T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r a t The U niversity of Texas a t Austin Austin, Texas, Tuesday, August 5, 1980 t X X ‘ s v u b j *°S 0d Fifteen Cents News and Editorial 471-4591 Display Advertising: 471-1865 Business Office and Classified: 471-5244 One Hundred Pages Vol. 79, No. 194 Copyright 1980, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (USPS 146-440) Jimmy defends Billy WASHINGTON (U PI) — President C arter said Monday he did not learn until last month that his brother accepted $220,000 from Libya, even though he had long been concerned about the relationship and suspected money might have changed hands. C arter, in a report to Congress and an hour-long news con­ ference, said White House lawyers learned July 11 that Billy C arter received two big paym ents from M uam m er Khadafy’s government. But C arter said he personally did not find out about the paym ents until July 15, a day after Billy filed a public state­ ment with the Justice Departm ent acknowledging he was a foreign agent for Libya Asked if it did not occur to him that Billy m ight have received money, C arter replied, “ yes, it occurred to m e.” But he said, “ it was not until July 15 that I knew of the two large loans or paym ents of $220,000 to my brother.” Related story, Page 3 C arter also defended his decision to use Billy as an in­ term ediary in the hostage crisis last November. He said there was nothing inappropriate in asking Billy to contact his Libyan friends and see if they could influence the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to release the hostages. But C arter acknowledged that the move “ m ay have enhanced Billy’s stature in the minds of the Libyans.” “ T hat’s the only downside to it that I can understand,” he said, “ That may have been bad judgment, but I was the one that made the judgment. I did what I thought was best for our coun­ try and best for the hostages and I believe that th a t’s exactly what Billy was doing.” Libya cam e out publicly against Iran on the hostage issue shortly after Billy made the request and Khadafy personally asked Khomeini to release them. C arter said. It was just a month later, according to Justice Departm ent records, that Billy C arter received his first paym ent of $20,000 from the Libyans. C arter also said there was “ no im propriety at a ll” in his June 17 discussion with Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti about Billy. Civiletti told the president at that tim e Billy was foolish not to register as a foreign agent for Libya and would not be prosecuted if he did register. Shortly afte r the conversation. C arter advised his brother to register, and Billy did But he said, “ I am deeply concerned that Billy has received funds from Libya and that he may be under obligation to Libya. These facts will have to govern my own relationship with my brother Billy.” C arter said he has not spoken to his brother privately since July 1. and has ordered his lawyers to draw up rules barring any of his employees from dealing with any m em ber of his family on substantive m atters. A specially appointed Senate panel is investigating the entire affair and C arter made his report a t the com m ittee’s request. C arter said he tried unsuccessfully to keep Billy from visiting Libya for a second time last fall. Local delegates debate rule By DON PEDIGO Dally Texan Staff Responses Monday from two prominent Austin delegates to the Dem ocratic national convention reflect the division between the C arter and Kennedy forces that is predicted to cause a m a­ jor fight over the delegate binding rule. As it now stands the delegates are required to vote for the can­ didate they supported in the prim aries through a m oral com m it­ ment only, not an actual rule. Therefore the C arter supporters are supporting the adoption of a convention rule requiring the delegates to vote for the candidate they were originally elected to support. Austin C arter delegate Lowell Lebermann said Monday he op­ poses an open convention “ because it is an undermining of the entire delegate process” to which millions of dollars and man hours have been devoted. “ It's changing rules a t the end of the gam e,” he said. Lebermann said he feels completely free to vote his beliefs on planks for the party platform and will support the final version but believes delegates should rem ain com m itted to their original candidate. Lebermann said the whole Billy C arter incident has been “ blown out of proportion ” and its coverage proves “ the Washington press corps has nothing better to do.” “ The cables sent by the White House were poorly handled,” Lebermann said, but they have “ zero signifigance” because the public reads State D epartm ent cables every week in Tim e and N ew sw eek. Lebermann believes the intention of the cables was m erely to be an official mem ento to the president’s brother. He said the loan to Billy C arter from Libya “ was at worst an im propriety” and Leberm ann does not believe Billy C arter could ever influence any State D epartm ent issue. Lebermann said presidential candidate John Anderson is £ very honest and candid person and he has no reason to doubi A nderson’s sin cerity to w ithdraw from the ra ce if tht Democratic candidate is not Carter. “ Jim m y C a rter’s record is the best kept secret in the Unitec S tates,’ Leberm ann said, and the key to Dem ocratic success ir November is “ to clean up the view of the issues.” The president has to get out on the huff,” Lebermann said, tc “ confront the issues as he sees them ” and reveal to the public what his adm inistration has done. An Austin delegate supporting Kennedy at the convention does not agree with all of Leberm ann’s views. “ I t ’s always been an open convention,” Austin Kennedy delegate Paul Hernandez said Monday, “ and I will fight for an open convention. ” “ I ’ll be lobbying, wheeling and dealing,” he said, and “ it’s go­ ing to be an open convention — le t’s be positive about it.” Hernandez said that Anderson is working for an open conven­ tion by offering to drop out of the race and that the Billy Carter incident has given Kennedy hope, but “ it is going to take more. It is going to take people like me hustling out th ere ,” he said. Hernandez said the chances for passage of C arter forces’ rule are seven to three at this time, but by Aug. 11 they will be 50-50. Hernandez, who headed the 1976 Chicano support for Carter, said that the president “ across the board has not come through” on issues such as employment for m inorities and keeping the in­ flation rate down. Hernandez believes that if Kennedy is the 1980 Democratic candidate he will need a “ m assive grassroots cam paign" on a neighborhood level, and “ that is what I am going to go to New York to point out.” Clayton trial Defense protests tape gaps HOUSTON (UPI) — Defense lawyers for House Speaker Bill Clayton Monday said prosecution tapes of secretly recorded conversations involving four Brilab defendants and an FBI informant in c lu d e d g a p s o r “ b la c k e d o u t ’’ segments. “ We have got transcripts of tapes where the tapes are blacked out,” Roy Minton of Austin, one of C layton’s lawyers, said after a pretrial hearing on evidence in the racketeering, fraud, con­ spiracy and extortion case. Mintor said the transcripts indicate “ things are being said, but there is nothing on the tapes.” Defense lawyers complained to U.S. D istrict Judge Robert O’Conor that federal prosecutors were withholding 48 of at least 141 tapes involving the defen­ dants. Assistant U.S. Attorney Ronald Woods said none of the remaining tapes was relevant to the Brilab investigation. “ Although Mr. Woods tells m e they’re not relevant, th at’s a judgm ent I should be able to m ake,” said Mike Ramsey, representing Deer Park union official L.G. Moore, in seeking access to the recordings. Clayton, Moore and Austin lawyers Randall Wood and Donald Ray were in­ dicted June 12 on federal charges in­ volving bribery allegations. The govern­ m ent claim s Clayton accepted $5,000 from Moore and promised to accept $600,000 m ore for his help in influencing placem ent of a multimillion-dollar state em ployees’ insurance contract. The indictment said Moore was aided by Wood and Ray. “ We re haggling about getting tapes we can understand and getting all the tapes we re entitled to,” said Minton. “The tapes, in many cases, are not audible.” He said the quality of some of the government-supplied copies was “ sorry as hell.” “ They’re really bad,” he said. “ They sound like Chip and D ale.” Government records showed the tape recordings occurred from Nov. 19, 1979, until Feb. 8, 1980, under an order from U.S. D istrict Judge Ross Sterling. The government has asked O’Conor to rule in advance of a scheduled Sept. 8 trial that the tapes are admissible. Slip sliding away Catherine Steele, visiting Austin from Chicago, plays years old, went swimming at Barton Springs Pool at Ziiker Park Monday afternoon. Catherine, three earlier with her twin sister. . . . . 1 I— Ralph Barrera, Dally Texae átaff 2 * t ' U.S. would welcome inquiry into jailed Iranians’ treatment WASHINGTON (UPI) — The State D epartm ent said Monday it would welcome an inquiry by the United Nations into the treatm ent of Iranian dem onstrators being held in a New York prison The the pro- Khomeini dem onstrators have been m istreated and tortured, is reported to have asked for such an investigation. Iranian government, which has charged The 192 Iranians taken to New York last week were arrested during a violent Washington dem onstration on July 27. Many have been fasting and refused to identify themselves. State Departm ent spokesman John T rattner said, “ I have found no evidence of torture or m istreatm ent. We would welcome an inquiry by the United Nations, just as we would welcome a sim ilar inquiry into the treatm ent of our hostages in Tehran. “The dem onstrators have had all of the things you would ex­ pect — food medicine, recreation and phone calls,” T rattner said. “ Some of them may have been kicked in the shins during the course of the dem onstration. They chose to dem onstrate and they chose to accept the consequences of dem onstrating.” In New York, a spokesman for the Manhattan Correctional Center, Myron Washington, said Iran’s “ acting am bassador to the U.N. ” had visited with all 20 fem ale Iranian prisoners for ai. hour Monday but made no com m ent on their condition. A spokeswoman for the Iranian Mission to the United Nation' refused to confirm or deny some prisoners had been visited b; Mission Chief Jam al Shemarani. Reports from Iran say the Iranians will further delay actioi on the U.S. hostages because of alleged m istreatm ent of the dem onstrators. T rattner said the United States drew no link between the two cases, but “ I don’t want to suggest that we are not pursuing every' channel to win the release of our hostages.” The Justice Departm ent announced Monday that only 46 of the 192 jailed Iranians had identified themselves. The Im m igration and Naturalization Service said only 70 Ira man students, out of a total of 59,000 in the United States in November, have been deported. Proceedings are pending against another 8,000 who appear to have violated their visas by not attending regular classes, and 308 chose to leave the coun try. The INS said the remaining 51,000 Iranian students hold legal visas and attend American schools. Rostow offers positive attitude on energy, economics By ROBERT DORR Dally Texan Staff Walt W. Rostow is one economist who has something constructive to say about the energy crisis, economic growth and development between the industrial nations of the north and developing nations of the south. In his latest book, “ Why the Poor Get Richer and Rich Slow Down, Rostow, a professor of economics and history at the University, examines world industrial development in its long-term growth cycles, its “ take­ off” stage and a “ drive to m aturation” in which the ab­ sorption of technologies is a vital factor in sustained growth. Rostow was an adviser to Presidents John F Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, and recent U.S. representative to the Organization of America " States. “ IT IS NOT an exaggeration of current reality to describe the increasing dependence of the United States, its allies and others on a limited source of external energy supply as the key economic and, potentially, strategic fact on the world scene,” Rostow said recent­ ly “ The energy-economy model tells us that the United th e r e s o u r c e and p ro b a b le S ta te s c o m m a n d s technological capacity to w eather a period of transition to higher-cost energy sources with a relatively slight aggregate deceleration in GNP as compared to a situa­ tion where the real price of energy remained constant; that the potentialities of coal and shale give us con­ siderable flexibility in exercising the nuclear option and vice versa. “ THE ORDER of the magnitude of the energy-related investment required between now and 1985 to reduce U.S. oil imports to President C arter’s goal is sufficient to bring the American economy back to relatively full employment. “ The regional locus of this investment would be such as to m itigate some, at least, of the problems of the hard-pressed Northeast and industrial Middle West, as well as to accelerate the rapid expansions under way in the Mountain and West South Central states. “ In broad term s, the expansion of investm ent in energy-related the generation ahead, the equivalent, say, to the opening up of the American West. industries should constitute, in “ Why, then is the problem difficult? “ INTELLECTUALLY, our leading economists, be they R epublican or D e m o c ra t, a r e e x p e rts in manipulating effective demand. They are awkward in handling the kind of resource and supply problems which have marched to the center of the stage in the 1970s but which have no formal place in neo-Keynesian models. “ Institutionally, we do not yet have the tools to mount large investment program s in these resource fields ... and, with respect to the conventional sources of energy and energy conservation, the dem ocratic process in the United States has been unable to fulfill the price assum p­ tions underlying energy-economy models or to settle firmly the energy-environmental trade-offs. “ At its core, m odem economic growth consists in the progressive absorption erf new technologies which raise the level of productivity. “ THE LINK among technological innovation, rapie sectoral growth, and the generation of profits for re investm ent helps to explain the high growth rates of the late-com ers to the early-com ers. As the late-com ers ab sorbed this large backlog, they generated a good part o; the supply of investment resources “ The widely held notion that the rich typically gel richer, the poor relatively poorer is supported neither b> evidence from the contem porary scene nor by that from the longer past. The growth of the Sun Belt is a local ex am ple of this. “ Econ. tnic negotiations between the industrialized northern nations, and the underdeveloped nations of the south, looking toward common action, ought to flourish. In fact, they are now stuck; and with m inor exceptions, they have proved sterile. “ CONCEPTUALLY, I believe we need a then, different approach; the definition of a common e n te r­ prise. with explicitly recognized common interests, tc which all parties, North and South, might contribute. The developing nations are not a homogeneous group in term s of real income per capita, stage of growth, oi capacity to act effectively on the resource agenda al] nations confront. “The appropriate perspective on north-south relations is not one of income redistribution from the rich to the poor, but of so maintaining the growth process in tht world economy that the normal catching-up process operates on behalf erf the late-com ers The heart of the common effort should be radicail) expanded investment with the developing countries and from abroad, in resource related fields ” University professor and economist Walt Rostow Ralph Barrera, Daily Texan Staff Page A2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5. 1980 NEXT TIME YOU VISIT 2700 Guadalupe Buy One ^ 5 ^ W H O P P E R Sandwich Get One FREE! WITH THIS COUPON O ffe r good A u g . 5 th ro u g h Sept. 15. Please present coupon to cashier before ordering Limit one per coupon per customer. Void where pro­ hibited by law 1980 Biwq?' King Corporation All rights reserved Printed m U S A K 3158 HEBREW KOSHER MEALS JEWISH FUN 1 * 0 3 NEW STUDENTS EDITION Editor Brian Dunbar Diane Ballard < ampus Editor (ampus Writer* Paul Alvarado. Jenny Benedict. Jams? Brown, Jenny Ccaughran Sandra Dougherty, Bob Elder Ruth Garner. Scott Lind, (luirle* Lunan. D ixie Gail Proctor. Suaan Vamtnen Entertainment Editor Paula Angerstein Entertainment Writers Nick Barbero, Jenny Benedict, Kelly Ga*h, Charles E v e ritt, Wendy Farb, Chris F rink. Carlos Sanche*, Ron Seybold, Wayne Terry, Chris Walter* Sports editor Associate sports Editor Roger Campbell Scott Bowles Sports assistants Jams* Brown. Tom Duderstadt Dixie Gail Proctor. Allison Wheeler Sports w riters John Brtd*haw. Karen Broe. Jim m y Burch. Joe Cbem- cyz. Nancy G am er Brian Huber. Steve Lee. Dave Milzan Special to the T e x a n Bob Genarelli, Brenda Kopycinski. Ried Lay manee. Gena McFarland. David Sprangler Austin Section Editor Alisa Hagan Austin Section Writers Carmen Abete Paula Angerstein. Karen Broe Rodol/o J G a rc ia D avid Pyndu*. C arlo* Jackie Smith, Shen Soltes, Sanchez Marla Till. Bill Valdez, Gary Volluz. Melissa Ward. John Williams Photographers Ralph B arrera. Brad Doherty, Rocky Kneten Greg VI- mont. Tun Wentworth Artist Jeff Litchfield T h e D a il y T e x a n ISSUE STAFF Paul Alvarado Issue Editor Don Pedigo News Assistant Editorial Assistant Kent Anschutz Entertainm ent Assistant Ron Syebold Gary Volluz Assistant Sports Edito- Tim Wentworth Make up Editor Wire Editor Paul Wilson Copy Editors Hancel Deaton. Martha Grisham Ralph B arrera Photographer Join r*M «arty M r* o< M r r f . Moot Akpart Hadgting, arhramad. rafuvanahon Hying at th g h l Club rata* tty tool and tatm batata dam at Hnt h a th th ta ruttdaaaty oat at tho Hghi U phttm g t u n o n d paurx* an tha day ahaadt Sthadtda today fat d a w n — at anytkna V IS A . M aHarCharga Camna H o t Cantor i urnmot tp a tk d Cad now to antar d r a w m g tar haa Hight i k d 1» Naat Akpart, 171 5337, 271 - 5943 _ _ _ _ _ Announcing a IT BOARD MEETING TO N IG H T August 5 6:00 p.m. TSP Conference Room TSP 3.302 TEXAN PERMANENT STAFF John Havens Brian Dunbar Mark McKinnon Tom Baker Editor Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editor Assistant to the Editor News Editor Associate News Editor Graphic* Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainm ent Editor Melanie Hershon Photo Editor Images Editor Images Associate Editor Images Assistant Editors Diane Jane Morrison Don Puffer Tony Kotecki Scott Sudduth Jimmy Burch Greg Vimont Clare Hagerty Jody Den berg Kelly ('ash. Ale* Plaza Campus Activities Editor General Reporters Suzy Lampert Diane Ballard, Alisa Hagan Melissa Ward Newswriter* Robert Dorr. Sheri Soltes Scott Campbell Editorial Consultant Ca > N - 4 o r M 00 0 0 > 00 ■ no 2 2 C 2 >— 4 I M *< & m X < MH n m x 50o m C -. m ■ X O in X m x 2 > H UT feeling crunch Temporary housing set up By D A V ID P Y N D U S Daily Texan Staff One hundred sixty-three University students living on cam pus in the fall will be housed in temporary lodgings. Robert Cooke, director of the Division of Housing and Food, said Mon day. Although there is a “ real housing crunch now in the U niversity-area. m ost students wanting a regular dorm room “ probably will wind up in o n e,” Cooke said. The number expected to live in temporary housing is approxim ately the sam e as last year, he added. Out of 5,500 single student spaces, he said, this is a “very sm a ll” amount. The 70 men and 93 women accepting a tem ­ porary arrangement for the fall will be set up in dorm study lounges, typically with four residents sleeping in bunk beds, until regular rooms are available. living They get a refund of 25 percent for the tim e spent in temporary housing,” Cooke said Since food service rem ains unaltered, no refund will be given for board, he added. Though Cooke said the temporary housing agreem ent is strictly voluntary, students sen­ ding their housing contracts to the University must agree to accept temporary space. A letter from the Division of Housing and Food Service which accom panies all contracts states: “This contract is offered with the un­ derstanding that your assignm ent m ay be in temporary space upon your arrival in August.” Students may refuse their contract and still remain on a waiting list for a regular room, Cooke said, even though they are guaranteed nothing. Cooke said that frequent turnovers — a result of late cancellations and changed plans — usually make plenty of rooms available for those who want them , even the students choos­ ing to refuse their contract and remain on a waiting list. “ By mid-October, the number of students (living in temporary housing) is close to zero,” Cooke said. “Our goal is to get m ost of them out by the end of O ctober.” He said the rate at which students obtain regular room s varies depending on the residence hall. Once som e women in Kinsolving stayed in temporary housing all year, he said, but they were pleased with the arrangem ents. “ They had a pretty nice set-up.” Texas exes brochure says Aggie fund-raising tops UT Burr-headed Aggies in mid-gig are not the usual cover feature for University publications — especially those sent to alumni. However, Aggie cadet Dean B ernal’s enthusiastic cheer was the first thing Texas exes saw when they received fund-raising brochures in the mail. Pam phlets titled “ Will the Horns becom e an Aggie joke?” urged former UT students to sup­ port the alma m ater through contributions. ‘‘Although we may hate to adm it it, there is one area where those Aggies have us beaten hands down,” the brochure stated. ‘T e w state universities in the country can match Aggie alumni in the financial support they pour into a school they lo v e.” Only 5 percent of University alumni con­ tribute to UT, w hile 30 percent of Aggie graduates contribute to A&M, the pamphlet said. ‘‘We can beat those Aggies at football, basketball and the brochure stated, “ but when it com es to alumni support, they have us whipped.” in a ca d em ic a r e a s ,” T h e B a t t a l i o n , A&M’s student newspaper, published statistics disputing the pam phlet’s claim to scholarly superiority. Warren Gould, director of developm ent and University relations, U T’s fund-raising depart­ ment, was unavailable for com m ent about the pamphlet Monday. CHARLOTTE EVANS form erly of Jerem iahs Now Cutting Hair at: D. Qeqgan’s 4 1 0 6 M A R A TH O N CALL 4 5 2 -7 5 6 6 for appt. School Supplies Gifts • UT Items Greeting Cords • Stamps Cigarettes • Candy Magazines • Paperbacks T E X A S U N I O N General Store Open M-F 8-4:30 Rabbi Traxler wants you! CHABAD HOUSE-LUBAVITCH Jew ish S tu den t Center 2101 Nueces cor. 21st St. Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 472-3900 TORAH INSTRUCTION HOLIDAY PROGRAMS TEXAN ADVERTISING STAFF Suzanne Baida, Liz Lie Lorenzo. Lusa O r ­ son, Fred Goldsmith, .'-«nemarie Hagan. L a u r a Manning. Gina Montgomery Peg Moody Jim Wells Jeffrey Whitehead The Daily Texan a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications. Drawer D, University Station. Austin. TX 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Fri­ day. except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin, TX News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4581), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 136) Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made m TSP Building 3 200 ( 471 52441 and display advertising in TSP Building 3 210 (471-1865) The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students 6330 N Pulaski, Chicago, II. 60646 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright 1980 Texas Student Publications THE DAILY TEXAN SUBSCRIPTION RATES Summ er Session 1960 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within U S A One Sem ester (Fall or Spring I 1980-81 ...................................................................... By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within USA Two Sem esters (Fall and Springi 1980-81 .......................................................................... ..................................... By mail in Texas 32 00 By mail outside Texas within U S A 34 00 Send orders and address changes to TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS, P.O. Box PUB NO 146440 D. Austin Texas 78712. or to TSP Building C3 200 ...................................... 110 50 11 00 17 50 18 50 ■ G N I L E S N U O C ■ H C A E R T U O B S O Z U Z E M R E H S O K ■ T A B B A H S D E T I R I P S ■ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN Woiid&National Page A3 Allen’s winds top 160 mph CASTRIES. St. Lucia (UPI) — Hurricane Allen, a “great hurricane’‘ and the mightiest the eastern Caribbean has seen thundered westward below the barrier islands Monday night, leaving sunken ships, devastated towns and at least eight people dead. this century, in The h u rric a n e 's top winds w ere 160 mph, forecasters at the Miami Hurricane Center said, and it was elevated to the status of a “great” storm, one of rare ferocity. Forecasters said it appeared Allen’s center would pass south of Hispaniola, the island shared by the Dominican Republic and Haiti. Haiti’s southwestern peninsula and the Dominican Republic were put on a hurricane watch at mid-day. the southw estern coast of At 9 p.m., the San Juan weather bureau called Allen “ the most intense hurricane to occur in the eastern Caribbean this century.” Hurricane hunter planes flying into the storm reported it was con­ tinuing to strengthen. “ Its drastic strengthening is causing gusty winds and thundershowers to be stronger than expected in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands,” 250 miles from the center of the storm. IT WAS A COMPACT storm with hurricane force winds confined to a 40-mile radius from the center. Gale force winds extend 175 miles to the north and 100 miles to the south. Forecaster John Hope said Allen was as strong as Hurricane David, which claimed thousands of lives in the Caribbean last year and is considered one of the worst storms of the century. “ It is a great hurricane, very much so,” said Hope. Foreccaster Bob Case said it appeared Monday night that Haiti and the Dominican Republic would get no more than gale force winds and heavy rain from Allen Tuesday “ if he goes as expected and behaves himself.” But he warned that “a m atter of 2 degrees in the track Allen takes means a difference between hurricane force and gale force winds” on Hispaniola. AT 8 P.M., CDT, Allen had top winds of 160 mph and was centered about 250 miles south of San Juan, Puerto Rico, near latitude 14.8 north and longitude 67.0 west. It was moving slightly north of due west, below the barrier of islands between the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico, at about 20 mph — a course it was expected to maintain for the next 24 hours. Radio Antilles, in ham radio contact with St. Lucia, said at least eight people were dead on the lit­ tle resort island, three of them in Castries and two at the village of Vieux Fort. Officials said the southwest tip of St. Lucia at the towns of Vieux Fort and Dennery. the worst damage was on The Central Disaster Relief headquarters called on islanders to join in a volunteer cleanup in the after- math of the storm, which demolished a wing of the Victoria Hospital in Castries, felled utility lines and trees and demolished at least two banana plan­ tations. miles I 70 t * Dominican R ep.. Haiti South America -X L San Juan • M -y • i Puerto Rico st. Lucia IjPI Telephoto Tyrone Southerland, a meteorological officer in St. Lucia, said “ Vieux Fort is in total shambles. Almost every house there has been damaged.” The Monserrat-based Radio Antilles quoted a freighter captain as saying six ships had been blo^m aground in the mountain-embraced Castries harbdr, including an unidentified Venezuelan war ship, and 75 percent of the homes in the hillside Moroe neighborhood lost their roofs. IN BARBADOS, officials said the government of St. Lucia had asked for emergency donations of medical supplies and personnel. The British destroyer Glasgow, which had been visiting Antigua, was steaming for St. Lucia, but it was warned not Jp try to enter the port due to danger from storm- sunken ships. Authorities said it would sendtia medical team in by helicopter at dawn Tuesday and then work its way in close enough to unload medioal supplies. There were no immediate reports of deaths on Bar­ bados. the first island to feel Allen’s fury. Authorities in Barbados said more than 10 ships ha^e been lost — including the 150-foot freighter Current Trader, which was smashed on the rocks in Bridgetown harbor, and 28 fishing boats were destroyed and 100 more were damaged. Ham radio operators on the island of St. Vincent, where all communications lines were down, said the capital of Kingstown was flooded. Several inter- island schooners went dow n in Kingstown harbor and others were blown aground. Storm-dirven rains also caused flooding In the neighboring islands of Guadeloupe, Martinique and Dominica. Iran’s parliament postpones talks By United Press International Iran’s Parliament decided Monday to postpone debate on the A m erican hostages but the speaker of the house, protesting Iran ian demonstrators in the United States, said the hostages should be put on trial to show “we are not scared.” jailin g of the Speaker Ayatollah Hashemi Raf- sanjani said Parliament had asked the to make Supreme Islamic Council prep aratio n s for the 52 Americans since nearly 200 Iranians w ere la s t week d u rin g a Washington demonstration. tria ls of ja ile d “This should be sufficient to show the Americans that under no circumstances are we going to be intimidated by their last ditch efforts. We are not scared,” Rafsanjani said in a Tehran Radio broadcast monitored in London by the BBC. Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh asked for a U.N. commission to in­ vestigate the conditions of the Iranians who face possible deportation to Iran. The State Department said it would welcome such a probe, although a U.N. spokesman said no such request had been received from Tehran. President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, urg­ ing those jailed to “ resist as far as possi­ ble, so that they have to drag you into the planes,” insisted the United States itself was preventing the 275-day-old hostage problem from being resolved. “ EACH TIME IT (the United States) creates a new problem to keep the original problem of the hostages in­ soluble,” he said. In L o n d o n , a S c o tla n d Y a rd spokesman said police arrested between 30 and 40 Iranian demonstrators outside the U.S. Embassy where they were protesting the detention of Iranian students in U.S. jails. Rafsanjani also said consideration of a request from 180 U.S. congressmen that Parliam ent release the 52 hostages would be postponed because the deten­ tion of the Iranians by U.S. authorities. He did not say when the m atter would be taken up by Parliament. The speaker’s call for a hostage trials was seconded by H assan Ayat, a parliamentarian and hardline ideologue, who said the hostages “ should be judged and condemned.” the hostages “ WHAT WE WANT to attack by judg­ ing the course of is American policy rather than the persons themselves,” a French daily quoted Ayat as saying. A m erican and Iranian officials wrangled over the treatm ent of the 192 Iranian demonstrators arrested over a week ago in Washington, with the United States denying Iranian charges they had been mistreated. lette r In his to U.N. Secretary- General Kurt Waldheim, Tehran Radio said G hotbzadeh said the Iranian demonstrators “ have been subjected to the most barbaric attacks by U.S. police.” On Iran’s political front, Bani-Sadr predicted that his choice for prime minister, Mustapha Mir Salim, would receive parliamentary approval and a new governm ent would be formed before “ not very long.” Bani-Sadr suffered what was widely seen as a political setback last week when Parliament refused immediately to endorse Mir Salim. Reagan visits Jordan A crowd of 100,000 throngs Bologna square. UPI Telephoto Italians protest terrorism BOLOGNA, Italy (UPI) — Millions of Italians took to the streets Monday in a massive general strike to condemn the bombing of the crowded Bologna railroad station, the nation’s bloodiest terrorist attack ever. Nearly 100,000 people jammed Bologna’s main square, waving red banners as speaker after speaker denounced Saturday’s tragedy that killed at least 77 and injured 188 others — most preparing to leave on their annual August vacations. Early Monday, police began rounding up suspected right- wing extremists in some 20 cities, holding several dozen for questioning about the explosion. SIMILAR LARGE rallies were held in every major Italian city and in Rome, the Senate opened a special debate on methods used by Prime Minister Francesco Cossiga's government to deal with terrorism. “ No more bombs, no more shootings, no more deaths!” some demonstrators chanted in Bologna, a Communist stronghold in the heart of Italy’s “ Red Belt.” Every sector of Italian business and industry participated in the strike, from small shopkeepers in rural Sicily to highly specialized factory workers in the industrial north. Activity at every air, bus and train terminal across the nation was halted for one hour in the morning to allow transport workers to participate in the demonstrations. AT THE SCENE scene of the blast, a steady stream oí memorial wreaths and flowers arrived from around the na­ tion, prompting police to barricade a special section of the area in front of the station to hold the memorials. By midday Monday, 70 of the victims, including about 30 children, had been identified. With the exception of three women, one Swiss, one English and one French, all those identified were Italian. Sonia Burri, a 7-year-old Italian girl, died Monday in a Bologna hospital, bringing the number of dead to 77. Authorities said a funeral for most of the victims would be held in the city’s Basilica Wednesday and 43 would be buried in the Bologna cemetery. The interior ministry created a $125,000 fund to help the injured victims and families of the dead deal with the immediate expenses caused by the tragedy. Kennedy, Anderson woo blacks By United Press International As President Carter prepared to go before the public with the problems of his brother’s dealings with Libya, his three rivals — Sen. Edward Kennedy, Ronald Reagan and John Anderson — campaigned in New York City Monday. With the opening of the Democratic national convention just one week away, Carter hoped to remove some of the political pressures threatening his renomination at a Monday evening news conference to explain his brother’s involvement with Libya. Carter also sent Congress a lengthy report on the controversy m which Billy Carter admitted to accepting $220,000 from the oil-rich Arab country. Kennedy and Anderson addressed the convention of the Urban League. Reagan paid a hospital visit to the league’s executive director, Vernon Jordan, still recovering from gunshot wounds suffered during a sniper attack in Fort Wayne, Ind,. last month. REAGAN WILL address the league convention Tuesday and Carter is scheduled to speak to the group Wednesday morning. Kennedy and Anderson received only lukewarm receptions as they courted black voters Kennedy got his best response when he attacked fellow members of Congress for accepting free medical care “ for the slightest case of sniffles” but opposing national health in­ surance for the general public. Independent candidate Anderson got his warmest reception when he criticizd Carter, saying the country needs a president who is “ a vigorous problem solver, not a tinkerer ... a real moral leader, not a m oralizer.” KENNEDY BLASTED both Reagan and Carter, saying a “ rea c tio n a ry the country because progressives, including Democrats under the president, are in retreat. is rising tid e ’’ in Reagan, he said, stands for the politics of "McKinley, Har­ ding, Hoover and Goldwater.” As part of his first campaign swing since winning the GOP nomination, Reagan will visit New York’s South Bronx and Brooklyn Tuesday to highlight what he considers the failure of the federal government to help poor minorities and to focus on his own proposals to help the poor. Carter campaign chairman Robert Strauss and former Gov. Patrick Lucey of Wisconsin, representing Kennedy, lobbied the governors' conference in Denver on the open convention, but the state leaders decided the best politics was to take no stand at all. AT STAKE is whether to pass a rule binding delegates to vote for the candidate they were elected to support, or release them to vote their conscience. Eight Democratic governors have called for an open conven­ tion so far — though some are Carter supporters who believe he would emerge a stronger candidate. “ What we decided to do instead is to work for unity,” said Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton, explaining why there was no vote by the 24 Democratic governors. STRAUSS SAID if a vote had been taken, 20 governors would have endorsed the president Maine’s Joseph Brennan, the only governor who has endorsed Kennedy, would have voted for an open convention and three others would have been uncom­ mitted, he said. Lucey said he would have expected only about six governors on his side. Strauss said it was a Tot of baloney” that Kennedy has enough votes to defeat the proposed ruling binding delegates. We have a hard count that under a worst case' scenario we would lose 8 to 9 percent of our delegates on the rule, but pick up 4 to 5 percent of the Kennedy delegates,” Strauss said. Nuclear records eyed I Commonwealth Edison charged with violations ■ ROCK ISLAND, 111. (UPI) — Commonwealth Edison Co. and two of its- employees deliberately falsified records to cover up serious security violations* at the Quad Cities Nuclear Power Station, prosecutors charged Monday. The indictments — the first criminal charges ever brought against a nuclear * power firm — charge Commonwealth Edison ordered guards not to report such., violations as unlocked and unguarded doors and unescorted visitors in vital^ areas of the plant. Chief U.S. District Judge Robert D Morgan took under advisement a motionl by Commonwealth Edison to ban the public and the news media from the cour-~ troom during discussion of “classified” material. Morgan said he will rule on- the request when he sees such material. Chief prosecutor David W. Elbaor said one of the defendants, Walter E Meehan, former plant security director, became concerned in January 1976^ because the violations listed in security records made his division look bad. « Shortly thereafter, Elbaor said, Meehan and the other defendant, plant’ manager Nicholas J. Kalivianakis. told guards to exclude violations from their * regular patrol sheets and put them on separate sheets of paper. “The NRC never saw those slips of paper,’ Elbaor told the jurors. He described in detail how the plant is divided into three areas — restricted,^ protected and vital. The latter includes the reactor, support systems and th e , control room. THE FALSIFIED reports included instances of unlocked and unguarded doors in the vital area, Elbaor said. “ I will ask you to focus on the vital area and \ vital-area doors ... and focus on the importance of truthful records, Elbaor ’ % said. He also said Meehan and Kalivianakis were aware the NRC was concerned * about keeping the vital area doors locked because in 1975 the NRC fined the Quad Cities plant $4,000 because an inspector found a vital area door propped’ open with a sign that said such doors should be kept locked. ComEd was charged on nine counts of fraud and conspiracy and Kalivianakis and Meehan were indicted on seven counts each Each count carries a max­ imum penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. The Quad Cities plant is located in Cordova, about 30 miles northweast of the Quad Cities, a metropolitan area on the Mississippi River between Illinois and Iowa The area has a population of 375,000. A rouncI tllE W o R ld From Texan new* services U.S. ambassador accused LA PAZ, Bolivia - Bolivia’s military regime Monday accused U.S. Ambassador Marvin Weissman of violating the Geneva Convention by transm itting a “ slanderous” news dispatch through diplomatic channels. Information Minister Fer­ nando Palacios said Hay Bonner, 38. a stringer for N e w sw e ek magazine and T h e W a s h i n g t o n P o s t , transmitted a news story through two days the American mission after a military coup July 17. The cable by which the story was sent was signed by Weissman, who was recalled to Washington July 20 in protest against the coup, Palacios said. In Washington, a spokesman for the newspaper said one of B onner's sto rie s was received through the State Department. AMMslna kill 9 SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - Suspected right-wing assassins kill­ ed at least nine people in overnight political violence and dumped their bodies near churches in what could be warnings to leftist priests, of­ ficials said Monday. The nine were among 16 people reported killed in the past 24 hours of fighting between leftist and rightist extremists seek­ ing to rule the impoverished Central American nation. Waldheim visits Thailand - B A N G K O K . T h a i l a n d Thailand’s foreign minister took £ tough line in talks Monday with U.N Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim on easing tensions along the Thai Cambodian border. Sources close to the meeting said Foreign Minister Sitthi Savetsila did most of the listening, but stuck to previous demands by non-communist Asian nations that Vietnam pull its troops out of Cam bodia. W aldheim ’s arrival in Bangkok on the last leg of a five-day mission to defuse a con frontation between the region’s com­ munist am! non-communist states coincided with Thailand’s first air raid alert in 35 years. Ptking ducks beer issue Beer drinkers in Peking are com plaining that some restaurateurs are capitalizing, if you will, on summer thirsts by requiring each beer order to be accom panied by a food p u rc h a s e . T he P e k i n g D a i l y N e w s p a p e r said Monday th at despite orders by the municipal governm ent th at such practices must end, some restaurants are still insisting on the side orders with beer.“They can issue their notices,” one defiant waiter told the paper T il serve the m eat with the beer.” Women sailors on trial a s LONG BEACH, Cal». - A hearing for eight women sailors accused of homosexual activity aboard the USS Norton Sound opened Monday amid charges that women in the military a r e b r a n d e d s e x u a l l y promiscuous by both officers and enlisted men. No testimony was taken during the morning session of the hearing, which was held in the quarters of the ship’s commanding officer. About 20 demonstrators, most of them women, paraded out­ side the gate of the Long Beach Naval Shipyard, where the Norton Sound is docked, protesting the hear­ ing and the charges. Court donies custody CHICAGO - A Juvenile Court judge Monday refused to restore custody of Walter Polovchak to his parents so they can take him with them back to the Ukraine. The boy and his sister have been living with a 24-year-old cousin, also named Walter Polovchak, and were granted asylum by the Justice Department and im m igration officials. “ We want to make certain they don’t run again,” Cook County Juvenile Judge Joseph Mooney said. “ I’m afraid the next time Walter runs, he won’t run to cousin Walter again. He may run someplace where he is harm ed.” Cleanup continues SHELL BEACH, La - Officials directing the cleanup of about 25,000 pounds of toxic wood preservative spilled in a ship collision estimated Monday that only 80 to 90 percent of the poisonous chemical could ever be recovered. Port of New Orleans executives said the accident has cost the port $3 million in lost shipping and wages and that losses would con­ tinue to mount at the rate of about $1.5 million per week. Stocks (town slightly NEW YORK - The stock market gave ground grudgingly Monday after Chemical Bank raised its prime lending rate for the first time in more than three months. Trading was moderately active. The Dow Jones industrial average, down more than 8 points a t the outset following Friday’s 3.84-point loss, eased only (1.42 point to 931.07. The New York Stock Exchange index lost 0.24 to 60.20 and the price of a share decreased 12 cents. Declines topped advances. 902 to 596, among the 1.896 issues traded at 4 p.m EDT. THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Threat to free press continues The N ew York T im e s said in an editorial on Tuesday, July 29: With the authority of the Supreme Court and a magistrate’s warrant, the police swept through the desks and files of a Boise, Idaho, television station last weekend and seized some unedited videotapes depicting a prison riot. The ; prosecutor said he needed the tapes to identify the riot leaders. The station, which had done nothing wrong, had no time to resist. “ My desk looks like the Nazis went through it,” said Bob Loy, managing editor of KBCI-TV. “ I feel I’ve been completely compromised. These people asked specifically for me to go in (to the prison) because they knew I could be ■ trusted.” It was only the second time since 1978, when the Supreme Court sanctioned the practice, that a search warrant was used to turn the press into an instrument of law enforcement. But such raids on private files will continue, and for even less worthy reasons, if the Court’s unwise ruling remains in force. The present policy jeopardizes the files of anyone entrusted with confidences, but it poses very special problems for the press. Reporters routinely get information, as Loy did, on a con­ fid en tial b asis; im portant sto r ie s would otherwise never come to light. Moreover, the files of news organizations routinely contain in­ formation that the authorities yearn to inspect on any pretext. The names of informants about of­ ficial misconduct, as in Watergate, or official negligence, as in a badly run prison, are often law enforcem ent. But irrelevant to sound punishing the whistle-blowers may well be the main concern of some authorities. Since the Supreme Court approved a search of the Stanford University newspaper two years ago, the press has pleaded to be asked for infor­ mation by subpoena. That can be made more precise than just a warrant — and it can be con­ tested in court. Two correctives are necessary. Federal law ought to require that information from the press, and ideally from all innocent parties, be sought by subpoena whenever there is no danger that the information would thus be lost. Such a limit on police powers existed for decades, without visi­ ble harm to law enforcement. And, whatever the law, the courts need to recognize that demanding information from the press risks interfering with its First Amendment rights. Since the Stanford decision, the Supreme Court has found, in at least one case, that free access to the news is inherent in freedom to print the news. The press, meanwhile, has tried to show, case by case, how the inability to protect information can interfere with access to it. Chief Judge Collins Seitz, of the United States Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit, showed last week that he understood this point even as he ordered CBS News to produce some unaired tapes. “The compelled production of a reporter’s source materials can constitute a significant in­ trusion into the newsgathering and editorial process,” he wrote. “ Like the compelled dis­ closure of confidential sources, it may substan­ tially undercut the public policy favoring the free flow of information to the public that is the foun­ dation for the (First Amendment) privilege.” *1980 New York Times Fírínq U ne Bikers beware ignore the “ Bicyclists Unite’’ indeed! Unite and learn some basic rules of the road. Most bikers want the convenience, ex­ ercise and economy of riding their bikes but choose to in­ convenience of stopping at stop signs, signalling, etc. It’s as though the motorists are expected to let the bikers rule the road, as in China (which in itself is a ridiculous comparison to the U.S.). I don't think the fact that bikers expect special privileges bothers me as much as the fear of hitting a weaving biker and seeing the remains smeared across the windshield — because the biker didn't want to go to the expense of buying protective gear. Some people don’t have the option of riding bicycles because of children, equipment, books, etc. So please give motorists the benefit of being a very real part of the traffic — before you become a very real statistic by someone who tires of dodging bicycles! P at T hom as Austin E vangelists condemnable I am righteously indignant! In “TV Saves,” Robert King calls television evangelism “Christianity” ! Isn’t it ob­ vious that Jesus Christ is not central to the message of religious racketeers but is only peripheral to their money- grabbing schemes? It is true that TV preachers, like other demagogues, ex­ ploit the fears of their public for advan­ tage, but their ploys have nothing to do with true Christianity, and the name of Jesus Christ is used only to lend an aura of legitimacy to their propaganda. We must be careful not to condemn Biblical Christianity when we are outraged by these men; indeed, they are condemned by the Bible they thump. Read the general epistle of Jude. B a r b a ra S h apow al B iom edical Engin eerin g ‘Friends’ really enem ies is that it is not Rudy Johnson was perfectly correct in calling the “ Friends of Cambodia” for what they are: “ Enemies of Cam­ bodia.” But Mr. Johnson does make one ig­ error though, because norance w hich m o tiv a te s th ese hypocrites in their self-righteous sup­ port of genocide, but duplicity. Leslie McCullough’s alibi for this criminal con th e se so -c a lled sch em e “Friends” are somehow neutral in this dispute and believe that aid should be sent through all channels, not just delivered to the invading Vietnamese troops. But facts are stubborn things: against the wishes of the vast majority of the governments of the world, these “ Friends” call for the recognition of the puppet Heng Samrin regime, in­ stalled by the invading Vietnamese, who are puppets of the Russians. Puppets of puppets These “ Friends” have castigated the U N. for precisely the policy they claim (dishonestly) to uphold With friends like these, who needs enemies? Hal W hitaker Austin A rticle clarified I want to thank John Williams for the very flattering and well-done story about me in The Daily Texan on July 30. But one misunderstanding found its way into the text through no fault of Mr Williams. My son Gavin is very happy and my wife and I have been very pleas­ ed with A u stin ’s Robert E Lee Elementary School. The semi-literate teacher he had earlier in his young career was in another state. Since the in our Texan c ir c u la te s w id ely neighborhood and several parents have already asked me about it, I hope this letter will help relieve their worries and correct the misimpression Thank you G ene Lyons Austin “Can you hear it . . . from inside the hood . . . uncontrolled laughter . . . in Arabic” Draft assures cheap labor supply By R U SSELL BAKER Speaking of the draft, have you ever wondered why the only branch of government that has to conscript labor is the military? Nobody ever argues for drafting people into the State Department, or the Federal Power Commission, or the FBI. And what about the office of the president? It needs more people every year. And the Congress — it always needs elevator operators, doorkeepers, people to do the piping and greet the folks from back home It’s only the military jobs that excite Congress’s appetite for conscript labor, and of course congressmen make a good deal of sense when they talk about why young people ought to be made to serve their country. There are good reasons for asking everybody to do a little service to the state. As things are now, though, all they have to look forward to is the uniformed bureaucracy. Why is this opportunity for edifying government service limited to government service with ammunition? One reason is that all the other jobs in which a young American can serve his country are locked up by volunteers who would be furious if they were replaced by draftees. One reason they would be furious is that most of them are earning very good salaries. A couple of recent economic studies show that civilian government jobs paid better wages than comparable jobs in private industry. There can be a lot of satisfaction in serving your country when you realize that if you weren’t serving your country you’d be eating a little lower on the hog. Well, you may say, if that is the case, why not raise military salaries as high as the government’s civilian salaries? Wouldn’t that drain a lot of the civilian work force away from the State Department and White House and Senate elevators and leave openings for some draftees to fill a lot of these white-collar jobs? If you ask these questions it’s because you haven’t thought things through. In the first place, if you raised military salaries as high as civilian salaries, you’d have skilled workmen from the private sector pouring into the military jobs so fast they would all be filled before the white-collar government people could apply for transfers. In the second place, the federal payroll would go so high that taxes would be even more bankruptive than they are now. The only way to maintain the military work force without going broke is to keep salaries down, and if the pay doesn't attract the necessary labor, the solution is to draft labor which will work at unattractive wages or be court-martialed. When things come to this pass, explanations about the rewards of serving your country are likely to seem a bit hollow. You are likely to develop the sour suspicion that you have been pressed into involuntary servitude to fill the government's need for labor at substandard wages. This nasty situation can be avoided and youth’s need to do some service to the country can be satisifed quite sensibly by lowering salaries throughout the government, thus inspiring many civilian workers to seek jobs in the private sector and opening work opportunities for youthful draftees in all the diverse and fascinating government jobs at Washington’s dis­ posal. There are nearly three million reasons why this will not be done. They are the government’s civilian employees who know why draftees are unfit to perform complex government jobs, except in the military. • 1980 New York Times BLOOM COUNTY Did you k n o w ...that the 96th Congress has enacted 300 public laws so far. One law in 8 honors people, places or anniversaries; among them laws to mark National Museum Day, honor Disneyland s 25th anniversary and six naming federal buildings after officials. Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or the writer or the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of R egents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Editorials Page A4 Viewpoint White knight loses sight Barely a month has passed since John Anderson rode into town on a white horse leading his Don Quixotish presidential campaign. The independent candidate declared then that he was running “ Because something is wrong with a nominating process that gives us Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter.” Considering those alternatives, we agreed and nothing w e’ve seen since then has altered that opinion. In response to his trip to Austin, we noted then that “It was reassuring to witness his enthusiasm and commitment to a third- party bid, and it was refreshing to hear him vocalize bold ideas.” But apparently, his commitment to a third-party candidacy is wavering. Anderson said Thursday, after a well publicized 45-minute meeting with Sen. Edward Kennedy, that he would reassess his in­ dependent presidential candidacy if the Democratic national con­ vention nominates someone other than President Carter next month. The obvious implication being — if the Democrats choose Kennedy. Anderson’s announcement was a Carter-like about-face, since only three days earlier he had declared his intentions to stay in the race no matter who the Democrats nominated. T he question remains, simple though it may be, why would Ander­ son reassess his “national unity campaign” simply because Kennedy was nominated instead of Carter? Perhaps Anderson agreed to the announcement with the stipula­ tion that should Kennedy lose the nomination, as expected, he would endorse Anderson in the fall campaign. In return, if Kennedy pulls off the coup d'etat in New York, maybe Kennedy agreed to make Anderson his running mate. But although such a political trade-off has not been established, the suggestion is clear — these two underdogs didn’t get together to scratch each others’ presidential flea bites. What is particularly disappointing, however, is Anderson’s about- face. He seem s to have made his candidacy contingent upon the out­ come of the Democratic convention. With that in mind, it is difficult to understand how he expects anyone to take his candidacy serious­ ly- In response to his Austin visit, we also noted that "... it was disap­ pointing to hear him engage in all-too-familiar political rhetoric, answering questions with questions and criticizing his opponents without making clear his alternatives or solutions.” In other words — politics as usual. Perhaps voters should take that statement a little more seriously and beware of white horses bearing presidential candidates. John Havens Strong lands bill needed The N e w Y o r k T im e s said in an editorial Tuesday, July 22: The Alaska lands bill now up for a Senate vote is being falsely por­ trayed as an energy issue. The s ta te u rg es p a s sa g e of this development-oriented bill “to help A m e r i c a s t a r t i t s dependence on foreign oil.” But oil is actually a minor issue, easily resolved. The real issue is the ap­ propriate balance between preser­ vation and development on millions of unspoiled acres, most of which have no energy potential. to c u r e The lands at issue cover as much as a third of the entire state. The l a s t y e a r p a s s e d a H o u s e conservation-oriented bill that has been endorsed by environm en­ talists and the Carter administra­ tion. Now the Senate will be voting on a development-oriented bill ap­ proved by its Energy Committee, p l u s p r o p o s e d d o z e n amendments. a The only area of potential energy conflict is the William 0 . Douglas Arctic Wildlife Range, which con­ tains the calving grounds for the last great caribou herd on the conti­ nent — and roughly 5 percent of the areas deemed promising for oil. Environmentalists want no oil ex­ ploration on the range until a study is made of wildlife resources and their sensitivity to oil development. But on all other The Energy Committee’s bill would allow seismic exploration, which need not disrupt the herd or the fragile tundra. The result would be a better basis for deciding whether to allow exploratory drilling. Given the severity of the energy crisis, that seem s a reasonable approach. issu es the Energy C om m ittee’s bill gives away too much to the developers. It would require far more timber- cutting than the Forest Service deems wise, and would open tens of m i l l i o n s of a c r e s of p r i m e wilderness to roadbuilding, mining, logging and hunting. Senator Tsongas of Massachusetts has in­ troduced a package of worthy amendments — endorsed by en­ v i r o n me n t a l i s t s and the a d ­ ministration — to protect more land against such intrusions. He and Senator Roth of Delaware also seek an even stronger substitute bill. Either it or the amendments are a distinct improvement over the Energy Committee’s version. In any case, the nation as a whole will be well served by passage of the strongest possible combination of these m easures to preserve Alaska’s wilderness. The only ex­ ception is that seism ic exploration for oil in the Arctic Wildlife Range seem s a risk worth taking. ©1980 New York Times by Berke Breathed m o ... s m a m u F L m r mmuo 5 / M C K LÍ...ITU IC JUST ierrcmufTMTiT'- OOOD few flis... i ye 6or &J&SIN m urn, /snwrrrp y o u m w ... Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ T H E DAILY T E X A N □ Page A5 Austin People Though Bill Hardon has only been garden ­ ing for a year, he is already working on his third garden. to support His Hardon w as found driving stak es into the ground preparing tom ato plants. His first crop of tom atoes w as 60-70 pounds. After picking the first crop, he found his tom ato plants budding again — unusual for plants that usually die a fter their first yield. "So m etim es I get a little crazy and g ra b a clean tom ato and just eat it like that — with a little s a lt ," he said. His extrem ely tidy garden con sists of okra, sweet potatoes, squash, white radishes and tom atoes. He g ^ s out to the garden s at 7 a.m . and works until noon, when the garden ers have to stop watering their plots. He usually leaves in the afternoon and returns to his garden in the evening when it is cooler. The sweltering heat has been the b iggest problem for Hardon this sum m er. ’“With this heat you alw ays have to w ater or else you’ll get nothing,” he said. "T h e only way to get it done is to sta rt do­ ing it," Hardon said, as he picked up his hatchet and continued to drive the stak es which will support his plants. Story and photo by Ralph Barrera Report wants states to dispose of waste The individual states, with federal financial help, should take over disposal of low-level nuclear w aste, a task force of the National Governors Association recom m ended Sunday. "U nlike high-level w aste, which is prim arily a federal responsibility, the disposition of low- level w aste should be largely a state respon­ sib ility ," the report stated. The report went on to say a regional solution should be tried, in which a group of sta te s would determ ine the disposal site s in a certain region. that state s m ust create nuclear w aste site s or face future crises. It added "The T exas Energy and N atural R esources A dm inistrative Council has a subcom ittee that is currently studying the options availab le in T exas, and will m ake recom m endations to TEN RA C about low-level w aste around Sept. 25, said E d g ar D. Bailey, adm in istrator of Radiation Control of the T exas D epartm ent of Health. Bailey believes the funding for the site will be borne by private industry; no tax dollars would be used. Dr. William L. Fish er of the UT Bureau of Econom ic Geology heads the subcom m ittee. ‘ ‘The altern atives to not disposing of the w aste are even w o rse," said Dr. Thom as A. Griffy, chairm an of the UT D epartm ent of Physics For exam ple, the w aste would pile up in hospitals where radiotherapy is done and in private industry, creatin g a dangerous situ a­ tion. G riffy added. P r e se n tly , two p ro p o sa ls a r e b e fo re Congress concerning the w aste problem . The first will require that states that do not produce w aste disposal plans would lose lic e n se s th e ir h o s p ita ls and oth er radiotherapy p rogram s. The second would allow the Departm ent of Energy to pick waste- disposal sites around the country. fo r Only three sites are now in operation — at Barnwell, S.C., Beatty. Nev. and Hanford, Wash The Beatty and Hanford site s are to be closed within four years. Proposed city budget indicates 20% increase By ALISA HAGAN Daily Texan Staff The City Council spent alm ost 13 hours Mon­ day holding the first in a series of workshops on the recently proposed $418.2 million 1980-81 city budget. The proposed budget reflects a 20 percent in crease over last y e a r’s budget. The m arathon workshop began at 9 a.m . with an overview of the 635-page budget presented by Budget D irector Lee Thomson. City depart­ ment heads then explained their proposed budgets and the city m an ag er's budget to coun­ cil m em bers. No action w as taken by the council, a s the workshop w as designed prim arily for depart­ ment heads to ju stify their proposed budget needs. SH O R T LY into the d ep artm en t budget presentations, council m em ber Ron Mullen requested that City M anager Dan Davidson conduct a study on employm ent turnover in city jobs. Mullen recom m ended that the study use a sala ry of $15,000 a s its point of division. If the city offered sala rie s com parable to private business, city em ployees m ay rem ain in job positions longer, Mullen said. The 1980-81 city budget, released Ju ly 31, shows the m ajority of departm ents requesting an in crease in funds. Davidson’s overall budget is $418,238,732 — an increase of $71 million over the 1979-80 operating budget. The proposed budget calls for im plem enting a 6-cents-per-$100 of a s s e s s e d valuation property tax increase. This tax in crease is add­ ed to the city ’s recent com pliance with a state law requiring asse ssm e n t ratios to be adjusted to 100 percent, rather than the form er 75 per­ cent. THIS Y E A R ’S property ap p raisals increased from 20 percent to 45 percent. This jum p, coupled with D avidson’s proposed in­ tax crease, could raise tax bills significantly. Num erous workshops and public hearings, however, will be held prior to finalizing a 1980- 81 budget and council m em bers have said they hope to reduce the proposed budget significant­ ly. Public hearings are scheduled for early Septem ber and the council m ust adopt a 1980- 81 budget by Sept. 27. The city ’s fiscal year begins Oct. 1. Under the new state law percentage in­ crease, the current y e a r’s 96-cents per $100 valuation at 75 percent is equivalent to 72-cents per $100 valuation at 100 percent. However, D avidson is req u estin g 78-cents per $100 asse ssed valuation at a 100 percent a ssessm en t ratio. The F ire D epartm ent proposed a 1980-81 budget of $13,186,772 — an in crease of $1,342,- 118 over the current y e a r’s budget. The depart­ ment requested the increase to upgrade seven pump stations, com pensate for the hike in fuel costs and pay em ployees m ore salary . The Police D epartm ent is asking for a 12 percent in crease in funds, from $18,774,082 to $21,029,978. for the addition of eight officers. Chief Frank Dyson said 11 percent of that 12 percent in crease will go toward m aintaining services. A Bicycle shop that w ants to repair your bicycle no m atter w h a t brand. Jü¿ÍC uC&auj l LH C , OPEN M-F 8-6 SAT 9-1 17th & Guadalupe 472-9724 The W hite Sale AUSTIN'S ONLY UNEN OUTLET STORE Selling N A M E B R A N D Sheets, Towels, Comforters, Bedspreads, Table Cloths, Shower Curtains and Draperies Closeout Imported Beach Towels Assorted Colors and Patterns Made to Sell for I000 O u r Price 5 Towels Famous Maker slightly irregular Com pare At: 7.00 5.00 2.50 Our Price 3.97 2.77 1.77 B A T H H A N D W A S H C L O T H I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I B I BEAUTY IS YO URS with, individualized skin care by Erno Laszlo. No. 5 Jefferson Square Call 452-8846 NEW YORK PIZZA 608 West 24th Street (Formerly Hook *Em Pizza - still the same owners) Try Our Great Calzone Buy Any Large Pizza And Get One Pitcher of Beer For 25c (with this coupon) R e g . $ 2 .5 0 value For speedy take-out call 472-9633 Good through August lf> FOOTGEAR A G R EA T PLACE T O TIE O N E O N .... W hen w e began doing business 4 years ago , w e sold only W e becam e know n fo r Com fort and A fte r repeated requests w e e xp a n d e d and becam e the finest • an^ FOOTGEAR We now se|1 • f . from all o ver the W heth er you need a fo r a w e t duckblind o r a __ V ; ' fo r I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 4 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X "V G O O D COLOR SELECTION a night on the j3§rr| , y o u ’ll find it all at F O O T G E A R • W e re p a ir NORTH I72I-A R«Merck BM . Grand Central Statiee (M«xt to S k o ff*) 450-1219 SOUTH 5742 Mencboca Ckerry Creek Plaza 441-7334 10 to 6 Daily Thursday and Friday until 9 and resole , crep e soles, tennis shoes and sandals. Y ou'll find o u r salespeople a re m ore concerned w ith yo u r satisfaction than m aking J2BEH. So w h en you w a n t the Best in FC f \ o o © c A . So w h e n you w a n t the Best in F O O T W E A R ....... ® F O O T G E A R » s a great place to tie one o n ! : Page A6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5 , 1980 7 Z l s t & Guadalupe WELCOME. STUDENTS! MAGIC MUSHROOM SCHOLTZSKY'S AUDIO CONCEPTS B.C. ROGERS OPTICAL BY GEORGE COLD SPRINGS MINI-MART COMBS & SHEARS CONNIPTION FIT DOBIE SCREENS 1 & 2 MCDONALD'S MINSKY'S PIZZA MOTHER UBU'S MUSIC EXPRESS PLANT-IT EARTH POWER PLAY THE SAMWITCH SHOP SPORTING FEET TASTE ALTERNATIVE THE CLOTHES HORSE TACO FIESTA SCHERTS & MORE UNICORN GALLERY & GIFT SHOP m m w w m m . m m ? **» . h h h h m h h h h I GINNY'S COPYING SERVICE, INC. RECORD TOWN WILLY'S GUITAR PLAYER WELCOME to McDonald’s, on campus 2021 Guadalupe * 2818 Guadalupe (Dobie Mall) & & P D P P ■ WHEN YOU BUYI When you buy 015^ of meal with a cool andcr per customer, per vi Expires 9/30/80 M 2021 Guadalupe 2811 Guadalupe DAE ■ ■SANDWICH ché|, w e’ll top off your >ui»aé. larges iM cDooififl!? suáÉIaé. Limit one coupon present coupon when ordering. ■ Big Mac. Quarter Pounder Quarter Pounder with Cheese. McFeast. Offer good through September 31,1980 One Self Service Spiral Binding with Self Service Copies 44 Dobie Mall Austin 476 917! O U Z D w k— 8 o¿ 01 O 3H yCOt % A LIVING D o b ie o f f e r s s o m e t h in g m o s t s tu d e n ts find in short su p p ly . . . R O O M T h e sp a ce you need to stu dy, to relax, to e n te rta in friend s . . w ith o u t falling all o v e r y o u r ro om m ates. D obie d o esn 't th in k you should h ave to su ffer just to be c lo s e to school. T h a t's w h y w e d o n 't c ra m you into a cu b icle of buitt-ins W e feed you an yth in g but also w o n 't D ob ie fe a tu re s p leasan t surroun d ings, p arkin g , 19 m eals a w e e k , and lots of little ex tras . . . like a p ool, a suana, and a shop p ing m all full of d elig h tfu l sh o p s and e n te rta in m e n t. Plus a s ta ff th a t really cares ab o u t Y O U as a person. A n d all th is living room is right acro ss the street from cam p u s. d elic io u s , ca re fu lly prepared food D ob ie . 21st at G u ad alu p e. 472 8411. p h « to p o n k r a ti WELCOME BACK, STUDENTS! Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ TH E DAILY TEX A N □ Page A 7 Shoemakers to America for more than a hundred years miss capezio JUST 4 GREAT NAMES FOUND AT M O C C A S IN S 9 i ___ fashion BOOTS by: LOWER LEVEL DOBIE MALL lO O H IE M AUL 2lst&Guadalupe « 11 I * I T U ^ ! _L I i* i MASTER TYPIST, INC. T h e P rofessional's Professional LETTER-PERFECT TYPING FOR THE U.T. STUDENT on all T erm Papers, Theses, Dissertations, Professional Reports, Letters, Resumes Located across the Street fro m Campus in the PopularD obie Mall 2021 Guadalupe No. 36 FREE 2-HR. PARKING IN DOBIE GARAGE 472-0293 Q uality that stands above the rest! FREE PARKING with purchase of $2.00 in Dobie Mall ” " C p U P 6 N ................... SAVE $3.00 DISCWASHER SYSTEM Regularly $15.00 WITH COUPON $1 2.00 DOBIE MALL 2021 Guadalupe Austin, TX 78705 (512) 478-7421 WE CASH STUDENT CHECKS! 478-3590 UPPER LEVEL DOBIE MALL Dealers of: Willy’s $ Guild • Ovation • Y am ah a Ibanez • Hogue Handmade G u itars and Mandolins Strings • A ccesso ries • Songbooks BEAR. W IN E & LIQ U O R Í Austin — 476-1574 August is National Sandwich Month Daily Sandwich Specials! " “ " “ • “ “ " . “ “ “ " “ " " “ " " • “ - - — - - — - - — - - — - - « " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - i r I SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY > (0 CO ■o c 504 Congress 4 7 8 -0 8 7 7 U . f l l Dobie M all 4 7 2 -8 0 1 8 Westgate M all 8 9 2 -2 4 6 2 AM «mil ® ■ PIN BALL MACHINES | VIDEO GAMES POOL TA BLES POWER A GAMEROOM ARCADE IN DOBIE MALL Low er Level 10 a .m .-12 midnight Mon. through Sat. PLAY 1 FREE G A M E w /coupon 25‘ value 1 per person per visit Plants P ottery 20% OFF AN Y PLANT PURCHASE Low er Level Dobie M all 21st & Guadalupe D ecorative Accessories 20% OFF A N Y P U N T PURCHASE Open 10 a .m .-9 p.m. M on .-Sat. We have great horse sense... o when it comes to fall fashions Jeanswear for Guys and Gals. THE CLOTHES HORSE Low er Level Dobie Mall AT DOBIE MALL THERE'S SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE! Hook 'em in Style! If you're a spirited SCHERTS w More UT fan, Scherts & More has what you i t e m s w i t h e n o u g h stylish designs to suit a n y p e r s o n a l i t y . I f t o y o u ' r e hook ’em, let Scherts & y o u M o r e Hook'em in style. g o i n g h e l p need to show it. Check out our wide range of s p o r t s w e a r , g l a s s ­ w a r e , a n d n o v e l t y 1 ■' — -------íU--y——— —a Dobie Mall 2021 Guadalupe 477-2652 ... Page A8 □ TH E DAILY TEX A N □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Queen mother saluted *1980 The New York Times LONDON — With the special ex­ uberance that it reserves for its royal oc­ casions, B rita in Monday jubilantly celebrated the 80th birthday of Queen Mother Elizabeth. Military jets streaked across the grey London sky in tribute; 21-gun salutes boomed out from Hyde Park and the Tower of London, and outside Clarence House, her four-storv. 19th century palace, thousands of people pressed close around for a glimpse of her, chanting, “ We want the Queen Mum,’’ and then, when she appeared on the balcony to wave, breaking into “ For She s a Jolly Good Fellow.” “ SH E ALW AYS makes me happy is why I'm here,” explained a woman named Sue Goodman, who spent hours waiting outside the queen mother’s residence Monday, holding a “ Happy Birthday, Queen Mum” lu stily balloon, and cheering “ I remember in the war, when she and the king came to the East End of London after the bombings She spread a lot of good feeling around then, and she’s been doing it ever since ” More than the other members of the royal family, who tend to be austere in public, the queen mother, with a perky cheerfulness and an informal twinkle in her clear blue eyes has “ brought the crown closer to the people,” as The Lon­ don Times said Monday. T H E COUNTRY is full of people who have had experiences with her like that of a young Manchester policeman once guar­ ding one of her parade routes. Peering into the queen mother’s car, he noticed that she seemed to be chewing on something, she noticed him noticing, and the next thing he knew, she tossed him a caramel. I The 4 basic steps to walking in comfort Step 1. Wear the super-comrortable Vasque Walking Shoe Step 2. Put your right foot forward Step 3. Put your left foot forward Step 4. Et cetera. WALKING SHOES FOR MEN & WOMEN Viva Vasque! RED WING SHOE STORE t&e M ow riaii* b e o ti 6103 Hwy. 290 East (IH 35 at 290) _ 454-929Q___ CBS newsman Dan Rather interviews Afghan rebel The Afghan newspaper Hakikate Iniklabe Saur Monday said Dan Rather encouraged a group of Afghan rebels to stone and behead three workers captured by rebels during a village raid, Rather denied the allegations, saying ‘This is completely untrue and without foundation from first letter to last period. It is pure un- adulterated fantasy.’ UPI Telephoto Eckhardt to probe chemical plants By MELISSA WARD Daily Texan Staff More than 750 million tons of chemical waste have been dumped by U.S. chemical companies since 1950, with the highest concentration - 319 dumping sites — in Texas, ac­ cording to a congressional survey. Because of the state’s high con­ c e n tra tio n of p e tro c h e m ic a l refineries and recent studies that in­ dicate high incidences of brain cancer at two of these plants. Rep Bob Eckhardt, D-Texas, chairman of the commerce subcommittee on investigations, has oversight and begun an investigation of South Tex­ as plants. The investigation is going in two d i r e c t i o n s , D a v i d N e l s o n , Eckhardt’s staff investigator, said Monday. “ The congressional sub­ committee is looking to see if the laws are sufficient to handle “health threats,” he said. In addition, the Occupational Safety and Health Ad- m i n i s t r a t i o n c h e c k i n g petrochemical plant employment records for high incidences of cancer victims. is Eckhardt met Friday with OSHA scientists to discuss the possibility of a nationwide investigation. “ Although the problem has been identified in Texas, it is also of national concern. It not only affects workers in the petrochemical in­ dustry over the entire country, but also may affect residents of the communities surrounding scores of chemical plants,” Eckhardt said. An initial study showed 25 brain cancer cases at the Dow Chemical plant in Freeport and 18 cases at Union Carbide in Texas City. “Nobody would say that was epidemic,” Nelson said, adding he thought it was cause for investiga­ tion He said there were 40,000 employees at Dow when the study was conducted Nel son sai d one questi on Eckhardt’s staff is pursuing is whether the national health in­ stitutions. especially the National Cancer Society, are putting enough resources into prevention of cancer that could result from exposure to certain chemicals at the sites. Another question. Nelson said, is whether access to Social Security records is sufficient. The records are used to determine where and how long cancer victims worked, Nelson said. Eckhardt plans to introduce legislation that would make these records more accessible, Christine Moore, Eckhardt’s press secretary, said Monday. Union Carbide has investigators’ complied with the requests but Dow has not, Moore said. Another provision Eckhardt is pursuing would not only make com­ panies “ eternally responsible” for chemical waste but also permit in­ dividuals to sue for damages for any injury caused by waste generated after Jan. 1, 1980, Moore said. As a result of a recent court rul­ ing, exposure to a specific chemical at a determined level of risk must be demonstrated before industries can be regulated by the govern­ ment, Nelson said. Because it may be impossible to determine the specific chemicals threatening health, Eckhardt is concerned that this could leave workers un­ protected, Moore said. Complete all your fall looks at The Ultimate Step. We have the best selection of dance class outfits around. Shop e a rly —' beat the rush. Capezio’s been dancing since 1887. FAMOLARE^ W elcome to UT! Drop by and get acquainted! Dress- Sport—Casual Shoes. Dancewear, too. v i s a and M a s te r C h a r g e accepted. 2348 Guadalupe Also Karavel stores at 5517 Burnet, Northcross Mall, and Westgate Mall. Zimbabwe S A L IS B U R Y , Zimbabwe (U P I) — Chanting “ viva, viva and dancing in the streets. 20,000 peo­ ple Monday welcomed Mozambique's President Samora Machel. the first head of state to visit Zimbabwe and the man who supported the nation’s black guerrillas in their prolonged struggle for in­ dependence. Police tried without success to restrain the crowds reaching out to touch the former rebel who fought against Portuguese colonialism and whose support of Prim e Minister Robert Mugabe’s guerrillas brought devastation to Mozambique. He was the first head of state to visit Zimbabwe since it gained independence from Britain in April. Some 20,000 dancing Zimbabweans, including 15,000 school children, poured into the streets chanting “ viva, v iv a !” and waving small Mozam­ bican flags. Wounded war veterans, including am­ putees using crutches, joined the dancing throng. Mozambique year guerrilla war. Crowds pressed in on Machel from the time he landed at Salisbury Airport for his five-day state visit to a ceremony where he snipped a ribbon and formally opened a boulevard renamed in his honor. His airliner was escorted from the countries' common border by four Zimbabwean Air Force Hawker Hunter jet fighter bombers, the same air­ craft piloted by the same whites who pounded Mozam bique in attacks against M ugabe’s guerrillas The trim, bearded 46-year-old Machel stood briefly at the top of the aircraft ramp and with a clenched fist, saluted the 5,000 Zimbabweans waiting on the runway. As he took his first step on Zimbabwean soil, he was hugged by the titular chief of the 3-month-old state, President Canaan Banana, and then by Mugabe, whom he convinced to attend the London talks that last winter brought an end to the seven- A battery of 25-pound cannons boomed a 21-gun salute to the cheers of the crowd followed by six jets screaming low over the field in diamond for­ mation. Except for school children, few whites joined in the festivities. One white woman at the airport hissed between clenched teeth, “ I ’m full of hate.” Once in Salisbury, well-wishers blocked the streets and stood on car tops, jamming against the windows of the visitor’s Rolls Royce. The horse- mounted police escort struggled to stay in forma­ tion. Machel changed from his pinstripe double- breasted blue suit to neatly-pressed green army fatigues when he arrived at the presidential guest house that he and his wife will occupy during their visit. China tries to dismantle Mao legend in hopes of avoiding personality cult P E K IN G (U P I) — Piece by piece, China dismantled the legend of Mao Tse-tung Monday, but one huge statue of the late chairman resisted repeated efforts to consign it to the junkyard. Students at one campus in Peking have been trying for days to pull down and dynamite a concrete statue of Mao, but have not been successful. The students, with the approval of school authorities, first lassoed the to w e rin g fig u re of the G re a t Helmsman and tried to physically haul it down. When that failed, they dynamited it with a small charge and later used more dynamite but only succeeded in blowing off one of Mao’s kneecaps and parts of his head. Student sources said even the add­ ed push from a tractor failed to dis­ lodge the former chairman but they were still seeking new methods to to p p le the f ig u r e of a m an worshipped by a quarter of the world’s population as a demi-god for several decades. W orkm en a rm e d w ith blow torches and a huge crane were successful on other Mao portraits. China has admitted it is now ac­ tiv e ly tryin g to erase the all- p e r v a s i v e p r e s e n c e of M a o throughout the country — re­ adjusting his legend back to a mere mortal who made mistakes. In the past, the pictures of Chair­ man Mao have been on too many public places in China,” a Foreign Ministry spokesman said in announ­ cing the new government policy for the first time. “ This has been harmful to the political atmosphere in China,” he said and added the government would give careful consideration in the future to any other public por­ traits of leaders in order to avoid a repetition of the personality cult that sprang up around Mao. Workmen clambering up ladders first battered the huge 60-foot high slogan “ Without The Peoples Army, The People Have Nothing” then at­ tacked it with blow torches and finally dismantled it with a crane. At one time, there were probably more portraits and photographs of Mao than of any other world figure. Every public building, business and home throughout China had a por­ trait of the man. Tuesday, August 5. 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page A9 INTERMEDIATE ALGEBRA FOR U.T. STUDENTS A Cooperative Program O f U.T. Mathematics D epartm ent and Austin C om m unity College Recommended For: (1) Any incoming U.T. student with College Board Achievem ent Test score below 400. (2) Any other U.T. student who reauires a review of the content of second- year high school algebra. Location of Class: Times of Class: U.T. Campus R L M Building (U .T . Math Building) (1) Monday and Wednesday (2) Monday and Wednesday (3) Tuesday and Thursday ( 4 ) Tuesday and Thursday 6:00-7:30 p.m. 7:45-9:15 p.m. 6:00-7:30 p.m. 7:45-9:15 p.m. (9/3/80-12/10/80) (9/3/80-12/10/80) (9/2/80-12/10/80) (9/2/80-12/10/80) Cost of Class: Tuition — $39.00 5.00 Registration — Refund: M ake checks payable to Austin Com m unity College T O T A L — $44.00 B y a special provision of state law, you m ay be eligible for a partial tuition refund because of your enrollment in two state colleges. Directions on how to apply for such a refund (if you are eligible) will be explained at R eg istra­ tion. H ow To Register: Come to U.T. Mathem atics Office, R L M 8.100, between 8:30 and 11:30 a.m. F rid a y, August 29. Lim ited space available. For Further Inform ation, Contact: Dr. Jam es W . Daniel, C h airm an D e p a rtm e n t of M athem atics University of Texas a t Austin 1 -5 1 2 -4 7 1 -3 3 6 1 Dr. Stephen Rodi, Division Chairperson M ath em atics and Physical Sciences Austin C om m unity College - Rio G ran d e Cam pus 1 -5 1 2 -4 7 6 -6 3 8 1 Ext. 39 ( I f space is still a v a ila b le , students m ay also register a t the Austin C om m unity College la te registration Septem ber 3 a n d 4, basem ent of Austin M unicipal A u d ito riu m .) C t ) \ ^ i t \ce l ° ' '7» c o '1: \0 M ® p\ece ^ o P ® p ^ c - \c>o. \KieO' O'' " ,. a \ o e © o t A O .O ° Ir-o“ ° . c- V*-' S. ’ vn ON 0<°*cv, U©d ' A TT'e O- p v> ', é © 98 Jestesmy twoim zródtem finansowym PIo u s s o m m e s v o tre p e s s o u n € lit o i k i n L L o o k in g f o r the best deal? ^ 1o many of our customers, this country is the foreign country’. To them,our International Depart­ ment serv es as their financial ambassa­ dor in Austin. Under the guidance of Vlenahem Beniflah and Joe Hernandez, the International Department is staffed with professionals fluent in many lang­ uages Working with this department, the understanding of local customs is simplified and the transition into a new culture is made much smoother. cashing of foreign checks, international wire transfers, buying and selling of most foreign currency, international drafts, foreign travelers’ checks, checking and savings accounts, the MPACT automatic teller machine, and safety deposit boxes for important papers and valuables. Customers traveling to or conducting business in another country will also find us a capable ally in complementing and implementing plans. Now, in any language, American Bank Our many and varied serv ices include: is your financial resource. AMERICAN BANK Member Mercantile Texis Corporation Equal Opportunity Employer/Member FDIC/ 477-6581 W h y n o t get it o n sale! Selected summer stock up to 80% off a t O n ce M o re With F e e lin g 1 7 0 0 S a n A n t o n i o N*‘* Hours 11-6 exerp t Sun «5L Tues vrsjr y Afghan military adviser shot down in Kabul N EW D E L H I, India (U P I) - A Soviet ad­ viser, said to be the mastermind behind Rus­ sian infiltration of Afghan rebel groups, was gunned down and an Afghan official was wounded in separate attacks in Kabul, reports from Afghanistan said Monday. State-controlled Radio Kabul admitted the Afghan reg im e was plagued by rebels cutting main highways and staging hit-and-run raids on convoys. In Pakistan, former Afghan officials, in­ cluding ex-Prim e M in ister Mohammad Yousuf, are reportedly gathering to form a government in exile “ with people who have the capacity and capabilty to rule the country,” an Afghan source said. “THIS WILL be a government-in-exile which will have prestige among the Afghan public,” the source said, adding that “ Dr. Yousuf w ill be the leader unless the king joins, which is possible. King Shah lives in self-exile in Rome. The Soviet adviser was gunned down last Tuesday in Kabul’s Karet Char suburb, an Afghan courier from the capital said. The Russian obviously was a selected target because of his work, a traveler said, confir­ ming the report. An Afghan Information and Culture Ministry senior adviser, Akram Osman, also was shot and wounded by unknown assailants as he climbed out of his car in Kabul and was hospitalized, a Western diplomat said. OSMAN IS a well-known member of Afghan President Babrak Karm al’s Parchamite Pa r­ ty, the courier said, but it was not immediately known whether the assassination attempt was by Moslem rebels or by rival Khalq Party “ hit­ men.” Though the Parchamites and Khalqs run Afghanistan under the Krem lin’s thumb, the rival parties engage in an average of 10 nightly assassinations of each other’s supporters in an effort to rule the nation alone. Radio K abul said “ B an d its, foreign mercenaries and the servants of America and China cut the main road through Parwan province near Byan Olya village and stopped trucks and buses, intending to rob them. THE BROADCAST said two workers and three rebels died when police were called in and a firefight broke out. In the northern Balkh province, rebels recently cut the route between Sholgara District and Puli Imam Bukri near the Soviet border and blocked six buses, but two rebels were captured when police arrived, the radio said. A Western diplomat said the Soviets have ringed Kabul with enough heavy weaponry to fend off an armored attack on the capital. He said Soviet “ tanks and other armor are still in positions in and outside’’ Kabul, adding “ The type and positioning of artillery pieces around Kabul indicate defensive precautions against arm or.” The report indicates Soviet occupation forces may be jittery because of recent mutinies by Afghan troops. The Russians recently crushed one such mutiny by two Afghan army units stationed just outside the capital, the diplomat said. C a m p u s N e w s ín B ríeí Student Volunteer Services seeking helper for charity Student Volunteer Services to do needs s o m e o n e statistical work and write for an Austin charitable organiza­ tion. For information, call 471- 3065 or stop by Union Building 4.302. A N N O U N C EM EN T S A FRICAN S T U D IE S C EN T ER will show the film "South Africa: The Nuclear File" at 8 p.m Tuesday in Jester Center A315A. Interested persons are welcome. UT T EN N IS C L U B will sponsor a tennis tour­ nament Friday through Sunday Events are men's and women's singles and con­ solations For information, contact the Of­ fice of Ftecreational Sports by Tuesday. TEXA 8 UNION R EC R EA T IO N C EN T ER will feature bowling for 25 cents a game per person from 10:30 p.m. to midnight Tues­ day. M EET IN G S ST U D EN T S FOR IN N ER R EA LIT Y will meet to discuss programs and activities at 7 in Sutton Hall 101. p.m . Tuesday UT SA ILIN G C L U B will meet at 8 p m Wednesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 7 104 UT INTERN ATIO N AL FO LK D A N C ER S will meet to teach recreational folk dancing at 8 p m . Tuesday in Goldsmith Hall 105. U N IV ER SIT Y KI-AIKIDO C L U B will meet to practice mind-body coordination and aikido from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Tuesday in B ellm ont Hall 966 Beginners are welcome. M E D IE V A L S O C IE T Y FO R C R E A T IV E ANA CHRO NISM will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday In Education Building 354. I I I f 7 :3 0 a . m .-6 p.m . 453-5352 { MR. OIL 4721 Airport Blvd. 10 m in. Oil, Lube, Filter reg. 1495 A ll UT S tu d e n ts $ 2 . 0 0 D is c o u n t w ith this coupon C o m p le te s a fe ty check * t ¡ P e n n . 2 0 w 40 a n d 30 n m M n m m c « m n f n m g g p e g g n f l O th e r oils a v a ila b le ¡ THOMAS ESPARZA. ATTORNEY IMMIGRATION CONSULTANT IMMEDIATE RELATIVE PETITIONS • • ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS • LABOR CERTIFICATION • VISITORS' PERMITS no charge for initial consultation w ith your student ID 512/441-0062 1001 W . M a ry EGG ROLL STAND 2 7 1 7 G uadalup e 4 7 8 -0 3 5 4 N o w O p e n From 1 1 a .m . To 11 p.m . D aily E x cellen t C h in e s e F on d It P rice s E v e r y o n e Can i f f o r d Partial M enu V«9¡« E n Roll Pari Em Shrimp E99 Kofi Chichón Friod Rico Swoot A Sour Pori Mo Koo Goi Pon Cashaw Chkhon Ping Chichón Chop Swoy ....................... M ' .......................... AS' ..................... 75' .............. $1.95 ............... $2.75 .................... $7.75 ............ $2.75 .................. $2.75 ....................... $2.95 Poppor Stoah Shrimp w/Mushroom .............. $2.35 2 7th St. U.T. Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE D A ILY TEXA N □ Page A11 ■ austirrbaiiet theatre Fall classes begin Sept. 2nd Registration in progress S tan ley H all, A rtistic D irector B arbara Carson, School D irector * A com prehensive training program for the serious ballet student * Graded classes for children and adults PRE-BA LLET * BEGINNING INTERM EDIATE * A D VAN CED PO IN TE * JA ZZ * EXERCISE 717 West 23rd Street 4 7 8 -9 9 5 7 j HI, PARENTS! Cut Out and Save Me | For t h a t Special S tu d e n t Occasion ■ ■ W e deliver to the U.T. area a 6 " X 16" I decorated w h ite cake that serves 24 people | for $15.00. Send check or m oney order to: I Mrs. Johnson's Bakery | 1303 W . Koenig Lane Austin, Texas 78756 512-453-7271 S tu d e n t's N a m e ______________________________________________ | A ddress ______________________________________________________ | Room N o. or A p t. No. ______________________________________ | D elivery D ate _________________________________________________ H Phone N o ____________________________________________________ | N a m e or N ic k n a m e _________________________________________ (w ith H a p p y B irth d a y ) From (yo u r n a m e ) Storewide Sale 50-75% off original price of Sportswear & Shoes SELECT GROUP OF SHOES 2 PAIRS FOR MO FIND YOUR LUCKY SIZE! Sw ing into fall and look at our new selections 2 5 1 4 G uadalup e Open 9:‘30-6 M onday-Saturday 478-5077 Austin Community College INSTRUCTIONAL TELEVISION FOR COLLEGE-CREDIT COURSES * cappuccino Intro d u ctio n to Business ( B M G 1013, section 1110) is a general survey of the entire field of business and m anagem ent in the free enterprise system. The concepts of business and m anagem ent functions, organizational considerations, and decision making processes are examined. The course also explores areas of specialization in the business world. (G O V 2613, section 3486) surveys the institutions and U n ite d State s G o v e rn m e n t processes of the federal government and the issues facing a representative dem ocracy in the contem porary world. Special emphasis is placed on the U.S. Constitution. This course satisfies partial fulfillm ent of the legislative requirem ent. for teacher certification by the State of Texas. INTRODUCTION TO BUSINESS UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT l . r s \ m i > ( :a f,- 1 1111 S a n \ n t o n in ♦♦ ♦ | ? f m ♦ 2 b is c u it s o r t o a s t LAZY DAISY RESTAURANT offers the following breakfast specials Monday through Friday 5 a.m .-11 a.m. ¿ ♦ EARLY BIRD SPECIALS ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 1.75 2.2 5 2 8 0 1 G u a d a l u p e i 2 8 t h A G u a d a l u p e ) ♦ C h o ic e o f h o t h o m e m a d e 1.55 1.35 s w e e t r o ll o r 1 b r e a k f a s t ♦ w i t h 2 p ie c e s b a c o n ( C o n g r e s s A L iv e O a k ) t a c o s e r v e d w c o f f e e .25 .95 .95 c r e a m g r a v y c o f f e e w i t h b a k e d p o t a t o 2 2 0 1 C u l l e n A v e or s a u s a g e j e lly , | ( | 3 ♦ C h ic k e n Frie d S te a k 11 a m -9 3 0 p m . 7 D o y » S e r v e d W ith S a la d fre n c h fríe » & roil* LOCATIONS: ♦ 2 e g g s a n y s t y le h a s h b r o w n s , t o a s t o r b is c u it s , c r e a m g r a v y o n r e q u e s t ♦ w i t h 2 p ie c e s o f b a c o n o r s a u s a g e O c o f f e e s e r v e d w i t h a n y b r e a k f a s t PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Are you considering Abortion? Confidential ee P re g n a n c y Testing & R e ferra l: For information call PROBLEM PREGNANCY of AUSTIN (512) 474-9930 600 W . 28th, No. 101 Austin, Texas 78705 COSMOS C O S M O S is a new thirteen-part television series that will be broadcast on K L R U - T V for the first tim e this fall. A spectacular voyage through space and time, the series ex­ plores our past, present and future relationships with the universe. COSM OS program s were filmed at 40 locations in over a dozen different countries and incor­ porate more than 70 special effects sequences, thereby enabling the viewer to “ t r a v e l" with host Carl Sagan from inside the human brain to far-away galaxies CO SM O S follows in the tradition of such highly acclaim ed public television series as T H E A S C E N T O F M A N and T H E A G E O F U N C E R T A IN T Y . The topics of CO SM O S programs range from astronomy and cosmology to com­ p a ra tiv e religions and biology. In te rste lla r com m unication and E g y p tia n hieroglyphics are explored, as are the Voyager missions in our solar system and the expeditions of the Dutch in the 17th century, Hindu mythology, Ionian science and Einsteinian physics. C O SM O S is an interdisciplinary study of science, often from a humanistic perspec­ tive. It is not an introductory course in astronomy or physics. The course has been designed for all students and does not require any prerequisites. It is being offered as Ph ysical Science 1613, Section 6805. ACC Telecourses B ro a d c a s t hours: Am erican Governm ent and Introduction to Business will be broadcast on Capital Cable Co. Channel 10 at various times in the mornings, after­ noons, evenings and weekends. COSM OS and C O N N E C T IO N S will be broadcast over K L R U - T V Channel 18. E a c h program in both series will be shown twice during the week. O n c am p u s v ie w in g : Students who do not subscribe to cable television or who miss a program m ay view any of the programs in the A.C.C. Learning Resource Centers at Ridgeview, Rio Grande, Crockett or Reagan during regular college hours. Textbooks: E a c h course requires students to use a textbook that provides additional m aterial and a study guide that integrates the m aterial from the television broad­ casts and the textbook. C lass sylla b u s: A class syllabus for each course w ill be availab le at registration or m ay be obtained by mailing the telecourse information coupon on this page to A C C O rie n ta tio n m e e tin g : All students enrolled in A.C.C. telecourses m ust attend a one- hour orientation meeting during the first week of classes for each telecourse Orienta­ tion meetings will be offered at various times on different A.C.C. campuses. Check the appropriate class syllabus for times and locations. Self-p aced : Telecourses (except for C O SM O S) may be taken self-paced. However, students must m aintain a passing grade level throughout the semester Check the class syllabus for more information. M ail-in reg istratio n : Students who will be enrolling only in telecourses may register by m ail. Complete and return the coupon on this page. The appropriate registration forms will be mailed to you. All other students must register for telecourses at M unicipal Auditorium August 26-29. Tuition a n d fees are the same as for other A.C.C. courses S13 per credit hour for Texas residents. (E a c h is a three-credit course, so tuition is $39 for Texas residents.) Telecourses require no special fees; however, all new students to A.C.C. must pay a one-time $5 application fee and a $1 I D. card fee The telecourses are approved for veterans' educational benefits. Any student who wishes to receive V A benefits must meet the V.A. requirem ent that the course be in her or his approved degree plan and other eligibility requirem ents of the Veterans Administration. For more information, call Ron Brey, 476-6381, Ext. 155. CONNECTIONS C onnections: Technology a n d C h a n g e , also on K L R U - T V , examines the nature of technological development by exploring its historical context and relation to contem­ porary problems. Connections shows how seemingly unrelated events and ideas are in fact interrelated and have cum ulatively produced key scientific discoveries. Instead of the usual concept of history as a linear progression, the series depicts our technologic development as the result of accidental discoveries, the prevailing philosophies of the era and often luck. The series also discusses the controversies sur­ rounding technology, its effects on society, the conditions of technological develop­ ment and the sources of technological change. C onnections is offered as Ph ysical Science 1643, Science and Contem porary Social Problems, Section 6815. TELECOURSE INFORMATION COUPON Please send me information about the F a ll 1980 telecourse(s) in: □ Introduction to Business □ U.S. Governm ent □ COSM OS □ Connections Name (last, first, middle) M ailing address City, state and Z IP code L Home phone Business phone If these are theONLY ACC college-credit courses you will be taking, check here if you would like to receive mail-in registration inform ation: _____________ Have you ever been enrolled in college-credit courses at A C C ? □ Yes □ No M A IL T H IS C O U PO N TO M r. Ron Brey, Ridgeview Campus, Austin Com­ munity College, P.O. Box 2285, Austin, T X 78768 T H IS IS NOT A P R E R E G IS T R A T IO N C O U PO N DO NOT S E N D M O N E Y Last day to register by m ail: August 20 •University of Texas students contemplating concurren4 enrollment should check with their UT academ ic deans about transferability of credits ¡ \ ! r ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ SPORTS NEWS LIKE NEVER REFORE. NOW IN AUSTIN CAPITAL CARLE CH. 12 FINANCIAL NEWS LIKE NEVER REFORE. NOW IN AUSTIN CAPITAL CARLE CH. 12. WORLD NEWS FROM TURNER RROADCASTING LIKE NEVER REFORE. CAPITAL CARLE CH. 12. SIM GMMES TO AHSIM. a M R S OF NEWS FOR CAPITAL CABtf TV HONES. And. Austin, there's more to come. P’or the past 17 years Capital Cable has demonstrated to local TV viewers technical capability, financial commitment and dedica­ tion to prompt extension of service. Capital Cable has repeatedly upgraded its plant—to meet proven state-of-the-art advancements and in expanding channel capacity. We've added many new services. Yet there’s never been any increase in our basic $4.95 monthly service charge. Early in 1981, we will complete the updating that will expand our system to 37 channels. OPTIONS. AND MORE OPTIONS. Upon approval of the Austin City Council, Capital Cable plans to make a three-tiered program schedule available to subscribers. The S3.95 Package. For $1 a month less than subscribers currently pay, an 11-channel program schedule. It will include all the Austin channels, a new color weather radar channel, public access channel ACTV, Cable Satellite Public Affairs Network (coverage of congress), Spanish International Network, Black Entertainment Television and new local government and cultural access channels. Option: Home Box Office (14-16 monthly premier movies ). The $4.95 Package. Ten more channels for the current charge. All the programs in the $3.95 Package, plus CNN—Ted Turner’s new Cable News Network—and the Satellite Program Network. And KTVT (11-Fort Worth), KWTX (10-Waco), KCEN (6-Temple), and three San Antonio channels (4, 5, 12). Option: Home Box Office. Plus two new options: Showtime Plus Sports (15 monthly premier movies and live coverage of SWC sports) and Galavision (premium Spanish-language movies, action series and soap operas). The $6.95 Package. Wow! 14 more channels than the $4.95 Package—for only $2 a month more. Programs include everything listed for .95 and $4.95, plus live Madison Square Garden Events, live Thursday Night Baseball (and Basketball), Callipoe (quality children’s programs), Nickelodeon (children’s entertain­ ment), ESPN (24-hour spoils network) and Modern Satellite Network (entertainment and consumer shows). And Christian Broadcasting Network, National Christian Network, Amer­ ican Educational TV Network and UPI News. Three options: Home Box Office, Show­ time Plus Sports, Galavision. AND STILL MORE. A remarkable new system called 55/Plus was recently announced by an Irving, Texas, cable TV equipment manufacturer. It is still under development, with projected delivery in mid- 1981. It could allow expansion of up to 74 channels with a “piggy-back” home terminal. If this technology proves feasible, Capital Cable Company will provide these terminals — or comparable models— as additional options. For several years, Capital Cable has been providing closed circuit cable TV service at schools selected by AISD. In 1981 a special two-channel educational network with two- way feeds from the AISD and Region 13 administrative centers will be made available for school use—at no charge to the District or the Region. In 1983 the company plans to completely rebuild most of its plant, including cable, amplifiers, passives and power supplies. This will give the entire operation two-way capa­ bility. It can lead—for additional fees—to home fire and intrusion security alarms, medi- cal emergency call services, and numerous other innovative services as new technology makes them available. WHY ARE WE TELLING YOU THIS? Frankly, we want you to know what we're planning. That w e’re oriented to giving our subscribers lots of news and entertainment for very reasonable fees. And that, with the approval of the Austin City Council, you can expect more from Capital Cable in the years to come. Capital Cable Company 1138 East 51st Street Austin, Texas 78723 459-3366 If y o u ’ re r e a d y to s e e w h a t y o u v e b e e n m i s s i n g on C a p i t a l C a b l e , call o r m a i l t his c o u p o n . W e ’ ll c o n t a c t y o u to a r r a n g e i n s t a l l a t i o n . S t r e e t A d d r e s s N a m e City A p t . Z I P H o m e P h o n e O f f i c e P h o n e Sports Page B1 Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN Stroke puzzles doctors pitching a rm . HOUSTON (U P I) — A te a m of d o c­ to rs Monday said the blood clo t th at felled Houston A stros p itch e r J R. R ich ard cu t off the flow of blood to the right side of his brain for a s m any a s four hours but said it still w as too e a rly to know if he su ffered p e rm a n e n t d am age. “ I would say th at this w as a m a jo r s tro k e ,' said team physician H arold B re lsfo rd , one of th ree d o cto rs p a r­ ticip atin g in an A strod om e new s co n ­ fe re n c e to exp lain R ic h a rd 's condition and tre a tm e n t. The 6-8 a ll-s ta r p itch e r collap sed dur­ ing a light w orkout a t the A strod om e la st W ednesday, four days a fte r his re le a s e fro m M ethodist H ospital w h ere he had undergone e x te n siv e te s ts to d eterm in e the ca u se of fatig u e in his D octo rs who e xam in ed him for th ree days then said he had a c irc u la to r y problem in his right a rm and shoulder that did not req u ire su rg ery . They said he could resu m e w orkouts but p ro bab ly would be lim ited in the nu m ber of in­ nings he could work in e a ch g a m e for the re st of the season But 10 m inutes into his fir s t w orkout, R ich ard . 30, collap sed and nine hours la te r underw ent a life-sav in g o p eration that rem oved the bloodclot w hich d oc­ tors now say did not develop until a fte r his Ju ly 26 re le a s e from the h o sp ital. T h e d o c to rs a n sw e re d re p e a te d questions Monday about why R ich a rd was allow ed to p ra c tic e so soon a fte r his re le a se . “ D espite finding that (th e in itia l c i r ­ cu latory» b lock ag e I don t know of any m e d i c a l t h a t w a s t r e a t m e n t n e c e s s a r y , ” s a id D r . C h a r l e s M cC ollum , a v a scu la r ca rd io lo g is t and the d octo r who led the su rg ica l te a m . Asked to e v alu te R ic h a r d ’s co n d ition , M cCollum said, “ he still h as m a rk e d w eakness ... it m ay be tra n sie n t o r it m ay be p erm an en t. He has show n im ­ provem ent of m o tor fu n c tio n .” D o cto rs have said s in ce the s u rg e ry that R ic h a rd ’s left a rm and leg s u f­ fered p a rtia l p a ra ly sis. E a r lie r th ey had said they exp ected to know by M on­ day night w h eth er the w eak n ess w as tem p o rary . It s d ifficu lt to e v a lu a te h is c o n ­ dition. B re lsfo rd said “ He s e e m s to be m aking im provem ent e v e ry d a y .” U.S. tracksters seek revenge e v e n ts and r a c e s . fo u r w o m e n 's legendary' H enry Rono. World Cup w inner in 1979. cham pion. R O M E (U P I) — A squad of 85 A m erica n a th le te s will be seek in g th e ir post-O lym pic reven g e fo r the G a m e s they w ere fo rced to m iss a t a one- day tra c k m eet Tuesday a t R o m e ’s O lym pic Stadium . The A m erican s, who w ere ordered to b oy cott the ju s t- com p leted M oscow O lym pics b ecau se of the Sov iet invasion of A fghanistan, w ill be c o m ­ p e tin g w ith a t le a s t e ig h t m e m b ers of the Sov iet G a m e s contingent. The R o m e “ Golden G a la ” is p art of a s e r ie s of E uropean m e e t s , s c h e d u le d to g iv e fro m b o y c o ttin g a t h l e t e s nations the ch a n ce to cla sh with so m e of the s ta rs of the 1980 G a m e s. In te rm e d ia te hu rd ler Edw in s p r i n t e r H a r v e y M o s e s , G la n c e and h ig h ju m p e r Dwight Sto n es will lead the A m erican contingent. O th e r O ly m p ic b o y c o t t nations planning to co m p ete a re W est G erm an y , K enya, Ja p a n and Canada. Italy , a s u r p r is e O ly m p ic s u c c e s s with 15 m ed als — eig h t of them gold — w ill also field a strong te am for the 16 m e n ’s I t a l i a n 2 0 0 - m e t e r g o ld m e d a list P ie tr o M ennea w ill fa c e a tough field a s he ra c e s a g a i n s t A m e r ic a n t h r e a t s G l a n c e , H o u sto n M c T e a r , Stan Floyd and J im M ollard. w h i c h K e n y a , a l s o boycotted M oscow , w ill be rep resen ted by J a m e s M aina the the 800 m e te rs and in The 400 m e te rs shapes up as the highlight of the m eet. Soviet gold m ed a list V iktor M arkin, who won the event in M oscow with a tim e of 44 60 second s, te s ts his legs again st A m erica n s W illiam M ullins, W a lte r M cC oy , and W illie Sm ith , a ll of whom will be hoping to knock off the Soviet In the p ole v a u lt, w o rld r e c o r d h o ld e r W T a d y sla w K osakiew icz, who sa ile d to a height of 18 fe e t, 11 in ch es in Moscow to c la im th e O ly m ­ pic gold, w ill be th re a te n e d by a in ­ t r io of F r e n c h m e n , cluding fo rm e r world re co rd h o ld e r P h ilip p e H p u v io n . A m erican s B illy O lsen and Dan R ip ley a r e a lso sch ed u led to co m p ete. Wills takes over Seattle post A N A H EIM , C alif. (U P I) — The S e a ttle M a rin e rs, in th e m id st of a nine-g am e losing s tre a k and holding the second w orst reco rd in the m a jo r leag u es. M onday fired M an ag er D a rre ll rep laced him w ith fo rm e r b a se ste a lin g g re a t M aury W ills. Jo h n son and The ann o u n cem en t w as m ad e b efo re the th e C a lifo r n ia M a r in e r s ’ g a m e a g a in s t Angels. Jo hnson, 52, the only m a n a g e r in the 3 ^2- y e a r h istory of the M a rin e rs, w as n otified of his d ism issal by D aniel O B rie n , p resid en t and c h ie f e x e cu tiv e o ffic e r of th e club. Johnson led S e a ttle to a s ix th -p la c e fin ish in the A m erica n L eag u e W est in h is fir s t sea so n but this y e a r the te a m has won ju s t 39 of 104 th e tim e of g a m e s . At fir in g , th e th e M arin ers w ere ju s t two p e rc e n ta g e points ahead of la st-p la ce C alifo rn ia in the AL W est. O 'B rien , who took ov er a s th e c lu b ’s c h ie f exe cu tiv e in Ja n u a ry , 1979, flew to A n aheim Monday to m a k e the m a n a g e ria l sw itch . L a te la st week he a ll but gave Jo h n so n his w alking papers when he said . “ No one c a n sa y we didn't go the la s t m ile with D a r r e ll.” W ills, the 47-year-old fo rm e r L os A n geles Dodger sp e ed ste r who sto le 586 b a s e s during his 14-year c a r e e r , is the fa th e r of T e x a s R a n g e rs second b a se m a n B um p W ills. He b eco m es the third b lack m a n a g e r in m a jo r league h isto ry , follow ing F ra n k R ob in so n , who piloted th e C leveland Indians fro m 1975 until 1977, and L a rry D oby, who m an ag ed the Chicago W hite Sox in 1978. Everything you need to knew about Renting Furniture in Austin* UPI Telephoto Billy Sims and Coach Monte Clark at Lions camp. Lawless quits; Dickey still unsigned By United Press International TH O USA N D O AKS, C alif. — F iv e -y e a r v e te ra n Burton th e D a lla s Cow boys’ only exp e rien ced re s e r v e L a w less, guard, is re tirin g b e ca u se he has no z est fo r fo otb all. L aw less, 26, said he w ill work fo r F la tt S ta tio n e rs , an o f­ fic e and school supplies firm in M exia, T e x a s , n e a r his 45- a c r e ran ch in G ro esb eck . He ev en tu ally hopes to ra is e h orses. “ T h e Cowboys have been good to m e ,’’ he said. “ I didn’t w ant to give th em ju s t a half-w ay e ffo rt. I t ’s b est to g et out h ealth y and happy. “ I a lm o s t le ft a w eek ago, but m y b e st frien d on the te am (H andy H ughes) talk ed m e into stay in g this long. B u t I re m e m b e r on the fir s t p ra c tic e of tw o-a-days I asked m y self the q u estion, ‘W hat am I doing h e r e ? ” ’ L a w less did te ll C oach Tom L and ry th a t he would co m e b ack and play if the te a m ’s sta rtin g guards w ere inju red . Land ry said wide r e c e iv e r D rew P e a rs o n would not play fo r th ree w eeks b eca u se of a h airlin e fr a c tu r e in his shoulder. S a fe ty R and y H ughes, how ever, w ill w ear a h a rn e ss to p ro te ct a d islo cate d shoulder and continu e playing ★ ★ ★ B A L T IM O R E — C u rtis D ickey of T e x a s A&M, the B a ltim o re C o lts ’ top pick in the N F L d ra ft, m ay play in Canada if the C olts don’t co m e up with a b e tte r c o n tra c t o ffe r o r tra d e him by T h u rsd ay , his ag en t say s. At le a s t one oth er N F L te a m has o ffe red an “ a c c e p ta b le ” c o n tra c t fo r D ick ey , said J e r r y A rgovitz, a Houston d en tist who n eg otiated a m u lti-m illion d ollar c o n tr a c t w ith D e tro it fo r B illy S im s of O klahom a, the firs t pick in the N F L d ra ft. If the C olts don’t m e e t th at c o n tra c t or o ffe r to trad e the speedy running b ack , he said he would reco m m en d D ick ey play this seaso n in th e C anadian F o o tb a ll L eag u e. A rgovitz said ta lk s Satu rd ay with Szy m ansk i w ere e n ­ cou rag in g , but ow ner R o b e rt Irs a y had b eco m e a stum blin g block. T h e ag e n t said he talked to Irs a y la s t w eek and w as offended by his com m en ts. “ We didn’t talk about signing D ick ey . I t w as m o re a p er­ sonal a tta c k on m en and ag en ts. He told m e all Colt o ffe rs w ere off e x ce p t the first, and th a t I b e tte r co m e to C hicago (w here Irs a y liv e s ) with m y ta il b etw een m y legs and g et ready to n e g o tiate dow nw ard,” A rgovitz said. Giants trade Dean P L E A S A N T V IL L E , N .Y .— Continuing a fu ll-sca le youth m ovem ent, the New Y ork G ia n ts M onday traded fo u r-y ear v eteran q u a rte rb a ck Randy D ean to the G reen B ay P a c k e rs fo r a m iddle-round d raft ch o ice. The G iants have been extrem ely im pressed with the show­ ing m ad e by sixth-round d ra ft ch o ice S c o tt B ru n n er in tra in ­ ing cam p , cle a rin g the way fo r D e a n ’s d ep artu re. B ru n n er, a q u a rte rb a ck fro m D elaw are, w as v e ry sharp la st w eek in a controlled scrim m a g e ag ain st New E ngland and he fig u res to jo in seco n d -y ear fre e agent D ave R a d e r in backing up second -year pro P hil Sim m s. A fter a 6-10 season la st y e a r, the G ia n ts have stripped th em selv es of a lm o st all p la y ers m o re than 30 y e a rs old. On Sunday, the club told v e te ran o ffe n siv e lin em en Doug Van Horn and Ron M ikolaczyk th a t they don’t fit into the clu b ’s plans and would be waived sh o rtly if a d eal could not be w ork­ ed out. the ro s te r fo r Second -y ear co ach R ay P erk in s told the p lay ers Sunday the team G ian ts had no room on spokesm an said M onday the p la y ers would be w aived within the next two days if no oth er clu b s showed in te re s t in them . Only th ree p lay ers left on the G ia n ts — in ju red c e n te r J im C lack , d efen sive ta c k le M ike M cCoy and tig ht end G a ry Shirk — a r e m o re than 30 y e a rs old in th e a fte rm a th of a youth m ovem ent designed to rev iv e the clu b — w hich has not m ade the p lay offs sin ce 1963. them . A WE ARE FINALLY GETTING IT ALL TOGETHER T h e presses a r e h u m m i n g , t h e f o l d i n g m a c h i n e s a r e c l i c k i n g and t h e b i n d e r y is bo il ing. S o o n , t h e t r u c k s will roll f r o m Dallas to b r i n g y ou a n o t h e r e x c i t i n g , c o l o r f u l r e c o r d o f a y e a r a t T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s . B a r r i n g an a t t a c k by a gi an t, beer- d r i n k i n g a r m a d i l l o , t h e C a c ­ tus T e a r b o o k will be h e r e Augus t 13. 1 5 tPSV I u-- . 1 M I i& ji m ^ o r — asf T O n? CACTUS 1980 Modern Furniture Rentals 837-2944 8131 North IH 35 r Page B2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 S pORTS SltORTS fro m Staff and Wira Reports Washington, Texans receive honors Record-setting quarterback Mike Washington received the Austin Texans' Most Valuable Player Award at the team ’s an­ nual awards banquet Thursday. Washington established team records for most yards passing in a season, most attem pts in a season and most completions in a season this year He also led the team in scoring. Other honorees at the banquet were E lv is Shaw, outstanding defensive linem an; Charles Washington, outstanding defensive back; lineman and Leonard Brantley, outstanding offensive back. Jam es Nunley, outstanding offensive Defensive end Arthur Atwood was presented with the first an­ nual Low ell Lebermann Team Spirit Award. The award was named in honor of the Texans’ owner. Head coach Jim Davis also had special praise for two Texans who didn’t receive awards — fullback Kim -Juan W atts and tight end L a rry Carter. “ Kim did a great job for us after he got the hang of the fullback position,’’ Davis said “ And L a rry C arter is just a class person and always w ill be class. I don’t know how w e’d have scored a touchdown all year without him .” Bryant may be released Nicklaus honored T U SC A LO O SA , Ala — Legendary Alabam a football GET IT IN YOUR CAR AT THE coach Bear Bryan t m ay be released Tuesday after a 10-day stay in a Tuscaloosa hospital. “ We hope to get him out certainly by Tuesday,” said B rya n t’s secretary Rebecca Christian Monday. “ I talked to him today and he is feeling just fine.” Bryant, at 66 the winningest of a ll active college coaches and only 19 victories shy of becoming the winningest college coach of all time, was admitted to the Druid C ity Hospital Ju ly 26 for what officials called routine tests before the 1980 football season He had also complained of dizziness shortly before be­ ing admitted. Bryant said his doctors had been insisting he check in to “ get my medicine right” before the start of fall football practice. Mrs. Christian said she did not know when Bryan t would be able to get out to the field to supervise the workouts of the Crimson Tide — who begin practice in less than two weeks. Bryant coached the Tide to an undefeated season and the national collegiate championship last year. He has 296 coaching victories in 35 years as a head coach and needs only 19 more wins to break Amos Alonzo Stagg’s record of 314 career vic­ tories. C O LU M BU S Ohio — Ja ck Nicklaus, a Columbus native, was honored Monday by state and city officials as the “ world’s greatest golfer” for his contributions to the game of golf and to the economy of Ohio. In ceremonies on the Statehouse steps, the 48-year old golf superstar was named “ Governor of the D ay” and was presented with the first roadsign designating Interstate 270 — the Columbus outerbelt — as the “ Ja ck Nicklaus Free w ay.” Nicklaus, who has won a record 18 m ajor golf cham ­ pionships, including a ll four m ajor titles at least three times apiece, was accompanied by his wife and five children, and at least 13 other relatives. America's Cup races to begin N E W P O R T , R .I. — Four foreign yachts, the biggest and strongest field ever, begin dueling Tuesday for the right to challenge the New York Yacht Club for its A m erica’s Cup. Australia, France, Sweden and England face the awesome task of shattering the longest winning streak ever. The Cup has been im m ovable since 1851 — when the upstart schooner Am erica beat the best yachts Britain had to offer in a race around the Isle of Wight. Foreigners mounted 23 challenges, but the Cup stayed in A m erica’s ossession. However, this tim e the foreigners have managed to substan­ tia lly narrow the gap which has kept the Cup safe in the New York Yacht Club’s mid-Manhattan mansion for 129 years. “ There’s no question,” said Commodore Robert McCullough, chairm an of the A m erica’s Cup Selection Com mittee “ This is one of the strongest years yet for the foreigners.” But the challengers’ strides, says McCullough, must be measured on a ladder the defenders have also climbed. “ They’ve made improvements, absolutely,” he says. “ But I wouldn’t go so far as to say they’re on equal footing — ye t.” K oldest egs in Austin • Party Set-Ups • Delivery A vailable WmmMy Ip e c lq l» ___________ WELCOME, STUDENTS! We Carry: • T-Shirti • Ice • Soft D rinks • C ig a re tte s • Im p o rte d Boer Caps Ice Chests Mixers Snacks & Chips Wines COORS 8 Oz. Cans (6-Pk.) • f S» LITTLE KING'S CREAM ALE 12 Oz. N.R.s (6-Pfc.) • 2 7 * 451-8508 33rd & Guadalupe , Hpurt; M -F 1Q;3Q q .m .-1 2 p .m . S A T 9 q .m .-l a .m . SUN 12-12 M V STUDENT & FACULTY SPECIAL PRICES It 0 BEST DEAL IN TOWN i HERE’S WHAT WE FEEL IS THE *• F U R N IT U R E R E N T A L ” A "ONE BEDROOM GROUPING T ate or Full oizo BED 4 Drawer CHEST Badroam LAMP 6 Place DINETTE SOFA end Matching CHAIR Cocfctalt TABLE End TABLE and Table LAMP Boxers compete in tourney at AquaFest Austin AquaFest includes sports in cultural program The Austin Judo Club and is co­ the Aqua F e s t iv a l sponsoring a judo tournament too. Scheduled for Saturday at the South Austin Recration Center, the one-on-one contact sport is open to eligible AAU members. The annual festival also in­ cludes a ladies golf tourna­ ment which begins Aug. 11 at the Jim m y Clay golf course. Other a ctiv itie s include a skeet and trap shooting con­ test Sunday at the Austin Skeet Range. R acers once again w ill have an opportunity to take to the tracks in the AquaFest 100 at the Austin Speed-O-Rama Frid ay at 8:30 p.m. Photos by Ralph Barrera Local sports enthusiasts w ill find many activities to occupy their hot summer days this week at the Austin AquaFest. The annual cultural fair, which began Frid ay, includes events in judo, golf, softball and w ater sking. The Austin Aqua Festival Cash Awards Ski Tournament highlights this w eek’s a c­ tivities on Town Lake. The tourney begins Saturday at 9 a.m. and features 50 of the top skiers in the United States and Canada. Skiers w ill compete for $25,- 000 in cash awards in three events; the slalom, jump and trick skis. A highlight of this past weekend’s opening AquaFest activities was a series of box- in g m a t c h e s s t a g e d a t Festival Gardens on the lake. The matches featured many of Austin’s youngest boxers who are part of a regular outdoor su m m er boxing p ro g ram sponsored by the Parks and Recreation Department. The AquaFest com m ittee also is sponsoring a softball tournament this weekend. The m en’s slow p itch tourney starts Saturday at the M artin Jun ior High softball fields. The open division, double elim ination tourney has a $45 entry fee. A fast pitch tourney also is included in the festival’s ac­ tivities. The open tourney w ill be Aug. 16-17 at the Pan Am Recreation Center. This is one of many groupings available I Rent your Furniture S Ifcalso a v a ila b le ...a t SPECIAL Discount Prices! % • s ,e e Per SOFAS e R E C L IN E R S e DESKS e CHAIRS • E N T E R T A IN M E N T C E N T E R S • B OOKCASES d f 4 * A , j U < i There are twelve green recycle boxes on campus. F in d one and put this newspaper in it. 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It only takes l ' j hours, and you (an donate every 72 hours. You will receive S8 00 for ^ your first donation and $10 00 for a second dona tion in the same week. If you bring this ad in with — you, you will receive a 11.00 bonus after your first donotion. ■ & & ( / & ) I . . . U m i J f t - . . . AlUML... kavt a, CoAt.. wnuAfui mu yywna Coke add* üfetc. fw b p iA ie d ! Furniture Corporation of America m i » i v i i v u y v y i u u u i i v--.. i ^ w f A iu w im w L v d « i C o i «N I C «M M M rttg •<*■*** <**• e»r*ieC AUSTIN BLOOD COM PONENTS, 5 1 0 W est 2 9 t h Phone 4 7 7 - Hears: Men. A Than. I a.m.4 p.m.; Tees. & M . I a m . ? J t p.m. ♦ Bosetti no hot dog m c a u a y , M u y u b l o , l a o u LJ 1 M IL U A I L . Y I H , A A TN U K a g e Toronto center fielder one of the best defensive outfielders in American League By JIMMY BURCH Daily Texan Staff ARLINGTON — There’s a high fly ball hit to center field. Toronto Blue Jays’ center fielder Rick Bosetti circles under it. If there are runners on base, he'll make a two- handed catch for the sure out. If there’s no one on he 11 m ake a basket catch around his w aist, a la Willie Mays. His penchant for the unusual and flashy plays have earned Bosetti a “hot dog-' label around the major leagues, one that he doesn’t think he deserves. But no matter what the reputation is, the bottom line is that B osetti’s a quality defen­ sive center fielder. In fact, he led American League outfielders in both putouts and assists in 1979. “ I’VE ALWAYS enjoyed entertaining the fans as long as I don’t hurt the team when I’m doing it,” Bosetti said during a recent road trip to Arlington Stadium. “ Some people have inter­ preted that as being a hot dog. «.-*>11 cau ‘ho “ Thev could insf They could just as well say, ‘he plays with a flair, a flambuoyance,' or something like that. I don t do anything flashy when th ere’s a chance it’ll hurt the team , so I think the c r itic ism ’s a lit­ tle unjust.” ^ Bosetti s reputation as a hot dog cost him the respect of som e players from around the league when his book. R i c k B o s e t t i ’s B o o k o f B a s e b a l l , was published p rio r to th e start of this season. I VE CALGHT a lot of flack from guys on other team s about it, Bosetti said. “ They say, \o u ve only been in the big leagues two years. What are you doing writing a book9’ I try to explain to them why I wrote the book — to help the people of Toronto understand baseball a little better — but m ost of them don’t listen.” Bosetti said his book is nothing m ore than your basic “ How to" book to introduce the Toronto audience to the intricate strategies of baseball. “ Baseball fans in Toronto are like hockey fans in Dallas," Bosetti said. “ They just don’t un­ ______ i _______ » derstand the game. I wrote the book exclusively for them, and it’s selling pretty good in Toron­ to.” IN SPITE OF the flak he's gotten from being a career .260 hitter with a book on the market, he's drawn more criticism from the claim the publishing company made on the book jacket — This book contains ... the things that have helped make Rick a star. Bosetti is quick to point out that he had nothing at all to do with being billed as a star “That was something the publisher put in to make the book se ll,” he said. “ It kind of em- barassed m e because I’m not a star. I’m just an average offensive player and a good defensive player. I may be a little star on our team, but I’m no star league-wide.” NO, H E ’S NOT. In fact, many baseball fans don’t know of B osetti’s defensive abilities. Instead, they remember him from a S p o r t magazine aritcle on “baseball’s biggest flakes.” The article said that B osetti’s hobby was “watering baseball fields without the use of a water hose.” It also quoted him as saying that he'd vic­ timized every American League park and was a inter-league so he could big proponent of dampen the ivy at Chicago’s Wrigley Field. “That article was just something a free-lance writer did to make a story,” Bosetti said. “ He called a bunch of my team m ates, and my friends — Roy Howell and guys like that — they wouldn't talk to him. I didn’t talk to him. The whole article was written from hearsay.” Bosetti said a few of his team m ates might have told the writer about an occurrence during his minor league days at Toronto’s Oklahoma City affiliate, and the writer blew it out of proportion. ONE GAME when I was at Oklahoma City, I was out in center field and I had to go really bad, Bosetti recalled. “ It was a really long in­ ning and the other team was scoring run after run. We made a pitching change. And, well, the lighting there is bad like it is in all minor league parks. Plus there’s no stands in the outfield. “ I figured, why n ot?’ and w ent ahead. Afterwards, I took a lot of kidding from m y team m ates and it's kind of stuck with m e .” . Another thing that has stuck with him is bitte^ m em ories from his contract negotiations with the Jays last year Problems with the front of­ fice, combined with his current .210 average, have him that h e'll be p la y in g elsewhere in 1981. thinking “ I DON’T expect to be here next y ear,” B oset­ ti said. “ I ve heard my name mentioned in som e possible trades earlier this season. “ (Club president) Peter Bavasi goes by the artichoke theory Either you're a heart and he wants to hang on to you. or you’re a leaf and you're expendable. Last year I was hitting (.260, 8 home runs and 65 RBI — all three career highs) and I was a heart. This year I'm not hit­ ting and I’m a lea f.” Astros top Giants; Yanks beat Texas By United Press International HOUSTON — Nolan Ryan and Joe Sambito combined on a five-hitter and Enos Cabell and Cesar Cedeno drove in first- inning runs Monday night to lead the Houston Astros to a 4-2 vic­ tory over the San Francisco Giants. Ryan. 6-8, struck out seven and walked five over seven innings and received important defensive help from Cedeno. who made four fine running catches in center field. Sambito cam e on to pitch the final two innings and earn his 11th save, keeping the Astros in first place in the NL West. The victory was Ryan’s fifth without a loss this season in the Astrodome. The Giants scored an unearned run in the first in­ ning on catcher Alan Ashby’s throwing error and San Francisco added a run in the third on Jack Clark’s RBI double. Rookie A1 Hargesheimer, 2-1, suffered his first m ajor-league loss by giving up six hits and four runs in three innings. Terry Puhl’s single and Cabell’s triple tied the score 1-1 in the first and Cedeno’s two-out single gave the Astros a 2-1 lead. A second- inning RBI single by Craig Reynolds and Jose Cruz’s third- inning sacrifice fly accounted for Houston’s final two runs. ★ ★ ★ NEW YORK — Reggie Jackson crashed his 30th homer and Eric Soderholm and Bobby Brown joined New York’s home run parade, powering the Yankees to a 10-4 rout of the Texas Rangers. Jackson’s fifth-inning homer off reliever Dave Rajsich was the 399th of his career and marked the sixth tim e the Yankee slugger has hit 30 homers in a season. Jackson’s shot tied him for 19th place on the all-tim e career list with Hall of Fam er A1 Kaline. New York took a 2-0 lead in the second inning off starter Gaylord Perry, 5-9, when Jackson singled, took third on Jim Spencer’s single and scored on Rick Cerone’s double-play grounder. Soderholm followed his sixth homer. The Yankees scored four more runs in the fourth when Brown hit a two-run homer, his ninth, to send Perry from the game. Jackson’s homer touched off a three-run fifth for the Yankees. Texas scored one run off starter Tom Underwood, 9-7, in the fourth when A1 Oliver hit his ninth homer and the Rangers added two more runs in the seventh when Bump Wills tripled and Bud­ dy Bell hit his 12th homer off reliever Tim Lollar. Rusty Staub’s ninth-inning sacrifice fly closed out the scoring for Texas. Expos 4, Mets 3 MONTREAL — Andre Dawson’s single with one out in the 10th inning scored Ron Leflore with the winning run and lifted the Montreal Expos to their seventh straight victory, a decision over the New York Mets in the first gam e of a twi-night double- header. With one out, Leflore walked and stole second off loser Neil Allen, 5-7. Allen then walked Rodney Scott to setup Dawson’s hit. The single extended Dawson’s hitting streak to 19 gam es — tying Warren Cromartie for the club record. Elias Sosa, 6-4, pitched the final 1 2-3 innings to pick up the win. The Expos scored three unearned runs in the eighth inning to break Pat Zachry’s 27 inning scoreless streak and tie it 3-3. With runners at first and second, LeFlore hit a grounder down third, but Elliot Maddox let the ball go between his legs and was charged with a two-run error to make ot 3-2. LeFlore went to se­ cond on that play and to third on Scott's single. LeFlore then stole home to tie it 3-3. Reds 11, Padres 2 CINCINNATI — Joe Nolan’s bases-loaded single and Dave Concepcion’s two-run double highlighted an eight-run seventh in­ ning to lift the Cincinnati Reds to an victory over the San Diego Padres and a sweep of their twi-night double-header. Tom Seaver returned from the disabled list and was aided with two-run homers by George Foster and Johnny Bench to lead the Reds to a 7-1 victory in the opener. In the nightcap, Mario Soto, 5-5, picked up the win in relief of starter Joe Price, who went 4 1-3 innings and gave up both Padre runs. Reliever Dennis Kinney, 4-4, took the loss. Red Sox 7, Brewers 2 BOSTON — Hot-hitting rookie Glenn Hoffman slam m ed his second homer in as many days and ignited a pair of three-run in­ nings to lead the Boston Red Sox to a triumph over the Milwaukee Brewers. Hoffman, who has raised his average from .231 to .284 in the last seven gam es, gave the Red Sox a 2-0 lead in the third inning when he followed a single by Dwight Evans with a home run into the left-field screen off loser R eggie Cleveland, 8-5. Jim R ice’s sacrifice fly later in the inning gave Boston a 3-0 lead. Hoffman then started a three-run seventh with a leadoff dou­ ble, eventually scoring on Fred Lynn’s sacrifice fly. The other uns scored on an RBI single by Carlton Fisk and R ice’s RBI groundout. • Steve Renko pitched a four-hitter into the seventh inning and picked up his sixth win in 10 decisions. Bob Stanley finished up to register his third save. Milwaukee scored its runs in the seventh when Sixto Lezcano doubled and scored one out later on Jim Gantner’s bloop double. S t a n d in g s AMERICAN LEAGUE By United N i l International Eaai NATIONAL LEAGUE By United Praaa International 36 44 45 49 50 49 57 66 58 56 55 53 51 45 Waal W 65 54 50 47 46 39 39 Monday'* Raaufts I 40 53 54 56 57 64 66 pet 635 569 554 529 515 510 441 pet 619 505 481 448 447 379 371 QB 7 8Ü 11 12VÍ 13 20 QB 12 14h 18 18 25 26 Montreal P'ttsburqn Philadelphia New York St Louis Chicago Houston Lot Angeles Cincinnati San Franciso San Dieqo Attanta Eaat W 58 56 54 51 46 42 Waa W 58 56 56 51 47 46 I 45 47 47 53 57 58 I 46 47 51 55 59 58 pci. 563 544 535 490 447 420 pet. 558 .552 523 481 443 442 QB 2 3 7'r 12 14 i QB 3h 8 12 12 o r 7. Milwaukee 2 eland 11, Toronto 5 *as Cfty 6. Detroit 5 York 10. Texas 4 and 11, Minnesota 2 ornid 8 Seattle 3 Monday's Roaults tat 7, San Diego 1 utfi 11. San Diego 2 a* 4 New York 3 ark 4 Montreal 3 igetes 5. Atlanta 3 n 4 San -rancisco 2 Monti New THE student m agazine of The University! UTmost — the magazine UT students like to read on subjects that interest students most — sports, student ac­ tivities, the low-down on academia, fads about what's really going on at UT, in Austin, in Texas — and the world. * ¥ : Did you subscribe to UTmost at Preregistration? GREAT! To get your first issue, just come by one of the orange UTmost booths located around campus on either Tuesday or Wednesday, September 2 or 3. Show your paid fee receipt or valid student I.D ., and we'll give you your September issue. We'll also ask you to fill out an UTm ost address card so that we can mail the rem aining issues right to your door! Did you forget to subscribe to UTmost a t Preregistration? NO PROBLEM! You can still subscribe to all issues for 1980-81 quickly and easily. Come by the orange UTm ost booths located around campus on either Tuesday or Wednesday, September 2 or 3, and fill out an Utmost address card. The fee is $3.50, payable in cash or by check. We'll give you your September issue and m ail the rem aining issues right to your door! Have you not yet registered for the Fall Semester? When you register for fall at the Special Events Center August 25 or 26, you can subscribe to UTm ost simply by checking ¡to ff on the Optional Fee Card provided to you. The fee is $3.50, payable along with your other fees. A fter you pay your registration fees, simply show your paid fee receipt at the orange UTmost booths located around campus. You will be given the September issue and asked to fill out an address card so that the rem aining issues can be mailed to you. Pick up the September issue on campus. Remaining issues will be mailed to you. Clip and mail this coupon to: This Coupon Will Bring You UTmost For A Year By M ail For Only $ 3 5 0 Texas S tu d e n t P u blicatio ns P.O. Box D A u s tin , TX 7 8 7 1 2 (M a k e check p a y a b le to: Texas S tu d e n t P ublications) Name ___________________________________________ Í \ \S*0 ___ & o u r 7 •THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Entertainment Page B4 ‘The Big Red On©’: Fuller’s poetry in motion By LOUIS BLACK Daily Texan Staff “ T ie Big Red One” ; written and directed by Samuel Fuller; starring L ee M ar vi n , Heb ert Carradiae, Bobby Di Ciceo and Mark Hamill, at Debie Screen. Usuallly when a creator hasn’t come out with a work in a kmg time there is an air of expectation ac­ companying the unveiling of any new piece. Just think of Joseph Heller, Bob Dylan or J.D. Salinger. This sum m er se e s the release of “Thé Big Red Ore,” written and directed by Sam Fuller. It is the first film he has made in Hollywood since 1963. This is something of an unusual c a s e b e c a u se Fuller does not have that great a popular following, despite the high esteem many film makers, critics and students have for him. Among Fuller’s films U is hard to find a title general audiences recognize. Yet over a 15-year period he turned out almost a score of the m ost brutal and hard-edged film s in the h isto ry o f H ollyw ood. These films celebrated the netherw orld of pim ps, g a n g s t e r s , r e p o r te r s , spies, prostitutes, which Fuller saw as a functioning metaphor for the state of contemporary society. By the early Sixties he was through in Hollywood and in the last 15 years has only m ad e tw o film s . Fuller is now 68 and with that long a period of inac­ tivity he should have been down for the count. His last years should have been an ep iso d e from “ S u n set Boulevard,” with Fuller pathetically giving inter­ views about how he was working on this project or that, and bow be expected to m ate a comeback any day. Well, in the last 10 years he’s given those in­ terviews, but this is Sam Fuller we are talking about an d n o t a s t u d y in Hollywood pathos This is Sam Fuller with a cigar clamped in his mouth and a touch of the crazed visionary in his eyes. Sam Fuller is a director. He makes movies, that’s what he does. He stayed in there and fought it out. and when everyone had written him off he came out with “The B ig R ed O n e , ” An autobiographical narrative based on his experiences as infantryman, he had an planned this film for 20 years. Now he has made it. The film is a study of World War II seen through the eyes of one unit of soldiers. A masterpiece of com passion , hum anism and cinematic storytelling, “The Big Red One” is Sam F u l l e r ’s t r i u m p h a n t return. On one hand. Fuller is such a d e m e n t e d and dedicated renegade that he can’t help undercutting every convention ever utilized by war films. On the other hand, he is an old- t w o - f i s t e d f a s h i o n e d , liberal, who thinks there is something beautiful, im­ portant and righteous in such emotions and concep­ tions as loyalty, decency and brotherhood. He es­ pecially and unashamedly valu es the san ctity of human life. This odd com­ b i n a t i o n is s t r a i n e d through the numerous con­ tradictions of Fuller’s per­ sonal ideology. The result is a film that is both tough and caring. The honest e m o t i o n s a n d e m o ­ tionalism of film are rare in these days of c a m p - f o l l o w i n g h ip , Hollywood works. this one hell of a movie, and I only hope that Fuller’s next film is on the way. "The Big Red One” is a study of how war affects the people who must go through it. It is a study of survivors, men who are hurt by war and who are changed by war. The current release was edited down from Fuller’s version, which was about four hours long. What is left is a series of finely realized vignettes that c h r o n o l o g i c a l l y and geographically follow the progress of the war They begin in North Africa and have their end in the horrifying setting of a con­ centration camp. (Have you ever really thought of what it must have been like for the American troops who liberated those camps, full of the living dead?) f a c e The film is brilliantly acted, with Lee Marvin giving one of the best per­ formances in a career fill­ ed with exceptional work. H is t h e metaphorical resonance of the battlefields depicted. He is counterpointed by four young actors, who por­ tray the metamorphsi s from wet nosed recurits to seasoned veterans. i s “The Big Red One” is a cinematic poem that is fun­ ny! challenging and in­ triguing. I don’t like war movies, but this one is far more than an exercise in militeristic cinem a; this is a film about people and how they use, need and love each other. It is also one hell of a movie Joe ‘King’ Carrasco and the Crowns Page Carr The ‘King’ is crowned By CHRIS FRINK Daily Texan Staff Hotter then our cu rren t heat wave, Joe King’’ C arrasco and the Crowns cam e home to Austin with their hot Tex-Mex flavored rock n’ roll. Showing no lack of energy after two months on tour. Joe bounced all over the stage and ventured into the audience a couple of times. He opened his fast-paced show with “ Houston El M over’ off his latest single and went directly into “ P arty Weekend,’’ the “ A” side. Despite the heat the dance floor was pack-, ed. As the band w arm ed up the crowd got hotter. Joe continued with “ Jalapeno Con Big R ed,” a little conjunto num ber and “ El Molino,” featuring Kris Cummings on Far- fisa organ CARRASCO GREW up in Dumas in the Panhandle and has been playing this Style of m usic all his life — and his tunes reflect it. Cum m ings’ organ provides the backbone for m ost of the songs. Brad “ B reath-' Kizer on bass and Mike N avarro on-drum s com prise the rhythm section. C arrasco plays guitar th at sounds influenced by Buddy Holly, often Indicative of Panhandle rockers. C arrasco w asn’t just influenced by the Chicano m usic of the Panhandle. He is also known for great renditions of Sixties rockers like Sam “ the Sham ” and the Pharoahs’ “ Wolly Bully.” He didn’t include that in F riday’s show but did offer up a great version of the M ysterians neo-hit “96 T ears” that featured Cummings on organ. C arrasco has just signed with Stiff records and will go on a nine-nation European tour in October with nine other Stiff artists. The second set was as hot, if not hotter than the first. The audience had just a taste from the first and was ready for m ore The crowd cut across all ages, dress and hair-length barriers and was very responsive. Many were jum ping around feverishly despite the sauna-like atm osphere. Midway through the set they played “ Out of Control” and the audience responded as directed. Two songs later during “ Jam . Baby, J a m ” Carrasco leaped into the crowd in front of the stage to appear a few m om ents later on top of a table. The action on the dance floor started to get a little wild as the King went into his last number, “ Don’t Bother Me Baby.” The house lights were brought up as Joe Nick Patoski, rock-w riter, now J o e ’s sem i-legendary m anager, had to hustle him off stage twice to end the show ‘Noah’s A rk’ saves Disney from flood of sappy films Writer/director Samuel Fuller Schroder and Vincent Gardenia. Elliott Gould plays Noah Dugan, a down-on-his-luck gam bler and ex-pilot, on the run from underworld bill collectors. To es­ cape he takes a job flying a rickety World War Two bomber to an island in the South Pacific. His cargo includes several dozen anim als, a couple of orphan kids (Ricky Schroder and Tammy Lauren) and a self-righteous m issionary (Genevieve Bujold), all set to bring religion to the natives. They end up crash-landing on an island which is inhabited by a pair of Japanese soldiers who don’t know that WW II is over. Together the group constructs a boat, using the wreckage of the plane for raw m aterials. How they survive and how their feelings toward one another change fill the last hour of the film Instead of a simple recounting of the confrontation between good and evil (the type of thing Disney’s become known for), director Charles Ja rro tt has produced a refreshing tale of cooperation: people working together for the common good. The two Japanese characters would probably have been played as buffoons in earlier Disney films. In this new schem e of things, they are easily the m ost resourceful ch aracters in the film (Okay, there are a couple of mild racial slurs, m ostly in­ volving “ r ’s ” and “ I s ,” but just a few.) The perform ances are uniformly good, better than in any Disney film in recent m em ory. John Fujioka and Yuki Shimoda as the Japanese soldiers bring dignity to what could have been rem arkably offensive roles. Gould and Bujold bring levels of am biguity to their roles which are sure to go over the heads of kids in the audience, but which will be appreciated by adults ex­ pecting to be bored at the Saturday m atinee. Ricky Schroder and Tam m y Lauren are as sappy a pair of kids as you’re likely to see. Luckily, they a re n ’t on screen long enough to do too much dam age. Walt Disney Productions has been chafing a t the bit for years, waiting for a chance to move into the big leagues. They tried last year with “ Midnight M adness” and “ The Black Hole.” Both films bombed. “ The Last Flight of Noah’s Ark” could have been the vehicle they were waiting for. It starts out like gangbusters, breaking down toward the end. They had to give it a pat ending. They had to skip a lot of badly needed ch aracter development. Thev had to throw in a soppy love song. Didn’t thev? than expected. “ The Last Flight of Noah's A rk” is a good film. Not a great one. but b e tte r I t ’s playing with “ 101 D alm ations,” a classic of Disney animation. That being the case, you might as well sit through the double bill. You’ll get m ore for your money and you won’t be sorry you saw Disney’s latest. Tutone’s power: mixed musical waves By W ARREN SPECTOR Daily Texan Staff “The Last Flight of Noah’s Ark” ; Walt Disney Productions; produced by Ron Miller; directed by Charles Jarrott; from a story by Ernest K. Gann; starring Elliott Gould, Genevieve Bujold, Ricky Schroder,Tammy Lauren and Vincent Gardenia; at Village 4 and Lakehills. Wonder of wonders, a Disney film that doesn’t look like a Disney film. “ The Last Flight of Noah’s Ark” is sure-fire en ter­ tainm ent for the kids and, glory be, th ere’s something for parents (and just plain adults) here too. The story, based on an Ernest K. Gann story, is intriguing and suspenseful. The action never fclters (how could it when the film only runs 98 m inutes?) and the mood, which ranges from suspenseful to rom antic to comic and back, is enhanced by a fine m usical score by Oscar winner Maurice Ja rre (“ Lawrence of A rabia,” “ Doctor Zhivago” ). And there’s only one of those goopy love songs we’ve come to expect from Disney in recent years. Walt Disney Productions is making a conscious effort to change its image and broaden the appeal of its films. A new ap­ proach to casting is the most visible evidence of the com pany’s new thinking. Gone are the old regulars, Fred M acMurray, Annette Funiceilo and the rest. Replacing them are contem ­ porary stars like Elliott Gould. Genevieve Bujold, Ricky — Jo in t h t aarhy b u d t a t D a n * B ird i N a t l A irp o r t fla d g lin g a dva n ce d , ro iu v o n a tio n H yin g a t f lig h t C lu b r a ta l f ly to o l, a n d ca lm ba to ra dos* a t f i r i t h a th lig h t U p liftin g D iva ru f W o s d y o u t o f th • i u n a n d p o u n c i on lh a d a y a h o o d l S ch a d u h to d a y fa r d a w n — or a n y tim a V I S A , M o ita rC h a r g a C s s in a P ilot C antor S um m a t tp a c ia l C a ll n o w to a n ta r d r a w ­ i n g lo t h a a f lig h t B ird 'i N a t l A irp o rt, 272- 5337, 272-5943 Call 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 to place a Classified Ad in The Daily Texan Presents * Tonight * In the Beer Garden MIDNIGHT ANGELS * Tomorrow » An Evening with NORMAN AND NANCY BLAKE * Friday * JÁ M Presents DEVO •A Saturday, August 16 * THE RECORDS Quincy The Historic Armadillo Beer Garden open daily, weather perm itting LIBERTY LUNCH 405 W. 2nd at G uadalup* THE LOTIONS TONIGHT r a t 4 i i i S Z S% BA R TO N S P R IN G S R D . 4 7 7 -9 7 6 * - 4 4 4 4 < <: < x x j ; HALFBUS PRICE JRBCQRPS ♦ .MAGAZINES MAIN STORE: 1514 LAVACA ★ MON-SAT 10-10 ★ SUN 12-6 BRANCH STORE: 6103 BURNET RD. ★ MON-SAT 10-6 ★ SUN 12-6 LARGE SELECTION OF USED TEXTS ALL HALF PRICE OR LESS ★ SHOP US FIRST LARGEST SELECTION OF USED RECORDS IN CENTRAL TEXAS WE BUY ANYTHING EVER PRINTED OR RECORDED By RON SEYBOLD Daily Texan Staff It’s new wave music. No, wait a m inute; it’s power pop. Scratch that; it’s old fashioned rock ‘n’ roll. Suprise — Tommy Tutone’s music is all three a t once, and more as well. Would you believe it contains a sm attering of C/W swing, and blues power as well? Something for everyone seems to be the theme. “ People find a lot of different things in our m usic,” said lead singer Tommy Heath after Sunday night’s Armadillo show. Heath s vocals recall Leon R ussell’s growling style, with extra pop energy pumped into the beat. He funneled that energy into the Dillo crowd through the night, toying with the women on num bers like “ Cheap D ate” and Girl In the Back Seat. Then h e’d step out of his “ come get m e attitude to tell about growing up with rock ‘n ’ roll in “ Sounds of a Sum m er N ight.” Heath provides the onstage persona, but the m usic’s roots stem from lead guitarist Jim Keller. “ When we w rite a song Jim usually brings it in," explained Heath. “ Then Tommy does at a rra n g e r,” Keller added. Indeed, the his thing to it; h( m arriage of mu, lotion that Keller and Heath have worked up is infectious E ither elem ent by itself would be old news. a r Keller does most of his onstage talking with his guitar. Midway through the show he grabbed the mike for his only vocal solo of the night, “ F at Chance. ” He acted out a story with words, m iming verses and playing straight to the partying throng on the stage rim The bouncing backbeat faded into silence, and Heath wrung out “ Steal Away” against the quiet riffs of K eller’s guitar. The two m usicians are at their best working as a tag team ; K eller’s licks accenting the vocals, H eath’s voice bringing words to Keller’s emotional guitar. The words aren t great poetry: J o h n n y ’s p u m p i n g g a s ­ o l i n e/ S a ll y m a k e s the c o u n t e r s h e e n / B u t e v e r y F r i d a y night at ni ne L o rd i t ’s b a c k s e a t t i m e The lyrics are jolted by Heath s biting delivery and K eller’s gutsy m usical backing. Face it, these are rock songs in structure. It’s the style they’re played in that m akes them different. The power that popped from the stage on a num ber like “ Red Chicken-Fried Steak was based in H eath’s country/w estern Brad Doherty, Dally Texan Staff Tommy Heath days. “ I still play country/w estern, which the re st of the band thinks is uncool, said Heath He’s able to bring the tight sound of C/W bands to the music as a result, slam m ing the four-piece band to bone- jarring halts. Heath arranges onstage as well as off The mix of Sherman, Texas native Heath and New Jersey native Keller is sure to produce m ore suprises in the future. "I don t want to do anything th a t's just a m usical follow-up,” Tommy said after the show. Springsteen’s “ Born To Run” hyped Keller back into music from a well-paying construction job that “ wasn t enough of a challenge.” The combination of Keller and Heath shows that two is only the starting num ber of tones in the music. . . . . ‘Past’ By SARAH SULLIVAN Daily Texan Staff “ Out of the P a s t” ; d irected by J a ­ q u es T o u r n e u r ; s t a r r in g R o b e r t M itc h u m , J a n e G r e e r an d K irk Douglas; at Burdine A uditorium , 7 and 9 p.m. Tuesday. Long ago someone discovered any movement in a film scene attracts the viewer's attention. Understandably ex­ cited by improved camera technology modern filmmakers have taken this close to heart and have further decided that more is better. Now they make the whole scene move, with those smooth tracking shots and crane shots done with easy perfection. The technique is overused in places where a sense of motion isn’t needed, and the users seem not to realize that if everything on the screen moves all the time, nothing can catch the eye. This was in the 40s, when movie­ making fashion was different. “ Out of the Past,” made in 1947. has one track­ ing shot effectively placed at the begin­ ning, and that’s all. Motion is used sparingly. It s a movie about a man trying to avoid an inescapable situation. It’s about not knowing who to trust or what to do. a story of a man groping about in moral darkness. It’s told in terms of night and shadow, dark, wet streets and blinding headlights. Out of the Past” is also about a per­ son on the run. If it had been made more recently, it might have had an accelerating plot with exciting chase scenes filmed from inside moving cars. a fashionable gem But it doesn't look a thing like that. Every scene is carefully lit and com­ posed. then filmed by a motionless camera. With no color to play with, they made the pictures as interesting as possible with dramatic lighting and repeated shapes. When motion does oc­ cur, it is singularly beautiful, like the revolving door spinning slowly in the darkness, or the shadows of two smuggling men flickering over a woman's face. The pictures are still-lifes, and without fast cutting there’s time to ap­ preciate them. This isn t photography that grabs your shirt collar and insists on your attention; the camera used was an inanimate machine operated by a skilled and deliberate hand. The pic­ tures quietly control the mood. It ’s really very relaxing to watch. The script is just as carefully com­ posed. People say significant things, unfortunately sometimes without the grace to say them casually. For in­ stance, “ There’s no way to win this game, only a way to lose more slowly.” They also repeat verbal motifs such as “ She walked in out of the sunlight... out of the moonlight.” and the un­ spoken “ out of the past.” All this exactitude and deliberation make for a very premeditated movie. The story proceeds at a given pace toward a given end. Though restricted, the style is especially appropriate to the fatalistic theme It makes us feel that all that happens has long been decided and is now unalterable The story line is tangled. Across from a decidedly evil Kirk Douglas. Robert Mitchum plays an indecisive Footnotes good guy named Jeff. He's a case- hardened ex-dectective with a blotch on his past, a very curvy blotch named Kathie (Jane Greer). He fell for her and she deceived him. and now he just wants to avoid her and Whit (Douglas). But that’s impossible. After Jeff gets mixed up with Kathie and Whit again, as he inevitably must, they dance a minuet of double-crosses. The steps are too intricate to follow, but that’s intentional. We should be as confused as the characters. Mitchum is at his disgusting best as Jeff. His attitude toward women is only slightly better than condescending. ( “ Love m e ?” — “ Uh-huh” ) He doesn’t waste much eye-contact on anyone, and is so guarded that he can be understood best only by what other people say, esp e cially K a th ie ’s desperate “ I had to kill him; you would never have done it.” In spite of Je ff’s opinion, the women in this story are remarkably strong. Except for sweet Ann of the honest blue eyes, who is negligible and un­ interesting, they are kept women who detest the men that keep them. They are sleek animals with sharp claws, deceptively beautiful. Kathie is caught in the same trap as Jeff, and her destination as a character is as impor­ tant as his. K ath ie, who is nothing if not sophisticated, has a mink stole with square shoulders and scalloped edges, a very extraordinary piece of fashion! Like the cloak, “ Out of the Past” seems dated, but nonetheless im ­ pressive, and it has the added value of a past fashion. You don’t see any like that today. The I 7 Cabaret Theater is holding over “ for colored girls who have considered suicide when the rainbow is enuf.” Six ad­ ditional performances have been scheduled for this week. Cur­ tain times are 8 p.m. Thursday and Sunday and 7 and 10 p.m. h riday and Saturday. Student tickets are $4, non-student tickets $5. For reservations call 471-1444 between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. ★ ★ ★ The Paramount Theater has announced its 1980-81 season offerings. Nine productions have been scheduled. Season ticket sales begin Friday and continue through Dec. 1. Tickets for four CEC co-sponsored productions are offered at a discount to CEC ‘The Gin Gam e” (CEC co-sponsored) “ The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas” members. Call the theater at 472-5411 for a free brochure PARAM OUNT TH E A T E R SCH ED ULE: Oct. 19 — “ Da” (C EC co-sponsored) Oct. 31, Nov. 1, 2 Nov. 4 Dec. 1 — “ The Elephant Man” Dec. 6, 7 Feb. 8 — “ La Boheme” March 4 — Juilliard String Quartet March 27 - Austin Symphony Chamber Orchestra April 2, 3, 4 — Long Wharf Theater presents “ The Lion in The Paul Taylor Dance Co. (CEC co-sponsored) Winter” (CEC co-sponsored) Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P age B5 I f l UNIVERSAL AMUSEMENT ■ l l The Finest in Adult M otion Picture E n terta in m e n t ADULT THEATRES 2130 S Congress 442-5710 OPEN H A M c m u o m r aA SEXUAL INFERNO OF EXPLICIT EROTICA" H im W fo v M ■ M B u » “ TALK TO ME DIRTY” RATED X X X Adults ONLY —P L U S - J^uisij mat) t U U i v i L / ( x ) 8 0 U LT S 0WLV ■ Vk\ N .S N a .\ V v V A X > V A * - W THROUGH THE LOOKING , — L , T¿¡B GLASS' RATED X X X Adults Only PLU S— tidal wave of exuberant & sensitive raunchf Al G o ld ste in vwerr Al H ¡US < >NIYy M d lm ees Daily No One U nd er 18 A d m itte d Late Shows Friday & Saturday. Sundays O pen Noon Please Bring I D s Regardless C>t Age | S T E P H K N P O S T E R Tonight B A N D W e d n e s d a y R i c k S t d n R e v u e Longest Happy Hour in Town Double Shot* — 2 for 1 1 1 a.m.-8 p.m. N EVER A C O V E R C H A R G E R E B E L Driae-ln 6902 B urleson Road New C in e-fi Sound S ystem Privacy of Your Auto 38S XXX Original Uncut Note: TheatTe sound operates through your car radio If your car has no radio, brinq a portable TTT5 IS V E S BEAU M* V,i-h Cover Girt PI a v Kid CeM*r -v-"" D ew e y A»e*»"*«r OPENS 8 STARTS DUSK a p re se n ts TONIGHT ONLY! A SHOCKINGLY VICIOUS CRIME THRILLER ". . . the sum o f de ceitful com plica­ tions that occur m ust be reckoned by logarithm ic tables. . . it's very snappy and q u i’ e in tric a te ly played by a cast that has been well and sm artly d i­ rected. " — Bosley Crowther New York Times OUT O F ! THE FAST BURDINE AUD. 7 & 9 PM ONLY $1.50 starring ROBERT MITCHUM RHONDA FLEMING KIRK DOUGLAS BRINGING UP BABY ". . . Though Bringing Up Baby hasn't the prestige or reputation of Hep­ burn's later comedy success, The Philadelphia S tory, it’s her best com­ Pauline Kael edy.'' Kiss, Kiss, Bang, Bang Today at 6:30 & 9:55 p.m. Union Theater $1.50 UT $2.00 non-UT I . ', ’ THE V A E S I T T i l 24 0 2 G U A D A L U P E 4 7 4 -4 3 5 1 u p s ta ir s ~ ~ ~ “ T R A V O L TA 81 SPACEK! In BUI A N DC PA LM A 'S »O K Il| SC ItEtiN S FREE PARKING IN 00B1E GARAGE D08IE MALL 477-1324 Once they said God himself c ouldn t sink her. Then they said no man on earth t oukl reach her. N ow -you will be there when we... A LEC GUINNESS JASO N ROBAROS DOLBY STEREO P G V I L L A G E A 2700 AND! RSON • 451 8352 12:45-3:05- 5:25-7:55-10:15 NOW, FOR TH€ FIRST TlM€, FtLMGOCRS WILL D€ ADLC TO SHARE THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE OF DENG IHStD€. T H € SPECIAL EDITION CLOSE ENCOUNTERS ’Cutir1P G DOLBY STEREO I BUT REYNOLDS O F T H E T H IR D KIND \ m m m \ m m m : ; . 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RIVERSIDE TW IN CINEM A □ ■ LA K EH ILLS C IN EM A FOUR £ || W BEN WHITE || , ANDERSON LANE U At .(HaiO 'OAi*9* 1® -»• VX \ i . i ^ ___ J v V m m m * * \ _ \ * MASTERPIECE. INTERIORS RANKS WITH THE FINEST FILMS EVER MA0E. A WORK OF ART. — G*n* Sh*tit W*SC INTERIORS _ im S B S B B S = = a ----- jlllP D E BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL! TWO ADMISSIONS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE WITH THIS COUPON GOOD ONLY THE FIRST WEEK OF SCHOOL AUGUST 31 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 6 \ 101 DALMATIANS V I L L A G E A I L A K E H I L L S 2700 ANDERSON • 451 8312 ■ 2428 BIN WHITE • 444 0552 $1.50 FIRST MATINE! SHOWING ONLY l i i i i i i H H i ' H I " " ' X ..................... THE B IG RED O N E —“A blast of clean air in a summer of muQSV. meandering m ovie»/' DAVID A N S i N f N S W S W iiK ALL SHOWS $ 1 .0 0 K Page B6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 d a y s a v i n a s w i t h Í K k S s ^ , , J £ - : - * 4 CALL THE HOT UNE 471-5244 Swwrtáph TXnu mfm Emm 1 ^ 8 ^ 1 1 1 ’ muuumt,’ ifvcmtiúmi lbcas Union C o n y Center • '-■ g Im M « & M ■■■<■> Bf| ¡¡§4*""-4 TO BUY SELL TRADE TEXAN WANT ADS ARE BEST! CALL Refreshing values For summer RED RIPE WATERMELONS 1 A 9 8 GOLDEN BANANAS E,3Ch Ripe. Econom ical ... ¡í/h.0lf w (Cut, Lb ... .11) O Q . 4 0 Lb. LARGE CANTALOUPES California Vine-Ripened HONEYDEW MELONS w o n d e rfu l Eating JUMBO MANGOS A Tropical Delight .69Each .29Lb .89Each ¥ FOREMOST ¿ICECREAM R o u n d s f COTTAGE ¿CHEESE ^ F o rem o st ¥ FOREMOST ¿SHERBET Ro un ds -| 5 9 1/2 Gal Ctn. 24 Oz. Ctn. 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I • dm 16 CT PKC J DURATION NASAL SP R A Y 'j g g r ASPERGUM CHERRY 16 CT PKG • ’ ISOPROPHYL ALCOHOL ¿ P ROBITUSSIN O EXPECTORANT.................. 4 02 BTL r CORRECTOL LAXATIVE <=> f ROLAIDS TABLETS 6 75 CT PKG 50 CT PKC 46- • 9 f ) 7 / VASELINE JELLY PETROLEUM 7 5 02 JAR r Q-TIPS COTTON SW ABS ® f ORAFIX ADHESIVE 6 DENTURE 2 S 02 TUBE 170 CT PKG 89 .39 1.23 1.39 1.29 .89 1.43 compare Our Everyday low prices throughout the meatcase V WHOLE HAM ^ 8 9 FRYING CHICKEN W ilson co rn King Boneless, Fully C ooked w ate r Added, 5-7 Lbs. Lb W hole Body, Grade A RUMP ROAST Bon e in, Sirloin Cut Heavy M ature Beef R o u n d CROSS RIB ROAST 1 8 9 Lb. 0 0 9 Mm Boneless, Heavy M atu re Beef Chuck Lb. ROUND STEAK Bone in, Full Cut, Heavy M ature Beef Lb. BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST Heavy M ature Beef 1 18 Lb. .55Lb. 1 8 9 LARGE END RIB ROAST Heavy M ature Beef 2 » 9 LADY LEE BACON Lb. Sliced (Thick Sliced, V/t Lb. Pkg. 1.89) PORK LOIN RIB CHOPS PORK LOIN ROAST SIRLOIN CUT, A VC. WEIGHT 5 LBS ................ LB PORK LOIN SPARERIBS COUNTRY STYLE, RIB E N D ........................... LB LB LB LB LB TOP ROUND STEAK BONELESS HEAVY MATURE BEEF 7-BONE CHUCK STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF......................... BONELESS TIP STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF ROUND............... SIRLOIN STEAK BONE IN HEAVY MATURE BEEF LOIN..... 2.87 2.29 2.78 l .55 2.87 2.18 2.88 2.98 ,b.98 Back-to-schoo^ values. E-Z CUT CUBE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF LARGE END RIB STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF T-BONE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF LOIN PORTERHOUSE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF LOIN SLICED BEEF LIVER SKINLESS........................... LB LB LB LB PORK LOIN CHOPS TENDERLOIN........................................... LB PORK LINK SAUSAGE ROECELEIN PINKY PIG.................... 12 OZ. PKG BONELESS HAM HALF WILSON CORN KING FULLY COOKED WATER AODED.....................LB ITALIAN STYLE SAUSAGE FRESH PORK HOT OR MILD.......................... LB ROEGELEIN BACON SLICED........................................ 1 LB PKC LB 1 Lb. Pkg.12 9 1.49 1.49 1.88 2.08 1.15 1.99 2.06 1.36 ^ S PACK o POPULAR THEMES BIC BARGAIN PACK BLUE MEDIUM POINT f 5 SUBJECT NOTEBOOK 6 DIVIDED 5 SUBJECTS r THERMOS" LUNCH KIT T /IQ .59 1.19 .99 1.59 o,.39 f WHITE GLUE ó SAFE NON TOXIC DRIES CLEAR r TYPING P A P -R r DICTIONARY THUMB EASE 200 CT 6 ” PROTRACTOR MODEL 981126 ...................... r SLICKER BINDER o flexible vinyl covers 1 2 ring PRO POCKET COMB u n b r e a k a b l e .......................... PONYTAIL HOLDERS LITTLE BANOS MODEL 5685 ............ SCOTCH® MAGIC TAPE ALWAYS USEFULL 1/2 X 450 ................ SANDWICH SAVER SUPER SEAL PLASTIC.......................... Maxwell House Ground Coffee 0 4 9 R e g u la r. E le c tr ic Pe rk or A u t o D n p 48 0 2 C a n Jif Peanut Butter C r u n c h y or C r e a m y 18 O z Ja r 140 Duncan Hines Cake Mixes 6 Flavors 18 Oz Pkg Q Q Crisco Oi 24 O z B tl. 1 2 9 471-5244 SWIFT BACON , 1 LO Pkg ...... ROECELEIN BACON, 1 lo pk9 ARM O UR BACON, 9 id Pkg SM OKED SAUSACE, H tsmre Farms Porx or B e e f B u ik l b 1.38 1.36 1.39 1.98 JIM M Y DEAN SAU SA CE , Regular or ho t ........ .— * ........... 1 lo Rom SANKA COFFEE, nstan; 4 Oz I KOOL-AID, unsweetened 9 Flavors KOOL-AID, pre Swe-renea 2 Qt 7 Mayors. 6 2 02 Pxg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.57 2.62 .15 .59 KOOL-AID, Pre Sweetened i c Ot f eiavors 5i Oz TJ" ZATARAIN S CRAB, 8 ^ i o 2 bo« ADOLPHUS RICE, z* :i sag I LAW RY S M ARIN AD E, Beer - 0z p«g 2.64 .37 1.32 .34 GARLIC SPREAD, Lawrys 4 Oz jar PURINA CAT FOOD, vanecyMenu Meat Country or Tuna 6 Or Can.............. CAT LITTER, cats Prtoe 10 ld Bag LUVS DIAPERS , Otsoosaoie Small vediurr 18 Pkg .73 .28 1.11 2.68 Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page B7 overall. m Eagle's everyday low prices are a refreshing relief from the heat of inflation. So Keep your cool this su m m e r with vine-ripened V ' ^ melons and creamy dairy products from Eagle, at lower prices overall. Desserts and coffee i i ! 1 a . m . " th e best c h e esec a ke m tow n " 1200 West Lynn 472-3790 i in K ) A K H h * a > ... IH H H h ^ P 3 X > as ------------------------- ™ ---- —— ~~~~----- ---— ....... Canned & Packaged canned & Packa get* Delicatessen items Dairy & Frozen p CAKE Im ix e s 7 C • / Pillsbury Plus, 8 varieties 18Vj Oz Box PPORK & I LBEANS ¿ v van Camps . 9 7 53 Oz Can J v mCHICKEN LFRANKS Holly Farms . 6 9 12 Oz. Pkg. FIVE ALIVE Snow Crop Citrus Juice 12 Oz can w PINEAPPLE i JUICE ^ Lady lee n r 46 Oz. Can * Leaf mDEL m o n t e L. SPINACH . 3 8 15 Oz Can mCHEDDAR t CHEESE LOG , Kaukauna Klub 2 6 8 KRAFT DINNER Macaroni & Cheese . 2 9 7V* O Z. BOX BLUE RIBBON 1 5 9 5 Lb. Bag 64 OZ CTN KEY BUYS MEAN EXTRA SAVINGS! Key Buys are items priced even lower than their regular discount prices as a result of manufacturers tem porary promotional allowances or exceptional purchases y o u ii find hundreds of Key Buy items every time you shop Our Price Protection Po licy guarantees these prices to be effective Tuesday, A ugust 5th thru W ednesday, A u gu st 13th, 1980 r CHICKEN BOLOGNA ^ HOLLY FARM S......................................8 OZ PKG ARMOUR HAM CANNED (PLASTIC)............................... 3 LB CAN LADY LEE BISCUITS BUTTERMILK OR SWEETMILK..................7 5 OZ CAN r MEAT BOLOGNA OSCAR MAYER.............................. 16 OZ PKG r ALL MEAT FRANKS o OSCAR M AYER.............................. 16 OZ PKG BORDEN S LITE LINE SLICED C H E ESE .............................12 OZ PKG CHEDDAR CHEESE LADY LEE S H A R P ................................. 9 OZ PKC SMOKED SALMON LASSCO................................... 3 OZ PKG 12 Oz. Pkg. .73 6.49 .17 1.77 1.59 1.76 1.55 2.29 CHEEZ-IT CRACKERS SUNSHINE.......................................... 10 OZ BOX SALTINE CRACKERS LADY I E E .......................................... 16 OZ BOX I I ALMONDS BLUE DIAMOND. ROASTED SMOKED OR BARBECUE FLAVOR I { WEIGHT WATCHER SNACKS O Q APPLE OR FRUIT................................ 1/2 OZ PKC m éLm s j A A I r BAKING SODA ® ARM & H A M M ER ................................. 16 02 BOX 6 OZ CAN .76 .53 1.51 WE GLADLY ACCEPT YOUR FOOD STAMP COUPONS LADY L E E ......................................20 OZ BOX 1.19 r HONEYCOMB CEREAL A 2 Q 6 P O S T .......................................... 14 OZ BOX 1 m'tmJ s J r FROSTING 6 BETTY CROCKER READY TO SPREAD I 6 VARIETIES...................................16 OZ. CAN I • / i n I • P PILLSBURY FLOUR ¿> ................................................10 LB BAG A Q / l I • V » P OCEAN SPRAY COCKTAIL 4 C C CRANBERRY JUICE....................... 48 OZ 8TL I • 6 r TEXSUN JUICE 6 ORANGE PINEAPPLE ......................... 46 OZ CAN • \ J Q -1 ■ r LEMONADE MIX c> COUNTRY T IM E .......................... 32 OZ CAN O C Z EVAPORATED MILK LADY LE E .......................................... 13 OZ CAN WESSON OIL p SHORTENING 6 HARVEST DAY GAL BTL 48 OZ CAN NOODLES ROMANOFF BETTY CROCKER................ 5Vj OZ BOX .42 5.29 1.39 .65 we honor manufacturers' coupons So Dring them in for additional discount savings. LOG CABIN SYRUP BUTTERED ................................. 24 OZ BTL CORNED BEEF LIBBY S ................................. 12 OZ CAN NESTEA TEA MIX LOCAL . . . ......* .......................... .4 02. JAR HARVEST DAY PEAS DEL MONTE CORN WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE 1.36 1.79 1.38 .30 .35 16 OZ CAN 17 OZ CAN 16 OZ BOX GEBHARDT. « PILLSBURY INSTANT MASHED r HUNGRY JACK POTATOES-1 CY1 I m \J / 10 OZ CAN ,.33 .73 A n 7 i CHILI HOT DOG SAUCE r BARBECUE SAUCE O KRAFT REG HICHORY SMOKED OR HOT .. 18 OZ BTL MUSHROOMS f M U b H R U U M b 6 BRANDYWINE, STEMS & PIECES BRANDYWINE, STEMS & PIECES 8 OZ CAN 8 OZ. CAN I • / r DEL MONTE POTATOES » WHOLE NEW ................................. 16 OZ CAN • * ■ / / ITJ f WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE 6 HEINZ ............................................10 OZ BTL • U £ Q Household & Pet p KOZY KITTEN CAT FOOD ¿ FISH OR CHICKEN................................. 15 OZ CAN KAL KAN DOG FOOD 4 VARIETIES.........................................14 OZ CAN < P MEOW MIX CAT FOOD h> 56 OZ BAG .26 .33 i Q Q s J I • P TOP CHOICE BURGERS 72 OZ « GAINES DOG FOOD. ... 9 f i f í V / BOX f INSECT TRAP 6 BLACK FLAG. FLY P O R T .....................2CT PKG A A Q I • • V / GAMES, LIMITS OR GIMMICKS LADY LEE TISSUE TOILET SINGLE PLY 4 PACK WHITE OR Y E L L O W ........................... 281 S F PKG 8 CT BOX 3 MILL 50GALLON............................ 8 CT BOX 3 M IL L 3 0 C A L L O N LADY LEE TRASH BAGS A 4, LADY LEE DIAPERS EXTRA ABSORBENT........................48 CT PKG I ( SCOTT NAPKINS JUMBO P A P E R ...................................160 CT PKC TWICE AS FRESH AIR FRESHNER 4 FRAGRANCES 95 OZ PKG • BAGGIES PLASTIC BAGS SA N D W ICH ....................................... 150CT PKG AJAX DETERGENT POWDERED LAUNDRY O 84 02 BOX fc » AJAX DETERGENT LIQUID DISH............................ 32 02 BTl A I • CALGONITE DETERGENT A POWDERED DISHWASHER 50OZ BOX I • I I £ I I I I AJAX CLEANSER .......................................... 21 02 CAN • Our Price Protection Policy guarantees tnese prices to be effective from Thursday August 7th thru W ednesday A ugust 13th 1980 79 79 89 76 88 89 49 29 75 49 1 . 5 6 . 8 9 1 . 4 2 2 . 1 4 5 . 1 9 2 . 6 2 1 . 1 7 Copyright i960 by Lucky Stores. Inc AH Rights Reserved Lirrul Righis Reserved on Commerc a! Sales ; S I L K I E N C E , conditioner 15 Oz 8ti 1 . 9 6 S C O P E M O U T H W A S H , 24 oz Bt ¿ C O L G A T E I N S T A N T S H A V E , 11 Oz Can . 7 9 T O N Y P E R M A N E N T , x,t Gentle or Reg Each 2 . 6 7 C L O S E - U P T O O T H P A S T E , 4 e o z ^uoe p Mazóla 6 Margarine 7516 Oz P kg T H A I R S P R A Y , Farran cawcerr © Non-Aerosoi 8 Oz Size i H A I R S P R A Y , Aaua Net 10 Oz Car L I S T E R M I N T M O U T H W A S H , Cinnam on 12 OZ Bti ....................................................... ......... S E C R E T S O L I D , Anti Perspirant 2 Oz Size L U V S D I A P E R S , Disposable Large 12 Ct Pkg 2 6 8 L I L T P E R M . Special or Body wave ...... 2 . 4 9 M I N U T E M A I D D R I N K S , chmea i>unch Lemonade or Pink Lemonade 64 0z Ctn . 9 9 H E A D & S H O U L D E R S , snampoo ’soz sti D R A N G E J U IC E , Minute M a id C h ed 64 oz ctn* 1 . 5 7 D I A L A N T I - P E R S P I R A N T , spray 6 OZ Can ¿ B R E C K S H A M P O O , iso z st> 2 4 7 N U M Z I D E N T Adu ' r rrr>u¡a S T . J O S E P H S A S P I R I N , For Children, 36 Ct Bti . 5 3 SU AVE CONDITIONER, 16 Oz 1.19 f I N T E N S I V E C A R E L O T I O N , vaseline 6 15 oz Bti B A Y E R A S P I R I N , ioo ct Pkg ...... O N E - A - D A Y V I T A M I N S , tooct Bt C O N T A C C A P S U L E S , c o w ioct Pkg N O X Z E M A C R E A M , s* i tooz ar B A B Y P O W D E R , Johnson s 24 Oz Can. 2 . 2 6 1 . 0 7 1 . 7 9 1 . 5 8 3 . 3 4 1 . 5 5 2 . 0 4 2 4 4 I E N H A N C E C O N D I T I O N E R , 8 oz at. 1 . 4 9 ; C O N D I T I O N E R , Farran Fawcett 8 Oz Bti 1 . 6 6 STORE HOURS: Monday - Saturday 8:00 A.M. -10:00 P.M. Sunday 8:00 A.M. - 9:00 P.M. HOUSE PLANTS Assorted, 6 inch Pots Sorry, Mr. Inflation. _B8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Mlllfl ill I ll'ii'iium i % C L A S S i f t e O A D V E R T I S I N G Consecutive D a y Rates tim e tim es tim es 15 word m in im u m S 15 * E a c h w ord 1 S 34 * E a c h w ord 3 S *2 * E a c h w ord 5 S 68 E a c h word 10 tim es S4 70 1 col * 1 inch 1 tim e S4 24 1 col * 1 inch 2-9 tim es $4 01 1 coi x 1 inch 10 or more times F irst S I 00 ch arge to change copy two w ords m a y be ait capital letters 25' for each additional word in capital — — - letters S T U D E N T / F A C U L T Y S T A F F C onsecutive D a y R ates 13 word m in im u m ....................... .— I -JJ E a c h d a y E a c h additional word each day S 07 1 col * I inch each day *2 40 P a y m e n t in advance and current I.D m u st be presented in T S P Building 3 200 ! 25th & W hitis) from l a m to 4 .10 p m M o n d a y through F rid a y There is a V f ch arge to ch ange copy F irst two words m ay be all capital letters 25' for each additional word in cap ital letters OCAOUNI SCMCOUlf Friday 2 OO p m Monday T»»«n Monday It 00 a m Tuctdoy T « s n Wadnatday Toron Tundoy 11 OO o m Thvridoy T«*an W*dna*doy 11 00 a m Thvr»doy 11 00 a m Friday T»*an "In tha «van» af error* moda in an adrar fiwmtni immadiata notka mint be giran a* tha pubitthart art rat pan tibia far only O N I tncarract intarftan All claim* for od- jutiman** thauld ba moda nal lalor I han 30 dayt oftar publication " AUTOS FOR SALE V W E N G I N E S rebuilt $459 installed, ex ch ange G eneral V W repair Reason able rates 452-3821 W e buy broken V W s. '78 V W R A B B I T M ovin g, m ust sell. 4- door, A M / F M 8 track, AC, AT, regu lar gas. great condition $4550 477-5173 476- 2622, Rickey 1970 C H E V R O L E T IM P A L A . AT, AC, new tune-up Perfect rendition $850 477- 6534 1969 V W B E E T L E G ood engine, runs well radio $800 negotiable Alain, 477- 5935, evenings 6 30-8 30 T973 P L Y M O U T H D U S T E R P e rfe ct condition M u s t Sell Im m e d ia te ly E m ­ manuel. 928-0053. 74 V E G A K A M B A C H rebuilt engine, low m ileage, good condition, $500 C a ll 478- 0896 after 5.________ __________ 1973 C A P R I R u n s well, good tires, air, A M F M $1000 Alain, 477 5935 evenings 6:30-8 30 #7 3 P I N T O R U N A B O U T 79,000 mi les, good condition, new ra d ia ls Negotiable 7-11 p m 443 8888 1972 V W P O P -T O P cam per in good run­ ning condition Less than 5,000 m iles on rebuilt P o rsch e engine A sk in g $2400 Leave m e ssa g e s at 472-6427 or 458-9131 ext 307 B M W 5301 77 silver" 35 000 miles, AC. cassette $12,000 or best offer 474-6660 or 926-3105 T W O A D V E N T s p e a k e rs , e x c e lle n t sound $140 pair new, used 6 months, $90 Bill. 459-8350 M u s ic a l- F o r S a le A U S T IN 'S B E S T selection of songbooks and sheet m usic A lpha M u s ic Center, 611 W 29th 477 5009 G IB S O N H E R I T A G E gu itar M in t con di­ tion with hard case. $500 C a ll evenings after 6, 442 6395 P h o t o g r a p h y - F o r S a le M A M Í Y A M 645, 80mm F 2 8, P D P r ism Finder, E x celle nt Condition, $700 474 7777, 453-1101. C A N O N A E-1 and Soligor 85-2l0mm f3.5. Close focusing room lens. Together or seperately 472 7828 P e ts-F o r S a le A K C I R IS H Setter puppies Six weeks old W orm ed 443-0224 or 443-8869 and leave m e ssaae H o m e s - F o r S a le W alk to U T from this large elegant brick house on the nicest corner in A ld rid ge Place. Sit on your circ u la r front porch in the evening and watch the squ irrels play in the old oak and pecan trees The house h a s a l m o s t 2500 fe e t w ith t h r e e two baths and a two-story bedroom s rentable addition. T astefu lly restored and com petitively priced $149,950 474- 7776 Why pay $9600 rent over 4 years college? Buy a mobile less than $200/ home for month; sell at end of 4 years and make money. To find out more, call Greg anytime at 385-1992 or 892-0592 after 7 p.m. Get a roommate to split payments and make a large profit. AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR Service as efficient and reliable as the car itself. i E ngine tuning, problem d iagn osis, full parts inventory. Personal service. Fine used BMWs w PHOENIX AUTO PRODUCTIONS 442-1361 1606 Fortview Road O n e block north of Ben W hile at Clawson ALL SIZZLER A D S MUST RUN BY AUGUST 29, 1980 V ■ m m I K WORDS I K f o r A d d ition al W ord s - 2 0 ‘ each a # f o r o n l y DAYS $ • L im ite d to n o n - c o m m e r c ia l a d v e r t is in g o n ly . • A d s m a y b e c a n c e lle d , b u t n o r e f u n d s c a n b e m a d e . • A d s m a y b e o r d e re d for a n y m u lt ip le of fiv e d a y t (to ru n t h r o u g h A u g u s t 2 9 ) . • L im ite d to f o llo w in g c a t e g o r ie s o n ly : • For S a le • Lost & F o u n d • M e r c h a n d i s e W a n t e d • T ra v e l • R o o m m a t e s CALL THE TEXAN CLASSIFIED "H O TLIN E" 471-5244 BE SURE TO ASK FOR THE $3. SIZZLER! E N F I E L D C O N D O M IN I U M Efficien cy $25.000, IB R $38 000 F in a n cin g W endall C o r r ig a n , 478 7005 A m e n a B u llo c k Realtors, 346-1073 S T Y L E G A L O R E T a rry to w r, c o n ­ d o m in iu m O N T H E S H U T T L E B U S L I N E with two story atrium , fo rm al dm ing room, fireplace, wetbar, two m aster bedrooms, patio and great storage $82,- 500 C all today and move in before school starts M axw ell-Jen kin s 474 9923 H Y D E P A R K remodeled two story 4-2, C A /C H , new kitchen, hardwoods, three sitting areas, la rge wooded lots 459 9468 $129,500 W IN D S O R R O A D (24th Street) 2 B R townhouse, I i m iles to U T Fireplace parquet floors, pool, private patio and loan arran ged with low yard Low 70s down paym ent 240) W insted 441-1980 M is c e lla n e o u s - F o r S a le IN D IA N is~ 2 5 % o ffi S A L E 1 N elso n 's Gifts, 4502 S C o n gress 444- 3814, 10-6, closed M o n d a y s icwelry T W IN B E IDS, com plete mattress, bo* spring, maple, m ahogany, $79 95 M a t ­ tress, box sp rin g sold separate 454-5896 C O M P U T E R Í S T S I F R O N T loading c a r ­ tridge disc drive, excellent condition with com plete documentation, $650 451 2179________________ lu g g a g e B R A N D N E W V W R a b b it carrier, M u sta n g fender chrom e Best offer accepted 459 5841, after 5 30 IB M S E L E C T R I C typewriter, excellent condition $475 or Best offer 474-1331, 474-7627 anytim e M U S T S E L L - sturdy wooden dining table with four chairs. $90 C a ll M ik e after 6 443-7048 O R A F T IN O f A B U E for*sale $407 24,7x- 36" pine top and oak bottom Ba rb a ra , 476-1942 S A L E 2 old couches pair $20 2 sets twin m attresses $10-$20 W o rkin g g a s dryer $75 Harold, after_5, 477 9438 G R E A T H U N T IN G $6000 equity Take up paym ents 10 acres of beautiful trees with 1 acre tank, Llano. T ex as 1-824- 1814, 1-656-9554 after 6 _________ N E W T W IN bed with fra m e $125, like new M ira n d a autom atic c a m e ra $150 Joy, 476-6381 ext 42, 477 3882 N O R G E AC, 115 volt, 5000 BT U , window unit. $120 472-3077 6 0 -G A L L O N A Q U A R IU M 48" long. 26" high Com plete equipment, gravel, large O sca r $175 478-9649 evenings R E F R IG E R A T O R . O L D E R model great shape. $35. After 5 p.m. 478 5228 in F O R S A L E twin size box sp rin gs $10 Good condition 266-2775 T R A V E L A G E N C Y . UT a r e a l$50.000 or best offer P.O B e * 12504, Austin, Texas, or call (512 ) 474-6660. 12 C U B IC F O O T no-frost refrigerator, $125 S000 B T U Sears E n e rg y sa v e r air conditioner, $100 Call 476-1621. O 'B R I E N C O M P E T IT O R 67 5, plate bin­ ding, brand new waterski 451-8737 We buy jewelry, estate jewelry, diamonds and old gold. Highest cash prices paid. C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N. Lamar A L L B I L L S P A I D Sm all 2 B R 's $330 2215 Leon W a lk or shuttle to cam pus, central air, and new carpeting 474-7732 A L L B I L L S P A I D L a r g e I B R $320 2212 San Gabriel Walk or shuttle to campus, C A / C H , new carpet, DW, cable, disposal. 474-7732. G O I N G B A N A N A S ? W e rent a p a rtm e n ts, d u p le xe s, h o u se s all o v e r A u stin . F R E E R e a l W o rld P r o p e r t ie s 443-2212 South 458-6111 North 345-6350 Northwest E F F I C I E N C Y C L O S E to c a m p u s . C a rp eted , d ra p e s a p p lia n c e s C a ll Chris, 478 8958 2302 Leon E F F I C I E N C I E S , 6607 a n d 7102 G uadalupe G a s paid, furnished, d is­ hwasher. acc e ssib le shuttle, p a rtia l leases availab le 454-3414 FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS LAST CALL FOR THE T h e D a i l y T e x a n th e battle cujaUuU íh J¡jUí I ío *i ! While your kids are at U.T., make those dollars you spend every month for their rent work for you for a change Invest that money in a Nash Phillips/Copus townhome Locations in North and Northwest Austin just 15 minutes from campus. Starting at $47,000 5 % down. 1112% financing Co-signing may be required For more information call or write today: Beth Woods, Marketing Director NPC Multi-Housing Division P.O. Box 14508 Austin, Texas 78761 512/451-5106 FOR SALE FOR SALE M o t o r c y c le -F o r S a le 3700 m iles SHOO or 1980 H O N D A 40 0 Best otter Call 477 5599 o r 4 7 1 4 5 9 1 Leave m e ssa g e for Robbie K in g 1978 G O L O W IN G Perfect condition, full dress, all e xtras Should see to ap­ preciate $3500 346-1386. Tony B ic y c ie -F o r S a le 22 IN C H V O L K cycle. fflkspeed S80 472- 47 4 3 or 4 7 7 -5 8 5 0 S t e r e o -F o r S a le C I R C L E S T E R E O , prompt, reasonable audio video service Used equipment bought and sold P a r ts and accessories 1211 Red Rive r 476 0947 S a n s u i tu r n ta b le a n d F O R S A L E receiver, two Kenwood 5-way speakers Set Tltfeist golf clubs 471-3570 H o m e s -F o r S a le 12 X 60 M O B I L E home, 2BR, unfur­ nished, redecorated, AC, cable, pool, near UT shuttle 454 4797 ex* 5616, 452 2496 O L D U N I V E R S I T Y n e ig h b o rh o o d , b e au tifu lly rem odeled 2 story brick IB R , 2 / bath, huge redwood colonial deck overlooking large tree covered lot. 3104 G ran dview $159,000 453-1121 W A L K TO U T Renovated 1911 home H igh ceilings, Hunter fans, hardwood floors, landscaped yard C a li Aiex 477- 5117 or 327-4524 Realty W orld Town and Country. E N J O Y A N endless su m m er of living, unique " A " fra m e 3BR, 2BA Central air new carpet, built-in appliances, sundeck off upper sp ir a l sta irw a y , beorOo m 1$43,950 Odus Realty. 454-4541 P I O N E E R KP500 car cassette deck, F M , supertuner and Pioneer dual tone 10 oz ca r sp eakers $150 471 1988 10 x 57 M O B I L E home in good condition Tw o bedroom, one bath, $4800 Call 385- 1992 WJ»N tS H ÍP ARA R T M iN T S ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS P R E L E A S E F O R F A L L Tree shaded quiet furnished IB R garden apartm ents Tw elve O a k s Apartm ents, M l W 39th. M a n a g e r 451-2586 after 3 p m $175 p L U S E . We are looking for quiet, conscientious, n o n sm o k in g stu d en ts in ­ terested m a la rg e efficiency near shu t­ tle CA c h laundry deadbolts, d is­ posal 476-2812 S U B L E T A P A R T M E N T for fail before r e n t g o e s u p . 1-1 f u r n i s h e d , a ll am enities, close shuttle sh o p p in g $235 8. E, A u gu st 25. Prefer 2 people. 1230 E 38 2 288 2861 N O W L E A S I N G F O R F A L L B R O W N L E E F A L L R E N T S175 2 B L O C K S TO C A M P U S 2502 Nueces 477-2897 UNIQ U E CO NTEM PO RARY 1-bedroom efficiency apartm ents Fall $209-$219 + E furnished with dll the geedies! 4105 S p e e d w a y M a n a g e r No. 103 C all 4 5 1 -4 9 1 9 If no answer, call 459-3226 H U N T IN G T O N V I L L A A p a rtm e n ts La rge efficient v furnished pool, laun­ dry shuttle $175 plus E 454 8903 O L O M A I N Apartm ents, 25th and Pearl IB R , efficiencies Four blocks UT. shut­ tle, cable, poo! 476-5109 G R E A T O A K - Luxurious quiet con­ venient, large 2-2, pool, sundeck, laun­ dry. Lease $380 477 3388 472 2097 D O W N T O W N W I L D E R N E S S A wilderness with new 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. O nly 5 m inutes from down­ town Oak Run 3700 Southridge 441-8241 or 476-2633 B a r ry G illin gw ater M a n a ge m e n t Com pany Pavillion L a rge furnished or unfurnished one bedroom apartm ents with large win­ dows and w alk-in closets. Withm walk- ng distance of UT shuttle and city bus C o n v e n ie n t to s h o p p in g and m a jo r highw ays starting at $180 unfurnished $200 furnished 926-3534 or 476-2633. I J B a rry G illm gw ater M a n a ge m e n t com pany i M ARK V APTS. S ig n in g Fall L eases j 1 BR Furn. $250 • W oter, G as, TV Cabla Poid by O w nar • Shuttle Bus • Sm all Friendly Complex 3 9 1 4 Ave. D 4 5 3 -5 9 8 3 P R E L E A S I N G EFF. THROUGH 4 BRMS. S U M M E R A N D FALL S U M M E R RATESI SHUTTLE BUS M O D E R N , S P A C IO U S FU RN ISH ED, U N FU RN ISH ED POINT SOUTH 7200 W ILL0W CREÍK (Riverside Are a ) 4 4 4 - 7 5 3 6 T R A V I S H O U S E A P A R T M E N T S Preleasing Now Super Fall Savings Starting at $215 Huge 1 and 2 bedrooms F irst shuttle stop L a rge pool C A CH 2 laundry rooms 1600 Royal Crest 442-9720 M O V E IN A U G U S T 1st! 1 and 2 bedroom furnished apartm ents for A ugust and F a ll C R shuttle, all ga s appliances, $190 and up plus E. H u rry ! 451-3470 Spanish Trail 4520 Bennett P R E L E A S I N G FO R F A L L M A U N A K A I 405 E.31st Efficiencies. Water and gas paid. Waik to campus, shuttle and city bus. _________472-2147 3 2 N D A T I H 3 5 A V A L O N A P T S E ffic ie n c y - $180 1 Bedroom - $215 2 B R -2 B A - $308 U p On P re m ise s La u n d ry W a lk U T 472-7604 A C T V I I A P A R T M E N T S 4303 D U V A L Furnished IB R near UT, shopping and shuttle, private patios A ugust $155, F a ll $225 plus E. 345-8550, 453-0298 R I O G R A N D E S Q U A R E A P A R T M E N T S O N E B E D R O O M $210 E F F I C I E N C I E S $195 2800 Rio Grande 472-9569 B E E H I V E A P A R T M E N T S 4209 A V E N U E B Furm shed efficiency near U T and shut­ large walk-m closets dishw asher tle. and patio A ugust $147 50 F a ll $200 plus E. 459-6180, 453-0298 105 E. 31st P R E L E A S I N G F O R F A L L W alk to U T - luxury efficiency in sm all complex, double bed, built-ins, laundry Cable, water, g a s paid $205 month. M a n a g e r apartm ent no 103, 477-4005. M I D S U M M E R S P E C I A L A T T E N T IO N S I N G L E S A N D S T U D E N T S free rent to q u a lifie d Tw o w e e k s applicants, efficiency apartments, fu r­ nished or unfurnished, from $175-5200 security g u a rd s on duty, Olympic size pool, low incom e welcome. Ca sa B la n ca A partm ents 2506 M a n o r Road 474-5550 Preleasing F o r Fall 4200 Ave. A - Eft., $205 plus E. IB R , $245 plus E 4200 Ave. A 4206 Ave A - Eft., $245 A B P 451-6966 609 E 45th - I B R $210-5220 plus £ 454 8995 4000 Ave A - Eft $245 A B P 458-4511 4307 Ave A - IB R . $240 plus E 459-1571 4209 Speedway - IB R , $245 plus E 458-6937 202 E. 32nd Eft , $215 plus E 458-4511 Central Properties inc. 451-6533 I B R - $195 Secluded small quiet complex. Built-in kitchen appliances, AC, trees. Water, gas, cable paid. 609 E. 45th St. 454-8995, 451-6533. Central Properties Inc. 5 B L O C K S W E S T OF C A M P U S La rge efficiency. Carpeted ga s (stove), living wa'er, cable included. Paneled room, walk-in closet. Su m m er rates $170 and $180 2104 San G abriel, Red O ak s A partm ents 477-5514, 476-7916 F A L L P R E L E A S I N G Central Furnished E fficie n cy with g a s hear and cooking paid Lau n d ry and pool Convenient to U T shuttle and city bus $205 plus E 451 4584 or 476 2633 B a rry G illin gw a ter M a n a ge m e n t Co m p an y E F F I C I E N C Y $199 A B P Close to cam pus, oeai.* fully paneted, fu lly carpeted, a ll built-in kitchen C A 'C M 4000 Avenue A. 458-4511, 451 6533 Central Properties Inc. W e F u rn ish T h e T ra n sp o rta tio n H o u s e s D u p le x e s A p a rtm e n ts T o w n h o m e s — A Free S e r v ic e To Y o u — JB GO ODW IN L oca tor S e rv ic e •:#: N o rth g p M 7 7 8 8 0 ^ >Xv S o u t h \;X; 44 3 8101 ^ ; HARDEBECK® HAS HOUSING Free Locater Service • All Prices • All Types • All Overj We Drive 444-9490 I I I I I I I I I I I I L LA C A N A D A APTS. Fall L e a s in g — ALL BILLS P A I D — J B R Furn. $ 3 1 0 W a lk To C a m p u s N ic e Pool — Patio Tennis C o u rts A cross Street 1300 W. 24 4 7 7 - 3 0 6 6 I l l l I l l I l l l I j E N G L I S H A I R E A p a rt m e n ts Efficiency, 1 B e d ro o m & 2 B e d ro o m Starting at *185. 4 / / a > 4 S’ ^ & S o m e U tilities P aid O n shuttta route F R E E R a cq u e tb a ll & T e n n is C o u rts Free C a b le T V S e e o n e of A u s t in ’s F I N E S T A P A R T M E N T C O M M U N I T I E S 1919 Burton Dr. E n glish A ir e 4 4 4 1846 9 6 M o n S a t 12 6 S u n d a y ALL OVER AUSTIN Apartm ent Locators 459-3226 4314 Medical Parkway No. 1 FREE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE LICENSED BY THE TEXAS REAL ESTATE C O M M ISSIO N i EL CID APTS. | vall L e a s in g N o w ! | I I I I I I BR Furn. $240 • Shuffle Front Door • Water, Gas & TV Cable Paid • Small Friendly Complex LEASING FOR FALL! 1, 2, 3 & 5 B e d ro o m s 2 Lighted Tennis Courts Shuttle Bus Stop Security Service Exercise R o o m s / S a u n a s P u ttin g G reen 2 Pools — 1 Large & 1 Sup e r-Large F u rn ish e d /U n fu rn ish e d W a lk -In C losets Free C a b le TV 447-4130 Village 3704 Speedway ¡ 477-1607 2101 Burton Dr. Apartment Finders Service A r r r \ T ^ Division of G illin g w a te r Investm en ts, Int. Our business is apartments! • FREE, P R O F E S S I O N A L S E R V I C E • T R A N S P O R T A T I O N T O P R O P E R T Y • L I C E N S E D R E A L E S T A T E A G E N T S • L I S T I N G S A L L O V E R T O W N • O F F I C E S O P E N 7 D A Y S A W E E K 3701 Guadalupe Suite 103 11If 8 I I 1 Give your lifestyle a lift. P laz a 25 is central to all U.T. happenings, at the corner of 25th Streets. Longview a n d It's C h o o se P laza 25. som ething special - not just another pretty place. Pressed for a p la ce to live? Try P laza 25. A c o e d dorm, w here w e offer a non-regi- m ented lifestyle. C ontract parking available to m ake your life infinitely more simple. Laundry room s on every floor. And, w e're located on the U.T. shuttle. There are T.V. an d music rooms, a courtyard, a n d a pool for relaxing moments; special room s available for sequestered studying; fur­ nished suites that you'll call home. Professionally managed by Barry Gillingwater Management Company N ow le a sin g for fall, 2 5 0 5 Longview 4 7 2 -0 1 0 0 Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page B9 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS "WE'VE GOT 'EM " • FREE • Apartm ents • Houses • Duplexes 4501 G u a d a lu p e (Suit* 101) 458-5301 (^aifw oocL ¿toaxitfiAu Tanglewood North Apartments — Fall Leasing — Better Hurry! Tomorrow Will Be Too Late — 1 Bedroom Furnished $260-$290 2 Bedroom Furnished $370-$390 — We P ay Your A ir Conditioning — T, V. Cable, Too! Shuttle Bus at your Front Doot 1020 E. 45th 4 5 2 -0 0 6 0 THE GREEKS D istinctive! Convenient! Take advantage of carefree living in one of our spacious apartment homes overlooking scenic Buttermilk Creek. We have a sw im m ing pool and volleyball pool as well as other club facilities, a fam ily and adult section with 1 and 2 bedrooms plus some with sundecks from $235 to $335 & E. Our sauna, fenced playground and TV cable are a few of the pleasures furnished by The Creeks. The fact that The Creeks is only minutes from downtown, major shopping and work centers is an added con­ venience. Come see The Creeks today! Y ou ’ll see something Distinctive. On H igh w ay 183 ju st north o f 290. P h on e 451-48%. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l I I I i EL DORADO APTS. Fall Leasing 1 BR Furn. $235-$245 Shuttle Front Door Nice Pool — Patio Close Enough to W alk to C am p u s 3501 Speedway 472-4893 Tanglewood Westside Apartments Fall Leasing Run, don't w alk — tomorrow will be too late for these choice residences, 1 Bedroom Furnished $250-$270 Gas & water is paid by owner. T.V. Cable, Tool Shuttle buses at your front door 1403 N o rw alk Ln. 472-9614 How to Afford Northwest Hills It’s easy when you live at Ridge Hollow, Northwest Hills most affordable apart­ ments. Here’s what you get for very reasonable rent Hilltop location Fireplaces Washer/dryer connections Balconies and patios with storage Tennis courts Swimming pool Malls and shopping centers Efficiency, 1 and 2 bedroom plans Come by today and see for yourself You’ll like the view from our hilltop And you'll like getting your money’s worth tn Austin’s nicest neighborhood. i ■r * I I f I emernmrnd k j ^ b i a i c c n i s d * h '• o o d h c m > f k * ! I é h h i Ridge haHniii MKWtmiwr!, 6805 Woodhollow/Austin, Texas 78751 345-9315 WE SPECIALIZE FOR STUDENTS.. NOW LEASING FOR FALL! THEARBOR ♦ On Town Lake... 1500 Royal Crest Dr. 444-7516 or 476-2633 Efficiencies 1 & 2 b e d r o o m s Fro m $ 2 2 0 First stop on U.T. shuttle P a id g a s h e a t a n d c o o k in g Fully ca rp e ted D i s h w a s h e r , d is p o s a l S w i m m i n g P o o l/ w a te r fa ll L a u n d r y facilities A m p l e p a r k in g All a d u lt liv in g Parties a n d othe r c o m m u n it y activities F ull-tim e on-site m a in t e n a n c e Fastidious apartm ents, designed to please. 2304 Pleasant Valley 442-1298 or 476-2633 Efficiencies, 1, 2, & 4 b e d r o o m s From $ 2 2 5 O n U.T. S h u ttle Pa id g a s & w a t e r Free cable T.V. 2 s w i m m i n g po ols C lu b h o u s e a n d g y m Lots of l a u n d r y ro o m s Five sp a c io u s floor p la n s C lo se ts g a lo re ^ Cascades i t ' s the way we live... 1221 Algarita 444-4485 or 476-2633 Efficiencies, 1, 2, & 4 b e d ro o m s From $ 2 0 0 1st stop on U.T. shuttle 2 s w i m m i n g pools, 1 volle y b a ll court C lu b h o u s e w it h w e t b ar a n d fireplace 14 floor plans; flats & t o w n h o u s e s Lots of sto ra g e space Lavish la n d s c a p in g Free ice m akers Professionally M anaged By O BARRY GILLINGWATER M A N A G EM EN T CO. Page BIO □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS M FURNISHED APARTMENTS M FURNISHED A P A R T M E N T S ^ UNFURN. APARTMENTS ROOMMATES SERVICES TYPING ABP E F F . , 1 B R S F r o m $195 L e a s in g for fa ll 5 b lo c k s to c a m p u s Sh u ttle , pool C H A P A R R A L A P T S . 7408 L e o n 476-3467 HYDE PARK APTS. F (ill I jp Q s itig ’S o u I I • U rg a him. Efficiency J200-S210 • Large him 1 BR $235 • Shuttle Bus Front Door • Park & Tennis Courts Adjoin Complex I I LA PAZ APTS. ¡ I ¡ S i g n i n g F a l l L e a s e s I g 1 BR FURN. $250 ¡ • Water & Ga» Paid • Shuttle Bus • Quiet Com plex 4 4 1 3 S p e e d w a y ( 4 5 8 -2 0 9 6 i i 401 W . 39 4 5 1 -4 2 5 5 UNFURN. APARTMENTS ! MARK XX I APTS. Fall Leasing I i | I • I BR Fum. $250 • 2 BR Fum $310 • Shuttle 2 Blits. • W a te r, G a s Paid CIRCLE VILLA APTS. F A II Lea sing 1 BR $220 • Water & Gas TV Cable Paid By Owner * Shuttle Bus 4 4 4 -5 0 0 3 2323 Town Lake Circle 451-2621 3815 G u a d a lu p e UNFURN. APARTMENTS P A R A Q O n A p a R t m e n t Lo c a t o r s H aving a hard tim e finding an apartm en t ? Call us. We have the trained sp ecialists to do the job for you. (A sk about our rom m m ate finding service.) Sh erry M c M illin , A g e n t Effic. From $ 1 6 0 2 1 3 W . 5 t h 4 7 7 -6 6 8 8 8 3 3 0 B u r n e t R d . 4 5 2 -6 6 8 8 Continental Apartments 2 BR Fum. - $315 • Water, gas, TV cable PAID • Shuttle Bus Comer • Nice Pool • GoH Course Across Street 9 1 0 E. 40 4 5 1 -7 7 1 8 El Campo Apts. Sig n in g Fall Leases J • 1 BR Fum. $250 • 2 BR Fum. $310 • Water i gas pd. • Shuttle 1 Blk. • Quiet Complex 305 W . 39 4 5 2 -8 5 3 7 MARK VII APTS. - Fall Leasing - • 1 BR Furn. $250 • Shuttle Front Door • Water, gas, TV cable Paid 3100 S p e e d w a y 4 7 7 -1 6 0 7 UNFURN. APARTMENTS ON III SHUTTLE • Central location off C a m e r o n Rd. just east of IH35 • Beautiful landscaping • Pools, wet bars, cable T V and m ore • H u g e floor plans with private patios • A B P , one and two bedroom s B R O A D M O O R APARTM ENTS I A II 1200 Broadm oor 4 54-3885 4 5 4 -2 5 3 7 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FÜRNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS E N F I E L D R O A D , n e a r shu ttle , s m a ll, quiet, o ld e r c o m p le x 1 b e d ro o m s, A C , A B P S t a r t s at *180 L e a s e a n d d e p o sit J a c k 478-9521 W E A s s o c L a r g e eHicien S T U D E N T ' S DP e AM c ie s n e a r c a m p u s , s m a ll q u ie t c o m p le x , u t ilit ie s r u n low *225 C a ll V i r g i n i a o r K a y b e t w e e n 10-2 at 474-8486 O N E B E D R O O M a p a r t m e n t - c lo s e to U T n e w c a r p e t a n d f u r n it u r e C a ll 478 6899 A f t e r 5 00 p m E F F ¡C I E N C Y F O R S I7 5 Q u ie t s u r r o u n d in g s w a lk in g a c c e s s to m a j o r s h o p p in g a r e a N e a r I F fie ld fo r sh u tt le a c c e s s C a ii 454-0086, T h e S a ltillo . 1 B R S T U D I O a v a ila b le fo r A u g u s t C e il­ in g f a n s , d i s h w a s h e r , d i s p o s a l, tw o D io c k s f r o m s h u ttle *165 fo r A u g u s t . F a l l *26C p lu s E 404 35th 451 0791 451 2986 34 5 0772 in q u i e t L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y n e ig h b o r n o o n n e a r g o lf c o u r s e * 1 * 0 fo r A u g u s t. *185 fo r F a l l 516 E 40th a fte r 6 452-3271 t a r r y t o w n s t u d i o efficiency. $250 a b p , C A - C H , c e i l i n g f a n , l a r g e b e d r o o m , k i t c h e n e t t e P r e f e r m a l e g r a d u a t e s tu d e n t 478-6380 ( t w o d o u b le A V A I L A B L E N O W b e d s) c lo se I F route. *195 A u g u s t , *260 fall. 478-9649 e v e n in g s 2 1 L A R G E 2 B R 2 B A N e a r U T a n d ih u tt la . C a ll a fte r n o o n 452-6789 W A L K T O c a m p u s . E f f i c ie n c y a p a r t ­ m e n t a v a i la b l e A u g u s t 1st 2909 W e st A v e n u e A p a r t m e n t 304 W A L K L A W sch o o l, L B J L ib r a r y , s h u t tie I B R s *2 2 0 p lu s E 1 b lo c k e a s t of R e d R iv e r o n 26th T o w e r v ie w A p a r t m e n t s . 478 4066. Y E S . W E h a v e the p e rfe c t s tu d e n t c o m ­ p le x for y o u 302 W 38th, L e M a r q u e e I B R s , e f fic ie n c ie s A p a r t m e n t s left G a s p a id 453-4002 P o o l E F F I C I E N C I E S . g a r a g e a p a r t m e n t s G r a d u a t e stu d e n ts, f a c u lt y o n ly 12 m o n t h le a se N o pets, c h ild r e n 474-1212, 452-7680 2 B R 1 T ir e d of li v in g w it h s t r a n g e r s ? T r y u s - N e w M a n o r A p a r t m e n t s , a n e w a g e c o m ­ m u n it y of f r ie n d s A u s t i n 's o n ly c lo t h in g - o p tio n a l a p a r t m e n t s h a v e a fe w m o r e o p e n in g s C lo s e to shuttle, w in e clu b , v o l l e y b a l l , h u g e p o o l, c h i l d r e n 's p la y g r o u n d , la u n d r o m a t , te n a n t s e c u r i­ ty a h b ills p a id e x c e p t E *180 *215,2401 E M a n o r (7 10 m ile E of IH 35 1 476- 5875. 474 4319, 458 9042 M I D S U M M E R S P E C I A L T A N G L E W O O D E A S T A P A R T M E N T S W E L C O M E S Y O U S T U D E N T S A N D F A M I L I E S f r e e to q u a l i f i e d T w o w e e k s a p p lic a n t s 1 a n d 2 B R a p a r tm e n ts . O ly m p ic siz e pool, s e c u r it y g u a r d s on d u ­ ty, low in c o m e w e lc o m e r e n t 2604 M a n c r R o a d 474 5550 A L L B I L L S P A I D South, 1 a n d 2 b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t s o n T o w n L a k e ; pool, W D ro o m , c o n v e n ie n t to d o w n to w n a n d c it y b u s S t a r t in g *245, 4 44 3337 o r 4 7 6 2 63 3 . G i l l i n g w a t e r M a n a g e m e n t C o P a r k s i d e Apts. 4209 B u r n e t Rd. L a r g e f u ll y I b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t * , c a rp e t e d C e n t r a l h e a t a n d a ir. id e a l f o r f a c u lt y o r s e r io u s stu d e n t. T e n n is co u rt, pool a n d lo g g in g t r a il a c r o s s the stre e t R a m s e y P a r k N o pets, n o c h ild re n . 9 m o n t h s o r 12 m o n t h s le a se *235 p lu s e le c t ric it y D e p o s it *75 N o w le a s in g fo r S e p t e m b e r 1st S U B L E A S I N G a n e f fic ie n c y a p a r t m e n t *1 1 0 A B P A i r c o n d it io n e d for A u g u s t C a ll 4 7?.2784 a fte r 5 p m M r s . T h o m s o n 454-3251 M a n a g e r 459-1594 ROOMS A t t r a c t iv e R o o m in H is t o r ic W e s t A v e H o m e P r iv a t e entrance b a th W a lk to U T G a r d e n se ttin g, A B P , s m a ll frid g e , no c o o k in g S h o u ld be a v a ila b le tor s o m e p a id b a b y s it t in g for 1 y e a r o ld d u r i n g s o m e e v e n in g s a n d w e e k e n d s d e p o sit r e q u ir e d *175 C a ll 477-4348 a fte r 5 p m . L e a s e * 1 3 5 E F F I C I E N C Y d u p l e x E a s t S p a c io u s a p p lia n c e s 5207 L e d e s m a B R a lp h L o u is P r o p e r t y M a n a g e m e n t . 458- >757 L A R G E 2 B R 2 B A , *2 5 0 p lu s E W e a r e lo o k in g to r a q u ie t, c o n s c ie n t io u s i n ­ d iv id u a l o r c o u p ie in t e re ste d in a s m a ll c o m p le x n e a r N o r t h c r o s s V e r y cle a n , C A C H . pool, p a tio, la u n d ry , d e a d b o lts, d is h w a s h e r , d is p o s a l, c a b le 476-2812 S P A C I O U S E F F I C I E N C Y O n T o w n L a k e , s m a ll q u ie t c o m p le x . *165 p lu s e le c t ric it y 45 E a s t A v e n u e 447-4400 U T C O E D S F A L L S e v e r a l m c e p r iv a t e r o o m * a v a i la b l e to r w o m e n a n d m e n C lo s e to c a m p u s F u r ­ n is h e d a n d c a r p e t e d B i ll s p a id C o m m u n tt y k it c h e n L a u n d r y C e n t r a l he at a n d a ir . C a ll D a v e at 477-1205 N O W L E A S I N G fo r s u m m e r a n d fall C o -e d d o r m n e x t to c a m p u s R e m o d e le d , n e w r e c r e a t i o n a r e a , s u n d e c k W id e s c r e e n t v , r e f r ig e r a t o r s no m e a ls T a o s 2612 G u a d a lu p e , 474 6905 f u r n i s h i n g s , N I C E R O O M , C A / C H , w a lk in g d is t a n c e U T C a ll 477 9388 T W O B L O C K S U T , n ic e ly f u r n i s h e d r o o m s , e f f i c i e n c ie s a n d a p a r t m e n t s f r o m *105 u p L y le H o u se , 2800 W h ih s 477 7558 O N E m i l e f r o m U T , f u r n is h e d k i t c h e n , U tilitie s 477-5192, 453 5075 * 1 6 0 p l u s d e p o s it , p l u s s h a r e 2 A V A I L A B L E A U G U S T 15th a w a y f r o m lik e at* c a m p u s . N ic e q u ie t c o u n t r y m o s p h e r e K i t c h e n p r iv ile g e s , p o o l 476-0028, 258-0720 N o n - s m o k e r 2 L O V E L Y B E D R O O M S fo r g r a d u a t e g i r l s R e a s o n a b le te a c h e r o r U n i v e r s it y e m p lo y e d M r s O B D o u g la s , 476-3924 FURNISHED HOUSES N I N E T Y Y E A R o ld o w n e r of tw o b e d r o o m B r y k e r w o o d h o m e n o w re q u ir e s n u r s i n g h o m e c a r e S u b s t a n t ia l r e n t d i s c o u n t to r e l i a b l e , m a t u r e g r a d u a t e stu d e n t c o u p le w h o w ill liv e in a n d m a in t a in the h o u s e R e f e r e n c e s r e ­ q u ir e d C a ll 472-6614 UNFURNISHED HOUSES N O R T H 3 B R -1 B A N E W L E A S E - P U R C H A S E O P T I O N N e w 3 B R 1 B A b r ic k h om e . C A C H , la r g e lot lo c a te d c lo se to IH 3 5 a n d 290 E O n ly S i7 5 p e r m o n t h o w n e r a g e n t L y n c h P r o p e r t ie s , 454-5869, e v e n in g s 345-8481 H Y D E P A R K a r e a 3 B R , 1 B A S u m m e r r a te *275 p lu s le a s e a n d d e p o sit. N o d o g s. J a c k , 478-9521, W E A s s o c ia t e s A V A I L A B L E N O W ! T w o a n d t h r e e b e d ro o m o ld e r h o m e s , a p a r t m e n t s C a ll n o w for 24 h o u r in f o r m a t io n 452-5979 12 M O S L E A S E 3 B R l 1 . B A C A - C H . a t ­ t ic a n d c e ilin g f a n F e n c e d Y a r d F i r s t a n d la st m o r e n t p lu s s e c u r it y a n d pet d e p o sit *400 N e g o t ia b le 926-9506 2 B R , 2 B A , b o n u s r o o m , fire p la c e , la r g e f e n c e d b a c k y a r d , h u g e trees, e a st of H a n c o c k C e n t e r *4 9 5 459-7823. S T U D E N T S ! 12 x 60 m o b ile h o m e on U n i v e r s i t y p r o p e r t y , A C , l a r g e r e fr ig e ra t o r , d is h w a s h e r , a n d m o r e ! 476- 7464 A V A I L A B L E S E P T E M B E R 1 o n S h u t- tle 3 B R 2 B A , f e n c e d y a rd , p a r t ly f u r ­ n is h e d *3 1 0 / m o n th , *1 5 0 d e p o sit 345- 9442. _ W A L K T O U T , la r g e 2 B R , 2 B A . t a s t e fu l­ ly r e m o d e le d in s id e D i s h w a s h e r d i s ­ p o sa l, r e f r ig e r a t o r , sto v e , w a s h e r , d r y e r in c lu d e d C A C H , p r iv a t e 2 -sto ry . *495 p lu s u tilitie s. N o p e ts. 459-0964 T a o s D aaia euatMuf» mtmttn, I i i h 7 Í 7 0 S « 7 4 Í M J N O W LEASING FOR FALL C o -e d d o r m a c r o s s the s tre e t f r o m c a m p u s at 27th St R e c e n t ly r e n o v a t e d f a c ilit y w it h t a ste fu l, e ffic ie n t f u r n is h in g s . R e c r e a t io n a r e a s u n d e c k , w id e s c r e e n T V , r e f r i g e r a t o r s in e v e r y ro o m , 24 h o u r s e c u r it y , in e x p e n s iv e p a r k i n g a v a ila b l e ¡¿005 Willow Creek Austin, Texas 78741 (5 1 2 )4 4 7 - 6 6 9 6 447-6697 \ \ ROOMS ROOMS UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES LEASING FOR FALL Park Place 4306 Ave. A Furnished 454-1789 2/1...$300 plus E. Redwood North 5101 Evans Unfurnished 459-0956 iff $169 plus E. 1 / I $195 plus E. Blackstone 2910 Red River All Bills Paid 476-5631 Furnished & Unfurnished l / l $200 2/2 $410 The Elliott System 451-8178 SERVICES SERVICES EARN M l 00 CASH ( on your first visit) 1st Donation - $8.00 & a $3.00 B O N U S (with student I.D.) 2nd Do nation - $10.00 Each donation alternates: $8.00 then $10,00 plus on yo u r 10th visit you receive a $10.00 B O N U S AUSTIN PLASMA CENTER 2800 G u a d a lu p e 474-7941 C o u p o n v a lid on 1st visit on ly Step into a world suited for a king... For $245 & E. & up In this day and age of m echanical and technological advancem ent, it is nice to be able to sit back and relax. K ingsgate A partm ents alfords every resid en t an a s s o rt­ ment o f choices that include: • tasteful, color-coordinated • free cable T.V. • large pool w ith am ple lounging decors facilities • club room /party facilities • racquet ball/handball courts and much, m uch more. Hours M-F 9-6 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-5 ___ L P i y cl il e it f c A w h f — m If y o u r , o n n o u t d a p r a t t o d , or c a n 'f fh o f a t>ro C / in ir o f A m f i n m a y b e • lo o p o 6 f o lo h a f p T r o o l m o n l h b o o for i h o t o w h o m o o t n m p l a o n t ry e n t o n a bo t a d t o h ly o n m o d K o l o r o l o o t i o n t Thtt o p p o r t u n i ­ t y it o v a i l a b l a d u o to t o t t i n g p r o c a d u r m r o p w r o d b y Ih o t o d o r a l L a w r e g a r d i n g th o f o r d o Y o l o p m o n t o f n o w m o d k a l i o n i c o m p lo t . i n f o r m a t i o n a r . d to f in d o u t if y o u q u a l i f y , t a ll m m ? : _______ COPYING SERVICE Jf 4 D o b ie M all 476-9171 P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L I N G , R E F E R R A L S &, F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T I N G T e x a s P r o b l e m P r e g n a n c y 600 W 28th, S u it e 101 M -F , 7 30-5 30 474-9930 F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T S C o u n s e lin g o n aM p r e g n a n c y a l t e r ­ n a t iv e s b i r t h c o n t r o l m e t h o d s a n d w o m e n 's h e a lt h c o n c e r n s W a lk - in b a s is, M o n - F r i 9-5 W o m e n 's R e f e r r a l C e n te r, 1800B L a v a c a 476-6878 All referrals made locally. O R A L S U R G E R Y PA T IEN T S S tu d e n ts in n e e d o f h a v in g third m olars (W is d o m teeth) re m o v ­ e d a n d w h o w o u ld be w illin g to participate in an a n a lge sic d ru g study at re d u ce d fees, p le a se call: Donoid R. Mehlisch, M.D., D.D.S. 451-0254 S u rg e ry ca n be arranged to be d one at the U niversity of Texas if S t u d e n t H e a lt h S e r v i c e desired F O R E I G N C A R T U N E - U P & M I N O R R E P A I R B y a n e x p e r ie n c e d N I A S E c e r t if ie d m e c h a n ic 476-1346 A R T 'S M O V I N G a n d H a u li n g : a n y a r e a 24 h o u rs, 7 d a y s 447-9384, 477-3249 J E N N I N G S ' M O V I N G a n d H a u l i n g D e p e n d a b le p e r s o n a l s e r v i c e la r g e o r s m a ll |obs 7 d a y s 'w e e k . 442-7233 D A N C E C L A S S f o r m e n t a l l y o r e m o t io n a lly d is t u r b e d . C a ll D o n n a C lift at 445-1652. ____________________ E X P E R I E N C E D M O N T E S S O R I te a c h e r n e e d s c h ild r e n f o r h o m e d a y c a r e c l a s s C a ll 474-5507, 8-5, a s k fo r D o t- tie; 478-7775. ___ ____________________ _ E X P E R I E N C E D C E R T I F I E D e le m e n ­ t a r y f o r p r iv a t e s c h o o l A f t e r 5 , B a r b a r a 476-7991, B e t s y 258-9575 t e a c h e r s s t u d e n t s s e e k in g M O V I N G ? T W O 18' t r u c k s ne e d lo a d s O n e e a st b o u n d , o th e r w e st. C a n c a r r y 6-7 r o o m s of f u r n it u r e f o r little m o r e th a n y o u c a n r e n t a t r u c k a n d d o it y o u r s e lf . M i d - A u g u s t 474-4185. f o r d ís s e r - S T A T I S T I C Á L A N A L Y S I S t a t io n s, t h e s e s , a n d o t h e r r e s e a r c h . R e a s o n a b le ra te s. A f t e r 6, 478-7902, 451- 8803 WANTED C L A S S R I N G S , g o ld je w e lry , o ld p o c k e t w a t c h e s , c u r r e n c y , s t a m p s w a n t e d . H ig h p r ic e s p a id . P io n e e r C o in C o m ­ p a n y , 5555 N o r t h L a m a r , B ld g . C -1 1 3 in C o m m e r c e P a r k , 451-3607. ___________ B U Y I N G W O R L D go ld , g o ld je w e lry , s c r a p go ld , old c o in s, a n t iq u e s , p o c k e t w a t c h e s . P a y i n g f a i r m a r k e t p r ic e C a p it o l C o in Co., 3004 G u a d a lu p e , 472- 1676 P h i li p N o h r a , o w n e r. W A N T T O b u y u s e d s c i- fic b o o k s G o o d co n d itio n . M i n i m u m 100 p a p e r b a c k s . A f te r 8 p.m . 346-1570. W I S H T O b u y tw o g o o d F le e t w o o d M a c t ic k e t s W ill p a y to p d o lla r . 458-4664 N O R T H W E S T . M O T H E R to f in a n c i a ll y s t a y h o m e w ith n e w infant, m u s t b a b y s it tw o m o r e in fa n t s. 837-6318 D o y o u n e e d a r o o m m a t e in a h u r r y ? Call R O O M M A T E S E L E C T O R T h e C o m p u t e r iz e d L o c a t o r S e r v ic e 452-0420 M a k e a r r a n g e m e n t s now for the fa ll s e m e s t e r R O O M M A T E S ( S i N E E D E D to s h a r e c le a n A u s t in 442 6751. in S E s h a r e u t ilit ie s f u r n i s h e d 3-2-2 h o m e *1 8 0 -* 145 m o., ________________ S O U T H F E M A L E s h a r e 2-1 f u r n is h e d d u p le x C A - C H , c it y b u s s i SO, b ills pa id . A f t e r 5 00, 442 7381 N E E D T W O r e s p o n s ib le n o n - s m o k e r s , S h a r e la r g e 3-2-2 S o u t h m a te f e m a le » b 'li s 4 7 6 -)97S *186 m o n t h in W A N T E D 1 O R 2 h o u s e m a t e s b e a u t ifu l 4 B R n e w h o m e F u r '- shed. G r a c y W o o d s a r e a , 10 m in u t e s n o r th on I 35 *210 p lu s u t ilit ie s C a ll D o u g at 459-8350 (k e e p t r y in g ) S T U D I O U S . R E S P O N S I B L E , --eat p e r ­ so n to s h a r e h u g e 1-1 a p a r t m e n t W a lk to U T *100 A B P C a ll S u m it 478-2365 C Ó N S I D E R A T E , L I B E R A L , a t t r a c t iv e f e m a le g r a d u a t e s e e k s s a m e to r g r e a t 2 B R d u p le * O v e r a c h ie v e r p r e f e r r e d C o n m e 441-4898 N E E D R E L A X E D n o n - s m o k e r to S h a r e *165, ¡ u t ilit ie s 2 B R . 2 B A t o w n h o u s e S o u t h IH 3 5 Jo h n . 447-1849 F E M A L E N O R T H A u s t n s h a r e h o u se S u s y , 453-5503 S e p t e m b e r 1. ; B R i b ills N o n s m o k e r s i 50 p lu s N O N - ~ S M O K I N G , R E S P O N S I B L E fe m a le s h a r e la r g e 2 2 a p a r t m e n t on *155 p tu * 1 ¡ e le c t r ic it y D i a n n 443 S R 6900. ______ H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D F i n e 3 B R house , c a m p u s a r e a *132 50. b ills, dep. 451-4188 m o r n in g s , e v e n in g s H O U S E M A T E T O s h a r e 2 B R N e a r IF sh u ttle *122 00 451-5445 a ft e r 6 p m N E E D C O N S I D E R A T E , r e s p o n s i b le fe m a le . U n f u r n is h e d 2 1 t o w n h o u se C A *138 p lu s ’ > u tilitie s. C H , D i s h w a s h e r 445 9848 6 :30/1:00 p.m . F E M A L E 26 N e e d s ro o m , o r s h a r e h o u s e , F u r n U n i u r n , n e a r U T , e n d A u g u s t 441-5799 E v e n i n g s C L O S E T O c a m p u s S h a r e 2 B R d u p le x S 100, b ills. A v a ila b l e n o w C o m e b y 2909 W e st A v e n u e N o 304 W A N T E D R O O M M A T E 2 B R 2 B A E n ­ fie ld E R s h u tt le D is h w a s h e r , g a r b a g e d is p o s a l, pool. P r e f e r n o n - s m o k e r . 472- 7265 . ____________ H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D ' O w ñ T n " tra n c e , w a lk to c a m p u s , no d e p o s it *150 p lu s ' 2 b ills Scott, 474-1870 N O N S M O K I N G s t a f f e r g r a d H a r d w o o d flo o r s, E R *100, M ic h e lle , 478-9649 e v e n in g s . s t u d e n t F E M A L E U T s h a r e 2-1 j u tilitie s. S H A R E F U R N I S H E D 2 B R d u p le x . L a r g e b e d r o o m , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e H a r d w o o d s . * 1 1 2 50, Va u t i l i t i e s A v a ila b l e n o w 459-8076 R O O M F O R re n t, la r g e o ld e r h o u se , o w n ba th *135, ; :< b i ll * N o n - s m o k in g f e m a le g r a d u a t e p r e f e r r e d 478 3953 e v e n in g s T im , Ja n e t. F E M A L E N E E D E D im m e d ia t e ly A t ­ tra c tiv e , m a t u r e o n ly , n o s m o k e . Q u ie t d u p le x n o r th Jo h n , 836-1718 9-11 p m N E E D M A L E r o o m m a t e to s h a r e 3 B R , in n i c e N o r t h A u s t i n 2 B A h o u s e F u r n i s h e d o r u n f u r ­ n e i g h b o r h o o d n ish e d , *1 2 0 p lu s '/j u t ilit ie s. 454-7556, 345-0377, S T U D E N T 2 B R a p a r t m e n t M F *167 50 m o n t h in c lu d e s a ll b ills. T w o b lo c k s s o u th of T o w n L a k e O r w il lin g to s w itc h to p e n t h o u s e *2 1 5 / m o n th . E v e n i n g s c a ll 477-2826 f o r R O O M F O R r e n t in h o u s e I F sh u ttle . M u s t lik e m u s ic . *1 2 0 p e r m o n t h 454- 9752 R E S P O N S I B L E F E M A L E r o o m m a t e ' Neat, q u ie t n o n - s m o k e r f o r f u r n is h e d 2-1. *165 p lu s e le c t ric it y . C a ll C a r o l, 477-2507 N O N - S M O K I N G R O O M M A T E , s e m i ­ f u r n is h e d 2/2 B a r t o n S p r in g s a r e a B y A u g u s t 9 D o n n a , 327-5263. H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D S h a r e 4-2 in c o n v e n ie n t , sh a d e d , q u ie t n e ig h b o r h o o d . *106, b ills 459-7177 C A S U A L , R E S P O N S I B L E r o o m m a t e ( s ) fo r 2 B R c lo s e to c a m p u s . C R at d o o rs te p . * 165. /M ay, 453-4762. R O O M M A T E W A N T E D , 3 l > e d r o o m house, C A / C H . N e a r C R ro u te Vs b ills. C a ll 458-2037 N O R T H E A S T 2-2 (*3 2 5 ) a n d 3-1 i (*3 8 0 ) C A / C H , f ir e p la c e , c a rp e t , 2 sto ry , c a r ­ port, lo ts of s t o r a g e V e r y g o o d c o n d i­ tion 327 4095, 444-5818 _ re n t 2 B R , 1 B A , N E W D U P L E X to r c a rp e t, d i s h w a s h e r , r e fr ig e r a t o r , stove, d ra p e s , ca b le , C A C H , c a r p o r t . D e p o s it p lu s b ills, 6 m o n t h le a se , p e ts O K . W it h in 10 m in u t e s of d o w n t o w n 1 3 m ile f r o m IH 3 5 o ff W i l l i a m C a n n o n C a ll B o b K e a v e n y , 447-5512. S P E C T A C U L A R V I E W B a r t o n C r e e k 2 B A , V a l l e y . H u g e d e c k , 2 B R , 1 fir e p la c e , m o d e r n kitc h e n , s e c lu sio n . *400 m o n t h Ja n e t, 478-2214, 477-3651 2-1 N E W L Y R E N O V A T E D N e w c a r p e t s, C A / C H , w a s h e r , d r y e r T re e s, y a r d . C lo s e to U T 3 b lo c k s E C sh u ttle . *300 8-1 80 478-3918 a ft e r 6 p .m UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES T R A V I S H E I G H T S . Sh u ttle , p e ts ok, no lease, m o v e in t o d a y H a r d w o o d , liv in g , d in in g , k itc h e n , 2-1. *345 327-1878 I FOR RENT MUSICAL INSTRUCTION Pi A N O L E S S O N S A ll le v e ls E x p e r i e n c ­ ed. q u a lif ie d te a c h e r. F o r in f o r m a t io n , p h o n e 451-3549. E X P E R I E N C E D P I A N O / G U I T A R t e a c h e r , 'B e g i n n e r s - a d v a n c e d . U T degree A f t e r 1 p.m . 459-4082, 476-4407 1 G U I T A R L E S S O N S tra in e d e x p e r ie n c e d 451-0040 3-7 p.m . f o r s e r i o u s . B y in s t ru c t o r. P h il, S P A C I O U S M O B I L E h o m e lo ts f o r re n t. C a ll 385-5883 O ff 6900 b lo c k of R iv e r s id e D r iv e . P R I V A T E V O I C E . P ia n o , a n d m u s ic th e o ry s t u d y c l a s s ic a l o r p o p u la r m u s ic . 327-6471 in s t r u c t io n HELP WANTED 1 HELP WANTED S U P E R M A R K E T Opening Soon I m m e d ia t e full or part-time e m p l o y ­ ment available for clerks in the follow­ ing departments: M e a t — P ro d u c e — C a s h ie r in g — P a c k a g i n g — Deli. A lso need jo u rne y m a n meat cutters. All po sition s r e q u ir e s u p e r m a r k e t e x ­ perience. A p p l y at Sun Harvest Farms 8801 R e s e a r c h Blvd. (next to K - M a r t ) 9 A M - 6 P M GET YOUR FALL JOB NOW You can m a k e $4.00 to $5.00 per hour • A great part time or full time job • W ork in your o w n n e ig h b o rh o o d • Free m eals All locationi hiring tor back to schooI rush A P P L Y AFTER 4 3 0 404 W. 26th St. 476 7191 411$ Guadalupe 459-9101 • 7011 E. Riverside 44 7 6691 * 1110 West lynn 474-7676 TYPING, PRINTING, B IN D IN G The C o m p le te P ro fe ssio n a l FULLTIME TYPIN G SERV IC E 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 H EM PH ILL PK P l e n t y of P a r k i n g : econotype : j econocopy : J Typing C o p y in g , • Binding, Printing * IB M Correcting Selectnc * Rental & Su p p lie s 5C copies • North J Mon.-Fri. 8 :3 0 -5 :3 0 9 Sat. 1 0 :0 0 -4 :0 0 37th a n d G u a d a lu p e 4 5 3 - 5 4 5 2 * ; South 0 Mon.-Fri. 8 :3 0 -5 :0 0 E Riverside a n d Lakeshore • • a 4 4 3 - 4 4 9 8 Austin Typing Service Experienced • Professional Academic specialist minor editing included 4 5 1 - 6 0 1 2 G u a d a iu p * — South of 183 ( o r n a r o f G u a d a l u p a 8 A m p t b u r y l H O L L E Y ' S 1505 L a v a c a 478-9484 P r o f e s s io n a l T y p in g , C o p y in g , B i n d in g Color Xerox W O O D S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E When you want it done right 472-6302 2200 Guadalupe, side entrance T Y P I N G : T H E S E S , d is s e r t a t io n s , l e r m p a p e r s re p o rts , e tc E x p e r ie n c e d , I B M 458- S e le c tr ic . N e a r N o r t h c r o s s M a l l j 6465 C A L L D e A n n e at 474-1563 8-5 M - F o r 345- 1244, 453-0234 w e e k e n d s a n d e v e n in g s N o r m a l l y 1 -da y s e r v ic e . P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I S T e c o n o m i c a l e x p e r ie n c e d . A ll t y p e s of w o r k a c c e p te d . 251-4454 a fte r 6 p.m . T A Y L O R T Y P E S , p r o f e s s i o n a l , te c h n ic a l, t d a y s e r v ic e . U T d e liv e r y . I B M S e le c tr ic , c a r b o n r ib b o n . 458-2649 a ft e r 5 p.m . A C C U R A T E T Y P I S T , e x p e r ie n c e d , f a s t s e rv ic e , I B M S e le c tr ic . 443-5060, K im . T Y P I N G ^ R IV E R S ID E area. O n e day s e rv ic e . I r e n e 's B u s in e s s S e r v ic e . 443- 4684. Q U A L I T Y T Y P I N G at lo w r a t e s E x ­ c e lle n t sp e lle r, g r a m m a r i a n N e a r 45th a n d B u r n e t 451-7086 P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I N G ~ m a n u - s c r i p t s , s t a t i s t i c a l . G u a r a n t e e d . Y v o n n e , 474-4863. r e p o r t s , l o n g F A S T , F A S T P r o f e s s io n a l, e x p e r ie n c ­ ed *1 p a ge , d o u b le s p a c e d C a ll B o n n ie , 441-6657 P E R S O N A L I Z E D Q U A L I T Y t y p i n g to tit y o u r n e e d s. F r o m *1 p a g e F r e e p i c k ­ u p a n d d e liv e r y . K e n d r a , 282-3167 A N Y T H i N G T Y P E D ! I n c T u d in g "f o r e ig n la n g u a g e a n d m a t h . C o r r e c t i n g S e le c ­ tric F r o m S l/ p a g e . 458-2380. t y p iNG DISSERTATIONS, theses. Too y e a r s e x p e r i e n c e . F a s t , a c c u r a t e . L o r r a in e 473-8536 9 a . m . -9 p.m . S A T I S F A C T I O N G U A R A N T E E D . L a w s c h o o l s p e c ia lis t . A ls o th e se s, d i s s e r ­ t a tio n s. I B M C o r r e c t in g S e le c tr ic . V e r y e x p e r ie n c e d , r e lia b le 327-0109. F A S T , A C C U R A T E , p r o f e s s io n a l, in e x ­ p e n s i v e t y p i n g . A l s o p r o o f r e a d i n g , w r it in g , t u t o r in g R e s u m e c o m p o s it io n s , p h o t o g r a p h y . 2420 G u a d a lu p e , 478-3633. K A T H E 'S Q U I C K T Y P E - s a m e d a y o r o v e r n ig h t s e r v i c e M o s t c a s e s . N o c h e c k s p le a se . 443-6488 I t h e se s, Q U A L I T Y T Y P I N G , p r o o f in g d is s e r t a t io n s , r e p o r t s S e le c tr ic . O v e r ­ n ig h t E R sh u ttle . P a t M il l s , 475-4593, 472-3450. A f t e r 5, w e e k e n d s. R E A S O N A B L E t y p i n g b y F A S T p r o f e s s io n a l, p lu s g u a r a n t e e d p r o o f in g C a ll K e n at 443-7622 a ft e r 6. T Y P I N G S E R V I C E , S I 25 p a g e E x ­ c e lle n t w o rk . P r o o f in g a v a i la b l e 442- 4080 H I G H Q U A L I T Y t y p in g R e p o r t s , d i s ­ s e r t a t io n s p a p e rs , le tte rs, e tc C o r r e c ­ t in g S e le c t r ic E x p e r ie n c e d P r ic e s c o m ­ p e titiv e . E liz a b e t h 477-9670. T H É R É S E F s T Y P I N G F a s t a c c u r a t e *1 00 p a g e R iv e r s id e a r e a 445-2115 Ann y.v'áa 4 M B A RESU M ES w ith or w ithout pictures 2 D a y Service 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill Park Just North of 27 th at G u a d a lu p e 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 ROOM AND BOARD S T O N E H E N G E C O - O P F e m a le v a c a n ­ c y W e a r e 5 w o m e n a n d 5 m e n l i v in g In p o st - V ic t o r ia n h o m e 3 b l o c k s f r o m c a m - p u s 611 W . 2 2n d 474-9029, 477-7181 N E W G U I L D C o -o p h a s f e m a le a n d m a le v a c a n c ie s 510 W 2 3rd 472-0352 V A C A N C Y A T v C o-e d , e c o n o m ic a l, v e g e t a r ia n c o -o p 6 b l o c k s c a m p u s P e t s ok. 1919 R o b b in s , 474-7767 E A S T W O O D P A R K A r e a C o o p lo o k in g f o r quie t, n o n - s m o k in g p e r s o n to h e lp m a k e a h o u s e a h o m e V a c a n c y S e p t 1. L o n g - t e r m c o m m it m e n t p r e f e r r e d 474- 2487 o r 472-6554 H E A L T H A N D n u t r it io n o r ie n t e d c o -o p s e e k s r e s p o n s ib le in d iv id u a ls W e o ffe r q u ie t r e s i d e n t ia l n e ig h b o r h o o d n e a r c a m p u s , v e g e t a r ia n s m o k e - f r e e e n v ir o n ­ s u n d e c k o p e n f ie ld a n d g a r d e n m e n t ___ R o y a l C o -o p , 1805 P e a n 478 0880 V A C A N C I E S A V A I L A B L E at F r e n c h 2 b lo c k s f r o m s p e a k in g c o o p e r a t iv e 3 c a m p u s F r e n c h H o u se , 710 W 21st, 478- 6587 P R A N A H O U S E s e e k in g v e g e t a r ia n s , n o n s m o k e r s C o -o p life s ty le , n ic e h o u se , g o o d fo o d 2510 R i o G r a n d e 476-7905 TRAVEL a ’-ea a n y t im e A f te r A u g u s t 15th C a ll 475 0516 o r 472 3120 ( A f t e r 5 p m ) D R I V E R N E E D E D to m o v e r e n t e d t r u c k w it h f u r n i t u r e to B o s t o n E * - pe r 1 e n c e r e fe r e n c e s n e e d e d C o m p e n s a ­ tio n n e g o t ia b le 472-4823 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page B11 R E S P O N S I B L E S IT T E R wanted 3 30 to 4 30 Monday and Tuesday, U T area 476- 4236 after 5 F R E E R E N T for couple or someone to live m to help fake care of senior citizen F o r information call 453-5723 i a m a handicapped graduate interested in fmdmg someone to provide part-time ass stance with m y care and completion ot degree If you are interested, please ca ll 444-6227 or 474-1333. Wives disrupt Klan/Nazi trial LOST & FOUND f o u n d o r LO ST a p el? Special Pals Hotline, call 258-0408 L O S T : S M A L L silver band inscribed "C a rm e n ." G reat sentimental value Rew ard offered Call 472-2392 after 8 p.m. PERSONAL P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e pregnancy testing and referrals. 474- 9930 MISCELLANEOUS S500 IS yours if you are the first with M cDonalds W inning Combination " A T " Call 458-6405 TUTORING M ID D L E E A S T E R N Studies tutor need­ ed 476-4369 M O T E L N I G H T C L E R K Two personable, able bodied individuals to work from 9 p.m. to 7 a m Eac h will work three to four nights per week E x ­ perience preferred, but we also train Excellent for university students work­ ing their way through college Apply at 10 a m West Winds Motel, Interstate Highway 35 at the Airport B lvd intersec­ tion. 452 2511 M A K E $6 P E R H O U R J e a n s and long h a ir O K . Secure your fall part-tim e w o rk Flexible hours, indoors. 1209 Rio G rande No. 212 after 1 p.m. a l l Y O U F O L K S that need e x tra money can sell flowers with The Original Flow er People Paid daily 288-1102 ¿tu Everynme you use the D aily Texan w ant ads JUST CALL 471-5244 Have something to buy or sell? O ne phone call like dialing \ our entire circu lation .. .person-to- ^ person! Place your W a n t A d today! to us is ^ ^ k T h e Da ily T exan G R O U P H O M E C O U N S E L O R The Brow n Schools is now interviewing for a m ature individual to work in a com ­ munity based program which provides guidance and counseling to emotionally d is tu rb e d and m e n t a lly r e t a r d e d residents Hours are from 3 p m .-11 p m. Monday through Frid ay. Call 478-6662 E O E T Y P I S T 50 wpm $3.50/hour 9-5 or 1-9 M-F 815 Brazos Downtown Call 474-8467 N O W H I R I N G S C H O O L B U S D R I V E R S Reliable women and men needed, must be availab le 6 30-9 00 a m and/or 2-4 30 p m. Start S4 20/hour Apply North, 5901 Guadalupe, 452-5007; Central, 1315 W. 5th St., 474-5773, South, 3300 Jones Rd., 892-2620, Nelson Field, H ighw ay 290 E a st and Berkm an, 452-0011, L B J , 7309 Lazy Creek Drive, 452-0259 E O .E A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R Im m ediate opening - En erg etic young couple to m anage small complex in UT area Perfect way to work w ay through school M ust have at least 2 years left in school No children or pets D avis 8, Associates, 472-6715 En terta in ers: W e are looking for versatile perform ers with a good comic sense to complete a newly formed group. If you have one or more of the following talents — singing, dancing, mime, im ­ provisation, writing, music, stand-up comedy - please call George, 478-7131, or Alvin, 454-4203, to schedule an audition. p a r t T IM E assistant manager needed at apartm ent community. Must live on site and enjoy working with people. No experience necessary Apply in person, 1000 W est Avenue. P L E A S A N T S P E A K IN G V O IC E $4.00/hour 5:30-9:30 M-F W ill train 815 Brazos D O W N TO W N c a ll 474-8467 P e r s o n a l c a r e a s s is t a n c e n ee d ed fo r d is a b le d U T students for fall semester. Op­ tion for live-in (Live-in must be students). Apply at Student Health Center, Room 337 or call Sheri Allen 471-4955 ext. 167, between 8-5 pm for ap ­ pointment. S C IE N T IF IC T R A N S L A T O R S part- or full-time. Hours flexible. Good pay. All languages except Fren ch , G erm an. S p a n is h . S e n d q u a l i f ic a t i o n s to Translators, P.O . Box 7552, Austin, Tex­ as 787 1 2 .________________________________ F U L L - T IM E M A IN T E N A N C E position a v a i l a b l e . T r a n s p o r t a t i o n a n d willingness to work a must. Call for ap­ pointment between 10-4 Monday through F rid ay 451-6697 L O O K IN G F O R Waitpersons needed, Apply Jangs, M o P a c and Greystone. fa ll e m p lo y m e n t? lunch or dinner in person between 2-4, Slang D A Y T IM E COOK positions open/full­ time Apply in person between 2-4, Slang Jar.gs, M o Pa c and Greystone B A B Y S IT T E R - W A R M , loving, respon­ sible to care for baby and toddler F le x i­ ble hours, close campus 476-7608 H U R R Y ! T - S H IR T S P L U S needs help now for fall. Apply in person, Hancock Center, Northcross M ail. IN F A N T T E A C H E R Plan, supervise enriched nurturing environm ent Sem i­ parent Co-op U n ive rsity area W eekday mornings 474-5101 P A R T - T IM E C O U N T E R a tte n d an t carhop Hours 2 p m - 6 p m M-F, 8 a m 12 noon Saturdays Apply in person on­ ly Home Steam Lau nd ry and Cleaners 2301 Manor Road. E X P E R I E N C E D P A R T T IM E counter help Apply in person, 100,000 Auto Parts, 1712 Lake Shore Blvd P A R T T IM E - full time, S3 25 per hour, plus incentives. Start im m ediately. Call for appointment. 477-3788 P A R t T IM E job. Flexible 15-20 hours per week S5 25 per hour C all between 10 a m. and 2 p m. only. 459-3440 N E W h a i r salon needs models for port folio advertising Call Albert 472-7400 LO S T R E S B O B O S is now hiring for both kitchen and floor positions Apply at 1206 W 38th.___________ S M A L L UT area apartm ent complex needs a manager Respond by m ail only to A ll O ver Austin P ro p e rtie s 4314 Medical P a rk w a y, No l 78756 E X P E R I E N C E D C H I E F engineer take full charge of te ch n ica l operations. K O K E A M F M Four years experience Im m ediate opening Jim R ay or Jim Green P O Box 1208, Austin, Texas 78767 454-2561 E O J E L R A M A D A INN Capitol now accepting ap plications for bellm en-parking lot in person between attendants Apply 9 30 a m and 3 00 p m M-F at 300 E 11th Street. C R E A T IV E H E B R E W school teachers w ith b a c k g ro u n d in H e b re w and Ju d a ica Music teacher opening also Send resume to Agudas Achim. 4300 Bull Creek, Austin 78731 COOK N E E D E D to prepai e Sunday night meals for U n ive rsity Presb yterian C h u r c h 's f e l lo w s h i p g ro u p s A p ­ proxim ately 30 people 476-5321, 9-4, R A M A D A IN N Capitol has imm ediate opening for full-time front desk clerk, 7-3 shift Apply in person between 10 a m -2 p.m. M-F, 300 E 11th R A M A D A INN Capitol has imm ediate o p e n in g Background in accounting helpful. Call M r. Schloss, 476-7151, for interview f o r n ig h t a u d it c l e r k P E R F E C T JO B for UT student. 1 block cam pu s M u st be w illin g to w ork weekends 472 8085 ositions available: TO PLACE T E X A N CLASSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 T h e D a ily Texan is accepting applications from students interested in w orking on the fall staff. A n y U n iv e rs ity student m ay apply. N o jo u rn a lism classes are required. T h e Texan w ill begin in te rvie w s for perm anent staff positions August 6. Stud en ts should have at least one semester of experience at the Texan to apply for a perm anent position. Stu d en ts should pick up applications and sign up for in te rv ie w s at the Texan office, T S P C2.112. C all 471-4591 for more inform ation , T h e Da il y T e x a n G R EEN SBO R O , N.C. (U P I) — The widows of two com­ munists slain Nov 3 were jailed Monday for disrupting the open­ ing day of testimony in the trial of six Klansmen and Nazis charged in the shootings. Marty Nathan and Florence Cauce were each sentenced to 30 days in jail on contempt of court charges by Superior Court Judge Jam es M Long for separate outbursts. The trial is ex­ pected to last two to four months. Nathan was gagged by bailiffs after she stood up in court and said, “ This trial is a sham and a farce.” P O L IC E SAID a Communist Workers Party supporter was also arrested for setting off a fire alarm in the Guilford County courthouse. Donald Pellas was charged with violating a court order on disruptions in the building and placed under $1,000 bond. Other CWP members and supporters demonstrated outside th e heavily guarded courthouse to protest the trial and the jail­ ing of Nathan and Cauce. Police said no incidents were reported. Three dozen police officers were stationed on streets surroun­ ding the courthouse and eight police marksmen held positions on nearby rooftops. Police also stood nearby while the six defendants and their families and friends ate a picnic lunch outside the courthouse during the noon recess. Inside the building, deputies patrolled halls and required all spectators in the trial to pass through a metal detector before entering the third floor courtroom. The six Klansmen and Nazis are charged with murder and felonious rioting in a shooting incident last Nov. 3 at a CWP- sponsored “ Death to the K lan" march in a Greensboro housing project. P O L IC E SAID a group of Klansmen and Nazis drove to the site where the march was being organized, heckling started between the two sides and shots broke out, killing five CWP m em bers. The six on trial are Klansmen Je rry Paul Smith, 32, of Maiden; Coleman B lair Pridmore, 32, of Lincolnton; Lawrence Gene Morgan, 27, of Lincolnton; and David Wayne Matthews, 24, of Newton; and Nazis Jack Wilson Fowler, 27. and Roland Wayne Wood, both of Winston-Salem In opening arguments, Assistant District Attorney James Coman told the jury the state would prove the six men intended to disrupt the November rally and “ they were prepared to do everything from throwing eggs to shooting and killing people.” D E F E N S E L A W Y E R Robert Cahoon. who represents Wood, told the jury the first shots were fired by anti-Klan demonstrators and “ Wood only acted in self-defense.” Cahoon said Wood was frightened for his life and fired a shotgun “ to attempt to escape an ambush set on them (the Klansmen and Nazis) by the Communist Workers Party.” DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau ¡N TOUJN UH-HUH. I'M BEING FOR THE CONVEN- FORCED 10 VON, SIR? COVER IT. PRESS, HUH? m i, SIR. YOU'RE /N FOR A 316 TREAT' MOVE BEEN POLISHING THE APPl£/ AND U/E'RE READY TO SERVE YOU' RESTAURANTS, THEATERS, DISCOS, BARS . YES, NEW YORKS (SOT H A W IN FACT, IF I MAY BE PERSONAL FOR A MOMENT, SIR.. YES 7 TOTE TVE GOTA FEEL- ING YOU'RE 60/N6 YOUR TO FALL IN LOVE Ri™ T TYPE- UJfTH THIS CRAZY / DJRIWR, T u e s d a y & W e d n e sd a y N i g h t S p e c ia l Catfish & Boiled Shrimp ALL YOU CAN EAT! 5-10 PM $695 Served W i t h S a l a d Bar, B eans, French N o w Serving Cocktails! , THE BRANDING IRON * | 6 '6 M iles Past O o k H ill on H w y . 71 W est < < q yv - i f * ACROSS 1 — bear 6 W eight unit 10 Hand tool 14 Quick 15 Gas: Comb form 16 Swan genus 17 French legis­ lature 18 Dress 19 Lose pep 20 irony 22 G oofs 24 Very small pin 26 Old Greek coins 27 Screamed 31 Before 32 Canine 33 Core 35 W ire meas­ ure 38 Shake — — : Hurry 39 Confronts 40 Game fish 41 Halfway 42 Turkish coins 43 Doctrine 44 Pose 45 Collect in specific area 47 Lay 51 Canvass 52 Glazed 54 Located 58 Genial 59 — the Terri­ ble 61 Escape 62 Common suf­ fix 63 Certain 64 Lorelei 65 Stag 66 Assemble 67 Very small DOWN 1 Go by 2 Olive genus 3 Raveling 4 Profiting 5 Tested anew 6 Joke 7 Bore 8 Molding edge 9 Criminals 10 Turn 11 Similar 12 Angrier 13 Squeeze 21 W apiti 23 Sour 25 Franz — UNITED Feature Syndicate Monday's Puzzle Solved □ □ □ 3 0 Q 3 3 □ □ Ü O U □ E93 □ □ □ □ □ LiUDOLi □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ U U U □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ U Ü Ü C d u g q d d o a n a □ □ □ □ □ □ U U U ft GOO □ □ □ □ □ □ □ U Ü D J Ü Q Ü a u u □□□□ □□□□□□ □ □ □ □ UU U □ □ □ □ a a a □ □ □ □ □ a u c u 3 U 3 □ □ □ □ □ □ Ü U □ □ □ □ a □ u u a u a u u u □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □□□□□ u a a a j l g u 27 Phony 28 Hindu festival 29 Was sorry 30 Picture trans­ fer 34 Fabulist 35 Actor Paul 36 Don Juan's mother 37 Recent 39 Kismatic phi­ losophy 40 "I cannot — 42 Heap 43 Highest 44 Season 46 — a plea 47 Stitched 48 Growing out 49 Menu 50 Stage show 53 Challenge 55 Preserve 56 Paradise 57 Gainsay 60 Meshwork 50,306! That's the number of people* who read The Daily Texan regularly, ac­ cording to a survey con­ ducted by Peter Bennett, PhD., of the U n iv e rs ity Department of Marketing. In fact 38,690 persons Rely t h e T e x a n - M o s t on c o m p a r e d to 2 2 , 6 6 8 students, faculty and staff w ho rely on the Austin American Statesman, the survey reveals. * inc luding students, fa c u lty a n d s ta ff. THE UNIVERSITY READS T h e Da il y T e x a n U P ' WEATHER FOTOCAST ® Austin will have partly cloudy skies Tussday, with a 30 psrcant chanca of thundershowers. The high will reach the mid 90s, and tha low will be in the upper 70s. Tuesday tha sun will sat at 8:22 p.m. and rise at 6:52 a.m. Wednesday. Across tha nation, rain and thundershowers are expected in the North Plains Ragon, tha Ohio Valley and tha Middle Mississippi Valley. B.C. M e w ione> c t e s ¿Me h a ve to 'S-K&N U P fOfZ p rtcw 'SeUTT-. . . . t c r . M e p b y jo h n n y h art 7 that m jld e e cm ?,., uh .. CARE PLAM. FETeRs. HEALT4 -SFA ,,y © f MHO frrwetpneoe »r*c »—O •• «6 T A N K »FN A M A R A by Jeff M iliar & B ill Hinds W&L, WE'RE UEI?E77 _ ^ - -WHEFE7» Tf|£ c a m e r a 7- O •IN TME. 9 M A W C 5 ' P£ES£iN G ROOM ^ I -MY FOOT J ( GTART O f ^ -------- - x ------- 7 AW AITING TME MOW LONG wag me IN TME m W C A V i BOOTM BEFORE tmey namep h im manager Page B12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 B ur.sm .m A D t on rent through the C L A S S I F I E D ¿4E7S Call the Want Ad Hot Line — 471-5244 Staying up Late? So are we. IN M H m t / ...A ' S / S / / / ^ u \ s Governors deny full support D E N V E R (U P I) — The nation's Democratic governors Monday sidestepped the messy fight over convention rules that could threaten Presi­ dent Carter’s renomination, but failed to give him a specific endorsement. The policy paper approved by the Democratic governors caucus did include a ringing endorse­ ment of the Equal Rights Amendment — aban­ doned by the Republicans last month — and criticized G O P nominee Ronald Reagan s tax cut plan. The governors hinted they would support an “intelligent’ tax cut in the future. Last summer, the Democratic governors en­ dorsed C arter’s re-election But they did not vote on that question this time, or on the rules question — the key to next week’s nominating convention I nless the proposed rules are changed, delegates must vote for the man they were elected to support. C arter won more than enough delegates for renomination if the rule holds. The Democratic caucus obscured the rest of the agenda at the annual meeting of the National Governors Association. Carter campaign chairman Robert Strauss flew to Denver for the caucus to lobby against the open- convention drive. He said the caucus did not vote on support for the president or the proposed convention rule because it was clear Carter would win. The other side reluctantly agreed. Strauss said of the 24 Democratic governors there, 20 would have backed Carter, three were uncommitted and Maine’s Joseph Brennan sup­ ported Sen. Edward Kennedy. He said on the rules. Carter would have won 18 votes, with four against and two uncommitted. “ That is a very, very firm count," Strauss said If the people who represent the other side had wanted a vote, we would be delighted to give them a vote. But there is no point coming out here and flexing the muscles If you have the votes, you can afford to be gracious.” Kennedy's deputy campaign manager, former Wisconsin Gov. Patrick Lucey, agreed with Strauss’ figures and conceded. "M y cause would not have been served by pressing for a vote.” But Lucey said. “ I would think it is somewhat significant that the governors chose not to endorse the president this close to the convention.” Arkansas Gov. B ill Clinton, a Carter supporter who served as spokesman for his colleagues after the 90-minute closed meeting, rebutted Lucey. Nothing we did should in any way be inter­ preted as a diminution of support for President C arter among those of us who support him,” he said. Strauss claimed there was no way the president could lose the rules vote since he has 300 delegates more than needed and the “ worst case scenario” had only 150 deserting him. OAR proposes alternate jail plans By SUE WILSON The Travis County Task Force on Ja il Overcrowding will meet Tues­ day to consider proposals offered by Offender Aid and Restoration U.S.A. (O A R ), an organization involved in alternative jail plans. “ O AR is a private, non-profit organization with 25 a ffilia te s throughout the country. It is the only n a t i o n a l o r g a n i z a t i o n whos e primary focus is working in local jails. Our core O AR program sends volunteers into jails to work one-on- one with the people." said Carol Shapiro, O AR s project director. Shapiro was in Austin last week to talk with representatives of the crim inal justice system and to evaluate the county as a site for O A R ’s alternative plan. Some O AR sites have job training programs in which the prisoners are released from jail to be supervised by an employer or agency. Through this job training system, Shapiro said, employers and public agencies could keep defendants productive and rehabilitate them. The key, she said, is that the com­ munity has alternatives other than jail terms to hold people accoun­ table for crimes. “ So each of our alternatives is designed to benefit the offender and the community by reducing the cost to taxpayers, provide needed services to the com­ munity and give the offender the op­ portunity to become a more produc­ tive person in society," Shapiro said. “ Austin is slated to build a new jail in a few years that will grossly overcrowd the in Austin.” said Gene Draper, criminal justice planner. ja il situation isn ’t O vercrow ding the only problem, however; jails are expen­ sive This year taxpayers will spend alm ost $1 billion on jails. The average prisoner will cost $12,000 “ Eighty percent of the people in Austin jails are awaiting trial, so the question is whether these people need to be in ja il,” Draper said. Draper added he suspects the task force will recognize the jail over­ crowding problem. “ We can look at the cost of building an adequate number of jails or we can look at alternative projects,” he said. “O A R has something to offer.” Turning clock ahead splits Jerusalem Free Delivery N ew L a t e , Late Hours: 4:30-2:00 am Frid ay & Saturday! and 4:30-1:00 am Sunday- T h u rsd ay ! W h e n you get the Late night H u n g rie s, call D o m in o ’s Pizza for a great Hot N ew York style pizza, delivered to your door in 30 m in u te s or less. Cam pus * 476 7181 E R iv»fsid e '4 4 7 6681 N G uad alup e '4 6 8 9101 En field * 474 7676 JE R U S A L E M ( U P I) - The latest Israeli-Arab dispute — over a clock — has effectively created two time zones within the city of Jerusalem. Many Arab residents of East Jerusalem are ignoring an Israeli Supreme Court rul­ ing and have refused to ad­ vance their clocks by one hour "WHERE YOU SAVE NOW BECAUSE YOU PAY FOR IT NOW // MODERN FURNITURE MM RENTALS SALES OUTLET OPEN M O N D A Y THRU SATURDAY 9:00-6:00 1143 AIRPORT BLVD. 928-1400 WHERE Y O U SAVE O N NEW AN D RENTAL RETURN FURNITURE RENTAL RETURN SOFAS CHAIRS BEDDING DINETTES DRESSERS NIGHT STANDS k..*29M COCKTAIL TABLES u - S ] S W tmm *49°° fm.*39(0 i—*59i? k m . *49“ w.*79°° NEW SOFA*CHAIR w.$15995 SOFAHOVESEAT CHAIR $ 2 4 0 « from S0FA*L0VESEAT CHAIR*0TT0MAN RECLINER ho. *399” DRESSER MIRROR CHEST HEADBOARD FRAME MATTRESS BOX SPRING $29995 from 16 PC. SET DISHES WITH ANY DINETTE BEDSPREAD WITH ANY BEDROOM GROUP L i m i t e d Q u a n t i t i e s 2 LAMPS WITH ANY LIVING ROOM GROUP 11 ASK ABOUT OUR STUDENT DISCOUNT for the six weeks of summer time. “I t ’ s not a m a t t e r of politics,” said the owner of a s ta t i o n er y shop in E a s t Jerusalem. “ It ’s a matter of convenience. I t ’s silly to move the clocks ahead for such a short tim e.” On the other side of the city, the Supreme Court ordered Israelis to turn their clocks ahead one hour starting Sun­ day after an energy-conscious engineer took the government to court over the issue. The court's ruling, issued only last month, calls for summer time to end Sept. 13. There has been no daylight savings time in Israel since 1975 because observant Jew s have insisted the time change t hr ows off th e ir p r a y e r schedules. An Arab agronomist, Abed Abu-Arafeh, 30, said he did not change his watch because he is on vacation and “ time is not so important to m e.” Besides, he said, “ When the order comes from Israel, you feel you don’t have to be part of the system.” The owner of a pharmacy, who asked not to be identified, said “ the whole thing doesn’t make sense” and keeps the clock in his store on standard time. “ Maybe it’s a feeling of not wanting to belong to anything Israeli,” he said. reason for not changing his clocks was simple — Jorda­ nian television broadcasts on standard time. T h e A r a b s of E a s t Jerusalem are not the only group not recognizing summer time in Jerusalem. The ultra­ religious Orthodox Jew ish sect, Neturei Karta, which does not recognize the ex­ istence of the state of Israel, dispatched patrols to make sure clocks were not changed in t h e i r M e a S h e a r i m neighborhood. John A wad, 45, co-owner of the City Grocery, said his “ So if you stay up watching their TV shows until midnight, it's really 1 a.m. already.” Israel Television goes off the air at midnight, summer time. M any Moslem s in E a s t Jerusalem said they did not set their clocks ahead because they are in the middle of the month-long Ramadan fast and did not want to change their schedule. Some said they would move them ahead when Ramadan ends. INVENTORY LIQUIDATION SALE Continues D aily SHIRTS 30% OFF on Arrow Dress Shirts 20% OFF on Dover Button-Downs 50% OFF on Arrow Long-Sleeve Shirts PANTS 50% OFF On Jeans & Casual Slacks 40% OFF On Dress Slacks ALL LEVI'S DENIM & CORDUROY FLARES *10.99 All Clothing & Suits 40% OFF 34 Corduroy Suits Reg. *145 SALE s75 Large Group of Shoes Values to *45 515 a pair Athletic Sport Shoes Reg. s27 S10 a pair Socks Reg. *1.75 on Sale for s1.25 a pair All Neckties 50% OFF (Hiakt t Open 9 :3 0 -6 2 5 1 2 G uadalupe On the Drag New Students Edition Campus i c e V e n d o r s , c r e a m , r o l l e r s k a t e r s , e g g r o l l s , D r a g worms, businessmen, shopkeepers and students can all be found on Guadalupe Street, better known as the Drag. New York has Broadway, Los Angeles has The Strip and Austin has the Drag. Item s found on the Drag range from the unique to the bizarre. On the w est edge of the University cam pus, the D rag has over the years become the meeting ground for variety. Most people are content with a 9-5 office job that pays the bills and puts the kids through school, but for many Drag vendors, being able to display their talent or ju st being able to be on the Drag is satisfying enough. DAVID JONES is one of the many Drag vendors. Being confined to a w heelchair does not seem to hinder his aggressive but pleasant attitude about selling ice cream . He has manned the stand for about a year I really love being out and says, here on the Drag, working face to face with the people. Ninety-nine percent of them a re fantastic! It beats rack in g your brain doing som ething you don’t enjoy doing.” Drag goers are greeted with con­ vincing vocal advertising when they pass David s stand. R efrains such as How about some hom em ade ice cream , 10 flavors that are sure to cool you off, can be heard from a block away. Other Drag vendors depend not only on their selling ability but on t h e i r s k i l l a s c r a f t s m e n or craftsw om en. A U niversity a rt history m ajor, Kay Bronaugh supplem ents her in­ com e by designing original a ir brush a rt onto m irrors. At her spot on the Drag, Kay, like many of the other vendors, executes her talent while open for business to let her audience of curious onlookers see exactly how the procedure is done. ‘‘I ’ve been doing airbrush for about two years and enjoy it, and after such a long tim e the work is trivial and I can ’t m ake myself put higher prices on my w ork.” An average work runs about $6. T e r r y S e r c u a n o t h e r craftsw om en who depends on her skill to provide for herself and her children M arisa and Mindy. T erry m akes stained glass decorated with flow ers she has collected from the months of in around Austin March and April. Terry feels that working on the Drag and making stained glass allows her a lot of ta len t, to display her freedom besides the obvious advantages of being out of doors and being with her kids. i s A new business on the Drag is but­ tons. Je rry Alexander, a retired com puter program m er, and Ilan Irie are the only two that have put the business to work for them so far. Jerry said he found the c raft in Los Angeles where buttons are big business. Austin is a prim e m arket spot because it has no button in­ dustry, he said. Je rry 's collection includes such advertisem ents as Willie Nelson for President and ‘‘D raught beer not people.” Ilan’s buttons on the other hand deal with drugs, the Austin music scene and nature. Ilan said the Drag is a haven for people who want to display their t a l ent and m aybe m a k e som e money. T H E D R A G A LSO h a s shopkeepers who are prepared to m eet the needs of students who can t find what they w ant on the sidewalks. Shops ranging from clothing and photograpy, to jewelry stores and barber shops can be found on the Drag. At his Guadalupe location for m ore than 27 years, A rthur Rees owns and o p erates R ees Bros. W atchm aker Rees recalls the price to clean a watch when he opened in 1957 to be $6.50; today the same operation cost $16.50. ‘‘I couldn’t sell it,” Rees said of his store. ‘‘The business is m e .” Rees says he has a c q u i r e d o n l y s o m e r e g u l a r custom ers over the years and at­ tributes that to the frequent tu r­ nover at the university. He said he stays on the Drag because of the good traffic. A m ore lucrative business around any university is clothing stores. The Bazaar is considerd by many one of the unique shops on the Drag specializing in original fashion. A l i c e S u l l i v a n a n d D e b o r a h Mitchell, employees of the shop, agree that their lingerie selection is probably the most unusual facet of the store. Most of the clothes in the store were purchased on shopping sprees in D allas, Los Angeles and New York. Story and photos by Paul Alvarado (Clockwise from top) The Drag, looking north from west of the Texas Union Building. Arthur Rees repairs watches, as he has done In his Guadalupe Street store for more than 27 years. Kay Bronaugh reflects on her work. Man Irie but­ tonholes students in an effort to make a sale. Page C2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5. 1980 UT housing options vary By DIXIE GAIL PROCTER Students coming to the University have a wide variety of liv­ ing arrangements to choose from in Austin — on or off campus — but they had better do their chosing in advance. The 11 University operated on campus dormitories, which have a total capacity of 5,341 are already full for the fall, said Jam es Braeutigan, Division of Housing and Food Service ad­ ministrator. Jester Center, the only coed dorm on campus, has been referred to as a “ mini-city.” Many University students find Jeste r’s population of 2,889 to be larger than their hometown’s population. Four of the dorms have cafeterias, and Keith Thomas, who has eaten in all four, ranks them as “ Blanton first, Kinsolving second, Littlefield third and Jester tenth.’’ “ I think dorm living is a hell of a lot better,” Thomas said “ I don’t have time to cook dinner and wash dishes,” he said. But another student who has lived in both apartments and dorms disagreed. “ SU R E, LIV IN G in a dorm you don’t have to run out and buy salt, but it’s cheaper living in an apartment,” Tom Burson, a senior at the University, said. Although it might be cheaper for Burson to live in an apart­ ment, he admits each person has to decide the most inexpensive way to live. “ It’s a lot easier to study in an apartment,” Burson said. One of the first things people learn when they move into a dorm is that it is hard to find a quiet place, he added A student living in Kinsolving also complained about the lack of privacy in a dormitory. “ Sometimes you feel like there is no way to get away. There is no privacy — you can’t run to your room and lock the door like at home,” freshman Sharon Roach said. Dorm life for a resident assistant can sometimes be challeng­ ing. one resident assistant said. “ We do peer advising, pull drunks out of the shower and keep people from running around with shaving cream all over them,” he said ANO THER STUD EN T said he lives in a dorm because of its convenience. “ A lot of students living in the dorm are younger, but I like liv­ ing here for the sheer fact that it’s convenient, especially when you don’t have a car and don’t like riding shuttle buses,” he said. Breautigan said the convenience of dorm life can save students gas money and added, “ living in a dorm is an educational experience.” Campus dorm prices — which include meal plans — range from $1,792 to $2,312 for the long session Off-campus dorms run anywhere from $2,500 to $3,790 a year. MOST O F the on-campus dorms house a mixed group of peo­ ple, but sometime off-campus dorms have less of a variety, some students said. “ Compared to other dorms we have more upper-classmen,” said Liz McDonald, a resident assistant at Contessa McDonald likes living in the off-campus dorm because “ you can meet people easier, and there is a maid service.” STUD EN TS who are still looking for a place to live in the fall better hurry because most off-campus housing is filling up fast. The Castilian Dorm still has a few rooms for women, and Gooda 11-Wooten Dorm has two men’s rooms. Taos has 40 vacancies, with more space for women than men, but Taos employees said they expect to fill up fast. In cooperative houses, students work together in cooking and cleaning. The Casa Latina Co-op has seven houses and only two are full. Each house can hold 5 to 15 residents. Memoirs of a Jester resident By JENNY BENEDICT Daily Texan Staff Jester — ah, my unforgettable freshman year. For some strange and totally unexplainable reason I remember all the good things first. Yet when I lived there, I never said anything good about the place. That stuff they dared to call food. I think if it had been hot oc­ casionally, I wouldn’t have complained so much. But then, even those rare meals when it was lukewarm, it tasted like Alpo. Even the lettuce tasted awful — like chemicals. “ They are there to preserve it,” was the excuse. If the taste didn’t get to you, then the bugs did. “ Sure” you say, “ How many people actually find bugs in their food? One every month? That’s not such a bad ratio considering the number of peo­ ple being served.’’ Well, let me tell you a little story. In one week, I found a black bug in my lettuce, a hard green thing in my ham­ burger pattie and a brown wormy looking object in my fish — and you wonder why they have such a hard time passing the sanitation inspections? 1 gave up complaining. There was no point, nothing was ever done about the problem. Some hints for trying to beat the system (if you’re still green enough to think you can) — get to the cafeteria early with everyone else. So what if you stand in line for half an hour, at least you have a chance at getting some warm food. U SE YO UR IM AGINATIO N, it won’t taste so terrible. Or do what I did — go on a steady diet of french fries and coke for two weeks at a time, and gain 20 pounds. If you can survive the food, you can survive almost anything, in­ cluding the elevators and the parking. At least one elevator was not working each day and sometimes none of them worked. Of course this isn’t bad if you live on one of the first five floors, but trying to juggle a suitcase, a flight bag, a laundry bag, a purse and a chocolate cake up nine flights of stairs is no fun. The Jester parking lot is a joke — it’s not even big enough for a tenth of the people living there. I remember nights (or early mornings) walking back from the stadium wondering if I could make it to the entrance or if someone would find me passed out in the middle of the street the next day. Sleep is another major factor you will have to contend with. “ Oh, that’s no problem,” you say, I like to stay up late.” But How late is late? All weekend when the guys upstairs think they’ll have some fun and bounce tennis balls on the floor, or throw pennies at your window? Now try getting up for an 8 o’clock exam on Monday mor­ ning. BU T T H E N O ISE isn’t only at night. Trying to study in your room is like studying in a railroad station. People are constantly coming and going, asking questions, trying to lure you away from your books, or just plain talking. The simplest solution is to go to the library, if you really do want to study. If you are a private person and have had your own bedroom all your life, then living in Jester can be quite a shock. Most people take pot luck for their room­ mates, and consequently many of them are not happy. Usually it is not that either person is really disagreeable, but that their natures con­ flict. T H E SPA C E in one dorm room is the size of a regular bedroom in a house. But in a dorm, you are expected to live as if that one room was a whole house. There is no privacy. You can never be totally alone. The room is not yours; it’s both of yours. These conditions can be trying for even the best of friends. However, roommate conflicts are one of the high points of dorm gossip. It always seems to beein when one roommate, say Sarah, has to get up at 6:30 a m. for an 8 a.m. class. Of course her roommate, Brigitte, doesn’t have class until 11 a.m. If Sarah is angry or the tiniest bit upset with Brigitte, she w ill have no mercy. The alarm clock rings for what seems like 10 minutes before Sarah finally turns it off. Then on go all the lights. “ It ’s so dark, I can’t possibly see to put my make-up on without them.” Next the hairdryer, “ I don’t want to walk to the bathroom down the hallway. I don’t have anything to wear — my robe smells and I won’t wear it.” Of course, Sarah has to try on everything she owns, making sure to slam the drawer shut each time she pulls something out. And so life goes on. Brigitte finally gets up when Sarah leaves. She is so awake that there is ab­ solutely no point in even trying to go back to sleep. W H EN B R IG IT T E is finally ready to leave she notices that Sarah forgot to take her key with her. Ah. this is her chance for revenge — she locks the door. And so the saga continues from week to week. Sometimes roommates w ill switch rooms, sometimes they just bitch at each other all semester. But for every bad memory of Jester, there is a good one and a more valuable one. The most treasureable being the people. No where else at the University w ill you have the opportunity to meet so many people. You’re surrounded by 3.- 000 of them — Jester even has its own Zip Code and is its own voting precinct. You eat with these people, party with them, go to school with them, share everything you own with them — you can’t get rid of them if you try. There is always somebody wanting to do something, always someone to talk to. And of course, since it is co-ed, you can always find someone to go out with. AN O THER GOOD point about Jester is con­ venience. Until you move away from campus and have to ride a bus or walk every morning, you don’t realize how nice it is to be able to flop out of bed at 8:45 a.m. for a 9 a.m. class. The library is right across the street, the stadium and the SEC are just down the road. There is no doubt, convenience is what Jester is all about. All the housework is done for you. Maids clean your room, cooks prepare your meals (not such an advantage) and maintenance men take care of all your problems. You don’t have to come home after a long day on campus to a sink full of dirty dishes and a leaky ceiling. FO R MOST students, dorm life is their first experience with the outside world. No Mommy and Daddy to look after them — WOW! You can stay out all night if you want, drink and smoke all you want, lock yourself in your room with your boyfriend if you want, don’t go to class if you don't want. Nobody is going to tell on you, nobody cares what you do. But having nobody to care about you can take some getting used to. "Any major dude with half a heart would tell you my friend Any amount of world that breaks apart falls together again.” — Steely Dan. Co-ops promise unique experience By CLARE HAGERTY Daily Texan Staff College. When you’re fresh out of high school, this word has enormous dimensions and possibilities as to what lies ahead — an even broader education (and you thought you knew it all), new friends, new enemies and even a whole new schedule with some vague purpose to it. But more importantly, this word conjures up a wonderful vi­ sion of independence. You’re on your own now, and there’s no one to tell you to be home before 1 a.m. or to pick up your room. You have finally reached that glorious day when coming and go­ ing as you please has turned into a reality. Where you decide to settle with this new-found identity has much to do with your hap­ piness (or lack thereof) while away at school CHOOSING A place to live — if your parents offer you this freedom — while attending a university can be a joy or a dis­ aster, depending on where you end up and who you end up with. If you’re brave enough to try cooperative living (or to go even further and try coed (cooperative living) there are a few generalized rules to become fam iliar with — pointers, so to speak. After all, cooperative living is a unique experience, and a few general guidelines just might enhance your very survival — not only in your new living quarters, but in the overall college community as well. The words “ cooperative living” deserve a little explanation. A co-op is the ideal situation that your parents were always after you for not doing when you lived at home — you know, pitching in and doing your share. In a co-op, everyone is expected to do a certain number of chores a week, the number of labor hours (known to insiders as “ duties” ) depending on the size of the co­ op. And, as expected, there are penalties (often semi-severe) for the all too common “ no shows” who play a large role in com­ munity living. The first step in choosing a co-op is to sit down alone somewhere and give several major questions some thought. How many people do you want to live with? There are coops with as few as five or six residents, and some with as many as 100. HOW MUCH time are you willing to devote to labor duties? If your schedule doesn t allow rtiore than an hour a week, you should consider a small, intimate coop If you are considering a large coop, how much time would you be willing to devote to various committees? The basic question to ask is how involved you really want to become. OK. So you’ve chosen a coop based on the above (helpful) hints. The next step is meeting your roomies, one of the more desirable musts of community living Start moving in your belongings one tremendously heavy parcel at a time, looking overwrought and alone. Most coops are arranged so that the dining room is the main room to pass through when seeking out members’ rooms, so you can’t miss in attracting someone else’s attention — preferably of the opposite sex — to give you a much meeded hand with moving in. In talking about coops, especially the larger ones (75 to 100 people), it’s only fair to mention the subtle and not-so-subtle social systens that exist within. T H E S E SOCIAL systems usually consist of an “ in-crowd” (seriously involved people, often heads of committees and known by everyone), the not-so-in-crowd or “ independents” (semi-involved members who do their duties but may or may not head a committee, and may or may not be serious about life in general, particularly as it pertains to co-op-ing). And, of course, there are always the “ rebels” — those who are aggravated with the whole idea of a social system and refuse to partake in anything but the requirements — people without which no co-op is complete. Knowledge of the social system of a co-op becomes fairly im­ portant if you’re serious about surviving the first semester of this new lifestyle. So the next step is to advertise the active in­ terest you plan to take in the co-op, an idea best expressed by running for a committee position (remember, we’re talking about a large co-op in which there are several committees from which to choose). A F T E R YOU have settled in your new quarters and have met some of the other co-opers, seek out the in-crowd members (they’re not difficult to find), approach one (preferably a com­ mittee chairman) and tell this person about your interest in run­ ning for an office. If a position is indeed open, chances are you will be competing with members who have lived in the co-op a while and are completely fam iliar with all of the basic prin­ ciples of heading a committee Don’t let this intimidate you — just begin your campaigning with confidence by making a speech at dinnertime, outlining what your plans w ill be once you win (with enough humor to ease your own tension and enough sincerity seriousness to satisfy everyone else). Once elected, you’ll begin feeling more and more like a true co-op-er, caught up in the excitement of planning the semester’s first party, mapping out the first big field trip or scheduling various speakers for the coming months, depending on what committee you have just taken over And, as the weeks trudge on. you may even begin to take it seriously — a sure sign that the co-op has actually Decome significant in your life. BECO M ING TO TA LLY involved is by no means the only sur­ vival tactic for alternative living If you are already involved in what you consider “ more important things,” falling under the category of an independent (or perhaps even a rebel), you can still exist quite happily within the co-op walls. If you happen to be an extra-curricular person, or perhaps merely a part-time loner, there is a separate list of what to do to maintain a happy existence in the co-op. First, making friends if you’re never home can be difficult, so be realistic. It may take a while, but eventually you'll find yourself with four or five really good friends who stick up for you when the other co-op-ers, who barely know you, make snide remarks about you being anti­ social. Second, don’t get yourself into any obligations (committees or inconvenient duties) that you won’t be able to fulfill — remember “ no shows” are simply no good to co-op-ers. And last, don’t let all the excitement of being caught up in co-op ac­ tivities get you down because you work 20 hours a week and go to school full time. Co-op participation isn’t everything and, besides, your next-door neighbor w ill be more than glad to fill you in on everything you’ve been missing out on for the past few weeks. SO, W H ET H ER you’re an outgoing, assertive person who loves to be involved or more of a loner whose schedule calls for 30 hours in the day when there are only 24, cooperative/com­ munity living offers a position — a lifestyle — for everyone. It can be a gateway to making new friends and hanging on to old ones, a chance to provide leadership and an educational ex­ perience that extends beyond going to class every day. It is a slice of life in a small community that continues to grow only because of the attitudes and input of its members. And, after all, isn’t that what “ college life” is all about? Some co-ops around campus: • Nexus: Houses 15 co-op-ers in individual rooms One meal is served weekdays at dinner time, with a mid-day brunch provid­ ed on weekends. The $140 a month rent and fairly light duties aren’t easy to overlook and probably have played a large role in attracting most of the present members. • Stonehenge: Houses 10 members and has basically the same meal plan as Nexus, but with added “ snacking privileges.” Rent is $165 a month and the duties are not exceedingly time con­ suming • University co-ops: There are 12 co-ops in all, and each one houses between 15 and 21 women, usually with more members in the fall The rent depends on two factors — whether the co-op is air conditioned and whether you decide to make your home there in the summer or fall. (See CO-OPS, Page C3.) LrfcffFifcLp Counseling-psychological center assists students Tuesday, A ugust 5. 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page C3 S C O T T LIN D Daily T exan Staff P otted tropical plants, m odernistic fluid paintings and soft rock lyrics in the background beckon one to sit and re fle c t w hile aw aiting the tim e to speak with his or her counselor a t the C ounseling-Psychological Services C enter. On the third floor of the West Mall O ffice Building a cro ss from the A cadem ic C enter, the c e n te r offers a num ber of s e r­ vices for students. Some of the p ro g ra m s include individual and group counseling, sessions on building relationships, dealing w ith stre ss and change, women s and m e n ’s roles and hum an sexuality. All serv ices of the counseling c e n te r a re free of charge. The Telephone Counseling and R e fe rra l Service, also con­ nected with the c e n te r, provides 24-hour serv ice for those who wish to speak w ith a train ed counselor on a m a tte r of personal concern a t 476-7073. IN ADDITION, persons m ay call the Telephone Self-Help Tapes (471-3313) to h e a r prereco rd ed selections on m ore than 150 differen t su bjects, from w hat to do if you get a tra ffic tick et to dealing with a broken relationship to helping a friend w ith suicidal feelings. Jim C lark, asso c ia te d ire c to r of the C ounseling-Psychological S ervices C enter, seem ed e a g e r to inform new studen ts of the serv ices as we sa t down over coffee. As you know, we do offer individual counseling ,” he said. But m any people don ’t know th a t in addition to individual counseling we also have d ifferent groups for such issues as a sse rtiv e n e ss training and also m e n 's and w om en’s aw aren ess g ro u p s,” he said. focus on ‘‘TH ESE GRO U PS the unique concerns and problem s faced by m en and wom en, and w hile m en and w om en often have sim ila r problem s, when it com es to th e ir role th e ir problem s becom e unique. F o r this reason, w om en and m en find it advantageous to m e e t am ong th em selv es and discuss th e ir situ a tio n ,” he added. “ Both groups find they a r e pressu red to m e e t so cietal expec­ tatio n s which m ay a c tu a lly co ntribute to personal unhappiness and lack of fu lfillm e n t,” he explained. “ Men a re so often told by th eir p a re n ts and by society, ‘You m u st be strong and em otionally reserv ed , you m u st m ake all the im p o rtan t d e c isio n s.’ In th eir groups they ju s t w ant to talk about the trip s, the social ex pectations laid on them , and they w ant to let the self they w ere told to re p re ss to becom e a p a rt of th e ir life a g a in ,” he added. “ IN TH E W OM EN’S groups, c a re e r issues, how to have both a c a re e r and be a w ife, a m o th er, is the focus of som e groups. F o r o ther w om en the question m ay be, How do I get rid of societal expectations, becom e m ore a sse rtiv e , to s ta te m y needs to m yself and o th e rs and a c t upon th e m ? ’ a re som e of the questions w om en a re asking in th e ir g ro u p s,” C lark explained. “ Women a re w anting to discover th e ir unique concerns in w hat it m eans to be a w o m an ,” he added. “ We have w orkshops w hich help couples to define th e ir goals, in terp ersonal and c a re e r-o rie n te d . We help them develop a plan of action to m e e t a s m any goals as possible, and ju s t as im p o r­ those differing personal goals and re ­ tan tly, identify to quirem en ts w hich need negotiation and co m p ro m ise,” C lark said. W ORKSHOPS, announced “ S om etim es the initial goals and d irections a re c o n trad icto ry and turn in d iffe re n t d ire c tio n s,” he explained. “ N egotiation over the d iffe re n c es can help a couple m ove clo ser to g e th e r.” include deciding w hether to sta y o r leave a relatio n sh ip ; change as a function of hum an life; cu ltu ra l conflicts faced by m inority stu d en ts; co m ­ ing out of the clo set and into the w orld as a gay person; w ays to cope with s tre s s ; tran sitio n s (sep aratio n , divorce, grow ing up) faced by fam ilies and the ups and downs of d ire c t com m u nica­ tion. in advance, W orkshops also cover se p a ra tio n and divorce; changing roles, relation sh ips and the self; w h ether intim acy m ight be not the joys of taking chan ces; ending enough or re la tio n s h ip s and tra n s itio n s a c ro s s long fa re w e ll; trad itio n al c a re e rs ; dual c a re e r couples; w ays tow ard in­ tim acy ; how to live alone a fte r living to g eth er; affectional identity and changing religious v alues and options for belief. too m uch; th e Also w orkshops cover the sophom ore slum p; depressio n and anxiety faced by sen io rs; w h eth er it is all right to drop out of c o lle g e ; in s c h o o l w h e n p e r s o n a l c h a n g e s (relation ships, c a re e r un certain ty , e tc .) in te rfe re w ith concen­ tra tio n and m otivation and using your ex p erien ces and learnin g as an old er-th an -av erag e student. s t a y i n g “ MANY INCOMING fresh m an stu d en ts m ay have feelings of loneliness when confronted with a university as la rg e as UT. e s­ pecially if they com e from a sm all town and w ere surrounded by friends all th e ir liv e s,” C lark said. “ E ight thousand out of 44,000 stu d e n ts live in residence halls on c a m p u s,’ he acknow ledged, “ and in fact living w ith o th er students on cam p u s m ay be the e a sie st place for stu d en ts in­ te re ste d in building an activ e social life ,” he said. “ But then th e re a re o th er students who find the U n iversity to be a big, aw esom e, a cold and lonely p lace long a f te r they have entered UT. “ These stu d en ts a re not activ ely in itiatin g co n ta c ts w ith peo­ ple, and a s people we all need th ese co n ta c ts, p a rtic u la rly when we a re m o st v u ln e ra b le ,” he added. “ THESE PERSONS have a kind of shy a p p earan ce, very laid back in th e ir appro ach , and h av e serious difficulty m aking friends, and a re not even su re how to. “ We o ffer group sessions w hich a re popular a t UT on m aking friends, on building g re a te r self-confidence and social skills for people who w ant to feel c o m fo rtab le initiating re la tio n sh ip s,” he said. ( lark acknow ledged the people feeling m ost alone n ev er ap p ear a t the counseling c e n te r to find out. “ This person m ay float w ithout m uch conflict over his lack of friendships, until p re ssu re s build and a full-blown c ris is occurs, a very serious c risis type of thing. I t s u n fo rtu n ate th a t we often see th ese lonely persons a t a much la te r sta g e who m ay p erh ap s have a tte m p te d suicide and ju s t now m a k e use of our serv ices, when the problem leading up to the c risis m ig ht have been w orked out e a rlie r ,” he said. “ The people who an sw er the phones a t the 24-hour counseling line a re g en erally w arm and c o n sid e ra te individuals who have a real in te re st in listening to o thers. They a re not c h a ra c teriz e d Co-ops ■ ■ ■ (Continued from P ag e C2.) S u m m er ra te s in th ese co-ops go by the session: (w ith a ir con­ ditioning) $218 for one session, $419 for both and $324 for the nine-week session; (w ithout a ir conditioning) $195 for one se s­ sion, $375 for both and $290 for the nine-w eek session. F a ll ra te s a re $165 a m onth for a ir conditioned co-ops and $145 a m onth for non-air conditioned. M eals a re divided up (usually two cooks p er m eal) as duties — lunch and dinner a re served five days a w eek along w ith a serv e yourself b reak fast. D uties a re fairly m inim al and th e re a re sev eral options from which to choose. • 21st Street Co-op: O ffers an a p a rtm e n t-lik e setting, co m ­ p lete with wooden balconies and a m aze of outdoor sta irc a se s. B reak fast, lunch and dinn er a re provided five days a week, a s a re a S aturday and Sunday brunch (all m eals except b re a k fa st involve a t le a st th re e cooks). • The Ark: Houses ap p roxim ately 100 m e m b e rs m em b ers and offers th ree d ifferen t h alls on which to live — the quiet hall, the m o d e ra te hall and the loud hall — depending on how m uch noise you a re w illing to to le ra te . R ent is $215 a m onth in the fall and som ew hat ch e a p e r in the spring and su m m er. M em bers a re able to plan variou s field trip s, guest sp e a k e rs and p a rtie s through various c o m m itte e s which the co-op sponsors. One of the nicest fe a tu re s (b esides the fam ous Ark p a rtie s) is a nice-sized sw im ­ m ing pool, w here it ’s never too h a rd to find a t le a st eight or 10 people stru m m in g g u itars, studying or sunning them selves. The labor schedule a t the Ark re q u ire s four hours of d u ties per week. Although the stan d ard co-op d uties a re av ailab le — cook, cook’s helper, dishes, kitchen clean-up, etc. — o th er jobs such as m ain ten en ce and pool crew a re ad ditional options. Since the Ark and the 21st S tre e t Co-op a re la rg e r than m ost, th e re a re also positions th a t m e m b e rs can be elected to, such as labor c z a r and k itchen coordinator. These a re by no m eans the only co o peratives around cam pus, but they c o n stitu te a re p re se n ta tiv e sam ple of w hat is offered in the way of a lte rn a tiv e living — both on and off U niversity property. W hether you a re in te re ste d in sm all, in tim a te settin g w ith ju st a few people roam ing around your hom e a t any given tim e, or w h ether you really w ant to becom e p a rt of a m uch la rg e r “ com m un ity w ithin your c o m m u n ity ,” coop erative living could very well be the answ er. At any ra te , i t ’s an a lte rn a tiv e th a t’s open. Fraternities offer ‘camaraderie f gro u p ,” he said. from $35 to $150. By S A N D R A D A U G H E R T Y A ttending a u niversity w ith 43,000 o th er people can so m etim es leave one w ith the feeling of being “ lost in the c ro w d .” About one out of every 10 stu dents a t the U niversity solves the p roblem by becom ing involved w ith the G reek system on cam pus. The U n iversity recognizes 25 fr a te r ­ n itie s w ith 2,200 m e m b e rs and 15 so ro ritie s w ith 2,300 m em b ers. “ F r a t e r n i t i e s o f f e r a s e n s e of said B ryan M uecke, c a m a ra d e rie ,” fra te rn ity ad v iser for the In te rfra te rn i­ ty Council. “ F ra te rn ity b ro th e rs help each o th er out. T here is a sense of belonging to a g ro u p ,” he said. “ A fra te rn ity can be a place to call hom e a t this big university. It gives g u y s fro m m u tu a l b a c k g ro u n d s a th in g s in a c h a n c e to e n jo y doing A thletics a re a la rg e p a rt of fra te rn ity in­ te a m s to give each life. Some tra m u ra l sp o rts m em b er a chance to com pete. fra te rn itie s o rganize “ M any stu dents played sp o rts in high I n ­ th e sc h o o l an d w a n t tra m u ra ls gives chance to do so ,” M uecke said. to c o n tin u e . these stu d en ts The social asp e c t of fra te rn ity life is also im portan t. E a c h fra te rn ity th ro w s p a rtie s each y e a r along with m ix e rs with the so rorities. E ach fra te rn ity has its own se rv ic e p ro jects including blood d rives, v isiting local nursing hom es, p a rtic ip a tin g in Big B ro th ers and giving p a rtie s for un­ derprivileged children. F o rm a l rush w eek begins Aug. 25, w ith 1,100 stu d en ts expected to atten d . M onthly dues for a fra te rn ity ran g es Sorority form al rush will be Aug. 24- 31, with a p p ro x im ately 1,050 rush ees ex­ pected to atten d . Sorority can d id ates a re req u ired to have a 2.0 g ra d e point av e ra g e to be in­ itiated, said E velyne B ennett, d ire c to r of the P an hellen ic Council — a g o v er­ ning body o v e r all th e U n iv e rs ity sororities. S ororities also p a rtic ip a te in serv ice a c tiv itie s such a s giving H allow een and C h ristm as p a rtie s for underprivileged children, helping w ith the blind school a n d c o n t r i b u t i n g lo c a l organizations, B ennett said. to o t h e r Y early du es for so ro rities run high, averag ing ap p ro x im ately $964 for the first y e a r and to a p ­ p ro x im ately $700 then dropping as ad v ice-g iv ers," C lark said “ W E’VE FOUND th a t m ost people a lre a d y know the solution to th eir problem , and the counselors encourage the person to work out his solution,” he said. “ Often people know the solution. I t’s ju s t how to get th e re th at th e y ’re not so s u re .” he added. “ If a person seeks m o re conversation on the m a tte r co n c e r­ ning him . our counselors m ay re fe r him to the Counseling- Psychological Services C enter for coun seling ,” C lark said. “ I think the whole point is listening and responding w ith un­ d erstanding You have to let the o th er person know th a t you have heard h im ,” he explained. The co ncerns people have when requ esting an appointm ent with a counselor at the c e n te r, C lark said, a re “ loneliness, d if­ ficulty w ith personal relationship s with o th ers, feeling a lot of acad em ic, social and financial kinds of p re ssu re s. U sually th e ir concerns a re in te r-re la te d ,’ he added. “ I t ’s seldom som eone com es into the c e n te r and says, ‘My problem is such-and-such.’ U sually the person says, ‘I ’m feeling lousy and down and I d o n 't know w hy.’ COUNSELORS a re th e re , Clark said, to help the person clarify w hat his feelings a re and then to w ork out with him solutions to the problem . “ M aybe th e re has been a break-up in a relation ship and the ren t is due and the person d o e sn 't have the m oney to pay for it and he isn ’t su re w hat to do n e x t,” C lark said. “ I will help the person actu alize the goal he has set unless the goal is illegal or would cause harm . “ If the person says h e ’s out of m oney and w ants to rob a bank, or if he w ants to break up a relationship, then I will not help him w ith th e g o a l,” he explained. “ But w h atev er else the person w ants to striv e for, I will accep t his g o a l,” he added. Two c e n te rs for individual counseling e x ist a t the U niversity, the o th er one being the m ental health unit of the Student H ealth C enter. “ We re fe r a student to the m ental h ealth unit if he is sev erely depressed, if he has a history of serious difficu lties continually showing up or if he doesn t seem to profit from counseling a t the C ounseling-Psychological Services C e n te r,” he explained. “ A person w ith continuing suicidal feelings and gestu res, who perhaps has a tte m p te d suicide, taken doses of pills or p erh ap s slashes his w rists, we will re fe r him to m en tal h e a lth ,” C lark said. “ THE MENTAL health unit m ay also pick up its clients from doctors a t the Student H ealth C enter who d e te rm in e th a t the person could profit from p sy c h o th e ra p y ,” he added. Noting the num ber of stu d en ts using counseling se rv ic e s a t the c e n te r has increased 30 p e rc e n t la st y e a r, Clark said the reasons for the increase m ay have to do w ith the recession, a tightening job m a rk e t o r “ sheer a c ad em ic p ressu re. “ In the p ast two y e a rs the counseling c e n te r has becom e b e tte r known, m ore visible all the tim e ,” he said, and m ay be the overriding reason behind increased usage. “ If a stud ent com es h e re and has goo ex p erien ces with his counselor, he m ight talk about it w ith a friend and give us a good reco m m e n d a tio n ,” he added. Saying a gay student having problem s w ith his or her lover can feel fre e to talk with m ost of the counselors, C lark added the stu d en t can also req u est counseling w ith any of the gay counselors working at the c en ter. “ It is his prero g ativ e to have sessions w ith gay staff p e r­ sons if th a t is w hat he w a n ts,” C lark said. One w all of Jim C la rk ’s spacious office w as dom inated by a bookcase of books m ainly on psychology and o th e r a sso rte d te x ­ ts on grow th and sexuality but also containing books on lig h te r subjects. On the coffee ta b le an a ttra c tiv e p o tte ry face which seem ed to evoke som e an cien t Inca profile beckoned. F o r m any incom ing fre sh m a n students, their m ove aw ay from hom e also signifies th e first tim e they are away from their p a re n ts for a significant length of tim e ,” Clark said. “ This opportunity for independence from one’s parents” re­ quires new w ays to deal w ith o ne’s parents as one fully becom es an individual. F o r m any it happens kind of naturally for those who can m ake it happen and who have parents who facilitate this grow’ing independence,” he explained. FOR OTHERS whose p a re n ts disco u rag e independence, the process m ay re q u ire negotiation, he added. Students m ay find they a re independent from their parents “ in everything but financial h e lp ,” C lark said, “ and m ay feel uncom fortable m aking decisions they know th e ir parents would object to .” “ The old adage. D on’t bite th e hand that feeds you,’ il­ lu stra te s the problem s th ese people have as they try to chart out an independent e x iste n c e ,” he said. P a re n ts often feel th at since th e y ’re shelling out the money their son or dau g h ter should re m a in in school when what they w ant is to lea v e .” Clark ad d e d ” their paren ts “ SOME PEOPLE physically rem ove th e m se lv e s hundreds of m iles from in­ dependence, thinking I don t w ant to live too close to Mom and Dad O thers w ant to go back hom e to be w ith th e ir parents,” he said. the problem of to resolve T here is no one answ er to relationships w ith parents or achieving independence,” C lark said. “ I am rem inded of two types of students one often sees on cam pus. On one hand is w hat m ay be called the bookworm, cam ped out a t the lib rary day and night. He m ay be doing quite well in school, and yet h e’s m issing opportunities to develop social co m petencies through m eeting frie n d s,” C lark noted. “ And then th ere s w hat we m ight call the E v e ry K egger. H e’s guzzling down ev ery keg of beer he can find. Y ou’ll alw ays find him in the m iddle of fun H e’s c e rta in ly becom ing quite com pe­ tent socially, the only problem being th a t he soon flunks out of his c o u rse s.” NOTING THAT the av e ra g e u n d e rg ra d u a te student changes his m ajo r anyw here from th re e to five tim es before choosing the one he g ra d u a te s with, C lark said that many who do change m a jo rs “ feel like th e y ’ve failed in som e w ay.” “ Many students choose th e ir initial major on the basis of p a re n ts ’ w ishes o r social ex p ectations without looking carefully a t their own p re fe re n ce s and w hat really interests them ,” he explained. “ Those who a re unhappy with th e ir choice for major may s ta r t asking them selves. W hat do I re a lly want to be when I get out of here? I don’t like m y m a jo r but I ’m not sure what other choice to m ake. “ So often we end up acting on old beliefs when maybe these beliefs have no validity for our life in the present,” he noted. SOME STUDENTS com e to counseling because they find “ th e y ’re h ere a t UT and don’t know why, a n y m o re ,” Clark said. “ They begin to ask th em selv es, ‘W hat th e hell am I doing here? W here would I ra th e r be if being h e re is not it? I want a b e tte r a lte rn a tiv e . But if I ’m not h e re , w hat else is there?’ ” he added. The purpose of counseling is not only to le a rn m o re efficient w ays of getting along with o th er people, C lark said, but also to feel m ore confident m aking decisions. “ Shall I get m a rrie d and will I go to g ra d u a te school a re im ­ p o rtan t decisions. C lark said, “ and people don’t tend to com e h e re if the decisions a re e a s y .” When people have clarified th e ir decisions, he said, th e ir next question m ight be, “ Now how am I going to do it? W hat steps do I take in o rd e r to get th e re ? ” Taos 2612 guada! upe I austin, texas 7 8 7 0 5 4 7 4 -6 9 0 5 /4 7 8 -4 7 4 7 NOW LEASING FOR FALL Co-ed dorm across the street from cam pus at 27th. Recently renovated facility with tasteful, efficient furnishings. R e c re a t io n area, su n d e c k , wide sc ree n TV, refrigerators in every room. 24 hour security Inexpensive parking available Everything you’ve always w anted to ta lk about. You can. Telephone Counseling 4 7 6 -7 0 7 3 Anytime Hypnosis for Learning & Concentration L e a r n e ff e c tiv e a n d v a l u a b l e te c h n iq u e s . D r a m a t i c a l l y i m p r o v e a c a d e m i c p e r f o r m a n c e . 6 h o u r s e m i n a r S a t u r d a y , S e p t e m b e r 27. C a l l for r e s e r v a t i o n . F e e $25. Special note: “ Creative Experiences ^ in H y p n o s is " begins Sept. 9. In d iv id u a l co u n se lin g and casse tte tapes a va ilab le . istin Wellness Center A M -4 PM 503 W. 17th 472-5513 M ix in g Alcohol an d Other D ru gs? GET THE FACTS ab ou t this a n d other alcohol related issues From The ALCOHOL INFORMATION CENTER Student Health Center 471 -4955 The University of Texas at Austin (fn^iishAire APARTMENTS M o ve in and move up to a new lifestyle of luxury apartm ent livingl W e feature: • Lighted tennis courts • Handball court • S w im m in g pools • Shuttle bus • C a b le TV Efficiencies, 1 & 2 bedrooms from * 195. S o m e bills paid. N O W LEASING FOR FALL O CCUPAN CY. 1919 BURTO N DRIVE Page C4 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 tJhe P a rt-T im e Job Placement Office P a r t -t im e job listings a re posted, as a service to in the O ffice of Student F in a n c ia l A id students, Building Room 130. Students’ attorney offers legal advice Office helps students with landlord complaints By C H A R L E S L U N A N Dally Texan Staff Somewhere among all those dollars University students will spend next fall for school will be the infamously non­ d e s c r i p t s t u d e n t f e e s. Somewhere within those will be an especially obscure 50- cent charge for the students’ attorney office. The first full-tim e, on- ca mpus legal a s s i s t an c e p r o g r a m f or U n i v e r s i t y students in the United States, the office was founded in June 1970 by th e U n i v e r s i t y Students’ Association and now employs two full-time licens­ ed attorneys, two full-time para legals, 25 law clerks, m a n y v o l u n t e e r s , one secretary and three work- study receptionists. T H E O FF IC E is designed to give University students free legal a d v i c e and, w he r e necessary, represent students in civil legal disputes which occur outside the University community. As such, the of­ fice complements the Univer­ sity ombudsman office which is designed to advise students in conflicts with the Universi­ individual ty. be they with faculty members, the ad­ ministration or residency re­ quirements. This is to avoid any potential conflict of interest since the is ap­ students’ attorney pointed by the U niversity president. The office also w ill not represent students in student interests, student business versus student litigation or in criminal cases, although it can advise a student on the latter in an informal manner IN 1977 more than 6.000 students used the office, with approximately 600 open files and 120 cases in litigation. Case distribution that year was diverse: • Landlord-tenant problems which involved mostly securi­ ty deposit disputes comprised 35 percent of the cases. In most cases problems were settled without litigation. • Automobile collision dis­ putes accounted for 18 per­ cent. • Consumer-related issues made up 12 percent of the SEE th ousands of plants u nd er one roof. SAVE by b u y in g direct from th e g ro w e r. LEARN h o w to care for your p lan ts from the people w h o g re w th e m . V A R I E T Y , q u a l i t y a n d specim en p la n ts . If w e d o n 't h ave so m eth in g yo u 're look­ ing for, w e 'll fin d it. Septem ber 6-7 M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M COTHRON’S BIKE SHOP 3 Complete Selection of Raleigh 10 Speeds Service and Parts For All Bikes If You Can Pedal It, We Can Fix It 509 Rio Grande 1003 E. 52nd 4 7 8 -2 7 0 7 1504 Fortview r - .. No. 1 1608 la vaca 478-3281 AUSTIN'S ORIGINAL SUB SHOP ★ Best Sandwich V alue in Town ★ M any Varieties of Ice Cold Beer A Rolls Baked Fresh Daily No. 2 20) L Riverside 441-5331 L __________' - — * T H U N D E R C L O U D S U B S % STUDENTS The only thing you have to go through to get good service ... is our fro n t door! up Grarilree ip A t Grantree we make good service practice, not an exception. a As always: — NO DEPOSIT — 1 0 % Discount on Student Rental Rate — 1 0 0 % Purchase Option — M onth to Month — Individual Item Selection — Low, Low Rental Prices A n d fo r a limited time, 20% discount on delivery fee when you present this ad before 9/15/80. Two Locations to Serve You: Grantree Furniture 8965 Research Blvd. 837-7170 10 a.m .- 9 p.m. M-F 10 a.m .- 6 p.m. S Grantree Furniture 4606 Burleson Rd. 441-9381 9 a.m.-5 p.m. M-F Students’ Attorney Ronald Shortes caseload. • C r e d 11 p r o b l e m s represented 9 p ercen t of cases. • Illegal and unethical tow­ ing and w recker company practices comprised another 6 percent while related car repair disputes represented an additional 4 percent. injury, • Labor-employment dis­ putes, personal in­ surance company conflicts, administrative non-criminal problems involving drivers' license privileges made up ap­ proximately 16 percent of the cases. In 1976 the office initiated into a major investigations “ entrapment racket” which lured car owners into parking areas which were surrep­ titiously designated as tow- zones. After the office had progressed to a certain point in the investigation, the Texas attorney general’s Consumer Protection Division joined in and injunctions and criminal theft followed promptly. indictments Another victory which the office likes to boast of is its crucial participation in what eventually became a federal class action suit against Southwestern Bell, which was employing d is crim in a to ry credit practices in its dealings with unmarried women. Bell had been requiring all women falling under these categories pay a special deposit or sign a letter of guarantee to ensure their pay­ ment of b ills . T h is d is ­ criminatory practice assumed inferior earning capabilities of single women and applied to all Texas women with Bell ac­ counts. Ronald Shortes and his staff are proud of their work in this case because when it was eventually won early in 1979 it benefited all Texas women and therefore transcended University boundaries. WE INVITE YOU TO LIVE AT COLLEGE NOT JUST CAMP Cramped rooms, community showers, bus schedules, preparing meals, cleaning, utility bills . . . WHY R U F F IT? Convenient easy living is the style of The Castilian. We offer a choice of a 19- or 15-meal plan, maid service, air conditioning, paid utilities, recrea­ tion facilities, saunas, indoor (year-round) swimming pool, covered parking, a well rounded social program and lots more! We are located one block from campus just off the "D rag /7 also for your convenience. Live at college. . . . It is more fun than ruffing it! THE CASTILIAN he Place To Be At U. T. ” “7 2323 San Antonio 478-9811 J Rec center offers bowling, pool By JA N ISE BROWN Daily Texan Staff Equipped with everything from beer to backgam m on, the Texas Union R ecreational C enter has become a gam e-lover’s paradise for people who ca n 't afford to go out and ca n 't stand to stay in. In fact, the cen ter's popularity “ has alm ost doubled in the past year, Ann Green, gam es area supervisor, said. Our main objective is not to m ake money h ere,” she said, and by charging only half as much as other gam e places charge, the center in the bottom of the Union Building has virtually become a bargain basem ent of entertainm ent. THE C E N T E R opens at 9 a.m . Monday to Friday and at noon on weekends and offers low-priced relaxation in a variety of forms. E n tran ces leading down to the center are at the north end of the second floor. We have 16 bowling lanes, m ore than 35 pinball and electric gam es, nine pool tables, dart boards and a full array of table games, such as Scrabble, backgam m on, Monopoly and R isk ,” Green said. By popular demand. “ We are adding four new pool tables, which should be installed by the end of the su m m er.” Another new addition to the facilities this fall, will be a pro shop, featuring a variety of m erchandise from bowling balls to cue sticks. “ WE W ILL increase our inventory 100 percent and our m erchandise will be priced from $5 to $12 cheaper than it would be in a public house,’ Green said. “ The shop will be reserved exclusively for faculty, students and s ta ff.” The prices at the center are tailored to fit the student’s tight budget, while “darts and table gam es are all free for people who have a student ID ." Green said. To bowl, “ We charge by tim e, unlike public houses, who charge by the gam e, she said. The cost-per-gam e figures out to about 60 cents in the recreation center, while public bowling alleys charge $1.25 per g a m e ." POOL IS inexpensive as well, costing $1.50 per hour, as com ­ pared to public houses which charge at least that much per per­ son, Green said. To m ake the gam es even m ore affordable, daily specials are offered throughout each week, she said. Popular specials feature bowling for 25 cents per game, pool for 75 cents per hour and free gam es during the Red Pin specials. Overall, the diversions which the center offers have m et with great success and even though they must com pete regularly with football gam es and concerts, Green can rem em ber tim es when “ there was a two-hour waiting list for pool.” “ EV EN IF the tables or lanes are full, however, the table gam e room is alw ays open and there are other things to do.” Green said “ You can get a snack or a beer while you w ait — most people really don’t m ind.” As a special service, groups are allowed to m ake reservations 24 hours in advance and pay special group prices, she said. However, “ Even if you com e alone, chances are that you will be able to find someone to challenge — especially at the table gam es, she said. “ We have lists of rules for every gam e available, ju st in c a s e .” FOR THOSE who enjoy a little competition with their fun, the center offers league m em bership to anyone who is in­ terested There are a variety of team s to choose from , but they all have one thing in common — “ everyone becom es frien d s,” Green said. Inexperienced bowlers shouldn’t feel intimidated by a low average, she said, because all leagues have handicaps, which m athem atically balance the scores of two opponents with un­ even talent. “ Even if you are a beginning bowler, you can feasibly beat an advanced bowler and win in your leagu e,” Green said. The team s aren t exclusively designed for the most experienced players. “ They’re for everyone who enjoys bowling, m eeting people and having fun.” SIGN-UP sheets for leagues will be posted in the cen ter dur­ ing registration and the first week of class. The center is also involved in intram ural com petition in bowl­ ing and pool. “ The details a re published on the recreation cen ter sports page of the Daily Texan, and you can sign up at the beginning of the se m e ste r,” she said. Schedules of the c e n te r’s activ ities will be available a t the in­ formation desk in the Union Building, as well as outside the Special Events Center during registration. UT outdoor programs provide students with big study break By RUTH GARNER Dally Texan Staff Students looking for a break from studies and cam pus life don’t have to search far to find a variety of activ ities in the U niversity’s outdoor recreation program. Day and weekend trips include rock- c a n o e in g , b a c k p a c k in g , clim b in g , snorkeling and cy clin g . C anoeing, backpacking and cross country skiing are offered as extended trips during holidays. “ ALL STUDENTS, faculty and staff are eligible to participate in the out­ ings,” Linda Doering, assistan t director of recreational sports, said. P ersons who wish to bring a non-student friend will need to purchase a $2 guest pass to cover expenses provided by student fees. The trip fees pay for transportation, special equipment and skilled instruc­ tors. On weekend trips, the use of group camping equipment and an outdoor Saturd ay night dinner and Sunday breakfast are included in the fee. The extended outing fee is a package deal with food and equip­ m ent covered by it. transportation, E A C H TR IP is preceded by an orien­ tation meeting in Bellm ont Hall 104 where participants m eet the other trip m em bers and instructors and discuss the details of the outing. In addition to the trips, skill clinics a re offered to instruct participants in techniques which will m ake the a c ­ tivities m ore enjoyable. Kayak clinics will cover basics such as entering, ex ­ iting and rolling. Canoe clin ics will teach basic strokes, m aneuvers and canoeing safety. Sandwich sem inars w ill c o v e r s u b je c t s ran g in g fro m to running white backpack cookery w ater. “ R ental equipment is available in the Gregory Gym Store and reservations can be made by paying up to one week in a d v a n ce ,” D oering said. A vailable equipm ent te n ts, sleep ing bags, backpacks, stoves, day packs, duf­ fle bags and w eather gear. includes REGISTRATION begins up to four weeks in advance. Paym ent in full is n e c e s s a r y when you sign up, but cancellations a re accepted until the scheduled pretrip deadline. To get in­ volved in the outdoor action, register in Bellm ont Hall 104 or call 471-1093. 2405 San Antonio 474-7812 O p en M on-Fri 9 :3 0 - 3 :3 0 (? « £ CLARK Tuesday, August 5. 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXA N □ Page C5 £2_______ « « ATTENTION STUDENTS & MILITARY PERSONNEL' FURNITURE RENTAL CERTIFIED LEASING COM PAN Y RENT OUR SPECIAL INFLATIO N FIGHTER GROUPING LIVING ROOM AND DINING ROOM YOUR BEDROOM FREE !! ONLY $30.00 per mo. FULL APARTMENT OF OI IA I I T Y FI 1RNITI )RF FOR ONLY TO OO ‘ TERMS OF TYPICAL LEASE MONTHLY RENT...................................... W AIVER................................................................. $30 00 3 0 0 TA XES (Varied by a r e a ) ...................................... 1 5 0 S E C U R IT Y ....................................................... T R A N SP O R T A T IO N ...................................... 1st MONTHS R E N T ......................................... n o n e $30.00 3 4 5 0 TOTAL MONTHLY P A Y M E N T $ 3 4 .5 0 INITIAL P A Y M E N T .................................... $64.50 DUE TO THE LOW RENTAL RATE OF THIS OFFER WE RESERVE THE R IGHT TO W ITHDRAW AT A N Y TIME CERTIFIED LEASING COMPANY 459-4241 1001 E. Anderson Lane Wallabees T h e f a s h i o n and fit that is timeless. Hidden i n the tree§ b ehind Y aring• YOU ARE G O ING TO MISS M O M S COOKING! T ry A D elicious L u n ch W ith B arbara and Jane_______ We’re up when you are. Telephone Counseling 476-7073 Anytime • N ew & Used Books • We Buy Back Used Books • Notebooks & Stationery is a gum rubber sole and cu sh io n ed ( lark s W allabee shoes will hug y o u r feet with c o m ­ fort and style! 1 he se c re t to W aílab ee’s superb c o m ­ insole. fort th e ir unsurpassed W allabees are also known in T an Calf c ra ftsm a n sh ip and quality. Available Plain Toe o r Sand Suede M o c T o e (m ed iu m width) 66.00. for Reynolds- "\nland Caps, Shirts, and Class Rings One Stop Shopping — Buy your school supplies while you buy your books We guarantee that our prices are never higher, or w e w ill refund double the difference! TNI 2 4t h ★ TEXAS TEXTBOOKS ► £ -< ★ Porkirtf TEXAS TEXTBOOKS INC. 1st Floor Castilian 24th & San Antonio 4 7 8 -9 8 3 3 VISA* ' t . i M \ i \ r frv \ \ \s V OUTLOOK It'» back to »chool anti t he basics for a sm ashing fall w ard ro b e . Like this I (HI* < c o tto n O xford -trip e shirt by K e n n e th G o rd o n of New O rlean s. C tunes in B lu e and C laret - its superb c o n s tru c tio n m ake- it a »uper value at 10.(K). \I s o com es in solid white, blue, e c ru at 2 5 . OO. Sizes I l 1 2 to I 6 1 2; 3 2 - 3 5 sleeves. Finish that eri»p look with a B a r a c u t a \X in dbreaker made of 1 0 0 0 c o t t o n poplin. F eatu res i ncl ude Fr as e r t a r t a n plaid lining, kni t c o l l a r , wai»t and e u f f and xcnti l ated yoke back. In n a t u r al , n a v ) — 7 0 . 0 0 ; 36- 11 reg. and 10-16 long. 'enland Image makers for T exa s since 1929 I Diversity Shop - 476-7b7o Highland Mall - 459-7616 Congress Avenue - 472-4125 Page C6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 COUNSELING SERVICES The Counseling and Psychological Services Center, 471-3515 or P A X 3380, provides a wide range of counseling se rvice s to students without charge. INTERNATIONAL OFFICE The International Office, 100 W. 26th, 471-1211, has trained advisers to assist foreign students with schedules, housing, jobs, immigration and personal problems. W HO SHOT J.R.? When the news breaks the Dallas Times Herald is the first to know. For news while it's still news— Sports Entertainment World Events Texas News it's all in the Dallas Times Herald. It's offered to you at special student rates and delivered to your new Austin residence. Call our state cir­ culation department toll free: 8 0 0 -4 9 2 -9 7 5 0 to begin delivery, or in Austin call 442-8761. r ~ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Half-Price Student Subscription Buses shuttle around Austin T e n ro u te s c a rry s tu d e n ts to all p a rts of to w n By BOB ELDER Daily T exan Staff The University shuttle bus system, operated by Transportation Enterprises Inc., provides transportation to students around campus and to other parts of Austin Once amicable relations among student passengers, d rive rs and management have recently been strain­ ed. however. Transportation Enterprises Inc. of Austin banned all music from its buses June 20. Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1549 gave its drivers petitions to bring back m usic. N e a rly 4,000 signatures have been collected, union officials said BAD F E E L IN G S between the com­ pany and the union have not hurt ser­ vice, however. Jim Wilson, assistant to the U niversity vice president for business affairs and University liaison with T E I. presented some favorable evidence for the system with 10 routes in the fall and spring, nine in the summer: • Buses are at the stops an average of every four to seven minutes during peak hours, roughly 7 a.m. to noon. The buses start at 6 a.m. and finish at ap­ proximately 11 p.m., depending on the route. • In the afternoon, buses stop every eight to nine minutes. After ap­ proximately 6 p.m., stops are made every 25 to 40 minutes, depending on the route. • At peak times. 55 buses cover the routes. At night, only one bus is assign­ ed each route. • The routes cover 55 miles and buses make more than 1.000 round trips a day. Before the music ban. some drivers used massive stereos and tape decks while others preferred transistor radios. Drivers' tastes ran from concer­ tos to obscure punk groups Since most drivers work four-hour shifts, the varie­ ty of music heard was considerable. BUT MUSIC also started tension between T E I and the union T E I personnel cited “ numerous passenger complaints in banning music, which it said ‘caused a condition ... not conducive to safety.” But the company has refused to give theunion, or anyone, a record of those complaints. Music has been a fixture on the shut­ tle buses since the system started in 1968 Austin Transit Union Local Presi­ dent John Lipscombe said music “ has always been taken for granted as a benefit ... the enjoyment from driving comes from talking with the passengers and alleviating the boredom with music.” T E I TURNED down the union’s re­ quest for music at a grievance hearing. The union has now requested an ar­ bitrator from the federal mediation and conciliation board in Washington. Although the dispute remains un­ resolved. the troubles between T E I and its drivers go back to 1972 The drivers went on strike, demanded and got a un­ ion — the ATU Local. IN 1976, safety standards on the buses prompted another strike. Drivers won. among other things, the right to refuse to drive a bus for safety reasons. T E I officials refuse to say much about the dispute. Vice President Doyle Stone will say only, “ the ban on music still stands.” The issue may not be settled by the fall and John Lipscombe, president of the union, said petitions will be cir­ culated again in the fall so more students can sign them. Both T E I and the union mutually selected an arbitrator from the Federal Mediation and Councilation Service in late July to decide if bus drivers playing music on their routes were creating an unnecessary safety hazard. Lipscombe said he was sure the bus drivers would win the decision, and several T E I of­ ficials refused to comment on the matter. No one on either side is anticipating a strike, but should one occur, thousands of University students and faculty may be forced to find other transportation. SUNDAY WEDNESDAY Bible S tudy W orship C hoir Supper S em inars F a m ily 9:30 a.m 11:00 a .m . D in n e r 5:00 p.m . M id -w e e k 6:00 p.m . S ervice 6:30 p.m . 5:30 p.m . 6:15 p .m . M O N D A Y & THURSDAY 9:45 p.m . UBC Chapel P ra y e r Nam e Austin Residence City State Zip S tart Date ................................................... Phone . . . . M ak e check payable to: Dallas Tim es H erald 5 4 1 6 Pine Place, A us tin, TX 7 8 7 4 4 □ $ 1 0 .5 0 F a ll Registration through final exams. □ $ 2 0 .0 0 Both F all and Spring Sem esters THE STUDENT MINISTRY OF THE UNIVERSITY BAPTIST CHURCH Twenty-Second & Guadalupe • Dr. John Shouse, Pastor EARLY FALL ACTIVITIES r ROOFTOP ICE CREAM SOCIAL UBC Student Bldg. Rooftop Aug. 28 — 7:30 p.m. UBC/BSU BARBECUE U BC Parking Lot, Sept. 1 Before the game — 5 p.m. DINNER O N THE GROUNDS UBC — Sept. 7 — Noon FALL RETREAT Highland Lakes Camp Sept. 12-13 PRAYER BREAKFAST UBC Fellowship Hall Sept. 14 — 8:45 a.m. DINNER THEATER UBC Sept. 1 9 - 7 p.m. L " ^ J ARMY ROTC AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS A GREAT DEAL FOR FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES COURSES CARRY 2 SEMESTER HOURS ACADEMIC CREDIT INTERESTING TRAINING: MOUNTAINEERING MARKSMANSHIP ORIENTEERING CONFLICT SIMULATION FREE BOOKS! ELIGIBILITY FOR SCHOLARSHIPS! NO HAIRCUT REQUIREMENTS! NO MILITARY OBLIGATION! MOUNTAINEERING MARKSMANSHIP FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CALL OR STOP BY 471 -5919/5910 ^ ^ RUSSELL A. STEINDAM HALL, ROOM 110 m m m a — _ m ^ mm/mmmmm Student government revival needs regents’, students’ OK By DIANE BALLARD Daily Texan Staff This fall. University students will en­ dorse or reject a constitution drawn up last spring by elected delegates to a constitutional c o n v e n t i o n w h i c h would reinstate student government. interested A group of students in resurrecting student governm ent — which students abolished in the spring of 1978 — began organizing brainstor­ ming sessions last Septem ber Students voted March 2, 1978 in a bin­ ding referendum to do away with the 75-, year-old institution that critics said had no power and had become just another branch of the U niversity's bureaucracy. The Board of Regents on April 7. 1978 voted 6-3 to uphold the students’ deci­ sion. OPPONENTS to the revival of stu­ dent government — officially titled the Students’ Association — still claim the organization would represent students only in name, because for the constitu­ tion to be valid, the regents m ust first approve it. If the board does approve the con­ stitution. it will go back to students this fall for final approval. in In a c a m p u s -w id e e le c tio n N o v e m b e r , s t u d e n t s e l e c t e d 25 delegates to a constitutional convention to ham m er out a new constitution. The proposed constitution cam e up for student vote on April 1. Only 5 percent of the student body participated in the election and the con­ stitution was approved However, opponents of the movem ent th e d o c u m e n t h ad b een c h a r g e d “ railroaded’’ and several groups — in­ cluding the Senior Cabinet — refused to endorse the constitution. One of the m ajor differences between the proposed document and the past constitution is that under the proposed constitution, a future Students’ Associa­ tion would be run on a “ m anagerial” basi^ ra th e r than by a “ m onarchy.” The constitution delineates represen­ tative power to an assem bly rather than a p re s id e n t and s tre n g th e n s the organization's judicial branch. Opponents of the fo rm er student government claim the president of the a ss o c ia tio n often o p e ra te d like a monarch with alm ost com plete appoint­ m ent power. Delegates at the conven­ tion responded this criticism by designing a document that distributes power m ore evenly between represen­ tatives. to In the past, a president could appoint all com m ittee heads and m ake ap­ to standing com m ittees. pointments Under future guidelines, four of the six c o m m ittee vice presid en ts will be elected by the student body to head a com m ittee. The rem aining two com ­ m ittee vice presidents will be appointed by the president and require two-thirds assembly approval. Standing com m ittee appointm ents also m ust have two-thirds approval of the assembly. ELECTING v ice p re s id e n ts and delegates to a com m ittee, rath er than to a body, is an effort by delegates to design a Students' Association based on issues, delegates said. A significant issue missing from the document delineating the “ m anagerial” form of government proposed in the constitution, is the funding of a future representative body. Financing for an on-campus student to com e g o v e rn m e n t would h av e through m andatory or optional student services fees, either of which could be supplemented by discretionary funds. Constitutional convention chairm an David Bright said convention delegates were not elected to determ ine finan­ cing. and funding procedures would be w ritten in by-laws created by an elected Students’ Association. “ Funding has never been included in other constitutions.” Bright said. Jam es Hurst, dean of students, said he was “ pleased” funding is not includ­ ed in the constitution. P a rt of the solution to future funding is the establishm ent of a com m ittee of finance. Bright said. He said the com ­ m ittee could raise a large am ount of money for the association. Adm inistrators and several student leaders say they favor m andatory fun­ ding over optional funding because it es­ tablishes a guaranteed budget for an association. Proponents of m andatory funding say they fear the m ajority of students would not voluntarily finance the association. “ I favor m andatory funding,” Hurst said. “ I believe the office of a Students’ Association can spend its tim e in better ways than out hustling for m oney,” he said. S enior C ab in et C h airm an M ark Cassidy says a Students’ Association “ n eed s m a n d a to ry funding fo r a m inimum amount to operate from .” But Cassidy said there were benefits to optional funding. “ The reason I like optional funding is that it m akes a Students’ Association m ore accountable to students,” he said. “ But I know that would be a problem because they wouldn't get enough fun­ ding," he said. V Give the Good Life GHEESE & BTC. CHEESE & WINE THE AUSTIN SANDWICH SHOP Welcomes New Students! 1 0 0 D ifferent Varieties of Deli Sandwiches W ines & Cheeses from all over the W orld Im ported and Dom estic Beer G ourm et Foods G u ad alu p e e 4) X 2323 San Antonio San Antonio Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page C7 THE STUDENT HEALTH CENTER 471-4955 The Student H ealth Center is a fully accredited medical facility p ro v id in g both in -p a tie n t and out-patient services for the student body of the U n iv e r s it y . It pro vid es o p t im u m health c a re to e lig ib le students at the m i n i m a l cost possible. Specialties represented on the professional staff in clude: G eneral Medicine Gynecology Internal M edicine O phthalm ology Orthopedics Psychiatry Surgery Urology URGENT CONDITIONS ATTENDED AT ANY TIME PHYSICIAN ON DUTY 24 HOURS A DAY EVERY DAY CLINIC HOURS 8:00 a .m .-5:45 p.m. Monday through Friday 8:00 a .m .-12:00 Noon Saturdays For Appointment, Call 4 7 1 -3 0 8 2 Did you know The Ex-Students' Association offers you many activities NOW as a student? Party for new U.T. Students, September 11 Scholarship Open House 40 Aeres Fun Run The G raduate Magazine Career Contacts * * * * * * March 2 & Round-Up Activities * Washington Internship Program * Student Involvem ent Committees Orientation for interested members, October 2 1980-81 Student Involvement Committee: Sherri Ford Vandi Glade Beck y Griffiths David Haug: Am y J o h n s o n L y n n L au ghlin Ellen L o c y David Lopez Mark M c K i n n o n Vicki B e h r e n d , Chairman K e n All en R o n n i e Barshop Janet B auerle Mark B e ck er M ic h e lle Brock K ev in Bro w n Mark Cassidy Rusty Combes Joel Ferrell Jack Morse Ron M u n n Allison N a t h a n Layn e Prickett Richard Selin e Kris Story Kirby Walker David Weiple Cheryl Zaremba The T exas Union, the com m unity center of The U niversity of Texas cam pus, offers four options for contract m eals each sem ester. The m eal plan program is unique in that all m eals are served Monday through Friday only, with four different com binations of m eals from which to choose, and at two different locations. ADVANTAGES TO PARTICIPATING IN THE PROGRAM — Time and Convenience How much tim e do you spend shopping for food, cooking, and cleaning up9 How much tim e do you spend walking or driving to some fast-food restaurant? Almost 15 extra hours per week can be yours that you can spend on studying or on other activities. Plus you have the added convenience of eating right on cam pus where you spend most of your day \o u may not have access to cooking facilities. You may not know how, or you m ay hate to cook. You may be housed in a residence hall without a meal contract. You may be spending so much of your tim e in the library, a laboratory, or in rehearsals that you end up eating junk or skipping meals. \ our eating schedule may be unique in which you may not have use for three daily meals The expanded serving times, the one-, two-, and three-meal-per-day options, plus the fact that our eating facilities are right on campus, alleviate all these problems. — Good Food at a Good Price The Texas Union Dining Services has a fairly strong reputa­ tion on campus for serving good food. We operate 15 food facilities in the Texas Union Building and around campus that include c a fe te ria s, fast food facilities, and a form al restaurant, as well as a complete catering service that provides banquet facilities for m ajor University functions. We re concerned about what we serve and how we serve it. Our cooks and food production staff like what they do, have a vast amount of restaurant experience, and make just about everything from scratch, every day. They like to be in­ novative and spice m eals up with a gourmet touch. We wouldn't serve anything that we felt was not very tasty, healthy, or just plain blah. We buy the highest quality m eats and produce available, from the sam e places as your favorite restaurant We re cheaper than restaurants because we don’t make a profit The plan is offered strictly as a service. Because we can count on you to eat with us each day, we just produce more food with the sam e overhead and pass on the savings to you in the form of a discount — from 20 to 35 per cent, depending on how many m eals a day you contract for. Although food prices have been going up steadily, the meal plan price won’t change during the sem ester, even though price increases may occur on certain item s that people who aren ’t on the plan would have to pay. LOCATIONS AND HOURS OF THE MEALS The Varsity Cafeteria Breakfast, lunch, and dinner are all served at the Varsity Cafeteria, located just off the corner of 21st Street and Speedway, adjacent to Moore-Hill Residence Hall. “ The Var­ sity” (University Cafeteria) is a full-service food facility opening each day at 7 a.m . for breakfast and closing at 7:15 p.m. after the dinner hour. As a part of Texas Union Dining Services, the Varsity also houses our Bakery Production Departm ent, producing fresh-baked breads, cookies, pies, doughnuts, and cakes for all of our eating facilities on campus. The Varsity Cafeteria is unique in that it is right in the middle of the Men’s Residence Halls complex and across from Jester Center. It also is just down the street from the Perry-Castaneda Library. In addition to the daily variety of popular food item s, the Varsity also offers some grille favorites such as ham burgers and cheeseburgers with a substitution schedule for our m eal plan participants. top-quality, Texas Union Building Breakfast and dinner are offered in the Texas Union Building (located on the west side of campus next to the Academic Center) at two adjacent facilities in the Round-Up Food Mall. “ Adds N Drops” is our main cafeteria line offering a variety of fresh hot foods with a different menu each day. “ E lec­ tives” is our special “ old favorites" counter featuring barbecue, chicken fried steak, and Mexican food every day. Both of these facilities lead into the 40 Acres Dining Room, a quiet, carpeted dining area. Because you can have breakfast and dinner at either of our locations, a much greater variety of food is available, es­ pecially for dinner where there are up to 10 choices of hot en­ trees each day. A published menu will be available so that you can see in advance what the menu items are in each area. COST OF THE PLANS OPTION A — $506.00 plus tax. Includes breakfast, lunch, and dinner five days per week calculated a t 74 days x $1.55 for breakfast (regular $2 39), plus $2.46 for lunch (regular $3.79) and $2 82 for dinner (regular $4.34). A savings of 35%. OPTION B — $378 00 plus tax. Includes breakfast and dinner five days per week. Calculated at 74 x $1.79 for breakfast and $3.25 for dinner. A savings of 25%. OPTION C — $450 00 plus tax Includes lunch and dinner 5 days per week. Calculated at 74 x $2 84 for lunch and 74 x $3 25 for dinner. A savings of 25%. OPTION D — $257.00 plus tax. Includes dinner 5 days per week Calculated a t 74 x $3 47. A savings of 20%. PAYM ENT The full payment can be m ade at the beginning, or in accor­ dance with a set paym ent schedule spread out over the course of the sem ester (see below). Paym ents also can be charged on VISA or M asterCharge credit cards. P a \m c n t Schedule (includes 5% sa les tax i P ay m en t P lan (Includes $2 per p ay m en t fee) O ption Full P ay m en t A B D $531 30 $396 90 $472 50 $269 85 By S eptem ber 2 $214 52 $160 76 $191 00 $109 94 October 3 $177 33 $132 97 $157 93 $91 .<0 Novem ber 7 $145 45 $109 17 $129 57 $74 91 Breakfast is served from a.m. to 2 p.m .; and dinner from 5 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. a.m. to 10:30 a.m .; lunch from 11 WHAT THE MEALS INCLUDE Breakfast: Choice of two eggs, pancakes, or french toast; hash browns; bacon or sausage; toast or biscuit; beverage; and sm all juice. Lunch: Includes a choice from at least three entrees choice of two fresh, hot vegetables, roll, dessert or tossed salad and beverage. Dinner: Includes an all-you-can-eat tossed salad, a choice from at least three entrees, a choice of two item s from a selection of fi*esh, hot vegetables, hot roll and butter, choice of one dessert and beverage. WHEN THE PLANS ARE VALID The Texas Union Meal Plans are valid beginning on September 2 and ending on December 16 They are not valid on November 27 and 28. The T exas U nion M eal P lan y HOW TO PURCHASE A MEAL Any of the meal plans can be purchased in person at the Tex­ as Union Business Office. Room 4 124, from 9 a m to 4 p.m. beginning August 25 and ending Septem ber 30. or by m ail throughout the sum m er Meal plans purchased a f te r September 2 \*ill be discounted for each day m eals have been missed, For further information, contact the Texas Union Business Office at (512) 471 4852. or write Meal Plans, Texas Union Dining Services, The University of Texas at Austin, 78712 Page C8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 TRADITIONS Watch repairs. You can set your watch by the Tower clock. If your watch is working. I f not,you have a jeweler in the shadow o f the Tower whose master watch­ makers and service depart­ ment have been keeping ~"exans on time for almost three decades. Drops, t hese are not the ones that go with'adds'.' Rather jewel pendants, gold initial-letter drops, organization insignia- very wearable jewelry that customarily commemorates anything from her birthday to Eyeore's. G old jewelry. Regardless o f the occasion, a gold chain is appropriate whether you're foing to a game or to bathe levo. Traditionally students com e to us for gold jewelry fo r themselves or as gifts, because we have the pick o f the glitter. Engagement rings. When you get engaged at Texas, it's traditional to come to The Sheftall Co. to choose a diamond. You can count on us to have auality rings and gems as brilliant as a bonfire and certainly more enduring. ( 'lass rings. A class ring is a symbol o f achievement. It is the mark o f professional status; a symbol o f success. V I students have traditionally bought their class rings fn mi The Sheftall Co. just to show how smart they are. For almost three decades, The Sheftall Co. has been a Texas tradition where university students, faculty and staff shop for fine jewelry, watches, diamonds and gifts. It's where you can cash checks, open your first charge account and find a complete service department for both repairs and custom work. t h e S h e f t a l l c o . JEWELERS GEMOLOGISTS Member Ameritan Gem Society i 2 2 3 6 Guadalupe (in the uimt blotk as The Co-op), Altándole Village, 1 Vestgate Mall and Highland Mall All major (redd cards and Sheftall charge. Student plays Kinsolving’s baby grand piano Rocky Kneten, Daily Texan Staff Residents enjoy dorm piano By SUSAN VAMMEN The m ost frequently used piece of fu r­ niture in Kinsolving D orm itory’s lobby sits in the far south end From m id-afternoon until late at night, students sit down at the baby g ra n d p i a n o and p l a y M o z a r t , Beethoven , C ole P o rte r, ‘the old songs’’ — and some mean rhythm and blues But the pianists of Kinsolving D or­ t o b e for m i t o r y a r e n o t p l a y i n g professionals. They play m usic m usic’s sake. "M usic is good, but to m ake a living at it can be very boring.” said Ken P er- sins. an e le c trica l engineering student. P E R SIN S HAS played with Dixieland bands and likes to play what he calls “ New York ’40s dinner m u sic.” “ I got tired of all my cla ssica l train ­ ing and picked up on what my dad used to play in bands,’’ he said. P ersin s has ju st finished an untitled symphony for a full o rch estra which runs 8*z m inutes “ I t ’s a contem porary, rom antic mood p iece,” he said, “ It was inspired by a woman who is not around anym ore.” it on He cannot play the piano because, he said, its full meaning would not be understood. “ You have to hear it played by an o rch e stra .” He hopes to have the D epartm ent of Music en ter it in the Student Com poser R ecital this fall P E R S IN S CAN play sev eral m usical instrum ents — violin, flute, saxophone and som e percussion. “ You have to be fam iliar with a lot of instrum ents to w rite for an o rch e stra ,’’ he said. “ Even if you c a n ’t play a c e r ­ tain instrum ent, you have to know how it will sound by itself, and also within an orchestra settin g .’’ He started his symphony five y ears ago but stopped working on it several tim es. “ I have to feel crea tiv e when writing or nothing co m e s.’’ he said. “ It can get exasperating because when you w rite a piece of this stature you have to com e up with something o rig in al.” The Kinsolving baby grand has five pianists who com e to play on a regular b a s i s . B u t n o n e of t h e m h a v e professional piano am bitions. Kennan Cowing, a legally blind pre­ law student who once m ajored in m usic, must use an eyepiece to read cla ssica l m usic. “ I really consider m yself m ore of a vocalist than a p ian ist,’’ he said. “ I play for my own satisfaction because playing for others m akes m e feel like I'm giving my a rt aw ay.” COWING ALSO plays the cello, bass, violin, recorder and harpsichord. He was introduced to m usic while growing up in a m usical fam ily. He mused that Kinsolving’s piano players are going to open a secre t piano bar in the dorm. “ There is this other resident, Scott, a black guy who plays rhythm and blues and G ershw in,” he said. “ Ken and I are going to get with him and see if we can get a spinet piano in the dining room up­ stairs and play bar m usic a fte r hours.” ALLANDALE BAPTIST CHURCH Revival with Richard Jackson September 7-12 Josh McDow ell September 13, 14 Riverboat Party October 18, 1980 Bar-B-Cue September 13, 1980 Josh McDowell, Speaker WELCOME UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS STUDENTS AUSTIN'S FASTEST GROWING CHURCH 9:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 5:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. M orning Worship Continental Breakfast — Faith Building Bible Study with Traditional and Coed Classes — Excellent Teachers Special Discipleship Seminars Evening Worship Aliándole Baptist Church 2615 A liándole Rd. Austin, Texas 78756 512/454-8711 September 7 Special College Day FREE D IN N E R At 12 N O O N 7 OX-iX 1 LiítIDLíIV 4 free a ir c o n d itio n e d v a n T R A N S P O R A T IO N ___LEAVE SPECIAL COLLEGE DAY LEAVE K IN SO LV IN G /SR D - 9:00 a m JESTER/MOORE-HILL - 9:00 a.m. . w RETURN AFTER W ORSHIP Health center takes good care of students I (this w on’t do Incoming sudents can rest assured the physicians, nurses and staff of the Student Health Center will take good care of them as they pursue their academic studies. “ W e warn to keep the students in school and keep them healthy,” said Valery Cox of the center ‘‘Students don't have the time to be ill with their heavy academic load,” she said. The center at 26th Street and U niversity Avenue, is open 24 hours a day for those needing emergency medical services, and hours for ap­ pointments with physicians are 8 a.m. to 5:45 p.m. Mon­ days through Fridays. The pharmacy at the bottom level of the center is open 8 a.m . to 6 p.m . M ondays through Fridays, and from 8 a.m. to noon Saturdays. ‘‘The Student Health Center is a fully accredited hospital, and we have to meet the same stringent medical standards as any major hospital such as Brackenridgeor Seton (alsoin Austin),” Cox said. Those students needing em ergency treatm ent can receive it any hour, day or night, from a competent nur­ sing staff and a physician if treatm ent necessitates his ministrations. W H E N A S K E D what would happen if a disagreement around a keg led to a brawling fight requiring stitches late at night, Cox said, “ There is a physician physically available in the building just in case som ething se rio u s needs attention,” she added. Physician specialties on the professional staff, Cox said, include such fields as general medicine, gynecology, inter­ nal medicine, ophthalmology, orthopedics, psychiatry, sur­ gery and urology. “ If a student needs other care, say, for his teeth or he needs eyeglasses, then the Student Health Center has a reference file of physicians who charge reasonable rates and who are competent,” she added. S E R V IC E S available as a result of required fees paid by the student at registration in­ clude free services of staff physicians, nurses and other m edical personnel during regular and non-regular clinic hours, physician services for minor surgical procedures for the relief of such conditions as cuts, sprains, minor fractures and dislocations, ambulance service to the health center if authorized by an official there on c o n s u l t a t i o n and therapeutic diets on order of a physician. S E R V I C E S also include limited services of the Mental Health Section at the center, clerical service for filing in­ surance claims for authorized medical services rendered at the center and hospitalization for a very nominal fee which includes professional staff in attendance 24 hours a day. “ We only charge $16 a day for hospitalization,” Cox said. “ If you check around the prices at any other hospital, you'll know how reasonable the Student Health Center is.” Services available at the center for which nominal charges w ill be made include diagnostic X-ray studies and specialized diagnostic studies such as a r t e r i o g r a m s , arthrograms, mammograms and e l e c t r o c a r d i o g r a m s , operating room services and anesthesia materials, services of s p e c i a l c o n s u l t a n t s , laboratory determinations and i ntr avenous medi ca t i ons , blood transfusions, drugs, dressings and orthopedic appliances. Other services requiring charges include deposit and rental of crutches, private nursing care and physical therapy services, prescrip­ tions, extended Mental Health Section services, premarital food e x a m i n a t i o n s and h a n d l e r s ’ p e r m i t s , a d ­ ministration of allergy injec­ tions and services of staff physicians and nurses for Emergency Room treatment during other than regular clinic hours. T H E O N L Y services not a v a i l a b l e at the Student Health Center are obstetrical care, dental care other than urgent oral surgery, non­ urgent surgery and physical examinations other than for diagnostic purposes or when f o r a c a d e m i c r e q u i r e d courses. While the services provided through the center satisfy the great majority of any required m e d i c a l c a r e a nd a r e a v a i l a b l e a t r e l a t i v e l y minimal costs to the student, unexpected and unpredictable situations (such as surgical procedures and extended hospitalization) m ay arise which can leave the student financially responsible for what could be heady costs. For this reason students are encouraged to be adequately covered by some type of com­ prehensive health insurance. i n s u r a n c e m a y be T h i s available to the student under his or her parents’ policy (generally up to a certain age) or it may be necessary for the student to obtain his or her own policy. I F A S T U D E N T needs to ob­ tain health insurance, he or she may wish to review the h e a l t h i n s u r a n c e p l a n available through the Univer­ sity. Information can be ob­ tained through the Student Ac­ tivities Office or the Health Center Insurance Office. Students wishing to file claims with their insurance company for medical services at the Health center should discuss the matter with the in­ surance clerk (Room 226 in the health center) at the time those charges are incurred. NO I N S U R A N C E claim , either initial or follow-up. can be filed by the center without the patient’s request to do so. It is the student’s responsibili­ ty to initiate the process of fil­ ing insurance claims. The stu­ dent r em a in s f i n a n c i a l l y responsible for all charges for services not paid by the in­ surance company. IN ADDITIO N to providing direct patient care, the health center maintains continuing programs in environmental health. These programs are directed toward the preven­ tion of illnesses and the dis­ semination of information that fosters and enhances good health. These programs are announced by special topic throughout the academic year and all students are invited to attend. “ We have a gynecologist available for women and also a nurse practitioner when women need her,” Cox said. S H E A D D ED “ most of our doctors are trained to do gynecological services. “ When a woman or man is concerned about birth con­ trol,” Cox said, “ they can get from the doctors all the alter­ natives for birth control with discussion concerning all the methods, their advantages and disadvantages.” ‘Doctors are prepared to discuss the advantages and disadvantages, as well as the side-effects of the different birth contol pills available,” she said. “Ultimately, whether you use a foam or a diaphram, an IUD, the rhythm method or the pill is your decision,” she said. “ If you need venereal dis­ ease information,” Cox said, “ you can come to the Com­ munity Health Office (at the Student Health Center), and they can a d v i s e you on whether you need screening, tests or treatment. “ 1?" YO U need treatment, then most of the physicians on the staff have experience in dealing with VD whether for straight or gay people,” she said “From my experience I have noted that students are willing to sit down and talk about VD. And they’re anxious to get treatment and further evaluation so they can resume having sexual relationships,” she said. “ Those students who are gay can also be assured of get­ ting the proper attention when it comes to V D . ” she added. “ Unlike most university clin ics, we don’t have a special section for VD. Detec­ tion and treatment is included with all the general services a v a i l a b l e at the Student Health Center,” she explain­ ed. “ T H E S T U D E N T Health Center is also a member of the World Health Organization,” Cox said, explaining that “ we can counsel people who are Univereitv V U niversity of Texas Y M C A and Y W C A 2330 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 78705 472-9246 ERS WOMENSPACE °" Women's Counseling and Information Confer Tues., Wed., Thors., 7-10 p.m. Friday Night Coffee House Women's Support Groups 472-3053 THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR LEARNING (CREATIVE RAPID LEARNING CENTER) Working with youths with looming differences utilizing a multimedia approach. Call 472-6220 THE COMMUNITY GARDENS 26' x 26' garden plots: $25 Call 456-2006 Organic Gardening class 454-2006 GAY COMMUNITY SERVICES Counseling and information Mon.-Sat. 6-10 p.m. Friday night Rap Group 6-10 p.m. 477-6666 Classes in M odem Dance, Cha Yon Ryu, Swing Dance, Karate for Women, Contact Dance, Tap Dance Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page C9 planning to take foreign trips, give them the immunizations necessary, and also provide the appropriate stamp for their passport “ If an event should arise where the student may wish to speak with someone, the director of the Student Health Center, would be very happy to a ns wer any questions students have or deal with any problems which arise,” she said “ He is quite willing to discuss any problem with the students.” R A C H E L Crenweige, assis­ tant director for nursing ser­ vices, is also available to answer questions you may have concerni ng Student Health Center procedures, and Dr. Paul Thomas, assistant director of the Student Health Center, is open to questions, Cox said. 277-5337 Bird's Nest Airport 272-5*43 1 0 m * N t o f M u f**€ tp o t A t r p o t f fhght Chib itatm* t o o n to # d ' f l w m o h a* f h q h t IMMIGRATION CONSULTANT * ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS PETITION (1-130, 1-130/1-405). The application for PERMANENT RESIDENT STATUS available to persons who entered the U.S. with inspection, have a quota number im­ mediately available and who are otherwise admissi­ ble. THOMAS ESPARZA, ATTORNEY 5 12 /441-0062 1001 W. M ary Button-up with button-downs lo n g Sleeve Button-Dow ns Solids — reg. Our price $13.50-14.20 Stripes — reg. yd Our price $ 1 4 .2 0 Short Sleeve Button-Dow ns Solids — reg. %)Á Our price $11 Stripes — reg. %\6-\1 Our price $12.60-13.60 Salesm an's Sam ples South 2605 Jones Rd. M on-Sat 10-6 North 7505 N. L a m a r M on-Sat 10-7 How Evelyn Wood Reading Dynam ics gives you a competitive edge in school. School at any level means reading . . . lots of it. Keeping up with thousands of pages can take a heavy toll in time and energy, and grades. If you’re typical, you read 150 to 350 words a minute But how do you get ahead of the rest? Evelyn Wood can triple your reading rate and improve your comprehension and study skills. Hundreds of thousandaof students use the Reading Dynamics Method. They find reading less of a chore. Concentration and retention improve, which can lead to better grades. A competi­ tive edge is important. . too important for you to delay. Prove it to yourself today! Whether you’re thinking of grad school or the job market, or if you want to keep up with course reading today, let Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics give you a competitive edge. In fact Evelyn Wood guarantees that you will triple your reading rate if you follow the course correctly, or your full tuition refunded That's our competitive edge. Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics 1801 Lavaca (one block south of cam pus) ***** m. A % EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS IS TAKING RESERVATIONS N O W FOR CLASSES TO BE HELD IN SEPTEMBER. CLASSES ARE LIMITED, SO REGISTER NOW. T U IT IO N ‘475.00. S T U D E N T S ‘395.00, payable by cash, check, M asterC harge or V IS A . W e also have a tim e paym ent plan: ‘150.00 down and balance due in 30/60/90 days. Register now; a deposit of ‘95.00 will reserve you a place in class. FOR M O RE IN FO RM ATIO N CALL: (512) 472-6912 N am e ________ _____________________________________ Address Home phone _ Class start dates 9 /1 5 9 / 1 8 (circle one) Check/m oney order $ account no. _________ expiration date total amt. enclosed V IS A M asterCharge I Charge to; j Signed Evelyn Wood Reading Dynam ics. The Competitive Edge. S o f t L u g g a g e . The sta n d ard choice of experienced travelers These sturdy top -zip bags are made of super tough cordura nylon- Ea sy to f handle i com pact to s t o r e | I luggage are available in a full range I of siz.es and colors Duffles and o th e r so ft 1 WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY 24io S aw Amtonio 66 fc& R e s &a k c w 4 9 b C.%33 416-1577 I YL “Moped Market made me get serious about mopeds.” “ I’d never been on a moped until I took a test ride on the 1980 P U C H at Moped Market. I rode it. I bought it! All it took was a spin around the block, and I knew I had to have one. “ The people at Moped Market were great. Their price was the lowest in town, and I was impressed by the fact that they sell only mopeds. These people are moped specialists, and they provide complete, expert service on my P U C H and all other brands. They even have a hotline and rescue service in the unlikely event that my moped breaks down on the street. Moped Market put me on a moped, and 1 love it. Now that I can go over 100 miles on a gallon of gas, 1 usually leave the car at home.” 5341-B C A M E R O N RD . 458-1321 704 W E S T 24TH ST. 472-3139 Join thm aarty birth at Bird'» Not! Anpori fladghng ctdvontod ' • f uvonotion Hying oi flight Club ratm* fly both tool and talm b¿taro c l a n at tint hg.-t Uplifting Onto ruthlottiy out of Iho su n and povneo on day a hood1 %< hod uto today for down — or onyhmo VISA fAmtorChargo Cotona BiJot Contar Sutnmor tpoatol Caff now to on tor draw­ ing for hoo flight Bndt Nott Airport 2 7 2 - 5 3 3 7 7 7 2 - 5 9 4 3 University Ombudsman aids students having trouble with administration Page C10 □ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Hillel Campus Jewish Center Welcomes you to join us for Warship Services Shabbat Dinners Holiday Services Guest Speakers Social Activities Beit Midrash Classes Israeli Dancing Bagel & Lox Brunches Drop by and pick up a calendar of schedule events and activities for Fall Semester. Director, Rabbi Neal Borovitz 2105 San Antonio 476-0125 » n » n Shop UlMS£ ujilti TF»e D q iIij T e r o n íocJn uj££k Per the best buqs in Fr^sb p r o d u c e ! By JENNIE CAUGHRAN If you think countless hassles are a prerequisite the University om ­ to obtaining a diploma, budsman can help you. “ The 1 Iniversitv ombudsman is more or less an arbiter between the students and any University ad m in istrato r, o ffice or p ro fe sso r,” Cheryl Zarem ba, ombudsman, said. Handling grievances ranging from housing to Bellmont Hall bats, the ombudsman hears com ­ plaints on any University m atter. In the spring of 1980, nearly 30 percen t of g rip e s involved professors and grades Less than 1 percent dealt with lib ra ry p ro b le m s and health c e n te r problem s. N early 20 percent of all student con­ cern s involved gen eral co llege ad ju stm en t problems. THE OMBUDSMAN relies prim arily on in­ to solve quiry negotiation and p ersu asio n problems. “ When an individual com es in with a problem, we sit down and discuss the situation with the student, Zarem ba said. “ Som etim es we only give them needed information or a re ferra l.” Zarem ba, a third-year law student, said her m ajor goal is to heip students get through the University bureaucracy. “ The great m ajority of students that contact this office have reaso n ab le argu m en ts and legitim ate p rob lem s," Zarem ba said. “ In this situation, we are left with a judgm ent call on whether to intervene “ IN THIS office, we have no firm rule about when we advise people on how they m ay handle their own problem s and when we intervene,” she said. “ We usually suggest that the client handle his or her own problem until difficulties develop. “ The most difficult client is the student who, in judgment, has an unjustified com plaint,” our “ As a neutral arbiter, we will Zarem ba said sim ply inform the student of his or her avenues of appeal. This type of student is looking for an of­ fice that dispenses favors rather than an office that safeguards rights. “ E V E R Y A SPECT of the University is touched upon at one point or anoth er," Zarem ba said. “ T here's com plaints in every college and from alm ost every office. With the Universiy being a s large a s it is, there will be slip-ups now and then in ju st about everything.“ Scholastic grievances range from com plaints again st grading system s to professo rs’ d isreg ar­ ding the course syllabus. Other student problem s involve services such a s financial aid, parking and traffic problem s and health and food. “ A STU D EN T even called in last year to ask for an April F o ol’s jo k e,” Zarem ba said. The hardest part of the job. Zarem ba said, is being neutral. “ I must look at the U niversity’s sid e ." Z arem ­ ba said. “ By natural inclination, because I am a student, I would like to alw ays be on the student s side. It’s hard to say that the University is co r­ rect and that nothing unjust is going on.' The om budsm an’s office, one of 10 or 15 such of- fices in the country run solely by students, handl­ ed approxim ately 1,000 com plaints last year. In the spring 1980. 430 students got ombudsman help. By classification , 34 percent of the clients were seniors while only 13 percent were freshmen. T H E O F F IC E h as a p ro b lem re a c h in g fresh m en , Z arem b a said . Although student aw areness of the office is improving, upper- division students continue to m ake up the m ajo ri­ ty seeking help at the office, she said. The om budsman, appointed by the p resid en t earns $500 a month, works 20 hours a week and has two assistan ts. Half the office’s funding com ­ es from the president’s office and half from the student serv ices fee. THE SALARY is not the jo b ’s prim ary rew ard, though, Zarem ba said. “ I get something out of helping other people, plus I need something to enjoy while going to law school,’ ’ she said. “ The biggest reward is when an individual will com e back and say his problem ’s been solved,’ - Zaremba said. “ The one or two people that take the tim e to call back and say they feel a lot better m akes the job worthwhile.” ZAREM BA SAID her fam iliarity with the University qualifies her for the job. “ I have been at the University since 1973,” she said. “ I feel I know the system and the per­ sonalities well and can be of a ssista n ce .’ ’ they read For new students to avoid problem s, Zarem ba information suggests th eir sp e c ific co llege ca ta lo g . c a ta lo g and Students are responsible for knowing the rules whether they have read them or not, she said. the general WHEN PR O BLE M S com e up, she advises students to keep a personal record of everyone they talk with about their problem s. “ It m ay be a hassle, but be a s patient and the bureaucracy a s possible,” rational with Zarem ba said. Zarem ba received her bachelor’s degree in D ecem ber 1977. She w as named to Phi Beta K ap­ pa and w as designated an outstanding student by the Cactus. She has served as president of the Alpha Xi Delta sorority, secretary of the Panhellenic Council and m em ber of Austin Women’s Political . Caucus A ^ -2 - j r / /' V / I I f A# s í f J A / V H «*1 ^ H O U S T O N M l A l l fN i A FA SH IO N O U TLET A U S T I N Across from Highland Mall/6019 Dillard Circle/10-7 M on-Fri/10-6 Sunday/451 2783 UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH C o r n e r o f 21st Street an d U niversity A v e n u e Across from Littlefield Fountain A congregation at The I niversity interested in students and their concerns. NORDAN LOUNGE STUDENT CENTER Open daily P in g pong, piano, co nve rsation, study NORDAN CHAPEL Open 24 hours a day for y o u r use WEEKLY ACTIVITIES SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. - 10:50 a.m. 5:30 p.m. C hurc h School - M o r n in g W o rs h ip - D iscip les Student F e l l o w s h i p ( D S F ) M e a l and fe llo w sh ip M O N D A Y W EDNESDAY 5:30 p.m . - THURSDAY 12:00 noon - U.T. F e llo w s h ip Luncheo n (open to all students) Choir R eh ea rsa l 12:00 noon - ■ Soup and S a n d w ic h S e m in a r (Special guest sp e a k e r each week; open to all students) H ar old R. Dow ler, Minister M a r g a r e t Zeise. Associat e Minister C h a r l e s H . (.ox. Director. Tex as Bible C h ai r R alp h B a rre ra , D aily T exan Staff Om budsm an Cheryl Zarem ba JESTER CENTER Your ON CAMPUS student store Weekdays 8:00 til 5:45 Saturdays 9:00 til 12:45 • BLUE BOOKS • T-SHIRTS SCHOOL SUPPLIES MAGAZINES SNACKS • COSMETICS • SUNDRY ITEMS Telephone: 477 -6 1 0 4 4 7 7-0725 Convenient for shuttle bus riders! m&áé AIR AFROTC AS A MATTER OF FACT!! IT'S W I T H S O M E T H I N G AS I M P O R T A N T AS Y O U R F U T U R E , U R G E N T T H A T YOU G E T A N D U N D E R S T A N D A L L T H E FACTS. A I R F O R C E ROTC CAN BE AN I M P O R T A N T P A R T OF Y O U R F U T U R E . T H E A I R F O R C E N E E D S D E D I C A T E D M E N A N D W O M E N TO D I R E C T A N D M A N A G E T H E F U T U R E U.S. A I R F O R C E AS C O M M I S S I O N E D O F F I C E R S . T H R O U G H A F R O T C , YOU CAN S E L E C T A C H A L L E N G I N G JOB W I T H O P P O R T U N I T I E S FOR A D V A N C E D E D U C A T I O N . UT A F R O T C O F F E R S A 4 - Y E A R A N D A 2 - Y E A R A I R F O R C E O F F I C E R C O M M I S S I O N I N G P R O G R A M FOR S T U D E N T S IN IS NO N E A R L Y A L L A C A D E M I C D I S C I P L I N E S . T H E R E M I L I T A R Y O B L I G A T I O N D U R I N G T H E F I R S T T WO Y E A R S OF T H E 4 - Y E A R P R O G R A M . A F R O T C S C H O L A R S H I P S , C O V E R I N G F R O M 4 T O 7 S E M E S T E R S , A R E A V A I L A B L E TO Q U A L I F I E D S T U D E N T S . S C H O L A R S H I P S F U R N I S H $100 A M O N T H IN CASH P LU S P A Y A L L T U I T I O N , BOOKS, A N D F E E S . Call AFROTC 4 7 1 -1 7 7 6 Or Come By Steindam Hall. Room 115 a A • i r V D I \ j G atew ay to a Great Way of Life FORCE HOTP G a t e w a y to a g r e a t w a y of life. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * . * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ★********************************************** ^ T A U Ps,t O - FIESTA GARDENS FRIDAY, SEPT. 26 6-12 p.m. Tickets $250: s300 at door BEER THE FINEST IN COUNTRY & WESTERN ENTERTAINMENT *°\%■ VOUTtf ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ ***********M*********************************************************************************** Ed ition Arts & Entertainment Collegiate C owboy It began as a small impulse — all I wanted to do was dance. I didn't like pogoing and I didn’t know how to pimp around, disco style, but I needed to dance. So I decided to go country. A year ago I wouldn’t have had any trouble picking a kicker joint to dance at. It was either the Broken Spoke or the Silver Dollar But I found out cowboy places are popping up all over town, and it’s not so easy to pick one So I went to all of them. My first stop was at Hondo’s Saloon, 2915 Guadalupe St. I t’s located where The Still disco used to be, about three blocks north of campus. Hondo’s is the vision of its owner A.J. Schill, who redecorated the interior with wood from torn-down barns and area ranches. It has a real nice effect, but he overdoes it at the bar. Some of the bar seats are saddle-topped and I just w asn’t very com fortable straddled across 18 inches of leather. TH E W A ITRESSES, d re s se d as cowgirls, were friendly and added to the laid-back atm o sp h ere of the place. Businessmen and students made up the crowd and there was a lot of dancing. A 3-for-l happy hour brings in the crowd from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m. and a live band every night tries to keep them there. If you can get by the saddle-straddle gim­ mick, i t ’s a nice place to get acquainted w ith c o u n try m u sic and dancing. T here's a cover charge that ranges from $1 to $4, depending on the night’s enter­ tainm ent. I couldn’t persevere the saddle chairs, however, so I headed out for another honky tonk on Lavaca Street. I t’s called Cowboy and is located where the once- popular Veranda used to be, 1301 Lavaca St., just west of the Capitol. The Veran­ da had a reputation for being the hang­ out of the state politicos and Cowboy will soon be the same. The crowd is basically an older group, but as m anager L arry Bumb explains, to i t ’s going younger people. I don’t think i t ’ll make it, however. Too many gimmicks. through a tran sitio n The star attraction is the free drink for every lady who walks through the doors. This tends to a ttra c t quite a few ladies initially, but afte r the first free drink, the country-western atm osphere certainly won’t keep them pinned to their chairs. The dance floor is so sm all it had to be pointed out to m e because I missed it. I was told I could request the kind of music I liked and it didn’t have to be western — their DJ caters to all tastes of music. Occasional western music hardly disguises this disco as a cowboy joint. It looks alm ost exactly as the Veranda once did, except for some horns hanging about here and there. And although the waitresses are friendly, the cute cowgirl outfits, complete with a sheriff’s star, insult my good taste. Cowboy initially opened in St. Louis where it was im m ediately popular, and soon 12 other Cowboys popped up around the country, including Austin’s. But Tex­ ans won’t and shouldn’t be attracted to the sam e kind of cowboy gim micks that might appeal to St. Louis citizenry. We know what w estern it’s definitly not like Cowboy. There is one plus — they have no cover charge. like and is After leaving there I had to go to a place with a reputation — the Broken Spoke. This is cowboy. The dirt parking lot outside is the first indication that you are about to enter the place where the good ol’ boys hang out. As you walk in the door you feel like you’ve stepped into The Last Picture Show. THE FRONT ROOM is a sm a ll restaurant reputed to have the best chicken fried steak in the world. Cow­ boys, many on the rodeo circuit, mill around the single pool table near the en­ trance to the dance room. There, Red Greg will greet you with a joke and to collect the $3 cover charge. This place is so authentic Red has two stam ps for the custom ers — one for adults and another, which says minor, for their children which Red is sure to tease. Every Wednesday, Friday and Satur­ day, a live band specializing in the two- step and the Cotton-Eyed Joe keeps the large crowd whirling. The Broken Spoke has been operating for m ore than 15 years and the only problem you may encounter is an initial feeling that you’re a stranger crashing someone’s fam ily reunion. But Red will soon make you feel at home. I reluctantly left the Broken Spoke to head on to Austin’s latest cowboy sensa­ tion, West World. At the northern end of MoPac, you can spot West World a m ile away by the adjacent steam boat-style restaurant that is lit up with a Christ­ mas flair. TH ER E’S NO cover and it’s nice until the club is filled to its legal lim it and everyone else is forced to stand outside until room becomes available. Initially, you get a feeling that no one is in the place. You m ust pass through a small barrage of doors and corridors to get where the action is, only to find out the action isn’t dancing. The m ajority of the bar is packed into a single arena- type room watching everyone ride the mechanical bull. Obviously, this is why they can afford not to charge a cover, because a continuous stream of people slap over $2 and sign their life away before challenging the mechanical bull. The bull can be program m ed from a gentle buck for a novice to a gyrating pitch for a professional rider. If you can hang on to the bull for m ore than eight seconds, you get a second ride free. After squeezing your way through a hoard of people, it is fascinating to ponder the possibility of your fellow man getting killed. It may not be likely to happen, but I sure wouldn’t trust the old m attresses they use for padding on the floor. Watching than five this for m ore minutes gets to be pretty tedious, unless you happen to be riding, in which case it gets to be p retty expensive. There are other rooms where you can sit and talk, but I couldn’t find any place to dance, and I didn’t feel like dancing with a machine. I FINALLY headed out to the Silver Dollar North a t 9102 Burnet Road. There is also a Silver Dollar South on Highway 290 West. From all the cars in the park­ ing lot, I thought the place was going to be packed and I w asn’t looking forward to it. F irst I get hit with a $3 cover charge, and things are really looking bad. Then, wow. The place is huge inside. Despite the large crowd of people, there are a number of places where you can alm ost be alone. There is freedom of m ovem ent on the dance floor and even a good coun­ try band. The crowd seem s to be a young crowd, which is supposed to dom inate the place every Wednesday night — college night. Although I kind of enjoyed the novelty of the Broken Spoke, I felt much m ore a part of the crowd at the Silver Dollar. There is a sm all snack bar, but the place is totally geared to dancing. And I felt I really could have enjoyed myself if someone had agreed to dance with me. Story by Carlos Sanchez Photos by Brad Doherty (Clockwise from u pper rig h t) A c o u r a g e o u s cowgirl challenges West W o rld ’s m echanical bull; cow boy takes to the pool table; d a n ce rs cruise to the two-step at Silver D o lla r N orth; c o w g ir l tries the saddle-topped b a r s t o o ls at H o n d o ’s Saloon. Í Page D 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 re i *10 •Tt0 lS t of» i . SH«P " ot»tiq W THE MERCANTILE at Symphony Square Specializing In ESTATE JEWELRY AND SILVER - “old and new’’ quality guaranteed merchandise — lowest prices in town! A N T IQ l ES — furniture, glassware, primitives TEXANA BO O K S & GIFT ITEMS 1 1th and Red River 4 7 6 -3 5 1 1 M onday-Friday 10 a .m .-4 p.m. f f ♦ : ♦ f ♦ ♦ I ♦ ♦ ♦ I LATCH A LONGHORN Bevo pattern to latch hook in 2 sizes -1 5x15 pillow size $ 6 .0 0 -2 2 x 2 7 w all hanging or rug $ 8 .0 0 We carry B ucilld pre-cut Rug Yarn -w ool $ 1 .0 0 oz. -superspun acrylic 60* oz. -deluxe acrylic 80* oz. -rya acrylic 65* oz. You w ill also find in our store Bevo in needlepoint kits and hand p ainted canvases, crew el kits and also counted cross stitch. L - Paternayan Persian D M C Floss & Perle Cotton Counted Cross-stitch supplies Hand Painted Canvases LOWER LEVEL HIGHLAND MALL 454-9070 (ODD TOWN ICHARUE DANIELS’ ■ new album “Full Moon.” Everyone in America should get it! N o A m e r i c a n should be without this album which features the smash anthem , "In Am er­ ica." including: Birthday Boy/Overnight Cafe/Song For You Tha American Dream/Where Did The Lovin Go , CHICAGO ‘Chicago XIV’ 8 . 9 8 EDDIE MONEY PLAYING W KEEPS including: Running Back/Trinidad/Let's Be Lovers Again Satin Angel/Get A Move On Give the gift of music. Also included are more of the kind of ballads and rockers The Charlie Daniels Band has al­ ways been proud to play. The Charlie Daniels Band. On Epic Records and Tapes. 8 . 9 8 " E p ic " is a trademark of CBS l#c. R EG U LA R PR IC E *2 OFF 4.99 5.99 L p /T ap e 7 9 8 L ist L p /T ap e 8.98 L ist CBS R E C O R D S and T A P E S _ EDDIE MONEY Playing For Keeps 8 . 9 8 Mickey Gilley THAT'S ALL THAT MATTERS TO M E including: True Love Ways/Thats AH That Matters The Blues Don t Care Who's Got 'Em A Headache Tomorrow (Or A Heartache Tonight) The More I Turn The Bottle Up "lawaese **« MICKEY GILLEY Al That Matters To Me’ 7 . 9 8 DOBIE MALL mw O PE N U N T IL 9PM Austin can be moviegoer’s paradise By CHRIS WALTERS Daily Texan Staff Old and new, exotic and standard fare provides movie variety as “ K ram er vs K ram er,’’ “ E lectric Horsem an” while showing older films upstairs. and “ F am e’’ ahead of the moviegoing public. Middle to Recent Vintage, Sensibly Selected. T e x a s Union F i l m s — A l l m o v i e s $ 1 .5 0 w i t h U n i v e r s i t y ID, A u s t i n p r e m i e r e s $2 w i t h ID Austin is the best movie town in Texas. I t’s probably the best in the entire Southwest, but w e’ll leave that one up in the air. If living here d o e sn 't co n v e rt you fro m being a ca su al moviegoer into a fanatic with pale skin and bloodshot eyes inside of one or two years, you’re probably a lost cause. Big D has us beat on advanced shopping mall design, San Antonio has better food, Houston has some big art galleries and enough freeway mileage to pave most of the Third World, but Austin is a movie nut’s paradise. Between the numerous first-run houses and the campus films, moviegoing in Austin can be ex­ hilarating if you’re from a big, dull Texas city or a small, dull Texas town. When I first arrived in Austin (from a big, dull Midwest city), I started eating a lot less so as to devote more funds to wallowing in celluloid — sort of like a skid row bum turned loose in a wine cellar. With that in mind, this article is set up like a wine list, going from early to late vintages. Prices will be quoted as accurately as possible, but may have changed by the fall sem ester because of economic vicissitudes. Early, Middle and Recent Vintage; Rare with Occasional Classics; Benevolently Priced C i n e m a T e x a s — A ll M o v i e s $1.50 CinemaTexas is a mostly autonomous unit of the University’s D epartm ent of Radio-TV-Film. It is run by a group of obsessed graduate students who show considerable skill a t picking up on in­ teresting movies (both foreign and dom estic) from the entire spectrum of film history. Not that they don’t ever feature m ainstream fare — Tuesday nights in the fall and spring are usually devoted to filling the cu rricular needs of the RTF departm ent’s History of Film class, which m eans landm arks like “ Citizen Kane’’ and “ The G raduate” are featured. Other nights also are tailored to the needs of film classes — Wednesday may be Am erican comedy night; Thursday, showcase night for the works of direc­ tors like Arthur Penn and Robert Altman. Besides their regular four-night-a-week bookings — all shown in Je ste r Auditorium during the school year — they show one or two movies a week in another hall, usually Burdine, which are also som ewhat off the beaten path. The Bugs Bun­ ny and Rocky & Bullwinkle anim ation festivals have been among the m ost popular. The m ost recent CinemaTexas venture is an ongoing series of screenings of upcom ing Hollywood releases, arranged with m ajor studios and shown to whoever is able to scarf up the passes, which are given away on a first-come, first-served basis. The idea has been extrem ely successful, enabling students to see such features The Union film program has improved so much in the last six or seven months as to be rather diz­ zying It now boasts as broad and interesting a selection of movies as you’re likely to find at any big state university in the country The Union’s drastic improvem ent is mainly the took over as work of Steve B earden, who program m er in the winter of 1979. Bearden books movies on the principle of “ something for everyone,” which is not as easy as it sounds. But because he knows American and international film inside out, the Union program m anages to satisfy both casual patrons looking for pleasant entertainm ent and hard-core movie buffs on the prowl for the offbeat and exotic. A typical night this sum m er featured “ Fellini's Orchestra R ehearsal," “ Strangers on a T rain” and “ Rock & Roll High School.” There you have it — the latest from a great foreign director, a Hitchcock classic and a wacky punk-rock B- movie — something for everyone. The Union charges separate admission for each show, which is a good thing. If they had a double bill arrange­ ment you’d be tem pted to sit through any two or all of those movies in a row — a grating ex­ perience indeed. Though he books enough hits and popular oldies to keep the program in the black and satisfy the general college crowd, Bearden still m anages to prem iere a lot of foreign films that local ex­ hibitors would never take a chance on, as well bringing in plenty of fascinating obscurities. Or if you're interested in Oriental film, the Union averages around a half-dozen or m ore a sem ester, and they range all the way from God­ zilla cheapies to the best work of Kurosawa or Ozu Union movies are shown at the Union Theatre, with some bookings a t Batts Auditorium and the Academic Center auditorium. Mainly Recent Vintage, Dilletante Tastes T h e V a r s i t y T h e a t r e , 24th a n d G u a d a l u p e s t r e e t s — D o u b l e B i l l s $3, D o w n s t a i r s F e a t u r e s $3.50 The Varsity is an older theater that seats around 900, including the balcony. E arly this year they moved away from booking the sam e movies over and over in endlessly repeating cycles to first foreign and “ a r t” films. The new approach did net some notable successes — “ La Cage Aux Folies" and “ My B rilliant C areer” among them. In mid-summer they sealed off the balcony and built a new screen in front of it, so they could devote the main screen to the first-run stuff, is latest. But Coming up the Oscar-w inning G erm an movie, “ The Tin D rum ” and “ Wise Blood,” John repertory Huston's program is an awful mish-mash of arty films that were neither good nor popular, some quasi- po rn o g rap h ic cam p , a few acknow ledged classics, some recent hits and some recent bombs, both artistic and com m ercial. the upstairs But mostly there are a lot of idiotic double bills. “ Last Tango In P a ris” and “ Lenny” ? “ Carnal Knowledge" and “ Starting O ver” ? “ Nashville” and “ The S erial” ? “ Quadrophenia” and “ Pink Floyd ? Those movies go together about as well as turpentine and ice cream . But because the Varsity charges $3 for admission, whether you want to see both movies, you’ll be tem pted to sit through these clashing combos. Recent Vintage, Poorly Aged T h e Do b ie S c r e e n s , D o b ie C e n t e r — A l l M o v i e s $2, w i t h d o l l a r d a y s a n d $1.50 M i d - n ig h t e r s . Both of the Dobie rooms are cram ped and un­ comfortable. The movies are usually hits that have already been around the track at regular first-run houses, along with some predictable campus favorites that everyone’s seen twice. Brand Spanking New Varieties L o c a l f i r s t - r u n e x h i b i t o r s — A v e r a g e a d u l t p r i c e $3.50, n i g h t s h o w s a n d m a t i n e e s at $2 a n d $1.50, d e p e n d i n g o n ch ai n. Because Austin is a prosperous town with a lot of disposable income floating around for leisure purposes, it tends to get alm ost every new movie rather quickly after national release. There are four m ajor chains: Presidio, AMC, Mann and General Cinema. The nicest house in town for comfort, acoustics and size of screen is AMC’s Americana, where m onster hits like “ The E m ­ pire Strikes B ack” tend to get booked. At the other end of the scale is the Northcross 6, also owned by AMC, a set of tacky, undersized theaters in the Northcross Mall, a tacky, over­ sized shopping mall near Anderson Lane and Burnet Road. General Cinem a’s two theaters, the Highland Mall Cinema and the Capital Plaza, are disliked by some people because the films are projected onto a white wall rather than a reflective screen, which cuts down on the luminosity of the image. Most people don’t notice it, but if you’re a stickler for technical purity, you may want to defer on these. The Mann and Presidio chains are easily the most consistent as far as the quality of their facilities is concerned. Chop Sake S o u t h w o o d 2, 1423 W. B e n W h i t e B l v d. The Southwood 2 has a Kung-fu midnighter every Saturday. Admission $3. Jaime’s Spanish Village Best Mexican Food in Austin BREAKFAST FROM 7 AM LUNCH AND DINNER 10%OFF TOTAL MEAL WITH COUPON AND UT ID Jaime's Spanish Village 802 Red River R eservations: 4 7 6 -5 1 4 9 U nd er N e w M a n a g e m e n t Parking in rear of restaurant NATURAL FOODS FOR THE WEST CAMPUS AREA . . . and m ea t & fish, beer & wine, canned goods, health & beauty aids, fresh produce, and d a i r y products, m ore at W h e a ts v ille Food Co-op. / wheatsville co-op ^ ¡ 2901 NORTH LAMAR 478-2667 L\ C o m m u n ity C o n tro lle d D e m o c ra tic a lly M a n ag ed ALL OVER AUSTIN is Apartment Locators i A A 459-3226 4314 Medical Parkway #1 FREE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE LICENSED BY THE TEXAS REAL ESTATE COMMISSION i► J f 1/\t c I c ep ( W L IT \ P |lip \r tí\ -tfir dKit ££ > - $>' J Sri Lr A 1rJ 1 - 1 (, A ■ \ KtKOX COPIES l ( 2700 Guadalupe WITH A CUT • GET A BUCK * * * * * * * * * * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 4 4 * AT TEXAS SUPERSTYLES: With any cut and style, get a ticket good for a free "BULL RIDE" on Austin's first and only indoor Urban Bull I Or get a 2 for 1 drink special — ALL at THE W ILD W E S T , A ustin's m ost popular new NIGHTCLUB! * * * * * * * ♦ * 4- ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Come and see why TEXAS SUPERSTYLES is the University's Favorite Hairstylist. M C W D DOWN ‘A u s tin 's F in est H a i r s t y l i s t ” 8 1 7 W. 24 th in Tri Towers f r e e Parking in Tri-To wers Garage 477-3361 Punk reaches turning point, makes tamer statement Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page D3 By NICK B A R B A R O Daily Texan Staff 7 he good old days, t h e y 'r e all gone n o w , ” said the that s w h y they re good now — c a u s e t h e y ’re poet, g o n e .” New wave music used to be known as punk rock. It used to be angry, and it used to scare people. It used to do what Jean Cocteau demanded of a rt back in the heyday of surrealism : ‘‘Astonish m e.” Rut that w a s th e good old days. Nowadays, new wave music and clubs have become tam e enough to appeal to anyone who likes live music and or dancing. If you need any proof of how bourgeois-respectable new wave has become these days, check out the recent “ Summer Sex' issue of P la y b o y , wherein the Playm ate of the Month lists her favorite m usical groups as the 3 Bs: Blondie, Barbra Streisand and the B52s. From the Sex Pistols to Sum m er Sex in three short years. We lose more good cultural revolutions that way. But a dying revolution, like a dying star, puts out an awful lot of energy in its death throes. In 1969, when the counterculture was losing its sense of social urgency — when m arijuana and long hair were no longer political statem ents — Arlo Guthrie surveyed his hippie-ized world and sang out, ‘‘You can get anything you w ant.” He could Say pretty much the sam e thing about the new wave scene in Austin today. You won t see many safety pins, razor blades or raw m eat in Austin’s new wave clubs any more, but you can see a rem arkable number of good bands, in a range of styles broad enough to suit just about anyone’s taste. RIGHT NOW, in reaching out to a m ass audience, new wave music is at a very interesting turning point in its history. In Austin after a couple of years of exciting and constantly expan­ ding music, we are going through a period of adjustm ent and re­ direction The dilem ma is new wave has been so dynamic and successful in its drive to challenge authority, th at it has itself become an authority of sorts, with its own traditions and con­ ventions. In response, the m ore radical sorts seem to be chas­ ing their own tails, while m ost of the bands today are retreating from political involvement altogether. This has been a strange sum m er for new wave in Austin. There haven't been any really stunning, innovative groups, but there are a lot of new bands heading out into a variety of in­ teresting new directions. And it will be interesting to see what new directions em erge, because there is a lot m ore a t stake than m usical style. New wave, in the broadest sense, is a whole culture, a social state­ ment. and even a way of life, a phenomenon not unlike the rock- and-roll revolution of the 60s. IT IS A spirit of rebellion which has spawned a whole field of alternative media — new wave m edia, so to speak, to go along with the new wave music. P oster a rt is the m ost obvious ex­ ample: the proliferation of posters along the Drag advertising coming club dates and other events. A lot of these are just litter, of course. But there is also some very good original artwork and design too. Similarly, there have been a num ber of new wave-oriented projects in other fields — num erous magazines, for example, with various degrees of artistic m erit and com m ercial success. Among these. Sluggo, C o n te m p o Culture, G r o u n d Z ero and Fyulse are still around, and well worth reading if you can find a copy. F IN A L L Y , regarding new wave on vinyl, for some of the latest in recorded New Wave music, check out the Reverend Neil X, on KUT radio every other Sunday night. And if you’re looking for an obscure British im port, or the latest local LP, try Inner Sanctum records, which has knowledgeable employees and the widest selection in town of music m agazines and records. BUT AT the center of it all is still the club scene In addition to the variety of bands, there is a variety of New Wave clubs in Austin. And though they all book pretty much the sam e bands, charge about the sam e cover and a ttra c t the sam e clientele, each has its own distinctive atm osphere. RAUL’S — 2610 Guadalupe St. Raul’s was Austin’s original punk club, and to a large extent, it still is, even though it closed for a tim e earlier this year and reopened under new m anagem ent The atm osphere continues to be shaped by an incident which occurred alm ost two years ago — the infamous Huns’ M assacre, a police riot which got R aul’s into the national press, and m ore importantly, m ade the club a household word in all segm ents of Austin society. Ever since Officer Steve Bridgew ater burst onto stage to arrest the Huns’ lead singer for singing their hit song,“ E at Death Scum” (though it w asn't their hit song until the next day), Raul s has been more a symbol of punkdom than just a music club. Since then. R aul’s has developed something of a national reputation for its music as well — following unannounced per­ formances by such notables as P atti Smith and Elvis Costello and a barrage of im pressive Austin groups, several of whom (Joe Carrasco. Standing Waves, The Chickadiesels and The Next, for example) have drawn considerable praise in national music publications. More than a score of records have been put out by “R aul's bands,' as well as a compilation album entitled ‘‘Live at R aul’s .” Still, the club is probably best known not for its music, but for its punk clientele. It is part of the punk heritage that the audience should be as much a p art of the show as the band. The problem is that R aul’s has also become a lightning rod for con­ servative backlash against punk culture. Occasionally bottles are thrown from passing Trans Ams, and on any given night, the people there for the music m ay be greatly outnumbered by the “ tourists” — the University-area equivalent of the middle- aged men with binoculars who hang around the nude beaches at Hippie Hollow On the other hand, new wave a t its punkest thrives on hostili­ ty and confrontation; along with the Huns’ bust, my m ost vivid m emory of R aul’s is of the final week under the old m anage­ ment, when the Chickadiesels, with m ore bitter sarcasm than I ve ever heard in any music, played a set full of songs like “ Izod Snappers” to a crowd m ade up alm ost entirely of fra te r­ nity and sorority “ tourists.” The tourist controversy has gotten so heated that certain respected m em bers of the punk community have seriously proposed R aul’s institute a dress code. The mind boggles: “ No shirts with both sleeves, except if torn in at least three places. Colors must clash. No long hair — unless it stands straight up, or is purple. Anyone piercing their bodies with sharp m etal ob­ jects is exempt from all the above restrictions.” Archetypal R aul’s bands include the Huns, Sharon T ate’s D a w n P a t r o l — Join I ho oar I, birth at Bird's Not! Airport Flodgling, advanced, rejuvenation Hying at Flight Club rates Fly fresh, cool, a n d calm before class at first light Uplifting Dive ruthlessly out of the the day aheadI sun and pounce on Schedule today for daw n — or anytime. VISA, MasterChorge Cessna Pilot Center. Summer special Call now to enter draw ­ ing for tree Hight Bird's Nest Airport, 272- 5337, 272-5943 It makes good sense to c o n s e r v e o u r n a t u r a l resources, recycle The Daily Texan. fe e % % % FREE SET OF STRfNGS W ITH PURCHASE | OF 1 SET W /C O U P O N . (exclud ing bass strings) 1402 S. L am ar 12/15/eo 444-4365 $ A***? \ f t . i / l - * - * V Stie R Baby and the Dicks, groups which rely as much on a spec­ tacular and outrageous stage show as on their musical talents. DUKE’S ROYAL COACH INN - 318 Congress Ave. Almost as much as R aul’s, Duke’s Royal Coach is shaped by its past. But Duke’s has a very different history. In the late ’60, during the height of Austin's hippie era, the building housed the Vulcan Gas Company, the place to go for a night on the town, the home base for all of the earliest Texas rock ‘n’ roll groups — bands like the Thirteenth Floor E levators and the original Shiva’s Head Band More recently. Duke s has been a Chicano bar, with conjunto music by night and the usual array of downtown winos by day. A year ago, Duke s started booking new wave alm ost exclusively, and now rivals Raul s as the top new wave club in town. In fact, in term s of the physical layout, it may just be the best place in Austin to see live music The stage is large raised well above the huge dance floor. there are plenty of tables with an unobstructed view, a good sound system , a large bar and three pool tables set off to the side where they don’t interfere with the music The one thing it lacks is R aul’s com bative spirit — this is more of a party club, a place to go to listen to the music and not think about cultural politics. As such, the typical Duke’s groups are good-times bands like Joe King C arrasco and the Gator Family THE CONTINENTAL CLUB - 1315 S. Congress Ave. Originally a country bar, the Continental Club switched over to new wave at about the sam e time as Duke’s and now books about half and half with some blues and jazz bands thrown in as well. The most distinctive feature of the Co Club is its size — or lack of it. The club is long and narrow, with one narrow passageway leading from the bar in the front to the stage all the way to the back. When it's crowded, you might as well resign yourself to not moving until a break, unless you have excep­ tional skill at maneuvering in crowds. The stage is a bit too cram ped for large groups or perform ers who like to move around a lot. and the dance floor is overcrowded even when the club isn't full. Still, there can be a certain charm to this — an in­ tim acy and kinetic energy that comes from having that many people cram m ed so closely together. The clientele is m ore mixed here than a t Duke’s or R aul’s, and many of the old-time punk regulars avoid the place. But the Co Club continues to book a wide range of top New Wave acts. OTHERS. If you want to see Austin’s new wave community in its natural habitat, go to one of the clubs listed above. But if you just want to hear the music, there are quite a few places you can go. if you check the daily ads. As new wave has grown more popular and respectable, just about every club in town has jumped on the bandwagon — from the Riverside Rock of the Back Room to the Sixth Street sophisticates at Steam boat 1874, to the country rockers a t Soap Creek. The downtown area seems particularly open to new wave bookings, with E sth er’s Pool, Liberty Lunch and even Gaslight Theater bringing new wave acts in every once in a while. Also, m ajor punk and new wave artists regularly include Austin on their concert tours Just about everyone of note has turned up here at least once — and in many cases two or three tim es — usually at the Armadillo World Headquarters. AWHQ started booking new wave acts even before R aul’s — back when only a couple of hundred people showed up for the first Ramones concert. Although the old music em porium is better known for progressive country and blues, new wave fans will regret its passing as deeply as anyone. The # long wait is finally over! The Paramount Theatre is once again realizing its destiny as Austin’s premier performing arts facility by bringing you our most exciting season to date. Since 1915 the Paramount has provided you with the finest in professional entertainment this coun try has to otter. Now, in celebration of our 65th birthday, the Paramount stands ready to serve you and your family in a continuation of six decades of rich theatrical tradition. So cali the theatre today at 472-5411 for your season ticket brochure and secure your place in the Paramount’s future. Remember, a season ticket is your guarantee against sellouts. P c¡44¿ ir n Call 4 7 2 -5 4 1 1 for your season ticket brochure. \ \ rr 2 > a kSbte* in ' f a * 7 1 U d n d f d h a m ln * QncUtdUa i S h in ? Q je& ittt "J U rr / On M iniui THE ABBEY IS BEER 'N ' BURGERS A casual atm osphere for socializing over your favorite tap beer and the best charbroiled burgers in to w n . foosball, THE ABBEY has DARTS, shuffleboard, and the latest in elec­ tronic games. 2100-B E. RIVERSIDE DRIVE 442-9967 7 ? Z 1 PICK OUR POCKET Our hearty pocket bread sand )-built ana wiches are custom-builT .an servea on preserj/at ivr I I I I I I I ree pocket brea ChoQse from top quality meat and cheese plus other fresh goodies. POCKET PETE'S 5209 Burnet Rd Open 11 a.m. 8 p.m Mon. Sat. RESERVE THIS DEN-MATE REFRIGERATOR (to preserve th e ice’o f Texas) U N IV E R S IT Y APPROVED - FREE D E L IV E R Y TO YOUR DORM • FIR ST DAY D E L IV E R Y WITH R ET U R N E D RESERVATION CARD • TWO SIZES AVA ILA B LE - 2 cu. ft. and 3 cu. ft. • FREE REPLACEM ENT G U A R A N T EE W IT H IN 18 HOURS • SE R VIN G U N IV E R S IT Y STUDENTS FOR OVER SEVEN YEARS • SEND NO DEPOSIT TO RESERVE YOUR R E FR IG E RA TO R NOTE: IF YOUR ROO M M ATE A LS O ORDERS A U N IT . ONLY ONE W ILL BE D E L IV E R E D UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED To insure First Day Delivery, please reserve a compact DEN-MATE refrigerator for me. After my arrival, I will call and confirm my order and give my dorm and room number as soon as possible. I understand I am under NO OBLIGATION for any paym ent UNTIL the unit is delivered. Check One: □ 2 cu. ft. □ 3 cu. ft. NAM E: ________________________________________________________ P L E A S E C O M P L E T E T H E F O L L O W IN G I N F O R M A T I O N , IF K N O W N A T T H IS T IM E I II HOME ADDRESS: C IT Y :____________ STATE: _____ D ORM __ ROOM * 2 CU. FT. per er Academic Year T ■ 3 CU. FT. MUSTANG RENTAL 8a SA LE S CO. 7122 V A L L E C I T O DRI VE AUSTI N, TEXAS 78759 A F T E R A R R IV IN G IN A U S T IN , PLEA SE PHONE TO C O N F IR M Y O U R O R D E R (512) 258-4099 I I I I I I I Page D4 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Tuesday, August 5. 1980 Armadillo World Headquarters: Hotel, parking garage to replace humble home of Austin’s music roots By RON SEYBOLD Daily T exan S taff Don’t it always seem to go You don't know what you got till it s gone They pave paradise and they j>ut up a parking lot With a big hotel, a boutique and a swtngin’ hot spot Believe it kid< Austin's own slice oí musical paradise. A r m a d illo W o rld H e a d ­ quarters, will feel the smash of the wrecking ball sometime next year to make way for a hotel and parking garage Ten years of musical history will be bulldozed so an out-of-town developer can park Buicks and rent sheets. IT ’S A tragedy because the Armadillo was the yeast that made Austin's musical dough rise When you scan the paper and see the variety of music in this town, before the Dillo, the scene was much smaller re m e m b e r - In the late '60s Austin was a It hadn’t virgin for live rock made a stab into the club scene, which was m ostly country-western until then Blazing the tr a il of rock through Texas’ capital wasn't easy. A front-page columnist for the Austin American- State sman slashed at the Dillo’s immediate sire, the Vulcan Gas Co., and the drug scene that grew aroud it. Civic leaders stepped all over each other to denounce the den of sin. But musicians like Steve Miller raved about the Austin crowds. T H E TOWN was hungry for new m u sic. It w as also thirsty: without beer, other clubs had failed The Vulcan eventually folded in 1970, but not for want of business. For three years they put up a mix of blues and acid rock — a wild card by Texas' stan­ dards. The Vulcan proved the town would support a growing music scene. But it had to be an Austin scene. The locals who came to the clubs wanted — Joni Mitchell a Texas flavor to the music, not just a rehash of California rock The summer of 1970 was as hot as the Austin music scene was cold In August, A r­ madillo World Headquarters opened for business. Could a law student, freak artist and brewery public relations man change the bad-luck streak in Austin music? Brew ery P R man’’ T H A T ’S E D D I E Wilson, first boss-man of the A r­ madillo. Always out in front, f ir s t w ith the chutzpah Wilson discovered the old a r­ mory for the club while taking a leak behind the Cactus Club one night Arranging a lease with the owner (a school board member), Wilson join­ ed with Mike Tolleston and Jim F ra n k lin to jo lt the Austin music scene awake — slowly. T O L L E S T O N w a s th e business brain behind the club, Franklin the artistic spirit. Up front was Wilson, talking back when the LA music serpents hissed, cajol­ ing the now-curious press. Wilson was the yeast the music scene needed — the dough of talent had been around for years. What galvanized him into climbing onto a sinking ship, like Austin music? In a word. S h iv a . M o re a c c u r a t e ly . Shiva’s Head Band: the group le a d e r . S p e n c e r w h o s e Perskin, talked Wilson into promoting beer and music together They knew they'd have to lay low awhile to prove they were upstanding citizens liquor license). Shiva pumped its ad­ vance money from a recor­ (and get a ding contract into the Dillo. Those early years were tough: a lot of workers lived in the club, surviving on brown rice and bread Shiva started with $4,000. no lease and a lot of hope Wilson saw what rock music could do for beer sales at the Cactus Club, where artist Franklin once drew fivers. for But who to sell it to*1 With local turnouts piddling acts, all the beer brewed w ouldn’t generate enough money. As the club loped along with sparse crowds in its first year, the old saw ‘ Ya gotta have money to make m oney" looked to be the club’s epitaph. Rock was saved by a minor m ir a c le A w o r k e r who mopped the floor gave $25,000 to the Dillo to keep it alive. D ebts w e re paid off; a junkyard in back was turned into a beer garden A kitchen was added inside to pick up the summertime and 'dark night" slack. T H E ’D IL L O soon began to g a i n a m u s i c i n d u s t r y foothold: a reputation It was lauded by Townsend Miller, American-Statesman c o l u m n i s t and Country Music Magazine w riter.It was commended to rock fans by Chet Flippo. contributing editor for Rolling Stone. The club gained a rep with performers as one of the best places to play in the United States, for reasons as diverse as the onstage carpet — the crowds and the lack of cops in the club. Wilson called it “ the world’s biggest speakeasy." The wide-open-spaces attitude of Texas spread out into the dope-smoke filled crowds. Shows were as much party as concert at the Dillo; thus the importance of the beer Although things never im­ proved beyond a constant crisis financially, the music moved into a heydey of its r T V , ' ■ I ) IS YOUR SKIN LOOKING GOOD? For an im m ediate, lasting difference, in y o u r c o m p le x io n — experience the European m ethod. I am an international expert with 25 years of experience in Warsaw, Paris, Vienna, New York, and Texas. M y EU R O P E A N SK IN C A R E S A LO N offers a full line of the most effective, professional treatments for all skin types and conditions, as well as brow shaping and lash/brow tinting, hair removal (wax­ ing), make-up design, body massage. I make no elaborate promises, but I do assure you that your treatment will bring immediate, visible, lasting results. Mme. Halina Pradzynski fed HALINA EUROPEAN SKIN CARE 5403 C lay A venue at Burnet Road Austin, Texas 512/452-3500 Finest Cosmetics Free Skin Analysis Marshall Tucker, Frank Zap­ pa — the list goes on and on The point is the Dillo brought the music to Austin first. It wasn’t as if the Dillo was the only club in Austin — just the biggest and oldest For many, the best. Growth was always in its future, though, the size of the hall almost demanded the operation get bigger. Seeking this growth plunged the club out of Austin's music mainstream and into the big pond. Places, like Soap Creek Saloon, couldn't aspire to national status because of their size; big stars needed big halls. Smaller clubs were left to cater to the Austin and tal ent. Enough regional places sprang up to gobble up most of that taient, and with it, the audience T H E ’D IL L O began to ieel the effects of this in 1976. Money problems remained, many because of the club s liberal credit policy “ If it's on paper, we’ve got it." They h ad an u n d e r s t a n d i n g landlord, a family-type work force. They worried about the music, not the money. Unfortunately you can’t separate the two. The boom of Austin clubs triggered a drop in Dillo attendance; crowds shrank by two-thirds between 75 and 76. A #series of per­ sonnel firings culminated in Eddie W ilson's resignation from the presidency in Oc­ tober 1976 f i l l h i s W ILSO N nominated Onion Audio president Hank Alrich to s h o e s as Dillom aster. Alrich, who says he is a musician bv trade, began a policy of book­ ing three local/regional bands for every national group book­ ed. “ When we book national acts all the money leaves the c o m mu n i t y — local musicians aren't getting it." Alrich explained the He put the club on a cash basis. “ We re going to have to be more conservative in our business practices I d just as soon make $500.000 (a year) and keep a large net. than make a million and lose it to overhead.’’ The Dillo waded back into the middle-sized pond of local music. It was sick from swimming in the big-time waters and needed time to financially. Filing for heal p ar t i a l b ank r u p t a n c y in J a n u a r y 1977 bought that recovery time. “ It's a little like the Austin music scene, in that the A r­ madillo expanded very quick­ ly and got ahead of itself,'' said Alrich at the bankruptcy h e a r i n g The c r e d i t o r s allowed the club to operate on a budget reviewed monthly, while the Dillo paid off its debts slowly. Without this a r r a n g e m e n t , e x p l a i n e d Alrich, “ the vultures and the IR S would have come in and emptied the place." B U S I N E S S p i c k e d up through September 1977, but f i v e c a n c e l l a t i o n s in November ate up operating c a pi t al . The P a r a m o u n t Theater and the reopened Opry House were booking big names along with the Dillo. In the rough waters of com­ petition. the Paramount s city money and the Opry House s W illie Nelson money gave them a steadier tack. The other clubs had gotten bigger with the 'Dillo, but the pond was the same size. The situation improved through 1978 "People are calling us again; they know we are open. If artists of stature want to play here, we c a n m a k e i t . ’ ' A l r i c h predicted on the club's eighth birthdav. T H E R E W A S l i t t l e gratitude in Austin's upper echelons for the music boom, though A fte r ra is in g itsHf on its hind legs, the Armadillo was given a swift kick by M K Hage, the patient landlord He announced plans in February to sell the 7.8 acres of the headquarters to a high-rise developer The land the Armadillo rooted in for 10 years was to be a hotel com­ plex. The sale hinged on a zoning change — without it. no hotel Citizens and devel opers scrambled for petitions and lawyers, respectively. Alas, the cogs of the business machine ground down artistic spirit The zoning was chang­ ed in May; the last chance for the Dillo boiled down to a City Council hearing June 26 AT T H E John Prine concert the night before, the emcee urged everyone to attend the meeting the next morning. “ If we lose and get kicked out of here, just remember — the Armadillo isn’t a building, it’s you guys: all of us together." The next morning the coun­ cil heard impassioned pleas to save the old armory building — to no avail. The ax fell on the 'D illo ’s roots. W H A T ’S T H E moral of this story of a burrowing beast in Hill Country roots? The A r­ madillo is change, diversity and Texas' musical soul — not a building or a plot of land. The music must change; it will find a place to do so in Austin, if the town will accept new music styles and learn to appreciate their own. In the meantime, get to the club at 525 1/2 Barton Springs Road before it’s defunct. WEEKLY SPECIALS T U E S D A Y - V2 Price Drinks for Working Women (Just bring us a business card or tell us where you work.) W E D N E S D A Y Amateur Night Dancers begin at 5:45 Daily. A LADIES’ CLUB 15th & Lavaca 476-0105 i T H E A U D IO F I L E ' S P R O M IS E TO Y O U : THE BEST SOUNDING STEREO FOR LESS S i i i i i i i I I PERSONALIZED ATTENTION Helps you select the perfect ■ combination of components and features for your taste in music, your ■ room, and your budget. | I THE FINEST EQUIPMENT — W e specialize in finding components that I offer exceptional sound per dollar. You can have it all! Create your own | m usical heaven from our Sky's-The-Limit selection of m ajor brands and S such exotica as Hafler, M arcof, Allison, etc. Here's How We Do It: LOW PRICES — No one matches our combination of equipment, service, and price. You find the same brands for less than the 'high end' stores and com petitive with the discount m arts. OUR SPECIAL TOUCH - Even the finest equipment needs to be adjusted to your room to sound its best. From proper cartridge alignment to ideal speaker placement, our sophisticated testing, set up, and installa­ tion insures that the stereo system that you create sounds better than your w allet's wildest dream s! I I I I I I I I I I THE AUDIO FILE 1907 Brackenridge 443-9295 B y Appointment own The club spawned the com petition that created Austin's musical diversity. Once Eddie W ilson and Gang had tested the water, the rest of the entrepeneurs dove right in The Texas Opry House was started as a challenge to the Dillo by Bronson Evans. A slew of other clubs sprang up in the friendly waters of Austin music. The O pry House folded eventually, but the Austin s c e n e k e p t e x p a n d i n g Through all this the Dillo led the way in national acts — booking Van Morrison for four shows in five nights in 1974, recording live albums at the club by Frank Zappa and Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Airmen. Bruce Springsteen played with Alvin Crow for two nights. The Pointer Sisters. B .B King. Universal Amusements to A u s t i n ' s s e x u a l l y b r i n g s sophisticated community the finest un­ cut, uncensored, sexually explicit mo­ tion pictures available anywhere at: The XWIsT 2130 S. Congress at Hm comar of Uva Oak 442-57I f On the Drag ?7?4 Guadalupe 477-1444 and The CALL FOR SHOW TIMES Open 11 a .m . • Discounts for Couples & College Students Matinees Daily • No One Under IS Admitted Late Shows Friday, Saturday & Sunday Open Noon Pl»aso Bring IDs Rmgardlmss o f A g o T M f T t X A S * M IX B ir d iL ü J * • • C a fn to l C IH tM A U v o O a k X O ttor f y*" / ¿V. *> !? - V . A <* 'b ,o* + 9 «X o P o* vtK A ^ g\ .«• A* * jp * / w i - Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page D5 Esther’s Follies comedy revue develops own brand of satire By NICK BARBARO Daily Texan Staff What do the following people have in com m on — Ruth C a rte r Stapleton. Amy Sim ple M cPherson. C arole McClellan, the punk rock band John C onnally’s D elegate, the W art fam ily and Bubbles, the official m asseu se to the T exas L egislature? Why, they (and m any o ther peculiar c re a tu re s ) a re all creatio n s of the w arped m inds behind E s th e r's Follies. If you've lived in Austin for any length of tim e, you alread y know all about the Follies If you've ju st moved here and have never in your whole life been exposed to these strange people, you a re in for a real tre a t. E s th e r’s Follies is a com edy revue which has developed over the p ast few y ears into one of Austin s m ost tre a su re d th e a tric a l traditions, by presen ting a brand of topical s a tire quite unlike anything else in town — or ju st about anyw here else, for th a t m a tte r. THE FOLLIES have th eir hom e base a t E s th e r’s Pool, a downtown b ar nam ed a fte r '40s sw im m ing s ta r E sth e r W illiam s. The Pool, m anaged by Follies Shannon Sedwick and M ichael Shelton, opened in the su m m er of 1977, and the Follies w ere born soon th e re a fte r At first, p erform ances w ere fre e ; a c to rs w ere paid through the tim e-honored th e a tric a l tradition of passing the hat. The a c t had a sim ilarly im provisational feel, with a loose stru c tu re p atte rn e d a fte r vaudeville — a se rie s of skits, m usical a cts, one-liners and u tte rly off-the-wall parodies of everything from “ Stereo H ard S ell'' to the F irs t F am ily. F ro m the beginning, it w as the atm o sphere, as m uch as the m a te ria l, th at distinguished the Follies, th a t brought people in and brought them back for m ore. The am bience w as inform al and personal, stressin g interplay betw een the p e rfo rm ers and the audience. With the stag e righ t in the window facing on Sixth S treet, passers-by w ere often astonished to see such a c ts a s a Busby B erkeleyesque u n d erw ater ballet, in which the tro upe perform ed scissor kicks and form ed com plex geo m etrical p a tte rn s while flat on th e ir backs. SOON, MORE and m ore people w ere dropping in to try to figure out ju st w hat w as going on here. The F o llies’ rep utation grew by leaps and bounds, and so did the audiences, and the troupe itself. By the end of 1977, with 30 m em b ers in the c a st, E s th e r ’s began c h a rg in g a d m issio n and expanded th e ir schedule to several perfo rm an ces each w eekend. And they still faced standing-room -only crow ds. T hat is m ore or less the way it stand s today. There have been num erous changes in both personnel and m aterial. T roupe m em b ers have com e and gone and com e back again. M ore elaborate a c ts have been incorporated into the show — things like M asterK itsch T heater, the Blandscrew Sisters and the country-punk sounds of Dolly R otten and the Tex Pistols — but the essential sp irit of the Follies rem ains the sam e as it always has irre v e re n t, utterly hilarious a tta c k on ju st about anything that m oves, from God to M exican food. an MUCH OF the F o llie s’ c h a rm — their verve and v e rsa tility — com es from the fo rm at and the way the shows a re put together. It is a com m unal effort w ith no d irector, per se, and no sta rs. The p e rfo rm e rs all take p a rt in the w riting, and even a fte r a routine is w ritten , it is usually refined during re h e a rsa l. New m a te ria l is being added to the act all the tim e. To keep the show fresh, the Follies try to keep a razor blade on the pulse of A m erica; e a rlie r this y e a r, for exam ple, John Connally’s D elegate cam e out with th e ir hit song, “Bomb I ra n .” But m any of the F ollies’ best routines have been around for quite a while: ( “ th e o p e r a w o r l d ’s u l t i m a t e D a m e D e lla D iv a em bellishm ent ’ Amy Sim ple M cPherson and h e r F irs t Church of the Gooey D eath and Discount House of W orship, and Ruth C a rte r Stapleton professing h er faith and confiding that “ God sm okes d o p e '" ASIDE FROM their work in the Follies and the Pool, Shelton and Sedwick also run L iberty Lunch, an o th e r downtown bar/nightclub, and both clubs book an am azing div ersity of acts in all so rts of fields. Dee M cCandless and Gene Menger, well- known local cho reographers, have perform ed w ith the Follies and on their own E s th e r's has also hosted p e rfo rm a n c es of jazz m usic and m agic, as well a s several pro g ram s of r a r e film s, from past and present. L iberty Lunch, m eanw hile, has hosted several Follies shows, and sev eral other off-the-w all a c ts, such as the legendary U ranium Savages, a satire-ro ck group which recently shared the stage w ith the Follies for the first tim e. YOU CAN catch the Follies (and once you do, th e y 're h a rd e r to get out of your bloodstream than the m ost v irulent form s of dysentery) a t E s th e r’s Pool. 515 E. 6th St., and a t various other bookings around town. So the next tim e y o u 're faced with the prospect of sitting a t hom e w atching reru n s of S a t u r d a y Ni g h t L i r e or F r i d a y s , re m e m b e r that you have a choice. You can sit at hom e and m elt into your couch in front of the tube, or you can go downtown and see b e tte r m a te ria l, p e r­ form ed really live before your very eyes. Not only will it m ake you a b e tte r person, im prove your sex life, cu re c a n c e r and save the Cam bodian refugees. It will also be oodles (or a t le a st one oodle) of fun. Satisfaction Guaranteed Each time you visit Fandango’s you’re assured the finest quality food and drink, quickly served in authentic, Southwestern surroundings. Our entire menu is yours to enjoy, 7 days a week, 11 am till closing. Your satisfaction is guaranteed or it’s on the house. Burger Platters Entrees One-halt pound of fresh ground beef charbroiled medium & served on a toasted bun with your choice of hearty ranch beans, creamy cole slaw, or homemade fries With baked potato add 75 Fandango Burger 3.45 Wtth bacon add 45 Mayonnaise, fresh lettuce tomatoes onions A cheese Chili-Cheese W»th oacon add 45 3.65 Hom em ade chili with aged cheddar chee se| A grilled onions Hickory Burger 3.45 W*tn bacon add 45 Our own Bar BQ Smoke Sauce & aged Cheddar cheese Bacon-Cheddar 3.85 Fried bacon strips A aged Cheddar cheese with let tuce tomatoes A mayon naise Salads Chefs Salad 3.75 Fresh cut greens topped with tomato wedges egg slices, turkey, ham A cheese Served with crackers & your choice of our homemade dressings Spinach Salad 3.25 Fresh spinach served with bacon egg & mushrooms with our own hot bacon— vinaigrette dressing House Salad 1.65 Fresh greens with tomato wedges & mushrooms served with crackers A one of our homemade dressings Ribeye Steak 6.95 Steak & Bake 5.95 USDA Choice obeye charbroiled A served with a house salad and your choice of dressings cole slaw or hearty ranch beans and Texas toast Charbroiled sirloin served with our baked potato loaded with butter sour cream, chives real bacon A aged cheddar cheese Marinated Chicken 5.95 A boneless breast of chicken marinated in our own recipe1 Served with a house salad & one of our homemade dressings, cole slaw or hearty ranch beans and Texas toast South Texas Platter 4.25 One half pound of charbroiled ground beef topped with cheeses, fresh tomatoes A chives Served with salad & home­ made fries • Country Fried Steak 4.25 Fresh beef cutlets hand breaded and deep fried— served with a fresh green salad and your choice of our homemade dressings A t L homemade fnes and I ] W Texas toast1 Beer Batter Shrimp 6.45 Large Gulf shnmp hand dipped m our own special batter—deep fried and served with homemade cocktail sauce & coie slaw and homemade fnes Southw est Specialties Soft Tacos 3.25 Three Flour tortillas filled with your choice of chili or chicken, topped with let­ tuce tomato & aged cheddar cheese and served with hearty ranch bears Flautas 3.45 Two large flour tortillas filled with aged cheddar cheese A your choice of chili or chicken Deep-fried A served on a platter with your choice of ranch beans homemade fries or guacamote' Lone Star Special 3.65 A Tex-Mex blend ot oui homemade chili aged cheddar cheese, topped with guacamote A sour cream all served on a bed of lettuce with tortilla chips' Huevos Rancheros 3.95 Large flour tortilla topped with fried eggs A our own Ranchero Sauce Served with a guacamote salad A a side portion of retried beans with a soft flour tortilla' Potpourri Hearty Ranch Beans 3.75 Famous Texas recipe of beans lean meat and cheese blended with spices and served with our house salad your choice of dressings and flour tortillas Quiche Lorraine 3.25 The classic quche made with fresh eggs two cheeses A chunks of ham Served with fresh fruit garnished with poppy seed dressing house salad and your choice ot home­ made dressings Made fresh daily Snacks and Skie Dishes Creamy Colaslaw Bowl of Chili Homemade Frias Freah Guacamole Tostado Chips With Hot Sauce With Queso Dip 75 1 65 85 1.95 95 1 75 Combination Dip Ptatter Tostado Chips with Guacamole and Queso Dip 2 25 Baked Potato — Loadad Homemade Ranch Beans Appetizer Quiche 4-Flour Tortillas 1 25 75 2 25 45 H o m e m a d e Desserts Homemade Pecan Pie House Dessert 1.50 1.75 Firewater Fandango's Famous Margaritas Fro*»*» or On The Rocks 2 25 Fresh Fruit Daquirie S lr tw t o r r y or Reach Cactus Cooler CheW l» »rvJ Perrier Mother Masons Delight A m strvfio Cacao lea Craam S traw berry Armadillo lead Taa Tequiie Rum Vodka Gin Sweei a Sour. Coka FM 2222 M a y r a Rum Freeh Lim a Coka Split Rail T aquida a n d X anula On The Aocaa Perrier Frozen Mug of Bear Importad Draft House Wine Glass Litar 2.50 1.75 2.50 2.50 1.95 2 25 1 25 from 1.25 95 95 4 50 Esther’s Follies’ production of ‘Westward Hose.' A unique art deco HOT LIPS.INC. Let us be your special shop for those special times at U.T. VIBRANT CARDS UNIQUE GIFT WRAP OPEN MON.-SAT. NOON-M IDNIGHT card & gift shop 2815A FRUTH 476-5120 WELCOME NE W U. T. STUDENTS TO THE BEST! 'A The Best City In Texas! ★ The Best I niversity In Texas! ★ The Best Book Store On The Drag! featuring: ★ The Best Selection Of Magazines Both Foreign And Domestic ★ The Best Selection Of Science Fiction ★ The Best Selection Of Mysteries ★ The Best Selection Of Contemporary Literature plus we offer: ★ 15% Off All New York Times Hardback Best Sellers ★ Personal Attention To Special Orders ★ 10% Discount To Faculty And Librarians The Lively- Eclectic U. T. Campus Bookstore! 2302 Guadalupe 474-2982 Open M on.-Sat. 10-10 S u n d ay 12-7 Cochran'sBOOKS IX A nderson Lane At Burnet Road In West Anderson Plaza 11-11 S u n -T h u rs , Til 12 Fri & Sat Happy Hour 4 - 7 M o n -F ri Visa, MC. Page D6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 t h r o u g h ' By WAYNE TERRY Daify Texan Staff Bonzo Shmer reels out of bed at 6 in the evening and rubs his hands through his scraggly hair It is tim e once again to “ hit the dang town.” as Bonzo says is perhaps Mv friend Bonzo the prem ier authority on Austin drinking spots No one consumes more libations, in m ore places, in less time, than the m ythical Bonzo Shiner I packed some Alka-Seltzer and accompanied Bonzo to some of the best Austin nightspots to provide newcomers to Austin with a comprehensive list of places to get hap- py BONZO STARTED the night a t Scholz’ Garten, 1607 San Jacinto Blvd. “ I like to sit out back and watch the people, he said “ If it’s a cool evening, it s a fine place to down a few and maybe get some nachos. All they got’s beer, I guess, and wine, but shoot, the night is young.” After verbally abusing some rather a t­ tractive coeds at Scholz’ Garten, Bonzo tooled his '57 GMC truck on over to the east side of the University campus. He hauled up in front of the Posse E ast and disappeared inside, emerging momen­ tarily with cold beer and a toothless grin. “Posse E ast is pretty dem ocratic,” he said “ All kinds of folks come here. It’s another good place to spend an evening outside scarfing hops. The Posse, now, the original place west of campus, th at’s pretty much of a fraternity hangout. The crowd isn’t as mixed up, so to speak, as it is over h ere.” BONZO VERBALLY abused a stray cat, this time, as the GMC made its arthritic way to the west end of town. Donn’s Depot, 1600 W. Fifth St., quaked as Bonzo blasted through the door. The a lick as Bonzo sucked down his drink “ After a hard day of watching football is a decent little or sleeping, hangout,” he said, around a mouthful of ice cubes. “ Now the crowd is a little older than normal, but shoot, at least it’s relatively quiet.” this Once again Bonzo geared up, heading for the Tavern at 12th Street and Lam ar Boulevard “ The Tavern agrees with near everybody,” he chuckled, aiming the truck at an elderly woman crossing the street ahead. “ Music som etimes, tables upstairs and downstairs, lotsa room and a decent crowd, usually.” We never made it to the Tavern, however, as the elderly woman whipped a pistol from her purse and pumped off two quick shots, diverting Bonzo from his course. “ THAT WAS close,” he m uttered, c o m b in g b ro k e n g la s s fro m h is mustache. “ Them old heifers are get­ ting dangerous. Tell you what, we’ll hit one of my favorite places, the Hole in the Wall on the Drag across from cam ­ pus.” And there we went, to a tiny room packed with people. A live band played, as always, to com plem ent the full bar and gameroom. including Later, after a series of truly amazing tric k s the chew ing and swallowing of a m artini glass, Bonzo stumped to the truck and poked his im ­ pressive belly behind the steering wheel. "Gordo’s,” he m uttered. “ Gotta play some pool.” Gordo’s, at 421 E. Sixth St., proved to be a fine choice, with full bar, quiet atmosphere, limited kitchen ser­ im portantly, quality vice, and, most pool tables. A POORLY navigated walk down historic Sixth S treet brought us to Maggie Mae’s, a fine European-type pub with “ sixty-eleven kinds of out-of-Texas beers, as Bonzo said The acoustic bands at M aggie’s, like Coquesigrues or Eaglebone W’histle, are a special plus, with an emphasis on traditional or Euro­ pean tastefully and quietly played tunes, However, since quiet, good ta ste eludes the sensibilities of Bonzo Shiner, he soon staggered out and headed for the GMC. A meeting of some im pact with a light pole determ ined the next stop — Phases, at 2222 Rosewood Ave. Disco and jazz m ade up the music, and the m ajority of the crowd was black Bonzo took full ad­ vantage of the bar, and ingested another m artini glass before deciding that the truck should be hefted off the fallen light pole. “Well, AS BONZO lifted his GMC down from the curb, he scratched his belly and if I had m e a pondered. girlfriend, I ’d take her over to The Cedar Door. C’mon. I'll show you.” Sure enough, the sm all bar at 401 W. 15th St. is the perfect spot for quiet conversa­ tion Full bar, cards and backgammon available, and the best atm osphere in town for talk and drink. “ T here’s another good place, too,” Bonzo gurgled into his m argarita glass. “ Mike and C harlie’s, over on 34th a cou­ ple blocks west of L am ar street is great. No loud music, good drinks and free chips and hot sauce. Can you beat that? Class joint. I wouldn’t take me there, if I were me. I t’s too nice.” OF COURSE, m ore bars saw Bonzo blast through the front door that night, but I can’t tell you anym ore about the whole m ess, b e c a u se I lo st co n ­ sciousness som ewhere on the floor of the B rackenridge em ergency room , another place you may become ac­ quainted with in Austin. Happy trails. By CHBIS FRINK The variety and quality of A ustin’s live m usic scene is rivaled by only one or two other cities in the nation.The following is a partial list of the clubs where you can become part oi this thriving scene. T h e s e t h u m b n a i l sketches will give you an idea about each club. Many clubs put out calendars that are works of art in their own right, besides letting you know who’s playing in the weeks ahead so yon can plan a big weekend when your friend comes down from Borger to see some of that great “Austin” music. KLBJ-FM has a 24-hour entertainment line <474- 5720) that gives the club scene for that night and road shows coming to town in the next month. Alamo Lounge 400 W. Sixth St. Great acoustic folk to go t h e u n i q u e a t ­ w i t h m o sp h e r e . Car ds and dom inos are ava ila b le. Beer only, and there is no cover — the hat is passed the en tertain m en t. for Mon.-Fri. noon-midnight. Sat. noon-1 a.m., Sun. 1 p.m.-midnight. Austex Lounge 1920 S. Congress Ave. Some of the best blues in town and a great place to catch hot new acts. The Fabulous Thunderbirds used to play here before they made it big. Open every night 7 p.m.-2 a.m. Cover $1-2. Beer and wine. A n t o n e s 7934 G r e a t Northern Blvd. A very large club (it used to be a carpet warehouse) that books touring acts — like mostly blues artists John Lee Hooker or old rockers like Jerry L ee Lewis. Beware — it can get inside as the very hot crowd warms up. Hoars vary as does the cover charge. Armadillo World Head­ quarters & Beer Garden 525V* Barton Springs Road Soon to see its demise, the historic ’Dillo is and has been home to a great variety of acts — from Devo to Felicia no.The Beer Garden has some of the best cheap food in town and live m u sic nights. G et there while it’s still there. Beer Garden. Mon.-Sun. 11 a.m.-midnight Sometimes a cover ($1-2). Beer, wine, mixers. ’Dillo: Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-midnight, Sat.- Sun. noon to whenever. Cover $3 and up. The Backroom 2015 E. Riverside Drive. There’s never a cover here and the music is pret­ ty good, ranging from coun­ try to some new wave. Big drinks and one of the best game rooms in town. Mon.- Sun. U a.m.-2 a.m. B»ckstage Restaurant and Bar 1201 S. Congress Ave. Good original music and the crowd hi older, a little sleazy and predominantly polyester-clad. Open every day 7 p.m.-2 a.m. Cover $1.50 to $3. The Bottom Line 1800 E. Sixth St. Funky East Side blues joint. Mon.-Sat. 4 p.m.-2 a.m., Sun 6 p.m.-l a.m. Cover: $2-3. C h e l s e a S t r e e t P u b s N o r t h c r o s s Mal l and Highland Mall. S t r i c t l y so m etim es p erform ed , s p e c i a l s , w eekends, a.m.-l a.m. 40, com peten tly for on Mon.-Sat 11 Check c o v e r Top Liberty Lunch 405 W. Se­ cond St. Enjoy good music out­ doors amid some of the best art in town. Hie music tends to be mostly Carib­ bean — reggae, calypso and salsa. But some new wave acts are being book­ ed. Open every day 7 p.m.-2 a . m. B e e r and wi ne . " > « * Cover: $2-3. MacKedrick’s Treefeotte 502 Dawson Road Listen to mellow jazz with an older crowd and a great view of Austin. Tues - Sun. 6 p . m . -2 a m. $2-2.50. Mother Earth 1907 E. Riverside Drive Rock V roll every ni$it. i t ’s rea l Most o f te n mediocre, but it’s better than disco. Tues.-Sun. 8 pm .-2 a.m. Cover:$2 on weekends. Steamboat Springs 1874 403 E. Sixto St. Set in a restored 19th cen­ tury building, Steamboat offers fine music — mostly folk and blues, but they are booking a few new wave acts. Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-2 a.m., Sat. 7 p.m.-2 a.m. Cover. $1-4, Steven’s 701 Congress Ave. The Stephen F. Austin Hotel lounge is booking some hot blues acts and it bears some watching. If the acts are good this could be a new hotspot. Mon.-Fri. 11 a m . -2 a.m., Sat. 4 p.m.-2 a m Cover:$2 weekends. \'f* %-^L ^-5“ Waterloo Ice House 906 Congress Ave. Live folk or jazz. Thur - Sat. 9 p.m.-midnight. Beer and wine. No cover. FOR THE RIDE OF YOUR LIFE. . s K I P ' c , * i®*Hd RENTAL, INC. * tJHe J 8 2 6 I * l u A u s i i n B l v d . B o m fou. \ o v I \ k i A l s i i n O p u s D d i l v * H a m . - 8 p . M . R i n ia I bv «-bn. * Int. * dA\ V Í S A - MASH RCflARty A t i i p i l d PboM 4/6-ZJ7Í S k ip Pt 11> O u / N t « SEE th ousands of p lan ts u n d e r one roof. SAVE by b u y in g direct from th e g ro w e r. LEARN h o w to care for your p la n ts from th e people w h o g re w th e m . V A R I E T Y , q u a l i t y a n d specim en p la n ts . If w e d o n 't h a v e so m eth in g y o u 're look­ ing for, w e 'll fin d it. Septem ber 6-7 M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M Austin radio stations AM stations KGTN <1530 kHz * Country m usic 6 a m to 8:30 p m ^ * ,XL ,y7° Inspirational m usic 6 a m to sunset Paul Harvey at 7 50 a m noon, 5 20 KLBJ ( 590 kHz > Adult contem porary music 24 hours daily Cactus Pryor 8:30-9 a m Noon Report. Evening Report at 5 p m . Phil Miller Sports 5 45 p.m. CBS news on the hour Headliners on the hour Headliners and Capital Cloak Room Saturday morning Black Spectrum ■ 30 a m Sunday R eligious program m ing Sunday morning . KNiOW ' 1A9° ,ltHz ’ Adult contem porary music 24 hours with live personalities ABC Informa­ tion Network News on the hour Straight Talk call-in 8-9 p m Sunday KOKE (1370 kHz I Contemporary country m usic 6 a m to sunset Public affairs, news and religious programs 6 a m. to noon Sunday. K \ ET (1300 kHz Country m usic 24 hours daily Sunday 'Gospel Train" at 9:15 a m . "Around About Austin at 10 30 a m and First Baptist Church at 11 a m. KM stations KASE n o o 7 MHz ) Beautiful m usic 24 hours daily KCSW (103 7 MHz) Contemporary m usic 24 hours a day Top single hits and album selection s Live personalities "Straight Talk" call-in 8-9 p m Sunday KGTN 96 7 MHz i Country m usic 6-11 p.m KHFI (96 3 MHz i 24 hour fo p 40 Am erican Top 40 Saturday 9 a m. to 1 p.m. Great A merican Radio Show Saturday 7-9 p.m The Jazz Album Show Sunday 9 p.m. to midnight KLBJ (93 7 MHz i 24-hour album-oriented rock including som e jazz and new wave Blue P late ° U? J nday at 12 20 P m ^ l e r Late Than Never Tuesday and Thursday at midnight King Biscuit Flour Hour Sunday at 7 p.m .. First Audition Wednesday at 9 p m New* Magazine Sunday at 10 30 a m y n y and Sunday9 5 MHZ' ClaSS'Cal m usic 11 a m midnight weekdays, 7 a.m . to midnight Saturday Spanish service information. KMXX (102 3 MHz) Spamsh m usic 5 a m to 9 p.m. daily Soul m usic 9 p.m to 1 a m dailv y KOKE (96 5 MHz) Contemporary country m usic 24 hours daily Public affairs new s and religious program s Sunday 6 a m to noon K l T (90 7 MHz) Listener-supported public radio affiliate of the U niversity, 5 a m to 2 a m n m ' s ^ SS‘Ca. musi<; 6- n : 3 0 a m Monday-Friday; 6-9a m Saturday. 6-11 a m and 2 30-4 30 p m Sunday Jazz 8 11 p.m Monday. Tuesday, Thursday; 9-11 p.m. W ednesday, Friday Soul 11 P,m iw eekn‘ghts Opera 1 p.m. Saturday. Folk m usic 8 p.m. Saturday. International pop i r Í P m SUnday' Mornmg EdiUon newsm agazine H a m weekdays All Things ondidered newsmagazine 5-6 30 p.m weekdays. Radio drama 6 30-7:30 p.m Monday Thuraday; 8-9 p m. Friday 11 30 a m , noon weekdays except Thursday and 7-8 p m S u l ! school^ oard M e etin g s P " * PHd“, “ U v e broadcasts ^ t y Council and HIGHLANDS *80! % w 1 w c* A Spectacular. Incredibly Well-Planned. One-Of-A Kind, Inexpensive Weekend Extravaganza When: August 2 9 -S e p tem b er 1 (Labor Day Weekend) Where: Highland Lakes Baptist Encampment (40 miles west of Austin on Lake Travis) Who: Students attending college this fall How much does it costJ Only $28 00 This fee covers the cost of all meals, programs, and activities H ig h lan d s SO is a planned weekend of fun for students attending the University of Texas The program I begins with dinner Friday evening and concludes with the Longhorn football game Monday evening Here s an idea of what's in store for you Mornings Seminars aimed at the needs of University Students Here are some of the topics Y o u are C o r d i a l l y I n v it e d a s ou r G u e s t to the Figure world OPEN HOUSE PARTY! SATUR DAY — A U G U ST 9 10 A M TILL 8 P.M. 1300 W. Ben White (A c ro ss from S o u tb w o o d Mall) 444-4897 South A ustin g ¡ rH 2 J I I rij n j Hr H is ) rjj s ñ , ¿2 n *T PRIZES-GIFTS GALORE! FREE! REFRESHMENTS! OOOR PRIZES! NO «JUCmAST Nfí fSSAfO • C o lor TV • D igital W atches • E xercise Bike • Las Vegas Trips • A larm C lock Radios • 10 - Speed Blenders • A * PARE N CT iN C L U O fO Fi rli d: P lia iM r]ilJl£lia; rll Gi H rii ¿ M * f t I / Gerri Morin Spa Directress Figure Fitn e ss Expert will a n sw e r all your que stions concerning weight problems Conference Pastor, Barry W ood B arry W ood is o n e of th e m ost so u g h t after sp e a k e rs for col lege stu d e n ts in A m erica H e has p asto red First B aptist C h u rch in Beverly HiUs, C alifornia a n d w as C ollege Minister at First Baptist C h u rch , L ubbock. Texas, w h ere he p re a c h e d to over 1 .0 0 0 stu d e n ts each w eek in th e largest stu d e n t service in the nation B arry is active in th e F ellow ship o f C hristian A thletes, has w ritten tw o best selling books, a n d p ro d u c e s his ow n C hristian radio sh o w LÜ B SEE the breathtaking Spa area — the hot Roman whirlpool SEE the huge Conditioning area with over $10X3,000 worth of patented, passive and active exercise equip­ m e n t-d e s ig n e d to firm, build, reduce, ton e and re­ contour your figure. SEE the Finnish rock sauna, Desert dry heat room, private dressing rooms, elegant vanity areas. SEE a whole new world of good health and good looks —just waiting for you—right now! C o n feren ce M usic Leader j C h arles D o w n ey Charles Downey has b een Minister of Music at several Baptist churches, he is now a business m an living in Quitm an. Texas ADDRESS He has been a soloist with the H ouston S ym phony O rchestra and the H uston G rand O pera Association Chari* - is in m uch CITY AND s : AI ( N A M E _____________ | dem and as a musician hum orist, and after-dinner speaker Registration Fee $28 00 j r i ZIP • How to Find Help When You Need It At the University of Texas (People Services, Activities, Finances) • What Color Is Your Parachute? (C hoosing a M a jo r an d C are e r Decision m a k ­ ing Based o n the bestseller by R ichard Nelson Bolles ) • Getting Ready For Marriage Or Singleness • Questions and Answers on Dating • Change Expecting It. Accepting It, Using It • My Biggest Problem As a Freshman • Pass or Perish How To Study Effectively tia l Why People Fail) • The Importance of Setting Goals • The Second Greatest Story Ever Told (H e lp on H o w To Reach Y our Poten • The Striptease of Humanism Christianity and the Secular Worldview • Spiritual Growth A Personal Process • Consistent Christianity Faith and Lifestyle • Professors You May Meet • Scripture Memory Work and the Importance of God s Word in a Person s Life | • Flow To Have a Daily Quiet Time With God • Sharing Christ On the Campus • Issues In The 80 s Abortion Birth Control. Euthanasia. Racism Genetics. | Homosexuality • Spmtual Counterfeits Confronting the Cults Afternoons: Water Skiing Sailing Canoeing Swimming Softball Volleyball Recreation that's got something for everybody!!! Physical Fitness Hiking Archery Tennis Dirt Bike Racing Travis 5000 (3 Mile Run) Evenings Sharing together in w orship great preaching, singing, and getting to know people Make some friendships that will last through and beyond college' A lso Talent show by the Hill Country Com pone Players Movies, Com edy Skits involving everybody! 1 Lodging is in one of nine air-conditioned dorms all meals included, staffed by Hyde Park Baptist Church To register or ask for more information write to David Procter. Hyde Park Baptist Church 3901 Siieedwav Austin Texas 78751. L o n gh orn F o o tb a ll Monday evening at 8 10 p m we will watch the Texas Long­ horns whip the Arkansas Razorbacks at Memorial Stadium Hook em Horns'" Tuesday. August 5, 1980 □ TH E DAILY TEXAN □ Page D7 ~.. — i acjs: i—i ■ Restaurants offer reprieve from dorm (in)edibles By W AYNE TERRY Daily Texan Staff Well, you promised mom you’d cook good meals at home, or eat in the dorm and stay away from junk food and generally be a dietetic angel. But it just doesn’t work out that way. Either you have a date, or you can’t face more peanut butter and crackers at Jester, or you just have to get out But eventually, sooner or later, you will want to go to a restaurant. Restaurants, though, are a sneaky proposition, because you never know if they’re any good until you go and spend your money. If they’re no good you re just out of luck. And quite a few crummy restaurants lurk out there waiting to take your hard-earned allowance. But wait. Below we have compiled everything you need to know about the best Austin dining — the best places, prices and food. The restaurant guide is split up into categories that make the most difference to all of us — how much the people at the cash register want when you get up to leave. Otherwise, this is a com­ pletely subjective compendium of restaurants that consistently give good service and food. Happy eating. EXPENSIVE Average $10 or more per person. J effre y ’s Restaurant, 1204 West Lynn off Enfield Road. Many people consider Jeffrey ’s the best restaurant in Austin. Although the food is ra th e r expensive, all the dishes are well prepared and the am bience surpasses any place in Austin. They tucked Jeffrey ’s into a little building next to an ice cream store and a cheese nosh Dim, cozy interior, a natural for romance. If you can scrape the bucks together, go. Ajpenhof, way out on FM 620. Finding it is half the fun. Although the drive takes a while, you will be am ply rewarded. Gorgeous view of Austin from the Hill Country. Service is the watchword at Alpenhof. Everyone from the owner down to the busboys keeps the custom er in mind a t all times. The veal cordon bleu is excellent. Take mom and dad out there and m ake them pay. Sweetish Hill, 1202B W. Sixth St. One of the finer restaurants around town. Simple, tasty cuisine, including quiches, om elettes and ex­ cellent salads. The daily luncheon specials provide a less expensive way to sam ple the all- natural food (they don’t even have Sweet n ’ Low), and you can dine outside. This restaurant is affiliated with the Sweetish Hill Bakery, so be sure to sam ple the bread assortm ent and dessert pastries. They rank among the finest in the state. Yunnan Dynasty, 2900 W. Anderson Lane in the Village. Yep, C hinese food. As fa r as traditional Chinese cuisine goes, no place in town can touch Yunnan. The pork and duck dishes prepared with hot peppers make an especially spicy meal, and they cook succulent vegetables. Service is a tad slow, but always courteous. m anagem ent's request you lim it your consump­ tion to two. The m argaritas cost a lot, but they justify the price by curling up your eyebrows. Blooms, 1612 Rio Grande St A restaurant in a Victorian home with a splendid view of the Capitol. Get them to seat you upstairs if possible. The entrees, with the exception of beef, tend to taste a bit bland sometimes. The pate makes an excellent appetizer, and nobody else in town makes it. Quiet, romantic atmosphere. Be prepared for a hefty check. G reen Pastures, 811 W. Live Oak St. One smooth restaurant. Fancy interior, excellent food and atom ic bomb prices. J.R. Ewing, and sim ilar elderly, oil-rich Texans can afford this place Most of the rest of us can’t. Subdued a t­ mosphere, courteous waiters, uniformly superior food T h e Old Pecan St. Cafe, 310 E. Sixth St. A the French newly revised menu still offers cuisine staples of tasty quiche and crepes. Higher-priced entrees are also excellent, es­ pecially the daily specials such as fresh flounder amandine. Even if you’re stuffed by the entree, leave room for some of the most scrumptious desserts in town — the Germ an Chocolate cake can 't be beat. Service varies, but is usually ade­ quate. F o n d a San Miguel, 2330 North Loop. San Miguel really doesn’t cost that much, unless you lot. In the upper echelon of Austin drink a restaurants, San Miguel has in the past enjoyed a reputation for the best Mexican food in town although the interior Mexican recipes make it quite different from the standard Tex-Mex. While the crowds makes the food rem ains superb, dinner tim e alm ost oppressive. Expect to wait any night you go. The mole sauce makes for several heavenly dishes and the fish recipes from Mexico m erit mention. MODERATE $5 to $8 or so. give or take some. M am a Woon’s Chinese Barbecue, 5320 W Bee Caves Road. This, folks, is the best restaurant around No kidding. Super service, sane prices and meticulously prepared dishes. Not uncom­ mon for Papa Woon, spouse of the superlative chef, to stop by the table and chat. Ribs, sliced beef and chops in plates or combination make up the fare, along with changing daily specials. Hot fish stands out among the specials. Quiet a t­ mosphere, good location in the hills, but word gets around, and crowds now show up at dinner time, especially on weekends. T he Hoffbrau, 613 W Sixth St. Simplicity and great sputtering slabs of thick steak make the Hoffbrau one of a kind in Austin. You sit in a diner-style room or outside, and the w aiter com ­ es and nam es five or six different steaks and their prices. T hat’s it. Buy a salad (fascinating olive oil and lemon dressing) and an icy beer and sit back. A huge steak and all the chunks of fried potato you can eat will be out in a short while. Amazingly reasonable prices. Austin tradition. L o s Tres Bobos, 1206 W. 38th St. in 26 Doors shopping cen ter. Best m id-priced Mexican restaurant in town. Tyrannosaurus Mex, sort of a glorified fajita, tastes especially good. Both a celebration and a satire of traditional Mexican places. The menu resem bles a Saturday Night Live script. Nice garden patio to view while you eat. Good drinks, always an enjoyable evening. A da Rose Restaurant, 1514 W. 35th Cut Off. Big. airy place with lots of plants. They bill the cooking as “ home style.’’ There are usually several m eat entrees to choose from, including a fine plate of chicken. The m eal comes with a huge salad and two vegetables which change every day. Good broccoli, bland squash. Growing reputation, although the food may be a tad pricey for what you get. Good bread. the other C asita Jorge’s South, 2538 Elm ont St., over behind the Aquarius theaters on Riverside. two Jorge's South far outclasses Jorge's in town. Good, standard Mexican fare. The m ig a s fo r b r e a k f a s t c o m e s h ig h ly tortilla recommended, scram bled eggs with chunks and some of the zippiest little green peppers you've ever eaten. But Jorge’s fam e really arises from the legendary m argaritas. A the clo se th e m enu w ill re v e a l look a t Buffalo Grille, 1112 W. Sixth St. Live music, good food, interesting patrons, great jukebox. An endangered species. Go before it’s gone. L o n a n ’s Pizza, locations. Frank several Frazetta decor, lots of wood and earth people hanging around. Among the best pizzas in town, featuring a thick crust with lots of sauce and plenty of ingredients. Quality has deteriorated just a tad since Conan's got to be big business. Call ahead, especially on weekends. M orty’s Pizza King. 8816 Research Blvd. Way out north, but worth the trip “ Over 53.800 varieties of pizza,” including such oddities as barbecue, tuna fish, scram bled egg. m araschino cherry and okra. Don’t worry, the regular types of pizza are available, too. A small pizza is more than two reasonable people are capable of eating. Fair prices, excellent pizza. J o e ’s Pizzeria House, 1614 W. Fifth St. Sort of an underground University tradition. Jo e ’s hides out by the MoPac expressway and barely gets by. Hard-core custom ers know Joe, a crusty little man with a huge mustache, and a Jo e's custom er is a faithful one Huge pizzas, rath er hard crust, a nice ambience. Check out the jukebox and the hand-lettered philsophies on the walls. K a t z ’s, 618 W. Sixth St. A real delicatessen, run by real Yankees, with real up-North prices The main attraction, besides the authentic kosher menu, is that Katz's is open 4 a.m . Dill pickles on every table, excellent cheesecake and good sandwiches in general. Avoid the pastram i, rath er fatty, and the overpriced bagel-fish plates. Good place to catch yankees hanging around, if you get homesick. T exas Chili Parlor, 1409 Lavaca St. The classic Texas chili joint. One, twTo, and three alarm chili, as well as sandwiches (forgettable) and nachos! What you got here is real chili, m ade with the right kind of m eat, in a great little restaurant. The sign on the wall says no Dr Pepper, no beans, no ketchup and they mean it. Cold beer, bar and ambience. Worthwhile. Nighthawk, 336 S. Congress Ave. The restaurant that s been here since Moses was lit­ tle. Good quality food all the time, best coleslaw in town Try the medium size chopped steak if you go. People who used to go to the University still rem em ber this place, and you’ll have kids someday. LESS THAN MODERATE You can usually get out of these places for $5. Nothing cheap, just inexpensive quality. warm sometimes. Pleasant decor, with stained glass and skylights. One of the best deals for the money. T h e Omelettry West, 2304 Lake Austin Blvd. Take Sixth just past the intersection with MoPac. The Omelettry West is indisputably the best deal for the money you can get. Something like 11 different omelettes, salads, burgers, sandwiches, gingerbread pancakes and desserts, and all of it tasty. Uniformly good, quality food, and nothing over about $3.25 on the menu. Fast becoming a West Austin favorite The lines weekends now spill into the parking lot under a tree. Go early. If you got $5 and an itch to eat, head to the Omelet­ try West. M ad Dog and Bean’s, 512 W. 24th St. Real close to campus. Big, fat, cheap burgers, cold brew, hefty shakes, interesting clientele. You get to sit outside and sw elter as people walk by in large front of you, sw eltering. Usually a lunchtime crowd, no place to sit unless you get there early. One of the best deals near the school. C isco ’s Bakery and Coffee Shop, 1511 E. Sixth St Another Austin tradition. Heaven knows how many students have reeled into Cisco’s the m orning-after with killer hangovers and collaps­ ed, anticipating that plate of huevos borrachos. The perennial specialty here is breakfast, featur­ ing fine refries and hot eggs. You just can't graduate without heading over to Cisco’s once. Scholz’ Garten, 1607 San Jacinto St. Just a football throw from the stadium. Everybody from politicians to students to cowboys frequent Scholz Garten. Fairly oily cuisine, m ade better by lots of beer Plan on spending a long tim e waiting for your order to arrive. Fried chicken is always interesting, as are the nachos. A little bit of G e r m a n c u l t u r e s h o w s up t h e wi e n e r s c h n i t z e l wi t h p o t a t o s a l a d and sauerkraut. in T aco Flats, 5213 N. Lam ar Blvd. Don't believe the sign out front that says “ Over 3.000 tacos returned.’’ They must have gotten double that back by now. But seriously, folks, here you have cheapo Tex-Mex, beer and a unique atmosphere, to say the least. Everybody knows about it, but surprisingly few people have been brave enough to go in. Be one of the elite. Try it out. B ean s Restaurant, 311 W. Sixth St. Fine little restaurant, nice selection of burgers, including jalapeno. Good soft tacos, but the beer is too Stallion, 5534 N. Lam ar Blvd. Not much to say the Stallion. Legendary chicken fried about steaks and fries, low. low prices and a country clientele. Regular weekend crowds, emphasis on pickups in the parking lot. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF US I ■ A T 10% TO 50% OFF. MUSIC CENTERS 3 styles, w h ite lacquer, ready to assemble Reg $75 — $160, SALE $ 4 9 -$ 9 9 FOLDING CHAIR Black, green reg $39, SALE $19 Chrome reg $49, SALE $25 PLAYCRATES Blue, green, red, yellow, w hite Reg $8.50, SALE 2/$10 FILE CABINETS Yellow, red, w hite, brow n Buy any tw o , save $30 Two draw er reg $79 ea., SALE 2/$128 Three draw er reg $99 ea , SALE 2/$168 COUNTRY KITCHEN STOOL 24” high, solid oak Reg $29, SALE $15 SISAL DOORMAT 18" x 24" reg $7, SALE $4 BEECH BUNKBED Includes mattresses, bases reg $387, SALE $249 SOFA Solids reg $600, SALE $499 stripes reg $700, SALE $549 IMPORTED RUGS Assorted sizes Reg $ 9 9 -$ 1 ,4 0 0 . SALE 50% OFF STAR BOOKCASE White lacquer, ready to assemble Narrow mg $130, SALE $100 Wide reg $165, SALE $130 BENTWOOD ROCKER Solid beech, black finish Reg $129, SALE $64.50 OUTDOOR FURNITURE ¡r back chair reg $49, SALE $25 Vienna chair reg $49 SALE $20 tack Tables lo w reg $34, SALE $19; high reg $56 SALE $39 BENTW OOD SIDE CHAIR Natural or w alnut finish Reg $44 SALE $39 DINING TABLE round butcher block top, oak base Reg $250. SALE $175 Hurry into Storehouse for our Summer Stock-Up Sale. You'll find savings of 10% to 50% on these and many more selected items throughout the store. But take advantage of us soon: Quantities are limited and sale ends August 30. storehouse stock up sale 2402 Highland Mall, 459-3161 (Mon -Sat. 10-9) can help you sell just about anything. Call us at 471-5244 and find out how. THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Speed demons get thrills with mini-racers Eueryflme you use the D a ily T e x a n w a n t ads JUST CALL 471-5244 \ & Have something to buy or sell? One phone call to us like dialing our entire circulation.. .person-to- person! Place your W an t Ad today! is £ Jf - ¿ & f * T h e D a i l y T e x a n -4*2?- - rJ W j -Aim* „ r .JStt' — £ • a e r j e t m s » * * * .4 g £ f r l b » . By C H A R L E S EV ER IT T If you enjoy driving fast and see every curve as an open invita­ tion to desecrate the posted speed limit. Austin can be a fine combination of heaven and hell. Heavenly because stretchs like Ranch Road 2222. Bqe Caves and Anderson Mill roads can provide more thrills than you can stand, hell because the federal government recently threatened to yank highway funds from states where speed limits are not adequately enforced - and the Department of Public Safety, as well as city police, have been especially zealous toward that duty lately. One could conceivably go racing, but the cost for most peo­ ple is prohibitive. Malibu Grand Prix, 7417 N IH 35, is an alternative to spending baskets of money on racing equipment or speeding tickets. F or less than $2 a lap. anyone with a valid driver s license can slide behind the wheel of a well executed replica of a Formula One racing car and go for it. It ’s good, clean, risk-free fun, im­ ported from California and sanitized for your protection — all the thrills of racing with none of the dangers. BF.FORE GETTING on the track, beginners must buy a $2 Malibu Grand Prix racing license. With lap tickets, one proceeds to the pit apron where an attendant explains the rules of the track — don't try to cut corners by running over curbs — it s hard on the cars and just slows you down; if you slide off the track, wait for the attendant to push you back on; drive smoothly — that s the fast way around. One must be smooth to be fast, and the electronic timing equipment, which flashes lap times in two-foot high figures, has no sympathy for those who employ a ragged cut-and-thrust driv­ ing style. The cars are impressive little pieces of equipment. They cost $8.000 to build, and with a 28 horsepower Wankel rotary engine working through an automatic transmission, they can • New & Used Books • We Buy Back Used Books 9 Notebooks and Stationery • Caps, Shirts and Class Rings • VISA/M C 9 One stop shopping — buy your school supplies while you buy your books TEXAS TEXTBOOKS INC. We want to be your textbook store." 1 st Floor Castilian 478-9833 24th & San Antonio 24fh St. ' f a T e x a s T e x t b o o k s VISA' CAPITAL BARBER COLLEGE ■ A t - Lowest prices for fashionable hairstyling, permanents, and other hair treatments for men and women. Cut by experienced students and supervised by professional instructors. N o appointments needed. r This coupon entitles bearer to ONE FREE STYLE (includes sham poo, conditioner, cut a nd blow-dry) Hours 1 0 :4 5 -5 :3 0 TUES.-FRI. N O T V A L ID O N S A T U R D A Y S Expires Sept . 12, 1 9 8 0 Capital Plaza Shopping Center 4 5 3 - 1 7 5 5 I I North I.H.-35 | _________ J Driver wrestles with curve at M alibu Grand Prix. Greg Vimont, Daily Texan Staff reach a top speed of 45 mph on the one-half mile course, which is a collection of more than two dozen twists and turns, with no straightaways long enough to challenge the ca r’s potential top speed of 70 mph. The brakes are a combination of discs on the front and drums on the rear, and the tires are miniature Goodyear slicks. The steering is the hardest thing to get used to, because it is right now quick, and anyone used to driving a full-sized American car w ill execute their first lap in a series of darts and lunges through every corner A fiberglass body covers the tube frame. IT ’S DIFFICULT to establish a rhythm while driving as one must pull into the pit lane after every lap and give the attendant another ticket before going back to the staging lights, where cars are allowed out at nine-second intervals. There is no wheel- to-wheel competition — the racing is between you and the clock. Nonetheless, I ventured forth and promptly learned humility. My first lap was approximately 68 seconds, and I managed to work that down to a 59.04 on the ninth of my 10 laps. Smoothness is the key, and one must concentrate very hard to get even minute improvements in lap times. The actual speeds may be moderate, but the course is tight enough to demand every bit of your attention. M ike Ren negar of Austin, the M alibu G rand P r ix national champion, clocked a 47.80 second time cut. “ He's so smooth he doesn’t look like he’s going fast at a ll,” said Mickey Coggins, Malibu Grand Prix manager. “ But he is." Most of Malibu Grand P rix ’s customers are 18 to 40 years old. and they do it because “ it’s exciting, different from everyday life — on the freeway,” Coggins said. Customers tell Coggins the main reason they do it is to “ work out aggressions.” J IM TELFER, who at one time had the track record at a Malibu Grand Prix location in Memphis, Tenn., agreed. “ I t ’s a way to take out your aggressions and frustrations,” said Telfer. “ You drive calmer when you get into your own car.” “ I also do it for the competition,” he said. “ You go with your friends and get to see who’s fastest.” The cars have a lot to do with it,” he said. “ If you can get a good car it makes all the difference in the world.” So for a minimal cash outlay and at virtually no risk to life and limb, you can rent a three-quarter-sized racing car, Bell helmet and track time and play Walter M itty to your heart’s content. And it ’s a lot cheaper than a ticket to the policeman’s ball. EVERYONE IS WELCOME ... at W h e a t s v i l l e F o o d Co-op, but w h y do n 't you b e c o m e an o w n e r ? D U K E ’S Royal Coach Inn 472-0321 Open every night (except M ondays) B ringing you the Finest In Local and N ational NEW W AVE ROCK V ROLL Located Dow ntow n at 318 Congress Large D ance Floor Plenty of P a rk in g m i 1 ■ » ^ V * > td S u m m e r too h o t? We'll Take It Off at Rick*! for m en & w o m e n C o m m u n i t y C o n t r o l l e d D e m o c r a t i c a l l y M a n a g e d THE E X P L O S IV E S $1 .50 cover M O THER OF PEARL L A D IE S FREE THE C O B R A S THE S K U N K S plus THE E X P L O S IV E S R IV E R CITY RESTAURANT - BAR Aug. 7 A ug. 8 A ug. 9 403 E. Sixth 478-2912 AUSTIN'S MOST POPULAR NEW NIGHTCLUB 2 4 1 4 G U A D A L U P E 4 7 6 -6 9 6 0 IT'S A BULL R ID IN ', FOOT S T O M P IN ', H O N K Y T O N K IN ' G O O D T IM E IT'S A N IG H T C L U B LIKE YOU H A V E N EV ER S E E N G am e & Pool Room Upstairs Country & W estern , Rock n' Roll, Disco A ustin's Finest Sound SELECT A U D IO EQUIPMENT W ITHOUT HAVING TO ENDURE A LOT OF JIVE AND JARGON “H O M E O F T H E O R IG IN A L U R B A N B U L L " \ 8611 N. M o P a c Hwy. on Loop 1 Between Anderson Lane & Hwy. 183 346-2134 WEST Happy H o ur Sp ecial * * * 5-7 Mon.-Fri. * 25* B E E R * * 2 for 1 D R IN K S * 4- $1.00 U R B A N B U L L R ID E S * AT H FI, O U R S A LE SP EO PL E U N D E R S T A N D A U D IO E Q U IP ­ M EN T . BU T THEY SPEA K E N G L IS H . W E O FFER A W ID E R A N G E O F FIN E A U D IO E Q U IP M E N T A N D A C C E S ­ S O R IE S . T H ER E'S N O C H A R G E FO R C O N S U L T A T IO N , S O IF Y O U 'R E T H IN K IN G S O U N D , C O M E HEAR. 3300 WEST A N D E R S O N LANE 1710 LAVACA STREET Clean fun can be a good time too By JENNY BENEDICT D aily T e x a n Staff I ’ve alw ays thought you couldn t have fun in Austin un­ less you included drinking and partying. But occasionally the desire for some good, clean (and cheap) things to do in Austin arises. If the sun is shining, vou’re iuck. T here a re m any in places to go and many things to do outdoors. If you re into water. Austin has two waterslides: Aqua Thrill Way. 7901 S. IH 35. and Splish Splash, 1001 Ben White Blvd. (open until 11 p.m .). The average price is $2 for a half hour and $5.50 for a whole day. You might even lose a couple of pounds — walking up to the top of the slide after each ride can be a chore. If so arin g down a w et waterway appalls you. rent a boat at Town Lake. Sailboats are $5 to $9 an hour and paddleboats are $3.50 an hour at Town Lake Sail Away, 1800 S. Lakeshore Blvd. You can also rent canoes at Barton Springs pool for $4 the first hour and $2 every hour after that. A driver’s license is re­ quired as a deposit. On those ra re occasions when you feel extravagant, jet skis can be rented at Skip’s Je t Ski R ental. 3826 Lake Austin Blvd. They are $12 for a half hour and $19 for an hour, which can easily be split between five or six people — only In c re d ib le Hulk would have enough strength to hold on for a whole hour. the U n fo rtu n a tely , t h e se a c ­ tivities last only until the sun goes down. Then w hat0 There is always miniature golf. T here are th ree courses: P e te r Pan M i n i - G o l f N o r t h , 6623 Highway 290 E., and South. 1207 Barton Springs Road, and P utt-Putt Golf Courses, 6700 Burnet Road. P rices range from $1.25 for one course to $3 for three courses. I don’t think m iniature golf has to be a everything is dull and dismal. However, there are just as many things to do indoors. You can still skate when it rains. There are three rinks: Hot Wheels Skateland, 1606 S ta ssn e y L a n e , P la y la n d Skating Center, 8822 McCann Drive, and Rollin’ Cross Tex­ as, 821 Rrentwood St Prices th ere a re always vary as s p e c ia l s an d d is c o u n ts . Skating rinks are also some of the hottest pick-up joints in town. Ice skating is one alter­ native to roller skating. It's pure relief from a heat wave. The one and only rink in Austin is in Northcross Mall, 2525 W. Anderson Lane, and costs $3.50 an hour during the day and $4 at night. One of the fine arts of ice-skating is lear­ ning how to trip up your date and then conveniently fall on top of him /her — anything can happen from here. If you prefer team sports, take 12 people to a bowling a lley and g et lanes. tw o Among the m o re p opular alleys are: Austin Bowl-O- Rama, 517 S. Lam ar Blvd., the “ drink and (known as roll" because it’s fun to sit in the bar and have a couple of d rin k s b e fo re you s t a r t bow ling); Highland Lanes, 8909 Burnet Road; D art Bowl, 7801 B u r n e t R o a d ; and Westgate Lanes, 2701 William Cannon Drive. Bowling is one of the most effective ways of taking out your frustrations w ithout hurting anyone — pitch that ball down the alley, who cares whether you hit the pins. The cheapest place to take a d ate is a pinball arcade. Almost everyone can afford 25 cents for one gam e — after t hat first g am e, you can always try for that free one. Close to campus (so you don’t have to waste any gas) is Le Fun, 2200 Guadalupe St., and Jester Dorm has a gam e room in its basement how much closer can you get him /her to your room 9). Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page D9 UVE ROCK 'N' ROLL GAME ROOM DANCING & MIXED DRINKS HAPPY HOUR TUESDAY-FRIDAY 3 PM - 8 PM 1907 E. Riverside Dr. 443-1695 i i| B | FREE ROCK N' ROLL TICKET ADMIT 2 for the PRICE of 1 Valid through Septem ber 30, 1980 AUDIO MASTERS FACTORY WARRANTY SERVICE • A C C U P H A S E p A K A I p ALTEC • A M P E X • B & O • B G W • B O G E N • BSR p C E N T R E X A C R A IG P C R O W N P D U AL P EPI P FISHER # H A R M A N -K A R D O N A H ITACHI P J V C • KLH • M A R A N T Z P M ICRO -SEIKI P N IK K O • P.E. P P A N A S O N IC • P H A SE LINEAR P PHILIPS # PIO NEER P R E C O R D -A -C A LL • SAE # S A N S U I P S A N K Y O P S A N Y O P SCOTT • S H A R P • S H E R W O O D • S U PER SC O PE • T A N D B E R G • T A S C A M • T EAC • T ECH N ICS • T H O R E N S • T O SH IB A P UH ER • Y A M A H A N A T I O N A L t l t C T N O N I C W IE S d a M * V lC € DEALERS ASSOCIATION. INC AND M A N Y OTHER BRANDS 4 5 4 - 6 1 5 1 2825 HANCOCK DR. 9:00 AM TO 6:00 PM — TUES. THROUGH SAT. N A T IO N A L L Y CERTIFIED ELEC T R O N IC S T E C H N IC IA N S H-fl T E X A S ( I K T R O N K S ASSO C IA TIO N o T c I h t Wa T T I x X S The Texas Longhorn by Gorham in gleam ing silverplate to u se as a p a p erw e ig h t or as a m ost elegant knife rest. A th ou g htful gift for any Texan. A g enerous m e m e n to for any visitor. $ 19.9 5 . S o m e t h i n g B e au ti f u l for E v e r y o n e . 9 Back to School Special S12.no Amusements abound in Austin R a lp h B a rre ra . D aily T e x a n Staff sedate game. If you play the holes in reverse order or hit your partner over the head with a putter, it can be quite amusing. Roller skating on the Drag and campus is also a favorite pastime. Down South, 2402 G u a d a lu p e St. and E a sy Rollers Skate Shop. 2330 San Antonio St., both rent skates for $1 or $2 an hour. Although the initial cost is low, the hospital bills may not be. I always think when it rains, I fo u , d o v it (tO M tb C jb fo OHftUf, Owi MitfOi ARMEN’S RESTAURANT “F irst Amenian R estaurant in A u stin ” Specialties: Shish Kebab, Chicken Kebab, Dolma, Kibbi, and more All served with our F am ous Tabulleh Salad E ntrees from $3.50 to $5.50 4 2 0 6 Duval Street 451 -7 8 7 7 ALVIN ORD’S 2200 Guadalupe Lower Level 476-8732 Sandwiches on Fresh Baked Buns Salads Beer B r e a k f a s t S e r v e d 7-10:30 M - F B ring Your A p p etite And A Friend SutuAoif, ii'u u tclt 11am - 2 pm écújfaL R e stau ra n t & Bar 311 W. 6th 477-8999 open Sunday-Thursday 11 am to 12 open Friday and Saturday 11 am to 2 LIVE MUSIC EVERY NIGHT 11AM till 2 A M 7 D A Y S LO N G E S T HAPPY H O U R IN TOW N 1 1 A M - 8 P M Since 1914 Highland Mall Also H ouston / Dallas I Ft. Worth / Tyler I El Paso I Abilene San A ngelo/L ake Jackson U se one of Corrigan's convenient charge plans or American Express, VISA, Master Charge. Mail and Phone Inquiries Invited: (512) 459-1347. Please add sales tax w here applicable plus $2 for postage and handling. WEAVING SUPPLIES YARNS COUNT THREAD EMBROIDERY ’T H E D R y S 2 ® g Í S D JL J K L J t f l Commerce Square 5501 N. Lamar 459-7476 Coming This Month A u g . A u g A u g A u g A u g 5 6 7 8 9 A u g 10 A u g 1 1 A u g . 12 A u g 13 A u g 14 A u g 15 A u g 16 A u g 17 S te p H e n P o s t e r B o n d R k k S te in R o v u o P o c k in ' D o v U s D o n St D ow s C a l l C l u b K e n n a tH T h r e a d g il i a n d A lv in C r o w L o w is A H i* L e g e n d s S te p H e n P o s t o r B a n d S k u n k s TH e P o s ir o s P o n A P a v o P a c k in ' P e v i b K o a a o t li T H r o a d g ill sm d A lv in C r a w A u g 18 A u g 19 A u g 2 0 A u g 21 A u g 2 2 A u g 2 3 A u g 2 4 A u g 25 A u g 2 6 A u g 2 7 A u g 28 A u g 2 9 A u g 3 0 A u g 31 L o w is A ttio L o g o n d s THe P o s ir o s P ic k S t e in R o v u o P o c k in ' P o v ils P a n A P a v o S to p h o n P o s t o r B a n d K e n n e t h T H r o a d g ill a n d A lv in C r o w A lv in C ro w S k u n k s P o c k in ' P o v ils S t o p H o n P o s t e r B a n d P a n A P a v o C a l l C l u b K o n n o tH T H r o a d g ill s a id A lv in C ro w IE BACK BOOM 2015 E. RIVERSIDE DR. 441-41 N E V E R A C O V E R CH AR G E! □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Diverse entertainment events make CEC a student bonus CEC schedule C E C C O N T R A C T E D E V E N T S F O R T H E F A L L S E M E S T E R : Auditorium Joan Armatrading — Sept 11 at Municipal Auditorium. Marian McPartland (jazz pianist) — Sept. 24 at Hogg Houston Ballet — Sept. 26 at the Special Events Center Phil Woods Jazz Quartet — Oct 7 at Hogg Auditorium Bert and Sophie sM im e) Oct. 15-17 at Hogg Auditorium Paramount Theater. Theater. Da (Broadway Touring Company) — Oct. 19 at the Texas Little Symphony — Oct. 23 at the Paramount G IN G A M E (Broadway Touring Company» — Oct. 31. Nov. 1 and 2 at the Paramount Theater American Deaf Dance Company with the Austin Civic Ballet — Nov.13-15 at Hogg Auditorium. Ohio Ballet — Nov. 17 and 18 at Hogg Auditorium. Paul Taylor Dance Company — Dec. 6-8 at the Paramount Theater. C E C C O N T R A C T E D E V E N T S F O R T H E S P R I N G S E M E S T E R : Gaechinger Kantorei and Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra — Jan. 23 at Hogg Auditorium. Pat Carroll in “ Gertrude Stein. Gertrude Stein" — Feb 15 at Hogg Auditorium. Austin Ballet Theatre — Feb. 20 and 21 at Hogg Auditorium. Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (Dance/Concert) - Feb. 27 at the Union Ballroom. Dizzy Gillespie Quartet — March 9 at Hogg Auditorium. Luis Rivera Spanish Dance Company — March 26-28 at Hogg Auditorium. Long Wharf Theater Company — April 16-18 American Deaf Dance Company with the Hartford Ballet and San Antonio Ballet — April 16-18 at Hogg Auditorium. SYMPHONY SQUARE Amphitheatre Concerts A Classical Sunset G. Montague Smith ( Irarlighl Uaitc. Aug. H Aug. 15 Aug. 22 G ab rie li Hra«s Q uintet Aug 29 Allegro t Itamber Group Sept. 5 A «ant A d m i s i ó n : $ 2 . 5 0 ( S I f o r c h i l d r e n ) Sept. 12 A ustin Sym phony Orchestra Z ilk e r Hillside Theatre (F iv e ) Catch A Rising Star Aug. 9 Aug. I ft Aug. 2 I M arcia Hall I i’Hi. A ihf LrgwxG E r ic Jo h n -o n By K ELLY CASH Daily T exan S taff “Look, all I'm trying to say is that you will be slothful, ignorant, hai'e cottage-cheese thighs and eat funyons and creamed weenies when you're 40 if you don ’t check CEC off on your optional fee card. ’’ Velveeta Meringue, avid CEC patron. Terrific-ness and yuckiness have a symbiotic relationship at this university. I give you the H um anities R esearch Center next to Dobie Mall, Ilya Prigogine and Lorene Rogers, the amount of atten­ tion given to men’s sports compared with women’s ... and the polarity becomes more pronounced as each new digit is placed on Fred Akers’ paycheck w h ile those of regular faculty remain all too familiar AND Y'ET for all its mixed blessings, the U n iv e rsity ’s constant plus is that there's lots of neater-than-neat cheap and free things that go on in and around it. I ’m talking your choice every night of eight to 12 movies for less than $3, maybe a music recital or a guest speaker for $1 50 or less, a free stroll through Hun­ tington G allery or down the Drag The Cultural Entertainment Committee is a prime vehicle for cheap entertainment on campus. C EC is a Union com­ mittee made up of students. It is funded by the student pop­ ulation, who support it by checking off C E C on their op- fee c a r d s d u rin g tio n a l registration. A C E C membership entitles students to buy a ticket a day BIKINI TIME! Summer is here. Be ready with permanent hair removal. Bette Pritchett, O w ner For Free Booklet or Complimentary Consultation Day or Evening Call 4 7 7 -4 0 7 0 UNIVERSITY ELECTROLYSIS 6 0 0 W . 2 8 th Suite 2 0 5 HANG LOOSE, WHAT S THE USE? 24th & San A ntonio You want more than survival, don't you? There has to be more to life than stayin' alive. Deeper meaning, greater purpose. If you're searching for something more meaningful than survival, join us. We're finding answers to some of the really critical questions of life. Share with us the exploration of life's meaning at the S T U D E N T C H R IS T IA N F E L L O W S H IP 1909 University Avenue, Austin, Texas 477-5701 We wouldn't be surprised H Stanley found the missHif Li vinf stone through our Classified Ads. Jest about everyliung is the rol TEXAN CLASSIFIED 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 Pilobolus Dance Theater performers before non-CEC holders and get anywhere from $1 to $5 off the original ticket price. This includes tickets for rock con­ certs which C EC presents in conjunction with the Special E v e n ts C enter, M u n icip a l A u d i t o r i u m t he Paramount Theater. a n d The first concert scheduled t h i s y e a r J o a n A r ­ is matrading. Past schedules have included Bruce Springs­ teen, Joni Mitchell, Phoebe Snow. Earth Wind and Fire. W e a t h e r R e p o r t , D a v e B ru beck, Leo Kot t ke and many others. means to dance, theater and music normally available only on the East or West Coast or at high prices in Houston or Dallas — acts like Pilobolus, M u m m en sch anz and The Cambridge-Oxford Shake­ speare Company. Others feel C E C doesn’t bring enough rock and that much of its is dated — program m ing Martha Graham instead of Alvin Ailey, Bob Dylan in­ stead of Steve Forbert. Opinions and preferences notwithstanding, fact remains C E C provides enter­ tainment that would otherwise be unavailable. the S O M E P E O P L E rave and others bitch about C EC . Fo r som e, C E C re p re s e n ts a U N F O R T U N A T E L Y , in the beginning C E C was not an op­ tional fee. Consequently, there was much more money and programming. The start of the optional fee a few years ago resulted in a drop in budget, which caused the demise of the Great Musicians series. But there are still many good acts coming with enough diversity to accommodate everyone’s taste. The $10 C E C m em b e r’s ticket can still be purchased at Adds and Drops and open registration or at the Bursar’s office in the Main Building throughout the year. For rock concerts scheduled at the Special Events Center, C EC offers blocks of tickets which go on sale at Hogg Auditorium prior to sale at the SEC. COOPERATION MADE EASY . . . no labor, no fees. T r y W h e a t s v il le Food Co-op. --- ^ BICYCLES MOTOBECANE • PEUGEOT • MIYATA • NISHIKI 2404 San Gabriel ® Expert repair of all makes and models. Complete selection of parts and tools Workstand and tools for customer use Racing and touring accessories Large selection of cycling clothing Compare our competitive pnces ® On our new bicycles: Free 150 mile checkup 90 day free gear adjustments. 25°o lifetime labor discount. Lifetime frame warranty * M T W F 10-6 Thur. 10-9 Sat 10-5 H i 477-6846 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ S T A R S PREVIEW MEMEBERSHIP V a lid for 3 visits to Stars * Jf J f Jf Jf Jf Jf Jf Jf ■ N a m e _ Address O c c u p a tio n _______________ _____________ V a lid a n y 3 da ys u n til A u g . 31 This card entitles you to one free drink on your first visit. Comm unity Controlled D e m o c r a t^ n » Managed THOMAS ESPARZA, ATTORNEY IMMIGRATION CONSULTANT CONSULTATION: SATURDAY by appointment only. MONDAY-FRIDAY 9 a.m.-6 p.m. SATURDAY by appointment only. 5 1 2 /4 4 1 -0 0 6 2 1001 W . M ary AQUAWORLD Welcomes Back All U.T. Students Come by and see our selec­ tion of aquariums (many different sizes in stock). We also carry a complete line of aquarium accessories for your every need!! HAPPY HOUR 5 pm-9 pm Weekdays OPEN 5 pm-2 am MONDAY-FRIOAY 8 pm-2 am SATURDAY & SUNDAY M O N D A Y - F R ID A Y 5 :0 0 pm - 6 :0 0 pm ALL THE HIGHBALLS & DRAFT BEER YOU CAN DRINK. JUST $ 2 .0 0 AT THE DOOR S U N D A Y UVE JAZZ & ROCK 477-STAR 727 West 23rd Between Rio Grande A Pearl Monday through Saturday Filling your Life w ith D ance Music 9 til 2:00 FREE PARKING LARGEST SELECTION OF TROPICAL FISH IN AUSTIN!! Bring this ad in and we will give you 10% OFF any 10, 20 or 29 gallon aquarium 815 E. 53 V4 St. O ff of Airport Blvd. ^ ( B e h i n d Payless Shoes) 453-2827 I Hours: M o n - S a t 1 1 - 7 1 S u n 12-6 j | * * * * jf * * * jf jf jf * jf jf * jf 16 jf jf jf if jf jf jf jf * jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf Tuesday, Augu t 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page D11 Austin Symphony prospering Conductor Endo to bow out after fifth stanza By WENDY FARB Dally Texan Staff Classical m usic is alive and well in Austin, thanks to Akira Endo and the Austin Symphony Orchestra. But the symphony faces a future th at may not be as bright as its recent past because its maestro, Endo, is leaving for a new con d u ctin g p osition in Louisville, Ky. Endo cam e to Austin in 1975 to become the music director and conductor of the symphony. In 1978 he left his position as principal conductor of American Ballet Theatre in New York City to spend more time in Austin. Endo's plan then was to fill out his season by guest-conducting for other orchestras. THIS SEASON, however, guest con­ ductors will be coming to Austin. Endo said he estim ates he will conduct three or four of the eight concerts offered dur­ ing the 1980-81 season The rest of the concerts will be directed by guest con­ ductors invited by a symphony com ­ m ittee seeking a new conductor. J a n e S ib le y , p r e s id e n t o f th e symphony’s board, said, “ We are going to conduct a two-year search, inter­ viewing talented young men and inviting them to conduct. Akira will conduct the opening concert, the pops concert and probably two o th e rs .’’ “ I would like the tran sitio n (of getting a new conductor) to be as sm ootn as possible, Endo sa id .“ I will stay here this y e a r and the next if Austin needs me. This is the understanding I have in Louisville.” CYNDY ALLEN PERKINS, develop m ent d ire c to r of the sym phony, said, Akira is such a delightful person and h e ’s done w onderful th in g s for the Austin Symphony. We’ll m iss him a g re a t deal, but w e’re glad he has the chance to m ove on .’’ Endo expressed re g re ts about leaving Austin but explained the opportunities Louisville offered him. Louisville is b e tte r b ecause it has a professional o rch estra and th ere a re possibilities of doing bigger things. It is a longer season and they have a civic ballet com pany and opera com pany. Austin is w here Louisville w as 10 or 15 years a g o ,’’ he said. For Austin to advance a s Louisville has, Endo said. “ I suppose it ’ll take a lit­ tle m ore cooperative support and m ore contributions. I will m iss Austin life and the o rc h e stra . It w as a very difficult decision to m a k e .” THE SYMPHONY is a d iv erse group of a p p ro x im a te ly 80 m u s ic ia n s , in­ cluding U niversity pro fesso rs, students and a taxi d isp atch er who re fe rs to him self as “ the second fiddle” because he plays second ch a ir violin. The o rchestra will begin its reg u lar c o ncert series Oct. 9 and will end it May 16. U niversity stud en ts who have paid the C ultural E n te rta in m e n t C om m ittee fee a re entitled to co ncert tickets a t a d isco u n t. S tu d e n ts can buy seaso n tickets or individual tick ets through the CEC. DARREN WALKER, CEC chairm an, said. Buying through the CEC is an a d ­ vantage because the symphony is usual­ ly sold out. Also, we get the best se a ts for the c o n c e rts.” Besides its reg u lar seaso n ’s concerts, which a re held at M unicipal A uditorium , and its Thursday night m ini-season con­ c e rts, the symphony also offers outdoor concerts. The symphony p resen ts su m m er con­ c e rts F riday nights a t 8:30 until Sept. 5 a t the Symphony Square A m phitheatre, 1101 Red R iver St. Saturday nights m usic lovers can “ C atch a Rising S ta r” a t 8:30 when the sym phony presen ts pop­ u la r jazz, rock and country groups. THE SYMPHONY will sponsor a night of free classical e n te rta in m e n t Sept 12 a t 8:45 p.m. a t the Zilker H illside T h eatre in Zilker P ark . Akira Endo Dally Texan Staff Austin theaters produce wide range of drama, musicals , ar\Ki o c v d a i r» By RON SEYBOLD Daily Texan Staff All right, students, FREEZE! Put that money back in your wallet. Don’t be so quick to spend those entertainm ent bucks on m ovies, m usic or m uscatel. T here’s a big theater scene in this town on the Colorado. Those m ovies will be around for years; theater is alive now. Even with the recent dem ise of Melodrama Theater and Country Dinner Playhouse, there’s still plenty out there to make you laugh, cry and everything in between. The prices run from $2 to $6 a head, and it’s a classy night out if you want to impress that little redhead in English 306. Austin sinks its municipal m onies into ZACHARY SCOTT THEATER CENTER, at R iversid e D rive and Lam ar Boulevard on the shores of Town Lake. They offer a bargain season for the more dedicated (or cost-conscious) theater­ goers: $14 up front gets you into six shows for the price of four. 1 he deal also gets you $1 off the guest productions throughout the season. Regular prices are $3.50 Wednesdays, Thursdays and Sun­ days, $6 Fridays and Saturdays. All shows are at 8:15 p.m ., ex­ cept Sundays, which are at 2:15 p.m. Although reservations are recommended, the seating is first-com e, first-served. ZACHARY SCOTT SCHEDULE: Aug. 15-Sept. 6 — “ 110 In the Shade” — a musical. Sept. 12-Oct. 4 — “ Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” — drama by Edward Albee. Oct. 10-26 — “ Buried Child” — drama by Sam Sheppard (Guest production; $3.50 Wednesday, Thursday, Sunday; $4.50 Friday-Saturday.) Nov. 7-20 — “Sly Fox — com edy by Larry Gelbart (creator of M*A*S*H). D ickens' story (This o n e ’s fre e if you bring a toy or clothing item to be donated to Goodwill.) On the U niversity side of the riv e r downtown a re the indepen­ dent th e a te rs. Some have financial b ack ers like Zachary Scott, but no public funds prop up th eir seasons. At 214 W F ourth St. is the GASLIGHT THEATER, deep in the h e a rt of the w arehouse d istric t. C urtain tim es a re 8 p.m . every night except Sundays, a 6 p.m . s ta rt. P ric e s a re $4.50 for stud ents and $5 for everyone else M ondays through T hursdays and Sundays; F riday and S aturday nights adm ission will be $5.50 for stu d e n ts an d $6 fo r o th e rs . R e s e rv a tio n s a r e recom m ended GASLIGHT THEATER SCHEDULE: Aug. 20-Sept. 13 (W ednesday through Sunday) — “ G etting O ut” — a d ram a about fitting back into the re a l world a fte r prison life. (A dm ission is $4.50 F rid a y and S aturday and $3.50 W ednesday and T hursday for this one.) Aug. 24-Sept. 9 (Sunday through T uesday) — “ The Good Doc­ tor — A Neil Simon com edy based on R ussian short stories. (A dm ission $3.) Oct. 22-Nov. 8 (M ondays, W ednesdays, F rid a y s and S a tu r­ days) — La B ohem e” — a big opera in an in tim ate setting. F rid ay shows will be in Italian, all oth ers in English. S m allest, q uain test and m ost refresh in g of the independents is THEATER IN THE RYE, a tiny sto re fro n t a t 120 W. F ifth St. No play is too old o r obscure for this hum ble estab lish m en t to presen t. This m ay be due to the th e a te r ’s size — it se a ts only 40 to 60 people and has a m icroscopic overhead com pared with o th er th e a te rs. You get to the re stro o m by way of the stage, so com e p re p a re d to m ake a good e n tra n c e and exit. A dm ission is $2 ev ery night, with show s T hursday through Sunday a t 8 p.m . THEATER IN THE RYE SCHEDULE: Aug. 7-24 — “ The C hin ese” and “ Dr. F is h ” — two one-act Dec. 11-22 — “A Christmas Carol” — a m usical adaptation of com edies. O ldest of the independents is CENTER STAGE THEATER, a t 326 E. Sixth St. C enter Stage has tailored its season around a three-show form at — m usicals, c o m e d y /d ra m a s and m usical revues. P rices for shows a re $5 for stud ents with IDs and senior citizens and $6 for all o thers F rid ay s and S atu rd ay s; $4 for students and $5 for others T hursdays and Sundays. C urtain tim es a re 8 p.m. T hursday thru S aturday and 6 p.m . Sundays CENTER STAGE SCHEDULE: Aug. 12-16 — D ear L iar — a com edy about G eorge B ernard Shaw s relationship with the a c tre s s Mrs. P a tric k Cam pbell (P ric e s a re $3.50 for students and $4.50 for o th e rs.) Sept 5-14 - “ Singin’ Sets Me F r e e ” — a lig h th earted frolic into A m erican folk m usic. ($4 for students, $5 for o th e rs.) Sept. 19-21 M otherlines — a series of e x c e rp ts from P la y s an d d r a m a tic fo c u sin g on c h a n g in g r e a d in g s , relationships betw een m others and daughters. (A dm ission $3.) Oct. 17-Nov. 16 — “ T hree Penny O p era” — the classic B recht/W eil m usical about ten em en t life in the ’30s. Nov. 28-Dec. 21 A Clown of G od” — a w orld p re m ie re of A ustinite M arty M artin 's play. Closer to hom e th e re ’s the UT DRAMA DEPARTMENT, with p erform an ces in the B. Iden Payne T h e a te r and the T heater Room, both at 23rd S treet and San Ja c in to B oulevard on cam pus. P ric e s for m a jo r productions a re ste e p e r than for M aster of Fine A rts shows d irected by g ra d u a te students. UT DRAMA DEPARTMENT SCHEDULE: Oct. 8-11 — “ Sergeant M usgrave’s D ance” — T h e a te r Room Oct 25-Nov. 2 — “ Inside Out and “ W orking” — T h e a te r (M FA). Room (M FA). Nov. 14-22 — S h ak esp eare’s “ A ll’s Well T hat E nds W ell” — m a jo r production in the B. Iden P ay n e T heater. Throughout the y e a r o ther groups, such as the A fro-A m erican P la y e rs and the Austin R eperto ry T h eater, will sta g e shows a t the above th eaters. BOOK-BUYING I, VC rí L K e "A GOOD PLACE TO BOOGIE" Proprietor — George Majewski Young m a n ,” said the judge sternly, “it's alcohol and alcohol alone that is responsible for your sorry state. ” I m awfully glad to hear you say that, your honor, ” replied the fellow w ith a sigh of relief. “E verybody else says i t ’s aU m y fault. ’* «306 v / V L r r NORTH LAMAR OPTHE AUSTIN, TEXAS STAR ™ CIIOt3$-0J09 NOW OPEN OVER 1400 FEET OF SPUSHIN' & SPLASHIN' U Sf t S* V 1 WATER SLIDE 1001 W. BEN WHITE 4 4 1 -8 2 7 9 OPEN 11-11 EVERY DAY CHILDREN UNDER 12 — *3 ALL DAY ASK ABOUT OUR GROUP RATES V * Hour Free W ith Purchase of Vi Hour a t regular price. V a lid Mon.-Fri. O ne coupon per person per d ay A u s t i n ’s Finest Country & Western Nightclub S tu d e n t N ig h t T u e s d a y Silver Dollar North 9201 Burnet Rd. 8 3 7 - 1 8 2 4 $ 2 2 5 S tu d e n t N ig h t T h u rs d a y Silver Dollar South 5337 Hwy. 290W (Hwy. 71W) 837-8899 PITCHER BBER FREE ADMISSION w /c u rre n t student I.D. C O M IN G ATTRACTION Silver Dollar North Rex Allen, Jr. Sept. 1 THE BRANDING IRON FEATURES FAN TASTIC SPECIALS MONDAY NIGHT SPECIAL ALL The Sirloin Steak & Crab Legs You Can Eat From 5-10 p.m. ForONLY *5.95 S erved w ith S alad Bar, French Fries, Hush Puppies TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIALS ALL The Catfish & Boiled Shrimp You Can Eat From 5-10 p.m. ForONLY ’6.95 S erved w ith S alad B ar, Beane, French Friee & Hueh Puppies THE THURSDAY NIGHT SPECIAL ALL The Sirloin Steak & Shrimp You Can E a t F ro m 5-10 p.m. ForONLY *8.95 S erved w ith S alad Bar, French Fries, A Hot Bread FRIDAY & SATURDAY — 6 p.m. on ... the fabulous BEEF & BEACH BUFFET PRIME RIB & YOUR FAVORITE SEAFOODS Prim e Rib, Boiled Shrimp, Fried Shrimp, Stuffed Shrimp, Stuffed Crab, Baked Fish, 4 Catfish, Alaskan King Crab, O ysters, Scallops, Shrimp Creole, Frog Legs, Baked Potatoes & Salad Bar. ALL You Can Eat for ONLY, *11.95 263-2827 cocktails in our comfortable bar. 6‘2 miles past Oak Hill on Hwy. 71 West ^ — ly i u . y H i . t y » . i i i F O F ^ O l/R / A f / i A U N IV E R S IT Y CATHOLIC CENTER 2010 U N I V E R S I T Y A V E N U E A U S T I N , T E X A S 78705 476-7351 L itu rg ies: Weekdays: 9:30 ( F a m ily M ass)/12:05/5:05 Sundays: 9:30/11:15 ( F o l k ) / l : 1 5 (Spanish) 7 p.m. ( F o l k ) / 1 0 p.m. (Candlelight) COUNSELING P R A Y E R /S C R IP T U R E GROUPS ACTION FOR HUNGER STUDENT M IN IS T R Y CATHOLIC B E L I E F GROUPS B IB L E STUDY GROUPS RETREATS SPEAKERS — PRE-CANA CONFERENCES T i Page D12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5. 1980 Used clothing provides ‘rags to riches’ wardrobe 8y VICTORIA BARNAART J u s t a s fine w in e a g e s and mellows, so does clothing. And like wine, clothes gain character and fam e with time. But while wine it b e c o m e s m ore exp en sive as g r o w s o ld e r , c l o t h e s b e c o m e cheaper. But not cheap. The price may be low. but vintage clothes are better made than the mass-produced, department-store garbage. With a lot of time, a little taste and some imagination, vin­ tage clothes can be unique, prac­ tical and elegant. Austin has a wide variety of stores selling vintage wearables, varying as to clothes available, Drices and personal help. THE GRANDADDY (or grand­ ma) of the vintage stores is Old Time Teenie’s, 1126 W. Sixth St. to 5 p.m. A first Hours are 11 a m i m p r e s s i o n o f T e e n i e ’ s is overw helm ing; the store overflows with m e n ’s and w o m e n ’s clothing of every description. E v e ry square inch of the sto re is used for display­ ing something. The giass-wmdowed th e w a ll a r e c a b i n e t s a g a i n s t c ra m m e d with silver pill boxes, old- fashioned fans and sm all china dolls; one wall has a wonderful collection of sm all antique purses in m eta l m esh and petit point. The d r e s s e r in the c o rn e r is com pletely covered with h a ts; in fact, the e n ­ tire c o rn e r is knee deep in old hats. A lth o u g h T e e n i e ’s p r i c e s a r e s o m e tim e s high, is worth it and Teenie is alw ays will­ the selection ing to help in the search for say, a Joan Crawford jacket. the second St. Vincent de Paul's, 325 E Sixth St., open from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. specializes in vintage clothing and floor. accessories on M erchandise generally includes a spectrum of the weirdly chic, c o m ­ pletely inexplicable and the truly item s bizarre — m ade from leopard skin prints to a giant cowhide skirt and hat for som e sort of m u ta n t cow costume. P ric e s a re among the best; a lined wool jac k e t with padded shoulders is $2, an elegant m e n ’s silk ja c k e t is $1 and t h e r e ’s a selection of shirts for 50 cents. from punketta DOWN THE S T R E E T is Henry's M emry’s Vintage Clothing, 423 E. Sixth St. Hours a re 11:30 a.m . to 5:30 p.m Monday through Satur­ day. and 7 p.m. to 11 p.m Thursday through Saturday. The store has a wide selection of jewelry, especial­ ly in rhinestone, and som e truly l a s t w o n d e rfu l h a t s . A u s t i n ’s r e m a i n i n g a u t h e n t i c H a w a i i a n shirts can be found here, together few v e r y n ic e b e a d e d w ith a sw eaters and shells and lots of old- timey tucked, lacey and ruffled for­ máis. P ric e s a r e quite reasonable, with a lot of d resses in the $5 to $15 range, and som e sheer dainty shirts from the ’40s a t $3 to $8. Once More With Feeling a t 17th and San Antonio s tre e ts is open from 11 a m to 6 p.m. The boutique ca rrie s “ a tasteful selection of the that includes m ore old and n e w ’ than any vintage m en s clothing other Austin store. They have an ex­ cellent selection of m en s vests and ’40s style baggy pants a s well as second-hand jeans and cutoffs pric­ ed from $4 to $8 in s p e c i a l i z e s Ragowitz a t 18th and San Antonio s t r e e t s r e n t i n g costum es, but also has a small room of vintage clothes to sell that in­ cludes b eaded s w e a te r s , m e n ’s ve sts, w om en s v in ta g e s h irts, lingerie and some dresses. In the next two rooms, for about $5 plus a $5 deposit, you can be anything from a ’60s mod rocker to a southern belle, com plete with bonnet, fan and appropriately buttoned shoes. The costum es a re mostly to rent, but owner Cassie Lugge says if you “ c a n ’t live without i t ” s h e ’ll con­ sider selling it. UPSTAIRS AND deep in the h e a rt is R o s e of B l u e b o n n e t P l a z a Arthur's Attic, at 24th and Nueces stre e ts, with m ore tre a su re s than g r a n d m a ’s attic ever had. Hours a re 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to Saturday. I t’s small, but it has an in te r e s tin g se le c tio n of v in ta g e clothes, including som e definitive is a bowling shirts. Also, basket with item s priced under $1, alw ays worth looking through for old-fashioned button-on lace collars. On the Drag is The Bazaar, which usually succeeds in living up to its name. The Bazaar has both the highest prices and the m ost unique vintage clothes in town. 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Audio Express Policy No. 3 ’ **90 Day Receiver Trade-up Policy*** When you buy a receiver from Audio Express . . . if for any reason you're not completely satisfied . . . you can trade it in at full purchase price on any other receiver, at its regular low price, within ninety days. 4901 BURNET RD. NEXT TO SOUND WAREHOUSE. OPEN 11-8 THIS WEEKEND Longhorns searching for new leader Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page E5 By TOM DUDERSTADT Daily Texan Staff You can say one thing about Abe Lemons — h e ’s never short on words. But when confronted about the possibilities the coming season brings, the Longhorns coach gets peculiarly silent. It's not that Lemons doesn’t want to talk about his team , but “ you have to be realistic,” he said. And L em o n s s a y s , on p a p e r, th e Longhorns are at a disadvantage this year. “ Ron Baxter ran over the con­ ference for four y ears,” Lemons th e re c e n tly d e p a rte d said of forward who was drafted and later cut by the NBA-champion Los Angeles Lakers. As a senior last season, Baxter was the team ’s pillar of strength. He started all 30 gam es, led the team in scoring and steals, was se­ cond in rebounding and assists and played m ore minutes than any other Longhorn. More im portantly, Bax­ ter provided the young team with leadership. BUT REPLACING Baxter poses a challenge, assistant coach Barry Dowd said. “ We’re looking for someone to be a leader,” he said. Lemons, who is uncertain, joking­ ly quipped, “ Maybe Dowd will be our Moses.” On a m ore serious note, the m en­ tors agreed 6-10 sophomore LaSalle Thompson might take up some of the scoring slack. “ LaSalle should be as good as any big man in the conference.’’ Lemons said. So good in fact, that Lemons said an injury to Thompson might com­ pletely change the Horns’ style of In his Southwest Conference play the debut year, Thompson league rebounding, averaging almost 11 per contest and was the third-best Longhorn scorer with a 13.6 average in conference play. led in SINCE TEXAS has no seniors on this y ea r’s roster, 6-6 junior Henry Johnson will be one of the elder statesm en. Johnson averaged 9.3 points a gam e last year and his presence as a s ta rte r halfw ay through the season helped to bring the Longhorns out of a slump and carry them down the stretch. Sophomore Fred Carson is the other returning sta rte r for Texas. The 6-1 guard may also be the man Lemons is looking for to fill the void in the leadership departm ent. Car­ so n e x h i b i t e d s o m e of h is capabilities for guiding the team from the playm aker position last year, dishing out four assists per g am e, seco n d -b est the co n ­ ference. in JUNIOR KEN Montgomery, 6-6, who transferred to UT two years ago from North Carolina State, is another returning letterm an who should see considerable action for Texas this season. Last year, he played in 27 of the 30 gam es, usually in a reserve role. He is generally considered a fine outside shooter, proof of which was his 55 percent field-goal percentage last year. Rob Cunningham, a 6-8 junior, and 6-7 sophomore Bill Wendlandt com­ plete the list of returnees. Each averaged about five m inutes of play­ last season, ing usually in reserve capacities. tim e per gam e Texas’ new faces this season in­ three three freshm en and clude junior college transfers. MIKE WACKER, 6-8, out of San Marcos, may be able to help the te a m rig h t aw ay , Dowd said. Wacker averaged 22 points and 11 rebounds per gam e as a high school senior and many rated him the No. 1 prospect in the state. But Lemons w arns against coun­ ting too heavily on freshm en, and after last season, he should know “ Freshm en get caught up in the vastness of T exas,” Lemons said, referring mainly to George Turner and Steve Frederick, who were freshm en last year and are now attending junior college to regain to eligibility. Another freshm an who will be battling the adjustm ents to college is 5-11 Ray H arper from Bremen, Ky. He averaged 35 points a game and hit 93 percent of his free throws as a senior. Jo ining H a rp e r is 5-9 Bobby H arris from Columbus, Ohio. H arris averaged 26 points and five steals an outing last year He set a Columbus city record by scoring 50 points in one game when he was a junior. Junior Daryl Bushod. 6-7, will join the Longhorns from Henderson C om m unity C ollege, w here he averaged 18 points and 10 rebounds per game and earned a spot on the A l l - E a s t e r n T e x a s A t h l e t i c Conference team . Another junior college transfer coming to Texas is 6-5 junior Louie Graves from Cowley County Com­ munity College in Arkansas City, Kan. He averaged 22 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists last season and was named to the All- Jayhawk Conference team. ROUNDING OUT the roster for the Longhorns this year is 6-6 junior Virdell Howland, who transferred from Tyler Junior College where he led his team in scoring and reboun­ ding the past two years. Howland also led his team to a third-place finish in the National Junior College tournament. While Texas will be relying heavi­ ly on newcomers, other schools around the conference will be arm ­ ed with seasoned veterans. As a m atter of fact, the only team which suffered m ore severe losses than the Longhorns is SMU, due mainly to the firing of Coach Sonny Allen. But in spite of obvious obstacles, Lemons said, “ We have to have a good club. We’ve never had a real bad one. Everything being said right now is just speculation, anyway.” LaSalle Thompson tries for rebound against SMU. Women’s basketball team eyes national championship By TOM DUDERSTADT Daily Texan Staff A 135-28 record over the last four years. Instant recognition as one of the nation’s top powers in women’s basket­ ball. The country’s longest winning streak — 30 gam es — during the 1979- 1980 season. Three tournam ent titles during the sam e year as well ending the season ranked fifth nationally. What else can a coach bring to a team ? For Jody Conradt and her Longhorns, the answ er is a national championship. But Conradt, last y e a r’s coach of the year in wom en’s college basketball, says one key ingredient is m issing from her national championship potion. “ IT TAKES somebody 6-8 to build a dynasty,” she said. “ The tallest player to graduate from high school in Texas last year was 6-2 or 6-3,” Conradt said. And since Texas can ’t provide a big girl inside, Conradt has searched in other states, but with little success, because of the Association for Inter­ c o lle g ia te A th le tic s fo r W om en recruiting guidelines. “ The AIAW rules definitely hinder us,” she said. “ We can’t pay expenses for a player’s visit. She has to provide her own transportation if she wants to come. We re not even allowed to con­ tact players while they’re off cam pus.” But all is not lost for the Longhorns in the coming season. As a m atter of is satisfied with her fact, Conradt returning players and recruits. “ I’M EXTREMELY pleased with all of them. The new guards (Esoleta Whaley and Terri Mackey) are not as good as last y ea r’s yet, but they have the potential to be as good or b e tte r,” she said. But Conradt expresses concern over the Longhorns’ lack of height. “ We’re going to be sm all again,” she said, “ but we will be quick and we may have a better shooting club than we had last year. We’re going to play good defense and ru n .” (H attie) Browning One of the people providing Texas with quickness will be Esoleta Whaley, who was the No. 1 guard prospect in Texas and “ should ease the pain of los­ ing (last y e a r’s national leader in steals),” Conradt said. Whaley averaged 18 points per game for Slaton High School and led her team to its third straight Class AA state title ANOTHER FRESHMAN who should see action in the backcourt is 5-7 Terri Mackey from Sapulpa. Okla. Mackey also averaged 18 points per contest last year, but m ust adjust to playing the full-court gam e, because Oklahoma high schools still play divided court basketball. She was also an All-State high school selection. Nancy Walling, a 5-9 sophomore from Canyon returns at the guard spot for the Longhorns. She spent considerable tim e last year watching three All- America guards from the sidelines, but played in 26 games picking up some valuable experience. T h re e -y e a r le tte r-w in n e r L aura H a r r is c o m p le te s th e L on g h o rn backcourt. H arris, a native of Greene, Ind., served mainly as a substitute for Browning last year, but saw action in 16 games. NELL FORTNER, who led Texas in scoring last year with 13.7 points per game, returns to her post position. F ortner is a form er P arade Magazine high school All-American and started 32 of T exas’ 34 games last season. Joy Williams, 6-0 sophomore post from Waco, led the team in rebounds and blocked shots last year with 6.9 rebounds per game and 32 rejections on the season. Sophomore Debra Rankin, another form er P a r a d e M ag a z i n e high school All-American, returns on the Longhorn frontline. She averaged 7.7 points per game last season in a backup role and will probably see extensive action this year. Lee Ann Penick, who walked on last year as a freshman, played forw ard in 31 gam es last season. Penick, a native of Austin, sank the winning free-throw in last y ear’s 81-80 win over M ercer during the AIAW national playoffs. DERENDA DURR and Barb Totzke. two sophomores, are the other re tu r­ ning Texas players. In addition to Whaley and Mackey, the Longhorns picked up S herryl Hauglum, Lesa Jones and Melissa Scott this season. Hauglum is a 5-10 forw ard who averaged 28 points per contest for Vic­ toria High School last year. She was named to the P a r a d e M a g a z i n e All- America second team and also won All- State honors. She was rated by m ost as the top prospect in Texas. Jones transferred from Angelina Junior College where she averaged 27 points and 15 rebounds as a post. Scott averaged 18 points and 11 rebounds for Harlingen High School and was nam ed to the All-Valley team for the last three years. THE LONGHORNS may get a boost in their lineup before the season gets underw ay, as All-Am erica Ja c k ie Swaim is appealing to the AIAW for another year of eligibility. Swaim suffered torn knee ligam ents last Decem ber and after surgery, was sidelined for the rem ainder of the year. But the chances of Swaim suiting up with the Longhorns for another season are slim , Conradt said. “ A winning streak like last y ea r's is a once-in-a-lifetime thing.” But a year ago, following a 37-4 season, Conradt said, “ I t’s going to be difficult to take up where last year's team left off. ” Horns seek key combinations as route to No. 1 ranking By JOE CHEMYCZ Daily Texan Staff Over the years, the University m en’s swimming team has produced both quality sw im m ers and quantity, but never both in the sam e season. That theory held true until last year. Texas em erged from the shadow of its football team and a history of also-ran finishes to burst on the scene as a legitim ate contender for the national championship. The 1979-80 campaign was the finest season ever for the Tex­ as swim team . The Longhorns, under second-year head coach Eddie Reese, snapped SMU’s 25-year conference stranglehold on first place by swampmg the Mustangs and other league con­ tenders in the SMU pool in March They defeated the Tennessee Volunteers for the first tim e in 11 dual m eetings. Texas capped off the Cinderella season with a strong second-place finish behind California at the NCAA m eet at Harvard. The glass slipper nearly fit. “ WE DID A little better than I thought we would,” Reese said, looking back at the NCAA m eet. The Longhorns, despite the year of new successes, w ere picked to finish sixth prior to the sta rt of competition by the so-called experts. In Boston, the Longhorns also produced their first-ever in­ dividual and relay national champions. Freshm an Clay B ritt took the 100-yard backstroke event and the foursome of Britt, Scott Spann, William Paulus and Kris Kirchner won the 400- yard medley relay, setting six records in the process. (David “ Skippy” Browning won four diving titles in 1951 and ’52.) NCAA m eet, diving coach Mike Brown said. “ But then you can’t count on freshm en as much as you can count on d iv ers.” Put those two together and “ you just never know.” NEWCOMERS FOR Texas this year will include middle dis­ tance freestyler John Smith of Akron, Ohio; freestyle sprinter Tom Agar of Lansing, Mich.; Little Rock’s Bill Stafford, breastroke and individual m edley; Mike Higgs of Cincinnati, distance freestyle, and Rick Fields of New York, also a sprinter. “ They (the freshm en) have the potential,” Reese said. “ They are a lot further away at this point than last y ea r’s group. But talent-wise, they may be b etter.” Strong words, considering that R eese's last bunch of new­ com ers was listed as the best freshm en crop in the country The schedule will again m atch Texas and the best of the rest. The Longhorns will have dual m eets against six of the top 13 team s from last y e a r’s NCAA m eet. Arizona, eighth in Boston, will start things off Nov. 15 at the Texas Swim Center. UCLA, fourth last year and an early favorite this year, will com e to Austin Jan. 3. Also due in town are Arizona State, Stanford ahd SMU The Longhorns’ biggest m eet away from home will be at Florida on Jan. 24. Add to that the SWC m eet in early March and NCAA m eet three weeks later. Checking R eese’s coaching record, the returning sw im m ers past perform ances and the new re cru its’ potential, 1980-81 may be the year that the glass slipper does indeed fit. Todd Crosset lifts for air “ There is never any guarantee th at a team will swim up to its full potential in a m eet such as th a t,” Reese explained. “ I figured the best we would have been able to do was fourth, and we could be anywhere in the top eight. If last season was b righ t, 1980-81 could shine even brighter for Reese and Co. Six new recruits join a squad that rem ains nearly intact from last year. All but one point-scorer while practicing butterfly. Da,,¥ Texan s,a" from the NCAA m eet Spann return for another shot at the coveted co llegiate cham pionship, which will be the Longhorns’ home pool next spring. in Heading the list of new recruits is diver David Lindsay of Arlington, the state AAAA high school champion. “ Lindsay could be, should be a point scorer for us at the Women swimmers seek higher position, bid for first national championship By JOE CHEMYCZ Dally Texan Staff Two years ago the wom en’s swimming program was in trouble. In 1978, the team finished 18th at the national championships. The answ er seemed to be a coaching change. E nter Paul Bergen from the highly successful Nashville Aquatic Club. It was a story of instant success. In 1979 the team won its first-ever state title and moved all the way up to fourth at the AIAW national m eet. B ergen’s 1979-80 team did even better, finishing with a 6-2 dual m eet record, winning the state championship for the second straight year and in­ ching its way to second nationally, just six points behind champion Stanford CHARACTERIZE THE season as “ so close, yet so fa r.” A good swim here, a better dive there and the team m ight have brought the national trophy to Austin last March. Bergen returns everyone from that second- place squad, having also added Austinites Kim Linehan and Jennifer Baron among his recruits, and the propects for Texas’ first AIAW’ national champion are good. The Longhorns started the season Nov. 10 with an 84-56 dual win over Texas Tech. A win over the Canadian National All-Stars followed one week later Then the Lady Longhorns piled up 734 points in the University of Houston Invitational m eet in Decem ber. Houston totaled 415 points to finish in second In Ja n u a ry , two easy wins cam e against Texas A&M and Houston before the big showdown with then rated No. 1 Florida a t the Texas Swim Center. The m eet could not have been closer. Texas, having won seven of the first 12 events, led 54-52 going into the final race, the 400-yard freestyle relay. Both team s were even throughout the 400 yards, but F lorida’s Amy Caulkins out-touched Joan Pennington by 48 of a second and the Gators escaped the TSC with a 59-54 win and their top ranking intact. The team got a real taste of losing one week later as they traveled wTest. After a 75-65 win over fifth-ranked Arizona State in Tempe, the team m et No. 2 Stanford the next day in Palo Alto, Calif. The rugged travel schedule proved too much. Texas, on a down-swing after the loss to Florida, m et a charged up group of Cardinals in foreign w aters, eventually losing 73-40. AFTER THE Stanford m eet, no fewer than five two of whom found sw im m ers becam e ill. them selves in the hospital. On Feb. 8 the team concluded its dual session with a 74-63 win over SMU in Dallas. The state m eet in Fort Worth saw Texas blow a 100-point lead after the first day, increase it to 300 the next, eventually winning the three-day affair by 375 points over its nearest rival. SMU. Finally the national m eet in Las Vegas Texas won five of six events on the fourth day of com ­ petition, reducing Stanford’s lead from 31 to six points, but it wasn’t enough. The Cardinals ac­ cumulated 629 points, Texas 623. USC was third with 494 Florida fourth with 443 1 2. For Texas, the 623 points was nearly double it had scored the previous year the 339 ip Pittsburgh Altogether the Longhorns won nine of 24 events, with 10 different swim m ers earning a total of 30 All-America honors by placing in the top three at the national m eet. Jill S terkel, a from H acienda freshm an Heights, Calif., was the dominant sw im m er dll year long for the Longhorns. Sterkel won the high point aw ard at the national m eet, taking 97 out of a possible 100 points in her five events. Sterkel won four events and placed second in another while bolstering two winning University rel^y team s. All four of Sterkel’s wins set Association of In terco lleg iate A thletics for Women ahd American record tim es. J Following the year, Sterkel was nam ed the Broderick Award winner as the country’s outstan­ ding women's collegiate swim m er in­ Diver Denise Christensen also won an dividual title, capturing the 3-meter springboard event with a m eet-record total of 453.80 points. Joan Pennington, the 1979 Broderick winner, recaptured her 100-yard individual medley title and Kim Black won the 1650-yard freestyle. During the course of the season, 17 of the school’s 25 swimming records were broken Ten freshm en, five sophomores and two junior^ com prised Texas squad last year and the addition of Baron and Linehan m ay put the Longhorns over *¡ the top in the national m eet in 1981, Texas’ A ll-A m erica Jill Sterkel. Greg Vimont, Dally Texan Staff Page E6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Ellington and Jones seek to improve on Royal standard for men’s athletics By DIXIE GAIL PROCTER Daily Texan Staff An old face was placed behind a new desk in Jan uary when Bill Ellington jo b a s took over D arrell R o y a l’s a t h le t i c d ir e c t o r th e T e x a s Longhorns. fo r Ellington has been on the Longhorn sta ff for 20 years, serving a s an a s s is ­ tant coach to Royal, a freshm an coach, assistan t athletic director and now the head man He is joined in the new decade of sports by another fam ilar face. “ T .” Jones, who has not been on a T exas staff in 17 years, has taken Ellington’s place a s assistan t director. Jones, a 1953 graduate of UT, led the Longhorns a s quarterback for the 1952 SWC-title team He ended his college career playing in the 1953 Cotton Bowl victory over Tennesse. After returning from the m ilitary, Jones served a s an assistan t coach un­ der both Ed P rice and Royal. He resigned in May 1963 to enter private business. joined City National Bank of He Austin in 1969 and w as director of m arketing and senior vice president when he a cce p te d February. the UT job in “ When Ellington called m e up, all he said is come see m e,” Jones said. “ I had no idea what he was going to offer m e.” Both m en a r e fa c e d w ith th e challenge of improving the athletic departm ent which will not be easy, since it is already considered one of the best in the nation “ We have outstanding coaching in all sp o rts," Ellington said “ Ju st look at Akers' record for only three years — it’s good or outstanding.” the m en ’s Ellington and Jo n es are responsible for all eight of in ter­ collegiate athletic team s. They are un­ der the control of the Athletic Council, which is m ade up of faculty, students and ex-students. “ We have a “ They set the p o licies we m u st follow,” Jo n es said ‘Ellington and I are both m em bers, but I do not vo te.” lot of ch ecks and balances sy stem s h ere,” Ellington said The council reports to President Peter Flaw n ’s office, which reports to the Board of Regents. is a little over $4 “ Our budget m illion,” Ellington said $1 m illio n o f th a t scholarships. “And close to is s p e n t on “ A lot of students think the athletic departm ent spends tax dollars, but all the money we get com es from gate receip ts.” “ The SWC sets the price for tickets and the NCCA also sets rules we m ust abide by ,” Ellington said The NCAA lim its the num ber of sch olarsh ip s which m ay be given to a total of 158 for all sports combined The football team can have a total of 95 athletes on scholarship at one time. Basketball can have 15, baseball 13, track and cross-country 14, swimming 11, golf five, and tennis five. Planning ahead, Ellington hopes that som e of the Longhorn facilities can be improved during the new decade. “ We have great facilities for sp ec­ tators, but we need to improve the facilities for the ath letes,” Ellington said, “especially the visitors’ dressing room s.” “ We also need a new tennis facility — a good one — closer than 5lst S tre et.” he said “ I look for the future to be good.” Ellington said. Ralph Barrera, Daily Texan Staff Bill Ellington Ralph Barrera, Daily Texan Staff ‘T.’ Jones Lopiano seeks women’s program’s first national title By KAREN ANN BROE Daily Texan Staff Women’s ath letics at the University are beginning to share som e of the light long dominated by m en’s football — literally. The wom en's cro ss country team , with wins in the state and Southwest regional m eets, caused the Tower to be lit twice last year. The swim m ing team fell six points short of a national championship last season and the basketball squad rode the longest winning streak in the nation, going 30 gam es without a loss. Men’s team s are not the only ones perfor­ ming for an audience. Many of the women's team s are now revenue-producers. For 1980-1981. the w om en's D epartm ent of the In terco llegiate A th letics U n iversity for an unprecedented $1.15 million, with $235,000 earm arked for 85 full or partial scholarships in eight sports. is ask in g Men still outshine the women in the budget area. The m en’s departm ent is asking for $4,208 million, including scholarships in eight sports. UT women have been competing in sports program s since the early 1900s. Sports clubs, which em phasized leadership training, were formed to provide p ractice once a week on “ playdays.” O ccasionally, the women would travel to a tournament at another school All clubs were enjoined to the U niversity of T exas Sports Association, a board of elected student supervisors. Faculty sponsors were also required for the clubs. Anna H iss, who later the University joined becam e director of w om en's intram ural sports and the D epartm ent of Physical Education, advised UTSA in its early years. in 1918 and Hiss also w as instrum ental in the opening of the Women’s Gym nasium in 1931, later to be renamed in her honor. During the late 1950s and early 1960s, in­ terest in UTSA and sports clubs began to Intercollegiate ath letics for women wane got started in 1966, when a group of volleyball and basketball players asked for and receiv­ ed assistan ce from the University in fielding two te a m s. its fir s t y e a r, w om en’s athletics operated under a budget of $700. In Golf, gym n astics and badminton were add­ ed the next year, with sw im m ing following suit in 1969. Eventually, eight team s would com e to com pete under a financially indepen­ dent D epartm ent of Women’s Athletics, form ed in 1974 Dr. Donna Lopiano, the first perm anent director of the departm ent, said financial in­ dependence from the men s departm ent has benefitted the w om en's program . “ Being sep arate has had its advan tages in that we re not competing with established m en’s sports for the d o llar.” she said. “ When there are priorities, it’s not sacrificin g the women’s program ” A nine-tim e A ll-A m erican in so ftb a ll, Lopiano. 33, has pursued an aggressiv e course for women s ath letics during her first five years. Her goals are to have all sports rank nationally in the top 10 and to light the Tower for a women's national championship by 1980. Lopiano’s gam e plan has been to hire the best coaches in the country. So far, she has lured to the University 1980 Olympic coach Paul Bergen, who directs the w om en’s sw im ­ ming team and the AAU Longhorn Aquatic Club, and Mick Haley, a form er U.S. national coach in volleyball, am ong others. Nine coaches have com e and gone under her helm. “I think the people are there, and the money is there now It’s ju st a m atter of building those program s — and that takes tim e ,” she said. Lopiano’s entrance to the University coin­ cided with the p assage of the equal opportuni­ ty clause of the Education Am endm ents of 1972 — commonly known a s Title IX. Initially. Title IX created a havoc in the athletic departm ents of many colleges and universities. It w as thought the government would order institutions to pay m en’s and women’s athletic departm ents equal funds. Darrell Royal, form er UT athletic director and head coach of the football team , had warned that the am endm ent could mean the end of college football a s it w as then known. But Title IX has failed to become an issue at the University. Lopiano said the am end­ into account the tremendous ment takes differences between certain sports. “We don t have a counterpart to football,” she said “ We don’t have a sport in M emorial Stadium where it co sts $20,000 ju st to open up the stadium , every tim e, six tim es a y e a r.” She said the budgets for sim ilar sports, like basketball and swim m ing, are com m en­ surate between men and women. N ow adays, “ UT has never been in Title IX difficulty,” she said “ By the tim e the final policies cam e in w om en’s a th le tics, un­ derclassm en frequently beat out junior and senior letterm en for spots on the team . “ I don t think w e’ve had m ore than five or six four-year lettering ath letes That's a good ex­ am ple of the youngsters being so good in the last three or four y e a r s ,” she said. “ For the first tim e, they’ve had com peti­ tion and coaching ever since the seventh or eighth grade. KA R ATE SUPPLIES A N D EQUIPMENT Central Texas most complete Line of Martial Arts Equipment Karate and Judo Uniforms Protective Equipment Weapons Books Teeshirts Austin Karate Supply, "THE MARTIAL ARTS STORE" Inc. 2011 B East Riverside Rivertowne Mall 441-3216 Blanket tax offfers students break on tickets By ALLISON WHEELER Daily Texan Staff Inflation may be running at the double-digit level, but at least the ath letics blanket tax isn ’t going up For $34. students can still purchase season tickets for all University-sponsored sports events The fee paid by students at registration covers all UT home gam es, G reg Hager, athletic events supervisor, said F or all out-of-town gam es, students will pay the regular ticket price of $10, except for OU. which will be $7.50, H ager said. D ate tickets for OU will be $15 To purchase a season ticket, a student m ust pick up an athletics com puter card at registration and turn it in with his or her course cards. After registration, a blanket tax can be purchased at the ID card center in Gregory Gym. A special color-coded background identifies season ticket- holders, H ager said. This year the option of drawing season tickets for football or basketball gam es will not be offered to students, H ager said. In the past, ticket-holders had a choice of drawing their tickets at the beginning of the sem ester and keep­ ing the sam e sea t throughout the season or draw ­ ing the week of the gam e. “ Lack of participation by season ticket-holders is the reason for the change,” H ager said. Draw ings for tickets will be Monday through Wednesday the week of the gam es, except for the A rkansas contest, which will be played Monday, Sept. 1 instead of on a Saturday. Students will be allowed to draw the Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday preceding that gam e. As many a s six tickets m ay be drawn for each gam e, but there will be a lim it of four for the OU gam e because of the lim ited number of tickets available. “ This year there m ay also be a four-ticket lim it on the Tech g am e ,” H ager said. “ It all depends on the number of students purchasing tick e ts.” Students will be asked to fill out an application for the OU lottery drawing at the ticket office in G regory Gym. A student eligible for the drawing will be notified by m ail a few d a y s a fte r applications are subm itted. The student will then receive a card entitling him or her to purchase a ticket at Bellmont Hall. Ralph Barrera, Daily Texan Staff Donna Lopiano V J SCHWINN Maintenance., VOLKSWAGEN REPAIR We’re BIG on Service... We Specialize kt Professional and repairs on any brand bicycles We're on your budget ram SPEED SPEED LIMIT LIMIT I110 C e s s n a ^ MIIICHTH 5 5 272-5337 B ird 's N e s t A ir p o r t 272-5943 10 mi H I o l M u n ic ip a l A irp o r t F lig h t C lu b H ato* C a ll n o w to o n to r d ra w in g For h o o M ight © T H E B U G CO RN ER , INC. PHONE (512) 452-0654 1509 NORTH ST. A USTIN, TEXA S * L iv f \t i W i* We also have the k n n W M ■ selection of bicycles LARGEST in Central Texas and feature Sachs and Peugeot Mopeds UNIVERSITY SCHWINN CYCLERY South 1818 Ben White 443- 3622 Central 2901 N. La mar 474-6 6 9 6 1542 W. Anderson Lane North 4 5 1 -6 5 6 7 k in lfO 't 2200 Guadalupe ^ C O P IE S 476-4654 Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page E7 Men’s cross country to chase Arkansas By DAVE MILZMAN Daily Texan Staff A rk a n sas is “ th e te a m to b e a t fo r th e 1980 se a so n .” T ex a s c ro s s c o u n try c o a ch J a m e s B lackw ood fig u re s. T h a t’s not su rp risin g since A rk a n sa s h a s won e v e ry S o u th w est C onference c ro s s c o u n try title sin c e 1973. “ I h a te to run fo r second p la c e , but th e y won la s t y e a r and a r e g e ttin g s tro n g e r th is y e a r ,” B lackw ood said A fter finishing se v en th in th e c o n fe re n c e m e e t for th e second c o n s e c u tiv e y e a r, th e L onghorns c a n n o t do m uch w o rse th is fall. “ We w ill do a m u ch , m u ch b e tte r job th is y e a r ,” B lackw ood sa id “ If w e g e t all o u r guys signed, w e w ill be a m u c h im p ro v e d te a m — a t le a s t be a to p-four c o n fe re n c e te a m .” N EX T TO THE R a z o rb a c k s, B lackw ood said th a t B a y lo r is th e b e s t of th e re m a in in g SWC te a m s , and SM U. H ouston. R ic e and T exas w ill all be fig h tin g to finish ru n n er-u p to A rk an sas. The L onghorns g o t off to a good s t a r t la s t fin ish in g I n ­ y e a r , v ita tio n a l, but illn e ss and in ju rie s b eg a n to ta k e th e ir toll on th e te a m th e B a y lo r th ir d in Tw o ru n n ers d e h y d ra te d durin g th e T e x a s In v ita tio n al and h ad to be tak en to a h o sp ita l. T he in v itatio n al m a rk e d th e low point of th e 1979 seaso n , a s T e x a s finished 10th o u t of 12 te a m s . “ T h e h e a t in c id e n t a t In ­ v ita tio n a l sc a re d th e o th e r ru n n e rs s o m e ,” B lackw ood said. “ We ju s t n e v e r got b ac k on tr a c k for the r e s t of th e se a s o n .’ th e T e x a s ATHLETIC D E PA R T M E N T re g u la tio n s w ould not allow B lackw ood to re v e a l w hom he h a s re c ru ite d fo r th is season, b u t he h in te d “ th e top four ru n n e rs w ill all be new to T e x ­ a s . ” In addition to th e a n tic ip a te d new te a m m e m b e rs . B lackw ood e x p e c ts so m e of h is r e tu r n e e s to h av e good se aso n s. J a s o n G ria k , w ho ra n stro n g in th e f ir s t tw o m e e ts in 1979 b e fo re g ettin g in ju re d , w ill be a m o n g th e top re tu rn in g ru n n ers. im p r e s s iv e p e r f o r m a n c e s B lackw ood also e x p e c ts h elp from Kevin Borg and C hris B ucknall B org, d esp ite hav­ ing so m e la s t season, h a s been in c o n siste n t. B ucknall, a tra c k w alk-on, ra n tim e s of 1:51 for 800 m e te rs and 3 54 for 1.500 m e te r s to e a rn h im self a sc h o la rsh ip for th e 1980 season. DURING T H E s u m m e r, te a m m e m b e rs tra in on th e ir own. ru n n in g an a v e ra g e of 80 to 100 m ile s a week and rh o c k m g in w ith the coach p erio d ically to d is c u ss th e ir p ro g re ss, B lackw ood said O nce th e se aso n s ta r ts in th e fall, th e te a m will p r a c tic e tw ic e a d ay , ru n n in g th e to u g h e r w orkouts in th e m o rn in g to avoid th e h ea t. M ost of th e tra in in g w ill be a m ix tu re of long slow d is ta n c e and h a r d e r, f a s te r w o rk o u ts of vario u s d ista n c e s, Blackw'ood said. “ I w ill also get C oach E d d ie R e ese , the sw im co ach , to a s s is t w ith so m e sw im m in g w orkouts fo r th e r u n n e r s ,” B lackw ood said. “ The sw im m in g w ill giv e th e m a b re a k on hot d ay s and p ro v id e a good body c irc u la tio n w o rk o u t." T exas w ill run in at least four m e e ts before the con feren ce m eet Nov 3. The m ee t w ill be m ore for bragging rights than anything e lse , b ecau se the d istrict m eets are the qualifying rounds for the NCAA cham pionships. “ The D istrict Six m eet w ill be on Nov. 15, and it is the one that co u n ts,” Blackwood said. The guys are capable and should do e x ­ trem ely w ell in “ C r o s s c o u n t r y t h e S o u t h w o s t C onference has not been strong* ’ Blackwood said. “ The best tinish a con feren ce team has achieved nationally w as 10th p lace. Cross .country here is just to get in shape for track. “ I m a y go e a s t n ex t y e a r to recruit sin ce c ro ss c o u n try is big in th e E a s t , ” Blackwood said "The high schoo ls h av e b e tte r d istance r u n n e r s .” B lackw ood a lso said he felt h e could co unt th e te a m th is on a few w elk-ons m a k in g season. “ T hey m a y not be o u r top runners, but •w alk-ons u sually w ork h a rd an d are good for th e te a m .” Track team finish considered unpredictable By ROGER CAMPBELL Daily Texan Staff An old sa y in g — “ undou b ted ly ig ­ n o ran c e of th e fu tu re ills is m o re useful th a n know led g e of th e m ” — will b e s t c h a r a c te r iz e w h a t so -called ex p e rts and s o o th s a y e rs e n c o u n te r if they a tte m p t to p re d ic t th e o u tc o m e for th e 1981 m e n ’s tr a c k te a m . L on g h o rn s’ a s s is ta n t co a ch J a m e s B lackw ood show ed no h es ita tio n in backing th a t up. th in g “ I t ’s a lm o s t im p o ssib le . I t ’s a v e ry to d o ,” B lackw ood d ifficu lt sa id “ T h a t ’s ( p r e s e a s o n p r e d ic ­ tions) on p a p e r, you h a v e to do it on th e tr a c k .” relin q u ish in g L ast s e a s o n ’s d isa p p o in tin g y e a r is th e m a in c a u s e for th e u n p re d ic ta b le outcom e, a s th e Horns show ed sig n s of in tr a c k . A fte r h a v in g c la im e d 38 Southw est C o n fe re n c e title s , T e x a s finished low er th a n f irs t fo r only th e 27th tim e in th e 66-year h isto ry of th e th e ir d y n a s ty s p o r t’s e x is te n c e in the co n fe re n c e . (T h e re w a s no m e e t in 1917 b e c a u s e of W orld W ar I.) “ OF COURSE you’re n e v e r happy finishing th ird in th e c o n fe re n c e .” C oach C le b u rn e P ric e said. “ O ur b asic p hilosophy is th e S o u th w est C o n fere n ce ch a m p io n sh ip h a s to be th e h ig h e st p rio rity a t th e U n iv e rsity of T ex as. “ W e c o u ld h a v e won th e c o n ­ fe re n c e , e x c e p t for th a t A&M h ad r e a l q u ality peo p le and b a s ic a lly a ll w e re w hole a t co n ­ fe re n c e tim e ,” P ric e said. th e f a c t B eing “ w h o le ” w as th e d ir e c t op­ p o site of T e x a s ’ in ju ry s ta tu s , a s th e th e s e a s o n te a m w e n t m o s t of w ith o u t th e se rv ic e s of people such a s hig h ly r e c ru ite d fre sh m a n H e rk ie W alls. T h e te a m also lost peo p le :n th e pole v a u lt fo r th e e n tire seaso n . in ju r ie s a ll y e a r ,” P r ic e said. “ I think th a t k ep t us fro m bein g th e te a m w e could “ W e h a d n a g g in g have b een I do not use th is a s an e x ­ cuse, b u t ju s t a sim p le fac t. “ W H E N Y O U ’R E lim ite d w ith sc h o la rsh ip s, you have to h av e m o st of y o u r p eo p le h ealth y a t th e con­ fe re n c e tim e in o rd e r to h av e an op­ p o rtu n ity of w in n in g .” E v en a top-10 spot in th e NCAA c h a m p io n sh ip s, w hich w ere held on th e H o rn s ’ h o m e ground, w as con­ sid e re d a d isa p p o in tm en t. in “ F in is h in g n in th th e NCAA ah ead of all c o n fe re n c e schools c e r ­ ta in ly w as a b o o st,” P ric e said. “ H ow ever, ev e n w ith th a t finish, th e re w a s no re a so n not to ex p e c t us to finish a t le a s t in the top fiv e .” B ut fo r n e x t seaso n , p re d ic tin g the o u tco m e w o n ’t co m e a s easy . “ Now looking a t 1981, it is a little d iffic u lt to te ll about o u r situ a tio n b e c a u s e of s e v e ra l unkow n f a c to r s ,” P ric e sa id “ No. 1 — the trip le ju m p , 10.000-m eters and s te e p le c h a se w ill be ad d ed to o u r co n feren ce. Tw o. we lost s e v e ra l key people — so m e hopefully only for th e fall, including O sk a r Ja k o b sso n , O w en H am ilto n and W ayne Jo h n so n .” THOUGH PR IC E h a s co n firm e d th e sig n in g of a t le a s t e ig h t r e c ru its (fo r f e a r of losing th e m , th e n a m e s w e re w ith h e ld until th e fall session h as o ffic ia lly s ta r te d ) , o nce ag a in q u e stio n s a r is e . “ W e h a v e found e ig h t o r nine peo­ ple in r e c r u itin g .” P r ic e said . “ B ut it is a little d iffic u lt to te ll how they w ill fit b e c a u s e of th e ir a g e and in e x ­ p e r ie n c e .” S o m e tim e s fre sh m e n do not eq u a l th e ir high school p e rfo rm a n c e s d u r­ ing th e ir f ir s t y e a r b e c a u s e of the tre m e n d o u s a d ju s tm e n t to co lleg e life, P r ic e said. W ith m o s t of T e x a s ’ e n trie s in th e n atio n al m e e t r e tu rn in g and th e im ­ p o s s ib ility of s o m e r e c r u i t s proving th e H o rn s’ w eak sp o ts — long d is ta n c e s and field e v e n ts — they m a y be back th e ir usual s ta tu r e a t th e end of th e 1981 seaso n. to “ 1 think w e w ill be s tro n g e r in th e d ista n c e s in 1981, b u t w ill no t be as stro n g in th e field e v e n ts ,” P ric e said. And th o u g h P r i c e r e m a in s o p ­ tim is tic , he feels th e c h a n c e s for his ‘squad to d o m in a te th e c o n fe re n c e a r e all but ov er. “ I IK) NOT thin k w e w ill e v e r see ag ain th e c o n fe re n c e ch a m p io n sh ip being d o m in a te d by one school a s it h as in se v e ra l s p o rts in th e p ast. All nine co n fe re n c e schoo ls a t th e p re ­ se n t tim e h av e 14 sc h o la rs h ip s ,” th e m a x ­ P ric e sa id . F o u rte e n im u m n u m b e r of tr a c k sc h o la rsh ip s a school m a y aw a rd . is B ut in 1981 an y th in g is po ssible, fo r la s t a s B lackw ood pu t s e a s o n , “ T h e r e ’s p le n ty a s lip betw een th e cup an d th e lip .” it e a r lie r Texas’ Jeff Lindsay wins 440 dash. Daily Texan Dethroned Longhorns attempt to regain state crown By MARCIE DONOVAN Daily Texan Staff W hen a tra c k te a m lo se s six of its b e s t sc h o la rs h ip a th le te s to in ju r ie s by th e m id se a so n m a rk , it is h a rd to e x p e c t a v e ry g ra n d finish to th a t seaso n . T h a t loss to T e x a s ’ w o m e n 's tr a c k te a m th is p a s t se a so n w as In te r c o lle g ia te th e T e x a s A sso c ia tio n only n o tic e a b le a t A th le tic s fo r W om en m e e t in A pril. th a t w ay ju s t ab o u t “ W e w en t to s ta te w ith six of o u r b e s t p eo p le in ju re d . I t had b een th e w hole s e a s o n ,” C oach P h il D e la v a n said. “ You c a n ’t c o m p lain a b o u t th e jo b th e h e a lth y k id s d id b e c a u se it w a s a su p e r job. W ith th e n u m b e r of k id s out, w e should not h a v e done an y b e tte r th a n th ird o r f o u r th .” TH E LONGHORNS, d efe n d in g s ta te c h a m p io n s , lo st th a t t i ­ tle to T e x a s S o u th ern U n iv e rsity by tw o p o in ts. B ut n o t w ith o u t a good fight. T e x a s, TSU and T e x a s A&M w e re n ec k -an d -n eck th ro u g h m o st of th e m e e t an d ev en a f te r it w a s a p p a r e n t T e x a s co u ld no t w in, th e te a m p ro v ed its c o m p e titiv e s p ir it by b e a tin g TSU in th e m ile re la y to r e ta in th e s ta te c h a m p io n s h ip in th a t e v e n t. T h a t re la y te a m c o n s iste d of R obbin C o lem a n , R e n e R o c h e s te r, T a m m y E tie n n e and J u lie H olm es. S ev eral L ong h o rn s q u a lifie d fo r th e n a tio n a l m e e t in E u g en e , g e t th a t needed b a la n c e . O re., b u t failed to m a k e it into an y of th e fin als. TWO M E M B ER S w e re n a m e d A ll-A m eric a a f t e r co m p etin g in th e U.S. T ra c k and F ie ld A sso c iatio n c h a m p io n s h ip s th is su m m e r. L a u ra M e ssn e r g ain ed th e honor in th e d isc u s and E tie n n e in th e h u rd le s. E tie n n e w a s n a m e d a m e m b e r of th e U.S. n a tio n a l te a m an d w as in v ite d to ru n in th e O ly m p ic tr ia ls , w h ere sh e p la c e d fo u rth in th e 4 00-m eter in te r m e d ia te h u rd les. “ I think T a m m y did a f a n ta s tic jo b th is y e a r , sh e b ro k e th e school re c o rd s e v e ra l tim e s d u rin g th e c o u rs e of th e s e a so n and now holds it a t 58:15 s e c o n d s ,” D e la v a n sa id . T h e L o n ghorns did have one v e te r a n A ll-A m eric an , C o lem a n , b u t fo r so m e rea so n h e r p e rfo rm a n c e w a s not a s b a la n c e d a s D e la v a n h a d hoped for. “ ROBBIN RAN e x c e lle n t in th e r e la y s ( s p rin t an d m ile ), but for so m e re a so n h ad tro u b le in th e 400-m eters. She h ad th re e people rely in g on h e r in th e r e la y s and a lw a y s did w e ll.” D elavan se e s b a la n c e a s being th e o v e ra ll f a c to r in la s t s e a so n ’s o u tc o m e. “ T his y e a r, th e th in g th a t h u rt us th e m o st w a s n o t h av in g th e b a la n c e w e h ad b e fo re (w ith th e 1979 t e a m ) .” But w ith th e a d d itio n of so m e new m e m b e r s to th e te a m , D elavan and new a s s is ta n t tra c k c o a ch T e rry A n d erso n plan to “ We p ro b ab ly got 12 to 15 w alk-ons co m in g in, w hich w ill be sa id D elav an Six o th e rs h a v e been m a in ly re c ru ite d , th re e of th e m fro m o u t-o f-state. f re s h m e n ,” T he d is ta n c e ta le n t sho u ld be supplied by tw o K an sa n s, L a u ra N elson and T e rry E b a n k s , and T ra c y W ong fro m L as V egas. “ E b a n k s ru n s f a s te r th a n anybody w e h a v e on th e te a m n o w ,” D e la v a n said F ie ld e v e n t help should co m e fro m R e g in a S w ain in th e long ju m p an d Jo B eth P a lm e r in the sh o t and d isc u s. “ S w ain h a s ju m p e d 20 fe e t Vz inch. T h a t’s only l z inch off th e school - e c o r d ,” D elav an said . “ And Jo B eth P a lm e r h a s th ro w n th e d isc u s and th e sh o t f a r th e r th an w h at won s ta te th is y e a r . ” D E A N IE PA LM ER , J o B e th 's s is te r, w ill be ru n n in g th e 100- m e te r h u rd le s for T e x a s th is season. “ D e a n ie ’s tim e in th e h u rd le s is p ro b ab ly th e s a m e a s T a m m y E tie n n e ’s , ” D ela v an said. W ith all th e se a d d itio n s to th e te a m and know ing a ll of la s t y e a r ’s te a m is re tu rn in g . D ela v an h as a hopeful outlook fo r th e se aso n ahead. “ I think w e ’re h av e a s tro n g te a m th is y e a r w ith good d ep th and good b a la n c e ,” D e la v a n said. Women bid for third consecutive set of titles By MARCIE DONOVAN Dally Texan Staff i t ’s s e t If T e x a s ’ w o m e n 's c r o s s c o u n try te a m k eep s th e s a m e p a c e tw o y e a r s , it should g ra b a th ird c o n s e c u tiv e s e t of s ta te and re g io n a l title s . th e p a s t f i v e f r e s h m e n , L a s t y e a r ’s te a m c o n siste d o f t w o so p h o m o re s an d a ju n io r. All l e t t e r - w i n n e r s w i l l e i g h t r e tu r n th is y e a r. T h e H orns, t h e T e x a s w h o w on b o th A s s o c ia tio n I n te r c o l le g i a te A th le tic s fo r W o m en s t a t e c h a m p i o n s h i p a n d t h e S o u th w est A sso c iatio n I n te r ­ f o r c o l l e g i a t e A t h l e t i c s la s t t i t l e W om en s e a s o n , h ad o n ly o n e p o o r show ing in 1979 — th e AIAW n a tio n a l m e e t. r e g io n a l “ TH EY RAN se v en v e ry goo d m e e t s a n d o n e b a d m e e t,” C oach P h il D ela v an said . “ A t n a tio n a ls w e d id n ’t sc o re w ell. We ju s t h ad a bad ra c e , an d th a t w a s i t . ” “ (K e lly ) W ells an d (J a y n e ) S w e ig a rt h ad a good y e a r , and they h a v e g r e a t p o te n tia l for th e said. f u tu r e ,” D e la v a n “ T hey th riv e on c o m p e titio n , and th e y ’ll be th e s tro n g points of our te a m s in th e n e x t few y e a rs. “ F re s h m a n D onna M a tth e w w a s a ls o o n e o f o u r to p ru n n e rs th is s e a s o n ,” D elav an s a id . “ T h e y ( t h e s q u a d ’s fre sh m e n ) a ll g ain ed a y e a r of e x p e rie n c e an d m a tu r ity .” A lthough th e fre s h m e n w e re th e c o re of th e te a m , ju n io r C h r i s t y a n d so p h o m o re s M a ry a n n e P ils (th e te a m c a p ta in ) an d Hope G a r c i a W ilson g a v e th e young te a m so m e sta b ility . All th r e e c a m e on stro n g la te in th e se aso n to help c a p tu r e th e re g io n a l title , D elav an said. its h a s y e t ALTHOUGH T e x a s h a s won s e v e ra l te a m title s in th e p a s t tw o y e a r s , to p ro d u ce an y in d iv id u al c h a m ­ pions. B ut w ith th e a d d itio n of th r e e new th e t h a t m a y s o o n b e t e a m , histo ry . r e c r u i t s to T ra c y Wong, a so phom ore t r a n s f e r s tu d e n t f r o m L a s V egas, is an “ o u tsta n d in g d is­ ta n c e ru n n e r ,” D e la v a n said . T e x a s also r e c ru ite d L a u rie N e ls o n a n d T e r r y E b a n k s , both fro m K an sa s. N elso n is a v e r s a t i l e r u n n e r , w ith im ­ p re s s iv e tim e s in th e 440 , 880 and m ile, D elav an said . B ut it is E b a n k s w ho h a s a s h o t a t t i t l e s , i n d i v i d u a l D ela v an said. “ E b a n k s h a s run f a s te r th a n anyb o d y w e h a v e on th e te a m rig h t n o w ,” D ela v an said. A N O T H E R K a n s a s r e s i ­ dent, a s s is ta n t co a ch T e rry A nderson, w ill begin h e r f ir s t th is fa ll. se a so n a t T e x a s A nderson is th e f ir s t w o m e n ’s a s s is ta n t tr a c k c o a c h , a n d D elavan sa y s s h e ’ll be a g r e a t help. “ So w e ’re looking fo rw a rd to a good y e a r in c ro s s co u n ­ tr y ,” D elav an said. “ W e’re going to be shooting fo r th e s ta te and reg io n a l title s and hope to light th e T o w er tw ic e ag ain th is y e a r .” New coach, talent give volleyball team different look Texas runner Hope Wilson. Daily Texan Staff By ROGER CAMPBELL Daily Texan Staff r e m a in in g With a new co a ch , s ta r tin g lin eu p and o u t­ look fo r th e co m in g se a so n , a b o u t th e only th in g th e s a m e w ith T e x a s ' w o m en ’s v o lle y b all te a m in 1980 is th e n am e. F irs t-y e a r co a ch M ick H aley ho p es to sh ak e th in g s up to re a c h so m e of th e g o als — both im m e d ia te a n d long te rm — he h a s s e t for h im s e lf an d h is sq u ad . “ I thin k th e te a m is aw fu lly young, so th e first thing is to s e t a s ta n d a r d s y s te m fo r o u r la s t p rogram ,” sa id H ale y , w ho c o a ch e d season at K ellogg C o m m u n ity C ollege in B a t­ tle Creek, M ich “ I ’ll do th a t by e d u c a tin g th e p la y e rs .” S p ecifically , H aley sa id he p la n s to w ork on the te a m ’s o ffe n siv e ex e cu tio n an d d e fe n siv e d e te rm in a tio n . HALEY ALSO h a s th e goal of c u rin g th e p erso n al p ro b le m s of la s t y e a r ’s te a m . “ We w ill e s ta b lis h indiv id u al g o als fo r th e individual p la y e rs , th e n te a m g o als, he said. “ If w e e v e r h av e an y c o n flic ts, w e ’ll go b ack to th o se (in d iv id u a l) g o als an d a t le a s t th e t e a m w i l l a g r e e . t o l e r a t e fo o lish n e ss.” I w o n ’ t H ale y ’s se le c tio n a s c o a c h en d ed w h a t D on­ na Lopiano, w o m e n ’s a th le tic d ir e c to r , c a lle d an “ e x te n s iv e ” fo r a n atio n ally c o m p e titiv e w om en s a th le tic p ro g ra m ’ T he s e a r c h for a v o lle y b all co a c h w as n e c e s s ita te d by th e re sig n a tio n of L inda L ow ery, L o n ghorn co a ch fo r tw o se a so n s. to “ s tr iv e s e a r c h w ho c ite d “ p e rs o n a l p ro b le m s ” fo r le av in g . H ailey, w ho w ill c o m e to T e x a s h a v in g c o a ch e d both m e n 's an d w o m e n ’s te a m s to a to ta l of six N atio n al J u n io r C ollege A th le tic A ssociation n a tio n a l c h a m p io n s h ip s, w ill se e m in g ly pro v e h e is w o rth y of L o p ia n o ’s d ec isio n if he even c o m e s clo se to a c h ie v in g so m e of th o se goals. in D esp ite hopes of c o m p e tin g in th e n a tio n a l to u rn a m e n t la s t se a so n , th e H o rn s en d e d w ith a 33-18-2 o v e ra ll re c o rd and a s e v e n th - p la c e finish th e S outhw est A sso c ia tio n In te rc o lle g ia te A th le tic s for W om en to u r n a ­ th e m e n t. Though fo u r th e y signed r e c ru its (L e slie L u ca s, K a tr in a “ T rin k ” D o m se ife r, D ebbie W h itfield an d I rm a S anchez) an d r e tu rn e d four p la y e rs , th e b e s t T ex a s could sa y ab o u t th e se a so n w as th e te a m finished w ith its h ig h e st w in to ta l e v e r. in T e x a s to p BUT THINGS could im p ro v e a lot in 1980, e sp e c ia lly w ith th e a c q u isitio n of fre s h m a n D eniz D osdogru of Ista n b u l, T u rk e y , H aley said . D osdogru h a s play ed on th e T u rk ish natio n al te a m sin c e sh e w as 13. “ She w ill d e fin ite ly be a p rin c ip a l p la y e r ,” H aley said. “ She w ill add a lot of m a tu r ity (d e sp ite it being h e r firs t se a so n ) to th e te a m " D osdogru led th e h e r te a m to a second- p la c e finish in la s t y e a r ’s E u ro p e a n n a tio n a l to u rn a m e n t H aley said he a lso e x p e c ts se n io r K im B indew ald to p lay a m a jo r p a r t in a c h ie v in g his goals. T h o u g h B i n d e w a l d ’s th e c o u rts , fac e on it w ill b e - th e “ new B indew ald who w ill help m a k e th e d iffe re n c e in th e fall, H aley said. f a m i l i a r i s a “ I ’m hoping K im w ill c o m e a lo n g ,” H aley said. “ She h a s d e fin ite ly show n m e a lot of d e te rm in a tio n in th e try o u ts ’ O th e r n e w c o m e rs e x p e c te d to m a k e co n ­ trib u tio n s a r e F ra n T e e te r, L o u sian a s top high school p la y e r, and T ex a n K im R isin g e r, co n sid ered th e top r e c r u it in th e s ta te . B oth p la y e rs led th e ir te a m s to s ta te title s. H aley e x p e c ts R isin g e r to bid fo r a s ta rtin g spot rig h t aw a y an d s e e s T e e te r “ a y e a r aw ay fro m th e s ta rtin g s ix .” “ EACH Y E A R I r e c r u it fre sh m e n th a t w ill co m e rig h t in and h elp o u r c h a n c e s, H aley said. T h re e tr a n s f e rs fro m H a le y ’s K ellogg C o m m u n ity C ollege te a m , J e n n y H ayes, S al­ ly S chelobohm an d G w en P e ll, w ill a lso try out fo r th e te a m . Jo e B eth P a lm e r, who sig n ed wi t h T e x a s on a tra c k sc h o la rsh ip a s a shot p u tte r , h a s a lso im p re sse d H aley “ S h e ’s lia b le to ju m p rig h t o v er th e n e t,” he said H aley is eq u ally im p re sse d w ith D o m se ife r and L u cas play d u rin g th e ir ro o k ie se aso n s and p re d ic ts they too m a y s t a r t a g a in th is season B ut he said he h a s not se en enough of th e o th e r p la y e rs to m a k e a n y d ec isio n s v e t.” S e n i o r s D o n n a B e n t o n , T r u d i e R ic h a rd s and S usan P en a an d ju n io r Cathy H iles a r e also e x p e c te d to r e tu rn . J u lie G leason, la s t s e a s o n ’s s ta r tin g s e tte r for th e L onghorns, h a s qui t th e te a m . H aley, w ho has a lre a d y sc h ed u le d g a m e s w ith J a p a n e s e te a m Sony a t h o m e and in A lab am a, is tryfng to se t up s e v e ra l g a m e s a g a in st te a m s stro n g in in te rn a tio n a l play to g et his p la y e rs “ to thin k th e y ’r e play in g q u a lity te a m s all th e tim e. But H aley, w ho h as a lre a d y s e t e y e s on be­ th e nation , ing one of r e a lis tic a lly d oes not e x p e c t a m ir a c le o v e r­ night. te a m s th e top in “ In o rd e r fo r us to ch a lle n g e n a tio n a lly , w e h av e a lot of w ork to do. It could ta k e th re e y e a rs o r possibly tw o, H aley sa id “ I e x p e c t iis to be th e b e s t in th e s ta te a s fa s t a s w e ca n , dep en d in g on th e kids. “ I DON’T c a r e to win a t th e beginning of th e s e a s o n .” he said “ If w e w in o u r last g a m e , th a t m e a n s w e ’ll end up in S an ta B a r­ b a ra (C a lif.)” H aley also knows who stand in the way of that Coast. w ill m ost likely tr ip to the W est “ Houston has to be the favorite, but it :s up to us to prove w e re cap ab le of beating th e m ,” H aley said. If the Horns do beat the Cougars and a few o th e rs in th e SWAIAW to u rn a m e n t, a trip to S an ta B a rb a ra m a y be forthcom ing. Kim Bindewald spikes one against Southwestern University. P a9e . § □ T H E D A IL Y TE X A N □ Tuesday, August 5. 1980 Come by and enjoy our games while listening to your favorite music POOL, DYNAMO, FOOSBALL, PINBALL ELECTRONIC GAMES: ASTEROID, GALAXIAN AND LUNAR RESCUE O p en 3 :30 -2 :3 0 7 d a y s a w eek 1903 E. Riverside Drive W e e kd ay H a p p y Hour 4:00-7:00 444 -5 81 8 Texas Union General Store Sidewalk Spirit Sale! Monday, September 1 11 a.m.-5 p.m. (before the Arkansas Game) 1.00 off on any U.T. T-shirt! Complete Selection A lso fea turin g these U.T.’p rinted item s: Jogging shorts Sun visors Baseball hats Insulated canned drink holders Mugs Decals Scarves Stop by for o free souvenir football program. Just outside the Texas Union on tbe West Mall. Not all Great Beers come from Europe f 1 AVAILABLE NOW IN AUSTIN - ASK FOR IT! NEGRA MODELO■. - , Mexico’s World Class a Beer < SHINER BEER DISTRIBUTING CO. ositions available: The Daily Texan is accepting applications from students interested in working on the fall staff. Any University stu dent may apply. No journalism classes are required. The Texan will begin interviews for p e r m a n e n t staff positions August 6. Stu dents should have at least one semester of experience at the Texan to apply for a p e r m a n e n t position. Students should pick up applications and sign up for interviews at the Texan office, TSP C2.112. Call 471-4591 for more information T h e Da il y T e x a n (Continued from page 3.) SM U Mustangs By B O B G E N N A R E L L I DALLAS — I n ju r ie s , a coach’s nightmare. They can make an also-ran of a con­ tender. Ju st ask SMU coach Ron Meyer H is M u s ta n g s w e re a legitim ate th reat heading into the 1979 Southwest Conference campaign, after enjoying one of the nation’s best recruiting seasons. But a wrench was thrown into Mustang M ania’s gears before the Ponies could hit full stride. However, with everyone healthy again, Meyer is op­ t i m i s t i c t h e Mustangs can be more than just a threat. t h i s y e a r THE MOST critical injury of 1979 was to All-America quarterback Mike Ford The Mesquite junior was lost for the season, undergoing knee t e a r i n g s u r g e r y a f t e r ligaments in his right knee during SMU’s 27-7 win over TCU However, Ford did earn redshirt status for 1979, leav­ ing him with two full years of remaining eligibility. Joining Ford on offense are four returning starters, in­ cluding F ord’s replacem ent of a year ago, Jim Bob Taylor Yet even with the return of Ford and those seven starters, Meyer does have a problem HIS CONCERN is with his receivers. Three-year starter Bob Fisher is gone at tight end and A ll-A m erica wingback Emanuel Tolbert’s graduation has left another hole Meyer has moved starting split end Anthony Smith to wi n g b a c k . whi l e S m i t h ’s brother Gary, and sophomores Mitchell Bennett and Jam es Collier are contending for the vacancy at split end But whether any of these can replace Tolbert is yet to be seen. The M ustangs' offensive in tact, which line re tu rn s Mike Ford causes Meyers to call it 'the best offensive line in my five years here.” Mike Jusko and line up a t the Lee Spivey tackle spots. Robert Barnes and Joe B eard a re a t the guards and Lance Pederson, a second team All-SWC pick, is the center. C LEM ENT FOX has the edge at the starting tight end, but Meyers has yet to see two freshm en recruits — David Randle and Ricky Bolden, both from Dallas. f or Running back, a weak spot for SMU just two years ago, has been transform ed into a t h e M u s t a n g s . p l u s JAMES SAW the most ex­ tensive action of the group last season, as his 761 yards on 168 the best carries ranked as among Mustang backs. Jam es w a s g i v e n t h e s t a r t i n g tailback spot for SMU's last two gam es of 1979 and he responded with a combined total of 255 yards rushing over those final two weekends. th e r a t e d D i c k e r s o n , t h e nation’s top high school back in 1978, could m anage just 477 y a rd s on th e ground because of injuries. Yet when Dickerson was healthy, he did perform , rushing for 123 yards and three touchdowns in his first collegiate gam e against Rice, 103 yards against Baylor and 113 in SMU's romp over Wichita State I) E F E N S I V E L Y , t h e Mustangs return nine of 11 s t a r t e r s on a ver y young defensive unit is T h e a t s t r e n g t h linebacker, as three starters — Jared Moore. C larence Bennett and Eric Ferguson return Add to those names sophom ore standouts P ete Collins and Gary Moten, not to m ention B yron Hunt, and you've got some of the best in the SWC. Ha r v e y A r m s t r o n g and Jerry Kovar return on the defense line, but here Meyer must fill his only two losses. Sophomore Michael Carter, injured most of 1979, is pen­ ciled in for the vacant tackle spot, with Kevin Chaney fill­ ing the opening at nose guard. that A r m s t r o n g . C a r t e r and Chaney were all absent from spring drills A problem h ere is Coming out of spring drills, M eyer liste d his s t ar t i ng linemen as Scott Gibson and David M arshall, with Waldo Theus at nose guard. The secondary is healthy again with the return of strong safety Blane Smith, who suf­ fered a broken foot just two games into the 1979 season. Cornerbacks John Simmons and C h a r l e s B r u t o n al so return, along with free safety Jam es Mobley. So M eyer’s last concern before SMU's Sept 13 opener with North Texas State is fin­ ding a replacem ent for punter Ken Rosenthal. Texas A&M íes B y G E N A M C F A R L A N D COLLEGE STATION - An­ ticipation. Thoughts about what you can do. Every coach and every team have the sam e things going on in their heads before the season starts. Will we do it? Can we do it? “ There is only one way to prove it — on the field,” Tom W ilson, T ex a s A&M head coach, said. That's exactly what the Tex­ as Aggies plan to do in 1980. A&M has e ig h t s ta r t e r s returning on defense, though t h e y w i l l b e m i s s i n g pow erhouse ta c k le Jac o b Green. On offense, only four starters rem ain. The big ques­ tion here is the backfield. as Curtis Dickey won’t be around to take the handoff “ Replacing Dickey is a fac­ tor to be concerned about, but we have six running backs that can play,” Wilson said. “ Cur­ tis was hurt a lot last season, and we had to play without him. Other people got to play, and they will be the ones replacing him .” in line JOHNNY HECTOR, a 5-11, is the 190-pound sophomore, player m ost to fill likely Dickey’s tailback position. Se­ cond is sophom ore E arnest Jackson, a 5-11, 192- pound r unni ng back f r om Rosenberg Junior David Hill will once again play fullback, with Ronnie Jam es backing him up. Mike Mosley will be at quarterback, a player Wilson c a n ’t s ay eno u g h about . Mosley is Wilson’s personally t r a i n e d , m u l t i - t a l e n t e d product. Wilson was q u arter­ back coach when Mosley, now a senior, cam e to A&M. Since moving to head coach, Wilson has had the opportunity to use Mosley to the best of the player’s ability. “ I think Mike is one of the best quarterbacks in the coun­ try this y e a r,” Wilson said. Backing up M osley will be David Beal, Gary Kubiak and Mark McQueen. Last y ear’s kicker. David Appleby, graduated, leaving his spot empty. A&M signed two kickers, Kyle Stuard of Abilene and Alan Smith of Texas City, and th ere are sophomore David Hardy and several walk-ons. A&M t h i r d r a n k e d in r ecr ui t i ng nat i onal l y this year, one survey said, and those recruits will help to fill the empty places on the Aggie roster. Mike Mosley the Aggies have a Again t o u g h n o n - c o n f e r e n c e schedule, facing Penn State, which A&M upset last season, in College Station Sept. 20 A&M also faces Ole Miss and Georgia out of conference. E v e n t o u g h e r m a y be A&M s SWC road schedule. They play Southern Methodist, Houston, Arkansas and Texas away from home. T C U Horned Frogs B y J IM M Y B U R C H FORT WORTH - It seems the TCU football program has been rebuilding forever, but Coach F.A. Dry and his staff feel the Horned Frogs are close to finishing rebuilding and em barking on winning. F or the first tim e in alm ost eight years, the num bers are there to back up TCU's claim . Although the Frogs finished only 2-8-1 in 1979, they showed im provem ent in all m arked p h ase s of th e g am e. The biggest im provem ent was on the Horned defense, where F ro g s allow ed 120 fe w er points than they did in 1978. In fact, the TCU- defense did not allow a touchdown against Arkansas, Baylor or Texas Tech. Graduation took its toll on the Horned Frogs, however. Five of last y e a r’s defenders, including the entire secon­ dary. have left for greener pastures the NFL. This leaves the Frogs with a secon­ d ary com posed en tirely of freshm en and sophom ores. Understandably, this also con­ cerns TCU coaches. in Heading into fall practice, TCU is looking to sophomores Thomas Bell and Robert Lyles as “ for-sures” in the secon­ dary. The freshm en defen­ sive coordinator Bob Junko is counting on are John Preston and Reggie Cottingham, both highly recruited high school players from Dallas South Oak Cliff. Linebacker is the strongest spot for the Frogs, as five ex­ perienced players return. Out­ side linebackers Joe Vail and Mike Dry (the coach’s son) started last year, as did strong l i n e b a c k e r D a r r e l l s i d e P atterson. P atterson is com­ in g o ff an e x c e p t i o n a l freshm an year. He led the team in tackles, was selected S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e “ Freshm an of the Y ear” by one wire service and was nam ­ ed "Defensive Newcomer of the Y ear” by the other. Also returning at linebacker are seniors Kelvin Newton and Jim Bayuk. Bayuk was a sta rte r his first two years, but limited his playing injuries tim e last season. Up front, the Frogs aren 't hur t i ng for dept h ei t her . S ophom ore Ga r l a nd S hort started eight games at nose guard last year and he returns along with another starter, John McLean McLean pinch­ ed a nerve in his neck and mis­ sed most of spring training, so he'll have to try and win his right tackle position back from Shawn King in the fall. ONE SPOT that is settled is left defensive tackle, where sen io r C h arles Champi ne takes over for All-SWC per­ form er Wesley Roberts. Frog coaches lavish praise on the 6- 2, 255-pounder from Orange who has said his goal is to win this y e a r’s Outland Trophy, symbolic of the best defensive lineman in the nation. Defensively, Junko said the 1980 Frogs can be at least as good as last y ea r’s edition. But gam es are not won with defense alone, as the Frogs know from experience. They averaged only 11.5 points a game last year, but Junko said a y e a r’s experience will im ­ prove the point production. “ I think we ll be able to run t hi s y e a r , " J u n k o sai d, alluding to the fact that only one TCU back gained m ore than 500 yards last season. “ We know we can throw. The offense should be able to stay on the field longer and that'll help the defense. to the f or ef r ont The spring gam e was a w atershed for the TCU offense in that it brought two running b ack s to replace departed seniors Jim ­ my Allen and Craig R ichard­ son. Junko said junior college transfer Michael WYight was outstanding in the spring and led all rushers with 135 yards the Purple-White game. in L a st y e a r ’s c o - s ta r te r s Steve Stam p and Kevin Haney return at quarterback, along wi t h so p h o m o res Reuben Jones and Eddie Clark. Although no clear-cut choice has been made, Junko hinted the real battle now is between Haney and Jones. All four of the F rogs’ top receivers — Bobby Stewart, P h i l l i p E p p s , S p e n c e r S u n s t r u m a n d S t a n l e y Washington — return, so no change is planned there. Change is the name of the gam e in the offensive line, h o w e v e r . C e n t e r E d d i e G rim es has moved to defen­ sive end and sophomore Mike H artm an will start at center. R e t u r n e e s D o n a l d R a y Richard and Don Baker will th e g uar ds and S teve be W7ilson will m an the right tackle spot. Three battle for left tackle — E ric McCree (6- 6. 285). Bobby Richardson (6- 4. 240) and Dudlev Stephenson (6-4 , 250). Darrell Patterson Tight end is still a question m ark, as Chester Strickland and Stan Talley go after the job. with Talley having the in­ into fall side workouts. tra c k going The 6-6 Talley will also han­ dle the punting duties and Greg P o rter will be the place­ m ent m an again this year. “ I don t know if our defense will be as good early as it was last year. We’ve got m ore team speed, but no Wesley R o b e rts,” Junko said. “ If these guys can mature during two-a-days. w e’ll be better.” tim e and two-a-days Only will tell. Texas Tech Red Raiders By R E ID L A Y M A N C E In 1979 Rex Dockery’s Red Raiders faced a paradox. Tex­ as Tech had the Southwest in Conference’s Jam es Hadnot but only the sixth m ost-productive offense in the Southwest Conference. top rusher Now. with Hadnot departed to the pros, Dockery hopes to reverse his paradox and get the Raider offense rolling con­ sistently. The key to Tech’s offense in 1980 wili be junior q uarter­ back Ron R eeves’ recovery from a shoulder injury suf­ la s t fered a g a in s t T exas season. Despite missing Tech’s final three gam es in 1979. Reeves, a finished three-vear fourth in the conference in total offense with 1,019 yards (656 passing and 363 rushing). starter, Ron Reeves R e p l a c i n g H a d n o t a t fullback will be sophomore Wes Hightower of Dallas with A n t h o n y H u t c h i s o n . “ Sometimes when you lose a player of Hadnot’s ability, the younger players come in and work harder to replace him ,” Dockery said, m inimiz­ ing Hadnot’s loss. THE RED RAIDER offen­ sive line is a question m ark wi t h only tw o r e t u r n i n g starters, center Denny H arris and guard Mark Gesch, and as Dockery said, no depth. But if the offensive line is question m ark, the defensive front four is an exclamation point. to end, “ F ro m end the defensive line is the strongest part of our team ,” Dockery said. Anchoring the Raider defen­ sive front will be sophomore noseguard G abriel R ivera from San Antonio Jefferson. F lan k in g R iv e ra th e trenches are ends Jam ie Giles (6-2, 265) and Jeff McKinney ( 6-2 , 2 2 0 ). in “ Giles has been with us four years and has the potential to be o u t s t a n d i n g , ” D ockery said. Leading the Tech secondary will be free safety Ted Watts, a preseason All-American. Teamed with Watts in the defensive backfield is strong safety Tate Randle, who tied Texas Derrick H atchett for the Soutwest Conference in­ terception last season title with six. Dockery said another key to the R aiders’ 1980 success will be the kicking game, where Tech lost three-vear sta rte r Bill “ B lade” Adams, who scored 61 points last season. Junior Maury Buford, an academic All-America in 1979, holds the punting job after posting a 42.1 average last season. • New & Used Books • We Buy Back Used Books • Notebooks and Stationery • Caps, Shirts and Class Rings • VISA/MC • One stop shopping — buy your school supplies while you buy your hooks TEXAS TEXTBOO KS INC. "We want to he y o u r te x tb o o k store. 1 st Floor C astilian 4 7 8 -9 8 3 3 _ e < * 24th St. ★ T o x a t T a x tb o o k t l 24th & San Antonio Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page E9 Texas expects tough baseball race By BRIAN H U BER Daily Texan Staff Though the Longhorn baseball team won its second straight Southwest Conference title and its 53rd since 1915 last season, the Horns expect another tough race next year. The balance among teams in the SWC has greatly increased in recent years and Coach Cliff Gustafson, who’s won 11 SWC titles himself, expects no team to completely dominate. As in previous years, Gustafson believes Texas will be “ as good as the pitching will allow.” Much of the success of the 1980 team was because of the piching staff, which posted the lowest earned run average in the conference and allowed the fewest runs of any team. However, the top two pitchers, Keith Creel and Jim Acker, have both moved on to professional ball. THE 1980 Longhorns also thrived on clutch hitting. The team led the conference in bat­ ting average, thanks to the surprising play of junior-college transfer Chris Campbell (.374), walk-on David Dean (.348), first-year starter Ricky Nixon (.344 >, sophomore Randy Richards (.345) and outfielder Mike Zátopek (.328). At the outset of the 1980 season, Texas was not expected to have much impact on the SWC race. The team had only one returning starter, catcher Kevin Shannon, and only one proven pitcher. Creel. But the unseasoned Longhorns attained a fourth-place national ranking before concluding a 53-13 season. Next year's team will have returning players at all positions. However, Gustaf­ son's recruiting leaves no position certain “ THERE WILL be competition for all spots.' Gustafson said. “ Starters will have the inside track but will have to work to maintain their positions." The Horns doubtless will have excellent reserve potential. One recruit, Randy Day of Orange Coast Junior College in Los Angeles, was an all-conference center fielder in his freshman year and was all-conference most valuable player at first base last year. Another first baseman-outfielder is Mark Reynolds of Wichita, who batted .490 his senior year in high school. Gustafson recruited several catchers to help replace Shannon, who's now playing pro ball Burk Goldthorn, who was used primari­ ly as a designated hitter in 1980, returns and is expected to become next year's starting catcher. The new catcher recruits are Brad Jones from Dallas Hillcrest. Rusty Uresti, a junior-college transfer who played high school ball in Austin, and Harland Robertson, a transfer from Hill Junior College. Gustafson has tried to establish a team which doesn t have to rely on power since Disch-Falk Field is not a home-run hitter's park The Horns did display some power in road games “ Power is an inconsistent ingredient," (íustafson said, “ and we look for a consistent ingredient That consistency should come mainly from increased depth in the pitching staff. Gustaf­ son has recruited four of the top high-sehool pitchers in the state for next year’s squad — Austin Westlake's Calvin Schiraldi, Spring's Mike Capel, La Marque’s Bobby Hinson and Carrollton Turner’s John Machin Gustafson said it has been “ quite an ac­ complishment" to recruit those four and hopes they can offset the loss of Creel and Acker. ‘‘WE HADN’T gone after many freshmen in the past, so we felt that this year we need­ ed to rebuild the pitching staff.” Gustafson said. “ Without good pitching, there is incon­ sistency for the team so we had to start there.” Nevertheless, the starting pitching rotation remains uncertain. “ I hesitate to say that freshmen will be the big players,” Gustafson said. “ I hope two of the freshmen pitchers will be outstanding enough to begin in the starting rotation along with the best returners " But Gustafson had no idea which pitchers would win starting spots. Gustafson said he expects better consisten­ cy from returning pitchers Mike Withrow, Dave Seiler and Doug Laufer The coach is also hoping for effective relief help from Jimmy Tompkins and Mike Hamer. ONCE AG AIN Texas strongest com­ petitors for the SWC title should be Texas A&M and Arkansas. A&M suffered heavy graduation losses but had a good recruiting season, Gustafson said The Aggies’ strength will be the return of last year’s freshman pitchers. Baylor, which Gustafson said is always a contender, might also make a resurgence. Texas Tech proved to be tough last season, eliminating Texas A&M in the SWC Tourna­ ment. Gustafson also expects greater competition from Houston, with its improved pitching. Even perennial cellar-dweller Rice, looking for a fresh start with a new coach and almost all their starters returning, could prove a sur­ prise, Gustafson said. Improvement in SWC teams has given Gustafson a cautious but confident outlook for next year. He is certain of the team’s talent but must wait to see which players might lead Texas to another championship. m m - i l <4* ' Mike Hamer prepares to pitch. Ed Malcik, Daily Texan Staff Gustafson faces familiar rebuilding task By ST EV E LEE Daily Texan Staff It happens every year. Major league clubs raid the UT baseball team’s pitching staff and make off with some promis­ ing troops. really came on for us this year." Acker is playing in the A A Southern League at Savannah. Gustafson, who became the winningest coach in Texas athletic history in 1979, foresees the battle for the starting rota­ tion as “ pretty wide open.” This year, the Kansas City Royals and Atlanta Braves com­ mandeered the talent, capturing, respectively, Keith Creel and Jim Acker. Anticipating the departures of Creel and Acker, Texas out- maneuvered the pros and signed four senior pitchers this summer. The annual depletion of the Longhorn pitching staff — a staff which has led Texas to two consecutive Southwest Conference championships and College World Series appearances — is becoming just another part of the job for Coach Cliff Gustafson. And though it’s getting to be commonplace, the task of replac­ ing Creel and Acker may be a particularly arduous one for Gustafson. Creel, voted by the 1980 squad as Longhorn Most Valuable Player, wound up his college career with a 38-4 record, while Acker ended at 19-7. C R EEL TIED ex-Longhorn pitcher Jim Gideon's record for most games pitched in a season in 1979. That year, the 6-2 righthander won 10 games, struck out 69 batters and had a 3.32 earned run average. He was also named M V P of the 1979 SWC Tournament as he helped Texas eliminate Arkansas with two saves in three relief appearances. Previously drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Oakland A s, Creel signed with the Royals after being chosen in the secondary phase of the major league draft this year. Acker, meanwhile, signed with the Braves after being the 21st player selected in the first round. Gustafson figures Acker to be the stronger of the two draftees. “ JIM IS A better physical prospect than Creel,” Gustafson said. “ He showed up as a walk-on and developed gradually. He “ Righthanders Calvin Schiraldi, Mike Capel, Bobby Hinson and southpaw John Machín all have good chances for a starting spot,” Gustafson said. “ I expect at least two of them — and I ’m not sure which two — to break into the top four. They were all drafted by the pros.” Dave Seiler may emerge as the stopper this year if he manages to overcome the inconsistency which tarnished an otherwise satisfying season “ HP] THRP^W A no-hitter against Southern Methodist Univer­ sity last year and dropped his E R A from 5.41 to 2.97,” Gustafson said. However, that proved to be the hard-throwing righthander’s only complete game in 12 starts. Some may suggest Gustafson is placing too heavy a burden on the four new recruits, but if they perform as well as in high school, Gustafson just may have another premier staff. Machin led Carrollton Turner to the AAAA semifinals last year with a 17-1 record. Schiraldi, 14-1 as a senior, pitched Westiake to the AAA title. Capel’s Spring high school team took the 1979 AAAA championship and Hinson ended his high school career with an 8-3 season at La Marque. All four pitchers played in the Texas high school all-star classic. Every summer, baseball coaches are thrust into a drafting war with the major league ball clubs. It isn’t easy for a starry- eyed high school kid to turn down the kind of money teams are offering today, but some prefer the safer route of going to college and learning the complexities of the game at a less- pressurized level. Gustafson said. “ MOST OF' THE players are drafted right out of high school, but the pro rule states that if a player selects a four-year college, he can’t be drafted until after his junior year, unless he’s 21.” Gustafson said That explains why most professional baseball candidates leave school after their junior seasons Prospects generally come to UT from high school, not junior colleges. • “ The majority of junior college ballplayers are lost to the pros. " Gustafson said “ Some will have two outstanding seasons and sign a pro contract." Former Longhorn hurlers in the professional ranks include Burt Hooten of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Rich Wortham of the Chicago White Sox, Jerry Don Gleaton with Tulsa in the Texas Rangers’ system. Keith Walker with Knoxville of the Blue Jays' chain, Ricky Wright with the Dodgers’ San Antonio affiliate and Tony Brizzolara of Richmond in the Braves’ system. “ The key to winning championships is pitching and we had the best staff last year,” Gustafson said. “ This year's club has the potential to do it again. Our strongest challenge will probably come from Arkansas and Texas A&M. They have a lot of returners.” If Texas is to improve on its No. 4 national ranking of last year, pitching will have to be even sharper and deeper than last season. Former UT pitcher Keith Creel. Daily Texan Staff Added funds aid gymnastic team’s future By JA N IS E BROWN Daily Texan Staff With enough funds to attract experienced gymnasts to her team, Texas women’s gym­ nastic coach Kathy Fears looks forward to fhe coming season, describing her newly acquired talent with just one word — “ amazing.” “ It’s going to be tough the first year out as a competitive team,” Fears said. But with a new lineup, a clean slijde and ample funding, Fears’ hopes are more than high — they're soaring. I t ’s no wonder, either, because the three new recruits and one new walk-on joining the team have played the game before — and won. “ The girls on scholarship have average scores that are higher than the top collegiate gymnasts in Texas this year,” she said. “ I don’t see anything that can keep us from winning state.” L e a d in g the te am as Fears’ “ No. 1 scholarship recruit” is Cindy Greer, a freshman from Garland who has competed nationally for several years. Also coming to Texas on full scholarships, are freshmen Debbie and Vicki Forman, identical twins from Miami. “ They are strong com­ petitors and have qualified for nationals for the past two years,” Fears said. D a w n P a t r o l — Join tho oatly budt at Bird't Nott Airport flodgling, advancod. rojuvonation flying at flight Club rato* fly froth, to oI, and calm bo for* clou at tint light Uplifting Divo ruthlottly out of tho 5on and pounco on tho day ahoadl Schodulo today for dawn — or anytim* VISA, MatloKhatgo Cottna Pilot Contor Sum mor tpocial Call now to ontor draw­ ing for froo flight. Bird't Noot Airport, 2 7 2 - 5 3 3 7 , 2 7 2 -5 9 4 3 The final addition, is walk- on Elizabeth Fritschen. who will enter the University as a senior this fall. “ She’ll give us a little more experience than some of the o th ers,’ ’ F e a rs said, as P'ritschen placed 18th all- around at collegiate nationals two years ago. FO U R WOMEN w ill be returning to the team from last year, and with up to four others joining the team as walk-ons, Fears anticipates having a total of 12 gymnasts to help carry the Texas team to new heights in this year's competition “ We will build up the team each year and over a four- year period, we will work up to h aving 10 people on scholarship,” P^ears said, but this year’s additions are at least a start. Undeniably, with six women on scholarship. Fears will have more than enthusiasm to work with this season UT senior gets new Thunderbird on Leigh Ford graduate finance plan ^ T h e w o rld 's shortest runw ay, l í o a N aval A viation team , Hj it's the u ltim ate challenge. ad When a man seeks the life of a Naval A viator or Naval Officer, he faces more than the challenge of learning the basics of flying. He faces the challenge of a solid steel runway, just 900 feet long, that never quite stands still. To handle it we look for men in fine physical shape with sharp minds that have earned thern a college degree. Then we see if that mind and body can handle N ava Aviation training. It's been said that our training begins where other aviation training programs leave off. Y ou 'll believe it during those long, rigorous hours that continue even after you think you've mastered your specialty. Sure it's tough. But when you're part of a N aval Aviation team, you have to be good enough to handle a challenge day after day, that others in aviation never have to think about. Think about it. If you are SOMEONE SPECIAL with 15 college hours or more, contact Je r r y Yost, 1-800-292-5703, for more information. Vincent Golbeck gets keys from Leroy Thompson; Patricia Lane, R E. C la r k lo o k o n . V incent Golbeck, graduating zoology major, took d elivery this week on his brand new 1981 Ford at Leigh Ford in Round Rock, becoming the first to take advantage of a new "g rad u ate finance p ro gram " initiated by the dealership. " I saw their ad in the Texan and decided to see if what they said was tru e ," Golbeck stated. "A n d it sure was. I was able to buy a new car with only $200 down, with 48-month financing. The interest rate was com ­ parable to a bank, and I was able to get the first month's payment set lower until I get out of school and established on my new job in law enforcement in Dallas. " A ll I had to do was to show evidence that I would graduate this spring and that I had a firm job offer. The loan was autom atic." How does he feel about his treatm ent at Leigh F o rd ? " I am very satisfied. The service was ex­ cellent, and I feel I got a very good deal, Golbeck declares. ^ FORD LEIGH FORD OF ROUND ROCK Just Minutes North of UT on IH35 in Round Rock! Page E10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Women golfers seek repeat By ROGER CAMPBELL Daily Texan Start Though Texas' women's golf team finished first in the state and eighth nationally last season. Coach Pat Weis optimistically is aiming for more in the coming year. “ I think we re going to be as cohesive as ever and maybe the best w e’ve ever had here,” Weis said But Weis warns most other teams also will im­ prove. “Offhand, on paper, we’re going to look strong, but at the same time, other teams will be just as strong.'’ she said “ With the performances of last year, I think we can improve, but I’m recognizing also that other teams will improve. “SMU is returning most of their people and are getting two top-notch players. And I expect much stronger teams from TCU and Texas A&M, based on the returning players and those recruited. “ COMPETITION WILL not only be in the state but the entire country.” Weis said. “The Universi­ ty of Tulsa i last season s national champions) will return a lot of their top players. “ I t’s going to be a real battle Each week w e’ll have to give a better p erfo rm an ce in the tour­ nam ents than last y ear .” And to be com petitive in an expected rough season, Weis r e tu r n in g letterw om en — particularly senior Debbie Petriz- zi—to “ add leadership to the te a m .” is ex p e c tin g th r e e “ T h e t h r e e t r u e v e t s — D e b b i e , B a r i B ra n d w y n n e and Cindy Figg can help with leadership. ” Weis said. “ I think if we can get that necessary leadership, they will offset the loss of (Carol Bragdon letter-winners two four-year B lackm ar and individual sta te last sea so n ’s winner. Lori Huxoldi “ DEBBIE HAS been a steady player She’s been in strong tourn am en ts all sum m er. I t ’s not so much leadership, but a strong p e rfo rm e r is what we will need from her. And if she can do th is...” Petrizzi, who won the National Association Intercollegiate Athletics for Women individual ti­ tle as a freshm an, last season tied for 14th in the national m e e t to be the Longhorns’ top finisher. Other letterw om en a re sophomore Jack ie Daiss and senior Lori Rogers. returning Squad m e m b e rs who didn’t letter — both walk- ons — sophomores Kathryn Riviere and Susan Watkins, a fo rm er I T tennis player, “ a r e e x­ pected to contribute to the te a m ," Weis said. THE LONGHORNS also picked up three high r e c r u its who Weis c o n sid e rs “ v ery school prom ising.” Kim Shipman of Richardson was state runner- up in her last high school season while Debbie Wright of Albuquerque won the New Mexico high school championship as well as the all-city c h a m ­ pionship in Ju n e T exas also signed Nancy Ledbetter, form erly from B irm ingham , to close out their recruiting. “ I do not look for a drop-off with the fresh m e n ,” real quality I just look for an im provem ent in the freshm en a re “ The Weis said players juniors and sen io rs.” Weis also expects the entire te a m to bid each week for the top five spots. “ I do not look for five people to m ak e up a regular lineup.” Weis said. “ E a c h player is going to vie each week, which is good. I believe the c o m ­ petition will be that close.” Improved depth, experience foreseen as keys to golf team’s drive for high national ranking By NANCY CHERNER Daily Texan Start Texas' men’s golf team has “ improved and is looking forward to gaining a top position in this year’s standing,” Coach George Hannon said “ Last season we finished 12th in the NCAA and third in our conference,” Hannon said. “ I think the team has more experience and depth than in the past.” Those returning to add experience to the Longhorns include Cutts Benedict, Marks Brooks, Tom Cornelia, Lawrence Field, Jim Spagnolo and Brian Williamson. Brooks. Cornelia, Field and Spagnolo were Tex­ as key players on last year’s team, Hannon said. Field, who will be in his third year at UT, should lead the Horns this season. Hannon said The two- tim e high school All-American from Oklahoma City c a m e to Texas a s the Junior Professional Golfers Association national cham pion and has since been one of the Longhorns’ low-scoring players. Field was also voted Most Valuable Player in his first year. (brother of John Aune, Two new com ers to the te a m a r e freshm en Greg Aune fo rm e r Texas quarterback, now a defensive back) from Dallas and Bhamdell Chamblee of Irving. The squad will include 10 to 15 players, Hannon said. Facing strong com petition early, the Longhorns open the 1980-1981 season Sept 8 in Houston a t the All-SWC tournam ent The All-American Junior College tournam ent, designed for freshmen, will also be played in Houston on Sept. 22-23. The only fall tournam ent Texas will play in Austin is the Harvey Penick tou rn a m e nt Nov. 10- 12 The conference has been dom inated for seven straight y e a rs by the Houston Cougars. “ The te a m s that give us the m ost trouble a r e the sa m e ones that always do — Houston, Texas A&M and TCU,” Hannon said. " O u r s ta n d in g la st y e a r show ed an i m ­ p ro v e m e n t,” Hannon said “ If the players show the dedication they have in the past, I don’t see I'm looking why we c a n ’t have a good tea m forward to a good seaso n.” Top players leave team Men’s tennis squad looks to better 5th place finish The Horns will miss Lori Huxhold. Daily Texan Start By JOE CHEMYCZ Daily Texan Start Texas’ men’s tennis coach Dave Snyder knew he was go­ ing to learn some new things when he began the 1979-80 season , but he never en ­ visioned he would learn so much in such a short span of time. tournament Texas finished its season with a 16-7 dual record, 6-4 in the SWC, and ended up in fifth place in the league after the in conference Corpus Christi. Arkansas swept to the title, winning all of its league dual matches and taking four of six singles crowns and one of three d o u b les c h a m p io n s h ip s . Houston finished second, SMU third and TCU fourth “Arkansas was obviously the class of the conference last year as it turned out,” Snyder said “After some of our early close matches I saw the possibility of us maybe sneaking into the top spots, but we just didn’t play well at the conference meet. “I thought our dual record was respectable but I was really disappointed with the SWC m eet.” The Longhorns started the year slowly, losing their first two matches to Pepperdine and Clemson. However, they turned things around quickly, putting together a seven- match winning streak, begin­ ning with Southern Illinois and ending with Pan American Following a 7-2 loss to league foe Houston, Texas edged both SMU and TCU by f or identical 5-4 margins before spring break and Snyder began to see another top three l e a g u e t h e f i n i s h L o n g h o r n s . T h e Ho r n s sandwiched wins over Duke and South Carolina around a 6- 3 loss to Georgia. R e t u r n i n g t h e southeast trip, Snyder’s squad easily beat both Texas A&M and Baylor. However, those wins proved to be its last gasp. The team dropped three of its final four SWC matches into the disastrous heading conference in tournament Corpus Christi f r o m team s. Only T he L o n g h o r n s c o u l d muster only four points from the league meet, just enough to hold off Texas A&M for fifth place. For Texas, five of six singles players lost in the first round, as did one of the doubles the tandem of Paul Crozier and Kreg Yingst advanced as far as the finals at any position. Crozier and Yingst, seeded se­ cond at the No. 1 position, were defeated in the title match 6-2, 6-3 by the top team of Peter Doohan and Ron Hightower of Arkansas. For the season. Crozier wound up with a 16-8 singles record, playing at the No. 1 spot when the season ended. Sophomore Bill Berryman’s record was 13-5. Craig Kar- don, a freshman, ended the spring with a 12-6 mark. Doug Snyder and Ted Erck, also freshm en, each won five times while losing once. The best record belonged to citizenship in both the United States and Greece, is playing in n a tio n a l c o m p e titio n abroad. “ He (Fotopoulos) definitely won’t be back here in the fall,” Snyder said. “ And there is a pretty good chance he won’t be back for the spring, but I really won’t know until then.” The new kid on the block is Edgar Giffenig, the No. 1 junior player in Mexico and friend of the Longhorns’ No. 2 sin gles player G uillerm o Stevens. Snyder is optimistic about the upcoming season. “We’re still going to be young, but the freshmen will be sophomores and we will have a lot of experience com­ ing back,” he said. “One of the most encouraging things is that most of the team members are playing on the this summer m ini-circuits against some top competition. For them to give up their summers shows me they are anxious to for the next year.” fo r The season starts on Sept. 26-28 a t h o m e th e Longhorns with the first in a series of three-team tour­ naments scheduled between Trinity, A&M and Texas. All three sqauds will move on to Trinity one month later and to College Station the final week in October. Finally, the an­ nual Westwood tournament, featuring many SWC schools, will conclude the fall season in November. No. 2 seed Guillermo Stevens in action freshman Sam Fotopoulos of K ansas. Fotopoulos, who played in only one of the first three matches, worked his way up the ladder by winning 16 c o n s e c u t i v e m a t c h e s . T C U 's Rick M e y e r finally beat Fotopoulos in the second to last match of the year. Fotopoulos’ record wound up 16-3 Texas returns seven players from last year’s team, along with one new recruit. Missing in 1980-81 will be Yingst and probably Fotopoulos. Yingst, unhappy with his playing time, has elected to transfer to T r i n i t y U n i v e r s i t y . Fotopoulos, who holds dual Coach expects improvement with stability By KAREN BROE Daily Texan Start Few coaches would trade places with Dave Woods when he took over as head coach of the UT women s tennis team last fall. Woods, a former assistant coach of the men's tennis team, entered as the fourth person person to direct the team since 1977. Many of the current team members were recruited by ex­ coach Cathy Beene. Beene, who replaced Betty Haggerman in 1977, resigned the post in November 1978, after a report appeared in T h e Daily Texan connecting her with the theft of a prospective recruit’s watch. The previous September, Beene had quietly been put on “probation as an employee of the University,” by Dr. Donna Lopiano, director of the Department of Women’s Athletics. Dick King, tennis pro at Austin’s Courtyard tennis club and personal friend of Beene, assumed interim coaching respon­ sibilities through the 1979 spring semester. Woods was ap­ pointed permanent coach in the fall. Beene’s popularity on the team. Lopiano said, made Woods transition difficult. “ I think it’s an extremely tough thing for a coach to take over from a previously popular coach — and get through that first year,” she said “ You're talking about kids that someone else recruited, that are used to a different style of coaching Woods, who is spending the summer teaching tennis at a club in Snow Mass. Colo admits the adjustment period was difficult at first. But going into his second year, he saids he expects “spirit and morale” on the team to improve. The older players “have been through one year, and they’ll know more about my coaching style,” he said. Returning players for the 1980-81 season are: Cindy Sampson, a junior from Fort Worth; Beth Ruman, a junior, originally from Indiana; Kirsten McKeen, a sophomore from Richardson; Karen Wilson, a sophomore from Odessa; Bernie McCann, a sophomore from Oklahoma; and Mary Jo Giammalva, a sophomore from Houston. New recruits include freshmen Vickie Ellis, of Florida, who ranked No. 21 nationally; and former San Antonio resident Tenley Stewart, a freshman who now lives in St. Louis. Woods listed as a prospective third recruit Jo Hansen, a sophomore who used to play for the University of California in Santa Barbara. Abbey Braswell, who played No. 2 doubles last spring with McKeen, said she is still undecided about playing this fall. Whatever her decision. Woods said he is appreciative of Braswell’s effort. “She came in and really helped us out in the spring,'’ he said, when top players Beth Alison and Merilee Keller dropped out of competition. Alison will not be returning to Texas and is uncertain of her plans, Woods said. Keller, who played both the No. 1 and 2 singles last fall, decided to play for Trinity University in the spring. Looking ahead to the fall. Woods said he expects to play more team tournaments than individual draw tournaments. “ We re hoping for more consistency next year” between the state and regional coaching committees which decide tourna­ ment rules, he added. “They never had a conference where you had to play everybody once We felt like we were taken advantage of. They drew up different rules at each tournament.” Cindy Sampson returns shot. Sports club program offers various competitive levels Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page E11 By JOHN BRADSHAW Daily Texan Staff You may not make it as a walk-on for Fred Akers’ football team or Abe Lemons' basketball squad, but you can join any of approximately 40 inter­ collegiate clubs or form your own if your favorite sport is not offered. “ You don’t have to be super cutthroat” to join many of the clubs, Tom Dison, associate director of the Division of Recreational Sports, said. “ To be competitive doesn’t mean you have to be skillful.” The sports club program offers com­ petition at collegiate, instructional and strictly recreational levels, he said. The clubs are outside the UT varsity athletics program. T H E M E N ’S powerlifting club has won two state championships and the 1980 national title. The men’s and women’s soccer, lacrosse and bowling clubs all offer strong competition at the collegiate level. The University bowling team, which has won the Texas Intercollegiate Bowling Conference championship for the last two years, chooses many of its members from the bowling club. “ I would recommend the bowling club to the highly competitive,” B ill Schwehr, Texas Union Recreation Center coordinator, said. For those who do not make one of the 12 places on both the men’s and women’s bowling team, there is the bowling club where bowlers can im­ prove on their averages while waiting to try for the team again. Tryouts for the bowling team are on the weekends of Sept. 13 and 20 at the bowling lanes in the Texas Union Recreation Center. FR ID A Y , S E PT . 12, starting at 6 p.m. and lasting until 6 a.m. Saturday, the Division of Recreational Sports will hold an all-nighter in Gregory Gym to acquaint students and faculty and staff with the various programs it offers. Activities such as wheelchair basket­ ball, rock-climbing and backpacking clinics, ultimate Frisbee matches, a wrestling tournament, mechanical-bull riding, racquetball and a midnight run around campus will be among the many contests and exhibitions offered at the all-nighter. All-nighter T-shirts will be awarded to the individual winners of the contests. The all-nighter w ill be free to students with a University student ID card and to non-students with a Recreational Sports ID. All other per­ sons w ill have to pay $2. “ T H E IN T EN T IS to expose people to the programs offered by recreational sports,” Dison said. “ We feel that if we can get 'em in here one time then we’ve got ’em.” The Division of Recreational Sports provides organization and minimal amounts of funding for the various clubs, but the clubs are formed and run by its members. Most existing clubs in­ clude both men and women and there are clubs for the disabled. If your favorite sport is not offered in the club program, you can get together with some friends and form a club, Dison said. A list of each club’s sponsor and stu­ dent representative is kept in the sports club office in Gregory Gym 33 along with the time and place of each club’s meetings. Information on how to form a club is available at the same office. The phone number for the sports club office is 471-3116. RACQUET SPORTS, field sports, power sports (w eight liftin g and wrestling), water sports, competitive sports, traditional sports (shooting, fencing and archery), sports for the dis­ abled, exercise and self-defense, dance groups and new clubs make up the various activity areas of the sport club program. “ Really, the basic philosophy of the clubs is play for the competition itself and not for awards,” Dison said. The new club sports are darts and Frisbee. The Dart Club has weekly campus dart tournaments in the Texas Tavern. The club also sponsors the University dart team which competes in the Austin Dart Association. Ultimate Frisbee and “ tricking the disc” are the main activities of the Frisbee Club. T H E A S S O C I A T I O N of B lind Athletes and the University Wheelchair Athletic Association promote sport clubs for the disabled. There are bowl­ ing competitions for the blind, a wheelchair basketball team called the High Rollers and blind competitors on the wrestling club. The wheelchair athletes also compete in track meets sanctioned by the National Wheelchair Athletic Association. The Outdoor Program offers hiking, canoeing and kayaking clinics for the disabled. The exercise and self-defense groups practice various Oriental and Eastern exercises for general conditioning and body awareness. Some of these groups are competitive while others are simp­ ly recreational. TH E FO U R UT DANCE groups are primarily performing and instructional in nature. The competitive dance club is for persons who dance regularly and its members train for competition in and around Texas. The sailing, synchronized swimming, and water skiing teams are included un­ der the water sports program and have all become competitive locally or nationally. The archery and fencing clubs and the pistol and rifle teams, under the traditional sports program, all offer competition at the collegiate level as do rodeo, volleyball and men’s gym­ nastics. The emphasis of the volleyball club is on the Olympic-style “ power” volleyball. “ Out of 40 or so clubs, about half run year-round,” Dison said. “ During the summer we provide for 15 or 20 clubs.” Faculty and staff can join the sport clubs and participate in all the ac­ tivities offered by the Department of Recreational Sports for $18 a year. The RE C Sports Revi ew and Cam­ pus News in Brief, which appear in The Daily Texan, announce sport club ac­ tivities. The R EC Sports Update, 471- 4373, provides 24-hour information on all the programs currently offered by the Division of Recreational Sports. Many clubs also place notices around campus. Mark Pitzer and Reid Slaughter compete for lacrosse club. Intramurals gives year-round program Daily Texan Staff By RUTH GARNER Daily Texan Staff Anyone who enjoys athletics should find a sport to suit his in­ terest in the University Division of Recreational Sports in­ tramural program. Last year, the 85 tournaments had 30,000 participants, a 20 percent increase from the year before, Tom Dison, associate director of recreational sports, said. TH E IN T RA M U R A L program consists of three areas — men’s, women’s and coed sports. Activities offered throughout the year in the men’s and women’s programs are based on past interest and participation. Supplementing the others is the coed program which offers the opportunity for men and women to compete together in a variety of activities. “ No previous experience is required,” Dison said. “ Students enter at their own level so there’s a classification for everyone.” which are for the most highly skilled students. The classifica­ tion with the most entries is the “ B ” level, for those interested in a fairly high degree of competition. The “ C” leagues are for those interested in recreational activities, more than com­ petitive ones. “ Softball was by far the favorite team sport last year with 721 teams involved,” Dison said.“ Basketball was the second most popular activity with 638 teams, followed by football with 492 teams, volleyball with 284 teams and soccer with 116 teams.” T EN N IS AND racquetball were the most popular individual sports. To register for individual or dual tournaments, you simply enter as an individual or with your partner. Teams are formed by housing groups such as dorms, frater­ nities, sororities, cooperatives and apartments and by registered student organizations and other groups of individuals interested in plaving together. Students interested in the intramural program should go by The most competitive individuals enter the “ A” leagues, the office at Gregory Gym 33 or call 471-3116. s = = Looking Good Makes You Feel Good “r¥e*vui We feel that the Henry Jacobson’s man buys style as w ell as substance. We cater to men who care by con­ tinually providing a fresh look in m e n ’ s w e a r . Custom fitting for the “ Life of the Garment.” 2222 GUADALUPE N E X T TO THE TEXAS THEATRE IMMIGRATION CONSULTANT * IMMEDIATE RELATIVE PETITION (1-130): The application filed seeking Perm anent Resident Status. It is available to the spouse, parent or child of an A m erica n citizen. THOMAS ESPARZA, ATTORNEY 512/441-0062 1001 W. 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L ittle do those unfortunate creatures living outside the Garden of Austin realize that water flows abundantly from beneath almost every rock and roll of the “Country of Eleven-Hundred Springs.” Water seeping up from the clean­ sing limestone aquifer of the Edwards Plateau Aquifer — water of all temperatures and clarity — water for enjoying and preserving, unites the aqua kindred of Austin on its banks and shoals. In this short guide are 11 of Cen- tral Texas’ best water and swim­ ming holes which I have enjoyed during my 22-year stay in The Friendly City. Barton Springs, in Zilker Park on west Barton Springs Road This is the best of the Austin aqua scene. Its frigid, bubbling clarity should be experienced at all costs and as often as possible. Barton’s perpetually dear, 68- degree spring water washes clean the heat and grime of a long day on campus. But Barton’s is more than cold water — it is the city’s premier arena for people-watching, conver­ sation, topless swimming and the plotting of one’s destiny. While soaking up rays on the hot rocks near the low diving board watching beauty and the world pass by, war, famine, pestilence or even the next y’s test fast become secondary in portance to tranqulity of the nd. For a culinary twist, seek out an derwater spring, swim to its arce on the bottom and sip its cool iters. \n entrance fee is mandatory dur- l the summer, but swimming is *e the rest of the year for polar ars. Crystal Quarry, right o ff U.S. 3 North before The Boat Shop. rhis one’s on private property so VTCH IT! rhe straight, deep edges of this 1 limestone rock quarry are this le’s forte. Thirty-foot cliffs to the nth allow excellent diving with lit- fear of repercussion against die ttom. Spring water and rain runoff keep this 60-foot-deep depression always filled with clear, cool water — se- cond only to Barton’s. Admission is free. Ham iltion’s Pool, on Hamilton Pool Road off Texas 71. The calming effect of the water pouring over the edge of a 40-foot, half-moon, limestone precipice into a deep, clear pool surrounded by Cyprus trees makes Hamilton’s Pool the mellowest of picnic grounds to be found. But please remain a topwater bird at this swimming hole and refrain from swan diving or you’ll bust your skull open on the rocks below. Admission varies yearly. G orm an Falls, direct your sights north on U.S. 183 to L am ­ pasas, hang a left turn on Ranch Road 580 to Bend and follow the signs Did you know there is an 85-foot waterfall on the “muddy” Colorado River within 50 miles of Austin? Did you know there are caves honeycombed behind the falls which surface at two levels offering un­ usual views of the falls ami the river? Did you know that Gorman Falls may well be the best kept secret in Texas? Cottages, cam per hook-ups, campgrounds, canoes and food are available and for a small fee, the managers will truck you on a trip down the Colorado from Bend, a ta rn populated with less than 100 people interesting in itself for stiff competition between its two (count ’em, two) gas station-grocery stores. Prices vary according to your desires. , McKinney Falls State Park, o ff U.S. 183 South near Pilot Knob Swimming is good here when the surf’s up after a rain. It’s the two waterfalls on Onion Creek winding through the park which packs them in for tubing, swimming and rock sliding. Unfor­ tunately, like all state parks, McKinney Falls has its drawback — no consumption of alcohol allowed. The $2 per carload entrance fee allows entrance to swimming holes, picnic areas, bike-and-hike trails and a nature interpretive center Campbell’s Hole, above Bar­ ton Springs on Barton Creek One of the few inner-city swim­ ming holes where people can do, drink or smoke anything they please. Park rangers occasionally walk the area, but not on a frequent enough basis tb cause alarm. summer months, but after a good rain it is teaming with cliff-divers performing aerial acrobatics. The Hole also serves as the final destination for inner tubers making the 2-and-Va-hour trip from Loop 360. It ain’t such a bad trip if you place a six pack on your lap. Forget admission - It’s free. Bull Creek P ark, on Lakewood D n ve o ff o f FM 360 Bull Creek Park should be renam­ ed L ast Chance Park because as soon as Loop 360 is completed, it’s a safe bet to assume this stoic swim­ ming won’t be worth a flit — so this may be your last chance to see it. Sitting on the big bouluers in the center of this concrete edged pool on Bull Creel should remind you of your earlier life as a turtle basking on the Nile. Also try swinging on the best rope Campbell’s hole is dry during the swing around. yi ■ . • ' ' • No charge, please. H ippie Hollow and W indy Point, on Comanche Pass o ffR R 620 I > This is th e m o . For aU those willing to test the tenderness oi the clothed bodily areas (groins, breasts, etc.) against the Old Sors rays, these two swim­ ming holes on Lake Travis offer the finest in communal nudity and full- body tanning. Requirements for an enjoyable afternoon are plenty of sun-tan oil to protect your skin from the sun, shoes to protect your feet from the rocks and a trash hag to protect the land from your litter. Keep your money in your pockets, it’s free. Deep Eddy, 400 Deep E d t e Or ‘Deep Edward’s” by locad». Hob-nob with the new Ctetari&e mamas escorting their ttiioglv*** The pool is nicely divided into two sections allowing die more sartas swimmers respite from taj^ children’s frolicking. Drawback - die lifeguards here are like camp directors and whistle and yell at every little infraction of the pool’s rules ... definitely not cooI J i t i ife Fee please, Stacy Pool, Alemeda and Live Oak Street Warm water. What every winter awImmer needs to complete his jaaiH fta# exercise program is an swimming pool with constant degree water from hot springs. This is a normal chiorinai . swimming pool, which Is free» free, and not noted for its big crowds so “ mum is the word” so this hot spot. ; Water Fountain on the Grounds. ' If it’s good enough for the test four generations family it’s good enoofb for There Is ooth&ig?j. hating*; hooest-to-gosh spring water t a l is the best, especially after night on the tara . Page F2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Texas’ finest circus features Capital performances By BILL VALDEZ Daily Taxan Staff The finest circus in Texas will be auditioning in November and will formally sta rt its comedy and animal acts in January at the state Capitol. That circus is the state Legislature, and over the years it has unintentionally produced mofe laughs than m ost comedians do in a lifetime. The next session figures to be one of the best shows in recent years with many im portant issues to be dealt with — issues legislators can sink their teeth into with unbounded gusto. Tlie first order of business for the House will be selection of a speaker — unless of course the pre­ sent one, Billy Clayton, m anages to survive the charges of bribery and misuse of office that originated from the federal governm ent’s Brilab investigation CLAYTON IS charged with accepting a 15,000 bribe from a Houston labor official with the tacit understanding $650,000 more would follow for future political campaigns if Clayton would use his influence to change insurance com panies for state employees. Clayton has acknowledged he received the $5,000, but m aintains it was merely a campaign contribution and not a bribe. A Houston jury will determ ine Clayton’s political future, but he has set Labor Day as the cutoff for any decision on whether he will seek a fourth term for what is called the third most powerful political position in Texas. Clayton’s woes were unveiled in early F ebruary and as of th at tim e he had only one opponent for the speakership — John Bryant of Dallas. When his in the B rilab scandal becam e involvem ent known, every representative with the support of a t least one colleague seemed to announce for speaker. The race for the speakership reached fever pitch in late June when news of Clayton’s pending indictm ents spurred his heirs’ apparent to hold press conferences to announce they had won the race, and m ore press conferences to denounce the others’ claim s THE SPEAKER is elected by a sim ple m ajori­ ty of the 150-member House first day the session opens and since this is an election year and the exact composition of the House will not be known until after November, political observers are ex­ pecting no end to the blood-letting before then If the speaker’s race is center-ring of the cir­ cus, it will soon be displaced by redistricting juggling once the session starts. Every 10 years the Legislature is charged with realigning voting districts in accordance with changing population patterns that are d eter­ mined by the census. Obviously, m any political fortunes will rise or fall depending on where the lines are drawn. A victim of earlier redistricting was the “ Bull of the Brazos,” state Sen. Bill Moore, D-Bryan. His district had changed considerably with pop- * I&R is an attem pt to have the public vote directly on issues Critics m aintain only well heeled organizations (large corporations and political action groups) will be able to effectively use the power In states where it has been used, I&R has affected less than 2 percent of the legislation passed Clements m aintains I&R is necessary to allow the voters access to the legislative process, but unless he has more success than in 1979 when the issue was repeatedly voted down, it appears I&R will rem ain a sideshow. • Consum er issues — an a re a norm ally slighted by the Legislature — are on the horizon to be dealt with Issues include energy policies, wages and prices, health care, insurance, food and housing. Legislators should find that ignoring or weighing the issues in favor of traditional power groups in Texas will be m et with harsher resistance than in past sessions. Bryant has made his pro-consumer position known, and even if he loses the speaker's race, he still should be a powerful advocate. • Budgeting and taxes are always a favorite subject of the Legislature. The last session pass­ ed a $20.1 billion biennium budget, coming large­ ly from sales and property taxes and oil and gas royalties. Watch for a battle royal, since giving money to politicians to distribute is like throwing bloody entrails to the lions — they will scratch and claw for every last bit. • Clayton’s troubles have led to renewed in­ terest in limiting the power of the speaker to con­ trol legislation. The speaker is elected in an open ballot and then selects chairm en of the various House com m ittees — a situation that lets the speaker know who voted for him and what rew ards or punishments should be m eted out. Reform s calls for secret ballot, limiting the speaker to one or two term s and changes in the rules that determ ine com m ittee representation and how bills weave their way through the Legislature. THE SPEAKER is an all-powerful ringm aster who determ ines what acts will appear on the agenda, and many legislators would like to see that power diminished. The Legislature is never lacking in subjects to play with During the tim e Clem ents was propos­ ing a special legislative session this sum m er, no less than 58 separate issues were subm itted for consideration. Once the November election is over legislators will seriously consider what bills they will spon­ sor in January. Many will be walking a political tightrope as they attem pt to satisfy the voters who put the financial into office and backers who provided the funds. them If past shows are any indication, it should be amusing or tragic — depending on which side of the ring you watch from. uiation shifts, and what had once been a secure power base turned into quicksand as a m ore m oderate and appealing candidate was elected to office. Speculation is that if Moore had survived the challenge this year, he — an acknowledged force in the Senate after three decades of roaring leadership — would have m anaged to realign his district in a m anner th at would have ensured his re-election for the next decade. As it turns out, the bull had his horns clipped and was sent to the pasture early, leaving the cir­ cus with one less act. R e d is tric tin g will occupy m uch of the L egislature’s tim e and efforts, but other floor fights should com pete with it for press space and tedium • The University of Texas System budget will be presented to the Legislature and will call for increased tuition costs for students. Gov. Bill Clements has com e out for doubling tuition rates but faces strong opposition from state Sens. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, and Babe Schwartz, D- Galveston. who have labeled the hike an outrage aim ed at one of the weakest lobbying groups in the state — students. Clements counters that since tuition rates have not risen since the '50s and taxes have steadily in­ creased, it is only fair students should shoulder the burden • C lem ents’ own addition to the circus is in­ itiative and referendum — something he has been promising the voters since elected to office in 1978. ACADEMY SURPLUS Has Absolutely Everything Need To Get Settled s For School W STUDENTS' HEADQUARTERS _ S a m h A M E R I C A R Q _ _ _ _ C KA y f I L 1» 4 Big Stores to Serve You The Most Interesting Store Open All Day Sunday 4 1 0 3 N. IH 35 U 603 E. Ben W h ite Blvd. 81 03 Research Blvd. 6601 Burnet Rd. I A Mayor takes ¡ob seriously By JACKIE SMITH Dally Texan staff T i m e Ma g az i ne has chosen her one of 50 upcoming leaders under 45 years of age in the nation President Carter has named her to the U.S. Conference of Mayors. She’s even had a taste of Hollywood by acting a small part in the motion picture “ Roadie.” To the citizens of Austin, however, this woman is probably best known for the role she portrays as Mayor Carole Keeton McClellan. In the life of the mayor there are no “ typical days.” Some are spent atten­ ding meetings and fulfilling ceremonial duties while others are filled with keep­ ing appointments and coping with the everyday problems of the city. “ T H EY T E L L mental patients to take it one day at a time — well, I take it one hour at a time,” McClellan said, poin­ ting to several tall stacks of letters, memos and reading material piled up behind her desk “ I'm a stickler for seeing everything myself,” she said. “ I never catch up.” McClellan reserves some days to spend strictly with her four sons. Often times she combines her role as mayor and mother by using her car telephone to do “ city business” while driving the kids in the neighborhood car pool to school. B EIN G A woman in politics has not caused her any major problems, she said. “ Initially I felt that I might be blasted or praised, but now I don’t even think about it.” A strong supporter of the Equal Rights Amendment, McClellan said all she wants or expects for women is the “ same fair shake” entitled to any person. Sh o rtly a fte r she took o ffice, McClellan said there were times when she was m istakenly called “ M r. M ayor.' In addition, a group of firefighters walked into her office wan­ ting to have a “ man-to-man” talk. Instances such as these do not bother McClellan, because she said she doesn’t get “ hung up” on this sort of details. Although she has not announced whether she will seek a third term next April, McClellan said she is seriously considering that possibility. She also said she is “ heavily leaning” in the direction of another campaign because there are “ too many things (projects) which are not yet finished and two years (the term of office) is just too short a time to complete them,” McClellan said. “ Being mayor — it’s the people, that’s what I enjoy about the job — and the problem-solving,” McClellan explained. “ It ’s an education — a quick education learning about the world, which is a real benefit for me. “ It ’s not a safe place to be politically, but as my daddy always told me — if you don't do anything to get anybody mad, you haven't done anything,” she said. ALTHOUGH McClellan ran into op­ position when dealing with such issues as the South Texas Nuclear Project, the energy situation, the boat races on Town Lake and her recent “ crackdown” on massage parlors, the mayor does not consider any one of them as her “ toughest task.” T H E IS SU E she has great concern for is keeping the quality of life in Austin “ second to none” by controling the development of the city so that what results is “ quality growth,” she said. “ I'd like to get more students involved in the city, by becoming members of the various city boards and commissions. The students are a very important part of our city — a welcome part because they present a different aspect to our lives,” she added M cC LELLA N , a 1961 graduate from the University with a degree in a government honors program, was also a member of Chi Omega sorority, Orange Jackets and president of Mortar Board. Her father. Page Keeton, former dean of the University law school, in some way influenced her future career as a politician, she said. “ When my brother and I were little, he (her father) used to recite law cases to us, instead of bed­ time stories. We would have to be the judge and decide the case,” McClellan said. JU G G LIN G her time between her duties as mayor and mother, McClellan likes to spend as much time as she can with her four sons, aged 12-17. “ My kids, which are my number one pleasure in life, they are my escapism,” she said. “ Every now and then I like to get away — pack up the kids and go to a tennis tournament. “ They don’t think of me as being the mayor, they’re more concerned with where their clean pair of Levis are, or w hat w e’re having for d in n er,” , McClellan said, laughing. “ They bring me back down to earth. “ T H EY CAN discuss all the current issues concerning Austin,” she said, ad­ ding her children are usually split down the middle about political issues which provides for some interesting conver­ sations around the dinner table. If she didn’t have enough personal reasons for seeking re-election, McClellan said her oldest son, who has been accepted to Yale University in Connecticut for the fall, will instead attend the University so he can “ stick around” to work on her campaign. Tuesda August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page F3 m m j w r - i r r y • ■**" - - Austin Mayor Carole Keeton McClellan Ralph Barrera. Dally Texan Staff TO BUY SELL TRADE TEXAN WANT ADS ARE BEST! 471-5244 - Buy this oxford cloth shirt, and we'll monogram it at no additional charge! Team it up with our slim trouser pants... W ith purchase of this classic button-down oxford cloth shirt, you may have three initials monogrammed at no extra charge, on either the cuff or the pocket! Please allow ten days for this service. The shirt is of easy-care cotton/polyester, in pink, blue or yellow, sizes S,M,L, 14.00. Complement it with the menswear-styled twill "workpants" with side pockets, front pleats and striped belt, in navy, khaki, black, blue, violet or green cotton/polyester, size 5-13,19.00. Junior World JOSHES M A UNIT O f A i L III STOit'- W e will continue to provide credit tor the convenience of our customers. . .whenever it is needed! For your convenience, you can now order 24 hours a day from joske's anywhere in Texas. O utside San Antonio- Dial toll free 1-800-292-5600. In San Antonio-Dial 227-4211. Shop Joske's, Highland M all, daily 10 til 9! Page F4 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 View, brew make Dry Creek Cafe unique decade They tak e tu rn s d ro p ­ ping quarters in the juke box. guzzling th eir brew s and swaying to tunes like Bob Seger’s “ Night Moves” and Kenny Rogers’ “ Lucille.” One patron, a 1968 Universi­ ty law school graduate who first visited the cafe early in his college career, said, “ It was a legend back then “ It hasn’t changed,” he add­ ed before taking a swig of beer “ It’s not bigger, it’s not smaller and it's no cooler.” An ancient Fedders air con­ ditioner sits on a window sill; the button is pushed on “ hi.” but the unit probably died when cigars were a nickel OUTSIDE, the temperature approached 100 degrees. “On dog-days like this, only the hard-core can be found here,'' one patron said, noting, “The Pearl longnecks have a lot to do with my coming here.” The selection of beer at the cafe is pretty good But all brands are not available at all times. Pearl seems to be the popular choice anyway. “There's so damn few of this kind of place left,” a patron said. “ When this place goes, it will never be replaced We’ll get a Steak and Ale.” “ What are you doing in this beer joint anyway?” one of his friends asked. learn the game. “ I t’s a sign of decadent youth,” warned one patron as he sipped a beer. said RETURNING from the bar with se v era l cold b e e rs, a n o th e r p atron solem nly observed, “Too much of old Austin has been torn down — everything is discos.’’ During I m drinking beer, he said as he strolled over to the bar. the conversation, three kids scurried around a coin-operated pool table in the center of the room trying to Another patron, a 1971 Baylor law school graduate, casually sat on the edge of the pool table after the kids left. “Sarah really doesn’t care if you come back again." he Just then she walked over from the bar and told him to get off the table “ SARAH IS a very special person,’’ he said, hopping off the table “And she has a very special place.' The first patron summed up the attitude prevalent at the “ A D ry C r e e k C a f e : millionaire and a bum could come in here and they would both be the same treated way.” By DAVID PYNDUS Daily Taxan Staff The Dry Creek Cafe sits n e a r the peak of Mount Bonnell — unpretentious as a Drag eggroll vendor. But here the view and the brew are the thing. Though it is called a cafe, not even hamburgers are sold. For the thirsty, a variety oi domestic brews are available, and a few Pearls usually can put hunger pains out of mind Food or not, this modest saloon has one attribute which sets it apart — the view. WATCHING the su n set from the open porch on top of is a the Dry Creek Cafe pastime, especially in the spr­ ing when is cooler. The cafe’s cold drinks, however, can help one over­ come the summer heat. And the view is magnificent in any season. the w eather The small cafe is rarely crowded — just the way the owner wants it. “ I ’m h a p p y w ith th e custom ers I ’ve got,” said Sarah E. Huggins, owner and b a r t e n d e r . And a s one customer remarked, “ you’ve got to play by her rules ” The cafe at 4812 Mount Bonnell Road is open 6 to 9 p.m. weekdays and Saturdays and is always closed Sundays. But the hours are constantly changed — subject to Sarah's mood. On a normal weekday after­ noon at the cafe, a few state employees stand in the back room chatting about legen­ dary Austin clubs that have la s t d is a p p e a re d th e in —, . The Dry Creek Cafe Brad Doherty, Daily Texan Staff a * tv i «Si STATE C A P IT O L (11th ST €*M) Nice people.Taking care of nice people. A ll over the w orld. RAMADA INN CAPITOL Reservations— AC 512 476-7151 Toll Free— 1-800-228-2828 P.O. Box 6 2 7 300 East 11th Street Austin, TX 78767 SEE th o usan d s of p la n ts u n d e r one roof. * SAVE by b u y in g direct from th e g ro w e r. LEARN h o w to care for your p lan ts fro m the , p eop le w h o g re w th e m . V A R I E T Y , q u a l i t y a n d specim en p la n ts . If w e don t h a v e so m e th in g y o u 're look- ing fo r, w e 'll fin d it. Septem ber 6 -7 M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M f l w j j j Bass fíts your fashions W hether y o u ’re dressing up or dressing dow n, Bass shoes are sure to fit m t M W % W É & éEb J" your m ood. Their supple leathers and m f U wLM m cushiony soles will make you feel g o o d Cm all day long. And Bass's classic g o o d looks will never cramp your style. So com e in and see how much fun it is to fit the Bass look into your life. Mount Bonnell worth the climb By DAVID PYNDUS Deity Texan Staff Three miles west of the University campus. Mount Bonnel! traditionally has been a refuge for students seek­ ing a breath of fresh air And fresh air is exactly what students need after climbing the dozens of stone steps leading to the summit. The 775-foot peak is a Travis County landmark known its “ spectacular view” of the Colorado River far meandering Indian trails and stone picnic tables. Mount Bonnell is one of those legendary places students have been going to since the dawn of time. Records in the Austin Public Library show students have been trekking there for many years. AND MOUNT Bonnell’s attraction has remained the same. Shortly after Dwight Eisenhower was re-elected president, it was called ‘‘the most popular place around the campus for lovers.” This continues to be one reason for the peak's populari­ ty But the scenic attraction is paid for in the many biting, crawly things and small pebbles that get in shoes. At one time. Mount Bonnell was named after a beautiful Spanish señorita — Antonette Rodriquez. She ul­ timately jumped off the cliff after her lover was killed by Indians. Appropriately enough, it was called “Antonette’s Leap.” The affair began after Cíbolo, a Comanche chief, heard of Antonette’s beauty and set out with 50 of his warriors to find her. Once they located her, Cibolo took the maiden to his Colorado River camp. HER BETROTHED, a Spaniard named Don Leal Navarro Rodriquez, swore to get his lover back. He reached Cibolo’s camp, freed her and they both rode away. But the story did not end there. When Cíbolo discovered Antonette missing, he gathered his warriors and set out to find her. They caught up with the two, and Don Leal shot Cibolo in the chest. But the warriors retaliated by shooting 20 arrows in Don Leal. Antonette. realizing her fate, kissed her dead lover and plunged off the precipice. Antonette’s Leap was apparently later renamed after George W. Bonnell, a newspaper editor who traveled to Texas in 1836. FRANK BROWN’S Annals of Travis County” said, “The name was conferred by a prominent lady of the time named Barker, a widow, highly respected and ad­ m ired.” Some claim Barker bestowed the honor «a Bonnell in 1841 at a party where everyone was in good spirits. Yet another story says that a girl named Golden Nell married her beau on top of the mountain, but Indians at­ tacked and the couple leaped off to avoid capture. The mountain was subsequently named “Bonnell” — a com­ bination of “beau” and “Nell.” These days Indians are non-existent at Mount Bonnell so the “ lover’s leap’ stories should not scare anyone away from visiting the peak. D a w n P a t r o l — Jo in th e early birth at B ird 's N e t t A irp o r t fle d g lin g , advanced, re ju v e n a tio n H yin g a t flig h t Club ra to t fly f re th . coo 1, a n d ca lm before c la n a t f i n l lig h t U p liftin g D ive ru t h lo ttly o u t of the t u n a n d p o u n ce on th o day a h o a a i S chedule to d a y fo r d a w n — or a n ytim e VISA M a tte rC h a rg e C e ttn a M o t Center S um m e r tp e c ia l C a ll n o w lo enter d r a w ­ in g fo r tre e f lig h t B ird t N e tt A irport, 7 7 7 - 5337, 272-5943 ’ / Í ííidTK L U in m i ¿ A CAU r;_ ^WAHTAK7hot un e 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 South Lakeshore Laundromat "W e Take the Load O ut O f Laundry" W ash W ith Us A nd Erqoy: • The C leanest Place In To w n • Color T .V .'t • M a g a zin e s • Snack M achines • C h a n g e M a ch in e (T h at w orks) • A tte n d a rts O n D uty - All Hours • W ash & Fold Service 45 * por pound B rin g This Ad For Free W ash er lo a d Limit O n e Per Custom er L a u n d r o m a t H o u rs 7 :30 A .M .-1:00 A:M. W a s h & Fold Hours 8:00 A .M .-5:00 P.M. Mon.-Fri. 1 7 1 7 S. La keshore Dr. 4 4 7 -9 2 3 6 Both Locations: Lower Level Highland Mall HOURS: Monday-Saturday 10 a.m .-9 p.m. . . Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page F5 Citizens discourage development in ‘sensitive’ areas rains and dump chlorine and high-nutrient wastewater into the creek • Homes built on creek bluffs for the view alter the lin e and n a t u r a l s ig h t character of the creek • Development would be particularly destructive to wildlife. These concerns supplement the most obvious concern of environmentalists, pollution of the n a t u r a lly c le a n Edwards Aquifer water which supplies the Rsr-ton watershed and all of Austin’s drinking water. D E S P I T E T H E S E a n ­ ticipated problems there has been an alm ost booming growth in the watershed area which forced the City Council to look into the problems and respond to them. They began by examining a parks and recreation proposal to acquire more than 500 acres of land in the watershed area known as the Barton Creek Green belt, worth ap­ proximately $4.6 million The proposal was made in August 1979. The council has purchas­ ed some of the land and is land negotiating for more with options on the rest. POSSIBLY THE largest ac­ tion taken by the council was the 180-day m o ra to riu m in 1979 on further enacted d e v e lo p m e n t w ith in the watershed area. This would give the council time to ex­ amine the problems in more detail. They called on dozens of c ity departm ents and citizens’ advisory boards to prepare reports and make recommendations. in for From this came the Barton Creek Task Force, a group th e w h ic h to a id is r e c o m m en d a tio n s the growth management plan of Barton Creek The task force is a six-member board made up of two environmentalists, land owners and two two represen tatives the city's Environmental Board They work in conjunction with an e n g in e e rin g and e n ­ vironmental consulting firm to make major recommen­ dations to the council from WITHIN THE task force, however, there has been a lot of disagreement between the land-ow ners and the en­ viro n m en talists. They all agree the most important problem is ensuring a high w ater q u ality w ithin the watershed. Among the areas of disagreem ent are develop­ ment density, sew age disposal s y s t e m s , w id th o f th e greenbelt corridor and exten­ sion of the moratorium Despite more than four months of debate, the task force and consulting firm came up with the Barton Creek Ordinance — a strict d e v e l o p m e n t s e t limitations. The council ended the moratorium, which had been extended three times by adopting this ordinance. of THE ORDINANCE will pre­ vent indiscriminate uprooting of the vegetation, prevent any increase in soil erosion which land m ay be caused by development, compensate for in cr e a s es in storm w a t e r runoff and reduce the pollu­ tion concentration this runoff. in The watershed area was divided into three zones: the Critical Water Zone, 400 feet to either side of the c reek : the Lowland Water Zone, 300 feet beyond the C ritical Water Zone and the Upland Water Zone, which includes the rest of the area. Each zone is limited to 60 percent development within a given tr a c t. A lso, storm sewers are prohibited from draining directly the creek or any of its tributaries into APPLICANTS who want to construct within the area m ust provide an ero sio n - sedimentation, drainage and street layout plan. D e sp ite th e se str in g e n t standards, environm entalists still see a threat to the creek and pledge not to end their fight to save Barton Creek. By CARLOS SANCHEZ Daily Texan Staff Barton Springs is a smab part of an ecologically in­ tricate and fragile area exten­ ding more than 50 miles from Hays County to the Colorado River. Encompassed within this area is Barton Creek and the Barton Creek watershed. It is an area which has en­ dured for centuries, an area feared to be destroyed soon by the city it serves. AS AUSTIN continues rapid growth, an ever-increasing problem of co-existing with the watershed grows also. The Austin City Council has in­ herited the task of controling t h is p r o b le m . C o u n c il m e m b e rs a re fo rc e d to m e d ia t e b e tw e e n la n d developers and environmen­ talists who raise convincing arguments as to why their in­ terests are more important. To help combat some of these problems, the council passed in 1979 a revision to the city Master Plan, which dic­ tates growth patterns for Austin. Adopted after more than five years ot research and debate, the plan calls for growth along a north-south axis and discourages develop­ ment in the environmentally s e n s itiv e a re a s w est of Austin The plan was soon challeng­ ed, however. Land develop­ ment near the Barton Creek area had already begun con­ struction by the time the Master Plan had been adopted and there was a demand by some of the subdivisions for new sewer service and roads. TO MEET this demand, City Manager Dan Davidson advocated in 1979 construction of the South Austin Outfall — a major sewer line which was anticipated to satisfy the needs of the area These sewers were eventually to be placed directly beneath the creek itself. Although this has yet to be done, environmentalists im­ mediately voiced their con­ cern for the creek. They claimed this plan, coupled with the plan for proposed ad­ ditional roadways in the area, would threaten the creek and encourage more development. Environm entalists becam e increasingly concerned at the beginning of construction of Barton Creek Square, planned largest shopping to be the m a ll th e S o u t h w e s t . Scheduled for completion in 1981, this mall would encom ­ pass more than 1.4 million square feet. in THE PARKS department soon announced this develop­ ment and urbanization would cause a number of pollution problems: • They anticipated septic tanks would p o llu te the ground water. • Replacing vegetation with roads, parking lots and homes would alter natural drainage channels and cause flooding and erosion after rainstorms. • Lawn pesticides and fer­ tiliz e rs would e ven tu a lly drain into the creek causing it to actually choke the creek by fertilizing and increasing the aquatic vegetation to a point where it dries off the water. • Holding ponds for sewage treatment may flood during Springs offer heat break By CARLOS SANCHEZ Daily Texan Staff Throughout Austin’s history, people of all makes and shapes have experienced the chill­ ing sensation of swimming at Barton Springs. The l,000-by-100-foot wide natural pool epitomizes the natural beauty of Austin. Set in Zilker Park, Barton Springs is a tradition to sun worshippers. The cold waters — a constant 68 degrees — serve as a center­ piece to activity. Everyw here within the fenced off spring area has a personality of its own. FAMILIES and children play in the shallow waters near the southern bank of the pool. Intellectuals and hippies congregate behind the low diving board at the foot of the northeast hill. Across the pool from them are the seasoned veterans, some of whom say they swam the icy waters during the Great Depression. Students bask in the sun on the grassy hill at the northeastern corner of the pool. Near the top of the hill sit transcendentalists and Frisbee buffs. Occasionally, a topless female saunters about. The m ajority of these people spend little, if any, time in the water, preferring to bake their bodies or simply to watch the antics of some of the 2.000 to 3,000 visitors who make their way through the gates daily. FOR THOSE brave enough to plunge into the naturally chilled waters, there is a boun­ tiful diversity of aquatic activity in a pool which is drained and cleaned twice a week. The springs are replenished constantly by clear waters from the Edwards Aquifer. Near the western shore, there is a gravel- bottomed swimming lane which is usually kept clear by the lifeguards for swimmers in­ tent on swimming laps. A marker in the shallow end of the pool indicates Vs of a mile from that point to the dam so the swimmer can measure his distance. THE LIMESTONE bottom rises close enough to the surface to permit walking by an adult swimmer. At either end rafts sprinkle the water and rafters can tan coolly — usual­ ly without fear of colliding with unseen swimmers or persons diving from the two diving boards. Barton Springs is a natural springs, replenished with more than 40 million gallons of water daily. The water flows in quickly through the limestone cliffs near the shallow end of the pool. Beneath these cliffs are numerous caves big enough for swimmers to enter, yet because of the force of the water entering the springs it is virtually impossible to penetrate farther than a few feet into the rock formations. THE FIRST civilized life at the springs can be traced to the 1730s when Spanish friars reportedly wandered into the area and built three missions near the southeast side of the pool. Indians frequented the springs during this period. It was thought by the Indians to con­ tain magical powers. In 1837, “ Uncle B illy ” Barton moved into the area and patented the land. HIS BACKYARD springs soon became a tourist attraction despite the continued risk of Indian attacks. The star attractions were two tame baby buffalo which grazed on the hills students occupy today. As the springs became more popular, an Austin businessman built a merry-go-round and began renting bathing suits to swimmers. In 1871, he and several other men built an ice- making machine, a flour mill, a saw m ill and a quarry along the banks of the springs. A RIVERBOAT soon ran small excursions up Barton Creek at a cost of 50 cents. The land was later aquired by A.J. Zilker, who soon donated it to the City of Austin. Presently, Barton Springs is open from May to October between the hours of 7 a.m. to 9:45 p.m. It is, however, easily accessible to anyone who wishes to risk swimming after hours without a life guard and the possibility of being fined by the park patrol. Out of season it is permissible to swim without risk of getting kicked out. ADMISSION for students is $1 and life guards stress key environmental rules. The most troublesome and often-broken rule is the littering which often helps kill vegetation on the hills’ slopes. The early morning and late night hours are the least crowded and usually best hours to savor the beauty of the historic waterhole. rr WITH THIS COUPON FRAME IT YOURSELF Rafters’ float near the dam at the east end of the springs. Tim Wentworth. Dally Texan Staff RECONCILE YOUR CHECKING ACCOUNT FASTER AND EASIER WITH CITY BANK’S NEW SIMPLIFIED STATEMENT. CITY NATIONAL B ANK O f A u s t in p o b o x 1 r j ; A u s t i n u x a s 76767 5 12 «76 7 1 7 . r ACC O UN T N U M B E R C*rt O* I hiS AS? $TATfMf*T g* v 123 456 7 6/11/80 5/09/80 > PAGE NO .... 1 J 21 J O H N A C U S T O M E R 123 A N Y S T R E E T A U ST IN , T E X A S 078700 City BankFirst C ity T iiiS M B a n co rp o ra tio n IIIIH I M ffnber MEMBER FDtC B A L A N C E O F P R E V IO U S S T A T E M E N T O N 5/09/80 4 D E P O S IT S A N D O T H E R C R E D IT S TO TALIN G 17 C H E C K S A N D O T H E R D E B IT S T O TALIN G S E R V IC E C H A R G E A M O U N T C U R R E N T B A L A N C E A S O F T H IS S T A T E M EN T 195 04 860 81 913 60 4 50 137 75 C H E C K IN G A C C O U N T T R A N S A C T IO N S * DATE A M O U N T T R A N S A C T IO N D E S C R IP T IO N 5/13 5/15 5/23 5/29 6/09 6/11 DATE 4/29 5/14 5/15 5/16 5/20 5/16 5/21 6/04 109 68 + 322 61 + 75 00 + 353 52 + 50 00- 4 50- D E P O S IT D E P O S IT D E P O S IT D E P O S IT A U TO M A T IC S A V IN G S D E B IT S E R V IC E C H A R G E C H E C K NO 1882 1900* 1903* 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 A M O U N T 5 63 6 75 35 00 28 41 21 00 15 00 26 95 13 30 DATE 5/23 5/27 5/21 5/30 6/06 6/09 6/05 6/05 C H E C K NO 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1916* 1917 * IN D IC A T E S A S K IP IN S E Q U E N T IA L C H E C K N U M B E R S DA IL Y B n L f t l N u t o U M M A H T ................. DATE 5/09 5/12 5/13 5/14 5/15 5/16 B A L A N C E DATE 5/20 5/21 5/23 5/27 5/29 5/30 195 04 189 41 299 09 292 34 5 7 9 9 5 536 54 B A L A N C E 515 54 471 81 526 81 492 81 846 33 836 33 DATE 6/04 6/05 6/06 6/09 6/11 A S O F T H IS DATE Y O U R S A V IN G S A C C O U N T #01234567 H A S A B A L A N C E O F $ 1 0 93 67 A M O U N T 20 00 34 00 16 78 1000 479 00 4 95 11 20 130 00 B A L A N C E 823 03 681 83 202 83 142 25 137 75 Only City Bank offers you the ease and convenience of a new statement form with checks listed in the order that you wrote them. No codes to decipher, no reference lists for abbreviations - all transactions are spelled out completely, accurately, simply to save you time and help you keep your banking records straight. Here s how it works: STATEMENT SUM M ARY A quick run-dow n of account activity including beginning and ending balances. AUTOMATIC TRANSACTIONS Payroll deposits, transfers to savings, loan payments — any transaction that you have authorized on a m onthly basis is recorded by date. Bank service charges appear here also. SEQ U EN T IA L CHECK LISTING Your checks listed in order by number. Skips in sequence for checks that have not cleared the bank or that have been voided are indicated by an asterisk. DAILY BALAN CE SUM M ARY C hecking balances listed by date throughout the m onth to show you exactly how m uch m oney you had in your account during the month. SAVINGS ACCOUNT BALANCE For Autom atic Savings Transfer or A utom atic Deposit C usto­ mers who use sm art m oney managem ent to make their C hecking and Savings Accounts work together PROFESSIONAL ADVICE & ASSISTANCE • A COMPLETE WORKSHOP & EQUIPMENT 10:00 A.M . - 5:30 P .M . Daily Mon.-Sat. O P E N L A T E W E D . N IG H T T IL 8:00 L I M I T O N E C O U P O N P E R S T U D E N T E X P I R E S D E C . L 1980 S A L E I T E M S E X C L U D E D 1701 West 35th C A L L : 451-3045 Your new statem ent — simple to w ork w ith, easy to understand — only from C ity Bank! Expect more. I C ity Bank ■ U L “ lL U ( U R F P FDIC <ÍTh A r D M f.R F SS f B Agencies find homes By MEUSSA WARD Daily Taxan Staff Austin has a number of agencies to make house­ hunting easier. Apartment-locating ser­ vices are free to prospec­ tive renters. Services in­ cl ude s c h e du l in g a p ­ pointments and providing transportation for clients. locaters charge Because the apartment owner to list with them, these agencies usually handle larger com­ plexes. “ We show apartments all over town, but we do point out the advantages of complexes farther out on the shuttle routes, lower rents, newer complexes which have most of the ex­ tras students are looking for, such as largo* pools, clean environm ent ami modern decor,” Stan White of Habitat Hunters said, REFERRAL agencies, h o w e v e r , do c h a r g e customers for assistance in locating a home. The t he a g e n c i e s p r o v i d e prospective tenant with a list of vacancies to check out. By c h a r g i n g the customer, rather than the property owner, referral services extend services to handle duplexes, houses and garage apartments. Debbie Grant, Capitol Rentals referral agency owner, said the agency tries to settle students in the neighborhood they re­ quest, usually the west campus, Hyde Park, En­ field, Travis Heights or Clarksville areas. “ Most students are look­ ing for a place with a bedroom for each room­ mate and there are usually two or three,” she said. listings ranged Capitol’s from $215 to $250 a month fora two-bedroom dwell­ ing. ALTHOUGH “doubling up” is more economical, White said m ost of his c u s t o m e r s r equest ef­ ficiencies so they can live E f f i c i e n c i e s a l o n e . average from $175 to $200 a including mont h, not utilities. t he R a t e s f ai l f o r semester will be up 10 to 15 percent over last year, White said. Deposits required Utilities just a call away By GARY VOLLUZ Daily Texan Staff deposit. Most apartm ents furnish w ater, but if not, an additional $10 will assu re service. E stablishing utility service in Austin may be Southern Union Gas service easier than many new students expect. Usually forem ost on students’ minds is telephone service. Picking up a phone and get­ ting connections can be done at any of four phone cen ters in the city — 611 S. Congress Ave., 3300 W Anderson Lane, 6101 Highway 290 E a st and at Dobie M all, next to campus. Telephone service can be started within two days if the request for service is made before 1 p.m. Monday through Friday. Under current rates, a standard desk phone with a one-party line is $7.65 per month with a $24 25 connection fee. No deposit is required un­ less the applicant has an outstanding bill from form er se rv ic e . F resh m e n can avoid the letter of guarantee deposit by presenting a from their parents. Southwestern Bell also o ffers additional-cost forw ard ing, ca ll three-way conversation and speed including c a ll se rv ic e s waiting, calling. E le ctric a l Service If a student has had past ele ctrica l service in Austin, he can obtain e le c tric and w ater ser­ vice by simply calling Austin W ater and E le c ­ trical Service at 476-7721. The offices at 205 E . Ninth St. or 318 O ltorf St. can begin power for new residents. R egardless of past usage records, everyone is required to pay a deposit which varies on apartm ent size. One bedroom ca lls for a $40 takes a $70 four bedrooms deposit while Southern Union G as Company (477-6461) can issue sam e day service if the order is taken before 10:30 a.m . No deposit is required if past bills have been paid, but there is a $5 connec­ tion fee. G as officials must obtain entrance to the apartm ent, however, before turning on the gas. If the student cannot be home on the appointed day, notice should be left in the apartm ent m an ag er’s office. F o r every 1,000 cubic feet of gas used, the student is charged $4 40 G as officials say most sum m er bills average $18 while winter bills vary according to use. Transit Services Austin Transit System has 26 routes, all using the sam e fare system. F a re s vary by tim e of day, 40 cents weekdays from 6 to 9 a.m . and 3 to 6 p.m. and 20 cents from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m. An $18 monthly pass is valid at all hours of a calend ar month. An $11.50 com m uter pass, valid from 6 to 9 a.m . and 3 to 6 p.m. Transfer slips to another route a re free and valid for two hours. Route information can be obtained at the U n iv e rsity ’s T exa s Union Building or by writing the Austin T ran sit System at 505 N. P leasan t Valley Road, P.O . Box 1943, Austin 78767 or by calling 385-6860. Austin also has four taxi companies. The current rate is $1.80 for the first m ile with each additional m ile $1. Page F6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5, 1980 Groups assist with tenants’ problems By M ELISSA WARD Daily Texan Staff While finding the home of your dream s may not be an easy task in Austin, the University O ffice of the Students Attorney, the Austin Tenants' Coun­ cil and the R iv er City Tenants* Union can reduce future h assles by helping students avoid tenant- m anagem ent problem s, most of which concern security deposits “ To avoid secu rity deposit disputes, a tenant should m ake a c le a r accounting of everything in the apartm ent and its condition,” says Steve M cGuire, senior se cre ta ry of the students’ a t­ torney’s office. If the ap artm en t m anager does not have a check-in sh eet. M cG uire advised ren ters to devise one. ‘ i t ' s im portant to get an idea of the apartm ent s condition because you're supposed to leave it like you found it. except for normal wear and te a r ." Sm iley said Sm iley added the o ffice has had many disputes over ' normal w ear and te a r ” interpretations, but he said ten an t should re q u est the m anager to m ake and sign a move-out inspection in the presence of both room m ates and a w itness to avoid problem s. “ This m ay seem verging on paranoia, but w e’ve had lots of problem s with the security deposits, ” Sm iley said. When it com es to repairs in an apartm ent, current legislation sta tes the tenant can take a landlord to court if he fails to m ake repairs to co rrect conditions threatening health and safety, Sam P ersley of the Austin T enants’ Council said. The renter should m ake all requests for repairs in writing and keep a copy, P ersley said. The landlord is required to “ m ake a diligent e ffo rt’’ to co rrect the condition within 10 days to two w eeks, depending on le a se a g ree m en t. P ersley said the lease should stipulate who is responsible for what repairs. the If significant repairs are not made a fter several requests have been made, the tenant should inform the landlord that he might use his right to term inate the lease if he wants to avoid a court case, M cGuire said. “The laws (concerning tenant rights) can be used as a bargaining tool. Most property owners wouldn t want to be taken to court over a dis­ pute,” P ersley said One stipulation in cu rren t legislation states that the party losing a ca se has to pay all legal fees. “ This could discourage a tenant from tak­ ing the landlord to c o u rt,” P ersley said, “ but if the condition is a th reat to health and safety and the tenant has followed the com plaint procedures and has everything in writing, he should win the c a s e .” the le a se P e rs le y said ‘‘con su m er agreem ent and if repairs are needed, a tenant paying for full services should receiv e financial com pensation, even if the conditions do not threaten safety. is a Sm iley said tenants can avoid landlord hassles by fam iliarizing them selves with the complex before they sign a lease He suggested talking to other tenants and checking with tenant agencies to see which com plexes have had com plaints. P ersley *aid a tenant should read the lease before signing it to determ ine what repairs he will be responsible for. what happens if he cannot pay the rent on tim e, if there is a m anager on the prem ises or an absentee landlord, whether the com plex allows pets, how long guests are allowed to stay, what eviction stipuations are and how much notice is required before term inating the lease. When moving out, a tenant should not fall for the “ P erry Mason m ythology,” M cGuire said. “ Tenants often make the m istake of leaving their security deposit for the last m onth’s re n t,” he said “ Under certain circu m stan ces, som e landlords will sue for triple dam ages if the last month's rent is not paid." Die Texan is only the beginning! T h e Da il y T e x a n O - CACTUS X* PEREGRINUS Official University Directory Y ou probably know that The Daily Texan is the student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin. As a UT student, you are a subscriber to The Daily Texan. With bright orange distribution boxes throughout the University community, The is a highly visible publication, Daily Texan published Monday through Friday on class days. Students, faculty and staff have relied on the T e x ­ an for information for 79 years. But what you might not know is published by Texas Student Publications. And The Daily Texan is only the beginning. TSP also is f o r s e v e r a l o t h e r c a m p u s r e s p o n s i b l e publications, each with the dual goal of informing and entertaining the University community while providing valuable work experience for Universi­ ty students. is that The Daily Texan O n e of the best times of your college experience might very well be looking back on it years later. E a ch year the Cactus Yearbook captures the es­ sence of the University in words and pictures to provide you with a lasting souvenir of your days at the Forty Acres. The Cactus Yearbook is as much a tradition at U.T. as the O.U. game and Aggie jokes. It was first issued in 1893, making it the oldest publication on campus. I n addition to the Cactus Yearbook, TSP also is responsible for printing Peregrinus, the yearbook of The University of Texas School of Law. Named a fter the mythical patron saint of the U.T. law school, Peregrinus is now in its 30th year. F in d in g a student s co rrect telephone number or address can be like looking for a needle in a haystack. The Official University Directory helps the p ro b le m by providing a c c u r a t e so lv e telephone and address information of all students and faculty and staff m em bers. Published every fall, is a the Official University Directory valuable reference book, designed to help you keep in touch with the University community. K e e p in g abreast of the students’ desire for interesting, informative reading is the purpose behind UTmost, the student magazine for the for UT University. Written by UT students students, U Tm ost provides an in-depth look at the people, places, events and ideas that shape the University experience. the Texan publishes Of Course!, T h e r e ’s more. T S P periodically prints special supplements which are inserted into The Daily Texan, each serving a special purpose. F o r in­ stance, the course selection guide that helps students choose the right courses to suit their needs and interests; the Final E x a m Schedule, a listing of tim es and locations of final examinations each sem ester, and a variety of special interest supplements dealing with everything from housing and ca r ca re to fashion and Christmas gift buying. And to help you decide where to go or what to do for fun, every Monday th ere’s Images ... in the Texan. Texas Student Publications Texas Student Publications is the UT auxiliary enterprise responsi­ ble for publishing the student publications. It is governed by a Board of Operating Trustees made up of six students, three faculty members and two professional members. Congress Avenue, looking north toward the Capitol Political activity encouraged Mayor C arole M cClellan, along with the six City Council m e m b e r s , e n c o u r a g e s students to becom e involved in city governm ent by seeking appointment to boards and com m issions or by attending public hearings and regular council m eetings. Regular council m eetings are scheduled every Thursday at staggered tim es in council cham bers, 301 W Second St Meeting agendas can be pick­ ed up at the city c le rk ’s office in M u n icip al B u ild in g a t Eighth and Colorado stree ts th e M on day b e f o r e e a c h m eeting. C o o k e , The council m em bers are B e t t y L e e H im m elblau, Ron M ullen, R i c h a r d G o o d m a n , J o h n Trevino J r . and Jim m y Snell. Both the mayor and the coun­ c i l a r e e l e c t e d in odd- numbered years. Citizens can speak before the council on any item placed on the agenda simply by ra is­ ing a hand when the m atter is called The agenda stipulates tim es which item s will be dis­ cussed, but the new com er to council m eetings should be w arned c o u n c il m e e tin g s g e n e r a lly run n o to rio u sly behind schedule. Citizens who feel a par­ t i c ul a r to be i t e m n eed s brought to the council’s a tten ­ tion can file a request one week p rio r to the reg u lar meeting with the city c le r k ’s office testify before the council. to When that request is co m ­ plete, the citiz en ’s nam e will appear under “ Citizens Com­ m unications” on the agenda. T h e c o u n c i l g r a n t s f i v e minutes to discuss any topic Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page F7 3 3 3 3 3 & SHEPLERS THE WORLD'S LARGEST WESTERN STORES NOW IN AUSTIN HIGHWAY 290 ANO 1-35 OVER AN ACRE OF SELLING SPACE COME ON IN AND GET TO KNOW US! CHOOSE FROM THE LARGEST SELECTIONS OF • BOOTS • JEANS • HATS • SUITS • TACK & SADDLES • WOMEN’S WESTERN • MEN’S WESTERN • CHILDREN’S IT’S ALL THERE NOW! AND JUST TO GET TO KNOW US BETTER, USE THIS MONEY SAVINGS COUPON GOOD FOR $5 OFF ANY PURCHASE OF $15 OR MORE. — — — — — — C O U PO N - — — — Stores offer customers a wide variety of bikes. Pedaling advice flows free from Austin bicycle shops By C A R M EN A B E T E University students pedal­ ing for bicycle bargains, bike accesories, free repair es­ timates, repair services, used bikes or any other bicycle in­ formation can visit several bike shops in the University area for assistance. U n iv e rs ity Co-Op B ik e Shop, at 2246 Guadalupe St., offers brand name mopeds and 10- and 12-speed bikes such as Fuji, Puch and Austro- Dainler with price ranges of $190 up. “ A University Co-Op bike sale for the fall begins Aug. 25-Sept. 25 with 10-speed bicycles starting at $99.95,” said R ich ard D eGarm o, manager of the University Co- Op Bike Shop. “ Regular layaway plan for bikes purchased at the shop are financed through the University Co-Op. and a 10 percent deposit is required with either the six-month or nine-month time payment plan,” said DeGarmo. The layaway plan excludes any bikes on sale. “ Repairs for all bicycle makes are serviced by the shop and get done within 48 hours. A free repair clinic is offered on Tuesdays from 6-8 p.m.,” the manager said. University Co-Op Bike Shop sells bike accessories such as tire tubes, wheel rims, leg bands and safety locks. “ We provide a variety of safety locks and safety chains to en­ sure bike protection from theft,” he said. DeGarmo recommends us­ ing either Kryptonite, Master la m in a te d or A m e rica n padlocks as a safety measure. University Co-Op Bike Shop is open Monday through F ri­ day from 9:30 a.m.-8 p.m. and Saturday from 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Another local bike shop, Freewheeling, at 2404 San Gabriel St., sells Miyata, Nishiki, Puegeot, Motobecane and others with price ranges of $190-$500. Children's 20-inch wheel bikes and 10-12 speed 27- inch wheel bikes for adults are among the types sold in a variety of styles. “ Bikes put on layaway re­ quire the customer to deposit 10 percent or $20 down with a time plan of six months,” said a Freewheeling employee. “ We service any type of repairs, but since most of our business around the Universi­ ty area increases during the fall, work repairs to bicycles get restricted,” the employee said. The shop allows for a 25 percent labor discount on bike repairs if the customer buys the bike there. When a customer brings in a used bike to find out if he is a good buy, g e t t i n g Freewheeling Bike Shop will provide free estimates. Padlo cks, cable locks, frames, tires, bike pumps and f ew b i k e r i m s a r e a accessories sold at the shop. Cable lock prices range from $3-$5 and the American, Kryp­ tonite or Ci tadel locks the r e c o m m e n d e d by employee range from $20-$30. Freewheeling Bike Shop is open on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Thursday from 10 a.m.-9 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Cothron’s Bike Shop, 509 Rio Grande St., offers bikes having from one to 14 speeds most of which are English brands, but Japanese made. “ Cothron’s specializes in bike styles from England such as Raleigh, Rampar, Raleigh Rapide, Reliant and the latest English bike. Grand Sport, with price ranges from $139 up to the Professional Mark V style selling for $1,049,” a Cothron’s employee said. “ We sell choice and not chance,” he added. He builds new bikes from the parts received from the manufacturers. “ I correct defective parts received from the factory before building the bike,” he said. It takes five to six hours to build an ordered bicycle. A 30-day guarantee for a new bike allows for free r epai rs and a l i fe t ime guarantee for all iron or metal parts on the bike. Customers get a 5 percent discount when buying more than one bike or accessories. James recommends use of American padlocks with double- cable locks or turnip- cable locks as a safety measure for bicycles. Cothron's layaway plan re­ quires a deposit of 40 percent of the bike cost and is allowed a time payment plan of three months. Cothron's deals in used bikes starting at $39.95 on up. Cothron's Bike Shop is open on Monday through Friday from 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. and on Saturday from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Any bicycle brought to the University by students must be registered with the UT Police Department. Larry Oliver, officer of the Crime Prevention Depart­ ment at the University, said, “ Any bicycle brought or park­ ed on campus grounds must be registered by either the city fire station, Austin Police Department or the University P o l i c e D e p a r t m e n t . ’ ’ Students can register their bicycles for free with the UTPD. A “ Bicycle Drive” at Bell- mont Hall parking lot will give bike owners a chance to register bicycles during the fall semester, Oliver added. GETYOUR HAIR CUT BY A TEACHER'S PET FOR m «C UIUS SIAAP00 »tas»« UKUT I tu>« MY T h e G r a d u a te is the s tu d e n t s tu d io o f V ogue C o lleg e S ch o o l o f H air D esig n . Our hair cu tte r w ill be goin g to e x p e n s iv e stu d io s to w ork after g ra d u a tio n . T h is is yo u r c h a n c e to g et a p rec isio n cu t at a greatly red u ced price. A ll w ork is c lo se ly su p e rv ised by a top notch p ro fessio n a l instructor. No ap p o in tm en t n eed ed . J u s t c o m e in . . . y p u ’ll be su rp rised ! THE GRADUATE (ALL «VORK PERFORMED BY STUOENTS) NOW TWO LOCATIONS: VOGUE COLLEGE/SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN DELWOOD CENTER/3929 N. INTERSTATE HWY. 35/4S4-27I1 623 W. BEN WHITE/444-6391 Hr». 9:00-4:00 Closed On Monday No A p p o in tm e n t N ecessary S i AT V t N T 5 c Concert and show revutwm regularly in the arU A JHCCRX of The Daily Texan. .C 4 |0 1 n | 3 T 3 01 """"" t S $ 3 Invest your Austin years in a Mediterranean Villa. Show i Mom and Dad the potential of ownership vs. rent. sunbleached flagstone every­ where you look. The heavy wooden doors. And the tran­ quil, Mediterranean atmos­ phere. But notice also that you're just minutes from campus or anywhere else in Austin via Mo-Pac. And handy to shop­ ping, restaurants and entertainment Málaga: a prestigious northwest Austin address The condominiums at Málaga offer striking proof that a comfortable, well-constructed home in the northwest hills of Austin can be a very afford­ able proposition indeed. Students, young couples, singles - all kinds of people who appreciate the no-main­ tenance lifestyle - are dis­ covering that a home at Málaga can be a constant source of pleasure and delight. Not to mention an outstanding invest­ ment opportunity, especially if others in the family will be following in the years to come. A setting that suggests the Costa del Sol. From its handsome Spanish roof line to its beautifully landscaped hilltop location. Málaga calls to mind the south­ ern coast of Spain. Notice the energy-efficient stucco construction. The distinctive A wide variety of floorpians. Málaga features five unique and very appealing floorplans. From a spacious one bed­ room, one bath and a dramatic one bedroom studio with fireplace all the way to a luxuri­ ous three bedroom, two bath split-level with fireplace and surrounding bookshelves. Choose a home with your own enclosed patio. Or one with a balcony overlooking the pool. Select your own wall-to- wall carpeting, Congoleum flooring and wall coverings. Mdu’II love choosing the home that's perfect for you. You'll love living there even more! $38,950 to $59,950 95% financing available Furnished models open i/r CAMFVfc A 6910 Hart Lane at North Hills in Austin phone 512/346-3611 Page F8 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Tuesday, August 5. 1980 Banks differ in charges, services offered to students By PAULA ANGERSTEIN Daily Texan Staff So you're sitting there with that pretty little $500 check Daddy gave you for books and your first month's rent. But what to do with it9 The Co-Op certainly won't take it. Hmmm, looks like you’ll have to open a checking account. A checking account! But there s a million banks in Austin, you say. Calm down Thoughtful evaluation of the situation will reveal you just need to consider several fdCtors about each bank to decide which one to leave your money with. Checking account charges, opening requirements, extra ser­ vices and location are a few factors to consider. Before those checks can be put to use, however, new students must obtain a Texas driver's license or identification card. Tex­ as licenses and identification cards are available at the Depart­ ment of Public Safety branch offices Persons will be required to have a photo ID. New IDs cost $3 If you plan to open your new account with an out-of-town check, it’s going to be a few days before the check will clear and you can draw money from your account. Immediate credit will be given, however, if you start the account with cash, cashier’s checks or traveler’s checks. Also, if bouncing checks may figure in your future, it’s a good idea to find out what each bank's policy is for bad checks. Most banks charge close to $10 per check A listing of banks and their checking account programs in the predominantly student-populated areas may help you get started on the search for a place to stash cash. American Bank. Sixth and Colorado streets. For $4.50 a month, the Ultimate Service account gives you lots of services with no minimum required balance. Included are free personal checks, safety deposit box. traveler’s checks, cashier’s checks, notary service, a $10,000 accidental death insurance policy and discounts from local merchants and entertainment places. The average monthly balance account is free if you keep more than $400 in your account with charges as the balance goes down but does not include extra services. American Bank also has an Impact automatic teller machine. An Impact card can get cash from your account 24 hours a day in several major Texas cities. You get the first six months free and then are charged 10 cents per withdrawal or $4 per year. Austin National Bank Fifth .Street and Congress Avenue. Austin National also offers two kinds of accounts, but its com­ puter is nice enough to figure out the cheapest way to charge you for the number of checks you write per month. There's no minimum amount required to open an account. The fees charg­ ed are either by the average balance method, which is free if you keep more than $500 in your account, or the metered method, which is $3 per month and 10 cents per check. The banks give you 30 cents credit for every $100 you keep in your account. Bank of Austin 2501 S. Congress Ave. It takes $100 to open an account at Bank of Austin The Southsider Special has a 50-cent per month service charge plus a 15-cents per check charge, but you only get Ltatements quarterly. The Etc. account is $4 per month with no minimum balance requirement. You get free checks, traveler’s checks, cashier's checks, money orders, notary service and discount coupons to city theaters. Banking by mail is postage-paid Capital National Bank. 114 W. Seventh St. Capital offers an average balance account that is free if your average balance stays above $400 An efficiency account is $3 a month plus 15 cents per check An account can be opened with $25 Banking by mail is postage-free. Citizens National Bank. 5407 N. IH 35 in Capital Plaza Citizens offers a free account if your average balance stays above $500 It takes $200 to open an accoujt. Citizens also offers the Impact card system with 90 days free and then either 15- cents per withdrawal or $1 per month City National Bank 823 Congress Ave. City National has an exclusive with its orange and white Longhorn-logoed checks. The minimum needed to open an account is $25. A regular ac­ count is free if a $300 balance is kept. A special account is 50 cents a month plus 15 cents per check. A More account is $4 50 per month and offers free checks, traveler’s checks, cashier’s checks, money orders, and a $10,000 accidental death insurance policy. Banking by mail is free. Texas State Bank 900 Congress Ave. The Texas Check Plan is $2 50 per month plus 15 cents per check with no minimum balance requirement The Two Plus account is free if you keep $500 in a savings account there. You also get free checks, free overdraft protection, tree stop payment service, $10,000 ac­ cidental death insurance policy, cashier’s and traveler’s checks, and notary service Banking by mail is postage-paid. They also have a teller at the drive-in window 24 hours a day. Travis Bank 911 W. 38th St Travis Bank offers an account that is free if you keep $500 in your account. Banking by mail is free. University Bank 1904 Guadalupe St. University Bank offers an account that is free if you keep $500 in your account. A balance of $400 to $500 is $3 per month, $300 to $400 is $2 per month, and under $300 is $5 per month. Austin’s history made by its citizens Austin s history is as unique as the in­ honor Stephen F. Austin. dividuals who made it possible. Mirabeau B. Lamar, president of the Republic of Texas, played the key role in Austin's beginnings and selection as the capital Lamar visited Jacob Harrell. Austin's first white settler, during a buf­ falo hunt in 1838. Harrell had a cabin and stockade at the mouth of Shoal Creek. After finishing a successful hunt, Lamar stood on the hill which is the present Capitol site, “ This should be the seat of a future empire.” TH E N E X T year Lamar asked the commission which had been authorized by the Texas Congress to choose a site for a permanent capital, to inspect the Colorado River location. By this time, Harrell’s original settle­ ment had accumulated several families and been incorporated as the town of Waterloo. Although the commission was the official selection body, it is believed Lamar brought his influence to bear in selecting Austin for the construction of government buildings begun in May 1839 The town's name was changed to Despite stiff opposition from more heavily populated East Texas and cons­ tant Indian raids on the new frontier town. Austin put down roots. Edwin Waller was elected the first mayor of Austin in January 1840 but resigned before the end of his term and moved to a farm in the county that was later named for him FROM 1836 to 1846 Mexicans and In­ dians provided trouble for the growing community. An invasion by Mexicans in the spring of 1839 as public buildings were being constructed was repulsed. Indian raids continued at frequent inter­ vals until 1844. In addition to these problems, Austinites had to contend with their own statesmen Sam Houston, who was in­ augurated as president of the Republic for the second time in December 1941, had oppposed Austin as the capital. He used the Mexican invasions as an excuse to move the state’s government first to Houston and later to Washington-on-the- Brazos. The capital was returned to Austin in 1845, the year Texas joined the Union. SAM HOUSTON’S attempt to remove Austin’s archives to Houston was a bit more than Austinites could tolerate. In the famous “ War of the Archives,’’ some of Houston’s men slipped into the city one night and loaded the archives on wagons at the land office. Luckily for Austin, a posse of the city’s best riders caught the group at Walnut Creek and in a bloodless encounter retrieved the archives. The 1850s and 1860s were a time of elegance for Austin, when log cabins gave way to colonial homes accentuated with verandas and classically styled columns. There were still problems such as fire protection, inadequate transpor­ tation, droughts, freezes and cholera, but at least the exposure to hostile natives and nature was controlled. Austin's population was 3,500 in 1860. The land sold for $15 an acre. Cot­ ton, wool, hides and lime were the city’s main exports and cattle drives through town were a common sight. STUDENT CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP 477-4701 1909 University A venue IN FORM AL BIBLE STUDIES • BIBLE COURSES FOR CREDIT • COUN SELIN G • RETREATS • D EV 0 T I0 N A L S • RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY AVENUE CHURCH OF CHRIST 476-6088 1903 University Avenue SERVICES ON SUNDAY Church S(ho«l 9:15 a.m. Worship 10:30 a.m. & 6 p.m. W EDNESDAY - M idw eek Services 7:00 p.m. Bible CallTM Telephone Tape Library Phone 926-9621 PLEASE REQUEST EACH TAPE BY ITS NUMBER AND KEEP THIS AS YOUR TAPE GUIDE WHAT IS BIBLE CA U ? t a p e is a rra n g e d Bible Call is a free public service religious information library co n­ sisting of hundreds of different f iv e - m in u t e r e c o r d e d m essages on a w ide variety of Bible subjects. T h e L ib ra ry to provide a means by which the public can quickly and accurately lo ca te B ib le inform ation on alm ost any important topic. This m ay be done by simply calling 926-9621 and asking the tape librarian to play a recording of any of the subjects listed in this ad. Librarians are on duty Sunday through Saturday from 2:00- 10 OO p.m. except holidays. ★ A t n ig h t a n d o n h o lid a y s , y o u c a n h e a r a p r e s e le c t e d m e s s a g e w e h o p e y o u w ill fin d p r o fit a b le * BIBLE STUDY 47 Inijxraftpyi «f Hi* | M tha lihta 105. Thanfk fvaWtiaa 104. A Utt af laah» aad ArtkMi aa fyahitiaa aad tha tibia 774 Gad ar Mattar — Wtwih? 775 EvaMtiari: What Pa tha Tam il Say? 541 Tha Arrtk Tara ietmng Any Denomination 547 Tha Kaagaroa 179 Purpot# o* f+wi Old 9*tf New 113 Christ - Yesl The Charch - Mel T#»fqr»**ifi It OfMtrm# importen*? 135. I St. Tin 8 4 k end (form t! Later ftevebtien I f 7. D* We Really Have Hie FAMILY LIFE » * U }. Straagthonrag Yaar foawfy Twfcy? 5. Strangthomng Yaar Marriaga 5. UrMarttemftng Hta MmMIo Aga (M M 4. TattaA M aat far a Gm i Marnaga 74. lir fk (a a tra l 505 Wa» tha farth (raatad ky Ornara? 504. What I» Gad? 505 (avamaa and tha tihia 504 Tha fa«nl Rarard m i tha libia 507 Haw Wa» tha (raatiaa (raatad? 540 (hartati af tha Gadi aad (amm m 5m u 504 Why Jaw» (hn»t and aaf PERSONAL 1. W W ,» I i k l * C.N7 fa im g m OgaraHaa livin g With IHna»» fa n a g Daath 4 4 7 I 10 Ra» Gambling? Raalty tha A a iw ar? 117. Sitvatioa Ethtra — Oao» lava Maka Oar Wraagi larama Right? 707. What it Wraag wtlh Gambhag? 771. Ara You TMakmg About Havtag aa Affair? 41. Haig far a Trauhlad Marnaga 104 San ia Marnaga 141 Iw a m la Pafmgaamy Part II 154 iw a m la Patingwaary Part III 117. K ayf ta Uaian laad iag Oar (M M raa IIS . Pitngiiaa - Aharaativa ta Tragady 144 fffartlva Pttrigha» - Part I 704 fffartiva Pttngiiw — Pari II 147 tamg a Staymalhar 145. Satviag family Praklamt 701. Try «m g Yaar (M M ia tha I M a 705 Taarhmg My (M M Ta Warh 704 P a u l Taka Yaar W ilt lav Graatad 717. Haw Ta Shaw Yaar (M M raa Yav la va Tham la law Trauhla 14 144 Taanoga Pa hag — Paraati 145 Ray W ardi ia Pradvoag a Haggy Hama CHRISTIAN EVIDENCES 47 fvidaota af Gad TvHiHod Praghacy 45 IvtOanra al Gad: S Gleapers JL W O O L A N D F U R S T O R A G E Sanitone 511 WEST 19th STREET • AUSTIN, T EX A S 78701 472-3131 COWTOWN BOOT FACTORY OUTLET street its historic distinction, have yet to enjoy the protec­ tion and allocation of federal f rom r e s t o r a t i o n historic zoning funds "T h e y’re the last of their k i n d , ’ ’ H o f f m a n s a i d . “ (Congress) has been an avenue of people and activity for 130 years. These buildings have always related to people and a human scale.” "People are beginning to be interested in the past. They are diiscovering that in many i n s t a n c e s i t ’ s m o r e economical to restore old buildings than to build new ones,” Alexander said If the City Council has its way, Congress Avenue — which houses many of the old buildings — w ill soon be reduced from six lanes to four lanes. Several merchants on the avenue are opposing the plan, saying that it will in­ crease traffic congestion. s a i d , t he p l a n H o w e v e r , is scheduled to go into effect in e a rly 1981, M a y o r C arole M c C l e l l a n and merchants attempting to call a city-wide vote on the lane reduction may run out of time. The petition must carry at least 10 percent of the voters’ signatures to require a vote. The council held several p u b l i c h e a r i n g s on the Congress Avenue beautifica­ tion project during its seven years of planning. Austinites were split between wanting the beautification plan to get under way and maintaining the six-lane avenue. The plan also calls for widening the sidewalks, planting trees and sloping the sidewalks for easy access for the handicapped. The Paramount Theater, undergoing renovation Ralph Barrera, Daily Texan Staff Avenue, show tradition mingl­ ing with technology. Cultural architecture combines with the skyscraper. B Y A u s t i n B U I L T m i l l i o n a i r e G e o r g e Washington Little fie ld , the building retains the same out­ er appearance as in 1915, ex­ cept the original doors are now housed in the University Academic Center. The doors, which depict typical ranch scenes of Texas, were sculpted in plaster and then sent to Tiffany’s in New York to be cast in bronze. "On the reception of the doors and installation, Littlefield com­ plained that the cattle did not have his brand on them so he hired someone to chisel the brands into the bronze in large letters, thereby spoiling the artistic value of the doors,” a letter in the Travis County Courthouse states. T h e S o u t h w e s t e r n Telegraph and Telephone C o m p a n y b u i l d i n g . 410 Congress, is an example of Romanesque architecture — a style which flourished in the Middle Ages. S IN C E T H E building’s con­ struction in 1886, its tenants have included the Phoenix Cigar Company and Gerhard Hardware. It was restyled in 1898. Other buildings of historical interest on Congress Avenue include the form er Pe ar l House Saloon, a resting place for weary railroad travelers, and the Old Bakery, built by immigrant Charles Swedish Lundberg in 1876 The Old Bakery is presently a show­ case for handicrafts of senior citizens. M A N Y O F Congress Avenue buildings, which give the Ralph Barrera, Daily Texan Staff The Old Bakery Emporium \\WHERE YOU SAVE N O W BECAUSE YOU PAY FOR IT N O W " MODERN FURNITURE O P E N MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:00-6:00 RENTALS SALES OUTLET WHERE YOU SAVE ON NEW AND RENTAL RETURN FURNITURE 1143 AIRPORT BLVD. 928-1400 RENTAL RETURN NEW SOFA’ CHAIR S from 1 5 9 SOFAS CHAIRS from$4 9 00 S0FA*L0VESEAT from$39°° CHAIR $ 2 4 9 from PET RANCH W S T » M S-Sr. Mon. thru Sat. 10 A M - 9 P M Opon Sunday 1-6 AUSTIN'S COMPLETE PET STORE • Freshwater & Marine Fish & Supplies • Live Aquatic Plants • Dag & Cat Supplies • Birds & Supplies • Healthy Small Animals • Knowledgeable Salespeople Wé&J WE KNOW OUR BUSINESS H A N C O C K SHOPPING CENTER 459-7000 NO RTHCRO SS MALL 4 5 9-311 3 P R E S C R IP T IO N S THE SH O PPERS CENTER 444-5525 Silverware ..... 452-9451 A / 8 8 * Pocket Accents ¡w “?!!!*.', 2 / * 1 5 Subject Notebook $0 Q Q 1 200 pg .............................. 1 * 7 7 Shower Curtains * 3 . 5 9 200 Sheet Filler Paper w allet or credit card size LED Calculator • 8 Functions • 4 Key m e m o ry • APF 192 0 or 3 5 5 0 reg. $21.99 Directors Chair Sale W A LG R E E N C O U P O N Coke, Sprite Tab, 6 pack 12 oz. lim i t 2 w it h c o u p o n g o o d th ru 9 - 3 0 - 8 0 LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER W A LG R E E N C O U P O N Ball Point Pen U m i t 1 w i t h c o u p o n g o o d t h r u t - J f t - M LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER South on Congress at 113 W. Oltorf North on " C R " route C ap ital Plaza BEDDING from $5 9 ? i DINETTES from$4 9 00 DRESSERS ,rom$7 9 00 NIGHT STANDS from$2 9 00 Narrow rule .... 6 9 COCKTAIL TABLES from$1 5 00 SOFA’ LOVESEAT CHAIR*0TT0MAN fro RECLINER * 3 9 9 DRESSER MIRROR CHEST HEADBOARD FRAME MATTRESS BOX SPRING $290 fro 16 PC. SET DISHES WITH AN Y DINETTE BEDSPREAD WITH A N Y BEDROOM GROUP Limited Quantities 2 LAMPS WITH AN Y LIVING ROOM GROUP ASK ABOUT OUR STUDENT DISCOUNT IH 35 1143 AIRPORT BLVD. 928-1400 Page F 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday. August 5. 1980 Workers prepare for installation of water pumping turbine. Ralph B arrera, Daily Texan Staff City’s share of STNP creates friction By A LISA HAGAN Daily T ex a n S taff * C ontroversial issues abound in m ost every c ity , but in Austin one issue in p a rtic u la r brings an im passion ed glow to the faces of re sid e n ts - th e c o n stru c ­ tion of the South Texas N u c le a r P ro je c t in M atagorda County, n e a r Bay City. Texas is receiving none of its e lec­ tric ity from nu clear plan ts, but four pro jects a r e slated for the fu tu re. The biggest is STN P, which is planned to eventually provide 5,000 m e g a w a tts of pow er T H E N U C L E A R s ite h a s c au sed p ro tests in Austin since the c ity bought 16 p e rc e n t of th e $2.7 billion p ro je c t in 1973 largely on Public c ritic ism of this p ro je c t has cen tered the p la n t’s cost overruns. A 1973 e stim a te th a t the plant wouid cost $1.006 billion has been re v is­ ed repeatedly, and the la te s t p ric e tag is $2 7 billion. The city staff in 1973 e stim a te d spen­ ding $161 m illion on the n u c le a r project, but c u rre n t figures show' the c ity ’s in­ vestm ent to be $435 million. P red ictio n s are the p ric e m ay soar even higher. The n u clear plant is four y e a rs behind to schedule and c u rre n tly p red icted produce pow er in 1984. O ther p a rtn e rs in the p ro je c t include San Antonio, Cen­ tra l Light and P ow er of C orpus Christi and m anaging p a rtn e r Houston Lighting & Pow er T H E D ISC R EPA N C Y in c o st e s ­ tim a te s, says a consulting firm hired by the com panies involved with the pro­ je c t, is traceab le to gross u n d e re stim a ­ tion of the am ounts of m a te ria ls and labor needed to get the job done, ra th e r than inflation A ustinites have voted tw ice in bond elections to continue financial support for participation in the p ro ject. V oters will go to the polls to d e te rm in e the c ity ’s input into the p ro je c t before ea rly 1983 w hen A u stin 's a llo c a te d bond money for STNP will run out While several city sta ff m em b ers have becom e disenchanted over the p ro je c t because of cost overruns, m ost Austin public officials favor continued participatio n in the project R L Hancock, d irecto r of the c ity ’s E le c tric U tility D ep artm ent, said a s of now the pow er STNP will produce is the m ost econom ically feasible concept of gathering ele c tric ity in the future. P U B L IC C O N C E R N s u rro u n d in g r e p o r t e d S T N P a ls o f o c u s e s on violations of safety regulations. These concerns w ere last y e a r when the N uclear R egulatory C om m is­ r e p o r t e d 12 s p e c i f i c s a f e t y s io n problem s of the p la n t’s construction intensified Among problem s listed in the re p o rt w ere: • F a i l u r e to c o r r e c t r e c u r r i n g deficiencies in c o n c re te placem en t. Air pockets in the w alls have plagued the project for som e tim e • F ailure to m eet req u irem en ts for qualifications of w elders. • Inadequate docum ent control HL&P. the p ro je c t’s m an ag er, say they will m eet the NRC’s construction orders by the deadline set in August. THE PR O JE C T has a lread y self- im posed o rd e rs to stop work on specific a re a s of con struction until needed safe­ ty im provem ents a re m ade. The NRC will inspect these questionable a re a s in August or S eptem ber to see if STN P has sufficiently m et req u irem en ts needed to continue building The NRC also plans public h e a rin g s the next few the p ro je c t within on months. SAFETY PRO BLEM S at STN P w ere highlighted in a re p o rt recently a ire d by “ 60 M inutes. ’ centering around shady safety inspections, including the h a ra s s ­ m ent of safety inspectors. The p ro ject s co n tracto r, B row n and Root, and HL&P both claim en fo rce­ m ent of ad eq uate safety inspection has becom e m ore strin g en t in light of the publicized com plaints W H ETH ER these concerns outw eigh the fe a r of d eficient e lectrical pow er in the 1980s w ill not be know n u n til A ustin's bond election som etim e b efore 1983. m £ ) r i |F ‘ ** - ¿ y * * V !li |f f t l - j i i r a g g w b > *• Hyde P ark B ap tist C hurch 3901 Speedway Austin, Texas (512) 459-6587 To All New Students Welcome to Austin and The University of Texas! JOIN THE FELLOWSHIP OF EXCITEMENT! S h i r le y L o t h r a n Barr et t Miss A m e r i c a 1975 1 red A k e r s H e a d f o o t b a l l C o a c h University o f T e x a s Longhorns S h i r l e y L o t h r a n B a r r e t t , Miss A m e r i c a 197 5, will be in t h e Col le ge D e p a r t ­ m e n t at 9 : 4 5 a . m . , o n S u n d a y , S e p t e m b e r 7. S h e will uKo s har e h e r t e s t i ­ m o n y at t h e free WFLC’O M E L O N G H O R N S LUN< HI O N f o r s t u d e n t s at n o o n . Mee t He a d f o o t b a l l C o a c h I red A k e r s a n d o t h e r U n i ve r si ty f a c u l t y , s taff , a n d s t u d e n t s w h o b e l o n g t o H y d e Park. Sunday Services Bus Service 9:20 a.m. Jester (at the sh u ttleb u s stop on Pick-up locations 9: 30 a.m. Kinsolving (fro n t entrance on Speedw ay) Whitis Ave.) Morning 8: 30 a.m. 9:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. Evening: Worship Service College Bible Study* Worship Service Texas Sacred Singers* Snack Supper 4 : 3 0 p.m. 5:30 p.m. to 6: 00 6 :0 0 p.m. 7:00 p.m. *Bus Service to dorms College Forum Worship Service Wednesday Sen ices 4 :4 5 p.m. Dinner 6 00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting Sanctuary Choir Practice No. 1 reactor is scheduled to begin producing power in 1984. CONVENIENT LOCATIONS ALL OVER TOWN JACK BROWn ( L E A D E R S one h o u r mminizma: The Best Cleaners in Town! ... invites you to become acquainted with its fine services with this special offer, good at all locations. O N E DAY D R Y CLEA NIN G AT NO “ E X TR A C H A R G E ’’ O NE DAY L A U N D R Y SE R V IC E CO URTEOUS CU RB SER V IC E L E A T H E R A N D S U E D E CLEA NIN G D R A P E R Y C LEA NIN G U PH O LSTER Y CLEA NIN G C A R P E T A N D RUG C LEA N IN G ALTERATIONS PILLOW RENOVATIO N F U R C LEA NIN G AN D STO RAGE Coupon $ 1 0 0 OFF any order of $5.00 or more coupon must be presented with order i JACK BROUJn C L E A i l E R S one h o u r mmininna offer good on regular price only offer good through 9-15-80 Ladies HERE ARE EIG HT GOOD REASONS TO SHOP uüians IN NORTHCROSS MALL joyce fp p - / $iD£R MISS CAPEZIO WESTERN BOOTS La Vista SERVICE OPEN 10 til 9 M ON. thru SAT. L ady L iicch ese uli a n s i ' f c r t h c n » M * J I W A nderaun Utxw 403-2730 Bookstores line shelves with variety Each shop’s literature reflects different customers’ personalities Tuesday, August 5, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page F11 them at basem ent prices. HALF PR IC E Books recent­ ly purchased approxim ately 25.000 rem ainder books, Desha said, and they should arrive next month As with the previously men­ tioned bookstores, business has been good for Half Price Books "E v e ry year, it (business) has been going up,” he said. In f act , the chai n — which already operates 12 stores in T exas (two in Austin) plans to expand. It is looking for a South Austin location, Desha said. Congress Avenue Booksellers, which advertises itself a s the “ com plete downtown book sto re ,” carries a variety of printed m aterials, including a few cards and a large selec­ tion of calanders. The shop, 705 C o n g re ss Ave . attem pts to "c a r ry a lit­ t l e o f e v e r y t h i n g , ’ ’ a spokeswoman said. The largest sections of the store are given to scientific and m ystery type books. "We also have a good occult sec­ tion. but it is difficult to keep full — they sell so quickly." P rice range at the Congress Avenue Booksellers sta rts at 50 cents and goes to $300. Whole Earth Provision Co., 2410 San Antonio St., is only two blocks from cam pus and c a r r i e s an a s s o r tm e n t of fo r the l i t e r a t ur e g e a r e d i n­ c a m p e r a nd p e r s o n s t e r e s t e d it d o i n g th em selves." in Cochran’s employee browses through paperbacks. Welcome, Newcomer to IH E University! By KAREN-ANN BROE Dally Texan Staff A cadem ic texts are not the only books lining the shelves of Austin bookstores within w a lk in g d is t a n c e of th e University. b r o w s i n g . t o c l a s s i c s Books ranging from popular c u l t u r e t o m etaphysics are available for th e S e v e n b o o k sto re s, co n ta in in g an assortm en t of book topics, line the D ra g betw een M artin Luther King J r . Boulevard and 26th Street. G a r n e r and S m ith , 2116 Guadalupe St., predominantly handles academ ic and sp ecial­ ty books. "T h is has been traditionally the m ore in tellectu al book store on the D ra g ,’ ’ said Je su s G espar, a form er University g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t w h o m an ages the store. H A R O LD G A R N E R and D avid Sm ith, a lso fo rm er University graduate students, founded the store in 1963. They also operate an a rt gallery on 12th S t r e e t an d a n o th e r bookstore in T arry town. ‘ ‘We are outside the traffic p attern ” on the D rag, G espar said, so ‘ ‘we don’t have a high p e rc e n ta g e of b r o w s e r s .” Therefore, “ we have to try different techniques of getting people in h ere.” The store orders a large number of University P ress, architecture, philosophy and literary criticism books. In addition, ‘‘we stock som e fa ir­ ly expensive books in the $100 to $150 price ran g e ,” m ostly about photography and art, G esp ar said. Buying is ‘ ‘based on what we have previously done well in ," he said. ‘ ‘We can ’t base our buying on the national a v e ra g e .” Textbooks are som etim es ordered a s a favor to a Univer­ sity professor. "W e already know them and we do it a s a c o u r t e s y ,” he e x p la in e d . "T h ey prefer to go through u s.” P r o f e s s o r s , g r a d u a t e students and University sta ff constitute a large portion of G a r n e r S m i t h ’ s a n d custom ers, G esp ar said. "W e don’t feel w e’re in any je o p a r d y of g o in g out of b u sin ess,” he added. "A fte r 17 y ears, we have our clientele down.” TW O B L O C K S a w a y , Cochran’s Book Shoppe No. 5 also vies for Guadalupe Street shoppers. Harold Zem er, buyer for Cochran’s, 2302 Guadalupe St., denies there is fierce com peti­ tion among University-area S e c t i o n a l s e l l e r s . b o o k d i f f e r e n c e s b e tw e e n th e s to re s, he said , d eterm in e their m arket. “ We don’t have the carriag e trad e ,” or the "v e ry ob scu re” titles, Zem er said. “ We carry a little bit of everything.” C o c h r a n ’ s, f o u n d e d by W i l l i a m C o c h r a n , h a s locations on L am ar Boulevard and in the downtown business district, in addition to one in Wichita Falls. Students and "professional people associated with the U niversity,” compose the bulk of business at the Guadalupe Street location, Zemer said "Students are into science fiction and c u rre n t good titles,’ he said Titles such as “ Sophie’s Choice,” "B o m to Run. and " No One Here G ets Out Alive,” are selling well, he said. is probably the “ ‘Shogun’ a l l - t i me b e s t s e l l e r ” a t Cochran’s, he added, but ‘The World According to G arp ’ is the cult book now am ong college students.” s a i d list” of books Looking ahead, Zemer said the sto re e x p e c ts a busy C h r i s t m a s s e a s o n . A f t e r attending a recent publishers’ ‘ ‘ a c o n v e n t i o n , he sm ashing is coming up. He s a i d the s t o r e h a s "shown an in crease” in sales, d esp ite national econom ic woes. " I t ’s a well-documented f a c t in­ th a t book-buying cre ase s during a recession .” A few blocks south of the University, Grok Books, 503-B W. 17th St., defines its uni­ queness in term s of "new con- siou sn ess.” Owner Philip Sansone said the store, with 10,000 titles, is “ the largest m etaphysical and new consiousness bookstore in the Southwest.” G R O K B O O K S w a s bankrupt when Sansone took over in 1977. He had devoted the p re v io u s sev en y e a r s w orking with C en tral and South Am erican Indians as a P eace Corps volunteer. re n e w ed The store w as born with "th e whole ’60s movement and th e in e a s te r n p h ilo s o p h ie s,” he said. But "eventually it had grown into a general book sto re .” i n t e r e s t As the third owner in the sto re ’s 10-year history, San­ sone said he “ phased out everything not new age or m e ta p h y sic a l.” Book s a le s have since tripled. The name "G rok Books” w as conceived of after dis­ covering the word in Robert H ein lein ’s in a “ S tra n g e r Strange L an d,” he said. In the book, “ grok” is a M artian word meaning an un­ derstanding of one’s deepest self. TH E STO RE has decreased its dependence on student custom ers since its opening, Sansone said. Because of its sem i-residential location, "w e do not depend on passers-b y.” S a n s o n e d e s c r i b e d hi s typical custom er a s a post­ academ ic individual in his late 20s or early 30s, who is in­ terested in developing and im ­ proving him self, and who is beginning “ W hat’s to ask happening to this w orld?” Grok Books operates out of an old-style, w ood-floored home a few blocks from the Capitol. Book d isp lay s a re arranged in room s according to color: blue for the occult and e so te ric philosophies, orange for eastern religions and m editations, green for holistic health and alternative lifestyles and yellow for "non­ s t e r e o t y p e d c h i l d r e n ’ s books.” SANSONE SAID he buys from m ajor publishing com ­ p a n i e s a s w e l l a s a p ­ proxim ately 100 sm all ones. He added he carefully review s books before ordering them. t he "T h e re ’s an awful lot of junk in m etaph ysics,” he said. ‘ ‘ Y o u kno w t y p e — Western M agical T radition s,’ o r ‘ b u y - t h i s - b o o k - a n d - type dominate-your-friends’ books. It’s a hype. It’s usually ju st trash ,” he said. In addition to selling texts, Grok Books h as sponsored visits of such speakers as John Lilly, Timothy Leary, Rom D ass and Steven Levine. This fall, Sansone said he is to bri ng Ken a t t e mp t i n g K esey, author of “ One Flew Over the C uckoo’s N e s t,” "So m etim es a G reat Notion” and other w orks; and Charles Bukowsky, a poet who formed a group called “ the m erry pran k sters” in the ’60s — and who is also “ renowned for his r a u n c h i n e s s a n d b e e r drinking,” Sansone said. A fourth Austin book store aim s to attract students whose pocketbooks are hurting. "We can ’t sell a book for m ore than h alf the cover p rice,” explains Paul Desha, m anager of H alf P rice Books, 1514 Lavaca. Half P rice Books buys and s e l l s b o o k s , r e c o r d s and m agazines. At present, 100,000 books, 20,000 m agazines and 15,000 records are contained within the 12,000 square-foot form er laundry building. The reason the store can sell books so cheap, Desha said, is that a m ajority are bought f r o m c u s t o m e r s — a p ­ proxim ately 1,000 each day. The price paid for a book depends on the number of copies already in stock and when the book will likely sell. High priority is placed on c la ssic s and unusual books, Desha said. “ YOU DO see every kind of book after a while. The un­ usual ones jum p out at you,” he said. Half Price Books offers no trad e-in p o licy on book s. "E ven tually, a fter a tim e, all you have is jun k,” Desha said. Another method of holding down prices is to buy what D e sh a c a lle d “ re m a in d e r b o o k s.” P u b lish e r s print many books at higher-than- usual prices, he explained. If retail stores cannot sell the books even a fte r m arking them down, the rem ainder will be returned to the dis­ tributor, who will then resell We've Made Shopping This edition of the Texan is ’specially for YOU! When you read this issue, you’ll gain a wealth of valuable information about the community of more than 44,000 students you will be joining in a few short weeks. the Campus: In the cam pus section, you will find page after page of in­ dispensable data to help vou find your way around our friendly cam pus! Information on where to go, who to see and what to do (and how), plus the answ ers to hundreds of questions you'd like to ask. the City: All the important information you'll want to know about Austin — the sylvan setting of the University. This section will tell you who’s who and what's what around the T exas capital city. Arts/Entertainment: You can't spend all your time in study! H ere's a section to give you ideas about what to do and where to go for relaxa­ tion and fun in and around the UT cam pus and Austin. Sports: All you ever wanted to know about Bevo — and the Longhorns! No story about the world's number one universi­ ty would be complete without plenty of facts on the world’s numero uno sports team s — from golf to swimming, baseball to football — Longhorns are best. Ask Abe Lemons! northcro// mol Andarson In. at Burnet Rd. Open 10 a.m . to 9 p.m. M onday through Saturday T h e Da il y T e x a n Page F12 □ TH E DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, August 5. 1980 First Baptist Church 9th and Trinity — 4 7 6 - 2 6 2 5 Browning W are, Pastor Bobby G uffey, Associate Minister, College and Youth WELCOMES YOU SUNDAY-BIBLE/DISCUSSION 9:30 AM WORSHIP 11:00 AM A lm o s t too busy to read this? I understand. Very li ttle t i m e and a thousand things to decide and do. Someone keeps pull in g the fall semester into the heat of s u m m e r . And ... it's m id - A u g u s t a l r e a d y ! When does the ra t-ra ce stop? For some persons ... never. They live th e ir lives in the confusion of an sw e rin g an y bell th a t rings. Nevertheless, you were not m ad e fo r schedules; schedules were made fo r you. But, only you can choose your p rio rit ie s . If you don't, every one w ill choose for you. We have been plan ning for you r a r r i v a l . First, we th in k your plans for an education are a good thing. Second, we would like to help. We believe the r e a l i t y you seek has been d e m on s tra ted in Jesus Christ. All the answers? No, we don't have the m by an y means. But, we are seekers and would like you to join us in sessions of study and wo rs hip . For Transportation Call 4 7 6 -2 6 2 5 or 4 4 7 -6 1 5 1 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 9th & TRINITY AUSTIN, TEXAS Parks refresh tired students By R O D O LFO G A R C IA With the m ass m igration of fe a th e rless freshm en fledglings to the U niversity, m any will find a need to supplem ent th eir search for an education w ith a bit of old m o th er nature. fa c e L e t's it. W ithin tim e c o n c re te w a lls, sidew alks and begging sq u irrels rem in iscen t of Bangladesh s tre e t urchins begin to get you in the gut. Well, Austin m ay not have the A dirondacks or prim eval forests of Michigan, but we do have in our own backyard an a sso rtm e n t of tre e studded park s and babbling brooks th a t would even bring sm iles to John D enver. ZILK ER PARK, with its B arton Springs pool, has becom e one of the favorite haunts for studen ts arriv n g a t the U niversity. Within th e parks boundaries a re hundreds of a c re s well endowed with g re a t n atu ral beauty. The num erous facilities lend them selves to a d iv ersity of re c re atio n a l a c tiv itie s th at include: • Football, baseball and soccer fields. • Outdoor th e a te r and playscape a re a s. • Picnic and barbecue facilities. The park also includes a portion of Austin s ex­ panding hike-and-bike tra il, canoeing and a scaled- down replica tra m th a t winds through the park on a regu larly scheduled route. Zilker P ark has a curfew of 10 p.m a t the pool and playscape a re a s and a m idnight curfew on all o ther park are a s. B arton C reek G reenbelt, which borders Zilker to the south, offers beautiful hiking conditions when the creek is flowing. T here is a m idnight curfew for the a re a as well. THE PO PULARITY of Zilker P a rk and B arton Springs pool does cause som e parking problem s in the a re a In an sw er to th a t problem , the city has begun a free shuttle bus route which provides transp o rtatio n for park visitors from designated parking a re a s beneath the M oPac expressw ay ju st north of S tratfo rd Drive. New this y e a r is the downtown shuttle to Zilker which will pick up passengers from any of the reg u lar bus stops betw een Sixth and B razos stre e ts a t 40-minute intervals. Both sh u ttle to Zilker a re available weekends and holidays from 9 a.m . to 8 p.m . M arch 22 to Labor Day. routes Since sw im m ing is such a popular p astim e from April until late fall for the m ore robust souls, the city o p erates six m unicipal pools including Barton Springs. SWIMMING IS allowed in City P a rk on Lake Austin, P ace Bend P a rk ( P aleface) and M ansfield Dam P ark on Lake Travis. Swim m ing is not allow ­ ed in Town Lake. The lakes also provide excellent a re a s for boating launching ra m p s a re and sa ilin g . M any b o at available to help get your boat in the w ater. T here a re also m any businesses which supply re n ta l equip­ m ent for boating or canoeing. F o r m ore adventurous types who enjoy “ roughing it alongside unseen little beasties, th e re a re c a m ­ ping grounds w ithin and around Lake T ravis. The m ost stunning of the sites is P ace Bend P a rk noted for its tow ering lim estone cliffs and b reath taking scenery P a c e Bend, off FM 2322, 4.6 m iles e a st of Highway 71, has 150 cam ping sites. And so as not to offend anyone, th e re is even horseback riding available for e q u estrian lovers. T ravis Country' Stables, Highway 71 in Oak Hills, has horses to ren t and a 1,000-acre riding area. Lakew ay E q u e stria n C enter on Lake T rav is offers one-hour tra il rides on horseback. THE CITY of Austin m aintains sev eral hike-and- bike tra ils, including the Town Lake T rail which circles the lake for 12 m iles. O ther tra ils follow Shoal C reek in C entral Austin, Blunn Creek in South Austin. B arton C reek in Zilker P a rk , W aller Creek which cuts through the h e a rt of the U niversity and Boggy C reek in E a st Austin. While you’re a t Town Lake don’t fo rget the Lone S tar R iverbo at which runs a scheduled route upon the lake, fre e of a tta c k from arm adillos. All SJz m Ap4irlii|<;ii( Solee’ Fee Paid By Apartment Owner FREE SERVICE! 474-6357 3507 N. Interregional Apartment Rental Service OPEN SUNDAYS! Transportation Provided- FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1201 La vaco Street P.O. Box 1666 Austin, TX. 78767 Ph. 478-5684 SUNDAY SCHEDULE a.m . Morning Worship a.m . Sunday School College Class a.m . noon Morning Worship College Lunch, Wesley Hall 8 :3 0 9 :4 5 1 0 :5 5 12:00 MINISTERS Jack D. Heacock Scott R. Somers Jim Farris Bruno C. Schmidt C try o í A u s tin F e a tu r in g . . . H u e v o s R a n c h e r o s , S te a k a la M e x ic a n a , M igas, H o m e -m a d e B isc u its, F lour T o rtillas a n d B olillos. CHc?* 1511 h a s t S ix th O p e n d a ily : 6 ’til 2 p m / P h o n e 478-2420 DON’T GET CAUGHT IN A RUSH Arrange in advance with the City of Austin Utility Customer Services main office, 205 West 9th Street, or our South Austin Branch, 318 E. Oltorf, to have your electric and water services turned on, disconnected, or transferred. Requests received after 12:00 noon for same-day service are charged $5 extra. A service initiation fee of $7.50 is incurred with application for service. New custom ers ... com e in person to apply for service. Bring along your picture I D. and a copy of your lease agreem ent. Also be prepared to make a deposit of between $40 and $70 — depending on the size of your residence. Apply in person at the: South Austin Branch 318 E. Oltorf Between 8:30 a.m . and 5:15 p.m. Monday through Friday or Utility Customer Services Main Office 205 West 9th Between 7:45 a.m . and 8:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri. or 8 a.m . to noon Saturday Previous custom ers .... if you have had service in your name within the last two years and have m ain­ tained a good utility credit account, you may arrange for service by telephone. Dial either number (see map) designated for the area into which you are moving. The South Austin Branch of the City of Austin Utility Customer Service Office is convenient! For service by phone: r i v e r s i d e d r iv e 476-2173 o r 476-3419 IH35 N 476-4470 o r 476-6681 476-9663 or 476-7721 IH35 S 476-1240 o r 476-5400 Advertising Supplement to T h e Da il y T e x a n August 5th, 1980 Table o f Contents -------------------------- — Welcome Students! ....................................................... 3 W hat is the University Co-op? ..................................... 4-5 Co-op Textbooks: Here to serve you .............................. 6 School Supply Headquarters ............................................ 7-8 Calculators ................................................................. g Co-op Books: Something for everyone ................................... 9 Why do textbooks cost so much? ....................................... 10 Welcome to Longhorn C o u n t r y.......................................... 11 Action-wear for campus life9 Class rings .............................. 12-13 ABCs o f Austin ............................................................ 13 One stop sport shop ........................................................ 14 Co-op Camera specializes in service Co-op Bike Shop caters to professional and recreational cyclists ................................ Austin Bike Club Sweeps State Championships Football schedule, map of campus ...................... Special Effects ...................................................... Co-op East ........................................... Your Everything Store ..................................... University Co-op rebate policy .............................. 10-17 18-19 22-23 24-25 20 27 26 27 Hotlines offer access to services Austin offers a variety of service agencies w hich w ill help when the time comes that you have a problem to ha ndl e all by too big yourself. So me agencies are open 21 ho ur s a day, 7 days a week, b ut some op era te on a limited basis, so it is best to call in adv ance and find o u t exactly what services are provided. T h e p a r ti c u la r agency you call may not always be able to help you, bu t can refer you to a n o t h e r agency. C e n t e r for B at te r ed W om en is open 24 h o u r s a day, 7 days a week. Counselors are available for batte red w o m e n from Austin and i n f o r m a t i o n , T r a v i s C o u n t y w h o n e e d referrals and counseling. T h e c e n t e r can hou se 14 w o me n and c h il dr en for an average stay of 7 days. Call 47 2- H U R T . Gay C om m unity Services provides peer cou n selin g, rap sessions and a research library for lesbians and gays. T he service also has guest speakers and organized athletics. H o u r s are from 4 to 7 p.m. M on da y th r o u g h S a t u r ­ day. Call 177-6699. Legal Aid Society of Ce nt ral Texas handles civil law cases only. After an initial interview to d e t e r m i n e financial need, persons who c a n ­ not afford a lawyer may qualify for legal aid services. Call 176-6321. Middle E ar th D rug Crisis C e n t e r services i n ­ clud e in fo rm a ti o n , coun seling , referral, h o us ­ ing and o t h e r in f o r m a ti o n c o n c e r n i n g dru g abuse and dru g related crises. T h e c e n t e r is op en 21 h o u r s a day, 7 days a week. Call 472- 2411. Austin Rape Crisis C e n t e r offers free, c o n ­ fidential services in counseling, advocacy, in­ r e f e r r a l . V o l u n t e e r s ar e f o r m a t i o n available 24 h o u r s a day, 7 days a week, to help rape victims and th e ir families. Call 472- RAPE. a n d Sex I n f o r m a t io n H o tl i n e opera tes from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. M o n d a y th r o u g h Friday for sex and p r egn anc y counseling. Call 474-5321. Suicide P r e v e n t i o n H o tl i n e offers c o u n s e l­ ing and referral services 2 1 h o u r s a day, 7 days a week, and m a in ta i n s an up-to-date list of every service agency in Austin. Call 172-2111. W o m e n Space offers coun seling , referral and su pp or t groups for w o m e n from 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and T h u r s d a y . Call 172-3053 for an a p p o i n t m e n t . O t h e r e m er g en cy listings include: Austin Police D e p a r t m e n t — 176-3541. Austin Fir e D e p a r t m e n t — 176-4333. E m er g en cy Medical Serv ices (EMS) — 474- Travis C o u n t y S h e r i f f s D e p a r t m e n t - 472- 1911. 9285. I T T e l e p h o n e Coun se li ng and Referral S e r ­ vice — 476-7073. U T Self-Help Tapes — 171-3313. . c ° - °- ’■-. , . , ° c ' e r v 8,5 4>*-7,w 7*i t We lCOfihQ • urii/j* St^den ts; * ? £ % « < * ! • on üniVe to the n°? avirip s« « i cr<>p f e ' * o l T » « a r r , ; ; ; ; - £ ? * « « * ed- of store L P(rrs° n a n ODane y e i y Va*t to , r , t n e M ' C g o n . ' i * to, tlat V ?' * ° r i o f " T ^ Z \ p , Z i»ve . We be t u d as qUi v store np b°arr p S ^een ”□ fU^ esti0n « « tv% 2 5 ?•>» t v . to come greatest 0, 5e Z Íbl*¡ZT'ts T d ^ th ° nt f° bí y with ^ SVers wii ; the ¿ n w ur ^ I p i ' yo“ » « “ "*• »n t v ; e S t gi ven for the first time in J u n e o f 1899. To get the Co-op o ff the gr o u n d . Bat tle invested m o re th an $ 2 ,0 0 0 of his own m o ne y . H e was repaid within six subscriptions years. F a cu l ty a m o u n te d to $6 0 0 that first im p o r tan t year. When it was realized in 1903 that no o ne “ o w n e d ” the Co-op. a m o v e m e n t set o ut to in­ c o r p o r at e the society . T h e c o rp o r a ti o n known as the “ I niversity Co o pe ra tiv e Society ” was for med in 1906 with no capi tal stock. One prov ision of the ch art er stated that the rebates should be decided by the bo ard o f di re cto rs at the end of e ach fiscal year. T h e C o - op ’s boar d of dire cto rs, al t houg h var ying in nu m be r, has alwa ys consist ed o f students as well as faculty. T o d ay the board is mad e up o f a c h a i r p e r ­ son, who is elected by the hoard, fo ur s tu de nts and fo ur faculty me m bers . St u d e n t m e m be r s are elected by the stu de nt body eac h year. Fa cu lty m e m b e r s are appointed by the Presi­ den t o f the University. In general the boar d the Co-op ma kes policy decisions opera ti ons. T h e board also hires the Pres i­ dent. B o a r d m eetings are held m on thly and are o pen to all s tud ent s and faculty. Meeting times and places are published in T h e Daily Texa n . about In 1911 Dr. J o h n W. C a lh o u n , the third C o ­ it was time to give o p Pr esident , decided s o m e t h i n g to the st udents besides rebates. He pl edged $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 to the G r e g o r y G y m fu nd to be paid ou t o ve r a ten-year period. Th is policy o f un iver sity e n r ic h m e n t co n ti n u e d o ver the year s w h e n e v e r feasible th ro u gh prizes and d o n a t io n s. B y 1916 the crowded ro o m which h ouse d the Co-op was bur sting at the seams. E x p a n ­ sion was im m in en t. T h e boar d pu rc h as ed land on G u a d a l u p e a nd erected a bu ild in g where today ’s Co-o p stands. Physic al ‘growth was and de p ar tm e nt a l nee ded agai n d u r i n g the post World War II era when s tu d e n ts were steadily p o ur in g into We’ve got whatever you’re into.. The only store that orders every book for every course TEXT BOOKS Uw «r t*v«l the Unive rsity. S in c e 1959 the Co-op has a c ­ quir ed the Co-op E ast, a pa rki ng lot a nd the Bike S h op . f o r m o r e All o f to o . T h e C o - o p e m p l o y s a p ­ e m p l o y e e s , proximate ly 2 0 0 worke rs on a r e g ula r basis w it h t e m p o r a r y e m p l o y e e s at pe ak sale pe riods. An e ffo rt is t h i s g r o w t h c a l l e d a d d i t i o n a l a b o u t 1 0 0 made to employ st u d en ts for these t e m p o r a r y positions, and varied work sch ed u les are off ered to fit class sched ules. T h e Co-op has c o m e a long way fro m tha t tiny r oo m in 1896, but the a im rem a in s the sam e: to pro vid e books, supplies a nd services to t he U nive rsi ty c o m m u n i t y at reasona ble prices, W hat is the University Co-op? C h a rte d and in co rp o ra te d as th e U n iv e r s it y used books all year long, p a vin g the highest p rin ts, poster* and n o ve lties. G ift w rappin g is C o-operative S o c ie ty , th e U n iv e r s it y Co-op cash possible. a v a ila b le fo r item s purchased here or in the student d e p artm en t store is a n on-profit c o r ­ S C H O O L S i P P L I E S m ain Co-op. Ju * t brow sing is a treat! p o ratio n operated fo r th e d is trib u tio n o f In a d d itio n to textbooks, y o u 'll be needing C L A S S R I N G S e d u ca tio n a l and supplv needs o f its m em bers. a va rie ty o f supplies. A q u ick stop in this T h is d e p a rtm e n t offers th e largest and most Y o u , as a bona fide stu d en t in resid en ce o f d ep artm en t and yo u can pick up spirals o f all co m p lete selectio n o f class rings in A u stin . I he I n iv e rs ity o f Texas at A u s tin , are now a d escrip tion s, pads, p e n s , pencils, lap boards, ( la** rings are a v a ila b le in all designs and m em ber. A ll m em bers o f the fa c u lty and staff paper clips, ty p e w rite rs, c a lcu la to rs, filin g price ranges. G re e k je w e lr y and accessories of the U n iv e r s ity are also m em bers. cabin ets and m ore. A special area is designated can also be ord ered. T h e ( T)-op has no in d iv id u a l o w n ers or sp ecifically for art and en g in e e rin g supplies. C O - O P E A S T stock holders. In a sense, y o u , its m em bers, C O - O P B O O K S 2nd L E V E L O n tin* c o rn e r of 26th and Red R iv e r are its ow n ers and stock holders. O p e ra tin g T h o u san d s o f h a rd c o v e r and paperback S treets, the Co-op E ast serves the L a w , A rt, po licies and p ractices arc set by th e B o a rd o f books and m agazines art* a v a ila b le to you o n and N u rsin g students. S u p p lie s, as w ell a* text­ D ire cto rs. T h e B o a rd consists o f fo u r fa c u lty the second floor. N o t to In* co nfused w ith T e x ­ books, an* located here, m em bers ap po inted by th e I n iv e r s ity P r e s i­ tbooks. Co-op B o o k s offers o ne o f th e finest C O - O P E A S T A R T dent to serve a fo ur-year te rm , fo u r stu d en t selections of bestsellers, c h ild re n 's , te c h n ic a l T h is ne w a d d itio n to Co-op Ea*t is a m ajo r m em bers elected by the stu den t b o dy to serve and classics to be fo un d in th e S o u th w e s t. supply c e n te r for art students, am ateu r* and a tw o-year te rm , and tw o em p lo y e e m em bers C h e c k this d e p artm e n t o u t fo r some “ u n r e ­ prof* *ss ionals. elected by the Co-op em p loyees to serve a one q u ired read ing. W a t c h fo r special bargain C O - O P N O R T H y e a r te rm . B o a rd m eetings are held o n ce each book and record sale*' th ro u g h o u t th e year. L o c a te d n o r th o f th e D ra g at 1101 m o n th , except d u rin g su m m er sessions at th e L O N G H O R N C O U N T R Y I n iv e rs ity , and are open to all. E a c h m eetin g H as any stu den t e v e r m ade it th ro u g h tin* G u a d a lu p e , Co-op N o rth i* a d is co u n t book store that b u y* and s e l l * all types o f books, in ­ is a n n o u n ce d in T h e D ailv T ex a n , and the U n iv e r s it y w ith o u t a I .T . t-shirt‘? T h e n o v e l­ clu d in g foreign language textbooks, novels, agenda is posted on the store b u lle tin board. ty d e p artm e n t is stocked fu ll o f the finest etc. Vi hen p ro fits art' assessed at the end o f each selection o f o rang e and w h ite p a ra p h e rn a lia fiscal yea r, some m o n e y is reserved fo r west o f the M ississippi. M ugs, hats, jogging o p eratin g expenses, fin a n c in g increased in ­ shorts, decals, stu ffed lo n g h o rn s and U .T . ven to ries, and re p la ce m e n t of, or ad d itio n s to, goodies y o u n e v e r dream ed existed are w aitin g assets. A ll p ro fits b eyon d these costs are dis­ fo r yo u . C a n d y , to bacco , sta tio n e ry and o th e r trib u te d am ong th e m em bers (stu d en ts, fa c u l­ personal needs are also lo cated h ere. W h e n ty and staff o f T h e I n iv e rs ity o f Texas) in the g rad u atio n fin a lly rolls a ro u n d , y o u ’ll be able fo rm o f a patron ag e re fu n d . E a c h re fu n d is to rent o r buy y o u r cap and gown in this based on how m u ch a ctu al business each in ­ d e p artm e n t. d iv id u a l m em bers has co n d u c te d , in the store, A P P A R E L th ro u g h that ye a r. It is a fu n c tio n o f the T h e A p p a re l D e p a rtm e n t prov ides m en and B o a rd to d e te rm in e the p ercentag e o f this rebate. w o m en w ith stylish new cam pus fashions, accessories, je w e lry and cosm etics. B ra n d T h e P re s id e n t or G e n e ra l M a n a g e r o f the nam es in beauty needs and c lo th in g m ake this store, the person responsible fo r the day-to- d e p artm e n t a m ust in y o u r sch oo l shopping. day o p eratio n o f the business, is ap pointed by S P O R T S the B o a rd and is en tru sted to im p le m e n t the T h e Co-op S p o rts D ep a rtm en t is y o u r p o licies it sets fo rth . R esp o nsib le to the P r e s i­ h ead q u arters fo r p h ysical e d u ca tio n class dent are several D e p a rtm e n t M an a g e rs w ho s u p p lie s an d sp o rts e q u ip m e n t. P h y s ic a l sup ervise the va rio u s areas o f the store. fitness is a m ajo r part o f th e student lifesty le, Y O l R E V E R Y T H I N G S ^ O R E and th e Co-op o ffers th e finest in sporting L o c a te d on the “ D ra g " in the heart o f the u n iv e rs ity c o m m u n ity , the I n iv e rs ity Co-op goods. W e 'l l even restrin g that old ten n is racket for y o u ! W e lc o m e t<» Y O l R store. S e r v in g yo u is o u r reason for being. H a v e a G R E A T vear! University Co-op Credit Plans is eager to m eet y o u r personal as w ell as C A M E R A S H O P 2nd L E V E L I he I n iv e rs ity Co-op o ffers tw o e d u ca tio n a l needs. T h ro u g h th e years th e C o ­ O n th e second flo o r o f th e Co-op y o u 'll find cred it plans for the stud ents, fa c u lty , op s m ain o b je c tiv e has been to p ro vid e c o n ­ a c o m p le te c a m e ra d e p a r tm e n t. B e s id e s v e n ie n c e and serv ice to U . T . students, fa c u lty cam eras and eq u ip m e n t, yo u can p urchase and staff. T h e serv ices in c lu d e c h e ck cashing, supplies and accessories fo r all photo classes. gift w ra p p in g and m ailin g , key m ak in g , a It is also a handy place to buy film and h ave it n o ta ry p u b lic , m o n e y orders, a u tility p a y­ processed. O n e day s e rvice and custom ized and staff o f the U n iv e r s it y o f Texas. T h ir ty - d a y c h a rg e a c c o u n ts a re lo r charges th ro u g h o u t the a v a ila b le store. T h e y are b illed on the 25th o f each m o n th and are to be paid in fu ll by m ent w in d o w , bus tickets, and a p h o to co p ie r, am ong others. processing are a v a ila b le . W h e n you need a rad io , p o rtab le T V , the 25th o f the fo llo w in g m o n th . AH In o rd e r to p ro v id e a b etter lin e o f c o m ­ re co rd e r and tapes, y o u 'll fin d a selectio n m u n ic a tio n betw een cu stom ers and m anage­ su itab le fo r dorm and ap a rtm e n t liv in g in the m ent. a special c o m m u n ic a tio n board has C am e ra Sh o p . been placed by th e fro n t doors. T h is board is B I K E S H O P for any suggestions a n d / o r q u estio n s about L o c a te d on 23rd S tre e t o n e block west o f the Co-op. A n sw ers from th e m an agem en t w ill the m ajo r store, the Co-op B ik e S h o p o ffers a be q u ic k ly posted fo r all to see. co m p lete selectio n o f state-of-the-art bikes, past d u e balances are sub ject to a fin a n ce ch arg e of .8 3 3 3 % per m o n th , w h ic h is an a n n u a l p ercentage rate of 10%. I n s t a l l m e n t a c c o u n t s a r e a l s o a v a ila b le for the p u rch ase o f one item M ad e up o f m any d e p artm e n ts and sub- accessories and mopeds. k n o w le d g e a b le p e r­ o v e r $50.00. I hese a c c o u n ts are billed departm ents, the Co-op has som eth ing fo r sonnel attend to y o u r eve ry c y c lin g need. T h e e v e ry o n e . B ik e S h o p also o ffers co m p le te rep a ir service. T E X T B O O K S S P E C I A L E F F E C T S 1 he Co-op is th e only bo okstore in A u s tin A t S tre e t L e ve i fo r y o u r c o n v e n ie n c e , that ca rrie s e v e ry title fo r e v e ry co u rse taug ht at U .T . R e co m m en d e d texts, co rresp o n d en ce S p e cia l E ffe c ts is ju s t next d o or to th e m ain store. books, d ic tio n a rie s, o u tlin e m aterials, fo reign F ix in g up y o u r dorm room o r ap artm en t is language records and flash cards are also made easier w ith o ne o f A u s tin 's most u n u su al a v a ila b le . O u r buy back d e p a rtm e n t buys back gift and accessory shops. Y o u 'll find fine gifts, w ith a c o u p o n b o o k le t fo r m o n th ly p aym en ts o v e r a six period. to n in e m o n th A p p lic a tio n s fo r these a c c o u n ts m a y be o b tain ed at the A c c o u n tin g o ffic e w in d o w on the second flo o r. Co-op Textbooks: Here to serve you T h e U n i v e r s i t y C o - o p T e x t b o o k D e p a r t ­ m e n t o p e ra te s o n a s t u d e n t - f a c u l t y s e r v ic e o r ie n t e d p h i l o s o p h y . It is the o n ly b o o k s t o r e in A u s t i n that c a r r ie s e v e r y title r e q u ir e d fo r e a c h c o u r s e t a u g h t at I .T. It a l s o c a r r ie s a n a s s o r t m e n t o f r e c o m m e n d e d t e x t s , c o r ­ r e s p o n d e n c e b o o k s , d i c t i o n a r i e s , o u t l i n e m a te rials, f o r e ig n la n g u a g e re c o rd s, a n d flash cards. T h e C o - o p s e lls ¡ill n e w te xts at th e p u b l i s h e r 's list price. V large n u m b e r o f used b o o k s are a v a ila b le at 7 5 C o f th e p u b l i s h e r 's list price. T h e d e p a r t m e n t a lso p r o v i d e s a b u y b a ck s e rv ic e f o r th e s t u d e n t s a n d fa cu lty m e m b e r s . I f a b o o k is b e in g used in th e f o r t h c o m i n g sem e ster, the C o - o p w i l l b u y that b o o k back fo r 5 0 c f o f the list p ric e u n t il the e n r o l l m e n t f ig u r e is re a ch e d . T h e C o - o p p r o v id e s a w h o le s a le b o o k s e r v ic e to b u y t i t l e s n o l o n g e r used at I .T. T h e te x t b o o k d e p a r t ­ m e n t exe rcises o n e o f the m o st lib e ral r e t u r n p o lic ie s o f any b o o k s t o r e o n the D ra g . I n a d d it io n , the C o - o p g i v e s all o f th e pro fit e a r n in g s , after taxes a n d re t a in e d s a v in g s , b a ck to m e m b e r s o f the C o - o p (f a c u lt y , stu d e n ts, a n d staff). T h e T e x t b o o k D e p a r t m e n t p r o v i d e s a d ­ d it io n a l s e rv ic e s to the I n iv e r s it y e o m m u n i t v by s u p p l y i n g b o o k s to R e c o r d i n g s f o r th e B l i n d a n d h e l p i n g m o b ilit y im p a ir e d s tu d e n t s o b t a in b o o k s t h r o u g h the T e x a s R e h a b i l i t a ­ tio n C o m m i s s i o n . T h e C o - o p h a n d le s the b o o k s c h o l a r s h i p f o r m s fo r the M e n ' s a n d W o m e n ' s In t e r c o lle g ia t e A t h le t ic s . I t a lso t r i e s to h i r e as m a i n s t u d e n t e m p lo y e e s as possible. T h e ( lo-op T e x tb o o k D e p a r t m e n t is eager to b e c o m e an im p o r t a n t part o f y o u r a c a d e m ic career. C o m e in a n d m e et o u r s t a f f a n d m a n a g e m e n t . L e t t h e m h e lp y o u use th e text­ b o o k d e p a r t m e n t to y o u r fullest a d v a n t a g e u h ile v o u a re at I .T. A foundation for the future Textbooks are fundamental to college work. They supply basic course information, reinforce lectures, com plete class notes, provide details and visual aids, and help you prepare for exams. Rely on your textbooks 'N o student know s his subject: the m ost he know s is where and how to find out the things he does not know.' W o o d r o w W i s o n -35 rjtuj \ a u f t i i 1 1 M l in L . ' i KTttfcllOlNN Introducing every required booh for every U.T. course: VJS4* m C 2 2 4 6 G u a d a lu p e Text B o o k s lo w e r level “ r r Dept, welcomes yo to the finest selection of materials & supplies available anywhere . . . notebooks, spirals, legal pads, typing paper, etc. J *■» ^ pens, pencils, inks, hi-liters, etc. artist’s paints, brushes, sketch pads, markers, etc. engineer’s scales, drawing instruments, triangles, lettering sets, etc. * * calculators, typewriters, ribbons, etc. National brand name selections. There is no waiting line for entering the supply dept, so, come on in, we’re ready to serve you! * H r \ \ ' School Supplies First Level VISA & MasterCharge Welcome Americas'!! The Rolling m m. m * . says,wBuy it here.” Qentel Creating new ways for America to write S c h o o l Supplies S ch o o l Supply Headquarters • T h e Supply D e p a r t m e n t of th e University Co-op offers s tu d e n t s a wide selection of pens, t y p e w r i t e r s , a r t an d p en ci ls , n o t e b o o k s , e n g i n e e ri n g materials and m u c h more. C la ren ce K oslan. d e p a r t m e n t ma nager, has been pu r ch as in g supplies for mo re t h a n 30 years. H e m a in ta i n s close c o n t a c t with I T ' s faculty to assure th e right selec tio n of re­ q ui re d and items. T h e stu d en ts bt ■nefit from Koslan s exp er ie n ce and from his well-stocked d e p a r t m e n t . specialty T h e Su p pl y D e p a r t m e n t i^ located o n t h e first floor of t h e I n i \ e r s i t y Co-op. A well- tr ai ned staff is r ead y to serve you. F o r y o u r day to day needs the U niv ers it y Co-op offers a wide variety of personal supplies inc lu d in g he al th and b ea ut y aids, magazines, food an d beverages. At the Co-op you'll find tobacco, stat ion ery , ce ra mi c gifts, a wide selection of greeting and n o te cards, an d imp or ted an d do mestic c a n ­ dies. Also, he s u r e to che c k out the array of new el ec tr o n i c an d tradi tion al games. Stick ’em up with Roll’n Glue. Easy, dean- rolling. The Professor says,"Buy it here.” . Sch ool Supplies Page H The Cream of the Crop •• H EW L E T T P A C K A R D H r * lett-Parkard HP 3 tC advanced scientific programmable uith continuous memory Hew lelt-Packard HP I1C a calculator a system a whole neu standard T e x a s I n s t r u m e n t s I N C O R P O R A T E D Texas Instruments The MBA powerful business calculator with programmability Texas Instruments 59 computer-like capabilities Hew !«>U- Packard HP 33C program mable scientific uith continuous memory Hewlett- Packard H P 38C advanced financial program mablt with continuous memory Texas instrum ents 5BC advanced programmable calculator uith plug-in Solid State Software modules A new Constant Memory feature T h e I niversity Co-op has be en helping U T st ud e n ts select c a lc u l a t o r s for years. U i t h t o d a y ' s the p o c k e t ca lc u l at o r stand s ou t as a great barga in and a helpful st ud y aid. i n f l a t i o n a r y p r i c e s , In 1972, the Co-op in t r o d u c e d tin* H-P 35 pocket c a lc u l at o r and was the exclusiv e agent for Hew l e tt -P ac ka r d in Ce n tr a l Texas. T o d a y the Co-op o ffe rs ca lc u l a t o r s and ac c essories from T e x a s I n s t r u m en t s , S h a r p , Hewlett- Pac k ard and other s. T h e C a lc u la t o r D e p a rt m e n t is located on the first floor, be h ind the App ar el D e pa rt ­ me nt. P r o g r a m m a b l e mod els for both scien- t i f i e a n d b u s i n e s s n e e d s a n d n o n - pr o g ra m m a b le s art* a vailable at r e a s o nabl e prices. And a well-trained s taff i*> al ways ready to d em on s t r at e c a lc u l at o r s and help you with any pr oble ms . Texas Instruments Slimline Business Analyst - II financial calculator uith statistics and Constant Memory feature Co-op Books: Something for everyone Co-op B o o k s, the general book d e p artm e n t and test books, sports, h u m o r, games, and o f the U n iv e r s it y Co-op located on th e 2nd m any o th e r subjects. flo o r, is a fu ll serv ice book d e p artm e n t. In ad­ d it io n to a la rg e s e le c tio n o f te c h n ic a l re fe re n ce books, th e general b o o * d e p artm e n t ca rrie s a co m p e lte selection o f books in all categories, in c lu d in g lite ra tu re , the arts, h u m a n itie s , s c ie n c e , fo re ig n language lite ra tu re and d ic tio n a rie s, as w ell as magazines, new spapers, maps, and globes. ^ ith o u r g ro w in g space, we h ave opened a special c h ild re n 's area, the B o o k w o rm , w ith a broad assortm ent of books fo r yo u n g readers o f all ages. e also c a rr y all I n iv e rs ity o f Texas Press Co-op B o o k s o ffers a v a rie ty o f cu sto m er services. B o o k s can be special ordered at no extra ch arge to th e cu sto m er. T h e d e p artm en t p a rticip a tes in G ive-a-Boo k, w h ic h o ffers gift c e r t if ic a t e s w h ic h ca n be re d e e m e d in bookstores n a tio n w id e , (r ift w rappin g and m ailin g are also a v a ila b le . A booksearch ser­ vice has been re ce n tly in itia te d to lo cate out- of-print books for custom ers. F in a lly , wc send out a p e rio d ic n e w sle tte r w i t h notes on new books, book review s, and news o f u p co m in g eve n ts o f interest to o u r custom ers, such as a u th o r's v i s i t s , poetry readings, etc. titles. W e h ave the w idest se le ctio n o f tra v e l Co-op B o o k s is h ere to serve yo u. D ro p by books and maps, both fo reig n and dom estic, in the area. W e c a rr y most Hooks c u r r e n t ly in and brow se; let us help y o u wi t h all y o u r book needs. p rin t w ritte n by fa cu lty at U . T . O u r general referen ce section in clu d e s books on gard en ­ ing. co o k in g , hom e and a u to rep a ir, c a re e r <3S j_M. O [ Super-Sharp is razor sharp! The Professo says, "Buy it here.”;ry% fnr A) Qentel v jy s for A m » ••► d io w rite Sell ool Supplies. ...and the next time your man comes home from a hard day, prepare two diy martinis and greet him at the door wearing onjya pair of Sack stockings... iwwo; finely tuned m echanical pencils introduces: Co-op Camera specializes in service full find a Co-op C a m e r a is a com plete ph o to g r ap h e r s range of supply store. You'll p h o to g r a p h i c materials ami e q u i p m e n t for e v e r y t h i n g from pre-shooting to m o u n t i n g , as w ell I T p h o t o g r a p h ) courses. Ko dak , C a n on , Nikon, O ly m p u s and Ilford are just a few of the qu a l i­ ty br and s available in the I niversity Co-op's Ca m er a D e p a r tm e n t. r e q u i r e d s u p p l i e s a*- all f o r Loeated on th e second floor at th e top of the stairs. Co-op C am era is a c o n v e n i e n t place to dr o p off film to be developed. Th e Co-op tw o e x c e l l e n t p h o t o f i n i s h i n g also o f f er s and Specialty processes, E as tm an K odak P h o to . Poo rly processed prints will begin to fade severely with in a few years. If y o u r pic­ tures are (and whose a r e n ' t ? ) , the quality processing you'll w ant available at th e Co-op. F o r rush jobs you can get o v e r n ig h t service on most color films. im p o r t a n t to use in on e of A n o t h e r f eat ur e of the Cam era D e p a r t m e n t is its friendly, individualized service designed to help th e sn ap s ho ot er and th e professional p h o t o g r a p h e r. Most of the staff m e m b er s have worked as professional ph o to g r ap h e r s and have e i t h e r gone t h r o u g h or are c u r r e n t l y enro lled the I niversity's ph oto d e p a r t m e n t s. Th ey know and u n d e r s ta n d the s t u d e n t n e e d s a n d p r o b l e m s o f p h o to g r a p h e r . And, as a m e m b e r of the Professional P h o t o g r a p h e r ’s Guild of Austin, Co-op Ca m er a can offer helpful tips and ad- viee a b o u t th e most advanced ph oto gr aph ic produ cts. No m a t t e r w hat category y o u r needs fall into, you'll find the personnel in Co-op Ca m er a qualified and willing to help. t h e ASK FOR QUALITY COLOR PROCESSING BY KODAK • Bring us your KODAK C o lo r Slide. M ovie and Print Film for prompt, quality p ro c­ essing by Kodak. • We’ll have Kodak process your film for quality results, and we ll fill your order promptly. Stop in a n d ask for details VfSA’ Great Expectations... photograph by Larry Deckard Great Results! It is a sure thing with our extensive selection of cameras, lenses and photographic supplies. Canon • Nikon • Olympus ^ Ilford • Kodak Ask About Our Time Payment Plans c°$V VISA & Master Charge W elcome V ,roy p cP;V — color prints,fast Sunset ov er G le n Rose, T exa s — i by H o w a r d C a stl eb er ry you re gonna like our NEXT DAY SERVICE IN by 10:30 a.m. OUT by 10:30 a.m. NEXT DAY on most color print film s Your M em ories Deserve THE BEST C A R E Superb q u a lity • C on ven ien t • Fast Service • W h y settle for less The Whole Truth & Nothing But We Swear it. Maxell cassettes give you the handiest way to rocord everything, with incredible fidelity, and we mean everything. Listen to your M axell Dealer for sound results Specialty Photo finishing c vaAc C* \ V ,s J f * * second level Visa 8t M a s te rC h a rg e W e lc o m e when you need... a radio, portable t.v. recorder 6? tapes - you’ll find a selection suitable for dorm 6? apt. living. ask about our Time Payment Plans SECOND LEVEL Co-op Bike Shop caters to professional and recreational cyclists ____________________________ — ^ - - T h e University Co-op Hike Shop is the place to go for all y o u r bicycling needs. Bicycles, mopeds, cycling clothing, cu s to m frames and a f ul l t o u r i n g a n d p r o f e s s i o n a l accessories are available. And th e Hike Shop offers 18-hour repair service o n most bikes, same-day service on m an y. l i n e o f A free repair clinic is held every Tuesday night from 6-8 by Serxice M anager Craig fCalx in) Jones. This gives Hike S ho p p at ro ns a c h a n c e to bring and learn to fix their own bikes. A n o t h e r serx ice offered by the Co-op is expert repair on all P u c h mopeds, ev en those bought elsewhere. inclu din g T h e Co-op is stocked with top brand s of bievcles and accessories \ u s t r o - Daimler, P u c h , Fuji. Avocet, Cinclli, Duegi, ( d e m e n t , C o n t i n e n t a l . Detto Pie tr o, W older, Zeus, F T , Edco, l ni versal, Cam pagnolo, Galli, G ip ie m m e , Koto, Omas, Henoto. Phil Wood, Jint B la ck bu rn . S bim an o and Su n l o u r . Pro F r a m e s are available from Gios Torino, Alan, P icc hio , Tomasini, G u e r c io t ti , Zeus, G raf tek , V in er and Chevas. Skip Hujsak, o ne of the c o u n t r y ' s finest frame builders who lixes in Austin, offers cu sto m frame jobs in ­ cluding a choi ce of frame tubing, angles, braze-ons, colors and o t h e r options. T h e Hike Shop is located behind th e U n i v e r ­ sity Co-op at 505 W. 23rd. S to re h ou rs are 9 :3 0 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday t h r o u g h Friday and 9 : 3 0 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. S at u rd ay . -n r Bob Steele tightens brakes as part of th e C o - o p ’s Bike Shop repair service. Don’t get caught with your pants — * PUCH .the wise alternative. The Co-op Bike Shop has PUCH Mopeds and expert service & repair. UNIVERSITY C 0 -O D 505 W. 23rd Street PUCH. THE MAXIMUM MOPED STARTING AUGUST 25, 1980 SALE OF THE CENTURY Don’t Buy a Bike Until You Get to Austin-------- STOP PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SEPT. 27 OR WHILE SUPPLIES LAST Only fNJTRO-MiriLER fl-DJ s139.'“ SUGGESTED RETAIL ’229 YOU SAVE *90 SPORT 12 GRAN TOURER SE ROYALE S10S S12S AMERICA Reg. Sale *210 *179 ‘219 *255 *295 *259 *299 *249 *350 *299 *648 *549 PUGH 79 PATHFINDER CAVETTE II CAVALIER BRIGADIER LADIES BRIGADIER MIXTE MARCO POLO Reg. Sale *189 *139 *229 *179 *259 *199 *299 *229 *299 *209 *389 *319 SUPER SPECIAL PURCHASE CP10 -10 SPEED with 23” FRAME REG. ■169 ONLY ^ 9 9 00 WALK-IN - RIDE-OUT ALL BIKES ASSEMBLED AND ADJUSTED TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS YOU’LL FIND ALL THIS & MORE Quality bicycles, accessories and back packs Prom pt expert repairs on all makes Friendly service Patronage refund to members* Easy Time Paym ent Plans #■ s a l e p r i c e o n in s t o c k b i c y c l e s ONLY SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED This is not a liquidation sale. Limit one bike per custom er. Please, no dealer inquiries o? 505 West 23rd Street behind the VTSA* I 'when one is declared 476-7211 E X T . 223 Austin Bike Club Sweeps State Championships Aus tin sored by bicycles, won ail positio ns C h a m p i o n s h i p s held in Dallas J u n e 29. Bike Cl u b ( A B C ) , which is spon- the U n i versify Co-op and P U C H f i \ e nat ional q ua lif yin g the 1980 T exa s R oad R aci n g in I he race co v e r e d a 106 mile co ur se. M or e than 8 0 cyclists e nte red from a r o u n d the state. A B C e nte re d 10 r ac ers and had six f inishing in the top 10. Win ni ng first place for A B C was C hris Ode . A B C riders placed se c ond with Sco tt Dickson a nd third with Ch r is G r u v e r . H a n s S c h n e i d e r placed fo ur th, and Br ian in fifth. T h e first five place Th om as ca m e winners will c o m p e t e in the Na tio na l C h a m ­ pionships Aug u st 17 in B is be e, Arizona . A B C also c.aptured first and sec o nd places in the St at e T im e I rial C h am p i o n s h i p s in which cyclis ts ran agains t the c lock o v e r a 25 mile co ur se. Chr is O de took first place h o no r s with H a ns S c h n e i d e r in se con d place. A B C bikers won all fo ur S t at e T ra c k C h a m ­ pionships. J e f f Fi e ld s was the only doub le c h a m p io n , winning both mat ch sprint s and the points race and qu a lif y i ng f or Na tionals. B r ia n T h o m a s was k ilo met er winner. Ha ns that S c h n e i d e r won pu rsu it with a qu alifies him for the Na tio n a l T ra ck C h a m ­ pionships to he held Au gu st 2 1 in S a n Diego, Cali for n ia . time T h e A B C racing t eam consist s o f 10 racers from 12 to I t years old. T h e t eam is c o n ­ sidered t he top Texa s t ea m a nd o n e o f the finest in the S o u t h e r n I nited St ates. Several team m e m b e r s a rc O ly m p ic hopefuls. The Un iversity Co-op an d P U C H also help fin ance a tourist gr ou p. Rides are pa ced slow, m o de rat e and fast, a nd lea ve the Co-op Bike S h o p most S u n d a y mo rn in gs. T h e rides are from 15 to 80 miles long. Tim es, speeds and dista n ces are listed in the A B C n ewslet ter and on the Co-op B ik e shop bulletin hoard. UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS ACADEMIC CALENDAR Fail Semester, 1980 August 25 MONDAY. Orientation procedure Student Health Center benefits become available to all students. August 25-26 MONDAY-TUESDAY. Registration for the fall semester August 26-27 August 27 August 29 September 1 September 2 September 5 Students obtain class cards. TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY. Registration for the fail semester: Students pay fee bills. WEDNESDAY Last day students may complete registration by paying fees without late penalty. Classes begin in the School of la w FRIDAY. One-day centralized add/drop procedure. MONDAY Labor Day, a holiday. TUESDAY. Classes begin except in the School of Law Last day of the official add and drop period in the School of Law FRIDAY Last day of the official add and drop period except in the School of Law Last day undergraduates may register without special approval of the Registrar Last day a student may change his register without special approval of the Registrar. Last day a student may change his registration in a course from a ietter-grade basis to a Pass-Fail basis or from a Pass Fail basis to a Ietter-grade basis Last day students in the Graduate School may register, including paying fees | w thout special approval of the Vice-President and Dean of Graduate Studies. September 12 FRIDAY This is the twelfth class day in the School of Law and the date on which the official enrollment count is taken t in the School of Law Last day on which to drop courses in the School of Law for a possible refund to be made S ep tem br-i 17 W E D N E S D A Y , this is the twelfth class day except in the School of Law and the date on which the official enrollment count is taken. Last day on which to drop courses except in the Scnool of Law for a possible refund to be made. Last day to apply for a graduate degree September 29 October 1 October 24 October 31 November 3-7 November 27-29 December 1 December 1 -3 December 2 December 8-22 December 11 December 12-18 December 17 December 19 December 20 December 22 Intrasemester reports due tn dean's offices. MONDAY Last day for dropping courses (except in the School of Law) without possible academic penalty. (See General information bulletin.) WEDNESDAY. Priority deadline for Student Financial Aid applications for spring semester (no applications accepted after November 15). FRIDAY FRIDAY. Last day a student in an undergraduate college or school may withdraw from the University or drop a course except for urgent and substantiated, nonacademic reasons acceptable to the dean Last day for making application for an undergraduate degree. Last day graduate students residing outside of Austin can request registration by mail for the thesis or dissertation course for the spring semester MONDAY-FRIDAY. Preregistration academic advising for the spring semester. THURSDAY-SATURDAY. inciusive Thanksgiving holidays MONDAY Last day to submit doctoral dissertation to the Vice-President and Dean of Graduate Studies. MONDAY-WEDNESDAY. Pre regí st rat ion fee bilis for spring semester distributed TUESDAY Last day to submit master s thesis or report to the Vice-President and Dean of Graduate Studies MONDAY-MONDAY Fail semester final examinations in the School of Law (No Saturday exams.) THURSDAY. No class day. except in the School of Law. FRIDAY-THURSOAY except in the School of Law WEDNESDAY. Payment deadline for students preregtsterfng for the spring semester FRIDAY, 9:00 a m Closing of University residence halls SATUROAY Graduation day except in the Schcot of Law (No public exercises ) Commissioning of ROTC graduates. Last day Student Health Center benefits are available to students. MONDAY Graduation day m the School of Law final examinations Fall semester MAP OF THE CAMPUS P a * r 21 CO-OP EAST Men's Athletic Activities SPORT Women's Athletic Activities ENTRIES OPEN Tues., Aug. 26 Tues., Aug. 26 Mon., Sept. 8 Mon., Sept. 15 Mon., Sept. 15 Mon., Sept. 15 Mon., Sept. 22 Mon., Sept. 29 Mon., Oct. 6 Mon., Oct. 13 Mon., Oct. 13 Mon., Oct. 20 Mon., Oct. 20 Mon., Nov. 10 Mon., Nov. 10 Mon., Dec. 1 ENTRIES OPEN Tues., Aug. 26 Tues., Aug 26 Mon., Sept. 8 Mon., Sept. 15 Mon., Sept. 15 Mon., Sept. 22 Mon., Oct. 6 Mon., Oct. 13 Mon., Oct. 13 Mon., Oct. 20 Mon., Nov. 10 Mon., Dec. 1 ENTRIES OPEN Tues., Aug. 26 Mon., Sept. 22 Mon., Sept 22 Mon., Sept. 29 Mon., Oct. 6 Mon., Oct. 13 Mon., Oct. 13 Mon., Oct. 20 Mon., Nov. 10 Mon., Dec. 1 “ Touch Football ‘ Punt, Pass, Kick “ Tennis (S) Team Bowling Gold (S) ‘ Golf Long Knock Badminton Racquetball (S) Volleyball “ Soccer Table Tennis (S) Handball (D) Swimming ‘ Turkey Trot Weight Lifting Basketball SPORT “ Flag Football ‘ Punt, Pass & Kick Racquetball (S) Team Bowling “ Tennis (D) Badminton (D) Volleyball * * Soccer Table Tennis (S) Swimming ‘ Turkey Trot Basketball SPORT “ Flag Football * ‘ Tennis Tube Polo ‘ Miniature Golf Volleyball Racquetball * * Soccer Swim Relays ‘ Turkey Trot Basketball ENTRIES CLOSE Wed., Sept. 10 (noon) Thur.. Sept. 11 Tues., Sept 16 Tues., Sept. 23 Tues., Sept. 23 Wed., Sept. 24 Tues., Sept. 30 - Tues., Oct. 7 Tues., Oct. 14 Tues., Oct. 21 Tues., Oct. 21 Tues., Oct. 28 Tues., Oct. 28 Tues., Nov. 18 Tues., Nov. 18 Wed., Jan. 14 (noon) ENTRIES CLOSE Wed., Sept. 10 (noon) Thurs., Sept. 11 Tues., Sept. 16 Tues., Sept. 23 Tues., Sept. 23 Tues., Sept. 30 Tues., Oct. 14 Tues., Oct. 21 Tues., Oct. 21 Tues., Nov. 4 Tues., Nov. 18 Wed., Jan. 14 (noon) ENTRIES CLOSE Wed., Sept. 10 (noon) Tues., Sept. 30 Tues., Sept. 30 Tues., Oct. 7 Tues., Oct. 14 Tues., Oct. 21 Tues., Oct. 21 Tues., Nov. 4 Tues., Nov. 18 Wed., Jan. 14 (noon) Coed Athletic Activities 1980 LONGHO FOOTBALL SCHED Sept. 1 ARKANSAS Rice at Houston Oklahoma at Dallas SMU Sept. 20 U tah State Sept. 27 Oregon State Oct. 4 Oct. 11 Oct. 25 Nov. 1 Texas Tech at Lubbock Nov. 8 Houston Nov. 15 TCU at Fort Worth Nov. 22 Nov. 29 Texas A & M Baylor at Waco 8 :1 0 p.m . 7 :0 0 p.m . 7 :0 0 p.m . 7:30p.m. 2:00 p.m. 1:0 0 p .m . 2:00 p.m. 1 :0 0 p.m . 2:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. 1:0 0 p.m . AL L G A M E T I M E S SU B JE C T TO C H A N G E (HOME GAMES IN BOLD FACE) Texas Fight! Show your ORANGE & WHITE from LONGHORN COUNTRY OPEN RECREATIONAL FACILITIES B«tlmont Hall Gregory Gymnasium Tennis Courts Whitakef Fields Mamoriat Stadium 21st St A Speedway 51 st & N Guadalupe 51 si & N Guadalupe 471-4523 471-7211 454-0888 471-7211 . ! sS m U o change'086 08,68 ’ h0 88me TtttioertfiU f • • A V i—htvtn is Easy bulletin boards 18"x w /w a ln u t fram e $6.99 w /u n fin ish ed fram e $6.50 cork letters sm all 5 l/t ”, $1.29 each large 11”, $2.75 each Coffee mugs m any unusual styles from $3.25 Special Effects, located just n o r t h of th e Co-op's main store, is a fascinating, fun-filled collection of distinctive items for gift-giving or for yourself. Browse th r o u g h o u r extensive selection of the newest and most exciting aesthetic effects from a r o u n d th e world! O u r fi ne gift area will dazzle an d inspire with a broad range of de co ra tiv e and f u n c ­ tional accessories for h o m e or office; items of brass, glass, ce ra mi c and porcelain, and na t u ra l materials to c o m p l e m e n t or cre a te any de cor, priced to fit small or large budgets. Tired of bare walls staring you do w n ? Special Effects has o n e of the largest arrays of posters, wall hangings and fine art r e p r o d u c ­ tions in Austin, ma n y of w hic h you w o n 't find elsewhere. F ra m es in a myriad of sizes, styles and materials are available, and m a n y are q u it e inexpensive. r o o m O u r ba ck is d e v o t e d to a vast assemblage of n o n - o r d i n a r y items for use in th e ki tc hen and for e n t e r t a i n i n g guests with food and libation. All kinds of c o o k e r y from storage to serving can be fo u nd here, with an emphasis on style and personal expression. T h e gift wrapping service for th e University Co-op is also located in Special Effects. W e’re p r ou d of o u r store, and we re sure you'll find s om et h in g to please you and those you love. Parson’s tables ^ 14” square brown or w h ite durable P olystyren e $5.99 ''Ta® memo boards w rite on — w ipe off! sm a ll $2.00, large $2.75 *I •,?X V ‘' . V < V * ¿ . S I * * , - 1 cork sheets 12” x 12” (pkg. of 4), $2.75 12” x 36” (pkg. of 2), $5.50, 24” x 36”, $5.50 each parachute nylon bags rainbow & m etallic colors from $11 to $21 5PGCWL GtfCCTS 476-7211 • 2268 Guadalupe St. ~ Page 23 Utility, P h o n e Service S t u d e n t s m o v i n g i n t o n e w d o r m s / * apartments or houses can get phone service through Sou thw estern Bell Telephone C o m ­ pany s business office, 61 I S. Congress Vve., or at the Bell phone store in Dobie Mall, 2021 Guadalupe. Those living in dorms or newer a pa r tm en t complexes that have modular outlets for plug­ in phones mav pick up phones at the business offi ee or Dobie Mall phone store. Students renting a house or an ap ar tm en t that does not have modular outlets must place an order for new service with the business of­ fice. Serv ice on this type of order usually takes about two days, and the individual requesting service must plan to be at the residence when the phone is installed. Electricity and water service can he ordered at the Austin I tility Office at 205 W. Ninth St. or the branch office at 318 E. Olto rf St., the which Colorado River. four miles south of is about St udents applving for service in Austin for the first time must pay a deposit of $ 10 to $70, depending on the siic of the a par tm ent or house. The deposit will he re fu nde d at the end ^ of eight months. Electricity and water will be tu rn e d on the same day if the order is placed by noon. For gas service. S o u th e rn I nion Gas C o m ­ pany can be contacted by te le pho ne at 17?. 6461. T h e r e is a $5 co n n ec ti o n charge that covers tu rn i n g on the gas and checking for gas leaks. Someone must be at the residence when the gas is tu rn e d on. No deposit is required. /'N ecessary b u t N ice“ Longhorn Double Old Fashions set o f six, $17 Oversized Wine Glasses set o f eight 123/4 oz. $11.99 k . "—\ Rich Lauv er adds the final touches to an item he is gift wrapping. Special Effects will gift wrap anything bought at the University Co-op. The AdapTABLE by Kinnovations Library Magazine Rack natural finished N orthern hardwood $19.95 c 1 hardwood and steel casual tables that go anyw here available w ith yellow or black tops that fold fla t for easy storage $21 © ■VPCCWL 2268 Guadalupe 476-7211 ext. 264 wsr free 1 hr. parking in Co-op lot with $3 purchase 0*€CT$ SfijS T h e Co-op Last is a ma jo r supplier of school and art supplies and law an d n u r s in g texts. Located at th e c o r n e r of Red River and 26th Streets, Co-op East is c o n v e n i e n t to t h e Art Building, the Law C e n t e r and th e School of Nursing. R eq ui r ed law texts and an as so rtm ent of H o r n books and law dictionaries are available at Co-op Last. You'll also find Case notes, Gilbe rt su m m a r ie s and West Nutshells. s t u d e n t s will te x tb o o k s , stethoscopes, nam e badges, nu rs es ’ patches and o t h e r supplies at Co-op Last. N u r s i n g find Drawing pads, artists pencils, markers, pastels and Monsac portfolios are ju s t a few of the items axailable in Co-op Last's Art Shop. at er colors, oil and acrylic paints, brushes, c lay, c er a m ic tools and m u c h m o r e are also a\ ailable. I be* Co-op L a s t is open 8 : 3 0 a.m. to ó p.m. Mondax 1:30 p.m. Saturday. t h r o u g h Friday and 9 :3 0 a.m. to w t Rely on >9 your J 'J textbooks (Course Essentials 1[(study Framework ( (LectureReinforcement ([ Exam Review ((Future Reference (Illustrations ( ( Come on over to the East side x a For Art supplies • Law books • Nursing supplies stoce hours: mon.~-(r¡.: 8 • 3 Oa.m. ~ S ’OOjy.m. ¿aturda?; S'OOa.m.~ 1 • 3 0 at Co-Op East Write quicker with the Clicker. The Professor says, . A - m m j ~ - * "Buy Quicker \ Click»* here!” Penfcd. Creating new ways lor Amenca Id write 'School Suppl ies J * ltS r History of UT------- In 188 3, w h e n T h e U n i v e r s i t y of Texas at A u s t i n first o p e n e d its doo rs, a fa c u l ty o f 13 t a u g h t 221 s t u d e n t s . T o ­ day I T at A u s t i n has t h e largest e n r o l l ­ m e n t o f a n y sc ho o l in Texas. T h e o r ig in a l U n i v e r s i t y co n sisted of tw o d e p a r t m e n t s w h i c h b e c a m e t h e College of A r ts a n d S c i e n c e s a n d t h e S c h o o l o f L aw. I n 1894 t h e College o f E n g i n e e r i n g was c o m p l e t e d . In 1906 t h e S c h o o l o f E d u c a t i o n o p e n e d , a n d in 1910, t h e G r a d u a t e S c h o o l. O r a n g e a n d w h i t e w e r e c h o s e n as sc h o o l c o lo r s in 1900, a n d t h e Texas t e a m s b e g an usin g t h e n a m e a t h l e t i c “ L o n g h o r n s " in 1904. By t h e t im e W o r l d W a r I e r u p t e d , t h e e n r o l l m e n t at T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f Texas at A u s ti n had r e a c h e d 2,2 5 4 . A f t e r t h e w a r it passed 4 ,0 0 0 . T h e n u m b e r o f n e w s t u d e n t s n e c e ssita te d e x p a n s i o n o f t h e U n i v e r s i ­ ty. T h e S c h o o l o f B u sine ss A d m i n i s t r a ­ tio n o p e n e d its d o o r s in 1922. I n 1923, at a t im e w h e n U T n e e d e d m o n e y fo r m o r e c o n s t r u c t i o n , t h e S a n t a Rita oil was d i sc o v e r e d in t h e U n i v e r s i t y ’s West Texas lands. In f o r U T by 1970. T h e oil h o l d in g s g e n e r a t e d $ 3 6 6 m illio n In 1930, G r e g o r y G y m o p e n e d ; in 1933, t h e S t u ­ d e n t U n i o n . 1937, t h e M a in B u i ld i n g , o r ’’T o w e r , " was b u i l t . T h e 2 7 - s t o r y b u i l d i n g is lit with o r a n g e f loo d lig h ts w h e n e v e r UT wins a n a t i o n a l a t h l e t i c in c h a m p i o n s h i p o r beats rival A & M foo tball. Pafir 25 I n t h e late 1930s, t h e College o f F i n e Arts o p e n e d , b u t W o r l d W a r II saw U T s e n r o l l m e n t d e c l in e by m o r e t h a n 2,0 0 0 . A f t e r t h e U n i v e r s i t y rapidly. E n r o l l m e n t g ain ed su rpass ed 15,000 a n d again w a r r a n t e d new c o n s t r u c t i o n . t h e war, s t u d e n t s T h e G r a d u a t e S c h o o l o f L i b r a r y S c ie n c e o p e n e d in 1948. T h e G r a d u a t e S c h o ol of Social W o rk o p e n e d in 1950, t h e S c h o o l o f A r c h i t e c t u r e in 1951. Black s t u d e n t s e n t e r e d e x p a n d i n g U n i v e r s i t y b e g i n n i n g 1950. t h e rapidly in T h e 1960s w e re m a r k e d by t r a g e d y dft U T . In 1966 a s n i p e r ’s b u lle ts killed 14 v ictim s a r o u n d t h e T o w e r a n d w o u n d e d t h e T o w e r , 32. T h e w h i c h also was t h e site o f se veral suicides, was closed in 1974. to p p o r t i o n of University Co-op tfORTH Discount Book Store Buying & Selling all types of books Everything Discounted 50% or more! • Foreign Language • Textbooks • Novels Plus Much More O pen M on.-Sat. 9:30 a.m .-5:00 p.m. Plenty of Free Parking Stop in and Browse 4101 Guadalupe Visa, MasterCharge le Co-Op Charge Welcome 458-6451 Back to School Special-. I __________________________________________ 10% OFF All Artist's Paints & Brushes through Sept. 15 effective only at Co-op East THE STUDENTS^ Department Store Ready to serve you, all under one convenient roof . . . Textbooks & Study Aids • Cameras School Supplies : : „ Apparel Shop Calculators & Typewriters • Gifts Art & Engineering Supplies » Radio & Television, Recorders & Tapes Sporting Goods . ; • Novelties & Texas Souvenirs Jewelry & Class Rings -• - • Sw eete Shop General Books *] jf Special & Mail Order il <« SPECIAL EFFECTS— UNIQUE GIFTS JUST NEXT DOOR n «€»&»■* *■>..> . r :~v * - > , - 4 Shop our State-of-the- Art étke'Shop, at 5 0 5 W. 23rd Street. C o -O p N orth Discoúht Eíooks at 4101 Guadalupe Street Co-Op East—Located at toníhr ¿f 26th & Red River 4 7 2 -6 1 5 6 Convenient for LMw SI Nursing Students Complete One Stopl'ArtfSupply Headquarters DO YOU rÍEED . . . a Money Order?" « " A (k mtt iiiji. u-n o I (| I Jfcif ’ check? ' 1 11 A* ; 1 ■ *4 ^ V# J#íi6; rri^ke a purchase with VISA or Mastercharge? ^ag « h ^^jU.Co-Qp time payment plan? v *( of-OT^g needs; come by the Co-Op and give üs a chapee to.'h'étot. * * árf-onghbíft trá d ití^ s in c e V ú; . ' » H • H R ¿ 3 0 * ^í~or?r?