\ Da il y T exa n Vol. 88, No. 20 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Thursday, September 29,1988 25$ Discovery to launch after 2y>year dry spell Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Discovery's five astronauts, anxious to break an agoniz­ ing 32-month drought in American space­ flight, were "elated to be headed for space" Wednesday as the overnight countdown began for a Thursday midmorning launch. NASA officials were admittedly nervous, but confident. "The space shuttle is ready to fly," said shuttle administrator Richard Truly, adding, "Even the weather is look­ ing good." The ship, obscured for weeks behind a giant scaffold, stood in full view after NASA retracted the structure. The process took place hours early, so "workers will have a head start" on final countdown pro­ cedures. The count resumed at mid-eve­ ning Wednesday after a daylong scheduled hold. Fueling was to begin about 12:40 a.m. Austin time, with the craft bathed in bril­ liant spotlights. "This has been a long 2 V2 years," Truly said of the difficult period since the Chal­ lenger accident in 1986. Liftoff was sched­ uled for 8:59 a.m. Austin time, with a 2Vi- hour window to take care of weather or technical delays. After launch officials gave the prelimi­ nary go-ahead for overnight fueling of Dis­ covery, Truly passed the news to Frederick Hauck, the shuttle commander. "The best way to describe him is elated to be headed for space," Truly told reporters. The crew studied updated flight plans and received weather briefings before an early bedtime. Around the Kennedy Space Center area, excitement was mounting. Campers and recreation vehicles found good viewing places across the Indian River. Souvenir sellers set up shop. NASA's Visitor's Cen­ ter sold out of the commemorative enve­ lopes that feature the crew patch. NASA's deputy administrator Dale My­ ers exulted that "we have been working 2xh years to put the shuttle back in business and tomorrow is the day we plan to do that." He said, "It's really the beginning of the future for our space program." Arnold Aldrich, director of the shuttle program said jubilantly, "Tomorrow the shuttle should return to its proper place in the sky and launch us into a new era." Hauck and his four-man crew had an easy day, relaxing at the crew quarters sev­ en miles from launch pad 39B. Their wives were there, too. They were to be awakened at 5 a.m., for breakfast, a last-minute weather briefing, and time to get into their cumbersome flight suits. The four-day Discovery mission will be the first shuttle flight since Challenger ex­ ploded in a fireball 73 seconds after liftoff from the same launch pad on Jan. 28, 1986. The accident ceded manned space flight to the Soviet Union, which has put 16 cosmo­ nauts into orbit since then, aboard six flights. Asked what would be going through his mind as the count ticks down, the center's deputy director, Tom Utsman, said, "I'll be saying that hopefully we have done all the right things, that we haven't taken any shortcuts, that we haven't overlooked any­ thing. "I'd be a liar if I said I wasn't nervous," he said. "But I also am confident." As a result of investigations since the ac­ cident, the shuttle fleet and NASA's man­ agement have undergone major changes. The shuttle itself has had 210 modifications. State tries to win $3.2 billion site But Louisiana may win plant bid with ‘very aggressive’ approach By BARBARA UNKIN ®The Daily Texan Texas and Louisiana are the only contenders in a bid for a $3.2 billion expansion of Formosa Plastics Corp. U.S.A., part of a multinational chemical company headquartered in Taiwan, a corporate official said Wednesday. Larry Peyton, Formosa's vice president of new business develop­ ment, said company officials will make final announcement sometime in October. But, Peyton said, Louisiana may have a slight edge. the "In Texas it looks like the right location," he said. "But it looks bet­ ter for Louisiana because their de­ partment of commerce is more orga­ nized." If the plant comes to Texas it would mean more than 2,500 new jobs for Point Comfort, the new plant's possible location, and would pump millions of dollars into the state's economy, Peyton said. For­ mosa already has one plant just out­ side the small South Texas city. Local groups have fought hard in Texas for the project, he said. "People in the state of Texas have been very ... positive about having a new project," Peyton said. State Sen. Ken Armbrister, D-Vic­ toria, along with Gov. Bill Clements, House Speaker Gib Lew­ is and Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby have been courting corporate officials. Geoff Sugerman, Armbrister's press secretary, said the lack of a corporate income tax in Texas is one of the state's most attractive points, along with a cheap labor market and an incentive package state officials have in the works. The package will be introduced to the Legislature in January, after the final decision has been made, Sugerman said. But the chairman of the board, W.C. Wong, knows what the package entails, he said. Louisiana may be able to match that package because of a law that allows state officials to match incen­ tives offered by other states. "The state of Louisiana has a more organized effort," Peyton said. 'Their department of com­ merce has been in business for a longer period of time. They are very aggressive." Peyton said corporate officials are looking at several things before they make their final decision, including the states' business climates, raw material supplies and transportation possibilities. the past Texas has been struggling with a lagging economy few years. But if Formosa should decide on Texas, some of those problems could work in the company's favor, Sugerman said. The state's soft real estate market can hurt consumers, but it helps lure new businesses because cheap­ er properties are an incentive, he said. Sugerman also said the state's faltering banking tystem will not af­ fect the decision because most of the company's finances will be handled out of Taiwan. Peyton agreed. "There are some offsetting factors in the state that al­ low a good business climate," he said. "Texas has got a lot to offer, you just need a little better sales package." Sugerman said the support of Texas officials has been a good omen for the state. "I think it's a sign that Texas real­ izes that we have to be much more aggressive in attracting new indus­ try," he said. Formosa Plastics Corp. U.S.A. is a division of Formosa Plastics Groups, a multinational business interests as far-reaching as with hospitals in Taiwan and Indonesia. The group's profit for last year was more than $5 billion, putting them in league with Texas Instruments, Peyton said. The company has 18 operating plants in the United States. Three are in Texas, including the compa­ ny's largest plant. No ‘Control’ Jeff Holt/Daily Texan Staff Lance Cunningham, a business freshman, undressed and flexed in front of television cameras and a live audience Wednesday in hopes of winning a spot on the MTV game show Remote Control. Cunningham, however, was not selected as a finalist and will have to play along at home. See related story page 5. Cronkite to tell it ‘the way it is’ in UT workshops By JEANNE ACTON Daily Texan Staff After years of negotiating, the dean of the College of Communication has finally "nabbed" former CBS News anchorman Wal­ ter Cronkite to teach a three-day workshop on media ethics to 34 communication stu­ dents in the Senior Fellows program. "We've been trying for 10 to 15 years to get him here," said Robert Jeffrey, dean of the college. In the closed-session workshops Oct. 17-19, Cronkite will address three general topics: "Journalists: Are They the Maker or Breaker of News?" "Is A Journalist a Scientist or Ethi- cist?" and "Are Journalists Personal Patriots, or Should They Be Helpful for the Nation?" said Roderick Hart, Senior Fellows program director. The Senior Fellows program is an honors program that started at the beginning of the fall semester, and is open to communication students who meet grade point and other re­ quirements. "Basically, each case presented will be something he has reported, which we will have on videocassette, or it will be something that is just interesting from an ethical stand­ point," Hart said. Since the class is so small, the students will have a "great opportunity to interact with him" on a more personal basis, said Sheri Stodghill, a journalism and radio-television- film senior and a student in the class. "He is phenomenal," Stodghill said. "He knows the ins and outs that we couldn't learn in 20 years of reporting." Cronkite prefers to work with smaller groups, Hart said. "He wanted to get closer to the students," he said. Hart said this type of atmosphere will defi­ nitely benefit his students. "This is a guy who has not only lived a rich life, but reported it as he lived it," he said. "Given his unparalleled experience, Cronkite gives the class an envi­ able chance to learn from a professional who has covered virtually every major news event related to international politics." Cronkite also is expected to announce that he is donating papers and memorabilia to the University, Jeffrey said. Some 500 boxes of material trace Cronkite's career in journalism. UT officials have honored Cronkite, who attended the University from 1933 to 1935, several times. He was named a distinguished UT alumnus in 1964 and received the College of Communication's DeWitt Carter Reddick Award in 1974. HUH .... Rw o r t b n id n g — On Wednesday, Los Angeles Dodger pitcher Orel Hershiser broke Don Drysdale s 20-year-old record ot 58% scoreeless innings by one-third of an inning, having shut out the San Diego 8 Padres for 10 innings WEATHER No room wooM ior — Thanks to our pal Orel, this serious bit of meterological infor­ mation comes to you in a more somber weather vane Highs Thursday will be in the low 90s, with lows huddling around 70. Winds will be out of the east at 10-15 mph. A cold front will arnve Thursday, dropping highs into the chilly mid-806 Ooooh, foot­ ball weather is here INDEX 15 Around Campus 12 Classifieds 15 Comics.............................. 4 Editorials. Entertainment 10 S p orts.................................................. 8 S ta te & L o ca i........................................ 7 6 University 3 World 4 Nation -------------w----------------——.. Congress awards Sematech $100 million By ANDRES EGUIGUREN Daily Texan Staff Both chambers of Congress on Wednesday quickly approved a conference committee's recommen­ dation to allocate $100 million for the Sematech research consortium, as part of an authorization bill for defense spending. Congress approved the immedi­ ate release of $25 million for fiscal 1989, with the remaining $75 million being held until Sematech and the Department of Defense agree on op­ erational procedures. The measure awaits President Reagan's approval. U .S . Rep. J.J. "Jake" Pickle, D- Texas, said in a statement that the added requirement should pose no major problem because annual ne­ gotiations with the Defense Depart­ ment already are required. "In fact, it should help them to reach an earlier agreement and avoid the delays which prevented the release of funds earlier this year," Pickle said. This spring, in legislation that was eventually vetoed, proposed funding for the Austin-based re­ search consortium was cut from $100 million to $45 million. Robert Noyce, president and chief executive of Sematech, said he was pleased with Thursday's devel­ opments and had not expected such a quick passage by Congress. Noyce said getting the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agen­ cy, which approves defense fund­ ing of research projects, and Sema­ tech to agree on the 1989 operations should not be too hard. "We don't expect to have any dif­ ficulties with that. It's good prac­ tice" to hash over the plans, he said. Sematech, a nationwide consorti­ um of 14 companies, has an agree­ ment with the Defense Department to do semiconductor research. Noyce said the full $100 million is necessary to do the job properly. "This whole program is a race, if you will. Slowing it down is not a good idea in a race." Pickle said getting full funding has been an uphill battle, particular­ ly after Reagan proposed the $45 million figure for the 1989 fiscal year. Noyce said the administration may have asked for the reduced fig­ ure because of the perception that the project was coming along slow- »y Noyce said he and Paul Castrucci, chief operating officer of the UT Montopolis Research Center in South Austin, where Sematech is lo­ cated, have been trying to change that perception since joining the consortium Aug. 1. Pickle said greater national impor­ awareness of Sematech's tance is needed to assure future fed­ eral funding. "We are excited to have Sematech sitting out at the UT Montopolis Center, but we have to get folks around the country excited about it too," Pickle said. "Our challenge for the future is to make everyone understand how crucial this project is for this coun­ try's future economic competitive­ ness," he said. Reagan vetoed a defense author­ ization bill last month, but he is ex­ pected to sign this one, perhaps as early as Thursday. UT studies changes in foreign programs By KAREN ADAMS Daily Texan Staff Because of some past problems keeping track of study abroad stu­ dents, two UT offices specializing in helping those people are changing their record-keeping systems. Margaret Kidd, International off­ ice director, said an advisory council made of several UT administrators and faculty is looking into ways of keeping tabs on the students. Ivy McQuiddy, study abroad adviser, said part of the problem in­ volves students who study abroad but never come to the office, as well as other students who come to the office but never return to let advis­ ers know they have gone to school in other countries. Kidd said identifying students in other who have participated study abroad programs is hard be­ cause transcripts from the U.S. in­ stitutions do not indicate courses taken at foreign institutions. To solve this problem, the council is looking into three proposals. One involves registering at the University for UT classes and re­ ceiving UT credit while studying abroad, Kidd said. But instead of registering for spe­ cific courses, the student would ap­ ply for a block of non-specified study-abroad credit, Kidd said. Stu­ dents would then sign up at the for­ eign institution for the courses they want and discuss with a faculty adviser what credits would apply. Another solution involves re­ maining on UT lists as a full-time student, but actually registering at the foreign institution and receiving transfer credit, Kidd said. Students with scholarships or fi­ nancial aid would benefit from the second proposal because their tran­ scripts would say they are full-time UT students and allow them to ful­ fill scholarship or aid requirements. Kidd said she is unsure what ef­ fects the program would have on UT enrollment record-keeping, and this solution may require approval from the University, UT System Board of Regents or even the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. The third proposal involves no of­ ficial UT registration. Instead, stu­ dents would be advised at the Uni­ versity and have their names designated in a computer database as studying abroad. Whatever proposal the advisory council decides upon would make the study-abroad process smoother, Kidd said. "We're really working to make opportunities available for students for whom this is feasible," she said. McQuiddy said her office also has initiated new programs to help im­ prove record-keeping procedures for students. "Up until this year, we haven't kept records of people who study abroad," McQuiddy said. "This year we have a new proce­ dure for every student who comes through our office, so we will know where these students have gone," McQuiddy said. form The procedures, initiated this fall, include filling out a pre-departure application the courses the student intends to take. Both the student and the Study Abroad office will keep copies, McQuiddy said. specifying By keeping track of students, the office hopes to develop contacts for future study-abroad candidates, she said. But the new procedures will not tracking the necessarily alleviate problems. "If students don't come back to this office, we don't know who they are," McQuiddy said. "We would like them to, though. We think we can provide support." Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/Thursday, September 29,1988 2 pair of GLASSES or 2 pair of CONTACTS or 5 pair of GLASSES & 1 pair of CONTACTS Singlevision in Selected Frames B & L Sofspin or C Q .4 contact lenses • Tints, UV and Scratch Resis­ tant Coatings available at nominal charge • Valid thru Decem ber 31,1988 LENS * u s O x y s e p t Svstem m $ 7 9 ( e y e c a r e ) 476-1000 1904 Guadalupe MBank Mall Mon-Fri 9-5:30 Sat 9-noon 441-9771 1909 E. Riverside In the Riverhills Shopping Center Mon-Fri 9-5:30 Macintosh Products & Peripherals 30-70% OH! MacProdi ts USA in Dobie Mall offers software and hardware at mail order prices! MacProduds I SA in Dobie Mall carries the largest inventon o f Macintosh [X-npherals and We also manufacture a w ide range o f high level pe rip h e ra ls-e \e rvth in g from hard tim es to RAM upgrades. An w e offer local support anti sen ice. So instead o f waiting weeks for mail order o r paving retail, discover MacPixxlucts I M - the mail order distributor nght here in Austin. Call today for a free catalog: For retail sales call: 343-9441 469-5000 !□= MacProducts U SA ^= 2021 G uadalupe • 2nd Floor D obie Mall next to Ginny's T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor.................................................................................................................................................... Mike Godwin Managing Editor......................................................................................................................... Cherie Henderson Associate Managing Editors . Schuyler Dixon, Stacey Freedenthal. Jennifer Horan, Robert Wüonsky News Editor............................................................................................................................................ Junda Woo Associate News E d ito rs ............................................................................................ Susan Boren, Kevin Hargis News Assignments E d ito r............................................................................................................. Diana Williams General Reporters............................................................................ Karen Adams, Mike Erickson, Jim Ken nett, Barbara Linkin, Dennis McCarthy. Linda Milch Special Pages Editor......................................................................................................................... April Eubanks Associate E d ito rs ....................................................................................................... Scott Henson, Sean Walsh Entertainment Editor.......................................................................................................................Steve Crawford Associate Entertainment E ditor...................................................................................................... Jeff Turrentine Sports E d ito r....................................................................................................................................... Mike Fannin Associate Sports E d ito r......................................................................................................................... Jim Greer Steve Davis, Jerry Gemander, Clarence Hill, Garry Leavell General Sports Reporters John Foxworth Photo Editor Images E ditor.............................................................................................. Bret Bkxxnquist Associate Images E d ito rs ...................................................................................... Rachel Jenkins, Rob Walker Issue Staff Art Director............................................................................... News Assistants........................................... John Council, Andres Eguiguren, Kim Horner, Randy Kennedy, Greg Perliski. Are Slettan, Genez Waite Sports Assistant............................................................................. Sports W r ite r .............................................................................................................................................Ray Dise Entertainment A ssistant........................................................................... Editorial Columnist.............................................................................................................Ftob Nash, Kevin Reed Editorial Assistant............................................................................................................................... Tom Philpott Makeup Editor......................................................................................................................................... Deke Bond Wire E d ito r...................................................................................................................................Supriya Nayalkar Mindy S3rown, Dan Price, Alan Krankel, Neal Whitman Copy E d ito rs .................. Jeff Holt, Robert Kirk ham Photographers................................ Graphics Assistant........................................................................ Comic Strip C artoonists.................................... .............................Van Garrett, John Keen, Tom King, Volunteers David Marks, Robert Rodriguez, Martin Wagner Jeanne Acton, Craig Branson, Lydia Lum, Sharon O’Malley, Lisa Treiber, Rachel Kate Oyoko Local Display Advertising Deborah Bannworth, Tony Colvin, Ann del Llano, Betty Ellis John Farris, David Hamlin, Denise Johnson, David Lutz Beth Mitchell. Gina Padilla, Susan Stnpling, Chris Wilson Classified D isplay.............................................................................................................Ricardo R Fernandez Classified Telephone Sales.................................................................................. Charles Hyman, Melanie Neel, Martin Pellinat. Juanda Powell, Victoria Woo Classified Telephone Service........................................................................ Susan Fleischaker, Jennifer Head, Linda Martin, Shawn McMinn. Janet Petrie. Toni Schmitt The Daily , vxan (USPS 146-440). a student newspaper at The University ot Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis. Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications advertising, call 471-8900 For classified word advertising, call 471-5244 Entire contents copyright 1988 Texas Student Publications The DaSy Texan Mel Subscription Ratee One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fall and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fall. Spnng and Summer) $30 00 55 00 20 00 75 00 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications. P O Box D. Austin, TX 78713-7209. or to To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471 -5083 TSP Building C3.200, or call 471 -5083 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE 471-5244 WANT ADS Sixth Street crime rate spurs security increase Bobby Ruggiero By JANET WEBB Daily Texan Staff Austin Police D epartm ent officials will begin doubling their weekend night forces on Sixth Street Friday to combat the area's rising crime rate. "It'll be a fairly decent increase," said Capt. Freddie Maxwell, com­ m ander of the tactical services divi­ sion. About 30 officers nightly — up from 15 — will patrol Fifth, Sixth and Seventh streets from Congress Avenue to the w est Interstate 35 frontage road. Van Garrett Gregor Sauer Since July, about 38 assaults have occurred in the Sixth Street area, ac­ cording to police statistics. During April, May and June, 27 assaults oc­ curred and 15 assaults were report­ ed during the previous three-m onth period. Jeff Satterwhite C.F. Adams, police spokesm an, said the num bers are only "ballpark figures," because some cases prove to be unfounded after investigation. The num ber of aggravated as­ saults jum ped from 16 in late spring to 26 in July, A ugust and Septem ­ ber. Reports of sexual assaults in the area have dropped from six to four in the sam e period. Maxwell said Sixth Street police forces have gradually strengthened over the sum m er, but four assaults last weekend prom pted the latest patrol increase. All those assaults involved w eapons and at least one resulted in serious injury, Maxwell said. The area has also seen more re­ ports of drug abuse, prostitution and thefts since mid-summer, ac­ cording to police statistics. But, Maxwell said, the figures have not significantly last year. Also, police are gearing up for football w eekends and Halloween, which is one of the busiest times of year, he said. increased since "W ith all these things together we felt like it deserved some special attention," Maxwell said. iving more police would surely help here.’ — Aaron Scharff, a Maggie Mae’s manager However, some business owners and Sixth Street patrons have grow n concerned about gang activi­ ty, said Aaron Scharff, a m anager of Maggie Mae's, 512 Trinity St. "H aving more police would sure­ ly help here," he said. "It's not going to hurt." Scharff said Maggie Mae's em ­ ployees are heavily prom oting the club's program offering to escort anyone to his or her car. streets, Scharff Most of the problem s occur on side streets off Sixth Street and on said. adjacent "There are gangs that rob people and stab people there because they know they can't get away with it on Sixth Street," he said. Sgt. Rennie D unn, of the Youth Services Division, said gang activity has the increased, but m ost of "gangs" vandalize buildings rather than commit violent crimes. "They're mostly a loose federa­ tion of kids w ho d o n 't have any­ thing else to do or anyw here else to go, so they get together and call them selves a gang," D unn said. Some of these groups use Sixth Street as a gathering place, he said. But Dunn said gangs are not new to Austin. The Hispanic Crime Unit was formed in response to more vi­ olent gang activity, such as m ug­ gings and m urders, he said. The younger gangs just need "to have their time directed," he said. Most of the additional officers p a­ trolling Sixth Street will come from the Tactical Services Division, which includes officers on the w alk­ ing beat, the m ounted patrol and the Special Mis­ sions Team, Maxwell said. the canine unit, products in Texas. We keep over l .000 software and hardware products in stock and. 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Reagan signs free-trade bill President vetos textile measure, calls it protectionist Associated Press Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan on Wednesday signed a a bill paving the way for a multibillion-dollar free-trade zone with Canada. O n ly minutes before going before television cameras in the Rose Garden to sign the trade bill, he vetoed legislation designed to toughen curbs on textile, appar­ el and shoe imports. He argued that the textile bill would have "disastrous effects" on the economy at a time when exports are booming. In both cases, Reagan said he was acting to lower prices for consumers and to ensure jobs for workers. The president lavished praise on the Canadian free- trade agreement, calling it "a hallmark of free trade and "the antithesis" of the textile measure he had just vetoed. But the treaty has no force as yet because it is bottled up in the Canadian Senate and its fate depends on the outcome of the Canadian election. The textile bill, intended to protect American indus­ tries against foreign competition, won final congres­ sional approval Friday But Reagan, in a veto message released by the White House, said, "This bill represents protectionism at its worst." "Protectionism does not save jobs," Reagan said in his veto message. He said the bill "would impose needless costs on American consumers, threaten jobs in our export in­ dustries, jeopardize our overseas farm sales, and und­ ermine our efforts to obtain a more open trading sys­ tem for U.S. exports "At a time when American exports are booming, the United States must not embark on a course that would diminish our trade opportunities," he added. The textile measure won congressional approval without the two-thirds margin needed to override a veto, and White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater expressed confidence that Reagan's veto would be sus­ tained. The House passed the bill by a vote of 248-150 Fri­ day, and the bill won Senate approval by a 59-36 vote on Sept. 13. The president called the textile and apparel indus­ tries "the most protected sector of our economy" and said they were undeserving of further aid. Reagan charged that prices would climb and "break the clothing budgets of many American families" if the legislation took effect. But House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, criticized the president's move, accusing Reagan of being unhelpful toward the textile industry. "For eight years this administration has pursued anti-worker, anti-wages, anti-employment policies," Wright said. "In vetoing this trade hill, President Reagan refuses to give the textile, apparel and footwear industries the time they need to prepare and modernize for interna­ tional competition," he said. Fitzwater said Reagan vetoed the hill as soon as it arrived from Capitol Hill Wednesday morning. Asked about possible repercussions from the veto on Vice President George Bush's election effort in the South, where even some staunch Republicans back the bill, Fitzwater replied, "It's our belief that, politics aside ... protectionism is the issue here." Anticipating the veto, Rep. Butler Derrick, D-S.C., said Friday that he expected Congress to mount an ef­ fort next week to override Reagan's action. The House approved the bill on a vote of 248-150 on Friday. Earlier this month, the Senate approved the measure, 59-36. Afghan rebels attack, leave 35 dead, 150 hurt Associated Press MOSCOW — Rebels in Afghanistan sprayed rockets into the capital, and one missile exploding near a downtown bus stop killed 35 people and wounded more than 150, the Tass news agency said Wednesday. The attack,'believed to be the deadliest ever by anti- Marxist insurgents on Kabul, was reported one day af­ ter Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze told journalists the Kremlin had halted its military with­ drawal from Afghanistan. Shevardnadze on Wednesday cut short his participa­ tion in the U.N. General Assembly session in New York to return to Moscow for what his spokesman, Gennady Gerasimov, said was a meeting of the Com­ munist Party's policy-making Central Committee. It was not immediately known whether the commit­ tee would discuss the situation in Afghanistan. Gerasi­ mov said the meeting would make high-level personnel changes and revamp the party's structure. In its report from Kabul, Tass said that in the space of one hour, "extrem ists" fired 21 surface-to-surface rock­ ets into the Afghan capital. It did not say what day the attack occurred. "O n e of the rockets exploded near a bus stop in the center of the city, killing 35 and wounding another 156 civilians," Tass said. Tass said seven people were wounded in other parts of Kabul. Over the past two days, it said, rebel rocket bombardments caused "civilian casualties and wide­ spread destruction" in residential areas of the capitals of Ghazni, Laghman, Nangarhar, Balkh, Paktia and Parwan provinces and of Khost district. For months, the Soviets have accused Pakistan of violating U.N.-brokered accords on Afghanistan by tunneling arms, including rockets, to U .S.-backed reb­ els battling the pro-Moscow government of President Najib. The agreement obligates the Soviets to withdraw their more than 100,000 troops from Afghanistan by Feb. 15. The Soviets announced that half of their troops were back home by Aug. 15, in accordance with the agree­ ment. But on Tuesday,Shevardnadze told reporters at the United Nations that the Soviets have not begun the second stage of the pullout. He did not say how the Soviets would react if the alleged violations continued. "Let's wait and see," Shevardnadze said. "It is nec­ essary to stop the violations that take place. It is the most important thing." Soviet media made no mention Wednesday of She­ vardnadze's remarks or of a pause in the Soviet pul­ lout, perhaps because of widespread hopes kindled in the country when the withdrawal began. Valentin Falin, head of the government press agency Novosti, told a reporter at a reception Wednesday the pause was due to "the actions of the other sid e." He referred to U.S. and Pakistani arms supplies to the Af­ ghan rebels. Although the Kremlin's role in Afghanistan was sup­ ported by many Soviets, an increased number had be­ gun to regard the mounting Soviet casualties as point­ less. By Soviet count, more than 13,000 Soviet soldiers died in Afghanistan. In a speech to the General Assembly earlier Tuesday, Shevardnadze asked the five members of the U.N . Se­ curity Council to discuss violations of the withdrawal agreement with Afghanistan and Pakistan. He did not name Pakistan, but the Soviet Union has filed numerous complaints with the United Nations saying that Pakistan is allowing the U.S.-backed insur­ gents to launch raids into Afghanistan from bases in Pakistan. "This cannot be allowed to happen," She­ vardnadze said. "W e're not complaining to anyone. We have the means to make things fall into place. But we are responsible to the United Nations and therefore are appealing to it." Pakistan has been a major backer of about 200,000 anti-government guerrillas. The United States and Chi­ na have also given support to the rebels. Bush’s savings proposal criticized Associated Press WASHINGTON — Private economists reacted with skepticism Wednesday to George Bush's proposal for new tax-deferred savings accounts for the middle class. Democrat Michael Dukakis was already using the proposal as ammunition for his contention that a Bush presidency would favor the rich. However, Republican Bush defended his plan to set up "individual savings accounts," saying they would "give taxpayers a little nest egg." Many private economists called the tax savings in­ consequential and said it was unlikely such accounts would be used by very many Americans. The vice president's proposal, which he first de­ scribed on Tuesday, would allow people to deposit up to $1,000 annually in a special savings account and defer taxes on the interest if the money were kept in the account for a minimum of five years. er would come from additional interest earned on mon­ ey that would otherwise be taxed immediately. The amount of the benefit would depend on whether the taxpayer was being taxed at a 15 percent or 28 per­ cent rate and how much his or her investment was earning. Michael Boskin, a Stanford economist and a top Bush economic adviser, said that a taxpayer being taxed at a 28 percent top rate who put $1,000 into the special sav­ ings accounts every year for 10 years would accumulate about $500 in tax savings at the end of 10 years. This assumes that the investments earned 10 percent annu­ ally. Boskin called the plan a "modest additional propos­ al" and said it should be viewed as complementing other savings incentives such as existing Individual Re­ tirement Accounts and Bush's proposal for college sav­ ings bonds, in which the income from the bonds would be tax free if it went to college tuition. While the interest would accumulate tax free during that time, it would be taxed at the saver's regular tax rate once it was withdrawn. That would mean that the only benefit to the taxpay­ But other economists said the modest benefits the Bush campaign was claiming would be even less when the savings were invested for a shorter period of time or at lower interest rates. unfair Associated Press BOSTON — A top-to-bottom reorganiza­ tion of physician fees, requested by Con­ gress, could raise the pay of general practi­ tioners by 70 percent while cutting some surgeons' income in half, its author said. If adopted by private and government in­ surance programs, the long-awaited plan would sharply increase the pay for office visits while reducing fees for surgery and other procedures, such as installing pa­ cemakers. The plan's architect, economist William Hsiao of the Harvard School of Public Health, contends the current system is "u n ­ workable and unfair," short-changing doc­ tors for day-to-day management of their pa­ tients while paying them far too much for exotic tests and other highly technical work. He said his proposed fee structure will change doctors' financial incentives, and this will alter the way they practice medi­ cine and ultimately improve patient care. "You can predict that under the new sys­ tem, doctors will be willing to spend a lot more time with patients to examine and counsel them ," Hsiao said. "Right now, physicians are being penalized financially for spending time with patients." In addition, he says the changes could encourage more young doctors to go into primary patient care and lower the overall cost of medical treatment. If accepted by Congress, the plan will be used to determine physicians' Medicare fees, which make up about 20 percent of doctors' annual income. Hsiao predicted if that happens, the plan will also be taken up by state-run Medicaid programs as well as by private insurance companies. A summary of Hsiao's plan, known as a resource-based relative value scale, was You can predict that under the new system, doctors will be willing to spend a lot more time with patients to examine and counsel them.’ — William Hsiao, economist published in the Sept. 22 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine. Dr. William Roper, head of the federal agency that runs Medicare, called Hsiao's study "pioneering work" in a commentary accompanying the study. At a news conference in Washington, Roper, administrator of the Health Care Fi­ nancing Administration, which contracted for the $2.3 million study, said it provides a scientific basis for "what medical observers have known for some time." Predicting that no sweeping changes would result from the study immediately, Roper said there nonetheless are things "Congress might want to do in 1989 before the megadebate" is completed. For example, he said, if Congress wants to use the study as a mechanism to make budget savings it well might trim some Medicare-approved payments from the top end of the scale without adding much or anything at the bottom end. "Nobody is going to get 65 percent more from Medicare next year, for exam ple," he said. Hsiao tried to determine how much work is involved in 2,000 duties performed by doctors in 14 specialties. He and colleagues took into consideration practice costs, spe­ cialty training, time, mental effort, techni­ cal skill, physical effort and psychological stress. For each task, he came up with a non­ monetary value. For instance, a compre­ hensive visit by a new patient to a family practitioner is $248, while a well-baby visit is $64. An appendectomy is $621, a pa­ cemaker insertion is $620, and a triple coro­ nary bypass is $2,871. To figure out how much doctors will get, these values would be multiplied by a mon- tary conversion figure. That number would be set by Congress for Medicare or by a private insurance company. If Hsiao's plan is universally adopted, the biggest losers would be heart, chest and eye surgeons, whose income would fall 40 to 50 percent. However, Dr. Robert Reinecke of Jeffer­ son Medical College in Philadelphia said the public expects doctors to be well-com­ pensated for delicate and demanding pro­ cedures, such as cataract surgery. Haitian leaders seek return to democracy by restoring suspended 1987 constitution New s I n B r ie f Associated Press Budget Director Miller resigns; deputy to assume office Oct. 15 WASHINGTON — Budget Director James Miller III is resigning effective Oct. 15 and will be replaced by his deputy, Joseph Wright Jr., President Reagan an­ nounced Wednesday. Miller will become a fellow of the Center- for Study of Public Choice at George Mason University in Fair­ fax, V a., a Washington suburb. In addition to assuming the post at George Mason, Reagan said, Miller will become a fellow of Citizens for a Sound Economy, an advocacy and research or­ ganization in Washington favoring lower taxes, fiscal restraint and free trade. 1988 Nobel Prize winner to be selected OSLO, Norway — The five members of the Nobel Prize committee met behind locked doors Wednesday to choose the winner of the 1988 peace prize. President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba­ chev were mentioned as leading contenders for the prestigious award. The committee's regulations bar it from divulging names, but the Os'o daily VG speculated the super­ power leaders would share the honor for signing a treaty to dismantle intermediate-range nuclear weap­ ons and putting arms control efforts on a new course. Committee Chairman Egil Aarvik was to announce the decision Thursday at 8 a.m . Austin time. The prize carries a cash award of $390,000. Senate approves anti-obscenity measure WASHINGTON — The Senate on Wednesday unanimously approved a stringent anti-obscenity measure that would give prosecutors new ways to crack down on child pornography and other obscene materials, and stiffen penalties for those who sell or possess them. Some senators said they had concerns about the constitutionality of portions of the measure — includ­ ing a provision making it a crime to simply possess obscene materials on federal lands. But, as Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., noted wryly, "This is not the season when anyone is going to stand up on the Senate floor and say, 'I oppose a child por­ nography bill.' " Defense motions in Noriega case unsealed MIAMI — Defense motions unsealed Wednesday in the case of Panama's military iuler Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega charge that his indictment on drug charges was part of a scheme to renegotiate the Pana­ ma Canal Treaty. That treaty, signed during the Carter administra­ tion, turns over control of the canal to Panama at the end of this century. "There were attempts to modify aspects of the trea­ ty ," Noriega's attorney, Neal Sonnett, said Wednes­ day. "W e argue that it was one of the circumstances leading up to a decision to attempt to get Noriega out of power." The defense motion accuses the U.S. of selective prosecution, and questions its authority to indict the head of a sovereign nation. Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Haiti's new military leaders met with three form er presidential candidates Wednesday and agreed to restore the constitution but balked at set­ ting an election date, a spokesman for one candidate said. "The government seems to desire the advancement of the democratic process," said Claude Roumain, po­ litical director for Marc Bazin, one of the former candidates. Lt. Gen. Prosper Avril, Haiti's new president, and Sgt. Joseph Heubreux met Tuesday with Bazin, Gerard Gourgue and Louis Dejoie Jr., local radio stations said. The three former presidential candidates belong to a pro-democracy group called Committee for Democratic Understanding. They asked Avril for a return of the constitution, which was ap­ proved by referendum but later sus­ pended by Lt. Gen. Henri Namphy, who was ousted as Haiti's leader in a Sept. 17 coup by lower-ranking members of the Presidential Guard. Avril, administrative head of the army under Namphy, was named Committee and the military govern­ ment agree, nevertheless, that the date will be set by an independent Electoral Council, and not by the de facto government," Roumain said. Avril and Heubreux have met factions but with other political have set no timetable for bringing democratic rule to Haiti. Haiti was ruled for nearly three decades by dictators Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier and his son, Jean- Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier. The younger Duvalier was swept from power by a popular uprising in Feb­ ruary 1986 and fled to France. Namphy, exiled now to the Do­ minican Republic, led a provisional government after Duvalier's depar­ ture that was interrupted for four months in June by the civilian presi­ dency of Leslie Manigat. Manigat was elected in military- run balloting that was boycotted by the most popular presidential candi­ dates and marked by widespread ir­ regularities. What might have been the na­ tion's first free elections in 30 years were thwarted last November when armed thugs killed at least 34 people at polling stations. president by Heubreux and other coup leaders. Heubreux is believed to be running this impoverished Caribbean country in concert with Avril. "The principle of a return to the suspended 1987 Constitution was admitted by the new government. Amendments will be considered only when a new duly elected legis­ lature is in session," Roumain said. "O ur points of view differ, how­ ever, on a date for elections. The Page 4/THE Da il y TEXAN/Thursday, September 29,1988 E d ito ria ls Viewpoint opinions expressed m The Daily Texan are those of the editor and the writer of the article They are not necessarily the opinions of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees V ie w p o in t W e're N u m ber T wo Scatological lyrics not worth the worry L onghorn band director Glenn Richter is afraid that students at the UT-Oklahoma football game are going to embarrass the University on na­ tional television. The source of his worries is an increas­ ingly common tradition among students attending UT football games — they like to substitute "m ake 'em eat shit!" for "Go Horns G o!" in the fight song. If Richter had thought about it for a min­ ute, he'd have realized that he has nothing to fear — everybody knows students pre­ fer the phrase "O U sucks!" for that game. Factual error aside, the recent well-pub­ licized plea by the band director and indi­ viduals he calls "high profile UT leaders" to stop the use of profanity in the Texas fight song is so much of a non-issue that you have to wonder why Bush and Du­ kakis aren't arguing about it. Seriously, though, of all the problems and injustices that are inevitable for an in­ stitution of this size, surely the mutation of the fight song ranks low on the list. Even so, Richter has gone so far as to threaten to take the tradition-packed Texas fight song off the Longhorn band's playlist if naughty students don't change their tune — or rather, stop changing it. According to Richter, "T h e incorrect words misrepresent our state." But in a very real sense, the altered lyrics represent our state better than the original ones. large number of UT students who eventu­ ally will go on to represent the state. The drunken students singing "m ake 'em eat shit" during this Saturday's ballgame will form a large part of the state's ruling class in several years. Richter also says he wants to preserve the image of the University. But this is one image that reflects reality. The University is not just here for the students, the University is the students. And if the majority of student body wants to use an altered form of the school's fight song, then that's the correct version. Besides, as a fight theme, it works. The refrain that contains the coprophagic lyric is always the loudest and most fiery part of the song — many students don't even sing the rest of it. No one needs to make over the image of The University of Texas. The students who live and learn here are justifiably proud of themselves and their school, and few are worried that the fight-song lyrics are going to have any harmful effect on their educations or on the University's reputation. Richter should turn his ener­ gies to something more significant than whether UT students adhere to his notions of propriety. And students, too, should combine their energies in a collective effort to ad­ dress a significant concern. So, everyone repeat after me: "O U After all, the scatological lyric is simply sucks!" another part of the self-expression of a — Scott Henson UNTRUE STORIES Despite new findings, Brawley needs help L ast fall, a New York deputy sheriff found 15-year-old Tawana Brawley sprawled out in a large bag in the backyard of an apartment complex. Apparently unconscious, she lay there with her body and clothes smeared with feces, her blue jeans torn and scorched at the crotch and inner thighs, her hair matt­ ed with feces and sweat. Authorities later found racial and sexist epithets scrawled on her body — "K K K ," "nigger" and "b itch ." Apparently too traumatized to speak, she indicated with head nods that for almost four days six or seven white men — including a "white cop" — had urinated on her, subjected her to oral sex and raped her "a lo t." From the start, though, Brawley's story was rife with inconsistencies. Hospital tests, for example, showed no evidence that Brawley participated in any sexual ac­ tivity during the four days in question. In the time since she first gave the police her version of what happened, Brawley has refused to defend her story publicly or to cooperate with investigators. Instead, she has let her family and a small core of "advisers" speak for her. These men have tried to turn the spot­ light away from the contradictions in Brawley's story. They've launched a cam­ paign that paints New York authorities from Wappingers Falls police officers to Gov. Mario Cuomo as racist conspirators. Their accusations have had no basis in fact or hard evidence; they've been carried solely on the force of the Rev. A1 Sharp- ton's demagogic personality. It seems unlikely, however, that they can be carried much further. This week, a New York state grand jury inquiry pro­ duced a large body of compelling evidence that Brawley either staged or helped stage her own "rap e." The only reasonable conclusion is that Brawley's entire story is a hoax. But one question remains: Why would a teen-age girl run away from home, smear herself with feces, climb into a plastic bag and pretend to have been raped? Whether she acted alone or with encour­ agement, it's obvious that Brawley is a dis­ turbed young woman in need of help — one who needs, above all, to be removed from the "care" of her odious handlers. Public anger over the hoax shouldn't ob­ scure the fact that she probably has been manipulated and abused — by the very people who claimed to be her champions. — Tom Philpott WANT 1© EARN $97 MILLION IN A VEAl) AN® A HALF? MicWAEL JACKSON i»®- MADONNA MADE $ 4 6 MILLION, AS ANOTHER S i o n o f this Sector': HEALTH DO you 6 ET THE SENSE THAT THERE'S SOMETHING \ € um. FUNDAMENTALLY WRONG GOING ON HERE? / A ruMtseftWti PAotmut >m VC wTTAAO NCWl I Meat industry's proposed new law shows they're a bunch of weenies One of the major themes of the up­ knowledge. The industry's tactics are anal­ ogous to real estate agents who remove the danger sign from a radiation-contami­ nated area so they can sell houses on it. coming election seems to be patri­ otism. The candidates constantly spar over whose defense plan can best K ev in R eed TEXAN COLUMNIST protect this great nation; whose education plan can best guarantee its future; and in the ultimate contest of jingoism, who loves the Pledge of Allegiance most. Since love of country is such a hot issue now, the time is right to come to the de­ fense of an American institution — the hot dog, that cylindrical, oblong hunk of meat so popular at ballgames, picnics and reun­ ions. No, the hot dog is not in danger of being banned, and it has not been found hazard­ ous to one's health, but it is currently fac­ ing a challenge to its integrity that must not go unmet. Everyone knows that hot dogs aren't composed of the finest Grade A beef. Part of the fun of eating one is wondering just exactly what's in it. After all, no part of a cow that people would want to eat is natu­ rally shaped that way, so patrons of the delicacy must accept some mystery. In a way, it's a prime example of the "what you don't know won't hurt you" philoso­ phy. There is a limit, however, to the amount of uncertainty the hot-dog-eating public will accept. Currently, a group of major meat processors are backing a proposal by the Agriculture Department just might go too far. that At issue is mechanically separated meat (MSM) and the regulations for its use in hot dogs and other processed meat prod­ ucts. MSM is produced by "putting the bones and attached meat rem nants of a slaughtered animal through a grinder and forcing the mixture through a sieve." Cur- * * There is a limit, however, to the amount of uncertainty the hot-dog-eating public will accept/^ rent regulations allow meat products to contain up to 20 percent MSM, but any­ thing containing any amount must be so labeled. The new proposal, submitted by Bob Evans Farms Inc., Odom Sausage Co., Sara Lee Corp. (tsk tsk Sara) and Owen Country Sausage Inc., would permit prod­ ucts containing less that 10 percent MSM to omit it from the ingredients list. If that idea is adopted, hot-dog eaters truly would have no way of knowing what they were eating. Not entirely despicable, the meat pro­ ducers are absolutely candid in reference to their motives. The current laws, they say, call too much attention to the "m eat remnants" in MSM products, and conse­ quently those products aren't selling very well. Were MSM to be removed from the labels, consumers would be unaware of its presence and would presumably buy more of its products. Again, its nice that the industry is so candid, but their limited honesty can't cover up the accompanying deviousness and underlying stupidity. It should be fairly obvious that if prod­ ucts advertised as containing MSM don't sell well, consumers don't want to eat the strained meat mixture. That being the case, it is somewhat malicious of the com­ panies to try to sell it to them without their Any real estate agent who would per­ petrate such a scheme, though, would probably be smart enough not to tell cus­ tomers about the ruse. Thankfully, meat- packers do not seem to possess that kind of widsom, and choose instead to expose their plan to anyone interested. And luckily, someone is. Rodney Leon­ ard and his group, the Community Nutri­ tion Institute, have dug in and sworn to oppose the idea at upcoming Department of Agriculture hearings. Leonard feels that the entire mess is a politically motivated conspiracy that involves the Reagan ad­ ministration's caving in to big business. "They [the Reagan administration) want to get all of the junk and crud and sleaze done before they leave," Leonard said. Actually, one would think that with the election coming up, the Republicans would want to avoid dealing with "jun k and crud and sleaze" right now, so per­ haps Mr. Leonard goes a bit too far in his reasoning. Nevertheless, he is watching out for the public interest, and that is a worthy cause. Should anyone care to join him, the pro­ posal will be open for public comment un­ til Nov. 8. Letters can be sent to Linda Carev, Food Safety and Inspection Ser­ vice, USD A, Room 3171-S, Washington, D.C. 20250. It may take a bit of time to write a letter, but how many times do people get the op­ portunity to protect their fellow man and defend the integrity of an American insti­ tution? Reed is a Plan II junior. F ir in g L in e Controlled questions, old ideas So, here we are, $22,500 less rich, and Jeane Kirk­ patrick is quite boldly $22,500 richer. The content of her much-contested speech (as proven by the spontaneous group of 100-plus pro­ testers who gathered outside of Bass Concert Hall) was nothing new, nothing we don't already know from reading newspapers. How fortunate for those those to the right that she could "fit" that engagement into her schedule. I can't help but feel somehow this was a well-timed, orches­ trated maneuver to rally support for the Bush-Quayle ticket. What does this say for our University? Her ques- tion-and-answer period left little room for rebuttal, not to mention the screening each questioner had to go through before asking a question. Upon approaching a microphone, I was asked what I would be asking. "W hy?" I replied. "Because we need to make sure it's appropriate," an usher told me. At John Stockwell's speech, which I can assure you cost well under $ 2 2 ,5 0 0 ,1 was not screened about my question. Is this screening a regular UT format, or did we pay a little extra for that, too? Teresa Laye English It could be worse, Richter I most wholeheartedly agree with band director Glenn Richter's statements about students' changing the UT fight song. I have long believed in changing the song, and I have taken die liberty of rewriting it myself (with a little help from George Carlin): "Fuck, shit, piss, cunt, cocksucker, motherfucker, tits!!!"' Use it in good health. Dan Dadmon Communication Texan' comic artists lack humor Everybody (at least anyone you would care to asso­ ciate with) Ukes a good comic strip. Which is unfor­ tunate for UT students because many of the comics in The Daily Texan are bed. As in horrible. A quick rundown of The Texan's strips reveals: ■ Bloom County: Funny, insightful, drawn by a UT alumnus; a classic. ■ Dot Ksberry: Funny (when Trudeau eases o ff his umuuymam HI I»1»11" political whining); nice drawings. ■ Eyebeam: Ceased to be funny two years ago, but endearing, goofy characters and occasional nifty, biz- zare-perspective drawings are worth it; sentimental value; authored by another UT alumnus. ■ Hepcats: Nice effort; extra points for all the char­ acters' being animals, but has yet to be funny. ■ Burnt Orange Blues: Can you say "boring?" ■ The Magician: Drawings aren't worth the lack of humor; space would be better left empty. ■ Los Hooligans: See The Magician above. ■ Ulterior: In general, puns are great; these aren't. Nuke it. ■ Polystrip: A boil on the bun of The Texan; started bad and grew steadily worse; hangin' is too good for this one. David Todd Law Just call us The Daily P ra v d a ' Every morning I wake up and open The Daily Texan and read another editorial by some liberal-minded columnist who never met a Democrat he or she didn't like. I support George Bush because he is a more com­ petent leader and he supports what I believe are fundemental American values: freedom to succeed as well as to fail, a strong defense of our nation and a subordinate government. I might not agree with all of Bush's views on social issues, but I refuse to vote for that tax-and-spend monster Mike Dukakis. I don't know a better ally of the Kremlin in the United States than good ol' Mike. The Reagan-Bush administration is often criticized for overspending and a mounting federal budget debt, but let us not forget that it's the Democratic Congress that actually signs the checks. I am proud that the University has a vehicle of expression like this newspaper, but please try to re­ port both sides of issues instead of the biased propa­ ganda you preach now. Andy Bearden Austin resident Need to talk to the editor? m m Cüémm w g lie li ottos liour» at The DtBy Town ottces fcow I h h i p m . today. Slop by Étu a chat. Don't deny criminals' humanity T hroughout the greater part of Western history, sen­ tencing transgressors of the law to death has all too often been considered the most exped­ ient and effective means of pre­ serving justice and ensuring pub­ lic safety. Another commonly held belief among present and past propo­ nents of capital punishment is that it deters other potential criminals from breaking the law. We now come to a time when we take pride in our efforts to be "m ore civilized" in dealing with public offenders. Yet even though we strive to be more humane, our so­ ciety still sentences some people to death. Proponents of the death penalty see no hypocrisy in killing people to prove that killing people is wrong. Such measures are justi­ fied not only in light of the "an eye for an eye" principle, but also with the notion that such "sick" or "evil" people do not deserve tax­ payer's money for rehabilitation. These arguments deserve and require more discussion than I have space to address, so for the purposes of this column, let's dismiss them as bad solutions for a humane and civilized society such as ours, and assume that money spent on helping rather than hurting public offenders is money well spent. Imprisonment can't be an an­ swer to our problem of dealing with lawbreakers, if we serve an ideal of humane and civil treat­ ment. The hypocrisy in imprison­ ment is best put as stealing from thieves to prove that stealing is wrong, or holding captive hostage takers to prove that kidnapping is wrong, or abusing drug abusers to R o b N a sh TEXAN COLUMNIST teach them that abusing them­ selves is wrong. The list goes on. The principle remains that if we chose to be a humane society, we must not steal people's freedom, hold them hostage or abuse them, to teach them how to live among the rest of us in a non-offensive way. is Rehabilitation the most humane solution we know of in dealing with law breakers at this point. But it still requires stealing a person's life for a period of time in order to teach him or her more adaptive and healthy ways of liv­ ing in society. History offers little or no pre­ cedent for dealing with lawbreak­ ers in ways that do not act out so­ ciety's them. frustrations on Guidelines for rehabilitation need to serve society's interests of safe­ ty without forfeiting the before­ mentioned principle of humane treatment of criminals. Keeping in mind the fact that re­ habilitation does require infring­ ing on people's freedom and in­ deed their life, it is important to handle the restructuring of their behavior, their thinking and their feelings very cautiously. Once again the whole notion of rehabilitation is exposed. the vulnerability of Tampering with one's psyche is very much akin to brainwashing ant other methods of torture. But trying to help transgressors of the law instead of acting out our anger and aggression on them would al­ low us to progress beyond old modes of problem solving (which only create more problems). It would also enable us to find more humane, effective modes of prob­ lem solving. But then other questions arise. What do we do with criminals who refuse or don't respond to therapy? Such anti-social behavior cannot be tolerated if we want to protect the safety of the public. The free­ doms of the few who repeatedly offend or refuse to accept a more social mode of behavior must bend to the needs and the safety of the many. This is not to say we should give up on helping them. On a case by case basis, all in­ mates must have the rest of their rights respected — even the right to refuse help — in hopes that the rewards of living among the rest of society in a civil way will even­ tually be something they want. As long as they don't respond, there is little else to do besides keep them from harming people. Tax money spent on those who need and respond to rehabilitation is well worth the expense. Tax dollars spent on detaining people who don't want or don't respond to therapy at least keeps them from harming others, and this is also worth the cost. Finally, allocating tax money for rehabilitation, as opposed to capi­ tal punishment or imprisonment, is worthwhile. We must strive for consistency in those ideals of hu­ manity and civility as we develop still more effective means of serv­ ing them and society. Nash is an English sophomore. West Mall receives new PA system By LINDA MILCH Daily Texan Staff A new West Mall sound system will let the Campus Activities Office avoid borrowing technicians and equipment for student rallies, UT officials say. The UT Division of Utilities, which had provided a sound truck for the frequent rallies and speech­ es, was being “taxed to the maxi­ mum" by the practice, said Vicki Scalf, student development special­ ist for the Office of the Dean of Stu­ dents. Bill Stephens, a communications engineer, said the use of the sound truck was "taking a skilled techni­ cian away from his normal duties." "We were looking for a good way to get out of that responsibility," Stephens said. Scalf said the new system, ac­ quired earlier this month, is cheaper and easier to operate. "Now we can vnfer the sound system for a $10 flat fee, and you can keep it out there for the two-hour space available for rallies," she said. Campus Activities Office person­ nel will help organizations assemble the equipment, Scalf said. The entire system is mounted to a cart that can be wheeled out to the West Mall. Scalf said having the mi­ crophones and an amplifier at the office will be convenient for the stu­ dent organizations. Caa* ft Carry OPEN LATE TILL 8:00! Roses $8.95 dozen Maar Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 facing 41a* I t Daily Spacéate no ^ coupon______ ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO a CUT “i § BLOW DRY I 5 3 3 9 Bumftt 4 5 5 -2 6 2 0 RICHMOND INN facT oaa R ic h m o n d A v e from Coolers i FOOTBALL WEEKENDS SPECIAL SUITE RATE OF $39.95 O n e bedroom s u ite s — (sleeps up to 4) Fully equipped kitchens Am ple parking D aily maid service 10 minutes from the Astrodome (students welcome) 5151 Richmond Avenue Houston, Texas 77066 713-629-7120 S i h -a i \ S i v i . i H A iR D i: S I G N 95 CUTS t - v i ’?. \ n; 1 Ift 95 PERMS a:' / > ; \ h h \ : h , 1 : ' k 12 29 A A, I >. A t V ‘ 3701 G U A D A L U P E + ' 4 5 4 - 5 7 7 4 S A ’ V 4 C O U P O N E X P I R E S 10/2 8/8 8 NOT ALL MBAS ARE CREATED EQUAL. I KAPLAN STANUY H KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD MR. KAPLAN SPEAKS TO THE U.T. FINANCE A SSO C IA T IO N FROM 3-4 P .M .O N 9/30TH IN O S S 2.126 CALL 472-EXAM TV tryouts get out of ‘Control’ By RANDY KENNEDY Daily Texan Staff About 100 determined UT stu­ dents tried to get through show host Ken Ober's basement door Tuesday — during contestant au­ ditions for MTV's Remote Control. However, because of a misun­ derstanding about when the tryouts started for the program, some disgruntled game-show hopefuis didn't make it past the auditorium door in the Art Build­ ing. About 35 students, some who said they had arrived up to 30 the announced minutes before starting time of 3 p.m., were turned away in the lobby and told that the audition list already had been filled. A sign taped to the double auditorium doors stated, "W e have 100 people on the list." Posters displayed on campus all week listed 3 p.m. as the time of the event and stated in smaller blue letters at the bottom, "Audi­ tion will be limited to the first 100 people, so don't be late." Edward Capuano, a contestant production assistant from MTV's New York office, said students should have understood the signs and the newspaper ads to mean "first come, first serve." "The ad in the paper said only the first 100 people would be ad­ mitted," he said. "There were people there at 10 a.m. I guess they understood what the posters meant." "Was there a misunderstand­ ing? Yes, there was," he said. Bruce Walden, promotions di­ rector for KLBJ-FM, said he also was upset about the way the audi­ tions were handled. He said KLBJ had announced that the first 94 people to show up for the event would get free T- shirts. When the station's repre­ sentatives arrived at the Art Build­ ing at 3 p.m., they discovered the candidate list already had been filled and had to give the T-shirts to those already inside. Scott Kentros, MTV's UT repre­ sentative and a communications senior, said the finalists will be flown to Orlando, Fla., sometime this fall to compete on the show. He said the UT Remote Control finalists were Arthur Africano, communications senior; Sarah De­ lano, accounting senior; Houston Foppiano, liberal arts sophmore; and Jennifer Russell, communica­ tions freshman. THE DAILY TEXAN/Thursday, September 29,1988/Page 5 C o p i n g w i t h u f i s OAY P R O B L E M S J M W S f í W S A T # í f t l f TODAYS TOPIC Relationship Addiction: Are We Junkies for Love? Texas Union Eastwoods Room (2.102), 12-1:30 Sponsored by Counseling, Learning and Career Services BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE 471-5244 W ANT A D S H - E - B k FOODS • DRUGS Fresh Savings Ideas Are In The Bag! Boneless Top Sirloin Steaks F a m ily Pack. U . S . D . A . C h o ic e Steak house Beef. Fim it-2 Packs. Ple^s. A V Blue Bonnet Stick Margarine 16 Ounce Package. Limit-3 Packages. Please S A V H L’eggs Hosiery Semi-Annual Sale Choose Regular. Sheer Lnergy, Sheer Llegance. Control Top. Active Support. Knee Highs. Just M \ Si/e. Silken Mist O r Underalls In Si/es A. B O r Q. Limit-4 Pair Total. Please50®1Mfrs. Suggested Retail Price Red And Golden Delicious Apples Washington State, Lxtra Fancv PRICES GOOD WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, THRU TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4,1988, IN AUSTIN, ROUND ROCK, GEORGETOWN AND BASTROP • Limit Rights Reserved • T h e Da il y T e x a n Thursday, September 29,1988 Page 6 U n iv er sity Latin economies affect UT enrollment By LINDA MILCH Daily Texan Staff D espite an increase from last fall in overall foreign s tu d e n t en ro ll­ m en t, few er stu d e n ts from c o u n ­ tries experiencing econom ic difficul­ ties are the U n iv ersity 's sw elling ranks, a UT official said W ednesday, joining M argaret K idd, d irector of the In­ tern ation al Office, said few er s tu ­ d e n ts from Mexico, Brazil a n d Peru have com e to th e U niversity in th e p ast few years, w hich sh e credits partially to d ev alu atio n s of th o se natio n s' currencies. Foreign en ro llm en t d ro p p e d y e a r­ ly from 1984 th ro u g h 1986, a n d th e n began to climb, according to th e UT Office of In stitutional S tudies. This y e a r's foreign s tu d e n t e n ro ll­ m en t reached a h igh of 3,387 o u t of 50,107 stu d en ts. D on D avis, associate directo r of th e Office of S tu d e n t Financial Aid, said he believes th e U niversity is ex­ periencing a trickle-dow n effect. Foreign stu d e n ts w h o c a n n o t afford private schools a tte n d th e U niversi­ ty, and th o se w h o c an n o t afford th e U niversity go to c h e a p e r in stitu ­ tions, he said. "It's still a bargain for th em to com e h e re ," he said. Foreign stu d e n ts sign a sta tem en t sw earing th ey will hav e sufficient fu n d s to p ay for th eir ed ucation. But often political o r econom ic situ a­ tio n s ch an g e an d they find th e m ­ selves sh o rt of m oney, D avis said. K idd said th ese stu d e n ts can seek e m p lo y m e n t w ith the U niversity or a Texas Public E ducation G rant to alleviate th eir problem . "W e m ake the reco m m endations to financial aid, a n d they d o the ac­ tual a w a rd in g ," she said. "M ost of th a t m o ney is gone for th is acad em ­ ic y e a r." D avis said these g ran ts com e d i­ rectly from "set-a sid e" o u t of tuition fu n d s — 15 p ercen t for Texas resi­ d e n ts a n d 5 percen t for n on-resi­ d en ts. T he m oney is placed in sep arate accou nts to serve th e tw o g ro u p s of stu d e n ts. A bout $400,000 h as been d e sig n ate d for n o n -re sid en ts this year, b u t stu d e n ts will foreign receive only a sm all portio n. D avis said the g ran ts h av e existed for m an y years, b u t foreign s tu ­ d e n ts w ere not eligible for m oney u n til the 1985-86 academ ic year b e­ cause of a ch ange in the law . "F o r­ eign stu d e n ts co u ld n 't get a p e n n y from a n y b o d y ," he said. Unstable exchange rate handicaps foreign students By ARE SLETTAN Daily Texan Staff For foreign stu d e n ts a t th e U niversity, c u rre n ­ cy exchange rates are m ore th an n u m b e rs in the n ew sp ap er; a su d d e n fall in their co u n try 's cur­ rency o ften m ean s a sem e ste r of seriously strain ed finances. M argaret K idd, director of th e International Office, said W ed n esd ay th at the office recently h as seen m ore foreign stu d e n ts asking for finan­ cial help. "I w o u ld n 't say th e re 's been a dram atic in ­ crease th is se m e ste r," she said. "B ut th ere seem s to be a n increase in th e problem over th e last y ears." Kidd said M exican, M alaysian and Brazilian stu d e n ts are am o n g th o se having to seek help. "I can 't really say th a t it's w o rse in an y c o u n try ," she said. "T h ere hav e been slu m p s in various econom ies a ro u n d th e w o rld ." M exico h a s experienced drastic d ro p s in its currency exchang e rate ag ain st the dollar. Luis A lberto A rellano, a 22-year-old acco unt­ ing senior from M exico, said he h as been at th e U niversity d u rin g several p lu n g e s in th e p e so 's value ag ain st th e dollar. "O n ce, in a couple of w eeks th e [dollar's] rate d o u bled , so o u r p a re n ts, w h o earn their w ages in pesos, h a d to give u s d o u b le ," h e said. "A lot of peo ple h a d to m ove or find new ro o m m a te s." Jens Bjorheim , an econom ics sen io r from N o r­ w ay, receives a scholarship from th e N o rw egian g o v ernm ent. The sch olarship for an academ ic year is based on the exchange rate from M arch. "E v ery on e k n ow s th a t if th e d o llar goes u p after M arch, y o u 're u p [a] creek ," Bjorheim , 24, said. But he a d d e d th at in som e years th e o p p o ­ site has been tru e , a n d his m o ney h as been w orth m ore. S tu d en ts from som e o th er cou n tries have ex­ perienced few prob lem s at all. "M ostly, they are doin g fine," M asao N akagaw a, a g ra d u a te b u si­ ness s tu d e n t a n d p re sid e n t of th e Jap an ese S tu ­ d e n t A ssociation, said of the U n iv ersity 's Japa­ nese stu d e n ts. N akagaw a, 28, also said m any Jap an ese, in ­ cluding him self, are unaffected by th e exchange rate because Japanese com p anies s p o n so r them in A m erican dollars. Kidd said the In tern atio n al Office can find for­ eign stu d e n ts an o n -c a m p u s job. The office also can arran g e sh o rt-term loans. O th e r aid is scarce, sh e said. DEFENSIVE D R IV IN G CLA SSES $17.00 with this AD 2 Classrooms Coll 836-5305 tor class times A dates 6705 Hwy 290 W at William Cannon Bank of The Hills 13807 Research ROSES *899 one dozen cash n carry T f f r F I E S T A 453-7619 F L O W E R S 3830 N. Lamar Jeff Holt/Daily Texan Staff A new generation Domingo Zapata and Armando Vasquez load a retired soft-drink vending machine onto their truck outside Mary E. Gearing Hall. The machine was replaced with a high-tech version that can accept dollar bills as well as change. o \ o <$> V© ^ G 'e V \ e Choose from a great Selection of swimwear, Sportswear, dresses & Accessories at up to a 50% savings. Just Arrived: Body Glove Swim wear - If you couldn't find it earlier, get it now w hile the selections are best. Leather: Skirts, jackets, Dresses Bustiers, Shorts & Pants in all colors w ill soon be arriving. H o w a rd H u gh e s M e dical Institute Doctoral F elloe ships in Biological Sciences 1989 ( Competition I h r H o w a r d H u g h o M e d ic a l In s titu te v\ 111 a w a rd 6 0 lrllo w s h i|» > lo r It d l- lir m study to w a r d th e I ’ h .lh o r S r . I ). d e g re e in r r l l b io lo g y a n d r r g u la t io n . im m u n o lo g y , g r n r t i o . n r u r o » i r t t r r . a m i '•trn c tu ra l b io lo g y o l m a c r o r n o l c r u lr v K l i g i b i l i t v : \ l o r m a r I h r b e g i n n i n g o l g r a d m i l r M u d v . N o e itiz e n -h i|> r e q u ir e m e n t -. I .S . c it iz e n - tnav study a b r o a d : o t h e r - m ust s tu d v tin th e I n i t r d s t/tida(! T/teidew Showing Fall Bridal Fashions Sunday, October 2nd Location: Hyatt Regency Austin on Town Lake, 208 Barton Springs, Austin Time: Exhibits open at 5:30 PM - Bridal Show at 7:00 PM Champagne reception following Guest MC: Music: Michelle Leigh Smith, Austin American-Statesman Fashion Editor Sunrise Band directed by Miles Lefler - Piano: David Kautz Door Prizes and Exhibitors: * Free Weekend at any Hyatt Hotel in Texas Hyatt Regency Austin • Certificate for 16”X20" portrait, with booking of wedding, valued at $200 Bette Mayfield Photography • A Makeover for the bride and her attendants from Makeup By Barbara Dicks For advanced registration or more information Call: 451-0474 $500 toward wedding gown from Lou's Boutique and Bridal $200 credit towards groom's and attendants tuxedo rental from G ingiss Formalwear • Gift certificate for 3 fresh or silk bouquet, valued at $25 each The Flower Shack & Gifts • Certificate for 15% discount on wedding cake to serve 100 people from Shirley's Cake Shop A gift certificate from Stephen's Limousine Service, Inc Three gift certificates from Mila Kathy Cameron- Joseph Mary Kay Cosm etics * Gift certificate from Tupperware Home Parties Fantastic Party Sales $100 towards a wedding video in the Austin area from Bloom's Video Productions • A gift certificate from Aziz Hair & Nail Skin Care Salon 1/2 off cm a wedding rental from Austin* s World o f Rental * Silver tray valued at $50 from Benold's Jewelers Tickets available from Sponsors or at door... Admission: $3.00 1926 E. Riverside By MiniMax 448-DAVE 65 IMPORT BEERS Among the widest selections in Austin AT THE BEST PRICES No FREE PIZZA this time, but still the BEST PIZZA, & BEER PRICES IN TOWN D O U G H & T O P P IN G S M A D E F R E SH D A IL Y j HERE’S HOW THE BEST JU S T GOT BETTER l m CO 6 ' O * < I 3 E IM 1 N O f * = j o . Right now, you can discover how the best just got a little better. You'll see why more people cail Domino's Pizza® for pizza than all the rest combined. r ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ■ ■ Medium (12M) One-topping Pizza $5.51 Any 12" pizza with your favorite topping is only $5.51 plus tax. Additional toppings available. Please mention coupon when ordering. One coupon per order. r 1in • o r • ' o S! NAME PHONE_____________ Fast, Free Delivery™ Expires 11-30-88 DT9.88 o n l y N l)l v u !‘(1 I.iys .ipplK.abiP " M r S ? 0 0 0 . m v ilh H l I l l t c !.)« I niitf-d di'hv*' Large (16") One-topping Pizza $8.24 Any 16” pizza with your favorite topping is only $8.24 plus tax. Additional toppings available. Please mention coupon when ordering. One coupon per order. NAME PHONE____________ Fast, Free Delivery™ Expires 11 30-88 DT9.88 l"*- U>l” Chri V vHfS <*ífy ÍHSS f'Mf ^,>0 L . . . . . . . . . . 476-7181 404 W. 26th St. 447-6681 2011 E. Riverside Dr. 458-9101 4115 Guadalupe 474-7676 913 N. Lamar * % NOtOB and NON} character ara ragjatertd tradem arks of Domino's Pizza, Inc. NON* design in CiaymationO by W! Virion Productions O 1968 Domino's Pizza inc. Must Be Present To Win The Daily Texan Sta te & L ocal Thursday, September 29,1988 Page 7 Officials tout Proposition 3 Plan w ould allow UT to invest in new businesses By JO H N CO U N CIL Daily Texan Staff Playing catch-up with the ever- changing Texas economy and in­ dustry, state officials and UT Sys­ tem regents Wednesday endorsed a ballot proposition that would allow the System to invest otherwise re­ stricted funds in new businesses. Proposition 3, which will appear on the Nov. 8 general election bal­ lot, frees part of the Permanent Uni­ versity Fund, the Permanent School Fund, the Teacher Retirement Sys­ tem of Texas and the Employees Re­ tirement System of Texas for volun­ tary in an economic investment development program. Monies such as the Permanent University Fund are set aside by the state Legislature for the sole pur­ pose of university development. But if the proposition is passed, as much as $285 million of the com­ bined assets of these funds could be invested in sprouting businesses. Leading state officials endorsing the proposition included Gov. Bill Clements, Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby and House Speaker Gib Lewis. Lewis said in a letter to the propo­ sition's author, Rep. Stan Schlueter, D-Killeen, that the proposed consti­ tutional amendment would be a vi­ tal stimulus to the Texas economy. "The Texas growth fund, or Prop­ osition 3 on the Nov. 8 ballot, is a responsible and pragmatic approach to increasing the availability of in­ vestment capital in our state," Lew­ is wrote. "It would create a public/ private partnership directed toward economic growth without increas­ ing state expenditures, while at the same time protecting investments made to our students and retired em ployees." Restrictions established in 1956 have limited use of the Permanent University Fund to only 1,200 busi­ ness investments, while Texas has seen a growth of more than 6,000 potential investm ents since that time, said Jack Blanton, UT System Board of Regents chair­ man. business Blanton said the UT System has a responsibility to help Texas in its transition to newer, more profitable industries. "W e're trying to be part of the whole change that is clearly occur­ ring as the economic base of Texas said. changes," Blanton "W e're moving from an oil and gas and cat­ tle and timber economy that we had decades ago, into one that really in­ volves the development of our minds to move this economy for­ ward." consortium In many ways, the proposition mirrors efforts the University took when it helped attract the Sematech research to Austin, Blanton said. "It was thing with the same Sematech. We did something that had never been done before," Blan­ ton said. "W e pledged some of the resources of the University of Texas System to help attract something that we'll get our money back on five times a year." Blanton said if the proposition is passed, Texas cities with major uni­ versities can expect an increase in new industry, and Austin could pull in the most new businesses. The Texas A&M University Sys­ tem also would participate. If approved, the Texas growth fund would exist for 10 years. After that period, the Legislature could approve a second growth fund. R E S E R V E O F F I C E R S ' T R A I N I N G C O R P S "THE DASE CO OP PROGRAM IS LIKE A COURSE IN REAL U R ." “The big thing it offers is experience, and that’s what companies look for. There are things I’ve learned on the job that I couldn’t learn in school.” The Department of Army Scientific and Engineering (DASE) Co-op Program provides ROTC students the opportunity to work in a Department of the Army facility while still in college. Each is paid while getting practical work experience in a high-tech facility. Selected students also receive up to $5,000 tuition assistance per year and the opportunity for continued employment after graduation. Tb be eligible, you must be a freshman in a baccalaureate program leading to a degree in science or engineering. For more information on application pro­ cedures, contact the Chairman of the Co-op Department, or the Professor of Military Science. Students are selected on a com p etitive b asis. For More Information Contact: Capt. Miller at 471 -5919 or stop by Steindam Hall (RAS) Room 110 ARMY ROTC THE SM ARTEST COLLEGE COURSE YOU CAN TAKE. Ex-Justice Hill endorses Republican ByGREGPERUSKI Daily Texan Staff In a rare meeting of minds among Texas politicians W ednes­ day, former Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice John Hill, a Demo­ crat, publicly backed incumbent Republican Tom Phillips for the court's top position. Phillips was appointed by Gov. Bill Clements after Hill's resigna­ tion in August 1987. If Phillips is elected in November, he will be the first Republican chief justice voted into office since the Recon­ struction. Hill said Phillips has proven his the past nine abilities during months. "W e could ask for a no more Judge qualified candidate Phillips," Hill said. "H is back­ ground as a briefing attorney, an than attorney in private practice and as a district judge have provided the requisite skills needed to head our state's judiciary." said But a top Democratic Party offi­ cia l th e e n d o rs e m e n t stemmed from a personal vendet­ ta. "It's a shame that his inability to get his way with other members of the Supreme Court has left him a bitter old man who now endorses a former colleague's opponent," Bob Slagle, state Democratic Party chairman, stated in a release. "Despite his claim, John Hill is not a good Democrat," Slagle said. "N o one who endorses a Republi­ can and turns on the Democrats who honored him with nomina­ tion and election to a statewide office can be considered a good Democrat." Hill could not be reached for a response. Phillips said he was honored by the endorsement — a move he said signifies the election for chief justice will not fall along tradition­ al party lines. "H is endorsement today is an­ other indication that this election is more important than party affili­ ation," he said. "H e joined a num­ ber of prominent people who said this election is above party poli­ tics." Hill, who resigned to campaign for merit selection of judges, said Phillips' "unassailable" character will be a valuable asset in the Nov. 8 general election. Hill served as Texas secretary of state fron\ 1966 to 1968 and as state attorney general to 1979. from 1972 In 1984, he was elected chief jus­ tice of the state Supreme Court. MICHAEL the DOG GEORGE the CAT or is it the other way around? It is election time again and it's raining cats and dogs again. Political animals play upon our understandings of loyalty and personal happiness...trustworthy like a dog; smug as a cat. Each would have us hate the other species. Both depend upon our feeding them (by voting) and then cleaning up after their party (thru taxes). Now this is a church ad. The question: "Does God elect cats or dogs more?" the answer: Both. God be­ came a lamb so enemies might love one another. "The cow and the bear shall be friends and the young child dance over the viper's nest." (Isaiah 11:7) Su*2Lu) 'ftítofup&L (¡Aju- &AtfiiA£Uv CamptU Z iO O S a *.ftn l* k> n .4 7 2 5 + 6 / ?a4to\, Conti* Ht. Zb Ü M n u T IC K E T D IS M IS S A L ONLY $15.00 NEAR CAMPUS NO TESTS REGISTER BY PHONE (Don t forget to bnr>g this coupon with yo u ) Budget Driving School 454-5077 4314 Medical Parkway es Mm 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open 11:00 am Mon-Sat Open Sun 4 pm Happy Hour Mon-Sat 5-7 NAME A POWERFUL GIANT WHO EMERGED FROM JAPAN TO CHANGE THE WORLD. No, not that giant, but a g ia n t o f a m ore peaceful nature. Recruit Co., Ltd. We are Japan's most innovative com puter services, te leco m ­ m unications and p u b lica ­ tions com pany. Em erging as a p o w e rfu l force in the A m erican m arket, RECRUIT U.S.A., INC. w o u ld like to te ll you a bo ut the w id e variety of ch a lle n g in g positions in the U.S., as w e ll as in Japan, fo r a m b itio u s C om puter Science, Liberal Arts, Engineering and Business majors. Learn m ore about the p o w e rfu l g ia nt w ho e m e rg ed from Japan by a tte n d in g our inform a tion session! If! V m t )V ih 1 Ü X u* h CO & t i m A . 11 T / . ^ / o D r L i ' ' X l»J Jj o X 4 INFORMATION SESSION DATE: Fri., Sept. 30th TIM E : 11:00AM-2:00PM PLACE: Union Bldg. (Ask at Desk) FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 1400-28MSA1 ^RECRUIT U.S.A., INC. A subsidiary of Recruit Co., Ltd. Thursday, September 29, 1988 Page 8 T h e Da i l y T e x a n Sports DeLoach takes gold from Lewis; Killeen boxer rolls to final bout containing a “g ooey yellow sub­ stance" that sm elled bad. Lewis lost the 200 m eters to team ­ mate and friend Joe DeLoach. Lewis w on the long jum p and got the 100- meter gold w h en Johnson w as stripped for taking steroids. He still has the 400-meter relay, but the best he can do now is three gold, not four like Los A ngeles. DeLoach led Lewis to the wire by .04 seconds as Americans w on the gold and silver in the 200 meters. DeLoach w as timed in an O lym ­ pic record 19.75 seconds, Lewis in 19.79. The American boxing team con­ tinued to roll. K ennedy McKinney of Killeen and Michael Carbajal of Phoenix, Ariz., becam e the first two U.S. boxers into the finals. McKinney stopped Phajol Mool- son of Thailand in the first round of their 119-pound bout. "T he com petition is there, b u t I'm n o t giving them a c h a n c e ," M cKin­ ney said. "I'm ju st blow ing them aw ay ." Carbajal scored a 4-1 decision over Robert Isaszegi of H un g ary in th e 106-pound class. America also w o n the gold in the d e m o n stratio n spo rt of baseball b e ­ hind the com plete-gam e pitching of Jim Abbott and the tw o hom ers of Tino Martinez, beating Japan 5-3. In tennis, Miloslav Mecir of Czechoslovakia ousted W imbledon cham pion and top-seeded Stefan Edberg of Sw eden, 3-6, 6-0, 1-6, 6-4, 6-2, and m oved into the m en's final against Tim M ayotte. Mayotte beat Brad Gilbert 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 in the other semifinal. It w as a four-star day for U.S. men on the track and for Florence Griffith Joyner, w ho broke the Olym pic record with a time of 21.76 in qualifying for the w om en's 200 meters Thursday. Sergei Bubka, the world record holder from the Soviet Union, w on the pole vault gold at 19 feet, 4V* inches. Ray Mercer of Jacksonville, Fla., became the third American boxer into the finals. Mercer, at 27 the old­ est boxing team m ember, battered European cham pion Arnold Van- derlijdge of Holland and stopped him in the second round of their 201-pound bout. The U.S. w om en's basketball team beat Yugoslavia 77-70 for the gold medal Thursday. The Soviet wom en got the bronze. Hershiser sets scoreless mark Dodger ace gets record after 10th Associated P ress SAN DIEGO — O rel H ershiser broke D on D ry sd ale's record of 58 consecutive scoreless in n in g s, s h u t­ ting o ut the San D iego P adres for 10 innings W ed n esd ay night. H ersh iser e x ten d ed his streak to 59 in nin gs, b u t his Los A ngeles D odgers w ere also unab le to score an d the gam e w as 0-0 th ro u g h the 1 0 th . r e lie v e d H ersh iser to start th e 11th. J e s s e O r o s c o H ershiser, trying for his sixth straight sh u to u t, gave u p just four hits an d did n ot allow a ru n n e r past first base until th e 10th. to M arvell W ynn e struck o u t o p e n the 10th b u t reached b ase on H ersh iser's w ild pitch. Benito S an ti­ ago sacrificed an d W ynne took third on R andy R ead y's g ro u n d o u t. G ar­ intentio nally ry T em pleton w as w alked a n d to second, b u t H ershiser retired pin ch -h itter Keith M oreland on a the record. fly ball ran for W ith a crow d of 22,596 cheering fo r H e r s h i s e r , th e D o d g e r s stream ed from th e d u g o u t to con­ gratu late rig h t-hander, w h o broke the m ark set by D rysdale in 1968 w ith the D odgers. their ace See H ershiser, page 9 OLYMPIC SCOREBOARD Gold, Silver, Bronze, Totals G S B Soviet Union East Germany United States West Germany Romania China Bulgaria Hungary Britain Italy France Souti Korea New Zealand Australia Poland Japan Sweden Czechoslovakia Netherlands Norway Denmark Yugoslavia Finland Switzerland Brazil Canada Spain Kenya Morocco Portugal Suriname Turkey Chile Costa Rica Neth Antilles Senegal . . . . 37 29 19 10 5 3 7 8 4 4 4 3 2 2 2 1 0 2 2 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 19 22 20 10 10 9 7 5 7 4 3 3 1 4 4 2 3 2 2 2 1 0 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 30 22 18 8 6 9 6 4 6 3 4 5 7 3 3 4 3 0 0 0 1 2 2 2 3 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tot 86 73 57 28 21 21 20 19 17 11 11 11 10 9 9 7 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 CHALLENGING SALES OPPORTUNITY OFFERS GOOD PAY! Sell ad vertising for The D aily Texan and gain experience as w ell as good pay. You should already have advertising sales experience and be m otivated to become a successful Texan ad salesperson. You w ill receive som e on-the-job training, but be prepared to show us w hat you can do right now. Applications A vailable, 9 AM-4 P MMo n . thru Fri. Texas S tudent Publications 3.210 Campus 471-1865 THE DAILY TEXAN The University of Texas at A ustin is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Associated Press SEOUL, South Korea — On the 12th day of the Summ er O lym pics, the passing w as recorded of these: Ben Johnson's “gooey yellow sub­ stance" alibi and Carl Lewis' golden grand slam. A doctor for the Canadian Centre for D oping in Montreal revealed W ednesday that Johnson's male hormone levels w ere so low w hen he ran the 100 m eters in Seoul, that it could only have been from ex­ tended steroid use. Johnson's agent had said the sprinter w as sabotaged by a strang­ er with a bottle of “sport drink" GOLF MULLIGANS Practice Range $ 1 . 0 0 off any bucket 9 .m.-3 p.m. M-F • Practice Groan • Le— one • Tlfgn » • Untied Tee • Loen Chibe • Open 9 e.m.-IO p.m. 7 deya • NE Comer Mopec® 183 (next to Public Storage) „ e Ph 339-9400 M *1 Exp 9-30-88 y? =\SL^____r■E6EHDSI 8 P 0 I T 8 I A I I Mon.-Fri. 4 pm-2 am, Sat. 8 Sun. 11 am-2 am 1912 Rod Rivar (Old C aucu s Restaurant) Phono 4-SPORTS | VISA. MC & AMEX I 10 SCREENS OF SPORTS! NAPPY HOUR NOT I COLO BUFFET Beor-1.24HifcaBs-1.S0 MONDAY NITE FOOTBALL M m us lor Vw cure tar Mon.-Fri. 4 pm-7 pm MOST NFL AVAILABLE BICYCLES SPECIALIZED TREK Visit us for the largest selection and best prices on a accessories and cycling clothing! CENTURION bicycles, *Gonuina Kryptonrf» K4 lock». Rag. S31.95 with tim od $26.95. *FR IE - Bring m lha od and rocoiva on# fraa patch kirt (faml 1 par cuOomar) ^^■andOw Laganday JN m 's Mbie *UFl MOAND 2404 San Gabriel 477-6846 (all offers expire 9/30/88) rU iS ' | i STEALMT HORSES THE STRATOBLASTERS SATURDAY OCTOBER Bth 1908 STARTS 2:00 RM. TICKET PRICE 15.00 Plus service charge LOCATION: ON THE CORNER OF FIELD AND GRIFFIN IN THE HISTORIC WEST END OF DOWNTOWN DALLAS Tickets available through Rainbow TicketMaster 214/787-2000 Statewide 1-800-992-8000 For additional information call 214/220-0330 ~ > f \ r'** | . Champagne leads by example By STEVE DAVIS Daily Texan Staff With all the injuries to the Texas offensive line during the last two years, the linemen have played a few unaccustomed roles. Tackles have been moved to guard. Players have been double-trained. Even center Alan Champagne has had to take on one more role. Champagne is one of just two seniors on the line. As one of the elders, Champagne now has double duty as teacher and center. "I'm not a mother or a Hitler out there, but I've got to make the other players understand the importance of doing certain things," said one of Texas' two offensive captains. "I feel a big sense of responsibili­ ty," Champagne said. "If somebody puts the trust into you to be captain, then they must respect you and ex­ pect a lot out of you. You've got to lead by example." Champagne's duties as a center suddenly became even more im­ portant last season. Carter Hill, Champagne's competition at the position for three years, had to quit football because of a neck injury. That left the Longhorns very shal­ low at the position and Champa ne became even more valuable. The problem was compounded this year when Texas lost tackle Ed Cunningham for the season to a knee injury and tackle Brian Nielsen decided not to return. But Cham­ pagne said the players did a good job of not letting it affect them. "Last year we had the same type of deal," Champagne said. "We lost offensive linemen left and right. We basically had six or seven linemen that we used all year and we had some holes that we had to plug." Champagne said the young play­ ers just need time to learn. "It wasn't a panic situation at all," he said. "(Offensive line coach Clovis] Hale wouldn't let it be that way. He just told us on the first day of two-a-days that they were good players but they are gone and we have to forget about them." It was a setback to an offensive line that, after one full year under Hale, had come together into a strong, slick unit by the time Texas played Pittsburgh in the Bluebonnet Bowl. Champagne said the team has yet to reach that level this year. "We were blowing people off the ball and protecting the quarterback. But we need to be better than we were against Pitt to beat teams like Oklahoma and Arkansas." Champagne said the linemen are developing fine individually and have the ability needed to be as good as last year's final unit. It's the team cohesiveness that Texas now needs to be as good as at the end of 1987. "Right now we're really pretty close," Champagne said. He said the team is on schedule to be as good as it needs to be against Oklahoma in 10 days. Champagne feels a big sense of responsibility to help get the team to that point. Leading by example is the best teacher, he said. Besides hustling and doing things right the first time, Champagne said leading by example means making sure people understand the impor­ tance of watching films and lifting weights. "You're not just lifting weights for this week," he said. "You're lift- ing for three weeks down the road." THE CHAMPAGNE FILE ■ Center ■ 6-4,275 ■ Senior Houston Cypress Creek T h e Da il y TEXAN/Thursday, September 29.1988/Page 9 Hershiser Continued from page 8 "I really and truly did not want to get the record," Hershiser said in a dugout interview with Drysdale, now a Dodgers' broadcaster. "Out of respect of the man next to me, I feel I should have stopped at two- thirds. I wanted to just put the ball down out of respect for the guy next to me and baseball records. But the guys next to me in the dugout kind of convinced me to go for it." Said Drysdale: "If I had known that I would have been down there kicking you by the seat of the pants." Drysdale was among those on the mound to hug Hershiser. "It was the mental groove, more than the physical," Hershiser said. "I was out there pitching for wins in a pennant race, not a streak." Hershiser struck out three and walked one in breaking the record. ~ >' ■ • . -1 .. i m I « B 1 K 1 9 ANNUAL WEEKEND CELEBRATION! 0 0 0 0 0 0 # 0 0 0 0 & A Mark Shale Tailgate Party? Well...maybe we don’t have a football game and maybe we don’t have a car, but we are in the mood for fall. And we are celebrating Texas/O.U. Weekend! Bring a friend...come join us at our first annual Tailgate Party: Saturday, October 8 from 10 til 2. Refreshments! Good Company! Great clothes! 8300 Preston Road 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 i 0 0 9 0 BALLROOM TEXAS/O.U. PARTY WEEK-END! a a |Y P MUMM OCT. 7 PAVM» LYNN JONM OCT. 8 U r S PARTY AT TNI LONGHORN BALLROOM 214/426-4400 216C m ¡M ltft Industrial OFFICIAL TX-0U HEADQUARTERS C H A S T E I o i i i i ZWlSu 7$t& t ‘Pvpuletn TUf&tUjt 7 Friday 8 Saturday 6 Thursday j 9 P M -Eddie j Harrison & j J Noon - $1 Draft Baer j The Shortcuts 1 4-7 pm Woo Brothers I j 9 pm Larry & The ¡4 pm Woo Brothers 19 pm Gary P. Nimmi I Blue Notes Outdoor Cookout Featuring... Rattlesnake Fajitas Tfa % % Tfa*vtTKatie tmed 'Ifnt Aéout 3010 N. Henderson @ Central 823-2411 B L U E I G H T S P E C I A L n F R I D A Y I B A N D UP C L U B H D M cXMNCV DAUAS 2t4-m«uo GARDEN RESTAURANT &. BAR 4615 GREENVILLE AVE. • 214-369-1969 JOIN US FRIDAY FOR THE OTAYS AT 5:00 AND THE PANHANDLERS AT 9:00 SATURDAY FOR THE PANHANDLERS AT 9:00 FRIENDS FOOD DRINKS The Fast and Cool Club WELCOMES U.T. FANS! 1 ? - HOOK 'EM TO DEEP ELLOM Daflas Oct 7 Si 8 JOHNNY RENO & THE SAX MANIACS E L M M A I N C O M M E R C E < ■ > 2720 ELM AT CROWDUS 744DADA S' « i s a/^warm vyom^i! WHEN IN DALLAS EXPERIENCE KIÚ TÉ HOUR AND CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNCH Dallas' Definitive Dance Floor 827-5544 3606 Greenville O o W E E K E N D October 7 & 8 Have you made your hotel reservations yet? R o d ew a y JNN North Central Dallas — Cotton Bowl 635 N I \ X / Single Occupancy* % —FREE BREAKFAST— PRE-GAME HAPPY HOUR '$5.00 each additional person For Reservations Call: (214)231-5181 íf íifytUL f faifa fy lfo t An original border Cantina featuring a great Happy Hour, live entertainment on Saturday night and Sunday Brunch. 6881 G reenville A ven u e. Dallas 369-8600 13900 North Central Expressway G R I L L MODERN SOUTHWESTERN CUISINE AND ATMOSPHERE ¡■■■■■■■I imm mm * » m m . - mumsmm Village On The Parkw ay 5100 Beltlm e A ddison, TX 214-934-0165 Thursday, September 29,1988 Page 10 A rts & E ntertainm ent 6Ringers’ doesn’t ring true to director’s style T h e Da il y T e x a n By MIKE CLARK Daily Texan Staff A rule of thum b: Avoid any m ov­ ie that bills the director's nam e over the title. It's a sure signal that the flick ain't u p to said director's usual standard; therefore, the m oneym en behind it try to sell it on reputation alone. David C ronenberg's Dead Ringers is a good illustration of how this rule into practice. Even though it stars fam ous people an d has a, well, novel prem ise, audienc­ is p u t es are supposed to run-not-w alk to the theater because it's a Cronenberg movie. Only problem is, Dead Ringers isn 't a C ronenberg movie. Some­ times it's a David Lynch movie, som etimes it's an A ntonioni movie, som etim es it's an ABC Movie of the Week. But it seldom , if ever, delivers the thrills, spills and gory chills a u ­ diences expect from the m an w ho brought you Technicolor cranial ex­ plosions an d Jeff Goldblum sh ed d ­ ing his skin. Cronenberg claims that this is his first "naturalistic" movie, but the assertion is highly dubious. In Dead Ringers, World Fam ous identical- tw in gynecologists Beverly and Elli­ ot Mantle (Jeremy Irons in a dual role) play sexual switch 'em w ith a World Famous actress/patient Claire Niveau (Genevieve Bujold). U nfor­ tunately, she transfers her W orld Famous drug habit to one, and then both, of the doctors, whose neat and sterile relationship is already being challenged by rivalry for her World Famous female affections. Bloody physical and m ental m ay­ hem results. Broadw ay’s smash hit m usical! KAPT-FM 01 m is on Stagoi One performance only! 8 p.m . Friday, Septem ber 30 Tickets $12-$24 The “Hey, Big Spender” musical! the M antles perform their opera­ tions dressed entirely in scarlet. All this w ouldn't be so bad if Dead Ringers had the flash and rapid pace that C ronenberg movies normally have. Instead, it's full of dark, m ud­ dy tones, and it barely moves at all. It's as if the filmmakers, not the characters, are on Seconal. The om nipresent special-effects shots used to clone Jeremy Irons probably contribute to the lethargy. While the camera work is m uch bet­ ter than for past attem pts at twin shots (like The Parent Trap), Irons doesn't seem really comfortable playing against himself in alm ost all his scenes. Much of the movie has a cold, m echanical isn't excusable. that feel Irons is one of the more accom­ plished actors in movies today, and it's sad to see him struggle through the part(s). He calls up all his skills to differentiate the introverted Bev from the extroverted Elliot, but by the end, you d o n 't care which is which — they both get on your nerves. And his characterizations, though well-defined, aren 't consist­ ent w ith the script — both tw ins seem too ugly and malicious to be the social and sexual successes they're supposed to be. is Genevieve Bujold, w ho looks like hell, likewise wasted. Claire Niveau isn't a character as m uch as a stim ulus, the push that sets the M antles' psychodram a in motion. Her m ost notable traits are her deli­ cious w hiskey-and-honey Q ue- becois lilt (she sounds like a French Kathleen Turner) and her efficiency at d istinguishing u p p ers from dow ners. is undoubtedly But the chief villian in this crime of boredom the script. If Bujold was an active pres­ ence from beginning to end, an ac­ tual part of the dram a betw een the twins, there'd be some suspense and excitement. Instead, Dead Ring­ ers' main dram atic conflict plays out between Irons and himself, and no m atter how good he is, he can't bring it off. The characters' drug addiction be­ comes the main plot device, and af­ ter about 25 scenes of Irons and Bu­ jold popping and shooting various substances, the movie starts looking like Valley of the Dolls, with everyone spew ing and drooling and rolling their eyes back in their head. Rather than having addiction be one of m any elem ents that define the char­ acters (like Dennis H opper's gas mask in Blue Velvet), it's the only el­ em ent. There are bright spots. C ronen­ berg's visual style, though m uted and derivative of Lynch and Anto­ nioni, still includes som e killer shots — a needle covered w ith m elted candle wax, ghastly surgical instru­ m ents, and a shot of the Irons tw ins connected by a disgusting fleshy link between their stom achs (the only shot approaching the gore of earlier C ronenberg films). And there is hum or, especially near the end, w hen the M antles, identically disheveled, shoot in perfect synchronization. their drugs But such small pleasures are not enough to make one part with one's money, not w hen there are so m any better movies on the way. If you w ant to see drug addiction, wait for Bird, and if you can't get enough of twins, go see Big Business or the ap ­ propriately nam ed Twins coming soon. Dead Ringers isn't even a good bet for die-hard C ronenberg fans. Dead Ringers, at the Barton Creek 5, MoPac Expressway (Loop 1) at Loop 360; the Lincoln 3, 64061- 35 North; the Southpark 6, 1921 E. Ben White Blvd.; and the Village 4, 1AI A n /-io r c n t i I i n p The Return of Free Stuff Jeremy Irons, star of David Cronenberg’s Dead Ringers, is scared by the film critics lurking outside of his window. G ranted, Cronenberg movies are seldom "believable," but that's the point — they're obviously fantasies. Films like Videodrome and Rabid (featuring Marilyn Cham bers as a hum an m osquito) d o n 't take place in the sam e world that real people live in. With Dead Ringers, C ronen­ berg attem pts to spin a plausible tale, not of Brundleflies or m utant hate-babies, but of characters that really exist (at least in our cultural consciousness), and he fails com­ pletely. He do esn't help his cause by cram m ing every frame with symbol­ ism and artifice. Each design ele­ m ent telegraphs the characters' psy­ chic m akeup to the audience. For exam ple, the M antle b ro th ers' apartm ent and clinic look like the bridge of the starship Enterprise, while N iveau's flat looks like the draw ing room at M anderley. And DON’T BE A GROOVE DOG Dance at e ddic e STUDENT RUSH1 Half-price balcony tickets, day-of-show at Paramount with I.D. PARAMOUNT THEATRE FOR THE PERFORM ING ARTS 713 Congress A venue • 4 7 2 -5 4 1 1 727 W 23rd • 479-8888 III BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471-5244 Mil M M IM M M M M IIIII Last week, we, the benevolent souls in The Daily Texan Entertain­ m ent D epartm ent, gave aw ay 25 tickets to see the Presidio theater's m idnight show ing of The Road War­ rior. Well, lucky people, w e've som e­ how m anaged to finagle a bunch (well, not a bunch) more to see this week's show ing of Oliver Stone's Platoon, and they're burning holes in our pockets. Come to The Texan offices (com er of 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, in the basem ent) to­ day after 3 p.m ., and we'll give you one free pass to see Platoon. Each pass is good for two people. The Natural Sciences Council presents TECH FAIR TEXAS UNION BALLROOM Thursday, September 29 Friday, September 30 - - 9:30-12:00 1:00-5:00 9:30-11:30 1:30-5:00 Companies Represented: LTV Mobil Phillips Radian M l Bellcore IBM IMSL Lockheed Representatives available to show students the job opportunities in many technical and scientific fields. Sales Technologies, Inc. Schlumberger Texaco U.S.Aimy U.S. Navy BEEN NAILED LATELY? CAMPUS DEFENSIVE DRIVING SCHOOL TICKET DISMISSAL WALK-INS WELCOME STUDENT SPECIAL FLEXIBLE SCHEDULE 2512 Guadalupe • 476-2886 for RESUMES! PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS IMMIGRATION third & 2532 GUADALUPE 477-5555 A C M w m & M m a i i N S Saturday, Oct. 1 at 8 p.m. Bass Concert Hail Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060* $10, $8; $7, $5.50 FAN Club; $9, $7.25 seniors Tickets on sale now at all UTTM TieketCenters * advance salesamC O M P L E X THE UNIVERSITY O f TEXAS AT AUSTIN inxtf)Street Country Club THURSDAY, SEPT. 29 “THIRD LANGUAGE” "Out with the Old In with the New Swimwear & Skiwear Show Begins At 10 p.m. $1.50 Frozen Ritas & Coronas Till Midnight 98c Coronas 9-11 p.m. with K-98 Card FRIDAY, SEPT. 30 MAD HOUSE & N BY TEN $1.50 Tequila & Schnapps Shots SATURDAY, OCT. 1 MAD HOUSE TAXI $1.50 Taquila & Schnapps Shot» SUNDAY, OCT. 2 BOB POPULAR FREE BARBEQUE 6:30-9« p.m. $1.50 Frozen Margaritas A Domi c Beer $2.00 Importe ! 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Mon -Fri. 9-5 ■ WEEKDAYS: 5:15.9:30 SAT/SUN: 140,5:15.9:30 ARIA BtnNnt& r PJ C H ’S ISLAND WEEKDAYS 7 )5 ONIY SAT/5UH 340.715 non na doucto* or sowwat THE BIQ BLUB WEEKDAYS; 515, 7 30 SAT/SUN 140.515,7:30 MKHAEL KEATON BEETLEJUICE WEEKDAYS: 9 45 O M Y SAT/SUN: 315.9:45 1’V V •n o n n ALL DAY AL t S E A T S —ALL S H OWS cum [onw ooa m DEAD POOL [ g M i 7 :3 0 9 3 0 THE RESCUE |j>§] 4 :4 # 7 -0 0 9 : 1$ OutSay Mooro m ARTHUR 2 4 : 4 5 7 :1 9 9 : 4 4 (PQ) ( T IM E S P U B L IS H E D ARE F O R TO O AY ONLY ) A r , i • . r i C M I K H O V S tM (« 2.00 9:40-11:49 @ 9J tin* r t pi ie it mi l ur e of this lie a d m i l l r d IN wi ll filu Hut* In m ilr r i P it' Í V r h n f o l W rM em ( ml i / a r mn I V !I tl|( metal llears M M 3 (a 2 I t 7 : 1 5 - 9 :5 i @ 3 J 0 I PLLIB kLÓWIIE FROM O Í S l SPACK 7:25-12:00 M i i n • l . l i ?ISt«w G u a d a l u p e 477-1334 elegant piece of the kind of ex penence well worth the time ' Dtaae CiaMro Autlin Amrrlcmm . 9TU D B N T 8 A FACU LTY ■SOOotT Hegnlar Prtea* CAPITOL CITY PLAYHOUSE A aaagmll that Wyrtly af the *8-rear ■ Carwi Hawaba S g M TWDWátr Tasan Delivery ’M 3:00 A.M .! 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P r o f e s s i o n a l R e p r o d u c t i v e ( a r e I i r e I ' n i i n . i n i i l i s t í n » ) C t o M c n i r r c i j i i í H i i v ( < ■ n n s r l n i n • M u o t ¡i >n S i j \ i< i ' s m m m am rnm m m m * B i r t h ( m i t i n l • l \ i p I n s t V2V>II REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES I', . m l < . . 1. 1,, ,í I f ( ,i i 1 I, . ’ i i i ! \ i T ■. : i 11 | N ’ ,, 11 i v ¡., r i, . . m m s . i. .i i ) i , ( It S h i ill I. 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 1 0 0 9 1 1 0 t h • • • O a a \ M F ALETAS Thursday is Fajita Day FAJITAS for TWO only $8.95 A A T S I J ( A L L D A Y L O N G ) wtth pico de gado, guacamole, rice, beans. & our deHdout flour tortitas 1907 Guadalupe 479-0940 or 479-0319 (not vafld w/ any other offer) - P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S M O O N O V E R P A R A D O R ( 3 : 0 5 - 5 : 1 5 ) - 7 : 4 0 - 9 : 5 5 H [ H X S W E E T H E A R T S D A N C E « Í H X R Í H X ( 3 : 4 0 - 5 : 4 5 ) - 8 : 1 0 - 1 0 : 2 0 M A R R I E D T O T H E M Q B ( 2 : 5 0 - 5 : 0 0 ) - 7 : 2 0 - 9 : 4 0 Y O U N G G U N S ( 3 : 1 5 - 5 : 3 0 1 - 7 : 5 5 - 1 0 : 1 0 « * . L A S T T E M P T A T I O N O F C H R I S T 1 2 :5 0 - 4 :0 0 - 7 : 1 0 - 1 0 : 2 0 T H I N B L U E L I N E (1 :0 0 -3 :0 5 -5 :1 0 )-7 :2 0 -9 :3 0 D E A D R I N G E R S (1 2 :4 0 -3 :0 0 -5 :2 0 ) -7 :4 5 -1 0 :2 5 A H A N D F U L O F D U S T (1 :5 0 -4 :4 0 ) -7 :3 0 -1 0 :1 0 R . P G , G O L , , " I H X D E A D R I N G E R S ( 2 : 2 5 - 5 : 1 0 ) - 7 : 3 0 - 9 : 5 5 F IS H C A L L E D W A N D A " I H X ® ( 2 : 4 0 - 5 : 2 5 1 - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 0 5 B E T R A Y E D ( 2 : 0 0 - 4 : 3 5 ) - 7 . 1 0 - 9 : 4 5 _________ ■ H X p a g D E A D R I N G E R S < 1 2 : 5 5 - 3 : 1 0 - 5 : 3 0 ) 2 7 5 0 - 1 0 : 7 0 P A T T Y H E A R S T ( 1 2 4 5 - 3 : 0 0 - 5 : 1 5 ) - 7 3 0 - 9 : 4 5 M O O N O V E R P A R A D O R (1 3 0 - 3 : 4 0 - 5 5 0 ) - B : 0 0 - 1 0 : 0 5 . j g I H X R [ R ( 3 : 0 0 - 5 : 3 0 1 - 7 : 4 5 - 1 0 : 0 0 A W O R L D A A R T t l(; I H X B U L L D U R H A M ( 2 : 4 5 ) - 8 : 0 S MI D N I G H T R U N ( 4 : 4 5 ) - 7 : 2 0 - 9 : 4 5 C O C K T A I L ( 6 : 0 0 ) - 1 0 : 1 0 B A M B I ( 3 : 1 5 ) K A N S A S ( 2 : 4 0 - 6 : 1 0 ) - 7 : 3 0 - 9 : 5 0 R P A R f N T H F S f .S ‘N D IC A T E D IS C O U N T E D S H O W S H O W T IV r s ARF, F O R T O D A Y O N L Y W E D N E S D A Y S A L L T I C K E T S $ 2 . 9 4 Texas Union Films Sawdust a n d Tinsel Sw odlsh w /tuM H os Tonight art 7:00 pm fig U nion Thootro Wedding in G ellilee JM m Bb b P y g g d s r Hobrmw and Arabic w/tubHHos Tonight at 7:30 pm Union T h e o tn Sfi D o n 't L o o k B a c k Tonight at 10:45 pm U nion Thootro Manon of the Spring f ranch w/tubtMat Tonight at 7:00 pm H ogg Auditorium _______ Nosferatu the Vampyre Gorman w/subtMos Tonight at 9:25 pun. H ogg Auditorium General Cinema [bargain matinees every day ■ FIRST MATINEE SNOW ONLY D O L B Y « T I M O = » BARTON CREEK M O PAC of LOOP 360 327-8281 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES ★ DEAD RINGERS n 12:202.435:107:351040 T H X ★ MOON OVER PARADOR p o -u 12:202:304:457:209:40 ★ DIEHARD»« 12:002:305:007:3010:00 ★ MARRIED TO THE MOB r 12 4 5 3 4 0 5 :1 0 7 :2 0 9 :3 0 i l G r a 1 4 0 3 4 5 5 :1 0 7 :1 5 9 :2 0 H IG H LAN D M A L L HIGHLAND MALL BLVD. 451-7326 ★ MOON OVER PARADOR p q i s 1:153:205:25 ROGER RABBIT p o 1:003:004:557:209:20 CAPITAL P L A Z A 1-35 of CAMERON RD. 452-7646 NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET IV r 1:103:155:207:259:30 DIE HARD r 1 2 4 0 2 :3 0 5 4 0 7 :3 0 1 0 4 0 BIGpq 1:13 3:20 5:25 7:30 9:35 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD S I G O U R N E Y - W E A V E R T H E D AILY TEXAN/Thursdáy, September 29, 1988/Page 11 * SPI N 180 * In Conceit •ft * Wed. & Thurs., Sept. 28-29 * * M ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Jf Jd isn ir ^iui(s No Charge for Admission U niversity M arket Facts... 4 6 , 4 9 6 s t u d e n t s a n d 1 6 , 8 7 4 f a c u l t y s t a f f r e a d a n A u s t i n w e e k d a y n e w s p a p e r w i t h i n t h e p a s t w e e k . W i t h 4 4 , 8 9 3 o f t h e s t u d e n t s a n d 1 4 , 9 3 3 o f t h e f a c u l t y / s t a f f , t h e n e w s p a p e r r e a d w a s T he D a ily T exa n . 3 3 , 8 4 8 s t u d e n t s a n d 1 0 , 9 7 6 f a c u l t y / s t a f f r e a d a T e x a n y e s t e r d a y . 2 0 , 3 0 9 s t u d e n t s r e a d o n ly t h e T e x a n y e s t e r d a y . (Source The University Market Belden Associates. 1987) i m ¿ THERE IS A DIFFERENCE e TODAY’S TIMES ONLY $ 0 5 0 CHILDREN ^ TWILITE $ 0 5 0 STUDENT mi ATINEE O THE BEST MOVIE PRICE IN TOWN 4:30 - 6 PM EVERY DAY DESIGNATED BY ( ) .MA TINEES IN ITALICS $350= STUDENT TICKETS ALL SHOWS AFTER 6 RM 7 DAVS A W E EK ONLV AT MÜ&51» wmmrn rnmmm !vtf«Kta 4 tMtPi Ygllov Id 4444000 S LAMAR 5 BEN WHITE M2 3MC L8D# & Bum«t 4$4-5’47 V A L I D S T U D E N T I D M U S T B E P R E S E N T E D A T B O X O F F I C E T O Q U A L I F Y WESTGATE 8 W E S T G A T E MALL S LA M A R & B E N W H IT E 892 2696 SWEETHEARTS DANCE 2:-7:35-9:55 A FISH CALLED WANDA 2.01X5:15 fa $2.501-7:25-9:35 TUCKER H 2. f(X fa $2.50>-7:15-9:25 YOUNG GUNS H 2.21X5:35 fa $ 1 5 - 9 : 4 5 COMING TO AMERICA ® > 2:11X5:25 fa I WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT m 2:21X4:55 fa $2.50)-7:15-9:25 STEAUNG , HOME IK U 31 2:21X5:35 fa $2.50)7:35 OF DEATH [ 9:55 I RIVERSIDE 8 RIVERSIDE & PLEASANT VALLEY RD 448-0008 KANSAS ® 2:31X5:35 fa $2.501-7:55-10:05 DIEHARD H 2 0(H4:45 ta S2 SO}-7:15-9:45 NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 4 2.3.TtlltNa(m “*^iSH)CHAaAPTH) '■* ^ C HAD THE HOUGHTON MIFFUNIOOK 'i 'V . u A S MC ANOUNfVfPSAL CfTY STUOOB PC * U - ! NOW PLAYING IN SELECT AREAS. CCMING SEPTEMBER 30th TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU. Wmyáño 16511 Bratton Lane 255-4073 TONIGHT THE FABULOUS DEBONAIRES 250 Draft $1.50 Pitchers $1.00 OFF COVER with Student I.D. M u st b e 1 8 o r o k le r w ith v s k i d riv e rs A ce n e e Thursday, September 29,1988 Page 12 C lassified A dvertising VISA/MasterCard Accepted For Word Ads, call 471-5244/For Display Ads, call 471-8900/8 a m -4 30 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Avenue VISA/MasterCard Accepted T h e Da il y T e x a n THE DAILY T EX A N CLASSIFIEDS TRANSPORTATION RIAL ESTATE SALES MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 20 — Sports-Foi tign 120 — Houses 260 — Hobble» 360 — Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. 360— Fum. Apts. _ •Call Mom & Dad! • e • • • Bettor than a Condo... « Deep fenced yard, IF Shuttle ¡ • small, clean cottage duplex • I • sized lot 31,950 ti al sales price : : Owner 453-4990 . MERCHANDISE 190 — Appliances Compact Refrigerator $35 Color TV 19-inch $50 Code A Phone 2100 $50 Akai R-to-R Deck $95 IBM S electric typewriter $35 Sanyo Dictator/Transcriber $195 Sony VCR $100 SCM XD8500 Memory typewriter $ 300 Berkman's Electronic Service Center 4930 Burnet Rood 454-6731 TO N Y LA M A boots! First quality,choco­ la te Nzord-10V5D. W o rn 15 minutes ot Tony Lamo facto ry. $130 4 59-6401. (C om pare $ 2 0 0 o t Alton's). 9-13 280 — Sporting- Camping Equip. 200LB CAST IR O N w e ig h t set & DP in- d in e d bench w /le g extensions and cud. B rand N e w t $ 2 0 0 o r best o ffe r 4 4 0 - 8 0 5 3 Alex. 9 -2 3 ______________________ 300 —G arage- Rummage Sales M O N D O SALEH! S aturday-Sundoy. 9o.m.-4p.m. 20's fun k-8 0 's junk. V intage mens/women's. Housewares. Collectibles. 1 7 0 5 N e w n in g . 9 -3 0 330 — Pets A F G H A N PUPPIES, cham pion b lo o d ­ lines. Must sell, o nly $ 2 0 0 eoch. 2 82 - 0 4 5 3 10-3_________________________ FREE KITTENS six weeks old. O ra ng e w ith white markings. House Please call 4 7 7 -2 5 2 6 . 9 -2 9 trained. 9 -2 9 LARGE DEARBORN space heater, n o r­ mally $150, now $100. C all Ken o r Jim. 3 2 2 -0 6 0 0 10-4_____________________ 340 — Misc. 200 — Furniture- Household C O N S IG N M E N T SHO P fo r hom e fum - ishings. Buy from us o r sell throu g h us, 2 6 6 -3 3 7 7 107 Ranch Rood 6 2 0 South # 1 0 8 . 10-5D__________________________ EXTRA FIRM Q ueen in nerspnng mattress & b o x springs. Band new, still pockaged: setting: $185, includes delivery. Home: 8 9 2 -7 0 8 0 10-4_______________________ FURNITURE/GARAGE sole Desk $125, 2 beds $100, bookcase $ 7 5 , tab le /cha irs $100, nightstand $100. N e g o tio b le You haul a w ay. 4 4 7 -8 3 7 1 .9 -2 9 DELUXE, EXTRA firm king size bed, dress­ tables, kitchen er, stereo stand, end table, choirs, d ra ftin g b oa rd , $ 2 0 to 10-4______________ $ 2 0 0 4 7 9 -0 8 6 7 S OFA/HIDE-A-BED tion.. $ 2 0 0 O B O C all 3 2 0 -8 4 1 7 10-4 in excellent co nd i­ DINETTE SET-Brass & glass, like new, off white cushions. $175. 4 5 0 -0 1 6 8 10-5 COMPUTER DESK $ 25 , M en s toll dress er $ 2 0 , like new. C oll 4 54 -0 5 1 6 10-5 OFFICE CHAIR $ 75 , pointings $10, brass desk la m p $15, swivel rocker $ 7 5 M ake o ffe n .4 7 7 -2 9 3 4 10-5_________________ FULL SIZE mattress & boxspnngs $125; Deluxe single unused $150; Evenings 4 5 9 -1 9 2 0 . 10-5_______________________ 210 — Stereo-TV VCR ZENITH, 4-heod. rem ote control, program m able. 6-m onths old, ve ry nice $350 080 .447 -21 13. 10-3_________ CO NSO LE STEREO $ 4 0 ; W eigh* bench w/attochm ents + weights $ 85 , Couch $ 40 . C oll after 6 3 0 p m 3 8 8 -2 6 4 8 10- 3____________________________________ TEAC 105A cassette $125, PIONEER d i­ rect drive turn-table $125, M a ke offers 4 7 7 -2 9 3 4 . 10-5 220 — Computers* Equipment —5 YEAR WARRANTY— MAONTOSH HARD DRIVES manuteduied by MICROTECH imi, Inc CeUeaSotlww* VxSudwVF ** tH u o o * l EXTERNAL. ZO3 (025.725 k Surface Mount SISSMS SAXkMb fiJ la iA i; e» R - H ' • ■ ' • 442-7041 8AM 8 P M 7 d q y e tw e e FABULOUS pr good at leaei toroufpi September NEW AND USED PCS, PRINTERS AND ETC. e IBM PC 640K, 20 meg with Printer, $825 e New systems from $649 McComputers 4 5 9 - 9 0 0 9 Tue-Sot 10 o m -6 pm _______________________________10-13M PC COMPATIBLE Com puter C o lo r m o n i­ tor. 20-m eg harddisk ond pnnter. Call b efo re noon $13 00 4 7 7 -9 5 6 6 9 -3 0 5511 plain p op er TOSHIBA COPIER copier, excellent condition, g o o d service record, one ow ner. Includes separate stand. $1200 4 7 7 -5 8 2 7 9 -3 0 C O M P A Q 2 56K Portable, IBM co m p ati­ ble. Includes Hayes smart K at m odem IBM Q urte w riter Pnnter $ 10 00 Also $ 7 5 0 . 3 8 8 - Beautiful 3 6 7 9 10-4___________________________ letter q ua lity 250 — Musical Instruments DEERING DELUXE Ban|o Excellent co n ­ dition. 4 7 7 -9 4 5 7 . 9 -2 9 ______________ RO LAN D ELECTRONIC Piono EP-50.6- octave, Standard-size. Pressure sensi­ tive. M ID I co m patible fo r synthesizers 9 -3 0 ________ $ 4 7 5 , Coll 4 4 0 -7 2 7 5 G IBS O N H U M M IN G B IR D , mint condr- lio n H ord cose, $ 3 5 0 3 27 -7 51 7 . 10-4 FOR SALE: Tok am ine C-128 classical g uita r w/case. Excellent condition. Rare­ ly played $ 2 0 0 . C a ll Jim 244-5141. 7om -4pm . 10-5 C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 T O P LA C E A C LA S S IFIED A D CAS H Buying Gotd-Sttver Broken Chains, Cl Ringe Unwanted Jewelry S e r v in g S t u d e n ts S in c e 1978 e r t y C o in s L4Sttie $ IMMEDIATE CASHS W e buy gold, silver, jewel­ ry, coins, class rings. High­ est prices paid. A-Z Coins. 6 0 9 E. 7th. 4 6 9 -0 0 0 5 9 -2 9 H UT CENTENNIAL ADDITIO N 18 KT. GOLD WATCH, # 4 of 25, original issue price $6000. $3000 cash or will trade for car, bullion gold or sil­ ver, collector coins or stamps, other. Call (512)896-6268. 10-5D LARGE PORTABLE Dog Run, w elded fo r large or small dogs loints G reat 9 -2 9 ________________ $ 9 0 4 7 7 -9 4 5 7 POWER WHEELCHAIR, Rolls-IV Invo­ care, excellent condition slighty used 9 -2 9 _____________ $ 2 8 0 0 345 -2 05 1 WEIGHTS A Q U A R IU M W eights good total pounds 145 $ 150 "start up set A quanum 10 g a llon $5, 4 4 5 4 7 7 8 10- 3H_________________ ___ VINTAGE CLOTHES Save 40°'o w/this ad-G rea t G randm a's A ttic-H ill Co Flea M arket Sat-Sun only 2 miles east o l 183 on 6 2 0 10-19F______________________ RENTAL 350 — Rental Services FREE LO C A TO R SER VIC E fre e tronsportxition provided Best ond friendliest service in town. T h o m e • G . T b o m p e o o J r . w J REALTORS 4 5 2 -8 6 2 5 ]4 Sours a day e e e e e e e - e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e # # NEED TO FIND AN APARTMENT? Let us do the looking for you! Capitol City Locators 339-7368 Phone answer for 7 am-11 pm e e e e e e e e # e » # # * e # * e e e e e # e e 10-21M ★ TIRED O F ★ ★ LAUNDROMATS? ★ Rent your own washer and dryer $35 per month ★ 370-2400 ★ 10-4 360 — Furn. Apts. $220/FA LL, ABP. 2 blocks UT N e w ly re- m odeled d o rm - style efficiency - Fork­ ing, CA /C H , la u n d ry 2 5 0 2 Nueces, 4 7 4 - 2 3 6 5 , 4 7 6 -1 9 5 7 .10-5D_______________ LARGE, CLEAN very nice efficiency, sep­ arated b edroom /kitchen, quiet neigh b orhood/residents, Seton oreo, ceiling fon, AC, w o lk-in closet , dishwosher, loundry, no pets. 4 5 3 -5 4 1 7 10-6C VERY CLEAN 1 br., smoll com plex Ceiling fans, AC, screen d oors M a ture individu­ als 35th St. N o pets 4 5 3 -5 4 1 7 10- 16F RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. V illa S o la n o Apartments 51st&Guadolup# 8 Shuttle Bus/Oty Bus # Shopping Nearby t 2 Laundry Areas e Nice Pool 1&2 Bedroom Apis. Across From Intramural Fields 451-6682 MOVE IN TODAY BIST DEAL IN WEST CAMPUS! • W alk to Campus • Ceiling Fans • Microwaves • Large 1 & 2 Bedrooms ONLY 1 1 BDR LEFT S e p t . RENT FREE 4 7 9 -6 1 0 5 Longhaven Apartments 916 W. 23rd #102 PRICES SLASHED Short ond long term leases in the heart o f W a it Campus 1 bedroom $280; large 2 bedroom $480 Featuring • poof, laundry facilities, m odem appfionces, budl-m desks, parking only steps aw ay from shsXtle. SUMMIT APARTMENTS 1008 W . 2516 between San Gabriel and Leon 495-9477, 452-3449 10-3M ★ Two Bedroom ★ Fall Rate $440 W alk to Campus, small quiet complex, ceiling fans, pool Cavalier Apts 3 0 7 E 31st 4 7 6 -6 2 2 5 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 47 3 -25 13 10-31K ★ 5 Blocks West UT ★ Large, quid, immaculately dean semi­ efficiency. Kitchen, wattt-tn closet, laundry, gat heat cooking, watar/gas furnished. On tita manager. $249. Red Oak Apartments, 2104 San Ga­ briel. ★ 476-7916 ★ 10-18 it-M r+ + ■ * + + + + + it it + ■ *+ + + BUDGET PLEASERS Convenie nt lo catio n o t 41st o nd A ve A, 1 block east o f G uadalupe- 1 bed ro om $ 2 0 0 , 4 10 0 A ve. A. See m o n og er a p a rt­ ment # 1 0 3 o r cott 451-1084 If no an­ swer 4 7 8 -7 3 5 5 10-11H 1 BEDROOM $275 Student Special. Shuttle, carpet­ ed, drapeid, walk-in doset, pool, gas/waiter paid. 42 0 0 Ave. A. 451-6966, 451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. 10-1QA 1 BEDROOM $240 Student Special. Seduded, quiet complex in park-like setting. Nicely furmshed, carpeted, and draped. Gas/water paid. 609 E. 45th Street. 452-1823,451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC 9 -2 9 A FREE RENT H yd e Pork 4 8 0 6 A ve A. Huge, quiet, d ea n, shuttle, covered p o lk in g 2-1, $ 3 8 5 . Ceiling forts, rmni- biinds, built-in desks, o il gas p aid and m orel 4 5 1 -5 8 2 5 9 -3 0 D MARK XX LÍASINO FALL S H O A L R A T U B o a t th a H ig h E le ctric Rates! 1 B tdrooms & 2 Bedrooms Available 459-1664 3815 Guadalupe Davis & Assoc. SPECIAL SATES Furnished Efficiencies 1-1's 7 2-2's a 3 Pools a 3 Laundry Rooms • G as and Wafer Paid t Shuffle of Front Door Ideal to t Stvdantt Beat the High Electric Mate* Tanglewood W estside MOVE IN TODAY! 1403 Norwalk La* 4 7 2 - 9 6 1 4 DIPLOM AT APARTMENTS B A R G A IN RATES F o r M l tW d k h C m p m it 469-0224 M a n a g e r Apt. # 2 0 2 Davis & Assoc. $ 2 2 0 A P B ! 2 BLOCKS U.T. NEWLY REMODELED DORM-STYLE EFFICIENCIES 4 7 6 -1 9 5 7 4 7 4 -2 3 6 5 THREE OAKS APARTMENTS • FROM $200 • 1 Bdr/1 Ba a Furnished • Laundry Room NOW LEASING FOE FALL SEMESTER LOW RATES! 451-5840 409 W. 38tls St. TIMBERWOOD APARTMENTS MOVE IN TODAY • Large Efficiencies from $275 e Good Location in U.T. Area e Shuttle or Walk to Campus e Poots/Firepiaces LEASE FALL 4 7 8 -1 6 2 3 1000 W. 26th UTAREA N A R K EMBERS Spoomaqxrimbirik 8 Mid # CeinaF • 2 Pool I Fan • WoktoUT • On If S ri*. O nly A h w L s f t C o l for n o v a In ? « d d 478-6005 3100 Spaadwqy Manager apt.# IBS $$$ SAVE $$$ Furnished 1*1 Near UT Shuttle $225 per mo. Pecan Square <; Apartments 506 W. 37th St. Call 345*7406 ALL BILLS PAID Fall Rates Eff. 1 BR Sm. 2 BR $275 $360-$395 $395 W aJk o r shuttle to ca m p us, C A /C H , re m o d e le d , c o n v e n ie n t to e v e ry th in g . 2212 San Gabriel 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 10-31K • —-*— ~*" ‘ i1.1 í'.:.!*l¿znzznr:x ~ $100 Deposit CALL A ND ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL Affordable Luxury Designed for Student living Beautiful 1 and 2 Bedroom Plans from $275 Furnished or Unfurnished. Just off IH South. Oakwood Apartments offer options for every living situation. Set am idst tow ering oak trees and lush landscaping. Oakwood features fully equipped clubhouses adjoining magnificent swmiming pcnils. Six, nine and twelve month leases as well as month-to-month accom­ modations. Complete Home Services packages (including dishes, lineas, T.V. and m ore). Maid Service is also available. Office open daily 9 to 6. Sorry, no pets. 0« Hn UT Sfcifttto Um CLASSIFIED WO«P AD* KATES_____________ ' Charged by the word. 15 word mtni- muai. Set in 5 pt type only. Rates ore for contecultve days. Each word 1 time Eoch word 3 times Each word 5 times Each word 10 times Eoch word 15 times Eoch word 20 times S 32 $ 87 $ 1 3 0 $2.20 $2.55 $2.80 per insertion . . . $1 00 charge to change copy. First two words may be oH capítol letters. 25c for eoch additional word in capítol letters. Masiercord and Visa occepled. CLASSIFIED LINE AD-KATES______________ — — — — ’ Chorged by the line. One column inch minimum Available in 5 to 14 pt. type. 1 col. x 1 inch 1 T u n e .....................$7.45 WORD AND LINE AD DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y ........................... Friday Horn T u e s d a y ...................... .M o nd a y 11am W e d ne sda y....................Tuesday Horn T h u rs d a y ................ W e dnesday Horn F r i d a y ..........................Thursday Horn TO PLACE A WORD OR LINE AD CALL: 471-5244_________ CLASSIFIED OISPLAY*AP RATES___________ ‘ Charged by the column inch. One col­ umn inch minimum. A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available Fait Rates Sept 1-May 30 1 to 49 column inches Per Month $7.45 Per Column Inch Over 50 col in. per month, coll for rates. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY DEADLINE SCHEDULE Wednesday, 4 p.m. Monday Thursday, 4 p.m. Tuesday W e d n e sd a y ...................... Friday, 4 p.m. Monday, 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday, 4 p.m F rid a y ..................... TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD, CALL: 471-8900_________ for only ONE In the event of errors mode in an ad­ vertisement, notice must be given by 11 a.m the first doy, as the publishers are responsible incorrect insertion All doirm for adjustments should be mode not later than 30 days after publication. Pre-poid kittj receive credit slip if requested at time of cancel­ lation, and if omount exceeds $2.00. Slip must be presented for a reorder within 9 0 days to be valid. Credit slips are non - transferable C L A S S IF IC A T IO N S T R A N S P O R T A T IO N 10— NUk . A utos 2 0 — S ports-F o reign A utos 30 — Trucks-Van* 4 0 — V shktM to Trod* 30 — Sand i-Kapok 6 0 — Ports-Acc— so rt— 70 — Motorcyd— 0 0 — B kyd— 90 — Vohkto Loosing 100— Vohld— Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES 110— Servk— 120 — Hows— 130 — Condos-Townhous— 140— Mobile Horn— -Lots ISO— Acreage-Lots 160— Duplexes- Apartments 170 — Wanted 100— Loans M E R C H A N D IS E 190— Apptlanc— 20 0— Fi wlti Household ©— toreo-TV 220— Computara* Cqwipmant 23 0— Photo-Cameras 24 0— Boats 250— Musical Instruments 260— HobM— 27 0— Mochlnery- Equipment 200 — Hng-Camplng Equipment 290— PumRuro-Applianco Rental 300 — Garage-Rummage Solos 310 — Trade 32 0— Wanted to Buy or Rant M E R C H A N D IS E 3 3 0 -P o ts 340 — Misc. RENTAL 35 0— Rental Servk— 360— Fum. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 300— Fum. Duplex— 39 0— Unf. Duplexes 400 — Condos- Townhous— 4 1 0 — Fum. Hous— 42 0— Unf. Hous— 42S — Rooms 43 0— Room-Roard 435 — Co-ops 440 — Roommates 450 — Mobile Horn— -Lots 4 6 0 — Business Rentals 4 7 0 — Resorts 40 0 — Storage Spaco 49 0 — Wanted to Ront-Loa— 50 0— Misc. A N N O U N C E M E N T S 5 1 0 — In to rtcd n m o n t-T kko ts 5 2 0 — P ersonals 5 3 0 — T ra va i- Transportatlon 5 4 0 — Lost A Found 5 5 0 — Licensed Child Caro 5 6 0 — P u M k Notlco 5 7 0 — M u s k -M u s kk m s E D U C A T IO N A L 5 0 0 — M u s k a l Instruction 5 9 0 — Tutoring 6 0 0 — In struction W anted 6 1 0 — Misc. Instruction SERVICES 6 2 0 — Logal S e rvk— 6 3 0 — C om puter Services 6 5 0 — M o v in g -H au lin g 6 6 0 — S torage 6 7 0 — Painting SERVICES 6 0 0 — Office 6 9 0 — R ental Equipm ent 7 0 0 — Fu rn iture Repair 7 1 0 — AppNanco Repair 720 — ito ro o -T V Repair 7 3 0 — Hom o Repair 7 4 0 — B k y d o R epair 7 5 0 — Typing 7 6 0 — RUsc. S e rv k — E M P L O Y M E N T 7 7 0 — Em ploym ent A pandas 7 0 0 — Em ploym ent Sanricas 7 9 0 — P ort tim e 0 0 0 — O onorol H e lp W onted 0 1 0 — OfVlce-Clerkal 0 2 0 — AccounHng- ■ookkoopvng 0 3 0 — A dm lnlsf r a tlv o - 850 — R etail fs m ol 170— m ca $ m — 09 0— Clubs-R— ta u ra n ts 9 0 0 — D om ostk-H ousohold 910 — P ositions W anted 92 0— W ork W anted B U S IN E S S 9 3 0 — Business O pportun ities 9 4 0 — O p p o rtu n M — W onted TSP Building, Room 3 .2 0 0 2 5 0 0 W hrth M o n d a y throu g h Friday 8 :3 0 a m -4 :3 0 p m VISA TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos FIAT SPIDER 2 0 0 0 G o o d condition, 5- speed, Sony A M /F M cassette deck. 4 3 ,0 0 0 mi, $ 3 ,2 0 0 322-9191 til 5. 441- 3 7 4 4 a fte r 6. 10-13_________________ 1977 MERCURY MARQ UIS, $1200; Runs perfectly, A M /F M cassette. P ow er w in ­ d ow s/ seat. Tilt steerting. 4 4 7 -2 4 0 5 , Roger. 10-17 * * * * * I BUY cars! Cash on the spot. 4 4 5 - 0 5 8 3 . * * * * * . 10-3H___________________ 1982 TO YOTA CO RO LLA Tercel Silver & Black, 2 sun roofs standard, extra dean, $ 2 9 0 0 cosh, 4 4 5 - 0 5 8 3 . 10-17H________ 1979 CHEVROLET M A U B U PS, PB, AC, , g re at cond itio n $1,150 471- 4 -d o o r 8 2 7 0 d o y 4 43 -8 6 5 1 night. Jion. 10-18 1982 FORD ESCORT G o o d cor. AC, g o o d tires, only $ 17 25 4 4 2 -7 3 8 4 .1 2 -1 9 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 1976 ALFA RO M E O Spyder. ow ner. Rebuilt engine. N e w top, seats, battery, records $ 3 ,0 0 0 . 3 43 -9 41 8 . 9 - 25___________________________________ Ivory, 1 1983 DATSUN 280ZX. M in t condition ond restored. Must sell $ 6 2 0 0 o r best o ffe r 2 5 5 -4 3 9 0 .1 2 -1 9 _________________ '8 2 V W Jetta 5-speed, tinted w in d o w :, m idnight blue, g o o d condition, $ 2 5 0 0 n egotiable. 4 5 3 -6 3 0 0 .1 2 -1 9 BEAUTIFUL RED - 72 M g M idg et Brand new brakes + clutch. Engine, point job, tires, to p - g re at condihon $ 2 2 0 0 , 4 7 8 - 5 0 6 3 .1 2 -1 9 __________________________ '7 9 CAPRI . Cleon cor, V-6, A M /F M , AC, 4-speed. $1595. Robin, 3 4 3 -0 5 5 7 12- 19____________________________________ 1983 TO YOTA CO RO LLA SR-5 2 -d o o r, 5 -sp e e d , c o n d itio n , $ 3 5 0 0 . 4 6 9 -0 3 9 2 , trades welcom e. 10- 18H__________________________________ e x c e lle n t o ir, 1967 TRIUMPH spitfire com pletely re ­ stored, w ire w heels, both tops, $ 2 7 5 0 - negotiable. Pasco M o to r Co. 4 7 7 - 9-15__________________________ 3301 Autos 1 986 V O IK S W A G O N Q U A N T U M . 5- ipssd, p o w e r sunroof, lo o d a d l Luxury ca r $ 6 7 5 0 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd. 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 10-4F________________________________ MUST SELL 1986 A ud i 4 0 0 0 S 5-speed, cruise, sun roo f, tinted w indow s, new tires, records. $ 8 7 5 0 . 9 2 6 -6 0 3 6 . 10-5 1985 TO Y O TA MR2 AC, lape, A M /F M , p o w e r w indow s, p o w e r mirrors, b o d e d 6 0 .0 0 0 mi. $ 5,5 0 0 -o ffe r8 3 5 -9 1 8 0 . 10-5 1977 UT O RA NG E Corvette. F o d o ry co l­ o r is UT b urnt orange. Autom atic. A ir. M ust see $ 8 5 0 0 /firm Chortle 8 1 7 -9 6 5 - 3 8 0 0 10-5F__________________________ 30 — Trucks-Vans 7 5 CHEVY TRUCK fo r sole Cheap. Must sell Call David Shockley 4 7 2 -6 7 3 2 . 10- ______________ 3 1 978 V W BUS, w ell m aintained, A /C , 8 4 .0 0 0 miles. 4 5 8 -5 3 5 5 . 6-10pm. 10- 1 0 _________________________________ M ONSTER JEEP 4X4 3 5 " Hawgs new to p Skxiocker lift V 8M F. M ust sell $ 2 5 0 0 4 8 2 -9 2 1 3 Stuort. 10-18_________ 1949 CHEVY PICK-UP. N e w m otor, not running $ 8 5 0 ,4 5 2 -7 5 3 6 . 9 -2 9 1985 N IS S A N PICK-UP, excellent co nd i­ tion, co ld air, A M /F M ra d io, 8 2 ,0 0 0 high w a y miles. $ 4 2 5 0 O B O 3 2 7 - 3144. 1 0 - 4 _________________________ 1987 JEEP WRANGLER, crem e w /to n , soft-top, 5-speed, excellent condition, new b a b y forces sel. 4 4 8 -3 7 9 6 . $ 8 5 0 0 . 10-4__________________________________ 1984 B ronco II. Low m ileage, 4-speed w / O D , 4X4, A M /F M , AC. Excellent condi- tion. 8 6 9 0 0 . 836-2 11 0 .1 0 -5 ____________ 70 — Motorcycles H O N D A 4 5 9 - 3 3 1 1 Full Selection o f Motorcycles & Scooters Check on O ur '8 7 c io s m u r WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6509 N. LAMAR O M O u n t Al Brandi e Fectory trained mechanics e Free estimates e Cleanest pre-owned bikes around e Discount Parts & Accessories CYCLE SALES 6301 n a 454-1822 ( p d f e ) N o rth st i C y c le s s y j y A e £ g £ 5 5 t t L ftp e Pick-up * D e B v e ry 1981 OLDS O M E G A , 5 7 ,0 0 0 miies, e x­ cellent condition $ 2 ,0 0 0 . 12-19 1972 FORD M averick, 7 9 K miles, at, ps, AM , new radiator. Runs g ood. $ 5 0 0 . 4 7 2 -6 6 2 9 6-8 pm . 12-19______________ '7 4 V W Superbeatie, blue. Excellent co n ­ dition. Rebuilt engine N e w clutch. $1900. C oll C a ro l 4 6 7 -7 7 5 4 . 12-19 1984 PON TIAC Sunbird. S tandard, A /C , A M /F M tope, 2 4 ,0 0 0 miles. Call 4 4 8 - 4 0 8 5 . 8 3 5 0 0 , o r best o ffe r 12-19 1985 FORD LTD C row n V ictoria Excel­ lent condition $ 2 0 0 0 b e lo w blook. $ 5 4 0 0 .34 3 -1 16 01 2 -1 9 ________________ 1974 V W Thing convertible, 55K, im m ac­ ulate, ong in al finish excellent m echani­ cal condition, extras. $ 3 ,4 0 0 /n e g . 2 6 7 - 2 9 9 6 .9 -2 9 ___________________________ '8 6 M U STA N G IX, AC, 2 ye ar w a rranty, stero cassette, options, g re y in te rio r/e x ­ terior, excellent condition, 2 7 ,0 0 0 miles. $6150 negotiable. 3 4 5 -8 9 7 2 message. 9 -3 0 _________________________________ 1968 A M C Javelin 6 cyl, 2 dr., A /C , runs w ell Clean in ten or a nd exterior. Please call 4 4 2 -8 9 3 6 . 9 -3 0 Z ge Colt. BACK TO SCHO O LI 1979 D odge d, w ill fin 5 5 ,0 0 0 miles, AC, standard, w ill finonce, $ 4 9 5 d ow n. 4 4 5 -0 5 8 3 . 9 -3 0 D ________ 1976 Datsun B-210. Economical & in ex­ pensive. W ill finonce, $ 4 9 5 dow n. 5 2 6 E O h o rf 4 4 5 -0 5 8 3 . 9 - 3 0 0 ________ ____ 7 2 V W BUG. N e w p oin t jo b, 4 5 ,0 0 0 ong in al miles. Runs g o o d . $ 15 00 o r best o ffe r Call 4 7 9 -8 0 0 4 o r 1 -8 5 6 -2 5 4 2 . 10-4__________________________________ 1982 FORD Escort. G o o d shape, 6 0 ,0 0 0 miles. Everything w orks perfect. $1650. 4 4 2 -4 3 8 4 .1 0 -5 _______________________ 1979 CHEVY M A U B U station w o go n $ 8 7 5 coll John Laurie, w o rk # 4 7 8 - 7 2 8 6 o r H o m e # 2 8 2 -5 5 6 8 . 10-5 1980 M A Z D A 6 2 6 $ 10 00 o r best o ffe r 10-5_____________________ 3 3 5 -6 8 0 7 1969 B M W 1600 MO DEL, dependable, g o o d ra d ial tires, new McPherson struts, asking $ 2 ,0 0 0 . Chris 4 5 2 -5 5 3 2 .1 0 -5 1985 RENAULT ENCORE 2 8 ,0 0 0 miles, A C 2 doors, irvory. C oll evenings 4 4 7 - 0169. $ 2 ,9 0 0 9-15 1923 FORD T-BUCKET roadster, 3 5 0 Chevy 7 8 0 H olley 3 5 0 Irons 411 re a r end too cooll. Paseo M o to r Co. 4 7 7 - 3301 $ 4 9 5 0 .1 0 -6 ____________________ 1984 H O N D A LX fully b o d e d , tinted windows, 331-6178. $ 6 2 0 0 , neg oh o ble 10-6 im m aculate condition. Call tires, new 1977 BUICK Skytork n e w brakes, PS/PB, A M /F M , 3 8 9 3915 Leave metsoge. 9-15__________________ 1973 CADILLAC. LO A D E D . Leather inte­ rior. N e w tires. Batte ry altem ate r $ 9 5 9 . 3 2 3 -9 0 2 3 . Leave message to M ichael. 12-19 _______________________ '7 9 CHEVY N O V A , rebuilt engine, A /C , g o o d condition. M ust sell ($980), Lee 4 6 2 -2 8 3 6 10-6______________________ 6 4 CHEVY Im polo Super Sport, 4 -speed, latter m ochine $ 2 9 5 0 Pasco M o to r Co. 4 77 -3 3 0 1 1 0 6 tires, battery, 7 3 CADILLAC. Loaded le ath er in terior, n ew altem ate r, $ 9 5 9 . 4 5 9 -1 9 7 9 . Leave message to M ichoel. 12-19______________________________ 1981 0 - 5 Jeep Laredo. Block. 4-speed, 6 -c y tn d e r Soft and b ikin i to p . $ 4 9 5 0 , n egotioble 4 5 4 -7 9 8 4 .9 -1 6 ____________ 1978 DATSUN 2 8 0 Z Block on block. C o ld A . W ill finonce, 4 4 5 -0 5 8 3 . 10-7H 1982 FORD G R A N A D A W a g o n 63K miles. PS/AT/AC g re a t shape, g re a t car, $ 2 8 5 0 2 5 0 - 2 8 4 6 ,1 -8 5 8 -4 7 2 2 .12-19M 1970 FORD M U S T A N G , 3 0 2 V 8 PS, AT, UT orange. M a g nu m 5 0 0 w heels, g o o d condition. $ 18 00 4 4 3 -6 4 2 9 .1 2 -1 9 1979 MERCURY CAPRI, lo w milage, A /C , A M /F M n ew tire. 4 54-6176.10-11 1980 TO YOTA CELICA Supra Silver, o l i - M m ileage,rum g re at. C o l M o ru f 4 4 2 -6 3 0 8 $ 2 5 0 0 M H M M N.10- " '.v DATSUN 2 0 0 $ 2 9 0 0 N e go tia ble. C o l 3 8 5 -4 5 4 8 10- 1982 W V 1983 H O N D A CIVIC 1500S. 2 -d o o r, 5- speed, air, g o o d condition $ 2 8 5 0 . 4 6 9 - 0 3 9 2 , trades welcome. 10-18H 1978 TO YOTA CO RO LLA 2 -d o o r hatch- bock, 5-speed, A /C . Runs g o o d , $1200. 4 7 6 -2 7 1 9 .10-18H_____________________ 1977 PLY VOLARE W o g o n . Please call Roy o r Bov 3 2 9 -1 04 1 .1 0 -5 _____________ 1985 SUBARU Station w a g o n DL. 5- speed, A /C , A M /F M stereo, g oo d condihon $ 3 2 5 0 /o ffe r 3 8 9 -0 6 7 6 ,2 8 2 - 5 3 4 9 . 9 -2 9 H _________________________ 1978 M U STA N G . AIR, outo, 6 cyl, 8 ,0 0 0 miles on engine. Rebuilt transmission. $ 1 8 0 0 /nog. 2 8 2 -1 03 4 .1 2 -1 9 ___________ 1982 O LD S CUTLASS Supreme Diesel, 4 - doo r, co ld AC, stereo w e take trade-ins. 4 4 5 - 0 5 8 3 .9 -3 0 H _____________________ 1980 CHEVY Citation, AC, 4-speed, runs 4 7 7 - w e ll. A skin g $ 1 ,0 0 0 , neg. 8 4 2 7 . 10-4__________________________ 1985 FORD THUNDER8IRD. 5 .0 V8 Loaded, cleanl $ 4 9 5 0 . 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rood. 4 50-0128. 10-4F______________ BEST BUY 1987 Nissan Centra 5s-4d, A M /F M cassette, air, excellent co n d i­ tion 21,000 M l, $ 7 ,5 0 0 . 4 4 3 -5 9 8 4 leave message 10-25K ________________ 1964 CHEVY BISCAYNE 4 -d o o r, 6 cyl, 5 0 ,0 0 0 miles, g o o d condition, $15 00 . 4 5 2 -9 8 9 4 .1 0 -4 _______________________ 74 CA DDY LIM OU SINE, m idn ig ht blue, w /le a th e r & ve lo u r interior. 8 0 ,0 0 0 miles, n ew tires, g re a t c ondition. $ 4 ,8 0 0 (8 1 7)641-3840 10-5_______________ 1964 FORD G a la xy 5 0 0 Rebuilt 2 8 9 en­ gine, com plete n e w bra ke system, no dents, inspected. Janet 2 58 - 8 2 1 7 ,4 7 7 -5 8 5 2 e xt 2 6 2 J0-5H licensed, 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos I BUY I ^FOREIGN CARS M 1111 M u s b o m w t A u l t S a l e s B I i 4 5 9 *4 8 7 5 * 31flO Q yaa»-4t—.M.olUT J 1984 TO YOTA CELICA G T-coupe. lo o d - ed 5 speed excellent condition. 4 3 ,0 0 0 miles. Price reduced. 5 ,7 0 0 346-5311. 12-19________________________ _ 1985 DO D G E D A Y TO N A . Turbo-Z. Sun­ roo f, 5-speed, lo ad e d, sharp, excellent condition. $ 2 0 0 0 b e lo w b o o k $ 4 9 0 0 . 343-1160.12-19_______________________ 1979 CORVETTE. Block, red leather, L- 82, autom atic, glass T-tops, o n ly 6 5 ,0 0 0 miles, $ 7 9 5 0 n e g otia fce . 4 7 8 -5 5 6 4 9- 29 ___________________________ _ 1978 V W BUS o n g in a l ow ne r. R um fine. N eeds some w ork. CaR 1 -8 6 9 -1 0 7 9 o f- t e r 6 . 10-3____________________________ 1978 S C IR O C C Q N e w KYB d to d a , Tayo tires, b ro k e t G o o d e n p n e a n d m - terior. Records. $ 1 2 0 0 .4 7 7 -7 4 3 4 10-5 1978 V W RABBIT, runs g o o d , $ 9 0 0 . 4 9 5 - 9 2 9 5 .1 0 4 1986 CORVETTE, fully loaded, outom otic, excellent condition, firemist re d / natural leather $ 1 9 ,9 5 0 coH 4 4 8 -3 8 4 4 o r 2 5 5 - 10-6__________________________ 1289 MUST SELL (genuine reasons). 1972 V W cam per van. G o o d condition. O ffers p laced a t Riverside Q uarters ca r-p ark 100 1$ IH 3 5 RiversideDrive. 10-6 1985 B M W 318i, d iam on d black, new michelins, g a ra g e kept, o rig in al ow ner, fully lo ad e d, $12,750. Scott, 4 52 -2 81 3 . 10-7_______________________________ 1 9 8 3 V W R o b b it - s t o n d o r d w / A .C .,5 0,0 0 0 miles. Runs G re at! O n ly n e e d s $ 2 , 2 0 0 3 2 8 - 5 8 0 4 10-7_________________________ c o sm e tics. 1976 FIAT SPIDER convertible, red, n ew top, paint, Aw esom e cor. $ 3 9 5 0 . Fred 4 51-2810 doy, 4 4 2 -3 9 0 1 10-10___________________________ rubber. 1983 A C C O R D -4 d o o r, 5 speed, e xcel­ lent condition, 4 2 ,0 0 0 miles, $ 4 ,2 0 0 . 3 4 6 -5 2 5 2 .1 0 -1 0 ______________________ 1985 TO Y O TA CELICA GTS, Lift bock. Low miles, w o rro n ty, sunroof, excellent. B elow B ook $ 9 2 5 0 4 6 9 -0 8 6 3 Nights. 10-10__________________________ '8 4 N IS S A N 3 00 Z X Tee tops, white, b ra w n leather, 5-speed loaded, d igita l dash, o n ly 3 4 ,0 0 0 mi. O ffe r. 8 3 7 -5 6 0 3 12-19_________________________________ 1983 DATSUN 280ZX 5-speed, T-tops. A /C , A M /F M , lo w mileage, A lp ine A la rm system. $ 7 ,5 0 0 4 5 3 -1 3 5 9 10-12 1982 DATUSN 310-G X A /C , autom atic, A lp ine stereo, g o o d miloge, $ 2 ,5 0 0 . 4 7 2 -7 0 0 2 a fte r 5pm. 10-11_____________ 1973 V W BUG. k -built engine. Runs and looks great. $16— 1 O B O . A fte r 5pm o n d w eekends 4 7 3 -8 30 3 .1 0 -1 1 1982 FIAT 2 0 0 0 Spider, red convertible. E xcellen t $ 4 , 2 5 0 0 3 6 5 (h o m e ) Low m ileo g e 3 2 8 - ______ c o n d itio n . 3 2 9 - 2 5 0 1 ( w o r k ) 10-13 1 984 M A Z D A 6 2 6 LX. Looded. A ll o p ­ tions. Excettent condition. $ 6 8 0 0 4 5 9 - 3 4 6 5 10-13________________________ 1 98 6 TO Y O TA CO RO LLA GTS hatch b a c k . A /C , A M /F M s te ro , g re a t co nd itio n. U n de r wholesale $ 6 4 5 0 441- 4 193. 10-17K________________________ 198 3 M A Z D A RX7 GSL. Sunroof, leather seats, stereo cassette, equalizer 2 ,0 0 0 b e lo w b o o k $ 3 9 9 5 , 3 39 -1 4 4 6 10-17K 1973 V O LK S W A G E N ca m p e r-W e st- pholto, w hile, ad accessories, new starter, dutch, distributor. Excellent en- qine $1450. 4 8 0 -9 5 4 6 . 10-18 1987 RED C A M A R O 1 4,000 miles. $ 9 0 0 0 o ne ow ner. W o rk 4 6 3 -2 0 1 5 B orbora 4 4 5 -7 3 1 4 .1 0 -1 8 _____________ 7 9 RED 280ZX , n ew tires, o nd a ll re­ ceipts $ 3 ,0 0 0 . 0 8 0 . 4 8 0 -8 8 9 0 a fte r­ noons, lea ve me u o g e . 10-12____________ 1985 M A Z D A 626LX . Touring Sedan, 4DR, 5SP0, A C A M -F M ca ssette, cruise, m aroon, b eautiful. $ 6 4 9 5 , 4 5 3 -6 3 5 5 . 10-19 ____________________________ '81 V W RABBIT S, gas, 5-speed, stere o , o rig in a l o w n e r, A C, excettent condition. $ 2 0 0 0 .3 3 9 -8 4 9 9 . 9 -2 9 _____________ 1977 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, g o o d co n d i­ tion, h a rd -ta p a n d soft-top, $ 1 5 0 0 O B O 9 -2 9 _______ 4 4 2 -4 6 5 1 le ave m e u o g e . 1981 M A Z D A RX-7 GSL m odel. S unroof, $ 3 0 0 0 .3 3 1 -5 5 3 2 .9 -2 9 _______________ 1 980 V O IK S W A G O N SCIRO CCO S, 5 - speed. A C A M / F M A lp ine ster eo .red, 10- lo w miles, $ 2 3 0 0 C o l 3 2 7 -3 1 4 4 3_______________ 1983 D A TS U N 2 8 0 Z X L ow m tteage 4 5 9 -8 6 5 2 . 12-19___________________ _ NOTICE TJ'S CYCLE MOVED TO 6215 N. Lomar. Check out our grecrt pnc­ es on used bikes, scooters, ports & acces­ sories. Professional service a l reasonable prices. 453-6255 10-6 8 7 N IN J A óOORXMint condition. N e ed s to b e seen. Built in ro d ar Best o ffe r 4 7 8 - 8 0 4 3 . 9 -2 9 ___________________________ 1985 H O N D A N ig h lh a w k 4 5 0 , o rig in o l ow ner, new $10 00 Coll 4 54 -1 7 9 3 tires, w e ll m aintained, 9 -2 9 __________ MUST SELL H onda A e ro 8 0 S cooter Two seater, excellent cond itio n, $ 7 0 0 / best offer. Leave message, 4 6 9 -0 8 7 7 Leslie. 9 -3 0 ___________________________ '8 6 H O N D A SCOOTER 150 Deluxe, g o o d condition. Asking $ 7 0 0 , o r best o ffe r 4 74 -5 20 1 , doy; 9 2 6 -9 4 7 6 , night Leeove messoge. 10-4__________________ '8 4 H O N D A XL 250R. Excellent co nd i- tion, $ 7 5 0 C oll 4 6 9 -9 1 9 9 10-4 '8 5 H O N D A ELITE, windscreen, radio, lu g g a g e com partm ent, olarm , excellent condition. Asking $1295. 8 3 4 -8 4 7 1 , a fte r 9pm . 9 -3 0 80 — Bicycles B N S C IO S E O U R ^H iwtrnthevkntl MMBBmm BUCK’S BIKES 4 4 1 1 t o r t n o d o l e 924*21 VHA. SSC. ten fap , Decuie i wetrn m s BICYCLE SALE! tnpy lO w f r p n o w a n a m e m a y wm - Caiesi n fk M . j h u i aegAgegAe# aep. v ic e fr o m s m a l b r ie s h o p . M o u n ta in D ia m o n d - B rie s, C m m n , 1 0-spt b o c k , C e n iu r io a C y d e - P r o GT. S tu ­ d e n t s p e c k i C y d e - P r o 12 s p e e d d t y - tra d b r ig , $ 1 7 0 . S o u th A u s tin B icycles, 2 2 1 0 S o u th 1st S t, 4 4 4 * 0 0 0 5 . 9 - 3 0 21' FUJI 12-speed. Perfect condition. $ 2 0 0 .4 7 7 -8 2 3 4 .1 0 -5 _________________ M fY A T A 310 2 2 ' 12 speed. Light we igh t fram e, Shim ono Paid $ 4 0 0 , o d o r * $ 2 0 0 , negotiable. (1)847- 3619. 9 - 2 9 _________________________ components. PUEGEQT PX-10E Reynolds 531 th ro u g h ­ fram e. Brooks professional out. 2 5 " seat, ta b u la n , strong lig h t crowtaet, 2 lb s . Ja ro n 2 7 2 - 17 9 - 2 t . ___________________________ Cod condition. $t-21F________________ C O N V E N IE N T 2-1-1 hardwood floors, blinds, AC's, ton, yard. 9 0 6 E 54th (west of I.H.35) $ 4 0 0 4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 10-21F HYDE PARK 3-V/5, CA/CH, at appfi- on if shut- 7* 4 BR/2BA. Near Honcodt, shuttle, living, dining, study, fireplace, bookshelves, CA/CH, appftances, fenced yard. $850/ mo. 459-9141. 9 30 _________________ EXTRA LARGE 2-1, aH opplionces, W /D connections, fenced yard, fans. $495/ mo, 8917 Glenn In 250-9618 or 331- 9 39 8 10-10_________________________ LARGE 3-1, CA/CH, hardwood floors, fenced, carport, W/D, bus, quiet. 1201 W 40th $ 5 5 0 255-6778.10-4________ 3BR-1BA CA/CH, gas stove, dishwasher, new carpet, fenced backyard, 10 mm drive to UT, $425/month. 345 -2 4 0 9.10 - 4H__________________________________ LARGE C O L O N IA L house has upstairs vacancy. Immaculate 1-1, CA/Ch, UT shuttle, deck, wooded area. $295/month. 442-3030.10-12 LARGE CARPETED room. Private en­ trance, bath, refrigerator. N o kitchen. 38th St. Quiet individuals, no pets, no loose. ABP 453-5417 9 -2 9 N __________ MATURE N O N -S M O K E R . Private room, share kitchen. Quiet, pelless - V? block to UT $160 - $200/month Lease - share bills 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 9 -3 0 N ______________ $220/FALl. ABP 2 blocks UT. Newty re­ modeled dorm - style efficiency. Park­ ing, CA/CH, laundry. 2 5 0 2 Nueces, 4 74 - 2365, 476-1957 10-5D_______________ NEAR UT Law School on RR shuttle. Fur­ nished room $195 ABP CA/CH. Share bath 3310 Red River, 4 7 6 -3 6 3 4 .10-17F 435 — Co-ops L P O NEAT HOUSE A L L B I L L S A L L M E A L S O SU N D EC K S C O - E D P U T S T ! all from $230/mo. Pre-leasing for fall, loo! ICC CO-OPS 510 W. 23rd 476-1957 F R E N C H H O U S E ! $ 2 K U I ) 1 1 1 1 1 111 I »’ < * ■ i n All hills ( i r e a t meals 4 blocks I I 478-6586 BEAUTIFUL, historic home 2 blocks UT. Quiet, studious, relaxed Doubles $ 29 3 - $300; singles $ 3 2 5 -$ 3 5 4 Indudes ALL food, fofo. C ol soon! Hekoui Co-op, 478 -6 7 6 3,19 0 9 Nueces, or col ICC Co- ops: 476-1957 510 W 23rd 10-60 ECLECTIC, CREATIVE, fun, 3 Mocks from UT! Dekoous veggie cuisine, pool, great housemates. Doubles from $285; singles from $357. A l food and b i s included. House of Commons, 2610 Rio Grande, 476 7 9 0 5 10-6D Centennial's Best Largest 2-2 comer location, second floor! 2 patios, all appliances, fireplace, pool, under ground parking. Johnson & Co. 452*4300 10-3Z VERY LARGE TOWN HOME 3 -2 and 2-1 Vi, oH appliances, ceiling fans, fireploce, fenced polio, pool, pet O .K. $ 3 7 5 -$ 4 4 5 . N e o r W illiam C o n ­ non ond IH -35. 346-4392 Luxurious Sophisticated 2 bedroom 2 both apartments. C o n ­ veniently located in the sought after W e rt C am pus area. Amenities include m icrow ave oven, ceiling fans, w asher o n d dryer, fireplace, balcony a nd covered parking. Cad so o n for best selection! 4 7 6 -8 5 9 0 . 9 -2 9A ★ Convenient Location ★ 1 Bedroom e gos, w ater poid e 2 pools e earth tones e laundry facilities e on shuttle $ 1 9 0 .0 0 Co# M n Brey ownmr/agtnt 2 5 8 - 0 5 3 3 it ★ 10-28F BEST PRICES, QUALITY & LO C A T IO N West compus, Enfield, & Hyde Pork. Condos/houses CaH S E A N 478 -6 5 6 5 City Properties 10-10F E 31st B Speedway Reduced 2-2, fire­ ploce, W /D provided, ceiling Ian, mi­ crowave, security gate Amenities + + Elliott Systen 451-896410-11 P NICE C LEA N furnished 1 bedroom/1 bath, kitchen, living room, near compus 3 00 0 Guadalupe $295 2 5 5 -8 5 3 2 10- 3___________________________________ SHUTTLE STOP Loke Austin. 2-1 on En­ field onty $ 4 2 5 448 -3 7 3 7 Great C on­ dition 10-7 BEAUTIFUL N E W furnished or unfur­ n ished efficiency with b a lcony, clubhouse , tennis courts, 2 pools, close to UT shuttle Poddock Condos Janet 331-6599 after 6pm 9 -30 CLO SE-IN I 2-2 roommate plan, mi­ crowave, ceiling fan, only 4 blocks horn IF shuttle $ 3 5 0 Aportment Finders, 458- 1213 10-7H__________________________ DUPLEX N E A R UT 2 logre bedrooms. A/ C. W/D connections 1200 sq feet WoH-to waH corpet Va block to UT bus shuttle 4 6 7 -6 5 0 9 441-3411 10-10 6th Street! Live |ust off 6th street in this 1 - 1, ceikng fan, close to Sweetish Hill Bak­ ery only $250, Aportment Finders 458- 1213 10-12H_________________________ NUFF SAID! 1-1 new mirubknds on shuttle $22 5 Now! Apartment Finders 4 58 - 1213 1Q12H_________________________ W O W ! C LE A N 1-1 aH appkonces on shut­ tle only $ 2 5 0 Aportment Finders 4 58 - 1213 10-12H_________________________ TRAVIS G R E EN 2-2 a l oppfcances, mi­ crowave, ceikng torn, p o o l water/ gas poid $395. 1304 M anposa Centurion Properties. 3 4 5 -6 5 9 9 11-2F 410 — Fum. Houses LARGE C O L O N IA L house hos upstairs vacancy. Immaculate 1-1, CA/CH, UT shuttle, deck, wooded oreo. $295/monlh. 4 4 2 -3 0 3 0 10-12_____________________ 420 — Unf. Houses 709 W ELIZABETH Cute 2-1 w/new cor- pet, washer/dryer connections, $350/ mo. C o l Chns, Chobon & Assoc, 476- 4394. 9-29H ________________________ AVAILABLE N O W 3-1 house, near Seton shuttle, hardwoods, deck, sunroom. W / D included C a l J8G 441 -7 8 8 0.10-3J 360— Fum. Apts. ALL BILLS PAID $250 « Student Special. Large dean ef­ ficiency in Hyde Part Near shuttle, carpeted, draped, walk- in closet, built-in kitchen and pantry. 4000 Ave. A., 458-4511, 451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. 10-6A 370 — Uni. Apts. ABPÜ e 1 < 2 bsdrooms 90% dudent complex Close to campus on shunte route. River Oaks Apts. Medical Arts 6 Rad Rivar • 472-3914 e 10-19F _ 1 BEDROOM $260 Student Special. Quiet oparftnent in Hyde Pork. Built-in desk with bookshelves. Lots of dosets, carpeted, draped, gos/wcSer paid. 4307 Ave. A 450-1438,451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. 10-6A e LOOK! e 1 bodroom/oHkiency from $195.00 pool— poho — ofl-ftO tnooopof A Fountain Terrace Apartments 610 W 30lh/Monag«r #134 e 477-8858 e 10-25F side Apts. 1 & 2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished. Cleon & Quiet. All Utilities Paid. 478-2819 514 Dawson Road Just Off Barton Springs Rood 10-4N 2 5RD $ 27 5 IH 35 ot Copital W aio Shopping Center W alk to shopping, bus shuttle Minutes to downtown and UT. Gas, heat, ond water paid. Pool, laun­ dry, clean ond quiet 4 5 3 -5 7 6 4 10-3D UNIVERSITY AREA holt block from law school. Lorge 1 bedroom efficiency A * bUspoKt $ 2 7 0 441-1819 9-29________ G A R A G E APT 1 bedroom $200, water paid Beck & Co 458-1777 9 -3 0 M CLOSE TO U T norlti Efficiencies, $165 $ 1 7 5 1BR. $ 1 8 5 -$ 2 5 0 2 B R , $ 2 7 5 404 E 31st 477-2214, 453- $ 37 5 8812,452-4516 1Q-24H_____________ QUIET 1 B E D R O O M in OarksviHe tnplex $ 3 0 0 plus electricity 1632 Waterston 500 9 477 10-4___________ _____________ ,474-4899 furnished IMMEDIATE O C C U P A N C Y available Oct 1 Sublet charming, private partially furnished 1-1, grey decor top floor, cor tier, ceding fon, skylight $300/month 1700 Nueces. Betino 474-0117, Mtchoel 251-9017 (message) 10-5_____________ 370 — Uni. Apts. )nh n B a rkle y C o m p a n y U .T. A R EA Q U A R TER S I nufur affordable hou»r\ ihipltifi iin.l apartments Win/ with «.',■ A ndy Bumngton, |o*A 590 — Tutoring 2707HEM H I U I U K At27lhA< jadalupt M — f c , n l I t n r L I n n T] r runung 472-3210 472-7677 4 7 2 -6 6 6 6 H o u s e o f \ \ \ T IJ T O R S W PRCcESSIONAL TUTORING ALL SUBJECTS OPEN 7 DAYS/WK S U N - T H U R S TIL M ID N IG H T 8 1 3 W . 2 4 t h ( T r l - l o w e r s ! * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * » ♦ ♦ * ♦ * * * Y e s!! It c a n in c r e a s e y S u r le a m - jn g c a p a c it y b y m o r e t h a n 2 0 0 % . W e n a v e t o p q u a lit y tu­ t o rs in a lm o s t a ll subjects. AHas Tutoring Service 397-3031 *************** *********** 10-4F CONFIDENTIAL, PRIVATE tutoring in col­ lege algebra, calculus, physics, pascol, ■oisfics & economics, C o l 251-8626. Reasonable rates. 10-7H EXCELLENT TUTOR -moth, physics, Span­ ish: 111 make these fun and easy- $10/ hour. KeBy 474-7801 9-29____________ M ATH TUTOR, M A in mathematics. 3 yrs TA experience. $10/hr. CaH Brigit 4/7- 1 25 9 .9 -3 0 0 _________________________ 610 — Misc. — Instruction LONGHORN COPIES • R e s u m e s • T h e s e s • T e rm P a p e r s • W o r d P r o c e s s in g • B i n d i n g • L a m i n a t i n g • L a s e r P r i n t i n g • K o d a k ■ C o p i e s 2 5 1 8 G u a d a l u p e 476-4498 A + TYPING SERVICE 4 0 7 W . M * R B I Professional Proofreading Spelling. Punctuation. Usage Guaranteed Correct Special Discount Rate For Revised Theses/Dtssertattons 4 7 2 - 7 9 6 6 3 3 5 - 7 9 0 3 i IALWORDFROCESSMG • ra w 1 3 * ft. 8 Blocks S o t Campus 476-9290 WadoRtltorlaaal S P E E D R E A D IN G 8 hr. course Momtngs. sventnps or wootiende. MM double or triple your reeding speed! Austin Learning Canter 331-0454 H o u s e O l| % t T U T O R S i V T Y P I N G & R E S U M E S O P E N 7 D A Y S SU N -T H U tS "Til M IDNIG H T 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 8 1 3 W. 2 4 t b (T r i- T o w e rs ) r T T T T T v ▼ v » » SERVICES W O O D S T Y P I N G * W O R D PRO CESSIN G ANNOUNCEMENTS 650 — M o v in g - H a u lin g 510-** Entertainment- Tickets ABBEY M O VERS: absolutely professional piano moving, households, offices, apartments. Specials to Dallas, Houston, etc 479 -9 3 0 1.10-2SH________________ LaserWriter II Printing Macintosh / MS DOS 472-6302 2200 Guadalupe E % $ $$$ WE FAYtOP DCXLAI $$$ Ostrt ehte yeur wiwklw weeyl W» p w *w e for csenjewrtry, gold «le. Traes MsnwSeeel GeU kte. M A K l a w . 3204)191 30th & N. Lamar 320-0191 10-11f KMPLOYMINT 790— Part tima NEED TO EARN STEADY INCOME NOW? Lomas Telemarketing is hiking for qualified individuals with ex­ cellent communication slalb to market premium credit cards na­ tionwide. WE GUARANTEE $6/ HR. Great atmosphere! Great people! Great hours! 9-1 M-F, 1- 5 M-F, or 5-9 M-Th and 9:30- 1:30 Sat. Apply in person at: 300 W. 5th St. Suite 840 MBANK PLAZA K M 1 D JC Penney Telemarketing Center Pwt fm i openingi for indMdnofti to tali CMtomer otóon for ootologiio MtckondhL LwplffgfE mult b i tédm tule between hours of 7:30 am-T14X> pm Mon.-Sat. Min. requirement per day 7:30 ant-6 * evening 3 pm-11 pm. R you «tfoy oWamm confuct and hovo eoeont lakphono voice Rw may be Rw job for you. The portflom of- for comptMwe nortino salary. dbcounfo poid training end aAar AppRoofloni ore being oocepfad om- 4 0 0 pm pm Mon.-fri. JC Penney Telemarketing Center 836-3786 12246 Runningbird Ln. fc Lamar) (Off Metric Blvd. between Burr 9 -3 0M Phlebotomist Needed W e a re lo o k in g f o r d e p e n d a b le part-time phle b oto m ist* to w o r k in o u r clinical in S outh Austin. W e p re fe r e x p e ri­ ence, but will train p e o p le interest­ e d in le a rn in g h o w to d r a w b lood. Ple a se call Lisa S u b ia at 4 4 7 - 2 6 6 3 ext. 4 3 3 if interested. ______________________________ 9 -3 0 0 re se a rch facility Accounting Clerk permanent part-time Experience with Modntodt computers and accounts payable Hours 1-5 pm M-F, $4.50/ hr. FORWARD resume or loiter of ¡ntorart with phone number and return oddree to: Accounting dork 8303 MoPoc Suite 218 Austin, TX 78759-8369 9-30 $5.00 Hr. $5.00 Hr. ST U D EN TS C O N CER T TICKET Part time evening positions Apply: 5 5 5 5 N . Lam ar Bldg. C - 1 0 7 1-5 pm SALES H M D Attention Student jobs available. Flexible hours, near school. Earn $5-7/hr. in your spare time. JU D A S PRIEST • Sode - Elton John - Rob- ert Ptont - Randy Travis - Sonto no - George Michael - Scorpions - J. Leno - UT Football -— Showtime Tickets - 478- 9 9 9 9 9-30E_________________________ G E O R G E M ICH AEL in Dallos October 14. Row 7 on Arena level. Coll Tim at 459-6401.10-5______________________ ELTO N JO H N this weekend-Ddlosll 2 Great seats r- airplane tickets $150 448-1214 GoryQeove message) 9 -29 BUY/SELL OU-TX tickets. Student and date tickets. Best pnces on compusl CoH 4 7 4 -5 6 8 6 10-4______________________ AIR LINE TICKET TO O U W EE K EN D O N L Y $38. Round trip ticket leaving Friday morning ond returning Sunday morning. C o l M a ry 288-4/66/442- 7833. 10-5D________________________ 530— Travel Transportation HURRY! Available «poce for UT skiers is fiing fart on Sunchase Tours' Seventh Annual Jan­ uary Colegiala Winter Ski Breaks to Steam­ boat, Vak, Winter Pork ond Keystone, Colora­ do. Trips indude lodging lifts, porfíes ond picnics for five, six or seven days from only $156! Round trip Rights and group charier bus transportation available. C ol tol free 1- 800-321-5911 for more information and res ervations TOOAY! ___________________________ 10-27 SKI N* AUSTIN January trip. Ski Brecken- .ridge Jan 3-8, lifts lodging 5209/per­ son, w a ll to lifts, night life from condo's. CoR 452-6662,467-0610. 10-10 550 — Licans d Child Cara W ESTLAKE PRE-SCH O O L needs part time 4 y r old teacher. Hours 7:45am- 12:00pm. CoR Diono 327-1144 10-5D $49 MOVE-IN SPECIAL 2 WEEKS FREÍ RSNT Starting at $ 2 4 0 a Eft., 12 Bedrooms ■ i t Townhoui* Unfls • Newty Remodeled e M e n * Womens Sauna |e ExercfoeRoom*Equipment e On U.T. Shuttle e Swimming Pool e 4 Laundry Areas e Off Street Parking e ClubhouM e O n ! ttanogemei Maintenance C o a » J o i n U t ! M l A M I G O 4 5 0 5 D u v a l St. 4 5 4 -4 7 9 9 r C L O S E TO S H U T T L E STAFFORD HOLM: \i \R I'M r v - 2-1’s starting a? $ 3 2 5 1 -1 s starting at . $ 2 0 0 X I v a n lo e V illage á p a r t a t n l B - h T ra v is — N o t T o P r a k Quiet N t * l r- — IMFraGsHSta- 4 ra t — I a r a d o * — Escdkral It ISM E M M l 0t 4 4 1 -4 3 7 5 740 — Bicycle Repair Best Prices in Parts a n d Services Parts for Japanese bikes and scooters. W e can get any parts you need. Austin Cycle Salvage 4 6 2 6 Burnet Rd. 453-9809 11-1M 750 — Typing America's Oldest-Largest PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICE JOB WINNING! RESUMES 89/up Expert Oertgnelyptng Printing m b You Wah • Job BanxnotleWerwAppHcaitor» e Mating Campaign* SF 17ft e M tory Corwerslom e turnea Proponte ft Reports e Fiee tnterrtewUteeme Updating B I * W. Ben VMM#* M IS Burnet #J8M 83*4477 338-7838 W O R D P R O C E S S IN G - low rales. Fort service. Pickup, delivery. Karen 331- 1792.10-6___________________________ A SA P TYPING/W ord processing, popers, theses, dissertation, moilouts, with a per­ sono! touch. $1.65/poge. Candace 451- 4885.. 10-14 RENTS START AT $255 r 1 I I I I C a t fo r S f Ú 9 I I L A R G E 1 and2Badrooms Apartments and Townhomes I i • Fireplaces a Pool • Hot Tub I a On CR Shuttle I NOW I LEASING! I Irongate I I Apartments I I 454-2636 ^ CALL NOW! ^ I'D LIKE TO TEND YOUR BUSINESS on my IBM word processor. Call 472-2536 McCall Office Service 9-30F 346-615010-28M UNIVERSITY TYPING 473-2948 $2-$3/pg. RUSH JOBS ANYTIME Resumes $10. Highest print quality. Spelling guaranteed correct. 7 days a Parking. UT area at 610 W. 30th Street # 10 2 . $ 2 . 0 0 O F F W /T H IS A D _______________________________ 10-6H W A N TED -TO HIRE: T W O o r M O R E N EAT, C L E A N , R E S P O N S IB L E people to selí high quality bakery items from foo d cart in 2 3 0 0 block of G uadalupe. H ours to be covered are 9 :3 0 -3 :3 0 p.m. C hoose yo u r ow n portion - m orning o r afternoon. Salary plus commission Call Jim or Diane 4 7 8 - 5 7 0 0 9-30 N EA R C A M P U S - Full/part time. TYPIST (45 + wpm). BOOKEEPER (we train). R U N N ER (your car). O D D JOBS. Appli­ cations 9om-4pm.... 4 08 W 17th. 10-6C M ILLIE'S W O R D Processing. Papers, theses, dissertations, moilouts, transcrip­ tion, proofreading. 15 years experience South Austin 280-6304. 10-14M TELEMARKETING P O SIT IO N S available two blocks from campus. Evening shifts 20/hrs. per week, $5-10/hr. CaH Tony at 477 -3 8 0 8 10-5______________________ TOP QUALITY Typing/Word Processing. Free spelling check, campus pick-up delivery poge. 482-i $1.50 poge 4 82-8552. ' ' .10-11 JMc P R O F E SSIO N A L word processing. W e guarantee quality work at the low­ est prices. 15 years experience, 451- 0 9 6 6 .10-24H________________________ 760 — Misc. Services ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Dance Dimensions The Sound & Light Company Professional Mobile DJ. Service 389-1403 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ______________________________10-10C AUTO INSURANCE Low cost no money down! SR-22, Life Insurance, renters in­ surance, mobile home & bond insurance. 9 2 9 -3 9 2 0 or 92 9-3 988 JSB & Assoc. Inc. Austin, TX 78721 _________________________ 10-24F FRESHMAN/SOPHS. Need more Finan­ cial A id? Free information. Nationwide Student Services, 601T SE 8th, Morton, Tx _______________ 79346.10-3 GRADUATE STUDENTS needed for no- tetalung in business and natural science classes. Flexible hours, must type. Para- digm, 4 7 2 -7 9 8 6 .9-30H ______________ G Y M N AST ICS ASSISTANT, T&TH, 1-6. Experience helpful. 1-693-2087, ask for Linda or leave name & number on recor- der 9-29___________________________ ELEMENTARY EDU CATION major with transportation needed os companion and utter for 14 yeor old girt. C o l Suzy 3 3 9 -8 8 9 9 or 327-2218 9-30_________ B U SIN E SS NEED S port time assistant M o rn in g s M-F. Needs computer proofreading experience absolutely. Need cor. Call mornings. 327-7877. 9- 3 0 ____________________ $7.50/H O U R A N D up! Assirt advertising promotion for 473- 3 8 7 7 .10-19H__________________ _ local business. PART-TIME TEACHER aide position avai- oble Experience preferred, oH t w- uty Presbyterian C PC, 472-4984. 9-29 BEST JO B in town, train driver for Ziker Park Rail rood Must be mechanically in­ dined, able to lift lOOtbs, willing to help tickets and souvenirs, 478-8167. se* 10-6______________________________ PE R SO N TO W O R K w/lBmo - 2 V} yr old children in daycare. Experience pre­ ferred M -F 1:30-5:30 p m located in U.T. area. Child Craft Schools 4 7 2 -3 4 6 7 .9 - 30__________________________________ C PA N E E D S JR/SR undergraduate / graduate to help in general accounftna ond tax w ork Pay $5-6/hr. 263- 5 82 8 9-29 The ultimate in lifestyle! Roommate specials from *215“! * t Campus On West Campus Pool, Hot Tub, Sportscourt, security gates, sponsored activities, microwaves, washer & dryers, icemakers, ceiling fans, beautiful interiors... Call now - special ends soon! VILLA VALLARTA 322-9887 2505 Longview M N T A L 435 — Co-ops S A N D S T O N E I N II emm u. ofvjrQa * ; f - emtwec #*** td 5cm I Xjf*rr vrr Srac.ur*v ^mr'.jémo erwjecapetí Msk- ' ’>»• ** •* Introducing.... New Guild Co-op 2 blocks UT*ABP*Sundcck,,,Pets OK Big backyard*Great meals*Funfunfun $289 doubles, $369 singles N o w p r e l e a s i n g f o r f a l l l Call soon! 510 W. 23rd St. 472-0352 M o w P r m l a a t l n g l o r F a l l * S p r i n g RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. EFFICIENCIES! ST0NEW 00D VILLAGE APTS. 4558 Ave. A Large Efficiencies on UT Shuttle • Dec or at or C e llin g Fan* • M l n t ' b u n d s • Door-to-door tTath pick-up • Sp acio u s batti w dressing are a • On© b lo c k from Intram ural Fields • B ra nd new ca rp e t* In som e a p t* • P atio* B a lc o n ie s a v a ila b le • Newty redecorated! • Courtesy patrol service • On-slte m anage m en t • Lots of windows • Hyde Park a re a • On-site Laundry • Ste p save r kitchen Hurry! This special won’t last long! Page 14/THE DAILY TEXAN/Thursday, September 29,1988 EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part tim« 810 — Office- 870 — Medical ; Top-ranked Bruins stifle Horns threat Clerical_______ PERFECT PART TIME POSITION for mature, upper classman or grad student with interest in in­ surance. Near campus. 4 5 3 -6 6 4 8 10-3 AMERICA'S BEST WANTS YOU! Part time telemarketing person­ nel needed. Pleasant telephone voice, w e will train. Ideal for stu­ dents, evening hours available, call Judy at 3 3 9 -61 94. 9 - 3 0 H N E A R C A M P U S - Full/port time. TYPIST (45 + w p m ).B O O K K E E P E R (we train). R U N N E R (your cor). O D D JO B S. A p p li­ cations 9om-4pm.... 4 0 8 W 17th. 10-4C 820 — Accounting- Bookkeeping experience. TYPIST (45 + N E A R C A M P U S : FULL/Part time G ain b ook* w p.m ). R U N N E R (your car). O D D J O B S Applications 9a.m.-4p.m.... 4 0 8 W 17th St 10-14F_______________________________ 840 — Soles_________ Students I'm looking for som e­ one w h o wants to be in business for themselves on a parttime b a ­ sis and earn between $ 3 0 0 to $1,000 a/mo. Sellir E PA a p ­ proved water filters. It you have $195 to invest, m y 18 yr. old nafl com pany will finance the rest. Call Scott at 4 4 0 -9 6 0 9 . ___________________________________ 9 - 3 0 ATTENTION Students needed to earn ex­ tra income. W ork evening hours for public relations firm. Earn up to $K)/hr. Call 472-2536 9 -3 0 F ends. $7-$14/hour. shuttle. 45 1-27 71 ext 120. 9 - 2 9 FT/PT. N e a r UT night immediately. gra d u a te Senior N e e d e d level o r student preferrably in nursing, speech therapy or rehabilitation to w ork as a daytime com panion to as­ sist stroke victim. M ust be re­ sponsible, dependable and able to furnish at least 3 references. Duties will include answ ering phone, running errands an d as­ sisting with hom e therapy rou­ tine. Please call Kathryn Eaves or N a n c y Rhoads at 4 7 6 - 7 4 0 0 (day) o r 4 7 9 - 6 2 6 6 (night). 7 9 - 2 9 M 880 — Professional Kitchen Coordinator/ Mental Health Worker needed for N. Austin group hom e for developmentally dis­ abled adults. 3 2 hrs/week with full benefits. Pleasant w orking environment. in menu planning, healthy cooking, groce ry shopping, & kitchen o r­ ganization needed. Experience in mental health field helpful. $4.50-$5.00/hr. Send letter or resume to: Experience C.L.C. - North P.O. Box 4008 Austin, Tx 78765 10-4F C O M P U T E R G R A P H IC S artist needed Sm all computer ga m e publisher seeks full time SF/Fontosy artret w/professional d raw in g experience required. M ic ro ­ com puter graphics o plus. S a la ry to be 8-5pm. d eterm inea CoB 5 1 2 -3 2 8 - 9 - 2 9 D 5/8____________________ 0 2 8 2 . 890 — Clubs- Restaurants COCKTAIL SERVERS for DADDY'S High Energy Nightclub Call Anytime 837-1671 10-3 M A G G I E M A E ’S on 6th St seeks bor- bocks, security, bus people a n d buffet servers. M ust b e 21. A p p ly in person M o n d a y only 2-5pm . 3 2 5 E 6th St 9- 3 0 _____________________________________ N E E D W A IT P E R S O N cooks. M u st w ork nights a nd weekends. A p p ly G uadalupe. 9 - 3 0 D in person. Aletas Fajitas 1907 line a n d prep- C H I U S C H I N E S E R e sta u ra n t n o w wartperson A p pty in person at 73 1 0 Bum et Rd. 10-7 900 — Domestic- Hous hold BABYSITTER W A N T E D ocassional w e ek­ d a y s a n d / o r r e g u la r W e d n e s d a y afternoons. Norhtw est Hills. 3 4 5 -6 4 5 1 9 - 3 0 EMPLOYMENT 900 — Domestic- Household BABYSITTER F O R toddler d um in g after­ noons. T/TH- 12-5:30. References and reliable transportation required. 33 5 - 1679. Michelle. 10-3 L O V IN G P E R S O N w anted to help take care of 9 month old in W esflake. Room/ B oa rd provided. Sa la ry negotiable Ref­ erences requiredl Leave m essage 3 2 7 - 7601. 9 - 3 0 ____________________________ PART TIM E housekeeper, 5 -6 hrs/wk, mornings, must have car, experience, fluent English. $5/hr. 3 2 7 - 9 6 0 2 . 1 0 - 5 BU SINESS 930 — Business Opportunities $ SUPER MARKETINGS $ OPPORTUNITIES $ FOR ENTERPRISING INDIVIDUALS For individuals w h o are looking for out­ standing income, this |ob offers exciting opportunity for growth a nd success FUTURELINE ENTERPRISES 331-1727 1 0 -2 6 M JANITORIAL Start your own clean­ ing business now. A c­ counts and training available. $1000 total fee. Call 467-7073. 11-2D EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part time STUDENT FOR PARTTIME ADVERTISING SALES Minimum of ten hours weekly in sales activity in behalf of Peregrinus law school yearbook. Previous advertising sales helpful, but not required as we will train. Commission rate is 2 5 % . M ake application in TSP Building Room 3.210 from 9 am to 4 pm M o n ­ day through Friday. The University of Texas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirma­ tive Action employer. PEREGRINUS By RAY DISE Daily Texan Staff SAN ANTONIO — Ann Boyer to Daiva Tomkus. The combination worked well for UCLA and the Bruins worked it of­ ten as they com bined for 22 kills to in the lead the top-ranked team country over the fifth-ranked Lady Longhorns 10-15, 15-6, 15-10, 15-11. Texas (10-2) looked on the w ay to an upset as the Longhorns fought back from an early 2-0 deficit, tying the score on a kill from freshman Annette Garza, w ho played in a starting role for the first time and w as bolstered by the hom etow n crowd of approximately 2,300. The teams w ent back and forth as Tomkus kept the pace for UCLA (10-0) and D aw n Davenport did so for Texas. The Longhorns then took a 9-7 lead on tw o attack errors by Saman­ tha Shaver. Texas then poured it on behind two kills and a block by Davenport. Freshman Janine Grem- mel then sealed the gam e with a service ace. Game two started much the same as the tw o teams battled to an early 4-4 He, with Garza, w ho finished the match with nine kills and 10 digs, leading the Longhorn attack and Jenny Evans guiding the Bruins. UCLA then w en t on the offen­ sive. Behind Boyer, Tomkus and Shaver, the Bruins w en t on an 11-2 run that closed out gam e two. "Our serving w as poor in the first gam e and our setting was erratic," UCLA Coach Andy Banachowski said. "We just settled dow n and w ent to work." The Bruins may have settled d ow n, but that didn't mean Texas w as going to roll over and die. Sue Schelfhout blocked the first UCLA offering of gam e three and then directed Texas as the teams w ent back and forth unHl they w ere Hed at 10. UCLA once more became the ag­ gressor, scoring the gam e's last five points — tw o on kills by Tomkus. "We needed to pass, w e had som e major concentration break­ dow ns in our passing," Davenport said. "They were very good at plac­ ing the ball and exploiting our block and that just com es w ith experi­ ence." The Bruins took a 3-0 lead in gam e four behind the hitHng of Ev­ ans, Tomkus and Shaver. They in­ creased the lead to 7-1 before the Longhorns made a charge. Sophom ore Q uandalyn Harrell, w ho got off to a slow start, came off the bench to record tw o kills. Stacie Nichols com bined with Katie Salen to draw Texas even at eight. The teams evened the score at 11 before UCLA once again reasserted itself. Texas returns hom e to face UCLA in the Reebok Showcase II at 7:30 p.m . Thursday in the Erwin Center. BUY IT! Sm art S h o p p e rs R ead the T exan W a n t-A d s! EMPLOYMENT 850 — Retail H Y D E PARK. Student to pick-up/care for 2 children a ge s 10 + 7 in my home. Hrs. 2 4 5 -4:45 . 2/3 d ays per wk., $4/hr 4 5 3 - 0 0 6 8 , 2 4 4 -8 3 4 0 . 1 0 -7D RETAIL FORGET SOME­ THING » W a ld e n b o o k s and M ore is a fast growing upbeat division of the W aldenbooks chain offering a omplete selection of books . deo and book related products ompiifT;ented by an atmosphere ■ service to the customer W ald e n b o o k s and M ore is now hiring for our new location m Austin for the following positions Managers m-Training Assistant Managers Full Time and Pari T me Booksellers ano \ o n porary age agt mowlec ainees < ihould h ice Boc should t nted e> alar ar xnpetitiv nsive be mare in c w e one com prer chancet cess To learn more, apply s in person at our A u stin location on T hursday, S eptem ber 29 or Friday. Septem ber 30, W alden ­ b o o k s and More, Arboretum Market, Suite 35-D, 9722 Great Hills Trail, Austin, TX. Aru-qua opportunity employer n- f Waldenbooks Greeks, it’s your turn to be photographed for the 1989 Cactus Yearbook. Make an appointment with your organization NOW to have your photo taken on one of the following days. Septem ber 86-88 Acacia, Alpha Chl Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Alpha Phi, Alpha Phi Alpha, Beta Theta PI, Chi Phi, Delta Chl, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Delta Sigma Phi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon Septem ber 89-30, October 3 Alpha XI Delta, Chl Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Delta Phi Epsilon, Kappa Alpha, Kappa Alpha Psi, Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Omega Psi Phi, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Theta, Pi Kappa Alpha, PI Kappa Phi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon October 4-6 Delta Sigma Theta, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Delta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, PI Beta Phi, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Chi, Sigma Delta Tau, Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sigma Tau Gamma, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Theta Chi, Theta XI, Zeta Beta Tau, Zeta Psi, Zeta Tau Alpha Location: Texas Student Publications, 25th and Whitts, Rm 4.122 Studio boars: 8:30 a m - noon. 1 - 4:30 p.m. Sitting fee: graduating seniors and grad students - $3 50, others - $2 00 Cactus Yearbook Cany on Pick your company very carefully. Or you might not like the break-in period C o m p a n ie s have personalities. Just like people. S om e are trendy, s o m e are tra d itio n a l. S om e find s tre n g th in e s ta b lis h e d pa tte rn s, w hile o th e rs like to mix it up w ith the new and different. But each c o m p a n y e x p e c ts its em p lo ye e s to fit in w ith its ow n p a r tic u la r style and p h ilo s ­ ophy. S om e a lot m o re than others. A t C hevron, w e feel every em ployee re p re s e n ts a unique c o m b in a tio n of ta le n ts and experience . We individualize assign- m e n ts as m uch as p o s s ib le to take 1 / ad vant age of th o s e strengths. We like creative, a m b itio u s en t husi ast i c pe op l e They w o rk better. And they help us w o r k better. Think a b o u t this befo re you choose. Do you w a n t the c h a n c e to make a real im p a c t on your c o m p a n y 's fu t u r e 9 Or vice versa. Chevron Chevron Corporation More than a company More than a job FLEXIBLE H O U R S . $ 5 Porting de y, excellent driving record, 21 or oidor, heavy lifhng. S u r y 3 3 9 - 8 8 9 9 9 - 2 9 UPPER LEVEL accounting major needed for bookkeeping opening afternoons C o l Su zy 3 3 9 - 8 8 9 9 9 - 2 9 ______________ D R IV E R S N E E D E D to deliver for Incredi­ ble Flying Pizza. C a r necessary. V ery g o o d money. O n ly h ard workin rfcng, apply motivated individuals nee d to 4 7 4 - 1 7 0 0 . 9 - 3 0 ________________________ P EO PLE N E E D to distribute fliers. Paid doily N o c or necessary unlimited amount of w o rk ovodo b le 47 4 -1 7 0 0 . 9- 3 0 _____________________________________ N IG H T T IM E T E L E P H O N E survey $4/hr. 2 hrs/night, 4 nights/week. South Austin location, Tracy or Jerry 4 4 3 - 6 1 7 3 . 9 - 3 0 PART TIM E P R E -K IN D E R G A R T E N teoch- irig positions a voilabe in after school program. Professional enviroment, e xp e ­ rience preferred. Call for more inform a­ tion. Creative W o rld 8 3 7 - 8 8 4 0 2 0 2 3 Denton Drive. 10-3P M A D D O G & B E A N S a n d M o d D o g s D o g H ouse are hrring port time night workers, late night shifts may be re­ quired. A p p ly in person 512 W 24th after 5p.m. 9 - 3 0 H __________________________ A F T E R N O O N D R IV E R n eeded for South Austin office suppiy com pany. 4 4 3 - 0818. 9 - 3 0 ___________________________ S A L E S P O S IT IO N a vailoble with south Austin panting a nd office supply c om p a ­ ny Flexible hours, g o o d opportunity for M arketing majors. 4 4 3 -0 8 1 8 . 9 - 3 0 EXTRA I N C O M E ? O n -site apartment m anager/leasing agent. Regular hours required. Free rent a n d other extras. 10-4______________________ 3 2 9 - 0 2 0 2 G 'iE A T N E W business! Immediate cosh return, low overhead, easy startup, mini­ mum investment, full o r port-time, puts you in charge. 1 - 8 0 0 - 9 9 9 -8 2 9 2 10-5 G Y M N A S T IC S IN S T R U C T O R wonted. Previous teaching experience required. Ploose call M a rg a re t at Bluebonnet Gvnmastics at 3 2 0 - 0 6 6 5 1 0 -4 M BABYSITTER F O R A e ro b ic s doss. T, Th 5 3 0 -6 3 0 pm, Saturday 9 00-10?00am , $A/hour Call Kathy. 4 5 4 -2 1 6 5 . 10-5 EXC E LLEN T PART time m oney Distribute advertising survey, a pp ly PIF Research 129 Boles, Fayetteville, A r 7 2 7 0 1 .1 0 -5 DELIV ERY D R IV E R needed. Northwest Hills area. N e a t appearance, car, insur­ ance. Nights, weekends. The Bradford G oup, 4 5 1 -2 7 7 1 .10-5H ________________ A R T D E A K E R needs secretarial help. So m e bookkeeping, marketing, corre­ spondence, flexible hours, excellent p ay 4 5 3 - 1 9 7 9 . 10-3H 800 General Help Wanted ★ STUDENTS * Part-time, w e e ke n d s & evenings tem porary assign­ ments available. Call: AUSTIN TEMPORAAV SiKVICCS, INC 454-5555 L AIRPORT M ARRIO TT The A u stin Marriott Airport Hotel is currently seeking limousine drivers & bell staff employees. Successful candi­ d a te s will present: e Outstanding hospitality skills e Clean driving history e Professional appearance • Outgoing disposition Afiply in person only at the hotel, H jman Resources Department. 6121 IN-35 (at US290) Mon.9-noon, 1-3; T i es. 9 - n o o n : Wed. 1-3. Equal Opportunity Employer M/E/H/V/R 10 -3H Courier - Attention Cash Paid Daily Car or Cycle Apply in person, 600 W. 28th St., Suite 105. 9 -3 0 F TELEMARKETING $8.00 per hour N e e d 8 outgoing, depend­ able people. Flexible hours. PT or FT. Call M a ry at 28 8 -5 6 00 be­ tween 9 am -12 noon 1 0 -7 D Pizza Classics will soon deliver to the U.T. area. Highest Paid Drivers! We nee a customer-» delivery & inside personnel. outside Call 320-8080 or apply at: 6 0 4 W . 29th St. between 11 a.m. & 4 p.m. 10-3F Advertising Artists Austin Weakly, a new metro wide news weekly, has immediate openings for full-time and part-time advertising otists. Must be experienced, prefero- bly on McIntosh equipment. Work di- rectty with advertising sales staff to produce spec ads through final pro- daction. Send Resume and salary his- tory to: Austin Weekly, 48 E. Ave. Suite 333, Austin, TX 76701. 9 - 3 0 ★ Order Takers ★ Full time/Part time. Need 10 people by Wed. a Call Now! * * 4 7 2 -2 5 3 6 * 9-30F HELP WANTED Needed person to help with cor pools, Kght housekeeping, foundry & moots for month of October. Need to work at least 3 hrs every weekday afternoon; Storting 3:30 pm. Job starts Sept. 26, and* Nov. 1. Need own transportation, 327 - 0241. 10-21H TELEM ARKETING North Research Blvd. area. Now hiring tor immediate employment with Nahonal Company. Mud be able to work ue*- cby-Fndoy 4 pm-9 pm and Saturday 9 onv2 pm. Salary pke bonuses. Ideal for students, homemakers or moonlghlon. Earn eecelawt incoma in short noun. 331-1473,4 pm-9 pm. 10-7Z _ * S m ^ • ¡ «£ a< < c % AlállNES NOW HIRING. Fight Attend onts, Travel Agents, Mechonics, Customer Service. Listing*. Satanes to S50K Entry level positions. Call 805- 687-6000 Ex». A-9413 12-15 GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040- $59,2XVyr Now Hiring. Your area. 605-687-6000 Ext R 9413 for current N5 ■' $10,000 - $K)5,00Q/yri Now Hiring! IBgBlllIll 320 ♦ Utmost (1) 805 687-6000 Ext. Federal Us». 12-15_______________ OVERSEAS JOBS. Also CruwesNp*. ( A OJ-9413.10-19_________________ BE ON T.V. Many needed for commer- oak Casting mío. (1)805-687-6000 Ext. TV-9413 10-27_____________ v NEAR CAMPUS - Ful/port «me. TYPIST L‘~* * [ (45 + wpm). BOOKEEPER (we tram). RUNNÍR (your cari OOO JOBS Am * - E & B H H M R cations 9om 4pm— 408 W 17th. 10-oC > -Pi 8 8 ' . l Il l g * Il f S A VON S looking for wdmiduah to take orden. $30 Free make-up at free tram- $200 a w C M M W ü p M É b p iM M ' mg 472-1470 B»eH0-17H_________ ina tristona otéml Nopli sal mm/ setig Neg . C e i 478 2 Í5 5 ABHJNE JOOS $12,000 $XX)JXXVyr Around Campus is a daily col­ umn listing University-related ac­ tivities sponsored by academic de­ partments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, or­ ganizations must be registered with the Office of Student Activities. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, although no significant changes will be made. ~ MEETINGS Bellwether is holding an organi­ zational meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in College of Education Building 370. Prospective members and beaus are especially invited. The Martin Luther King Jr. Stat­ ue Foundation will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union Building 4.108. All interested in erecting a statue of Dr. King on campus should attend. The Royal Order of Pythons will test positive for steroids and other banned substances shortly after winning the Olympic kayaking competition at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.302. Ev­ eryone welcome. The Texas Association of Middle Eastern Scholars will hold its Eighth Annual Meeting at 8:45 a.m. Friday in the Peter T. Flawn Academic Center Knopf Room and at 8:30 a.m. Saturday in the Middle East Collection Room in the Main Build­ ing 316. For more information, call the Middle Eastern Studies office at 471-3881. The Texas Angels will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday in the L. Theo Bell- mont Hall T Lounge. Solutions for Men Alanon Group will meet at 5:30 p.m. Thursday in the University Student Health Cen­ ter 429. Students Against Multiple Scle­ rosis will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in University Teaching Center 3.104. Psi Chi will meet to plan the Ca­ reer Fair at 7 p.m. Thursday in Mezes Hall 206. The Christian Science Organiza­ tion will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Building Board of Directors Room. Everyone is wel­ come. The Volunteer Services for the Deaf will meet at 6:15 p.m. Thurs­ day in Jesse H. Jones Communica­ tion Building 3.120. If you have any the questions or cannot attend meeting please contact Stephen Holter at 467-7337 or Katie Glass at 454-7388. The Students' Association will have a Student Media Agency Meet­ ing at 5:30 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union Building 4.310. Everyone is welcome. Make videos, develop a TV show. The Mexican Students Associa­ tion will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Graduate School of Business Building 2.120. The Texas A&M As­ sociation will give a presentation on the Maquiladora Convention. Ev­ eryone is welcome. The Caribbean Students' Associ­ ation will meet at 5:30 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Afro- American Culture Room. The Theatre Collective will hold a “Variety Show" meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Build­ ing Battle Oaks Room, across from the Union Theater. Anyone inter­ ested in performing is welcome. The African Students Association will meet Thursday in the Texas Un­ ion Building Afro-American Culture Room to approve a new constitu­ tion. Delta Omicron Chi (Pre-med/pre- dental Association) will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in University Teach­ ing Center 3.110. Dr. Sinclair, dean of admissions at Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine, will speak. The Model United Nations will hold an orientation meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.312. For more information, call Beau at 467-7366. Everyone in­ terested should come by the meet­ ing for info and applications. The Radio-TV-Film Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Jesse H. Jones Communication Building 3.124 to discuss an upcoming talk show production and the possibilty of producing a video yearbook, and to appoint commitee chairpersons. Everyone is welcome. The Navigators will have a fel­ lowship meeting from 7 to 8 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Build­ ing Sinclair Suite. The Student Council for Excep­ tional Children will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in College of Education Building 292. “Kids on the Block" will perform. SCEC is an organiza­ tion for anyone interested in special education. The UT Economics Association will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Uni­ versity Teaching Center 3.102. Ev­ eryone enrolled in economics this semester is welcome. The Texas Equestrian Team will meet 7 p.m. Thursday in University Teaching Center 1.104. A trip to Tennessee will be discussed. Every­ one is welcome. The Hispanic Business Building Association will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in University Teaching Center 3.102. The University Ballroom Dance Society will meet at 7 p.m. Thurs­ day in the basement of F. Loren Winship Drama Building B202. The Movimiento Estudiantil Chi- cano/a de Aztlán will meet at 6:45 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union Building Chicano Culture Room on the fourth floor. We will have infor­ mation on tutoring project. Every one is welcome. the Zavala The Central America Peace Initi­ ative will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thurs­ day in University Teaching Center 3.122. FILMS A Luta Continua/The Struggle Continues will show “Blackland: The Struggle for a Neighborhood" and two documentaries about UT's destruction of the Blackland and the crisis of the homeless in Austin at 7 p.m. Thursday in University Teach­ ing Center 3.112. A discussion with the producers of the film and activ­ ists for the Blackland and the home­ less will follow. PERFORMANCES From topless joints to The Tonight Show to Bass Concert Hall — it's Doritos pitchman Jay Leno, for one show only Oct. 20 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $17.50 and $15.50 and available at all UTTM TicketCenters. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Middle East Resource Center will host Zvi Steinfeld, visiting pro­ fessor from Bar Ilan University in Is­ rael, to speak on "The Contempo­ to T alm u d ic rary A p p roach Research" at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in Dorothy Gebauer Student Services Building 3.102. The Department of Art will host a lecture by internationally recog­ nized artist Hans Haacke at 4 p.m. Thursday in Art Building Auditori­ um 1.102. UT Students for the Exploration and Development of Space will host a Space Seminar lecture at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 5.104. Dr. David Ashley will speak on lunar base construction, and ev­ eryone is welcome. The Intervarsity Christian Fel­ lowship will have a seminar at 7 p.m. Thursday in College of Educa­ tion Building 330A. Leon Filyaw will speak on "W ho is using you?" All students are welcome. The Women's Studies Research Seminars will sponsor a lecture on "Poverty and Crisis in the '80s: The Case of Peru" at 4 p.m. Thursday in the staff lounge of the Student Ser­ vices Building 4.104. Cecilia Busta- mente, recipient of the National Po­ etry Prize of Peru, will speak. OTHER The UT Fencing Club holds con­ ditioning from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. and footwork, lessons and fencing from 6 to 9:45 p.m. every Monday and Thursday in L. Theo Bellmont Hall 302. Past, present and future mem­ bers are welcome. The Department of Geological Sciences will hold technical sessions at 4 p.m. Thursday in Geology Building 100. Dr. W .P. Means of the University of Albany will speak on "Syn Kinematic microscopy." The Student Volunteer Services needs volunteers to take elderly persons to their doctor's appoint- p c u v s r a / p . BURNT ORANGE BLUES heedmci the Ctt\l diín-ess- t c> he wasn i 4 sure.. I 1 itx * r r y&rrJc&- life Mcrr i t s HEU>! t TRimcoS O o *»t O f .. ments. A volunteer must be at least 18 years old, have a valid Texas drivers' license and liability auto in­ surance. They must also attend a 45- minute orientation session sched­ uled at their convenience. Drivers may set the days during the month they wish to drive, the time of day and the areas of Austin in which they would drive. Most medical drives are done between 7:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. For more information, call the Stu­ dent Volunteer Services at 471-3065. The UT Amateur Radio Class will hold novice license class at 7 p.m. Thursday in Engineering-Sci- ence Building 145. Get your entry- level ham radio license. The Office of the Dean of Stu­ dents will have a table on the West Mall Friday accepting donations of any school supplies and backpacks for the Texas School for the Deaf in recognition of Deaf Awareness Week. The University Underwater Soci­ ety is planning a trip to Amistad Lake in Del Rio at 6 p.m. Friday. Meet in the parking lot diagonally across from Robert Lee Moore Hall. For more information, call 473-2155. Attention 1988 spring initiates of Alpha Lambda Delta and/or Phi Eta Sigma: If you have not picked up your certificate, you must do so by Oct. 7 or it will be sent back to the national office for filing. Please stop by the Office of the Dean of Stu­ dents in Student Services Building 1.120 between 8 a.m . and noon or between 1 and 5 p.m. weekdays. For more information, call Sandra Rhoten at 471-6359. The Air Force ROTC, detachment 825, will hold an orientation for any­ one interested in a career as an offi­ cer in the Air Force from noon to 1 p.m. every day in the AFROTC De- tatchment Office in Russell A. Stein- dam Hall. Students 25 and Over, the Office of the Dean of Students invites you to a brown bag lunch from noon to 1 p.m. Friday in Texas Union Build­ ing 4.108. Dr. Richard Bell will pres­ ent a program on "How to Manage Stress Effectively." The Hispanic Business Student Association will have Company Night at 7 p.m. Monday in the Peter T. Flawn Academic Center Atrium on the fourth floor. Representatives from Exxon, IBM, the IRS and oth­ ers will attend. The University Squash Club will have player ratings for fall leagues from 5:45 to 7 p.m. Thursday on the ninth floor of L. Theo Bellmont Hall in the south end. All levels of play welcome (A, B, C and D). Come see how you rate. The Central America Peace Initi­ ative will hold a slide show presen­ tation at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Uni­ versity Teaching Center 3.122. Gregg Roberts, member of the Uni­ versity Presbyterian Church, will deliver the slide show. BY VAN GARRETT K was it a sense <4 & , r3 ' v r f l .partwp/F W i n * 5 the poor tat was stock high vjp m a Tree he sensed the end ot the world *»t hand THE DAILY TEXAN/Thursday, September 2 9 ,1966/Page 15 ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 1 Inkle 5 S. American plain 10 Fastening device 14 Braced aback: naut. 15 Vegetable 16 Voice 17 Swallow 18 Meat cut 20 Perch 22 Middling: pref. 23 All 24 “Nix!” 26 Tart 27 Canadian province 30 Yield 34 Baser 35 Young ones 36 Needlefish 37 Latvian 38 Stay 40 Cheese 41 Time before 42 Sped 43 Coat part 45 Pausing 47 Dwarfed 48 Classifieds 49 Arista 50 Mortify 53 Length unit 54 Holy book 58 Edible 61 Vessel 62 Monkeys 63 Author Michael — 64 Injury 65 Blow 66 Gazes 67 Genuine DOWN 1 Aiglets 2 Touch on Sport Promoter Bedstead Lack of vim Quarry man 8 Flocks 9 Person 10 Segments 11 Agave 12 Ado 13 — up: ante 19 Equine gear 21 History 25 Tensions 26 Italian magistrate 27 Color 28 Go 29 Packages 30 Nasty person 31 Large bird 32 Untutored 33 Cornered 35 Closure 39 Ask 4 0 -------backward 42 Skins 44 Lie in wait 46 Most docile 47 Peddler 49 Scriptures 50 Fish 51 Moqui Indian 52 Solemn word 53 Slush 55 Storm 56 East 57 Dickens girl 59 Draw off 60 Essence 9-29-88 © 1988 United Feature Syndicate 'fHE REAL GEORGE BUSH. SEQUES-] met? in me m e c e lla r o f m e 'TRUMP PRINCESS," WAS NOTA HAPPY MAN... ITS NOT M R ! ISHOULPNT HAVE AGREED ID THIS! TH/9 IS MY CAMPAIGN! J PIP ALL THE WORK! ANP NOW MY PARN W IN IS GETTING ALL THE CREDIT FOR DUKE-BASHING WHILE I LANGUISH IN THIS... THIS FLOATING HOLE! I D < LU Q D GC h- > GC GC < O > - CO MEANWHILE, I CAN'T SEE MY FAMILY, I CANT TALK TO MY OWN STAFF, I CANT EVEN WATCH M Y OWN DEBATE ON TV .! AND TO SIR, Y0UVE TOP IT OFF, HARDLY TOUCHED r MISSED YOUR YOGURT. I PEARL HARBOR PAY! Page 16/THE DAILY TEXAN/Thursday, September 29,1988 Billiards Exhibition Jack White with "The coolest guy in pool" JtCMyfjiwMr a Billiards aces, novices and anyone who ap- predates good humor will enjoy seeing an exhibition by world-class Billiards expert Jack White this Friday in The Presidential Lobby of the Union. Mr. White has taken his trick-shot exhibition all over the world and has apbe a re d in numerous television shows and publications. His quick w it will keep you in stitches (Beware: no one is safe from his cut-ups!) There will be tw o free shows tom orrow at 11:30am and 2:30pm. G et the edge on your g a m e —learn a few shots from Jack White himself tonight in the Texas Union Rec Center. Mr. White will instruct a Billiards Clinic in the Rec Center's Billiards Parlor a t 7:00pm. $3.00 for Billiards Sports Club members and $5.00 for the public. TAp'y fTy. \ ' a ‘-sr-y'X rhh ^ ( . .d.-dh ’ n ^ / fT ) -PLp, )£r> The Rec Center: Billiards fans take n o te 1 Trick-shot a ce Jack White will co n d u ct a Billiards Clinic tonight at 7.00pm in the Rec Center's Billiards Hall. Cost is $3 for Billiards Sports Club members and $5 for the public. The Texas Tavern Tonight is C hicano Night1 D ance the night a w a y to spicy Latin jams from 10:00pm - 1:30am. There's no cover charge for this bi­ weekly event. The Cactus Cafe: The Shoulders are winning Austin audiences over everywhere. C atch them at the Cactus tonight. No Cover. Texas Union Films: Sawdust a n d Tinsol (Union Theatre. 7:00pm, Swedish with subtitles). W edding in Galilee (Union Theatre, 8:45pm, Hebrew & Arabic with subtitles); D o n 't Look Back (Union Theatre, 10 45pm); M anon o f the SpringiHogg Auditorium, 7:00pm, French with subtitles); Nosferatu the Vampyre (Hogg Auditorium. 9:25pm, German with subtitles). The Rec Center; Billiards trick-shot ace and humorist Jack White will perform tw o exhibitions in The Union's Presidential Lobby a t 11:30am and 2:30pm. No admission charge. The Texas Tavern: Joe 'K in g ' C ar­ rasco y las Nuevas Coronas reign over the Tavern tonight. C atch a true party fiend and his to p -n o tch Tex- Vlex b an d Friday a t 10:00pm. All ages w elcom e. The Cactus Cafe Rosie Flores returns to the Cactus for a special solo perform ance Friday. Tish Hlnlhosa opens the show at 9:15pm. Texas Union Films: W edding in Galilee (Austin Premier, Union Theatre. 7;30pm, Hebrew & Arabic with subtitles); Red Heat (Union Theatre, 9:35pm); D on 't Look Back (Union Theatre, 11:35pm); A Time to Live a n d a Time to Die (Austin Premier, Hogg Auditorium, 7:30pm, Chinese with subtitles); M anon o f the Spring (Hogg Auditorium, 10 00pm, French with subtitles) Saturday, October 1 The Rec Center: Bowl under the nightlights Saturday a t M oonlight Rock ’n Bowl. DJ Tom Winner brings his collection of tunes to the lanes while you bowl for Red Headpin specials. The Texas Tavern: Ballad Shambles and Water the Dog play the Tavern Saturday a t 10:00pm. Both bands continue to gain critical acclaim in the Austin music arena. All ages can see them together a t the Tavern. The Cactus Cafe: KUT's Folkways will broadcast live from the C actus at 9:00pm Saturday. The Austin talent will include Butch H ancock, Jimmie Gilmore, Robert Earl Keen, and Hudson & Franke. Texas Union Films: Wedding in Galilee (Austin Premier, Union Theatre, 7:30pm, Hebrew & Arabic with subtitles); Red Heat (Union Theatre, 9:35pm); Don't Look Back (Union Theatre, 11:35pm); A Time to Live a n d a Time to Die (Austin Premier, Hogg Auditorium, 7:30pm, Chinese with subtitles); Manon o f the Spring (Hogg Auditorium, 10:00pm, French with subtitles). Sunday, October 2 The Rec Center: Rent-a-Lane is Sunday's big feature. For $2.50 per hour, you and your friends cdn reserve a lane all to yourselves— squeeze in as much bowling as you can! This special is good from noon to 6:00pm. Texas Union Films: Red Heat (Union Theatre, 2:00 & 7:00pm), Walkabout (Union Theatre. 4:30 & 9:15pm), A Time to Live a n d a Time to Die (Austin Premier, Hogg Auditorium, 3.00 & 7:00pm, Chinese with subtitles), Marion o f the Spring (Hogg Audito­ rium. 5:30 (k 10:00pm, French with subtitles). Austin Premier! (1988. Directed by Michel Khleifi; starring Ali el Akili, Makram Khoury.) Set in an Arab village in Israel, this film explores the delicate subject o f a *amily caught betw een the struggles and politics of tw o clashing cultures. Not rated. Hebrew and Arabic with subtitles. Showing at The Texas Union Theatre this Thurs­ day at 8:45pm and Fri­ day and Saturday at 7:30pm. RICH...VIBRANT...EXOTIC. DEMANDS TO BE SEEN! C A R Y N JA M E S N Y T I M I S * I H O B E R M A N VI LL A GE VOICE H I N O I N t r W N A T I O N A l P f » l S i N T S W edding GALILEE m * , i A F IL M B Y M IC H E L K H L E IF I A F IL M B Y M IC H E L K H L E IF I I * M l B K F * A N D A H A R K W I T H * N C I I S M S U R I I I I I S I N H I B R I A « N U t R t R H W I T H I N C I I S H ^ V INTERNATIONAL; 1 CRITICS AWARDS _ C a n n e s A HINO IN T E R N A T IO N A L R E L E A S E JOE "KING" CARRASCO y Las Nuevas Coronas Friday, September 30 10pm T Join the undisputed King of Tex-Mex Rock and Roll as he launches another “Party Weekend' in the Texas Tavern. He brings with him his "secret weapon"—accordian virtuoso Marcelo Guana, considered by many to be the finest rock accor­ dionist in el mundo. If you've never been to a Party Weekend with Joe King, see what it's all about this Friday. All ages are mucho welcome. RED HEAT RED HEAT RED HEAT (1988. Directed by Walter Hill; starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jim Belushi.) A Soviet and an American team up to capture a Soviet drug kingpin loose in Chicago. See Schwarzenegger at his best in this action-packed and often humorous film. Rated R. 110 minutes. Showing at the Union Theatre Friday and Saturday at 9:35pm and Sunday at 2:00 and 7:00pm. RED HEAT Popcorn, candy, fountain drinks, ice cream , frozen yogurt, munchies, and friendly service on the Main Level o f The Texas Union, across from the Theatre. A recent article in The Daily Texan concluded that Eeyore's is one-half to two-thirds less expensive than your average movie house concessions stand. Eeyore's is open until 15 minutes following the be­ ginning o f the Union's final feature film. Whew! One of Austin's greatest vqcalists returns to the Cactus Cafe for a special solo performance. Ms. Flores is originally from L.A.'s Screaming Sirens. She records on Warner Brothers Records and continues to gain popularity In Texas. “Cornin’ into Austin...” Folk Legend Arlo Guthrie on O ctober 8th. Texas Union B a llro o m . Tix at UTTM o u tle ts C a l! 477-6060 to c h a rg e .