n 331N 3D U " H : i U a J i g | u l y Texan Vol. 84, No. 201 The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Friday, August 16,1985 250 UT athletes paying lower rent than other tenants at complex By ELLEN WILLI AMS ° 1985 The Daily Texan University athletes paid almost a third lower rent than the other resi­ dents in the Rio Nueces Apartments this summer, the apartment owner said Thursday. Thirty-three athletes — most of them UT varsity football players and some of them freshmen — lived this summer at the Rio Nueces Apartments, 600 W. 26th St. Ed Padgett, owner of the apart­ ments, said Thursday that the ath­ letes paid $95 a month less than the regular $295 a month summer rent for a one-bedroom apartment. The athletes are the first group Padgett has given the reduced rates, but he said next summer he would give any University-related group of at least 20 people a discount on summer rates because of low sum­ mer occupancy rates. Padgett said David McWilliams, assistant UT football coach, ap­ proached him last spring, saying he was compiling a list of 20 to 25 ath­ letes going to summer school. "I said if you've got a group of 25, I'll give them a cut in rent," Padgett said. "Did we show the athletes any preferential treatment? No." McWilliams could not be reached for comment Thursday. Janice Wenger, NCAA legislative assistant in Mission, Kan., said Thursday that the NCAA would be interested in reviewing the situation at Rio Nueces. "Athletes are sup­ posed to be paying what others pay," she said. Wenger said she did not think of­ fering group rates next summer "in ‘Athletes are supposed to be paying what others pay/ — Janice Wenger, NCAA legislative ____________assistant and of itself is enough to legitimize the situation." She said this does not necessarily mean the University has violated NCAA regulations. Coaches can help players find housing, Wenger said. "But they can't help them into an arrange­ ment that's not a normal one,” she said. "That's something we'd be in­ terested in looking at." Padgett said occupancy rates at the complex are low in the summer — this summer it is 85 percent full. He said his occupancy rate would have been in the 70 percent range if the athletes had not moved in. The rate has been 85 percent to 90 per­ cent in previous summers, and the apartments are full in the fall and spring, he said. Padgett, who lettered in football as a UT tackle from 1959 to 1961, said he had never before been ap­ proached about group rates for Rio Nueces, which opened in 1982. "I'm not doing anything for that group that I wouldn't do for any other group," he said. jobs around As part of the deal, the players do the apartment odd complex, Padgett said. He said he would not expect other groups next summer to do the odd jobs. A sign above the Rio Nueces apartment mailboxes Wednesday said three or four students — "FB players or etc." — were needed to work for Ed Padgett Construction, and said those interested should contact the Rio Nueces manager. Padgett said players this summer were not working for Ed Padgett Construction, although he said he has employed them in the past. A former football player who asked not to be identified said some of the players working for Padgett in summer 1982 were on scholar­ ship. This is the first summer the NCAA has allowed players on scholarship the NCAA passed the rule in January. to work, after But receiving special rates, if they are not available to other students, may violate NCAA regulations, said Charles Alan Wright, former chair­ man of the NCAA Committee on In­ fractions and a UT law professor. Players who pay lower rates may be ineligible if the NCAA rules that they violated NCAA regulations, Wright said. "If athletes receive benefits not available to other students, that means pay for play," said Wright, who was chairman of the committee until 1983. Wright said the NCAA can penal­ ize an institution if one of its repre­ sentatives is involved. Head Coach Fred Akers said Thursday that McWilliams was in charge of helping players obtain summer housing. The players live in Jester West Dormitory as part of their full scholarship during the fall and spring. T Jones, associate athletic direc­ tor, said scholarship athletes attend­ ing the University during the sum­ mer receive $600 per session to pay rent, because they cannot live in the dorm. Joe Eivens, academic counselor for men's athletics, said approxi­ mately 85 of the 95 scholarship foot­ ball players attended 1985 summer school. Akers said coaches arranging housing for athletes shop around. "W e've tried to help them get the best place they can get for the most reasonable price," Akers said. Offering group rates in the sum­ mer is "just business," because there are fewer students in the sum­ mer, Akers said. "I'd say it's a pret­ ty good deal for both." Akers said he doubted the NCAA would find any violations against the University. "W e're not opposed to them coming in and talking to u s," he said. "W e have nothing to hide." Other Texas schools have been under fire lately for alleged viola­ tions. Southern Methodist Universi­ ty officials appealed Wednesday to the NCAA Council to reverse an in­ fractions committee decision. The punishment for alleged re­ cruiting violations would be to bar SMU from giving some football scholarships next year and from ap­ pearing in bowl games or on televi­ sion for two years. SMU is now contemplating a law­ suit against the NCAA, claiming it is being singled out for punishment. The University of Houston was told Monday it could not give schol­ arships to two recruits because of recruiting violations. Robert Cohen/Daily Texan Staff Three-alarm blaze Fire struck an Austin apartment complex for the second time in six months Thursday night. No injuries were known and no cause of the fire at The Manchester Apartments at 1200 W. 40th Street was given. Hurricane Danny hits Louisiana, forcing coastal-area evacuation United Pre ss International NEW IBERIA, La. — Hurricane Danny sloshed-across the swampy Louisiana coast Thursday, unleash­ ing 85 mph winds, tornadoes and torrential rains that kept thousands from their homes. The death of a Texas man — elec­ trocuted while helping to move a boat — was attributed to the storm. No other injuries were reported. The storm, originating Sunday in the Caribbean near Cuba^ was at its strongest when it hit shore. Torren­ tial rains of up to 10 inches were expected to cause the highest dollar losses as the storm pushed inland, threatening extensive damage to rice, sugar cane and other crops across the southwest Louisiana low­ lands. For the most part, residents, sea­ soned by decades of coastal storms, were taking Danny in stride, au­ thorities said. "This is basically an exercise for us to resharpen our emergency pre­ paredness so we can be ready when the bad one hits," said Lionel Ou- Iberia Parish Civil Defense bre, communications director. "Danny is not so disastrous because it's turned out to be a minimal hurricane." Iberia was one of 13 parishes de­ clared in a state of emergency by Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards. e Texas reacts to Hurricane Danny’s threat. See page 10 Three tornadoes caused light damage as far east as New Orleans, 140 miles from the landfall, and there was widespread lowland flooding and downed trees and util­ ity poles. Coastal residents from the north­ ern Texas coast around the Gulf to the mouth of the Mississippi River boarded homes, fleeing inland. The hurricane watch, however, was dropped for adjoining states as the hurricane focused on Louisiana. Gale warnings continued from the mouth of the Mississippi River to Pensacola, Fla. Civil Defense officials said 98 per­ cent of the 5,000 residents of Camer­ on Parish, the point of landfall, evacuated to the north, leaving only civil defense workers and sheriff's deputies. The Cameron area was opened again late Thursday, while only minor street flooding and some downed power three branches were reported in Lake Charles. lines and An estimated 20,000 people were moved to land from offshore oil and gas ngs. Patty Gamer, a Red Cross worker in Baton Rouge, said 2,878 people were housed at 25 shelters opened in locations throughout the state. The port of Lake Charles, normal­ ly dotted with recreational craft and sailboats, was filled with shrimping trawlers and offshore oil barges seeking safe harbor. In New Orleans, the Coast Guard said a 41-foot sailboat, The Fine Wine, with seven people aboard, was first believed floundering in the hurricane, but the craft was later found tied to an offshore rig 20 miles from Grand Isle. A helicopter was dispatched to lift the people from the boat, a Coast Guard spokesman said. Danny's rapid movement across the Gulf of Mexico prevented the storm from strengthening into a ma­ jor storm, the National Weather Ser­ vice said. The eye first touched land near the central Intracoastal City on coast, sliding northwest and cross­ ing Pecan Island at 11 a.m. Squalls extending 150 miles to the east of the eye mauled towns, cities and rural areas throughout central Louisiana. Gusts or 60 mph in New Orleans knocked out power to 18,000 homes and businesses before dawn. Clarification — The Daily Texan would like to clarify that the Panhellenic sorori­ ties have signed an anti-discrimination agreement with Texas Student Publica­ tions. However, the sororities have not signed the University anti-discrimination clause, which all student groups must sign to be registered student organiza­ tions. The Texan regrets any misunder­ standings that may have occurred be­ cause of the story in Wednesday’s paper. WEATHER Only 131 shopping days until Christ­ mas — That's irrelevant, of course. The forecast for Austin and vicinity Friday through Saturday calls for partly cloudy days and fair nights, with a 20 percent chance of afternoon thundershowers. The high temperatures Friday and Satur­ day wül be in the upper 90s. with a tow Friday night in the mtd-70s. Winds «U be easterly near 10 mph Friday. Details, p«gei9. INDEX Around Cam pus........................ 19 Classifieds ................... 13 Com ics.................................. 1* C rossw ord ............................. 13 8 Editorials........................... 11 Sports . Showers may offer reprieve to Austin lawns, gardens from Stage 3 restrictions By RUDY SUSTAITA Daily Texan Staff Thursday's brief spurt of rain might send Austin back to Stage 2 water restrictions, city water offi­ cials said Thursday. "The rain will definitely help," said Maria Gomez of the city Re­ source Management Department. "A lot of people won't be watering their lawns." But Jack Woods, a spokesman for the National Weather Service bu­ reau in Austin, said the the rains will not last long. "It's nothing to get excited about," Woods said. He said there is a 20 percent chance of rain Friday with more scattered thunderstorms throughout the weekend. He added that the showers are not a result of Hurricane Danny. Lynne Lightsey, public informa- As of Thursday, Austin still vyas under the strict water restrictions of tion officer for the resource manage- Stage 3, but the outlook is good, ment department, said that under The city has pumped less than 157 Stage 2 water restrictions, residents million gallons a day for tour con- can water their lawns with spnn- secutive days, said Mike Erdmann, klers ami water hoses on their des- division manager of consumer •#'* °«*y between 7 vices for the Department of Water p.m. and midnight, and between and Wastewater. midnight and noon. ignated day Under the city charter, pumping less than 157 million gallons for five consecutive days could pull Austin out of Stage 3 water restrictions. "The computer shows that even without the rain, we should be un­ der 157," Erdmann said. Gontex sakl the rain might have helped. "It has a goodpsychotogical effect," she said. *Tf it's raining, I wouldn't water." by the last digit of home addresses. days we determined Under Stage 3 water restrictions, residents can water only between 4 a.m. and 10 a.m. and between 7 p.m. «id 10 p.m . Hand-held hoaes can be used any day but only dur­ ing Stage 3 hours. Sprinklers can be : used only1 on csiettdsr days. "and only during the restricted Hborfc she added. * ' United Press International A woman w rits along the Detcambre Canal Thursday past a sunken boat as Hurricane Danny came inland. Botha reaffirms denial of black vote United Press International JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — President Pieter Botha, vowing ro t to lead South African whites "to abdication and suicide," promised Thursday to involve blades in some government dedsions but refused to grant them the vote, and said apartheid will remain the law of the land. In a major speech in Durban de­ scribed by his foreign minister as "the most important statement in the history of South Africa," Botha also pledged to negotiate with black leaders. He did not, however, provide de­ tails about when such talks might take place or whom they would in­ volve. He made it dear the coun­ try's policy of racial segregation, known as apartheid, will remain in place. Botha also ruled out the forma­ tion' of a fourth chamber in die tri racial Rutiament that was instituted last September, which has cham­ bers for whites, Asians and mixed- race people known as coloreds. Apartheid critics said thev were disappointed by the speech* and some prediieted it could lead fee "ca­ tastrophe." * . Dr* Beyers Naude, the white Sec­ retary General of the South African Coündl of Churches, said Botha had lost the opportunity "to re­ spond as á true statesman in a mom ento! crisia." "I am afraid that the reaction of the majority of the people of our country is going to be one of deep disappointment and anger and that of the world outside one of severe disillusionment," Naude said. The Nobel Peace laureate, Bishop Desmond Tutu, said in an interview with Cable News Network that it is "going to be very difficult to know who will avert the catastrophe that 1 believe we are on the brink of." The speech came in the fourth week of a state of emergency, im­ posed July 21 by Botha in an at­ tempt to quell five nearly year-long violence that has left more than 620 people dead. Some of the worst bloodletting came last week outside the dty where Botha Durban, spoke. Saying he would not hand over the country revolutionaries, to Botha said, "I've been lenient and patient" in the face of the escalating violence. "Don't push me too far," he warned. Botha, addressing his all-white National Party during a party con­ ference, said he believes in "partici­ pation of all the South African com­ munities on matters of common but those communities must be kept separate. The president, dashing hopes at home and abroad that his speech would offer major compromises to end 11 months of racial unrest, culed out any possibility that South AiricilSé'piepateá te grarit blacks full citizenship. "I am not prepared to lead white South Africans and other minorities on a road to abdication and sui­ cide," Botha said. A universal franchise — the right to vote — would "lead to domina­ tion of one over the others and it would lead to chaos," he said. "Let me state explicitly that I be­ lieve in participation of all the South African communities on matters of common concern. I believe there should exist structures to reach this goal of co-responsibility and partici­ pation," he said. "I know for a fact that most lead­ ers in their own right in South Afri­ ca and reasonable South Africans will not accept the principle of one- man, one-vote in a unitary system," Botha said, adding that the only way to accommodate the diversity of South Africa's population was the people speak "by through their leaders." letting Botha warned that the nation's 4.5 million whites would never al­ low the 22 million majority blacks to control the country. There are some 900,000 Asians and nearly 3 million people of mixed race in South Africa as well. The only olive branches extended by Botha in his speech concerned the Influx Control Act, which limits the movements of blacks. The presi­ dent said he regarded the act as "outdated and too costly," but he did not address the future of the law. world & nation Reagan may repeal minority quotas United Press International SANTA BARBARA, Calif. — The Reagan administration is considering repealing a 1965 executive order requiring government con­ tractors to set humerical goals for hiring mi­ norities, a White House spokesman said Thursday. But spokesman Larry Speakes said no time­ table for a decision has been set and a draft of a proposed change that was leaked to the press "has no standing whatsoever as admin­ istration policy." The draft, obtained by United Press Inter­ national in Washington, said the government should now base a company's compliance on "demonstrated nondiscriminatory treatment of its employees and potential employees" in­ stead of having to set numerical goals for hir­ ing a set number of blacks, women and others who have been discriminated against in the past. The order would affect about 23 million people in 73,000 private companies doing business with the government. Reagan has consistently opposed such quo­ tas. Changing existing law "has been a subject of discussion in this administration since the president took office in 1981," Speakes said. The matter "is on the agenda, but no date has been set for consideration." The leaked document "has not been dis­ cussed with any interagency group," Speakes said, and "has not been presented to the Cab­ inet Council ... and it certainly has not been presented to the president." "Therefore, it has no standing whatsoever as administration policy." In Washington, Richard Seymour, director of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said the plan would "leave noth­ ing but the facade of the present enforcement program, and would gut everything of value in the program." He noted that both Con­ gress and the Supreme Court have recog­ nized the validity of the present order. Justice Department spokesman Patrick Kor- ten said at least six versions of the new execu­ tive order have been prepared in the long- running debate within the administration over affirmative action. "There's no secret Reagan and (Attorney General Edwin) Meese think quotas are not the way to deal with past or present discrimi­ nation," Korten said. Speakes said, "Our objective is to make sure that there is equal opportunity, but there tificial barrier allowed toi exist in must be no artificial the market." It is "a matter in the early stages of discus­ sion," he said. "There is a possibility there may be no change or there could be refine­ ments." Sources told UPI that the draft order was written by Ralph Bledsoe, special assistant to the president. Bledsoe Was unavailable for comment. In a statement from Pittsburgh, the AFL- CIO said, "Such a move would represent a giant step backward in the fight against em­ ployment discrimination." "W e urge the administration to cease its constant search for ways to weaken the na­ tion's civil-rights laws, and instead to comnjit itself to enforcing those laws vigorously and effectively." Ralph Neas, head of the Leadership Con­ ference on Civil Rights, said the plan "should not surprise anyone because it is consistent with the comprehensive assault that extrem­ ists in the Reagan administration have been waging." "Gutting affirmative action would be a na­ tional tragedy," Neas said. U.S. envoy journeys to Israel United Press International JERUSALEM — Assistant Secre­ tary of State Richard Murphy met Thursday with Israeli leaders, but the talks probably will not lead to a meeting with a joint Jordanian-Pal- estinian peace delegation, a U.S. of­ ficial said. Murphy flew from Jordan to Isra­ el for talks with Prime Minister Shi­ mon Peres and Foreign Minister Yit­ zhak Shamir on Thursday, a day after he met for two hours with King Hussein. . After Murphy's meeting with Hussein, speculation arose that the U.S. envoy might meet with the Jor- danian-Palestinian delegation, de­ spite Israeli objections. But a U.S. official said Thursday that Murphy "probably won't meet with the delegation, because they can't agree on arrangements, peo­ ple, places, et cetera." The official, who asked not to be identified, said Murphy's return to the United States by the weekend "was possible." television said officials in Jerusalem say that after going to Cairo on Friday, Mur­ phy will return to Washington. His original schedule was never made public. Israel Hussein and Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat agreed last Feb. 11 on a peace initia­ tive that calls for a Jordanian-Pales­ tinian panel to hold talks with ihé U nited States. The proposal received only qualified support from the Arab League at its Casa­ blanca summit Aug. 7. But both Peres and Shamir op­ pose any meeting between Murphy and the delegation if the session ex­ cludes Israel. Israel has also rejected any U.S. talks with a delegation tlu(t includes PLO members, maintain­ ing it would lead to American recog­ * nition of the organization. Israel says a meeting with PLO members will violate a 1975 Ameiv can commitment not to talk to thf PLO unless it recognizes Israel'* right to exist. Murphy met Thursday for two hours with Peres, then conferred foí­ an hour with Shamir. Later, ,h£ called the talks "full and dose." "W e are involved in an in tima t£ and intense set of discussions,'*' Murphy said. "W e are pursuing fuB and dose consultations with the • government of Israel." Unltod P in » international Home on the range Rounding up a herd of stubborn goats isn’t in the training manual for police in Wake County, N.C. Officers chased seven goats on foot and in cars before herding them into a briar patch at the edge of woods near a busy shopping center and intersection. United Press International Gandhi settles immigration dispute in Assam © 1985 The New York Times NEW DELHI, India — Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, declaring that India had overcome an­ other threat to national unity, announced the settlement Thursday of a bitter dispute that has led to thousands of deaths in the northeastern state of Assam. Although Assam has been relatively peaceful recently, a sharp dispute over the rights of a half million foreign immigrants has simmered ever since an estimated 5,000 people were killed dur­ ing a state election in 1983. Mo$t of the immi­ grants were Moslems fleeing poverty in neigh­ boring Bangladesh, formerly East Pakistan. The / population of Assam is largely Hindu. Under the accord announced Thursday, new elections are to be held soon in Assam, but the government bowed to a demand by Assamese protesters that many of the immigrants be barred from taking part. All immigrants who arrived in Assam after 1965 are to be disenfranchised. In addition, im­ migrants who arrived after 1971 are to be deport- ed. There was some question Thursday whether a mass deportation of hundreds of thousands of people was practical or could be done without setting off further violence. Nevertheless, newspapers and politicians pro­ that the Assam dispute had been claimed "solved" by the accord. It was the second time in less than a month that Gandhi has sought to negotiate a peaceful resolution to a domestic crisis. In late July he reached agreement with Sikh leaders aimed at ending three years of violence that has also cost thousands of lives. Thursday he was again widely praised for seeking to ac­ commodate India's myriad regional, ethnic and religious factions. Speaking at an Independence Day ceremony at the 350-year-old Red Fort in the old city, Gan­ dhi said he had reached agreement with As­ samese protest leaders at 2:45 a.m. Thursday af­ round-the-clock ter negotiations. three days of nearly "We hope that with the signing of this agree­ ment, another element of tension will be re­ moved and the country will be able to devote its attention to development," the prime minister said as tens of thousands of people applauded. Protest leaders had demanded the new elec­ tions, but violence threatened to recur if they were held without a resolution o£ the disagree­ ment over the status of the immigrants. Opposi­ tion to the immigrants came from the largely Hindu population, and the protest movement was led by political figures, students and many others. Gandhi was hailed Thursday as having brought an attitude that contrasted markedly on the Assam issue and others with that of his predecessor and mother, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. In a typical comment, the governor of Assam, Bhishma Narain Singh, praised Gandhi for "wis­ dom and statesmanship" and also thanked the leaders of the Assam protest movement for their "foresightedness, courage and spirit of accom­ modation." in his announcement, the prime minister al­ luded to the fact that Mrs. Gandhi had wrestled with the Assam problem. "It had been there for many years, and a solution had eluded us, he said. His comments provided a note of poignance, since this was Gandhi's first Independence Day celebration since becoming prime minister after his mother's assassination Oct. 31. Wearing his customary white tunic, Gandhi appeared shortly after 7 a.m. at the ornate red sandstone ramparts of the fort built by the Mog­ ul Emperor Shah Jahan. Thirty-eight years ago Thursday, the British flag was hauled down and the white, saffron and green banner of the new Indian nation was flown for the first time. The prime minister, who will turn 41 next flag and was Indian week, unfurled showered by rose petals. the "Indiraji should have been here today, but she has been snatched away from us," Gandhi said, using the Hindi honorific for his late mother. "The task has fallen on m e." "I did not see the struggle for independence," he went on, speaking in Hindi. "When the trico­ lor was unfurled here for the first time, I was only 3 years old. Today, two-thirds of the people of India are like me, who have not participated in the country's struggle for independence. A new generation has come to the fore." Security was heavy at the celebration. Gandhi spoke to the crowd from behind a bulletproof glass shield. The people in the crowd had gone through metal detectors, and all cars were heavi­ ly inspected before being allowed to park. The Aassam accord calls for the current state legislature, elected in the disputed voting of 1983, to be dissolved, with a caretaker govern­ ment in control until after the new elections. In addition, certain unspecified "legislative and administrative safeguards" were promised by the central government "to protect the cultur­ al, social and linguistic identity and heritage" of the Assamese people. High interest rates, national debt blamed for industrial slowdown United Press International WASHINGTON — The factories, mines and utility companies that in­ make up American creased production by only 0.2 per­ cent in July, the Federal Reserve said Thursday, further delaying any economic rebound. industry "The economy continues to be held back by high real-interest rates, the adverse trade situation, an overhang of unsold inventories and slow growth in consumer demand due to heavy indebtedness," an economist for the major manufac­ turers said. Jerry Jasinowski, chief economist of the National Association of Man­ ufacturers, indicated that any pick­ up in business of the sort forecast by last month still is not in sight during this third quarter. the administration late Another economist, Lawrence Chimerine, said Thursday he sees "n o reason to expect a major im­ provement." The head of the Chase Econometrics analysis firm said, "W e are . still mired in this almost flat or very slow growth period we have been in since early last sum­ m er." Another Fed report Thursday suggested consumer borrowing peaked in May, an ominous sign that consumer resources are getting stretched thinner just when more spending would help revive lacklus­ ter sales. After expanding by slight­ ly more than $9 billion in May the installment borrowing total rose only another $6.8 billion in June. Underlining the way expectations are lowering week by week, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office issued its own updated eco­ nomic forecast Thursday, filled with new uncertainties but with growth for 1985 marked down to 2.6 per­ cent. That is lower than the admin­ istration's new 3.1 percent forecast. The CBO saw no improvement in the unemployment rate until next year but no recession either. Even the small 0.2 percent in­ crease in July production was above average for the last 12 months, when the growth in sales dollars have been siphoned by imports and demand has softenea. Earlier this week the government reported re­ tail sales in July up only 0.4 percent. to see all the ef­ fects of the incredibly unbalanced last few years" policies of Chimerine said, referring to the enormous gap between government income and spending, even after a recovery from recession. "W e're beginnin the Had auto production not in­ creased 1.2 percent in July, despite the lack of any encouragement in , the sales figures, overall production would have stood nearly still in ,uly White House spokesman Larry in Santa Barbara, Speakes said Calif., "We're pleased that there is growth in the consumer-goods cate­ gory caused in part by strong, resi­ lient auto production." t Noting that manufacturing held steady with some decline in mining, Speakes said, "All in all, we view this as positive news and are en­ couraged that this news will allow the economy to continue moving forward at a strong pace without the danger of drastically increasing pric­ es." Business-equipment production, covering construction and factory gear, was down 0.3 percent. Defense and space equipment output, the strongest of the major sectors of manufacturing up to now, also fell 0.3 percent. The index of industrial produc­ tion was pegged at 124.9 in July, compared to a base of 100 in 1977. Mining and oil drilling contribut­ ed a 0.1 percent increase to the overall index but over the past year , have seen production fall 3.7 per­ cent. Utility companies also are includ­ ed in the index and cut back output 0.9 percent. From Texan news services China chief admit* to ‘isolated eases’ of infanticide PEKING — President Li Xiannian admitted Thursday -there are "iso­ lated cases" of infanticide in China but said the government is working hard to eradicate the practice. Li told visiting U N. Children's Fund Executive Director James Grant that the killing of infant daughters by parents hoping for a son under Chi­ na's one-child population policy was a carryover from feudal days. "These are very few isolated cases," Li said of reports of infanticide. "We are carrying out a vigorous cam­ paign to uproot such practices." Li's meeting with Grant in Peking's Great Hall of the People was report­ ed by the official Xinhua News Agency. The 76-year-old Chinese president defended the one-couple, one-child policy, which has been at­ tacked by foreign critics who charge it has also led to forced abortions and sterilizations. - Pope forgives m urderer KINSHASA, Zaire — Pope John Paul II Thursday beatified an Afri­ can nun who died resisting rape and forgave "with all my heart" the man who hacked her to death. The killer was believed to be in the crowd that heard the message. The pope proclaimed Sister Marie- Clementine Anuarite a "blessed" of the church, a status that usually leads to sainthood. Her parents and three1 sisters were present to hear the proclamation. Sister Anuarite and 33 other nuns were captured by Simba rebels during the 1964 civil war in southern Katanga province. Scores of whites and thousands of blacks were slaughtered in the fight­ ing. The 23-year-old nun was beat­ en and bayonetted to death Dec. 1, 1964 by Pierre Openge Olombe, a rebel officer. Olombe, who was sen­ tenced to death for the crime but lat­ er pardoned by President Mobutu Sese-Seko, has said he killed Sister Anuarite after she refused to be­ come the mistress of a rebel leader. S cien tists to begin fin al draft of M engele report WILMINGTON, Del. — A foren­ sic scientist who studied a human skeleton exhumed from a Brazilian cemetery said Thursday the remains were those of Nazi war criminal Josef Mengele "within a reasonable scientific certainty." The six Ameri­ can forensic experts who went to Brazil in June to study the remains and other evidence about Mengele, the infamous "Angel of Death," met to begin writing their final re­ port, which will go to the U.S. Jus­ tice Department. After six days of investigation, the scientists wrote in a preliminary report issued June 21 that it was their opinion "within a reasonable scientific certainty" that the skeleton was that of Mengele. FBI supervisor te s tifie s in S oviet espionage tria l LOS ANGELES — A former su­ pervisor of the only FBI agent ever charged with espionage said Thurs­ day he took the overweight defend­ ant off sensitive street work in part because a psychiatrist warned that he might have a mental breakdown. Gary Auer said the 1982 psychia­ trist's report was "a factot" in his decision to take Richard Miller off the streets and have him monitor telephone wiretaps in September 1983. The report said Miller might face a nervous collapse because of the pressure his supervisors were putting on him to lose weight. Mil­ ler's continued violation of 1 weight standards led to a series of poor performance evaluations, and prosecutors claim that that and his desperate financial straits eventual­ ly led him to agree to sell FBI docu­ ments to Soviet immigrant Svetlana Ogorodnikova for $65,000 in gold and cash. Stocks end slightly higher NEW YORK — Stock prices closed slightly higher in continued light trading Thursday. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.78 to 1,317.76. The Dow transportation index fell 3.16 to 671.00. Broader in­ dicators eased. The New York Stock Exchange index declined 0.03 to 108.59. Standard 8c Poor's 500-stock index fell 0.15 to 187.26. The price of an average share fell 2 cents. Among the 1,969 issues traded, ad­ vances outpaced declines 749-700. Big Board volume totaled 86,100,000 shares compared with 85,780,000 Wednesday. Composite volume of NYSE-listed issues on all U.S. ex­ changes and over the counter to­ taled 103,205,210 shares against 105,009,400 Wednesday. "With no momentum investors take the route of (oast resistance," Trade Latimer of Evans & Co said. U.S. Army base damaged in bomb attack United Press International MOENCHENGLADBACH, West Germany — A firebomb planted at a U.S. Army installation depot Thurs­ day damaged an American Forces Network transmitter but caused no injuries. radio Authorities blamed the attack on terrorist supporters. An army spokesman said sabo­ teurs cut their way through a fence outside a guarded U.S. Army depot in Moenchengladbach, 50 miles northwest of Bonn, at about 3 a.m. and planted three incendiary devic­ es. One of the firebombs exploded and damaged an AFN relay transmitter serving the area. Two other devices were found and dis­ armed before they went off, he said. The depot, where army trucks and other wheeled vehicles are stored, was guarded at the time of the attack by German civilian guards, the spokesman said. The vehicles were not damaged. There were no clues as to the identity of the saboteurs, but a spokesman for the West German Federal Prosecutor's Office said they probably were terrorist sup­ porters. "We think the attack came from the terrorist fringe," said Alexander Prechtel, spokesman for the office. Authorities differentiate between "terrorists" who are willing to kill and "supporters" on the fringe who confine their attacks to property. The attack came just one week af­ ter a car bomb planted by Red Army Faction terrorists at the U.S. Air Force's Rhein-Main base killed two Americans and injured 20 people. The West German Federal Crimi­ nal Office announced Thursday that it believes a woman named Sigrid Sternebeck, 36, was the owner of the Volkswagen Passat used to smuggle the bomb into the air base for the Aug. 7 attack. Investigators probing the car- bombing at Rhein-Main air base outside Frankfurt believe Red Army Faction members may have mur­ dered Army Spec. 4 Edward Pimen­ tal, 20, of New York City, in order to get his military identification card. Pimental .was seen leaving a bar in Wiesbaden with a woman who resembled Sternebeck the night be­ fore the car bomb exploded. He was found shot in the head in the woods on the outskirts of the city, about 15 miles west of Frankfurt. The dark-haired, brown-eyed women described by witnesses in the two crimes were similar, but "such a similarity could be a coinci­ dence," the Wiesbaden district at­ torney's office said. Heinrich Boge, head of the Crimi- ‘ nal Office, the German equivalent of the FBI, estimated the left-wing urban guerrilla band — also known as the Baader-Meinhof gang — has a core of about 20 members and about 200 militant supporters. Judge rules Walker’s statement not allowed as evidence United Press International DC. BALTIMORE — A federal judge the government ruled Thursday could not present as evidence a statement John Walker made to the FBI shortly after his arrest for selling U.S. secrets to the Soviets. U.S. District Judge Alexander Harvey II agreed with defense attor­ neys that FBI agents violated Walk­ er's rights by initiating "the func­ tional equivalent of interrogation" and by failing to honor his request for counsel and initial refusal to be interviewed. Harvey, however, in a victory for the prosecution, denied a defense motion that sought to throw out as evidence a garbage bag seized May 19 by the FBI at a suspected drop site that contained confidential mili­ tary documents. Defense attorneys had argued that FBI agents unlawfully exa­ mined the contents of the bag with­ out a search warrant. But Harvey agreed with prosecutors that priva­ cy was forfeited once the bag was placed and abandoned at a remote wooded area outside Washington Walker, 48, a retired Navy war­ rant officer, was arrested at a hotel in Rockville, Md., less than seven horn's after the FBI found the gar­ bage bag at the foot of a utility pole marked by a "no hunting" sign. Earlier Thursday, Harvey granted a defense motion to try Walker sep­ arately from his son, Michael Walk­ er, 22, a Navy seaman, who also is charged with espionage. Harvey said John Walker, as earli­ er scheduled, will be tried Oct. 28, and his son would be brought to tri­ al "shortly thereafter." Last Friday John W alker's brother, Arthur Walker, 50, was convicted in Norfolk, Va., of obtain­ ing military secrets for the Soviets. He is believed to have funneled the through his secrets brother, John. to Moscow A judge in San Francisco Thurs­ day set Nov. 12 for the trial of re­ tired Navy radioman Jerry Whit­ is charged with worth, who conspiring to supply the Walker family alleged spy ring with nation­ al defense information. The fourth member of the supected ring, Whit­ worth, 45, of Davis, Calif., is a for­ mer Navy friend of John Walker. John Walker, who opened a pri­ vate detective agency in Norfolk shortly after retiring from the Navy in 1976, is believed to have been the ring's mastermind. His arrest led those to the three others within a few days. The Walker family is believed to have supplied the Soviets with con­ fidential military secrets for up to 20 years, helping Moscow track U.S. naval operations worldwide. Gov­ ernment officials have alleged the ring may have done the most dam­ age to U.S. national security since Julius and Ethel Rosenberg sold se­ crets to the Soviets in the 1950s. John Walker was arrested at gun­ point at 3:45 a.m., May 20, in a lob­ by of the Rockville hotel and imme­ diately afterwards told the FBI he did not want to waive his right to remain silent and that he wanted an attorney. Fred Bennett, Walker's court-ap­ pointed attorney, told the court that his client twice refused to make a statement. Shortly after 6 a.m, "in what amounted to interrogation," Bennett said the FBI showed Walker a copy of an undelivered letter to the Soviets that Walker is believed to have placed in the garbage bag confiscated by the FBI. YOU’RE JUST A FEW BLOCKS AWAY FROM THE BEST STERLING SILVER PRICES IN TEXAS!! 24th & San Antonio Opon ivory Night Until 1:30 O p en 1 1:00am M o n -S a t O p en Sun 3:00pm H a p p y H o u r M o n -F ri 5-7 $599 LONDON $699 FRANKFURT $825 P A R IS $889 ROME Wednesday Travel Scheduled Service $715 SANTIAGO, BUENOS AIRES, RIO or SAO PAULO sssi* $833 HONG KONG or TAIPEI All Fares Roundtrip from Austin 'UNCIL Wholesale Diamonds APPRAISE — BUY — SELL T.D. WERNICK, Inc. 314 Highland Moll Blvd. #104 454-3133 FINALS ARE HERE!! WE CAN HELP! OPEN 7 DAYS OPEN TIL MIDNIGHT • EXPERT TUTORING In most subjects é WORD PROCESSING • OVERNIGHT TYPING SERVICE 813 W. 24th St. 472-6666 CAPITOL SADDLERY EQUESTRIAN HEADQUARTERS FOR AUSTIN ENGLISH WESTERN Boot & Shoe Repair ♦Handtooled Belts 8t Chaps# ♦Handmade Boots# ♦Sterling Silver Belt Buckles# 1414 LAVACA 47M349S ” w n t i i m m i i K W i Eaob NEW HAIR GROWTH IN MALE PATTERN BALDNESS 18" 7mm full sterling silver necklace $24.00 Compare at $39.00 18" 10mm full sterling silver necklace $44.00 Compare at $72.00 7" 7mm sterling silver bracelet $11.00 Compare at $16.00 T 6mm sterling silver bracelet $10.50 Compare at $13.00 18" 9mm sterling silver necklace $37.75 Compare at $49.00 Or make your own graduated necklace at the best price possible! PLUS Sterling stiver ball studs starting at $2.00 (5mm) Sterling Silver Hearts Sterling Stiver Bracelets ¡ i Bring this ad for a • FREE PAIR OF 7mm i STERLING SILVER ! BALL STUDS i with any purchase ¡ expires 8 /3 1 '85 limit one per customer t - ““" - " I ^ Á c a a n o c 1 IL— 1 J tzszi p r a B r — — ií5 S. Casgres# L.js_ The Daily Texan/Friday, August 1 6 ,1985/Page 3 Nakasone honors war dead with visit to Shinto shrine United Press International TOKYO — Prime M inister Yasuhiro Nakasone Thursday made a controversial visit to a Shinto shrine dedicated to the Japanese war dead as the nation solemnly marked its World War II surrender. The end of the Pacific war, on Aug. 15, 1945, is celebrated as "VJ Day" in the West. But for the Japa­ nese, the anniversary is a somber occasion marked by prayers for peace. A bent, frail Emperor Hirohito,. whose radio address to his nation led to Japan's unconditional surren­ der, paid tribute to the country's 3.1 million war dead at a memorial at the Budokan, or Martial Arts, Hall outside the Imperial Palace. "My heart still pains over a great number of people who died on the battlefront and in ravages in the past war," Hirohito said at ceremo­ nies attended by Nakasone and about 8,000 other people. Hirohito, 84, the world's longest reigning m onarch, appeared unsteady as he prayed for peace be­ fore an altar bedecked with 25,000 white and yellow chrysanthemums, Japan's national flower. At noon, a tape of Hirohito's 1945 speech announcing the decision to surrender was broadcast as temple bells tolled and sirens wailed in cit­ ies. People nationjvide offered a one-minute silent prayer for the war dead. Nakasone said at the ceremonies that "taking a lesson from the previ­ ous war, I will make a relentless ef­ fort for international cooperation and world peace." After the observance, Nakasone became the first post-war prime minister to make an official visit to the Yasukuni Shrine, a Shinto shrine dedicated to the war dead. Shintoism, the state religion of Ja­ pan prior to 1945, emphasizes the worship of nature, ancestors, an­ cient heros and the divinity of the emperor. At the shrine, seven youths were arrested for distributing leaflets pro­ testing Nakasone's visit, police said. Leftists and other domestic oppo­ nents claim that Nakasone's visit was an official expression of sup­ port for the militant Shinto sect in violation of a constitutional separa­ tion of church and state. Critics fear the gesture will en­ courage those who hope to revive Shinto nationalist militarism in Ja­ pan. Nakasone, however, defended the visit. His official spokesman said the visit is "in response to the strong desire of many, including families of the war dead ... to show respect to those who laid down their lives in the defense of their country and their fellow-countrymen, and to re­ new the resolution for the peace of Japan and the world." T h e Daily Texan Permanent Staff . ........................ Ru«aMI Scott Editor Managing E ditor........................................................ *-lsa Brown-Bichau Associate Managing E d ito rs ........................Herb Benenson, Tela Goodwin, Suzanne Michel, David Nather News E ditor......................................................................................... Associate News E d ito r........................................................................................................ Associate Editors Art Director Sports Editor . Associate Sports E d ito r ...................................... Entertainment E d ito r............................................................................................................... Entertainment Associate E d ito r............................................................. Images E d ito r............................................................................................................ Associate Images Editors Photo E ditor............................... Genera) R eporters............................................ Matthew Geiger, Donny Jackson, Rick Rutledge, Jim Warren Entertainment R e p o rte r............................ Around Campus E d ito r....................................................... C artoo n ists........................................................................................................ M iles Mathis, Donny Jansan Draw Parma Andrew Chin, Sean S. Price Stan Roberts DianeBurch Tim ................................................ David Men* Helen Bramtett ^ Bhat, I lelon Moroney • • ¡5 5 ? McDt Parry Getteiman Issue Staff ...............................................................................................................Paula t Assignments Editor General R e p o rte r...................................................................................................................... KeHye Norns Newswrrters Julie Daniels, Rudy Sustaita. Sharon Taylor, Jane Thompson, EHen WMkams News Assistants........................................................................................................................... John Wickson Sports Makeup E d ito r..................................................................................................................WÜ! Sports A ssistant......................................................................................................................................... Sekm Editorial Assistant Editorial Colum nist................................................................................................... Make-up E d ito r........................................................................................................... * • • • Key McNamara W ire E d ito r........................................... ” ...................................................................................Keete Bordan Copy E d ito rs ..................................................... Micky Inoue, David Gadbots, Mary Corbett, Peter Strouthes Photographer . . V o lu n te e rs ................................... ....................................................... Ron Matlock. Kyle Pope LumTwiH* hnaon **?Tna Rachel Waxman Kay Carpenter Denise Johnson Tammy Haiovsky Benny Lawrence Cindy Holladay Ken Butts Susie Snyder Lori Ruszkowski Linda Cohen Alex Gelb Ken Grays Display Advertising The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University ot Texas at Austin, is j Wished by Texas Student Publications, Drawer D, University Station. Austin, TX 78713-7209 The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.136) Inquiries concerning classified advertis­ ing should be made in TSP Building 3.200 (471-5244) The national advertising representative ot The Daily Texan is Cass Communications, 1633 West Central Street, Evanston. Illinois 60201; CMPS, 1680 North Vine, Suite 900. Hollywood. CA 90028 American Passage. 500 Thud Avenue West Seattle, WA 96119 _ _ The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan « a member ot the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association, Columbia Scholastic Press Association. Copyright 1985 Texas Student Publications The M y Texan Subscription Ratea One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fa# and Spring) Summer S e s s io n ................................................................................................................................................. One Year (Fa#. Spring and S u m m e r)................................................................... 58.0; IM O ® Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P O. Box D, Austin. TX 78713-7209, or to TSP Building C3.200. or cal 471-5083. f FOREIGN STUDENTS & FACULTY S PAUL PARSONS p.c. ATTORNEY AT LAW Board Certified Immigration & Nationality Law Texas Board of Legal Specialization \ is pleased to announce the opening of his new offices at DiflmonD? unumic€D V DIAMONDS OF AUSTIN INC COMPARE OUR PlflCES BEFORE YOU BUY "Find us. we're worth it." 314 Highland Mall Blvd. Suite #309 - 3rd Floor 454-5257 l U M C a Afea* I * H rry M m * Fm ■ I S . 704 RIO GRANDE Austin. Texas 78701 (5121477-7887 Mocassins by [matnelll j Easy-Stride Footwear Only$24 reg. $38.25 90 One Week Only! Available in: putty navy gwy burgundy ■ PHYSICIAN I SUPERVISED ic a l H 800E. I St. SUM* 210 478-6777 2406 Guadalupe “On-the-Drag” university Page 4/The Dally Texan/Friday, August 16.19: ÜTSA researchers! use baboons in study By JULIE DANIELS Daily Texan Staff Researchers at the University Health Science Center in San Anto­ nio are working to cross the species barrier with baboons in studies that may prove helpful to future heart patients. The baboons are supplied by the Southwest Foundation for Biomedi­ cal Research in San Antonio, which maintains a colony of 2,800 ba­ boons. "W e're the No. 1 source of baboons in the country," founda­ tion president Duncan Wimpress said. The foundation, one of the largest independent centers of biomedical research in the country, collaborates with the Health Science Center on baboon research projects involving the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems. Baboons are physiologically simi­ lar to humans and can be studied intensely for long periods of time, said Karen Stamm, a spokeswoman for the UT Health Science Center in San Antonio. "The baboon is a good model for the human system in re­ search." Richard Walsh, associate profes­ sor of medicine at the center, uses the baboons in an $875,000 study to determine the exact point at which heart failure begins. "It's a very im­ portant transition point that has im­ plications involving the best time to perform surgery and to use medica­ tions on heart patients," Walsh said. The researchers, funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood In­ stitute, insert tubes in the baboon's heart arteries or veins and measure heart cell enlargement caused by high blood pressure, the No. 1 cause of heart disease in the coun­ try, Walsh said. The baboons will be used in his study for five years and will then retire to the foundation's colony. Another UT Medical School study using baboons, directed by Dr. Henry McGill, professor of patholo­ gy, seeks the link between obesity and hardening of the arteries. Baboons and humans metabolize fat in the same way, and McGill dis­ covered by feeding infant baboons different diets, that overfed baboon infants got fatter as adults than those given normal diets, Stamm said. "The researchers tend to think that humans would have the same experience," Stamm said. "The overfed baboon^ had more fat cells than the others, and they figured it was worse for a person to have lots of fat cells than to have fewer big ones." Stamm said fat-cell size can be re­ duced by diet and exercise, but the number one develops as an infant never changes. "They don't know yet how to link the baboon research with hardening of the arteries in humans, but they should have that information in a year," she said. In addition to adult baboons, the foundation supplies the demand for infant baboons, Wimpress said. "W e sell about 100 infant baboons a year to scientific facilities around the country," he said. 3G roli s BEEF CHICKEN IAJITAS FRESH SKIRT r u i r i / C M Steve Schroeter/Daily Texan Staff ■S» M», L * Rainy days and Thursdays i inria Ena and Joan Braeuer both graduate students in psychology, grab a bite to eat at the egg roll stand near Littlefield Fountain during a brief shower Thursday. The two shared a plastic bag to shield themselves from the rain. The showers had nothing to do with Hurricane Danny.___________ City Council considers LBJ school to study airport safety By JIM WARREN Daily Texan Staff touchy subject at The City Council resurrected a politically its Thursday meeting — Robert Muell­ er Municipal Airport — and is con­ sidering hiring the Lyndon B. John­ son School of Public Affairs to study its safety. In January, voters narrowly re­ jected moving the airport, but Councilmember Mark Rose, who is sponsoring the study along with Councilmember Sally Shipman, in­ sisted the study will deal only with safety, not with relocation. ‘We don’t plan to make recommendations on whether the airport should be moved; we’ll look at the safety of Robert Mueller Airport.’ — James Katz, assistant professor City Manager Jorge Carrasco asked for two weeks to look at the LBJ School proposal and determine if the city has funds to finance the study. But LBJ officials said the work is scheduled to begin in early September, and Carrasco agreed to make a decision at next Thursday's council meeting. James Katz, LBJ School assistant professor, and Richard McCulley, research associate and lecturer at the LBJ School, will head a panel of about 10 students at a cost of rough­ ly $25,000 to the city and $19,000 to the University. Rose said the University ex­ pressed an interest in the study sev­ eral months ago. Rose asked Katz if he could as­ sure the council that the report will be unbiased, and Katz said it will be fair. "W e plan to ensure that all points of view are taken into account," Katz said. "W e'll be using hard data, and we'll be doing a lot of number crunching." When completed, the report will be open for public review, Katz said. Rose said the report will not be though McCulley political, even was a member of the Airport Task Force and was a leading proponent of moving the airport. "The unfortunate thing about that (January) election was it got down to whether a plane was going to crash into Capital Plaza or whether we were buying a white el­ ephant," Rose said. "My intent is not to find safety problems but to find out if in fact there are safety problems." Katz said his group will consult experts in airport safety, and look at factors such as runway length and air corridors, as well as make com: parison studies of other airpoiis similar to Mueller. "W e don't plan to make recom­ mendations on whether the airport should be moved; we'll look at the safety of Robert Mueller Airport," Katz said. Although Rose and Katz said the report has nothing to do with the recent Delta crash in Dallas, the re­ port will look at the possibility of air collisions in the Mueller area, which is heavily populated. The D a ily Texan wants you Foil Registration Monday, August 19 Tuesday, August 20 Wednesday, August 21 Thursday, August 22 1:30 p.m.-8:00 p.m. 10:00-a.m.-8:00 p.m. 10:00-a.m.-8:00 p.m. 10:00-a.m.-6:00 p.m. College-Credit Courses: Register for all college-credit courses at City Coliseum. A time permit, required to enter the Coliseum for registration, may be obtained at the Admissions Office at the Ridgeview or Rio Grane» campuses, in the Associate Deon's Office, Crockett and Reagan centers. For information, call 495-7504 or 7505. Continuing Education Courses: N o time permit is required to register for continuing education courses. To avoid crowds at the Coliseum, you may also register at the following locations: A C C Central Office, 207 E. Fifth Street, M-F, 8 a.m.-5 p m , 495- 7540. Crocket Center, 5601 Manchaca Road, portable building by Manchaca parking lot, M-Th, 4:30-9:30 p.m., 442-6684. Reagan Center, 7104 Berkman Drive, portable building at St. John's Ave., M-Th, 4:30-9:30 p.m., 453-0234. : :.v,, ' Welcome Entering Students! let u* help you carry your books home from school. All our bookpacks are quaranteed to last through graduation (with normal use), Visit us soon 4 look over our large selection of book/ bike packs, shoulder bags and briefcases. North 4 Campus stores are open 10-6 Weekdays 4 Saturdays,'til 9pm Thursdays. The Brodie Oaks store is open 10-9pm every weekday and 'til 6pm Saturdays. Stop by soon. Whole Earth Provision / 8868 Research Blvd 4 5 8 -6 3 3 5 ^ B 2410 San Antonio St. ■ ■ 4006 South Lamar | _444-99?S If you would Itoe to h o $ feriof tatonted. them ¡«ap lace tor s ta te & The Daily Texan/Friday, August 16,1985/Page 5 Testimony concludes in trial of ‘KGB agent’ By RICK RUTLEDGE Daily Texan Staff After numerous delays, testimo­ ny concluded Thursday in federal court in the fraud trial of self-pro­ fessed KGB agent Bratislav Lilic. Byron Eaton, a special agent with the FBI, Thursday gave his account of Lilic's confession of defrauding the governments of South Africa énd Uganda to the jury. The Yugoslavian-born Lilic, 33, who lists a Chicago address, is charged with three counts of fraud and one count of mail fraud. He is accused of fraudulently obtaining $46,000 from Austin resident Doug­ las Pierce to secure the release of Pi­ erce's son, John, from Vietnam. U.S. District Judge James Nowlin said the trial should conclude Fri­ day. If convicted, Lilic could receive up to 35 years in the federal peni­ tentiary. Lilic's attorneys offered no de­ fense testimony. John Pierce was one of 83 crew­ men on the Glomar Java Sea, an oil that sank 200 exploration vessel miles off the coast of Vietnam Oct. 25, 1983. While there are no known survivors, Pierce's body was not re­ covered , father has searched for him ever since. and his The father testified Tuesday that he offered a $100,000 reward for his son's return in late 1983 and placed ''every Viet­ in advertisements namese newspaper in the world' and even appeared on the CBS Morning News. Pierce said that over a period of four months, Lilic, posing as a KGB agent, collected $46,000 from Pierce and continually promised that his son would soon be released. Lilic has not denied Pierce's story, but he has maintained he was working for the Soviet Union and he intended to get Pierce's son released. Eaton said Lilic told him he had been a "con m an" for years. "H e decided to take advantage of his for­ eign accent by pulling cons" on var­ ious representatives of foreign gov­ ernments, Eaton said. Lilic, who was suspected of de­ frauding the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defa­ mation League at the time, told Ea­ ton that he, on one occasion, contacted the South African consu­ late in Chicago, Eaton said. Lilic told the South Africans that he had a relative in the French For­ eign Legion who could supply the South Africans with an arms ship­ ment for $25,000, Eaton said. "H e had no capability whatsoever of providing the w eapons," Eaton said. But Eaton said a friend of Lilic double-crossed him and took the $25,000, so Lilic went back to the South Africans and got an addi­ tional $5,000. Eaton also said Lilic got $10,000 from the Ugandan government in exchange for helping to expose a supposed assassination plot against dictator Idi Amin. Eaton was the only witness to tes­ tify Thursday. Ron Butler, director of security for the Anti-Defamation League, did not testify before the jury. Butler testified Wednesday out­ side the presence of the jury that Lilic had tried to obtain money from the Anti-Defamation League in ex­ change for information about guns being smuggled to an anti-Jewish group. Butler taped one conversation w'ith Lilic, but a dispute over But­ ler's testimony arose because the tape was not supplied to Lilic's at­ torneys before the trial began. Officials say weather increases heat illness By JANE THOMPSON Daily Texan Staff With temperatures rising into the 90s, the number of people suffering from heat illness in Austin also has been climbing. Dr. Juan Nieto, medical director of Brackenridge Hospital's emer­ gency department, said the number of patients suffering from heat ex­ haustion has been increasing. "In the past four weeks there have been a lot more people coming in and complaining about head­ aches and abdominal cram ps," Nieto said. "These problems are re­ lated to heat exhaustion." illness Nieto said children and elderly people are most susceptible to heat exhaustion. "H eat is a progressive thing," Nieto said. "It starts with cramps, confusion, weakness and headaches." He said next the per­ son starts to feel confused and diz­ zy. Heatstroke occurs when the per­ son's body is no longer able to regulate its temperature. Nieto said he has not seen any cases of intense heat exhaustion this summer. He said Austin's low hu­ midity is one reason heat illness has not climbed to dangerous levels. To help prevent heat exhaustion, Nieto suggested drinking lots of flu­ ids, wearing light clothing, wearing a hat and staying out of the sun dur­ ing periods of intense heat. Another problem related to the soaring temperatures are soaring electric bills. Many Austin residents cannot afford to cool their homes and some have had their electric service cut off. There are several agencies that help people who cannot afford to pay their electric bills, said Gerald Murphy, general supervisor for Utility Customer Services. The city "plus one" system pro­ vides aid with funds donated by Austin residents. City of Austin electric bills have a printed request that asks utility customers to add $1 to their payment to help needy fam­ ilies that cannot afford to pay their electric bills. The "plus one" system has helped 1,806 Austin residents pay for electric services since it began in July 1983, Murphy said. He said only 116 out of 1,922 applicants have been denied. There are also three federally funded programs that provide utili­ ty payment aid to needy families. The Texas Department of Com­ munity Affairs houses two of these programs. The energy crisis inter­ vention and weatherization pro­ grams provide funds to low income families, said Bud Roland, program manager for emergency assistance for the TDCA. The energy crisis intervention program helps about 75 to 100 fami­ lies a week, Roland said. He said a termination notice is required to ap­ ply for funding. The program began in February and will operate until the funds are expended, Roland said. He said the program grant was for approximate­ ly $100,000 and he expects the funds to last until late September. The other TDCA program, the weatherproofing program, provides more permanent help to families. The weatherproofing funding helps families make their homes more energy efficient, said Debbie Amberson, public information as­ sistant for the TDCA. Amberson said the program is only for people that are below in­ come poverty guidelines and said elderly and handicapped persons are given priority. Steve Schroeter Daily Texan Staff Staying alive Sue DeGasperin of Palm Springs, Calif., pauses in Robert Mueller Munici­ pal Airport to dance with a robot named SICO, created by Robert Dornic of International Robots, Inc. Three charges against Lucas dropped United Press International . LUBBOCK — Three murder charges against serial killer Henry Lee Lucas were dropped Thursday in another twist of the bizarre story of a former drifter w ho has recanted hundreds of confessions. "Because of the evidence that we have now ... we feel it has cast doubt on the cases here in Lub­ bo ck ," Criminal District Attorney Jim Bob Darnell said during a news conference. "I have no reason to question the integrity of the law officers," Dar­ nell said of criticism that Lucas hoaxed authorities across the coun­ try eager to close unsolved cases. Lucas previously confessed to 600 in 26 slayings prompting police states to close the books on 210 kill­ ings. A state grand jury in Waco and the Texas attorney general's off­ ice has reviewed his statements. He disclaimed nearly all his con­ fessions in April, but remains on Texas' death row for a capital mur­ der conviction in the slaying of an unidentified hitchhiker whose body was found Halloween night 1979 along Interstate 35 in Williamson County. Darnell said Lucas remained a suspect in the unsolved Lubbock slayings, but the prosecutor said other jurisdictions had stronger cas­ es against him. The 48-year-old former Michigan mental patient was indicted in May 1984 for the 1975 death of Deborah Sue Williamson, the 1971 slaying of Naomi Miller Martin and the 1976 death of Elizabeth Price. Williamson's stepfather Bob Lem­ ons of Gainesville said he would file a m ulti-m illion dollar law suit against authorities who ignored his they had that repeated charged the wrong man. claims an W illia m so n , 1 8 -y e a r-o ld newlvwed, was stabbed 17 times outside her home Aug. 24, 1975. Darnell said investigators only re­ cently obtained Michigan prison records showing Lucas was released from a Jackson prison Aug. 22. "It is o u r conclusion that in all probability Henry Lucas could not have been in Texas in that time fram e," Darnell said, adding Lucas' relatives indicated they were with Lucas in Maryland on his birthday, Aug. 23, 1975. SALE DATE co-op camera AUGUST 12th irtLU l7th SUPER Viviti I I SALE '28-90 m.m.f/2.8-3.5 MACRO LENSES : Vwitar Series 1 $ 174.00 mm 70-210 m.m.f/2.8-4.0 MACRO... 183.00 200 m.m. f/3.5 AUTOFOCUS..... 323.00 450 tn.m.f/4.5 CATADIOPTRIC. . . 419.00 * T * MOUNT FOR 'CAT'.. 29.00 MATCHED MULTIPLIER FOR CAT... 98.00 -OUR BEST PRICE EVER •»! Vivitar Senes FIXED MOUNT 17 m.m.f/3.5............... $ 24 m.m.f/2.0.. .......... 28 m. m. £/2 . 0 .... ............ 28 m. m. f/2 . 8.............. . 55 m.m.f/2.8 MACRO......... 166.00 79. 00 450mm 153'.ooCaladhptrk ZOOMS : Vhritor Series 1 70-210mm f/2,8-4.0 55mm f/2.8 Macro 2 8 - 8 5 m . m . f / 3 . 5 - 4 . 5 MACRO.......... 28-l35m.m.f/3.5-4.5 MACRO.... 35-105m.m.f/3.2-4.0 MACRO.... 35-200m.m.£/3.0-4.5 MACRO.... 70-200m.m.f/3.8 MACRO...... 2X MATCHED MULTIPLIER...... 70-210m.m.f/4.5 MACRO...... 75-300m.m.f/4.5—5.6 MACRO.... 120-600m.m.f/5.6-8.0....... *35-70m.m.f/2.8-3.8 MACRO.... 1 1 2 . 0 0 171.00 98. 00 161.00 1 1 2 . 0 0 36.00 96.00 135.00 410.00 87. 00 PRO-PAK - INCLUDES SKYLIGHT FILTER. LENS HOOD, POUCH CASE & LENS CLEANING KIT-WITH PURCHASE OF ANY VIVITAR LENS. ONLY................. 14.00 2 X TELECONVERTER. .■..... . 31.00 FLASH UNITS-AUTOMATIC 2600............... 2800 2500................... * , 283....................... . NEW 285 HV......... CAMERAS : * PS; 35 ....... • • •$ 87.50 TELE WIDE KIT ...... 26.50 6.95 CASE................ 5 2l 32 45 51 PS:30. . ............ 62.95 6-95 CASE................ SALE DATE : AUGUST 12th THRU 1 7 t h Fret Parking 23rd & San Antonio W S3 Purchase Vivitar 120-600» im U f / 5.6-8.0 Telephoto DEDICATED UNITS I2 6 OO D 25. 0 0 '2800 D.......... • 34. 00 3500 W/MODULE...... 45.00 •••••.• 57 •00 3700 68.00 5200 " MISC. INSTANT SLIDE PRINTER...$ 93.50 SB-6 AC ADAPTER.... 20.50 * PLUS-dET A TWIN PACK OF POLAROID 669 FILM FREE WITH PURCHASE OF SLIDE PRINTER !H SITY 2246 Guadalupe Phone 476-7211 THE AUSTIN DIAGNOSTIC CLINIC is p le a se d to a n n o u n ce the op e nin g of THE NIGHT CARE CENTER in the North Building at 801 West 34th Street The Night C a r e C e r e / through Friday for no n Ple ase net fy - • An A u s t e ■ s a a ' o ■’ > I GET THE BEST OF STOREHOUSE Computer desk with storage cabinet in natural oak veneers; 48" x 26V2" x 2 6 V2" high. Includes monitor shelf. Reg. $279; SAL,E$199 Museum chairs with chrome plated tubular steel frame come in natural, walnut or black finish. Arm, reg. $69; SALE $49 Side. reg. $54; SALE $39 Custom-made parson's tables in over 50 plastic laminate finishes, now 25% off. Samples shown: 36" square, SALE $199 16" square, SALE $94 24" x 48". SALE $209 Our own Rondo sofa, ready for delivery in neutral twill woven with rich accent colors. Or custom order in choice of 100 other fabrics. Save 20% either wa; Reg. S599-S699; SALE $4 As shown, reg. SEMI-AMMUAL S A U K W fcm SO % O W | Come save on hundreds of our best and brightest designs. Hurry—quantities | M * LIMITED STOCK IN SOME MOUNTS. CHECK FOR AVAILABILITY OF YOUR CAMERA. THIS IS A SPECIAL ORDER SALE:20% DOWN. BALANCE DUE UPON ARRIVAL. ALLOW 1-3 WEEKS FOR DELIVERY. PHONE 476-7211 EXT. 242 FOR MORE INFORMATION. 2402 HKaNqpdMoB, 459-3161 (Mon-Sat 10-9. Sun.12HS) m m Pttge 6/The Daily Texan/Friday, August 16,1985 City plans to expand bikeway system in face of criticism Authorities issue order to inspect all 747s in Japan United Press International TOKYO — Japanese and U.S. investigators Thursday examined the flight recorders from the jum­ bo jet that crashed with 524 peo­ ple aboard and the government ordered tail inspections for the country's entire Boeing 747 fleet. Inspections of the 69 jumbo jets operated by japan's four ma­ jor carriers were ordered after preliminary evidence indicated that the tail section of Japan Air Lines Flight 123 broke up Mon­ day before the plane slammed into a mountain in central Japan, killing 520 people in the worst single airplane disaster in histo- :ry. JAL spokesm an Masaru • Watanabe said damage to the tail fin — essential to controlling the aircraft — could well have led to the crash. "But we still don't i know for sure." Recovery teams still airlifting bodies off the densely wooded ridge where the plane crashed Monday some 60 miles north­ west of Tokyo were hampered by the rough terrain and crews sprayed preservatives over the shattered plane to slow the de­ composition of bodies still buried in the debris. Doctors in Fujioka, a city 25 miles to the northeast of the crash site, said identification of the victims also had been slowed because many bodies were muti­ lated or burned. Only four people, two Japa­ nese women and two girls seated in the rear of the plane, survived the crash and were reported by doctors to be recuperating from serious injuries in a hospital. from investigators the Seattle-based Boeing Co., and Five two each from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board and Federal Aviation Administration, met with transport Japanese ministry officials to begin review­ ing Flight 123's cockpit voice and flight data recorders, which could provide vital clues in deter­ mining the cause of the crash. Transport officials gave no de­ tails on the findings and said it would be "several days" before any announcement is made. An FAA official declined comment. In its order, the Ministry of Transport said inspections for JAL, All Nippon Airways, Toa Domestic Airways and Nippon Cargo Airlines were mandatory "since the circumstances seem to indicate to (Flight 123's) vertical stabilizer and rudders might be the start­ ing point of the accident." the damage that Two pieces of the vertical sta­ bilizer, part of the lower rudder and another less critical part have been found along the path flown by the jet. In Seattle, a Boeing spokesman called the inspection order "a prudent move on the part of the Japanese." 'They don't know what happened and so they should take every step they can that is intelligent and prudent to determine the cause. We don't know anything more than what the (Japanese Transportation) ministry has said." Watanabe downplayed a theo­ ry that problems with the right rear door of the aircraft caused the jet's cabin to depressurize 40 minutes before the crash. Shortly after the plane left Tokyo for the western city of Osaka, pilot Masami Takaham reported a malfunction in the door. Serioui»88 Austin’s Nk and bike traHs. They say the trails do not alow them to ride fast enough and are too dangerous. have priority," Reeder said. "If you were a serious cyclist you would never ever think of riding on a bike path." Austin's 20 miles of hike and bike trails are run by the Parks and Rec­ reation Department and are com­ pletely separate from the bikeway system. They also were criticized by the three club presidents. "I think they basically design them as jogging paths," Endres said. Endres said they are "too twis­ ty and tumy" and force cyclists to ride much slower than their most ef­ ficient speed of 18 to 20 mph. Reeder said she thought bike paths, bike lanes and hike and bike trails were probably a good idea in the UT area because there are a lot of pepple riding short distances. McAlister said the UT area is a good candidate for bikeway addi­ tions and improvements. "I think that (the UT area) would certainly be one of the areas we would look at closely because there are a lot of cy­ clists in that area." McAlister said anyone can submit proposals or suggestions in written form to the Urban Transportation Department concerning the addi­ tional bike routes as long as she re­ ceives the proposals by Aug. 31. Steve Schroeter/Daily Texan Staff :<■ isn'-V ^ tie ^?lLc <* th^66ASOI - ñ a s csP J T / Í a a t e u ii-m -s a v in g s ^ 5 that set-up because it segregates bi­ cycles." All three association presidents' said they rarely used bike lanes. "The bike lanes I find practically worthless because cars park there all the time and they (the police) never ticket," Endres said. The traffic detail at the Austin Po­ lice Department said it is illegal for a car to drive in a bike lane, but not illegal to park there. "We've been trying for over a year to get the City Council to make it illegal to park inNa bike lane," Reeder added. McAlister said the city has ap­ proximately 75 miles of bikeways in place, consisting of bike lanes, bike paths and bike streets. Bike lanes argareas within a road­ way designated primarily for the use of bicycles. They are marked off on the edge of the road by white stripes. Bike paths are areas adjacent to the roadway specifically designed for the sole use of bicycles, or bicy­ cles or pedestrians. Bike paths are paved, much like sidewalks. McAlister said bike streets are marked with signs and run parallel to main roads. Ideally, they are a little wider than most side streets and are safer to ride on than main roads, McAlister said. Austin will spend $1 million in bond money in fiscal year 1985-86 and another million in '86-'87 for improvements and additions to bring the bikeway system up^to 273 miles — giving Austin one o in longest bikeway systems country. The additions will be some combination of bike lanes, bike paths and bike streets. The criticism of bike paths prima­ rily is that they slow cyclists too much because of debris that tends to accumulate — mainly broken glass — and because of the frequent curb cuts. "You've got to stop at every sin­ gle curb cut when you're riding on a bike path, but if you were on a street, you would automatically By RON MATLOCK Daly Texan Staff The city Urban Transportation Department hopes to finalize plans this month for an additional 200 miles of bikeway system to be built with $2 million in bond money, but some serious cyclists said the im­ provements may not be what they need. Joyce McAlister, coordinator of special transportation programs at the department, said three weeks ago letters were sent to neighbor­ hood associations and cycling groups to get their opinions of addi­ tions and improvements to the bike­ way system. At the end of August, McAlister hopes to use this feedback to draft a formal plan for the planning and en- .gineering section of the Urban Transportation Department. From there, the plan will go to the city. Public Works Department. But the presidents of three major cycling groups in Austin agreed that the only improvement serious cy­ clists would be interested in are bike streets, which are roadways official­ ly designated as a bicycle routes, but open to motor vehicle travel. And that would mean spending most of the bond money on widen­ ing new and existing streets. Mark Endres, president of the UT Cycling Club, said for cyclists main­ ly interested in getting from point A to point B — tourers, commuters and racers — the fastest and most efficient way to get around is to use regular streets. Ruth Reeder, president of the 300-member Austin Cycling Associ­ ation, has lobbied the City Council about cyclists' interests and voiced a similar concern. "What we really would like is a network of roads large enough to accommodate mo­ torists and cyclists," she said. Jay Bond, president of the bicycle club Violet Crown Sports Associa­ tion, said he "tends to favor the idea of bike streets where bikes and cars can share the right of way," but that he has "mixed feelings about Funds sought for legal aid to women By JULIE DANIELS DaMy Texan Staff An Austin non-profit corporation will provide legal assistance to al­ most 4,000 Texas women this year, but the agency needs more money to expand its services, the agency's executive director said. Three Austin attorneys formed the Women's Advocacy Project Inc. in October 1983 to help inform women of their legal rights and en­ sure that all Texas women have equal access to the legal system, said Betsy Loar, the agency's execu­ tive director. "Women frequently don't know what their legal rights are," Loar said. "It's usually more the case that women rather than men are not aware." The project operates a toll-free 800 number "hot line" to answer le­ gal questions on family issues like domestic violence, divorce and child support. The agency also will help with such employment prob­ lems as sex discrimination, sexual harassment and pregnancy rights. "With most hot line calls it's a sit­ uation where a woman says, 'I'm about to get a divorce and I don't know what's involved. What can you tell me?' " Loar said. "There usually aren't any quick answers." v But Loar said the agency does not have enough money to meet a growth in demand for hot-line ser­ vices. The agency has handled an average of 230 calls a month since January, which is 70 percent more than last year, she said. "Statistics from the phone compa­ ny show we miss at least l lA times as many calls as we answer," Loar said. "The callers are definitely out Hiere, but we've reached the maxi­ mum we can handle in the hours we're open." Paula Latimer, an agency founder and the chairman of the board, said the hot line was their most popular and valuable service. "The phone never stops ringing, so we're put­ ting our resources into continuing it," she said. The project operates on a $40,000 annual budget, with $12,000 of that paying for the hot line. The project will have a fund-raising reception honoring state Treasurer Ann Rich­ ards on Oct. 5, in which they hope to raise $20,000. Most of the agency's funds come from individual donations, Latimer said. "Some small businesses and institutions have given us money, but the backbone of our budget comes from individuals," she said. Other services offered include a Mat of attorneys willing to give two free consulations monthly. Attor­ neys also are flexible on the fees charged. The agency also holds seminars on women's legal issues and pro­ vides speakers for groups con­ cerned about women's rights. Six interns, all UT law students, research legal issues for attorneys and give free information, Loar said. "When attorneys are dealing with time, you're dealing with mon­ ey, and any way to save them time saves the women money, she said. The Daily Texan/Friday, August 16,1985/Page 7, Convicted killer ) thanks warden „ for Hth-hourstay, United Press International HUNTSVILLE — A convicted killer whose execution was blocked Wednesday just minutes before he was to be taken to the death chamber calmly thanked a war­ den for news of the reprieve and then was returned, to his death row cell. The U.S. Supreme Court blocked the execution of Jay Kelly Pinkerton at 11:35 p.m. Wednesday, 25 minutes before he was to be put to death by injection for the bloody mutilation murder of a housewife. "Thank you," Pinkerton told Warden J.B. Pursiey. He then shook the warden's hand. The appeal had been pending before the high court since Tuesday. A federal appeals court refused to inter­ vene Monday, and a federal judge earlier Wednesday rejected Pinkerton's handwritten request for a stay. Texas Attorney General Jim Mattox said he initially thought Pinkerton, 23, would win a stay because he was early in the appeals process, even though in his opinion issues raised by Pinkerton's attorneys were without merit. "We saw no justifiable grounds for any of those is­ sues to be raised," he said. "We looked at the issues and did not see any meritorious ones in the group." Pinkerton claimed he did not receive effective legal improperly used a counsel and that prosecutors surprise witness during his trial. The witness was Pinkerton's former cellmate, who testified the one-time packing plant worker often bragged about killing Sarah Donn Lawrence, 30, and sexually mutilating her body. Pinkerton was 17 when he broke into Lawrence's home Oct. 26, 1979, raped her and then stabbed her more than 30 times as her children slept in nearby bed­ rooms. The woman, who died of a gaping stab wound in her throat, also was sexually abused after her death. Mattox said he does not believe the Supreme Court's action signals a more lenient attitude toward appeals. "I don't think it's a signal of anything," he said. "I feel the courts continue to send conflicting signals. They appear to be on the verge of moving quickly, then they do something like this to slow things down." Ten death penalty opponents holding a candelight vigil outside the prison cheered when they received news of the stay. "Every time someone doesn't die it lifts the spirits of all people opposed to the death penalty," said Helen Gros of the Houston chapter of the American Civil Lib­ erties Union. Earlier Wednesday night, a coalition of anti-death penalty groups blasted the state for carrying out execu­ tions. Loeffler ^ criticizes f Gov. W h it* United Press International sk Rep. Tom Loeffler, R-Texas, Thursday criticized the farm policies of Democratic Gov. Mark White, and indicated he will formally an­ nounce his candidacy for governor by early September. Loeffler, addressing the annual meeting of the Texas Agricultural Cooperative Council and Farm Credit Banks of Texas, said the Democratic administration in Aus* tin "has little knowledge or concern for agriculture." "In my judgment, there is no question that all of us in agriculture have a right to demand more from * 7 Austin, Texas," he said. In addition to White, Loeffler also singled out Texas Agriculture Com­ missioner Jim Hightower, a Demo­ crat, for criticism. The problems, Loeffler "The current administration, in my judgment, at the statehouse has little knowledge or concern for agri­ »* culture," he said. said, ranged "from the new pesticide reg­ ulations which could put our farm­ ers at a disadvantage with farmers and ranchers in other states to a lack of leadership in the problem of bru­ cellosis, which led to a quarantine of Texas livestock, to a lack of over­ sight in the damaged grain drought assistance program that I, not Mark White or Jim Hightower, devel­ oped." Loeffler told the farm group that Texas must preserve its heritage while preparing for the future as its * population continues to expand. East Texans sentenced in slavery case United Press International NEW ORLEANS — Two East Texas men convicted of forcing Hispanic workers into slavery must serve five-year prison sentences, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. Steven Crawford, 22, of Center, and Randall Waggoner, 23, of Na­ cogdoches, had been placed on five years' probation for their convio- tions on 21 counts of slavery, con­ spiracy and illegal aliens. transporting They allegedly forced the illegal, aliens to plant trees near Center at gunpoint and provided them Iittj^ foo l and only a shack for housing. U.S. District Judge William Steger of Tyler, who referred to the work­ ers as "wetbacks" during the 1983. trial, ordered probated sentences for the convict d men. The U.S. Justice D ej ftment ap­ pealed the sentences, arguing that Steger had violated fedefal court lylei y h secuto» let tel ItoÜ .S, Wayne jus that the p ro b atio n s Steger had been illegal. United Press International Workers remove bodies from the wreckage of Japan Air Lines Fight 123 Thursday. Y O U N G M E N Generra shirts, slacks, reg. $ 2 8 -$ 3 2 ....................... g V-neck sweaters, special Short sleeve knit shirts, reg. $ 1 8 .................... * 1 7 g g 12 99 mm £ ? f ka9«d «hirts. reg. $ 16 $ 18 . 1 2 . 9 9 E Joven Oxford pant by Farah reg. $ 2 4 ....... ACCESSO RIES Entire stock, colored jewelry reg. $5-$50 ............... 3 5 n ^ R Entire stock, leather handbags Í69 * 22 ? 115.............16.5Ó-86.25 Leather mini-bags, reg. $ 12 7 99 Artist ties, reg. $ 1 0 ......... Entire stock, color hosiery reg. 2.75-6.50 ........... 2.06-4.88 Juniors', Young Men's, Young Juniors' and Accessories. We welcom e your Jo sk e "s'cA ^ rg e card. Diners C lub' and The American E x p re ss' Card. Order 2 4 hours a day from anyw here in Texas: dial toll-free 1 - 8 0 0 -2 9 2 -5 6 0 0 . S h o p J o s k e ‘s Highland M a ll M onday-Sefurday 10-9: Su n d ay 1 2-61A U N IT O F A L L IE D S T O R E S JO SK E’ editorials Page 8/The Daily Texan/Friday, August 16,1985 viewpoint Math, at its best, lives on t A RAMIE, Wyo. — The nation's two lution to a packed audience of MAA members. Annuar Saffar, an industrial engi­ neering senior at the University of Missouri, later presented a simplified version of Kar­ markar's work to student participants. largest professional mathematical soci­ eties Thursday concluded their joint summer meetings here at the University of Wyoming. The experience could not have been duplicated by either organization alone. The American Mathematical Society con­ centrates on research; the Mathematical As­ sociation of America focuses on education. A unique spirit of continuity and completeness among mathematicians of all ages seems to appear especially when the groups join their causes together. The best mathematics research is, after all, a kind of teaching. "I spent my mathematics career seeking out problems of a simple vari­ ety, then lunging in ," said retired geometer Hassler Whitney, receiving the 1985 AMS Steele Prize Wednesday for lifetime achieve­ ment in mathematics. "Other mathematicians would dive in, the held would expand, and I would have to step out. One of my best the­ orems developed into a topic in combinator­ ics, the nature of which I do not now under­ stand." The 738 participants at the meetings, both old and young, found a common interest in discussing the past year's most outstanding results. Benoit Mandelbrot of Harvard lectured to both societies on the subject of fractals, or geometric curves having fractional dimen- sions; his work is the cover feature in the current issue of Scientific American. The work in linear programming of Bell Communications researcher N. Karmarkar has apparently solved the longstanding "traveling salesman" problem — to find the path of minimum length through all 48 state capitals in the contiguous United States — and fascinated the U.S. mathematics commu­ nity. In Karmarkar's absence, colleague Mi­ chael Saks Monday described the general so­ As usual, political activities went on in the background. A table at registration carried petitions on behalf of individual mathemati­ cians suffering from human rights violations. The AMS business meeting unanimously en­ dorsed a plea for Ismail Mohamed, a profes­ sor in South Africa and a leader of the Unit­ ed Democratic Front, now on trial for his life. Both societies were interested in what the National Science Foundation had to say about funding for mathematics research, which bottomed out in 1982 and 1983 and currently stands at 1960s levels, adjusted for inflation. John Thorpe, speaking for NSF's Division of Mathematical Sciences, expressed further concerns that during the remainder of Presi­ dent Reagan's terra, "invitations for propos­ als will become much more specific," due to demands for research from the Department of Defense. Interestingly, the only call for re- séarch proposals distributed at the meeting was for the DOD's 1986-87 University Re­ search Instrumentation Program. This year's summer meetings testified to the vitality of the U.S. mathematics commu­ nity, despite the continuing federal cutbacks. For a few days, these visitors transformed a secluded town into a haven for cognition and reasoning, but no television cameras chroni­ cled the spectacle. "You know, somethin amazing is hap­ pening here," said Kirk Weller, who graduat­ ed this spring from Hope College in Michi­ gan with a bachelor of science degree in mathematics. "The world ought to know about it." — Andrew Chin Cooksey delays STNP accord W ith Austin's meter on the South Texas Kyle Pope Texan Columnist Nuclear Project running at $2.5 mil­ lion a week, questions are popping up about whether Mayor Frank Cooksey's inde­ cisiveness on the issue cost the city a part in an early settlement on the nuke. Certainly, Austin may still avert a lawsuit in the case, but with the cost figures as ridiculously high as they are, alle­ gations of delay are serious and could be indica­ tive of Cooksey's leadership style in general. Basically, insiders say because Cooksey played wait-and-see with the $6 billion lawsuit and an even more expensive project, the other partners got tired of waiting for a decision from the new mayor and went ahead to reach a settlement on their own, without Austin's involvement. "Cooksey's taken Austin from being involved with a bunch of partners to being hung out to dry," one source said. The other partners in the project — Houston Lighting and Power, Corpus Christi Central Power and Light, and San Antonio — agreed to accept $750 million from Brown and Root if they would drop their lawsuit against the company. The settlement, though, only prevented a law­ suit and did not get them out of the project. Austin, which owns 16 percent of the project, would have received $120 million from Brown and Root. The company was sued by the four partners for mismanagement of the nuke during its nine years as contractor of the project. Formerly tight-lipped about anything concern­ ing the negotiations, those involved are now painting a picture of Cooksey as being unin­ formed on the issue and making no effort to edu­ cate himself. Partners in the project say it took Cooksey at least two weeks after he had taken office to contact them on the issue. In fact, one former member of the Austin negotiating team said the mayor was unaware the partners even had a settlement proposal together. Don Beeth, spokesman for HL&P, verified those statements and echoed the allegations of indecisiveness. "M r. Cooksey seemed to take a good while," Beeth said. "Austin was not prepared to make a decision and the other partners were." Beeth was not ready to tag Cooksey as wishy-washy per se, but he did say, "I could see why you might want to speculate on that." Former Mayor Ron Mullen, a patently partial observer but one of the most knowledgeable people in the state on the STNP, said he invited Cooksey to meet with him and be briefed on the nuke before he left office, but Cooksey declined. "H e wasn't interested," Mullen said. "H e never contacted me or accepted my offer in any way." Since most of Mullen's term and political future had been invested in reaching a settlement on the nuke, he feels Cooksey blew the chance on a good resolution to the decade-old issue. "W hat's happened is Frank made a decision by default. He did not contact anybody. He was so out of it that he didn't realize he needed to," Mullen said. "M y concern is he did not talk to them for weeks. I can assure you he had no discussion with the partners." For his part, Cooksey denies it all and says Brown and Root has granted Austin "a nice, long period of time in which to make a decision. All of this is being done in a very careful, thoughtful .way. There is no problem what­ soever." In addition, he returns the volley initi­ ated by Mullen. "Mr. Mullen does not know anything about what has been going on since he left office. He has no basis for his statements," Cooksey said. Cooksey's delay has accomplished nothing but to increase the pressure to avoid a lawsuit. A push for some kind of settlement is coming from all angles. The city legal staff has neither the expertise nor the will to carry it through. The other partners would just as soon their own er­ rors not be paraded before the press in a lengthy trial, and the aging Bay City judge in the case, G. P. Hardy, has repeatedly said he is tired of the whole thing and is ready to take a vacation. One of the most powerful influences on Cook­ sey, strangely enough, is coming from the gov­ ernor's office. With one of Mark White's closest allies, former Secretary of State John Fainter, running the negotiations for the city, White will be a key in any Austin settlement. And the gov­ ernor does not want to see a lawsuit. In May, when the other three partners reached an agree­ ment, White was said to be mad and even scrapped a congratulatory press conference the other partners had hoped for. What all of this has to do with Cooksey's inde­ cisiveness is peripheral. Whatever the extent of White's involvement, it is impossible to think, with Fainter now in the picture, that White will not be exerting pressure on Cooksey to settle the issue and get it over with. The fact is Cooksey has almost no maneuvering room. In pre-elec­ tion polls, he pledged to get Austin all the way out of the iroject. Now, though, it is unlikely HL&P will buy it back and Brown and Root .is not prepared to shell out more money to Austin because it would mean giving more money to the other partners as well. If he chooses to go on with the lawsuit, he will have to respond to questions concerning the necessity of spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees while Brown and Root is waving $120 million in front of the city's, nose. The mayor was elected to make these kinds of decisions — and make them on time. Let's hope he acts more decisively this time than he has in the past. If not, the next two years are going to seem very, very long. Pope is a communications junior. Opinions expressed in The Daily Texán are those of the editor or the author of the article and are not of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating T [THIS IS UTTLE OPEC I HE LOST HIS INFLUENCE ANP WAS IABAND0N6PB9 HIS CARTEL»» I HES HUN6W*., HIS CHAUFRKW5 I HUNGRY ANP HIS ROUS Rm lisouroFflAS. ■ HE WANTS WUR H6LR WO CAN TURN THIS 0 ? f é O R _ WU CAN LAU6H WUR HEAP OFF, Furnish your mind for the long haul A woman whose name I have forgotten, but whose wisdom lingers on in the dank corri­ dors of my brain, once stated that the and the better for gathering in mental riffraff on a par with chairs shaped like turnips and water-filled paperweights with a miniature Iowa state Capitol building inside. act of getting an education, in what­ ever form, is analogous to the act of furnishing the barren rooms of one's mind. It was her contention that an in­ dividual would be ill prepared to face the uncertain rigors of life without a full complement of cerebral love seats and drawing-room tables. I like that notion. She must have been my kind of woman. Unfortunately, the kind of education we seem to value the most, because prospective employers are more will­ ing to pay us for getting it, leaves the little mental rooms in our heads filled with puke green filing cabinets, dusty blue linoleum, harsh fluorescent light­ ing and molded plastic chairs that stack neatly together — it's functional, but you wouldn't want to live in there for the next 80 years. All is not lost, however. Nay, say I. A few people in the world still value a liberal-arts education, the kind of edu­ cation that can furnish the little sitting rooms of your mind with things that don't do much, but which can make life in this increasingly dangerous and complex world a little bit more habita­ ble. Everyone needs a comfy mental parlor where their thoughts can go and smoke a good pipe. A place filled with partially broken and sagging Lazy-Bov recliners, shaggy ottomans of indeter­ minate color, a mohair throw rug and Elvis-shaped decanters of blueberry brandy. I have spent a great deal of my time at this university seeking out just the sort of mental furniture other people would normally dump at a white-ele- phant sale. Those who know me well would say that all you could find in my head, were you able to mosey around in it a bit, would be the comfortable, aesthetic, generally worthless neat-o kind of stuff. My head is a place where, if you could visit it as you could, say, the Catskills, a person such as L. M. Boyd might choose to vacation or even retire there. I'd probably kick him out after a few weeks however. Too much L.M. Boyd can grate on any­ body. But while some might say that I com­ pletely ignored such functional things as urinals and electric pencil sharp­ eners in my cerebral interior decorat­ ing, I find that 1 am quite comfortable in here and believe I will be better able to weather the crazy waste matter the world is certain to throw at us in the coming century. For those of you who are beginning to worry about the possi­ bility of spending the rest of your life in a head furnished only for the crimi­ nally boring, I will give you some tips on where to find all the good naked- lady lamps at this university. This is for your edification, so pay attention. At a school of this size, most stu­ dents can't help but occasionally slip into the academic nether worlds occa­ sionally. But while most non-liberal- arts majors try to avoid these educa­ tional quagmires, hoping to finish quickly and exit stage left, I tracked them down and plunged into their steaming monetary uselessness. I wal­ lowed in mires of nebulous knowl­ edge, seeking out those classes that languish in the dark recesses of every course catalog. I looked for course numbers not easi­ ly divisible by 3, like the 367s, the 373s, and the 392Ks. These were always my kind of courses. The bigger and mean­ er the number, the smaller the class Virtually every department has one or two of these courses, but some de­ partments are set up completely for the dissemination of non-functional infor­ mation. One of my favorite academic furniture fire-sale hangouts was the Philosophy Department. This depart­ ment is guaranteed to fill your mind with odd things. The professors seem to revel in their inability to justify what they teach in terms of real-life survival. But they are still dedicated, wonderful people. I have a great deal of respect for folks who question whether we re­ ally all exist, or whether we are all just positing one another. They also talk about things like "chaim ess," argue the question of the "synthenicity" of language, and wonder aloud about a guy who may be controlling all our thoughts called the Evil Genius. When I first told my older brother about the possibility of the Evil Genius, he told me that he was impervious to the thought-controlling rays being beamed at us due to a protective metal plate that had been surgically implanted in his brain at birth. I don't know how this counterargument would sit with some philosophy professors on a mid­ term, but I fear they might fail you, posited or not. I would eschew it great­ ly if I were you. By now you are probably asking just where the hell all of this is leading. And, rightly so, I might add. The next irrelevant paragraph is my answer. This is my last column; it doesn't need to lead you anywhere. As an English major about to leave this university, I fear not the world be­ cause in my mind I am armed with a fur-covered whaling ensemble, some door keys from the Sea Breeze Motel (postage guaranteed), a few ceramic cucumber sandwiches, and a plethora of stuff shaped like tubers. I also am a staunch supporter of bias on the edito­ rial page. Roger Wilco, over and out.... Johnson is an antivivisectionist be­ cause h e thinks that word sounds neat. -30- Wrapping this strange package up H elen didn't think I'd mention her in my -30- column so she dared me. Here goes: Hey, Helen Moroney. You ol' thang. How Paul de la Garza Texan Columnist If you make a mistake, accept it and try to correct it. Be careful. goes it? Cooked any albino chicken lately? Played any good pool lately? There. Hope you find Theo. And now for the rest of this farewell. To begin with, I'd be lying if I didn't say this is the most difficult piece I've ever written. After all, working at The Daily Texan after a while becomes an obsession and having to leave all this behind is, in one word, sad. I think the thing I'm gonna miss most about the Texan is the staff. I'm the kind of pen son who loves being around people and the characters here are priceless. I mean, can you imagine going to AP and meeting Robert Bruce's double. "Associated Press. Your mother speak­ ing." Anyway, the staff down here made it all worthwhile and if I had to fail classes all over again, I'd go for it. I always read other people's -30- col­ umns and hoped that mine wouldn't be as mushy and sentimental as theirs, but I now realize that that's virtually an impossible thing to do. The reason I say this is because this place grows on you. You go to class — sometimes — and the rest of the time you spend down at the basement trying to crank out a newspaper which will never please anyone. But for some intriguing reason — I think it's some type of sadomasochistic bond — we keep coming back for more. More pres­ sure. More criticism. More bylines. More stories. More late nights. And less pay. Back at the terminal after a brief in­ termission. 1 I'm sitting at the slot next to Marthá Ruth in my usual state of mind — or should I say our usual state of mind — and I have so many things I want to say but finding it difficult to organize. So, if it stops making sense from here on, bear with me and enjoy. And if it never made sense, bear with me any­ way. I've been at the Texan for nearly three years and I've always wanted to respond to one main gripe from our readers but never had the opportunity because I was always involved with the news part of the paper. Well, to all those people who bitched about the Texan for being a "liberal rag" and for being insensitive to our readers' needs, I suggest that you come down to the newspaper and work. If you'll notice under The Daily Texan flag, it mentions something about this being a student newspaper. It is produced by students, for stu­ dents, and if you can do better within a limited amount of time at the risk of your academic career and for a token amount of pay, then this newspaper will be your utopia. To the staff of The Daily Texan, I say, congratulations. Congratulations for being on the staff of the best college daily newspaper in the world. There is so much potential here it's scary. Be mature. Be responsible. And for Chrissakes stop bickering within the departments. You have the power to determine what the reader will read. How the material will be presented. When the material will be presented. And the list is endless. Avoid burnout. Burnout is a bad thing. If you need time off, take it. If you start eating, drinking and shitting the newspaper, you'll go nuts. I know. Another thing, don't be shy. Shy­ ness is a curse in our profession. Have confidence, be informed and don't let anyone intimidate you. Be persistent, but professional. I guess that's it — time to go. But I don't wanna. Frown. Special Thanks Section: Thanks to my mom and dad and the rest of my family. Thanks to Bobby "Skibby" Wiemers Martha "I'm almost 22" Ashe, Robert "Bell H ead" Bruce, Mr. Hilbum, David "(A hh, Ahh)" Wood ruff, David "H ee H ee" Elliot, Kelly Frankeny, Lisa Brown-Richau, Helen "how cío you hold the cue stick M oroney, Sarah Howie, John "she had spiked bool " Jenks, Sylvia Bravo, Herb "Paul, you won't believe what I did last night" Booth, Mike Alexieff, Maureen "w here's the bong" Sheeran, Suzanne "w e're having the party" Mi chel, Hector Cantu, Bobby "it's almost midnight" Jacobsen, Russell "EeeN- DIA" Scott, and of course, Leslie "I can get you discount plates" Miller. And now I leave you with a quote Bill.Bo< h used in his -30- cohwiri three years ago muí which David Woodruff recently resurrected. It deals with the appropriate way to leave the Texan "Kiss a few friends. Have a last drink. And very quicidy, without bullshit or baggage, wrap this strange package up ." Good luck Skibby. The end. 1 , Paul has been newswriter, general reporter, associate news editor, news eaitor and associate managing editor three sem esters. The Daily Texan/Friday. August 16.1985/Page 9 Area lawmakers squabble over death of aquifer bill analysis ByJM W ARRBI Daiiy Texan Staff A water conservation bill died rel­ atively unnoticed in the last lerasla- tive session, but political quibbling over who was responsible for its death may resurrect the issue in time for the next campaim. At issue was Senate BUI 1248, de­ signed to form an underground wa­ ter district to protect the environ­ mentally sensitive Edwards Aquifer from overpumping and pollutants by setting up a monitoring district. The players were Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, an Austin Democrat, and Rep. Terral Smith, an Austin Republican, and the two legislators still have different explanations for why the bUl died. Barrientos, who in his 10 years in the House had a strong record on environmental issues, sponsored the bill and got it passed unani­ mously in the upper chamber. But Smith says he still has reservations about whether Barrientos really wanted the bUl to become law. Smith's basic complaint was the timing — the biU did not get to the House until May 21, six days before the session ended. The bill cleared the Senate May 17. Smith contends that if Barrientos wanted the bUl passed, he would have sent it to the House earlier in the session. Barrientos says he spent the time working on a com­ promise that would have made all sides content, and that should have made Smith's job easier. Smith said several days before it cleared the Senate, he told a constit­ uent the bill was probably dead. "1 frankly questioned whether he (Bar­ rientos) wanted to pass it," Smith said."I got tired of waiting for it, so I started to file my own bill." But Smith said he did not want to be accused of stealing Barrientos' bill, so he did not file an aquifer bill in the House. Barrientos said he questioned whether Smith wanted the bill to pass, and was upset that Smith turned it into a public controversy. "1 remember saying, Terral, if you want to introduce it, introduce it,' " Barrientos said. Publicly accus­ ing a bill's sponsor of not support­ ing his own product is "ludicrous" and in bad taste, Barrientos said. "I'm not interested in making this a political issue," Barrientos said. "I'm not going to sit here castigating a House member. I'm not out after Terral Smith. But if I'd been in the House, I'd have worked out the proMems." Smith said, "The House members were deferring to Gonzalo. It wasn't anyone in the House's fault." The timing of the bill, however, was not a tactic to kill the bill while stiU being able to boast of passing it in tiie ^ n a te , Barrientos said. "1 just wanted to make sure we had a bill acceptable to as many people as possible. 1 even met with develop­ ers out there (along the southern parf of the aquifer). "I didn't want to be anti-free en­ terprise or anything, but we had a body of water we needed to pro­ tect," Barrientos said. Many small users pump water out of the aquifer, as do some com­ mercial operations. With dry sum­ mers and increased pumpage, envi­ ronmentalists worry that it could eventually enrnty the aquifer, which feeds Barton Springs. City Councilmember George Humphrey said statistics show Bar­ ton Springs could be dry in as little as 15 years. And Bert Cromack, Save Barton Creek Association vice president, said pumpage control has surpassed pollution as a prob­ lem in the sensitive region. Cromack believes Smith killed the bill, and said, "He's going to pay for it come the next election." Besides the question of timing. Smith and Barrientos differed on specific sections of the bill. Barrien­ tos' bill, written by Kent Butler, University associate professor of community and regional planning, included Barton Springs on the north end to Kyle on the south end in the proposed district. Smith wanted the northern part of the aquifer included because he thought the people in the northern section eventually would form a dis­ trict, creating two bureaucracies when one could handle the entire area. The tax base for the aquifer also would increase if the bounda­ ries were extended, meaning lower district taxes for property owners. Smith said. Barrientos said experts told him the north and south were geologi­ cally separate aquifers. As for tax rates, Barrientos substituted a small ad valorem tax with a well fee that he said would support the district for the first several years. So when the bill came to the House, Smith took it to the RepuWi- can-controlled Natural Resources Committee and amended it to in­ clude the northern section of the aquifer. The bill passed out of com­ mittee May 22 — the same day the committee received it — after two readings in one day. The bill went to the Calendars Committee May 23 to be set on the agenda. May 24 was the last day to get a bill on the agenda before the 72-hour rule took effect. The rule jhibits further introduction of Jls in the last 72 hours of a session. Because of a backlog in the print shop, the bill was never heard be­ fore the full House and died. insists But Barrientos the bill could have gotten through in six days. "I filed it with plenty of time to spare," Barrientos said. "I disa­ gree with anyone who says it was not filed early enough. I said (to Smith), 'If you don't want it, fine. But the people out there do.' " After the session ended. Smith and Barrientos said it easily would have passed in the next session, but now it appears that will not be nec­ essary. The City of Austin last week joined Buda, Hays, San Leanna and Sunset Valley in a cooperative agreement to form an underground district similar to what Barrientos proposed. If the Texas Water Commission approves it, voters will decide in January if they want the district, and the small tax that comes with it. Local governments, under Chapter 52, can form a district, but Barrien­ tos and Smith disagree on the new district, too. Although both legislators support the district, Barrientos said that ide­ ally, he would like to see state man­ agement of the entire aquifer, be­ cause it would lead to a more comprehensive control. Smith said he prefers local control without state interference. Who was at fault may not matter now anyway. The local district — Butler will be project director — has excellent chances of passing, so the Legislature probably has seen the last of the aquifer bill. And even if Barrientos' bill got to the floor, a point of order could have killed the bill because of insufficient public notice and other parliamentary pro­ cedure problems. But come election year, the question of "Who killed the aquifer bill" surely will come up. T H E PERRY SCHOOL 710 E. 41st St. (Across from Hancock Golf) NOW ENROLLING ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE • Small Classes • Competent Faculty • High School Program Limited Adult ESL Program Call 458-1211 for appointment Eih»»d8i »! ! !( Ill St’! v k t s • B u t h C o i t t r o l • B . q > ! »' st . n i r w h n q R E P K O D H C 1 I V I S E R V I C E S Hoarti i c rtf tied Ob I i« #n*#d Nut ting Staff i a p e r i e n t c d ' o a a n a e l o r * On I K ahaHtf 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 ! p.m . Now S en day Laach B a ffe t N oo n -2:39 p.m . r ■ ■ ■ ■ i I I i 99' P IZZA . Buy any p iu a and gel the next smaller same style p u ta with equal number of tappings, for 99'. Present this coupon with guest check. Not valid with any other oCer. Inspiration B/cHJ/Ha ‘I I I I I No coupons accepted r ------ ■ — with delivery with delivery | ■ m ■ u j t u i u t a t I Get 13.00 oft a large or 12.00 off a ! medium site p iu a . any style and as many toppings as you want. Present this coupon with guest check. Not Expiration 8/3Q/86 I valid with any other oiler. | g | No coupe rev iingiisn accepted with delivery ' ■ | | | «, 1 | | Pizza inn I I ■ Pizza inn 1a _____ I DT8.16/H5 | or n out il’s P i//a Inn. I or |il/M «ml It'S ic rr.K ^ a s a m in e iin 1710 W. Bm While 220» Rhm* 7237 Hwy. 290 East 444-0035 3000 Dwal 0401 Bwscl K4. 447-0011 920-1504 10313 Lake Creek Parkway 477-0751 451-7571 256-7444 D o n ’t fo rg et o a r b u ffat—A ll the pizza, salad, and spaghetti yoa cea e a t fo r one low p rice. TONIGHT T h e C m m im h m I m Saturday S k a n k ■Cargo Cult sports The Daily Texan/Friday, August 1 6 ,1985/Page 11 You gotta be kidding me ... Jacobs soon to be leaving R eality is harsh. Just 12 Vic Jacobs segments remain as K T W 's sports anchor is oouuta here after next Friday. function as sports anchor: His executioner is Channel 36 news director Rob Dean, who says Jacobs' style is incompatible with the "serious sports journalism" he now demands. But are sports reality? Dean ap­ parently wishes to treat an RBI with the same sobriety as DWI. Escapism will no longer describe KTYV's sports report, but merely a burglar's success. News will be news and sports will be news. No more will Austin viewers brace for the brick from a sportscast- er wearing a rendition of Memorial Stadium as a headdress. No more will a sports anchor invite Bevo to the studio and feel "honored" to clean up after the Longhorn mascot's excretions. Behind the 32-year-old Jacobs' an­ tics, though, exists an appreciation for the sports he covers. United Press International and Associated Press noticed. This year, the two wire services voted him Texas Sportscaster of the Year for TV markets comparable to Austin's. UT a th le te s n o tic e d . N o Longhorn championship was com­ plete without Jacobs emceeing the locker room celebration. Jacobs' audience of followers, de­ scribed by Dean as small and loyal, and by Jacobs as just loyal, noticed. Pickets have paraded in front of the KTVV station for the last week hoisting "H onk for Vic!" signs. Most drivers, incidentally, do honk. What also honks is K T W 's ap­ parent basis for firing the Brooklyn, N .Y ., native. Jacobs said a support­ er phoned Blake Byrne, vice presi­ dent of television operations for the station's parent com pany, Lin Broadcasting, and was told a sam­ ple of 400 viewers "show ed" Jacobs was unpopular. "If you're going to fire somebody who's made an impact on the peo­ ple on the basis of 400 people ... that's not a very smart m ove," Jacobs said. 'T h ey never said, 'This is why you're fired.' They say, 'Our Stan Roberts ‘If you’re going to fire somebody who’s made an impact on the people on the basis of 400 peo­ ple ... that’s not a very smart move. They never said, “This is why you’re fired.” They say, “Our re­ search shows...” ’ —Vic Jacobs, KTW sports anchor research shows ...'" Byrne is on vacation, but Dean said, "W e've done several research projects over the three years" of Jacobs' employment that indicate viewer dissatisfaction. Dean refused to elaborate on the sampling pro­ cess. Smile, Rob Dean. Please. "They (management) are para­ noid of my freedom and creativity and what I do to people," Jacobs said. What the fallen ax has done to Jacobs is indeterminable, given his propensity for playing the clown. But don't feel sorry for him, folks. Jacobs' Connecticut-based agent reports there are prospective em­ ployers in major markets. In fact, Jacobs may become a CBS sports re­ porter after taking a two-month Eu­ ropean sojourn this fall. Jacobs is likely to make an appear­ ance at a 1:30 p.m . Friday get-to­ gether in front of the K T W station at 908 W. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. In case you fail to connect with Jacobs Friday, he wished this column to represent his "official bon voyage to the students." Some closing quotes, first on his "(Giving the sports) is the basic explosion. It's the culmination of your day. It's a sports orgasm. It's foreplay the whole day and then boom — the orgasm. Four min­ utes." On the role of nightly news sports reporting in Austin: "Y ou're not competing with just two networks anymore. You're competing with the whole (cable) dial and that is why sports and weather must be more than sports and weather. I must provide some­ thing they can't get throughout the dial. I provide that entertainm ent." On those protesting his firing: "The people have been just in­ credible. I even heard a rumor that someone will be fasting till I come back on the air." On goals: "M y real dream is to go one-on- one with Warner Wolf of WCBS in New York — to have a showdown with Warner. He goes with his best script and I go with mine (Wolf's delivery is similar to Jacobs'). My real goal is to go into an urban swell and tell it like it is." A final message: "W e're Americans. We're free­ dom fighters. Let America ring and remember one thing: we're all ani­ mals and let's go out there and have some fun." Post mortem The key, perhaps, to Jacobs' con­ flict with K T W and with those the Cornell whom Dean claims graduate offends concerns Jacobs' liberal posture. "Liberal" is the es­ tablishment's dirty word of the '80s as Reagan reigns and big business booms. Safe, conservative broadcasting is back, rendering viewers comatose and offending no one. Jacobs' inno­ vativeness and showmanship titil­ lates the majority, but offends a mi­ nority KTVV management has chosen on which to focus. Nice research, guys. Artificially prove your suppositions. Can you say, "Sample error?" Brace for the brick, Channel 36. Morris Goen/Daily Texan Staff Vic Jacobs, left, and weatherwoman Kathie Turner are KTW animals, but Jacobs wN soon be oouuta here. Steinbrenner implies Martin oouuta here if N Y ends 2nd c 1985 The New York Times CHICAGO — Despite a vow there would be workouts until the team is in first place, Manager Billy Martin decided to give the second- place Yankees the day off Thursday. It was a decision that came after George Steinbrenner, team's principal owner, had insisted cm a workout and promised that anyone who did not appear would be fined $500. the But Steinbrenner did not criticize his manager for calling off the prac­ tice session. "H e's the m anager," Steinbr­ enner said. "It's up to him. I'm not mad. But he also said he would overtake Toronto, and I say fine. When a vice president of a corpora­ tion says he can meet his quota without having his men work over­ time then doesn't meet his quota, he's not going to be vice president for long." Martin decided earlier Wednes­ day his team would be given the day off, partly because the Yankees were not due to return to New York until early Thursday morning. He had originally scheduled a workout for five reserve players — Dale Ber­ ra, Billy Sample, Andre Robertson, Omar Moreno and Dan Pasqua, the rookie called up Thursday. But Mar­ tin rescinded that order because of the death of Pete Sheehy, the long­ time Yankee clubhouse attendant. "I'm not doing it to defy G eorge," Martin said Wednesday afternoon. "G eorge likes to work out for disci­ plinary reasons and I usually go along with it. But because of the heat we had in Boston and the fact we're getting in so late, I'm not gon­ na do it. "If I get in trouble, I'll take the blame. But I'm doing what I think is best for the team ." Martin said he did not want to overwork his team, which remains in distant contention for first place in the American League East. "I've been in the game 40 years as a player and a m anager," he said, "an d the difference there's going to be between us and Toronto is this: Toronto is going to wear out and w e're not. I'm not going to wear our guys out. Right now, w e're the best team in baseball. We may not be on top, but we're still the best team ." Steinbrenner said Martin was breaking an agreement to continue with workouts after the team fell from 1 */2 games out of first place last month. "O ne of the things we decided when Billy cam e," Steinbrenner said, referring to the managerial change last April 29, "w as that there would be practices until we were in first place. I said OK. It's always been my practice to bear down when things are going their best. "But then we got beaten by some dubs that shouldn't be on the same field with us — Cleveland, Texas — and I told them to put the practices back in. "Billy thinks they're gonna win, and he doesn't want to overwork his players. That's fine. We'll see. When you do that to the boss you've got two roads open — to succeed or to worry. I love a guy who sticks his neck out. That's good. But if you make a deal, then say you don't need it, you'd better deliver. "If Billy says there will be no practice, then there's no practice. And there wiH be no fines if they don't show up. "B ut I want them to be totally dedicated to what it's going to take to beat Toronto. I don't want to see players carry around briefcases and worrying about endorsements or appearances. 1 hope they put out for Billy because they're putting him in a sp o t." Hey — Alcott leads women’s World Veteran’s 65 good enough for 3-stroke lead over elite field in $200,000 event real co n siste n t," played said Sheehan, winner this year at Sara­ sota and Las Vegas. "But I had a hard time getting the ball to the hole. There were a lot of sucker pins. When I missed it, I missed it b ad ." Clark said the greens were slower than the regular LPGA stops "and I found my putts coming up short most of the d ay." Lopez, who had four victories, four seconds and a tie for third in Tier last nine appearances, had four consecutive birdies, starting at No. 2, to go 4-under after five holes but had only one more birdie and three bogeys the rest of the way. | W I M United Press International BUFORD, Ga. — Amy Alcott ran off six birdies in a seven-hole span Thursday en route to a 7-under-par 65 and a three-stroke lead in the opening round of the World Cham­ pionship of W omen's Golf. shots behind Alcott, who has won 23 tourna­ ments and nearly $1.5 million in just over a decade of LPGA play, was three fast-starting Nancy Lopez after the first five holes, but forged into the lead at No. 8 and pulled away with a string of four consecutive birdies. Patty Sheehan birdied No. 16 and took second place with a 4-under 68 while Judy Clark made a 15-foot birdie putt on the final hole for a third-place 69. Lopez, this year's leading LPGA money winner and the favorite for this $200,000 event, was tied for fourth with (1980-81) World Hiatetpioiiiiiip^ winner Beth Daniel at 2-undef 70. two-timt Rounding out the exclusive 12^ player fiekf were U.S. Open chant* Kathy Baker, Jane Blalock and etsy King at 71, Pat Bradley and Bonnie Lauer at 72, Jan Stephenson , at 74 affef being assessed a toé- stroke penalty for leaking a tom! rule, and Alice Miller, No. 2 money leader and a four-time winner this year, at 3-over 75. Alcott, who has, won at least one tournament every year she has been on the LPGA Tour, was putting for birdies on nearly every hole Thurs­ day, making eight and lipping out several others. "I kept firing at the pin. I never backed off," she said. "W hen you are an aggressive player, you can shoot a round like this. I made some good putts today. "Y ou have to putt these greens aggressively, but you also have to know which putts to go tor. This is a challenging course, o n e th a t a * quires you to play your best golf. It gnakes it fun to may.'' 1 11 The World Championship, the sixth annual, is being played for the first time this year at p&ie Isle on | 1 Lanier, 40 miles northeast of Atlante, after being played die pre­ vious fiye years in Ohio* Alcott, 29, has won $183,73) and two tournaments so far this year. Bhe skipped three of the last four Tour stops, finishing fitted far Mon­ treal in her only appearance of the • pMC munan M started out with a bogey, then in United Press International You’re anim als Would somebody tell me, has the Bucs' Lee Mazzilli been forced out by a mile at home or what? Cards catcher Darrell Porter had already thrown to first to dou- ble up batter Bill Madlock. Get this guy oouuta here. For a complete roundup of Thursday’s major league action, see page 12. White wine QB jo b ... who cares? United Press International THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — Quarterback Gary Hogeboom will start in the Dallas Cowboys' second preseason game, but Coach Tom Landry has picked veteran Danny White as his starter for the regular season opener Sept. 9 against Washington. Hogeboom, a six-year pro out of Central Michigan, will lead the Cowboys Saturday night in San Di­ ego and will play atleast through the first quarter Wednesday. Landry said will start Sept. 9, when the Cow­ their regular season boys open against Washington. "We just want Gary to work with the first unit" Landry said. “We're . just doing it to k t people work with different groups." White started last week, when the Cowboys opened their preseason with a 27-3 win over Green Bay at Texas Stadium. Hogeboom and backup quarterback Steve Pelluer ■fin saw action. Landry said Wednesday White "There's no decision to be made," Landry said. "Danny will be the starting quarterback until he proves he can't do it. We don't need to have this thing up in the air any more." However, Hogeboom said Landry had informed him differently. tela nte the job is open," Hogeboom said. i Page 12/The Daily Texan/Friday. August 16.1965 NL East race as tiüght as Gordon Smith’s leisure suit V M m w i i m i N Opeeieg rrMeyt friday, Aug. 16 V o n W ilks Saturday, Aug. 17 Bed's Kitchen—Daily Lunch 11avn-2pm Help Soap Creek Saloon Find A New Location. "G et It W hile You Can ” 3 n o t s * COftGMSS VV3 A966 • Ii ij i n J1 -: ■ i m .m i . UnAsd Press International National League ST. LOUIS — Ozzie Smith drew a bases-lc ded walk with two out in the 12th inning, giving the Cardi­ nals a 4-3 victory Thursday over Pittsburgh and a sweep of their double-header. in the opener, Kurt Kepshire took a perfect game into the seventh in­ ning and Darrell Porter drilled a two-run single, lifting the Cardinals past the Bucs, 3-1. The sweep put die Cardinals into a first-place tie with the New York Mets in the National League East. Tito Landrum opened the 12th with a double off Cecilio Guante, 3- 5, and went to third on Tom Herr's flyball. After Jack Clark and Andy Van Slyke were walked intentional­ ly to load the bases, Larry McWilli­ ams replaced Guante. Brian Harper batted for Mike Jorgensen and forced Landrum at the plate, but Smith walked on four pitches to make a winner of Bill Campbell, 3-2. • Mets 10, Phillies 7 — In New York, diminutive rookie Len Dyks- tra laced a ground-rule double with two out in the eighth inning to score Ronn Reynolds from second and snap a 7-7 tie, lifting the Mets to a COMPORTA, Tricot singlet Whisperweight nylon tricot teamed 14) with 50% cotton/50% polyester mesh. Tricot shorts with liner/Overlap style Nylon tricot shell with (Aeriapping side panels. Liner is knitted texturized nykxi with knitted-in cotton terry’ panel. Excellent four way stretch. Buttoned back pocket f| n p K U ll-l LA 472.3254 “T he R unner's S tore 1 West 12th Street at Lamar OPEN TUE-SUN10-6 CHRIS’S LIQUOR STORE North 5201 Cameron Rd. 451-7391 ZIPFER LAGER BEER 12 oz Bottles. Austno RINGNES BEER 12 oz Bottles, N o rw a y . TECATE CANS I2 i 6 FOR *2.99 MOOSEHEAD LAGER BEER 12 oz Bottles. C onodtan Beer CORONA EXTRA BEER Producl o f M e xico WICKULER PILSENER BEER 12 oz Bottles. G erm any CLUB WEIBE 17 oz Bottles. G erm any ST. PAULI GIRL BEER 12 oz Bottles. Germ any SHINER BOCK BEER 2*1 Bottles ño s Deposit ...................... LONE STAR BEER OR SHINER 24 Bottles Plus Deposit BUD BOTTLES, SCHLITZ CANS 12 oz Bottles o r Cons KROMBACHER PILS BEER 12 oz Bottles. Germ any . . . . OLD MILWAUKEE BEER PEARL BEER CANS 24 cons 12 oz. Reg or Light . . . HOEGAARDEN WHITE BEER 12 oz Bottles. Belgium .............................. SAISON BELGIAN ALE Special Ale PACIFICO CERVEZA 12 oz Bottles. M e xico SOUTH PACIFIC BEER 12 oz. ootties ¡ e w Gmyeo . STEINLAGER LAGER BEER 1? oz Bottles N e w Zeaiond RIOCO BRAZILIAN GUARANA 12 oz. Can C orbo no te d Beverage Over 150 imported and domestic beers to choose from at: CHRIS'S OPEN lOtil 9pm 6 Bottles for 3.99 6 Bottles for 3.69 6 fo r 3»1 Case of 20 for 1 2 * 9 9 6 Bottles for 4.69 1 Bottle for 1.29 6 Bottles for 4.19 Case 10*99 Case 9*< 12 for 5.19 6 fo r 4*99 12 for 3*69 12 for 3*99 6 for 5*29 750 ML 2.99 6 for 3*69 6 fo r 4 #99 6 for 4 #69 1 canfor 894 victory over Philadelphia. The Mets survived a Phillies' comeback and a rare poor mitins by Dwight Gooden to post their 10m victory in their last 11 games. With the score 7-7, Reynolds sin­ gled with one out and moved to sec­ ond on a sacrifice by winning re­ liever Jesse Orosco, 4-4. After Don Carman, 4-4, intentionally walked Wally Backman, the 5-10 Dykstra then drilled a shot that bounced over the wall in right-center as Rey­ nolds scored the winning run. Backman and Dykstra scored when left fielder Von Hayes lost Darryl Strawberry's popup in the sun for a three-base error. Gooden, laboring in 95-degree heat and seeking a season-hi] i 13 consecutive victories, left after five innings with a 6-5 lead. He permit­ ted eight hits and five runs as Phila­ delphia scored in each of the first four innings. Gooden fanned just four and walked one. • Expos 7, Cubs 3 — In Chicago, Vance Law hit a two-run homer and Tim Raines had three doubles to lead Montreal to a victory over the Cubs. Expos pitcher Bill Gullickson, 11- 8, gave up seven hits, struck out one and walked one in 6% innings. Chicago starter Steve Engle, 6-2, was the loser. • Antroe 4, Lilliputians 1 — In San Francisco; Mike Scott tossed a six- hitter and Dickie Them drove in two runs to lead Houston to a victory over the Lilliputians. Scott, 12-6, struck out six and walked three in pitching his third complete game. After the fourth in­ ning, Scott yielded only one hit and over one stretch retired 13 batters in a row. Dave LaPoint, 5-10, was the victim of three unearned runs. • Reds 5, Padres 4 — In San Diego, pinch hitter Tony Perez came through with a two-out single in the top of the 10th inning to score Ron Oester from third with the run that broke a 4-4 tie and gave Cincinnati a victory over the Padres. Reds player-manager Pete Rose went hitless in three at-bats and still needs 20 hits to break Ty Cobb's ca­ reer hit record. • Dodgers 5, Braves 4 — In Los An­ geles, pinch hitter Terry Whitfield hit a two-run homer off relief ace Bruce Sutter in the bottom of the eighth inning to rally the Dodgers to a victory over Atlanta. Whitfield, batting for winning pitcher Fernando Valenzuela, clubbed his third homer to drive in pinch runner Mariano Duncan ahead of him. Pedro Guerrero walked before Whitfield's homer and was replaced cm the bases by Duncan. The homer came after the Braves had taken a 4-2 lead on Dale Murphy's 31st homer in the fifth. American League • Orioles 9, Rangers 1 — In Balti­ more, Cal Ripken drove in four runs with his 100th career home run and a double to power the Orioles to a victory over Texas. Ripken, who played in his 5,000th consecutive inning and 554th con­ secutive game, climaxed a five-run second inning with a three-run ho­ mer off reliever Dickie Noles. Storm Davis, 7-7, scattered six hits over seven innings to boost his career record against the Rangers to 7-0. • Tripe 7, Tigers 6 — In Detroit, Andre Thornton's three-run homer capped a four-run ninth inning rally against Detroit relief ace Willie Her­ nandez that carried the Tripe to a victory over the Tigers. Hernandez, 7-7, came on in relief of starter Walt Terrell to begin the ninth and allowed a single to pinch hitter Benny Ayala and walked pinch hitter Carmen Castillo. Julio Franco singled to left to score Ayala and move Castillo to third. Thorn­ ton followed with his 11th homer — a blast into the upper deck in left field. • Twins 14, Mariners 5 — In Min­ neapolis, Kent Hrbek belted a grand slam and Gary Gaetti hit a three-run homer to power a 15-hit attack that sparked the Twins to a victory over Seattle. • Brewers 7, White Sox 5 — In Milwaukee, Cedi Cooper broke open a tie game with a seventh-in- ning grand slam to power the Brewers to a victory over Chicago. Cooper's blast, his ninth home run of the season and fifth career grand slam, made a winner of Ted Higuera, 10-6. Rollie Fingers earned his 15th save with l 1/? relief innings. Floyd Bannister, 5-10, took the loss. Charlie Moore started the game- winning outburst with a one-out single and went to third on a single by Ed Romero, ,who took second on the throw to third. Robin Yount was walked intentionally to load the bases and, one out later, Cooper smashed a 1-0 pitch over the center field wall. More Sports, page 17 Anders gets 3 years’ probation, banned from team United Press International HOUSTON — University of Houston basketball player Benny Anders has been placed on three years' probation for carrying a gun on school property and will not be a part of the Cougar team this season. Anders, 21, pleaded no contest to the third-degree felony charge and state District Judge I.D. McMaster deferred adjudication, meaning Anders will have no record if he completes the terms of probation. Anders' attorney, Fred Reynolds, said he does not know if the inci­ dent would interfere with Anders' playing ball, but Athletic Director Tom Ford said Wednesday Anders will "not be in our plans for the 1985-86 season." Anders sat out the 1984-85 season with a knee injury and quit for a month during his junior year. He is academically ineligible to compete this season, which would have been his last one. Prosecutor Cheryl Turner said on May 20, Anders was playing basket­ ball on campus when a 26-year-old man asked to join. She said Anders objected and the two began arguing. The man picked up a starting block (used in track) and threw it at Anders, who got a gun from his car and pointed it at the man. Earlier this week, the NCAA ruled 7-0 Tito Horford is ineligible to attend Houston because of recruit­ ing violations. FRIED OLE CATFIS I n t r o d u c t a >rv P r u v ; i \ * i : S o r v e d N,«. 1. ■ M Uncle Sue-Sue’s SBS Rooster Andrews foot Joy PALMETTO Mesh & Leather Tennis Shoe “ “ $ 24.95 Nylon upper r e in fo rc e d w ith l e a t h e r , double heel c o u n t e r , and two d e n s ity sole f o r lo n g er w e a r. Reg. $34.95 R ooster Andrews 3901 Guadalupe sporting goods Open 8 am - 9 pm S. Lamar at Ben Whit* Andaraon Lane at Shoal Craak DAN’S 1 60 0 LA VA C A 4 7 8 -5 4 2 3 ALL SPECIALS CASH 53S 3 BURNET RD. 4 5 9 -8 6 0 9 OR CHECK O N L Y .................. 1.75 LT. 1 4 . 9 9 HAIG PINCH 8 6 Proof Scotch MRmky OLD SMUGGLER 8 6 Proof Scoich 'M usky BALLANTINES 8 6 Proof Scoich \Musky KINGS RANSOM 8 6 Proof Scoich M w k y CUTTY SARK 8 6 Proof Sco*diM4it«ky OLD SMUGGLER 8 6 Proof Scoich \Musky CASTILLO RUM 8 0 Pro o f Puerto Ricon Rum FLEISCHMANNS GIN 8 0 Proof Gm FLEISCHMANNS VODKA 8 0 Proof V o d k a .......................................................... ... ............................ W. L. WELLER 9 0 Proof Straight Bourbon \Muskay BELLOWS 8 0 Proof Straaght Bourbon \Muskay JACK DANIELS BLACK 9 0 Proof Tennessee Whisky BACARDI RUM 8 0 Proof Puerto Ricon Rum TANQURAYGIN 9 4 Proof E ng h h G in ........................................ AMARETTO 5 6 Proof Dromore A lmo nd Uquoor EMMETS IRISH CR. 3 4 Proof Im fi C i*a m Liq. FALL CREEK WINES Taxa^ O w rw n 81. Biono de B lanc Rreel CARLO ROSSI C a lf. Chabfct. Rhine Ro m . B o r, MAYAN COFFEE 5 2 Proof Monean Coffee liq SAUZA SANGRITA M ix M ode in M e xico . . . SCHLITZ CANS 12 C om......................................................................... 6 Com TECATE PEARL Light or Reg. ............ 12 NR BoMrn MICHELOB 12yr 750 M L 1 2 . 9 9 750M L 5 * 2 9 750 M L 6 * 9 9 750 M L 8 * 9 9 1.75 IT. 1 6 * 9 9 1.75 IT. 1 0 * 9 9 1.75 IT . 8 * 9 9 1.75 IT. 8 * 9 9 1.75 IT . 6 * 9 9 1.75 LT. 9 * 9 9 750M L 8 * 3 9 L T Ó . 7 9 I T 1 1 . 8 8 750M L 5 * 9 9 750M L 6 * 9 9 750 M L 4 * 9 9 « it. 4 * 4 8 750 M L 5 . 6 9 750 M L 6 9 0 12 Pock 4 * 9 9 12 Pock 3 . 1 9 9 « 0 ............ «Feck 3 * 1 9 WATER SKI SALE ALL SKIS 25% OFF NORTH ANDERSON IN . & SHOAL CREEK • CENTRAL 3 9 th & GUADALUPE • SOUTH LAMAR 8. 8EN WHITE classified advertising The Daily Texan/Friday, August 1 6 ,1985/Page 13 Vi so/Mo star cord Accepted For Word ods call 471 -5244/For Display ads call 471 -1865/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. MomJay-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitts Ave. Viso/8los1orcord A ccepted M A L ESTATK SALES REAL ESTATE SALES REAL ESTATE SALES MERCHANDISE M I R C H A N O m 120— Houses 130— Condos- 130 — Condos - 190 — Appliances Townhouses TewnhouBM classified advertising CohmcuHvs Day Rafos IS w ord minimum Each w ord 1 bm* E a d i w ord 3 timo» Eoch w ord S timos Eoch w o rd 10 timo» Each w ord 15 timo» Eoch w ord 2 0 time» 1 col. * 1 in d i 1 time $ 26 $ 72 $ 10» $ 1 7 7 $ 2 1 4 $ 2 3 0 $6 35 $1.00 charge to change copy First two words may be oil capital letters 25c lo r each additional word m capital letters. Mastercard and Visa accepted. DCADLINI SCHEDULE Friday Ham M o n d a y Texan M o n d a y Horn Tuesday Texan Wedne»doy Texan Tuesday Horn Thursday Texan W ednesday Horn Thursday 11am Fnday Texan In its# avant of erro rs mod# in on s d y i rHn i iu n t , Im m e­ diate notice must be given SponeBHo for o n ly O N I in­ correct insertion. A il claims for ed|ustments should be m ede not later than 30 days WTI^n pU^mCwvluVv. kHts slip N req uested at time of concoBotfon, a n d H am ount exceeds $2.00. Slip must be p resen ted fo r a reo rder within 90 days to b e valid. CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Autos 20 — S po rts-fo reig n Autos 90 — Trucks-Vans 40 - Vetskt#* to Trade SO — S ervke-R epoir *0 — Parts-Accessories 70 — Motorcycles 00 — Okyctes 9 0 — Vehicle Leasing 1 0 0 - Vehicles Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES 110— S ervk es 120 — H ouses 130 — Condos-Tow nhouses 140— M o b ile Homes-Lots 1 SO— Acreage-Lots 160— Duplexes- 170— W anted 100 — Loans MERCHANDISE 190— Appliances 2 0 0 — F u r n i t u r e - H o u s e h o l d 219 - Stereo-TV 220— Com puter s- Iqu ipm ent 230 — Photo-Cam eras 240 — Ooats 250— M usical Instruments 2 6 0 - H obbies 270 — M ach inery- iqu ip m er 200 — Sporting-Cam ping Equip ment 290 — Furniture-Appliance Rental 300— G a rog e-R u m mage Sales 3 1 0 - T r a d e 320 — W anted to Ouy o r Rent MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 - P e t s 34 0 Misc. RENTAL 390— Rental Services 300— Turn. Apts. 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 300— Fum . Duplexes 390— Unf. Duplexes 4 00— Condos-Tow nhouses 4 10— Turn. H ouses 430 — Unf. H ouses 42S — Rooms 430 — R oom -Board 435 — Co-ops 4 5 0 — MobUe Hom es-Lots 460 — Business Rentals 47 0 — Resorts 4R0 — S torage Space 49 0 — W anted to Rent-Lease ANNOUNCEMENTS S I 0 — Entertainm ent-Tkkets 5 20— Persona ls 530 — Travei- TransportaWo n 5 4 0 - L o s t A Found 550 — Lke n sed ChMd Care 560 — P u b lk N o tk e 570 — M usk-M uskksns EDUCATIONAL 500 — M u sk a l Instruction 590— Tutoring 60 0 — Instruction Wonted 610— Misc. Instruction SERVICES 620 — Legal S ervk es 630 — Com puter Services 640 — Exterm inators 650 — M o ving -H a uling 670 — Painting SERVICES 600 — O ffk e 690 — Rented Equip men t 700 — Furniture Repair 710 720 — S tereo-TV R epair 730 — Horns R epair 7 4 0 - B ic y c l e R epair 750 — Typing 760— Misc. S ervk es EMPLOYMENT 770 — Emplo ym e n t Agencies 700 — Emp lo y ment Ser v kes 790 — Part time 000 - G e n e ra l H elp Wanted 110 — O ffk e -C le rk a i 020 — Accounting- O o okkeepin g 030 — Adm inistrative- 0 4 0 - Sales R S O — R e t a il Technical 070 — M a d k a l 000 — Professional 090 — Clubs - Restaurants 9 0 0 — Domestk-H o u s e h o ld 9 10— Positions W anted 920 — W ork Wanted BUSINESS 9 3 0 — Ousiness O pportunities 940 — O pportunities Wanted TSP Building, Room 3 2 0 0 2 5 0 0 Whitis M o n d a y through Fnday 8om -4 30pm TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION REAL ESTATE SALES 20 — Sports-Foreign 70— Motorcyd s 110— Services 10— Misc. Autos 1964V), 'O ' cede. Mustang convertible, restored except paint, must sel, ap­ praised $ 95 50 , make offer, c o l 443- 7 5 9 5 $-16 1900 ZEfRA. extra dean, low mileoge. 4100. $25 00 . 3 45 -6 6 5 6 . A C radio 8 3 0 __________________________________ 1981 FO RD Escort, automatic, 46,000 mites, A C stereo, d e a n , ru ns g o o d , $ 2 2 5 0 firm. 4 5 3 - 2 0 6 0 A la n . 8 16 v s n i v w v i e w v n i i v SBiOIS-GtADUATES Ready for a brand new car? N e e d la establish credit m your m name? A fo m o trie financ­ ing. N o prior credh history o r co- egner necessary. N o dow n pay­ ment. N o paym ent lo r 3 months 442-7214 Autos 1976 RABBIT. AT, 7 7 ,0 0 0 miles, good condition, 3 5 mpg, $1350/ofters, call after 1pm, 472*4693. 8-16 1973 AUDI. 7 3 .0 0 0 4-speed. A M /F M cassette, AC, beige, excellent brakes ond lire», $ 95 0, 4 9 5 -9 7 2 7 Bill. 8-16 30 - Trucks-Vans JEEP C O M M A N D O , AT, 4 W dnve, re- m ovable hardtop w ith luggage rock. C o l Ja ck after 5, 4 7 4 -0 8 8 0 $1600. 8- 30 50— Service-Repair EVAN’S Sp ecco ta ng n Autom otive A/C Broke o n d Ftectncai Ueoa» Tttar Batteries Availacne Starling at S35 95 S314 Rurteeon Rd. 442-1244 ; 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos ‘6 9 C A R M E N G tv a orange, must sett, e xc transpo rtation, looks good, pnce n o g , 4 4 3 -3 8 3 8 evenings. 8 4 8-16 1971 V W Bug. Extremely reliable, ok weather. G o o d engine, brakes, tires. $ 4 5 0 , 0 8 0 4 5 8 -4 7 0 5 evenings 8-16 1983 M A Z D A 6 26. great shape. A C PS. cruee. A M / F M cassette, extended wor- ranty, $75 00 .4 43 -1 4 12 , 442-6821 8 -16 RED PO R S CH E 944, block interior, 5- new Pke S P-7 tires, 16' alloy perfect, $21500, Eurosport Im- p o r K 4 5 2 -1 8 2 4 .8 -2 9 _________________ RED 1981 M a z d a R X-7. 6 1 0 0 0 miles, sunroof, A M / F M coietre rocho, $ 7 5 0 0 4 4 7 -3 2 5 2 , after 7 9 28-0614 leave mes­ sage. 8 -1 6 ________________________ '81 M A Z D A RX-7. 4 5 ,0 0 0 mile*. w M icheknsv tun roof, Alpm e stereo. Im­ maculate O n gm al owner 443-5041 8- 16 70 — Motorcycles 180 Y A M A H A Riva for sole only 14,000 miles, great for school, helmet shield m eluded Cok 4 5 8 -8 8 2 5 . 8-16___________ 1983 H O N D A 250X1, excellent condi­ tion, |ust inspected, mutt sek. $ 9 5 0 firm C oS Robert 474-5611 Leave message. 8- 16____________________________________ '8 2 H O N D A C V 125 Looks new, runs great Cok Duke. 4 9 5 - 5 6 9 4 8-16 V E SP A 2 0 0 c c excekent condition, low miles, accessories, must sell $1250 0 8 0 4 5 9 - 7 5 0 8 8 -3 0 ________________ 7 2 H O N D A , too cheap! N e w brakes In­ spected Kick «Sort Headers. Very reli­ able. fost G o o d tires Don t mss. $ 5 0 0 4 4 7 -6 0 7 2 8 -2 9 ______________________ $ 5 0 0 REW A RD ! for a n y information leading So the return of the Horiey Do- wdson stolen from the lom phght Village area. Thursday, August 8 Cat 83 5- 2015 8-3 0 1981 Passport, 8 0 cc's, excellent condi- hon $ 4 0 0 4 7 8 -6 4 7 8 .8 -1 6 __________ 80 — Bicycles '8 3 NISHIKI C om p It txcyde, 2 3 lbs., paid over $ 6 0 0 with extras, $30 0. 4 47- 5 7 7 0 .8 - 3 0 __________________________ A L M O S T N E W 21 mch, 15 speed. Unwe- go G ran d Turismo bicyde. $ 2 5 0 o r best offer 4 4 7 -8 5 4 0 .8 -1 6 _________________ $ 2 5 -3 5 BIKES tw o locations: 54lh ond Airport, 12th and Airport Every Saturda y 9 A M -6 P M Austin Bicycle S ew age 9 28 - 4 90 0. C om e early! 8 -3 0 TEN SPEED Centurión touring bike. Ex- ce len t condition $135 o r best offer. 4 6 9 -9 0 5 7 leave message. 8 -2 8 * * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 101 GOOD USED BICYCLES A u s t i n s L a r q e s r * * * * * * * * I * ♦ * * * * * S e l e c r i o n ! Reconditioned an d G uaranteed DUCK'S BIKES 4613 Springdale (Col for dkeotons) 924*2610 FREE loch Ci c a b le wtrti Bike Purchase O p e n 9 o m - 7 pm Mon-Sot * * * * ♦ * * * * * * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 4 - B U Y , SELL, R E N T , T R AD E... W A N T A D S ... 471-5244 REAL ESTATE SALES 130 — Condos-Townhouses C O N O O 1212 Guadalupe For sales information call 512/469-0130 UNBELIEVABLE! 1975 Interest Rates in 1985 r 90% Owner Occupied/Investor Financing NO PM/ LIMITED CLOSING COSTS 1 & 2 BDRS - t52.500-S227.800 Penthouse - $553,200 MODELS OPEN DAILY Security Monitored Lobby Condominium/lownhome D iv. 512/474-5111 Reinstating a Tradition of Distinctive Downtown Living 2 Homes For Sale Wdk to UT 6 ladreo* perbd for fcdanifr or COOP Zoned MF4 $196900. Alto. 2 ledreo* on UT ShuMe near Hydt Pork, 1 Bk to Hancock Can­ tor, CACH, Mcrowav* Garoge, Sharp .105900 AritPraptriiei 346-1541 or 458-1911. 8-30 PARENTS U T Parents. Shuttle a t d o o r e v e ry five minutes. B rick d u p le x 3 BR 2 B A , 2 BR 1 BA— PLU S : liv in g-din in g, la rg e kitch­ en. U tility roo m . G a ra g e . A p p lia n c e s recent. C A C H . 2 3 9 8 sq. ft. F H A lo a n — $ 1 5 9 ,7 5 0 . Belli, Easter o n d E aster 3 4 6 -1 6 9 2 , 4 5 2 - 5 5 2 2 . 8 - 3 0 $ 69 ,9 00 , O W N E R finoncina 3BR, new paint, b in line, large fen ced yard, 119 H avana, call 4 4 3 -7 5 9 5 .8 -1 6 O P E N H O U SE. 7 0 5 London In , Sunday 10 to 2. Chormtng 3 bedroom 2 both in UT area $ 139,950 or coll McLestor & G risham ; Patricia; 8 9 2 - 3 0 2 0 / 4 4 3 - 9 7 2 4 8-16__________________________ BY O W N E R , near 45th/Mopoc 4 6 0 3 H ig h la n d Terrace. 3 -2 . Sunroom , large h ardw ood fenced yard. $142,000, assumption. 4 5 3 -4 7 7 4 ; 4 5 2 -4 0 2 8 .8 -3 0 __________ fireplaces, Roots, 130 — Condos- Townhouses ATTEN TIO N FACULTY and graduate stu- dents. D on't m ss this 2-2 con do with large loft. Skylight. Fireplace. H uge stor­ age N ice view. Two blocks UT. $103,000. JmaH complex. W illiam L Young, Jr; Realtor, 4 67 -9 2 5 2 . 8-16 THE POINTE. Spacious one and two b e d­ room condominiums for sole o r lease W a lk to Law School. O n shuttle. Security. Pool. Jocuzzi M icrow ave. Huge closets. Evelyn, ogent 258-9125, 2 5 0 -0 0 7 6 9-6 C R O IX 2 -2 , W e s t C a m p u s loca tion , w a lk in g dista nce to UT. L e a v e m e ssag e at 4 45 -2 11 8. 8-16 GREAT BUY! Efficiency condo only $29,950 Etched gloss, pri­ vate balcony! 0 6 Lauren al 327-9790/445-7481 8-30 L E N Q X f ( () \ i ) () VJ I \ I-1 M s 915 W. 23rd at San Gabriel UMÉRld IRPMdkOP nd isnaes nwwFnétit Larfl* 1 4 2 Bedrooms A ll a p p lia n c e » e P e a l e S p e e Sa u n a e W e ig h t ro o m . From $66,000 OPEN HOUSE don-FH 1 -5:30, Sat-Sun 1 l-J 469-0851 UT SHUTTLE Sparkling new condos 8 town homes with prívale garages12 BR, 2 B A & larger. Re­ frigerators, washers/dryers, microwaves & morel 2 lighted tennis court*, po ol & clubhouse $ 5 5 0 per month & up. Locat­ ed on Parker Lane between O frorf & W oodw ard, Tim ber Ridge Square' M od el/O ffice open weekdays 12-6 pm, Saturday & Sunday 10-6 pm. 4 4 7 -0 58 0. ________________________________ 8 -3 0 R iverside a re a , 1601 Fa ro . X tro la rg e 1-1 V i tw o *tory to w n h om e. AH a p p li­ ances, fire p la ce , m icro w a v e , ce ilin g fans, w /d con n e ction , p o o l side, n o stocked units. $ 6 6 ,8 0 0 b u y o r $ 4 5 0 / m onth rent. 3 8 5 -1 6 2 8 afte r 6 pm. 8-16 C O N D O E FF IC IE N C Y P rivate b a k o n y e tch e d gla ss o n shut­ tle pe rfe c t fo r student. O w n e r an xiou s to sell $ 2 9 ,9 5 0 . CoM Lau ren 3 2 7 - 9 7 9 0 , 4 4 5 -7 4 8 1 8-14 Below Market Value! L a rg e 18R c o n d o w ith study. P rice d to sell— ftreploce, jocu zzi, security, 2 b locks to cam pus. 2 i1 0 Rio G ro n d e . Bill, 4 7 4 -4 2 1 9 , $ 7 9 ,9 5 0 . 8-16 House? Condo? Duplex? Triplex? tu t-B-3 UJe h av e s e le c te d an e xam ple o f each ty p e p ro pe rty uilth in S blocks o f the shuttle to h elp ou t of-tow n inve sto rs understan d th e A u stin m a rke t UJe con se ll con­ dos. s in g le fam ily & mutti-fom ily housing. BCTJC KUCR 4760657 or 527-8800 SHARON MAJORS 472-1000 458-6610 hgents Monk & Box. B S B 8 B E 120 — Houses ---------- Perfect Professors Home A H a n d o ie — 2 2 0 0 sq. ft. im m acu la te 4 - 3 , 1 0 minute* fro m UT. L a rg e study, deck, office , g o rg e o u s yard . M o tiv a t­ e d seder. Lind a, 4 5 4 - 3 8 7 6 , 8 3 6 - 4 4 3 7 , Tam m y Fonss R ealtor. 8-16 $79500 Adorable 2 'year old condo wth 1BR/16A pki 10x12 loft for dudy or roommate Striking Boor plan with decorator intenor & lots of charm. A Ochen apptances, docked w/d fireplace, dorr windows & mm-btmd» 327-3676 ROSS ANDERSON REAL ESTATE STUDENT NOUI, MOfCSStONBL SOON-. 18000 CASTU HM faces 18th Street Extraordinary condo, convenient to U T but perfect tor young professo- ntoh. S bedrooms. S baths, S car garoge Lush uihite carpet, city view. $134 500 6CTJC KUCR 327-6600 476-0657 ftgent Moish & Box M U ST SELL! 1 BR/1BA downtow n condo on s h u ttle . N o n - q u a lif y in g 9% assumption Payments under $50 0. AH offers considered. B arbara 2 55 -6 9 3 3 , Agent. 8-16 8-1 1 2 0 3 lo rro m C h a rm in g 1 9 3 0 's b rick tw o story 4 -2 w ith 2 firep la ce s, w o o d floors, g ig a n ­ tic o a k tree. O n e b lo c k from shuttle in W e s t Austin. P rice d $ 1 3 ,0 0 0 b e lo w a p p ra is a l. Bid Sm ith Realtors. 4 4 7 - 3 6 5 1 C in d y lo lla 4 7 4 -0 6 3 4 . 8 - 3 0 N E A R UTI Homes for sale Call recording for information 451-3432 (24 hours) 9 -4 __________________________________ BY O W N E R . 4BR IV56A, C A /C H . 2421 Village W o k Investors welcome, no agents. 4 42-5317 evenmgs. 8 -3 0 1503 N E W F IE ID -E R shuttle Tastefully rem odeled 2-1, hardw ood floors, C A / CH, complete appliance package. A s­ sume 9 5 % VA, $ 5 3 7 PtTl, $105.000. Dave Broadway, broker. 4 4 8 -2 4 5 3 , 4 4 8 -2 4 5 4 . 8-16 ran " — 130 — Condos - Townhouses 130 — Condos-Townhouses FOREST OAKS CONDOMINIUMS In Tarrytown Immediate Occupancy 1508 Forest Trails Dr at Enfield Road. xh Block West o f Mopac Steps from Shuttle Bus 6 2 Bdrm 2 Ba Roomate Plans and 2 I Bdrm. 1 Ba. Homes Available. Am enities Include e Pool e Hot T u b e Club House e Microwave • Covered Parking • W D C onnecnons • Tile & Carpet Floors ft Security Access • G re a t I a vestm ent P ote ntial O p e n H ou se A l l W eekend o r C a ll C r a ig F lo y d 327-7908 o r 476-9798 N P C W estlake Brokerage STO N ELEIG II 2409 Leon New Condos for Sale or Lease Pre*L easing For Fall The Stoneleigh is a newly constructed condominium project con* sisting of 26 spacious units. These 1*1, 2*2, and 3-3 floorplans will be available for August 1 occupancy. Besides being less than a half block from the W C Shuttle stop, the Stoneleigh provides many outstanding amenities which include a pool, roof sundeck, elevator, security system, covered parking, decks, wonderful views of Austin and a full appliance package. 451-8249 Protect open 8-5 weekday, anytime by appointment. For information call— COOK CONSTRUCTION 474-7628 luchdown Silverado! Phase II of Silverado, Austin’s most popular condominiums has touched down! We’re celebrating and you’re invited! Join us for our Phase II Grand Opening. Come see Silverado’s quality craftsmanship, perfect floorplans, great pool and spa, and luxurious clubhouse. Explore our furnished models. Check out our dose UT shuttle boarding station. Rendevouz with our Phase I crew of young progressives enjoying carefree condominium living in the shadow of downtown Austin! Easy qualifying; owner financing. Come to Silverado, the perfect launching pad for your future and the best real estate investment in town! Priced from $39,950 N E W FULL size bed, must sell! A S A P ! C o l 3 39-1502 8 -2 8 __________________ SELECTRIC I ho$ 3 _ PRICE REDUCED! N ice 2BR near thutfte-- now only $45,9501 ($ 4 0 0 0 leM than neighbors) C a t John (owner/agent) 4 48 - 0 2 5 2 .1 3 0 4 Sume# #111. 8-16_________ N O M O N E Y dow nl S ave en laxe» on d bw ld equity A wum e 9 V)% O w n e r flexible, 1 BR with everything . 2 black» from campus. O p e n house, Sun­ day, 8-11. 12-5 PM. 114 E. 31st, # 20 6 343-2118.8-16_______________________ loan. WEST C A M P U S . 2913 Pearl # 202, 2 2, microwave, W /D , ceding fan, poaL re­ duced. $ 93 ,5 00 . Terms, ogent 3 45 - 1603 8-16______________________ O N E B E D R O O M con d o with loft. 2 blocks W e d o f campus. W alk to doss, $ 50,000. 7 1 3 -4 6 8 -5 8 2 7 9-13_________ LARG E 3-2V>-2, C A /C H , swimming, ten­ nis, on rimMie bus route, $ 72,500, 1707 Ttm berridg e Patricio A Linn Realtor, Chuck Borgeson, 4 40-0185. 8-16 10% D O W N n o n -qualifying 2 -lV ) con­ dominium. Fireplace, pool, skylights. Convenient to UT, downtow n, shopping. $ 6 1 ,0 0 0 .4 4 2 -4 8 8 4 .8 -1 6 _____________ O N E BR condo, nicely furnished, spotless location, condition, excellent University $ 3 9 5 0 0 . 479 -6 31 6 evenings, 214-386- ___ 4 9 6 4 .8 -1 6 PRICE REDUCED! H yd e Pork condo, 3 4 0 0 Speedw ay Shuttle bus at front d o o r N ice 1BR 1BA. $ 4 7 ,5 0 0 AH offers considered. C a ll today. Schneider-King Company. Barbara, 4 7 7 -5 8 2 7 o r 4 5 8 - 3 68 1.8-3 0 __________________________ 9 0 8 PO PLAR, # 2 0 7 - la r g e 18R con do with fireploce ond pool. A ll appliances including W /D . $71,900. McLestor ond Grishon 8 9 2 -3 0 2 0 , 2 8 2 -0 0 3 0 8-16 N E A R UT A fforab le 1-1 with loft. AH A p ­ pliances. Small complex. Ho* t»4>. Under $ 70,000. For Brown 3 45-8741 or 2 5 5 -6 3 9 5 . Deanie Owens, BH & G . 8-16 information c o t Patty D O N 'T RENT o r efrig erator the yeorft! Buy mine fo r the cost of rentoWI Dorm- ezed 1.7 o r ft $80 4 5 9 -9 2 8 7 after 6pm 8*29 200— Furnlture- Household SALE: O A K desk, oak chest, metal dresser with nwror; $ 3 5 eoch C o l M ich ael Lof­ ton, 4 7 7 -0 9 9 7 , 4 78 -3 9 5 5 , 2021 M a n o r Rd 8 -2 7 _____________________________ D O UBLE BED with metal frame. In g o o d condition $100 4 5 2 -7 8 8 0 8-27 C O U C H $ 5 0 Dinette $ 3 0 Dresser $ 4 5 C o m e r table, two lamps $15. Entertain­ ment desk, $10. Coffee table $10. Arup 4 47-7124 evenmgs 8-27 S O F A LO VE deeper Home stitch, $ 40 0. Com puter terminal with 3 0 0 band mode M , $ 30 0. Sanyo phone recorder remote ploybock $100, best offer 4 7 2 1881. 8 16___________________________________ N E W DINETTE table an d four choirs. Used sofa an d chair. $165. Must s e l by mid-August. C o l 339-1502 after 6 .8 - 2 8 C O U C H , D ARK blue, 7 ft, $125. Desk 3 7 ' x 21', with chair $ 2 5 C at 3 2 7 -0 7 8 5 a fle r 6 pm. 8-16 S O F A A N D loveseot, $ 20 0; double bed, $ 5 0 an d $150; dinettes. $ 5 0 ond $350; glass to p coffee an d end tables, $250; lamps, $15 eoch. Sat. an d Sun. 2317 ,4 4 3 -0 2 3 2 .8 -1 6 FURNITURE. BLUE U p-out sofa bed, $100. Three teak finish bookshelves, $ 3 0 each. Butcher block table, $75. Bunk bed, dresser, chest-of-drawers, $150 4 7 4 -9 4 5 9 after 8.30pm. 8 -28 B R O W N M ETAL desk with matching swivel chair, perfect condition. $100 or best offer. C at Yvonne 4 5 0 -3 3 9 5 days, o r 4 6 7 -0 6 5 2 evenings. 8 -2 8 RENT TO BUY N o rth w e s t HiHs L a rg e 1BR 1 B A C o n ­ d o a t 6 9 1 0 H a rt L o n e n e a r F o r W e s t Blvd. $ 1 ,0 4 0 d o w n a n d $ 4 9 5 / m o . W h ic h in clu d es d o w n p a y m en t fo r pu rch ase. UT Shuttle, 1 blk. CoH 3 4 5 - 5 8 2 7 . ____________________ 027 140— Mobile Homes- Lots 14X54 O okbroo k set-up in tree-shaded pork-convenient location. W /D connec­ tions, C A /C H , low dow n payment an d as­ sume note. Evenings: 443-1875; Day: 9 2 6 -2 8 0 0 , ext. 6 06 6. 9-13____________ 1982 M O BILE home, 14 X 52, oN electric, $14,500 o r best offer 928-3371. 8-16 1980 14X60, 2BR 16A. very nice, in UT pork, 4 4 3 -3 9 5 5 . K ee p trying. 8-16 3 PIECE sectional sofa, loveseat an d cor­ ner table with hideaw ay bed. beige with flecks o f eorth-tcme color, lv ) years old. $ 5 0 0 452-1567 8-29________________ M A T C H IN G CHEST, heodboord. and 2 night stands. Yellow and while formica. Very g o o d condition. $100. 452-1567. 8- 29__________________________________ M A H O G A N Y D IN IN G room table with tw o pedestal legs, circa 1940. $ 4 0 0 negotiable. 4 7 4 -5 2 6 3 .8 -1 6 FO R SALE twin Iona bed with frame. Firm. Barefy used. $125. CoH W ayne at 9 2 9 -3 3 5 5 after 6 pm. 8 -3 0 ____________ C O LLAPS AB LE TABLES $ 2 0 eoch, chatre $12, filing cabinet, metal, $55, misc. CoH 471-1711 ext. 233, 3 45-1526 evenings. Excellent condition, V) price. 8 -3 0 INEXPENSIVE FURNITURE, some go od some bad. Tables, dressers, beds, etc. 4 6 9 -0 4 0 3 8-16______________________ S O F A $100; dresser $50; kitchen table $70; desk, choir $30; notebook binders. M ovin g-m u st sefi. Leave messoge 4 74 - 7109 8 -3 0 350 - Rental Services MY APARTMENT FINDERS STUDENT PROPERTY SPECIAL­ ISTS IN LOCATING APARTMENTS ON OR NEAR SHUTTLE • LEAS­ ING FOR SUMMER AND FALL. -FA ST AND FREE SEHVICE- 339*0372 480*0440 N0RTH SOUTH 200 — PumHure- Ho w mHoM X-Firm Mat. Sets $79.95 BEDDING LIQUIDATION Twin or M sized iixjMrai* sets d> in factory wrapping. Going fad at $79.95 par sal. BEST PRICE FURNITURE 6535 N. LAMAR TEXAS FURNITURE OUTLET 1006 S. LAMAR (LAMAR PLAZA) 9-3 210— S t f O - T V Q U A S A R 2 5 mch co io r TV with sotd w o o d cabinet, e x c e ie nt $225, negoüobie. 4 5 2 -7 8 8 0 .8 - 2 7 lon dH on . PIO N EER S Y S T E M d e c p layer (3 months aid), l u nette deck, o m p ifie r 7 0 «rafts per ch an n e l speakers 120 «rafts per channel; $ 49 5, 4 4 5 -4 3 8 3 evenings 8- 2 0 _ STEREO RACK, O'SuRhran, w o od cabinet with 3 larg e adjustable shekra» record storage on bottom. ExcsHent condHon. $60. M ork. 4 95-9135 8 -2 9 ___________ BO SE 501 speakers. 9 months old. $ 3 7 0 ($ 60 0 + new) CoH 4 74-6631 leave number fa r Tony. 8-16______________ 220— Computers* Equipment TEXAS IN STRU M EN TS O m ni 8 5 0 X L dot matrix pri nter with tractor feed, — new $ 5 0 0 473 -8 71 6 8-16 stand on d supple». $ 2 2 5 . Laura, 4 5 4 - 4 0 6 9 after 5 pm. 8-16 C O R R E C T IN G TYPEWRITER Hermes 808. Uke new, 2 spare $ 25 0. CoH 3 2 7 -0 7 8 5 after 6 pm 8-16 correction tapes and ribbons. A TT EN TIO N M A C users Complete 512K upgrade for only $ 2 0 0 . CaR 4 76-3081 for details. 8 -3 0 250 — Musical Instruments SPRINGSTEEN, BEATIES bootlegs! A lien N ation Records, 3818 N . Lamar, 4 5 4 - 9 0 9 8 A lso at M e d ia PhHe, 4 7 3 -8 5 9 7 .8 - __ 16 SHURE U N ID Y N E m ike/cord, $ 35 ; G em emhord* flute/case, $125; 1964 G ibson 12-string/case, plays be au H M y. $ 4 0 0 .4 5 4 - 5 0 9 3 8 -2 9 ________________ 280 — Sporting- Camping Equip. HI FLY 100 windsurfer, used 3 times. $ 5 0 0 4 7 8 -6 4 7 8 .8 -1 5 ________________ U. S. were 8 0 cue. ft. aluminum scuba tank $ 1 0 0 0 0 9 2 6 -2 8 5 3 after 5 pjn . 8- __ 27 300 — Garage- Rummage Sole» G A R A G E SALE! Bookcases, dedts, break- fost room table, chorre, daftw ig and more. 1218 A E. 51. Sunday 8 /1 8 /8 5 ,1pm to 6pm. Com e/buy a n d sat up house far FoH. 4 5 3 -8 5 6 2 8-16__________________ 330— Pets 10c KITTENS!! V ery affectionate. N o e x ­ tra charge for microcomputer con trolad purr bo x o r factory instá is d cute. G a t youre today! 4 5 3 -4 6 6 4 . 8-27 S IA M A N X and SIAM ESE boons, $ 4 0 to $ 65, evenings ond m eefcendi Bastrop, 1-321 -6 28 9.8-29 ____________________ 340— Misc. LARG E D E A R B O R N gas healer, works fine. $40. Prepare fo r VMnter ahead. Typewriter. Smith-Corona, electric, porta­ ble with carrying caro. Excelent conrt- hon. $ 1 2 5 .4 6 7 -9 1 6 0 ,4 5 3 -2 4 7 8 .8 -1 6 f i a a B B H i 8 i 8 S B I S B ^ S qnd gold. Bax y-'.-C''i ' ■ ! ^condition. $895. LAD Y'S ROLEX. an d p o p e n , excellent . 4 7 8 -2 4 8 7 8-16 . CAMPUS LEASING SPECIALIST • No Charge • • No Hassle • • No Waiting • Students let the Witt group, find you a p la c e to live this fall. $445 & up. 360 — Fum. Apts. 4 8 0 - 8 8 8 1 A p a r t n | e n ( , " ' S e l e c t o r ® Since 1959. our free service has been helping individuals and corporations locate apartm ent homes. We handle many unadvertised specials. North/NW/Roundrock 451*2223 8501-Burnet Rd. Central/N E/North | I 474-6357 South/Southwest 441*2277 2219 W. Ben White Blvd. UT/Riverslde 445-0005 P ro fe s s io n a l Apt. Lo ca tin g Help 360— Fum. Apts. CARDEN GATE APARTMENTS CO€D NOW ACCEPTING LEASE APPLICATIONS FOR FALL • A ? / / / / / / / / / A® MARK XX APTS. Fall Leasing • 1BRFum.$380 • 2 BR Fum. $490 • Shuttle 2 Blks. • WaterS Gas PAID 3815 Guadalupe 459-1664 ACT IV APARTMENTS Signing FaH Leases • 1 BR Furn. $350 + E • Near Law School • Shuttle Bus at Corner L u xu ry 1BR F u rn ish ed 476-4992 2222 Rio Grande 3311 Red River 474-8125 Large 1 ft 2 Bedroom Apartments For Fall ft Spring Semester • Furnished • M Utilities Paid • Starting at $370per person, p er m onth CrifMadieoa Wmm 478*9891 T t: A Luxury Condominium With Everything. Including 10? Years Of History. Twenty-six exdusive condominum residences with a prestigious west campus address, heated pool, whirlpool spa and monitored security sys­ tems. Featuring fireplace hearths which have been painstakingly crafted using bricks from The University of Texas' first Main Building. In the new Old Main Condominiums, no detail has been overlooked. We've even built-in a "past" on which you can build a future. 0 O L D M A I N 807 W. 25th Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 472-8605 Available August 15,1985. 1840 Burton Drive Off Riverside • Telephone (512) 448-2608 Models Open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. p»fly PaQe 14^The Daily Texan/Friday, August 16,1985 ' Im r r A L ■ - 3 6 0 — P v m .il 4) 3 6 0 — P u r . Apts. 3 6 0 — F um . A pts. 6 6 # — - F i n n . A p t * . H e s e __ WWmwm wmm a *m Ü S Ü ÍM II W M M m m 22 8 3 .8 -3 0 c m m o n d ím íb n g s ^ ^ H ••M i B lB M * r $5 2 0 0 0 . A rtta g on»» $40 0 to M b «4t» M kan. Oama[ §37-9791, o4tar¿ áO »m .8-29_________________ MAOOAWTA MBY mata «y - K an» o l^8 rtf*íy w it m m m íK i machina. Ranlak 4434771 ONw rahmhmm * (^ 1 tCNTAL 350— Roirtal S trvic ti F R E E L O C A T IN G APARTMENTS AND CONDOMINIUMS FOR LEASE — FALL SE­ MESTER. WE8T AND NORTH CA M PU S AREAS. fit* b b ta t a mgm ° * eortk. S ta r co«ta» M r Ita r ita ta a M rin < ta ta 1M U fiktaa. fo p ta if w ta * ■. C Gn , ta n MOl 474- or 4794570 $•29 106 ñoco Fum. Eft/1 Mr Apk NewUoenaFeFdi/Spring e D ita w o ta e rt/d ta » a l a Suwmmiwq Pool • P a fia /lo u n g a /B O Q G n i a Irtd rvid u d Storage • V i b lo ck to IF A u M * • la u n d ry fa c ifilia i § ( tu itjp if monogor Funs. a *. $ 3 3 5 plm E. 1 BR $ 4 0 0 p to E. 452-14 19,4 53-2771. 108 W 4 5 4 i S». 8 -3 ( 476-2673 41(M*)SPtfc['n\-\\ i .i l l 1 t'.isma - - S E G U O IA lEfllcMocy Small Coopta , ■ $329 ■ 11 301W. 30th 1 J j 1 Bloc* to Shuffio 452-4032 WALK TO I T. f e i i u i A t ü / , ill I .M S II iq S315 to S425 E 101 1 3 2 n d 176 5 9 1 0 .... 2 3 1 1 Pe a r l 177 7 2 1 6 ...... DENMMMOKMB • HOUSES* XI • 346-0266 479-8956 FREE LOCATORS 360 — Fum. Apts. WALK TO campus laasing fo r Fat. M ou- no Kai. Shutta Dus, pool Larga affkian- cy, 7 BK 2 BA affictency. Fum AInf. 477- 2147.8-16________________________ CAMBRIDGE TOWER-Fumnh in alaqont high risa odjoining LIT. 24 hour sacunty, haotad pool, ínsita gotag». $495 LNiMas paid. 1801 Lavaca. 282- 6275 o r 443-8792.8-16____________ a r NO W LEASING. Largo fomishod 1 S t $380 month plus alactnc, 1 from LIT Law School. Towarvtaw Apts. on 26th straat batwaan Oldham and Rad Rater. 8-16 Vi BLIC o ff 26,1-1, 2-1 + E. Pool, covarad portang, large dosah. N o pats. Now corpat, now oppKoncos. La Cosita Apts., 2900 Cola. 482-9154.8-30__________ EFFIOENCIES. $255-280. 1BR $280- 300 2BRs $350-365. 603 Elmwood 3104 Duval. 5012 Duval. 4712 Dapew. 3812 Spaodway. 5505 Jaff Davis O ffice. 3101 Banolva. 477-2214, 453-8812, 452-4516 9-4_____________________ ONLY 2 loftt Large 2BR 2 BA condo l* » apis. 3 blocks campus, a t amandios. $800-850 fo r 2. $1000 fo r 4 and E. H ow ot Properties, 477 -99 25.9 -5 ABP, SPACIOUS 2-2, one block to Law School, 2910 M edical Arts. CaH now, 476-5631, The E liott System. 9-9 l i t 1 tuirms. I urn s i r . i 4 1 1 - 4 {) 1 ( ) M .in .iu * r » ID ! * » -------■— L ! — I « - t - p i nunaennru ip w i L a rg e E f f . & 1 B d rm s In H y d e P a rk A re a 45100 m I 451-1244 X WALK TO I ♦ CAMPUS ! ♦ DOS RIOS I 2S146UMMLUK } ♦ { N W + 1 BR 1 BA— C overed parking, ▼ g m icrow ave, in d ivid u a l w asher/ 4 fans, C A /C H , A .d rye r, ceilin g preleasing fo r fa ll. $ 4 7 5 -5 5 0 478-4271 474-0971 . ACT VII Small quiet complex centrally located. Now remodeling. 1 Bdrm. $360 +e 4303 Duval 4 5 1 -7 1 3 2 ALL BILLS PAID Effic iency $3 3 5 1B R $460 Longa 1 $ 4 8 0 SmoN 2BR $ 4 9 0 C A /C H W a ft o r shuttla to UT 2212 Son G abriel ____________________________ 8-25 C ottage charm . Q u ie t 1BR and e ffi­ in a park sotting. ciency cottages A m anitas include covarad assigned parking, laundry room , IF shuttla, ma­ ture landscaping. Privacy. S torting a t $ 2 9 0 . K E N S IN G T O N SQUARE, 4 5 2 -7 2 0 2 . C A LL 8-16 August Free. W est Campus. Furnished efficiencies, a t appliances, carpel, dropes, poo l, laundry. Sign 9 m onth lease and receive August fre e . $3 3 5 - $35 0. CaH now . D avid M e Ned Com­ pany 4 7 8 -3 5 3 3 o r m anager o f 4 7 6 - 720 5. 8-16 FALL LEASES N O W AVAILABLE PECAN SQUARE APARTMENTS 5 0 6 W . 37th St. Furnished 1-1 $ 3 3 5 + E Cod 459-1597 8 -3 0 WEST CAMPUS large 2 BR in 4-plex. W alk o r shuttle. CH/CA, lorge kitchen and living room, $475 + electric. Owner pays w ater and gas. Cod Ken M cW illi­ ams, 327-5000, after 6 pm 478-2410.8- 16 RENTAL 360— Fum. Apts. 415 Place Apartments LM rX TO ffy lOCOCwO near IF shuttle • Cow e d fro th in g • Pod • loundky Room • 1 B rftm $ 3 7 5 + • 415 UJ. 39th 458-2990 1 BEDROOM $375 PRELEASING FOR FALL ■ ------- A---M—A- A M AC » jf m ji com plex -matos a v a la b la fo r Fafi. Furnished, a l appfionces, naor shttole, va ry quito. $ 3 7 0 , $ 4 4 0 w ith lo ft. C a l C orf, 4 5 9 -9 5 9 2 . 8 -28 8-16 8-16 1 BEDROOM $325 S odudod, sm al, quw t com plex in park fita setting. N ic e ly furnished and car potod. 6 0 9 E art 4 5 lh Stra to , 4 5 3 - 1418, 451 -65 33. CENTRAL PROPER­ TIES. 8-16 Close in . N o rth o f UT. 1BR 5- $ 3 2 0 : 3104 and 5012 D uval. 3812 ft 3816 Speedw ay, 3 7 0 7 C edar; e ffi­ ciencies $ 2 2 5 -5 2 9 5 : 3100 Duval, 4 0 3 W . 38th, 104 W . 38VS, 4712 De­ pew ; 2 BR: $ 3 6 5 -5 4 7 0 : 5 5 0 5 Jeff Davis, 5100 Brwding. 452 -45 16, 4 7 7 - 2 21 4 ,4 5 3 -8 8 1 2 . 8-16 FLEUR DE LIS Supor lo ca tio n , one block campus, nicety fam ished 1BR apartm ents. $395-415. A b o one 3BR availab le. C a l Frank a t 476-2176, o r John o f 4 4 3 -3 0 3 7 .4 0 4 E. 30. 8-16 8-16 LARGE V£ST Austin furnished efficiency. N ear shuMle. $310 plus E. See manager, 1115 West th #204, or c o l 477-3461 l! 1am. 8-30 8-16 A D 9-10 302 W. 38 F o l te o ta g . EM dency, 110, cowvan ¡ato ly locatod. Fur AN opptancoA pooL V) b k to ta to ta . G o t ond ii'a to r p oid. /u tta n ta 453-4002 NEAR LAW K hooi, 2 edL ce in g ton, ta IM n da ta drawen, M m a w eh. Lea», $295 and $325. 926-7243.8-16____________________ ■188 APARTMENT. CeOng fans, tahw m h- a g g fg f a ^ r r f t *907 W ssr Ave. 474-7426. W tow idc ____________ 8-16 NEAR UT law school. Furnished room. OUCH. S ta r* b a ta 5195 A8P 3310 «edU ver . 476-3634 9-4____________ 9-13 O N I MONTH fro * re n t Large tarnished 1-bedroom, on RC SR tadta e. Staleqse through M ay. $40C|tao. 444-0936.8-16 IDEAL FOR couple apt in private l - vse 2 iV i x n o l yord 425 + AC 453 1109 of- te r3 .8-16 ____________________ LARGE FURNISHED e ffita n á o s and 1-Vs. .C e ta g fan, covered paiking, separate I study. Nice. W dk to UT. Dupfoiws oho 478-7718. 8- LAG l*TO ESTO W a ftin g dM anc* o f St. Edwards U ni- varto y C hooee from 1-1, 2-1, a n d to wnhouees, w ith fireptoees, ctofing fa n * m ini b fin d * duhw ashen f t g a r­ bage dw postih Com plex has ta m i* courts, dubhousa, 2 now p o o k 3 laundry room s f t a bootoiM creek w ith fo b o f trees. G as f t w a ter* pd. A bo, on-site security. 442-9369 1401 St. Edwards D rive Take IH -3 5 S, e x it St. Edwards Univer­ sity, 1st rig h t a St. Edwards D rive 1 * $-16 $295 $: 15 Plus E C a l M fre, 499-0699 o r 30 OLDER 3 M M I H W |W P * ^ M N | oble fo r 1. Serious, woB groomed UT student. References. N o pets. No W e are lo o kin g fa r quito, conscien­ tio u s non-sm oking students interested in a la rge efficien cy o r on# bedroom , i O ne-year lease. 2 locations. H y ta P a rk/near cam pus. C A /C H , laundry, ^ M d t a l. N o pals. Single occupancy. . I4Bo 4 5 8 -24 881 a 17 2-r- 33rd Tem Green 453-4082. 8-16 i sto- LARGE 1BR, 800 Sq. fr. grocfc * w— awn» (fo w w eteclricAy- Soulhem oire Aportments. I n oken . 805 Rio Grande. 6 dose* 4 2 1 0 0 VAUC TO CAMPUS-raoms, effic and 1 BR tarnished. $ 2 0 5 4 4 3 0 San G abriel For uppointeieto. Co# Oar-1 lean. 452-1387.9-10 1907 QUIET COMPLEX an d tu lta . pooL fire­ place* foundry, 1-H $415 + E; sffiden- des $335 + t Chimney Sweep Apts. 105 W 3BW 459-1711.8-16__________ | PRE-LEASING fo r FtW Spring. Large H i + E. Sparking p o o l laundry, cav- $375 parkmg. C o l 480-0201 o r came by #104. Penthouse Rio Grande, 1801 5 BLOCKS from campus on W . 28th 2-2 furnished P ool hat tub, c ng fan, foundry focAtas. C o l Kyle. 346-1402. 8 ______________________ _ 30 WALK TO UT, 31st and Duval Efficiency laundry i disposal , au to . $ 3 5 0 ^ 1 4 7 7 4 0 3 3 .8 -3 0 SUBLET. BEAUTIFUL tarnished deco rtta d enormous one bedroom; washer, dryer, dishwasher, microwave, porch, pool. Lor- rome 339 -08 06 8-30 ALL U ll PAIO. Neat campus, on «fado, efficiencies ond one badrooms in smafi complex. $295 to $430 451-8532, 442-4076.6-16____________________ WEST CAMPUS sm al attractively de­ signed and furnished complex, laundry fa d M * 1-1 fo r $360 to $370 + E. 451- 8122. West W ortd Real Estate. 9-12 : WALK TO campus, famished e fficiencies and one bedrooms, appfionces, ^ ^ ^ t a $315 to $340. 451-8122 W r M lli Roal Estate. 9-12 W ert W ortd ESQUIRE APARTMENTS just north o f campus/AC. appfionces. tuite mate effi- dan de* E, 451-8122. W ert W ortd Real Estate. 9-12______________ .250 p HYDE PARK one badrooms famished. $335-350, near shuttla, gas/water paid, 4412 Ave A, 451-3180.9-12 V£ST CAMPUS, shulta o r w a ft to com­ pus, alder 4-unit complex, 188. $280 + E, 451-8122. W art W orld Roal Estate. 9- 26______________________________ NEAT UT on CR shuttle, forge one and tw o BR a p t* pool and faundnr room, $380-450 C o l 472-5723 batwaan 6 ond 10pm 8-16____________________ ALL BIUS paid. New Gudd has vacancies fo r Fal. S268 per month. One block from campus. 510 W. 23. 472-0352. 8- 16_______________________________ EFFICIENCY NEAR UT. quiet complex, doable bed, appfionces, no pels. 477- 4005 after 5, o r 327-0051.8-28 GABLES CONDOM INIUM , ipodous 2- lV } famished, W /D , 2 bfts from campus $750/m o 469-0273 or 473-8545.8-16 FURNISHED EFHCIENCY. com er o f 45th and Speedway, on stattle. $250 month­ ly plus eledricily. $150 daposil. Month to month lease. A valabla Sept. 8, 453- 6545 8-30 370— lln f. Apt». THE HERITAGE is now leasing fo r Sum- mer and FaB. Luxury condos offer ced­ ing fa n * micrewaves, W /D s pfas much mere, lease/purchase plan abo avail­ able. C ol now 479-8174 a r 476-5631, 3111 Tem Greene. 8-16 HYDE PARK. 1-1 stadias A l appliances except dishwasher, carpet, w ater paid, pool, foundry, and on-site manager. S395. David McNed Company 478- 3533 o r m anager at 458-1634.8-16 WEST CAMPUS neighborhood. 1 and 2 BR aportaron* now taasirm fo r Fal. 6 blocks from UT, corpet, CA/CH, appli­ ances, palioe and balconies, tried both, o ff rtreet partwrg. S365-S525, plus E. Cable, gas and water paid. 1010 W art 23wL 472-2273.9-6_______________ CLOSE tN -H yde Park. 407 8 W. 45. 188. downstairs garage apartaienL One person occupancy. N o pels $360 plus b ta 459-4550 8-16____________ BEST BUY. $295 rant. Efficiency, pooi- rtde. 50' p o o l spa pool table, dothmg optional. 7 blocks E o f UT, 3bfts to shut- ta . 476-5875. 8-30________________ ATTRACTIVE NW efficiency, convenient to Mopac and 360. A variable Sept 1. c o l 453-1283, after 7pm. 8-16________ NEAR LAW school on shuttle, forge one bedroom apt. in a n a l quiet complex. $325 plus E. Pool. Avodobto Sept 1.474- 1240,442-4076.8-16_______________ NEAR If shulta, nice one bedroom apt. m sm al complex, gas and water paid, p o o l $320 ptas E. 453-7514, 442-4076. 8-16_____________________________ NEWLY REMOOELED efficienc.es, one and two bedrooms, some with fireplaces and d yfig h *, convenient north central location near tf shulta, two pools $295 to $455 plus E. 451-4561, 442-4076 8- 16 Free Rent— H yde Park efficiencies. A l o pp tancos. carpet, p o o i, m anóger, foundry, gas and w a te r paid> R«nt now through M ay and August h fre * l $315. D avid M cN eil C o m p a rt/ 4 7 8 - 353 3 o r manoge r a t 4 5 8 -8 8 9 3 . . 8-1 6 Cobblestone Apartments 101 ovad, fo r fa l. E xtra forg e dose* and nice p o o l in quiet community. UT shulta slops o t fro n t d o o r. C o l Randy a t 451 -72 56 o r 454-2157. 8-18 F inely, a ffo rd a b le housing fo r the school year. C O LO N Y NORTH o ffe rs forge 1 and 2 bedroom oportm ents Featuring forge Irving space, waop- around kitchen c o u n te r/b a r G ood- sized bedroom s and 12 ft. o f cfoset hanging space. S tarling a t $315. C A LI P o rfirio o t 4 5 2 -7 2 0 2 . 8-16 N e ar U niversity. O ne bedroom du­ plex. See a t 6128 W . 31V* Street, Vi block off G wadofope. N e w ly renovat­ ed. N ew carp eting , stove, re frig e ra ­ to r, blinds, and oc/heafing . O ff street parking $410/m o W a te r paid. $410 deposit. 9 m o. lease required . Avad- abie Sept. 1. Contact D ebbie o r Laura, M -F, days only, 1-224-1871. ____________________________ 9-13 Efficiencies m m a l com plex. Ceding fora , b u ilt-in bookshelves, decora to r touch, Sdvorcfiff A partments. $2 9 5 + E. F .S A H am son - Pearson 472-6201 8 -3 0 Available Now! The Waterford 2401 Leon Street Luxury 2-2 A p pro x. 9 7 0 sq. ft. 2 people, $ 3 6 5 eoch 3 people, $ 2 7 5 each 477-3143 8-16 RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apts. Long Haven Apts. Fall Leasing • 1 BR Fum. $390 • Walk to Campus Diplomat Apts. Fall Leasing • 1 BrFum. $370 • Walk to Campus • Gas & Water Paid! 1911 San Gabriel i 916 W.23rd ^ ^ ^ ■ 4 7 6 - 7 3 9 9 TIMBERWOOoj | APARTMENTS! —Fall Leasing— • Large Eff. $390 • Finest Location in UT Area • Shuttle or Walk to Campus • Fireplace BITTER HURRY! > 26th & San Gabrieli > “ 499-8712 T H E VILLA SOLANO APTS. F a ll L e m m in g • 1 BR Fum. $390 • 2 BR Fum. $500 • Shuttle at Comer • Intramural Fields across Street 600 W. Slat 451-6682 ^Tangle rood Westsid Is Apartments Now Preleasing Por Fall Semester 1 Bedroom Furnished $350-$390 2 Bedroom Furnished $540-$570 Gas & W ater PAID Shuttle bus is at your boat door 1403 Norwalk In. 472-9614 Professionally managed by Davis & Assoc. Hyde Park Apts. —F all Leasing— o Eff. Furn. $3204330 o 1 BR Furn. $335-$365 o 2 BR Furn. $465 o City Tennis Courts & Pool o Shuttle at Front Door 4413 Speedway 458-2096 Circle Villa Apts. F a U L m c u in g • 1 BSOnlum. $350 • IBS Fum. $360 • Water ft Gas Paid • Shuttle Bus 2323 Town Lake Circle 441-7557 CHELASU A P A R T M E N T S 1 BR Fum. $440 ABP 1 BR Fum. $415 + E PRE-LEASE FOR FALL • Nice Pools • Walk to Campus • Across the Street from Tennis Courts Office Open Daily Mon.-Sat. 8:00am-5:30pm 477-3619 1302 W. 24th St. T H E 305 A P T S . Signing Fall Leases • “Large" Efficiencies • $345 +E • Small Friendly Complex • Near Shuttle Corner Move In Today! 459-4977 Davis & Associates Preleasing For Fall • Efficiency $350 • 1 BR Furn. $390-$410 • 2 BR Fum. $530-$550 • Large Pool and Patio • Luxury Club Room • 2 Shuttle Routes 444-7880 Davis & Assoc. Management Co. ^ Villa ^ Arcos Fall Leasing • 1 BR Hm . $390 •Water A gas paid o Shuttle at boot door M A R K V A P T S . Signing Fall Leases 1BR FURN. $390 o Water & Gas Paid • Shuttle • Small, Friendly Complex 3301 Speedway Lg 476-1619 V 3914 Ave. D 452-5244 y ts H s ts H z ts h T ik iitm G re e k A p m n tm e a te NOW LEASING FOR FALL SEMESTER Unfurnished and Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom Furnished $395*$4#5 2 B éoom 1 Bath Fum. $595 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Fum. $53§-$545 Tanglewood North Apartments NOW PRELEASING FOR FALL SEMESTER W e P a y All Y our A /C a n d H e a tin g • 2 P — l « a V im Ap&a. • S hK ttic Stop 1 Bedroom Fum. $410-$425 2 Bedroom Fum. $560-$575 M m ' l f l l W U lo w c re ek DaeleMAeeoe. Management Co. I 1 4 4 4 4 1 1 4 1 W i l l t i l t 1020 E. 45th 4*2-0060 /tateMtoiaiyitiBiaptofyOotoRtaoa MARS EMBERS APTS. Fall Leasing .1 BR Fvm. $36$-$390 •Shuttle Front Door •2 Pooh •Small, Friendly Complex 3100 Speedway 477-2004 C a s c a n A c a r i m e r . ! : Kick Off The Year With A Winning Deal On A Campos Area Apartment W e F e a tu r e : S w im m in g p o o l, C e ilin g fa n s . G a s / w a te r p a id , L a u n d r y f a c ilit ie s o n s ite , O n s ite m a n a g e m e n t/m a in te n a n c e , E a s y a c c e s s t o I - H - 3 5 & M o p a c . El Campo 305 W. 39th Street Fuirashcd Unfurnished LaPaz 401 W. 39th St. Furnished Unfurnished lbd lb 2bd lb a $390 $515 lb d lb a 2bd lb a $360 $485 lbd lbn 2bd lba $390 lbd lba $515 2bd lb a $360 $485 El Dorado 3501 Speedway Furnished lb d lba lb d lba (CACH) $380 $390 Unfurnished lbd lba iimluna) lbd Iba (CACHI $350 $360 472-9843 Professionally managed by Johnston Properties, Inc A lpine F o re st Apts. N ow l e i s i i g F e r F a ll • Newly Remodeled Efficiencies • $315 (Furnished) $300 (Unfurnished) • Shuttle or Walk to UT Campus • Lots of Parking 4 5 8 At s A (At eerier ef 4*th mmé Avans A.1 444-8202 482-0720 DO V0 U N€€D RN IPARTMCNT FOR FAU? Uü€ HñV€ TH6MI 2803 Hemphill DRUBS BRRNDVUIIN8 2808 UUhitis HOUSTON UlllSHIRC 2801 Hemphill 301 UU. 29th ★ Startkig at E97.00 ★ 1 bodroom apartments Furnished and unfurnished Coll Phil 480-9358 2805 HCMPHIU PRRK #105 M W TRYING RENTAL 370— Unf. Apts. 2 2 € 7 L e c n A p t s . —Fsdl Leasing— ■ • 1 BR F in . $400 • 2 BR Fum. $570, • Walk to Campus* • Nice Pool & PsdO J 2207Leon; 478-1781 :• TAKE NOTE. W e’ve changed, inside and out. • 2 Bedroom apartmcatosvsUsblc for faM semester • New earn* aad designer tkt m I u s s ie r m i l l h H n tfa • Rcdesig - o o o 711W. 32nd 1 & 2 Bdrm Apts Available Fall Leasing Remodeled e Swimming Pool e Ceiling Fan* e Laundry Facilities e Walk to UT e Go* and Water Paid 453-4991 $100 Deposit Newly Renovated 1 & 2 Bedrooms with Fireplaces, Front Door Parking. Gas Utilities Paid. Just A Few Left! Call N o w . . . 454-2636 /NTOWN ON TOWN LAKE Move in Deposit FREE p OuaSad Orner Pan Bond) a Ef.1.283 bedroom Son $340 a FREEUMttes a lu o M n4H From DowrSowr a M num from Shoppng and a On C*t 8 s o u t UTShulle Boots a CBy 384 Doubles >298 Newly Reno tod L A U M lL H O U S E has vocancies this Fall fo r women. W e ora o self-gov­ erning community practicing rant-control in the campus orea. 44 Private furnished rooms CA/ CH, ABP. 17 meals/wk., reserved parking, access to pool. Fall $369/m o. C all 476-5478 1 9 0 5 N u a < a s Taos< y >p Looking fo r great h o u sin g ' Taos is o friendly coed community across from campus. AC, 19 great meals a week, full security, sundecfi ond fun educational programs. Tours avail­ able anytim e Come by and apply! Fall rates: Single, $ 4 1 l l/m o . Double, $298/ mo. 2612 Guadalupe 4 7 4 -6 9 0 5 ,4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 VACANCIES FOR WOMEN Welcome to the ARK CO O P fo r the FALL!! Friendly self-governing com­ munity close to campus. Pool sun- deck AC. Fun-filled educational ac­ tivities, all meals, ABP Come by for a tour. 2 0 0 0 F t a r i 4 7 6 - 5 * 7 8 G reat FoH Rates Doubles $288 Single $329 G RA D FEMALE. Your ow n huge room in com fortable beura. Unbekmraoty d ora. 9 people. 4 7 2 5 6 4 6 ,4 7 4 -2 0 0 2 *-1 6 VACANCIES FOR women a t N o w G u M C o-O p. Coifing fans, ha rd w o o d floors, a l b * p o r i $ 2 6 8 ungle, $ 3 4 0 double O n e block from campus. 4 7 2 -0 3 5 2 .8 -1 6 FEMALE DOUBLE room, boa rd . b « t, co- ad hou tot 12, A m d n t C o-op. 472 - 2 2 9 2 >-28_________________________ HO U S IN G COOPERATIVE 11 blocks I south o f ftvor, v aetanon. non smoking, É K IH vBOBionon, jjRent S 310 -S 36 0 no pots, num bar < 4 47-1268 t Rent in d u d o t fo o d / l K WEST CAMPUS--5BR house needs throe paopia. Interested in CoOps. Doubles $ 2 7 5 50/m o foo d , ufifitias. (including phono). Tina, 8 37-4134 M-F 8 -5 , 458 - 2 6 5 3 otter 6. 8-16____________________ V C o -O p Fatt vacancies. Coed, singlo rooms, $ 3 0 0 monthly room a nd board, 1919 Robbins Ptoco 4 7 4 -7 7 6 7 8 27 440—Roommates GRADUATE N O N -smokar Your own com forta b le house. R U S B S i H d o s e . Nina poopie. N o pats. 4 72 -5 64 6 , 4 7 4 -2 0 0 2 8-16 FEMALES W ANTED fo r Fafl, 2 -2 , Lenox condo with the works, walk to campus, coB G iG i colect, 1-817 236-8101 9-10 FEMALE ROOMMATE needed, $210/ mo. Vs o f M b . 38B 2 .5 8 A Two story condominium. CaB Joff o r Becky 442 - 3 6 5 8 $100 deposit.8-16 FOURTH GIRL wantod to share furnished apt. one block from campus. $ 2 7 5 mo. 4- utilities. C e l 214 -7 75 -2 0 28 o r 713- 4 6 6 -0 8 3 9 o r 713-469-9711.8-16 FEMALE; SERIOUS student but o fun per­ son. N o cigarettes. Cozy 2-1, O ortavifie Shuttle. $ 2 5 0 + Vi. Cot n a g 4 8 2 -0 6 5 2 Sarah. 8-16__________________________ Born-again Christian male seeks same to share expenses beginning 9-1-85. Du­ plex near campus. CA/CH, $ 2 5 0 /mo plus biBs. CaB Dan a t 4 7 8 -4 8 9 7 Please keep tryin g 8 -3 0 _____________________ ROOMMATE WANTED Sept. '8 5 Ideal Rio Nueces apt. One block N W o f compus ittifities. Pool, full kitchen, carpet, furnished CaB M o tt Juricfc collect (201)265-5477 8 -30 $ 3 3 0 /mo. Includes FEMALE GRADUATE student or em­ ployed female wanted to share modem apt. with elderly woman. 3 4 3 -0 4 2 5 . 8- 2 8 _________________________________ LIVE IN LUXURY! Neat, fem ale room­ mate needed to share beautiful model unit condo. 2-1, $ 6 0 0 (negotiable) + V2 biBs. Hottub, pool, security, fireploce, mi­ crowave, W /D . West campus. CaB N atal­ ie now! 480-9417. 8-16 , FEMALE NONSMOKER. 2BR IB A $260 + V l E. West com pra ow n room. 474- 7 8 9 2 otter 6 .8 -1 6 ___________________ FEM/MALE fo r spociout fo u r bedroom house. Gym, swimming pool, lo ca te d on Cat Mountain. $ 4 0 0 + V3 biBs. Serious inquiries only caR 4 52 -3 57 8 , 3pm-9pm. 8-16 ____ FEMALE ROOMMATE w anted fo r 2-1 u p m tw onl. Pool. Hyde Fork, IF shuttle $155/m o + Vs utilities. Cad Sadof 459- 1983 anytime. 8-16___________________ ATHLETIC, LIBERAL male needs same fo r new, large 28R 2BA apt. W /D . micro, pool, hottub. Must be eon, responsible, no sm oking Joe 6 -llp m , 452-6512. > 2 9 0 4 V l. 8-16_____________________ ROOMMATE FEMALE: nonsm oking not add ktad , ow n bedroom, bath, pool, fireplace, north Austin. Deposit. Transpor­ tation nogcttoblo. $ 3 2 5 V l uliiifies. M o ra in A u g 15. 2 5 8 -7 9 3 4 mornings. 8- ___ 16 ROOMMATE TO shore O ra ng e Tree fun, condo, $ 2 7 5 /m o . Prefer neat, active person. Rick, 4 7 7 -8 6 6 2 anytime. 8-16________________________________ ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 2-1 house, one block o ff Enfield shuttle route. H ardw ood floors, fireploce, ceil­ in g fans, W /D , $ 3 5 0 monthly. C o l V irginia 4 7 4 -2 4 8 4 5-10pm. 8-16 ROOMMATE WANTED: mala, 18-21. nonsmoker to share room in 2 bedroom Rio G rande apt. 4 5 9 -0 0 4 4 evenings. (__________________________ 816 FEMALE GRAD student, preferably Liber­ al Arts, needed to share 2-1, ER shuttle, with neat liberal roommie. $ 2 3 0 /mo + ’/ I bids. Jenny 477-1193, 472-8316. 8- 16 _ G W M , serious sttriant; furnished 2BR apt. N W Hils, shuttle; $ 2 4 0 + V l E. A fter 6pm, 3 4 5 -1 2 7 3 .9 -3 __________ 7 93 8.8 -1 6 IO O M M A T E W «rantod FEMALE d ia ra 2 -2Vi, t p o d o u t p ia ra a n SR route. A vailable im msdlatet)' Ton. 443*7413. 8 -1 6 __ to N O N M O K IN G ROOMMATE fa r 2:1 heura near Justin Lana. $ 2 7 5 + V l M b . CaB otter 3 4 5 2 2131 8-16___________ 3ffil — nirfo am N O N -S M O K IN G FEMALE men t id to share p a c ta ra 2 -2 cando « é IBMra. $ 2 5 0 /m o C o l 4 8 0 *8 2 0 0 otte r 5 3 0 . 8* 16__________________________________ ur XjL MTIra BinB. N i raonraato ENFIELD AREA. F a n s a f o ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H 3001 ■aofim g g ra d preformed- 477-1600, Vi­ vian. 8-16 M A L E ROOMMATES needed fa rr loras IF. Ta ta iy w ith W /D 4 6 7 -7 3 6 6 , 346- co n d o on 7451.8-16 QUIET, RESPONSIBLE fem ale wonted Sapt. 1. Largo to campus. 2-1, $ 3 0 0 + E. O o u d ri a ran ings, 4 7 9 -6 5 4 6 8-16_________________ living orea, w a tt N O N S M O K IN G PERSON wanted fo r room in 588 2 V í iA house. $170/m o + 1/5 uflMos. D epoet CR shuttle. 9 28 - 1034.8-16_______________________ Studious responsible fem ale fo r luxury condo (OrangoSrea) 1-1. S 37S .00 ABP I 4 7 9 -9 2 0 2 , 474-7719, 474-1121. N on- smoker p ra fo rra d S -ló FEMALE N O N -S M O K IN G housemate to shore 3-2. $ 2 2 5 + V« utifittes Barton HrHs .C ity bus to UT. Lauren, 448-3168 8 28 FEMALE. QUIET, si room + bath. $ 3 0 0 8 8 0 0 ^ ^ ^ ^ H O w n Vl. Sandra, 451- GRAD STUDENT. share 1BR til 28R available Riran idtt oreo. 4 4 2 -3 9 3 6 , 7 to I I pm. 8 -3 0 HOUSEMATE WANTED O n e to tw o nonsmoking neat, responsible, nón-TV semiragetftrion women w antod to re­ place same in throe bedroom home in quiet neighb o rho o d one nufo north o f Intramural Fields. $190 + Vs Mb. CoB Jim a t 4 5 4 -0 8 5 9 8 -2 8 ________________ N O N -S M O K IN G fomale, share 2BR, FaN $ 2 0 0 -2 7 5 range plus utttties. C h ira ■ 474-5111,472-3 7 2 -3 2 8 3 a f t s M R H B H H I atta r 7pm. 8-16 Koomy z - i < 2-1 o ff En- GREAT LOCATIO N. Ro fie ri, on shuttle. Nice fem ale non­ smoking g ra d student o r uppordamman. $ 2 3 0 mo. -i- V l lo w srtslittes. Sarah, 2 58 6 06 8 .8 -1 6 __________________________ HOUSEMATE NEEDED fo r FoR Big hom e, unfurnished bedroom , d o s e to campus, cheap ro n t-a b o i# $230 ABP. Fun p eople great doaN CaB 4 76 - 2 12 0.8 -2 8 __________________________ NEED ROOMMATE to share room in 3 bedroom home o ff Riverside. $175 + utilities. C o i 3 8 5 -0 6 7 9 8-16___________ GRADUATE STUDENT to share in house near shuttle. $ 2 2 5 + ’/ I $100 deposit. Nice yard. D rin e 4 76 -3 18 6 .8 -1 6 FEMALE RO O MMATE needed to share large, renovated house in Hyde Park. IF shuttle. 3-2, CA /C H , W /D , fireploce, ced­ ing fans, hardw o o d Boors. $ 3 2 0 plus V3 M b . CaB 4 5 3 -2 0 5 0 .8 -1 6 ______________ NEED OLDER, responsible, nonsmoking housemate fo r very large 3-2. Storage, microwave, dishwasher. Bike, shuttle to campus $ 2 5 0 . 472-2113, 475-4177 8- 16__________________________________ HOUSEMATE NEEDED 26R II $ 2 5 0 + V l ulM e s. 5-10 minute drive to IF, Princeton A ra . 4 5 9 -0 6 3 2 . 8-16 ROOMMATE W ANTED: nice 2-2 condo 2 blocks fro m compra. $ 25 0/m on th + V3 M b . CoB 4 6 9 -0 5 3 2 8-16__________ females nonsmok­ WANTED; T W O ompi in g to shore 3 -2 N . Austin home. M icrow ove, washer dryer. Ten minutos fro m CR thuttie. $ 20 Q /m o, Vs utilities CaB A nn a afte r 2pm. 8 35 -2 94 8 . 8-16 ' ROOMMATE. 2-1, $ 2 0 0 half M b . Secluded Riverside, partly Nonsmokers please. M ichoei. 1-5 after 11. 8 -3 0 ________________________________ tum efied N O N -S M O K IN G RESPONSIBLE mole to shore room. W C stop. $215 + V l M b . 4 7 8 -7 5 7 2 o r 47 2 -4 7 6 2 . 8 -2 8 _________ MALE TO shore with liberal, non-smok­ in g neat male. Luxurious hom e in pork area six blocks campus. W asher/dryer, security system. A ll amenities- Bedroom ' furnished/unfurnished. $ 3 0 0 phe ufifitias. Unusual 4 7 8 -8 0 0 6 . 8 -3 0 SMASHING! FRESHLY remodeled house. A l modem appliances. Safe, tree lined neighborhood, near shuttle. $235/m e. Females c a l Ann (owner/agent) 4 54 - 4 8 7 2 ,3 2 7 -0 1 9 0 8-16________________ RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. 8 -1 6 2 BR carpeted C A /CH 2 blocks UT ihut- tte 4 7 0 5 -A 4 70 7-B 4 70 9-A CosweB $ 4 5 0 2 8 2 -4 6 4 4 8 -3 0 _______________ RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. • BftOMAlSTONE Park Aportments is now tw o leasing affiaancies, bedrooms, $ 33 5 to $ 46 5 plus E. First . ec*> on IF shuttle, tw o pools, gas and motor p a ri, 4 5 4 -3 4 9 6 ,4 4 2 -4 0 7 6 .8 -1 6 on# and • • * IR A VIS HEIGHTS area, large on# bed- . * gpem on# bath with studio, o ak Boors, * b t t o f windows, trees, bomboo, coifing ’ n ils , 1310 The Circle (off Ac ademy). . - $ 3 9 0 4 72 -2123.8-16________________ • * H O O K E M HORNS! Large one bedroom • near shritte, 4 5 2 0 Bennett • * Aw# S pa rrih T ia l A pts $ 35 0/m o. C o l • 4 7 8 -7 9 6 3 . 4 5 8 -5 7 4 4 evenings ond 8 -28 g tg e B oor plan. G reat fo r * ¿ A N Y O N PASS 1-1 on shuttle Extra roommctte. ‘ • W eight room, sa un a pool, dubroom , * • g m ^ o u rr iry todBttes. 4 5 4 -2 1 5 / 8-16 N E W 2-2, o ff G uodolupe ond Stock Ave­ nue. Carpeted, ceding Ions, complete kitchen, fireploce, dosed gorage. W -D connections, yard maintained. $750, 4 7 2 -2 6 9 6 .8 -1 6 ______________________ taB ceding, HYDE PARK remodeled, extremely large, 2-1 Ceding fans, stained w oodw ork, lots o f closets Can easdy ac­ comodate 4 oduits N e or shritte. Very deon, earth tone decor $ 6 5 0 459- 9 0 9 5 8 -1 6 ___________________________ NEAR CAMPUS 2-1, CA/CH, w aA or shuttle, $ 5 0 0 /mo plus M b. Avadoble 9- 1 CoB 4 78 -4 89 7 . Keep trying 8 -3 0 1940's DUPLEX 2-1 on large lot, trees, oak Boon, tde, b a th bay window, quiet, neor 38th ond 1-35, 1307 Kirkwood, $510. 472-2123 8-16 MNTAL 370— Unf. Apts. Broadway Apts. 511 Woodward Princeton Apts. 521 Woodward New Yorker Apts. Manhattan Apts. 607 Woodward 439 Woodward Luxurious 1-1 $325-$360 Vaulted ceiling & skylight, ceiling fan, carpeted, complete kitch­ en. mirrored closet, parquet entry, private laun­ dry fadfities. Located between 1-H 35 8t Con­ gress. Directly Across From St. Edwards. f^ttttiBg Office Open M on.-Ffi. 906 G to a ttttt V .r . Sfeertfo Set. 9-5/Stm. 1-5 447-7077 458-2577 Apartment Locator Co-op CJL5. Matwgmmemi Ule thinl: ÜOU'RE (TlflflflflRUElOUSi And you’ll think we’re marvelous too when you see our beautiful apartment homes. • One, two and three bedrooms • Spacious rooms with well designed floor plans • Lots of closet space • Fun features: pool, tennis court, in­ door basketball, jogging trail and saunas •U.T. Shuttle stops D I S C O U N T E D R E N T 444-3917 I 1 1 0 2 T r a c e D r . a t I S. L a k e a h o r e 1-1 study W /D , locuzzi, 4biks from UT, $650, avail Sept. 1 4 5 9 -3 2 0 0 or 280- 3BR HOUSE fo r rent $ 4 5 0 /month. 5406 Evons. 331-0029. 8-16 LUXURY CO NDO S, Chelsen -2-1, $900, 3-3, $1195, W edgew ood 2-2's, $1200 Cheaper units ovailable Pnvate Proper­ ties, 467-7182. 8 -3 0 4 1 0 — Fum . Houses 4 BEDROOMS, 3 BA, fully furnished, off o f Cameron, close to shuttle o r city bus. $950/m ontb Ready end of August Coll LeAnn ot J.B. G oodwin, 8 3 7 -7 8 8 0 or 835-7319 8-16 WEST CAMPUS, 1114 W 22, large 3-2, W /D , sun room, study, no pets. 472- 9192. 8-16 AVAILABLE SEPT., Enfield, exposition oreo, landscaped 3-2 with dining, den, fireplace, separate garage, spa ond deck. N o pets, non-smokker please Lease $1250 477-3213 8 -3 0 LARGE 3-2 + extra room. Fenced yord, fireplace, CA/CH, W /D , dishwasher. W ill take 9 month lease 9 2 6 -3 8 8 4 8 -30 NORTH UT/Crestview, me# 3-1, CA/CH, hardwood floors, shady pnvate back yard $595, 8 3 6 -7 4 2 9 noon, nights, weekends. O w ner/broker, no dogs. 8-16 2 07 W. 55, 2BR 1BA. N ew ly remodeled with fenced yard. A vailable Aug. 20. $ 65 0/m o Call Julia, 477-6131. 8-16 CENTRALLY LOCATED houses. Some 4 & 5 bedrooms. $ 600-1250 N o pets. Pnvate Properties. 467-7182. 8 -30 8 0 6 E 46th, 2BR home, garage, yard, patio $800/m onth Call Bednorski Min- chew Realtors, 440-1144. 8-16 1803 ENFIELD, 3-2 with study $1100. H arw ood qaroge. 4 76 -4 7 7 2 , 4 7 7 -0 7 0 2 . 8 -30 floors, CA/CA, appliances, 425 — Rooms 420 — Unf. Houses WANTED. dose UT. 2 66 -9 2 6 6 . 9 to 4 P M 8-16 $ 4 0 0 -$ 4 5 0 /m o n th house GRADUATE N O N -sm oker Your own huge room m com fortable house. Unbelievably dose Nine people. N o pels. 4 72 -5 64 6 , 4 74 -2 0 0 2 .8 -1 6 3BR HOUSE, dishwasher, CA/CH, bath, W /D connection, large yard, pnvate drive, dose to bus fin*, 385-3911. Ap­ pointments only. N o pets. 8-16 PRIVATE RO O M S fo r 2 students, Barton Hills residence, shared kitchenette, bath. $ 2 5 0 each. N o smokers o r drinkers. Phone 441-6674 7-29 LARGE 5BR 2 B A CA/CH, W /D connec­ tions, dishwasher, garage, large yard, private drive. 385-3911. Appointments only N o pets. 8-16 PRIVATE SINGLE dorm rooms. W om en/ men. N ear UT Furnished, bills paid. $ 23 0-26 5 . Kitchen pnvileges. 477-1529. 8-16 NORTH CENTRAL, near shuttle, 2-1 trail­ er home, 712 Franklin, nonsmoker, no pets, $ 400. 4 5 2 -4 3 4 5 . 8-16 R O O M FOR rent, bills P.D., dose to shut­ tle and city bus stops. Coll Lee, 4 42 - 3 380. $ 2 3 0 8-16 370 — Unf. Apts. w N O W LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL' CALL US ABO U T OUR 12 M O N T H LEASE' E F F . , 1 -2-3-4 BDRM. APARTMENTS 11 FLOORPLANS FURNISHED — UNFURNISHED STARTING AT $335 RIVERSIDE AREA, SHUTTLE BUS, POOL, MODERN, SPACIOUS, TREES, & GARDENS P0INTS0UTH BRIDGEH0LL0W ■444-7536 444-6757 Rental Office; 1910 Willow Creek, Austin, Tx ■ i W W m s i t o i t t t t i w t w i w w M f i w w i i H i q (APARTMENTS ALL AROUND AUSTIN NORTH Chevy Chase 7561 Chevy Chase Dr. Austin. Texas (512)456-2131 SOUTH-CENTRAL Stratford Place 1617 E. Otttof Austin, Texás (512)442-2316 Terrific Amenities 17 Floorpians to Choose From On UT Shutfie Spodous Apoitments Woodshadows 3605 Sleek Avenue Austin, Texos (512)345-4360 Newscostle 9900 Gieyeqne Auein, Texas (512)3454)126 Fashionable MW HMs Community Lavish Landscaping 9-Hole tatting Gwen Country OubAimoBphew $50 OFF FIRST MONTHS RENT WHEN PRESENTING A COPY OF THIS AD AT TIME OF RENTAL a 6 l j o w i s w o w sw ep t- • « I WIN FREE RENT FOR SIX MONTHS! 11 you have to do is visit ourgreat partment community and register. You nay not have to pay rent for six full nonths. Lease one of our great ipartment homes and we ll also pay you noving costs* during THE MOVING EXPERIENCE! •Certain restrictions apply; ask your leasing agent Tbe Veranda 7201 Hart Lane 345*5400 ------------ Tflrmmf to É M ÉCf ia I W apefimeot community c* 4505 DUVAL 4 5 4 ^ 4 7 9 9 NOW LEASING FOR FALL AND SPRING • Reduced Summer Rates • Newly Remodeled • Pool • Gym • Recreation Room • On CR/IF Shuttles • Eff.» One, Two Bedrooms and Townhouse Units Call or Come I Today! S ( ;n f or bigness M o n F' i 8 Oat 9 0 Su n 12 5 NORTHWEST HILLS V illc ^ o V J Ie n Ó RiNTAL KDUCATIONAL SERVICES EMPLOYMENT BMHOYMBNT EMPLOYMENT 500—Mtec 590—Tutoring 750—Typing 750—Typing 790—Part Time 790—RorHTw _____ 790—Port Tim# SERVICES B H B 750-Typing B R SMVIC8S EESEE Wk MATH TUTOR 504 W. 24th St. Office 477-7003 Off 9 yaars of protes uortfK sarvce hatpKKj students mah# THu CaW or come by for apaMATH ‘ rustrated on tasts?'» tunos M301 30? w T B ttte * C S304P f EM311 M 3 0 3 f FM 306S C S206 M 4 0 3 R I E M 3 U C S 3 '5 M 3 I6 K L EM 319 C S 410 M 30SG EF316 C S410 M 40T E E 4 H M K A A B C S328 E F 3 IB MGO0E A B C S336 E E Z I? CS34S M 3 I8 K EE3?3 C S352 M 427K L EN G L IS H C S372 M311 C H E t P H YS IC S EN G603 PHV301 C H E M 30 I 302E H G 307 PH V307K I C M E M 6 10 A B E N G 3 0 * P H Y 3 03 K L C H E M 6 I8 A B E N G 3 I0 P H Y 3 2 7 K I BUSOOESS A S T N O N G A T A AN O A C C 3 M 312 A S I3 0 I ACC326 327 AST302 O PA310 AS T 303 ACC364 0 P A 3 3 3 K AST307 STA T309 E C O F R EN C H P S V 3 I7 EC O 302 G E N M A N EC O 303 SO C 3 17 SI EC O 320A L E C 0 3 2 4 O onl pul M e oM unte t w rapM betore m exam. I s too H e Osen. • 1 S tock to UT •fta a P a tk rn g • Vary reeeonW H -L o t* o ip M m ncr •In a t you can A lao high achoot t * * r»#ieat* re aubtacta and SA T » ONE A m Next door to Mad Dog & Beans I ♦ I Í Í If 3 UT compos V s TUTORING SERVICE SERVICES 650 — Moving* Hauling ABC APARTMENT MOVING Moving Austin as low as $39.95. Student discount. CALL 339-MOVE and iforoga dooab. $200/month F .S A Hormon-Poarion 472-8201 both 8-3 0 ANNOUNCIM1NTS 540— Lost 4 Found YOU'VE SEEN him! A male medium size liver brown and white coRe/sponiel mix 6 yrs. old, has long hair. Reword! M 467 2897 or 836^)266 816 550— Licensed Child Care CHILD CARE, afternoons and evenings, loving registered home, NE, ages 1-3 preferred. Col Michele, 926-4053 8-16 560— Rubik Notice AUTOMATED OFFICE Systems Inc and CPT Corporation extends an invitation to yo uto attend our technical typing semi- nor, Aug. 21 from 9 to 6. CaN tor reser- vahons at 454-8672.8-16___________ 570—Music- ~ ~ Musicians HELP! WE need your old records tapes, sheet musk, etc.--al styles Donate unwanted musical items and help non­ commercial rad». Cal KMFA, 476- 5632 8-16 . EDUCATIONAL 590 —Tutoring MATHMATICS TUTORING by graduate student with 7 years teoching experience. 452-7404 or RLM 12.132. 8-16_____________________________ tutor now PROFESSIONAL PRIVATE available finance and accounting classes Call 346-5673. fi­ ló for help in PROOFRE ADING/TUTORING/typing for American and foreign students done by English honors graduate. Col Mindy at 495-9727 8-16 WE'RE FIGHTING FOR NOUR LIFE American Heart Association U 590 —Tutoring M m u •OOMMATE. HR condo Col IH R 9 lla R a r3 R M .S a rio w th id M t.R - f a u R l N O W Nood a n o n ^ ü ^ m*rn rtwtert tor 2-1 houw on R 1 V' wo hoe A C ia w » u w , and foncod M hA SM Vm o ♦ Vrj b * 459 9287 djarégM .R-16____________________ NO H-SM O M M G tomata to A o n now located on Son * » > M condo from law school Al •M a ta . cm •■ •" R o t. $ 3 0 0 /mo + Vo uhSho» N iH w » quotable 713 424-8826 8 16 p r u u v a t i o n s q u a r e , a fourth « h aoadod for Itso yeor 2BR/2BA. ceiling ■ f o balcony. Large kitchen. U y 9 ^ -R o d . W /D. charming col 472 ■ :|if intorottodL 8-30 ONRAi SEEKS noromoking grad Midont, PJtfoond to dtoro 2-2 condo dot# to MaRoc. End old. Must bo ducrtot. respon dbfo. Pool coding tans, rvMcrowavi. $190, W Mb. Writo to Boxholder suite R U -175 601 W 13, Awtin, 78703 8- f __________________________________ MALE ROOMMATE noodod to dtoro tur atahad 2-1 oidor duplex in W wt W dk or shuttle to UT, $162.50 Ca ♦ ) Mb. N o A C Nontmokor. Mike: 452-4680, 476-1370 Koop trymgl 8 18 ________________________ 2 PCMALE nommokon to dtoro 2 2 con­ do td h 2 others who mutt study Rrvor- ■do noar shuttle W/D, microwave, $225 ARP, $100 deposit, Annette 385-7428. i l HOUSE, Northcrats M ol oroo, city bus goat by campus. $225, Vi Mb, doposit. 454-3180.8-16____________________ FEMALE WANTED IMMEDIATELY to dtoro luminous 2-2, W/D, ceding tons, dooo to diullle, $270 month 926-2241 owl 8-16 l grod or professional. Nice bouse ttoar campus. Nonsmaker. No pets. • $219 t V» Mb. 476-8366 8-16 ROOMMATEIs) NEEDED for 48R house in North Austin. $145/mo. plus lAdittos. C o l 467-9647.8-16________________ FEMALE WANTED to share large 3BR house. Own room/bath, $22 5/mo + V i (Afilies. W /D, CA/CH, micro 454- P377; leave message. 8-16___________ MATURE GRADUATE student only $225 C OOiit + Vi Mh. North/central house. 4S1-9801.8-16____________________ M CE CLEAN quiet femóle seeks same to dtore Hyde Park apt $200 A BP call 454-5887 8-16____________________ STRAIGHT MALE seeks dean rton-smok- Ing male roommate for 26R 2 BA on CR " I route. Now aportments with many •Was. $272,50 + Vibifc. Col L 451-0796.8-30. HOUSEMATE WANTED Fomalo Chns- Ran nonsmoking. Own bodroom/both. Noar Hancock Center $285 ABP 453- 06 9 5 8 30_______________________ PETS OK. East near UT. Fireploce, aquari- wms. $225, Vi Mb. No tobacco or .4 7 7 2128.8-28 FEMALE (NONSMOKER), 2BR, fitly fur- mdsed, AF shuttle $272, a l bilh paid. C o l Sheri, 453-4117, after 6 8-16 e i ^ w S S S S S S S s s s a g a 460—Business Rentals SMALL OFFICE spoce for compatible business. West UT campus $180-415 h uhfihes Howell Properties 477-9925. 9- 5_______________________________________ 490 — Wanted to Rent Lease sublease I want to sublease 1/1 apart­ ment for Fad. Call anytime. Marc, 713- 4R0-3442 or 713-333-1625 8 28 C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. I T H E C ^ ^ H PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE ■ ■ i l l 11 I FIJI NOUN □ 2707 iW hILI PARK At 27th & Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 VERA T E E ’S W o rd P ro cessin g Public Notary- 20 Years Legal E x perience • Term Papers • Law Briefs • Theses • Dissertations • Cover Letters • Resumes 5 1 2 '/ 2 E . 3 8 V l S t . (off D u v a l) 4 5 4 * 1 5 3 2 • 7 days a week PATTY'S WORDPROCESSING, lhasis, dissertations, PRs, legal, resumes, pick­ up and delivery available until 11pm. 345-4269 8-16 INTELLIGENT PROFESSIONAL compu text processing. English terized assistance (spelling, punctuation, gram­ mar). Beoutiful results get higher grades. Creative Services, 2420 Guodolupe, 478-3633 8-16____________________ PERSUASIVE RESUMES with flair! Invest in your career with confidence Protect your achievements-effectively. Profes­ sional resume consultancy Creative Ser­ vices, 2420 Guodolupe, 478-3633. 8-16 TYPING/PROOFING NONPAREIL: typ ing, spelling, shorthand honors prove peeriessness. Joe, 6.F A (honors), M.Ed 477-3684. 8-16 Tfbprtkx A nn MBA 0 * RESUMES 2707 Hemphill Park Just N o rth o f 2 7 th at G u o d o lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 ' S T OP ! r v r h i a i n , q ► 472-6 666 A w o r ci a b I* I '' D> 11 p">- O u ' b v 7 a fT- V E R A T E E S 51216 East 18H> St. • RESUMES • COVER LETTERS • FREE STORAGE 4 5 4 - 1 5 3 2 • 7 days a week SOUTNUICSI s e rv ic e s I V O f I D M O C C S S IN G 4 5 3 0 3 8 3 "--:.ate Acer-/ata «Word Processing $1 iO/pg' I * IBM Compatae | * 15 Years Experience Dissertations Thesis Tech Term Resumes Letters Etc * I # Free Spelling Check t Transcriptions I * Free Pick-up. Delivery # Rush Work Accepted W£- > / V - l , Xn ur 288-4678 S o u th A u s tin A r t Sure, we type FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out With Good Grades? 472-3210 472-7677 + Word Processing + + Resumes/Multiple Letters + + Low Briefs + + Dissertations + + Technical Papers + 472-2684 2404 Mo Grande Words JkW JOB W INNING RESUMES W e D o HAH! Expert Services Included Layout • Typing Printing W h ile You W a t • Job R es u m e^ L etten /A p p lic atio n s • M o ilin g C am p o ig n s • SF Forms T71's • M ilitary Conversions • Business Proposals & Reports • Free In terview /L ifetim e U p d atin g Since 1 9 5 0 — N a tio n w id e Univ. 1300 Guadalupe #1 0 3 4 9 9 -6 8 6 2 South 2219 W Ben 'White # F 4 4 3 -6 3 4 4 North 9513 Burnet # 2 0 3 E 8 3 6 -9 4 7 7 P R O C E S S IN G -1.50/p g W ORD Resumes (1-2 pages) 10 00 MosterCard and VISA occepted WordWrrte, 339- 8178 Where quality is never compro­ mised. 8-16 FROM $1.15 PAGE, professional quality IBM, theme to thesis RUSH SERVICE overnight, some day or whil you wait Lo­ cated South 9-9 every day. Donna, 443-5613 8-30 INTRODUCING AUSTIN’S NEWEST & MOST LUXURIOUS V ANYTHING TYPED, south, and/or word processing from $1.25/poge. 444- 5928, leave message. 8-16 QUALITY TYPING. Dissertations, theses, reports. From $1.10 (pica), $1.35 (elite) Campus drop-off/pickup U T BBA. Ask for Kotherine 467-7233. 8-16___________ PROFESSIONAL TYPIST These, disserta­ tions, professional reports legal. Gradu­ ate school quality From $1.15. Barbara TuHos, 453-5124. 9-5_______________ WHY DRIVE? Walk to Computype, locat­ ed on the Drag. Resumes and short papers while you wait. 472-2204 8-16 RENTAL 400 — Condos-Townhouses ♦ WASHERS/DRYERS ♦ MICROWAVE OVENS ♦ BURGLAR ALARMS w HfMLK 1 * CREEKWALK * HOT TUB & POOL * TOWNHOME FLOORPLANS 10 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS 6 4 0 7 SPRINGDALE R R 4 8 0 -9 5 9 5 9 2 9 -3 5 6 0 Take 183 E past 290, turn right on Manor Rd.. go V2 mile to site; or, take MLK east to Springdale, turn left, go 1 mile to site Professionally managed by Summit Properties PROTECTED BY: Network Security MODERN 1AND2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS 2814 Nueces directly across the street fro m campus Luxury One Bedroom Condominiums e Fireplaces • Washer dryer each unit e Security • Many others Priced from $510 to $650 Summer rates available For mora information call: G !c S INTERESTS 328-0219 Shown by appointment - J . P M U * ' Now leasing for fall! • 2BR/2BA • Close to Shuffle • Fireplaces • Washer/Dryer Connections • Microwaves • Swimming Pool w/Waterlall e Tennis Courts/Sports Court • Club House • Dishwasher 1510 W. North Loop 454-7701 • 2 Pools • 2 Jacuzzis • Clubroom • Bay Windows • Washers/Dryers • CJT Shuttle Route • Fireplaces • Microwaves • Ceiling Fans • Vaulted Ceilings • Patios/Balconies • Rates from $362.00- $530.00 per month 2nd Month’s Rent Free! Office open 9 am-5 pm Monday-Friday 10 am-5 pm Saturday 1 pm-5 pm Sunday 1071 CLAYTON LANE 453-4968 Available Now! Large One Bedrooms and Two Bedrooms F r o m $ 3 7 ^ 9 Mini-Blinds 6 Microwave t U.T. Shuttle t Ceiling Fans • Jacuzzi • Large Pool C .£ ISkevet Call Or Come By Today! §47-8303 443-545T TYPING/WORD l stnll 10 i ■ W m K B M ol, 469-5632 8-16 i i prOCMMRQ Stolon IncInc, 23 Dabia 760—Misc. Services PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIO NS RESUMES 3 m in u t e s e r v ic e MON-FRI 9-6 SAT 10-2 477-5555 THIRD EYE 2532 Guadalupe EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part Time Attention Work evenings on campus setting ap­ pointments from 5 to 9. Average $5- $15/hr. Coll Mike of 4 8 0 -0 6 0 6 to make an appointment for an inter­ view. CIRCULATION ASSISTANTS (DRIVERS] THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXASAT AUSTIN Immediate openings available. Re­ quires high school completion and a valid driver's license. Will deliver the Daily Texan, handle contracts and other publications, and assist with the operation of the inserting machine Salary $5.35/hr; 25 hrs/wk. Working hours are 1 am to 6 am. Applications accepted until noon weekdays. Refer *o job posting #8-12-10-8985-P To apply, contact: Employment Center Little Campus MLK Blvd. at Red River 512-471-3656 Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer 8-16 W ord Processor position available, afternoon hours. Must type 70 + wmp. $ 4 .50/hour. Coll Cathe­ rine 4 4 7 -9 2 5 7 between 8:30-1130 am only. Appointment Setters Work on campus, day & evenings available, daily bonuses, cash paid weekly. $10/hr realistic. Call JB, 469- 9724. TtAOttNG REV1CW courses tor the GRE a n d C M A T ^ a a H B H H a i of 90 % o rl' teoching onpovionoo. Sand ItNir, dglotf- ing quabi cottons to Ms. Baker, 1801 Lo- voco. Austin, Tx 78701 9-9__________ - - ' WORK WITH school age children 2-6 | K a^^toSchaol holidays off. Hourly wages at $5.20. 27 locations Must be 19 or older and have experience working with children. C al 454-3651, Extond-o- Cote.8-16 PART TIME PM positions available to work with school-age children in after school program, above overage pay scale, professional environment, apply in person with Creative World. 837- 8840.8-16_______________________ AUSTIN TRAVEL agency looking for clean-cut individual with professional appearance to deliver airfine tickets Transportation provided. Must be able to work 8:30-12:30 or 12:30-5:30, M-F Send resume to: 1826A Kramer, Austin, 787 58__________________________ CLEANING COMPANY needs part time help. Evening or dgy shifts available. Transportation and phone a must. Will negotiate salary with experience. Leave message. 458-5625.8-16 BARTON CREEK Square, Wicks V Slicks, pari lime tales applications bein g ac­ cepted. Mahir% outgoing pofsonoeliei a must. Nonsmoker preferred. Nigh ts and weekends. Andy M-F, 10-4, no phone cols accepted. 8-27 GELATO PINGÜINO--Itokon ice creom shop in Hancock Center-accepting ap­ plications, flexible hours. Need hard­ working friendly person with mtere it in gourmet food. 458-1413.8-16 NOWHIRING STUDENTS for telephone sales work. 2 shifts avaibble 9am-lpm or 5pm-9pm CALI 451-3441 during either shift 3 8-K Immediate Vacancies Avdable The Texas Union is now hiring for temporary part-time positions in food service. Must have ability to read and write. Those interested, please come by the Texas Union immediately The University of Texas at Austin is on equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. 8-30 Telephone Sales Need 8 people to sell tickets porttime, 5:30-9 3 0 pm, M-F, 9-1, Sat, paid cosh weekly. $5.50-$7.50/hr. guar­ anteed. Catt 478-1147. 8-16 450-0151 450-0151 Public Relations position, part time evening hour, $5/hr., Mr. Barrett 8-30 8-16 Gourmet Store Sales person pari time. Aggressive ar­ ticulate, enthusiastic, sales-onentod, interested in coffee, toa, candy, cook­ ware. Apply Coffee Exchange, Pecan Square. 1202 W . 6th 4 7 4 -5 3 0 0 8-16 Sign Printer Pari time position now available, pre­ paring Flexible in-store signoge hours, morning or mid-day, Mon-Fri. Perfect for graphic art student. Apply in person SCARBROUGHS Barton Creek *-16 Fall positions available for MONTES- SORI CLASSROOM ASSISTANTS in an internationally certified, well-es­ tablished Austin school, with a dedi­ cated staff of trained professionals. Excellent opportunities for observa­ tion and experience with children aged 2-6, or 9-12 yeors. Part time po­ sitions available. $400/ho ur. 442- 8-16 3152. 8-16 Accounting clerk needed for real es­ tate development/management firm located in SW Austin. W ork on IBM computer with emphasis on general ledger, accounts payable, and tax re­ ports. Approx. 2 0 hrs/week. Coll Jon 3 28 -3 2 3 2 8-16 TEACHERS NEEDED in Sept for church nursery Sundays and Wednesday evenings. Experience with recreation and crafts desired 476-2625 8-16 8-16 BANANAS AN D THE RED TOMATO RESTAURANT will have host positions opening up soon. Pori time day ond night. No ex­ perience necessary, however willing­ ness to work in a friendly fast-paced atmosphere that cares about quality is necessary. Apply in person, 1601 Guodolupe between 4:30-5:30 8-16 Inspector Pari time inspector needed at Capitol City Savings to inspect houses under construction. Must have experience in construction or bockground in archi­ tecture or civil engineering Applica­ tions ore accepted daily at 919 Con­ gress Ave. with 4th floor receptionist from 8 om to 4-30 pm EOE 8-16 WESTLAKE DAYCARE needs playground supervisor M-F, 2-6 327-0369 8-16 HOME STEAM Laundry and Cleaners is taking appkeofcom tor port tune counter attendant/car hops. Morning and after noon hours avail Apply xi person only at 2301 Manor Road 8-16 FLEXIBLE HOURS avail with eatenng co for food prep ond service. Close to campus. 397-4142.8-29 AFTERNOONS DAILY, light office skills, delivery tor surveying company Phone skills $5-6/hour 343-6205 8-16 TOY DEMONSTRATORS needed Show our toys, gifts, and Christmas decorations now till December through home parties Own hours Free $300 toy lot No investment Coll Sondy, 346- 0052 8-16________________________ PART TIME ticket/souvenir sotos, $4.00/ hr. Zilker Pork Railroad. Apply at pork train office. PART TIME aide to very independent handicapped person, no conflict with daytime school, $125/wV Co# George Higgxsson. 835-4475. References. 8-16 TEACHER AIDES needed to work with preschool children Col University Pres­ byterian Child Development Center 472 4984 8-16 RENTAL 400 — Condos-Townhouses How to turn your living quarters into dollars. 'T im e was when going off to college meant Because in addition to being located in the / saying goodby to four years of renl checks for student housing or an apartment highest resale area around campus. Merida offers a host of superb amenities But times have changed. Now there's Merida Eight two-bedroom, two-bath condominium homes located just west of the IT campus That's right. Condominiums So you recerve the same tax-saving, equity-building advantages that go along with home ownership And when you leave your longhorn Comer fireplaces with uled hearths. Micro­ wave ovens. Washer dryer combinations Ceil­ ing fans in living and bedroom areas A private whirlpool spa in a landscaped courtyard Mus a sophisticated security system So while there may be other student condo­ miniums. none tops Merida for fixation, amenities, and investment potential years, you don’t come out on the short end either Because you can sell your condo­ minium and reap the benefits of real estate's traditional appreciation. But that's just the ¡inning. For full informa­ tion, call (512) 479-8110. And let us show you how to turn student housing into a sound investment 2515 San Gabriel A development of The Parke Company * Must Be Leased Thru P a rk e Co. RENTAL 430 — Room-Board Welcome to M adison H ouse ★ G reat Food ★ Full Maid Service ★ Full Security ★ Individualized Service . - m i l # BABYSITTER NEEDED for toddtor, fol weitor. 12-3 Mon. and Wed References reequired. Murt Nave own traneporiution 476-8215.8-16____________________ RESTAURANT, KITCHEN/countor Kelp needed. Troraportahon required, neat appearance a mud. $4.00 our to dart 250-8208. Stove. 8-16 LOOKING FOR quafified teachers to leach Childrens tenement daues, with bockground in etomontary education or creative dramatics or donee or gymnas- tso-Cofi 478-0047. 8-16___________ LOOKING FOR quafified teachers to leach CMdrent Movement daises in Georgetown ond Round Rock area, with background in etomontary education oc creative dramatics or dance or gymrios- tict-Cofi 478-0047 8-16__________ time TELEPHONE TICKET satos Full time and jobs now! $6 hour part guaranteed CaN 473-2480 between 9om-9pm. 8-16 VIDEO PRODUCER looking for research •r/ctorical help. Hours flexible. Down­ town location. Opportunity for advance­ ment. Must be resourcehil, energetic, and responsible. CoN 472-3899 to make appointment for interview 8-28 r APPOINTMENT SETTERS NEEDED Work on campus, day ond evenings avoNabto. $6/hour -r possible Paid cosh weekly. Co» 469-9724 8-30 DATA ENTRY, tour hours during business day, independent contractor, hours tlex- ibto, $5/hr storting. 459-8300 8-30 TELEMARKETER N O W hiring port time, evenings. CaN Sonia 453-9613. 8-30 IMMEDIATE OPENING for eoriy child, hood teacher assistant. Hours 8:45 om- 11:45 am, minimum 261-6796 or 928- 2212.8-16________________________ NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: pari lime re- cephomst/secretary Flexible hours. Col 8 30-3:30. 263 5646 8-16__________ ORGANIZATIONAL CONSULTING firm near UT needs programming and business accounting experience. Pro­ gramming on DEC PDP-11 ond PC. Must know Basic, Plus 2, Microsoft Basic Good grades needed. 474-6917 8am- 7pm. 8-30 AUSTIN RECREATION center is looking tor arts ond crafts, and piano, instruc­ tors. Please contact Austin Recreation Center, 476-5662 8-30_____________ TODDLER TEACHER needed, mornings or afternoons, experience preferred, oft UT shuttle 478-3113 8-16____________ PART TIME pre-school teacher, coN Osu­ da Wnght, 452-2095 or472-3111 8-16 HELP NEEDED 15 hrv weekly Run er I housekeeping. rands, light housekeeping $6/hr 1 282-6275.8-14 m o n th < i only. T RELIABLE, H A R D w o rk e rs n e e d e d by lo ­ tune a n d c a l m o v in g c o m p a n y P a rt fn e n s iy atm gs w eekends. G o o d p a y. phere, 4 5 0 fle x ib le 0 5 3 0 8 - 3 0 ___________________________ schedule CaN PART TIME cle rk fo r re ta il p h a rm a c y H ours 3 3 0 -7 3 0 p m 2 -3 d a y s p e r w eek, som e S aturdays 9 - lp m CoN 4 4 4 -4 7 3 1 o r a p p ly A c e D ru g M o r t 2110 S C ongress 8-16___________________________________ JAC K B R O W N C leaners is n o w taking o p p h c a tio ra a t o u r R iverside o n d M a rtin Luther K ing Puentes, 4 5 8 -4 1 4 7 . 8 - 3 0 lo c a tio n s C o n ta c t Sondy 800 — General Help Wanted SECURITY OFFICERS f u ll a n d p o rt time M a tu re , d e p e n d a b le , p e o p to -o n e n te d o ffice rs n e e d e d N o m inim um w ages p a id U niform s fu rn ish e d Excell en t o p ­ p o rtu n ity to r rtu d e n ts C a l Z im co Security C onsultants M - f 3 4 3 - 7 2 1 0 8 - 16_____________________________________ l- 5 p m FULL A N D p o rt tune P M p ositions a v a il­ a b le w o rk in g w ith p re schoolers, prates sionol w o rk in g e n v iro n m e n t, a b o v e a ver a g e p a y scale, a p p ly m p e rso n w ith C re a tive W o rld 8 3 7 8 8 2 2 8-16 ALETA'S FAJITAS R e sta u ra n t/B o r o p e n tng soon a t G u o d o fu tp e a n d M L K has 100 o p e n in g s to r w a rtp e rso n b o rte n d e r hostess d is h w o ih e r kitchen p re p A p p ly m p e rso n a t 1907 G u a d a lu p e 2 -6 pm o r aN d a y S aturday 8-16___________________________________ coo k, bus b o y , LIV E -IN m ato attendon» n e e d e d to r dm - bto d m ole UT student to r t a l semester 1 9 8 5 (M ust be UT student) A p p ly Student H eotth C enter, ro o m 212 o r c o l S hem Alton. 471 4 9 5 5 , e x t 2 4 2 8-16_________ RENTAL A G E N T n e e d e d to r c a r rental co m p o n y a fte rn o o n h ours A p p ly m person. 3 5 1 5 M a n o r 4 7 6 -3 5 1 9 8-16 NO R TH W EST HILLS are a , o c c a sio n a l b o b y v tte r n e e d e d fo r 2 ch ild re n , a ges 8 m o o n d 2 *2 y e o rs W e e k e n d , d a ys o n d / o r evenings M ust h o v e o w n transpórtese o n 4 7 4 -2 1 9 8 , R h o n d a 9 5 p m 8-16 D O R M N EEDS m a tu re tuN lim e hou se ­ ke e p e r fo r d a y s Also, responsable desk re ce p tio n ist to w o rk g ra v e y a rd shift Fn a n d Sot nights o n ly CoN 4 7 8 -9 8 9 1 8- 16 W o r d P ro c e s s o r t o r lo w firm , s ta rt $ 3 2 5 /w e e k , b e n e fits , r e fe re n c e s r e ­ q u ir e d , J o b S e a rc h 4 8 2 - 0 8 0 1 , Fee 8 -1 6 A M A T E U R P H O T O G R A P H E R S P h o to te c h h a s o p e n in g s f o r FoN S e ­ m e s te r M u s i h a v e 3 5 m m S IR c a m e ra . D e p e n d a b le c a r, b e n e a t o n d p e r s o n ­ a b le M u s t b e a b le to a t te n d tr a in in g a n d s ta rt w o r k A u g 2 3 E xc e lle n t p o r t tim e |o b ! 4 7 4 - 4 8 9 7 . 8 -1 6 B A N A N A S & THE R E D T O M A T O R E S T A U R A N T wiN h a v e c o o k in g p o r ­ tio n s o p e n in g u p s o o n . F u lt-h m e p n d p o r t- h m e d a y o n d n ig h t N o e x p e r i­ e n c e n e c e s s a ry , h o w e v e r w iD m g n d ks to w o r k in a f r ie n d ly fa s t- p a c e d q l- m o s p h e re th a t c a re s a b o u t q u a lity j s n e c e s s a ry . A p p ly m p e r s o n 1601 G u a ­ d a lu p e b e tw e e n 4 : 3 0 & 5 3 0 M - F * 8 16 CALL 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AO We give you MORE inner & outer space • Recreational facilities , (pool, sauna, game room) \ • Lots of G O O D MEALS 19 meals a week • Across the street from campus • Housekeeping services • Off street parking available • Call or write for INFORMATION (512)472-8411 A Few Spaces Left For Fall A Spring Fall & Spring Combined Starting at $3300 We’ll M ake You Feel Like One o f The Fam ily! MADISON HOUSE 709 W. 22nd Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 478-9891 r / / ) A Few Spaces Left For Fall & Spring Fall & Spring Combined Rates Start at $3660 inc. meals "TOURS DAILY" G M E 2021 Guodolupe E T Austin, Ttxas 78709 R The Daily Texan/Friday, August 1 6 ,1985/Page 17 McWtllims p Thompsn 1b Kemp If Gonzalez 3b Khalifa ss Ortiz c Morrison ph Pena c Walk p Brown ph Clements p. Mazzilli ph Scurry p Madiock 3b Totals 0 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 5 0 0 0 6 0 2 0 6 2 3 0 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 SO 3 13 3 ToUU Clark lb Van Stykert Pendtoton 3b Dayley p Jorgensen 1b Harper ph Smith ss Nieto c Lawless pr Porter c Cox p Horton p Boever p DeJesus 3b 3 1 0 1 4 1 2 2 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 42 4 11 4 Two o u t aitisn w kw tag run acorad Pittsburgh St . Louis £90 000 102 0 0 0 - 3 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 001— 4 Smith (3) Game-winning RBI E Ortiz. Smith DP Pittsburgh 1 LOB Pittsburgh 14 St Louis 13 2B- Gonzales Herr Landrum 3B- Herr Khalifa HR Van Slyke (9) Morrison (2) SB Smith (15) Herr (32) Van Slyke (20) S DeJesus Ptttabtggh Walk Clements Scurry Guante (L 3-5) McWilliams St. Louis Cox Horton Boever Dayley Campbell (W 3-2) 6» H R ER BB SO 6 9 2 1 2 0 1 0 1 VS 1-3 5 ^ 4 3 2VS 1-3 2 2?d 4 0 1 3 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 3 2 0 1 0 2 1 0 4 0 0 3 0 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 3 1 1 3 1 Horton pitched lo 1 batter in 9th W P- Dayley 2 Balk Walk 3 T 4 14 A 34 170 Mets 10, Phillies 7 PMLADELPHM NEW YORK GGross If Virgil ph Carman p Foley ss Samuel 2b Schmidt 1 b Hayes cf GWilson rf Daulton c Wocknfss ph Schu 3b Koosman p Shipanoff p Thomas ph Andersen p Rucker p Corcoran ph Maddox cf Touts a b r h b l 2 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 4 1 1 0 3 1 2 3 5 0 0 1 5 1 3 0 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 2 3 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 37 7 11 7 To Backman 2b Paciorek rt Dykstra cf Strawbrry cf Carter 1 b Heep rf Hernandz ID Foster If Knight 30 Gardenhir ss Santana ss Reynolds c Gooden p Leach p Gorman p Sisk p Orosco p a b r h b l 3 3 1 0 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 5 0 1 1 2 1 2 2 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 4 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 New York Gooden Leach Gorman St*k Orosco (W 4-4) 4 1 3 ‘ 2 0 b 0 0 1 1 Gorman pitched to 1 batter m 7th Andersen pitched to 2 5 1\6 0 2-3 2 batters m 7th Sisk pitched to 1 batter in 8th WP Gooden T 3 28 A 36 663 Expos 7, Cubs 3 MONTREAL Raines if Washngtn 2b Dawson rf Brooks ss Wallach 3b Francona lb Law 1o Webster ct Wnnnghm ct Nicosia c Gullickson p Roberge p Shines ph St Ctairep ToUU CHICAGO Lopes ct Matthews it Sandberg 2b Moreland rf Durham 1b Davis c Speier 3b Dunston ss Bosley ph Engel p Dernier ph Frazier p Hebner ph a b rh b i 5 1 3 2 5 0 0 0 5 1 3 f 4 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 4 2 2 2 3 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 38 7 12 7 a b r h b l 5 1 2 0 5 1 1 0 4 1 3 2 4 0 2 1 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 t 0 t 0 1 0 0 c 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ToUU 37 3 11 3 032 000 011— 7 Chicago................................................ 100 010 1 0 » - 3 Game-winning RBI Raines (4) E Durham DP Montreal 1 LOB Montreal 5 Chicago 8 2B Raines 3 Dunston Dawson Mormand Matthews HR Law (7) SB Sandberg 2 (36) Lopes (42) Raines (46) Montreal Gullickson (W 11 8) Roberge St Claire Chicago Engel (L 0-2) Frazier T 2 50 A 29 553 IP H R ER BB SQ 6% 9 IV?. 0 2 1 7 2 8 4 3 3 1 1 0 0 v .t 0 0 0 , 1 4 0 ? 5 2 Tripe 7, Tigers 6 TRME Nixon If Ayala ph Carter ct Butler cl CCastillo rf Franco ss Thornton dh Tabler 1b Bernazrd 2b Jacoby 3b Vukovich rt Willard c Toute Trip#............. Detroit . . . . DETROIT ab r h bi 4 0 0 0 Whitaker 2b 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 5 1 2 1 5 1 3 5 5 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 1 5 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 39 7 11 7 Totals Evans 10 Gibson cl Parrish c Simmons rt Sanchez pr Garbey dh T rammel! ss Herndon tf Brookens 3b 31 6 6 6 ............. 100 010 014— 7 300 102 000— 6 Game-winning RBI Thornton (2) E Trammell DP Tripe 1 LOB 2B Tabler Jacoby 3B Butler HR 2(6) Thornton (11) SB B e m a/ird (12) SF Garbey Tripe 10 Detroit I Evans (27) Simmons i, IP H R ER 8 8 SO 4 a b r h b l 3 1 0 0 4 1 1 2 4 1 1 0 3 1 0 0 4 2 4 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 J IMPLOYM8NT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 800—General Help M Im m Aa J R U ii n a 810—Office- Clerical s p o r t s r e c o r d Standings B oxes 90 —Clubs* Restaurants GREEN PASTURES Restaurant is hiring buspenons. Fid or porttime Experience pretered C al 444-4747 fo r appoint­ ment. 8-16 6 0 0 E. RIVERSIDE DR. M AG IC TIME M ACHINE Now interviewing for assistant fooc servers and beverage servers. Apply in person, 6 pm or after. 8-16 SECURITY PERSONNEL wanted in person only The Back Room. 201 East Riverside Dr. 8-16 Positions Available. The County Line on the Hill is now hiring for day and night positions. G ood hours. Good pay. C o l or come by for an interview. 3 27-1742, 6 5 0 0 West Bee Caves RoadEO E. 8 -3 0 New York St Louis Montreal Chicago Philadelphia Pittsburgh Los Angeles Cincinnati San Diego Houston Atlanta Lilliputians NATIONAL LEAGUE Astros 4, Lilliputians 1 w L Pot 69 43 616 69 43 616 65 49 570 5 55 57 491 14 460 17 Vs 52 61 33 78 297 35 Vs 9 526 9 68 44 607 59 53 527 60 54 53 60 469 15VS 49 63 438 19 43 70 381 25 VS HOUSTON Doran 2b Garner 3b Basset Cruz If Mumphry rf GDavis 1b Walling fb Bailey c Thon ss Scoff p a b r h b l 4 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 3 0 1 2 3 0 0 0 Thursday's ReauMs New York 10. Philadelphia 7 St Louis 3 Pittsburgh 1 1st game St Louis 4 Pittsburgh 3 (12 innings). 2nd game Montreal 7, Chicago 3 Houston 4, Lilliputians 1 Cincinnati 5. San Diego 4 (1 0 innings) Los Angeles 5. Atlanta 4 Totals Houston LXfouSane . . . . . 31 4 5 3 Game-winning RBI — Thon (3) E—Uribe DP Lilliputians 2 LOB— Houston 4 Ltilipu- tians 8 HR— Doran (12) ULUPU TM N8 * r h b i Youngblod rf 3 0 2 1 4 0 0 0 Trillo 2b 3 0 1 0 CDavis cf 4 0 0 0 Leonard If Dnessen 1 b 4 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 Brown 3b 4 0 1 0 Brenty c 4 0 1 0 Uribe ss 1 0 0 0 LaPoint p 1 0 0 0 Gladden ph 0 0 0 0 Williams p 1 0 0 0 Wellman ph 0 0 0 0 Jeffcoat p 0 0 0 0 Garretts p 1 0 0 0 Roenicke ph Totals 33 1 6 1 ............. 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 -4 *> H R 0 1 SB SO 9 6 1 1 3 6 4 4 5 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 BOOKKEEPER/SECRETARY/person Fri- day, some computer 25-30 hours per week. $5.25 per hour. 450-0198, 11am- 2pm. 8-16 900 — Domastk- Household 840 — Sales TELEMARKETING ACCOUNT executive, assertive, ogresstve performers selling profesuonol business services. $5/Hr. 458-5177,448-1640 after 7pm 8-16 Friday's Q (A Tim N IT) Philadelphia (Rawley 9-6) at Chicago (Botelho 0-2). 1 20 New York (Lynch 10-5) at Pittsburgh (Rhoden 6-13). 6 35 Montreal (Laskey 5-11) at St Louis (Forsch 4-5), 7 35 p m Cincinnati (Soto 10-13) at Houston (Knepper 10-9), 7 35 Atlanta (Mahler 16-10) at San Diego (Hawkins 14-4) 9 05 Houolon Scott (W 12-6) U N w t m LaPoint (L 5-11) Williams Jeffcoat Garretts Los Angeles (Reuss 10-7) at Lilliputians (Blue 5-4), 10 05 n i i o » x i u n p m. pm p m. p m p m AMOSCAN LEAGUE LIVE-IN housekeeper needed fo r one person, NW H ils residence Room & board and smalt salary. Car nece»ary. 477-0702.9-3____________________ NANNY FOR two girts 1 & 3 weekends light housekeeping some cooking. $ 4 / hr. + bonuses. M rs Beal. 443-4926. 8- 30______________________________ LIVE-IN babysitter fo r 2'/5 year old. Room ond board in exchange fo r baby sitting 15-20 hours/week 450-1048, 327-7591.8-16 MOTHER'S HELPER, fo l & spnng i ten, 3-6 M-F, Lost Creek, light house­ w ork-chid core. Needs own car. 327- 1970.8-3 0_______________________ DISABLED INDIVIDUAL needs part-tim e assistance with personal care. Close to UT. Live-in position also available. 476- 5856.8-1 6_______________________ MOTHER'S HELPER. 3-6, M-F C hid core, cook Can use time fo r skxty, need own cor but w ii pay mileage Safory negoti­ able Evettegs 250-9817 8-16________ NANNY/HOUSEKEEPER, Round Rock. 3-7, M-F, some overtime. Room ond board ond salary. References required. 834-7234 days. 244-1314 evenings. 8- 16 Toronto New York Detroit Baltimore Boston Milwaukee Tripe California Kansas City Oakland Chicago Seattle Minnesota Texas West W L Pet. OS 72 42 64 48 60 53 58 54 57 55 51 60 75 38 632 — 7 571 111/5 531 518 13 509 14 459 191^ 336 33 VS 570 — 2 Tí 550 4 535 495 8 VS 12VS 461 460 12 Vs 372 22 VS 65 49 61 50 61 53 55 56 53 62 52 61 42 71 Thursday's ReeuNs Tripe 7, Detroit 6 Baltimore9 Texas' Minnesota 14 Seattle 5 Milwaukee 7 Chicago 5 Friday'• Game* (Al Times COT) HBP—byGarrelts(G Davis) T—2 25 A- 2 384 Cards 3-4, Pirates 1 -3 ST. LOWS Coleman 11 S r h H 4 1 1 0 4 0 2 0 McGee cf 4 0 G 0 4 0 11 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 32 1 • 1 Herr 2b Porter c Jorgensen 1b Van Slykerf Pendleton 3b Smith ss Kepshire p Lahti p Dayley p a b r h b l 4 0 0 0 4 1 3 1 1 1 1 0 4 0 1 2 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 . . TotMa 27 3 6 3 ............. 000 000 001— 1 ............. 210 000 00a— 3 Game-winning RBI DP—Si Louis 1 LOB- -Pittsburgh 4 Si Louis 5 2B Porter (4) Herr, Jorgensen. McGee Ray S— Kepshire Herr Crsulak rf Ray 2b Madtock 3b Thompsn 1b Almon pr Kemp If Lezcano ph Pena c Wynne cf Khalifa ss Reuschei p Mazzilli ph ToMM Pittsburgh a i l í x u PKabur0i Reuschei (L 8-6) St. Lout* Kepshire (W 9-6) Lahti Dayley (S 9) PITTSBURGH Orsulak rf Lezcano rt Wynne cf Ray 2b Guante p NEAR CAAAPUS: Adomings/After- noons/Evenings, and /or Weekends, Flexible, 2 0 + hours per week. PRO­ DUCTION and mailing of incorpora­ tion materials low er division student with good hand-eye coordination preferred, no prior experience re­ quired; TYPIST: 6 0 plus W PM , W P ex­ perience preferred, training available; BOOKKEEPER: Accounting hours ond/or experience. RUNNER: Part- time occasional, insured reliable cor. $3.5 0 -$ 5 .0 /h r. 4 7 4 -2 0 0 2 . 8-2 7 Adail room assistant w ill tra in , start $5.50/hour. Job Search 482-0801 Fee 8-16 8-16 820 — Accounting- Bookkeeping O »dar c M naadad, no axparianca nacawory, paying $ 5 /H our, fuN lim o, Job Scorch 4 8 2 -0 01. Foo. 8-16 W orahousa. N o axparianca neces­ sary, fuN benefit», P o rt $5/H oor Job S o o n *, 482-0801 Feo. 8-16 A ppointm ent setters w ith notional firm , fo# benefits, Job Search. 482 - 0801. Fee. Burger King 2 7 0 0 Guadalupe immedwte openings for full ond part- time help, doy & night shifts avail Ap­ ply in person. 8 -3 0 O rder clerk needed, no experience necessary, paying J5/hour, fo# time. Job Search. 482-0801. Fee. 850 — Retail 8-16 time or WANTED PART time salesperson Prefer someone w ith architectural or design background. C ol 459-3171, Storehouse. Highland M o l 8- 30 fu l Delivery person needed, must be able to handle lifting 4 0 lb bags o f ice ond hove a good driving record. Needed to start immediately with flexible Fall hours suited to your classes Starting pay $ 4 .5 0 hourly plus bonuses. Fre­ quent raises for hord worker Coll Floshcubs 4 7 4 -4 4 3 9 8-16 810 — Offlcs- Clerical INTERVIEWING FO# secretory/recep- honnt fo r downtown firm . Port hme or fuN lime applications being taken Pay negotiable. C o l Altyson after 1 pm, 477- 4426 8-16 SECRETARY/RECEPTfONIST for busy centraty located low firm. Accurate typ­ ist. answer phones Nonsmoker, profes­ sional appearance, V} days, 5 days/ week. Must hove own transportation Col Corotyn, 452-0534 8-16____________ PART TIME credit deck, night hours only. Tues. Thur Sat. evenmgs, S-9pm Phone 476-6511, lo ro y Bawd Yanngs Down­ town, 506 Cangro» 8-16 RECIPTKDNS/T/SECRETARY Engmeenng firm near UT, fu l time, good benefits, 50 + wpm. word processing experience helpful, neat appearance, personoble. non-smoker 474-9094 8-29 incorporation materials NEAR CAMPUS M ornings'Afternoons/ Evenings, and/or Weekends, Flexible. 21 * hours per week. PRODUCTION and moiting o f tower division Ardent with good hand- eye coordination preferred, no pnor ex­ perience required, TYPIST 60 plus WPM, traeung WP experience preferred, available BOOK EE PER Accounting hours and/or experience RUNNER Part tvne occasional, insured rekoble cor t3-5 0-> 5.5 0/hr 474-2002 8-27 RUNNER, $4 25/hour, start immediately *69-0925 8-16 firm has R unner/Fie Clerk. Real Estate Devel­ opm ent fuB-hme position availab le starting Sept 3 Adust be o re liable and energetic in dividual ond have ow n transportation $ 5 /h o u r t m tleoge C a í Lindo fo r appointm ent at 3 2 7 -9 2 7 0 8 -30 Benchmark Jewters is looking fo r a qua lifie d m anager/salesperson to w ork 3 0 -4 0 hrs/w eek. N o experience is necessary but a desire to learn is essential A pply in person at 1206 W . 3 8 tfi St 8-16 Bruce A llen Bags etc. is a unique o ff- pnce re ta il store chain that hos posi­ tions open fo r enthusiastic p a ri tim e sales help O pportun ity fo r advance­ ment. A pply m person to Bruce A llen Bogs etc, 17100 FM 1325, O utlet Adall, Round Rock. 8-16 880 — Professional 4-DAY WORK week. Couple or single person needed as live-m houseporents for 8 adolescent girts m residente! treet- ment center Apply at 1600 Peyton Gm Rood 836-2150 8-16_______________ RELIEF WORKERS needed for residential treatment facility Experience with ages 9-17 needed. $4.50 per hour Apply at 1600 Peyton Gm Rood. Ask fo r Robbie or Jerome 836-2150 8-16 C onstruction hands, $ 7 -$ 9 /h o u r, heavy liftin g, need several, Job Seorch 482-0801 Fee 8-16 M echanic, ow n tools, start $13 5 0 / hour Job Seorch 482-0801. Fee 8-16 G eneral O ffice , w ill tram , $8/hour benefits, p aid vocation. Job Search, 482-0801 Fee 8-16 Carpenters and farm ers w onted, ow n tools, $9 /h o u r Job Seorch 482-0801 Fee. 8-16 Kansas City (Leibrandt 10-6) at Toronto (Key 9-4) 6 35 Kepshire pitched lo 3 batters in 9th Loving, dependable core-giver want­ ed in late O ctober thru Dec. for 2 mo. old infant (Tu. & Thur. only, 8 am to 5:30 pm). Q uiet W estlake home, study while you work. Call Carol, 327 -18 35 for interview (Please leave messoge). p m p m 8-16 Tripe (Heaton 6-12) at Detroit (0 Neil 5-5), 6 35 p m Boston (Boyd 11-10) at New York (Cowley 10-5). 7 p m Texas (Mason 5-11) at Baltimore (D Martinez 8-7) 7 05 Seattle (Swift 4-6) at Minnesota (Schrom 8-12), 7 35 p m Chicago (Davis 1 -0) at Milwaukee (Bums 6-9 ) 7 35 p m Oakland (Birtsas 9-2) at California (Witt 9-7) 9 30 p m P H R ER BB SO 8 6 3 3 3 6 8 5 2-3 0 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PM adeMhU. . New York . . . J4 10 10 8 .................112 100 110— 7 .................510 000 13*— 10 Game-winning RBI Dykstra (3) E Strawberry Santana Hayes DP New York 1 LOB Philadelphia 9 New York 6 2B G Wilson Dykstra 3B Samuel HR Paciorek (1) Carter (17) Knight (5) Schmidt (20) Schu (4) S Samuel. Orosco a b rh b l 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 6 0 1 0 5 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 ST. LOWS Coleman If Campbell p McGee cl Landrum rf Herr 2b a b rh b i 6 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 2 0 3 0 1 0 6 0 4 0 Phiadatpri» Koosman Shipanoff Andersen Rucker Carman (L 4-4) 6> H R ER BB SO 17/3 5 1 3 Vi 2 1 0 .1 2 1 6 0 1 0 3 6 3 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 Trip* Smith Ruhle Wardle (W 4 4) Reed (S 2) Detroit Terrell Hernandez (L 7-7) Scherrer 5 Vj h’A ______________i ■ ■ ■ AW^IIF // U yaaw H M um iiig / JHHH BUCKLE UP. SERVICES 760 — Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT PREPARATION LEARN BARTENDING • 1 O r 2 Week Course • Day O r Evening • Job Placement Assistance ...CALL NOW! 458-6000 SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTS! Legal Serving Age 18 yrs. old PROFESSIONAL BARTENDERS SCHOOL B U Y , SELL, RENT, TRADE. W A N T ADS.. 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 800 — G eneral Help W anted INSTANT CASH ANDBONUS N you nood cash to help you out w hite a ttending colleg e. I w hy not do nate M ood P *o s -| mo? Yoo eon donato tw ice in a 7 d a y p e rio d — fo r the le i donation receive $10, fo r In the the 2nd donation sam e w eek receive $12 . Plus w ith this ad y o u 'll re fv e a $2 bonos on your firs t visit. Also ask abou t bonus pro­ gram s. So help others w hile helping y ou rse lf. M ust have valid ID an d soma proo f of Austin reeldenco. D raw ing held once a m onth fo r tw o $ 2 5 b o n a s o *. C ol 4 7 4 -7 9 4 1 . 2D00 Ouadcdupo RENTAL 4 3 5 -C o -o p s EMPLOYMENT 800 — G eneral Help Wanted QUALITY EARS NEEDED Do you want a challenge, can you hear subtle differences in speech quality? We need native speakers of English who are good listeners If your ears pass the test, we can offer them part-time hours, a relaxed atmosphere, study time, close to UT. paid holidays and free parking. $4.00/hr. + Bonus opportunities. 8 hours per week TTh 1-5 Call to see if your ears can meet the challenge D Y N A S T A T 4 7 6 -4 7 9 7 2704 Rio Grande. Suite 4 8am-3pm DRIVERS WANTED JOBS! JOBS! JOBS! In Texan Classifieds 800 — G eneral Help Wanted LINE UP YOUR FALL JOB NOW! Potential earnings up to $8 hr. Full time & part time posi­ a v ailab le. tio n s M ust have own car. —Apply in person: 4 0 4 W. 26th St. or nearest location. Take off yc a load mr heart. --------------- * j j j k V f Am Ass lerican Heart | ociation % ÉRGHTINGF0R i mKXJl $ ?UFE TTZ.- - - - 3T THE WHOLE G A N ® \ Every Day in T h e Da il y T e x a n / , 890 — Clubs- Restaurants NEED Y O U R RESUME EAST? I a l l u s t o r a n a p p o i n t m e n t a n d u o t \ p e 11 v \ h i l e \ o u v \ a i t 4S4.M 74 g i n n y s f S 4 1 7 N o rth Lamar ^ 1 8-16 THESES, DISSERTATIONS & P.R.'S t v p m g w i l l m o t \ \ t ■ u u a r a n U ' c o u r g r a d u a t e o h o o l r e q u i r e m e n t s Receptionist, fui-hm e, trainin g includ­ ed, fu# benefits, start $5 6 0 /h o u r Job Seorch 482-0801 Fee fl-IA DELIVERY DRIVERS NEEDED Earnings o f $ 5 -8 /h o u r. M ust hove car A pply 6 0 0 W MLK betw een 2 ond 5 pm. G eneral O ffice, w it tram , 48/hour, benefits paid vocation, Job Search 482-0801 Fee. CHIUS RESTAURANT fimng woitpersons fgjj *ome*ter lunch and dinner shifts. Apply »n person, 7310 Burnet Rd 8-30 ® ^ LOS TRES Bobos now hinng cashier, in hostess ond kitchen help Apply person 2-4 at 1206 W 38th 8-16 RENTAL 430 — Room-Board Limited delivery area. H 9 8 4 Domino's Pizza Inc g l n n y S — College Houses e . ■ ■ H J O H X E NON-RESIDENT MEAL PLANS High In Nutrition. Absoute Lowes* Prices On Campus Fall/Spring 1985: Academ ic Y e a r: Fall Sem ester: 19 m eals/w eek: $1100 14 m eals/w eek: $875 19 m eals/w eek: $575 14 m eals/w eek: $450 Punch Cards: $90 (42 punches: br akfast 1 punch, lunch 2 punches, dinner 2 punches, specials 3 punches) Dinners Only M eal Card: $90/m onth Lunches O nly M eal Card: $90/m onth D0BIE NON-RESIDENT SUPER SAVOR SAVE $50 On FULL ACADEMIC YEAR or SAVE $25 On FALL SEMESTER ONLY . O o.Pw Curto.w r ^ Semester Plan •8 . S t s S . » Holidays • Must Have Coupon • Limit Rights Reserved • Prices Sub|ect to Increase • No Meals Served When U.T.-Austin Is Closed home where students from freshmen to graduate students of all nationalities gather to exchange ideas and experiences. Bj^independence, shaping your own environment, no landlords, no dorm supervisors, just neighbors. CF*sharing in the work of running your house, so that you can share in the fun at lower cost than many other housing options. BjPhaving Nobel scholars over for informal chats in your living room. B j^ th e potential to make new friends, to learn to use a computer, to try new foods, to swim, to have parties, in your own home. I f these idees sound tike they make up the sort o f environment you'd tike to five in, then Coitege Houses Co-ops are waiting ju s t down the street to wet come you. Where else w ill you find a ll this: iiRstudent Managed “o-ed . ELFumt hed Rooms ^ A C fSLHome-cooked Meals r11mt . Rcreot People v iaRciose to Campus TSundeck »ool at such affordable rates? Doubles from $286/mo Singles from $369/mo Laurel House 1905 Nueces 476-5678 t M e I b c I o M , e l l M i l e p e M . Toot 2let Street 26126uedelupe 70? W. 21st 476-5678 476-5678 The Ark 2000 fie ri 476-5678 Stop By For A Tour Today! Mammogra] can detect breast cancers even smaller than the hand can feel. Low-dose breast x- ray, mammography, is giving hope that the leading cause of cancer deaths in women will be greatly diminished. We urge women without symptoms of breast cancer, ages 35 to 39, to have one mammogram for the record, women 40 1 49 ' to have a mammogram every 1 to 2 years, and women 50 and over, one a year. Breast self- j examination is also an important heath habit \ and should be prac­ ticed monthly. Ask your local Cancer Soci­ ety for free leaflets on both subjects. 1 The American Can­ cer Society wants you to know. Page lb /in e u a iiy lexau/iriuay, August 10, iaoo EPA develops w aste burial plan for 10,000 years United Press International WASHINGTON — The EPA Thursday issued rules that govern the burial of high-level radioactive wastes and are designed to keep the substances isolated from the public for at least 10,000 years. The slight risks involved under the new rules “are comparable to those faced by future generations if the uranium ore used to produce the waste had not been mined to be­ gin with," said administrator Lee Thomas of the Environmental Pro­ tection Agency. Officials explained that if the ura­ nium was left in its natural state in the earth it would produce the same amount of radiation as the used ore would produce under the new pre­ cautions. The new regulations require the radioactive waste materials from nuclear reactors and atomic energy defense facilities to be deposited in mined geologic structures beneath the earth's surface. The Energy Department has iden­ tified three potential sites for the first disposal facility: Hanford, Wash., Deaf Smith County, Texas, and Yucca Mountain, Nev. The EPA has worked for nine years trying to develop standards that will allow the deadly wastes to "be put away so that man can not bother about them and be safe," said Daniel Egan, director of the regulations development project. The EPA and other government agencies will monitor the deposited wastes but the rules afre intended to ensure that the materials will be safely isolated even if those offices no longer exist, Egan told reporters. The disposal sites will be identi­ fied with permanent markers to warn future generations of their lo­ cation and what hazards the materi­ als may present, the agency said. The rules are intended to limit the projected release of radioactivity for 10,000 years after the wastes are de­ posited in the disposal facilities, limit annual exposures from the fa­ cility to any member of the public for 1,000 years and limit groundwa­ ter contamination from radioactive materials. The standards were developed to restrict any individual's exposure to the deadly wastes for any expected cause or accident, "except for re­ leases from conceivable events that are judged to have an incredibly small likelihood of occurrence," the EPA said. The agency projected that compli­ ance with the standards should cause no more than 1,000 cancer deaths over the 10,000-year period, or an average of 0.1 of a fatality per year. Nuclear power plants currently store radioactive wastes at their own facilities but storage space is facilities are limited. Permanent needed because of the long lives of radioactive materials, which will re­ main harmful thousands of for years. New cancer therapy shown to increase chances of survival United Press International WASHINGTON — A new treat­ ment has been shown to increase chances of survival for victims of liv­ er cancer, one of the most lethal forms of the disease, a developer of the treatment said Thursday. Seven of 104 patients with ad­ vanced liver cancer who underwent the new therapy have survived dis­ ease-free for up to 3V2 years, while in 50 patients shrank enough so they could live nearly normal lives with intermittent treat­ ment, said Dr. Stanley Order, direc­ tor of radiation oncology at Johns Hopkins Hospital. tumors Conventional liver cancer treat­ ments produce remission of two months or more in 15 to 20 percent of patients, Order said. Generally, no more than 3' percent of patients are alive after five years, and m an/ do not live longer than four months. "W e've increased the remission rate far beyond what's been report­ ed in the literature," said Order, whose team developed the treat­ ment. The therapy is one of the first suc­ cessful uses of monoclonal antibo­ dies, proteins designed to home in on tumor cells and bypass normal cells. Order's team attached radio­ active isotopes to the antibodies to deliver radiation directly to the ab­ normal cells and destroy them. "It opens up a new era of treat­ m ent," said Dr. Gregory Curt, dep­ uty director of the National Cancer Institute's division of cancer treat­ ment. Curt the monoclonal anti­ body technique could be combined with other conventional therapies, such as chemotherapy, to increase effectivness far beyond what any of the treatments could have done by themselves. The one qualification Order had was that the treatment, a report on which will be published in the Jour­ nal o f Clinical Oncology, was not for patients whose cancer had spread to the liver from other or­ gans. Order said about a year and a half of work remains before the treat­ ment can be considered for general use. Until then, it will be restricted to laboratory experiments. An advantage of the therapy is that it has had no side effects so far. "I can envision a patient coming injection and in and getting an going back to work," he said. Monoclonal antibodies have been used experimentally in treatment of skin cancer, cancer of the pancreas and a kind of cancer of the lymph system, Curt said. Liver cancer is currently treated with drugs, radiation, surgery or a combination of the three methods. John Donne would have been proud of James D. von Hoften, the space shuttle Discovery's mission specialist, as he tightens a latching device that cations satellite next week. the shuttle crew will use to capture the slowly spinning Leasat F3 communi- Study of suicides among Amish suggests hereditary link United Press International in CHICAGO — A study of an Am­ indicates suicide ish community may run the family, with a predisposition to severe depression and self-destructive behavior being passed genetically from one genera­ tion to the next, researchers report­ ed Thursday. In a study of the Old Order Am­ ish community of southeastern Pennsylvania, researchers from the University of Miami School of Medi­ cine found that suicides mostly oc­ curred in a few families with a histo­ ry of mental illness and other suicides. But Janice Egeland, a medical so­ ciologist, said not all of the families where mental illness was present exhibited suicidal behavior, leading researchers to believe there might be a genetic trait that predisposes some disturbed people to suicide. "Mental disorder in and of itself doesn't say whether the person will said. commit suicide," Egeland "But something there may be biochemically different" about po­ tential suicides. Egeland and Dr. James Sussex of the University of Miami School of Medicine, reporting in the Journal o f the American Medical Associa­ tion, studied the incidence of sui­ cide between 1880 to 1980 in the Amish community, using medical records and interviewing relatives to determine mental illness. The Amish community was cho­ sen for the study because of its iso­ lated, homogeneous nature and not because a suicide problem exists there, Egeland said. In fact, there were only 26 sui­ cides in the 100 years studied, far below the national average. While the community has grown from 1,000 to 12,5Q0 since 1900, the sui­ cide rate has dropped, with no re­ ported suicides since 1977. In many ways, the Amish com­ munity is a model of suicide preven­ tion, with its non-violent agrarian life, little crime and no known mur­ ders in its 300-year history, Egeland said. Alcohol and drug abuse are virtu­ ally unknown among the Amish, as are unemployment and divorce, she said. The young work and worship together, fending off feelings of al­ ienation, and the elderly are revered and made to feel useful in their re­ tirement. "They're in a most protective type of community," Egland said. "And yet we do see some suicides, so we see them in their pure sense, unpol­ luted by other circumstances in modern society. Of the 26 confirmed suicides, 19 were clustered in four family lines. The four families made up 16 per­ cent of the Amish population at any one time, but they accounted for 73 percent of the suicides. In all but two of the cases, the person who committed suicide was diagnosed as suffering from either manic depression or severe depres­ sion. The incidence of mental illness in close family members of the sui­ cide victim also was high. Other Amish families had a histo­ ry of mental illness, but no suicides, Egeland said. suicide problems Egeland said while other factors exacerbate in modem society, the findings among the Amish point to some basic un­ derlying biological causes for sui-„ cide that can be of use to the medi­ cal community. "Family physicians are in a key position here to be alert that if a per­ son does suffer manic depression or severe depression and has a history of family suicide, they need to take extra care in the preventive realm," she said. Cosmonauts return to Salyut-7 United Press International MOSCOW — Two cosmonauts who found the Salyut-7 space sta­ tion in a Siberia-like deep freeze shed their special clothing and feigned warmth for the television viewers back home, the official Communist Party newspaper said Thursday. Pravda, in an unusually revealing report on a space mission that offi­ cials considered aborting, said Vla­ dimir Dzhanibekov and Viktor Savi- nykh did not want to alarm viewers when they arrived June 8 at the or­ bital station where the solar power system had failed. "It gives me shivers, boys," were cosmonaut Dzhanibekov's first words on entering the space craft in which the heating system had mal­ functioned due to misaligned solar panels, Pravda said. freezing During their first hours on the spacecraft, temperatures forced Dzhanibekov and Savinykh o return to their Soyuz T-13 trans­ port ship every two hours to keep varm, Pravda said. The men also had to guard against working up a sweat that could freeze inside their suits, Prav­ da said. Mission control, preparing for the conditions inside the orbital station, had outfitted the two men as it they were "going to the North Pole," Pravda said. Special warm suits were made with "warm caps, fur boots and wool underwear," ground-control spokesman Yuri Malyshev said. 'T h ey had to have all of this on, even at night when they slept in sleeping bags, until the station got warm enough." Shortly after their arrival, the spacemen were shown on Soviet television wearing the normal space garb for cosmonauts orbiting in the space station, which was launched in April 1982. "N ot to alarm us, with the trou­ bles they had, they took off all their special warm clothing before the Vremya (evening news program) broadcast," Malyshev said. "They on the ground hesitated about further work," he said, indi­ cating that ground control wanted to abort the mission. "But the crew, every time,/suggested that the next step be taken." As the mission progressed, the two cosmonauts struggled "for eve­ ry heat calorie, for every power watt," Pravda said. Wearing newly designed pressur­ ized suits, they realigned two solar panels and installed a third during a five-hour work session outside the Salyut-7 station. In their two months in orbit, the two men also installed a command radio line and restored heat and wa­ ter supply. "Now, it is possible to make the living conditions close to comfort­ able," Viktor Blagov, the mission's deputy chief told Pravda, indicating that all of the space station's prob­ lems had not been solved. Pravda first released details of problems aboard the Salyut . space station Aug. 2. Thousands tour Graceland mansion to commemorate death of Elvis Presley United Press International MEMPHIS —; Around 3,500 peo­ ple a day have been passing through Graceland this week to commemorate the eight anniversary of the death of rock 'n' roll legend Elvis Presley, an official of the man­ sion said Thursday. They comprise part of a half-mil­ lion fans who will tour the shrine where Presley is buried this year, said Ken Brixey, director of market­ ing for Graceland. Purchased by Presley for $100,000 in the mid-1950s, the mansion hous­ es a $6-million-a-year business, sell­ ing all forms of Presley memorabi­ lia. Money generated by Graceland Enterprises goes into a trust and will eventually go to Presley's daughter, Lisa. But the U.S. Travel Data Center estimated in 1983 that Graceland pumped about $55 mil­ lion into the Memphis economy, and attendance has grown since then. Presley died of heart failure Aug. 16, 1977, at the age of 42, Many of the thousands gathered at Graceland to observe his death still refuse to tarnish his image with reports that drugs contributed to Presley's death. A report of an autopsy said to have found drugs in his body has never been made public. "I feel very sorry for him ," said Yoko Minami, who came from Ja­ pan to pay homage to her idol. "We knew he had many faults as a human (but) he did many good things. He gave us many good songs. That's enough." It's simple, said Joyce Kemodle of Virginia Beach, Va., standing in line to tour the home, "Everyone's a fan of Elvis, if you're an American." But it's not just Americans. This week, Graceland is hosting fans from Japan, France, the Soviet Union, Sweden, Canada, England and Yugoslavia, a far cry from the occasional passer-by Presley used to conduct on personal tours through the mansion. "It's hard to imagine a country that's not been represented," said Brixey, who adds that Poland seems to outdo all the others in sending fan mail. "I'm not sure why, other than the Polish see Elvis as the consummate American," he said. Brixey said Presley's death moved him from the realm of superstar to the realm of legend. "I think Elvis has grown in stat­ u re," Brixey said. "Maybe it's be­ cause we tend to take for granted people who are alive." The legend also generates money for others. Sharon Bloomquist of Boone, Iowa, a professional Elvis imperso­ nator, dies her hair black and sports sideburns to make a living. The Daily Texan/Friday, August 1 6 ,1985/Page 19 Doonesbury GREAT KEYNOTE SPEECH, m m PBNTM e. a llo fu s mwamwRHMPio S H U VERY ILLUMINATING US7&i,AFTEP7HEmHEL TO­ NIGHT, I WANT YOU TO TRY A UTTU iO M ETH G tYE UOPKMOH. iC A L L lT jm MDMA. JR. f wmm THANKS, DOC. YOU KNOW, IFE E L AS IF I'V e KNOWN YOU MOST OF NN ADULT UFE SURF, TPSA CRAZY FBEUNG, OUT I WANTED ID YTX/VEAL- REAP/BEEN SNACKJNG, HAVENTYOU, HOLY SMOKES1 UOOKATTHEMO- LECULAR STRUC- TURE ON THIS QtP? UAPNI Nader says insurance firms overcharging Unnf o r a i miemauonai WASHINGTON — The insurance industry is charging excessive rates or denying coverage altogether for day care centers, midwives, obste­ tricians, municipalities and others to bloat profits and weaken victims' rights, consumer advocate Ralph Nader charged Thursday. Nader and Robert Hunter, presi­ dent of the National Insurance Con­ sumer Organization, called on the federal government to investigate what they called a "manufactured crisis" in liability insurance. They said if private insurers will not write policies for some professionals or businesses, the government should. By increasing policy premiums or refusing to provide coverage for some groups, Nader said, the insur­ ance industry hopes to win higher rates across the board from state legislatures and to "reduce rights of those injured in a claim." "This is a shotgun to the heads of legislators of this country," the Nader said. Marc Rosenberg, vice president for federal affairs of the Insurance Information said he "vehemently disagrees" with that assertion. Institute, "The rate increases are in re­ sponse to the losses we're suffer­ ing," Rosenberg said, noting the in­ dustry had losses of $3.8 billion in 1984. talking about somebody crying wolf." "We're not But Rosenberg added that the in­ surance industry has called for changes in the legal system to make "liability more predictable." Hunter, former head of the Feder­ al Insurance Administration, said insurance "is supposed to stabilize the economy — grease the wheels so commerce can go forward. In­ stead, it's making it unstable." Hunter said that while insurer profits were low in 1984, a rate ad­ justment of about 5 percent would have assured an acceptable profit level. Salvadoran rebels claim downing of U.S. helicopters United Press International SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Leftist guer­ rillas claimed Thursday they shot down two U.S.-supplied military helicopters during heavy fighting against government troops earlier this week. In a broadcast over their clandestine Radio Venceremos, the rebels claimed to have downed one helicopter near the town of Osicala in Mora- zan province, 90 miles east of the capital, and the other near Chichontepec volcano, 25 miles southeast of San Salvador in San Vicente prov­ ince. The Radio Venceremos broadcast claimed the UH-1H "Huey" helicopters were shot down Tuesday, and that the pilot of the plane downed in Morazan was injured. Military officers in Morazan and San Vincente provinces said the radio reports were "lies of the terrorists," and that no helicopters had been shot down this week. But the army press office confirmed one heli­ copter was downed in Morazan province, and that the pilot was wounded. Unofficial sources say the United States has supplied El Salvador with 49 combat helicopters, which have played a key role in recent army suc­ cess against the rebels. The military has launched a major counterin­ surgency campaign in six of El Salvador's 14 provinces during the past week in an effort to dislodge the rebels from their traditional strong­ holds. Heavy fighting has been reported by civilian sources in central Chalatenango province, as well as northeastern Morazan province and near the Guazapa Volcano, 12 miles north of San Sal­ vador. Tip leads to end of Houston shaggy dog story United Press international HOUSTON — Two prize dogs, an American Staffordshire terrier and a Doberman pinscher, stolen during the Astroworld Series of Dog Shows, have been recovered after officials received a tip on where the dogs could be found. San Antonio handler Carol Toth said the information about Dolly, the American Staffordshire, and Stormy, the Doberman, was given to Special Pals, an animal organiza­ tion. The tip led her and her father, Don Hoose, to Porter, 35 miles north of Houston. After driving around the community all day Tues­ day and part of Wednesday, the two narrowed the search to four houses and contacted the Houston Police Department. Officer Gwen Lilely of the the special theft division went to Porter, knocked on a door where it was be­ lieved the dogs were being kept and began questioning a 15-year-old girl, who then brought the dogs to the door. "It's hard to say who got more ex­ cited," Hoose said. "Dogs don't shed tears," Toth said. The dogs were taken Sunday while Toth was showing other prize dogs at the Astrohall. Hoose, who owns Stormy, said he was ecstatic about the return of his pet. "I wasn't going to give up on it, but I had my doubts," he said. Lively said charges of theft by re­ ceiving are pending against the peo­ ple who live in the house where the dogs were found. A charge of theft cannot be filed because authorities have not found a witness who saw the dogs actually being taken. POCKET MONEY: $108,626,000.00 Students at The University of Texas spend th a t am ount each year fo r non-essentials. SOtMCI: UfNVftSITV or nXAS collkm mwsmmi study mlocn assocmts s, dalias, a fail ism Peanuts © “ PEAR SNOOPY, THIS IS YOUR OL BROTHER SPIKE U1RITIN6 AGAIN FROM THE PE5ERT " by Charles M. Shultz BLOOM COUNTY by B erk e B reathed PEAR FATHER OF MNEt LET ME TELL YOU..THERE ARE SOME 0U6, n > Y0URL NNNAKE PONDERADLES A THESE NKrHTS.- V * ▼. if WHERE HRS OPUS BEEN I A il THESE MONTHS WHERE'S m CUTTER JOHN ? WHY POES OPUS H/NE AMNESIA Z ¡ MU- HE EVER SNAP OUT H M OFfTT'... .AND WHY THE HECK W0 UPW MADONNA WANTT0 MARRY ■ SEAN PENN. MHOS CLEARLY Z RKHES SHORTER THAN U HSR ANP ATLEAST 3 H Lett i m m f m v e mtsoort OH rrsA u . son, y a rn MIXING PONDERABLES AGAIN.. / S O M & W ! ^ X \ I J / / > B.C. Mssceuaous! NHATzfajR sea^rr l REFUSE TO sax. my um e ITS TIME / BYJOHNNY HART WHEKl THE f u e s start STi CKIÑ& TO THE SAVE OF THE PITCHED. T I’M STARTING ID MISS IMHU. (T WAS NICE HAVING AN ARTIFICIAL ALIEN AROUND THE HOUSE. COME TO TWNK OF n; THE NEXT j n O H ^ BEST TRN& MGHTI K AniLA&LE.../ ,c \> i S r t l u r i PERFECT1 \ IF VOU ASK ME, ) rr uas a cheap m call i f T m f l v f T o r contrivance. Barr iVt CTIt» rjQT\ vyvt a-' ►'VI > ‘ » -/» WOULD VOU V u E ENDED \R BY OWNCE HA/E A "HOME walet FROM three i N n k CORPORPfflON^ SCRAPPING MOST OF’EM, BUT THERE’S ONE LEFT IN BACK. I'LL m i YOU A JCCIC OF A DEAL. Squib bAt>. i v f Got a PROBiem. HAVE W V EV E R r e a d fre u d ? WELL, w e l e a r n e d IN f*MCH THAT DREAMING ABOUT HMCKIN6 VPS1AIRS WAS A PEPPESENTATWN OFSEX. YAH- SORE. 1 by Miles Mathis WOKE UP iwrfH GOUElEGi TWK MORNING DID YOU, SON 3 4 NO DAD. I HAVE U K RECURRENT DREAR OF ft&VD FAUIN6 bOUN STAIRS. AM I C R A 2Y ? YOU SHOULDN’T EAT EVERYTHING PUT IN FRONT OF YOU. Vbu should avoid foods high in cholesterol. Ills a fact, a high blood cholesterol level sub­ stantially increases your chances of developing heart disease. By cutting down on fatty, rich foods, you can do yourself a D ig favor. You could lower your blood cholesterol level and reduce your risk of heart disease. For more information about a planned and balanced diet, contact your American Heart Association. We ll give you some free advice on hew to pián a diet good for He. ■ ¡¡¡ I American Heart A s s o c ia tio n IBl h i g h e s t ^ ^ H TEMPERATURES j— LEGEND- * , • * 0SNOW AIR FLOW SHOWERS^ UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 6 P.M. FRIDAY The forecast for Austin and vicinity Friday through Saturday calls for partly cloudy days and fair nights, with a 20 percent chance of afternoon thundershowers. The high temperatures Fnday and Saturday will be in the upper 90s, with a low Friday night in the mid-70s. Winds will be easterly near 10 mph Friday. Nationally, rain is forecast for parts of the Mississippi Valley and the Gulf Coast region, with possible scattered showers in the Central Plains region, the Western Gulf Coast region and all regions east of the Mississippi River But that’s life. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 1 Mats’ stadium 5 Wild party 9 Golden touch king 14 Male animals 15 Bone: pref. 16 Greek letter 17 DM herb 18 Pretended disdain 20 Dormant 22 Malt liquors 23 Inquire 24 Relating to: suff. 25 Claw 26 Fuel 27 Tangle 28 Pipe die 31 French city 34 Ins end outs 35 Large bird 36 Indication 37 Despised 38 Weave 39 Permit 40 Compacted 41 Mies Grsbie 42 Sants — 43 Russian city 44 Supporter 45 Advances 47 — ammoniac 48 Stalemate 51 — Anne de Beaupre 53 London coin 55 Of speeches 57 Aslan river 58 Mail room gadget 59 Hub 80 Additional 61 Quick-witted 62 In the sack 63 “— Maverick’ DOWN 1 1mpression 2 High card 3 Corundum 4 Wine city 5 Petty officers 6 ”... that beat 7 Card game 8 Pronoun 9 Spirits 10 Insect stage 11 Contingent 12 Ripener 13 Flippancy 19 Iced 21 Partiality 25 Bandaged 26 Springe 27 Stopover Progress" 29 Neglect 30 Obligation 31 Actress — Negri 32 — corner 33 Get even 34 37 Flintier 38 Perception 40 Twist 41 Masquerade — 44 Went under 46 "Come in!” 47 Tonsure 48 Malay island 49 Habituate 50 Heron 51 Mixer 52 Russian lake 53 Strikebreaker 54 Yearling 56 W on walk 2 1 3 6 17 14 > 1 10 11 12 13 4 1$ I ■ ■IB JT ■ 90 JT 93 w _■ O Íh ii around campus 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 the Around Campus column, organizations must be reg­ istered with the Office of Student Activities. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form by 11 a.m. the day before publication to The D aily Texan office. No excep­ tions will be made. Join in the fun! Learn to folk dance from 8 to 11 p.m. Friday in Goldsmith Hall room 118 with the University Folk Dance Society. It's free and it's fun. No experience is necessary. For more information call 478-8900. Students Older Than Average will have happy hour from 5 to 7 p.m. Friday in Pierce Hall in the Texas Union building. Attendance is open to all older students. police report •om 3 p.m. Wednesday to 3 . Thursday the University Po- Department reported the fol- ing incidents: ssist outside agency: Three non- lents were arrested at 7:45 p.m. inesday on Red Bud Isles for session of marijuana and unlaw- possession of a weapon. The pects were turned over to the .tin Police Department, urglary of auto: A UT student arted at 6:36 p.m. Wednesday : someone had broken into his >, which was parked on the th side of Memorial Stadium. A let and its contents, valued at , were taken. The incident oc- red between 3 p.m. and 6:30 \. Wednesday. There are no sus- ts. 0 session of marijuana: A juve- * was arrested at 5:45 p.m. dnesday on the west side of the as Union building. He was re- ied to his parents. -hefts: A UT staff member re- ted at 3:20 p.m. Wednesday the ft of a backpack and its contents xi a chair in the J.T. Patterson >oratories building, 2415 Speed- y, Room 111. The theft occurred ween 3:10 p.m. and 3:15 p.m. dnesday. The items were valued &22. A juvenile was arrested for theft and released to his par- s. The backpack was returned to owner. V UT staff member reported at 5 p.m. Wednesday the theft of a llet and its contents from a purse the JT. Patterson Laboratories tiding, Room 429. The incident rurred between 8:30 a.m. and 4:15 n. Wednesday. The wallet, val- 1 at $7, was found in a men's troom and returned to its owner. \ UT staff member reported at 5 p.m. Wednesday the theft of r keys from the Biological Labora­ les, Room 108-B. The incident oc- rred between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. sdnesday. The keys were valued HO. There are no suspects. A UT staff member reporte at 5 a.m. Thursday the theft of a ckpack from Room A-4.140 of the tge H. Jones Communication Cen- • The incident occurred between j.m. and 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. Page 20/The Daily Texan/Friday, August 16,1985 Final Examination Schedule, Summer Session, 1985 Second-Term and Whole-Session Courses Saturday, August 17, and Monday, August 19 INDEX TO EXAMINATION PERIODS ('la s s m eetin g tim e: F inal exam ination tim e: M T W T hF l - H . M MTVVThF 8 :3 0 -1 0 M T W T hF 10-11:30 M T W T h F 1 1 3 0 -1 M T W ThF 1 - 2 3 0 M T W ThF 2 3 0 -4 L ate afternoon and ev e n in g classes Satu rd ay, A ugust 17 M onday, A ugust 19 Satu rd ay , A ugust 17 M onday, A ugust 19 Satu rd ay , A ugust 17 M onday, A ugust 19 7 p .in .- 1 0 p.m . 9 a. in.- 1 2 noon 9 a. U1.-12 noon 2 p.H 1.-5 p.m . 2 p .m .- 5 p.m . 7 p .m .- 1 0 p.m . Satu rd ay, A ugust 17 7 p .m .- lO p.in. Final exam inations for classes m eetin g at tim es w hich are not listed in this index are sch ed uled with exam s for classes m eetin g at the tim e most nearly co rrespon din g to the liniiidexed class tim e. F'or ex am p le, the exam for a class m eetin g YVF 1-3:30 p. in. will he at the sam e tim e as ex am s for classes m eeting M T W T hF 1-2 30 p .m . Q u estion s alxm t exam ination sch ed u lin g for specific classes should he d ire cte d to O fficial Publications. GRADE REPORTING SC H E D U LE F or exam inations on: Saturday, A ugust 17 M onday, A ugust 19 G rad e sh eets are du e in the d ep artm en tal office hv 9:00 a. in. on: T h u rsday, A u gu st 22 Frid ay , A ugust 23 G rad e sh eets for classes with sch ed u led m eetin g tim es which req u este d “ no exam ination are d u e at the sam e tim e they w ould have h een due had exam inations lieen sch eduled. G rad e sh eets for classe s with no sch ed u led m eetin g tim e are due d epartm en tal office by 9 :00 a .m ., T h u rsd ay, A ugust 22. the CLASSROOM BUILDINGS U n d erg rad u ate Lib rary and A cadem ic C e n te r Art Building B atts Hall L. T heo B ellm ont Hall B enedict H all Biological L laboratories B u rd in e Hall C alhoun Hall Je sse H. Jo n e s C om m u nication C e n te r (academ ic) E rn e st C ockrell, Jr ., Hall E ducation Annex Education Building, E n g in eerin g -Scie n ce B u ilding E xperim en tal Scien ce B u ilding E n g in eerin g T each in g C e n te r F in e Arts Lib rary and A dm inistration B u ild in g G arrison Hall M ary E . G earin g H all G eology B uild in g G eograp h y B u ilding G rad u ate School o f B u sin e ss B uild in g H ogg M em orial A uditorium M e z es Hall M u sic B uild in g E ast an d M usic B uildin g/R ecital Hall T. S. P ainter H all Parlin Hall P etroleum E n g in e e rin g Building Pharm acy B u ilding R u ssell A. Stein d am H all R obert L e e M oore H all D orothy G e b a u e r S tu d en t S e rv ic es B u ilding Sutton Hall Social W ork B u ilding 2601 U n iversity A ven u e U niversity T each in g C e n te r ACA ART BA T B E L B E N B IO B U R C A L C M A E C J E D A E D B E N S E S B E T C FA B G A R G E A G E O G R G G S B H M A M E Z M RH PAI PAR P E B P H R RAS R LM S S B S U T SW B U N I U T C W AG W ag gen er H all W C H W ill C H ogg B uild in g R obert A. W elch Hall W E L W IN F. Loren W insh ip D ram a B u ilding W RW W. R W oolrich L ab o rato ries Saturday August 17, 9 a.m.-12 noon Classes meeting M T W T h F 10-11:30 a.m. Grade reports for these classes are due in the departmental office bv 9:00 a.m.. Thursday. August 22. C2120 ACC £ 311 UTC 4.124 UTC 4.122 02150 ACC £712 UTC 3.134 02210 ACC S 362 UTC 2.102A 02220 ACC £364 UTC 2.1C2A 02230 ACC S364 UTC 2.-02A 02250 ACC £ 364 WEL 3. 502 02260 ACC £365 UTC 4.134 0228C ACC S382K UTC 3.102 02290 ACC S386F 05170 ADV S345J BUR 224 29240 AFR S317 PAR 102 PAI 2.48 2572C ANT £301 BUF 108 25730 ANT S302 BUR 134 2 5 740 ANT S313L WAG 214 25900 ARY S3C2 RLM 5.118 1277C ASE W311 WEL 2.224 36940 AST S 301 BAT 10¿ C3150 B C S32c ART 1.102 37430 BIO S301L ART 1.102 37431 BIO S301L ART 1.102 37432 BIO S301L ART 1.102 37440 BIO S301L ART 1.102 37450 BIO S301L ART 1.102 37460 BIO S301L WEL 2.310 37920 BOT S305 BIC 301 37930 BOT S320 2649C c c 3302K ■ WAG 214 26510 c c S 306 2552C c c S336 26550 c c S361 14100 C E W314K 14110 C E W314K 14120 C E W314K 14130 C E W321 14150 C E W329 14230 C E W360K 14340 C E W397 S302 39480 CH S354L 39620 CH 13670 CHE W363 03510 DPA S310 20190 DRM S312L 28640 E 28650 E 28660 E 28670 E 28680 E 28690 E 28700 E 28830 E 28860 E 28862 E UTC 3.132 UTC 3.132 WAG 214 ECJ 1.214 ECJ 1.214 ECJ 1.214 ECJ 9.236 RLM 5.104 ECJ 1.204 ECJ 3.402 WEL 1.316 WEL 2.308 ETC 2.136 UTC 3.112 WIN 2.112 GAR 200 PAR 208 PAR 103 PAR 104 PAR 204 PAR 302 PAR 304 PAR 102 PAR 308 PAR 1 S306 £306 S306 S306 S306 S306 S306 S314L S316K S316K S320L S338 S356K PAR 201 28890 E PAR 206 28920 E UTC 3.124 29000 E ESB 2.15 14690 E E W312 14700 E E W316 ENS 308 BUR ‘112 14880 E E W331 14950 E E W338 WEL : .308 WRW 102 14960 E E W338K 14990 E E W345L BEL 204 15000 E E W345L BEL 204 15010 E E W345L BEL 204 BEL 204 15020 E E W345L WRW 113 15520 E K W306S PEB 311 15650 F M W311 15660 E M W314 RLM 5.116 15663 E M W314 ENS 109 UTC 1.146 27660 ECO S302 UTC 1.102 27662 ECO S302 UTC 3.122 27690 ECO S330K 08390 EDC S37pE EDB 238 EDB 284 10140 EDP S48CP EDB 330A 10180 EDP S382L UTC 3.124 29530 EUS S361 02540 FIN S354 CAL 100 GAR 1 02610 FIN S374 MEZ 208 30000 FR S301 PAR 306 30010 FR S506 PAR 301 30012 FR S506 S507 . PAR 210 30020 FR PAR 101 S507 30022 FR BAT 115 30040 FR S310L PAR 310 30042 FR S310L PAR 303 S312L 30060 FR BEN 130 30062 FR S312L MEZ 210 30070 FR S341K BAT 101 30880 GER S305 BAT 107 30900 GER S310 PAI 3.02 31700 GOV S310L PAI 3.02 31710 GOV S310L PAI 3.02 31720 GOV S310L 31750 GOV S312L BUR 106 31760 GOV S312L BUR 106 31770 GCV S312L BUR 106 PAI 4.14 41370 H E S103L GEA 200 41400 H E S105L GEA 105 41410 H E S311 PAI 4.12 41430 H E S355 BUR 232 33900 HEB S407 UTC 2.112A 32240 HIS S315K PAI 4.42 32252 HIS S315L GSB 2.126 32260 HIS S325P BEN 132 30220 ITL.S507 CMA A2.320 05640 J S360 BUR 228 34030 JAP S507 GRG 312 34040 JAP S412L GAR 3 27170 LAT S312K GAR 203 33170 LIN S3Q6 NEZ 428 33190 LIN S391 EDB 104 47400 LIS S322T EDB 556 47520 LIS S388K RLM 4.102 W403L 42440 M RLM 4.102 W403L 4245C M RLM 4.102 4246C K W4C3L 42452 M 42520 K 425 30 M 42540 M 42611 M 42620 V 42630 K 42760 M 43190 M 43210 K 43240 M 43250 M 43320 M 43340 M 43350 K 4338C K 4339C M 43448 K 43520 V. *6260 K E W319 16290 M E W320 16300 K E W324 16380 M E W336 16530 M E W345 1656C M E W348 16600 M E W353 16610 M E W353 16640 M E W365K 17110 M E S201G 04090 MAN S325 04100 MAN S335 2937C MAS 3318 38370 MIC S330 04570 MKT S338 20420 MUS W605B 21240 MUS S302L 21260 MUS S612B 03680 0 A S322 33770 OAL S391 43740 P S S350 10930 PED S311K 1C970 PED S395 34360 PHL S312 34370 PHL S318 44480 PHR W320P 44590 PHR W345 45040 PHR W470 45050 PHR W373K 45230 PHR W381C 45270 PHR W383C 34950 PSY S301 02810 R E S386 06110 RTF S360J 35290 RUS S356 48860 S W S360K 12590 SED S372 35620 soc S3C2 35650 soc S321K 35670 soc S333F 0665C SPE S3C5 06660 SPE S315M 06 700 SPE S357 06-20 SPE S3-3 0680C SPE S393G 3643C SPN S506 3653C SPN S326F 36610 SPN S375 C3830 STA S30S 38-90 zoc S316F 38800 zoc S3 20 W4C3L RLM W808A ECJ W808A ECJ W808A ECJ W808E . ESB ESE W8C8E ESE W808E PHR W427K WCH S3C1 S302 WEL RLM S305G RLM S305G S311 RLM RLM S316L ENS S318F BUR S340L RLM S362F RLM S390C RLM S 394 2 ENS ETC ETC ETC ETC ETC ETC ENS ETC ETC UTC UTC BUR ESB GSB MRH MRH MRH GSB UNI RLM BEL BEL WAG WAG PHR GEA PHR PHR BUR PHR BEN UTC CMA UTC SWB EDB GEi> BUF. ACA CMA HMA B’JR CMA CMA BAT WAG BAT UTC ESB WEL 4.102 1.202 1.202 1.202 333 333 333 2.108 14 2.246 6.104 7.126 5.120 5.114 532 212 7 .104 6.114 431 2.108 4.134 2.102 2.114 4.150 5.132 302 2.132 3.112 1.130 4.132 134 223 2.124 4.116 2.604 M3.112 5.176E 208 8.318 202 850 201 101 2.116 114 2.110 2.114 2 20 2.114 222 3.104 A2.320 3.124 2.102A 360A 100 136 Ac. 134 208 A3 .111 AS.136 318 208 307 ■3 T i n 137 2.3C4 Saturday August 17, 2 p.m.-5 p.m. Classes meeting MTWThF 1-2:30 p.m. Grade reports for these classes are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m., Thursday, August 22. 02286 ACC S384 2610C ANS S361 2575C ANT S324L 4611C ARC S856A 1319C ARE W3 58 1286C ASE W376K 36950 AST S3C1 37510 BIC S302 3-52C BIO S 302 37530 BIO S302 37540 BIO S302 14080 C E W311K 14170 C E W335 14200 C E W357 39830 c s W3Ó4P 28780 E S306 28790 E S 306 28800 E S306 2831C E S306 28826 E S306 2888C E S316F 28900 E S321 14710 E E W316 14730 E E W318 14890 E E W331K 14980 E E W345K 15670 E M W314 15690 E M W319 27700 ECO S339K 08530 EDC S684PA 10080 EDP S310 10110 EDP S 371 02550 FIN S354 02580 FIN S357 02600 FIN S370 31740 GOV S310L 31742 GOV S310L 31790 GOV S312L 41330 H E S202K 41380 H E S103L 32280 HIS S341K 32600 I S S320 05630 J S343R 47440 LIS S382L 47510 LIS S385T 16330 M E W326 16340 M E W326 16490 M E W344 16700 M E W366L 16750 M E W379M 21270 MUS S221K 44550 PHR W141K 44560 PHR W141K 44570 PHR W141K 44580 PHR W141K 44600 PHR W145K 44610 PHR W145 Y 44620 PHR W145K 44630 PHR W145K 44e”70 PHR W366L UTC 4.124 WEL _. 308 BUR 136 SUT L . 114 ECJ 1.214 ESE 1 " C WEL 2 . Z j. 4 WCH 1 H WCH WCH 14 WCH 14 ECJ 3.306 ECJ 1.204 ECJ 5.410 UTC 2.112A PAR 1 PAR 103 PAR 204 PAR 302 PAR 301 FAR 308 PAR 206 ENS 308 ECJ 1.202 BUR 108 RLM 4.102 ENS 302 PEB 311 UTC 3.122 EDB 33CA EDB 524 UTC 2.102A UTC 4.132 UTC 3.124 UTC 3.132 BUR 112 BUR 220 BUR 106 PAI 4.12 PAI 4.14 WEL 1.308 UTC 3.122 CMA A4.204 EDB 104 EDB 556 ETC 2.108 ETC 2.108 ETC 4.134 ETC 2.136 ETC 2.114 MRH 4.116 PHR 2.108 PHR 2.108 PHR 2.108 PHR 2.108 PHR 2.116 PHR 2.116 PHR 2.116 PHR 2.116 PHR 2.110 44292 FHY S306 4431C PHY S6C9E 3498C PSY S328F 1258C SEI S371 C 386C SI' £384 PAI 2.48 PAI 4.42 BEN lie EDE 286 UTC 3.11 Saturday August 17, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Classes meeting MTWThF 7-8:30 a.m ., late afternoon and evening Grade reports for these classes are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m ., Thursday, August 22. 08481 EDC S381J 4756C LIS S39- 4- 562 LIS S397 4491: PHR W266F 4494 L PHF W266F EDE 104 EDE 466 EDE 468 PHF 2 .1*4 PHR 2. *15 Monday August 19, 9 a.m .-12 noon Classes meeting MTWThF 8:30-10 a.m. Grade reports for these classes are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m ., Friday, August 23. 0211C 0214C 02170 02180 05242 2520C 13160 13170 13180 12610 12830 12840 01570 C1590 03120 03290 37470 37480 3749. 37500 26483 26530 14160 39240 39530 39550 39570 13640 13660 03500 03540 28570 28580 28590 28600 28610 28620 28630 28840 14740 14750 14760 14770 14780 14790 14850 14940 14970 15C30 15070 15640 15680 15683 15750 27666 08380 10060 02560 02590 02630 30C30 30050 30052 26690 2671C 31800 41360 41420 32250 32270 32590 05643 27140 33160 4-540 42410 42420 42430 42580 42590 42600 42750 43170 43220 43230 43310 43370 16250 16370 16430 16620 16630 04080 04120 04130 33400 21250 43710 43720 ACC ACC ACC ACC ACC ADV AMS ARE ARE ARE ASE ASE ASE E A B A B C B L BIO BIC C C C C C E CH CH CH CH CHE CHE DPA DPA E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E 5 E M M E M E M E ECO EDC EDP FIN FIN FIN FR FR FK GF GF GOV H E H E HIS HIS I S J LAT LIN LIS M M K M M M M M M M M M M E M E M E M E M E MAN MAN MAN MES MUS P S P S 5311 5312 S326 S 327 S381M S391F W323F W3 35F W345 W340 W369F W369F S281S S382T S324 S323 S3C1M S301M S3C1M S301M S3C2 £347 W331 W391 S304K S610B S618B W317 W354 S310 S374 S306 S306 S306 S 306 S306 S306 S 306 S316K W321 W321 W321 W321 W321 W321 W323 W335M W341 W351K W360M W311 W319 W319 W394E S303 S370E 5310 S357 S370 S397 S310F S312F S312F W304 W41Z S320L S203 S322 S315L S334L S32C S363 S507 S306 S388F W403K W40 3F W403F W808B W808E W808B W427K S301 S304E S305G 5311 S340L W319 W335 W339 W363L W364L S325 S336 S372 S322K S411B 5303 5304 3.104 3.102 4.124 4.132 4.102 114 3 9.236 7.208 1.214 7.104 223 223 4.110 3.132 5.176D 2.126 2.224 2.224 2.224 2.224 2.102A 2.102A ,204 304 308 316 ,306 112 311 3.112 3.134 306 1 303 206 204 201 302 301 202 202 202 202 202 202 115 4.134 4.134 302 2.136 5.126 5.114 109 145 7 240 416 100 4.104 4.122 318 203 103 215 215 2.112A 4.12 3.502 106 214 2.112A A5.158A 1.102 101 464 102 102 102 4.102 4.102 4.102 2.246 100 6.104 2.108 5.118 5.104 6.126 2.114 2.102 2.132 4.150 1 3.124 4.134 2.112A M3.112 8.318 8.314 UTC UTC UTC UTC GEA GAR ECJ ECJ ECJ RLM ESE ESE UTC UTC GSB GSE WEL WEL WEL WEL UT" UTC ECJ WEL WEL WEL WEL GEO PEB UTC UTC PAR PAR PAR PAR PAR PAR PAR PAR ECJ ECJ ECJ ECJ ECJ ECJ ESB ETC ETC ENS ETC RLM RLM ENS ENS GAR EDB EDB CAL UTC UTC BAT PAR PAR GAR GAR UTC PAI WEL BUR WAG UTC CMA UTC PAR EDE WRW WRW WRW RLM RLM RLM WEL GEO RLM ETC RLM RLM RLM ETC ETC ETC ETC GAR UTC UTC UTC MRH RLM RLM 10956 PED S352K 10974 PED S395 34330 PHL S304 44540 PHR W341 44960 PHR W366T 45020 PHR W368L 45070 PHR W373N 45290 PHR W383E 44260 PHY S302L 35940 POR S612 02790 R E S358 061lfc RTF S363J 35260 RUS S507 35270 RUS S312L 35272 RUS S312L 12600 SED S372 35660 SOC S323 06640 SPE S305 05670 SPE S31? 06710 SPE S36- 36590 SPN S327 0382C STA £309 0385C STA S362 38810 ZOC £ 3652 BEL 202 BEL 202 WAG 201 PHR 2.110 BUR 212 PHR 2.116 PHR 2.108 PHR 2.108 PAI 4.42 PAR 102 UTC 3.122 CMA A5.158A BAT 115 WAG 420 BAT 307 EDB 284 BUR 136 PHR 2.114 CMA AS.134 CMA Al. 320 BAT 202 GSE 2.124 UTC 3.110 ESE 233 Monday August 19, 2 p.m.-5 p.m. Classes meeting MTWThF 11:30 a .m .-l p.m. Grade reports for these classes are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m ., Friday, August 23. S381M Q213C ACC S311 0216 C ACC S312 0219C ACC S329 C220C ACC S36C 46100 ARC S435F 1848C ARF S3C1 1849: ARH S363 12850 ASE W370K 0158C B A S381T 01610 B A S385T 03140 B C S324 26500 C C S303 26540 c c S352 14180 c E W354 40160 c s S315 3965C CH S352C DPA S310 20230 DSM S338 28-1C E S306 28 ”20 E £306 28”30 E £306 28-4C E S306 28”50 E S306 28760 E S 306 28-70 E S306 29010 E S360K 29040 E S376 14860 E E W325 14930 E E W332 15630 E K W306S 15700 E M W319S 15” 30 E M W382 27670 ECO S303 27710 ECO S372M 08440 EDC S371 02570 FIN S357 31730 GOV S310L 31780 GOV S312L 32230 HIS S309K 32870 LAS S355 47480 LIS S384K WS08A 42550 M 42560 M W808A 42570 M W808A 42770 M W427L 43200 M S301 43260 M S305G 43330 M S316K 43360 M S328K 43400 M S362K 16350 M E W328 16410 M E W338 16440 M E W340K 04110 MAN S335 04140 MAN S374 38380 MIC S361 04560 MKT S337 21340 MUS S687A 21370 MUS S393 34350 PHL S310 34380 PHL S329L 4445C PHF W320H 44510 PHF: W2 31 44520 PHR W338 4488C PHF W365M 45010 PHF W3Ó8F 45C3C PHR W 369 N 45060 PHR W373M 45280 PHR W383D 35C20 PSY S353K 02950 RMI S320 06070 RTF S321K 06077 RTF S331M 35630 SOC S302 06680 SPE S319 36450 SPN S506 36570 SPN S312L 0384C STA S309 UTC 3.112 UTC 3.104 GSE 2.126 UTC 2.124 CAL 100 ART 1.120 FAE 2.204 ENS 63- UTC 4.134 UTC 2 .102A GSE 5.176D GAR 1 GAR 1 ECJ 5.410 PAI 4.42 WEL 3.402 GSB 2.124 WIN 1.134 PAR 1 PAR 3 04 FAR 208 PAR 301 PAR 201 PAR 204 PAR 306 PAR 308 PAR 303 ECJ 1.202 RLM 5.104 RLM 5.118 WRW 113 RLM 6.116 HMA UTC 1.146 UTC 4.124 WEL 1.316 WEL 1.308 BUR 106 WEL 2.246 UTC 1.146 EDB 468 WEL 3.502 WEL 3.502 WEL 3.502 RLM 4.102 WEL 2.224 RLM 6.104 RLM 5.122 RLM 5.114 RLM 7.104 ETC 4.134 ETC 2.132 ETC 2.136 UTC 3.102 UTC 3.122 ESB 223 UTC 2.112A MRH 2.106 MRH 2.106 WAG 101 WAG 201 PHR 2.114 BUR 136 PHR 2.116 BUR 212 euR 206 PHR 2.110 BUR 220 BUR 220 UTC 4.122 UTC 4.132 ART 1.102 CMA A5.134 PHR 2.108 CMA A2.320 PAR 206 PAR 203 UTC 3.110 Monday August 19, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Classes meeting MTWThF 2:30-4 p.m. Grade reports for' these classes are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m., Friday, August 23. 0156C B A S380S 01600 B A S383T 14240 C E W363 14680 E E W411 14-20 E E W316 05650 J 16360 K E W335 16690 M E W366L 33410 MES S322K 33740 OAL S372 S377F GSB 2.-126 UTC 3.122 ECJ 1.214 ECJ 1.202 ENS 308 CMA A3.116 ETC 5.112 ETC 2.108 WEL 2.312 WEL 2.312 Space fear no problem for spunky astronauts United Press International HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — Fear of dy­ ing in space is som ething shuttle as­ tronaut Tony England says he doesn't spend a lot of time thinking about. In fact, England says, a space traveler who dwells on death crip­ ples himself for life. "You have to address that on the ground and have to put it behind y o u ," England said during an inter­ view Thursday after a presentation to Marshall Space Flight Center em­ ployees on the recent Spacelab 2 mission. Though no astronaut has died in space in 50 manned Ü.S. flights — three were killed in a fire while still on the ground — the unforgiving environment of space holds the ulti­ mate penalty for som e mistakes. And shuttle crew members know it. "There's no doubt you're on the edge when you go up, but when you get in the van and you're on the way to the (launch) pad, you don't dwell on it — if you want to do your job you d on 't," astronaut Story M usgrave said. Astronaut Karl Henize, a UT ad ­ junct professor of astronom y, said apprehension occurs during liftoff, but "once you're in orbit, there's no feeling of fear." "A fter you get into it, it's all busi­ n e ss," M usgrave added. "But that's not to say you're not a little ten se," shuttle co-pilot Roy Bridges said. The crew, narrating a film of the shuttle flight launched July 29 for a week of solar and stellar experi­ ments, joked about an incident that w as not funny at the time. "The drama started five minutes and 45 seconds after liftoff," shuttle comm ander Gordon Fullerton said in a monotone that drew laughter from an auditorium filled with N ASA em ployees all too familiar with the flight that came close to being aborted. "T h at's when the engine shut d ow n ," Fullerton said flatly. More laughter. Although abort procedures are practiced repeatedly during years of training, no one wanted to lose the mission because one of three shuttle engines quit unexpectedly. "All of us were a little startled when the engine shut down and throughout the ascent, the atm os­ phere on the flight deck was tense," Bridges said. The result was a lower orbit than usual, but the astronauts described their mission as a success nonethe­ less. Whatever fears of flying outside the atm osphere may exist, the risks of the eight-dav flight were worth it, said Bridges, who is scheduled for another flight. "By the eighth day, we felt like we could have stayed a m onth," he said. Standardized test cheating examined in Dallas United Press International DALLAS— Dallas School Super­ intendent Linus Wright met with an elementary teacher who claims her principal pressured her into helping students cheat on a standardized test. school Wright said he met with the teacher for 90 minutes W ednesday, and afterward said he would exam ­ ine the results of the Iowa Test of Basic Skills for the past two years at the school involved. The teacher told Wright that her principal gave her a copy of the test before it w as administered, asking her to drill her students with it. A note attached said, "I see no reason why these students can't succeed n ow ." Wright would not name the prin­ cipal or school involved. "If it is true, I don't want the prin­ cipal to have any warning about possible retesting," he said. Wright said he w ould talk with other teachers and, if necessary, re­ test the students. The teacher's class, which w as ranked in the 30th percentile nation­ ally, scored in the 99th percentile on the test. "We know the score of her class rose, but we need to find out if other classes were high, too," Wright said. Dallas teachers are allowed to use the previous year's test as a study guide, but not the current test. The investigation into the accusa­ tion of cheating came as the school district announced grades for sum­ mer school students. Almost 12 percent of the grades given to the 6,870 summer students were F's and more than half of the grades were C's. A's accounted for 11.8 percent of the grades. Friday, August 16,1985 J O H N HENRY FAULK 2 k m tN Friday, August 16,1985 Heart Answers 'feohycardia Tachycardia means “fast heart ra a.” The definition of fast depends upon the age and physical activity of the person, 'fcchycardia in a newborn is a heartbeat rate of over 160 beats a minute, while in the teenager or adult, tachycardia is a heart rate of greater than 100 beats a minute. Normal tachycardia occurs with fever, excitement, exercise and other similar temporary events, and treat­ ment is not needed. Some diseases, such as an anemia or increased thyroid activity, cause tachycardia and, in those cases, the underlying diseases should be treated. Often, the cause of tachycar­ dia is unknown but can be controlled and prevented with medications. WERE FIGHTING FOR VOURLIFE A m e r ic a n H e a rt A s s o c ia tio n A defense against cancer can be cooked up in your kitchen There is evidence that diet and cancer are related. Follow these modifications in your daily diet to reduce chances o f getting cancer. 1. Eat more high-hber fcxxis such as firuits and vegetables and whole- grain cereals 2. Indude dark green and deep yellow fruits and vegetables rich in vitamins A and C 3. Include cabbage, broccoli, hrussels sprouts, kohlrabi and cauliflower. 4. Be moderate in consumption of.sak-cured, smoked and nitrite- cured foods 9. Cut down on total fat intake from animal sources and fats and oils. 4 Anrid obesity. 7. Be moderate in consumption of alcoholic beverages: No one faces cancer alone. A Guide to Dining and Entertainment AMERICAN ITALIAN SEAFOOD ■AMANA» RRSTAUBANT AND M B Spaced cA day Mon. A Turn, only M W Half price burgers Wad. nd from 540. Go Banano* enjoy Ata flavor and atmosphere that mokas Auafin wdwl i i* Sto- dent and focufcy M.H. 4-7, M-f wilh Free Toco*. SSudant lala rvto H.H. 10-12, M-S. 1601 Gwodalups 476-7202 MC, V, EX, DC. BARTON SPBHIOS COUNTRY CUJB-Jog On In. In Tanná To®* and relax in our Ight and airy atmos­ phere! Sarving continuously from 11:30am, 7 days a doAy. Factoring; na­ weak. lunch and dmnar «sac cho* fajita* hash soafood, chidcon triad stock and boflsd shrimp. Supor Happy Hours M-F, 20O-70Opm, plus dafly drink specials for $1.50. Sunday brunch 11:30- 400pm. Patio opanl 306 Barton Springs Rd. a* Rrter- sido 476-0233 V/MC/AE IM L COOKB — Spadahy Staak Rodourant. Factoring Choico Thick Cut Boef, 26 ox T-lon* 24 ox. Tap Sir­ loin, 22 oz. Kamos Qty Strips 18 ax Rib Eyo, 16 ox Shah Kabob, 14 ax Flat Mignon. Exceflcnt Potato Bor A Salad Bar Aiat coma with msol cd for only 10.951 Spoool rifo Amo, wham you con cook your own staak or kora A coobsd for you. Fafl tor wflh Supotb Spirbs. Opan Mon.-Sun. 5:30-tlpm. In Ata Emporium at • 13 Research (Vs ml oast of Bumot Rd). 37-8005. MCVAE0CCB. CATERING TrodAiond Tanas Stylo la r W in a catud elmospherc. Coma by our DoAy Spoddt: (Monday) Chichón Plata $2 69, (Tuas- day) Sauaaga Ptala $1.89, (Wadnasday) Horn Plata $2.69, (Thursday) Baof Plata $2.69, (Fri, Sal, Sun) Roof and Sausage M ixed Plato $3.79. Dining Room o r to go. Coloring anywhere in Control Taaasl Minimum o f SO paopla, araflekfa a t short notice. 2304 S. Congras* 444-2272. CHINESE T H I C H IN A Q A R O U I — A hot spot in Town, lunch- dmnsr-cocktoAs and polynmion drink* Spocidizing in AuAtonfe Hunan a rd Smchwan Cubino.-China Gordon a sampfor o f Chinata Cubina. Manu offors good tarta of ragiond cooking style." Rolad 3 star by Austin Amari­ cen Sipísima. A l «Amos ora corafuAy pmpomd by (Agitar O tof Hwong, o mdpiant o f 4 star mcomondo- tion by Tho 16 tan Star. Tho bost friod crobtnool wantons and Mandarin Bod (hot). Rdomng rtm ot- phore and ottantiva soroca. Party room avaflabto. Opon 7 days - continuous sortrioe dofly. Carry o«4 avail­ able. Tha VBoga Shopping Contar, opposAo North Cross M dL 2700 W. Andonon la . Suita «19. For rasar- : tana 4 530793. M C.V, DC JAM F O U N T A IN -Soma BtaAhot. Sonto «Ed. But everyone's ogmod Ato» Jodo Fountain deserves m su porior rating A"» received. Gourmet emotions tbs Hutton Rod - ta rto M y gktgorish, and Mondorin Shrimp - pun- gardy spicy, would tampt your opp d fo At Am hot sum- mor season. Newly added lunch speciab Mm Shrimp wAh G arle Saúco and Mondorin Chicken, kept us in fo r Am nod few day* Open d oiy. Carryout avaflabfa. lo r — best Mai-Tai in fow nl iig h ly recommended. ktm - pararte to moderate. 3704 N. IH35 (odt 3flV* Si). 2 minutas from downtown and UT. 459-6001. THE HOT­ TEST SPOT W TO M *l. V, M C AE. DORM/HOME DELIVERY H H B H B ^ H I^ H H a w too make R mohos it Oafoary Special — Conam b Ata tartas» woy to cud» your oppaita and from now u ntl May 31rt, receive ons bee Pepsi w/any snw l pizza o r sandwich defcrared, or 2 fm a Papa's w /any msdium o r larga pizza dsflrarod. For dafoary in U.T. amo c o l 47B-57T2. HOME COOKING BUM MOON—Whan you wont Ata bad downhome mad in AurtkteAy not rsoch for Ihc Moon? Enjoy forty Roort lad, Friad GriAsd Pork Chop* T-flona; Somíwii Ffíid Qédmn, ond our o in r n W o l dMm. And donl fa ff! that on Sun. from 5 to 10pm you con §ot o m l 4 n I from fho Moon: 2 M i grÉod M i dbmms for in prico of onof Drinks ond poMKii odre. Tbs Mus Moon Cafo, ITs Hoausdy. Opan doAy Sun - Thur* TT-Wl Frl-ScA. 11-11. 5122 W. 1st Corns Rd, a hdf-mfo Eart of Loop 360. MC, V, AE. 327-21 «. J P U R A LD O » — Din in Italy tonight! Enjoy our detrious I d i i a g a J i j k ommAoi jm « 4 iM tflsm n O rw W iT I m a n a O B r IIU IIIN IIU U B s a il* Try our famous FoAurine, Conafoni and Lasagna, os woE os oggplant porvrteson, Scompi, vod scdfopme and bosh seafood, to noma a few. Dina inside, in our ramonAc olwmspbara, or outsidi, in our baotriifui Gor­ don Paha A l Am Romanea o f Italy m one mad. Lunch o r Dinner. M ajor credit cards accepted, live Oak (a Congrom — 447-4100. CATPI8M PARLOUR — O ur 1Hh year o f sarving A l You Con Eot Bonslaw Colfbh Fl at* famfly styfo with lots o f good tnmmmg* mriudkrg homamoda hush puppy* Wa obo serve shrimp, chicken ond chicken fia d staak. Mon.-Turn. ■ A ll YOU CAN EAT SHRIMP fo r $5.95. Casual atmosphere, budget priced, childrens menu, car­ ry out service and cotaring Opan dafly Spm-IOpm, Sunday llam-IOpm. 2 locations: No., 11910 Research, 25! 53; So, 4705 E. Ben Whim, 443-1698. TIN RID TOMATO ITALIAN RESTAURANT - This is w hen Austin dinas Mofan. Sarving Am kind of Mofan Food wo first loom to fora. Tha affair fingers on. Enjoy a romantic dmner in Aw wins color or o casual dkttw r with frionds on Am main floor. Now open Mon­ day* Excefant largo rpariab 11-2. Northern. Southern and American Italian favorites have been served to fac­ ulty, student* and staff fo r o ra r 10 yeor* Convenient & dose 3 blocks south o f campus 1601 Guadalupe 476- 7202 AE, V, M C BC. LUNCH O N LY lA O tl NIST CAN - 2405 San Antonio, 474- 7812. Across from UT, upstairs in the bock o f Yaring's. Mbs homo cooking? W e're serving delirious soup* spe­ cial entries and delicious desserts daily at 11am, plus our regular sdection o f sandwiches and sotad* Opon 9:30am-3pm, Mon.-Fri. MEXICAN I I AZTKA RISTAURANT - Serving Cabrito, Pqbfono Chile Refleno (cheese o r meat), Comes al Car­ bon, frijoles a la Chorra, Flauta* Fajita pioles etc. Abo 10 vegetation pioles. Imported beer, wine and mixed drinks wiAt food only. 2600 East 7th Street, 477-4701 Open lla m -llp m , dosed Sunday. Same location and ownership since 1963. Se Habla Español. POHHA BAN M W UIL — Texas' only restaurant serving exdurrtely interior M ortem cub * Delightful Mexican spocrohiot include Son MiguaPs com soup, coma osado b s g q u s f* enchflodos sur i A seafood spodaMos in Am ambience o f O ld Moxico FuN bar. Delightful atmosphere. Dinner 7 night* Sunday branch. 2 b ft* W. o f Bumel Rd. (Hancock A W. North Loop) 459-4121. M Q V, DC JALISCO One o f Austin's most unique interior Mex- ican restaurant* Featured b Cabrito, and Mesquite G r iled Seafood served with a variety o f sauce* Botona Plotter combmmg Fajita* Combo* Pofloof Mosquito, A a tam ping o f satads and appetizer* Comer o f So. 1st A Barton Springs Rd. lla m -llp m M-Th, H.-30am-11:30pm Fri, 5-11:30pm Sat llam -IOpm Sun. 476-4838. HARPOON HM RY'S — An exdusne drinking house, griN and oyster bar, with a unique variety of Fresh Fish, flown in daily. Featuring 2 for 1 oysters every weekday 4-7 p m , and Sunday 4-9 p.m. Opon doily fo r lunch ond dinner Happy Hour, "Doubles fo r ths price of smgies orafablo weekdays 4-7 pm, ond Lota N ile Happy Hour 11pm-2pm Saturday. Food serrad til 11:30 pm. Located at N. IH-35 and 290. 458-4114. V/MC/ AE/DC LAKIVIIW CAPI — A Restaurant & Bar orar look­ ing Lake Austin. Sunday Branch, 10:30om-2:30pm. Now sarving lunch ofl doy Mondoy-Saturdoy. Dinner 5- 11pm nighAy. Manu includes: Row Oyster Bor, Boiled Shrimp, Fajita* Salad* Hamburger* Steak* Chicken Fried Steaks & nile tima Pan Fried Fish Special! Happy Hour 4-7pm Monday-Friday. Open lata after Football Games. 3800 Lake Austin Blvd. 476-7372. MC/V/AE. PIUCAN'B WHARF — Located at Riverside and S. 1st. Austin's most unique seafood. The fish hero is served bash doily Spariolizmg in everything from Alaskan King Crab to Hawaiian Chicken with o il entrees including a trip to Am extensiva sotad bar. Tho Alaskan King Crab Special is unbeatable fo r $7.95 on Sun, Mon & Tues evenings. Half price oysters & drinks Mon-Fri 4:30- 7 0 0 . Open every evening at 5pm. 478-5733. V/M C/ AE/DC. SIDEWALK CAFES For 15 years the ineffable allure o f les customers o f every sort. Geniuses and come sober, they've come drank, the/ve Am meaning o f life. Once arrived they've place to sat and drink and ex- £ as without being blasted by loud music or gfodhondmg waiters Indoor ond outdoor vababie and service continues from 11am to seven days a week. 24th and San Antonio. U S AMISI Aims h o s ^ S unáis, in wf vb come high on found ( rushed by sealing b < 1:30 at night SUBS SOUPS A SALADS SOUPCR SALADS — 1980’s food served in a 1920's atmosphere A -YOU-CARE-TO-EAT! SALADS - Concoct a masterpiece from our 60 item salad bar! SOUPS - Choose one or a l four hearty homemade soups! SANDWICHES - Thick A generous A made to order! HOT CORN BREAD A HONEY BUTTER with all meals! Open 11-9 Mon-Fri 11:30-8:30 Sat at two Austin Locations: 2900 W. Andonon Lane A 800 Congress A ra (Downtown at 8th A Congress) P IZZA TEXAN U m M your Toms s GONANS MZZA - Ate wAh our Atick n' rich doap pan pizza. Fombhod try Am Sousoge Vegeto sn try Am Veggie. AE on your choice o f uAtAe o r our famous whole wheat dough. Abo serving tdods and hot o r cold sonrtuicbm, Pizza ovoil- abfo by Am s ka fo r lunch from lie pm, M-F, and by Am pon onytima. 2 location* Open 7 doy* BOBMHOt PIZZA BBUVRB»- FBBB - 30 min­ utas o r las* hot d a lrioui p in o wM be ddrtarad to your door. Each pizzo b custom mod», fresh, 100% dairy d iM N , corafuly N b d id toppings 5ptciol Souca and perfect gdden crart. l i mitad daAvary oraos. CAMPUS AREA • 476-7181-HYDE PARK AREA - 458-9101- RIVERSIOE AREA - 447-6681...ond 8 other locations! •IA N S RtSTAURANT and BAR. - an AUSTIN tradition — "the best chicken fried steak in TEXAS." Also giant burger* homomodo fries, toco* salads and more. SUNDAY BRUNNCH 11-3. Omelets, quiche, and M I­ GAS. BLOODY MARYS 95c during BRUNCH. OPEN everyday 11am - MIDNITE. 311W. 6lh. 477-8999. TIXAS CHIU PARLOR - O ld Time Texas Restau rant specializing in Texas Chili, enchiladas and fresh lime margarita* Also serving; ALL AMERICAN HAM­ BURGERS, Salad* sondwhkhe* nacho* A munchie* The best stocked bar in town with orar 150 different ■ brands o f liquor and a dozen o f your favorite beers. Rustk atmosphere - wooden floor, antique bar ond wofls o f collectable* Kitchen until 1am, everyday. Open; M-S: 11-2, Sun. 12-2.1409 Lavaca, 472-2828. V-VISA • MC-MastorCard t AE-Amerkan Express CB-Carte Blanche t DC-DbAng Club Kar l l g E ^ ^ N N ^ ^ N ^ H N s R R N N ^ N v ^ m ^ H Oil flhis BflflÉ Cflfi 471*1MS I N I W N # |P W ^ W • WWW ADULT ENTERTAINMENT THE RID ROBI — The Best Topless Entertainment Soylh o f The River. Open 7 days a week; Mon -Sat 2 pm-2am, Sun. 7pm-2am. HAPPY HOUR; Doubles for Am price o f singles A 50c o ff Aw price of beer Mon Sat. 2-7pm, Sun. 7-10pm PARTY NITE - Sunday! Featuring - Ofdms N ile, M ordi Gras or Country Western nits. AMATEUR NITE - Mon.! $175 m pnze money! Mul­ ti-Stage entertainment Personal dances available. 336 B East Ben \M tita, 443-4027. THE I I O' ROBI — The Best Topless Entertain­ ment North o f The River. Open 7 days o week; Mon - Sof 2pm-2am, Sun 7pm-2om HAPPY HOUR, Doubles for Am price of smgies A 50c o ff Am price o f beer, Mon.-Sot., 2-7pm. AMATEUR NITE, Sunday! $175 m prize money. Mubi-stags entertainment. Personal danc­ es, upon request. Pool tables A video gomes available Big screen T.V. fo r Mon. N its Football fans w/best half- time show in town! 6528 N. lom ar Blvd 458-2106. GAMES A AMUSEMENTS THE BACKROOM — Open Horn to 2om — 7 days o week, lira Musk 7 nights a week. Happy Hour 11-7, 25c draft beer 7pm-10pm — 7 nights a week. 2015 East Riverside. 441-4677. TEXAS SHOWDOWN - Ploy "Hi Bob" Wed. A Fri. (a 5:30. Pool, dart* video and foosboll. Open M-Sat., 11om-2om. Sun, 12n-2om. 27th A Guadalupe. WAREHOUSE SALOON AND POOL HALL - Only pool had in Austin with mixed drinks, elegant at­ mosphere, and 27 Brunswick gold crown professional billiard table * ladies shoot free M oa A Tues. 25c drcrf* beer A highbafls on Wed. and Thun. Open 11om-2am 7 days a week. 509 E. Ben W rite. 443-8799. HAPPY HOUR Open 11am to 2am - THR BACKROOM - 7 days a weak. Lira Musk 7 nights a week. Happy Hour 11-7, 25c draft beer 7pm-10pm — 7 nights a week. 2015 East Rrtenido. 441-4677. T H I HICKORY STRUT BAR - Mon-Fri 4-7 Our happy hour btdfol is set out each weekday from 5 to 7 with such features as batter fried veggie* cheezes and chicken, fix-your-awn tocos A potato skins A trimmings. Tap beer 75c a mug or $3.25 a pitcher Hi Bafls - $1.25. 800 Congress Avenue (N.W. Comer of 8th A Congress) TIXAS SHOWDOWN - "Happy Minutos". 25c cold glass A $ 2 0 0 pitcher — 400-4:15 n daily (Bud and Shiner only). FREE DRAFT w/sandwkh purchase 11 om-2pm. LADIES NITE; Tues. - Bpm-Midnite Free Draft fo r ladies. HAPPY HOUR on Draft and Import Beer* 2- 7pm daily. Open Mon.-Sat, Uom-2am and Sunday, Noon-2am. 27th and Guadalupe, 472-2010. WARIHOUSI SALOON AND POOL H A U - Only pool hafl in Austin with mixed drinks, elegant at­ mosphere, and 27 Brunswick gold crown professional bflEard table * Ladies shoal free Mon A Tues. 25c draft beer A highbofls on Wed. and Thur* Open llom -2om 7 days a week. 509 E. Ben White. 443-8799. UVE ENTERTAINMENT Open 11am to 2am - TH I BACKROOM - 7 days a week. Lira Musk 7 nights a week. Happy Hour 11-7, 25c draft beer 7pm-10pm — 7 nights a week. 2015 East Riverside. 441-4677. CHILSIA STRIET PUB - Features great Lira En­ tertainment with a variety o f Bonds ond Single Acts. Showtime is 9pm. Wed. BASH NITE. Thursday rutes drink 17 o x Margaritas fo r 1.25. Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 4-8pm First drink regular price 2nd drink fo r a ruckle. Food served tiM M idnight (outside entrance fo r after mall hours). Two location* Barton Creek Mad, A Centennial Cantor (a 7301 Burnet Rd. THUNDIRCLOUO SUBS Austin s Origmal Sub Shop - now has 12 Austin area locations. 16 varieties of hot A cold subs on French or whole wheat brood, baked fresh dafly. We ore now serving a delicious se­ lection o f fresh saiods. Campus area location: 16th ond Lavaca. Phone-ins are welcome, 478-3281. CHILSIA STRUT PUB - Happy Hour 4 to 8 p.m„ M onday thru Friday. First drink regular price, 2nd drink a nkkle. Specializing in the Biggest, Best, Fanciest A W ildest Drinks in town! Lira Entertainment Nightly. Two great locations: Barton Creek MoN and Centennial Can­ tor (a 7301 Burnet Rd. •■TV* * a 0 e * * .* Shop Fotoy’s Monday through Saturday 10 to 9:30. Sunday 12 to 6 (Downtown Houston and Bryon/Coilogo Station closod Sunday) Shop Downtown Houston Monday through Friday 9-JO to 4 SoMdoy '• if tatopto I Stirrup some fun in pants & tunics for the Student Body The tunic sweater of richly textured ramie/ cotton in jade, white or cherry red. Sizes S, M, L, *46 The stirrup pants, made with Lycra* spandex for a sleek fit. Black, red, blue or natural In sizes 4 to 14, *50 Better Weekend Department, All Foley's Stores. HOUSTON AREA: SAN A N T O N IO :: BRYAN/COLLEGE STAIION. 4 fcM0M Máey,Aepu*1M9ÍS CONTENTS Records Couch Flambeau puts out a record on their own label, and Befile says it's great. Barminski makes fun of white people............ Page 6 Feature Is it possible? Can there be something almost as tasty as a Rocket Burger? Planet 9 outdoes even the fabulous Club Ego-wanna. They actually play requests Page 7 At the Drive-in "Fright Night" is on par with "Night­ mare on Elm Street" and goes to No. 2 on the Best of '85 List.............. Page 8 Film As a mystery, "I Married a Shadow" is pleasantly low-key. As a romance, it's a delight Page 9 Feature Stephanie's Restaurant & Bar on Sixth Street is a popular (rat hangout. Images went there anyway Page 17 Slugline well to dOnexan in h Resident music critic David Menconi bids a fond fare- inhis last Slugline............................. .Page 18 Etc. Part II of "A n Unfortunate Obsession" locates Abbie Hoffman and cracks some skulls. P *g* W Staff EDfTORCd Combs ASSOCIATE EDITORS GouriBhat, NTS EDITOR Pony Getteiman LISTINGS EDITOR Hokn M m neyh Wf Rkhm d Steinberg STAFFWRITER David Menconi CONTRIBUTORS Andrew Aiarid, B * Barminski, Lb BeBe, Devin Borden, Edmund Martinez, David Nathcr, I Mri ñ* fterea; John Steie* £ lb i Uf*ams PHOTOGRAPHERS Steve Schroeter Made in the shade Nov; ;vtTi Eair-skinned a n d sun -se n sitive b o d i e s >_an get a tan that s nv; s k in off their no se — ¿it A u s t a n T a n n in g Center' Au s t a n s a d v a n c e d E u r o p e a n b e d s e m i t t a n n i n g ra ys t ha t are i ’VA i n <"■'n - h a r m f u I al t ra vi ol et ii ght ) I h e ultr<\vioiet rays 9 A •ir. nat ura ; sunligh* co nt ai n 7 0 - 7 5 UVB. w h ; c h a n c a u s e agi ng a n d w r m k i i n g Plus. A u s t a n gi ves y o u a w h o l e s u m m e r s w o r t h ot tan m ' u s ' a few s h o r t s e s s i o n s Se this '.am m et got a t a i that s no sweat N problem. A n d mo risk - a' either A cation oí A u s t a n t o da v' Guadalupe location now open! CENTER A ! ' l f u r r j i t U H V Let us rekey your locks to ghre you that secure VMH1II9 OJCnHs O M LockBtktytd 29M m 37 J O * ThrwLodci *«ytd 4750**1 Pour Lock» iekeyed 5430 ♦ m AN R tk ty td Locks C o m With 2 Alike Koys fttion Hep fttjop 2718 Guadalupe . 24 HR LOCKOUT SERVICE SE EB R Personal Checks Accepted 474-2140 _ . . S a d Ir O n S Photo by Kim Meyer 3407 Guadalupe, Ste. E— 459-2111 and 2700W. Anderson Ln., Ste. 507, Village Shopping Ctr.— 459-1400 Authorized dealer for Santana Tanning Systems—home and commercial units. *. yMft v ■ a w^JPPPPf •”f*«W STUPID COMIX ABOUT WHITE PEOPLE IDliU M i8 M f O C T S Flambeau: good food for thought Couch Flambeau "The Day the Music Died" Couch Flambeau ★ ★ ★ ★ If C ouch Flambeau were a food, I'd order it every time. But C ouch Flambeau is a band, and instead I can drive all my friends crazy by playing this record over and over. Actually it worked like a charm the first time I tried that. Cam e across sort of like the Butthole Surfers on acid at a G odzilla film festival. But I don't want to make any analo­ gies yet. N o train-wreck metaphors for the grating guitars or images of Pee W ee Herman in a straitjacket for the vocals. I just wanna get to the good part — the words: " I hate Shakespeare. He makes me sick. H e's too hard to read. I wish he were dead. Oh, he is? G o o d ." O r rural, W isconsin blues: "W a n n a buy a mobile home, I wanna live in a mobile home. W anna buy a broken Big Wheel, put it in front of my mobile hom e." And, of course, the love song: "W e 'll go through the windshield together." A sort of up­ dated "D .O .A .," but more thoughtful. Musically, Flambeau ranges from spontaneous, nasty saxophone to heavily Kiss-influenced guitar noise. But don't let that scare you away. Remember "Love G u n "? Great song. The quality of the record is incredible, since it was ap­ parently produced by the band itself and mastered at A & M. O n first listen, it sounds like well-done hard core, bor­ dering on power-metal production. But the mood is schiz­ ophrenic, and the words take over easily. They're either incredibly clever ("Curtains for You"), or mindless like an answering machine ("Satan's School for Girls"). Couch F i a m b e a a / ; ' # +4 S >■ -V 'V The self-parody is subtle throughout, since the musi­ cians themselves are undeniably good. If they really want­ ed to make fun of themselves they would have called the album "T he D ay our M u sic D ie d " and used bagpipes. This is the sort of band that would wear food on stage. Crazy, man. I haven't had this much fun since Gilda and Dan left "Saturday Night Live." Listen to Flambeau, have a party, put hallucinogens in the punch and turn up the volume. — Liz Bel He By BILL BARMIIMSKI * * * * * * * * * * * LES L. CRANE, DDS INC. and KELLY KEITH, DDS General Dentistry w/r/re 5V M u c h s o u l PRESENTS DON WARE CARLWOLFSON U T S T U D E N T S & F A C U L T Y Insurance assignments after — Payment by parents accepted — Audio-visual relaxation first visit technique S U R G E R Y - im p ia n t s , transplants, impacted wisdom teeth HOURS 3800 SPEEDWAY M-F 8-8 452-6405 Special Dental Health Offer: Free cleaning with exam with this ad Offer Expires August 30,1985 For an appointment or more info, call 452-6405 Also appearing : Bobby Gaylor August August 13-18 I Showtime* Turn., Wad., Thun., Sun.-8:30 PM Frl. and Sat-8:00 and 10:30 PM Tmaday Nights Students Half Price ______ Wed. nighis— 'H price! now i— iwmnow> c a ll aar-tm 8120 Rtm ich Blvd. (at Andsnon Sq.) w r i i u n , SUMMER SALE! FEATURE By ED MARTINEZ Mark Dean, left, and Stacy Page play songs at your request at Planet 9, which is held twice a week at Oz. Planet 9’s for dancin’ fools Well heckfire, little buckaroos, Un­ cle Ed has found something almost as tasty as a Rocket Burger. I have searched Austin-town and come across something that has just got me all slippery at the gizzards! I'm going to let you in on a little secret right here. It took me awhile to get around to writing this article. Once you come across a really good thing you kind of want to keep it all wrapped up and not let anybody else in on it. But heck, I just got to let someone else in on this. So here goes. I know you probably remember way back when Club Ego-wanna used to be more fun than pushing your little sister in the mud. Used to be you could bop and bounce all night long like some rabid maniac to some of the best thumpa-thumpa dance music in Austin. You didn't even have to worry about the possibility of maybe rub­ bing against a herd of Muffy-Buffys and having them slop their drinks all over the dance floor. You could dance until you were sweaty as a pig — a big one. By the time you got outta there, you had holes in your dancin' shoes and you knew you were going straight out and get some new ones for next week. W ell, all you dancin' fools out there, what if I told you there was a place where you could once again burn holes in the soles of your dancin' shoes until the wee hours of the morn­ ing to dance music I just know you're going to have a hankering for. Now I can just hear you saying "But, Ed, how do you know I'm going to like this music?" Because you're- the one who picks it! Remember all the times that you went and made a song re­ quest, only to have it fall on the deaf ears of some mightier-than-thou, pre­ programmed DJ? Well, not at this place. What if I told you that this place played only requested music. That's right, dance fiends, only the dance music you want to hear. There is a pad of paper at the door so you can write down your song requests. Adri­ an the doorman will take it to Mark the Dj, who will do his best to satisfy your musical desires. I can also hear you say "But, Ed, where on earth is this place?" And I will simply reply "It is not on earth, little buckaroos, it's on Planet 9." And you will say "Why, Uncle Ed, you are full of manure." But listen on Planet 9 is the brainchild of Austinites Stacy Page and Mark Dean. Planet 9 and Earth come in contact every Monday and Wednesday at Oz, 705 Red River St. And get this, impoverished ones — cover on Mondays is two bucks. That's right — two dirty dollar bills! And now for the best part. On Wednesday, three bucks gets you through the door, and to grease up your gears, they have 25-cent drinks all night long. So put that in your shorts and shake it. These two gents, Stacy and Mark, created Planet 9 after Adrian the door­ man introduced them to each other. They originally called the place Planet X but later changed the name to Plan­ et 9. I'll let you figure that one out. They said they got their idea after seeing that beast within Club Ego- wanna go rampaging all over the place and after going to the mighty fun (but short-lived) Z's Underground, which, by the way, might just be re­ opening at an undisclosed location under a new name — possibly the Ro­ deo Club. Stacy and Mark decided to take a crack at starting their own dance maniacs' paradise in the form of Planet 9. By playing requested mu­ sic, they say that Planet 9 is a commu­ nity affair: "In this way, we get every­ one involved. Planet 9 is for the people that are there. It's their party. We've had a pretty good crowd re­ sponse and already have our regulars. People are encouraged to bring their records and we will play them. We've been introduced to some great music we didn't know about.” On the nights I've been there I got a perfect kiss that spun me round like a record, in a ball of confusion, as I heard world destruction on my uni- 'versal radio! They play anything from Tears for Fears to james Brown, to Killing Joke, to Jefferson Airplane. Mark says he's proud of the fact that he doesn't have any Madonna or W il­ lie Nelson albums in his collection. Oh yeah, before I forget, they got flashing lights all over the place and one of those big screen things to show weird films while you are bouncing around the dance floor. And they got this nice patio outside where you can go when you don't want to be inside. But the best part about Planet 9 are the creatures that inhabit it. I asked a man with an extremely short crew cut, all dressed up in black and wearing a skirt, why he came to Planet 9. After a while he said "Because... I'm looking for my mother ..." HOT DAMN! I'm telling you this place is more fun than pushing your little sister and her stu­ pid friend in the mud! So tell 'em Uncle Ed sent you, and dance until you drop. But be careful driving home; the police station is Q] right around the comer. Highland Mall Lower Level Barton Creek Upper Level • • • Look for the Fork in the Road BAR&GR1LL .. g '- . immm 8 IgM g Friday, Aegmt 18,1985 AT THE By JOE BOB BRIGGS Austin's only cabaret nightclub Friday & Saturday 9 pm AMERICAN BANDSTAND Classic Hits From the 50's A 60's 11 pm « E - E - P - E - C - T Music From The Soul Doors open at 8:30 pm Cam ; (wMiUT 1.0.) $340— On* Show $6.00 Both Shows $8.00 Both Shows (Without UT I.D.) $5.00 One Show 23'A & Rod Rivor— Across from the LBJ Ubrary S lic e a n d S o d a S1.75 Amanda Beane expresses her opinion of the bean dip after a date with Chris Sarandon in 'Fright Night/ ‘Fright Night’: straight to No. 2 H ie best and gu zzle l in town. Get a slice and a soda for fust $1.75 with this coupon anvBBj weekday llam-2pm.BgS Good a t a il locations. M Deep Pan offer expiree Aug. 31,1985 WOODS HONDA FUN CENTER 1985XL350R Reg $2200 Sale $1998 i v V H n w i i P H 6509 N. LAMAR (between Airport 4 Koenig) f I * 459-3311 f HONDA . j 459-8944 Prkoe don't ktdvóv 7T4L I guess it was about three months ago when my life changed forever. The big boys at the "H e e -H a w " net­ work come out to the trailer house and they said, "joe Bob, you could have a career, joe Bob, you're funny. Joe Bob, you're an entertainer. Joe Bob, it smells terrible in here." And I guess that's the day the magic started. I really didn't have anything to do with it myself. I said, "W ell, O K, M A Y B E if about 17 million of my fans demand that I take my show on the road, I M IG H T agree to take their money, but I don't want anything out of it personally." So I guess it was maybe two, three weeks after that, the big boys come back to me and they laid it on the line. They said there was only three places in America where I could hold the world premiere of " A n Evening with Joe Bob Briggs:" Radio City M usic Hall. The Rose Bowl. O r the H igh School Auditorium in Berea, Ohio. Tell me honestly now, what you would of done? There was no doubt in my mind. I cranked up the Torona- do, drove 1,500 miles through the heart of hostile Yankeeland, and rolled into suburban Cleveland at 3 in the a.m. It was something I waited all my life for. Cleveland. The city where it all started. The city that invented the word "sleaze." The city where I left my heart and two of my toes. The city where everybody practices unem­ ployment as a way of life. And, you know, the song is so true: " I wanna wake up in the city that never works ... "W h e re I'll be a Number O ne — king of the JERKS." Like C hubb Pricke said to me one time, "Joe Bob, if your mind was a city, it'd be Cleveland." I'll never for­ get it. Anyhow, the audience was great. W e laughed together, we cried to­ gether, we sang together. W e all ex­ changed home phone numbers. I per- formoJ " W e Are The W e ird " for the first time since my assassination. Course, later on that night, I was the taste of the town. Several of my big­ gest fans took me dow n to the C u ­ yahoga River and showed me Cleve­ land at night. Someday w e'll probly find their bodies. It was something I'll always remem­ ber, the night when the whole world sat up, took notice, and said, "W h a t?" O n the way back home, I stopped off in Tennessee at Twitty City, where C onw ay Twitty lives with his lovely wife and seven beautiful hair trans­ plants, and C onw ay wanted to go to the drive-in and so I said, "O K , but only if you take all the born-again Babtist cassette tapes out of your El D orado," and Conw ay said O K and so we hauled it out 1-65 to see "Fright Night," which I thought Conw ay would like cause Roddy M cD ow all used to be a big star, too. "Fright N ight" has some of the best face-eating flying vulture-bat special effects I've seen. It's about a recent escapee from the Richard Gere Charm School w ho moves to the suburbs, sucks the blood out of prostitutes ever night, and starts sleeping all day long in a coffin in his basement. If the guy had just moved to Marin County, he could of got away with this, but in­ stead he goes to this little town where a kid named Charley lives next door. W hen Charley notices people are get- tin their heads chopped off and their in Hefty bags ever bodies stuffed night, he starts to suspect something. But then, when he sees that the guy in the house wears sweaters exactly like George Hamilton, he K N O W S he's a vampire. Then we get a lot of plot about how his friends don't believe him, the cops don't believe him, his Valium-head mother don't believe him, and his dingbat girlfriend Am y says, "Charley, is this some kind of trick to get me back?" And then one night the vampire comes over to visit at Charley's house, and while he's there he goes upstairs and starts bustin up the furniture, but before he can kill Charley, he gets a No. 3 Faber wooden pencil through the hand and that makes him turn into a werewolf on-camera. (How may times do I have to tell you people? Alw ays use a No. 2. I will no longer accept or grade vampires that are exe­ cuted with No. 3s.) Next thing, Charley goes and gets the nerd star of "Fraternity Vacation" to help him kill the vampire, only they can't do it without Roddy M cD ow all, w h o 's a retired drive-in horror star w ho knows about wooden stakes and holy water and gold crosses and all the other garbage you need to turn Ken-Doll vampires into Alpo. And I guess that's about when the slime starts to fly. Tw o breasts. Eight dead bodies. Eight gallons blood. Five slime-spew­ ing vampires. Four transformation scenes, including wolf-dog, goober- head melting-man, flying-lizard and flaming-bat. Two heads roll (off-cam- era). Hearts roll. Electric fingernails. Hefty Fu. Pencil Fu. Gratuitous Stude- baker. Vampire flashdancing. Disco riot. Drive-In Academ y Award nom i­ nations for Chris Sarandon, the Vidal Sassoon vampire, doing his best crea­ ture since he was AI Pacino's boy­ friend in " D o g D ay Afternoon;" Rod­ dy, the original planet-of-the-apeman, for excellent stake-driving; William Ragsdale, the kid vampire-killer, the finest actor in El Dorado, Ark.; Am an­ da Bearse, for the scene where she frugs with the vampire and turns into a frothing bim bo with fangs; Stephen Geoffreys, for agreeing to take a sup- porting-vampire role after starring in "Fraternity Vacation;" and Tom H o l­ land, the drive-in genius w ho wrote "T h e Beast W ithin," "C lass of 1 9 8 4 " and "P sy ch o II," w ho scores again. This flick goes straight to No. 2 on the Best of '8 5 List. Four stars. Joe Bob says check it out twice. 0 By JOHN STOKES Fa i f tal e ‘Shadow’ a delight Contrary to what the title implies, "I Married a Shadow" is not a love story crossed with the classic radio pro­ gram. The shadow of this understated French mystery is the stuff of a false story — a woman's fanciful account of how she met her husband. Lies, in fact, impel "I Married a Shadow," a film that has been likened to the works of Hitchcock, although it is actually more reminiscent of the Hitchcockian psychological studies of Claude Chebrol, without the neurotic qualities of either director's creations. Helene Georges, portrayed by Nathalie Baye (quite possibly the most appealing actress currently to be found on screen), has been aban­ doned by her no-account husband, Frank Bilot. Nine months pregnant and with no place to go, Helene boards a train, where she meets Patri­ cia Meyrand and her husband, Ber­ trand. Patricia, like Helene, is expect­ ing (she hopes it will be a boy who will look like Alain Delon). Like Hel­ ene, she has no family of her own. Unlike Helene, she is still with her husband, the heir to a sizable Bor­ deaux vineyard, and is en route to meet his parents for the first time. Naturally, the encounter between in a Patricia and Helene results switched-identity plot, but rather than becoming a psychological examina­ tion of two characters, as in Chebrol's "Les Biches," it is simply a mecha­ nism to set up the real plot of the film. Through a rail accident and a set of other circumstances (at least one — the loaned wedding ring — of which is contrived and implausible), Helene is mistaken for Patricia, who along with her husband has perishtfd. She learns this from Mathieu Meyrand, the father-in-law whom Patricia was to have met. At first, Helene tries to rec­ tify the misunderstanding, but not being able to convince anyone of the truth, and having no place to go any­ way, she accepts her new identity — along with an invitation to stay at the Meyrand chateau. At this point the actual "mystery" of the film develops. But this is not an intense thriller; its predecessors are the more atmospheric "Rebecca" and "Being There." Helene, with only ba­ sic information and a couple of anec­ dotes acquired during her brief en­ counter with Patricia, attempts to field questions from the jovial Mathieu (who wants to know if, during her visit to America, she saw Hollywood) and the formal Lena, whose cool manner cannot hide a gentle nature. Helene, like Chance the gardener in "Being There," gains greater favor as she be­ comes part of the family. And then there's the romantic interest between Helene and Bertrand's younger brother Pierre (Francis Huster, who does, in fact, look like Alain Delon). There are some twists, a number of surprises, and the constant uneasiness that arises from our knowledge of Hel­ ene's true identity. W e wait for the ir­ revocable slip that will unmask Hel­ ene, and with her, we fear the possible consequences. Among those who may know the truth are Pierre and his former mistress, Fifo, whose unbridled contempt for Helene/Patri­ cia recalls the malevolence of Mrs. Danvers of "Rebecca." As a mystery, " I Married a Shadow" is pleasantly low-key. As a romance, it's a delight. In either case there is an occasional tendency toward the con­ ventional br sentimental, but neither weakness mars the film's effect. But "I Married a Shadow" is a good deal more thar. a mystery or a ro­ mance. It is one of the most humane films of recent years. In its approach to characters and situations, it is simi­ lar to the work of jean Renoir and, in fact, raises ethical questions similar to those in "The Crime of Monsieur Lange." The question of immorality in defense of community or family is broached, and while the answer pro­ vided here is ultimately as arguable as that of "Monsieur Lange," the sub­ ject's presentation is touchingly elo­ quent and viable. The characters (with the exception of Fifo) are endearing. And the story's "fairy tale" quality is a delight. " I Married a Shadow;" showing [Tj Aug. 16-18 at the Texas Union. Nathalie Baye and Francis Huster wander the vineyards in a classic, Hitchcock-like tale of mistaken identity. L z Show Band of to M s - t J A U M U V o w m m o M NO mS S S & cb Him MOM own y y Open 8:30 Show 9:30 tlS tU ilo rS lu rfirii Hoodooes Tup Show Nandi f.vH MwSpacMGyaafcfMUMMro 0pw *3> S h o w S p n _____________ H atS M H o rlM w ti IW A M Y U f ■ h o a viai FREE Keg of Millar Draft Starting 8:301! O penBdO Show «pul >230Adw. W/«A»d I-P . tu i. h Amazing Cows, Startling Originals i m z . AUG. MONJIT 1 1 0 AUG. Of>Mt:30 Show 9:30 « IM A M Progressive Dance Vidao Nighity - I Ladies Nite Every Wednesday!fi DCIMMIMAT PlwASpHW9pmtmM MtyTMK-TKAXil DOüitfWttISFOttAHBMiWtHT! I 11 H »$2 Open :30 Show9pm H U R . AUG. R iody,Stt1 •’P.Mioii W V v c become \ au Mislead '1 the By PATRICIA PEREZ 'John Henry Faulk will occupy a niche in the permanent history of American journalism and in the life and times of the First Amendment.... He knows, and we all have to remind ourselves, that liberties can be de­ fended only as long as we still have them." — Eric Seva re id John Henry Faulk — author, politi­ cal commentator, constitutional ex­ pert, social critic, historian, folklorist, actor and all-around philosopher — stood at the foot of the porch outside his lakefront home, shovel in hand. He had been working around the driveway, but had not forgotten our fishing date. Wearing khaki pants, lennis shoes, a mustard-yellow T-shirt and a Bing Crosby golf hat, he did not fit the image of one of the First Amendment's foremost defenders. No shield of armor or Excalibur-like sword. And no white horse. 'The fish won't be biting this late in the day," he said, waving us into his modest, secluded home in West Lake Hills. "Now, we can't stay out on the lake too long with die sun and all; my wife would kill me if she knew I was going out with­ out that stuff on my face. I've got that Ronnie Reagan skin cancer," he ex­ plained lightly. "My problem these days is reminding myself I'm 72. I keep thinking I'm 16." Faulk said he was raised in South Austin "around the same time Colum­ bus discovered America." His child­ hood neighborhood was a mixture of people: farming families, lawyer-types like his father, and poor families living in shacks. It was a time when Sixth Street was not a place where most people would want to be seen. During the McCarthy "red scare" in the mid-'50s, a private group caMed AWARE branded Faulk a communist for his views expressed on a radio show he did in New York. Wielding only, an imaginative wit and his own brand of down-home philosophy, he later sued AWARE for "conspiracy to defame" and was awarded $3.5 mil­ lion (later reduced to $500,000). The controversy behind him now, Faulk enjoys the simple pleasures. Like fishing. Choosing a black fishing pole he called "Swan" from an assort­ ment of rods, we began our expedi­ tion. "Sister Perez, you've got to make that old bass down there think that the bait is a bug," he said, jerking his line about. After casting my line into the water, only to watch the weight, bobber and bait fly off the rod's end, I became convinced that an old stick, kite string and piece of bologna would have worked just as well, and were far more expendable. Watching my line drift away, Faulk suggested a leisurely ride on the lake, and said diplomati­ cally that we probably wouldn't have caught much anyway. "See that flag over there — the Tex­ as flag, Ms. Perez. A Republican more right-wing than Ronnie Reagan lives there," he said, pointing to another lakefront home."There was a time when that hill over there didn't have any houses at the top. If developers would just get together and build along the bottom of the lake ... " Faulk has taken an interest in pre­ serving the area wildlife, whose for­ ests are being whittled away by more and more houses. "Do you want me to go get the deer?" he asked, after we returned from the boat ride. He said he'd been feeding the deer for months, and it was beginning to get expensive. He kept calling the Wildlife Reserve to come and pick them up, but nothing had been done. A large, glass cage filled with doves greeted us as we entered the Faulk home. A portrait of John Henry Faulk Sr. hangs on one wall, and above the fireplace is a sketch of J. Frank Dobie, a former UT English professor. Both men are often subjects of Faulk's nu­ merous anecdotes. "Let me .put my damn earphones in," he said, pausing to pull two hear­ ing aids from his pocket. He had re­ cently been to Washington, D.C., he said, where he met with the Interna­ tional Platform Association, a group founded in 1831 by Daniel Webster. "Talking was the highest form of entertainment back then (in Webster's day). Now we're listeners, which is good and bad," he frowned. "It's a way we have of killing silence. He pointed out a ruby-throat hum­ mingbird feeding on red sugar water on the patio. "I once found a hum­ mingbird's nest. I was 12, and I found it in an oak tree; it was far above my head. Wonderful little nest, about so big, you understand," he said, cup­ ping his smooth, chubby hands into a tiny bird's nest. He pulled down the bough to look inside, and two eggs fell to the ground and broke. He looked a little embarrassed by this confession. "Nothing you can do about a bird's egg. Once you've dropped it, all you can do is stand over it and realize what you've done. It's very much like the sum of things we do in life. We cannot undo it, you just have to face the consequences." The Texan photographer present drew the comparison between the way young Faulk felt, helplessly standing over broken hummingbird eggs, and the way America feels 40 years after the bombing of Hiroshima. Faulk's face lit up and he began to talk excitedly. "All of the testimony on nuclear war tells us we're way beyond the stretch of imagination. We've become the servant instead of the master. Be­ fore he died, Einstein said it was the most destructive thing civilization has ever allowed to happen to us. It frus­ trates m e... there's no end to it. That's our delusion. "In my day, you could hear war. In the world you two children were born in, it won't last 30 minutes. There's nowhere to retreat. "(Nuclear power) is not a military weapon. A military weapon is one you use to prevail with. It (nuclear weapons) has a greater threat — ev­ erybody is a victim. We were so un­ real about it. We really thought it was a secret. It was like Newton with the apple falling onto his head. By God, patent it!" he said in mock eamesty. "What goal could possibly be gained by obliterating Russia? Noth­ ing. This is the hopelessness about it. It's beyond my understanding. Instead of cultivating a dialogue with Russia, the President does everything to keep it sore and ugly." He stopped speaking again and went outside, this time to fill his bird- feeder with seed. Entering the house again, he contin­ ued: "The height of idiocy is the Buckleys and the Reagans saying I don't criticize the Soviet Union. Hell, I don't vote in the Soviet Union. That's second-grade children's think­ ing ... I don't work for my govern­ ment, my government works for me. There's nothing Ronnie Reagan can do over there." Another flaw Faulk found in some Americans' common sense was the fact that they were shocked by Viet­ nam's lack of cooperation in returning captured soldiers. "I went to Hanoi after the war. The country was desolate. You never hear compassion about the people napalm was dropped upon. Picture bombs being dropped over Austin, death and desolation falling from the sky. Picture yourselves running into the woods. "Now think about those POWs coming into your homes. If you gunned down one of those planes and got your hands on one of the pilots, would you give them food, water and fresh clothes? Would you give them a pen and a piece of paper so they could write home to mom and dad and let them know where they are?" he asked into the silence. "I can't un­ derstand the hypocrisy." "Have you two babies ever read 'The War Prayer'?" he continued. With the word "no" barely out of our mouths, Faulk leaped from the table and brought over a copy of Mark Twain's poem. Putting on reading glasses, he began to read aloud: "Help us to tear their soldiers to bloody shreds with our shells; help us to cover their smiling fields with the pale forms of their patriot dead; help us to drown the thunder of the guns with the shrieks of their wounded, writhing in pain." He continued, and as he read, his voice became louder and stronger, bringing the pages be­ fore him to life. "Mark Twain at his most powerful" he said, closing the book and taking off the black-rimmed glasses. Despite his objections ("I ain't even a pimple on Mark Twain's behind!"), Faulk the storyteller to Twain. is often compared Two hours had passed since our ride on the lake. As we drove away from the house, John Henry Faulk stood in the drive­ way, waving goodbye as he picked up a broom to sweep the patio. Norman Lear once remarked, "If there is a funnier, more insightful ob­ server of the American scene than John Henry Faulk, put him in a spot­ light quickly, because he's a national treasure." A national treasure, indeed. [D i V 1 i r ” ’ • f> "Good friends don't let good friends smoke cigarettes.1 Larry H o g m o n Cigarettes aren’t good for your friends Adopt a friend who smokes and help em quit today You'll both be glad tomorrow AMERICAN CANCER SO C EIY i FREE MOVIE OFFER! M on Thurs: O ne iree m ovie rental w ith paid rental lot Pat am ount season film pass holders at Sound W arehouse Video T hurs Sun O oe Iree Param ount adm ission w ith paid adult adm ission lor Sound W arehouse Video Movie Pass holders. ENDS TONIGHT! Bogart starts tomorrow! T H E A T R E M l C H t | i t i R A k i m ■ « M M i l Adults— $4 Students, Child. Sr. Ch., $2.50. Two Movies for One Price! FREE MOVIE OFFER! Mon Thurs O ne lic e m ovie rental w ith 1 teo ta l lor Patam ount season W arehouse Video. Im pass n oldeis at Sound Thurs Suo O oe l ir e Param ount adir n o n w ith p u d «lu ll «ImiTWOo lot Sound W arehouse Video Movie Pass holders BoGARt *» M A U s f T f t* . K s U a 1 S L E E F : (Su b T B m : 1:101 8:40. t:4 5 L A R G O : (Sun. M at: 3 :4 §l 7:50 Co-sponsored by The Austin Chronicle, KLBJ-AM & Sound Warehouse. IlM lM .lH M im H ii What's new in the World? Read T h e Da il y T e x a n PRESIDIO THEATRES Why flirt with a heart attack? The American Heart Association says there are some things you can con­ trol to reduce your risk: stop smok­ ing, control high blood pressure, eat a diet lower in fats and cholesterol, keep your weight normal and get regular exercise. T H I M l C « n > n t Am m • n s n I A T R Plus: Bette Davis in 'The Little Foxes" W U TH ER IN G ■ H E I G H T S ! U utowco CRMof HEIGHTS 5 30. • 40 FOXES: 7 30 ________________ Co-sponsored by The Austin Chronicle, KLBJ-AM & Sound Warehouse W mmm#' M M * . HNhm *** >• * * " ü l a a p D O B IE THEATRE 1 & 2 i Call for showtimes 477-1324 ALL SEATS $2.50 1ST SHOW $1.00 rrn m MwrsiiMTMiES ■ M -W t « U W M tK H M tm H I W H > M U W n - I S T SN0W OWT a c t m a t t mmmrnn A M E R I C A N A THE BRIDE (PG-13) ( t M M d f e l rN O R T H C R Q 5 5 6 ^ r SUMMER RENTAL (PG) (1* lS * fe tS 4 t1S < M » « t l J M : 1S-1fc lS FLETCH (PG) I h B . |- l H « | I M REAL GENIUS (PG) (1M > M l » I M m h 7i l » M I VOLUNTEERS (R) ( t t l s - t i » M 8 (H P J > ) - T :I 5- M 5 RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD (R) ( t i R M t l l M tr . C J R > M S M rW -IA H FRIGHT NIGHT (R) L (1M I-M » > S c tS < a ttJ D - 7 : » 4 iSS»tS:15 j A Q U A R I U S 4 RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD (R)1 | (MR M l M W U jW M H iii i ^ S K f l l A D I A K P G - l s i ■RIAL GENIUS I F O M T i t m » ■ » FRIGHT NIGHT (R) ■ (IAH M l MSuPJR) 7:3M*S-HiM J fc lU lU . VOLUNTEERS (R) (1 M M 4 M t1 fe M -7 :» -fc8 -lM S . - -■ ■ S O U T M W O O D 2 ,4; W 4 i M » W GOONIE8 (PG) 'é* + s M iV '-q h * % B*'yO r;,1 n m c . . I S * u m « m m u 1 M a n a n t e w I H w m L w i w e * « i u S l e L i « e ) | , MOmtAUON K U i g T M r r « | l l» U m m Cigarettes aren’t good for your friends. Adopt a friend who smokes and help ’em quit today. You’ll both be glad tomorrow. *AM ERICAN IGANCER SOCIETY* JX ' REBEL ORIVE IN THEATRE 6 9 0 2 Bur l es on Rd PH. 3 8 5 - 7 2 1 7 j O R IG IN A L /U N Q t¿T A D U L T S Q W J L j r ST ARM AKER I C.T. (X) i m ÓHH UIAHTLV & !■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ , | T.A.RH DUSK , . . ( 7151 21ST a GUADALUPE « THHTRE BACK FROMTIK GRAVE AND READY TO PARTY! H H CLASSIFIED ADS — CALL 471-5244 Friday,Ai p e tit, 1S05 Um ft* 13 ■ M B 1 » I U a w á u A S A u M T ™ ^ i STARTS I TONIGHT ™ cR E T U R N t 5e LIVING DEAD 9 FRIDAY m RStlS@S2.7S) M 7:lS ,9tlS B « ...A n ew s h a w t -a n d a M t f v o c it in g o n e a t t h it : **naulN nfcsfpriae~ inha gent.wryand 1h0i2StoSSK "O na M -N O m rnm m . Rm V ttftM lautfler, outrage, r aMontyPytan» style comedy ofmamere. “WMIy V M I|fF«r Hooks you from the start and newer lets oor —WKamWoN. Gm u r Niw s S tfvcn ‘Tasonatra r N 9 909I «WBB ■ FRIDAY (5:00 (u S2.75) ■ 7:20, 9:30 1:45,3:45,5:45,7:45,9:45 STARTS TOMTI VACSITY (5:15 fa 2.75^7:15-9:15 TV Watch 1 W e e k ly «II the TV info you need for the wo ok! MONDAY IN THE TEXAN H & C just doot call them ^^^■w hen you’re in trouble. PUKE ACADEMY Pi Union Thaofe* So* rfcH me 100 U.T. 1 I Non U.T. | | m m m h h h b s b s s ^ b Michael Caine | I Julie Waters in Educating R ita S's Friday, Saturday, Sunday Burdin* Aud. 9:40 pm 1 N U .T . 2 J 0 M on U .T. f t f l j ^ ^ H h ^ C l a s s i c Hitchcockian. twists and turns! ** S iH i — Slewarl Klein. WNEW-TV r i o n n B A R G A IN P R IC E if Mnn Al l shows beforf 6 pm ■ uyu H9 MON THRUFRI ISATURDAY 4 SUNDAY FIRST SHOW ONLYy !3 6757 AIRPORT BLVD PEER] BIG EI 1:3 0 ,3:30,3:30, 7:30,9:30 NO PASSES > SILVERADO [PGj 2 :00,4:4 0,7:20,10:00 DOLBY STEREO y e a r o r t h e d r a g o n ! 1:20,4:1 3,7:00,9:43 NO PASSES 892-2775 ' /ECHO lA/CCTr.ATC Q!\ 4P0R WESTGATE BLVD SILVERADO ® 2 :00,4:3 0 ,7 :0 0 ,9 :3 0 RETURN OF TIE LIVING BEARI 1:45, 3:45, S:4S, 7:45,9:45 SUMMER RENTAL I 1:3 0 ,3:30, S :30,7:30,9:30 454-2711 Friday and Saturday Union Thaatrv 3.00 U.T. IV ;. ?S ':■} 64 10:001 i 150 Non U.T. 1 M A R R J G D l A S H A D O W ■ spcctrajda».- '/ / I ' 009W "THREE CHEERS FOR'NERDSI ^ A |S| ' Thtsic g r w t j i u f l ! C ¿Trajines p e rfo rm a n c e is¡ co m e d y m a rw l k > 9 w M lah Show 11:55 pm---------- Friday A Saturday Union Theatre 2.00 U.T. 2.50 Non U.T. r n a a Recent Czech Anim ation Friday A Saturday at 7:30 a n I Sunday a t 2 A 7:20 pat 2J0U .T . ■ ■ ■ — jy n h o A L LaN54ov11i4S » ■ U k t i l M ^ • . V 1M U .T. IS O N m ltf. ■ V-' v - v. 4 7 ’ ¿ «A im i i «i» »«»•» 4* * * * * t + f W ’T.Vx l A y C V * U * w > . v i - r n » e t « « . 9 A 4 h ' . n * c * l i « . % * a a a > uU>« * , » » . * . * * * STUDENT DISCOUNT $1.00 OFF WITH STUDENT ID UVE! TONIGHT AT CHELSEA CHAPPY HOUR 4 -8 P.M . if VI INTKftTAINJINT 41 DANCING AT 9 P.M . WITH. . . TOBY BEAU A T C K N T E N N IA L THE QUICK A T « A W T O N C R E E K Great Late M ite Food Til 1 A .M . • BURGERS • FAJITAS •SALADS 150 UNUSUAL DRINKS g a r r e t J u b ó Okill Stop smoking.w s WE'RE FIGHTING FOR VOUR LIFE an Heart Association "My name’s Bob Welch. And I’m alcoholic. I used to think you had to be real old to be an alcoholic. It doesn’t matter how young or old you are, or what shape you’re in, alcoholism isa disease that can hit anyone who drinks. But at 2 3 , I’m the one who got the disease. It could have killed me. I’ve learned howto live without alcohol, and I’ve learned howto live. Now I have something that nobody can ever take away. And that’s my sobriety. If I stay away from alcohol, I'll win!” Get help like Bob Welch got. Cal The National Cound on Alcohola n biTbur Area. Or write NCA, 73 3 Third Avenue, N.Y., N.Y 10017 w o m e n s a p p a r e l For Your Fall Fashion Image Crossroads Center 183 & Burnet•4 5 2 -8 9 2 9 • M. Th. Sat 10-8oT, W. F 1 0 -6 * Sun 1-5 LO O K M Q FO R SO M E F U N ? How Many inches in an Enchilada? i i r r t ' 1 UMO OOJ r i l i OFF/C/Al 8#r<& AUl£4 •* «wcAWaaa» 1 — —■ ' i — —————— iewMMMB«^mawMamw«e^aWaae A n swer— alota. Especially at Batos. Because every Tuesday for lunch and dinner we’re featuring all ot our wonderful enchilada dishes for half price. So you get 2 for 1, or 8 for 4 or 1 for 1/2. O r however you want to work it. Y,u might even want to come by on Wednesday too, because we are offering the same half price deal on our fabulous fajita dishes. It’s uno heck of a deal that really measures up. Just bring in this advertisem ent to get the half price deal and chow down. W also go to great lengths to make you happy with our happy hour(s) from 3 to 7 and from 10 to 12, 7 days a week. A n d on weekends we gotta whole hunch of Mexican brunch for you from 11:30 to 2:30. BATB$ Batos Restaurante y Cantina • 26th & Rio Grande • 472-8091 Otter expires Wednesday, September 25, I985. CUT HERE THEN COME OUT THIS W EEKEND FOR A GOOD GAME OF TAG. PLAYED WITH C 0 2 POWERED PAINT PISTOLS, TAG IS AN OLD FAVORITE EVOLVED INTO AN EXCITING GAME FOR ADULTS. FAST, FUN, AND ACTION-PACKED, TAG IS FOR THE KID IN ALL OF US. W E’RE TAG-, TEXAS ADVENTURE GAM ES. CALL FOR RESER­ VATIONS NOW AT 454-3863. T H IS C O U PO N IS GOOD FOR $ 3 . 0 0 O F F T H E R E G U L A R L O W $ 12 .0 0 P R IC E . P L A Y E R S 1 M U S T B E 18 Y E A R S OLD OR O L D E R . COUPON E X P I R E S S E P T . I , 1985 T E X A S ADVENTURE G AM E S 4 5 4 - 3 8 6 3 / 474-5314 2915 Guadalupe A u4&h ¿ áame tie “&&U4 Clifford soys: "Students FREE Mon.-Thurs. " Fri. o n d Sot. A u q . 1 6 -1 7 MARCIA BALL, LOU ANN BARTON ANGELA STREHLI BANDS cover $6.00 M o n . A u q . 19 Super Drown Party Stars MEL DROWN ond friends Tues. Auq. 20 w . C. CLARK Blues Revue Wed. A u q . 21 ANGELA STREHLI Thurs. A u q . 22 ALAN HAYNES and the Stepchildren Fri. ond Sot. A u q . 23-24 KIM WILSON LOU ANN BARTON Coming Aug. 31— LEROI BROTHERS Sept. 5-7—ROOMFUL OF DLUES Stubb's B -B -Q Served D aily 6 ^ 4 » f t a>*in^ »4*it|i i* e i» m m ¿ 'JI B lutjA h i t o i k ^ i m w f i ^ A^ aiiaiam-w ie rNieie ii SHOOTING STAR TMRMtm « t r a ‘ on sate now at Tho Erwin $14 $ $13 - Tel Cantor and aN UTTM TickatCantars: Uaatinga Racords & Tapae (Northern** Man $ 2330 Guadalupe). Saar* (Hancock Cantor 0 Barton Croak Square). The Performing Arte Cantor. Joske's (Highland Mad). The Paramount Theatre, Fiddler'» Green Roc. Cantor (Fort Hood). $ SWTSU Strahan Coliaeum (Sen Mar­ cos). NO CAMERAS UTTM CHARGE-A-TICKET: S12M77-6000. Convenience charge: $1Meket on an phone order* $ 754/ticket at ak UTTM TicketCentor* SWSW&VSfe* ■ el San Marco*). CALENDAR 418 E. Sixth St. 488-0211 Fri. The Torpedos Sat,, Sun. Special Interest Anchoviaa 503-A E. Sbrth St. 474-8802 Fri., Sat. Duck Soup Antones 2915 Guadalupe St. 474-5314 Fri., Sat. Marcia Ball, Lou Ann Bar­ ton, Angela Strehli Austin Opera House 200 Academy Drive 443-7037 Sun. Alcatraz, Johnny Van Zandt Mon. KTXZ show Back Room 2015 E. Riverside Drive 441-4677 Fri. Jam Scam Sat. 14K Sun. W.C. Clark Bates Recital Hal 25th Street and East Campus Drive, UT campus *471-5401 Beach 2911 San Jacinto Blvd. 474-0605 Fri. Peter Beck, Voice of Reason, Subtropix Sat. Patients Sun. Ice Nine Cactus Cafe Texas Union, UT campus 471-4747 Fri., Sat. Nancy Griffith Chameleons Coffeehouse 607 Trinity St. 473-0493 Fri. Ruth and Gail Sat. Gail Lewis Sun. Lynn Bender Chelsea Street Pub and Grfl Centennial Center, 7301 Burnet Road 454-6434 Fri., Sat. Toby Beau Barton Creek Mai 327-7794 Fri., Sat. Chewy and the Twisters Continental Club 1315 S. Congress Ave. 443-7141 Fri. Alex Chilton, Wild Seeds, Doc­ tors’ Mob Sat. Omar and the Howlers Sun. Tommy Pierce and the Person­ a l s The Dol House Rock Garden 3612 S. Congress Ave. 447-6467 Fri. Beto y los Fairlaines Sat. Extreme Heat rang swoon 801 Barton Springs Road 477-1022 Fri., Sat. Bill Averbach Quartet Flying Circus 1025 Barton Springs Road 478-4585 Fri. Tail Gators Sat. Extreme Heat Sun. Rhythm Rats Hole in the WaN 2528 Guadalupe St. 472-5599 Fri. TimBuk3 Sat. The Commandos Sun. Don & Robert Hut’s Drive-In 807 W. Sixth St. 472-0693 Sun. Tex Thomas Thu. Angela Strehli Liberty Lunch 405 W. Second St. 477-0461 Fri. Neville Brothers Sat Malopoets Sun. Roy Buchanan Maggie Mae’s Lime Street Station 323 E. Sixth St. 478-8541 Sun. Brian Cutean Michael-Michaei 2531 W. Anderson Lane 451-0947 Fri. Joe Valentine Ragtime 311E. Sixth St. 472-9245 Fri. Cul de Sac Sat., Sun. No Compromise Soap Creek Saloon 1201 S. Congress Ave. 443-1966 Fri. LeRoi Brothers Sat. Vanguards Sun. Mark Luke Daniels South Bank 312 Barton Springs Road Fri. Dead Milkmen, Black Spring, Glass Eye Sun. Rudi Dadd Steamboat 403 E. Sixth St. 478-2912 Fri. Johnny Reno and the Sax Mani­ acs Sat. The Dishes Symphony Square 1101 Red River St. 476-4626 Texas Tavern Texas Union, UT campus 471-4747 Fri. Commandos Sat. Skank, Cargo Cult Photo by PAUL SCHMIDTZINSKY FILM Burdine Auditorium UT campus "Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands” at 7:30 p.m. Friday through Sunday "Educating Rita” at 9:40 p.m. Friday through Sunday Hogg Auditorium UT campus "Recent Czech Animations” at 7:30 p.m. Friday through Sunday and at 3 p.m. Sunday "I Married a Shadow” at 9:40 p.m. Friday through Sunday and at 5:15 p.m. Sunday "Caddyshack” at 11:45 p.m. Friday and Saturday Laguna Gloria Art Museum 3809 W. 35th St. 458-9191 "The Go-Between” and “Powers of 10” at 9 p.m. Friday in the outdoor ampitheater Toulouse 402 E. Sixth St. 478-0744 Paramount Theatre 713 Congress Ave. 472-5411 "Wuthering Heights" at 5:30 and 9:40 p.m. Friday "Little Foxes” at 7:30 p.m. Friday "The Big Sleep” at 5:40 and 9:45 p.m. Saturday and Sunday and at 1:10 p.m. Sunday "Key Largo" at 7:50 p.m. Saturday and Sunday and at 3:45 p.m. Sun­ day Texas Union Theatre UT campus "T ightrope” at 6 and 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday "Police Academy” at 8:10 p.m. Fri­ day and Saturday "Revenge of the Nerds” at 11:55 p.m Friday and Saturday "Reds” at 2 and 7 p.m. Sunday THEATER Capitol City Playhouse 214 W. Fourth St. 472-2966 “ West Side Story” opens Aug. 21 and runs through Oct. 5, with perfor­ m ances at 8 p.m. W ednesdays through Saturdays and at 2 p.m Sundays Chameleons Coffeehouse 607 Trinity St. 473-0493 SOMA Theatre presents "With a Bit of Lime” and "Fully Dressed," an evening of sex and violence in two one-act plays by Canadian play­ wright James Nadler. at 8 p m Tues­ days and W ednesdays through Aug 2 1 . Comedy Workshop 1415 Lavaca St. 473-2300 James Gregory, Peter Gaulky, Tracy Wright Dougherty Arts Center 1100 Barton Springs Road 477-5826 "Down at the End of Lonely Street” at 8 p.m. Thursdays through Sun­ days, through Sept. 1 Laff Stop 8120 Research Blvd., Suite 100 467-2333 Don Ware, Carl Wolfson, Bobby Gaylor Live Oak Productions 311 Nueces 472-5143 Utopia Theatre 20th Street and San Jacinto BouF ev id, UT campus 467-8082 "And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little” at 8 p.m. Thursdays through Satur­ days through Aug. 24 Winedale Inn Round Top, Texas (409)278-3530 "Othello" at 2 p.m. Saturday and 7:30 p.m. Sunday "Merry Wives of Windsor" at 7:30 p.m. Saturday "Comedy of Errors" at 2 p.m. Sun­ day and 7.30 p.m. Friday Zachary Scott Theatre 1421 W. Riverside Drive 476-0954 "The Wiz” at 8 p.m. Thursdays through Fridays and at 2:15 p.m. Sundays through Aug. 18 ZHker HNside Theatre ZHker Park Austin City Dance Fesitval at 8:00 p.m. Saturday "Boys of the C ity” at 8:30 p.m. Sun­ day AIR Gallery 918 W. 12th St. 4776707 "Nude, Naked and Unclothed Vi­ sions of the Undraped Body' through August Amdur Gallery 307 E. Fifth St. 476-8960 “ Hiroshima: Sacrilege and Treason " paintings by David Hefner, through Sept. 14 Eagle’s Nest 1202 San Antonio 453-2012 “ Summer Fine Crafts Show" through Aug 30 Hid Country Weavers 912 W. 12th St. "Fiber C ool” through Sept 10 Kerbey Lane Gallery 1105 W. 42nd St. 454-7054 Carved birds by R.T Allen and early Texas pine furniture by Rick Bauer through August Old Bastrop Opera House 711 Bastrop St., Bastrop 3216283 "The Corpse in the Dressing Room” 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Sun­ days through August Laguna Gloria Art Museum 3809 W. 35th St. 4586191 Works by Hollis Frampton runs through Sept 29 Paramount Theatre 713 Congress Ave. 472-5411 Ritz Theatre 320 E. Sixth St. 4796054 Esther’s Follies pays homage to the Aqua Festival with a variety of skits At 9 p.m. Friday and at 9 and 11 p.m. Saturday. Matrix Gallery 912 W. 12th St. 479-0068 Annual "Pecasm am a” show through Sept 7 O’Brien’s Cafe 624 W. 34th St. 451-9665 Paintings and drawings by Frank Hensey through August By DAVID MATHER and ELLEN WILLIAMS Stephanie’s: the Brilliant White Place "W hat are you staring at?" "Oh, I'm sorry, I thought you were a mannequin." This conversation never actually took place at Stephanie's Restaurant & Bar — but it might as well have. The setting: one of those legendary W ednesday nights in this city of Au s­ tin. W e (six of us) have all been plan­ ning for some time to make an expe­ dition to Stephanie's, 508 E. Sixth St. After all, w e've heard so much about the place. You know, the fash­ ionable place to be. An American cul­ tural phenomenon. So, donning our best worst clothes — jeans with a hole in the knee, faded flannel shirts, Budweiser T-shirt and gym shorts (not all at the same time, of course; don't be silly) — we venture forthward. It is 9:45 p.m. Austin time. In Lon­ don, people w on't be waking up for another two hours; that's irrelevant, of course, but you never know when som eone’s going to ask you these things. In Austin, our G ang of Six has just spotted what appears to be the exterior of one Stephanie's Restaurant & Bar. So what does it look like? Well, it's a brilliant white place with a brilliant white patio filled with brilliant white people. Br ef scare — we hear a comment: "Sh o u ld we let 'em in ?" This has been uttered by one of the G Q men clad in brilliant white. (Real symbolic, huh?) Inside: lots of color. Plaid shorts. Blow-dried hair. Some of it bullet­ proof. W e all feel very, very honored to have All the Beautiful People stare at us. W e conclude that they must be bored. Can't imagine why. The music. It's loud. H o w loud is it? It's so loud you'd have to be deaf to "get into the groove." Strangely, we are still falling asleep. The drinks. Ellen's water is pretty tasty; it has lots of ice and stuff. D a ­ vid's water also is reasonably good for the price. ally inspired by the youthful, raw en­ ergy of Wham! The sights. W here else can you see a waitress balance an entire tray of glasses in one hand while twirling around and hugging a girlfriend with the other arm? Com e to think of it, where else can you also see the wait­ ress give us our bill immediately, with a "H a v e a pleasant day elsewhere" look? The people. M en with genuine stud qualities, the kind of men you expect to use pickup lines like " I can change a $90 bill." W om en with rotating wardrobes — wear it once, then send it back. W e w ould like to have interesting philosophical discussions with each and every one of them, but there just isn't time. Pity. Actually, it's hard to be philosophi­ cal when you're dancing. W e aren't, but they are. O bviously, they are in a Partying M ood, the kind of m ood usu­ By now, we realize that we have spent an entire hour writing and pass­ ing notes around the table. W h y have we been passing notes? Because shouting over the music would be too easy. So would leaving. But how much education can you take in one evening? You know, here we are at the Mecca of Beauty. It takes time to learn to be beautiful. You have to get all your pores sandpapered off and everything. So, gathering our vo­ luminous notes on fashion, dance steps and the American plastic indus­ try, we make our exit. All in all, the evening hasn't been a total loss. W e were served one round of drinks, and we have come a little bit closer to understanding how )ay Gatsby lived his life. But we still think the people in London had all the fun.□ 14, m s Keep your working parts in order. American Heart Association WERE FIGHTING FOR NOURUFE Summer Clearance (ThrouqH S a tu rd a y , A ugust 31 St.) All Travel Books 4 Maps 20% off Shirts 34» Rugby Shirts Terramar Boatneck 22** Id9-9 29» 19?? Hawaiian Shirts 2*** 16 99 Cham bray Luqqaqe Lowe Lite 3 pc. set 159» 99°* Bookpack Ranger Daypack 3 ? » 27*? Patagonia Shorts ¿ 4*? 19* Baggies Stand'Ups 3F» 24» 29» * 24» Oolong Rugby Shorts 19» 15» Swiss Army Knives Classic U » 8 * Champion 4 2 *3 2 * Cutters AN rag. strgth. 4 r 2 t e r 5 * Campinq Equipment Flashlight tent íe s » 99» Twilight sleeping bag 145» 99» >39» 2 7 * Globetrotter stove Lowe Appalacian Frm. Pk 146» 99» Pentax Binoculars 14?» 87* Selected Sandals Shoes ¿ Boots on sale All Hats 2 0 % off Gifts 4 Housewares 2 2 ^ * 16 9§ Official Horseshoe Sets 39^? 19» Framed Bird Prints Split Oak Picnic Baskets 2ér*P 19» WHt.Mtn. Ice Cream Freezers 7 9 » 65» I Tx. Running Short I S » 1 1 3 » Flashlights Pelilite ¿ 4 * 18» Kelli tes 2 3 » 19» Summer Specials Squeeze Whole Earth " Lite Zippo Compass 14? 3 « 6 (limit one eaT hole Earth Provision C a 8868 Research Btvd 458-63331 2410 San Antonio St 478-1577 4006 South Lamar 444-9975 mrT By DAVID MENCONI Mencon signs off — for good "M y all m y everything, and now even that is gone But still I try to sing, and the same old words still com e W hen will there be something to take the place of all this ? O r was it me that died, and the rest of the scene still exists I just don't know which way to g o ..." — The Big Boys If you've read this column with any sort of regularity, you may have w on­ dered w ho I am and what were my motivations for doing this. Even if you haven't, I'm gonna tell you now, since this last colum n is prime time for in­ dulgences. As far as basics, I'm a 24- year-old journalism graduate student. After getting an undergrad English de­ gree at Southwestern University, I came here in January 1984 with no clear idea of what I really wanted to do other than write. Not quite two years later, I'm leaving with no clear idea of what I really want to do other than write. In the meantime, I wrote a master's thesis on the Armadillo W orld Head­ quarters, an Austin music institution you may or may not have heard of. In either case, you should go read it; you might learn something, and it's a pret­ ty quick read. It's called "M u sic, M e ­ dia and the Metropolis: The Case of Austin's Armadillo W orld Headquar­ ters," and copies are in PCL, the Bark­ er Texas History Center and the Austin History Center. Yes, self-promotion is an ugly thing, but after working on it for a year, I don't want it to just gather dust. I first began dabbling in music criti­ cism in 1981 in Boulder, Colo. Every­ one seems to have at least one year of college where they flip out, and that was mine. W hile it was all very silly, I spent most of that year in a state of clinical depression. For solace, I turned to music. I'd always had an in­ terest in it, but that year it became passionate. Living within a block of three used-record stores, which I scoured on almost a daily basis, at least made it fairly cheap. I actually started writing about m u­ sic the following year at Southwest­ ern, doing record reviews for the school paper. Having grown up a typ­ ical suburban child of the '70s, my tastes grew from what I heard on A M radio. True, the '7 0 s produced some awful sludge, but when I started tun­ ing in my portable radio late at night, you could still hear Sly and the Family Stone or Motown, in between Elton John and Three D o g Night (both of which I feel a special fondness for, in a guilty-pleasure sort of way). So my preferences have always been pretty mainstream, at least compared to most critics. Having also grown up reading Roll­ ing Stone, my critical impressions came from the vintage criticism of that m agazine's first generation of writers, and the belief that music criticism in­ volves a great deal of pop sociology. To me, the mark of a good critic is how well he can communicate about music that deeply affects him; that moment of discovery is the reason we do this, after all. Based on my own criteria, I suppose I haven't laeen terri­ bly successful, since most people just remember the slags I've written. There are times when it's so frustrating, hearing something so perfect, so right, and being unable to communicate that feeling. W ords can be such an inadequate medium. I've tried to make this column en­ tertaining, provocative and occasion­ ally controversial, and I appreciate the feedback I've gotten, both positive and negative. It's kept me from feeling as though I'm writing in a void. But really, I've written this column more for myself than anyone else. It's some­ times been a lot of trouble (at times far more than it was worth), but it's also become one of the constants of my life at the University, and I'll miss it. It's been fun, being able to spout off every week about whatever I felt like, and actually have other people pay attention. Few people get a forum like this, and I'm grateful. I thought about taking a lot of vin­ dictive cheap shots on the way out (and believe me, there are a few I could take), but I'm just not feeling very self-righteous or angry lately. Re­ flective, perhaps, and very nostalgic. It's hard to accept that it's time to leave so soon. But that's a college newspaper's two-edged sword: con­ stant turnover, new blood. to the So finally, without getting any more maudlin than is absolutely necessary, a few individual thanks: to Brian Zab- cik, w ho has somehow managed to be both my harshest critic and best friend; staff at Waterloo Records, for record loans and invalu­ able advice; to Leigh Watson, for lis­ tening; to Ron Muller, w ho first opened my eyes to the local music scene and refused to ever take me or my rantings seriously; and to you, for getting this far without quitting in dis­ gust. So that's it. I don't especially want to leave Austin, and I genuinely love all the great music and bands here. I'm not sure where I'm going or what I'll be doing, and I may even wind up somewhere nearby. But the real world beckons, as it inevitably does. I sup­ pose that writing about music has been my attempt to deny the responsi­ bility of growing up, just as much as rock is, ultimately, about not wanting to grow up. Paradoxically, that is the m usic's special strength and also its fatal flaw. If I've left you with a sense of my ow n version of this and other contradictions, well, that's all any crit­ ic can ever hope to achieve. — 30 — FrWay, AngMt ) t , I9t5 Nm e 19 Unfortunate Obsession, Part II Roommates often do things the other roommate does not un­ derstand. Mark's sudden and uncontrollable urge to find Abbie flip the damn thing over." lessly. "What should I do?" he said help­ By ANDREW ALARID Art by DEVIN BORDEN Hoffman was one of them. I did not know why Mark wanted to talk to the man. I've seen him act this way be­ fore; it was when Suzie Riddle told him to get lost. He searched west campus endlessly for her, asking ev­ eryone on the street where she could be found. Now it was Abbie Hoffman he couldn't get out of his young, Re­ publican mind. A bus full of well-scrubbed faces from Baylor University pulled up to the curb. Before the passengers could disembark, Mark hopped aboard and screamed at the visiting students in­ side: "Anybody in here know where Abbie Hoffman lives?" "Mark," I said, climbing to the steps of the bus. "I said I would help you find him." Mark turned to me slowly and said, "Sit down." He said it with such pri­ mal conviction I didn't argue. The young woman sitting next to me with a large, pink bow wrapped around her neck asked, "Is this a joke? Is he a drama student?" "No, business," I replied. Half the bus kept asking who Abbie Hoffman was. This infuriated Mark, as I knew it would. "You stupid idiots!" Mark yelled over and over. "I bet you don't even know we fought a war in Vietnam!" "I don't know who you guys are," said the driver, a union woman with big arms and a Rocky Mountain High T-shirt, "but I want you off the bus now." "I know who Abbie Hoffman is," said a voice from the back of the bus. "I even know where he is. We just saw him." "What?" Mark said suspiciously. "Great, a wise guy," I said. "Abbie Hoffman," continued the voice. "I said we just saw him." T he woman with the pink bow turned to me. "That's Clay Hunn. He almost got kicked out of school once for spray painting Rent is Torture on the dorm walls." "Where did you see him?" asked Mark. Route 2222." it's him?" "About five miles out of town on Mark paused. "H ow do you know "I don't know," said the voice, trying not to laugh. "H e was yelling at all the cars passing by ... something about a groovy revolution and death to the swine in the pig nation." Mark almost exploded. "That's him!" Then, without sparing a sec­ ond, he pulled out a pistol, a Beretta 9mm, from his coat pocket and com­ mandeered the bus and everyone on it. "Mark!" I yelled. "Where did you get the gun?" The driver remained unintimidated behind a pair of dark Ray Bans. "Get going," Mark said calmly, fir­ ing a shot through the windshield. The people in back tried escaping through the rear emergency door, but Mark made them sit back down by telling them if they moved again he would kill them. Under her breath, the driver mumbled strange curse words as she started up the bus. "D id he see this in a movie?" asked the woman next to me. She took deep breaths to control her fear, but she couldn't stop drops of perspiration from staining the underarms of her silk blouse. "H e likes to watch the A-Team," I replied. I couldn't believe what was happening. "Whatever you do," whispered a psychology student behind us, "if he asks for his mother or father, don't lis­ ten to him. It means he's suicidal and wants to kill himself in front of his par­ ents." M ark reached into the glove compartment, which was full of cassette tapes, and looked at the various titles. "You can only talk about the '60s," the driver said, "but I was there." "W ho wanted to be there?" Mark said. He then pointed his gun at me. "M y friend here says he's glad he missed the '60s because of the clothes like the bell-bottom they wore, jeans." I didn't even try to deny it. What's the point, I thought. And seeing a menacing look deepen Mark's dim­ pled into the wide grin of a mis­ chievous kid in the locker room, I knew we were in for trouble. "Put this one in," he said, handing the driver a cassette. She took the tape and placed it in the jambox under her seat. The speakers blew out a perky rendition of Bob Dylan's "Blowing in the Wind." Mark made everyone sing along by using the pistol as a conduc­ tor's stick. I refused to sing one note, even though I knew all the words. Everyone seemed to know the words. And those who didn't had no problem following along. The tune was inescapable. I wondered why we were all familiar with the song. It wasn't significant, I finally concluded; this gang, I was sure, knew the theme song to "Gilli- gan's Island" by memory, too. It was late in the morning, ap­ proaching noon, as the bus sped down Route 2222. Surprisingly, but then again, maybe not, Mark man­ aged to charm almost everybody on the bus. He seemed so happy under­ taking this quest. His ebullience eased our fear. "Let's sing 'Sympathy for the Devil' next," shouted Clay Hunn. T he bus driver remained un­ moved. Her heavy hiking boot gradually pushed the accelera­ tor to the floor, a ploy to get the bus picked up on police radar. She round­ ed the next curve at such an incredi­ ble speed that the left side of the bus was lifted off the ground and everyone inside screamed. "Mark," I yelled. "She's going to "Make her slow down." "H o w ?" "I don't know. Tell her if she doesn't ease up on the gas, you're going to shoot the girl next to me." The young woman gasped, and when Mark put the revolver to her ear, she began to whimper. Super, I thought, now I'm an accomplice. Stepdaddy is not going to like this. The bus slowed down. And my sense of time slowed, too, as if my internal clock was somehow attached to the accelerator. The voice in the jambox became a low-pitched mourn. For a moment, I believed ev­ erything I saw before me would turn into a tableau. The bus careened into a large oak tree and time snapped back to the present. "Goddamn it," said the driver, get­ ting out to inspect the damage. Mark scrambled out and ran into the woods screaming, "N ow I'll never find Abbie Hoffman.” I ran after him, following the sounds of his footsteps, leaping over stones and shrubbery. A low-hanging limb caught me in the face and knocked me to the ground. My skull cracked open against a rock, sending half my brain into the past and the other half into the future. I could no longer focus clearly. I saw my brain neurons on what looked like a brightly colored vi­ deo screen circling downward, danc­ ing. It took all my effort to stand and walk. burned in the center of the room. There were more, as Mark put it, "dead spirits" roaming around. A squatting woman cradled a silent baby. I didn't see Mark, but I heard him speak. "Anybody here seen Abbie Hoff­ man?" he said loudly. His voice seemed too aggressive against the si­ lence. No one answered. It was clear they were hiding something. The earth began to rumble. Bits of the ceiling fell. A stone wall cracked open and split apart. An oversized Tonka truck, customized to look like a lobster, roared through the opening. ¥ he lobster-truck stretched out a mechanical claw and seized Mark by the waist. The vehicle retreated quickly, and the wall closed in a clearing in the woods, I shuf­ fled mindlessly through an en­ campment of aging hippies. Though I couldn't see Mark, I felt his presence by my side. A circle of bearded men sat quietly around a fire. I saw tents and makeshift houses. Liv­ ing in the city, only five miles away, I never heard anything about this place. It looked like these people had been living here for a long time. Was this Abbie Hoffman's utopian community, or was it a reservation for old hippies who refused to become New Agers? As we walked past the circle of men, I pointed to one of them and said, "Is that Abbie Hoffman?" Mark shook his head. I then realized that I didn't even know what Abbie Hoff­ man looked like. All I knew, all that I could remember, was that he was an obscure figure out of the past — a name I had heard only once or twice. Then the faces around the campfire changed. I recognized a few; they were faces I had seen before, or possi­ bly, knew very well. Yet there were others who had no faces at all, their features being undistinguishable. I could swear I saw my third-grade teacher, Mrs. Hamilton. My vision blurred. The scene shift­ ed to night, and I found myself in an underground dwelling, a large, open room with a dirt floor. The walls were made of heavy stone bricks. The high ceiling stretched past my vision. A fire shut in front of my face. Not being able to follow Mark physically, I sent my mind's eye after him. My senses raced through the cracks in the mortar into another room, a room of dark­ ness. I wanted to see something. I tried desperately to picture Abbie Hoffman. A man with a beard? Yes, I saw a man with a beard. He was talk­ ing to me now, and not to Mark. But what did he say? Why am I dreaming this? I don't know anything about Ab­ bie Hoffman. Maybe I am in someone else's dream. I showed him the photos I carried in my wallet. He said they were nice, and, with a smile, threw green, explosive slime all over me and the lobster-truck, which I gathered was his home. With a shrug of the shoulders, he was destroying what he loved, so simply, so casually, as if homes were easy to come by. And I would be destroyed, too, if I did not run fast enough. I fled from the under­ ground dwelling, climbing upward through a jagged opening in the rock. The scene scared me. I found myself roaming the hippie encamp­ ment aimlessly. There was no one here I cared to talk to, and nothing to entertain myself with. So I began to walk. About a mile down the road I found an appliance store. A large black and white TV was on display in the front window. I sat on the side­ "Hillstreet walk and watched a Blues" rerun. Geraldine Ferraro was the guest star. She was, if I remember my history correctly, the first female on a presidential ticket. Like Reagan, she used to act. A little sex kitten, she was. In this episode, she was blown across the room by a sawed-off shot­ gun. She did a convincing job, too. Blood spurted everywhere. During a commercial, I noticed my reflection in the window. My hair was caked with dried blood. Instead of growing my hair long, I thought, I'll shave it all off and dye my scalp blue. Then something terrible happened. A jeep full of fraternity boys pulled up to the curb. One of them screamed, the veins in his neck almost bursting, "You faggot! I'll kill yo u r But before he bashed my head in, I noticed a Keep America Beau­ tiful bumper sticker on the jeep. Then I felt my skull crack open, again. This time my brain neurons scattered like roaches into dark crevices no neurosurgeon could ever find. And that is where they stayed, hiding. Nev­ er venturing out to remember, or to think or act. Although I'm bitter, I do not blame Mark entirely for what happened. It wasn't his fault my head got bashed twice in one day. We still keep in touch. After he was released from prison on an early probation, he moved to Dallas and secured a job as ^ the doorman at the Stark Club. Maybe I'm getting him confused with some­ one else. He could be a real estate broker or a market consultant. It's hard to remember. I work for my stepfather now, some­ thing I vowed I would never do. But I had a hard time finishing college, and only my stepfather was willing to hire me with half a brain. Half a brain, I have discovered, is all I need for the job, anyway. Everyday, as I drive home on the freeway that encircles the metroplex, I think about the frats trying to keep America beautiful. This causes me td*~ roll down my window and litter. And usually, I forget which direction I'm going, but I know the freeway wilt eventually lead me home. I can relax as I sit behind the wheel, letting my mind wander to dark rooms of which I am no longer afraid, and I enjoy the QJ ride. I. . | .y T i j .i||. , | ,i ! ■mm i ■ i ■CADEMY'S INCREDIBLE SALE BACK TO SCHOOL OR ANYWHERE ELSE! Men's, Boy's and Student Wrangler & Dakota JEANS Men's 6 Pack TUBE SOCKS Regular $5.88 SALE$3 “ Regular $12.88 SALE * 9 “ All Other Men's, Boy's A Students Denim, Twill A Cord JEANS sa l e$5 m SALE BAND GLOVES $4.99 Value 18 Men's KNIT SHIRTS Special Purchase $6*6 Boy's Camo "T '"s MUSCLE SHIRTS Regular $2.88 to $3.44 SALE9! " SPECIAL PURCHASE SOCKS Vi PRICE Boy's Yellow VINYL RAIN COATS Regular $4.88 s a ie $3 “ HIGH TOP KANGAROO CANVAS SHOES $£99 Boy's 6 Pack TUBE SOCKS Regular $3.88 SALE * 2 “ Texsport Bravo 4' DAY > PACK Regular $6.66 $A99 SALE $4 U.S. Camper NYLON BACK PACK Musette Style Regular $2.88 $|88 SALE Children's Adidas Clipper RUNNING SHOE Regular $19.99 SALE * 9 ” GYM SHORTS Only5! 66 and up Men's Puma Cyclone II RUNNING SHOE Regular $19.99 SALE * 9 " ACADEMY Stores to Serve You The Most Interesting Store Open All Day Sunday 10% Discount to Retired Senior Gtizens 4103 N.IH35 603 E. Ben White Blvd. 8103 Research Blvd. 6601 Burnet Rd.