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May 8,1981 / Montrose Voice / Page 15
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TWT-3223 Smith «103—527-yiu
RESTAURANTS
.BAJA*S—402 Lovett-527-9866
•BAR-B-QUE RANCH-1525 We.
heimer—529-2289
Good Texas
Barbeque at the
Bar-B-Que Ranch.
• CRON1ES-1322 Westheimer-
522-1521
Cronies has new
Summer Menu!
See our ad elsewhere this issue.
After-hours Fri. & Sat. evenings;
champagne brunch Sun. afternoons.
Liver & Onion
Special Wednesday
at the Steamtable.
See our ad elsewhere this issue.
iSTEAK 'N' EGG-4231 Montrose-528-
8135
ROOMMATES
Roommate
Connections
Share expenses, build a
friendship.
We provide the referrals with
references, photos and all
appropriate information.
Professional Screening.
526-8002.
SCHOOLS
• BLUE WATER Diving School-
Weatheimer at Montrose—528-0634
SHOPS
•AI L THAT GLITTERS (gilts)—4325
Montrose-5226976
■FACETS (gifts)—l412 Westheimer—
523-1412
• TEXAs~jUNK_CO.-Taft al
Welch-524-6257
Come Shop With
Us—Texas Junk
Company.
See our ad elsewhere this issue.
TALENT AGENCIES
GARY CHASON & Associates-2620
Fountainview #222—789-4003
LONE STAR Syndicate (talent
agency)—527 Westheimer—528-6556
Lone Star Syndicate
Texas co-op talent referral & directory
tours, promo concepts, career direction,
full phase production, concerts, theme
parties, special projects, private classes
in improvisation, comedy and acting
Call Tina, 528*6556, 10 to 5
Plus art direction graphic deisgn,
logos, pasteup, photographer, ad
campaigns, by appointment only
TAXI
UNITED Cab—759-1411
United Cab, in
Montrose and
throughout
Houston, 24 hours.
759-1441.
TRAVEL AGENCY
PRESTIGE Travel-3205 Montrose—522-1922
Prestige Travel
Agency in Montrose.
See our ad elsewhere this issue.
TYPESETTING
& GRAPHICS
•MONTROSE VOICE Typesetting—
3520 Montrose, #227—529-8490
Fast, accurate,
computerized
typesetting—and
printing.
Small and large jobs. Publications,
catalogs, brochures, forms. We
specialize in complicated, unusual
projects. Let us give you a bid.
YARD & GARAGE
SALES
HAVING A YARD SALE next week?
Get it listed here in the Voice's new Yard
Sale listings. Call 529-8490 by 7pm
Tuesday to De in Friday's paper.
MontroseArt
Art This Week
in Montrose
(Friday, May8, through
Thursday, May 14)
Art League of Houston—1953
Montrose—523-9530
All Media Open Show 10:00am-
4:00pm Friday, noon-4:00pm Saturday, 10:00am-4:00pm Monday
through Thursday.
Boulevard Gallery—1526
Heights Blvd.—869-8733
Helen Orman collages, Elizabeth
Hedley paintings, Tina Escudero
weavings and Gary Huntoon pottery 10am-5pm Friday and Saturday, llam-5pm Sunday and
10am-5pm Tuesday through
Thursday.
Contemporary Arts Museum— 5216 Montrose Blvd.—
526-3129
The Americans: The Landscape
photography exhibition in the
Upstairs Gallery; Sylvia Mangold: Nocturnal Paintings in the
Downstairs Gallery, 10:00am-
5:00pm Friday and Saturday,
noon-6:00pm Sunday, and
10:00am-5:00pm Tuesday
through Thursday.
Cronnin Gallery —2008
Peden-526-2548
Richard Avedon: Fashions and
Portraits 10am-5pm Friday, Saturday and Tuesday through
Thursday.
Fine Arts & Collectors
Gallery—1776 Montrose—
527-8367
Ira Horvitz and Ron Ratliff oils
and Andreas Hadjialexiou pastels 10am-5pm Friday, Saturday
and Tuesday through Thursday.
Harris Gallery-HOO Bissonnet—522-9116
Larry SamuelB paintings and
prints 10am-6pm Friday and Saturday, l-6pm Sunday, and 10am-
6pm Tuesday through Thursday.
Hooks-Epstein Gallery—
1200 Bissonnet-522-0718
Polychrome wood sculpture and
watercolors by Jacqueline Fogel
daily Friday, Saturday and Tuesday through Thursday.
James-Atkinson Gallery—
2015 W. Gray-527-8061
French and American Impressionists 10:30am-4pm daily
except Sunday and Monday.
L'Atelier —1513 W. Alabama—522-7988
Works by Dan Allison, Gary
Huntoon and Marie Letermie
llam-6pm Friday, Saturday,
Sunday and Thursday.
Mancini Gallery of Pho-
tograpy—The Plaza, 5020
Montrose—522-2949
Joan Myers photographs 10am-
5pm daily except Sunday and
Monday.
Moody Gallery—2015-J W.
Gray-526-9911
Artists from the Linda Durham
Gallery of Santa Fe 10am-5:30pm
Friday and Saturday.
Museum of Fine Arts—1001
Bissonnet-526-1361
Herbert Ferber: Sculpture, Painting Drawing 1945-1980: Upper
Brown GaUery.New Accessions
in Photography: Lower Brown
Corridor; Ambroise Vollard:
Library Gallery (Friday, Saturday and Sunday only); Frederick
Sommer at 75: A Retrospective
photography: Romansky Galleries (Friday, Saturday and Sunday only); Early Chinese Art
Selections from the Asia House
Rockefeller Collection: Lovett
Oriental Gallery; Impressionist
and Post-Impressionist Selections from the Beck Collection:
Jones and Masterson Galleries;
10:00am-5:00pm Friday and Saturday, noon-6:00pm Sunday, and
I0:00am-5:00pm Tuesday
through Thursday.
Rothko Chapel—1409 Sul
Ross
Mark Rothko abstract expressionist paintings and Barnett
Newman's Broken Obelisk
sculpture.
St. Thomas University Art
Dept. Gallery-3900 Yoa-
kum-522-7911 ext. 292
Graduating Seniors Art Show
10am-4:30pm Friday and Saturday, 12-6pm Sunday and 10am-
4:30 Monday through Thursday.
Speedby's Old Print Gal-
lery-2015-F W. Gray-521-
9652
Will Bradley art nouveau prints
10am-5pm daily except Sunday
and Monday.
Texas Gallery—2012 Peden—
524-1593
Houses for Sale architectural
designs llam-6pm daily except
Sunday and Monday.
Samantha Reads Your Stars
If you woro born this wook: Keep your quarters jiggling in your
pockets, and tempting opportunities may pay off. When opportunity calls, catch it on the first wink. Later, the moon is up to tricks.
perhaps some of them as exciting as the one you had last week.
ARIES: You could be plagued by foot-in-mouth disease in weekend
ahead if you're not careful. Avoid being too critical, and try to be
tactful instead of blunt. Days include financial news and an
unexpected errand or two.
TAURU5: Weekend tip-toes in with secrets. Don't believe everything you hear, even if it is from a Hunk. Examine your material
and personal priorities thoroughly; you may need to make a few
switches. (That's "switches," not "swishes.") Days end in a flurry,
a frazzle and a flip.
GEMINI: You've been burning the candle at both ends again.
Watch it, or your swash may buckle, Give yourself a present and
get in some well-deserved R&R. Then you'll be ready when latter
days bring lots of excitement.
MOONCHILD: Your weekend may hold tricky potholes and disguised pitfalls. Use of good judgment is important, and you
should take nothing for granted. Later, look for an instant replay.
Some weekends are like that.
LEO: Keep an eye on a new person in your life. This one will
assume greater and greater importance as time goes on. Later,
you may be invited to come aB your are.
VIRGO: Past experiences can help you realize that a terrible tornado is just a littl ol' tempest in a teapot. Stand firm; you don't
have to head for the root cellar! However, you could see a riptide of
emotions.
LIBRA: Fulfill a certain responsibility and you'll receive an unexpected bonus. Intricate social maneuverings require perception to
figure out. Not a hard job for you. Later, good vibes carry you
through the weekend.
SCORPIO: Your ESP may be fairly strong, even if you just call it
"hunches." You sometimes go to extremes in being either too
trusting or too skeptical. You are often guided more by your emotions than by logic, although your mind is definitely one of the
best there is.
SAGITTARIUS: You sometimes butt your head against stone walls.
And you may be doing just that this weekend, at a certain
prospect.
CAPRICORN: Objectivity is important this weekend, in all your
affairs of the heart. Your subjective impressions are too likely to
. be colored. Step back and be pleasantly surprised.
AQUARIUS: Love makes a request of you and, if you're as smart as
I suspect, you'll answer affirmatively. Your current fantasy may
be in for a shock treatment.
PISCES: Confusing news arrives; rely on your common sense to
help straighten it out. Then, don't be put off by one who doesn't
seem to care which way the wind blows—that's all a facade. Days
close happily.
Trend
Gay political strength to
continue growing
"Trend" is column that each issue gives you a final thought to
ponder. This column is a joint effort by the staffof the VOICE.
A prediction: Ronald Reagan, if he survives the
full four years in office, will decide not to seek reelection. Despite four years of conservative government, the country, it will be obvious, will be more
liberal—socially—than ever.
Despite the fact that the Reagan administration
will have performed miracles with the American
economy, people will be climbing all over each
other (statement borrowed from author Gore Vidal)
to vote Democratic—perhaps Kennedy in the
national Presidential election.
There will be an unsuccessful draft-Carter
movement.
Democrats will also do well on the local level, but
not as they will in national elections.
Will gay people stay politically organized over
the next few years? Yes, more so than ever, in the
major cities.
In San Francisco, Houston, Dallas, Los Angeles,
New York and Seattle, it will be impossible to win a
city-wide election if your opponent has the unified
endorsement of the local gay political groups.
Also in Washington, Miami and Philadelphia,
gay political power will be strong, but reactionary
forces making gay people an issue will still be able
to win some elections in those cities.
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