° x i ‘ U O 4 6 U 1 [ • j n e / u j , q n S ^ Í° r ? * J8 i m * « u u j o i W ^ 4 t n c M ^ ÍU« ^ ■ 4 s ^ m u 4 n o s . UI 1 9 1 0 Vol. 88, NO. lo u ------- The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Wednesday, July 12,1989 25C Haddican accuses Cunningham of ‘conspiracy’ By MINDY BROWN Daily Texan Staff By withholding information from the public, UT President William Cunningham and members of a committee on undergraduate educa­ tion have formed a “conspiracy” against students, the Students' As­ sociation president said Tuesday. Jerry Haddican, SA president, said he is angry because recommen­ dations from Cunningham's 14- member Ad Hoc Committee on Un­ dergraduate Education have been kept from UT students. “Supposedly, this committee was to benefit the students," Haddican said. “They're keeping everything quiet — it's like a conspiracy." More than a year ago, Cunning­ ham asked James Doluisio, dean of the College of Pharmacy, to chair a committee to investigate ways to improve undergraduate education. The committee has since submitted three reports to Cunningham and expects to submit two more by the end of the summer, Doluisio said. Haddican, a speech senior, said the committee should be more "open" — discussing recommenda­ tions and goals with the students. “I am highly suspicious when someone tells me they are doing something in my best interest and won't tell me what they're doing," he said. Cunningham was out of town and unavailable for comment Tues­ day. James Anantha, one of two stu­ dents on the committee, said the group is effective but it suffers from "one control of information:" Cun­ ningham. “The problems are that the com­ mittee needs to be more vocal, more should have they public and searched for more representatives — such as m inorities," said A nan­ tha, a governm ent senior. "The is­ sues the committee is being given to examine are only the perceptions of Cunningham . There is a lot more to be looked at." into four Doluisio said the committee is di­ subcommittees vided which examine different topics — course scheduling and capacity, a transfer student policy, the quality of UT instruction and enrollm ent policies. The subcommittees write propos­ als and the full committee examines these proposals before recom m end­ ing them to Cunningham , he said. The committee already has sub­ mitted three proposals to the presi­ recom m ending — among dent, other changes — that: ■ The committee's course prere­ quisite recom m endations should be applied first to courses that are "chronically oversubscribed." ■ Scheduling of required “ impact courses" — courses frequently used to satisfy basic education require­ m ents — be given first priority for departm ental funding. ■ An assessment be made to determine the feasibility of offering entering freshmen a three-semester schedule guarantee. ■ Undergraduates be allowed to register for no more than 17 hours during early registration unless de­ gree plans in the student's college prescribe a greater number of hours. Anantha, who serves on the sub­ committee examining the quality of instruction in UT courses, said once a proposal is approved by Doluisio, it is given to Cunningham, who has See Haddican, page 2 Committee receives deadline on workers’ comp proposal By KIM HORNER Daily Texan Staff A conference committee must produce a bill by Friday on workers' compensation — an issue crippled for months by divided lawmakers — to ensure passage through the Legislature, Texas House Speaker Gib Lewis said Tuesday. And d e sp ite op tim ism by lawmakers that a speedy resolution can be achieved, Gov. Bill Clements said Tuesday he will call another special session this fall — whether or not workers' compensation is re­ solved. Lewis said he and Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby will intervene on the work­ ers' compensation issue to produce a bill before the weekend. "The lieutenant governor and I met to set a [Saturday] deadline and hopefully we can reach it," he said. “All conferees are very positive they will give us a bill." The House, which favors limiting injured workers' rights to a jury tri­ al, is in a tug-of-war with the Sen­ ate, which supports allow ing appeals to a jury trial. Clements said he had not heard about the deadline, but he knows the committee is working diligently to come up with a compromise. “I hear from Lieutenant Governor Hobby that they are going to be working on it far into the night un­ der his eagle-eye," he said. Nevertheless, Clements said he is “very confident" he will call anoth­ er special session although he did not say what issues the session would include if workers compen­ sation is settled before July 19 when the current session ends. Lewis said the conference com­ mittee, which has toiled since Sun­ day to come up with a solution for workers' compensation, is halfway through ironing out problems that have blocked the bill's passage. “We've drug it along for four or five months now, and it has come to the point that the lieutenant gover­ nor and I both feel like if it takes our intervention, that we're going to do that," Lewis said. The bill must be completed by this weekend in order to get printed and “scrubbed down to make sure we didn't let something fall through the cracks," he added. "We're just going to have to have a meeting of the minds on some of the key issues," Lewis said. He said the committee is still hag­ gling over discrepancies regarding workers' rights to jury trials, how payments to injured workers are calculated and whether or not those See Compensation, page 2 Officials say AIDS funding shirked By CATHY LEIGH Daily Texan Staff Although Texas ranks fourth in the nation in report­ ed AIDS cases, state legislators refuse to adequately fund research of the disease, Austin area health offi­ cials said Tuesday. Janna Zum brun, executive director of AIDS Services of Austin, said Texas has a national reputation for ne­ glecting AIDS research and education. “In the long run, we will end u p paying for this," she said. “The only group that can fix this situation is the body that adopts the budget for the state — the legisla­ tors. "The Texas House is particularly against funding AIDS research," Zum brun said. “The Senate is more in tune." She said m any people in the Texas Legislature choose to treat AIDS as a gay issue. "M any [legislators] are anti-AIDS. That bias is injected into the issue and is extremely harm ful to the state. "My fear is it will take m any thousands of people dying before som ething will be done." According to the U.S. C enters for Disease Control, Texas has had 6,714 diagnosed cases of AIDS since 1981. But unfortunately, a belief exists in American society that AIDS is a gay disease and AIDS victims are ex­ pendable, Zumbrun said. "This gay bias has closed re­ search. When it was proven that AIDS was spreading into the heterosexual community, then research started to increase." She said legislators were given the opportunity to boost research funding during the 71st Legislature by following recommendations of the Legislative Task Force on AIDS. "The legislators, particularly the House of Represent­ atives, chose to ignore these recommendations," she said. The task force was charged with examining the AIDS problem and deciding what the state needs to do for research, Zumbrun said. Emily Untermeyer, former director of the task force, which disbanded in January, said that during the regu­ lar session the group gave legislators five specific rec­ ommendations about AIDS research activities. Using these recommendations, the legislators passed the omnibus AIDS bill which "directs the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to encourage all institu­ tions of higher education and their faculty to conduct HIV-related research," she said. The coordinating board should help fund AIDS re­ search through its research monies, Untermeyer said. The sole institution to receive funding from the Legisla­ ture was the UT System's Southwestern Medical Cen- See AIDS, page 2 — r r O ------------- ‘UT 16’ activists say appeals court biased By DAN DWORIN Daily Texan Staff Texas Chief Justice Thomas Phillips swears in George Bayoud as secretary of state while Gov. Bill Clements, Rita Clements and Bayoud’s wife, Vickie, look on. Bay- oud, 34, was sworn in Tuesday in the Senate cham­ bers. Clements’ former chief of staff, he replaces Jack Rains, who resigned in June. See story, page 7. Melissa Amman/Daily Texan Staff College bond program targets middle-income families Families who plan to send their children to college but are deterred by the rising cost of higher education will receive help from a new state savings bond program, one of its sponsors said Tuesday. "Unless w e start planning now, we are going to price middle-income families out of giving their children a college education," said Texas Sen. Chet Edwards, D-Duncanville, one of the program's sponsors. The Texas College Savings Bond Program was introduced at the beginning of the regular ses­ sion and signed into law by Gov. Bill Clements in May. Along with Edwards, bill sponsors in­ cluded Texas Sen. Don Henderson, R-Houston, and Texas Rep. Wilhelmina Delco, D-Austin. James Meadows, Edwards' aide, said the bonds will pay dividends at the end of the in­ vestment time, which is usually between five and 20 years. The program is unique because the state will not accumulate any new debt, he said. "We're using funds already approved by the voters," he said, explaining that the bonds will like other state general-obligation be issued bonds. Most general-obligation bonds are sold by the state to help generate revenue and investors are later paid back the principal and interest. Meadows said these bonds will be specifically targeted to parents or grandparents of college- bound children. "It's a safe investm ent and will hopefully get people saving for school," he said. The bonds allow investors to match the time of maturity with the age of the child so that the investm ent pays off w hen college bills start com­ ing in, M eadows said. The bonds are zero-coupon bonds and do not pay interest until the m aturity date is reached — allowing the investor to receive both the princi­ pal and the entire interest in a lum p sum. And unlike existing federal savings bonds, the interest on state bonds such as the college bonds is non-taxable, M eadows said. He said the bonds can be bought by any inves­ tor and a special m onetary bonus will be offered to parents whose students choose to attend a Texas institution. The bonds will be adm inistered through the state General Land Office, the Texas Higher Ed­ the state Public ucation Coordinating Board, Finance Authority, the National Research Labo­ ratory and the state Water Development Board — all of which have bonding authority, M ead­ ows said. These agencies already manage $2.2 billion in general obligation bonds and can oversee the new program w ithout creating an additional ad­ m inistrative body, he said. David Roberts, land office public information assistant director, said the program addresses "a need that's been there for a long tim e." "The typical middle-class family that's just rolling along, paying their bills, can have a hard time paying for college," he said. "The state just w anted to help out." The land office now provides low-interest land purchase loans to veterans, and finances the loans by selling general-obligation bonds, Rob­ erts said. • He sa»d m any federal program s that help finance college educations have been slashed in recent years, leaving a gap that the state govern­ m ent could fill. Meadows said the new program will "fill the gap" between federal and state bond packages. The state's tax-free bonds are more attractive to people in a low-tax bracket, and the taxable but high-yielding federal bonds appeal more to up­ per-income families, he said. Damaged Valdez causes another oil slick Associated Press SAN DIEGO — The Exxon Valdez was kept offshore Tuesday because of an 18-mile-long oil slick that appar­ ently leaked from the tanker despite Exxon's as­ surances that the ship was cleaned before leaving Alas­ ka. "They were wrong. The ship is not squeaky clean," said Coast Guard Cmdr. Jack Scarborough, captain of the Port of San Diego. "That's a discrepancy I can't explain." Exxon officials agreed that the Exxon Valdez, the source of the nation's worst oil spill, was probably the source of the oil slick off San Diego, Scarborough said. The oil was likely washed out of the ship's damaged hull by seawater, he said. The tanker was kept 50 miles offshore while officials worked to dean its cargo tanks of oil. Before the oil slick was discovered Monday, the ship had been sched­ uled to enter San Diego Bay on Tuesday. "She's not going anyw here," said Coast Guard Lt. Larry Solberg. "W e've told them they can't come any closer." The Exxon Valdez was steam ing at about 1 knot as Coast Guard officials reviewed test results of samples taken from the oil in the ocean, Solberg said. The slick and five steel flaps discovered hanging from the tanker's bottom M onday were expected to de­ lay the ship's entry into the bay by at least several days. Underw ater video also show ed at least three rocks em bedded in the tanker's hull, said Coast G uard Petty Officer Dennis Hall. "O ne is the size of a Volkswagen," he said. Officials believe the rocks were from the reef in Prince William Sound, Alaska, that the tanker ran into March 24, spill­ ing nearly 11 million gallons of oil. WEATHER Exxon Vaktez w — th f — Last week the Exxon corporation reported that its tanker, the Exxon Valdez, was seaworthy and could safely transport oil In fact, it can t Exxon regrets the error For all of you sea otters that may consid­ er relocating to the Austin area, the highs will be in the upper 90s and the lows will be in the mid-70s There will be partly cloudy skies, a 20 percent chance of afternoon showers, and the southerly winds at 10-15 mph will blow our nasty little spill all over the Pacific Ocean INDEX Around Campus Classifieds Comics Editorials Entertainment Sports State & Local University World & Nation 19 15 19 4 12 11 7 6 3 By CHRISTIAN McDONALD Daily Texan Staff Members of a group that stormed UT President William Cunningham's office in 1986 said they believe a three-judge panel — which will hear oral arguments Wednesday on their sentences — has already made up its mind. Chester Wilson, one of the "UT 16" protesters arrested after taking over Cunningham's office in Octo­ ber 1986 during an anti-apartheid demonstration, said late Tuesday that an "unusual departure" from normal court procedure has led him to believe the panel knows in advance how it will, rule in the case. "We already know that the con­ clusion of this hearing and the de­ liberation that follows it have al­ ready been been determined," Wilson said at a meeting of De­ mocracy in Academia, a UT stu­ dent group. Denise Szymczak, another "UT 16" protester, said the way the three-judge panel was selected "doesn't look very good for us." Wilson, who is not one of 10 protesters included in the appeal, said of the six judges on the Texas Court of Appeals, two are consid­ ered conservative and the remain­ ing four are considered "moderate in some cases." "Initially, we figured we would have a two-to-one split against us," Wilson said. "But in our case, however, the deciding judge, Bob Shannon, who is one of the con­ servatives, selected the other con­ servative, John Powers. "And then instead of selecting one of the other four moderates, he selected a judge in retirement — pulled him out of retirement to sit on the bench with the panel," he said. "Earl Smith is very well known as a conservative." The "UT 16" occupied the presi­ dent's office to protest the Univer­ sity's investments in racially segre­ gated South Africa. Their plans to stay in the office until the UT Sys­ tem Board of Regents ordered divestment was thwarted when police crashed through a door and arrested the protesters. Eleven of the 16 protesters were tried together and found guilty of disruptive activity in September 1987. Leslie Taylor, then County Court-at-Law judge, sentenced the protesters to various amounts of jail time — ranging from 90 days to six months. Ten of the protest­ ers sentenced by Taylor are in­ volved in the appeal. Wilson, who was tried and con­ victed in a separate trial by Taylor, said holding oral arguments in the summer also was an unusual move by the court. "By having them [the oral argu­ ments] in the summer, the court does not have to worry about any demonstrations or actions around this case interfering with anything else they do," he said. 'T hey have isolated the case." The main thrust of the DIA meeting — which drew about 10 people — was to organize an anti­ apartheid demonstration to coin­ cide with the appeals court hear­ ing at the Suprem e Court Building. Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/W ednesday, July 12, 1989 « SHOE SALE T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff News Editor Associate News E d ito rs .................................... General Reporters.................................... Editor Karen Adams Managing Editor................................................................................................................Steve Dobbins Jeanne Acton, Bret Bioomquist, Associate Managing Editors Bruce McDougall, Jennifer Melton Susan Boren Randy Kennedy, Diana Williams Susan Hightower, Alan Hines, Kim Horner, Lydia Lum, Ron Lubke Associate Editors Bryan Solie, Greg Weiner Entertainment Editor....................................................................................................... Steve Crawford Associate Entertainment Editor........................................................................................Gilbert Garcia Sports E d ito r................................................................... Associate Sports E d it o r .................................... . General Sports Reporter.............................................................................................Paul Hammons Photo Editor.................................................................................................................... John Foxworth Associate Photo Editor.................................... George Bridges Images Editor.....................................................................................................................Carol Huneke Associate Images Editors............................................................................. Graphics E d ito r.............................................................................. Around Campus Editor . Madison Jechow Mindy Brown . . . . . Greg May, Lee Nichols Issue Staff . News A ssistants......................... Sports A ssistant.................................................. Entertainment A s s is ta n t.............................................. 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David Lawrence, Beth Mitchell, Gina Padilla, Cindy Pels, Jody Ruhberg, A C Webb, Felipe Campos, Melanie Hanson Noel Hwang, Charles Hyman, Matt Kumin, Shawn McMinn . Robert Acosta, Art Carrillo, Melanie Neel, Juanda Powell. Steve Davidson . Sonya Kirkham, Michelle Dapra, Paula Barrett Jena Kim, Becky Pokluda The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440). a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis. Austin, TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday and Fnday. except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710 Classified Telephone Service ....................... . . . . 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Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. $30 00 55 00 20 00 75 00 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE 471-5244 WANT ADS FOLEY’S e t c M M 7 I • USE YOUR FOLEY’S CHARGE S i f l m pw chu € f« i"y iurw jpteiCW} ewary one* piece, every tank suit, every little bUdni. We still have a huge selection of all the latest colors and styles from the very best names. Junior sizes 5*13. Orig. 34,00-60.00, n e w mm&y I0«i9 M4M» Junior Swimwear. Mador Guos»? i d Preview ’90 collect loos not included. FOLEY’ Haddican Continued from page 1 the discretion to im plem ent a n y rec­ o m m end ations he chooses. "If he [C unningham ] doesn't like som ething, he can leave it out and no one will k n o w ," Anantha said. "H e d o e sn 't w ant any of it public because it m ight m ake him look b a d ." Gregor Sauer A n antha said he agrees w ith H a d ­ dican that too m uch secrecy su r­ ro u n d s the com m ittee's reco m m en ­ dations and th at stu d e n ts have the right to know w h at the g ro u p is w orking on. "E veryone is being a little too Van Garrett secretive," h e said. "W e [SA offi­ cers] are trying to take this so s tu ­ d e n ts will know an d u n d e rsta n d w h at is going on so they can p u sh the issu es." M elvin O akes, a professor of physics and a com m ittee m em ber, said he does n ot believe the com m it­ tee is overly secretive b u t said he could not com m ent on the details of the recom m endatio ns because the g ro u p agreed on a single sp o k es­ m an. "W e said w e w o u ld n 't discuss the details of the re p o rts," he said. "It w as the agreem en t of the com m ittee to the public com m unicate th ro u g h D oluisio." to Jam es Vick, an associate d e a n of the College of N atural Sciences w h o also serves on the com m ittee, said he is "in favor" of an o p en com m it­ tee, b u t only in certain circum ­ stances. "T he com m ittee itself felt like it w as dealing w ith issues w ith a w ide variance of opinions, and w e h a d to keep internal discussions internal to get people to express them selv es as clearly as they co uld ," he said. a lre ad y Vick said since the m ajority of the h av e re c o m m e n d a tio n s been given to C u n n in g h am , com ­ m ittee m em bers m ight feel m ore at ease discussing them . "T he w hole com m ittee will now be m ore w illing to discuss it since it is o u t of o u r h a n d s," he said. O akes, also on th e subcom m ittee looking at instruction quality, said he believes stu d e n ts will have a p o s­ itive im pression of the g ro u p 's rec­ om m en d atio n s a n d th at C u n n in g ­ ham is going to ask the com m ittee to co ntin ue m eeting for a n o th e r year. "G enerally, 1 thin k stu d e n ts will find these recom m endations in their best in te re st," he said. Compensation Continued from page 1 w orkers can receive com pensation p a y m en ts in lum p-sum paym en ts. "T here are som e proposals [con­ cerning jury trial] floating aro u n d an d I've been given tw o or th ree th at I think are sane an d sen sib le," he said. Lew is said he w ould su p p o rt the m ove requiring bu sinesses to p ro ­ vide co m pensation for injured em ­ ployees if — am ong o th er th ings — em p loyers of u n d e r five w orkers are only responsible for offering h ealth insurance to em ployees. C lem ents, w ho H e also said he believes law m ak­ ers can pass a bill th a t C lem en ts will sign. "1 d o n 't think w e'll agree on a bill he w o u ld n 't sig n ," he said. su p p o rts the H ouse version of th e w o rk ers' com ­ pensation bill, called the sen ato rs "stu b b o rn " M onday. H ow ever, he expressed confidence T u esday in H obby 's Senate lead ersh ip an d d e ­ term ination to com plete a bill by Fri­ day. "In my ju d g m en t the problem is indeed in the Senate, an d w ith his [H obby's] leadership, I th ink they m ay very well get a bill o u t," C lem ents said. "I have said that the problem is in the Senate, an d I feel like it is. I to have no change m y statem en t and I hope they will com e to som e sort of ag re e m e n t." reason w h atso ev er AIDS_______ Continued from page 1 ter in Dallas, she ad d ed . D uring the session, th e only o th er AID S-related fun ding th e legislators specifically set aside w as $18.5 mil­ lion for the Texas D ep artm en t of tre atm e n t H ealth 's education and program s, she said. "T he task force report acknow l­ edg es th at Texas has not been p e r­ form ing en o u g h AID S-related re­ search. We hope it will change in the fu tu re ," U nterm eyer said. Z u m b ru n said because of th e lack th e state of research fu n d in g on level, there is a m o vem ent for in d i­ vidual com m unities to establish research p ro gram s. AIDS d ru g this co m m un ity re­ F un ding for search is com ing from the federal go v ern m en t as well as variou s m e d ­ ical fo u ndatio ns, she said. A local example is the Central Texas Medical Foundation, which recently received a research grant from the American Foundation for AIDS Research. The local founda­ tion also is trying to get federal funding, Zumbrun said. Dr. Earl M atthew, director of medical services and education at the Central Texas foundation, said they had to get research m onies from the national organization pri­ marily because "the state has not been in the business of funding re­ search except through universities." Tuesday’s Dow Jones Industrial Average: UP 11.95 to 2,514.61 Volume: 171.59 million shares WORLD & NATION W e d n e sd a y July 12. 1989 Page 3 Bush hails Hungarian political change in speech Associated Press BUDAPEST, Hungary — President Bush, sped on his way by thousands of cheering Poles, on Tuesday hailed the democratic "reform s and changes" taking root in H un­ gary as he pursued an journey to nourish freedom in com m unist lands. "W e w ant to work w ith Hungary to con­ tinue the changes and reform s you are going forward with in your great cou ntry ," the president told several thousand people w ho braved the rain to hear his arrival re­ marks. Thousands more lined the streets as B ush's m otorcade made its way into the city, ju st m inutes after a storm with hurri- cane-force winds blew through. Later, at an extraordinary exchange of d inner toasts with a very liberal-minded com m unist leader, Bush said that in this Soviet bloc state "th e key to econom ic suc­ cess is letting the m arket do its w o rk ." His host, Rezso N yers, effectively put in charge of the governm ent nearly three w eeks ago, assured Bush, "W e are con­ vinced that the reform of our economy and the steps we have taken to build a market econom y offer favorable terms for Am eri­ can enterp rise." There was no hesitation in the com m u­ nist leader's assertion that his country, seeking to recover from hard tim es, intends to "create m odern, com petitive structu res" and wants the United States to play "a n increasing ro le" in its econom ic affairs. On W ednesday, in a speech at Karl Marx University, Bush is expected to translate into concrete term s the kind of help the United States will extend to H ungary, in­ cluding better trade term s. Air Force O ne brought Bush and the presidential party to H ungary — w here So­ viet troops once brutally crushed dem ocrat­ ic yearnings — after a tum ultuous scene in G dansk, Poland, at the birthplace of the Solidarity trade union m ovem ent. "F o r those w ho say that freedom can for­ ever be denied, I say let them look at Po­ lan d ," he told a cheering crowd estim ated at 25,000 at a Solidarity m onum ent outside the giant Lenin shipyards. He said the struggles by Poles against the Nazis four decades ago and more recently against suppression of Solidarity had pro­ duced live ag ain ." time w hen dream s can "a "W e have sown new se e d s," Polish lead­ er W ojciech Jaruzelski told Bush before the president left on his 90-m inute flight from one Iron Curtain country to another. For Bush it was a rem arkable day that took him from one Eastern bloc country, where recent elections placed hundreds of opposition m em bers in its parliam ent, to a second where reform ers and hard-line com ­ trip munists now share power. Bush's served as a counterpoint to Soviet Leader Mikhail G orbachev's recent visits to West Germany and France. Like Gorbachev, Bush looked ahead to an opportunity to surm ount the 45-year Cold War and "e n d the division in E u rop e." In Budapest, Bush noted the torrential rains that had eased just m inutes before his arrival and told the thousands in Lajos Kos­ suth Square he was scrapping his planned speech to speak briefly "from the heart. Referring to the address he will delives Wednesday at Karl Marx University, Bush told the audience, "You'll have to listen to me tomorrow, I'm sure, at some drier liiru and some drier place." He added to cheers that "long after this rain is gone, I am going to remember iht warmth of the welcome from the people oí Hungarv." Later, at a state dinner, Bush toasted h¡ . Hungarian hosts and told them Youi nn tion is involved in an unprecedented e x p c r iment — a Communist system seeking t o evolve towards a more open economv to wards a more open and pluralista polituai sy stem ." Fires ravage Western states California firefighter killed Associated Press Tw enty-tw o fires burned out of control in nine W est­ ern states Tuesday, with one blaze in Nebraska grow ­ ing to 100,000 acres of grass and pine and a fire in Utah briefly threatening a m ajor pow er transm ission line. A blaze w est of D enver destroyed more than 60 structures by M onday night, including an unknow n num ber of hom es. Rain helped elsew here, but thunderstorm s in Ari­ zona also led to the lightning death of a firefighter M onday, the W estern fire season's second fire-related death; a firefighter in California was killed by a falling tree on Sunday. Tw enty-tw o fires that had charred about 119,000 acres w ere burning uncontrolled, down from 44 fires blackening 167,000 acres on M onday, the federal Boise Interagency Fire C enter in Idaho reported. Fires were active in California, Arizona, New M exi­ co, Utah, Colorado, Nebraska, W yoming, Idaho and O regon. Inform ation officer Debbie Shivers said 11,000 firefighters w ere at work throughout the W est. W hile rain m oderated some fires in the Southw est, the beginning of the seasonal m onsoon w eather could mean more lightning storms in the dry West. A brush fire in Utah threatened two pow er lines that relay electricity in the W est, prom pting the temporary shutdow n of a 345,000-volt line, but crew s contained the blaze early Tuesday, an official said. The fire burned more than 1,000 acres 15 mi! south west of Nephi and near the Intermountain 1 v\ei Plant's Intermountain-Mona transmission lines Bureau of Land Management spokesman Bert i ! i. said the blaze's intense smoke acted as ai conductor, causing a "shorting-out ef f ect ground. i ect nc o n i h e "Q uite often in smoke there's a lot of partii it m ter," he said. "W hether it be moisture or residiu hot plants that burn, it will transmit electricity Elsewhere in Utah, nearly 400 firefighters finish» d a fire line around a 15,500-acre fire west of the C To: t o r line, and crews capitalized on spotty rainfall to u m l a u t several other fires. The tire in northwestern Nebraska burned over .. area 8 miles wide by 22 miles long, and officials \ ho flew over the area estimated more than 100,000 acie* had actually burned, said Jerry Larson depot’s state fire marshal. The fire, fanned by 35 mph wind during the night, was within 8 miles of Harrison, an isolated community of about 360 about 27 miles west of C rawford When it started Saturday the blaze briefly threatened old I Robinson, the former cavalry post where S u n n C Crazy Horse was killed by his jailers. "W e are cautiously optimistic that the w o t the fire is o v er," Gov. Kav Orr said at C h a h o 22 miles east of Crawford ‘ p a r i o í o u t A firefighter in Fort Robinson State Park, Neb., pauses to drink water amid the smoke and charred ground. Associated Press Winnie Mandela linked to death Associated Press JO H A N N ESBU RG , South Africa — Police have given prosecutors a report linking black activist W in­ nie M andela to the death of a teen­ ager allegedly killed by her body­ guards, state radio said Tuesday. Eight of M andela's bodyguards have been charged w ith the m ur­ der of 14-year-old activist M oeket- si "S to m p ie " Seipei w ho was beat­ en in Sow eto, the spraw ling black tow n­ ship outside Johannesburg. last D ecem ber to death M andela, wife of jailed black leader Nelson M andela, denies in­ volvem ent in the case and says it is a governm ent sm ear cam paign. T h e g e n e r a l a tt o r n e y of W itw atersrand region is to exam ­ ine the police report and decide w hether additional charges should be filed, the South African Broad­ casting Corp. reported. It q u o ted an u n id e n tifie d spokesm an for the attorney gener­ al as saying linked M andela to Seipei's death. It did the report not say how Mandela allegedly was involved or if the police report included any new information. A lawyer for the Mandela fami­ ly, Ismail Ayob, said he has not seen the police report and is not aware of its contents. Seipei and three young black men allegedly were abducted from a church sanctuary in December, taken to Mandela's home and as­ saulted. Seipei's body was found in a Soweto field Jan. 7, police said. Soweto community leaders have said the other three men were freed from the house only after in­ tense community pressure. A law­ yer for the three has said they have prepared affidavits asserting Mandela was "in volved " in their abduction. Anti-apartheid groups have dis­ owned Mandela and accused her bodyguards, known as Mandela United soccer club and now dis­ banded, of w'aging a "reign of ter­ ror" in Soweto. HUD scandals may cost government $2 bill»» Associated Press W ASH IN G TO N — HUD Secretary Jack Kemp said Tuesday that housing scandals at his de­ partm ent could cost the governm ent $2 billion but also said, "W e have stopped the hem orrhag- in g ." "It's a ballpark fig u re," said Kem p, who has suspended three program s as part of his investi­ gation into allegations of m ism anagem ent and fraud at the D epartm ent of Housing and Urban D evelopm ent during the Reagan adm inistration. Responding to questioning by a congressional panel, he said of estim ates of potential losses, "I think $6 billion would be too high, $1 billion would be too lo w ." Rep. C harles Schum er, D -N .Y ., cam e up with the $2 billion figure and asked Kem p his opinion of it. W hile saying his departm ent has not com e up with its own estim ate, Kem p said he did not disagree with Sch um er's figure. He also said he believed recent efforts to cut the governm ent's losses have been successful. Earlier, Kem p denounced a system under which highly paid consultants helped develop­ ers try to win federal housing contracts. But he said he would not "w ag e w ar" on effective pro­ grams in his departm ent. "I do not w ant to w age war on program s ... I am not trying to w age war on the goals that have been set for these program s to help needy peo­ ple and low -incom e p e o p le ," said the secretary. He also told a congressional panel he was tak­ ing steps to correct "fund am ental flaw s" and "lax accounting and m anagem ent proced ures" I do not want to wage war on pro­ grams.’ — HUD Secretary Jack Kemp at his departm ent. Kemp, who took over the D epartm ent of Housing and Urban D evelopm ent six m onths ago, said he had told agency em ployees in a memo that their jobs would depend on putting an end to favoritism. And he said outsiders discovered to be abu s­ ing departm ent program s will be barred "from doing business with HUD and all other federal ag en cies." K em p's com m ents cam e in remarks to the House Em ploym ent and Housing Subcom m it­ tee, w hich is looking into allegations of fraud and m ism anagem ent at the agency. "S o m e of our most serious problem s have come in program s w here substantial subsidies are given to d ev elo p ers," Kemp said. "T h at extra m oney goes for excess profits for the developer and, clearly, to cover consultant fe e s," he said. "W e give the developer a reason to hire a consultant, and we give the successful bidder the m oney to pay consultants' fees." The departm ent's m oderate-rehabilitation pro­ gram was criticized in an April audit by the HUD inspector general who alleged influence ped­ dling and favoritism in contract awards to devel­ opers who hired form er HUD and other govern­ m ent em ployees as consultants. The audit estim ated HUD could lose as much as $413 million in excess subsidies < >v what they did for their consulting t -and wh.it the fee-payers expected in return Kemp said Tuesday, "H U D pi opiums sS i) operate without favoritism" and aw.a 1 will be made on the basis of need and merit. The housing secretary said that in a memo < p e t 1IUD employees last month he warned formance evaluations and job security will d e ­ pend on how these reforms .ire promptly imple mented and enforced." "T h e Department of Housing and Urban ¡ )t velopment will maintain a policy of /.ero toDr- ance for violations of our standards of conduct said Kemp, pledging "the highest ethu al s .m d ards at the department. Kemp has testified several times before C on gress in recent months, a sharp iontrast to hi predecessor Samuel Pierce, who members oí Congress say was generally unav lilable deriur, his eight-year tenure during the IT n;an admin istration. Since taking office Kemp has suspended, revised or restricted three troubled progr mi moderate rehabilitation, mortgage c o i n s m a m e and Title X land development mortgag« ance — which provide subsidized b low- and moderate-income lamilie ■ ¡tr­ i< Last week he curtailed an elderly h o t a gram in which 30 percent of the progs p resulted in foreclosure. ! Distinguished actor Olivier dead at 82 New s I n B r ie f Associated Press LON DO N — Laurence Olivier, forem ost actor of a distin­ the guished generation and the man w hose Hamlet and Henry V defined Shakespeare for m odern m ass audi­ ences, died Tuesday at 82. A rare fusion of superb classical and extraordinary contem porary ac­ tor, O livier was at hom e in the plays of Shakespeare, Shaw and C he­ khov, as well as movies made from classics, sucjh as Wuthering Heights, or the thriller M arathon M an. Knighted and ennobled, he was Lord Olivier when he died but still plain Laurence Olivier on his stage and screen credits. He also led a dis­ tinguished roll call of actor-knights and dam es who made British stage and screen history. The founding father of Britain's National Theater and two-time A cad em y A w ard w in n e r w as m ourned the acting throughout world as the greatest of his time. "It isn't too much to say that Oli­ vier was perhaps the greatest man of the theater e v er," said Sir Peter Hall, who succeeded him as artistic director of the National Theater. Flags were lowered to half-staff outside the National Theater, and theaters from London's W est End to Stratford — the birthplace of Shake­ their exterior speare — dimmed lights for an hour Tuesday night in respect. Q ueen Eliza­ sent con­ beth and d o le n c e s , ca m e tr ib u te s from Prime M in­ iste r M argaret T h a t c h e r an d form er President Ronald Reagan. "H is last few days w ere very p e a c e f u l. H e Olivier died in his sleep at noon. All the family w ere at his sid e ," said Richard O livier, the 27- year-old son of his third marriage, to Joan Plowright. Death cam e at his hom e near Ashurst, a village near Steyning in W est Sussex about 50 miles south of London. A private funeral is planned, with a public memorial service in London later. Olivier was the hero of his own life, fighting cancer, pleurisy and a muscle disease that m ade hand­ shakes agony. He endured two m is­ erable m arriages and years of para­ lyzing stage fright, contem plated murder and suicide and battled his own rages, guilt and drinking. He was renow ned for his daring. "H ow ever many tim es you'd seen him , it was probably the most dan­ gerously thrilling m om ent you'd seen on any stag e," actor Jerem y Brett said Tuesday. In Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey into Night, O livier brought nightly gasps of alarm from the au ­ dience by leaping backw ard off a table and crashing to the floor. He was then 64. He was a tragic film hero in Wuthering Heights and portrayed the painful experience of aging in The Entertainer on stage and A Voyage Round M y Father on television. His genius ow ed m uch to a sw eeping im agination and attention to detail. To conjure up King O ed i­ pus's unearthly cry of anguish, O li­ vier said he im agined the sound er­ mines make w hen they lick salt laid out by their tongues stick to the ice. their hunters and W hatever sex drive he had, O li­ vier wrote in his 1982 autobiogra­ phy Confessions o f an Actor, w ent into his acting. "Y o u can 't be more than one kind of athlete at a time. A sexual athlete is not likely to find sufficient energy for work of an oth ­ er athletic k in d ." His career was highlighted by a procession of Shakespearean roles, from Romeo and Juliet in 1935 and Hamlet in 1937 on stage to a TV pro­ duction of King Lear in 1983. He reached mass audiences with title roles and director's credits in Henry V in 1944, Hamlet in 1948, for which he won the Academy Award as best actor, and Richard 111 in 1955. He brought Othello to the screen in 1965, a year after playing the jealous Moor on the London stage. Associated Press Cheney predicts new Pentagon plan will improve control over purchases W A SH IN G TO N — D efense Secretary Dick Cheney, predicting he can save taxpayers $30 billion by fiscal year 1993, outlined a com plex plan Tuesday to overhaul the Pentagon's bureaucracy and tighten con­ trol over its m assive arm s-purchasing system s. His proposals include paring the num ber of people involved in purchasing decisions by thousands and giving more authority to the undersecretary of d e­ fense in that area, thereby trimming som e pow ers of the individual military services. Cheney was quick to say he had no magic solution for ridding the Pentagon and the defense establish­ m ent of fraud and abuse, or making it more efficient. Nor will he be able to m ake his program work on his ow n, he said. "T h ere's no silver bullet here. ... We have a blue­ print that we plan to pursue ... to try to significantly im prove the way w e do b u sin ess," Cheney said of his plan said at a Pentagon press conference. "If w e're going to be successful, it will be because we got C ongress to co o p erate," he said. Cuban leaders hold firm on death sentences M EXICO CITY — Cuban leaders apparently are standing firm in their decision to send a war hero and three other form er army officers to the firing squad for drug trafficking despite international pleas for clem ­ ency. "C u b a's traditional enem ies would also criticize us if we d on't shoot them , saying we don't make an exam ple of those international drug trad e," said Carlos Rafael Rodriguez, vice president of the Council of State. involved in The official Cuban news agency Prensa I ilnu which carried his comments, also said the ( ubau masses support Sunday's vote by President Ddc ! tro and the 28 other members of the council to u; I the death penalty for former Gen. Arnuldo i X h< , > Bribe scandal shocks FDA commission WASHINGTON — The commissionei ot tin and Drug Administration told Congress Tut* d n in "shocked, embarrassed and angered” bv revel in >n that FDA scientists accepted bribes from gem t dim companies. < o» Commissioner Frank Young vowed to seek ma ,i mum penalties against the firms. But he said we'rt having a difficult time trying to determine what v can do to remove these particular products market. tin tu investigations, whose chairman, th Young and his top aides were called be*ton House Energy and Commerce subcommittet i a o\ ei sight and John Dingell, D-Mich., said the scandal means We tan no longer be reasonably confident that the I DA is able to detect the entry of unsafe or i n e f f i c a c i o u s genrru drugs in the nation's pharmacies." Transportation strikes cripple 1 ondon LONDON — Railways, docks and city hall s e r v ic e s were disrupted on Tuesday in the worst week ot strikes for higher pay since Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher took office 10 y e a rs ago Meanwhile, a survey of public opinion polls bv th British Broadcasting Corp. showed in popularity for the first time. lhalcher trailing As thousands of c o m m u t e r s struggled to get home Thatcher told Parliament she hoped Fuesday's first direct negotiations since May between state run Brit­ ish Rail and unions would settle the v hronic transit dispute. ___ I Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, July 12, 1989 WW,K.- Go teK Youk STATE Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor and the writer of the article They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees O pinions expressed in D issenting Opinions and staff or guest columns are those of the writer V ie w p o in t L ed g er B a la n ce Kilroy account deserves family input f/fcKNlNG OF LIFE?' F a m ily T ies Law should recognize all families Sheriff of Nottingham strikes again! R obin Hood would roll over in his fairy­ the financial problem, too. Legislators are also taking this opportunity to call each other names. C lem ents accused Attor­ ney General jim Mattox of providing only a "half-hearted d efense" against the suit, and M attox becam e defensive, dem anding an apol­ tale grave if he had to support public current education finance system for the Texas public-school sys­ tem takes from the rich only to give back to the rich. in Texas. The SlOBAN ALBIOL TEXAN COLUMNIST It is obviously unfair, but presently it's not unconstitutional. That may soon change — the Texas Suprem e Court is considering the case. The rationale behind the biased system — funding schools from district property taxes — is that it allows districts more im mediate con­ trol over their schools. Unfortunately, it also allow s for disparity among districts. The state and school districts share cost of operations, but not cost of the facilities. This com es entirely from the school districts, none of which have equal budgets. Of the total cost for education, the state provides approximately 42 percent of funds. School dis­ tricts provide 50 percent, derived from local property taxes and m iscellaneous federal sourc­ es. There is also an equity fund, called the School Foundation Program, which makes up the rem aining 8 percent of the budget. It's in­ tended to make up for the injustice that the rest of the finance plan creates. It doesn't. The current breakdow n of funds creates an inequitable funding program. The property-tax revenue that a district can generate varies, so wealthier districts are able to provide more. Lo­ cal school-district tax rates also vary — less wealthy school districts frequently m ust set higher-than-average rates to m eet the m ini­ mum standards required to educate each stu­ dent. Thu s, the poor are penalized twice. This system allows those with advantages to becom e more advanced, while those with financial dis- //T h e rich get richer; the poor get poorer and all Texas legislators try to do is cover their b u tts.// advantages fall further behind. The rich get richer; the poor get poorer and all Texas legislators try to do is cover their butts. Legislators are looking everyw here except at the heart of the problem and then asking why the Suprem e Court isn't doing the same. The legislators voted for a $450 million funding bill in the 71st session of the Legislature. This m on­ ey would go to an equity fund, such as the School Foundation Program, w hose purpose is to com pensate for the disparity betw een school districts. No m ention of the $450 million plan was made during testim ony on Friday, and with good reason. The half-hearted rem edies the legislators are making now don't have anything to do with the fairness or constitutionality of the current system . Legislators need to attack the heart of the problem instead of putting a very large, but insufficient, Band-Aid on a problem that is valued at over $1 billion. 1 he $450 million plan w on't solve the state's consti­ tutional problem and it falls far short of solving ogy- So much for the value of Texas public educa­ tion. The legislators are worried about losing the lawsuit, so som e, like House Speaker Gib Lewis, want to see the $450 million equity pro­ gram used to help the state's legal defense. And som e, like M attox, are worried about their future political careers. But few seem to con­ cern them selves with the problem of the inher­ ent injustice of a school-finance system that al­ lots $19,000 a year to educate a child in one district and $2,100 to educate a child for one year in another district. O bviously, since property taxes are the foun­ dation of the public-education budget, they're the place to begin looking for solutions. At least one person has already proposed som ething like this. The prosecuting attorney, Rick Gray, presented the court with an alterna­ tive which maintains district-boundary lines, and local control, while reducing inter-district disparities by creating regional taxing authorities. therefore This idea is a step in the right direction. It looks at the central problem instead of tap dancing around it as legislators are doing. They should follow G ray's, and Robin H ood's, lead in addressing the problem of equity in financ­ ing. O therw ise, equality am ong school districts will remain a fairy tale. Albiol is a Plan II senior Survey says: Media a pack of liberals People who are biased and who do the hiring don't feel that they are biased. Sharks don't think they are worth making movies about. They're just having lunch. — Barry Farber are guilty of bias. T he American news media This is the charge critics the ideological spectrum across have leveled at the nation's major media outlets. Of course, they dis­ agree on exactly what bias is prev­ alent. But a little careful thought and a recent study show that the only real prejudice in the media is strictly to the left. There are three popular theories concerning media bias: ■ Corporate bias. Major media outlets exhibit characteristics just like any other corporation. This means that they don't want to of­ fend advertisers, so they report their news with a conservative, pro-business slant. ■ Pro-government bias. Some critics see the media as being tilted in favor of supporting U.S. gov­ ernment policies. Instead of the press being an adversary of the government, they see it as acting as an unquestioning m outhpiece. ■ Liberal bias. In his book The Coming Battle for the M edia, William Rusher documents that many re­ porters and anchors were former­ ly liberal political activists. These L isa S w a n t e x a n COLUMNIST beliefs can't help but carry over into their news coverage. All three of these theories have their share of passionate defend­ ers. But a study by M ediaW atch not only supports the theory of liberal bias — it also tears apart the corporate and pro­ government bias theories. recent The magazine studied the pat­ terns of philanthropy among five media outlets: ABC, NBC, The New York Times, The Washington Post I Newsweek, and the Times Mir­ ror Foundation. After seeing what political caus­ es the media donate their money to, it becomes painfully obvious that the liberal-bias theory about the media is no myth. For exam ­ ple, of the $452,000 that The New York Times foundation donated to political groups between 1982 and 1986, an incredible 96.5 percent went to liberal groups. Only 3.5 percent of the foundation's total philanthropy was given to con­ servative groups. And so much for the conserva­ tive corporate bias supposedly ex­ hibited by The Washington Post/ to MediaW atch, Newsweek conglom erate. Betw een 1983 and 1987, it gave 94.4 percent of its $180,000 worth of donations to liberal special-interest groups. According this foundation gave $20,000 in 1987 to the Lawyers Com m ittee for Civil Rights Under Law. That same year, that organization worked to oppose Robert Bork's Suprem e Court nom ination. The media foundation which gave the most money to conserva­ tive groups was the G eneral Elec­ tric Foundation, N BC 's philan­ thropic organization. According to it gave its 1986 annual report, $122,500, or 27.6 percent, of its donations to conservative groups. However, it still gave an over­ w helm ing $321,000 to liberal or­ ganizations. And as for the belief that the major media are pro-U .S. govern­ m ent, how does one explain the rem arks made by cable mogul Ted Turner in The Washington Post? In an interview with Tom Shales, Turner discusses his pro-Soviet Union sentim ents. "I absolutely trust them with my life. They're not even an enem y an y m ore." He has also started a lefty philanthro­ pic group with his com pany's m oney, called the Better World Society. M oney talks, as the old saying goes. And by seeing w here the media donate their m oney, it is clear where their bias is. But what can be done about this rotten situation? Perhaps, for propriety's sake, the media shouldn't donate to partisan organizations at all. But lucrative tax breaks make this no­ tion unfeasible. However, the netw orks and new spaper conglom erates, if they don't totally give up philanthro­ their py, should at donations evenly betw een liberal and conservative groups. The sit­ uation now is abom inable. least split Also, all the netw orks and ma­ con g lom erates jor new spap er should be required to disclose w here their philanthropic dona­ tions are going. D espite pressure from both M ediaW atch and the lib­ eral watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy in Media, C BS has refused to disclose its charitable contributions. It seem s ironic — CBS' new s program prides itself on hard-hitting investigative re­ porting, but it w on't reveal its own corporate donations. Although these rem edies will by no m eans eradicate the liberal- b ia s th e o d o r p e r m e a t in g airwaves, at least they will add an air of m uch-needed ethics to the media. Swan is a governm ent/history sen F ir in g L in e Carlson: Date rape no joke Eric Carlson III: With regard to your let­ ter ("Chivalry still lives," Firing Line, Fri­ day) concerning Danalynn Recer's column ("H it or myth: Date rape more common than you would think,” The Daily Texan, june 30), Recer's "stupid stereotyping of fraternity types" does pale in comparison with your own unwitting reaffirmations of fraternal cliches. The tone of Biff's anecdote, your classifi­ cation of men into two type?, plus your devotion to women as "sex objects that can hold your drink for y o u ," makes fun of the type of person you seem to want to patronize. The wonder is that your broth­ ers have allowed you to defend their inter­ ests. Your concluding remark " . .. as soon as I find out who else is dating our helpless taking advantage of sorority girls and them the them, we'll pummel ground, and the world will be free from this scourge" betrays your ignorance of the issue of date rape or at least it makes a joke of a serious topic. into Carlson, you don't actually think that vi­ olent revenge in the name of women who have been raped is a solution, do you? That action would certainly not be a de­ fense of wom en's interests. The point of Recer's article was not to quash frat boys. It w as to aid in the pre­ vention of date rape (this m eans before it happens, Carlson) by informing the pub­ lic, in this case the UT student body. If you and your brothers want to "m ake personal efforts in this area," please make something other than jokes and boasts of violent retribution after the fact. Katherine Shriver English Gospel according to Mark I write in response to Eric Soderlund ("Abortion unchristian," Firing Line, Fri­ day) and to spread the wisdom of God as revealed to m e, His modern, latter-day prophet. The other day the Almighty, in all His glory, said to me, and I quote. "M ark!" I looked around, "Y eah , G od?" "I need you to reveal M y opinion on the abortion issue. These multifaceted, m od­ ern, fanatic, religious institutions are caus­ ing Me stress." "O K. I'll write a letter to The Daily Tex­ an ." "G reat. Tell people that they should not try to legislate their subjective morality. The writers of the U.S. Constitution knew what they w ere doing when they separat­ ed church and state and allowed citizens to make their own moral decisions. "Y ou see, I gave people the power to use reason and to make decisions. 1 call it free will. Now anti-abortionists want polit­ ical institutions to restrict the moral free will of women based on unsubstantiated moral opinions of self-righteous individu­ als. They don't know when life begins. 1 haven't told anybody. "People don't seem to realize that laws only influence decisions; they don't make them. Rather than trying to limit the op­ tions available to a woman who must make a choice which will affect the rest of her life (and possibly her health), those opposed to abortion should make their preferred option more appealing. "Being omniscient, I'd hate to tell you about the effects on society if this trend toward the limitation of a wom an's control of her body continues.” "U h , God? Do I have the right to inter­ pret this revelation and will the people be­ lieve m e?" "Sure. All the other prophets do. And why shouldn't they believe you? They be­ lieved Falwell and Bush didn't they? Be­ sides, you have a biblical n am e." /. M ark Kelly Graduate student in prophecy Filing Line Policy Firing Line letters should be 250 words or fewer. The editors reserve the right to edit letters for spelling, gram­ mar, punctuation, length and Texan style. Bring letters and photo identification to the Texan offices, on the lower level, at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. PLUS SHOE WAREHOUSE THE ULTIMATE NAME BRAND AND í FSIGNEP FOOTWEAR OUTl ET G IG A N T IC S E L E C T IO N O F IFNI'S & CHILDREN S SHOES SUMMER CLEARANCE WOMEN’S AND CHILDREN’S SHOE INVENTORY 30% OFF OUR EVE F MON-FR! SAT SUN 10-9 10-6 12-6 332-997? ■ m r * . - - fin d in g th e ir place in e v e ry a sp ec t of life. T h e re a re m o re p o sitio n s a v ailab le th a n p e o p le to fill th e m . is E n v iro n m e n ta l re se a rc h in ­ c re a sin g in im p o rta n c e w ith th e d e p le tio n of th e o z o n e layer, th e g r e e n h o u s e effect a n d b o o m in g p o p u la tio n s c o n s u m in g re so u rc e s at e x p o n e n tia l p ro p o rtio n s . C a re e r p o ssib ilities in n o n - d e ­ fen se in d u s trie s a re e n d le s s . A n d if th e D e p a rm e n t of D e ­ fen se is fre ed from th e c rip p lin g e x p e n s e s of n u c le a r w e a p o n s , it co u ld e v e n foot th e bill for its e x ­ e m p lo y e e s' re tra in in g . O n c e th e w o rk e rs a re se t u p in n e w in d u s trie s , th e fu n d s c o u ld be d ire c te d in a n o th e r d ire c tio n a l­ to g e th e r. P ublic e d u c a tio n , for in ­ sta n c e is in d ire n e e d of cash . A n d to is e sse n tia l q u ality e d u c a tio n th e fu tu re of a n y c o u n try . s u p e rp o w e r s , A s th e U n ite d S tate s a n d S oviet U n io n h a v e th e re sp o n sib ility to e n s u re th e lives of fu tu re g e n e ra tio n s . S ince w e all live to g e th e r, w e s h o u ld m a k e a g e n u in e effo rt to w o rk to g e th e r. th e T h e a n x ie ty o v e r n u c le a r-a rm s th e fact re d u c tio n is e v id e n t in th a t tre a ty d o e s o n ly IN F e n o u g h to g et by. P eo p le a re fixed in th e w h ite -h a t, b la ck -h at rh e to r ic of th e R e ag a n e ra . But it d o e s n 't a p p ly a n y m o re , if it ev er d id . T h e re 's n o n e e d to stre s s o u t. C o n v e n tio n a l m ilita ry w e a p o n s a re m o re th a n e n o u g h . Fuentes is a h i s t o r y j u n i o r . lA N P FUTON SOFA BEDS I SUMMER SAVINGS! W N — P L A T F O R M B O D I | I COME IN AND VISIT] OUR STORE IN LAMAR VILLAGE AND SEE THE B B M flB ^ lM O lST SELECTION OF] ^ ^ ^ M ^ ^ ^ R J T O N SOFA BEDS -m am in austin. ■ * I t § . y m ate in nuclear d isar­ m am en t, the Interm e- diate-range N uclear Forces treaty E v a l i z a F u e n t e s TEXAN COLUMNIST INF M asq u erad in g as th e ulti­ betw een th e U nited States a n d the Soviet U nion is only a device used to pacify th e m asses. The latest sacrificial INF cow, the P ershing I-A ballistic m issile, w as d estro y ed m ore as cerem ony th an as any kind of real d isa rm a ­ m ent. T here are still concrete silos across the nation that still have nuclear w a rh e ad s aim ed at the So­ viet U nion. So the INF treaty falls sh o rt of expectations. N ew priorites need to be established an d new benefits calculated. The Soviet U nion is n o longer the enem y. U n d er the lead ersh ip of Mikhail G orbachev, th e country is evolving and slowly sh ow ing signs of h u m a n ity after y ears of isolation. N ine-w eek-old kittens are m ore of a th re a t th a n the Soviets, so saying th a t d isarm a m e n t w ould be d a n g ero u s because of the "Evil Em pire" is silly. Everyone w an ts the U nited States an d the Soviet U nion to have a peaceful relationship. Pre­ vention of th e w orld chaos inevi­ table w ith the use of nuclear w eap o n s is vital for everyone. A nd the econom ic problem s caused by disarm am en t are offset by th e gains. C hang es in th e d e ­ fense in d u stry w ould enable the U nited States to follow th e d e ­ m a n d s of new econom ic m arkets, to provide b etter public education and to strive for w orld peace w ith ­ out d e v astin g effects. D e fe n se w o rk e rs a n d should be train ed for research and d e v elo p m en t in o th er areas. can For instance, co m puters are What if you dorit get into the grad school of your choice? Of course, you maY £et *nt0 another school, but why settle? Prepare for the LSAT, GMAT, GRE, MCAT or any grad school entrance exam with the best test prep organization — Stanley H. Kaplan. For 50 years, Kaplan’s test-taking techniques have prepared over 1 million students for admission and licensing tests of all kinds. So call. Why go to just any grad school, when you can go to the right one? i KAPLAN STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. DON'T COMPETE WITH A KAPLAN STUDENT-BE ONE MCAT LSAT DAT GRE GMAT 9/16/89 9/23/89 10/7/89 10/14/89 10/21/89 472-EXAM Futon Sofa Beds Available In Oak, Teak, Maple, Walnut. Black or White Wash Finishes We hand make our Futons from the highest grades of cotton, cutting cost, never quality. O PENING HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m. 6 p.r Thu 10 a .m .-7 p.m. Sun. 12 p.m 5 p.m. Collegiate Ex p r e s a r NUsífailll I W ^ É É Í % i Financing Available 3820 N. Lamar (Lamar Village) Austin, Texas 78705 4528788 NCA APARTMENT LEASING A Free Service of Newcomer Centers of Austin • Apartments, Houses, D u p le x e s , C o n d o s • All Areas, Prices, Sizes • Move-in Specials • Transportation Available • Open 7 Days • 1 0 0 0 ’s of Availabilities Just tell us what you need — we’ll tell you w h e re to find it FREE Professional Apartment Referral and Employee Relocation S e r v ic e s 451 -2223 *400 EXTRA CASH BACK/DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN Offered Graduating Seniors & Grad. 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Contact David McDavid Chrysler-Plymouth for details 3 3 1 - 4 3 0 0 13573W — rch Blvd. (at Anderson MM Road) A ustin, TX 78750 i $ ñnrr« m flrA V JÜZUi¿3 \J I¿y a 801 N. L am ar T h e Da il y T e x a n W ednesday, July 12, 1989 Page 6 UNIVERSITY Board to debate enrollment caps B y LYDIA LUM Daily Texan Staff I he Texas H ig h e r E d u c a tio n C o o r d in a tin g Board T h u r s d a y will d isc u ss im p o s in g e n r o llm e n t limits o n th e University a n d th r e e o th e r state colleges that h a v e insufficient facilities for their b u r s tin g s t u d e n t p o p u la tio n s . for u n i v e r s i t i e s Bill S a n fo rd , b o a rd a s s is ta n t c o m ­ m is s i o n e r a n d h e a lth affairs, said staff m e m b e r s are c o n c e r n e d that g r o w i n g s t u d e n t p o p u la tio n s h a v e the n e e d for b u ild in g m o r e facilities — c a u sin g so m e u n iv e rsitie s to p ass in c re a s e d < pansion costs to s tu d e n ts . e x p e n s iv e " i t's to b uild n e w H o l d i n g s to a c c o m m o d a t e so m a n y s t u d e n t s , ' he said. "B ut it’s just as to m o th b a ll b u ild in g s x p e n s iv e th a t a r e n 't b e in g used. 1 he staff is in te reste d in g ra d u a lly r e d istrib u tin g s tu d e n t e n r o ll m e n ts , d t h o u g h no specific r e c o m m e n d a ­ tions will be m a d e T h u r s d a y , he said. "It's not a m a tte r of access to th e r e 's h ig h e r e d u c a tio n , so m u c h as a m a t­ ter of ch oice ," S a n fo rd said. " M a y ­ be f r e e d o m of too m u c h choice. W e 'v e f o u n d th a t s t u d e n t s m ostlv are tr a n sfe rrin g to a n d from schools of sim ilar caliber a n d c o m ­ p etitive ness, so it's n o t a decision based on a c a d e m ic s ." r e s p o n d H e said h e d id n o t k n o w h o w the b o ard will to staff c o n ­ cerns. "All w e can sav is th a t so m e of th e se schools, su c h as [the U ni­ versity,] are sim p ly o u t of sp a ce ," he said. I he U niversity hit a r ec o rd 50,107 s t u d e n ts last fall. O t h e r schools th a t could be affect­ ed bv the cap are S o u t h w e s t Texas S tate U niversity, S am H o u s t o n State U niversity a n d th e U niversity of N o rth Texas. T he b o a r d — c r e a te d in 1965 by th e Texas L egislature — co n sists of 18 g o v e r n o r - a p p o in te d r e p r e s e n t a ­ tives w h o plan a n d a d m in is t e r p r o ­ g r a m s for public colleges a n d u n i­ versities. T h e E d u c a tio n a l O p p o r t u n i t y P la n n in g staff will in tr o d u c e to the b o a r d a five-year sta te -w id e p la n for colleges a n d u niversities to e n c o u r ­ age m in o rity access to h ig h e r e d u c a ­ tion. Rosario M artinez, staff p l a n n in g director, said th e p la n 's objectives in c lu d e inc re asing th e e n r o llm e n t rate of h ig h school black g r a d u a te s to th a t of w h ite g ra d u a te s . In crea s­ ing college financial aid p r o g ra m s for m in o rities is o n e strateg y to car­ ry o u t th e objectives, s h e said. H o w e v e r , indiv id u al in stitu tio n s will be r esp o n sib le for d e v e lo p in g their o w n p r o g ra m s to increase m i­ nority r e c ru itm e n t a n d re te n tio n , s h e said. its "E a ch schoo l m u s t e x a m in e c o m m itm e n t a n d u n iq u e situ a tio n to com e u p w ith their o w n p l a n s ," M a rtin ez said. " W h a t w o r k s at T ex­ as Tech w o n 't necessarily w o r k at [UT-El P aso]." T h e b o a r d also will allocate $5.5 million to v a rio u s colleges to fu n d rem edial co u rse s for s t u d e n t s w h o fail th e Texas A ca dem ic Skills P ro ­ g r a m test. T h e 70th Texas L egislature in 1987 m a n d a t e d th a t f r e s h m e n e n t e r in g college this S e p te m b e r m u s t sco re at least 70 o n th e t h r e e section s — m a th , r e a d in g a n d w ritin g — o r take r e m e d ia l basic skills classes. said M ike K erker, TA SP p r o g r a m d i ­ th e U n iv ersity will rector, receive $200,000 for to p r o v id e rem e d ial classes — in a d d i tio n to $50,000 a lre a d y a p p r o p r ia t e d b y th e 71st L egislature — p e n d i n g b o a r d a p p ro v a l. A d ditio n a lly , th e b o a r d will c o n ­ sid e r a u t h o r i z in g a $79.5 million b o n d sale to g e n e r a te f u n d s to m e e t th e in c re a se d d e m a n d for H in s o n - H a z le w o o d S t u d e n t L oans. M ack A d a m s , a s s is ta n t c o m m is ­ sio n e r for s t u d e n t services, said loan r e q u e s ts d u r i n g fiscal y e a r 1989 d o u b le d th o s e of th e p r e v io u s y ear. " W e 'r e e x p e c tin g e v e n m o r e r e ­ q u e s ts this y ea r, po ssibly 50 p e r c e n t m o r e ," he said. H i n s o n - H a z l e w o o d l o a n s — s p o n s o r e d b y th e state a n d b a s e d on financial n e e d — are a w a r d e d for tuition p u r p o s e s to s t u d e n t s w h o qualify as T exas r esid e n ts. TSP editorial scholarship may be cut S y DEKE WAYNE BOND Daily Texan Staff If th e T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b lica tio n s Board of i ru s te e s d e c id e s to cu t back or e lim in a te a Daily Fcxan editorial s c h o la r s h ip , th e q u ality of fu tu re ed ito rs a n d m a n a g in g e d ito r s will suffer, / exan ed ito rs sa id T u e sd a y . K aren A d a m s , Texan e d ito r , said r e d u c in g or 'lim in atin g the sc h o la r s h ip — w h ic h covers tui­ tion, b o o k s a n d fees for th e m a n a g in g e d ito r a n d will cut both th e n u m b e r a n d quality of e d ito r ipplicants. "It [the scholarship] co u ld m a k e th e difference b e t w e e n m a k in g it h e r e or n o t a n d attracting qualified a p p lica n ts. It's g o in g to h u r t the n u m ­ b e r of p e o p le a p p l y in g for m a n a g i n g e d ito r m o re ¡han e d i to r ," said A d a m s , a Plan II senior. S tev e D obbins, m a n a g i n g ed ito r, said the scholarship h elps p e o p l e to d e c id e to a p p l y for th e positions. " W h e n s o m e o n e runs, t h e y 'r e basically a g r e e ­ ing to give u p o n e s e m e ste r at school, a n d the tu ition a n d b o o k s [scholarship] is a n a d d e d in ­ ce n tiv e ," said D obbin s, a jo u rn a lism senior. Richard Lytle, TSP general m a n a g e r, said the executive c o m m itte e of the b o a r d will m e et b e ­ fore th e r e g u la r b o a rd m e e tin g T h u r s d a y to d is ­ cuss th e o p t i o n s th e y hav e to c o n s id e r for the scholarship . A cc ording from Lytle, to a m e m o r a n d u m bo ard m e m b e r s can either e lim in a te th e sc h o la r­ ship, specify w h ic h benefits th e y w a n t to c o n t in ­ ue o r m a in ta in the sc h o larsh ip in its p r e s e n t f o r m . M artin G ib so n , p ro fe sso r of jo u rn a lism a n d m e m b e r of th e TSP bo ard , said h e w a s in favor of axing th e scholarship . "I th in k w e o u g h t to elim in a te it or m a y b e at the very least insist th a t w e cut it back to u n d e r g r a d u a t e tu itio n ," h e said. H a v in g to c o v e r the tuition, b o o k s a n d fees of a g r a d u a te s t u d e n t or a law s t u d e n t is too e x p e n ­ sive, G ibson said. T he ave rage u n d e r g r a d u a t e tuition a n d r e ­ q u ir e d fees for a Texas r e s id e n t w ith 12 h o u r s is $405.36, w hile for a is $1,269.36. law s t u d e n t th e cost F o rm e r Texan E ditor M ike G o d w in , a law s t u ­ d e n t, could n o t be r e a c h e d for c o m m e n t . L ytle's m e m o states th a t G o d w in o p p o s e d th e e lim in a ­ tion of th e sc h o larsh ip . G ibson said he believes th a t a p p lic a n ts for th e tw o p o sitio n s d o n o t a p p l y for th e sc h o la r s h ip m o n e y . "I d o n ' t th in k e d ito rs a p p ly o u t of th e n e e d for m o n e v . W e p a y m o r e th a n 95 p e r c e n t of n e w s p a p e r s in th e c o u n t r y , " h e said. In th e m e m o , Lytle r e c o m m e n d e d th a t certain sections of th e TSP H a n d b o o k be revised to a n ­ n u ally set th e e d ito r 's a n d m a n a g in g e d ito r s ' c o m p e n s a tio n . Buildings to get smoke detectors 'y L Y D IA L U M Daily Texan Staff \T w sm o k e d e te c to rs b e in g installed in the Jesse 11. Junes C o m m u n ic a tio n C e n te r will d is p a tc h signals to th e L I Police D e p a r t m e n t s w itc h b o a r d if fire brea k s out ,i I I I )ivision of Physical Plant official said T u e s ­ d ay . H o w a r d Wilson, phy sic al p la n t director, said th e a la r m 's n ew te afu re will im p r o v e r e s p o n s e tim e to a m fire in C o m m u n i c a tio n Buildings A a n d B a n d in the Texas S tu d e n t P u b lica tio n s building. " This is all part of th e U n iv e r sity 's effort to m a in ­ he said. " A lot of n e w e r b uild in g s ai­ tain safetv, rea d v h a v e this fe a tu re ." Jerry D e C a m p , a s s is ta n t vice p r e s id e n t for b u s in e s s p a r t of a $475,000 ca m p u s- affairs, said th e p rojec t w id e im p r o v e m e n ts p r o g r a m also in c lu d e d r e m o d ­ eling b u ild in g s a n d u p g r a d i n g o th e r s m o k e alarm sy s­ tem s. But Jackie Beckwith, a jo u rn a lism junior, said al­ t h o u g h m a in ta in in g safety s h o u ld b e a to p priority, the f u n d s m ig h t be " b e tte r s p e n t hiring m o r e te a c h e rs a n d o p e n i n g up m o re class se c tio n s." W ilson sa id the in stallation — initiated J u n e 13 — i n c lu d e s a d d i n g a n d re p la c in g fire alarm d ev ice s at stairw ell exits a n d s m o k e d e te c to rs in ceilings a r o u n d th e e lev a to rs a n d in a i r - h a n d l in g sy s te m s in m e c h a n i ­ cal r o o m s, Wilson said. The stairwell exit d e v ic e s will s o u n d a la r m s to alert p e o p l e to e v a cu a te th e b u ild i n g w h e n a latch is p u lle d or w h e n a glass p la te is b r o k e n , w h e r e a s th e sm o k e de te c to rs will s o u n d a la r m s w ith o u t m a n u a l a s s is t­ ance, h e said. A 1986 s u rv ey s h o w e d th a t m a n y of th e original fire safety sy ste m s in UT b u ild in g s — in c lu d in g C o m m u ­ nication C e n te r facilities — w e r e still b e in g u s e d , Wil­ so n said. "T h e y w e r e d efic ien t a n d m a rg in a l, so w e d e c id e d to replace t h e m , " h e said. THIS COUPON GOOD FOR: ADULT ADMISSION $1. O ff 50C OFF CHILDREN UNDER 12 RIVER CITY CAT SHOW JULY 15 & 16 9 a.m.-5 p.m. PALMER AUDITORIUM l o w e r l e v e l AUSTIN, TEXAS B E N E F A C T O R S O F A U ST IN AREA ANIM ALS hot valid with any other offer ■ only one coupon per ticket Mo cash value 1989 River City Cat Club coupon I I I I R . TICKET DISMISSAL ONLY$12W/THISAD GUARANTEED TO BEAT COMPETITORS PRICE BY $2 W/THEIR AD-ASK FOR DETAILS NEAR CAMPUS NO TESTS REGISTER BY PHONE BUDGET DEFENSIVE DRIVING 454-5300 4314 Medical Paricway ' r'onans JO/zza ^ 1 A DORM ROOM DELIVERY MEDIUM THIN PIZ Z A ONE TOPPING $5.50 T W O S O D A S G ood w ith co u p o n only O n e co u p o n per pizxa .G ood at all C o n an s locations E X P . 8-31-89 N E W I FREE D ELIV ER Y * *$5.00 M in im u m delivery order •Limited Delivery area VISIT OUR NEW RIVERSIDE LOCATION ! 4 4 1 -9 1 0 3 I m M _ _ ^ P a n e -fu l p r o c e s s Lane Thom as, top, and Barney Brascher cooperated to ease a glass panel into place on the Dobie Mall tower Tuesday afternoon. The panels were glazed in Alabam a and shipped to Austin. The tower is scheduled to be John M cC o nm co Daily Texan Staff K w Q o r v t a m h a r Business class inspires minority students By DANIEL DADMUN Daily Texan Staff A b u s in e s s class m ig h t be th e last place m a n y s t u d e n t s w o u ld w a n t to s p e n d th e ir tim e this s u m m e r — b u t several m in o rity from across th e n a tio n said T u e s d a y th e y feel differently. s t u d e n t s T he s t u d e n t s are ta k in g p a rt in th e L e a d e r s h ip , E d u c a tio n a n d D e ­ v e l o p m e n t p r o g r a m , a n a tio n a l p r o ­ g ra m th a t te a c h e s m in o rity s t u d e n t s a b o u t b u s in e s s as a field of s t u d y on a u n iv e rsity level. T h e fo u r- w e e k p r o g r a m — w h ic h sta rted July 2 — h as b r o u g h t 35 h ig h school s t u d e n t s from all o v e r th e c o u n try to th e U niv ersity , said A l­ len Bizzell, a s sista n t d e a n of th e College of B u sin ess A d m in is tra tio n . " T h e u ltim a te goal is e n c o u r a g in g gifted m in o rity h ig h school s t u d e n t s to c o n s id e r s t u d y i n g b u s i n e s s , " said Bizzell, th e p r o g r a m 's c u rric u lu m co o rd in a to r. T h e c h o s e n s t u d e n t s w e r e th r o u g h A Better C h a n c e — a Bos­ ton o rg a n iz a tio n th a t recruits m i­ n ority s t u d e n t s for h ig h e r e d u c a t io n institu tio n s, Bizzell said. All of th e s t u d e n t s p a rtic ip a tin g will be s e n io rs in h ig h school for th e 1989-90 school year, h e said. Joe C u lv er, a le c tu r e r in m a n a g e ­ m e n t a n d th e p r o g r a m 's o p e r a tio n s c o o rd in a to r, said th e U n iv ersity is o n e of 10 schools from across th e c o u n try th a t will s p o n s o r th e p r o ­ g ram — w h ic h is also f u n d e d b y a l­ m o st 90 c o r p o r a te s p o n s o r s . " M u c h of c o r p o r a te America u n ­ th e p r o g r a m ," C u lv e r d e r w rite s said. said w h ile th e p r o g r a m s H e across th e U n ite d States c e n te r a r o u n d b u s in e s s , th e y are n o t e xc lu­ sively d e v o t e d to it. " I t's g e a re d to w a r d bu sin e ss, b u t it also h a s a m u c h b r o a d e r in te rest to in c lu d e college w o r k , " C u lv e r said. P artic ip an ts a re c h o s e n be c a u s e of th e ir o u t s t a n d i n g acad e m ic a n d le a d e rs h ip skills, h e said. M iguel R o d r ig u e z , a s tu d e n t from San A n to n io , sa id h e is h a p p y to h a v e th e o p p o r t u n i t y to be in th e p ro g ra m . "It te a c h e s y o u a lot a b o u t b u s in e s s in h igh sc h o o l," h e said. th a t y o u d o n 't learn R o d r ig u e z said h e believes th e p r o g r a m is v e ry c o m p r e h e n s i v e . "It to u c h e s o n e v e r v as p e c t of b u s i ­ n e s s ," h e said. H e also said ta k in g classes fro m UT p ro fe s s o r s h a s quelled so m e of his fears a b o u t college. "It k in d of s h o w s y o u it's n o t too sc ary ," h e said, a d d i n g th a t he is c o n s id e r in g co m in g to th e U n iversity after he g r a d u a te s fro m h ig h school. " C o l ­ lege life itself is k in d of f u n ," he said. S tu d e n ts will a t te n d lectures by UT p ro fe s s o r s as well as by g u e s t in c lu d in g execu tiv es le ctu rers — from IBM, Shell Oil a n d t h e E qual E m p lo y m e n t Office for th e C ity of A u stin . In a d d itio n , s t u d e n t s will go on field trips a n d pa rtic ip a te in a n a ­ tio n w id e stock m a rk e t s im u la tio n , w h ic h will allow t e a m s of s t u d e n t s to " p u r c h a s e " stoc ks of 30 U.S. c o m p a n ie s . T h e s e stoc ks will be m o n it o r e d o v e r a tw o - w e e k p e r io d , w ith UT te a m s c o m p e ti n g a g a in s t te a m s at o t h e r schools. T h e te am w i t h th e h ig h e s t profit will be d e c la re d th e w in n e r , C u lv e r said. S tu d e n ts will b e able to m o n i t o r stocks u s in g free s u b s c rip tio n s to The Wall Street Journ al. P ro g r a m p a r ­ ticip ants will be in s tru c te d in h o w best to r e a d th e Journal, h e said. p r o b l e m - s o l v i n g P a rtic ip a n ts also will be p r e s e n t e d s c e n a r io s w ith b r o u g h t in bv ex e cu tiv es fro m area c o r p o r a tio n s , s u c h as IBM. T h e s e sc en a rio s le c tu r e r s in v o lv e g u e s t w h o s p e a k a b o u t a c c o u n t in g a n d o th e r c o r p o r a te p r o b le m s , th e n al­ low s t u d e n t s an o p p o r t u n i t y to try to solve th e p r o b le m s . After s t u d e n t s d e v ise a so lu tio n , th e g u e s t le c tu re r e x p lain s h o w th e p ro b le m w a s actually so lv e d in th e c o m p a n y . "M o st of th e m w o u l d be a n after- the-fact k in d of t h i n g , ” C u l v e r said. LSAT • GMAT • GRE The Princeton Review s u g g e s t s that Before you take the big test.. Give this small one. Before you sign on with a prep course for the LSAT, GMAT, or GRE, administer a little test of your own. Ask the company: 1. Is your class size limited to 12? 2. Can you document score improvements? On real tests? 3. Are instructors available for extra tutoring? Free? 4. How much training do instructors get? You'll find only one prep course with the right answers. The Princeton Review Summer courses beginning soon. Call now for information 469-6336 T h e Da i l y T e x a n STATE & LOCAL Wednesday, July 12,1989 Page 7 Tax coalition opposes city bonds for. center By ALAN HINES Daily Texan Staff If A u s tin 's p r o p o s e d c o n v e n t io n c e n te r is a s e c o n o m ic a lly s o u n d a s th e C ity C o u n c il c la im s , it s h o u ld b e fu n d e d th r o u g h p riv a te e n te r p r is e — n o t w ith c ity b o n d s , a ta x p a y ­ e rs o rg a n iz a tio n o ffic ia l s ta te d T u e s d a y . A t a p r e s s c o n fe r e n c e a n n o u n c in g th e T ravis C o u n ty T a x p a y e r s C o a litio n 's o p p o s i­ tio n to th e s a le o f $ 6 9 m illio n in m u n ic ip a l b o n d s to b u ild th e c e n te r , Jo h n L e w is , c o a li­ la m b a s te d th e c o u n c il's fi­ tio n c h a ir m a n , n a n c in g p la n s . "1 s u p p o r t b u ild in g a c o n v e n tio n c e n te r , a s d o e s a lm o s t e v e r y p e r s o n I'v e ta lk e d to , b u t n o t u n d e r th is p r o p o s a l ," L e w is said . " I f th e c o n v e n tio n c e n te r is a s e c o n o m ic a lly v ia b le a s th e c o u n c il s a y s it is, th e n w h y a r e n 't p ri­ v a te e n te r p r is e s fu n d in g it? T h is s h o u ld n 't b e a c ity v e n t u r e ." M im i C o r r e a , C itiz e n s fo r A u s tin 's C o n ­ sa id v e n tio n C e n te r c a m p a ig n m a n a g e r, L e w is is " s t ic k in g h is h e a d in th e s a n d " a n d ig n o r in g th e p r o je c t 's p o te n tia l v a lu e fo r th e city . " T h e c ity n e e d s to d o e v e r y th in g it c a n to m a in ta in its h ig h le v e l o f s e r v ic e ," C o rre a sa id . " O n e th in g I d o n 't w a n t it to d o is ra ise ta x e s , s o if w e c a n b u ild s o m e th in g th a t w ill b rin g in o u t-o f-to w n r e v e n u e , w h y s h o u ld n 't we move forward?" The center is expected to pump about $200 million annually into the Austin econom y through retail sales and taxes. But the council's past record with major city projects shows the city is incapable of supervising construction and operation of the proposed 100,000-to-150,000-square-foot center, Lewis said. "They have a terrible record of mism an­ agem ent," he said. "L o o k at the South Texas Nuclear Project — that w ent 10 times over our original cost. Look at the new airport — we still don't know w hen it's going to be built or how much it's going to cost us. Correa — on a leave of absence fro m h e r job as adm inistrative assistant to regular Mayor Lee Cooke — rebuffed Lewis' o p in io n of the council's com petence. "I'm sure Mr. Lewis d o esn 't intend to shut down all projects because of past action," Correa said. Lewis said another m ajor coalition c o n ce rn is that despite the cen ter's success o r failu re, bondholders will have to be repaid by th e city of Austin — "you and m e ." "W e have this project is what A ustin's econom y n e e d s ," Correa said. to move forward, a n d San Antonio man sought in Austin grocery holdup By RON LUBKE Daily Texan Staff The A u s tin P o lic e D e p a r t m e n t's ro b b e ry d iv isio n w a s still s e a r c h in g fo r a 2 2 -y e a r-o ld S a n A n to n io m a n in c o n n e c t io n w ith a " b ig - tim e " ro b b e ry o f a N o r th e a s t A u s tin g r o c e ry s to r e M o n d a y , a n in v e s tig a to r sa id T u e s d a y . S g t. S c o tt C a r e y sa id a b la c k m a le in h is e a rly 20s e lu d e d o ffic e r s a f t e r w a lk in g in to a T om T h u m b -P a g e s to r e a t 5811 B e r k m a n D riv e a ro u n d m id n ig h t a n d d e m a n d in g m o n e y fro m th e s to r e m a n a g e r . 1 he m a n e n te r e d th e s to r e , a p p r o a c h e d a c h e c k -o u t lin e a n d o r d e r e d e v e r v o n e in th e s to r e to g e t o n th e flo o r. H e th e n re m o v e d an u n d is c lo s e d a m o u n t o f m o n e y fro m a c a s h r e g is te r a n d w e n t lo o k in g fo r th e m a n a g e r, th e a rr e s t a ffid a v it s ta te d . T h e s u s p e c t th e n fire d tw o s h o ts in to th e flo o r w ith a g u n a n d to ld th e m a n a g e r h e " m e a n t b u s i n e s s ," th e a ffid a v it s ta te d . " H e w e n t to th e r e g is te r a n d to o k s o m e m o n e y ," C a r e y sa id . " H e th e n talk e d to th e m a n a g e r b e c a u s e h e w a n te d th e b ig m o n e y . T h in g s w e r e n 't h a p p e n in g fa s t e n o u g h fo r h im so h e fire d tw o s h o ts in to th e f lo o r ." A u s tin p o lic e is s u e d a w a r r e n t T u e s d a y for th e a rre s t o f 2 2 -y e a r -o ld S a n A n to n io re si­ d e n t K e rry Y o u n g in c o n n e c tio n w ith the h o ld u p . C a r e y sa id h e h a d c o n ta c te d th e S a n A n to n io P o lice D e p a r tm e n t b e c a u s e Y o u n g p ro b a b ly re tu r n e d h o m e . A u stin p o lic e o ffic e r s a r r e s te d L lo y d C lin ­ to n K y le , 25 , o f S a n A n to n io o n c h a r g e s o f a g g ra v a te d ro b b e ry w ith a d e a d ly w e a p o n in th e c a se . C a r e y said K y le w a s a r r e s te d a ft e r o th e r o ffic e rs n o tic e d th e ta n a n d g r e e n C a d illa c u se d in th e h o ld u p h e a d in g w e s tb o u n d o n E ast 5 1st S tr e e t w ith in m in u te s a fte r th e ro b ­ b e ry . T he o ffic e rs fo llo w e d it in to a n a p a r t­ m e n t c o m p le x at 1201 B ro a d m o o r D riv e , w h e r e K y le w a s a rr e s te d . A t th e c o m p le x , a b la c k m a le w h o m a tc h e s th e c a r Y o u n g 's d e s c r ip tio n a n d fled w ith a b a g o f m o n e y , C a r e y sa id . ju m p e d fro m T h e p o lic e im p o u n d e d th e c a r a n d fo u n d in s id e s e v e ra l .2 2 -c a lib e r b u lle ts a n d a T e x a s D e p a r tm e n t o f C o r r e c tio n s id e n tific a tio n c ard is s u e d to Y o u n g , th e a ffid a v it s ta te d . The p a s s e n g e r in th e c a r ju m p e d a fe n c e a n d ran in to a v a ca n t a p a r tm e n t c o m p le x at 5211 C a m e r o n R o ad . In th e c o m p le x , p o lic e fo u n d th e b a g c o n ta in in g a n u n d is c lo s e d a m o u n t o f m o n e y . P etting zoo Melissa Amman Daily Texan Staff Dana Stanislawski, 7 V 2 , isn’t sure about the baby goat that Robyn Smith, 7, holds for her to pet while Robyn’s mother looks on. Gentle Jungle on W heels brought the animals to the Spicewood Springs Branch of the Austin Public Library Tuesday. Petting zoo director Elaine Jones of Johnson City also brought ducks, bun­ nies, a lamb and ponies. Unlicensed pilot dies in Arlington crash St a t e B r ie f s Associated Press A R L IN G T O N — N a tio n a l T r a n s p o r ta tio n S a fe ty B o ard in v e s tig a to r s a re w a itin g fo r m e d ic a l to x ic o lo g y r e p o r ts o n a 2 4 -y e a r-o ld p ilo t w h o w a s k ille d a fte r ta k ­ in g a n e a rly m o r n in g jo y r id e in A r lin g to n . A rm o n d E d w a r d s , N T S B s e n io r a ir s a fe ty in v e s tig a ­ to r, sa id th a t c r a s h e d at 1:41 a .m . T u e s d a y a p p e a r e d to b e in g o o d w o r k in g o rd e r. th e C e s s n a 152 s in g le - e n g in e p la n e " W e 'v e m o v e d th e a ir p la n e th is a f t e r n o o n ," E d w a r d s said la te T u e s d a y . " T h e r e 's n o t h in g w r o n g w ith th e a irc r a ft. N o w it 's a m a tte r o f d o in g th e b a c k g r o u n d o n th e p ilo t a n d w a itin g fo r th e to x ic o lo g y r e p o r t s ." W illia m S ta c y o f A r lin g to n w a s k ille d o n im p a c t w h e n th e s in g le - e n g in e p la n e c r a s h e d ju s t s h y o f th e N e w p o rt V illa g e , P h a s e II, a r e s id e n tia l d e v e lo p m e n t. N T S B in v e s tig a to r s w a n t to c h e c k r e p o r ts fro m th e T a rra n t C o u n ty M e d ic a l E x a m in e r 's o ffic e to d e te r m in e if S ta c y w a s in to x ic a te d o r o th e r w is e im p a ire d a t th e tim e o f th e w r e c k , E d w a r d s s a id . A u th o r itie s s a y S ta c y , a n u n lic e n s e d p ilo t, s to le th e S t a c y a irp la n e fro m C o th r o n A v ia tio n In c . a n d to o k o ff fro m A rlin g to n M u n ic ip a l A ir p o rt a b o u t 1 2 :4 0 a .m . T u e s d a y . a c r o b a t ic m a n e u v e r s , b u z z in g a n e a r b y ju n io r h ig h s c h o o l a n d fly in g a s lo w a s 5 0 fe e t o v e r th e ro o fto p s o f t h e h o u s in g d e v e lo p m e n t. a p p a r e n t ly s e r ie s fle w o f a " W e 'r e v e r y lu c k y m o re p e o p le w e r e n 't k i l le d ," s a id A rlin g to n P o lic e s p o k e s m a n D e e A n d e r s o n . " H e w a s b u z z in g a p a r tm e n t c o m p le x e s . H e c o u ld v e ry e a s ily h a v e b r o u g h t th a t p la n e d o w n in a h e a v ily p o p u la te d a re a . E v e ry o n e w a s a s le e p a t 1 a n d 2 a .m . W e c o u ld h a v e h ad a v e ry tra g ic s it u a t io n ." T o m m y S ta llin g s , 2 8 , a p ilo t a n d o w n e r o f S k y -W a v e a t th e a ir p o r t, sa id h e sa w S t a c y ta k e o ff a n d k n e w th e p ilo t w as in tro u b le fro m th e b e g in n in g . " H e g o t in th e a irc r a ft a n d to o k o ff. A p p a r e n tly , h e d id n 't k n o w h o w to f l y ," s a id S ta llin g s , w h o trie d to g e t in ra d io c o n ta c t w ith S ta c y to ta lk h im d o w n . " H e c a m e in , m a d e th r e e o r fo u r [la n d in g ] a p p r o a c h ­ e s , b u t h e c o u ld n 't m a k e i t , " S ta llin g s sa id . " I to ld h im to p u ll o n th e th ro ttle b u t e ith e r h e w a s n 't lis te n in g o r h e ju s t p a n ic k e d . A n d h e to o k o ff a g a i n ." Associated Press Form er chief of staff sworn in as new Texas secretary of state G o v . Bill C le m e n ts ' fo r m e r C h ie f o f S ta ff G e o r g e B av - o u d to o k th e o a th o f o ffic e a s th e n e w s e c r e ta r y o f s ta te T u e s d a y — th e h ig h e s t a p p o in te d p o s itio n in T e x a s g o v e r n m e n t. In h is a c c e p ta n c e s p e e c h , B a y o u d said h e w ill w o rk to e x p a n d v o te r r e g is tr a tio n a n d e n s u r e fa ir n e s s in th e v o tin g s y s te m . rig h t o f p a r t ic ip a t io n ," h e sa id . B a y o u d a ls o a d d e d , " I s tr o n g lv b e lie v e in c a m p a ig n fin a n c e re fo rm a n d I w ill w o rk fo r its e n a c tm e n t b v th e T e x a s L e g is la t u r e ." H e r e p la c e s Ja c k R a in s , w h o r e s ig n e d Ju n e 15. Edwards to run for lieutenant governor A s S e n . C h e t E d w a r d s , D -D u n c a n v ille , a n n o u n c e d h is c a n d id a c y fo r T e x a s lie u te n a n t g o v e r n o r T u e s d a y , h e a lso re le a s e d a s ta te m e n t r e g a rd in g a $ 1 0 ,0 0 0 c o n t r i­ b u tio n g iv e n to h im b y E a st T e x a s m illio n a ire L o n n ie " B o " P ilg rim la st w e e k . " I n h in d s ig h t, m a y b e I sh o u ld h a v e ta k e n a few' m o m e n ts to c o n s id e r M r. P ilg r im 's m o tiv e s a n d a c tio n s th a t d a y ," E d w a r d s sa id in a p re p a re d s ta te m e n t. H e sa id h e s to p p e d a d e p o s it o n th e c h e c k a f t e r h e fo u n d o u t th a t P ilg rim h ad g iv e n c o n tr ib u tio n s to s e v ­ e ra l o th e r s e n a to r s . State Senate passes bill to protect children T h e S e n a te p a s s e d a bill T u e s d a y a llo w in g th e d e a th " I th in k th a t S B 12 w ill p ro v e to b e an im p o rta n t d e te r r e n t fo r th o s e w h o are c o n s id e r in g th e m u rd e r o f o u r p re c io u s c h i ld r e n ," said th e b ill's s p o n s o r , S e n . B u s te r B ro w n , R -L a k e J a c k s o n . The bill n o w a w a its H o u s e a p p r o v a l. S e n a to r s a lso a p p r o v e d a bill to p la c e T e x a s u n d e r fe d e ra l r e g u la tio n s re g a rd in g a s b e s to s re m o v a l. Compiled by Kimberly Horner, Daily Texan Staff " D e m o c r a c y 's m o s t p r e c io u s g ift to its c itiz e n s is th e p e n a lty fo r m u rd e re rs o f c h ild re n u n d e r 6. EXAM S • CONTACTS • GLASSES 1904 Guadalupe MBANK MALL 476-1000 PARK FREE MBANK LOT 1909 E. Riverside Dr. RIVER HILLS CENTER 441-9771 % MILE E. OF 1-35 Offering the la test in contact lens technology... A t affordable prices. * 20° ° OFF ALL SUNGLASSES Featuring RAY BAN® R M 3 r w coupon Wayfarer 3 9 “ w/coupon Not valid with other discounts. * 25 00o f f A COMPLETE PAIR OF PRESCRIPTION GLASSES • DOCTORS PRESCRIPTION REQUIRED • EXAMS AVAILABLE AT OUR OFFICE O ffer Valid Thru July 31, 1989 Offer Valid Thru July 31, 1989 2 pr. Glasses or 2 pr. Contact Lenses or 1 pr. of each 8900 e Doctors Prescription Required e Exams available at our office e BAL Sofspin or Sottmate B Contact Lenses e Selected Frames O ffer Valid Thru July 31. 1989 INSTANT CASH AND BONUS If you need cash to help you out while you are in school, why not donate blood plasma? You can donate twice in a 7 day period and receive $10.00 every donation. Plus, with this ad you'll receive a $3.00 bonus on your first visit and a $4.00 bonus on your second visit. • You must have a valid photo ID and some proof of Austin residency. (Student ID Accepted). • $25.00 bonus drawing every Friday. • N ew donors will receive a $5.00 bonus on their 3rd donation within 9 days. • On your 6th visit you will receive a $5.00 bonus. FOR INFORMATION, OR FOR DETAILS ABOUT ADDITIONAL BONUS PROGRAMS, PLEASE CALL 450-0756 AUSTIN PLASMA CENTER Visit our new facility at 3423 Guadalupe St. (comer 35th & Guadalupe) Dating service tests for AIDS Associated P ress S A N A N T O N IO — A n ew dating service offering AIDS testin g as part o f its m atch-m aking program has draw n the ire of health officials and volu n teers w h o w ork w ith AIDS p atien ts, w h o say the testin g m ay create a false se n se of security. The n ew service, k n o w n as "L unchm ates," w a s put together by M ike Pelletier, a 32-year-old divorced com puter salesm an and m arketing researcher. Pelletier said his service p rovid es not on ly the com ­ puter service dating portion of other program s, but also offers com plim entary testin g to d eterm in e if a prospective m em ber carries the A ID S virus. "W e b elieve w e h ave arrived at a sen sib le sin gles alternative to p layin g A IDS R ussian roulette o f the nightclub scen e," Pelletier said M onday. If the A IDS test is n egative, the m em ber receives a card sayin g he or sh e is free o f the virus' sym p tom s. Pelletier said a p o sitive test result w ou ld not d isqu ali­ fy a m em ber, but it w o u ld preclude his or her receiv­ ing a w allet card. T h e AIDS p o rtio n of th e p ro g ra m h a s d ra w n fire from M e tro p o lita n H e a lth D istrict officials a n d th e p re s id e n t of th e San A n to n io A IDS F o u n d a tio n . W e believe we have arrived at a sensible singles alternative to playing AIDS Russian roulette of the nightclub scene.’ — Mike Pelletier, marketing researcher "My op in ion is that it's just a scam to m ake m o n e y off the AIDS crisis," said Robert "Papa Bear" Ed­ w ards, p resident of the San A n ton io AIDS F ou n d a­ tion. "These cards are not valid tw o w ee k s after th e y are issu ed and they could be d an gerou s by giv in g a false se n se o f security," Edw ards said. Dr. M aurine Porto, coordinator of com m un icab le d isea ses at the M etropolitan H ealth District, also criti­ cized the n ew service. "There is a four- to six-w eek w in d o w p eriod in w hich a person cou ld be tested and be n egative but be carrying the virus," sh e said. n A D T T P T D A TVPT'O x jT1l£ V JL JLv/AJl ,JTjbJL w JL W I V l V I J J E / i J Pharmaco, a leader In pharmaceutical research, is currently conducting studies on several investigational medications and is seeking participants with the following physical conditions: Oral Contraceptives $ 100* Jock Itch (Tinea Cruris) $ 100* Depression Healthy adult women desiring oral contraceptives (birth control pills). Free oral contraceptives for up to eight months. Must have not been on oral contraceptive pills for two months prior to study entry. Healthy individuals at least 12 years of age with moderate to severe jock itch (fungal infection of the groin). Requires up to five clinic visits over a four-week period. Healthy adults with depression requiring antidepressant medications. Requires eight clinic visits over an eight-week period with an optional extension phase. Participants will . receive FREE psychiatric evaluations. Im pacted Wisdom Teeth Healthy individuals at least 16 years of age needed to evaluate pain relief medications after removal of impated wisdom teeth. Two visits over seven days required. Significant reduction in bill received for completed participation. Those meeting the medical qualifications for participation will receive FREE physical exams, lab tests, medication, and medical supervision throughout the study period. Com pensation For Study Participants H P H A R M A C O Research F o r Better Health For More Information» Please Call 447-3593 Page 8/THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, July 12, 1989 Houston realtors give council donations Associated P ress o f $500 H O U ST O N — A realty grou p 's d istrib ution cam p aign checks to several City C ouncil m em ­ bers prom pted surprised reactions from som e council m em bers, but others said it is sym ptom atic of the n e e d for local cam paign finance re­ form . "I d o n 't n e c e ssa rily th in k it w a s im p ro p e r," said C o u n c ilm a n V ince Ryan, o n e of fo u r to receive a check. " It's n o t u n u s u a l for so m e o n e to b rin g a ch eck to C ity H all. I th in k it's an o u tg ro w th of a sy ste m th a t n e e d s re fo rm ." O fficials said th e ch eck s w e re p r e ­ se n te d last w e e k w h e n real e s ta te interests d esc en d e d council cham bers for in dividu al m eetin gs w ith council m em bers. on The action d rew extra attention in H o u ston b ecau se of the controversy that resulted last w e e k w h e n East Texas b u sin essm an L onnie "Bo" Pilgrim p assed out $10,000 checks to state senators con sid erin g a w ork­ ers' com p en sation bill of direct in­ terest to Pilgrim. U nlike the A ustin incident, C ou n ­ cilm an Jim G reen w ood — w h o did n o t receive a check — said n on e of the points d iscu ssed w ith the realty group are currently on the City C ouncil agenda. H ow ever, som e council m em bers still reacted n ega­ tively to the n ew s. "I w a s stu n n ed that som e City C ouncil m em bers w ere getting ch ecks," C ouncilm an D ale Gorczyn- ski said. The contributions w ere m ade t h r e e -p e r s o n T h u r s d a y , w h e n team s from the H ou ston Board of Realtors arrived at C ity H all and fanned out to visit each m em ber and d iscu ss general issu e s in w hich in terested , officials the board said. is } C oun cilm en Ryan, R odn ey Ellis, Jim W estm oreland an d Ben R eyes said they w ere h an d ed the $500 checks during the visits or as the team s left their offices. 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Aug. 31,1989 ■ i > i i \ 3 r u e N Imagewriter Clones $245 2400 Baud Modems $129 Overstock Clearance Sale Mac 3D VideoWorks Multiplan Trapeze HD Utilities HD Partition Hayden Spell Check Thesaurus MacRaquetball Disk Express Hayden Graphics UT Faculty/Students: Buy 2 get 1 Free $30 $12 $15 $25 $12 $12 $12 $12 $6 $17 $10 ALL APPLE II SOFTWARE/HARDWARE HEAVILY DISCOUNTED FOR CLOSEOUT! 2520 Guadalupe 478-7171 FBI director’s Hero Award troubles anti-bias plaintiff Associated Press EL PASO — The Hispanic agent who filed a successful discrimina­ tion suit against the FBI said he was insulted w hen the country's largest Hispanic civil rights group lauded FBI Director William Sessions. Bernardo Perez was upset that the League of United Latin Ameri­ can Citizens gave Sessions its first Hero Award, which the 140,000- member organization plans to bes­ tow annually. Sessions received the award Friday at LULAC's national convention in W ashington, D.C. "W hat was more insulting is that LULAC gave him a standing ova­ tion," Perez said in an interview Monday. Texas LULAC President John Garcia said Perez d id n 't understand the reasoning behind the honor. "By recognizing Sessions, we are to establish goodwill attem pting with him so that we can get some genuine investigations by the FBI into police brutality cases," Garcia said. Sessions has consistently defend­ ed the FBI. Neither he nor other FBI officials were available for comment Tuesday evening. Sessions was nam ed FBI director in the m idst of Perez's class-action lawsuit against the bureau. The bu­ reau continued insisting it had done nothing wrong even after U.S. Dis­ trict Judge Lucius Bunton ruled the FBI discriminated against Perez and 310 other Hispanic plaintiffs in pro­ m otions, assignm ents and disci­ pline. Perez's attorneys, Hugo Rodri­ guez of Miami and Antonio Silva of El Paso, also accused LULAC of hy­ pocrisy w hen Sessions received the award. Earlier in the day, Bunton had aw arded the attorneys and eight as­ sistants $677,127 for representing the Hispanic agents. They had asked for $1.3 million in fees for more than 8,000 hours of work on the case. Silva said he and Rodriguez plan to ask Bunton to reconsider. The two lawyers will be paid $85 an hour for their work out of court and $125 an hour for courtroom work, Rodriguez said. Silva said he normally charges $125 an hour for civil rights cases. Dallas couple recovers stolen car, fully restored by talented thieves Associated Press DALLAS — Charlie and Sharon Reed were certain that if they ever again saw their stolen dilapidated Volkswagen, it would be in even worse condition, perhaps stripped and on blocks. But w hoever stole the 1976 con­ vertible fixed it up to the tune of $1,200, painting it, adding new bum pers and fenders and even fill­ ing up the gas tank. Police recovered the Reeds' be­ loved banana yellow "Bugaloo" at a car lot in Corsicana, about 45 miles southeast of Dallas, w here it was stolen three m onths ago. "I think they [thieves] aligned the front end, too," said Reed, 25, who sells rebuilt auto engines at Sun En­ gines. "It used to shim m y real bad. The only thing they d id n 't replace is this rubber strip on the back bum p­ er. Shouldn't be 10, 15 dollars." I think they [the thieves] aligned the front end, too.’ — Charlie Reed He said the only item missing was a toolbox his mother-in-law had giv­ en him last Christmas. "It's unbelievable," said Sharon Reed, a 23-year-old receptionist at a Dallas bank who said she thought the convertible had been lost forev­ er. The Reeds' insurance only cov­ ered collisions, not theft. For the first time in their three years of marriage, the two each had a car to drive to work Monday. "W e've always wanted to be a two-car family," said Reed. "It was a heartbreak knowing we had to start all over again." The couple, after the theft, had bought another car, but they said it was a step down from the colorful VW. "If I was going to steal a car, I'd paint it a different color," said Terri Ross, Mrs. Reed's sister. A Corsicana used-car dealer lam ents the fact that he bought a hot Bug. The ow ner of B&D Motors in Corsicana even installed a $100 windshield. Mark Barnes quipped the initials of his car lot stand for "broke and desperate" in this case because he has little hope of recovering his p u r­ chase price. Barnes, who said he had no idea the car was stolen, added he has since learned similar vehicles can sell for $5,000 or more. "I w asn't aware of w hat these lit­ things were bringing," said tle Barnes, who, despite his predica­ m ent, added that he was happy for the Reeds. $ 3 0 0 - $ 1 ,0 0 0 C om pensation Pharmaco is looking for healthy, non-smoking males to participate in several upcoming pharmaceutical research studies. To qualify, you m ust pass our free physical exam and be able to stay in our clinical dormitoiy over all the dates listed with each study. Meals, accommodations, entertainment, and recreational activities are provided to participants free-of-charge. EARN $1,000 Males, 18 - 45, weighing 135-200 lbs. and within 10% of ideal weight. Check-In tim e: 5:00 pm Friday. Ju ly 21 Friday, August 4 Friday, August 18 Check-out tim e: 8-9:00 am Sunday. J uly 23 Sunday. August 6 Sunday, August 20 ■* In addition, six brief outpatient visits are required after each check-out date. EARN $300 Males, 18 - 45, weighing 135-200 lbs. and within 10% of ideal weight. 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Then compare. You'll still find the best prices at Russell Korman. W ed d in g B a n d s D i a m o n d s w ith G.IJV. R ep orts F r o m $ 5 2 .5 0 Round Marquise $875 $1150 $950 .47 SI,F .49 VS,I ----------- i flM .ITOTUA S V T. I97\ h 38th & Lamar • 451-9292 • Open 10am - 6pm, Mon - Sun | Ease Your Housing Search with Texan Classifieds Page 10/THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, July 12, 1989 Lawsuit over movie rights may be settled Associated Press H O U S T O N — A lawsuit pitting Randall Dale Adam s against the producer of the film The Thin Blue Line could be resolved this w eek, despite som e public disagreem ent on settlem ent, Adams' attorney said Tuesday. terms of the "I think w e have basically agreed in principal on the details of.the settlem ent, and now it's just a matter of drafting the appropri­ ate papers," said Adams' attor­ ney, Randy Schaffer. Adams, of su b u rb an C olum bus, Ohio, filed suit in H ouston June 22 to decide whether he or Errol Mor­ ris ow ns the rights to Adams' sto­ ry. The suit w as transferred from state district court to the U.S. D is­ trict court chaired by Judge Lynn H ughes on June 30. The Thin Blue Line recounts the events that led to Adams' impris­ onm ent in the 1976 slaying of a Dallas police officer. Evidence un­ covered w hile researching the m ovie w as used to help Adams gain his release from prison in March. At issue is w h e th e r M orris ex­ ercised his option to retain rights to the A dam s story. said a n d M orris A w ritten ag reem ent betw een A dam s that A dam s w ou ld receive $10 if M orris produced a PBS docum entary ab out A dam s, or $60,000 an d 2 p ercent of profits if it w as a com ­ mercial film. But A d am s' atto rn ey s have con­ ten d ed th at M orris p roduced a com m ercial film, n o t a do cu m en ta­ ry, an d th at M orris failed to pay A dam s any m oney. M orris said a settlem en t is con­ tin g en t u p o n Schaffer's retraction th at he b o ught of statem en ts A dam s' life story for $10, but Schaffer d en ied th a t Tuesday. "N u m b er one, I'm n o t retracting anything . T h at's n o t part of any a g re e m e n t, it b e ," Schaffer said. n o r will "A n d nu m b er tw o, I never said that. W hat I said is, 'I gu ess M orris th in k s th at he p u rch ased A dam s' story for $1Q,' " he said. "I'm not suggesting he p u rch ased his story at all. O bviously, if he had p u r­ chased it th ere w ould be no basis for this law suit. The point of the w hole law suit is th a t he did not buy his story." M orris' attorney, D avid M ad­ dox, later so u g h t to clarify his cli­ e n t's com m ents, saying M orris m ean t to say th a t the issue of the contract w ould be m ade clear in the settlem ent. "E m otions are ru n n in g kind of high on th is," M addox said T u es­ "But w h a te v er settlem en t day. agreem ent is reached will be a m atter of public record, an d ev ery ­ body can draw th eir ow n conclu­ sions." M orris, from his C am bridge, M ass., hom e, said agreem en ts concerning fu tu re projects w ould stipulate that A dam s an d M orris share in the profits. Schaffer w ould n ot discuss the term s of the near settlem ent, say­ ing there w as an ag reem en t n o t to disclose is m ade final. its co n ten ts until it Associated Press BEEVILLE — Bee County officials say the more prosperous N ueces County to the south is acting less than neighborly in its pursuit of the state penitentiary Bee County wants to attract. Last fall, N ueces County w ent on record as a supporter of Bee Coun­ ty's effort to w in the prison, but N ueces officials say they are consid­ ering entering the competition. N ueces C ounty Judge Bob Barnes said Tuesday he expected the issue to come up at the N ueces County commissioners' July 26 m eeting, and that he thinks the com m ission­ ers will vote to submit an applica­ tion. "I am appalled at the efforts of Bee County prison plans to face tough competition ■ 1E - : W\ D<> • DRIugsA Our Recipe For Savings Calls For Low, Low Prices! S A V E Park Manor Milk Choose From G allon Jug All Varieties Lim it-2 Total, Please ■ / S p a r k ?)*», « 'M A N O R i«> MILK S A V E Del Monte Tomato Sauce___________ 8-Ounce Can. Limit-4, Please10? S A V E Split Fryer Breasts H-E-B Grade A , Dinner Pack $167 ■ Lb. F R E S H Boneless Round Steaks U.S.D.A. Choice Steakhouse Beef, Family Pack. Limit-2, Please A dditional $1.67 Lb. W,. i» "* ' « * TI CT ' l & t mk F R E S H Cantaloupes No Sodium T 1 W T [ F S u T 5 14 15 Prices Good Wednesday, July 12 Thru Tuesday, July 18,1989 At: AUSTIN, PFLUGERVILLE A N D RO UN D ROCK • Limit Rights Reserved • N ueces County to put a cog in our efforts," Beeville Mayor Jesse DeRusse said in a press conference Monday. "We have always worked together, and I question the ethics of initially receiving their support for our proposal, and then deciding to study it them selves." Corpus Christi Mayor Betty Turner said her city's support for Bee County continues, but it is in N ueces County's best interest to consider com peting for the facility. "T he county n ee d s every eco­ availab le," o p p ortu n ity nom ic Turner said. Turner said regional cooperation will be important no matter which site the TDC chooses. Bee C o u n ty 's econom ic d ev elo p­ m e n t director, G rady H ogue, has been w orking m ore th a n a year to p e rsu ad e th e Texas D ep artm en t of C orrections to choose Bee C ounty for a new m axim um -security prison next N ovem ber, according to the Corpus Christi Caller-Times. The county an d Beeville have sp e n t $30,000 on H o g u e's plan, in ­ clud ing $8,000 in land options. Offi­ cials estim ate the priso n w ould g e n ­ erate a m o nthly payroll of $1.3 m illion an d add at least 450 jobs to the area. Bee C o u n ty Judge W illiam Streit- m an likened N ueces C o u n ty 's in ter­ est in the prison to a slap in the face of a good friend. "W e have been w orkin g on this long and h a rd for over a year n o w ," S treitm an told the Caller-Times. "W e have enjoyed trem en d o u s su p p o rt a n d en thu siastic su p p o rt from all including N ueces C oun ty. over, The econom y in C o rp u s C hristi an d N ueces C o u n ty is very b right, b u t in the rural areas, o u r econom y has e ro d e d ." The Texas D ep artm en t of C orrec­ tions is soliciting pro p o sals for a 2,200-bed m axim um -security pris­ on. A pplicants are asked to include a d o n ation of 300 acres o n w hich to construct th e $64 m illion facility. The state also is accepting p ro p o s­ als for a $22 m illion, 1,000-bed m e- th a t w ould dium -security priso n em ploy a staff of a b o u t 260 w ith an a v e r a g e m o n t h ly o f $461,000. p a y r o ll fo r RESUMES PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS IM M IG RATIO N Htítti eye 2532 GUADALUPE 477-5555 E PAH/{ N o N o C h rom e C o n tr a c ts O pen Every Day 4121 Guadalupe Next door to A u s tin B a r b e ll Co-. 459-9174 S I pvnvr EVERYDAY 11-2 $ 4 5 0 e Egg Rolls • 2 Soups • Desserts ALL-U-CAN-EAT LUNCH BUFFET I I I I I II I I I I I* 4 Entrees • Many Kinds of Foods m II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 2 for1 HUNAN KING CHINESE RESTAURANT 2for 1 good for dMng room only WWl M i coupon good thru 7/19/89 6517 Airport Blvd. In front of Solo Serve 452-5172 Aak About Free Defeery C D C /M A I MAC ^ DINNERS •£!■ • Choice of 12 [whw 2 FOR 1 T h e Da i l y T e x a n s p o r t s Wednesday, July 12,1989 Page 11 Old, new lift AL All-Stars Jackson MVP as Ryan takes record-setting win Associated Press A NAHEIM , Calif. — Bo know s an d so th e A m erican League goes. Bo th e Jackson, b rig h te s t of b a se ­ b all' s b re ed , n ew m ade w in n ers of the AL and believers of every body else T uesday night. H e did it all, an d w h e n he w as d o n e th e A m ericans w on 5-3 and h ad consecutive All-Star G am e victories for the first tim e since 1958. It w as Jackson's show . H e led off w ith a m o n stro u s hom e ru n , stole a base and took tw o others. H e d rove in tw o ru n s, scored twice, saved tw o m ore w ith a ru n n in g catch a nd w as n am ed the gam e's m ost v alu ­ able player. O n th e n ig h t w h en Jackson 's m ulti­ sp o rt N ike com m ercial d e b u te d on n a ­ tional television, Bo sh o w ed he know s baseball b e st of all. H e do m in ated a gam e th a t w as su p ­ posed to be ru led by the pitchers at tw ilight. Instead, Jackson joined Willie M ays as the only players to h o m er an d steal in the sam e All-Star G am e. Jackson, w h o h as never led off for K ansas City, m ad e M anager T ony La R ussa's gam ble p a y off. He an d W ade Boggs hit consecutive hom e ru n s in th e bottom of the first inning off Rick Reus- chel. Jackson becam e the fifth play er to lead off an A ll-Star G am e w ith a h om e ru n an d the n in th to h om er in his first All-Star appearan ce. "H e 's a sinker-ball pitcher an d I th in k he left a sinker o u t over the plate a little bit, and I w as able to golf sw ing a n d get a piece of it," Jackson said. A nice piece, too. Jackson's h o m e r traveled an estim ated 448 feet, o ne of the longest ever hit to dead center field at A naheim S tadium . "I th o u g h t I m ad e a good pitch. H e just w ent d o w n a n d got it," Reuschel said. "I heard ab o u t his po w er and strength, an d I saw it first-hand to ­ n ig h t." Jackson drove in the tiebreaking run in the seco nd, singled in th e fo u rth and left after th e sixth. By th e n , N olan Ryan w as on th e w ay to being th e w in n in g pitcher, a n d th e AL n arro w ed its All- Star gap to 37-22-1. Ryan, at 42 th e second-oldest pitch er in All-Star h istory and th e o ldest to w in a gam e, p itch ed tw o scoreless in n in g s in relief of starter Dave S tew art, w h o gave u p tw o ru n s in the first. Ryan allow ed one hit a n d , ev en w ith o u t his best fast­ ball, struck o u t three. "To be h o n e st w ith you, th at first in ­ ning w as ju st th e op posite of w h a t I w as expecting. A nd I th o u g h t, 'H m m m , I d o n 't know if I w an t to go o u t th e re ,' " he said. A tlanta's Jo h n Sm oltz, th e y ou n g est pitcher in the gam e, w as th e loser. The AL led 5-2 after th ree innings. The NL tried to rally in th e e ig h th w h en Von H ayes hit an RBI single, b u t D oug Jones retired Tim W allach o n a fly ball w ith tw o ru n n e rs on base to en d the in- ning. Jones e arn ed th e save w h en he fin- See All-Star, page 19 Get Mugged! Bowl three games at the regular price between 10 a.m. - 7 p.m. (Mon. - Fri.) and the Rec Center will give you a beautiful 12 oz. mug and put your own “mug” on the Rec Center’s Mug Shot Wall of Fame. The Texas Union Rec Center Located downstairs in The Texas Union 471-0247 Cash ft Carry OPEN T IL 8.-00! ROSES ROSES ROSES Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 Naar FID facing 41st St. Datty Specials ' THE SEWING R O W • Tailoring • Alterations • Custom Bridal P a n t H em s 4534 W estfste B ird loo com 401* behind Mann Theatre 092-64 60 7 K D V l ( w i t h t h i s ad) Offer Expires 7/31/89 j . , . 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Limit one portable computer per individual in any 12 month period. Prices subject to change without notice c 1988, Zenith Data System* Bo Jackson of the Royals steals second as an errant throw flies past Ryne Sandberg of the Cubs. Associated Press Rockets sign Smith; guard help to come Associated Press H O U ST O N — U nrestricted free L a r r y a g e n t r e ­ S m ith , a b o u n d in g sp e ­ cialist w ith G old­ en State th e p ast s e a s o n s , n in e sig n ed a three- c o n t r a c t y e a r w o rth $2.5 m illion w ith th e H o u s­ ton Rockets on T uesday. NBA first-round pick T h e 6-foot-8 S m ith , G o ld e n S tate's in 1980, averaged 5.7 po in ts an d 8.2 re­ b o u n d s p er gam e last season and started 78 gam es for th e W arriors. targets Sm ith has been o n e of H o u sto n 's prim ary in o btaining a stron g reb o u n d e r d u rin g th e off sea­ son. Since h e w as a n u n restricted free agent, th e R ockets do n o t have to com pensate G o lden State for Sm ith. “ H e's recognized as o ne of the to p three or four re b o u n d e rs in the N B A ,'' G e n e ra l M a n a g e r Ray P atterson said. "H e 's a blue-collar player w ho gives us additional stre n g th in the front line along w ith A keem O lajuw on, O tis T horpe, Tim M cCorm ick a n d W alter B erry." Sm ith has averaged 10.4 re­ b o u n d s d u rin g his NBA career and only once in his nine seasons has he h ad m ore p o in ts th a n reb o u n d s. T hat w as in 1984-85 w h en h e had 887 po in ts an d 869 re b o u n d s in 80 gam es. Sm ith u n d e rw e n t off-season su r­ gery to repair ligam ent d am age to fingers on b o th han d s. "I h a d ligam ent tears on th e little fingers of th e right an d left h a n d s, b ut ev ery th in g is okay now a n d I'm excited sta rte d ," ab o u t gettin g Sm ith said. Sm ith e arn ed $600,000 w ith the W arriors last season an d recently re­ jected a tw o-year contract offer. Sm ith, w h o atte n d e d A lcorn State, w as the W arriors' first-rou nd pick in the 1980 draft, the 24th play er cho­ sen overall. The Houston Chronicle re p o rte d that the Rockets are in tere ste d in Seattle sh o o tin g g u a rd Sedale T hreatt, also an u n restric te d free agent. "W e're w ork ing h a rd o n the T hreatt situ a tio n ," Rockets general m an ag er Ray P atterson said. "T h ere are a few o th e r clubs involved w ith him , including Seattle. But w e 're w orking on it." The Rockets also are aw aitin g an a n n o u n c e m e n t from th e NBA on the sta tu s of form er Rockets p layers Lewis Lloyd a n d M itchell W iggins, b an n ed from the league for th e last 2Vi seasons because of d ru g in ­ volvem ent. Borrowed bicycle carries UT senior to triathlon title By PAUL HAMMONS Daily Texan Staff Talk about a re tu rn on y o u r in ­ vestm ent. C hris Torrigino, a senior at the U niversity of Texas, p ed aled aw ay w ith the Texas S tate T riathlon C h am p io n sh ip in W axahachie on S aturday w ith the aid of a n ew set of w heels. Ironically, T orrigino d id n 't pay a cent for th e new bicycle. H e h ad seen it in an A ustin bicycle sh o p on T hursday an d convinced th e o w n er to lend it to him for th e race. Torrigino, a 22-year-old kinesiolo­ gy m ajor, credited th e bike for his w in. The new cycle h ad a lighter fram e and sm aller w h eels th an To- riggino's old bike, a n d Torrigino said it gave him a n edge n o t only because it perfo rm ed better b u t be­ cause of th e m ental edge h e felt it gave him . "W h en ev er you g et a n ew bike y o u 're alw ays fired up, a n d you th in k you can go fa ster," Toriggino said. "T h a t's probably as im p o rtan t — think ing you can go faster. T he triathlon b egan w ith a .9-mile sw im th at w as follow ed by th e bike race, w hich lasted 31 miles. The com petition then e n d e d w ith a 6.2- m ile run. Toriggino said because of th e stru ctu re of the race, it paid off to be a bicycle specialist because it gave him m ore tim e to catch u p to the leader an d eventually stretch o ut a big lead. "I w ould say [the race] favors the bikers because it takes up m ore of th e tim e," Toriggino said. "If a biker com es in know ing h e 's a stro n g cy- W h e n e ve r you get a new bike you’re always fired up, and you think you can go faster.’ — Triathlete Chris Torrigino clist, he ju st goes m ad an d know s he has to m ake u p as m uch g ro u n d as he can. "I figured I h ad a p retty good shot [to w in], I had a feeling I w ould com e off th e bike in first, a n d I was just w orried if I could hold it d u rin g the ru n ." in Toriggino stayed close the sw im m ing leg, com ing o u t in third place, a n d quickly took over the lead in the first mile of th e cycling leg. H e co n tin u ed to len g th en the lead until he reached th e ru n stage a full four m in u te s a h e ad of th e field. He held on to finish tw o m in u tes ahead of second-place G reg Fisher. T origgino said he h as b een com ­ p eting in triathlo ns for th e last three years an d h a d picked u p h is first w in in a com petition a few w eeks previous in an A bilene race. O d d ly en o u g h , except for a year of sw im m ing in high school an d tw o years in a sw im m ing club, he h ad no real experience in racing of any kind, let alone in a triathlon . "I had d o n e th e bike ju st to get in sh a p e ," Toriggino said, " a n d th e n a friend w h o h a d been d o in g [triath ­ lons] gave m e his trainin g schedu le, and I ste p p ed it u p a bit. It ju st kind of h a p p e n e d ." IF YOU WEAR CONTACT LENSES AND HAVE ITCHY, RED, WATERY EYES, You w i receive FREE” eye care + "“Financial” incentive if you quaHfy to participate in a new mediation study. f í i i i EYE RESEARCH ASSOCIATES 458-6136 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM-5:00 PM W e d n e s d a y , J u ly 1 2 ,1 9 8 9 P a g e 12 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT The Daily Texan Mats take their act to bigger venues Even in cavernous arenas, The Replacements continue to take requests. By JEFF TURRENTINE Daily Texan Staff ] 'efo re people throw ing w ere la b e ls a ro u n d like "n ew sincer­ ity ," before the o n s la u g h t o f ja n g ly g u ita rs and the Cult of Alex Chilton, the Replacem ents were banging out drunken Kiss cov­ ers and sloppy, brilliant originals in a style that directly assaulted the mores of the pop establishm ent. Like their spiritual and musical fore­ fathers — bands like the Stooges and the MC5 — w hat the Replace­ ments may have initially lacked in instrumental virtuosity was made up for by their energy and attitude. Like the Stooges and the M C5, it looked as though the Replacem ents were bound to follow the sam e pat­ tern: Influential, but never com m er­ cially successful. Yet here they are, touring with Tom Petty, playing gi­ ant arenas nationwide. Did they ever think they'd be playing venues this large, for this many people? "Y e s ," says Paul W esterberg, lead singer and songw riter for the M inneapolis quartet. "Probably by the first w eek, we assum ed w e'd be playing them by the w eeken d." The release of a new Replace­ ments album always causes a stir among critics and listeners of "alter­ native m u sic," but with this record, the band is creating a stir of a differ­ ent sort. Don't Tell a Soul is a pop album, pure and simple. Unlike Replacem ents albums of the past, it's clean, melodic and commercially accessible — which has put fear in the hearts of old fans who, perhaps rather selfishly, don't want "their ban d " to do anything different. Yes, it may be true: The Replacem ents may be turning into a pop band. But to hear Paul VVester- berg talk about it, you'd be sure that's that w hat they were trying to be all along. And maybe being a pop band isn't such a bad thing, for that matter. "Instead of having real raucous music and then having really quiet m usic, we tried to blend b o th ," says W esterburg, explaining the philoso­ phy behind the new sound. "A nd I think that really helped out — put­ ting acoustic guitar on rockers and putting electric guitar on ballads. It's the first record that seem s like an album. Track by track, it seem s to make some kind of sense, rather than others which seem like a com ­ pilation or som ething like th at." Part of the shock surrounding the band's release of such an "accessi­ b le" album is that it seem s to go against anti-establishm ent, anti-commercial image. But that im­ age, although the Replacem ents never really challenged it publicly, w asn't totally of their own making. their The rock press latched on to the band early on in their career, and wound up the Replace­ turning m ents into larger-than-life symbols of all that rock 'n ' roll was supposed to be: unpolished, antisocial, spon­ taneous. The new sound poses an affront of sorts to that im age, and to the critics who have perpetuated it. "[T h e press has] created the Re­ placem ents' im age," he says. "W ell, 1 guess we created it, they're just the ones who wrote about it and ex­ pounded upon it. But it beats hav­ ing the press hate your guts. I guess it hurt us in the long run being 'crit­ ics' darlings,' because those are the bands that generally d on't cross over big time. But we d on't think about it that much. I figure if som e­ body likes us, that's gotta be better than som ebody hating u s ." influenced by Though the live show s will u n ­ doubtedly be the band's new , cooler m entality, W est­ erberg prom ises that the Replace­ m ents will still put on the kind of unpredictable show that has made them fam ous as the best live act in alternative music. "It's still tem pting to go back and roll on the floor and pull out the old stu ff," he says. "Basically w e're ju st doing a short version of our club set. We'll go up w ithout a list, play a song and start taking requests. W e did Hello Dolly the other night, and the Marine hym n. It's kinda fun to get up there and maybe play to a handful of yuppies w ho've maybe never heard of the b an d ." THE REPLACEMENTS Where: Erwin Center When: Friday night Mary adds decibels to Atlanta’s folkie scene By KATRINA BROWN D aily T exa n Staff "W h en people think of Atlanta ro ck ," says Mary My Hope guitarist Clinton think of Steele, REM, and Drivin' and Cryin', and now Indigo Girls. It's the folk, or the folk-with-rock so u n d ." "th ey Atlanta-based Mary My I lope, however, doesn't quite fit the earthy mold, according to Steele: "W e com e across a bit more psychotic than th at." Perhaps the deviation from the Atlanta trends stem s from the fact that no one from Mary My Hope really com es from Atlanta — the members just met there. Steele is from M anhattan, vocalist guitarist jam es Vincent Hall is from Nashville, and bassist Sven Ti­ pien hails from Sw eden. I he last mem ber of the band, drum m er Steve I indenbaum , joined the band through a new spaper ad mar­ keting his services. "W e're all self-taught m u sicians," Steele says, "and we started off as a garage band. But we wanted to play so bad, so we just did it." Since then, Mary My Hope has released the well-received debut album M useum, and em ­ barked on an extensive tour. They recently completed a seven-w eek tour of Europe open­ ing for Fields of Nephilim, playing for crowds as large as 4,000. Mary My Hope has also released one video, which can now be seen on M TV 's 220 M in­ utes. "Before we shot the vid eo ," Steele says, "I was very apprehensive about doing it. To me it was not appealing to do som ething like that all in one day. Also, the song we did was Wildman, Childman, which w ouldn't have been my choice to use. But, luckily enough, the video is fantastic — I couldn't have asked for m ore." For those wanting to get to know the band up close, Mary My Hope will be in Austin at Liberty Lunch on July 14, which happens to be, as Steele points out, Bastille Day. "I'v e never been to T e x as," Steele says. "In fact, I've never been out west. I'm looking forward to the the gigs, though, and the traveling in the van — it's the best way to see the coun- try ." was solo — honest, straightforward lyrics. I just try to write w hatever com es o u t." What does Steele expect from Texas audi­ ences? "A few w eeks ago, I saw this guy from a Dallas booking agency wearing a T-shirt that said on the back 'Fuck you, I'm from Tex­ as.' I guess that's my preconceived notion. I'm really looking forward to it." The rowdy sound of Mary My Hope should be just fine, though, for any obnoxious Tex­ an. While the music itself has been called "p rim al" by more than one critic, it seem s to be quite thoughtful, too. Although Steele claims that the band has no specific influences, Mary My Hope has been compared to the likes of Led Zeppelin, David Bowie, Black Sabbath, and Bauhaus. "I grew up liking standard ro ck ," Steele notes, "like Bowie, the Beatles, the Doors, and Pink Floyd. When I'm playing, I never really have an influence in m in d ." "In the band, though, I'm not really the m u sician," Steele adds. "I think m ore, since I write a lot of the lyrics." He finds that his influences, although few, come from such writers as Bowie or John Lennon, "w hile he "F o r example, in the song Communion, I try to describe how we do what we d o ." Indeed, quite a nebulous explanation, but Steele thinks that that's the best way to approach his lyrics — he likes to keep things am biguous, open. Steele's favorite song on Museum is Suicide King, which he says is about "physical love, strength in ambiguity. It's the most com plete of all the songs — it flows, it has no formula. W e're trying to get away from music that's self-conscious or d ilu ted ." The musical sound of Mary My Hope, Steele says, com es from a friction which m an­ ifests itself in lyrics, with a philosophical basis that he descibes as "optim istic nihilism ." "It's a feeling in which you fluctuate b e­ tween not caring about anything — which is the nihilism — and then caring about every­ thing so much that it drives you up the wall. I sit on that kind of fence — I'm not com fort­ able there, but I'm more com fortable there than anyw here e lse ." See Mary My Hope, page 13 Free Tickets W e’ve got free tickets to Capitol City Playhouse and its production of Randall Wheatley’s comedy Along For The Ride, and we want you to have them. There are two versions of the free tickets: The first is a group of five two-for-one tickets that are good for any production of the play other than opening night (Wednesday night) or the closing weekend (July 28 and 29). The second version is another group of five with pink markings on the ticket. These are two-for- one tickets good for the 10 p.m. showings on Saturday and July 22 only. So see our secretary Rosanne the Texan office s e arly at Wednesday to get your ticket. As usual, it’s one ticket per person, and as usual, be nice. _____________ c o u p o n . _ _ _ — i ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO x CUT s § BLOW DRY Service* perform ed by supervised students! 533 9 Burnet 4 5 8 -2 6 2 0 J ISN’T IT TIME YOU MADE SOME SERIOUS MONEY? If you’re serious about selling, you can make some serious mon­ ey. Our leading advertising sales repesentative averaged over $1200 a month during this past year. Working part-time. If you are a self-starter, a fast learner, and a hard worker, there may be a place for you on our ad­ vertising staff. Some sales experi­ ence is preferred, but not required. You must have a car and a desire to earn serious money. Come by T.S.P. 3.210 to fill out an application. If you qualify we'll call you for an interview. Hours are 9 a.m. to 12 noon, or 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. THE DAILY TEXAN TSP Room 3 .2 1 0 25th St. and Whitis Ave. An Equal Opportunity Affirm ative Action Em ployer LONDON PARIS ROME MADRID TOKYO RIO $335 $345 $399 $349 $508 $380 ONE WAY FROM AUSTIN ALSO TEACHER and BUDGET FARESI EURAIL PASSES USSR / Europe Tours Languso• Learning Centers 0 Coaadlftwd 1904 Guadalups 472-4931___ WISDOM TEETH If you need the removal of wisdom teeth... CALL B IO M E D IC A L R E S E A R C H G R O U P INC, 24th & San Antonio Open Monday-Saturday 11 am-until 1:30 at night at 451-0411 Financial incentive provided for your opinion on a pain medication Mon.-Fri. 8:30-4:30 I I CHINA FORTUNE C a f e t e r i a f l H QUICK LUNCH TO GO ONLy H HUNAN. SZECHUAN C U I S I N E ^ ^ M Choice of One Entree (I) Almond Chicken (3) Diced Chicken (fl) Beef Broccoli Plus: Kgg Roll Fried Wontoo 301 W. MLK (turner l «vaca & MLK* ll:O0AM-2:30PM LEGENDS PROUDLY PRESENTS: The Domino's Pizza Happy Hour Slice of Pizza & A Beer $1.50 —s4-6pm Monday-Friday LEGENDS O' \ * e i 9 1 2 R ed R iv e r • 4 7 9 -0 8 3 8 Musicians and Dancers From Breclav, Czechoslovakia Bates Recital Hall, UT Campus Thursday, July 13,1989 8:00 PM $7.00 ($5.00 students) T ry new Pepperoni Lovers™ Pizza from Pizza Hut®. Loaded with layer upon layer of pepperoni and an extra heaping portion of cheese. i Pi::,i Hul lilt .m l * m.ln. in cr i,lcm,irks and re|¡i-ltrcd iradenurk*ol Pi::.t Hul, Ilk M a k in ’ it great!f® Get one medium Pepperoni Lover’s' Pizza for only $8.99 Better yet, get two for just $4 more! Expires 7/30/89 I 2»» » r n i r»'tkmplM«n v atu * € 19*** P » / ? j H ut Inc I Mary My Hope Continued from page 12 THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, July 12, 1989/Page 13 ---------------- m A n n tíos A L L D A F ) a l l s e a ts —a l l sh o w s J i MANN W ESTGATE 4608 WESTGATE BLVD S ta p h m tang's PET SEMATARY 12d 2:16 6.-00 7:16 9 :» S i Cnortt* ShRRndom Brtroqr* - < H MAJOR LEAGUE 12:16 2:30 6:16 7:30 9:46 S HH Wm Jo h n C u to c k - < P V SAY ANYTHING 11:46 3:00 4 :4 * 7:00 9 : 1 6 H 1 ( TIMES PU8USHED ARE FOR TODAY ONLY ) M S I T V ^ X S H 9 4 / / Seafe R $ 1 M i: m h s > o w r S :m lL S Moctln Score— , Woody Alton NEW YORK STORIES ,'. >V- * v '•fe'-1iCua53n SAY ANYTHING 5 1 0 ,9 35 8 CIom, John Mokovkk DANGEROUS LIAISONS 9 Acodomy Award mt Foreign FHm p e u e t h i iuS .. University Market Facts... During the year UT students spend $3.346,196 for automotive maintenance and $2.798,933 for tires, batteries and parts and accessories at Austin automotive supply stores Source The University Market BekJen Associates 1987 I RESERVE 1990 CACTUS YEARBOOK TODAY TSP BUILDING 25TH & WHITIS C I N E M A R K T H E A T R E S MOVIES 12 ^ ll- 3 5 N @ F .M . 1825 251-7773 Affontabl* Adm rion Prtc«« Adults $4.75 Children >2.75 LETHAL WEAPON 2 12:30 3:00 5:30 8:00 10:30 H THX LETHAL WEAPON 2 12:30 3:005:308:0010:30 IB THX BATMAN Ecu! _____________ 2 : 0 0 4 :4 5 7 :3 0 1 0 :1 5 _____________ DEAD POET’S SOCIETY m th x 1 :1 5 4 : 0 0 7 :0 0 9 : 4 5 ~~ WEEKEND AT BERNIE’S Ecisi 1 2 :1 5 2 :4 5 5 :1 5 7 :4 5 1 0 :0 0 KARATE KID III m 1 2 :1 5 3 :0 0 5 :3 0 8 :0 0 1 0 : 3 0 GHOST BUSTERS II m 1 2 :3 0 2 :4 5 5 :1 5 7 :4 5 1 0 :1 5 HONEY I SHRUNK THE KIDS s*c] 1 2 :0 0 2 :3 0 5 :0 0 7 :1 5 9 :3 0 STAR TREK V m 1 2 :0 0 2 :1 5 4 :3 0 7 :0 0 9 :3 0 GREAT BALLS OF FIRE ipchi 1 2 :4 5 3 :1 5 4 :4 5 8 :1 5 1 0 :3 0 INDIANA JONES ANO LAST CRUSADE 1 :4 5 4 : 1 5 7 :0 0 9 :4 5 ¡PGÍ31 FIELD OF DREAMS m 1 2 :0 0 2 :3 0 5 :0 0 7 :1 5 9 :4 5 General Cinema [BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY m ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM - * DENOTES STEREO SOUND ' H IG H L A N D 1 0 M IPDLl nSKVILLI ROAD 454-9562 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES THX ★ GREAT BALLS OF FIRE mis 1:003:105:207:359:45 KtOISTtK TO WIN A NANT PIANO PIANO ★ KARATE K ID 3m 12:00 2:25 4:50 7:15 9:40 THX ★ HONEY, I SHRUNK THE KIDS pq 12:352:505:05 7:209:35 ★ WEEKEND AT BERHIE’S n 12:45 3:00 5:15 7:30 9:50 ★ WEEKEND AT BERNIE'S m 12:45 3:00 5:15 7:309:50 ★ DEAD POETS SOCIETY po 12:00 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 ★ FIELD OF DREAMS k 12:00 1:55 3:55 5:55 7:55 9:55 ★ EARTH GIRLS ARE EASY k 12:00 2:00 4:00 6:00 8:00 10:00 ★ SEE NO EVIL, HEAR NO EVIL r 1:003:10 5:207:409:50 ★ DO THE RIGHT THING r 12:00 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 BARTON CREEK MOPAC of LOOP 360 327-8281 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES ★ BATMAN RQ13 NO PASSES 11:30 2:104:507:3010:00 THX ★ BATMAN M13 NO PASSES 11:15 1:454:207:109:45 ★ DO THE RIGHT THING r 1 2 :0 0 2 :3 0 5 :1 5 8 :0 0 1 0 :1 5 DEAD POET’S SOCIETY ro 1 2 :3 0 3 :0 0 5 :2 5 7 :4 5 1 0 :0 0 DEAD POET’S SOCIETY n 1 2 :3 0 3 :0 0 5 :2 5 7 :4 5 1 0 :0 0 H IG H L A N D M A LL HIGHLAND MALL BLVD. 451-7326 1! TIMES ★ SAY ANYTHING m u 1 :3 0 3 :3 0 5 :3 0 7 :3 0 9 :3 0 PET SEMATARY r 1 :2 0 3 :2 0 5 :2 0 7 :2 0 9 :2 0 BWSTHUK PINK FLOYD LIVE 12:00 y i w j i rwy 7:25 DCBIE 4:45-9:30 I he true story of the 12th century lovers *** Abelard and Heloise has everything A GRAND, PASSIONATE FILM could want - sex, religion, intellect, violence and elaborate costumes...and a wonderful cast." CARYN IAMES, NEW YORK TIMES TW O HOURS OF ENTERTAINMENT.. Derek de Lint is well cast as Abelard... as Heloise, Kim Thomson exudes a simmering, naive sensuality." BILL KAUFMAN, NEWSDAY STARTS FRIDAY JULY14TH "A FASCINATING STORY... 'Romeo and Juliet' was kid stuff." HANK CALK ) NEW YORK DAILY NEWS “TRUST ME—ONE OF THE MOST BREATHTAKINGLY SENSUAL PICTURES IN YEARS EXTREMELY WELL ACTED AND FILMED: —Ioanna Ungdetd ABC AaCTO NfTWOKk THE FORBIDDEN LOVE QE HEL01SE AND ABELARD If Lew is A Sin Condemn Me To Hell! Atlanta’s Mary My Hope will see Texas for the first time on Bastille Day. $2.75 AH shows before 6 pm "W h en I w rite, it's a re le a se of e n ­ ergy . It m ak es m e h a p p y b e c au se I can create. Innovation is n ev er a s ­ p irin g to be, it ju st h a p p e n s. W hen yo u think too m uch a b o u t w hat y o u 're d oin g, you k n o w y o u 're a it's all p lan n ed . dilettan te, T h en ag ain , you can be v ery intelli­ gen t an d in novative an d not even kn ow it — like Bow ie or th e B eatles — they w ere ju st d o in g w h at they th o u gh t w as right, an d so are we. W e're ju st trying to be o u r s e lv e s ." that Steele sa y s that b e c a u se of the m alleable lyrics, the m u sic M ary M y H op e is m akin g can be u n iversal: "L ik e on Suicide King, the m e ssa g e is m ore p erso n al. It's not u s trying to hit so m e b o d y o v er their head with ou r id ea. T he idea is to m ake y our o w n ." MARY MY HOPE Where: Liberty Lunch, 405 W. Second St. When: Friday H O N D A • KAW ASAKI r o n CENTER ’89 600 HURRICANE Reg. 5,000 SALE *4,495 ST’ÉT • ’88 ELITE 80 Reg. 1,500 SALEM ¿398 ’88 ELITE 50 ’ 8 9 R e g . 1 , 0 0 0 SALE $598 ’88 250 INTERCEPTOR Reg. 3,500 SALE *2,955 ’88 HAWK 650 Reg. 4,200 SALE *3,495 COME W E WITH UE> 6509 N. LAMAR (Between Airport & Koenig) SALE ENDS 7-31-89 459-3311 459-8944 SALES (plus Tax Title and License) T £ Y A M C L flS S IF I€ D HOTLIN6! . AMY INTERNATIONAL/JADKAN FILM cwskNTs LM.K1 K L>f I IN’ 1 KIM THOMSON «si-D E N H O LM ELUOTT a CLIVE DO NN ER him STEAUNG HEAVEN a b *(*v»• MIKAEL SALOMON uuvc by NICK BICAT executive p«oouccb SUSAN CEORCÉ ^ surtM '! *7 Ft CHRIS BR YANT kKiVyj ih f kovti b> M ARIO N MEADE paooucto *v S IM O N MACCtMtKINDALE / h-K t'u ci < n ; * ■ « » • *np ANDROS EPAM INONDAS n » M ro * v CLIVE DONNER m worn mothers rctuies di$tsi»utiom E 2 1 St and G u a d a lu p e , H f A T ? e 4 7 7 - 1 3 2 4 PRESIDIO THEATRES T o d a y 's T im e s M a t in e e s In ( ) WESTGATE 8 m -itN W tS T O A T I M A U S. L A M A * A M M W H IT I LINCOLN 6 ■ M O * IN I S N O tT M A m x . N o t ON 2 SCREENS! (12 00>-2 4 5 :0 * 7 2 * 9 55 112 4 0)0 1 * 5 3 * 6 0 * 1 0 25 (1 1 5 * 2 2*5:1 5)-7 4 * 10:05 S IS I mS Í ® L e t h a l W c a p o m % No Pa isas (11 15M 45-4:30-7 25-10:10 R N K H O I SON KEATON I A T M A 8 - I H X No Pasaos (10 45-1 25-4 101-7:05-9.50 * » a n d th e L R S T C R U S R O t GHOSTBUSTERS 5^ II I I a o y sHMtoJ- 03. no. oourrenmo] T h x — (1 1 :3 *2 1 * 4 45>-7 4 *1 0 :2 5 ON 2 SCREENS' (11:45-2 0 * 4 3 0 )-7 0 *9 :3 0 (1 2 :0 *2 :3 *5 Q5)-7:3MO:00 No I No NORTHCROSS 6 4*4.91*7 M O O T H C a O S * M A U A N M M O N A 8URNCT No Discount Tickets (11 4S-2:25-4:55R7:20*9:45 B a r a — The S opervory o re b o c k * r * G H O S T B U S T E R S II HONEY I IHK KIDS S u N M a a r M S ON 2 SCREENS1 (11 40-2 10-4 551-7 15-9 35 <12 3 * 3 0 * 5 2S>-7 5 * 1 0 05 ■ | ON 2 SCREENS1 (12:20-2:3*4:45>-7:06-9:25 / i s i n s r c r u s r o e r r No I No Dsoounl Tickets (11 30-2 00-4 i>-7 05-9 45 A R B O R 4 10000 I R U I C M 345-6937 IA TB II E H 3 [ » A D I O C IS S O C II 1 1 m> I IN D IA N A J O h E S a n d | t h e L A S T CR U SA D E ( 1 * 3 * 1 :* iS 6 » k 7 :0 * 9 :4 6 ( i f t t - T S S i o i EX' T H 5 T » 7 3 * 1 0 15 ^ 1 :S * 4 :1 0 )- 7 :» 1 * 0 0 i K a r a t e K i d ■ • - i n ( Y l [ obCe* stereo" ■ - I h O N I V I --------T H I KIDS ¡ j I I t iW * » r « r w g l IHX* I f i R U T BUIS Of FlBE! nrtrooupr mmss j S ■ GHOSTBUSTERS ■ No Pw m <12 0 * 2 2 * 4 45) 7 15-9:40 1 1 — '« I 7 : 2 5 6 » I it*1* 11 No P a n » (1 0 * 3 : 2 * 5 45) 6 :0*10:15 No Pm m i (1 2 :3 *2 :4 *5 » ) 7 45-10 00 No P— »»« No Oiacounl Ttcketa (12 15-2 3 *5 :0 0 ) 7 356:50 i . S O U T H P A R K 3 1921 E 1CM WHITE 447-22*0 | S 1 E J o f D r e a m s (1 2 :1 *2:3 *4:S O )-7 :1*6 30 | T VILLAGE 4 1 3 7 0 0 t N O H S O N 4 5 1 6 3 5 3 > J l t { P - r , u i IIATIII No Pi m m i H X (11 3 * 2 1 * 4 6 1 * 7 : 2 * 1 *1 0 P A Q U A R I U S 4 1 I n O M Y 1 -------- TMCKIOS 4 No P w — 4 :1 5 1 0 3 0 No Paaaas No O taonM Tickets (1 2 :0 *2 :4 *5 :2 6 ) 7 :4 *1 0 -.» 160-3 10 5 :20-7:36 9 46 1 153 2 0 6 3 * 9 00-10 10 BEACHES sm 2:3$ 5:06-10:06 WORKING GIRL 1 _________ 12:10-7:40_________ DANGEROUS LIAISONS m 12:00-2:30-5:00 _________ 7:30-10:00 1A9 ANYTHIN* 1*013] 2 4 6 6 1 5 7 : » RIVERSIDE 8 ■ IV B H IO C A PULASANT V A U f Y t O a m - o o o o Lethal WEAPOX H No Pasar-* ON 2 SCRFR (11 45)-? 15 4 45 (12 4513 15-5 4 5 3 (12 25-2 55 5.15, 7 4510 20 No Pasa.» (12 1 52 4 5 5 75! 8 1 51 0 35 No Pasa*» (11 5 5 7 10-4 30> 7 00-9 30 No P»M«» (12 1 52 2 5 5 00) 7 30-10 00 No P tM M (12:00-2 30-4:56) 7 30-10:00 GHOSTBUSTERS ED II Dl \l> I’d I sex 11 n YNViAMJo* & a n d t h e • i n s r c r u s r o e No P uses No Discount Tick e (11 4 5 7 10-4 301 7 00-9 30 LAKEHILLS 4 2 4 2 * N N WHTO 44449*2 No P a n e l (12 2 * 2 4 * 5 00) 7 3 * 9 50 Th x SDeJVtTNEK. No Passes No D iscount Tick (1? 30-2 45 5 15k7 45 f 11 *u l) R I AMS RENEGADES HUB! Bins OfflRf! (12 50-3 05-5 2 7 4 5 10 05 No R***es (12 4 0 2 5 5 5 10 7 40*10 10 P E T 230-4 55 SEMATARY 7 2*9 so 4 4 4 - 3 3 3 3 CL\ iKf Uly 4 4 5 1 0 00 MAJOR LEAGUE 2 .3 0 -5 .1 5 -7 4 0 PM GONNA GIT YOU SUCKA 10:10 LEAN ON ME in . i 2 :2 0 -5 :0 5 -7 :3 0 - 9 5 0 DREAM TEAM n I3 | 2 :0 0 -7 :1 0 small sale Page 14/THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, July 12, 1989 ■t r a n s p o r t a t i o n ! ■ I f GUIDE TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Autos 20 — Sports-Foreign 70 — Motorcycles 10 — Misc. Autos tires, battery, 7 3 CA D ILLA C Loaded le a th e r m tenor, new alte rn ato r, $ 9 5 9 4 5 9 1 9 7 9 Leave message to M ich ael 12-19____________________________________ G O V E R N M E N T SEIZED Vehicles from $ 1 0 0 Corvettes Chevys. Surplus Buyers G u id e . (1) 8 0 5 - 6 8 7 ¿ 0 0 0 Ext S 9 4 1 3 Fords M e rc e d e s 6 16-18P 1 9 8 8 CHRYSLER LE B A R O N convertible, transmission, a /c premium automatic tilt w heel, cruise control, p package, to choose w indows/locks, p from 4 4 3 - 4 4 3 5 4 -1 2 - 5 N C seats, 7 from G O V E R N M E N T SEIZED vehicles $ 1 0 0 Corvettes Fords M e rc e d e s Chevys Surplus Buyers G u id e (1) 8 0 5 6 8 7 6 0 0 0 Ext. S - 9 4 13 7-12-2Q P 1981 T O R D LTD Icy A /C , Cruise, au to recliner Drives matic V 8 5 5 ,0 0 0 miles, superb $ 1 5 0 0 C all 4 4 5 6 8 3 6 6 - 2 7 - 1 5 N C ______________________ 8 3 A LLIA N C E, 50 K . A C , 4-speed. A M -' F M stereo cassette Excellent condition $ 1 7 5 0 4 4 3 -8 6 5 1 b efo re 10 am and a f ­ ter 3 pm, Jian 6 -2 9 -1 5 N C 198 4 P O N T IA C FIERO, Red, lo a d e d , with low m ileage 2 6 7 - 7 8 6 8 7-12 5B EDE3G3t3E3 The First Choice 30 DAY 1,000 MILE WARRANTY WITH MOST CARS! 1984 VOLVO DL 4 d r., 54,000 m iles M ust sell $6200 1979 CHEVY PICK-UP ton, real n ice $3995 1988 SUZUKI SAMURAI JX C onvertible! $6995 1988 SUBARU GL Station w agon, only 6,000 m iles $6995 1986 NISSAN PICK-UP Ixtngbed, 35,000 m iles $5675 1986 ACURA LEGEND 4 dr., loaded! ONLY $14,750 1984 FORD TEMPO GL V ery c le an $3450 1982 OLDS CUTLASS A uto, AC, AM A FM $2995 1985 DODGE ARIES LE 4 dr., a u to , AC, AM FM $4450 1988 FORD ESCORT 2 dr., AC, AM/FM Only $5995 Autos C H EVR OLET C IT A T IO N X ll 1 9 8 0 AT, AC, 7 2 5K , windows, cruise, excellent conditions! $ 1 ,5 0 0 Jose 4 7 3 - 8 5 2 6 2 8 -1 5 N C 6 - __ 8 5 LASAR XE Turbo, AT, lo ad ed , excel lent condition, super clean, $ 4 9 0 0 '$ ^ 0 0 b e lo w b o o k ) 4 5 3 4 0 0 3 6 - 2 9 - 2 0 N C .______________________________ '71 V O L V O G o ld , 4 -d o o r sedan AC , new clutch, v ery safe $ 1100 3 8 5 - 6 7 4 0 , ________________ 4 7 6 -6 1 7 3 7 - 7 -5 B 1987 V W C a b n o le t convertible W h ite w / w hite le a th e r 2 4 0 0 0 miles, autom atic, g re a t condition, $ 1 2 ,0 5 0 451-1156, 4 4 4 - 374 1 7 -7 -5 B M A Z D A R X-7 '81 R otatory Engine 7 4 ,0 0 0 m 5spd A /C , sunroof, p o w e r window s, K e e n d w o o d stereo $ 3 , 2 0 0 4 7 4 - 4 3 1 6 , 6 - 2 8 - 2 0 P ___________________ 1 9 7 9 C A M E R O ! A utom atic, 3 0 5 V -8 , A C , A M /F M cassette, n ew Leave messaqe 4 5 3 - 5 5 2 1 C h en e. 7 - 7 - 1 5 N C tires. $ 2 5 0 0 . V O L K S W A G O N RABBIT W h ite 4 -d o o r, $ 8 0 0 , call Curtis ot 8 3 4 - autom atic 0 4 5 6 . 7 -7 -1 5 N C _______________________ '8 5 M U S T A N G 5-speed, 5 0L V 8 , high m ileage. In top condition $ 4 7 0 0 C all 4 7 8 - 8 0 4 3 7 -7 -1 5 N C '8 3 SU BA R U GL. 4 -d o o r 5-speed. A C V ery g o o d condition 7 -1 0 -5 B 5 3 9 6 $ 2 ,0 0 0 4 5 9 1 9 7 4 ALFA Rom eo BeHina 2 0 0 0 N e w S -6 6 0 tires Turbine allo y w heels A C Must sell $ 8 0 0 . 3 8 5 - 1 4 6 6 7 - 7 -5 B 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos GREAT M ILE A G E ! 1 9 8 3 M a z d a GLC e q u a liz e r Sunroof, D o lb y stereo with $ 2 ,0 7 5 n eg o tiab le 2 6 4 1841 A fte r 6 5- 8 - 6 7 N C _________________________ _ 1 9 8 5 N IS S A N 2 0 0 SX very lo w m ileage, digital 2 3 ,0 0 0 , Autom atic, sun locks, excellent d ashboard , automatic c o n d it io n . n e g o t i a b l e M o h o m a u d 4 6 2 - 9 7 3 7 6 -1 4 -N C $ 5 9 9 5 roof, FAULTLESS, C LEA N . '8 6 T o yota Tercel W a g o n AT, PS, A C , Stereo-Cassette, Cruise Tinted M essaqe 4 5 0 - 1 7 4 6 6 - 2 3 - 1 5N C ___________________________________ '8 7 V W G o lf GT R ed,4-d oo r,sun roo f, fully lo a d e d $ 9 0 0 0 o r best o ffer 4 7 4 - 5 8 0 5 7-12-5B 70 — Motorcycles M O TO R C Y C LE FIXER UPPER'S d ream 1 982 H o n d a - 5 0 0 cc FT A S C O T fo r sole $ 9 9 le a v e m essage ot 4 9 9 - 0 1 8 5 7 - 7 -5 B ____________________________ Please 1 9 8 7 H o n d o 6 0 0 RXL 1 7 0 miles. Includes trailer and cover G a r a g e $ 2 5 0 0 - o f f e r Lee 2 6 3 - 9 2 0 7 , 3 2 9 - 4 7 3 6 . E x t.4 5 7 0 7- 7-5 B ____________________________________ SUZUKI G N 4 0 0 X G o o d Shape, new tires W e ll m aintained $ 4 5 0 W ill tra d e fo r a truck 472-1 115. 7 -7 - 5 P ____________ A-- Y. *>y. v ¡¿ * Í HONDA. Come ride with us 459-3311 Full Selection o f Motorcycles & Scooters WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6509 N. LAMAR INTERCEPTOR V F 7 0 0 Engine in perfect condition. A ll m ain ten an ce records 9 2 0 0 miles 7 7 0 0 Korsche 4 7 2 - 8 7 2 8 7- 1 2 - 2 P __________________________________ 1982 N IS S A N 2 0 0 SX, 5 spd Red 7 3 mi. Loaded p o w e r sunroof Leave message 4 7 6 - 0 9 2 6 $ 2 5 0 0 neg o tia b le 6 - 2 2 - 2 0 B 1 9 8 6 H O N D A ELITE 150, ice blue, official neat guy transportation of the gods, $ 8 5 0 4 7 6 - 3 9 1 6 7 -1 0 -5 B _______________ 80 — Bicycles 1 9 7 9 PO RC HE 9 2 4 Excellent condition, 5 speed, A /C , sunroof, stereo/cassette, alloy wheels. Pirelli’s and b ra $ 4 5 0 0 6 - 2 2 - 5 - N C _________________ 4 9 9 -0 1 3 3 1 9 2 3 M ERCEDES B EN Z Speedster RepL- 7 2 5 car Runs g rea t $ 4 9 5 0 neg o tiab le 7 - 0 3 - N o rth Lam ar 4 5 4 - 3 1 3 3 Tom 15N C 8 8 SU ZU K I K A T A N A Blue/w hite, lo w m ileage, mint condition. M ust sell! 4 6 9 - 9 16 8 .7 -1 1 -5 8 ___________________________ 1 98 2 FT A S C O T red runs great, n e w seat, 8 0 0 0 miles, g o o d condition $ 6 5 0 4 8 0 8 5 2 0 7 -1 2 -5 P M O U N T A IN BIKE/Jamis e x p lo re r 6 months old with helm et. M ike, 4 7 8 - 9 1 5 0 $ 2 2 5 O B O 7-11-5B D A W E S 21" 10-speed Reynolds 531 fram e. Brooks seat, Blackburn rack, Joe ot 8 3 2 1551, 4 5 3 - 6 3 0 1 7- $ 2 2 5 12-5B AUSTIN TOYOTA 86 Chevrolet Celebrity Auto, AC, AM FM Cass Power Windows, Power Locks, Cruise, Tilt Wheel SALE PRICE 86 Nissan Sentra 5-Sp , AC, AM FM SALE PRICE 84 Toyota Tercel Auto, AC, AM FM. Only 65,242 miles SALE PRICE $4,995.00 $3,850.00 I f 1V j 1 $2,995.00 84 Toyota Célica 5-Sp. AC AM FM, Only 47,159 miles SALE PRICE $5,595.00 83VWGT1 Black, 5-Sp, AC. AM/FM/Cass. Only 57.949 miles SALE PRICE CQ ^Q C f i f i 87 Chevrolet Cavalier Automatic, AC. AM FM 87 Honda CRX 5-Sp , AC, AM FM Cass SALE PRICE SALE PRICE $3,995.00 $6,895.00 O p e n S u n d a y s. Call Now! 478-6862 805 W. 5th St. u n til iiiii iiiim im ii iiiiiiii iiiiiiic I CAPITOL 1 I AUTOMOTIVE I ] SERVICE 1 / = I p Ú . / r o fv is io n a l 3 3 E 3 £ T C Jnafilu - S vrt'ice 3 Gasoline 6* Diesel 5 Tune-up fr Repair - Auto 6* Truck = — s s 3 WHO'S GOT HONDAS? WE DO! Over 100 new Hondas are serviced and ready for delivery. It’s our biggest selection of the year. “We h ave so m an y n e w 1989 H ondas and are so anxious to m ake a trade, th e re’s no w a y an y serious n e w car sh o p p er can w alk out o f ou r show room w ithout bu yin g a car. ” -H. H o w d y SALES CLOSED SATURDAY OPEN SUNDAY 12-6 PARTS & SERVICE MONDAY-FRIDAY 7:30-5:30 J b w d u □ o IM BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -5244 FOR THE BEST 3 S ales 3 S ervice B Savings 0 S election ’89 HYUNDAI GL-3 DR. ’89 ECLIPSE GL TURBO ’89 HYUNDAI GL - 4 DR. L v u l 'i t n 89 GALANT GS EXPERIENCE THE ALL NEW 1989 SONATA 89 MONTERO HYUI1DÍ1I- MITSUBISHI AUSTIN’S BEST BUY DEALER IH-35 South & Ben White South end of the Motor Mile 444-7111 or 1- 800 -444-7118 T h e D a i l y T e x a n CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING VIS A /M asterC ard A c c e p te d For W ord Ads, call 471-5244/For D isplay Ads, call 471 8900/8 a m -4:30 p.m. M onday-Friday/TSP B uilding 3.200/2500 W hitis Avenue y 12 1989 Page ^5 ccep THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS 80 — Bicycles 300 — G a ra g e - 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. A its 360 — Furn. Apts. TRANSPORTATION MERCHANDISE MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 10 — Entertalnm ent-Tickets 5 20 — Personals 530 — T ravel- Transportation Licensed Child Core 5 4 0 — Lost A Found 5 50 - 5 6 0 - P u b lic Notice 570 — Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580 — Musical Instruction 590 — Tutoring 6 00 — Instruction Wanted 6 10 — Misc. Instruction SERVICES 6 20 — Legal Services 6 3 0 — Com puter Services 6 40 — Exterm inators 6 50 — M ovin g -H au lin g 6 60 — Storage 6 70 — Painting SERVICES 6 80 — Office 6 90 — Rental Equipment 7 0 0 — Furniture Repair 710 — A ppliance Repair 7 20 — Storeo-TV Repair 730 — H om e Repair 740 — Bicycle Repair 750 — Typing 7 60 — Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 770 — Em ploym ent Agencies 7 80 — Em ploym ent Services 7 9 0 — P art tim e 8 00 — G e n e ra l H elp W anted 8 10 — Office-Clerical 8 20 — Accounting- B ookkeeping 8 30 — Adm inistran ve- M angem en t 8 40 — Sales 8 5 0 - R e t a i l 8 60 — Engineering- Technical 8 70 — M edical 8 8 0 — Professional 8 90 — Clubs-Restaurants 9 0 0 — Dom estlc-Household 9 10 — Positions W anted 920 — W ork W anted BUSINESS 9 3 0 — Business Opportunities 940 — O pportunities W anted CLASSIFIED WORD AD*tATE$ S .34 * Choroad by the word. 15 word minimum. Set in 5 pt type only. Rotes are for consecu­ tive days. Eoch word 1 t im e ....................... Each word 3 t im e s ....................... $ .90 S 1.35 Eoch word 5 times $2 30 Eoch word 10 times Eoch word 15 times . $2.70 . Eoch word 20 t im e s ............................ $3.20 per insertion $1.00 charge to change copy First two words may be oM capital letters. 25c for eoch additional word in capital letters Mast­ ercard and Visa accepted . . . . CLASSIFIID LINE AD*RATES $7.80 ‘ Charged by the line One column inch mini­ mum Available in 5 to 14 pt. type 1 col. x 1 inch 1 Time WORD AND LINK AD DEADLINE SCHEDULE Friday Horn Monday Tuesday Monday Ham W e d ne sda y.............................Tuesday 11am Thursday............................. Wednesday 11am F rid a y ......................................Thursday Horn TO PLACEAWORDOR LINE AD CALL: 471-5244 CLASSIFIID DISPLAY*AD RATES * Charged by the column inch. One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available Fall Rotes Sept 1-May 30 1 to 49 column inches Per Month .............. . $7.80 Per Column Inch Over 50 col. in. per month, coll for rotes CLASSIFIED DISPLAY DEADLINE SCHEDULE Wednesday, 4 p.m Monday Thursday, 4 p.m Tuesday Fndoy, 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday Monday, 4 p.m. F rid a y ..................................... Tuesday, 4 p.m. TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD, CALL: 471-8900___________ In the event of errors mode in on advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a.m. the first day, os the publishers are responsible for only ONE incorrect insertion. All claims for odfustments should be made not later than 30 days after publication Pre-poid kills receive credit skp if requested at time of cancellation, and if amount exceeds $2 00 Slip must be presented for o reorder with­ in 90 days to be valid Credit slips are non- transferable In consideration of The Daily Texan's acceptance of advertising copy for publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harm­ less, Texas Student Publication» ond its officers, employees, and ogents ogamst aN loss, liability, domoge, and expense of whatsoever nature ani­ ma out of the copying, printing, or publishing of its odverhsment including without limitation reason­ able attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privocy, piogwnsm and copyright ond trademark infringement. CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. A u to t 20 — Spo s-Porslgn Autos 30 — Trucks-Vans 40 — V «hielos to T ra d * SO — Service* Repair 60 — Parts-Accessories 70 — Motorcycles 00 -B ic y c le s 9 0 — Vehicle Leasing 100 — Vehicles W anted RIAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 - Services 120 — Houses 130 — Condos-To wnhouses 140 — M obile Homes-Lots 150 — Acreage-Lots 160 — Duplexes- Apartm ents 170 — W anted 180 — Loans MERCHANDISE 190 — Appliances 2 00 — Furniture-Household 2 1 0 — Storeo-TV 220 — Com puters- Equipment 230 — Photo-Cam eras 240 — Boots 250 — Musical Instruments 2 6 0 - H o b b ie s 270 — M ach inery- Equipment 280 — Sporting-Cam ping Equipment 2 9 0 — Furniture-Appliance Rental 300 — G arage-R um m age Sales 310 — Trade 320 — W anted to Buy or Rent MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 - Pets 340 — Misc. RENTAL 350 — Rental Services 3 6 0 — Fum . Apts. 3 7 0 — U nf. Apts. 3 80 — Fum . Duplexes 3 90 — U nf. Duplexes 4 00 — Condos-To wnhouses 4 1 0 — Fum . Houses 4 20 — U nf. Houses 4 25 — Rooms 4 3 0 — R oom -Board 4 35 — Co-ops 4 40 — Roommates 4 5 0 — M obile Homes-Lots 4 60 — Business Rentals 4 7 0 — Resorts 4 8 0 — Storage Space 4 90 — W anted to Rent-Lease 500 — Misc. O ne B lock F ro m Campus Chaparosa j A p a r t u t e t i t * 3110 Red R iver ( . i > v y i ' j TO IJ.T. 200 — Furn iture- H ousehold MOUNTAIN Wff| B10W0UT H • CHAMONO BACH-,- • MONTAGNA ’ . provad c r w llt fo r 24 rn o n tfia C o n t u e a L a B a ro n G T S In v o ic e tk n ta n o t reftoct T D SOB d o w n o n a p p r o v e d c re d it E M l # p ile # $ 7 5 9 9 , 6 0 m o n tfi fin a n c in g to q u a lifie d b o y a r a at 12 9*c A P R , $ 7 5 0 r e b a te « a lig n e d lo d e a le r F $ 5 0 0 re b a te a e a lg n a d to d e n im u • M l g n a d t o ómmmr. BO m o n tti fin a n c in g at 12 9 *» A P R lo q u *lrfw * i « A ll S a la Prlc4Ni E x c lix la IT A I V 3 J 4L. f pjw-j , p ' i i 9 K * 0 0 0 m * ■T Tf *"7 ^áxLAh 1 i V > ! * 9 9 ) «nrn pmt tw. tMto. 1 tom *. All Price# EicluPe TTAL MON.-FRI. 9AM-9PM SAT. 9AM-8PM 445-11OO SERVICE & PARTS OPEN T IL 8PM TUES. & THURS. TOMfi ( lA K E CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH W.M CAN t N W ML CANNON EXIT Page 16T H E D AILY TEXAN/Wednesday, July 12, 1989 RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — U nf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — U ni. Apts. 370 — U nf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL ★ ★ $ 2 0 0 . 0 0 Large efficiencies & 1 bedrooms. Carpeted, disposal, CA/CH, ceding fans, woter/gcs paid Large °ool & Patio Walk to UT Fountain Terrace Apartments 610 W 30th/Manager #134 477-8858 ★ ★ WALK TO CAMPUS 1100 E. 32ND ST. AVALON Low Rotes Summer $295 $225 $195 f a il $365 $265 $235 2 -2 — 1-1 — efficiency — Ceiling fans extra large units — on-srte manoger, loundry. Squeaky clean. wolk-in closets 6-20-20B-F 476-3629/459-9898 6-16-20B-F THREE OAKS A P A R T M E N T S • FROM $200 • 1 B d r 1 B a • Furnished • L a u n d r y • PRELEASE FOR FALL LOW RATES! 4 5 1 - 5 8 4 0 409 W. 38th St. r C L A S S HO USTO N 2801 Hemphill Park • 472-8398 BRANDYWINE 2804 Whites Ave. • 472-7049 DALLAS 2803 Hemphill Park • 472-8398 W IL S H IR E 301 W. 29th • 472-7049 Great Fall Rates • Fully Furnished • Laundry Ri^im • C e n tra l A i r H e a t • 2 B lo cks fr o n t k a m p u * MESQUITE TREE” APARTMENTS O ne b edroom fa m tih e d oportmenrs C lo ie to campus,neor sbultie Disbwosh- ei A /C ceiling fan, Loundry facilities, & hot tub W ater and basic T V cable paid N o pets Resident m anager #301, 2410 Longview St For m fa 4 7 8 -2 3 5 7 UNITS AVAILABLE N O W 6-29-20B-F 'b l o c k s w e s t u t ★ Large, quiet immaculately clean semi- effloency Kitchen, walk-in closet, .aundry gas hacrt & cooking, water/ gas furnished On site manager From $235.00 Red Oak Apartments 210 4 San G a b rie l 4 7 6 -7 9 1 6 ★ ★ 6 29-20B-F A L L B ILLS P A ID Great student lifestyle. On shuttle, pool, 3 lighted tennis courts, unfur­ furnished, nished, 2 BR-V ;• BA, $425. Apartment Finder 458-1213. 6-16-20B-C LARGE EFFICIENCY 3 8 th a n d A ve. B, quiet, fre e b a ­ sic cable, co in laundry, w a te r/ gas paid , fu rn ish e d/un furn ish e d . Sum m er $ 17 5 plus electricity. Pre-leasm g n o w fo r Fall. A. M iller broker 452-4212 6 -2 7-2 0 B -K FROM $190 EFFICIENCY/! BEDROOM Dishwasher disposal, m icrow ave (op tio n ­ al), individual storage, pool, barbeque laundry, on IF shuttle, across fro m City Pork, resident m a n ag er Unfurnished also available 108 PLACE APARTMENTS 108 WEST 45TH 452-1419 If no answer 385-2211 or 4 53-2771 7 -U -20B -A ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ALL BILLS PAID Fall Rates Eff. 1 BR Sm. 2 BR $275 $360-$395 $395 W a lk o r shuttle to campus. C A /C H , re m od e le d , c o n ve n ie n t to everyth in g. 2212 San Gabriel 4 7 4 - 7 7 3 2 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 6 -2 2-2 0 B -K ★ CHECK IT OUT!! Super low rates for summer/fall E fficiencies & 1 b e d ro o m furnished/unfurnished Convenient to U T Seton, Hancock Cen­ ter shuttle, & city bus line AH appliances, pool, laundry room Gas & w ater paid 302 W. 38th 4 5 3 -4 0 0 2 6-20-20B-F 4 BLOCKS West UT, Clean, quiet efficien­ cy W a ter/g a s furnished Gas heat and cooking $ 2 2 9 4 7 6 -7 9 1 6 6 -2 8 20B-F EARLY BIRD SPECIAL $100 off First Month's rent if you move in by August 1st. 1 B e d ro o m furnished a partm ents fro m $ 2 8 5 fu r­ nished a p a rtm e n ts fro m $ 3 7 5 . C o n q u ista d o r, 4412 A ve. A, 2 b e d ro o m 4 5 0 -0 9 5 5 . 7-11 13 * BEAUTIFUL * CHEAPEST ★ * Q UIET * 1 8 0 2 W A v e This comple* j one of the nicest apartments m West Campus given it's inexpensive rents We will try fo accommodate anyone's tastes & pnce range G r e a t a tm o s p h e re w a lk to U T S u rro u n d e d b y b e o u ttiu l h o u se s P o o l w ith fo u n ta in Free p a r k in g L o u n d ry r o o m N e w fu rn itu re Full k itc h e n F ully c a r p e te d G a s. w a te r & w a te r h e a te r p a id Now Preleasmg for Summer, Foil, & Spnng F o H /S p n n g 1-1 s ta rtin g a t > 3 6 5 Su m m e r 1-1 s to rtin g a t $ 2 9 5 2 - 2 s ta rtin g a t S 3 9 5 ? 2 s ta rtin g a t $ 4 9 5 3 -2 s ta rtin g a t $ 6 4 5 3 - 2 s to rtin g a t $ 7 8 5 Will arve you great deal on y e a r lease O F F IC E H O U R S E venings only 5 8 p m M -F or by oppt 4 78 -7 51 9 Largest ^ o s t beautiful p o o l >n W e$f Campus 7-12-Í0B -F BEST OF HYDE PARK! 11 with vaulted ceilings, shuttle ac­ cess, quiet atmosphere, covered park- ng balconies, skylights, furnished TELLURIDE APTS. 4100 AVE. C 452-4414 VIEW POINT APTS Walk or shuttle to campus1 Just 5 blocks west of Guadalupe at the end of 26th Street Then come home to your attractive affordable efficiency with a lovely wooded view Attentive management ensures quality living Pool, loundry facilities. Furnished or unfurnished 476 8590 7-10-20B C ★ ★ FRONTIER APTS. $220 ALL YEAR LONG! 4111 AVE. A: Large efficiencies on shuttle and city bus. Quiet complex, CA/CH, G & W and basic TV cable paid. 4 6 2 -0 9 3 0 ,4 4 7 -9 8 4 5 ★ ★ ___________________________ 7-10-20B-C SUMMER LEASING Large 2 B e d ro o m , 1 Bath. Built-in desks. Built-in bookshelves. C eil­ ing fans. C lean, quiet, sm aller co m ple x. Laundry, on-site m a n ­ a g e r. $ 3 0 0 . 4 30 6 Avenue A 451-5825 6-21-20B-D LARGE TW O story one bedroom s and efficiences A lon g Speedway A vailable now Summer savings Bret, 4 5 3 -0 5 4 0 6-29-14B FLJRNISHED/UNFURNISHED- ) Bdr-1 Ba $ 2 3 0 plus electricity, thru August 31st 5 minutes from Law School O nly 4 left 4 74 -5 15 4 7 -0 3 -9 B C ceiling GREAT O A K - Q u et, spacious, 2 -2 CA/ CH fans, dishwasher, pool, sundeck 4 7 7 -3 3 8 8 /4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 6-16-20B-C 30th/R ed River $ 4 0 0 -$ 5 0 0 CLOSE TO U T N orth. Efficiencies, $165- $175 O ne bedroom , $ 18 5-$2 3 5. Two bedroom s, $ 2 5 0 -$ 3 7 5 O ffice at 404 East 31st 4 77 -2 21 4 , 4 53-8812, 4 52 - 4516 6 -2 9 -2 0 B -A $ 2 5 0 - $ 6 0 0 ABP RO O M S EFF , 2 * 3 bedroom a p a rt­ including ments coble W alk to UT. 1902/1904 Nueces. Call 4 7 2 -7 5 6 2 eve.. 476-6109. 7-3- 203-F________________________________ G ARAGE EFFICIENCY UT Tarrytown redecorated, h a rdw o o d N e w ly floors, ceiling fan, $ 3 5 0 Bills paid 4 7 9 -8 6 0 0 , 4 7 6 -2 3 2 9 7-5-20B -C ________________ BEALHFULLY FURNISHED 18. 2 bed- rooms with pool, cable, G & W poid. Sum­ mer rotes from $ 2 5 0 The Conquistador 4412 A ve A 4 5 0 -0 9 5 5 7 -5-20B -C BLOCK WEST UT Very large 1 bedroom oportment, yord, built-in bookshelves, walk-m storage closet Q uiet individuals H a rdw oods N o pets 4 5 3 -5 41 7 7 6 ,208-F VERY LARGE J-2 or efficiency/1 B r ~ blocks N orth UT 2 Blocks shuttle Quiet individuals, no pets 4 53 5417 7-6-20B - F LEASING SUMMER and Fall, 1 block off campus 1-1 small quiet complex. Freshly pointed, ceiling fans, mini blinds. 2711 Hemph.ll Pork. 4 78 -1 8 7 0 7 -7 20B-K NEED R O O M M ATE to share room in owsom e 2 -2 bi-level Enfield condo N ice ly furnished! Loaded. Pay ’ 3 bills ER $ 2 5 0 4 8 2 -9 4 9 3 7-10-5B__________ ACROSS FROM UT Bedroom * both W a ter/g a s paid Refrigerator and mi crow ave 5 0 0 Elmwood Place $170 345 -1 5 5 2 7-11-7B 7 12-20B C ACROSS FROM UT Large 1 Br apart men! W ater/gas poid 5 00 Elmwood Place $230-Summ er, $ 28 0-Fall 345- 1552 7-11-7B 2-1 SPACIOUS, nicely furnished Ceiling fan, pools, large courtyard, quiet, clean, ER shuttle From $ 37 5 Antilles A p a rt­ ments 2 2 0 2 -2 2 0 4 Enfield 4 7 7 1303 2 5 8 -5 0 6 5 7-12-20B-F________________ 370 — Unf. Apts. Starting from $ 2 9 9 1 & 2 Bedrooms Ceiling Fan • Microwaves • Fireplaces 2 Laundry Facilities *2 Pools 2 Jacuzzis • Clubhouse • Ice Makers On UT Shuttle T R E S T L E S 4 5 3 - 4 9 6 8 1071 Clayton Lane T R A N S P O R T A T I O N G U I D E \ t i / S275.00 on UT shuttle Take a trip on Oak Lodge* > f es • 3 rv-K.oth .pases a va* • Min Binds l^ rr v tp fl *n'v TpshictlOHS apo'y N o w P r e l e a s i n g S u m m e r - F a l l O A K L O D G E 440-0118 2317 Pleasant Valley Rd. $ i e r r e i W a r q u i S a p a r t m e n t s 2601 Penny Lane Austin, Texas 78758 it 2 pools it Laundry Rooms ★ Convenient to bus it Gas and Water Paid ★ HUGE Floor Plans Efficiencies $200 1 Bedrooms $225 $325 2-2 $450 3-2 452-5155 IMMEDIATE M 0V E -IN • On IF Shuttle • Big Relaxing Pool • 24 Hr. Emergency Maintenance • On-site Management Villa Orleans Villa Gardens 2 0 6 W . 38th St. 452-3314 I W a l n u t R u n : PRE-LEASING n o w ! : • • On-srte management • • On IF shuttle • J • Washer and Dryer • • • in each unit • Microwaves «Hot Tub J : : • • • J « • • 453-9711 4 78-9054 3 2 0 3 S p e e d w a y 1 & 2 Bedrooms from $245 to $460 • Close to shopping • Close to shuttle • Creek views • Laundry facilities • E nergy efficient 451-4896 1901 E. A n d e rso n L n . 1 mile E ofIH-35 SU CASA APARTMENTS A TOUCH OF THE ORIENT SUMMER 1-1 $195.00 2-2 $295 00 3-2 TH. $325.00 FALL $295.00 $415.00 $495.00 Basic cable provided Water paid 203 West 39th 451-2268 6 -2 3 -2 0 B K ARE YOU SICK o f heky tocicy apartm ents in sleazy com plexes m an ag ed by faceless m eg o-m anagem ent c o m p a ­ nies? Then please come see Rio House A p a rt­ ments, a 193CEs hospital renovated into apartm ents in 19 59 I genuinely believe I m anage on e o f the interestin g and pleasant ap artm en t com ­ most plexes m Austin W e offer a fin e pool, o laundry room , elevator, storoge. and a rela xed quie t ambt- once $ 2 8 5 $ 3 6 5 de pending on $ize Call 4 7 2 1238 o r stop by anytim e Rio House A partm ents at the northeast c om e r o f 17th & R»o G ran de (S o rry , n o p re le a s m g & n o lo u d p a rtie rs .) 6 -2 3 -2 0 B K HALF-MONTH'S RENT FREE! Large 1-1 in small, quiet, complex near RR. New carpet, flooring, paint, mini-blinds. Water and gas paid. $245. Call for ap­ pointment. 467-6508 6-14-20B -A • $70 Move-in Special ★ N ow Preleasing for Summer 8. Fall • low deposit • extra large apartments • prom pt m aintenance/very clean • NR shuttle bus • swimming pool • newly decorated • large 1 b edroom - 7 50 sq ft • large 2 -2 1025 sq ft BROOKHOLLOW APARTMENTS 1414 A r e n a Dr. ★ 445-5655 ★ 7-7-^OB-F FROM $190 EFFICIENCY/! BEDROOM Dishwasher, disposal, m icrow ove (option­ al), individuo! storage, pool, barbeque loundry, on IF shuttle, across from City Park, resident m anager Furnished also a vailable 108 PLACE APARTMENTS 108 WEST 45TH 452-1419 If no answer 385-2211 o r 453 -2 77 1 7-11-20B-A BRYKER W O O D S Near Seton Hospital and U.T. All new heating and A / C. Old, English architecture in a trendy neighborhood. Don't lease until you call about this one. AUSTIN'S BEST LO C A T O R S New location 2222 Rio Grande D-112 Free locating Condos, Houses, Apartments, Duplexes 478-5277 7-12-20B-C Preleasing For Fall Large efficiencies in the Hyde Park area • Gas & w ot® ' po id 4 5 2 - 1 1 2 ! o r 4 5 3 - 4 9 9 1 7-11-20B-K • oil appliances • dropes • carpe» • laundry • p o o l $ 1 9 9 . 0 0 ! ! Weight Room/Racquetball/tennis pools/morel Large Units, New Carpet & Tile " Large 1-1: $229.00 2-2: $300.00 Properties One: 447-7368 c -------------------- 7-11-1B-F 1 BR - $100 2 BR - $125 STUDENT SPECIAL PRE-LEASE N O W TEXAS BEST LOCATORS 4 6 2 -2 5 3 2 6 3 0-20 B -C ★ ★ PRE-LEASING FOR FALL! LEON APARTMENTS Newly redecorated unfurnished effi­ ciencies in the heart of west campus water paid, covered parking, for only: $259 462-0930,447-9845 ★ ★ 7-3 -20 B -C ★ SPACIOUS 1 BEDROOMS ★ Huge 1-1's starting at $200! Assigned parking, miniblinds, quiet neighbor­ hood atmosphere Call after 3 p m Ridgetop Apts. 320-0331 7-10-20B-C ADORABLE EFFICIENCY 1 & 2 BEDROOM Adorable efficiency in beau­ tiful Hyde Park area. Gigan­ tic trees, pool, covered park­ ing, fireplace. Only a few left with Summer discounts. 452-1121, 459-1711. 6-21-20B-K HYDE PARK PLACE 4400 Ave B Manager #113 4 5 2 -3 5 9 0 7-12-20B-F 12 MONTH & SUMMER LEASE SPECIALS 4 minutes from campus on bicycle, on shuttle route! Quiet apartment com­ munity designed for senous students Enioy 2 study rooms, covered park­ ing, access gates, pool, 2 jacuzzis and designer clubroom. Large "happy roommate" floorplans with numerous custom features DUVAL VILLA 4305 Duval 451-2343 7-12-1B-C SUMMER RATE Small, centrally located spacious 2 Br/1 Ba on Pearl St. Carpet & hardwood floors. Central air & heat, gas & electric Fresh pamt- in good condition. Call 3 4 3 -6 9 9 0 KVA, Inc. 7 -3-20B -F THE LINCOLN LIFESTYLE We can think of many reasons why you should live at Lincoln Ridge Here are jus* a few free use of Capitol Metro shuttle, easy access to IH35, and our various apartment features. Lincoln P roperty 6503 Bluff Springs Rd. Austin, TX 78744 Ph: 442-4141 7-12-20B-K SAN A N T O N IO STREET. Roomy efficiency. Vintage 1940s. Wood floors, many win­ dows, book shelves, mock fire­ place, unique! Campus "1" block. No reserved parking, no pets. $235 summer, $265 fall. ABP, except A/C. N o utility de­ posit hassle. $100 security de­ posit. Jack or Lisa, 474-6897. 7 -7 -5 NEAR PEASE PARK Very seciuded, small complex in quiet area Lots of character 1 br/1 ba with low cost gas heat & cooking. Trees galore Only $345.00 Call 343-6990 KVA, Inc. 7-3-20B -F SUMMER LEASING Large 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath. Built-in desks. Built-in bookshelves. Ceil­ ing fans. Clean, quiet, smaller complex. Laundry, on-site man­ ager. $300. 4306 Avenue A 451-5825 6-21-20B-D ONLY $200-$275 WALK TO CAMPUS! 1-1 2304 Leon Luxury e fficie n cie s 2 7 0 3 Rio G ra n d e Su m m e r & Fall P re le a sm g Caring Quality Management ★ ★ 3 3 1 - 4 0 8 0 / 2 6 3 - 5 6 9 6 ★ ★ ★ ★ 6 -2 0-2 0 B -F ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ $199 ★ WALK TO UT LARGE EFFICIENCIES Quiet Complex — Pool — Loundry Dishwasher — Disposol — Walk-m Closet Furnished unfurnished Gas/Water Paid 3 0 5 W . 3 5 T H ★ ★ 4 5 9 -4 9 7 7 ★ ★ 6-16-20B-F 4 PLEX T O W N H O M E S north 1-2 b ed ­ rooms Free gas heating, w asher/ dryers, ceiling fans fenced patio, storoge, screens 4 54 -5 5 1 0 6-16-20B-F FREE HEATING, gas cooking, hot w a ter - rent! Stu­ $ 5 0 deposit. $ 5 0 first months dents welcom e 1212 W esthiem er 4 5 4 4 4 0 9 6 -2 2 -2 0 B -C Shuttle/metro. STUDIOS IN West campus - small quiet complex, great storoge, DW /disposal, m in ib lin d s- Preleosing fo r Fall 4 8 0 -0 9 7 6 7 -3 -20 P summer special ra te s/ ENFIELD LARGE" efficiency C A /C H on shuttle Large windows, quiet $ 2 7 5 /m o W endy 472 -6 )6 1 4 63 8 0 6 9 ___________ 7-6-10B trees, Q U A IN T LARGE efficiency in classical house. Just painted 9 0 6 W 22nd # 8 . $210. mo. Summer, $ 2 7 0 /m o - Fall 4 74 6 5 4 3 7 -7-5B ____________ LARGE UNIQ UE 2BR in stately older house Just refurbished A vailable unti' Aug 2 2n d 9 0 6 W 2 2n d #4 $ 4 2 5 mo 4 7 4 -6 5 43 7-7-5B __________ fan, UNIQ UE EFFICIENCY! Saltillo tiles ceil­ fireplace, windows, w alk-in- ing closets,pool shuttle $ 2 2 5 $ 26 0. $ 5 0 de posit STEP SAVERS 4 7 6 -3 0 2 8 7 1 0 20B-F STANDSTONE II 1-1, G ro i nd level, CA CH, take over lease deposit until De cember $ 2 6 9 month. 4 6 9 -9 5 7 6 , MGR 478 0 9 5 5 7-10-5P ___________ 2-1 Q uie t bunding, nice neighborhood, lorge w alk-in closets Pets allow ed! 1518 P arkway Call 3 4 3 -9 0 6 2 /3 4 5 6 0 2 8 7 10-10B-C_____________ __ 380 — Furn. D u p le xe s LAW SCHOOL 1 BR with study, kitchen appliances, living room , porch, parhinq Lease $ 4 0 0 . 9 2 6 -7 2 4 3 7-6-108-C 390 — Unf. D u p le xe s CO MPUTERIZED COMPREHENSIVE A vailabilities1 Huge Selection, A ll Sizes, All Prices, Efficient, Free Service! H abitat Hunters 482 -8 65 1 6 -2 8-2 0 P __________ CLARKSVILLE DUPLEX -3 BrT T B A with W /P connections, ceiling fans. mim- blinds on quiet street Coll 3 4 3 -6 9 9 0 . KVA Inc. 7-3 20B-F___________________ TARRYTOWN DUPLEX, 2 BR/2 BA with h a rd w o o d floors, built-in China hutch in dining landscaping- yard maintained Coll 3 4 3 6 9 9 0 KVA, Inc. 7-3-20B -F room. Lush HYDE PARK detoched contem porary 3 Br/1.5 Bo duplex with vaulted ceilings, fireplace, all kitchen appliances Coll 3 4 3 -6 9 9 0 KVA, Inc. 7-3-20B-F FREE RENT! 2-1, CR, h ardw o o d, mim- blinds, fence Pets a llo w e d W a te r paid Rent negotiable 9 2 8 -3 5 8 5 7-7-10B -D 1940’s 2-1 on cul-de sac O ak floors, hie bath, ceiling fans, lots o f light. $ 390. 1300 K nkw ood 4 7 2 -2 12 3 7 7 20B-F 3 3, STUDY CACH Eoch bed ro om has p rivate bath Two blocks Fields $ 75 0. O the r units available same a rea 4 5 4 -3 2 5 0 7-10-3P Intramural DOCTORAL STUDENT o r instructor. Ex­ cellent central location O ne bedroom duplex Mini-blinds, h a rdw o o d floors, re­ frig era tor, carp ort with storage $ 3 0 0 4 51 -0 2 3 4 7-10-5B W ALK UT Super rotes 2-2, 1-1, CA/CH, Large windows, buiH-m, pool, peaceful environm ent 4 7 4 -5 9 2 9 6 26-20B-K WEST CAMPUS Studio- 2 story studio, in liv quiet complex, loft bedroom , sunken mg room, new point/carpet, DW /disposal $ 3 0 0 summer/ $ 3 5 0 Fall 4 8 0 -0 9 7 6 7- 3-20P Now That You’ve Made the Grade, Take the Credit * i r i r ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 5 0 % O F F ! 16-Point Trip Check Now $21.00 H o n d o T o yo ta , M a z d a G Nissan o n ly 4 9 3 0 S Congress 4 4 3 - 4 1 2 2 7 5 1 4 B u r n e t R d Coil Now1 Otter Expires 1 17 89 4 5 3 - 6 2 9 2 ♦ * * * *i * ★ * ¥ * * * ★ * *I * i f * i f i f * * t J f : f ) f i f ' A u t o T i n t i n g s40 off Cars s10 off Trucks Tinting is o u r Specialty it Professional Installation ★ N ationw ide Lifetime W arranty _ ★ DPS Approved cis h a d e I H E S b Oun Z tr t / t f y *md Service* « t e <* S A *d e Seitet 336 A E. Ben W hite, Va m ile w est o f 1-35 462-AUTO 462-2886 C TRANS TECH AUTOMOTIVE^ 110% OFF! I First Time Custom ers AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION 6 Mo. 6,000 Mi GUARANTEE! ^ Metro & Shuttle Stops £ a*" .452*3738 C al Now! ° S i ns, 'O p 805 Caplol Court f lJ M v t fS la » ft/iLONE STAR USED CARS SUMMER SPECIALS 1982 NISSAN B-210 __ 4 door, auto, OoM. AC 1982 MAZDA GLC 4 door, 5 tpd ., CoM AC 1983 FORD FUTURA • ejtl., auto, AC, eloon— 1984 FORD LTD II • e y l., Vt, auto, AC. extra ctaan.____ 1984 PONTIAC FIREBIRD Auto. AC, axtra ctean 1987 SUBARU GL 3 door, 5 *pd „ air, 34,000 m l 1988 NISSAN SENTRA 4 apd., air, caaa., MOO m i ........... ------------------------- — ----------- s1 M e I I 9 9 h a a c 1 9 9 * / t07Qe C 1 9 9 — ___________ __ _______ 0999 soaac 9 * 4 9 9 saaac “ 999 tcAAC 9999 ----------------- AMERICAN SPECIALS 1985 PONTIAC PARISIENNE 4 door, awto, V-A, hiw ay m lloa......._________ 1966 PONTIAC 6000 Aulo, AC, 4 door, 40,000 m l------------------ — 1986 PONTIAC FIERO Avio, AC, Hit. crwiaa. P ------------------- 1985 PONTIAC PARISIENNE Wagon, axtra nica, on# c w n rr ---------------- --- 1988 CHEV. BERETTA V6. aulo, AC, 3 dr..................... ........................ 1988 DODGE DAYTONA Aulo, AC, caaaotta, Rod 0 Moo...— 1988 PONTIAC GRAND AM 3 door, AC. aNoya, caaa . • apd 1986 PONTIAC TRANS AM T-Topa, AN options ................ ............ 1989 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ........ Auto, V-4, #500 ml.. In w arranty ...... ......... _ . *4795 . *5395 . *5795 ... *7595 _ *7595 ... *8095 _ *8195 _ *8395 *11,895 EUROPEANSPECIALS 1985 PEUGEOT WAGON 505L Auto, AC, toathar............. ...._______ 1985 AUDI 50008 WAGON AC. N/R. fact hoi......... ....................................... 1988 VW JETTA •u nro o t, P /t, AC. casa., 73.500 ml........ ......... SPECIAL OP THE WEEK 1988 DAIHATSU CSX • apd., air, caaa.. lo cto ry warr., 0000 m i, whito. 9 9 9 9 i rf LONE STAR P O N T I AC • AUDI • P O R S C H E - S A A B 4610 1-35 South r c x c ' 4 ' ■ 5 T \ 3 ' ‘ 445-0300 I V ; ' 1 n ( ' 4 Whether you just graduated from the University of Miami or the University of Alaska, Pavilion Lincoln-Mercury and Ford Credit want your diploma to start working for you. Now that you’ve made the grade, take the credit. Pre­ approved financing from Ford Credit and a cash bonus of $400 from Ford Motor Company can be yours at Pavilion Lincoln-Mercury. Purchase or lease an eligible new vehicle from stock by December 31,1989 and Ford will give you a check for $400. To qualify for pre-approved credit: 1. You must graduate with a Bachelor's or ^ COLLec A u s tin . Texas 78705 451-5751 S p e c ia liz in g in th e tre a tm e n t o f s k in disord ers, "s p id e r veins a n d s k in cance r TELEPHONE (512) 474-9696 P A T R I C K S . P E V 0 T 0 , md pa OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY W d L m A W e L n e . W . 2 > . OBSTETRICS - GYNECOLOGY CONVENIENTLY LOCATED BEHIND KINK0 S EAST 1000 EAST 32ND ST. SUITE 6 AUSTIN TEXAS 78705 512-478-1377 HOURS BY APPOINTMENT OFFICE HOURS BY APPOINTMENT 14 MEDICAL ARTS SQUARE AUSTIN, TEXAS 78705 Albert T. Gros m.d. OBSTETRICS - GYNECOLOGY F.A.C.O.G. 4007 Jam es Casey Suite A 250 Austin, TX 78745 441-9796 AUSTIN INFERTILITY CLINIC K. M. Kavoussi, M.D. Obstetrics — Gynecology 4303 Jam es Casey 4 4 4 - 1 4 1 4 Regular Hours and After Hours •V I ¡8 Si EVERY WOMAN’S CONCERN ( o n f i d r n t i a l . P r o f e s s i o n a l R e p r o d u c t i v e C a r e • A d o p tio n S crv n es • t ic e P r e q n a iu v L o u n s e lm q • A b o r t io n S c rv u cs • B i r t h ( o n t r o l • l \ i p I esi REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES r rlih i'd ( M»-( icnt't ologist ■■■■h b • ~ ~ 1 I ^ ? I • 1 k m s rd N ursing StaH • I • > »c KK shunU »rm *"i1 (. ouns*'li>rs C J = “ Y o u r fe e t deserve a doctor o f th e ir own " Carla J. Emery, D.P.M. Physician and Surgeon of the Foot Noel F. Roebuck, dds general dentistry caring for children and adults new technique for whitening and brightening teeth now available!! • Preventive Dentistry & Sealants • Porcelain Crowns Fillings & Inlays - Bonding & Laminates • Nitrates Oxide & Headphones • Insurance & Paid Dental Processed N e w PATIENTS WELCOME C— SINC4E 1962 — 4 5 4 - 5 8 2 5 | | 711 W 3 8 TH S U It F B -1 0 J iU ttjL nrndbr i l l ROBERT I. FULM ER, M.D, A SSO C IA T E D G Y N E C O L O G Y IN F E R T IL IT Y U LTR A SO N O G R A P H Y 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 , 1 0 0 9 E. 4 0 t h 2113 E a s t M artin L u th er K ing B ou levard Austin, T e x a s 78702 512 479-8698 H o u rs by appointm ent TELEPHONE: (512) 477-3322 OFFICE HOURS BY APPOINTMENT 805EAST32NDST. AUSTIN,TEXAS 78705 2353238990532348485323235353235323232353485348484848 CLIP THIS HANDY GUIDE FOR ALL OF YOUR FUTURE HEALTH NEEDS Santiago A. Zamora, M.D. 104 Can m Austin, TX 78702 474*7824 Guadalupe Zamora, M.D. 2606 South First Austin, TX 78704 442*0248 Announcing their recent association for Family Practice. Office Hours Mon-Fri9-7 Saturday 9-2 No appointment necessary. Accepting assignment on Medicare and Medicaid. We are available for all Family members. /7c\ ROBERT CASANOVA, M.D. OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY By Appointment 51 2-472-5570 805 E 32nd St Austin, TX 78705 S+DAVIDfe Hospital Eating Disorder Program Treatment for Anorexia & Bulimia Jana Russell Certified Eating Disorder Therapist Darla Hailey, C.A.D.C. Certified Addictive Disorder Counselor Intake Counselor 5 1 2 / 3 9 7 - 4 0 2 3 ^ ^ Karen S. Miller Advanced Clinical Practicioner Certified Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselor Psychotherapy Children and Adolescents Individual and Family Provider: American Health Network Champús Travelers Blue Cross-Blue Shield 3500 Oakmont # 2 0 IB Austin, TX 78731 459-1140 We Welcome U.T. Students! For problems related to the ear, nose, and throat Associates in Otolaryngology 1301 W . 3 8 th S tre e t, S u ite 401 iM e d ic a l P a r k T o w e r) 458-4276 Richard Denton. M D Stephen Mitchell, M I) Stephen Muller. M D Judy Abrahamson, M A , CCC A L .____________ Jennifer Lenich, M.A., CCC A . J PREGNANT? V , Complete Prenatal Care and Delivery AUSTIN BIRTHING CENTER S A F E - P E R S O N A L - A FFO R D A B LE 451-7878 r PODIATRIST FOOT SPECIALIST Dr. Randy Llsch 834-1637 2521 Rutland Dr. (Comer Burnet and Rutland) STUDENT AND FACULTY DISCOUNTS available with U . T I D Page 18/THE DAILY TEXAN/Wednesday, July 12,1989 ¡BBBBH SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 750 — Typing B 750 — Typing 760 — Misc. SotvIcm 7 9 0 — Part Time 800 — General Help Wanted 840 — Sales ZIVLEY’S The Complete Professional Typing Sen/ice ★ Applications ★ Themes ★ Law Briefs if Resumes at 27th & Guadalupe 2 7 0 7 Hem phiU P a rk 472-3210 472-7177 Look tor our ad m Fnday s Tetan ACADEMIC TYPING SERVICE 504 W. 24th St. 477-8141 Term Fopers, Resumes Bnefs Diuertationi $ 2 /p p . w /2 4 h r*, notice •t 24th St. ■ Next doo r to M od O pen 8 o.m. P kkup 4 Delivery 4 id D og á Dee* to M idnight e ry 4 voMmh le PROFESSIONAL TYPING • Resumes • Freshman Themes • Law B n e fs • Applications Open 7 days week 'til Midnight Sunday to Thursday 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 House of 1%\ T U T O R S l W A+ TYPING SERVICE •I Paradigm Books 407 W 24th PK£E Professional Proofreading Spelling Punctuation Usage Guaranteed Correct Special Discount Rate For Revised Theses/D issertations 472-7986 335-7903 DOBIE MAI! FAST TORN The O riginal SPEEDWAY TYPING 469-5653 ^^TRANSCRIPTS T I UNLIMITED — Term Papers — Theses — Dissertations I y 6 A ▼ 6 ▲ A n iE E ; ▼ 6 A T ▼ A f • Laser Printing • Binding 6 • Proofreading, Punctuation A * e One Revision ▼ e English/Spanish 6 Experienced court reporter 6 ^ witti typing instruction background ^ A 4 7 2 - 4 7 7 0 ♦ > ♦ ♦ ♦ 1 0 9 -A W 10 th A ♦ « ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ TYPE-RITE typing lervice. All college pa­ $10. Laser pers $1.50/poge. Resume printer available Prompt service 4 4 2 - 7 0 0 3 Ó -20-20B-C____________________ W O R D PROCESSING Sl.OO/poge! Ten years experience, picL-up/delivery. M il­ lie 2 8 0 -6 3 0 4 . 6 -27-20B -C COLLEGE ENGLISH composition teacher with PhD; word processing, loser print­ ing, $ 2/poge up, 3 blocks from campus, 4 7 9 8 9 0 9 6 -3 0 -2 0 6 -A _______________ UNIVERSITY TYPING-Personalized, pro­ fessional service Summer special $ 1 5 0 / page, (rush jobs $2 0 0 / page, cassette 4 7 3 -2 9 4 8 . transcnption $2 50/page) 7 -3 -2 0 8 -f____________________________ SPANISH- ENGLISH word processing. Experienced editor Near letter quality text. 9 5 per/page. Tables, laser, editing, other options available Call Robert 4 7 7 -9 5 2 3 . 7-6-108 THE STENO PAD $1.50/double space page W ord Processing laser pnnter. 4 5 9 -7 7 1 0 evenmqs and weekends. 7-10- 208-C IN A time iam? Coll Express W ord Pro­ cessing ana Support Services. Low pnc­ es ana satisfaction. 3 2 2 -9 4 6 3 . 7-12-1B-K 760 — Misc. Services LOW-LOW RATES • Auto • Cycle • Moped Harry Henderson In». Agency 371-7500 9-6 M-F $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ STUDENT LOANS & SCHOLARSHIPS N O W AVAILABLE! Call to reserve your funds. 459-7019 7-12-20B-D AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS Photofegh is n o w hiring part-tim e p a r­ ty photographers fo r em ploym ent during 1 9 8 9 - 9 0 school y e a r Must be available nights a nd w eekends. A p p li­ cants should be n e a t in a p p ea ra n ce , personable, hove 3 5 m m SLR with 50m m lens, and d e p e n d a b le car. CaH 4 7 4 - 4 8 9 7 1 -4 p.m. 6 -2 6 -2 0 SEXUAL COMPATABILITY SURVEY 100 questions, easy to answer ond score. Gam insight about your sexual personali­ ty. Measures your verbal sexual expres­ sion, sexual assertiveness, stereo-typical attitudes, sexual acceptance, body con­ sciousness, and importance of romance. Send check or money order for $ 6 .9 5 to "SURVEY" P.O Box 4 05 , Austin, TX 7 8 7 6 7 -0 4 0 5 . 6-14-20B-F MAKE BIG money. N eed amateur male dancers. $ 1 5 0 + tips. CaH Randy or Morey, 453-1021. 7-3-15P_____________ PART-TIME positions now avoiloble for telemarketers (N o soles involved). Work 2 0 hrs/wk, 2 blocks from campus. CoH P8C marketing. 4 7 7 -3 8 0 8 7-6-5B -D SECRETARY FOR low office, some book­ keeping required. N ear compus. 2 0 hrsVwk. 1 to 5. M onday thru Friday. Non- Smoker preferred. 4 7 7 -7 4 7 6 .7 -7 -5 8 HELP NEEDED with housekeeping, er­ rands, etc. 2 -3 afternoons/week Cor necessary. Start $ 3 50/hour 3 38-1622. 7 -7 -5 8 _______________________________ BABYSITTER FOR 5 yr old daughter 2-3 evenings/wk. $ 3 .5 0 /h r O w n transpor­ tation. CoH Pom 451-1453 or 4 71-0547. 7-10-58______________________________ STUDENT BABYSITTER needed P re fe r­ able maior nursing/child development/ french. Coll 3 2 8 -5 0 1 9 . 7-11-5B_________ PART TIME Tandy computer demonstra­ tor needed 10-12 hrs/wk. Solary plus commission 7-12-5B PREGNANT? AUSTIN Birthing Center of­ fers safe, personal, and economical pre­ natal ond delivery core. Coll 451-7878. 7-12-1NC-D__________________________ 800 • General Help Wanted ATTENTION TELEMARKETERS: ]/2 DAY-GREAT PAY! EARN OVER $300/WEEK I need 10 happy, enthusiastic people who are motivated by making money. Our office has a comfortable, cheerful atmos­ phere with great co-workers & casual dress. A M /PM , PT/FT SHIFTS AVAILABLE. GUYS, GALS, STUDENTS, WELCOME. HIRING N O W ! N O EXPERI­ ENCE NECESSARY. Apply in person: 3701 Guadalupe, Suite 105. 12-12:30 or 6-6:30 p.m. ONLY. 7-10-3B-F HIGH TECH TELEMARKETING $5/an hour plus commission sell­ instru- ing diagnostic medical 6 )4 -2 0 8 ments for an 8 year old Austin firm. Clear voice plus positive outlook needed. Develop a life­ long skill. Call 4 5 3 -6 0 7 6 . EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part Time AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS Phototech is n o w hiring part-tim e p a r­ ty photographers fo r em ploym ent during 1 9 8 9 - 9 0 school y e a r. M ust be a vailable nights a n d w eekends. A p p li­ cants should be ne at in a p p ea ra n ce . Personable. H a v e 3 5 m m SLR with 50m m lens, and d e p e n d a b le car. Call 4 7 4 - 4 8 9 7 1 -4 p.m. 6 -2 6 -2 0 -A NOW HIRING for a variety of Fall Semester positions The Texas Union is interviewing daily from 9 a.m. to FI a.m . in room 4.410 o f the Union Building. N o phone colls accepted A n eq u al o p p o rtu n ity/a f­ firmative action e m ployer MATURE, E N G A G IN G PUBLIC SPEAKER to address business, college, high school and middle school audiences. Will train but should be sensitive to issues surround­ ing sexual assault M en and women en­ couraged to apply. Bilingual preferred. Salary $8/hour. N o phone colls please Send resume to: Austin Rape Crisis Cen­ ter, 4 3 2 6 James Casey, Austin, TX 7 8 7 4 5 by July 22nd 7-12-2B ill/par (4 5 + wpm). BOOKKEEPER (we train). Runner (your car). O D D JOBS. 4 0 8 W. (6-21- 17th St.: Applications 9am -4pm 20B-F) - at list. 6-21-20P ★ APPOINTMENT SETTERS * Y our hours: 10 a m -2 pm, 5 p m -9 pm ★ MON-FRI ★ M a la /F e m a le ★ Excellent p ay ond bonus plan ★ Cameron & Rutherford area CALL TODAY 835-1142 6 -2 9 -2 0 B -D teacher Opportunity for elementary teacher w/teaching experi­ ence/interest in Montessori to assist AM I '8 9 -'9 0 school term. Possibility to train following year for own class. fully esta b lish e d , W e ll equipped school. Call Don, 4 4 2 -3 1 5 2 ,9 -5 Mon-Fri. 6-26-12-F $ 1 6 , 0 4 0 - G O V E R N M E N T $ 5 9 ,2 3 0 /y r. N o w hinng Coll (1) 8 05 - 6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext. R-9413 fo r current feder- JOB S OVERSEAS JOBS. Also cruiseships. $10 ,0 0 0 -$ 1 0 5 ,0 0 0 /y r N o w Hmng! List­ ings! (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext OJ -9413 6-2 8-1 9 p _____________________________ EARN M O N E Y Reading booksl $ 3 0 ,0 0 0 /y r income potential. Details (1) 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext Y-9413 6 -8 -2 0 P A V O N IS looking for people to take o r­ ders. Free training Coll Sheme 3 3 5 - 9712. Minimum age 18 6-19-20B G O V E R N M E N T JOBS $ 5 9 ,2 3 0 /y r. N ow hmng. Call (1) 8 0 5 - 6 8 7 - 6 0 0 0 EXT R-9413 for current fe d ­ eralist list. 6-21-20P $ 1 6 ,0 4 0 A IR L IN E S N O W H IR IN G Flight Attendonts.Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service. Listings. Salaries to $ 1 0 5 K Entry 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 0 0 0 Ext A -9413. 6-21-20P level positions Call (1) Full/part time TYPIST NEAR CAMPUS (4 5 + wpm). BOOKKEEPER (we tram). Runner (your car). O D D JOBS 4 0 8 W 17th St.: Applications 9am -4pm . (6-21- 20B-F)_______________________________ LIVE-IN POSITION to care fo r mentally retarded adult man Room plus salary Experience working with b eh avior modi fication programs preferred. Must have first-aid and CPR. CaH 4 8 0 -0 9 2 0 . 7-7-4B FREE RENT plus salary in exchange fo r complete core o f w om an confined to wheekhoir Call Peggy 4 5 1 -3 8 3 9 7-11- 10B__________________________________ 7 1 2 -4 8 810 — Office- Clerical SECURITY OFFICERS N o w hm ng peop le-o rie n te d security officers for Fall an d Spnng semesters. N e a r campus location. Uniforms p ro ­ vided. Excellent opportunity fo r stu­ dents. Call Z IM C O SECURITY C O N ­ SULTANTS 3 4 3 -7 2 1 0 M o n d a y thru Fnday 3 - 6 p.m. 7-11-208 F ull/part time TYPIST NEAR CAMPUS (45 + wpm). BOOKKEEPER (we tram) Runner (your car) O D D JOBS 4 0 8 W 17th St. Applications 9am -4p m (6-21- 208-F) 820 — Accounting- Bookkeeping time G ain NEAR CAMPUS Full/port (45 bookkeeping expenence TYPIST w p m.) RUNNER (your car) O D D JOBS 4 0 8 W . 17th St: A pplications 9am 4 pm (6-27-20B -F) V D W I i i t l S HERE’S TOOAV’S WINNING CARD NUMBER If you have this card number you may win a ... 3 8 6 2 5 GAME C O LLEC TIO N from MAC PRODUCTS Bring your card (bearing the above number) to the TSP business office, TSP 3.200, dur­ ing business hours, before 5 pm Tuesday, July 18, 1989. (See rules below.) " v T l f ...and all you need is... THIS WINNER’S CARD! Get your card from any of the Bevo Bucks Sponsors Listed! Then Watch the Texan for your Winning Number! SPONSORS AND PRIZES: BURGER KING ~fl¡T Dobie Mad & ™ 2700 Guadalupe PRIZE: Huffy 10-Speed Bicycle MOVIN’ EASY 709 W. 29th Street REED TRAVEL 3405 GUADALUPE (next to AMY’S) PRIZES: One Pair Jazz Trac Leather Shoes PRIZES: Four Nylon Travel Bag? Three Pairs Cotton Bike Tights LOGAN’S CORNER BAR-B-Q 1004 W. 24th Street PRIZES: Five $20 Gift Certificates O’BRIENS CAFE 624 W. 34th Street PRIZES: Five $20 Gift Certificates TEXAS TEXTBOOKS 2410-B E. Riverside (Next to heb> 2323 San Antonio PRIZE: $100 Prize Certificate MAC PRODUCTS Dobie MaN, Suite 23 PRECISION CAMERA A VIDEO 3004 Guadalupe Nr. 5 TULA’S RESTAURANT & BAR 608 W. 24th Street PRIZES: 100 Disks Double Sided PRIZE: Five S20 Photo Processing Certificates PRIZES: Five $20 Prize Certificates Magic Modem (2400 Baud) Game Colection T h e Da i l y T e x a n C E V C V C I J C r S — R U U S — 1 The BEV O B U C K S g am e s open te an Texan readers e» cept em ployee s o f T exas S tudent Publications and o1 the Bevo S ucks sponsoring turns and the im m ediate households and fami Met of those em ployees 2 Clearly abated winning numbers randomly selected by com­ puter mil be run on various days m Th# Daily Texan A specified prize w « be designated lor each number announced The person hotdmg the W IN N E R S CAR D beating that number must pres­ ent the card and an official photograph* I 0 card (such as u ni­ versity or 0 P S ) at the business office of Texas Student Publica­ tions (during norm al business hours) w ithin tour (4) business days from the date ol publication m order to claim the prize W inner s C ards w h c h have been mutilated or altered m any way are void O nly one card allowed per player Quantify o f W inner s C ards is lim ited and cards win be distributed on a basis C ards have no cash value first com e 3 Pnzr>s are provided and distributed by t i e advertiser sponsors of the B E V O B UC K S program and are wholly then responsibili­ ty Neither Texas Student Publications nor The University of Tex as actmoaSad ga any rasponatxMy m t ie distribution of prizes At prizes «at be awarded Prizes not claim ed during the course of t i e gam e w tt be awarded m a drawing to be nato September 1MB 4 The B E V O B U C K S W in n e rs C ard gam e will end w hen all prizes h ave been aw arded or on August 3 i 1969 whichever is e arlier At that tim e card holders m ay return their cards to any advertiser-sponsor and will (hen be eligible to particípale m a sw eepstakes draw ing tor any unclaim ed prizes 5 the In the event that duplicate card numbers are distributed fcrst card properly presented at the T S P business office w ill be declared th# winner In case of tie winner win be selected by tot t The decision of the Advertising Director of Texas Student Pub Mcaftons will be tinai m the interpretation and administration of the loregoing rules SALES HELP wanted. M e n 'j clothing store. Full/Part time, Mon-Sat 10-6pm. Starts in August. 3 4 5 -5 2 2 2 . 7 -10-208 ADVERTISING Several intern positions Copy e Production e Sales Contad The Douglas Group 331-8848 6-29-20B -F 860 Engineering- Technical GRADUATE E.E. We need a self-starting internally m otivated and versatile person with a de­ gree in E E to p articip ate in consulting to U.S. govern­ m ent and m ajor m anufac­ tu rers on electronic product developm ent A low hassle, m inim um stru ctu re work­ ing environm ent n ear ca m ­ pus. O pportunity for post­ at grad prem ium pay. M ust be eli­ gible for security clearance. Need copies of tran scrip t, resum e, personal referenc­ es. proposed work schedule and copy of birth certificate. C O N TA C T: DOM Engineering Services, Inc. fu ll-tim e work 808 West 10th Street Austin, T X 78701 (512) 477-6011 880 — Professional Part Time position teaching SAT in Austin. Must prep courses have excellent math and verbal skills. Some post graduate w ork and teaching experience pre­ ferred. $15/hr. Starting. Submit resume. W ith SAT o r GRE scores to Collegiate Test Prep, 5 5 5 5 N. Lamar Suite C - lll Austin 78751. 7-10-5B ADVERTISING Several intern positions C opy • Production • Sales Contact The Douglas Group 331-8848 6 -29-20B -F RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT CENTER near O ak Hill is now hiring a WEEKEND SHIR COUNSELOR! Excellent personal and w o rk references re qutred Call 288-2687 2 4 Dm M , Th, F only 7-10-5B-C 890 — Clubs- Restaurants ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ BARTENDING Learn How In 2 Weeks! Morning, Afternoon, & Evening Classes Learn ho w to free-pour, like in the movie Cocktail! Job Placem ent Assistance Texas School o f Bartenders 4 4 0 -0 7 9 1 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A p proved by Texas Education Agency 7-10-2ÓB-F 900 — Domestic- Household " f r e e r o o m A N D B O A R D In exchange fo r babysitting childre n. Furnished tw o room, phone, T.V., pool, in Westlake home. Small sal­ ary involved. Call Lise at: 3 2 8 -0 9 7 2 . 7 -7 -7 HOUSEKEEPER/NANNY Part-time, 1- 6pm, M-F Cooking, laundry Car re­ quired School aged children References 3 35-7981 7-10-3B LeMond loses lead; France’s Fignon first Associated Press T O U LO U S E , Fran ce — A m erican G reg LeM ond lost the overall lead in the T our de Fran ce on T uesd ay as L au ren t Fignon of F ran ce, a tw o- tim e w inner, grabbed a sev e n -se c­ ond ad vantage. L eM ond held th e le a d e r's yellow je rse y sin ce last T h u rsd ay w h en he w on an in divid ual tim e trial. A fter th at, he held on ten acio u sly to th e je rs e y , e v e n after lea d e r's yellow the th e P y ren ee s in stag e first M o u n ta in s, w h ere m an y , in clu d in g L eM ond h im self, d ou b ted th at he w ould stay in front. Fin ally, in the seco n d sta g e in th e m o u n tain s and 10th ov erall, F ig n on took the lead . B u t it w as ju s t by m o ving aw ay from L eM on d by 12 seco n d s on th e final clim b th a t e n d ­ ed m ore than 5 ,8 0 7 feet ab ov e sea level. " O n the last hill I d ecid ed to a t­ ta c k ," Fignon said . " I d id n 't feel good until that last clim b. In the o th e r th ree I had tro u b le ." R ob ert M illar of Britain w on the d ay's stage, coverin g the 85 miles from C au terets to S u p erb agn eres in 4 h o u rs, 22 m inu tes, 19 secon ds. L ast y ear's ch am p io n , P edro Del­ gad o o f Spain w as second with C harly M ottet of Fran ce third. L eM on d, the only A m erican e v er to win this race, finished m ore than three m inu tes behind Millar in n in th p lace, 12 secon d s behind Fig­ non, w h o w as seven th . H e tried to keep up with Fignon, the T our de Fran ce w inner in 1983 and 1984, but fell back in the closing climb to erase the five-second lead he had held en terin g the stage. In the n ew sta n d in g s, L eM on d is in seco n d p lace o v erall, sev en se c­ o n d s b eh in d F ig n o n , w h o is s e e n by m any as th e fav orite in this y e a r's race. D elgad o h a s m ad e a m iraculous clim b th ro u g h th e sta n d in g s a fter startin g the first stag e in last place b ecau se he arrived alm ost th ree m in u tes late in th e p ro lo g u e. H e is now in th ird , ju st 2:53 b eh in d F ig ­ non after lo sin g m o re th an sev en m in u tes to h im in th e first tw o d ays. NBC hopes Walsh brings heart, humor from 49ers Associated Press N EW Y O R K — N B C k n o w s Bill W alsh isn 't Jo h n M ad d en . B ut it's h o p in g that the fo rm er San F ran cis­ co coach , w ho d id n 't w an t to re ­ m ain in lim bo w ith the 4 9 e rs, will u se his dry sen se o f h u m o r to d ev el­ op the sam e star q u ality as C B S ' top football an aly st. W alsh had his first say on the m atter T u esd ay , say in g he reg retted leav ing the team h e led to th ree S u p e r B ow ls, but callin g th e jo b as N B C 's No. 1 an aly st " a u n iq u e o p ­ p o rtu n ity ." N B C , m ean w h ile, w as cro w in g ab o u t team ing W alsh w ith D ick En- berg. " I have no d ou bt h e 's g o in g to be the b est tech nical football an aly st I'v e ev er s e e n ," said T erry O 'N e il, N B C 's execu tiv e p ro d u cer, w h o called W alsh 's au d ition " ju s t se n sa ­ tio n a l." in to afte r from a kind of T h e m ove rescu ed the 57-year-o ld W alsh lim b o he re sig n in g as step p ed coach after his te a m 's third Su p er Bow l victory last Jan u ary . W alsh , w h o w as strip p ed by the o w n e r Edw ard D eB arto lo o f team p resid en cy a fte r th e 1987 se a ­ so n , held th e official title o f ex e cu ­ tive director for football o p eratio n s. T h a t put him in a n e th e r w orld b etw ee n the in creasin g ly assertiv e D eB artolo, w ith w h om he has had in creasin g d iffe ren ce s the p ast tw o y e a rs, and C oach G eo rg e Seifert. W alsh w as largely resp o n sib le for g ettin g the job for S e ife rt, his form er d efen siv e co o rd in a to r. But his co n ­ tinued p re sen ce cou ld have led to sp ecu latio n that h e w as still coach - ing th e team — in d eed , w h en ask ed last M arch w h at he w ould be d oing jo b , he replied: "T h e in h is new sam e th in g s I'v e alw ays d o n e ." said N B C , m e a n ­ w h ile, its n e w e st a cq u isi­ tion will rep lace M erlin O ls e n as its lead a n aly st. s o f t - T h o u g h a n d s p o k e n a s n o w h e r e fla m b o y a n t as M ad d en , th e for­ m er coach of the O ak lan d R aid ers, W alsh has o ften d em o n stra ted a su b tle, dry s e n se of hu m or. Walsh H is first g am e w ill pro bab ly be Sep t. 10, C in cin n ati at C h ica g o , w h ere the 49e rs b ea t the B ears to win th e N FC title on Ja n . 8. " I f w e re ab le to co n v ey o n e half o f B ill's sen se o f h u m o r, w e 're g oin g to m ake the coach o f the '8 0 s into the co m m e n ta to r of th e '9 0 s ," said Dick E berso l, th e p re sid e n t o f N BC S p o rts, w h o had W alsh secretly au ­ d ition w ith E n b erg at a W orld W re s­ tling F ed era tio n co n clav e in S ta m ­ ford, C o n n . O lse n , m e a n w h ile, w ill be sh ifted to an N BC team w ith C h arlie Jo n e s . In a sta te m e n t issu ed th ro u g h the n e tw o rk 's p u b lic relatio n s sta ff, O l­ sen said he recog n ized th at ch a n g e s at N BC — th e a scen sio n o f E b ersol in p lace of th e retired A rth u r W a t­ son and O 'N e il as e xecu tiv e p ro ­ d u cer in p lace of M ichael W eism an in the — m ig h t lead to ch a n g e s b ooth . "N B C is n o t ask in g m e to sit on the b e n c h ," O lse n said . EMPLOYMENT 900 — Domestic- Household Single or couple to live in sepa­ rate house (2 BR, 1 BA) and care for children in main house. Com­ bination of free rent plus salary is possible depending on skills and hours. West Lake Hills area. Call Bob at 371-1269 (W) 3 2 7 - 0 4 6 8 (H). 6 -3 0-1 0 8 BUY I f ! Smart Shoppers Read the Texan Want-Ads! C A L L 4 7 1 5 2 4 4 S U C H A D € A L ! T € ¥ A N C L n s s | F i€D m> HOTLINE! A ll-Star Continued from page 11 ished the game on a double play he started. The victory w as the third in four All-Star gam es for the American League after losing 20 of 21. It w as the first loss for NL manager Tom­ my Lasorda in four appearances. The NL, true to tradition, came out running. O zzie Smith led off with a single and was caught steal­ ing, and Tony G wynn walked. Gwynn w as on the m ove as Will Clark grounded out, but major- league RBI leader Kevin Mitchell and Howard Johnson hit RBI sin- gles. Jackson rushed to the rescue, gliding over from left field to catch Pedro Guerrero's hard liner with runners of second and third to end the inning. Then, it was Jackson's turn. He took the first pitch for a ball and sent the next one onto a tarpaulin far beyond the center-field fence. Boggs, just 2-for-9 in previous All- Star gam es, hom ered on a 3-2 pitch to center. His w ent just 398 feet. A m erican 5, N ational 3 NATIONAL AMERICAN ab r h bi 4 0 1 0 Jackson if 2 1 1 0 Greenwl If 1 0 0 0 Boggs 3b 2 0 0 0 Gaetti 3b 1 1 1 0 Puckett cf 4 1 2 1 White ct Baines dh 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Leonrd ph 1 0 1 1 Franco 2b 3 0 1 1 Mtngly 1 b Ripken ss 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Fernndz ss 2 0 2 0 Sierra rf 3 0 0 0 McGwir 1b 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 33 3 S 3 Sax 2b Slembch c Tettleton c Totals ab rh b i 4 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 i l l 0 0 0 3 1 2 1 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 35 5 12 5 200 000 0 1 0 - 3 212 000 OOx—5 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2-3 1 0 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Piesac pitched to 1 batter in the 8th WP Sutciifle Umpires Horne, Evans (AL) First, Engel (NL), Second Cooney (AL) Third Crawtord (NL). Left Hirschbeck (NL). Right. Davis (AL) T 2 46 A 64.036 THE D a il y TEXAN/Wednesday, July 12,1989/Page 19 ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 1 More secure 6 Invoice 10 Rank 14 Sheepish 15 Melody 16 Door sign 17 Some pickles 18 Composer 20 Confessing 22 Kind of lily 23 Vessels 24 Tilt 25 Lean(on) 28 Meat 29 Forward 30 Ammunition of yore 35 For shame! 36 Obsess 37 Sweet drink 38 Decorating skin of 41 Disk 43 Corrosion 44 Most evil 45 Polished 48 Plants 50 Society 51 Trinkets 55 Amusement 57 Diadem 58 Birds: Lat. 59 Additional 60 Roof parts 61 For fear that 62 Moistens 63 Lurk DOWN 1 Beverage 2 Zestful 3 Coating 23 25 26 27 14 1 / 20 29 35 38 50 55 58 61 s C A N L O N G D A M O N E R A S E L A D E O V E R E N O W G 1 V E L E Y T E D E C R E A S E D W O R S T S E E P E D A N E W T 1 P P E C A N O E 1 S L E T P E A R S E T B 1 G S O D A S H O O T R E M A R K A B L E N A 1 D m m T A M D O R T E A M S R o O T S R U E F 1 R E B R A N D A G E N A | R O O M D O N T s K O L A E R O S E s P E D P E W E E S T E R N R A N D E R 1 E E Y E D Nights’ 31 Operate 32 Rancor 33 Verses 34 Wigwam 36 Legwear 39 Stalest 40 External 41 Robbers 42 44 Physician, for short 45 Brake part 46 Color 47 Continues 48 Chill 49 Cables 51 Anger 52 Enthuse 53 Sector 54 Barrel 56 Stitch 16 32 33 34 37 42 52 53 54 4 Brighten 5 Reposing 6 Plant of the mint family 7 Golf clubs 8 Cod type 9 Barrel part 10 Comments 11 Of a central line 12 Caption 13 “ — Frome” 19 Affright 21 Youngster 24 Egyptian Christian 25 Giddy 26 An essayist 27 Writer 28 Throe 30 Pace 18 21 J ■30 36 28 31 ■48 ■51 | 59 56 62 9 J 19 ■22 i J ■41 p4 ■I " 1 60 1 63 1 2 3 7 8 ,0 11 12 13 4 5 ¡ 6 ,s 7 - 12-89 © 1989 United Feature S y n d ic a te I CANT BELIEVE TRUMP HAC HIS o m SATELLITE i A ¿NELL, IT COMBS IN HAN PH DURING THE PEAK TRAF­ FIC PBRIO PS... IT ALSO 6/VBS U5 409 CHAN­ NULS ON TUR tu r f / TODAY 3BIJ/N6 UP- DAT BP ITS LIS T OF CHINA'S 2S MOST PJANTED "HOOLIGANS"... E —Santiago DP—American 2 LOB National 6 Ameri­ can 7 2B Ripken Mattingly HR - Jackson Boggs SB EDavis Johnson Jackson Gwynn IP H RER BB SO 39 40 . . . 43 45 46 47 49 HEY... SHE LOOKS VERT FAM ILIAR ... NJ ? *J Z C 4 A /7 f - 1 e g J BLOOM COUNTY m PONT WANT ANY0OPY 70 g et the idea that lately w ave been saying WOMEN CANT B6 TRUSTED by B erke B reath ed NOT AT ALL. NOT AT A LL/ m isses THE POINT / BY A MILE / THE POINT IS THAT WOMEN... OR RATHER WOMEN YON KNOW WOMEN... ..WILL TEAK YOUR HEART OUT AMD SERVE r r TO THE CAT THE MAGICIAN X M T e U - I M G . A L L M W m o k ow s - r a e t r u t h J t a t K E K E A L I . Y I S A N ASBESTOS « M r x ! llE TURNfcD A LL O F MY CLO TUES INYO ASBCSTo S’ I I UAD YAkfc 'E M OFF ■ O K G E T C A ^ C E K .Ü By Tom King L IS T fe M .Ili f ^ E F Z A O M Y o f f * c o u l d n 't Y ou g u y s g e t m e a -> 3 A O C E T O K S O N fcT V kN G \rr AH-Star Game winner Nolan Ryan allowed one hit and struck out three In two innings of work Tuesday night. Ryan returns to Anaheim in style Associated Press A N A H E I M , Calif. — The q ui­ et Texan, som e­ h o w lo o m in g larger th a n life, strode in o ut of the tw ilight and rew rote a n o th er bit of baseball history. im pressive N olan Ryan, seem ingly getting b etter as he grow s older, pitched tw o in nings T uesday n ig h t in the A m erican l e a g u e 's 5-3 victory over the N ational League to becom e th e oldest pitcher ever to w in an All-Star G am e. in th e 90-m ph Ryan, w hose fam ed fastball still ran g e, b u z ze s show ed the N L's finest h itters th at h e 's still developing at age 42. K eep­ ing them off-balance w ith his fast­ ball, Ryan also sh o w ed he could th ro w a nasty curve. A fter th e NL got to starter Dave S tew art for tw o first-inning ru n s, Ryan took o v er in th e second in nin g and set the to n e for his te a m 's p itch ­ ers the rest of the w ay. H e finished his tw o-inn ing stin t hav in g allow ed a g ro u n d e r by Tony one hit, G w ynn, no w alks an d striking out th ree — including d a n g e ro u s hitters Will Clark an d Kevin M itchell con­ secutively in the third. "It's special to w in here and to w in th e All-Star G am e," said Ryan, the Texas R angers' ace w h o was w ith the A ngels in the 1970s. "It re­ ally h a d n 't even crossed m y m ind th at I w as going to be the w inning pitcher; I just h a p p e n e d to be pitch­ ing at the right tim e." h a d R y a n a n o t h e r s p e c ia l m o m en t before his form er fans here ju st last T hursday night, w h e n he sh u t o u t California on th ree hits, striking out 12 in a 3-0 Texas victo­ ry. H e said his curve and ch an g e-u p w ere the keys to his successful o u t­ ing in the All-Star G am e, his sev­ en th app earan ce and first victory in the an n u al contest. "I h ad a good chang e, and I w as g ettin g the curve ball o v e r," he said. "I d id n 't m ake any m istakes, give them any good pitches to hit." A lthough he seem s to have lost little of his pitching ability, if any, Ryan has said he will decide after this season w h e th e r he will retire. "O u t of all th e All-Star G am es I've been in, this one m eans the m o st," he said. "B oth because of com ing back to A naheim , all th e gam es I pitched here, th e m em ories a nd the fact th a t this could be m y last A ll-Star G am e." A longtim e friend of R yan's, 83- year-old A ngels C oach Jim m y Reese, seem ed to d o u b t this w ould be his p al's last All-Star h u rrah . "H e 's a rare m a n ," said Reese, w ho w as a room m ate of Babe Ruth in the 1920s. " H e 's a b etter pitcher now th a n ever. "I th ink he could just go on forev­ e r." Smith ss Gwynn rl Dawson rf Clark 1b GDavis 1b Mitchell If Coleman It EDavis ct Hayes ct Johnson 3b Waiiach 3b Guerrr dh Bonilla dh Sndbrg 2b Rndiph 2b Santiago c Scioscia c Penac Totals National American Reuschei Smoltz L Sutclifte Burke MDavis Howell Williams Stewarl Ryan W Gubicza Moore Swindell Russell Plesac Jones S 6 Carter students arrested, charged in robberies Associated Press DALLAS — Six cu rren t an d form er C arter H igh School stu d e n ts w ere arrested T uesday in connection w ith a n arm ed robbery ring th at m ay be responsible for u p to tw o d o zen h o ld u p s in th e Dallas area. Sgt. Mia Sullivan said m ost of th e six — in ­ cluding five 18-year-old m en and a 17-year-old — have ties to th e school's athletic program s. She said th e m en are accused of robbing several restau ran ts, o th er b u sin esses and individuals be­ tw een Dec. 22 an d June 20. The arrests com e on the heels of last m o n th 's arrest of tw o form er C arter C ow boys football players, w h o apologized for th eir crim es over th e w eekend. G ary E d w ards an d Derric Evans are accused of u sin g a h a n d g u n to rob video stores and dry cleaning stores. Sullivan said latest su sp ects could be linked to "a couple of d o ze n [robberies] — th at w o u ld n 't su rp rise me. th e "I think it w as a gang — a gang of individuals th at knew each o th e r," Sullivan said. "A s far as how they chose th e b u sinesses, etc., w e 're not real clear at this point. They did know each o th e r." W arrants w ere issued for the arrests of the A round C ampus m en, b ut several en d e d u p su rre n d e rin g to offi­ cials at the Lew S terrett Justice C enter. The 18-vear-olds arrested are C arlos D w ayne Allen, Aric A n d rew s, Keith C am pbell, Jimmy Lee E dw ards Jr. and Patrick W illiams. A uthorities w ou ld not release the nam e of the 17-year-old because he w as a juvenile at the tim e the crim e w as com m itted an d is being tried u n ­ der the juvenile justice system . Allen, Jim m y E dw ards an d W illiams each w ere charged w'ith th ree co un ts of aggravated robbery a n d w ere being held in lieu of $75,000 bail. C am pbell had been charged w ith four counts of aggravated robbery an d w as being held in lieu of $100,000 bail. A ndrew s had not been arraig ned by 9:45 p.m . T uesday. All five rem ained incarcerated T uesday night at Lew S terrett Justice C enter. The 17-year-old, w ho w as charg ed in connec­ tion w ith a single arm ed robbery offense, has been released to his fath er's custo dy, p en d in g trial, a police sp okesw om an said. "W e anticipate to investigate fu rth er an d p o s­ sibly m ake m ore a rre sts," Sullivan said. "W e d e ­ veloped th ese individuals th ro u g h ou r investiga­ tion the p ast few w eek s." Sullivan said it w as "h a rd to say " w hat m otivated th e teen-agers to becom e involved in the robbery ring. "T he m oney seem s to be an incentive for th em to d o it," she said. "B ut how it started , it's diffi­ cult to say. You h ate to com e u p w ith m otive w hen y o u 're n ot really su re ." W hat m ay have begun as lark, she said, "I think it kind of snow balled. As they got in ­ volved, they got d e e p e r an d d e e p e r." thing ab o u t "T he un u su al this particular group is they d o n 't have any records as a d u lts," Sullivan said. "You usually find tw o or three or four w ho have been to p en iten tiary ." Allen w as considered one of th e area 's top ru n n in g backs before he suffered a broken leg m idw ay th ro u g h the season. A ndrew s played on the junior varsity football team tw o years ago but did n o t play last season. C am pbell, a third-string tig ht en d senior w h o did not grad u ate this year, is believed to be the leader of the g roup, police said. Jim m y Edw ards, w ho g rad u ated in M ay, played reserve forw ard for th e basketball team . W illiams, a defensive tackle, reportedly lost in ­ terest in football after he lost his starting position in the m iddle of the season. D < LD O D CC F- >- CE CC < o CO u 3 JQ 0J G 0 O Q Around Campus is a daily col­ um n listing University-related ac­ tivities sponsored by academic d e­ student services and partments, registered student organizations. To appear in Around Cam pus, or­ ganizations must be registered with the O ffice of Student A ctivities. A nnouncem ents m ust be subm itted on the correct form, available in The D aily Texan office, 25th Street and W hitis A venue, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The D aily Texan reserves the right to edit sub­ m issions to conform to style rules, although no significant changes w ill be made. MEETINGS Am nesty International w ill have a letter-w riting m eeting at 7 p.m . W ed nesday in th e A ustin H istory C enter, 810 G u ad alu p e St. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Archer M. H untington Art lecture Gallery will sp o n so r "F igurative Sculptural T raditions in Texas — A C en tu ry of Sculpture in Texas: 1889-1989" at 2 p.m . Sunday in the H u n tin g to n A rt G allery in the the UNCLE SKIPPY& WALT Art Building. Patricia H end rick s, as­ sociate cu rato r of th e H u n tin g to n and co-curator of the exhibition, will speak. The Palestine Solidarity C om m it­ tee will sp o n so r a talk on "T rade U nions an d W ork C om m ittees in the O ccupied P alestin e" at 7:30 p .m . W ed n esd ay in th e Texas U n­ ion B uilding Texas G o vern o rs' Room. H ani B aydoun will speak. SHORTCOURSES Com putation Center User Ser­ vices will offer sh o rt co urses in C o m p u tatio n C en ter 8. T he final courses for the su m m e r will be: In­ troduction to dBASE III PLUS from 2 to 4 p.m . T uesday a n d July 20 and Introduction to N O M A D 2 form 4 to 6 p .m . T uesday and July 20. C o u rs­ es are $8 w ith a valid UT ID. C u r­ rent ad d re ss, valid Texas d riv e r's li­ cense n u m b e r and Social Security nu m b er m u st be on checks. Cash p ay m en ts m u st be m ad e before 2 p.m . R egister at C o m p u tatio n C en ­ ter 12 from 9 a.m . to 2 p .m . or in Will C. H ogg B uilding 9 from 2 to inform ation, 4:45 p .m . For m ore contact the sh o rt course registrar at 471-3241. The Student Health Center is of­ fering CPR classes, Basic Life S u p­ port C ourse A, B o r C. Call 471- 4955, extension 212, or go to room 347 to register. OTHER The H illel Foundation w ill spon­ sor Israeli folk d an cin g from 8 to 10:30 a.m . every W ednesd ay at 2105 San A ntonio St. The Institute of Latin American Studies will sp o n so r a p u p p e t show by the C hiapas W riters C oopera­ tive, experts in traditional M ayan literature and d ances, at 7 p.m . W ednesday in the M usic Building recital stud io (2.608). Texas M emorial M useum w ill sp o n so r the exhibition "A u stin 's A ncient O cean" th ro u g h Aug. 28 at the T em ple-Inland Building, 301 C ongress Ave. H o urs will be from 7 a.m . to 7 p.m . M onday th ro u g h Fri­ day an d from 8 a.m . to 1 p.m . S atu r­ day. fossils Invertebrate m arine form TM M 's fossil collection will be featured. Free adm ission. BY VAN GARRETT kÉN/bUJTIoM I A K0VIBI& GANG C f cat Hoodlums in v a d e a p c a c e f u l Home W 5€A8CH OF FOOD. VIOLENCE ERUPTS WHEN Trtc fANtlYS P it BULL RETURNS FOR HeuQvIGEV r r C U e -M A ju e s A ^ e N o t U)6 HAVE S&O.SfcUPFV... 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