Paglia, S te in e m o ffe r th e ir v ie w s on fe m in is m , p. 6 — — — — — — — _ _ — . . . - Da il y T e x a n Vol. vz, no. oo The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, February 15, 1993 25c Schools lose money through tax loophole Associated Press HOUSTON — Texas schools are losing millions of tax dollars every year because of a loophole in a tax law intended to protect family farmers, a new spaper report­ ed Sunday. More than $64 billion in land has been removed from school property tax rolls because of a provision, com­ monly called the agriculture exemption, that gives spe­ cial benefits to farm and ranch land, the Houston Chroni­ cle reported in a copyright story. And last year, Texas schools lost more than $800 mil­ lion as a result of the exemption. A Chronicle investigation showed that the exemption allows m any developers and land speculators to pay far less property tax than the average homeowner simply by meeting minimal land-use requirements. “The joke is all you need to get an ag exemption is one cow and two blades of grass,” said Harris County chief appraiser Jim Robinson. “It's a little harder than that, but not m uch." For exam ple, Exxon Corp., pays $22.68 for $65,300 “The joke is all you need to get an ag exemption is one cow and two blades of grass.” — Jim Robinson, Harris County chief appraiser worth of property it owns in the Tomball Independent School District. By comparison, a Tomball homeowner with a $65,300 house pays $987.34 in school taxes. In another case, billionaire Ross Perot's Dallas-based Perot Group owns 15,420 acres to be developed near the Alliance A irport in Fort W orth. If valued at m arket rates, the Perot Group would pay Northwest Indepen­ dent School District near Denton more than $750,000. But the company pays $21,300. But defenders of the provision said they believe any abuse is minimal. "I don't think it's a loophole," said Texas Agriculture Please see Loophole, page 2 Clinton to back collider Associated Press DALLAS — P re sid e n t C linton, who reportedly has considered can­ celing the $8.25 billion super collid­ er, w ill ask C o n g ress to allocate $640 million for the project, accord­ ing to interim Sen. Bob Krueger. The am ount is less than the $710 m illio n ca lle d for in th e a to m sm a s h e r's m a s te r p la n an d w ell below the $859 m illion the B ush administration had planned to seek, b u t K ru e g e r sa id th e n ew s w as good. "I'm very pleased," Krueger told The Dallas M orning News in S u n ­ d a y 's e d itio n s . " T h is is a v e ry im portant project not only for the Dallas area, but for all of Texas. "I'm convinced that this level of funding, w hile it may stretch out th e co n stru ctio n phase a year or two, is a very good one." The Democrat said "an absolutely reliable" White House source gave him the figure Saturday afternoon. White House deputy press secretary Lorraine Voles on Saturday said she couldn't confirm either the report or the figure. Russ W ylie, spokesm an for th e project being b uilt about 30 m iles south of Dallas in Ellis County, said he was encouraged by the report. "If we can get an appropriation at that mark, we will be able to contin­ ue to m ake p ro g ress next y e a r," Wylie said. "It reflects a welcome decision by the Clinton adm inistra­ tion to not only maintain the super collider but to increase funding for it — signs of real commitment to the project." Last week, Republican Sen. Phil Gram m suggested that inadequate funding for the collider could force delays that w ould erode the pro- Please see Collider, page 2 U N . relief efforts thwarted Pressure on aid groups mounts as Serbs block convoy Associated Press SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnian Serbs turned back a U.N. convoy carrying food and medicine on Sunday to a Muslim town in eastern Bosnia that has been surrounded by Serbs for 10 months. It w as a n o th e r setback for relief agencies facing m ounting hostility from leaders and citizens of Bosnia's Muslim community who say not enough is being done to stop the republic's civil war, or to help 200,000 people trapped in pockets in the east. Officials in Sarajevo, Bosnia's capital, and Tuzla are blocking further aid to their residents to protest the fail­ ure to get supplies to the east. U.N. officials have criti­ cized that move for intensifying public anger aimed at U.N. operations and w arned th at stored food could spoil. For the second day, heavy fighting around Sarajevo prevented aid flights from landing at the airport outside the besieged capital. Fighting also raged in southwestern Croatia, and Serb Please see Bosnia, page 2 Panel votes to allow girls on varsity football teams Jeff Mead Daily Texan Staff After debating for less than an hour, members of the State Board of Education voted 9-3 Friday to a p p ro v e a re s o lu tio n th a t w ill enable high school girls to try out for positions on high school foot­ ball teams. According to a University Inter­ scholastic League spokesman, the ruling will go into effect im m edi­ ately. Jack Christie, one of the repre­ sentatives from the H ouston area on the board, listed the heights and weights of five players on the W estfield H igh School fo o tb all team in an attem p t to p ersu ad e board members to vote against the proposal. "In good conscience, I cannot allow a female to go up against the Westfield line. That averages out to more than the H ouston Oilers' [offensive lin e ]," C h ristie said. “We’re not talking about apples and oranges, here. We’re talking about males and females.” — Jack Christie, a U1L representative from the Houston area "W e're not talking about apples and oranges, here. W e're talking about males and females." Mary Helen Berlanga, secretary of th e b o a rd , d is a g re e d w ith Christie. " Y o u 're n o t a llo w in g eq u a l access," Berlanga said. "If a coach can allow a 5-foot, 5-inch, 145- p o u n d m ale to w ork w ith in the football team , he can also find a y o u n g w o m a n to d o th e sam e thing." Will Davis, vice chairman of the Please see Girls, page 2 INSIDE THEJE ÉHI STS Harvey Keitel roots through the amoral sleaze of New York City in Abel Ferrara’s Bad Lieutenant. 10 Déjá Vú Weather: Highs in the mid-70s, with 70 percent chance of thunderstorms. Lows near 50. Winds from the west at 15-20 mph. Highs in the mid-70s, with 70 percent chance of thunder­ storms. Lows near 50. Winds from the west at 15-20 mph. Heeeeey ... Haven’t we run déjá vú weather before? Index: Entertainment.................... ..................10 Sports................................. ..................16 Around Campus................. ................... 5 State & Local..................... Classifieds.......................... ................. 13 University............................ .................... 6 Comics................................. ................. 12 Editorials.............................. ................... 4 World & Nation................. .................... 3 Prayer school Asma Ahmed, 8, and Shakina Kamara, 10, prayed in a northeast direction toward Mecca Sunday afternoon. The children were attending a religious session at the Islamic Center of Greater Austin. The school meets once a week every Sunday. According to Islamic cus­ tom, the girls are separated from the boys. Eric Spier/Daily Texan Staff Official SA candidate list to appear today Justin Noble Daily Texan Staff S tu d e n ts ' A sso cia tio n election cam paigns began Friday w ith the release of the final list of candidates and the announcem ent of the for­ mation of a group that will run 28 candidates on one ticket. The official ballot list of all SA presidential and vice presidential c a n d id a te s w ill be m a d e p u b lic Monday. Capitalizing on the first day of the campaign, about 30 members of the p arty C am paign On Real E xperi­ ence marched from the Hillel House at 21st and San A ntonio streets to the W est M all at n o o n , b lo w in g w histles and chanting "W atch out for CORE." The group — led by SA presiden­ tial candidate Jerem y Pem ble and vice presidential candidate Karen Netzer — held a large banner dis­ playing a red apple with the letters CORE printed down the middle. "A n apple comes in many differ­ en t v a rie tie s, colors, sh ap e s a n d sizes, but at the cores, w e're all the same," said Doug Anderson, CORE campaign manager. "The name [for the group] Cam­ paign On Real Experience is called that because the candidates are the m ost qualified and experienced,” Anderson added. Pemble, an Asian Studies junior, is currently the chairman for the SA citizens' affairs com m ittee and the ch a irm an of th e A u stin C am pus Coalition. He has held several other p osi­ tio n s, in clu d in g p re sid e n t of the Freshman Students' Association and UT honors colloquium mentor. N etzer, a speech junior, is c u r­ rently an at-large SA representative and has worked on num erous other p ro je c ts in a n d o u t of the SA, in c lu d in g th e UT s tu d e n t g ro u p Future Alternative for Safer Trans­ John Pendygraft/Daily Texan Staff Government sophomore Gabe Acevedo called for public attention on the South Mall during a CORE march Friday afternoon. CORE marched around campus to encourage students to vote in the upcoming elections. businesses along the Drag and the m eet w ith leg islato rs and go o u t Panhellenic Society, will be installed in to th e c o m m u n ity an d h o ld within two weeks, she said. forums on legislative issues facing the University. Netzer is a senior Panhellenic del­ egate for Alpha Epsilon Phi. portation. Some of the main issues that con­ cern CORE are approp riation cuts and tuition hikes for students, long­ term planning initiatives and minor­ ity-related concerns, Pemble said. "W e have a big stu d en t apathy thing. It's time w e started talking action," he said of the financial con­ cerns facing students at the Texas Legislature. Pemble said he is already w ork­ in g on th e L eg islativ e S p eak e rs' B ureau, w hich tra in s stu d e n ts to Drawing students into the w ork­ ings of th e SA is also h ig h on CORE'S list of issues. "A lot of people don't know what the SA is or w hat it does," N etzer said. Netzer said she has already been working on a project to put 11 sug­ gestion boxes aro und cam pus for students to voice their opinions to the SA. The boxes, all donated by various N e tz e r said CORE, if e le c te d , w o u ld h o ld p u b lic issu e fo ru m s with students, faculty and members of the A ustin com m unity tw ice a semester to discuss issues facing the University and Austin. A ddressing the service needs of students is another issue for CORE, said A an an d N aik, CORE tick et coordinator. "Every m onth, the students ser­ vices complex gets m ore and more expensive," Naik said. Page 2 Monday, February 15,1993 T hk D aily T exan IMMIGRATION BARBARA HINES, PC Attorney it Law BOARD CERTIflED Immigration and Nationality Law Texas Board of Legal Specialization All Typei of Immlgntlon Catei Information about Immigration Act of 1990 1005 E. 40th 452-0201 R EPA IR • Boots • Shoes • Leathe' Goods • Luggage CU STO M MADE • Boots * Belts * Chaps * Etc Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca • * 478-9309 Relax. We'll Put You In A Bind At 3 am Fastback, Kroyden, Velo, Spiral and custom binding. Open 24 hours. kinko's Medical Arts at 26th & four more locations. 1993 BASEBALL SHOES High tops Metal cleats Air midsoles Rubber Cleats Youth shoes Compare our low prices! Shop now for best selection o f colors and styles! Collider Continued from page 1 Bosnia Continued from page 1 Girls C o n tin u e d from p a g e 1 ject's tenuous support in Washington. "If we go much below $700 million this year, we're probably planting the seeds that in two or three years will kill the super collider," Gramm said during a news conference at the project site. Krueger was appointed by Gov. Ann Richards to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated w hen Lloyd Bentsen accepted a post as Clinton's treasury secretary. About a dozen people have said they will challenge Krueger in a May 1 special election. Loophole Continued from page 1 Commissioner Rick Perry, who noted that landowners who develop agriculture property must pay five years of back taxes as a penalty. "I think the law the way it is written today is quite adequate," he said. Proponents of the provision are concerned that any erosion of the law would hurt the farmers and ranchers it was designed to protect. Critics say they are not trying to take the exemption away from legitimate farmers and ranchers. Their con­ cerns arc the land speculators, developers and corpora­ tions, particularly in urban areas. Agriculture land is taxed on the value of what crops or products it can produce, rather than its value on the real estate market. The exemption is intended to protect farmers and ranchers from high taxes resulting from skyrocketing real estate values. Before 1979, only individual farmers and ranchers were eligible to claim the exemption and pay lower taxes. Corporate agriculture producers and part-time farm­ ers and ranchers were excluded. A constitutional amendment was approved by voters in 1978 that tied the exemption to the use of the land, rather than the income of its owner. For the first time, corporate land holders qualified for the tax break. and Croat leaders in that former Yugoslav republic repeated com­ peting claims to territory as the) prepared for talks at the United Nations this week. The C roatian arm y began an offensive on Jan. 22 to regain con­ trol of at least some of the Serb- held Krajina region in the south­ west, one of the areas seized by Serb forces in fighting in 1991 after Croatia seceded from Yugoslavia. The latest com bat w as the first since a truce took effect early last year. The 10 trucks in the U.N. convoy to eastern Bosnia tried to reach C erska, w hich rep o rted ly is a refuge for up to 40,000 Slavic Mus­ lims. The convoy left Belgrade, capital of Yugoslavia and Serbia, on Sunday morning and got only as far as Serb-held Z vornik on Bosnia's border with Serbia. Bosnian Serbs refused to let the convoy pass, saying they had insufficient advance notice, said a spokesman for U.N. aid operations in Belgrade. The convoy w as to stay overnight in Loznica in Serbia and make a new attempt to reach Cerska on Monday. Distribution centers in Sarajevo were quiet as the city's residents e n tered the th ird d ay of w h a t authorities have called a hunger strike in solidarity w ith hungry and ill Muslims in eastern Bosnia. The city council announced Fri­ day th at until convoys reached eastern Bosnia, it would stop dis­ tributing the food aid that has kept Sarajevans alive d u rin g a 10- month-old siege. board, said football is the "last bastion" and said the proposal w as discriminatory. "ft's a matter of equity," Davis said. It doesn't mat­ ter „. if it's discrimination against any human being, it ¡ust won't fly." Board member William Hudson, who voted against the measure, said he is not afraid women will sue the board because they cannot try out. "Maybe they'll sue us. Let them sue us," Hudson said. "Any coach who picks a g irl... he's loco in the head, lie's gonna get tired." "There's going to be more lawsuits filed because of injuries" than because of not being able to try out, he said. "I'd hate to see a young lady get out there and get beat up. You ladies can have babies I can't." Robert Offjutt, a board member from San Antonio who voted against the proposal, also expressed concern that there would be more injuries if the board passed the measure. "What I think we'll be doing is increasing the proba­ bility of injuries on varsity football squads," he said. When contacted Friday, Johnston High School foot­ ball coach Jim Craig expressed his concerns over the rule change. "It causes a lot of problems for us because of dressing facilities," Craig said. "1 don't know what we'd do if we had to dress a girl out. I'm not against it, it's just amazing to me that boys can't play volleyball." UIL spokesman Bill Famey said the UIL does not allow boys to play on a girl's volleyball team because males are generally taller than females. David Seaborn, an assistant football coach at Travis High School, said the effects of the ruling will not affect many teams. "I don't think many girls are going to try out for high school football," Seaborn said. According to Famey, all other high school sports in Texas allow girls to try out, and football should not be an exception. He added that nationally, about 110 women played high school football last year. "Denying a girl the ability to try out is a constitution­ al issue," Famey said. "The impact on the boy's pro­ gram will be minimal because the problem is there aren't enough girls who want to try out.' NEED A JOB? CHECK THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS! NOMADIC NOTIONS 3010 W. Anderson La 454-0001 • Learn how to become a journalist • Win a $1,500 fellowship • Spend the summer in Florida The Poynter Institute will teach you everything you need to know to start as a newspaper reporter in just six weeks this summer. You’ll write and edit stories, work as a reporter on a weekly, and get interviews with top newspapers. The program starts June 21 and ends July 30. You need an undergraduate degree by this summer to be eligible. D eadline to apply is April 1 . For more information write or call Bobbi Alsina. The Poynter Institute 801 Third Street South St Petersburg, FL 33701 Phone: 813-821-9494 YOU SHALL KNOW THE TRUTH AND THE TRUTH SHALL MAKE YOU FREE Is that written on the Tower? Is it from the Bible? Is it for real? T h e Daily T e x a n Permanent Slaff Editor......................................................................................................................................................................Geoff Henley Managing Editor.................................................................................................................................................. Angela Shah Associate Managing Editors.................................. 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Try our slice and soda special only $a.wd, or our ALL-U- CAN eat dinner buffet, findudes drink i f salad). M-Th 5:30-8:30 $4.69 c r a s a » * P t z z A Chicago S ty le d Deep Pern 2606 Guadalupe 476-1981 MAKE HIGH MARKS all for just $30 for a full-day With lifts that take you well above the treeline, Loveland lets you leave your mark on 60 fun and exciting runs that get an average of 375 inches of snow every year - lift ticket ($24 with advance pur­ chase and even less with our money-saving Student Loan Pass). Loveland. The educated's choice in skiing. For information on lessons, group skiing, and the Student Loan Pass, call 571-5580. mm 'FR ID A Y 'S DOW JO N E S : 3,392*43 DOWN 30.26/VOLUME: 215,751,547 WORLD & NATION Lithuanians vote in first popular election M o n d a y. F e b ru a ry 15. 1993 P a g e 3 ;2 { T h e D a il y T e x a !#?® Associated Press VILNIUS, Lithuania — Lithuanians voted Sunday in their first p o pular presidential election, a contest that could decide whether the Baltic country looks to the East or West as it struggles to rebuild its economy. Pre-election polls indicated L ithuania's former Communist Party leader and acting president, Algirdas Brazauskas, had a com­ fortable lead of 10 percent to 30 percent. But his challenger, Stasys Lozoraitis, may have n arro w ed the gap d u rin g televised debates this m onth. He urged L ithuania's 2.6 million voters to look past their current hardships to a W estern democratic future, rather than romanticizing the socialist past. Turnout was heavy on a sunny day after a light snow . The ITAR-Tass new s agency quoted Lithuanian election officials as say­ ing that about 80 percent of the country's eligible voters took part in the balloting. Election officials said prelim inary results would be announced Monday. D uring a gen tlem anly cam paign, both candidates for the five-year term supported a free m arket, introduction of L ithuania's own currency and withdrawal of all Russian troops. But Lozoraitis campaigned on a platform of turning to the West for economic advice and support, w hile Brazauskas cautioned ag ain st d ism an tlin g state in d u s trie s too quickly or cutting ties with Russia. The candidates also had sharply different backgrounds. Lozoraitis, 68, is a thin, graying intellectu- “ Everyone was a Communist. You had to be.” — Ruslan Safonov, Lithuanian voter al w ho speaks five languages and has an Italian wife, Daniela. He spent 50 years in exile in Italy and the U nited States after Soviet troops occupied Lithuania in 1940. Since Lithuania regained independence in 1991, he has been am bassador to W ashing­ ton. M any voters said Sunday that they con­ sidered him a foreigner, even though he has always held Lithuanian citizenship. " I 'm for B ra z a u sk a s b e c a u s e h e 's a L ithuanian, and the other fellow has just com e. He d o e sn 't really know the situ a ­ tion," said Juozas Kolmanas, a 60-year-old medical worker. Brazauskas, 60, is a jovial man who spent more than 30 years as an official in the Com­ m unist Party. One of his campaign posters on G edim ino A venue, the capital's m ain thoroughfare, was defaced with a red Soviet sta r and th e w o rd s: "Y ou w a n t pow er! H aven't you had enough innocent blood?" But m any voters were inclined to over­ look his C om m unist Party background, or even to consider it good training for ru n ­ ning the state-dominated economy. “Everyone was Communist," said Ruslan Safonov, 20. “You had to be or you couldn't work as a manager." O ther voters noted that Brazauskas led the Lithuanian branch of the party to break w ith the central Soviet p arty in 1989. He s u p p o rte d th e c o u n try 's in d e p e n d e n c e m o v em en t and re n o u n ced an y belief in communism last year. 'T ru e, he's a person who was part of the old sy stem , b u t he tried from w ithin to break out of that system ," said Robertas Kriscalunas, 31. “ Lozoraitis lived in a com­ pletely different system, and I don't know it he understands the way we had to live." P arliam ent chose B razauskas as acting president last fall after the former Com mu­ n ists — re n am ed the D em ocratic Labor Party — returned to power in a voter back­ lash against the Sajudis party, w hich had led Lithuania to independence. Under Sajudis, collective farms were bro­ ken u p and land was retu rn ed to its pre- World War II owners. Armenia faces food shortage Azerbaijan standoff continues Associated Press YEREVAN, Armenia — Armenia c o u ld ru n o u t of b a d ly n e e d e d w heat this week, deepening the cri­ sis caused by an economic blockade stem m ing from its 5-year-long war with Azerbaijan, officials say. Shortages of fuel and other basic commodities have forced Armenia's 3.7 m illion peo p le to close dow n virtually all factories in the former Soviet republic. Electricity is off throughout Yere­ van, and there is little traffic. Most s h o p s a re c lo se d , an d re s id e n ts sp e n d th e ir day s sc ro u n g in g for food and fuel to heat their house. Small children use tw ine to pull bundles of sticks hom e through the sn o w -c o v e re d s tre e ts , s to p p in g every few yards to rest their under­ nourished bodies. “The diet has been reduced basi­ cally to bread and p otato es," said Gassia Apkarian, head of the Yere­ van office of the Arm enian Assem­ bly of Am erica, w hich is helping c o o rd in a te an in te rn a tio n a l aid effort. The av e rag e eld erly A rm enian has lost 11 p o u n d s over th e past three m onths, and autopsy reports show the fat layer on the average corpse has dropped from 2.4 to 3.6 inches to 0.8 to 1.2 inches over the past year, Apkarian said. Despite the very visible suffering in Yerevan, most Armenians appear com m itted to continuing their war w ith A z e rb a ija n o v e r N a g o rn o - Karabakh, an ethnically Arm enian region inside Azerbaijan. A rm e n ia n forces now co n tro l m o st of th e en c la v e a n d h av e opened up a land corridor to Arme­ * nia, through which they ship food, supplies and weapons. In the latest chapter in the fighting, A rm enian fighters occupied several more vil­ lages in an offensive last week. Azerbaijan has blocked all traffic across its b order w ith Arm enia, a land-locked m ountainous country th a t a lso b o rd e rs G e o rg ia a n d Turkey. Georgia is itself embroiled in civil war, and fuel and rail lines running to Armenia have been destroyed or d a m a g e d by b o m b s. T u rk e y is allowing some traffic, but is sym pa­ thetic to Azerbaijan, whose people are ethnically Turkish. A rm e n ia 's d e p riv a tio n co u ld w o rs e n q u ick ly b e c a u se w h e a t stocks are expected to be exhausted by S atu rd ay , U.S. an d A rm enian officials said. The U.S. government has donated 182,600 tons of w heat to Armenia, b u t o n ly 72,600 have been d e liv ­ e re d . T he n e x t s h ip m e n t is n o t e x p e c te d u n til n ex t m o n th , an d A rm enian officials say bread will become scarce until then, said a U.S. diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity. U.S. and A rm enian a u th o ritie s w ant Turkey to allow m ore grain an d h eatin g oil sh ipm en ts across their border. “ If our transportation and com ­ m u n ic a tio n s w ere fu n c tio n in g through Turkey, we could live like a norm al country," said Prime Minis­ ter Grant Bagradian. T u rk ish officials h av e allow ed some grain and fuel shipments, but Turkish diplomats in Moscow say it w ill be h ard for th eir co u n try to g iv e m u ch d ire c t a s s is ta n c e to A rm enia until the w ar w ith A zer­ baijan is curtailed. Clinton address will push sacrifice Associated Press W ASHINGTON — President C linton will give his first televised address to the nation M onday night, pro­ m oting an economic program that top adm inistration officials said Sunday w ould ask for sacrifices from all Americans. The adm inistration said the president's plan would p ro p o se close to 150 specific sp en d in g cuts to save money, while a top Democrat in Congress said that the m iddle class would be most affected by a new broad- based tax on energy. The White House confirmed that in its effort to con­ trol the deficit, it w as considering lim its on the pay­ m e n ts re c e iv e d b y d o c to rs an d h o s p ita ls u n d e r Medicare, the giant government program that supplies health care for 35 million elderly and disabled. Officials said that Clinton was still making final deci­ sions on the outlines of the huge package. But based on a variety of comments, the economic plan w as shaping up to be the largest deficit-cutting package in history, proposing about $250 billion in spending cuts over five years and what one Republican said would be $250 bil­ lion in tax increases over that same time period. White House officials conceded Sunday that virtually every Am erican w ould be asked to contribute to the plan, either through benefit cuts or higher taxes. “ I am not going to tell you that this package is going to exclude an y body," W hite H ouse b u d g et director Leon Panetta said on CBS's Face the Nation. As part of a stepped-up effort, the adm inistration announced that Clinton would address the nation from the Oval Office at 8 p.m. CST Monday. Officials said Clinton would speak for only 10 minutes and would not reveal any specifics of the package that he will unveil W ednesday night in a joint address to Congress. George Stephanopoulos, Clinton's chief spokesman, said the presid en t w ould tell the A m erican people, "W e're all in this together. Everybody is going to be asked to do their fair share." Several Republicans said Sunday that they believed the administration was going overboard on tax increas­ es and promised stiff opposition to the program unless more was done to cut spending. Clinton campaigned on a pledge to cut income taxes for the middle class while raising taxes on the wealthy. In addition, he promised to cut the budget deficit in half b y 1997 w hile significantly increasing governm ent investm ent in highway construction, worker retraining and education. However, adm inistration officials now concede that the m iddle class tax cut will be sacrificed because of soaring deficit estimates and, instead, the middle class will be asked to pay higher taxes in the form of a new energy tax. Prayer for deliverance A Roman Catholic priest officiated at a Mass Sunday near the slopes of Mayon volcano, 200 miles south of Manila. The volcano killed more than 60 people during its sudden eruption Feb. 2. Officials have ordered more than 6,000 people to evacuate, fearing further eruptions. Associated Press j ANC agrees to power-sharing plan Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — ANC President Nelson Mandela confirmed Saturday that the coun­ try's largest black group had agreed to share power with the government for five years after the end of white rule. Mandela said the agreement was a victory for the African N ational Congress. The leader of the ANC's m ain riv al, the In k ath a F reedom party, said there would be violence if the plan is approved. In any case, the plan is a break­ th ro u g h in re so lv in g d ifferen ces betw een the governm ent and the ANC over how to make the transi­ tion to a multiracial democracy. The p ro p o s a l still m u st be approved by the ANC's leadership and the Cabinet, and both sides are expected to consider it this week. The ANC could face opposition from its m ore m ilitan t m em bers, who see power-sharing as too great a concession to the government. But its top leadership is dom inated by m oderates such as M andela, w ho are very eager to see the country's g o v e rn m e n t firs t m u ltira c ia l installed. The governm ent announced the plan on Friday, but M andela's com­ m ents Saturday, m ade to Britain's ITN television netw ork, w ere the first confirmation that the ANC had agreed to power sharing. U n d e r th e p lan , a g o v ern m e n t will be elected in the country's first m ultiracial elections, expected by late this year or early 1994, and any political party receiving 5 percent to 10 percent of the vote will have rep­ resentation. D u rin g th e five-year term , the parties will try to work out a perm a­ nent pow er-sharing arrangem ent. The current white-led governm ent wants guarantees that the rights oí whites and other minorities will be protected; the ANC opposes this accusing the governm ent of trying to maintain white veto power. U.N. observers arrive in Hait i Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE, H aiti — A U .N . team of 40 h u m a n rig h ts observers m ade a low-key arrival Sunday, the first tentative step in a long-stalled effort to restore democ­ racy in the impoverished country. After months of resistance, Prime M in iste r M arc B azin 's m ilita ry - backed governm ent agreed to the mission last week when the United N a tio n s ag re e d to re d u c e the observers' autonomy and promised to respect Haitian sovereignty. Eighteen of the observers flew in Sunday afternoon on a commercial flight, the remainder aboard a char­ ter airliner from Miami. The group in clu d ed 15 A m ericans, the State Departm ent said. A military guard was on hand to ensure security, but there were none of th e p ro te s ts th a t h av e been staged d u rin g visits by other for­ T he acco rd eign envoys recently. The m ission had the cautious blessing of both sides in Haiti's bitter political crisis: exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aris­ tide and his foes in the military. a llo w in g th e observers does not specify the mis­ sion's size, but U.N. and U.S. offi­ cials say it may eventually num ber in the hundreds. The observers are to spread out across the troubled country to tty to ensure respect for hum an rights. The te a m 's U .N . c o o rd in a to r, Michael M oeller, told reporters at the airport there w as no tim etable y et for th is d e p lo y m e n t, b u t he expected Haiti's government to give the observers the freedom they need to operate. U nder the U.N.-negotiated plan, talks between Aristide and his foes w ould begin when the observers are in place. If the observers note an im prove­ ment in hum an rights and the polit­ ical situation, foreign g o v ern m en t could begin lifting a trade embargo that has crippled Haiti's economy. Sixteen observers from the Orga n iz a tio n of the A m erican S tates have been in Haiti since last fall but are confined to the capital. T he g o v e rn m e n t, w h ile n o t rolling out the red carpet for the observers, appeared intent on not giving them a hostile welcome as it did for U.N. envoy Dante Caputo. W hen C aputo visited Haiti two weeks ago to negotiate clearance for the observers, he was greeted by large and row dy state-sanctioned demonstration. An organizer of that protest, Ca -1 D enis, said the g o v e rn m e n t was barring him from using the state run media to call another rally. Aristide was ousted by the army in a coup in Septem ber 1991. The embargo, led by the United States, was imposed soon after in a bid to force Aristide's reinstatement. US ! Associated Press Israel plans to offer compromises to get Arabs back to peace table WASHINGTON — Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said Sunday that Israel is prepared to make com­ prom ises, in clu d in g ones involving territo ry , and wants to get on with peace talks with the Arabs. “Morally we do not want to dominate other people and politically we do not want to create a Yugoslav- like tragedy," Peres said in remarks to a leading U.S. Jewish group. “We are ready for a mutual compromise, including a territorial one," the Israeli foreign minister told the N a tio n a l Jew ish C o m m u n ity R elations A d v iso ry Council's annual meeting. Peace talks betw een the Israelis and Arabs have b een in lim b o sin ce m id -D ec em b er w h e n Israel abruptly ordered the deportation of 400 Palestinians into so u th e a ste rn L ebanon. Since th e n Israel has agreed to allow 101 of the men back into the country and said it would allow the rest back by the end of the year. Peres in his speech to the U.S. Jewish group did not address the matter of the deported Palestinians direct­ ly, but said Israel was eager to resume peace negotia­ tions with the Arabs. “We want to attain peace with all our neighbors — the Palestinian people, the Jordanians, the Syrians and the Lebanese. And we w ant to build new structures based on regional security" and developm ent of the region's economy, he said. OPEC nations meet to battle price drop VIENNA, A ustria — OPEC n atio n s w ere dead locked Sunday over an agreement to cut production to keep crude prices from plunging this spring. Ministers of the dozen nations of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries shuttled between their suites at a luxury hotel trying to w rap up an accord. But a pact remained elusive. Kuwait, bouncing back from Persian Gulf War dam ­ age to its oil fields, was resisting pressure from Saudi Arabia, Iran and other countries to slash its spring out put. At present output levels, the organization has flood - ed the m arket, creating a glut, and d riv in g prices sharply lower. The average price of an OPEC marker is more than $3 a barrel below its benchmark of $21 a 42-gallon barrel. OPEC delegates said the m inisters agreed on the need to reduce output by more than 1 million barrels of oil a day to hold prices steady. President and Mrs. Clinton leave after church. Associated Press Stephanopoulos said that the administration planned to take the fight to the special interests, saying at one point the adm inistration was “ going after the doctors and hospitals" because they were to blam e for health care costs spiraling out of control. “We've got to confront the issue of health care costs in the budget," said Panetta, noting that Medicare and Medicaid, which provides health care for poor people, represent half of the projected grow th in the govern­ m ent's deficit in coming years. In an in terv iew on N B C 's Meet the Press, S te p h ­ an o p o u lo s said th at in ad d itio n to the O val Office speech and W ednesday's 8 p.m. CST address to Con­ gress, Clinton also was considering returning to Capitol Hill Thursday m orning for a televised question-and- answer session with lawmakers. He said that the president would propose close to 150 specific spending reductions in his economic package, while Panetta said that proposals to eliminate unneces­ sary program s and stream line governm ent services would save $34 billion over the next four years. The adm inistration has said it would seek to boost the top income tax rate for Am ericans m aking more than $200,000 per year to 36 percent, up from 31 per­ cent, and propose a surtax on millionaires. On the cor­ porate side, it has said it would boost the corporate tax rate and limit corporations' ability to deduct salaries for high-paid executives. T h e D \ il y T e x a n Page 4 Monday. February" 15. 1993 Geoff Henley E d ito r Patrick Baria A s s o c i a t e E d i t o r Jeffrey Burk Associate Editor VIEWPOINT Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editorial board. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. Opinions expressed in staff or guest columns are those of the writer. Letters submitted to Firing Line should be fewer than 250 words and guest columns should be no more than 750 words. Bring submissions to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or mail them to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. Letters may be edited for grammar, length, libel and Texan style. The Daily Texan editorial board will meet with stu­ dents, faculty, administrators and members of the pub­ lic by appointment to discuss matters of public interest, political endorsements and Texan policies. To sched­ ule a meeting, call the Texan offices at 471-4591. Shelve Union bookstore if it fails to keep costs down he last thing UT students need is anoth­ er state-owned establishment. A book­ store in the Texas Union would be just wen if an outside corporation managed If the board does elect to place a bookstore in the Union, it must achieve student support and make sure the U niversity doesn't get taken to the bank. Without these assurances, the board should table the plan immediately and start over with something else. A private bookstore, with certain contract stipulations beneficial to students and the guarantee of a healthy lease revenue, would be the best plan. Idea lly, any paid services at the Union — bookstores, restaurants, recreation centers and copy stores — should be priva­ tized under special contracts. That way, the Union could reap funding í rom : ents, avoid pouring money into money- losing establishments — like the cash-cow Union Dining Service — and offer students quality services from private businesses famil­ iar with and dependent upon the competitive consumer market. If we must have, however, a state-owned, privately managed bookstore, the contract must promise many of the perks the board has mentioned while selling the idea to students. For instance, the managing company should guarantee a large stock of used books. University Co-Op President George Mitchell maintains that his bookstores stock about 46 percent used books, while the companies dis­ cussed for the Union bookstore — Barnes & Noble and Follett — stock only about 25 per­ cent. The board should insist on a proportion closer to that of the Co-Op. Moreover, the managing company should promise the low labor costs the board has argued a bookstore would bring. Students' Association President and Union Board mem­ ber Howard Nirken contends that Barnes & Noble devotes only approximately 7 percent of its expenditures to labor, while the Co-Op spends about 21 percent. The contract should require the m anaging company to keep its labor costs low. Low textbook prices are another item the board has promoted. The managing company should underwrite in the contract its commit­ ment to competitive prices — especially in the event that other bookstores fold and the mar­ ket becomes more expensive. Only with these details can a Union book­ store do what the board says it will. In its pitch to students, the board must make another thing certain — a rise in Union fees is not con­ tingent on the bookstore's approval. Making students choose between a book­ store and a Union fee increase is the wrong way to gauge student opinion. More impor­ tant, if the board does adopt the bookstore plan, it should promise that it will not raise Union fees anytime soon. If the Co-Op and other existing bookstores would offer students a better alternative, the board's proposal would have little momen­ tum. Wallace's and the Co-Op could offer, for example, an up-front 10 percent discount for UT students, instead of their rebate programs — which only a handful of bookbuyers actual­ ly use. Faced with a budget deficit, the Union must somehow close the gap by cutting its budget or generating revenue. It cannot, however, engage in a plan that only vaguely assures stu­ dent interests and enjoys only weak student body support. imsf m s mm m m " ’ ™ Á f ~~....... — ~ *: J i ' ' j A ' i __' AIDS epidemic demands public concern, caution Nancy Zey TEXAN COLUMNIST W hen Lucille Ball found herself in the fam ily way during the '50s, the te le v isio n ind u stry faced a dilemma. Even though Ball's pregnancy was hard­ ly a new phenomenon, censors shrank from thrusting the vul­ gar term into the audience's tender ears. But Lucy's condition w ouldn't go aw ay — at least for a few more m onths. The media and the audience had to address a sensitive issue. Nowadays, when television airs everything from orgasms to abortions, one sexually related issue dangles dangerously on the edge o f our so ciety 's co m fo rt zone: A ID S. Still an essentially repressed culture, w e tend to treat this horrible disease like the ozone layer. "It's not happening, so let's not talk about it." But the ostrich-with-its-head-in-the-sand m en­ tality is k illin g thou sand s of p eop le every year, becau se although people are aware of AIDS, they do not fear it. Yet fear is vital to halting its spread. The copious m yths and m isconceptions surrounding the AIDS epidemic dilute its severity, and the government leads the w ay in fabricating a false sense of security. Recently, the National Research Council, a division of the Congressionally- chartered National Academy of Sciences, reported that AIDS will g rad u ally d isso lve from pu blic notice becau se those affected are "socially invisible, beyond sight and attention of the majority [of the] population." They also claim the epidem ­ ic has done little to alter American behavior. "A nybody who thinks that way has not studied the history and d e v e lo p m e n t o f th is d is e a s e ," say s D en n is C is c e l, 111V /A ID S p revention expert at the Texas D epartm ent of M ental Health and Mental Retardation. Ciscel explains that AIDS cases have been indicated in oral tradition as far back as 250 years. The British first documented the disease in 1905, when railroad w orkers in Africa began to die m ysteriously after consorting with prostitutes. He claimed that the govern­ m ent's denial that AIDS goes far beyond a short-term fluke is lulling our society into a false and lethal sense of security. Zaire has long refrained from rallying its citizens to take action against AIDS. Because o f its inaction, the co u n try 's infection rate for all men and women hovers between 35 and 40 percent. Within the next 10-15 years, 30 percent of the pop­ ulation will die. Ciscel adds that prolonging ignorance and fear o f this d ise a se is su icid e. " T h is thing h as on ly ju s t b e g u n ." The m yopic NRC has been ad d ressin g A ID S the same way the Confederates initially perceived the Civil W ar as a benign skirm ish that w ill be over as soon as it had started. Unless they wish to witness the apocalypse, they had better urge the federal government to wage a full-scale war on the epidemic. None of us are invisible in this crisis. Contrary to what doc­ tors initially conjectured at its "d isco v ery " in 1981, AIDS is not a "g ay disease." Gaytan Dugas, the French-Canadian who introduced the disease to our shores, happened to be hom o­ sexual and infected a great num ber of his sexual orientation. But according to the Centers for D isease C ontrol's October 1992 report, 42 percent of the year's AIDS victims were het­ erosexuals, and the number continues to climb. In stead o f sim p ly can o n izin g fallen heroes like A rthur A she, they need to make com batting AIDS a C abinet-level priority. One o f the first plans of attack should be to tear off co n serv ativ e sh ack les restrain in g sex ed u cation in p u b lic schools. The com fort zone is a dangerous place to be w ith AIDS on the lurk, and only educated fear will give our society a fighting chance. Zey is a hum anities juntar. - .« ,* < 4 Talk shows pave path to decadence T alk show s on daytim e tele­ Toby Petzold TEXAN COLUMNIST vision ought to be banned. They serve no other purpos­ es b u t to m ake w h o res o f gu ests and voyeurs of viewers. To regard such d o p e as O prah and Donahue as mere entertainment is to validate our cultural decline. Instead, we should reject this tele­ vised P.T. Barnum ism not only by avoiding it, but through the strong­ est criticism possible. O f course, those who participate in th e s e sh o w s ' p o p u la r ity by w atching cou ld n't care less about the harm they do. But they ca n 't deny that the talk show phenome­ non is socially regressive. First, it celebrates m oral freakery. Im agine the m ost ridiculous topic possible (say, som ething along the lin e s o f " H e r m a p h r o d ite N azi D rug A d dicts W ho A re A roused By F arm A n im a ls " ) and y o u 're probably quite close to som ething Geraldo ran. S e co n d , it 's sh a m e fu l th at th e rotten exhibitionists who host these things are now regarded as legiti­ m ate sp e ak e rs for th e A m erican voter. Perhaps it's ju st good busi­ ness when Ross Perot appears with a leftist martyr like Phil Donahue, but w hat in the hell is that? It's a presidential candidate one day and the Chippendale dancers the next! How dignified. With such absurdi­ ties, drugs are redundant. B u t p e rh a p s m o st im p o rta n t, daytime talk shows have become a com m unity o f surrogate com pan­ ionship unto themselves, driven by nothing but ratings-consciousness. Their irresponsible pop psycholo­ gizing and shock-value treatments are p o o r s u b s titu te s fo r h o n e st solutions to people's problems. A d m itted ly , the su g g estio n of b ann ing these co u n terfeit friends from television is largely a visceral re a ctio n . Y e t its ju s tific a tio n re ­ m ains undiminished. Because tele­ vision is so m onum entally perva­ sive in our society, it is proper to be ftom, WM&U cm W NAMt.YoU ANSWER W - O o r m r r _ * Y o r ... You M'SWD? 'Yoovtoo , SP^EAMT concerned with our disgrace. S o m e sa y th a t th e ta lk sh o w racket is an extension of a free m ar­ k et and should thus be left to its own devices. But while w e faithful­ ly s it b y and e x p e c t e c o n o m ic forces to check the spread of such bankrupt entertainment, w e fail to u n d e rsta n d h ow a p ro d u c t lik e television differs from other goods. As a com m od ity like n o other, television underlies our m odes of co n su m p tio n and h elps to create demand, including its own. Talk shows, of course, are among te le v isio n 's m ost cu lp ab le ex am ­ ples of this harmful manipulation. For instance, the goal of a rumor- monger like Joan Rivers is to push her product at the expense of any real consum er benefit. To rem ain popular, shows like hers are oblig­ ated to excesses that should eventu­ ally d esen sitize th eir m arket. In ­ credibly, though, they h aven't yet reached bottom. W ith products besides this kind o f te le v isio n , the id eal is to earn m arket share with either quality or utility. W hat can Montel do but to go one better than his competitors' m e n ag eries of Tom Thu m bs and Incred ible Bearded Ladies? Every d ay brings another em barrassing spectacle*. T h e " s u c c e s s " o f d aytim e talk sh o w s is sim u lta n eo u sly a great d etrim en t to a so ciety th at cares ab o u t its in te lle c tu a l and m oral s ta n d a r d s . O p ra h and P h il, o f co u rse, are not th e ca u se o f our decadence, but they are certainly a sym ptom . R ather than glorify ing and giving vent to our social dis­ e a s e s , le t's rew ard q u a lity p ro ­ gramming and flush the rest. Petzold is a history/classics senior. wat, excwuuuse wt! \H F t n K E I OUST W C N T S A Y /y/yTWiN6> - Sucw * Beauv' Don't victimize speech I'm not a free speech absolutist. I agree w ith L isa M cD onald ( " F ir s t A m e n d m e n t's m u m a b o u t h ate sp eech, b ig o tr y ," T he D aily Texan, Feb. 3) that w e must limit forms of e x p r e s s io n w h ic h in fr in g e u p o n o th e r p e o p le 's rig h ts , e .g . ch ild p o rn o g rap h y . But M cD o n ald says that hate speech "activ ely prevents [its targets] from enjoying the rights to which they are en titled ." Exactly which rights are these? The right not to be offended? There is absolutely no right enum erated in the C onsti­ tution that offers such protection. Lim iting free speech based on its offensiveness is especially dangerous because it allow s those with political pow er to d ecid e w h at is o ffen siv e and w hat is not. The politically cor­ rect agenda maintains that homosex­ uality is a normal lifestyle. Suppose a preacher stands up in a church ser­ vice and yells out: "H om osexuality is a s i n ! " T h is s ta te m e n t, b y M c­ D on ald 's d efin itio n , w ould in tim i­ date and oppress hom osexuals. Are we going to throw the preacher in jail? Have we become so intellectual­ ly arrogant that we do not allow the possibility of another viewpoint? In th is co u n try , p ro te c tin g free speech is m ore im portant than pro­ tecting people from being offended. Drew Shirley Journalism Tin can grants T he city o f A u stin and C e n tra l T exas sh o u ld be c o m m e n d e d for their active stand and pro g ressive p rogram s in the area o f recy clin g , and a fte r w o rk in g fo r a re cy clin g com pany for a year, I have becom e especially sensitive to the local recy­ cling situation. I believe it is time for the U niversity com m unity to follow the c ity 's le a d , and lo o k at all the ad v an tag es o f recy clin g . T h e U n i­ versity of T exas should attem p t to im plem ent a progressive and user- friendly recycling program on cam­ pus. Such a program will keep us in step w ith the city of Austin and its earth-friendly m ovement to increase recycling and decrease waste. Every year, expand ing cities like Los Angeles, M exico C ity and even D allas ch o k e th e m selv es w ith the w a ste and p o llu tio n th e y a lo n e make, all because of their lackadaisi­ cal approach to recycling and pro­ tecting their own environment. The administrators w ho look over the U T campus should take a serious lo o k a t th e r e c y c lin g o f p la s tic s , glass, alum inum and paper so that we may continue to enjoy all the nat­ ural beau ty in A ustin and on cam ­ pus, as many have before us. Tod ay on cam pus, th e on ly real effort to recycle is a few bins to col­ lect used Daily Texans, but there is a serio u s need for m ore to be done. S o m e o p p o n e n ts of an ex p a n d e d recycling program say implementing a larger program w ould be costly, but this is untrue. M ajor cities have show n th at an investm ent in trucks, w orkers, recy­ cling bins, etc., pays o ff quickly in d e c re a s e d c o s ts o f s u p p lie s and m aintenance of our ever-expanding landfills. If such programs can work in a la r g e -s c a le m e tr o p o lis , w h y shouldn't they work in a community like the University? A specific example is the recycling o f alu m inu m cans. T he num ber of cans throw n aw ay by students and f a c u lty e v e ry d ay is s ta g g e r in g . M oney from the sale of aluminum to local recycling plants could be used for grounds clean-up, scholarships or even m ore advanced recycling pro­ jects. But the fact is that recycling is still a foreign co n cep t to m any p eop le, O b v io u sly , th e m ajo rity of p eo p le know what recycling and its benefits are, b u t to m ost p e o p le , recy clin g h a s n 't b e c o m e a h a b itu a l a c tio n , so m eth in g ev ery on e sh o u ld striv e for. A m ore in v o lv ed and in ten se recy clin g p olicy by th e U n iv ersity w ould b rin g co n se rv a tio n in to all our daily lives. Benjamin D. Keeler Austin resident Purging South African army drains stains of apartheid T he South African Conservative Party th e rem o v al o f re v o lu tio n a ry G estap o - types from any security force. History will record this act as th e trum p card in De Klerk's poker game for democracy. ing to N ew York. W e need to cooperate w ith De K lerk on further initiatives, for example, like the removal of overly restric­ tive dual-taxation laws. Craig Ackermann TEXAN COLUMNIST called it a "w itch hunt." The African National Congress called it a vindi­ cation. President F.W. De Klerk said sim ­ ply "Y o u 're fired ." Hie recent purging of top-ranking right­ w ingers from the South A frican d efense forces was a bold move toward dem ocracy by a struggling president who deserves to be recognized for his w ork toward a truly free South Africa. In late December, De Klerk dismissed 23 high-ranking officers and six generals with a wave o f his hand, stating that these men participated in "illegal and unauthorized activities and m alpractice." In Afrikaans, that means that they w ere caught w ith their hands in the proverbial cook ie ja r — in a plot to assassin ate the president and reassem ble apartheid. Nelson M andela and the ANC thought De Klerk acted for unstated reasons. They viewed the dism issals as a vindication of “Let’s bust open the bubbly and let the fascists pout. This is one cleansing the whole world can get behind. ” their charges of arm y brutality. M andela has charged repeatedly that the Security Forces side with the Zulus and the Inkatha Freedom Party under C hief M angosotho Buthelezi. Buthelezi, perceived as a moder­ ate by white South Africans for his concil­ iatory approach and free-market econom ­ ics, is considered a traitor by many black South Africans sympathetic to Mandela. Although there is some truth in many of M andela's charges, De K lerk's move was f not motivated by racial politics directly. In reality, De K lerk just w anted to save his butt. Pro-apartheid fanatics have assassi­ nated leaders o f the anti-apartheid m ove­ m ent on a re g u la r b a s is o v e r the p a s t decade. De Klerk is Buthelezi in the mirror: he is viewed in right-wing circles as a traitor — as a m an who sold out his party and his c o u n try . R e fe rrin g to D e K lerk , S o u th African Constitutional M inister Dr. Gerrit Viljoen put it succinctly: "The government is no longer an apartheid regime, it is part of the anti-apartheid m ovem ent." L et's bust open the bubbly and let the fascists pout. This was one cleansing that the whole world can get behind. W hether you believe M andela's allegations of bru­ tality or De Klerk's charges that these men w ere p lan n in g a "th ir d fo r c e " to o v e r­ th ro w th e g o v e rn m e n t, the m o v e w as good. A fter all, p ru dence and ju stice d ictate R ev o lu tio n arie s in charge of m achine gun squads and tank battalions are detri­ m ental to d em o cracy . T hese A frik aan er generals w ere determ ined to fight to the d eath for th e ir "se p a ra te and u n e q u a l" system. De Klerk's dismissal lessens the possibil­ ity o f b lo o d sh e d in a n a tio n a lr e a d y drenched in tit-for-tat violence. Now is the time for the world to stand behind De Klerk and support him as his traditional backing declines. The Clinton adm inistration should take a s ta n c e o f p ro a c tiv e c o n c ilia tio n : W e sh o u ld en co u ra g e U .S. in v e stm e n t and renewed trade relations — it is an em piri­ cal fact that d em ocracy prospers w ith a vibrant and free economy. South Africa is a rich nation with a histo­ ry of o p p ression and black poverty, but only reinvigorated investm ent — not the archaic so cialist redistribu tive program s ad vo cated by m any in th e AN C — can solve the co u n try 's econom ic and social problem s. As one Johannesburg resident said, "W hat good is the vote if you don't have the bread?" In a c o u n try co m p a ra b le to a th re e - d im en sio n al ch essbo ard — w h ere Zulu hates X hosa, black hates w hite and vice versa, Boer hates Englishman — the sparks of hope are few. De K lerk's efforts toward political and econom ic developm ent dem and recogni­ tion and praise. South African Airways is once again fly­ Ackermann is a Plan II junior. T he D aily T e xan Monday, February 1 5 ,1 9 9 3 Page 5 ■ AROUND CAMPUS Kround Campus is a daily column listin g U niversity-related a ctivities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organi­ zations registered w ith the Campus A c tiv itie s O ffic e . A n n o u n ce m e n ts m u st b e s u b m itte d on th e p rop er form by 11 a.m. the day before publi­ cation. Forms are a v a ila b le at the D a i l y Texan office at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit subm issions. MEETINGS A sian R ela tio n s C om m ittee w ill m eet every M onday at 7 p.m . in the A sia n C u ltu re R oom in th e T exas U n io n B u ild in g . Be a p art of th e A sia n /A sia n -A m er ica n com m un ity through ARC events, discussions and m eetin gs. Check out the W est Mall b u lletin board for other a n n ou n ce­ ments. For more information call Elvin Chan at 472-4216. C ro ssro a d s C o lle g e G rou p w ill meet on Monday at 8 p.m. in Calhoun Hall 100 for a new and different Chris­ tian w o rsh ip tim e. There w ill be a band and a speaker. For more infor­ mation call Chris at 453-0513. Faculty/Staff Christian F ellow ship will meet on Monday at noon in Col­ lege of Business Administration Build­ ing 4.336 to hear Marvin Olasky speak on "Christian Faculty: Savant or Ser­ vant." For more information call J.R. Cogdell at 471-1851. Habitat for Humanity will meet on Monday at 7 p.m. in University Teach­ ing Center 4.102. Make a difference! The ca m p u s ch ap ter is se e k in g to build a Longhorn H ouse for a needy family. N ew members are welcom ed. For more information call Chris at 323- 5772. H ispanic Pre-law A ssociation will m eet on M onday at 5 p.m. in Texas U n ion 3.116. C hicano law stu d en ts from the University w ill speak. Every­ one is welcome. Pagan Student A lliance w ill meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in College of Ed- ucation Building 422. We will be hav­ ing an energy raising, so bring your drum and your favorite chants and help us raise energy for a good sem es­ ter. Students for Choice w ill meet at 5 p.m. in Texas Union Building 4.110 on M onday. For m ore inform ation call Rachael at 451-3999. S o ciety of P h ysics S tu d en ts w ill meet in Robert L. Moore Hall 5.222 at 3 p.m. on Tuesday. All members will receive free SPS pins for attending. For more information call Randy Friemel at 505-2005. Stu d en t In v o lv em en t C om m ittee will meet every Monday at 3 p.m. in Lila B. Etter Alumni Center on the sec­ ond floor. Interested in com m unity service? Get involved w ith your fel­ low students and assume a leadership position in the Austin community. For more information call Bill Brookshire at 416-1322. Texans for Peace in Israel will meet on M onday at 7:30 p.m . in C aryn's apartment. A national Hamagshimim representative and a shaliah from Is­ rael will lead a discussion on Arab-Is- raeli relations. For m ore inform ation call C aryn at 476-9811. Texas Union International Aware­ ness Comm ittee w ill meet every M on­ d a y at 5 p.rr.. in Texas U nion 4.312. Newcom ers áre welcome. For m ore in­ formation call 471-1945. U n iversity T aekw on -D o Club of­ fe rs c la sse s fo r b e g in n in g a n d a d ­ vanced students. Classes are overseen by Mike Stinson, a fourth-degree black belt. N ew s tu d e n ts , b e g in n e r o r a d ­ vanced, are alw ays welcome. The club meets every Monday from 8-10 p.m . in Anna H iss G ym 136. Beginners class meets Thursdays from 7-8:30 p.m. and advanced class m eets T hursdays from 8:30-10 p.m . in th a t sam e room . For m ore in fo rm a tio n call Ben B erger at 458-4016. U n iv e r s ity Y oga C lub w ill m eet every Monday in Texas U nion Build­ ing A sian C u ltu re Room from 5:30-7 p.m. W ear loose, com fortable clothing; don't eat two hours prior to class. The class includes ex ercises, m editation and discussion. For m ore inform ation call S tephanie H orner at 926-4323 or Peter Fluery at 480-9180. UT Scuba Club will meet on M on­ day at 7 p.m. in Texas U nion Building 4.206 to present an un d erw ater video night w hich will include footage of the H o n d u ra n Bay Isla n d s, o u r s p rin g break destination. SPECIAL EVENTS A lp h a Chi O m e g a w ill h o s t its Sixth A nnual H oop-It-U p T ournam ent Feb 20 from 9 a.m. until 4 p.rn. at G re­ g o ry G y m n asiu m to b en efit C a p ital Area Faster Seals Rehabilitation C en­ ter and the Alpha Chi O m ega F ounda­ tion, both non-profit organizations. Teams of three to four players each w ill p a r tic ip a te in th e ro u n d ro b in tournam ent. KHFI 96.7 w ill sponsor this year's even t and several prizes h ave been donated b y A u stin area businesses. H o o p -It-U p is o p e n to the e n tire Austin community. For more informa­ tion call 472-8537. Department of Art and Art History will sponsor paintings by Lori A rm en- d a riz on the fo u rth floo r of the A rt B u ild in g and M useum in th e Flood G allery d u rin g this week. P hi Beta C h i, P r o fe s sio n a l W o­ m en's B usiness Fraternity, will m eet at 6 p.m. on M onday at the C hina Buf­ fet for a c h a p te r d in n e r. M eet y o u r "fam ily ." For m o re in fo rm a tio n call Rachael at 371-0215. T a rlto n Law L ib ra ry w ill e x h ib it "The Texas Bar Journal: A Voice for the Bar for over 50 Years" from 8 a.m. until 10 p.m. daily in the Tow nes Hall Atrium. SHORT COURSES A u stin C om m u n ity C o lle g e will sponsor a sem inar for technical w rit- ers on S aturday from 9 a.m. until noon at A CC's Rio G rande C am pus A udito­ rium, 1212 Rio Grande St. Cost is $25 Please see Around Campus, page 12 ; i iin if you need the removal of wisdom teeth call 320-1630 BIOM EDICAL RESEA R CH G R O U P LN& Financial incentive provided in exchange for your opinion on pain medication following ofal surgery. Approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified/Eligible Oral Surgeons. H H l l ■ . -2 ■ c ..J THE________ PRINCETON REVIEW We Score Morel TW M a c * . * fU U rM i M l rffltfcutf Wtfa STS «■ M ac***» U w vw rfrj sponsored by the liberal arts council NEED A JOB? CHECK THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS! FEBRUARY 17, 1993 10 am - 3 pm IN THE UGL LOBBY T h e U n iv e r s it y CO-OP S t u d e n t B o a rd 4 Howdy. Since I’m working on my MBA and my § wi fe, Suzanne, is studying advertising, I know how expensive textbooks are. The access to cheaper, used textbooks is important. Bookstores motivated by higher profits make more money on new books. This January, 58% of the textbooks sold at the CO-OP were used books. Over 80,000 books! One big way the CO-OP strives to serve you better. • give u/ vour bf/t /hot! the wihher: M eiih a M adoLora p ictu red : MeLihd M ddoLora & Mark Wiko "W idded o u t" the texctf uNioh caMPuf /tore if coNtiNuiNd it / p h o t o c o N te /t.w e ’re LookiNd fo r aNyoNe boLd aNd wiLLiNg eNough to e x p o /e th e M /e L ve / for a /M aL L r e w a r d . th e rew ard if a free roLl o f 2z,-pxpo/urp /¡Lm aNcj oNe free /¡Lm proce/JiNg. w e ’LL /p L L YOU t h e f il- M ^Ncj provide yo u co M p etitive L y priced, h id h d u a L ity ph oto proce//iNg. wheN y o u pick up y o u r/iL M y o u caN eNter /o M e th iN g reaLLy H c jic u L o u /. W e’LL p u b L i/h a Lucky WiNNer e v e ry M o N day. MoN. 0- thur/. - /ecohd /e t of priht/ free (i2 e x p . roLL) Hie tes Union The Campus Store Horn's: Mon-Thurs: 7:30 am - 6:00 pm, Fri: 7:30 am - 5:30 pm SUMMER JO B S CAMP WINADU FOR BOYS & CAMP V E G A FOR GIRLS SU M M E R CAMP PO SITIO N S AVAILABLE FO R C O U N SE L O R S AT N O R TH EA STER N CAM PS. SALARY + R O O M /B O A R D /T R A V E L M U ST HAVE LOVE O F CHILDREN A N D HAVE STR O N G SKILLS A N D ABILITY TO TEACH O NE O R M ORE O F TH E FOLLOWING ACTIVITIES: ARCHERY, BASEBALL, BASKETBALL, CYCLING, CRAFTS, DANCE, DRAMATICS, FIELD HOCKEY, FENCING, FOOTBALL, GOLF, GYMNASTICS, HORSEBACK RIDING-HUNT SEAT, LACROSS, NATURE, PHOTOGRAPHY, PIANO, ROCKETRY, ROLLER BLADING, ROPES, SAILING, SOCCER, SOFTBALL, SWIMMING, TENNIS, TRACK, WATER-SKIING, WEIGHTS, WINDSURFING, WOOD. WE ARE ALSO LOOKING FOR FOOD SERVICE, MAINTENANCE, NURSES/RN AND SECRETARIES. REPRESENTATIVES ON C A M P U S DROP BY FOR AN INTERVIEW: Tomorrow-February 16 llam ~ 4p m S tu d en t U n io n Room s 4 .2 0 6 & 4 .1 0 8 i t H i t t t < -K h{ < n i -1C Í < t i j t t Hi H i 1 ^ . T CAMP WINADU 4 5 GLEN LANE 4 MAMARONECK.NY Hi 1 0 5 4 3 HÍ HÍ Ht Ht Ht Ht g y y y y y y y y y y y y » W y y ¥ ¥ » » ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ » ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ » ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ » CAMP VEGA PO BOX 1 7 7 1 DUXBURY, MA 9 1 4 - 3 1 8 - 5 9 8 3 6 1 7 - 9 3 4 - 6 5 3 6 S s 0 2 3 3 3 2 * >- X- y* y- y- > y- y - > y* y - j - y - y - y - j - j - y> y h y - a- y- y - y h y - y y ► y- y - y - > í h > ) y ► y h > J h y h > y h >- y- y- y y JH y y - y - y y y h y y H y> J h y y k y - Page 6 Monday, February 15, 1993 UNIVERSITY T" " T Speakers bring differing feminist ideals to UT Paglia slams NOW, political correctness Bethany Matz Daily Texan Staff R ailin g again st con tem p orary feminism, political correctness and academ ic careerism , au thor and social critic Camille Paglia spoke to 700 people at the LBJ Auditorium Friday as hundreds more chanted her name outside. N otorious for her opin ion s on- date rape, pornography and pop culture, Paglia incited applause, boos, and laughter from the crowd. The controversial author of Sex, Art and American Culture focused her remarks mainly on university reform. Paglia said the current "tre n d toward political correctn ess" has encouraged "ghettoization" of spe­ cialized departments such as gay studies and women's studies. She attacked the "p olitical cor­ rectness" movement on university cam puses as "coerced sensitivity training" and called for a "depoliti­ cization of multiculturalism." " I want to see a tw o-year core curriculum that covers major world cu ltu res," she said in a Saturday interview. "W e have to honor the greatness in each tradition, not con­ cen tra te on v ictim izatio n and oppression." Although often attacked by lead­ ers of the modern feminist move- Steinem's speech stresses need for a ‘revolution from within’ Kiran Husain Daily Texan Staff Hundreds of UT students gath­ ered to hear Gloria Steinem, a femi­ nist leader and best-selling author, speak Saturday about the need for "a revolution from within" through increased self-esteem — the topic of her latest book. Steinem also held a book signing at the U n iv ersity Co-Op for her book Revolution from Within. Co-Op President George Mitchell said Stein em drew the larg est crowd in the history of the store. Steinem claim ed that her book was d ifferen t from other books written about the fem inist move­ ment because it is more political. Proceeds from the book-signing went to the UT chapter of Students United for Rape Elimination. Steinem talked about the need for women to assert their individualism and for men to share the burden of raising children. "W e grow up thinking that we are either victims or victim izers," Steinem said. "T h en com e along gender roles which train men to be the victimizers and women to be the victims." She stressed the im portance of child-rearing as a way to end in­ e q u a litie s betw een m en and women. " I f we need to do anything, it's for women to care for children less and men to care for children more," she said. "W e spent the first 20 years of the [w om en's] m ovem ent try in g to explain that women can do what m en can do and w e're goin g to spend the next 20 years, at least, explaining that men can do what women can do," she added. M ost stu d en ts that attend ed Steinem's speech voiced their admi­ ration for her and said they found her "inspiring" and "refreshing." "I'm a peoplist and to me the goal she is espousing is a realization of all people's potential," said Roberta W ilson, a speech com m unication graduate student. " I f th e re 's one person in the world I could go to lunch with, it w ould be G loria S te in e m ," said Debbie Cohan, a graduate student in sociology. Beth Wilson, an employee at Book W om an, a fem inist bookstore in Austin, said that Steinem's book has sold well. "The response to Steinem's book has been overwhelming," she said. " I t has been m oving for wom en everywhere." Steinem was amused by the per­ formance of Girls in the Nose, an Austin-based lesbian band, which played before Steinem spoke. They p erform ed a v a riety of songs, one of which, Breast Exam, featured two of the band's lesbian dancers removing their blouses and examining each other's breasts. John Pendygraft/Daily Texan Staff A crowd of people yelled for Camille Paglia’s attention outside the LBJ Auditorium Friday night. ment, Paglia asserted that her views are rooted more in the pure begin­ nings of feminism than those of her critics. Citing her own credentials both as a scholar and activist, she ad d ed , " M y fem in ism p redates [Gloria Steinem's]." Paglia criticized the current uni­ versity system for being "corrupt and overtenured" and said scholar­ ship is characterized by intellectual trendiness rather than free thought. A self-acknow ledg ed bisexu al and proponent of gay rights, Paglia made a series of attacks on current "sp ecial interest grou p s" such as the N ation al O rg an izatio n for Women and ACT UP, a homosexual rights organization. She referred to the tactics of ACT UP as " in s a n e b e h a v io r" and argued that such "fringe activism" would not win public acceptance of non-conformist lifestyles. About halfway through Paglia's lecture, an audience member stood up and asked if she was receiving $10,000 for speaking. Paglia, angry at being interrupt­ ed, called the questioner, among oth er th in gs, a " b i t c h " and a "n in n y ." Paglia said her speaking fee w as $ 2,0 00, b u t added she charged $2,500 because of the long trip to A ustin. Several au dience members left in protest of Paglia's handling of the interruption. The w om an who ch allen g ed Paglia, Keila Diehl, a UT anthropol­ ogy doctoral student, said she was in terested in exposin g w hat she called the hypocrisy of Paglia get­ tin g paid a la rg e am ou nt for a speech about academic reform at a university. "W hat got to me was the incredi­ ble hatred in her speech. It was not hopeful, it was not caring." Regents approve degree for specialized Slavic stud ies Edna C. Oliveros Daily Texan Staff A new UT m a ste r's d egree program ap p roved Th u rsday by the U T System Board of Regents is expected to open more doors for students interested in specializing in post-Soviet and East European Studies, officials said Friday. Michael Katz, director of the Center for Soviet and East European studies, said he was "delighted" about the approval of the new degree program, and added that the program should p rovid e stu dents with more extensive work in foreign studies. "[The program] will provide an opportu­ nity for students to do m ultidisciplinary work in language and area studies," Katz said. "Even though the Soviet Union doesn't exist anymore, the people are still there, and the various countries that have replaced the Soviet Union will still continue to play an important role in world politics." Martha Merritt, an assistant professor of government specializing in Russian politics, said she supported the program for its abili­ ty to teach students about particular coun­ tries. "[Students] pick an area of the world ... [and] don't have to worry about satisfying the requirements of a department," Merritt said. "They can tailor their program to their regional interest." M erritt added that the program is not designed for students seeking a general degree in Soviet studies. " [It is] important that students under­ stand it's not a con v en tion al acad em ic track," she said. "It is a great option for peo­ ple whose primary interest is in a country ... for students who want an academic career, getting a more conventional degree should be a serious option." Heather Burks, a Russian language junior, said the program would be beneficial for business. "[With] communism falling, there will be a lot of opportunities in that area," Burks said. "American business will need a lot of consultants. People with that kind of degree [will] be in demand from a business stand­ point." Burks added that many friends she knew had to pursue graduate studies in Soviet studies at institutions outside of Texas. "I'm really glad [the regents] passed it," she said. Stephanie Profitt, a government and Sovi­ et and East European studies junior, said the program was "a good thing," but might be too "limiting." The degree plan "might be too specific ... it has too much of a scholarly focus," Profitt said. "It might be too limiting [because] it doesn't teach you any specific skill. I don't know what you could do with [the degree] alone." A cco rd in g to a p rep ared statem en t, enrollment in the new program is projected at eight to 10 students per year. The pro­ gram will be coordinated by the Center for Soviet and East European Studies under the College of Liberal Arts. Students who finish the program will probably enter government and business jo b s, w hile oth er stu den ts w ill u se the degree toward a doctorate in a particular discipline, Katz said. * Solutions from your A p ple C am p us R e seller: a fu ll M a c in to s h line fo r a ll your n eeds. You’re not the only onewhofc carrying alot of units this semester The new Apple Macintosh Color Classic. The new Apple Macintosh Centris 610. The new Apple Macintosh LC III Right now, your Apple Campus Reseller has the most affordable new for even more power, the Macintosh Centris 610. See these new computers line of full-featured Macintosh computers ever. There’s the Apple Macintosh today at your Apple Campus Reseller. Where you'll get special student pricing, as well as service during college? And experience the power of Macintosh. Color Classic - a solid performer at a remarkable price. The Macintosh LC III, which runs 50% faster than its top-selling predecessor, the LC II. And, The power more college students choose. The power to be your best.’ Texas Union MicroCenter The M icroCenter’s special prices are available only to eligible UT students, faculty, and staff. Prices and availability are subject to change w ithout notice. The M icroCenter is located in the Varsity Center • 201 E. 21st (512) 4 7 1 -6 2 2 7 • Open Monday - Friday • 11 am - 6 pm Business School few Gjm 1 0 M lc ro C m te r sen ice is aca liable otth'from Afipk Campus HestUm trbk h are Apple I utbomed Sen u e Prm tilers % M I l/yz/t- (.om/nih-r Im Ml ncbh n n » l i/tple the ip/de lofto Macintosh m l The potter lo be your best are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, htc Macintosh Centris is a trademark ofApple Computer. Inc Classic is a registered trademark licensed to Apple Computer. Inc T h e D a i l y T e x a n Monday, February 1 5 , 1 9 9 3 Page 7 Assertiveness course looks at stereotypes Meghan Griffiths Daily Texan Staff Although 1992 was known as the "Y ear of the W om an," women in 1993 are still plagued by the same sexual pressures and gender roles their mothers faced, officials at the U T Stu d en t H ealth C en ter said Friday. "T h e stereotypes of men as ag­ gressive and women as passive still exist," said Toni Falbo, professor of educational psychology. " I think the existence of that belief is that men have to be ag g ressiv e as opposed to being sensitive." A lack of knowledge in dealing with sexual pressures is one reason college campuses have such a high rate of sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted pregnancies, said Jamie Shutter, coordinator of sexual health education at the UT Health Center. In an effort to teach sexual as­ sertiv en ess for both men and women, the Health Center is offer­ ing a four-part workshop designed to dispel gender m yths, Sh u tter said. " A lot of the w ay that w e're socialized as men and women is that men are expected to make the first m o v es," Sh u tter said. "T h e woman doesn't know that she has a leg to stand on insisting on condom use." Lack of communication is often a in re la tio n sh ip s, she problem added. "Everybody knows condoms pro­ tect you from STD s," she said. "If p eo p le know how they can get STDs, then why aren't they using condoms?" The switch from a home environ­ ment to a college campus is often a dramatic change for students. "A lot of students come here to UT and they have not made their sexual debut yet," Falbo said. Shutter said the training sessions at the UT Health Center are aimed to teach students about their sexual rights. Sessions will include co-ed role playing to represent a variety of sexual situations. Participants will also learn about the various meth­ ods of protecting themselves from STDs and unwanted pregnancies. Many students are not aware of the correct way to use a condom, Shutter said. During Health Center workshops explaining condom usage, "90 per­ cent of the time they get this exer­ cise wrong," she said. The week of March 11 will also be the celebration of National Condom Week at the Health Center. Increased knowledge in condom usage will help reduce HIV-related incidents and prevent unw anted p reg n an cies at the U n iv e rsity , Shutter said. The p ro g ram s on sexual a s ­ sertiveness entitled "Talking Back to Sexual Pressure: Assertiveness Training For Men and Women" will take p lace on Feb. 22, M arch 1, March 8, and March 22. MBAs win money solving problems Abe Levy Daily Texan Staff Representatives from the Deloitte and Touche accou nting firm an­ nounced the winners of a consulting contest for first-year MBA students Friday. M em bers of the winning team, UT first-year MBA students Thomas Cogdell, Julie Moore, Clay Williams and Brian W olfe, each received $1,000 scholarships from the compa­ ny for devoting almost 24 hours to solving a con su ltin g "p ro b le m " from D&T's 1989 case files. The four stu d en ts beat out 25 other UT teams in the annual com­ petition. The University is one of six schools nationally chosen by D&T to host the contest. " T h e stu d e n ts got a case in essence of what we do every day as business con su ltan ts," said D&T- Dallas branch manager Bob Kou- delka, who organized the competi­ tion. "T h e case was condensed so the students could perform it in one night." Most students burned the mid­ n ight oil as they prepared for Friday's 25-minute closed presenta­ tions with a five-minute question- and-answer period the following day at the Graduate School of Bus­ iness atrium. "T h e students get to work in a team environment and be exposed to a real-world problem under dis­ tinct tim e re s tra in ts ," K oudelka said. " W e stayed up all n ig h t and worked on selling the presentation with enthusiasm and presenting a creative marketing appoach," said Wolfe, who plans to apply at D&T for employment when he graduates. "T h e y expected re a listic, sound analysis of the situation." Moore, who specializes in infor­ mation systems management, said she studied last year's winners to gain an added ad vantage in the competition. " I did a sign ifican t am ount of research w ith the seco n d -y ear MBAs to really understand what I was getting in to ," Moore said. " I “This experience is not found in the classroom.” — Bob Casey, College of Business Administration director of development asked our team, 'What do we need to do to look like a real consulting team ?'" T hree out of the four w inners have a concentration of studies in information systems management. "It's the first time for a majority ISM team to win, a credit to the pro­ fessors," Moore said. After the judges narrowed the 26 teams down to five Friday morning, the finalists presented their plans in front of an open audience. D&T Chicago partner H. Thaine Lyman, who served as a judge, said he looked for "clarity of thought, conviction, energy and effective use of presentation m aterials" in the students' problem solving abilities. Bob Casey, director of develop­ m ent for the C ollege of Business Administration, said the University uses the competition to expose stu­ dents to the real business w orld, w h ile p ro v id in g D&T w ith the o p p ortu n ity o f recru itin g from promising MBA students. "This is an outstanding opportu­ nity for students to showcase their analytical, communication and lead­ ership talents," Casey said. "T h is experience is not found in the class­ room. The D &T-sponsored event enables the educational experience to become practical and meaning­ ful." The competition allowed the stu­ dents to not only see how business theory works out practically, but also let professors see their students perform outside the classroom. "The professors can add valuable feedback to the students on their presentation style, while D&T gets an opportunity to build relation­ ship s w ith stu d e n ts," K oudelka said. "This ensures a proper fit with students — they know us and we know them." Suck rocks Zoology senior Shawn Stringer uses an “aspirator” to suck stone flies from a rock into a holding jar. The aspirator contains a screen to prevent accidental consumption of a bug. John Pendygraft/Daily Texan Staff 4 arrested after shooting at Daytona Beach college Associated Press DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Four people were arrested Saturday in connection with the fatal shooting of three men at Bethune-C ookm an College, police said. Two of the four are believed to have opened fire on the victims with handguns while they sat in a car on campus. The suspects were involved in a quarrel before the Friday night shootings, but it w as unknown if the victim s w ere also involved, police said. Authorities added that the gunmen may have mistaken the victims for the men they had quar­ reled with. A recording by the police department's public relations office offered few other details. The men were charged with three counts each of murder and one count of attempted murder. A rrested w ere P atrick A shley, 23, and his brother James Ashley, 20, Jesse Adams, 22, and Shahron Green, 20. Police say James Ashley and Green were the ones who fired the shots. Dead at the scene were Kenneth White, 18, a freshman, and David Thomas, 22, a former stu­ dent. Henry Eaddy Williams, 18, also a freshman, died early Saturday of head wounds. Bernard Sm ith Jr., 24, was listed in stable co n d itio n Saturday with a bullet wound to the thigh. The tightly knit college of about 2,300 students has b een plagued by v io len ce and random tragedy w ithin the last year. W ith the latest deaths, nine students or alumni have been killed since June in shootings and auto accidents. Until Friday, the appearance of the predomi­ nantly black college's gospel choir at President Clinton's inauguration had almost wiped out the memories of the earlier deaths. T h e U n iv e r s it y CO-OP St u d e n t Bo a r d J o s t e n 9s The right price & value. The right quality & warranty. Josterís most preferred styles 14K $449.00 $379.00 10K $349.00 $279.00 Mens: Womens: Seniors: Reserve UT's finest custom announcements and cap & gowns during February: receive 5 personalized announcements FREE! J o s t e n ’s Graduation Center 2304 Guadalupe (next to Bevo’s Bookstore) Sat 10-3 Mon-Fri 11-5 CAMERAS • LENSES • BINOCULARS • SLIDE VIEWERS • LIGHT METERS • PROJECTORS • RENTALS • FLASHES « F ree F ilm P ro c e s s in g w it h th e CO-OP Cameras PunchCard! H I HI * S3° v il m pm qcm sT w o Process 10 ro lls o f C o lo r P rin t F ilm an d get o n e F ree, i Expires 4/19/93 (3 1/2x5 or 4x6 • Limited to 24 single prints). 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S p e a k i n g ?/> f t p ’ . -> - . , ;1m m . * T t h e T r u t h gégjjL t ' ' *• BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -5244 STUDENT ISSUES COMMITTEE PRESENTS A DEBATE Question Authority a m e s i c k Student Affairs V.P. 4:30 PM TUESDAY FEBRUARY 16,1993 PRESIDENTIAL LOBBY, TEXAS UNtON CAMPUS CROSSFIRE Soul R o b e r B e r d a h U.T. President 7:30 P M T exas U nion B a l l n o o m Fniday Febuaany 26 Tickets a t the door 54 UT/S5 non UT Those Who Dig Kent Cummins Comedy Magic Show Texas U nion Loggia next to the Texas Ballroom Feburary 24 Refreshments Served 12:00-1:00 pm Sponsored by Texas U nion S tu d en t Issues C o m m ittee & O m budsm an Bad M utna Goose big {prizes for most bizarre mardi gras costumes Sponsored by the Texas Union Special Events Committee Texas Union Tavern B I a c k H i s t o r y M o n t h t h e T e x a s U n i o n T h i s W e e k i n ■" r ■/.. v -'í ~ . . * • i. * 10 p m - 2 am This Thursday Monday The Dating Game/ 7 pm/ Texas Tavern Tuesday Black Jeopardy/ 7 pm/ Texas Tavern Wednesday Forum: Black Women/ 7 pm/ Presidential Lobby Thursday T V Night: M a r t i n / D i f f e r e n t W orld/ 9 pm/ Texas Union African American Culture Committee A frica n American Culture Room/ 4 . 1 1 0 i ., v -,i .j. CoiviiNq iisi MARch M u It íc u It u r a Üs m W e e !< L etters F r o m A S tucÍ e n t R e v o I u t ío n a r y M A yA A n q e Io u K u r t V o n n e c j u t , J r . I i n t e r n a t i o n a I W e e k day “ ¿ WjI & iexas.union • • Wi , , S te iS a iii . , ■ ■: •: ■ \ ilM M H STATE & LOCAL Gay, lesbian leaders rally behind same-sex marriage bill Monday, February 15. 1993 Page 9 T h e D a n ^ T k \ \ n Nathan E. Wheeler Daily Texan Staff Gay and lesbian leaders met at the Capitol Friday for a "Valentine's Day scene" to discuss a bill introduced last week to legalize same-sex marriages. "Friday before Valentine's Day seemed like a very, very good day to be talking about this," said Laurie Eiserloh, executive director of the Lesbian and Gay Rights Lobby of Texas. "In the next few days, America will be thinking about things like hearts, and flow ers, and valentines and love," said Kip Dollar. "This is a time we should ask ourselves: 'What is love?' Should we for any reason condemn love between two people?' " If passed, the bill will become a law Sept. 1. "House Bill 615 ... simply says that any two individu­ als may obtain a m arriage licen se," said Rep. Glen Maxey, D-Austin. Although they believe progress has been made, the speakers said they didn't believe that the bill will be much more successful than a similar bill introduced in 1991 by Rep. Debra Danburg, D-Houston, that died in committee. The new house bill, introduced Feb. 4, was authored by Maxey and co-authored by Danburg. Speakers at the conference included Maxey, Travis County Clerk Dana DeBeauvoir, and two gay couples: Sara Strandtman and Karen Umminger, and Toby John­ son and Dollar — each of whom carried long-stemmed roses for Valentine's Day. Strandtman and Umminger caused a controversy last July when their wedding announcement was published in the Austin American-Statesman, and Johnson and Dol­ lar tried unsuccessfully in 1991 to get a marriage license. "In spite of being tax-paying, adult citizens of this state, we cannot purchase a $25 marriage license which will allow us to legally name each of us to be the other's next of kin," Strandtman said. DeBeauvoir said she disagrees with the law that she enforces. "I will not issue a marriage license to two persons of the same gender — Texas law prohibits me from doing so," DeBeauvoir said. "And I think it's wrong." "People sometimes say 'I don't mind gays and les­ bians, as long as they stay in the closet,' " Eiserloh said. " I have this to respond — imagine your life if you can never invite your family to your home for Thanksgiving for fear of retribution." Maxey told of how, in previous weeks, he and his partner were unable to use a rental car, and of how they couldn't buy insurance for each other because there was "no insurable interest in each other's lives." "Just as gay men and lesbians and the people of this country are saying: Our time will come. Our time will come. We will win this issue," Maxey said. Maxey said many members of the House support him; however, they won't support the bill. " I would expect, if I walked around the House of Representatives, that a majority of the members would tell me, 'I agree with you, Glen,' and those same people overwelmingly would say, 'But don't ask me to vote on i t . '" According to Maxey, no other state has a law legaliz­ ing same-sex marriages. "Texas should be first on something, and this is a good place to start," Maxey said. STATÉ BRIEFS State school board flunks new budget State Board of Education officials said Friday that the g o v ern o r's budget proposal won't make the grade because it does not m eet enrollment increases. Gov. Ann R ich ard s' proposal calls for $317 million over the next two-year budget period. An addi­ tional $300 million will go toward a teacher pay increase. "The $317 million doesn't even accommodate the growth in stu­ dent en ro llm en t," said Carolyn Crawford, State Board of Educa­ tion president. Craw ford said the board 's re­ quest is $1.8 billion for the next biennium. "M ost things we do in education cost," said Will Davis, vice chair­ man of the State Board o f Edu­ cation. Board members said the extra money is needed to fund summer programs for failing students and more teacher support programs. "W e have some concerns about the adequacy of funding," Craw­ ford added. "It's going to take an investment." Conference addresses w om en’s political role W omen from around the state will gather Monday for Women's Legislative Days at the University to discuss education, health care and environmental policy. The two-day conference at the Thompson Conference Center will begin with an address from U.S. Rep. Susan Molinari, R-New York. Other speakers include columnist M olly Ivins; recently appointed Railroad Commissioner Mary Scott Nabers. There will also be a recep­ tion h on oring form er R ailroad Commissioner Lena Guerrero. Tuesday's session will feature workshops on topics such as child support, violence, gender equity and education. Compiled by Rebecca Stewart, Daily Texan Staff. EURO-fig* 901 S P O R T • ? ó w“ * 24th St. 24,h 4 7 4 - 9 0 9 2 M /- N MOUNTAIN BIKES m w * C L E A N & LEA N i Laundry fir Fitness 4 2 2 5 Guadalupe 458-LEAN EVERY WOMAN'S CONCERN Confidential, Professional Reproductive Care • - - . . , S in c e 1978 IS • Adoption Services • Free Pregnancy Testing • Probletn Pregnancy Counseling • Abortion Services REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES • Hoard Certified Oli-Gyncrolofiisls • Licensed Nursiwj Staff • Experienced Counselors • On HR Shuttle . On HR Shuttle / / ’ a r o f i O T / f ’ ® 1 0 0 9 E. 4 0 th How would you like to have one telephone number for messages during youf entire college career? Call the “911” of missed messages! Matthews Com m unications rZfi 3 1 4 -5 6 0 0 Needed to test new medication. Examination by Board Certified Gynecologist. Financial Incentive Provided. For more information, call: 320-1630 and ask for Ext. 211 tfgül B I O M E D I C A L R E S E A R C H G R O U P INC: NATIONAL CONDOM WEEK (Feb. 1 4 - 2 0 ) Look for sexual health information tables staffed by Sexual Health Peer Instructors and Health Advocates on the West Mall Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, 10am - 2pm. A very special presentation: trYVHAT IS I T L IK E L IV IN G W IT H H IV ?" will feature a panel of persons infected with HIV, courageous enough to share their personal stories on Wednesday, 3:00 pm, Texas Union 3.128. m i For more information contact the Student Health Center Health Education Department at 471-6252. ill (eyecare) VISION CENTERS S V • EXAMS • CONTACTS • GLASSES 1904 Guadalupe (Bank One Mall • Park free in Bank One Lot) Offering the latest in contact lens technology...At afforable prices. 476-1000 E X A M ¡24.00 U — - ! C O N T A C T r - iL E N S E X A M r - i59.00 F t - I 2 Pair glasses or ^ 2 Pair contact lenses or 1 Pair of each 89.00 r>S O FT S P IN - I SOFTM ATE B SOFTCON EW CIBA Focus soft f l e n s e s or B& L Medalist 4 Pair for <49.00 Rx required T • Exam s available at our office County Clerk Dana DeBeauvoir and Rep. Glen Maxey stand by as Kip Dollar and Toby Johnson speak. Eric Spier/Daily Texan Staff Courthouse killer was violent, ex-wife tried to warn officials Associated Press DALLAS — The former wife of George Lott, the Arlington man sen­ tenced to death for killing two peo­ ple at a Fort Worth courthouse, says he beat and raped her and tortured their young son. Margo Livesay, in her first public comments since Lott opened fire in an appeals court last July 1, told The Dallas Morning News in a copyright story Sunday she had tried to alert officials to the danger Lott posed. "N o one should've had to die to prove my point," Livesay, 43, said recently at her home in Peoria, 111. Livesay claim s Lott sodomized her son, now 5, with a gun and a knife. She said Lott also subjected the boy to cu ltlik e ritu a ls and threatened to kill him. Lott was awaiting trial in Peoria on sexual assault charges when he went on his rampage. Livesay said she was not su r­ prised to hear of the shootings, in which two attorneys died. Lott was sentenced to death on Saturday. The Fort Worth native said Lott often show ed tendencies tow ard violence. "I knew he was going to kill me, that's all there was to it," Livesay said. " I didn't know when, but I was sure I would be in a crowd and a lot of other people were going to die." The cou ple lived in A rlington after Livesay graduated from law school at the University of Texas. Their life became increasingly mis­ erable after their son was bom in July 1987, she said. T h e U n iv e r s it y CO-OP S t u d e n t B o a r d 4 4 O ne o f the C O -O P s main improvements will be an incredible new computer system. Students will be able to get their rebates direcdy with a student I.D .. T h ey ’ll have faster checking, better service, no more saving o f receipts, and no more long lines. t v . S p e a k i n g T H E T R U T H BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...47I -5244 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT ‘Lieutenant’ probes man and morality Vitiligo skin condition and the Oscar statue €T7 Oprah interview raises even more questions about reclusive ‘King of Pop* superstar Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The buzz over Michael Jackson's interview with Oprah Winfrey continued on several fronts Friday and included a statement from the pop star's derm atologist about Jackson's much-discussed skin condition. Arnold Klein said he diagnosed Jackson's discoloring vitiligo skin disorder in 1986 and said, "Mr. Jackson has requested that I make this statement." "It is not contagious and is a result of the loss of pigment-pro­ ducing cells of the sk in ," the Beverly Hills dermatologist said. Also Friday, the A C. Nielsen Co. confirmed that more than 62 million people watched the 90- minute special Wednesday night The chalky-faced Jackson re­ vealed the skin disorder when Winfrey asked why his skin was becoming whiter. He said he is proud of being a black man and hurt by insinua­ tions that he is bleaching his skin or trying to be white. He wears pale makeup, Jackson said, to even out the appearance of his skin and control the condition. Los Angeles Times television crit­ ic Howard Rosenberg said Friday: " I f Oprah was wondering why dark makeup wouldn't work just as well, she didn't give a due." The Jackson interview also raised eyebrows at the Academy o f Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, among those who won­ dered w here Ja c k so n got that seven-foot statu e o f Oscar that stands on his theater stage. "W e re just curious, but we're not going to m ake any effort to find anything o u t/ ' said John Pavlik, an academy spokesman. "If Michael wanted to let us know w here he got it, w e'd like to know." The movie academy is scrupu­ lous about protecting the copy­ righted image of Oscar. There are more than a dozen of the wood- and-plastic Oscars similar to the one adorning Jackson's stage and one of them is missing; ' A few years ago. one walked off somehow from the academy's lobby in Beverly H ills," Pavlik said. "W e don t know where it went." Among viewers of the reclusive entertainer s first interview in a decade were many critically ill children. The kids, their parents and donors deluged the Make-A- Wish Foundation of America with inquiries after seeing Jackson 's spraw ling N ev eríand Ranch in Santa Barbara. "It was wonderful " said Judy Lewis, executive director of the local Make A-Wish group. The entertainer regularle invites terminally ill children to visit the ranch. According to Nielsen. Michael Jackson Talks . . . to Oprah had a 39.3 rating and a 56 share of television view ers, m eaning 36.6 m illion households tuned in to the special for an audience of 62.3 million. Brian Baker Daily Texan Staff FILM ^Vampires are lucky, they feed on others. We gotta eat off of ourselves." So says Zoe, junkie and mistress to the title ch aracter in Abel Ferrara's new movie Bad Lieutenant. Harvey Keitel stars as the lieutenant, a cop whose life is slowly spiraling out of con­ trol. Addicted to drugs, he steals what he can from his investigations as a police offi­ cer. He is deeply in debt to the Mafia on escalat- ing wagers on baseball games. He manages to hurt everybody he has contact with, from two girls he pulls to the side of the road to his moth­ er-in-law, who sees him sniffing cocaine off pic­ tures of his daughter's first communion. Content to continue down his present course, he is assigned to investigate the violent rape and tortu re of a nun on the altar of a church in Spanish Harlem. Upon hearing the contents of the case, he tries to be glib. "Girls are raped every day," he says. "They want to make a big deal about it because this one wears a penguin suit." But the case stirs feelings the lieutenant, a lapsed Catholic, has tried to hold back with his abusive habits. The lieutenant's guilty conscience is awakened when, sitting in the church, he over­ hears the nun's confession to a priest, " I knew them, those boys. They play in our school yard. They are good boys." Upon hearing this, his need to solve the case becomes all-consuming. The nun (Frankie Thorn) is a complete moral opposite to the lieutenant. She is as emotionally strong as he is weak. The two counterbalance, each making the other's extreme behavior believ­ able. Thorn gives an outstanding performance. Although she has little screen time, her presence is felt throughout. The lieutenant himself is a nameless, twisted, grotesque everyman, a haunting moral enigma with no background. He has a family with three children, a w ife and her m other living in his house. He has reached the rank of lieutenant. But how? Has he always abused drugs? Did some- Harvey Keitel’s lieutenant w anders through an amoral landscape in Abel Ferrara’s new movie. thing occur that made him snap? Do his police friends know about him and ignore it? That these answ ers are never given makes his character more intriguing and raises questions about the pressure much people can take before breaking. Now after a dry period during the mid-'80s, Harvey Keitel has returned to the kind of cinema he is great at. His performance has the brilliance displayed in his motion picture debut, Martin Scorsese's Who's That Knocking On My Door, and in Scorsese's Mean Streets and Taxi Driver, Using the clout he gained by doing Thelma and Louise, Bugsy and Sister Act, he starred in the art house hit Reservoir Dogs, and now Bad Lieutenant. There are enough sh ocking scen es in Bad Lieutenant to merit a potentially disastrous NC-17 rating, which has begun to carry the same unfair stigma of pornography the X rating had. The rape of the nun and the vandalism of the church is truly horrifying. Drugs are ingested into the lieutenant's system at least every five minutes. But the scene that will get the most flack is one in which the lieutenant interrogates two girls he catches on a traffic violation and then mastur­ bates before them. Scriptwriters Ferrara and Zde Lund (who plays the lieutenant's mistress, Zoe) have decided not to cut any scenes, instead wear­ ing the NC-17 rating as a badge of honor. Bad Lieutenant is a fascinating study of how far a man can sink before‘he will destroy himself. It questions the fabric of society and finally focuses on the redemption and the possibility of forgive­ ness for the immense horrors of this world. This is a great film that will raise debate and challenge morals for some time to come. B A D LIEUTENANT Starring: Harvey Keitel, Zoe Lund, Frankie Thorn Director: Abe! Ferrara Playing at: Village 4 Cinema Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ (out of five) YOUR PASSAGE IS OUR P R IO R IT Y We offer special tour packages to anywhere in the U.S. along with TOUR-IFFIC fares for International and Domestic Travel SHOP. LO O K . LISTEN YouTI find that our level of service Is o u t s t a n d i n g ! MftffttWr Of tattmaiionai d a i l (512) 467-8687 Member o f „ f~~7~ .1450 London...............398 Lagos..... P a n s . Johannesburg.. 1 3 9 5 Frankfurt.........3 9 8 Nairobi............. 1395 3 9 8 i (..2 , « 7.™ * S f c l p pa x (512) 467-9353 S I T ....... 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M » x t c o " V . . .U XA S / N \ ( i t t ) 7 4 9 - S 5 - Z 8 a t e w & F ****>. ✓ T he D a ily Texan Monday, February 15, 1993 Page 1 Animated ‘ Barefoot Gen ’ captures horrors of war Kelly Wright Daily Texan Staff s a '«-ti c h ild , Japanese film - 1 JLJLvIVa maker Keiji Na- kazaw a liv e d through the de­ struction of his home in nuclear leveling of H iro­ shim a d u rin g W orld W ar II. In his semi-autobi­ og rap hic a n i­ mated film Barefoot Gen, Nakazawa points no fingers and lays no blame for the experience. His m ovie tran­ scends politics and ideology, giving a powerful account of him self and of the w o rld em erging in the nuclear age. In 1945, Gen is a young boy living in Hiroshima, Japan during the war. Time is hard, and food scarce, leav­ ing Gen and his little brother Shinji to dream of rice soup and squabble over a single potato. Gen w orries over a pregnant mother and a sister helpless in finding the nutrition her m other needs. But he and S h in ji take lessons in p atien ce from a strongwilled father who teaches his sons that war is not honorable, even when society demands it be so. The single act of picking up a coin saves Gen's life, shielding him from the nuclear explosion that leaves the city of Hiroshim a, as w ell as Japan itself, crip p led in its w ake. Tim e then stands still. The scene moves from in d iv id u a l to in d iv id u a l as people are caught in the blast, and virtu a lly melt before the eye. Gen wakes to find a land of gruesome zom bies and the le ve led streets w here once he roam ed d a ily. H e returns home to find his mother try­ ing to raise a beam that has Shinji, his siste r E ik o , and his fath er trapped beneath, but their efforts are in vain. Gen watches his fam ily burn to death, and then flees the scene w ith only the last words of his father to help him on. A rtist Kazua Tom izaw a places animation in a more realistic genre w ith Barefoot Gen. W h ile not as sharp ly draw n as Belle, A la d d in and oth er anim ated ch aracters offered by D isn ey and oth er American studios, Barefoot Gen and S h in ji leap o ff the screen w ith Take Off Def Leppard s lead singer Jo e Elliott played to a band included a “Def Leppard Unplugged” segment in packed house at the Erwin Center Saturday night. The the show. Jean-Marc Bouju/Daily Texan Staff ■ Sassy, Chance and Shadow pose for the camera before setting off across country in Homeward Bound. 6Bound’ catches spirit of adventure Susan M. Castellón Daily Texan Staff "C a ts rule, dogs drool!" W hile this m ay be the anthem of the leading fe lin e in Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey, even cat lovers would have to agree that the dogs definitely steal the show. Fo llow in g the same storyline as the original 1963 version, Homeward Bound te lls the sto ry of C han ce, Shadow and Sassy, three pets left on a ranch while their owners move to San Francisco. After being left w ith a fam ily friend, the animals decide to find their way back home. After a perilous trek across the Sierra Nevadas and several lu cky coincidences, the pets fin a lly are reunited with their owners. The most mischievous of the three is the Am erican bulldog Chance (voice supplied by M ichael J. Fox). Chance's youthful stubbornness leaves him hardened to the love of his adoptive human owners and resistant to the guidance of the older Shadow and Sassy. Shadow, a golden retriever (w ith the voice of Don Ameche), is confident that their owners w ill be back. A ll the while he worries about his boy, Peter (Benj Thall). It is Shadow's undying faithfulness and sense of responsi­ b ility that impresses even Chance later in the film. The third member of this party is Sassy, your typical­ ly conceited but resourceful H im alayan cat (voice by Sally Field). H er smugness gets her in trouble when, after refusing to paddle across a river like her canine companions, she tries to tiptoe her w ay on some fallen logs only to be taken aw ay by the current. Although Sassy is a little too pristine, it is her feline cleverness that helps the three friends escape from an animal shel­ ter near the end of their journey. W hat tru ly distinguishes Homeward Bound from its predecessor is the animals' ability to communicate with each other. W hile Shadow spouts doggy wisdom to tug at the heart strings, Chance and Sassy take turns batting one-liners off each other. The best one-liners come from Chance. W hen Shadow reveals he never w as crazy about the name "hot dog," Chance reassures him that they're not really made from dogs. Shadow fires back that he doesn't think hot dogs are made from meat at all, only to have Chance marvel aloud, reminiscent of Hom er Simpson, "Yeah, but they sure are great after they fall in the d irt." When the dogs are being chased by a m ountain lio n , Chance tries to reaffirm th eir machismo by saving they aren't running from an ordi­ nary cat but from "A rn old Schwarzakitty." Director Duwayne Dunham does a good job bringing the warmth shared between humans and animals to the screen. And the animals are amazing in their ability to interact w ith the humans and each other. (Chance and Shadow are each played by four dog actors and Sassy by 10 cats.) U n lik e m any rem akes, Homeward Bound does not butcher the original version but rather enriches the story through humor and the growth of the characters. B y the end of the film, young Chance has grown wiser and the fam ily has grown closer. Like most W alt Disney classics, there's not much at fault in Homeward Bound. HOMEWARD BOUND: THE INCREDIBLE JOURNEY Starring: The voices of Michael J. Fox, Sally Field, Don Ameche Director: Duwayne Dunham Playing at: Great Hills 8, Highland 10, Lake Creek 8, Northcross 6, Westgate 8 Rating: ★★★★ (out of five) PRESIDIO THEATRES B WELCOME BACK STUDENTS! YES, FOLKS. That's right! Now students pay only $4.00 w/ID - Bargain matinees until 6.00 pm $3 00 - Children and seniors $3.00 - and only S5.00 tor adult admission! For Village On RIVERSIDE 8 IN RIVERSIDE MALL 448-0008 GROUNDHOG DAY (pg) 3:00 7:50 10:05___________ SOMMERSBY (PG-13) 2:30 5:00 7:30 9:55 ALADDIN (G) 2 00 5 00 7 15 9:30 SMART STEREO SMART STEREO SMART STEREO ADED WEAPON 1(PG-13) 3:15 5:45 8:00 10:15 THE VANISHING (R) 2:45 5:15 8 0010:15 SNIPER (R) 4:45 7:40 A FEW GOOD MEN (R) 2:00 9:40 UNTAMED HEART (pg-i3) 2 15 5.15 7:30 9 45 THE TEMP (R) 3:30 5:45 0 15 10:30 SMART STEREO SMART STEREO SMART STEREO SMART STEREO SMART STEREO SMART STEREO 451-8352 I VILLAGE CINEMA 12700 ANDERSON ■ BAD LIEUTENANT (nc-17) 1 3:00 500 8 00 10:10 1 A FEW GOOD MEN (R) ■ 3:00 7:00 9 40 I DAMAGE (R) I 2:30 4:50 700 9:50 ■ THE CRYING GAME (R) ■ 2:40 5:10 7 4010 00 Dolby J J 1 i 1 DOLBY I General Cinema BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6pm ALL CINEMAS ALL STEREO BRACKETED TIMES ( ) FOR SAT, SUN & MON ONLY H IG H LA N D 1 0 | 1-35 or M ID DLE F IS K V IL L t R D 4 5 4-956: GROUNDHOG DAY (12:15) 2:40 5:00 7:15 9:45 Pi HOMEWARD BOUND (12:00] 1:55 3 45 5:40 7:35 9:301 CEMETERY CLUB (12:00) 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 PG! THE VANISHING (12:30) 2:4$ 5:10 7:35 9:50 R i LOADED WEAPON I ¡12:00) 1:55 4:05 6:00 8:00 10:05 PG13 SCENT of a WOMAN 1:00 4:00 7:00 10:00 R D< LORENZO’S OIL 7:15 10:00 PG13 stidn DAMAGE (12:05) 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 R mmo A FEW GOOD MEN 1:45 4:25 7:20 10:05 R srw THE BODYGUARD 1:55 4:30 7:10 9:45 R smio MATINEE 1:00 3:00 5:00 PG íihio GREAT HILLS 8 I US 183 a GREAT H ILLS TRAIL 794-8C HOMEWARD BOUND (12:00)2:003:555:457.409: UNTAMED HEART (12:30) 2:45 5:15 7:40 9:55 PC SOMMERSBY (12:00) 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 P LOADED WEAPON I (12:35) 2:40 4:55 7:15 9:25 PG SNIPER (12:45) 2:45 5:05 7:20 9:35 R sihio USED PEOPLE (12:15) 2:35 5:00 7:25 9:50 PG MATINEE (1:00) 3:00 5:00 PG simo ALIVE 7:15 9:45 R STIMO ALADDIN (12:05) 1:55 3 45 5:40 7:30 9:25 G si BARTON CREEK J MO PAC ot LOOP 3 8 0 327-8281 UNTAMED HEART (12:30) 2:45 5:15 7:40 9:55 PG13 douy THE VANISHING (12:15) 2:30 4:45 7:15 9:45 R oou. SOMMERSBY (12:00) 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 PG13 m MATINEE (12:15) 2:25 4:45 7:15 9 30 PG STfRfO HOME ALONE 2 (12:00) 2:35 5:10 PG sumo THE BODYGUARD 7:35 10:05 R STfRfO C H E C K T I M E S D A I L Y Roses, Roses, Rosesf\ Casa Verde Florist! 4 5 1 -0 6 9 1 Daily Sandals FTD • 4501 Guadalupe • On UT SWjtotlo Rt. — “ O ne o f the most im portant anim ated film s e v e r SHTim i Nakazawa's REFOOT 11:45 irj*? "EROTIC"^ (¡ery Frwnkfn, KCOP tv ^ The 9Í3S lover Brothers Gen and Shinji play in Nakazawa’s animated Barefoot Gen. detailed personalities and manner­ ism s. The atom ic explosion over Hiroshim a was over in a matter of seconds, but Gen d raw s out the atomic effects for over a full minute, creating an impression that haunts the mind and leaves the soul cold. N akazaw a's anim ated children run through the streets of a leveled Hiroshima, trying to eat carbonated rice and playing w ith skulls left in the rubble. Gen's frustration is felt as he grabs at the patches of hair falling from his head. Not one atom­ ic h o rro r, from the m eltin g of a body during the blast to the radia­ tion sickness that follows, is left for the im a g in a tio n . A t tim es Gen requires a strong stomach, at times an open m ind and heart. Am erican schoolchildren are rou­ tin e ly tau g ht the h isto ry of the Allied defeat of Japan. But students learn only the name of a city, a date and a time, missing out on a worth­ while lesson. Barefoot Gen brings to the anim ated screen a fam ily one cannot help but love from the begin­ ning, and not keep from feeling for w hen w aves of loss and tragedy pass over. Refusing to push a partic­ ular m oral ideology, Barefoot Gen leaves the memory w ith a sweeping image of peace. BAREFOOT GEN Designer and Animator: Kazuo Tomizawa Director: Masaki Mori Playing at: Dobie Screen 1 & 2, 2021 Guadalupe St. Rating: ★★★★ (out of five) Join the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Four Positions Available: PLACE 1 - College of Communication PLACE 3 - College of Communication PLACE 2 - At-Large PLACE 3 - At-Large Registered undergraduate and graduate students are eligible to serve as student members of the TSP Board of Operating Trustees. The only exceptions are graduate students serving as Research Assistants, Teaching Assistants or Assistant Instructors. College of Communication Places 1 and 3 Any student enrolled in the College of Communication who has completed twelve (12) hours of College of Communication courses, is in good academic standing (not on probation) and has completed at least one semester in residence in the long term at UT- Austin is eligible to be elected to the Board. It is no longer required that students be Journalism or Advertising majors. Place 1 is available in the 1993 election for a two-year term beginning June 1, 1993. Place 3 is available in the 1993 election for a one-year term beginning June 1, 1993. At-Large Places 2 and 3 Any student enrolled in the University of Texas at Austin who is not on scholastic probation and has completed 30 or more hours in residence at UT-Austin is eligible to be elected to the Board. Places 2 and 3 are available in the 1993 election for two-year terms beginning June 1, 1993. The TSP Election is held concurrently with the Students’ Association Election, and this year will be held on Wednesday, March 3, and Thursday March 4,1993 DEADLINE FOR APPLYING: Wednesday, February 17,1993, at 5 p.m. APPLICATIONS MAY BE PICKED UP AT TSP 3.200 Page 12 Monday, February 15,1993 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Congressman questions grants Crossword Edited by Eugene T. Maleska No. 0104 Associated Press its merit. ACROSS 26 Navy equivalent BOSTON — The chairman of the House science com m ittee has writ­ ten to 50 u n iv ersities dem and ing th at they ju stify research projects funded by last-m in u te p rovisions tucked into legislation without con­ gressional debate. The largest of the grants was $42 m illio n fo r a c lim a te -c h a n g e r e ­ sea rch c e n te r a t S ag in aw V alley S ta te U n iv e r s ity in M ic h ig a n , a sm all teach in g sch o o l w ith 6,500 students and no research program. The cen ter, w hich has space on th e Saginaw V alley State cam pus but isn't run by the school, is in the congressional district of former Rep. R o b ert T ra x le r, a D em o crat w ho w as head of a congressional appro­ priations subcommittee until he left Congress in January. Despite its size, the grant was not form ally authorized by C ongress. I here w ere no hearings to consider "It was nursed from its inception by M r. T r a x le r ," H o u se S c ie n c e C o m m itte e C h a irm a n G e o rg e Brown, D-Calif., said Saturday. "It comes out of the NASA budget, but nobody at NASA knows about it." Traxler had tried to delete fund­ ing for NASA's space station, so the a g e n cy did n o t o b je c t w h en th e app rop riation w as tucked into its budget. Brown said. T r a x le r d id n o t im m e d ia te ly return a telephone m essage left at his Bay City, Mich., home Saturday. But G ary B achu la, a vice p re si­ dent of the consortium that runs the climate-change research center, said the grant w as "p erfectly appropri­ ate and legal." He said the money will be used to build headquarters for the Con-sor- tium for International Earth Science Inform ation Netw ork. M em bers of th e th e in c lu d e U n iv e r s ity o f M ic h ig a n , th e University of Maryland and others. c o n s o rtiu m Brow n said su ch u n iv ersity re ­ search grants cost the nation $707 million last year. T h a t's ro u g h ly w hat tax p ay ers s p e n t o n th e s u p e r c o n d u c tin g su p erco llid er, on e of the n a tio n 's costliest and most debated projects. T he d iffe re n c e is that th e $ 7 0 7 m illio n in u n iv e rsity g ra n ts w as awarded without debate, by legisla­ to rs c u rry in g fa v o r w ith c o n ­ stituents, sources said. L ast S e p te m b e r, the C o n g re ss ­ ional Research Service reported that such grants have cost taxpayers $2.5 b illio n sin ce 1980. The p ractice is growing. Nearly half of the $2.5 bil­ lio n w as d istrib u te d in 1991 and 1992, according to the report. A m o n g th e 50 a p p r o p r ia tio n s b ein g in v e stig a ted by B ro w n are m u ltim illio n -d o lla r g r a n ts to C o lu m b ia U n iv e rs ity , T u fts , th e U n iv e r s ity o f M ic h ig a n , H a h ­ nemann U niversity in Philadelphia and other leading academic institu­ tions. hreat of inbreeding exaggerated Associated Press BO STO N — M arriages betw een first and second cousins pose sur­ prisingly little risk o children, and laws banning such marriages proba­ bly should be abolished, researchers said Sunday. M arriages betw een co u sin s are common, especially in parts of Asia and Africa, w here as many as half o f th e m a r ria g e s are b etw ee n c o u sin s, said A lan B ittle s of th e University of London. O ne su ch re g io n is the Punjab province in Pakistan, where Bittles found that ch ild h o o d death rates were about 16 percent in marriages o f unrelated people, com pared to a b o u t 21 p e rc e n t in m a rria g e s b etw een co u sin s , m ost o f w h ich w e re m a rria g e s b e tw e e n fir s t cousins. A study in Japan likew ise found only sm all increases in death and d ise a se ra tes in ch ild ren o f m a r­ riages between first cousins. A stu d y of M o rm o n s by L y n n Jorde of the University of Utah did find, however, that children of first- cousin m arriages w ere 70 percen t more likely to die before age 16 than were children o f marriages betw een unrelated people. The researchers said they could not explain the discrepancy in the findings. The stud ies, reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, also suggest that inbreed ­ ing might have advantages over the long term , said Dr. Jam es N eel of the U niversity of M ichigan in Ann Arbor. "Inbreed ing is not a bad th in g ," N eel said. " I n a p o p u latio n w ith inbreeding, you are flushing out a h ig h er p ro p o rtio n o f d e le te rio u s genes than in a population that is not inbreeding," he said. "Th ere is much more inbreeding than ever to d a y ," he said. "T h e re are ill effects, but they've probably been exaggerated in the p ast." The stereotype of poor rural com­ munities w ith high rates of physical deform ities and m ental retardation is far from an accu rate p ictu re o f inbreeding and p robably w as fos­ tered by prejudice, Bittles said. Law s against inbreeding should be a b o lis h e d , he sa id , an d N eel agreed. "Those law s w ere not passed for b io lo g ic a l r e a s o n s ," N e e l said . 'There was some religious m otiva­ tio n ." Bittles said about 30 states in the U n ite d S ta te s h av e law s a g a in st m a rria g e s b e tw e e n e ith e r firs t cousins or first and second cousins. AROUND CAM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5) and $10 for students. For more infor­ mation cal! 832-4800. G raduate School of L ibrary and Inform ation Science, the College of Communication and the College of Fine Arts will sponsor a workshop on Thursday in Peter T. Flawn Academic Center in the fourth floor atrium from 8:30 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. with Edward Tufte, a professor at Yale University. The workshop fee is $70. Contact the C rraduate Sch oo l of L ib rary and Information Science for more informa­ tion. Learning Skills Center will spon­ sor a three-week GSP review class on Mondays, W ednesdays and Fridays from 4-5:15 p.m. beginning Feb. 22 in B eau ford H. Je ste r C en te r A332. Classes are free and limited to UT stu­ dents. Enrollment ends Friday. FILMS, LECTURES, & DISCUSSIONS College Houses will sponsor a lec­ ture by Robert Solomon and Kathleen Higgins on “Love and Relationships" on Monday at 7 p.m. at the Second Floor Commons of the 21st Street Co- Op, 707 W. 21st St. For more informa­ tion cal! L eslie at 478-4071. D e p a rtm e n t o f G eo g rap h y w ill sponsor a lecture by Robert Schmidt Jr. from the University of Texas at El P aso on “ So u rces of P recip ital M oisture for North Central Mexico on the A d jo in in g U .S ." and Wednesday at 3:45 p.m. in Geography Building 408. For more information call 471-5116. U n iv e rsity H onors C e n te r and N orm an d y S c h o la r Program w ill show Au Revoir Les Enfants by Louis M alle on M onday at 5 p.m . in Carothers Honors Residence Room 7. Discussion will be lead by Francoise D eB ack er, the 1 iepartment of French and Italian. in stru cto r in VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES Department of Psychology is con- THE PHRNTOll despite the sest efforts of his FPiEM tiS, C H I? S T i lL t o o k t h e STAC.Y THING PPCTTY HflPP. IT DiON T HELP fAftTiERS thAT Ei/FHyRoOY SCEMED TO HAVE A U)flS ScoRinG-^J ^ T hegfc'j Thu furo ertSY F6ft s a t . t a e v £N S E Y M O U R ducting a study on premenstrual syn­ drome. Women fronvl8 to 45 who suf­ fer from PMS and who are not taking oral contraceptives may call 474-5625 for more information on this three- month study. Participants receive free consultation for participation. Student Volunteer Services is look­ ing for dedicated legislative reporters for an advocacy organization interest­ ed in keeping up to date on changes and happenings in realm of human services. Volunteers will follow issues in the Texas Legislature, including follow- ups at the Texas D ep artm en t of Human Services and concerned advo­ cacy o rg an iza tio n s. Good w ritin g skills and the ability to meet deadlines required. For more information call 471-6161. OTHER C om p utation C en ter announces that on Monday from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m., the Computation Center will be upgrading the computer systems that support microcomputer services such as printing and electronic mail. o f C o lleg e During this time the following ser­ vices will either not be available or w ill be sev erely d isru p ted : L aser printing for Macintoshes and PCs in the m icro co m p u ter la b o ra to rie s around cam pus (P eter T. Flaw n A cadem ic C en ter 29, C o lleg e of B usiness A d m inistration Building 3.11 8, B u siness A d m in istratio n 3.129, C o lleg e of B u siness A d m in istratio n 5.142, Tow nes H all 5.221 and E rn est Cockrell Jr. Hall 3.300.) Dial-up print­ ing from rem ote M acintoshes and PCs; and POP mail service (using such programs as Eudora) from the host "m cl.cc.u texas. ed u ." Please notice that the laboratories will remain open for use, only the services listed above w ill be disrupted. If you have any questions regarding this service dis­ ruption, please call 471-3241.. D ep artm en t of A stron om y w ill sponsor a telescope view ing every Monday at Painter Hall Observatory from 9-10 p.m., weather permitting. Department of Psychology is look­ ing for individuals who are anxious when giving presentations, interacting socially or eating in public. These individuals may be eligible for a free treatment study. For more inform ation call Rich Lucas at 471- 3722. Department of Radio-Television- Film announces that auditions for films will take place on Monday from 7-10 p.m . Jon es Communication Building B, studio 4- C. For more information please call 327-6361. Je sse H. in Education Council will sponsor a panel discussion on the ExCET exam on Tuesday at 6 p.m. in C ollege of Education Building 238. Liberal Arts Career Services will sponsor a Target information session on Monday from 6-8 p.m. in Lila B. Etter Alumni Center Schmidt Room. M easu rem en t and Evalu ation Center would like to announce that March 5 is the petition deadline to claim credit by examination so that credit appears on record before tele­ phone registration for fall semester 1993. Petition forms are available at the MEC, 2616 Wichita St., and at the general informa bon and referral desk in the lobby of the Main Building. Petition forms must be turned in at the MEC. Call 471-3032 for more infor­ mation. The ce n te r also an n o u n ces that F rid ay is the receip t d ead lin e in P rin ceton , N .J., to register for the M arch 20 G rad u ate M anagem ent Admission Test without an added late fee. Materials are available at the MEC, 2616 Wichita St., and at the general information and referral desk in the Main Building. For more information call 471-3032. UT Leadership Board will accept application s for m em bership until Feb. 22. Applications can be picked up at the Campus Activities Office. ______ b y J o s e A l a n i z IT’S NOT -THAT STACY PlDNT CAGLE. BuT (T uiAS LVK£ HE*. HAPfuYESS MflPf A CJALL 5CTWEEAJ THEM. OR A1AY&£ IT U A S Chip's O N H A f P iN f iS S T H A T U A S T H E U A L L . 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ITS SELF DESTRUCTIVE* 1 NEED SWHITS AMD ROMANCE, NOT Spurts of hedonistic lust! f a PUCE TONIGHT STX 0 CLOCK SHARP- ILL WEAR THAT LITTLE. LEATHER NUMBER AND 80U BRING THE j HARDWARE GOT I T ’ ---------- - .9 By Howard Sherman Y v f l KHEW I WAS IN TROUBLE Dl \ FIRST T V t I SAW HER ANA > WRESTLING BIKERS FOR BEER. J p * . - /é ° w IF ^ J u j % 2: \ ' 3 > : iLflA'iw e iP ---- ............... > WKitk 15 h«t fth eh tire !j C«45f. IgyPJy |'4 THE FUSCO BROTHERS byJ.C. Duffy T h e D a il y T e x a n Monday, February 15,1993 Page 13 To Place a Classified Ad Call m 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 Classified W ord Ad Raf.ps 8:00-5:00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11 a.m. prior to publication JÜ& J H w Charged by the word. Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply. 1 day— .$6.15 2 days----------------------- $ 1 1 .7 0 3 days---------------------------$ 1 6 .6 5 4 days---------------------------$ 2 0 .4 0 5 days ....................... $2 3.25 First two words may be all capital letters. $.2 5 for each additional w ord le tte rs . MasterCard and Visa accepted. capital in TRANSPORTATION 10-Misc. Autos 20-Sports-Foreign Autos 30—Trucks-Vans 40-Vehicles to Trade 50—Service-Repair 60-Parts-Accessories 70-Motorcycles 80-Bicycles 90-Vehicles-Leasing 100—Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES ■ MERCHANDISE 190—Appliances 200—Fumiture-Household 21 0-S tereo-T V 220-Computers-Equipment 230—Photo-Camera 2 4 0 -B o a ts 250-Musical Instruments 260-Hobbies 270—Machinery-Equipment 280—Sportmg-Camping Equipment Classified Disolav Ad Rates Charged by the column inch. One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available. Fall rates Sept 1-May 30. 1 to 21 column inches per month. $ 9 .2 0 per col. inch over 21 column inches per month. Call for rates. 110-Services 120—Houses 130-Condos-Townhomes 140—Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160-Duplexes-Apartments 170—Wanted 180-Loans 290-Furniture-Appliance Rental 300—Garage-Rummage Sales 310—Trade 320-Wanted to Buy or Rent 330—Pets 340—Longhorn Want Ads 345-Misc. RENTAL 350-Rental Services 360—Furnished Apts. 370—Unfurnished Apts. 380—Furnished Duplexes 390-Unfurnished Duplexes 400-Condos-T ownhomes 410-Furnished Houses 420—Unfurnished Houses 425—Rooms 430-Room-Board 435-Co-ops 440-Roommates 450-Mobile Homes-Lots 460-Business Rentals 470-Resorts 480-Storage Space 490-Wanted to Rent-Lease 500-Misc. 510-Entertainment-Tickets 520-Personals 530-Travel-Transportation 540—Lest S. Found 550-Licensed Child Care 56 Public Notice 570-Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580-Musicai Instruction 590—Tutoring 600—Instruction Wanted 610-Misc. Instruction S Ü Z 2 : 620—Legal Services 630—Computer Services 640-Exterminators 650-M oving-Haulm g 6S0- Storage 6 7 0 - P a in tin g 680-Office 690-Renta! Equipment 700-Furniture Rental 710-Appliance Repair 720-Stereo-TV Repair 730-Home Repair 740—Bicycle Repair 750-Typing 760-Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 770-E m ploym ent Agencies 780-E m ploym ent Services 7 9 0 -P a rt Time 8 0 0 -G e n e ra l Help W anted 8 1 0 —-Office-Clerical 8 2 0 - Accounting' Bookkeeping 8 3 0-A dm in istrative Management 8 4 0 -S a le s 8 5 0 -R e ta il 860—Engineering-Technical 870-Medical 880-Professional 890-Clubs-Restaurants 900-Domestic Household 910-Positions Wanted 920-Work Wanted BUSINESS 930—Business Opportunities 940-0pportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED in i n c o r r e c t l ADVERTISING TERM S lr th e e ve n t o f e r r o r s m a d e advertisement, notice must be given by 11 I a m th e firs t day. as the pub lishe rs are r e s p o n s ib le fo r only ONE insertion All claims for adjustments should I be m ade n o t !a te r than 3 0 days a fte r I I publication Pre paid Kills receive cred.t slip I I if requested at tim e of cancelation anc if I I a m o u n t e xce e d s $ 2 0 0 S lip m u s t b e l I presented for a reorder within 9 0 days to I be valid. Credit sNps are non-transferrable I In c o n s id e ra r on of th e D a ily T e x a n 's I a c c e p ta n c e o f a d v e r tis in g co p y fo r I publication, the agency and the advertiser I will indem nify and save harm less, Tecas I S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s and its o ffic e rs , I em ployees, and a ge n ts a g a in st an loss, I lia b ility , d a m a g e , and e x p e n s e o f I w h a ts o e v e r n a tu re a ris in g o u t of t h e ! co p yin g , p rin tin g , or p u b lis h in g of its I advertisem ent including w ithout lim itation I reasonable attorney's fees resulting fro m I claims of suits for libel, violation of righ t of I priva cy, p la g ia ris m and c o p y rig h t a nd j v telemark infringem ent TRANSPORTATION MERCHANDISE RENTAL 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. 3 7 0 - Unfum . Apts. 4 0 0 - Condos* 4 0 0 - Condos* 4 0 0 - Condos* 4 40 - Roommates 7 5 0 _ Typing Townhomes Townhomes Townhomes 2-9-20b-B ANNOUNCEMENTS 1-22-201>6. 2 -8 -2 0 8 6 SPA C IO U S , Q UIET 2-2, C A /C H , fans, pool, sundeck, cable, laundry. Red R iv e r/3 0 th . S u m m e r/$ 5 0 0 , F a l l / $ 6 5 0 . 4 7 7 - 3 3 8 8 /4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 . 2-3-20b Y r / $ 6 0 0 . “ NEED A N APARTMENT? NEED IT FU RN ISH ED ? C A M P U S A N D ALL SHUTTLE ROUTES. PRE-IEAS- FR O N T I N G . CALL M AR K. PAGE 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 2-8-20-B-C H i l l s i d e A p t s . 1 & 2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean & Quiet A ll Utilities Paid 478-2819 514 Dawson Rd. Just off Barton Springs Rd 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. J U S T R E M O D E L E D ★ 1-2 Bedrooms ★ 1-35 and C apital Plaza ★ New carpet and paint ★ Paid w ater and gas ★ UT/CR Shuttle SANTA FE APARTMENTS 1 1 0 1 C la y to n L a n e 4 5 8 -1 5 5 2 T h e R i d g e Spacious Designs Start at $379! P r e - l e a s e f o r S u m m e r & F a l l NOW! Friendly voices are waiting at 3 4 5 - 9 3 1 5 CASTLE ARMS APTS. Newly Remodeled 3 2 0 - 0 5 1 9 32nd & Speedway ★ 1 & 2 bedroom ★ Basic Cable Paid ★ Hot Water Paid ★ Laundry room ★ On-site mgmt. ★ On Shuttle OFF la n e . FAR w e s t/H e a r t $ 8 9 5 ,3 - 2 - 1 , 2-story, fire p la c e . 6 9 0 9 B Tho rn cliff. E vergreen properties 331 -1 1 2 2 . 1-20-20B-B SAVAN NAH CO ND O S 2 -2 , 9 1 5 W . 22nd 1 /2 Street. Minutes from U T. $6 5 0 summer, $ 7 5 0 year, $ 4 0 0 deposit. 2 story $ 1 000 vear. W /D , fire­ place. microwave, dishwasher, ceiling fan. For info and viewing 322-15 82. QUIET, AFFORDABLE Community. W e ll m aintained, good location. Spacious 1,2 bedrooms. • M gm t. ow ns site Free c q b le , w a te r. N o pets. Garden Path Apts. 835- 566 1 1 -22-20b-D. PEACE & Quiet in Hyde Park! Re­ treat Apartments 4 4 0 0 AvenueA. E fficien cy $ 3 4 5 + E . 1 / 1 $ 4 2 0 +E. Gas heating, hot water, cook­ ing, cable paid. 4 5 8 -1 9 8 5 ,4 5 2 - 1121. 1-22-20B-C. L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S S A V A N A H m onitor LARGE $ 7 5 . 0 0 . 1 5 0 g a llo n aq u ariu m with stand and lid $ 2 5 0 .0 0 . 4 0 g a llo n T .V . terra riu m $ 1 0 0 . 0 0 . Shawn 4 4 S 5 5 7 6 . 2-11-5P O N LY 5 weeks till Spring Breakl Tanning membership for sole 7 months rem ain in g tor $ 1 5 0 .0 0 1 G re a t lo catio n s a ll over to w n l Call 795-94831 2-10-5B. LARGE SPEAKER 2 6 " x 3 6 * x l 6 \ $ 2 0 0 . 4 9 5 -4 6 6 8 , 4 7 2 -3 2 6 7 2- 10-5nc. TAP BEER at home. Retrofitted re­ frigerator holds keg and C 0 2 cy­ linder. External tap. $ 1 0 0 . 26 1 - 8 3 3 2 2-10-5b. N O R D IC A SKI boots. W o m en 's size 7 1 / 2 . G re a t co n d itio n . $ 8 0 . 3 4 3 - 6 1 3 9 . Please leave message and number. 2-10-5B SUPER SING LE w o te rb e d , $ 4 0 . Liner, h e a te r, sheets in c lu d e d . Call Heidi 3 8 5 -8 8 4 3 . 2-12-5B KENMORE W ASHER, heavy duty] e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . M ust sell. $ 1 6 0 . 4 5 8 -1 4 3 8 . 2-12-5B 1 0 0 0 T L /2 , T A N D Y 6 4 0 K , 2 0M B . Keyboard, color monitor DM P 1 3 3 . Bought new , b arely used. $ 9 5 0 OBO. 326 -5 6 2 2 . 2- 1 1-5B____________________________ Y A M A H A M O P E D 1 9 8 5 . Excel­ lent condition. Idea! for student. B argain $ 2 7 5 O B O . C a ll Sam, 4 4 0 -8 8 6 3 . 2-11-5B VA CU UM $ 4 0 , answering machine $ 3 5 , TV $ 1 5 0 , turntable $ 5 0 , re­ ceiver $ 7 5 , speakers $ 7 5 , equal­ izer $50 , cordless phone $ 3 5 ,3 3 9 - 3 1 4 6 . 2-11-5B BIKE RACK, mounts on trailer hitch, $30. 4 7 2 -6 7 0 3 . 2-15-5Z S O L O F L E X -O R IG IN A L M O D E L , g o o d c o n d itio n . $ 1 2 5 , O B O 4 6 9 -9 5 3 8 2-15-5B H O N D A ELITE 8 0 , 1 9 8 7 , red , 1 7 0 0 miles, great shape, $ 8 0 0 , helmet included, 4 7 7 -3 1 9 8 . 2-15- 5B HP DESKWRITER M acintosh com­ patible, inkjet printer, lightly used tor ly r. Has 2yrs. of w arranty re­ maining. $ 3 3 0 . 4 7 9 -5 0 4 4 . 2-12- 5B. ALMOST N E W men's Peugeot 14 speed, 27 inch road bike. $ 1 3 0 . 4 5 8 - 2 5 8 8 am , 4 1 6 - 1 6 1 4 pm. Ask for Laura. 2-12-5nc CO M PLETE A 5 0 0 A m ig o C o m ­ puter system plus A 5 9 0 hard drive external floppy with monitor and printer for $ 8 0 0 negotiable. Chris­ tine 345 2 87 4. 2-12-5 P Y A K IM A BIKERACK, 4 8 in . rain gutter mount, locks, towers, and $90. 263 -9 5 2 6 . 2-15- rails only 5nc. RENTAL 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. BLACKSTONE PRELEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL 2910 Medical Arts St. across from law school ALL BILLS PAID Newly remodeled 2 bdrm- 2 bath FREE CABLE! Furnished or Unfurnished 474-9523 & & & & VACANCY AVAIIjYBIJS AT THE CASTILIAN! ACT FAST! [512) 478-9811- SPECIAL OFF N . Lam ar. Q u ie t 14 /u n it com plex, 1-1 @ $ 3 2 5 , 2- 1 @ $ 4 5 0 , deposit $ 2 0 0 . C arrol 8 3 7 -2 0 0 2 . 2-1 20B. * ‘ U N IQ U E EFFICIENCY! Saltillo tile , fir e p la c e , p o o l, IF shuttle, $ 3 5 5 / 3 6 5 . Pre-iease now, sum­ m e r/fa ll. Front Page 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 2 -l-2 0 b d . “ WEST CAMPUS! O lder, big 2- 2 's . C e ilin g fans, m ic ro w ave s, $ 6 0 0 s u m m e r/fa ll Front Page 4 80 -8 5 1 8 . 2 -l-2 0 b C . large 1 /1 : $ 2 9 9 - GREAT DEAL I $ 3 2 0 ( r e g .$ 3 7 0 - $ 3 9 0 ) . 2BR: $ 3 6 0 -$ 4 2 0 (re g .$ 4 7 0 -$ 5 4 0 ) Ex­ c e lle n t South lo c a tio n . Shuttle. W eight room, tennis, pool. Hurryl 4 4 4 -4 4 9 6 . 2-2-19b HYDE PARK, 4 3 0 3 Duval. Clean, a p a rtm e n t: c a rp e t, a p ­ 1 BR pliances, central a ir /h e a t, cable. $ 3 5 0 /m o . A p p o in tm e n t 3 2 8 - 8 2 3 6 2-3-10b — Hyde Park W ater and Cable Paid. On larg e floor plan. IF Shuttle, Available Feb. 15th. 453 3 Avenue A 450-1058 ALL BILLS PAIDI Efficiency $ 2 9 5 . E le c tric ity , gas, w a te r, cob le poid. On shuttle. 4 5 1 -8 5 3 2 , 452- 2-8-20b-C__________________ 1)21 3 0 1 W e s t Q U IE T 1 bed ro om 39th St. la rg e pool, courtyard, laundry, central air, half block from UT shuttle 4 5 2 -3 8 5 2 $ 2 9 5 /m o or 326 -9 2 1 5 . 2-9-5B-C HU G E 4 & 5BR apt on shuttle. N e a r R iv e r s id e /IH 3 5 . W e ig h t room, tennis, pool. O n ly $ 7 6 0 . Short-term okay (higher rate). 444- 4 4 9 6 . 2-9-14B W A LK TO cam pu s. 2 7 2 8 Rio G ra n d e . O n ly 1 322 -9 8 8 7 . 2-11-5B 1-1 loft at left. NORTH OF U.T. Efficiency $ 2 1 0 + e le c tric , 1-Bedroom $ 2 2 5 + electric. N o Pets. 4 7 7 -2 2 1 4 . 2- 10-20b-D. SAN PEDRO Oaks. 8 0 3 W 28th St. 2 -2 . W a te r ond G as p a id , pool, laundry. Mostly student com­ $ 5 0 0 with $ 2 5 0 deposit. plex A v a ila b le 8 3 7 - 2 0 0 2 . 2-12-4b-D. im m e d ia te ly . 1-1, $ 4 1 0 +E. HYDE PARK. C a b le p a id , fir e p la c e , b o o k­ shelves, some covered p arkin g . 1 0 5 W .3 8 1 / 2 street. 4 5 9 - 171 1, 4 5 2 -1 1 2 1 . 2-12-20B-C shuttle S P A C IO U S 1 BR. W a lk to law O n school. route. C A /C H . N e w c a rp e t, p ain t. 3 30 1 Red River. $ 4 0 0 /m o . The Taylor Company. 3 2 9 -8 1 2 8 , 3 2 7 - 8 1 7 1 . 2-12-4B-C. 3 9 0 - Unf. Duplexes W EST C A M P U S e ffic ie n c y . All bills paid. Hardw ood, A / C , fun­ ky! $ 3 5 0 . Eyes of Texas. 4 7 7 - 1163 l-28-20b C O N V E N IE N T TO UT Engineer- ing/Law School, 1-bedroom $ 3 0 0 -(-electricity. C a ll Joe at 9 2 8 - 6 5 5 4 2-11-58. 4 0 0 - Condos* Town homes ' ELY P R O P ER T IES " Pre-lease Croix 1-1 $ 6 0 0 .0 0 10 units 2-2 $ 1 0 0 0 .0 0 5 units W e have mor.e than anyonel ELY PROPERTIES P r e - le a s e St. Thomas Furnished 2-1 $ 8 0 0 up Furnished 2-2 $ 1 100 up M i k e 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease Robbins Place 2-2 $8 50 -1 1 0 0 10 0 0 s q /ft-1 3 0 0 s q /ft G reat Extra large unit M ike 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 1-22-208B ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease Centennial 3-2, $ 1 4 0 0 2-2, $1 0 0 0 1-1, $7 00 Best prices around campus. 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 , Chuck 1-22 20b-B ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease Nueces Oaks 2-2,2-1.5 $ 8 50-$ 900 Split level, secured covered parking. Mitch, 476-1976. l-25-20b-B C O N D O S , CENTRAL, unfurnished. M a s s iv e 2 - 2 ‘s, room for four. W est campus, all am enities, d if­ ferent prices. Call for locationsl Rio G rande Properties 4 7 4 -0 6 0 6 . l-25-20b-B PMT” W est Campus Penthouse View, Jacuzzi, Furnished $ 1 2 0 0 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . 1 28 20b-B PMT ORANGETREE 2 -2 .5 Furnished with Big Screen T V $ 1 4 0 0 476-2673. 1-28-20WS. P M T WATERFORD 3-2 W o n ’t Last 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . l-28-20b-B. PMT BENCHMARK 2 - 2 Vaulted Ceilings $900 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . PREPARE TOBE IMPRESSED, W H ILE TH EY LAST! ^ Now Pre-leasing!| S t , T h om as (^eKÍCHHicd O xanye 7 t e e Tl/atex^axd O ld “TKíUh. Campus Condos 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 C O F F E E 1 * ^ 3 1 5 1 0 3 1 Benchmark Buena Vista Centennial Croix 3200 Duval Lantern Lane Selcn S t Tnomas Littlefield Thirty-First St. Mews Old Mam Treehouse Orangetree Waterford 1, 2 and 3 Bedrooms HOUSES, TOO! (2-8 Bedrooms) 474-180 P re-lease H U G E 3-2 s and 2 - 2 ’s fur Ju ne and August: O rangetree. O ld M air Cen tennial, C ro ix, P re serv atio n Square, 1704 W est A v e , 1900 S a n G a b riel' M a ke an ap p o intm en t s o o n ' L o ts to s e e 1 474-0606 Rio Grande P R O P E R T I E S HUGE 1-1 s West Campus: B e n c h m a r k s , S e to n s . C e n te n n ia ls . R o o m to r 2 W O W . th e y g o fa s t1 C a ll to s e e . 4 7 4 -0 6 0 6 R io G ra n d e P R O P E R T I E S CHESTNUT SQUARE $ 1 200 5-Level Condo St. Thomas Condos Storting at $900. Call Nick at CAMPUS CO ND O S 474-4 800 . PRE-LEASING! 1-28-20WS. No Time To Waste! 2-2, W . Campus 121 -20b. HU G O 47 6-19 76. l-22-20b-B. ELY PROPERTIES” Pre-lease Orangetree 2-2.5 Courtyard $ 1 4 0 0 2-2 Outside $ 1 1 0 0 W e have several of each. 47 6 -1 9 7 6 Lori. PMT Awesome 3-2 with loft Spiral Staircase Available Avg. 1200 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . CAMPUS CONDOS Simon 474 4800. 2 8-68D. U N IQ U E , LUXURY, 1-22-2058. “ BEST PRICE) 2-2's, W est Cam­ pus, w ash er/d ryer, $ 6 5 0 . Front Page 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 2 -l-2 0 b C . i -28-20W5 W . Campus, Pre-Lease. Preservation Square CAMPUS CONDOS Simon 474-4800. PRELEASE a t PMT P M T 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 2-8-208B. P M T Huge Duplex 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Both Sides Available Could be 6 Bedroom /4 Bath $ 1 2 0 0 476-2673 2-9-20b-B P M T Centennial 1-1 $575 476-2673 P M T Delphi 3-2 $ 1 2 0 0 476-2673 P M T Orange Tree $500 Furnished Efficiency 476-2673 2 9 -2 0 b 8 P M T Nueces Place $40 0 Cozy One Bedroom 476-2673. 2 9-208B . P M T 2-1.5 Split Level W est Campus Covered Parking $6 50 476-2673. P M T Overlook 2-2 w /lo ft Pool, Hot tu b , Huge deck. $ 1 0 0 0 476-2673. 2-9 20b-B. * * HYDE PARK O a k s ! V e ry s p a ­ c io u s ! W / D , fi- e p la c e , m i­ c ro w a v e W a lk /s h u ttle , p re ie o s- in g ll $ 5 7 5 . F ro n t P a g e 4 8 0 - 851 8. 2-15-20B-C. “ SUPER C O N D O ! Pre-leasmg. North campus! All am enities. 2-2, $ 7 5 0 . 1 1 , $ 4 5 0 Front Page, 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 2-15-2 OBO. HU G E 2 / 2 , $ 5 9 5 +E. G as and cable paid. 4 0 0 W .3 5 th Street. 4 5 3 - 1 8 0 4 ,4 5 2 - 1 1 2 1 . 1-22-20B- C “ HERITAGE! BEAUTIFUL I Unique 2 - 2 's $ 8 0 0 , 1-1'» $ 5 7 5 . Fire­ p lace, hot tub, tiled b ar. Front Page 4 8 0 -85 18 2-l-20b-C . * * 2 / 2 APT.** RENTAL 370- UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS Nice! All bills paid, 2 blocks north of campus. Pool, covered parking, on shuttle. Chaparosa Apts. 474-1902. 1-27-20MS. SANDPIPER N O W leasing and pre­ leasing, 950sqft $ 6 5 0 . N e w er furniture a va ilab le 2 -1 -9 3 . M ike 476 1976 EPI. l-27-20b. 2-9-20fe-B. CASA DE SALADO APTS. 1-BEDROOM, FUNISHED. WATER, GAS, AND T V. CABLE PAID, NO PETS. SWIMMING POOL, AC AND CEILING FANS. LAUNDRY FACILITIES. CLOSE TO CAMPUS, NEAR SHUTTLE. RESI­ DENT MGR. #112. 261 0 SALADO ST. UNITS AVAILABLE NOW FOR INFO CALL 477-2534 2-12-206-0 1 BR furnished $ 3 4 0 , 26th Street, 3 minute w alk low school, small quiet complex, available March 1, Cary 4 7 9 -6 1 7 6 2-15-5P. T h r e e T i m e s T h e C h a r m . . . T H E HAM LET 1100 Reinli • Austin, TX 78723 Prices starting From $4 6 0 C O BBLESTO N E 1105 Clayton • Austin, T X 78723 Prices Starting From $375 REINLI ARM S 1012 Reinli * Austin, TX 78723 Prices starting From $ 3 9 9 For Leasing information call or come by The Hamlet office. Ceiling Fans* Ceramic Bathtubs ’ *1 Bedroom/1 Bath *2 Bedrooms/1 Bath *2 Bedrooms/2 Baths Walk-in Closets* 'Townhomes Available Swimming Pool Laundry Facilities Mtni-Blmds Gas & Water Paid •Available at seiect properties (512) 452-3202 w i i u a f i i K i l REAL ESTATE S E R V IC E S , IN C . Austin Apartment Association 1 i i ou^t(xucc¿ a p a r t m e n t h o m e s A L L B ILL S P A ID F E A T U R E S : A v a i l a b l e in S e l e c t u n i t s , • Ceiling fans • Spacious walk- in Closets • Mini-blinds • 3 swimming pools • Microwaves • Clubhouse • UT & City Busline • Wet bars • Free 49-channel expanded cable • Fenced patios • Built-in bookshelves E xcellen t R o o m m a te P lan C a m e ro n R o a d U .T. S hu ttle 45 4-2537 1 2 0 0 B ro ad m o o r D rive “ OLD M A IN I These go fasti Gorgeous W est Campus 2 / 1 ' s & 2 / 2 ‘s Start $ 8 9 5 . Front Page 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 2 -l-2 0 b C . “ CENTENNIAL! REAL nice! 2-2, 3rd. floor, high ceilings1 Furnished $ 110 0 Front Page 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 2- 1 -20b-C. Prelease * 2 3 ób-D 4 2 0 - Unf. Houses C A M P U S C O N D O S 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 477-LIVE 24 hours, o ld fashio ned charm , 1-3 BR homes, h a rd w o o d , 1- gas, app lia nces 25-20B-B $ 4 0 5 -$ 6 5 0 * ’ M tK /P A R K ! B IG o ld e r 3 / 2 , fir e p la c e , h a rd w o o d s U n e q u a l b e d ro o m s A v a ila b le 6 / 1 / 9 3 $ 1 0 5 0 Eileen, Front Paae 4 8 0 - 8 51 8 2-l-20b-C a t PMT “ T O W N H O M E STYLE! All amen­ ities! Absolutely gorgeous! West Campusl $ 8 2 5 Tyr, $ 9 5 0 9m o. Front Page 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 2-8-20B-C PRE-LEASE TODAY! Largest 1-1 's in Orangetree. 2 Available - $700 CAMPUS CONDOS Russ-474-4800. 2 8-6b-D LARGEST ORANGETREE 2/2.5 left in courtyard CAMPUS CONDOS 474-4800. BIGGEST IS BEST! Centennial 2-2's Perfect for Roommates Call Q u t c k l Russ-Campus Condos 474-4800 pre-l e a s in g F G re a t 1-1's N. and W . Campus W /D , M ic ro , F.P. Campus Condos Simon 474-4800. 2 8 6t>D. “ EXCITIN G C O N D o T i Preleas- in g . W e st C a m p u s l A ll a m e n i­ tie s 2 b e d ro o m s s to rtin g at $ 8 0 0 ! Front Poge 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 2- 1 5 2 0 b C SPRING BREAK '9 3 S Padre con­ do. Sleeps S on the beach. The Eses!! C a ll for de ta ils , ( 5 1 2 )8 6 9 1358. 2 15-56 2-8-6 !>0 HOUSES, HOUSES,"" HOUSES! 2 8 -4 5 0 425 - Rooms More BAN G for your Buck! 3-2's Tarrytown- $1150 Others Available. CAMPUS C O N D O S Russ-474-4800 2-8-ób-D. SHORT W ALK UT, Q uiet, nonsmok­ in g , p e tle s s . P riv a te b e d ro o m , share kitchen Private both $ 2 8 5 ABP, C a ll 4 7 7 - 4 1 9 7 . D.P 4 0 6 - 4 5 2 3 . To share bills , Both $ 1 80- $ 2 6 0 , C a ll 4 7 2 - 5 6 4 6 , 4 5 2 - 0 7 1 6 , 4 7 2 -1 7 8 7 . 2 5 20W5 435 ** Co-ops SHORT W ALK UT, Q uiet, nonsmok­ in g , p e tle s s . P riv a te b e d ro o m , share kitchen Private bath $ 2 8 5 ABP, C a ll 4 7 7 - 4 1 9 7 , D P 4 0 6 - 4 5 2 3 To shore b ills , Bath $ 1 8 0 - $ 2 6 0 , C a ll 4 7 2 - 5 6 4 6 , 4 5 2 - 0 7 1 6 , 4 7 2 -1 7 8 7 2 5?ObO dir, ,4V J*r.. jfc. .A. J* g jfedpt 1 7 U . T . ’ s R O O M M A T E m S O U R C E ? Find a great roommate tor ; j your busy lifestyle. Texas Ex M £« owned and operated. ^Conv»n»ntiy located at líth i Son Antonie* g M W IN D S O R ROOMM ATES ^ 4 9 5 * 9 9 8 8 - w n* "V rgp -V .*-■* -s * tpr W j * .-<* A e. . ROOMMATE SERVICE Looking o r have p la c e ? W i l l help you find a com pat­ ib le ro o m m a te . M a le o r fe ­ male. C a ll Sam . 280-7118 2 3 2 0 8 C . SHORT W ALK UT, Quiet, nonsmok­ in g p e tle s s . P riv a te b e d ro o m , sham kitchen. Private bath $ 2 8 5 AB P, C o ll 4 7 7 - 4 1 9 7 , D.P 4 0 6 - 4 5 2 3 . To sha-e b ills, Bath $ 1 80- $ 2 6 0 , C u ll 4 7 2 5 6 4 6 . 4 5 2 - 0 7 1 6 , 4 7 2 -1 7 8 7 2 -5 -2 0 8 0 PERFECT O FF-CAM PUS condo fo r nonsmoking female. Fans, comput­ e r /p r in te r , W / D , m icro w a v e , se­ c u rity , m o te . $ 2 3 5 /m o Share room a n d b ills . $ 2 0 0 /s u m m e r . Kristin 3 8 5 -43 91 2-8-1 Ob BARBIE'S ROOMMATE SERVICE B o n d e d fo r y o u r p ro te c tio n L o o k in g for that right ro o m m a te ? Serving students for years Office number 873-0015 24 Hr. Pager 867-9277 5 10 - Entertainment Tickets E N C O R E • TICKETS ALL EVENTS BEST PRICES 4 7 4 - 4 4 6 8 5 20 - Personals A BIRTHDAY A q u a rio u s Southern E x e c u tiv e G e n tle m a n s e e k s c o m ­ p a n io n s k ie r. Single ex-model or model betw een the ages of 27 to 3 5 . M ust be a b le to tra v e l a n d r e lo c a te . I w ill re s p o n d to ah who answer. Must send photo and phone num ber to The D aily le x a n N u m b e r D -7 A u s tin , TX 7 8 7 1 3 - 8904 Phone5 12-722-1 469 1-26-20P 5 30 - Travel- Transpartation B e a c h fro n t S O U TH PADRE. Famous Rodisson Resort. W et suit c o n te s t. D a n c in g . P a rtie s . S leeps 6 -8 O w n e r , ( 8 1 3 ) 6 4 2 - 548 3 2-12-10B 5 60 - Public Notice AFFECTED BY ADOPTION? Call 442-8AKA 2-12 2b EDUCATIONAL 5 80 ~ Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSONS: R & B, rock, ja zz, coun try. 10 years teaching experience. Andy Builington, 452- 6 1 8 1 . 2-3-206C 590 - Tutoring • T U T O R I N G • R E V I E W S OPEN 7 DAYS til Midnight. Sun.-Thur. H o u s e o f n \ T U T O R S W X Since 1980 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 6 1 0 - Misc. Instruction c la s s . TOEFL N E W Tues­ d a y /T h u rs d a y 1 .3 0 -3 :0 0 for stud­ ents w ith 5 0 0 + A u s tin E n glish Academy 4 7 6 -1 9 3 3 . 2-15-1B-B SERVICES 7 50 - Typing A S A P W O R D PR O C ES SIN G : P a ­ p e r s c o m p le t e d w it h e x t r a c o r e . Rush o rd e r s — $ 2 2 5 / p o g e ofter- n o o n s / w e e k e n d s . 4 5 1 - 4 8 8 5 . 1 1- ' c 2 0 8 W O O D S TYPIN G o n d W o r d P r o ­ T y p e w rite ' or M o a n to s h - c e s s in g la s e r 2 2 0 0 G u a d a lu p e (side e n ­ trance). 4 7 2 - 6 3 0 2 1-21-2088 PDQ Word Processing Papers: $1 .5 0 a page * Spell Check ‘ Laser Printing ‘ Resume ($7.00) ‘ Custom Calendars * 5 minutes from UT Full ra n g e o f service s a v a ila b le . Call 4 5 3 4 5 6 8 for details. 125-208-0 M O V E IN N O W L a rg e o ld e r hom e in W .C a m p u s w ith ro o m s a v a ila b le fo r w o m e n . W o lk to campus. tCC Co-ops. 4 7 6 -1 9 5 7 2-1 1-5B DR. I N K Desktop P u b lis h in g a n d D e s ig n : re su m e s, w o id - p r o c e s s in g , r e a s o n a b le r a t e s , q u a li t y l a s e r p r in t in g , q u ic k t u r n - a r o u n d 3 3 5 - 1753. 2-9-20B 2 -9 -2 0 8 8 Get some answers at our next meeting, February 15, 7:00PM. RENTAL Z IV L E Y The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING “ 1 | BLOCKBUSTER 27TH STREET 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 472-3210 472-7677 L o n g h o rn C o p ie s RESUMES THESIS FO RM ATTING BINDING LASER PRINTING TYPING 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 FAX 476-2602 Q U A L IT Y TY P IN G n e a r ca m p u s , lo w rates. 4 5 8 -4 0 2 0 . 2-1 1 -10B. 7 6 0 “ Misc. Services s tu d e n t U N IV ER SITY FOR $ ? 5 / h o u r , fo u r h o u r ’ m im m u m C h a u ffe u r d riv e n Rolls Royce fo r parties oround fraternities ond so­ ro ritie s o f UT. 4 7 7 -4 1 5 4 2-1 0 - 10B. *N E W GENESIS*” MIRACLE WORKERS * *W E MAKE LOVE** Spring is near, it's in the oir. Alone you sit think, and stare tike a shoe without its pair. The bar scene is often a scare. You w ake up in some cat's lair. He or she resembles a bear. Place an ad, resumes to spore Most of them you do not dare. So call us w e 'll be there. Tell us your wants without spare Someone warm, w illing to share Tell us, we'll take it from there You know why? Because we carel Is looking for M r. or Mrs. G oodbar causing you cavities? Call to meet your dream person. STRICTLY CONFIDEN­ TIAL. FREE CALLS. 465-7864 2-!2-7b. ■ r a r r m 7 9 0 - Part time E A R N M O N E Y , B u rn F a t H e rb a l F le xib le D iet Pills. G u a ra n te e d hours, G ood m one, Ben/ C onnie 1-22 20P. 259 2841 t b M a r k e t in g P O S IT IO N S AVAILABLE Evening and weekend shifts. Flexible scheduling. Salary plus bonus. Call 477-9821 Robert M. l-2fr208B I had a great summer job in Europe so can you! I can help you obtain o teaching, iu- tormg, or cam p/sport counselors position in any country worldw ide. Visit the world ond get paid. 1-800-538-0690. l-29-20b C O U R IE R /G E N E R A L M A I N ­ TENAN CE position for m edical o f fic e , F iv e a fte r n o o n s a w e e k Must have own tran sportation and insurance Must have good driving re c o rd a n d sense o f hum or. C a li M arilyn at 473 -2 3 7 0 . 2-2-10B. S H O R T W A LK UT c a r . r e lia b le Run le g a l errands in o w n econom ­ M o r n ­ ic a l, in g s /S c h e d u le a r o u n d cla sse s G re a t fo r p r e - lo w s /f ir s t- y e a r 's $ 4 .5 0 + tr ip o llo w a n c e . A lso need ty p is t, t r a in e e , b o o k k e e p e r $ 4 4 0 F ix -H /c o m p u te i s k ills a p lu s N o n s m o k in g s e lf- s to rte r s . W r ite a p p lic a tio n 9 -4 w e e k d a y s 4 08 W est 17th. 2 5-2080. 10 - Misc. Autos 1 9 6 7 A N D 1 9 6 8 Mustang coups Rebuilt 2 8 9 . Autom atic, $ 3 0 0 0 o r /O B O . Both run g re a t. C a ll 255 -53 72. 1-19-20W » ' C LEAN 1 9 6 8 C a d illa c De V ille convertible. 8 6 ,0 0 0 miles. Excel­ lent condition. Very good running con dition. C an be seen at 9 2 5 Biscoyne la k e w a y . $ 9 , 0 0 0 . 2- 11-1 OB S C H O O L BUS, in te rn a tio n a l, 1 9 7 7 , needs re p a irs , $ 1 , 0 0 0 . 3 4 3 -2 9 9 0 M-F. 2-15-5B 20 - Sports-Foreign Autos 198 5 M A Z D A RX-7, only 5 6 ,0 0 0 m iles, g o o d c o n d itio n . W o rth $ 4 0 0 0 , w ill sell for $ 2 8 0 0 . Lee 4 74 -0 9 1 2 . 2-10-5P 1 9 8 5 M A Z D A R X -7. E x cellent condition. $ 5 ,4 0 0 . 3 3 8 -0 5 0 2 . 2- 11-3B 50 - Service-Repair 3 D M o b ile 2 4 H R S e rv ice. Brakes, engine, fuel, A /C service. Foreign or domestic. 3 9 7 -0 1 2 2 or 397 -0 2 3 1 . 2-10-5B 70 - Motorcycles '9 0 Y A M A H A FZR 6 0 0 D& D ex­ haust, recently tuned, lots of ex­ tras. $ 3 4 0 0 O B O , M a rk 4 5 8 - 3 09 9. 2-15-5P MOTORCYCLE: 1 9 8 7 /8 8 Honda C B R 60 0 H u rricane . Runs g reat. Spring opportunity. $ 2 ,9 0 0 . 495- 2 9 5 9 . Coll M arcelo. Leave mes­ sage. 2-12-4P 8 0 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE ‘92 Models Must Go Many Reduced to Cost!! GT Mt. Shasta Bridgestone Haro BUCK'S BIKES 928-2810 while supply lasts REAL ESTATE SALES 110 - Services EXPERIENCED C A M P U S real es­ tate sales specialist. All campus areas. Governm ent repos. Jerry O akes 1 -2 1 - 20B-B PMT 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . 130 - Condos- Townhomes L A N D M A R K S Q U A R E -U N IQ U E lofted 2 / 1 . All possible amenities, covered parkin g , security. 5 2 K . Mitch 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 1-20-2058 THE POINTE-LARGE 1 /1 blocks to campus. Easy qualifying 5% down. 32K . M itch 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 . EPI. 1-21- 20B8. LONGHORN W A N T A P S EPSON EQUITY II 12M Z lO lK e y - Bd. 3 0 M g , H D , W o rd Perfect 5 .1 , lotus, PC tools, Procomm 3, DeBase $ 4 0 0 . 7 9 5 - 9 0 2 6 . 2-9- 5B. M CAT STUDY books for sale, half of store cost, all current. Flowers $ 2 5 ,0 0 Barrons $ 6 .0 0 , A M C A S practice test $ 8 .0 0 4 5 1 -3 8 6 4 . 2- 10-5B. W H IR L P O O L ELECTRIC d ry e r. W hite, almost new. Excellent con­ dition. $ 2 0 0 Call 4 4 5 -2 3 3 6 . 2- 1 0 5 8 IBM 3 8 6 C olor monitor and key­ board. $ 7 0 0 . 8 3 7 -3 6 2 4 . 2 - 1 0 58. ROAD-BIKE-RAIEIGH M EN'S lOspd. 2 0 " . Red. $ 1 3 5 . Performance helmet size 7, new $3 0 . Basic re­ p a ir kit. N e w , $ 1 0 . C a ll G ita 4 7 7 -2 1 5 4 . 2-9-5nc FREE W EIGHT Olympic-size bench and bar, over 2 0 0 lbs. of weight. Plus weight rock. $ 150 O B O 477- 5 6 5 0 . 2-9-5b.____________________ W O O D E N SQ UA SH racket, Hor­ net and W h ip Stroke. By G a rc ia Crogin $ 4 5 . Ektelon ro cq u etb all $ 2 0 . M en 's gloves $ 7 . C a ll Suzanne 476 -6 9 3 5 . 2-9-5b FENDER S t r a t i SQ U IR E -II caster/Fender SKX-15R am plifier. Amp has reverb, gain, countour con- Both less than ly r . Perfect trol. 4 9 9 -8 5 9 0 condition. Both $ 3 7 5 . after 5pm. 2-9-5b Q M E M B ER SH IP for 1 y e a r. $ 5 5 2 N o dues, no monthly pay­ ments, option to renew 3 / 9 4 at same low rote. 3 3 1 -8 0 1 4 . 2-9- 5N C . ___ ____________ '8 6 H O N D A 1 5 0 Elite D eluxe scooter. 1 ,7 6 0 miles. Helmets. $89 5. 2 5 1 -8 9 0 3 . 2-9-5nc FUTON-FULL-SIZE A frame with for­ est g reen cover. $ 1 5 0 . Add extro softness w ith feath er bed, only $ 5 0 more 4 7 9 -5 0 4 4 . 2-9- 5B AN TIQ U E D IN IN G table and four chairs $ 1 0 0 O B O . Antique desk $ 7 5 O B O , B ookcase $ 2 0 , Gouch/Futon $50 . Other furniture, coll ASAP 4 7 9 -0 3 2 5 . 2-9-5B FOR SALE: Redw ing boots, size 1.0, alm ost n ew , (w orn 3 x ). W o rth $ 1 0 0 , w ill sell for $ 6 0 . O BO , call Colin 4 7 7 -6 4 4 7 . 2-11- 5B. \ EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 7 9 0 - Part-Time 8 0 0 - General 800 - General 800 - General 8 0 0 - Genera! Help W anted Help W anted Help W anted INDIVIDUAL NEEDED for part-time position 1:00-5.00 ot busy non­ smoking low office. Type 45wpm, 15/hr, apply M_F, 1-5, 6633 Hwy 290E Suite 300 Austin, Texas. 2-9-5B. MARKETING/FINANCE STUDENT with Mac. to assist songwriter with record deal 328-92 13. leove message 2-9-5b NEEDED SALESPERSON-EVEN- INGS and weekends. Retail ex­ perience preferred. Apply at But­ ’s rfield's at Northcross Mall 2-9- 5P ___________________________ * *COOL DRIVERS** •WANTED* For ice delivery Flexible hours. Heavy lifting. Must know Austin, have excellent driving record, be customer oriented and commit through summer Col1 474-4453 between 9-5 Ask for Dan, Mary Alice, or Suzi 2-11-5M» NEEDED. PART/Full-time drivers for local courier service Need both dependable cars and trucks. 469-5552. 2-U-106 SCHOOL-AGE LEAD teacher need­ ed. Fun, quality center. Recrea­ tional activities: arts and crofts, drama sports 2:15-6:00 M-F $5,25 $6.00/hr. Apply 1314 EOitorf 444-7870. 2-11-5B. NEED CAREGIVER for elderly dependable, po- lady Must involves pa­ tient, kind ond strong, tient to transfer wheelchair. 478-8063. 2-11 -5b- C._____________________________ from bed RECEPTIONIST NEEDED part-time MAW afternoons. T-Th mornings. Fn. hrs. flexible Need god tele­ phone skills Call 328-7717. 2- 11-5B-B STUDENTS WANTED work 10 15 hrs/wk in exchange for meah plan at The Castilian. 478-1732. 2-n-5b. ★ * * * PART-TIME * * * * CLERK Small stole licensing agency, $6/hour, flexible hours 8-5pm, an­ swer phones, direct colls, typing, filing, moil outs. Possible fult-time summer, previous office experience preferred. Send resume TSBPTE, 3001 South Lomar, Suite 101, Aus­ tin, Texas 78704. 2-15-106 HELP NEEDED w/computer and tel­ ephone. 20-40 hours/week Apply in person at 217 Industrial Blvd., one block south of Ben White 2-15-3B TJ CINNAM ONS Bakery: moti­ vated, self-starting, outgoing per­ son. Part-time evenings and wee­ kends. Call John 452-7655. 2-12- 5B NEEDED: WORKER with computer experience in lotus 123, windows, ond works, and ability to train us. Call 338-0404. Ask for Ronnie. 2-12-58 CHILDCARE/HOUSEKEEPER FOR 2 older children. 3:30-5:30 M-F. Own transportation. 2-12-4B $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ First USA Telemarketing Services, a division of First USA, Inc. Is currently seeking the following marketing professionals: ‘ Consumer Credit Reps! Representatives will be responsi­ ble for marketing consumer pro­ ducts and services, primarily credit cards nationwide Excellent com­ munication skills with some soles ex­ perience is preferred. We guaran­ tee $6/hour plus benefits Com­ mission may be earned. Typing skills of 25wpm preferred. Sched­ uled shift is Mondoy-Friday • 5:30-9:30pm. Please apply in person Monday through Friday, 8om-6:30pm of First USA Telemarketing, One Texas Center, 505 Barton Springs Road, Suite 600, Receptionist. N o Phone Call Pleasel Equal Opportunity Employer First USA $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ 2-15-20B-C CHILDREN'S CENTER is hiring pa­ tient, loving, experienced, indi­ vidual for part-time help West­ lake Area. 327-7575/371-0422. 2-15-5B-8 * . y. •' - , • 3 00 - General Help W anted EARN M ONEY reading booksl $30 000/yr income potenticl. De­ tails. ¡1) 805-962-8000, Ext. Y- 9413. 12-1-28P UT STUDENTSII We offer short or long farm posi­ tions in many different areas- *Dato Entry ’ Customer Service •Telemarketing Call lor more information today I TRI-STARR PERSONNEL 345-1010 EOE 1-25-20&C $20a$500 WEEKLY Assem ble products at home. Easy! No selling. You’re paid direct. Fully Guaranteed. FR E E Infor- mation-24 Hour Hotline. 801-379-2900 Copyright # TX042950. 1-26-20P Help Wanted ATTENTION GRAD STUDENTS READERS NEEDED to eval­ uate student writing. Tem­ porary positions, approx­ imately seven weeks, be­ ginning M arch 24. W e p ro vid e train in g Two shifts are available. Day shift: 8:30am-3.45pm, M- F. Evening shift 5:00pm- 10:15pm , M-F. Hours flex ib le . a re not B a c h e lo r's d e g ree re­ quired; prefer English, lan­ guage arts, education or related field. During in­ terview, demonstration of w riting ability required. Pay rate: $7.00 per hour. C a ll Measurement Incor­ porated for further infor­ mation and application: (512)835-0091. 1-10 20W> TENNIS JO BS Summer childrens camps-North- east--Men and wom en with good tennis background who can teach children to play ten­ nis. G o o d sa la ry , room & board, travel allowance. W om en call or write: Camp Vega, P.O . Box 1771, Dux- bury, M A , 0 2 3 3 2 . (6 1 7 ) 934-6536. Men call or write: Camp Wi- nadu, 5 Glen lan e , Mamar- oneck, N Y , 10543 (91 4) 381-5983. W e w ill be on campus 2/16/93 from 11:00- 4 :0 0 in the student union rooms 4.206 & 4.108. 1-19 20M Waterfront Jobs WSI-Summer Childrens Camps- Northeast-Men ond W o m en w ho can teach ch ild ren to Sw im , C o a ch Sw im Team, Waterski (Slalom/Trick/Bare- Inboard Motors, foot), Sail, Beau tiful pool and lakes. Good Salary, Room & Board, Travel Allowance. Men Coll or Write: Camp Wina- du, 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N Y. 10543 (914| 381-5983. Women Call or Write: Camp Vego, P.O Box 1771, Duxbury, Mo 02332 (617) 934 6536. W e will be on campus 2/16/93 from 1 1:00-4:00 in the Student Union rooms 4.206 A 4.108. COUNSELORS/SUPPORT slaff-childrens camps/north- easMop salary, rm/bd/laun- dry, travel allo w a n ce Must have skill in basketball, bicy­ cling, crafts, dance drama, drums, fencing, field hockey, football, golf, guitar, gymnas­ tics, hockey, horseback riding- hunt seat, jiggling, karate, la­ crosse, nature, photography, piano, rocketry, rollerblaaing, ropes, sailboarding, soiling, scuba, tennis, track, waterski, weights, wood. Support staff- kitcnen steward/workers, ba- kerss, cooks, bus d rivers, m aintenance, nurses, secre­ taries. Men call or write: Camp Wi- nadu, 5 G len lan e , M am ar­ oneck, N .Y . 10543 (9 1 4 ) 381-5983. W om en call or write: Camp V ega, P .O .B o x 1771, Dux­ bury, Ma. 02332 (617) 934- 6536. W e will be on campus 2/16/93 from 1 1:00-4:00 in the Student Union rooms 4.206 and 4.108. 1-19-204x8 COUNSELORS, COACHES/ACTIVITY SPECIALISTS All land A water sports, primary A teen specialists, tennis, gymnas­ tics, ceramics, radio/video, na­ ture. music positions for JRS, SRS, & GRADS at Camp Starlight, a leading coed camp in Pocono Mts. of PA Working with a mature staff; friendly atmosphere; exten­ sive facilities. 6/20-8/20. Field work/internships upon request. For campus interview, call (516) 599-5239 or write: 18 Clinton Street, Malverne, NY 11565. 1-21-12B-B EARN MONEY reading booksl $30.000/yr income potential. De­ tails. (1) 805-962-8000, Ext. Y- 9413 1-14-23P CRUISE LINE Entry level on board-landside positions available. Summer or year round, great pay, transportation paid. Tampa, Florida 813-229-5478 l-2fr20b MICROFILM CLERK. No experi- ence necessary, evenings only. Call 837-9847 after 10:00 am. 2-15-2B EMPLOYMENT 790 - PART-TIME • Up To $600.00 Compensation Are you a healthy, non-smoking, male between^ the ages of 18 & 35, and within 10% of youM> ideal weight? If so, you may qualify to partid-^ pate in a pharmaceutical research study and<> receive up to $600.00. There are three groups ^ listed below pick the png that is most conveni­ ent for you. Check-in Time: Afternoon Check-out Time: Morning A. Monday, February 22 B. Tuesday, February 23 C. Wednesday, February 24 A. Saturday, February 27 B. Sunday, February 28 C. Monday, March 1 4 k $ To qualify, you must pass our free physical^ examination and screening accommodations, entertainment, and recrea-JJ tional activities will be provided free of charge, -o tests. Meals, For more information, please call 462-0492 R| P H A R M A C 0 R E S E A R C H FO R B E T T E R HEALTH 4F 4k 4 k 4k 4 k 4 k 4 k 4 k 4 k 4 4 k 4 k 4 k 4k 4 k 4 k <► <► <► <► o 4 SEMEN DONORS NEEDED w ill is Fairfax Cryobank seeking semen donors for its sperm bank pro­ gram. The prograrf is confidential and all d on ors be compensated. As a potential donor you will undergo screen­ ing procedures to in'spre good health and fertility ~otent?al. You must ¡be efween 1 8 and 35.1 If you are *■ interested,' lea$e cp 473-2268 FAIRFAX CRYOBANK o division of the Genetic A I.V.f. Institute YOU GET 1700 CASH First Donation LE fits for you: INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT- MAKE $2,000+ per month teach­ ing basic conversational English abroad japon and Taiwan Many provide room and board + other benefits. No previous training or teaching certificate required For program, call 1-206-632-1146, Ext 1-27-1 6P s u m m e r J o b s" w a r e h o u s e work. 3 eight-hour shifts 2 loca­ tions Dallas, (2 1 4j-869-0250, or Houston, (713)820-3820 2-2-20b- B CLEAN WATER N O W & FOR YOUR FUTURE, C W A is now hiring stud­ ents to protect our earth. Earn 16-20K full tim e /$ 6 0 d a y part- time, w hile learning skills you can use throughout your career. Good benefits, rapid ad­ vancement, and a sup­ portive environment. If you can work the hours of 1-1 0pm, 3-5 days per week and want to make a difference- C all Jam ie at 474-2438 EOE 2-8-1068 A PARTM EN T LIV IN G Program in South Austin hiring M H W to work with adolescents and young adults in psychiatric setting 1 1 p- 7a/ Monday-Friday. Degree in Psychology required For more in­ formation, please call: Brenda Bays, director Human Resources Community Living Programs 912 Capital of Texas Highway- South Fourth Floor Austin, TX 78746 512/314-5212 EOE RESULTS The recession's over and thousands of employers are hiring. Job Loco- tor. College Edition contains prov­ en methods ond resources that will give you an edge over the compe­ tition. It's the only guide you need to buy. Send $9.95 to: Refer­ ence Resources, P.O Box 1296, Fort Collins, CO 80522 2-8-108 PERSONAL CARE live-in attendant needed for UT employee Oltorf and Congress orea Call 445- 6188 after 6pm. 2-15-3B GREEKS & CLUB $ 1,000 AN HOUR! Each member of your frat, sorority, team, club, etc, pitches in just one hour and your group can raise $1,000 in just a few days! 2-15-5B Plus a chance to earn $1,000 for yourself! No cost. No obligation. 1-800-932-0528, ext. 65 EMPLOYMENT 800 - GEN. HELP WANTED The Fresh Air Fund, a non-profit agency, serving inner- city children each summer in its camps in Dutchess County (65 miles from NYC), is presently hiring energetic persons who have completed at least one year of college to work as Counselors, Waterfront Staff and Program Specialists. To learn more about The Fund and its summer camp opportunities, plan to meet with our representative at the UT Camp Fair on Wednesday, February 17th, or contact: The Fresh Air Fund, 1040 Sixth Avenue, New York, NY 10018. 1- 800-367-0003 mmnm is) ITT Sheraton R ESlW A ItO Y S ( EiYTKIl At W P I RECRUITMENT EXPO for RESERVATIONS SALES AGENTS Wednesday, February 17th Thursday, Feb ru a ry 18th from 1 0 :0 0 AM until 6 :0 0 PM Doubletree Hotel on 1-35 Full-time and part-time positions are available. Out center is open 24 hours a day, 7-days a week, including holidays. Candidates must be flexible and able to work Saturday and Sunday as well as holidays. Qualifications: a pleasant, clear and distinct vocal image; 1-2 years of public contact and/or sales experience and the ability to type 25 WPM (typing test will be given). In return, we offer you: $6.50 per hour! Paid Training Exciting Incentive Programs! Medical/Denta! Health Care for Full-Time employees EOE/M/F/D/V MAKE MY DAY! WE WILL O N FEBRUARY 24 T H GSB 2.120 7:00 P.M. HELP!!! We re Swamped WOMEN & MEN FULL TIME/PART TIME We have hundreds of families in the Greater Austin area who have sent tor information from us regarding tike purchase of ENCYCLOPEDIA BRlTANNICA. Our sates reps are among the highest paid in the world. EARN UP TO $720 PER WEEK NO COLD CANVASING NET COMMISSION ON TWO ORDERS FULL FRINGE BENEFITS CALL NOW FOR APPOINTMENT 4 59 -1 1 7 7 An Equal Opportunity Employer SECURITY O FFICERS Now hm ng full an d part-tim e night security officers for locations n ear the U T cam pus area. W # are looking for people orientated officers w ith ex p e ri­ ence in w orking with the public Uniform s provided E xcellen t o p por­ tunity (or students C all Z IM C O S E C U R IT Y C O N S U L T A N T S , 3 4 3 -7 2 1 0 . M on -Fri 3 p m -6 pm IN C Spend the summer in the beautiful Catskill Mountains of New York. Achieve a challenging and rewarding summer experience working in a residential camp for adults with physical and developmental dis­ abilities. Positions available: Counselors, Cabin Leaders, Program Leaders. All students a re en­ couraged to apply. Season dates June 1- August 19. Good sal­ ary, room and board, and some travel allow­ ance. C all G eorge at 512- 353-5816 for informa­ tion or write to Camp Jened, P.O. Box 483, Rock Hill, N Y 12775 (914)434-2220. 2-15-5P. EL TORITO now hiring waitstaff, cocktail servers, host/hostess, and part-time bartender Apply in per­ son between 2&4. 290 and 135. 2-1058. 1 CALL to Avon does it all. Set own hours full/part time No ex­ perience needeid. 335-9712. 2-9- 20B-B CAMP SEQUOIA S U M M E R J O B S a re a v a il­ able at C A M P S E Q U O IA in the N e w York State Catskill M o u n tain s (90 miles N W of New York City)! Cobin Counselor and Speciolty Instructor positions lor ALL TEAM SPORTS, SW IM ­ MING (WSI/LGT), TENNIS, WA- TERSKI, THEATER, ART, PHO­ TOGRAPHY, ENGLISH HORSE­ BACK RIDING, OUTDOOR EDU­ CATION, ond MANY MORE AR­ EAS. Competitive salary, travel allowance, room, board, and laun­ dry. STOP BY AND SEE T AT THE UT CAMP DAY, W ED N ES­ DAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1993, JESTER CENTER LOBBY C A M P SEQUO IA, 914-679-5291. “ a v ia t io n r a m p AGENTS Seeking responsible enthu­ siastic in d ivid u a ls w ho enjoy fast-paced work to perform ramp services for airlines. •Travel benefits with major airline •Paid training and parking •Full uniforms provided •Part and full time positions, flexible hours •Starting W a g e $5.00/hr •Drug testing required • Backg ro und w ill be checked S u p e rviso ry positions available - previous a via ­ tion experience required. E.O .E. Apply in person on Tuesday, February 16, 1993, between 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. AIRPORT TERMINAL SERVICES INC. Holiday Inn Austin-Airport 6911 North Interregional Highway EXTREMELY STRONG ottendantl Help to walk wheelchair bound el­ derly lady. Very strong, kind, pa­ tient, good conversationalist, few hours. 478-8063. 2-11-5BC WANTED: STRONG, dependable worker for loading and shipping windows. Part/Full time. Coll 835-9203. 2-11-5B______________ ASSEMBLE ARTS, crofts, toys, and jewelry items from your home. Excellent pay. Call 448-6456. 2- 15-206 SUMMER EMPLOY- ALASKA MENT- fisheries. Earn $600+/week in canneries or $4,000+/month on fishing boats Free transportation! Room & Boordl Over 8,000 open­ ings. No experience necessary. MALE or FEMALE. For employ- >6-545- ment program call 1-206- 4155 ext. A5848. 2-15-10B EMPLOYMENT 860 - ENGINEERING-TECHNICAL Graduate/Undergraduate Student Employment Applied Research Laboratories The University of Texas at Austin The Advanced Sonar Group of A R L :U T is developing high-speed, efficient, and massively parallel signal processing algorithms for underwater acoustic systems. Positions are available for qualified electrical engineering, signal processing, computer science, or physics students to simulate and develop real time implementations of these algorithms. Experience is preferred in some of the following areas: higher level software languages (e.g. C , C++, Pascal...), digital signal processing and image processing techniques, wave phenomena Current enrollnru nt at U T Austin and U .S. citizenship are required. Positions are security sensitive and a background investigation w ill be conducted on the applicants selected. Positions are located in Northwest Austin. Graduate positions are similar to research assistantships and are available immediately for qualified applicants. Actual job titles, salary ranges, and hours may vary, based on the qualifications and schedules of the applicants selected. For more information, call A R L :U T at 835-3206 or apply in person at 10,000 Burnet Road. Please refer to job code 93-01DT. Transportation is available via the U T Austin Balcones Shuttle Bus. The University of Texas at Austin is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. 8 1 0 - Office-Clerical SHORT WALK UT reliable Run legal errands in own econom­ ical, car, Morn­ ings/Schedule around classes Great for pre-lows/first-year's. $4.50-+tnp allowance. Also need Typist, trainee. bookkeeper $4 40. Fix-il/computer skills a plus. Nonsmoking self-starters. Write application 9-4 weekdays 408 West I7lh. 2-5-20W). RECEPTIONIST NEEDED for alter­ nate weekends for private country club. Position FT during summer. Proficient with data entry, 10 key, and multi-line phone system, coll 892-1205 for details 2-9-5B CUSTOMER SERVICE/DATA entry position available in NE Austin area. Call 837-2300 EOE 2- 12-5B __________ ___ Thrifty Car Rental America's fastest growing car rental company is now hiring part- time counter nelp. This is o per­ fect job for a student now and in the coming Summer session. (Can lead to fulMime). Apply in person, 3121 Manor Rd., M-F between 9:00 and 4:00. 2 !2-6b 8 20 - AccounHng- Bookkeeping SHORT WALK UT. Account­ ing/Bookkeeping trainee Full/port- time. Nonsmoker. $4.40. Write application 8-4 weekdays 408 West 17th. 2-5-20W5 PARTTIME BOOKKEEPER needed Tuesdays and Thursdays or flexible. North Austin 836-4844. 2-9-5B. CPA FIRM- Office/Bookkeeper with 15hrs accounting, comput- er/doto entry. Flexible 26hr. week, Saturdays. $6.00/hr. 345- 5546 2-10-5B 8 3 0 - Administrative- Managemonl PART-TIME ADMINISTRATIVE tion. hrs/wk Must know $6.50/hr 345-9500. Scott. 2-15-5b. DO Flexible hours, 15-20 15-2 WP 5.1 Carol or 8 4 0 - Sales BIG SALE COMMISSIONS Fullerton Continued from page 16 allowing four unearned runs in the sixth that proved to be the differ­ ence in the 7-5 loss. The Titans opened up a 7-5 lead in the fourth inning of Friday's con­ test w hen ce n te rfie ld e r P e te r G ardere dropped a bases-loaded flyball hit by Cal State second base­ m an Je re m y C a rr. T h e m isp la y ended w ith Carr on third and three Titan runs over the plate. Two more runs scored in the inning, w ith all fiv e being unearned. Starte r Ja y Vaught was knocked from the box with two outs in the inning. Texas recaptured the lead w ith four runs in the sixth inning on a two-RBI single by Kieschnick and R B I hits by leftfielder Steven Larkin and first basem an Braxton H ic k ­ man. Cal State responded with four run s in the top of the seven th , in clu d in g a three-run hom er off freshman J.D. Sm art by centerfielder D ante P o w e ll, w ho d ro ve in six runs on the day. The stage w as set fo r another Lo n g h o rn com eback and th ey didn't disappoint any of the 4,033 in attendance. In the bottom of the eighth, the Titans walked the bases fu ll to open the inning. Shortstop Tim H a rk rid e r, w ho had opened w ith a base-on-balls, scored on a w ild p itch . P in ch h itte r D a rric k D uke then h it a one-out double, scoring Larkin and Kieschnick to put Texas up 12-11. Second base­ man Tony Vasut grounded into a fielder's choice for the second out, scoring H ickm an from third and giving Texas its final lead. Smart earned his first w in of the his career, w hile Titan reliever Kim- son H ollibaugh lost his second of the year, surrendering three runs and three walks in one-third of an inning. " It was a great w in, but it wasn't a great g a m e ," G u stafso n said . "Y o u can't count on that kind of fin- N eed full-time/part-time sales rep in the Austin area for a rapidly expand­ ing US firm, which repre­ sents 5 multi-billion dollar industries. If you ore independent, dy Continued from page 16 n a m ic , a n d c a n d e s ig n Bulldogs r & i - . ■ y o u ' o w n sch ed u les, than ca ll im m e d ia tely to sched- ; d . r _ ule an interview. Prior ex- perience in sales is not needed. 834-0199 ... , Bulldogs (27 f o r 63; 45 p e r- . cn cent) failed to shoot 50 percent from . ^ field, but Texas (25 for 80, 35 percent) didn't reach 40 for the fifth stra ig h t gam e. The Lo n g h o rn s 215-38 haven't shot better than their oppo­ nents since the second game of the season, a 46 percent perform ance against Princeton. Still, they might have overcome Georgia if not for shooting 14 of 26 (64 percent) from the free throw line. After all, Texas outrebounded the B u lld o g s 52-50 d esp ite the absence of starting center Sheldon Q u arles, w ho d id n 't even tra ve l w ith the team because of a groin injury. The Bulldogs also turned the b a ll o ver 21 tim es, but s till the Longhorns fell short because of con­ sistently poor shooting. "T h e foul lin e h urt u s ," Texas coach Tom Penders said on KLBJ- A M radio. "A s much as w e've been stru g g lin g , w e h ave to h it free throws. W hen we had a chance to tie or w in the game, we just didn't hit our free throws." Twice, late in the game, the Long­ horns stepped to the free throw line to tie the game but made only one of tw o each time. Even then, Texas still had chances because Georgia made only seven of 13 free throws in the last 3:30. The Longhorns' last basket w ould come from M ichael Richardson (20 p oints) w ith 2:11 rem aining in the game to pull the Longhorns w ith in three points at 73-70. In the final two minutes, Richard- ish all the tim e." The Longhorns weren't so fortu­ nate Saturday, as m isplayed balls by freshman third baseman Chad Blessing and rightfielder Duke cost Texas the game. In the sixth inning, sophom ore p itch er R yan K jos w as cru isin g , dow n 2-1 but p itch in g w e ll. H e retired the first two Cal State batters before running into trouble. Kjos gave up a single and a w alk to start the inning, then got designated hit­ ter Jim Betzsold to chop a ball into the turf toward third. Blessing field­ ed the ball but hesitated, and Betz­ sold was safe at first with a hit. The next b atter, R o d riq u ez, then h it another chopper at Blessing, w ho fumbled the ball and threw wide to first. Rodriquez was safe and a run scored from third. The next batter, third baseman Jeff Fergueson, then h it a looper into right that D uke dived for, rather than p laying the bounce to hold it for a sin g le . Instead, Fergueson's hit went to the comer and three runs scored. That w as a ll the lead C al State would need, as starter Michael Rica- bal (2-0) pitched a six-hit, six strike­ out game. An eighth-inning two- run shot by Kieschnick was the only other offense Texas could muster as the Titans handed the Longhorns their second loss of the season. " I t w as in e vita b le that w o u ld happen," Gustafson said. "W e just handed them five runs. They earned the first two, but we gave them the next five." The good news for Gustafson is that his team seem ed to reach a turning point in Su n d ay's game. The Longhorns turned three double plays, m ade no dam aging errors, and got strong pitching. " I t w as the best gam e w e 'v e played so far th is season ," G u s­ tafson said. " I was very happy w ith ail aspects of the team's p lay." son had a three-pointer blocked, Tony Watson and Terrence Rencher (25 points) missed shots in the free- th row lan e, Lam ont H ill and A1 Colem an w ou ld also m iss three- pointers and the Longhorns could not score. 'Stats som etim es lie ," Pend ers said. 'They made some big shots. They hit big three-point shots down the stretch. W e had opportunities, but we didn't cash in. To beat Geor­ gia, you re a lly h ave to do a lo t right." C leveland Jackson led the B u ll­ dogs w ith 23 p o in ts and eig h t rebounds. Bernard Davis made four second half three-pointers in adding 16 points Saturday night. C arlos Strong added 12 points and eight rebounds and blocked Richardson's three-point attem pt with 1:25 left. D esp ite Texas' tallest starters being 6-foot-7 walk-on Jesse Sand- stad and 6-foot-8 Gerrald Houston, Georgia 7-foot center and leading scorer Charles Claxton scored only eight points. Houston, an A tlanta native playing in front of 30 mem­ bers of his fam ily Saturday, scored a career-high for the second straight game, adding 14 points for Texas. H e also added 10 rebounds in increased playing time due to Quar­ les' illness. Penders said Quarles may be able to p la y in Texas' next gam e on Tuesday at 7:35 p.m. at the E rw in Center against V irg inia Com m on­ wealth. EOE 343-0212 1-29-206. Lady Horns 9 0 0 - Domestic- H o u seh o ld that w ay." Continued from page 16 p oints and 13 rebounds over a smaller Baylor team. "W h e n we ran the ball, we did rea lly w e ll," C in ietra Henderson said. " I think Baylor got a little tired at the end because w e ran the ball. "W e produced a lot more points N ekeshia H enderson so lid ifie d her position as the starting point guard w ith her performance against the Lady Bears. She had been alter­ nating starts w ith senior Jennifer C la rk , but has sp arked a L a d y H orns offense that has struggled recently. "W e got so far ahead, we started relaxing a little bit, and Baylor was not going to go dow n w ith o u t a fig h t," Nekeshia Henderson said. "They just kept working hard, try­ ing to get back in it. "W e had to pull together and w in the game." Nekeshia Henderson's and H all's offensive performances could be the key Texas needs to finish strong going in to post season p la y . Nekeshia Henderson got the Lady Longhorns to a quick start w ith 13 first-half points. Texas led 54-43 at halftime. But Lady Bear Jennifer King and freshmen M ary Low ry and Am ber Seaton sparked Baylor back into the contest. King led all scorers w ith 28 p oin ts w h ile L o w ry had 22 and Seaton 17. "W e know they are a momentum team and th ey got a w fu lly hot­ h a n d e d ," C on rad t said. "P e o p le have a w ay of doing that against us." The Lady Longhorns host the No. 11 Lady Raiders Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. REPEAT 8 5 0 - Retail OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE for soles and service oriented indi­ viduals. Wicks N Sticks. Barton Creek Mall. Apply in person w/Lori. 2-10-5B SALESPERSON PART-TIME after- noons and Saturday. Sales experi­ ence References required. Apply in person. Texas Ceiling Fans. 1205 W. 6th. 2-11-5B. 2-11-48. 8 6 0 - Engineering- Technical Computer Programmer Position available for Dec. '92- May '93 graduate. DPA/CS/MiS specialization. Skills preferred include Macintosh and PC networking, installation and set-up of bulletin board serv­ ices, along with interfacing and IBM AS/400 into eoch of these en­ vironments. Positive attitude ond ability to learn new skills o must. Part-time possible until graduation. Send resume to Computer Programmer, Texas Association of Realtors, P.O. Box 2246, Austin, 78768 or Fax to : 512-370-2390. 2-12-6b. 8 8 0 - Professional Northwest State Farm Agency Staff Sales Assistant Energetic, self-starter, goal-orient­ ed individual needed. Must have typing, sales, basic math skills. Mail resume to 3515 Hyridge Dr. Austin 78759 8 9 0 - Clubs- R e stau rants POSSE EAST now accepting appli­ cations for day-time help and night kitchen. Contact Edward no calls please. 2-9-7b. CHILDOARE NEEDED in N W Aus- tin home. Severo! afternoons o week for two children ages 5 and 7. Coll Undo 338-4278 2-5-10b SITTER/DRIVER AFTERNOONS for 2 fun-loving children. 480-9777 or 499-8349. 2-9-5B SINGLE W O M A N live-in, full or part-time. Help w/household chores, w/disabled person, non- smoker, references required 444- 5351. 2-11-5B._______________ WANTED: PART-TIME babysitter for my 2 children. Three after­ noons/evenings per week and some weekends. Caring, depend­ able, must have own transporta­ tion 441-2055 . 2-12-2B Wanted Experienced housekeeper/nanny to care for working couple ond 3 daughters. Must be organized, re­ liable, have own transportation, non-smoker, references required, M- F 1-6. Salary $175/wk (will con­ sider live-in) Coll 327-4534 afler 6pm. 2-12-6b. COLLEGE STUDENT needed to help in household. Free room + pay Transportation of kids and child-core Spanish speaking okay. References required. 327-5215. 2-12-5B BUSINESS 9 3 0 - Business O pportunities ART/ARTISTS. GALLERY looking for ort/oriisls to display their works 331-7105 or 495-9480. 2-15-5B Save up to 50% on self-serve copying, binding, Macintosh1* and typing. Weekdays: 7 to 10 a.m., 7 p.m. to midnight, Fridays to 8 p.m. All day weekends. Dobie Mall. 476-9171. qinnys _ • _________ Pnntin* • Copvmg g Horns outswim Frogs. Mustangs in dual meets T h e D a i l y TEXAN Monday, February 15, 1993 Page 15 Heather Kelly Daily Texan Staff A Valentine's weekend ended in all roses for the men's swimming and diving team. The Longhorns completed their dual meet season with wins over TCU on Friday and SMU on Saturday to post an 8-0 record for the year. The record marks the second career per­ fect season for head coach Eddie Reese. The last one was in 1990-91 when he completed a 9-0 season. Reese is now 125-39 for his career. A gainst the H orned Frogs, Texas remained calm and laid-back. They cruised to an easy 152-140 victory, winning 8 of 15 events. Texas sw ept the 50 freestyle, 100 freestyle, 200 butterfly, one-meter diving, 200 breast stroke and 3-meter diving. "We had some good swims out there and so did TCU. I think it is a good sign for both groups going into the conference m eet," Reese said. Texas sw am w ith an unusual line-up against TCU. Josh Davis, 11-time All Ameri­ can, and five-time All American Jason Fink were not included in the lineup. Davis felt that Reese did not put him in the Friday meet so that he could rest up for SMU. "TCU is not one of our strongest competi­ tors in the conference, and it's a chance for the other guys to race and I'll get to race tomorrow night," Davis said. The meet was an opportunity for other swimmers, especially the younger ones. "We tried to put everyone in we could. This is the last weekend before we shave and taper," Reese said. S atu rd ay n ig h t's m eet against SMU proved to be more of a fast-paced meet with better times and closer races. Reese attribut­ es this to the fact that SMU brings out more emotion and better competition. He also said he learned two things. "W e swam fast on our first effort and then we got tired on the next time around. So we w eren't recovering which means we're not nearly rested enough yet and that is where we want to head," Reese said. Seasons best were posted on Saturday night by freshman Matt Hooper in the 200 freestyle and 500 freestyle, sophomore C.J. Robie in the 200 butterfly, junior Josh Davis in the 400 individual medley and junior Brian Williams in the 1,000 freestyle. The SMU meet, however, was not all per­ fect. Texas got d isqualified in the 400 freestyle relay for a false start between the exchanges. The Longhorns' troubles contin­ ued when Jonathan Jennings was disquali­ fied in the 200 individual m edley as he touched the wall with uneven hands in the breast stroke. Jarrett cruises to Daytona 500 win - V - : • Gibbs-owned car passes Earnhardt on race’s final lap Associated Press DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Dale Jarrett gave Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs an o th er Super Bowl victory Sunday, driving past a snakebit Dale Earnhardt with less than a lap to go and winning the Daytona 500. The victory in NASCAR's biggest race gave Jarrett som ething his father, Hall of Fame stock car driver Ned Jarrett, never had. Ned Jarrett, though, was in the CBS booth and a national television audience got to hear him root his son home. Dale Jarrett, driving a car owned by Gibbs, a three-time Super Bowl winner, kept Earnhardt from win­ ning the only important NASCAR race he's failed to take. E arnhardt looked to be on the way to his first Daytona 500 win in his 15th try. But Jarrett drove along­ side him on the fourth-turn bank­ ing on the 199th lap of the 200-lap race at D aytona In te rn atio n a l Speedway. The two dueled side-by-side, nearly a dead heat, with Earnhart barely in front on the outside at the finish of lap 199, but Jarrett had the «m om entum , driving his Chevrolet Lum ina to the front as the two ¿moved into the first turn, f t E a rn h ard t w as never able to '.mount a real charge on the lead the rest of the way, trailin g Jarrett across the finish line by .19-seconds — barely two car-lengths. The race has been referred to as the Super Bowl of NASCAR racing. The 36-year-old Jarrett, w’hose only previous Winston Cup victory NAPA Ford driver Jimmy Hensley slides backward through turn 2 after cutting a tire in the Daytona 500. Associated Press came in a side-by-side duel with last year's Daytona winner Davey Alli­ son at M ichigan In tern atio n al Speedway in August of 1991, spoke to his father on a headset immedi­ ately after getting out of his car. "You came so close when you ran out of gas in '63," the son said. "I got this one for you and all the fami­ ly." Gibbs, whose new stock car team struggled through its first season in 1992, was asked how this compared to winning the Super Bowl. "It's the same thrill," Gibbs said. "But I can't take much of the credit for this one. I was just praying on the sidelines." Earnhardt, who at 41 is getting more and more frustrated by his close calls at Daytona, was deflated but calm after the race. "I just got outdrafted, really," he said. "Our car was really loose and Dale's was really fast. I thought Jeff [Gordon] and I could work together and hang onto him, but Dale got by Jeff and then he got by me." Jarrett, who started the race on the outside of the front row, had been fighting a loose car most of the race, but seemed to get the handling solved just at the right time. He was third, behind Gordon, the impres­ sive rookie who started in the sec­ ond row, on lap 198, but zoomed past the next time around. Geoff Bodine, the 1986 Daytona winner, finished third, followed by Hut Stricklin, Gordon, Mark Martin and Morgan Shepherd. Jarrett, who led three times for eight laps — compared with Earn­ hardt's 11 times for 107 — averaged 154.972 mph. The race was marred by a wild, barrel-rolling crash on lap 169 when Michael W altrip's car broke loose, hit Derrike Cope and sent Cope into Rusty Wallace. Wallace hit the grass on the backstretch, flipped end- over-end, then rolled five times before coming to a stop on what was left of his wheels. Top-ranked Indiana survives scare by Michigan Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind.— There was no contro­ versial referee's call needed for Indiana to win this one. All it took was some solid defense and a freshman stepping up to keep the scoring bal­ anced; Brian Evans scored a season-high 17 points and No. 1 Indiana remained unbeaten in the Big Ten with a 93-92 victory over fifth-ranked Michigan on Sunday, the Hoosiers' 11th consecutive win. The last win for Indiana (22-2, 11-0 Big Ten) came in double overtime at Penn State on Tues­ day night when an admitted blown call by an official allowed the Hoosiers a chance to win it. Things looked bleak at hom e ag ain st the W olverines (19-4, 8-3) early as the H oosiers trailed by 13 in the first half. But Indiana's trade­ mark defense came through as Michigan went without a field goal for 6 1/2 minutes until a last- minute 3-point barrage, including a shot at the buzzer that made the game seem closer than it was. "The first point I want to make, and it is possi­ bly the most important point of all, was that we were able to leave the floor at halftime just down “It nearly got away from us again but we did a really good job of hanging in there and our guys off the bench really contributed.” — Bobby Knight, Indiana basketball coach two points," Indiana coach Bob Knight said. "It nearly got away from us again but we did a real­ ly good job of hanging in there and our guys off the bench really contributed." Two free throws by Jalen Rose with 6:01 to play gave the Wolverines their last lead, 78-76. Evans, a 6-foot-8 freshman, hit a 3-pointer 10 seconds later to give Indiana the lead for good. Michigan turned the ball over on its next three possessions and Indiana was able to convert on two of them, the last on another 3-pointer by Evans, who had made eight all season. "Evans played both ends well, rebounded well and got some points when we needed them ," Knight said. "H ow ever, this isn't the kind of game where you talk about individual effort. When we took the lead, I thought our defense was pretty good." As Indiana struggled from the foul line in the final m inutes m aking 8 of 12 in the last 1:40, Michigan made four 3-pointers, three by Chris Webber, to keep it close. "I'll tell you, I don't want to play them ever again when they shoot that way on 3-pointers," Knight said. "Michigan is really, really tough." The Wolverines, who made a season-high 12 3- pointers in 22 attempts and shot 58 percent for the game, have practically no chance of winning the conference title since they lost both games to Indiana this season. "We're probably not going to win the Big,Ten title. It would take a major miracle," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said as his team fell three games behind with seven to play. "Anything can happen as far as the Big Ten race goes," Rose said. "I think after the Penn State game and today it's going to be tough catching them. If they do win it, consider that as them getting the silver and we can still get the gold." Evans stepped up and it was his two free throws with two seconds left that made it 93-89 and made Webber's last 3-pointer at the buzzer for naught. Summer Sessio n . W h y 9{ot?‘Boulder. ‘Where TEXAS vs. VCU Tuesday *7:35 Erwin Center DRAW DAYS & SITES Monday & Tuesday Bellmont Hall 9:00 a.m .-4:00 p.m. Red River Box Office 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. For information call 471-3333 Dallas could lose Jackson for good Mavs‘ 1 st-round pick remains unsigned Associated Press DALLAS — The series of mis­ calculations and miscues on the part of the Dallas Mavericks in signing first-round draft pick Jim Jackson began from day one. The fallout has left the Maver­ icks trying to extricate them ­ selves from another public rela­ tions blunder and Jackson won­ dering about his fu tu re. The M avericks, at 4-43, have the worst record in the NBA and are on course to challenge the Phil­ adelphia 76ers' 1972-73 record of 9-73, the worst in NBA history. The trading deadline for this season is Feb. 25. Jackson has said if the Mavericks don't move him by that date he will refuse any trade made after the season and re-enter the draft. From the moment Jackson was selected by the M avericks, he was hailed as the cornerstone of a floundering franchise. Club officials considered him a player to rebuild around. The Mavericks flew Jackson and his agent to Dallas the day after the draft. The club wanted to hold a news conference and show the All A m erica g uard from Ohio State just how much he meant to the franchise. W hat happened next estab­ lished the tone of a failed rela­ tionship. Three key m em bers of the o rg an izatio n — N orm Sonju, Rick Sund and Richie Adubato — spoke w ith Jackson briefly then excused them selves to attend to personal matters. The th ree ap ologized for being unable to spend more time with Jackson and suggested that one of the assistant coaches would be able to take him out to dinner. “ For the good of the Mavericks in the long haul, it m ight be better to consider [the draft stalemate with Jack­ son] our Lenny Bias.” — Norm Sonju, Mavericks general manager Later Jackson and his agent M ark Term ini decided to cut their trip short and retu rn to C olum bus, O hio, on the next flight. "In and of itself, that sequence of events didn't mean much to us," Termini said. "Only in ret­ rospect did we look back on it and agree it indicated their fun­ dam ental attitu d e tow ard Jim and the negotiations." Recently, team general manag­ er Sonju told The Dallas Morning News, "For the good of the Mav­ ericks in the long haul, it might be better to consider [the draft stalem ate w ith Jackson] our Lenny Bias." Bias was the former M aryland sta r, d rafted by Boston, who died of a drug over­ dose. The M avericks say they believe Jackson is sincere about his plans regarding the Feb. 25 d eadline. They also say they don't intend to trade him in the next 11 days unless they receive equal value in return. On the surface, owner Donald C arter and his staff appear resigned to the possibility that the Mavericks could enter next season with nothing to show for the fo u rth pick in w hat has proven to be an o u tstan d in g draft. Kite Continued from page 16 dazed expression and pursed his lips in amazement at Kite's front- running exploits that left the rest of the field strung out far, far back. Rick Fehr, with Kite among the playoff losers for this title a year ago, shot 67 and matched the old tournament scoring record of 331. "It doesn't matter what you do when you run into a buzz saw ," Fehr said. "My hat's off to him. I just wish he'd picked another week to do it." His score, good enough to win all 34 of the previous Hope Classics, was a distant second against Kite's record exploits that included scores of 67, 67 and 64 on Bermuda Dunes, Tamarisk and Indian Wells, respec­ tively, and scores of 65 and 62 at the Palmer course. The victory, the 18th of K ite's career, was worth $198,000 from the total purse of $1.1 million and lifted him into the top spot on the year's money-winning list at $292,361. It also put the gam e's all-time money-winning leader within reach of the $8 million plateau. He now has $7,905,279. Scott Simpson was third alone at 335, 2 5 -under-par, w ith a final round of 66. Masters champion Fred Couples, playing with Kite and Fehr in the final threesome, had a 3-putt bogey on the final hole, could do no better than match par 72. Mountains Term A: Venn B: Term C: l erm D: N am e Address D ate o f Birth Mail to: • Enjoy the relaxed, comfortable atmosphere of the Boulder campus • Choose from over 500 courses • Select from five-, eight-, and ten-week terms or intensive courses • Have time to work, travel, or just have fun in the beautiful Rocky Plan now to make tlie Summer of 1993 a Boulder one! June 7 -July 9 July 13 - August 13 June 7 - July 30 June 7 - August 13 Shorter, intensive courses also available. Yes, send me the free 1993 CU-Boulder Summer Session Catalog. State Social Security Number* *For record-keeping and identification o f students only Office of Admissions Regent Administrative C enter 125 Campus Box 30 University of Colorado at Boulder Boulder, Colorado 80309-0030 (3 0 3 ) 4 9 2 - 2 4 5 6 Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Institution T h e Da il y T e x a n Longhorns drain No. 6 Kieschnick hurls Texas to 5-1 win W f ' s l imfmm Jason Lovelace Daily Texan Staff T exas' w eek end series ag ain st No. 6 Cal State-Fullerton, fraught with difficulty for the Longhorns in the first two contests, came to a sat­ isfying conclusion for head coach Cliff Gustafson's squad Sunday as they beat the Titans 5-1 to win the series two games to one. Brooks Kieschnick (3-1) pitched a seven-hit complete game, allowing no earn ed ru n s and strik in g ou t four. It was his longest outing of the season and continued his personal strin g of success ag a in st ran k ed teams. "I d o n 't know w hat it is about my thriving against ranked teams," Kieschnick said. "I just w anted to go a strong seven innings today , but after the seventh I told G us I felt s tro n g a n d w a n te d to keep going." Kieschnick worked himself out of a num ber of jams d uring the first three innings. In the second he sur­ re n d ere d a lead o ff d o u ble and a one-out walk before inducing Cal State shortstop Nate R odriquez to hit into a double play. In the third, K ieschnick faced firs t-a n d -th ird with no outs before getting a strike­ Bulldogs outshoot Horns Matt Schulz Daily Texan Staff Injuries, turnovers and all other difficulties aside, the Texas Longhorns are learning sev­ eral difficult lessons in this most trying of bas­ ketball seasons. Even with the personnel problems and aca­ demic difficulties it has faced, Texas can stay close with any of its opponents because of its tireless, body-sacrificing effort in each game. But the team is also being taught that players' drive, perspiration and gutsiness will likely be for naught if they continue their miserable shooting. The b ad sh o o ting b u g th at has g rip p ed Texas since December continued to ravage the 8-11 Longhorns in Saturday's 78-70 loss to G eo rg ia (10-10) in A th e n s. O nce a g a in , despite his team 's suprem e physical effort, o u th u stlin g an d o u tre b o u n d in g a big ger, stron ger G eorgia team , the Longhorns fell short. All team s have nights when a lid seems to Cal State-Fullerton’s Jeremy Carr got picked off first base by Texas’ Braxton Hickman in the second game of the series on Saturday. Eric Spier/Daily Texan Staff out, pop fly and ground out. Kieschnick also helped his cause at the plate, going 3 for 5 with two doubles and a run scored. The junior show ed com m and of b o th his b re a k in g p itc h e s — the slider and curve — while lacking a s tro n g fastb all o r c h a n g e u p . H e relied on the bender to get a majori­ ty of his outs, a strategy praised by b o th G u stafso n an d T itan s h ead coach Augie Garrido. "T hat w as a good choice on his p art to throw that m uch breaking stuff," Garrido said. "W e're a good fastball-hitting team and he d id n 't play to our strength." "H e w as outstanding and w e've hardly ever seen him better," Gus­ tafson said. "H e d id n 't really have an overpowering fastball, so he was forced to pitch today, ra th e r than just throw." Even m ore th rillin g for Texas, how ever, had to be the play of its defense. After committing 22 errors o v er th e ir first e ig h t gam es, th e L onghorns played error-free ball, almost. Third baseman Steve H ein­ rich, playing in his first game at the co rn e r for T exas, c o m m itte d an e rro r in th e fifth on a h a r d - h it ground ball to his left. It resulted in fine Titans' only run of the day. By c o m p a riso n , th e L o n g h o rn defense in Friday and S atu rd ay 's gam es resem bled the crash of the H indenburg and the Lou Brock-for Ernie Broglio trade all rolled up in one. Texas committed five errors in the series' first contest, yet inexplic­ ably prevailed in another barnburn­ er, coming back in the eigth to win 13-11. On S aturday, how ever, the team finally paid the price for its ch ro n ically p o o r d efen siv e p lay , Please see Fullerton, page 14 Lady Horns hold off Baylor surge, 89-75 Texas gets ready for SWC showdown with Texas Tech With the victory, No. 15 Texas improved its Gene Menez record to 16-5 overall and 9-0 in Southw est Daily Texan Staff Conference play and set up a showdown with th e L ady R aiders for th e leag u e c h a m p i­ onship. The Lady Horns can virtually clinch their first outright regular season crown since 1989 w ith a win over Tech in the Erwin Cen­ ter. WACO — A lm ost ev erybody had Texas Tech on their m inds Saturday in Waco. With a 16-point lead over Baylor getting larger by the shot, the Lady Longhorns were cruising to their show dow n W ednesday night w ith the Lady Raiders. But then the Texas fans becam e m ore su b d u ed an d the Lady Horns played w ith less intensity. Even coach Jody C onradt adm itted losing focus on the Lady Bears. The only one who w asn't interested in the Lady Raiders was Baylor and it alm ost gave Texas a nightm are. But the Lady Longhorns awakened just in time to capture an 89-75 vic­ tory over the Lady Bears before 3,105 in the Ferrell Center. "We had things too easy early on and we lost our focus," C onradt said. "I w anted to get C inietra [H enderson] o u t and m ake a few subs. " I guess I w as th in k in g ah ead to Texas Tech, the people that w ent in off the bench w eren't as intense as they needed to be and we let Baylor come back." Texas needed to buckle down in the stretch to drive away the 9-12 Lady Bears (4-5). Bay­ lor tied the game at 63 w ith 11:17 left to play but Nekeshia Henderson and Vicki Hall took over from there. Henderson sparked the Lady Horns' transi­ tion gam e w hile Hall led the team w ith 21 points and 15 rebounds. Henderson scored 17 points w hile handing out eight assists and collecting six steals. Texas once owned a 47-31 lead in the first "I thought we were pretty close to brilliant early," C onradt said. "I think we were close to brilliant at the end. "But we had some snooze time in the m id­ half. dle." Senior center C inietra H enderson had 17 Please see Lady Horns, page 14 Associated Press Texas center Corey Lockridge fights for a rebound with Georgia’s Arlando Bennett. cover the target. However, Texas was outshot by its opponent for the 17th straight game on Saturday. Please see Bulldogs, page 14 UT women netters dominate l ech, 8-1 Lady Homs face Top 20 foes this weekend Trent Freeman Daily Texan Staff W ith th re e ra n k e d o p p o n e n ts coming up on the road, the third- ranked Lady Longhorn tennis team co u ld h av e b een ca u g h t lo o k in g past Texas Tech Friday in Lubbock. Coach Jeff M oore's em phasis on the dual meet portion of the season, however, proved too m uch for the Red R aid ers to o v erco m e as th e Lady H orns dom inated their first team match 8-1. In the to p h alf of sing les p lay , Susan Gilchrist took care of Jennifer Brennan 6-1, 6-0; Kelly Pace defeat­ ed Ribbie Biswell 6-1, 6-4; and Vick­ ie Paynter beat Christy Davis 6-2, 6- 2. The bottom half featured wins by Jennifer Nasser over Sheri Gilreath 6-1, 6-2 a n d A n n e C o v e rt o v er Renna Rhodes 6-2, 6-2. Texas' only loss in th e to u rn a ­ m ent was a 7-6, 6-2 win by Lynne Jackson over Ashley Johnson. In doubles, Gilchrist and Paynter, the natio n's second-ranked tennis tandem, defeated Brennan and Jack­ son 6-0, 6-3. Johnson and Nasser beat Biswell and Gilreath 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, and Pace a n d C o v e rt d e fe a te d D a v is an d Rhodes 6-2, 6-4 to complete a sweep in doubles. The win against Tech, how ever, was expected. The Lady H om s will find out w hat they're really m ade of “I feel confident in the team. There is no doubt about that, but I do think it’s important to take each match seriously.” — Susan Gilchrist, Texas tennis player w hen they face No. 18 Kentucky, No. 13 Tennessee and No. 7 Georgia this coming Thursday, Friday and Sunday, repectively. H ow Texas fares in those three meets could determ ine w hether its national cham pionship hopes are legitimate. But Gilchrist said the team isn 't worried about that, yet. "I think it's always in the back of our m inds," she said. "Jeff is always pointing out to us that we can't look to the future. Y ou've got to play each match." Gilchrist said it would be foolish to look past anyone at this point. "We need to use this match as a stepping stone to next w eek," she said. "I feel confident in the team. There is no doubt about that, but I do think it's im portant to take each match seriously.' The L ady H orns w ere w ith o u t two of their top players — Jill Cray- bas and Jackie Moe — against Tech. Nasser returned after sitting out a week w ith a shoulder injury. Former Longhorn Tom Kite shot a record 325 over 90 holes. Associated Press Texas’ Kite flying high after Hope UT-ex claims record win Associated Press LA QUINTA, Calif. — Tom Kite played 90 holes better than anyone ever did before and scored a six- stroke victory Sunday in a record- s e ttin g p e rfo rm a n c e in th e Bob Hope Classic. The 43-year-old U.S. Open cham­ pion and former Longhorn had 37 birdies and two eagles in the five- d a y to u rn a m e n t an d set a PGA Tour record for 90 holes at 325. T hat's a dizzying 35-under-par and four better than the old 90-hole record of 329 set by Andrew Magee and D.A. Weibring in the 1991 Las Vegas Invitational, Saving his best for the last, Kite closed the greatest scoring binge of his 22-year PGA Tour career with a course record, 10-under-par 62 on the Arnold Palmer course at PGA West. It included a decisive 29 on the back nine. "I don't think there's any ques­ tion about it," Kite responded when asked if this was the best he'd ever played. He closed it out with birdies on the last four holes, marching up the 18th fairway to a standing ovation fiom the gallery that included the 89-year-old host comedian. Hope, a life long golfer, w ore a Please see Kite, page 15 f a s t €AK SCORES NBA Orlando................................102 N ew Y o rk ............... (3O T)100 C harlotte............................. 117 Detroit................................. 107 New Jersey..........................117 Miami..................(O T )lll Los Angeles Clippers.......... 96 Portland................................ 86 Los Angeles Lakers............135 A tlanta.................................. 96 Golden State....................... 114 W ashington.......................... 94 BRIEFS ■ T E X A S G O L F : The Longhorns finished third in the Puerto Rico Classic Sun­ day. Texas finished behind first- place Georgia Tech and sec­ ond-place Florida. The Long­ h o rn s w ere led by Ju stin Leonard, who finished third overall at 218. ■ T E X A S T R A C K : Lady Longhorn Eileen Vanisi autom atically qualified for the NCAA Indoor C ham pi­ o n s h ip s w h en she p la c e d first in the shot p u t at the Oklahom a City Classic this weekend with a m ark of 53- 5. Vanisi's teammate, Tamika H ig g in s-F ra n c is, fin ish e d first in the 55-meter hurdles with a time of 7.84. ■ TEX A S T E N N IS : The L o n g h o rn s b re e z e d p a s t Iowa Friday at the Mid-town Tennis Club in Chicago. Texas posted a 7-0 victory in the dual match. T exas' A n d e rs E rik sso n, Trey Phillips, Ian W illiams, Ernesto Ponce, David D rap­ er, C had C lark and Alistair M cD onald all w on th e ir matches over the Hawkeyes. ■ P R O T E N N I S : In Memphis, Tenn., Jim Courier held off 96th -ran ked Todd Martin 5-7, 7-6 (7-4), 7-6 (7-4) for the Kroger-St. Jude Inter­ national championship. Courier, ranked No. 1 on th e ATP to u r, h a d to d eal w ith sleep d ep riv a tio n the first five d ay s a fte r he r e ­ tu rn e d from his v ictory in the A ustralian O pen in the last week of January. "It's tough to recu p erate and get ready to go," Courier said. "So, I was very pleased I could gear up and fight m y way through." Com piled fro m s ta ff and Associated Press reports CALENDAR Monday ■ B A S E B A L L : T he Longhorns practice from 1:30 to 6 p.m. at Disch-Falk Field. ■ M E N 'S B A S K E T ­ BALL: The R unnin' H orns p ra c tic e from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the Erwin Center. Tuesday ■ B A S E B A L L : T he Longhorns play Schreiner at 2 p.m. at Disch-Falk Field. ■ M E N 'S B A S K E T ­ B ALL: The R unnin' H orns p la y V irg in ia C o m m o n ­ w e a lth a t 7:35 p.m . at th e Erwin Center. ■ W O M E N 'S B A SK ET­ BALL: The Lady Longhorns p ra c tic e from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. at the Erwin Center. Groups with sports calendar items should call 471-4591 or come by The Daily Texan at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. T he Texas m en 's swimming and diving b e a t Texas team C hristian and South­ e rn M e th o d ist th is weekend in the Long­ h o r n s ' final d u a l meets of the season. Page 15