DUNCAN’S DECISON San Antonio center Tim Duncan announces he will re-sign with the Spurs rather than leave for the Orlando Magic. S ee S p o rts, Page 7 rn v m m m m x m m m Flagship recommendations Why UT regents suggested increasing the number of premier institutions within the UT System during the next 30 years • Texas produces university grad­ uates at a lower rate than the national average • The combination of relatively low educational attainments and the ethnic shifts in the Texas popu­ lation projected through 2030 means that the state’s work force will be less educated than it is today • Education level of the Texas workforce is projected to decline, which means a large share of jobs that require a college-level educa­ tion could be lost to other states • Texas ranks No. two behind California in population but no high­ er than No. four in the amount of research and development funding from most federal agencies • The University of Texas and Texas A&M University are the only two Texas public higher education institutions that earn rankings among the nation’s top 50 Source: UT Board of Regents Ad Hoc Long Range Planning Committee THE OLDEST COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTH k * J M / i l l VOL. 100, NO. 175 WEDNESDAy, JULY If, 2000 y * * ly T exan _ _ _ 25 CENTS Regents back expansion, e-courses -------------------------------------------------------- UT System may add flagship schools By Patrick Badgley Daily Texan Staff To increase future graduation and enrollment rates within the state, a University of Texas Board of Regents committee has proposed adding to the number of flagship institutions within the UT System Tuesday. The Ad Hoc Long Range Planning Committee, which is made up of five regents, said the additional flagship, or pre­ mier, institutions are necessary in order to cater to the need of future growth enrollment in Texas universities. Regents said they will strive to improve the quality of those universities that currently serve mostly people who reside in the regions of those universities. The University is the only school in the UT System that draws a significant number of students from its own region. Universities that have the flagship title offer a greater variety of doctorate, graduate and undergraduate programs than other universities. The report stated that there was danger in keeping the University as the only UT System school that receives nation­ wide recognition. "Over subscription at UT Austin threatens our capacity to the offer acceptable choices for all of our best and brightest, committee's report said. The University, which is the largest in the nation, will con­ tinue to receive the 45 percent of the $7.5 billion Permanent University Fund it now receives. Currently, Texas produces university graduates at a lower rate than the national average. The UT System has established some institutional presence Sm REGENTS, Page 2 UT TeleCampus recommendations UT TeleCampus officials requested a $4,250,000 budget for the 2000-2001 school year. TeleCampus is recom­ mending the following additions to the program for the upcoming year: • Seven new undergraduate courses which will partially fulfill the Texas general education core curriculum require­ ment • 18 new courses to support or complete the eight grad­ uate degree programs • As many as eight courses that will add to completion programs at the undergraduate level in Nursing, Business, Criminal Justice and/or Computer Science • Development of alternative self-paced First Year Online track for students who pass a "test "designed to predict success in self-paced environment Interim Chancellor Dan Burck listens as Steve Hartman discusses technological advances that could bring in significant ^venue for the UT System. In addition to discussing money^saving strategies and minority attrition, the Board of Regents meeting also cussed new statistics on UT TeleCampus and several online programs. Adrlane Jaeckle Daily Texan Staff New courses to be offered on TeleCampus By Patrick Badgley Daily Texan Staff Undergraduate students in the UT System will be able to complete the 24 courses needed to fulfill the Texas general education core curriculum online by the 2001-2002 school year, UT TeleCampus officials said Tuesday. By adding 18 additional courses to the already vast number of graduate courses available, the UTTC will form courses that will allow students to complete mas­ ters degrees in eight programs, said Darcy Hardy, director of UTTC. Hardy the budget request and goals presenta­ tion the UTBpard of Regents Spf?ial Committee on Telecommunications and Technology! Transfer meet­ ing. \ Hardy said UT^C h^s m et most of its goals for enrollment and pra|rams and services offered thus far. She said sh rh o p e s Ifo see the program grow to benefit ^ raduate ancp undergraduate students around / ;ause w&Kave had success in our goals and there is trusC'W e're now in a position to discuss other methodology," she said. the on Telecommunications and Technology Transfer agreed C om m ittee Regents Special on that the opportunities will be helpful to students. UTTC officials said the new classes and programs could benefit anyone from a student who wanted to take online courses before college to graduate students who work away from a UT campus. Requesting a $4,250,000 budget for the 2000-2001 school year, Hardy said the group plans to take steps * toward increasing enrollment in graduate and under- graduate programs. Hardy said UTTC will continue adding classes and implement a student infom jatjon center and student support center withm the next five years. UTTC .afSo hopes lb add criminal justice, computer scierM*é and teacher certification courses to help people ^ ^ k in g furthephduCdbbn without the inconveniences college may cáwser ** » V Hardy said UTTC's goal right now is to assist lexans in education, but she said interttatiuruti...partnerships and schooling for people around the nation is a likeli­ _ hood. "W e've already been approached by people in Trinidad and Japan ... but right now our primary focus is on Texas," Hardy said. Regents also were supportive of the opportunity to allow military personnel to take classes online through See COMPUTERS, Page 2 mm— . The pros and cons of distance learning PROS • Students studying away from a UT component school are able to take courses through the system • Graduate students can take courses toward a masters degree while working • Officials said there could be more interaction between teachers and students, such as question/answer sessions. CONS • No face to-face interaction between professors and stu­ dents • Possibility of students registered for the course having . • someone else do the work • Potential problems with overcrowding in classes if major growth trend of students in the programs continues. Lucy Quintanilla/ Daily Texan Staff Carter named Options weighed in Travis House debate AAS interim director Current director Sakamoto leaves Aug. 31 Concerned residents and com m unity groups applauded the w illingness of legislative offi­ cials to discuss solutions concerning the hous­ ing of convicted sex offenders at Travis House, a substance abuse treatm ent center for felons located near UT cam pus. The m eeting, held Tuesday at N ewm an Hall of St. A u stin's Catholic Church, consisted of local law enforcem ent, residents and business groups. It w as organized by the University Area Partners, a coalition of neighborhood businesses. Travis House, located at 405 W. 18th Street, w ithin a half-m ile of two condom inium s and three child-care facilities, has a contract with the state to house felons on parole who need substance abuse treatm ent. He said at the same time they would work on long term solutions, such as legislation, so that housing of sex offenders in close proximity to residences and schools doesn't happen again. "We are w orking on this," Barrientos said. "It's not fast enough, I understand that, but we are doing the best we possibly can. By Brittney Booth Daily Texan Staff representatives of the community. Sen. G onzalo Barrientos, D -A ustin, along w ith Rep. E lliott N aishtat, D-Travis County, and Victor Rodriguez, division director for the parole division of the Texas D epartm ent of Crim inal Justice, said they recognized local businesses and resident concerns and would m eet this w eek to discuss solutions. Next week, officials plan to m eet privately w ith selected Although housing sex offenders is not in Travis H ouse's contract, last month 29 were moved there from C om stock Treatment Center in Del Valle. Com stock is located across the street from an elem entary school, violating the 1993 Child Safety Zone Law, which restricts housing convicts within 500 feet of schools and youth centers. Sm TRAVIS, Page 2 An Austin police officer listens as State Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos discusses his views about the Travis House. Alan Polzner/Daily Texan Staff By M atthew Cook Daily Texan Staff Richard Lariviere, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, ■announced Tuesday that associate professor Mia C arter will succeed A rthur Sakam oto as interim d irector for the C en ter for Asian A m erican Studies. * Sakam oto, an associate professor of sociology, will step .down Aug. 31. He led the search com m ittee to find his successor. "W e w anted som eone w ith an ethnic studies back- .ground and she has done th at," Sakam oto said. "She's also som eone w ho has had considerable adm inistrative exp erience on cam pus. She has a very good rap p ort with students." , L ariviere said C arter will be a m ajor asset as the new interim director. • "M ia C arter is well known for her active presence at the U niversity and she w as the first choice of the Asian A m erican Studies A dvisory C om m ittee," Lariviere said. "W e are grateful that she has agreed to take on this dem anding position at a critical point in the develop­ m ent of the C enter for Asian A m erican Studies." C arter could not be reached for com m ent Tuesday. ! C arter, who received her Ph.D. at the U niversity of yVisconsin-M ilwaulkee, is an 'associate professor in the English d epartm ent. She joined the UT faculty in 1992. ! C arter w as a recipient of the 2000 Texas Excellence Teaching Aw ard, an aw ard given to the student bod y's choice of top professors and gradu ate teaching assistants ifrom each of the schools and colleges, i Sakam oto joined the UT faculty in 1989, after receiving Jiis Ph.D. from the U niversity of W isconsin-M adison in 1988 I He announced that he w ould step dow n as director in ^ " 1 had been appointed to a term ending Aug. 31, and I M AAS, Pag» 2 IN S Il) E *1 e Ju s t p l a i n G o u d l e Group: Bush’s faith-based aid for disabled unconstitutional In the third installment of our series on Texas music, the Texan takes a look at Austin band Goudie. $ • « Entertainm ent, Page 12 in Texas. E d itor’s note: This is the first article in a three-part series highlighting the lines between church and state .4 fc. i, P * 4 * ♦ V 4 O P IN IO N _____ WORLD & N A T I O N __ 3 _____ 5 UNIVERSITY STATE & LOCAL ______ 6 ______7&8 SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT__ 11 9&10 CLASSIFIEDS ____ 2 THE EDGE 10*11 COMICS CONDITIONS High I Q Q L O W "9 "9 • * jtfZ Much classy summer attire wj|| kg the result of breaking 100. V is it the Dally Texan online at http://www.dailytexan.utexas.edu By Julie Nolen Daily Texan - groups who assist the A recent initiative proposed by Gov. George W. Bush to provide $100 milbon in funding to faith- disabled should be cK~ ,W ^ oCHURCH &STATE based deemed claims rehgious watchdog group. unconstitutional, - Washington, D C., Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, founded in 1947, represents 60,000 members and allied houses of worship across the nation. Barry Lynn, a spokesman for tire group, said Tuesday the government cannot subsidize or pro­ mote any religion through money. "Even if me religious groups are doing good . -U2HEIÍ2IS3K • Gov George W. Bush propbsed two initiatives to help improve transportation for disabled Americans in June, including one that provides funding to community and faith-based providers of alter native transportation. •The grant which is administered by the Rehabilitation Services Administration, offers a SlOOmiliion matching grant to both com munity and faith based programs that offer alternative transports ll°A spokesperson for Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a religious liberty watchdog group based in Washington D.C.. said giving this funding to faith-based groups is against the Constitution, which separatas church and state affairs •A Bush spokesperson said the funding that goes to the faith based groups is not violating the Constitution, although he admit­ ted the faith-based groups will remain religious. Lucy Quintanilla/Daily Texan Staff things, they cannot give money because the coastitu- tion says churches have to raise that money them­ selves," AUSCS spokesman Bam ’ Lynn said The $100- milbon grant, if approved, would be reg- Sm FAITH, Pag* 2 Page 2 Th i Daily T exan Wednesday, July 12, 2000 the Edge Wendy’s hunts for hamburger tunes across America By The Associated DUBLIN, Ohio — Musicians from all music genres harve a chance to hit the big time by writing and performing an original song about — you guessed it — their hamburger hanker­ ings. So whether your band bangs out heavy metal tunes or you prefer to belt out a love ballad, Wendy’s wants to hear your music — as long as it’s original and "sings the praises” of ham­ burgers. Amateur musicians across North America are irvtted to com­ pose a musical tribute that expresses their passion for the classic hamburger in Wendy’s Search for Sizdin’ Sounds Contest, sup­ ported by partners RollingStone.com and L TNN/CMT. “Since the 1950s, music and hamburg­ ers have held a spe­ cial place at the heart of American pop cul­ ture, but there aren't too many hamburger songs out there,” said Chris Henger, general manager of RollingStone.com. “Maybe we’ll create a new ‘hamburger clas­ sic’ with this contest.” Two contest finalists will make an appear­ ance on CBS' Late, Late Show with Craig Kilbom, and the Grand Prize winner will have a personal recording session with Wynn Jackson, founder and president of Country Club Enterprises and former vice president of promotion for RCA and Polygram Records. "I’ve loved hamburg­ ers since I was a little boy,” said Dave Thomas, Wendy's founder. "Any time I was having a bad day, I'd eat a hot 'n juicy hamburger with cool, fresh toppings and I’d always feel better. I know there are plenty of people out there who love hamburgers as much as I do. I can’t wait to hear how they put that passion to music.” For information about the contest, go to mrn.sizzlinsounds.com Source: Wendy’s Old Fashioned Hamburgers Restaurants Barrientos: Site problem won t recur TRAVIS, from 1 Barrientos played an active role in the transfer of the sex offenders from Comstock to Travis House. Cathy Norman, the University Area Partners, said she still has questions regarding the effectiveness of the meetings. president of "I'm sure some good things will come out of the meetings, but its kind of mysterious at this point," Norman said. Local resident groups said Travis House is also an inappropriate location. Rick Hardin, president of the Austin pri­ vate dorm association and UAP board mem­ ber, said nearly 10,000 UT students live in dorms within about 12 blocks of Travis House. , "Taking violent sex offenders, rapists and child m olesters, and sandwiching them between 6th street and UT, you couldn't devise a worse location than Travis House, Hardin said. Molly Ficken, 79, has been a resident of Greenwood Towers Condominiums for 21 years. She said having convicted sex offend­ ers 100 yards away puts the safety of resi­ dents, many whom are UT students, into question. . "This is not an appropriate place, Ficken said. "It's as if the community is the one who committed the crime. We are the victims of dú®-" But Rodriguez said the number of sex offenders at Travis House has already decreased from 29 to 12, and he expects the number to be zero by August, when school starts • , c Travis House residents are released after completing treatment, which usually lasts 45-60 days and are then reintegrated into the community. "We are working fast and furiously to find something that is a solution to this prob­ lem," Rodriguez said. Barrientos said because sex offenders must be released in their own counties, the num­ ber housed at Travis House could increase. "We have a law in Texas that parolees are to be released in their own counties. Fair is fair," Barrientos said. "We have to handle our own problems. They have to be some­ where." Barrientos said although sex offenders should not be housed in residential areas, housing them in less populated areas will cost more tax money. Contact us Have something you want to tell us? • News tips: texanews@uts.cc.utexas.edu •Entertainment tips: texanent@uts.cc.utexas.edu • Photo ideas: txnphoto@uts.cc.utexas.edu • Found a mistake or have an idea for the edge: copydesk@uts.cc.utexas.edu •Get in touch with the editor: texaned@uts.cc.utexas.edu Visit the Dally Texan online at h ttp ://w w w .d a ily te x a n .u te x a s .e d u Noise from farm ticks off golfers By The Associated Press STUART, Fla. — In a case of old Florida versus new, a golf course is raising a stink about the stench and noise from a neighboring pig farm whose owner plays twangy country music to soothe his swine. A judge and jury got a firsthand sniff Tuesday. Circuit Judge Ben Bryan and six tromped around Thomas Rossano's steamy, rural farm and observed 10 or so to 600-pound pigs rolling 400- jurors around in muddy pens in the 90- degree heat. They then hopped on golf carts and toured the upscale course. The Florida Club of Martin County sits about 100 yards across the street from Rossano's property. Rossano is fighting the golf club's claims in a lawsuit filed iiM f 97 that the pigs he raises to put food on his family's table smell and the music he plays to soothe the animals are a nui­ sance. The Rossanos say the developers knew about the pigs when they began building the golf course and subdivision in the mid-1990s. • . 1 Bryan wanted the jurors to assess the situation for themselves and took them to the source of the y e a r ­ long controversy. Bryan told jurors to wear heavy shoes suitable for walking in the brush. The long- sleeved, white shirt and khakis, but donned wingtips on his feet. judge wore a At the farm, strains of Christina Aguilera and the Red Hot Chili J v~% n i _ l L . . ^ « n A-s-v f U r o o Peppers thumped into three pig pens from speakers attached to a shed on Rossano's property. The swine typically listen to country music, but the radio wasn't tuning very well. A brown pig with black spots roamed around one pen as a black pig submerged in a mud hole stuck his snout above the water. The odor at the farm was definite­ ly noticeable, but did not carry across the street to hole No. 4. The music did — faintly. Carter leaves English department - 4 AAS, from 1 I'm spending more time teaching stu dents," and Sakamoto said. "A lso, I need to do more research on A sian- Americans. The Center is getting advising why they chose Sakam oto they chose Sakam oto as b ig g er... and I really c a n ', do why b igger... and I really can 't do interim director instead of hiring everything." student-endorsed Thom as Nakayama, a sociology professor at Arizona State University, as a permanent director. The A sian A m erican Studies program has been developing since 1994 and was a source of controversy in March 1999 when adm inistrators refused to explain In response, students from the «eU ito ns C Asian-Am erican Relations Group and the A nti-Racist O rganizing Com m ittee protested the p o st­ ponem ent in May with a rally and a five-hour sit-in at the liberal arts offices, w hich led to the arrests of 10 protesters. Regents: System needs more premiere schools REGENTS, from 1 r An* * number of flagship institu- ing a number of flagship institu­ tions. , hopefully better prepare students for a successful college career. ® y , _ in urban areas where population is growing. Regents believe they have the means to improve upon those components in order to better serve the region. The system will also attempt to improve the pool of students who enter the universities by continuing to implement strategies for elemen­ tary through high school students. Regents said by doing this, they will "If, in the spirit of leaving no child behind, we decide we do have needs and responsibilities then, clearly, the future student base must be devel­ oped," the report stated. to The report compares the UT the University of System California System, which has seven flagship institutions. Regents said the UC System is evidence that a state can be very successful in hav­ California universities also regu­ larly receive significantly more funding for financial assistance and scientific research from the federal government than does Texas. UT System officials said they believe the changes may spark more research projects within UT compo­ nents, which could earn those other UT schools flagship statuses. Despite the proposed changes, to regents believe the University will regents believe the University w receive nationwide continue attention. The the University may be harmed if it is forced to shoulder the burden of being the only highly-ranked school in the UT System. report said While the regents' 30-year plan of deeming new UT components flag­ ships is a long range effort, they said they will begin efforts to improve enrollment and graduation rates immediately. Plan raises issue scholastic honesty on the Web COMPUTERS, from 1 the UT System. The U.S. Army announced a new distance learning initiative for sol­ diers Monday. The $600-million pro­ gram will equip soldiers with lap­ tops and provide them with access to curriculum from American higher education institutions online. "I think we'd all be very interested in participating with the armed serv­ ices," Regent Tony Sanchez said. However, Sanchez also expressed concern about the problems that might occur if UTTC markets the programs and an excessive number of people try to get into the classes. "We are going to seek a budget increase for advertising and market­ ing," Sanchez said. "What are we going to do when everybody wants to take the course?" Group officials, who presented a request for a marketing budget increase of $125,000 for the upcom­ ing year, said they are aware of the potential problems involved with attracting too many people. Ed Sharpe, executive vice chancel­ lor for academic affairs, said UTTC is trying to prevent overcrowding and is now making decisions on how to market the courses. "What we're trying to do is bal­ n caution,' have in a classroom. Vfc'atro -in a rla c Q r n n m _ j ance aggression and Sharpe said. • Regent Patrick Oxford questioned UTTC workers about the possibility of registered students having other people do their class work. Hardy said while there are mod­ em ways, such as retinal scans, to prevent people not registered from taking the course lessons, she is con­ fident that the steps someone takes to apply and register for a course will serve as enougl) security. Another concern about increasing the number of students in online programs is whether they would be able to have the amount of interac­ tion with professors they would Hardy said there is much interac­ tion because of the question and answers students and professors present to each other through e-mail. UT President Larry Faulkner said classroom interaction is valuable for the student. "When you think about interac­ tion, you can't just think about ques­ tions and answers," he said. "A teacher takes note of facial respons­ es, and may have to reload if they can see a student is confused." UTTC, which began in May 1998, had just under 200 participants in Fall 1999. Officials expect nearly 1,800 enrolled for this fall. Bush plan would grant $100 million to faith-based groups FAITH, from 1 ulated by the Rehabilitation Services Administration, a federal agency that administers basic state and formula granted programs, service projects and rehabilitation training optional grant programs. Trie Services Rehabilitation Administration did not return phone calls Tuesday. The governor's proposal is a part of his New Freedom Initiative, which will provide the disabled enhanced access to telecommuting and improved trans­ portation to and from home. Groups would be awarded grants based on the level of planning and com­ mitment to the disabled, along with the amount of additional support for their proposal from other communities, Bush spokesman Ray Sullivan said. Sullivan said the funding does not violate the Constitution, although he admitted the groups are religion-based. After the Supreme Court decision not to allow school prayer at school football games, the separation of church and state has been questioned recently. Man Denllei Pierr e Bush wants to support these pro­ ____ . grams because they have been success­ ful in the past in Texas, Sullivan said. . . "What we have seen in Texas is that the government has made great strides, [such as] including faith-based institu­ tions in the delivery of welfare related, job training, and programs in prisons, Sullivan said. The governor's initiative includes integrating Americans with disabilities into the work force by offering a total of $475 million in incentives/ for telework and providing new resources to help small-businesses comply with the 1990 Americans With DisabiÚties Act. ADA is the anti-bias law which pro­ hibits employers from discriminating against a "qualified individual with a disability" because of that disability. "I have proposed the New Freedom Initiative to give Americans with dis­ abilities greater access and opportunity to pursue the American dream," Bush said in a statement. "In the workplace, that means enhanced access to telecom­ muting and improved transportation to and from home — tools which can enable Americans with disabilities to live independently, hold jobs and par- __i..»., in fkoir mmmiinitif*s." tidpate fully in their communities. Lynn said the constitution is correct in separating church matters from state affairs because the separation of the two means that government does not have the power to make theological judg­ ments and churches are able to operate without control by the government. Lynn added that religion should only be allowed in private. "In any place where private parties want to conduct themselves in a reli­ gious fashion is fine, as long as it doesn't disrupt what else is going on," he said. "But the government needs to keep its hands off [of religion]." Belinda Carleton, director of the Coalition of Texans with Disabilities, a group of individuals and organizations with all types of disabilities but is not faith-based, said she thinks the propos­ al is an attempt by the government to withdraw its responsibility for the dis­ abled. "The government is letting syna­ gogues and churches take care of these people," áre said. "That's the duty of the government." Carleton added that if the govern­ ment allows faith-based groups to acquire more money, then the disabled won't have as much protection against abuse. "We have enough abuse in state reg­ ulated agencies like nursing homes," she said. "If the churches have control, then we lose our oversight [over th< then we lose our oversight [over the agencies]." Carleton added that she doesn't see foe point in providing money to these faith-based groups. "The disabled want to be integrated into regular society — being run around by faith-based groups is not inclusion into society," she said. The New Freedom Initiative also funds 10 pilot programs intended to develop solutions to foe transportation dilemma many of foe disabled face. Pilot programs are not what foe dis­ abled needs, Carleton said. "We've had pilots on transportation for them to get around for 20 years now — we need affordable and accessible transportation," she said. We need to tap into foe funding in foe Department of Transportation left untapped every year." that goes Carleton added that Bush s father, former President George H. Bush, had a better plan to take care of foe disabled. "What I want to say back to [George W. Bush] is to give back his father's quote [when he enacted foe American Disabilities Act]," she said. "'We must not and will not rest until every man and woman with a dream has means to achieve it.' Now, [George W.] Bush is saying foe disabled can t achieve any­ thing on their own — lef s go with what your dad said, George." S u l i s f a c l i o n <11111 I V I i l i i ' d , ' inni,- i r i l h n o n n i / u i u J u i ' J r c c . ___ _ I CASH * CARRY I DAILY SPECIALS, I CASA VERDE FLORIST I 4 81-0091 FTD 1806 Ko«niq Ln. H i J - 1 I I ...I TOO I Get your UT news in The Daily Texan LSAT Have you signed up fo r a TPR LSAT course? Your competition has! CaU today to register. A n you a n o n -ln .u lln dependant diabetic and able to do home glucose m onitoring7 You participate In 8 clinical visite end receive up to $400 If you ere between the ages to 20 end 78 \ . . . I .jK H i iH i r i B i H n l l v t U P T V l t t l T M M l C h i t u d l f l t o h t l p f V i l U A t i trm study TdlAldd mddtedt - A - i r f #nd compensation M i l A S . C A L I « O L I I H . . . 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TEST I www.PrincetonReview.com n»PwmWi law* n not att*WÉa* WnteW ütwwvty a Ln* Sew» T he Daily Texan July 12. 2000 summit begins W orld&Nation Pipeline explodes in Nigeria More than 100 dead in Niger Delta By The Associated Press ABUJA, Nigeria — More than 100 charred bodies, many of them children in school uni­ forms, lay scattered among burned palm and rubber trees Tuesday after a damaged gasoline pipeline exploded in southern Nigeria, killing villagers scavenging fuel in buckets and cham­ ber pots. The death toll was expected to climb. About 100 villagers were seriously injured; 100 others were reported missing, witnesses and news reports said. The cause of the explosion was not known. Some local newspaper reporters who visited the scene estimated 150 - 250 people were killed. Officials said the blast occurred Monday morning when the punctured 12-inch pipeline caught fire near the villages of Adeje and Oviri- Court, in the oil-rich Niger Delta. The fire continued to bum Tuesday and clouds of black smoke hung over the area. State petroleum company workers and firefighters were trying to extinguish the flames. The pipeline was carrying gasoline from a refinery in Warri to northern Nigeria. The accident resembled a similar tragedy in nearby Jesse, where more than 700 people were killed'in October 1998. Since then, the govern­ ment has tried to educate villagers about the danger of "scooping," the illegal practice of scavenging fuel from pipelines. But absolute poverty in the region means many people remain willing to risk death for fuel. Some of the injured were taken to a hospital in Warri. But many others were being treated at home by traditional doctors because they feared arrest. In the past, the government has prosecut­ ed and even threatened to shoot pipeline van­ dals on sight. The blast destroyed fields and buildings within a one-mile radius. Burned corpses lay scattered about the area Tuesday — some still clutching containers used to collect fuel — while villagers began burying other bodies in shallow graves. Sola Adebayo, a reporter for Lagos' Daily Times newspaper, counted 100 bodies before giving up. Dan Akpele, a farmer living near Oviri-Court, said in a telephone interview that he heard a loud explosion early Monday and saw swarms of people running and screaming. Many were unable to outrun the leaping flames, other witnesses said. W hat sparked the explosion remained unclear, although witnesses said the pipeline had been punctured by vandals days earlier. Children and adults flocked to the area from surrounding villages each day to gather the gasoline in buckets and sell it along roadsides, the witnesses added. Government officials were not available for comment Tuesday. ton Issues between the two sides. By The Associated Press THURMONT, Md. — In the same rustic setting where Israel forged its first peace treaty with an Arab enemy, President Clinton brought together Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat in a renewed quest Tuesday for a lasting Mideast peace. "There is no guarantee of success, but not to try is to guarantee failure," Clinton said. Insisting on compromise, Clinton said peace w as a "two-way street and that both sides must find a way to resolve competing claims." Clinton opened the summit at the Camp David presidential retreat, where in 1978 Israel and Egypt struck a peace deal, by meet­ ing separately with each leader. Arafat first, then Barak. Afterward, the three leaders walked side- by-side down a winding asphalt path to Laurel Cabin to begin the first three-way meeting of the summit. Clinton put one arm around Barak, the other around Arafat. Seated at a long table, they conversed for a half-hour, but not alone. Clinton had eight assistants with him, Barak and Arafat, five each. "It was a good atmosphere; the discussion was serious," White House spokesman Joe Lockhart said afterward. However, he declined to say whether either of the two leaders acknowledged Clinton's spirited appeal for them to compro­ mise on core issues. Nor did Lockhart ven­ ture any assessment of whether Clinton had made progress. A second set of separate meetings with Barak and Arafat was scheduled tor later in the day. "We pledged to each other we would answer no questions and offer no comments, so I have to set a good example," Clinton said. Asked if that were the only agreement reached so far, Clinton said, "That would be answering a question." The mood appeared jovial as Arafat and Barak playfully sought to give way to the other when entering the cabin. But the scene belied the sharp differences between the two sides. Barak and Arafat are far apart on all key issues that must be settled to attain a compre­ hensive accord. Strenuous efforts and dogged shuttling by U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Dennis B. Ross and other U.S. medi­ ators have failed to make a serious dent. "The two leaders have profound and wrenching questions, and there can be no success without principled compromise," Clinton said at the White House before boarding a helicopter to fly to Camp David. Bringing the two sides to agreement will not be easy. The central issues have defied solution in the seven years since Israel agreed to begin turning over territory the Palestinians. to They range from Jerusalem, part of which the Palestinians seek but which Barak insists will never be divided, to claims ot Arab refugees to homes in Israel from which they say they were ousted at Israel s founding a half-century ago. Clinton said both Barak and Arafat have demonstrated they are committed to reach­ ing an agreement. Both leaders feel the weight of history but both, 1 believe, recognize this is a moment in history which they can seize," Clinton said. "We have an opportunity to bring about a just and enduring end the Israeli- Palestinian conflict. That is the key to lasting peace in the entire Middle East." to He cautioned, however, that "it will take patience, creativity and courage" to resolve the differences, but he said both Arafat and Barak have those qualities. "I'll do everything I can over the coming days to see that this moment of promise is ful­ filled," Clinton said. While no deadline has been set, Clinton is scheduled to go to Japan on July 19 for an eight-nation economic sum ­ mit. There, an Israeli diplomat said, Clinton intends to appeal for financial help to assist Palestinian refugees and to implement any agreement he might strike with Barak anti Arafat. The Palestinians' designated spokes­ woman, Hanan Ashrawi, continued to fire off strong criticism of Barak despite his offers to compromise. "Israel should not come to the negotiations with extremist positions such as not return­ ing to the 1967 boundaries or maintaining sovereignty over Jemsalem or rejecting the return of refugees," Ashrawi said at the National Press Club in Washington. "Being extremely realistic, 1 don't expect to see a miraculous, substantive breakthrough because the issues are complex. 1 have read the Israel proposals and the gap is extremely wide. It will take a great deal of effort to find areas of consensus, even convergence," she said. Drue: informant caught lying, cases in jeopardy ® By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS — In 16 years on the street, working in cities across the country as an informant for the Drug Enforcement Administration, Andrew Chambers put up some big numbers. He seized 1.5 tons of cocaine and $6 million in assets, arrested and convicted 445 drug dealers and other criminals and earned at least $2.2 million in rewards and other com­ pensation. But Chambers' detractors can point to some big numbers of their own; He has been arrested at least 16 times, and lied over and over on the witness stand about those arrests — as well as about his educational background and whether he had . . . paid taxes on his DEA earnings. Because of those lies, prosecutors have dropped charges against 15 alleged drug dealers around the country, and at least 12 others who were convicted in part on Chambers testimony are demanding release. Those numbers could grow. The DEA is going through each tran­ script of every' trial Chambers has ever testified at, looking for lies. "It's information that we think we have an ethical responsibility, if not a legal responsibility, to be able to pro­ vide to prosecutors who still have pending said DEA spokesman Terry Parham. "This information, on top of that, needs to be turned over to fire defense." cases," The DEA insists Chambers never lied about the drug deals he busted R,* rv » n Stew aal the former up. But Dean Steward, the former federal public defender who is gen­ credited with bringing erally Chambers' lying to light, questioned that. "When you got a guy that would lie about just about everything else, why do you think he would tell the truth about what led up to the deal?' Steward said. "That's just common sense." In any case, Chambers' lies deprived defense attorneys of infor­ mation they were legally entitled to have to try to undermine his credi­ bility in front of the jury. The DEA considers Chambers, 43, the most valuable undercover informant in its history. But he w as dropped in February, and his actions are forcing the agency to take anoth­ in said er look at how it ases informants in er look at how it uses informants the war on drugs. One thing the DEA has deter­ mined is that Chambers started lying in 1985, one year after he began work as an informant. The agency also determined that DEA agents knew he was lying in 1985 but continued to use him without telling prosecu­ tors and defense attorneys about the problem. I here is no telephone Listing for Chambers in the St. Louis area. But Chambers appeared recently on ABC's 20/20 and took questions dur­ ing an online chat after the broad­ cast. 1 le insisted he lied only about himself. "I was truthful about what hap­ pened when the deal was going on, he said. "1 didn't think that what I said about myself was that impor­ tant. Everything that happened dur­ ing the deal was recorded on video and I was accompanied by federal agents. The guys were dnig dealers They had prior histories before 1 even met them." According to Parham, I hambers was embarrassed to admit he had been convicted of soliciting a prosti­ tute, and arrested on suspicion ot assault, forgery, writing bad checks and impersonating a federal agent. Chambers had also testifii'd that he had paid his income taxes; it turns out he didn't pay tax e s on $100,000 the DEA had paid him over six years. He had also testified that he studied criminal justice at Iowa Western Community College; the school has no record of his attending. Bashar Assad elected president of Syria By The Associated Press DAMASCUS, Syria — A month after the death of 1 lafez Assad, Bashar Assad on Tuesday completed the smooth ascent to the presidency that his father had planned, winning 97.29 percent approval in an election in which he was the only candidate. Syria's parliament formally announced that Bashar Assad s swearing-in ceremony will be on July 17, after which he will embark on a seven-year term that is full of risks. The military, which is key to the control of this nation of 17 million people, and the political establishment rallied around Bashar Assad. In him they see a chance for a continua­ tion of the stability enjoyed under the elder Assad for three decades. have Bashar Assad, ^ former eye doctor, will have to test his unhoned skills as a politician against domestic and foreign challenges. Before his father's death, he had been closely associated with an anti-corruption campaign that earned him popularity' among ordinary Syrians. But it he con­ tinues the purge and at the same time liberalizes Syria's shackled economy, he risks alienating some powerful people who have benefited from a corrupt and controlled market. On the diplomatic front, the late president gave Bashar Assad several tasks — both at home .md in neighbonng Lebanon where Syria is the main power — to thrust him into public roles and recognition. But he has also left his son delicate unfinished busi­ ness: negotiations w ith Israel over the Golan Heights, captured by Israel in 1967. Hafez Assad pledged he . 1,-n t L : . would not accept anything less than the recovery of all of the Golan, a position his son has adopted but one that leaves him with little room to maneuver in the negotiations. In announcing the results ot Monday's referendum, Interior Minister Mohammed Harba said Syrians have said Yes to the constant path ... and a promising future." Harba said that ot the ^.44 mil­ lion eligible voters, about 8.93 million cast their ballots, a nearly 94.6 percent turnout. Asked about reports that some people were coerced into voting, | larba said, "The masses that have been crying since President Hafez Assad's death have they been forced to shed tears? ... Such reports do not harm Syna ." The outcome of the referen­ dum was never in doubt. Members of the Syrian Parliament clap their hand* during a Damascus Tuesday where the parliament formally announced that Bashar swearing In ceremony will be on July 17. tasad of Syria In Monday's referendum, an outcome considered a foregone conclusion. Associated Press Indigenous rebels free nine hostages in Fiji, 27 still captive SUVA, Fiji — Indigenous Fijian rebels freed nine of their 27 government captives Wednesday, mov­ ing this Pacific island nation closer to the end of a crisis. Other rebels seized a beach resort where The Blue Lagooti was filmed, later releasing its 40 guests. The release of the government captives came hours after an unrelated rebel group seized a posh resort on Turtle Island over what they said was a land dispute. The 40 guests, including 15 Americans, were released from the resort and placed on a cruise ship to Fiji's main island, Viti Levu. The resoiTs owner, American Richard Evanson, was being held in a hotel room with two of the people who occupied the island. The taking of the resort was the first attack on a foreign-owned facility during the government cri­ sis on the Pacific island nation. The nine government hostages were turned over to the Red Cross and then went to their homes, police and a Red Cross doctor said. They included all the ethnic Indian parliamentarians except for the deposed prime minister and his son. The other remaining hostages are all ethnic Fijian legislators. Bhagat Ram, the Red Cross doctor who saw the nine freed hostages, said all of them were unharmed. AOL launches Spanish language service, seeks future ventures SPRINGFIELD, Va. — America O nline Inc. launched AOL Mexico on Tuesday, the com pa­ n y 's first foray into the S panish-speaking w orld. The launch of the Spanish-language service comes as AOL, the w orld s largest online serv­ ice provider, increasingly looks to overseas m arkets to continue its expansion. AOL hopes to capitalize on the increasingly close cultural and economic ties betw een the U nited States and Mexico, and it has team ed up w ith the Latin America m edia com pany the ■ C isneros G roup to launch AOL Mexico and future ventures in South America. AOL Mexico will offer the sam e range of fea­ tures provided to custom ers of the English-lan­ guage service, b u t w ith Spanish content pro­ v id ed by El U niversal, M undo Soccer, - CN N enEspanol.com , LatinStocks.com and o th­ ers. As w ith AOL's past overseas ventures, ana­ lysts expect grow th to be slow. Despite its m arket dom inance in the United States, w here its Internet services boast 26 mil­ lion custom ers, AOL lags behind other online p ro v id ers in Japan, G erm any, France and C anada. AOL A rgentina is to debut this sum ­ mer. Senate listens to testim ony in Internet music debate WASHINGTON — Metallica drum m er Lars Ulrich — an outspoken critic of Internet music sharing — told a Senate committee Tuesday that government intervention is needed to stop what he . called Internet music "piracy." "I don't think there is a way this can be worked out without your involvement," said Ulrich, whose . band led the charge against Napster Inc., whose service allows computer users to make perfect copies of digital recordings over the Internet. The Senate Judiciary Committee, led by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah — a songwriter himself — asked musicians, record company representatives and Internet company executives to explain the industry's fight with companies like Napster and Gnutella, a similar service. Hatch, along w ith Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., say they are still trying to decide whether government intervention is truly necessary. Metallica and rapper Dr. Dre have been the artists most critical of Internet music "duplication," and the recording industry has sued to stop com­ panies like Napster and MP3.com, which already has settled some of the lawsuits against it. Napster lets users swap songs for free by trading MP3 files, a compression format that turns music on compact discs into small computer files. Gnutella software developer Gene Kan said the software community — the "pirates," he admitted — w ould not be stopped by mandating encryption, setting up licensing fees or trying to mandate that people identify themselves online. Scientists: genetically modified crops crucial to fight hunger LONDON — To combat world hunger, rich nations must boost funding for research into genet­ ically modified crops and poor farmers must be • protected from corporate control of the technology, a group of science academies said Tuesday. In an unprecedented report by seven independ- ; ; ent academies from both the developed and devel- • oping world, experts agreed that genetic modifica- 1 tion of crops is crucial to addressing the problem of ; fi\e world's growing population and shrinking land for growing food. Genetically modified, or transgenic, crops are created when scientists introduce a gene from one species into another. The technique can be used to make crops more resistant to disease and pests, for­ tify them with extra vitamins or vaccines, and boost their tolerance to drought. The academies' report, launched in London by the Royal Society, urged companies and research institutions to share their knowledge and called for a ban on broad patents covering GM technology. Corporations must have incentives to produce characteristics needed in the developing world, and small farmers in developing nations should enjoy special exemptions from licensing agree­ ments, the report said. Meanwhile, the public sector must create more genetically modified crops that benefit poor farm­ ers. Compiled from Associated Press reports The Daily Texan JULY 12, 2000 T he Du l y T exan Editor Cecily Sailer AsMK'iale Editors Karen Gross Marshall Maher Michael Wilt Opinions expn-ssed in The Daily Texan an* those of the editor, the editorial board or writer of the artidc TV“*v an» not necessarily those of the University administra­ tion, die Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. VIEWPOINT _______ Budgetary Blunders Texas lawmakers, drunk on the knowledge drat drey sent their governor off to the national arena with an arsenal of tax cuts and legislative successes to drum A1 Gore with, had a ball during the last legislative session. But now the party's is over and Texas is left with a $740-million hangover. . Legislative budget officials are estimating Texas is around $740 million short for next year's budget. While lawmakers sound cautiously optimistic, their trepidation is understandable — t h ^ r e the onesjvho blew all our money. The hscal irresponsibility of Texas i nmmpnhnff , ¿ e way to the top. Commenting lawmakers goes on the expected budget shortfall, Gov. George W. — Bush's spokeswoman, Linda Edwards, went so far as to say, "the state will be able to maintain current levels of service and perhaps even expand or improve in some limited areas." okeswo Ige. « *.« Aiü U N O W U i u a i i, Ai ~ . > The type of legislative voodoo it would require to expand social services with a budget deficit is the same budget trickery that got Texas in this mess in the first , pluse con­ verted into a halfway honre for gfrls,thui becoming the first home for young ladies in the state. What about plagiarism? This letter is in response to Monty Markland's editorial column that appeared in Tuesday July llto's Daily Texan. University T h e Daily T exan July 12, 2000 A F T fo rm s r e g u la tio n s O R jg iM jO N T g re r a g H ^ for internet colleges By Matthew Cook Daily Texan Staff The American Federation of Teachers, a national educators' labor association, proposed a set of guide­ lines last week for Internet-based colleges and universities. At the AFT's national convention in Philadelphia Thursday, members voted on a proposal that lays out a list of recommendations for schools which offer undergraduate degrees online. AFT spokesman Jamie Horwitz said the organization, which repre­ sents 110,000 higher education fac­ ulty, is already including the guide­ lines in contracts. "I think part of it is that we think a lot of [online education] has been vendor driven, rather than educa­ tion driven," Horwitz said. According to a statement released by AFT, the organization would like to see several guidelines implement­ ed: academic faculty must maintain control of distance education cours­ es; distance education students must be given advance information about course requirements, equip­ ment needs and support throughout the course; close student-teacher interaction is required; equivalent library materials should be available to distance education students; assessment of student performance should be as strict as assessments in classroom-based courses; counsel­ ing and advising should be avail­ able; full undergraduate degree pro­ grams should include classroom- based coursework. ’ Horwitz said AFT is not against online education, but merely wants to ensure that distance students receive a quality education. "We do like distance learning and we think it's a great tool," he said. Pamela Pease, president of Jones International University — "The First Fully Online Accredited University" — said the school is committed to giving a quality edu­ cation. "In our university we are very concerned about student learning, Pease said. "It is a rigorous instruc­ tional experience." Jones International University was established in 1993 and became operational in 1995. It received regional accreditation in 1999. to receive "We're the first 100-percent online university regional accreditation," Pease said. "If some­ body can meet those standards, they're meeting the standards of any other institution of higher educa­ tion." Pease said the university offers the services available at any tradi­ tional college, including academic advising and an online library. Jennifer Reese, communications coordinator for UT TeleCampus, the online distance education system for UT Systems, said the AFT's propos­ al will not affect the University. TeleCampus only offers graduate degrees online, Reese said, and meets all the guidelines laid out by AFT. "Believe me, what we're doing isn't the easiest way or the fastest way, we just believe it has the most integrity and worth," Reese said. MD Anderson Cancer Center first in U.S. for cancer treatment By Anita Powell Daily Texas Staff The U niversity of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center ranked first in the nation for cancer treat­ m ent in the annual "A m erica's Best H ospitals" to be released by US News and World Report July 17. study, The MD A nderson C ancer Center has long been regarded for can cer research and treatm ent, said C harles Mullins, executive vice chancellor for health affairs for the University. "The ranking by US News and W orld Report is a well deserved recognition of MD A nderson Cancer Center and President John M endelsohn," Mullins said in a statement. the hospital survey According to US News and World Report, is intended to educate the public on health, care issues. Out of 2,643 hospitals evaluated, only 173 made the ranking. Based in H ou ston's Texas Medical Center, the w orld's largest medical center, the MD Anderson Cancer Center is only one of the U niversity's health science branch­ es in Houston. The University of Texas H ealth Science C enter at H ouston and the UT School of Public Health are also based in Houston. Mendelsohn said he has hopes of expanding MD A nderson to reach patients around the world. "W e've always had about 6 or 7 percent of international patients, Mendelsohn said. "From Europe, the majority come from Spain. So it's only natural to set up [an MD Anderson branch] in Madrid. We were invited to do this, and we are thinking of doing the same kind of thing in other referral areas." MD Anderson was also ranked sixth in gynecology, 12th in urolo­ gy and otolaryngology and 41st in digestive disorders. Although MD Anderson ranked highly, it did not place on the US News and W orld Report "hospital honor roll." The honor roll is given to hospitals ranking first in more than one specialty. MD Anderson, Mendelsohn said, is more of a spe­ cialty hospital and therefore is not eligible for the honor roll, which ranks general hospitals. very are p roud ," Mendelsohn said. "W e are going to take a brief time to celebrate and then we are going to try to get bet­ ter and better." "W e Donald Evans, chairman of the UT System Board of Regents, said to be MD A nderson deserves ranked highly. "The ranking of MD Anderson as the number one cancer center in the nation by US News and World Report confirms the UT System's continuous commitment to excel­ lence," Evans said. "MD Anderson has earned its reputation as a pre­ eminent research institution and treatm ent center through many years of hard work and a single- minded focus on the elimination of cancer." Michael Ahearn, dean of allied health at MD Anderson and for­ mer UT graduate, said the commit­ ment to excellence is not restricted to MD Anderson but extends through the entire UT System. "I think the MD Anderson has always had an outstanding reputa­ tion and this latest recognition is just an acknowledgement of that," Ahearn said. "I came here because one of my UT professors told me that this is the place to be." Mendelsohn said he believes the excellence in research and academ ­ ics is not isolated to MD Anderson. "We are very proud to o t a part of the UT system," Mendelsohn said. "U T pride is big here. There are a lot of UT people here at MD Anderson. I think it's an outstand­ ing institution." « fill nn ln n ap r hp u sed to fu n d will no longer be used to fund student organizations. it. In a June 23 ruling, a three- judge panel of the 7th C ircuit C ou rt of A pp eals b rou gh t the issue of view p oin t n eu trality back. Southw orth asked the court to direct the U.S. District C ourt in M adison to reopen the issue of view point neutrality in the way student organizations are funded. said Southw orth's request to disregard the earlier agreem ent on view ­ "re a so n ­ point n eu trality w as able." ap p eals co u rt The "S co tt S ou th w o rth and his attorneys had earlier agreed, and even affirmed in their oral argu­ ment before the Supreme Court, that funds were distributed w ith­ out the regard to the view points expressed by student organ iza­ tions receiv in g fu n d in g ," said P atricia Brady, deputy general counsel the UW System . "They m ade a strategic legal deci­ sion in agreeing with us on that point, and now they want to undo for The Justice D epartm ent's brief questioned the fairness of the co u rt's ruling. "The issue of w hether this C ourt should make substantive rulings on issues to be decided or potentially to be decided in a given case, but w ithout affording the parties an opportunity to be heard, raises an issue of excep­ tional im p o rtan ce," the Justice D epartm ent stated. The university filed a statement with the appeals court in May identifying the issues that needed to be decided on rem and. It was not asked to brief any of the sub­ stantive issues addressed in the cou rt's remand decision. The Justice D epartm ent, which is representing the UW System in litigation, is requesting that both the three-judge panel and the full 11 m embers of the court rehear the case. ix.. u n .» By The University Wire MADISON, W is. — The U niversity of W isconsin System , rep resen ted by the W isconsin D ep artm en t of Ju stice, filed a petition July 7 in the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals questioning the co u rt's June 23 ruling the Southw orth case. in In 1996, Scott Southw orth — along w ith sev eral o th er UW - M adison law students — filed a formal com plaint against the UW System claim ing the m andatory fee required by all students to fund student organizations was unconstitutional. Two low er cou rts sided with S outh w orth and the oth er law stu d en ts, but the u n iversity appealed both decisions, which eventually brought the case to the atten tio n of the U.S. Suprem e C ourt in 1999. The Suprem e C ourt announced its unanim ous decision to side with the UW System in March, saying that the First A m endm ent p erm its a public u n iv ersity to ch arge stu d en ts a m an d ato ry activ ity fee if the p ro cess for approving m oney is done in a "view poin t-n eu tral fashion." Before the trial began, both p ar­ ties agreed to a stipulation that student-activity funds w ere dis­ tributed on a "v iew p oin t-n eu tral" basis and that a variety of organi­ zations w ere financed. The S uprem e C ou rt sent the case back to the low er courts for co n sid eratio n , a p art of the financing p rocess that involves use of a student referendum to decide financing. The court stated that the refer­ endum appears to violate the principle of viewpoint neutrality, since it relies on a majority vote. The UW System has since decided the referendum process m .ff-O ’Brvan and Georglanna Massey tease their friend Mary Norris after she complains about her near per- fect score on fhe i T p l a c e m e n f i e s . fn Beautord H. Jester Center. The three students are currently attending UT fresh- man orientation and will attend the University in the fall. Alan P olzner/D aily Texan Staff Police arrest Penn State U. protesters By The University Wire UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Before police officers put him in a choke hold and dragged him inside, Pennsylvania State University stu­ dent Justin Leto stood defiantly on a balcony on the front of Osm ond Lab, with duct tape partially covering his m outh and a gas mask hanging from his neck. Along with the other members of Redirection 2000, the student group responsible for the march on East College Avenue Sunday, Leto direct­ ed his venom toward the governors gathered in State College. Leto and four other members of Redirection 2000 were arrested for refusing to leave the lab while trying to stage a protest during the N ational G overnors' A ssociation Annual M eeting Monday. The two men and three women were arraigned on charges ot defiant trespass before D istrict Ju stice Bradley Lundsford and refused to identify themselves, according to a statement from Penn State Police Services. Lundsford set the prelim inary hearings for July 19 and released the people on nom inal bail after they agreed to provide their nam es to the court, according to the release. "A for Taste As governors gathered across the street at the Paul Robeson Cultural of C enter Pennsylvania," a showcase for the state's cu isin e and technological innovation, the protesters displayed signs, including a large banner that read, "TH E PEO PLE'S CO N V EN ­ TION / a socially responsible alter­ native to the G overnor's Convention / JULY 7-9." Leto claimed the group had a per­ mit to dem onstrate at the lab, and that the police had no right to remove it from the premises. However, according to the press release, police informed the students they wrere trespassing and told them to remove the signs and come off the window ledges. The group refused to remove the signs from the front of the Osmond building, prom pting officers from Penn State Police Services to remove the signs and protesters from the building. Form er Penn State professor Juilan Heicklen stood on the side­ walk outside of the lab and shouted to those w ithin earshot, T h is is what the United States has come to. This is not my country." By Matthew D. Wunsche. Pennsylvania State University You can e a rn m oney w h ile c o n trib u tin g to the future o f m e d ic in e b y p a rtic ip a tin g in a PPD D e ve lo p m e n t research study. W e c o n ­ d u ct m e d ic a lly supe rvised research studies to h e lp e va lu a te n e w m e d ica tio n s. W e neecj both he a lth y in d iv id u a ls a n d those w ith s p e c ific m e a ica l c o n d itio n s to p a rtic ip a te in o u r studies. Studies a re * - ■ 1 a v a ila b le to a c c o m m o d a te a lm o st any schedule. You have to m eet c e rta in c rite ria to q u a lify fo r a study, in c lu d in g o u r free m e d ica l e xam a n d screening tests. C a ll us fo r a n sw ers to y o u r questions a b o u t PPD D e ve lo p m e n t. A n d lo o k fo r o ur current study o p p o rtu n itie s listed b e lo w . Be a p a rt o t som ething b ig a t PPD D e ve lo p m e n t: oiiMBBlIT STUDY OPPOBTBMIT1ES COMPENSATION REQUIREMENTS TIMELINE Two, two night stays M ultiple outpatient visits Healthy, non-smoking & currently taking birth control pills Healthy W omen 1 8 to 45 Men and Women 19 to 6 0 Fri. Jul. 28 through Sun. Jul. 30 Fri. Aug. 25 through Sun. Aug. 27 Fri Sept. 22 through Sun. Sept. 24 Fri. Oct. 20 through Sun Oct. 22 Brief outpatient visits Jul. 31-Aug. 2, 4, 6, 8, 12,16, 28-30, Sep 1, 3, 5, 9, 13, 25-27, 29 Up to $ 2 5 0 0 Up to $ 4 0 0 0 Up to $ 1 0 0 0 Up to $ 3 0 0 0 Up to $ 1 5 0 0 Up to $ 1 5 0 0 By Alicia Hammond, University of Wisconsin Men and Women 21 to 40 Women 1 8 to 50 Men and Women 1 8 to 75 Men and Surgically Sterile or Postmenopausal Women 18 to 6 0 PA IN IMWM No relief from NSAIDs or acetaminophen? You participate In Itlple clinical studies \o receive up to $350 s-multli e m A w k ca fa u c t m*d1c*Ily supervised research studies to hehp eveKiele K K U S t n . . a g ib le pert,cipenuw in receive freestu ty rotated m *U M ' e*ams. applicable procedures, and compensation for time and travel. t t A S f c C A L L T O L L T K f c t T O R C O M h l H E OI: T AI L S 888- 258-8947 B E N C H M A R K R E S E A R C H Re seai Healthy & non-smoking Thu. Jul. 2 7 through M on. Jul. 31 Thu. Aug. 3 through M on. Aug. 7 Healthy, non-smoking and currently taking O rtho-Novum 7 / 7 / 7 Two weekend stays Multiple outpatient visits Healthy & non-smoking Healthy & Non-smoking W ed. Jul. 26 through Sat. Jul. 30 Thu. Aug. 3 through Sun. Aug. 6 Fri. Aug. 1 1 through M on. Aug. 14 Fri. Aug. 1 8 through M on. Aug. 2 1 Fri. Aug. 25 through Mon. Aug. 28 Men and Women 1 8 to 7 5 Up to $ 1 5 0 0 Healthy & non-smoking Sat. Jul. 29 through W ed Aug. 2 Sun. Aug. 6 through W ed. Aug. 9 ch T S T . typically .nvolve adn^n, J ^ ^ U w e ^ o t . o n a l m e d r c a ,.^ blood draw n and o .h e rp K x e d u re c U. Wisconsin appeals part of Southworth ruling 4K » . The Daily Texan June 12, 2000 State& Local c o m m u n ity o u t r e a c h p j j y weather increases | Austin area grass fires By Jeffrey Hlpp Daily Texan Staff A s te m p e r a tu r e s c o n tin u e to rise an d w ater le v e ls c o n ­ tin u e to d ro p , the A u stin are a is e x p e rie n c in g an in c re a se d n u m b e r o f g r a s s a sp o k e sw o m a n for the A u stin Fire D e p a rtm e n t sa id . fir e s, "W ith the lack o f ra in fa ll th at w e 'v e h ad o v e r the la st m o n th in the A u stin area, the rain th at w e receiv ed e arlie r th is se a so n is go n e, the g r a s s is dry, an d the d ry g r a s s p r o ­ v id e s fu el that e a sily c a u se d a ra p id sp r e a d o f g r a s s fire, a fire s p o k e s ­ d e p a r tm e n t w o m a n sa id . S in ce the b e g in n in g o f July, to 71 A F D h a s r e s p o n d e d g r a s s fires, 19 o f w h ich h a v e o c c u rre d sin c e F rid a y . T he n u m b e r o f g r a s s fires in the first w eek o f th is m on th is n e a rly three tim es the 19 in ci­ d e n ts d u rin g Ju n e, a s p o k e s ­ w o m a n fo r A FD sa id . A F D fir e fig h te r s a s s i s t e d the S o u th e a st T rav is C o u n ty a fire Fire P a tro l T u e sd a y in fig h t­ on n in e -a c re in g B u r le so n R o a d n e a r F e lte r L a n e , w h ich s p o k e s ­ w o m a n d e sc rib e d a s the w o rst th is m onth . th e U su ally , the sp o k e sw o m a n sa id , the fire s are c a u se d by im p ro p e rly d is p o s e d o f c ig a ­ rette b u tts or c a rs p a rk e d in ta ll g r a s s , b u t e a sy s a fe ty s te p s can be taken to p re v e n t su c h in cid en ts. " J u s t u sin g a lot o f c o m m o n se n se o u td o o r s an d k e e p in g in m in d w h at k in d o f th in g s can be a so u rc e o f ig n itio n g o e s a lo n g w ay ," the s p o k e s ­ w o m an sa id . T he Fire D e p a rtm e n t re c o m ­ m e n d s c itiz e n s take the fo l­ lo w in g s te p s to p re v e n t g r a s s fires: • D o n 't th ro w c ig a r e tte b u tts on the g ro u n d or o u t o f a v e h ic le . D is p o s e o f th em p ro p e rly an d m ak e su re they are e x tin g u ish e d . • D o n 't p a rk a u to m o b ile s o v er d ry g r a s s or sh ru b s. • P a re n ts s h o u ld e d u c a te c h ild re n o n the d a n g e r s o f p la y in g w ith fire. • D o n 't b u rn trash , le a v e s o r b ru sh o u td o o rs. • B a rb e c u e in an are a at le a st 10 feet a w a y from b ru sh an d sh ru b b ery . free • M a in tain a 30-foot sa fe ty z o n e fro m d ry b r u sh a ro u n d y o u r h om e, an d k eep g r a s s cut sh o rt. • K e e p a sh o v e l, b u c k e t o f w ate r, fire e x tin g u is h e r o r o th e r fire s u p p r e s s io n to o ls on h an d . If a g r a s s fire is w itn e sse d , c itiz e n s sh o u ld im m e d ia te ly d ial 911, an d sh o u ld be care­ fu l in a tte m p tin g to p u t it o u t th e m se lv e s, the sp o k e sw o m a n sa id . "A lot o f p e o p le try to co n ­ tain it th e m se lv e s w ith a g a r ­ d e n h o se o r w h a te v e r, b u t they sh o u ld n 't p u t th e m se lv e s in a p o sitio n o f d a n g e r. Ju st try to g e t u s o u t th ere a s q u ic k ly a s p o ssib le b y c a llin g 9 11," sh e sa id . from o f^ te T v o lle y l^ a ll'^ / ^ ^ C it^ o 'rA u stln '^ a fe t^ C a rn p ^ u e sd a y a ft e r n o o n / lh e ^ m p ^ a u ^ t children the im portance of team w o rk along with water, fire, bicycle and driving safety. Inmate once condemed Bush proposal to aid foster children for killing female guard dies in prison hospital Bush said the current child welfare system has failed because too few fos­ ter children are m oving to permanent homes — either back with their biolog­ ical parents or with adoptive families. Tpva* that have no ty-stricken areas of Texas that have no running w ater or sew age. About 400,000 people live in those areas. and little education. They could use as and little education. They could use a much as to $5,000 to pay for college or vocational training under Bush's plan. "Foster care should be a temporary that assist troubled families. By The Associated Press "I think it's very important that we show these people in his own state he is not com passionate toward," said Dem ocratic Rep. D avid Woodward. state 1 *■- p 1 ROYAL O A K Mich. — Foster kids by his side, Gov. George W. Bush talked of their longing for permanent hom es on Tuesday and proposed a $2.3 billion plan for giving adoptive parents a bigger tax break and states more money for child welfare. On a three-week "com passionate conservative" tour focusing on social welfare initiatives, the Republican presidential contender moderated a panel of parents and kids at the Judson Center, a home serving children from broken families. Bush wants to increase tax credits from $5,000 to $7,500 for adoptive fam­ ilies. The price tag to the government would be $1 billion over five years. He also proposed giving states $1 billion over five years to improve program s state," he said. Darryl McGee, a 19-year-old former foster child seated next to Bush, talked about how he went back to his family. "It's kind of hard for me to tell the story here, in front of all these people and all these cam eras," McGee said, choking up. "But it's people like the governor here that's keeping m e calm." A dozen people gathered across the street to criticize Bush, carrying signs that read, "Cofnpassion does not leave people behind," and show ing a Democratic-produced video of pover­ The governor said his state is on the "leading edge" of streamlining the fos­ ter care and adoption systems. The number of children who are legally free to be adopted in Texas rose from 1,033 in 19% to 2,123 in 1999 thanks to a speedier administrative process. The time children spend waiting for adop­ tion has been cut in half and adoptions are u p in Texas, Bush said. He also proposed spending $300 million over five years on vouchers for young people to leave foster hom es when they reach 18. Many have no jobs More than 540,000 children are in foster care — m any removed from hom es because of abuse and neglect Som e return to their parents, but one in four remains in foster care for three to five years. Som e stay longer because it's not safe for them to go hom e or because no adoptive hom e is found. Under federal regulations that took effect this year, states m ust inspect their child welfare agencies, m ove quickly to try to find permanent hom es for kids and do crim inal background checks on prospective foster and ad op­ tive parents. Those doing a poor job can lose fed­ eral child welfare money. States com­ plained that tíie federal gmiefnment is not helping pay for the new rules. By The Associated Press H U N TSV ILLE — A Texas death row inmate condem ned for killing a prison guard 15 years ago died while b ein g hospitalized, prison officials said Tuesday. Ram on Mata, 51, died Thursday evening at the Texas Departm ent of C rim inal in G alveston. He had been taken there June 26 from the Terrell Unit near Livingston, which h ou ses death row. h ospital Ju stice A n "The provisional cause of death is septic shock, an overw helm ing infec­ departm ent corrections tion," spokesm an Larry Fitzgerald said. au to p sy w as planned. Fitzgerald said prison officials were h av in g difficulties fin din g fam ily m em bers for the R eeves C ounty native and form er oil rig w orker but he had prearranged funeral plans that w ould be followed. M ata, with two burglary prison sentences already behind him, w as serving his third term in the Texas prison system — a 30-year m urder sentence for the 1978 execution-style killings of two Pecos County men — w hen on June 3, 1985, he fatally stabbed 41-year-old corrections offi­ cer Minnie H ouston in the officers m ess hall at the Ellis Unit northeast of Huntsville. In an interview following his 1986 m urder trial in M adisonville, Mata said he stabbed the w om an with a . < . i c___ .1____ butcher knife he took from the prison kitchen. At the time he had been a trusty, a prison inmate granted special privileges as a trustworthy person. M ata said H ouston, a w idow who lived in nearby Trinity with her three children, w as friendly to him and he becam e attracted to her. She rebuffed him by telling him she w as dating another man, M ata said. He said he stabbed her because he didn't want to lose her "an d now I've lost her." Testimony at his trial show ed that after the attack, he went outside the prison, got in H ouston 's car, drove to the front gate of the prison and told the officer there that he had killed her. A defense psychologist testified at his trial that M ata suffered from seri­ o u s m ental problem s. Testim ony show ed the longtim e d ru g and alco­ hol abuser who dropped out of school after the seventh grad e reported hal­ lucinations of H ouston com ing to his jail cell on nightly visits. "I'm sad d en ed ," he said in 1986. "1 hate what 1 did and I'm going to pay for it. I ain't worried about it or any­ thing. That's the w ay it is. For what 1 did I feel I should be executed." The closest he cam e to the death house w as when he received a March 14, 1996, execution date. The punish­ ment, however, w as halted by a court reprieve. Student Airfares Europe* Africa'Asia'South America More Than 100 Departure Cities! Eurailpasses • Bus Passes • Study Abroad ^shJdent “ • universe i com IT’ S YOUR WORLD. E X flD R E IT. Campaign leaders By The Associated Press Texas legislators likely will have to dip into the state's estim ated $l-bil- lion su rp lu s to balance the budget due to m iscalculations by tw o state agencies and an anticipated deficit in the M edicaid program . Som e Dem ocrats blam ed the esti­ m ated $610 million su rplus shortfall on Gov. G eorge W. Bush's $1.7-billion tax cut in 1998. But Bush and Republican leaders Tuesday said the deficits are due to unpredictable cir­ cum stances. This is the first time Texas h as had to d o m ajor budget tw eaking during Bush's time as governor. On the cam ­ paign trail, he often touts the back-to- back tax cuts he signed in 1997 and 1999. The shortfall could m ean that as much as $610 million o f the state's $1 - billion su rp lu s w ould be u sed to keep the overall $98.2-billion budget in the black. That likely will put the brakes on additional tax cuts and proposals for new or expanded pro­ gram s in the next legislative session, which begins in January. At risk is $110 million to $250 mil­ lion needed to build new prisons. The health insurance program for retired Texas teachers, TRS-Care, will also run out of m oney in A ugu st 2001 if it does not receive $400 million in state m oney in the next Legislature. Lt. Gov. Rick Perry and Sen. Bill Ratliff, R-Mount Pleasant, chairm an of Senate Finance Com mittee, joined the Bush cam paign Tuesday in deny­ ing that the Bush-backed tax cuts were to blam e for the su rp lu s short­ fall. "We don't have a budget shortfall. I don't know where those w ords cam e from ," Perry said. "We have a balanced budget. I've yet to really understand where the crisis is. We have am ple revenue to cover the obli­ gations of the state of Texas. Perry becom es governor if Bush, the likely R epublican presidential nominee, w ins the White H ouse. "T exas h as a healthy su rp lu s. Leave it to the Dem ocrats to com ­ plain about tax cuts even in a state with a su rp lu s," said "Bush cam paign spokesm an Ari Fleischer. Perry and Ratliff said deficits antic­ ipated in the state M edicaid pro­ gram , prison system , nursing hom e patient care and inside two agencies that m iscalculated last y ear's finan­ cial needs will force law m akers to d ip into the surplus. But state Rep. Garnet Colem an, D- H ouston , said the tw o-year state budget adopted by law m akers last year placed too m uch em ph asis on cutting taxes. "The question here is did w e b u d g ­ et enough m oney to m eet all our needs? No, we did not, C olem an told the Houston Chronicle for its Tuesday edition. "O nce som ething is set as a priority, it takes over other priorities." C olem an voted for the spending bill and w as one of 10 legislators w ho negotiated the final bu d get com pro­ mise. "Texas is in a bind now because of the Republicans' m isguided priori­ ties," said M olly Beth M alcolm , chairw om an of the state Dem ocratic Party. "The tax cuts were designed to give Bush som ething to brag about in his presidential cam paign." student radio for austin, tx '«tyV general meeting in TAY2.006 | www.StudentUniverse.com i I 800-272-9676 ! tar bottom tar H i H um dbtrtotton . . . W h e n it c o m e s t o t h e l a t e s t n e w s , w e w o n ’t k e e p y o u b a n g i n ’ ! C arolina-Bound Matt Doherty was named head coach at the University of North Carolina Tuesday. Doherty was a member of the 1982 N C A A champion Tar Heels, lo o p ago 8 — - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T he Daily T e x a n - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - S ports Jeter paces AL to 6-3 win over NL By The Associated Press ATLANTA — Derek Jeter turned the All- Star game into just another night of "New York, New York." After he doubled in the first inning for the American League's first extra-base hit in two years, his two-run single off the Mets' A1 Leiter broke a fourth-inning tie, sending the AL on to a 6-3 win Tuesday night over the National League. Jeter was awarded the game's MVP tro­ phy — and he wasn't even supposed to start! "You feel like a little kid, somewhat star­ gazing, seeing all the great players on the field at the same time," Jeter said in his usual low-key manner. "You get butterflies before the game." Just last Friday, Jeter got a two-strike, first-inning single off Leiter, scoring the first run in the Yankees' 2-0 win over their crosstown foe — a rivalry that turned bitter the next night when the Yankees' Roger Clemens beaned Mike Piazza. Jeter hit .407 against the Mets this year, going ll-for-27 with six runs scored and is a .327 hitter (25-for-77) against them in his career. The single off Leiter came on a first- pitch cut fastball. "He does it every time I face him. I try to lay off it," Jeter said. "I didn't hit it well, I just hit it in the right place." At 26, he's already a three-time All-Star. In his previous two All-Star at-bats, he struck out both times. Getting the start because Seattle's Alex Rodriguez sustained a concussion last weekend, Jeter found himself in the unenvi­ able spot of hitting against Randy Johnson. "I was thinking about bunting, but Randy Johnson's not the guy to bunt off of," Jeter said. Then came the hit off Leiter, which pro­ vided one of the few sparks on a night when pitchers dominated. Jeter and the Yankees love playing in Atlanta, winning the first two games of last year's World Series at Turner Field and sweeping three games at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium in 19% as they overcame a 2-0 deficit to win what turned out to be the first of three Series titles in four years. "We played some very important big games here," Jeter said. "I guess it's just good fortune." It's been a year of struggle for both Jeter, who spent 2 1 / 2 weeks on the disabled list with an abdominal strain, and the Yankees, who lead the AL East by mere percentage points. They hope beating the Mets three times in four games started their turnaround. "It's not easy to win," Jeter said. We made it look kind of easy three out of the last four years. But it's very difficult to do year after year." Johnson, the Big Unit himself, threw only eight pitches in working a perfect first inning. Then again, he threw 121 Sunday while striking out 13 as Arizona beat Oakland. In fact, Johnson finished off his third All- Star start by striking out Jason Giambi, whom he faced two days ago in interleague play. Wells pitched two scoreless innings. And, unlike the games that really count, there were no beanballs or brushbacks. The AL took a 1-0 lead in the third when Brown walked three batters, including Carl Everett with the bases loaded. Jones tied it with his opposite-field homer in the bottom half. 7 Wednesday July 12, 2000 Derek Jeter was named MVP of the game. ASSOCIATED P R E S S Duncan to stay in S.A. By Travis Richmond Daily Texan Staff SAN ANTONIO — Tim Duncan, never one for flash, entered in a back door at the La Cantería Resort Hotel, answered questions for 10 minutes, and then retreated out the same door he came in, avoiding a media crunch that wanted more answers. But Duncan had already confirmed what the San Antonio Spurs really wanted to know — he would re-sign with them instead of bolting for the Orlando Magic. "It's been a tough decision. Orlando had a lot to offer, 1 went down there and had a good time. They have some great people, but I decid­ ed to stay here for a couple years," Duncan said. "Orlando made the decision a lot harder than 1 thought it would be, but I just liked what I had here." Only one thing is for certain — when NBA free-agents are allowed to sign contracts begin­ ning Aug. 1, Duncan will sign a new deal with the Spurs. For how long and for how much remains unknown, although Duncan did give Jiint with his "couple of years" remark. "We'll deal with the contract in August when Tim decides what he wants to do," said Lon Babby, Duncan's agent. "I don't want to specu­ late on the details. He got to this point, now I've got some work to do." The Spurs obviously did their work after Duncan traveled to Orlando on July 1 with free-agent buddy Grant Hill, also a Babby client. Hill has said he will sign with the Magic in August, but Spurs coach and general man­ ager Gregg Popovich was able to entice Duncan to remain in San Antonio. "He knows us pretty well. It's hard to be something different from what you have been for three years," said Popovich a little over an hour later from the team's offices across town at the Alamodome. Due to NBA regulations, no one from the Spurs could be involved in Duncan's press conference. "We w'ere in a different position from other teams in that they had to show him who they were, what they did and what they had to offer," Popovich said. The Magic offered Duncan a si\-vear contract worth $67.5 million, while the Spurs can sign Duncan to a deal up to seven-vears for $86.5 million. In the end, Duncan chose the familiarity of the Spurs over the temptation of the Magic, who Duncan said made his decision much harder than he ever anticipated it would be. "Orlando did an incredible job. They have a great situation down there. It just came down to certain little things that made me want to stay here," Duncan said. "There wasn't much of a recruiting effort by the Spurs, nothing fancy or great. They just laid out what w'as here for me." Much had been made of the relationships Duncan had with Popovich and Spurs' center David Robinson, who flew back from a vaca­ tion in Hawaii to meet writh Duncan last week. But in putting personal feelings aside, Duncan said he chose the Spurs ultimately because he felt they give him the best chance to win anoth­ er NBA Championship. "Pop's great, but basketball was more ot it, said Duncan, the 1999 NBA Finals MVP. "Dave and I talked for an hour or two, and vve have gotten it done before. The Spurs give me the best opportunity to win right now'. Babby echoed Duncan's desire to w'in over all else. "Tim’s not the GM, he understands that, but he also wanted to put himself in a position where he would be able to continue to win over the next couple of years,' Babby said. 1 he Spurs have perhaps the best chance to dethrone the current champion L.A. Lakers and center Shaquille O'Neal with a their pair of seven-footers in Duncan and Robinson. Even though Duncan wasted no time in vis­ iting Orlando, Popovich said that w'as to be expected. "I knew that was going to happen, and he deserved to be able to do that," Popovich said. "If you are a free agent, you deserve to check See DUNCAN, Page 8 T i m T i d b i t s Career Averages Minutes — 39.0 Points — 22.0 FG % — 51.3 FT % — 71.0 Rebounds — 12.0 Off. Rebs. — 3.4 Blocks — 2.4 Assists — 2.8 Steals — 0.8 Fouls — 3.0 Career Highlights ~ All-NBA 1st Team 97-98, 98-99, 99-2000 Ail-Defensive 1st Team 98-99, 99-2000 All-Star Game Co-MVP 99-2000 NBA Finals MVP 98-99 Rookie of the Year 97-98 NBA Draft #1 Overall Pick 1997 — By Travis Richm ond Daily Texan Staff Tim Duncan announced Tuesday he would re-sign with the Spurs for at least “a couple" more years In August. Spurs fans ecstatic about announcement By Travis Richmond Daily Texan Staff SAN ANTONIO — While Tim Duncan's presence on the basketball c o u rt will be felt in the number of wins for the Spurs, some in the San Antonio area are impacted even more when he leads the team to suc­ cess. Take Trey Henderson, manager of Champs American Sports Bar on the Riverwalk. Wins by the Spurs trans­ late into money for his business. "There was a $60,000 difference in our revenues from this time last year, when the Spurs won the cham­ pionship, to this year," Henderson said. "Those extra playoff games create more money for our bar. As manager of Champs for the past eight years, Henderson has seen both good and bad Spurs teams. But Duncan's decision was the biggest concern for him yet. "The most important game we have evei; had was if Tim stayed or went [to OrlandoJ, and we watch in here," Henderson said. "This was life or death for the Spurs." . thousands of games In remaining loyal to the team he led to the 1999 NBA title, Duncan will not only earn more money than had he jumped ship for Orlando but maintain the admiration of an entire city. "He means so much to the people of San Antonio," Henderson said. "We need to have a celebration of him returning, probably before the first preseason or regular-season game next year." Before every home game, a group called the "Baseline Bums" meets at Champs, led by one person who has only missed two home games since the Spurs came from the ABA. The "Bums" are ticket-holders who like to "cheer the Spurs, drink beer, and raise some hell," Henderson said. In helping the Spurs convince Duncan to stay, H.E.B. purchased billboards throughout the city with messages such as "We Love Tim" and "Stay, Tim Stay!" "The billboards were wonderful, times," even overwhelming at Duncan said. Spurs' coach and general manag­ er Gregg Popovich said the support from the city- has always been strong. "I thought it was great when some of the businesses and people created that groundswell. No matter how you look at it, that makes any- See FANS, Page 8 Armstrong still sits in first By The Associated Press REVEL, France — Vance Armstrong strengthened his lead in the Tour de France on TUesday, finishing well behind the winner of the 11th stage but without losing any time to his main rivals. stage Erik Dekker of the Netherlands won the hilly from 135-mile Bagneres-de-Bigorre to Revel in southwestern France After sharing a big lead over the pack with Santiago for almost fire entire race. Botero Lance Armstrong: In 1st place after 11 stages. Armstrong, who came back from cancer to win the Tour last year kept his 4-minute, 14-second Overall lead on 1997 champion Jan Ullrich while moving closer to the 21st and final stage in Paris on July 23. Armstrong took his lead on Monday with a stunning late climb in the Pyrenees. . He is glad that unlike last year, there aren't back-to-back mountain stages until later in the 2000 Tour. "I didn't sleep very well but I felt good this morning" Armstrong said. "Normally there are two (mountain) stages, so 1 didn't feel as fatigued as I did last year after the Alps. "I was lucky enough to have my family, baby boy and in-laws with me. That was good for morale." Not that there were big celebrations within the U.S. Postal Service team. "Someone ordered champagne but 1 didn’t want any," Armstrong said. "If we win in Paris I will have champagne, but that is a long way from now." In the 11th stage, Botero and Dekker raced wheel to wheel until the end, when the Dutchman showed he had stronger legs. Dekker who won Saturday's eighth stage, fin­ ished in five hours, six minutes, 47 seconds. Neither rider had any chance of taking the yellow jersey, worn by the overall leader Botero started the day in 45th place, 17:40 behind Armstrong while Dekker was a distant 61st, 26:17 slower than the Texan. A car flies by a sign for Tim Duncan that is displayed on San Antonio's Loop 1604. Irvin says goodbye By The Associated Press IRVING — Michael Irvin's desire bums as fiercely as when he stood on the sideline with tears streaming down his cheeks becausb lie believed his team had quit. More than three vean, after that Sunday in 1997, Irvin was nearly m tears again as he described his passion for football, the Cowboys and the city of Dallas. This time, he was the one quitting walking away trom the game w ith . his body and pride intact. "1 like to think of myselt as a wamor," Irvin said IUesday at a news conference to announce his retirement. "I wanted to be dragged off the field — and 1 was. Irvin's final catch came late in the first quarter ot an Oct. 10 game in Philadelphia. When Irvin was tackled, the back of his head bounced on the hard turf of Veterans Stadium and he was carted off the field and into an ambulance. 1 le was temporarily paralyzed with a herniated disc, Tests revealed a fragile spine that he’d been fortunate not to damage earlier in his career. A somber Irvin admitted days later he was considenng retirement. He struggled with the decision tor months until his wife and mother mat e him realize that being able to play with his kids was more important than trying to win another Super Bowl. , , "If I said there wasn't serious thought, I'd be lying to you. 1 tried to Michael Irvin flntahed his career holding most Dallas receiving records. S m IRVIN, P a g* 8 Contact us The Daily Texan sports office encourages feed­ back, opinions, suggestions and questions from its readers. Please feel free to contact us in any of the following ways: E-mail: dtsports@utxvms.cc.utexas.edu Mall: PO Box D, Austin TX 78705 Phona: 512-232-2210 Fax:512-471-2952 On tha Wab: www.dailytexan.utexas.edu fast break MLB ALL-STAR GAME American 6, National 3 WNBA Minnesota at Phoenix, late Portland at Los Angeles, late air waves MINOR LEAGUE ALL-STAR GAME AAA AllStars, 6:30 pm , ESPN2 CYCLING ‘ TOUR DE FRANCE Stage 12, 5:30 p.m., ESPN2 WNBA Sacramento at Houston, 7:30 pjn., ESPN on this day JULY 12 1901 Cy Young of die Boston Red Sox wins his 300th game with a 5-3 victory over the Philadelphia A's. around theHom What’s On Tap? Tune In WNBA Sacramento at Houston Today, 7 p.m., ESPN Say What? " i was just cruising along in South Bend, and then the phone rang, and here I am. Maybe a lot of you saw this coming, but I never did. - Former Notre Dame coach Matt Doherty, who was named North Carolina’s head coach Tuesday. . i 4 I m l 1 Letters to the Sports Editor Write Us The Daily Texan Sports staff wants to know what you think of the section and of sports in general. Therefore, in the tradition of the Firing Line, the Texan will print sports letters to the Editor on the second page of Sports Thanks to the All-Star break, there is absolutely nothing on televi­ each week. , , So if you have an opinion about anything occurring in the sion to watch. Thus, it's time to do something you always said you would, but never did: Watch a WNBA game. The Comets, of course, own the four-year old league and with an 18-2 record they appear to be poised to make it four in a row. In fact, the orfly real enemy Houston has is themselves. Teammates are bickering with one another, and two-tme MVI Cynthia Cooper announced she would retire because she isn t get­ ting the rock enough. One would think with these problems, they would crater, but they keep winning. So watch and figure out how. wide world of sports, please send us an e-mail at dtsports@utxvms.cc. utexas.edu. Letters should be under 250 words in length and should include your name, major and classification. The Texan Sports staff reserves the right to edit all letters for brevity, clarity and liability. Sheryl Swoopes drives to the basket Around The Sports World UT set for morning kickoff against La.-Lafayette ■ The Longhorns will open the 2000 football season with an 11:30 a.m. kickoff against Louisiana- Lafayette on Sept. 9. The game will be broadcast live as part of the Big 12 television syndication package. Texas previously announced that the Sept. 16 contest at Stanford would be carried live by Fox Sports Net with kickoff at 9:15 p.m.. The Horns also announced the Nov. 24 tilt with Texas A&M would move from the 10 a.m. slot it occupied for the past four years to a 2:30 p.m. start on ABC. Texas' season officially will kickoff when the freshmen report to campus on Sunday, Aug. 13th. The freshmen will practice on Aug. 14 - 16 at Frank Denius Fields, while the veterans will report on Aug. 16th. UT's first full- team practice is slated for Friday, Aug. 18th at Whitaker Field. All preseason practices are open to the public. The league will run from July 17-24 at UMass-Boston. Sampras to miss Davis Cup Former Horns star Clack working out with Boston ■ Former Texas swingman Kris Clack will be hooping it up with the Boston Celtics this summer in the Shaw's Pro Summer League. Clack is joined on the 15-man Celtics summer roster by forward Tony Bathe, first-round Boston draft pick Jerome Moiso, and for­ mer Sacramento Kings guard Bobby Hurley. Also joining them will be for­ wards Mark Blount, Rodney Elliott, Bobby Martin, Silas Mills, Damian Owens, James Forrest, and Kenny Williams, guards Jerome Allen, Roberto Bergersen, and David Vanterpool, and center Kevin Salvadori. ■ NEW YORK — Pete Sampras probably won't face Spain in the Davis Cup semifinals and the Wimbledon champion hasn't spo­ ken to U.S. captain John McEnroe about it. "My status is questionable," Sampras said Tuesday. "I've got to talk to John. It's highly unlikely that I'll be able to play." Sampras, who spoke after a promotional event for a Wheahes cereal box featuring his likeness, said he needs to take care of the tendinitis in his left shin that hob­ bled him much of Wimbledon, where he won for a men's record seventh time on Sunday. He said a doctor in London told him to take two to three weeks off, which would rule out an appear­ ance in the July 21-23 semifinal at Santander, Spain. Defending champion Australia faces Brazil in the other semifinal. McEnroe will announce Wednesday who'll play against Spain. Doherty hired at UNC ■ CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Matt Doherty received a telephone call early Tuesday morning. On the other end was Michael Jordan, telling his former North Carolina teammate and friend to follow his heart. Doherty, a starter on North Carolina's 1982 NCAA national championship team, took Jordan's advice later in the day, leaving Notre Dame after one season to become coach of one of the more storied college programs in the country. "Michael said you have to do what is best for your family. Then at the end of the conversation, he said, 'Who knows, if it doesn't work out with you maybe they will have to go outside the (Carolina) family,"' Doherty said, ending a 12-day search for Bill Guthridge's replacement. "Right then, I made my mind up. I want­ ed to be the head basketball coach at the University of North Carolina." Doherty said he «first talked with North Carolina athletic direc­ tor Dick Baddour late Thursday night, taking a cell phone call in a Wal-Mart aisle. He interviewed over the weekend on the UNC campus, and accepted the post at 1 p.m. EDT Tuesday. "It's a numbing experience," Doherty said. "Kind of surreal. You dream it and wonder if you're going to wake up." — Compiled from staff and Associated Press reports tyJrTidURl IPASSES TO SCAUTTE/ZB4/M! The Daily Texan needs your help. We are updating our marketing research fo r our circulation department, and we would appreciate your input. You are our loyal readers, and we want to ser\'e you to the best of our abilities, to deliver your newspaper in the most efficient means possible. Please take a moment to complete the following questionnaire, drop it off at our offices, and get entered for a chance to win Schlitterbahn passes!! m • Where do you currently pick up a copy o f The Daily Texan?. ! Are there always enough newspapers in that location? — yes — no ■ ■ W hat time o f day do you pick up The Texan? --- Ü H o w often do you read The Daily Texan? — daily — 3-4 times/week ■ ■ ■ 1-2 times/week • What is the condition of the box? poor okay good Where would you like to see a new Texan box? (Bus stops, restaurants/bars, street location, apartments, campus area, etc.) Name: Phone: Please drop off at the advertising offices at: 2421 San Antonio Street (across from the UT parking garage) ■ Entries due h Jul, 28th at4pm.Dnwi*twmbe keld July 31U, end the win»" will be notified. Popovich ready to add to Spurs DUNCAN, from 7 out your opportunities and do the very best you can. It was perfectly natural and under­ standable, and I wanted him to do it." Popovich said he was the most anxious in the weeks between the time the Spurs were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the Phoenix Suns and July 1, because no nego­ tiations between the team and Duncan could be made. However, Duncan undoubtedly made Popovich even more uneasy when he finally told him of his decision. "He loves to screw with me. The guy just loves to see me twist," Popovich said. When asked if Duncan had jokingly told him that he had instead decided to sign with the Magic, Popovich answered sarcastically, "H e's a funny, funny guy. I'll just let you surmise. Next on tíre Spurs agenda is recruiting free- agent guard Derek Anderson of the L.A. Clippers, who was in San Antonio for a visit on Tuesday. "This is just the beginning. .It's a huge start obviously, as our whole emphasis was on Tim Duncan staying in San Antonio." Popovich said. "We still have an awful lot of work to do." City celebrates decision of Duncan to stay put FANS, from 7 one feel good," Popovich said. "But there was no way we could duplicate 200,000 fans on the Riverwalk during the champi­ onship [celebration]. It's good Tim knows how the city feels about him." Jonathan Padgett, a waiter at Champs, remembers when the , , Spurs beat the New York Knicks to win the NBA tide in 1999. "The whole city literally went crazy. People were pulling over on the freeways, dancing in the beds of their trucks, girls were flashing people — it was unbelievable," said Padgett, a junior at Trinity University and a member of Trinity's football team. Without Duncan re-signing, Padgett said the Spurs chances of winning another championship were "slim to none. "It means the world to us that Tim stayed in San Antonio, Padgett said. "All the customers have been asking us what was going to happen, but we have been on pins and needles waiting for his decision." The suspense ended with Duncan's announcement on Tuesday. . . , , "We had mall shoppers, security guards, janitors, everybody watching the press conference," said Henderson, who added that over 200 people usually gather to watch home Spurs games at the nearby Alamodome. "It was like the Super Bowl in here. In assessing the impact of Duncan's decision, Henderson also offered a commentary on the state of professional sports. "Free agency is what is bad about sports. Tim Duncan staying in San Antonio is what is good about them," Henderson said. I LOW Student Airfares | Europe «Africa Asia • South America More Than 100 Departure Cities! Eurailpasses Bus Passes Study Abroad •C9*SI¡tiÜr»> IT-» YO U R W O RLD . I X f U M I It. StudentUniverse.com SOO>2T2-ee7e Irvin to work for Fox Sports IRVIN, from 7 rationalize it: 'Any hit can be your last hit. You've been doing that all you're life.' "But I've accomplished a great deal of things that I wanted to accomplish and at this juncture there's no need to risk it and go on," said Irvin, who will now work for Fox Sports N ef s Sunday pregame show. The 34-year-old Irvin caught 750 Eises for 11,904 yards. At the time of final play, both figures were ninth in NFL history. Of the guys ahead of him, only Jerry Rice has as many Super Bowl rings. "We've both got three. I'll take that, Irvin said, roaring at his own joke. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, who has long been Irvin's biggest supporter, said Iryin's career statistics "are partic­ ularly impressive considering he did it on a team whose running back, [Emmitt Smith] may become the all- time record holder." But Irvin's career was marked by off-field problems, too. In 19%, he pleaded no contest to felony drug charges stemming from a raucous 30th birthday party at a motel with a teammate and two mod­ els. The NFL suspended him from five games. At training camp in 1998, he was involved in "Sdssorsgate," when he cut the neck of a teammate during a scuffle over a haircut. Whether the off-field stuff will affect his Hall of Fame candidacy won't be known for five years. Irvin, though, is more interested in getting in the team's Ring of Honor and reminded Jones of it more than once Tuesday. Irvin's reckless lifestyle also gave critics and rival fans more ammunition against him. As much as he was loved in Dallas, fans elsewhere saw him as epitomizing everything they hated about "America's Team." Irvin, though, thrived on it. He enjoyed making a target of himself then going out and proving he could handle it. His secret was a steely work ethic that came from growing up as the 15th of 17 children. "He wasn't blessed with the best physical abilities, but he made up for it with desire and work ethic," Aikman said. "He practiced every day as if he were going up against the 49ers." D EA D LIN E: 11:00 a.m . PR IO R TO PUBLICA TIO N Word Rates Charged by the word. Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply. 1 day................................ $9.60 2 days..............................$16.50 3 days..............................$22.80 14 days..............................$27.60 5 days............................. $31.30 First two words in all capital letters. 25# for each additional capitalized word. Display Rates Charged by the column inch. One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces, sizes, and borders available. $11.55 per column inch. Call for quotes. 471-5244 Mastercard & Visa Accepted. Fax 471-6741 C L A S S I F I E D S N O W ON T H E WE B D A I L Y ' W W W . D A I L Y T E X A N . U T E X A S . E D U The Daily Texan Wednesday, July 12, 2 0 0 0 Page 9 •\*4< * * % :«.1 370 - Unf. Apts. ALL BILLS PAID & WALK TO SCHOOL! Efficiencies, 1-ls, 2-2s starting at $ 4 7 5 Apartment Finders 322 -95 56. SOUTH SHUTTLE Huge Hoorplans 1-2-3-&-4 bedrooms. 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Preservation Sq., C ro ix, etc. Summer & Fall KHP 4 7 6 -2 1 5 4 . 1-1 GATED-CONDOS near UT 6 0 0 refrigerator, jacuzzi, sq/ft , pool, stove, furniture dishwasher, $64(3/m o. Summer discount 327- 75 7 4 471 5291 BY OW NER One bedroom plus loft- 4 blocks to drag- 1 2 month lease on in­ ly $79 5 O w ner/agent W /D cluded, pool, deck new on market 328 -8 3 3 3 x1 2 8 M ark or Marsha town SPACIOUS 1.2 3 bedroom homes Located at 18 3 /M o p a c Paid gas, heating, and water Call 345 1768 CENTENNIAL -LARGE 3 / 2 with 3 covered parking This unit has evety possible amenity! Available 8 / 2 8 $ 2 1 9 5 /m o 4 7 6 -19 76 ELY PROPER­ TIES HYDE PARK -1/1 with W /D and great Balcony, small quiet communi ty $ 7 9 5 /m o Available 8 / 2 8 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES -Large 1/1 ELMS in small gated West Campus Community, Great floor plan with W /D roommate Available 8 /2 8 $ 7 9 5 /m o 4 7 6 1976. ELY PROPERTIES tneplace CROIX- POOISIDE 1/1 with W /D and Available 8 /2 8 $ 7 9 5 /m o 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPER TIES ( BEST DEALS on 1 / I s ($650 875) and 1 /1 's w /lo fts ($700-800) All in in West elude W /D and Campus Campus Condos 474- 48 0 0 located LAST C H AN CE-LAST Croix Most sought after 2 / 2 in W est Campus Foil $ 15 0 0 /m o Campus Condos 4 74 -48 00 NORTH CAMPUS, unique 2-story 1 /1 .5 . Must hurry! $ 9 0 0 /m o . Cam pus Condos 4 7 4 4 8 0 0 WEST CAMPUS, Sommerset 2 / 2 Beautiful A must interior design seel West Campus shuttle right at door Campus Condos 4 7 4 4 8 0 0 IM QUIET, NORTH Campus near $ 1 1 0 0 /m o Best deal Campus Condos 4 7 4 48 0 0 fields Icirge location 2 /2 fall! for right at your door! I F SHUTTLE Close to Law and Engineering Schools N ew carpet, W /D , cov­ ered parking 2 / 2 $ I 2 0 0 /m o Campus Condos 4 7 4 -48 00 LUXURY WEST Campus condo, 2-1 gated community, appliances, balco­ nes, southwest design, very unique $ 1 2 0 0 708 9 1 2 6 4 2 0 - U n f. Houses spacious WEST CAMPUS 7 / 4 CACH, great condition $31 2 5 or 2 1 's Í8 0 0 , and M $ 72 5 Agent 477-1163 4 -BATH, 8-BEDROOM $26 00, 3 7 0 0 sq/ft, huge gameroom+ 2 liv inq areas, RHR N o smokers no pets, near Highland M all 4 7 4 -4 1 0 0 WEST CAMPUS Extra large 4bed room house 3blocks from campus floors quiet, no pets Hardw ood $ 2 ,5 0 0 478 -89 05 450-0242 4 2 5 -Room s RO O M AVAILABLE in auiet neigh borhood. Clo*e to UT/downtown Ha* laundry & kitchen G rad stu- dent A vailable Aug. 15th 323 -68 88 $ 3 5 0 / month preferred STUDENT W ANTED Westlake fomi- ly, room for rent Close to busline and the mall $ 5 0 0 .d e p o s it 328- 3 40 6 4 3 5 - C a t o p e SHORT WALK UT- Quiet, non-smok mg, large windows, hardwoods Pri­ vóte bedroom, shore bath From (+$100 $2 4 5 summer $34 5 474 -2 6 1 8 bills) meals, w w w .6 0 2 elmwood . com fall Page 1 0 T h e D a ily T e x a n Wednesday, July 1 2 , 2 0 0 0 ta g ? G W » g g .A tA M frp K J , >+ W g g v - V e f t t c . u J t M B n i l l A r v I ? V ~ ' ¿ ¿ 'V - A M O O L r i u c f e VJItY A P I by David A. Norton booaalaQmail.utexas. edu (£-Y -A C r-Lt f T H é Y ‘R& T£RR\¡í¡ r j V e v p t _ u n d e r. A-A/O p \u L f\G tB f O R N O T t H f ^ ó B U T V f v \ a / J g T A f t Y 6 f H ^ | \r ' I ' L L f f O ¿ e r A D o c t o r ... Hrv---------------------- f \ iK * » < / Í T > 4 o U « n - v « m * * Y * - E ^ T - r « + £ * « - M u r w r S - T lS & r fS ÍJ e , R T W 1 H C S * fc » 4 . 5 > N \ . . A e « x / r V * '* t i U T ; < V u V ^ P B p m T V ? Y&*a ÍOJ- C * flX < 5 _ KrON^Sy RJ(»UT.? MAsUj TWo S C ^T M íM <í.S M 3 8 - s M A f t . f i / /s r + is T i l t S e c o u D W o t-^ fc e jN fb ^ ^ e A f c A N C t iw IM L T e v ^ j t h i ^ W t t k ; .-' ^ «K J I D y o n . J o H N k lV M i l , EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT t 0 0 < * O * m r a l 8 0 0 * O « M r a ) t o o . ( k i — M d , / r j R 3C-" ÉUHÉMÉk ; J i u A - * ■ - FOO P o tt folia PROOF OPERATOR I Guaranty Federal™ Bank, F.S B has part-time positions available, M-F, 5:30-8:30p m. with Bank Holidays and Weekends off There is an opportunity to earn, in addition to the hourly wage, an extra $ 75 /w k Otner bonus opportunities are also available A high proficiency in 10 Key is required Flexible evening hours Interest applicants are preferred. MUST apply in person TEMPLE-INLAND FINANCIAL SERVICES 1300 S. M opac Austin, Texas / 8 7 4 6 Equal Opportunity Employer Job Line: 5 12-434-1717 P/T RECEPTIONIST for small west Austin law firm. Approx. 20 hrs./w k, $ 9 /h r, starting pay. Please fax resume ATTN:SEB to 472-8418 on or before 7-19. N o telephone calls. AMERICORPS FOR COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND EDUCATION PROGRAM at UT Austin is now recruiting part-time and full-time Members to tutor literocy in elementary schools from August 2000 through July 2001 For more information or to request an application, contoct Billie Pierce by phone at 512-475-9703 or email billiOmail utexas.edu or see our W eb site at http //w w w . danacenter .org/ocee/ CAMPUS JOB III Research Telephone Protect Office of Survey Research/ College of Communications TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS N O SALES $ 7 0 0 / h r Flexible schedules Evening A Weekend shifts Eng A Eng/Span UAv Room 2 . 106, 2609 University Ave 471-2100 or 471-4084 Valerie. BARTENDERS MAKE $100-$250 per night. No experience necessary. Call 1 -800-981 -8168 ext. 1003 APPOINTMENT SETTERS $ 12/hr, base + commission Are you tired of selling long distance, credit cards, or asking for donations? W e have the job for you I No direct sales involved Weekly pay - evening hours. Call Kay 837-2488. * ‘ SUMMER W O R K ** $1 1.25 guaranteed /appt Flexible schedules PT/FT Available Entry level Sales/Services No experience necessary. Training proved. Conditions apply. Work for www.stuaent.com/np RoundRock 302-1536 Austin 302-9894 BARTON CREEK Looking for a job? Are you a people person? • Human Resources Assistant • Rerservations Clerk •Front Desk Clerks •Waitstaff • Kid Club Attns. •G olf Associates • Golf Attns. •Cooks Apply in person M-F 8:30-5pm. 82 1 2 Barton Club Dr. W est of Loop 3 6 0 Fax resume to (512) 3 2 9 4 0 1 4 for a complete listing of all positions. SUMMER JOBS SECURITY OFFICERS Need • summer job w ith flexible hours? Would you also like to continue this work in the fall? If so, we have the perfect job for you!! A t Executive Security we o ffe r Full fit Part Time ftjtitio n a • Evening & Night Ifoaittons * • Study W hile You Work • • Car Not Required * • $7.0 0 /h r. starting pay • • No Experience Necessary • • Professional Uniform» • CALL 458-2258 NOW e x e c u t iv e s e c u r it y GREAT SUMMER JOB. Local environ mental group is hiring student organizers to help reduce pollution in central Texas Don't get stuck behind a counter! Do some­ thing fun and meaningful and help buila your resume. Pota training and benefits Travel and advancement opportunities. 2-10pm, M-F. $350-$425/w k. 326-5655 ATTENTION: CREATIVE INDIVIDUALS seeking a fun work environment. Do you understand the need to be treated with dignity and respect? d »o, come assist our staff with the planning and implementing of individualized Dementia care Pay training, FT/PT available Contoct Kim Greenwood 0 833-9253. JOBS- RECENT GRADSÍ W e hove various entry level position* in High tech/E Commerce Austin startups ond e*tabii»hed firms Tons of growth, top salocies/benefits/bonuses/ stock for direct hire. Call Debra Freeman at Cor— r Consultant» 346-6660 or tMieemon@coreeroMitin.com FEMALE MODEL needed for bikini $25- semi-nude modeling and 5 0 /h r 689-4450 WOMEN AND Sex. UT Psychology Department Study $ 2 0 0 /4 visits. Free medical tests Pre-menopause women, ages 1849 only, who are not currently on oral contraceptives calls/participation confiden­ only tial. 232 4 8 05 for DRIVERS NEEDED fast paced commercial moving company. Must be 23 years old and have a clean driving record. Call 832-1995 or apply at 11604 Stonehollow. DELIVERY ASSISTANTS needed and warehousemen needed no experi­ ence needed, must be able to work flexible hours and have a good work ethic. Call 832-1995 or apply at 11604 Stonehollow. PET SITTING Company needs relia­ ble 4 conscientious employees to care for pets Own transportation 4 liability insurance Please call Paw Prints at 301-7501 Must Love Ani­ mals. AUSTIN DOUBLETREE “ Club Hotel, Now Accepting Applications and Resumes for me following positions front desk clerk, AM 4 PM Lobby Ailendont, Administrative Assistant, and Accounts receivable clerk Please apply at 1617 IH-35N (MLK & 35), or fax resume to 479-6400 EOE, M /S /V /D . DOG LOVERS I Training facility seeking motivated detail oriented kennel help. Hard work, fun job. Storting $7.50/hr. 7 9 7 -3 6 4 7 or fax resume to 4 42 -6 97 0 tourusQaustin.rr.com THERAPIST NEEDED to work with Auti»tic/PD0 child doing In-Home Behavioral Modification 6-15hrs/wk Great opportunity for spec to! ed, psychology, sociology, soctol work m o to rT c o tl AHisonj72-9749 TALENT SCOUT Young, wealthy entrepre­ neur needs sharp individu­ als to help run my global business. Bilingual a plus. 3-6K/month potential. Call 5 1 2 4 5 3 -4 7 4 1 . BEVO'S ACC Bookstores now hiring for the foil semester at the North- ridge location, 11900 Metric Blvd. ana Rio Grande 1202 West Ave Call Terri at 477-2992. PART-TIME M O R NING RUNNER/CLERK needed for downtown law firm. Messengering, courthouse filings, photo copying, faxing, mail handling, light housekeeping, etc Must have dependable vehicle with good driving record and insur­ ance Fax resume to 476-7770 or email lisoOewbankandbyrom.com $8.50-$ 10/HR Flexible hours. Call Mike at Park Place Valet 784-7275 FT/PT HELP! $ 3 K -5 K /M O W e're swamped I Need PR, MGMT & Sales individuals nowl Call 374-9095 HOLIDAY IN N AUSTIN NORTH We are currently seeking Night Auditors, rT/PT, and exper. Reservationist. We offer excellent benefits, vacation, insurance, much morel Please apply in person M-F, 8om-5pm 691 1 N IH35. 5 1 2 - 4 5 9 4 2 5 1 . STUDENTS WANTED to work with child with Autism using Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) techniques to teach language and academic skills. Training available to motivated individuals. This experience will develop character, resume and graduate program prospects ¿ ail 837-0218. COLLEGE STUDENT Need Money? $ 10 /h r . potential 3 2 3 -2 9 5 1 HOTEL SAN Jose 131$ S Congress Ave Full/Part-time available. Front desk clerks and night auditor, fax re­ sumes 444-7362, call 444-7322. FULL 4PART time teacher aides want­ ed Call ROUND ROCK MONTES- SORI SCHOOL 733-1818, day 246/1701, evening TELEMARKETERS NEEDED part-time. No selling, work at home. Set own schedule between 8:30a m. and 8:30p.m. 3 28 4 5 27 . 8 0 0 * * O t n t f d H Q « < N n 4 i a l W E L L S FARGO BA N K TELLER J O B F A IR W E LLS FARGO Wells Fargo Bank Texas, NA is looking for career oriented individuals interested in joining the leading financial institution in Austin. I f you are interested in an atmosphere that offers exciting challenges and career growth for top performers, please visit our team at The Meeting Place on Monday, July 17,h from 8om-2pm for on­ site screening and interviewing. We offer... Competitive salary over 40 convenient locations in Austin excellent benefits TFLLERS • Cash handling, customer service and sales experience. • Excellent communications skills. Job Fair Monday, July 17* The Meeting Place 2100 Northland Drive No Appointment Necessary Just bring yourseif and a Resume Professional Attire yytfts Fargo la an A illrm a ttv * A ction Em ployer M em ber FO IC , E O t M/F/VFD________ m w n n p T p ip w p p jp , Monft Best Friend Seeking Professional Nannies $10-15/hr_____ PT Northwest, Long Term MWf 1p-6:30p T/TH 8:30a-5 30p, 5yo & 3yo PT Westlake, Long Term M -F 7a-9a/2p-6p, 5yo & 6yo triplets PT S. Central, Long Term M -F 2:4 5p -5 +5 p , 7 & 2 yr. old ■ PT West, Long Term M-F 2:15-6:15pm, 547 yr. old ■ PT North, Long Term M & W 8a-6p, 19 mo. old ■ PT North, Long Term Th. 1p-9p, 1yr old & baby due in Sep. Call M B F @ 346 2229 IT'S ALL ABOUT THE MONEY Did you know over 40 million people are earning less than $ 1 0 / h r ? Learn how not to be a statistic. 451-7270. FREE HEALTH CLUB MEMBERSHIPI The Hills Fitness Center is looking for female locker room/laundry/housekeeping. Mon-Fri, 2x00-5:00. Apply 4 6 1 5 Bee Caves Rd. Call Liz 3 2 7 4 8 8 1 . NEAR UT, $8.50-9 P.T., $9 -11 F.T. Legal services fftm, flexible hours, will train. PT/FT. Info lines: paralegal courier 4 7 42246; typist/clerical 474-22 16; bookkeeping trainee 474-0853 Or apply onlinel La wyersAiaService. com/jobs YMCA OF Austin is hiring clerical staff. Computer experience helpful. $6 50-$7.50/hr. EOE. Contact Mi­ chelle 0 476-1183. PERSONAL LINES Account Assistant needed for Southwest Austin agen­ cy. Fax resumes to Virginia at 327- 8337 ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT for bi­ ological consultant/dairy farm. Must have some word processing skills, skills and be good prompt. 8 5pm daily $ 10 /h r Call 276-7408 telephone Runner and clerical openings near UT, $ff°-9 P.T., $9-11 F.T. At Lawyer’s Aid Service, just 4 blocks from CJT, we help attorneys filing legal documents. Elnjoy flexible hours, smoke-free office, neat casual dress. Start now, summer, or fall. Clerical job info 474-2216 Info for Paralegal courier trainee 474-2246 More info. & Apply online LMWuersAidService.com OFFICE HELP 12hour*/weekly Computer and 832-2164 needed, P T /IO input for appointment filing Call SECRETARY NEEDED A.M. or ML time in small law firm Spanish flu­ ency preferred. Typmg speed 50 wpm Fax resume with hr*, of avail­ ability to Alty,, 443-6445. NEAR UT $8 5 0 9 P T $9-11 F T Bookkeeping Troinee: 474-0853 Poralegol Courier: 4 7 + 2 2 4 6 ; Typ- ,st/CI#rical: 47+ 22 1 6 ; Smoke-free, will train. Lawyer sAidService .com/jobs EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT BARTON CREEK Looking for o job? Are you a people person? •N ignt Auditor •Purchase Distributor Clerk •Special Services Agent •Accounts Receivable: Must be able to reconcile all balance sheet accounts each week. Review procedures which affect balance sheet accounts and implement changes when necessary. Reconcile all cash accounts with bank statements. Maintain fixed assets in asset system. Apply in person M-F 8:30am-5pm. 8212 Barton Club Drive West of Loop 360. Fax resume to (512) 3 2 9 4 0 1 4 for a complete listing of all position*. e e o i * g @ gB ia a@ M e ® ig r T m v m I m I DOW NTOW N NETWORK security softwore company has part-time positions available for software testing and support of Firew all/vrN product. Experience with PC hardware, Windows OS, Windows networking and TCP/IP preferred. E-mail resumes to resumes@ashleyla urenf. com, or visit our website www.ashleylaurenl.com eyl /employment STUDENTS W/MECHANICAL skills earn while you learn. locksmithing part/full-time Flexible hours. AC­ EOE. 459- TION LOCKSMITH. 5151 VB6 PROGRAMMER. 20+ hrs/wk. $ 15/hour 340-2351. CISS to start. N O W HIRING for clickin research.com. 4 positions available: Technical Writer, Usability Interviewer, Telephone Resource Specialist, and a Research Manager. Please send resume and cover letter to 1201 W 24th St. Ste. 204 Austin, Texas 78705. Or fox 236- 9191, www.dickinresearch.com. THE EX-STUDENTS ASSOCIATION UT-AUSTIN STUDENT RELATIONS ASSISTANT. Student Relations Assistant: experience in office environment, organized, detail oriented, outgo­ ing, assertive, supportive, excellent written 4 verbal comunicaton skills, strong interpersonal skills, ability to handle multiple priorities 4 work well with the public 4 on o team. Computer literacy adequate for word processing, desktop publish­ ing, spreadsheets, 4 database manipulation. Some weekend 4 evening work. Bachelor's degree ond UT knowledge preferred. Entry- level salary 4 exceptional benefits. Send resume 4 cover letter to Student Relations Assistant Search, deatonOalumni utexas.edu; moil Taryn Deaton, P.O Box 7278, Austin, TX 78713; Fax (512)471-8096 EOE LOVIN' LIFE I just got promoted I Now need PR & M GM T indvs. PT/FT. $lK -$3K /M o. Call 374-9095. INTERNET >ROMOTIONS College grads and students. Full-time career opportunities $ 3 0 0 0 - $ 5 0 0 0 / m o . Part-time summer opportunities. $ 1 0 0 0 - $ 3 0 0 0 / m o . CaH b f info and intafviaw. 4 1 9 - 0 0 6 1 .* 20+ PROFESSIONALS NEEDED $30K+ Nationally positioned communica­ tion company has immediate need for several sales support 4 retail sales individuals. Great ground-floor opportunities for graduates or indi­ viduals seeking a professional op­ portunity with increased income po­ tential. Base salary of $30K+ com­ missions. Prefer individuals with some sales background. Professional appearance and demeanor a musfl E-mail resumes to: raiQtexas.net, fax resumes to 732-0199 or call 732-0188 for immediate consideration. Recruiting associates, Inc. - Never a Fee, Equal Opportunity Employer. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY! Start-up Austin web-based informa­ tion system company seeking several sharp inside sales professionals. Phone sales targeting Universities and the academic communities utiliz­ ing pre-qualified leads, highly moti­ vated individuals with strong written and verbal communication skills could land this excellent ground-floor opportunity with no limit on career advancement. Base Salary of $30 + commissions plus full benefits. E-mail resumes to: rai@texas.net, fax to 732-0199 or call 732-0188. Recruiting Associates, Inc. ~ Never a Fee, Equal Opportunity Employer. BUSINESS COORDINATOR Owner of Market Research firm is seeking a quality and detail- oriented individual to join our firm as Business Coordinator. Duties include proposal preparation, project tracking, appointment cheauling, travel arrangements, research assistance, report writing and analysis, in addition to a variety of other general administrative tasks. This position involves frequent interaction with clients, some travel and a lot of variety. The successful candidate will possess superior communication skills, including editing skills. Must be able to take initiative, work independently, exercise good judgment, be highly organized and able to meet deadlines. Ability to prioritize worklood for self and Owner Is essential. Ability to maintain high level of confidentiality is required. Must be PC Sawy with expertise in Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint. Outlook experience a plus. Bachelor's degree required. W e offer flexible hours competitive pay and central location. Please email your cover letter, resume and salary history to buscoord@hr-directions.com or fax to 349-7724. EOE. * * UTILE ITALY restaurant n o * hiring line cooks and wait staff positions. CaH 3456761 or apply in person after 2pm. JOY, DANCERS and waitstaff. Be­ gin tomorrow, debt free next week I FT/PT TABC cert. CaH/come by Joy of Austin IH35 exit 250 N Bound 218-8012. DANCERS 4 Waitstaff position at Sugar's. Have fun 4 make $ in a pleasant atmosphere. $ Call 451-1711 $ PLUCKERS IS N O W HIRING Delivery Drivers $8- 15/hr Cooks & Dishwashers $6.50-$7.50/hr Waiters $ 10/hr Phone personnel $6.50+/hr Apply at 2222 Rio Grande or ¿all David at 236-9112. DELIVERY DRIVERS, AM/PM, PM COOK NEEDED IMMEDIATELY. Apply at Rocket's Burgers, Spuds and Salads, 28268 Rio Grande. 473-2261. Experienced drivers $10-$ 15/hr. N o cute uniforms or signs! Cooks hourly based on experience. PART-TIME CHILDCARE needed M f 2:30-5:30 in Barton Hills beginning Aug. 31st. Call Ruthie Schafer at 343-6248. I WILL GIVE FREE HOUSESITTING in return for room. Close to campus or bus. UT doctoral student. Non-smok­ er/drinker. 476-7937 CHILD CARE NEEDED. ~ Single father *(itL 2 boys (7 and 9). Approx. 15 hours per week. Full time room ond board provided. Responsible, mature, and be a kid at heart. Great opportunity for the correct person. E-mail: m i ssoula_kid@yahoo. com or c a ll 415-9620. CHILDCARE WORKER needed for two boys. Full-time late July/earty August. Starting August 15, 3-6p.m. Light housework, cooking, cor re­ quired. Fax resume: 476-1315. Call Martha 4 7 6 + 4 7 4 . 8-5p.m., eve­ nings 328-8544. in home to CAREGIVER NEEDED watch toddler, M-F 8 + . 290/Harris Branch area. Must be fun-loving and energetic. Refs and experience. 2 72+632 CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTER SEEKS: PT & FT te a c h e r s $7-8/hr. The Children's Center of Austin. 7 9 5 - 8 3 0 0 o r f a x 7 9 5 - 8 3 1 1 . MONTESORRI SCHOOL Austin has position teacher. Please call 451 -6134 in N W for afternoon "TUTOR" NEEDED part-time in Round Rock for special needs 6-year old. Training provided. Experience or education in special ed, speech, psycholo- . gy, etc. a plus. $8-10/hour. 3- 4 hour shifts. 255-3651 9 A.M. - 9 P.M. CHILDCARE NEEDED 1 or 2 after- noons/week. Experience w/children a must, CPR a plus. 6 20 /2 2 2 2 area, car necessary. 918-8481. PART-TIME NANNY: nuturing, high- energy student to core for 3yr old boy. 3 days/week, 12-5, 288- 8275, Undo. PERKY LOVING student needed by busy family to care for odoroble 2yr old boy. Hours 4-6:30 M-Fri. Must hove reliable transportation. Excellent pay. Coll 723-7051. AFTERNOON NANNY/ MOTHER'S HELPER: Six months, 1 2 -1 8 hours/wk. Transport bright, creative girt (4) from preschool to N W home. Some errands, light housekeeping, child's laundry, cot core Qualifications: Nurturing, organized, nonsmoker with arts 6 crafts skills, reliable car, good driving record, excellent references. Experience with newborns o plus. Salary based on experience. 346-8142 (before 9pm) or nannyOgolem.ph.utexas.edu BUSINESS BEST COMPUTERIZED Doytroding System, S4P5000 low startup cost. Earn 6 figures/yeer. Proven perform­ ance. INC. I roderslnter national, 51+6111 O o p / 5 l i d C o u l d l l o r o n 7 I I 8 €> 5 BY ttlKE / hqckbiK'd (S3 mail.ufexas.edu W oodson / h ttp: WNt, cc.u texas.edu/'* i% 3 ^ 2 Crossword Edited by Will Shortz No. 0531 L E T T NY MECWAniCAL DUPLICATE H M A t t WITH MOM SO \ COULD 00 PLAY. TUE ROBO ROBOn BUT WE ALWAYS rtEAn v w tL E .. , , CAf\ FEEL nYSELE c ettim ; CROW DED... I BET THAT JACKA5S IS DESTRC^ma H F E F O R iiS ACAin! 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M L K Phone V72*7SVS m - s 1 1 - 8 ; s u n 1 2 - 5 SIGNS OF THE APOCALYPSE DAY2001 @MAIL.UTEXAS.EDU DAVEYOUMANS VVAa A a /c^ By K> Kl P O W 'E V U -pttnA: gop kA tcvst Í30o)oiocjyi fAoQ hQL.CotA o v k g -u lsts a7e\ MtPO T^PA-y To p u a rtsrs To FiUP o\)T O H C t AVJ1> FoP- A U - \ f f-M A lL v J iS W A U > j TWbfr FjUV-i- f n v r ISÜV" fL&A > -W y p u g . 7 m 3 3 ? r y / S O , K C C 6 W N G - TO 0 U R R E S U L T S , W E A l t e s u R E T ^ A T -/O U R. f A M lL v j \ S M T sjo u R . T A M l u y , S o \ \ E A P o n £ A c £ S T A G f fc TO R- ^ 0 u T - C h f i i SWoviVd h W « • t o li 40^1 f. r -4 4 S e T A k í v r iAo»v/«r »«” ?«4C O O t T M 4 K O f VAO oVttAS V — EoV u 00* b f i« 4 V k H v m l H iY g) - Btwiv i* OO• L oka nA . n x k u J \ a X W e l l 3 ¿t/i *ir«' T** t so*g ai* ^ 6;ée - L .- c k V? G e n e r a l iilífcM'í'tO Jfc_aL W a i t >n ¿ F O K T H E GOOD DAY VIEWERS. TODAY WE ARE STAKING OUT A N E T C W ATER FOUNT IAN \N SEARCH OF A MOST ELUSIVE CREATURE; A F E M A L E ENGINEERING S T U D E N T . p— n Dilbert® DOG BERT CONSULTS I SAVED SOtAE fAONEV BY BUYING A USED CON SULTIN G REPORT. UJE'RE GOING TO GIVE THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS FOR SO M E­ TH IN G CALLED DOS TO SOMETHING CALLED M ICROSOFT FIN ALLY T H R EE DAYS OF WAITING PAYS O FF W H EN A FEM A LE IS SPOTTED DRINKING FROM T H E COOL WATER O F T H E FOUNT IAN. SHE 15 IM MEDIATELY SURROUNDED BY HER FELLOW MALE ENGINEER!N6 STU DEN TS, AND E N G U LF E D BY THEIR CORNY P lC K -ü P U N E S . ________ boO>v.fc-« ! « • » < > ----- D oonesbury BarrtH- i u « s a * * ! o f i ' v r WA./ f i'. r U A lW.y»' tW 'i i f \ \ f v A . t \ f ^00 t v M Y - ^you?- ra v \M is too vcM ,TO &S yoUR \2JcAU jr/MIL-V, CAUU US ! rtt INift*» by S co tt Adam s I HAVE A GOOD FEELING ABO U T T H IS . BY GARRY TRUDEAU 1 2 The Daily Entertainment Fight Clubbing How tough is the new video game, Marvel vs. Capcom 2? Find out tomorrow. t ’ • * Expect Nothing But The Best Austin band Goudie on signing with Lars and prom oting their Peep Show’ Sound Bites Records w ill com e and records w ill go. Some are worth keeping and som e are not worth the fr e e space o f your local used CD bins. The Daily Texan offers a look at the latest m ajor releases to enter stores. For your listening pleasure? Here's what we say ... EDITOR'S NOTE: For the third part o f our Texas music series, we take a look at Austin's oivn Goudie and their recent explorations into the mainstream. By Matt Dentter Daily Texan Staff Walking through the music industry, its history and its future, expect the unexpected, johnny Goudie expected nothing much when labels started looking at his rock band a few months ago. Named Goudie, after its lead man, the Austin quartet attracted the attention of national executives soon after its inception. "Right after we formed, we started writing songs and cutting demos right out of the gate and we were doing showcases," Johnny said. Their immediate dose of exposure was thanks to a well-connected manager. But it was the most famous rock drummer in music today, Metallica's Lars Ulrich, that decided to take a chance on the group and sign them to his Elektra Records imprint, The Music Company. Goudie s sound is not quite the heavy metal Metallica is known for, sounding more like an American Bends-era Radiohead. Needless to say, the group was concerned about what the metal head would think of their more emo-influenced epic sounds. In fact, they were afraid he would hate them. "It was very weird when they first told us that it was Lars' company that was coming to see us. It turns out he has a broad taste in music," johnny said. He's not the biggest Metallica fan, but can respect the musi­ cal directions that the ground-breaking rock group has made since the '80s. 'It's not really the kind of music I listen to, but I like what they've done, where they're going. I think they're a great band." After the deal was made, the band began work on Peep Show. Released this week nationally, Peep Slum) is great rock music. In 2000, in a climate of pop and rap- metal, this breed of ambitious, layered guitar music has become "alternative" once again. Ambitious with­ out being pretentious, Goudie took the making of Peep Show very seriously. "We'all get really excited about recording and we're all really adventurous," Johnny said of the group. "We would get to the studio in the morning and say, 'What song do we wanna cut today?' and that song we would cut. When you have the chance to do it like that, it makes it really exciting and really fun and exhausting. We locked ourselves away for six weeks and just went at it." Even though the name would suggest a one-man band, Goudie is definitely a group effort. Jflhnny would seek the writing and recording assistance of not only his three bandmates, but also some outside sources. The album's most infectious track, was even co-written by Go-Go's guitarist Jane Weidlin. Still, Goudie finds himself eventually com­ posing most of the band's words. Julia, "I do the majority of the lyric-writing because I think that I'm the most verbose one of all of us. I don't know if what I have to say is bullshit or not, but I def­ initely have a lot to say," he said. Being outspoken comes with the territory when your band is named after you. Though, Johnny doesn't fear the pressure or responsibility linked Johnny Goudie, second from left, and his band Goudie stand ready for stardom with their new album. with his band's moniker and his own. "We kind of started with that name. We thought, 'It's cool, nobody has it.' Think about how many bands are out there. There's just not that many names left," he said. "There's bands that have outgrown their name and their music defines their name. Like the name "The Beatles" is the stupidest name in the world, but you don't think about that now." Their name may be as unique as their sound, and that's fitting when considering the band's residence is in Austin of all places. It was a challenge for the band to break through in the 6th Street scene, but it worked. "It's kind of awkward for a band that plays the kind of music h a t we play. People aren't really at a bar to hear songs. No slag on h e scene or a band, people want to shake h eir rump. They don't wanna get all bummed out. It takes a little while to get a fanbase here, playing h e kind of music that we do. But it s been great." Yet, Johnny still sees some room for Austin's improvement. "The scene now has changed so much. Clubs have closed and it seems like it costs money to get into h e club and drink prices are higher. That's just h e way hings are and h e influx of people into this town has mavbe watered-down h e creative force that it once was. The band has exercised its live music muscle recent­ ly, opening for Veruca Salt and fellow Austinites Sister Seven. That, on top of a staggering show during SXSW 2000 — with Lars Ulrich in observant atten­ dance — has helped Goudie develop a strong follow­ ing b o h in town and out. For now, this Austin band will tour excessively through h e nation, starting along h e West Coast, where h eir single "Baby Hello" has received heavy airplay. With a little luck, even more music fans will discover h eir sound. Johnny Goudie is realistic about the music business, citing an early introduction to h e possible hangups and hardships h a t come with h e territory. Still, this famously polite and genuinely nice musician doesn't see his band changing for anyone, at any time. "It's not like we feel h e need to ever do something to make other people happy. That sounds kind of self­ ish, but we do what we do and eih er you like it or you don't," he said. "It's such a crazy crap-shoot and here's a lot of hard work and you never know where it's gonna end up." Meanwhile, he can only expect h e unexpected. V id e o P i c o f th e W e e k Baby D o ll Courtney Fitzgerald Daily Texan Staff Sexy, seductive Hollywood teens did not originate with Britney Spears and Jennifer Love Hewitt. Lolita as we know her today emerged even before Stanley Kubrick's 1962 rendition of Vladimir Nabokov's notorious novel. When controversial director Elia Kazan released Tennessee Williams' steamy Baby Doll onto American screens in 1956, he introduced the first precursor to the overt sexuality audiences have come to associate with die Lolita persona. Even from the opening Scene, the film is unforgettable, as Baby Doll (played expertly by Carroll Baker), a womanly yet immature nineteen-year-old virgin wearing little-girl romper pajamas and sucking her thumb in a baby crib, is spied upon through a hole in the wall by her middle-aged husband Archie Lee (Karl Malden). Archie Lee is a failing cotton gin owner whose patience wears thin as he waits for the 20th birthday of his childish bride when he will be allowed to consummate the marriage. With the intense drawl of its southern setting, die entire film dnps with desire and sexual tension as Baby Doll plays coy and childish games of teasing Archie Lee before the big day. When Baby Doll first appeared in theaters the media dubbed it as inexcusably dirty, and die Archdiocese of New York forbade Catholics from seeing it. But Baby Doll contains no explicit sexual­ ity. Elia Kazan and Carroll Baker have created a film $o polished that Bain/ Doll is all about sex without sex itself. Baby Doll repre­ sents a time when unadorned dialogue and acting spoke for them­ selves and a simple black and white screen coupled with a sultry look in an actress' eye were enough to send audiences into the kind of post-coital exhaustion that die ever-higher midriffs of cur­ rent Lolitas cannot inflame. Undergraduate Library Vulcan Video Available a t IB fl& fli iS ¿ Elia Kazan’s Baby Doll intro­ duced the first Lolita to audiences in 1956. The film was Kazan’s follow-up to East of Eden. m -ntm m a 8:00-8:30 Sneak Peek 8:30-9:00 Campus Loop 9:00-9:30 Pitch Control 9:30-10:00 Texas Newswatch 10:00-11:00 The Tate Show THE TATE SHOW PRESENTS: Make your own ad! Just color in the space provided! Too Much Stereo By: The Urge Label: Virgin Records The Urge's new album, Too Much Stereo, is a unique blend of almost all walks of music. Ska and reggae are uniquely and uncharacteristically com­ bined with guitar riffs that, at times, border heavy metal. The blend of musi­ cal genres builds the exdtem ent of the listener as you never know what will be slipped into the mix. Too Much Stereo is upbeat entertainment. Vocalist Steve Ewing has a smooth voice that transitions gracefully from ska beats, to a lower chord that refuses to be overshadowed when guitarist Jerry Jost rips into th e rock. "W hat Is This," starts the CD with ska rhythms, and lyrics similar in sound to those of Barenaked Ladies, proving that the diversity of this album is what makes it fun. "W hat Do They Know," however does not even attempt ska and instead relies on beautifully dark lyrics. "Warning, Warning" ends the CD with the horn section perfectly in sync, reminding the listener that although The Urge has successfully mixed a variety of styles on Too Much Stereo, they are highly applauded for their talent in ska. Too Much Stereo proves the St. Louis-based group deserves the loyal fans they have gained through constant touring, most notably with friends, 311. Though some of The Urge's first works didn't make it big, they have more than made up for it. — Stephanie Hogan The Urge will bring their melodic ska-rock to La Zona Rosa on Aug. 6, with B if Naked and Mest. Words For Living By: PJ. Olsson Label: Columbia Records is u neven . The o p en in g Words For Living, the second release from sin g er/so n g w rite r P.J. O lsso n , "G o od D ream ," "D an d elio n " and "Throu gh Rock Son g s," are a trium virate of sm art, cu t­ ting-edge pop. Sounding like N ick D rake on acid, O lsson d elivers airy vocal harm onies atop frenetic, beat box-inform ed rhythm s and acoustic guitar brushes. The com bination provides for a refreshingly novel sound; recalling the unhinged zaniness of C ake and m usical free-for-all of Beck. three so ngs, Sadly, the album should have stopped here; for the rest of the tracks fail to deliver the sonic inventiveness prom ised on the first three. O lsson ends up either sounding like Rufus W ainright-lite ("R ead y for a F all") or indulging in overly trendy lyrics and production. Such self-consciou sly hip styling ensures that W ords For Living is the kind of album that will sound em barrassingly outdated 10 years from now. — David English Notorious K.I.M. By: Lil’ Kim Label: Atlantic Records While Lil' Kim is usually well known for her hardcore sex lyrics, she proves that she can diversify her styles as she matures on her sophomore effort, Notorious K.I.M. Kim provides numerous club anthems for hot sum­ mer fun like the title track and the extremely provocative, yet curiously exciting "Custom Made (Give It To You),' which is one of the albums stand­ out tracks. Kim also mixes it up on "I'm Human, which, at times, sounds more like an upbeat dance track than a hardcore rap hit. But since Lil' Kim first broke into the spotlight, it w asn't a question if any of the songs would be accom­ panied by her over-the-top sexual lyrics, it was just figuring out how many she would include. Kim definitely turns up the heat on "She D on't Love You" in which she describes what she can do to her man that others can't. But the hottest song on the album (not for the faint of heart) is "How Many Licks" which also features Dru Hill's thong-loving frontman Sisqo .T h e beat and chorus are instantly catchy and Kim provides enough hardcore raunch ( , to make Jenna Jam eson look like an innocent school girl. There are a few moments on the album that lag. The collaboration with tal­ ented R&B singer Carl Thomas on "Right N ow " comes off a bit too forced. featuring I. And while it is not necessarily a bad track, "Q ueen Bitch Pt. 2 Diddy and Biggie just doesn't quite have the momentum that the original masterpiece did. Notorius K.I.M. is a fun work that flows perfectly with the summer season. Kim, like Madonna or janet Jackson, proves she still has the talent to keep ahead of her competitors by diversifying her sound and reinventing her image, not to mention the ability to always shock her fans with the unex­ —ira Weidberg Sparks Are Gonna Fly The Catherine Wheel Coming Soon pected. Re g a l c i n e m a s r e q . ilr in m n a s c o m C H A R G E T I C K E T S B Y P H O Nt- 5 1 2-4 2 R E G A L Daily Bargain M atin e e s in | ) W ednesday Discount Show s All Day excluding 1/ Film s ♦ N o P a s s e s * N o P a s s e s or S u p e r S a v e r s A d v a n c e T i c k e t s at B o x Offi ce Cred it C a r d s A c c e p t e d CAP -Al OF t EXAS AT -83 BEHIND WHOLE FOODS J la o M . 80e So . L a m a r & B e n W h it e G A T E W A Y A ll S t a d iu m S e a t in NOW HIRING ■ APPLY AT THEATRE THE PATRIOT(R) (1200 1230 1 00 3 X 4 00 4 45)7 00 7 30 I 1 8 00 10 15 D»Q | ✓ ★ THE PERFECT STORM (PG-13) (121012401:10 3.30 4 20 610) 710 7 40 810 10:00 1030 DIG I ME, MYSELF & IRENE (R) (122012:50 4 154 45) 715 7 45 1 10:00 10 30 d ig (12:15 2 45 515) 7 45 10:15 d ig I SHAFT (R) TITAN A.E. (PG) (12:10 2 30 4 45) 7 00 915 D»a GONE IN 60 SECONDS (PG-13) (1215 4 00) 7151000 d ig BOYS AND GIRLS (PG-13) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 2 (PG-13) (1200 1 00 2 45 3 45 (12 50 310 5.20) 7 40 9:50 d ig * W E S T G A T E 4 1 6 - 5 7 0 0 x 3 8 0 7 ✓ * THE PERFECT STORM (PG-13) (11 5012 40 1:30 2 40 3 45 4 45 5:30) 7 00 7 40 8 30 9:5510.30 d ig ✓THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY & BULLWINKLE(PG) (12:05 2:25 4 55) 7 15 9 » d k s TITAN A.E.(PG) (1220 12.50 2:30 3.00 4 405 15) 705 7 45 9 20 950 dig MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 2 (PG-13) (12.00120 2 45 4 30 5 25) 7 25 8 1010:05 d ig (12:30 2 50 5 00) 7 20 9 45 d ig BOYS AND GIRLS (PG-13) U-571 (PG-13) ROAD TRIP (R) (12 55 3.05 520) 7 501020 d ig FREE FAMILY FILM SERIES TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY 10AM M E T R O P O L IT A N (12 10 2:36 505) 7.3510:00 d ig » 3 5 S AT S T A S S N E Y L A N E 4 1 6 - 5 7 0 0 * 3 8 1 1 5 30) 7:00 830 9 45 o*a NOW HIRING - APPLY AT THEATRE ✓ DISNEY’S THE KID(PG) (11 451245 2153:155 151715 I SHANGHAI NOON (PG-13) U-571 (PG-13) (12 40 310 5 40) 8 00 10 30 d ig (12 15 2 45 5 15) 7 4510:15 d ig L IN C O L N 5 4 0 6 IH 3 5 N O R T H 4 1 6 5 7 0 0 * 3 8 0 6 C H A R G E T I C K E T S B Y P H O N E 7 9 5 0 2 3 2 * 9 4 5 NOW HIRING - APPLY AT THEATRE ✓ SCARY MOVIE (R) ✓ DISNEY'S THE KID (PG) (1215 240 5 05) 7 30 9 55 d ig ✓ THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY & BULLWINKLE(PG) (100 310 5 20)7-35945ooi (1220 225 4:35) 7 05 920 d k s I CHICKEN RUN (G) (12553 15515) 720 9 30 d k j BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE (PG-13) (1 10400) 710 935 ool MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 2 (PG-13) (130415) 700 950 pot A R B O R >000 ML S E A R C H C H A R G E T I C K E T S BN P H O N E /05 SUNSHINE (R) JESUS' SON (R) HAMLET (R) CROUPIER (NR) ADRENALINE DRIVE (NR) LUMINOUS MOTION (NR) FANTASIA 2000(G) I THE VtRGM SUIdOES (R) (1230 4:00) 800 d m (1215 2:36 5:00) 7 20 9 45 oia (1200 2 30 500) 7301035 d ig n2;30245 5 30) 7 40 9 55 d o l (1230 3:00 5:15) 7 501015 d o l (1230 215 4 45) 710 9 30ool (12.15215500)doi. 720 9.30 ooc 7:50 9:40 10 20 d ig ✓ THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY & BULLWINKLE(PG) (11301230 2:05 3 05 4 35 5:20) 730 7 30 9.301030 d ig SHAFT (R) (11 50 12.20 1 00 2.05 3 3 0 4 405 10 5 40) 7 05 7:35 8 15 9 35 10:101045 d ig BOYS AND GIRLS (PG-13) BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE(PG-13) (1140 1 210 1 05 230 2 » (12 20 306530) 7 551025 d ig 3 » 430 5 00) 710 7 40 8:05 9 » 10.001 0 » d ig 7 35 10 05 d k s SHANGHAI NOON (PG-13) DINOSAUR (PG) GLADIATOR (R) (11301454 50) d ig (12.00130 3 » 4 40) 7 00 8.» 1015 d ig R IV E R S ID E ' H O E R IV E R S ID E OH C H A R G E T IC K ! I S BY D H O i.i 4 1 6 6 7 0 0 *3 8 0 1 r>-0232*95■< SCARY MOVIE (R) (12.» 330 5:30) 8 1 0 1 0 » d ig ✓ DISNEY’S THE KID (PG) (12 00 220 4 40) 7 15 9 » d ig ✓ ★THE PERFECT STORM (PG-13) (130 4 » ) 650 9 45 d ig ✓ * THE PATRIOT (R) (1210 3 » ) 7301015 d ig BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE (PG-13) 8301010dol ME,MYSELF» IRENE(R) (1220 240 5 20)7501020o o l GONE W 60 SEC0N0S(PG-13) (1210 2 » 5 00) 7» 1000 dol SHAFT (R) (1 2 » 2 50 5 10) 7 40 9:55 DOL THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY A BULL WINKLE (PG) (1230 210420) dol Tired of the same old thing? Wanna try something new? New Music Giveaway Coming Soon to The Daily Texan! SU M M ER FILM CLASSICS w w w .th e p a ra m o u n t.o rg ________■ The Paramount 70 MM Sed» TOTAL RECALL (R) Tonight at 7 15 & 9 35 pm THE UNTOUCHABLES (R) Thursday & Fnday at 7:15 & 945 pm TOP GUN (PG) Satutlay at 7:15 8.9:30 pm. Sunday at 2 45, 5:00 6 7:15 pm. SB 00 Surtan* wti ID/Si C*K*6/Ma6ne«s bata» 6 pm $4 00 71 3 C o n g r « si IN F O . 4 7 2 - 5 4 7 0 M o re G a m e s • More VArieh • M ore In n ' N e w G am e s: Striker Extreme Pinball Marvel vs. Capcom 2 V irtiu Tennis; C ruisin Exotica; (ambo Safan Dead or Alive 2: Sew Gauntlei / 2 0 0 G u a d a l u p e A lw a y s op en till 4am dorm 15 broadcast 9