WORLD & NATION 3 UNIVERSITY with M arch s a d n e s s UT’s tentative decision not to host the men’s NCAA basketball tournament next year concerns some city leaders. *2¿£-£066i Xi OSVd 13 3Aiya - n a a im is v a ¿292 oni oN iH snandoaoiw isa n m n o s wad 6 8 / i i / s o wad ,21 UNIVERSITY B ack to sch o o l Zeta Beta Tau fraternity’s national office is allowing the group to form a new chapter on campus. 1 HE DAI LY TEXAN Vol. 94, No. 115 3 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Thursday, March 23, 1995 25c UT police, housing residents wary after rash of car burglaries, vandalism LLV w W h en crim in als find "W hen crim inals find an area that w orks for them, they stay there." MELANIE GERIK D aily Texan Staff In seven of the nine burglary cases, stereos _______________ T he U n iv e rs ity Police D e p a rtm e n t h as beefed u p patrols at cam pus m arried hous­ in g after a strin g of car b u rg la rie s, w hich police suspect are related. N ine burglaries of vehicles, a license plate theft and a broken rear w in d o w h a v e been reported to UT polici this sem ester from the G atew ay A p artm en ts on W est S i x t h Street, a n d th e B ra c k e n r id g e a n d C o lo r a d o A p a r tm e n ts on L ake A u s tin B o u le v a rd , according to police records. G rig g s said p o lice h a v e no su sp e c ts or strong leads, b ut added that the sam e p e r­ son or people probably are responsible for the burglaries. "O ur patrol officers are checking the area m ore frequently," said U f police C apt. Silas an area that w ork s for them , th ey stay th e r e /’ — UT police Capt. Silas Griggs G rig g s. "W e w o u ld also a sk re sid e n ts of G atew ay to be on the lookout for anything suspicious." G rig g s said the n u m b e r of in c id e n ts is u n u su a lly h ig h co m p are d to last y ear. In 1994, 79 a u to b u rg laries occurred on cam ­ pus, according to police reports. T h ere is a person or a g ro u p of p eo p le w orking G atew ay A partm ents," G riggs said. or speakers w ere taken. In o n e of th e m o st re c e n t c a ses, M ike H a r r e ll, a p h o to jo u r n a lis m s e n io r a n d B rackenridge A p artm ents resident, said he re tu rn e d from s p rin g b re a k at 9:30 p .m . S u n d a y to find the plastic w in d o w of his Jeep slashed and the dashboard arou nd the stereo dam aged, b ut nothing w as rem oved. M ost of the crim es h ap p en late at night, even though the areas have am ple lighting, G riggs said. "You can be as well-lit as you w ant to at th re e o r fou r in th e m o rn in g , b u t th e re 's ['-till] no one there to see it," he said. Please see Auto, page 5 Car problems BRACKENRIDGE APTS. INCIDENTS = break-in ^ radio/ J = fiar AREA OF DETAIL MAIN CAMPUS A u s tin source: U COLORADO APTS. GATEWAY A P T S . Parking rates to increase Revenue generated will finance construction of campus garage JENNIFER SCHULTZ Daily Texan Staff ^ S tudent Services Fee C om m ittee m em ­ bers gave their blessing W ednesday to the seco n d p a rt o f th e T raffic a n d P a rk in g Policies C om m ittee p la n to d o u b le c a m ­ p u s p a rk in g p e rm it ra te s to fin a n c e a fourth parking garage. "T h e en d r e s u lt w ill be, w e 'll h a v e e n o u g h m o n ey to p a y for th e g a ra g e ," said Joe W ard, assistant vice president for business affairs. Beginning this fall: ■ Student C parking perm its will go u p from $22 this year to $30. ■ G r a d u a te s t u d e n t G p e r m its w ill increase from the current $36 to $48. ■ M otorcycle driver M perm its will rise from $16 to $22. ■ A d m i n is tr a to r s ' O p e r m its w ill increase from $195 to $210. ■ Faculty F p e rm its w ill increase from $130 to $140. to $56 from $52. ■ Staff m em bers' A perm its will increase W ard said Parking G arage 4, to be locat­ ed near 27th Street an d Speedw ay, w ill be com pleted in abou t three years. B uilding the 1,000-space p a rk in g garage will cost ab out $6 m illion. The cost will be offset p a rtia lly by th e p e rm it p ric e increases, which will b rin g in about $386,000 a n n u al­ ly, W ard said. W ard said h e is n o t sure exactly ho w the re st of th e p ro je ct w ill be fin an ced . "T h e d e ta ils o f h o w it w ill w o rk o u t hav en 't been w orked out," he said. $3.7 million requested lor shuttle bus JENNIFER S C H U L T Z ___ Daily Texan Staff A $3.7 m illion contract for sh u ttle b u s service w as p re ­ sented to the S tudent Services Fee C om m ittee W ed n esd ay , c o n s t it u t i n g th ir d of approxim ately $10 m illion the com m ittee can distribute. a The c o n tra c t c o n stitu te s a $14,320 increase. Joe W a rd , a s s is ta n t v ic e president for business affairs, said the contract w ith Capital M etropo litan T ra n sp o rta tio n A u th o rity h a s n o t in creased since 1993, w'hen the service cost full-tim e stu d en ts $38.36 p e r sem ester, second only to the Student H ealth C enter fee of $45.36. The health center has since becom e a separate fee. The new' contract rate w ith C a p ita l M e tro w ill p ro v id e Please see Fees, page 2 C urrently, faculty a n d staff m em b ers are first in line for spaces in Parking G arages 1 and 2, w ith the rem ainder going to students Construction of Parking Garage 3 near Beauford H. Jester C enter has not yet begun. W ard said an increase in p a rk in g p e rm its w o u ld n ot o n l\ help fu n d the garage, b ut a lso e n co u rag e s tu d e n ts to use it because th e p rice d iffe re n c e betw een a p ark ing perm it and a garage space w ou ld be m inim al. V\ithout subsi­ dies, he added, users w ould be unable to purchase the spaces. __________________ o _________________________________________ Please see Parking, page 2 Associated Press W ASHINGTON — Shouting erupted in the H ouse on W e d n e s d a y a s D e m o c ra ts b itte r ly a c c u s e d m a jo rity R epublicans of try in g to ram th ro u g h a m e a n -sp irite d welfare overhaul bill, in the harshest floor fight yet over the G O P's "C ontract W ith Am erica." D em o *.1 ats ^ e' >► illegal immigrants rush to gain c r i e d R e p u b l i c a n c¡^|zenship ¡n face of welfare t a c t i c s i n p u s h i n g c u ( s the far-reaching bill -------- ——-------------------------- — — — tow ard enactm ent and accused the GOP of being cruel to children and pillaging w elfare program s to pay for a tax cut for the privileged. 5 But R e p u b lic a n s, le d by R ep. Bill A rc h e r of le x a s , assailed the "hysterical" rhetoric and said the D em ocrats' criticism m ark ed " th e d y in g th ro e s of a failed w elfare state." In a series of votes after a long day of angry debate, the House ap p rov ed am endm ents that w ould allow the sav ­ ings from the ov erh au l, an e stim ated $66 billion, to be used to pay for tax cuts, and to prohibit federal w elfare funds from being spent on abortions for poor w om en. Law m akers also agreed to tempe r a ban on cash aid to unm arried teen-age m others, and to the children born to w om en already on welfare, by allow ing such fam ilies to receive v ou ch ers for the purch ase of d ia p e rs an d o th er necessities. Please see Welfare, page 5 Sunjana Venkat, 4, eagerly looked on as Kristin Stone, an Austin High School senior, prepared her a mint chocolate chip ice cream cone at Baskin Robbins at 2828 G uadalupe St. She said that her m other takes her children out for ice cream several times a week. 3 indicted in Brackenridge case CAMILO RUGGERO AND SCOTT PATTERSON_____________ Daily Texan Staff Three people, in clu d in g the form er director of p a tie n t services at B rack en rid g e H o sp ital, w ere in d ic te d on felony ch arg es W ed n e sd a y a fte » a 15-m onth in v e stig a tio n in v o lv in g the hospital's financial dealings. D o ro th y W olfe, w ho resigned m o re th a n a y ear ag o as d ire c to r of p a tie n t services, and Scott G arcia, p re sid e n t of C ertica re Benefits, Inc. in H o u s to n , each w e re - in d ic te d on 11 The indictments allege that the hospital incurred about $80,000 in unre­ ceived services from Certicare, according to a statement from District Attorney Ronnie Earle, whose office conducted the investigation. felony counts of bribery and 12 felony counts of securing execution of a d o cum en t by deception. T h e in d ic tm e n ts a lle g e th a t th e h o s p ita l in cu rred about $80,000 in unreceived services from C erticare, according to a statem ent from D istrict A tto rn e y R onnie Earle, w h o se office conducted the investigation. A lso in d ic te d w as M a rily n B ric k m a n , an e m p lo y e e o f H o u s to n - b a s e d S p e c tru m Financial Services, w hich cond ucted business Please see Brackenridge, page 2 Perry: Iran’s military an increasing threat Associated Press DOHA, Q atar — Iran has installed chemical w eap o n s along w ith 6,000 troops near the m outh of the Persian G ulf in a mili­ tary b u ild u p capable of crippling the flow of oil in the region, Defense Secretary W illiam Perry said W ednesday. "W e really d o not know w hy Iran w ould choose to dvploy chemical w eapons there, but w e consider it to be a very nega­ tive factor," Perry told reporters aboard the USS M eé lusky. I he Navy frigate w as m aking a port call at A bu Dhabi, largest ot the seven U nited A rab Emirates. H e said it w as im p o rta n t for the G ulf A rab states to fully u n d erstand the nature of the th reat Iran poses. Perry, on a six-day G ulf tour, has been urging Arab allies to u p g rad e their defenses and im prove ties w ith the U.S. m ilitary in th e face of m ilita ry b u ild u p s by b o th Iraq a n d Iran . He arrived in Q atar late W ednesday to discuss the storage of sup­ p lies fo r a U.S. a rm o re d b rig a d e , o ne of th re e W a sh in g to n w ants to stockpile in the region. The defense secretary has w arned repeatedly in recent days of Iran 's w eapons b u ild u p near the m outh of the Persian Gulf, but he had not previously m entioned chemical w e a p o n s Perry said he could not discuss the type of chem ical w eapons Iran has deployed or their delivery system. Please see Iran, page 5 INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY N o t-S o -M e rry W eather: Let’s see ... my last paycheck consisted of 80 beans, a moldy, half-eaten doughnut and some change some­ one accidentally dropped on the floor. Not to mention that all my grades are in the mid-60s Call me Grumpy, call me Dopey, just don't call me Merry. I am neither a friend of Snow W hite's nor an elf, although I am treated that way. Think I’ll go home and eat some pizza. Index: Around Cam pus....................12 C lassified s.............................11 C om ics................................... 21 Editorials.................................. 4 Entertainm ent....................... 17 S p o rts •........................ 16 State & L o c a l.......................... 9 U niversity.................................6 W orld & N a tio n .......................3 }p. Patsy Mink, D-Hawaii, spoke on Capitol Hill Wednesday irina a rally protesting proposed welfare legislation. ASSUUiA i tu mesa ‘Contract with America survives anti-abortion bloc Page 2 Thursday, March 23, 1995 T h e D a il y T e x a n T h e Da ily Texan ......................... Editor Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors Nows Editor Associate News Editors News Assignments Editor Senior Reporters Associate Editors Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor Around Campus Editor. Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Photo Editor......................... Graphics Editor.................. Cartoonists............................ ......................................................... ......... ............... . ................................. ..................... ...... ............— ..... Mary Hopkins ... I f ..................................................................Michael Brick ................... Jason Dugger. Travis Gofl. Lesley Hensell. Robert Russell Renae Merle ..................................................................... Trish Busa. Stacey Rodrigues .................. ....................................................................... Kevin Williamson ........................... ........ Caleb Canning, Melanie Gerik, Camilo Ruggero, Jennifer Schultz Elizabeth Souder Raioiei Pickens, Carol Wright Chris Gray Marcel Meyer kevn WiH'smson Johnny Ludden Gene Menez David Livingston, Mark Livingston Nathan Sanders. Tracy Schultz ,.Huy Nguyen Ron Shufman ................. Naka Nathaniel .......................Emtty Abrams, Dave Boswell. Rob Caswell. C.J. Jones. Aaron Miller, Ken Naff, Eric Wild ........................................................................ ................................................................... ................ Issue Staff Photographers ..................... News Reporters................... Makeup Editors................ Wire Editor........................ Copy Editors.......................... Editorial Assistant Editorial Columnists Entertainment Writers Sports Writer Sports Assistant Paul Alcalá Timothy J Lee Andrea Buckley. Hotly Crawford, Mary Edwards, Sholnn Freeman Charul Vyas Dave Merrill, Jim Moore ....................................................... .........................................Cheryl Gooch Holly Crawford, Jeremy Frank, Nathan Morns Travis Kaspar Marc Levin, K D Williamson ...............Carl Durrenberger. John D. Lowe David Standifer ..................................... Shea Daugherty Sameer Abdelnour ....................................................... ................................. .............................. .......... .................................... ................................................... ...... Advertising Local Display Jessica Bonilla. Brad Corbett. Danny Grover Sara f ckert, Nancy Flanagan, Joe Powell Nathan Moore. Kathleen Mayer, Kristen Manslield, Jean Paul Romes Megan Zhang Layout Coordinator Dewayne I indell Graphic Designers................................................................................ Nathan Moore, Sandra Toon Classified Display Classified Telephone Sales ...................................................... Dana Colbert Stephanie Rosenfeld Clerks......................................................................................... Jessica Burtch, Amanda Ca'-ebier. Kim Fleming. Vanessa Flores, Sherry Sauter Kimberly Stuber .................................................. ........... .................................. ............. ........... The Dally Texan (USPS 146 440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2600 Whitis, Austin TX /870S The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam penods arid when s, iiool is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 7B710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone Í471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 101 > For local and national display advertising, call 4/1-1865 For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900 For classified word advertising, call 471 8244 Entire contents copyright 1995 Texas Student Publications One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fall and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer) . The Daily Taxan Mail Subscription Rates ................................................................... ..................... ............ .................... .............. - .......................... ...................................................... To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471 -5083 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P O Box (), A to TSP Building C3 200 or call 4/1-5083 ................ $30 00 .................... 55 00 20 00 .................... 75 00 1/ 78713-8904 or PO STM ASTER: Send address changos to T he D a ily Texan P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-0904 Texan Ad Deadlines M o nd ay T u e s d a y W e d n e sd a y Friday, 4 p.m ..W ednesday, 4 p.m Thursday Thursday, 4 p.m Friday Monday, 4 p m Tuesday, 4 p m. UIIIDOm TICTII Financial incentive provided in exchange for your opinion on an investigational pain medication following oral surgery. Approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeon. If you need the removal of wisdom teeth call: BIOMEDICAL in Austin call: 320-1630 S r o U P U & Outside Austin calL 1-800-320-1630 A P H A R M A C O :: L S R F a c i a l A c n e ? e a r n u p t o $1350 Earn money while contributing to the future of medicine by participating in a Pharmaco LSR research study. W e need healthy men 18 to 25 with mild to moderate facial acne or a past history of treated facial acne to participate in a research study evaluating an investigational meaication. This study requires forty clinic visits over a forty-day If you qualify, you may period. earn up to $1350. Please call us for details and answers to your questions. Be a part of something big at Pharmaco LSR. 92 II Y O U I I A V I NORPLANT CONTRACEPTIVE IMPLANTS V N D A R I I AIM R11 \ C I\ C : I u c s s iv c IxIccdinL' • • Blurred \ ¡sign • Seve re 1 le;id;i( lies • Nausea • I leart Pro b le m s Pregnancy vs I N orplant Scarring or Irauina fiom R em «41 |1‘ 1.11 1 <3 S|K(l4ll/ it IJi ..in: ‘ Bar ui It N _ Austin: The Capital of Texas and home of the Longhorn. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Texas Proud Parking: UT hopes to compete with Dobie Brackenridge Continued from page 1 Continued from page 1 w ith Brackenridge. Brickm an was indicted on a perjury charge for mak­ ing false statements to the grand jury about the number of staff working on a bookkeeping contract. "If you tried to do that on north campus, you would probably have a hard time finding people to fill it," said James Vick, vice president for student affairs and fee committee member. Fee committee members said they hope the garages will eventually be self-sustaining so that permit prices can decrease in the future. Ward said they are aiming to make the price to use the garage considerably less than the Dobie Center $308 semester rate by charging all students, adminis­ trators, faculty and staff higher permit prices and then charging more to those who will use the garage. John Black, student fee committee member and Students' Association president, said he doubted stu­ dents would protest the increase. "It easy for students to be sold on something that increases parking," he said. The committee gave their support to the proposal with seven members voting in favor of the increase and two members abstaining from voting. Plans for financing Parking Garage 4 have changed often over the past year. "The original plan was for it to be user-funded by those who have guaranteed spaces and by a book store," Vick said. But Vick said it was unlikely that any book store w ill be located near the garage because it probably would not be profitable. "Creating a fee is the easy part; getting rid of one, though, is an act of God," said Black, who abstained from either opposing or supporting the bill. Some committee members said they are doubtful that parking permits will ever cost less then their cur­ rent rate. " I don't know anyone that can promise the [prices of the permits] will drop when the building is complete," Vick said. The additional parking garages have the support of the Campus Master Planning Committee, headed by architects from Cesar Pelli and Associates. Ward said planning committee members have identified 10 loca­ tions where they would like to construct parking garages over the next 20 to 30 years. "The Master Plan direction depends on a decision on whether or not the parking garages will be approved" by the UT System Board of Regents, Vick said. The first phase of the planned permit price increas­ es began last year when C permits rose $7, A permits increased $4 and F permits went up $10. In Jun e 1994, G arcia and W o lfe w ere in dicted by another T ra vis County grand jury on numerous mis­ demeanor charges in connection with the investigation. Certicare Benefits, Inc. had contract­ ed w ith Brack en rid g e find Medicaid, Medicare and other gov­ ernment funds to pay hospital costs for uninsured patients. to B ra ck en rid g e C h ie f E x e cu tive Officer Keith Poisson said the hospital is ready to move past what happened. "W e went through a very diligent process" to replace Certicare, Poisson said. "A n d now w e're ready to get back to the business of servin g patients." As late as fall of last year, the city had rated C erticare's performance highly. Certicare finally lost its con­ tract to Medical Assistance Program Advisors for reasons not related to the investigation, Poisson said. Rollin Coleman, W olfe's replace­ ment as director of patient services at Brackenridge, said the position under Wolfe was susceptible to fraud. "T h e re w as a chance a contract could be steered to a favorable ven­ dor," Coleman said. "Because of all the scrutiny, the city now has a mixed review process that is more neutral" w hen recom m ending contracts, Coleman added. Colem an also said Certicare had performed well and cost the hospital nothing extra but added that the alle­ gations had led to a "large amount of institutional difficulty." Bond on G arcia has been set at $750,000 on the bribery charges and $250,000 on charges of securing exe­ cution of a document by deception. Bond for W o lf is set at $250,000 for the b rib ery charges and $100,000 on charges of securing execution of a document by deception. No bond has been set for Brickman. 15-month in vestig atio n The indictments are connected with of a Brackenridge, w hich has struggled with financial problems since the dis­ covery in January 1994 of an account­ ing discrepancy totaling $21 million. Wolfe resigned in early February 1994 amid the ensuing controversy. The accusations against Certicare would not be the first time the compa­ ny has come under attack. In spring 1993, Russell Kyler, then chief financial officer of Brackenridge, reported func­ tioning as a part-time consultant for C erticare w h ile the com pany was under contract with the hospital. The notification went unquestioned until a few months later when intense criti­ cism led to Kyler's resignation and an audit of the hospital that uncovered the accounting error. $600 A WEEK POTENTIAL SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Summer is the busy season in the moving industry and we need your help to handle the load. North American Van Lines is now accept­ ing applications from col lege students its Sum m er Fleet and staff for Driver Program. T R A IN IN G M OTEL/M EALS W H IL E IN - Free T R A IN IN G - Free PO T EN T IA L EA R N IN G S (A V ERA G E) $600 A W EEK W e w ill teach you how to safely operate a semi-trat tor trailer and how to load/unload household goods cargo. W e pay for your motel and meals while in training. O n ce you receive your Com mercial Driver's License, you have the potential of earning an approximate average of $600 a week To qualify, you must be at least 21 years old, meet North Amera an Van Lines qualific at ions, and be available for training the end of April or early May. W e promise you an adventure you'll never forget! Call 1 -800*348-2147, Dept. U 78. C northAmerican. Fees C o n tin u e d fro m page 1 138,000 hours of service for oper­ ating costs of $24.04 per hour and is guaranteed not to increase again until 1997. Ward a 1st requested $11,000 to print shuttle bus route maps. "W e won't be able to continue the service of printing them if we don 't get an allocation. M oney was set aside for the service until last year, w hen the Stu d en t Services Fee Committee refused the request," he said. "Since we a r e encouraging students to use |the buses] to go to other parts of the town, shopping or whatever, w e w ou ld like them to have maps." C o u n selin g , L e a rn in g and C areer Service s is requesting $2,280,002 from the fee committee, an increase of $81,461 from its pre­ vious allocation. Over half of the increase would go to a merit pool fund to reward staff members for performance and enable increases in fringe ben­ efits, said David Drum, associate vice president for student affairs and director of the services. Drum said the money for the m erit pool "is honestly below w hat we need ... to retain our staff." Eighteen thousand dollars of the increase w o u ld go into a salary equity fund, which would compensate staff members for per­ forming additional duties for no ad d ition al m oney. There are a num ber of "p e o p le doing the same job [and] being paid sub­ s ta n tia lly d ifferen t am ounts," Drum said. Another $15,000 increase would g o tow.ird hiring a computer con­ s u l t a n t to ensure the most efficient BUY. SELL, RENT. TRADE R 13 M M AWU 4711 use of com puter networks as a more effective new computer net­ w o rk in g system is created, he added. M em bers of the com m ittee questioned the request because several other offices have also wanted a computer consultant. "E v e r y o n e seems to need a computer consultant," said Fareed Tulbah, a marketing senior and fee committee member. Other committee members said it might be more beneficial to train current employees rather than hire new ones. Drum also asked for $696,289 for the Counseling and M ental H ealth C en ter, an increase of $20,843 over last year. The center also w o u ld use the a d d itio n a l funds for merit pool and salary equality funds. D rum , also d irector of the C ounseling and M ental H ealth Center, said it was not fair for the center's psychiatrists to receive substantially lower salaries than those who w ork in the Student H ealth C enter, w hen they are e q u a lly educated and e x p e ri­ enced. "W e've always prided ourselves in having one of the most compet­ itive and d iverse staffs in the n atio n," Drum said. He added that it is unfortunate that the cen­ ter's highly qualified psychiatrists receive the lowest salaries out of what he considers their top 20 competitors in the nation. These were the last budget pro­ posals that the fee committee is scheduled to hear before making a final decision Sunday. The fee is limited to a 10 percent increase over the previous year. : x ) ) I Oíd C o u c h p o t a t o 1 0 , 0 0 0 ig l LLÍIí l I Iran Continued from page 1 P e rry said the arsenal also includes Chinese-made Silkworm anti-ship and H aw k anti-air mis­ siles, as well as about 6,000 troops. The defense secretary said the chemical weapons give Tehran the c a p a b ility to harass sh ip p in g through the S tra it of H orm u z, through which half of the world's oil is transported. The chem ical w eapons also could be used to defend islands in the strait that are claimed by both Iran and the United Arab Emirates, Perry said. located, While Perry did not say exactly w here the troops or chem ical w eapons w ere the Pentagon has said the Iran ian s have increased defenses on one of the disputed islands called Abu M usa — one of three islands claim ed by both Iran and the United Arab Emirates. Iran's ambassador to the United Nations, Kam al Kharrazi denied Perry's assertion about the chemi­ cal weapons. " It is basically non­ sense in terms of military ... sense to deploy chemical weapons on the islands. W hat's the use of it?" he told A BC News in New York. During Perry's stop Tuesday in Bahrain, the top U.S. N avy admiral in the region, V ice A dm . Scott Redd, briefed the defense secretary on Iran's use of two Russian-made Kilo-class subm arines and their recent purchase of five Chinese- made fast-attack patrol boats. P e rry said W a sh in g to n w as w atching the subm arines " v e r y clo sely," given their stealth and ability to lay mines in the strategic waterway. Redd said the patrol boats could be armed with cruise missiles if Iran purchases them from China. If l T i MA T f N o N r V r N T NO SORE MUSCLES, heat exhaustion or sweat here . . .just a t-shlrt to show your spirit. The 5th Annual Couch Potato 10,00C^ is a NONevent, an alternative to the plethora of runs and walks In the Austin area. It’s your chance to donate to a worthy cause without expending any energy. SPONSORED BY: Community Partnership for the Homeless and Nathan Moore Foundation L IG a m e R o o m f s i c n s d L aw O ffic e o f B o b R o ber t s 1 9 9 5 Official NONentry Form • 5th Annual Couch Potato 1 0,0 0 0 ° LA St NAME Fl&Sf NAMÉ ADDRESS (* AND STREET) A R IA CODE/PHONE « NONEVENT CATEGORY ---------- £ITy------------ sTaTT T-SHIRT SIZ E : ADULT Q M U I U XL O XXL TiF A G E :_______ GENDER: □ M QF Ü $15 TATOR TOT U $50 POTATO HEAD U $20 SPUD U $100 BIG BAKER □ $30 FRENCH FRY □ OTHER_________ TOTAL NONEVENT CONTRIBUTION: $__________ □ MY CHECK IS ENCLOSED. PLUS $1 50 POSTAGE PER SHIRT: $__________ CHARGE TO MY:* □ MASTERCARD □ VISA TOTAL ENCLOSED: ‘Mr*MUM 1100 DONATION $__________ 16DIG1T # ______________________ EXP DATE_____________________ SIGNATURE_____________________ DO NOY SENO CASH. NO REFUNOS. MAKE ALL CHECKS PAYABLE TO CPH COUCH POTATO 10,000©, AND MAIL WITH NONENTRY FORM TO: CPH COUCH POTATO 10,000© • P.O. BOX 202166 • AUSTIN, TX 787202166 • PHONE: (512) 469-9130 ExCET R E V I E W S 512-474-5750 A U ST IN - April 22 & 23 Registration Deadline: A p ril 3 ilxjit' reyi trillion available thru April 17) E X A M + 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting at $119* Complete •price includes exam, 2 pair clear daily- w ear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1st follow up. E XPIRES APRIL 14,1995. WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VAUD WITH A N Y OTHER OFFER. Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT u.„ 4 7 7 -2 2 8 2 107 M/C VISA AMX DISC 9 6 t m * C Gert/er . t c u n n a / n r ty/>a j ' ^ •y4'v/ close at 4,082.99. FLEEING THE RIOT NEWS BRIEFS Iraq’s warfare tactics questioned ■ U N I T E D N A T I O N S — U N. o f f i ­ cials arc questio ning Iraq's account of its biological w e a p o n s p ro g ra m after discovering it has not accounted for 38 tons of material that could be used to c u l t i v a t e g e r m s , an o f f i c i a l s a id Wednesday. T h e c h i e f U .N . w e a p o n s m o n ito r , Rolf Eke us, left for Iraq on Wednesday to press Baghdad for details on its past biological p ro g ra m s, said sp o k e s m a n Tim Trevan. 1 le is expected to arrive in Baghdad on Friday. Ekeus is chairman of the commission charged with dismantling and monitor­ ing Iraq's programs to make long-range missiles, poison gas and other weapons of mass destruction. T h e re su lts o f his ta lk s w ith Iraqi leaders could have a crucial impact on attempts to ease crushing U.N. Security C ouncil sanctions im p o s e d after Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. E k eu s is expected to report in mid- A pril on I r a q 's c o m p li a n c e w ith the weapons monitors. France and Russia say they plan to press for an easing o f the oil em bargo against Iraq if the report is positive. T revan said information u n co v e re d by the Commission "p u ts into question the entire Iraqi account of its biological activities." Georgia exempted from Brady Law’s waiting period ■ A T L A N T A — G o v . Z e l l M i l l e r signed a law W ednesday freeing G e or­ gia from the Brady Law 's waiting peri­ od for handgun buyers, capping a leg­ islative session in which the once-m od- erate D e m o cra t m o ved farther to the right. T h e measure, which also w ipes out longer waiting periods imposed in 10 G eorg ia cities and counties, inclu ding A tlan ta , w a s a m a jo r victo ry for the National Rifle Association, whose lob­ byists flanked Miller during the* sign- ing. T h e law is designed to take a d v a n ­ t a g e o f a p r o v i s i o n in t h e f e d e r a l B rad y Law th.it e x e m p ts states from the w aiting period if they im p lem ent an instant background check. Georgia is awaiting a reply from the B u r e a u o f A l c o h o l , T o b a c c o a n d Firearms on whether the new state law meets Brady requirements. Libyan rebel group claims U.S. hostage n N 'D JA M E N A , C h ad — A Libyan- b a c k e d re b e l g r o u p c l a i m s to h a v e taken an A m e r ic a n captive, say ing it w ants to s h o w that C h a d 's p re s id e n t canno t control security in the country. T h e m is sin g A m eric an w a s id e n ti­ fied as A n th o n y Johnson, a technical consultant for the U.N . D ev e lop m en t P r o g r a m , U .N . s p o k e s m a n A h m a d Faw/.i said W e d n esd a y in N e w York. No h om etow n w a s im m ediately avail­ able. Johnson w as taken Su n d ay from his h o m e in t h e w e s t e r n c i t y o f M a o , F a w /i said. U.S. E m b a ssy officials have traveled to the region to try to work with local officials for his release, State D e p a rt­ ment deputy sp ok e sw o m a n Christine1 Shelly said in Washington. An official at the A m erican Embassy in C had said Jo h n s o n 's Malian driver and tw o C h a d ia n g u a r d s also d i s a p ­ p e a r e d . T h e o f f ic i a l , w h o s p o k e on C o n d itio n of a non ym ity , said no r a n ­ som d em a n d s had been received. M cD onald’s at fault in autom obile accident ■ S A L E M , O r e . — M c D o n a l d ' s is liable* for d am ages in an auto accident caused by an employee* w h o w orked u n u s u a l l y l o n g h o u r s , the* O r e g o n Court of Appeals ruled W edn esd ay . T h e e m ployer " w a s much like a b a r­ tender who served alcoholic beverages to a v is ib ly in to x ic a t e d p e r s o n w h o th e n c a u se d an a u t o m o b i le a c c id e n t that harm ed a n o t h e r ," the cou rt said in a 5-4 ruling. T h e 5-4 ruling upheld a ju ry's d eci­ s i o n th a t M c D o n a l d ' s m u s t p a y $375,(MX) to Frederic Faverty, who was i n ju r e d w h e n a c a r d r i v e n b y M a tt Theurer crossed the center line and hit his car in 1988. T h e u r e r , 18, w a s killed a fte r n o d ­ d i n g o f f w h i l e d r i v i n g h o m e a f t e r w o rk ing m o re than 12 h o u rs in a 17- hou r period. T ho u g h the restaurant had policies a g a i n s t s p l it s h ifts , T h e u r e r v o l u n ­ teered to d o so m o re frequently when asked by managers. M cD o nald 's will appeal to the state S u p r e m e C o u r t , s p o k e s w o m a n J a n e Hulbert said. — C o m piled from A sso cia te d P ress reports Police arrest sect member in linkage with fumes Associated Press T O K Y O — Police arrested a m e m b e r of a s h a d o w y sect after a car chase T h u rs d a y in w estern Ja pan , and m ilitary c h e m ica l w e a p o n s s p e c ia l is t s w e re called in w h en s u s p i ­ cious substances were found in the car. I n t e n s i f y i n g a c r a c k d o w n on th e S u b l i m e 1 ru th sect, authorities also launched a second round of searches at the g roup's facilities. The sect is under a growing e loud of suspi­ cion in the T o k y o s u b w a y ne rve g as a ttack M o n d a y th at killed 10 people and sickened nearly 5,000. Several m e m b ers of the sect, k n o w n in Ja pan ese as Aum Shinri Kyo, were arrested W edn esd ay in a kidnapping case unrelated to the Tok y o subway attack. Police would not say whether they also were being questioned in the subway case. The Japanese military dispatched 14 dangerous-chem icaK specialists to the scene of the arrest Thursday, near Hikone in western Japan. The* military squad was treating the autom o­ bile with chemicals so it could be sately examined, officials said. The* driver was stopped for a traffic violation and then tried to evade police, running re*d lights and crashing into a truck. Japanese television showed footage of the chase. T h e police and military blocked e>ff the area, and residents could be seen looking on anxiously. Meanwhile, more than 500 police w earing protective gear and carrying caged canaries as gas detectors e arried out new searches and took soil sample's Thursday at a rural religious com m u n e near Mount Fuji where they found nerve-gas sol­ vent the previous day. N ews reports Thursday said several people arrested in the cra ck d o w n W e d n e s d a y w e re doctors. But police h a v e not publicly linked them to the subw ay attack, and the group has strenuously denied any role in it. More than 500 police converged Thursday on the group s com pound near Mount Fuji, wearing full chemic al-protection garb and carrying caged canaries as gas detectors. O n the Tokyo subways, police sought help in their investi­ g ation d ir e c tly from c o m m u t e r s w h o w e re th<• v ic tim s of M onday's attack. Police were handing out 50,(XX) leaflets ask­ ing passengers to report anything suspicious thev had seen around the time of the attack. In a chilling development, the sect's leader, Shok o Asahara, was reported to have delivered an apocalyptic-sounding m e s ­ sage Tuesday to followers in the Russian Far East. " T h e time has com e at last for you to awake and help me, Asahara said in the message, broadcast W ednesday night by Japan's N HK television. " Y o u must act to ensure you do not have any regrets about death T h e raids are yielding frightening e v id e n ce of the s ect's hold over its followers. At the rural com pound, police found 50 people w h o were w eak and ill. Six were hospitalized. Press reports said doctors discovered that som e cult m e m b e r s found dazed and disori­ ented had been given drugs. P olice refu sed to d i s i u s s the s eiz e d c h e m ic a ls , but the K yo do N ew s Service said they included a solvent used to make sarin, the nerve gas used in the subway attack. The gas, developed by Nazi scientists, caused passengers to retch, faint and have conv ulsio ns. Several h u n d red people remained hospitalized in the wake of the attack, 52 of them in serious or critical condition. Officials refused to say specifically the raids were in c o n ­ nection with the subway attack, instead citing their investiga­ tion of a public notary's kidnapping. ASSOCIATED PRESS Colin Ferguson listened W ednesday as his sentence was handed down for the Long Island Rail Road massacre. T h e judge also ordered Ferguson to serve 50 y e a r s , th e m a x i m u m , fo r 19 c o u n t s o f a t t e m p t e d m u r d e r , t w o w e a p o n s c h a r g e s ,ind reckless endangernient. During the trial, police testified that Fergu­ s o n w a s c a r r y i n g h a n d w r i t t e n n o t e s th e n ig h t o f th e s h o o t i n g th a t e x p r e s s e d h is hatred of whites ,md A s i a n s , blamed whites for sa b o ta g in g his life and a n n o u n c e d that the LIRR would be his "v e n u e tor revenge* All b u t o n e of h i s v i c t i m s W t*re w h it e or A girl carries her brother as tear gas, fired from riot police, engulfs the area of El Alto, just outside the Boli­ vian capital of La Paz. Several hundred teachers were dispersed by members of the armed forces well as police as they m arched towards La Paz to protest against recent reforms in the educational system. ASSOCIATED PRESS Ex-postal employee charged in post office shooting spree Associated Press M O N T C L A I R , N.J. — A form er p o s t a l w o r k e r b u r d e n e d w i t h a " m o u n t a i n o f d e b t " w a s c h a r g e d W e d n esd a y with the shooting d eath of four men in a holdup at a small neigh­ b o r h o o d p o st o f f i c e , i n c l u d i n g tw o employees hi* knew. C hristopher Green, 29, w as arrested at his apartment in East Orange, four miles from this N ew York City suburb, l e s s than 2 4 hours after the robbery. Investig ators had gotten a tip from s o m e o n e w h o k n e w Green a n d saw news of the slayings on television, U.S. Attorney Faith H och berg said. Authorities also got a d escription of Green from the only person to survive the attack, a custom er shot tw ice in the face. David Grossm an, 45, who w as in critical condition, was able to a n s w e r i n v e s tig a to r s ' q u e s t io n s 1 u e s d a y by w ig g lin g his toes and fin g e rs fro m a h o s p i t a l bed, H o c h b e r g sa id . P o l ic e C h ie f Thomas Russo sa id Grossman w a s a b le to w r ite in fo r m a tio n d o w n Wednesday. In G re e n 's apartm en t, investigators found b lo o d -s p la t te r e d clo th e s worn during the holdup, a 9-m illim eter pis­ tol b elieved to have been used in the crime and $2,000 eash, Hochberg said. More than $5,000 apparently was taken in the robbery, she said. G r e e n to ld i n v e s t i g a t o r s t h a t he e ntered the post office T u es d a y after­ n oo n, o r d e r e d the tw o w o r k e r s and t h r e e c u s t o m e r s in s id e to g o to the b a ck room and lie on the floor, then shot them, according to court papers. B e f o r e d y in g , one o f the workers called out G re e n 's name, Russo aid. G r e e n said he i o m m it te d the ro b ­ b ery " b e c a u s e he had a m o u n ta in ot d eb t," and used part of the m oney for back rent, Postal Inspector Kevin M an­ ley said. California governor to study presidency Associated Press S A C R A M E N T O , ( alif. California Gov. Pete Wilson took office with a repu­ tation a s H 7 E F N , O R R O S S / 0 L V M O R E U N D E R c E ^ T A / w c iR í-o a 'y s t a N e t s , n o g y 7X £ f N O l / i D u A L S I A T C S . m t u r n h n c o Ocifc CO/V5,0 £ « A T /0 ^ «£/,v fc m x r » / r o t t r u i.tt PABTICULAB r»~u* O nce three of m y friend s w ere n ot killed in a robbery attem pt thank s to m y h av in g a pistol at h and and k n ow in g how to use it. I have also protected m y se lf and m y fam ily w ith a firearm . T h e p oint I am try ing to m ake is that m any o f our law enforcem ent officials w h o d en ou nce th e pro­ posed bill are hypocrites. W e are denied w h at they take for granted . T h e A ustin police officer's nam e is not m entioned b ecau se he w as a nice guy and I do not w ant to cau se him any trouble. Damon Wagley Sociology junior to m arry , an d co m m a n d in g to ab stain from m eats, w h ich G od hath created to be received w ith th an k sgivin g by them w h o b eliev e and know th e truth. For every creatu re of G od is good, and n o th ­ ing is to be refused if it is received with th an k sg ivin g ; for it is s a n cti­ fied by the w ord o f G od and p ray er." N iki, I d o n 't know y ou r religious beliefs. P erh ap s you have none. R egardless, the Bible says w h at it says. C an you possibly im agin e w here m ankind would be tod ay if anim als w ere not used for ou r b en ­ efit throu gh o u t history? O n e thing is for sure — you and w ould lik e to p ro vid e som e evi­ d en ce for h is assertions. H e can start by e xp la in in g w hy C C W per­ m it h old ers in o th er states do not shoot p eop le b ecau se they w ere in a bad m ood . trip e u sin g W ould h e care to provide ev i­ d en ce cou n terin g that in a later ed i­ torial, or w ill he just continu e to w rite several paragraphs o f bigot­ ed tired stereo ty p es of p eop le w h o ow n gun s? W hy is it that none of the g un ow n ers that I know m atch those stereo ty p es? Could M cC ann be W R O N G ? th e sam e Perhaps M cC ann should get out m ore and stop p ro jectin g his fa n ­ tasies about g u n s as reality. He m ight a lso try d oin g som e research and n o t accep tin g w hat is sp oo n -fed to him by the m ajo r m edia corp oration s, and not only on gun-related issu es. Patrick Chester Austin resident Didn’t enjoy beatings To m y full k n ow led g e, car cam p ­ in g did tak e p lace at the tim e referred by the M arch 22 w eather colu m n, but I w as unaw are that an y o n e actually liked the beatings. M y ap o log ies for any p ast m isrep ­ resentation or m isu n d erstan d in gs. Ted S. Warren Form er photographer, news edi­ tor and managing editor at The Daily Texan Guns can save lives M cC an n S e a n (" H a v e G u n s ...", M arch 22) is under a law s. d e lu sio n ab o u t H e is not alone. It is a d elu sion of our cen tu ­ ry shared by liberals and co n se rv a tiv e s alike. T h e y d e cla rin g "th e la w " b a n ) m ak es it so. th in k th at so m e th in g (u su ally a m ira cu lo u sly B ut w h o obeys the law ? are T h e law -abid ing (by th e d e fin itio n ), very p eop le w ho are re s p o n s ib le e n o u g h not to need it in the first place. T h e p e o p le y ou w an t to control do not ca re . A ll you h av e d one is harm the flexibility o f the law -abid ing. th ro u g h D o v e G un control is a classic exam ple. W alk S p rin g s tonight if you think that B rad y law s and the like hav e kept gu n s out o f the hand s of un su itable peo- ple. F act: the m u rd e r rate h as d eclined in Florida sin ce its co n ­ cealed w eapons law w as enacted. I, for one, w ould feel safer w ith the law , co n cea led w e a p o n s althou gh I h ave no plans to get a gun m y self. W h en y ou o u tlaw guns, only ou tlaw s w ill have gun s. David Barnett Graduate student in physics ♦ T h e D a il y T e x a n Thursday, March 23,1995 Page 5 35,000 Turkish troops move into Kurd territory Turks invade N. Iraq - - Black - ffSffSi 12 DARKARJAN, Iraq — Turkish troops rolled past Kurdish villages W ednesday in a massive offensive against a K urdish rebel m o vem en t, raising w o rld ­ w id e concern for civilians caught in the fighting. Associated Press Ankara ★ TURKEY Air strikes and shelling continued for a third day along the 20-mile-wide northern Iraqi border region. Turkey sent in 35,000 troops M onday to try to rout rebels of the outlaw ed separatist Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK. # Turkey claims about 2,800 guerrillas are operating in northern Iraq. T h e o p e r a t i o n h a s b e e n c ritic iz e d b y th e Red Cross, the U.N. H igh C om m issioner for Refugees, and European nations. Helicopters ferried in reinforcements W ednesday and at least seven battles v/ere raging, the Anatolia n e w s agency said. It said F-5 a nd F-16 fighter jets joined in the assault, and also dro p p e d leaflets call­ ing on the rebels to surrender. Standing beside his half-demolished house in the village of Darkarjan W ednesday as his wife rocked th e ir 1 0 - m o n th -o ld baby in the ruins, S u le y m a n Shivan described the offensive. "T h e y d r o v e in to my h o u se w ith a ta n k ," said Shivan, w h o like most men in the village said he w as a fighter for an Iraqi Kurdish opposition party, the SYRIA IRAQ Baghdad ★ Kurdistan Democratic Party. "T hey ordered everybody out, searched the hous­ es a n d seized our p a rty 's w e a p o n s ," Shivan said. Seven p e o p le from the village w e re d e ta in e d , he said. The Red Cross appealed W ednesday to Turkey to spare the lives of thousands of Kurdish civilians who fled from Turkey last year a nd are living in refugee camps in the border region. The United States also called on Turkey to exercise restraint and to respect the rights of civilians. A Turkish soldier inspects a personnel carrier flying the Turkish flag as a tank in the background monitors movem ents in northern Iraq, on the border road from Zahko to Amadiya. A S S O C IA T E D P R E S S Illegal immigrants seek citizenship since welfare cuts likely Associated Press M IA M I — For s e v e n y e a r s , Rosa D om inguez has lived in the United States as a legal resident. She has not felt the need to become a citizen — until now. She is learning English and taking citizen­ ship classes, but not because of some new ­ found affection for the United States. She is afraid the Republicans on Capitol Hill will take aw ay her welfare benefits. Rosa D om inguez is one of th o u sa n d s of green-card holders in Miami and across the nation rush in g to ap ply for citizenship as C on gress debates the Republican welfare- reform package. A provision in the legislation, expected to pass the House this week, w ould eliminate M edicaid, S u p p le m e n ta l Security Income, Aid to Families With D ep e n d e n t Children and food sta m p s to m ost legal alien resi­ dents. Dominguez, a 70-year-old Cuban native, has n o fam ily in M iam i a n d lives on the $458 in Supplem entary Security Income and $17 in food stamps she gets each month. "If the governm ent cuts the SSI and food stamps, I'll be homeless," Dom inguez said tearfully in Spanish, minutes after a class in preparing for the citizenship test. An estimated 2.2 million legal alien resi­ dents nationw ide would be affected by the r e f o r m s , a c c o r d i n g to t h e H e a l t h a n d H u m a n S e r v ic e s D e p a r t m e n t . T h e o n ly green-card holders w ho w ould not be affect­ ed are those over 75 who have lived in the United States for at least five years, political refugees and U.S. veterans. Supporters of the measure, ^uch as Rep. E. Clay Shaw, R-Fla., question w hether U.S. taxpayers should be sup po rtin g immigrants who are not allowed to vote a nd cannot run for most elective offices. "If you want to come to this country and you w a n t to enjoy all its freedoms, it'1- not unfair to ask you to become citizens,' said Scott B renner, S h a w 's s p o k e s m a n . "Y o u d id n 't come to this co untry to go on w e l­ fare." The Federation for American Immigration Reform, b ased in W ashington, is lobbying hard for the measure. " I m m i g r a n t s to d a y are b r i n g i n g th e ir elderly parents, brothers and sisters, w h a t­ ever, a n d are assim ila tin g in to w elfare," said D an Stein, the f e d e ra tio n 's executive director. "The longer they're here, the more likely they are to go on welfare. ... W h y sh o u ld immigration become a free lunch?" Rosa Rosales, state director for the Texas League of United Latin American Citizens, c o n t e n d s th e G O P p r o p o s a l g r e w fr o m racism. " W h e n p e o p le talk a b o u t im m ig r a n ts , th e y s y n o n y m o u s l y m e a n M exican s a n d other Latinos," Rosales said. " T h e y d o n 't w ant us to stay here permanently, but they w ant to use our cheap labor.' President Clinton is o p p o s e d to parts of th e r e f o r m p a c k a g e b u t h a s n o t s a i d whether he w ould veto it. Juan Luis Valiente got his green card 13 years ago and w o rk ed until he d eveloped severe heart problems in 1992. The 66-year- o ld a n d his 5 2 - y e a r - o l d w if e g e t $96 a month in SSI, $80 in food stamps, a n d $385 in rental assistance. "It's the only w ay I can live," he said. "I use food stam ps for dinner." S u p p o r t for the p r o p o s a l is n o t u n a n i ­ m o u s am o n g Republicans on Capitol Hill. Reps. Lincoln Diaz-Balart an d Ileana Ros- Lehtinen of the M iam i area said they did n o t e n d o r s e the G O P 's " C o n t r a c t W ith America" because of it. "It has ethical problems, and I think it's g o in g to h a v e c o n s titu tio n a l p r o b le m s , " Diaz-Balart said. "P eop le w ho are not citi­ zens don't vote. They make an easy target." Immigrants get green cards through fami­ ly members, employers, marriage to U.S. cit­ izens or p e r m a n e n t residents. T hey enjoy most rights of citizens, pay taxes a n d can be drafted. Auto Continued from page 1 A n thony Helm, a g ra d u a te stud ent in Japanese, said he w ould have been m o r e c a r e f u l a b o u t b r i n g i n g h is r e m o v a b le ste re o and c o m p a c t disc player inside his apa rtm e n t if he had been aw are of the burglaries. The elec­ tronic equipm ent was stolen from his H o n d a A c c o rd s o m e tim e b e tw e e n Feb. 28 and March 2. “If I had know n that the same p ark ­ ing lot h a d been hit before, I w o u ld not have been as trusting," he said. H elm a d d e d that he w a n te d o th e r residents to learn of the burglaries. “ I c o n s i d e r e d p a s s i n g a r o u n d notices," he said. Doug Garrard, assistant director for th e D iv is io n of H o u s i n g a n d F o o d Service, said the d e pa rtm e nt provides students with a large am o u n t of safety information, primarily th rough a spe­ cial n e w s le tte r called The H o u s in g Post. "We try to do a lot of education with o u r r e s i d e n t s ," G a r r a r d sa id . "T h e newsletter is a main vehicle for us." Yet Harrell said he did not think the newsletter was effective crime preven­ tion advice. Welfare: Democrats accuse GOP of ‘crueL reform package "I'm sure most people pitch that or if th ey d o read it, it h a s n o effect," Harrell said. O t h e r r e s i d e n t s sa id p r e v e n t i o n m e t h o d s , s u c h as a n e i g h b o r h o o d crime w atch system, probably w ou ld n o t be effec tiv e b e c a u s e m a n y re s i­ dents would not have enough time to participate. “ You h a v e to s p e n d e v e r y n ig h t doing it," said C o lorado A p a rtm e n ts resident Ping Li, a doctoral candidate in petroleu m engineering, w hose car w as burglarized twice. H e lm a g r e e d , s a y i n g h e d i d n ot know if a crime watch program w ould be successful. Griggs said in ord er to prevent car burgla rie s from h a p p e n in g , s tu d e n ts should remove their possessions from their automobiles. " N e v e r leave a n y th in g of value in your car," Griggs said. G a r ra r d said th a t s tu d e n ts s h o u ld report possible crimes immediately. "We encourage residents to call [UT police] w h e n th e y notice any s u s p i ­ cious activities," Garrard said. Continued from page 1 Anti-abortion Republicans had joined Roman Catholic bishops and the National Right to Life Committee to complain that the restrictions on cash aid w ould encourage abortions. Abortion-rights advocates later criticized the restrictions on abortions. "T his is a back-door w ay to restrict family planning and the right to choose," said Susan Lamontagne, a spokesw om an for the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Earlier in the day, anti-abortion law makers a n d Democrats tried to derail the bill b u t lost by a handful of votes, 217-211. Soon after losing the fight to stall th e bill, tempers boiled over as the Republican leader­ ship declared there w ould be a single vote on a p a c k a g e of 11 a m e n d m e n t s , i n c l u d i n g o ne involving abortion, and strictly scaled back the debate. "Will you get these highly paid members to sit d o w n and sh u t up? You all sit d o w n and s h u t u p . Sit d o w n a n d s h u t u p , " Rep. Sam Gibbons, D-Fla„ roared at the presiding officer. Rep. Jim McCrery, R-La„ interrupted, asking, "Is petulance a proper form of behav io r for a mem ber of Congress?" " I w ill be as p e t u l a n t as 1 w a n t to b e ," G ibbons bo o m e d back, then c o m p la in e d that the legislation is mean to children. Republicans Earlier in the day, anti-abortion lawmakers and Democrats tried to derail the bill hut lost by a handful of votes, 21 7-21L _______ booed. "Boo if you w ant to, make asses out of your­ s e lv e s if y o u w a n t to . ... Let 'e m b o o , Mr. Speaker," said Gibbons. A r c h e r s a id th e d e b a t e r e p r e s e n t e d th e "dy in g throes of the welfare state that has been built block by block over the last 30 years, and which has failed after the expen ditu re of $5.3 trillion." " W e h e a r a g a in th e r h e to r ic , the b ro k e n record of cuts, cuts, cruel cuts. 1 he reality about this bill is that it spends 43 percent m ore than w e a r e c u r r e n tl y s p e n d i n g in the n e x t five years," Archer said. D e m o c r a t s a n d s o m e R e p u b l i c a n s c o m ­ plained that H ouse leaders h ad gagged debate on the sw e e p in g bill, by re fusing to con sid er am endm ents that w ould have tem pered restric­ tions on aid to poor w o m en and children. T h e le g is l a ti o n c o l la p s e s d o z e n s of a n t i ­ p o v e r ty prog ram s, in c lu d in g school lunches and Aid to Families with Dependent Children, and gives the responsibility for welfare to the states. Adults would be required to work after two years On w e lf a r e a n d all fam ilies w o u l d be kicked off the rolls after five. The bill also repeals the g overnm ent's g u a r­ antee to p rovide cash benefits, school lunches, and foster care support to any needy child. It pares spending on food stam ps a n d denies cash an d M edicaid to as m a n y as 2.2 million legal immigrants. H o u s e M in ority L e a d e r Dick G e p h a r d t of Missouri said that the GOP is using its welfare reform plan to finance tax cuts for the rich and that it does little to h elp recipients m o ve into the w ork force. " H o w can people lift themselves u p by their bootstraps if the Republicans are b u sy taking away their boots?" G ephardt said. Rep. W illiam Clay, D-Mo., d e r id e d a r g u ­ ments that the legislation w ould help the poor escape welfare. I M M I G R A T I O N \ First Consultation Free Doug Wise Attorney at Law 1201 W. 45“’ 467-7444 no! certified by the Texas Board of legal Specialization Get The M ost Europe For Your Money. When It com®» to Europe, nobody offer» you more fun-or more value-then Contlkl. For example, a two-week, nine-country tour costs only $1,244 Including airfare.* There are over 30 tours-ranging from 9 to 52 days. Stop by or call Council Travel, 472-4931 for a free brochure. ■Price Is doubt* occupancy from New YorV. Depertur#» available from moaf major U.S. cltlaa. Price* vary according to dapartur* data. The World s RifOícM Travel Company For IK-AS Year Olds REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES si nc e I *)7S SUPPORTING YOUR CHOICE ABORTION PREGNANCY TESTING COUNSELING ADOPTION 4 8 0 4 GROVER Between Lamar and Burnet at 49th & Grover 458-8274 -Board certified OB-Gyns -Licensed nursing staff -Confidential Services -Flexible appts. Mon - Sat The Daily Texan Classified Ads 471-5244 NOW ACCEPTING SUMMER APPLICATIONS MM SAN ANTONIO STREET (800) M4-5Í20 ($12)478-9811 UNIVERSITY UT police O fficer Mike W eathersbee stam ps an identi- ficaticn number on a bicycle for Rush Pape, an unde- G ym nasium every W ednesday. clared freshm an. UT police will be in front of Gregory P A U L A L U A L A / u a n y i e x a n o i a n Minnesota may link tuition hike, student support ■ M in n e s o ta s t a t e S e n . S te v e M o rse , D -D a k o ta , i n tr o d u c e d a bill ea rlie r th is m o n th th a t w o u ld re q u ire the B oard of R egents to g et s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t s u p p o r t to raise tu itio n m o re th a n 3 p e rc e n t a t sta te schools. R ev en u e g e n e ra te d a b o v e th e 3 p erc en t cap w o u ld h a v e to rem ain w ith in th a t u n iv e rs ity a n d c o u ld n o t b e d i s p e r s e d t h r o u g h o u t a u n iv e rsity sy stem , M orse said. "T h e co n cep t h as a lo t of v a lid i­ ty ... a n d th e re is an a w fu l lot of in te rest," he sa id , a d d in g th at th e 3 p erc en t increase ro u g h ly m a tc h ­ es th e rate of inflation. M o rse s a id th a t th e p r o p o s e d bill is cu rren tly in com m ittee. CAMPUS NOTEBOOK W is c o n s in p aper h a lts p u b lica tio n ■ O n e of th e oldest college dailies in th e c o u n try h a lte d p u b lic a tio n last m o n th b u t m ay reopen in tim e for its 103rd b irth d a y in A pril. T he D aily Cardinal, o n e o f th e tw o college dailies a t th e U n iv e rsi­ ty o f W isconsin-M adison, w a s first p u b lish e d in A pril 1892, m a k in g it th e sixth U.S. college daily. T h e p a p e r's d e m ise is a ttrib u te d to billing p ro b lem s in the a d v e rtis ­ in g d e p a rtm e n t. M a d iso n N e w s p a p e rs , Inc., th e com pany th at prints the new spaper, re fu se d to c o n tin u e p r in tin g until billing disagreem ents are settled. Bishop to start group for fathers ■ D EN V ER — F o rm e r U n iv ersity o f C o lo r a d o C o a c h Bill M c C a r t­ n ey , u s e d to c o m p e titio n on th e football field, is ab o u t to get so m e co m p etitio n in th e relig io u s arena. C o l o r a d o E p i s c o p a l B is h o p Jerry W in te rro w d said h e p la n s to set u p h is o w n versio n o f P ro m ise K e e p e r s , M c C a r tn e y 's p r o g r a m w h ich e n c o u ra g e s m en to be b e t­ ter h u s b a n d s a n d fathers. L a s t y e a r, a P r o m is e K e e p e r s g a t h e r in g fille d th e u n iv e r s i ty 's F o lso m F ield . T he e v e n t w ill b e rep e ate d in 12 o th e r cities this year. "M en too long have been absent from the church and abdicated their role in the family," W interrow d said. T h e E p is c o p a l m e e tin g , to b e called " B u ild in g G o d 's K in g d o m — M an to M a n ," is s ta rtin g sm all. W in te rro w d h o p es 200 w ill a tte n d the first m eeting. — C o m p ile d b y A n d re a B uckle y a n d C h a r u l V ya s , D a ily T e x a n s ta f f, w ith A s s o c ia t e d P re s s reports .... .... É É É É mm ¡ ¡ ¡ p i p # . ■ .. . x l l l i l l l l ■ T h e D a i l y T e x a n THURSDAY, MARCH 23,1995 City officials fear loss of NCAA fans CAMILO RUGGERO___________________________ Daily Texan Staff A te n ta tiv e d ecision b y th e UT D e p a rtm e n t of In ter­ c o lle g ia te A th le tic s fo r M en n o t to b id fo r f u tu r e N C A A to u r n a m e n t firs t- a n d s e c o n d - r o u n d m e n 's b a s k e tb a ll c o u ld m e a n a m a jo r r e v e n u e lo ss fro m to u rist dollars, city officials said W e d n esd ay . K aren Jo rd a n , d ir e c to r o f th e A u stin C o n v e n tio n a n d V isito rs B u reau , sa id sh e h o p e s to co n v in ce U T officials to b id for th e g am es "T h e m o n e y [ g e n e ra te d from th e event} b eco m es fairly la rg e ," sh e said. T he ath letic d e p a r tm e n t ten tativ ely d ec id e d again st b id d in g for the g am es a fte r a se v e re sh o rtag e of hotel r o o m s d u r i n g la s t w e e k e n d 's t o u r n a m e n t fo rc e d m a n y o u t-o f-to w n b ask etb all fans to search for a place to s le e p a s far a s San A n to n io , s a id B u tch W o rley , to u rn a m e n t d ire c to r for th e UT D e p a rtm e n t of In te r­ co lleg iate A thletics for M en. Jo rd an said ex a ct re v e n u e to th e city fro m w eek en d to u rn a m e n t v isito rs h ad n o t been d e te rm in e d , b u t an e s tim a te d 40 to 45 p e rc e n t of to u r n a m e n t a tte n d e e s w e re fro m o th e r cities, a n d e a ch o n e s p e n t at le a st $150 to $175 a n ig h t. T w o o th e r city even ts, S outh b y S o u th w e st an d th e A u stin -T ra v is C o u n ty L ivestock S h o w a n d Rodeo, led to th e h o te l sh o rtag e, Jo rd a n said. "M y re c o m m e n d a tio n to the d ire c to r w a s th a t w e n o t bid o n the to u rn a m e n t until c a le n d a r conflicts w ith SXSW a re w o rk e d o u t," W orley sa id . " H o te ls d id a g r e a t jo b [w ith to u r n a m e n t p a r tic ip a n ts ] , b u t th e re w ere fan s from M em p h is, A rk an sas an d L ouisville th a t cam e to A ustin a n d fou n d o u t th e re w ere n o room s." Bids for the 1999 to u rn a m e n t ta k e p la c e this s u m ­ m e r. T h e e v e n t w o u ld a g a in c o in c id e w ith SXSW , w h ich is b o o k ed th ro u g h th e y ea r 2000. Bill H a n c o c k , d ir e c to r o f th e N C A A to u r n a m e n t, sa id th e w e e k e n d g a m e s w e n t w e ll b u t u n d e rs ta n d s th e U n iv ersity 's position. "It is a great lo ss for th e city a n d for th e U niversity. H o p e f u lly [the c a le n d a r co n flict] can b e re so lv e d ," H an c o ck said. J o r d a n s a id s h e h o p e s to c o n v in c e th e a th le tic d e p a r tm e n t th a t th e h o te l s itu a tio n w ill h a v e b e e n reso lv ed by the n ext to u rn a m e n t. A thletic d e p a rtm e n t officials d o w n p la y e d the effect th e decision w o u ld h a v e o n the U n iv e rsity b u t a d m it­ te d lost rev e n u e to the city could r u n high. O th er officials said o th e r benefits w ould b e sacrificed. " It's n o t a b ig im p a c t for us. W e c e rta in ly lik e to h o st it, b u t the o n e s th a t really lose o u t a re the b ask et­ ball fans," W orley said. C h r is tin e P lo n sk y , a n a s s o c ia te a th le tic d ire c to r, sa id th e lack of ro o m s c o u ld no t h a v e b een an ticip ate d fo u r y e a rs ago w h e n th e b id s for la st w e e k e n d 's to u r­ n a m e n t w ere m a d e. lo w er your standards. Film documents Tejano music CHARUL VYAS___________________________ Daily Texan Staff A film d o cu m en tin g th e ev o lu tio n of Tejano m usic an d its role th ro u g h o u t history w ill be presen ted at the L y ndon B. Johnson A ud ito riu m Friday. " I 'v e a lw a y s w a n te d to d o a s h o w a b o u t [T e ja n o m usic]. It's p art o f m y h isto ry ," said H ec to r G ala n , th e f ilm 's p r o d u c e r. " I t's m o r e th a n m u sic , it's a b o u t th e T exas-M exican ex p erien ce." The do cu m en tary , Songs o f the Homeland, w ill be sh o w n a t a free screening Friday at 8 p.m . It is the first film explor­ in g Tejano m usic in m ore th a n 20 years. "I w a n te d to in tr o d u c e th is m u s ic to a u d ie n c e s n o t fam iliar w ith it," G alan said. The film, w hich looks a t M exican-A m erican m usic from th e 1920s to th e p rese n t, u se s p h o to g ra p h s, m a g a z in e s, posters, records an d old film s to show h o w le ja n o m usic h a s developed "I thin k the film teaches y o u n g people ab o u t their histor ry, and a lot of th at history w as painful," G alan said. "For a long period of tim e, w e w e re a sh am e d of o u r m usic." G ala n a d d e d th a t T ejan o m u sic w as a s so c ia te d w ith low er-class p eo p le w hich ca u se d M e x ican -A m erican s to reject it and their h eritage as they tried to assim ilate in to an A n glo-dom inated culture. "Today, you look at that music, an d y o u 're p ro u d of it," G alan said. "This is so m ething w e 're em bracing." T he m u s ic ia n s fe a tu re d in th e d o c u m e n ta ry in c lu d e Lydia M e n d o /a , V alerio L ongorio, Isidro L opez a n d Little Joe H e rn a n d e z , w h o G ala n d escrib ed as p io n e e rs of the field. H e also included n ew m usicians, such as La Mafia, Los C ham acos, D avid Lee G arza y Los M usicales a n d Sele­ na Q uintanilla in the film. G alan described T ejano m usic as "a u n iq u e voice creat­ ed at the tu rn of the cen tu ry ." "T he m usic is original, it w as created in the state," he said. Tejano m usic is a h y b rid of Mexican, G erm an, Polish a n d A m erican influences, h e ad d e d . G alan has also p ro d u ce d p ro g ra m s for the P ublic B road­ casting Service series Frontline a n d The American Experience. V ice P ro v o st R icardo R om o, w h o h e lp e d b rin g G alan an d his w o rk to the U niversity, said stu d e n ts w ill n o t only be en tertain ed by the film, b u t w ill learn ab o u t T ejano cul­ tu re a n d history. " O u r s tu d e n ts h a v e a tre m e n d o u s in te re st in m usic," said Rom o, referring to A u stin 's title as th e "L ive M usic C apital of the W orld." "W h at m akes this d o c u m e n ta ry so im p o rta n t is that it looked a t the evolution of the field. Pat Jasper, d irector of T exas Folklife Resources, said the film is m eaningful b ecause it tells ab o u t the role of m usic in com m u n ity life. The Texas Folklife Resources, a private, n o n -p ro fit o rg a­ nization th at preserves th e cu ltu re of Texas, h as w o rk e d w ith th e U niversity on o th e r projects. "W hat is especially u n iq u e ab o u t this film is th a t it w as conceived an d directed b y a 'le ja n o prod u cer, w h o has a special sensitivity to the role of m usic in his co m m u n ity s life," Jasper said. G a la n w ill h o ld a q u e s tio n /a n s w e r se ssio n a fte r th e screening. G alan said th e film w ill be sh o w n on PBS d u r­ ing H ispanic H eritage W eek in Septem ber. eyecare V IS IO N C E N T E R S ^ " w Optometry & Treatment of Eye D isease James A Dugas, O.D. EXAMS • CONTACTS • GLASSES We’ve Moved 2 2 4 W. Martin iAither King/Free Parking in rear 476-1000 Offering the latest in contact lens technology... A t affordable prices. North Hills HEB C enter 4815 W. Braker Lane at U.S. 183 COMPLETE EXAM 29.00 CONTACT LENS EXAM Free pair o f disposable len ses with exam 59.00 ;<“\\Vu(\s SO T T CONTACT IX N S f S MMCOn A ■ E xperien ce the com fort o f C iba N ew V ues, the fir s t en h an cin g-tin ted disposable con ta ct lenses, a v a ila b le in soft shades o f a q u a , royal blue & evergreen. 7 six-pack ref;. $28“ Jewish Student Council Presents... S p rin g O p e n H o u s e burgers hot-dogs Drinks p i Lamda P ’11 At Hillel 2105 San Antonio (21st & San Antonio) 476-0125 Austin: The Capital of Texas and home of the Longhorn. Is it a ny wo n d e r t hat The Uni vers ity of Texas would do so mu ch in such a T e x a s - s i z e way? T he Daily Texan is no e x c e p t i o n . R e ad f or y o u r s e l f . T h e D a il y T e x a n Texas Proud. T h e D a il y T e x a n Thursday, March 23,1995 Page 7 + ZBT chapter returns to campus L0UNGIN' ELIZABETH SOUDER________ Daily Texan Staff T h e Z e ta B eta T a u fra te rn ity is back on campus as the only U T fra­ te rn ity that does not treat p ledge m em bers d iffe re n tly than it treats a c tiv e m em b ers, e v e n th o u g h its c h a rte r w a s re v o k e d in 1993 for pledging violations. The national Z B T chapter sent a representative to recolonize the U T chapter, w h ich registered as a stu­ dent organization M arch 15. "The U niversity of Texas had been such a strong cam pus for us," said Joel W yatt, Z B T chapter and expan­ sion consultant. Z B T first cam e to U T cam pus in 1920, W y a t t said. The fra te rn ity 's charter was revoked in 1993 for treat­ ing new m em bers d iffe re n tly than active members, w hich is prohibited by the national chapter. Freshmen members were forced to perform construction set-up work for the ch ap ter's an nual Pat O 'B rie n 's party. W o rk ran from morning until night with exception of classes. Z B T has a unique system when it com es to first-year m em bers, said Z B T V ice President C hris Dardano. "T h ey don't have a pledge program. They have a brotherhood program," he said. The four-year b roth erh ood p ro ­ gram involves each member in com­ m u nity service and m aintenance of the fraternity, W yatt said "Y o u w ill be in itia te d w ith in 72 hours. That w ay there is not that w in ­ d o w of o p p o rtu n ity of pled g esh ip w hich is almost alw ays followed by hazing," he said. Z B T members vote every semester to determ ine w hether each brother has spent enough time working with the fraternity to rem ain a member, W ya tt added. Z B T currently has eight members, but hopes to attract m ore w ith its p o licy not to differentiate between n e w and a c tiv e m em bers and the chance to join an organization at the ground level. " It was an opportunity to be able to influence a fraternity in m y ow n w a y," Dardano said The fraternity w ill solicit members from different student organizations, including the Students' Association, African-Am erican groups, H ispanic groups and the H illel Student Foun­ dation, W ya tt said. Z B T is a p re d o m in a te ly Je w is h group, but was one of the first frater­ nities to accept members of different races and religions in 1954, he said. "That's what 1 thought was unique about this fraternity," Dardano said. The fraternity must have 15 mem­ bers to receive its charter, W ya tt said. Ju s tin Johnson, p resid ent of the In te rfra te rn ity C o u n cil, said m any national fraternities w ant a chapter on U T campus. :"T hey see a lot of opportunity here because the campus is so big and our percentage of G reek p op ulation is relatively low ," he said. "The bigger the system the better." B u t Sc o tt Beck, m e m b er of Pi Lam b d a Ph i fra te rn ity and form er member of Z BT, said many members are upset about the new Z B T chapter. W h en Z B T lost its charter many of the members joined P L P , W ya tt said. The new Z B T members "are actual­ ly going against our agreement with the Z B T nationals. O u r agreem ent with the Z B T nationals is that for the next tw o years they w ill not try to recolonize," Beck said. "This whole thing could be a potential for a new lawsuit." W ya tt said Z BT wants to start fresh w ith n ew m e m b ers. " T h e y 'r e P i L a m b s and w e 'r e Z B T , " he said . "Those members expelled from the n a tio n a l fr a t e r n it y are no lo n g e r members " Dardano said W ya tt is doing care­ ful interviews with prospective mem­ bers. "You have to have a good core group to start," he ‘>aid. * Leslie Bell, a mechanical engineering junior, took time to kick her shoes off and enjoy the sunshine between classes Wednesday as tem peratures reached the upper 80s. PAUL ALCALA/Datly Texan Staff é Ex-professor sues ACC over firing UNIVERSITY BRIEFS Jewish culture celebration starts today ■ The fourth an nual C h ai W e e k celebrating Jew ish culture w ill kick off w ith an open-house barbecue T h u r s d a y at the H ille l S tu d e n t Foundation. " It b rin g s tog ether the Je w is h c o m m u n ity at the U n iv e r s it y of Texas, and it's im portant that we show [that], even though w e're a diverse group, w e w o rk together and w e w a n t to learn from each other," said Jew ish Student Council President Liza Stavchnasky. T h e Je w is h S tu d e n t C o u n c il sponsors C h ai W e e k as a w a y of bringing Jew ish students together, raising Jew ish awareness on cam ­ pus and bringing quality programs to cam p u s, said S ta v c h n a s k y , a m a rk e tin g s e n io r. C h a i W e e k extends to M arch 29. A c t iv it ie s d u r in g the w e e k include a Saturday evening party at Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity house, a potluck picnic Saturday and a dis­ cussion M onday on the differences between Judaism and Christianity. Others activities include an inter­ active Talm ud study at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs live via satellite from Jerusalem, an Israeli Food banquet and a United Jew ish Appeal C h arity Auction in the College of Business A d m in is ­ tration Building atrium. H ille l estimates there are 3,500 Jew ish students on campus. Kappa Delta helps Helping Hand Home for children ■ A n Austin home for abused chil­ d ren w ill b en efit from the co m ­ bined efforts of Kappa Delta sorori­ ty chapters at Baylor and the U n i­ versity this spring. The two chapters are each host­ ing a m e n 's softball tournament at the end of this month, and the two w in n in g teams from each school w ill play each other A p ril 1. " W e 'r e h o p in g for $4,000 this y e a r," said Toni M ezzetti, c h a ir­ w om an of the tournam ent for the U n iv e r s ity K a p p a D elta chapter. She said each team p a y s an entry fee of $100, an d m o n e y also is raised through donations. M ezzetti added that this is the fifth y e a r th at K a p p a D e lta has ho sted the to u rn a m en t, an d the first year that the B a y lo r chapter has been involved. " It 's been ve ry successful. Last year w e raised w ell over $2,000," she said. The tournam ent w ill serve as a Shamrock Project for both chapters, w hich is a charity fund-raiser that Kappa Delta holds nationwide each March, Mezzetti said. A m y C assidy, Sham rock c h a ir­ wom an for Kappa Delta at Baylor, said the tournament is an opportu­ nity fo. Baylor and U T students to join th eir efforts and raise m ore money than they could separately. " W e always have Shamrock pro­ jects, and this is something w e can do together," she said. Mezzetti said that 80 percent of the proceeds w ill benefit the Junior H elping H and Hom e for Children in Austin, and 20 percent w ill go to the National Committee for Preven­ tion of C hild Abuse. She said the children w ill attend the final game between the University and Baylor. — C om piled by K e lli Dunn and Sholnn Freeman, Daily Texan staff MARY EDWARDS__________________________ Da/y Texan Staff A civil liberties organization tiled s u it W ednesday against Austin C om m unity College on behalf of an A C C E n g lis h professor, w h o says he was fired in spring 1994 after criticizing the school's grade-chang­ ing policy. The suit w as filed in T ravis C oun ty State District Court by the Rutherford Institute on behalf of Richard Manson, w ho taught part-time at A C C from August 1982 until M a y 1994. The Ruth erford Institute is a non-profit c ivil liberties organization specializing in the defense of free speech and religious liberty. The suit asks the court to reinstate M anson to his old job and to recognize Manson's right to academic freedom and his right to be free from retaliation for speaking out about college policies, said D avid G u il­ lory, Manson's attorney. A C C had not been notified of the suit at press time and was unable to comment, said Donetta Good.til, executive assistant to the A C C president. The suit stems from an incident that occurred in the summer of 1993 when Manson gave a U niversity of Houston football scholarship student an F in English Composition I. "T he student had done bad and walked out of the final exam w ith o u t turning an ything in ," G u illo ry said. "B u t the administration arbitrarily changed the grade to a C and Mr. M anson'was disciplined for hav­ ing too high standards." But A C C officials have said that a student's grade is changed only when there is an error or the administra­ tion finds that the student has fulfilled all necessary requirements for a passing grade. A C C has since mod­ ified its forms to ensure that instructors are notified when a student's grade is changed by administrators. The student, D avid Roberts, said last spring that he did all that was required of him to receive a passing grade in the course. H e added that Manson was too hard on him because he was a football player. In Septem ber of 1993 the adm inistration reduced Manson's course load from three classes a semester to one class a semester. "It was a punishment for having high standards," M anson said. A fter his load w as reduced, M anson filed a grievance w ith the Texas Faculty Association and spoke to the public, press and legislators about the incident. " If the Constitution protects anything at all, it's the right to speak up and com plain," G u illo ry said. He added that the law is clear that a public em ployee cannot be punished for com plaining through legal channels. The lawsuit also addresses the issue of defamation. " W e feel that A C C has done tremendous harm to [Manson's] professional reputation, and we are seek­ ing damages," G u illory said. Manson said he w ill ask the court for damages, but the amount has not yet been decided. M anson's attorney added that the main focus of the law su it is not about money, but about gaining the public's attention. O ne purpose of the law su it is to raise aw areness about the issue of academ ic stan­ dards, Manson said. "The issue is whether or not a place such as A C C s h o u ld maintain high standards or hand out diplomas as a matter of cost, without much w o rk on the part of the student," Manson said. M anson's attorney said the former A C C teacher has exhausted all the educational job opportunities in the Austin area and is doing odd jobs. "H e 's considering looking outside of the A u stin area, but what he w ould like is to have his job at ACC back," G u illo ry said. L u n c h S p e c ia ls wniiimwiwifiiiifiuiiiiii imiiimme • Vrg. of the day • Bean or Lentil dish Rice 296 in d ia n re sta u r a n t in D obie M a ll. 2 Dozen R oses * 1 9 .9 5 Cash & Carry Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 D a i l y S p e c i a l s FTD • 45* & G uadalupe • On UT Shuttle Rt. M OVING TO HOUSTON? NEED A N APARTMENT? Let A Texas Ex Help You Find Your N ew Apartment/Townhome Call Michael Conway A t Ace Locators 7 13-254-12 13 7 13-908-6621 pgr A FREE SERVICE is AVE THIS* AD i"! j *(lt could save your grade.) J | ( all your personal math, physics, | - and inorganic chemistry expert. | I Sunday-Thursday, 5pin-2am!! In Austin call toll free 4 5 1-4510, outside of Austin call l -800 T B C H 543. W c accept I -Visa/M C/Dist o 'e r/ A m E x Take advantage o f our ■ ^ ^ i ir o d u c t o r y trial offer FREE tutoring > l I I London $309 Paris $355' Frankfurt $359' Madrid $349' $440' Tokyo Costa Rica $185’ $185* Caracas • f ares are each way from Aust r . dased on roindtr ip perchase Restrictions appty and taxes not nduded Call for other worldwide destinations Council Itavd 2000 Guadalupe St. • Austin, TX 78705 512-472-4931 Eurailpasscs gyp ompare Check Out the Savings... Shop the Co op! Go-op Bachelor Package 30 Announcements Cap, Gown & Tassel w 50 Announcements Cap, Gown & Tassel S4 (T Cap, Gown & Tassel m 00 100 Announcements Jostens *4IS: on * : oo * si>5 \IS j 00 * ' 1... Wallace ’37* 0 * 0* 1 \][ sli £ 00 * ....... UNIVERSITY CO-OP LONGHORN COUNTRY 2246 GUADALUPE • 476-7211 • M-F 8:30-7:30 • SAT 9:30-6 • SUN 11-5* PARKING BEHIND THE STORE W/$3 PURCHASE *Price comparison made on 3/20/95 Page 8 Thursday, March 23,1995 T h e d a i l y T e x a nupm *’ I. P^... K ‘ ' \ %s . Event Date/Time Place Admission THE T E X A S U N I O N txunion@bonge.ee.utexas.«du lor moreinfopleoso call: (hint: this is a phono number!) \ Tejano Night Tonight, Mar 2 3 ,10pm Chair Applications Deadline: Fri, Mar 24 5pm Woman in Islam Wed.,Mar. 2 9 ,5:30pm Africa Week Mon, Mar 27-31 International Week Mon, Mar 27- Sat, Apr 1 Human Rights Day Thurs., Mar.30, noon Texas Union Showroom Texas Union Student Activities Desk Various Various West Mall Deadline Mar. 31, 5pm Texas Union Student Free Free Free Varies Free Free Applications for CoSponsorship Ethnic Conflict in America - Henry Louis Gates Madrigal Dinner Script Call Apr. 6 ,7 pm Texas Union Ballroom Students Free, $3 Faculty/Staff $5 General Public Deadline Apr. 1 9 ,5pm. Texas Union Student Activities Desk Free B ' J M ' I T E l € B M J K T B O 3 M J 2 * . ¿ j C Í H A CJ A K jf ^ j Community Earth international Week 1995 e ^ P C R ie N c e An evening filled with dances, songs and sights from around the world. Feast on our International Buffet for a small price ($4 U T I D I $5 general public). Dance into the night to live m usic at a W orld Beat Party. S A 1 U R O A Y , A P R I L 1, 1 9 9 5 S o u t h M a l l / L i t t l e f i e l d F o u n t a in R a in s i t e : T e x a s U n io n B a l l r o o m 6 p m to 1 2 : 3 0 a m s p o n s o r e d by th e I n te r n a tio n a l A w a re n e ss C o m m it t e e “Ethnic Conflict in America: Will the Circle Be Broken?” Thursday, April 6,1995 7pm Texas Union Ballroom tickets available at door: free w/UTID, Faculty & Staff S3, & General Public $5 - v ' > sponsored by the Distinguished Speakers Committee& tne Hillel Foundation Africa Week 1935 M arch 2 7 - 3 1 Texas Uatoa Euvtmameutat aati Student Issues Committees preseat m i f B > a l a c l a r a b ydarn brornr Chairman of the Earth Island Institute and an uncompromising champion of the wilderness slnflhhe ’3to. I Darryl Cherney Make plans to be in the Texas Union Show room tonight from 10pm til 2am to party to the sounds o f D eja Vu. Adm ission.is free. The Tavern Bar and Grill will be open next door to take o f your beverage needs. Proper ID is required for Tavern purchases. sponsored by the C hicana/o C ulture C om m ittee T he C am p u s Enterrainment C om m ittee is in need o f M adrigal D inner I heater Scripts. Scripts d o not have to be polished. If interested, please call 4 73-6630 or com e to the Program office on the 4th floor o f the Texas Union. sponsored by the C am p u s Entertainm ent C om m ittee T h e Texas Union Program & O perations C ouncils are seeking chairpersons for the upcom ing Fall ’95 & Spring ’96 semesters for the Asian Culture Com m ittee, the African American Culture C om m ittee, and the Student Issues Com m ittee. A pplications are available at the Texas Union Student Activities Desk. The application deadline is Friday, March 24th at 5pm. Interviews will be M onday and Wednesday, March 27th and 29th. O P E N T O A LL U T S T U D E N T S * SOT! Events scheduled for Africa Week (M arch27-31), are intended to increase awareness about Af rica's current realities in a changing global political, econom ic and cultural situation. T h e theme for the week is "Africa and the New W orld O rder/D isorder.” Two Films, one, a docum entary (The Africans: A triple Heritage), and the second, a feature Film ("X ala"), explore different aspects o f the challenges and historical legacies that Africans continue to deal with. An exhibit on the West Mall will present through art and artifacts, Africa's contribution to world culture. Two distinguished personalities will deliver talks on the theme from different perspectives. M s. Ama Ara A idoo, a leading African writer, will give a talk titled "W riting in C ha(lle)nging T im es: An African Writer Speaks," on Wednesday, M arch 29, 1995 at 4 :3 0 pm in Batts H all, Room 7. M s. Aidoo, a poet, novelist, and playwright, is the author o f Changes: A Love Story which won the Com m onw ealth Writer's Proze for Africa in 1992. She also is the Madeline Haas Russeii Distinguished Visiting Professor at Brandies University. Professor Ali A. M azuri will deliver the keynote address titled "Africa and the New World O rder/Disorder," Thursday, March 30 at 5 pm in the Texas U nion Ballroom. Professor Mazuri is a political scientist, historian, and cultural critic, widely known for his P B S /B B C nine-pan docum entary: The Africans: A Triple Heritage. H e has authored m any books that include: Cultural Forces in World Politics, Towards a Pax Africana, and The Trials o f Christopher Okigbo. He is currently the Albert Schweitzer Professor o f H um anities at State University o f New York at Bingham ton i i II n r« ' ' ' cosponsored by the C oSponsorship Review Board and the African Students Association 1 n t p r A A 1 I v i Schedule o f Events: M onday, March 27, C afe D u M onde- In front o f the Union, West M all, 11:30 a m -l:3 0 pm International M usic, food, and coffee. Tuesday, M arch 28, M ini Jam boree- In front o f the Union, West M all, 11:30 a m -l:3 0 pm M ini cultural fest, featuring perform ances o f student organizations, An exhibition o f Africa will take place in conjuntion with the program , entitled, Africa's Contribution to the World Cultu re. Wednesday, M arch 29, W orld Fair- West M all, 11:00 am -4 pm Exhibits o f arts, crafts, food, costum es, posters, etc. from num erous cultures. Try out gam es and toys from around the world. Friday, M arch 31, Keynote Speaker- Texas Union Ballroom, 7:3 0 pm -9:30 pm Planning a trip? Traveling Abroad? The keynote speaker o f the International Week is G ill W hite, who specializes in budget traveling around the world and Europe. T he interactive lecture is entitled Europe & Around the World on 84 A B P except p ho ne & cable • House Keeping tw ic e w eekly «C o vered Parking • C o m p u te r R o om • N ig h t-T im e P a tro l B e d s , B e d s , B e d s The factory outlet lor Simmons, Sealy, Spnngaif We carry doseovti, discortirued covers, A factory 2nd; From 50-70% off retail stare pnces All new, complete with warronly Twin set, $ 6 9 Full set, $ 8 9 Queen set, $ 1 1 9 . King set, $ 149 1741 West Anderson Ln. 454-3422 ‘ W a r e h o u s e C le a r a n c e S a le * Student desk, Computer tables, filing cabinets, choirs, sofos, office furniture, dining tables, coffee tables, and pictures Cox Office Products 10938 Research 345-7691 M F 8 3 0 a m - 5 : 3 0 p m ________________________ 'i 70 7 OB D 2 1 0 -S te re o -T V SPEAKERS 2 FACTO RY-SEALED Acoustics, 12" w oof plus 5" mid plus tw ee t M a n y featu res. $ 14 0 0 /O B O . M ason 4 8 0 -9 4 5 5 3-7 20B 3 4 5 - Misc. * * ‘ CARING OWNERS*** W e have a wide range of efficien- cíes, 1 BR, 2 BR, and 3 BR apart­ ments and condos. Please call KHP at 4 7 6 -2 1 5 4 lor more information 3-20-20B-D 360 - Furn. Apts. V.I.P. Apts. Summer/Fall Leasing ‘ Luxurious 3 BR, 2 Bath ►Two-level unit, suitable for 3 ‘ ►or 4 mature students King Size 1 B R , Double Bath ‘ Pool, shuttle at door, gas ■water paid Contemporary* ►furnishings, large closets 4 7 6 - 0 3 6 3 By Appt. 101E. 33rd at Speedway W a lk to campus Now prelecsmg 1-1, Sm all, qu iet com plex, well- maintained $ 4 2 5 2711 Hemphill Park 4 7 8 -1 8 7 0 . 3 /2 0 6 SUMMER IEa SE Luxury 2-1 apart­ ment W Campus all appliances full size W / D Pool O ld Main. F O R M U LA O N E $ 3 0 . Form ula Call Richard 4 8 2 -0 3 2 7 . 3 2 0 -5 B Three $ 3 8 . C a ll Karen 3 2 8 1 8 1 7 2 17-20B SUMMER SUBLEASE. Very nice 1 1. Share room. W est Campus 1 CLEAN USED carpet from $ 2 50- block UT $ 3 0 0 obo 7 0 8 1374 3- $ 4 / y a r d Big a n d small a re a s 2G 5B 3 3 0 1 2 24 2OB East 7th 3 8 5 - 5 4 4 4 FREE R O O M . H e a lth y c a p a b le , mature person. Private room, shore house, cook, assist apartment man­ agem ent, records, car furnished. 5 5 0 5 A Jeff Davis 4 5 3 8 8 1 2 3 RENTAL • 360 FURNISHED APARTMENTS LOCATION - LOCATION COME SEE BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APTS. 4210 Red River C e n tu ry Pl?za 2 Bd., 1 Bd. & Efficiencies ALL BILLS 452 -4366 C e n tu ry S q u are 3401 Red River 2 Bd., 1 Bd. & Efficiencies ALL BILLS 47 8-9775 G ra n a d a III 940 E. 40th 2 Bd., 1 Bd. & Efficiencies ALL BILLS 453-8652 • CONVENIENCE • POOL • PATIOS • LAUNDRY FACILITIES • S Q U A R E Apartments * NOW PRELEASING M MMIR/IVLL * FURNISHED/UNFURNISHED * 5 BEKS FROM CAMPUS * W t SHUTTLE STOP * EFFICIENCIES * DELUXE 1 1 * 2*1 ECONOMY STYLE * ON-SITE MANAGEMENT ALL BILLS PAID both with Caribbean Sea and river BIG SALE at Ruby's Boutique and frontage, public water, electricity, telephone and road frontage Ideal for any type development. Price is 32 3 -3 B retail Shop item s. lots ol miscellaneous 4 7 0 4 S. C o ngress 10-208 Come Check Us O ut...2707 Rio Grande 476-4648 2 2 1 2 San Gabriel Street Austin, Texas 78705 (512)474-7732 7 .arr pu i large 3 1, lots of stlree refrigerator, vs Fr< arpet, cat OK Available gray < June 1 1 0 0 B W 25th $ 8 5 0 . 2-1 fourplex available now 1 107BW 25th $ 5 5 0 Efficiencies available now, 2 4 1 0 Leon $3 3 5 M atthew s Properties 454-0 099 SPACIOUS 7 7 Í Ute 1 9 0 IB Wood proxim ateiy 1 ,3 0 yard $ 4 5 0 Pets okay ¡(-posit 3?x >n UT shuttle ro- land Avenue ap le n t ed } sq ft $ 7 3 5 /m o n th ■1582 Tina 3 2 i 4B 4 0 0 - C o n d o s - Tow nhom es PRELEASING IS HAPPENING N O W !! Summer-Fa II Delphi Seton Tom C ireen Croix Orangetree Centennial St. Thomas Benchmark All Price R a n g e s All Shuttle Routes CALL NOW! CAMPUS CONDOS 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 1 5 0 0 E A S T R IV E R S ID E D R IV E 4 4 4 -1 4 5 8 “ U N D E R N E W M A N A G E M E N T ’ EFFECIENCY TO THREE BEDROOM UNITS AVAILABLE STARTING AT $ 4 2 0 ALL BILLS PAID ASK ABOUT SPECIALS HYDE PARKI WEST CAMPUS Preleasing Units available in all sizes and price ranges. • I CALL NOW FOR THE I BEST SELECTION \ The Augustine Co. 4 5 9 - 4 2 2 7 ► 4 ►4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 M ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 14 ►4 ► 4 14 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 14 >4 14 ► 4 ►4 H ►4 ► 4 ►4 ► 4 Preleasing For Summer & Fall iu m m cR RftTCf snnD y o u e y b a u FREE c n n i E PV SHUTTIE TUIO POOH o n siT E m o m i 1911 Willow Creek Dr K 4 4 4 - 0 0 1 0 Ü Professionally M anaged ►4 by Davis A A sso cia tes >4 Sm a l l C o u r t y a r d Style C o m m u n it y Poolside 1 l's at $415 and $445. Ceiling fans, built-in bookcases tk more. 2323 Town Lake Circle 4 4 7 - 5 8 5 5 Hancock Square Apts. 9 2 4 -9 2 8 E. 4 0 ’ Nice units 112 block from shuttle Summer 12 mo 9 mo $375 $450 $595 $360 $425 $575 $325 Eff $400 1 -l’s 2-1 S's $525 Demmg Real Estate 3 2 7 - 4 1 1 2 ^ Pre-leasing for Sum/Fall ^ W. Campus & Hyde Park Area ! Furnished & Unfurnished Great rates Call Victoria al / 3 2 0 - 0 9 1 5 "Js igam aiaunpiaM M tauiciL.iuiL.iuiuiL. L A C A S I T A l- l $ 5 5 0 2-1 $ 6 7 5 Heat. W ater, Cooking, Trash & Gas Paid Pool 2 mm walk to Campus 4 7 6 - I 9 7 6 E P I 0=U=tHlHU£IHU=l5£lHLHIHIHl5=IHlHIHLb£0£ÍH r I ^ Leaseline \ ^ c0 1 UT Area M a n y L i s t i n g s N ow P r e l e a s i n g V 467-7121 >4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 M ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 M ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 ► 4 >4 H ►4 ► 4 S U M M E R P R E L E A S E T h e A rra n g e m e n t Lg l-l, 2-2. lofts & townhomes SR Shuttle at Front D o o r 2 1 24 B u rto n Dr. 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 S U P E R S U M M E R / F A L L / SPRING RATES! UT AREA. 2 2, 2-1, 1-1, CA/C H , pool, la u n d ry facilities, c a b le , connections, dishwasher, disposal Plenty of parking. Pleasant atmosphere 474-5929 SMA1L, C L E A N , q u ie t com plex 1BR, 6 5 0 sq.ft., $ 3 8 0 . located at 7 0 3 3 Highway 290E. The M ayfair Apts 9 2 6 6 9 5 4 2-22 20B-D IMMEDIATE O CCUPANCY and FebruaryMove-lns G reat Roommate Floor plans CR Shuttle Come discover over sized value with an undersized price $ 1 0 0 deposit Special 50-channel cable Huge 1 bed from $41 0, Huge 2 -b e d /1-bath from $51 0 large 2 bed Townhouse $575, Huge 2 tied /? bath $595 Ask about our February specie s Wesfheimer Apartments 4 5 4 4 4 0 9 M O V F IN S P E C IA l~ $ 4 0 0 * large deluxe l b r / 2 b r townhous«? Pool, quiet, C A /C H , newly decorated 2101 Elmont 4 4 7 6 9 3 9 3 9 20B N E W LY DEC O R A TED la rg e Ib r - $ 4 2 5 /2 b r $ 5 5 5 . Some hardwood floors, A C , close to shopping and UT buses 4 7 1 9 H a rm o n 4 6 7 - 8911 3 9 20B 1 B E D R O O M A P A R TM EN T in North Austin. $ 4 0 0 /m o n th Call Amanda 3 0 2 -3 8 6 0 3-20 5B Prelease for June Beautiful efficiencies, M 's , V l's, and 2-2's All close to campus From $390- $ 7 7 5 . 4 6 9 9 0 7 5 3-20-6 B-D Hyde Park 1-1 $41 5 -4 5 0 . 2-1 $52 5 5 9 5 All appliances, f. A / CA, small pets okay. Red River shuttle Small, quiet complexes available now, June, and July (no foil pre leases) 1037 F 44th, 4 6 0 8 Bennett. Matthews Properties 454-0099 W a lk to U T (by e n g in e e rin g ). Small and large efficiencies $295 4 50 gas arid water paid Small, quiet complexes. Available now and for summer (no fall pm leases) 5 0 0 , 5 0 2 , 5 0 4 Flmwood. M atthew s Properties: 45 4 -0 0 9 9 * * ‘ CARING OWNERS* * * EFF’s from $ 3 6 5 1 BR from $ 4 6 5 2 BR from $ 7 0 0 3 BR from $ 9 9 5 Beautiful units, dedic ated management W est and North campus, Tarrytown K H P 4 7 6 - 2 1 5 4 3 20 20B D N O R T H C A M P U S -W A L K to school. Free cab le/Free gas remo­ deled interior-covered parking, 1 1 $ 5 2 5 , 2BR $ 6 5 5 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 3-21-4P-8 UT SHUTTLE- W asher/Dryer includ ed M icrow aves Fireplaces Vault ed Ceilings 1-1 $ 4 9 0 , 2 2 $ 7 4 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 3-21 4PB C O VE R E D PA R K IN G -W EST cam pus. 1-1 $ 4 4 0 . G a s /C a b le paid Pool. Apartm ent Finders Service 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 3-2M P-B 2 / W f ST < ampus-covered parking balcony-w alk to school-penthouse available- Apartment Finders Serv ice-$ 6 7 5 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 3-21-4PB UT SHUTTIE L O O O W bills Ac gates-Free cable-ceiling fans 3 7 5 - 1 BR 4 2 0 , 2BR 5 8 5 32 2 -9 5 5 6 3 21 4P B i-i 7 5 0 Square Feet $45Q /m o, low deposit Extra large apart ment. - 5 r MINOLTA X 7 0 0 SLR, Minolta 28- 70mm Zoom, Vivitar 550FD flash PLANE TICKET to St. touis 3 /3 1 - 4 /2 $ 1 9 0 Call Sarah 495 -39 63 3-22 5B jnit. 1 year old All manuals Paid $ 5 0 0 Askir,g $ 3 0 0 Coll Luke svenings or leave message 4 5 2 - 5228 3-105B HP LASERJET II like new condition, 8PPM , toner cartrid g e included $ 5 9 5 Call 4 7 2 -6 9 5 4 3-20 5B C O U C H , LOVESEAT, ch a ir, and ottomdh, $10 2 4 4 -0 1 2 7 3 2 7 5B 3 8 6 COMPUTER modem, mouse, no monitor, $ 4 0 0 16mm film com e r a , 2 lenses, w / lig h t m eter, $ 3 0 0 834 15 4 0 3-23 5 N C N IN E T E N D O A N D games, $ 7 5 Cordless phone, $ 2 0 Uptight va cuum, $ 4 0 . Canister vacuum with attachments, $ 7 5 Turntable, $75 R e ceiver, $ 5 0 . Large speakers, 3 8 6 / 2 0 M H Z no teb o o k 6 0 M B hard-drive, mouse, charger, NiCAD battery, carrying cose software, internal 7 2 0 K floppy drive $ 3 5 0 O B O 4 5 2 -4 4 7 7 evemngs 3-23 58 7 M O N T H T E C H N IC S stereo 5 $7.5 3 3 9 3 1 4 6 3 22-56 year warranty, 5 speakers, 5-disc CD changer, dual tape decks, tun er. remote, cabinet $ 8 0 0 / 0 6 0 Debbie 4 9 5 -3 4 5 5 . 3 10-5NC SOUVENIR TEXAS "T"'s made from the o rig in a l hard w ood flo o r of in 1 9 2 7 , G r e g o r y G y m , la id 2 'x 3 ’, Call 4 5 9 -6 3 1 5 for showing. 3 20 56 SYSTAT 5.2.1 Macintosh manuals Getting Started, Statistics, Graphics arid Data Unused, $ 3 0 331 9 6 6 3 Call between 6pm 9pm 3-21-5B YA M A HA DX-7 synthesizer an d /o r U5S k e y b o a rd stand for sale $ 6 0 0 together. Also, M ac 1C 6 / 4 0 w/monitor, printer, and fax/modem, 23 5B $ 8 0 0 John 4 1 9 9 9 8 6 3-23 5N C M A C CLASSIC II 4 / 8 0 plus Style W r ite r II, ink jet printer, $ 8 0 0 / O B O . 4 5 4 5 4 8 9 3-22-58 ity speakers, $ 1 0 0 each. Double mattress/box springs/fram e, $35 . lo w wood bookcase, $ 3 5 . Picnic table/benches, $ 2 5 . 4 5 2 -2 1 1 1 . 3 M O U N TA IN BIKE ‘9 2 Raleigh Ton gent frame and fork, '9 5 Deore IX brakes/shifters, '9 5 Shimano STX re a r deraile r $ 4 2 5 . Louis 4 5 2 - 5 8 8 6 3-22-5B TREK 4 2 0 men's bike $ 1 2 5 , kitchen or computer pine table, 4 directors' chairs $15 0 rediner couch $125. Chairs make offers 4 4 1 -6 2 2 4 3-3 5B MAC CLASSIC lots c printer I and HP desk jet oftware Both for S 5 5 0 /C 3B O . C o n ta c t Laura at 2 8 0 - 0 1 6 7 /2 8 0 - 0 1 6 8 (e v e n in g s / W A L N U T CO FFE E ta b le , $ 9 0 . W a ln u t stereo unit, $ 1 2 5 Sharp video cam era, $ 3 7 5 . Nicknacks, set of dishes, $ 2 0 , and morel Judy 8 3 7 27 7 9 3 23-58 FLOOR-STANDING 2 0 0 watt Infin­ weekends). 3-23-5B 4 7 4 - 1 9 0 2 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I i 7 13 19 25 O r d e r b y M a i l , F A X o r P h o n e O f ! _________ __ R S C B o x D P .O . B o x D A u s t i n , T e x a s 7 8 7 1 3 F A X : F A X : 4 7 1 - 6 7 4 1 n i n x x l f l e c l P h o n e : C l a s s i f i e d P h o n e 4 7 1 - 6 2 4 4 M V W O l T C l S 9 A d d i t i o n a l W o r d s . . . . $ 0 . 2 5 e a t l c i y S / r 2 8 14 2 0 2 6 3 9 15 21 2 7 4 10 16 22 28 i 1 17 23 2 9 12 18 24 30 (non < lim ited to priva te pa rty Individual ite m * o « e r « .i N A M E ' O tte r I m e rc ta l) arle only I for s ale m a y not e x c e e d $1 (XX) a n d price m ust a p p e a r irt (tie body of th e a d copy H I .terns a re not sold live a d d itio n al insertions A n n R f C C I will be run at no c h a rg e A dv e rtise r m u s t " o u n c u o . I can b e fo r e 11 e .m on th e d a , ot the fifth I Insertion N o c opy c h a n g e tt a n redui t o n In p n c e* is a llo w e d C I T Y . .................. (other im .. .P H O N E ................. ........................................................... S T A T E . Z IP . I I I I I GREAT APARTMENT t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t 32I-4BD t i l l a g e Students Welcome On U T Shuttle Free Cable 2-1 885 sq. ft. $535 2-1.5 1000+ sq. ft. $625 1201 Tinnin Ford 440-0592 -T H E A S H FO R D : 5 APARTMENTS it % % M tt Alow Prelea»ing F(tr Summer « 2 Large Efficiencies I I s p erfe ct fo r roommate Starting at $290 * Large 2-2's J Special Summer Kale J % tt tt tt 1 7 6 -8 9 1 5 tt tt * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 2 4 0 8 L e o n £ v i e w P o i n t A p t s ■y West Cam pus Efficien cie s ? Now Leasing For June 1 Occupancy ? • Enjoy wooded views y • Starting at $38 On-site management Pool and Deck f . Corner of 26th & Leon 5 Blocks west of Guadalupe 7 2518 Leon 7 7 Call 476-8590 7 m , Where You n Always Treated ¿ Like Someone Special X, v T •ri'i ihY f t f t •U N IQ U E EFFICIENCIES! Soltillo turtle tile, fire p la c e , pool Prelease june, 1 year $ 4 2 5 Eiieer Frontpage. 480-8518 2 222B-D f t ( " i 3 1 20BB Prompt maintenance Very clean NR Shuttle Swimming Pool Nice small, quiet community South Aus PRE-LEASE FOR SUMMER OR FALL! Lofts Townhomes-Studios M a n y unusual floorplans. Advantage Properties 443-3000 tin. Brookhollow Apartments 141 4 Arena Drive 44 5 -5 6 5 5 3-21-20B D UT SHUTTLE, Fitness 1 connections, d rybar sauna, I T $ 47 0, 2bi 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 . UT Shut! access 3 214B-P PRE-LEASE DISCOUNT n Amenities include pool, indoor basketball, weight room, ten nis. On UT Shuttle 1, 2, or 3 bedroom floorplans from $455. A d va n ta g e Properties 4 4 3 3 0 0 0 HILLSIDE APTS. 1-2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean & Guiet All Utilities Paid 478 2819 514 Dawson Rd Just off Barton Springs Road LARGE EFFICIENCY w ith covered parking. $ 4 2 5 /m o n th ABP O n the shuttle route. Pool and laundry. Casa Grande 1 4 0 0 Rio G ra n d e 4 7 4 -2 7 4 9 AVAILABLE N O W I H .g. two bedrooms W / D o p a tio , sto rag e, shuttle $ 4 3 0 /m o 4 4 7 75 6 5 3 2 EFFICIENCIES 1 and shuttle route If he* 451-2268 $ 4 0 2-B ED R O O M / 28th and Rio ( sublease for s BA I I PARi Avoila $ 9 0 0 Call 4 7 8 -6 1 7 5 . 1 23-5B ‘ WEST CAMPUS* Big 1-11 Gas poidl Patiol $4 5 0 Prelea-.e Front Page 480-8518. 3-3-20B-D •SUPER SPACIOUS! West Cam- pusl O lder 2-2's $ 7 5 0 / $ 7 3 0 . June/ August Eileen, Front Page 480 8518 3-3-20BD EFFICIENCY AVAILABLE N o w l Hardwood floors, water/gas paid $395/m o 418 3454 3-7 15B The Cottages SPRUCE HOUSE, KEYSTONE 1 & 2 bedrooms, wood floors, 9 0 9 W 23rd St. Mon-Thurs, 6-7pm only 4 8 0 0 9 7 6 . 3-22-lOfFB NEAR L A W School! Large 1 / 1 , $ 3 9 5 ♦ E O n shuttle Pool, laun dry 4 7 4 1 2 4 0 3 2 3 20BB 3 9 0 - Unf. Duplexes HUGE 6 / 3 W / P Close to com pus A v a ila b le 8 / 2 5 H u rry l Dana, 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 . EPI 2 272066 1 10 West 22nd Street •W E S T C AM P U S t H a rd Unique 1 bedrooms. Hardwood floor s/carpet/lohs $4 8 5 $ 6 5 0 , Start ng Summer Many other listings available ir West Campus, North Campus, a Hyde Park Leaseline 467-7121 small 2 / N o pets I 3-3-206D I $ 7 5 0 1 year Don! Page 4 8 0 so se 5 18 1 5 Bl Who 3 3 X X W e s t C< «and Boor restored dwood, appliances, PROPERTY MANAGEMENT OF TEXAS 704 WEST 24th STREET 476-2673 G reat C ondom inium s!!! West Campus 2/2’s Under $850 Limited Selection Lori 476-1976 EPi THE S A V A N N A H 4 7t Qppll 76 EPt y C ondos vered pork fireplace. 2 0 8 B Now Preleasing One Block From Campus ibis sm: jilM i . . (sRKS i ' 1 HIH L 8 " i ;' ' • 1 BR & 2 BR • Ceiling Fans • On Shuttle • Laundry Room • Fully Furnished • Pool • Permit Parking • On-f>'te manager/ maintenance • Vertical mini-blinds • Affordable deposits • Bargain Summer Rates • Group Rates Rio N u e c e s « 0 0 W. 2 6 t h M74-097U GREAT O AK- Quiet, spacious 2 / 2's. CACH, fans, pool, sundeck, DW, coble Red River/30th $ 7 3 5 785 4 7 7 3 3 8 8 /4 7 2 2 09 7 3 20 20SD HYDE PARK 1 Bedroom Apt. Large walk-in closet $ 4 4 5 IOS ARCOS APTS. 4 3 0 7 Avenue A 4 5 4 9 9 4 5 3-20-20B-D WALK TO CAMPUS 32 nd a n d IH 3 5 Avalon Apts 2 / 2 $59 5 and up 1 /1 $ 44 5 and up Convenient LBJ, Law, Engineering 459-9898 3-20 5 B-B UNEXPECTED V A C A N C Y . Large 1 / 1 , walking distance to campus, on shuttle route. C a ll Terri 4 5 2 4 4 4 7 3 21 4B M E S Q U I T E TR EE A P A R T M E N T S 1 -b ed ro o m , close to cam pu s a n d shuttle. Fully furnished, ceilin g fa n , TV c a b le , spa. G a s , w a te r p a id , lau n d ry. G R E A T RATESI N o pets. Res M g r # 3 0 1 2401 Longview 478-2357 C A S A DE S A L A D O A P A R T M E N T S 1 bedroom, furnished W ater, gas, and TV cable paid N o pets Swimming pool, A /C and ceiling fans laundry facilities Close to campus, near shuttle G R E A T RATES) 2 6 1 2 / 2 6 1 0 S a la d o St. 474 2534 32 I 4B 0 All bills p a id , nicely furnished, 1 B R / 1 BA a p a rtm e n t Pool, c o v e re d p arkin g , lau n d ry, on shuttle Chaparosa Apts. SUBLEASE FOR sum m er 2 2 w asher/dryer, pool, 21st and Rio Grande $ 4 5 5 4 9 5 3 5 3 6 3-27-46 SMALL E F F IC IE N C Y tw o blocks from U .T $ 2 7 9 All b ills p a id Q uiet, studious environment. Short term lease. H ollow ay Apartments 2 5 0 2 Nueces 4 7 4 0 1 4 6 3-22-4RB 3 7 0 ~ Unf. Apts. APAftTMfMT H O IIft 1 BR st. @ $ 4 0 5 2 BR st. @ $ 4 9 5 2-2 ABP $ 6 2 5 $ 1 0 0 O FF 1 st M o n t h w it h T his A d A v a ila b le Im m e d ia te ly For more info call L e a s i n g U T $3000 3-2 $1600 2-2 $1250 2-2.5 $1450 4-2 $1350 $1350 3-3 2 Kitchen/2 W/D •6-4 Duplex •Centennial 2-2 2-2 •Orangetree •Pecan Walk •Chelsea •Benchmark •St. Thomas •Croix 2-2 •Wedgewood 2-2 •Robbins Place 2-2 2-1 •St. Thomas 2-1 •infield $1200 $1150 $ 1 1 0 0 $1000 $975 $950 $700 12 agents to serve you 476-19/6 I YIVERSITY REALTY Hurry & Prelease Centenial Centenial Chelsea 2/2 3/2 2/1 $ 12% $ 1500 $795 Croix Large I/I $775 Croix Orangetree large 2/2 $1050 $750 |/| Robbins 2/2 Set on I jrge I/I $975 $750 Treehouse 2/2 Loft $1325 House 2800 San Pedro 6 Bedrooms $3200 4 7 4 - 9 4 0 0 " I ' " T " , ' 2 ! ™ « ',60 200 K I I». 2-2* 650- i 350 ft * V r f i Orangetree * 2 2-. i v * * C .l'l N r a " ,. r* 5 £ 4 7 4 - 1 8 0 0 *KKftftKKKKI«KKKKKKK*K C J . l J . L ' I . M I i f f » W /SO ■•/<; I C o n d o s H o u s e ; I / V . t \ k i o ( i.*-.-. I I I __________C r > , f i l l e r l r o o m V J K l I r ) $600 i l l I ' j ' I . t y m m 7 r n 7 Z m 3 d M S a v a n n a h I 5 2 / 2 S $ 8 7 5 4 2/2’* $ 9 0 0 2 2/2’* $ 9 2 5 I 2/2'% $ I 2 0 0 77 G C o ve re d Park r,? 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 »t*i ^COFFEE P R O P E R T IE S ^ ! i/ u r y in W e s t 6 am p,is M f / / '. C o n d o m i n i u m s 9 0 5 / / 2 2 / 2 2'. 8 / 5 1 3SO W / D p o o l m i c r r ,, i I' ' avewt-d p 'R g 474-1800 J A1 / / ( '/ [ / ? J O R f H C A A / P U S f-r<: k r r , , r , g 2/2', .tart r c, a t $ / V 5 A / ir.r I , o s la r , 5* f h r .r n r js , ( c c t e r im c l, rj»,d 'n 'i f i / mc/rr. C f i i i K e v i n 4 / 7 1 5 / 7 E P I Page 12 Thursday, March 23, 1995 T h k D a i i .Y TKXAN RENTAL ANNOUNCiMiNTS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 4 0 0 - C o n d o s - T o w n h o m e s 400 - Condos • Townhom es 400 - Condos * Townhom es 520 - Personals 7 90 - Part-Time 790 - Part-Time 790 - Part-time 790 - Part-time •9 4 Duplex $3600 G u s 4 7 6 d 9 7 6 EPI 2 27 2 0 M 3 2 3 2 0 B N O R T H C A M P U S 2 / 2 ’ * l a r g a S O M E R S E T C C N O O S . A l b n c k , floor plans w / oil omemties $ 9 0 0 all room» »e pa rate A lw ays a shut Dane or 4 / 6 W 7 6 EPI 27720B8 ti<- A l w a y s 8 5 0 / y r C a l l PM T H A VF IT a ll! G r e a t p o o l, con trr, ■: *- r| a cce ss super (lo o fp la n Sunchase $ 96 0 D eacon 4 / 6 little tim e , o n ly tw o le ft ( a ll 19/6 Ifli ,■1 7 / / hi s PM T 4 7 6 2 6 / 3 3 23 20B-D O I D M A I N T w o b e d r o o m Too 4 / 6 2 6 7 3 3 23 2 0 B D f-Pf IF A '.E ■ R O B B IN S M o ca luxu W E S T C A M P U S 2 / 2 s for $ 9 0 0 '/ L o n d o s 7 7 / D insidn C o v e re d 2 / 1 » s ta rtin g *9 $ / 5 0 M a n y 1 p n . k m q 7 7 . I O O O sq $ 9 7 5 b e d ro o m s Jo a n 4 5 2 7 07 1 M T C " ' A t O P E E N co n d o l 2 bedroom $ 8 5 0 I ne 1 *t, b o k o / big lb -iq1 4 2 0 - Unf. H o u s e s W n d o w s l 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 3-3 2 0 B D 4 2 1 m a to UT C A / C H , W a s h UN(HA' d it; B.g 2 W A N T E D 1 0 0 stu d e n ts lo s e w e ig h t 8 lO O Ib s N e w m etabolism b r e a k t h r o u g h I l o t i 151b* in 3 w e e k » ) R N a s s is te d G u a r a n t e e d result* $3 5 1 8 0 0 5 7 9 1634 3 2 M 0 B G E N IT A L H E P P F L ? I don’t h a v e out b r e a k s a n y m o re M y d o c to r told me ab o u t a safe m ed ication I take e v e r y d a y th a t h a s L T O P R E D my outb reaks C h a n g e your life C a ll your doctor 3-2O-2O0 5 3 0 - T rav e l- T ra n sp o rta tio n $ 9 0 3 20 flrjr. W A L N U T R U N P R E L E A S I N G 320 3 Lpend w o / 7«qr » , o . preferable 'tarious <■' .r.r rjr.r' g rad student ,,, , f 0, . . I 2 2'» ovat l.OOOsp fl * reptar <•». urge Irtlr her rruCrOWOve ' etlinq fan», security alorm», covered parr na att«nt /<■ m anagerne' i e r / D r y e r , c e ih n a fan s, on shuttle $ 1 2 5 0 / m o A v a ila b le r M a y , I / e a r l e a s e 3 0 0 9 C h e r r y w o o d John Heb ed ing 261 7 0 7 3 2 2 0 20B S T U D E N T T R A V E I C LU BIM $ / 5 oH first ti< tnf p u rch a $ # l $ 9 9 // o rld w id e Airfoff?$ DiscOunt#d f u f O p i/ Int’l far#$ Youth Ho$t©i G u id e , and m om Join to d a y 11 (9 1 9 )9 9 9 4 3 9 8 HYDE PARR e/t I I 0 0 7 3 22 10B H uge 8 bedroom , 3 i>afh just n o » o f U I is being completely remodeled 2 living areas, lots of pd'king, shuttle I blor r Park I block 4 5 0 7 A ver < f $ 3 ,0 0 0 / mo 272 5783 5 4 0 - Lost & F o u n d R f W A R D l L Q L T d o g B la c k la b , b lue co lla r, lost aro und 3 2 n d and D u v a l 7,all 9 0 8 / 9 0 4 t-a/e mes s a g e or e n te r p h o n e n u m b e r 3 23 5B $ I 0 0 R E W A R D 7/ort.ar . per 'iant 3 r, I OB w o tr t, la s ' M a r c h 9 17) (D ru g '/ Q u a ck en b u sh ? H) Sentimeritol val Yvonne 4 / 1 5 5 3 1 / 4 / / 0 8 8 / $ / 5 0 C O U N T R Y L I V I N G ( F M 9 6 9 ) UT C a l l 7 0 8 8 1 9 7 1 4 m i , la r g e 3 / 1 2 5 / 2 ( A r M , ) 7 9» a p p l i a n c e s 77/1/ C o n n er 11o - -, porche», yard $ 8 6 0 4 / 2 2 0 9 / 3 23 LP I BE f / p r ; O t / M 1 A N n e w ly 3 70 200 0 pointed co nd o unit 3 3 1 6 CSuadu L U / U R r H O M E S 28 18 R io lupe S q u a r e $ 4 5 0 /m o n rt C a ll G r a n d e 6 bed room s, ch a n d elie rs, V < r ,./■• . 9 30 5 5 0 6 3 0 SB • er.jnt/ system, ' »• I mg fans, C A / B e s t D e a l iri W e s t C a m p u s LANTERN LANE C O N D O M IN IU M S 2 0 0 8 S a n A n t o n io 7 1 ' j a n d 7 / '• $ 8 7 5 , Ju n e I s! t /ic ro, S o m e F u r n is h e d f J / ' j COFFEE PROPERTIES 474-1800 IIP! D Of HIGH PI I HS* < H, /cjrcj -j / ».<( r lent h a rd w o o d s, c a r p e ' A v a ila b le A u g u st 1 9 9 S W a l k U T / S h u t t le 4 8 2 8 6 8 0 3 20 7 OH B I »> > ( /J le/O S P e eos r g i Best selection of housrrs, 7 7, F>©drr,om», g re at locations 7*ge. • 4 / / I 163 .3 72 2 0 B D HYDE PARK f ley on! Hr,'/ ib a hoe e , j»i ' lofth af i J l It's being r ¡, ¡ deled 2 ivir g areas, 1.3 ceiling EDUCATIONAL 5 9 0 - T u torin g • writing • essays • research Laper: grades through college ' S T I H ^ * H 'r " H " L ' / PUT IT IN W R IT IN G 4 5 9 - 9 0 1 5 T U T O R IN G ana v j /e oney parking G « 'n e ig h b o rh o o d I M ock to park, 1 M ock to shuttle I N T E R N A T IO N A L S T U D E N T 5 fans, 2 wasf *•". an d dryers, lots of A T T E N T I O N C O F F E E P R O P E R T I E S Your U l L a ’,(/<•' ialf',1 M e m Fx u A B O R A M I S 474 1800 $ 3 0 0 0 4 5 0 / A ver ne I 7 7 7 6 / 8 3 ¡7 7UB 4 2 5 - R o o m s N e o c J h e lp w ith E n g lis h ? E x p e r ie n c e d c e r tifie d te a c h e r o f English a s a S e c o n d 1 rjricju acje Individtjals G roufi'. 77. st A rstin room ir small house „ it. Irjrrje grjrder L « ' er r oeds 7 0 7 9 8 1 0 $ 2 $30 CASH/WEEK 2 H o u r s p e r W e e k S c h e d u l e O w n T i m e • Extra Clean. State-of- the-Art Facility • Safe, Medically Super vised, Relaxing • Only 15 Minutes from B la M E l A N E W H i g h T e c h P l a s m a F a c i l i t y Please Call for Appt. 2 5 1 - 8 8 5 5 HOURS: 8AM • 8 PM IH-35 & Pflugerville Exit West tide IH-35 behind EXXON PACKAGE H AND LERS | Ideal part time work for Job íovoI/hl! LtudentL I loading/unloading pack age', from /an', anrl trucks We offer an rate! excellent hourl/ I plus $1/hr tuition assis tance after 30 days. Must be at least 18 |Apply in person M F, at ROADWAY PACKAGE SYSTEM. INC. 9101 Wall St. Suite 300 Austin, TX 7 87 5 4 f (¡y./, i H E lP N E E D E D part tim e lor A C A D The* Perfect College Job IT input o f arch ite c tu ra l d ra w in g s Coll 327 59 06 3 2 0 5 B ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Receptionist needed for environmental corporation starting $7/hr, 8am Ipm M F Barrvópm TH Must have transportation Phones, W ord Perfect, lotus, d ata entry, mail distribution. Fax resume with rover letter to Human Resources at 7 ) 9 5 5 1 / U p to $ 19/hr la rg e marketing com pany in North central Austin has unlimited open ings Hours 9 12 / I 4/ 5 9 W o rk as m any hours as you want Must tie customer service Oriented & be ab le to type 35 wpm G re a t base p a y & excellent bonus program C a ll Kelly Tempo­ rary Services 2 4 4 7735 N e v e r and ap p licant fee Eq ual Opportunity Em ployer 3 20 *-H 'i 22 86 B t l W A U S T IN IN S U R A N C E FIRM marketing O utgoing personality a EXTRA M O N F Y ! 1 f.lE RtCAL H E 1 P N I F D F D A T 5 H R S / W K $6 50/HR F IE X IB IE S C H ED U LE D U R IN G REG U LA R BU SIt IF S S H O U R L S E M IP R O F E L L IO N A 1 ATTIRE CALI S U Z A N N E A ! 7 9 4 0 0 3 4 3 20 9B PERFECT PART-TIME F M P L O Y M E F IF W e h ave immediate openings in North Austin working for a national nor, profit health organization Individuals will be dom g various phone support projects N o tele must Hours are M T h 6pm 9pm, d a y hours are occasionally avail ab le C a ll today for a n appoint K E II Y T EM PO R A R Y LI RV IC ES ment 244 7/3.5 EOF 322866 j $ 1 9 C A S H j F O R N E W D O N O R S ! and earn up to ¡ ! $ 1 4 0 / M O N T H ! ¡by donating twice a weak I I I | | W ith you r first ge n e ro u s | | J | | j | (w ith this toupon). | I * Social Security Card ‘ Proel of Rosidtero I We require you bring witk you: P ktu r. ID (UT ID, TDl .) I A USTIN P L A S M A C O M P A N Y INC. I ¡ J 1 0 W . 2 9 th S t . * 4 7 7 - 3 7 3 5 j I N E E D fielpl If you »p «ak Spanish, F r e n c h , G e r m a n J a p a n e s e , C h in e s e , K o r e a n , Portugue-.u c a ll donation of life sa vin g p lasm a Coll B a rb a ra 4 7 4 6961 Í 2 0 5 B A D M IN IS T R A T IV f A L L IL T A U T 10 2 0 hours p e r w e ek $5 5 0 / h o u r V,w an 328 1018 3 / 2 0 B PART TIME W E D N E S D A Y S and Lun PART TIME P G S I T K / N L a v a ila b le W rx k 4 8pm weekdays 15/hr * bo d a y s or W e d n e s d a y / o r S u n d a y D R Y C t E A N F R L C O U N T F R h e lp o n ly C le a n d riv in g re co rd A p p ly A p p ly T o p h o t, 34 19 N L a m a r 4 6 3 878 2 between 3 4pm 3 / 20P order# / 4 / A / 3 2 EOF 3 2 0 5B $ / $ I 0 / H R E V E N IN 7 J te le m ark et ing p o stm an for ticket sales to or, nual shru.e 1 aster e g g hunt ideal S U B S T IT U T E S N E E D E F ) F le x ib le hours w o rk in g with ch ild re n Start mg gay $6/hr 292 4 8 6 8 3 20 2 0 B for students 8 3 4 3 0 3 0 3 9 12B PA R T T IM E C H I I D C A P F w o r k e r PA R T T IM E H F i P w a n t e d 1 0 15 h rs/ w k F r id a y » a n d S a tu rd a y s $ 7 ,0 0 to start M ust b e 18 ye ars or olrinr lo w c House liquor 5 / 1 4 M a n o r R o a d C a l l 9 2 6 - 4 0 2 3 PA P T TIM E P R O L H O P Lio n ’s G o lf (Lo u ise A p p ly f rilield R o a d or re su m e P O B r,/ 6 66 1 A u s tin , 7 8 / 6 3 3 2 0 56 n e e d e d a t d o w n t o w n < h u " h on W e d n e sd a y evenings Year co m tct ment 4 / 6 *2 6 2 5 3 22 SB ! 0am Vpm or com e by 800 - General Help Wanted ( A L T P H O N E work N o sains in v o ice d A M / P M $5/Fu + bonus f A R N $ 4 0 0 00+ /m o n fl w ork ing (.nrt tim e Pick your hou rs ga th e t 4 6 9 886 4 3 22 LB info etc aver phone G P f AT w ork/ PA R T T IM E HE I P I 2 d a y s / w e e k sales e /g er,ern e l C a ll Eve lyn 3 2 7 8 4 2 4 3 H r I 0 B S H O R T W A L K UT T y p is ts (w ill tr a m o n M a c ) , b o o k k e e p in g tra in e e s , t A n c a l, ru n n e rs N o n Smoking 4 / 4 203 2 3 10206*6 W E S T A U S T IN G o u rm e t G r o c e rie s seeks p art time to cook a n d check S a t u r d a y s a n d som e a fte r n o o n s 4 / B B 5 8 2 3 20 5 8 C 7 / IIE G F LT U D FN T L I $ 5 $ 10/hour d istrib u tin g flye rs T ra n s p o rta tio n u n n e c e s s a ry C o ll P a ig e tn D o b ie M a ll L.etw eer, 3 4 p m , 5 0 6 2 3 4 9 3 10 I OP V id e o S to re M ust b e 19 years or o ld e r C a l l afte r 1 0 a m M o n d a y Sunday 385-7224 3 7 7 LB ~ G R E A T H O U R S FOR ST U D EN T S lo cal cab le co m p any seeks 3 port ticnersl M o rn in g and afternoon hours availab le Inbound calls only Start mg $ / 0 0 Intervi©w% *.tart M on d a yl C a ll 3 4 6 3 15 5 Personnel Connection 3 21 5ft B Immediate opening for an assistant to a Real Estate N e e d H e l p W i t h T u i t i o n ? W c art- building a new team at ( irt le K, and You t on Id he the player wc need! So make plans to join our team bet ause this is a ( Jreat ( )pporfunit y! W e offer tuition reimbursmenl, Bring this ad - Exp. 3/31/95 mises, p a id fram ing C all C r a ig at Texas F m playm en! Com m ission job 462 6 6 4 9 3 2 2 LB it J G f 1/ $4 2 , 0 0 obiolntci p eace and quiet Ideal rr,o n th a p p r o / O r, ..b u ttle r o u t e for O quiet, Christian, matute if A/ it DAD ' I ' d 3 yr old twins Jo 4 8 2 i I H /ersid e r /pen 5 u n d a / male, «ntereited tn long term re*i panes** 1 h r/w k $ ?0 / h t M a k u tf R a m s e y « th J B G o o d w n 3 2 / d ency and willing to fhor# «n up i i*, L e n d I p a g e resum e to 8 0 7 trainees Apply in person only 7/880 3 2 0 I OR r#*»*p and care of house and yard í rige, ft, 7* ist n, TX 7 8 / 0 4 Í 2 f LB 12 00 5 0 0 pm at Arbor Theater, PRELEASE FOR JUNE 6 1 0 - Misc. Instruction 10000 Research Boulevard P R E S ID IO T H E A T R E S n o w hiring part-tmrie manager 7/PI RATOR f il IF/ED agent Must be an organ c i impel it i vc wages ( IL/7 major to work 2 0 26 hours jier week for the informatuiri services department at tEie Texas i/er and a good communi and flexihility! cator, both written and For (non iniurmalinn snip by A ss'X ia t on o( Realtor*. Hours verbal Computer skills a any lixation or i uniat t Human kt sources al (512) i $9 HM 16. Í C O F F E E P R O P E R T IE S J t • • B at- in W e s t C a m p u s V 2 « too') u Non» ( in G r e a t p ro p e rties - ■ •<, IJ $3/ 000 $100,000 M ar f „ tf law d ow t r.'i/»-' 800 - General Help Wanted T e l e m a r k e t e r s 12 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS! PIT & FIT hours available. Days, even­ ings, and some wee kends. N.E. Austin. $6 50/hr. High school diploma & some date entry required. Cust. sve or telemarketing exp. preferred. Call soon! These posi­ tions will go fast. No fee. EOE OFFICE SPECIALISTS 451-1666 GREAT WORK THRU SPRING BREAK S 9 .S5 / H O U R w as the average pay ra te of T elem arketers at IM S this w eek W c need ex p erien ced Tel­ em arketing Sales P ro fessionals Exceptional incentive bonus plan. $6 50 $ I 5/hr 3 shifts available 458 S I J J or apply in per son at 6200 La Calm a, Su ite 200 C a ll IM S Innovative M arketing Solutions o o o o o TexJobs Ijonghorns & employers working together! W illi IexJobs you ( an at cess hundreds of openings for part time jobs, internships, volunteer opportunities, and full-time jobs! It’s for ALL Iff students... and its I KIsK! Strip by the ( Career Center in Jester A l lf> to get your a< i css code and user information N O W H IR IN G Presidio Theatre Arboretum’s Arbor 7 Days / Nights / Weekends C a l l 3 4 6 7 9 1 9 A A C PU I5F 5H IP5 hiring I F arn big $ $ $ ♦ fr©e v/c/fld tr a v « l ( C a r i b 'iejjend ent on class s* tsedule and co'irse load Interested?? Lend resume to TAk Attn. Brent Sitton P O Box 2 2 4 6 must Hours flexible. Call Peggy at 4 99 8013 3'/! 4 B Part time Delivery D n / n r P a r t T im a W o r k n r , W a n to d To H a n d P r e p a r e M a i l i n g l a b e ls Arntin, Te x ai 7 8 / 6 8 2 2 4 6 7ou M u s t H a v e a I / p a v / n to r, 3 21 4B M ,*.t tif. t 'I'd worknr n th rmat C o m p u ta r , o r G o o d H a r id w r it ' , K / / / r i ' , ' f j f A . l ' f i i i i n o w f ir appearanc <■ P « r (« 't dri/mg in g Im m ed io tr* ( /porting*, m g , e v e n in g s 5 30*9 0 0 p m M f a.fo rd rwquirecj Appra/im atrjly 1 8 0 9 4 7 4 - 2 7 0 9 (1 D rate*, a p p ly ) G o o d m o n o/ Start n o w (t 1)454 30 Firs/week $5 60/hr 803 6 or |L )3 29 /0 6 8 3 20 I0 B /•(,(,'/ iri person only M ! H A R T 1 A N D B A N K P a r t tim e tell Northwest Hills Pharmacy ©r C ash handling or previous bank mg ©/.pertone.© Drive tEiru M l I 6, S a t 9 I A p p l y in p e r s o n 1 / 1 / W 6th Suite I 10 Í 20 S B at,rj f lo n s t 3910 Far W e s t B lv d EMPLOYMENT - 790 PART-TIME A B H C 1 g.. Assessment Program te am in g d.fl,' ilt.es? -if c ir ■ er 'ration problems.! Individuals with these m tj/ eht from a luatior ',1 their learr f,r fk ».y rruiy rjls', q jallfy atror > n edur otianal under sec.tion 504 ill 8 3 5 /6 22 information 6 2 0 - L e g a l Se rvice s D E F R A U D E D O F your se cu rity de pos»t? C a ll 4 / 3 895 1 l»Y ©n$ed to p r a c t ic e l a w b y the T e x as Su p r e m e C o u r t N o t c e r t i f i e d b y T e x a s B o a r d o f l e g a l S p e c ta li/ a 7 5 0 - T y p in g Z I V L E Y The ' .am p ie le Pro te v.tariel f ypinrj Dervice T E R M P A P E R S d i s s e r t a t i o n s A P p t tC A T IO N S R E S U M E S W O R D P R O C E S S I N G L A S E R P R IN T IN G F O R M A T T IN G H Is / / l'l ’.n il I I 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 472 7m 472 3^10 ▼ Resumes ▼ Papers / Theses ▼ Laser Printing ▼ 79< Color Copies ▼ Rush Jobs '¥ H*l’« C opies I W i * »txxJrjkj(^» St 472 5353 $ 6 - 1 3 / h o u r G U A R A N T E E D ! 3 shills • 7 days/week 416-8900 Best .fob for UT Students C i r c u l a t i o n A s s i s t a n t (Inserter) 19 hourl per week maximum $6 16 per hour depending upon qualifications Work hours begin at 2 a.m. J i A l l i l í in Circulation Department of The Daily Texan an nightL when inserts are placed in paper. Requires High School graduation or GED; ability to lift heavy load,, valid Texas Driver'’, License and an acceptable driving record Applicant selected must provide a current three year Driver's License Record. C a ll T e rry R e ille y a fte r 1 1 p m a t 4 7 1 - 5 4 2 2 for ap pointm ent I he Umver.ity of Texas at Austin is an tqu al Opporfuriify/Affirmative Action Employer H a v e several d o g s H o rriw oo a firxurs $ 30 0 ♦ 1/2 ut,lit.es and cJeposit //■•<■ ( /wrier P 7, Box 5 9 8 0 Au«»n,TX 78/63 320 la r g e J eve $ 4 0 0 a b p 44 0/7,/ 3 22 38 4 3 0 - R o o m - B o a r d tPEE REN T F O P UVE IN YOUNG H7)U$fPEEPER I gt.troom upscale I ,7/ Aust ■ horri© Brivfjt© budroom /bath, go rage M a n y conv*ni«nc#i1 Unhrr.it ©d hou ta u$# for piaoio nt fem ale student kent#r k e e p i houm for 74 Renter p ays electricity ow ner everything •!§« B O N U S for reli able, coring renter, like a daughter, Y/wner will le ave her a valuab le lea at / C all ¡3 I 9 89 0, lO a n 4 3 5 - C o -o p s W est ' amp.»-, pool W / D /ear old alert owner w / amputated K H P 4 / 7 , 2 1 5 4 leg M o nursing Food shared 50/ 3 20 2 0 B D 50 O w ner does mo it cooking Beautiful 3/2 Townhome - Close to campus $1300 469 9075 A R ’ i ( - O W f JE R 5 * * I BP from $ 6 5 0 7 BP horn $ / / 6 3 BP fro,, $ i 300 H**'I ' ful urt ts. ' j Y a t * c a n help ca m pus a r e a or '.r.itrie routes 7 fJ| Apa-tm eu! F.nd ers 322 9 6 6 6 3 2 I 4 P B ,P/.' ,! ! H !I 7 ,, , c j I bon .j-,. ' er te n r rjl, Bene h m a rk 99 ;7¡ 2 i 4H P 771 L I A M P U L a n d I lo r d ' am pus 11 $ 6 0 0 $ 9 0 0 9 2, $ 6 / 5 $ L 0 0 3 b - 's $ I S O $ 7 4 0 0 I-, r/r.f Hr-., I state 3 9 2 9 9 3 4 1 A R ', f W L I ( . A M R I J L 1 1 L jrr / bla- . lr/,rr < am p n BENCHMARK C O N D O S 2/2, //aterfall, jacuzzi, controlled access, full siz© W /D Call PMT 4762673 D E I P H I C O N D O S v i d e o e n t r y 2/2 $850/yr $ 9 5 0 / 9 m o s 3 / 2 $ 1 3 0 0 A v a i l a b l e J u n e o r A u g u s t C a l l P M T 4 / 6 2 6 / 3 S T J A M f S I 5 ft r filings T r/rit#-rr,f>r jffjf y tiled fk/Of. P r7)fe*/*,ionally de» n rate rj $850, ' hoo'.e tan & gff*y Caff PMT 4 / 6 2 6 / 3 ST THE/MAS //f ST CAM PUS PARADIS! 2 BP f urnished or unfurnished $9r/0 Call PM I 4 /6 2 6 /3 ''"V hr d ///new p a - d •• v gules 2 4 P B " ' 7 •" W «st W / D ...... /• /a a b lt M a y 2 0 t i $ 4 7 5 / m o //■ W u '»■ •' Realty, tor. 4 / / ' 0 / 0 3 23 10B 77/1 4 / 6 4 / 6 1 9 / 6 $/5 4 4 0 - R o o m m a te s f F M A I I G R A F x t JA ll s t u d e n t n ed to shote b e a jtiful 3 / 2 k arne ir, W e s t l a k e H-¡Is R « ( e r e r i '< . s re q u t.e d R e n t/b ills O ve ra g e $7,00/ rnonrt ( all 3 2 7 1 4 1 8 3 6 I OB R I L U M F L $ 3 0 7/jOdpt, choir e of $1/1 ©%, qutf it I ' j t r»cjroynrJ, othe» DTP D e e p M 'J y Publishing 4 7 7 203 3 U / f R G O M M A f f w a r ,te d 3 B R 3 2058 near / *er, 2 story duplex //as! e r / d r y e r , alt a p p l i a r ' es t <>•// y decorated //',*xJed vetting ,r, F.m / 760 - Misc. Services C o v e r e d p a r k i n g , W / D , nmghborh'xsd W a te r and waste wa'.v paid f . . . str,an«, n<- dr /) ., reterenres $ 2 9 0 4 / 4 4 / 3 9 3 10 20!'. l ast, I .i’.y L oans up to M A I I / M M A I f R O O M M A t f ne ed e d íor b eautiful 2 !,*/ 2 star/ L'.ntF. 1 st/ Be* W h ite t'.w ' ‘ a " e a r e 'i . / a . te d C>• i,r g s, ar, F>us ro ite |/ > e le c t 't * $ 2 7,r) $ 4 0 0 ° ° ! CASH PAWN ¿ 2/09 f . Riverside xf 441-1444 V» A p p l e C o m p u t e r , I n c . Jo b T i t l e : U s e r A s s i s t a n c e S p e c ia l is t J o b D e s c r ip t io n : i7 !79k! 3 2 6 766 3 2 2 3B 4 5 0 - M o b ile H o m e s-L o ts O W G T)W N N O C L O S IN G FFF'j S ix ur it y p*)* if I* H o u s tn o L e tv ir e s /■ ri /ision af W < : firion'< r /*r n w i c u ’ s rjr«. r, B ''.'.n to r t ^ b e r m V jrm ll* , L r u R O R lT tfL M A K f OR »a $ 2 0 0 0 n w e e s ! M o tivate d student or 1 BOO 7 0 0 9'} 1 8 g a rii/ a h o n * r e e d e d for m arketing Non standard hours may be required The length of employment is up to one year P iy rate is $1 1 00 per hour. ATTF N T l O t ! FRA TF Rt (H IE L A N D escalations to internal organizations wmnmnm 5 1 0 - Intertoinment- Tickets proj<-' t ( a ll t a r i i J ( 8 0 0 ) 7 5 6 Benefits are available 6 6 6 2 2 I / 2 0 B E l i g ib i li t y : ■ L m i « 7 8 0 - E m p lo y m e n t Se rvice s Exciting and rapid innovations are taking place at Apple Computer, Inc, $2 and this is your invitation to come be a part of it all If you meet rhe following criteria • Enrolled full time m a university or college (9 credit hours A G G I E J O K E S S p r i n g E d . To hear 21 jokes call 9 0 0 990*2581 ATTENTION EARN Money Re a¿ in g Book*1 U p to $ 5 0 0 *<*#kiy f o r m or* C h o o i© $ub|9 Ct •ditto111 1-906 3 6 2 4 3 0 4 $ I 9 9 / rr ttr i r m j x 6 *** £ 0 0 0 5 3 é W n m o r $ 1 1 . 9 4 M u * ,i b e 18 or over K iw i u«rv i* es 512 2240292 Cor p Chnsti, TX i / i 3P 520 - Personals IIOTIC, HOT, KINKY, BASIS LIVf 1*900 53S-UVI(54I3) $2 50$3 VV/miisut» 18. 3 3 2LK 790 - Part time You# re 1 a b le , •conomtcal c a r t/ t H . M W I M o rn in g s o fte m o o n s 4 / 4 2032 2-21 2 0 6 8 IN T t Rf S T E D I N w orkir g t / o ie * co rp o rate commitment to the principle of diversity In that spirit, we encourage and welcome applications from all individuals P A R A I F G A I R U N N f R W II n o n Apple Computer, Inc P fc A l ■ ///• 7 4 / 9 on I 77/D Juro r,r a /. ,g vi Ju » . $ i j 5 0 C h ’jr.k 4 / 6 19/6 f p 7 7/ 7f/hB 77 • 4 C U I L ' ; 7 J / U P Y 7 d o t G a r $ 8 6 0 W e it 7,ampu* Irjrrje r rig P sly 4 / 6 9 / 6 EPI 7 / 7 . ¡I B HUC/t 2 / 2 and 1/1'*, r 7u et com ■ / ,-eot fd ' groa-, $ 9 0 0 d $ 6 0 0 ¡ ne a n d A u g .•»* Chur t 4 / r 19 / 6 f Pi / / t / ' i h h 77r ST : 7*i 1 7 / 7 % * -«/: ¡/r, » '/j 77/D , ' 0 / June ond A vj ,»t $867j D a n a 4/7, 9 7 6 EPl 2 ? ? ? 0 M ,7-7 / » 77 ' i G P G t » r,rr ,, ,» ( or a t ( orerert . *.g P',r,i/sprj /. 77/U or- 4 / 6 9 / 6 . G A B I L 3 2 ? « o r g a r a g e W n d o w s go o*e $ ¡ J» '/ 7*voil T1/ » ' i- ■ 7 r.».le iur e • OfJ,. PMT 4/6-26/3 s H uge' 7 .,rr.i.,n,,| , 77 • tireptrjre .modate-, 2 3 93 20fcU $ / '/ ; ...--- . . ■ .... .. ,'r 4/7, 9 / 6 EH 7 / / 7 9 k k f P I I H O U S E G G P G » G U L e»b •......*............." f N T f l i -................. .. 7 Jp7 ' d o t r e r r , H a rrlw r> o d flo o r » , 1 re p lo re . W / D , go rrjg* $ 52 6 i v j l P M ’ 4 / 6 / 6 / 3 : 23 3 0 B U G f O R G I A N / I O ' /- r K / N / Lo /o { y ‘ * f !*,- ./ « c a i.b r. 2 b * d ro o m $ 8 0 0 . 2 1 »t O fid P * a r ( u l! P M ! 4/7, * * ‘ 2 6 7 3 3 23 20ft 0 7 / z'/fcts ® A Better Way! inn»»y I mpluyrr An fxptal ( T * lj* r n « e d e d fo r h ig h v o lu m e b ú a " Furop*:, H a w a ii, h u ) Lurn check cashing ro m p an / f xpenenr©d rr ■•'/permanenl, w i «x p arian ca riec p r e fe r r e d but not n t K f t it o r y r a i l « s s a .y '/u ic Jo ( 9 1 9 ) 9 2 9 4 :9 8 835 5761 3 ? 0 5B nxi C 100/ 2 2 4 2 0 B EMPLOYMENT - 800 GENERAL HELP WANTED EARN $350-$400 P E R W E E K O R M O R E ! People Needed To Do Fun, Kasy, Respectable Part or Full Time Work At Home. 24 Ur. Msff Gives Details CALL NOW ! 1 - 8 0 9 - 4 7 4 - 2 8 3 9 Inti I,d rati-s a p p ly HEALTH C0HSCI0ÜS MEN NEEDED FO R SEM EN D O NO RS!! IF YOU APE BETWEEN 18 AND 35 AND WOULD LIKr IO F A R N F X I R A M O N E Y IN A C O N FID EN T IA L PR O G R A M , G IVE US A . C A L L . FAIRFAX CRYOBflNK 47H26S Telemarketing or Sales experience, com puter data entry and professional voice a must. • J 9 . 75 wi-r.iK" hourly rate • <,<.i,i roui incofKivei • Cr.'.r' b e n e fit* p.i'Hag» p.. '1 trisuran. * after 90 days • P.nd tra in in g ■ PI. xitsl*- //orR • Ongo" t, supervision ■ Potential c a r e e r paths I,«'tules I Top Performers for the W eek of March 6, 1995 Tiff rl Hon©d / ijj I au©r M aryW rig b i $24 95/h r $^3 00/hr $/• 75/hr oth e ri made above $ 10/hr $ 9 . 7 5 Avg. Hourly Rate P r o f e s s i o n a l Telemarketers Needed For Ongoing Corporate Program Call Todayl 4 5 8 - 5 1 3 3 In n o va tive M a r k e t in g S o lu tio n s 6200 La C a lm a A u s tin ,Tejía*, 78752 THE BEST PART-TIME J O B FO R ST U D E N T S The Gallup Poll ^/eJ&pJtoste 9 HieAAM OUJeeAA, / 'If rut uull (fsUm/UHésut your v f w Ju le You ffuet wurk m ffitfurrtum rjf me/ wtiei Arty hour© cktfWfQ fit# ttvmrrtttyn end / or ww*9b©Md«s lio ijri wpm©» tort you 4 'LjiM uull cxhUaoI fv>w much /(/(, BB'fi /our {je/ i*-» b*M>d f/ft prrifJur,1iv»ty ami quetity «f1firm»fif,e Avimiy* pay lor ft»» ftf!**© hour taanri m %h tG $H jeir hour 'Ifau umU •a'ut ap to 1 rXT'u of your ooMer/e tuflfori tn fi*l 5 'If 044. Uull (f UJtSA e (/(iifi»f/f»a an a wvla varwity of tf/pK » W« av e rag e 160,000 t*f*phon* lu rv ty t avary rrvxrfti i 'IftHt ut*ll ’ <*fí7*i a, a w ir r h i r d MtH,x^nitHsG thi'iuyfi Gatfuf/t (.effffv «!»/>© pffjtyrem v/tifcti WK ftxi*4*. » l f If I pH/ 6 'If044 UUU «4tf04f ff.to tnafifjl/ art?] pcHUtiva w«;rV anviroomant Your ai^iarviaora and oo 8®f/rkar« '.ara «hoof you CA LL N O W TO SC H ED ULE A T E LE P H O N E IN T E R V IE W (512) 454-5271 M o n . * Fri. 1 0 - 6 '-. . f o firirj rtkxfrKit.o© obouf lha f xdiiup OraontiotxR) rj» fha Mkrwtng Pt'f mmmrt ( M ■ «i $f i®nf«v t4wir*l ArH. (Jfld a*a C -.Itepe ol r fJlr> mu©cotFO© C//«' v fjid lttp (Pkifam aatkut .j» , /, uj Primad'/ *a 2V0 JrkxM» I© 1H1^ w»d 290 i/ah«ad »ha DtaAAaaaa HcAal) A© f q u o ! O p p o r t u n i t y f m p l a y r IM M E D IA T E O P E N I N G sales o s to cicit*. a f te r n o o n s , e v e n in g s a n d w eekend s Ple a s e a p p ly in person at Hilton gift shop 46 1 5 / 6 / 3 21 LH T F l f f ' H O N f IN T E R V IE W E R L $6 5 0 / h r O r, c a m p u s R e s e a rc h o n ly / r,', s a le s C o ll la r io r .i 4 / 1 4 9 8 0 3 2 i 4B F A R M E R 'S I N S U R A N C f "« e d - so m e o n e 8 10 lu s/v / k (or phonr, work Involves HI* 'O il D avid or Chuck at 335 4 4 0 4 ) 2 1 4 B C H II D C A R F P R O V ID f R n e e d e d W a i t A u stin c h u i'F i, W e d n e s d a y s ar,d Sundays 3 4 3 7 8 5 8 3 2 1 7 B CHA F IR M se.tks p n rto n //itF, go od phone vc> ' « to c all businesses Irorv. our office Fle/ibt# cicry time hours H o u r ly p lu s b o n u s e s ( . a l l 7 0 / 3473 3 2 3 LB S W I M M I N G IN S T R U C F O R Sum m<-r a fte rn o o n s a n d / o r e v e n in g s W a r n pool Smalt classes W L I a ' d e x p e r ie n c e p r e f e r r e d 2 5 V 4 54 5 3 2 3 6B A N S W E R I N G Lf R / !' ( o p e .a to r * n e ed e d d a y s / e /en, ag » / w e e k ends Close to UT 4 / 9 I 8 5 9 , M f , 9arr 4f,n, 3 23 LB I I Jl ! \ i a rr.o' n a responsible student to provide after school ta r e 4 6pm non-smoker M ust h a / e re fe re n te s and ' or ( all after 5 343 7,7,4 ¡ 3 23 3B MR G A i r i L LE R V K I ' EN TFR is ftrokmg for friendly, enthusiastic professionals witk, great poop," skills lyf/e 25 wpm, o v o ,iabie .ome weekends I ull time rjnd part time, d a / and evening shifts GRF AT JO B FO R S T U D F N T S I For info " i l l 4 5 4 4 7 6 0 betv/eer I 0 arr, 5 00pm 3 23 / B G E N E R A ! ' ' j F I K F clerk part-time Must be neat an d d e p e n d a b le Re sponsibilities include (ilrcig, copying, a n d d e l i/ e r a , g $7,/ h r B a r t o n » ,eok H e a lth C a re 3 2 7 7 1 0 0 23 2BD J G R E A T II1 LT P U C T O R L W A N T ! 0 Seeking part-time instructor» for C,RF, LSAT, G M A f , an d M C A T imn.ecjiatel/ needing chemistry tear hers Requirements 9 0 th % ile and te a t hmg e/|/ener,' e Lend te sume . co/er letter a n d co p y o f test S' ores to the K a p la n Ed uca hor.'j ( enter, 811 W 24tit Street, Austin, Fx / 8 / 0 L , Attn ( ynthui fklker 3 2 3 1 0 B B G I A M G U R L H c , I S P a r t tim e p h o n e w o r k e rs F le x b le h o u rs ' ,'eo t atm osphere $ 5/Lu * bonus plu' 4 L 0 I 6 0 1 J 23 2B I R I S H PA S T A Sh op needs part lime person for mornu gs Duties include re tail sale s a n d p a s ta p re p a ra tio n ( „ II tro r.) A p p ly a t 420 1 L ( On gress suite 10! (one bk/'k south o f Ben W h ite or ross from Furrow) Po ¡ 23 LB sition n / a ila b l* imm ediately Dc/ you h ave tw ', hour s to spore or, either Thwrs , Friday. M oridoy, or lu e sd ay rnornmg from 10 30 to 12 30K Sixteen tesearch sub|e* u. needed to rate '.fXM" n sompies for guala/ Ra/rrier * of $2'/ 0 0 upon completion Must iiOv* I rsg) *.h « « fust lang uage and g 'x x J hearing For further r Formation rjt d appointment, call betweer V 5pm D Y N A G T A T , IN C 2 /0 4 Rio Grand®, Suite #4 4 7 6 4 / 9 7 10 HCjUtij o w*«k houi9wor$ and p o t i f b i e b a b y $ f W fn g 6 month o l d $ 2 4 0 p «r month R * f * r « n r * % r« quir*d N * qf to»npu$ 4 7 2 8 1 3 0 3 22 TH AS who? Arizona State rides dark horse in loaded Southeast Region A ssociated Press B IR M IN G H A M , Ala. — Arizona State looked the part of the outcast Wednesday at the N C A A Southeast Regional. The players took the court for a brief prac­ tice with their jerseys all askew, some turned inside out, others flipped around backwards. Coach Bill Frieder, a notable flake, showed up at the Birmingham-Jefferson C ivic Center wearing a sweat suit, loafers — and no socks. It was a fitting image for a team that has many people asking: "W ho 's that fourth team in Birmingham?” "W e 're probably the craziest team in the country," said star center Mario Bennett. Craziness aside, the fourth-seeded Sun Dev­ ils (24-8) are also the most unknown commod­ ity at the Southeast Regional, an otherwise glamorous pairing that includes the two win- ningest schools in college basketball history, top-seeded Kentucky and No. 2 seed North Carolina, along with 1984 national champion Georgetown. Maybe that's why Bennett, asked his thoughts on playing Kentucky Thursday night in the regional semifinal, said matter-of-factly: " It feels good to be alive. That's about it." But don't get the impression the Sun Devils are just happy to be making their first appear­ ance in the round of 16 since 1975. They are livid over oddsmakers who established Ken­ tucky as a 14-point favorite. "H o w big an underdog are w e?" asked a skeptical Bennett, the Sun Devils' force in the middle who leads the team in three different categories with 18.2 points, 8.2 rebounds and 3.5 blocks a game. "Those people don't see our practices. ITiey don't see how hard we work. W e worked too hard to get this far to get blown out. I'll tell you this much: you won't see a blowout game. It'll be a good game." But Arizona State — or anyone else, for that matter —- faces serious match-up problems against Kentucky, which certainly has the look of a team capable of running the field. The Wildcats (27-4) haven't lost in more than five weeks, winning 10 straight games by an average margin of 20.7 points. The only team to stay within double figures was defending national champ Arkansas, which T h e D a il y T e x a n Thursday, March 23,1995 Page 13 + West Continued from page 16 Joe Smith. No ordinary Joe, the skinny 6-10 Smith scored 31 points, grabbl'd 21 rebounds and blocked seven shots in Maryland's last vic­ tory over Texas and said the num­ bers didn't surprise him. Actually, they didn't surprise anyone else. "E ve ry player has an ego," Smith said Wednesday, "every player has the frame of mind that, 'If 1 play my game I can't be stopped.'" What makes these teams so good, though, is not their individual abili­ ties but their collective strengths. "W e both like the up-tempo, N BA style game," Booth said. "Both teams like to get out as far as trapping, showing the pressure defense, running the ball." The winner between Maryland and UConn will face either U C L A or Mississippi State with a Final lour berth on the line. In Mississip­ pi State's second-round victory over Utah, Erick Dampier blocked shots with such force the ball often wound up in the first few rows. The presence of the 6-11, 255- pound Dampier in the middle, along with 3-point shooters T.J. Honoré and Marcus Grant, often is enough to put away most teams. But the Bulldogs won't have an easy time against U C L A in Thurs­ day's first game of the West Region­ al. The Bruins are the No. 1 team in the nation with a 15-game winning streak. UC LA's answer to Dampier is George Zidek, who offers a deft hook shot and 7-feet worth of block­ ing ability. "H e's probably going to be the best center I've played this year — so far. He's an extremely physical guy and has a lot of reach," /.idek said Wednesday. " I think I'm pretty physical, tcx). My hook shot is pret­ ty tough to block." Zidek prefers matching up against big players over quicker, smaller opponents who can get him in foul trouble more easily. Dampier joined elite company with 21 points, 10 rebounds and a career-high eight blocks against Utah. Only Shaquille O'Neal (11), Shawn Bradley (10) and David Robinson (9) had more blocks in an N C A A tournament game. A S S O C I A T E D P R E S S Je rry Stackhouse and the rest of the Tar Heels, who meet Georgetown Thursday, are back in the Sweet 16 after a one-year absence. 44 W e ’re probably the craziest team in the country.” Mario Bennett, Sun Devils center — built a 19 point lead in the finals of the South eastern Conference tournament only to f.dl 95- 93 in overtime. Even Kentu< ky coach Rick Pitino, after reel­ ing off the virtue's of Arizona State ("the quick­ est team I've seen"), conceded that his squad has all the elements to go all the way. There are few lists regarding college basket­ ball coaching success without the names I )ean Smith and John Thompson. Smith's second-seeded North Carolina Tar 1 leels (26-5) are finally back in the round of 16 after losing to Boston College in the second round last season to end a 13-year run of get­ ting to at least the regional semifinals of the N ( AA tournament. Thompson's sixth-seeded Hoyas (21-9) haven't been this far since 1989, losing in the second round four of the last five years. Smith and Thompson have been on oppo site benches only three times and the biggest of Smith's two wins was the 1982 NC A A championship game. That was the one where a North ( arolina freshman named Michael Jordan hit a big jumper with 17 seconds to play and the game ended when Georgetown's Fred Brown handed the ball to North Caroli­ na's James Worthy for one of the most famous turnovers in tournament history. " W e talk so muc h and in one or two instances that game has come up and we talked about the last play or something one of us did in the game but it never lasts more than five minutes," Smith said. "W e haven't talked about s. heduling because I want him to win and he wants us to win and two can't win in this sport. I here are no ties." One of them will win Ihursday night and it w ill come down to which team's stars play they way they have to. North Carolina has sophomores Rasheed Wallace and Jerry Stackhouse, as fine a front­ line combination as there is. D a il y T e x a n C l a s s i f i e d s mnmmm 8 8 0 - P rofe ss io n al Attention Grad Students Rf ADI RS N I ! Dt D In evaluate student writing Temporary positions, approximately seven weeks, beginning March 17 A/e provide training Iwoshift*. available l/ay shift 8 30am 3 45pm, M f Evening shift 5 00pm-10 15pm, M l Hours are } 23 3 riot flexible Bachelor's degree required, prefer I nglith, language oris, education, or related fields — L U H ' L U ™ EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 8 9 0 - Clubs- 8 9 0 > Clubs* R estau rants R estau rants 9 0 0 - Domestic- Household SERVERS C o co's now accepting application*, for full ond part tune s e rv e tv A ll shifts TRES A M IG O S 2 9 0 Apply now! available Apply at Waitpersons needed at 1605 S IH 3 j at Oltorf, 5 8 1 6 N IH 3 5 at 2 9 0 or 5 8 7 8 at S h o a l C reeF F O f 7535 East Hwy 290 926-4441 Ask for David LIVf IN OR liveout nanny Flexible hours, must know how to swim 2 year old ond infant 320 880 3 or pager 209 4/4 0 3 7 I0 B Daycare Piov dor Needed Professional couple needs mature non smoker to ■ are For / ond 9 year olds m aur home (f ucle ( Ram Li bW ) far summer References and ' nr re-iuired ( arnpetitivc- pay ( rill 7 880549 after /pm or wee i / / IB kends 3 10 5B During interview, demonstration of W AM RI bb f OR writing ability required Pay rate 1 lair I 30pm $/ 00 per hour Additional oval 0600 3 20 5B lunr h shift Mon I n Good pay 4 / / W f I K E N D (-ATI R IN G business seeking wait staff for working par uator positions available between mid-May and end < RUIbl SHIRS H IRIN G torn up to $ 2 0 0 0 4 /month W o r ld n o v e l Seasonal & fulltime positions N o exp rvy <-,viry For info "ill I 2066 14 0468 ext C58675 3 6-20P $ I / SO W l I KlY possible m ailing Roommate needed to live with woman with disability Pr-'son would provide > am as needed overnight for free rent Beoutiful home lex aterj in rirjrtheast Austin or shuttle route Interested individuals contact Rosa Gon/alez Abrego at 834 9433 for information 3 20 SB our circulars N o experience re A PPOINTM ENT Sf Tit PS quired 202 298 8929 1-642P Begm now For mfo «■.oil D O E S Y O U R job suck? UT under grads interested m sales/mnrketu g training spe< lal summer program $6100 average and college n w i RelioFcle, part-timers to set appoint ments N O SAI I SI t leeded to start immediately $6/hr plus bonuses f vemngs & Saturdays Call Mir belle at 45 I 8995 for inter view 3 20 4B it Call 320 75 17 the Southwest RESORT JO B S lo rn to $ I 2/hr + em ( ompomr 3-6 20B AFLFR S C H O O L II At HERS need ( in rent and summer em ploy •id rniTit opportunities Excellent w ag «•./training Stepping Stone Schr»ol, 459-0258 3 8 8b SUM M f R S W IM ir vfrur lor*. I xper «nr «/training required Competí live p a y Stepping Stone Sr hool 459-0258 3 8 8B tips Theme Parks, Hotels, Sp a t ♦ more Tropical & Mountain destina tions C all I 2 0 6 6.32 01 SO ext R 5 8 6 / I 3 22 I 5P DIRECT C ARf STAFF NEEDED to work in small group homo with women with moderate mental retardation 2 part-time shifts available in south Austin Must Ice D I R K . l C A R E staff needed * -. r at least 23 year*, due to insurance N o - lh w e i! Austin g roup hr,me M any shifts available 1 all M ina at 338 9795 for more informatior 3 16106 requnementt Call (512)3926888 I Of 2 28 20B I / J 56 THE C A S T IlllA N Food Se rvic * I» ( on now hiring two dish people ta< t Star ey at 478 1732 3-20-5B W F l l E STA 8 1ISH FD Preschool m central Austin needs several loving, d e p en d ab le leu- hers and subsh tutes full and part time positions COOL JOBS Employment G u i d e Earn $2000-6000 a month ♦ Iren travel C hjim- ships, Alrnkon fi-Jier Jobs on lis*,, ( lub M«-20b n. « pmg I Jon A N IM A L H O S P IT A L part time of temoon and weekends Experience required 4769191 3 22 3B P ro Fasteners a n d Components 810/ Spring dale Road Austin, 78/24 Small, high-tech company has rea son ably flexible half time position with product development group Work will be largely with K s, moderns, arid networks Most C U S T O M IR SERVtCf PI PS A M /P M fgll time shifts available National marketing rompany seeks important requirement is ability to figure out how to do things that yoi don't already know how to do 10 CSR's Must lrie voir e required You programme ■ ¡ betid resume !< ■ IR O N SMITH BO DY, INC At A S P A S U M M F R E M P L O Y invite*, applications for the position M E N f STUDFNTS N e e d .d l Fish of ‘ professional* sports and fitness trainer t xpenem e needed in ing Indu-.iry $6000+ per mor II Earn up n $ 30 00 (loom and leac t-mg, designing and implemari.ng general healfh, fitness Boardl Transportarían) M a le or female No exp0 r«n M A ll rery d C A S U A I b tail-orient* rd keeping Meti< i I p« tal Flexible A p p 371 7264 3 22 28 wk •ds lor could start tmmerjicitelyl Temp to hue opportunities olso here! Call 346-3155 Personnel Connec tion 3-21 -58-8 THE D O U G H E R T Y Arts Schoo l >s now hiring visual and performing or lists/instructors a n d recreational lea d e rs for summer youth cam p 397 1458 3 2 1 4B N O R T H S ID E Q U A L IT Y D a y c a re seeking afternorm assistant teach ers Hours vary Apply ( hildren's Network, 854 V S 26 3 2 I4 B 8 2 0 - Accounting- Bookkeepirtg SH O RT W A IK UT Non smoking Hislp setup M ot bookkeeping %y% tern Also hif»0 Q typists, clerical, runners 4 /4 2032 11M O M 8 4 0 - Sales Hot Shot Delivery Drivers Needed $ 30 0 $ 5 0 0 a week B 5 M F , N o myhts/no weekends Beoii chauffeunng pizzas You must hove small trurk with camper or mtmvan type /«hu le Prefer full lima, but maybe 3/4 time 707 9132 12146 G P U ' Al SH O P r oads a re< iption St p a r t lima o r full tim e C o ll 458 536/ 3 2 l 5B B A B Y S IT M Y d o g ? Parson w yard naeded to watch small dog til lota M ay $5Q/m onth Br 834-1540 3 23 5B Part-time < ommission and non< om mission soles positions available in the followirig departments Brand Central, ladies Fashions, Home Fashions Men s Department Flexible hours Apply in person: S e a rs personn el departm ent, Hancock Center F O f , M /F /D u a b le d IA R N $ IO D 3 0 0 /W EEK piomofing Parttime, flexible local busmeste* houtt available Coll 4 /2 9195 3 2 0 5B CALL 471 5244 TO PLACE A SUPER LONGHORN WANT ADI Austin Digital Inc 39 1 3 Medic al Pkwy #202 Austin, TX 78756 Fax 452 8170 C/C++ PRCX -RAMMI R5 ‘Fined*ate openings for full time a port tune €/€♦♦ programmers Exciting projec ts wtth growing company Windows developmer lApenence strongly desired Vitu ♦ ♦/MFC experience helpful Ur experience O plus W a n t fast learners and self starters fa* resume to 4 596244 or f mail t< resumesOeurekasoh com 8 8 0 P ro fe ss io n al «tor for food Orgamzer/C and nutrition progrom in Austin's t ast side community Must be bilm gaol English/SfKjmsFi, hove some knowledge of kxxi 6 agricultural issues, minimum qf 5 yeort profes Stoncil ax per It* ■ I a ur equivalent O' ademic bar kground Salary DOf please send rt-su-nes to Sustainable f'>od Center 1715 I 6tt Suite 200, Austin, TX /8702 Student Intern National Instruments, a leader in in strument control and data acquiii tion produi ts. is seeking a qualified Student Intern for our International Marketing Communications Depart men) Responsibilities include exe cutmg press mailings, building kits, gathering motenals, sleeving pho to*, maintaining filing *ystems, li brarie*., and databases, coordinat­ ing shipments, various clerical du ties such as photor opylng, tra'king information and materials, monitor mg inventor <-■. handling sper rol projects as requited Must currently be high *.' hoof o' colleger student who is interested in marketing and irite-national business, couise work in marketing, international studies, or -elated oreo, and < hiñese Ion guag<- skill* preferred A bility to speak K orean also helpful Mu*! have good listening otgonizattonol, communii ation, multi ta*k>ng, and in lerpersonal skills, be detail orient ed arid have arrutóte typing skills M ust be o b le to use Men intosh computer, expetlerue in Mb Word, Excel, FileMaker Pro preferred fx posure to international business and high le< hnology a plus I Jational In struments offers an exrellent ram pensation and benefits package and good working environment Proem ploymen! drug m ea n in g requned Resume mutt be accom panied by application Clos-ngdate 3-24-95 Janene Horton Notional Instruments 6504 Budge Point Parkway Au*Nn. TX 78730 Id trm by Mai o " „ g r' epting app: «/ part tima p parson at 't'« )lli rns for oil utiont A,, uuftyurcj by lull I ply Marriott ')66( N I 35, March 2D 24 9om6pm 457448 ! Li<-xibia ilas ond graol Imuefiis f ( J f M/f/DA 3 20 5B >11 CULAR BIOL b' v/ Marketing itlion Re in- e support, te* h wnimy and Irih w and two yean m I (rumination skills jck B b /M S rb Good com reply i'. A M BION, iob 22, 21 3 0 vVoo< I w a rd Ausim, TX 7 8 / 44 3 7 I 4B 8 9 0 - Clubs* Restaurants make g-.-xt niantsyl Apply M W I f i ■ If AK & Ale, 22 I I W Anderson I , 2pni 4|jrn 4 82 5 la k e Austin lane, now hiring tor the fallowing Blvd .3 2348 PART flM f W A H P f R S O N at Ja pur r-se n••irjuron! Dinner only Ap ply in person before 5p m at Mu tashino, 1407 G ie ysto n e at M a par 3 23 5B C A P IT O l < A l t on 1 I th seeking lurn li time delivery help rind sand w ii h maker to work M I $6/hr < all 4 /8 8 /7 3 after '/ 30pm .3 27 3B am/prr position* hostperson, bus person dishwashers, servers, and 4pm 3 73 IOB 9 0 0 Domestic* Household I RI F R O O M and board near ram pm. Spanish speaking for child t aro ir» horno Kt 9 4 )5 3 8 IOB 4/4 5156, 4/3 EMPLOYMENT - 890 CLUBS-RESTAURANTS Five Star Smokehouse The Best Barhcw & Talas Beers tn Austin ^7 ' k ' k ¡ntellúence & Personality Wanted CAshltrs............... $6.00 Hour Pry Cooks $6.00 Hour Mtat Slktrs.......... $7.00 EDur Call cliff Hauler at .123-1157 or cam ky bday at 3638 JSu Caví pjOWHIRSMG E N T R Y L E V E L t U I U G E n E N T ^ - J “ x n j A FT ER N O O N BABYSITTER/HFIPFR r r-eded i 5 tjoys/w eek in W e s t lake area for 8 and 6 year olds Must have own transportation, be nonsmoker and willing to help with laundry ond ironing $7/hours Coll Kim J2 7 / 4 Z / 3 20 5B SUMMER BABYSITTING Matura college student for (¡ni ( I I ) , boy (9) W e s t 10th Street area 30 hours/weak, with flexibility Must have a plus 472 4113 e v e n in g s 3 21 26 i n ) U S f ' l E A N IN G , W f M l A KI area, $8/hi , 10 hrs/wk Flexible hoius N eed car and ri-lerem es 328 7446 3 21 3B mmmrnm 9 3 0 - Business Opportunities OVERSFAS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY 'ieek oriental students to expand a business opportunity overseus in mainland ( hma ana Korea Must be fluent in C híñete Of Korean leave name ond number at (512) 70/ 3683 You will be i ontacted 16 HR S I N G IN G A N D perform ing arts studio for sale (A little gold mm#) Cull 4 /9 0 2 6 6 3 23 208 LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT? CHECK THE D a i l y T e x a n CLASSIFIEDS FIRSTl lituTtedidU.* riandj¿erTFent oppanunibes avdilable tTinxigtxxit tfie Housuxi area Ccxne join us on tfie ground door on oof way to tfie top' • Hands on Training e Performance Based Company eMew A Exciting Restaurant Concept N E E D E D A t R waiter* for a m Call between 2 4 a la s c and p eekc • and thills 327 3 2 0 SB 7022 3 (0 5B We are looking for enthusiast* growth oriented individuals with hands on restaurant experience It yuu have th* aWity tu w uk n a high H*rgy «rvvuvnent. vend « tax revurt* in llene Hnhman at BC lexav. Ux 488 7 Aiplsa Hd Bldu 2 Smire 290, XV ** M A I . . / 2 U JU J Page 14 Thursday, March 2 3,1 99 5 T h e D a i l y T e x a n NCAAs Continued from page 16 "H e's looking good for the first time this year." Reese feels that the key to a good Longhorns performance will be the team 's execution in the close races, citing the "swing races" as the 50- and 100-yard freestyle sprints. Reese also mentioned that the 200- yard freestyle relay worries him. This makes sense, since that relay kicks off the meet T hursday evening. A victory or a high finish by the relay team would set the pace for the rest of the meet. "We w ant to win all the close races, and if we do that we'll have an excellent chance," Reese said. Lewis Continued from page 16 fare as the first game," he said of the 103-96 overtim e loss at Indiana. "H itting my first jump shot was n ice.... It gave me mom entum." Jordan was perfect on his first six shots, all jumpers, and had a role in a Bulls victory for the first time since June 20,1993, the day they won their third straight NBA title. As in the old days, it was his team 's biggest role. "O nce he gets him self going, obviously the team 's going to focus on him," said B.J. Armstrong, one of three current Bulls who played with Jordan before his tem porary retire­ m ent to try his hand at baseball. While Jordan played the way fans remember him, the Celtics present­ ed a flattering portrait of the Reggie Lewis that their fans would like to remember. His No. 35 was retired during a 26-m inute cerem ony after tw o weeks of new spaper reports indicat­ ing he used cocaine. But the em pha­ sis Wednesday was on his on-court and off-court accomplishments in six years with the team. His widow, Donna Harris-Lewis, read the capacity crowd her own poem, which said, "Character is one thing that never dies. Let's not believe these harmful lies." Boston coach Chris Ford said the fans, who applauded several times during the ceremony, "acted just like I thought they would." Unfortunately for the Celtics, Jor­ dan played like they feared he would. "Michael made the night all the better for the fans," Ford said. "They enjoyed it. We, as a team, didn't enjoy him that much." Not even three quick fouls that sent him to the bench just 4:38 into the game could ruin his night. • Jordan m ade nine-of-17 shots and Texas will be facing teams previ­ ously faced during the dual meet season, such as Michigan, Stanford, Florida and A uburn. C ould the H orns' prior upset of top-ranked Stanford be a precursor the NCAA meet? to "We can 't control w hat other teams do," Reese said. "For exam­ ple, the Michigan women swam as well as they could last weekend [at wom en's NCAAs], and that's all you could ever ask from a team. ... And they finished second." As far as a prediction of how his team will fare, Reese said, "We'll know more when we get there." all eight of his foul shots. He had three rebounds, three assists and two steals. His most eye-catching pass came when he looked away and fed Pippen for a driving layup that made the score 53-39 with 4:29 left in the half. "That typified my relationship w ith Scottie," Jordan said. "H e knew where I was going to give him the ball." PF Pts 3 16 28 35 21 28 2 6 22 15 20 21 A 5 4 1 4 3 5 1 1 1 2 0 0 27 FG M in M-A 6-13 8-15 4-5 5-9 9-17 2-5 4-7 2-3 4-8 2-5 1-1 1-3 C HICAG O Kukoc Pippen Perdue Armstrong Jordan Myers Longley Blount Kerr Wenmngton Krystkowiak Harper BULLS 124, CaTJCS 107 FT M-A 4-7 2 -3 1-3 3-3 8-8 0-0 3-4 0-0 0-0 3-3 0-0 0-0 Reb O-T 2-5 4-8 4-7 0-3 0-3 0-3 2-4 2-6 0-2 0-2 0-0 0-0 48-91 24-31 14-43 Percentages: FG 527. FT 774 3-Point Goals: 4- 15, .267 (Harper 1-2, Armstrong 1-2. Jordan 1-3, Kerr 1-3, Kukoc 0-1. Myers 0-2, P.ppen 0-2) Team Rebounds: 5 Blocked shots: 8 (Perdue 3, Kukoc, Pippen, Jordan, Longley, Blount) Turnovers: 8 (Pip­ pen 4, Kukoc. Myers, Longley, Blount) Steals: 11 (Pippen 3, Kukoc 2, Jordan 2. Kerr 2, Myers, Wen- nington) Technical fouls: None. Illegal defense: None. 15 5 4 24 124 T o ta ls 240 PF Pts BO STO N Wilkins Radja Montross Brown Douglas Ellison Minor McDaniel Humphries Strong Earl FG M in M -A 7-10 3-10 4-12 4-11 7-16 0-0 0-4 7-12 1-1 Reb FT 0 -T M-A 0-2 4-5 1-4 4-4 2-2 0-4 1-7 4-4 6-8 2-4 0-0 0-0 0-2 0-0 4-7 4-6 0-0 0-0 2-2 8-16 0-0 0-0 37-86 26-31 16-46 Percentages: FG .430, FT .839. 3-Point Goals: 7- 24 23 32 41 40 3 15 24 8 28 2 240 A 2 1 1 8 4 0 1 1 2 0 0 20 4-9 0-1 23 107 Totals 13. .538 (Douglas 3-4, Wilkins 2-3. McDaniel 1-1, Brown 1-4, Minor 0-1). Team Rebounds: 10. B locked shots: 3 (Montross, McDaniel, Brown). Turnovers: 17 (Douglas 6, Wilkins 3, McDaniel 3, Montross 2, Radja. Brown, Ellison) Steals: 2 (Strong, Douglas). Technical fouls: None. Illegal defense: None. Chicago Boston 37 32 31 2 4 - 1 2 4 27 27 31 22— 107 A.: 14,890. (14.890) T.: 2:27. Officials: Ron Olesiak, Bill Spooner, Paul Mihalak. Texas Union Environmental anti Stoúoni issues Committees present Pace Continued from page 16 playing doubles. This season, she has teamed with freshman Cristina Moros to form the third-ranked doubles team according to the ITA. "I like doubles because I can count on someone else, and they can count on me," Pace said. "[Moros] is such a reliable partner that she comes out ready to play. If I'm a lit­ she helps keep me tle focused." tired, Moros notes Pace's serve as one of the best parts of her game, but said it is her partner's mental toughness that comes out on the court and her fighting spirit that helps keep them from giving up w hen they are behind in a tough match. Assistant coach Vicki-,Lilis agreed Pace's com­ petitiveness is a big advantage. "She has got one of the toughest attitudes around. It discourages the opponent right off the bat," Ellis said. "They know they are going to have a tough match, and she always has the mental edge." While she is pleased with the progress of her play, Pace is always striving hard to im prove herself. She continues to work on the funda­ mentals of her game, such as her GF GA 84 98 67 72 79 80 77 81 83 76 80 73 68 85 GF GA 1 1 3 74 122 100 71 68 82 98 87 83 65 72 74 58 GF GA 106 60 109 69 99 78 84 82_ 87__ 78 81 105 GF GA 87 97 8 4 _ 97 8 5 93 87 107 87 62 98 64 EA STERN CO NFERENC E Atlantic Division _16___1 0 . 11 12 Philadelphia Washington N Y. Rangers New Jersey Florida Tampa Bay N.Y. islanders Pts 35 30 29 29 27 2 4 21 Quebec Pittsburgh Boston Buffalo Hartford M ontreal Ottawa Detroit Chicago St Louis Toronto Dallas Winnipeg W 20 20 14 Í1 _ Northeast D ivision L 6 8 12 11 14 14 19 11 10 4 Pts 43 42 30 ~ 27 26 25 12 W 19 17 W ESTER N CO NFERENC E Central Division L 6 9 10 12 13 15 Pacific Division Pts ’ 40 36 32 31~ 25 22 15 13 10. T Pis 31 27 2 6 . 24 22 18 Calgary Edmonton__ Vancouver Los Angeles San Jose___ Anaheim W ednesday s G am es Edmonton 4, Dallas 4 Hartford 4, Philadelphia 3 Florida 3, Montreal 2 Quebec 6, Boston 2 New Jersey 5, N.Y. Rangers 2 Detroit 6, Winnipeg 3 Calgary 4, St. Louts 3 Thursday's Schedule N Y. Rangers at N Y. Islanders, 6:30 p Edmonton at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at Vancouver. 9:30 p.m. Anaheim at San Jose, 9:30 p.m. serve and volley. She w ants to improve her physical strength and speed as well, for national competi­ tion and beyond. "If I got to the point where I couldn't find anything to work on, I don't think I would enjoy playing as much," Pace said. "I really like find­ ing things in a game that I can improve on and try to get better." Pace plans to use her talent at the professional level as well. Winning the NCAA singles title could help get her off to a good start along with the possible endorsem ents or a chance to play in the U.S. Open. But, before heading to the professional arena, Pace has a few more things she would like to accomplish in her last semester at Texas. With the Lady Horns sitting in the No. 2 spot in the country, Pace is eying a national championship for Texas, as well as a singles and doubles title. "I really w ant to win another national championship," said Pace, a m em ber of the 1993 national champion team. "I definitely think we have the ability to win it this year." Scouts Continued from page 16 ager Carl Pederson also expressed a keen interest in Pinkney. "From the physical side of it, he's a pretty impressive guy," Pederson said. "The question here is can he play both [tight end and w ide receiver]." Pinkney's size makes him a good prospect as a tight end in the NFL, but his quickness and speed make him a trem endous prospect at receiver. In 1991, the Chiefs drafted Texas receiver Keith Cash, then con­ verted him to tight end. The switch was beneficial for both the Chiefs and Cash. "I can't see Pinkney as a tight end," Faulkiner said. "It's going to take two years to learn how to block. [W ashington Redskins tight end] Ethan Horton took three years to learn to block." Pinkney's off-field troubles could also hurt him in the draft. Teams check out everything about a player, from quickness to personal life. Pinkney's num erous suspensions and the controversy that followed him while he was at Texas may dam age his stock. But Pinkney is pleased with the way things have developed so far. "I'm just glad that I was given the gift of talent and the opportunity to show my talent at the University of Texas," Pinkney said. Just as impressive as Pinkney was Prayer service planned for Tyson Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS — Mike Tyson's spiritual adviser plans to hold an outdoor Islamic prayer service just after the former heavyweight cham­ pion is released from prison Satur­ day. But like the details surrounding just about every other aspect Tyson's release, the specifics of the service have not been determined. Neither has the exact time of his release, nor where exactly he will go once he is out. The Rev. Charles Williams, presi­ dent of the Indiana Black Expo, and several of Tyson's boxing associates say that after he is released, Tyson will be driven to Indianapolis Inter­ national Airport and fly home to Ohio. "H e's going to get in a car, get on a plane and go home," Williams said Wednesday. "A t this point, he's going home without any stops." But there will be a brief stop if Tyson's spiritual adviser, M uham ­ m ad Siddeeq, follows through on his plan to hold a prayer service out­ side the prison walls with several high-profile Muslims. Siddeeq said he is expecting box­ ing great M uham m ad Ali and W.D. M oham m ed, the son of Elijah M uham m ad, who led the Nation of Islam for 40 years until his death in 1975. M oham m ed is believed to have 100,000 to 200,000 followers. Also expected to attend are for­ m er Pittsburgh Steelers star Mel Blount and former boxing champi­ ons M atthew Saad M uham m ad, Eddie M ustafa M uham m ad and Qawi Dwight Braxton. "M ike just said he wants to say his prayer before he leaves," Sid­ deeq said. Siddeeq said on M onday that Tyson's first stop after his release would be the nearby Islamic Society of North America mosque to offer a prayer of "thanksgiving and hope." Big 12 cuts list to two Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The list of candidates for commissioner of the new Big 12 conference was trimmed from four to two after lengthy inter­ views on W ednesday, the chairman of the search committee said. "W e have narrowed the field to two to go to Dallas," Jon Wefald, president of Kansas State, said. "But we have to notify the candidates. W e're going to try to get a statement out early Thursday morning. "If we can contact everybody, we'll get it out tonight. There are four excellent candidates and they all did an excellent job." Interview ed W ednesday w ere Kansas athletic director Bob Freder­ ick, Ohio Valley Conference com­ missioner Dan Beebe, Missouri Val­ ley Conference associate commis­ sioner Patty Viverito and Southwest C onference com m issioner Stevfe HatcheU. The Big 12 presidents will inter­ view the two finalists in Dallas on Sunday and plan to announce a choice then. At the request of the committee, the four candidates all declined comment Wednesday. Frederick and Hatchell have been identified by sources close to the process as the leading candidates. the other junior, Brockermeyer. The 6-5, 298-pounder attracted a large, interested crowd while doing drills against his older brother Brent. Brent, a law student at Pepperdine U niversity in Malibu, Calif., was tossed around by his much larger younger brother. Brockermeyer needed a good p er­ this w orkout after form ance at struggling at the Indianapolis com­ bine earlier in the year. "I'm pleased the way things w ent today," Brockermeyer said. "I think I solidified some things. ... My focus was to show everybody that [Indi­ anapolis] was a fluke." On the bench press, Brockermeyer maxed out at 443 pounds and his vertical leap was four inches higher (30 inches) than his previous per­ sonal record. "Blake's a big 300-pounder," Ped­ erson said. "He's a guy w ho's obvi­ ously got some talent. H e's going to be a high draft choice that's going to play a long time in this league." Ellis and Watkins are two other players whom scouts may be eying closely. W atkins had the team 's highest vertical leap (35.5 inches) and the highest broad jum p (10 feet). "[The scouts] stay kind of quiet," W atkins said. "But I think I definite­ ly turned some eyes." ■ v B J P J k W mm HAVE ÍÉOUR ISAYV YES NO H v david browe Chairman of the larth Island Institute and an uncompromising champion ol the wilderness since the ’30s. I ?pm • Texas Union Ballroom March 2 2 .1 9 9 5 24tk & Guadalupe Grassroots I ^ ^ 4.5pm • Texas Union Sinclair Suite ÉMarch 23,J995H¡^H 1.5pm • Texas BOM Quadrangle Ro 1THE info 475+6630 T h e D a il y T e x a n Question of the w eek: “Should parental n o tificatio n be required before abortion is obtained by a m inor?” iS ll ' M SI SI |To register your opinion* | call the Texan Poll Line: 1 900 446-6117 Watch the Texan for Poll Results To be counted, you must cast your vote before 12 midnight on Sunday. If you have euggastione for future poll subjects, write: The Editor, The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713 P C a h c o s t I s 9 9 i . Y o u m u s t b e 1 8 o r o l d e r to P a r tic ip a te / NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION T h e D a ily T e x a n Thursday, March 2 3 , 1 9 9 5 P a g e 15 * x-Utah San Antonio Houston Dallas Minnesota w 49 46 40 31 27 19 L 18 18 25 35 37 48 W 49 x-Phoenix 45 Seattle 40 L.A. Lakers 36 Portland 32 Sacramento Golden State 21 14 L.A. Clippers X — denotea ptayoff apot cilnched L 18 20 25 29 34 45 54 Pet .731 .719 .615 470 .422 .284 Pet .731 .692 .615 .554 .485 .318 .206 HVE8TERN COmfflWCE Mklwest División GB 1 'k 7% 17V.... 20% 30 L10 8-2 8-2 5-5 6-4 5-5 3-7 Streak Won 1 Won 5 Lost 1 Lost 2 Won 2 Lost 1 Home 26-7 27-7 22-11 19-13 14-19 12-22 Away 23-11 19-11 18-14 12-22 13-18 7-26 Conf 26-15 28-11 20-18 19-23 17-24 11-30 Pacific Division L I U Ü D 6-4 — 7-3 3 5-5 8 6-4 12 3-7 16* 5-5 27% 35% 3-7 Streak Lost 1 Won 1 Won 2 Lost 1 Lost 1 Lost 2 Lost 4 Home 26-7 25-7 23- 9 22-10 23-11 13-19 11-23 Away 23-11 20-13 17-16 14-19 9-23 8-26 3-31 V/Om 30-10 25-15 25-15 21-20 19-21 15-27 7-35 . WEDNESDAY’8 GAMES C hicago 124 Boston 107 San Antonio 102 New Jersey 85 Philadelphia 119, Golden State 102 Miami 98 Atlanta 84 Cleveland 101, Sacramento 89 Indiana 107, L.A C lippers 103 Dallas 99, M innesota 96 Utah 103. Denver 91 L A. Lakers 121, Portland 114 THURSDAY'S SCHEDULE Dallas at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at Orlando, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m. Utah at Houston, 7:30 p.m. New York at Denver, 8 p.m. W ashington at Seattle, 9 p.m. EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GB L10 x-Orlando x-New York Miami New Jersey Boston Washington Philadelphia Charlotte Indiana Cleveland Chicago Atlanta * Milwaukee Detroit W 4y 4? 26 26 25 16 18 W 41 41 37 35 33 26 24 L i *7 1 Í 22 41 41 41 47 48 L 25 25 29 32 33 41 42 Pet 7 AO 656 388 .388 .3 /9 277 273 Pet .621 621 .561 .522 .500 388 364 Streak lA/nn 1 Lost 1 Lost 2 Lost 4 Lost 2 Lost 1 Won 1 Streak Won 2 Won 1 Won 1 Won 1 LOST i Won 2 Won 1 Home 33-2 24-9 17-15 17-15 14-20 10-24 9-23 Home 24-9 24- 6 20-13 2 1 - 1 2 on 1 a ¿aj- I D 16-17 18-14 Away 16-15 18-13 9-26 9-26 11-21 8-23 9-25 Away 17-16 17-19 17-16 14-20 10-1 7 10 1 / 10-24 6-28 Conf 33-11 27-15 20-22 17-26 15-20 13-30 11-30 Conf 27-14 27-17 27-14 23-18 P 9 -P 3 20-27 17-25 6 2 3 * 23% 24 3 0 * 31 4 6% 8 15* 17 7-3 4-6 4-6 2-8 4-6 2-8 L10 6-4 7-3 4-6 7-3 0 - 4 4-6 3-7 Central Division GB — __ Jazz waltz into first-place tie in West A ssociated Press SALT LAKE CITY — Karl Maloijf scored 23 points and John Stockton added 12 of his 15 in the fourth period as the Utah Jazz held off the Denver Nuggets 103-91 Wednesday night and assumed a share of the Western Conference lead. M ahmoud Abdul-Rauf led the Nuggets with 22 points, but he and the Nuggets were score­ less in the final 3:22. Jeff Hornacek and Adam Keefe scored 15 apiece as Utah tied idle Phoenix for the top record in the W estern Conference at 49-18. ■ Heat 98, Hawks 84 — In Atlanta, Kevin Willis had 24 points and 18 rebounds, leading the Miami Heat past the Hawks for their first regular-season victory in Atlanta. It was the third victory in four games for the Heat. Reserve Tyrone Corbin led the Hawks with a season-high 21 points and Steve Smith and Ken Norm an each added 13. Billy Owens had 18 points and Glen Rice 17 for the Heat. Mookie Blaylock m ade only 2 of 20 shots but did pick up the one steal he needed to reach 1,000 in his career. It came in his 421st game, fourth fastest in the league. ■ 76ers 119, W arriors 102 — In Philadelphia, Jeff Malone, playing in his first game since Dec. 22, scored 28 points to lead the Philadelphia 76ers to victory over the Golden State Warriors, ending Philadelphia's eight-game losing streak. Clarence Weatherspoon had 21 points and Dana Barros 18 with 11 assists for the 76ers. Chris Mullin, Victor Alexander and Tim Legler each had 14 points for the Warriors, whose road record dropped to 8-26. B.J. Tyler had 12 points as Philadelphia won for only the ninth time in 32 home games. ■ Cavaliers 101, Kings 89 — In Cleveland, Mark Price scored 23 points and made four of Cleveland's 11 3-pointers Wednesday night as the Cavaliers beat the Sacramento Kings 101-89. The 11 3-pointers tied a franchise record set last November against Golden State. Price was 8-of-10 from the floor and added eight assists in 26 minutes. He was 4-for-5 on 3- point attempts. Mitch Richmond scored 19 points, and rookie Brian Grant added 18 for Sacramento. BOX SCORES LA CLIPPERS Reb 0-T 4-6 4-10 1-4 0-0 2-3 1-1 PF Pts 19 22 12 4 24 5 5 7 2 3 25103 PACERS 197, CUPPERS 103 FT M-A 5-6 2-3 6-6 2-2 2-2 0-0 3-3 3-4 0-0 3-3 FG M-A 6-15 10-14 3-9 1-2 9-16 2-8 1-7 2-6 1-1 0-1 Min 42 Murray Vaught 37 Massenburg 36 Ellis 14 Richardson 43 20 Piatkowski 19 Dehere 22 Riley 3 Outlaw 4 Smith 240 Totals 1-1 7-10 1-1 0-2 35-79 26-29 21-38 Percentages: FG 443, FT 897 3-Point Goals: 7- 14, .500 (Richardson 4-6, Murray 2-2, Piatkowski 1-3, Smith 0-1. Dehere 0-2) Team Rebounds: 6 Blocked shots: 2 (Ri'ey 2). Turnovers: 19 (Richard­ son 4, Dehere 4, Murray 2, Vaught 2, Massenburg 2. Ellis, Piatkowski team 3) Steals: 7 (Vaught 2, Massenburg 2, Richardson 2, Dehere) Technical fo u ls: None. Illegal defense: None. INDIANA FG M-A Min 7-10 36 3-9 36 5-13 33 2-5 35 34 12-13 0-3 26 0-4 13 5-7 17 1-2 5 0-1 5 FT Reb O-T M-A 3-7 0-0 4-4 0-4 9-9 4-11 1-1 2-2 0-2 9-10 4-4 3-5 3-4 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 240 35-67 31-33 11-32 A PF Pts 3 14 0 1 10 7 2 19 0 2 6 10 4 36 2 4 3 0 2 2 3 2 13 0 1 2 0 1 3 0 23 107 22 D.Davis McKey Smits Jackson Miller A.Davis Fleming Scott Ferrell Mitchell Totals Percentages: FG 522, FT .939 3-Point Goals: 6- 10, .600 (Scott 3-3, Miller 3-4, Ferrell 0-1, Fleming 0- 2). Team Rebounds: 5 Blocked shots: 6 (D Davis 2, Smits 2, McKey A Davis). Turnovers: 16 (Smits 4, Miller 3, Jackson 2, Scott 2, D Davis. McKey, Flem­ ing. Mitchell, team) Steals: 12 (McKey 3, Jackson 2, A.Davis 2, Scott 2, D.Davis, Smits, Fleming). T echni­ cal foul: Illegal defense, 7:45 fourth. Illegal detense: 1. L.A Clippers Indiana 32 21 23 27— 103 32 24 25 26— 107 ■ A.: 14,246 (16.530i T.: 2 17. O fficials: Bennett Salvatore, Terry Durham, Blane Reichelt. - — —' f FG M-A Min 7-21 40 42 11-17 5-6 20 7-15 39 2-6 33 6-11 23 3-4 21 0-1 9 2-4 13 HEAT 98, HAWKS 84 Reb FT O-T M-A 2-8 2-2 2-4 5-18 2-2 0-0 2-6 4-5 1-3 1-2 1-3 2-2 0-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 5-6 0-0 240 43-85 11-15 18-48 A PF Pts 1 17 0 1 24 3 4 10 2 1 18 3 4 11 5 3 14 2 6 2 0 1 0 1 4 1 1 18 98 23 MIAMI Rice Willis Salley Owens Reeves Miner Geiger Gamble Askins Totals Percentages: FG 506, FT .733 3-Point Goals: 1- 11, .091 (Rice 1-4, Miner 0-1, Gamble 0-1, Askms 0- 1. Owens 0-2. Reeves 0-2) Team Rebounds: 12. Blocked shots: 1 (Wiliis) Turnovers: 13 (Rice 3, Willis 2, Owens 2. Reeves 2, Salley, Miner, Gamble, Askms). Steals: 4 (Gamble 2, Owens, Reeves). Technical fouls: None Illegal defense: 1. FG ATLANTA M-A 3-9 3-7 4-11 2-20 e-11 5-12 2-4 8-11 0-1 0-0 0-0 Reb FT O-T M-A 2-4 3-6 Augmon 1-4 3-4 Long 5-7 0-0 Lang 2-4 2-3 Blaylock 0-4 0-0 Smith 0-1 2-2 Norman 1-3 3-10 Anderson 4-4 1-3 Corbin 0-0 0-0 Whatley 0-0 0-0 Koncak 0-0 0-0 Wiley 33-86 14-21 15-38 Totals Percentages: FG 384, FT .667 3-Point Goals: 4- PF Pts 1 6 9 8 7 13 13 5 21 0 0 0 84 Mm 30 25 19 40 41 23 25 26 6 4 1 240 24, .167 (Corbin 1-2. Norman 1-4, Smith 1-5. Blay­ lock 1-13) Team Rebounds: 8 Blocked shots: 3 (Anderson 2. Corbin). Turnovers: 6 (Smith 3, Blyiock 2, Augmon). Steals: 10 (Long 3, Anderson 3. Aug- mon, Blaylock. Corbin. Whatley). Technical fouls: None Illegal defense: None Miami Atlanta 27 1 8 23 30 - 9 8 24 15 19 26 - 8 4 A,; i~noQi (16,365). T.: 1:53. O fficia l*: Joe Craw­ ford, Gary Benson, Mark Wunderlich. Min LAKERS 121, TRAIL BLAZERS 114 Reb FT PORTLANDI O-T M-A 3-5 6-10 5-6 0-0 2-7 0-0 1-3 3-4 1-4 1-2 0-2 0-0 1-1 6-14 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 240 49-93 11-17 18-43 FG M-A C Robinson 40 10-20 4-9 Williams 35 3-8 18 Dudley 8-13 40 McKie 5-14 Strickland 40 24 3-9 Kersey 27 13-16 Thorpe 3-4 15 Porter 0-0 1 J. Robinson T otals A PF Pts 4 2 ! 4 8 3 2 1 6 3 5 21 11 4 12 10 2 6 3 4 27 2 7 1 1 0 1 0 26 114 35 Percentages: FG 527, FT .647. 3-Point Goals 5- 15, .333 (McKie 2-5, Strickland 1-2, Porter 1-2, C Robinson 1-5, Thorpe 0-1). Team Rebounds: 3 Blocked shots: 6 (Williams 3. Dudley 2, McKie) Turnovers: 8 (C.Robinson 2. Strickland 2, Dudley, Kersey, Thorpe, Porter). Steals: 5 (McKie 2, Kersfey 2, C Robmsoni Technical foul: Kersey, 4:30 fourth Illegal defense: None L.A. LAKERS FG Min M-A 11 0-0 0-0 5 8-14 31 6-15 37 7-11 33 3*9 19 38 12-19 4-6 22 28 2-6 1-1 15 1 0-0 Reb FT O-T M-A 0-1 0-0 0-0 2-2 5-6 5-10 1-3 0-0 2-4 0-1 2-6 5-6 8-10 3-11 1-3 1-2 1-3 0-0 240 43-81 29-35 14-40 3-3 2-2 2-2 0-0 A PF Pts 0 1 1 1 2 1 3 21 5 2 14 3 3 18 10 2 11 1 2 32 2 1 12 7 1 7 2 2 3 4 0 0 0 34 19 121 B o w ie Rambis Divac Peeler Van Exel Cebaiios Campbell Threatt Daniels Miller Harvey Totals 12, .500 (Peeler 2-3, Van Exel 2-4, Threatt 1-1, Daniels 1-2, Cebaiios 0-2) Team Rebounds: 8 Blocked shots: 10 (Divac 3, Campbell 3, Bowie Miller. Daniels. Van Exel) Turnovers: 10 (Divac 2. Cebaiios 2, Campbell 2, Miller 2, Peeler. Threatt). Steals: 6 (Campbell 3, Peeler 2. Daniels) Technical fouls: None Illegal defense. None Portland L.A Lakers 37 24 24 29— 114 27 39 28 2 7 -1 2 1 A.: 12.123 (17,505) T.: 2:04 Officials: Ron Garret- son, Joe DeRosa, Sean Corbin. CAVAUERS 101, KINGS 89 Reb FT M-A O-T 0-2 0-0 6-8 4-11 4-9 1-3 0-3 3-4 1-4 7-8 1-2 0-0 1*3 0-0 0-3 0-0 1-2 0-0 0-1 0-0 240 34-72 17-23 12-40 SACRAMENTO Min W Williams 31 33 Grant 39 Polynice 36 Webb 36 Richmond Hurley 9 17 Smith 15 Brown 17 Simmons Causwell 7 Totals FG M-A 3-9 6-10 8-15 5-8 5-14 0-3 2-3 0-0 4-8 1-2 A PF Pts 7 3 5 2 18 1 2 17 0 3 14 8 3 19 4 0 0 1 4 1 1 0 3 2 4 1 8 1 2 0 ______ 23 22 89 _ _ Percentages: FG 472, FT 739 3-Point Goals: 4- 14, .286 (Richmond 2-6. Webb 1-2, W. Williams 1-3, Simmons 0-1, Hurley 0-2) Team Rebounds: 7. Blocked shots: 6 (Causwell 2, Grant Polynice, Webb, Smith). Turnovers: 16 (W.Williams 4, Smith 3, Brown 2, Grant 2. Polynice. Webb, Richmond. Sim­ mons, Causwell) Steals: 2 (Webb. Brown) Techni­ cal fouls: None Illegal defense. 1 CLEVELAND Min 28 35 42 21 24 26 20 18 24 1 1 FG M-A 4-9 4-9 4-8 4-11 6-11 8-10 4-7 1-6 2-8 0-0 0-0 Reb FT O-T M-A 2-2 3-3 3-9 1-2 2-4 5-14 0-1 0-0 0-1 3-4 0-2 3-4 0-0 0-0 1-4 2-2 2-4 2-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 240 37-79 16-21 13-37 A PF Pts 1 12 1 6 9 0 3 10 4 4 9 0 4 16 2 1 23 8 2 11 3 4 2 0 7 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 24 21 101 Mills Hill Cage Brandon Phills Price Ferry Roberts Campbell Dreilmg Colter Totals Percentages: FG 468, FT 762 3-Polnt Goals: 11-19, 579 (Pnce 4-5, Ferry 3-5, Campbell 1-1, Mills 1-2, Phills 1-2 Brandon 1-3. Roberts 0-1). Team Rebounds: 7 Blocked shots: 5 (Cage 4, Campbell; Turnovers: 10 (Hill 3 Campbell 3, Cage, Pnce, team 2/ Steals: 7 (Cage 2. Brandon 2. Campbell 2. Mills) Technical foul: Hill, 2:04 third Illegal defense: Nona. ______________ ______ Sacramento Cleveland 30 13 27 19— 89 26 26 27 22— 101 A.: 20,562 (20.562) T.: 2:04. O fficials: Ed T Rush, Ken Mauer, Derrick Stafford. Spurs cut down Nets, 102-85 Associated Press EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — David Robinson scored 22 points and Vinny Del Negro added 19 Wednesday night as the San Anto­ nio Spurs won their fifth straight, taking a 102-85 victory over the New Jersey Nets. The Spurs, playing their second game since Dennis Rodman separat­ ed his right shoulder in a motorcycle accident, were outrebounded 70-49 but still won for the 15th time in 17 games. Rodman is the league's lead­ ing rebounder, averaging 17.4 a game. The Nets dropped their fourth straight and fifth in the last six to fall into a tie with Milwaukee for the final Eastern Conference playoff spot. J.R. Reid finished with 16 points, Johnson added 14, Sean Elliott had 13 and Person added 11 for San Antonio, which shot 53 percent from the field. The Nets, w ho shot just 32 percent, got 21 from Armon Gilliam, but Derrick Coleman was limited to 10 points before fouling out midway through the fourth quarter, and Kenny Anderson scored just 7 points. ■ Pacers 107, Clippers 103 — In Indianapolis, Reggie Miller scored 36 points as the Indiana Pacers su r­ vived a Clippers rally in the gam e's final two m inutes for a victory over Los Angeles. Rik Smits contributed 19 points and a team-high 11 rebounds for the Pacers, while Byron Scott added 13 off the bench. Former Pacer Pooh Richardson led Los Angeles with 24 points, and Loy Vaught added 22. ■ Mavericks 99, Tim berwolves 96 — In Minneapolis, Jamal M ashbum scored 18 of his 25 points in the third quarter to lead the Dallas Mavericks past the Minnesota Timberwolves. Roy Tarpley had 20 points and 13 rebounds off the bench, and Popeye Jones added 12 points and 16 rebounds for Dallas, which held a 57-32 rebounding advantage. Christian Laettner tied his season high with 26 points for the Wolves, who got just six points on 3-for-14 shooting from leading scorer Isaiah Rider. ■ Lakers 121, Trail Blazers 114 — In Inglewood, Calif., Elden C am p­ bell scored a career-high 32 points off the bench and had 11 rebounds as the Los Angeles Lakers defeated the Portland Trail Blazers. Vlade Divac added 21 points and 10 rebounds for Los Angeles. BOX SCORES DENVER JAZZ 103, NUGGETS 01 FT FG M-A M-A Min 2-7 0-0 30 3-4 27 4-8 1-4 5-7 42 2-2 44 9-21 0-0 5-10 31 4-9 24 2-2 4-5 2-2 10 3-3 3-9 23 1-2 0-2 9 _ _ _ 34-75 16-22 240 Reb O-T 0-6 1-1 1-7 2-3 0-2 0-2 0-2 1-3 1-3 6-29 A PF Pts 4 4 3 5 12 0 2 11 2 2 22 3 5 12 10 4 12 0 8 2 0 1 9 0 5 0 18 30 91 R Williams Rogers Mutombo Abdul-Rauf Rose Ellis Hammonds Stith B Williams Totals Percentages: FG 453, FT 727 3-Point Goals: 7- 28. .250 (Rose 2-5, Ellis 2-6, Abdul-Rauf 2-10. Rogers 1-1, Stith 0-2, R.Williams 0-4). Team Rebounds: 8 Blocked shots: 6 (Mutombo 2, Rose 2, R.Williams, B.Williams). Turnovers: 11 (R Williams 3 ! Rose 2, Mutombo, Abdul-Rauf. Ellis, Hammonds, Stith, B.Williams). Steals: 8 (Abdul-Rauf 2, Stith 2, R.Williams, Mutombo, Rose. Ellis). Technical fouls: illegal defense 3, 2:50 first; 11:21 second, 4:03 sec ond. Illegal defense: 1 Reb FG UTAH 0-T M-A 0-4 3-7 1-10 9-16 0-1 1-2 3-7 2-6 2-8 7-10 0-1 1-3 0-1 0-4 1-3 4-6 3-6 6-10 2-3 1-3 __ __ __ 34-67 33-41 12 44 Benoit Malone Donaldson Stockton Homacek Crotty Carr Edwards Keefe Chambers Totals Percentages: FG .507, FT 805 3-Point Goals: 2- A PF Pts 1 9 1 2 23 7 4 1 0 4 15 10 2 18 4 1 2 2 2 2 0 1 10 2 3 15 0 2 5 0 19 103 26 FT M-A 3-4 5-7 2-2 10-12 3-3 0-0 2-3 2-3 3-4 3-3 Min 26 40 15 36 35 12 15 24 27 10 240 4, .500 (Stockton 1-1, Hornacek 1-1, Benoit 0-1, Chambers 0-1). Team Rebounds: 7 Blocked shots: 13 (Malone 5, Donaldson 2, Benoit, Stockton, Carr, Edwards, Keefe, Chambers). Turnovers: 16 (Stockton 5, Malone 4, Keefe 2, Benoit, Hornacek, Crotty, Carr, Chambers) Steals: 6 (Homacek 3, Stockton, Edwards, Keefe). Technical fo u ls: illegal defense 2, 3:25 first; 8:51 fourth Illegal defense: 1. 25 21 19 2 6 - 91 Denver Utah 24 24 31 24— 103 A .: 19,911 (19,911). T.: 2:13 O fficials: Jack Nies, Don Vaden. Mike Callahan. MAVS 09, WOLVES 96 DALLAS Mashbum Jones Williams Hams Kidd Brooks Tarpley McCloud Dumas D.Smith Totals Min 39 35 25 28 30 23 31 19 5 5 240 FG M-A 7-23 6-14 2-4 4-8 5-15 3-8 6-13 4-5 0-2 0-0 FT M A 9-14 Reb O-T 4-7 0-0 8-16 3-6 0-1 2-3 1-2 2-2 2-7 0-3 1-2 7-10 9-13 1-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 PF PtS 4 25 12 4 9 12 8 20 9 0 0 99 Percentages: FG 402, FT .645. 3-Point G oals: 5- 16, .313 (Mashbum 2-8, Tarpley 1-1, Brooks 1-2, McCloud 1-2, Dumas 0-1, Kidd 0-2). Team Rebounds: 14 Blocked shots: 5 (Tarpley 2, Mash­ bum, Brooks, D.Smith). Turnovers: 14 (Kidd 4, Mashbum 3, McCloud 3, Jones 2, Williams 2). Steals: 4 (Harris 2, Mashbum, Dumas). Technical foul: Illegal defense, :231 first. Illegal defense: 1. MINNESOTA Min 38 39 10-17 3-6 26 2-8 28 4-6 19 3-14 25 2-2 17 3-7 21 1-2 17 4 1-1 0-2 6 Reb FT FG M-A M-A O-T 0-6 6-13 ’ 4-5 5-6 5-12 0-4 2-2 0-0 0-0 1-1 3-3 2-2 0-0 3-4 0-1 3-4 4-6 1-1 3-4 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 240 35-78 24-30 1 2-32 A PF Pts 3 17 8 4 26 2 8 2 0 4 4 3 5 11 2 1 6 4 1 7 0 1 10 3 5 5 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 25 % 23 Gugliotta Laettner Rooks Garland West Rider King Martin Durham Foster C. Smith T otals 8, .250 (Laettner 1-1, Gugliotta 1-2, Garland 0-1, Durham 0-1, C.Smith 0-1, Rider 0-2) Team Rebounds: 12. Blocked shots: 5 (Gugliotta 2, Rooks 2, Laettner). Turnovers: 10 (Laettner 4, Gugliotta 3, West, team 2). Steals: 8 (Laettner 2, Garland 2, Durham 2, Gugliotta, Rider). Technical fouls: West. 7:50 fourth, West, 2 02 fourth. Illegal defense: None Dallas Minnesota 22 21 26 30 - 9 9 96 21 32 15 28 A.: 14 496 (19,006) T.: 2 10 Officials: Hue Hollins, David Jones, Tommie Wood. FG M-A 6-10 3-7 SPUR8102, NETS 85 FT M-A 0-0 0-0 6-13 10-11 0-0 7-12 8-14 0-0 0-2 5-10 5-7 5-9 1-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 Reb O T 1-4 " 3 0 1-4 1 1-9 11 1-4 5 0-3 1 0-5 1 3-9 0 0-3 0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0-0 22 240 41-78 15-22 7-41 SAN ANTONIO Min 27 21 40 37 41 28 31 9 2 2 2 Elliott Cummings Robinson Johnson Del Negro Person Reid Rivers Haley Nwosu Eisley Totals A PF Pts 3 13 4 6 3 22 1 14 2 19 1 11 5 15 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 102 Miri 13, .385 (Del Negro 3-4, Elliott 1-2, Person 1-5, Rivers 0-2). Team Rebounds: 6 Blocked shots 8 (Robinson 5, Reid, Rivers, Nwosu) Turnovers: 10 (Johnson 3, Reid 2, Elliott, Robinson, Del Negro, Rivers, Eisley) Steals: 10 (Reid 3, Elliott 2, Robinson 2, Johnson 2, Rivers). Technical fouls: None Illegal defense: 1. NEW JERSEY Reb O-T 4-5 7-12 7-9 1-4 3 4 3 4 4-14 3-7 0-0 0-2 0-1 240 33-103 15-20 32-62 Brown Coleman Schmtzius K. Anderson Moms Higgms Gilliam Williams Walters Childs Mahom Totals Percentages: FG 320 FT 750 3-Point Goals: 4- PF P ts 1 10 10 e 7 9 13 21 4 0 3 0 20 85 FG M-A 5-13 4-14 4-11 3-11 4-11 5-14 6-16 2-4 0-1 0-7 0-1 FT M-A 0-0 2-3 0-1 0-0 0-0 1-1 9-11 0-0 0-0 3-4 0-0 15, .267 (Higgins 2 4 . Moms 1-2, K Anderson 1 4 , Coleman 0-'i, Chi ids 0 4 ). Team Rebounds: 8 {locke d shots: 5 (Brown, Schmtzius, K Anderson, jiiliam , Williams). Turnovers: 16 (Coleman 4 Brown j, Schmtzius 2. Moms 2, Walters 2, Childs 2, Higgins, jiHiam) Steals: 7 (Childs 3, Brown, Schmtzius, < Anderson, Higgms) Technical fouls: None Illegal lefe n se None _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 31 24 21 26 102 {a n Antonio 85 18 24 29 14 4ew Jersey j y 20,049 (20,049) T.: 1 59 O fficials: Dick Bavet •a, Greg WWard, Tim Donagfty. 76ERS 119, WARRIORS 102 FT GOLDEN STATE FG Reb Mullin Rogers Alexander Lorthridge Spreweli Marshall Gatling Rozier Jennings Legler Wood Min M-A M-A O-T A PF Pts 1 14 0 9 0 14 0 8 1 7 3 13 1 0 3 11 1 7 1 14 3 4 5-9 3-6 7-14 4-7 3-10 5-14 0-0 4-6 3-9 5-8 1-1 ..... 29 26 27 23 22 28 7 23 22 24 6 2-2 3-8 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-2 3-6 0-0 2-2 0-0 1-8 2-4 2-6 1-1 0-2 4-5 1-1 5-8 0 -1 0-1 0-2 5 0 0 3 3 2 0 0 5 0 1 Morton Totals 3 1‘ 3 240 41-87 1 0-20 1 8-41 0 0 2 19 1 5 1 02 Percentages: FG 471 FT 500 3-Polnt Goals: 10-23, 435 (Marshall 3-6, Mullin 2-3. Legler 2-3, Wood 1-1, Spreweli 1-4, Jennings 1-5, Rogers 0-1). Team Rebounds: 8 Blocked shots: 2 (Rogers 2) Turnovers: 22 (Marshall 4 Lorthridge 4, Spreweli 3 Morton 2. Mullin 2, Alexander 2, Gatling 2. Rogers Gatling, Jennings) Steals: 13 (Jennings 4, Muiim 3. Alexander 2, Rogers Spreweli, Rozier, Lorthridgei Technical fouls: Illegal defense, 10 08, second Ille­ gal defense. 7:35, fourth Flagrant fouls: Wood 40, third Illegal defense 1 FG PHILADELPHIA FT Reb Min M-A M-A O-T 3-4 6-10 3-6 3-4 4-4 4-11 0-5 2-2 2-7 1-1 3-5 1-1 0-0 0-1 4-7 0-2 0-0 0-0 A PF Pts 2 11 3 2 11 4 3 14 1 1 18 11 2 28 2 4 5 1 1 12 4 0 2 10 0 © 0 1 7 119 26 Percentages: FG 532 FT 700 3-Point Goals: 5 4-14 Wright 37 9-12 Weatherspn 43 5-10 28 Bradley 38 Barros 7-13 40 1 3-26 Malone 2-3 14 Williams , 5-6 19 Tyler 5-9 19 Alston Graham 0-1 2 Totals 240 50-94 14-20 22-50 10, .500 (Tyier 2-3, Barros 2-5, Malone 1-2). Team Rebounds: 7 Blocked shots: 6 (Bradley 3, Wright. Weatherspoon) Turnovers: 22 (Tyler 6 Weather­ spoon 5, Wnght 4, Bradley 2, Barros 2, Alston 2. Gra­ ham) Steals 13 (Weatherspoon 4. Barros 2. Tyler 2, Alston 2, Wright. Bradley WiHiams). Technical fouls: None Illegal defense: None Golden State Philadelphia 26 24 26 2 6 -1 0 2 35 29 25 30 119 A.: 10.160 (18.168) T. 1 53 Officials: Jake O'Donnell, Tommy Nunez, Joe Borgia 1 6 T h e D a il y T e x a n THUR80IW, MARCH 2 8,1996 B B B #. fast break Horns set sights on 6th swim title Hooper, Russo lead underdog Texas into NCAA Championships in Indianapolis SHEA D A U G H ERTY___________________ Daily Texan S taff The UT m en's swimming and diving team will try to bring a national championship home tins weekend when it competes in the NCAA Championships in Indianapolis. The competition kicks off at the Indiana Uni­ versity/Purdue University Natatorium Thurs­ day with six events: the 200-vard freestyle relay, 500-yard freestyle, 200-yard individual medley, 50-yard freestyle, 1-meter diving and 400-yard medley relay. Eight events will follow Friday, and the remaining seven will bring the meet to a close on Saturday. Texas qualified 16 swimmer^ and one diver UT MEN'S SWIMMHG & DIVING for the championships, and swimming coach Eddie Reese has hopes for his experienced squad which experts do not believe the Long­ horns can achieve. "W e were told all year that we were picked to finish third or fourth this year," Reese said. "W e just plan on finishing better than we were picked." Although the Horns are coming off their 16th consecutive Southwest Conference cham­ pionship, Reese said the team was not satisfied with that performance and realizes that it must do even better at the NCAAs. But when it comes to the t e a m ' s potential going into this meet, Reese had only positive 44 This group has looked as good as any group I have ever seen. Eddie Reese, Longhorns coach — things to say. "This group has looked as good as any group I have ever seen," said Reese, who has won five national championships since arriv­ ing at Texas 17 years ago. Texas' best chance for an individual gold will com e from distancer Matt Hooper, who is looking to better his second-place finish in the 1,650-yard freestyle at last year's NCAAs. For the third time this season, Hooper's m ain challenger will be A rizona's Chad Carvin, the defending national cham pion. Carvin has bested Hooper in each meeting this season. "This is the best M att's looked since I've seen him ," Reese said. "H e's been doing great things in practice." Reese also was quick to note the progress made by backstroker W yatt Russo, who had a frustrating SWC meet when he fell behind rival Ryan Berube of SMU. "W vatt has really worked hard," Reese said. NBA Dallas 99, Minnesota 96 San Antonio 102, New Jersey 85 Chicago 124, Boston 107 Philadelphia 119, Golden State 102 Miami 98, Atlanta 84 Cleveland 101, Sacramento 89 Indiana 107, L A Clippers 103 Utah 103, Denver 91 L A Lakers 121, Portland 114 NHL Edmonton 4, Dallas 4 Hartford 4, Philadelphia 3 Florida 3. Montreal 2 Quebec 6. Boston 2 New Jersey 5, N Y Rangers 2 Detroit 6, Winnipeg 3 Calgary 4, St. Louis 3 SPRING TRAINING BASEBALL Houston 11, Cincinnati 6 New York Yankees 7. Atlanta 0 Los Angeles 4, Cleveland 3 St. Louis 8, Minnesota 3 Chicago White Sox 5, Toronto 1 Colorado 2. Chicago Cubs 1 San Diego 5, San Francisco 1 Milwaukee 10. Oakland 5 California 10, Seattle 8 Montreal 2, Florida 0 COLLEGE BASKETBALL MEN'S NIT QUARTERFINALS Virginia Tech 64, New Mexico State 61 Marquette 57. South Florida 50, OT Rangers sign 3B Pagliarulo ■ A RLIN G TO N — The Texas Rangers have signed free agent third baseman Mike Pagliarulo to a contract with their minor league affiliate in O klahom a City. Pagliarulo, 35, reported to the league camp R angers' m inor Wednesday morning. Pagliarulo, a 10-year m ajor league veteran with the Yan­ kees, Padres, Tw ins and Orioles, played for the Seibu Lions of the Japanese Pacific League in 1994, batting .263 with seven homers and 47 KBIs. The left-handed batter has a career .242 average w ith 130 homers and 478 RBIs in 1,160 major league gam es from 1984- 1993. He had 32 homers and 87 RBIs with the Yankees in 1987 and played with the 1’wins in the 1991 World Series. Agassi, Graf advance in Lipton ■ KEY BISC A YN E, Fla. — Long unpredictable, Andre Agassi may now be the closest thing to a sure bet on the m en's tour. He mowed dow n foe W ednesday, even without his old hair or flair. another Wayne Ferreira was the vic­ tim, 6-2, 6-4, in the quarterfinals of the Lipton Championships. Ferreira never had a break point against Agassi. Steffi Graf, who has yet to lose a set this year, barely kept her streak intact against Natasha Zvereva in the w om en's quar­ second-seeded terfinals. The Graf won 6-4, 7-6 (7-5) and will play Jana Novotna on Thursday. Zvereva delighted the crowd with playful body english — head tilted, k n e e s together or hips askew — following some of her best shots, but she didn’t save any of them for the end. In the tiebreaker, Zvereva led 5-4 with the m om entum and two serves coming. G raf then took the final three points, clos­ ing out the match on a service w inner to improve to 12-0 in 1995. Also advancing were No. 5 seed Gabriela Sabatini and No. 7 Kimiko Date. — Compiled from staff and Associated Press reports THURSDAY ■ TBfiS: The Lady Longhorns will play Oklahom a State at 2 p.m. at Penick-Allison Tennis Center. FRIDAY ■ BASEBALL: The Longhorns will play Houston at 7 p.m. at Disch- Falk Field. ■ T R A C K & F fL D : The Longhorns and Lady Longhorns will par­ ticipate in Texas Quadrangular at Memorial Stadium. Groups with sports calendar items should call 471-4591 or come by The Daily Texan at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. Please see NCAAs, page 14 UT FOOTBALL Eyes of NFL upon Texas Brockermeyer, Pinkney dazzle pro scouts DAVID LIVIN G STO N Daily Texan S taff If it was meant to be a showcase for the participating seniors, the NFL scouting workout for Texas players may have failed. But if it was meant to improve the status ot T exas' most talented it might be marked down as a com ­ plete success. juniors, O ffensive tackle Blake Brocker­ m eyer and receiv er/tig h t end Lovell Pinkney, both juniors, stole the show Tuesday afternoon at Memorial Stadium as they excelled in most areas of the workout, which tested vertical leap, strength, speed and quickness. The two players showed the approximately 60 NFL scouts why they chose to leave school one year early. "It seems they both worked out better than people thought they w ould," former Cleveland Browns tight end O zzie Newsome said. The other players who participat­ ed in the workout were linebacker Norman Watkins, defensive backs Victor Frazier and Joev Ellis, tail­ back Rod Walker, fullbacks Juan Kemp and Gerald Crawford and receiver Eric Jackson. D efensive tackle Thom as Baskin was able to participate in some drills, but his workout w as limited because of recent knee surgery. Before Pinkney ran the 40-yard dash, 49ers scout Mike Faulkiner said that if the 6-5, 245-pounder could run the sprint as low as 4.5 seconds, team s would not worry about his weight. So Pinkney did just that, causing a m urmur to go through the other­ wise subdued scouts. Pinkney first ran a 4.43 with spikes on, then ran a shoes. 4.55 Faulkiner admitted to being very impressed. in normal tennis "T h e re's nothing w rong with him [physically]," Faulkiner said. Kansas City Chiefs general man- Please see Scouts, page 14 Kelly Pace’s goal before com pleting her final year is to return the national championship the Lady Longhorns won two years ago. I I.G .C * / L Z a u y i c a o i i o t a n Picking up the Pace As career comes to an end, senior eyes singles, doubles, team national titles TRACY C. SCHULTZ_______________ Daily Texan Staff UT WOMEN'S TENNIS Senior Kelly Pace has achieved a great deal in her career on the tennis court at the University, but the No. 1 college player in the country is not finished yet. Just this week, Pace regained the No. 1 spot in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association rankings. She had fallen to second just recently, despite not losing a match. "I've worked really hard over the last three years. I take more pride in it now," Pace said. "I don't like seeing that anyone's nam e is ahead of mine. I guess I'm pretty com petitive." Pace came to Texas from Huntsville, Ala., as the 15th-ranked junior player in the nation. She chose to become a Lady Longhorn because she felt the program was geared toward developing the talents of the players. Pace, who will lead the Lady Horns when they meet Oklahoma State at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Penick-Allison Tennis Center, is pleased with the way her play has progressed. "W hen I came to UT, I didn't really have many w eapons on the court,' Pace said. "I was more or less just a counter-puncher and would just try to be m ore consistent than my oppo­ nents. Now w hen I go on the court, I w ant to attack them as much as I can to win the m atch." One tiling remains consistent with Pace — victories. Her 134 wins (23 losses) tie her for the most career wins by a Lady Longhorn w ith for­ mer Texas player Susan Gilchrist. Pace's career w inning percentage of .854 is the top am ong all Lady Longhorns. She enjoyed a 13-match win­ ning streak this season before losing to sixth- ranked Monica Mraz of Duke. While Pace enjoys the one-on-one competition of the singles matches, she is just as comfortable Please see Pace, page 14 Maryland, UConn set for Western shootout UCLA faces Mississippi State in Sweet 16 Associated Press O AKLAN D, Calif. — If college team s could stay together, keep their coaches and create their own fran­ chises in the NBA, Connecticut and Maryland might be competing for a league title in a few years. For the moment, these two teams with NBA-style size, speed and tal­ ent are shooting for a spot in the Final Four, and one will knock off the other Thursday in the semifinals of the NCAA West Regionals and go on to a probable matchup against No 1 UCLA. Connecticut may have the finest, best-balanced starting five in the country, led by workhorse Donny Marshall at power forward, silky Ray Allen at small forward, savvy Kevin Ollie at point guard, former Israeli national team star Doron Sheffer at shooting guard, and 7- footer Travis Knight at center. It is a unit that plays with m aturi­ ty, even if Allen and Sheffer are sophomores and Knight a junior. And coming off the bench are two solid p la y e rs who could just as well be starting, center Eric Hayward and guard Brian Fair. Maryland is perhaps slightly less balanced in its starters, but it has the added dimension of the best player on either team — All-America center Please see West, page 13 Lewis’ No. 35 raised to rafters, but Bulls prevail Associated Press BOSTON — Michael Jordan seems to be getting the hang of this new basketball thing. There was that silky smooth jumper quietly rippling through the net. There was the slam dunk, a loud reminder of his ability to soar over all opponents. And there w as that no-look pass to Scottie Pippen. There were, simply, signs that the Jordan who dom i­ nated basketball for so many years may not be far from dominating again. Three days after missing 21-OÍ-28 shots in his return to the NBA after a 21-month absence, Jordan made his first six shots and scored 27 points in 26 minutes as the Chicago Bulls cruised past the Boston Celtics 124-107 Wednesday night. "1 w as a little more relaxed. There w asn't as much fan- Ptease see Lewis, page 14 ASSOCIATED PRESS Reggie Lewis’ No. 35 shares a banner with Larry Bird (33), Dennis Johnson (3) and Kevin McHale (32). ‘Grave’ digs a soul-chilling comedy ENTERTAINMENT T h e D a i l y T e x a n THURSDAY, MARCH 23,1995 17 Clibum tunes philosphy of music — --------- f e l V f e l B U R N CMAfKOVSKY CONCERTO NO. 1 | K O N D R A S H I N R C A S Y M P H O N Y JfcACHMANINOFF: CONCERTO NO. 2 j i p r i NER C H IC A G O SYM PH O N Y r a 4 ■ I. * on| the record the After the last report on the sta­ tus of the Big Drag album, the band's manager placed a call to The Texan to clear some things up. According to him, the main stick­ ing point with Unclean Records was licensing agreement. What this concerns is the rights to the album should it be picked up by a major label. The manager felt that Roger M organ's standard quest for control of the album or five years was unreasonable. The fear was that Morgan could sell the masters and Big Drag would get nothing. So the $20,000 figure was thrown out merely as an unattainable number. Currently, Big Drag has a ver­ bal agreement more to its liking with O nly Boy records, run by The Gay Sportscasters. An April release is the current plan, but this could change. There are also apparently several of bigger labels interested in Big Drag, depending on the record's performance. Big Drag fans also can look for a cover of Heroes on a forthcoming David Bow ie tribute album on Only Boy. According to Roger Morgan, the contract he offered is his stan­ dard deal for all LPs. He notes that it was fine-tuned by Seth Tiven, whose band Dumptruck -tad just gotten through with a nasty licensing agreements. Morgan says he was not trying to cheat Big Drag. His agreement says both parties must approve, in writing, any sale. He was merely trying to protect his investment. Several labels, such as Sym pathy for the Record Indus try, h ave been burned when an artist gets picked up by a major label. The big guys issue a "cease and-desist" order on distribution by the indie, leaving them stuck with thousands of dollars worth of CDs in their warehouse. lawsuit over If there's anything to be learned from all this, it's that the rise of indies is producing an emphasis on money that can be destructive to the trust that builds in a set ne. If Austin keeps its profile as a great underground scene, more things like this will happen. In other local label news, Rise Records has released a Hormones 7-inch called Cartographer o f Love. Another Rise Records artist, NY avant-jazz pianist M atthew Shipp, has recorded an album for Henry Rollins' new 213 record abel. Coming summer, Undone Records will have a 7- nch featuring W alter D an iels and Memphis garage-kings The O blivions. That should be good. this H eartbreaking story of the week: Former journey frontman and every MOR radio program ­ m er's wet dream Steve Perry's March 25 concert at the Erwin Center has been cancelled and will not be rescheduled. Appar­ ently Perry has taken ill and is not up to perform ing because his Houston and Dallas dates also have been canceled. The Texan congratulates Perry for even sell- ng enough tickets to play the Drum, because we assum ed he'd be playing Babe's, as those other 80s refugees from Q uiet Riot did j couple* weeks ago. We're really oanging our heads (heh-heh, heh- heh) against the wall on this one. Turning to slightly cheerier news, those crazy hempsters from Atlanta are coming back to town, sA everybody arm your tape recorders. The Black Crowes have announced an Austin show for April 25 at the City Coliseum . Tickets go on sale Saturday at 10 a.m. at all STAR ticket outlets, so instead of going to see Steve Perry, you can stand in line for Crowes tickets. Or, you can stay at home, crank Journey's Greatest Hits and charge by phone at 416-STAR. They're no Steve Perry, but the Crowes have been known to put on some rockin' shows in their own right. Don't forget the Visine. ■ And start lining up right now at for next W ednesday's Emo's show featuring the Coolest Guys In The Universe, THE SUPER­ SUCKERS!!! This will be the debut appearance of the Suckers new guitarist, Rick Sim m s (for­ merly of the D id jits) and a lot of new material off the record they just finished recording at Arlyn S tudios with B utthole Surfer Paul Leary. Now, everyone down here loves the Supersuckers, but w e're kind of worried. 1 mean, how could they top their last record, La Mano Cornuda? Even if it wasn't great, it would still be one of the top 10 records of all time just for starting out with a Rudy Ray Moore sample. — Compiled by John D. Lowe and Chris Gray, Daily Texan staff CARL DURRENBERGER Daily Texan Staff It was 1958 — the peak of the Cold War. In an act that would inevitably be interpreted as a sign of improv­ ing relations between the United States and Russia, Van Clibum — then a fresh-faced, 19-year-old prodigy pianist from Texas — won International first prize at Tchaikovsky in Moscow. The fame he subsequently enjoyed w as rooted not only in American nationalism, but in the demonstrated universality of music as a diplomatic language. the Com petition Cliburn's first major recording — Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 — went gold soon after its release and is perhaps the only classical record to have made the play lists of pop stations. After the event, Van Cliburn per­ formed continuously around the globe for more than five years. Col­ laborating with num erous conduc­ tors and orchestras, he made count­ less recordings of an incredibly wide slice of the piano repertoire, winning acclaim from music critics and audi­ ences from every corner of the globe. Then he decided to take some time off, as mentioned in a 1964 N ew York Times article, whereupon his touring and travels were reduced. Thursday, Cliburn performs with the Austin Symphony. He will be playing the Tchaikovsky Piano Con­ certo No. 1, the very same work that brought him to the international forefront more than 35 years ago. Cliburn, who speaks politely and sagely with a warm Texas accent, eschews the typical profile of the renowned musician. Unlike the many artists who view themselves as personas apart from and above the audience, he likes to think of himself as an interpretive communi­ cator of music, which he sees as a beautifully powerful language that everyone is capable of understand­ ing. "In the public schools [in Greece], music was taught as a language that is readable, writeable and recitable," he said in a recent phone interview. As with any language, Cliburn believes that an increased awareness of classical music literature and its gramm atical elements leads to a greater sense of self-fulfillment and understanding. In the same vein, Cliburn lam ents the dim inishing in presence of music education American public schools, citing Japan as the only nation that makes it mandatory for students under 14. He also wishes for a wider disper­ sion of classical music over the air­ waves, although he is well aware of the current reality. "In New York, it came as a great shock to the music community when one of the two classical stations switched formats," he said. If Cliburn laments the lack of widespread musical training, he cer­ tainly will not tolerate any logic con­ necting a lack of public awareness to arrogance. Especially disturbing to him are musicians' views that their art is intended solely for other m usi­ cians. Cliburn attacks the current trend among music critics to dispar­ age "popular" works in the classical catalog on the basis of their wide­ spread success. "You have to be very careful with sophistry," he warns. "When you look at all the great masterpieces — the ones that have remained popular over centuries — you find that every one is celebrated for very cherished and beloved reasons. They are amazing both from the standpoint of content and composition." Using an elitist argument, many them- com posers have reserved CLASSICAL VAN CUBURN Playing at: Bass Concert Hall, UT campus, 471-1444 Cost: $30-$50 Date: 8 p.m. Thursday selves to writing atonal works that tout creativity and theoretical cun­ ning, often at the expenses of break­ ing the communicative bond with the non-musician. "It's not clear what current music is trying to do," Cliburn said. "Is it an experiment? There are only 12 tones you have to work with; you can sidestep that problem with, say. quarter tones — but are quarter tones indigenous to humanity?" The increasing im portance of musical "grammar" is what distin­ guishes modern classical music from the great masterpieces, Cliburn says, to the extent that "music is now "written for the musician and not for humanity." Talking with Van Cliburn about his personal musical experiences is sort of like strolling through a classi­ cal music hall of fame. He has played with just about every con­ ductor and orchestra imaginable, from the Israel Philharmonic under Zubin Mehta to the Chicago Sym­ phony led by Fritz Reiner. Of all the conductors Cliburn has collaborated with, however, the late Russian con­ ductor Kiril Kondrashin remains fondest in his memory. "He was very wide in musical scope, allowing every passage to breathe," recalls Cliburn of Kon- drashin's abilities. interpretive Cliburn liked Kondrashin so much that in 1958 he persuaded Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev to per­ mit Kondrashin a leave of absence D A V ID S T A N D IF E R Daily Texan Staff Recently studios have shown a growing fervor to attract audiences by slapping generic labels on films. Is anyone not sick of the phrase "heartwarm ing comedy"? (For that matter, is anyone not sick of heart­ warm ing comedies?) As a result of these misnomers, studios have begun to obscure the meanings of these labels. This is particularly true with the classifications "thriller" and "black comedy". The term "thriller" has come to apply to anything with more thrills than a Merchant-Ivory film. "Black comedy" has become similarly empty, often signifying a film that is not funny at all but just faintly amusing in a sick sort of way. Consequently, any film which actu­ ally lives up to either label is as refreshing as it is rare. Shallow Grave, a new, blackly comedic thriller from Scotland, lives up to both. The plot commences as three arro­ gant young professionals conduct interviews for a fourth roommate to share their posh Glasgow flat. After shamelessly humiliating dozens of potential room m ates, they select Hugo, a cool customer who immedi­ ately pays his first m onth's rent in cash. Now, conventional wisdom holds that people who pay large amounts in cash are to be avoided. But, as it turns out, Hugo is a perfect choice, because after one night in his new room, Hugo d r o p s dead from a leaving behind a drug overdose suitcase brimming with cash. Quite a lot of ( ash. Hundreds of thousands of pounds, in fact. So it is no shock that Alex, Juliet and David are tempted to hide the body and keep the monev — this would at least occur to anyone. But what mav be shocking is that these three actu­ ally go through with it. If you can m ake the harrow ing sequence depicting the disposal of H ugo's bodv, you'll be able to take the periodic ultraviolence of the rest of the film. And if you enjoy this sequence, well, stick around, there's plenty more when* that came from. The remainder of Shallow Grave is through it riddled w ith plot complications. These twists arise from the bleak psychological afterm ath of the bloody deed and from the persis­ tence of a couple of I lugo's partners in crime, who are determined to recover H ugo's money. The films dashes to an exhilarat­ ing conclusion, always cruelly hilar­ ious and suspenseful, never stop­ ping to make superfluous explo­ rations of the characters or their moralities. It is to the credit of the fine actors that the audience is tricked into rather liking the egotistical, morally degenerate characters. All three of SHALLOW BRAVE Starring: Kerry Fox, C hrbtopher Eccleston, Evan McGregor Director: Danny Boyle Playing at: Village Cinema Art Rating: ★★★★ (out of five) the lead rol»w are ex< . uted flawless­ ly, which is all the more impressive because of the young age and rela­ tive inexperience of the actors. Kerry Fox, w'ho brings to vivid life the cold and reserved Juliet, is something of a rising international star. She has worked with accomplished directors Gillian Arm strong (Little Women) and Jane Campion (The Piano), and won critical acclaim for her screen debut in Cam pion's A n Angel A t M y Table. Christopher Eccleston and Ewan McGregor have also enjoyed success early in their careers. Eccleston is perfect as the serious, squarish accountant David. He makes a believable transition out of the film's only major stretch on credibility — David's bizarre transformation into a paranoid recluse. McGregor is a wonderfully cocky Alex, who falls from being the dom inant member of the trio to being the most alienated. He provides the bulk of the film 's DAVID STANDIFER__________________ Daily Texan Staff The new medical thriller Outbreak is not quite a must-see. On the other hand, if you're looking for fun weekend viewing, you really could do much worse. The film mixes sus­ pense, drama, action, hum or and romance, so it should have some appeal for everyone. And despite a mediocre script, the final product is a fairly enjoyable movie. The plot concerns the rapid outbreak of a fic­ tional African virus, Motaba, in the small Cali­ fornia tow'n of Cedar Creek. Col. Sam Daniels, M.D. (Dustin Hoffman), is fresh from investi­ gating the strain's destruction in an African village. Just before the epidemic springs up in C edar Creek, Daniels is fighting his superiors, Gens. Billy Ford (Morgan Freeman) and Don­ ald McClintock (Donald Sutherland), to bring the threat of Motaba to national attention. Daniels does not realize what the audience knows from the beginning: Ford and McClin­ tock are desperate to ignore the virus. I ogeth- er, they were responsible for the shady treat­ ment of an earlier occurrence of Motaba, so they fear national recognition of the strain wall bring their reprehensible actions to the public eye. To the film's credit, it deals with a timely subject, the w orld's growing paranoia toward viruses. Outbreak opens with an appropriate quotation from Nobel Laureate Dr. Joshua Lederberg: "The single biggest threat to m an's continued dominance on the planet is the virus." And this may well be true, considering the medical world's current frustration with HIV and the bizarre flesh-eating strain of streptococcus bacillus. Of course, this topic is hardly new to the sil­ ver screen. More than 20 years ago, Michael Crichton's The Andromeda Strain gained popu- OUTBREAK Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Rene Russo, Mor­ gan Freeman, Donald Sutherland Director: Wolfgang Petersen Playing at: Arbor 7, Highland 10, Northcross 6, Riverside 8, Westgate 8 Rating: ★★★Vfc (out of five) larity and Oscar nom inations for its depiction of a governmental investigation of a mysteri­ ous virus. But Outbreak is even more relevant. Its true focus is not the fear of viruses but per­ haps a more rational fear: the alarm ing prospect of governmental negligence toward viruses. Unfortunately, the screenplay itself is prone to flat characters, trite developments, and ridiculous coincidences. The movie starts out with Sam Daniels fac­ ing a messy separation from his ex-wife Dr. Roberta "Robby" Keough (Rene Russo), who is also a medical researcher. From this common thriller formula, most people will expect Sam and Robby to be drawn back together by the crisis. Sadly, this is not the only predictable devel­ opment to come of Sam and Robby's relation­ ship. But for those of you who can't foresee the ending of a Disney animated film, the others won't be mentioned. You may find yourself thinking, "how con­ venient!" on a regular basis, especially later in the film, as the plot struggles clumsily to a happy conclusion. Daniels' complete defiance of authority and the w’himsical treatment of major military operations are hard to swallow. But the most incredible instance occurs when Daniels bursts onto the set of a television news Van Cliburn is probably Texas’ most famous classical performer so they could tour London and America together. That same year, a dinner was held in Fort Worth by the local teachers' association. A first prize of $10,000 was offered in a competition to be named after Van Cliburn. "I w as shocked w hen it was announced," Cliburn says of the evening. On the topic of competi­ tion, Van Cliburn takes a balanced stand. "I don't like competition," he said. "It puts a terrible strain and terrible stress on musicians." But, as he is quick to point out, competitions "allow many doors to be opened" for prodigies who might otherwise go unnoticed — much in the same way his career w as launched in Moscow in 1958. In the final analysis, Cliburn believes that "competitions are bona fide' mea sures of playing ability that are ben eficial both to the musical (.(immuni­ ty and the music -going public 1 he way we run it is more like a festival, anyway," he said. In a message to aspiring young musicians, Cliburn reminds u*. that music is a "vocation, a calling - something you have w ith you all your life," and that there is little time for complacency or arrogance. In fact, his experience s u g g e s t s that "the more time you spend with it [music], the less you feel you know. And as the late pianist and com pos­ er Sergei Rachmaninoff reflected, "Music is enough for a lifetime, but is never enough for a music " lifetime First-time screenw riter Kerry Fox, Christopher Eccleston, and Ewan McGregor star in the British import Shallow Grave, a movie filled with death and decisions. blunt hum or with great skill, never placing comedv before believability. John Hodge is actually a doctor m oon­ lighting in the motion picture busi­ ness. He also tries his hand at acting in his own film, as a humorously prying detective constable. Hodge is a surprisingly talented amateur, in both endeavors. In the script of Slial He gives the violence a startling panache, he shoots stylishly without being too distracting, and he creates radiantly moody atmospheres I such as the oddly-lit attic, David's haven of dementia). job with acting supervision, not that the three lead actors need much, and especially with the visual aspect of the direction. low Grave, Hodge combines what he sees as a very British, Hitchcockian story with the rapid pace of much great American cinema. The result is an intriguing combination of two verv different styles with potential appeal to the fans of both. Director Danny Boyle does a tine Somewhere between Stephen King and Quentin Tarantino, Shal­ low Grave is a twisted and iarring portrayal of the consequences of cal­ culated moral delinquency. This film is a gem: intense, funny, intelli­ gent, hip, and thoroughly entertain­ ing. broadcast to warn the publii of the monkey hosting the virus. At that very moment, a sub­ urban mother is watching the broadcast. And, w ouldn't you know it, when she looks out the window, there's her baby daughter going to play with a monkey. Kevin Spacey. Dustin Hoffman, and Rene Russo (clockwise form left) surround Cuba Gooding Jr. as he works on a computer to combat a deadly virus in the movie Outbreak. Hoffman brings great determination, as well as humor, to Daniels, his most average charac­ ter yet. Russo (In the Line o f Fire) h o ld s her own opposite Hoffman as the ex-wife who ''till respects Daniels enough to assist him , Morgan Freeman is good as usual, making the most of a rather flat character. And Donald Sutherland (Ordinary People, Disclosure) performs memo­ rably as a snakishly evil General McC lintock. Director Wolfgang Petersen (In the Lute o f Fire) compensates for these flaws with good, solid directing. He keeps the film interesting and suspenseful and where the script turns profoundly implausible, he plays up the excitement and hopes for the b e s t . Which is the best he can do given t h e circumstances More than anything else, it is superb acting that saves the movie from absurdity Dustin The film's lengthy running time is alleviated by a quick pace throughout, and in the long run it does not make itself felt. So it v o u 'rt willing to set aside the problematic matter of credibility, you will probable enjoy the thrill ride of Outbreak. ‘Outbreak’ fever spreads despite scrip! 18 T h e D a ily T e x a n THURSDAY, MARCH 23,1895 THE CUY Bad Com pany Starring: Ellen Barkin, Laurence F ishbou rne , Frank Langella, M ichael Beach, David Ogden Stiers Director: Damian Harris P la y in g at: G re a t H ills 8, Riverside 8, Lincoln 6. Westgate 8 Before Sunrise S tarring: Ethan Hawke, Julie Delpy Director: Richard Linklater Playing at: Highland 10, Dobie Boys On the Side S ta rrin g : W hoopi G o ld b e rg , M a ry -L o u is e P arker, Drew Barrymore Director: Herbert Ross Texan rating: ★ ★★ Playing at: Great Hills 8 The Brady Bunch Movie S tarring: Shelley Long, G ary Cole, Michael McKean Director: Betty Thomas Texan rating: *v¿ Playing at: Lake Creek Festival, Lincoln6. Westgate 8, Bullets Over Broadway Starring: John Cusack, Diane Wiest, Chazz Palmenteri Director: Woody Allan Texan: rating: * * * V 2 Playing at: Highland 10, Great Hills 8 C a n d y m a n : F a re w e ll to the Flesh S ta rrin g : Tony T o d d ,K e lly Rowan, Timothy Carhart Director: Bill Condon Playing at: Lake Creek Festival, R iv e rs id e 8, N o rth c ro s s 6, Westgate 8 Director: Roman Polanski Playing at: Highland 10 Dolores Claiborne Starring: Kathy Bates, Jennifer Jason Leigh Director: Taylor Hackford Playing at: Highland 10,Lake C reek F e stiva l, R iverside 8. Arbor 7, Lakehills 4 The Hunted Starring: Christopher Lambert, John Lone, Joan Chen Director: J.F. Lawton P la yin g Westgate 3 at: A q u a riu s 4, The Jungle Book Starring: Jason Scott Lee, Cary Elwes, Sam Neill Director: Stephen Sommers Playing at: Westgate 8 Just Cause S ta rrin g : S ean C o nnery, L a u re n ce F is h b u rn e , K ate C apshaw , B la ir U n derw oo d, Ruby Dee, Ed Harris Director: Arne Glimcher Playing at: Lakehills 4, Lincoln 6, Great Hills 8 Forrest Gump S ta rrin g : Tom H anks, G ary Sim ese, R obin W right, S ally Fields Director: Robert Zemeckis Texan rating: ★ ★★★ Playing at: Lincoln6, Northcross 6 Little Women S ta rrin g : S u san S a ra n d o n , Winona Ryder, Gabriel Byrne, Kirsten Dunst Director: Gillian Armstrong Playing at: Great Hills 8 Death And The Maiden S ta rrin g : S ig o u rn e y W eaver, Ben Kingsley, Stuart Wilson Losing Isaiah Starring: Jessica Lange, Halle B erry, S a m ue l L. J a c k s o n , David Straithairn Director: Stephen Gyllenhaal Texan rating: ★ *★ Playing at: Arbor 7, Lincoln 6, Riverside 8 The Madness of King George Starring: Nigel Hawthorne, Helen Mirren, Rupert Everett, Ian Holmes Director: Nicholas Hytner Texan rating:* **V 2 Playing at: Arbor 7 Mr. Payback Starring: Billie Warlock, Leslie Easterbrook, Christopher Lloyd Director: Bob Gale Texan rating: Playing at: Highland 10 Pulp Fiction Starring: John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman Director: Quentin Tarantino Texan rating: ★ * * * l £ P la yin g at: G re a t H ills 8, Highland 10 Quiz Show S tarring: John T urturro, Rob Morrow, Ralph Fiennes Director: Robert Redford Texan rating: * * * V S S h o w in g at: G rea t H ills 8, Highland 10 Shawshank Redemption Starring: Morgan Freeman, Tim Robbins Director: Frank Darabont Texan r a tin g :* * * 1/£ Playing at: Highland 10 Tall Tale S ta rrin g : Nick S tahl, R oger A a ron B row n, O liv e r P latt, Patrick Swayze Director: Jeremiah Chechik Playing at: Highland 10, Lake C reek F e stiva l, R iverside 8, Arbor 7, Lakehills 4 Mon. 27 W orld’s Edge, Savannah, Bridge Jai Britten Wed. 29 Business, Contradicks Tue. 28 Twang Twang Shocka- Wed. 29 Twang Twang Shocka- Boom Boom 311 CLUB 311 E Sixth St. 477-1630 A N TO N E S 2915 Guadalupe St., 474-5314 Thu. 23 Ging’Breadmen, King Friday Fri. 24 Tracy Nelson, Jake Andrews Sat. 25 Robert Earl King, George Rains, Larry Fulcher, Mark KaZanoff Sun. 26 Guy Forsyth & the Real Deal Mon. 27 Lou Ann Barton Tue. 28 King Friday Wed 29 Banana Blender Surprise AUSTIN OUTHOUSE 3510 Guadalupe St., 451-2266 AUSTIN MUSIC HALL 208 Nueces St., 495-9962 BACKYARD AT BEE CAVE 13101 Highway 71 West, 263-4146 Thu. 9 Strunz & Farah Fri. 24 Indigo Girls, Big Fish Ensemble BATES MOTEL 317 E. Sixth St., 480-8121 Thu. 23 Blue Midnight, The Frogs Fri. 24 Sandblasters, Jim Talbot Sat 25 Texas Philistines, Midnight Ramblers Sun. 26 Dave Fulkerson Band, Joe Kelly’s Blues Party Tue. 28 Blue Midnight. Hand to Wed. 29 Hand to Mouth, Texas Mouth Philistines BABE’S 208 E. Sixth St. 473-2262 BLACK CAT 309 E. Sixth St. BACK ROOM 2015 E. Riverside Drive, 441-4677 Thu. 23 Brother’s Hand, Language Fri 24 House 665, Hollowpoint, Headwound Sat. 25 Pushmonkey, Jive Sun. 26 Alien Spies, Rainbow BROKEN SPOKE 3201 S. Lamar Blvd., 442-6189 CACTUS CAFE Texas Union Building, 471-8228 Thu. 23 Traditional Grass Fri. 24 Tuck & Patti Sat. 25 The Cow Pattys CAFE BRAZIL 1806 B arton S prings R oad, 476- 0254 CAFEZINO 5414 Parkcrest Drive. 453-2233 CALLE OCHO 706 Congress Ave., 474-6605 CAROUSEL LOUNGE 1110 E 52nd St., 452-6790 CATFISH STATION 418 E Sixth St., 477-8875 CEDAR STREET JAZZ BAR 208 W Fourth St., 708-8811 Thu. 23 King Valentine Octet Fri. 24 Brannon Temple, Atomic Soul Sat. 25 8 1/2 Souvenirs Sun 26 King Valentine Octet Wed. 29 Lucky Strikes CENTRAL MARKET CAFE 38th St. and North Lamar Boulevard ► Please see Live Muisc, page 19 Tony Todd presides over the Mardi Gras weekend carnage once more in Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh. AUSTIN LIVE MUSIC Austin pop-rockers Velvethead take a part in the KNNC Homegroan Live series at Liberty Lunch Thursday &A TTFR V ^ T h e P e r f o r m i n g A r t s C e n t e r P r e s e n t s A R a v i S h a n k a r S e r i e s E v e n t Attitude, a diuge (Dance ‘Jioor, and Loads of Vo itage Sucking Lig ‘Bulbs ALI AKBAR KHAIM sarod ISHWAR LAL IVIISRA tabla T h e w o r l d - f a m o u s p e r f o r m e r . T h e m u s i c o f N o r t h e r n I n d i a . A n e m o t i o n a l r id e on 2 5 s tr in g s . Sat. March 25 .m . B a t e s R e c it a l H a ll $25 ($15 S tu d en ts) C H A R G E -A -T IC K E T : 4 7 7 - 6 0 6 0 T ic k e ts at all U T T M T ic k e tC e n t e r s I n f o : 4 7 1 - 1 4 4 4 Wednesday: The UT Greek Bacanal Festivity S1.50 Anything, A L L Night Thursday: The all-out Beer Guzzling Gala $1.50 A ny thing, A L L Night Friday & Saturday: Featuring the UT Dancetorium $2.00 drinks, A LL Night Sunday: The back to class Lubricating Jubilee $1.50 Anything, A LL Night PARADOX... üHE CLU3 YOU LOVE iO FACE Open 9pm - 4am Available for pnvate parties C o n tin e n ta l *3 K T b c TEXAN C L A S S IF IE D A DS W O R K — FO R YO U R S CALL 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 | , 1 A T L A » CD & / CS S A L E E N D S 3 / 2 9 / 9 5 CO M PACT DISCS RECORDS «VIDEO 10-10 Mon-Sat 12-10 Sun 600-A North Lamar, Austin, TX 78703 512/474-2500 WHERE MUSIC STILL MATTERS > Live Music, continued from page 18 CHARLIE S ATTIC “ 5420 Airport Blvd., 454-0381 CHELSEA STREET PUB & GRILL B arton C reek S quare M all, 327-7794 CHICAGO HOUSE 607 Trinity St., 473-2542 Thu. 23 Hugh Moffatt, Matt Wilkins Fri. 24 Lourdes Perez Sat. 25 Betty Elders Sun. 26 Pena, Norm Ballinger, Walt Wilkins Mon. 27 Steve Hokins, Cindy Pitts Tue. 28 Poets Open Mic Wed. 29 Sydney Gallagher, Chicago Showcase w/ Mike Jasper THE CLOAK ROOM 1300 Colorado St., 472-9808 * THE CONTINENTAL CLUB 1315 S. Congress Ave., 441-2444 DANCE ACROSS TEXAS 2201 E. Ben White Blvd., 441-9101 DONN’S DEPOT 1600 W Fifth St., 478-0336 Thu. 23 Kire Lynn Fri. 24 Donn & the Station Masters „Sat. 25 Carolina of Texas Mon. 27 Kira Lynn Tue. 28 Donn & the Station Masters Wed 29 Murphy’s Law ELECTRIC LOUNGE 302 Bowie Road, 476-3873 Thu. 23 Heterosexuals, Tallboy, Spill Fri. 24 Lowbrow, Swangkee Hotel, Lolly, Hamell On Trial, Slack Panthers Sat. 25 Blue Rodeo, Dumptruck, Meredith Miller Sun. 26 Seizureville, Girl Robots, Blort, Whammo Mon. 27 Snuggles, Self-Help Seminar, LD 50, B Girls Tue. 28 Olive, Veronica, Whammo’s Poetry Slam Wed. 29 Cattleguard, Million Sellers, Jerry Giddens, Bottle of Smoke ELEPHANT ROOM 315 Congress Ave., 473-2279 Thb. 23 Tomas Ramirez, Bobby Doyle Fri. 24 Kyle Turner, Jazz Pharaohs Sat. 25 Lara & Reyes Sun. 26 Lucky Strikes Mon. 27 Jazz Jam Session w/ Sandy Allen, Tony Campise Tue. 28 Tony Campise, Bobby Wed 29 Jon Blondell Quartet, Jazz Doyle Pharaohs EMO'S 603 Red River St., 477-EMOS Thu. 23 Myra Manes, Sap, Flackjacket Fri. 24 Retarded Elf, The Flamin’ Hellcats, The Flame Trick Subs Sat. 25 Sons of Hercules, Tallboy, Sensefield T h e D a il y T e x a n Thursday, March 23,1995 Page 19 G Mon. 27 Euripedes Pants Tue. 28 John McVey & the White Trash Playboys Wed. 29 Supersuckers, Gomez THE ESCAPE CLUB 110 E. Riverside Drive, 444-8452 ESTHER’S FOLLIES 525 E. Sixth St., 320-0553 FAT TUESDAY S 508 E. Sixth St.,474-0632 Wed. 29 Jack Simmons,Eugene Kenny LANDRY’S ON THE LAKE 600 E. Riverside Drive, 441-1010 LIBERTY LUNCH 405 W. Second St., 477-0461 Thu. 23 KNNC Homegroan w/ Banana Blender Surprise, Velvethead, Coyote Dreams, Last Wish Fri. 24 Sixteen Deluxe, Swine THE FILLING STATION 801 Barton Springs Road, 477-1022 Sat. 25 Reverend Horton Heat, King Hagfish FLAMINGO CANTINA 515 E. SiXth St. LUCKENBACH, TEXAS HCR 13, (210) 997-3224 FLIPNOTICS COFFEESPACE 1601 Barton Springs Road, 322- 9750 Fri. 24 Alientime, Jeff Benedict Sat. 25 Merchants of Venice GRUENE HALL 1281 Gruene Road, New Braunfels (210) 606-1281 Thu. 23 Slade Cleavers Fri. 24 Nervous Purvis & the Sat. 25 Michael Baile, Monte Jitters Warden Sun. 26 Dan McCoy, Rhythm Rats HEADLINERS EAST 406 E. Sixth St., 476-3488 HOLE IN THE WALL 2538 Guadalupe St., 472-5599 Thu. 23 Big Foot Chester, Seth & Amy Tiven, Amberjack Rice Fri. 24 Death Valley. Big Drag Sat. 25 Spoon, Splinter Sun. 26 Rock n’ Roll Free-for-AII w/ Hamell On Trial. Gomez, Magneto USA, Heady Spread Mon. 27 Space Heaters Tue. 28 Cattle Guard, Grain Elevator, Caterpillar Wed. 29 Stretford. Dead End Cruisers, Phantom Creeps JAZZ-6TH STREET 609B W. Sixth St., 477-7777 Thu. 23 Jazz Pharaohs Fri. 24 The Brew Sat. 25 Cula de Cafe Wed. 29 47 Indians JESSEN AUDITORIUM UT campus, 445-2371 JOE’S GENERIC BAR 315 E. Sixth St., 480-0171 Thu. 23 Hornets, Jim Talbot Fri. 24 Hand to Mouth, Tim W h e e le r & the Soul Shufflers Sat. 25 Hornets, Jim Talbot Sun. 26 Jim Talbot's Sunday Blues THE LUMBERYARD 16511 Bratton Lane, 255-9622 Thu. 23 Debonaires Fri. 24 People’s Choice Sat. 25 Brian Gowen MAGGIE MAE’S 323-325 E. Sixth St., 478-8541 MANUEL’S 310 Congress Ave., 452-6832 Sun. 26 Paul Glasse Trio MOZART’S COFFEE ROASTER 3825 Lake Austin Blvd., 477-2900 Thu. 23 Mark Sullivan Fri. 24 Marshall Styler Sat. 25 Danny Santos 1 PARAMOUNT THEATRE 713 Congress Ave., 472-5411 Fri. 24 Paula Poundstone Sat. 25 Jerry Jeff Walker Sun. 26 Neil Simon’s Broadway Bound RUTA MAYA COFFEEHOUSE Fourth and Lavaca streets, 472- 9637 RUTA MAYA RIO GRANDE 2222 Rio Grande St., 322-0922 THE SAXON PUB 1320 S. Lamar Blvd., 448-2552 Thu. 23 Rusty Wier Band, Olin Murrell Fri. 24 Apaches of Paris, Big Blue Men, Polk Shelton Sat. 25 Shake Russell, Jack Sanders, Eric Moll Sun. 26 Monte Montgomery, Jimmy Ash, Brenda Freed Mon. 27 Open Mic Tue. 28 Apaches of Paris, VOX BOX, Aaron Atchley Wed. 29 Keepers, Pine Cones, Spencer Jarmon SCHOLZ GARTEN 1607 San Jacinto Blvd., 477-4171 STEAMBOAT 403 E. Sixth St., 478-2912 TEXAS SHOWDOWN 2610 Guadalupe St., 472-2010 Party Kelly Mon. 27 Danger Zone, X-15 Tue. 28 Larry B. & Little Wing, Joe TEXAS UNION SHOWROOM UT Texas Showroom, 475-6630 Tue. 28 Comedy Night Wed. 29 X-15, Tim Wheeler & the Soul Shufflers LAFF STOP 8120 Resarch Blvd.. 467-2333 Tue. 28 Jack Simmons, Eugene Kenny TOULOUSE 402 E. Sixth St., 478-0744 THE VELVEETA ROOM 317 E. Sixth St.. 469-9116 THEATER ANN SEXTON: THE EXCITABLE GIFT Chicago House 607 Trinity St., 473-2542 Through April 15 DEATH AND THE MAIDEN Live Oak Theatre 719 Congress Ave., 472-5143 Through April 2 JEFFREY Capitol City Playhouse 214 W. Fourth St., 472-1855 Through April 8 THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE Dougherty Arts Center 1110 Barton Springs Road., 499- TIXS Through Mar. 26 MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING Public Domain 1501 W . Fifth St., 459-5686 Through April 1 TRAVESTIES The Acting Studio 5811 Burnet Road., 453-7943 Through April 22 Hook Up W ith Pro-Cuts I oil with this coupon 2801 GUADALUPE $6.95 ^ R E G U L A R PRICE . I C t l f _ _ _ 1 1 l 3 0 llit iG id lii 47¿fiul m é & tl ^ ^ m X Z f\c M mjWáWÍ3ttR 9 -1 0 P M T v e r y Thursday T v e m n g 7 # 1 0 -1 1 W Í W e're Alw ays R olling I M liv e Mons&c Ev®rp UTkmredlffly 9-1 Spurn omiiir Donvoll L a c u f t t o o n For Fast Fresh Delivery Call DAVE 3 0 0 0 Duval 4 7 6 -DAVE 1926 E, Riverside 4 4 8 -DAVE Castilian 4 7 2 -DAVE The Reverend Horton Heat returns to Austin this Saturday at Liberty Lunch. Dallas’s Hagfish will open. Seattle's answer to the Reverend Horton Heat, the Supersuckers, play Wednesday at Emos. Gomez opens. GALLERIES FLAWN ACADEMIC CENTER Prints & Drawings Gallery “ W ho W ore the P ants in 1650? G e n d e r and in Early European Popular Imagery” Through Aug. 11 Id e n tity HARRY RANSOM CENTER Fourth floor gallery, 471-8944 “A Certain Death: Danse Macabre and D ivine R e trib u tio n in Early European Prints” Through June 30 GENERAL LIBRARIES Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 2 “Behold the People: R.C. Hickman's Photographs of Black Dallas, 1949- 1961” Through Aug. 30 GENERAL LIBRARIES Sid Richardson Hall, 2.109 “1945: Texans at War and Peace" Through May 20 HARRY RANSOM CENTER Seventh floor gallery, 471-8944 “Ernest Lehman: Screenwriter” Through May 12 LITTLE JACK MELODY AND HIS YOUNG TURKS MARCH 25 Saturday 10:45 pm $ 6 / $ 1 o ff w ith rhtt ad A t do o r only, 1 hour b e fo re perform ance 214 WEST 4TH ST .¿CAPITOL CITY*. PLAYHOUSE T e x a s U n i o n F i i m s |ackie C h a n D o u b le F e a tu re F ir s t M is s io n H E f c PkdPctAPartI G*arp Armstrong Winona ftyJw Susan Sarandon & Gatxwt Byrne L l T T l i Union Theatre Thu 7 & 9:15 pm __ S«OV\TIMfS (OK M a k h 21 I W 4 BUY, SELL, HARRY RANSOM CENTER First floor, 471-8944 The Gutenberg Bible On permanent display HARRY RANSOM CENTER Sixth floor, 471-8944 The First Photograph On permanent display HARRY RANSOM CENTER First floor, 471 -8944 “Worldly Possessions: Memorabilia from the Collections” On permanent display HARRY RANSOM CENTER Wrenn Room, seventh floor “ A ldus M a nutius, R e n aissan ce PRESIDIO THEATRES HEY STUDENTS! YES, FOLKS That's riQht1 Now students pay only $4 25 w/ID Bargain matinees until 6 00 pm $3 50 Children and seniors $3 50 • and only $5 25 fo r adult a dm issio n 1 D IG ITAL For Village Only STUDENT DISCOUNTS DAILY WITH VALID STUDENT I.D. Time» Valid for Friday, March 24.1995 Only RIVERSIDE 8 IN RIVERSIDE MALL 448-0008 MAJOR PAYNE (P G 13) 2.30 5.QQ 7.45 1Q.15 12.2Q___ BAD COM PANY (R) 2 45 5 15 8 00 10 30 12 45 DOLORES CLAIBORNE (R) 1.30 4:15 7.00 9.45 12.30_________ TALL TALE (PG) 1.30 3.30 5.30 7.30 9.30 12.00 OUTBREAK (R) D O L B Y SB 2.15 4 .4 5 7 .1 5 1Q.QQ 12 .4 A . CANDYMAN: FAREWELL TO THE FLESH (R) 3:00 5.45 6.15 10 40 12:40______________PQ.LBISB WHHMSB LOSING ISAIAH (R) « O W t U D f W O U W STEREO 2 00 4 30 7 00 9 33 12 10 NOftHMSSn BYE BYE LOVE (R) nosmumoutm S T E R E O 2 0 0 4 3 0 7 1 5 9 4 5 ' ? 10 DOLBY SR ■PMB K S m U l 0ÍSC0UMT5 D O L B Y S R NO FREE NSSO D O L B Y SR VILLAGE CINEMA 451-8352 2700 ANDERSON M UR IEL’S W EDDING (R) 2 4 5 5 15 7 4 5 10 10_________________________ DOLBY CO LONELCHABERT 2 15 4 45 7 1 5 9 4 5 . TOM & VIV (R) 2 3 0 5 0 0 7 30 1 00 0 SHALLOW GRAVE (R) 3 00 5 30 8 00 10 15 OOLBY Printer: a Quincentennial Celebration” Through July 21 HUNTINGTON ART GALLERY Art Building mezzanine, 471-7324 “Prints and Drawings: Acquisitions, 1993-1994” Through April 2 HUNTINGTON ART GALLERY Art Building mezzanine, 471-7324 “ Proofs and Rarities of 18th Century French Printmaking” Through April 2 LEEDS GALLERY Flawn Academic Center, fourth floor “The Company They Kept: Alfred A. and Blanche W Knopf, Publishers" Through Aug. 18 WOMEN AND THEIR WORK 1137 W. Sixth St. “Susan Miller: On Becoming" Through Mar 30 G eneral C inem a BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY A ll SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6pm • = ACADEMY AWARD NO M INEE HIGHLAND 10 1-31 a t M I D D U F I S K V I I I t « D 4 5 4 9 5 6 2 C O M B O S P E C IA L ALL SEATS $ 5 .0 0 DUMB & DUMBER p g u Plu. 5 SHOWINGS Of M R . PAYBACK p g u C O M P L E T E S H O W S o» 1 0 0 4 0 0 7 :0 0 10 0 0 OUTBREAK 1 1 5 4 1 5 7 2 0 10 10 R oiG iut ROOMMATES 12 0 0 2 3 0 5 0 0 7 3 0 10 0 0 PG T H E THE MANGIER 12 ’ 5 5 0 0 M S R S U M O HIDEAWAY 2 3 5 7 2 0 R s u m o BOYS on the SIDE 12 00 2 3 5 5 10 7 4 5 10 20 R s u m o • SHAWSHAHK REDEMPTION 12 50 4 0 0 7 10 10 10 R D O W • BULLETS OYER BROADWAY 12 3 5 2 55 5 15 7 3 5 9 5 5 R s n « 0 • LEGENDS OF THE FALL 1 15 4 10 7 OS 10 0 0 R D O W BEFORE SUNRISE 1 30 4 15 7 10 9 55 It DO t r • PULP FICTION i 00 4 00 7 00 10 00 R 3H X GREAT HILLS 8 ,7 & | US 1 8 3 * O M A T HILLS T R A IL 7 9 4 - 8 0 7 6 | • BULLETS OVER BROADWAY 2 20 4 40 7 10 9 30 R s u m o HIDEAWAY 2 50 5 15 7 40 10 0 5 R MSMt MAN of th« HOUSE 2 45 5 15 7 4 5 10 0 0 PG ZEES JUST CAUSE 2 4 0 5 0 5 7 30 9 55 t o o tr BOYS on the SIDE 2 30 4 55 7 20 9 45 R s u m o • LITTLE WOMEN 2 15 4 35 7 0 5 9 25 PG s u m o BEFORE SUNRISE 2 35 4 50 7 20 9 40 R s tlM O • PULP FICTION 1 0 0 4 0 0 7 0 0 10 0 0 R DOltr G IFT C E R T IFIC A T E S ON SALE Page 20 Thursday, March 2 3 ,1 9 9 5 T he D aily T e xa n Ex-CIA officer Howard denies ‘hurting America Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — E d w a r d L e e H o w a r d , th e f ir e d C IA o ffic e r b la m e d fo r e x p o s in g R u s s ia n s w h o sp ied for th e U n ited S tates, a d m its h e co o p e r­ a te d w ith th e KGB a fte r h e fled to M o sc o w b u t d e n ie s re v e a lin g a n y in fo rm atio n " th a t c o u ld h u rt A m erica." T h e 4 3 - v e a r - o ld f o r m e r s p y , s ti ll w a n te d in W a s h in g to n fo r e s p io n a g e , a s s e r te d for th e first t im e th a t b e f o r e h e w a s f ire d in 1983 t h e C IA in te n d e d h im to w o rk w ith a $250 m illio n technical e a v e s d r o p p i n g p r o je c t in M o s c o w — n o t w ith h u m a n ag e n ts. H o w a r d , in a n in te r v ie w w ith T h e A sso c ia te d P ress, also rev e ale d th at h e w as in th e S oviet U nion u n d e r KGB p ro te c tio n just th ree d a y s after h e used h is CIA tr a in in g to slip fro m ro u n d -th e -c lo c k FBI s u r v e illa n c e in N e w M ex ico in S e p te m b e r 1985. A n d he claim ed th a t the KGB h e lp e d h im visit the U n ite d S tate s u n d e r an a ssu m e d n a m e in 1986 and a rra n g e d for him to see U.S. g o v e rn m e n t files ab o u t h is case. H is d is c lo s u r e s c a m e in a s e r ie s o f te le p h o n e in te rv ie w s w ith th e AP th is w e e k fro m h is h o u se o u ts id e M o scow a n d in h is new b o o k , Safe Hou^c, p u b lis h e d th is m o n th . "M y b a ttle w a s w ith th e CIA. It w a s n 't w ith the A m erican p e o p le ," H o w a rd said in an interview . "I n e v e r g av e in fo rm atio n th a t co u ld h u r t A m erica o r A m e r ic a n s . I m a d e s o m e m i s t a k e s — n o t th a t th e y 'll e v e r fo rg iv e me. B ut m y a n g e r, m y h id in g h e re w as d ire c te d at the CIA. M a y b e now th a t CIA is n 't as p o p u la r, so m e p eo p le w ill u n d e r s ta n d m e." "I h ad to c o o p e ra te to a certain e x te n t to get by, H o w a rd sa id of h is d ea lin g s w ith the1 KGB, w hich p ro v id e d h im a M oscow a p a rtm e n t a n d a d ac h a or c o u n try h o u s e a n d p aid h im a sa la ry for five years u n til he se t u p a tra d e co n su ltin g b u sin e ss. H e a d m its in th e b o o k th a t h e id e n tif ie d p h o ­ to g ra p h s o f p e o p le he h a d w o rk e d w ith, d escribed g e n e ra l CIA p ro c e d u re s for re c ru itin g a g e n ts a n d a d v is e d the C u b a n s on th e b est w ay to try to recruit a le sb ia n CIA agent. W as th at useful to th e KGB? "I can'f d e n y th a t," H o w a rd said . " I 'm n o t g o in g to in su lt a n y b o d y s i n t e l l i g e n c e , b u t I d o n 't w a n t to i n c r i m i n a t e m y se lf.” " T e c h n ic a lly , th e fact th a t E d H o w a rd w o rk e d for th e CIA is'classified T he L angley floor p lan is cla ssifie d ,” h e said. " A lot of sections in the book p ro b a b ly w ill h elp p ro se c u to rs b u t I w a n te d a bo o k th a t h a d cre d ib ility .” H o w a rd said he k n e w th e C IA 's R ussian a g e n ts a n d M o sc o w m e e tin g s ite s o n ly by c o d e n a m e s, a n d office go ssip m ig h t h a v e giv en him useful clues to th e id e n tities of " m a y b e o n e o r tw o ." B ut h e says in the b o o k , " I d id not give the S ovi­ ets a n y n a m e s or d e s c rip tio n s of S oviet o r A m eri­ can h u m a n a sse ts, n o r te ll th e m a n y th in g a b o u t o p e r a tio n s in M o sc o w th a t th e y d id n o t a lre a d y k n o w ." H e w as to w o rk on " a technical su rv eillan c e p ro ­ ject, e a v e s d r o p p in g ," H o w a r d s a id in th e in te r ­ v ie w . " I w a s s u p p o s e d to b e c r a w lin g a r o u n d M oscow at n ig h t in stallin g th e se devices, c o n n e ct­ ing 'a ' to 'b ' a n d flip p in g th is sw itc h .” H e said th e project cost $250 m illion in 1983 an d w as " re la te d to Star W a rs," b u t he w o u ld give no fu rth e r details. H e d id say the p ro jec t h a s b e e n c o m p ro m ise d by th e tim e h e fled to M oscow in 1985. "T h e y th re w th is a p p a r a tu s on th e d e s k in fro n t o f m e. T h ey k n e w m o re a b o u t it th a n I d id .' H o w a rd sa id h e c o n c ea le d th e tech n ical project a n d g a v e D a v id W ise , w h o w r o te a 1988 b o o k a b o u t h im , th e im p r e s s io n h e w a s to w o rk w ith a g e n ts "b e c a u se I d id n 't w a n t to a n g e r th e CIA . I w a n te d m y w ife a n d son to b e allo w ed to com e live w ith m e. So I p ro te c te d th e p ro jec t. I 'm still n o t ta lk in g ." E x -C IA officer Edward Lee Howard strolled alon g the Arbat, a pedestrian walkway in M oscow , W ednesday A S S O C IA T E D P R E S S Hunger, violence set mood in Rwandan refugee camps Associated Press ^ NAIROBI, K enya — The R w and an refugee crisis k e e p s c o m in g b ack to te rr o r iz e th o se w h o created the terror, as starvation an d fu r­ th e r violence loom over refugee c a m p s filled w ith th o u sa n d s o f suspected killers. N ea rly a y ear a fte r H u tu ex tre m ists k illed a n e s tim a te d 500,000 p eople, few le a d e rs o f th e g e n o c id e h a v e been a r r e s te d . I n s te a d , te n s of th o u s a n d s of p e o p le w h o ca rrie d it o u t h av e rec eiv e d shelter, food a n d m e d ica l c a re fro m p riv a te c h a ritie s a n d U .N . a g e n ­ cies at re fu g e e cam p s. N o w , d o n o r n a t i o n s a r e b a l k i n g a t b a n k ro llin g su sp e c te d killers, a n d aid w o rk ­ e r s a re w a r n in g o f food s h o r ta g e s a m o n g th e 2 m illio n refugees. "W e h a v e b o tc h e d the job a n d a re n o w at a loss a b o u t h o w to fix it," A. Jo h n W atson, ex e cu tiv e d ire c to r of CARE C a n a d a , re c e n t­ ly w ro te o f th e w o rld co m m u n ity . . , " W e 'v e a ll b e e n a w a r e o f t h e m o r a l d ile m m a ,” sa id U.S. A ssista n t S e c re ta ry of S ta te P h y llis O a k le y . " N o n e o f u s h a s th e m e a n s to so lv e it." T h e U .N . H ig h C o m m i s s i o n e r f o r R efugees a n d W orld Food P ro g ram said this w ee k th a t th e y a lre a d y h a v e c u t food ratio n s in so m e p la ce s an d m ay h a v e to cu t fu rth e r b e c a u s e d o n o r n a tio n s h a v e p le d g e d o n ly h alf th e fo o d n e e d e d th is year. "C o u n tries think there sho u ld be a quick fix to the R w andan refugee crisis," said U N H C R s p o k e s w o m a n S y lv a n a F o a. 1 h e y d o n t u n d ersta n d w h y these people d o n 't go hom e." D o n o rs a ls o k n o w th a t f o rm e r g o v e r n ­ m e n t o f f ic ia ls , s o ld i e r s , m il i t i a m e n a n d o th e r w a r crim es su sp e cts h o ld sw a y in the c a m p s . T h e y h a v e k ille d a n d in tim id a te d th o se w h o w o u ld re tu rn h o m e a n d h o rd e d relief food for th em selves, all th e w h ile p lo t­ tin g th e ir re tu rn to p o w e r in R w a n d a. " P e o p le d o n 't w a n t to c h ip in $10 o r $20 .... ^ o u t o f th e ir s a la ry to feed a H u tu k ille r," said M a rk R ich ard so n , sp o k e sm a n in N a iro ­ bi for CA RE C a n ad a . H i U r C A R E 's W a tso n n o te d in a recen t article in th e Toronto Clobe and Mail th a t m a n y fac­ to rs c o n trib u te d to th e refugee crisis: T he U n ited N a tio n s w ith d re w p ea ce k ee p ­ e rs fro m R w a n d a at th e sta rt o f th e g e n o ­ cide; F ran ce se n t tro o p s to p ro te c t th e fo r­ m e r g o v e r n m e n t fro m p o ssib le c a p tu r e at th e e n d of th e gen o cid e; refugee h o st c o u n ­ tries d id n o t a rre st th e retrea tin g a rm y an d o th e r su sp e cts as th e y arriv ed in exile; g o v ­ e rn m e n ts a re no t a rre stin g su sp e cts in their c o u n trie s ; a n d a id o r g a n iz a tio n s se t u p a c a m p s y s te m th a t p u t R w a n d a 's f o r m e r le a d e rs in ch a rg e of th e refu g ee p o p u la tio n . P e r h a p s th o s e s u n k m o st d e e p ly in th e eth ica l b o g a re th e h u m a n ita ria n o rg a n iz a ­ tions. T hese a re the p eo p le w h o w o rk d aily w ith th e refugees, w h o m o st o ften face the q u e stio n of w h e th e r it is rig h t to h e lp th o se " w h o b lu d e e o n e d . hack ed , b u rn e d o r sh o t w h o b lu d g e o n e d , hacked, b u rn e d o r sh o t to d e a th u n a rm e d m en, w o m e n a n d ch ild ren . "T his is the b ig issue a m o n g a id w orkers. W e ta lk a b o u t it all th e tim e ," s a id L a u ra A n n M y e rs , a w o r k e r f o r th e A m e r ic a n R efugee C o m m itte e , w h ic h p ro v id e s tra n s ­ p o rta tio n a n d h e a lth p ro g ra m s in Z aire. M y e rs a n d m a n y o t h e r h u m a n i t a r i a n w o r k e r s b e l ie v e th a t " i f s o m e o n e n e e d s h elp, y o u give-it to th em ,' she sa id . T h ey a r g u e th a t a lth o u g h te n s o f th o u ­ s a n d s in th e c a m p s a r e k ill e r s , th e v a s t m a jo rity a re in n o c e n ts w h o fle d r e v e n g e killings b y the v ic to rio u s T u tsi-led rebels. Som e d e c lin e to ev en c o n s id e r th e q u e s ­ tion, a p h ilo s o p h y th at h a s led to g en o c id e su sp e cts o n ca m p pay ro lls A m ong paid em ployees at an o rp h a n center in Zaire is a m an w ho identifies him self as a form er political com m entator for R adio M illes C ollines, w hich incited m assacres by b ro a d ­ casting ethnic h ate m essages. H u n d re d s, p e r­ to h a p s th o u sa n d s of o th e r su sp ects are p. h a p s th o u sa n d s of o th e r su spects are paid as en g in ee rs, m edical w o rk e rs, latrin e d igg ers, drivers an d other staff for the m any prc >grams that keep the cam ps operating. E ven aid g ro u p s th a t fin d this d ista ste fu l sa y it is to o d a n g e ro u s to fire ex tre m ist le a d ­ e r s o n c e th e y a re id e n tif ie d b e c a u s e th e y su m m o n m o b s o f refu g ee s to p ro test. O v e r th e m o n th s, m o re th a n a d o z e n aid o rg a n iz a tio n s h av e p u lle d o u t of th e cam ps, s a y in g th e y re to o d a n g e r o u s O th e rs said th e y co u ld no lo n g e r sto m ac h a sy stem th a t a id s R w a n d a 's killers. " O n e h a s to feel so rry for th e h u m a n ita ri­ a n o rg a n iz a tio n s b e c a u s e th e y c o n trib u te d to th e p ro b le m a n d th e re 's n o w ay for th e m to r a tio n a liz e th e ir w a y o u t of th e d ile m ­ m a ," s a id A lex d e W a a l o f th e L o n d o n - b ased A frican R ights. "B u t th e so lu tio n is n o t in their h a n d s. It's in th e h a n d s of g o v e rn m e n ts , a n d g o v e rn ­ m e n ts are n o t m a k in g any m oves (Tfie Jean JloUozvay JLzuard for ‘Teaching ‘Excellence in or L iS eral A TfaturalScien Selected by students from student nominations N om ination fo rm s available in all C ollege C o u n c il Offices, W est Mall B u ild in g 3.104 or W.C. H o g g 109 P le a se turn in to W M B 3.104 or W C H 109 D e ad line: Friday. March 24, 1995 CHECK OUT THE COUPON SECTION THE DAILY THAN TUESDAYS E A R N 3 H O U R S C R ED IT B Y EXAM AT UT! SAVE T IM E $ S A V E $ COURSE CLASS OATES EXAM DATE COURSE CLASS DATES EXAM DATE j ECO 303 April 1,2,4,6,9,11 APRIL 12 1 GOV 31OL Mar 24-27 M 305G April 3-6,11 (PL E A SE A S K FRONT D E S K FOR SU G G E ST E D RE A D IN G S) MARCH 29 APRIL 12 PSY 301 April 7-10 S0 C 302 April 7-9 APRIL 12 APRIL 12 CH 304K March 24-27 April 4-6,10-11 E 306* ECO 302 April 1-3,8-10 MARCH 29 APRIL 12 APRIL 12 House $l 10 PER COURSE** TUTO * * D o e s not include cost o f exam RsVN 472-6666 ! Excellence In Lea 2 4 0 0 P e a r l S t ., A r n in g Since 1 9 80 .listín , T X 7 8 7 0 5 -Y ou may take the E306 exam if you have alreai jy taken at the U T cam pus prior to O c to b e r '94 P L E A S E N O T E : H o u s e o fT u t o r s offers p r e p c o i irses, n o t the e x a m . C o u r s e s a r e n o t g u a ra n te e d . i] THANKS FOR 20 < GREAT YEARS! 1975 Prices I L IM IT S PER CUSTOMER, NOT AVAILABLE ON DELIVERY ►On A l l O r i g i n a l M e n l I S u b s E v e r y M o n d a y I n M a r c h ► Celebrate With U s!! ► m b? C u S i \ ciKivvr s w i m i m G et y o u r FREE1 s: land save $1 onalL r su b sa t TOP i GAMES S P O R T S ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H j ,-L ■* ' IR A D !* ‘SeeyourTe*anCafd I D M m • Directory for Details " T hll¿±1 *, . ; I G E T V O U B CA RD from any participating I T e x a n C a r d I a d v e r tise r 1! Or mail a stamped, eelf-addressed #10 envelope to TexanCard, P.O Box D, Austin, TX 76713, ’Offer good only while supply lasts, i U Crossword ACROSS 1 S loughs 5 1978 B u jo ld film 9 T ousle 13 Deseret, no w 14 Shows skittishn ess 1 5 W ithin: Prefix 1 6 Get one s go at 17 Ivory tusk thief? 19 Zitherlike in stru m e n t 21 Give up 22 N oted N o rm an 23 Go w ith o u t air c o n d itio n in g 25 Anim al to h o p into bed w ith? 2 9 G irder 30 Was a m e n to r to 35 Put d o w n 36 M useum near M alibu 38 Brazilian b o o te r 39 D ram atic m usical w ork 41 Poplar 42 Very la rge a p pa rition s? 4 5 De Staél and others 49 R edolence 50 Tea-party crasher 51 1968 W inter O lym p ics site 55 Z ookeeper? 58 Florida 59 Pass over 6 0 K id’s nam e ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PÜZZLE T h e D a il y T e x a n Thursday, March 23,1995 Page 21 _ # E d ite d b y W il l S h o rtz N o. 0 2 0 9 61 F onda in “ My ? 5 5 s S i 10 11 15 DOWN 25 26 27 22 23 24 13 16 19 35 39 50 55 59 62 Darling C lem entine" 62 U n th inking resp on se 63 Deal p re ce d e r 64 Layover 1 Pat on the b a ck 2 F ootb all s A rm strong 3 W in g d in g 4 S w indle 5 M exican h o rsen ian 6 P inguid 7 D e b u ssy's “ La 8 T em pe sch 9 P alladium , e.g. 10 Awaiting ignition 11 C o o p e rs to w n ’s C a rlton 12 M ore vexed 14 off (ren ou nce) 18 T reacly 20 Pair off 23 Peep show s and the like 24 Lean and stro n g 25 R odin work, w ith “ The" 26 Up to the jo b 27 At hand 28 In reserve 31 Som e brushw ork 1I § 15 18 21 31 ■38 ■58 1 L 64 ■ | 17 20 J ■ 28 30 1 36 37 ■ 40 42 43 44 49 ■ ■ 51 56 57 60 ■ 1 63 32 33 3 4 52 53 5 4 45 46 47 48 Puzzle by Richard Thom as 32 M an" (1984 flick) 43 Rom an odist 44 G land prefix 3 3 I O or U A bb r 4 5 C o lle ge d e clara tion 34 C ubs h a n g o u ts 46 g U(jg e t rival 3 6 Flag w a ver 4 7 Pinkie, e g 3 7 Vacation tim e s *8 C r¡tic a abroad 51 E ssence 52 P ooped 53 V e g a s c o n ste lla tio n 54 Lay eyes on 56 TV mfr. 57 C a co p h o n y \Jfiip\/0nneSiar Get answers to any three clues valley by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 5656 (75C each minute). 41 Q u o ta tio n no tation Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU ¡T77* ...AND UJE'VE SCHEDULED ANOTHER. BREAKFAST FOR YOU, SIR... / ^ I f a S i t ™ W E THINK GINGRICH'S AN T!-BREAKFAST B IL I A W INNER FOR U S! THIS COULD BE THE VETO NJE'VE BEEN L00KJH6 FOR'. USE YOUR T e x a n C a r d and SAVE AT OVER 200 LOCATIONS! ken s world HEY / TtiFS SOlfiAr PouQtlV N f L A i H i T i n r you s o u p m o P d C s n t C o n e u i t h B A T T E ^ e x ! ThouchT T o ., Co^LO a x f * U/CU, X U+ÍV7 St&J * ?!>- yflTEsZPiAY, Y* a í t e v ' * e > e \ / e r a - l > - t h e l U U e p e o p l e v o e r e - i o v - c e c l 4 o a d o p t b G a r v x v v\o^ Around Campus is a daily col­ umn lis tin g U n iv ersity -related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organizations registered with the C a m p u s A c tiv it ie s Office. Announcements must be submitted on the proper form by noon two days before publication. Forms are available at the Daily Texan o ffic e at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. You may now subm it Around C a m p u s e n tr ie s by e-m ail at: a r o u n d c @ u t x s v s .c c .u te x a s .e d u . Please in clu de the name of the sponsoring organization, location, time and date of event, date of announcem ent, a contact phone number and other relevant infor­ m ation.Also, please include the date of the announcement in the subject heading. Q uestion s and re g a rd in g Around Campus may also be e-mailed to this address. Otherwise, please direct q-uestions to Kevin Williamson at 471-4591. The Daily Texan reserv es the right to edit submissions. MEETINGS O vereaters Anonym ous m eets from noon-1 p.m. Thursdays in the Texas Union African American Cul­ ture Room (4.110). For more infor­ mation call Clyde at 371-9662. Alpha Phi Omega and Students United for Rape Elimination spon­ sor safe w alks home from 9 p.m. until 2 a.m. on Tuesdays and Thurs­ days. The service is based at the U ndergraduate Library. Students can get a walk home from anywhere on campus by calling 471-7778. Association of Latin American Students meets 7 p.m. Thursdays in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.304. For more information call Milton at 389- 2104 or Miriam at 416-9093. Pre-Veterinary Association meets 7:30 p.m. every other M onday in the Texas Union Chicano Culture Room (4.206). For more information call Marty at 708-8243 or Jennie at 707-7612. Intervarsity Christian F ellow ­ in sh ip m eets 7 p.m. T hu rsdays Calhoun 100. For more information call Christy Wooten at 505-2604. Hindu Students Council meets 7- in R obert A. 8 p.m . T h u rsd a y s Welch Hall 2.316. Gita stu dy se s­ sions are held every other week. For more information call Swati at 495- 3418. T exas U n ion E n v iro n m en tal Committee meets 4 p.m. Thursdays in the T exas Union G o v e rn o rs' Room (3.116). For more information call Holly at 836-3157. C hin Woo M artial A rts C lu b meets 6.30 p.m. Thursdays in the R ecreation al S p o rts C en ter. For more information call Patty Sun at 495-EVEN. UT Taekwan-Do Club has class­ es from 7-8:30 p.m. and from 8:30-10 p.m. Thursdays. Beginners are wel­ come. For more inform ation call Diana Hun at 452-5822. Christian Science Organization meets 6-7 p.m. T hursdays in the Texas Union Asian Culture Room (4.224) Texas Squash meets Thursdays at 6 p.m. on the 10th floor of L. fh eo Bellmont Hall. For more inform a­ tion call Amit at 477-8865 or David at 471-6806. C am p u s A dventists and other Sabbath-keeping Christians meet at noon every Friday in U niversity Teaching Center 1.136. For more information call Edwin de Angel at 479-8280. N a tio n a l O rg a n iz a tio n fo r Women meets at 7 p.m. Feb. 26 in im m c r * AROUND CAMPUS the Texas Union Building African- American Culture Room (4.110). For more information call 462-9809. A lcoh olics Anonymofls holds closed meetings from noon-1 p.m. in Paulist H all of St. A u stin 's Catholic Church, 2026 Guadalupe St. The Asian Relations Committee will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Building Battle Oaks Room (2.404). We'll be discussing a new A sian A m erican h istorical exhibit for the Texas Union Building and the campaign for fair immigra­ tion policy. Call Andrew Chin at 471-8325 for more information. Society of Professional Journal­ ists will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday at Scholz Garden, 1607 San Jacinto St. Former Texas railroad commission­ er Mary Scott Nabers will speak. For more information call Jessann Bias at 836-6815 or Griff Singer at 471 - 1993. T exas Society of Professio n al E n g in eers w ill m eet at 6 p.m . Thursday. Ron Anderson, treasurer of the state chapter, will speak. For more information call 471-0221. Students Against Drunk Driving will meet at 6 p.m . T h u rsday in Education Building 330. Representa­ tives of the Texas Alcoholic Bever­ ages Com m ission will speak. For more information call 474-2325. Asian Business Students Associ­ ation 2will meet at 6:15 p.m. Thurs­ day in University Teaching Center 4.110. Members of the alumni panel will speak. For more information call 445-4871. N atio n al O rg a n iz a tio n for Women will meet at 7 p.m. Thurs­ day in the Texas Union Building A frican-Am erican C ulture Room (4.110). For more information call 462-9809. SHORT COURSES ~ Learning Skills Center is regis­ tering studen ts for the follow ing courses: "Study Strategies," "Speed Reading," "Final Exam Review for M 408C" and "MCAT: The Writing S a m p le ." Enroll at B eau ford H. Jester Center A332. For more infor­ mation call-471-3614. Probe Center Students will offer "A p o lo g e tic s for Post-M odern Tim es," part of a course series by research associate Greg Grooms, at 3:30 p.m. T h u rsd ay in the Probe Center, D obie M all Suite 36. For more information call 505-0105. FILM/LECTURE/ DISCUSSION Preservation and Conservation Studies and the Graduate School of Library and Information Science w ill h ost "S ta n d in g on Sh iftin g Sands," a talk by James Druzik, a conservation scientist at the Geddy Museum, at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in Education Building 556. For more information call Bonnie Orr at 471- 8289. Veritas will host a lecture on the im po rtan ce of litu rg y at 7 p.m. Thursday in University Teaching Center 4.102. For more information call Tim Young at 482-9387. Asian Studies will host "Yankee Encounters with India: Represent­ ing and N e g o tiatin g C u ltu ral Boundaries Through Trade (1785- 1854)," a lecture by Susan Bean of the P eabody M useum , at 3 p.m. Thursday in the Asian Studies Con­ ference Room on the fourth floor of the Will C. Hogg Building. For more inform ation call Asian Studies at 471-5811. Asian Studies will host "Contem­ porary Japanese Politics,' a lecture by Albert Craig of Harvard Univer­ sity, at 5:30 p.m. in the Asian Stud­ ies Conference Room on the fourth floor of the Will C. Hogg Building. For more inform ation call A sian Studies at 471-5811. Center for Post-Soviet and East European Studies will host "Yaku­ tia: N ew P rospects for D evelop ­ ment," a lecture by Bella Bychkova, an exchange student in the Gradu­ ate School of Business from Yakutia, at noon Thursday in Calhoun Hall 422. For more information call Celia Cole at 471-7782. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES Student Volunteer Center seeks students interested in law to assist in a legal library. Volunteers will assist in shelving, checking, index­ ing newspaper clippings and per­ form other tasks. For more informa­ tion call 471-6161. OTHER Undergraduate Advising Center will offer an informational program at 3 p.m. Thursday in Peter T. Flawn Academic Center 1. Study Abroad Office is taking applications for the Seelinger Schol­ arship su ppo rtin g study abroad . U.S. citizens who are UT students (graduate or undergraduate) are eli­ gible for this $500 scholarship con­ tingent upon acceptance in a UT stu dy abroad program . Applica-"* tions are available at the Interna­ tional Hospitality Council of Austin located in the UT In tern ation al Office, 2622 Wichita St. 222, 471- 1211; and at the Stu d y A broad Office, Carothers Residence Hall 23, 471-6490. Application deadline is April 12. Study Abroad Office holds infor­ m ation se ssio n s in the Stu d y Abroad Office, Carothers Residence Hall 23, at the follow ing times: 4 p.m. M onday, 3 p.m. T uesday , 2 p.m. W ednesday, 1:30 p.m. Thurs­ day and 11 a.m. Friday. For more information call 471-6490. Jester Dormitory Hall G overn­ ment will hold band auditions for Jamfest '95 at 5 p.m. March 23. For more information call Maria at 495- 2549. UT Designated Driver Program offers free cab rides to UT students and up to three guests from 11 p.m.- 3 a.m. Thursday-Saturday nights. Call 471-5200. M easu rem en t and E valu ation C enter w ill offer the G ram m ar, Spelling and Punctuation Test and the Word Processing Test on hourly from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. March 22. There will be no registration the day of the exam. Students must register and pay the test fee on the day prior to the exam at the Measurement and Evaluation Center, 2616 Wichita St. For more information call 471-3032. M easu rem en t and Evaluation Center will administer the follow­ ing exams for credit and placement at 7 p.m. on March 29: JPN ($40), GOV 310L ($40), CHEM 301 ($30), and CHEM 304K ($45). Test fees can be paid from 2-6 p.m. on the test day at the Beauford H. Jester Center ticket office. For more information call 471-3032. TASP Office announces that Fri­ day is the postmark deadline for the last TASP test of the spring semes­ ter, to be offered April 22. Registra­ tion before this deadline is $26. Late registration is $46. Students may pick up a registration bulletin in the TASP Office, Peter T. Flawn Acade­ mic Center 33. Students who wish to enroll in summer or fall classes and who have accumulated nine or m ore sem ester hours m ust have TASP scores on record with the Uni­ versity For more information call 471-TASP. e.wild LOW-VAAiVTTLVlMCE MA-vs€> toMe-n**e me-SF* ^>'#ici£>rE .1 0- • \«vjre*OJGH rx t-vAvFi. a - UtOCeWetAUD ÍT SVT UtíCS, 1\ Awy*jAy R&T VJ>v X D ( i MREOA CQbPSl .'ff. «OROe» vAvi vsi*t m \vicoJ5r pt «*4 V/^Jt U T - yrORe v n A l l I s W e l l w ( a s w e l l S í R o s w e l l PIZZA GUY yt)uVe o u td o n e iouRSCLf, ch i P. TVPS v ir t u a l- R E A l/ t y P i z z a IS'SUST LIKE t h e KIND WE" WAKE HERE/ THANKS. X TRIED TO G ET IT AS CLOSE AS T COULD TO A REAL SMILEYS PIZZA. HEY, t h e RE'5 A HAIR in i t / y f o f c o u r s e T T H E F U S C O B R O T H E R S ALL IN ALL, RoLF, lT*S BEEN A VERY n iL D WINTER... by J.C. Duffy • Yoo -see, no w o rw v N 0 rx>t, Nenvi ki ... avk? v e t rv STill tOOfAVter-XiVXo 2\«6y?) a tewynt -statoaíkít: (y»H*r At that moment Darla kne*J she Had met her iUce Charm»» \ \ I P W Y A c» RrvaV J c - a r » / \ ! Y - C* FOCUS Sh in y, h a ppy peo ple T h e D a ily T e x a n ■ ■' THURSDAY, MARCH 2 3 ,19 9 5 22 Sally was not happy. So she dropped out of school. "Being smart was never my problem. Actually sto ry by Jam es Hibberd I DAHY TEXAN STAFF going to school was," she said. Sally was still not happy. So she began taking drugs. "A m phetam ines — crank, mainly — oh, and coke." Still not happy, Sally s o u g h t solace from gang m em bers. "Stu d en ts h av e m any issues o f separation — separation from the fam ily and leaving hom e," M orton said. "A lso the increased responsibility o f being ind ep end en t and the tem ptations of sex, d ru gs and rock and roll add to that stre ss." "I w a s into v e r y u n h e a lth y ulation. And w hile the receivers of the nearly 1 m illion p rescrip tions w ritten each m onth along w ith the doctors w riting them m ay seem to agree, there is still a certain level of n e rv o u sn e ss su rro u n d in g P ro z a c 's lo n g ­ term e ffe cts. P erh ap s it's sim ply an inherent cynicism o f d ep ressives, b u t m any feel there m ust be a price to pay for all this norm alcy in pill form . re la tio n sh ip s." F o r five ye ars, S a l ly ' s fa m ily d e s p e r a t e l y s o u g h t to retrieve s o m e s e m b l a n c e of the Sally t h e y used to k no w . T he a n x ­ i o u s , s e l f - d e s t r u c t i v e p e r s o n w h o slept all d a y and d i s a p ­ pe a re d at nig ht w a s a stranger. But kindness didn't work. Nei­ ther did reasoning nor punish­ ment. By the time Sally was bulimic, her family decid­ ed hospitalization was the key and a year of intense therapy followed. Did therapy change Sally? N o. "I had trouble ju st gettin g out of and brushing m y te eth ," she bed said . T h e psychiatrists w h o cam e and w en t never said d ep ression w as the problem . Rather, it w as S a lly 's fam i­ ly th a t first suggested her troubles m ay be rooted in so m eth in g deeper than rebellion and attitu d e. They stro n g ly urged her to talk to a psy­ ch iatrist about trying a d ru g called P rozac. R eluctantly, she agreed . "A fte r about a m onth o f taking Prozac, 1 started feelin g really nor­ m a l," Sally said. "I stop p ed having con fro n tatio n s with m y fam ily and I felt m ore in control o f my m oods.' F a st forw ard a y e a r and a half to Febru ary 1995. The d ays o f eating d isord ers, d rugs an d gangs are far b eh in d her. Sally is b ack in school, a lin g u is­ tics m ajor, and last sem ester earned straight A 's — "even in Ja p a n ese ," she said proudly. H er fam ily relationsh ip s hav e n ever been b etter. And what ab ou t rom antic involve­ m en ts? Th e w ed d ing is in Ju ly . N ot all Prozac sto ries are as d ram atic or su ccessfu l as Sally's, but now that P rozac is th e second most com m on ly p rescribed drug in th e nation, there is little doubt it ha s help ed m any su fferin g from d ep ression. D ou bt, though, d o e s exist w hether P ro /a c is safe or properly prescribed . And these d o u b ts are o f co n cern to m any students, as y o u n g ad ults com p ose tine of the b lo ck s of an tid ep ressan t users. is P ro z a c lead in g th e new w a v e of a n tid e p re ssa n ts, in clu d e Z oloft and w h ich Paxil, w h ose popularity has su rp assed the old er m odel tric y c lic a n tid e p re ssa n ts. B oastin g few er sid e-effects and a success rate to p p in g 65 percent, these "h a p p y p ills " h a v e rev o lu tio n iz e d and m ain stream ed the an tid ep ressant industry sin ce P rozac's introd u ction in 1988. N ot only d o e s its popularity show no sign of slow ing, b u t the d ru g is bein g p rescribed for an ever- w id er range of afflictio n s and bad habits Legally, any d octor can p rescribe an an ti­ d ep ressan t, and P ro z a c's p o p u larity has prom pted m any n on -p sychiatric physicians to prescribe the drug for ailm ents ou tsid e the realm of y o u r typical psychiatric d iso r­ ders. "B u t n on -p sych iatric physicians are not people who are as fam iliar w ith the m ed ica­ tion in term s o f how long the p atien ts need to be treated o r w hat the in d ication s are," M orton said. Scary thing is, a veterinarian can prescribe Prozac. And w h a t's scarier is that they d o — problem atic cats and d ogs are now being "Depression is so insidious that it compounds daily and it's impossible to see the end. The fog is like a cage without a key." — Elizabeth Wurtzel, Prozac Nation. T m a loser baby, so why don't you kill me." — Beck effe cts asid e, on g -term P rozac is not w ithout m ore apparent d raw backs. In p ar­ ticular, the drug has been know n to ham per a couple o f favorite college pastim es: drinking and sex. At least one form er Prozac user, Lillian, stopped taking Prozac because of these inter­ ferences. The recent U T graduate suffered from chronic depression or, as she puts it, "being suicidal every day of my life." D uring her sen ior year at UT, Lillian sou ght help from the cou n seling ce n ­ ter. O n e o f the d octo rs p rescribed P rozac, w h ich sh e took for a few m onths. "I guess m aybe I felt a little b etter," sh e adm its. "B u t nothing that n otice­ ab le." W hat L illian certain ly did notice w as P ro z a c's in flu en ce on her sex drive. "It screw ed up m y sex life, I w as no longer org asm ic," Lillian said. T h e red u ction of sexual sen sation and d riv e is a com m on co m p la in t am o n g u sers o f a n tid e p re ssa n ts, though som e m ales find it increases sexu al end u rance. In L illian 's case, the d o cto r put her on ad ditional m ed ica­ tion to cou n teract the sexual num bing w hich, to her horror, m ad e her gain w eight. If that w eren 't enough, Lillian d is­ covered d istu rb in g things happened w hen she ignored her d o cto r's w arn­ treated with P rozac. T h e ultim ate Scooby snack. So w hy is m ed ication for d ep ressiv es being p rescribed to treat so m any problem s? P ro zac w as the first an tid ep ressan t to solely target the n eu rotransm itter serotonin, a focus that's considered resp onsible for P rozac's su ccess. U n like m ost n eu rotrans­ mitters, serotonin is located throu ghou t the brain w hich m av explain why Prozac effects m ore than ju st d ep ression. But it's not the uses of Prozac that concern skeptics, it's the unknow ns — nam ely, the long-term effects. Will the drug be view ed 50 years from now as the m odern equivalent of penicillin, or o f cocaine? The latter view is held by Prozac critic Dr. Peter Breggin. In his book, '¡'diking Buck to Prozac, Breggin notes P rozac's chem ical sim i­ larity to speed and recalls how am pheta­ m in e s wi re prescribed in the 1960s to treat depression in greater num bers than P ro /ac todav. O nly later did the hazards of long­ term am phetam ine use becom e apparent. On the other end o f the spectrum is Dr. Peter Kram er, w ho has cham pioned Prozac in his bestselling book “Listening to Prozac." W r i t e s Kram er: "It can give social con fi­ dence to the h ab itu ally tim id, m ake the sen­ sitive brash, and lend the in trov ert the skills of a salesm an ." ing and drank alcohol on Prozac. "W ell, y o u 're not supp osed to drink w hile taking the m edication, but of cou rse I did an y w ay ," L illian said. "1 w ould just get totally in san e." Insane how ? She sig hs, "I would get very aggressive and go up to people to say th in g s I w ould never norm ally say, I w a s pretty bitchy. I'd alw ays w an t to take o ff m y clothes in public places, then I'd black ou t and the next day people w ould tell me things I had d on e." Psychiatrists w ill o ften need to try d iffer­ ent an tid ep ressants until finding one that aids the patient w ith a m inim um nu m ber of side effects. For Lillian, though, enough w as enou gh, quit the m ed ication and still suffers She from d e p re ssio n to d a y . T h o u g h L illian w ould try in g a n tid e p re ssa n ts co n s id e r again, she is no longer elig ib le for services at the U niversity and is reluctant to seek help from th e state funded M H M R, w hich offers m ental health s e r v ic e s on a slid in g scale. Like Lillian, Sally a lso finds that P rozac affects d rinking and sex but has a different a ttitu d e to w ard in h ib itio n s on her lifestyle. the "I hav e to w atch m y self b ecau se even just a little bit of alcohol can unleash my an ger so [taking Prozac] en cou rages me n ot to d rin k ," A quick look F o r instance: D o you su ffer fro m ob sessive-com p u lsive d is ­ o r d e r 7 H av e p ro b lem s w ith w eigh t control? P rozac m ig ht h elp . W hat about add)* tions — S m o k in g ? G a m b lin g ? P ro z a c in k ick in g the m a y aid you h a b it. P M S b eco m e the three m ost hated letters in your alp h abet? L et's talk. G uys, do you have d iffi­ cu lty h old ing b ack your tem ­ p er? W hat about y o u r orgasm ? W ell, P rozac could help you con trol both. L ad ies, h a v e D esp ite the v ariety o f uses, thou g h, the prim ary reason for p re scrib in g an an ti depressant is still dep ression. At the U n i­ versity, m ore than 2,000 stu ­ d en ts a y ear seek h elp from the C o u n selin g and M ental H ealth C en ter, w here free individ ual and group therapy is available. A cco rd in g to Dr. G ary M o r­ ton, a psychiatrist at the co u n ­ s e lin g ce n te r, s tu d e n ts have m a n y u n iq u e that a re n 't faced by the general p o p ­ s tre s s e s Sally said. In addition to not experi- eni ing the b en efits of Prozac, Lillian also d id n 't receive the positive fam ily supp ort and en cou rag em en t Sally did. Said L illian: "T h ey d id n 't really w an t to hear about it, they d id n 't think I needed to be on m ed ication, they co u ld ­ n 't un derstand w h y I w as so d ep ressed . 'Ju st get ov er it,' they w ould tell m e." This sort of reaction is w hy m any people, as exhibited by the p seu d onym s used in this story , a re not co m fo rta b le d isclo sin g they use an tid e­ p re ssa n ts U n in fo rm ed friend s and fam ily can often th e m e d ica tio n as a view d a n g ero u s a d d ictiv e and drug, even after seeing the im p ro v em en t d isp lay ed by people like Sally. "I think people are so m isin­ formed that som e who would benefit from Prozac don't take it because it's so taboo," said Sally. "T h ey w orry that taking P H O T O ILLU STR A TIO N B Y N A K A NATHANIEL/Daily Texan Staff it m eans they're crazy." W hether it's the social taboo or fears of long-term conseq u ences, m any P rozac users are u n com fortab le with the notion o f taking an an tid ep ressan t indefinitely. But quitting can be t ch allen g in g task. W hile P rozac and oth er antid ep ressan ts are not ad d ictive and th erefore have no w ith d raw al sym p tom s, som e hav e found Prozac to be their m ental life preserver. And a life p reserver is a d iffi­ cu lt thing to let go of. Phoebe, a photojou rnalism ju nior, is one w h o did. After m oving to A ustin, the 2 1 -year-old found h erself friend less in an un fam iliar tow n. Sh e w as sleepin g all day, and doing poorly in school. Phoebe1 turned to Prozac, but she is quick to point out the d ru g d id n 't cu re her problem s. "It d id n 't really change how m uch I slept or how I did in sch o o l," sh e exp lains. "A ll it did w as change m y attitu d e and m ake me w illing to try hard er, and it d id n 't happen o v ern ig h t." Socially , P h o eb e's sim ilarly im proved. Som e users of an tid ep ressants life w as find they are less intim idated by social situa­ tions. "W h en y o u 're real d ep ressed you d o n 't care (about being so cial) and d o n 't ever w ant to do anything, you just w ant to be by y o u rself," she said. A fter a y ear of tak in g P rozac, P h oebe felt satisfied w ith her grad es, social life and em otion al state. She decided she no longer needed the m ed icatio n . "I think they're good for the tem p orary, to get som eon e out of their d ep ression , but then they need to be w eaned o ff," P hoebe said. T hou g h stay in g on P ro /a c is necessary for som e, Dr. G ary M o rton a lso p ro m o tes P rozac as a tem p o rary solution. "T h is is not a m ed ication that p eople are intend ed to be on for a long tim e," h e said. A s for Sally, w h ose life w as com p letely tran sform ed by P ro /a c , she too w ould con­ sid er q u itting the m ed ication — but not just yet. For the tim e being, Sally is satisfied just living the "n o rm a l" life that for so long elu d ­ ed her —- g oin g to school, w orking a part- tim e job and, m ost im portan t, being happy. N A K A NATHANIEL/Daily Texan Staff N O FEE. N O A N X IE T Y . A N D N O # 2 PENCILS R E Q U IR ED c L G!I!BAN > x I certify that I meet and agree to all Citibank < Appii u tv. Sigt ,iiuie 1 C K N W 3 1 S 3 T H P G 8 8 8 8 S 5 CITIBAN•" CITIBAN<0 c L A S S I C n f l a w » © ‘ W tJ ttA > 1 / 1 H ^ U28 0012 3H54» 18^0 •j/n *\/>«/i/a/ i no* u t t t r * T?!??" V IS A / E ’RE l o o k i n g o u t f o r y o u . S. o' 2-t it ? i § i ¡S n v» o 2 7 £ § -n *X> T _ U* Ui /£ #-» i/i o(u r 3 O Q- X i/i m O 3 m Í r v I fe. J 1, , .■7 7 7 'y a f fi < ft / i % ’■ if k !• ,y 1, ll 1- ■ /> Jj í ' / T • 7 : " 'i ■ : ' < ««■! 3 ci * < % ¿ J/ 4 d 5 ■ 3 T 5 '•<' a , 4 « * k 7 c ■: r H ., - ■ i ■ k •; '• j v. '/. 7 7 t ■' •' :• m 5 ':t # J r& Q Q On i v-' cC L U CD Z 8 b < h-(VO Q Q 3 * u > Z CL. ~ D o o I- V ZUJ cL D o >- UJ X — ~E _ ~ * - — - “ < 1 V lL LU > — Oz , < CL. LU 0 ¿ U 1 i n LU Z i / ) 3 CÜ £ 2 ' T IS ) c r C L C L - r rs D Z 5 UJ U > cX UJ cyi oC UJ CD z z Q CL < r UJ , D_ UJ UJ > £ cL < u Q z cL z z o u £ o h - h - z<• u IS> cL CD o UJ o o V < r - H U I % 1 3, Q 2 ,1 ■ if■■ :e 7. v 8 if?. - y-