i f. %r Hooton Albuquerque pitching coach Burt Hooton is expected to be named pitch- ing coach for the Longhorns. BEST ■ E M Reel vamps Bordello of Blood is the lat­ est in the Tales from the Crypt series. F R O M T M Iarm Falling short The Designated Drivers Program has been unable to raise the $30,000 it needs. T h e Da il y T exa n New clue points to explosive on TWA 800 The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Friday, August 23, 1996 Vol. 95, No. 203 2 Sections 25c Associated Press SM ITHTOW N, N Y. — T races of a chemical residue that m ay be part of an explosive have been fi >und on a piece of TW A Flight 800, . i source involved in the in v e stig a tio n told T h e A s s o c ia te d P re ss T h u r s d a y night. The source said it h as “ cer­ tainly consistent with a bom’a or mis­ sile." The source, who spoke tc» the AP on condition of anonym ity said of the ev id e n c e , “ W h eth er o r n o t a bomb or m issile brought do wn that plane at this point we d on't know for sure." p lan e, a sen io r law e n fo rce m e n t official in W ashington told The AP. T h e s o u r c e m ad e th e re m a rk s w h en a s k e d a b o u t a s to r y in F rid a y 's e d itio n of T he N ew Y ork Times that reported the discovery of the critical chem ical evid ence that an e x p lo s iv e d e v ic e d e to n a te d inside the passenger cabin. H o w e v e r, in v e s tig a to r s s till h av en 't ruled out other scenarios, in c lu d in g th e p o s s ib ility th a t a m e c h a n ic a l fa ilu re c a u se d th e ex p lo sio n that brou ght d ow n the th e FB I Citing senior officials involved in the in v e stig a tio n , the T im es said in c h e m is ts at W ashin gton have found traces of PETN, a chemical in plastic explo­ s iv e s , on a p ie c e o f w re c k a g e retrieved from the je t's p assen ger cabin between rows 17 and 27. lab The fin d in g p ro v id es ev id en ce the je tlin e r w as d estro y ed by an explosive device, but the Times said the chemical is commonly found in many bombs and surface-to-air mis­ siles, making it impossible to know which type of device was involved in the July 17 crash that killed all 230people aboard. , The senior law enforcem ent offi­ cial in Washington who spoke with the AP on condition of anonymity said the Times account was “ kind of exaggerated in saying w e're down to two options, either a bom b or a m issile." being considered. None have been ruled out. No great corner has been tu rn ed in the in v e stig a tio n ," the official said. One official also suggested to the AP th a t th e re are o th e r p o ssib le explanations for the existence of a trace amount of PETN: for example, a passenger, perhaps a soldier who worked with explosives, could have carried a trace amount of the mater­ ial onto the plane inadvertently. “ All three of the theories, includ­ ing a mechanical accident, are still The Times said senior investiga­ tors w ere not yet ready to declare RAINY DAY Welfare bill becomes law Associated Press WASHINGTON — Sw eej >ing aside six decades of social policy, President Clin ton signed welfare legis­ lation Thursday that ends guaranteed cash payments to the poor and demands w o rk from recipients Unusually subdued for a Rose Garden cerem ony, the president called the m easu re “ far from p erfect" and vow ed to prepare see» >nd-term proposals that would ease the sting to need y Americans. “ W e're going to take this historic chance to try to re-create the nation's social bargain with the poor," the president declared. U T p ro fe s s o rs and A u ; tin p o litic ia n s o ffe re d opposing views on the histo ric act. "W elfare does not work fo r either the taxpayers or the recipients," said D em ocratic Rep. Lloyd Doggett. "T h is b ill re p rese n ts the o n ly ch an ce for reform now." R ep u blican Teresa Dog»:;ett, w ho is ch allen gin g Lloyd D og gett for U .S. H o u se of R ep resen tativ es seat, also applauded Presi dent Clinton for signing the bill. But Diana DiNitto, a p rofessor of social work, said neither party protected the ] xx>r or the rights of legal immigrants. "It's not a good day for p oor p eop le," she said. "M y crystal ball isn't saying this will be a help to this country." Marvin Olasky, a UT pro lessor of journalism, said the three-decade-old system needed reform. "T he last 30 years have b een a huge failed experi­ m en t," O lasky, w ho w ro te tw o books on w elfare, said. "This bill eliminates th e negative. And the next step is to accentuate the posi tive." Responsibility for the co antry's neediest citizens, about 12.8 million people, n o w falls to the states in a law that turns over money and power once held in W ashington's grip. It requ ires a lifetim e b e n e fit lim it of five years, stringent requirem ents theit w elfare recipients find work within two years and cuts in food stamps and aid to im migrants and disal >led children. The law will save federal taxpayers about $55 bil­ lion over six years, a cco rd in g to governm ent e sti­ mates. The transformation ends a federal guarantee to the poor that has existed s in c e the New D eal d ays of President Franklin R oosevelt and jealously guarded by generations of Democra tic politicians. Clinton vetoed two p rev io u s Republican w elfare p lan s but em braced th e la te st m easu re to guard ag ain st a ccu satio n s o f b re a k in g a 1992 cam p aig n promise to “ end welfare a s we know it." P residential rival Bob D o le , who lobbied behind the scenes to keep the hi 1 from going to C lin ton 's desk for election-season ap p rov al, quickly accused the W hite House of stealin g Republican thunder. " H e 's d o n e e v e r y th in g b u t c h a n g e p a r t ie s ," groused Dole. Senior W hite House ad visers are steadying them­ selves for a backlash at th e convention. Their argu­ ment to liberal Democrats has been pragmatic: Only a second Clinton term can fix the bill's problems. P lease see Welfare, page 2 L o n g h o rn B a n d s e c tio n le a d e rs K e n n y B e n tle y , le ft, C harles Roeckle, center, and M elanie M oss shield th em ­ selves from light rain falling on the UT cam pus. The stu ­ dents, who had ju s t fin ish ed m orning practice, T hursday a re re s p o n s ib le fo r te a c h in g m a rc h in g te c h n iq u e s to prospective m embers. Clinton to declare nicotine addictive drug Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — President Clinton is set to reverse centuries of U.S. policy that have made tobacco agricultural gold by declaring nicotine an addictive drug and unleashing a crackdown to stop teen­ agers from picking up the habit. T h e lo n g -a w a ite d F oo d and D ru g A d m in istratio n regu latio n o f to b acco , e x p e c te d to be u n v e ile d by C lin to n Friday afternoon, aims to cut in half the 1 m illio n te en -a g e rs w ho sta rt sm o kin g each year. D o c to rs and a n ti-s m o k in g a c tiv is ts hailed the move as a “ courageous step" even as the tobacco industry and its sup­ porters charged that Clinton was acting illegally and costing American jobs. The crackdow n already has spaw ned c o u rt law suits pending in fed­ in N o rth era l C arolina, from cigarette makers who say the FDA h a s no b u s in e s s in its business and from adver­ tisers w ho call the rules an in frin g e m en t of free speech. Clinton N o rth C a ro lin a G ov. Jim Hunt also is considering filing a law­ suit on behalf of the state to block FDA regulation of tobacco. “ It's illegal jurisdiction," said Tobacco Institute spokeswoman Brennan Dawson, ad d ing that the industry w ill exam ine whether to seek an immediate injunction once Clinton releases the rules. But tobacco, long revered as the cu r­ th e A m e ric a n th a t fin a n c e d re n cy Revolution, would be less restricted than any o th e r d ru g th e g o v e rn m e n t has labeled addictive. And taxp ay ers w ould co n tin u e pro­ moting its production through a govern­ ment price-support system. Still, "to b a cco has been exem pt from safety regulations that every other con­ sum er product in the country has been s u b je c te d t o , " sa id U n iv e r s ity o f C alifo rn iar p ro fe s s o r S ta n to n G la n tz , author of The Cigarette Papers “ They're basically going from a privi­ leged status to being treated more like everything else," Glantz said. T h e r e g u la tio n s , e x p e c te d to be announced m a Rose Garden ceremony with anti-tobacco activists and mem bers of Congress, would declare nicotine an addictive drug and treat cigarettes and smokeless tobacco as devices that deliv­ er it. The idea is to snu ff tobacco s appeal as sexv and fun, as well as its availabili­ ty to minors. Although teen smoking already is ille­ gal, 90 percent of all smokers start before age 18. T h a t's so m e 3,000 te e n -a g e rs ev ery dav, 1,000 of whom the governm ent says will eventually die from tobacco-caused disease. C ig a r e tte m a k ers in sist th ey d o n 't e n c o u r a g e te e n -a g e r s to sm o k e , and in ste a d te a c h r e ta ile r s n o t to se ll to minors. But C linton says they do entice teen smoking — and has seized on the issue for his re-election campaign. 4-year graduation schedule goal of new engineering dean STEFAN![CARTER Daily Texan Staff Getting students to graduate in four years is the top p rio rity of Ben S tree tm an , the n ew ly s e le c te d d ean o f th e C o lle g e o f Engineering. C u rre n tly U T M icroelectronics Research Center, Streetman will take over his new position Sept. 1. d ir e c to r th e o f Streetman, 57, is a prominent science and technology adviser to industry' and govern­ m ent. An ad vocate o f the 14-hour cou rse load requirem ent for engineering students, Streetm an said as dean he would propose o th e r m easu res to en co u ra g e stu d en ts to graduate in four \ ears. Streetm an 's selection was the result, of a nationwide search of administrators and fac­ ulty. But UT President Robert Berdahl made the final decision. He is an outstanding scholar, has been a d ynam ic leader of m icroelectron ics center and is a person who has a very strong con­ nection w ith m icro electro n ics ind u stry in Austin," Berdahl said. "W e'll make an out­ standing team ." Streetm an said Thursday he w ould sug­ gest reducing the number of hours required for graduation from 130 hours to about 124 The reduction could not take effect until the summer of 1998, he said. In June, Berdahl approved a "reasonable progress" proposal to increase engineering students full-tim e sem ester load from 12 to 14 hours. A d m in istrato rs in the co lleg e said they would study Streetm an's suggestions. "There is no magic in the number of hours as far as a degree," said A1 Meyer, associate dean for stud ent affairs for the C ollege of E n g in eerin g . "T h e im p o rtan t part is that w hen stud en ts g rad uate w ith a d egree of engineering that thev are productive " Please see Engineering Dean, page 2 INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Name the Hurricane: Just w ho com es up w ith these nam es a nyw ay? G u sta v, Hortense, Fausto. Odile There is a 40 percent chance that no one has nam ed th e ir kids Norbert in about 70 years. ................ Index: Around C am pu s............... 11 Classifieds........................ .12 C om ics............... 11 4 Editorials Entertainm ent....................16 Sports............... 9 State & Local...................... 8 6 University..................... World & N ation................... 3 Ben Streetman was chosen the new dean for the College of Engineering after a nation-wide search. He will begin h is new position Sept. 1. ALFRED BRICE/Daily T e*c- Staf* the crash the result of a criminal act until they can say for sure whether th e e x p lo s io n w as c a u se d by a bomb or a missile. They still hoped to r e tr ie v e m o re w re c k a g e , and were particularly interested in find­ ing metal fragments showing what in v estig ato rs call shock w aves — physical damage left by a blast that s u g g e s ts w h at ty p e of d e v ic e exploded. The source in New York told the Please see TWA, page 2 Local delegates head to Chicago MARK MCKENZIE Daily Texan Staff U pbeat about the com ing election, th e A u stin d e le g a tio n n ex t w e e k 's D em ocratic National Convention said th e e v e n t w o u ld h an d P re s id e n t Clinton an insurmountable lead in the polls. "I'd like to see a unified convention, a big rally, and a big boost to the cam­ p a ig n ," sa id Je s s ic a M a n g ru m , a D em ocratic delegate and UT govern­ m ent senior. At 21, M angrum is the youngest delegate from Austin. Clinton lost Texas to President Bush in 1992, and this year he has lagged b eh in d R e p u b lica n ch a lle n g e r Bob Dole in state polls. Joe Cutbirth, Land C om m issio n er G arry M au ro 's press spokesm an, said Clinton is not ignor­ ing Texas' 32 electoral votes. "W e have spent $300,000 this spring and sum m er on television ads, more than the last three election cycles com ­ bined," Cutbirth said. The p artv 's d ecisio n to put T exas D em o cratic Sen ate cand id ate V ictor Morales in a prime-time speech sched­ uled Tuesday demonstrates that com- Please see Convention, page 2 r a y e ¿ t-riaay, August 2 3 ,1 9 9 6 T h e Da il y T ex a n , Convention Continued from page 1 mitment. T h e D e m o c r a tic c o n v e n tio n extravaganza kicks off on M onday at the U n ited C e n te r in C h ica g o . Superm an actor Christopher Reeve will speak on opening night. N ot to be o u td on e by E lizabeth Dole's performance at the Republican convention, where Dole took a micro­ phone into the audience, first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton will speak at the Democratic convention Tuesday. The Austin delegation is composed of a number of familiar names, includ­ ing Attorney General Dan M orales, U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Austin, Lt. G o v . and Coundlmember Jackie Goodman. B u llo ck Bob Doggett said he is looking forward to the convention. "I expect that the convention yvill focus on our strong commitment to helping families." Doggett said. Lloyd Doggett's opponent, Teresa D oggett, w ho is not related to her opponent, said the convention may not be as successful as hoped in light of recent legislation. Teresa D oggett said she suspects there will be demonstrations by w el­ fare recipients outside the Democratic convention because of Clinton's sign­ ing c f legislation reducing w elfare spending Thursday. Austin delegate Olivia Bistiro said som e delegates are concerned that children are getting the "short aid of the stick" in the welfare debate. But m any A u stin d elegates said that next w eek's convention would be a united. And several parties should help. T exas C o m p tro lle r Jo h n S h arp plans to throw a Texas-size party in Chicago on the 96th floor of the John Hancock Center and all Texas dele­ gates, elected officials and party sup­ porters are invited. . M angrum said she was unsure if she would attend. First-time delegate Margo Frasier, the D em ocratic nom inee for Travis County sheriff, said the convention will fire up delegates. " If there w as anything that su r­ prised me, it's that I d id n 't realize how many parties there were," Frasier said. Clinton is also holding a breakfast for Mauro and key Texas supporters at the White House Friday, Cutbirth said. Clinton designated Mauro the delegation chairman for Texas as well as the chairman of Clinton's presiden­ tial campaign in Texas. Mangrum campaigned at the state convention with about 80 people for the eight elected slots to the national convention. Mangrum said she called several hundred people to seek their support and got some key people to back her. 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Jennifer Spence, Jennifer Wilson Layout Coordinator..............................................................................................................................................juun VVhiiaksr The Daily Texan (U S P S 146 440). a student newspaper at The University of Texas a! Austin, is nubfishcd by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis, Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session. Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), 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 471-1865. For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900. For classified word advertising, call 471-5244. Entire contents copyright 1996 Texas Student Publications. The Daily T exan Mall Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring)......................................................................................... * ........................................ $30.00 55.00 Two Semesters (Fall and Spring)........................................ 20.00 Summer Session................................................... :.................... 75.00 One Year (Fall, Spring and S u m m er).............................. To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904, or to TS P Building C3.200, or call 471-5083. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904. 8/23/96 TWA Continued from page 1 AP, "W h at we have now in itself is not enough. That is why we are so frustrated. So far w e have not seen what we are looking for. So at this point we still don't know for sure." Five days after the crash, investi­ gators found p relim in ary in d ica ­ tions of PETN residue on another piece of w reckage, the right w ing near the fuselage. But a later, more sophisticated test at the FBI lab in W ashin g ton did n ot confirm th at find. The results of the later, definitive test on the other p iece, the Times said, have been known for as long as tw o w e e k s, b u t in v e s tig a to rs kept them top-secret. "W e h av en 't said it because we s t ill d o n 't k n o w fo r su re w h a t brought the plane dow n," a senior in v estigato r told the T im es. " Ju s t having one hit is not enough. W e w on't say it is a bomb or a missile w ith o n e h it on th e p la n e . It is potentially important, but it doesn't get you where you need to g o." If the crash is declared a criminal act, it would be the deadliest crime in American history, surpassing the A p ril 1995 b o m b in g o f a fed eral office bu ilding in O klahom a C ity that killed 168. In o th e r d ev e lo p m e n ts, N A SA in v e s tig a to r s w h o p ro b e d th e C h allen ger space sh u ttle d isaster were called in Thursday to examine specific pieces of TWA Flight 800's wreckage. N ation al T ran sp ortatio n Safety B o ard V ic e C h a irm a n R o b e rt Francis also said salvage operations in tw o of th e th ree d eb ris areas should wrap up this weekend. National Aeronautics and Space A d m in is tra tio n e x p e rts a t the M arshall S p ace Flig h t C en ter in Huntsville, Ala., will examine fuel pum ps, fuel probes and the flight en gin eer's con trol panel, Fran cis said. Calling in NASA underscores the importance o f determining or elim­ inating possible m echanical causes. "T h e y are trying to find o u t any­ thing they can about the possibility of m alfunction," Francis said. The sweep for wreckage from the doom ed flig h t w ill soon c o n c e n ­ tra te on a 4 0 0 -y a rd -b y -4 0 0 -y a rd area of the ocean, dow n from the five square miles that were initially targeted. A u th o r itie s b e lie v e th e y h av e reco v ered all they can fro m tw o other major debris sites. M echanical engineers continue to scrutinize, am ong other things, the recovered pieces o f the center fuel tank. Three pum ps from the center tank are in in v e stig a to rs' h an d s, Francis said. This tank w as virtually em pty for the New Y o rk -to -P aris flig h t, but •bums on the w reckage indicate an explosion occurred there. A m ajor m y ste ry is w h e th e r so m e u n e x ­ plained event set o ff the vapor, or whether an explosive device set off a chain reaction that led to a sec­ ondary explosion. A U S T IN O B /fS Y N CO NFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES gtf • First and Second Trimester • Complete Family Planning Services • Emergency Contraception • Private Office Setting • Board Certified Gynecologist • Female Physician on Staff • Student Discount ( 5 1 2 ) 2 5 0 - 1 0 0 5 9805 Anderson Mill Rd. Austin, TX. 78750 V YEAST INFECTIONS DO YOU HAVE: [7] 0 [71 [7] g en ital itching, irritation, redness, swelling, v a g in a l discharge □ □ s# you h a ve not used I any medication, and are 16 years or older, you may qualify for participa­ tion in a research study. Participants may qualify for the following at no cost: ! Physical & gynecological exam Study-related laboratory tests Study medication Financial compensation for participation ,.„..,.Tara L. Copp Welfare Continued from page 1 "Sham e! Shame! Sham e!" chant­ ed more than 200 people in a picket line outside the White Hoiise orga­ nized by the National Organization for Women. Standing next to three former wel­ fare recipients, Clinton said, 'Today, we are ending welfare as we know it, but I hope this day will be remem­ bered not for what it ended, but for what it began: a new day that offers hope, honors responsibility." Clinton alluded to a package of pro­ posals he will unveil next week to cre­ ate jobs in h ig h -p o verty areas or reward companies that hire welfare recipients. And aides said he wants the Justice Department J o determine whether he can grant a g race period for legal immigrants who will lose benefits. - Clinton's goal is to appease liberal members of his party, including White H ouse aides and Cabinet members, w ho fought against the bill. TlLte Rev. Jesse Jackson warned thi$ week that there will be tension at the Deni ocratic NationalConvention. " The timing of this is not good/' he said. D em ocratic congressional leaders, m a n y of w hom op p osed the b ill; stayed away from the Rose Garden. E v e n M arian W righ t Edelm an, presi dent of the Children's Defense Fund1 and a lon gtim e friend of C lin ton , called the bill signing " a mom * art of shame. Engineering dean Continued from page 1 Neil Armstrong, a professor of civil engineering, who is the new dean for acad em ic affairs in the C ollege of Engineering, said the 120-hour goal for degree programs is feasible. If the num ber o f required cred it hours is lowered, it will come after con­ sultation with the faculty members and reviewing degree programs at other large public universities, Armstrong said. a C h u ck B rad y , Stu d en t Government representative and chemi­ cal engineering junior, said he supports Streetman's plan to reduce the number of required hours. B rad y said he hopes to help Streetman and other adm inistrators modify course loads because of the implementation of the 14-hour require­ m ent "It is a worthwhile project for him to undeitake — I don't know what type of resistance they are going to get from faculirj' Brady said. Af62r receiving his doctorate in elec­ trical engineering from the University in 19*56, Streetman was a professor at the U n iv e rsity o f Illin o is. H e w as recruited by Earnest Gloyna, dean of the U T College of Engineering in 1982, to help develop a microelectronics pro­ gram. Affier teachin g for 30 years, Streetman said shifting to the role of administrator would be difficult. "I liad to convince myself to want to walk away from some of those things! enjoy," Streetman said. "I decided that the College of Engineering was impor­ tant enough for me to take on those new d u ties." COUPON SPECIAL U N I V E R S I T Y Exp 12/1/96 FREE C y C L E fliY I IB Wmmm L i U LOCK OR HELMET W V WITH PURCHASE OF NEW BIKE 2901 N. LAMAR MON-FRI 10-7 SAT 10-6 474-6696 SUN 12-5 WORSHIP with friends th is S>unday, 11:00 a.m. for, by and with stu d e n t s • • contemporary with goo^i music • non-fundam entalist • an open and accepting community. Sermon title : If I only had a brain. Texan Aid Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m. Thursday, 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday........... Monday, 4 p.m. Tuesday, 4 p.m. Friday Classified W o 'd A d s ......................................................11 a m (La st Bu stn ess D ay Prior to Publication) C enter for Clinical Research 12221 f lorth MoPac Expwy. Austin, TX 78758 For m o re inform ation, p le a se call (512)404-1248. LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY (ELCA) 2100 5an Antonio • 472-5461 • Fastor Craig Sommer (located in University Lutheran Center • one block west of Dobie) C H E C K I N G w r r a A p T T A T p r Now choose from ü I I I I H r H I ■ ADVANTAGE AD VA N TAG E P LU S S T U D E N T Unlimited check writing and no monthly A I M fee. Flat S3 monthly serv ice charge; no minimum balance. No monthly ATM fee and no f t ATM transaction fee at UFCU machines. Farns dividends on No monthly ATM fee and no ATM transaction fee at UFCU 4ɧdyy»».£«m» ^vidends on “ more, declared and paid monthly. Maintain minimum $500 balance at ail times to / avoid $5 monthly service charge. mote, declared and paid monthly. jÉIpítahi naititmmM $750 Average Monthly Balance to avoid $5 monthly service charge. fou r convenient checking accounts. University Federal e: R E D i U N o f B 3 n t e r W a y I O N I T B e t i.... D O C Unlimited check writing. No monthly ATM fee and no ATM transaction fee at UFCU machines. 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B rodie Lane Branch 540C B ro d ie Lane M ain Branch 4611 G uadalupe Street Dotote M all Branch 2025 G uadalupe Street Stock Branch 3305 S teck Avenue at Shoal C reek D owntown Branch 702 C olorado Street Taylor B ranch 417 N orth IMain Taylor, Texas Internet A ddress http //w w vsu fcu . org E X THURSDAY'S DOW JO *S: UP 43.661 VOLUME: 437,746,260 WORLD & NATION Army bums 60 nerve gas rockets NEWS BHEFS RBUGE I ^ t .2 Associated Press TOOELE ARMY DEPOT, U ta h — A d e c a d e b e h in d sc h e d u le , th e A rm y b eg an destroying the U.S. stockpile of chemical weapons Thursday in a high-tech incinerator, starting w ith n e rv e -g a s ro c k e ts th a t w e re re d u c e d to ash an d molten aluminum. By d a y 's e n d , th e A rm y plan ned to incinerate 60 M55 rockets containing the deadly n e rv e a g e n t GB — th e first weapons to go in a $12 billion effort to eliminate 31,000 tons o f m u s ta rd an d n e rv e gas packed into 3 m illion rockets, lan d m ines, bom bs, m ortars, missiles and canisters stored in eight states. Congress ordered the Army to d e s tro y ch em ical all w e a p o n s by 1994, b u t th a t deadline was extended to 2004 becau se of chan g in g re g u la ­ tio n s, e n v iro n m e n ta l c h a l­ lenges, congressional m andates th e P e n ta g o n a n d w h a t acknowledges was poor m an­ agement. E ven a fte r th e b u rn in g began, environm ental groups continued their fight, claiming the government suppressed or ignored the dangers. • T w o h o u rs a fte r th e first rockets were destroyed, a Utah hazardous-w aste board reject­ ed 5-2 a last-minute plea for a shu td ow n from opp onents of the incinerator. "W e are off on a very posi­ tive step on a long trail to elim­ inating the hazard of chemical w e a p o n s ,” sa id M aj. Gen. R o b ert O rto n , m a n a g e r for chem ical d em ilita riz a tio n at A b erdeen P roving G ro u n d s' E dgew ood A rsenal in M ary­ land. "W e believe this is the safest way to rid the nation of its chemical arsenal." The $650 million incinerator was built to destroy the 14,000 tons of chemical agents stored th is s a g e b ru s h -c o v e re d at d e s e rt in s ta lla tio n 50 m iles so u th w est of Salt Lake City. T o o ele's arsenal co n tain s 44 p ercen t of the n a tio n 's total chemical stockpile. The b u rn in g will co n tin u e for a 10- to 15-w eek sh ak e - down, followed by a period of about six weeks during which the state of Utah will analyze emission levels and safety pro- cedftres. T hen the state w ill d ecid e w h e th e r to issu e the Army a perm anent license for 24-hour-a-day operations. The Army hopes to complete the d e s tru c tio n o p e ra tio n at Tooele in 2004. Much hinges on the success of the incineration at Tooele: Seven other states have smaller shares of the nation's chemical stockpile and the Army plans to b u ild sim ilar in cin erato rs th e re th o se weapons. d e s tro y to Chemical w eapons are also s to re d at b ases in P u eb lo , Colo.; Pine Bluff, Ark.; Umatil­ la, Ore.; Anniston, Ala.; Rich­ m o n d , Ky.; A b e rd een , M d., and Newport, Ind. There is a sense of urgency, sin ce som e of th e w e a p o n s date to W orld W ar I and are ( p r o ­ leak in g . A t T ooele nounced Too-ILL-uh), w here the weapons are stored in 208 e a rth -c o v e re d co n c re te bunkers, there have been 1,510 repo rted leaks since 1967, 32 this year. "N one of the leaks detected posed a hazard to the public, but it's just not getting any bet­ ter as it sits o ut th ere ,” said Rick Holm es, assistant burn- project manager. The cache of 1.1 m illio n items at Tooele includes 6,000 tons of the W orld W ar II-era nerve gas sarin, three kinds of m ustard agents, five kinds of nerv e ag en ts and the b liste r agent lewisite. The U nited States an d the form er Soviet Union pledged to destroy their chemical arse­ nals in the late 1980s, deciding that burning off the gases was the safest and m ost efficient method. Associated Press GROZNY , R u ssia — B oris Y eltsin denounced his security chief's handling of th e C h ech n y a c risis T h u rsd a y , ra is in g d o u b ts ab out a n ew ly signed truce and deepening the confusion over Russian poli­ cy in the separatist republic. The deal, struck by security chief Alexan­ d er Lebed to p re v en t an all-out R ussian army assault on Grozny, calls for a cease-fire beginning at noon Friday. It also says R ussian troops w ould pull back to their bases at tw o airports on the outskirts of the embattled Chechen capital. Russian "troops will leave Grozny, joint units will take their place and yesterday's enem ies will ensure order in the city and demilitarize it," Lebed said after signing the truce Thursday. But Yeltsin, reappearing after weeks spent m ostly in seclusion, seem ed to suggest a cease-fire w asn't good enough. "W e m ust hold peace talks," he said in a brief inter­ view on Russian TV. Saying he w asn 't "com pletely satisfied with Lebed and his work in Chechnya," the president complained that when Lebed was a presidential candid ate he "co n stan tly ’ promised to end the war. "W ell, he now has pow er, but, re g ret­ tably, there are no visible results of his work in C h ech n y a,” Y eltsin said. Y eltsin has re m a in ed larg ely o u t of the p ic tu re for U.S. Legoland to open in 1999 ■ C O P E N H A G E N , D e n m a rk .— Lego will open its first U.S. Legoland in 1999, bu ildin g the park brick-by- plastic-brick in the them e-park mecca of Southern California. T he D a n ish to y m a k e r h o p e s its brand of gentle thrills will attract fami­ lies with children too young for other a m u se m e n t c o m p a n y sp o k e sm a n P eter A m b eck -M ad sen said Thursday. p a rk s, L eg o lan d w ill b o ast m ild ro lle r­ coasters and m erry-go-rounds m ade to look like the colorful, interlocking Lego bricks. It also will have a Lego M iniland, featuring L illiputian-sized copies of famous buildings and sites built with millions of the tiny plastic blocks. The 24-acre site will be developed in Carlsbad, about 40 miles north of San Diego, at a cost of about $138 million. The company expects nearly 2 mil­ lion visitors a year and a staff of about 700 people, Ambeck-Madsen said. U.S. aids North Korea during food shortage ■ WASHINGTON — A U.S. cargo ship carry in g 13,000 m etric tons of food has arrived in North Korea, offi­ cials said T hursday. It is one of the first such vessels to travel to that coun­ try in 50 years. The Tampa Bay docked on Wednes­ day, coin ciding w ith the a rriv a l of Rep. Tony H all, D -O hio, w ho is in N orth Korea to assess the extent of food shortages there. Severe flooding in North Korea last sum m er destroyed vast stretches of farmland and left a half-million people homeless. M ore flo o d s th is s u m m e r h av e caused an estim ated $1.7 b illion in damage. The Agency for International Devel­ opm ent contribution of rice, com meal and com soya blend is being made to the U.N. World Food Program's em er­ gency feeding effort for North Korea. Boeing 737s face stricter regula­ tions ■ WASHINGTON — Airlines oper­ a tin g th e B oeing 737, o n e of th e w orld's most popular airliners, were put on notice Thursday that the gov­ ernm ent-w ants im provem ents in the plane's flight controls. T here h av e been tw o m y sterio u s crashes of 737s in recent years. Accidents in Pennsylvania and Col­ orado have baffled investigators, with suspicion focusing on possible rudder problems in the twin-jet plane. M ost of the c h a n g e s a n n o u n c e d T h u rsd a y by the F ed eral A v iatio n ’ A dm inistration focus on the ru d d e r and wing control surfaces. Some of the requirements will affect just early m odels of the plane while others will cover all 1,037 of the planes in service in the United States. There are 2,830 737s in use around the w orld and m any foreign regula­ to rs are c o n sid ered likely to ad o p t similar requirements. C osts of the changes could range from $10,000 for som e repairs to $5 million for others, to make the change in the U.S. fleet. * NASA investigators called in on flight 800 probe ■ PA R IS — T akin g its to u g h e st 1 stance yet against 300 illegal African im m igrants resisting deportation, the governm ent declared T hursday that I "they have no right to live in France." P rim e M in ister A lain Ju p p e said none of the immigrants entrenched in I a Paris church — including 10 in the 49th day of a hunger strike — had a legal claim to stay. - "In all the situations that have been subm itted, the parties have no right to * live in France,” Juppe said, reading I live on French television a ruling by * the Council of State, the governm ent's - constitutional watchdog panel. But the p rem ier said his govern- * m ent still w o uld rev iew each case - individually, and it was still not clear I w hether the standoff would end with a mass expulsion, as the im m igrants - fear. The im m igrants' dram atic push to stay has become the focus of a national - d ebate ov er w hat to do about the I thousands of immigrants living ille- * gaily in France at a time of 12.5 per- » cent unemployment. — Com plied from A ssociated Press reports Rwandan refugees peek through a hole in the rain cover of a U.N. truck as they arrive at a registration center in Ngozi, Burundi. They were on their way from the Magara refugee camp in northern Burundi to th e ir hom es in R w anda T h u rsd a y. O n ly 222 refugees rem ain in M agara, a cam p which once held about 54,000 as repatriation continues from northern Burundi. ASSOCIATED PRESS ANC apologizes for 34 killings Associated Press CAPE TOWN, South Africa — The g o v ern in g A frican N atio n al C ongress confessed T h u rsd a y to executing 34 of its own guerrillas after military-style trials during the tense days of apartheid. th a t c h a ra c te riz e d The a d m iss io n cam e as A N C leaders testified before a com m is­ sion investigating the hum an rights ab u se s the a p a rth e id era. L ead ers of the N a tio n a l P arty , w hich o v e rsa w white minority rule from 1948 until reform s began in 1990, ap p e are d before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Wednesday. In its 300-page subm ission, the ANC listed 34 people executed by its m ilitary tribunal at a guerrilla base in neighboring Angola. Those executed were accused of m urder, m utiny and rape, and were put to death betw een 1980 and 1989, the ANC said. Abuses occurred during a "life- or-death" struggle against increased efforts by the white m inority gov­ ernm ent to infiltrate and w eaken the ANC, the organization said. It was not the first report of such killings, but it was the m ost com­ prehensive account to date from the anti-apartheid organization. The truth commission is charged with helping South Africans under­ stand th eir past, finding w ays to co m p e n sa te v ictim s of p o litic a l crimes and recommending amnesty for som e of those w ho confess to apartheid-era atrocities. O bservers hope the tru th com ­ mission will open a serious debate on apartheid during the hearings, and they say the willingness of pre­ sent and former leaders to subm it themselves to public questioning is a significant step. D um isa N tsebeza, h ead of the co m m issio n 's in v estig ativ e u n it, to ld re p o rte rs T h u rsd a y he w as encouraged by the breadth of the ANC statement. He was, however,, less satisfied w ith testim ony that came earlier in the week from other p o litic a l p a rtie s , in c lu d in g the National Party. National Party leader and former P re sid e n t F. W. De Klerk a p o lo ­ g ized W e d n e sd a y for th e p a in ca u sed by h is p a r ty 's a p a rth e id policies, b u t said his governm ent never authorized the murders, tor­ ture, rapes and other abuses com­ mitted by army and police person­ nel. "I find it very difficult to believe that because they were a political party they were not (aware of) deci­ sions taken by the security forces," Ntsebeza said. De Klerk said more details would be o ffe re d w h e n the arm y an d police force make their own submis­ sions at a later date. Commissioners have said they will study the party reports and could call leaders back for more questioning. D eputy President Thabo Mbeki, who headed the 23-member ANC delegation, said that while his orga­ nization's cause was just, som e of the m eans it used in its stru g g le were inexcusable and "excesses did occur." "The ANC has acknowledged that in a num ber of instances breaches in policy did occur, and deeply regrets civilian casualties," he said. Yeltsin denounces Lebed’s pact with rebels top militarv official in charge. The brief television interview w ith the p re sid e n t T h u rsd a y did little to clarify things. Yeltsin spoke before Lebed signed the pact, b u t it w as w idely k n o w n th a t the agreement was in the works. A num ber of agreements and cease-fires have already foundered in Chechnya Lebed's shuttle diplomacy quelled some of the worst fighting since the war began But his d e a l seem s s u re to cause an uproar because it leaves the separatists in at least partial control of the city they overran tw o w eeks ago in a h u m iliatin g ro u t of Russian forces. It rem ains to be seen w hether Russian generals, who have defied numerous orders to hold their fire throughout the 20-month war, will abide by the accord and whether Chechen leaders can rein in their field com­ manders. There w ere reports of fresh fighting in Grozny on T hursday night in advance of the cease-fire, with at least 50 Russian sol­ diers killed It also is uncertain w hether Yeltsin will throw his support behind the accord. Lebed, a cocky former paratrooper gener­ al with presidential ambitions, said he was­ n't worried about the Kremlin's reaction. "I'm sure I'll be well m et,' Lebed said, adding that he "lost my ability to be afraid a long time ago." A refugee couple pauses pauses for a rest along the road after fleeing Grozny Thursday. Boris Yeltsin’s security chief Alexander Lebed said Thursday he had averted a major assault threatened by the Russian military and also worked out a naui tn ix a uilth C h o rh o n roKol b aH p rs weeks, suffering from w hat his aides call c a m p a ig n fa tig u e an d o th e rs w o rry is anotner serious bout of heart trouble. He recently gave Lebed the authority to end the Chechen crisis, then failed to back him up when Lebed dem anded the ouster of the ASSOCIATED PRESS Amount of Associated Press MARGETICI, B osnia-H erzegovina — W hile th e N A T O -led force for B osnia destroys a huge, illegal cache of am m uni­ tion, officers concede they have little idea h o w m uch m ore a m m u n itio n B o sn ia 's armies have hidden. "W e know exactly what the composition of the w eapons system s is, dow n to the smallest pistol and AK-47 up to the largest tank and field gun," said Lt. Col. Max Mar- riner, a peace force spokesman. "But in terms of ammunition holdings, we have estim ates ... and no more " He wouldn't say what those estimates were. Agreements signed by the Serb, Croat and Muslim leaders of Bosnia limit the num ber of tanks, aircraft and heavy weapons each of the parties to the 3>-year war are allowed to keep. Working with checklists and su rveil­ lance, the peace force can tally up viola­ tions and confiscate surplus weapons. But there is no agreement on the stocks ammunition in Bosnia unknown on ammunition and mines, only on where they can be stored. TTie NATO-led force has compiled a list of 700 authorized storage sites. Officers say there is more — much more — outside of the approved sites. million. plastic explosives and 40 tons of detona­ tors, said Col. Biagio di Grazia, the deputy commander of the multinational brigade in the area. The cache had an estimated value of $2.5 The largest illegal dum p found so far is the M argetici schoolhouse w here NATO has been destroying a huge stockpile of a m m u n itio n and m ines th is w eek in a series of explosions that has frightened livestock and sent smoke billowing into the air. On Aug. 4, an Italian patrol stopped by the side of the road to prepare a meal and noticed su spiciou s activity aro u n d the schoolhouse in S erb-held M argetici, 15 miles northeast of the Serb stronghold Pale The Italians entered the building, and found the two-room, white stucco school packed wall-to-wall and floor-to-ceiling with army-green wooden crates. The building contained 145 tons of anti­ tank and anti-personnel mines, 205 tons of The next day, a Bosnian Serb army dele­ g a tio n ask ed th e N A T O -led force to ap p ro v e 10 new sites. One of them was Margetici "You might come to the conclusion that th ere w as a d eg ree of d u p lic ito u sn e ss in v o lv e d ,” said Maj. B rett B o u d rea u , another peace force spokesman. In fact, the Bosnian Serb army had asked the force in March to authorize am m uni­ tion storage at the schoolhouse. Officials had said no. The peace force, in fact, rejected all but 700 of the more than 4,000 sites the armies asked it to authorize. Most sites didn't meet the criteria NATO established: That they not pose a threat to the peace force; that they not be located within a certain distance of the zone sepa­ rating the former warring parties; that the sites be secure; and that they be far from residential areas. The Margetici schoolhouse sits across the road from a farm stead, close to a major thoroughfare. It is unguarded and contains a m ixture of a m m u n itio n . B o u d rea u c a lle d it a recipe for disaster." But it is far from the only illegal m uni­ tions dum p in Bosnia. The peace force com es across illegal dum ps from time to time, though officials w ould not v e n tu re to guess how m any there are. The force is "looking for everything and anything," M am ner said The d eto n atio n s this week in a valley four miles from the schoolhouse were cal­ culated to send a clear message to all sides: Dangerous weapons stocks will not be tol­ erated — if they can be found EDITORIALS Lone Star shines with Republicans For fret, confidential kelp ■ 2 4 hoars a day CALL k 4ItM cIaI lTl UT Telephone Counseling "T exas could w ear Rhode Island as a w atch fob ," som eone once quipped. Ind eed. Texas exceed s other states on many counts, but in 1996, our political clout is u np aral­ leled. At last w eek's Republican C onvention, Lone Star statesm en illu strated rem ark ab le T exas' national influence. W ith a w ide array of speakers, Texas' role w as so great som e analysts called it a Texas Convention. Texans outlined the basic philos-' ophy of the party. As C onvention co-chairm an, Gov. George W. Bush em phasized personal resp o n sibili­ ty over governm ent paternalism . He even m anaged to take a jab at the other party. "N atio n al have insisted every problem dem ands a govern m en t so lu tio n ," he said. "A nd as a result, taxes are up and bureaucracies are large." D em ocrats Bush charm ed d elegates from around the country and becam e a national figure overnight. H is con ­ siderable podium time gained him headlines and fueled specu lation that he m ight be on the national ticket in 2000. W ith out m entioning P resid ent C linton by name, form er Presid ent Jim Dedman TEXAN COLUMNIST Bush stressed the need for strong foreign policy and true leadership in the W hite H ouse. "It breaks my heart w hen the W hite H ou se is d em eaned , the presidency dim inished ," he said, obviously referring to his form er rival. The B ushes w eren 't the on ly Texans taking the convention by storm. Sen. Kay Bailey H utchison, touted as a possible VP candidate earlier this year, attacked C lin ton 's record the second night. «Dusting off a copy of C lin ton 's 1992 book Putting P eo p le First, H u tchison read a lengthy list of C linton's b ro ­ ken cam p aig n prom ises. T he Am erican people, she said, should elect som eone to keep C lin to n 's prom ises for him. H oustonian Jam es Baker, w ho was secretary of state under P resi­ dent Bush, criticized C lin to n 's weak foreign policy. C laim ing the United States' cred ibility su ffers from C lin to n 's leadership, Baker said D ole could restore our in ter­ national respect. Rep. Henry Bonilla, R-San A nto­ nio, joined W endy Gramm in sec­ onding D ole's nom ination. A ris­ ing star in the party, Bonilla is the first H ispanic Republican elected from Texas. M rs. to C on g ress Gramm is an accom plished eco n o ­ m ist and the w ife of our senior sen­ ator. Although form er D ole rival Gramm played a m inor role at the convention, he gained a national follow ing during his quest for the presidency. in C hairm an of the Texas Railroad C om m ission C arole Keeton Rylan- favor of stron g d er spoke restrictions on illegal im m igration. “To those w ho com e to A m erica legally, w e open our arm s, w e open our hearts. Am erica can be ? dream com e tru e," said Rylander. “To those w ho break the law s of our land, we w ill control our bo r­ ders with every ounce of our d eter­ m ination." Texas R epu blicans also set the in C on g ress. M ajority agenda is a vocal L ead er D ick A rm ey ad vo cate o f tax. Tom DeLay replaced N ew t G ingrich as m ajority w hip , a p restig io u s le a d ersh ip po sitio n . Bill H ouse flat the A rcher becam e chairm an of the p ow erful tax -w ritin g W ays and for a M eans C o m m ittee called national sales tax to replace the incom e tax. In the Senate, H u tchi­ son now chairs the conservative Senate R epublican Steering C om ­ mittee. role Texas R ep u b lica n s' in national p o litics illu strates that this is no longer a one-party state. Before 1978, Texas had never elect­ ed a R epublican governor. Now , the GOP holds all three Railroad C om m ission seats á m ajority on the Texas Suprem e C ourt and is likely to cap tu re the state Senate. Last spring, som e form er yellow - dog counties saw a 400 percent in crease in R ep u b lican p rim ary turnout. Two of the last four Republican N ational C onventions have been in Texas; D allas hosted in 1984, Houston in 1992. San Antonio, site of this y e a r's R ep u blican S tate C on ven tion , h op es to hold one soon. When it com es to politics, d on't m ess w ith Texans. Dedman is a history junior. gfe a s'» ggyoM P ^ COH7KOL 4 T h e D a ily T e x a n FflDAY, AUGUST 2 8 ,1 8 8 6 T h e Da il y T ex a n Editorial Board Robert Russell Associate Editor Tara L. Copp Editor Colby Black Associate Editor Opinions expressed in I he Daily Texan are those of the editor or writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the University adm inistration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. VIEWPOINT Splortiitig chance Last week, the NCAA Clearinghouse certified rookie defensive back Levar Jenkins for this fall's football season. This will allow him to begin his career with the Longhorn football team. In and of itself, this is generally not newsworthy, but Jenkins was the last of the Longhorns' stellar recruiting class to pass the N CAA's requirements. Neither has the University done anything out of the ordinary in clearing all its signees. But the fact that 100 percent of recruits are not given the N CAA's blessing should raise eyebrows. The road to collegiate stardom begins in the ninth grade, when the Clearinghouse dictates a core class load for high school students. These requirements include four years of English and two of math, natural science and physical science. The student's GPA is then used to find a minimum score on the entrance exams. Granted, most athletes do not end up at a school the caliber of the University, but the NCAA requirements are not only lower than the University's requirements for admission, but are lower than most high schools demand of their graduates. The important thing to remember here is not that the guidelines are excessively low, but that guidelines are there and that they are being enforced across the board. Even students who have not quite met the requirements still have a chance to compete, as long as they are close to -the cutoff point. For prospective athletes just a bit shy in one area, the NCAA has imple­ mented a waiver process. Appeals are heard on a case by case basis. However, the process of certification is by no m eans automatic. Several programs wanted to increase their talent at any cost — and that cost was academics. Baylor went out and grabbed one of the most talented recruiting classes in the country. The alumni were happy, and pressure was temporarily off the Bears' coaching staff. Now, the Bears are beginning to feel some pressure to deliver these highly recruited prospects. Baylor is apparently nervous about their chances, as they would say nothing about their recruits. O f the 22 high school studs Baylor signed, seven are still waiting for their eligibility to go through. W hen queried on their recruits' academic prospects, all the Baylor athletic department would do was fax a readily-available roster and m utter “no com m ent." Signing players with questionable academics might be a great quick fix to the solution for most schools, but not all programs have resorted to it. Preseason num ber one N ebraska's class of 18 is cur­ rently only short one player. Since only one out every 1,000 high school football players ever makes it to the professional level, a college degree is almost a pre­ requisite for success in those post-football years in the real world. The whole institution of college athletics should be about giving academic chances to those who might not otherw ise be able to achieve them. Instead of what we can do for them, the focus has shifted to w hat they can do for us. Even with the stragglers, the N CAA's standards are good because they force student athletes to be just that, students and athletes. Schools like the University and Nebraska should be applauded for placing a priority on players they felt confident would meet the N CAA's guidelines. Recruiting these prospects not oniy saves much time and heartache for players, coaches and fans, but is also much more effective for players who might not make it in the pros. A WELFARE BILL Social Security propaganda package misleads nation’s youth In The Joy Luck Club, a novel about C hi­ nese im m igrants in Am erica, three m oth­ ers alw ays refer to Social Security as “So­ so Secu rity ." This is not a linguistic m isun­ derstanding, but a recognition o f the fiscal h ealth o f the So cial Secu rity program . U nfortu n ately, this is a sobering truth m any A m erican y o u n g sters w ill never know if Social Secu rity A dm inistration bu reau crats have their way. T h e So cial S ecu rity A d m in istra tio n 's new teach er's kit, aim ed at ju n ior high and high school classes, is a sham eful attem pt to brainw ash A m erica's youth so that they will unknow ingly support a retirem ent system that will bankrupt their genera­ tion. The deceptions begin w ith a list of “Rea­ sons for C onfid ence in the Future of Social S e cu rity ." The is "g ro w in g financial strength of system and buildup of reserves to pay future b en e­ fits." In fact, the m ost recent report by the that tru stees S o cial S ecu rity fou rth reason cited in d icates Marc Levin TEXAN COLUMNIST expenses will exceed revenues by 2012. W hen the outlays o f a business overtake its incom e, the situation is com m only a cause for headaches, not “grow ing fin an­ cial stren gth." In addition to hardly hinting at the com ­ ing crisis, the kit asserts that no one needs to w orry until past 2020 since the Social Security Trust Fund will fill the gap. H ow ­ ever, the sad truth is that there is no trust and there is no fund. Politicians have irre­ sponsibly spent the m oney on other pro­ gram s, m aking the deficit look sm aller than it really is. All that rem ains are IO Us totaling some $2.33 trillion in 2012 that can only be paid off by raising taxes or going into even m ore debt. The prim ary reason for the fiscal crisis is ch an g ing d em ographics. In 1950, there w ere 17 w orkers supporting each retiree, Politicians have irresponsibly spent [SQcial Security trust fundi money on other programs, making the deficit look smaller than it real­ ly is. All that remains are IOUs totaling some $ 2 .3 3 trillion in 2 0 1 2 that can only be paid off by raising taxes or going into even more debt. w hile there are only three today and there w ill be only tw o in 2029. This is w hy the current 12.3 percent payroll tax would have to be increased to an obscene 40 per­ cent by 2029 to continue current levels of benefits. Com bined with other taxes, the total tax bu rd en w ould be 84 percent which w ould dash all hopes of future prosperity for tod ay's students. Tragically, these vital statistics staring down our generation are om itted from the teacher's kit. In addition to not acknow ledging the problem, the kit either belittles proposed rem edies or glosses over them entirely. For exam ple, Sen. Robert Kerrey, D -N eb., and Sen. A lan Sim pson, R-W yo., have pro­ posed m eans-testing the program since there will not be enough m oney to pay off everyone. The teachers' kit com p lains that “introducing a m eans test would tend to make it ju st 'anoth er w elfare program ' in the p u blic's m ind." It is com pletely inap­ propriate for a taxpayer-funded educa­ tional pu blication to take a position on a policy issue currently before C ongress. To m ake m atters w orse, the kit fails to m ention the attractive p rivatization option supported by 69 percent of A m ericans according to a new poll done by the Cato Institute, a Libertarian think-tank. Chile is an excellen t m odel, having privatized its system in 1981. U nder C hile's plan, each individual is required to save a certain p ercen tag e of th eir they choose how to invest it. Since bonds and stocks earn three to six tim es as m uch interest as governm ent pension program s, C hilean retirees have enjoyed a higher rate of return on their investm ent. incom e, but Perhaps the Social Security A dm inistra­ tion's teacher's kit is just another part of outcom e-based ed u cation w hich seeks to prom ote self-esteem if it has no basis in reality. U ndoubtedly, students would be depressed if they knew their chances at the A m erican Dream are being destroyed by a Social Security program that m akes com ­ m itm ents it can 't h onor. How ever, if stu ­ dents w ere aw are of the situation, at least they could take action before it's too late. W e should heed the biblical p assage etched on the Tow er: “Ye shall know the truth and the truth m ake you free." Levin is a government junior. ASK YOUR LAWYER FIRING LINE Iri cooperation with Legal S e r­ vices for Stud ents, we attem pt to answ er a student-subm itted legal question every other w eek. To subm it a question, w rite to P.O. Box D, Austin TX 78718 or e-m ail T E X A N @ u tx v m s.c c .u te x a s.e d u . Su bm ittors' nam es rem ain co n fi­ dential. ■ Q u estio n : Do I need renter's insurance? P ro bab ly so. It m akes life a lot easier. T e n an ts o ften assu m e la n d ­ lo rd s are required to cover lo ss­ es caused by ev en ts o u tsid e the te n a n t's con trol, such as flood and storm s. But a land lord is only liable if he or sh e a ctu a lly knew or should have know n about the to m ake p ro b lem and a d e q u a te re a so n a b le and repairs. It is w ell establish ed in T e x as that d am ag es re su ltin g from an act o f God are not o rd i­ narily ch arg eab le to an yone. Yet failed land lord s this does not m ean are never resp o n sib le. The Fifth D istrict C ou rt of C ivil A ppeals ruled in A.W . H u tch in g s vs. Hal A nd erson that for a defend ant to be relieved o f liab ility, "th e re m ust be no neg ligen ce on his part co n cu rrin g w ith the acts of G od to cau se the d am ag e." L a n d lo rd s are also lia b le under T exas P roperty C ode § 9 2 .2 5 9 in sta ll, inspect or rep air sm oke d etec­ tors w ithin seven d ays o f a te n ­ an t's w ritten requ est and n otice th at th e te n a n t m ay e x e rcise statu to ry rem ed ies. th ey d o n 't if T h u s, if you d o n 't h av e a sm oke d etecto r, request in w rit­ install ing that y ou r land lord on e. If you h av e a d etecto r, in stru ct your land lord to make su re it w orks. Then, it becom es his or her responsibility.* If you h av e r e n te r 's in su r­ ance, your insu rer w ill cover the tak e a ctio n lo ss and itse lf a g a in st a re sp o n sib le p arty , such as a land lord , if necessary. T h is frees you from the tim e­ stressfu l co n su m in g resp o n sib ility of resolving your claim personally. and R en te r's in su ran ce is not very exp en sive and covers losses due to th eft as w ell as accid en ts. Tw o types of reim bu rsem en t are a v a ila b le. O ne allo w s you to recover the fair m arket valu e of the property that w as stolen or d estroyed . T he other requ ires your insu rer to pay replacem ent costs for the m issing property. If you h ave su ffered a p ro p er­ ty loss becau se of an u nforeseen event w hile a cu rren t UT stu ­ dent, feel free to con tact Legal Se rv ices for S tu d en ts at 2609 U n iv ersity A ve., right behind the new Stu d en t ID C enter. The telep hon e num ber is 471-7796. W e can help you n eg otiate w ith in su ra n c e co m p any , or yo u r ab o u t p o te n tia l a d v ise you claim s ag ain st property ow ners and lan d lo rd s if you are u n in ­ sured. Complied by David C. Barranco, third-year law student. Check your facts, or you’re a Dedman have produced an accu rate c o l­ um n. In the future, Mr. D edm an should be m ore careful and p ro ­ fessional. a Texan co lu m n ist Jim D edm an re cen tly w ro te co lu m n ( 8 / 2 / 9 6 ) statin g that the U n i­ versity o f T exas at A rlin g ton has im posed m andatory se n si­ tiv ity for ad m in istrators, staff and fa cu l­ ty. This is not true. tra in in g co u rses UTA w ill o ffe r se n sitiv ity train ing as p art of its d iversity p rog ram , but p a rticip a tio n is strictly vo lu ntary. A phone call to UTA to check the facts w ould Robert E. Witt President, the University of Texas at Arlington Royal mistake As an alu m nu s of the U n iv er­ sity, I have the utm ost respect for C oach D arrell R oyal. But I think renam ing M em orial S ta d i­ um for C oach Royal is a bad idea. I hope he w ill put an end to this idea by g raciou sly d eclin ­ ing like Lady Bird Joh n so n has rebuffed all attem p ts to renam e Tow n Lake a fter her. M em orial Stad iu m is nam ed in honor o f th o se w ho sacrificed th eir lives for our cou ntry. W e should not d im in ish their sa c ri­ fice, lest we forg et them . Jim Christianson Austin resident W ant to m ake a d ifference on cam pus this fall? The Texan is accepting applications for editorial writers and cartoonists. To apply, stop by The Texan offices in the basement of the Texas Student Publications Building and pick up an application. If you have any questions, call 471-4591 and ask for Lora. Firing Line letters and Ask Your Lawyer Questions can be brought to the Texan basem ent offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue or mailed to P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. Or, e-mail them to TEXAN@w w w. utexas.edu Firing Line letters must be few er than 250 words. UT students should include their major and classi­ fication, and all writers must present identification or include a phone number. The Texan reserves the right to edit letters. CALVIN KLEIN FOR JUNIORS rf They 're hot. They 're coot. They 're back-to-school basics. Straight-leg jeans in double stone washed cotton. Sizes 1-13, with 30", 32" and 34" inseams, 45.00 CK logo “baby tee in white or heather gray, one size. 16.00 Easy-fit jeans in sandblast; sizes 1-13, with 30", 32" and 34" inseams, 52.00 Both in cotton. • Juniors Denim Collection Dillard’s 6 T h e D a ily T e x a n HOMY, AUGUST 23,1898 DDP short of needed funding 44 We have gotten ANNA BAKER______________ Daily Texan Staff D e s ig n a te d D riv e rs P ro g ra m organizers have collected $50 from corporate sponsorship since the Stu­ d e n t S e r v ic e s Fee C o m m itte e re fu se d to c o n tin u e its fu n d in g . Their goal is $29,000. The program provides cab rides for students w ho are too drunk to drive. In M a rc h th e fee c o m m itte e decided to stop paying for the pro­ gram in D ecem ber, if D esign ated Drivers Program could not find cor­ porate sponsorship. P ro g ra m o rg a n iz e r s w ill m eet with the Student Services Fee C om ­ m itte e O ct. 13 to d is c u s s th e ir progress. Jim Vick, vice president for stu ­ d en t a ffa ir s , said th e c o m m itte e requested that the D esignated D ri­ vers P ro g ram find o th e r fu n d in g years ago, but that the group appar­ ently had made no efforts to do so. "T he com m ittee's concern in the past has been the program 's insuffi­ cient effort to raise money external­ ly,' Vick said. "There is support for th e p ro g ra m , and it d o es h a v e a stro n g re p u ta tio n , w h ich p e o p le support." The program is a student-led vol­ unteer organization initiated years ago to discourage drunken driving. Volunteers man phones during the w ee k e n d s to tak e ca lls from s tu ­ d ents u nab le to d rive th em selv es home. The volunteers arrange for a taxi to pick them up free of charge, pro­ v id e d th e y sn o w U T ID c a r d s . W h en th e g ro u p b e g a n s e v e r a l y ears ag o, v o lu n teers d rove vans th r o u g h o u t A u stin i n - th e e a r ly m orning hours to pick up students. B ria n P a te l, th e fu n d -r a is in g director of Designated Drivers Pro­ gram , sp e n t h is su m m er sen d in g p ro p o sals and d escrip tion s o f the p ro g ram s a c tiv itie s to lo cal and in c lu d in g n a tio n a l c o m p a n ie s , lots of rejection let­ ters.” — Debora Orrick, OOP staff adviser A d olp h C o o rs C o. He also asked Pepsi Cola and the U niversity C o­ op for funds; both refused. "W e have gotten lots of rejection le tte rs," said D ebora O rrick, staff ad viser for the program . "I th ink w ith the rate w e're raisin g fund s and with the difficulty we are hav­ ing, we will not have the money by Decem ber." O rric k sa id th e p ro g ra m h as received com m itm ents from Coors an d A n h e u s e r B u sch to d o n a te money. But no final decisions have been made. A u d ie W ilk e , an A u stin C oo rs rep resen tativ e, said the com p any was eager to help D esignated D ri­ v e rs P ro g ra m w h en it w as fir s t organized several years ago. D e s ig n a te d D riv e rs P ro g ra m organizers said the company never gave them a form al offer of sp o n ­ sorship, adding that the group does not want to be used as advertising. N ow , th e C o o rs is e v a lu a tin g a g a in h o w m u ch m o n e y it can donate. W ilke said the com p any w ould like to com pletely fund the D esig­ n a te d D r iv e r s P ro g ra m , b u t th e $29,000 price is too expensive. A cco rd in g to a report by P atel, Coors' regional office has agreed to match the local office's offer. And Agnes Fucello, a representa­ tive of Brow n D istributing, a local beer distributor, said the com pany is tryingMo m ake a "very positive" offer. UMVBtSITY WIDOW WASHNG Scientist: Mint oils kill mites Associated Press It M O R G A N T O W N , W .V a. — sounds like a folk remedy, but a West Virginia University entomologist says it works: Use natural oils — spearmint, wintergreen, peppermint — to ward off mites preying on wild honeybees. The proof, James Amrine says, can be seen in 46 nearby honeybee colonies where applications of wintergreen have produced the healthiest honeybees in years. "T h e re is no doubt those bees are almost back to where they were before these mites came into this country," he said. The mites, which entered the United States 12 years ago, have destroyed 90 percent of wild honeybees, researchers say. Last spring, commercial and hobby­ ist beekeepers reported average losses of 50 percent in 22 states surveyed by the Georgia-based American Beekeep­ ing Federation, said Troy H. Fore Jr., executive secretary. The harsh winter contributed to loss­ es, especially in northern tier states like Maine, which reported 80 percent loss­ es. The losses follow a continual weak­ en in g o f h o n ey b ees since the m ites appeared in the mid-1980s. The original invader, the tiny tra­ cheal mite, crawls into the breathing tubes of bees and lives off their blood The varroa mite, the size of a small tick, attaches to bee adults and developing eggs and lives off their blood, weaken­ ing and killing them. In Cumberland, Md., about 60 miles east of Morgantown, Bob Noel stum ­ bled u p o n h is n a tu ra l o ils rem ed y' w hen m ites stru ck his co lo n ies last year. He put wintergreen oil in a ham- burger-patty-shaped mixture of short­ ening and sugar, then placed it in a hive. "I said, W ell, they're dying anyway.' I came back a couple of days later and there were no mites on the bees. There were several thousand (dead) mites on the bottom of the hive," he said. Mike Lokken washes the Tower Room’s windows on the fifth floor of the Texas Union. Lokken must climb a 40-foot ladder to reach the windows. With two window washers working it takes approximately 20 hours to clean all the windows on the south and east sides of the building. CINDY BROW N/Daily Texan Staff KVR 9 to begin ad campaign JUAN ALANIS JR.__________ Daily Texan Staff To cope with budget cuts, Texas Student Television-KV R-TV 9 will launch an extensive ad cam paign and add several new program s to its lineu p to increase v iew ersh ip this fall. T h e stu d e n t te le v isio n sta tio n requested $70,000 from the Student S e r v ic e s F ee C o m m itte e in th e 1995-96 school year, but received only $56,000. C h a rlie B a rn e s, K V R 9 sta tio n m anager, said the statio n 's fin an­ cial d ifficu ltie s w ill not stop the "big promo pitch." Barnes said free movie passes or g ift c e rtific a te s and ad s in lo cal n ew spap ers w ill be a part o f the station's promotion efforts. The station will develop several new sh o w s, in c lu d in g a s p o rts show, he said. And he said the sta­ tion planned to cover theater and dance presentations. KVR 9's other programming will in c lu d e M u ch M u sic , B lo o m b erg Business and the Austin M usic N et­ work. K V R 9 w ill a g a in b r o a d c a s t w om en's volley ball gam es in the fall and may broadcast some of this year's Texas Union D istinguished Speakers series. B arn es said K V R 9 w ill be on A u stin A cce ss C h an n el 10 d aily from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m., starting Oct. 1 . Barnes said a full-time cable sta­ tion would make better headway in lu rin g th e s ta tio n v ie w e rs and advertisers. Though the cut will make m ain­ taining the statio n 's video eq u ip ­ ment difficult, KVR 9 supervisors said the cut was expected. Bob Sim m ons, KVR 9 broadcast th e s u p e r v is o r , s ta tio n sa id promised the committee the station could survive with 20 percent less money each year until the Student Services Fee C om m ittee's contribu­ tion zeroed out. But after two years of experience, that promise has proven difficult to keep. "Unlike other student media, TV is p ro b a b ly th e m o st e x p e n s iv e b e c a u s e th e re are so m an y e l e ­ sa id C h a r lie m e n ts at w o r k ," Barnes, KVR-TV station manager. C o n tin u in g sh o w s in th e fa ll in c lu d e th e p o litic a l ta lk sh o w Texas Politics, Austin Outer Limits, S n eak P eek and K V R -T V N ew s at Nine. Several returning shows are up for awards at the Nov. 9 National Association of College Broadcasters Convention in Providence, R.I. •Annual benefit period: August 23,1996 to August 23,1997 Brackenridge Hospital and Children’s Hospital 90% of eligible expenses will be paid at these hospital facilities. Seton Medical Center, Seton Northwest Hospital drug benefit. • Prescription Drug Benefit of $300 •Eligible services at the Student Health Center are covered at 100% with NO DEDUCTIBLE! •Call the Student Insurance Office located in the Student Health Center (room 130) 171-1040 or the Student Insurance Division at 800-767-0700 for an enrollment packet._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ T h e D a i l y T e x a n Friday, A ugust z ¿ , iu s o r a y » il THE GALLERY Texas SAT scores fall or remain even 44 Our students are preparing for future guages, continues to grow," he said. "Our students are preparing for future challenges as never before." * According to The College Board, Associated Press challenges as never before.” mmmmm which administers the SAT: Tsxss Education scored by the 85,616 students who took the test last year. The SAT is one of two college entrance exams accepted at nearly all universities and colleges. All Texas universities and colleges con­ sider results from either of the SAT or the American College Testing exam in admissions decisions. Texas Education Commissioner Mike Moses said even though SAT scores did not move up this year, he was pleased with the number of stu­ dents participating. "It is extremely gratifying to see that the number of Texas students taking honors courses, higher-level math classes, as well as foreign lan­ ■ Nationally, 1.1 million students took the test this year. ■ Nationally, the average verbal score was 505. was 508. ■ The national average math score ■ In Texas, about 31 percent of the 55,991 Hispanic seniors, 17,262, took the exam. ■ Nearly 39 percent of the state's 24,325 black Texas seniors, 9,432, took the test. - Test scores am ong Texas high schools seniors taking the Scholastic Aptitude Test fell or remained even this year compared to scores for last year's senior class, the Texas Educa­ tion Agency says. A total of 89,329 Texas seniors took the SAT this year, the TEA reported Thursday. That was about 48 percent of the 186,229 students in the 12th grade. The stu d en ts' average verbal score was 495, the same as last year. The average math score of 500 was one point below the 501 average AG sues 4 nursing homes M orales accuses 16 others o f distorting public health and safety records Associated Press The d e a th s of tw o v u ln e ra b le nursing hom e residents — a baby and an older w om an — are tragic ex a m p le s of th e n ee d to re s to re s tro n g e r s ta te re g u la tio n of th e hom es, A tto rn e y G e n e ra l D an Morales says. The tw o n u rs in g h o m es w e re a m o n g fo u r s u e d T h u rs d a y by Morales on allegations of health and safety violations. He sued 16 m ore on allegations th a t th ey m is re p re s e n te d th e ir health and safety record to the pub­ lic. But it's likely the four safety-relat­ ed law suits will never m ake it to court because of a 1995 law allow ­ ing nursing homes to choose to set­ tle such cases through arbitration, Morales said. "We have now lost our ability to take these bad nursing home opera­ tors into a court of law even when there is a death that has occurred," he sa id . " T h e s a n c tio n s w e can im pose on bad operators have all the sting of a parking ticket." Morales said the 1995 law had a direct bearing on the case involving the elderly w om an's death, which came after she choked on food. The law allows nursing homes to bypass requirem ents that have pro­ v id e d cru cial p ro te c tio n to re s i­ dents, such as feeding assistance, according to Morales. "This is exactly w h at we w ere afraid of," he said. The case involving the w om an's d ea th w as filed again st B riarcliff Health Center in Carthage. M orales said the nu rsing hom e didn't properly prepare the 62-year- old wom an's food and didn't super­ vise her eating. He said she choked and then died of related complications. Morales is seeking civil penalties in the case th at could range from $200 to $20,000. The penalty is $100 to $10,000 per violation, he said, and two safety violations are alleged in connection with the death. An adm inistrator with the n u rs­ ing hom e d id n 't retu rn telephone calls from The Associated Press. The law suit involving the baby w as filed ag ain st the Trum an W. Sm ith C h ild re n 's C are C en ter in Gladewater. M o ra le s sa id a 1 5 -m o n th -o ld infant was placed on a heating pad for so long that his body tem pera­ tu re rose to 108 d eg rees, and he died. In that case, M orales is seeking civil p en alties th at he said could range from $600 to $60,000. A telephone call to the center was referred to a woman identified as an administrator. She refused to give her name and had no comment. Tw o o th e r n u rs in g h o m es, Rowlett Nursing Center in Rowlett and Sunny Acres of De Kalb, also were accused in lawsuits of endan­ gering residents' health and safety. A spokeswom an for the Rowlett center, DeLana Thompson, had no immediate comment. Dora Perry, Sunny Acres adm in­ istrator, said her facility earlier had a different ad m inistrator and that previous problem s have been cor­ rected. "We have a good nursing home. Our residents are happy, and I have no deficiencies at this time with the state," she said. " I h av e a sta ff of 92 for 92 patients. I think I'm well staffed." The atto rn ey general said local prosecutors could decide w hether to bring separate criminal charges in the cases involving deaths, and that the Texas D ep artm en t of H um an Services could look at w h e th e r a hom e's license should be removed. DHS s p o k e sw o m a n S h e rro n H einem ann said the agency isn 't pursuing license revocation in the four cases. She no ted th a t the agency had referred the fo u r to the atto rn e y J The Floor Store g en eral after co n d u c tin g in sp ec­ tions. Rep. H arv ey H ild e rb ra n , w ho sponsored the 1995 law, in the past h as said he w o u ld w o rk w ith M orales to change the m easure if needed. H ild erb ran , R -K errville, w a s n 't a v a ila b le fo r co m m en t T h u rsd a y , sa id H ild e rb ra n aid e Chris Traylor. Morales said he believes the 1997 Legislature will support strengthen­ ing nursing home regulations. Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock, w ho p re ­ sides over the Senate, generally sup­ ports the attorney general's views said B ullock on spokesman Mike Hailey. issu e, the The Texas H ealth Care Associa­ tio n , w hich re p re s e n ts n u rs in g homes, noted that Morales said he believes the vast majority of facili­ ties a d h e re to h e a lth an d safety standards. The g ro u p sa id it s u p p o rts M o ra le s' e ffo rts to im p ro v e th e quality of care. EXAM 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting at $1I9* Complete ’price includes exam, 2 pair clear daily- wear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1 sf follow up. EXPIRES SEPTEMBER 20,1996. WITH COUPON ONLY. NO T 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 MTh 477-2282 FRI 10-7 M/C VISA AMX DISC 9.6 Roses- $ 1 2 .9 5 1 Dozen $1 9 .9 5 2 Dozen Gladiolas- Buy 1 get 1 for 1C Cask & Carry Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 - 0 8 8 1 D a ily S p e c ia ls FJD • 45* % Guadalupe • On UT Shuttle R t C o s t a R i c a $249 $ 2 5 9 G u a t e m a l a $ 3 2 9 L o n d o n $ 3 6 9 P a r i s $ 4 3 9 F r a n k f u r t F m i s a m eac h ««at not* A u s t in ia s e o o n a a o u n d h t» m a ­ chase. Faxes DO n o t MCLUOt FEDEAAi TAXES O * P f C s TOT AUNG «CrwTEN $3-$4S, O E ttfO N G O N DESTINATION O * OEPAJTTUME CHAAGES A AJO OMECTU TO TOABGN G O V U N M M T S. EURAILPASS GIVEAWAY!!! C o m e in t o w in a F R E E 1 s t C la ss F ljexipass! Gcxxl for 15 days o f rail witltin 2 months! W e sell S tuden t/Y o u ™ Tic k e t s th at ALLOW STAYS UP TO ONE YEAR. O u r STUDENT TICKETS FOR EUROPE ALLOW CHANGES FOR ONLY $25 See us fo r Y o u th D isc o u n ts ON EURAJU»ASSES TOO. • We have great car rental ratea for Europe. • We also tell student discount tickets for the U.S.A. CALL USUI Council 2000 G u a d a l u p e St. • A u s t in , TX 78705 Travel 512-472-4931 http://wtcic.ciee.org/travel.htm E U R A I L P A S S E S I S S U E D o n - t h e - s p o t ! W AREHOUSE REM N AN T SALE S a v e Up Te 7 0 % on High-Quality, Fashionable N am e Brand Carpets, Sheet Vinyl Remnants, W ood & Ceramic Tile Perfect for Dorm Roam s or Apartments! Hurry far Best Selections - While Quantities Last 1011 W. A n d e rso n A cross from M e rv y n 's 454-6736 YOUR POW ERLINK NUMBER IS... POWER I I W I l A utom ated O utage Reporting 8. Restoration Information System The Electric Utility Department introduces a faster, better way fo r you to report electric outages. You now have immediate access to a new automated system that is efficient and easy to use: Refer to your utility account # EX A M P L E 0 5 2 7 Call 322-9100 when you need to report an electric outage. All you need is your POWERL1NK number or the telephone number at the outage location. (Look at the example to the right for instructions on how to Fill out your POWERLINK# for quick reference.) If you should move, you will need the new six-digit number from the account at your new address. For more details, call the Electric Utility Department at 322-6300 or visit our web page at www.electricjiustin.tx.us/powerlink/outage.htinl six n u m b e r s of y o u r a c c o u n t n u m b e r P O W E R L I N K * E l e c t r i c 3 2 2 - 9 1 0 0 Jonathan Schwartz visits the Lyons Matrix Gallery at 1712 Lavaca St. The gallery will pre­ sent the East Coast Glass Invi- ALFRED BRICE/Daily Texan Staff tational “Jew G lass Sculpture" by various artists from Pennsyl­ vania and New Jersey until Sat­ urday. Law schools prefer higher LSAT scores. LSAT Our proven techniques and focused, results-oriented approach can help you get the scores that open doors. • small classes (8-15 students) • extensively trained, dynam ic instructors • practice on 4 full-length timed tests • the most up-to-date materials • dramatic score improvement C lasses 3e^iv\ Gefrr The Pnnceion Review is not affiliated with Princeton Uni vena tv or LSAS 2 4 f W . T H E PR IN C ET O N REV IEW 474-TEST wwwLPeviewxoni The Daily Texan will be holding tryouts for the fall semester Aug. 22 -Sept. 1. There are openings in all departments, no experience is necessary. Call Renaé or Tara at 471 -4591 or just come by. We're in the base­ ment of the TSP building, across from the CMA. T h e Da il y T e x a n Real Experience Daily. If you're interested in working at The Texan please fill out the portion below, so that we can contact you with more information. N a m e : _____________________ I am interested in these p o sitio n s:_____________________________________________ You can contact me by (phone num ber or e-mail address): 3 T h e D a i l y T e x a n FRDAY, AUGUST 28,1996 FRUIT BASKET STATE LOCAL Garza to stay in Austin PICK TIKE 7 -7-5 City manager to receive higher salary, more benefits MICHAEL MULCAHY________ Daily Texan Staff H is s a la r y w i ll in c re a s e to $135,803 an n u a lly, alm ost $11,000 more than his current pay. A f t e r m o re th a n tw o h o u rs in execu tive session w ith c ity coun- c ilm em b ers, C it y M a n a g e r Jesu s Garza emerged a richer man. G arz a said T h u rs d a y he w o u ld stay in his current position rather than accept the city manager posi­ tion in C o rp u s C h risti, his ho m e­ town. Garza said his parents, w h o live in Corpus Christi, "do n't need to get m y bedroom ready." The Corpus C h r i s t i CaUer-Ti mes reported that G arza w as offered a job and w ould have received a high­ er salary. M a y o r Bruce Todd said G arza's new package provides G arza w ith more money, increased benefits and a substantial safety net if he is fired or forced to resign. H is deferred com pensation, the money the city contributes annually to his retirement account, w ill get an increase of 50 percent to $7,500. Severance pay, in case of in vo lun­ tary term ination, w ill be equal to nine months' pay in comparison to the previous three-month amount. D a v id M a tu s tik , a c ity p u b lic information officer, said the increase in salary w ill take effect im mediate­ ly- Garza said the increase in salary and benefits were important factors in his decision to stay in Austin. But he said w orking conditions and his staff in A u stin also p layed sig n ifi­ cant roles. Todd said he was delighted Garza decided to stay in Austin. "The one common issue you hear is Austin is extremely tough to gov­ e rn ," T o d d said. " I t does in d e e d take a rare in dividu al." The council voted 6-0 for the new c o m p e n s a tio n p a c k a g e ; c o u n c il member D aryl Slusher abstained. Slusher said he favored G arza as city manager, but did not agree with the percentage of the raise and the am ount of severance p ay offered. Slusher said he w ill not support any raises above the 3 percent raise all city employees received this year. " I appreciate everything Jesus has d o n e ," E r ic C o u n c ilm e m b e r M itchell said. "H e does a very good job. This w ill help us con tinue to move forw ard." Councilmember Ronney Reynolds said he was "excited" Garza decided to stay. "C itiz e n s of A u s tin w o n today," he said. More than 90,000 licensed in T exas to carry handguns Associated Press are not counted separately. M o re than 90,000 T e x a n s are licensed to carrv concealed h a n d ­ guns, according to the Departm ent of Public Safety. The D P S says it had issued 91,501 c o n ce a le d - c a rry lice n se s as of W e d n e s d a y . A n o th e r 617 p eop le had been denied licenses. T h e d e p a rtm e n t on T h u r s d a y released its monthly report covering 85,818 licenses issued as of Aug. 1. The report showed: ■ A total of 80,807, or just more than 94 percent, of those perm its w e n t to w h ite m en an d w o m e n . That could include Hispanics, w ho ■ W h ite men, including some H is­ panics, held 65,607, or 76.5 percent, of the permits. ■ B la c k m en an d w o m e n had 2,566, or nearly 3 percent. ■ Black men held 2,239, or 2.6 per­ cent. Texas la w m a k ers ap p ro ved the concealed-carry la w last year. P e r­ mits began going out last fall and p e rm ith o ld e r s w e re a llo w e d to c arry concealed w eapo ns starting Jan. 1. Sta te o ffic ia ls h ad e s tim a te d 75,000 perm its w o u ld be issued in the first fiscal year, w hich ends Aug. 31. Th t estim ate w as passed last month. The department said 273,539 peo­ ple had requested applications and 99,652 h ad re tu rn e d c o m p le te d forms so far. " W e 'r e glad that people are tak­ ing advantage of the op p ortu nity," said M a rk Seale, a spokesm an for Sen. Je rr y Patterson, R-Pasadena. Patterson sponsored the law. " W e think that the numbers w ill continue once people realize they can achieve their safety legally. The blood in the street that opponents predicted hasn 't happ ened and it w on't happen." Naomi Ventura and her 4-year-old son, Mejaime, shop at the Travis County Farmers Market at 6701 Burnet Road. Naomi says she visits the market because they can use their W IC (Women, Infants and Children) coupons to purchase produce that is of very good quality. ALFRED BRICE/Daily Texan Staff Hurricane Dolly to provide little drought relief A ssociated Press B R O W N S V IL L E — W it h H u r r i­ can e D o ll y en ro u te to M e x ic o instead of Texas, hopes of the storm becom ing a drought-breaker w ere all but washed out Thursday. Still, D o lly alread y has brought so m e m u c h - n e e d e d ra in to the re g io n , an d m o re s h o w e rs w e re expected w ith the storm's anticipat­ ed crossing of M exico's northeast­ ern coast. " T o t r u ly b re a k the d ro u g h t, w e 'd have to get our rainfall back up close to normal for this time of year, and it w o n 't do th a t," said Richard Hagan, a meteorologist for the N a tio n a l W e a th e r S e r v ic e in Brow nsville. D o lly re tu rn e d to h u rr ic a n e strength T h u rsd ay afternoon as it traveled across the G u lf of Mexico toward the Mexican coast, where it was schedule^ to cross the coastline F r id a y m o rn in g n ea r the p ort of Tampico. T h e sto rm w a s cen tered about 240 miles east-southeast of Tampico a n d 385 m ile s s o u th e a s t o f B ro w n s v ille , m o vin g w est-n orth­ west at 10 mph. H urricane warnings w ere posted from V era cru z north to L a Pesca, 155 miles south of the Texas border. Ju s t in case D o lly d e c id e s to sw in g farther north, So u th Texas officials set in m otion their em er­ gency preparations. Cam eron C ounty commissioners h e ld an e m e rg e n c y m e e tin g to a p p ro ve the p urch ase of satellite telephones and portable generators, w h ile county w orkers filled sand­ b ag s ch e c k e d d ra in a g e pipelines in case of flooding. a n d " W e 'r e making preparations that require tw o to three days to com ­ p le te , ju s t in case a h u r r ic a n e comes," said C ounty Judge Gilberto Hinojosa. " E v e r y b o d y 's just kind of w a it­ ing to see what happens. But every­ body's ready, incredibly read y." R e d C ro s s w o r k e r s in s p e c te d generators and inventoried supplies for their shelters. " W e 'r e ready and w a itin g ," said M anuel Gomez Jr., executive direc­ tor of the w est C am e ro n C o u n ty chapter. In an odd twist, about 55 prison­ ers were released from the county's n e w d e te n tio n center b ecause of fa u lty c o n stru ctio n that o ffic ia ls feared w o u ld not hold up in bad weather. _ _ _ _ F a r th e r w est, H id a lg o C o u n ty o f f ic ia ls also m a d e p r e lim in a r y p re p a r a tio n s , su ch as c h e c k in g d ra in ag e cu lverts, as they kept a close watch on D olly. The p rep aratio n s p rob ab ly w ill prove unnecessary, how ever, w ith South Texas expected to feel on ly D olly's remnants. "Texas w ill catch the rain and the showers that have been m oving on shore, and that kind of thing w ill c o n tin u e for the next c o u p le of d a y s ," said M ik e H opkins, a fore­ caster at the N a tio n a l H u rric a n e Center in M iam i In the past few days, cities across the region have received 1 to 3 inch­ es of rain, but the heaviest showers are still to come, Hagan said. " W e should see an additional 1 to 2 inches, and if w e're lucky, even in excess of that," he said. B r o w n s v ille , w h ic h u s u a lly records 26 inches of ram annually, had received just 2.12 inches prior to these showers. That total already has increased by 1 inch, Hagan said. But the rain hasn't fallen w here it is most needed: in the tw o reser­ voirs that sup p ly w ater to the Rio Grande Valley. BICYCLES SPECIALIZED • T R E K • CANNONDALE Visit us for the largest selection and best prices on all bicycles, accessories and cycling clothing! * Bring In This Ad And Get 15% Off Any Helmet 473-8700 _ 2401 SAN G ABRIEL ‘ O ffer Expires 9/21/96 • Sale Helm ets Excluded il Angry bikers voice opinions on helmet law ■Citizens angrily criticized the C ity C o u n cil Thursday for enacting the helm et ordinan ce that took effect Sunday. M ore than 80 citizens signed up to sp eak before co u n cilm e m b e rs about the ordinance. The o rd in an ce requires that all cyclists w ear helmets. It was enact­ ed M a y 9 w ith a 90-day grace peri­ od. Fines are $50 for the first violation ■ m you’d like to get in on the ground floor of Texas I | Student Publications Internet advertising sales I I program this is your opportunity! Write a short (less than 100 words) letter telling us why you’d like to be considered and why you think you are qualified. Mail it to On-Line Services, ^ mm w ^ ■ ■ m ■ w - m P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. Or send it by e-mail to: WebTexan@mail.utexas.edu. No web experience is required, but a little experience in surfing the net couldn’t harm. Sales experience of some kind would also be helpful. Compensation is by commission, so your pay will be based upon your ability, desire and willingness to work. Send in your application-we’ll contact the best qualified for interviews. The University of Texas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer STATE BRIEFS and $100 for each subsequent viola­ tio n . O n T h u r s d a y the c o u n c il tabled an am endm ent that w o u ld h a v e re d u c e d those fin e s. T h e am endm ent is expected to be con­ sidered at the council's Sept. 5 meet- ing. L y le Zegub, an A u stin resident, c o m p la in e d T h u rs d a y ab ou t the lack of public input before the ordi­ nance's passage. A n d he said the ordinance should only apply to chil­ dren. " W h y even infringe on m y consti­ tutional right?" Zegub asked. R a u l C a ld e r o n , a s s is ta n t c ity atto rn ey, said the o rd in an ce w as m odeled after a s im ila r H o u sto n ordinance that has stood up to legal challenges. V ie w s s im ila r to Z e g u b s' w ere shared by most of the speakers. " I w ant for us to have a choice," Terry Calahan, an A u stin resident, said. "They didn't ask us anything. They ignored the voters." Calahan offered his ow n resolu­ tion that w o u ld either abolish the ordinance or revise it to apply only to children. Citizens w ho spoke in favor of the ordinan ce cited p u b lic safety and high public m edical expenses that come with head injuries as evidence that Austin benefits from the law. "H elm ets save lives, the law puts h e lm e ts on h e a d s ," s aid B re n d a Lindfors, a health and safety advo­ cate fro m Seton H e a lth c a re N e t ­ work. MoPac ramp to close ■M otorists heading toward M oPac Expressw ay (Loop 1) from the U.S. 183 south frontage road w ill have to find a different route beginning in September. Jo h n H u r t, sp o k e sm a n for the Texas Department of Transportation said the ramp leading to M oPac w ill be closed permanently. H urt w ould not give a specific date. Have a “ Super” Look Kvcryday $ 1 ) 5 Savesl.W) on your next Supercut™ (Reg. s875) Simply bring this coupon to these three SUPERCUTS•. As usual, no appointments are necessary. Come in today, this Offer ends 9/30/96. Riverside T he Drag at Pleasant Valley 30th & Guadalupe at Koenig Lane 476-4255 G u a ra n te e d L ow est P rices on Paul M itchell A N exus P rofessional H aire a re P ro d u c ts 385-4972 458-4145 Burnet N ot valid wilh any other offer. A S SO C IA TED PRESS Fidencio Ortega, works at the Brownsville Coop Gin in anticipa­ tion of Hurricane Dolly. H u rt said the ram p connects the s o u th b o u n d U .S . H ig h w a y 183 frontage road to the flyovers lead­ ing to northbound and southbound M oPac. Traffic on the ramp was supposed to y ie ld to m otorists exiting from U.S. H ig h w a y 183, but most did not yield, H urt said. H urt said more than 40 accidents o ccu rre d on the ram p in a three- year period. H u rt said the ramp would proba­ bly be closed w ith a concrete barrier and be m o nitored by the d e p a rt­ ment to study traffic flow w ithout the ramp. H u r t said m o to rists can get to M oPac by going north on Capital of Texas H ig h w a y (Lo o p 360) or by f o llo w in g the U .S . 183 so u th fro n ta g e ro ad to the M o P a c e n tra n c e ra m p s o u th o f S te c k Avenue. Public meetings were also held to d eterm in e if resid en tial streets in the area w ould be used as detours if the ramp was closed. H urt said the te m p o ra ry clo su re d id not affect area streets. — C om piled by M ichael Mulcahy, Juan Alanis, Daily Texan staff Largest Selection of Bicycles & Accessories in Austin Genuine Kryptonite Locks lug. 528 *5 ./coupon SIMS KryptoM Kryptomte K-4 flus Leg. $36.95 «/coupon $26.95 Kryptonite Evolution Keg. $49.95 «/coupon $31.95 2401 San Gabriel 473-8700 Offer expires 9-21 -96 B I T " I % # ■ I T h e D aily T e x a n 9 FNMV, AUGUST 28,1886 Hooton expected to be named new Longhorn pitching coach MARK LIVINGSTON AND DAVID LIVIN GSTO N_________ Daily Texan Staff A source close to the University confirmed Thursday night that for­ mer Longhorn pitcher Burt Hooton will be hired as the next Texas pitch­ ing coach. Hooton, who interviewed with Garrido last Sunday, was a three­ time all-American at Texas from 1969 to 1971 and later had success in the major leagues. Garrido interviewed several can­ didates for the job, but Hooton's resume was apparently too impres­ sive to pass up. Hooton is the pitch­ ing coach for the Albuquerque Dukes, a Class AAA affiliate of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Hooton's pro­ fessional pitching career spanned 15 years, including a nine-year stint with the Dodgers. Texas Former coach Cliff Gustafson has often said that Hooton was the best pitcher he ever coached. While at Texas, Hooton compiled a 1 14 earned run average, a Texas record for pitchers with at least 100 innings pitched. Gustafson once lobbied to retire Hooton's number, but the Texas ath­ letic council denied the request. At the 1995 annual Texas Varsity- fans presented Alumni game, Hooton with a sign resembling the one on Disch-Falk Field's outfield wall in honor of Roger Clemens. Hooton has been a regular at the varsity-alumni games, coaching the alumni team in recent years. When Garrido was hired, he said he would stress recruiting, some­ thing Hooton could help. His World Series ring from the Dodgers' 1981 championship season, his sta­ tus as a Longhorn legend and his ties to the state of Texas could bring a strong presence to the baseball program. Garrido indicated at his opening press conference that he would look for an assistant coach with Texas connections. "This is a Texas university," Garri­ do said. "It reflects Texas baseball." The source, who wished to remain anonymous, said the announcement of Hooton's hiring could come as soon as Friday- Garrido interviewed Hooton in Las Vegas, Nev., on Sunday. His was the most well-known name in a long list of candidates interviewed. Others included Longhorn assis­ tant coach Tommy Harmon, South­ coach west Texas State head Howard Bushong, Northeast Texas community college coach Ty Har­ rington, former Longhorn and major league shortstop Spike Owen and former Arkansas State assistant coach Rusty Richards. Texas still has another assistant coaching vacancy, which many players would like to see filled by Harmon. Harmon served under Gustafson for seven seasons and wras one of the leading candidates for the Texas head coaching job NFL E xm m o N Kansas City at Chicago, cancelled Hooton was a three-time All- American for the Longhorns from 1969-71. He finished his UT career with 386 strikeouts. Stewart, A&M roll into 96 1986 PIGSKIN CLASSIC EDITORS NOTE: This is the 10th o f a 12-part series previewing the Big 12 football teams. BRIAN DAVIS D aily Texan Staff A new quarterback, a new two-back offen­ sive set, a new conference and the same old Wrecking Crew. It all adds up to mean that the excitement is back in Aggieland. Despite the excitement of moving into the new Big 12 confer­ ence, all Texas A&M talk fans want about is who is at the helm. to big 12 big. He's He's handsome. He's quick. He's mobile. He carries a load of reputation His name's not Corey Pullig, and he has never taken a snap at A&M — until now. Nothing can quell the hype of Branndon Stewart. The former Tennessee Volunteer jumped ship in Knoxville after rumors circu­ lated that a fellow' freshman named Peyton Manning would be the Vols' quarterback of the future. After sitting out a year after transferring, Stewart has the reins of a program that domi­ nated the Southwest Conference since the mid-1980s. The SWC is now defunct, but the quest to climb to the top of the Big 12 is one that Aggie fans hope Stewart can spearhead. "If Branndon Stewart improves like he should, we should be an improved football team," A&M head coach R.C. Slocum said in an attempt to contain his excitement. Some of the intangibles that Stewart brings to the table are things that Pullig or even Bucky Richardson didn't. Stewart can move once forced out of the pocket, and he can throw on the run. Richardson could do the latter, while Pullig could do neither. "[Stewart] has a lot of ability, and he can throw a 50-yard bomb," Aggie center Calvin Collins said. "So that mobility will be some­ thing that can really help our offense." Texas A&M head coach R.C. Slocum w ill lead another talented Aggie squad into the 1996 season Saturday against BYU in Utah. ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘Super Alliance’ draws fire from Big 12 Associated Press DALLAS — Several Big 12 Conference schools w ill seek changes in the proposed Super Alliance bowl system, which they said gives preference to the Rose Bowl and the Big Ten and Pacific-10 conferences, The Dallas Morning News reported on Thursday. "I don't see it happening," Texas A&M ath­ letic director Wally Groff said of the agree­ ment, which has yet to be signed. "They want [to have] their cake and eat it, too." souri also expressed concern over the new system the way it's drawn up and said they are not sure they can go along with it. “We are going to try to work this out," Big 12 Commissioner Steve Hatchell said. The Big Ten and Pacific-10 conferences are scheduled to join the Alliance in a new structure that would guarantee a national championship bowl matchup beginning in 1998. Under terms of the proposed Super Alliance agreement, the champions of six major conferences and possibly Notre Dame would be put in a pool for the four bowls to chose from to create the title game between the Nos. 1 and 2 teams in the national rank- ings. The leagues are the Big 12, Atlantic Coast, Southeastern, Big East, Big Ten and Pac-10. But The Rose Bowl will be allowed to keep the Big Ten and Pac-10 champions in its game in the Super Alliance unless one of those conference's teams is ranked No. 1 or No. 2 and the Rose isn't staging the title Please see Alliance, page 10 Please see Aggies, page 10 Athletic directors at Nebraska and Mis­ Running backs shine in murky scrimmage MARK LIVINGSTON Daily Texan Staff record The first scrimmage on the new grass field at Memorial Stadium Thursday night turned in to a show­ case for two fullbacks named Ricky. Sophomore Ricky Williams, who set the Texas freshman rush­ ing season, was last responsible for several highlights early in the scrimmage. Then, backup fullback RickV Brown, a redshirt freshman who sat out la^t season with a broken leg, made a name for himself toward the end of it. Williams ran the ball four times for 37 yards and a touchdown. He also had two catches for 22 yards and a touchdow'n. W illia m s ¡uked linebacker Brandon Nava and ran over Quinton Wallace to score that touchdown. Brown carried the ball three consecutive times in one drive, racking up 65 yards before scoring a touchdown. His first carry was a spectacular 53-yarder in which Brown bowled over would-be tacklers. "It felt great," said Brown, who earned tne nickname "Touch- down" Ricky Brown in high school. "1 love being near the goal line and when I see it, I just bear down and give it all I got to get in that end zone It was just like old times tonight. It felt great to get in there finally." Pouring rain prevented Texas from throwing the ball very much, causing Texas head coach John Mackovic to turn to his heralded It also group of running backs gave coaches a chance to watch freshmen defensive linemen Will Goodloe and Cedric Woodard work with the first team defense. "The scrimmage was a little more controlled tonight than Sat­ urday's scrimmage," Mackovic Please see Horns, page 10 SCORES MLB AMENCNV LEAGUE Boston 2, Oakland 1 California 12, New York 3 Seattle 10, Baltimore 3 Detroit 10, Kansas City 3 Texas 11, Minnesota 2 Toronto 1, Chicago 0 (6), rain NATIONAL LEAGUE Colorado 10, St. Louis 5 Pittsburgh 8, Houston 6 Montreal 5, San Francisco 4 Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 2 (13) Los Angeles 8, Philadelphia 5 BRIEFS Orioles’ Johnson enters hospital ■ BALTIM ORE — Orioles man­ ager Davey fohnson was hospi­ talized Thursday with an irregu­ lar heartbeat and planned to stay overnight for observation. condition was not believed to be serious, but the 53- year-old manager missed Balti­ more's game Thursday night against the Seattle Mariners. He planned to be back in the Oriole dugout Friday night. The “This morning Davey experi­ enced dizziness and an irregular heartbeat," team physician Dr. William Goldiner said. "H e is no danger and will be treated and observed this evening. We expect him to be released tomorrow." Bench coach Andy Etchebar- ren managed the Orioles ir Johnson's absence. "H e seemed to be feeling a l1, right last night," Etchebarren said of Johnson. “But the last: month, I've noticed him getting; faint now and then. He was tak ­ ing smelling salts every once it i a while." Johnson was admitted to the Heart Institute at St. Josep i Medical Center Sharon Sopp, a spokeswoman for St. Joseph, said late Thursday afternoon, "H e's stable and comfortable." Wizards oppose Bullets’ new name ■ NEWARK, N.J. — Among those angered that the Washinj ;- ton Bullets could soon be the Washington Wizards is the pre s- ident of two troupes of basket­ ball players who compete ar d entertain as the Harlem Wizard Todd Davis took the witness stand Thursday in support of h is lawsuit that the NBA team and the league are treading on h is trademark. The Bullets and the NBA coi v tend that Davis has a weak clai n because other sports teams use the Wizards name. executive Testimony they offered from a appeared league aimed at showing the that Harlem Wizards did not bother to register that name until lean i- ing that the Bullets were consit 1- ering the name. The executive's testim ony also cast doubt on whether coi \- tests held by the Bullets regart I- ing their new name and logo have any bearing on what the team eventually chooses. Lawyers expect about four more days of testimony. U.S. District Judge William H. Wal Is, who is condqcting the ben ch trial on whether to bar the Bul­ lets from becoming Wizards, h as not said when he will rule. Texas signs Morris: ■ ARLINGTON — The Te>;as Rangers have signed fifth-rou nd draft pick Warren Morris, an infielder from Louisiana Statt ?. Morris, the starting second baseman on the U.S. Olym pic team this year, hit .409 with five homers during the Olym pic Games. The U.S. team wort a bronze medal. He was a three-year lettem ¡an at LSU and finished his colle­ giate career on June 8 witl a two-run homer in the bottom of tthe inning, the ninth Tigers to a 9-8 victory over Miami in the College World Series title game. lifting — Com piled from Associa ed Press reports CALENDAR SATURDAY ■ VOLLEYBALL The Longhorns hold their annual Orange and White scrimmage at the Recre­ ational Sports Center at 7 p .ri. P a g e 1 0 F rid ay, A u g u s t 2 3 , 1 9 9 6 T h e D a i l y T e x a n WE DON'T N ffi)N O STHKNG SHUTS Football fans enjoy the pouring rain during the second half of the Kansas City Chiefs game with the Chicago Bears in Chicago. The Bears were behind 14-10 when the game was canceled Thursday during the violent thunderstorm for the safety of the fans and players. ASSOCIATED PRESS Woods setting pace for Amateur crown Associated Press CORNELIUS, Ore. — Tiger Woods got all that he could han­ dle on the second day of match play in the U.S. Amateur Cham pi­ onship, but Hh was simply too good for a 37-year-old veteran and a 17-year-old up-and-qomer. It's looking more and more like Woods m ight be too good for any­ one here and will walk away with his unprecedented third consecu­ tive Am ateur title. Even when not at his best, he's simply too good. W oods won his second-round match 4-and-2 over Jerry Courville on Thursday, breaking open an even contest by winning three con­ secutive holes beginning at No. 12. Then Woods advanced to the quarterfinals in the afternoon with a 3-and-l victory over Charles How­ ell. The 17-year-old from Augusta, Ga. — home of the Masters — was the first of Woods' 19 opponents in U.S. Amateur competition who was younger than Woods. In both matches, Woods simply wore down opponents with one titanic tee shot after another, rou­ tinely driving the ball more than 320 yards and hitting short irons to greens while his playing part­ ners hit long irons. For Woods, who is now 17-2 in the U .S . Amateur, three was the magic number. He needs three more victories to get his third consecutive U.S. Amateur Championship. And in all three of his matches this week he turned it around on No. 8. "I feel very positive with the way I'm hitting it," Woods said. "I'm putting much better and I'm managing my game very well." Also advancing to the final eight was Joel Kribel, who defeat­ ed Paul Simson 4-and-3. Robert Floyd, son of Raymond Floyd, moved on by winning 1-up over Jason Enloe. Duke Delcher won in 19 holes over Richard Barbies and Steve Scott defeated Kelly Miller 3-and-2. Grass Continued from page 9 could not be happier with the condi­ tion of it tonight." Most of the players were su r­ prised at how the new grass was very hard and very fast. The players wore regular cleated shoes on the new surface, which drained as well as an Astroturf surface, and there were no signs of standing water despite the heavy rainfall. "It was great. It's fast, real fast," Horns running back Shon Mitchell said. "I kept hearing the coaches say that it was the best field in the coun­ try. I haven't been on a better field. It felt great." M itchell's backfield team m ate, fullback Ricky Williams, agreed that the new grass is short enough, and slick enough, to play just like Astro­ turf. "It did surprise me," Williams said. "I thought the field would be more torn up than it is. I thought it would be all m uddy out there. But, DAN'S LIQUOR 1600 LAVACA 5353 BURNET ROAD 478-5423 459-8689 SPECIALS GOOD FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIALS CASH OR CHECK ALL SPIRITS 80 PR. UNLESS NOTED OLD CROW BOUR........ 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Texas' M emorial Stadium had been a grass facility since the stadi­ um 's construction in 1924. Artificial turf was installed in time for the 1970 season. The turf was replaced in 1974, 1982 and again in 1989. in The artificial surface has become a grow ing concern the 1990s because of the growing num ber of injuries incurred while playing on it. Following the trend set by other schools in the NCAA, Texas had the Astroturf stripped by this past April in favor of a return to natural grass. "I felt real good. It's real good, and it's real fast," running back Priest Holmes said. "You really don't have to worry about it being uneven or slipping or different things like that. There's no potholes or anything like that." Mackovic said: "I think next week, it'll be hardly visible where we were playing tonight — except for a few spots. So, as far as the field goes, and I think that a lot of people will be interested in it, I think that it showed exactly what it's made of, and we're real happy about that." CHRIS'S LIQUOR 5201 CAMERON R[T 451-7391 OPEN 10 9 PM O A K H IL L L IQ U O R C03C HWY 290 WEST Open 10nm 9pm Ph. 892-0607 4.99 BOHEMIA BEER **<> GUINNESS PUB DRAUGHT i , m «i» 5 . 4 9 BITTBURGER BEER Germany 6 tor 5 . 7 9 ANDERSON VALLEY BEERS ^ - 1.49 4.99 B O D D IN G T O N S P U B A L E t^ 5.79 ABITA BEER FOSTER’S BEER * * * 5 . 5 9 4.99 CELIS BEER a ll types QRANJEBOOM LAGER HoiUid . 5.59 5.79 MICHAEL SHEA’S LAGER 1.89 AMBER FISCHER D'ALSACE f» » » h Iv 4.99 ATHENIAN BEER Gr«c* 6 tot 39.99 W.L. WELLER 90* BOURBON WHY. w s l 19.99 CANADIAN MIST 80° CAN. WHY. i m 1 2.99 C UTTY SARK SCOTCH 80 24.99 1 5 1 1 2 . 9 9 GILBEY’S GIN 80* ..i 75 l 24.99 ABSOLUT VODKA 80° 175111.99 CASTILLO RUM 80* 175110.99 CALENDE TEQUILA 80° MEL CHAMPAGNE. ,750 ml 8.49 NATURAL LIGHT or 16Ga1 MILW AUKEE'S BEST ^ . Horns Continued from page 9 said. "We wanted it that way. We had to work on some specific things. We were able to get some things done. I thought our defense did a nice job controlling the second team offense, which was running some things. And our first M issouri offense — even though they could­ n 't throw the ball a great deal because of the weather — did a nice job of mixing some things up." Because of an injury to starting defensive lineman Gray Mosier, Goodloe and Woodard could be thrust into the starting role and will definite­ ly see substantial playing time. "I was hopeful that Gray Mosier would be able to get some time this week and he hasn't," Mackovic said. "I don't know when we can really count on his being back. But certain­ ly we have to make a decision*at that point because he hasn't practiced. And we have a couple of young freshman who have been in there all the time." Woodard played well, posting five tackles, including three for losses. For Ricky Brown, the scrimmage marked his return from a broken leg that he suffered during the 1995 pre­ season. "I was particularly im pressed with Ricky Brown," Mackovic said. "This was the first time that he's had a chance to really show some of his stuff." Said Brown: "People will ask me what I do and I'll say football," said Brown, smiling. "I say Ricky and they're 'Oh, you're Ricky Williams,' and I'm like 'No, I'm Ricky Brown. They'll go, Oh, well.' Nobody really does recognize me, but hopefully that'll change in the like Alliance Continued from page 9 game-. The other Super Alliance bowls — the Fiesta, Sugar and Orange — gave up their traditional tie-ins beginning last season, w hen the Alliance's current three-year run began with No. 1 Nebraska meeting No. 2 Florida in the Fiesta Bowl. Also, for the seven years of the Super Alliance, the Rose Bowl will be allowed to stay in its traditional late afternoon start, except for 2002, when it is slated to stage the nation­ al championship game. The other three Alliance bowls must change their kickoff times to accommodate the Super Alliance. The Rose Bowl will be able to trade its 2002 title game for one in 1999, 2000 or 2001 if the Big Ten or Pac-10 team is ranked No. 1. No other Alliance bowl has that option. ABC would own the television rights to all four Super Alliance games and be able to stage a nation­ al championship game each year in a different bowl. The Rose Bowl is assured a spot in the rotation, and the Fiesta, Sugar and Orange bowls are to be given a 60-day period later this year in which to negotiate for their spots. "If we had known that (the Big Ten-Pac-10 contract), we would future." After struggling in much of the preseason, Texas' young offensive line showed signs of improvement. When the first team offensive line was in the game, the Horns moved the ball. "I thought vye were going against the scout team the way [the offensive line] was blocking our second team defense," Williams said. "They did a good job today. I was kind of wonder­ ing when it would all come together and it seemed like it did today." ■ Tight end Pat Fitzgerald played in the scrimmage, after spending the beginning of the preseason rehab- bing a strained abdominal muscle. "Everything has pretty much gone on schedule," Fitzgerald said. "I plan on being ready for Missouri. Physically, I need to work on some of my footwork and things like that, but we've got a week left." Several players were held out of the scrim m age because of small injuries, including w ide receiver Mike Adams, tight ends Derek Lewis and Derrick Scott and offen­ sive guard Russell Gaskamp. Mack­ ovic said he expects most injured players back by Monday. He also said that Fitzgerald and linebacker Kyle Richardson, who has been lim­ ited in preseason by an injury, will be evaluated next week. ■ Quarterback James Brown com­ pleted all five pass attempts for 48 yards. His backup, Richard Walton, completed four of six for 26 yards and a touchdown ... Defensive line­ man Clarence Martin had five tack­ les, two sacks. Chris including Akins also had a sack. the have not m oved ahead Alliance," Nebraska athletic direc­ tor Bill Byrne said of his school's vote. in "Luckily, we have not signed any­ thing. We did not know their con­ tract had been officially extended." Texas athletic director DeLoss Dodds labeled the new deal among the Rose Bowl, Big Ten, Pac-10 and ABC "disappointing" but said he could live with it. "O ur clear understanding was we would have an opportunity to have jump ball in 2002 to put this on the open market and let the market dic­ tate what the term s m ight be," Byrne said. We understood what the rich history of the Rose Bowl was, and we w ould phase them into the Alliance. But after 2002, everybody would be an equal partner. The way this has happened, some partners are more equal than others." "The Big 12 doesn't want to wear the black hats in this. But, by the same token, we should be treated the same as everybody else," Mis­ souri athletic director Joe Cas- tiglione said. "The days of good- faith negotiations seem to be over." 4? W M M O B i C K OUTLOOK S A L E * . jm m m m m 'M um m m m 1 - ' H Failsafe X L U-Lock ■ HjO®® «feouixm • Lim it on* p *r . . " .gg H _ I S38.M ■ . _ wp*r»a m m - m _ ottm I IB New Location 2815 Fruth 47-CYCLE u**d bike* from $100 Cougars expect war with Aggies 44 We’re inexperi­ Associated Press PROVO, Utah — Ask LaVell Edwards, marking a quarter-centu- ry as Brigham Young's coach, why retirement is far from his mind and he'll point to Saturday's Pigskin Classic. Playing No. 13 Texas A&M in the first game of the season has the nor­ mally poker-faced Edwards as enthusiastic as ever. "I certainly didn't think I'd be doing said this at my age," Edwards, who turns 66 on Oct. 11. this opportuiiity came "When along, it was something we just had to do. Playing these kinds of teams has been the source of some of our greatest victories." Two years ago, the Cougars beat Notre Dame 21-14. In 1990, they upset Miami 28-21. "B ut then again," he added, "they've been the source of some poundings, too." Am ong them: A 44-28 loss to Florida State in the Pigskin Classic five years ago, and a 65-14 loss to Texas A&M in the 1990 Holiday Bowl. The Aggies, with the NCAA's third-best defense last year, w ent 9- 3, including an Alamo Bowl win over M ichigan. Texas A&M is favored by 6 1/2 points, but coach R.C. Slocum calls the game a tossup. "There is a risk, especially going to play at our opponent's home stadi­ um," he said. "BYU is a quality team and we have our work cut out for us." BYU will be counting on quarter­ back Steve Sarkisian, ranked third in NCAA total offense (297.97 yards per game) in 1995. The senior from Torrance, Calif., is not awed by the Aggies. Sarkisian says Texas A&M is the first hurdle in trying to revive BYU, which failed to make a bowl game for the first time in 18 years. The Cougars were 7-4. "Granted, they are a very good football team, but they can't just come up here and step on the field and expect to beat us," Sarkisian said. "It's going to be a battle. We're not overmatched by any stretch of the imagination. This is our year. I think it will show on Saturday." W ide receivers K.O. Kealaluhi enced in the secondary,; and BYU is one of the best teams in the coun­ try in checking out your secondary.” — TLC. Stocum, Texas MAM head coach amd Kaipo McGuire are back, as is tight end Itula Mili. Kealaluhi caught 28 passes for 483 yards and three TDs last year, while McGuire had 24 catches for 359 yards and tw o TDs. Mili had 36 catches for 440 yards and three TDs. James Dye, whose 21.9-yard punt return average led the nation in 1995, also will get a shot at tight end. As a punt returner, Dye "is the t>est in the country, perhaps the best I've seen," Edwards said. "H e is exciting when he gets his hands on the ball. He can really make things happen." A veteran secondary and lineback- ing corps also returns for BYU, but the Cougars return only one defen­ sive and two offensive linemen. Edwards also lacks experienced running backs, a critical complement to a BYU passing attack ranked fifth last year. Only senior fullback M ark' Atuaia has any appreciable backfield time, rushing for 374 yards and five touchdow ns in 1995. Atuaia could have a tough open­ er. Seven times in the past decade, th e Aggies' defense, dubbed the " Wrecking Crew," has ranked in th e top 10. Nine starters return this year. Still, Slocum sees the matchup of Sarkisian against his secondary as a "scary" prospect. Though he returns comerbacks Donovan Greer and A idre Williams, the safeties are sopho­ mores Toya Jones and Rich Coady. "W e're inexperienced in the sec­ ón dary, and BYU is one of the best' team s in the country in checking o u t’ y o u r secondary," Slocum said. Aggies Continued from page 9 Stewart's mobility will no doubt open up a newly formed two-back offensive attack that was discovered in a 22-20 win over Michigan in the Alamo Bowl last season. That new attack heads to Provo, Utah, Satur­ day as Texas A&M faces Brigham Young in the 1996 Pigskin Classic. Kickoff is set for 11 a.m. After the departure of running back Leeland McElroy, A&M was left with a serious dilemma. The problem : How to fit two backs into an I-back system. The solution: A split-back back­ field. The result: More opportunities for Sirr Parker and D'Andre Hardeman. No one seems to know why this approach w asn't used v/hen the Aggies had the tandem of Greg Hill and Rodney Thomas. Both Hill and Thomas combined for 1,703 during the 1993 season in an I-back set. Once again, the Aggies have two tal­ ented backs but only one football. "You never know," Collins said. "You m ight even see the wishbone come back " Hopeful as it may sound, the wishbone offense hasn't been seen in College Station since the beginning of the Jackie Sherrill tenure in 1982. It may not m atter how good the Aggies can run as long as Stewart's receivers can catch. Senior Albert Connell's claim to A&M fame was a fingernail grab in the back of the endzone with eight seconds left in the game to beat SMU last season. He returns along with Dante Hawkins to provide the two biggest targets for Stewart. The passing game only produced 200 yards per game last year, the most during the Pullig era. In an area that was already unsta­ ble, a two-a-day injury to center Koby Hackradt has forced a reshuf­ fling of sorts. Collins was expected to start the season at right guard. But due to the H ackradt injury, Collins moves back to center for now forcing sophom ore Semisi Heimuli into the picture. Tackle Cameron Spikes, left guard Steve McKinney, and left tackle Chris Ruhman fill out a line that averages 290 pounds. The Wrecking Crew lost only one key player to the NFL this season. Linebacker Reggie Brown was draft­ ed by the Detroit Lions and is fight­ ing for a starting spot in the Motor City. Without question, the defense is going to step up and make a statement, now is the time. if All defensive linemen and two of the four linebackers are seniors. Defensive ends Pat Williams and Brandon Mitchell, nose tackle linebackers Edward Jasper, and Keith Mitchell and Larry Walker will get their last shot at earning that coveted No. 1 defensive ranking that A&M's units relish. Aggies had the No. 1 spot entering the Texas game last season. 44 You never know. You might even se e the wishbone come back.” — CaMnCaHna Texas MM The Longhorns racked up 393 yards of Kyle Field turf, and A&M was statistically knocked from the top sp o t and into third in the NCAA's tin ,31 tabulations. Mot only was stopping the run a key factor in A&M's defensive suc­ cess, the Aggies ranked No. 2 nationally in pass defense. Led by AH American Ray Mickens, Texaá A&M allowed a measly 151.9 yards p er game through the air. But Mickens, just like Brown, m oved on to the NFL and his depar­ tu re has left a gaping hole in the defensive secondary. This is proba­ bly the biggest question mark for Texas A&M entering the season. * Left to dispel the rum ors about inconsistency are senior Donovan G reer and sophom ore Shun Horn. G reer is an experienced veteran who know s the A&M system, while Horn eme rged last season in spot play throughout the 12-game season. A t the safety spots, Toya Jones and Rich Coady are two guys who h av e traveled long roads to get w here they are today. Jones was a special teams guru last season and finally earned the free ¡safety starting nod after a strong spring. Coady was finally given a scholarship after walking on the team straight out of Pearce High School in Dallas. All four defensive backs will be the focus of BYU offensive coordinator Roger French's attack as the Aggies face the pass-happy Cougars out of the Wesb?m Athletic Conference Saturday. The fact that A&M will face BYU this early in the season does put extra strain on a team that has its hands full already by the move into the Big 12. The only positive about a game this early is that the Aggies have two weeks off to prepare for their next opponent, Southwestern Louisiana. "The Pigskin Classic does put extra strains on our team," Slocum said "But it's been great to go every: whe re and hear people speak noth­ ing but exciting tilings for the Big 12. Across the country, over the sum­ mer, there has been nothing but pos­ itives said." Of course in College Station, there has l^een nothing but positives said abou t Stewart. Fans are spellbound by his potential, and they will expect nothing but success. Rangers walk by Twins, 11-2 Crossword T h e D a il y T e x a n Friday, August 2 3 ,1 9 9 6 Page 11 Edited by Will Shortz N o. 0 7 1 2 ACROSS 1 “Backdraft” gear 31 State of em ergency 33 Attacker • Approxim ates 34 C o ld war 15 Wind: Prefix 16 Credit card cost 17 G. I. 's bills 18 P ro sp e c to rs’ helpers 19 Form al footwear 20 Place for a hole, often 21 Sq u a re dance partners 22 W hen repeated, a 1968 pop hit 23 Certain trousers 25 Knot 26 Acting Gardner 27 H a v e see 29 Pollster's finding headquarters 35 Fetter 39 Cartoon brawl exclam ation 40 Locker room d isc u ssio n 41 P a r i (at an equal rate) 44 Tender looks 45 Catchall abbr. 46 Sm elter input 47 Scottish clan leader 49 Sk iin g m ecca 50 Kind of fall 52 C P R administrator ANSW ER TO PREVIO US PUZZLE 'hood 5 3 T o n to ’s Scout, for one 54 S c h e d u le 57 G eom eter's concern 58 Like brew ers’ h op s 59 E sc a p e the understanding of 60 University Park c a m p u s s i Cobnted tree rings, e.g. DOWN 1 # 2 Head-to-toe look 3.0utdoor air 4 70 s radical Harris 5 Saturates 6 S o n g from the 7 Getting crocked 8 P o p 9 M icrow aved 10 Sto p up 11 Turnstile cheater 12 Recently 13 1973 hit “• Stron ger Every D a y ” 14 O w ned (up) 23 S u c c o ta sh ingredient 24 S te p p in g spo ts 27 To the max 28 70 s singer Garrett MEAN BUSINESS! ■ K O I WORDS 5T 471-5244 THE DAILY TEXAN y ot ad copy ■ aama w* not I oréf WM vHtocrwK * 0 and mmi oat batera II top» ctwnge trihm » •men* UR. on m# da» at Iha Wlh rrmnjr Advert»»" Nr l : DILBERT® A S O K T H E I N T E R N Puzzle by Chuck Deodene 30 Bring in 32 Israeli writer Oz 33 Public regard 35 En glish garden feature 36 Looking freshly groom ed 37 Leeway 38 Fenced-in 40 Series of troubles 41 S o d a can feature 42 Reach 43 Galleon crew 44 Africa s sm allest 53 51 Volunteer’s home: Abbr. a s a case country 48 C o m p a ssio n 49 C y Y o u n g winner, 1988 55 Sco re s at R F.K 56 City near Arnhem Answers to any three clues in this puzzle are available by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420-5656 (75c per minute) Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the iast 50 years: (800) 762-1665. D oonesbury b y g a r r y t r u d e a u HFAR THAT, (AJIF5 ? Ha aXPFCTB m TO P o s a A G C 1 N ÍC A L , H ARP-BrrraN , c o rru p t, C R A v a u , s e u F -s a R v iN o , aU TISTm P/A SCUM! U/etl,UJHAT P O I UJCAR? GHGíHP I M £P PA Y, O F /'r u iD c c H A V a A PRJNK1N G A U U R aa. P R O BL3M ? 1 U jW T TO G F T THB PFTA JL5 RIGHT. \ by Scott Adams I C A fA E I N O V E R T H E Y O U C O U L D H A V E B U I L T I T T U R N S O U T T H A T I S I T T R U E I C A N W I N W E E K E N D A N D L O O K E D A T T H E D E S I G N Y 0 U V E T H E U N I T A T H A L F T H E A w a r d s f o r C O S T W I T H T U S T O N E T H I S S O R T ' F E T C H T H E S E E N W O R K I N G W I T H /'-NINOR C H A N G E . O F T H I N G ? « I N T E R N A P U L T .; » / A L L Y E A R . OTHER Ut t ER C 0 FUS I 'Ó b y 1Á W U M 6» F d Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS — The Texas Rangers lead the major leagues in batting, but Thursday night they didn't need even a single hit to beat the Minnesota Twins. The Rangers took advantage of a season-high 11 walks by Twins pitchers, scoring their first four runs on bases-loaded passes in an 11-2" victory. "It was really unusual, but in a good way for us," said Texas third baseman Dean Palmer, who had two hits, two RBIs and walks in both the first and third innings. "I looked up at the scoreboard in the third inning and we had four runs and only one hit," he said. "That's not usually our style." Texas finished with 10 hits, more than enough offense for Ken Hill (14-7), who pitched his sixth com­ plete game of the season. "It was a strange game. Strange," said Hill, who got out of a bases- loaded jam in the first inning. "It's always good when you get runs early like we did. It tends to relax a pitcher." The AL West-leading Rangers won for the 11th time in 13 games and moved a season-high 20 games over .500. Ivan Rodriguez of the Rangers hit his 43rd double, setting a major league record for most doubles by a catcher. Rodriguez broke the mark shared by Mickey Cochrane (Philadelphia Athletics, 1930), Terry Kennedy (San Diego, 1982) and Brian Harper (Min­ nesota, 1990). Rodriguez, Harper and Kennedy primarily were catchers, although they played other positions. "It's a pretty good feeling," said Rodriguez. "Fifty doubles, that's the next step. But the main thing is my team's in first place." Rusty Greer hit a two-run homer, his 16th. He was 3-for-5, making him 9-for-14 with six RBIs in his last three games. Hill scattered 10 hits, including a solo homer by Roberto Kelly, and struck out six. He won for the third time in four starts. Texas entered the game with a team batting average of .293, tops in the majors. But the Rangers had a 4- 0 lead before they even had their second )\it of the night, thanks to nine walks in the first three innings. "It was an ugly game for us," said Twins manager Tom Kelly, whose pitching staff has been inconsistent all year. "It's hard to fix a problem we don't know how to fix." Rich Robertson (6-12) walked four of the first six batters he faced, with Palmer's walk giving Texas a 1-0 lead. In the third, Texas loaded the bases with two outs on a single by Juan Gonzalez — Texas' first hit — and walks to Will Clark and Palmer. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL AMBUCAN LEAGUE East UvM m GB — 5 9 14 27 1/2 L10 3-7 z-7-3 7-3 z-6-4 3-7 Pet .571 .532 .500 .461 .354 Central HvMan GB Pet .598 .535 .496 .469 .450 Pet .578 .516 .477 .465 L10 5-5 z-3-7 5-5 5-5 z-3-7 L10 z-8-2 5-5 2-8 6-4 — 6 13 16 1/2 19 — 8 13 14 1/2 West DMriee GB M a y 's Streak Lost 2 Lost 1 Won 4 Won 5 Won 3 Streak Lost 1 Lost 3 Lost 2 Won 1 Lost 5 Streak Won 2 Won 1 Lost 3 Won 2 Home 40-25 33-31 38-28 28-33 25-34 Home 37-24 34-26 31-36 31-35 26-38 Home 43-24 31-33 30-36 36-27 Away 32-29 34-28 26-36 31-36 20-48 Away 39-27 35-34 32-28 29-33 32-33 Away 31-30 34-23 32-32 23-41 New York Baltimore Boston Toronto Detroit Cleveland Chicago Minnesota Milwaukee Kansas City Texas Seattle Oakland California W 72 67 64 59 45 W 76 69 63 60 56 W 74 65 62 59 W 79 68 59~ 58 52 W 68 67 63 62 54 L 54 59 64 69 82 L 51 60 64 68 71 L 54 61 68 68 46 58 69 69 75 60 60 62 62 73 59 60 62 71 Seattle (Mulholland 1-1) at Boston (Gordon 9-6), 6:05 p.m. Milwaukee (McDonald 10-8) at Cleveland (Hershiser 13-7), 6:05 p.m. Oakland (Wengert 6-8) at New York (Gooden 10-5), 6:35 p.m. Cafifomla (Boskie 11-6) at Baltimore (Wells 9-11), 6:35 p.m. Toronto (Hentgen 15-7) at Chicago (Bere 0-1), 7:05 p.m. Texas (Oliver 10-5) at Minnesota (Aguilera 6-5), 7:05 p.m. Detroit (Sager 2-2 or Keagle 3-6) at Kansas City (Appier 11-8), 7:05 p.m. Only games scheduled Atlanta Montreal New Y o r k _ Florida Philadelphia Houston St Louis Chicago Cincinnati Pittsburgh W San Diego 70 Los Angeles 66 Colorado 66 San Francisco 54 ________________ z-first game was a win NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dtvtstoe GB Pet .632 540 .461 .457 409 Streak L10 Won 6 z-9-1 z-4-6 Won 1_ z-4-6 Lost 1 4-6 _______ Lost 2 Won 3 4-6 11 1/2 21 1/2 22 28 Central ttvMee L10 GB 4-6 z-5-5 6-4 Z-6-4 3-7 Pet .531 .527 .504 .500 .425 1/2 3 1/2 13 1/2 West DMstoa GB L10 z-6-4 z-6-4 5-5 5-5 2 1/2 3 1/2 14 1/2 Pet .543 .524 .516 .432 M a y 's Gantes Streak Lost 2 Lost 3 Won 2 Lost 3 Won 2 Streak Won 4 Lost 3 W on4 Lost 1 Home 46-21 38-25 34-28 39-25 27-35 Home 36-25 35-28 36-31 33-31 27-36 Home 36-30 33-28 43-19 29-32 Away 33-25 30-33 25-41 19-44 25-40 Away 32-35 32-32 27-31 29-31 27-37 Away 34-29 33-32 23-43 25-39 Cincinnati (Carrara 0-0 and Jarvis 6-5) at Florida (A.Leiter 12-11 and Valdes 0-1), 1, 3:30 p.m. Chicago (Trachsel 11-6) at Atlanta (Maddux 11-10), 6:40 p.m. St. Louis (Osborne 10-8) at Houston (Kile 10-7), 7:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Lieber 5-4) at Colorado (Rrtz 13-9), 8:05 p.m. New York (Clark 12-9) at Los Angeles (R Martinez 9-6), 9:05 p.m. Philadelphia (Hunter 1-4) at San Diego (Ti.Worrell 7-6), 9:05 p.m. Montreal (M.Leiter 7-10) at San Francisco (Gardner 10-5), 9:05 p.m. Only games scheduled Robertson then walked Mickey Tet- tleton and, after throwing a ball to Mark McLemore, was relieved by Jose Parra. But Parra didn't do much better, walk­ ing both McLemore and Kevin Els ter. Tettleton drove in three runs with a walk, sacrifice fly and single. Gon­ zales added three hits as Texas scored 10 or more runs for the fourth time in five games. Around Campus is a daily col­ umn listing U niversity-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organizations registered with the Campus and Community Involvement Office. Announce­ ments must be submitted on the proper form by noon two days before publication. Forms are available at the Daily Texan office at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. No changes will be made to Around Campus entries after 5 p.m. one business day prior to publication. You may now submit Around Cam pus entries by e-m ail at: aroundc@ utxvm s.cc.utexas.edu. Please include the name of the sponsoring organization, location, time and date of event, date of announcement, a contact phone number and other relevant infor­ m ation. Q uestions regarding Around Campus may also be e- mailed to this address. Otherwise, please direct questions to the Around Campus editor at 471-4591. The Daily Texan reserves the AROUND CAMPUS right to edit submissions. MEETINGS UT Tukong Moosul martial arts club meets 6 p.m. Monday, Thurs­ day and Friday and 3 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday during the sum­ mer on Clark Field. Beginners are welcome. For more information call Kim Hewitt at 475-8464. Malaysian Singaporean Christ­ ian Fellowship meets 7:30 p.m. every Friday in the Episcopal Stu­ dent Center at 209 W. 27th St. All are welcome. For more information call 453-5798. UT Floor Hockey Club meets 5:30 p.m. Friday in L. Theo Bell- mont Hall 5.202. For more informa­ tion call Mike at 482-0798 VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITY UT Internationa] Office Pals Program seeks American students to provide friendship and cultural exchange as conversation partners for international students. For more information call a Pals coordinator at 471-1211, or e-m ail to pals® mozart.io.utexas.edu. Division of Housing and Food Service needs student tutors to help with a literacy and GED pro­ gram for adults. Classes are held from 1-2:30 p.m. and from 2:30-4 p.m. For more inform ation call Steven Phillips at 471-5031. Chabad Jewish Student Organi­ zation invites all Jewish students to a free full-course Shabbat dinner Friday at 9:30 p.m. Students are also invited to our services that begin at 8:45 p.m. Candle lighting this week is at 7:44 p.m. and all women and girls are invited to light them at that time. Chabad House is located at 2102 Nueces St. Saturday morning services begin 10 a.m. and are followed by a gourmet meal. Call 472-3900 for more infor­ mation. F p f t T e W U n r m X U t o pTomJ 5 jt . I A J '/p n y T i i H.O Uus s t n t s l t r ! SOCKMAN! T. RAMEN and M.S.G. C A N P I C K . Y o u r , f r i e n p s . OU CAN P IO C Y O U R N O S C Y O U C A N ' T P \ C K Y o u r . f r j c n p ' s N o s e j ,; I WANT Neo O N M Y t e a m I I WANT THIS N o sei NoS£S $ 3 * 1 W A N T Y o u r n o s e ! n o W A Y / , N\AN- 5 » 6 g d y s ! A A £ A L L i 6 AD D (. M L U M 4 , no kitr-.fauuw* ore** b v T o m a s & i O D Q Q S > v C O . Help Keep Our Campus Clean! Recycle! Recycle! Recycle! Page 12 Friday, August 2 3 ,1 9 9 6 T h e D aily T e x a n To Place a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 or on-line at: http://fetumedia.jou.utexas.edu/ CLASS/ clasform. html Classified W ord Ad Rates Charged by th e w ord Based on a 1 5 w o rd m inim u m , th e follow ing ra te s apply. $6.15 1 day 2 days $ 1 1 .7 0 3 d a y s .................................... $ 1 6 .6 5 4 d a y s ................................... $ 2 0 4 0 5 d a y s .................................... $ 2 3 .2 5 F irst tw o w o rd s may be all capital le tte rs . $ .2 5 fo r each additional w o r d l e t t e r s M a ste rC a rd and Visa accepted c a p it a l in Classified Display Ad Rates C harged by th e colum n inch. One colum n inch m inim u m A variety of type faces and s ize s a nd b o r d e r s a va ila b le . Fall r a te s Sept. 1-M ay 3 0 . 1 to 21 co lu m n inches inch over 21 p e r m o n th $ 9 2 0 p e r col colum n inches p e r m onth Call fo r ra te s FAX ADS TO 471-6741 8:0O5:CXD/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.2 00 Deadline: 1 1 :00 a.m. prior to publication TRANSPORTATION 10—Misc. Autos 20—Sports-Foreign Autos 30—Trucks-Vans 40—Vehicles to Trade 50—Service-Repair 60—Parts-Accessones 70—Motorcycles 80—Bicycles 90—Vehicles-Leasing 100—Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES ■M E R C H A N D IS E 190—Appliances 200—Fumiture-Household 210-Stereo-TV 220—Computers-Equipment 230—Photo-Camera 240-Boats 250—Musical Instruments 260—Hobbies 270-Machinery-Equipment 280—Sporting-Camping Equipment 110-Services 120-Houses 130—Condos-Townhomes 140-Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160-Duplexes-Apartments 170-Wanted 180-Loans 290—Fumiture-Appliance Rental 300—Garage-Rummage Sales 310-Trade 320—Wanted to Buy or Rent 330—Pets 340-Longhom Want Ads 345-Misc. RENTAL 350-Rental Services 360-Fumished Apts. 370-Unfurnished Apts. 380—Furnished Duplexes 390—Unfurnished Duplexes 400—Condos-T ownhomes 410—Furnished Houses 420—Unfurnished Houses 425-Rooms 430—Room-Board 435—Co-ops 440—Roommates 450—Mobile Homes-Lots 460—Business Rentals 470-Resorts 480-Storage Space 490—Wanted to Rent-Lease 500—Misc. ANNOUNCEMENTS 510—Entertainment-Tickets 520—Personals 530-T ravel-T ransportation 540— Lost & Found 550-Licensed Child Care 560—Public Notice 570—Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580—Musical Instruction 590—Tutoring 600-Instruction Wanted 610^-Misc. Instruction SERVICES 620—Legal Services 630—Computer Services 640—Exterminators 650—Moving-Hauling 660—Storage 670—Painting 680—Office 690-Rental Equipment 700—Furniture Rental 710-Appliance Repair 720-Stereo-TV Repair 730-Home Repair 740-Bicycle Repair 750—Typing 760—Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 770—Employment Agencies 780—Employment Services 790-Part Time 800-General Help Wanted 810-Office-Clencal 820—Accounting-Bookkeeping 830—Admmistrative- Management •840-Sales 850-Retail 860—Engmeenng-T echmcal 870-Medical 880-Professional 890-Clubs-Restaurants 900-Domestic Household 910—Positions Wanted 920-W ork Wanted BUSINESS 930—Business Opportunities 940-0pportumties Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED f o r o n ly ONE ADVERTISING TERMS in th e e v e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e advertisem ent, notice m u st be given by 11 a m. th e fir s t day, as th e p u b lishe rs are in c o r r e c t r e s p o n s ib le insertion All claims fo r adjustm ents should be m a de n o t la te r th a n 3 0 days a fte r publication. Pre-paid Kills receive cre d it slip if requested a t tim e of cancellation, and if a m o u n t e x c e e d s $ 2 . 0 0 Slip m u s t be presented fo r a re ord e r within 9 0 days to be valid Credit slips are non-transferrable In c o n s id e r a t io n o f th e D a ily T e x a n 's a c c e p ta n c e o f a d v e r tis in g c o p y f o r publication, th e agency and the advertiser w ill indem nity and save h a rm le ss, Texas S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s and its o ffic e r s , e m ployees, and a g e n ts a g a in st all loss, l ia b ility , d a m a g e , a n d e x p e n s e o f w h a ts o e v e r n a tu re a r is in g o u t o f th e c o p y in g , p r in tin g , o r p u b lis h in g o f its a dve rtise m e nt including w itho u t lim itation reasonable attorney's fees resulting fro m claim s of suits for libel, violation of rig h t of p riv a c y , p la g ia ris m a nd c o p y rig h t a nd tra d e m a rk infringem ent TRANSPORTATION REAL ESTATE SALES MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 3 6 0 ~ Fum . Apts. 3 6 0 - Fum . Apts. 3 7 0 - U nf. Apts. WALK TO UT W ALK/BIKE 10 - Misc. Autos WHITE '95 4-dr Saturn S ll Auto­ matic transmission. 16,000k. Excel­ lent condition $11,000 OBO. 301- 1712 or 288-7055. 8-15-5B 1990 PONTIAC 4-dr. 38,000K A /C , Heater AM/FM-radio. Excep­ tionally clean Blue book price $5028. Your price $4500. Can be financed by bank. 442-0084 8-22- 4P '91 FORD Taurus G l V6, A /C , P/W , P/B, C /C , P/L. Very Good Condition. 6 6 ,0 0 0 /m ile s $63 0 0 OBO. 794-6359 8-22-12B MUST SELLI '9 4 Geo Metro 43K miles, run*/lOOks perfect, new fires and tune-up Book Value $6,000, sell for $5,000, obo. Charles 452- 8 2 2 2 ,4 2 4 6 5 1 3 8-22-14B 2 0 * Sports-Foreign Autos 94 BMW 3 25 is. Loaded. 2 2 ,0 0 0 m ile s, $ 2 5 0 0 0 OBO 4 5 1 -1 7 0 7 8 -7 -1 5B 1983 280ZX 2+2, loaded, digital dash, t-fops, new tires, excellent con- dtion, $2995 Call 303-5900 8- 22-5B FIAT 1981 56,000 /m iles, $3000/cosh. 345-0315 8-23-2B Spider new 2 0 0 0 , top, 3 0 - Trucks-Vans '7 7 G.MC shorfbed h-tick runs areal. $2000/obo. 4746631 Leave mes­ sage for Jason. W ill call back. 8 16 5B 1987 SUZUKI Samurai 12IK miles Many extras Great for student or ranch. $2500 255-4345 8-22-7B TRANSPORTATION 8 0 - Bicycles A u s tin Bicycle Salvage W AREHOUSE 1830 N. Mays Round Rock (Behind Buck’s Bikes) Used Bikes and Parts Open to the Public MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Cost!!! B U C K ’S B I K E S 928-2810 REAL ESTATE SALES 130 • Condos - Town homes U .T . E x p e r t s Pearl M w /loft $ 47,500 Shodowtree 1-1 3000 G tN xlaiv|K M Paddock EH. Orongetree ’ Overlook Treebouse M e v u e Wedgewood EH. 1-1 1-1 1-1 2-2 EifieW Towntant 2-2 Somerset 2-2 W. Univ. Plore 2-2 (owner fmomed) $ 33,000 $ 33,000 $35,000 $ 40,000 $ 56,500 $67,500 $67,500 $ 71,000 $01,000 $01,500 $05,000 -Lennox (ro ix 2-2 2-2 $05,000 $ 92,000 ‘Qrawjetree 2-2 $108,000 2 0 0 - Furniture- Package deal for a paltry sum. Furnish your whole place for $ 7 5 0 . Like new: 2 matching sofas, dining table, 4 matching solid w alnut pieces, 13 drawer dresser w ith m irror, 5 drawer dresser, desk, credenza 346- 3547 8-22-5B-C BEDROOM SET double bed, mattress box spring, headboard, dressing ta­ ble with mirror, chest and end tables. $350 Call 255-5569. 8-23-5B 2 2 0 - Computers- Equipment MAC POWERBOOK, 165c 4MB R AM /80 MB hard drive, cuilt in flop­ py drive and carrying case. $800 Leave message 837-3229. 8-16-5B Lo nghorn W ant: A d s ALDINE CD/CHANGER, Phoenix gold amp, Alpine digital alarm, all wiring, sounds perfect!I Only $750 for packagel Contact Adam at 719 1100. 8-14-5P COMPUTER WORK center desk Ex- cellent condition, $ 100. Sony mega­ bass compact stereo with CD/2-cas- sette decks and remote $80 Bean bag, $10 file $10, 7081663 8-14-5B 1--------------------------------------------- FOR SALE: One single bed+ m at­ cabinet, tress, One desk, One nightstand P rices n e g o tia b le 7 08 -1846 Leave a message. 8-14-5NC CHEAP CAR! '79 Oldsmobile 98 se- dan Dark blue, 403 cid, not muck to look of, but runs good. $975/obo 481-1977. 8-14-5B STUDENT VALUE! Blue satin chaise chair, $200 Small Bat- tenburg lace shade, $10. One TV $12 5 , VCR $125, Reel to Reel tape re c o rd e r $25 0 , tu rn ta b le $75, vacuum cleaner $25. 339- 3146. 8 -1 5 -5 B RENTAL Blow Off Campus — It's Too Expensivel — We Have Well Priced LocationsAjLOve^Austin Apotrante «Duplexes Haras * Gondoniixre With over 20 years serving Austin's leasing needs 443-2526 - R e n t a l R e f e r r a l— A Free Service 3 6 0 • Fum . Apts. Now Preleasing One Block From Campus . SO - Bicycles '9 4 KON A Lava Qome mountain bike, 16" perfect condition, barely ridden Paid $700, sell for $400 Charles 452-8222, 4 24 6 5 1 3 . 8-22- 148 REAL ESTATE SALES 1 20 - Houses floors, UT 3-21/2 HARDWOOD area, quiet neighborhood, skylights, remodeled Only $129,0001 Abbe Waldman, agent 483-0395. 8-22- 14B 130 - Condos- Townhomes SPEEDWAY CONDOS: P e rfe ct room m ate flo or plan! Nine con­ dos $ 7 9 ,5 0 0 -58 9 .5 0 0 . S p e ed ­ way location. Cher, Landm ark P ro p e rtie s . 2 5 5 -8 8 7 3 . 7-30- 20B 2408 LONGVIEW West Campus C ondo. G reat location, sm all com plex, 2bedroom , 1bath, pool, co vere d p a rkin g , security. $59,000 Pat F itzp a trick. 338- 8 2 2 4 e x t2 2 4 . 8 -8 -1 0 B 2408 LONGVIEW. West Campus Condo G re a t loca tio n , sm all com plex, 2bedroom , 1bath, pool, qovered p a rk in g , security. $59,000. Pat F itzp a trick. 338- TIRED OF RENTING?? Talisman Condos 4 min from dwtn. 1501 Barton Springs Rd Spacious 2 /2 's, Fireplaces, Microwaves, City Garages. Views, $ 9 7 ,9 5 0 /$ 9 9 , Eanes Properties, 263-7333. Pool, 9 50 8-23-5B-A 160 - Duplexes- Apartm ents UT SHUTTLE!!! Duplex for sale 2/1 each side $4900 Down. $107,000 100% Brick S u r­ rounded by $ 175,000 hom es in Prestigious Travis H eights” makes this a stable investm ent. Quick move in OK Centex Realty MERCHANDISE 2 0 0 - Fum iture’* Household COME TO Furniture Brokers of West­ lake for excellent deals on quality fur- nitue 4201 Westbank. 329-8421. 8- 14-1 OB COME TO Furniture Brokers of West­ lake for excellent deals on quality fur- n ture 4201 Westbank. 329-8421. 8-14-1 Ob MUST SELL entire household of awe­ some antiques & great used furniture Delivery available 832-6806 8-22- 5B MUST SELL, 6 piece beige couch, 9 drawer dresser with mirror, & ceiling fan, Air conditioning. 476-5318 8- 22-2p ■ r i J U ' I H H U 2 0 0 - Furniture - Household Beils, Beds, Beds The factory outlet lor Simmons, Seoly Springou We carry closeouts discontinued covers, 4 factory 2nds From 50-70% off retail skxe pnces Al1 new, complete With warranty Twin set, $69 Full set, $89 Queen set, $119 King set, $149 1741 Wetf Anderson In. 454-3422 FREE DELIVERY For UT Stutlontsl 2 8 2 - 3 3 4 4 bedroom wooden end table, $50. 1 - 8 0 0 - 8 4 6 - 4 4 9 3 Sm all table w /lam p. $70. 338- _______ 8-6-20B 1638. 8 -6-5 B * FHA Financing 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 RANSPORTATION • 10 MISC. AUTOS 6618 N LAMAR 2001 S LAMAR Centex Furniture W h o lesale 450-0988 445 5808 Setting a new standard in used car dealership ligh quality selection of cars, trucks, vans and sport utility vehicles with friendly financing to fit any budget. S | ( ) S B u r n e t K o . u l ( U t u 11 it \ n d < rs< m \ N i i i k i 1 BR & 2 BR Ceiling Fans On Shuttle Laundry Room Fully Furnished Pool • Permit Parking • On-site manager/ maintenance • Vertical mim-blinds • Affordable deposits R i o N u e c e s 600 W. 26th 474-0971 Longhorn W a n t A d s Longhorn W a n t A d s VALUE PRICED! Oriental fan style c h a ir, $150, M a tch in g w icke r shelves, $100. Tall wooden coat rack, $20. Antique small ca bi­ net, $155. 3 3 8 -1 6 38 8-22-5B COUCH FOR sole. 6 feet long, soft gray, asking $90. Goes with every­ thing Call Rebecca at (713)728- 3322; However, couch is in Austin. 8-14-5NC FULL FUTON w /fram e $100, 17' Coleman Canoe $270, Dressmakers mannequin $90, CD/Cassette Radio $50 480-0196. 8-15-5B QUEEN-SIZE FUTON- Wooden frame, arm rests. Just like new! $350 OBO. Round wooden drop-leaf table, unfinished $100 OBO 302- 3140 Leave Message. 8-15-5B i BUY MY waterbed solid maple, frame only with heater and 6-drawer pedestal, $100 Couch-good condi­ tion, $65. 306-8099. 8-16-5nc STUDENTS: VALUE Priced Furni­ tu re ! $100. Tan p la id couch, $ 100. A va n t g a rd e le a th e r ch air& sto o l, $150 338-1638 8-22-5N C SAUDER OAK computer desk en­ tertainment center $ 100/m o White tile farm table w /fhree chairs $150 292-9071 8-15-5b BIG 40" TV $800 OBO. 95 Gary Fisher Rock Shox, Clipless, Many E xtras, $500 OBO. C all 469- 9 7 6 8 ,Leave Message 8-15-5B "HELMET LAW sucks" shirts $5, Help Austin's freedom fight & retain a sou venir. Thursdays, 6pm city council near liberty Lunch. 8-22-5b NEW ROAD bike red Yokata legend 19" Kromole frame 14sp. Shimano RX100 $395 obo. 346-3694. 8-22 5B LAPTOP- COMPAQ contura 4 8 6 /2 5 209M G horddrive, 8MG RAM; ac­ tive color matrix monitor 9 6 fax mo­ dem only $1000 478-2216 8-22 5B. KENWOOD STEREO Receiver DE N O N 12 Bano equalizer, INFINITY speakers, JVC CDP, TECHNICS turn­ table, SHARP 20" tv. $600. Obo. Coll 478-2873. 8-22-5B g n o L h W ant: A d s r n o MAC CLASSIC 2 /4 0 w /cover, stand, manuals and software $2501 447-9345. 8-23-5B COMPAQ 486 14" color monitor, $500. IBM thmkpad, 720, 486-50, 1 2/1 20 . $700 Laptop at desktop prices Dan, 320-0901. 8-23-5nc 3 45 - Misc. SCULPTURED LONGHORN by Jo­ seph Meloncon. Ceramic Reproduc­ tion. Display at Bevo's Bookstore on the drag. Order info: 1-800-499- B E V 0 8 0 £ 2 0 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ W M M M M 3 5 0 - Rental Services ONE CALL Does It All I Houses, Du­ plexes, Apartments, Condos Rent, Buy or Sell. All Sizes, All Prices (From $500). Hunters, Habitat habitat@bga.com, http://w w w .aus- tinre com/habitat,htm, 482-8651 8- 23-8P 3 6 0 - Furr». Apts. GREAT 1 BEDROOM APARTMENTS! VALUE PRICED! O riental fan s ty it tem, C olor M onitor $225 P e n ti­ Furnished, Quiet, $450/mo. MACINTOSH CLASSIC 2MB, RAM, 40-MB, hard drive + modem. $500 OBO. 206-0105. 8-14-5B ch a ir, $150, M a tch in g w icke r um 75 Multim edia 4X CD Sound. shelves, $100. Tall wooden coat Speakers, modem, SGA, rack, $20 Small antique cabinet, w a rra n ty, $975 4 4 8 -2 5 36 8-9- Tower View Apartments 9 2 6 E, 2 6 t h St. #208 $ 155. 3 3 8 -1 6 38 8 -2 2 -5 B 5pc 3 20-0482 8-14-20B-Ü LASER 386 SX/25 Com plete S ys­ 1 /2 Block from Law School STUDENT VALUE! Blue satin 486 S X /3 3 C om plete Multimedia chaise chair, $200. Small Bat- System w ith C D-Rom . sound, 2-BLOCKS CAMPUS Mauna Ka tenburg lace shade $10. One speakers, Faxmodem, VGA Color 405 East 31 si E fficiency S e p tl, bedroom wooden end table, $50. $495 AST 486 DX/33, VGA C o l­ $ 3 7 0 + 1 50+E . 1 BR $46 0 + Sm all table w /lam p, $70. 338- or $425 4 4 8 -2 5 3 6 8 -9-5 p -C $ 2 0 0 + E . A p p o in tm e n t 4 53- 4 7 2 - 7 0 4 4 , 4 5 2 - laundry, mgr. Jerrick Apts. Furn 1-1's A LL SIZE S N O W $ 4 1 9 - $ 4 8 9 ! 104 E. 32nd (block 4103-5 Speedway (If Speed­ way) 2514 Pearl Shut­ tle) 2 2 3 7 If No Answer 346-1990. 8 -7 -2 0 b HYDE~PARK One Bedroom $ 5 2 5 N ew Furniture, Fans Large walk-in closet 4307 Avenue A 454-9945 8-1 5 9B-C AVAILABLE N O W in Hyde Park: Fur- nished 400/sq. ft. Efficiencies w /m i- crowave. Recent paint. 10 min to UT. 2b!k to IF shuttle. $ 3 9 0 /m o Fait, $ 360/m o Summer. Gas/woter paid Joe. 708-9275. 8-15-58 3TO10 BLOCKS North UT. Effic.en- cy $265, $325 1-br $335, $395 Quiet, No Pets. 454-4441. 8-15-5B WALK TO Campus. 2-1, controlled access. 1800 Lavaca $ 9 5 0 /m o ABP Jay Gohil Realty DP 370-7878 8 15-5B W 9TH/BLANCO - clean, honest, responsible. No pets Oak floors. Landscaped. Furnished $300+ utilit­ (512)476-4214 8-16-10p ies GREAT LOCATION LARGE 2-2, miw carpet, new paint, all, appliances, swimming pool 2 blocks from UT Law School 326-8534 8-16-8B APARTMENT FINDERS service (e- http://w w w .ausapt.com mai!)afs@Jump.Net 322-9556 8-16- 5P-C TO CAMPUS Avalon Apart­ ments: 32nd at 1-35 • 2 - 2 $ 6 4 5 T O W N H O M E 1 bedroom, 2 baths Secluded Balcony, Trees, Ceiling Fan, No Pets. $525-$550 . 701 North Loop Near Intramural Fields 4 5 4 - 9 9 4 5 7-29-20B C •1-1 $465 •Eft. $ 4 2 5 C onvenient engineering, law, LBJ Prime C rest Apartm ents 9001 N orthgate B oulevard A u stin, TX 78758 school and all East Campus Walk- 8 3 6 -7 2 3 1 in closets, ceiling fans, on-site Spacious 1 and 2 bedroom apa rt­ 4 59-9898 Open 7 days a week ments available now!!! Large pa­ tio s/b a lco n ie s, lots of clo se t and storage space, poo1 laundry, covered picmc/BBQ area, trees 8-22-20B D and scenic courtyard views Call or come in to d a y!1 Prices start at $ 44 5 7-26-20B 8-22-18B 0 7-31 20B *; HYDE PARK 2-1 935 Square Feet $ 7 6 5 4 5 1 - 2 3 4 3 7-30-208*0 NORTH CAMPUS 2-2 996 Square Feet $ 8 2 0 Available now. Move in Discount 4 5 1 - 2 3 4 3 7-30-20B 0 LAFtGE EFFICIENCIES Special Rates Small, quiet complex Remodeled D/W CA, New floors, pool, laundry $20 0 d e p o sit No pets o r room m ates Available Now Preleasmg Call Sandra and leave name, number, and best tim e to call 4 7 4 -5 0 4 3 ext 103 One Bedroom $ 3 9 5 Large Two Bedroom $ 4 2 5 9 2 6 - 7 3 7 7 W alk To Campus Ready to Move in Now! Ma M aison (Womens Residence) 2222 Pearl (23rd/Pearl) * All bills paid ' West Campus * Free Cable/Parking * Luxury Lobby * Dining Hall * Exercise equipm ent ' C om puter/F ax * Housekeeping ' Fully Furnished * C ontrolled Access * Laundry Room * C lose to all S huttles * C om m unity Kitchen * Sundeck Freshmen Welcome! No Waiting List! C a ll 474- 2224 1 - 8 8 8 - 4 7 4 - 2 2 2 4 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. CARING O W N E R S Personalized attention only E fficiencies starting from $ 38 5 to $ 4 4 5 One bedroom s sta rtin g from $ 4 9 5 to $ 54 5 $ 69 5 to $ 80 0 Gorgeous, Colonial Three Bed­ room $ 1 3 4 5 KHP 4 7 6 -2 1 5 4 Hardwood Floors, Super Large 4 5 3 -5 4 1 7 . 8 -2-2 0 B -D LARGE EFFICIENCY. $ 4 4 0 2-2" $675. Quiet individuals. 12 month lea se , no pets 3 5 th /3 7th St WEST CAMPUS1! Spacious older 2-21 On sh uttle /w alk U T! $750 7-30-20B-C FPP 480-8518 8-2 20B-C HYDE PARK 4510 DUVAL G r e a t L o c a tio n b y Bus S to p E f f ic ie n c y $ 4 2 5 CUTE 2-1. G reat Location West Campus, All Bills Paid, Parking $75 0 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 8 -5-2 0 B LIVE ALONE1 Great efficiencies West Campus, all bills paid, com : L a r g e 1 B e d ro o m fo r $ 5 4 5 p le te kitch e n , close t space C e ilin g F a n , N o P e ts Sum mer. 9 m onths, 12 m onths $ 4 2 5 -$ 4 7 5 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 8 -5 - 3 02-5699 7-26 20B-C 20B WINDOWFUL TREEHOUSE Q u ie t garage apartm ent H ardwoods. 3 7th-S t., Window AC's $850 ABP 12 m onth lease. No pets 453- 5417 8 -2-2 0 B -D LARGE MODERN Efficiency In sm all, well m aintained, quiet com­ plex Great kitchen, lots o l w ind­ ows. co vered p arking Year lease No pets $440 1013 W 23 4 5 1 -0 4 14 8 5-20B -D L a C a s i t a • Only 1 blocks to IT • Comm unity Pool • On Site Laundry • Summer & Fall/Spring availability • Covered Parking • (¡as heat and w ater paid • On-site m aintenance • Tastefully decorated • l and J bdrm f b o r plans • Best value in North Campus Size 1-1 2-1 12 months 9 months $550 $650 $575 $675 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 S Q U A R E Apartments * NOW PKELEASLN'li * FI tt.MSHED/1 WIKNISHED * 5 BIJKS FROM CAMPUS 1 WC SHUTTLE STOP * EFHC1ENOES * DELUXE M * 21 ECONOMY STYLE * ON SITE MANAGEMENT , ALL BELLS PAID 2 2 1 2 San Gabriel Street Austin, Texas 78705 (512)474*7732 1638 8 -22 -5 B WATERBED, QUEEN size with mir­ rored headboard/bookshelf. Great condition. New water heater, $150, 873-7465 8-22-5NC MAC PERFORMA 400 w /color moni­ tor, inkjet printer, word processor. Perfect for term papers. Excellent con­ dition $650 0 8 0 452-4551 8-22- 58 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER $75 End table $6. Student oak desk $45 Sewing machine cabinet $45 (never used) White ceiling fon w /lig h t $10. Call 892-7336. 8-22 5P. FOR SALE 14-ft Goldfish sailboat Good COndition. New tires $300 OBO 836-4497. 8-15-5B BLUE SOFA Bed $125 346-8403 MATRESS BOX spring and frame $180. 708-1101 8-23 58 SONY 41" TV $800 Good condi­ tion. Just had check-up. Call 326- 2085 or 444-6676 Ask for Shelley. 8-»3-5b LIQUIDATING LUXURY King size wa­ terbed. Black naugahyde padded headset and frame W ill set up $250. Complete 326-2913 Leslie 8-2 3-5 B WHY RENT? Own a blacfaack deal­ ers table w /fu ll casino setupji e cards, shoes, chips) Portable and professional $600 326-2913 Le­ slie 8-23-5B 1981 HO N DO CM400T, garage kept Only 7000 miles! Hardly ever used 2 helmets included $950 447 4467 8-23-5B 3 6 0 - Fum . Apts. 3 6 0 • Fum . Apts. F u r n is h e d 1-1 la rg e i - i 2 - 1 2 - 2 WEST CAMPUS Apartment Finders Service 2 1 0 9 R io G r a n d e 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 P a r k P l a z a and P l a z a C o u r t A p a r t m e n t s LEASING I & 2 BDM APTS CONTROLLED ACCESS GATE C O N V E N IE N T TO H A N C O C K CENTER, U T & SAN MARCUS SHUTTLE 915 E. 4 1 st 4 5 2 - 6 5 1 8 W a lk T o C a m p u s HOUSTON 2801 Hemphill Park -472-8398 D A L L A S 2803 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 BRANDYWINE 2808 W hitl* Ave - 472-7049 WILSHIRE 301 W 29th - 472-7049 G reat Locations! • Prdeasing • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Central Air/Heat • 2 Blocks From UT • No Application Fee • 1 BR/BA »On-site manager 1 Affordable deposits THREE OAKS & PECAN SQUARE AP A R TM E N TS • 1 BDR/1 BA • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Community Atmosphere • On Shuttle • No Application Fee • Preleasing • On-site manager • Affordable deposit 451-5840 4 0 9 W . 3 8 t h St. 8812 7 -31 -2 0 B -D ALL BILLS PAID- Fully or partially furnished. Preleasmg for fall from $505. P ro pe rtie s Plus 447-7368 7 -3 1 -20B-D RENT SPECIALS- All new 1,2,3 or 4BR's w ith access gates, free ca ­ ble, sport activitie s d irector On shuttle For fall. Properties Plus 4 4 7 -7 3 68 . 7 -3 1 -20B -D LARGE EFFICIENCY, $ 4 4 0 2 -2 , $675 Quiet individuals, 12 month lease, no pets 3 5th /3 7th St FURNISHED 1-1 $520! W est C am ­ 4 5 3 -5 4 1 7 8 -2-2 0 B -D FURNISHED EFFICIENCY 1 05 East 31 st Walk U ^/sh u ttle Most 5P-C bills paid. $415. Call to see 328- 1809 8 - 2 - 2 0 B pus B a lco n y! Pool. A p a rtm e nt Finders S ervice 322-9556 8-16- GREAT OAK- Spacious. Quiet, 2- 2’s, CACH, Fans, Walk-in Closets, Red R iver/ 30th. Pool, C able on efficiencies. 1 & 2 Bedrooms, 3388. 8 -22 -2 0 B -D C onvenient to Hancock Center, UT, and Hyde Park Half a block to shuttle All appliances, pool, laundry room, gas, water, and cable paid. POINTE CONDOS- Incredible north campus location. Furn./unfurn. Avail­ able now! Campus Condos 474-4800 8-23-5B-A 4 5 3 -4 0 0 2 7812-20B-C FURNISHED M , $400, 34th and Helms, 9 month lease, available now Call Tim, 47908847 8-22-5B RENTAL • 360 FURNISHED APARTMENTS L O C A TIO N - LO C A TIO N COME SEE BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APTS. C en tu ry Plaza • 4210 Red River 2 Bd.. 1 Bd. & Efficiencies ALL BILLS PAID 452-4366 C e n tu ry S q u are 3401 Red River 2 Bd.. 1 Bd. & Efficiencies ALL BILLS PAID 478-9775 C h a p a r o s a Apartments 3110 R a d R iv e r Close to U.T. Small, quiet, quality com ple x 2 blocks north of UT, on shuttle, attractively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3SR 474-1902 Starting from $490 3 5 0 - Ramal Services RENTAL RENTAL 302 W 38th Fall/ Spring Leasing $ 8 0 0 -$ 8 5 0 . 4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 , 4 7 7 - T wo bedroom s sta rtin g from 8-1-20B 0 • CONVENIENCE • POOL • PATIOS • LAUNDRY FACILITIES • RENTAL - 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS RENTAL EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT * EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT T h e D a i l y T e x a n F r i d a y , A u g u s t 2 3 , 1 9 9 6 P a g e 1 3 W f ' Tiifi n ü B 'IW t COVENTRY PLACE 370 - Unf. Apts. NEAR UT Large Efficiency $365 New paint, tiles and carpet! 472-6979 370 - Unf. Apts. W ALK TO UT 1 -1 , Fireplace, balcony, tower view, 8 minute walk UT, 34th and Speedway, covered parking O n shuttle Appliances, amenites Lu xu ry 1-1’s, Tile, W /D * Fireplace, Microwave, Crown Molding. A vailable Fall from $560 - Call Presidio Group 4 7 6 -1 5 9 1 8-5 -20 B-D S P A C IO U S 3 -2 'S . All bills pa.d W e st Cam pus, $ 1 4 7 5 , 4 7 4 - 7 7 3 2 8 9-10B A V A I L A B IL I T Y * O N all s h u ttle 8-14-20i>d routes. FW , IF. RR, NR, PV. S R . N IC E 2BDR 2 ba. 2 blocks to UT C R A p a rtm e n t F in d e rs S e r v ic e 1 9 0 5 Rio G ra n d e $ 7 0 0 / m o 751 3 2 2 - 9 5 5 6 8 - 1 6 - 5 P - C 8-8-2 OB-D $ 6 2 5 4 7 4 -2 0 2 4 HILLSIDE A P A R T M E N T S 1 -2 B e d r o o m s F u rn is h e d or U n fu rn ish e d C le a n a nd Quiet All Utilities P a id 5 1 4 O a w so n R o a d H Y D E P A R K H u g e 2 -s t o r y 1 -1 s 7 1 6 3 8-14-20b a n d e f fic ie n c ie s for im m e d ia t e m o ve in. P riva te la u n d ry room , p a tio , IF s h u t t le 4 3 1 2 S p e e d w a y 8 3 5 - 6 2 5 0 8 - 8 - 5 B - D C L E A N C O O L R O O M - A B P $ 295. 2 3 0 3 R io G ra n d e . C a ll 4 8 0 - 0 9 7 6 Spacious & Conven­ ient Eff $ 3 9 0 1 -1 $ 4 4 0 1-1 $ 4 9 0 2 -1 $ 5 9 0 Sorry, n o p re le a sin g Ju st off B a rto n S p r in g s R o a d M -T h 6-7p.m . orrty 8 - 1 2 - 1 0 B O n B u s R o u te #1 Stra ig h t to 4 7 8 -2 8 1 9 S E R IO U S S T U D E N T A P A R T M E N T IN H IS T O R IC H Y D E P A R K V IL L A G E O n -site stu d y ro o m s, ca rd a c c e s s ga tes, co v e re d pa rkin g, b icyc le g a r a g e s , pool/hot tub. H u g e floor p la n s d e s ig n e d for r o o m ­ m a tes. 4 m in u te s b y b ik e from UT. Q u ie t co m m u n ity with u p p e r- level a n d g ra d u a te s tu d e n ts in mind. C a ll 4 5 1 - 2 3 4 3 . 4 3 0 5 D u v a l St. C o -o p W a lk to G ro c e ry Norwood Apts 5606 N. Lam ar Blvd. 4 5 1 -1 9 1 7 8-15-20B-C S A F E , C L E A N , q u ie t g r a d u a t e P ro fe ss io n a l c o m p le x L e rge 1-1, new carpet, paint, tile ca b le tv a n d pool. $ 4 1 0 3 2 3 - 6 2 7 5 8- 1 5 - 5 B -C C EN T R A L, UT, D P S. C ircle O a ks. 2 b e d ro o m s A s k a b o u t o u r G P A 6 4 0 8 Bums Dr. 1-1 $ 4 9 5 2-2 $ 5 9 5 rebate p ro gra m . M E N T IO N T H IS A D F O R $35 0 D I S C O U N T ' Pool, laundry. LPJ 3 4 6 -8 2 5 2 DP 305- 2 2 5 6 . 8-15 5b PERFECT DEALI S Austin efficiency. D U V A L V IL L A A P A R T M E N T S 8min. from campus. M onthly lease H Y D E PARK efficiencies. G as/w ater paid. lease, $ 4 2 0 / m o 4 7 7 -3 9 4 9 4 2 0 4 S p e e d w a y, I-year diately 4 4 2 -1 6 3 6 8-15-5B 1 B E D F IO O M a p a rtm e n ts in sm all, quie t c o m m u n ity F r e e c a b le 8 12-20B-D option, N o deposit, Available imme­ and a ll East Cam pus W alk-in closets, ceiling •Eff $ 4 2 5 Conveín¿®nl engineering, law, LBJ school 370 - Unf. Apts. N O R T H C A M P U S 2-1 S. 9 a n d 12 m on th le a s e s . C a ll for a p p o in t­ m ent A p a rtm e n t F in d e rs S e rv ice . 3 2 2 - 9 5 5 6 8 - 1 6 - 5 P - C 3 7 0 -U n f.A im . I L A R G E w / ow n R O O M front entrance. Kitchenette, shared bath­ room near C R shuttle $ 3 5 0 / m o all bills paid. Julie 8-22-5B 4 5 8 -5 5 0 1 S h a w n or 370 - Unf. Apts. Q U A D R A N G L E H U G E 2 / b e d In­ credible units. Great location A vaila­ ble now l C a m p u s C o n d o s 4 7 4 4 8 0 0 8 23-5B-A N U E C E S PLACE- 1 /b e d N e w $ 1 050/m o. A v a ila b le now ! E ly 390 - Unf. Duplex*» 400 - Condes- P e m b e r to n 2 5 1 7 H A R R I S - 400 • H e ig h ts la rg e 2/1 with 1 g a r a g e H a rd w o o d floors, ceiling fans, m i­ c r o w a v e , W / D c o n n e c t io n s . P r o p e r t ie s 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 8 - 2 2 - 2 0 B - 400 - Condos* Townhomes T W E L V E O A K S C O N D O 2 - 2 s fro m $ 9 5 0 C o n trd lle d a c e s s q a te s g a r a g e Po o l/ hot tub - D o n ’t pantcl ** Ston eleigh C o n d o s** CARING O W N E R S P e r s o n a liz e d attention only M o s t lu x u rio u s c o n d o s L o ts of u nits a v a ila b le O n e b e d ro o m s sta rtin g from $ 5 5 0 to $ 7 8 5 T w o b e d r o o m s sta rtin g from $ 7 9 5 to $ 1 2 *7 5 KH P 4 7 6 - 2 1 5 4 THE G A B L E S @ 1 8 0 8 Rio Grande 3 story townhome style 2 / 2 .5 with 2 car ga ro g e l Loaded with amenities Available 8 / 2 5 $ 11 0 0/ m o , 476- 1 9 7 6 EPI 8-13-1 lb West Campus S u m m e r H o u sin g ! 2 - 2 s ( 8 5 0 s q ft) s t a r lin g at $ 8 9 9 a n d 1-1 s s ta r tin g st $ 6 9 9 A v a ila b le im m ediately 2 -2 a v a ila b le A u g u st. 7-30-20B-C W es Walters Realty R e s p o n s iv e on site m a n a ge r S A N T A F E 1-1 F W S h u ttle W/D, 3 4 5 - 2 0 6 0 C a ll for a n appointm e nt M ic r o w a v e . $ 6 2 5 . 1 2 m o n th P a t 4 5 2 - 3 3 2 4 . P a g e r 8 6 7 - 2 4 8 9 7 0 4 W e s t 2 1 s t s tre e t le a se N o pets C o v e re d parking 8-13-20B-D 4 9 5 - 9 5 8 5 4 5 3 - 5 4 1 7 8 - 2 - 2 0 B - D 8-2-20B-C C O N D O U N F U R N IS H E D fo r W o o d r o w - H u g e 1/1.5 T o w n - W O O D R O W S Q U A R E 5 6 0 4 1 5 0 0 W O O D L A W N - L a r g e unique le a se ! North C a m p u s!! Price re ­ ho m e style c o n d o , e a s y b u s ride l/ 1 iv a u lte d ce ilin g with all p o s s i­ du c e d ! N ic e 2 -2 at 3 1 s t c o n d o s! to U T Q u ie t c o m m u n ity , $ 6 5 0 . ble a m e n itie s $ 85 0 /m o A v a ila ­ F P P 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 8 - 2 - 2 0 B - C 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 E P I. 8 - 1 3 - 1 1 B - D i, 4 T H ^ S P E E D W A Y 1/1 , co v e re d N U E C E S P L A C E - 2 2 0 6 N u e c e s - parking, shuttle clo se , fireplace. h u g e 2 s t o r y 1-1 v a u lt e d 1 5 0 0 W O O D L A W N - L a r g e W /D, C A / C H . m ic ro w a ve , c e ilin g s , p le n ty o f light, q u ie t u n iq u e 2/2 v a u lte d c e ilin g with b a lco n y, airy F a ll $ 6 2 5 4 7 4 - c o m m u n ity o n ly 2 b lo c k s to UT. all p o s s ib le a m e n itie s 2 0 2 4 8 - 7 - 2 0 B - D $ 7 7 5 . 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 E P I. 8 - 1 3 - 1 1 B - $ 1 100/m o. A v a ila b le 8/25 E ly P r o p e r t ie s 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 . 7 - 2 4 - 2 0 B - C L A S S Y 1-1 w/ W /D. M W , C o v ­ ered Parking. C eiling F a n s. C row n M o ld in g , H a rd Tile,& M ore ! D O R A N G E T R E E - L a r g e e fficie ncy $550/mo. N O P E T S . P R E S I D I O carpet/fresh paint. A va ila ble nowl C am pus C o ndos 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 . 8-23-5B- A D O R A N G E T R E E V E R Y large 1 BR Center of W C a m p us. A v a ila b le nowl C am pus Condos. 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 . 8- 23-5B-A G U A D A L U P E S Q . - Q U A IN T 1 /BR w alk to cam pus A v a ila b le now l C am pus Condos. (5 1 2 )4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 8- 2 3 5 b 2 / 2 3 blocks to campus, just renovat­ ed, new paint/carpet accepting 9/m o leases at $ 9 0 0 Call Jared at C am pus Condos. 8-23-5B-A 390 - Unf. Duplexes BLOCK W EST UT ond floor H a rd w o o d s , yard Light, airy. C A / C H , W /D, im m a c ­ ulate, quiet T re e s, m a n y a m e n i­ ties. W o nde rful w in d o w s. S h a re d room from $ 2 9 5 . S in g le room from $44 5 . H u g e , u n u s u a l sin gle ro o m from $ 4 8 5 . 4 7 4 - 2 0 1 4 D 8-7-20B-D 8-22-5B-C GORGEOUS S h a r e la rge r e sto re d 3 b r '2 b a t h ble 8 / 2 0 E ly P r o p e r t ie s 4 7 6 - with 3 ro o m m a te s. W h o le s e c ­ 1 9 7 6 . 7 - 2 4 - 2 0 B - D 4-2 W IT H style excellent condition insid e p o ol level. C o v e re d p a rk ­ G R O U P 4 7 6 -1 5 9 1 . 8 - 7 - 1 0 B - D near UT lots of trees a nd charm. in g with W /D in unit $ 675/m o. Hardw oods, large windows, big bed­ room, each. (5 1 2 )4 7 7 -9 7 1 2 . 8-8- 10b A va ila b le now A v a ila b le 8/2 5 E ly P r o p e r t ie s 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 . 7 - 2 4 - 2 0 B - D O R A N G E T R E E C O N D O N E A R P O O L 2 story 2.5 3 S P A C E S IN G A R A G E A B S O L U T E L Y F A B U ­ A P A R T M E N T F IN D E R S service http://w w w .ausopt.com (e maii)afs@Jump.Net 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . 8-16- 5 P C G R E A T L O C A T IO N W a lk in g dis- lance to UT. 180 1 Rio G ra n d e Penthouse apartments. 2-br's starting at $ 7 5 0 - $ 8 5 0 . 1-br's storting at $ 5 2 5 $ 6 5 0 . 3-br $ 1 1 0 0 . Call M a ­ ria at 4 7 2 -8 3 2 5 8-22-10B-D RIG H T O F F 4 2nd /Re d River.’ 8 0 6 Park Blvd. 2-br/2-ba, 2-story apart­ $ 7 5 0 / m o , $ 4 5 0 / d e p Call ment. 4 5 2 -6 1 7 1 . 8-22-2B F O U R B L O C K S from c a m p u s on S a la d o . 2 -2 with a p p lia n c e s R e ­ c e n tly p a in te d , no sm o k in g , n o p e ts. C a ll 4 4 1 - 2 5 3 4 8 - 2 2 - 2 B S P A C IO U S 1-1 S & 2-2's G a s, co < T ing & heating $ 4 5 0 -$ 5 7 5 + Electric. Sh e rw o o d A pts 7 1 0 Oltorf. 4 4 1 - 3 1 7 4 8-22-58 WALK/BIKE TO CAMPUS A v a lo n Apartments 3 2 n d at 1-35 •2-2 $ 6 4 5 •1-1 $ 46 5 THIS A P A R T M E N T IS IT! G R EA T 3rd floor 1 /BR, North Central. H U G E closet, balcony sunsets, microwave, pool. O n #1 busline 10 min max to cam pus available immediately. Full/partial lease 4 5 5 -6 2 4 9 . $ 49 5 . 8-22-2P ALL BILLS paid, 2-Br move in before school starts. Convenient location. 4 6 7 -9 2 7 2 . 8-22-5B R E M O D E L E D E F F IC IE N C IE S W e st & North C a m p u s ! S o m e utilities paid, O n site la u n ­ dry, N e a r shuttle 1 Y e a r L e a s e $ 4 2 5 C a ll P e d ro 4 9 9 - 8 0 1 3 W e st S id e G ro u p 1-1, 2BLKS from UT. $ 4 7 5 all bills paid Quiet, studious only. On-site (5 1 2 )4 7 4 - laundry. m anage r & 0 1 4 6 8-14-3b H U G E 1 BR loft Fireplace, fence, pa­ tio, a cce ss gates, a nd community pool, w /d Please call 4 4 8 -3 9 4 8 8- 22-5 B EF F IC IE N C Y B E H IN D private home on 29th, just west of Lamar, built in cabinets and desk, cieling fan, small refrigerator, microwave, A / C , pri­ vate entrance, carpeted, parking Se ­ curity deposit $ 34 5 /m , includes util­ ities. C a n furnish. 4 7 7 -8 5 8 5 . 8-23- 2 B fans, on-site laundry, mgr 4 5 9 -9 8 9 8 O N E CALL Does It All! Houses, Du­ plexes. Apartments, Condos-Rent, O p e n 7 days a week Buy or Sell All Sizes, All Prices (From 4 7 7 - 9 7 1 2 . 8 - 9 - 1 0 B 3 B L O C K S T o C a m p u s 1 B ig 4 -2 Du ple x. C A / C H h a rd w o o d A u ­ g u s t - A u g u s t le a s e . $ 1 5 0 0 / m o 8 22 206 $ 5 0 0 ). Habitat Hunters, habitat@ bga.com , http://www.aus- tinre com/habita* htm, 4 8 2 -8 6 5 1 . 8- 1 9 1 5 D A V ID 1/1 g a r a g e apt 7 - 2 4 - 2 0 B - D w /hardw ood floors. Quite unique and only blocks to UT. $ 5 5 0 . 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 EPI. 8 -1 2 -1 2 b d T O M G R E E N - L a r g e 2/1.5 c lo s e L O U S ! H U G E UN IT! N O P E T S to law sch o o l. A m e n itie s include: P R E S I D I O G R O U P 4 76 -1 5 9 1. 8-7- $ 6 2 5 4 7 4 -2 0 2 4 W /D , m ic r o w a v e . 2 r e s e r v e d 1 0 B - D p a r k in g . $ 8 5 0 / m o . A v a ila b le 8/2 0 E ly P r o p e r t ie s 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 L O F T E D B E D R O O M !! R iv e rsid e UT A R E A con do 2 9 0 6 W est Ave , 2- 1.5 pool, stack units, 9 5 0 sq ft fire­ shuttle N e a t 1/1. P a tio ! O n ly place, fan, microw ave 8 -14-5b $ 4 6 0 !! F P P 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 . 8 -7 -2 0 B - plants» pool N O P E T S P R E S I ­ Q U IE T O N E b e d ro o m 301 W e s t hot/cold w a ter N o p e ts 8 3 5 - D O G R O U P 4 7 6 -1 5 9 1 . 8 -7 -1 0 B - 3 9 th L a r g e p o o l, c o u rt y a r d , 5 6 6 1 . 8 - 1 6 - 2 0 B - D la u n d ry room , c e n tra l air. H a lf b lo c k from U T sh u ttle . $ 4 2 5 / m o n th . 3 2 6 - 9 2 1 5 o r 4 5 9 - 9 8 3 2 8 - 1 4 - 1 0 B - D Q U IE T C O M M U N IT Y in H yd e Park with pool. L a r g e 1-1 s. C a ll 4 8 3 - 9 4 7 6 . 8 - 1 6 - 5 B - D H Y D E PA RK 1-br, 1-bo, 6 0 0 / s q ft pool, heat, and water paid $ 4 9 5 . L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y o n sh u tt le route. 2 5 0 0 B u r le s o n R o a d . C a ll (5 1 2 )4 7 2 -4 8 9 3 4 4 4 - 8 4 1 1 . 8 - 1 6 - 1 0 B - D IN H EART UT 2/blks Separate pri­ vate b u n g a lo w kitchen, ac, great Single dw elling, studenfsl for 23-8P $ 4 0 0 / m o . ( 5 1 2 ) 4 4 2 -8 4 4 6 1 0b 8-22- S E R IO U S S T U D E N T A P A R T M E N T IN H IS T O R IC H Y D E P A R K V IL L A G E C LA RK SVILLE 1211 W 8th . Q uiet Excellent condition. N e w complex A / C , e fficiency-$350/m o. 1-1 $ 4 5 0 -4 9 5 / m o . (5 1 2 )4 7 4 -8 7 8 6 . 8- 2 3 -2 0 b A T T E N T IO N G R A D student/professor. Duplex 2 1 10 mi­ nute UTI $ 4 9 5 + $ 3 0 0 deposit. Ref­ erences required, 3 8 8 -4 8 6 5 . 8-14- 5 8 D LARGEST 2 bedroom s in the cam pus EF FIC IE N C Y 1 0 5 E. 31 st/Speedw ay ga te s, c o v e re d parking, bicycle area Access gates, pool, .acuzz 2- walk UT shuttle, most bills paid. Call 1 $ 7 0 0 , 2-2 $ 7 5 0 3 2 6 8 0 1 0 dp 3 0 4 -2 8 6 2 8-14 8 b to see $ 4 1 5 . 8-16-4b g a r a g e s , pool/hot tub. H u g e floor p la n s d e s ig n e d for ro o m ­ L A K E S ID E L IV IN G . 10 m in u t e s W E S T C A M P U S , 2-2, small quiet complex 2 blks to UT 1 9 0 5 Rio U T . Q u ie t c o m m u n ity with u p p e r- from UT, R iv e rsid e area, w eight Gronde. $ 6 5 0 7 5 1 -7 1 6 3 . 8-16-6B le vel a n d g ra d u a te s tu d e n ts in O n -site stu d y room s, card a c c e s s S H O A L CLIFF Ct. - 1/bed or efficien­ 2-1 N E A R U T S h u t tle L a r g e cy Quiet campus location. A vailable now l C am pus Condos. 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 . 8- 23-5B-A f e n c e d y a r d p e rfe c t fo r p e ts, L a rg e m aste r be d room . Fireplace. G a ra g e . A la rm s y st e m . Ideal m a te s. 4 m in u te s b y b ik e from S A N G ABRIEL W est - 2 / 1 , nice lo- p la c e to s tu d y . $ 8 1 5 3 2 7 - 2 0 B -C cation. Available now! C a m pus C o n ­ dos 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 . 8-23-5B-A 4 2 4 6 . 8 - 1 4 - 7 B O n e . two. a n d three b e d ro o m s room, s a n d volleyball, con trolled a c c e ss , s p a c io u s ba lco n ie s, sh u t ­ fro m $ 5 0 5 tle, 2 -1 , $ 5 3 5 -$ 5 6 0 , call P M T ® G R E A T 2-2, $ 7 4 0 W a sh e r/ d rye r connections 9 ' ceilings, alarms, pa­ tios, pool. Apartment Finders Service ADVANTAGE PROPERTIES 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 8 - 1 5 - 2 0 B - D 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . 8-16-5P-C 2 b e d ro o m s. $ 7 9 5 . A s k a bout 4 4 3 - 3 0 0 0 OR 1 - 8 0 0 - 5 7 8 - 8 3 4 1 H Y D E PA RK totally rem odeled 2-2 small quiet complex. G reat UT loca­ W E S T C A M P U S 2-2. Patio, covered parking. W a lk to school. $ 6 5 0 - 8-8-20B-D tion 3 0 4 E 8-14-10b 34th (5 1 2 )4 7 4 -2 1 9 2 $ 6 7 5 . Apartm ent Finders Service, 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 8 - 1 6 ^ 8 C E N IM - 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS mind. C a ll 4 5 1 -2 3 4 3 . 4 3 0 5 D u v a l St o u r G P A re b a te progra m . M o v e -in T oday! LA RG E 1-1, 7 1 0 W 34 fh. Small quiet complex. N e w heat and A / C . Ex­ cellent condition. $ 495/m o. 3 3 5 -9 3 7 1 . 8-23-20b (5 1 2) P O IN T E C O N D O S - Incredible north cam pus location. Furn./unfurn Avail­ able now l C a m p u s C o n d o s 4 7 4 - 8 - 2 2 - 2 0 b - d 4 8 0 0 . 8-23-5B-A LARGE 2-2 , w /d, stor, refrigerator, recently redecorated, N E residential neighborhood, $ 6 0 0 , 4 5 0 - 0 7 7 3 Leave message. 8 - 16-5B ** Ston eleigh C o n d o s** West Cam pus 1 - 1 ’s $ 7 0 0 7 0 0 sq .ft./ ap p rox. 2 - 2 s fro m $ 8 9 9 6 5 0 sq .ft./ ap p rox. 4 5 2 - 3 3 1 4 P a g e r 8 6 7 - 2 4 8 9 7-15-20B-D C E N T E N N IA L - L U X U R Y 2/2 to ta lly C r e d e c o ra t e d n e w c a rp e t a n d pain t. 2 c o v e r e d p a rk in g . $ 1 2 00 / m o . A v a ila b le n o w E ly P r o p e r t ie s 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 . 7 - 2 4 - 2 0 B - IN T R A M U R A L F IE L D S - U n iq u e 1 b e d ro o m , 2 b a t h t o w n h o m e . V e ry private, se c lu d e d b a lco ny, tre e s. $ 5 2 5 - $ 5 5 0 N o p e ts. 701 4 7 / R E D R IV E R ! P le a sa n t com plex. C u te efficiency! O nly $ 4 7 5 F P P 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 8 - 7 - 2 0 B - C 'L O F T $ 4 8 0 * S P I R A L S T A I R W E L L W /D in c lu d e d 9 B -D S t u d io s $ 4 0 5 1 b d r s $ 4 3 5 N o rth L o o p . 4 5 4 - 9 9 4 5 . 7 -2 6 - A d v a n t a g e P r o p e r ­ M a r c u s m a n a g e m e n t . 1 9 0 4 S a n G a b rie l, 1-1 ($ 5 00 / m o .), 2 -1 (7 0 0 / m o .); 6 0 7 2 9 & 1 / 2 St., 1 -1 , $ 75 0 /m o .; 2 9 0 5 R io G r a n d e , 2 -1 , $ 1 0 0 0 . 3 2 0 - 0 0 1 0 . 8 - 6 - 1 8 B - D S M A L L 8 -U N IT com plex, 2-1. satillo tile C A / C H , sto v e , re frigerator. 1 -b lo c k to # 4 7 s h u ttle $ 4 9 5 / m o . D is c o v e r y : 4 7 8 -6 5 2 0 . 8 -6 - 1 1 B - D U N F U R N IS H E D E F F IC IE N C Y w ith H a rd w o o d floors, C h e c k e r e d tile, T r a c k L ig h tin g . $ 4 3 0 / m o W a lk to U T . 4 7 7 - 5 3 0 6 8 - 6 - 1 5 B C A L L " T H E Atrium " H O M E ! R e m o ­ d e le d t o w n h o u s e s at L A M A R » N O R T H L O O P 1-1 from $ 4 9 5 2-1 from $ 5 9 5 C lo s e to B u s ! All 2 -sto ry units S m c o m p le x w/trop D E R S H U T T L E : 1 B R / 1 B T H A P T in c h a r m in g o ld h o u s e / g a r a g e 7 0 0 - 9 0 0 sq.ft S o m e w ith W /D c o n n e c t io n s or H W F P e rfect for R o o m m a t e s l C a ll B e n $ 6 9 5 - $ 8 0 0 . 4 4 4 - 0 6 8 7 8 - 7 - 1 0 B - D •AMENITIES GALORE* • indoor b a sk e tb a ll 'f i t n e s s c e n te r 's t u d y lib ra ry ‘s a u n a pool volleyball ^ J n k ^ R l c f ' • * * 454-5052 NORTH 916-0916 SO UTH AMRTMBUT? WELCOME BACK STUDENTS!!! LOOKING FOR THE BEST VALUE IN AUSTIN, CALL THE ANDERSON GROUP AT SHORN! 447-5971 DAICEU 440-0592 JEANNE 315-7284 M A N Y SPACIOUS FLOORPLANS TO C H O O S E FRO M INCLUDING: - 10 MINUTES TO UT - UT SHUTTLE ROUTE - SOME WITH PAID CABLE, WATER, GAS - RESIDENT ACTIVITIES - SPARKLING POOLS - SAN D VOLLEYBALL - - TENNIS & BASKETBALL COURTS - CEILING FANS - WALK-IN CLOSETS ICEMAKERS A N D M UCH, MUCH, M U CH MORE! PRICES STARTING AS LO W A S$450! WITH THIS AO RECEIVE $100 OFF SECOND MONTHS RENT) Page 14 Friday, August 23,1996 T h e D a i l y T e x a n RENTAL EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EDUCATIONAL ble. S u p e rv is in g a n d In te ra c tin g M-F, 8 :00am to 1:00pm . Q ualified 4 0 0 1 CALL N O W , SAVE O N RENTI *M o n y great condos $50-150 o ff/m o * 1 ,2 and 3 bedrooms available * 9 or 12 month leases * W or N campus, Enfield, TARRYTOWN HOUSE G ra d s tu d e n t n e e d s 1-2 ro o m m a te s to s h a re g re a t h o m e JUST W EST O F C A M P U S , 2 4 th /W in d s o r TW O SHUTTLE RO UTES, W /D, Shuttle Routes p ho ne, s p a c io u s p o rc h e s , tre e s , ‘ Spacious floor p la n v W /D , covered parking *G re a t list o f houses & duplexes also m a n y a m e n itie s in g re a t a re a O n e b e d ro o m ($ 3 2 5 a ll b ills p a id ) O R E ffic ie n c y liv in g a re a ($ 4 7 5 all COFFEE PROPERTIES 4 7 4 -1 8 0 0 816-ÓB-D O R 1/2 h o u s e w ith o n ly 2 s h a rin g b ills p a id ) W INDOW FUL G ARAGE a p a rtm e n t MATURE FEMALE. Large W estlake LO N G H O R N FOOTBALL fans spend home. 2 hard-working housemates. M aste r bed roo m , bath, w alk-in the weekend on beautiful Lake Travis waterfront, 2 story, multi-family dock closet. $ 4 9 0 ABP. G arage use add i­ tional. 3 2 7 -2 7 0 0 . 8-8-20p and spa, dog kennel. C a ll 512 -25 0- 0 3 0 7 8-23-5B- 3 7 th S t. H a rd w o o d s , C A /C H , q u ie t, c u l-d e -s a c , tre e s , n o pe ts $ 3 8 5 / $ 2 9 5 d e p o s it . 4 5 3 -5 4 1 7 . 8 - 2 - 2 0 B - D BLOCK WEST UT GORGEOUS S h a re la rg e re s to re d 3 b r/2 b a th w ith 3 ro o m m a te s . W h o le s e c ­ o n d flo o r H a rd w o o d s , ya rd L ig h t, a iry. C A /C H , W /D , im m a c ­ u la te , q u ie t. T re e s , m a n y a m e n i­ tie s W o n d e rfu l w in d o w s . S h a re d ro o m fro m $ 2 9 5 S in g le room N O N -S M O K IN G GRAD student to share 3-2 with couple in soufh Austin. 10 min. from downtown. Must like $ 2 7 5 /m o + 1 /3 bills. 707- pets 7 3 4 8 . 8-13-9p BLOCK UT Private bedroom, share bills, bath, kitchen, suppers, cooking, chores. $ 2 9 5 + $ 1 0 0 for bills, phone, food. Q uiet, friendly, non­ sm oking, petless, 4 7 4 -2 6 1 8 . 8-13- 6 b NEED SPECIAL education or educa­ Y M C A m e m b e rs h ip b e n e fits . A p ­ tion m ajor w ith goo d m ath /w riting skills to help 2-dyslexic girls. C all Connie 4 9 4 -0 1 5 V o ice -m a il# 2 .8 -l4- S tre e t ply in p e rs o n at 1809 E. S ix th re n t ($ 6 0 0 a ll b ills p a id ) 4 7 8 - 0 9 2 6 8 -7 -10 B OLD CASTLE H Il L, n ice e ffic ie n ­ c ie s in s m a ll, w e ll- m a in ta in e d c o m m u n ity , id e a l p la c e to stu d y , a v a ila b le now , $ 4 5 0 -$ 4 7 5 . C a ll P M T @ 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7 -1 7 -2 0 B -D AW ESOM E SO UTHERN H o m e ro o m fro m $ 4 8 5 4 7 4 -2 0 1 4 fro m $ 44 5. H u g e , u n u s u a l s in g le 20B-D W ALK TO UT M ale to share 2 /1 C ondo. M ust have references $ 4 0 0 /m o . 1 sf & last month's rent re­ quired. 4 5 a 1533 8-22-7b 1 0 B -D 2 8 th & S a la d o L a rg e F ro n t P o rch 5 /3 , W /D , H a rd w o o d s . L o ts of C h a rm $ 2 5 0 0 /m o . N o P e ts P re s id io G ro u p 4 7 6 -1 5 9 1 8 -7 - 8-7-20B-D FOUR BLOCKS U T F urnished, p ri­ va te ba th S h a re kitc h e n . Q u ie t, n o n -s m o k in g , p e tfr e e C A /C H . S in g le s from $ 4 3 5 A B P D o u b le s LEASE WESTGATE C o n d o 1BR 22nd floor, great view, pool across d in in g , study, W D , p o rc h e s , N ew 2 0 B -D from C a pitol. C all John, 346 -0 0 2 5 . in te r io r, G A /C H , b u r g la r a la rm , U T /D O W N T O W N I! 2 /2 L iv in g , fro m $ 2 7 5 A B P 4 7 4 -2 4 0 8 8 -7 - hardw oods, garage! A W E S O M E ! $ 1 6 0 0 F P P 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 8 -7 -2 0 B -C DOBIE CENTER A re y o u tire d of b e in g on a w a it lis t? D o b ie C e n te r has lim ite d s p a c e still a va ila b le . M ALE/FEM ALE R O O M M ATE wanted. Furnished, Luxurious town- house, private bathroom, W /D , shut­ tle: O lto rf 1-35, Pool, Tennis. (5 1 2 )4 4 1 -0 8 2 7 . 8-15-2p CLEAN ATHLETIC hard w orking N /S male. College student looking for M /F roommate to shore 2 story 2-2 apartment at W illiam Canon and IH- 35. Lots of studying plus little party­ ing. $ 3 2 5 + 1 /2 utilities. C a ll 288- 5 7 2 9 . 8-22-2b instruction N O A M C H O M S K Y tapes, Nader, Vidal, Zinn, others, free cata­ lecture logue: Alternative Radio, P.O. Box 551 Boulder C O 8 0 3 0 6 . 8 22-20B SERVICES 670 - Painting BRUSH ROLLER Painting. Interior/E x­ terior. Free estimates Environmental Paints. Small Jobs W elcom e. C all Allen. 5 1 5 -5 0 9 5 . D P #612-3730. 8-22-5P 750 - Typing „ C O O L /U N IQ U E ! 1/1 H igh ce ilin g , C a ll to d a y 5 0 5 -1 0 0 0 . 8 -7 -1 0 B TEMPORARY WEEK to w eek 2BR MEDICAL SCHOOL APPLICATIONS se rv ice sk ills nee ded tile , h a rd w o o d s , c o rn e r u n it! P ri­ v a te ! $ 6 2 5 F P P 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 8 -7 - 909 W E S T 2 2 n d . P riv a te , se cu re , Rote negotiable. ABP M ature,respon­ e s s in g . D is s e rta tio n s , term p a ­ P o sitio n s A va ila b le For Fall: q u ie t, S p a c io u s , A /C , h ig h c e il­ sible 8 3 5 -1 9 9 9 8-22-7P p e rs 4 5 4 -2 3 5 5 a n y tim e 8 -1 3 - a p t. Share Female, non-sm oking ty p e d L a s e r p rin te d w o rd p r o c ­ 9B M -F : 8 -1 1 . 9 -1 2 ,1 1 - 2 , 2 -5 8-22-5 B W ALK TO UT Extra nice efficiency. Shuttle 31 st/D uval, no pets. $ 39 5. ly r. lease 4 7 4 -0 1 8 8 . 8-22-4B i_______________________________ 11 GATED Condo near 3rd/R ed Riv­ er. W a lk UT/shuttle $ 4 8 0 for 1, 2 0 B -C $ 5 6 0 for 2 (5 1 2 )3 2 7 -7 5 7 4 . 8-22- 10b M i l YMCA CO M E TO W OR K TO PLAY A f te r s c h o o l s t a f f 2 :0 0 p m to 6 :3 0 p m W E E K D A Y S . 1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ,5 d a y s /w e e k o p p o rtu n itie s a v a ila ­ w ith c h ild re n . V a rio u s s ite s in A u s tin $ 5 .0 0 /h o u r b e g in n in g . Now A c c e p t i n g A p p l i c a t i o n s For THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSI FI ED AD TAKE RS GRAPHICS SPECIALIST Temporary Part-time position availa­ ble in N orth Austin w o rking for Inter­ medies O rthopedics, Inc. Individual w ill need to be availab le for work 9 / 9 through 1 2 /2 0 . W o rk hours are person w ill have know ledge o f print production, creation of prom otional materials and solid editing skills. Pro­ in cluding ficie n t com puter skills PageMaker, Harvard G raphics, Pho­ toshop, and W ordPerfect in the W in ­ 8 -5-20B dows environment are required. Contact Cheryl with Kelly Technical Services for more inform ation. Phone 5 1 2 -2 1 8 -1 1 6 6 Fax 5 1 2 -2 1 8 -1 4 3 7 N o t an Agency, neveg a fee Private Personnel Service Equal O pportunity Employer RESEARCH SUBJECTS NEEDED T o ra te s p e e c h s a m p le s fo r in te l­ lig ib ility a n d q u a lity , s ta rtin g s a l­ a ry $ 6 .5 0 /h r . w o rk 12 h r s /w k M - W -F , 1-5 p m . o r 9 h rs /w k T -T h , 1 2 :4 5 - 5 :1 5 p m . S c h e d u le n o t fle x ib le . P e rm a n e n t p o s itio n . M u st h a v e E n g lis h as fir s t la n ­ PART-TIME POSITION a va ila b le for filing clerk in medical office, 15 -2 0 hrs/w k. 8 9 2 -1 2 2 0 , 4 6 3 8 S. Lomor. 8-2 2-2 B PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST for con-" struction com pany in O a k Hill, M-Th, 7 :3 0 -1 :00pm . 2 8 8 -5 3 4 4 . 8-22-5B ' PART-TIME RETAIL Sales help needed 9am -6pm . 4 5 1 -7 6 3 3 weekends only. 8-22-106 g u a g e , g o o d h e a rin g a n d a tte n d BABYSITTER NEEDED occasionally- lis te n e r s c re e n in g s e s s io n s . F o r fu rth e r in fo rm a tio n c a ll b e tw e e n 9 -5 pm by professional N W Austin family. Two fun, respectful kids. Evenings non-sm oker ca r, References, required. 5 0 2 9 6 3 1 . 8-22-5B Dynastat, Inc. 2704 Rio Grande, Suite #4 476-4797 8-14-5B HELP IN G ift Shop- Sales Associate P/T afternoons, evenings, weekends. A p p ly in person.2 0 6 -3 0 0 7 . 8-22-5B 8-22-4B -C PHONERS NEEDED P/T Surveys PART-TIME LAW O ffice receptionist, 2 5 hrs +1 1 /2 , M-F, 8 -la m or 1- D u ties in clu d e ta k in g v o lu n ta ry ads 6 :1 5 p m . M o tiva te d , responsible, by p h o n e , filin g , ty p in g , c o o rd in a t­ g o o d com m unication skills. W e ll ing p ro je c ts , a s s is tin g sale a n d s u ­ groom ed 4 7 8 -7 4 6 3 . 8-14-5B RESEARCH SUBJECTS NEEDED T o ra te s p e e c h s a m p le s fo r q u a li­ ty . R e q u ir e s a p p ro x . 13/4 h r*- p e rv is o ry s ta ff w ith c le ric a l ta sks . ZACHARY SCOTT theater needs $ 2 5 .0 0 o n c o m p le tio n . M u s t E x c e lle n t c o -w o rk e r and c u s to m e r great voices for evening phone sales have E n g lis h as a firs t la n g u a g e not sales W eekends, some nights C oll Dave 8 22- 7b (5 1 2 )4 7 2 -5 5 6 5 P/T LO N G term assignments availa­ ble for clerical support. A ll shifts available. Some office experience preferred. O ffic e Specialist. (5 1 2 )4 5 1 -1 6 6 6 8-22-4b Commission only structure yeild aver- oge of $ 2 0 /h r 47¿ +0594x242. 8- 14-15b PART-TIME FILE clerk needed for busy doctors office Please send resume to L.Lopez, 3 7 0 5 M e d ic a l Parkw ay, # 4 5 0 , 7 8 7 0 5 or Fax to 4 5 1 -7 4 1 5 . COURIER NEEDED flexible hours and great pay. N eed your ow n transpor­ tation C all 8 3 3 -7 7 1 1 . 8-15-5B and g o o d he a rin g . M ay not ha v e p a rtic ip a te d in a D y n a s ta t s tu d y OFFICE in th e p a s t 3 m o n th s. T w o s e s ­ AS SISTANT/BO OKKEEPER/SECRE­ s io n s a re s c h e d u le d fo r tw o e v e ­ TARY. B a s ic a c c o u n tin g /c o m p u t­ n in g s on A u g u s t 22 a n d 2 3 (5 :3 0 - er s k ills nee ded. T e rrific e x p e ri­ 7 :1 5 p .m . o r 7 :3 0 -9 :1 5 p m .) a n d en c e o ffe re d . C o n v e n ie n t; fle x i­ o n A u g u s t 24 ( 1 0 :0 0 - 1 1 :4 5 o r b le h o u rs 4 5 8 -3 6 3 6 8 -2 2 -2 0 B 1 2 -1 :4 5 ) F o r fu rth e r in fo r m a tio n and to re se rve a space p le a s e ca ll A m y b e tw e e n 1 2 :3 0 -5 p .m . Dynastat, Inc. $ 5 . 0 0 P e r H o u r 8-14-58 A P P L Y IN P E R S O N T H E D A I L Y T E X A N T S P R o o m 3 . 2 0 0 SPACIOUS 8bedroom 4bth. In ex­ b a th s a n d y a rd W a lk UT. $27 5- cellent condition. Close to UT and $ 3 6 5 4 8 2 -8 6 8 0 . 8 - 8 - 2 0 B - C in gs, h a rd -w o o d S h are k itch e n s, 2 8 1 5 RIO G ran de floor, $ 4 9 5 1-1, ground Kirksey-Levy Realtors, park. Q uiet street C A C H H a rd­ woods. $ 3 0 0 0 . (5 1 2 )4 7 7 -9 7 1 2 . 8- 4 5 1 -0 0 7 2 . 8-23-6B 8-10b 3 0 0 0 GUADALUPE, 3rd floor, 1 /1 , c o /c h , fans, extra storage 3 blks UT balconies, $ 42 5. Kirksey-Levy Real­ close to shuttle $ 1 5 0 0 /m o , owner: 1 0 B -D tors, 4 5 1 -0 0 7 2 . 8-23-6B 4 7 7 9 7 1 2 . 8-9-10 b 4-2 DUPLEX big bedrooms hardw ood 26T H S T R E E T and G u a d a lu p e R o o m fo r w o m a n $ 3 0 0 , fu rn is h e d , u tilitie s in clu d e d , share s h o w e r C a ll 4 7 2 -2 8 1 6 . 8 -8 - LO O K IN G FOR UT student/Llve-in" Free room and board exchanged for cleaning, cooking and some child­ care Separate living quarters on Lake Austin. 3 4 9 -2 0 0 0 8-22-5P TYPING SERVICES. Available. Desk- top p u b lish ing, com position o f books/m anuscripts 2 5 5 -7 4 1 0 . 8-16- 20B RO O M M A TE W A N TE D . 2B R /2B A opt. $ 3 7 0 /m o Full-term lease Pool, spa, tennis court. O n UT bus route C a ll Phil ot 9 1 2 -9 2 4 8-22-3b. 760 - Misc. Services IMPROVEMENT master M EMORY quick techniques. SASE, DT03 P O MAGNIFICENT 3-2 + form al living room & dining room. N a tional architectual aw ard Steam room, 2-car garage w /a u to m a fic doors. 3 blocks from UT. Beautiful landscaping, $ 16 9 5 /m o . KHP, 476 -2 1 5 4 . RR SHUTTLE. Private entrance Share kitchen and bath. W /D available. O w n phone line $ 4 0 0 ABP. Deposit negotiable 8-14-5B W O M E N STUDENTS- furnished T W O MIDDLE-AGED nonsmoking fe­ males (One grad student, O ne PhD) 2 b seek similar third to share 4-2 country house on six w ooded acres 2 0 mi­ nutes to campus $32 5 +share ex­ rooms; private baths; share kitchen in penses Ideal roommate likes large, historic mansion. 4 block UT. 476- 5 8 4 5 . 8-22-3B friendly dogs but has none 288-31 15. ATTENTION W O M E N natural alter­ native for PMS, depression, SASE DT05 P.O. Box 1 4 8 6 3 Austin, TX 78761 8-23-2b 8-22-58 EMPLOYMENT 4-30-7N C gas allow ance. Kuhn, Doyle and Kuhn 6 0 3 W .8 th 4 7 2 .7 3 4 1 8-15- 5b-c 2B ment for loving, educated individual. office m anager, answ e rin g tele­ 3 2 9 -5 8 8 1 /7 0 8 -0 0 3 0 . Paula. 8-22- phones, etc Must be responsible, O N E CALL Does It A ll! Houses, Du­ plexes, Apartm ents, Condos-Rent, Buy or Sell. A ll Sizes, A ll Prices (From Hunters, H a b ita t $ 5 0 0 ). t-abitat@ bga.com , http / / w w w aus- tinre.com /habitat.htm , 4 8 2 -8 6 5 1 . 8- 23-8P 4 4 0 5 AVENUE A , 1-1 vaulted ceiling, 3rd floor, $ 4 9 5 . Kirksey-Levy Realtors, 4 5 1 -0 0 7 2 8-23-6B CROIX C O N D O S # 2 0 5 A - 8 0 6 W . 24th Street. 2 / 2 @ $1 2 5 0 /m o $ 1 ,0 0 0 sec. deposit. Furnished, fireplace, ceiling fqns, m icrowave, w a sher/dryer, re­ served covered parking. Available 8 /2 3 . C ontact Kemp M anagement (512)476-6581 LENOX C O N D O S # 1 0 8 -915 W .2 3 rd Street 2 / 2 @ $ 1 ,1 0 0 /m o - $ 1,0 00 Sec. Deposit. Fireplace, ceiling fans, built-in microwave, w ashe r/dryef and more A vailable 8 /2 3 . Contact Kemp Management 4 7 6-65 81. 8 -2 3 -2 0 W TALISMAN C O N D O S FOUR MINUTES TO D O W N T O W N . 1501 BARTON SPRINGS RD„ 1 5 0 0 S O F T , 2-2 1 /2 FIREPLACE GARAGE. POOL. $ 1 2 0 0 /m o EANES PROPERTIES, 26 3-7 3 3 3 . 8-23-206-A 4 1 0 - Furn. H o u se s 9 0 1 A W . 21 st, 3-2 $ 1 5 0 0 /m o 8-20- 9 6 to 8-15-97. W /D , CACH, D W , DP, porches, 2-story. 385-9111 8- 22*78 26T H S T R E E T a n d G u a d a lu p e . 8-13 -2 0 B C R o o m fo r w o m a n $ 3 0 0 , fu rn is h e d , u tilitie s in clu d e d , share s h o w e r . C a ll 4 7 2 -2 8 1 6 8 -8 - W ALK TO Campus 3 - b r /l -ba H ard­ w o o d floors, C e ilin g fans. N e w point, Free cable, O n Bus. 2 5 0 2 1 0 n c M anor Rd. 8-15-5B-D SPACIOUS 4BR,2BA, central lo cation. $ 8 9 5 /m o 6 1 9 -5 2 1 -0 7 0 9 . 8-16-7B new, Like no pets 8-23-20-b-d 5BR 2 1 /2 Bath in Shady Hollow. 430 - Room -loard R O O M & BOARD a va ila b le fo r fe­ male involving light housework for single mother w ith 2teenage children 271 -55 71 8-22-5B 435 - Co-ops ROOMM ATE W ANTED: M oving to Austin from M inneapolis O ct 1. I am o responsible person, a recent col­ lege grad and easy to get along w ith . Please e-mail me at Iaur0003@ gold.tc.um n edu, or call me collect (61 2 )8 7 2 4 4 8 7 . 8-2 3 -14B ROOMMATE NEEDED for Far W est area Furnished, private room /both, non-smoking, 1 block to UT shuttle. $ 3 8 0 /m o + 1 / 2 bills (5 1 2 )7 9 5 - 9 6 0 2 . 8-23-5b ROOMMATE SERVICE 5 0 0 - Misc. Looking or have a place NORTH CAMF*US AREA S e e ad fo r te x t N o rth C a m p u s 8 -1 4 -5 B -D . Large backyard and screened-in pa­ tio, $ l,9 5 0 /m o n W agne r Leasing, 4 4 4 4 3 0 0 8-22-4P LOCATED EAST of IK -3 5 /3 8 1 /2 th Huge 4 bedroom , 2 bath home Large yard, giant trees, hardw oo d floors, lots o f w in ­ dow s Central a ir/h e a t carport N o pets A va ila ble 8-19 3 9 0 3 Cherrywood $ 1 5 0 0 /m o . Private Properties 5 0 2 -0 1 0 0 3-1 SE of W illia m C a n n o n /IH -3 5 , backs to horseranch. Fenced yard. Hardw oods $ 8 2 0 2 5 5 -2 1 8 2 8- 22-7B Six bedroom luxury f l U l l i C . 2b i 8 Rio Grande By a p p o in tm e n t o n ly. S e c u rity sy s te m , h a rd w o o d s , If you sign up for the service on the first call you will receive one month for 8-22-6B FREE! Business Since 1988 Served over 7,000 people Sam, 4 5 3 - 4 3 9 6 8-2-20B-C BLOCK UT. Privóte bedroom, shore bills, bath, kitchen, suppers, cooking, chores $ 2 9 5 + $ 1 0 0 for bills, fire p la c e yard, de ck, C A / phone, food Q uiet, friendly, non­ C H , e n e rg y e ffic ie n t, u g h smoking, petless, 4 7 4 -2 6 1 8 . 8-13- c e ilin g s , la rg e ro o m s, W /D 20B-D 5 1 0 - ftdwfwniwiiV Tickets T E X A S AT C o lo ra d o F o o tb a ll T e x a s at C o lo ra d o F o o tb a ll T e x a s at C o lo ra d o F o o tb a ll Tick- e tm a n ( 3 0 3 ) 4 3 0 - 1 1 1 1 . 7 - 2 9 - 2 0 B g r e a FT~b e d r o o m APARTMENTS! 1 / 2 B lo ck from Law S ch ool. h e d Qitiot td5Q/mr. r u r n iin c u , Tower View Apartments 9 2 6 E. 26th St. # 2 0 8 3 2 0 -0 4 8 2 . LOST GREY Persian cat. W est 4 7 7 -5 7 3 9 . Reward. Campus area 8-22-3N C 560 - Public Notice ANNOUNCEMENTS in g 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 7 -2 6 -2 0 B -D DEAN WITTER Reynolds needs 2 part-time receptionist M-F 8 -1 2 :3 0 or 7B 12:30-5 for inquiries please call 474- fo r in te r v ie w . 5 0 5 -2 3 4 9 8 -8 - CHURCH CHILDCARE, Sunday morrv 8 -22-20B -C PRESCHOOL N / N W seeking P/T Box 148 6 3 Austin, TX 787 61 8-23- T e le p h o n e in q u irie s not a cc e p te d . SEEKING HELP to care for 6m o old Infant child. 2 7 h rs / week $ 5 /h r. CPR Areferences requ ire d Start 2704 Rio Grande, Suite #4 476-4797 A p p lic a n ts m ust be a U n iv e rs ity of 8 /2 9 . 4 5 8 -3 9 7 9 8-15-5B 8-22-2B -C T e x a s s tu d e n t o r th e s p o u s e o f a s tu d e n t. RUNNER FOR small dow ntown law D e pendab le c a r, a p p ro x. firm . MOTHER'S HELPER 3-7pm M onday 2 0 h rs /w k $ 5 .0 0 /h r , Plus $ 2 5 /w k Thursday. G ood pay and environ­ INTERVIEW ING FOR C h ild c a re W o rk e rs fo r e v e n in g & d a y tim e . G rea t o p p o rtu n ity ! C o n ta c t G in g e r 7 9 0 - P a r t t i m e B is h o p 3 2 7 -4 8 2 5 o r3 2 7 -8 0 2 8 8- M O T H E R 'S H E L P E R 7-11 B IN R O B R O Y M ust be w illin g to c o m m it 2 0 -2 5 HARD W ORK G o o d Pay $5+ h o u rs /w e e k fo r e n tire s c h o o l b o n u s ( $ 6 - $ l0/ h r). C a ll G e ra ld year, fo r in te r v ie w 5 0 5 -2 3 4 9 8 -8 - like c h ild re n , be re s p o n s ib le , have 2 0 B -D sen se o f hum or, d riv e and do e r ­ rands. G e n e ro u s package. 4 1 0 3 B a lc o n e s W o o d s D r ., 7 8 7 5 9 2 0 B -D HARD WORK G o o d Pay $5+ b o n u s ($ 6 -$ 10/ h r). C a ll G e ra ld PARALEGAL RUNNER F u ll/ P a rt- JACK OF all trades person 6-12 tim e w ill tra in Y o u r re lia b le , e c o ­ h rs/w k Hex/w ork hrs. a few rental n o m ic a l ca r. A ls o n e e d ty p is t, b o o k k e e p e r N e ar U .T ., N o n sm o k ­ prop $ 8 /h r . 10b (5 1 2 )4 7 8 -9 1 7 0 8-12- MAKE A DIFFERENCE Teoch Inde- pendent living skills to mentally chal­ lenged individual Psych/Sociology m ajor encouraged Hours 4-7pm M- F C o ll John 8 9 2 -1 0 8 4 between 6 :3 0 -8 :30pm , M-Th 8-15-4B FIELD REF*S n e e d e d $ 6 /h r g u a r, p lu s b o n u s e s . M -T h , 4 -8 p m . T r a n s p o r ta tio n fro m c a m p u s avail. No sa le s in volved C a ll C raig 4 5 3 -8 7 8 2 8 - 1 6 - 2 0 B - D ¡ngs, a n d /o r W ednesday evenings $ 8 /h r . com m itm ent. M ust make H o lid a ys . 6 mo. fle xib le LeighAnn, 2 5 7 -0 4 2 4 8-16-6B N O W HIRING telemarketers 10 po­ sitions open $ 8 / h r plus bonuses. Flexible hours. C all 2 6 3 -9 1 7 9 8-16- GREAT JOBS FOR STUDENTS ‘ NO W HIRING* S ervers S e rv ic e A s s is ta n ts D ish w a sh e r and C ook W ill w o rk w ith S ch ool S ch edules No L a te N ig h ts STEAK & ALE 2211 W A n d e rs o n Ln. 4 5 3 - 1 6 8 8 RUNNER/CLERK M W F 8-2. 3 blocks from UT, need transportation. $ 6 /h r. Please call Melissa or Kellie ot 4 7 7 -7 5 4 3 8-22-4B PROPERTY M AINTENAN CE. Com po ny seeks dependable, part-time m ain­ Public Relations 1710. 8-13-10b ROCKET'S-EARN $ 8 $ 10/H R hiring tenance person. Clean-cut A honest, fast food delivery drivers. Flexible w ill train. 2 5 2 -9 2 7 3 . 8-22-5b ‘ G R EA T JOB" schedule. D ay/E vening shifts availa­ Be Paid to H ave Fun! ble 2 7 0 0 W , Anderson Ln, Ste 21 3 . 45 3 -3 1 9 8 . 8-16-3B TV STATION on UT campus needs messenger up to 15 h rs /w k , 1 :30-4 3 0 ,M-F Must hove Intern $7per H our 20 hours w eekly C reative S elf-starter E x te n d -A -C a re is now H iring S u p e rviso rs and G rou p L ea ders to w o rk w ith e le m e n ta ry -a g e c h ild re n at a ll 6 6 lo c a tio n s . No w e e k e n d s ! J u s t w e e k d a y a f­ S e n d R e s u m e to : P .O . B o x te rn o o n s o f fu n ! M u st be 18 5 0 4 9 3 A u s t i n , T X 7 8 7 6 3 w /H S D iplo m a o r G ED 7-26-20B C A L L E x te n d -A -C a re For Kids SW A u stin 4 7 2 -9 9 2 9 e x t 4 0 8 E0E 8 13-2B-C PART-TIME SUPPORT f o r b u s y valid TDL A good driving record A l­ b e n e fits a d m in is tra tio n firm . D u ­ tie s in c lu d e filin g , c o m p u te r e n try so help traffic dept w /va n o u s duties Submit resume w /co v e r letter to Traf­ and c o p y in g R e q u ire s co m p u te r lite ra c y , o r g a n iz a tio n , a n d s e lf m o tiv a tio n . B e a u tifu l o ffic e in fic Dept.PO Box 7 1 5 8 , Austin 7 8 7 1 3 N o phone calls Closing 8 / 2 8 EOE 822-38 H o u rly ra te o f $ 6 00 w ith fle x ib le h o u rs. C o n ta c t M a ry B ro w n a t 7 0 7 - 5 3 1 9 22-5B 8-16-3B-C PART-TIME LEGAL assistant for small low firm G eneral office typing, o r­ ganize A mamtam files Some com­ puter experience C oll 452 -00 01 8- DANCE ACROSS Texos is now hir­ FUN JOBS w o rk in g w ith children. ing part-tim e waitresses C a ll be­ Part-time or full-time Temporary or tween 12-5, M-F, 4 4 1 -9101. 8-14-5B permanent available Some in UT oreo Please call 4 1 6 -7 3 4 4 8-22- IMMEDIATE 20 8 OPPORTUNITIES W a rm , e n e rg e tic , e m p a th e tlc p e o p le n e e d e d to a s s is t te a c h e rs at q u a lity in fa n t/to d d le r d a y c a re ce n te r P re v io u s e xp e rie n c e or WEEKEND RECEPTIONIST Dependo- bility experience answering phones, professional and appearance and w o rd processing attitude 22-5B skills are all needed Please call Jen­ ny at 327-21 3 IL or fox resume to: c la s s e s p re fe rre d A M /P M s h ifts 3 2 7 -5 1 2 6 8 - 2 2 /B NEED AFTERSCHOOL nanny 2:30- 5 30pm 2-4 da y s/w k $6-7/h r. Cur­ rent CPR required Must like little boys 892-1041 8-22 5B INTERESTED IN working at o private 5B softba ll com plex? Evenings and W eekends Flex hours G reat stu­ dent jo b C o ll Lonnie 4 4 5 -7 5 9 5 8- PRESCHOOL ASSISTANT teocher. Perfect for students. 2 :3 0 -6 . M-F Small classes, good w o rking environ­ ment. $ 5 .5 0 -6 /h r Early childhood program . Jewish Federation of Aus­ tin. C oll Jean 331-1 144 for app t 8-23-4B BUSY M O R TG A G E /R EAL ESTATE OFFICE in W estlake needs outgoing person we can train In the follow ing areas assisting loan processor and hardw orking, trainable, ca pa ble of making decisions and a team player Flexible hours, good pay depending on ability. C all for appt 3 0 6 -8 3 4 3 . 8-23-6B N E W BAR on 6th street needs stu­ dents All positions N o experience W ill tram C oll 4 7 4 -2 9 7 6 8-23-1B CHILDCARE FOR 2 boys 6 and 8. W estlake area, T/TH 3-6pm, car re­ quired $ 7 /h r 263-41 8 6 8 23-5B teachers and substitutes W ill work around schedule Excellent pay Call 2 5 8 -6 4 3 9 or 3 3 1 -0 8 8 1 8-23-6B ROCKET’ S-EARN $ 8 $ 1 0/H R h.nng fast food d e livery drivers Flex schedule D ay/E vening shifts avaito ble 2 7 0 0 W A n derson Ln, Ste 313 4 5 3 -3 1 9 8 8-23-5B RUNNER/OFFICE CLERK for dow ntown la w firm Afternoon position available, M-F Previous work experience and excellent refer enees required Must have reliable transportation, proof o f insurance, and a good driving record Must have professional appearance, non- smoker C all Personnel 4 0 4 2 0 0 0 8-23-5b BED&BREAKFAST SAT &Sun 8am 4pm , H e lping w ith b reakfast a n d cham ber m aiding O u tg o in g , Furf working atmosphere N o experience $ 6 /h r to start re lia b le frie n d ly, necessary. W ill train C allr (512)4 7 9 -0 6 3 8 . Between 9am -5pm 8-23-ób BILINGUAL PHONERS needed P/T » Surveys not soles. Spanish speakers needed C all Dave 4 7 2 -5 5 6 5 8-23-, PART-TIME N A N N Y needed Caret for infant TTH 7 :30am to 4 :3 0 p m ( References required C a ll for m tert view 4 0 4 4 5 6 7 or 4 4 8 -3 3 7 4 8 -2 3 ' 10B PART-TIME RE­ SEARCH TECH P h arm aco In te rn a tio n a l Inc., a le adin g c lin ic a l re s e a rc h o rg a n iz a ­ tion, is seeking PAR T-TIM E RE­ SEAR CH TE C H S to w o rk in the so u th A u s tin h e a d q u a rte rs H igh sch o o l d ip lo m a Sr e q u iv a le n t r e ­ 4 2 0 - Unf. H o u se s c p n n e c tio n s , c a rp e t, etc. 440 - Roommates 540 - Lost & Found AV AILABLE AU G U ST 1 5 th . 1 to 4 B e d ro o m s $ 4 2 5 -$ 1 5 0 0 F o r 2 4 - H o u r In fo rm a tio n C a ll 4 7 7 -L IV E , F ax 4 5 2 -5 9 7 9 7 -3 0 -2 0 B -C M LK /LA M A R ! M ULTI le ve l 5 B e d ­ ro o m ! A v a ila b le n o w . No P e ts . $ 1 9 5 0 C a ll E ile e n F P P 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 8 - 2 - 2 0 B BLOCK WEST UT GORGEOUS W alk to UT. 4 8 2 - 8 6 8 0 8 -22-20B -C N E W 30TH & Duvol 2 /1 C A /C h , dishwasher, disposal, w / d connec­ tions, ca rp o rt V ery quiet. $ 8 7 5 /m o . (512)4 7 7 -6 0 5 5 LARGE 3 / 2 H yde Park hom e. C A /C H , new paint, c a rp e t/w o o d floors. $ 1 1 0 0 4 5 1 8 Ave B 45 0 - 1 7 3 6 8-23-5B S h a re la rg e re s to re d 3 b r/2 b a th w ith 3 ro o m m a te s W h o le s e c ­ ond flo o r H a rd w o o d s, yard L ig h t, a iry C A /C H , W /D . im m a c ­ u la te , q u ie t. T re e s, m a n y a m e n i­ O N E CALL Does If A lll Houses, Du­ plexes, Apartm ents, Condos-Rent, Buy or Sell. All Sizes, All Prices (From $ 5 0 0 ). Hunters, H a b ita t habitat@ bga.com , h t tp : / /w w w aus- tinre.com /habita t htm, 482 -86 51 8- BLOCK WEST UT GORGEOUS S h a re la rg e re s to re d 3 b r/2 b a th w ith 3 ro o m m a te s W h o le s e c ­ o n d flo o r. H a rd w o o d s , ya rd L ig h t, a iry C A /C H , W /D , im m a c ­ u la te , q u ie t T re e s , m any a m e n i­ tie s. W o n d e rfu l w in d o w s. S h are d ro o m fro m $ 2 9 5 . S in g le ro o m fro m $4 4 5 H u g e , u n u s u a l sin g le r o o m fro m $ 4 8 5 . 4 7 4 -2 0 1 4 M ANOS DE C ris to lo o k in g fo r v o l­ q u ire d C e rtific a tio n o r e x p e ri­ u n te e rs to *te a ch E n glish as a S e c­ en ce in p h le b o to m y a n d p re v io u s o n d L a n g u a g e to a d u lts a n d tu to r p a tie n t c o n ta c t p r e fe rr e d b u t n o t e le m e n ta ry sc h o o l c h ild re n H elp re q u ire d P rio r e x p e rie n c e in u s le n d a h a n d . 4 7 7 -7 4 5 4 8 -7 - c h e m is try /b io lo g y !ab o r c o u rs e - 15B 8-7-20B -D NOTICE: HAZLEW O OD VETERANS w o rk in c h e m is tr y /b io lo g y p r e fe r ­ red R e s p o n s ib ilitie s in clude b lo o d c o lle c tio n s a n d o th e r te c h ­ FOUR BLOCKS U T F urnished, p ri­ va te b a th S h a re kitc h e n . Q uiet, CAS REFUNDS Present and former Hazlew ood nical proce d u re s such as ECGs u n d e r e x tre m e tim e c o n s tra in ts n o n -s m o k in g , p e tfr e e C A /C H Students may be eligible for substan­ M ust be a b le to w o rk a v a rie d S in g le s from $ 4 3 5 A B P D o uble s fro m $ 2 7 5 A B P 4 7 4 -2 4 0 8 8 -7 - tial refunds. C a ll now to determine your eligibility sched ule in c lu d in g e v e n in g s and w e ekends. tie s W o n d e rfu l w in d o w s. 23-8P S h a re d ro o m fro m $ 2 9 5 . S in g le room fro m $ 4 4 5 H u g e , u n u s u a l s in g k e ro o m fro m $ 4 8 5 4 7 4 - 2 0 1 4 8-7-20B -D 425 - Rooms STUDENT SPECIAL!! Q uiet area Rooms with amenities $ 4 0 0 -$ 4 5 0 . 4 1 6 6 6 6 2 or 4 5 1 -1 5 8 8 8-15-5B 2 0 B -D RO O M M ATE W A N TED F o r Fall. O ra n g e tre e A p a rtm e n ts . $ 4 0 0 / m o n th . 9 0 3 -6 7 5 -6 6 5 6 8 -7 -1 0 P R H. lo ya , P.C. Attorneys & Counselors 1-800-276-4309 Legal Specialization N o t certified by the Texas Board of re su m e to: 8-23-1B H u m a n R e s o u r c e s If in te re s te d , p le a s e fo rw a rd y o u r 26 3 -2 5 5 4 8-14 I4B RENTAL • 4 0 0 CONDOS - T0WNH0MES W est C a m p u s C o n d o s Price Reduction!! 2 2 $850 Covered Parking Access Cates - W asher/D ryer 2 2 $950 Covered Parking Access Gates Washer/Dryer - Pool $900 2 1’A W a s h e r/D ry e r - Pool - C o vered P arkin g A p a r tm e n t F in d e rs S e rv ic e 2 1 0 9 Rio Grande 322 9 5 5 6 I M a k e D e a l s __ l i b 2-2 21 Elf I 1.5 Community Size Pnce Amenities $1100 2 Car Garage Gables $1000 Extra Large Robbins Place $950 Super Value St Thomas $675 Most Desirable Orange Tree Preservation $825 Designer Loft Square Centennial Croix Orange Tree $1300 Remodeled $1300 Luxurv $¡500 Townhome Stvle 2-2 2-2 2-2.5 When vou’re ready to make a deal Call nson 4 9 4 - 2 1 2 3 GAZEBO GUNTER PL NUECES PL OVERLOOK $675 $775 $550 $700 $550 Coffee Properties "Deals of the Week" 2-1 2815 Rio Grande Loft 2 2 2813 Rio Grande Incredible Price! I I 2206 Nueces Close, cute I-I 908 Poplar Pool, W/D, big 1-1 2107 Rio Gronde W/D, dose 2-2 808 W 29* Huge, Pool, W/D Call for info on those a n d m a n y others. 4 7 4-1 8 0 0 $1000 WEST UNIV PL PECAN TREE NOW LE A SIN G FO R FA LL Old Castle Hill Eff. $425 Eff. Paddock $450 Orange tree Eff. $600 Rio Grande Condos 1 -1 $600 $650 Buena Vista l/mghaven $725 $775 2703 Mulford Sunchase $850 $950 Parapet Bellevue 2 - 2 $ 1 0 0 0 Robbins Place 2 - 1 3-2 2 2 2 - 2 $ 1 0 0 0 2 2 1 - 1 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 & COFFEE $7 50-7 75 $ 8 5 0 $7 00 -1 2 0 0 $875 $5 25 -7 0 0 $ 8 5 0 B w n a V ista Chat sea C ro ix in fie ld Place G azeb o G u nter PI. H ancock PI. H yde P ark O aks Nueces C om er Nueces Place O ra n g e tre e P a ra p e t Pecan Tree Seton 3 1 s t St. St. W est. U niv. PI. M a n y O th e rs A v a ila b le I 2 8 1 3 Rio O r a n d e # 2 0 6 4 7 4 -1 8 0 0 $ 9 2 5 $675 $775 $550-775 $675 $ 1 0 5 0 $575 $775 $ 9 5 0 $ 1 0 5 0 HMJihWnúJ} TÜ W 1M i j U T i l l LI i > J J A ! J U A ! £ ¡ 1800 LAVACA AUSTIN, TEXAS 78701 IS NOW LEASING FOR FALL Come Experience A More Distinguished Lifestyle • I and 2 BR rondos • L u x u r i o u s i n t e r i o r s • B e a u t i f u l (¿ ro u n d s • W / 8 in e v m u n i t • Pool •Hoi Tub • C overed Parking • M ir r o w a v e • O n I T S b u U le • fid. Alarm Svsle ns • M s aid 2-fs S 7 M - 9 5 I 9 or 11 mo. leases RENTAL 4 0 0 » Condo* - Townhome* EFFICIENCY $425 On U T Shuttle. Quiet. W /D , microwave, fans, cable. Lg/multi pets ok. 210-615-0729 S to n eleig h Condos West Campus M s from $700 700 sq. ft./approx. 2-2 s from $899 850 sq. ft./approx. 452-3314 pgr 867-2489 ^ m c a g r H A f t M W O W i Fall Buena Visia 1-1 $ 7 7 5 C | C r o i x 1-1 $ 7 7 5 $ 5 5 0 $ 8 0 0 Ü 0 $825 I $ 6 2 5 Ü $800 1 -1 1-1 1 -1 1 - i 1 -1 0 G a z e b o ■ Nueces Place 1-1 e 2 G (Orangetree jj Pointe 1 Treehouse 1 1Gauge) B Wedge wood | Chestnut Sq ■ (1 Story! g $200 Duval | Pres Hquare g W » i l Floors) I Q u adrangle g Large) I 31 St Condos 2-2 $ 9 50 ■ Sunchase 2-2 $1200 • (Nicely Furnished) $ 6 7 5 $1300 2 - 2 2-2 S I 400 2-2 $1100 ijj 2 - 2 $ 1 2 0 0 I FURNISHED 8 UNFURNISHED CONDOS ALL BILLS PAID except phone end a b le ) LAUNDRY ROOM • COURTESY GUARD • HOT TUB SWIMMING POOL ASSIGNED PARKING ON SITE MANAGEMENT M A R Q U I S MANAGEMENT CO CAMPUS c o r a o s LE S S THAN A 5 MINUTE WALK FROM UT CAMPUS FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL (512) 476 9710 4 7 2 -3 8 1 6 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 P H A R M A C O (R E S T E C H ) 4 0 0 9 B a n is t e r L a n e A u s t i n , T X 7 8 7 0 4 F A X # ( 5 1 2 ) 4 4 0 - 2 9 5 2 EEO/AA EMPLOYER 8-2-20B 0 HIRING TELEPHONE re p s fo r b o th in b o u n d & o u tb o u n d c a llin g In te r ­ n e t te ch s u p p o rt p o s itio n s a v a il­ a b le F le x ib le h o u rs, $6/hr. p lu s b o n u s e s C a ll 7 0 7 -3 1 1 1 8 -7 - 1 0B RENTAL 440 * Roommates U.T.’s ROOMMATE SOURCE Instant Service Student Discounts M em ber Better Business Bureau "Texas Ex-owned since 19 8 9 ” 1711 Son Antonio (of 18*1 WINDSOR ROOMMATES 4 9 5 - 9 9 8 8 r t T » I K T T T » t » T T 1 EDUCATIONAL BRUCE LEE’S JEET KUNE DO KALI AND GRAPPLING CALL ABOUT CLASSES after 4 00 892-4557 6 1 0 * M i s c . I n s t r u c t i o n ► SERVICES 7 5 0 - T y p i n g Z I V L E Y The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 2 T & Guadalupe 472-3210 MR Resumes Papers / Theses User Printing 7 * Color Copies Rush lobs C o p i e s 190b G uadalupe SI 472-5353 dÉk.. -dfeb. dfet. + 4 1 t EDUCATIONAL * 610 MISC. INSTRUCTION B ecome 0 B artender Ufotimo Short Ttrm LOW M u o n S S Z 2 8 3 3 - 0 3 0 3 National Badness School 8 2 5 E. R u n d b e rg I n . , Stg B -3 EOÉ Call Helen pr Mary: 4 7 8 -3 1 13. NEED PERSON to pick-up 2 older ch ildren from school in W estloke orea, M-F 3:30-6 OOp Prefer com­ puter geeks and Robert Jordan fans. «PART-TIME OPPORTUNITY- Baskin Robbins at Fiesta D elwood Plaza on 381/2- IH3i Needs personable enthu­ sia stic/ team-player Age 16 & older All shifts available A pply in person 1 1a.m.-5p.m. 8-22-3B GRADUATE STUDENT- N otetakers needed All subjects Come by P ara digm to apply. 4 0 7 W 24th St 8-22- 38 LAW FIRM has im m ediate opening for part-time ru n n e r/file clerk Must have your own dependable transportation and good driving record G eneral office CHILDCARE FOR 2 c h ild r e n (3 - 1/2, 1) M .W 3 3 0 -7 30. M u s t h a v e tra n s p ., re fs M o p a c a n d B e e C a v e s . $ 6 /h r 3 0 6 -9 0 2 6 skills such as typing, spelling, filing 8 -2 2 - 5 B and onsw ering phones necessary A v a ila b le hours: M ,W ,F or T,Th 8:30-12 30. ALSO M ,W ,F or T.Th 1 1:30-6 0 0 A p ply at 301 Congress Suite 80 0 . PART-TIME D A NC E instructor for young children Previous experience 3 3 5 -0 0 1 3 /9 1 8 -8 2 4 0 8-22-5b EMPLOYMENT 790 - Port tim * NEEDED CHILDCARE near M opoc A M cN eil,every Fn,6 30pm-2 30am 2 PART-TIME MYSTERY shoppers need-* great kids, boy A g irl, ages 6 A 9 ed for local stores 10 2 5 + /H r plus Must have reliable transportation A FREE products FREE food and more references N o smoking $ 2 0 0 /m o C all now ( 8 18) 7 5 9 -9 0 9 9 8 23-4B ( Call 8 3 4 -1 7 9 9 8-22-5B PART-TIME OFFICE C lerk n e e d e d HELP W AN TED part-time retail, pet year around $5 7 5 /h r flexible 20r shop 3 2 7 2 3 3 0 8-22-108 hrs a wk Duties include data entry, P/T RECEPTIONIST/MAIL clerk 2 0 h rs /w k at westside travel agency. C all 4 9 9 -0 4 0 5 M-F 8-5 8-22-5B WEST AUSTIN gourm et g ro ce ry seeks PT ca shier/de li prep Sat and PTweekdoys 4 7 8 -8 5 8 2 8-22-5B filin g , opening m ail a n d co p yin g , Must be able to type 4 5w pm A p p i/ at Texas M edica l Association, Per-, sonnet Dept , Ste 5 1 3 , 401 W e s t 15th St M-F between 9am -4pm oq call 3 7 0 -1 5 5 6 Equal O p p o rtu n ity Employer 8-23-6B EMPLOYMENT • 790 PART TIME y / / / / / / 7 / / 7 / / / / / / 7 / / / / / 7 7 7 / / / / / 7 / / / / / / y UT Students Job O p p o rtu n ity 1 Combination Mail Clerk/Runner for Texas Student Publications. 2 Shifts: 2 V 2 hrs. early morning, 2 hrs. late afternoon. Able to lift 40+ lbs, valid Texas D.L. & good driving record. Contact Elena at 471-5083 or pick-up application at TSP3.200, 25th & Whitis An Equal O p p o rtun ity/A ffirm ative Action Employer rto z z z z z j^ r jr r 7 z z r z z z z ijr tz j& z z z z z z z z z z Z k Z Z Z Z 2 U n k w r e t e y o f T w m r C f r c u U r t i o n A e a i e t n n t l S É É ÍP D a l l y T e n o n l a a e e k i n g m C i r c u l a t i o n g | A m H e ttm n t. t o p ic k u p n « w » p « p e r # a t t h # O o c k /® | l o a d o w n v e h ic le , a n d d e l i v e r t h a r t a w a p a p e r a t o |9 b o n e » o n e a m p u a a n d t o o t h e r A u a t- ln a n d jg M U r t w d t y l o c a t i o n * D a *w aH a a m u * t b e g in a t 4 0 0 A M a n d O a c o m » H p l a t a d b y 7 A M , M o n d a y t h r o u g h F r i d a y - n o ¡¡1 W0 0 k # n d 9 Bh £ a c | u i r a d q u a lific a t io n » f o r t h ie v a c a n c y ; wU- f t n p n a a a t o p r o v id e own v e h ic le (van o r c o v e r e d B p ic k u p ) , t o ahow p ro o f o f ineurance, a n d t o p r o - H v i d e a v a lid d r i v e r © lic e n se an d a c c e p t a b l e d r V » H b l * r e c o r d . A p p l i c a n t © e le c te d m u a t p r o v i d e M I c u r r e n t D e p a r t m e n t o f P u b lic S a f e t y J r M w t e B e e t l e * r e c o r d . N e w e p a p e r d e l i v e r y kii p n a f er n e d b u t n o t r e q u i r e d . B B H * * 6 . 1 0 p a r h o u r, f o r a m a x i m u m o f 1* + H M IÉ h íH d k í É Ü POSmON TO BE FIILED! Professional Legal Association requires part-time office assistant for afternoon hours 1 pm-5pm Monday thru Friday. Computer/ Word Processing skills a must. Competitive compensation Downtown location Contact Bobby at 476-5225 between 8am-12 noon. Student's # 1 Choice for Extra Cash $ 2 0 CASH TODAY ON F I R S T DO N AT IO N ONLY W C O U P O N Í X P 8 31 % $ 2 0 EACH DONATION $ 1 6 5 PER MONTH Can Donate 2x/week Schedule Own Time • Extra Clean. State-of- the Art Facility • Only 15 Minutes from UT C am pus B I O IV IE D A IXiEW High Teih Plasma Farilitg Please Call lor Appi 2 5 1 - 8 8 5 5 H O U R S 8 A M / P M IH 35 & Ptinqervi tle Exit W e s ! s h I h iH 35 üehmrt f X X 0 N RENTAL EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT tOO - f t t t i f d • 0 0 * » G e n e r a l majors Hyde Pork Baptist 465- F’RESCHOOL IN W est Austin look­ 8 3 8 3 EOE 8-16-10-bc ing for afternoon assistant. Call tion studies W e offer S u san 4 7 7 -9 5 4 9 8 -2 2 -8 B flexible PRESCHOOL- N / N W Austin looking for ft/pt experienced, mature teach­ ers. Excellent pay and benefits Call 8-16-5b GREAT FT/PT opportunity! Be your schedules plus great pay and 2 5 8 -6 4 3 9 or 331-0881 8-23-6B LEAD TEACHERS A teoching assistance for private, professional, preschool halfday program accredited. Beginning fall '9 6 5 days or less E.C.E/child Devel­ opment training and early childhood education experience preferred Call Vicki, G abriel 3 2 7 -1 3 1 5 or 26 3-43 9. 8-13-1 lb CASHIERS NEEDED $ 5 .1 0 /h r Students encouraged to study Mornings (8-3), Afternoons (3- 6), Evenings (3-11). Close to cam­ pus Apply in person at Seton Medico! Center Housekeeping/Parking Deportment 1201 W 38ih Street N o phone calls please 8-22-78 ATTN:AUSTIN:POSTAL POSITIONS NIGHT MONITOR N eeded im m e­ Permanent fulftime for clerks/sorters d ia te ly . D o w n to w n highrise If interested please apply in person, Full Benefits For exam, application and salary info, call:7 0 8 9 0 6 -2 3 5 0 . Ext. 8arn-8pm. 8-14-5 $ 6 5 0 /h r to s ta r t. 1 5 - 2 0 hrs/w k. C a ll 4 7 7 -9 7 5 1 or apply 1122 C olorado M anagem ent O f­ PRESCHOOL TEACHERS & assis­ fice from 8 a m -4 p m 8 -2 2 -2 b tants need for school in ACCREDITED NO RTH Austin Pre • l O - O f f k a - C b r k a l $1750 WEEKLY possible mailing our circulars No experience re­ quired. Begin now. For info call 3 0 1 -3 0 6 -1 2 0 7 . 6 -1 9 -4 7 P PARALEGAL RUNNER. Full/ Parf- time will train. Your reliable, eco­ nomical car Also need typist, bookkeeper Near U.T., Nonsmok­ ing. 4 7 4 -2 2 46 7-26-20B -D TYPIST/CLERICAL, SHORT walk to UT Flexible hours varied, nonsmok­ ing Will Train on Mac Call 474- 2 2 1 6 8 - 2 - 2 0 B - D • $ 8 -1 0 / H O U R ap po int­ conserva­ flexible tion studies. W e offer schedules plus great pay and benefits. For more inform ation p lease contact Kay at 4 4 0 -4 8 5 0 . 8-5-20B BANKING EXPERIENCE NEEDED TELLERS NEW ACCOUNTS CUSTOMER SERVICE IMMEDIATE OPENINGS, EXPERIENCE REQUIRED 4 4 2 - 8 4 8 4 W e need reliable and en erge­ Westlake F /T or P /T . We love tic people to schedule students. We will work with your schedule 327-7575. 8-6-6B school needs port-time teachers for mornings and afternoons Great at­ mosphere! 8 3 2 9 1 3 7 8-15-4b m ents and conduct JOURNALISM OR public offoirs ma­ CHILDCARE TEACHERS needed for jor wanted for paid intern position at a public affairs firm in Austin. Strong afternoons. Pre sch o o l/afte rs ch o o l Northwest loc. 3 3 5 -9 6 1 6 8-22-5B news judgement required. Involves earfy morning hours. Call Curt Hend- ley at 4 3 2 -1 9 1 8 or 8 2 0 6 fax to: 7 0 8 EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY for early childhood education major. After­ noons with 2yr-old Fax letter or re­ sume with references 4 4 2 -3 1 1 6 15-5B 8- FULL-TIME, PART-TIME help needed PC APhone skills a must. Paid train­ ing and excellent odvoncement op­ portunity Downtown offices Fox re­ 3 2 0 -8 2 5 5 after5 8-15- sume to: 108 HIRING CHILD core teaching assts full and /or part-time tuition scholar­ ships for child development classes NEED IMMEDIATELY: P/T 7om-12pm M-F M ake follow-up phone calls and answer phone. Apply at Lexus of Austin 447 -11 11 8-22-2B FRIENDLY E N VIR O N M EN T, clerk/ cashier/sfocker. M ay study while you run register Good pay Good benefits. Hyridge Grocery 3 5 0 5 Hy- ridge ot N Mopoc 3 46 -10 47. 8-22- 5B POK-E-JO'S BBQ accepting applica­ FT/PT. Bonus tions am /pm shifts pkjn, insurance, great pay, 3 loca­ tions: Round Rock, 3 8 8 -7 5 7 8 , Arbor­ etum area 3 3 8 -1 9 9 0 , Downtown 32a 1541 8-22-5B 8-6-11B-D W ANTED: STUDENT with specialty in child care development to watch 5 year old in ofternoons. Must hove own transportation. Salary negotia­ ble Great Hills area 3 2 8 -0 4 0 0 8- Longhorn Employment S erv­ ices T h e •mployment service lor students 16-108 W e need dependable people for various tem porary assignm ents including clerical, data entry, technical and light industrial Must be available 8 -5 short or long term . Start working im ­ m ed ia te ly P a y $ 6 5 0 -S 1 0 + d e ­ pending on assignm ent C all to­ day for an appointm ent 3 2 6 -H O R N LYNNTECH, INC A fast grow ing high-tech com pany in C ollege Station, Texas has full and part-tim e research positions available C andidates should have a BS or MS degree in chemistry, chemi- col engineering, biom edicol science or related subject G roduate students are encouraged to app ly Send re­ to sume Joy M a rsh a ll-C a ld w e ll, Lynntech, Inc., 7 6 1 0 Eastmark Dr., Job Line 4 6 2 -3 4 2 2 , Ste 105 , C o lle g e Station, TX In te rn et www longhornjobs com 7 7 8 4 0 EOE To fill by 9 / 3 0 / 9 6 8-7-20B-C 8-22-8B CO M MISSIO N PAID D a ily1 M ake $ 1 0 0 -3 0 0 W eekly Selling P repaid PART TIME N A N N Y needed for three Long Distance Phone Cards You pick your hours Free prepaid p ho ne card 5 1 2 -2 5 2 -1 8 7 4 8 -7 - 22-3B 10B YM CA OF AUSTIN now hiring sports officials, in­ structors and volunteer coaches Knowledge of Spanish a n d /o r sign language a plus. Flexible hours A pply in person at 1 8 0 9 E 6th, between 8:30am and 6pm. o ld e r children 2 45 -6 4 5 tw o d a ys/w k 2 6 3 -4 3 5 4 or 4 6 1 -6 1 2 5 . 8- ‘ Your favorite consignment shop for women and children, is hir­ ing full-time and part-time assis­ tants Responsibilities include w orking with customers and some paperwork. C bsed M on­ days Please call 451 -6845 S E C O N D TIME A R O U N D N E W CLUB now hiring positions 4 0 6 E 6ih Si After 2pm 8-22 2B Austin C all 4 5 0 -1 9 9 6 8-22-4B 8-12 20b LO V IN G , ACTIVE in volved nanny wonted for a d o rab le 2-yr-old boy M onday 9-1 a n d /o r TTh 9-1 N W own boss, work your own hours and earn serious income Coll 512-371- 1823 ask for John 8-22-5B Kid Friendly education or child development majors wanted for new toy store in W estlake Hills KidGenius is a large new educational toy store opening August 19th on Bee Caves Rd in Westlake Hills (About 10 mmutes by cor.) W e hove part-time or full-time positions available for friendly ambitious education or child develop­ ment majors Your immediate reply to 3 2 7 -0 3 0 6 is welcomed Hook'em Horns! 8-22-2B EARN M O N E Y w hile losing weight with our all natural guaranteed prod­ ucts Priscilla 476-lose (5673) 8-22- 20B W O R K FROM home- $50 0- 1 5 0 0 /m o Flexible Schedule, full training 4 9 4 -0 7 5 5 8-22-20P opportunity w /lo tu s software devel­ opment Must have some soles expe­ rience Long term assignm ent $ 1 1 /h r O ffice Specialist 8-22-4b job but w ant a career, The Sherwin- W illiam s Paint Com pany is looking for you I W e have several part-time positions throughout the Austin Area with on opportunity for advancement W E OFFER ‘ Com petitive Salary *(6 ) Paid Holidays ‘ QUARTERLY BONUS ‘ Flexible Schedule (15 to 3 0 hrs/w k) ‘ And M ore CURRENT O PEN IN G S INCLUDE O ne PT Inside Soles Position O ne PT Dnver M-F 8am -1 pm C all Kent/Bruce @ 4 4 4 -2 5 2 5 or ap­ ply in person© 5 0 0 East O ltorf Sherwin-W illiams Company all applicants subject to background check 8-22 28 ATTN RECENT college grads sales 8 0 5 W 1 0 * St. Austin Texas, 78701 »1*7» THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS Company 8 3 7 -6 5 5 0 8-15-48 8-22 56 If you are not |ust looking for o P A ADMINISTRATIVE Assistant. Cler­ Br.ng your dependable w illing to learn, hardw orking, customer service SHORT WALK UT Gam experience w ith M ac b o o kkeeping system attitude to The Also hiring typists, clerical, runners E M P L O Y M E N T • G e n e ra l rvetp n o rm a H i l n W n n t a r l NOW HIRING SECURITY OFFICERS Having a hard time making ends m eet’ Need extra income without sacrificing your GPA to get it? If so, we have the perfect job k x you!! At Zimco we offer • Full & fa rt Time ftssitions • • Evening & Night Rssitions • • Study W hile You Work • • C ar Not Required • • School Holidays O ff • • No Experience Necessary • • Uniforms Provided • C A L L 34 3-72 10 N O W ZIMCO O C U R IT Y CONSULTANTS Licmor » B-01VI0 AWESOME OPPORTUNITIES Become a 'cell' phone expert. No sales exp. necessary, just a great service attitude. Hourly pay plus commissions Several part or full time positions available Extra cash tor your offke skills! Data entry, typing, accounting assistants, receptionists. North, South or Central Austin Cat today for assignment. AUSTÍN tempo'wy services South • 447-0306 Round Rock - 244-3535 Central 454-5555 ' ATTENTION: NEEDED Energetic and outgoing people E arn $ $ N o w High Commissions Paid for people w orking outdoor table sales for subscriptions C a ll 326-9660 ATTENTION BUSINESS motors Capital equipment financing compa­ ny hos part-time Assistant Marketing Representative positions available for Juniors/Senior Located in Austin, 15-25 hrs/wk Hourly wage ♦ bo­ nuses up to $ 18 /h r Full-time Mar ketmg Rep positions (including at­ tractive compensation plans) availa­ ble to qualified candidotes upon graduation Call 4 5 8 1300, and ask for Fred Fontano TECHNICAL W O R D Processor 8 2 2 2 8 Downtown environmental engineer­ Sporting ROOSTER Goods needmg FT retoil sales em­ ANDR EW S ployee M-Sof w /o n e weekday off Anderson Ln Store 12pm-9pm 4 5 8 -2 1 0 3 Barnes, or Gr ff 8-22-5B Ask for Billy, Dawn, ing com pany seeks a full-time self starter to utilize developed word processing, spreadsheet, and other skills in a M icrosoft O ffice environ­ ment. Candidate must work inde­ pendently, display odvanced techni­ ques, and have strong organizational SITTER NEEDED after school for 1 3-yr and team skills. Competitive benefit old SW Austin Must hove reliable transportation. 4-7pm M-F package M a il or deliver resume to Technical W o rd Processor, Cook- $5 2 5 /h r Call Peggy 2 8 8 -0 3 1 5 8- Joyco Inc , 8 1 2 W est 11 th St Aus­ 22-5B tin, Tx, 787 01 or fox to 4 7 4 -8 4 6 3 CUSTOMER SERVICE Reps desper ately needed N o sales 6am -12pm & 3pm-8pm Personnel Connection, AFTERSCHOOL TEACHERS Several locations, Hex hrs excellent work en­ 3 4 1 0 Far West Blvd, Suite 130 346- vironment Stepping Stone School, 3 1 5 5 8-22-5B 4 5 9 -0 2 5 8 8-23-10B 8-22 28 E M P L O Y M E N T • 8 0 0 G E N E R A L H E L P W A N T E D In t e l l iQ u e s t W e A r e L o o k i n g F o r P e o p l e W h o A r e : • Looking for a set schedule • Dependable and intelligent • Knowledgeable about personal computers and related products • Committed to making a contribution • Can type 25 words or better per minute • Are experienced on the phone, preferably conducting market research studies. If you match this description, you may be qualified to become a Telephone Researcher with IntelliQuest. We are a leading provider o f marketing information fo r the high technology industry. We offer: • Set hourly pay - no sales or commission work! • Casual, comfortable work environment • Interesting work gathering information about current and future technologies • Convenient location - near downtown on public transportation • routes • Day and evening shifts available • Weekend shifts also available Pay range is from $6.00 to $8.50 per hour depending on tenure and merit. If you are interested in joining our rapidly growing company, come to our office at 1700 S. Lamar, Suite 240 between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. to complete an application or call 447-6707 fo r more information. Marketing Promotions Assistant. two teenage boys (great kids, oges DOUBLETREE HOTEL AUSTtN Seeking qualified applicants for the following positions Cashier/Greeter-eoriy am PBX Operator-pm Conceirge-mostfy 5om-10om Sales Secretary Dishwasher-pm Housekeepers Business Center Coord.-part-time, Tues.&Thurs. noon to 6pm. 6 0 5 IH 3 5 N HRDept, Mort-Thurs., 9om-to noon EOE MARKETING PROMOTIONS assistant A leading national real estate devel­ oper currently hos on opening for a If you are a high energy, hands on person with lots of creativity, this is the job for you. Responsibilities include the coordina­ tion ond organization of all mall mer­ chandising promotions and special events including community fund rais­ ers and exhibits Copy writing, de­ sign ond tracking of oil internal mat! communications including mall signs, directories, and merchant newsletters Inventory control and management of oil promotional PARALEGAL RUNNER Full/ P art- equipment Physical labor required. tim e will train Your reliable, eco ­ nom ical car. Also need typist, bookkeeper N ear U T , Nonsm ok­ ing 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 7 -2 6 -2 0 B -D TYPIST/CLERICAL, SHORT walk to UT Flexible hours varied, nonsmok­ ing Will Train on Mac Call 474 - The successful candidate will have a bachelors degree in piblic relations, communications or marketing Some experience is helpful, volunteer work ond internships wiH be counted as ex­ perience Microsoft Publisher experi­ ence is lecessary 9 0 0 DRIVER/COMPANION Responsuble person needed to pro­ vide after-school transportation-for 13 and 15) to music lessons, sports, & home in N W Hills W ill pay $ 1 0 0 /w k for availability from 3- 7pm, MorvThurs, but some days may be shorter Must have excellent driv­ ing record, dependable car, good references Call 4 5 3 -3 5 1 9 eves or leave message during day 8-14-58 CHILDCARE PROFESSOR’S children, Mon 9om-2pm plus two days otter school 2pm-5pm (more hrs if desired). Experience References, Transportion. Coll pms 4 7 8 -0 8 3 9 8- 14-5P RESPONSIBLE, PATIENT, loving stu- dent for afternoon childcare Must have reliable transportation Down­ town area 6 9 8 9 8-14-10b w -4 9 5 -8 8 5 2 , h-479- N A N N Y NEEDED for two small chil­ dren Days & weekends Car, expe­ rience a must. S.Austin, (512)292- 6 7 4 3 , Cheryl 8-15-7b 2 2 1 6 . 8 - 2 -2 0 B -D This is a full time position, Tuesday SHOfTTWALK UT. Typist (will train thro jgh Saturday Salary is $7 9 0 AFTER SCHOOL Nanny/Housekeep per hour. Highland Mall offers a full er Enthusiastic, Dependable, loving, on M ac); Bookkeeping trainees: benefits package including health in­ Clerical; Runners Non-smoking surance, 4 0 1 K, paid vocation and need reliable car and references 1- 6pm M-F $ 15 0 /w k Leave message 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 8 - 1 3 -2 0 B -D educational assistance Leah 3 3 8 -0 8 1 3 . 8-1 5 4 B $ 8 - 1 0 / HOUR W e need reliable and energe­ tic people to schedule appoint­ ments and conduct conserva­ Interested parties should complete a NEED FUN, E nergetic person with Highland M all job application ond tra n s p o rta tio n to c a re for my submit a resume Applications are 8&11 year-old afterschool M -F, available at the Highland Mall Man­ agement Office 3-6 W estlake area Call Debbie at 4 4 2 -9 7 9 7 or 3 2 7 -3 2 2 2 8- For more information contact Lori Du­ pree at 4 5 4 -9 6 5 6 1 6 -3 B BABYSITTER FOR 2-yr boy and 3-yr 8-16-38 girl 15-20 hrs/w k in morning. Must have own transportation. $ 5 -7 /h r. benefits. For more information please contact Kay at 4 4 0 -4 8 5 0 . 890 C lu b s- Restaurantf CATERING BY Rosem ary is now 8 - 5 - 2 0 8 hiring full-tim e/p art-tim e w aiters SUPER LEASE! $ 5 3 9 /m o one bed room, one bath A vailable Sept 1. C all Karina 8 3 7 -2 4 8 0 . 8-16-8b AFTER SCHOOL childcare 2 chil­ dren ages 3 & 6 M -F , 3- 4/hrs/d ay. C a r required Michael or D o re en , 3 0 6 -8 8 4 6 8 -2 2 -7 B P A HELP Runner needed for busy prop man office must have reliable transportation, proof o f insurance G o o d driving record. Hex afternoon Including hrt/assorte d other duties s o m e liltin g M -F $ 5 5 0 /h r A p p ly ® 150 2 B W 6 th S treet 8-12-1 Ob TW O PART-TIME RUNNER POSITIONS o va liable for a small dow ntow n law firm The tw o shifts ore 9 30am-1 3 0pm and I 30pm 5 30pm You must hove a dependo- ble o n d insured transp o rta tio n W o rk in g know ledge o f dow ntow n Austin is a must Must be able to use office wquipm ent such os phones copier ond fax as bock up Starting salary is $ 6 /h r. Píeos* la x resume to 4 7 6 6 1 0 6 Of m ail to NEED DEPENDABLE person for part- time data entry. Located near ACC N orthridge M-F 5-9p.m C all Linda & bartenders for the fall season. Apply in person. M -F. 9 -5 , 2 1 1 0 San Jacinto (U T Alumni Center), No phone cans please 8-1 -1 5 B GREAT KIDS- N eed responsible sitter 10-yr-old boy, 5-yr-old girl. 2-6pm. Transportation a must $ 6 /h r M-F 219-9661 or 4 5 1 -1 8 7 0 after Pat 6pm 8-22-5B SHORELINE GRILL Work with friendly O C C A S IO N A L BABYSITTER own people in a cosuo! fine dining atmos­ tran sportation ^ good kids, ages 5 & 10, $5 5 0 /h r 4 7 2 -4 0 4 3 . 8-22-2B W ORK 3-6 M-F driving 2 kids to ac­ tivities Must have own car. 328- 2 0 5 9 8-22 5B STUDENT NEEDED to help drive, do homework, and babysit older chin- dren. Tues/Thurs ond occasional Fri. 3-7 pm $ 6 /h r Need car, good driv­ ing record and good personality. 4 7 4 -1 8 2 4 Leave message 8-22-7B phere Hostess position available Lunch ond dinner shifts. Apply in person 9 8 San Jacinto 8-I6-3B SUGARS IS now accepting app lica­ tions for dancers, all shifts 4 0 4 High­ land M all Blvd 4 5 1 -1 7 1 1 . 8-1 2-5B THE YELLOW ROSE Is looking for Austin fin­ est Entertainers, w ait­ resses & busperson. Apply in person. 6 528 N. Lamar. BABYSITTER SO UG HT for 9 & 6 /y r daughters of W /A u stin prof/attny M o/Tu 3-5 pm $ 7 /h r, car desirable 8-20-5b 4 72 -5 3 0 5 . 8 22-5P C A N Y O N CAFE N o w hiring all posi­ tions Excitmg new southwestern res­ W O R KING M O M in search of after- ical, data entry. Accuracy & reliabili­ taurant. G reat benefits High Vol­ school core from 4pm-7pm. W ill ty critico!. Casual atmosphere, smok­ ume A pply in person. W estlake provide kids, car and gas. Please ing home office Hex. hrs Fax resume Hills Shopping Center SE corner of call 499 -6 2 2 5 or 327-2341 8-22- 8 3 4 -2 3 0 8 8-23-5B ' 3 6 0 and Beecaves Rd 8-22-5B 2B ADMINISTRATIVE TEXADELPHIA IS octively review ing ASSISTANT/RECEPTIONIST needed for Insurance office Profi­ cient with computer W ill use W o rd Perfect, Excell, DocEosy and Adobe applications for all positions. Prefer­ ence given to neat appearance and scheduling availability. 8-23-7B Pagemaker Prior experience not re quired but must be a quick learner ACE BLACKJACK- W e are seeking self-motivated, energetic, outgoing in­ G o o d phone skills dividuals to deal blackjack in Austin's Call M ike ot 3 46 -44 84 premier nightclubs W eekend availa­ PART-TIME N A N N Y needed for 9mo old, varied daytime hours. Near UT campus. Experience and references required 4 7 7 4 0 2 4 8-22-7B NIGHT STUDENT looking for full-time nanny for two infants Need car and references Great pay and benefi's Call Linda 3 2 7 -4 4 4 7 8-22-2B in the am only 8-23 10B b ility is o must Free training Salary & Tips 4 5 9 -2 2 3 7 8-23-3B 820 - Accounting* ftookkoeping M A N G IA PIZZA need drivers, coun­ ter help, cooks waitstaff Please a p ­ ply at any o f our locations 8-23-5b M O M 'S BEST Friend seeking nannies A sitters for P/T A temp positions •F/T.RR, infont A 3-yr-old, $ 3 0 0 /w k , •F /T , Killeen, newborn, 2 A 4-yr- olds. $ 2 0 0 -2 5 0 /w k • P/T, Georgetown, infant $7-8/hr •P /T , N W toddler. $ 6-7/h r •P /T , Lakewoy, 3-yr-old, $6-7/h r; • P/T, North newborn, mormnqs WAITPERSON NEEDED for one of the best Japanese Restau­ rants m Texas Dinner onfy, 4pm- 1 1 pm If you can think fast, move fast and would like to make extra money, $ 6/h r; come see us. 7 9 5 -8 5 9 3 ,after 3 pm Musashino • P A , Barton Creek, 6 A 2-yr-olds, af­ ternoons, $6-8/hr •FT, Westlake 9-yr-old, $20 0- -Greystone at M opoc 2 5 0 /w k 900 - Domestic* Household 8-23-68 ‘ Must have childcare references A own car Call 3 4 6 -1 9 6 7 8-23-5B H O U S E H E LP E R 10+/H R S/W K Starting $6/hr. Includes h ou se­ SITTER NEEDED 2 Boys, ages 10 A 13. Light housekeeping, woman pre­ ferred P A , Sun, Mon, Tues Referen­ work. laundry, some ironing food ces, own trans(x>rtation. 327 -1 3 8 5 p rep a ra tio n . NW Austin No 8-2 3-5 B smoking/ perfum es. Speaks Eng­ lish and references 3 3 1 -0 6 2 7 . 8- 5 -5 B NEEDED- RESPONSIBLE FEMALE for part/full-time bou sec lean mg. er ronds, laundry and occasional over­ night care for 2-teenage children Room Aboard optional Must have own transportation References 25mm to campus. 2 6 1 -5 5 7 9 voice mail 1-800-957-8491. AFTERSCHOOL CARE (3 0 0 -6 00) for 2 elementary school-age girls West Austin Must have dependable transportation. Coll 263 -5 3 7 2 8-23- 5B BUSINESS 9 4 0 - Opporhm tties W anted ATTENTIO N ALL Students!1 Grants and Scholarships Available from Sponsors! No Repaym ents, Ever1! 8 -2 2 5 8 $$$ C ash for C o lleg e $ $ $ For Info: 1 -8 0 0 -4 0 0 -0 2 0 9 8 -7 -2 0 P -C N o nsm oking 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 7 -3 0 - 2 0 B -D 840 - Sales H IG H telephone ENERGY personality M aking outgoing calls Downtown location Speed your co- reer on the super highw ay $ 5 /h r ♦bonus, fox resume 3 2 6 -1 8 9 0 8-23- 6b 850 - Retail FA M O US CHRISTMAS store has openings for full &parMime sales and cashier positions Flexible hours, ap­ ply 5 3 3 9 North IH35 8-22-6B 880 - Professional Experienced AGENTS- TRAVEL agents preferred and interns Fax re­ sume to ( 5 1 2 )2 5 5 1 6 8 4 8 I5 -5 B LEAD TEACHERS AN D ASSISTANTS Children's W orld Learning Centers, a nationally accredited private pre­ school is seeking qualiHed, caring irv dividualswho thrive on challenge and hard work Full and part-time posi- tons available. Great benefits, experi­ ence a plus Must be flexible and hard working Call 3 4 6 -6 1 6 0 for more information 8-15-4B E M P L O Y M E N T - 8 00 G E N E R A L H E L P W A N T E D ★ Now Hiring Energetic Service Professionals Do these questions describe you? • Can you create “WOW” guest experiences? • Do you have high standards for service? • Are you a positive “upbeat" person • Do you enjoy making the service experience right for your guests? • Do others enjoy working with you? • Are you always punctual? • Can you create the “big welcome?" If this description fits you, we want you to join our professional team. Ma Ferguson’s is a newly designed restaurant/coffee and cocktail bar that offers a casual atmosphere and family style service unique to Austin. Our restaurant, named after our first female governor of Texas, Miriam “Ma” Ferguson, offers a traditional Hill Country setting with ornate platters, quilts and hard wood floors. The menu emulates Ma’s homespun style and presents many entree selections from "Ma’s" own original recipe collection. We are assembling a unique group of full and part time hospitality associates for both our “Front and Heart of the House” including: SERVTRS • BUSPERSONS • GREETERS • BARTENDERS • COCKTAIL SERVERS • BUSPERSONS • UNE COOKS • PANTRY COOKS • DISHWASHERS • NIGHT CLEANER We offer: A professional work environment that promotes career advancement opportunities • Benefits including M ED1CAL/DENTAL/UFE insurance, vacation, family care days, holiday pay, free Capitol Metro bus passes, free meals, tuition reimbursement and MUCH MORE:. CALL NOW TO SCHEDULE AN INTERVIEW; Maria at 206-3040 Monday Friday 8:30- 5:00 p.m. OR Candace at 206-3040 Saturday 10^X) - 5:00 p.m We are an Equal Opportuntity Employer Pre-employment Drug Testing is required for all positions. T h e D a ily T e x a n Friday, August z ó , iyyt> ray» u SOUND BITES PU R E 8W E F T HELL Artist: various Label: Mammoth Rating: ★★ a (out of five) As if it d id n 't m ake enou gh money off of the concept the first time around, L.A .'s famous Jab- berjaw nightclub now has a sec­ ond ben efit com pilation album out. ,The first one was supposed to help raise m oney to m ove the club into a new location, and one would think that with the caliber of music found therein, it would have done so easily. Bands ranging from Helmet to Hole to Mule contributed tracks (often rare B-sides or otherw ise u n a v a ila b le re c o rd in g s ) th a t resulted in a strong album. The bands represented a good cross- section of the acts that normally would play Jabberjaw — punk, hardcore, "alternative" and noise acts of all sorts. For Austinites, one need sim ­ ply think of the bands that come th r o u g h E m o 's — b o o k in g a g e n ts u s u a lly to u rs th r o u g h b o th c lu b s , and th e owners are good friends. sen d H o w e v e r, Pure Sweet Hell d o e s n 't re a lly stack up to the first Jabberjaw compilation. The first not only supported the DIY u nd ergrou nd aesth etic by first releasing all the songs on 7-inch singles, four songs at a time, but also seemed to have bands more indicative of the general Jabber­ jaw acts. H ow ever, Pure Sweet Hell is still pretty strong, though as w ith all com pilations, it can o n ly be ju d g e d by lis te n e r s ' a ffin ity for e a ch in d iv id u a l group. There are the usual suspects — S te e l P o le B a th tu b , F itz o f Depression, Jawbreaker (back for th eir seco n d Ja b b erja w co m p ) and g o d h e a d S ilo . T h ere are a few n ew twrists — M a n ... or A stro m an ?, B rain iac, C lic k ita t Ikatowi and Low. And then th ere are the ones th a t tru ly s tic k o u t, th e a c ts meant to "diversify" the parade of p u n k/n oise acts — Red Kross and M ary Lou Lord. To be fair, the last have probably been in Jabberjaw at least once or twice, but hardly fit in. The best songs here are Fitz of D e p r e s s io n 's Burn It Down, L a u g h in g H y e n a s' Shine, and Steel Pole B athtub's The Charm. There are some disappointments — g o d h e a d S ilo 's h o rrib ly recorded Heaven Isn't Hollywood as w ell as M an... or A strom an and Brainiac's lackluster lacklus­ ter performances. And of course M ary Lou L o rd 's folk y d riv el and Low 's carefully constructed slow-core pop stick out like bad hair-plugs. Still, all in all, Pure Sweet Hell is all right, even if the firs t s in g le fro m th e o r ig in a l (w ith H e lm e t, S lu g , co m p U n w o u n d and H a m m erh e a d ) can w hip the w hole thing any day. — Joe Sebastian BO O TH & TH E B M JW G B . Artist: Booth & the Bad Angel Labei: Lontana Rating: ★ ★★ (out of five) If you asked a hundred people on the street, "What is the most u nlik ely m u sical co llab o ratio n you can im agin e," m ost would p ro b ab ly an sw er, "T h e sin g er from Jam es and that guy w ho scores David Lynch film s." W ell, o u r p e rv e rs e tim es being what they are, that bizarre hypothetical pairing has come to pass, but the resultant album is n o t as w eird as you m ig h t expect. Tim Booth's songs are more or less in the Jam es m o ld , w h ile Angelo Badalam enti applies his inimitable talents to creating the eerie washes of sound that have become his trademark. Ex-Suede guitarist and all around musical deity Bernard B utler also plays on much of this album , adding gorgeous guitar to Stranger and extra texture to the unabashedly optimistic first single I Believe. Perhaps inevitably, the album h as a cin em atic q u ality , but it m anages to sou nd w id escreen w ith ou t b ein g b o m b a stic. The m elodies are sw eeping, but the ta stefu ln ess o f th e p ro d u ctio n and Badalamenti's preference for k ey b o a rd s o v er s trin g s k eep s things from going over the top. B ooth's singing, too, is his best and most understated ever, par­ tic u la r ly th e L e o n a rd C o h en style vocals on Dance of the Bad Angels and the rom antic croo n ­ ing on Fall In Love With Me. Booth and B ad alam en ti also m anaged to rope in Bom b The B a s s 's Tim S im en o n to fid d le w ith a cou p le o f the tracks, to g e n e r a lly lo v e ly e ffe c t. For instance, Dance of the Bad Angels is strip p ed dow n and ghostly, emphasizing Badalamenti's ethe­ real keyboards, while also man­ ag in g to in co rp o ra te a b izarre ululating female voice. h a v e U n fo r tu n a te ly , T im B o o th needs to be a little more self-criti­ cal w ith the lyrics: "T h in k you m u st slip p e d m e co c a in e /W a ite r, take it b a c k /I ord ered sham p a in ." S o rry , I d o n 't th in k so. A nd Tim 'n ' Angelo's spoken word shtick on Life Gets Better is pretty dire as well. Still, while there may be a little too much Booth and not enough B ad A n g e l, th e re s u lt o f th is unholy pairing is, on the whole, quite lovely. Not an unqualified su cce ss, th en , b u t b e tte r than an y o n e cou ld h av e exp ected ... and th e re 's still the prom ised, "d a r k e r , o d d e r " fo llo w -u p to look forward to. — Alex Wettreich Basquiat Continued from page 16 the m ovie, and from w hich m any good lines o f d ialogu e are ripped off, like "W hen y o u 're clim bing a ladder, don't kick out the rungs.") G ary O ld m an is A lbert M ilo, a popular painter whose ravaged face and slu m p e d sh o u ld e rs su g g est th at he ju st b a re ly su rv iv e d th e g id d y rid e w h ic h w ill u n d o B asqu iat. He to lerates B asqu iat s pissing in his stairw ell and other bad behavior with the wise hum ili­ ty of a man who went through it all and cam e out w ith a cap acitv for genuine affection. M o st n o ta b ly , th e re is D av id B o w ie 's w eak , c o n fu se d A n d v Warhol. Warhol sees his lost youth and in s p ira tio n in B a sq u ia t and tries, as his last p e rfo rm an ce, to reach out to another human being. B ow ie's w om anish walk, his stu t­ tering comment on Pittsburgh, "I'm kind of from there, you know?" and th e v u ln e r a b le g leam to his w et eyes all produce a powerful im pres­ sion of hope brewing in a blighted landscape. Arrayed against these good spir­ its are the art-world vampires who p u ll a s m ilin g B a s q u ia t to w ard doom. They include Elina Lowen- sohn and Parker Posey as a pair of avaricious art dealers, Dennis H op­ per as a stuck-up German collector, C ourtney Love as a clum sy seduc­ tress, and Christopher Walken in a Burns Continued from page 16 about him. It would be nice to see him flesh out those abilities M ike M cG lone, how ever, is not so good. But the paltriness of his F ra n cis is no t e n tire ly his fau lt. F irst, h is c h a r a c te r has his ow n hig h -rise o ffice and a three p iece suite, but his fidgety, turtle-necked im m atu rity g iv es the im p ressio n that he co u ld m ism an ag e a cash register. Second, he is married, involved in an affair, looking to get a divorce, and com paring his situation to the difference between a '74 Buick and a new Porsche. He barely looks 21! Do love and marriage really die that cam eo p lay in g Satan H im self, as usual. W alken needs to get voted God of Creepiness, or at least Zen M as­ ter of the Pregnant Pause. He plays an unnamed interview er who takes approxim ately five m inutes to cut Basquiat into little bleeding pieces. All in g ra tia tin g sm iles and a w k ­ ward gestures, he nevertheless lets w ord s like "p ick a n in n y ' hang in th e a ir to c u t lo n g e n o u g h Basquiat's throat, and leads his little co n v e rsa tio n to w ard a co rn e r of fright and insecurity in the artist's soul. Given such a fascinating array of c h a r a c te r s and a tr a je c to r y th a t reaches the bottom and top of con­ temporary’ America, why the hell is Basquiat as hum drum as it is? Back to m y o rig in a l th esis: e x ­ p ain ters m ake bad d ire cto rs. T he script of Basquiat follow s pointless scenes too long, hesitates to delve deeply into psyches and m eanders p o intlessly through 45 m inutes in the latter half. What gives? And Jean -M ich el B asqu iat h im ­ self is handled with kid glo\es, so there's nothing that grabs us about him. It's a com bination of bad lines and an actor w’ho isn't pushed to go past them. A loss Anyhow’, Basquiat passes the time but it doesn't use it to take you any­ where. quickly these days? And as for the w hole C am eron Diaz-Jennifer Aniston hcxipla, hope­ fully after the film those with such hang-ups will find themselves more impressed with the warm, unsenti­ mental Maxine Bahns Diaz has a sensual, plush sm ile that is attractive, but it is only pin­ up prettiness. A n isto n , 1 d o n 't g et. F o r th e record I detect tw o genuine em o­ tio n s fro m h er: lis tle s s n e s s and pouty stupidity. Is she cap able of m o re? P erh ap s In She's The One however, Mr Burn-* is not too eager to find out. E N T E R T A IN M B U T Things still campy at ‘Bordello of Blood’ 16 T h e D a il y T e x a n Hn/nr, august 23. luuu THOMAS YOO_____________________ Daily Texan Staff Like Rocky Horror and others. Bordello O f Blood is reminiscent of horror double-bills of old, and like those w antonly depraved predecessors, it delivers the goods in a film full of trashy, cheap fun. In a series o f scen es w hich p o rtray h eroes m eltin g v a m p ire v ix e n s w ith su p er so ak ers loaded with holy water, it even features the infa­ mous tune Ballroom Blitz. There are plenty of gratuitous gory scenes and vile, d ecad ent innuendo in w hich to revel — bitching blood sucking "dem on sluts," tits bare, severed heads, third nipples and ripped-out still- beating hearts — mixed with the very Tales from the Crypt kind of hilarious humor. All the elem ents w hich crowned the w idely popular TV show a success for almost a decade make Bordello, the second feature hosted by the notorious Crypt Keeper, a completely satisfying genre flick. You alm ost don't really notice that Corey Feldman character. The comic book plot pits Dennis Miller as the dow n-an d -ou t, w ise-crack in g d etective, Rafe G uttm an, who seeks to find the m ischievous, too-cool brother Caleb (Feldm an) of Katherine Verdoux (Erika Eleniak), virtuous and uptight Bible-toter. R afe's "D echo vn ian " investigation leads him to a whorehouse lair of vampires. The queen vampire, Lilith (sultry supermodel Angie Everhart) has been summoned to damn the wicked perverts to hell by the self-righteous rock-n-roll televangelist. Reverent Jim m y C ur­ rent. A seriously evil incarnation, Lilith can only be stopped by cut- ting h er h eart into fou r sep arate slices. Unfortunately for her, Rafe is Herman. ^ ^ | k Like any good Tales fro m the Crypt ep iso d e. Bordello, heavy with self-parody and thick with terrible gags, puns and one-lin­ ers — sim p ly re fu se s to tak e Itself seriously (in one scene you can see a curi­ ous pipe, protruding from the side of the mortu­ ary, blowing smoke that is supposed to be that ominous fog). The m om m a vam pire, Lilith, rem arks after pulling off a guy's head, "D on't you just love a Angie Everhart sw oops in for a sanguine snack in Tales From the Crypt’s Bordello of Blood. man who gives head and lets you keep it." At one point. M iller's character com m ents in his perpetually sarcastic tone — "I feel like I'm in a bad Tales from the Crypt episode." B ordello's primary quality is that it is funny. M iller's continuous ironic ranting, notably sar­ casm -saturated wit and keenly obscu re refer­ ences w ork well in this consider­ ably campy story. - T 5 T But the most striking aspect of B o rd ello is the ra v ish in g g ran d e dam e, seductive Everhart. Her role is full of tasty genre bits — she tears out m en's hearts and bites into the bloody contracting m ess, and h as a re a lly lo n g tongue w hich she forces down victim s' th roats and into th eir chests (w anna deep throat?). Let's face it — if Everhart were a real vampire, she'd have everyone lining up to be sucked dry. W e would all be in a lot of trouble. A genre that once served as an outlet for social and psychological tension, horror films allowed film T A L ^ f m i m CRYPT BORmiOWBLOm Starring: Dennis Miller, Angie Everhart Director: Gilbert Adler Playing at: Great Hills 8, Highland 10. Lake- line, Riverside 8, Westgate 8 Rating: ★ ★ ★ (out of five) audiences to see the unseeable, unleashing the twisted, wicked desires of the repressed id in the safe liminal space of a dark theater. Bordello, w hile not exactly having the sam e cathartic function as others in the core of the g e n re , e x h ib its so m e d e lic io u s ly g ru e so m e fetishizing. Lilith is phenomenally sexy — in a warped, demented, alluring sort of way — part­ ly because she is a vampire, has fangs and loves the taste of blood (mm-mm). P B O M T H I CIt tF T Bad portrait of a tortured artist DANIEL Y. MAIDMAN ____ Daily Texan Staff film Burns ain’t ‘The One’ RU SSELL HURST Daily Texan Staff film Time to vent some of the old ire. Painter Julian Schnabel directed B a sq u ia t. I d o n 't know w h at th e deal is with artists who w ere hip in the '80s deciding they're directors all of a sudden, but itjaisses me off. Jo h n n y M n em o n ic , S e a rc h a n d D es tro y and n o w B a s q u ia t, th e smuggest of the bunch, are all vani­ ty flic k s by d ile tta n te fo r m e r painters w ho d on't know two bits and don't seem to care either, about the art of making movies. So anyhow, Basquiat is the story of young Jean-M ichel Basquiat, the o n ly m a jo r b la c k p a in te r o f th e whole '80s art-m arket explosion. O n e y e a r he w a s a h o m e le s s , notorious New York graffiti artist working under the tag Sam o (with a crown). The next year he was dar- General Cinem a BARGAIN WATINEES EVERY DAY A ll SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6pm H IG H L A N D 10 ^ 1-35 at M ID D L E F IS K V IU E RD 4 5 4 -9 5 6 2 S N E A K P R E V IE W SA T U R D A Y 7:00 B O G U S PC S O L O 2:00 4:3S 7 ; li 9;4S PG13 STERIO C A R P O O L 1 15 3 20 5 25 7 35 9 40 PG DOLBY S H E ’S T H E O N E 12:45 3:00 5:25 7:50 10 10 R OlOITAL/THX E M M A 12:00 2 25 4 50 7 20 9 50 PG THX T H E FAN 12 :15 2 35 5 05 7 45 10 15 R DIGITAL THX K A N S A S C IT Y 2 00 4 25 7 00 9 25 R SURIO N O 7:00 K A N SA S CITY O N SATURDAY B O R D E L L O O F B L O O D 7 40 9 40 R DOLBY H O U S E A R R E S T 12 30 2 45 5 10 PG J A C K 12:05 2:35 5 00 7 30 9 55 PG13 DOLBV C H A IN R E A C T IO N 2 45 7 45 PG13 STEREO A T IM E T O K IL L 1 00 4.00 7 05 10 00 R DOLBY C O U R A G E U N D E R F IR E 12 15 5 25 10 05 R STEREO GREAT HILLS 8 ;:7 & I U S 183 & GREAT H IL L S TRA IL 7 9 4 -8 0 7 6 IS L A N D OF D R . M O R E A U 12 00 2:35 5.00 7 35 10:00 PG13 THX S O L O 1 15 4 15 7 15 9 50 PG13 STEREO C A R P O O L 12:10 2:20 4 45 7 1 0 9 40 PG STEREO S H E ’S T H E O N E 11 55 2 25 4 50 7 20 9 55 R DOLBY T IN C U P O N TWO SCREENS R 1 30 4 30 7 30 10 00 DOLBY 1:00 4 00 7 00 9 45 DIGITAL'THX B O R D E L L O O F B L O O D 7 25 9 30 R STERJO A L A S K A 11 50 2 15 4 35 PG STEREO H O U S E A R R E S T 7 05 PG STEREO M A T IL D A 12:15 2 30 4 45 PG STEREO K IN G P IN 9:25 PG13 STEREO GIFT CERTIFICATES ON SALE K /\ / ^ ---- OrWR'iS • d*'"5 • 4ARY OLIMAN “ E x p l o s i v e ! ‘Basquiat’ will make sparks fly!” Imrid Sadby, ISTERmW MAGAIJSE BASRIRAT Starring: Jeffrey Wright, Benicio Del Toro, Claire Forlani, David Bowie, Dennis Hopper, Gary Old­ man, Christopher Walken Director: Julian Schnabel Playing at: Dpbie Rating: ★ ★ ★ (out of five) lin g of an art scen e in tra n sitio n from the conceptual chic of the '70s (h e n c e so m e o f th e a p p e a l o f Basquiat's, and Haring's, boundary- breaking display techniques) to the m ore classical co m p ositio n -b ased concerns of the '80s (Basquiat was pretty good at this too). B a s q u ia t d id n 't liv e o u t th e decade. After a few years of prolific output and partying hardy, he OD'd on heroin. S ch n a b el's m ovie traces the rise and a lit t le b it o f th e fa ll o f h is d ecea se d b u d d y . Je ffre y W rig h t, fresh from his success in A ngels in America, takes on the character as a blithe, self-destructive young man. Com pared w ith the sw irl o f vivid su p p o rtin g ch a ra cte rs, he re g re t­ tably comes off as a boring calm at the center of the storm. Highlights of the supporting cast buoy up the movie from start to fin­ ish. E v ery b o d y 's favorite in co m p re­ h e n s ib le a c to r B e n ic io D el T o ro appears as Basquiat's hoop-dunking street buddy Benny. Benny seem s like a fun guy to hang out with, and man does it sting when he blurts to a b o a s tfu l, s u c c e s s fu l B a s q u ia t, " F u c k y o u , m a k in ' m e fe e l bad m an." He's a good friend. Then there's the cadre devoted to showing what a mesmerizing, love- in sp irin g p re se n c e B a sq u ia t has. Because of W right's flat characteri­ zation, they seem rather more mes­ m erized than he seem s m esm eriz­ ing, but they're still good. Michael W incott is Rene Richard, a ta tty A rtforu m c r itic w ho sp o ts fresh squ eezed ju ice ALL FRUIT SMOOTHIES*FRUIT BARS BUY 1 SMOOTHIE GET 1 FREE! MONOAY & TUESOAY WITH THIS AD (offer expires 9-30-96) ju/CE j 0irr & W A T E R B A R 1625 Barton Springs Rd. A cross the street from Shady Grove M-F 7am-9pm Sat-Sun 9am-9pm JEMNIFEIIJRtONLElEH M IR M RiCHDROSON KRRRV eElflFO*HfE KUKAt Cil» I ^ (11:30Sot&Sun) 2:00-4:30-7;10-9:45 THE TINGLER Vincent Price, ludith Evelyn (’59) William Castle's preposterous yet original shocker' Coroner Price discovers mat fear causes a creepy « UTTU BUAN TftRY ZydGCG T ^ o lo r t A UfH# Jinny SiindaY. August 25 PINTNITE G U Y FORSYTH Monday. AusuMt 26 LADIES NITE $2Udle> B L U E M O N D A Y w / M aH o rd , D * r « k , F ro sty A th o Holy M o o llo rs Wednetdav. AumtMt 28 Kevin McKinney’* SHAT R iC O R D S w / u m i n o A n t i SHFS THE ONE Starring: Edward Burns, Mike McGlone, Cameron Diaz, Jennifer Aniston, Maxine Bahns Director: Edward Burns Playing at: Great Hills 8, Highland 10, Lake Creek Festival, Village Cinema Art characters are tr\ ing to live a nor­ mal life. Y et w ith S he's The O n e, B u rn s seem s too readily accepting of his ow n s u c c e ss an d , at age 27, h as appeared to slip into com placency — something perhaps worse than a sophomore jinx. The film w an ts to ex am in e the nature of brothers, but the exam ina­ tion is at a sitcom level. M icky rs g en u in ely an gered at F ran cis for sleeping with his ex-fiancee. Tem ­ p ers fla ir, in su lts are ex ch a n g ed (very b ro th e rly ) and th en ... th eir fath er has them settle the matjter outside with boxing gloves. The scene is ludicrous because it intentionally wants a laugh. It gets it because Burns is wry and witty, but the em otion is cut. No one is really hurt — Burns w on't rock the boat. T h e r e la tio n s h ip s w o rk at th e same level. The script can be pithy — managing the cutest scene possi­ ble about the need for a vibrator — b u t a g a in . B u rn s w o n 't v e n tu r e beyond that. Francis confronts Renee with his affair after he is comically suspect­ ed of being gay. "I'm in love with someone else." (P a u se . R e n e e sh o w s s ig n s o f pain) "W ho is he?" Again, the mood is broken. Life goes on I guess. As an actor, 1 like Edward Bum s a lo t. H e has a w o n d e rfu lly ta rt mixture of whine and gravel in his voice, and a subtle, observant way Please see Bum s, page 15 The Pier AT LAKE AUSTIN YOU DESERVE A DAY AT THE PIER! Sunday, 8/25 3-7 P.M. 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