A card for all seasons Five hundred students will test multi­ purpose ID cards that function ac Hnrm all. Switzer and Da Boys The Cowboys’ new head coach enters the NFL with a bang as his team defeats the Minnesota Vikings 17-9. 6 STATE & LOCAL Money pit Drag-area business owners fear they are losing revenue because of con­ struction on Guadalupe Street. Da il y Te x a n The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 93, No. 186 2 Sections Fascinating rhythm Monday, August 1, 1994 25c Invasion of Haiti approved by U.N. Security Council resolution authorizes use of force to remove Haiti’s rulers Associated Press UNITED NATIONS — The Security Council cleared the way Sunday for a possible U.S.-led invasion of Haiti to o u s t the m ilitary-backed g o v e rn m e n t a n d restore ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. The resolution authorizing the use of force passed by a vo te of 12-0. C hina and Brazil a b stain ed . The 15th m em ber of th e council, R w anda, w as ab se n t for the vote. ih e resolution, w hich gives no tim etable for the pos­ sible invasion, "authorizes m em b er sta te s to form a m ultinational force u n d e r unified com m and and control and ... to use all necessary m eans to facilitate the d ep a r­ ture from H aiti of the m ilitary leadership." The re so lu tio n also calls for the d e p lo y m e n t of a 6,000-member U.N. force following any invasion. U.S. A m b a s s a d o r M a d e le in e A lb r ig h t sa id th e Council's m essage to the H aitian m ilitary w as that "you can d e p a rt v o lu n ta rily an d soon, o r y o u can d e p a rt involuntarily and soon. The sun is setting on your ru th ­ less am bition." Albright said the U nited States "is prepared to orga­ nize and le a d " an in v a sio n force. " W e seek — and UT System lose jobs in Haiti’s military-backed government “can depart voluntarily and soon, or you can depart involuntarily and soon. The sun is setting on your ruthless ambition.” — M adeleine Albright, U.S. am bassador to the United Nations anticipate that others will join," she said. " W e h o p e th a t th e c u rre n t m ilita ry le a d e rs will d e p a rt voluntarily and that the m ilitary force will not b e o p p o s e d . But th is re s o lu tio n a u th o riz e s actio n w hether or not our hopes are realized." China, which abstained^ expressed uneasiness at the vote Its am bassador, Li Zhaoxing, said the resolution will doubtlessly create a dangerous precedent." bt \ eral Latin A m erican states said th ey feared the resolution w ould set a precedent for U.S. intervention in the region. Please see Haiti, page 2 employees reshuffling L a u r a A. S tr o m b e r g D aily T exan S taff A lm ost 40 UT System em ployees b ased at the U n iv ersity h a v e lost th e ir jobs at th e C e n te r for H igh Perform ance C om puting as respon­ sibility for the center is transferred th e from University. th e UT S y ste m to C harles W ar lick, d irec to r of the UT C o m p u ta tio n C en ter, said the C e n te r fo r H ig h P e rfo rm a n c e C o m p u tin g w ill b e r u n by th e C o m p u ta tio n C e n te r b e g in n in g Sept. 1. B ecau se of re d u c tio n s in th< Plans for the Center for High Performance Computing after the 1994-95 academic year are uncertain, said Charles Warlick, director of the UT Computation Center. Perm anent University Fund, the UT System will no longer su p p o rt the C e n te r fo r H ig h P e rfo rm a n c e C o m p u tin g a fte r th e n e x t fiscal year, W arlick said. Jam es A lm ond, C H PC d irecto r, said du rin g the course of adm inis­ tra tiv e re o rg an izatio n , 39 em p lo y ­ ees have been laid off. These e m p lo y e e s in c lu d e 14 in i n J-“ i m anagem ent positions and 25 part- time grad uate students. Alm ond said some of the em ploy­ ees will be placed in other positions w ithin the University. The Center for High Performance C o m p u tin g b u d g e t, w h ic h w a s reduced by one-third for the 1993- P lease see C enter, p age 2 r i c a b c o c c v / c i H c t , p d y 6 c Gary Cody, who calls himself a “related member" of the Cherokee Nation, perform a traditional dance Sunday afternoon at the City Coliseum. Cody has practiced dancing for most of his life. Timothy J. Lee/Daily Texan Staff aV T 11^ ^ ^ Provisional students having better success this summer C h a r u l V y a s D aily T exa n S taff S tu d e n ts in the Provisional A dm issions Program have a better chance now of stay­ ing at the University than students enrolled in th e p ro g ra m in p re v io u s y e ars, a UT adm issions official said Friday. Last y ear w e had a 60 p ercen t success said Paul Pedersen, assistant director rate of adm issions. We had a 5 percent increase in success rate [between 1992 and 1993)." P e d e rse n s a id m o re s tu d e n ts su cceed because the pace of the courses taken b\ the p ro v isio n a l s tu d e n ts fo llo w s th e p ac e of classes in the long semester. I hv students that come into the program a r e b e tte r p r e p a r e d " as w ell, P e d e rs e n added. This sum m er 560 freshm en en tered the University on a provisional basis, hoping to m ake it th ro u g h a p ro g ra m that re q u ire s th e m to take four classes and m ain tain a 2.25 GPA. If the students m eet these standards, the\ ' ’■ill be ad m itted as regular stud en ts, said D irector of A dm issions Shirley Binder. S tu d e n ts e n ro lle d in th e p ro g ra m are re q u ire d to take 12 hours, eith er o v er the sum m er o r in the spring sem ester. They a re re q u ire d to tak e E nglish 306, m ath, psychology or soc iology, and biology or chemistry. Iexas residents w ho were not adm itted to the University' because of their class rank or SAT score are eligible for the P rovisional A dm issions Program. W hen the program was first put in place in the late 1960s, students originally had to get a 2.0 GPA. This GPA requirem ent w as raised to a 2.25 with no grade less than C and at least one B. The current standards, in place since 1993, allow students to get a D if they m ake a 2.25 GPA and no grade of. an F or X. .. V . I think that overall, the provisional pro­ gram is fair," said provisional student Chris Yuan. "If y ou came in with the right a tti­ tude, and if you 're w illing to work, you'll be okay." O th er stu d e n ts feel th at the p ro g ra m is unfair. "If they had regularly adm itted students go th ro u g h w h a t w e 're g o in g th ro u g h , I think they d fail out," said Jeanette Cajide. She said that 12 hours over the sum m er w as too much. It w ould be a lot better if we only had to take nine hours," she added. P ed ersen said s tu d e n ts in the p ro g ra m during the spring sem ester find it m ore dif­ ficult because th e re are m ore stu d e n ts on cam pus and students are less focused. The Learning Skills C enter has also m ade an effort to p ro v id e special help to p ro v i­ sional students. D enise Sw ann d irec to r of th e le a r n in g Skills C en ter, said th e cen ter "has d e v e l­ oped a specific program for provisional stu ­ dents." She said the new w ay the program is set up is a "m ore realistic ap p ro ach , m ore of w hat a regular sem ester is like." LSC has seen an increase in the num ber of students seeking assistance in the p ast two years, Sw ann said. She a d d e d that in the beginning of the sum m er, an "extraordinary num ber" of stud ents cam e into the LSC, but the n um ber of stu d en ts that com e into the center now has becom e m ore m anageable. 1 he LSC has ¿ilso set up a new program to help stu d en ts w ith th e m ath in C hem istry 304K an d o p en ed up a w ritin g lab so s tu ­ dents can get special help in English. Man arrested in clinic killings investigated month before by FBI Health care concessions frighten HMD industry Associated Press WASHINGTON — H ealth m aintenance o rg a n iz a tio n s a n d o th e r m a n a g e d c a re groups sum m ed up the reform bill crafted by th e H ouse D em ocratic le ad e rs in o n e phrase: hazardous to their health. The m anaged care industry had hoped for a major boost for its style of m edicine from the reform s p ro p o sed by P resid e n t C linton and m any in Congress. Instead, it has been put on the defensive by a back­ lash in C o n g re ss a g a in s t th e in d u s tr y 's effort to limit which doctors they deal w ith and control patients' access to specialists. I he latest setback cam e Friday with the D em ocratic le a d e rsh ip bill an d its " a n y w illing p ro v id e r" provision. T his w ould require health plans to give any provider who accepted their fees and met their stan­ d a rd s an o p p o rtu n ity to treat th e p la n 's patients. The m anaged care groups are hoping to The latest setback came Friday with the Democratic leadership bill and its “any willing provider” provision. d issu ad e Senate M ajority L eader G eorge Mitchell, D-Maine, from including sim ilar language in the bill he will unveil Tuesday. But even if it s n o t in his plan , they fear th a t tit** p ro v isio n m ay be a d d e d on the Senate floor with tacit W hite H ouse su p ­ port. " This strikes at the heart of w hat HM Os do, said M ary Nell Lehnhard, senior vice president of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, which has 26 m illion of its 66 million custom ers in m anaged care plans. T hey're tying our hands and m aking it very difficult for us to select the best panel Please see Health, page 2 . ■ vJ E xcuse me, you dropped this nam e w eather: it was at the Ann Richards fund-raiser — I was invit­ ed by my mentor, Barbara Jordan. I really o w e it all to her — when I saw him. Richard Gere! H e and the Dalai Lam a w ere sitting by them- selves in the corner, with the highs in the upper 90s. So I w ent up to introduce myself, couldn’t h u rt/a n d the next thing you know, I’ve got an internship in C alifornia! W h e re in 1 California is Tibet, anyway? I Index: Around Cam pus............................8 Classifieds..................................... g 8 Comics..................................... Editorials.................................... 4 Entertainm ent................................7 S ports............................................12 State & Local ..... 0 University....................................... 5 World & N a tio n ....................... ,,. 3 Associated Press PENSACOLA, Fla. — A m onth before he w as arrested in the killing of an abortion doctor and bodyguard, a form er m in ister w as in v estig ated but not arrested by the FBI for allegedly violating a federal law protecting abortion clinics. Prosecutors weighed the clinic's rights against Paul H ill's right of free speech and decid ed an arrest w asn't w arranted, FBI spokesm an G eorge W isnovsky said Sunday. The decision w as m ade based on w here he w as and w hat he w as d o in g ," W isnovsky said from the FBI s Jacksonville office. "T h e results of o u r in v e stig a tio n w e re fo rw a rd e d to th e U.S. attorney.” The director of the Pensacola clinic had asked that Hill be arrested u nder the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act. The law m akes it a feder­ al crime to obstruct, intentionally injure or intim i­ date anyone trying to obtain an abortion L adies C e n te r D ire cto r L in d a T a g g a rt com - Please ^ee Abortion, page 2 Associated Press June Barrett attended the funeral of James Barrett, her husband and a victim of Friday’s violence. Page 2 Monday, August 1 ,1994 T h e D a ily T exan Cynicism, unease to mark Polish remembrance Associated Press m arched in. W A R SA W , P o la n d — C y n ic a l jokes, tales of brave youths felled by Nazi bullets and pleas for firm ties to the W est are echoing through this c a p ita l a s P o le s m a rk th e 5 0 th anniversary of the ill-fated W arsaw U prising. N ot as well know n abroad as the tra g ic 1943 r e v o lt in W a r s a w 's Jew ish ghetto, the u p risin g against P o la n d 's N a z i o c c u p ie r s w a s a doom ed attem pt at self-liberation by its u n d ergroun d H om e Army. T h e 6 3 -d a y u p r is i n g , d u b b e d T e m p e st," w as launched on Aug. 1, 1944, a s th e S o v ie t R ed A rm y advanced tow ard the city. But the Red A rm y h alted on the V is tu la R iv e r 's e a s t b a n k a n d w atched w hile the G erm ans slaugh­ tered the p opu lace, th en razed the city. T he in s u r g e n ts la c k e d arm s a n d a m m u n itio n b e c a u s e S ta lin b arred A llied p lanes from landing at S oviet a irfield s u n til it w as too late. M ore than 200,000 Poles, nine in 10 of them civilians, w ere killed. A city' w ith a p rew ar p o pulation of 1.3 m illion had becom e an em pty, life­ less p ile of ru b b le in Jan u ary 1945 f in a lly th e R ed A rm y w h e n "H ere and now here else, the Cold W ar betw een East and W est began," w r o te H a n n s v o n K r a n n h a ls , a G erm a n h isto ria n w h o ch ro nicled the uprising. O n M o n d a y , Vice P re s id e n t A1 G ore, B ritish Prim e M inister John M ajor and President Rom an H erzog of G erm any w ill join President Lech W alesa and m ost of th e 6,000 s u r­ v iv in g u p ris in g v e te ra n s a t c o m ­ m em orations. S eek in g re c o n c ilia tio n w ith the tw o p o w e rfu l n eig hbors th at have d iv id e d and co nquered Poland for m ost of tw o centuries, Walesa invit­ ed H e rz o g a n d P r e s id e n t B oris Yeltsin of Russia. H erzog accepted, a lth o u g h c o n fu sin g th is u p ris in g w ith the Jewish ghetto revolt. T hat p ro m p te d Poles to w o n d e r a lo u d w h a t th e a v e ra g e G e rm a n know s about Poland's W orld W ar II s tr u S gle a n d w h a t th a t m ean s for future relations. Y eltsin said he w as too b u sy to attend and w as sending his chief of staff although the invitation w as m ade a year ago. T his is an e x p re ssio n of a n g e r tow ard Poland for its p retty forceful e f f o r t to jo in N A T O ," s a id Ja n Now ak, w ho w as a courier betw een a n d th e W a rs a w in s u r g e n ts The 63-day uprising, dubbed “Tempest,” was launched on Aug. 1, 1944, as the Soviet Red Army advanced toward the city. P oland s L ondon -b ased exile g o v ­ e r n m e n t a n d la te r h e a d e d R ad io Free E urope's Polish section. M a n y P o le s o p p o s e d in v itin g H erzo g a n d Y eltsin. O p in io n s u r ­ veys show the populace divided. G erm any is now Poland's leading a d v o c a te in th e W e st, a n d e v e n m a n y v e te r a n s d o n o t o b je c t to H e rz o g . But d u r in g 44 y e a rs as a th e u p r is in g S o v ie t re m a in e d an e n d u r in g sy m b o l of national self-determ ination. s a te llite , M any w ho took p a rt chose exile over returning to a country firm ly in Stalin's grip. They w ant n othing to d o with the Russians today, fearing resu rg ent expansionism an d a con­ tinued Russian m ilitary presence in form er Soviet republics. "D id you h e a r th at Y eltsin w ill, afte r all, atte n d th e u p risin g com ­ m em orations?" goes one joke m ak­ in g th e ro u n d s in W a rs a w th e s e days. "H e'll just be arriving late." Haiti: Mexico, Uruguay refuse support Continued from page 1 "The crisis in H aiti is not a threat to p e a c e ," A m b a s s a d o r V ic to r F lo re s O le a o f M ex ico to ld th e 'F ro m the s ta n d p o in t of C ou ncil. history, m ilitary intervention in our h e m is p h e r e h a s in v a r ia b ly b een traum atic." U ru g u a y 's A m bassador, Ram iro Piriz-Ballon, said his country "w ill not s u p p o rt any m ilitary interven­ tio n , w h e th e r of a m u ltila te ra l or unilateral n ature." "P eaceful solutions have n o t yet been exhausted," he said. M ex ico a n d U r u g u a y a r e n o t m em b ers of the S ecurity C ouncil, b u t th eir re p re se n ta tiv e s ask ed to speak prior to the vote. H a itia n A m b a s s a d o r F ritz L o n g ch a m p , w h o r e p r e s e n ts th e A ristide governm ent, w elcom ed the outcome. "T he H aitian com m unity w ould like as m uch as p o ssib le to av o id m ilitary action, but there is no alter­ n a tiv e to g e ttin g rid o f th e m ili­ tary," he said after the vote. A lb rig h t to ld NBC te le v is io n 's Meet the Press on Sunday that Latin A m erican countries w ere concerned ab o u t "som e trend in intervention that is absolutely not true." A ristide sent a letter to the U nited N a tio n s on F rid a y c a llin g on th e in tern a tio n a l c o m m u n ity to " ta k e p ro m p t and decisive action u n d e r th e a u th o r ity o f th e U n ite d N a tio n s " to resto re dem ocracy in Haiti. M ost council m em bers, especially Latin American countries, said they w ould need specific clearance from A ristide before they could approve a possible U.S.-led invasion. T h e H a itia n m ilita r y o u s te d A ristid e in 1991 a n d has defied a w o rld w id e tra d e a n d oil em bargo a n d a U.S. ban on m o st financial transactions w ith Haiti. U.S. forces finished four days of w a r exercises near P uerto Rico on Saturday and steam ed tow ard Haiti to re su m e p a tro ls off the coast of the C aribbean island. Health: AMA, legislators defend provisions Continued from page 1 of p ro v id e rs to m eet th e n eed s of c o n s u m e rs ," said K aren Ig n ag n i, p r e s id e n t o f th e G r o u p H e a lth Association of America, w hich rep­ resents 360 HMOs. bill. The AMA, w ith su p p o rt from law m akers at polar ends of the ide­ ological spectrum , w ants physicians to be able to appeal a health plan 's decision to drop them . playing field," he said. B ut la w m a k e r s s a y th e y a re responding to a flood of com plaints fro m c o n s u m e rs a n d p h y s ic ia n s ab o u t abuses by insurance co m p a­ nies a n d o th er m anagers of health care. A d d in g to th e m a n a g e d c a re g r o u p s a n x ie ty , th e A m e ric a n M edical Association has succeeded in g e ttin g large ch u n k s of w h a t it c a lls th e P a tie n t P r o te c tio n A ct em bedded in the H ouse Democratic " It w o u ld tie y o u in such legal knots th at y o u 'd have a very hard tim e not accepting everyone, d ow n­ s iz in g o r d r o p p in g p h y s ic ia n s ," said Lehnhard. But Dr. Jam es T odd, the A M A 's executive vice president, called it a m a tte r of fairness at a tim e w h en p o w er o v e r m edical decisions has shifted to in su rers an d aw a y from physicians and their patients. "W e n eed so m e p ro te ctio n to level the "D octo rs are scream ing all over the place about m anaged care," said Rep. Sam M. G ibbons, D-Fla., the acting chairm an of the H ouse Ways and M eans C om m ittee. A r t L ifso n , v ic e p r e s i d e n t for h e a lth p o licy of th e C igna C o rp ., o n e o f th e b ig g e st p la y e rs in th e m a n a g e d c a r e b u s in e s s e s , s a id , "Physicians d o n 't w an t to stand the test of the m arketplace. T hat's w hat a lot of this is about." T h e H o u s e le a d e r s h ip b ill prom ises to guarantee A m ericans a choice betw een fee-for-service and m anaged care. Visitors to the Powaztd Military Cemetery light candles before the graves of victims of the 1944 uprising. Simpson lawyer defends behavior described in leaked jury testimony Football star once angrily confronted ex-wife with lover, witness said Associated Press Associated Press LOS ANGELES — O.J. Sim pson's a n g ry c o n fro n ta tio n w ith h is ex- wife and her lover show s a father's c o n c e rn fo r h is c h ild re n , n o t an obsession which led to m urder, his law yer said Sunday. Simpson confronted the tw o after he watched them through a w indow having sex in a living room, accord- ing to grand jury testimony. I think anybody w ho happened to observe people in m id-act in the proxim ity and possible presence of ch ild ren w o u ld find th a t c o n d u c t in a p p ro p ria te a n d w o u ld ex p ress c o n c e r n ," s a id R o b e rt S h a p iro , Sim pson's lead attorney. If th e s to r y is tr u e , h e s a id , Simpson show ed "great control and great restraint." The a cc o u n t cam e in te stim o n y b e fo r e a g r a n d ju r y b y K e ith Zlom sowitch, director of operations for M ezzaluna, the restau rant w here N icole Brown Sim pson ate h er last meal. Zlom sow itch w as am ong 17 w it­ n e s s e s w h o te s tif ie d b e fo re th e grand jury last m onth, according to tran scrip ts relea sed F riday by the grand jury office after portions w ere leaked to new s organizations. Shapiro declined to com m ent on Keith Zlomsowitch, director of operations for the restaurant where Nicole Simpson ate her last meal, was among 17 witnesses who testified before the grand jury last month, according to transcripts released Friday by the grand jury office after por- tions were leaked to news organizations. o th e r s e g m e n ts o f th e 4 6 0 -p a g e grand jury transcript that w as m ade p u b lic. H e said he w as n o t awrare th a t it h a d been re le a sed u n til he opened Sunday's new spaper. "W e w ere certainly not consulted on it," he said. Shapiro said he p ro bably w o uld n o t o p p o s e tr ia l te s tim o n y b y Z lo m s o w itc h if th e p r o s e c u tio n d erid es to present it. S im p so n is s c h e d u le d to s ta n d trial beginning Sept. 19 in the June 12 killings of Ms. Sim pson, 35, and her friend Ronald G oldm an, 25. Defense law yers and prosecutors w ere to m eet M onday afternoon to discuss evidence. Z lo m so w itc h , w h o h a d a b rie f a ffa ir w ith M s. S im p so n in 1992 a fte r sh e an d S im pson se p a ra te d , d e p ic te d a w in e -a n d -c a n d le lig h t sexual encounter w ith her in the liv­ ing room of her Brentwood hom e in April 1992. Z lo m s o w itc h s a id an a n g r y Sim pson told them the next day that h e h a d s p ie d o n th e m th ro u g h a w in d o w . H e q u o te d S im p so n a s saying: "I w atched you last night. I can 't believe you w ould do th at in the house. I w atched y o u ." S h ap iro n o ted th a t th e Sim pson c h ild r e n w e r e liv in g w ith th e ir m o th e r a t th e tim e a n d w e re a t hom e. If any m an by chance cam e upon this type of behavior in the proxim i­ ty of children and all that w as done w a s to c a u tio n th e m , th is s h o w s gre a t control and g re a t re s tra in t," Shapiro said. Z lom sow itch said Sim pson later shook his hand and said: '"N o hard feelings, right? ... You u n d e rsta n d , you know , I'm a very proud m a n /" T h e g ra n d ju r y h e a r in g th e Sim pson case was dism issed before it could vote an indictm ent because a ju d g e ru le d th a t m e m b e rs h ad been exposed to prejudicial publici­ ty- The Daily Texan E d *» Permanent Staff Managing Edttor Associate Managing E d fc w Z " Z .................................................................. News Editor.................... Associate News Editors............................... News Assignments Edttor Senior Reporters Associate Editors Entertainment Editor.................... Johnny LuWen Joseph Garza, Ranée Mlnjaruz, Jeff Rhoads -----------------—....................Kevin Wdiamson Rena# Merte, Mike Wallace .................................................Ralna Anderson -Abfaham L ® *. * * * Montfort, Steve Schetoal, Laura Stromberg Jenntter DeLay, Robert Rogers Z Z Z Z Z Z Mary Hopkins . 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Editorial Columnist Editorial Cartoonist Editorial Assistant................. Entertainment W riter................. Sports Assistant ................ .............. Z I T ' : : .......................................... Garmon, Timothy J. Lee Caalav, Atox De Marban, Richard Luttrek, Charul Vyas ......... ..... Chris Cain - T T - " ..........Roe* Cravens, Juke MMer Jam* 8 e* * . Tamara Loomia - ....... Wck Mercter Henry Demond George Kloe Marcel Meyer ....................... — ~............ ....................................... Brad Corbett. ¿ -« ¿ ¿ o » .................- ........ Local Display ------------------- Layout Coonttnstor______ Graphic Designers_______ Classified Dtaptey __ Classified Telephone Sates Clerics .................. Sonis Gercte. Denny G ro w , Bred Floyd, Lynn Lackey, -teenPaul Rome* --------------------- Megan Zhang ........................... ;......... Brian De Los Santos *-------- “•••••: 068 Humphreys, Nathan Moore .................... — ..CaroNne Langley, Steohante Rnmnfofci The Datty Trocan (USPS ' hshed by Texas Student Publications. 2500 Whitts Austin TX 7 ^ 0 5 ^ Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Fridav exceot’hnenJL not in session. Second(^(HMpastage^p8 S Z 7 1 Center: Both managers, graduate students suffer in staff cuts Continued from page 1 94 academ ic year and again by one- third for the 1994-95 academ ic year, will be elim inated at the start of the 1995-96 academ ic year. G e rh ard Fonken, UT vice p re s i­ d e n t for research, said th e cu rre n t b u d g e t of ab o ut $1 m illion w ill be e n o u g h to c o n tin u e to r u n th e C HPC through the 1994-95 academ ­ ic year, although the bud g et redu c­ tions will req uire the U niversity to m ake reductions "in staff personnel, as w ell as in services." Fonken said the su p erco m p u ters a t the C H PC w ill co n tin u e to p ro ­ vide com puter services for the other U T c o m p o n e n ts th r o u g h th e UT S ystem c o m p u tin g n e tw o rk , even thou gh few er services will be avail­ able. "All of the [UT] com ponents will share in the loss" of PUF revenues, Fonken said. "All will see a decline in th e se rv ice s m a d e a v a ila b le to them ." P la n s fo r th e C e n te r fo r H ig h P e rfo rm an ce C o m p u tin g a fte r the 1994-95 a c a d em ic y e a r a re u n c e r­ tain, W arlick said. He a d d ed that every area d epen­ dent* on fu nding from the PUF has been affected by budget cuts. " T h e b o tto m lin e is th a t th e incom e to the UT System from the PUF has declined rather dram atical­ ly in r e c e n t y e a rs ... a n d th e UT S y ste m h a s m a d e r a th e r la r g e r e d u c tio n s in q u ite a n u m b e r o f areas," Fonken said. W arlick said the loss of the "full array of services and people is very unfortunate." It s a tragedy to lose the services of such qualified people," he said. M atthew W itten, associate direc­ to r of th e C H P C a n d h e a d of its research a n d d e v elo p m e n t d e p a rt­ m e n t, s a id h e w a s a n g ry th a t h e w o u ld be losing h is job in about a m onth. "I'm 43 years old and [have been] a senior professor, and I c a n 't find a job — an d it is n 't for w a n t of try­ ing," he said. W itten said he h ad to fire most of his departm ental staff of a b out 18 in January, leaving five em ployees he had to elim inate tw o to three weeks ago. I m an g ry , not o nly because of w hat happened to m e and the way it w a s h a n d le d , b u t b e c a u s e o f w h a t's happened to" the other staff m em bers, he said. D ean N o bles, m a n a g e r o f co m ­ p u tin g services for the CHPC, said those w ho w ill rem ain on staff m ay face "a little b it of a bum p y road." " O b v io u s ly o u r w o rk lo a d is go in g to c o n tin u e a n d w e 'll h av e less people to d o i t ... b ut I thin k in the lo n g ru n w e 'll p u ll th ro u g h ," N obles said. He said th at em ployees have lost their jobs in all departm ents of the center. Abortion: Funeral held for abortion clinic shooting victim Continued from page 1 plained that Hill had been scream ing through the clinic s w in d o w s. H ill w as a reg u lar p ro te ste r w ho advocated the killing of abortion doctors as justifiable homicide. strongly believed in ," B arrett's son, Bruce, told the congregation. "H e died w ith his boots on. He w as a soldier in the w ar for hum an rights." "They said they d id n 't think it w as the tim e to a rre s t h irn ," T a g g a rt to ld th e Pensacola News Journal, "N obody can seem to do anything until it's too late." 6 P ro se c u to rs d e c id e d H ill h a d n 't b ro k en the la w , s a id U .S. A tto r n e y M ic h a e l P a tte r s o n . N onetheless, an arrest w ould not have prevented the slayings because H ill w ould have been free cm pre-trial release, he said. *3 0 00 Hill, 40, is charged w ith tw o counts of m urder and one count of attem pted m urder in the deaths of Dr. John B ayard B ritton, 69, of F e m a n d in a B each, a n d r e tir e d A ir F orce Lt. C ol. Ja m e s H erm an Barrett, 74, of Pensacola. The m en w ere killed Friday by m ultiple shotgun blasts as they drove into the clinic's parking lot. Barrett's wife, June, 68, a retired public health nurse, w as w ounded in the arm as she sat in the rear of the car. June Barrett and other fam ily m em bers w ere am ong 150 peo p le a t a m em orial service early S u n d a y fo r h e r h u s b a n d a t th e ir c h u rc h , th e Pensacola U nitarian U niversalist Fellowship. "W e all k n o w he died d o in g so m e th in g he E le a n o r S m e a l, f o u n d e r o f th e F e m in is t M ajority an d form er p re sid e n t of the N ation al O rganization for W omen, called Sunday for fed­ eral protection for clinics. "T he extrem ists hav e em barked on a m u rd e r strategy. They have no legal right to threaten to kill us, Smeal said. "W e w ant federal m arshals to come in to protect the clinics. There is no rea­ son doctors, nurses, escorts and patients have got to risk their lives." GRE Expert Teachers Persona! Attention Rele as ed E xam s Enroll by Aug 31 and get the GRE Psych Course FREF 1-800-KAP-TEST K A P L A N I B B I M EXAM + 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starling of ‘119* Complete P°c® includes exam, 2 pair dear doiiy- W9ar *oft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1st fdlaw up. EXPWS AUG. 10,1994. WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VAUD WTTH ANY OTHER OFFER Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D on fr 2 m im west of UT M-Th 477-2282 m 10-7 M/CVtSAAMX OSC 9_6 R o s o s ; s J - T v C a s a \ u r d e F l o r i s t 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 D a i l y Spec lilis | l, |(),| I U|>(> • ( ÍH ( n t , I , : . |! , f] , I T 0 • I ill 1 im m ig r a t io n BARBARA HINES, fc Atlornay at Law M AM CERTIFIED Immigration o n * Nationality Law Taxaa Board a t Lagal SpociatUatton AM Tfgoa at lte«l«rstlM C sm i • to * * ! ViMtt, Vert VMM awd FasHy-lMed foalgrttlM FRIDAY'S DOW JONES: 3.764.50 UP 33.67 / VOLUME: 318.066,580 I.S. threatens U.S. threatens trade sanctions against Japan T h e C l i n t o n ■ W A S H I N G T O N - a d m i n i s t r a t i o n g a v e f o r m a l n o t i c e S u n d a y th a t it w ill m o v e to im p o s e t r a d e s a n c t i o n s a g a i n s t J a p a n if th e J a p a n e s e g o v e r n m e n t d o e s not a g re e w ith in 60 day s to e x p a n d U.S. access to its g o v e r n m e n t telecom m unications a n d medical e q u ip m e n t markets. U.S. T ra d e R e p r e s e n ta ti v e M ic k ey K a n to r a n n o u n c e d the decision, s a y ­ ing he w a s acting because of " J a p a n 's f a ilu re to a d d r e s s l o n g s t a n d i n g d i s ­ crim ination a g a in st U nited States s u p ­ pliers." A m e r ic a n t e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n s giants have long c o m p la in e d that they a r e es se n tia lly locked o u t of th e $10 b illio n t e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n s m a r k e t b ecause of d is c r i m in a to r y actions by g o v e r n m e n t - o w n e d th e N ip pon T elep h o n e an d Telegraph. l a r g e l y Mitchell: Health plan needs phase-in ■ W A S H I N G T O N — Senate Majority L eader G eo rg e M itchell will u n veil a health care bill T u e sd a y that stretches o u t the p h a s e - in p e r io d for c ove ring all A m e r i c a n s a n d d o e s not, as in a 1 lo u se version a n n o u n c e d last w eek, ex p a n d th e M edicare system to cover th e u n in su red . p r u n e o ptio n M i t c h e l l , D - M a i n e , s p e a k i n g on CBS' Face the Nation S und ay, said his is a v o lun ta ry system th a t e nc o urages peo p le to enter health p la n s b u t d o e s not force in d iv id u a ls or e m p lo y e rs to p ay into plans. Serbian president urges acceptance of peace plan ■ BELG RA D E, Y ugosla v ia — Serbia's p r e s id e n t, th e c h ie f in s tig a to r of th e Balkan conflict, th re a te n e d S u n d a y to e n d his vital s u p p o r t of Bosnia's Serbs it they d o not acce p t an in tern ational p ea ce plan. P r e s i d e n t S l o b o d a n M i l o s e v i c w a r n e d of unfo re see ab le tragic c o n ­ s e q u e n c e s fo r S e r b s in Y u g o s la v ia a n d s u r r o u n d i n g c o u n trie s if th e 27- m o n th Bosnian w a r d o e s n 't end now . A b o u t 2iH),000 p e o p l e a r e d e a d o r m issin g in the conflict. \ o o n e h a s t h e right ... to reject p e a c e ,' h e said in a s t a t e m e n t p u b ­ l i s h e d by th e T anjug new s agency a n d the influential daily Politika. Natural breast implants to be tested ■ V\ A S H I N C . T O N — G o v e r n m e n t r e g u la to r s are a l lo w in g 50 A m e ric a n w o m e n to tr y o u t a n e x p e r i m e n t a l breast im p la n t filled w ith a natural fat fro m soyb ean oil — the first a d v a n ce in i m p l a n t s since w i d e s p r e a d p r o b ­ l e m s w ith th e d e v ic e s w e r e r e p o r te d in 1991. L i p o M a t r i x Inc s a i d t o d a y th a t its n e w b r e a s t i m p l a n t s h o u l d be s a fe r t h a n t h e s i l i c o n e - g e l a n d s a l i n e i m p l a n t s t h a t t h o u s a n d s o f w o m e n b l a m e t o r s i c k e n i n g t h e m — a n d w o u ld be the first im p lan t a m a m m o ­ g ra m could see th ro ugh, i he Food a n d D r u g A d m i n i s t r a t i o n said anim al studies sh o w the im plants are safe e n o u g h for limited testing in w o m en . I his is tj v e ry d iffe re n t im p l a n t," said I ip o M a trix' presid e n t, Dr. T erry K napp. " I t ' s a natural substance." Campaign organizer killed in car incident ■ P U E B L A , M e x i c o — A c a m p a i g n O r g a n iz e r fo r th e le ftist D e m o c r a tic R e v o l u t i o n P a r t y w a s s t r u c k a n d k ill e d bv a u ir, a n d p a r t y m e m b e r s called for an investigation, the daily La ¡ornada de ( 'tríente re p o rte d S unday. G ab in o A paricio A randa, a 55-year- old teacher, d ie d S a tu r d a y of injuries he s u s t a i n e d w h e n h e w a s hit w h ile crossing a P uebla street a d a y earlier. I h e d riv e r of the car fled the scene. 'W e are d ealin g w ith a very strange ao. ident, in w h ich the d riv er of the car stru ck G a b in o A p aric io a lm o st head- said p a r t y s p o k e s w o m a n Rosa on, M arquez. Pope criticizes giving birth ‘at all costs' ■ CASTEL G A N D O L F O , Italy — In .1 d e n u n c i a t i o n of h a v i n g c h i ld r e n " a t all c o s t s , P o p e J o h n P a u l II s a i d S u n d a y that practices su ch as artificial f ertilizatio n a re the p r o d u c t o f m u d ­ dled morality. In his w ee k ly p u b lic a p p e a ra n c e at his s u m m e r r e sid e n c e o u ts i d e Rome, the p o p e m a d e no m e n tio n of specific cases, but Italian n e w s p a p e r s in recent d a y s h a v e b e e n f ille d w i t h a r ti c le s d e b a t i n g t h e c a s e o f a 6 2 - y e a r - o l d Italian w o m a n w h o g a v e birth in July. C o m p i le d f r o m A s s o c i a t e d P ress reports £w|!EL| Treasury cited for ethics lapses * H l i r t i n c r tVlO r>----- mT Report criticizes official’s briefings Associated Press W A S H I N G T O N — S e n i o r T r e a s u r y D e p a r t m e n t officials w e r e criticiz ed in an ethics re p o rt S u n d a y for disclosing in fo rm a ­ t i o n a b o u t a p o t e n t i a l c r i m i n a l p r o b e in v o lv in g P r e s id e n t C l in to n 's W h i te w a te r lan d v enture. But the rep o rt said no ethics rules w e re violated. T re a s u ry 's general counsel, Jean H anson, g a v e t h e W h i t e H o u s e i n f o r m a t i o n t h a t "would seem to go b e y o n d w h a t w a s neces­ s a ry " to ac h ie v e h e r sta te d p u r p o s e : help- i n g p r e s i d e n t i a l a i d e s a n s w e r p r e s s inquiries, the r ep o rt said. A n d Ja c k D e V o r e , n o w r e t i r e d as th e T r e a s u r y D e p a r t m e n t ' s c h i e f p r e s s s p o k e s m a n , v i o l a t e d t h e p o l i c y o f t h e R esolution T ru s t C o rp. — w h ic h w a s c o n ­ Holding th e Line 1__C l /-k n . d u c tin g the investigation — b y confirm ing t h e e x i s t e n c e o f a c r i m i n a l r e f e r r a l to a reporter, the rep ort said. • A r e f e r r a l is a m e m o t o t h e J u s t i c e D e p a rtm e n t asking th a t age n cy to consider crim inal pro sec u tio n . RFC s e n t a series of crim inal referrals, ask in g Justice to c o n s id ­ er, a m o n g o t h e r th in g s , th a t C lin to n a n d H illary R o d h a m C linton could be w itnesses in the probe. T he focus of the R 7 C in v e stig a tio n w a s th e failed M a d is o n G u a r a n t y S av ings and Loan, w h ic h w a s o w n e d by th e C lin to n s ' b u s i n e s s p a r t n e r in h is W h i t e w a t e r la n d v e n tu re — also a flop. O n e object of the p ro b e w as to determ ine w h e t h e r t h e v e n t u r e c a u s e d l o s s e s at M a d i s o n . T h e t h r i f t n e e d e d a t a x p a y e r bailout of b e tw e e n $47 million a n d $60 m il­ lion. T h e eth ic s r e p o r t f o u n d n o t h in g w r o n g w ith briefings for W hite H o u s e officials In- D e p u t y T r e a s u r y S e c r e t a r y R o g e r C. A ltm a n , n o r w ith the d e la y e d decision by A ltm a n — an old friend of th e p re sid e n t's — to d isqua lify him self from the probe. O n S u n d a y th e chief Senate W h i te w a te r critic, A lfonse D A m ato, r e n e w e d c h a rg e s o n N BC 's M eet the Press th a t A ltm a n g a v e c o n f id e n tia l m a te r ia l a b o u t th e i n v e s tig a ­ tion to W hite H o u s e aides last Feb. 2 — one of w h o m briefed P re siden t Clinton. A ltm an said F riday that he disclosed no confidential inform ation a n d the N e w York Republican w as " s im p ly incorrect." "T he re is n o th in g in the report that s u g ­ gests that the ... m e eting involved a disclo­ sing of non-public inform ation,' the rep o rt said. D 'A m a to said th e rep ort "will h a v e to be r e c o n s id e r e d " b e c a u s e the Senate Banking C o m m itte e received n e w d o c u m e n ts a b o u t th e c o n d u c t of T re asu ry officials. H e did not describe them. T h e e t h i c s r e p o r t w a s w r i t t e n b y t h e Office of G o v e r n m e n t Ethics, an i n d e p e n ­ d e n t e x e c u t i v e b r a n c h a g e n c y , a t t h e r e q u e s t o f T r e a s u r y S e c r e t a r y L l o y d Bentsen. O G E w r o t e B e n ts e n t h a t " t h e c o n d u c t detailed in the re p o r t of officials p re se n tly e m p l o y e d b y t h e D e p a r t m e n t o f t h e T r e a s u r y d id n o t v io la te th e S t a n d a r d s of E t h i c a l C o n d u c t f o r E m p l o y e e s o f t h e Executive B ranch." B e n tse n , in a b r ie f n e w s c o n f e r e n c e to r e l e a s e th e r e p o r t , s a i d h i s o w n r o l e in W h i t e w a t e r w a s v i r t u a l l y n o n e x i s t e n t bec ause h e erected a fire w all b e tw e en h i m ­ self a n d the W h ite w a te r m atter. "It becam e well k n o w n that I w as n o t to intervene in a n y case specific," h e said. "So 1 w a s kept o u t of it, as I sh o u ld h a v e b ee n ." W h e n rep o rters p o in te d o u t th at H a n s o n h a s t o l d c o n g r e s s i o n a l c o m m i t t e e s , in c l o s e d - d o o r i n t e r v i e w s , t h a t s h e k e p t Bentsen inform ed, the secretary r esp o n d e d : "That is not correct, a n d w e h a v e a different recollection of that." T h e c r it ic is m of H a n s o n in th e r e p o r t f o c u s e s on a b r i e f i n g a b o u t t h e c r i m i n a l referrals that she g ave W hite H o u s e officials last S eptem ber. W hite H o u s e counsel L loyd C u tler told C o n g res s th a t H a n s o n said she w a s r e la y in g i n f o r m a ti o n p a s s e d on b y a rep o rter w h o w a s a sking q uestions a b o u t the referrals. Welfare slows to a crawl through Congress Associated Press W A S H I N G T O N — E l e c t i o n - e v e p r o m is e s a n d fo ur d a y s of h e a r in g s to t h e c o n t r a r y , w e l f a r e r e f o r m a p p e a r s stalled a n d u n lik e ly to o v e rc o m e d e e p fault lines in the D em ocratic Party, p a r ­ tisan differences a n d a distracting c r u s h of c o n g r e s s i o n a l a n d c a m p a i g n b u s i ­ ness. It s slim a n d none, and slim just left t o w n ," said Rep. Rick Santorum , R-Pa., w h e n a s k e d a b o u t w e l f a r e r e f o r m ' s chances of passing C ongress before the C a p ito l 's m a r b l e c o r r id o r s e m p t y this fall a n d l a w m a k e r s r e t u r n h o m e to c a m p a ig n for re-election. Rep. S am G ibbons, the actin g c h a ir ­ m a n of t h e H o u s e W a y s a n d M e a n s C o m m i t t e e , i n s i s t e d la s t w e e k t h a t a l t h o u g h t h e i s s u e is " c o m p l e x a n d divisive, h e believed the H o u se could p ass a bill this year. I think w e can g et it done. W e 'v e got time, Gibbons, D-Fla., said T uesday. By F r i d a y , t h e c h a i r m a n o f t h e h u m a n r e s o u r c e s s u b c o m m it te e , Rep. H aro ld Ford of Tennessee, said he c o n ­ tinue d to believe a bip artisan bill is still possible, b u t co n c e d e d that " w e d o n 't h a v e the votes right n o w in su b c o m m it­ tee." T h e h e a r in g s b e fo re F o rd 's s u b c o m ­ mittee last w e e k exp o sed discord w i t h ­ in t h e D e m o c r a tic P a r ty a n d p a r t i s a n t e n s i o n s t h a t a t o n e p o i n t e r u p t e d b e tw e en F ord a n d S a n to r u m , illustrat- ing again h o w to u g h it m a y bé to finish w elfare reform this year. P re sident C lin ton a n n o u n c e d his $9.3 b il l i o n w e l f a r e o v e r h a u l J u ñ e 14 in K a n s a s C ity , M o., d e l i v e r i n g o n h i s p o p u l a r c a m p a i g n p r o m i s e to "-end w elfare as w e k n o w it" w ith d plan to limit benefits to tw o y ea rs a n d re q u ire recipients to w ork. But he has d o n e n o th in g since to sell his proposal, u n w illin g to risk alienat- “It’s slim and none, and slim just left town.” — Rep. Rick Santorum. R-Pa. ing the liberals w h o s e votes he needs to pass health care reform. " W e 'v e got o u r priorities a n d this is a very high priority, b u t it is not a higher p r io r i ty th a n h e a l t h c a r e ," said A v is LaVelle, a m e m b e r of the task force that d r a f t e d t h e p r e s i d e n t ' s p l a n a n d a s p o k e s w o m a n for th e D e p a r t m e n t of H ealth a n d H u m a n Services. To the e x te n t th a t t h e r e 's e n t h u s i ­ a s m u p t h e r e a m o n g m e m b e r s o f C o n g r e s s , it's s e l f - i g n i t e d , " sh e sa id . " W e h a v e n 't d o n e a n y th in g to light that fire o th e r th a n s e n d u p a g o o d p a c k ­ age." Rep. Ron W yd en, D-Ore., calls it the r e d - m e a t i s s u e o f o u r t i m e " — a d eb a te that could tu r n h a rsh an d p u n i ­ tive if s o m e h o w w elfare reform w e re to begin m o v in g before the elections. M o d e r a t e c o n s e r v a t i v e a n d D em ocrats, on the o th e r h a n d , say th e p r e s i d e n t s q u a n d e r e d an o p p o r t u n i t y to p ass a bipartisan bill by w aitin g until m id y e a r to in tro d u c e his plan. They say p a s s in g a bill c o u ld h e lp th e ir p a r t y 's r e - e l e c t i o n p r o s p e c t s in N o v e m b e r , w h e n D e m o c r a ts e x p e c t lo s s e s at th e polls. Rep. D a v e M c C u r d y , D -O k la „ a n d the sp o n so r o f the so-called M a in strea m D e m o c r a t s w e l f a r e r e f o r m p l a n , b elieves w e lfa re re f o rm c ould m a k e it t h r o u g h the H o u s e if C lin to n w e r e to intervene, a n d h e lp n e g o tia te a centrist p la n w ith R e p u b l i c a n s a n d m o d e r a t e Democrats. But th e n u m b e r o f le g is la tiv e d a y s left this y e a r is d w in d lin g quickly a n d la w m a k e rs are p reo c cu p ie d w ith health reform, a tr a d e bill a n d their fall c a m ­ paigns. It is really a race a g a i n s t th e clock right n o w ," said W yde n . F ir e fig h te rs fro m L o w e ll, O re ., d e p lo y e d them selves after planning th e ir attack in the a t b ru s h a lo n g O ld B r id g e R o a d Associated Press L e a v e n w o r th , W a s h ., S u n d a y . T h e fire , know n as th e Rat C re e k F ire, has a lre a d y blackened m ore than 5,000 acres. House, Senate debate dollars for defense Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — H o u se a n d Senate n e g o ­ tia to rs are b a t tlin g b e h i n d c lo sed d o o r s o v e r w h e t h e r th e P e n t a g o n s h o u l d b u y m o r e B-2 bom bers, p a r tic ip a te in U nited N a ti o n s p eace­ k ee p in g o p e r a tio n s a n d lift the a r m s e m b a r g o on Bosnia. I h o se are th ree of the m ost c o n ten tio u s issues in the conference com m ittee*w here H o u s e and S e n a te m e m b e r s will w o r k o u t d if fe r e n c e s in their respective 1995 d efense b u d g e t plans. The m ain th reats to P resident C lin to n 's a g e n ­ d a are in foreign policy. P r o v i s i o n s in t h e H o u s e v e r s i o n w o u l d restrict P en ta g o n s u p p o r t for U.N. peacekeep- m g operations, d e m a n d grea ter financial contri­ bution s from N A T O allies, a n d unilaterally lift the a r m s e m b a r g o on Bosnia. The S enate w o u ld dii n o n e of those things, siding instead with the Clinton adm inistration. O n the B-2 b o m b e r, the a d m in is t r a tio n a n d the H o u s e a g r e e th a t the g o v e r n m e n t s h o u ld b u y n o m o r e th a n t h e 20 p l a n e s a l r e a d y o n o r d e r . T h e S e n a te a d d e d $150 m illio n to th e defenst' b u d g e t to keep alive th e o ption of eve n­ tually b u y in g 20 m o re of the $1 billion planes. Such a m o v e co u ld th r o w C l in to n 's fiv e -y e a r defense plan into disarray. W ith the n egotiato rs p e r h a p s d a y s a w a y from c o m p l e t i n g t h e d e f e n s e b u d g e t , m a n y o f .th e core e l e m e n ts of C l in to n 's m ilita ry p l a n h a v e s u r v iv e d w ith little change: n o m a jo r cuts;.an aircraft carrier; six C-17 cargo planes; a n d f u n d ­ ing to d e v e lo p a new attack subm a rine, recon­ n a i s s a n c e h e l i c o p t e r , a i r f o r c e f i g h t e r a n d M a rin e C o rp s tr a n s p o r t aircraft. Perry visits Kigali, vows more aid Asscx:iated Press ^ K IG A L I, R w a n d a — U.S. D e f e n s e S e c r e t a r y W i llia m P erry caught a vivid g lim pse of R w a n d a 's suffering S u n d a y as ho ex ten d e d refugee relief efforts to the stricken nation a n d p le dged to k e e p U.S. troops w o rk in g as long as neces­ sary. In a visit that d r a m a tiz e d g r o w i n g U.S. in v o lv e m e n t in th e crisis, P erry also received a s s u r a n c e s from R w a n d a 's w eek-old g o v e r n m e n t that it w o u ld not seek restitution or r e v e n g e fo r m a s s a c r e s t h a t h a v e k i l l e d u p to 50 0 ,0 0 0 R w a n d a n s since April. Five U.S. relief flights flew into Kigali's a irp o rt S u n d a y d u r i n g th e s e c r e ta ry 's hectic o n e - d a y visit to th e region, w h ic h i n c l u d e d m e e t i n g s w i t h R w a n d a n a n d U g a n d a n leaders, U.S. a n d U.N. military officers, relief agencies a n d visiting French D efense Minister Francois Leotard. P re sid e n t C lin to n o r d e r e d the U.S. m ilita ry to in c re ase relief s u p p l i e s g e t tin g to m o r e th a n 4 m illio n R w a n d a n refugee s across the b o r d e r in Z aire a n d elsew here. " M y heart w a s torn by the h u m a n trag e d y that is u n f o ld ­ ing here in G o m a ," Perry said in a visit to the Zairian tow n h a r b o r i n g an e s t i m a t e d 25,000 to 50,000 refu g ee s. M ore th a n 1 million m o re refugees are scattered in cam ps in the countryside. But Perry said h e w as e n c o u ra g e d by optim istic reports fro m relief w orkers. A lth o u g h he d i d not visit the teem ing refugee c a m p s in G o m a 's outskirts, Perrv passed h u n d r e d s ot s u f fe rin g p e o p l e sittin g on ro c k s a n d b a r e g r o u n d in G om a, w h ic h is a b o u t ¡00 miles by ro a d from Kigali. But G eorge Moose, assistant secretary of state for African affairs, w h o a c c o m p a n ie d P erry, s a id n e a r ly e v e ry relief ag ency g a v e a n ew ly optim istic re p o r t of conditions in the ca m ps, w h e r e d e a th s hav e d r o p p e d from th o u s a n d s a day to h u n d r e d s . A n air of inte rn atio n a l crisis w a s still e v i d e n t as Perrv m et w ith L eotard, U.N. H ig h C o m m is s io n e r for Refugees S a d a k o O g a ta of Ja p a n and C a n a d ia n Gen. R om eo Dallaire, w h o h e a d s a U.N. p e a c e k e e p in g fo rc e e x p e c te d to r ea ch 5,000 w ithin a few weeks. P e r r y i n t e r v i e w e d on CBS' Face the N ation, s a id th a t w i t h i n a f e w w e e k s th e re w ill be a b o u t 3,000 A m e r ic a n t r o o p s in th e r e g io n c o n trib u tin g to th e relief effort, b ut only a few h u n d r e d in R w anda. H e said th e re w e r e ' in h e re n t d a n g e r s " fo r A m e r ic a n s Associated Pres Nurses tend to babies at a field hospital in Goma, Zaire w o rk in g in a c o u n t r y just e m e r g in g from a civil w ar, b u th a t th e U.S. t r o o p s so far h a d b e e n r e c e i v e d w a r m l y ' 1 here is no hostility at all," he said. NAACP head denies harassment charges, plans legal action Associated Press A T L A N T A — N A A C P E x e c u tiv e D irector Benjamin C havis Jr. denied Sunday that he sexually harassed a former em p loy­ ee and accused the w om an in a countersuit of failing to keep her end of an out-of-court agreem ent. In h is first p u b lic r e s p o n s e , C h a v is p r o m ise d to fig h t the a lle g a ti o n s an d a $250,000 law su it the w om an filed in June against the N A A C P that claim s the group reneged on the settlem ent. C havis cam e under fire b ecau se he had agreed to give the w om an up to $332,400 of the o rg a n iz a tio n 's m on ey w ith o u t tellin g th e 64 N A A C P b o a rd m e m b e r s. B oard m e m b e r s w e r e f u r i o u s w h e n they learned th e l a s t w e e k o f t h e s e t t l e m e n t a n d w o m a n s law suit; at least o n e s a i d C havis sh ould resign. C h a v i s s a i d t h e a c c u s a t i o n s of s e x u a l h ara ssm e n t "are com pletely false a n d have no m erit." "I d o n o t m in i m iz e th e h a r m of sex u al harassm ent, w h en it h a p p e n s ," C h a v is said at a new s conference. " W e d o not inte n d to a llo w th e se false a lle g a tio n s to u s u r p mv energy or c o m m itm e n t to c o n tin u e to lead the N A A C P in th e p o s i t i v e d i r e c t i o n w e embarked upon 18 m o n th s a g o ." C havis and the ex-worker, Mary Stansel reached their settlem ent in N ovem ber 1993. A ccording to court records Stansel w as to be p a i d $ 5 0 ,0 0 0 a n d t h e n s ix m o n t h l y installm ents of $5,400. U n d e r a n o t h e r p r o v i s i o n o f th e a g r e e ­ m e n t , t h e N a t i o n a l A s s o c i a t i o n fo r t h e A d \ a n c e m e n t o f Colored People w as to p ay Stansel $250 (KX) if C h a v is could not find her a n o th e r job that paid at least $80,000 a year. Stansel said C h a v is ren e g ed on that part. N A A C P b oard C h a ir m a n William G ibson said Stansel w a s paid $82,400 a n d $64,000 of it c a m e from th e g r o u p . N o f u r t h e r p a y ­ m ents h a v e been m ade, h e said. S tansel is a form er aid e to Sen H ow ell H e flin . D -A la ., w h o h e lp e d lo b b y th e N A A C P s board of directors for Chavis last vear w hen he sought his job. N A A C P o ffi­ cials said she worked as an interim assistant to C h a v is for a bout a m o n th. Stansel has an unlisted te le p h o n e n u m b in the W ashington. D.C., area a n d co u ld n be rea c h e d for com m ent. H e r la w s u it dm n o t d e ta il th e a l le g e d s e x u a l h a r a s s m e i a n d N A AC P la w y e rs hav e said th e y knev n o th in g a b o u t it. B o a r d m e m b e r J o s e p h M a d i s o n sai Sunday that C havis a n d G ibson sh ou ld ste a sid e tem porarily w h ile the board invest gates the case and conducts an independer audit of both of their offices. I his is not an attem pt to con d em n D C havis or Dr. Gibson, but assure the m en bers and supporters of the N A A C P that th a p p r o p r ia te c h e c k s an d b a la n c e s are i place, M adison said. I i n D a i l y T e x a n P I K -5‘ August 11. 1994 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Editorial Board M ary Hopkins Editor Robert Rogers Associate Editor Jennifer DeLay Associate Editor Closed door Provisional students unwelcome ^ I t's rtgw/ t t 's improve/ ViTPMt/si ettsncuep . LfEALTM"OQ CERtm. FtfRTffc \ U . . C I A « S . . . / * ___ s - ->ai.íMi crw vj » ■■■ F ckípá ta - t o p e r c e n t A m e r i c a , Yot/ want ccrt&cejL... T Resist attempts to hike tuition Rick Mercier TEXAN COLUMNIST T he D aha T f \ w 500 students to test new multipurpose IDs r c\vr\ c r»A n ^A Cards could be used for copy machines, dorm access, banking transactions A c * . . . IV ¡ 0 n cl ci v/ A Li Q L S t 4 ■ ^ 3 ¡ t P r i ^ p It s the way of the future and the opportunities are endless.” ___________________ James Vick, vice president for student affairs use the card to get tickets to athletic events, reducing the need for special stickers, Mack­ ey said. The card can also be used in place of the TUX card at the Texas U nion to pay for food at th e d in in g services, sa id Jo sh u a A ru h, tw o -y e a r, a t-la rg e S tu d e n ts ' A sso c ia tio n representative. C u s to m e r s a t th e U n iv e r s ity F e d e ra l C r e d it U n io n w ill be a b le to w ith d r a w m oney at ATM m achines a ro u n d cam pus w ith th e n e w c a rd s. E. B u rto n E u b an k s, presid en t of the credit union, said students are not required to be m em bers of the credit union to take ad v antage of the debit card service. It s p a rt of a lo n g stan d in g p a rtn ersh ip betw een the credit union and the Universi­ ty," Eubanks said. T h e lib ra rie s , th e d o r m ito r ie s a n d all other departm ents that will be accepting the new cards will still use the sam e equipm ent as they do now , b u t w ith m odified software, Mackey said. T he M u ltip u rp o s e I d e n tific a tio n T ask Force has not decided w hether students will still need validation stickers. ing o u t the details w ith C apital M etropoli­ tan T ransportation A uthority that will allow stud en ts to ride the shuttle service w ithout validation stickers. Students will also be able to access acade­ mic inform ation at iTow er kiosks stationed^ around cam pus. M ackey said the com m ittee has not decid­ ed w hat inform ation will be available to the stu d en ts at the kiosks, b u t they are consider­ in g m a k in g o u ts ta n d in g b ills , s tu d e n t s ' schedules and grades available. S tudents voted last sp rin g to p a y a one­ tim e $7 to $10 charge for the m ultipurp ose identification card. "This isn 't the idea of any one p e rso n ," A ruh said. "It's so m e th in g th e U n iv ersity has been considering for a long tim e, and m any people have been ad d in g to it." Vick said the use of sw ip e cards for the electronic secu rity d o rm s w as also a p ilo t P a u la P a c la u Paula Caslav Daily Texan Staff «._______ . .......................... to convert to the new cards, M ackey said. Five h u n d red UT students will test m ulti­ p u rp o se iden tificatio n cards th at com bine d o rm access c a rd s, deb it c a rd s a n d copy cards this fall, UT officials said Friday. It s the w ay of the future and the oppor­ tunities are endless," said Jam es Vick, vice president for student affairs. The stu d en ts volunteered to test the pro­ to ty p e IDs fo r one sem ester. If th e te st is successful, all students, staff an d faculty at the U niversity will change to the new sys­ tem in the spring of 1995, said Laurie Mack­ ey, ed ucation and training m an ag er at the Office of Accounting. It s a m atter of w hen everyone is ready J Since sw itching 70,000 p eo p le over to a new ID system is no sm all task, the old ID cards will continue to be accepted for a peri­ od of tim e a fte r the n ew ones are im p le ­ m ented, Mackey said. The new card will be sim ilar to the c u r­ rent stu d en t IDs, but will have tw o m agnet­ ic strips and will be the size of a credit card. O ne of th e strip s w ill be for b an k in g and general access to stu d en ts' records; the other will be for the photocopy m achines. The cards will have a picture of the holder taken w ith new digital cam era eq uipm ent, M ackey said. The new card will be used at the libraries to ch e c k o u t b o o k s a n d to m ak e co p ie s. Dorm residents w ill use it to access the elec­ tronic security doors, and sp o rts fans will o u u 3 J 7 U I i d l l b w i l l " Geology professor, ex-chair dies at 93 Nick Montfort Daily Texan Staff UT P ro fe s s o r E m e ritu s o f G e o lo g y Fred Bullard, an authority on volcanoes and former chairm an of th e D epartm ent of Geology, died Friday in A ustin. H e w as 93. "As a teacher he w as fantastic," said Robert Boyer, dean of the College of N atural Sciences. "H e had a legion of stu d en ts follow ing him. J h e y 'd take the first course, physical geogra­ p h y , a n d th e n ev ery o n e w o u ld w a n t to get fpUo Dr. Fred B ullard's course." I Boyer w as chair of the D epartm ent of Geol­ ogy w hen Bullard retired in 1971. D uring B ullard's long career at the U niver­ sity, he taught the children and grandchildren of his form er students, Bover said. B ullard ta u g h t g ra d u a te -le v e l c o u rse s in volcanology an d Latin A m erican geology in addition to u n d erg rad u ate courses. H e served as chair o H h e D epartm ent of G eology from 1929 to 193/ and w as a respected scholar. He w as a le ad in g figure in volcanology, a n d h is b o o k o n v o lc a n o e s is o n e th a t is extrem ely p o p u la r because his w ritin g style appealed to a broad spectrum ," Boyer said. Bullard s Volcanoes o f the Earth, o riginally published in 1962 and last revised in 1984, is considered one of the best w orks on the sub­ ject. C la rk W ilso n , th e c u r r e n t c h a ir o f th e D e p a r tm e n t o f G e o lo g ic a l S c ie n c e s , s a id Bullard rem ained active after his retirem en t from teaching. "H e w a s in th e b u ild in g tw o d a y s a g o , w orking on his files," W ilson said Friday. "He was rem arkable in being a vigorous person on up until the last day." B u lla rd a c h ie v e d fa m e in 1943 w h e n h e becam e the first geologist to fly a helicopter over an erupting volcano. He took this flight in a s till e x p e rim e n ta l v e h ic le to film th e erupting Paricutin Volcano, W ilson said. B ullard w as delivering a special lecture at the N ational U niversity in Mexico w hen the volcano e ru p te d . H e w as recen tly h o n o re d w ith a show ing of his film in H ouston. This flight attracted m uch atten tio n in his field at the time, W ilson added. In 1929, w hen Bullard w as on a U.S. Geolog­ ical Survey expedition in Alaska, he w itnessed an active volcano, spurring his interest in vol­ cano research. H e later served as an assistant in the H aw aiian Volcano O bservatory. Bullard studied volcanoes in Central A m eri­ ca, Icelan d , S o u th A m erica, Ja p a n , G reece, A frica, th e C a n a ry Is la n d s , M a d e ira , N ew Guinea, N ew Zealand an d the Azores. He w as a llo w e d to s tu d y th e v o lc a n o e s in th e C arpathian M ountains of Czecholovakia in the m idst of the Cold War. From 1945 to 1954, B ullard w as a d is tin ­ guished lecturer for the A m erican Association of Petroleum Geologists. Students, lawyers from Mexico finish seminar at UT law school m Alex DeMarban Daily Texan Staff A fter four w eek s of sem in ars at the UT School of Law, 31 law s tu ­ d e n ts a n d la w y e r s fro m M exico com pleted their introduction to the American legal system Friday. T he p a r tic ip a n ts fro m v a rio u s regions of Mexico said rising com ­ m e rc e b e tw e e n M ex ico an d th e U nited States re q u ire s la w y e rs to fa m ilia riz e th e m s e lv e s w ith th e legal intricacies of both countries. "In the future, w e can collaborate because Mexico and the U.S. partici­ p a te to g e th e r in co m m ercial re la ­ tio n s," said A rm a n d o V argas, a n in te r n a tio n a l c o n tr a c ts a n d re a l estate law yer from V eracruz. "A t the m om ent, w e are closing the g aps betw een the tw o nations." Because law stu d e n ts in M exico are u n d erg rad u ates, those w anting to atten d U.S. law schools enter at an academ ic level unequal to that of th eir U.S. c o u n te rp a rts, said M a r­ garet K idd, director of the Interna­ tional Office. "The institutions in Mexico w an t to send students to the U.S., but o u r law school system s are not com pati­ ble," she said. "T his [the sem inar] p ro v id e s an o p p o r tu n ity for law stu dents to study in the U.S." D u rin g the se m in a r, p ro fe sso rs a n d la w e x p e r ts s u c h as T e x as Suprem e C ourt Justice Raul G onza­ lez and U.S. Ju d g e Pete Benavides outlined the U.S. legal system and a rapidly evolving international law. Luis Hinojosa, a law yer and city council m em ber from Veracruz, said th e sem inar w as "very in terestin g and professional." "In m y w o rk n o w I can u n d e r ­ stand w hat Am ericans think," H ino­ josa said. "1 have Am erican clients, and now it will help me do my daily w ork." Patricia H ansen, assistant profes­ so r at th e UT School of Law, said NAFTA is m odifying international law in th e a reas o f g o v e rn m e n ta l investm ent, copyrights and patents, the environm ent, labor and dispute resolution. "T h e re w as n o in te r n a tio n a l a g re e m e n t on m a n y of th ese su b ­ jects prior to NAFTA," she said. One result of changing relations is a law that prevents double taxation of citizens and corporations by the M exican and U.S. governm ents, said the effect of NAFTA on business at the UT School of Law Friday. rr-e o n , u ' 8 e n e r a | °< « « • « > . « p o i» a b o u t T.J. Lee/Daily Texan Staff 11 um berto H ernandez H ad d ad , con­ sul general of Mexico in San A nto­ nio. Also, he said, although previous­ ly a Mexican national was required to ow n m ore than half of each for­ eign business op eratin g in Mexico, full ow nership by foreigners is now allowed. M e x ic a n e x p o r ts to th e U.S. increased 20 percent from the Jan. 1 im plem entation of NAFTA to April 30, com pared to that tim e last year, according to figures from the Mexi­ ca n C o m m e rc e a n d I n d u s tr ia l D evelopm ent Secretariat reported in El Economista, a M exican econom ic journal. In th e s a m e p e r io d , th e C o m ­ m erce D epartm ent reports, A m eri­ can ex p o rts to M exico are u p 15.7 percent to a record $11.6 billion. "This [seminar] is the best wav to create binational law yers. It's fun­ d a m e n ta l ... to m a k e th e tw o e c o n o m ie s e n g a g e e a c h o th e r in p ro d u c tiv e exchang e,' said. H ern an d ez F ern an d o C u esta, a law s tu d e n t fr°m the A utonom ous U niversity of G u a d a la ja r a , s a id th e p r o g r a m re v e a le d th e c h a n g in g ro le of th e law yer. "This o p en ed m y m ind to w h at specific area of in tern atio n al law I w ant to study," he said. I he p a rtic ip a n ts of the p ro g ra m a ls o h e a r d p r e s e n ta tio n s o n th e s tru c tu re o f T exas s ta te c o m m is­ s io n s , su c h as th e P u b lic U tility C om m ission and the H ispanic Bar Association. The $1,700, four-day-a-w eek sem ­ inar was paid for by the participants and by scholarships from in d iv id u ­ als and the A utonom ous U niversity of Mexico in Mexico City. "The stud en ts and attorneys real- ly enjoyed and got quite a bit out of th e academ ic p o rtio n ," K idd said. "TTwy w ant first p riority w hen we select our participants next year." Larry S h ultz, right, got a lesson from kayakin g instructor I hom as Chapm ond on how to properly tie a kayak to the top of a car Sunday. Shultz bought his kayak prior to a R ecre­ ational Sports Center kayaking trip on Saturday morning. M.D. Anderson releases data on research to federal agency Laura Stromberg Daily Texan Staff The UT M.D. A nderson Cancer C en ter h as released in fo rm atio n to the federal governm ent on radi­ atio n re search p erfo rm e d a t the center du rin g the 1950s and 1960s, th e c e n te r's p re s id e n t said S u n ­ day. The c e n te r released th e in fo r­ m ation in response to a letter sent in m id-July to institutions w hose re s e a r c h in v o lv e d " to ta l b o d y r a d i a t io n ," sa id D r. C h a r le s L e M a is tre , p r e s i d e n t o f M .D . A n d e rso n . The g o v e rn m e n t has not yet inform ed the center of the “We have shared our data with the Department of Energy to show the therapeutic benefits for the patients who were treated.” — Dr. Charles LeMaistre, ______________ president of M.D. Anderson Cancer Center schedule of the investigation. L e M a istre s a id a lth o u g h th e re se a rc h in fo rm a tio n w as p u b ­ lished long ago in scientific jo u r­ n a ls, th e in v e s tig a tio n m ay be looking for research that could be considered "questionable." "We have sh ared o u r data w ith th e D e p a r tm e n t of E n e rg y to show the therapeutic benefits for the patients w ho w ere treated," he said. LeM aistre a d d e d th a t officials are uncertain w hat questions will arise during the investigation. He added that officials at M.D. A n derson have "no deadline, no date and no contact p oint" for fu r­ ther inform ation abou t the inves­ tigation. TSP names 4Texan’ managing editor Reporter Abraham Levy approved by majority after second vote KlIa U Nick Montfort Daily Texan Staff journalism senior Jason G oodrich, rem oved from con­ sideration. Levy w on 5-3. •». - I Texas S tudent Publication Board of O p eratin g 1 rustees nam ed journalism senior A braham Levy m an ­ aging editor of The Daily Texan for the fall semester. Levy, w ho is currently the senior state rep o rter for the UT student new spaper, will replace Johnny Ludden. It cam e as a su rp rise to m e," said Levy, w ho w as elected after tw o votes by the board on Friday. Four of the eight ballots w ere cast in the first vote for C hristopher Brick, a journalism sophom ore. Since the election of the m anaging editor requires a m ajority vote, a second vote w as taken w ith the last-place candidate, "I consider m yself fortunate to have this o p p o rtu n i­ ty, Le\ y said. Johnny L u d d e n has d one an excellent job the last three sem esters. I look forw ard to this fall being one of the best sem esters yet. My m ain goal is to continue the stand ard of excellence w hich has been the cornerstone for The Daily Texan/' Levy was tw ice an issue staff reporter for The Texan has intern ed for the Tyler M orning Telegraph and has w 'ntten and done layout for the w eekly Tyler Junior Col­ lege News. His stories have been carried by the Associat­ ed Press and he has received the local T.B. Butler N ew s W riting A w a/d. eyecare VISION CENTERS Optometry & Treatment of Eye Disease Jam es A. Dugas, O.D. COMPLETE EXAM 29.00 CONTACT LENS EXAM Free pair of disposable lenses with exam 59.00 EXAMS • CONTACTS • GLASSES We ve Moved 1 7 1 0 I.avaca (N ext to U ptow n E n c h ila d a B ar) 476-1000 Offering the latest in contact lens technology. . At affordable pnces. North H ills H E B C e n t e r 4 8 1 ,Bear' G ov Ann Richards' cam paign aid es • ? stran8 e man photographing license plates o f c a m p a ig n h e a d q u a r te r s' p a rk in g lo t in A ustin They jotted d ow n his license plate and obtained the lie records reglstered ow ner o i car by using pub- knI!Le Kld.TuWant,ed t0 Send him a little note to let him nd ou T but the joke w as on them, ress was a parking lot at an A ustin convention (>en e a aa and special events center. A lthough m ost researchers b elieve their p rofession remains honorable" and claim they w ould not violate persona proprieties, they acknow ledge their im age has ni r' f, rnisb ed by tales that som e fello w researchers e gam e to w in at any cost, the Houston Chronicle p ay reported Sunday. Republican Karl Rove claim s he has been the victim o f unscrupulous researchers. An electronic bug was d is­ covered in his office in 1986 and janitors told him tw o years later several p eop le had offered to buy his bags o f trash, he said. ' "These are the kinds of things that go on, but I su s­ p ect they g o on in freq uently in the greater schem e o f things," R ove told the Chronicle. "But it g oes to sh o w the exten t p e o p le w ill go to gain in te llig en ce on the opposition." Others b elieve g oin g through the garbage or planting sp ies is just part o f the job. "About half your tim e is (spent) attem pting to get a sp y in the o p p o sin g cam p," said K elly Fero, a form er p ress secretary w h o h an d led o p p o sitio n research for Jim M attox in the 1990 gu b ern a to ria l p rim ary c a m ­ p aign. "And another big ch u nk of tim e is d evoted to a tte m p tin g to d is c o v e r w h o m ay b e a s p y in y o u r cam p." 7 Fero said the M a tto x c a m p a ig n p la n te d a sp y in Richards' cam p aign . The b ooty w as an early draft of R ic h a r d s' e d u c a t io n p la tfo r m , s n a tc h e d from th e garbage. "A s a result, w e gain ed a sen se o f w hat sh e w ou ld com e out w ith , and w e cam e out w ith ours fir s t" he said. M ost researchers say p ub lic issu e analysis, not per­ son al dirt, is their top priority. T h ey said the use o f hired d etectives to d ig up the private dirt on a candi­ date is on the w ane, w ith an em phasis instead on com ­ p uter-assisted research of public financial d ocu m ents and voting. But Rove b elieves som e researchers have an "alarm mg tendency" to investigate an opponent's private life. w w ld oTentoTrtainment* l^ stiH ^ e ^ a c k ^ ic h o I s o ^ a ^ T h e ^ o k e M o ^ h f s ^ o k e r Som e'career advice,aj i ^ ' D o ^ t do a t a ^ sh o w ! *h* One of the few strengths of the film stem s from the story's centering on the prom otion of a love-people-for-w ho-they-are m essage. Ben Stein, Kevin A rn o ld 's d ro w sy science p rofesso r from The Wonder Years, p lay s a sim ilar character w h o helps to bring Ipkiss to this understanding. R ichard Jeni o f Caroline's Comedy Hour deposits a satisfying role as Ipkiss' su p p o rt­ ive ban k in g b u d d y , C harlie Schum acer. A less-than-successful w om anizer, Schum acer attem pts to loan Ipkiss interest-free tips on h o w to p ic k u p w o m e n . The s c e n e s in w hich he continuously fails in the m idst of his love lessons are som e of the funniest of the m ovie sim ply because they d o n 't rely on o v e r-b u lg in g e y es a n d g im m ick y special effects. “ F* un errects. Movie makers discover the advantages of filming in Austin Tin I) \I! \ T i:\ \ \ Mask a Marcel Meyer ■ Daily Texan Staff IF1LM N ew Line C inem a's The Mask is the first m ovie of the com edy genre to blanket its script u n d e r the protective covers of s p e c ia l e ffe c ts s tu d io I n d u s tr ia l L ig h t a n d Magic. But with poor character d e v e lo p m e n t a n d a The s lo p p y I Mask s ultim ate result is an audience-charac- ter relationship that is w holly depen d en t on | these costly visuals. I s c r ip t, Jim C a rre y (Ace Ventura: Pet Detective) plays the role of Stanley Ipkiss, a nice guy b a n k te lle r w h o is tra n s f o r m e d in to an unlikely hero of sorts. D onning a m y steri­ ous and ancient mask, C arrey navigates the | streets of Edge City w ith a b izzaro w o rld ! com pass. W h e n p la c e d o v e r h is fa ce, th e m a sk transform s the repressed cartoon addict into a m am bo dancing, crim e fighting rom antic w arrio r. C arrey forges his altered perso na w ith a m eld o f F red A s ta ir e 's d a n c in g m obility and a dash of sand from the eccen­ tric; p layground of Michael R ichards' (Sein­ feld's Kramer) m ind. C arrey succeeds in fabricating a distinct d u a lity b etw een the tw o p e rso n a s in th e story, b u t the narrow plot acts only to com ­ p le m e n t the s tu n n in g v isu a ls an d so his respectable efforts seem w asted. T alented new com er C am eron Diaz p o r­ trays the stereotypical role of the gangster's g irlfrie n d , Tina C a rly le , w ith re fre sh in g e n th u s ia s m . F rom h e r first slo w -m o tio n entrance, to her acrobatic dance stunts, Diaz balan ces C arre y 's usual zan iness w ith the c o n tr o lle d p o is e of a s e a s o n e d lo u n g e singer. ^ A sso cia te d Press FILM T e x a s ' c a p ita l c ity is c o m in g on strong as one of th e s t a t e 's m o v ie - m a k in g meccas. A nd its p o p u ­ larity as a shoot­ ing location for recent films and te le v is io n p r o ­ g ram s p a in te d a g reen ish tin ge of en v y on som e b ig g er Texas cities, state film officials say. C lint Eastw ood, w h ose M alpaso Productions filmed twice in C entral Texas, told I he Dallas Morning News for an article in S u n d a y 's ed itio n s th a t A u stin w ill see h im a n d h is cam eras again. The people in the city' are w arm and cooperative and have real film know -how ," he said. The actor-director, w ho is also an avid jazz tan, sees other benefits to Austin. "A nd there's alw ays great jazz at the Elephant Room," he said. H ollyw ood learn ed in 1987 th a t A ustin can fill alm ost any position in a film production crew. Clint Eastwood directed A Perfect World, in which he also starred, along with Kevin Costner, Laura Dern and T.J. Lowther. The movie was filmed in Huntsville and the Hill Country surrounding Austin. Other Austin filmed productions include Disney s Blank Check and Austinite Richard Linklater’s Dazed and Confused. "There w ere a lot of com m ercials and low -budget stuff going on that y o u c o u ld p ic k a r o u n d a n d g e t s o m e th in g to g e th e r ," sa id N ic k L om bardo, senior vice p residen t of T urner Pictures. "It was iffy only in the sense that no on e h ad d o n e it before. So w e did it and it w orked o ut great." P roducer Stan Brooks has just fin­ ish e d film in g his f o u rth A u s tin - m ade television show in five years. The Santa M onica, Calif., pro ducer says A u stin is th e frie n d lie st city to w a rd m ovie p ro d u c tio n th a t he has ever w orked in. New biography shows plain Hank J o h n D. L o w e Daily Texan Staff H e d ie d a t a n early age, d u r ­ ing th e h e ig h t of his fame as a m u s ic ia n . H is c a re e r w a s filled w ith su b ­ a b u s e s ta n c e p r o b le m s in part related to a _________ _ chronic illness, problem s w hich he never overcame. H e w as never truly und ersto o d by anyone, nor did he ever fully reveal him self anyw here but in his music. Ultim ately, fame brought m ore m is­ ery than happiness to him. A nother Kurt Cobain eulogy? No, m erely a short description of the life of H ank W illiam s, one of the first c o u n tr y m u sic s u p e r s ta r s . C o lin Escott has w ritten a com prehensive account of W illiam s' tragic rise and fall, full of inform ation from every­ one the singer ever associated with. Hank Williams: The Biography is a perfect title for this plainly w ritten and inform ative book. It is not any m ore scan d alo u s or lurid than his real adventures. It is not sensation­ al, but very inform ative. Williams was bom Sept. 17, 1923, in a logging settlement in southern Alabama. His family moved around quite a bit when he was little, while his father Lon worked for logging companies. Lon grew ill when Hank was 6 and was hospitalized in a san­ itarium, never to be fully reunited with his family. Williams and his family moved to M ontgom ery w hen he w as 13. He had already taken a shine to music, lea rn in g so m e gu itar and so n g s Hank Williams: The Biography is a perfect title for this plainly written and informative book. fro m a b la c k s tr e e t m u s ic ia n in G eorgiana. Slow ly, he w orked his w ay o n to th e ra d io at WSFA-FM an d w as p lay in g show s at school- houses, by the age of 14. H e also started to drink regularly at this age, a habit that held back his career m any times. W illiams w as a binge drinker, w ho w ould go on a th e n th r e e - d a y " b e n d e r " a n d require three more days to sober up a n d g e t o v e r th e h a n g o v e r. F re ­ quently, this interfered w ith concert a p p e a r a n c e s , e a r n in g h im th e dreaded tag of "unreliable." During th e h e ig h t of his fafrte, 1951 an d 1952, he w as p la y in g gigs in East T exas an d L o u isia n a ra th e r th a n doing The Grand Ole Opry. W illiam s' drinking and dalliance w ith prescription d ru g s eventually led to his death at the age of 29. At the time, he w as on the road to C an­ ton, O hio for a New Year's Day con­ c ert a p p e a ra n c e th a t w as to h av e rehabilitated his reputation. O n e o f the m ost rem arkable things about Hank Williams is that he packed such a full life into so few years. H is first single to reach the charts was Move It On Over, in mid- 1947. H is first N o. 1 s in g le w as Lovesick Blues, in early 1949. This hit propelled him to national status and the coveted spot on the Opry, the most popular country radio show in the nation. In less than four years, he w as kicked off the sh o w and finally died. Escott does well in focusing on HANK m u AMS: THE BIOGRAPHY Authors: Colin Escott with George Merritt and William MacEwen Publisher: Little, Brown and Company Price: $22.95 these year¿. W hile he sp en d s som e tim e o n th e le a d -u p to W illia m s' fame, Escott concentrates on those a s p e c ts th a t d ir e c tly in flu e n c e d W illiams' life, such as his drinking, r e c o r d in g s a n d h is m a r r ia g e to A udrey Sheppard. There is also very little editorializ­ ing to d e tra c t from th e sto ry . It w ou ld be very easy to sit in ju d g ­ ment or speculate at every juncture in W illia m 's life. In s te a d , E scott leaves th is u p to th o se w h o knew W illia m s . T h is u s u a lly b e c o m e s h u m o ro u s as each tells a different sto ry th a t m akes them the p ivotal character. th e s to r y Perhaps w hat Escott does best is le t its e lf. H a n k te ll W illiam s w as q u ite a character, as w ere W illiam s' wife, A u d rey , and m other, Lillie. Reading the saga of H an k W illia m s' s e lf-d e s tru c tio n , a n d h o w e v e r y o n e a lte r n a te ly offered help and pain, is moving. It is rare to find a b io g ra p h y th at is hard to p u t dow n, particularly one as plainly w ritten as this. Hank Williams: The Biography is good reading, whther you're a fan o f cou n try m u sic or n ot. The insights it offers into the music busi­ n ess, the price of fam e and su b ­ stance abuse are as timely today as ever. Escott has acheived the ulti­ mate goal of a biographer: motivat­ ing a reader who knows little about the subject into finding out more. ( Ktp T«m Tariee Cméml M kM J. Fe* - Treet WXkm W h e r e t V t h e R i v e r s _ . F L O W N o r t h i f c C R g W 4:45- 9:40 HULE BUDDHA 296- 7.-00 % \ O F T H t N > - 45¿ ^ £kK,l ) t ) K I F ^ 2:15- 4 JI- 7:15-4:30 | 11:4$ p* lUilMfcpi 4MI^ CKRGO E v e ry S u n d a y a m i M o n d a E a r ly , n a n -s n ia liin ^ s l u m s i r i t l i S IM it ills ami hntiinrks a ¡un til d osr M o n d a y MR. NAPPY, SICK LITTLE MONKEY WORMY A THE MAGGOTS Tuesday. August 2 Z ROCK NIGHT SEED S IM O N B O N E G L O V E $1.98* cover, 98* drinks, beer Wednesday. August 3 nickel draft 7-10 TR A IN FA C E B L O O D S T O N E L .A . Y A R D D O G S MONSTiK VOODOO MACHIN!, 8 / 6 D M W N /FO I LOV! NOY USA, t / t L O V I H A T I 8 / 1 1 K Y U S S /S T O M P B O X . 8 / 1 3 T lw N IX O N S , 8 / 1 9 S K M W , 8 / 3 0 CHRISTIAN M A T H , 8 / 3 1 2 0 IS Last R iverside D riv e i l l K.” i i,i UO< k M onday A ugust 1. H 99-1 P a g o THE MASK Starring: Jim Carrey, Cameron Diaz, Richard Jem and Peter Riegert Director: Charles Russell Playing at: Arbor 7, Highland 10, Northcross 6, Riverside 8 and Westgate 8 Rating: (out of five) Despite its many fallbacks, there are som e genuinely entertaining lines and scenes in the movie. The majority of these focus on Carrey's electrifyin g stage presence, but many come from the frustrated antics of Lt. Kellaway, played by Peter Riegert (Barbar­ ians at the Gate). H o lly w o o d 's k itsc h y w a v e o f ca n in e influence follows Carrey from his animated performance in Pet Detective. Ipkiss' faithful pup M ilo, played by Max (M om and Dad Save the World), is backed by obvious editing of human-like grunts. With all the tricks and jumps this dog is capable of, he should have rolled over and played dead when asked to fill this role. To date, ILM, the uncontested leader in the production of visual arts, has woven its colorful magic through the black and white scripts of over one hundred feature films, and is redefining the com puter-generated borders of celluloid stock. But h o w far w ill these state-of-the-art scanners and power morphers go? Already w e've w itn essed dream scape terminators and, most recently, the first computer gener­ ated audience in Robert Zemeckis' Forrest Gump. A lthough the special effects stretch the unagination into a dimension of plastic real­ ity, The Mask's technical wizardry is no sub­ stitute for a well-written script and inelastic plot. And w h ile the ending of the m ovie leaves a door open for the already signed sequel, Carrey might fare better getting back on the case in another Pet Detective install­ m ent ment. “The people in the city are warm and coopera­ tive and have real film know-how. And there’s always great jazz at the Elephant Room.” — Clint Eastw ood, director and star o f A P erfect W orld "T h e y 're a little w eak in casting services. They could obviously use a bigger talent pool," he said. "Every actor w ho isn't w orking in the U nit­ ed S tates s h o u ld m o v e to A u s tin because they'll work. ... But it still stacks up b etter than any city I'v e ever shot in." Special effects coordinator R andy M oore rem em bers having to b u m a b a m for an episode of a TV series. The b a m tu rn ed out to be 200 feet inside the A ustin city limits. " A u s tin is a c le a n -a ir city . N o open fires in Austin, th at's the law ," he said. "B ut the city cam e out and said , 'L isten , y o u 're m ak in g a TV show , y o u 're b rin g in g m oney into tow n. If you d o n 't m ind, w e'd like to have som e of our boys here so it d o e sn 't get out of hand. " I n D a lla s , th e r e 's a d if f e r e n t tone. They w ant som eone to sign off o n it a n d n o t h u r t t h e ir c a r e e r. T h e y 'r e to ta lly b u r e a u c r a tic . In Austin, it's like, 'Let's facilitate this movie. Let's m ake this happen.' I've found that in San Antonio, too." In 1993, Austin drew $33.3 m illion in m o tio n p ic tu re an d te le v is io n p rod uction , according to the Texas Film Com m ission. That w as second only to the $37.7 million H ouston m ade off of two TV m o v ie s , a s e rie s p ilo t a n d e ig h t m o v ie f e a tu r e s , th e c o m m is s io n said. Dallas-Fort W orth was third w ith $29.5 m illion, followed by San Anto­ nio w ith $20.5 million, the com m is­ sion said. A u s tin 's p ro d u c tio n boom h a s o th er cities w o n d erin g if com m is­ sio n d ire c to r M arlen e S a ritz k y is luring projects to the capital city a nd the doorstep of Gov. A nn Richards, a fan of m ovies and those w ho m ake them. "You do hear grum blings that the s ta te fa v o rs film c o m m is s io n A ustin," said Roger Burke, director of the D allas-Fort W orth R egional Film Com m ission. "But it's natural to lead w ith locations th at you can speak about m ore authoritatively." S a ritz k y d is m is s e s s u c h s u s p i­ cions. "If you look at how business has been spread statew ide over the last couple of years, y o u 'll see that all the m arkets, especially H ouston and San A ntonio, have gotten business," she said. e s M w is L a t e - Open every night until 1:30 a.m. 24th & San Antonio G e n e ra l C in e m a B A R G A IN M ATINEES EVERY D AY ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6pm TUESDAY IS BARGAINDAY All SUTS-AU SHOWS-AU MY t MGHT1001 $300 TUESDAY ONLY EXCEPT STARRED («) FIIMS H I G H L A N D 1 0 , 7 ,K I i 1-35 or MIC P it H S K y u U t t D A S ^ S ^ r * THE MASK ON TWO SCREENS PCI 3 11 50 2:10 4 30 7:00 9 25 THX 12:40 3.00 5 25 7 50 10 00 DIGITAL ¡ BLO W N AWAV ’ 30 10 OC fTIR IO * THE CLIENT ON TWO SCREENS PGI3 12 20 2 50 5 15 7:45 10:10 TNX 12 00 2 20 « 45 7 15 9 40 OOUY * LION KINO ON TWO SCREENS G 11 00 1:00 3 00 5 00 7 00 9 00 ITIKIO 11:40 1:40 3:40 5.40 7 40 9:45 DOUY WYATT EARP 12 00 4 00 8 00 PGI3 STfRfo | ANGELS IN THE OUTFIELD 12 00 2 20 4 40 7 TO V 25 P G s iu tc I THE SHADOW 2 30 7 25 *G13 fTIRIO I j H WOLF 12 10 4 40 9 50 g ÍT IIR 0 THE RJNTST09RE8 12 40 2 40 5 05 PG STMfC ' GREAT HILLS 8 . 0 * 1*1 H I U S T R A I L 794-8076 I L - H I nr COULD HAPPEN TO YOU 12 05 2 30 5 05 7 30 10 00 PG 3 H X * BLACK BEAUTY 12 45 3 00 S 10 7 15 9 30 0 3 H X ANGELS IN THE OUTFIELD 12 15 2 45 5 00 7 25 9 45 PG iritwo NOWTH 1 00 3 10 5 20 7 35 PGsthbo BLOWN AWAY 9 50 R ITtRtO THE SHADOW 12 10 2 35 5 00 7 35 10:00 PG13 tom • LO V ! TROUBLE 12 05 2 405 10 7 40 10 IOPGmxm WOLF 2 15 5 00 7 30 10 00 R fTHRCO MAVERICK 1 35 4 25 7 15 1 55 PG (TW O SUMMER MOVIECAMP E V E R Y WED DOZEN ROSES $ 8 .9 5 Cash & Carry 3830 N . L a m a r 453-7619 FIESTA FLOWERS , PRESIDIO THEATRES WE RE BIG ON BARGAINS HEY STUDENTS! YES, FOLKS That s right! Now students pay only $4.25 w/ID - Bargain matinees until 6 00 pm $3 50 - Children and seniors $3 50 - and only $5 25 tor adult admission! For Village Only STUDENT DISCOUNTS DAILY WITH VALID STUDENT I.D. RIVERSIDE 8 N RIVERSIDE MALL 448-0001 THE MASK (PG-13) 12 40 3 50 5 00 7 40 10 00 IT COULD HAPPEN TO YOU (PG) 1 .1 .50 2,00 4 45 9 ,35. FORREST GUMP (PG-13) H 4 5 J L 4 5 5 40 8 30 11 45 n o fr e e pa s se s DIGITAL s m a r t s t e r e o F0RRESm]fiF(PGd3r 1,104.007 io ions_______ TRUE LIES (R) m u 5.30 100 9 15l THE LION KING (PG-13) 12 102 15430 730930 THE CLIENT (PG-13) 12.00 2.30 5 on ; an Q Mi NORTH (PG) 1 2 J 0 1 . 5 0 3.4 5S.4 S SPEED(R) 7 45 10 15 SMART STEREO M7HÉÍ PASSES 10 SPKW DISCOUNTS . SM A RT S I L R E O I S M A RT S T ER EO « r a s * «¿MAíii ¿1LBE0 I NO WEE f NO SPECIAL ( SMAfililLBLO I . JfRBPtfSfS i H K H b 5MAR’ S T E R E O ! 451-8302 VILLAGE CINEMA 2700 ANDERSON IT COULD HAPPEN TO YOU(PG) J 2 .I5 2.45 5.00 7 30 9 45 MIDNIGHT COWBOY (R) J2.ti5.15 IQ,00 WIDOW’S PEAK (PG) a« 7 45 FOREIGN STUDENT (R) 12 30 2 30 4 45 7 15 9 30 GO FISH (NR) DOLB 1 . 9 0 3 15 5 3 0 8 0 0 10 1! Page 8 Monday. August 1.1994 Thk D a i i .y T k x a n begin Monday Crossword Dallas killing 3* River to the Caspian *3 Veterans Day ACROSS Edited by W ill Shortz No. 0620 Associated P ré » DALLAS — The hunt began almost 11 vean; ago after Rozanne G aih u n as was found n u d e legs and arm s bound to her four-poster bed. She had beer, shot tw x* m the head. It took five years to arrest a suspect - a w om an whose husband had been haxing an affair with the vie- tim. It took nearly six more to recapture kw OaxTs Axior who lumped bond and fled Hast before her murder trial The pursuit w ound through C anada Mexico and the French Riviera before a minor traffic acodent led to her rearrest. Testimonx begins Mondax’ in the capital murder tna' of A ylor, 44 accused of « r a n g i n g and pax-mg for Gaibunas death allegedly through, a series erf m id d le ' men. Age is a lw a y s the en em y o f the p ro se c u to r Assistant District Attorney Kevin Chapman said. The fact that it happened m I¿*S3 and we re trvmc it 11 xoars iáter, íj\3{ s 3 h¿bibt\’ hávf to ovctcoit)€ f Authorities portray Ax ior as a scorned woman who discovered her husband's affair, then masterminded the Authorities portray Aylor as a scorned woman who discovered her husband’s affair, then masterminded the lovers’ murders. lexers murders. She taces separate charges erf planning a s u p e r attack or. Larr. Ayíor ¡n 1^86 it failed! and thev divorced two months later Joy Davis A xior s law yer Doug M ulder, did not return repeated phone messages left at his office over a period erf weeks. Gaihunas a 35-year-old nurse w ho w as separated from her p hysician husband P eter G a ih u n a s. w as attacked O ct 4 1983 in her suburban Dallas home. Her 4-year-old son found her tied to her bed Tissue was stuffed down her throat and blood was oozing from h e r head She died two days later Police got their first break in the case in 1988 when Carol Garland came forward to implicate her áster, Jov. .After wiring Garland and tape-recording two conversa­ tions between the sisters, police arrested Axior that Mav Arkansas prepares for triple execution Associated Press LII ILE ROCK. -Ark. — For now, the m aca b re d re ss re h e a rsa ls at Cum mins prison are held w ithout the three leading players — the men se n te n c e d to d ie W e d n esd ay in Arkansas first triple execution in 55 years. Prison staff are going through the m o tio n s o f p u ttin g so m eo n e to death. They' use other staff members AROUND CAMPUS Around Campus is a daily col­ umn lis tin g U n iversity-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organizations registered with the Campus Activities Office. Announcements must be subm it­ ted on the proper form by 9 p.m. two days before publication. Forms are available at the Daily Texan o ffic e at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. The D a i l y Texan reserves the right to edit submissions. MEETINGS A lcoh olics A nonym ous h o ld s closed meetings noon-1 p.m. M on­ day through Friday at St. Austin's C atholic, 2026 G u a d a lu p e St., Paulist Hall. The m eeting is new , specifically serving the UT commu­ nity. Campus Ministries International meets for Bible study and fellow ­ ship 7:30 p.m .-9 p.m. M ondays in Burdine Hall 106. All visitors wel­ come. For information call Cristina or Loretta at 459-0710. Texas U n ion D istin g u ish e d Speakers Committee will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Union Asian Culture Room (4.224). For informa­ tion call Brian at 444-8364. University Yoga Club meets 530 p.m .-7:30 p.m . M ondays in Texas Union Asian Culture Room (4.224). Open to the public. Please do not eat tw o hours before the meeting. For inform ation call Peter at 288- C H E E S E R A H for practice, stra p p in g them to a gumey used in lethal injections. T h ey 're w a lk in g th o u g h the whole process, from the time we go to get him in the cell to the time he's walking to the execution chamber and tied down. And it's done ox'er and o v er and oxre r a g a in ," Correction Departm ent spokesman .Alan Abies said. Darryl V. RichJey , Hoyt Franklin Clines and James Williams Holmes are scheduled to die W ednesday night for the death of a Rogers busi­ nessm an du ring a break-in at his home. They have chosen to die bv lethal injection. Nobody really looks forward to doing this. The concern is, to do the job w ell and d o it w ith o u t an v glitchés. Abies said. Txvo of the m en , R ichlev and Clines, have asked Gov. Jim Guy Tucker to commute their sentences to life in prison Holmes has filed no such appeal. 3456. UT Taekwon-Do Club meets 7 p .m .-9 p.m . M ondays in L. Theo Beümont Hall 502A. New members are always welcome. For inform a­ tion call 458-4016. SPECIAL EVENTS" Departments of Art and Art His­ tory p re sen ts an ex h ib it of p h o ­ tographs and prin ts by Stevie Joe Lake and C arolyn P o rter, in the Fine Arts Building, New Gallery, Monday through Friday. For infor­ mation call 471-3379. SHORT COURSES^ UT SURE Program and Student Activities are sponsoring free five- w eek self-d efe n se co u rses for women's groups and organizations. Interested indix'iduals should orga­ n ize a g ro u p of 10 o r m ore UT women to qualify for the program. Call Suzanne at 416-9735 to reserve the time and dates. VOLUNTEER- OPPORTUNITIES UT Neighborhood Longhorns is seeking volunteers to prepare infor­ mational literature, design fliers and help coordinate the 1994 fall semes­ ter tutoring program. For informa­ tion call 474-0897. UT Student Volunteer Center is seeking: ■ Individuals w ho are fluent in A m erican Sign L anguage to help and com m unicate th ro u g h touch with an elderly woman who is hear­ ing-impaired and visually impaired. ■ Students to help an organization that works with the hom eless and w ith other people in need. Volun­ teers are needed to answer calls and requests for information as well as help with screening clients needs. For information call 471-6161. ■ A student, at least of junior sta­ tus, to serve as a com m unications a s s is ta n t w ith a s ta te w id e AIDS awareness and prevention organiza­ tion. Volunteers will help produce and d is trib u te a n e w s le tte r and action alerts and will maintain tele­ p h o n e con tacts w ith com m unity advocates. For information call 471 - 6161. OTHER M e a su re m e n t an d E v alu atio n C e n te r a n n o u n c e s F rid ay is the receipt deadline in Oakland, Calif., to register for the Aug. 20 Medical C ollege A dm ission Test (MCAT) with an added late fee. Materials are available at the MEC, 2616 Wichita St. and the general information and referral desk in the Main Building. For information call 471-3032. UT C o u n selin g an d M en tal H ealth Center is seekin g fem ale participants for a research study on child sexual abuse survivors (one to two years in the healing process). For inform ation call Yael Gold at 471-3515 or 469-0177. D ° u ( * V vM f f Bend • Exchange • Pofcte form of address 13 Actor Calhoun 14 Make for (argue m support of) 11 Ray of Hollywood 14 This puzzle s mystery subject 18 ‘The Joy Lock Club* author >0 Fuzzy t i Rule MYtekj *3 Dubbed one *4 1951 movie with 16-Across St Stumble mo. 38 Dafy of ‘Gypsy* 38 Competition tor Geraido 88 Trig function 38 Wynken, Bfynken and 48 They’re sometimes wild 41 Earth mover 48 1 957 movte with 16-Across 47 Thumbnail sketch 48 16-Across s ‘Cat o n Roor. 48 Étagére piece Tin ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 88 County north of San Francisco 84 Neighbor of Ind *7 1946 movie with 16-Across •O * known then what. . . ’ • i Cancel •8 *A* code word •3 Greek portico •4 Use epees •8 Half a fortnight DOWN 1 Stew 8 ‘Damn Yankees' seductress 3 Green land 4 Affair 8 Ray's start 8 He coined the term 'horsepower" 7 Pallid • Caress t M-G-M s Louis B. and others know is 10 * what.. 11 Sick a s ----- 12 Dawn 14 Put up with 17 Novelist Waugh 18 Disney mermaid 88 Horn, for one 83 Iranian chief, once 84 Letter abbr. 28 Richard of D o o n es b u ry by g a rry tru d e a u I MzLL, I PONT KNOW, OMR. 00 yO(J THINK WOULD JNStST ONfT, COULD KREPtT U6MT? JUST667 7066THER A& OU? FRlTNPS7 ^ -------- , p / MRS mm □ 0 □ □ □ □□ □ a 3 j 0 0 SED □CD □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ Ruzzto by Bette Sue Cohan 27 Tend to 28 Refrain syllable 2» Confederacy's opponent 30 Three trios 34 Exceedingly 38 Eight. Prefix 37 Through 38 Latched 40 Law professor Hill 48 Bit of fall weather 44 Miss O'Neill 48 Publisher Adolph so Sloop 81 Defense means 52 Diner's guide 83 First-class 84 Man or Ely, e.g. 55 16-Across’s With ' Father" so Plumber’s concern 58 Travel (about) 50 16-Across’s “The Last Time Paris" ‘Bustin' Loose- 24 Newswoman 43 Airline to Spam 44 Outpouring of Ellerbee gossip Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 5656 (754 each minute). JEAN BUSINESS! 20 WORDS 5 DAYS s 5 ! 1 1 -5 2 4 4 Lying, Cheating, Lcgy Bastards D£¿éLJñQxv± AVP Í ÜE Oor> KdiJD O f UUE jEaTTRxJi . . M . UÜEtPECTTD STOP c?aJ a g - g a a m e w ms mb&as iwtiU rh£K u/eee taking i/a; SCEajERy' / Bx-PUAI AI6 A/UP S 7 H n flc f D by Chris Turner f i V a ^ 8 u r / D O HAeA)ces v i u i T •«i Mt. . »1t>) - » r "TO TVffCiO. ©< «•orfn'Sw fokacjk v ih « m t T-V. ^ THCi®. J O I 4 k f m a Cfctoto 1 \ - — >14X6 . fUt)M w kN ,1 ^ '« P . 5 b ' THE FUSCO BROTHERS__________ by Jc. D“ IS U D D V N OT fiflS Y , PR L . i . ¿ A /- ■ V i N M f y b TVE M o r - j g j T h e D a il y T e x a n Monday, August 1 ,1 9 9 4 Page 9 To Place a Classified Ad Call 471-5244 C lassified W o rd Ad R r í-pq Charged by the word. Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply $ 6 1 5 $ 2 0 .4 0 1 ri0Y 3 days ...................$ 1 1 .7 0 3 days................................$ 1 6.65 .............. 4 days 5 days................................ $ 2 3.25 First two words may be all capital letters. $.2 5 fo r each additional w o rd le tte rs . MasterCard and Visa accepted c a p ita l in C lassified Display Ad Rates Charged by the column inch. One column inch minimum A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available. Fall rates Sept. 1 May 3 0 1 to 21 column inches per month $ 9 2 0 per col. inch over 21 column inches per month Call for rates FAX A D S TO 4 7 1 - 6 7 4 1 8:00-5:Q O /M onday-Friday/TSP Building 3 .2 0 0 Deadline: 1 1 .0 0 a.m. p rio r to publication TRANSPORTATION 10—Misc. Autos 20-Sports-Foreign Autos 3 0 —Trucks-Vans 4 0 —Vehicles to Trade 50—Service-Repair 60 —Parts-Accessones 70—Motorcycles 80—Bicycles 90-Vehicles-Leasing 10O-Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES ■M ERCHANDISE 190—Appliances 200—Fumiture-Household 2 1 0 —Stereo-TV 2 2 0 —Computers-Equipment 2 3 0 -Photo-Camera 240-B oats 250—Musical Instruments 260—Hobbies 270—Machinery-Equipment 280—Sporting-Camping Equipment 110—Services 120—Houses 130—Condos-Townhomes 140-M obile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160-Duplexes-Apartments 170-W anted 180—Loans 290-Furniture-Appliance Rental 3 00—Garage-Rummage Sales 310—Trade 320—Wanted to Buy or Rent 330—Pets 340-Longhorn Want Ads 3 45—Misc. RENTAL 350—Rental Services 360-Furnished Apts. 370-Unfurnished Apts. 380-Fumished Duplexes 390-Unfumished Duplexes 4 0 0 —Condos-T ownhomes 410-Furmshed Houses 420-Unfurnished Houses 4 2 5 —Rooms 4 3 0 —Room-Board 4 3 5 —Co-ops 440—Roommates 450-M obile Homes-Lots 460-Business Rentals 470-Resorts 4 8 0 —Storage Space 490-W anted to Rent-Lease 5 0 0 —Misc. ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 1 0 —Entertainment-Tickets 520-Personals 5 30—T ravel-T ransportation 5 40—Lost & Found 550-Licensed Child Care 560-Public Notice 570-Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580-M usical Instruction 590-Tutoring 600-Instruction Wanted 610-M isc. Instruction 620—Legal Services 630-Com puter 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-Hom e Repair 740—Bicycle Repair 750—Typing 760—Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 770-Employment Agencies 780—Employment Services 790—Part Time 800—General Help Wanted 8 1 0 —Office-Clerical 820-Accounting-Bookkeeping 8 3 0 —Administrative- Management 840—Sales 850-Retail 860—Engineering-T echnical 870—Medical 880—Professional 890—Clubs-Restaurants 900-Dom estic Household 910—Positions Wanted 920—Work Wanted 930-Business Opportunities 940—Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED e sp onsible fo r on ly O NE ADVERTISING TERMS In the eve nt of e r ro rs made advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a m the firs t day, as the publishers are in c o rre c t insertion All claims for adjustments should be made not la te r than 3 0 days after publication Pre paid kills receive credit slip if requested at time of cancellation, and if am ount exceeds $ 2 0 0 . Slip m ust be presented for a reorder within 9 0 days to be valid. Credit slips are non-transferrable In c o n s id e ra tio n of th e Daily Texan's a cc e p ta n ce of a d v e rtis in g copy fo r publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harmless, Texas S tudent P ublicatio ns and its officers, employees, and agents against all loss, liability, dam age, and expense of w hatsoever na ture a risin g o u t of the copying, p rin tin g , o r publishing of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, plagiarism and cop yright and trademark infringement 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 - Uol. Apts. RENTAL RENTAL 3 6 0 -F u rn . Apts. 9 0 9 \ A / « c t 9 Q tU 302 West 38th F all le a s in g o n e ffic ie n c ie s , o n e -b e d ro o m s , fu rn is h e d . C o n v e n ie n t to H a n c o c k C e n te r, UT, a n d h a lf a b lo c k fo IF shuttle. A ll a p p lia n c e s , p o o l, la u n d r y ro o m . G a s , w a te r , & c a b le p a id . CALL 453-4002 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. N I C E P L A C E T O C A L L H O M E ★ I - 1 *s fit 2-1 's ready Lor Sum m er ★ G as C ooking, G as H eating ★ On CR S hu ttle ★ $425/$575 plus elec. RENTAL L e a s e lin e • UTArea • Now Preleasing FREE S e r v ic e ^ % ,487-7121 / Fu lly fu rn is h e d , c o n v e n ie n t to ^ ________ 7-27-20B-B HYDE PARK 1 Bedroom Apt. nice furniture 7820B-B large w alk-in closet SANTA FE a p a r t m e n t s 1101 Clayton Lane 4 5 8 - 1 5 5 2 f^ 9 £ C a r r e lls A p ts . Walk to UT Large 1-1 '1 Low Fall Rates 4 7 2 -3 8 1 6 TRANSPORTATION MERCHANDISE 20 - Sports-Foreign Autos 2 0 0 - Fumiture- Household MERCHANDISE RENTAL 3 6 0 - Fum. Apts. 3 6 0 - Fum. Apts. 1 9 7 6 CORVETTE, T-top, p s , pb, a t, n e w in te r io r , A lp in e s te re o , new u p h o ls te ry $ 7 9 0 0 3 2 7 - 24 70. 7 12 20B pH 80 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE M a n y Reduced to Cost!!! BUCK’S BIKES 928-2810 REAL ESTATE SALES 130 - Condos - Townhomes i t a F R E E D E L I V E R Y For UT Students! $ 79.95 TWIN SET w/FRAME $ 89.95 FULL SET w/FRAME S 49 95 4 DRAWER CHEST J 69 95 DESK SET $129 95 5-PIECE DINETTE SOFAS $159.95 DAYBED w/MATTRESS $ 99 95 Centex Furniture Wholesale 6618 N Lamar 2001 S Lamar 450-0988 445-5808 B ED S -B E D S -B E D S The factory outlet store for Simons, Sealy, Springair. W e carry close-outs, discounted cov­ ers, and factory 2nds. From 50- 70% off retail store prices All new, complete with warranty. Twin set $69, Full set $89 Queen set, $ 1 1 9 King set, $1 4 9 1741 W e st Anderson Ln, 4 5 4 -3 4 2 2 7-12-20B-8 Ely Properties. Inc. 3 45 - Misc. C o n d o s F o r S a l e Quodrongle 2-2.5 $94,500 Sabina! 2-2 $6], 000 Westfield Pkno 2-1 $57,000 Lenox M $47,000 10 Licensed Realtors 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 HYDE PARK CONDOMINIUM Fabulous location for student' 2 bedroom/2 bath, covered parking W /D & refrigerator $57,950 Michele Turnquist REALTOR® O 3286600 GOODWIN & TURNQUIST 140 Mobile Homes-Lots W H Y PAY rent when you can buy a m o b ile hom e fo r less? C a ll to ­ day! 9 2 6 -8 5 1 3 7-15-206 j g C A R P E T yk 4LL AMERICAN FLOORS )J(D orin Size C a rp et)* Remnants Cheap! W 7 5 3 0 B u r n e t R T * * 4 5 1 - 1 7 7 6 * > ♦ * * ~ * ‘ W a r e h o u s e C le a r a n c e S a le * STUDENT DESK Computer tables, filing cabinets chairs sofas, office furniture, dining tables, coffee tables, and pictures C o x O ff ic e P ro d u cts 1 0 9 3 8 R e search 3 4 5 - 7 6 9 1 M -F 8 :3 0 a m - 5 :3 0 p m 7-22-206-D RENTAL 3 6 0 - Fum. Apts. Large 9. •H a ll lit t aim •PtMlI i iin * jji Low Fall Rates ^ * i J: 4 7 2 - 3 8 1 6 • ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ♦ The Arrangement SPECIAL MOVE-IN DEALS ON 2-1'//s & 2-2's (no locators) ^ 2 BR Townhomes & Flats A Preleasing Now C all 4 4 4 -7 8 8 0 Before they're gone!! RENTAL 3 7 0 - U n f . Apts W O T . M p n . $75 OFF FIRST M O N TH 'S RENT W ITH THIS AD! Five blocks to Campus. 2-1 's available. Each unit features all appliances, ceiling fans, private balconies, some w /fireplaces. Extra storage and covered p arking available W ater and garbage paid. Rates starting from $ 77 5 4 5 1 - 7 6 9 4 7-19-15B-0 $ 1 0 0 O F F FIRST M O N T H 'S RENT W IT H THIS A D I 1 7 1 7 W 3 5 th St. C lo s e to shuttle. 2 -2 . Large w a lk -in -c lo s e ts a n d s p a c io u s b e d ro o m s . W a t e r a n d c a b le p a id . $ 6 9 0 / m o n t h 451-7694 7 19-15B-D SMALL, QUIET com plex la rg e ef­ ficiencies. C e ilin g fan, m ini-blinds, a ll app lia nces, large closets W a ­ t e r / g a r b a g e p a id . $ 3 9 0 . 4 5 l - 7 6 9 4 7-19 15B-D NE AR LA W S c h o o l! Large 1 /1 $ 3 9 5 +E foil. $ 3 7 5 +E summer O n shuttle. Pool, Laundry. Avaii- a b le 7-18-20B-B July 1. 4 7 4 - 1 2 4 0 . LARGE EFFICIENCIES N ear campus/Red River Shuttle New floors, ceiling fans DW , mini-blinds N o pets/no roommates CALL SANDRA 4 7 4 -5 0 4 3 M-F 3 7 1 -0 1 6 0 weekends _______________ 7 18-20B-B THE MARKS Apartm ents 3 1 st and Speedway. 1 bedrooms $ 4 5 . C all Dan 451-2268 7-19-20B-B a u x tte u u j. *»*MTMCNT HOMES FEATURES: • Spacious walk- in Closets • 3 swimming pools MOVE-IN SPECIAL HALF OFF FIRST MONTH • Free 49-channel expanded cable • Fenced Patios • Clubhouse • UT & City Busline • Built-in bookshelves A L L B I L L S P A I D HUGE FLOORPLANS 1 B e d ro o m 7 2 5 s q ft. F ro m $ 3 9 5 2 B e d ro o m 1 ,0 1 0 sq. ft. F ro m $ 4 9 5 LOW SECURITY DEPO SITS C a m e ro n R o a d U.T. S h u ttle (B e h in d C a p ita l P la z a ) 4 5 4 -2 5 3 7 1 2 0 0 B ro a d m o o r O rive PICK OF THE CROP N o w P re leas in g For Fall La rg e E ffic ie n c ie s * * S E X X Y L O F T * * *Access Gates ‘ Fireplace ‘ Tennis ‘ Lofts 1&2 bedroom s A D V A N T A G E 8 3 2 -9 2 0 0 7-7-2060 ‘ S T U D IO S /T O W N H O M E S * Great North Location On UT shuttle $ 3 1 0 + E ffic ie n c ie s -1 -2-3 b e d ro o m s Advantage 832-9200 7-7-20B-D SPACIOUS 2 -B E D R O O M / 2-BATH T O W N H O U S E A ll A m e n itie s : In d o o r P a rk in g , W a s h e r / D ry e r, D is h w a s h e r, M ic r o w a v e , F ire p la c e , B a lc o n ie s , etc. U n its s ta rtin g a t $ 4 5 0 RENTAl- 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS P ristin e C o n d itio n . 1- I s P e rfe ct For R o o m m a te s C lo s e to UT c a m p u s . L a rg e 2 -2 's O n ly $ 1 1 0 0 . Call Dan at Property Management, 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . D o n 't P a y Exp ensive U tility D eposits "Let Us P a y T h e m " W e s t C a m p u s S h uttle 2 B locks From S h u ttle ______________ 7-14-20B-B 6 B lo c k s From UT A S H F O R D A PTS. 4 7 6 - 8 9 1 5 Super Summer/Fall/ Spring rates! UT area: 2 -1 . C A C H , p o o l, la u n d r y fa c ilitie s C a b le c o n n e c tio n s , d is h w a s h e r, d is p o s a l. P lenty o f p a r k in g . P le a sa n t a tm o s p h e re . - 0 J '77 IMPALA PS, PB, V8 G ood [ru n n in g , d e p e n d a b le c a r, lo o ks f ir s t $ 8 0 0 takes it '.e*5B g o o d to o 3 6 5 6 7 0 9 I SALE I SMITH C o ro n a e le ctro n ic | 'y p e w! >er w ith m on-toi G ram íe s 'HO »e ’ . M e $3< >0 $ 2 0 0 o b o . 7 0 7 7 4 6 9 I d s - You 7-26-5P LIKE N FW , used tw, ce sewing mo- I ch in e $ 1 5 0 C a ll a n y tim e 8 3 5 [ 9 7 8 5 . 7-265nc D D IS K M A N SPEAKERS w ith a d a p ­ t o r H o 'd 'y eC R ed $ ’ 0, must • It fo r $ 5 0 O B O P a ul, 4 9 5 1328V 7 28 5B K IN G SIZE WATERBED with wood- |e n fra m e In p e rfe c t c o n d itio n - ' 4 4 i . 394 - ! $ ! < « 28 5B REMOTE K E N W O O D A / V SYS TEM, surround-sound receiver, 7- d 's k CD c h a n g e r, d u a l cassette deck, and 10-channel graphic equal­ izer $ 3 5 0 for whole system. 474 6 9 6 3 . 7 28 5B '6 3 RAMBLES Classic 6 6 0 Stan­ d a rd transm ission. Runs g o o d but needs some work. Red-n-white top $ 8 0 0 C a ll a fte r 5 : 0 0 1641 7 28-5B 4 6 2 - CHEST OF draw ers for sa le- $ 4 0 Student desk $ 3 5 C a ll o t 2 8 2 - 4 6 2 3 . 7 28-5NC 5 0 0 YARDS burnt orange p o p lin - 6 0 “ w id e , $1 0 0 / y a r d 5 dozen burnt orange poplin skirts, assorted styles and sizes $ 6 0 0 0 /d o z e n C all Leona at 345 -4 7 4 6 . 7 28-5NC SUZUKI SAAAARAI soft top $ 1 5 0 To kara Racing bicycle $ 8 0 Bridges to n e I ? spd $ 1 2 5 W o m a n s 's B ike $ 2 5 ATB lO s p e e d B ike $45. Call 371-7351 7 27 5NC GT TEQUESTA Q u a lity mountain SOFA FOR sale O ff w hite great b ik e $35 0 2 80-75 9 5 7 295B Like new M u s t se ll c o n d itio n . $ 4 0 M e re d ith 4 7 9 - 8 8 0 7 8-1-5B 12 REMOTE T V ., W asher Dryer, m atching sofa, and chair 19.6 A l­ m o n d c o lo r r e fr ig e r a to r . Law n m o w e r (needs som e w o rk) $ 2 0 - $22 5 83 6 -2 2 2 3 7-28-5NC T! 3 8 6 N o teb ook com puter $ 87 5, P o rta b le p r in t e r $ 5 0 ; L o g ite c h D ig it a l C a m e ra $ 2 0 0 , # 9 G X E w /3 M B V id e o /C a rd $ 4 0 0 ; Sum- m a g r o p h ic s III D r a w in g T a b le t $ 1 5 0 ; C y r ix 4 8 6 D X 2 / 5 0 CPU c h ip $ 1 0 0 , V id e o D ire c to r S o ft­ w are and H a rd w a re $ 5 0 MS PS- 2 M ouse $ 3 0 , M S S e ria l M ouse $ 2 0 , 5 2 5 " F lo p p y D isk D riv e $ 3 0 . C o m m B o a rd s M e g o B u ffe r (4) $ 4 0 , fo r p r in te r $ 3 0 ; Sharp 0 Z 7 0 0 0 O rg a n iz e r w /P C (5 1 2 ) 2 4 4 -6 2 6 2 8 1 lin k $ 5 0 5N C S C H W IN N BICYCLES $ 5 0 a n d $ 7 5 . In fa n t c a r r ie r n e v e r used $ 5 0 .3 3 5 3911 8 15NC O N E C O P E N H A G E N peak w o o d desk with chair and matching lamp G re a t fo r students. $ 1 0 0 M ust sell by August 5th 3 8 5 0 2 0 7 7 29 5B P A G E M A R K BEEPER $ 7 5 N e w Popeil pasta m aker $ 1 0 0 , 1 9 5 . Chevrolet Pickup running, ready for r e s to ra tio n w ith p a rts , $ 7 5 0 (512) 244 -6 2 6 2 . 7-29-5NC GET SERIOUS a b o u t school. Bu, my classy Macintosh (Got an A in W riting) $ 5 0 0 4 6 9 9 0 7 6 . 8 1 5NC N O W M t - l f A S k O ! B IG G E S T F I O O R M A N S u n d e r t h e S N U JJith our hugefloorp!on$ you J con fit 4 mo 2 Bedroom or 2 m o l Bedroom sto/tr-g at $455 SAND V O U C f AAU F f t € € C M U P V S H im iC TWO POOLS ONSITf M G M T U M L O U I CftCCK H IU S 4 4 4 - 0 0 1 0 C A S A G R A N D E Now Leasing E ff’s (ABP) $450 2-2’s St. at $700 $950 3-2’s • near UT • pool • laundry • parking • large room s • On UT shuttle 140 0 Rio Grande 4 7 4 -2 7 4 9 474-5929 Cornerstone Apts, Garden Gate Apts. M NTAI - 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS 7-13-1 OBO •Stackable Washers •Built-In Microwaves ■ulml a i , m h n L iiln lit i •Ceiling Fans •Great Roommate Plan •Large 1-1 Starting at $620 •Furnished/Unfurnished •On-site laundry •West Campus •Pool! •5 Minute Walk to Campus •Covered Parking •Fully Furnished •1-1 from $575 •2-2 from $990 •Elevator L easing Office at 2 2 2 2 Rio G r a n d e 4 7 6 - 4 9 9 2 L e a s i n g O f f i c e a t 2 2 2 2 R i o G r a n d e 4 7 6 - 4 9 9 2 Cornerstone Apts. 2 7 2 8 Rio G ran d e LSP L i * 1ST * h Es? ■J3P< L

i \ L a J I L 4> O 5 1 BR Loft $ 5 4 5 ^ m s l o t * . I 322-9887 Order by Mail, FAX or Phone FAX: P.O Box D A u stin . Texas 78713 471-6741 Classified Phone 471-5244 2 0 w o r d s 5 d a y s ^ 5 Additional Words....$0.25 ea ENTA1 - 3 6 0 EURNISHED APARTMENTS 1 7 13 19 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 8 14 20 26 3 9 15 21 27 1 4 10 16 22 28 5 11 17 23 29 6 12 18 24 30 mercial) ads only limited to private party (non com­ 1 1 I Otter I tor sale may not exceed $1 000 and pnce * must .ippear in the body of the ad copy If I ¡tern* are riot sold, five additional insertions | *>*! be^run at no charge Advertiser must cal before tt a m on the day of the fifth than ■ insertion No copy change Jredu. tion in price) is altowe (other Individual items ottered N A M E . A D D R E S S . CITY...... P H O N E . ................................................................................................. . S T A T E Z I P . ............................................ J I I I I EFF. & 1-2-3-4 BDRM APARTMENTS S ta rtin g a t $ 3 9 0 P re le a s in g F o r S u m m e r a n d F a ll Remodeled Units 11 FLOOR PLANS Fum./Unf. Shuttle B us 5 Min. To Downtown Modern Microwaves Lofts W/Fans Excellent Maint • Spacious • Two Pools • Student Oriented POINT SOUTH Colorado River Bridgehollow — — jg| 5 444-7536 PO INT SOUTH—BRIDGEHOLLOW R e n ta l O f f i c e 1 9 1 0 W illo w crn e k PARADISE IN WEST CAMPUS! \ i l l a \ a l i a r í a offers all the popular amenities as w ell as an a tte n tiv e m a n a g e m e n t an d maintenance staff Come by and see how w ell you can live at affordable rates! • Sparkling Pool • Private Parking • Sport C o u rt • Ceiling Fans • Track Lighting • Electronic Entry • Microwaves • Icem akers • Built-in Shelving St at $3 85 Ottorf \ I*A It r M E N T ^ i ^ A C a u 3 2 2 - 9 8 8 7 ____________ 7-19-1560 2 - 2 $ 1 1 0 0 7-262060 7 5 0 - Typing Page 10 Monday, August 1,1994 The Daily Texan RENTAL RENTAL LARGE 1 -BEDROOM on well-main­ tained property, Beautiful garden setting. Ea*y access to IH-35 off ' 83 N orth. N o pets. Starting at $450. 835-5661. 7-6-206-0 Available June $7 5 OFF FIRST M ONTH'S RENT WITH THIS ADI W alk to campus. Spacious efficiency, large kitchen, all appliances, ceiling fans, large closets. W ater and gas paid. $ 4 1 5 / month 4 5 1 - 7 6 9 4 N ew ly renovated 1-1 in small, quiet complex on shuttle route. 5 0 0 s.f. Includes appliances, ceiling fans, miniblinds, new carpet and tile. Pool and laundry on site G arbage paid. Starting at $450. 4 5 1 - 7 6 9 4 ___________ 7-19-1560 $75 Off First Month's Rent with This Adi Walk to Campus Unique 1-1 w/vaulted ceiling and skylight, $480 cozy efficiency, $435. All appliances, ceiling fans. Extra storage and covered parking available. Security gates, pool and laundry room. W ater/garbage paid. 451-7694 _______________________ 7-19-1560 BROOKSTONE APARTMENTS. Huge 1 BR a v a ila b le now W /D connections, balcony, storage, on UT shuttle, 10 minutes from RVC 447-7565. 7-21-206 NOW Preleosing Cowies-Heeses-Oepftxes-Apts Sarawak 2-2.5 $1200 $1150 3-2.5 Croix Pentfcovse St. Tkoeeas Sabinal Wostploce Wedgewood 1-1 2 - 2 2 -1 2 - 2 2 - 2 2 - 2 $ 1 0 0 0 $900 $350 $350 $525 $500 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 COFFEE PROPERTIES G n a t p ro p e rtie s fo r fa n sem ester D up lex 2 6 2 3 S alodo $ 9 7 5 Lg 2-1 with hdwd flrs. 4 1 cor garage L o n g v ie w T e rra c e 2 3 1 3 Longview $ 6 2 5 - 1-1 with loft, quiet, small complex G aze b o 2 8 1 5 Rio G rande $ 6 5 0 - 1-1 w ith loft - new carpet & pamt G a te w a y 3 0 0 4 Speedway $ 8 2 5 2-2 North Campus • very close to U T P a r a p e t 280 1 Rio G rande $ 9 0 0 - 2 2 W /D , covered prkg R ed R iv e r 470 1 Red River $ 4 2 5 Eff Cute, on shuttle 474-1800 PRE-LEASING! Red River Place at 26th & Red River. Walk to law school. 1-1, gas paid. W /D on site. $399/month. 472-5341 7-25-1060 WEST CAMPUS e fficien cy 1011 West 23rd $ 40 0 gas/water paid. Skylight, balcony, quiet complex. 478-2579 ogent Jockie. 7-25-106 t i m e i s r u n n i n g o u t 1-1 $ 4 2 0 and 2-2 $ 5 4 0 *UT Shuttle* ‘ O lym pic Size Pool* ‘ Racquet Ball* ‘ Aerobics* RIVER TERRACE 2 0 05 W illo w Creek Drive 4 4 7 -6 6 9 6 7-27206 HYDE PARK BR, $ 3 9 5 /m o n th . Located a t 3 4 0 8 Speedway. 469-7891. 7-27-20B-D area 1 Small clean and quiet complex. Efficiencies $325, 400 sq.ft. $80 deposit. One BR's $375 650 sq.ft $80 deposit. Located at 7033 Hwy 290 4 blocks from UT shuttle, 1 / 2 block form Metro. Leave message at 926-69 54 7-26-2060 * * ‘ C a r in g O w n e r s * * * D O N 'T PANIC I Still hove beautiful 1-BR's from $445, 2-BR's from $665 Some with hardwood floors- antique units West Campus-Torryfown Pool, Security KHP 4 7 6 -2 1 5 4 = C 1 T V P R O P E R T IE S i NO W LE A S IN G ! Condos* Townhomes*Apts 706 W. MLK 478-6565 O R A N G E T R E E 2-2.5 Condo in Courtyard 2 roommates needed Call Nick at Campus Condos 474-4800__ , firaplace, op p fia e c e i, $ 1 2 0 0 . O w nar, 4 7 9 !*♦, no # 1 5 3 , for Sa p f m bai •■ISOM CASH FOR college 9 0 0 ,0 0 0 grants available No repayments over Qualify immediately. 1 800- 243-2435 7 29-206 RUNNER NEEDED For busy property management office: EDUCATIONAL M 0 M w tical GUITAR LESSONS: Blues, rock, ja zz, alternative, folk 10 years teochmg experience Andy Bullmy- tan, 452-6181 7 2I-20M Must have reliable transportation, proof of insurance, ond good driv­ ing record Hours preferably 11 -4, M-F $5/hr Position ova i table Aug 15 Call 4 7 4 -5 0 4 3 from 2 4pm. _____________ 7-2 72 06 6 COLLEGE STUDENTS! Summer Jobs A vo i ¡a ble $ 5 /h r ♦ bonuses Call Paige between 3-4 30pm at 505-2349 7 19- 10# EDUCATIONAL EMPLOYMENT 5 9 0 - Tutoring 7 90 - P ort-tim e EMPLOYMENT G eneral Help W anted • TUTORING • REVIEWS OPEN 7 DAYS til Midnight. Sun.-Thur. Since 1980 472-6666 SERVICES ZIVLEY The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING H I BLOCKBUSTER Come see how much fun a telemarketing job can bel W e are now taking applica­ tions to fill 8 positions. Great work environment. No selling. On campus. 2 0 h r/w k Evening shifts. $5 $ 10 /h r. Call CJ at PBC M arketing 477-3808 7-26-568 PHONE SETTER needed to work 5- 9p.m . M-F. N o cold ca llin g A d ­ vancem ent p ositio n s a v a ila b le Call Tim at 453-8782. 7-26-10B PART TIME RECEPTIONIST/CLERK needed for law office near cam­ pus Word processing experience 2- 5pm $5/hr 476-3400. 7-26-58 Outbound calling on prospective residents for the Austin area. Strong verbal communication a must. Tuesday and Thursday, 5-9pm, Saturday 10am-4pm (10-20 hrs/wk) 3 4 6 - 5 1 9 4 , Mr. Lopez from 4-9pm 7-26-566 LENS CRAFTERS. O p e n in g s fo r part-time flexible shifts. Sales and lab *ech positions. A p p ly at Bar- tonC reek 7-26106 lo c a tio n . 3 2 8 -1 2 2 0 SEEKING RESPONSIBLE student for after-school child care for 4 th- grader, Mondays, Tuesdays 2 30- 5 30. Northwest area Need reli­ able tra n sp o rta tio n , references. $5/hour 502-9662 7-28-12B RUNNERS NEEDED M on Am /Pm p ositions. $4 25 -f r age. 346-6094 7-28-5B-D Fri. e s y o u t o b o l i o r T h e D a il y T e x a n Texas Proud. ¡ $ 1 9 C A S H ,1 NEED PARTTIME office employee Must hove m arketing, real-estote PR experience Quick study detoil- m inded. Some com puter w ork. G ood phene skills C a ll 4 5 8 - 4675 7-28-5B-D | j F O R Y O U ! With your first generous | donation of Rfesaving plasma ■ (with this coupon). ■ ! I j Y O U G E T | • free physical on first donation j | | • Free screening on every j I | donation (HIV & Hepatitis) ■ We retire you bring with yon: ‘ Social Security Cord ‘ Proof of Residence * | ‘ Picture ID (UT ID, TDl...) I I AUSTIN PLASMA COMPANY INC. I L 5 10 W. 2 9 t h S t * 4 7 7 - Í 7 3 5 j SECURITY OFFICERS Now hiring full and part-time night security officers for locations near the UT campus area We are looking for people orientated officers with experi­ ence the public Uniforms provided in working with Excellent opportunity for students Call ZIMC O SEC I R in C ONSl LTAYTS L tNc . 343-7210. Mon -Fri 1pm-4pm CRUISE SHIPS N O W H IR IN G - Earn up to $ 2 0 0 0 + /month working on Cruise Ships or Land - Tour com­ p o n .es. W o rld travel. Summer and Full-Time em ploym ent a v a il­ able N o experience necessary. For more inform ation ca ll 1-206- 634-0468 ext. C5867. 6-22-30P. ASSEMBLE EASY Products In Your Spare 1 me Reliable Extra Incomel Program Guaranteed. 1-800-377- 6000 Ext 4150. 8-1 IP HOME T > PI STS, PC users needed. $35 0 0 0 potential. Details Call 6- (1) 805-962-8000 Ext. B-9413 29-28P $100 PER hour possible mailing our circulars. No experience required. For info call 203-221-2011 7- u 206 Telephone appointm ent setters. G uarantee plus huge bonus. G rea t professional com pany representing AT&T. C all Thom at 7 1 9 - 4 1 3 9 M onday-Friday. 7-13-206 ROUTE DRIVER needed, with truck or van. $ 3 0 0 - $ 5 0 0 /week No sales Paid weekly 3 10 -0 1 48 7 I5-20B FLORIST SEEKING a pm sales clerk 451- and a pm delivery person 6728 7-26-56 87 PEOPLE Serious To Lose A ll N e w ll N o w ill W e.g h r pow er needed 1 0 0 % g u a r­ anteed Paul/Jennifer, 918-2919 7-26-206 FILE/MICROFILM CLERK Full or p a i'n m e positions, no experience necessary C all 8 3 7 -9 8 4 7 b e t­ ween 10am & 3 p m for a p p o in t. ment 8-1 3B o rderT axers Accept telephone orders and give information to customers calling about our products. NOT OUTBOUND CALLING. Full time and par* t:me positions available. All shifts avoliable Starting sal­ ary from $5 to $7 per hour, based on experience. Apply in person only between 1 lam and 3pm DO t FLL TELEMESSAGING CENTER 44 East Avenue, Suite 302. Call 370-4795 for more information. 7 284* HIRE A HORN TEMPORARIES needs dependable people for full time (8 5) clerical assignments The tallowing skills would be very helpful Typing (50+WPM), Lo­ tus, WP, MS Word, Excel, etc We also have some general labor assignments available COLLEGE STUDENTS needed to work 4 8 p m. M-F $ 5 /h r +bonuses. M anagem ent positions a va ila b le Cah v_raig at 4 5 3 -8 7 82 between 38.4. 7-28 20B 2 :3 0 - AFTER SCHO OL care 6 OOp m. starting Aug. 15. Two children ages 8 and 10. Must have re lia ble transportation $5 /h o u r C all for Sharon 4 7 1 -7 7 4 8 (day) or 834-9489 (evenings). 7-28-12B PERFECT FOR Students: A p p ro x­ imately 4hrs in the evening W ee­ kend hours also available G reat pay. Professional C leaning Serv­ ice, O ffice number: 3 7 6 -3 9 5 8 D P # :4 5 0 -9 5 15. Ask for K e lly Chapman, 8 1-5B STUDENT AIDES needed for child ren with special needs $ 5 /h o u r. Background in Judaica preferred, but not necessary. Call Congrega­ tion Agudas Achim at 459-3287 6 1-156 LIKE TO talk on the phone? Part- time w ork availa ble for you. N o selling involved, seeking English- speaking and b ilin g u a l phoners. Call Milt at 472-5323. 8-1-5B COMPUTER LAB assistant. M acin­ tosh computers only. Casis Elemen­ tary 30-35 h rs/w k $ 6 /h r . C on­ tact Mr. Fischer 477-1771, 7-29-5B Perfect Part-time Employment Customer Retention Clerks We hove immea ate openings for a company in North Austin for individuals to work for o non-profit health organization. Individuals will be calling past contributors to solicit support to the organization. This is not cold calling and you are not selling anything No commission, stroicjht hourly poy. Work hours 5pm-9pm Must have excellent phone skills. Cal! KELLY TEMPORARY SERVICES 2 4 4 -7 7 3 5 Not an agency-Never a fee. EOE. 7-14-666 Fast? Accurate? Motivated? Two part-time library clerks. Talking Book Program, Texas State Li­ brary. M-F, 8 00am-12:00 noon or I 00-5:0 0 pm and some Saturdays for both. Requires: High School or GED; six months experience per­ forming ten key function Physical |ob Saiaiy $561 per month Coll 463-5474 M /F EOE D 61-160 AFTER SCHOOL program for ele mentary children seeking energetic teachers Various locations flexible hours. North. 459-0258. 61-106 REPRESENTATIVE NEEDED by sportswear company to set up ap­ pointments with sororities and fra­ te rn itie s by telephone. A verage $ 5 0 $ 100 w o rk in g or 2 n ig h ts /w e e k C a ll 1 -8 0 0 -2 4 2 8104. 6-1-36 1 G R O W IN G COM MERCIAL Real Estote Com pany needs part-tim e maintenance/handyman for fall se­ mester. 10-12 H ours/w eek, flex, must have truck, call 452-2553 8 1-360 Micrographics Data Enlry Opera tor- Texas State Library. Requires High School or GED. Six months experience in dato entry and the operation of a microcomputer One year office, clerical of shipping/receiving experience. Good knowledge of business gram mar, punctuation and spelling. Vis­ ual acuity and manual dexterity. Type 55w pm /5 errors. Salary: $1261 per montn Call 463- 5474 M /F EOE D PART-TIME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS South Austin Biotech Company seeking detail oriented individuals for a variety of clerical tasks; Customer Service, data entry, filing, etc 20-30 hrs/wk casual environment $5.50-$7/hr Call 445-6979 9-11 30am M-Th ____________________ Fast-growing company seeds mar ketmg assistant to coordinate pro­ jects Strong writing, computer skills a must. Dependability, ener­ gy, ond ability to meet deodlines also important Atmosphere is co- suai but intense, schedule is flexi­ ble Non-smoking environment Please send resume to Smart-Mail, 2600 McHaie Court # 155, Aus­ tin TX 78758, Attn Roger Arad< 837 1955 Fax 837-85) 1 6158 TO PLACE AN AD IN THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS CALL 4715244 EMPLOYMENT 8 0 0 - General Help W anted HOME TYPISTS, PC users needed $35 ,00 0 potential Details Call (1) 805-962 8000 Ext B-9413 28-23P 7 AIRLINES ALL P O S IT IO N S $ 8 . 0 0 - $ 1 5 . 0 0 . h r HIRING NO W ! NO EXP. NEC! For Information (800) 50 9-55 05 ext a 8 422 BABYSITTER NEEDED for Sunday mornings 9:30-12:30 Start in Sep­ tember $ 5 /h r Call 703-5000 7- 29-46 ATTENTION EDUCATION M a prs Sunday School teacher need K-6 Sunday morning 9 30-12:30 Posi­ tive uplifting self-esteem program, $ 5 0 /S u n d a y If interested c a ll Maurine at 703 5000. 7 29-46 O N W A R D THRU THE F O G If you can walk it like you talk it and have a strong desire to succeed: Be your own boss Moke $ 2 0 0 + a day. Company Vehicle 21 or over Call 8 3 6 -8 2 3 4 . EMPLOYMENT 8 4 ° - Sales FULL-TIME E M P LO Y M E N T $ 2 8 0 /w e e k guaranteed, plus bonuses Looking for mature voices and career-minded people for ticket sales over the telephone. Monday-Friday 1:00-9:00pm & Sunday 4:00- 9 00pm. Call Sam between 10:30am-3:30pm 371-1200 7-6-206 Like to tele m arke t? D o n 't c a ll us.. .Love to fele m arke t? C a ll us! Work as a team member cold colling for the #1 singles organization in Austin Relaxed and fun atmosphere Call Carol 345-2333 EMPLOYMENT 8 9 0 - Clubs - Restaurants BREAKFAST C O O K Guest serv­ ice o rie n te d , neat a p p e a ra n ce . Apply in person at the food ond beverage departm ent in The Em- bas*y Suites Hotel. 5901 North IH- 35. 454 8004 7 29-5B TEXADELPHIA Evening G rill Cook and Lunch Counter Help needed. Hard work, good environment, and decent pay based on experience and ability M ust be neat and well-organized A pply in person, 3:0 0-5 :00, 24 2 2 Guadalupe. ’ 27-66 •AUGH STOP needs pari < me poshve, frie n jy , and flexible box off ce help Call Margaret at 467 2333 11 OOorn- 6:00pm week-days. 8 l 36 7-26-5B 8 5 0 - Retail TEAM SPIRIT NSA. Part-tim e/full time positions available for sports­ wear stores at Barton Creek/High land M all. Looking for energetic responsible, detail-oriented peo­ ple W eekends $ 5 /h o u r 8 9 2 2424 7-27-56 PART-TIME POSITION open for ag gressive sales person Have an eye for interior design, understand the importance of customer serv­ ice W ill tram Apply at 7532 Bur- nett Road Light's Fantastic 625-5B _________________ 8-1-568 8 8 0 - Professional HIRE A HORN IS looking for strong, dependable, hard working individuals for mov­ ing and general labor assignments, hours vary between 8am and 5pm during the week as well as wee­ kends $6 40-$8 5 0 /h r You must have your own transportation Please coll 326-HORN(4676) N O WIMPSI 8-1 2060 ATTENTION Mr Gotti's service center is seeking phone operators for full ond part-time day and evening positions Approximately 25 wpm plus previous customer service experience Also must be available weekends For into; call 4 5 4 4 7 6 0 between 10om-6pm . 8-1-28 8 10 - Office-Clerical SHORT WALK UT Typists (w ill train on computer); Bookkeeping trainees, clerical, runners. 4 7 4 . 2032 7-6-2066 Assistant Center M anager People person with excellent com­ munication and organizational skills Needed to help run educational center on a parttime or fulltime basis. Send cover letter/resume detailing staff supervision, phone skills, customer service, ond computer expei.ence, as well as salary requirement MS Baker 8 1 I W 24th St Austin, TX 78705 7 29 1066 HELD C H EM ISTS^ Rollins Environmental Services, Inc (NYSE "REN"), the nat^n 's leader in incineration of hazardous waste is expanding its CHEMPAK subsid­ iary natio n w id e w ith several im­ mediate entry level Field Chemist positions to service educational, R&D, ond industrial focilities Positions based in D a lla s /F t Worth, TX ond 20 other branch of fices throughout the United States offer travel and extensive client in­ terface. A B S degree in chemis t f y p re fe rre d M a y co nsid e r a B j degree with 20 hours of chem­ istry including organic I & II. Knowl­ edge of environmental, DOT regu­ lations a plus W e offer training in the ra p id ly grow ing field of haz­ ardous waste management, com­ p e titiv e sa la ry and benefits. Please send resume and salary his­ tory In confidence to: Operations Supervisor/HG Rollins CHEMPAK Inc 633 1 12th Street Arlington, TX 76011 EOE 8 9 0 - Clubs- Restaurants DANCERS- ENTERTAINING work Greot income Daily poy Full and p art tim e openings Start imme diotely No experience necessary 371 7600, 320-6696 pager 7 18 20B BANQUET SET-UP person A pply m person at the food and bever og# d epartm ent in the Embassy Suites Hotel, 5901 North IH 35 454-8004 7 29 56 SHORT WALK UT non-smoking Leorn Bookkeeping Also hiring typ­ 'd*, clerical runners 474-2032 7 62086 61 1BD Please call 32 6 HORN(4676) 7-27 2060 THE BAGEL M anufactory has im- mediate opening for weekend de livery driver. 5am-10am Saturday and Sunday Must have re lia b le tra n sp o rta tio n . A p p ly j n person 2200 Guadalupe 7-27 56 Local Delivery Service 61-36 seeking full-time & part- time positions for fall. G oo d driving record & reliable transportation required Please call 4 5 I -6 5 4 4 for details. 6 1 3 6 0 N e w Era Bank Process credit card a p ­ plications over the phone telemarketers. Close to campus. Call 3 2 2 - 9 4 6 9 7 2638 N o w hiring experienced 8 2 0 - 9 0 0 - Domestic- Household BABYSITTER FOR- two c h ild re n ” ages 8 a nd 10 M W f 3-6pm $5/hour Begm August 15fh Must hcxe reliable transportation 322- 0553. 7-27-5B HELP CARE for 2 1 /2 yr old ond I month old. M-F 4 30 8 3 0p m. Sat 9 00a m .-lp m North Austin 335-0461 7-26-5B AFTER SCHOOL childcare 3-6 30 M-F. Non smoker, re lia ble trans­ portation Stan August 22 328- 4 )2 7 Leave messoge 7 2656 SITTER NEEDED mole/female boys ! 0& 1 3 after school in home Driving necessary Begin August 31 454 5355 8156 AFTERNOON BABYSITTFR needed for 9-year old boy weekdays from 3 00 6 00 $ 7 5 / wee* Start Au- gust 15 4 58-5612 7 29 56 NEED STUDENT/NANNY ,n V V ¡^ lake Hills are 1 for 6 year-old and 10 ye ar-o ld form 2 0 0-6 0 0 pm Tuesdays ond Thursdays Transpor- ta tio n and references Call 327-0978 after6 00i sq uire d n 7-29-106 CHILDCARF LOVING responsible pwson to care for two preschoolers T4TH 11.305:30 or 12:305 30 Experience, references, car required $5 5 0 /h r' Coll 47 I -4120 or 794 8638 8 126 MOTHER'S HELPER/BABYSITTER N W Austin, Tuesdoy afternoons, evenings begm nm g September Own cor, referenc smoking only 8858. 8 1 56 required -all Caroline Norv 346- BUSINESS 8-1-88 9 3 0 - Business Opportunities 900 #s Your Own Business! Low Start-up! We s u p p l/ high profit programs! Call 1*800-865-1000 Baseball Continued from page 12 T h e D aily T exan not try in g to do it on p u rp o s e , that's the w ay it's been going for us." R ight-hander Ram on M artinez (10-7) pitched eight-plus innings despite being stung on the inside of his left h an d by a lin e d riv e by James Mouton in the second inning. M artinez then collided w ith Wal- iach trying to field the ball. "He hit me, but he didn't hit me too h a rd ," M artinez said. "I was surprised because I was looking for the ball and I saw W allach rig h t there. It was kind of like, wow." M artinez allow ed one run and seven hits while striking out six and walking two. Martinez shook off the soreness in his left hand and led off the sixth w ith an in fie ld sin g le , sc o rin g m om ents la te r from sec o n d on DeShields' single up the m iddle. W allach follow ed M ike P ia z z a 's sin g le w ith an RBI d o u b le th a t knocked out Houston starter Greg S w in d ell (7-8), and Eric K a rro s greeted Todd Jones with an RBI sin­ gle for a 5-1 lead. Swindell allowed five runs and six hits over 5% innings, with three strikeouts and two walks. "I don't think they hit a ball hard today," the left-hander said. "I was m aking good pitches, b u t every- thing they hit seemed to drop in." Sunday. Thompson, used by the Phillies in a left-field p lato o n w ith P ete Incaviglia, is hitting .273 with three home runs and 30 RBIs in 87 games. The A stros p lan to use th e left- h a n d e d h ittin g T ho m p so n in a right-field platoon with switch-hit- ter Kevin Bass, who has been strug gimg against right-handed pitching. Edens appeared in 39 games for the Astros with a 4-1 record, a 4.50 ERA and one save. ■ A n g e ls 4, R an g ers 3 — In Arlington, Garrett Anderson's first career RBI broke a sixth-inning tie and carried the California Angels to a 4-3 victory Sunday night over the Texas Rangers. Anderson, who w ent 2-for-4 in only his fourth major-league game, slapped a two-out single off Kevin Brown (7-9) to drive in J.T. Snow and allow the Angels to regain the lead they had squandered the pre­ vious inning. Texas scored twice off Chuck Fin- lev (8-10) in the fifth, getting two- out RBI singles from Juan Gonzalez and Dean Palmer. Finley snapped a two-game los­ ing streak, allowing three runs and nine hits in 7 \ innings. He walked four and struck out five. Mark Leit- er pitched the final 1% innings for his second save. Wallach's sacrifice fly scored But­ ler in th e fo u rth for a 1-0 lead before Jeff Bagwell's opposite-field leadoff homer tied it up in the sixth. Houston m anager Terry Collins couldn't figure out the Astros' poor p lay fo llo w in g th e ir su cc ess in Cincinnati. "We came in on a trem endously high note and played absolutely as flat as you can possiby p lay ," he said. VVe talked about it yesterday after the game and today I thought I'd see something different " Brown lost for the first time since June 15 despite pitching his third com plete game. He allow ed nine hits and three runs. The Angels took a 2-0 lead by o p e n in g the gam e w ith th re e straight singles off Brown, a notori­ o u sly bad first-in n in g p itc h e r. Opponents are hitting .379 off him in the first inning this season. Snow drove in Chad Curtis with a single and Spike Owen, who went 3' for"‘}' sc? re¿ °,n a d o u b le p la y groundout by Chili Davis. While the Astros continued their sUde. Bagwell kep. pace in his indi- vidual pursuits. His 36th h o m e r left him fo u r behind m ajor league leader M att Williams and tied him with Frank Thom as and Ken G riffey Jr. The major league RBI lead ed finished July with 29, tying the club record, and leads the majors with 105 RBIs. Rafael Bournigal ad d ed a tw o- run single off Brian Williams in the eighth to make it 7-1. ■ NOTES: The H ouston A stros obtained outfielder Milt Thompson from the P hiladelphia Phillies in exchange for reliever Tom Edens on throughfaSai^ * the T Z Í '/ r T l scored C urtis and p u t C alifornia ahead 3-1. Texas got to Finley in the third as Butch Davis led off with his third double in four at-bats going back to Saturday's game. He scored on a single by Will Clark. But Clark ended the inning when he was called out for not touching second on a Juan Gonzalez roller into right field. Right fielder Jim Edm onds also kept Finley out of trouble earlier in the inning by m aking a nice ru n ­ n in g catch, costing R usty G reer extra bases. Monday, August J, 1994 Page 11 = Dream Continued from page 12 shot only 34 percent in the first half, yet cut D ream Team II's lead td seven points, 42-35, with 4:36 left to g°- After that, the Dream Team ers picked u p the pace and w idened their lead to 57-37 at halftime. They stretched the m argin to 38 points several times late in the game. A few sequences S unday w ere definitely dream like, such as the gam e's opening play when Shawn Kemp fed Derrick Coleman with a perfect interior pass for a layup. But th e c o lle g ia n s h ad th e ir moments, too. Indiana's Alan Hen­ derson blocked O'N eal's hook shot, draw ing oohs and ahhs from the sellout crow d. A nd w hen O'N eal tried to block H enderson's shot at the other end on the next sequence, he was called for goaltending. "I let him block it," O'Neal joked. D o m in iq u e W ilk in s had 14 points, Mark Price scored 12 points on 4-for-6 shooting, and Dan Majer- le a d d e d 11. M iller scored nine p o in ts, all on 3 -p o in ters, before fouling out w ith 2:54 left. Joe D u m a rs, P rice, C olem an, K em p a n d W ilk in s s ta rte d the game. Football Continued from page 12 W illiam son w en t the rest of the way. E lliott, try in g to rep lace Nick Lowery, the Chiefs' all-time leading scorer who was released this sum ­ mer, kicked a 24-yarder and a 28- yarder in the second quarter, slic­ ing the Oilers' lead to 10-6 with two seconds left before halftime. Rookie w ide receiver Lake Daw­ son sco red th e C h ie fs' first TD w hen he broke three tackles on a 52-yard reverse with 2:52 left in the third quarter. That m ade it 17-12 and the Chiefs then took advantage of the NFL's new rule and scored their first 2- p o in t c o n v e rs io n w hen John Stephens carried for the score. Gary Brown, a fourth-year ru n ­ ning back, carried five times for 39 yards in Houston's opening drive, which stalled when A1 Del Greco missed a 34-yard field goal attempt. A few m in u te s la te r, D ish m an in terc ep ted M att B lundin's pass in te n d e d for D aw son and sp e d down the left sideline for the TD. Del G reco co n n ected on a 24- yarder in the second period. g § | g e s you to K o o k foil | lummim and ¡¡p ap er recycling Haround campiii h e D aily T e x a n Texas Proud. Mifar Ltapa BassM NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Montreal Afarria Philadelphia New Yorfc ' Florida Cincinnati Houston Pittsburgh Chicago S t Louis Los Angeles San Francisco Colorado San Diego C«nfrel Division W 65 62 51 50 45 W 61 59 49 47 47 W 52 52 50 41 L 36 42 54 53 59 L 43 46 55 56 56 L 52 54 57 66 P e t 631 ■596 ■466 .485 .433 P et .567 .562 .471 .456 .456 P e t 500 .491 .467 383 GB 3’* 15 15 20’* GB 2'* 12 13’* 13'* GB 1 3’* 12'* West Division Monday’s Games Cincinnati (Hanson 5-5) at San Francisco (Swift 8- 6), 3:05 p.m. S t Louis (Palactos 2-7) at Montreal (Henry 8-2) 8:35 p.m. " Atlanta (Maddux 13-6) at New York (Jacome 4-1) 8:40 p.m. Ronda (Rapp 6-6) at Chicago (Morgan 2-10) 7 05 p.m. Colorado (Painter 3-5) at Houston (Hamisch 7-4) 7:05 p.m. er 5-5), 9:05 p.m. Only gam es scheduled 7‘5) ^ Los An9etes (Hershis- AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W 64 56 50 49 48 l 38 46 53 54 56 P et .627 .549 485 476 .462 Central Division W 62 59 58 50 47 W 50 47 44 40 L 42 43 47 54 56 L 55 56 62 62 West Division Pet .596 .578 .552 481 456 P et .476 .456 .415 392 New York Baltimore Boston Toronto Detroit Chicago Cleveland Kansas City Milwaukee Minnesota Texas Oakland California Seattle GB 8 14'* 15’* 17 GB 2 4* 12 14'* GB 2 6'* 8'* Monday’s Gam es Toronto (Hentgen 12-7 and Cornett 1-2) at Boston (Sele 7-6 and Mrnchey 1-3), 2, 4:05 p m Detroit (Moore 10-9) at Cleveland (Gnmsley 3-1) 6:06 p.m. " New York (Perez 8-3) at Milwaukee (Wegman 8-3), 7:05 p.m. Baltimore (Rhodes 1-5) at Minnesota (Mahomes 8- 4), 7:05 p.m. Oakland (Darting 10-9) at Kansas City (Gubicza 6- 8), 7:05 p.m. Onty gam es scheduled baseball roundup Leader* Bmrtcaa Laagn M a n TGwynn S D Bagwell Hou Morris Cm AJou Mon Jefferies StL P ia ría LA Justice Att Boone Cin Mitchell Cin Cortine Fla AVERAGES AB 379 369 404 377 360 370 316 339 280 406 G 100 101 103 97 94 98 94 98 86 104 H 146 135 141 125 118 120 102 109 90 130 P e t .385 .366 .349 332 .328 .324 .323 .322 .321 .320 Thom as Chi O’N eil N Y Bene Cie Lofton Cie Molitor Tor Boggs N Y WOartt Tex C D avis Cat Palmeiro Bal Baerga Cie AVERAGES AB 366 331 396 416 405 328 360 357 390 395 G 104 93 102 101 103 88 101 99 101 92 H 134 119 142 148 140 113 118 116 126 127 P e t .366 .360 .359 .356 .346 .345 .328 .325 .323 .322 R U N S — Bagwell, Houston, 97; Grissom, Montreal, 86, Bonds, San Francisco. 82: Biggio, Houston. 90; Lankford, St. Louis, 77, Galarraga, Colorado 77- Bichette, Colorado, 72. RUNS — Thomas, Chicago, 101; I 96, Be Be, Cleveland «6 Canseco ley Jr, Seattle, 82; Phillips, Detroit, 81; Knoblauch, Minnesota. 78. HITS — TGwynn, San Diego, 146; Morris, Cincin­ nati, 141; Bichette, Colorado, 139; Bagwell, Hous­ ton, 135; Galarraga, Colorado, 133; Conine, Flori­ da, 130; Ak>u, Montreal, 125; Grissom. Montreal, 12S. HITS — Lofton, Cleveland, 148; Belle. Cleveland, 142; Moktor, Toronto, 140; Thomas, Chicago, 134; Knoblauch, Minnesota, 127; Baerga, Cleveland 127- Griffey Jr, Seattle, 127. RBI I — Bagwell, Houston, 105; Bichette, Colorado, 94; MaWiHiams, San Francisco, 90: Piazza, Los Angeles, 85. Galarraga, Colorado, 85; McGriff, Atlanta. 81; LWalker, Montreal, 78. RBI — Belle, Cleveland, 98; Puckett, Minnesota. 97; Thomas, Chicago, 95; Carter. Toronto, 95; Franco, Chicago, 88; Canseco, Texas, 85; Sierra, Oakland 84. HR — MaWiHiams, San Francisco, 40; Bagwell, Houston, 36; Bonds, San Francisco, 32; Galarraga, Colorado. 31; Bichette, Colorado, 27; McGriff, Atlanta, 27; MitcheA, Cincinnati, 27. HR — Thomas, Chicago, 36; Griffey Jr, Seattle, 36; Bede, Cleveland, 35; Canseco, Texas, 29; Fielder, Detroit. 25; MVaughn. Boston, 24; Carter, Toronto 24. DOUBLES — LWalker, Montreal, 40; Biggio, Hous­ ton, 38; Bichette, Colorado, 32; JBell, Pittsburgh, 30; TGwynn, San Diego, 30; Bagwell. Houston, 29 Morris, Cincinnati, 29. DOUBLES — Knoblauch, Minnesota, 42; Belle, Cleveland, 35; Fryman, Detroit, 33; Thomas. Chica­ go, 31; Lofton, Cleveland. 29; Palmeiro. Baltimore, 29; Nilsson, Milwaukee, 28; Baerga, Cleveland 28 Puckett, Minnesota, 28. TRIPLES — RSanders, Cincinnati, 8; DLewts, San Frandsco, 8; Butter, Los Angeles. 8; Clayton, San Francisco, 6; TFemandez, Cincinnati, 6; 11 are tied with 5. TRIPLES — U obnson, Chicago, 13; Coleman, Kansas City, 11; Lofton, Cleveland, 8; ADiaz. Mil­ waukee, 7; McRae, Kansas City, 6; White, Toronto 6; 6 are tied with 5. STOLEN BASES — DSanders, Cincinnati, 36; Grissom. Montreal, 35; Biggio, Houston. 32; Can, Florida, 31; DLewis. San Francisco, 27; De Shi elds Los Angeles, 26; Mouton, Houston, 24 STOLEN BASES — Lofton, Cleveland, 54; Cole­ man, Kansas City, 49; Nixon, Boston, 36; Knoblauch, Minnesota, 31; McRae, Kansas City, 28; A Cole, Minnesota, 27; ByAnderson, Baltimore, 27. PITCHING (11 Decisions) — Freeman, Colorado, 10-2. 833, 2.90: Mercker, Atlanta, 9-3, .750, 3.57; Saberhagen, New York, 12-4, .750, 2.82; KHifl, Montreal, 14-5, .737, 3.18: DnJackson, Philadel­ phia. 13-5, 722, 3.42; Rijo, Cincinnati, 9-4, .692, 3 17; GMaddux, Atlanta, 13-6, .684,1.69. PITCHING (11 Decisions) — Key, New York, 16-3, 842, 3.27; Bere, Chicago, 10-2, 833, 3.68; Boever, Detroit. 9-2, .818, 3.62; Cone, Kansas City, 15-4, .789, 2.74; MClark, Cleveland, 11-3, .786, 3.82; Mussina. Baltimore, 14-5, .737, 3.24; MPerez, New York, 8-3, .727, 3.70; Wegman, Milwaukee 8-3 .727, 3.98. STRIKEOUTS — Benes, San Diego, 175; Rijo, Cincinnati, 147; GMaddux, Atlanta, 137; Glavtne, Atlanta, 132; Saberhagen, New York, 131; PJMartmez, Montreal, 129; F ass ero, Montreal, 119 STRIKEOUTS — RJohnson, Seattle, 183; Clemens, Boston, 154; Finley. California, 139; Appier, Kansas City, 133; Hentgen, Toronto, 130; Cone, Kansas City, 120; Rogers, Texas, 117. SAVES — DJones, Philadelphia, 27; Franco, New York, 27; Beck, San Francisco, 25; Wetteland, Montreal, 21; McMichael, Atlanta, 20; Myers, Chica­ go, 20; Hudek, Houston, 16; BRuffin, Colorado, 16. SAVES — LeSmith, Baltimore, 32; Montgomery, Kansas City, 23; Aguilera, Minnesota. 21; Eckersley, Oakland, 17; Fetters, Milwaukee, 16; Russell, Cleve­ land, 16; Ayala, Seattle, 15; Howe, New York, 15 U.S.* Miller loses at Goodwill Games, ends 2-year win streak Associated Press ST. PETERSBURG, R ussia — Shannon Miller's two-year winning itreak is over. In her first defeat since the 1992 Olympics, America's most decorat­ 'd g y m n a s t w as b ea te n for the w o m en 's a ll-a ro u n d title at th e .jo o d w ill G am es on S u n d a y by Russia's Dina Kochetkova. The 17-year-old Russian won the ^old by slightly more than five-hun- J re d th s o f a p o in t — 39.325 to 39.268. Yelena Grosheva of Russia won the bronze with 38.943 points. Since taking the silver m edal at the 1992 Barcelona Games, Miller had w on th e a ll-a ro u n d title at every m ajo r e v e n t in w hich she competed — including the 1993 and 1994 world championships. Basically it com es d ow n to: if you ve got to beat Shannon, she's got to beat h erself," coach Steve Nunno said. Kochetkova, who won the bronze at this y ea r's w orlds in Brisbane, Australia, led throughout Sunday's competition at the Lenin Sports and Concert Complex. M iller, 17, hurt her chances by finishing fourth in the first event — the vault. She took steps on both of her landings and finished w ith an average score of 9.731 points, while K ochetkova m oved into th e lead with 9.763. "I think the little steps I took out of both my vaults made the differ­ ence," Miller said. "It was so close." Kochetkova scored 9.787 on the uneven bars as Miller moved up to third overall with 9.750. In the bal­ ance beam , K ochetkova sco red 9.850 and M iller climbed into sec­ ond with 9.887. The Russian headed into the final floor exercise, leading Miller 29.400 to 29.368. Miller went first, performing to a m edley of H u n g arian m usic. She stum bled slightly on her landing after a double back somersault with a twist, but otherwise showed good tumbling moves and musical inter­ pretation . The judges gave h er a score of 9.912. K o c h etk o v a w as next, and show ed m ore dynam ic tum bling skills. Her routine featured a layout, double-back somersault for openers and a double-back somersault with a full tw'ist for a finish. Her landing was perfect and she received a score of 9.900. Miller, of Edmond, Okla., has five Olympic and seven world cham pi­ onship m edals — m ore than any other U.S. gymnast, male or female, in history. But h e r v u ln e ra b ility becam e clear in the team event Saturday, w hen the U nited States finished fourth and she was third in the indi­ vidual scoring. The event was plagued by several com puter scoring glitches. At first, the scoreboards were showing only the top vault instead of the average of the two vaults. Later, the com puter and the offi­ cial scoresheet were rounding up ra th e r th a n ro u n d in g dow n th e scores. And finally, the final scores w ere originally listed as 39.30 to 39.28. Miller was not the only American whose winning streak was snapped Sunday. Wrestler Bruce Baumgartner's 23- match string was broken. He settled for the bronze m edal in the 286- pound class. The two-time Olympic and two-time world champion lost his first m atch 1-0 on a referee's decision to his Russian rival, Andre Shumilin. Raft Continued from page 12 was traveling down Town Lake. G arriot, how ever, is the first to volunteer that his ideas are only a small part of the final product that was in the water on Saturday. "It's definitely a collaboration," said Garriot. "I've got a bunch of c re a tiv e frie n d s th a t all d o th is together. The Origin and Custom Creations crew spent about a month working on th e ir ra ft and even c o m m is­ sioned Scott Jones, a local artist, to do some work on the horse and the d ra g o n . They, how ever, d id not have very m uch tim e to rehearse th e k n ig h t and d ra g o n p e r f o r ­ mances. "We only got all the audio tracks. We got a cd-bum of it on line about 48 hours ago," said Garriot. Even w ithout m any rehearsals, the show that they p u t on was the biggest crowd-pleaser of the day. O ther rafts that attracted atten ­ tion included a w orking volcano an d an u p s id e -d o w n cow th at squirted out water instead of milk. "These are artists that come out here and m ake these rafts," said K aren K laus, a m o rn in g DJ for KHFI. Many other elaborate rafts were also built by co-workers from p lace s like H om e D epot, A p p le C o m p u te r, S um m aG rap h ics and Dianetics. Henry Garcia, the captain of the SummaGraphics team, felt that the raft race was a good bonding expe­ rience for co-workers. "We did this to build up our team — this is for team -building," said Garcia. The team had spent a week build­ ing their raft, as did the Apple crew w ho had b u ilt a raft th at w ould accom m odate 20 people. But you didn't need to use that much effort to be part of the fun. There were many private entries “Every year there are a few little floats that go down to the bottom. But we always try to get peo­ ple up and all the way down to [Interstate] 35.” — Karen Klaus, KHFI disc jockey b u ilt by g ro u p s of frie n d s. O ne group, who had decided on a soccer theme to com mem orate the World Cup, was still touching up their raft w hen m ost of the e n tra n ts w ere already in the water. A nd how lo n g had they b een working? "A bout 12 hours'," said one m em b er o f the W orld C u p crew . "W ell n o t ev e n , we g ot together for about three hours last night." Every once a w hile, h o w ev er, rafters d isco v er that m aybe th ey should have p ut in just a little more work. "Every year there are a few little floats that go dow n to the bottom," said Klaus. "But we always try to get people up and all the way dow n to [Interstate] 35." Finishing first in the actual race was not really a concern for th e rafters. Awards were given for most o rig in a l, m o st h u m o ro u s a n d ju d g e s ' fa v o rite , w h ile the ra ft selected as best of show was aw ard­ ed $500. That is w hat the co ntes­ tants set out to win. And for the third year in a row, the O rigin and Custom C reations team stole the show while captur­ ing the top aw ard and creating a world all their own. The other contestants were v an ­ q u ish ed an d th e k n ig h t re ig n ed supreme. Hall___ Continued from page 12 His last years were spent hop­ ing he w ould get a call from the H all of F am e,' C hris D u ro ch er said, sobbing and barely audible at times. "A t first, I thought what a sham e it was th a t he could n o t have lived to receive it himself. But now I know, as I stand here, that mv fa th e r s ta n d s w ith us h e re today. I guess he got tim e off for good behavior." It didn t take a hoarse Rizzuto long to change the somber mood. The 1950 MV P, who played on nine American League pennant-winners in 13 seasons, was in top form. He w ent from D urocher ("W hen I'd pop up, he'd say, Home run in an elevator sh aft,"') to the N avy ("I got seasick every day. I gave away m y am m unition and later found ou t I could have been courtm ar- tialed. They put me off the ship. It w as in N ew G uinea. I th o u g h t I was going to see a lot of Italians.") M idw ay th ro u g h , th e fo rm er New York Yankees shortstop, and th e te a m 's c u rre n t b ro a d c a ste r, broke up the crowd. If people are understanding this speech, raise y o u r h a n d s ," said Rizzuto, w ho turns 77 in Septem­ ber. "My family knows me. They're raising their hands." Wendell Smith, a writer for the Chicago American and Chicago Sun- lim e s , receiv ed th e J.G. T aylor S pink A w ard for his serv ic e to b aseb all. S m ith, th e firs t black m em ber of the Baseball W riters A ssociation of A m erica, h elp ed Jackie Robinson break baseball's racial barrier in 1946 and wrote the first b io g rap h y o f the Brooklyn Dodgers star. New York Mets broadcaster Bob M urphy received the Ford Frick Award for his more than 40 years as a broadcaster. Dodgers complete sweep of Astros Associated Press LOS A N G E L E S — T im W a l­ lace's discipline d u ring the lonely days of N ovem ber is paying off in the heat o f a pennant race. W allach, u n d e r the tu telage of firs t-y e a r h ittin g coach R eg g ie Smith, has rejuvenated his sw ing in time to help keep the Los A nge­ les D odgers atop the NL West. He had tw o RBIs and scored a ru n as the D odgers co m p leted a three-gam e sw eep of the H ouston Astros w ith a 7-1 victory Sunday. W allach knew he n eed ed help after three consecutive seasons of Finley, Angels edge Rangers, 4-3 h i t t i n e u n d e r 7 1 0 h ittin g u n d e r .230. H e s ta r te d w o rk in g d a ily w ith S m ith in N ovem ber, then eased u p to two o r th re e w eekly h ittin g sessio n s once the season began. The result is a .347 average, 20 h o m e ru n s and lots of confidence. He has been positive from day one. Regardless if I felt I w as h a v ­ ing a bad day and like I struggled h e 'd find so m eth in g go o d ab o u t w h a t h a p p e n e d ," W allach said . You just do n 't see that th at often. People tend to w ork off the nega­ tives, b u t he will not do that and i he w o n 't let m e do that." , . Coming off a 3-10 road trip, the D o d g e rs im m e d ia te ly b o u n c e d h ack a t h o m e . T h e y o u ts c o r e d H o u s to n 20-7 in th e s e rie s a n d m aintained a one-gam e lead over San Francisco, a 9-4 w inner S u n ­ d a y o v e r C o lo ra d o . T h e lo ss d r o p p e d th e A s tro s 2% g a m e s behind Cincinnati in the NL C en­ tral. This is w hat we needed, to get h o m e ," D o d g e rs m a n a g e r Tom L a s o rd a s a id . " T h a t 's h o w w e have to p lay all the tim e — aggres­ sive, daring baseball.” I hat a ttitu d e e x te n d e d to the basepaths, too. D elino D eShields and Brett Butler com pleted a dou ­ ble steal in the fourth that p ut But­ ler in scoring position. DeShields then spark ed a four- run sixth inning w ith an R B I sin­ gle. His th re e -ru n h o m er F riday night with tw o out in the bottom of the ninth gave the D odgers a 7- 5 victory in the series opener. It seem s w e g e t o u r ru n s in bunches," D eShields said. "F o r a period of tim e w e d o n 't score and w e have those big innings. W e're P le a s e s e e B a s e b a ll, p a g e 11 Fa st B reak RATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE PRESEASON Dallas 17, Minnesota 9 K ansas City 24. Houston 17 L A Raiders 25, Denver 22 MAJOR LEAGUE BASESAU. NATIONAL LEAGUE Los Angeles 7, Houston 1 Atlanta 9, Philadelphia 5 New York 6. Pittsburgh 4 Chicago 9, St. Louis 7 Cincinnati 2, San Diego 1 (10) San Francisco 9, Colorado 4 Montreal 13, Florida 4 A M E R IC A N L E A G U E California 4, Texas 3 Milwaukee 5, Boston 2 New York 4, Cleveland 1 Toronto 6. Baltimore 4 Kansas City 9, Minnesota 5 Chicago 8, Seattle 1 Detroit 5, Oakland 4 Associated P ress H o u s to n s J e f f B a g w e ll h it h is 36th h o m e ru n d u rin g S u n d a y ’s ga m e . Dream Teamers dispose of college players Associated Press OAKLAND, Calif. — For one ,it least, D ream Team II halt should have been glad the score­ b o a rd s at O ak lan d C o lise u m Arena weren't working. Playing the collegians who rep­ resented the United States in the G oodw ill Games, the NBA's top pros looked a little ragged in the first half Sunday, one day before they w ere to lea v e for Toronto and the World Championships. In the game's first 14 minutes, Dream Team II put up just 40 points but still beat the Goodwill Games team 113-75. "I don't think w e shot the ball that w e ll and p layed that w e ll overall, said Kevin Johnson, w h o had gam e highs ot eight assists and 24 minutes. "But w e have so much talent it makes up for a lo t oi m istakes that w e have. T h o se guys threw us off because they're g o o d i-o n -1 p la y e rs, and w e never got in sync." Shaquille O'Neal led the Dream learn ers w ith 18 p o in ts and grab b ed eig h t reb o u n d s in 18 m in u tes. Tyus Edney of UCLA led the G o o d w ill G am es team w ith 13 points, and W isconsin's M ich ael Finley and M ich igan State's Shawn Respert each had All fiv e of the arena's score­ boards w ere out o f com m ission d u rin g the first half, so public a d d r e ss D ick Callaghan had to give the score after every basket. a n n o u n cer A jetlagged G ood w ill G am es team , w h ich w on the b ron ze m edal at St. Petersburg, Russia, Briefs A gassi wins Player’s Ltd. International ■ T O R O N T O - It was not just a n o th e r d a y at th e o ffice for A ndre Agassi. T his w as an u n fla sh y , w o rk ­ man-like Agassi, not the flamboy­ ant charmer, who wron his second Player's Ltd. International tennis title Sunday by halting A ustralia's Jason Stoltenberg s run of upsets 6-4, 6-4. The eighth-seeded Agassi used a c o n s is te n t first se rv e a n d an equally im pressive second serve to th ro w S toltenb erg off his net game. Agassi w as brilliant on his first serve, and saved all seven break points in the one-hour, 20-minute match at the N ational Tennis C en­ tre. In the d o u b les final, Z im b ab ­ we s Byron Black and A m erican Jonathon Stark won 6-4, 6-4 over A m ericans Patrick M cEnroe and Jared Palmer. Pride takes FedEx St. Jude Classic M E M P H IS , T e n n . — D ic k y P ride, w ho en tered Sunday in a threesom e for the lead, beat Hal S u tton and G e n e S auers w ith a 20-foot b ird ie p u tt on th e firs t playoff hole to win the $1.25 m il­ lion Federal Express St. Jude C las­ sic, his first victory on the PGA Tour. He p ut him self into the playoff bv sinking a 25-foot birdie pu tt on No. 18. T he v ic to ry g a v e P rid e , th e third alternate w ho learned Tues­ d a y h e w o u ld p la y w h e n L ee J a n zen w ith d re w , th e $225 000 w inner's check. He shot his third straig h t 4 -u n d e r-p a r 67 and fin­ ished at 26/ tied with Sutton (64) and Sauers (66), w ho also birdied No. 18 to go to 267. Sutton and Sauers missed their birdie putts by inches on the play­ r 7 off hole. Chiefs score TD with 18 seconds left to beat Oilers Associated Press IRVING — Barr>- Sw itzer's NFL p re se a so n d e b u t w as successful S unday night, thanks to a player he re c r u ite d o u t o f H e n r y e tta , Okla., High School in 1984. Trov A ik m a n th re w a to u c h ­ d o w n p a s s a n d th e d e f e n d in g S u p e r Bow l c h a m p io n D a lla s Cow boys rolled to a 17-9 victory over the M innesota Vikings. S w itz e r w a s h ir e d b y o w n e r Jerry Jones on March 30 to replace Jimmy Johnson. Sw itzer w on tw o national titles in 16 years at O kla­ homa and h a d n 't coached football for five years w hen he got the call. D allas q u a rte rb a c k T roy A ik ­ man quickly show ed his old col­ lege coach w h y he is m o re e ffi­ cient in a p ro -sty le offen se than the W ishbone T S w itzer tried to get him to play at Oklahom a, trig­ g e rin g A ik m a n 's to UCLA in 1985. tr a n s f e r A ikm an took the C o w b o y s 65 y a rd s in 11 p la y s on th e ir first possession, hitting six of six pass­ es for 52 yards along the w ay. The payoff cam e on a tw o-yard scor­ ing p a ss to fullback D aryl Jo h n ­ ston. It w as th e only possessio n Aikman played in the game. R odney Peete, A ik m an's b ack ­ up w ho was a starter last year for Detroit, hit rookie Willie Jackson, a fo u rth -ro u n d d ra ft pick from F lo rid a , w ith a 2 6 -y a rd to u c h ­ dow n pass in the second quarter. The plav was setu p by com erback C layton H o lm es' in te rc ep tio n of Gino Torretta. Rookie C hris Boniol closed out the C ow b oy s sco rin g w ith a 17- vard field goal in the fourth q u ar­ ter. ^ The only V ikings p o in ts cam e on a 46-yard Car)' Blanchard field goal w ith 7:44 left in the gam e and a five-yard touchdow n pass from Brad Johnson to Q adry Ismal with C o w b o y s D e rric k L a s s ie s p r a in e d h is k n e e d u rin g th e firs t p e rio d of 3:08 left in the gam e. The to u c h ­ d o w n p a ss w as set u p on a 50- yard Johnson-to-Ismal pass. A fter the V ikings to u c h d o w n they w ent for two, but Johnson's pass to O landa Truitt w as short. W'arren M oon, w ho play ed 10 years for H ouston, m ade his M in­ nesota debut, hitting four of seven passes for 45 y ard s as he p layed only the first period. Em m itt Smith, the N FL's lead ­ ing ru sh er the last three seasons, d id n 't play nor did starting Dallas w ide receivers Michael Irvin and A lvin H a rp e r, w ho a re n u rs in g injuries. D allas lost se c o n d -strin g r u n ­ n ing back D errick Lassie w ith a sprained knee in the first period. A c ro w d o f 59,062 w a tc h e d I S w itz e r's p ro fe s s io n a l d e b u t in Texas S ta d iu m . M in n eso ta no w le a d s D a lla s 4-3 in p re s e a s o n games. ■ C h ie f s 24, O il e r s 17 — In K ansas City, Mo., Alex Van Pelt h it Lee H a r r is w ith a 2 5 -y a rd touchdow n pass w ith 18 seconds le ft S u n d a y n ig h t, g iv in g th e Kansas City Chiefs a 24-17 exhibi­ tion victory over the H ouston O il­ ers in th e first gam e on the new grass field at A rrow head Stadium. The C hiefs m oved 89 on eight p lays, in c lu d in g a 2 2 -yard pass from Van Pelt to w id e rec e iv e r Jimmy Johnson to the O ilers' 25. Kansas City tied it 17-17 with a penalty-filled 56-yard drive in the fo u rth p e rio d , c lim a x ed by Lin Elliott s 41-yard field g oal w ith 5:40 left. C ris D ish m a n 's 64-yard in te r­ ception return gave H ouston a 7-0 lead in the first quarter. th e ir g a m e a g a in s t th e V ik in g s . Asso ciated P re ss T he g ra s s field w as in sta lle d this sum m er 22 years after A rrow ­ head opened w ith artificial turf. Two Chiefs left the gam e w ith w h a t w ere d e scrib ed as co n cu s­ sions Ron D ickerson w as im m o­ bilized and carried off the field on a s tre tc h e r in th e first h a lf a n d A nthony Daigle w as helped aw ay w ith a m ild c o n c u s s io n in th e th ir d p e r io d . Both w e re h u r t returning kicks. T h e O ile rs , w h o lo s t to th e C n e ts last y e a r in th e o p e n in g ro u n d of the AFC playoffs, used C ody Carlson only in the opening s e r ie s . C a rls o n , r e p la c in g th e d e p a rte d W arren M oon as q u a r­ terback, hit one of five a tte m p ts fo r 20 y a r d s . S ean S a lis b u r y , B u ck y R ic h a rd s o n a n d Lee ^ P le a s e s e e F o o tb a ll, p a g e 11 r »ease s e e F o o tb a ll, p a g e 11 | Please see Dream, page 11 «• arlton, Rizzuto, Durocher enter Cooperstown — “ W i o l o o * . . . . —............. ... i„HCÍk>' i l KSTOWN' N Y - * « " > Carlton and I hil Rizzuto entered baseball's Hall of Fame on Sunday completely in character - Carlton displaying little em otion until the end of his short speech and Rizzuto bringing e house w >th a rambling half-hour “ Carlton, stung by a m agazine article this year that portrayed him as anti-Semitic, had a t chance to break the silence that marked half his 24-year career and tell the baseball world liWe«líwmtlf ^ ChOSeinS'ead ,0 reVeal It was an altogether appropriate setting to honor one of baseball's great recluses The makeshift podium from which Carlton spoke Halfof F a me ’’* SPCnt h O P i" 9 h® WOuld get a ca" ,rom the w as set on a lawn on the outskirts of this quaint village, the deserted Catskill M oun­ tain foothills in the background. Carlton, 49, lives on a 400-acre spread in the Colorado Rockies. In one of his few per­ sonal r e c o lle ctio n s, he sp o k e of a W hite House visit. I remember we were in the White House after we won the World Series in 1980," Carl­ ton said. The next day there was a picture in the papers and I was listed as an unnamed Secret Service man." Carlton, who strmk out 4,136 batters, sec- Chris Durocher, son o f Leo Durocher ond only to N olan Ryan, is the only pitcher to w in lo u r Cy Y oung A w a rd s. H e w on 329 gam es, second am o n g le ft-h a n d e rs only to W a rre n S p ah n . H e c r e d ite d c a tc h e r T im McC arver, w ho w as in the audience. " H e forced m e to pitch in sid e ," C arlto n said. He d set u p behind the hitters and the on \ t ling I could see w as the um pire. I w as one ot the most focused pitchers to ever play th e gam e and T im m y re m e m b ered e v e ry ­ thing about everything." Carlton said the trade that sent him from a p en n a n t contender, the St. Louis C ardinals, to the w oeful P h ila d elp h ia P h i l l i e s i n 1972 w as one of the keys to his success. . 7 rh ® *ra d e v.vas a b lessing in d isg u is e ," a id Carlton, w h o w on 27 gam es that year on a team that w on just 59. "It gave m e a chance to put my ideas in focus." C arlton w as follow ed by Leo D u ro ch er's « - w if e , actress Laraine Day, and th eir son, is, in th e m ost riveting p a rt of the cere­ mony. T he feisty D u ro ch er, w h o se te a m s w on 2,008 games, seventh on the all-tim e list, died m 1991 at age 86. He once said he d id n 't w ant to go in th e H all o f Fam e afte r he d ie d If there was bitterness when he said that, it was orgotten S unday w hen his son accepted the plaque. P le a s e s e e H a ll, p a g e 11 Dungeons and dragons Weekend raft race showcases creativity o f contestants A n d y W ang Daily Texan Staff The m ig h ty k n igh t on h is m ig h ty horse held his head high with the knowl­ edge that he was victorious. The dragon had just been vanquished. The inhabi­ tants of the castle w ere now safe and they cheered on the knight and frolicked and danced to music with a newfound sense of security. No, this wasn t a King Arthur m ovie or even m edieval dinner theater This was a group of many creative entrants in he 13th annual KHFI Raft Race on Town Lake Saturday between MoPac Express­ way and 1-35. This group o f entrants had decided that sim p ly b u ild in g a raft w a sn 't enough. I hey wanted to put on a show And decked out in m edieval garb and e q u ip p e d w ith s w o r d s in th e ir m an- made castle raft, they entertained specta­ tors as th e k n igh t on th eir m a n -m a d e horse defeated the m an-m ade dragon. I le castle, horse and dragon w ere t h e b rainchild of em p lo y ee s o f O rigin S ys­ tems and C ustom Creations, tw o Austin c o m p a n ie s w h o h ave en tered the race together three years in a row and ended up with top honors each tim e Many m em bers of the crew credit Ori­ gin's Richard Garriot for generating the raft idea Garriot is w ell-know n in soft­ w are circles for his role-playing gam es in the extrem ely su ccessfu l U ltim a series ,arnot is k now n as Lord British in t h e com puter w orld and the slogan of Origin is We create worlds." And after w eeks o f work, Lord British and h is crew had created their o w n special w o rld and it Please see Raft, page 11 Of the Origin and u * Ashtey G am io rV D a ily T e x a n Staff gin and Custom Creation Crew disassembled their reft after Saturday s race Lemieux expected to m iss upcoming season P IT T S B U R G H _ M a rio L em ieux w ill m eet w ith P itts ­ burgh P en gu in s ow n er H ow ard Baldwin this w eek and likely will tell him he isn't healthy enough to p la y th is se a s o n , a c c o r d in g to sources close to the team. Lemieux has m issed at least 25 gam es over each of the last five s e a so n s d u e to a bad back and H odgkin's disease. The P en g u in s w ould not co n ­ firm b ro a d cast reports S u n d ay night that Lemieux has decided to tem porarily retire from the gam e or w ill sit out the first half of the season before deciding whether to return in the 1994-95 season One of the greatest scorers and p la y m a k e r s in h o ck ey h isto ry L e m ie u x is o n ly 28 and s till w ould be young enough to mount a com eback should he d ecide to sit out a year or tw o of hockey. C om piled fro m A ssociated Press reports C / U fittA R Tuesday I COWBOYS CAMP Practices are from 8:45 a.m. through 10:45 a.m. and from 4 p.m. through 6 p m. at St. Edward's University. For more inform ation, call 217- CAMP Groups with sports calendar ttems should call 471 4591 or come by The Daily Texan at 25th Street and Whitt* Avenue Page 12 Thursday, September 1,1994 T h e D a ily T e x a n FOOD FIGHT People throw tomatoes during the annual tomato war mated 220,000 pounds of tom atoes during this year’s in Bunol. Spain. Som e 20.000 people threw an esti- festival, a tradition that dates to the Middle Ages. Associated Press •¿(a Free Live Music Retarte d Elf Dah-Veed Sunflower The Nixons [m Bug Coyote Dreams The Cactus Cafe presents: Little Jack Melody and his Young Turks. \ m Tl jm © FRIDAY, SEPT. 9 ,1 9 9 4 9pm tiu 2am 0 Free Admission PartyZilta T exas U nion Open House and Jam 24th and Guadalupe T T v ; _ . MM Bowling Movies 50c in the R ecC enteri Union , 7pm till 2am T heatre M idnight Food T ill A t the . >. Plus Games and Prizes H err o u t w m i l s y o u c a m . TEXAS union mm 0 Sponsored by the T exas Union • C o Sponsored by 1 0 7 .7 K - NACK Radio and JAN SPORT A lcoh ol available in designated areas only. F o r m o re inform ation cafi 4 7 5 - 6 6 3 0 U.S. military dependents depart Guintánamo Bay Associated Press GUANTANAM O BAY NAVAL BASE, Cul — Tears streamed down the cheeks of Petty Offir 1st Class Carmen Booth as she waved goodbye Wlnes- day to her husband and their two small childredur- ing the base's first evacuation of military depelents since the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. Booth and her husband are in the Navy ancnust remain on duty at the base, located at Cuba's sohem tip. But their children — 3-year-old Brian and /ear- old Laura — were among the first military depeients evacuated from the base to make room for more (iban refugees. Chief Petty Officer Patrick Booth accompanii his children on the ferry and charter flight that toe 280 people to Norfolk, Va. He will then take his childin to St. Louis to stay with relatives and return to his pst in Guantánamo. ''W hat can you say?" Patrick Booth said as hefted Brian. His voice choked: "O u r kids are leaving usor a y ear." Military spouses and children, school teacher:and some other civilian workers and their dependenl are among roughly 2,200 people being moved out froi the base over the next week. The 41-square-mile base, known among militaryper- sonnel for its friendly, small-town atmosphere, has been transformed by the Cuban refugee crisis. Parts of the base, nicknamed "G itm o ", have een turned into small, teeming tent cities with thousands of Cuban and Haitian refugees. The evacuation was spurred by fears that there could be escapes or riots at the growing refugee camps as well as the need to relieve the strains from the new res­ idents on the small base's infrastructure. M any of the evacuees were bitter. As they prepared to board the charter flight for Nor­ folk, three sisters whose parents are in the Navy wore protest T-shirts that read: "A m erican refugee from C u ba" and "I am a dislocated, relocated, evacuated, unemployed Gitmo resident." "It's hard. All of a sudden you have to leave," said Kia Sawyers, 20. "It's disrupting my life. ... They spare no expense on the im m igrants." Sawyers said she had to give up a civil service job at the base and was only one semester from earning her associate degree in business. All the base schools have been closed because of the evacuations. "It gets me all mad because I'm not going to see my friends. W e can't see our parents for a long tim e," said her 9-year-old sister, Desirea Shropshire. She and her other sister, Danika Shropshire, 13, are going to Atlanta to stay with an aunt they have not seen in years. They will have to attend new schools and adjust to big-city life after three years at the once-tran- quil base. There are usually about 7,000 residents at the base. They have been joined by nearly 30,000 Cuban and Haitian refugees; 1,500 more Cubans were on the way after being picked up Tuesday by the Coast Guard. It’s Harvest Time at the MicroCenter Performa 636 8/250 CD $1,729.00 Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesigr, Keyboard 66/33-MHz 68LC040processor, IDE Hard drive Expandable to 36MB o f RAM, Upgradable to PowerPC Advanced multi-media expansion option Includes: ClarisWorks 2.1, At Ease, American Heritage Dictionary Mac Gallery Clip Art, Click Art Performa Collection, Spectre Challenger Spin Doctor Challenge, PC Exchange, eWorld, MacLink Plus Translators Pro Macintosh Writing Companion, Internet CompanionTM, Student Assist Microsoft Bookshelf ’94, Groller’s Multimedia Encyclopedia Time Magazine Almanac ’94 PoweirBook 520 4/160 $2,03|5.00 50/25- mHz 68LCO40 9 5 ”sixheen-levelgrey scale Passive-Matrix Screen Includes\: ClarisWorks 2.1, PowerBook Mobility Bundle Macintosh Writing Companion, Internet Companion TM Student Assist Russia’s more ‘civilized’ spies monitor business, nukes, crime 44 Our official priority used to be to observe the United States to Associated Press M OSCOW — Vladim ir Karpov works near the Lubyanka prison in a mansion where a notorious Soviet spymaster lived, threw orgies and ran the terror network known as SMERSH. Today, the home of Stalinist spy Viktor Abaku­ mov, with its marble hall and wide staircase, belongs to Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service. And Karpov, a smooth, smart spokesman, refers freely to its horrific history while discussing the latest phases in the evolution of Russian espi­ onage. Today's agents, he says, have changed. They are more "civilized," more partial to power suits and business cards than cloaks and daggers — a cross between the tough, old KGB and the new, changing Russia. Or maybe a double-cross. The West has been rocked twice this year by cases indicating that Russia continues to use the Soviet espionage network it inherited from the Cold War. American officials say CLA mole Aldrich Ames worked for both the old and the new Moscow governments, and Sweden asserts the same about double-agent Stig Bergling. That Russia still spies on the West despite friendlier relations should come as no surprise. But the West expects the game to have changed since the 1991 Soviet breakup. Has it? Yes, say analysts and officials — and no. On the one hand, the former KGB has suffered savage cuts in jobs and prestige, closed some 30 foreign bureaus, and lost valuable agents abroad and at home. On the other hand, it has more access than ever to the West and tighter focus: It no longer needs to one-up the United States in tiny countries of little im portance or shore up the baby com munist par­ ties of the world. According to Karpov, who says he worked overseas for years as a spy in journalist's clothing, prevent a nuclear first strike, and we had to file regular reports on that. Now we can say that we think the threat of an American nuclear attack is zero.” — Vladim ir K arpov, spokesm an for R ussia’s Foreign Intelligence S erv ice the most im portant change is that Russian intelli­ gence has been freed from its ideological strait- jacket. "O ur official priority used to be to observe the United States to prevent a nuclear first strike, and we had to file regular reports on that*. Now we can say that w e think the threat of an American nuclear attack is zero." The new demons, he says, are nuclear and chemical weapons proliferation, terrorism and drug trafficking. But they're also focusing on W estern economic and technological tips to help Russia compete in the global market. "It's remarkable the num ber of former security people we know of who have resurfaced as busi­ nessmen traveling in the W est," says Jonathan Eyal of the Royal United Services Institute, an independent think tank in London. "O fficially w e are friends, but both sides know their potential enemies remain the sam e." Analysts say Moscow also remains interested in the M iddle East and neighbors such as Afghanistan, China, Iran and Poland. It keeps a close watch on the former Soviet republics, and has signed cooperation treaties with secret ser­ vices in all except the Baltics. Along with their revamped mission, Karpov says, Russia's spies have changed tactics. He cites a 1992 law banning terror by security forces. n er," he said. "W e don't force anyone to work with u s." Skeptics, however, say the changes haven't gone far enough. Yevgenia Albats, a Moscow journalist who has written extensively on the former KGB, says Rus­ sia still hasn't determined w hat its vital interests are and so hasn't really reformed its security ser­ vices. The spymaster Abakumov was in charge of Stalin's terror network SM ERSH — a Russian acronym for "death to spies" — from 1942-1946, then in charge of Soviet spying abroad after World W ar II. He was state security minister in 1950-1951. Executed in 1954, he was known for extrem e brutality and wild orgies sometimes involving abducted young women. Although the days of such terror and labor cam ps are over, intelligence is still used as a polit­ ical weapon, Albats said. "In a way it gained. Political institutions are unstable, and this kind of organization always gains strength in times of unrest," she added. After the failed Soviet coup of August 1991, about 30 percent of intelligence workers were laid off, Karpov said. There are no reliable public fig­ ures on the intelligence budget. Karpov calls the layoffs "a political decision that was hard to endure." "H ow ever, w e're recovering from the shock," "In other words, we work in a civilized man­ he adds. T h e D a ily T e x a n Thursday, September 1 , 1994 Page 13 Mayors request fast enforcement of anti-crime bill Associated Press W ASH IN GTO N — M ayors urged President Clinton on Wednesday to swiftly implement the newly passed $30 billion anti­ crime bill so they can begin hir­ ing police officers in hopes of cut­ ting urban crime before 1996. The U.S. Conference of Mayors put together a three-member task force to prod Congress and the Clinton administration as they appropriate money for cities to use in anti-crime efforts. It com prises Denver M ayor W ellington W ebb, Louisville Mayor Jerry Abramson and Paul Helmke, mayor of Fort Wayne, Ind. Knoxville, Tenn., Mayor Victor Ashe, the conference president, said unless money is made avail­ able quickly, cities w on't be able to adequately recruit and train new officers in order to put them on patrol next year. Most cities, he said, have an average training period of six to eight months. "U n d e r the best of circum ­ stances, it's going to be a year. We sure don't w ant it to take a year and a h alf," Ashe said. Clinton is expected to sign the measure som etim e after Labor Day. Ashe said the m ayors hope Clinton will treat their need for crime-fighting help as he would treat federal aid to areas stricken by disaster. "Su rely victims of crime are equally deserving," he said. When it is signed, the new law, approved by Congress last week, will ban assault-style weapons and devote $8.8 billion to putting 100,000 more police on U.S. streets. It will authorize construc­ tion of thousands of prison cells, establish new crime-prevention programs and allow the death penalty for 50 additional crimes. Free Workhops ! 4 - THERE’S STII L TIME TO REGISTER FOR THIS SEMESTER! Student Health Center staff is recruiting students for fall and spring 1994 peer advisor training in the areas of: Stress M anagement/Substance Abuse Prevention Nutrition Education B E N E F IT S ; • Skills in public speaking, leadership and group facilitation • Upper division academic credit for training, teaching, and individual consultation • rrépa ration for future employment or grad uate school • A chance to become part of a valuable team and give something back to UT To schedule an interview or to get a complete description of the program, {^portabilities, and required classes, come by the Student Health Center, Health Education Department, Room 454 or call 471-6252 between 8:00 a.m. and 5-00 p.m., Mondav- Friday, Take elevator C. Requirements: • Two semester commitment (minimum) • Each program has a requisite academic class • Freshmen may be accepted into the program f t TEXAN CLASSIFIED A D S W O R K — FOR YO U RS C A L L .4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 University Duplicating Service at The Texas Union Announces: • New Lower Prices for Copies • Full Service Copies (as low as $0.022 each) • Fax Services Available • Departmental Orders • Course Packet Service Enroll through Sept. 9 . Classes begin 9/12 or 9/13 (unless otherwise noted) Registration at Jester Center Third Floor, Room A 332 (9am to 4:45pm) M aster Math Beat the Test Calc Review for M408D (1 Session: 9/8) Thors. 4:00 - 5:15 Verbal GRE Prep (4 Weeks) TTh 4:30 - 5:45 Intensive Algebra for M403K (2 Weeks) MWF 3:00 - 3:50 Trig Review for M408C (2 Weeks) TTh 4:00-5:15 Differentiation for M408C (1 Session: 977) Wed. 3.-00-5:00 (2 Weeks, Begins 10/3) MWF 3:00 - 3:50 Solidify Your Srieoce •. ■ 4 Math GRE Prep (4 Weeks) MW 4:30 - 5:45 GSP Review (4 Weeks) MW 4:00 - 5:15 TASPPrep LS AT Prep (1 Session: 9/8) Tburs. 4:00 - 6:00 Expand You; Knyiteh Studv Smarter Study Strategies (4 Weeks) MWF 10330- 10:50 TTh 4:30-5:45 MW 4:00-5:15 Speed Reading (3 Weeks) MW 3:30-4:45 Revitalize Reading Skills (1 Session: 9/6) The. 4:00-4:50 Improve Reading Speed & Retention (1 Session: 917) Wed 4:00 - 5:00 Visit our other retail lo catio n at GSB 3.136 Time Management (1 Session: 9/7) Wed 4:00-5:00 Math for CH304K (1 Session: 9/7) Wed. 4:00-5:15 University D uplicating Service Texas Union (UNB) 2.214 • 475-6675 Enroll Today! Chemistry for BIO302 (2 Weeks) MW 4:00- 5:15 (8 Weeks) MW 2^)0-3:15 Closed September 1-5 210 East 21st Street Special Hours beginning August 27 through September 9. 475-6550 „ , . . MicroCenter Texas Union Com e V isit O u r N e w Location Bigger & Better *Bring in this ad and get a free patch kit! 2401 San Gabriel 473-8700 * Limit one per customer O ffer expires 9-17-94 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE WANT ADS . . . 471-5244 % - - - • - We've Extended Ourselves. UFCU’s Dobie IVIall Branch has temporarily extended business hours to Saturdays. B e g i n n i n g A u g u s t 6 t h r o u g h S e p t e m b e r 1 7 , U n ive rsity F e d e r a l C r e d it U n i o n ’ s D o b ie M a ll lo c a t io n will b e o p e n o n S a t u r d a y s fro m 1 0 : 0 0 a . m . to 6 : 0 0 p . m . , all for yo ur c o n v e n i e n c e . W e ’ re e v e n g o i n g to b e o p e n o n S u n d a y , A u g u s t 2 8 , from 1 0 : 0 0 a . m . to 4 : 0 0 p .m . for s t u d e n t s g e ttin g s e t t l e d in o v e r th e w e e k e n d . D r o p by a n d s e e u s . T h e r e ’ s n e v e r b e e n a b e t te r tim e to jo in . 467 - 808 0 . Main Branch, 4 6 1 1 G u a d a lu p e U n iv e rs ity F e d e r a l C red it U nion D o b ie M a ll B ra n c h , 2 0 2 1 G u a d a lu p e rjJSJjnZHZDPWP^ Grateful law sthoo I enfr0" L i 7® 'l ' í l i f ’ lú ld lM