UNIVERSITY SPORTS Empty magazine ¿gaefc» blowout Campus lib subscriptor as funding c he Longhorn baseball team defeats Duthwest Texas by 14 runs in the n 0Sya m arris’ second game this season. Snoop no murderer A jury finds rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg and his former bodyguard not guilty of murder. NI0N1 W*d6 8/u/eowyo Vol. 95, No. 98 1 h e Da il y T ex a n Buchanan wins New Hampshire The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Wednesday, February 21, 1996 3 Sections 25c Dole, Alexander run second, third in first GOP primary Associated Press M A N C H E S T E R , N .H . — C o n s e rv a tiv e rebel Pat B u ch an an won a narrow victory Tuesday in New H am pshire's leadoff presi­ dential primary, nudging Bob Dole from his perch as Republican front-runner and throw­ ing the G O P race into three-w ay turmoil. Late-charging Lamar Alexander, the former T e n n e s s e e g o v e r n o r, ran a c lo s e th ird . Alexander suggested that his show ing proved him a stro n g e r m a in stre a m a lte rn a tiv e to Buchanan than "a weakened Senator D ole." T h e c a n d id a te s o n W e d n e s d a y w e re launching im m ediately into a five-w eek, 30- state burst of prim ary contests. D o le w a s h e a d e d W e d n e s d a y to th e D a k o ta s ; A le x a n d e r lo o k e d S o u th , to G e o rg ia an d S o u th C a r o lin a , h o p in g h is T e n n e s s e e r o o ts w o u ld t r a n s l a t e in to regional strength. F or B uchanan, the com m entator-tu rned - c a n d id a te , it w as a n o th e r d ra m a tic N ew H am pshire night. Four years ago, he scored 37 percent against an incum bent G O P presi­ dent here, asserting him self — and his often unorthodox view s — in national Republican politics. W ith 99 p e rc e n t o f p r e c in c ts c o u n te d , Buchanan had 56,453 votes, or 27 percent, to 5 4,09 1 or 26 p e rce n t for D o le. A le x a n d e r had 46,922, 23 percent, Publishing heir Steve Forbes w as a d istan t fourth at 12 percent, and said by associates to be reassessing his cam paign but certain to press on for another w eek because of his strength in A rizona and Dei a ware. In e x it p o lls , v o te r s c ite d p o c k e tb o o k issues — jobs, taxes and bu d get deficits — as th ey ju d g ed th e e ig h t-m a n R ep u b lican field. A s k e d w h ic h is s u e m a tt e r e d m o st in d ecid ing how they voted, one in four cited the econom y and jobs and one in five cited taxes. R ou gh ly 15 p ercen t said the federal b u d g e t d e fic it. In c le a r r e fle c tio n o f the race's volatility, 60 percent said they settled on their choice in the final week. P resident Clinton sw ep t to overw helm ing victory in the D em ocratic prim ary, logging m o re th an 90 p e rce n t o f the v o te a g ain st to k e n o p p o s it io n . T h e f r a c t u r e s in th e R epublican field gave C linton and his party even m ore to celebrate. "T h e answ er is not to d iv id e the A m e rica n p e o p le ," C lin to n said in a victory statem ent that offered his view o f the R epublican race. N ew H am p sh ire's resu lts w ere likely to w innow the G O P field, though none of the stru g g lin g ca n d id ates w ou ld im m ed iately adm it as much. Forbes, particularly, had to be disappointed. H e had been tied for the New Ham pshire lead a m onth ago but his effort to prom ote a flat income tax wilted as moderate voters chose betw een D ole and Alexander. In d ia n a S en . D ick L u g a r w as fifth at 5 percent, Alan Keyes had 3 percent. Illinois b u sin essm an M orry T ay lo r and C aliforn ia Rep. Robert D ornan had even less to show for their N ew H am pshire efforts. " W e have m ade h isto ry again to n ig h t," B u c h a n a n sa id in c e le b r a tio n . B u ch a n a n delivered a scathing populist critique of the G O P e sta b lis h m e n t an d b ig co rp o ra tio n s and cast his show ing as " a v ictory for the good m en and w om en o f M id dle A m erica." P erh ap s the b ig g e st d iffe re n ce b etw een Buchanan and his two rivals is trade policy. T h e y s u p p o r te d th e N A F T A an d G A T T free-trade agreem ents as critical to boosting A m e r ic a n e x p o r ts in a g lo b a l e c o n o m y ; New Hampshire primary winner Pat Buchanan speaks to supporters after his victory over the rest of the GOP field. B u c h a n a n b la m e s th e d e a ls fo r s e n d in g A m erican m anufacturing jobs overseas, and stagnating w ages at hom e Buchanan is also fa r m o re o u ts p o k e n th an e ith e r D o le o r A lexander on social issues. He pledges to be the "m o st pro-life president in h isto ry " and v o w s th e r e w ill b e no jo b s fo r a v o w e d hom osexu als in a Buchanan adm inistration. C lin g in g to hopes for a late-n ig h t com e­ b a c k , D o le d id n o t c o n c e d e . B u t h e a p p e a re d re s ig n e d to p la c in g se co n d in New H am pshire, again. "N o w I know why they call this the G ranite S ta te ," said Dole. "B e ca u se it's so hard to cra ck ." T h is tim e, D ole v o w ed a d isa p p o in tin g N ew H am pshire night w ould not derail h is candidacy, as w as the case in 1988. Ignoring A lexand er's show ing, D ole said it was tim e for m ainstream R epublican s to rally to his Please see New Hampshire, page 2 A S S O C IA T E D P R E S S Group forms to fight for open Tower observation deck AMY STRAHAN_______________________________ Daily Texan Staff D ecades after its p erm anent closure by the Board of R egents in 1975, stud ents are trying to gather support for a p ro p osal to reo p en th e o b serv atio n d eck of the Tow er. A new stu d en t o rg a n iz a tio n called Stu d e n ts for an O pen Tow er gathered signatures to petition for the pro­ posal Tuesday. The top of the Tow er w as closed to students follow ­ ing a rash of suicides from the observation deck. "M a k in g th e T o w e r s a fe is n o t a p r o b le m ," sa id Spencer Prou, president of the group. Prou said the proposal calls for safety barriers of p lex ­ iglass or m etal to be placed on the deck, metal detectors to b e installed and a guard positioned to prevent s u i­ cides. "It would be som ething w e could pay for ou t of the Student G ov ern m en t b u d g et," he said. "W e also think w e can get donations to fund the proposal." Prou said his proposal w ould help elim inate the n eg ­ ative connotations currently associated with the o b ser­ vation deck. tory of the T ow er," he said. "W e w ant to renam e it after B arbara Jo rd an . In d oin g so, w e m em o rializ e a g reat person and d isassociate the T ow er w ith the W h itm an shooting." I've been h ere," Livingston said. T h e 1966 C h arles W hitm an m assacre, w hich left 16 dead and m ore than 30 injured, is underscored by the suicides also associated with the Tow er. The organization has collected about 1,200 signatures "T h is w as a d readfully traum atic episode. The ca m ­ so far, he said. A ttem pts to reopen the deck in the past have failed. W illiam Livingston, senior vice president, w ho cam e to the U niversity as a faculty m em ber in 1949, said the debate over w h ether to open th e T ow er to students is by no m eans new . pus w as just torn by it," he added. "P rio r to that time, there had been half a dozen su i­ cides up there, m ostly, but not all, stud ents," L ivingston said. "In 1949, I had a stud ent in m y class w ho killed him self." "W e address the tension involved w ith the w hole h is­ "It has b een opened and closed several tim es sin ce Please see Tower, page 2 Berdahl trapped in middle of battle over building name RENAE MERLE ___________ Daily Texan Staff The debate about the name of the molecular biology building has been a back and forth struggle for faculty members, students and administra­ tors that has left UT President Robert Berdahl walking a tightrope. Berdahl's insistence that the issue be dropped illustrates his dilemma. He must heed the decisions of his bosses, who named the building, while serving faculty members and students, many of whom oppose the decision. The Faculty Council's vote Monday asking for the renaming of the Louise and James R. Moffett Molecular Biology Building put Berdahl in a position he has dread­ ed. He wrote to a faculty member in December that syeh a vote would test his effectiveness as president. "If the faculty voted one way, and I was not able to support them, I would be at odds with me faculty, in which case it would be very difficult for me to function," BerdaM said in a Oct. 18 letter to cocúptffier sciences professor Robert Boyer. "If the facul­ ty votes that way, and I support that, I would be at odds with the regents." In the letter Berdahl said such a conflict could force him to resign. ANALYSIS but backed away from that stance when questioned about it publicly. He has since decided that his safest position would be not to speak on it all, and has stood by his pledge even in private discussions. Now the faculty and the regents are stuck on polar opposites of the debate and neither side seems ready to budge, though faculty members are realistic about the possibility of die name changing. Gretchen Ritter, an assistant pro­ fessor of government who spon­ sored the resolution passed by the council, said contemplatively after the vote, "We can Only hope that the Board of Regents care what the fac­ ulty have to say." Faculty members and students have protested the naming of the building for Moffett, Freeport- McMoRan's chief executive officer, in response to accusations that the company has committed environ­ mental degradations and human rights violations in their Indonesian mining operations, which company Officials have denied. Moffett donated $2 million to the construction of the building, which will house the Institute for Cellular PtMse see Berdahl, page 2 Not in our back yard Proposed West Campus parking meters criticized DAN C A R N EVA LE____________________ Daily Texan Staff p ark in g m eters on stre ets in W est C a m p u s neighborhood , inclu d ing 22 1 / 2 Street to 26 Street and Nueces Street to Pearl Street. A new stu d en t group p ro te sted T u esd ay the City C ouncil resolution calling for p ark­ ing m eters to be installed in W est Cam pus. "W e d o n 't w ant parking m eters in front of w here w e liv e," said Ty Pearson, a m em ber of Students A gainst M etered Parking, at a W est M all rally. P earson and oth er m em bers o f the g rou p organ ized a cam paign M onday to approach the City C ouncil, asking it to overturn the res­ olution that w ill lead to the installation of 440 In s ta llin g th e m e te r s w ill c o s t th e c ity $ 1 8 9 ,0 0 0 an d e a r n it $ 3 6 0 ,0 0 0 p e r y e a r , a c c o r d in g to th e c o u n c il r e s o lu tio n . T h e m oney will go into the city's general fund, it states. "T h e installations are part of a plan of the A ustin A lliance and D ow ntow n C om m ission to m ake spaces available for cu stom ers," said Please see Meters, page 2 P H O T O BY S T E P H A N IE F R IE D M A N /D aily Texan Staff Jennifer Smith, a graduate student in geolo­ gy, signs an anti-parking meter petition. TEXAN TODAY C o rre c tio n : In Friday’s D aily Texan, a q u otation supporting the T e x a s Independence Day celebration was incorrectly attributed to Victor Saenz th e M o v im e n to E s tu d ia n til of C h ic a n a /o de A z tla n . M ic h a e l George of the Young Conservatives of T e x a s w as the correct source The Texan regrets the error. W e a th e r: High in the 80s, Low in the 60s, with zero chance of rain. Index: Around Campus.............. 12 Classifieds....................... 16 Comics.............................12 Editorials........................... 4 Entertainment.................. 10 Pre-Leasing Guide 13 Sports.................................7 State & Local..................... 6 University.......................... 5 World & Nation.................. 3 Oklahoma City bombing trial moved to Denver because of media coverage Associated Press O K LA H O M A CITY — A federal judge m oved the O klahom a City bom bing case to D enver on Tuesday, s a y in g th e n eed to p ro te c t the d efen d a n ts fro m a vengeful public ou tw eighs the desire of the victim s' fam ilies to attend the trial. T im othy M cV eigh and Terry N ichols "h a v e been d em o n ized " in the new s m edia, U.S. D istrict Ju d ge R ichard M atsch wrote. "T h e re is so great a prejudice a g a in s t th e s e tw o d e f e n d a n t s in th e s t a t e o f O klahom a that they cannot obtain a fair and im p ar­ tial trial at any place fixed by law for hold ing court in that state." He did not set a trial date. Prosecutors had urged M atsch to m ove the trial to Tulsa, about 90 m iles from the bom b site, so that vic­ tims' fam ilies could easily attend. But M atsch, chief fe d e ra l ju d g e in D en v e r, sid e d w ith th e d e fe n s e , w hich w anted the trial held in D enver. constitu tional requ irem en ts," the judge said. T h e A p ril 19 b o m b in g o f the A lfred P. M u rra h Federal B uilding killed 169 people and injured m ore than 500 in the d eadliest terrorist attack on U.S. soil. M a tsch said n ew s co v era g e o f th e b o m b in g w a s e x t r a o r d in a r il y h e a v y in O k la h o m a an d w e n t in to g re a t d eta il a b o u t the in v e s tig a tio n and th e v ictim s. "B e c a u s e this w as a crim e that occurred in th eir s ta te , O k la h o m a n s w a n ted to k n o w e v e ry d e ta il about the explosion, the investigation, the court pro­ ceed in g s and, in particular, the v ictim s," the ju d g e said. "T h ere is a fair inference that only a guilty v er­ d ict with a death sentence could be considered a just result in the m inds of m any " M cV eigh and N ichols could face the death penalty if convicted of m urder and conspiracy V ictim s' fam ilies said it w ill be hard for som e to attend the trial 500 miles away. "T h e interests of the victim s in being able to attend this trial in O klahom a are outw eighed by the co u rt's obligation to assure that the trial be conducted w ith fu n d am en tal fa irn e ss an d w ith due reg ard fo r all " I plan on going several tim es during the trial, but not every d a y ," said A ren A lm on, w hose vear-old d aughter Baylee died in the bom bing and w as p h o­ tographed in the arm s of a firefighter. Page 2 Wednesday, February 2 1 ,1 9 9 6 T h e Daily T exan State attorney calls treasurer’s actions illegal Associated Press investor fears. AUSTIN — Treasurer Martha W hitehead acted illegally when she used treasury money to prop up the state-run TexPool invest­ m ent fund d uring a D ecem ber 1 9 9 4 run, according to an opinion issued Tuesday by the attorney general's office. The finding cam e in an five- page opinion issued at the request of Rita Horwitz, executive director o f the S ta te P en sio n R eview Board. " T h e state treasu rer's u se of fu n d s in the sta te trea su ry in D ecem b er 1994 to p u rch a se TexPool funds at a price above market value was not authorized by law ," according to the opinion, sig n ed by A ssista n t A tto rn ey General Susan L Garrison. Although an attorney general's opinion does not have the force of law, it represents his official posi­ tion as to how the courts would rule on the matter. The state treasury bought gov­ ernment securities from TexPool in an effort to stem $1 billion in w ith d ra w a ls from the b e le a ­ guered local government invest­ ment fund in mid-December 1994. T h ey said the trea su ry w as using state funds to buy govern­ m ent securities from TexPool, a sta te -ru n fund for 1,300 lo cal Texas governmental units, to ease S tate a tto rn e y s said th at Whitehead's office acted illegally by using state treasury funds to buy TexPool securities at prices above market value. The buys "constituted the with­ draw al o f funds from the state treasury w ithout an appropria­ tio n " by the Legislature, which would violate the state constitu­ tion, the opinion stated. "M o re o v e r, we q u estio n w hether the L egislatu re would have had authority to appropriate funds to TexPool for the purpose o f p re v en tin g to the investors," the opinion stated. lo sses Ron D usek, a spokesm an for Attorney G eneral Dan M orales' office, said M orales declined to comment or speculate on what the co n se q u e n ce s m ig h t be of the alleged constitutional violations. H orw itz, w ho declined com ­ ment on the opinion, said it was re q u ested by sta te Sen . Jo h n Leedom, R-Dallas and a pension b o ard m em ber. T h ere w as no an sw er at L ee d o m 's hom e Tuesday night. W h iteh ead co u ld n o t be reached for comment at her office Tuesday evening. The state treasurer's office will b e ab o lish ed effectiv e Sept. 1, 1995. The 1995 L egislature also voted to restrict how state funds may be invested, effective Sept 1. Werk With Arnold Metrowerks, the leading provider of software development tools for the Macintosh, is looking for highly motivated people to grow with us in our main offices located in beautiful Austin, Texas. Credited with saving the Power Mac, Metrowerks and our CodeWarrior products have won numerous awards including MacUser's 1994 Software Product of the Year. We have already reached 40,000 registered users since CodeWarrior was introduced in 1994. Never content with the status quo, Metrowerks is expanding with Windows and Java products along with the new Discover Programming series of tutorial products. With $5 Million in revenue for 1995, Metrowerks is expecting to double in size in 1996. Metrowerks strongly believes in providing the best in technical innovation, the best in customer service, the best value for our shareholders, and the best opportunities for our employees. Here is a sampling of our job openings available now and for upcoming graduates. CodeWarrior Customer Service Seeking 15 highly motivated, customer-oriented people. Individuals will be responsible for providing excellent customer support in one or more areas including in-bound phone sales on our Order Desk, email support for our registered user database and sales support for our out-bound sales reps. Customer service position is a stepping stone into out-bound sales and marketing positions. Work hard, learn the business and grow with one of the world's leading software development tools companies. Bachelor's degree required, computer literacy is a must. Marketing Metrowerks has 2 openings in its marketing department for programmers interested in product marketing. Individuals will be responsible for creating marketing collateral and developing promotions to support new and existing products, performing product demonstrations and training, and establishing product position based on market and customer knowledge. Position reports to Marketing Manager. Bachelor's degree required and programming experience highly desired. Technical Support Metrowerks is currently hiring 3 Technical Support engineers. Macintosh programming experience would be beneficial; but we will train the selected candidate if he/she is proficient in other areas (see below). Must be fam iliar with one of the following programming languages: C, C + + , Pascal and one (or more) of the following platforms: PowerPC, 68K, x86. Candidate will primarily provide e-mail and phone support to our wide database of users. Must be able to resolve issues and escalate problems to engineering. Bachelor's degree in the sciences or engineering is preferred but not required. If you are technically inclined and want a challenging, high-growth and high-potential work environment, submit your resume on our Web page at httpyAvww.metrowerks.com/about/jobs/resume.html Resumes entered on the Web will be immediately submitted into our internal recruiting database providing you the best visibility with our hiring managers. Single-page resumes can also be submitted via email to recruiting@metrowerks.com or faxed to (512) 305-0439. T h e Da ily T exan Permanent Staff Editor..................................................................................................................................................Robert Rogers Managing Editor................................................................................................................................ Robert Russell Associate Managing Editors..........................................................Caleb Canning, Sholnn Freeman, Chris Gray News Editor.................................................................................................................................. Elizabeth Souder Associate News Editors................................................................................... Jennifer Schultz, Laura Stromberg News Assignments Editor............................................................................................................... Scott Patterson Senior Reporters.......................................................... Caton Fenz, Renae Merle, Jason Spencer, Amy Strahan Associate Editors..................................................................................................... Kevin Butler, Veronica Vargas l^hoto Editor.......................................................................................................................................Victor Caivano Entertainment Editor.....................................................................................................................Kevin Williamson Associate Entertainment Editor............................................ Cora Oltersdorf Around Campus/Listings Editor............................................................................................................ Dave Merrill Sports Editor...................................................................................... Associate Sports Editor..........................................................................................................................Brian Davis General Sports Reporters..............................................................Charles Polansky, Tracy Schultz, Matt Young Graphics Editor.................................................................................................................................. Ross Cravens Issue Staff Reporters ........................................................ Dan Carnevale, Chris Janson, Bonnie Lewellyn, Jennifer Stump ..................................................................................................................Stephanie Friedman Photographers .............................................................................................................................. y j (_ee Photo Assistant Copy Editors................................................................................................................Kim Head, Rebekah Rogers Makeup Editors.................................................................................................... Kevin Fitchard, Shanna Gauthier Wire Editor............................ Andrea Dennison Editorial Columnist............................................................................................................................... Geoff Henley .................................................................................................................. Chris Panatier Editorial Cartoonist Ryan Golden, Bryan Stokes Entertainment Writers.................. Cartoonists.................................................................................................................Mike Hamisch, Brandt Rydell - ................................... Advertising Local Display...................................................... Vanessa Flores, Krista Coalson, Brad Corbett, Danny Grover, Sara Eckert, Jaco Jordaan, Kristine Johnson, Lisa Hynd Graphic Designer.................................................................................. Classified Display........................................................................ Nathan Moore, Nancy Flanagan, John Starcke Classified Telephone Sales............................ Amy Forbes, Carrie Anderson Classified Clerics -Amanda Smallwood, Jo Anne Mautner, Edmund W. Robb, Brandi Etcher, Motty St. James Classified Manager---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Layout Coordinator................................................................................... The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whrtis, Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.101.) For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865 For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900. For classified word advertising, call 471-5244. 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Box D, Austin, TX 7 87 1 3 -89 0 4 . 2-21-96 Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m. Thursday, 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday..........Monday, 4 p.m. Friday..............Tuesday, 4 p.m. « I m i : la asito o A oíd Add ( L M B u U n m a D«y Prior to PubdcaDoo) Tower: Open observation deck called ‘attractive nuisance’ Continued from page 1 L ivingston added that the deck was closed on the grounds it is an "attractive nuisance.” "A student predisposed to think about su icid e may be encouraged by the availability of the Tower," he said. Though the W hitm an m assacre certainly contributed to the closing of the deck, it was not the deciding factor, he said. "The real reason is the fear that w e'll have other suicides. That's at th e h e a rt o f th e re g u la tio n of access," Livingston added. "I regret it can't be seen. The view is spectac­ ular, but we face a dilemma." O ther UT o fficials said sim ilar id e a s h av e b een b ro u g h t to th e a d m in is tra tio n th ro u g h o u t th e years. "T h is is not a new issue, th ere have been other p ro p o sa ls," said Jim Vick, vice president for student a ffa irs . "W h e n I cam e to the U niversity in 1970, it was open to the public. There was tight security as far as access was concerned, but not on the deck itself." L iv in g sto n and V ick said th e administration in the past has stud­ ied proposals to build a protective barrier around the observation deck and place police officers there, but concerns about whether such m ea­ sures would work and the aesthet­ ics o f the T o w er sto p p ed th e ir implementation. "The biggest concern was proba­ bly the m o d ification o f the d eck itself," Vick said, though the con­ gestion on the Tower's aging eleva­ tor was another consideration. A student last fall proposed that graduating students be allowed to v isit the deck on any w eekend their last semester. The proposal cu rren tly being d iscu ssed by tl administration, Vick said. Student w ishin g to go to the deck woul< p ay a sm a ll fee and w o u ld b< acco m p an ied by a p o lice o fficer! The fees would be used to pay fo| the security. "That's something that continue to be discussed, but no decision he been m ade," Vick said. " I think il would be a great tradition if it weri fin a liz e d to g iv e som e stud ent^ access to the observation deck." New Hampshire: Buchanan victorious Continued from page 1 side in the dizzying rush of contests beginning Saturday in Delaware. "R ight now it is a two-man race. It is going to be a one-m an race before long," Dole said. "O ver the next month we will decide if we are the party of fear or hope." That was a thinly veiled poke at Buchanan's protectionist trade views and tough stand on immigration. A le x a n d e r c o n g ra tu la te d Buchanan but criticized his ideas, esp ecially about can celin g global trade deals and putting tariffs on foreign goods. Taking direct aim at Dole, A lexander said the 72-year- old senator had proven him self a weak candidate for Republicans to send into battle against President Clinton. "H e does not have enough ideas," Alexander said of Dole. Meters: STAMP members question zoning Continued from page 1 Berdahl Continued from page 1 and Molecular Biology. The regents are mystified that is still a controversy at all. "It's reallj getting more press than it deserves,' said Bernard Rapoport, chairman o\ foe UT System Board of Regents. Berdahl inherited the controversy from UT System Chancellor Willk Cunningham, who oversaw foe event that led to foe current debate when was president of foe University. The building name was a small of foe plan to secure funding to com-! plete foe construction project As part of foe incentive to bring in] funding, foe donor would be allowed] to name foe building, administrators! have revealed. At foe time they did not j know who that donor would be. Cunningham asked Moffett, a long­ time friend, to allow his $2 million donation to capital projects in the C ollege of N atural Sciences to be applied to foe molecular biology build­ ing after foe original donor backed out Then Cunningham asked Freeport, for which he served on foe board of direc­ tors, to donate an additional $1 mil­ lion. "Cunningham should be the one answering questions" about foe build­ ing name, Boyer has repeatedly said. When Berdahl became president in 1992, Cunningham was already facing questions about his position on the Freeport board, from which he has recently resigned. The geological research sponsored by Freeport was being criticized as not legitimate, and foe graduate students were characterized as prospectors for foe company in its Indonesian mining operations. The wheels were already turning to name foe building in honor of Moffett, but foe crest of foe controversy would not hit until Berdahl took over the presidency. Berdahl, who came to the University from Illinois, had no control over earlier decisions. Berdahl said he is left to keep unity on campus and "assure that foe con­ flicting points of view do not divide us in a matter that fractures the deeper unity." "President Berdahl is not the issue here. It is unfortunate that somehow he has been pushed into foe middle of it," said Alan Cline, a computer sci­ ences professor, w ho helped push through foe legislation asking for foe building to be renamed. "Almost all of of foe discussions were made prior to his arrival on campus." S $ $ or Credit for Scholarly Books/Review Copies in all Fields Com puterized O.P. Book Searches We Bill for all UT Depts. IBook Market M-Th 10-8 499-8708 F-Sat 10-10 mvinson@io.com D obie M a l! /2 1 st & G ua dalup e EXAM + 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting a t s 119* Complete ‘ price includes exam, 2 pair clear daily- wear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1 st follow up. EXPIRES MARCH 29,1996. WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT M-Th 4 7 7 -2 2 8 2 1 0 -7 M / C VISA A M X DISC FRI 9 -6 Life in the Fast Lai. D e f e n s i v e D r i v i n g C o u r s e s February 3 February 27-29 March 9 UT I n f o r m a l C l a s s e s 4 7 1 - 0 2 7 0 liformal Item Lean Ui eijoy Life! MUrkhtm. tofJ/wwwjtfus.ek/sliifil/tiMiM Al Lovelady, supervisor of Austin's parking meter installations. "T h e y 'r e g o in g to tu rn W est C am p u s to w n ," in to a g h o st Pearson said at the rally. "I d on't want to have to walk three blocks from where I park to get hom e." STAMP members said the Austin City Council zoned these areas of the W est Cam pus as business dis­ tricts rather than resid en tial d is­ tricts. " T h a t 's o n e o f the th in g s w e think is odd," said STAMP member Amy Thrasher, adding that many students and Austin residents live in that area. But Brian VanDeW alle, engineer fo r A u s tin 's T ra n s p o rta tio n D ivision, said parking m eters are only going to be placed in areas that already have a timed free-parking limit of two hours. VanD eW alle said the free-park­ ing areas w ith tim e lim its "d o n 't create the turnover you'd expect." He added that meters would create more of an incentive for travelers to move their cars. VanDeW alle also said the park­ ing meters are only in effect from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays and are not in effect Sundays and some holidays. Morris Poe, staff support supervi­ sor of A u stin's D ivision of Public Works and Transportation, agreed w ith V anD eW alle and added that the free-parking area with time lim­ its are "alm ost impossible to effec­ tively enforce." K a tie G ille tte , a m e m b er of STA M P , said the g roup plans to take petitions to the West Mall and Did Mother Nature Keep You From Your Test Drive? sp y o u J r o m ta k in g jro u r rree tesrdnve. ^ WeTI be holding additional Test Drives > +t> °Mefo,Mnsdm : February 24th LSAT 9:00 AM GMAT9:00 AM MCAT 1:00 PM GRE 1:00 PM On The U.T. Campus d o o r-to -d o o r to g ain su p p o rt. "Right now w e're trying let people know what we're doing," she said, adding that the group already has about 500 signatures. "O ne of our biggest concerns is that it is so unsafe," Thrasher said, citing several break-ins to student housing and a stabbing incident in the West Campus area. She add ed th a t a re sid e n ts in West Campus would either have to park far away from their home at night or "you 'd have to get up at 6:30 a.m. to move your car." A long w ith stu d en ts living on West Campus, business owners will also be effected by the new parking meters. Brenda Smith, financial manager of the Inter-C ooperative C ouncil, which houses UT students, said the new parking meters "could have a d ra stic effe c t on our a r e a ." Sh e added that this effect could include a raise in the student's cost of liv­ ing, fewer people living in the Co- Op, and a property value decrease. Smith added that other business­ es will be hurt because "stud ents and the general public will be dis­ cou raged from sh o p p in g here if they have to pay the m eters." But Joe Mitchell, general manag­ er of Ruta Maya Rio Grande, a cof­ fee shop in the W est Campus area, said "the more people discouraged to drive, the better the city will be." M itchell said his bu siness w ill not be hurt by the parking meters because "w hen I get there at 6:50 a .m ., a ll the sp a c e s a re g o n e " around his business. He added that the meters may be helpful because they "m ay leave those slots open." "It's not a negative effect what so ever," Mitchell said, adding that 95 percent of his cu stom ers are stu ­ dents on foot or riding a bike and "there's plenty of room in the back to park." Tulips $9 .9 5 per Bunch Cash & Carry Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 D aily Specials FTD • 45- & Guadalupe • On UT Shuttle Rt. C a ll now to re se rve youi K A P L A N 1- 800-KAP-TEST T T Y ^OTY >x< ^ T IT =tTY ^TY xflTY > £ y s i ± k t e ▼ ash we* today fee dnesday UJUARy 21 u n i v e c s i t y s t . a u s t i n ' s c a t h o l i c c e n t e R c a t h o l i c c h i m c h «..Jason Dugger m a s s e s at: 12:05 p m • 5:30 p m • 7:30pm ashes will be distRiButed at all masses. 20iouniveRsrty ave. • 476-7351 iBetween dOBie 6-pcl, on 21 st s t.1 m a s s e s at: 8 :0 0 am • 5;oo p m • 6:30 pm ashes will Be distciButed at all masses. 2010 Guadalupe st. • 4 7 7- 9 4 71 iBetween mtk & 21 st st J KVTTV Robert Lin Kelley Poché Dianne Eaton TEXAS STUDENT TELEVISION K 0 9 V R AUSTIN VHF Channel 9 Dorm cable 15 Internet CuSeeMe: 12 8 .83.42.2 call 4 7 1 -7 8 9 9 for more info Friday’s Schedule 7pm Sn eek Peek Interview with Adam Sandler, star o f Happy Gilmore 7:30pm TCX3.S Politics Homeless Camping Ban 8pm SCC New videos from R ID E, David Bow ie, Speech, and Ed Hall 9pm T h e Show presents "The Pharcyde" Watch Lady Longhorn Basketball L IV E tonight at 7:30pm TUESDAY'S DOW JONE8:5,458.53 H DOWN 44.78 / VOLUME: 395,018,900 WORLD & NATION Chinese county seat NEWS BRIffS experiences boom FAST BREAK ■ | T he D aily T exan ■ WEDNESDAY, FBRUARY 21,1888 8 No strong sign about rate cuts ■ W ASH ING TO N — While p r e d ic tin g th e e c o n o m y 's slu g g ish n ess is only tem p o ­ rary, Alan G reenspan indicat­ ed Tuesday th at the Federal R eserve sto o d re a d y to cut interest rates as an insurance policy against recession. T he re m a rk s by th e Fed c h a irm a n failed to cheer a grum py Wall Street. The Dow Jones in d u stria l average fell 44.79 to close at 5,458.53, unset­ tled by a continued plunge in the bond market. Demand for Treasury's benchm ark 30-year bond fell, pushing the yield up to 6.39 percent. Delivering the Fed's twice-a- year status report to Congress, G reenspan said central bank policy-makers believe the over- all eco n o m y w ill g ro w at a moderate 2 percent to 2.25 per­ cent this year, w ith inflation rem aining w ell-contained at 2.75 percent to 3 percent. Tanker spills oil off Britain shore ■ ST. A N N 'S HEAD, Wales — A fleet of tugboats failed on Tuesday to refloat a stranded supertanker, which is leaking thousands of gallons of oil near an important wildlife haven. Despite a tide that was the h ig h e st in at least 15 years, the com bined pow er of seven tu g b oats, a team of salvage w o rk e rs a n d th e ta n k e r 's e n g in e s fa ile d to m o v e th e Sea Empress. The tanker is at the m outh of the Milford Haven estuary, one of Britain's most important w ild life co n se rv a tio n areas. Local environmentalists say oil has s u rro u n d e d tw o islands th a t are h o m e to se a ls an d thousands of seabirds. — Compiled from Associated Press reports Associated Press FUYANG, China — A $23 m illion road project can't lay pavem ent fast enough to accommodate the cars and trucks. Factories m ultiply so quickly there's not enough electricity and w ater to run them. Yet people keep coming to Fuyang: The once- quiet county seat, if not rich, is booming. In Fuyang's gritty progress, C hina's planners see the future. They are pitching the rapid trans­ form ation of tow ns into cities as a way around th e c o u n try 's m o st in tra c ta b le p ro b le m : too m any people and not enough land. Moving farm ers w ho are barely scraping by on m eager plots into prom ising industries in cities — or so the th eo ry goes — will raise incom es an d en co u rag e large-scale, m o re m echanized, productive farming. It m ight also d im in ish the arm y of m ig ran t laborers roam ing the country in search of work. Its ranks are filled with at least 80 million peas­ ants, by official count, and C hina's Com m unist leaders fear them as a potential source of unrest. To accom m odate the th ro n g of unem plo yed a n d u n d e r e m p lo y e d a n d k e e p th e m o u t of already overloaded metropolises, China — which tries to control w hat goes on inside its borders as much as possible — plans to increase the num ber of cities from 622 in 1994 to 1,003 by 2010. C hina's 900 m illion farm ers m ake u p 80 p er­ cent of the population. But th at is changing — fast. H ebei province, w hich su rro u n d s Beijing, plans to move 8 million peasants into cities, most of them new ly built, by 2000. In Fuyang, 500 miles south of Beijing in east­ ern A nhui province, the pace is frenetic. Since the county seat an d the su rro undin g area w ere declared a city four years ago, grow th has aver­ aged 30 percent a year. Zhang Pengju so u nds m ore like a real estate developer than the dep uty m ayor w hen he reels off Fuyang's changes: Some $23 m illion is being spent to build or w id en 80 m iles of ro ad s and three bridges; a $24 m illion loan is being used to bring w ater from a river 20 m iles to the south. Tw o p o w e r s ta tio n s a n d a sew ag e tre a tm e n t p lant aw ait fu n d in g or ap p ro v al from Beijing, and an am usem ent park, a stadium and lots of public toilets are being built. Even so, officials say the new roads and pow er stations will soon be overw helm ed. By 2000, the c ity 's p o p u la tio n is e x p e c te d to d o u b le to 500,000. By 2010, 1 million. "W e're developing bit by bit, b ut it's still the T hird W o rld ," said Li Wei, C o m m u n ist Party deputy secretary for the city. Thousands of Muslims, like these faithful in Nairobi, Kenya, unite in prayers to end the month of Ramadan. Some continued to celebrate for another day Tuesday because of confusion about whether and when the new moon was sighted. ASSOCIATED PRESS Arkansas bankers charged with misuse of funds Associated Press LITTLE R O C K , A rk . — T w o bankers w ere indicted Tuesday on charges they m isused bank m oney in connection w ith political contri­ b u tio n s to s e v e ra l c a m p a ig n s including Bill C linton's 1990 run for A rkansas governor. Herby B ranscum Jr., Robert Hill a n d N eal A in le y are a c c u s e d of u s in g b a n k f u n d s to r e im b u r s e themselves, their relatives and bank em ployees for $13,216.70 in contri­ b u tio n s m a d e to p o litic a l c a m ­ p a ig n s b e tw e e n M ay 1990 a n d N o v e m b e r 1993. The in d ic tm e n t a lso a lle g e s th a t H ill d e liv e r e d $7,000 to C linton a m onth after he w on the election. There is no suggestion that Clin­ ton knew of the alleged w ro n g d o ­ ing. The indictm ent, by W hitew ater p ro s e c u to r K e n n e th S ta rr, is th e first to m ention Clinton by name. N e ith e r C lin to n n o r firs t la d y H illa ry R o d h a m C lin to n w a s ch arg ed , n o r w ere any ca m p a ig n w orkers in Clinton's 1990 bid for a fifth term. The W hite H ouse said it was preparing a statement. Branscum and Hill, co-owners of Perry C ounty Bank, are charged in th e 1 1 -c o u n t fe d e ra l in d ic tm e n t w ith conspiracy, m isapplication of bank funds, making false entries in bank records and failing to repo rt transactions to the Internal Revenue Service as required. A inley, the form er p re sid e n t of th e b a n k , is n o t c h a rg e d in th e indictm ent. He pleaded guilty last year to failing to report large w ith­ draw als from the Clinton cam paign fu n d in 1990 a n d is c o o p e ra tin g w ith prosecutors. A fter the election, Branscum was nam ed an A rkansas state highw ay c o m m issio n er; H ill, a form er IRS agent, w as appointed by C linton to the state bank board before the 1990 race. C lin to n re a p p o in te d h im in 1991, and Hill is now chairm an. The indictm ent alleges that of the m o re th a n $13,000 in c a m p a ig n donations raised by the three men, H ill d e liv e r e d a t le a s t $7,000 in p o litica l c o n trib u tio n s to C lin to n about a m onth after his election. Som e $3,000 ra ise d in O c to b e r 1991 w ent to "a candidate for feder­ al office," and other money w ent for s ta te races in 1991 a n d 1993, th e prosecutor said. N one of the donations exceeded the $1,000 limit on cam paign contri­ butions. Prosecutors refused to say w hether others w ould be charged. Hill and B ranscum allegedly got the m oney to reim burse themselves and the others by subm itting false expense vo uchers to the bank and by ta k in g $3,000 v ia a c a s h ie r 's check directly from bank funds. The count dealing w ith failure to report large transactions stems from the w ith d r a w a l by C lin to n c a m ­ paign aides of $30,000 in May 1990 and $22,500 in N ovem ber 1990 from the cam paign's account at the bank. O ne of the w ithdraw als was m ade by W hite H ouse aide Bruce Lindsey, then a Clinton cam paign worker. L aw y ers D an G u th rie and Jack Lassiter, w ho rep resen t B ranscum and Hill, respectively, denied th at any m oney w as misused. "Mr. Branscum and Mr. Hill are of in te re st to Mr. S tarr only because they have past ties to the Democratic president of the United States," they said in a statem ent. "In d e p e n d e n t counsel has spent approximately $30 m illion of taxpayer m oney to date. The total am o u n t involved in th is indictment is $13,216." Neither Branscum nor Hill could be reached for comment Tuesday at their offices in Perryville, 30 miles north ­ west of Little Rock, or at their homes. Steve Lawrence, current president of the bank, d id n o t im m e d ia te ly return a message left at his office. Starr was appointed independent counsel in A ugust 1994 to in v e sti­ g a te w h e th e r p ro c e e d s fro m th e failed M adison G u ara n ty S avings an d Loan w ere diverted to finance any of C linton's cam paigns for gov­ ernor or the W hitew ater land devel­ opm ent that Clinton and Mrs. Clin­ ton co-owned w ith M adison ow ner Jam es M cD ougal a n d M cD ou gal's ex-wife Susan. T u e s d a y 's in d ic tm e n t cam e 13 days before the M arch 4 start of the trial of Gov. Jim G uy Tucker and the McDougals on fraud and conspiracy charges. The three are accused of fra u d u ­ lently arranging about $3 m illion in lo a n s fro m tw o fe d e ra lly b a c k e d len d in g co m p an ies, in c lu d in g th e M adison savings and loan. LAWFIRM SEEKING WITNESSES (not potential clients) through from 1991 up IF the present, you have observed patrons of Chuy's a n d /o r Hula Hut being served more than 4 alcoholic drinks a n d /o r being served a lcoh olic drinks when obviously intoxicated, please contact Mr. Sherman at 477- 8 7 7 2 in Austin (1-8 00-7 41-4926 from outside of Austin GUAI^ANTEED employment, GUARANTEED competitive salary, GUARANTEED GUARANTEED responsibility and challenge. aviation training if you qualify. With hard work, completion of Officer Candidates School (OCS), and completion of your bachelors degree these things and a lot more can be yours as an Officer of Marines. If you are a freshman, sophomore, junior, senior, or grad now is the time to find out more about the programs available to you. African Americans, Hispanics, & Women are encouraged to apply. Call Captain Gentry at 477-5706 for more details. M arine Officer The Few. The Proud. The Marines. Does Your Religion Pass the TRUTH Test? What Exactly is the TRUTH ? Please ¡oín us for a video presentation and discussion as w e probe these vital questions for the right answ er THURSDAY, FEB. 22 - 7:00 PM PARLIN HALL #301 R e fre s h m e n ts to b e S e rv e d For more info, please call Kelly @ 479-9430 TH E STUDENT GOVERNMENT COMMUNICATION AGENCY AND TSTV PRESENT DISCUSS THE ISSUES A STUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 2 M AIN MALL NOMINATIONS SOLICITED FOR 1996 EMPLOYEE EXCELLENCE AWARDS THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN February 1996 President Berdahl and the Excellence Awards Committee are pleased to announce that nominations are now being accepted for the 1996 University of Texas at Austin Employee Excellence Awards. Now in its seventeenth year, this awards program is designed to honor and recognize the invaluable contributions of non-teaching personnel to the continuing success of The University. Thirty employees will be selected and awarded $1,000 in appreciation for his or her service to this institution. The awards are subject to withholding for taxes and retirement contributions. Eligibility: All non-teaching personnel at U.T. Austin who hold at least half-time appointments and who have been employed for a minimum of two years as of September 1,1995, are eligible. Nominations for both classified employees and administrative and professional personnel (Code 1000) are encouraged. The Committee is especially interested in receiving names of persons whose competence, conscientious performance, great customer service or ingenuity may not have come to the attention of the larger University community. Previous recipients who received awards more than five years ago are eligible. Nomination Process and Deadline: Any University employee may make a nomination for the award. Please follow the format suggested below and include the information requested. Send your nominations via Campus Mail (no stamp needed) to Excellence Awards Committee, c/o University Supply and Mail Service, F4700. The deadline for nominations is March 15,1996. Notification: Award recipients will be notified in April and will be honored formally at the Staff Recognition Program on May 10,1996. 1996 Format for Nominations for Excellence Award Name of nominee (please print) Position and title of nominee Name of employing unit at U.T.Austin Nominee’s campus address, if available Your name(nominator)-please sign and print Nominator's department Supporting Statement Required: Attach a bnef supporting statement with examples describing what the nominee has done or is doing for The University. 4 T h e D a ily T e x a n WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21,188 8 EDITORIALS T h e Da i l y T e x a n Editorial Board K ev in B u tle r A s s o c ia te E d ito r R o b e rt R o g e rs V e ro n ica V a rg a s E d ito r A s s o c ia te E d ito r Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of O perating Trustees. VIEW POINT A 1ee we rteecI Student Government candidates seem to care a whole lot about using UT funds to create an observation deck, a graduation dance and a student lobbying group. Almost no one expresses concern about maintaining the m ost important resource the University has — its nationally renowned library system. It may not be renowned m uch longer. The UT library system is chronically underfunded, and students will suffer as a result. A report released by Harold Billings, director of General Libraries at the University, reveals that UT libraries have "been operating increas­ ingly closer to the edge of inadequate support." The UT library system has received alm ost no increase in funding for new purchases during the last 10 years. Meanwhile, the cost of publications continues to climb, fueled by a recent paper shortage and poor exchange rates. Students must pay the price — in fewer new m aterials and up-to- date research. According to Billings, the UT library system is purchasing 30,000 fewer volum es per year now than it did 10 years ago. Since 1986, 4,866 journal titles have been cancelled — m any of which could have pro­ vided students the information they desperately needed for that research paper. A side effect of this awful funding situation is that students find cur­ rent library m aterials less accessible. Because of the funding shortage, UT libraries have redirected funding for em ployees to purchase new m aterials — meaning that books are reshelved m ore slowly. Although the U T library system is the fifth largest in North Am eri­ ca, it has fallen to 29th in acquisitions. The report notes the effects of such spiral on library quality: "There is little possibility of rem edying 10 years of a virtually flat budget." But we can try. Follow A&M 's exam ple and raise fees for libraries. Every student needs to use the library, and everyone will benefit — unlike proposals for fee increases to lobby W ashington. — Kevin Butler Indecent law On W ednesday, a three-judge federal panel will evaluate the constitutionality of the Com m unications Decency Act. The CD A outlaw s using com puters to expose a minor to "indecen­ cy " or "patently offensive m aterials." A single federal judge has already imposed a tem porary restraining order against enforcing the CDA. N ow the question the judges face is whether to issue a preliminary injunction. There are several reasons why the court should do so. First, the legislation unconstitutionally confuses "obscene" and "in decen t." The Constitution does not protect obscenity, and laws against its distribution already exist. No First Am endm ent exception, how ever, exists for "indecent" speech. Indeed, no exception could exist unless a reasonably clear definition of indecent speech existed. With all its talk of com m unity standards, the definition of "obscenity" established under Miller v. California can be difficult enough to understand. This vagueness exists despite the relatively large body of obscenity cases. Yet few if any cases have attem pted to give a precise definition of "indecent." Thus, citizens can be legitimately uncertain about w hether their speech would violate the CDA. In other w ords, the legislation should be declared void for vagueness. Second, the implications of holding the CDA constitutional are breathtaking. The legislation could affect millions of terminals across America, especially those connected to the Internet. Anyone w ho pub­ lished "indecent" material or created conditions that might allow a minor to view it could face criminal prosecution. The result could be to reduce adults to reading only material suit­ able for children. Nothing could be so foreign to A m erica's tradition of free speech. For that reason, the federal courts should strike dow n the CDA. — Robert Rogers G L r i v / 4 * , geo M G "T o A 5 5 U M E TI4AT X COULD £>uy T’E o p l e’S v o t e s .... b u t d i d you (CWOLj THAT Mx/ LXWOU5IKJE I4AS X T S O U K J KlggiffPBKB Abolish tenure for professors at UT Nothing short of scrapping tenure w ill keep G eoff H enley TEXAN CO LU M NIST idle faculty at w ork. First endorsed in 1915 in a m anifesto by the Am erican A ssociation of University Professors as a shield from political pressures from adm inistrators, the lifetim e em ploym ent guarantee still fails its pur­ poses. M oreover, tenure spaw ns innum erable harms. Faculty m em bers d on't need tenure; they need backbone. As an undergrad participating in the debate against politicizing freshm an com posi­ tion, I w as stunned by the fear my tenured allies had of openly opposing the Left-w ing D epart­ m ent of English. And the Leftists often resorted to anonym ous poison pen letters, w hich in at least one case savaged a professor's appearance. A dm ittedly, I d id n 't and still d o n 't have a fam­ ily to feed. But tenure ostensibly protects these interests. It doesn't. It fosters w eakness. The m ost current exam ple of this defect com es from faculty m em bers who have sponsored a res­ olution that the U niversity ensure their academ ic freedom to trash corporate donors. Apparently, tenured radicals w ant m ore pro­ tection. These activ ists think th e U n iv ersity should not only protect academ ic freedom inter­ nally, but serve as an insurer for their tortious conduct — i.e., pay for their defense and com- pensate those w hom they defam e. Such expecta­ tions resem ble those of the teen-ager who w ants Dad to buy him a car so he can break curfew. W hen faculty assail public officials and figures, the First A m endm ent affords them am ple protec­ tion. M oreover, som e statem ents, if m ade by a UT official in som e sort of discretionary capacity, might be protected by sovereign im m unity. But tenure fails not only its essential purpose — it harm s. It's intuitive that tenure provides no incentive for faculty to produce once they've got it. Efforts have b een m ade to abolish tenure at schools in Florida and Colorado. These efforts, though, have m ade no sw eeping changes. Equally controversial have been efforts to abol­ ish tenure in the public school system . A BC 's 20/20 reports that firing faculty w ho have even assaulted and m olested students can take years. For exam ple, it took three years to rem ove a M ichigan teacher w ho drew a knife on a student. Though there appears to be little such violence in higher education, pockets of incom petence and indolence rem ain. Even m oderate ideas o f m ov­ ing tow ard renew able contracts have m et with vigorous opposition. W hy? B ecau se m ost faculty — w ith the exception o f textbook w riters, legal and business consu ltants and engineers and sci­ entists — cannot produce lucrative w ork inde­ pendent of a university. N o o n e's banging dow n doors to buy up d econstructionists. T h ere's little need for free-lance philosophers. Tenure proponents no doubt w ill w ail, "B u t 'fo r ca u se .'" But proving faculty can be fired harassm ent or laziness as "ca u se," these apolo­ gists know , rem ains a heavy burden, esp ecially at a public university. The b est bet for adm inistrators — often the fac­ ulty's least cou rageou s — is typically to ignore the bad apples. The U n iversity m ust m ove tow ard abolishing tenure. The Texas L egislature w ould b e well advised to hasten this m ove. N othing flies in the face of our state's traditions of right to w o rk and em ploym ent at w ill than this entitlem ent. N o one except federal ju d ges enjoys such a guarantee. D espite such facts, faculty egalitarians still cling to em ploym ent term s different from those o f doc­ tors and ditch diggers. Henley is a second-year law student. Barbara Jordan’s example inspires Texas On W ednesday, Barbara Jo r­ to w hites only. Jord an w as, there­ fore, excluded from m em bership in the D em ocratic Party. dan — born Feb. 21, 1936 — w ould have celebrated her A lthough Susan B. A nthony w as arrested for voting in 1872, by 1920 the 19th A m endm ent w as ratified. In 1924, M iriam Ferguson w as elect­ ed governor of Texas. Rosem ary Sim m ons GUEST C O LU M N IST 60th birthday. But one month ago, draped in an A m erican flag, she took her last dig­ nified journey from the University, carried from the LBJ Library, w here she had lain in state, across the beau­ tiful patio of Sid Richardson hall in w hose classroom s she had taught so brilliantly, and on to H ouston for her last trip hom e. In an outpouring of grief such as is seldom seen, the "beloved com ­ m u n ity " of M artin Luther K ing's dream , Tony B row n's "T eam A m er­ ica " cam e to say good-bye to Bar­ bara. People of all races, social class, national origin and sexual orienta­ tion joined in m ourning her death. But 60 years ago, there would have been no lying in state for Jo r­ d an at the U niversity. In 1936, Jo r­ d an w ould have been barred from participating in the political process of the D em ocratic Party as surely as she w as barred from the U niversity as a student and as a teacher because of her race. Jordan, in an eerily sym bolic way, em bodied in her person many o f the categories for w hich de jure (legal) or de facto (custom ary) exclusion has been "p o litically correct" for m ost of the 20th century. She was black; she was fem ale; she w as fat, and she w as disabled. But the one that presented the great­ est obstacle for her w as not her sex, not her wheel chair, not her size, but her race. and Ferg u son , Surrogate though she w as for her fo rm er g o v ern o r h u sb an d Jam es e lectio n show ed that it w as possible for a w om an to be elected to high political office in Texas. h er The sam e could not b e said for blacks. In 1923, the T exas L eg isla tu re passed a law forbidding blacks to vote in the state D em ocratic prim a­ ry. L.A. Nixon, a black Texan, ch al­ lenged the law on the grounds that it violated the 14th and 15th A m end ­ m ents, and in 1927 the Suprem e Court agreed w ith Nixon. In 1935, how ever, the Suprem e C o u rt in G rovey v. T ow n sen d upheld the right o f the Texas D em o­ cratic Party to lim it its m em bership Barbara Jo rd an 's ultim ate inclu­ sion in political life did n ot come about because of the goodw ill of the brokers of the politics of exclusion. It cam e about through steady pressure exerted on an unjust system by men and w om en who transcended their tim es. Eleanor Roosevelt in the '3 0s and '40s exerted pressure from the W hite H ou se, w h ile Thurgood M arshall representing the N A A CP attacked the system in the courts. B ecau se of their courage and the courage of countless others, a state and a people w ere enriched by the life of Barbara Jordan who, b o m in black-history month, becam e a trail- b lazer of black history. Simmons is a graduate student in educational psychology. Boyles missed the mark Once again, Sherry Boyles gets it all w rong. It's time to put som e of the points m ade in her Firing Line into perspective. Boyles claims the SG has w orked to close loopholes in election laws, yet the assembly she helped to elect voted dow n meaningful election reform. The Election Supervisory Board chair she appointed has already violated the rights of the students, as Rob Rogers aptly observed in his Vieiopoints. Congress never proposed eliminating the student loan program . It proposed changing the repaym ent options but not canceling the program itself. The national organization she brags about, N A SH E, has little or no influence in W ashington, D.C. M ore im portant, it violates the rights of students by forcing them to contribute to a lobbying group they may not agree with. N A S H E is m ore about giving cam pus politicians like Sherry Boyles free trips to W ash in gton than it is about helping stu­ dents. T h o u g h the stu d en ts did vote to in cre a se fees for the stu d en t services building, they also voted twice to delay co n stru ctio n of the building pending the co m p letion of a cam pus plan. Boyles an d her precious SG have yet to giv e even token support to the election results d em an d in g a delay of the build­ in g's con stru ction. Boyles an d the SG still refuse to carry ou t the referen d u m favoring the direct election o f S tu d en t Services Fee C om m it­ tee m em b ers b ecau se it w ould take pow er aw ay from the SG president. Boyles used to b rag that the UT legisla­ tive relations gro u p s receiving m andatory student fee m o n ey only took positions on ed ucation issues. N o w she w ants to force all students to p ay to su pp ort either the SG or PIRG, a N aderite grou p that cam paigns for anti-business legislation. Boyles w on her election because the m ajor alternative got disqualified for the content of his views. The stu d en ts n ev er got to vote on w h eth er o r n o t th ey w an ted the SG because the ESB claim ed Neil Sheffield violated prohibitions again st "m islead ­ ing" cam paigning. This rule clearly vio­ lates the First A m endm ent, and the SG has yet to repeal it. D uring m y three years at the U niversity, I chronicled the activities of the Student G overnm ent. I noted the times it ignored its ow n rules, the times it took vacations at stu ­ dents' expense, and the ridiculous corrup ­ tion and incom petence of som e of its offi­ cers. But I also chronicled its successes. I know C hris P arry. W e disagree on m an y issues. H e w as a m em ber of the U ni­ versity D em ocrats, while I belonged to the Young C onservatives of Texas. Yet P arry has often w orked tirelessly for students. He helped lead a grass-roots coalition including both YCT and the UD 's to try to delay construction of the student services building until a cam p u s plan got adopted. He worked at The D aily Texan to help provide students an informed perspective on cam pus and world events. Chris Parry w as one of the m ost honest, sincere, hard-w orking people I en coun ­ tered at the University. S herry Boyles regu larly w astes stu ­ dents' m oney, violates their rights, and has a vastly inflated view of the SG's accom plishm ents and its im portance. Leveling false personal attacks at Chris P arry doesn't change that. William Lutz UT alumnus FIRING LINE Let’s be honest about Abe Kevin Butler's cute, w holesom e little ode to "h onest A be" roused strong em otions in m y tough A m erican heart. F eelin g s of pride and nostalgia they w ere not. Sw allow your buttery w hite bread, boy, and wash it dow n with a half gallon of truth. D uring his inaugural address, the Great Em ancipator expressed strong support for an am endm ent that would make slavery legal and federally protected in the states w here it existed. Throughout his life, Lincoln saw colo­ nization, the transport of all A m ericans of A frican descent to Liberia, as the solution to the slavery problem . A racist through- and-through, he stated to a delegation of blacks, in the m onths before the release of the Em ancipation Proclam ation, that, "O n this broad continent, not a single m an of you r race is m ade the equal of a single man of ours. ... It is better for us both, therefore, to be separated." In this great land o f ours, are som e things best left w ithin their pleasing down covers? O r should w e take that daring peek into the darkness w ithin? lungs, and a city fragm ented and su bd iv id ­ ed. For others, cars mean "co nvenience" or im age." W ithin 50 feet of you is a place where your body can be crushed into a sack of jelly with but one lapse of attention. I w onder why this is necessary to civiliza­ tion. I know my view s are not popular. too Does the conduct of ou r daily lives have to be at the detrim ent of society? Are w e m aking this country better or ju st crying for m ore privilege? W e com plain about congestion, parking, and drunk drivers. W e rem ain blind to the effects of ou r "c o n ­ venience" and "im ag e." M aybe we w ill be trap ped by thoughtless habit. I thank this university for its w isdom in com m itting itself to a car- free cam pus. People will cry now, but the value w ill b eco m e self-ev id en t. Those how ling at the thought of losing pam pered parking privilege seem a trifle unrealistic, but it is a condition of childhood. Child­ hood ends; responsibility begins. W e strug­ gle toward a better world, and either we or our children will have to raise the courage to do w ithout "co n v en ien ce" or "im ag e." Mike Librik Humanities senior tions. So, until the U niversity is losing m oney on football, and cuts w ould be unjustified and costly to other students, stop com plaining. Kevin Sheppard Math senior Too much blood and gore A fter the W orld & N ation page w ent to press, The D aily Texan realized that the sto­ ries featured on the overturned ferry in the Philippines, the tw o car bom bs in Algeria, the earthquake in Indonesia, the F-14 crash, the L ondon d ouble-decker bus explosion and the com m uter train w reck did not con­ tain a body count high enough to satiate the blood thirsty heathens they know and love as their readers. In an effort to correct this problem , they printed an addendum to the death toll in the hope of appeasing any advertisers that felt The Daily Texan w as not living up to the high levels of m ediocrity strived for by publication after publication that recog­ nizes gore and violence as true journalism . Matt Hullum RTF junior Brooke Brunner Plan II sophomore Do not cut scholarships Car-free campus needed I want to thank the University for their recent com m itm ent to car-free cam pus in '97. It is easy to feel like a voice in the w ilderness when one claims that these cars are killing us, m aking us strangers to one another, and subjecting us to stress, fear and violence. No one seem s to care. When I think of automobiles, I think of thousands of deaths each year, of pollution pouring relentlessly from the numberless tailpipes that stream past our laboring I am writing this Firing Line on response to the colum n about cutting football schol­ arships. The author said that only one-fifth of the 554 N CA A football program s earn money. Thus, 111 program s m ake money, and alm ost all o f these program s are D ivi­ sion 1-A, as Texas is. Football at Texas is a trem endous m oney maker, and it afford s m any other excellent athletes w ho could not have gone to a uni­ versity of this caliber a chance. In addition, I believe the Longhorn Foundation raised some $4.2 million. Much of this fund rais­ ing was done at football games and func­ % Te. to the Texan basem ent offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue o r mailed to P.O. B ox D, Austin, TX 78713. T hey a lso can be e-m ailed to T EXA N @ utxvm s.cc.u texas.ed u . Firing Line letters m ust be fewer than 250 w ords. U T students should include their m ajor and classification, and all w riters m ust present identifi­ cation o r include a phone num ber. The Texan reserves the right to ed it UNIVERSITY A PENNY SAVED Wyatt Phillips and Scott Privette, both aerospace engineering seniors, perfect the “rocket scientist’s p ig g y b a n k ” w h ich , a fte r a 6 0 -ste p p ro ce ss, deposits a penny into a piggy bank. The project will be entered in the Rube Goldberg Contest, which is a competition to see who can devise the most complicated machine to perform the simple task of dropping a penny in a bank STEPHANIE FRIEDMAN/Daily Texan Staff A lounge of Malcolm X’s own see and appreciate everyone's strug ­ gles," he said. As for the unofficial status of the name, no other com parable areas in Jester are named for historical figures. Furthermore, in December Berdahl said of the unnamed lounge, "I think we have a problem with naming on this campus." "The U niversity's position is that non e of th e lo u n g e s are n a m e d ," said W ilson, add ing "I d o n 't think th e s tu d e n ts w a n t a p la q u e on a wall nam ing it, either." "There is no question this is the M alcolm X lo u n g e," said finance junior T 'm itri G lenn. "You can tell what it is by the poetry and artwork." CHRIS JANSON ____________ Daily Texan Staff T he M alcolm X L o u n g e in th e Beauford H. Jester Center may not be officially recognized, but it is becom­ ing a cam pus home to many African- American students at the University. The lounge opened last December in response to student and staff con­ cerns th a t th e re w as no place for African-A m erican stu d en ts to meet socially and study. Terry W ilson, UT assistant direc­ tor of public affairs, said since the early 1970s Jester Center has served as a g a th e rin g p lace for A frican- American students. "Since Jester was built, a num ber of A frican-Am erican students were housed there," he said. "It became a c e n te r o r g a th e r in g p o in t for A fric a n -A m e ric a n s tu d e n ts , as opposed to the W est Mall." D u rin g th a t p e r io d , A fric a n - A m erican stu d en ts began referring to a popular lounge in the residen­ tial area of Jester as the Malcolm X Lounge, he said. James’Vick, vice president for stu­ dent affairs, said in the fall of 1994, stu d en t residents in Jester decided to convert the lounge to a 24-hour quiet area for studying, w hich pre­ v e n te d s tu d e n ts fro m g a th e rin g there to socialize. Soon after the conversion of the lounge, A frican-A m erican stud en ts voiced their concerns about the lack of a suitable meeting area on campus. "Generally speaking, there are no places where African-American stu­ dents can gather to socialize," said Sabrina Whatley, a psychology junior. Vick said after the original lounge had been converted, African-Ameri­ can s tu d e n ts " fe lt th e y h a d lo st s o m e th in g ." A fte r m e e tin g w ith co n c e rn e d s tu d e n ts , UT officials, in c lu d in g UT P r e s id e n t R o b e rt Berdahl, began to look for another site, he added. "A lth o u g h the im p e tu s [for the new lo u n g e] cam e from A frican - Am erican students, the lounge is for all students," Vick said. W h a tle y s a id , " S tu d e n ts of all races come in here. It's a good place to study," she said, adding, "It's not like it is limited to m inorities." Some African-A m erican students said the lo u n g e m akes th em feel more comfortable at the University. "It m akes us feel that we have a fo u n d atio n — a feeling of hom e," Glenn said. The lounge "is an extension of liv­ ing room s or dens, w here stu d en ts can share experiences," Wilson said, adding that he is waiting for the day when such lounges are not necessary. "The u ltim ate goal sh ou ld be to Study skills center offers intro course supplements BONNIE A. LEWELLYN_______ Daily Texan Staff Because of funding increases p ro ­ vided by several colleges, stu d en ts in som e entry-level courses in clas­ sics, radio-television-film and speech are now able to attend special d is­ cussion sections that integrate study skills w ith the usual course material. The Learning Skills C enter added these supplem ental instruction class­ es th is s e m e s te r to th e c o u rs e s already offering SI, including lower- division b io’ogy, chem istry, history and sociology courses. " S u p p le m e n ta l in s tru c tio n is a nationally recognized, non-rem edial stu d e n t assistance program specifi­ cally d e sig n e d to help stu d e n ts in entry-level academ ic courses," said Joanne H olladay, a learning special­ ist at the Learning Skills Center. T he L e a r n in g S k ills C e n te r d e m o n stra te s m ethods of effective le a r n in g a n d te s t- ta k in g , w h ic h te a c h in g a s s is ta n ts b le n d into th e discussion sections. "In a traditional section, students re g u rg ita te m aterial," said K irsten Dellinger, a teaching assistant for Soci­ ology 302. "SI says, 'Hey, you have to learn how to manage this material.' " Students in Dellinger's sociology SI section are working on constructing a matrix to bring together the material learned throughout the semester. "The goal is to foster independence a n d get s tu d e n ts m ore activ ely involved in learning," she said. "I think every class should have one of these." Some students, however, object to this m ethod of instruction. "I'm sure it helped some people in the class, but I feel that at the college le v e l, s tu d e n ts h a v e in d iv id u a l re s p o n s ib ility to take c a re of a n y s tu d y s k ills p ro b le m s," sa id E rin Dixon, a journalism senior w ho took a g o v ern m e n t course w ith su p p le ­ m ental instruction. "I'm n o t taking classes at UT to learn a b o u t stu d y skills w hen I've already developed a study system I'm com fortable with." But H olladay said, "Students real­ ly like and do trem endously better in these classes." A study said 82 p e r­ cent of SI particip an ts feel that the le a r n in g s tr a te g ie s ta u g h t w e re either 'v ery helpful' or 'helpful.' "I thought it w as a big help w hen used in conjunction w ith atte n d in g lectures, b u t you can't just go to SI and skip class," said Tyler Jacobsen, an undeclared liberal arts freshm an w h o a tte n d e d SI classes. "It h e lp s you get p roblem s straig h te n ed o u t that you can't ask in class." Since 1993, the num ber of classes offered w ith sup p lem en tal in stru c ­ tion has increased 110 percent, to 105 sections, H olladay said. &vv;J T h e D a il y T e x a n Vi WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1986 5 Libraries see drop in general funds As funding stalls and costs rise UT watches national rankings fall JENNIFER STUMP__________ Daily Texan Staff P e rio d ic a ls a n d b o o k s w ill be harder to find, library hours will not be e x te n d e d and the U n iv e rsity 's national ranking as a major research i n s titu tio n w ill c o n tin u e to fall u n le s s f u n d in g for th e G e n e ra l L ibraries is increased, said H arold B illin g s, d ir e c to r of G e n e ra l Libraries. Funds for purchasing new m ateri­ als for the G eneral L ibraries have been at a v irtu a l standstill for the past 10 years, Billings said Tuesday. At the sam e time, the cost of period­ icals has m ore than doubled, and a p o o r e x c h a n g e ra te h as m a d e it m ore expensiv e for A m erican d o l­ lars to buy foreign journals, he said. "The library is starting to slip dra­ m a tic a lly fro m th e w o rld cla ss library w e have been to one th a t's going to have to w ork very h ard to re a c h o u r fo rm e r s ta n d a r d s ," Billings said. T his y e a r, s u b s c rip tio n s to 605 periodicals will not be renewed, and in 1993 alm ost 2,000 su bscription s w ere canceled. A lth ough the U niversity has the fifth la rg e s t lib ra ry c o lle c tio n in N o rth A m e ric a , it ra n k s 2 9 th in funding for new m aterials, accord­ in g to re c e n t s ta tis tic s fro m th e Association of Research Libraries. "If we follow these same sp e n d ­ ing p a tte rn s, in 10 m ore y e a rs we will make one-third of the book p u r­ chases we did in 1986 and less than one-half of the journal purchases," Billings said. For the past 10 years, m oney that w ould norm ally pay for hiring new staff members, office supplies or com­ puter maintenance has been rerouted to help pay for new purchases, said Dennis Dillon, head of collections and information resources. "W e've been taking every p enny we can squeeze and p u ttin g it into journals," Dillon said. Dick Richardson, chairm an of the Library C om m ittees of th e Faculty Council, said, "The im pact h as not been totally uniform across cam pus. Students and faculty in the sm aller d e p a r tm e n ts w e re th e o n e s th a t were taking the b ru nt of those cuts. But anyone th at's in the m ainstream will also feel the im pact." O ne of th e m o st b a sic w a y s all students are im pacted is that books are n ot resh elv e d q u ic k ly e n o u g h d ue to u n d e rsta ffin g , said Jo a n n e Hawkins, associate director for p u b ­ lic services in the General Libraries. "If you can't get m aterials on the shelf th e n y o u m ig h t a s w e ll n o t have them ," H aw kins said. And although students consistent­ ly request longer library hours, this will not be possible w ith o u t m o re funding, she said. "The library is the core institution of the U niversity, and w ith o u t the m aterials our re p u ta tio n an d p r o ­ d u c tiv ity w ill go d o w n ," s a id Vi H ua, an en g in eerin g sen io r a n d a student representative to the Faculty Council's Library Committee. In th e fall of 1995, T exas A&M U niversity im p le m en te d a $2 per- credit- hour stu den t services fee to help pay for library purchases. That fee w ill be raised to $4 p er c re d it hour by the fall of 1997. As a result, Texas A&M will spend about $7 million on new library p u r­ chases th is year, $3 m illio n m o re than w h a t w as spen t in 1995. The LJniversity will spend $5 million this year. It is one of the only state-su|p- ported schools in Texas that does not have a student library fee. Fred Heath, dean of A&M 's Ster­ ling Evans Library, said A&M offi­ cials a re try in g to im p ro v e th d ir school's statu s as a m ajor research institution. "O ur library is not as good as the A ustin library," H eath said. "This kind of ex penditure m oves us into the sam e acq u isitio n ran g e as the University of Texas." The Undergraduate Business Council Presents Business Week ‘96 TEX4S BUSINESS February 19-23 99 Monday Commissioner Brenda Arnette TX Department of Commerce 530-650pmUTC2.112A Patrick J. McDonnell Vice Chairman of Business Assurance Coopers & Lybrand 7-8 pm UTC 2.U2A Tuesday Entrepreneurship in the ‘90’s 5-6 pm UTC 3.102 Business in Professional Sports Spurs, Rangers & Rockets 7-8» pm GSB 2.124 Reception in Atrium Wednesday Margot Fraser ■ President of Birkenstock 7-8 pm FAC 21 Thursday Entertainment Tonight Fiesta Texas, Zachary Scott Theatre, & TX Film Commission 5-6“ pm UTC 3.112 Virtual Reality: Defining our Future CyberSim, Flogiston Corp., & UT Architecture 7-9 pm UTC 3.112 Friday Service Auction Food, Fun, D.J. & Dance Maggie Mae’s 9 -lam Sponsored by BC & 0 X 0 • v i:. T Pi ■ i _ V V EXCLUSIVELY ON Television - c T h e D a i l y T e x a n 6 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1886 STATE & LOCAL PICK THREE: 5-8-4 LOTTO: 7-10-14-20-27 Councilmembers offer new candidates words of wisdom BOTTOMS UP JA SO N SPENCER Daily Texan Staff Though the first day of the filing period to run for a place on the City C o u n cil cam e and w ent T u esd ay without a sound from any potential candidates, current councilmembers have p len ty of ad vice for an y o n e thinking of running. Current councilmembers said the eventual candidates will have a num­ ber of issues to address before the election. "They'll have to address the electric u tility , re o rg a n iz a tio n of the city departments ... and the tax structure of the c ity ," said C ou n cilm em b er Ronney Reynolds. Reynolds, who holds Place 2, said in the next few years the council will have to decide whether to sell its elec­ tric utility and make sure construc­ tion of the new a irp o rt sta y s on schedule and on budget. Councilmember Jackie Goodman, who is running for re-election, said she agrees that the question of what to do with the electric utility, which is currently owned and operated by the city, will be one o f the most im por­ tant issues facing the new council. "W e've got to make our utility lean and mean if it is going to survive," Goodman said. O utgoing C ouncilm em ber Brigid Shea said the council candidates will also have to address the problem of paying off the city's debts. Shea said d ealin g w ith the d ebt generated by the city's revitalization p la n s for E ast A u stin co u ld be a source for heated political debate. Rebecca Motal, who plans to run for Place 3, said part of the reason no on e filed at the city c le r k 's o ffice Tuesday is that candidates must pay a $500 filing fee or collect 259 signa­ tures to appear on the ballot. T h e end of th e filin g p erio d is March 20. The two retiring councilmembers, Shea and Max Nofziger, offered some w ords of w isdom to the num ber of people who have said they intend to run for council. Shea, who is not seeking re-elec­ tion, said she would advise her suc­ cessor not to take the public scrutiny that comes with the job too seriously. "M y advice would be to develop a tough skin and do the right thing no matter what the consequences," Shea said . "W h o ev er tak es my p lace is going to have a tough time of it." Shea said the current council has b ecom e "v e ry p o la riz e d " and the in co m in g c o u n cilm e m b e rs co u ld have a tough time dealing w ith the personal attacks from political oppo­ nents. Nofziger, who also will not run for re-election, said the best way to deal with the pressures of running the city is to get out of the city whenever pos­ sible. "T ak e som e tim e aw ay from the job," Nofziger said. "G et out of town periodically." Nofziger said he plans to pursue a ca re e r in m u sic w h en his term in office runs out in June. R eynolds said he hopes the new council will be able to do a better job of putting aside personal differences and getting work done. "It's okay to d isagree," Reynolds said. "Just d on't do it disagreeably. When it's all over with just go have a beer or iced tea together." To boost participation, political parties encourage involvement Donna Lita of Austin changes her 16 month-old expecting again. She said, “I’m looking forward daugther Nicole’s diaper at Zilker Park where to another on e .” Th e w eather gave them a they were picnicking. Lita, a full-time mom, is chance to enjoy the day outdoors. B O N N IE J . WALDMAN/Daily Texan Staff T he p re c in c t c o n v e n tio n s a re m e etin g s at the p o llin g p lace in each precinct. Attendees select the d eleg ates who attend the county convention in late M arch, M orey said. "The reality is that this year, if you show up at the D e m o cra tic precinct convention, you will be a delegate to the county convention," Morey said. She added, "T here w ill be little co m p etitio n at the p recin ct level because there is no Democratic chal­ lenger to President Bill Clinton." G a lb ra ith ag reed w ith M orey about the importance of attending precinct conventions. "The grass-roots level is where it all begins. You can file resolutions at the precinct level to have certain item s included in the platform of the party — that's w here you can really make a difference," Galbraith said. H o w ev e r, th is p o w er can be abu sed, w arned K ild ay . She said certain co n servative groups have said they would vote in the Democ­ ratic primary just to be able to par­ ticipate in the precinct convention and attempt to shape policy. "That's not the kind of participa­ tion we're looking for," Kilday said. A sid e from atten d in g p recin ct conventions, which could be a prob­ lem for students since this year they fall during spring break, students can become involved with campus political groups, said Sean McCann, president of University Democrats. "P eop le call us every day look­ ing for volunteers, and people call us every day w anting to volunteer ... w e m atch them u p ," M cC ann said. S u zan n e S a n d e rs, p u b lic re la ­ tio n s c h a irw o m a n fo r C o lle g e Republicans, said joining a student p o litical group is one of the best ways to get involved in this year's campaigns. Sanders also suggested contacting local party organizations and candi­ dates directly. "They always need the help, and there are some positions available at $5 an hour," Galbraith said. She added that can d id ates and party organizations can always use volu nteers w illing to w alk n eigh­ b o rh o o d s , s tu ff e n v e lo p e s and d riv e v o te rs to polling places. call p e o p le , "Just give them a call," she said. Kilday encouraged working for a cam paign or party because of the am ount a student can learn about the political process. " The students I have working in the party are learning more practical knowledge about the demographics o f T e x a s, T e x a s h isto ry and the p o litica l p rocess than they could learn in any class at UT," Kilday, a UT alumna, said. CATON FENZ_______________ Daily Texan Staff W ith season the ca m p aig n already well under way, state and local political party organizers are p u sh in g to in v o lv e m ore young people in the campaigns as a way to increase party participation in the coming years. "I think students are less involved today, and we need to change that," said Anne Marie Kilday, director of communications for the Texas State Democratic Party. "W e w ant p e o p le to b eco m e involved as early in life as possible ... because then they will be more likely to pay attention to the politi­ cal world around them the rest of th e ir liv e s ," said Ja n G a lb ra ith , ch a irm an o f the T ra v is C o u n ty Republican Party. M ary M orey, executive director of the Travis County D em ocratic P a rty , e n c o u ra g e d s tu d e n ts to atten d the p re cin ct co n v e n tio n s th a t ta k e p la c e a f te r th e p o lls clo se on the day of the prim ary M arch 12. 149 Stylewriter with 6214 Performa purchase Now’s the time to get a great deal with the Apple Power Payback on a computer and a printer. Because while supplies last, you can receive a $150 mail-in rebate on ANY Apple pnnter when you combine your purchase with an Apple Macintosh® Performa® 6214 computer. 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Texas Union MicroCenter The Microcenter’s special prices and services are available only to University of Texas at Austin students, faculty and staff Prices and availability are subject to change 2 1 0 East 21st Street, across from Jester 475-6550 E-Mail address: (micro@mc.utexas.edu) WEB page address: ( http://www.mc.utexas.edu NATIONAL BESTSELLER Now in Paperback by Nicholas Negroponte Whether you’re superwired or still unplugged, Negroponte is your best - A source for information on the multimedia future that’s starting right now. “¡Being Digital] flows from the pen (or cursor) of a wizard who is himself helping create the new cosmos toward which we are hurtling.” -New York Times THE TEXAS UNION MEET THE CANDIDATES O pen F o ru m M eet the candidates for the two one- year VOTING POSITIONS ON THE TEXAS UNION BOARD OF DIRECTORS Chris M adeksho P rescott Caballero Corbin Casteel Steve B artels D onna P olidoro T ejal Shah Am y C. W elborn M aury B ricks D . Shane H ogan D anny R afati T u e s d a y , F e b r u a r y 2 7 , 1 9 9 6 N o o n - 1 : 3 0 p.m. P r e s i d e n t i a l L o b b y , T h i r d L e v e l T h e T e x a s U n io n SPORTS T h e D a i l y T e x a n # WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1896 Horns keep Skinner, Bears in check, 80-72 MATT YOUNG______________ Daily Texan Staff WACO — Just call it the Tom Pen­ ders Invitational. It's n o t exactly March M adness and you w o n't hear Dick Vitale raving about it on ESPN, but P enders created the fictional tournam ent to make sure his players are focusing on one gam e at a time. The R unnin' H orns got a big sem i­ final w in in Pender's tournam ent w hen they outlasted Baylor 80-72 Tuesday night at the Ferrell Center. Before last w eekend's gam e at SMU, Penders sat his team dow n to tell them not to look ahead to the m uch-anticipated gam e with No. 9 Texas Tech Saturday. "I just told them that the Tech game is like the finals of a toum a- TEXAS MEN'S BASKETBALL m eht," Penders said. "In ord er for us to make it that far we h ad to get past the first tw o rounds against SMU and Baylor. I told them this w as just like the semifinals of any to urna­ ment. We w on this one so now w e look ahead to the finals." Texas (17-6, 10-2 SWC) used a blazing 50 percent shooting perfor­ m ance from behind the 3-point arc to sink the Bears (8-15, 3-8). Junior Reggie Freem an's five three pointers and senior Lam ont H ill's four treys helped both of the guards share the scoring lead w ith 22 points apiece. Freshm an Kris Clack had another stellar night w ith 17 points and a gam e-high 14 rebounds. "Clack w as huge for us tonight," Penders said. "He h ad five offensive rebounds tonight and every one of those turned into buckets for us. If he's not the freshm an of the year, then I guess I d o n 't know w hat the hell I'm doing." Texas found itself in an unusual position in the first half. For the first time in three games the H orns actu­ ally w ere trailing in the game. The biggest deficit was only 15-19 with 9:30 still left in the first half. Texas opened up the second half w ith a 12-2 run to give it a 54-40 lead. The H orns w ould go on to stretch that lead to 17 points with 7:40 left in the game. At that point Baylor sprung a sur­ prise on the H orns by pressing Texas after m ade baskets. It worked as Bay­ lor sophom ore Roddrick M iller scored nine straight points to lead the Bears on an 11-1 run of their own. Baylor forw ard D oug B randt would follow with seven straight points to cut the lead to 73-68 with 1:44 left in the game. "We worked on the press all week in practice," Brandt said. "We knew that teams who press don't like to get pressed. You could see them panic a little and try to beat the press by throwing those cross-court passes." On the next possession, Texas worked the clock dow n until Free­ m an threw up a scoop shot in the lane that m issed badly. Clack was there for the rebound and kicked it out to Hill, w ho was fouled w ith 55 seconds left. Hill connected on tw o free throw s to give Texas a seven-point lead. Baylor could get only one free throw out of its next possession to cut the lead to six. Texas sealed the win by passing the ball around, leaving Bay­ lor unable to foul and stop the clock. Clack had an im pressive night w ith a couple of huge plays against Baylor's 6-10 stud Brian Skinner. All season Skinner has show n that he is virtually unstoppable w hen he gets the ball in the low post. But early in the second half, Skinner caught the ball in the lane and turned for w hat looked like an easy deuce, before the 6-5 Clack used every inch of his 42-inch vertical leap to reject the big m an's shot. Clack also capped a 9-0 Texas run in Please see Runnin', page 8 Horns roll Bobcats again, 18 TEXAS BASEBALL CHARLES POLANSKY Daily Texan Staff For the second time in 13 days, the Texas Longhorns beat South­ west Texas State by two touch­ dow ns, 18-4, at Disch-Falk Field Tuesday. Oops, w rong sport. "W hen yo u 're up tw o touch­ dow ns it's about time to call it a day," Texas designated h itter D anny Péoples said. The Longhorns (7-7) collected 15 hits and six SWT pitchers helped out w ith nine bases on balls. The Bobcats fell to 3-7. The gam e was m arkedly dif­ ferent than the gam e w on by Texas 21-7 on Feb. 7. In that con­ test the Bobcats led the H orns 4- 1 in the fifth inning before Texas erupted for 18 runs in its final three turns at bat. "Well, I think the difference was [Texas starter Donny Bark­ er] holding them dow n and giv­ ing us some innings to build u p a lead," Texas head coach Cliff Gustafson said. "Last time Jake [O'Dell] ran into trouble early." Peoples agreed w ith his coach. "W e took a little pressure off Donny with some runs early," he said. "A fter we put u p a couple of ru n s early everyone could relax a little bit." Barker (3-1) pitched six innings and allowed only three hits and two runs b u t w alked six. H e struck out tw o SWT hitters. "You've got to give [Barker] credit for a good start," Gustafson said. "H e w ent six innings and gave up three hits and only two runs but he did walk six and Please see Horns, page 8 R-E-S-P-E-C-T Texas can’t seem to get any oj it BRIAN DAVIS Daily Texan Staff After back-to-back road wins at Texas A&M and SMU, and still no votes in nationw ide polls, the Lady Longhorns finally get their chance to earn some respect by knocking off a top-10 team — but that's Saturday. If Texas (15-7, 10-1 S outhw est Conference) w ants Saturday's gam e against No. 6 Texas Tech to m ean anything at all, a win over Baylor (10-16, 2-9) W ednesday is a must. A victory over the Bears w ould m ean that S aturday's gam e against the Red Raiders is for a share of the top spot in the SWC. "If we d o n 't w in W ednesday, then everything w e've done is for n o th ­ ing. That's how im portant this gam e forw ard A m ie is W ednesday," Smith said. "Of course, Saturday's going to be exciting. But, it's not going to be exciting unless we w in ■ When: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. ■ Where: Erw in Center ■ Records: Texas (15-7 over­ all, 10-1 SWC); Baylor (10-16, 2-9) on W ednesday." A lthough Texas' m entality is to take things one gam e at a time, it m ust be aw fully hard to concentrate on a BU team that has only posted tw o conference victories, both of w hich w ere over the conference's barrel-bottom TCU H om ed Frogs. STEPHANIE FRIEDMAN/Daily Texan Staff Texas catcher Roman Escamilla is safe at home before SWT catcher Chad Spear has caught the ball. He scored on Chris Edelstein’s double. Cowboys lose MVP Brown to Oakland Associated Press OAKLAND, Calif. — C om erback Larry Brown, whose w orth on the free-agent m arket soared after he being voted the Super Bowl's m ost valu­ able player, is leaving the Dallas Cowboys for the Oakland Raiders. ------------------------------------- Brown, w ho had ► Deion decides to drop two interceptions in baseball, page 12__ ___ the Cowboys' 27-17 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers, would not dis­ close details of the contract, except to say it was for more than one year. "T here's a point in your life w hen you have to realize it's time to move on. I think I came to that page," Brown said Tuesday at a news conference. The Cowboys were not expected to re-sign Brown because of salary cap restrictions and the available cornerback com bination of Deion Please see Lady Horns, page 12 UT’s Daniele Viglione’s buzzer beater downed SMU. Please see B ro w n , page 8 JOHN GAYUSKY/Daily Texan Staff Strom getting chance to turn Astros’ staff around Associated Press HOUSTON — Despite all the talent in their hard-hitting lineup, the H ouston Astros' cham ­ pionship hopes m ight rest with a balding 47- year-old w ho notched a 22-39 record during his brief major-league pitching career. New pitching coach Brent Strom has been given the task this season of turning around a five-man starting rotation that com bined for a 43-49 record and included no pitcher w ho won more than 10 gam es last year. It's difficult to envision the A stros m aking a run for the N ational League C entral title w ith­ out substantial im provem ent. Those who know Strom, including most Astros pitchers, insist he's up to the task. "One good thing about Brent is that he doesn't think every pitcher's the same," Shane Reynolds, Houston's most consistent starter the past two years, told the Houston Chronicle. "Everybody has different mechanics, and he understands that." Strom spent 12 years coaching in the Class AAA Pacific C oast League before his prom o­ tion. His major-league pitching career lasted only five years, but his team mates included Tom Sea ver and G aylord Perry. He learned from both of them and finished his career with the San Francisco Giants, where split-finger fastball m aster Roger Craig w as his pitching coach. W hen he w ent to w ork as the D odgers' Class AAA pitching coach in 1980, he talked pitching w ith such greats as Sandy Koufax, Don Drys- dale and Don Sutton. "I'd rem em ber what they said, and I'd take notes," Strom said. "All these great D odger nam es had things to teach me about pitching. But it all came dow n to three things: W ork quickly, change speeds, and be able to have com m and. I heard the same thing from the M ets." Strom had effect on the Astros even before joining the big-league club, w orking with most H ouston pitchers in the m inor leagues. He taught Reynolds a forkball at Class AA Jackson and coached reliever Todd Jones at Class AAA Tucson. "M y control is spotty," Jones adm itted. "But before I met him , it w as awful. W e'd go to the outfield, and h e 'd have me throw ing to him with m y eyes closed, and that im proved my control. With m y eyes closed, I w ouldn't lose my balance." Strom said feel plays a large part in pitching. Please see Astros, page 8 ASSOCIATED PRESS Astros pitcher Shane Reynolds throws a football during spring drills. % SCORES NBA Milwaukee 92, New York 87 Orlando 123, Philadelphia 104 Chicago 102, Cleveland 76 Utah 112, Boston 98 San Antonio 108, Portland 105 L.A. Lakers 121, L A. Clippers 104 NHL Ottawa 7, St. Louis 1 Calgary 5, San Jose 3 COUifiE BASKETBALL MBITS TOP 2S No. 1 UMass 74, Rhode Island 69 No. 2 Kentucky 84, Alabama 65 No. 7 Purdue 74, Illinois 71 No. 9 Texas Tech 75, SMU 54 Seton Hall 80, No. 15 Syracuse 79 No. 19 Memphis 91, Southern Mississippi 66 SWC MEN Texas 80, Baylor 72 WOMEN'S TOP 25 No. 2 Georgia 89, No. 19 Florida 81 No. 9 Virginia 80, Georgia Tech 61 No. 23 Notre Dame 80, Miami 61 COLLEGE BASEBALL SWC Texas 18, Southwest Texas 4 TCU 10, No. 9 Oklahoma 9 No. 19 Texas A&M 9-3, UT-Arlington 2-4, (2nd game, 11 innings) f fÜÜ H tsBKPIlP-.' H.J* » Ip - v,*4 Ik Mr* W ei NCAA looking at mileage to party ■ ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Michi­ gan basketball players involved in an automobile accident on their way back from a party in Detroit might have committed an NCAA violation by taking a recruit too far from campus. "It appears a violation has happened, but we w on't do any­ thing until we get the actual mileage — w e're clocking that right now ," Craig Keilitz, the university's athletic compliance officer, said M onday. An NCAA rule states th at recruits on official1'v isits m ay be pro v id ed w ith en tertainm ent, but it m ust be w ithin a 30-mile radius of cam pus. The party was slightly farther aw ay than that. accident rollover o ccurred S atu rd ay w hen for­ w ard M aurice Taylor fell asleep at the wheel of his grandm oth­ er's 1996 Ford Explorer Limited Edition, police said. The Also in the vehicle w ere cen­ ter Robert Traylor, guard Louis Bullock, W illie forw ard M itchell, w alk-on Ron O liver and recruit M ateen Cleaves. Traylor sustained a broken arm that will keep him out for the rest of the season, but that was the only serious injury. Tay­ lor w as given a ticket for care­ less driving. the Keilitz said the players knew of rule, b u t ap p aren tly believed they w ere w ithin the 30-mile radius. J u r y to d e c id e fa te o f D a lla s ’ m a rk e tin g ■ NEW YORK — A jury will decide if the Super Bowl champion Dallas Cowboys violated league marketing contracts by promoting companies on their own. In a victory for the league, U.S. District Judge Shira Scheindlin on Tuesday rejected the motion to dismiss by Cowboys ow ner Jerry Jones and ruled the suit by NFL Properties can proceed. No trial date was set. The NFL sued the Cowboys last Septem ber for more than $300 million, saying the club had broken its agreem ents regarding club tradem arks and logos. NFL lawyers argued last week that its negotiating stance for deals it makes on behalf of all the football team s are w eakened when one team promotes its own. For example, while the rest of the league is prom oting Coca- Cola through a deal arranged by the NFL's m arketing arm, the C ow boys are prom oting and selling Pepsi at Texas Stadium. — C om piled from s ta ff an d A sso cia ted Press reports WEDNESDAY ■ BASKETBALL: The Lady H orns will play Baylor at 7:30 p.m. at the Erwin Center. FRIDAY ■ BASS All: The Longhorns will play UT-Arlington at 2 p.m. at the Disch-Falk Field. rage a Wednesday, February 21,1996 THE Daily Texan Astros Continued from page 7 "Todd had a problem keeping his balance, and that's why he didn't have control," Strom said. "H e was rushing toward home plate. By clos­ ing his eyes, he could feel his body parts better, and with his eyes closed he could come very close to getting the ball to m e." What the Astros need now is a few more such miracle cures. Their five starters — Doug Drabek, Reynolds, Mike Hampton, Greg Swindell and Darryl Kile — have been designated. Strom said his goal is to extend the starters' effectiveness. While Hamp­ ton and Reynolds were generally Brown Continued from page 7 Sanders and Kevin Smith. Sanders, who has juggled football and baseball, was planning to con­ centrate exclusively on the Cowboys next season. And Smith, who was sidelined for all but the Cowboys' 1995 season opener with an Achilles to tendon return. injury, was expected That left Brown open to offers. Brown would not say whether the Dallas offered as much as Raiders ultimately did. " I w anted to get it behind m e," he said. "It w asn't all about m oney." Brown, 26, played a lot last sea­ son, finishing with six interceptions, including two for touchdowns. Brown first attracted attention in 1991 when he went from 12th-round draft pick out of Texas Christian to Runnin’ Continued from page 7 the second half with a monster dunk on Skinner's head. Clack held the ball at the free throw' line and had no one in between him and the goal except for Skinner. Without a moment's thought, Clack put his head down and went right at the Baylor center and threw dowTi a one-handed toma­ hawk as he skied over him. "It was just a matter of me going strong to the rim," Clack said. "I saw him under the goal, but it really did­ n't matter to me. I just went to the rim and attacked him." The Bears' shooting kept them in the game, as they shot 59 percent from the field, including 75 percent from 3-point range. "It's crazy," Freeman said. "Every R o c k w e l l S e m ic o n d u c t o r S y s t e m s reliable for six innings, else could be counted on for seven. That forced m anager Terry Collins to overuse his bullpen. "T h e Atlanta Braves' starters throw 75 percent of their innings, and our starters have to do the same thing," Strom said. "W e can't ask our bullpen to throw 35 percent of the innings. That's why we had a tired bullpen at the end of last season." Improving the starting rotation is even more important considering that Astros relievers last year had a 30-16 record. They w on't likely match that this season minus Mike Henneman and Dave Veres. starter. He went on to start on Super Bowi-winning teams over the next two years. Brown said he hopes to provide some leadership, especially during rough times, as he did in the second half of last season, when the Raiders lost their last six games after open­ ing the season 8-2. " I think the Raiders' potential is as a Super Bowl team ," he said. "W hen I got to the Cowboys, they hadn't made the playoffs yet." Brown said "the Raiders are a very confident football team. They know what they are capable of, they just haven't gotten it done." On Monday, Oakland lost offen­ sive tackle Greg Skrepenak to Caroli­ na. The unrestricted free agent had spent five years with the Raiders. time we play here, they're always throwing up all kinds of junk and it seems to go in here. It's there gym so I guess they get those kind of breaks." Penders said the key for his team was its ability to slow down Skinner. Texas held the 23-point-per-game scorer to 13 and six rebounds. "To hold him to that kind of night is a significant statistic," Penders said. "W e don't have one dominat­ ing big man, but all our guys are ter­ rific rebounders and defenders." With all the preliminaries behind them, Texas will finally get to focus on the "championship game," the imaginary championship anyway. Be a Part of the Communications Connection On-Campus Interviews, Wednesday, March 6th Rockwell has been the lead u- in wireline com m unications devices for over 15 years, w ith w orldwide dara and facsim ile m odem market share o f alm ost 7 5 % o f this com m ercial market. Bu t w ere n ot stopping there. W e are located in Southern California in the city o f N ew port Beach where tom or­ row’s technologies in personal com m uni­ cation s are bein g developed today at Rockw ell. O u r products are shaping the way people com m unicate, w hether in the hom e, office or on the move. Advanced sem iconductor systems devel­ op m en t efforts are supported by our new 2 0 0 m m wafer fabrication facility and oth er state-o f-th e-art tools. B u t w hat keep» us moving forward is the outstand­ ing talent o f the people at Rockw ell. You could be a p an o f our team. I f you have a background in any o f the fol­ lowing and would like to help create tom orrow ’s technology, consider join in g our dynam ic team. • Electrical Engineering • Com puter Engineering • Material Science • Physics • Com puter Science • Chem ical Engineering • Systems Engineering • Industrial Engineering s tu d e n ts in terv iew W e w ill be o n cam pu s M arch 6 th g r a d u a tin g to interview th is s p rin g . To arrange an with a Rockwell representative, let us hear from you. Fax y o u r resume to (7 1 4 )2 2 1 -6 0 9 2 , Am u UTAustin or E m a il: c o l l e g e . r e i a t i o n s @ n b . r o c k w e ll .c o m A ll ca re e r o p p o r tu n itie s at R o ck w e ll in clu d e e x c e lle n t salary an d c o m p a n y be n efits as well as an in ce n tiv e package. Citizenship is N O T required and all can ­ didates are encouraged to apply. Rockwell is an Equal O pp ortun ity Employer. 9 Rockwell Semiconductor Systems Horns Continued from page 7 that's a cause for concern. He didn't have much command of his breaking pitch and he's got to develop a little more consistency with that to beat a good ballclub." Barker ran into trouble in the sec­ ond inning when he walked the bases loaded with one out. Bobcat second baseman Casey Carter put SWT up 1-0 with a ground out to first baseman Jason Layne. The Longhorns answered with three runs — one earned — in the bottom of the inning. With one out and the bases loaded, second base­ man Wylie Campbell hit a ground ball to the hole between third and short but Eubank muffed the grounder catcher Roman and Escamilla scored. The next batter — shortstop Kip Harkrider — hit a sharp grounder to second. Campbell was forced out at second, but the relay throw to first by Bobcat shortstop Greg Newkirk to try to double up Harkrider was wild into the SWT dugout scoring two more runs. Texas led 3-1 after two and that would be all Barker would need. Texas Sean Braswell recorded his first collegiate hit and RBI on the same play. His double down the line knocked in Chris Edelstein and gave the Homs a 4-1 edge. left field baseman third Barker also had problems in the fifth inning when he walked two more batters. He helped himself out a little when he picked SWT left fielder Matt Schnabel off first base for the second out. But an infield sin­ gle with two outs by third baseman Brad Eubank pulled SWT to 4-2. Texas used three hits to score three more times in the fifth. An RBI single by Edelstein (3-for-5, 2 RBIs) and a sacrifice fly by Trey Salinas pushed the margin to 7-2. "I was pleased with the way we kept our focus and swung the bats," Gustafson said. "Early on [Bobcat starter Scott] Sherrill had us off-bal­ ance a little bit but we made an adjustment and wound up getting to him in the fifth." Sherrill pitched 4 2 /3 innings and allowed seven runs — five earned — Associated Press For years, Tom Glavine and his teammates liked the start of spring training except for one thing — hav­ ing to talk about why they weren't World Series champions yet. No such problems for the Atlanta Braves on Tuesday when they held their first full workout in West Palm Beach, Fla. At last, they're the best team in the baseball and have the trophy to prove it. "It's a lot more relaxed this sea­ son than it has been," Glavine said. "It's a lot more relaxing to answer questions about defending your championship than it is to hear questions like, 'A re you the Buffalo Bills of baseball? Are you ever going to win the big gam e?"' "m a t stuff, when you hear it all the time, if s real easy to get on the play­ ers' nerves," he said. "W e always had a little bit more tense atmosphere than we have right now." It was hard to find a spot without a sign noting that this is the spring home of the 1995 world champions. To defend its title, Atlanta has essentially the same team it had last season. Missing are five role play­ ers — pitchers Kent Mercker and Alejandro Pena, outfielders Luis Polonia and Mike Devereaux and catcher Charlie O 'Brien — who were trimmed from the roster to free up money for re-signing first baseman Fred M cGriff and out- U to T r id e s again what's IMesT? Utim is: th e o ften irreverent, alw ay s in fo rm ativ e, en tirely stu d en t-p ro d u ce d o fficial stu d en t m ag a zin e o f the U n iv ersity o f Texas at A u stin . A n d it 's attem p tin g a co m e b a ck a fter fo u r lo n g y ears o f u n fo rtu n ate non- e x is te n c e -b u t th is tim e on the W orld W id e W eb. is not: W an t to jo in U tm o sT as it su rfs o n to the info h ig h w ay ? W ant e x p e rie n ce w ith w eb m ag azin e jo u rn a lism ? W ant to stretch y o u r in te rn e t ab ilities? Study Breaks On Campus Alcalde Join Us: Wed. Feb. 21 5pm TSP 3.302 W e co u ld u se a litte help w ith ju s t ab o u t ev ery th in g : • W riters «E d ito rs • L a y o u t and G rap h ic D esig n er • A rtists and Illu strato rs •the H T M L / C G I/ Ja v a - s a w y If y ou h a v e an y o f th ese sk ills, or any o th ers you think m ig h t be u sefu l, an d y o u 're in terested , co n ta ct L an e B ecker at 459-7414. A g eneral se ssio n w ill be h eld on W ed. Feb. 21 at 5p m in T S P C 3 .3 0 2 BONNIE WALDMAN/Daily Texan Staff SWT left fielder Matt Schnabel is picked off at first base by pitcher Donny Barker in the top of the fifth inning. We need to ju st keep playing and it’s going to come around like we know it will. Hopefully we can continue this against higher caliber team s.’’ — Up Harkrider, Texes second basemen and falls to 1-1 this season. The Homs blew the game wide open in the sixth inning. They sent 13 batters to the plate and scored nine runs and assured the Texas victory. A triple off the base of the "Monster" in center field by Layne scored two Texas runs and Edelstein had an RBI double as did Harkrider. Campbell hit a double with the bases loaded to knock in two of his three RBIs. SWT reliever Jeff Jansky (2.42 ERA before Tuesday) bore the brunt of the Longhorn onslaught in the sixth. He retired no Texas batters in the inning giving up seven hits and seven earned runs. Eric French, Kelly Clements and Brian McKinney pitched in relief of Barker, with Clements allowing the other two Bobcat runs. Harkrider and Edelstein had three hits each and they both had three hits the last time out against the Bob­ cats. The defense played well (only one error and two big double plays) for the second straight outing, but one of the keys to the game — and the rest of the season — was Texas get­ ting off to a good start. Texas seems to be gaining confi­ dence and that could go a long way in determining where they end up this season. "W e're playing better all around," Harkrider said. "W e need to just keep playing and it's going to come around like we know it will. Hope­ fully we can continue this against higher caliber teams." With upcoming dates against top- ranked Cal State Fullerton and top 10-ranked Oklahoma, the Long­ horns will soon get that chance. HORNS 18 , BOBCATS 4 ab r h bl I SWT Vuskov cf Newkirk ss Schnabel If Ladewig ph/lf Eubank 3b Corson 1b Broussard dh Cherry dh Borne rsbach rf Spear c Wickrsham ph/c1 2 Carter 2b TEXAS 5 1 2 6 2 2 1 2 ab r h bi 1 0 0 Campbell 2b 4 2 1 3 0 2 0 Harkrider ss Byers cf 0 0 0 Scarborough clO 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 2 2 1 Peoples dh 0 2 1 5 1 1 Layne 1b 2 1 0 4 Escamilla c 0 0 0 5 Edelstein If 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 Salinas rf 1 0 0 0 Davis ph 0 0 1 1 4 0 1 2 Kiemsteadt Braswell 3b 33 4 9 4 Totals SWT Texas ________ 37181516 010 010 0 2 0 — 4 9 4 030 1 39 02 x — 18 15 1 E — Eubank 2 (3). Newkirk (5), Vuskov (2), Campbell (9) DP — Texas 2. LOB — SWT 10, Texas 9. 2B — Braswell (1). Campbell (1). Edelstein (3), Harkrider (3), Peoples (3) 3B — Layne (1) SB — Escamilla (5) SH — Campbell (2) SF — Byers 2(4), Salinas (2 ). SWT Sherrill Winfield Everett Jansky Kirkpatrick Spencer TEXAS Barker French Clements McKinney IP 4.2 0.1 0.1 0.0 2.1 0.1 IP 6.0 1.0 0.1 1.2 H 7 0 0 7 1 0 H 3 1 5 0 R 7 0 2 7 2 0 R 2 0 2 0 ER 5 0 2 7 1 0 ER 2 0 2 0 BB 4 0 2 1 2 0 BB 6 0 0 2 SO 3 0 1 0 2 0 SO 2 2 0 0 WP — Everett (1). Kirkpatrick (1). HBP — by Kirk­ patrick (Layne) Umpires — Christal. Ford, Diehl. T — 3:10 A — 3,859. Champion Braves hold 1st workouts Canseco reports, Martinez ready, Johnson loving it ■ From Lou Gehrig to Don Mat- tingly, greatness has graced first base at Yankee Stadium. Now, Tino Martinez has the opportunity to leave his mark. "E lv is," Duquette conceded, "is in the building." "I'm not going to think about Don Mattingly on the field," said Martinez, acquired in an offseason trade with Seattle. " I f I make an error or strike out, those things are going to be magnified early in the season. It's all part of replacing a legend." Martinez hit .293 with 31 home runs and 111 RBIs last season when the Mariners won the AL West title. "W e traded for Tino Martinez because Don retired, even if it may only be tem porary," manager Joe Torre said in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "W e needed a first baseman. If we get as much production as he had last year with Seattle, I'll be more than pleased." ■ He won the AL Cy Young Award and pitched his team into the playoffs last season, and will make $5.75 million this year. No wonder Seattle star Randy Johnson is smiling. " I am having more fun in this game than ever because I'm not fighting m y self," he said at Mariners' camp in Peoria, Ariz. " I'm still a perfectionist and want to pitch well every game. But before when I had a bad game, I didn't think the sun would come up the next day." Married now with one child and another on the way, Johnson is aware of his good fortune. "I'm playing a sport I love and get grossly overpaid doing it," he said. ASSOCIATED PRESS Wade Boggs watches over a Yankee batting practice Tuesday. fielder Marquis Grissom. "R ight now, everything is great for us," Glavine said. "W e're the world champions. We have every­ one back. And we're looking for­ ward to doing it again." ■ Cancel the m issing person report; Jose Canseco is in camp. absent Canseco was from Boston's first full-squad workout Tuesday morning, and general m anager Dan Duquette was miffed. But shortly after 1 p.m., Canseco arrived in the clubhouse in Fort Myers, Fla. Canseco said he had intended to show up for Tuesday's 8:30 a.m. team meeting but was delayed by a charity golf tournament in West Palm Beach on Monday. He said he arrived in Fort Myers around 4 a.m. " I had a long drive. I had a lot of things to take care of," he said. " I was sick with allergies. I just could not get up this m orning." Duquette said Canseco should have been on time "o u t of respect for his team m ates" and should have called to say he'd be late "a s a professional courtesy." " I will speak with him ," Canseco said. "H e loves m e." Later, Duquette talked briefly with Canseco. JPI, ilw Southwest s foremost developer of niiilti-ldmily irsidnm* is sick’ino /<) mu ,mli / I ' . n i - l i n i i l u t o l n , m o i i r . i h i l u i i t i r i i t n . i l s i r n l i >/»,//7v7///ist iii.nl oi In a yon i k s i i i i k JPI ca n p ro vid e the p olish fo r y o u r o p p o rtu n ity to shine. NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION EASTERN CONFERENCE Attantic Division Pet .731 .620 .451 .442 .431 .365 .200 Pet .904 .627 .588 .549 .531 .500 .400 .280 GB — 5 1/2 14 1/2 15 15 1/2 19 27 GB _ 14 1/2 16 1/2 18 1/2 19 1/2 21 26 32 L10 8-2 6-4 3-7 4-6 5-5 4-6 2-8 L10 8-2 5-5 8-2 4-6 5-5 6-4 5-5 2-8 Central Division Streak Won 4 Lost 2 Lost 1 Lost 2 Won 4 Lost 2 Lost 4 Streak Won 6 Lost 1 Lost 1 Lost 1 Won 2 Won 3 Won 1 Lost 2 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Pet .686 .680 .642 .412 .320 .280 .216 Pet .765 .620 .500 .480 .471 .453 .333 GB — 1/2 2 14 18 1/2 20 1/2 24 GB — 7 1/2 13 1/2 14 1/2 15 16 22 L10 8-2 7-3 6-4 5-5 3-7 3-7 1-9 L10 9-1 9-1 2-8 7-3 6-4 3-7 1-9 Pactfic Division Streak Won 3 Won 3 Won 1 Won 1 Lost 4 Lost 4 Lost 3 Streak Won 7 Won 6 Lost 7 Won 1 Won 1 Lost 5 Lost 1 L 14 19 28 29 29 33 40 L 5 19 21 23 23 25 30 36 L 16 16 19 30 34 36 40 L 12 19 24 26 27 29 34 Home 28-0 19-9 16-9 16-11 15-8 10-15 6-19 Home 24-0 19-5 18-8 17-10 18-9 18-9 11-14 10-16 Home 20-4 20-6 18-7 13-10 10-14 9-14 8-18 Home 23-2 21-7 15-8 13-13 15-10 14-12 11-16 Away Conf 10-14 22-9 12-10 20-13 7-19 11-22 7-18 13-18 7-21 16-16 12-16 9-18 4-21 5-27 Away Conf 23-5 27-2 13-14 20-13 12-13 20-15 11-13 18-12 8-14 15-16 17-14 7-16 9-16 11-19 9-24 4-20 Away Conf 15-12 22-12 24-7 14-10 16-12 21-9 8-20 12-20 6-20 11-18 5-22 11-21 3-22 4-25 Away Conf 16-10 25-5 10-12 19-12 13-14 9-16 13-18 11-13 9-17 11-16 10-17 12-18 6-18 14-18 W 38 31 23 23 22 19 10 w 47 32 30 28 26 25 20 14 W 35 34 34 21 16 14 11 W 39 31 24 24 24 24 17 Orlando New York Washington Miami New Jersey Boston Philadelphia Chicago Indiana Cleveland Atlanta Detroit Charlotte Milwaukee Toronto Utah San Antonio Houston Denver Dallas Minnesota Vancouver Seattle L.A. Lakers Sacramento Phoenix Golden State Portland L.A. Clippers W e d n e s d a y 's G a m e s Miami at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m. Washington at Charlotte, 6:30 p.m. New York at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Orlando at Indiana, 7 p.m. Houston at Minnesota, 7 p.m. New Jersey at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m. Sacramento at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Boston at Phoenix, 8 p.m. L.A. Lakers at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. San Antonio at Golden State, 9:30 p.m. T h u r s d a y 's G a m e s Chicago at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m. Houston at Cleveland, 6:30 p.m. Toronto at Utah, 8 p.m. Denver at Portland, 9 p.m. Golden State at Seattle, 9 p.m. T h e Da ily T ex a n Wednesday, February 2 1 ,1 99 6 Page 9 Jazz’s Stockton breaks assists record Associated Press SALT LAKE CITY — On a night when John Stockton became the NBA's all-time steals leader, there was no tight game to diminish the event Utah led by as many as 32 points before settling for a 112-98 victory Tuesday night, and Stockton's big play came with 8:21 to play when he snatched the ball out of the hands of Eric Williams for his 2,311th steal, one more than the old record held by Maurice Cheeks. "It was a pretty neat feeling," Stockton said. "It was kind of fu n .... I think the whole team picked up for a couple of minutes, we were all running around and found a lot of energy at the end of the gam e." steal came Stockton's after Boston's Rick Fox passed to Williams, who drove the baseline. Utah's eight-time All-Star slapped the ball loose, then passed 16 sec­ onds later to Chris Morris for a 3- pointer that put Utah up 100-72. "Basically, I took a swipe at it and knocked it loose," Stockton said. "I didn't wanted to lose it at that point; I just took a chance and got it." He added that he had just "w ant­ ed to get it over with," a sentiment BOX SCORES echoed by Jazz coach Jerry Sloan. "I'm glad John could get that, so it's behind h im ," he laughed. "(Now) we can worry about playing basketball." As for Williams, he was philo­ sophical about his role as Stockton's history-making victim. , P e Was to get it eventual­ ly," he said. "There's going to be another time when somebody else sneaks the record, and then I'll be out of the history books." Karl Malone scored 24 points for their ninth the Jazz, who won straight over the Celtics. Greg Foster had 16 points, Antoine Carr 15 and David Benoit 14 for Utah, which has won 13 of 16 overall. Stockton added six. Dana Barros led Boston with 16 points, while Greg Minor scored 15 and Fox added 14. Stockton, in his 12th year, entered the game with 2,309 steals, one shy of the record Cheeks built in 15 sea­ sons. Averaging 1.68 steals per game this season, he tied the record with 5:08 left in the second quarter when he tipped a pass out away from Eric Montross and into the hands of Utah's Antoine Carr. Carr passed back to Stockton as he fell out of bounds, and the Stockton then whipped the bail to Greg Foster for a 20-footer and a 45-38 lead. Malone's top-of-the-key jumper with eight seconds left in tire period gave Utah's a 91-59 advantage — its biggest of the game. BUCKS 02, KNCKS 07 MILWAUKEE — Baker 10-21 2-3 23, Robinson 7- 13 12-12 27, Benjamin 4-7 0-0 8, Newman 4-7 2-2 11, Douglas 2-10 2-2 6, Mayberry 2-4 0-0 6, Cum­ mings 3-6 3-4 9, Keys 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 33-70 21-23 92. NEW YORK — Mason 4-9 2-2 10, Lohaus 6-11 0- 0 16. Ewing 11-31 7-8 29, Starks 3-8 0-0 7, Harper 3-10 1-2 7, Davis 2-10 2-2 8, Reid 0-2 0-0 0, Ward 0- 1 2-2 2, Anderson 4-5 0-0 8. Totals 33-87 14-16 87. Milwaukee New York _________ _ 24 25 25 18—092 18 28 18 23—087 3-Point goals—Milwaukee 5-10 (Mayberry 2-2, Baker 1-1, Newman 1-2, Robinson 1-3, Douglas 0-2), New York 7-18 (Lohaus 4-8, Davis 2-4, Starks 1-4, Ewing 0-1, Harper 0-1). Fouled out—None. Rebounds—Milwaukee 48 (Baker, Robinson 11), New York 47 (Ewing 19). Assists—Milwaukee 16 (Douglas 6), New York 18 (Mason 8). Total fouls— Milwaukee 17, New York 17. Technicals—Milwaukee illegal defense 2. A— 19,763 (19,763). JAZZ 112, CBHC8 08 BOSTON — Fox 5-6 0-0 14, Radja 5-12 0-0 10, Montross 2-5 0-1 4, Minor 6-11 2-4 15, Wesley 4-11 2-3 10, Williams 3-8 4-6 10, Brown 3-8 4-4 10, Elli­ son 0-1 0-0 0, Lister 1-3 2-2 4, Barros 7-11 0-0 16, Day 2-4 0-0 5, Burrough 0-2 0-2 0. Totals 38-82 14- 22 98. UTAH — Benoit 5-11 1-1 14, Malone 10-11 3-4 24, Spencer 3-5 0-2 6, Homacek 3-10 0-0 8, Stockton 2- 4 1-1 6, Eisley 1-3 1-1 3, Ostertag 1-3 0-0 2, Moms 2-8 0-2 5, Carr 6-8 3-5 15, Keefe 3-7 7-8 13, Foster 8-10 0-0 16, Russell 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 44-82 16-24 112. Boston Utah 24 19 16 39— 98 29 32 30 21— 112 3-Point goals—Boston 8-13 (Fox 4-4, Barros 2-2, Minor 1-2, Day 1-2, Wesley 0-2, Brown 0-1), Utah 8- 19 (Benoit 3-6, Hornacek 2-5, Stockton 1-2, Morris 1- 3, Malone 1-1, Foster 0-1, Russell 0-1). Fouled out— None. Rebounds— Boston 46 (Radja 9), Utah 52 (Benoit 8) Assists— Boston 20 (Radja, Wesley 3), Utah 33 (Stockton 14). Total fouls— Boston 23, Utah 19. A— 19,911 (19,911). MAGIC 128,76ERS104 PHILADELPHIA — Stackhouse 4-12 2-3 10, Cole­ man 2-6 0-0 5, Wright 4-12 2-5 10, Maxwell 2-8 0-0 4, Ruffin 9-16 10-11 32, Weatherspoon 7-11 0-0 14, LThompson 2-2 1-2 5, Alston 0-1 0-0 0, Walters 0-4 0-0 0, Dumas 6-11 1-2 13, Sutton 4-6 2-2 11. Totals 40-89 18-25 104. ORLANDO — Scott 7-10 0-0 20, Grant 6-6 0-0 12, O’Neal 12-23 0-2 24, Anderson 5-7 3-4 14, Hard­ away 4-9 3-5 13, Shaw 1-3 0-0 2, Wolf 5-8 0-0 10, Bowie 5-8 0-0 10, Royal 0-4 5-6 5, B.Thompson 2-4 0-0 5, Armstrong 3-5 0-0 8. Totals 50-87 11-17 123. Philadelphia 16 17 27 44-^164 Orlando______________________ 33 29 2$ 33— 123 3-Point goals—Philadelphia 6-23 (Ruffin 4-8,"Sut­ ton 1-2, Coleman 1-3, Stackhouse 0-3, Maxwell 0-3, Walters 0-4), Orlando 12-23 (Scott 6-9, Hardaway 2- 3, Armstrong 2-4, Anderson 1-2, Thompson 1-2. Wolf 0-1, Shaw 0-2). Fouled out—None. Rebounds— Philadelphia 47 (LThompson 12), Orlando 52 (O'Neal 13). Assists— Philadelphia 17 (Ruffin 6), Orlando 34 (Anderson, Hardaway 7). Total fouls— Philadelphia 18, Orlando 23. Technicals—Orlando illegal defense. A— 17,248 (17,248). BULLS 102, CAVALERS 76 CLEVELAND — Mills 4-1>3-3 11, Ferry 6-10 0-0 13, Cage 0-11-2 1, Phills 2-7 0-0 5, Brandon 7-15 4- 5 21, Majerie 2-7 2-2 7, Hill 4-8 0-0 8, Crotty 1-2 1-2 3, Sura 2-5 2-4 7, Miner 0-2 0-0 0, Lang 0-0 0-2 0, Marshall 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 28-70 13-20 76. CHICAGO — Pippen 5-9 1-2 14, Rodman 3-7 3-4 9, longley 5-11 0-1 10, Harper 10-14 2-4 22, Jordan 6-19 2-3 14, Kukoc 5-12 3-4 14, Kerr 2-3 2-2 8, Brown 0-3 2-2 2, Buechler 0-1 0-0 0, Wennington 2-3 0-0 4, Caffey 1-2 1-13, Simpkins 0-0 2-4 2. Totals 39-84 18-27 102. Cleveland Chicago________________ 19 15 24 18— 76 21 22 26 33— 102 3-Point goals—Cleveland 7-20 (Brandon 3-5, Sura 1-1, Phills 1-1, Ferry 1-5, Majerle 1-5, Mills 0-1, Miner 0-1, Marshall 0-1), Chicago 6-12 (Pippen 3-5, Kerr 2-2, Kukoc 1-2, Rodman 0-1, Harper 0-2). Fouled out—None. Rebounds—Cleveland 40 (Ferry, Hill 6), Chicago 63 (Rodman 15). Assists— Cleveland 14 (Majerle 6), Chicago 27 (Pippen 8). Total fouls— Cleveland 26, Chicago 17. Technicals—Cage, Rod­ man, Chicago illegal defense. A—23,604 (21,771). Gain career-building experience in a World Capital through American University’s Washington Semester and World Capitals Programs Washington, D,C. (choose from ten areas of study) * London * Buenos Aires * Paris * Beijing * Moscow * Rome * Brussels * Santiago * Madrid * Berlin * Prague Stop by the Washington Semester and World Capitals Programs information table this Thursday to find out how a semester in one of our exciting programs can: * give you professional working experience ,f introduce you to influential business leaders and provide you with a competitive edge after policy makers graduation WHEN: Thursday, Feb 22 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. WHERE: University of Texas Career Center Jester A115 For more information about the Washington Semester and World Capitals Programs, call 1-800-424-2600. T Í College of Business Administration © to rn Expo W (Through Tuesday) SCOfUNG G FG Jordan, Chi. 51 580 Malone, Utah '50 503 Olajuwon, Hou. 53 543 Robinson, S.A. 433 49 Mourning. Mia. 330 40 Barkley, Phoe. 352 43 Richmond. Sac. 47 371 47 Cebailos, LAL 414 C. Robinson, Port 48 375 Rice, Char. 399 48 Hardaway, Orl. 51 395 Ewing, N Y. 46 425 Pippen, Chi. 51 421 44 Elliott, S.A. 307 49 Johnson, Char. 372 Baker, Mil. 49 '418 Miller, Ind. 321 1 49 FT 364 327 278 355 310 285 252 244 224 195 323 184 159 237 255 206 288 Avg Pts 1590 31.2 1341 26.8 1367 25.8 1223 25.0 978 24.5 1021 23.7 23.7 1115 1095 23.3 1114 23.2 1109 23.1 1176 23.1 1037 22.5 1117 21.9 947 21.5 1046 21.3 1045" 21.3 1045 21.3 NBA LEADERS Hill, Det. Robinson. Mil. Howard. Wash. 48 49 50 361 386 433 296 1018 199 1025 173 1042 21.2 20.9 20.8 r m u b U A L r t n u t n i A b t O’Neal, Or). Muresan, Wash. Kemp, Sea Geiger, Char, D Davis, Ind. Stockton, Utah Williams, LAC Sabonis, Port. Polymce. Sac. Miller, Tor. FG 267 298 366 207 204 285 278 220 231 258 FGA 442 498 638 361 360 515 504 401 431 482 Pet .604 .598 .574 .573 .567 .553 .552 .549 .536 .535 Rodman, Chi. Robinson, S.A. K tts u u r a u s G 39' 49 Ofl Def 381 218 431 192 Tot 599 623 Avg 15.4 12.7 Barkley, Phoe. Kemp, Sea. Mutombo, Den. Williams, N.J. Olajuwon, Hou. Jones, Dali. Ewing, N.Y. Cage, Clev. • 43 51 49 49 53 50 46 50 164 191 169 236 132 193 87 196 523 359 612 421 576 407 311 547 445 577 331 524 383 470 510 314 Stockton, Utah Kidd, Dali. Stnckland, Port. Stoudamire, Tor. Johnson, S.A. Anderson, N.J -Cha. Jackson, Ind. Payton, Sea. Abdul-Rauf, Den. Van Éxel, LAL A S d io lB G 50 49 49 50 49 43 50 51 47 49 A 566 495 468 449 438 381..... 385 379 349 359 12.2 12.0 11.8 11.2 10.9 10.5 10.2 10.2 Avg 11.3 10.1 9.6 9.0 8.9 8.9 7.7 7.4 7.4 7.3 © NO SOFA? NO PROBLEM. (heck Out the Newest in furnished Student Apartments ) E t f E R S 0 N C O M M O N J n i q u e c 0 n e 5 Í 0 ' e m Iitimr IfiíífWfi í LP * GtyofHmBfon 4 f t J * , ( f í m r t í f r ñ « « 5 j 5 i T i i | si I 1 Í ws>w < v WvnjTv V v > F f L i V v v t v i3 5 v G i f f a n v / f j i v f t i l V l a h > x | \ f *v> >v\ j iv*.- /**\ vv< <*, v-\ L U S M O fflC t NO N OPEN lowers Court Building 715 W. 23rd Street M thru f 9-6; Sat 10 - 5; Sun I - 5 4 fully furnished with choice of three designer color schemes 4 Private bedrooms 4 full-size w asher/dryer 4 Student Services Center includes computers, copy machine, fax machine 4 [ease by the bedroom (Not responsible for roommate’s rent) 4 S ta te -o f-th e -a rt fitness center 4 Optional covered parking LfASf NOW fOR FALL 1996 *22-0755 I campus % | 6th street i- íi I •■■■ < * ■: V < < P te %**• N-: -N Ú J; j, <..* X; ¡ ¡ Li5 «I < i > i s * > ■? < > y U i C í l i i ■y > i ú i , w . • ,i“ t i | y | l i l i I iftdaltylttaileri.ini. ‘ f i í " n j sce great oppommítict in your ftltUrCatIntOHDCpOl" ■ ■ * » « r w m * T flB M y L - : iilf \ M L iílflirA ílff ( ñ V / Í x í l i i l í W x45 s V * * ( m i V ; 4 i « i i5 > \. V v í 5<'5 'x F V * 5 5 5 5 v i ? t í « 4 5 i i Wednesday, February list, 1996 noo-^oopiii Undergraduate Reading Room, (BA 4th floor Casual Attire Sponsored by the Intern Expo (omroittee A Bmm On the 'J1 shuttle route. ( a j *Some restrictions apply T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D A D S W O R K S B g — Y O U R S C A L L 4 ^ M | | U q n U j ¡ m O I I U d i n m & B í l f f i $ r m ¡\ I I ’I. f i K á V m -X S í í : : í H l O í í f S v h * < \ V f <•> ^ «¡V / Ív: ñ í i } A > 1 ( f H T í f l r w l ** a ?? .Tí ? ; V i li S y 1 ! i . v i? i p & 1 d i f i - 51 4 4 i J>5 Í ' í W i 5 í > L \ o ' í 555(44'' 4 5 r V4v4 * i . J L iv V T ' £ f 1 / | U i u K r M \ d t t J :: f í J f f t » 5' >■? f 'A >.• ív >.•¡ * .a ,» 5' A <¿> $ i ' j y ' .¡414 544 > sí i >54 55.5 \ í i V i .x,. J f y Si 4.4x i 5 n i y 4 11 V. 5 s 4S S vA 4 / 45 54 ; ! u i á > b 4 s¡ ? 5" í lm \ M t i s's':A í / ' t f - ’t :• S4ij> y /4 5 5 s r i 4 í f f l i U j O l V y , j f 5 r “ - j ™ . <>• | j a | | | | w | | ^ .s < s ' tefimlraraaCo! 10 T h e D a i l y T e x a n WBJMESO/W, FflfflUMY 21,1896 ENTERTAINMENT MCE SHOT Poet offers up sharp prose in ‘Sweetbitter’ RYAN G O LDEN Daily Texan S taff How p le a s in g it is for p r o s e maniacs to see an honest poet — . published, mind you — like Regi­ nald Gibbons practice his sharp train of t h o u g h t o n a n o v e l . Amazingly, in the tran sfer from poet to prose writer, Gibbons did­ n't lose an ounce of the fantastic d elicacy th at c h a r a c t e r i z e s h is poetry. S w eetb itter, his f irst n o v el, is smoothly duplicitous in nature; it will force th e m o st r e s t r i c t i n g reader to redraw the e v e r-h a z y line dividing poetry and prose. Sweetbitter is a novel, to be sure. And it has a plot. B ut in d o in g justice to Gibbons' work, one can­ not descend into the depth of his work from anyw here other than the fateful memory of Reuben, the shackled character who consists of and is somewhat ruled by his conjoined ethnicities, C aucasian and Choctaw. The beginning of the novel sees G ib b o n s e x p e n d a w a r r a n t e d amount of prosaic force establish­ ing this departure point of view, a voice from which, and only from w h ic h , R e u b e n c a n be u n d e r ­ s t o o d : " A l l th e p e o p l e s o f th e earth were created, each from dif­ ferent substance and thus of d if­ ferent appearance, and at tim es struggling against each other." . T h is p re lu d e , w ith its so lilo - quial, foreboding interpretation of mankind, im pregnates the novel w ith a stern d isc o m fo rt — as if Gibbons wrote, "This is how it is, and this is how it is. " The im m utability of R eu b en 's earthly plight is what intentional­ ly, and enjoyably, cripples its sig­ nificance. Set in Texas from 1896- 1920, the story finds Reuben, d ur­ ing h is so c ie ta l s t r u g g l e in the to w n o f H a r r ie t , s u b je c t e d to extreme racist misunderstanding, fury and bitterness because he is of mixed descent. literature s w r n a n a Author Reginald Gibbons Publisher: Penguin Books Price:$11.95 S h o u l d he h i d e f r o m th is world, it will still stand as such, racist, ranked and divided. What d ire c tio n can h is s t r u g g le take, considers Martha, R euben's wife, if R e u b e n s i m p ly c a n n o t c o m e in t o h e r w o r ld , th e " w h i t e " world, with its culture and accou­ term ents? As R e u b e n 's C hoctaw voice says in an in terlu d e , "A ll [his] possibles added up to a piti­ ful small pile of th in g s, and no prospects." h is S u r r o u n d i n g R e u b e n an d M a r th a is a w o r ld s t u c k in its ways. Reuben has only his memo­ ry to g u id e , te a c h and lift him p a s t a n y e a r t h l y o b s t a c l e s . Indeed, spirituality — what grave l i t t l e d y i n g m o t h e r bequeathed him — is what drives Reuben through the ridicule, the taunting, the brutality of it all, to free him into a w o rld w h ere he can choose his own path. Really a p l a c e w h e r e , " t h e r e w o u l d be miles and miles of clear running, deep hiding, plentiful hunting." The images lingering after read­ in g S w e e tb it te r a r e o f R e u b e n trekking with Martha through an arid forest, happening occasional­ ly upon a b ro o k or stre a m that o n ly t e m p o r a r i l y q u e n c h e s an infinite thirst. G i b b o n s m a s t e r f u l l y o r c h e s ­ trates such conclusive and power­ ful im ages, w h ic h s u p p la n t the intentionally stultified plot — one in which Reuben can only realize his own predetermined, terrestrial position. Gibbons' prose asks the question, "W h a t can an earthly p lo t a ffe c t? " As poet and prose writer, he owns the answer. pipes p l u s PIPES PAPERS LIG H TE R S IN C E N S E CIGARS C L O V E & IM P O R T C IG A R E T T E S 504 W. 24th I I I » t O M S I t ) S ( I N 1 7 H 7 . ' )(, 1006 TEXA S Ken’s Donuts C om e by for breakfast or for a snack before or after class. W e use all vegetable oil. Free wholesale delivery. •Muffins •Danish •Brownies 2820 Guadalupe 320-8484 m i n o r i n m n m m Tleketc S i at the door Vocalist Richard Patrick of Filter prepared the crowd for a night of industrial-strength music with White Zombie at Austin City Music Hall Monday. CHRIS CURRY/Daily Texan Staff Keen disappoints with boring show old song that he traditionally ends his shows with. By using it midway through the s h o w , h o w e v e r , th e re st o f the concert was alm ost a letdown, as it w as hard to top the song that everyone in the crowd seemed to know. T h ro u g h o u t the co ncert, Keen tried to breathe his energy for his w o rk into the cro w d , but it did n o t w o r k v e r y w e l l . T h is w as p ro bably due to the crow d m ix ­ ture of older people in the more expensive seats and the staggering drunks in the cheap ones; neither of which are prone to a very good atmosphere. Despite the short set and'lack of e n e r g y from th e c r o w d , fan s of R o b e r t E arl K e e n c o u ld n o t be very disappointed. Because Keen always puts on a g o o d s h o w a n d , w h i l e he m a y have been forced to limit it due to a set television schedule, his songs make it all worthwhile. CONNECTIONS Internet Services FREE trial membership with IF account Connect with 30,000 students nationwide/ worldwide Browse biographies of like-minded BBS’rs People you want to meet FUN and SAFE environment w e b s it e ; h ttp ://connect.fc.net t e l n e t : connections.email.net HELPLINE 453-6072 B R Y A N S T O K E S ___________ D a ily Texan S ta ff While it's usually a good idea to le a v e y o u r a u d i e n c e w a n t i n g more, Thursday nights Robert Earl K e e n c o n c e r t c a r r ie d th a t idea way too far at Austin City Limits. S p e c i a l G u e s t H a l K e tc h u m opened the show and while start­ ing off well, he soon became irri­ tatingly dull. This was due to the fact that Ketchum apparently lost h is b a n d in th e la s t to w n he played in, and he sang only with a guitar the entire show. When Keen took the stage, the crowd, which was a bit subdued from Ketchum, livened up a little, bu t r e m a in e d f a ir l y s e d a t e the e n t i r e e v e n i n g . P r e d o m i n a t e l y p l a y i n g s o n g s f r o m h is m o st recent albums, B igger Piece o f Sky and Gringo Honeym oon, Keen kept a good mixture of songs going all night. By sticking to the songs that most of his fans know, Keen took no chances and just played what he knew the crowd expected. T h e sh o w p e a k e d , h o w e v e r , with The Road Goes on Forever, an General C inem a B ARGA IN MATINEES EVERY DAY ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6 p m M H I B ! 5.90-7 JO M 5 • = A C A D E M Y A W A R D N O M IN E E u riciii • h it tuutm iiit u it iiii i MKfs ^ Fe s t i v a l <>f A N M A W V 5 09-7:1 S-MS IHiiMSBTO * FOUR ROOMS »* R C P . I E 31*1 S. Gw«4aWp* 472-FILM á T w o B i t s - Tit tUrt tklir m Hut ill frtia 4 45-7:25 9:25 W ar of m BuTtOnS Mo» mri lot feors 0® m Ins to be nerby faw k 4 30 7:30 9 30 r UROPEAf TRAVEL SEM INAR r P rese nted by Rick S te IVES, AUTHOR OF 11 GUIDEBOC )KS AND HOST C >f Tr a v e ls in fi WORE WITH Rl fc/r S teves o n P BS-TV. THURSDAY, FEB 2 2 A u stin C o n v e n tio n Center B a l l r o o m s B/C 5 0 0 E. C e s a r C h a ve z 7 : 0 0 - 9 : 3 0 pm • Admission $ 5 ! R .S .V .P . 4 7 2 - 4 9 3 1 S p o n s o r e d b y C o u n c i l T r a v e l E x h i b i t o r s t o i n c l u d e R a i l E u r o p e a n d B r it R a i l ¡ ! H IG H LA N D 1 0 ,7 | I 1-35 ot M ID D L E flS K V IL L E R D 4 5 4 -9 5 6 2 C IT Y HALL 1 :0 0 3 :1 5 5 : 3 5 8 : 0 0 1 0 :1 5 R S O D S T H X M U P P E T T R E A S U R E IS L A N D 1 3 : 5 0 3 : 5 5 5 :1 0 7 : 3 0 9 : 3 0 G W SiU l B E A U T IF U L Q IR L S 3 : 3 0 5 : 0 0 7 : 3 5 1 0 : 0 5 R OOLIT • D E A D M A N W A L K IN Q 1 :3 0 4 0 0 7 : 3 0 1 0 :0 0 R T H X W H IT E SQ U A L L 9 :1 5 P G 1 3 STEREO B E D O F R O S E S 7 : 5 0 9 : 5 0 P G ST ÍR E0 • B A B E 1 :5 0 3 : 5 0 5 : 5 0 G F R O M D U S K TILL DAW N 3 3 0 5 : 0 0 7 : 3 0 1 0 :1 0 R D01IY • S E N S E S S E N S IB IL IT Y 3:05 4:40 7:35 10:00 PG D01FT • L EA V IN G L A S V E Q A S 1 :3 5 4 : 3 0 9 : 4 0 R DOLBY H E A T 3 :1 0 5 3 0 9 : 0 0 R DOLBY • TO Y S T O R Y 1 :4 0 3 : 4 5 5 : 3 0 7 :1 5 G STEREO GREAT HILLS 8 ,7 & U S 183 & GREAT HILLS TRAIL 7 9 4-80 76 MUPPET TREASURE ISLAND 1 3 0 4 : 3 0 7 :1 0 9 : 3 0 G T H X H A P P Y Q IL M O R E 3 : 0 0 4 : 5 0 7 : 3 0 9 : 5 0 P G 1 3 DOUT M R. W R O N O 1 :4 0 4 3 0 7 : 3 0 9 : 4 0 P G 1 3 STEREO • L EA V IN Q L A S V E Q A S 1 :5 0 4 : 3 0 7 3 5 1 0 :0 0 R D01IT T H E J U R O R 1 :1 0 4 : 4 0 7 : 3 0 1 0 :0 5 R STEREO • R E S T O R A T IO N 1 :4 0 4 : 3 0 7 : 3 0 9 : 5 0 R STEREO • M R. H O LL A N D 'S O P U S 1 :0 0 4 : 0 0 7 :0 5 1 0 :0 0 P G T H X Q R U M P IE R O LD M E N 7 : 0 0 9 :1 5 P G 1 3 STEREO • B A B E 3 : 0 0 4 : 4 5 G GIFT C ER T IF IC A T E S ON SA L E Paris Frankfurt Madrid $264* $295* $279* •fww are each way tern Austin bated on * «ouxfmp purchase. Fare* do not n c id r fed­ eral axes or FTCs toa*y between $3 and $45, depend09 on detftnaéon or departo* chafes paid dreefy to foreign government!. Cal for fares to crfwr wortehvidc dewrwéom Spring Break 96' 7 n i g h t s • J a m a ic a f r o m $579* 7 n ig h t s • C a n c ú n f r o m $489* ( D a l l a s D e p a r t u r e ) We sell S t u d e n t • Y o u t h T ic k e ts THAT ALLOW STAYS FOR UP TO ONE YEAR, Plan y o u r su m m er early, call to d a y! C o u n c i l Travel 2000 Guadalupe St. Austin, TX 78705 512 - 472-4931 http://www.aee.org/cts/ctshome.htm E u r a i l p a s s e s i s s u e d o n - t h e - s p o t ! COLLEGE RADIO FOR A U S TIN 91.7 fm KVRX 91.7 (m KVRX COLLEGE RADIO FOR A U S TIN 91.7 K V R X P le d g e D riv e K ic k - o f f P a r t y a t E M O 's — M a r c h 1 fe a tu rin g UNSANE 91.7 K V R X P le d g e D r iv e - M a r c h 2-10 From the Street Vendors of Bangkok, we bring you NOW OPEN! M TH A I NOODLES, etc. „ I HOUSE ' X 2602 Guadalupe (form erly A corn C afe) gj Classics and Vegetarian Behind 7 -11 Pan-Asian Noodle Dishes f 494-1011 j , f B U Y I GET I FOR 1/2 PRICE w/ad COMPUMENTARY STUFF! T h e Daily T ex a n Wednesday, February 2 1 ,1 9 9 6 Page 11 Rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg acquitted of murder charges tions on those counts. About an hour later, ju ro rs w en t h o m e for th e evening and were to resume delibera­ tions on Wednesday. Prosecutors claimed the two tracked Woldemariam down and shot him in cold blood at a city park after Wolde­ mariam flashed a gang sign and shout­ ed an obscenity in an earlier confronta­ tion outside Broadus' apartment. Defense lawyers called the shooting an a ct of self-d efen se, claim in g Woldemariam was going for a gun in the waistband of his pants when Lee fired at him from a Jeep driven by Broadus. Prosecutor Robert Grace disputed the self-defense claim, arguing in clos­ ing statements that Woldemariam, 20, was shot in the back and buttocks as he tried to flee Broadus and Lee. Playing off the lyrics of one of die rapper's songs — M urder Was the Case — Grace told the jury: “ Murder is the crime they committed. Murder is the crime they committed. Murder is the crime they committed." In the latest setb ack for th e Los Angeles district attorney's office, pros­ ecutors were hurt by a combination of c o n tra d ic to ry an d destroyed evidence. te s tim o n y Two of W oldemariam's friends ini­ tially told police that W oldem ariam was unarmed when he was shot but later admitted hiding the weapon to set Broadus and Lee up for a murder charge. Associated Press LOS AN GELES — Gangsta rapper Snoop D oggy D ogg and his form er bodyguard were acquitted of murder Tu esd ay in the shooting death of a gang member. Snoop, w hose real nam e is Calvin Broadus, and M cKinley Lee, 25, also were acquitted of conspiracy to com­ mit assault in the Aug. 25,1993, shoot­ ing death of Philip Woldemariam, an Ethiopian immigrant. T h e 2 4 -y e a r -o ld ra p p e r sta re d straight ahead as the court clerk read the verdicts. The panel deadlocked on a lesser ch a rg e o f v o lu n ta ry m a n sla u g h ter against both men and an accessory- after-the-fact charge against Broadus. T h e ju ry fo rem a n sa id th e ju ro rs, seven men and five women, failed to reach a g re em en t on the v o lu n tary manslaughter charges after 15 ballots. Sup erior C ourt Ju d ge John Flynn ordered the panel to resume delibera- OK, you know the drill. We have complimentary pass­ es, posters, and such for Before and After, a new film from Hollywood Pictures starring Liam Neeson and Meryl Streep. Come to our luxurious offices at 25th Street, and Whitis Avenue, after noon and we might give you some. Liotta props up sagging ‘Unforgettable’ Associated Press Compared to Dr. Martha Briggs, Dr. Jekyll was a piker. D r Briggs has developed a serum that allows people to assume the per­ sonality and memory of other human beings — even the recently dead. So far, she has tried it only on laboratory rats. But Dr. David Krane is so desper­ ate to clear him self of accusations he murdered his wife that he is willing to try the serum on his own. T h at's the prem ise o f the unfortu- UNFORGETTABLE Starring: Ray Liotta Director: John Dahl Rating: ★★★ nately titled Unforgettable, a science fic­ tion thriller with large helpings of vio­ lence. W ith high-energy direction by John Dahl and an imaginative script by AUSTIN REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES C O N F ID E N T IA L , P R O F E S S IO N A L R E P R O D U C T IV E C A R E Free P regn an cy Testing Abortions Confidential Counseling Adoption A lternatives E m ergen cy C on tracep tion B oard C ertified Ob-Gyns Licensed Nursing Staff Licensed by T x. Dept, of H ealth One Block E o f Burnet Rd. a t 4 9 " '& G ro v e r í R E P R O D U C T IV E S E R V IC E S 4804 Grover Ave. 458-8274 since 1978 Bill Geddie, the film may satisfy those who enjoy action more than credulity. Dr. Krane (Ray Liotta) still works as a forensic scientist for the Seattle Police Department, even though he remains under a cloud after his m urder trial was voided by a technicality. When he hears of the research by Dr. B riggs (Linda Fiorentino), he seizes the oppor­ tu nity to fin a lly exo n era te h im self. First, he must uncover the murderer. Though he is m orose throughout, Liotta manages to convey the torment of a man striving to vindicate himself. Fiorentino is convincing as the con ­ cerned scientist, but she is mostly lim­ ited to ta g g in g a lo n g on L io tta 's adventures. WRITERS! We re looking for fresh, creative and even bizarre writing talent for the purpose o f developing story lines for a super hero and his sidekick to follow. Please send 2-3short story lines ( I -2 pages each) in a super hero, cartoon style. Rem em ber, creativity is king-so get outrageous! £ Send these story lines to: A ffo ; Super Hero 302 L 6th Street 477.7523 TUESDAY MTF $1.00 Drinks, Longnecks & Draft All Nite Long No Cover WEDNESDAY NITE $1.00 Anything in the House Including Domestics & Imports THURSDAY NITE College Night 25C Draft, 25C Well Drinks, $1.00 Anything Else Including Domestics & Imports LfflPAY NITE $1.50 Drinks & $1.00 Draft All Nite Long 16 2 3 Toom ey Rd. A u s t i n ' T X 7 8 7 0 4 21 & OVER TIL 2 18 SUP FROM 2 TIL DAWN SATURDAY MTF $1.50 Drinks & $1.00 Draft All Nite Long AVAILABLE FOR PRIVATE PARTIES IVISDOfll TEETH Financial incentive provided in exchange for your opinion on an investigational pain medication following oral surgery. Approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified Oral Siirgcon. If you need the rem oval o f w isdom teeth c a ll BIO M ED IC A L ■ c h e q u e A iid i * In Austin call: 320-1630 IGftOUP i n c . 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VISA ^ P L U S It's every'w^ierC •you wartt to be.1 rage r¿ Wednesday, February 21,1996 The Daily Texan Crossword Edited by Will Shortz N o. 01 10 21 Noble name 48 1941 Leningrad DOWN ACROSS i Stir-fry need 4 Angelic headw ear 10 Sa u d i Arabia neighbor 14 Nigerian lan gu age 15 Country on Lake Victoria 16 Baseball sq u a d 17 Tales of woe 19 Delivery vehicles 20 C om m an d to Sp o t 26 O rgan iza tio n s 27 In 30 M o olah 31 B o w e d tree 35 P olar worker 36 P u rc h a sin g option 37 H oled up 40 B e st Picture nom inee of 1992 43 “G o tc h a ” 44 O p e ra set around Seville 45 Lite-rock radio fare part 22 C ap 23 Ottoman dynasty founder event 50 X-rated 51 Au tograph se e k e r's a c c e sso ry ANSWER TO PREVIO U S PUZZLE A D Z 1■C0 D E S |T M A N z U R E 1H E R O P O E 1A E L B A 1p A N D A 1u N 1 T S T U B B O R N A S A M U L E L 1 N K H O B | ’■ S H O R A P O R T w H E E Z E C L 1 I 0 L A H U N p R O U D A S A P E A C O C K E S P A M 1 E R Y E C A M P E D A S P E D 1 T S G R A S 41 A 1 M A D A S A M A R C H H A R E A R I z IT 0 R A H ■O L A F 1 N A N E 1R E N T M O D E A W O L C O L T si11X 1 S 52 O.K. Corral fighter 56 Linda E lle rb ee 's “A n d — - G o e s ” 57 "T e rm s of Endearm ent," e g 60 Therefore 61 W hat bargain hunters look for 62 Altar w ord s 63 Impertinent one 64 H arrelson and W o o d p e ck e r 65 D o z e (off) 1 W hat p re ce d e s a blow out? 2 M e lan cho ly instrum ent 3 1995 earthquake site 4 P iz z a ------ 5 In the past 6 B a b y b u g 7 G a rde n item appropriate for this puzzle 8 Jeannie portrayer 9 K L M rival 10 Taped, in a w ay 11 D olphin hom e 12 And rea M cArd le B ro ad w ay role 13 B ranch h e a d q u arte rs? 18 Sin gle -m aste d ve sse l 22 G o of off 24 Is friendly to 25 Terrorized WORDS MEAN BUSINESS! 20 5 ?5T 471-5244 DAYS THE DAILY TEXAN *Olto» tatwtod to pnvsto party (non amrmraaQ arta only n cowwraflB k IndMduai Mtm oft**) lot uto mt,y no* txcmmei $1.0 • mud appM* in if» txxfy of fw ad o «oto W-a artcMonaM nnwem « • clay ol tha Wto n m w i top Puzzle by Matt Gaffney 26 C h e c k b o o k colum n Aviv 27 W ow 2 8 29 W eight 30 New Zealander 32 Circular m otion 33 G iv e (yield) 34 Kapow ! 38 “ M ine" (Beatles so n g ) 39 R e a d in g room 41 Castle site, often 42 “Mrs. M iniver” star G a rso n 51 South-of-the- border m on e y 45 D iam o n d co rn e rs 46 Fe stoo n 47 O n e of the M ario Brothers 48 B y g o n e pact 49 1935 hit "The L a d y ” 53 Related 54 M a k e over 55 E n c o u ra g e 57 P laying marble 58 Rival of D ave 59 C h ic a g o trains Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420* 5656 (754 each minute). Doonesbury b y GARRY TRUDEAU you REALLY LIKE SKITTL&5? ARE YOU K/PP/N6 7 THEY TUTALPY RULE THEIR FOOP 6ROUP' MY FA VORJTE FUEL, THOUGH, 19 NACHOS. PIP YOU KNOW YOU CAN M BIT A JA R OF VeiVEETA CHEESE Texas’ Amie Smith (center with ball) scored 21 points against Baylor in the two teams’ first meeting Jan. 24. A L L IS O N C ODLIN/Daily Texan Staff Lady Horns: UT must avoid distractions Continued from page 7 “There will be a lot of distractions this week and a lot of people talking about Texas Tech," Longhorn coach Jody Conradt said. “It's important that we stay focused. Baylor is a competitive team, and they've got to be a hungry te a m .... They worry me. "We could get all bent out of shape about the polls and we could spend time talking on that, but if we lose to Baylor, then it didn't mean anything." Texas could have a legitimate rea­ son to question the method of the Associated Press Top 25 madness. The Longhorns have defeated Texas A&M and SMU twice this season, and the Aggies are still garnering more votes (six) than Texas (zero). Both the Aggies and the Mustangs were picked to finished higher than the Longhorns in the preseason. "A ll I can say is that this whole season is about respect," Smith said. "N obody's going to give us any respect until we keep winning bas­ ketball games, and we're taking care of our business down here, and if they don't notice us, they don't notice us, because sooner or later, they're going to have to." Texas guard Angie Jo Ogletree echoes Smith's remarks that respect is hard to come by. Ogletree feels that Texas has had the "underdog" tag placed around its neck all season. "Well, I really don't believe in rankings and all that stuff; I never really have," Ogletree said. "I know that's what a lot of people look at when they look at teams and the way they're ranked. It means a lot to peo­ ple. But we've got to take the attitude that it doesn't m ean a lot to us. "1 guess people alw ays look at it as w e're the underdogs. If w e win, then it's a big thing, and if w e lose then the other team w as supposed to win. I d on't look at it that way, and I think that w e shou ld be g etting som e votes, b u t it's not going to bother me if w e d o n 't." It m ay not bother O gletree now, but if Texas d oesn 't find a w ay to stop the Bears' leading scorer, Tonya H arris (12.3 points-per-gam e), then Satu rd ay's big-tim e chance to gain som e respect m ay be nothing more than pipe dream s. ■ A s of W ednesday, 10,003 tickets have been sold for Satu rd ay 's show ­ dow n w ith No. 6 Texas Tech. ‘Prime-Time’ calls it quits Deion giving up baseball to spend time with family Associated Press DALLAS — Deion Sanders isn't going to be a two-sport star in 1996. Sanders has decided to shelve base­ ball for at least one season while he devotes his energies to becoming the NFL's only full-time two-way player. "Now , we'll see how good I can b e," said the Dallas Cowboys cor- nerback-wide receiver-kick return­ er. "I want to have an impact on both sides of the ball." Sanders is so serious about becom­ ing a great receiver that he will attend his first full training camp in July. He once spent two weeks in camp with the Atlanta Falcons. "I'm looking forward to mixing it up in camp, working with Troy (Aikman) and Michael (Irvin) and all the guys," said Sanders, who made the announcement on Tues­ day from his posh "Primetime 21 " nightclub in north Dallas. "I'm a football player now. I'll go over the middle, do whatever I have to do to become a great receiver. I think I'm going to have an impact. I have high expectations. ... I think this team is going to win a lot of Super Bowls in the next five years." Sanders' baseball marketability has dropped, but he also wants to spend more time with his family. He just returned from Florida from the first vacation he'd ever had with his wife, Caroline, and two children. "Norm ally, I would be leaving for (baseball) training camp right now and be gone from my family for six w eeks," he said. " It 's great just being here and dropping my kids off to school every day." Sanders said his baseball earnings wouldn't have matched the $2.5 mil­ lion he made last year playing for the Cincinnati Reds and San Francis­ co Giants. " I would have had to take a pay cut playing baseball, but I've got some business ventures that can make up for that," said Sanders. Coach Barry Switzer kiddingly asked Sanders, who got a $13 mil­ lion bonus in September, if he had coaxed more money out of owner Jones to make the decision. "D o you get some more money from Jerry?" Switzer asked. Sanders just grinned. Jones didn't. Switzer said he was "thrilled to death" to get Sanders full time. "W e know what kind of package Deion brings to defense, and now he's given up another sport to see how good he can be on offense," Switzer said. "H e will really earn his money now. We expect him to be the best." DILBERT® I HEARD THAT OUR SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT WORK HAS B EE N MOVED TO THE T IN Y N A T IO N O E ^ — ELB0N IA . GET CAN'T ^ THAT by Scott Adams DILBERT, YOU'RE IN CHARGE OF INTEGRATING • THE ELBONIAN'S s o f t w a r e coith OUR EXISTING SYSTEMS. « c >* if) 4) OKAY, NOU) IT CANT GET ANY I vou JMGHT U)0RSE 1 WANT TO GET A TUBERCULOSIS VACCINATION. s o o if) I o o if) • E Vrt I - ? (mOCr>) / ° \ - / o f o z 3 • U. T3 • C D t te B o> - o> ► v* * AROUND CAMPUS A round Cam pus is a daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by academic depart­ ments, student services and student organizations registered with the Campus Office. Activities Announcements must be submitted on the proper form by noon, two business days before publication. Forms are available at the Daily Texan office at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or you may fax the •announcement to 471-1576. You may also subm it Around rv'1 • Tw o Parking Garages • Elevators • Icem akers • Recently Refurbished • Secu rity Gates • New Paint, Awnings. W • Patios and Decks Carpet t >fc P re m ie r W e s t C am p u s C o m m u n ity Sum m er R ates Available Call W es Walters Realty. Inc. X * * * J1 R K Í ^ ^ I ÍT H E ---------------------------- 1 VILLAS) OF LA COSTA JT Like Two Separate Apartments In One! *2-2 s Great for Roomates * 1 st Stop CR Shuttle * Two Lighted Tennis Courts *Sparkling Pools PRELEASE NOW!! 1016 Camino La Costa 454-5638 Know Your New Phone Number The Same Day You Pre-Lease! Utility & fable Hook-Up Also Setup The Same Day! H i| e F lo o rp la u Fit 4 it a 2 Bedroom Fit 2 ia a I Bedroom Closet Spare Calore Great Views Free F u n d e d B auir Cable S a id Volleyball Two Pools PV Shuttle Sta rtiip at $485 444-0010 The Castilian An Upscale Private Residence Hall Located Just One Block From Campus! The Best Residence Food in Austin * Card contro1 access doors and ¿ates * Paid Utilities * Academic Year Leases Fantastic Facilities * High-tech computer * Study center and free center tutoring * Free Cable television * Maid service * Heated indoor poo! A Home Away From Home Looking for a place to live? Let us do the foot work for you. ^ Leasing & Sales f Apartments & C ondos » North & West C am pus Area Including all shuttle routes f Apartment Finders Service 2109 Rio Grande Q R R A Austin, TX 78705 O ZZ~YD DO r y y y y y y yyp y^jjr y^r nbt Huge Summer Diseouuts ^ * H / M R/y Covered deck multilevel parking garage Planned social & sports activities Courteous & responsive staff Ashford Apartments A A A AAAAAAAAÁÁ Í . AA V Tours Given Daily - 1-800-334-5320 The Castilian Easy Living at it’s best FU< v 4. niv»r«iitt| o f T n t Aitditin turn Page 14 Wednesday, February 2 1, 1996 T h e Daily T exan SQ U A R E C O F F E E m B B B COMPLEX AD DRESS PRICE C O M M E N T S Prelease Now for June/August These & M A N Y OTHERS Available Shuttle Routes, Too!! 8FW CHMARK BENCHMARK B C tS A ^tSTA • k i V A YT ST A CSN'IVNMU. C t N ’ i W A L CH€LS£A c r o c k c r o c k O ÍÜ P H d o h e x C M Y E X GATE V» AY .A T E 80 G E O * G AN G - s 'E R PEACE H A N C O CK P i ACE HOUSE “O U S E -> D f PARK OAKS _A N 't R N ¡.ANE LANTERN lA N E LONGVIEW TERRACE M E W S M E W S M EW S NUECES PLACE NUECES PLACE QAKV1EW ORANGETREE ORANGE TREE PALMETTO PALME H O P A R A P E T PECAN TREE RED RIVER SABINAL SAN GABRIEL PI SETON SOMERSET STONESTHROW STONESTHROW ST THOMAS ST THOMAS THIRTY FIRST ST TREEHOUSE TREE HOUSE WEST UNIV PLACE 3001 CEDAR 3001 CEDAR 1908 SA N A N T O N IO 1908 SA N AN T O N IO 5 0 ' W 26TH 501 W 26TH 1 0 0 0 W 25TH 806 W 24TH 806 W 24 TH 706 W 24TH 811 W ANNIE 2623 SA L A D O 3004 SPEEDW AY 2 8 I S RIO G RA ND E 715 W 221/2 2813 RIO G RA N D E 912 E 32ND 604 BAYLOR 2903 W 4STH 114 E 31ST 2008 SA N A N T O N IO 2008 SAN AN TO N IO 2313 LO NGV IEW 905 W 22 1/2 905 W 22 1/2 905 W 22 1/2 2206 NUECES 2206 NUECES 2901 SAN JACINTO 2529 RIO GRANDE 2529 RIO GRANDE 2110 RIO GRANDE 2110 RIO GRANDE 2801 RIO GRANDE 2107 RIO GRANDE 4701 RED RIVER 712 GRAHAM PLACE 1000 W 26TH 2513 SETON 2206 SAN GABRIEL 2311 NUECES 2311 NUECES 807 W 25TH 807 W 25TH 2 03 E 31ST 2612 SAN PEDRO 2612 SAN PEDRO 808 W 29TH 800 1200 750 1100 850 1200 875 700 850 1200 9 0 0 1 0 0 0 1000 1075 900 750 900 875 950 975 1100 950 675 925 925 700 1350 1050 1300 575 800 725 700 750 1375 925 800 1000 595 500 1000 800 800 975 595 725 lO SP IlO O 1275-1350 975 725 1300 1200 BEAUTIFUL C O M P LE X IN N BEAUTIFUL'! LARGE, BALCO N Y LARGE UNITS. 1 BLK TO UT POOL. W /D , COVERED PR KG H A S SO M E FURNISHED GREAT FOR 2 PEOPLE LUXURY C O M PLEX PERFECT FOR 2 3 GREAT LO CATION M O DERN , W / D C O N N H D W D FLOORS. 1 CA R GAR AG E REALLY CLOSE ON N CA M PUS LOFT IS 2 N D B D R M HEART OF W. C A M P U S SO M E ARE 2 STORY H A R D W O O D FLRS, W /D CLARKSVILLE, H D W D FLOORS H D W D FLOORS, LARGE YARD W /D , FIREPLACE, BALCO NY 1 BLOCK TO UT'. GOOD FOR 2 3 BALCONY', GOOD FOR 2 3 LOFT IS 2 N D B D R M GO R GEO U S, LU XU RY UNIT 2 STORY GREAT FOR 2 FRONT PENTHOUSE UNIT! 2 BLOCKS TO UT. CUTE 2 STORY W /D CLOSE TO LAW SCHOOL! INSIDE COURTYARD SETON SIDE COVERED PRKG/NICE PATIO LARGE PATIO, COVERED PKG FLR PLAN FOR UP TO 4 SMALL COMPLEX, CLOSE NICE EFFICIENCY GOOD FOR 2 3, POOL GREAT PRICE. W /D FURN OR UNF LARGE ENOUGH FOR 4 2 BLOCKS TO CAMPUS, HAS W/D BIG ENOUGH FOR 2, W/D, COVERED PRKG BEAUTIFUL FURNITURE LTD ACCESS GATES/GARAGE CLOSE N CAMPUS HAS GARAGE HAS GARAGE VERY LARGE FLOORPLANS 2813 RIO GRANDE, SUITE 206 474-1800 TWO BEDROOM/1 BATH ALL BILLS PAID FURN LNFI RX CEIUNG FANS ONE BEDROOMS ALL BILLS PAH) FURN/UNFURN VERY LARGE EFFICIENCIES ALL BILLS PAID SEPARATE KITCHEN TWO CLOSETS FURN/UNFURN LIMITED AVAILABILITY W /C SHUTTLE STOP WALK TO CAMPUS SUMMER/12 MONTH SPECIAL RATES MANAGEMENT OFFICE ONSITE 2212 San Gabriel Austin, Texas 78705 474-7732 Cornerstone Place • Stackable W ashers • Built-In M icrow aves • Ceiling Fans • Covered Parking • Furnished Available • 1-1 from $430 • 2-2 from $700 Leasing Office at 2308 Rio Grande 322-9887 ViTA I t T M BNS 2505 Longview STARTING AT $350 • Pool • Electronic entry • Microwave • Sport Court • Icemaker • Washer/Dryer some units • Close to Campus • Efficiencies • 1-1’s, 2-2’s 322-9887 C o rn e rs to n e Apartments 2728 Rio Grande • Vaulted Ceilings • On-Site Laundry • 2 Blocks from the Drag • 1 Bedroom • 1 Bedroom and loft (great for roommates) STARTING AT 3 7 5 m 322-9887 Fitness Center f / • Aerobics * Weight Room * Sports Courts • Saunas * 2 Olympic-sized pools Í/ / Club House • Game Room • Pool Table • Party Room • Big Screen TV * Guest House • Kitchen »Laundry Room • Putting Green Computer Center • 10 Computers ♦ Copier Service • Internet Access • Computer Classes f \ • Fax Service Private Study Rooms Conference Room 'eaturirij 1 £ & 3 Bedroom 6am-Midnight 2101 Burton ustín, TX 78741 (512) 447*4130 Celebrate Free Cable Laundry Service Social Activities Multiple Picnic & Bar-B-Que Areas Access Gates 1 <0e oc o th — Town Lake Riverside Dr. 8c Woodland Ave CD ■ UntverstyA Heights T y Ottort Directions: From IH-35 exit QLtorf easl From Qfoorf, tumkfton iBurton Dn We will on your right f f University Heights BH MANAGEMENT SERVICES INC. tat Equal Housmg Opportunity COOPERATIVES: NOT YOUR AVERAGE STUDENT HOUSING Are you looking fo r more than just a place to live? Do you want to live with fun and interesting people? Do you fin d the idea o f a democratically run house VEGETARIAN & NON-VEGETARIAN MEALS appealing? Are you looking fo r a unique blend o f privacy and community? Do SINGLE & DOUBLE ROOMS you want to live in a house with character? Dou want to share household A L L B I L L S P A I D chores with others, rather than doing everything yourself? Do you want to BETWEEN 2 & 5 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS come home to home-cooked meals? I f your answer to any o f these questions is KITCHENS OPEN 24 HOURS yes, then the Inter-Cooperative C ouncil co-ops are the place fo r you! U N I V E R S I T Y O F T E X A S INTER-COOPERATIVE COUNCIL 510 W. 23rd • AUSTIN, TX 78705 • 512/476-1957 T he D aily T exan Wednesday, February 21, 1996 Page 15 ing Guide WIST CAMPUS WIST CAMPUS APT. SERVICES RED RIVER UT SHUTTLE Ma Maison F a ll ‘96 -*9 7 S t a r t in g at $ 4 ,0 0 0 d o u b le o c c u p a n c y Sum m er Special $1,000 fo r both sessions A B P . L u x x u ry f u r n is h in g s , lo b b y , k i t c h e n /d in in g . S u n d e c k . m a id s e r v ic e , c o m p u te r s , c o n tr o lle d a c c e s s . F re e p a r k in g , c a b le . In W e s t C a m p u s - 2 3 rd a t P e a rl C o m e b y f o r a to u r 474-2224 B e s t D e a l A r o u n d Pre-lease now Fall ‘96-'97 $475 If Sign before May 1 on ly $450/m on th for a on e year lease. ABP. F u lly F u rn is h e d , C o n tro lle d A ccess. F ree P a rk in g . C a b le .F a n s , M icro w av es, Large F rid g e Park Avenue Place 474-2224 306 E. 30th ( b e h in d E n g in e e rin g B ldg.) RPI Croix 1/1...................... $700 Windtree 2 /2 ............... $900 Croix 2 /2 .................... $1200 476-1124 3 Blocks from Campus Private l-1. Hardwood Floors, Ceiling Fans, Mexican Tile Bar. $550. Available June 1.328-9307. CASA DE SALADO APARTMENTS 2610-2612 S a lad o S treet Best Deal In W est Cam pus Preleasing for 1996-1997 • F a m il y o w n e d & m a n a g e d p ro p e rty • V. block from WC S h u ttle Bus • 24 on e bedroom un its • 4 two bedroom /one batb units • Fully furnished • Sw im m ing pool • Laundry Room • Owner pays for basic cable, gas (heat & stove) and water/w aste water • Prefer one year leases Call Brian Novy at 477-2534 Condos Available Now! West & North Campus! June/August move-ins. Fireplaces, W/D, Access Gates, Covered parking, 1-1’s $650, 2-2’S $850. Tower Real Estate 322-9934 West Campus Condos! Large Selection! $525 up, 1-1’s $800 up 2 -2 ’s Washer/Dryer, Covered parking. Tower Real Estate 322-9934 C ondos too expensive? T hat’s ok, we can help. All sh u ttle routes. Call Apartment Finders 322-9556 APARTMENT FINDERS SERVICE http://ausapt.com. AFS 322-9556 GRFAT A partm ent at GREAT L ocation for GRFAT p rices. Contemporary unit with lots of .imenities • San Gabriel Condos 2100 San Gabriel • San Remo Aph • 2204 San Gabm-i • Lantana Apts -1802 Vi Avenue Call B u rlin g to n V en tures 476-0111 [Large 1-1’s. West Campus - Access Gates - Ceiling Fans - Microwaves - Balconies. AFS 322-9556 Furnished 1-1’s West Campus - Large Floorplans - Access Gates - Ceiling Fans, Microwaves - Balconies. 1-1’s from $575. AFS 322-9556 PRE-LEASING 1-1's, 2-2’s, and 3 bd’s. APT. H EA D Q U AR TER S 442-9333 FREE LOCATING SERVICE UNIVERSITY REALTY 474-9400 iff us m c o m í m m b i s i smmn t BENCHMARK CENTENNIAL CROIX ORANGETREE ROBBINS SETON ST. THOMAS mis TREE HOUSE WEST UNIVERSITY 705 W. 24TH. SUITE C NEXT TO AMY'S AND THUNDERCLOUD NORTH T he M ayfair Small, quiet, and clean complex. Located near UT shuttle On site management and a friendly staff. Efficiencies, 1 and 2 bedrooms starting at $325. Call us today, move in tomorrow. 926-6954 APARTMENT FINDERS SERVICE http://ausapt.com AFS 322-9556 North Campus 1-1 and 2-2 Walking Distance. Great for Law and Engineering Students Tower Real Estate 322-9934 HYDE PARK Pre-leasing for SUMMER EFF/1-BDRM HYDE PARK From $395 Furnished & Unfurnished DW/DSP/Bookshelves Pool/BBQ/Patio Laundry/Storage/Res.Mgr. On “IF’ Shuttle 108 Place Apartments 108 W. 45th St. 452-1419, 385-2237, 453-2771 GREAT OAK APARTM ENTS Red R ive r at 30th 1 B lock N orth of U T Quiet 32 apt. complex. Large 2 br/2 ba apts. On site manage­ ment. furnished dishwasher large walk-in closets sundeck ceiling fans built in desks CA/CH Laundry Petiess 40 ft. swimming pool S800-S850 472-3388 477-2097 as® r BEST DEAL U . T . 1 Shuttle - 2BR/1.5BA - Free Cable - Access Gates - Ceiling Fans - Low Bills - $615 9 mo. $595 12 mo. AFS 322-9556 j ÜJTT. i rrx- Nicest Property on South Shuttle Fireplaces, Ceiling Fans, Balconies, Pool, Hot tub. 1-1’s $465. 2-1’s $690. 2-2 $735. AFS 322-9556 WALK TO CAMPUS Walk UT 2-2 (832 Sq. Ft.) $625-5725 1-1 (560 Sq. Ft.) $445-$525 Eff (362 Sq. Ft.) S345-S395 All bills paid except A.C -heating saving at least $50/month New carpet, paint. Appliance Prompt Service. Swimming pool Furnished/Unfurnished Special Discount for one year lease and/or paying up front Voyaers Apt. 311 E. 31st St. North Campus 478-6776 BUCKINGHAM SQUARE to Q uiet complex, close campus, early rent dis­ counts every month, 1 and 2 bedrooms available.Call us to reserve your apart1 ment today. 453-4991. Preleasing! Summer, Fall. 1 Block UT 1-1, small, quiet complex. W ell-m a in ta in e d . G reat Location. Water/gas paid. Hemphill Park Apts. 2711 Hemphill Park. 478-1870 UT SHUTTLE APARTMENT FINDERS SERVICE http://ausapt.com. A F S 322-9556 SOUTH U.T. Shuttle - Two Pools - Hot Tub - Sand Volleyball - Balconies - Ceiling Fans 1-1’S $479. 2-1’s $660. 322-9556 GREAT NEWS!! Now Preleasing. FW Shuttle route. W/D connections (select units) 1-1 $490, 2 Br. $625. AFS 322-9556 HYDE PARK/IF Pre-leasing for Summer/Fall Eff/1 bdr from $380 Fum and unfum. Dishwasher/Disposal, Bookshelves Pool/BBQ/Patio, Laundry Individual Storage Resident Manager. On IF Shuttle 1/2 block to Shipe park 108 Place Apartments 108 West 45th St. 452-1419, 385-2237, 453-2771 CENTRAL On Shuttle Route. Bryker- wood. Large 4-2 CH/CA, refrigerator, stove, dispos­ al, washer/dryer, fireplace, Mexican tile floors, huge oaks. $1600. Available June 1st. 328-9307 D o Y o u K n o w T h is P e rs o n ? YOU COULD WIN A VACATION FOR TWO!!! RULES 1) Identify the person circled in the photo. Bring your completed entry to The Daily Texan (25th and Whitis, Room 3.200). If you are one of the first five people to bring in the Identity Form, you will win a Cactus P shirt. Your entry along with all other entries received by 4:00p.m. Wednesday will go into a drawing for the weekly winner which will receive a “96 Cactus Yearbook and CD Rom”. There will be a weekly winner once a week for eight weeks. These eight winners will go into a drawing for the *VACAT!ON FOR TWO which will be announced and awarded on March 27th. 2) Each entry must be brought to the Texan office in person with only one entry per person. No photocopies accept­ ed. 3) TSP employees and families not eligible. Name of the person circled in the p h o to :________________________ ir -tu Your Name: Address: Phone Number: Student/Faculty? ‘ Vacation Giveaway includes 4 days, three nights accommodations for two. Amenities depend upon vacation package chosen (South Padre, New Orleans, Orlando, Lake Tahoe). ! c - t t J Z c - i , 5 h j a : r . ft*» 9 » P a g e 1 6 W e d n e s d a y , F e b r u a r y 2 1 , 1 9 9 6 T h e D a i l y T e x a n To Place a Classified Ad Call 471-5244 or on-line at: http://fetumedia.jou.utexas.edu/ CLASS/ clasform html Classified W ord Ad Rates C h arg ed by th e w o rd Based on a 1 5 w o rd m in im u m , th e fo llo w in g ra te s apply. 1 day ............................. $ 6 1 5 ................................ $ 1 1 . 7 0 2 days 3 days .........$ 1 6 6 5 4 days............................ $20.40 5 d a y s .................................... $ 2 3 .2 5 F irs t tw o w o rd s m a y be all ca p ita l le tte rs . $ . 2 5 f o r e a c h a d d itio n a l w o r d M a s te rC a rd and V isa a cce p te d c a p i t a l in l e t t e r s . Classified Display Ad Rates C h arg ed by th e c o lu m n inch. One co lu m n in ch m in im u m A v a rie ty of type fa c e s and s iz e s a n d b o r d e r s a v a ila b le . F all r a te s S e pt. 1-M a y 3 0 1 to 2 1 co lu m n in ch e s p e r m o n th $ 9 2 0 p e r col. in ch o v e r 21 co lu m n in ch e s p e r m o n th Call fo r ra te s FAX ADS TO 471-6741 8:00-5:00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication TRANSPORTATION 10-Mtsc Autos 20-Sports foreign Autos 30-Trucks Vans 40-Vehioes to Trade 5 0 - S e r w * Qepar 60-Part? Accessories 70-Motoncycses 80-8cycies 9 0 - Vehicles ceasing 10 0 -1 ahctes a; )U?o REAL ESTATE SALES 110—Services 120-Houses 130—Condos-T ownhomes 140-M obile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160-Duplexes-Apartments 170—Wanted 180—Loans «M E R C H A N D IS E 190—Appliances 200—Fumtture-Household 210-StereoTV 220-Computers-Equipment 2 30—Photo-Camera 240-Boats 250-Musical Instruments 26X3—Hobbies 270-Machinerv-Equipment 2 80-SportingCamping Equipment 290-Fumiture-Appliance Rental 300-Garage-Rummage Sales 310-Trade 320-W anted to Buy or Rent 330-P ets 340-Longhom Want Ads 3 4 5-M isc RENTAL 350-Rental Services 360—Furnished Apts 370-Unfumished Apts. 380-Fumished Duplexes 390—Unfurnished Duplexes 4 00—Condos-T ownhomes 4 10—Furnished Houses 420—Unfurnished Houses 4 2 5 —Rooms 430—Room-Board 435—Co-ops 4 4 0 —Roommates 4 50—Mobile Homes-Lots 4 6 0 —Business Rentals 4 70—Resorts 4 80—Storage Space 490—Wanted to Rent-Lease 500—Misc. A N N O U N C E M E N T S 510—Entertamment-Tickets 520—Personals 530-Travel-Transportation 540—Lost & Found 550—Licensed Child Care 560—Public Notice 570—Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580-Musical instruction* 590-Tutoring 600-Instruction Wanted 610—Misc. Instruction SERVICES 620-Legal Services 6 3 0 —Computer Services 6 4 0 —Exterminators 650-Movmg-Hauling 660—Storage 670-Painting 680-Office 690-Rental Equipment 700—Furniture Rental 710—Appliance Repair 720—Stereo-TV Repair 730-Hom e Repair 7 40—Bicycle Repair 750-Typing 7 60—Misc. Services EM P L O Y M E N T 770—Employment Agencies 780—Employment Services 790-P art Time 800-General Help Wanted 810-Office-Clerical 820—Accounting-Bookkeeping 830—Administrative- Management 840-Sales 850-Retail 860-Engineering-T echnical 870-Medical 880-Professional 890-Clubs-Restaurants 900-Domestic Household 910-Positions Wanted 920-W ork Wanted B U SIN ESS 930—Business Opportunities 940-0pportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED f o r o n ly O NE ADVERTISING TERMS In in t h e e v e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e ad ve rtise m e n t, notice m u s t be given by 11 a.m. th e f ir s t day. as th e p u b lis h e rs a re r e s p o n s ib le in c o r r e c t in se rtio n All cla im s fo r a d ju stm e n ts should b e m a d e n o t la t e r th a n 3 0 d a y s a f t e r publication Pre-paid kills receive c re d it slip if req u e ste d a t tim e of cancellation, and if a m o u n t e x c e e d s $ 2 . 0 0 . S lip m u s t b e p re s e n te d fo r a re o rd e r w ith in 9 0 days to be valid C re d it slips a re n on -tra nsferrable . In c o n s id e r a t io n o f t h e D a ily T e x a n 's a c c e p t a n c e o f a d v e r t is in g c o p y f o r publication, th e agency and th e a d v e rtis e r w ill in d e m n ify and save h a rm le s s , Texa s S t u d e n t P u b lic a tio n s a n d its o f fic e r s , e m p lo y e e s , a n d a g e n ts a g a in s t all lo ss, li a b ilit y , d a m a g e , a n d e x p e n s e o f w h a ts o e v e r n a t u r e a r is in g o u t o f th e c o p y in g , p r in t in g , o r p u b lis h in g o f it s a d v e rtis e m e n t including w ith o u t lim ita tio n reaso n a b le a tto rn e y 's fe e s re su ltin g fro m cla im s of s u its fo r libel, violation of rig h t of p r iv a c y , p la g ia r is m a n d c o p y r ig h t a n d tra d e m a rk in fring em e nt. ISO - Condo* - ' MERCHANDISE ! | RENTAL * ..* •yea—j____L .IJ 3 6 0 .f u r o . A p h . 1 370 - Unf. A p t.. RENTAL iÍ RENTAL 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. j RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 3 ^0 - Unf. Afíf». , 2 0 Autos 1988 PORSCHE. 924s, beautiful, red, 47k, one owner Below blue- book $ Loaded blaupunkt, am /fm , $5 9 7 5 . 453-7014. 2-21-5B 3 0 - T ru c k s -V a n s '9 2 MONTERO. 4 6 k , 4 W D , 5FP, cassette, cruise, ro o f/b icycle rack, trailer hitch. Ready for vacationl $ 1 8 ,0 0 0 447-4221. 2-21-5B 8 0 - B ic y c le s M O U N TA IN B IK E C L E A R A N C E Many Reduced to Cost!!! B U C K ’S B IK E S 9 2 8 - 2 8 1 0 REAL ESTATE SALES 1 3 0 - C o n d o s T o w n h o n w i ' Property Management t of Texas 704 W. 24th St. Jus: s s v S M U.T. Experts Parapet landmark Sq. Gfeeiwowi fewers Treehwise Poééoá Orangetree PoMte Sunchase Overlook Orangetree $85,000 2-2 $65,000 2-1 2-1 $65,000 IgM w/garage $64,900 $105,000 2-21/2 $35,000 $45,000 $44,900 $49,900 $56,500 $74,000 1-1 w/stvdy poolsideefi. 1 § H if f . 1-1 1-1 Croix 2-2 Orangetree 2 -2 1 /2 $«9,900 $108,000 É i L f l F o r S a le 67.9K 54.9K 36K 150K 79.9K 54.9K 44.9K 1*1 Croix 2-2 91K ♦Croix ♦Etas 1-1 ♦Guadalupe Sq. 1-1 3-2 ♦Hobidod ♦Orange Tree 2-1 1-1 ♦Overlook 1-1 ‘Po«te 3-2 52K ’Windfall 2-2 67.5K Georgian Landmark Sg. 1-1 Pecan Walk Robbins Place 2-2 75.5K San Gabriel Pk 2-2 5*K 2-2 87K St. Thomas 51K 1-1 Tom Groan 74.9K Treeboese 2-1 Wedgewood 2-2 75K Westplace 2-2 64.9K ♦Denotes FHA 2.5% Down 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 4-2 96K West Campus Orangetree Eff $46,000 Wedgewood l-t $55.000 l-t $56,500 Buena Vista l-l $65,000 Centennial i-S $67,500 Georgian t-t $74,000 Old Main Old Main t-t $95,000 Orangetree 2-15 $107,500 $89,500 Croix 2-2 5-3 $117,000 Croix North Campas l-l Northforfe Windtree 2-2 Benchmark 2-2 5200 Duval 2-2 $29.500 $69,500 $98.000 $98,500 ^ ^ C a i n C e n n j ^ ^ ^ ^ 476-2673 mm 2109 Rio Grande Apartment Finders Service 2s CACH. Cable. Lease begin­ ning June-1 st/August-20th. $ 8 0 0 / $ 85 0. (6-to-8pm) or 472-2097. 2-7-20B-D 4 7 7 -3 3 8 8 302 W. 38th Leasing on furnished 1-bedrooms, and 2-bedrooms. Conveniently located. All appliances, pool and laundry room. Gas, wafer, and cable paid. 453-4002 Beds, Beds, Beds The factory outlet lor Simmons, Seaiy, Springair, We carry closeouts, discontinued covers, & factory 2nds. From 50-70% off retail store prices All new, complete with warranty Twin set, $69. Full set, $89 Queen set, $ 11 9 King set, $149 1741 West Anderson In. 454-3422 GREAT PRICES ON G uitars* Amps» VCR's TV’s ■ CD’s ■ Jewelry CASH PAWN 2 2 2 0 9 E. Riverside 4 4 1 - 1 4 4 4 i 35.75K JERRY GARCIA Lithograohs. Af­ fordable. 314-230-2370 2-12-20P RENTAL *20 Years Service” (W 0 1 OUT T ilt HLWtSTIH ÍURHIUHD S U M HT flP M IM H T I u n t m 4 1,2,3 &4 private bedrooms 4 Lease by the bedroom (not resoonsfcte for roommate's rent) 4 Full-size washer/dryer 4 On the UT bus route 4 Multimedia computer center m m m i a m o K H Lease Now for Fall 1996! Towers Court Building 715 W. 23rd St. M thru F 9-6; Sat 10-5; Sun 1-5 322-07CC Jfl D W a lk to UT. Unexpected vacancy. ABP, free cable, fully furnished, o ff street p a rkin g . O ne block to campus. $ 4 2 5 . Park Avenue Place 30th and Speedway 474-2224. 2-20-20B-D BEAUTIFUL EFFICIENCIES, one and tw o bedroom apartments available on Red River. Pool, shuttle, shop­ ping Coll 452-4366. 2-13-9B Eff $425 1-1 Free Gas/Cable $471 1-1 Large $575 2-2 Free Gas/Cable $755 $801) 2-2 Washer/Dryer 1-1 Access Gales 1-1 Large 2-1 All Bills Paid 2-2 Access Gates $445 $520 $775 Skittle F/W. CR.11.PV. SR Eff Free Cable/Gales $415 1-1 Free Cable/Gales $440 $525 2-1 PV M le 2-1.5 Free fable/Gates $595 $660 2-1 Far West $780 2-2 Washer/Dryer "And Manv More” 322-9556 2109 Rio Grande http://www.ausapüum AVAILABLE NOW! Must See to Believe Approx. 650 sq. ft. Covered Parking Separate Study Area Walk to Campus $525 J Z 2 :M16_ DAILY TEXAN 471, 471,1865 FOR T W O QUEEN beds w /fra m e $ 1 50 each, dresser $ 1OO, couch $ 1 5 0 , twin bed w /fra m e $25 Excellent condition. Rob or Steve. 833-2251 2-21-5B PRESSURE CLEANERS, ready to use, $99 9 2 7 4 2 16-5B Complete, 1-800-333- LUSTEROUS BLACK lacour dining room set, table, 6 chairs, lighted china cabinet, entertainment center with mirroredbar $95 0 obo 418- 0 5 9 6 2-16 5B BROTHER INKJET word processor, W P-7000J whisperwriter. $200. 4 7 8 -2 8 2 4 2-15-5B C R O W N WIRE wheels (13 in) 60 spokes, 3-prong spinners, 4-lug In­ cludes BF G oodrich 1 7 5 -5 5 /1 3 tires Set of 4, all chrome Excel- ent condition. 604- 3 7 5 2-15-5B $900-obo. FLORIDA/BAHAMAS VACATIO N Five nights of Package for two. accommodations including meals on­ board cruise ship. Anytime before 4 / 5 /9 6 . $ 2 9 9 Firm 6 02 -64 37. 2-15-4B. SMALL SOFA and matching chair. N ew condition, mauve and blues in abstract floral design, $ 3 9 0 OBO 836-4785. 2-1Ó-5B 200mm PENTAX Lenses: 6X7 $ 3 5 0 , 105mm $250. Jewelry casting machine w/accessories $ 2 5 0 ($500 new), Oxygen regula­ tors, ($125 like new $ 8 0 each new). 502 -89 73, 2-16-5B PROTEUS MPS Keyboard, New $ 1 0 0 0 Excellent condition, $550 Ibanez ultra-thin American O BO . made, special edition, N ew $1000, $ 5 0 0 0 6 0 474 -08 04 2-16-5B '8 2 SUBARU DL, 5-speed, 130K, runs well, but needs clutch $300. 454-5474. 2-20-5B UT FANS 1950's-style orange and white dinette table and four chairs. G ood shape $ 2 0 0 OBO. C all for details 454-0819. 2-20-5B RCA COMPACT disk jambox, $70 ; Rafton couch, $40; single fu­ ton frame $ 1 7 5 ; 10-speed bike, $ 35 ; chair and lamp, $5 0 . 371- 7 35 1. 2-20-5B NILUS LECLERC 4 5 " natural birch, four harness, jack floor loom, sepa­ rate matching storage bench w /to o l trays, $ 10 00. tools reeds, (512)343-7614 2-20-5B M CAT: KAPLAN, Flowers, Bar­ ron's, REA, practice tests, $ 1 0 0 ; weight lifting bench w /le g and arm attachments $30 . M inh, 832- 5 30 2. 2-19-5B D IAM O NDB AC K Ascent BIKE. Perfect for women. O n ly $ 2 5 0 Just had W o rth $ 6 0 0 G el Seat, U-lock included 322 -20 15. 2-19-5B. tune-up Call FURNITURE SALE. Blue/beige sofa, $80 ; dining set w / 4 chairs, $100; table, $25. C a ll Vivian coffee 912-1026, Prices negotiable 2-21-5B REG. BORDER C ollie pups Very smart. Shots. $20 0. 28 8 -3 5 9 3 or (409) 6 93 -52 17. 2-21-5P 198 5 NISSAN Stanza steering, valid tags. Powei In excellent condition, $ 1 0 0 0 . Call 454 -8 3 2 3 2-21-5B MOTORCYCLE: BLACK Suzuki GS Less than 12,0 0 0 original records 323 4 5 0 . miles. kept. Runs great. 5 7 7 0 . 2-20-5B All maintenance $ 7 0 0 O B N M A I L o r d e r b l a n k O r d e r b y M a ll, F A X o r P h o n e FAX: ClamUted Phone: P.O. Box D Austin. Texas 78713 471-6741 471-6244 20 words 5 days ^5 A d d ition al W o r d s ....$ 0 .2 5 e a ¿ x l L t f i 7 13 19 25 2 8 14 20 26 3 9 15 21 27 4 10 16 22 28 5 11 17 23 29 6 12 18 24 30 limited to private party (n o n -c o m ­ O tte r m e rc ial) ads only Individual item s ottered for sale m ay not e xc ee d $1 OOO. a n d price m ust app ea r in trie body ot trie a d copy it item s are not soid five additional insertions will be run a t no charg e A dvertiser must call b e fo re 11 a .m . on tria day of th e fifth than insertion N o copy c h a n g e reduction in p rice) is a llow ed (other A D D R E S S . N A M E.............................................................................. PH ON E. i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i j n V . 4 Walk to School' Efficiencies 1 - 1 Large 2-2’s Various Locations Covered Parking Available North & West Campus Call Marquis Management 472-3816 or 454-0202 AVAILABLE NOW SUMMER and FALL ★ 1 -1 's 8c 2-l's re a d y fo r ★ G as C o o k in g , Gas ★ Gas, W a te r 6c C ab le S u m m e r H e a tin g Paid ★ On CR S h u ttle ★ $ 4 5 0 /$ 5 9 5 p lu s elec. SANTA FE APARTMENTS 1 I OI Clay ton Lane 4 5 8 - 1 5 5 2 S i PRE-LEASING Hancock Square 924 E. 40111 On the Red River Shuttle Efficiencies 1-1 's $395 $465 $625 2-1.5's C ava lier 3 0 7 E.31» Walk to Cantpus $750 2-1's Barclay 7 0 0 Franklin On the Guadalupe Shuttle Efficiencies 1-1 s $395 $465 D E M IN G REAL ESTATE 3 2 7 - 4 1 1 2 ------ — On U T Shuttle Free Cable •2-1 885 sq.ft.$535 2-1.5 1000+ sq. ft. $625 3-1.5 1200+ sq.ft.$795 1201 Tinnin Ford 440-0592 ountieiM tC APAR TM EN T HO M ES 2 BR st. @ $550 OFF 1st M * » & with This Ad y * Available Immediately fot more info coll 4 5 4 - 2 5 3 7 "B E S T DEALI! W est Campusl Large, nice 1-1, gas p a id l Patio. $470+ Front Page 480 -8 5 1 8 . 2- 21-20B. "SU PE R SPACIOUSI W est cam­ pus! 2 / 2 $ 7 5 0 , $ 5 0 0 dep. Pre­ lease Front Page 480- 8518 2-21-20B-C todayl Shut- "U N IQ U E EFFICIENCIES. tle /W a lk l fireplace, Saltillo, tile, pool. Prelease $45 0. Front Page 480-8518 2-21-20B-C. RENTAL - 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS SQ UA RE Apartments NOW' PRELEASING FDRNlSHED/f'NFl RMSHF.D 5 BU S FROM CAMPUS * WCSHimiESTOP * EFFICIENCIES * DELUXE 1-1 * 2-1 ECONOMY STYLE * ON-SITE MANAGEMENT A LL B ILL S PAID 2212 San Gabriel Street Austin, Tesas 78705 (512)474-7732 (~Woód£alzE. c ^ ffia ’ib n z n ti / ¡ j & Bike Trails '\Jtatuxe.s. Joucui in (>\Vood£a$t' » Four UT Shuttle Stops • Spacious One & Two Bedrooms • Ceiling Fans • • Sunrise Lake Views cSt ¿Makla £i.pcmo£ (lU/zty uoi cStait enjoyincj [ifc at ¡J ( Woodta&s todau? 443-6363 Race On Over Preleasing E xtra Large Efficiencies 1-l s Perfect For Roommates Large 2-2’s 6 Blks From Campus 2 Blks From Shuttle All Bills Paid No Electric Deposit (’release Now Ashford Apartments Call 476-8915 \ RATES NOW!!! We have summer rates for immediate occupancy on select apartments now through August if you sign a one year lease. All of the communities are on a shuttle individual amenities. Two bedrooms start as low as $490. Call now for the best selection: route have but WILLOVYCREEK HILLS THE ARRANGEMENT TANGLEWOOD NORTH 444-0010 444-7880 452-0060 2-21 W a sh e r/d ry e r m cludedi Pool, Jacuzzil $78 0+ Front Page 480 -85 18. 2-21-20B-C PRE-LEASING FAR W est and Cam­ $ 4 9 0 -$ 8 0 0 . eron Road shuttle Call Leaseline at 467-7121. 2-21 -10B WALK TO UT law and engineering schools. Pre-leasing summer and fall. 1-bedrooms with study and large lofts. Some 2-bedrooms, W & G paid. Cats ok. 5 2 9 + . C all Leaseline 467-7121. 2-21-10B PRE-LEASING WEST A N D NORTH CAMPUS. LEASELINE. 467-7121 2-21-10B 170 0 NUECES: studio. Trees, views. Fountain C ourtyard. Free cable. G arage Laundry. Luxury W ell maintained N o pets. A vail­ able now- M arch 1. $ 4 9 0 . 444- 2 7 5 0 /4 6 7 -3 3 3 2 . 2-20-20B-D. SUBLET 2-2 apartment for $ 6 7 5 / mo. Close to UT, on shuttle. Pool. A vailable immediately. 272 -9 4 7 7 . 2-20-5B. GREAT Apartments at GREAT Location for GREAT Prices Contemporary unit with lots of amenities. •San Gabriel Condominiums 2 1 0 0 San G abriel •San Remo Apartments 22 0 4 San G abriel •Lantana Apartments 1802 W . Avenue Call Burlington Ventures 476- 0 11 1. 2-19-5B ” $365-575 Efficiencies, 1-1,2-1. Ready to move in. 15 minutes a w a y from UT. Bus route. 451-4514. 2-16-12B Available N ow 1-1 in Hyde Park Large Floor Plan W a ter/C able Paid. On IF Shuttle Sausalito II 4533 Avenue A 450-1058 2-14-106C LAM A R /KO E N IG . GREAT 1-1. Appliances, ceiling fans, mini-blinds, laundry room, pool, W & G paid. From $ 37 5, A p ril Realty Services, 442-6500. 2-16-20B SUBLEASE EFFICIENCY from March-August $34 5. 26th and Red River. Parking. Some furniture. Ur- gentl Call 478 -35 45. 2-19-5P BEAUTIFUL C O N D O . 2-1. N ew carpet, paint. W asher and dryer. UT shuttle A va ila ble now, 328- 363 1. 2-19-5B LARGE EFFICIENCY off 1-35 and Riverside. 1300 Parker Ln. O n shut­ tle route. $325. 707 -85 00. 2-19-5B WALK TO Campus. Large efficien­ cies. 451- Very Nice. 09 8 8 2-19-1 OBO $ 41 5. 1-1 3 blocks from campus, RR shut­ in M arch 1. $ 4 7 5 / tle, move month. Call 320 -54 17. 2-21-3B QUIET O NE bedroom 301 W est 39th. Large pool, courtyard, laun­ dry room, central a ir. Half block from UT shuttle $ 3 9 5 /m o n th . 3 85 2. 2-20-5B-D. A va ila ble N o w 3 2 6 -9 2 1 5 or 452 - NEAR LAW School, on Shuttle. Large 1/1 $ 3 9 5 -4 1 0 . 4 7 4 -1 2 4 0 . 2-21-20B-C. Spacious 1 /1 in BULL CREEKI small community. $ 49 5 + E. Ca­ ble, gas paid. 450- 0 4 6 0 . 2-21-20B-D. N o pets. 3 9 0 - U n f . D u p l« x » s 1&2 BR apartments in small, quiet community. Free cable, h o t/c o ld water, no pets. 8 3 5 -5 6 6 1 . 2-19- 20B-D. " H A R D W O O D FLOORSI Du­ plex W est Campus. Smaller/neat 2-1 only $75 0. Pront Page 480- 851 8. 2-21-20B-C. N O W PRE-LEASING. Charm ing 4 0 0 + courtyard efficiencies. W a lk school I G roup 476-1591. 2-15-10B-D. From $ 4 4 0 . to Presido TOW NHOM E $550 One bedroom, 1 1 /2 baths, balcony, huge closets,ceiling fan. N o pets. 701 North Loop N ear Intramural Field. 454-9945. 2-15-2 0B SMALL, CLEAN and quiet commun­ town- ity. 1 45 0 sqft. 3bd-2bth. house. $ 8 5 0 /m o . $ 2 0 0 deposit. Located at 4 0 9 Swanee 450 - 939 1. 2-14-20B LARGE 3-1 apartment. 9 0 6 W 22. 5-6 or 15 month lease. $800 deposit, $ 1 1 0 0 monthly. 479 -07 31, leave message. 2-7-1 3B A va ila ble now HILLSIDE APARTMENTS 1-2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean and Quiet All Utilities Paid 5 1 4 Dawson Road Just off Barton Springs Road. 478-2819 2-7-20&0 SMALL, CLEAN and quiet communi­ ty, 1 -bedroom, $3 7 5 rent, 525sq ft, $ 1 5 0 deposit. $ 2 5 application. M ike 4 5 0 -9 3 9 1 . At 4 0 9 Swanee 2-1-10B LA CASITA- Pre-lease 2 - l's and 1- 1's located 2 blocks to campus. From $ 5 7 5 /m o . 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 2 19-15B-D LARGE EFFICIENCY ^ LtF $345. UT shuttle. N ew carpet, paint, and tile 472-6979. 2-9-20B-D LARGE 1 bedroom near UT O n UT shuttle $ 42 5. 4 7 2 -69 79 2-9 20B-D EFFICIENCIES, paid small patio, pool, covered parking. 4 3 5 sq.ft $ 35 9-4 19 /m o . 2 0 2 0 S. ELECTRIC Congress. 444-4226. 2-13-10B $100 OFF Move in by 3-1-96 and receive $ 100 off March. Summer special for 12 month lease Efficiency, 1 and 2 bedrooms. SR shuttle The Arrangement. Professionally M anaged by Synermark M anagement Co. 2-12 206. 2 STORY 1 B D / 1.5 BA 2 Balconies. Fireplace W s h ./D ry . W a lk to Campus. Q uiet. A va il. April-Aug. O p tio n to renew. I pr elea sin H 1S| HAPPENING NOW!! ^ K u m m e r-F a lll Seton 1-1 $775 C r a p : ¡ i 1 J j ? 5 0 Croix | 2+1 H H 1 Orangetree 2-1 $ 9 7 5 Ife Centennial %1 $1350 l it - « I m m ■ * W mCALLNOWm Hie— — J i i ^ Ely Properties Now Pre-Leasing $1200 2-2 Benchmark Beeoa Vista $750 qi 1-1,2-2 Cntem id 1-1,2-2,3-2 $800 up $850 up Chelsea 2-1,3-3 $675 up Croix 1-1,2-2 $900 Georgian 2-2 $800 up OnmgeTree 1-1,2-2 $600 up Pomte 1-1,2-2 $700 np Robbins Place l-l, 2-2 $950 Sabinal 2-2 $900 op Savannah 2-2 $750 Seton 1-1 $950 op St Thomas 2-1,2-2 $700 up Treehouse 1-1,2-2 $1250 Waterford 2-2 Westplace $875 2-2 $875 op Westridge 2-2 Largest pre-lease inventory 100's more to choose from 476-1976 $ 7 2 5 /m o / $ 7 0 0 dep. 4 7 6 -2 7 7 0 " Beautiful LA W /E NGINEERING I W ALK! 1-1 Condosl Large 2-14-46 $ 67 5,roomy 2-2's $ 1 0 0 0 Emenitiesl Front Poge 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 . 2-21-2 0 B C . C O F F E E H W H W lim PRE-LEASING NOW Benchmark Hyde Park Oaks Parapet Buena Vista Lantern Lane St. Thomas Centennial Mews Goix Orangetree Treehouse Thirty-First St. Many Others Available! CONDOS • APTS • HOUSES 2813 Rio Grande #206 474-1800 P RE LEASING NUECES OAKS 2 BRTownhomes Call PMT for availability 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 "V A U L T E D CEILINGSI W est cam pusl Bright 2 / 2 , w /d , fp, cf, cp. $85 0. Front Page 4 80 -85 18 2-21-20B-C little as 5% dow nl! BUY A condo instead of renting 11 As Payment less than rentingll C all Eileen Page todayll F.P.P. 480-8518. 2-21-20B-C N O W PRE-LEASING luxury 1-1 s with w asher/dryer, covered park­ ing, and fireplace. From $ 56 0. 1 year leases. Presido G roup. 476- 1519. 2-15-10B-D ATTENTION GRADUATE Students: Tired of apartment living but need to something affordable? Close Balcones/JJ Pickle shuttle. Q uiet tównhome community. C all 837- 5 8 3 2 . 2-15-5B NORTH CAMPUSII G reat 1-1 $ 6 7 5 , 2-2 $ 1 0 0 0 . Beautiful quali- ty ll FPP. 480-8518. 2-6-20B-C SUPER BARGAINSI W est campus 2-2s $ 7 5 0 - $80 0- $85 0. A v a il­ able Sum m er/ Fall 11 Nice placesl Call FPP. 480-8518. 2-6-20BC. PRE-LEASING FOR summer and fall. O x fo rd Place Condos. 2 2 1 7 San G abriel. Covered parking. Elec­ tronic access. M ic ro w a v e /c e ilin g fans. Efficiencies and one bed­ rooms starting at $ 4 9 5 . C all Lisa, 4 69 -09 25. 1-29-20B TWELVE O AK C O N D O M IN IU M S PRELEASE EARLY FOR BEST RATES Controlled Access G ates/G arage P ool/ Hot Tub Responsive O n Site M anager Call for an appointment. 704 West 21 st Street 495 -95 85 1-29206C. Great Deal in West Campus Lantern Lane Condominiums 2008 San Antonio 2-1 's & 2-2's. $925. June/August availabilities. W /D , micros. 1 block to campus. Coffee Properties 4 7 4 -1 8 0 0 . 2-13-206C LARGE 1 bedi oom. Vaulted ceil­ ing, w /d , $ 7 7 5/m onth. A va ila ble June or August. C a ll Kevin 476 - 1124 RPI. 2-20-15B-D. U nf. Houses HYDE PARKI Huge 6 bedr oom 3 bath. 2 living areas. Big kitchen/ ya rd /p o rc h . FPP, 480 -85 18. 2-15-20B-C Pre-lease!! $ 2 7 0 0 PRE-LEASE LARGE W est Campus 8- 4 house with oil amenities A v a il­ able 6 / 1 . $ 3 8 0 0 /m o . 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 . EPI. 2-19-15B-D TARRYTOWN PRE-LEASE. G reat for 7-8 people 5-2. Pets o k. Fenced yard. $ 2 5 0 0 . A va ila bl;e June 1st. 476-1976. EPI 1-25-20B-D WEST CAMPUS huge 1 I bedroom, Lots of parking. G reat for 5 bath Greek 4 76 -19 76. EPI 1-25-20B $ 5 0 0 0 . Available 8-25. AVAILABLE N O W . 2-3 bedrooms $55 0 - $82 0 Stove, refrigerator. For 24 hour info,Call 477-UVE 2-6-20BG BIG DECK, 4-4, 1995 construction, vaulted ceilings, area, W /D , m icrowave spacious living W est Campus, rental. 419 -17 95. 2-13-10B. $ 2 2 5 0 /m o n th , August 3 0 0 5 FUNSTON, 2-1, near Mo- availab le P A C /2 9 5 h , M arch $95 0/m onth, $ 9 0 0 deposit, fenced yard, 3 3 5 -3 7 5 4 or email "obri- enOslb.com". 2-19-7B ■Orangetret M B B R I 2 /2 's from $875 CITY.................................................... STATE. •ZIP., Professionally M anaged by SynerMark M anagement Company I t f n W I V i f i 5 3 ”/ C l a s s i f i e d s a r e o n t h e W o r l d W i d e W e b : rht t p : / / s t u m e d i a . i o u . u t e x a s . e d u / C L A S S / t o c . h t . i T i l 1 U V S V V . RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYM ENT 420 - Unf. Ho u m i 530 - Travel - 790 - Part time EMPLOYM ENT EMPLOYM ENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLO YM ENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYM ENT T h e D a i l y T e x a n Wednesday, February 21,1996 Page 17 7 9 0 - ParHfaiw Y M C A : C O M E to w o rk to play. A fte rsc h o o l staff, 2 -6 :3 0 p .m . W E E K D A Y S 1-5 d a y s / w e e k a v a il­ able. S u p e r v is in g a n d interacting w / ch ild re n . V a r io u s sites in Austin. $ 5 / h o u r b e g in n in g C a ll 4 7 6 -1 1 8 3 for information 800 - General 800 -General Help Wanted Help Wanted O m n i 0 A u s t i n H o t e l Full & Part T im e Positions Available V O C A T IO N A L TRAINER n eeded to w o rk w /a d u lts 870 - Medical 880 - Professional, M E N T A L H E A L T H W O R K E R S Full a n d part-time o ve rn igh t shifts a v a il­ able. $ 5 . 5 0 - $ 6 2 5 storting Those q u o lifie d w ill receive m onthly mile- S P A N I S H 3 “ C U R R I C U L U M W R IT E R n ee de d to write content for prim d ty S p a n ish re a d in g p rogra m . Id eal c o p with m ental retardation. M u st o g e reim bursem ent, p a id time off, have neat a p p e a r a n c e a n d health insura nce, a n d p a y ra ise in­ did ate h a s tought S p a n ish sp e a k in g S T O C K B R O K E R IN T E R N S w onted. Hospitality is all about. Call for preferred. F /T -M -F , 8a m -4pm . Com e see what TRU E Texas positive attitude. E xperience N o e x p e rie n c e n ec essa ry. C o n ta c t K yle C o w a n d at B lu eb o nn et Se c u ri­ ties, 5 0 2 - 1 0 5 0 . 2-9 -2 0 B open positions 476-3700 e x t 4902 or apply in person Tues-Thur 9 am - 12 noon or I - 3 pm at Human P A RT-TIM E E L E C T R O N IC A ss e m ­ Resources Dept., 700 San Jacinto. bler n e e d e d 2 0 h r s / w k - M W F G e n e r a l O ffic e help n e e d e d 1 0 h rs/w k. $ 6 . 0 0 / h r C a ll T ravis at 8 3 7 - 0 2 8 3 . 2 -1 4 1 I B REALESTATE SA L E S P O S IT IO N JPI, o n otionw ide apartm ent d eve l­ $ 6 / h r . w /b en efits. Call 4 47 -1619 a sk for Roberta. E O E M / F / D . HOUSTON C A N Y O U set a p p o in tm e n ts? Tele­ o p e r has part-time le a sin g positions S U M M E R J O B S ! centives. G re a t for students o r you ngster to read S p a n ish , is a na se c o n d in c o m e Please fax resum e five S p a n ish speaker, com m u nica tes to B K P erson n el ( 5 1 2 ) 8 9 4 - 0 2 7 5 . proficiently in English a n d is c o m ­ (Ind icate o ve rn ig h t p osition a n d a v a ila b le d ay s) puter literate Excellent p a y temp position. Fa x resum e to 7 1 9 - 4 4 3 9 2-15-5 tO 2 263B 2-19-58 880 - Professional 890 - Clubs- A T T E N T IO N G R A D S T U D E N T S Restaurants R E A D E R S N E E D E D to e valuó te written re sp o n se s T e m p o ra ry p o s i­ THE B A G E L R Y V 5 5 0 1 B B a lc o n ie s D r is h irin g full-time a n d parttithe M o n -S u n . B a k e i a n d counter. A p ­ p ly in person. $ 6 / h r 2 - 1 4 - 2 0 B m arketers n ee d e d for e arly e v e n in g a vaila b le Se rvice industry a plus. M ille r Sw im A c a d e m y is n ow hiring tions, a p p ro x im a te ly seven w eeks, w o rk S a la r y plus com m issio n. 3 4 3 - M a k e a smart m ove to a n em ­ sw im m ing instructors a n d sw im team b e g in n in g m id -M arc h. W e p ro v id e A IR LIN ES WILL T R A IN $9.00-$ 18.00/hr. H IR IN G N O W ALL P O S IT IO N S For information Call Now! (800) 510- 5545, ext. A 8 42 2 . 2-I9-5B-C view or fox resume to 2 1 4 - 5 5 6 - ty locations throughout Houston F E v e n in g shift: 5 : 0 0 p m - 3 8 8 9 Sw im team o r teaching experience 1 0 : 1 5 p . m , M-F. H o u rs o re not 2-14-8B needed. C a ll 1 - 7 1 3 - 7 7 7 7 9 4 6 flexible. B a c h e lo r's d e g re e re­ $ 1 7 5 0 W E E K L Y p o s sib le m a,ling o u r circulars. N o e x p e rie n c e re­ R E S ID E N T A P A R T M E N T M a n a g e r q uired . B e g in now . Fo r info coll n eeded. Sm a ll U T a re a com p le x 219-5B quired, prefer English, la n g u a g e arts, e d u ca tio n o r related fields D u rin g interview, d em on stration o f w ritin g a bility required P a y rate $ 7 . 0 0 per hour. call M e a su re m e n t In c o rp o ra te d for a p p lica tio n: (5 1 2 ) 8 3 5 - 6 0 9 1 . 2-9-20B-C 2 2 1 1 W . A n d e r s o n L n .* "H o s t p erson start at $ 5 . 5 0 / h r m ‘ A ls o h iring servers & 1 service assisto ns W e offer part-time/ full-time positions, flexible schedules, a m / p m shifts 4 53 -16 8 8 * 2-14-2ÓB 3 0 1 - 3 0 6 - 1 2 0 7 1 -1 1-35P PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAM PS IN MASSACHUSETTS H A R D R O C K C A N Y O N N o rth ­ 6 7 7 6 . 2 -1 9-5B ploye e oriented com p an y. C a ll 1 - co a ch e s for this summerl Free train­ training T w o shifts a re a v a ila b le . 8 0 0 - 4 9 8 - 4 3 5 5 to set up a n inter­ ing is p ro vid e d Excellent p a y Thir­ D a y shift 8 :3 0 a .m .-3 :4 5 p .m ., M - _ STEAK & ALE 790 - Part-time LOSE WEIGHT SPRING BREAK C a ll 7 0 7 - 1 1 0 3 . 2-21-206 W E 'L L P A Y y o u to lose w e ig h t be­ fore S p r in g B re a k! 2 1 8 - 4 3 5 1 . 2- 2 1 - 1 0B . P ART-TIM E C U S T O D I A N position a v a ila b le for 1 2 h o u rs/ w e e k at r e a so n a b le rates. C a ll U niversity Baptist C hurch. 4 7 8 - 8 5 5 9 2-2 1-3B -C w est A u stin a re a apartm ent co m ­ munity. L e a sin g Assistant, 3 0 - 3 5 hours, w e e k e n d s required. 5 0 2 - 4 0 0 0 2-2 1 -5 B C A N V A S I N G , D O O R - T O - D O O R in affluent n e ig h b o r h o o d s for la n d ­ sc a p in g c o m p a n y . H o u rly plus b o ­ nus Start im m ediately. 9 1 2 - 5 0 0 7 2-2 1 -5 B STOCK POSITION at C a lic o C o rn e rs. Look in g for a reliable, en ergetic, o r g a n ­ ize d stock a ssistan t to w o rk in retail fabric store. Position re­ quires h a n d lin g he a vy bolts of $5 EXTRA BONUS ON F IRST DONATIO N ONLY W C O U P O N /E X P 3/1/96 $ 2 0 EACH DONATION $ 1 6 5 PER MONTH Can Donate 2x/week Schedule Own Time • Extra C le a n . S ta te of- t h e -A r t F a c ilit y * O nly 1 5 M i n u t e s f r o m U T C a m p u s BIO MED A NEW H igh Tech P la sm a Facility Please Call for Appt. 251-8855 H O U R S: 8 A M - 7 P M IH -35 & P llu ge rv ille Exit W est side IH 35 behind E X X O N E xp e rie n c e not re q u ire d R e sp o nd P .O B ox 5 3 4 2 A u stin 7 8 7 6 3 . 2- 16-10B-C . D E L IV E R Y M E S S E N G E R S . N e e d e d for light d e liv e ry in N o rth Austin. M u s t h ove o w n v e h icle / in su ra n ce A p p ly in p e rso n t o d a y ll! 7 8 0 1 N Lamar B - l 5 3 . 2 -2 0 -5 B L O N G H O R N E M P L O Y M E N T S E R V IC E S W E N E E D P EO PLE! Long a n d short term a ssignm ents. Excellent clients, top p a y rates G iv e us a call W e are very e a s y to w o rk with. * adm inistrative assistants * ge ne ral office/receptionists * d a ta entry * file clerks * industrial * technical IN D IV ID U A L S W IT H D E G R E E S IN J A P A N E S E , IT A L IA N , R U S S IA N O R FUDDRUCKERS G E R M A N N E E D E D IS N O W H IR IN G In d iv id u a ls with d e gre e s in Ja­ B aker a n d all service p osition s p an ese, Italian or Russian ore n e e d ­ ed o n M a r c h 2 8 , In d ivid u a ls with Flexible hou rs G o o d starting p a y d e g re e s in G e r m a n a re n e e d e d on N o expe rie nce n e c e ssa ry M a r c h 2 9 A p p lic a n ts w ill be sc o r in g teacher certification tests. Excellent tem p o ra ry or su p p le m en ­ tary e m ploym en t P ay rate is $ 1 0 per hour. For additional information a n d further c on sid eration , p le a se coll ( 5 1 2 ) 9 2 6 - 0 4 6 9 o r m ail o let­ ter of interest o n d resume to : A p p ly in p erson M-Th, 2-4 at 4 0 2 4 S. Lamar. 2 1+306 A L L IG A T O R GRILLE B usin ess is b o o m in g! W e a re n o w h iring all positions: STA R T W O R K I N G T O M O R R O W I I C A LL 3 2 6 - H O R N ( 4 6 7 6 ) N a t io n a l Evaluation System s Inc. Sc o rin g P.O . B ox 1 4 0 4 0 6 2-20-208C Austin, Texas 7 8 7 1 4 - 0 4 0 6 •H o st/H oste sse s GET PAID TO PLAY! E .O .E tor G rille, 3 0 0 3 S. Lamar. E O E A p p ly in p erson at: The O l d A llig a ­ • W a it s toff •B u ssers •Line c o o k s •Prep, c oo ks 2 -2 0 -4 B P A Y R O L L S E R V IC E seeks so m e o n e C o u n se lo r p o sitio n s for talented with g o o d telep h on e v o ic e to c o n ­ a n d energetic students a s P ro gra m tact n e w clients from o u r office Sp e c ia lists in all Team Sports, espe­ H o u rly w a g e plus b on u se s Flexible c ia lly B ase b all, Basketball, Roller h o u rs ( 1 5 -2 0 weekly). C a ll 7 0 7 - H o c k e y , G ym n a stics, Field H o ckey, fab ric a n d store m ain te nan ce 3 4 7 3 . 2-1 6 -6 B T-Th-Su, a p p ro x . 12 hrs./w k. 4 6 7 - 9 4 6 2 , C a r o ly n Keyes. THE STA TE Securities B o a rd h a s an imm. o p e n in g for a P/T C le rk II. 2-21-5B P osition invo lve s filing a n d other With your first frfesaving donation receive i$19 CASHi I FOR NEW DONORS I s with tros Coupon I ! $ and earn up to is 150/m o n th! I by donating twice a week I OFFICE CLERK Part-time position in d ow nto w n la w firm. Tuesdays: 1 1 : 3 0 - 2 :3 0 W e d n e sd a y s: 9 : 0 0 - 3 : 3 0 Thursdays: 2 : 3 0 - 6 : 0 0 T yp in g, filing, a n s w e rin g p hones, a n d other cle rica l duties M u st h ave p ro fe ssio n a l a p p e a r a n c e , e x­ cellent references, a n d a car. C o m p u te r kn o w le d g e helpful. New donors please cad for on appointment. N on -sm o ke r only, 4 0 4 -6 6 0 0 g e n e ra l office duties, a n d pick-up a n d d elivery o f docum ents a n d sup­ plies. M o d e ra te -h e a v y lifting re­ q u ire d a n d a p p s must be a b le to lift at least 7 5 lbs. G o o d d riv in g re c o rd required, a n d must use p er­ so n a l vehicle to malje local p ic ku p s a n d deliveries. Position req u ire s 2 0 h rs./w k, for either m o rn in g s or afternoons. $ 5 6 1/m o. Su b m it a p ­ plication to: D o n Raschke, D irecto r/Sta ff Se rvic ­ e s D iv isio n / S ta te Securities B o a r d / P .O . B o x 1 3 1 6 7 / A u stin , TX 2-20-4B 7 8 7 1 1 O r call 3 0 5 - 8 3 0 0 for a n a p p lic a ­ ! I I I ! | 1 I So cc e r, V olle yb all; 3 0 T e nn is o p e n ­ in g s; a lso G o lf, A rch e ry , RiHery, P io n e e rin g / O v e r n ig h t C a m p in g , R o p e s a n d Rock C lim b in g , W e ig h t s/ F itn e s s a n d C y c lin g , other o p e n in g s in clu d e Perfo rm in g Arts, Fin e Arts, Figu re Skatin g, N e w s p a ­ per, P h o to g ra p h y , Y e a rb o o k , R a d io Station, C o o k in g , Sev/ing, a n d Rocketry; All W a te rfro n t/ P o o l A c ­ tivities (Sw im m in g, Sk iin g, Sa ilin g, W in d s u rfin g , C a n o e in g / K a y a k in g ). T o p salaries, room , b o a rd o n d trav­ el. June 18 th-A u gust 17th. In­ q uire M A H -K E E -N A C (Boys): 440 - Roommates G U IT A R L E S S O N S , 1st lesson free A ll styles, 2 0 y e a r s e xpe rie nce , Brian 4 4 0 - 8 3 6 8 2-16-5B . 590 - Tutoring We require you bring with you: . 'S ocial Security Card 'P ro o f of Residence J 'Picture ID (UT ID, T D l...) E A R N M O N E Y w h ile lo sin g w eight. A ll n atural products. G e t re a d y for S p r in g B re a k n o w 4 7 9 - tion. E O E . I AUSTIN PLASMA COMPANY INC I 5 6 7 3 . 2-V 5 -2 0 B -D L 5 L 0 W , a L S L . - 4 7 7 _ j 7 ¿ 5 J * W rÜ¡n9 **• essays research papers elementary grades through college I Low-Key Appointment | S etters Needed Part-tim e/Evenings Call 452-2304 to start today C O M E SEE h o w much fun telemarketing can be. W e are now taking applications for 5 positions. G reat work environment. N o PUT IT IN WRITING 4 8 0 -0 6 3 6 TUTORING 1-26-20B-C 1 -8 0 0 -7 5 3 -9 1 1 8 D A N B E E (Girts): 1 -8 0 0 -3 9 2 -3 7 5 2 The N o rth w e st R e cre atio n C enter is lo o k in g for e ne rgetic full a n d part- time staff for our sum m er d a y c am p I 29 20P p ro gra m s. O u r p articip a nts ra n g e from 3 -1 5 y e a rs of a g e Sche d ules N E E D A n ew w o rk e xp e rie n c e to b ee f up a dull job history o n your re su m e ? G a in v a lu a b le e xp e rie n c e with an international c o m p a n y 2-19-3B-D F A S T F U N D R A IS E R - R A IS E $ 5 0 0 in d o va ry Interview d ote s are 5 d o y s. G re e k s, g ro u p s , clubs, sc h ed u le d F e b ru a ry 2 8 through m otivated ind ivid ua ls. Fast, e a s y - M a r c h 1 C a ll 4 5 8 - 4 1 0 7 for in­ n o financial o b lig a t io n (8 0 0 ) terview time 8 6 2 19 8 2 Ext 3 3 2 -5 -3 0 P 2-21 8B la u n c h in g a n a g g r e s siv e market-ex- $ 2 5 7 , 0 0 0 . M Y 2 n d y e a r incom e D O E S Y O U R job su c k ? Earn p a n sio n p ro gra m in the Austin a re a 2 y e a rs out of c o lle ge N o t multi­ $ 6 2 0 0 , re c e ive c o lle g e credit, level, just a n h on est w a y to m ake a n d g a m v a lu a b le resum e e x p this O p p ortu n itie s to earn hourly w a g e + c o m m issio n for 1 0 -1 5 h o u rs/ w e e k MOLECULAR BIOLOGIST Tech Service, R&D, Q C / P ro d u c tio n positions. (# 1 3 3 ): Full-time Require B S / M S & 1-2 years mol. research- R N A work. Reply to Ambion, 2130 Woodward, Suite 200, Austin, TX 78744. TH E C A S T IL IA N fo o d service is n o w h irin g line servers, d ish ro a m a n d p /t p re p c oo k. C a ll Sta c e y 4 7 8 - 1 7 3 2 . 2-2 1 -5 B 900 - Domestic- Household C A R E T A K E R F O R three active giijs, a g e s 8 -1 3 , M -F, 3 -7 p m o r earlier O w n transportation, references n e e d e d C a ll 3 2 8 - 4 6 1 9 , 3 2 7 2-I9-5B 4 8 2 5 selling. 1 block from cam pus. of y o u r time. Expe ct to e arn over Free info. 1-2 9 -2 0 P for more inform ation. Southwestern sistant. R e sp o n sib ilitie s inclu d e in­ g o o d money. C a ll 8 0 0 9 4 6 - 1 6 9 0 sum m er. C a ll Scott @ 4 4 7 - 6 1 3 0 G E R M A N - S P E A K I N G A D M I N A s ­ 2 0 + hrs/wk. Evening shifts. $ 1 0 0 / w e e k . For m ore inform ation $ 5 -1 0/hr. C a ll CJ at PBC call 8 3 3 - 7 4 9 8 . 2 -2 0-4B IN T E R N A T I O N A L E M P L O Y M E N T - C o m p a n y . 2 -2 1 -5 B E a rn up to $ 2 5 - $ 4 5 / h o u r te a ch in g L A G O V IS T A sum m er sw im team M arketing. 4 7 7 -3 8 0 8 . R U N N I N G / S H I P P I N G C LE R K b a s ic c o n ve rsa tio n a l E n g lis h in Ja­ a c c e p tin g a p p lic a t io n s for p a id 2-15-5B T E M P A fternoons M o n d a y-F rid a y. p a n , Taiw an, or S K o re a . N o h e a d coa ch . S e n d resum e to B ox ternational custom er service, g e n e r ­ al a d m in , duties, d a ta entry. S c i­ en c e b a c k g r o u n d a n d fam iliarity with G e rm a n -b u s in e s s p ractice s a plus R e la x e d w o rk environm ent. M a i l resu m es to A m b ia n , 2 1 3 0 W o o d w a r d Street # 2 0 0 , Austin, TX 7 8 7 4 4 , E O E . N o p h o n e calls- flexible Lift to 5 0 lbs; reliable te a c h in g b a c k g r o u n d or A s ia n la n ­ 4 1 1 3 L ago V isto 7 8 6 4 5 2-21-1 OB transportation, c le an driving g u a g e s required. For info call: (20 6) record. $ 5 / h o u r plus m ile age 4 7 8 - 9 7 1 - 3 5 7 0 ext. J 5 8 6 7 3 2 -7 -1 5 P 810 - Office-Clerical 2 5 4 ! . Fax: 4 7 4 - 6 4 9 4 2 -2 0 -3 B A L A S K A S T U D E N T jobs! G re a t IN S U R A N C E O F F IC E needs student for please. 2 -2 0 -4 B C O M P U T E R H A C K E R w /e xte n sive $ $ $ T o u sa n d s o f jobs a v a io la b le e x p e rie n c e w ritin g D O S batch M a le / F e m a le . R o o m / B o a r d / T r a n s­ files N e tw o rk e xp e rie n c e helpful portation often p ro v id e d G re a t for o sp e cia l project. C a ll Victor, adve ntu re G d e 9 1 9 - 9 3 3 - 0 1 8 8 8 3 2 - 0 2 6 5 . 2 -2 0 -5 B ext A 1 0 5 5 . 2-8 -1 0 B P A R T -T IM E C O L L E C T O R H ours: $ C R U IS E S h ip s H irin g! Students 2 - 1 4 -2 0 B e v e n in g s a n d Saturdays. At least 6 n e e d e d I $ $ $ +free travel (C a r ib ­ m onths e x p e rie n c e re q u ire d b e a n , Europe, H a w a ii!) S e a s o n a l/ Resum es: H u m a n Resources, P .O . B ox Perm anent, N o E x p e rie n e n ec es­ 2 0 0 9 , Austin, TX 7 8 7 6 8 2 -1 9 -5 B sary. G d e 9 1 9 - 9 2 9 - 4 3 9 8 ext part-time clerical p osition M-F. Duties inclu d e typ in g, telephone, light com puter, m ail p re p C a ll Dottie 4 5 4 - 5 2 6 6 . 2 - 2 1 - 1 0 B ASSISTANT. OFFICE Part-time office w o rk including journal entries, c o p y in g , mail services, h o u se ke e p in g, er­ TX S C H O O L f/t B lind & V is u a lly Im p a ire d is h irin g for a n Intervenor multiple d isa b ilitie s G o o d sig n la n g u a g e skills Experience w o rkin g with d e a f & b lind p erson s. Prefer k n o w le d g e of B raille a n d sigh te d g u id e skills. E xp e rie n c e w o rk in g with students in a n e d u ca tio n a l set­ rands, p ho ne s, filing, etc. ting. M u s t h a ve 6 0 h o u rs o f c o l­ C l 0 5 5 . 2-8 -10 B So m e lifting required. M u st le ge or at least 3 0 h ou rs with o n e so rtin g mail, filing, fa xin g, a n s w e r ­ entry, pricing. 15 -2 0 h rs/ w k , $ 5 - 6 / C O P Y C E N T E R / O F F IC E S e rvic e s C le rk n e e d e d for d o w n to w n la w firm. Part-time, 4 -5 h ou rs a d a y ( 1 2 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 M - F o r 8 : 0 0 - 1 2 : 0 0 M - F). Duties inclu d e m a k in g c o p ie s, in g pho n es. M a i l resum e o r letter of interest to: W r ig h t a n d G reenhill, 2 2 1 W . 6th, # 1 8 0 0 , Austin, 7 8 7 0 1 or fax to 4 7 6 - 5 3 8 2 , attn: Personnel Director. A C T R E S S F O R alt sp a internet site. Y o g a , d a n c e e x p e rie n c e p referred 4 5 4 - 1 4 3 5 2 -2 1 -7 B FILE C LE R K , part-time for O B / G Y N d oc tors 2 0 - 2 5 h o u rs p er w eek, $ 5 2 5 / h r M o r n in g s M , W , F , after­ n o o n s T,Th. P reviou s office e x p e ri­ e n c e preferred. C a ll Janet 4 5 4 - 5 7 2 1 2-2 0 -4 B PRODUCTS ASSISTANT N a tio n a l W ild flo w e r Research Center. Inventory control, data hr. D e p e n d a b le , o rga n iz e d , com puter literate, ten-key preferred N o p ho n e colls, resume to Jennifer C h a p m a n N W R C , 4 8 0 1 La C ro s se Ave., Austin TX 7 8 7 3 9 . N E W S O U T H A u stin apartm ent com m u nity a c c e p tin g part-time a p ­ plications for le a sin g agents, a ro b ic instructors, p e rs o n a l fitness trainers a n d com puter instructors. 4 4 7 - 4 1 3 0 2-1 2 -10 B for the D e af-B lind for students with Hills. 3 4 5 - 8 2 8 7 2 19 -5B P A R T -T IM E S E C R E T A R Y / R E L IE F re­ cep tio nists n e e d e d in m e d ic a l li­ L IF E G U A R D N E E D E D for W e lls brary, Duties inclu d e c h e c k in g m a ­ B ro n c h M u d P o o ls M u st h o v e cur­ be diligent a n d dep e nd ab le . S e n d resum e to Law Office, terials in a n d out, a n s w e rin g the rent lifeguard, C P R a n d First-Aid 1 14 W 7th Street, Suite 6 0 0 , phone, scree n in g library visitors a n d Certifications. M u s t be 16 -yrs old Austin, Tx, 7 8 7 0 1 2-15-5B e x p la in in g p olic ie s, p r e p a rin g c or­ P a y b a se d on e xp e rie nce , flexible re sp o n d e n ce , d a ta entry, c o p y in g , hours. C a ll 2 5 1 - 9 8 1 4 . 2 -1 2 -6 B C L E R K N E E D E D filing. R e qu ire s 5 0 w p m typing, o n e y e a r office or lib rary e x p e ri­ ence, a bility to c o m p o se b a s ic c o r­ re sp o n d e n c e , accurate spelling, k n o w le d g e of w o rd p ro c e ssin g , U .S. G O V T . J o b s now : 1 0 0 's of with car a n d clean driving entry level o p e n in g s u p d a te d d a ily record to d o delivery, make C a ll: 1 - 8 0 0 - 5 4 9 - 2 3 0 0 ext, # 3 0 1 4 2 -1 4-20 P -D copies, ge ne ral office help; som e lifting, stairs. Flexible y e a r of relevant e xpe rie nce G o o d a bility to w o rk c o m p a tib ly with m a n y different adults a n d students S a lo r y is $ 1 , 4 2 1 per month with g o o d benefits A p p ly at 1 1 0 0 W 45th, 2 0 6 - 9 1 2 9 . 2-19-5B O / E x p '7 4 - 2 0 2 4 . 2 -1 9-20 B -D . , IRONSMITH BODY, INC., A p ro fe ssio n a l health, fitness, a n d sports-specific p e rfo rm an ce training center invites a p p lic a tio n s for EASY M O N EY. Must have car Afternoon babysitting 2-6, some full days Near T.l. 219-9000 2- 21-5B p re fe ra b ly W o rdP e rfect. 3 h o u rs a A T T E N D A N T N E E D E D . H a n d i­ hours. M id -size law firm close sports a n d fitness trainers This p o ­ SERVICES EMPLOYMENT - 790 PART-TIME N E E D K ID SIT T ER for 1st a n d 5th gr a d e r S o m e a fte rno o ns after 3 a n d w e eken d evenings. 2 -2 1 -2 8 D IS A B L E D VET n e e d s w e e k e h d help. H o u rly w a g e s p a id for b y Se rvic e s for the Elderly. C a ll D o n after 2pm . 4 5 8 - 2 8 8 2 2 -2 0 -2 0 B E X P E R IE N C E D , S E N S IT IV E , nurtwr in g UT female babysitter. W -T H or T -W A p p ro x im a te ly 2 3 0 - 5 :3 0 p m $ 6 . 0 0 / h r T ran sp o rta tio n a n d e x ­ cellent references req u ire d N W S H O R T W A L K UT. H e lp g e n iu s tot learn a lp ha b et Flexible hours, non- sm oker. Fun! $ 5 - 7 D / O / E x p 4 7 4 - 2 0 2 4 1 -3 1-20 B -D W A N T E D B A B Y SIT T E R . B oy, 1st g r a d e M -W -F 2 3 0 - 6 p m T-Th 2 :3 0 -4 p m . Located South, off S la u gh te r In 4 0 4 - 7 3 8 7 , d a y 2 8 2 - 4 5 8 5 , e ven in g 2-1 5 -5 B T E A C H 2 G e n iu s Tots talking, counting, alphabet, g a m e s Flexible hours N on -sm o ke r Fun I $ 5 -7 0 / h u e q 930 - Business Opportunities A B U S IN E S S O F Y O U R O W N $ 1 0 0 Prepaid Long Distance Phone Cards • Voice Mail •Fax Mail Box • No Monthly Quotas •Commissions Paid Daily •No Inventory To Stock or Ship 1-800-233-5794 Never Pay For Long Distance Calls Again! T E L - A M E R IC A I N T E R N A T IO N A L , IN C . The G re a te st O p p o r t u n ity in A m e rica n B usin ess T o d a y! Y o u r Lo­ cal Ind e p e n d e n t R e presentative 4 1 6 - 8 2 4 0 , V oice . M a i lb o x 1-8 0 0 - 8 7 1 - 8 4 2 0 , # 0 0 3 9 7 3 6 0 2 -7 -2 0 B TO PLACE AN AD IN THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS CALL 471-5244 $240" to $550" Weekly! Fun, Fast-Paced Atmosphere Flexible Schedules: 9-1 • 1-5 • 5-9 Benefits Plus Bonuses 1-800-929-5753 N EW SPAPER DISTRIBUTO RS The University of Texas at Austin Circulation Assistant The Daily Texan is seeking a Circulation Assistant to pick up newspapers at the dock, load own vehi­ cle, and deliver the newspapers to boxes on cam ­ pus and to other Austin and University locations. Deliveries must begin at 4:00 A M and be com ­ pleted by 7 AM, Monday through Friday - no weekends. Requires High School graduation or G ED ; ability and willingness to provide own vehicle (van or covered pickup), to show proof of insurance, and to provide a valid driver’s license and acceptable driving record. Applicant selected must provide a current Department of Public Safety driver’s license record. Newspaper delivery experience is preferred. Salary is $6.10 per hour, for a maximum of 19 hours per week, plus $.28 per mile. For appointment call TO M M Y A LE W IN E 471-5422 An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Em ployer d a y b etw een 1 0 & 3. A p p l y by c a p p e d m ale se e ks live-in attendant m ail o r in p erson at the T e xas M e d ­ for sum mer $ 1 0 0 0 / m o C a ll 4 9 0 - ical A sso c ia tio n , Personnel, 5th 2 3 5 I for details. 2-9 -2 0 B floor, 4 0 1 W . 15th st Eq u al O p p o rtu n ity E m ployer W O R K I N G F O R G lo b a l Justice 2-I6-5B-D V olu ntee r y e a r o v e rse a s a n d / o r c o m e to A m e ric a n U niversity, C O L L E C T O R N E E D E D D C ., career confere nce, M a r c h 1- E x p preferred but not necessary, 3, info 2 0 2 - 6 2 5 - 7 4 0 3 2 -1 3 -3 P S U M M E R E M P L O Y M E N T Life­ g u a r d s a nd Pool M a n a g e r s W a n te d N o r t h H ouston a n d Katy. E & A train in g req u ire d a n d a v a ila b le C a ll ( 7 1 3 ) 4 4 3 - 7 6 6 5 . 2 -1 2 1 IP $ 3 5 ,0 0 0 / Y R . IN C O M E potential. Reading books. Toll Free (1) 8 0 0 -8 9 8 -9 7 7 8 Ext. R- 14 4 3 for details. $ 4 0 , 0 0 0 / Y R I N C O M E potential H o m e Typists/ P C users. Toll Free (1) 8 0 0 - 8 9 8 - 9 7 7 8 . Ext T - 1 4 4 3 for listings. 2 -1 4 -6 P h e a v y telephone contact w/clients, exp. o n C R T 's preferred. Sh o u ld have strong custom er-relations skills, so m e k n o w le d ge of b a n kin g la n ­ g u a g e a n d p roced u res is helpful, ability to w o rk at fast p ace M u st be d e p e n d a b le a n d o rg a n iz e d , bi­ lin gua l a plus. H o u rly w a g e + in - centive for volum e Hours:M -T h 5- 9 p .m .,Sa t 9a.m .-! p.m. C on tact C h ris R o ge rs at C heckRite of Austin betw een 12-5p.m . at 4 4 0 - 0 9 1 1 2 -2 1 -5 B n e e d s a te m p o ra ry part-time recep ­ tionist from n ow -e n d of sem ester 1- 5 p m, M-F. Startin g p a y $ 6 / h o u r For m ore inform ation, p le a se call 7 0 7 - 3 1 2 1 2 -2 1 -3 B IN D IV ID U A L S N E E D E D for P/T e v e n in g a n d w e e k e n d w o rk at polit­ ica l/ m arke t re se a rch p h o n e b a n k . N o sales. C a ll Tiffany at 4 7 8 - 9 2 0 4 . 2 -2 1 -5 8 S M A L L O F F IC E in South A u stin 2 - 1 4 - 6 P to cam pus. Fax resum e to sition req u ire s so m e o n e with a 4 8 0 - 0 9 6 8 gre a t d e a l of initiative, the a bility 2-1 5-5 B to h a n d le multiple projects sim ulta­ n eously, p o s se ss g o o d b u sin e ss a p ­ PART-TIM E C L E R IC A L , flexible hours, titude p h o n e skills, o r g a n iz a t io n a l com puter k n o w le d g e n e e d e d C a ll skills, a n d be detail oriented with a Tom C o r n w e ll at C & C Benefit strong d e sire to p rovide excellent C onsultants 3 4 6 - 2 0 2 6 2 -1 3-9B service Exp e rie nc e n ee d e d in B A S I C W I N D O W S skills-desired not required, a n s w e r p h o n e s, a d ­ min support. N e e d 2 part-time tea ch in g, d e s ig n in g health, fitness, a n d sports-specific c on d itio n in g a n d resistance training p ro g ra m s E arly m orning, e ve n in g a n d w e eken d w ork 8 3 0 - 1 2 : 3 0 / 1 2 : 3 0 - 5 o r 1 full-time $ 6 -7 5 0 / h o u r F a x resu m e 8 3 3 - s required 0 0 0 2 or call 8 3 3 - 0 0 0 1 . 2-8 -1 0 B Q U A L I F I C A T I O N S : M u st h a ve or L E A S IN G A G E N T . 2 p /t p osition s for be w o rk in g on B ache lo rs d e g re e in N orth cam p us Se rio us studentproperty. health related field, C P R certifica­ Fo x resume 3 2 9 - 8 8 4 2 . 2 -1 4 -8 B tion Y o u must be energetic, h a rd ­ P O S I T I O N A V A IL A B L E for D a ta En­ try C lerks. D a y a n d e v e n in g shifts a v a ila b le E x p e rie n c e n e c e ssa ry 3 0 2 - 3 1 8 9 . 2 -1 6 -4 B 820 “ Accounting- Bookkeeping w o rk in g a n d excited abou t w o rk in g 1 -to-1 a n d with g r o u p s of p e o p le w h o h a v e a ra n g e of g e n e ra l health, fitness a n d sport-specific go a ls. M u st h ave multi-sport k n o w le d g e a n d d em onstrate p rofi­ c ie n c y in basketball, volleyball, tennis a n d golf. A p p lic a n ts must A R / A P FULL-TIM E p o sitio n 2 yrs p o s se ss d e sire to continue "le a rn ­ e xpe rie nce P ayro ll helpful P ea ch ­ in g 11 a n d h ave intentions in a cq uirin g M u sic Industry Internship tree for W i n d o w s so ftw a re D o w n ­ A C E , A A F A , A A F P , A C S M , L A -ba se d A sy lm M u s ic M a r k e t in g town, salary, benefits 4 0 4 - 2 3 0 0 N C S A , N A S M , a n d N F P T certifi­ seeks can d id ate for A u stin -b a se d in­ 2 -1 5 -1 0 B cations in a timely manner. ternship, so p h o m o re or a b o v e M u st be resp on sib le , o u tg o in g a n d creo five 1 0 -2 0 h rs/w k., w o r k in g w / B IL IN G U A L ( S P A N IS H ) n e e d e d for re c o rd retail, r o d io & b o n d s M u st P/T e v e n in g a n d w e e k e n d w o rk at lo ve n ew /altern ative m u sic a nd p olitica l/ m arke t resea rch p h o n e ­ k n o w market w e ll C a ll ( 2 1 3 ) 3 6 8 - ban k. $ 6 / h r. C a ll Tiffany at 4 7 8 - 7 6 2 6 a nd leave m e ssa ge for Linda 9 2 0 4 . 2 -2 1-5B 2 -2 1 -2 B EXTEND-A-CARE FOR KIDS A R E Y O U lo o k in g for a fun w a y to e a rn m o n e y? W e hove part-time, full-time tem p o ra ry a n d p e rm a n e n t Part-time job opportunities: p o sitio n s a v a ila b le , w o r k in g with W e offer fun-filled, stimulating e x­ child ren , (m an y in U T a re a ) 4 1 6 - periences w o rk in g with sc h oo l-a ged 7 3 4 4 2-1 6 -2 0 B P A Y R O L L A S S IS T A N T 1 0 h ours/w eek $ 7 / h o u r W o r k in g kn o w le d ge of Lotus 1 2 3 required, d ow nto w n Austin, p a id p a rk in g Please call 4 7 8 - 5 5 7 6 or fa x one- p a g e resume to 4 8 2 - 8 6 2 8 . A c ­ counting student preferred 2-20- 5 B 840 - Sales S A L E S , 2 0 h o u rs a w e e k e q u a ls $ 1 0 0 0 or m ore, sa la ry plus co m ­ m issio n N o investm ent N o t a musti-level. P a id traini ng, 24-hr E m ploym en t benefits include: P aid va ca tion , health insurance, c on tin u ­ ing education. Su b m it letter of re c co m e nd a tion , resum e a n d a p p lica tio n to: IRONSMITH BODY, INC. 1 7 0 1 W e st 35 th St. Austin, TX 7 8 7 0 3 (5 1 2 ) 4 5 4 - 4 7 6 6 A p p lic a t io n s will be received until suitable c a n d ld o te (s) a re found Ironsmith B od y, Inc. is a n Equ al O p ­ portunity Affirm ative A ctio n Em ­ ploye r 2-19-20B-C | WEB OFFSET PRESS (TRAINEE) K 5 TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS (1 position available) Job requires high school graduation or G ED, loud working enviroment, heavy lifting, working with strong cleaning solvents and various other duties 19 hours per week maximum $ 8 .1 8 per hour Work hours are 10:00 pm to 5:30 am 2 or 3 nights per week Sunday-Thursday. Apply in person at the TSP building (25th & Whitis): M A R V IN O 'N E A L 471-5422 or 471-7835 10 pm - 5 :3 0 am Su n d a y thru Thursday. S The University of Texas at Austin is an Eq ual O pportunity/Affirm ative Action Em ployer students, flexible hours a n d c o m ­ petitive w a g e s for qualified p er­ so n s Responsibilities: interacting with children, g iv in g g u id a n c e a n d b e in g a role m odel A gre at o p ­ portunity for students interested in g a in in g h an d s-on e xperience w o rk in g with children. Hours: 2 -6:30p.m ., M-F P osition s/ Salary G ro u p Leader $ 6 / h r C enter Su p e rviso r $ 6 7 5 / h r (Center Su p e rviso r p o s limited) APPLY N O W AT E xtend-A -Care for K id s 5 5 IH -3 5 North Austin, TX 7 8 7 0 2 i I i I I I S C O U N S E L O R S : T O P B O Y S m e ssa g e 1 - 8 0 0 - 3 2 6 - 9 4 2 7 2-6 -15B SP O R T S C A M P IN M A I N E I M u s t h ave g o o d s skills, q b le to in­ struct, c o a c h or ossist: O p e n n in g s in ALL Land, W a te r, A d ve n tu re a n d In d ivid u a l Sports, plus R N , Se cre ­ tory. E X C IT IN G , F U N I W o r k with kid sl Beautiful Lake, Excellent facil­ ites C o e d Staff, To p Sa la rie s, $ 1 0 0 0 S IG N - U P b o n u s Telem ar­ keters n ee de d $ 3 0 0 / w e e k s a la r y * b o n u se s FT/PT o p e n N o e x p e ri­ e n c e n ec essa ry. C a ll 4 5 3 - 1 1 9 9 N o w lt I 2-2 0 -5 B 850 “ Retail R M / B D / L N D R Y , Travel A llo w ­ C L O T H I N G S A L E S p e rso n nee de d a n c e C a ll or write Steve Rubin, part-time or fulltime. McBrides, 30th and ( 8 0 0 ) 4 7 3 - 6 1 0 4 , C a m p C o b b o s - N Lamar 4 7 2 - 3 5 3 2 2 -1 9 -3 B see, 1 0 Silve rm in e Dr So . Salem , N Y 1 0 5 9 0 860 “ Engineering- Technical 216-6B S W I M T E A M c o a c h e s a n d life­ g u a r d s nee de d for Sp rin g / S u m m e r O r C a ll 4 7 2 - 9 4 0 2 for m ore info. p osition s. N ic e facility a n d c o m ­ W ill be at job fair today petitive pay, e xp e rie n c e req u ire d 2-21-1B-C C a ll Trey 4 4 4 - 4 8 2 7 2-1 5 -5 B C O L L E G E S T U D E N T S h ard w o r k / g o o d p a y in D o b ie $ 5 / h r + b o n u s H o u rs 4 -8 p m M -F C a ll Fred 5 0 5 - 2 3 4 9 2 - 2 1 2 0 6 800 - General Help Wanted FL O R A L D E S IG N E R , creative a n d e xp e rie nc e d . Full-time, g o o d salary, re la x e d w o rk in g environ m en t 2 8 2 - 0 9 9 4 2-2 1 -3 B L IF E G U A R D S N E E D E D B e a r C re e k, Katy, C y p r e s s, a n d M is s io n B en d a re a s Excellent p a y If Interested, call ( 7 1 3 ) 3 7 6 - 6 5 1 0 . Leave n am e a n d num ber if recorder a n s w e rs 2- 19-5B i I I :: . ~ L f l S U M M E R C A M P C O U N S E L O R S Fun summer p ro g ra m in N Austin for K-5. W F I certification needed, e xperience preferred Se nd resum e to C h ild re n 's N etw o rk 1 2 2 2 3 C a s s a d y Dr Austin, TX 7 8 7 2 7 2-19-5B G R E A T P AY, G re a t H o u rsl M a i d Fo r Y o u H o u se c le a n in g S e rvic e is h irin g Flexible h ou rs $ 6 2 5 / h r C a r required 3 4 5 - 8 5 3 0 2 -2 0 -5 B M I S A S S I S T A N T / C O M P U T E R O p ­ erator. H igh -te ch direct m arketing a g e n c y . E x p e rie n c e with M S A c ­ c e s s required. P C trouble shoot­ ing, internet a n d e-mail techn o lo gy a plus. Full-time (w illin g to sched ule a ro u n d c la sse s) plus benefits & profit sh a rin g M u s t b e will o r g a n ­ ize d, pro|ect a n d g o a l oriented F a x resume to: D M G - M I S Assistant 9 9 0 - 8 9 9 9 o r c a ll 9 9 0 - 2 0 0 0 E O E 2 -2 1-3B NEED A NEW APARTMENT? CHECK THE DAILY TEXAN PRELEASING GUIDE ON PAGES 13-15 r n W V L O O K I N G F O R a h o u se A S A P ? Let V is io n A d s Locafer Se rvic e help you. C a ll 4 5 1 -FREE to set up appt. 2 -1 9 -2 0 B . Transportation M A Z A T L A N S P R I N G break. 4 nights from $ 3 0 9 , 5 nights from $ 3 2 9 . Frank A b a te , 2 6 4 - 0 2 9 4 1- W E S T 3 5 T H . G o r g e o u s 3 b e d ro o m 2 5 - 2 0 B 2 bath. T il? floors, h a r d w o o d s , deck, fenced yard. 6 month le a se $ 1 4 0 0 . M a r c u s M a n a g e m e n t 3 2 0 - 0 0 1 0 . 2-20-4B . 425 - Rooms S P R I N G B R E A K '9 6 - C a n c ú n from $ 3 8 9 , J a m a ic a from $ 4 6 9 , Flo rid a from $ 1 0 9 G u a ra n te e d lo w est p ric e sl O r g a n iz e a g r o u p o f 15 a n d g o free C a ll ( 8 0 0 ) 6 4 8 - 4 8 4 9 for m ore info. 2-8 -10 B R O O M A V A IL A B L E for female, ni­ cely fu rn ish ed , o w n bath. O n L E T 'S P A D R E I So uth P ad re Isla n d W e s t C a m p u s shuttle $ 4 5 0 / m o . C a ll 4 7 4 - 8 6 0 3 . 2 -1 9 -4 B 2 - N IC E F U R N IS H E D room s. A B P^ all c o o k in g utensils, W / D N ic e are a, perfect stu dy environm ent. 9 2 9 - 0 6 6 9 . 2-7 -2 0P b e a ch fron t c o n d o with b a y s id e view . 2 B R / 2 B A $ 1 2 0 0 / w k . C a ll (2 1 0 ) 7 6 1 - 2 2 2 7 . 2-2 0 -4 B S K I S P R I N G B re a k R u id o so , N e w M e x ic o Time S h a r e c o n d o sle e p s eight, linen a n d kitchen p ro vid e d . A v a ila b le M a r c h 9 - 2 3 $ 8 0 0 / R O O M F O R lease, $ 3 0 0 / m o Utilities included, con se rvative fe­ m ale p refe rre d C lo s e to 1 8 3 a n d M O P A C . 3 3 1 - 5 8 8 5 . 2-1 9 -5 B w eek. 3 2 3 - 9 4 0 8 . 2-2 1-5B -D 550 - Licensed Child Care $ 4 0 0 A B P , near A C C . L o ri:2 9 2 - U R G E N T : W A N T E D extensive tutor­ 6 5 6 0 . 2 -2 1 -2 B ing O r g a n ic C h e m istry II P h o n e 435 - Co-ops co-ops: not your r v e a a student housing e g • • • ICC's large, older homes are conveni­ ent, affordable, & student owned. Rent, food, & bills included in one monthly charge, Inter-Cooperative Council Inc. 510 W. 23rd St. 476-1957 C O - O P R O O M S a v a ila b le $ 3 0 0 A B P 1 9 1 0 Rio G ra n d e , 3 b lo c k s from cam p us. 3 2 2 - 9 3 4 7 . 2 -1 6 -5 B S H A R E N I C E apartm ent, o w n b e d ­ ro om / b a th , fully furnished, short w a lk to cam p us. $ 3 9 0 / m o C a ll 4 7 9 - 6 3 8 9 2 -2 1-5B R O O M M A T E SER VIC E Looking or have a place UT ID discount Business since 1 9 8 8 Served over 7 , 0 0 0 people Sam , 4 5 3 -4 3 9 6 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D for H y d e Park a r e a house. $ 2 5 0 + 1 / 3 bills, $ 1 7 5 dep. C a ll M a tt 3 7 1 - 1 3 8 0 . 2 - 1 9 - 5 P UT S O P H O M O R E lo o k in g to sh a re S W - A u s t in d up lex w / F E M A L E stud­ ent. I a m responsible, laid-back, a n d e a sy to ge t a lo n g with A R E Y O U ? T W O F E M A L E S se e k in g two fem ale ro om m ate s A u g -A u g Large W C 2- 2 furnished con d o. Fun, reliable, in­ d ependent. $ 3 1 5 / m o . 4 7 2 - 9 7 0 1 2-21-5P. ANNOUNCEMENTS 510 - Entertainment- Tickets ★ T I C K E T S ir ★ •C oncerts •Sports * W •Special Events ^ Local-State-Nationwide ^ L . * SHOWTIME TICKETS * ± + 503 West 15“> m * ★ ★ 520 - Personals 478-9999 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ W A N T E D 10 0 students Lose 8- 1 0 0 lbs. N e w m e tabolism b re a k ­ through. I lost 15 lb s in 3 w e eks. G u a r a n te e d results. $ 3 5 . 1 -8 0 0 - 6 6 6 - 4 7 9 3 . 2-9 -10 B M A L E E X -S T U D E N T , g e n e ro u s a n d ve ry g iv in g , se e kin g fem ale b u d d y Let's m eet for a c o k e P .O . B o x 9 5 3 6 , # 1 6 6 Austin, TX 7 8 7 6 6 . 1- 2 6 - 2 0 8 530 - Travel- Transportation U N IV E R S IT Y B E A C H C L U B ™ ONLY FLY F R O M A U S T IN S K I ! Crested Burn b f i i i i i i i 9 0 9 9 9 , 6 0 0 W E S T 2 8 T H ¡ S O U T H P A D R E I S p r in g B re a k Party on Padre: M a r c h 7-9, 1 4 -1 6 or 2 1 - 2 3 . In c lu d e s 3 d a y s / 2 nights lo d g ­ ing a n d ta x e s— from $ 2 9 / p e r s o n . Hurry, lim ited s p a c e C a ll 1 -8 0 0 - S U N C H A S E 2 -1 2 -1 0 B Attention Parents If you're looking for attentive mature, experienced babysitters in your home As Good As Grandma is a customized sitting service to fit your needs Days, Nights, weekends. Coll 219-0955 |l ST. MARK'S United M ethodist C h ild re n 's D a y O ut C hu rch Program is n o w a ccep tin g enrollment for M o n . a n d W e d sp a c e s So m e Tues. a n d Thurs. sp a c e s available. A c c e p tin g children a g e s 6 wks. to 4 yrs. For more information. please call 8 3 6 -9 0 7 3 . 2 -2 - 2 0 B EDUCATIONAL 580 - Musical Instruction N E E D C O M P U T E R help with V I S O 4 ? P a y $ 2 0 / h r . C a ll Rick 3 2 9 - 0 0 6 6 . 2 -2 1 -3 B G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T n eeded to tu­ tor 8th g r a d e p rivate sch oo l stud­ ent. 4 5 8 - 5 3 8 9 . 2 -2 1 -4 B 3 4 5 - 5 8 7 1 . 2 -1 4 - 1 0 B 6 1 0 - Misc. Instruction S E X U A L A S S A U L T , 2 5 % of w o m e n b e c o m e ra p e victims. "T he 6 0 Best W a y s Ever to Protect Yourself, A n ­ yw he re, A n ytim e " S e n d $ 4 9 5 to Protection Reports, P O B o x 1 4 4 7 , V e ro Beach,FL 3 2 9 6 1 1-8-8B 620 - Legal Services N E E D L A W student to d o resea rch w o rk for private in d iv id u a l E x c e l­ lent p ay . C a ll p a g e r 6 0 4 - 0 3 5 0 . 2 -2 0-5P 750 - Typing ZIVLEY The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PA PERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS R E SU M E S W ORD P R O C ESSIN G LA SER PRINTING FORMATTING 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 27th & Guadalupe 472-3210 Resumes Papers / Tbeses User Printing 79i Color Copies Rnsb Jobs s$bel's C o p ie s 1906 Guoctolupe St 472-5353 760 - Misc. Services Cellular Phon Rental D a i l y « W e e k l y " M o n t h l y C re d it Card o r Cash D eposit 4 7 6 0 4 8 8 f t Fast, Easy L oa n s u p to m $ 4 3 0 “ ! C A S H P A W N 2 2 2 0 9 E. R i v e r s i d e 441-1444 J on all printing & copying services for any club, society, fraternity or sorority ★ Ask attout our New 4-color printing * s PEEDWAY COP Y é PñtN TtHQ Dobie Mall * offer 478-3334 copirs madr an »rlf-»ervt copier» EDUCATIONAL - 610 MISC. INSTRUCTION Train for Bartending job placement National Business School Call (512) 833-0303 At Mardi Gras, it takes all kinds to fill Rue Bourbon U We’ll see hundreds of breasts before the day’s over, d a y 's ov er, so it's g o in g to be w orth it ," M cC usker said. Associated Press NEW' O R L E A N S — The rest of the year, A1 T h o m a s is a r e fin e ry m a n a g e r . F o r M a rd i G r a s , h e b e c a m e a flo o z ie , in sequined bikini, fishnet stockings and flow ­ ing blond curls. " I look exactly like m y m other, except sh e w ax es, an d sh e 'd d ie if sh e saw m e now ," he laughed. He an d h is w ife, S a n d y , d r e s s e d a s a clo w n , jo in e d th e th ro n g s th at h a p p ily threw o ff all in h ib itio n s for the n a tio n 's biggest street party — M ardi Gras. The boozy pre-Lenten blow out filled the streets o f the French Q u arter w ith glitzy floats, blan n g bands, flashing flesh and lav ­ ish costumes. M en in e v e n in g g o w n s p a r a d e d p a s t so it’s going to be worth it.” — Kevin McCusker, Mardi Gras reveler wom en in g ra ss skirts. A m an w earing only s t r a t e g ic a l ly p la c e d fe a th e r s, h is b o d y painted pink from head to toe, chatted with a m an d ressed as an angel, with huge feath­ er w in gs. A couple covered in leaves and c o n d o m s m arc h ed p a st, c a rry in g a sig n proclaim ing them selves rubber trees. The w eather w as perfect — hazy and in the 70s — b u t c ro w d s a p p e a re d sm a lle r than in p reviou s years. Nevertheless, police put the official estim ate at the traditional "m o re than 1 m illion." It w a s p e a c e fu l, w ith o n ly a b o u t 400 arrests in the last few days, including w hat police call nuisance cases, such a s nudity and urinating in public. B ead s rained d ow n on B ourbon Street, rew ards to people below for exposin g flesh. Kevin M cCusker and 12 friends invested $500 in long ro p es of fau x p e arls to g iv e w om en who exposed their breasts. "W e'll see hundreds of breasts before the In con trast, sm a lle r g r o u p s h a ra n g u e d gro u p s o f revelers with, bullhorns, quoting Bible v e rse s, con d em n in g the celebration and calling for them to repent. " T h i s is an a b o m in a t io n ," s a id Je rry Mitchel, 36, of Jackson, M iss. "W e've com e to try to sav e som e of these p eop le. They think th ey're h av in g fun, bu t w e h ope to show them they aren 't." C arn ivals build tow ard M ardi G ras for a month, with dozen s of p arad es throughout so u th L o u isia n a . It screech es to a halt at m id n ig h t T u e sd a y w hen p o lic e clear the French Q u a rte r's streets, sw e e p e rs b egin the c le a n u p a n d L e n t d e s c e n d s on th is heavily Rom an Catholic city. T h e y shelled, it o u t f o r y o u r o r t h o d o n t i s t b i l l s . Coughed it u p f o r y o u r c a r i n s u r a n c e . A n d forked it o v e r f o r t h a t fish t&Tlk a c c i d e n t . Yet t h e y s t i l l Í U S Í S t y o u c a l l Collect. T o u c h e d by t h e i r u n d y i n g lo v e , y o u s p a r e t h e m f u r t h e r e x p e n s e vou dial 1 800 CALL ATT. 1 8 0 0 CALL ATT alw ays c o s ts less th a n I-8OO-COLLECT. And always g e l s you the reliable Á1&T Network. Use it whenever you're off campus. Know the Code. 1 800 CALL ATT. That’s Your True ‘ * For mterstat? catts. PromoiK ms excluded MOO-COLLECT is a regisiered trademark o f .MCI C 19% AT&T AT&T Your True Choice A / \ , JP *% 1 y / / f?" * a f ■ ASSOCIATED PRESS 1 ' El Paso to retain gunslinger remains Associated Press EL P A S O , T e x a s — N o to r io u s g u n slin g er John W esley H ardin, a w a n te d m an w h o n e v e r se ttle d dow n for long in life, will finally be staying put. State District Ju d ge Kathleen O li­ v a r e s h a s q u e lle d a fe u d o v e r H ard in 's final resting place, ruling the Old West bad man should remain at El P a so 's C on co rd ia C em etery, w h ere he w as b u rie d a fte r b ein g gunned dow n in 1895. " I 'm w ell p le a s e d w ith t h a t ," H ardin's great-grandson, E.C. Spell- m ann, said T uesday. " A couple o f other generations m ade the decision to leave the body there. I didn't see any reason for a third (generation) to m ove it." Sp ellm an n filed suit alo n g with the Concordia Heritage Association, an El P aso historic group, to block attem p ts by other H ard in d esc en ­ d a n ts to relocate the g u n fig h te r's remains to Nixon, Texas. The h e ir s b a c k in g th e m o v e argued that H ardin belonged in the sm a ll to w n e a st o f S a n A n to n io because he had once lived in the area an d b ecau se his first w ife, Jane, is buried there. Attorney Frank Billings, who rep­ resented those favoring the reloca­ tion, said the family w as disappoint­ ed and is considering an appeal. " I k n ew that the c h an c es w ere good it w ould go this w ay," he said. L ast A u g u st, fam ily rep re se n ta­ tives attem pted to quietly rem ove H a r d in 's re m a in s u sin g a sta te - issued permit. They slipped into the cemetery at daw n but were stopped by m embers o f the Concordia association, which h ad obtained a tem porary restrain­ ing order and subsequently sued for a perm anent injunction barring the removal. The g ro u p argued during a non­ jury trial last month that the defen­ dants were acting against the wishes of their ow n descendants, who had long ago decided to leave Hardin in El Paso. A C on co rd ia historian also said th at H ard in , w h o is sa id to h av e killed at least 30 men, had only tenu­ o u s ties to N ixon. H ard in spent a large part of his life as either a fugi­ tive in Texas, Florida and Alabam a, or in prison. He had opened a law practice in El Paso shortly before he w as killed in the Acme Saloon by Constable John Selman, with whom he had argued. Olivares found the defendants had im properly tried to remove the body by not m aking a formal request to an El Paso County court after failing to obtain p erm ission from all H ardin heirs. Spellm ann signed a consent form but later changed his mind. Further, Olivares said in the ruling issued M onday that after 100 years there is no com pellin g reaso n for digging up the remains. Sh e s a id a tte m p tin g to d o so w ould irreparably harm su rro u n d ­ in g grav e s, p articularly sin ce e v i­ d en c e in d ic ate d no one k n o w s if Hardin is actually buried beneath his tombstone. Computer pirates cost $2.5 billion Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — P iracy cost U .S. com puter entertainm ent soft­ w are and video gam e m akers $2.5 billion last year, a trade g ro u p said T u e sd a y . It n am ed C h in a a s the b iggest offender. The Interactive Digital Softw are A s s o c ia t io n , a tr a d e g r o u p fo r e n te rta in m e n t so ftw a r e m a k e rs, called on U.S. trade officials to take a c tio n a g a in s t C h in a , T a iw a n , H ong K o n g and M exico for failing to prevent piracy. The B u sin ess S o ftw are A lliance filed a sim ilar report with the U.S. Trade Representative's office, but it didn't estimate 1995 losses from inter­ national piracy spreadsheets, databas­ es and other business software.