¿c37 AVAILABLE COPY Da i ly T e x a n I k ^ " Vol. 90, No. 103 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Wednesday, February 27, 1991 25c Iraqis abandon Kuwaiti capital U.S. Marines battle remaining forces at city's airport Associated Press D H A H R A N , Saudi A ra­ bia — U n der A m erican an d allied fire, Iraq's b eat­ en arm y stream ed north in a headlong flight h o m ew ard, a b a n ­ d o n in g Kuwait city to its d ay of liberation after a long, dreadful, bloody nigh t of occupation an d w ar. 5 T uesd ay The fight raged on. "W e 're going to ... at­ tack an d attack a n d atta c k ," a U.S. general v ow ed as M arines tangled w ith Iraqis fighting a rear-guard action at K uw ait city airport, and as a vast U.S.-British arm o red force collided w ith Iraq's v au n ted R epublican G uard so m e­ w here to the northw est. In fierce battles, allied forces h ad knocked o u t 26 Iraqi arm y divisions — ro ugh ly 260,000 m en by early W ed nesd ay , U.S. m ilitary offi- Allied forces defeat division of Republican Guard, page 3 SA candidates, progressive students discuss Middle Eastern views of war, page 6 i Vietnam War medic criticizes use of napalm in gulf, page 7 cials in Riyadh said. The officials, speaking on condition of an o ­ nym ity, said th a t A m erican reconnaissance team s an d o th e r "lead elem en ts" of U.S. forces w ere in Kuwait city, but the U.S. com ­ m and did not regard th e city as liberated. "I'm su re w e'll run in to som e pockets of resistance, but w e fully expect it to belong to coalition forces at the en d of to d a y ," one offi­ cial said. He said som e Iraqis probably re­ m ained in Kuwait city. In o n e battle, tank crew s of th e U.S. VII C orps battered a G uard division in the Iraqi desert w est of K uw ait, a senior Pentagon offi­ cial said. A new s-pool report, m eanw hile, said G uard units w ere setting u p new d efen ­ sive lines w est of the southern Iraqi city of Basra. The cam paign a p p eared to be com ing dow n to a deadiv race th ro ugh the d e sert betw een Iraqi tro o p s retreating n orth tow ard Iraq's h eartland and th e VII C orps arm or rum bling in from th e w est to cut them off. The Iraqis reportedly had Kuwaiti hostages in tow. No one in auth ority w as saying how deep into Iraq the allied forces m ight pu rsu e the w ith d raw in g arm y. Iraq's P residen t S addam H ussein sought to label the w ithdraw al a "v icto ry ." President Bush called it an "o u tra g e " and said Saddam w as trying to cling to form idable military pow er w ith his pullback. H u n d re d s of surren d erin g Iraqi soldiers had an o th er w ord for the debacle. "Salaam! Salaam !" — "Peace! Peace!" — they sh o u ted as they raised their hands to advancing troops. M ore than 30,000 Iraqis have now been taken prisoner, th e U.S. com ­ m and said d o m ." And am ong Kuw aitis, the w ord w as "free ­ joy "O u r to is overflow ing, G o d," their exile radio declared The enemy is turning tail." th an k s be Flashing V -for-victory jub ilan t Kuwaitis em erged from their hom es Tuesday to greet the first o u tsid ers to v entu re into their bu rn ed , looted city. sum s. from Saudi A rabia People ran u p to h u g and kiss triu m p hant American soldiers w h o pu n ch ed 50 miles north three-dav g ro u n d cam paign, A ssociated Pres»; p h o to ­ g rapher L aurent R ebours reported from the city's outskirts. M en of the 1st M arine Divi­ sion later entered th e city. in a There were no new reports Tuesday on U.S and allied dead an d w o u n d ed on the front lines. An u p d ate d report on M onday's Scud missile attack on a rear-area barracks Please see Gulf war. page 12 Associated Press Minority aid in jeopardy Inadequate money may bring end to noted MAPS tutorial program Diane Smith Daily Texan Staff A program frequently cited by UT officials as proof of their com m it­ m ent to m inority recruitm ent and retention is in jeo pard y because it lacks ad equate funding. W anda N elson, UT assistan t dean of stu d en ts, said T uesday that the Office of the D ean of S tudents, w hich organized th e M ounting A Plan for Success program , has " re ­ quested additional fu n d in g and are aw aiting a resp o n se" from the UT adm inistration because m oney for the program has run out. stu d e n ts MAPS has enabled A frican-A m er­ to ican and H ispanic receive free tutorial assistance for approxim ately tw o years. Last se­ m ester, 135 stu d e n ts took ad v an ­ tage of the program a n d , despite their academ ic troubles, 79 percent of them w ere re ta in ed by the U ni­ versity, N elson said. "W e know th e pro g ram w o rk s," she added. "W e are about helping stu d en ts stay in sch o o l." for establishing th e pro gram w as tw ofold. The organizers w an ted to prev en t academ ic difficulty am ong m inority stu d en ts, as well as help m inority stu d e n ts w ho are on sch o ­ lastic probation regain good aca­ dem ic standing. But jam es Vick, vice p re sid e n t for s tu d e n t affairs, said "tig h t b u d g e t co n strain ts" m ake it difficult to find additional m oney for th e p ro g ram 's grow th. The program is curren tly sp e n d in g m ore m oney th a n it did last year, he said. But Vick also said he recognizes the significance of the program and is actively seeking the m oney the program needs. "W e are right now trying to id e n ­ tify fu nds that can be u sed to s u p ­ p lem ent the b udget of the MAPS p ro g ram ," he said, a d d in g that he d o es not rule out the possibility of private funding. "I'm delighted that w e can provide tu to rin g for the s tu ­ d e n ts ." Vick said th ro u g h lapsed salary fu nds, he w as able to give the p ro ­ gram an additional $5,000 last Janu- N elson explained that the reason Please see MAPS, page 12 In to th e lig h t Jonn MteConroco Daily Texan Staff Marco N ava and Jared Miles, both UT engineering freshmen respond to medics after being guided out of a cave they were trapped in for six hours. Miles had stayed below to comfort Nava while Andrew Eilictt. also an engineering freshman, went to get help. SA candidates spar over experience, abortion Aaron DaMommio Daily Texan Staff W hat had been a polite S tu d e n ts' A ssociation presi- dential race took a nasty turn T u e s d a y c a n d i d a t e s clashed in often heated de- bate at tw o forum s. a s fH M | m | ^ ■ concerned providing abortion services on cam ­ pus. An audience m em ber posed the q uestion, pointing out th at the stu d e n t g o v ern m en t at the U niversity of Texas at A rlington recently rejected a proposal for cam p us abortion services. G arth Davis, a philosophy pre-m ed junior, said he w ould avoid hav ing abortions perform ed on c a m p u s because they are offensive to m any students S tu d en ts w ere given the o p p o rtu n ity to question can­ didates ab o ut their view s d u rin g a forum sp o n ­ sored by th e Texas U nion S tu d en t Issues Com ­ m ittee. O n e question th at divided candidates Bill Tiede a g o v ern m en t junior w h o officially resigned from the presidential race Tuesday spoke on behalf of candidate Brian Byrd, w ho w as absent from the U nion forum . Tiede also spoke against m aking abortion services available at the U ni\ er^icv. Scott Gaille, a g o v ern m en t junior, said, W e shouldn t have a ivthm g like th at on cam p us But Michael Mark, a liberal a r t s senior said that if supplying abortions on cam pus w ould m ake the decision to have or avoid an abortion easier he w ould have no problem s w ith it, Jennifer Kowalik a liberal arts sophom ore said she w ould leave the issue u p to a Student kssem blv vote, a s the q u estio n er had sa id he w a s not interested tn the cand idates' view s on abortion itself. Enc Dixon, a speech philosophy senior said Please see Forum, page 2 INSIDE THE TEXAN TODA much for the power shortage. The sixtn- ^ ^ ^ ¡ 5 ^ r a n k ® d Texas Longhorn baseball team rolls ¡over the Southwest Texas State Bobcats 10-4 J L f c ^ g j l u e ^ a y behind the strength of three homers 18 38k 1 B I at Disch-Falk Field. ' W ea th e r: Just-the-Facts-M aam W eather. Cloudy skies. 40 percent rain chance. Southeast winds 10 mph. Lows high 40s. Thank you. Roll, Friday. Index: Around Campus.................................. 2 3 .................................... 21 Classifieds Comics................. 2 3 22 6 Editorials.......................................... . 4 3 Entertainment.....................................11 SA Election G uide............................... 8 World & N a t io n .................................10 S p o rts ................................................18 Spring Break Guide State & L o c a l......................... Television University War in the Persian Gulf 13 • • Body of missing man found in Town Lake Michelle Koidin Daily Texan Staff Police fo u n d the body of 19-vea-- old Richard Balli Tuesday floating alongside the sh o re of Town L ake in the 200 block of hast Riverside Drive, abo ut a block the nightclub w h ere he w as last seen Feb. In from Sgt. Robert Pew itt of the A ustin police youth services unit said he decided to search the river on a hunch an d discovered the bodv of a male at 2:55 p m The Travis later County m edical m atched the bodv s fingerprints to BaiH's. exam iner The cause of d eath is p e n d in g fur­ ther lab results. Pew itt said. Balli lived w ith his sister, M arlene Rodriguez, her h usb an d a n d four children at ^ 15 W alter St. Rodriguez rep o rted Balh m issing Feb. 17 because h er brother had a 2:30 a.m . curfew an d h ad alw avs called if he c o u ld n 't m ake it hom e in time she explained S unday. Rodriguez said Balli left hom e about 7 p .m . I eb. In in her h u s Please see Body, page 2 SA presidential candidates speak at a forum in the Texas Union Theater. Joey Lin Daily Texan Staff Hazing victim tiles lawsuit against Sigma Nu, actives Jennifer R. Sansbury Daily Texan Staff The victim of a N ov. 10 hazing in­ cident that resulted in cancellation of the UT ch ap ter of the Sigma Nu fraternity's charter tiled a law suit Friday against the fraternity, its p ar­ ent organization a n d several indi­ viduals. Mark Sanders, a natu ral sciences junior w ho w'as p led g in g the Upsi- lon chapter of Sigm a N u last fall, was paddled, th rea ten ed w ith an open flame a n d beaten w ith a two- by-four board, a cattle w hip, a broom and a stake an d physically ab u sed in o th er w ays at th e fraterni­ ty house by several actives and alum ni of the fraternity, according to an affidavit filed last fall. A ccording to the suit, tw o of the d efen d an ts "lifted S an d ers by the front and rear of his u n d erw ear an d created a saw ing m otion back and forth, causing S anders excruciating p ain ." In addition, one active "led S anders aro u n d th e room in the fra­ ternity house, pulling him w ith a ham m er, the claw of w hich w as hooked u n d er S an d ers' testicles," it said. A lthough according to the suit, Please see Sigma Nu, page 12 Page 2 Wednesday, February 27,1991 THE DAILY TEXAN T h e D a i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors News Editor Associate News Edtors News Assignments Ecklor Senior Reporters Associate Editors Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Edito- Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor General Soorts Reporters Photo Editors Photographers ............................................... ............................... .......................................... Kevn McHargue Randy Kennedy ....................... ... Dtpu Bhattacharya Katnna Brown Scott Stantord Jett Turrentme Hope S Yen Matthew Canton Dane SchiSer Jenny Huang Matthew ConnaHy (State). Aaron DaMommto (University) Steve Higginbotham (City) Michelle Ko dm (Police), David Loy (University) Adam Hersh Dave Winter Shannon Prosser Shai Tsur Keith Nelson Mindy Brown Jaime Aron, Mark Babmeck Craig M Douglas Kirk J Crippens Michelle Patterson Michelle Dapra Marc Fort Scott Lewis Joey Un Susanne Mason, John McConmco. Jack W Plunkett Greg S Weiner Jeanne Acton. Bobby Ruggiero Felipe Campos Mindy Brown .............................................................................. . . . . Images Editor Associate Im ages Editors Graphics Editor Around Campus Editor issue Staff Reporters Editorial Assistant Entertainment Assistant Sports Assistant Sports Writer Makeup Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors Graphics Assistant Com e Stop Cartoonists Fabtenne Labourey Jenny Lin. Jenny fi Sansbury. Diane Smith. Buck Sralla. Rebecca Stewart, Jenny Walker Gabriel Demombynes Sarah Thurmond Deanna Roy . Tom Grace. Meredith Whitten Essam Abde Hady Michael Casey David Dzierzartowski Rita Baladad. Melissa Gilbert Korey Coleman Korey Coleman. Cameron Johnson. Robert Rodriguez, Greg Werner . Local Display Art Director C.assiiieo Display Classified Teieohone Saies Classified Telephone Service Advertising Cindy Anderson. Scott Butter. Michael Chang. Catherine Durkin. M elanie Hanson. Dave H em phill. Sandra Kuehler. Michael La Kier. Susan Lebfrom Doug Lyon Me .na M adoiora L sa Perry Jyile Robinson Elsa Snyder Stace Sorretts. W endy W atkins Dwight W ilhelm Landon Sims Brad Corbett. Cindy Garza. Sheronda Scott Joyce Inman. David Ross Jennifer Brooks. Art Carrillo. Andi Harrison. Christi Stradford Michele Dapra. Tammy Ferguson Sonia Garcia. Dianne Hodgms. Shawn McMinn. Kristy Tang The Dai'y Tenar i USPS 145-440) a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin is published by Texas Stude-t Publications 2500 Whitts Austin TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday and Friday except holidays, exam periods and when school is not m session Second class postage paid at Austin TX 7871C News contr.buttons will be accepted by telephone (471-4591) at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Bunding 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Buildmg A4 101) For locai and national display advertising, call 471-1865 For classified display and national classified display advertising can 471-8900 For classified wora advertising calt 471-5244 Entire contents copyright 1991 Texas Student Publications The Daiy Texan Mad Subscription Rates One Semester (Fait or spnng i Two Semesters iFall and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fail Spring and Summer) TSP Budding C3 200 or call 471-5083 Send orders anc address changes to Texas Student Publication-. 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STUDENT SPECIAL 16 piece grouping to furnish a one bedroom apartments Roberto M. Peña, MD Hoard C ertified . A m erican H oard o f F am ily P r a c tic e f c t a t n l Health f mrr h r t g M M t Te*t* • B irth I o n tr o l • PAF S a r t r t (512)477-4693 Park St. Dai id » 900 I Jtth S treet* - uite 210 ROSES! ROSES! ROSES! Casa Verde Florist Daily Specials 451-0691 FTD • 4 5 0 1 Guadalupe • On LIT S h u ttle R t. 'LEARN TO DIVE1 F ro m '2 9 ,9 5 Let Us Plan Your Dive Travel SCUBALAND ADVENTURES 339-0733 (10805 N. Lamar) [ 0City M agazine of UT, Texas REPAIR • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage C U S TO M MADE • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca. Amtm. 478-9309 Shoe Hospital Now Serving UT Boot and Shoe Repair New Location MLK (a Nueces 473-2929 12 Austin Locations Open Mon.-Sat. Until 1:30 at night 24th & San Antonio You Just Bought A Classic. Then you’re gonna need few peripherals to go.. Seikosha SP2000 Dot Matrix Printer 210 2400 Baud Modem 79 Turbo Mouse 109 DS/DD blank disks .99 DS/HD blank disks 1.75 Quantum 52 MB Internal Hard Drive 359 Maxcess 40 MB External Hard Drive 389 MacProducts USA 2021 Guadalupe Suite 23 Second Level Dobie Mall Free Parking 4 6 9 5 0 0 0 I l f 11 i t e r t PC ALERT! Your Macintosh Resource Center is now also your IBM/PC Resource Center! Forum C ontinued from page 1 he would not oppose campus abor­ tions if enough students supported them; his concern would be the dif­ ficulty of finding space or funding tor such an additional student ser­ vice. Mark I lopkins, an economics jun­ ior, said, "I would in no way allow an abortion clinic on cam pus.” Another question came trom Mona Kiblawi, Dixon's vice presi­ dential running mate, who said she wanted to know more about the candidates in case she were elected with them. Kiblawi called into question Mark's experience on the SA shuttle bus committee, prom pting an argu­ ment among several candidates — including Mark, Hopkins and Dixon — about w hether Mark and Hop­ the kins had actually served on committee. However, later in the forum, Da­ vid Ritchie, an SA graduate school representative, said the committee was a large one and that he had per­ sonally witnessed significant contri­ butions from Mark, Hopkins, Dixon and Kiblawi. Corey Birenbaum, also a candi­ date for vice president, asked Dixon how he couid cite his SA position as a plus given that "the SA has been a complete loss according to the vast s tu d e n ts .” Dixon m ajority of disputed the claim, but said that in any case, he felt he did a good job as SA executive director. Candidates also came into conflict at an earlier forum sponsored by the Body Continued from page 1 band's Ford truck to go to a party for a co-worker leaving for duty in the Persian Gulf. When he got to the partv on Win- drift Way, he was introduced to Garver Godfrey, 28, of 5709 Blvthe- wood Drive, who invited him to go to a club in dow ntow n Austin. They left the party with two other men but argued over which club to go to, Godfrey said Sunday. He said he and Balli chose to go to Club XS, 110 E. Riverside Drive, and arrived around midnight. "We went upstairs ... and this girl was looking at [Ricky]." "H e went over to talk to her," Godfrey said. He left Balli to go dow nstairs for 35-40 m inutes and w hen he returned, Balli was gone, he said. Godfrey said he waited for Balli until the club closed at 2 a.m ., but left without him. "1 figured he'd gone to have fun with the girl he was w ith," Godfrey said. He described the girl as 22-25 years old, Hispanic and wearing black. Godfrey said Balli had a few drinks while thev were together and was a little "tipsy." But Balli's family said no one ex­ cept Godfrey claims to have seen Balli inside Club XS. The youth's mother and sister spoke Saturday to the club's security guards, who said they did not notice him. And no one saw him leave with a girl, Rodriguez said. The only person who adm itted seeing Balli on Riverside Drive on the evening of Feb. 16 was a street vendor who works outside the club, Student Engineering Council. Dav­ is, Dixon and Mark cited their expe­ rience in the SA only to have that experience called into question by C uiille. Pavis said a bill he helped get passed in the University Council to make teacher evaluations m andato­ ry proves his ability to get things done in the student governm ent. three SA Dixon, w ho has been involved adm inistrations, with mentioned among other things hav­ ing co-chaired the SA's shuttle bus investigation committee, which he said has given him im portant con­ tacts. Mark offered his background as former co-director of the Martin Lu­ ther King Jr. Statue Foundation in addition to his position as a one- year at-large SA representative. But Gaille implied that experience in the SA is nothing to brag about, saying that the SA has squandered its resources on program s that bene­ fit "only a few students" such as promoting activities for gay and les­ bian students. Both Tiede and Byrd also attend­ ed the engineering forum. The only presidential candidate who did not attend either forum was Dallas Ad­ dison, a Plan II junior. Neither forum attracted very many students; the attendance at the Union forum varied from 20 to 50 students and most of the stu­ dents at forum appeared to be candidates. the engineering Sgt. Robert Pewitt of the Austin police youth ser­ vices unit said he decided to search the river on a hunch, and discovered the body of a male at 2:55 p.m. said Diane Balli, the m an's m other. "She said she saw him outside her truck walking back and forth," Diane Balli said. Rodriguez said she found her husband's Ford truck the following morning at the house w here the party had been. Balli worked full-time as a night stocker at H.E.B., 2701 E. Seventh St. Rodriguez said he had been em ­ ployed by different H.E.B. stores for about two years and had hoped to become a m anager or ow ner some day. "H e was a real fast worker, a hard worker, one of the best over there," Rodriguez said. Balli worked at H.E.B. with his girlfriend, Patty Serna, 18, whom he had been dating for about one m onth. Rodriguez, 27, said Balli had been very close to her, to their two sisters and to her children. She said her brother had a strong like nobody character and "felt could hurt him, so he would trust anybody." Police had not had any leads be­ fore Tuesday. The juvenile investi­ gations unit handed the case over to the homicide detail Tuesday eve­ ning to investigate the possibility of foul play. NO SECURITY DEPOSIT • STUDENT PACKAGE PLANS TV’S AVAILABLE • FREE DELIVERY TO STUDENTS HOT LOOKS • SMART LOOKS • CASUAL LOOKS For the LOOKS You Want. L O O K S F U R N I T U R E L E A S I N G H O M E & O F F I C E 7801 N. LAMAR 459-4123 Obey all traffics! 5 8 v TOSTADA/ •to p and Yield to our now low prices. Check out the new vaiue-pneed mexican dishes at these Texas Union Dining locations. El Burrito in The Texas Kitchen Main Level, Texas Union. CBA Dining Center College of Business Administration, 3fd floor Law School Dining Center Townes Hall, l 5t floor Hours of operation: Monday - Friday 10:30am - 6:30pm Hours of operation: Monday - Friday 7:30am - 3:00pm Hours of operation: Monday - Friday 7:30am - 3:00pm The Texas Union Asian Culture Committee presents FTJ 1 L.JJ 1 Professional fashion model with the Ford Agency & President of Helen Lee Skin Care & Cosmetics FEBRUARY 27, 1991 7:30 - 9:30 PM TEXAS UNION QUADRANGLE ROOM 24TH & GUADALUPE Free Admission A reception will follow in the Texas Union Asian Culture Room (4.224) See the Asian Fashion Designers Exhibit on display in the Asian Culture Room. WAR IN THE PERSIAN GULF . Wednesday, February 27, 1991 Page Allies defeat division of Republican Guard Elite Iraqi units offer 'stiff resistance' Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — U n der the cover of d ark ness an d in a driving of M 1A1 h u n d red s rainstorm, tanks and infantry from the A rm y 's VII C o rp s h av e attacked and d efeat­ ed ,i Republican Guard division in Iraq, a senior P entagon source said Tu esd ay . T h e attack was led by the 3rd Arrñored Division and the 1st Infantry Division (M echan ized), and the units w ere plow in g forward an d e n g a g in g a seco nd Republi­ can Guard division in Iraq, said the source, w h o spok e on condition of a n on y m ity . T h e attacks from the w e s t w e re being cond u cted on a front d ozens of miles w id e w est of Kuwait, the senior military officer said, a d ding that Guard units w ere o f­ fering "s tiff re s is ta n ce ." Officials said earlier T u es d a v the U .S . and allied troops to d raw a n oo se around Sad dam H u ss e in 's vaunted G u a rd , p reventing a retreat and "d e s tro y in g them in p la c e " u n le ss they surrender. intended T h e source said A p a ch e helicopters w ere flying over the VII C o rps attack into w estern Kuwait to cha lleng e a regular Iraqi arm y division. Also, 50 Republican Guard top-of-the-line Soviet- made 4 -72 tanks w e re captured a s they attem pted to flee northw ard a lon g a road near the E u p h ra te s River, the source said. E le m e n ts o f the 24th Infantry Division intercepted the co n v o v and captured the tanks, the source said. Th e officer cautioned that difficult hq hting still lav a head , particularly involv ing any future clash w ith the rem aining Guard forces. " W e d on't w ant to be too optimistic. W h a t's ahead could be verv, verv d ifficu lt,” he said. Th e senior officer's report was the first detail o f how the attack on the Guard was being carried out. Earlier Tu esd av, Lt. G e n . T h o m a s Kelly, op erations directo r for the Jo int C h ie fs of Staff, described the tro u b le ," in Gu ard w h eth er they rem ained in their b u n ke rs or rose up to con fron t U .S . and allied forces closing in on them . troops as b eing " d e e p , d e e p Their com m u n ica tion s have been so sev erely d isru p t­ ed that "t h e v are having difficulty sen sin g from which direction they might be a tta c k e d ," said Rear Adm. Mike M cC onnell, the Jo int Chiefs' director of intelli­ gence. The officer said that in the T u esd ay attacks, U .S. casualties w ere "v e r y , very lig h t," and that no U .S. vehicles had been lost. OPEC may cut production Ministers could rein in supply to avoid postwar crash Associated Press V IE N N A , A ustria — O n ce the gulf w ar en d s, O P E C will be p re ­ pared to rein in its stro n g oil pro­ duction if dem and falls too m u ch, Ind onesia's oil m inister said T u e s ­ day. " I f a cut in production is n e ed e d , we will do s o , " said G in a n d ja r Kar- tasasm ita, on e of a h alf-d ozen m in ­ isters attend in g informal talks o f the O rganization of Petroleum E xport­ ing Countries. T h e ministers m ade n o decisions at their secretiv e sessio n M o n d ay, G in a n d ja r said. It w as hastily a r­ ranged ab ou t a w eek ago to co n sid ­ er w ays o f avoid ing a price crash on ce hostilities end in th e oil-rich Persian G u lf region. "T h e r e is no a g re em en t y e t ," he told rep orters. "W e are d iscu ssin g ideas and tossing ideas a b o u t." O th e r oil m in isters a tte n d in g the m eeting were from Algeria, Nigeria, G ab on , Libya a n d V enezuela. N o o n e from the im portant Persian G u lf states turned up. T h e ir ab se n ce , e s ­ pecially th at of Saudi Arabia's influ­ ential H isham N azer, e nsured no actions would be taken. Th e 13-nation cartel is scheduled to hold a formal monitoring session on M arch 11, p ossibly in G en eva. At that m eeting, the ministers will likely d ecid e to reim p ose their quota system and en d their produ c­ tion free-for-all, beg u n shortly after Iraq invad ed fellow O P E C m em ber K uw ait on Aug. 2. But a n y m o v e to cut back O P E C production will likely m eet resist­ ance. T h e top V en ezu elan oil execu tiv e said T u e s d a y that his cou n try 's oil to m aintain co n g lo m erate w an ts if cu rren t prod u ction lev els, even that m ean s low er prices. "O u r strateg y is to m aintain cu r­ levels w ithin a rent produ ction scen ario w here prices w ill be m uch m o re m o d e ra te ," A n d res Sosa Pie- tri, p resid en t of P etróleo s de V en e­ zu ela, told a m eeting of V en ezu elan b u sin ess execu tiv es in C aracas. He said low prices wpuld stall plans to develop alternate energy sou rces. V en ezu ela is p u m p in g clo se to 2 .5 m illion barrels o f oil d aily, well a b ov e its O P E C quota of 1.94 mil­ lion b arrels. T h e O P E C q u otas w ere ab a n ­ d oned sh ortly after the crisis b eg a n , w h en a U N .-sp o n so re d em barg o halted sales o f about 4 m illion bar­ re l s a day of Iraqi and K uw aiti cru d e, and oth er p ro d u cin g n ations resp o n d ed by p u m p in g m ore crude to elim in ate the sh ortfall. W ith n o restrictio n s, th e rem ain ­ ing 11 O P E C n atio n s are pu m ping ab ou t 2 3 .6 m illion barrels a day, a n ­ aly sts say. That is well o v er th e ceil­ ing of 22.5 m illion b arrels a dav set in an accord in ju lv . Making contact Associated Press A member of Task Force Ripper of the U.S. First Ma- rine Division tried to communicate with a pair of cap- tured Iraqi soldiers who were being processed inside Kuwait Sunday. Bush demands Saddam’s absolute surrender of Kuwait Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — P resid ent Bush g rim ­ ly vowed to press the war against Iraq "w it h undim inished in te n sity " T u esd av as the P en tagon said Sad d am H u sse in 's s h a t­ tered arm y was " i n full r e tr e a t." Bush said the troops were leaving only in hop es of re grouping to fight again a n o th e r day. is not " S a d d a m in p e a c e ," Bush declared. " H e is trying to save the rem na nts of pow er and control in the M id ­ interested dle East by ev ery m ean s p o s s ib le ," Bush said. " A n d here, too, Sa d d am H u ss e in will fa il." threatened by m o re Pounded by air and grou nd attack s, S ad ­ d a m 's fo rces w ere o n the run in occu p ied Kuwait and than 100,000 U .S . and allied tro op s in so u th ern Iraq. A small band of U .S . and Saudi s p e ­ cial forces probed Kuw ait C ity as an allied to e n te r the force of th o u san d s waited Kuwaiti capital. "T o m o r r o w , w h e n the sun c o m e s up, the questio n in my mind is w h e th e r the e n e m y is going to be there,'.' Lt. G e n . T h o m a s Kel­ ly said at the P en tagon . H e said S a d d a m 's pow erful R epublican G uard had not p er­ form ed an y b etter than oth er units. in b attle "T h e Iraqi arm v in full retreat, al­ is though there is still fig hting go in g o n ," Kel­ ly said. D eclaring th at the allies w ere ad van cin g than e xp ected , B ush proclaim ed , faster "T h e liberation of Kuw ait is clo se at h a n d ." A fter an aftern o o n u p d ate on the war, Bush said , "W e are n ot on ly on sch ed u le, w e're ahead o f sch ed u le. N o co m m a n d er in ch ief has ever b een so proud o f A m erica's m en and w om en in u n ifo rm ." In a radio sp eech , Sad d am said he had ordered his troops to w ithd raw . Bush d is­ m issed that in a terse and un yield ing state­ m ent in the Rose G ard en , say ing , "H e is trying to claim victory in th e m idst of a ro u t." V ice P resid ent D an Q u a v le w as at Bush s side d u ring the W h ite H ou se sta tem en t and later m ade clear that the U n ited States w an ts to ren d er Sad d am p o w erless. "S a d ­ dam and his m ilitary m ach in e are sim plv incom patible with a lasting and ju st peace, Q u av le said in a sp e ech at M cG u ire Air Force Base in N ew Jersey . to see Increasingly, Bush h as ap p eared d eter­ m ined through on his th e w ar unyield ing terms rather than em brace dip­ lom atic solutions su g g e ste d bv M oscow . In fact, his cond ition s h av e been m ade to u g h ­ er in recent da v s, w ith d em a n d s for S a d ­ dam him selt to bow to U .S. term s. The clear goal is to d en v Sad d am a face-savin g w av out of the war. Allied sorties step up pressure Associated Press A U.S. AIR BASE IN C E N T R A L S A U D I ARA BIA — Allied pilots in te n s i f i e d b o m b i n g m i s s i o n s against targets in Iraq and Kuwait on Tu esd ay to maintain pressu re on S ad dam H u ss e in 's retreating army. Senio r Air Force officers said the allies' sw eeping air, land and sea cam paig n succeeded w'here d ip lo­ macy failed bv overw h elm ing the Iraqis and to flee Kuwait. forcing them " I f these guy s are beating feet, we need to put the p re ssu re on them — continu e to m aintain the pressure until the presid ent tells us he's accepted the c o n d i ti o n s ," said Col. Hal H ornburg, c o m ­ m and er of the 4th Tactical Fighter Wing. Hornburg said it w as critical that the Air Force fly " s o m e good sor­ ties" to h a m m er the fleeing Iraqis. As he spoke, a g ro u p of F-15E t h u n d e r e d f i g h t e r - b o m b e r s ?>kywaid from this largest U .S . aii base in Saudi Arabia. I he colonel said the allied offen­ impressive sive w as even more than he had expected. He attribu­ ted the success to the streamlined c o m m a n d P e n t a g o n chain o f ad opted rigorous peacetim e training and the will to learn the lessons of the Vietnam War. the 1980s, in Allied aircraft had o n e of their busiest days M onday, flying 3,000 air sorties, 1,400 in the Kuwait the­ ater, the U.S. Central C o m m a n d said Tuesd ay. Half of the sorties were close aii support missions and a s pokesm an said the tem po w as the sam e on Tu esd ay . "1 think w e'r e past the point of Two U.S. pilots walk in front of an A -10 Thunderbolt tl, a tank-killer’ jet. Associated Press I'm s o r r y ," just letting him get in his tanks and drive them back into Iraq and said Lt. Col. say G e o rg e Patrick, an F-16A tighter- b o m b er pilot from the South C aro ­ lina low country. "1 feel fairlv p u n ­ itive about it." " G e o r g e Bush has the right idea n o w , " said Lt. Col. D u a n e C la w ­ son of Frankfort, N .Y . " Y o u want to negotiate with so m e b o d y , you put your k nee in their chest and your knife at their throat and th en w h en they say 'Y e ah , I'll talk,' you push h a r d e r ." C law so n said he had flown his F-16A on a mission in Iraq to at­ tack Iraqi military co n v o y s trying to retreat from the battle area. H e said he did not drop any bom bs for fear of hitting rapidly a d v a n c­ ing allied forces. From his previous mission over Kuwait, he painted a picture of the battlefield as " a very jagged, c o n ­ v o lu te d " front line m arked bv col­ u m n s of U S., Saudi, Kuwaiti and other Arab forces. for their side. You '1 w o uld n't want to be an Ira­ q i. " he said. "It d o e s n 't look real look goo d d ow n, and e v e ry w h e re you look there's tanks and A P C s (arm ored pe rson n e l carriers) and th e y 're all on the m o ve and th e y 're all our g u v s ." He said two squ ad ron s of F- 15Fs, the U.S. Air F o rce's most s o ­ phisticated w arplanes, have start­ ed th ing dav time m issions as well a s their normal night sorties a s part of an intensified air c a m ­ paign. and from Bad w eather billowing Iraqi sabotag ed oil sm o k e well tiios in Kuwait significantly ham p ered F- lb As from fix ing d ay­ time supp ort m issions tor coalition ground forces striking d ee p into Kuwait and Iraq on I uesdav 1 -16A pilots, w h o need to see then targets for the best results, were frustrated thev had tv' return w ith their bombs and w ithout tir ing, for the first time, a new 30m m c a n n o n strapped to their planes. U.S. raises stakes as Saddam retreats Michael Putzel Associated Press W A S H I N G T O N — S a d d a m H u ss e in 's d oom ed attem pt to keep Kuwait has suddenly b ec o m e a d e s ­ perate struggle to surviv e political d em ise and public humiliation. Flaving routed Iraqi arm y, President Bush n o w w an ts to settle the score with Sad dam himself. the " H e is trving to save the rem ­ nants of p o w e r and control in the Middle East by every m e a n s p o ssi­ the president said of hi^ foe. ble, " A n d here too, S a d d a m Hussein will fail." T h e presid ent insisted that S a d ­ dam him self m ust "p e rs o n a lly and publicly" agree to the peace terms the U nited S ta te s and its allies set on Friday. Bush thu s raised the stak es in the gulf w ar, w ith th e approval of his clo sest w ar allies. "S a d d a m H u ssein w ent into K uw ait on his te rm s ," V ice P resi­ d en t D an Q u av le said T u esd av, "a n d now he is gettin g ou t of Kuw ait on ou r te rm s ." Until M onday the U nited S ta te s and its allies o sten sib ly sou gh t only to im p lem en t the 12 U nited N ations Secu rity C ouncil reso lu tio n s aim ed at forcing Iraq to give up n eig h b o r­ ing Kuw ait, w hich Sad dam s forces annexed l ast \ugust Th e first of those resolu tion s, N o. bbO requ ires th at Iraqi forces w ith­ draw "to in w hich the p o sition s they w ere located on Aug. t, 1990," the dav b efo re the Kuwaiti bord er. thev cro ssed But White H o u se press secretary Marlin F itzw ater m ad e clear M on­ day night th at m ere w ithdraw al would no longer be sufficient. Thev m ust, he said , lav d ow n their arm s and w alk out. to a g re e In line with the U .N resolutions, the L nited S ta te s also d em a n d s that Iraq give up its claim to th e oil-rich e m ir a te , c o m p e n s a te inclu d ing Kuw ait an d o th e r s — even arch-toe Israel — tor d am age done to them , retu rn all prisoners o f war and h o s ta g e s an d help the vic­ torious fo rces find and rem ov e htd- den m nes on land and at sea. Associated Press Rhetoricians exchange volleys while their troops trade bullets W A S H IN G T O N I he w a r ot words that marched side-by-side with the war of w e a p o n s in the Persian Gulf reflected battlefield realities Tuesdav. W ith his armv in disarray, Sad d am H u ssein fo ught with a d el­ uge of rhetoric while P resid ent Bush could afford to be direct. " O h great p e o p le ," Sa d d a m beg an his speech in Iraq. " O h nobles in the forces ot jihad and faith, oh glorious men of the m other of battles, oh truthful zealo us be- lievers in our glorious nation and all Muslims and good people in the world, oh glorious Iraqi w om en. B u sh wasted no su ch s en tim en ts. "I have a brief Sad dam s most statem ent tv' m ake todas " he said. recent speech is an ou trage That ou t of the wav, their juxtaposed words provide a telling c o u n te r p o in t Sa d d am : "T h is s h o w d o w n is clear evidence of what G od m e a n t it to be a lesson that would lead the be lievers to faith, immumtv and capabilits and the u n ­ f a i t h f u l , c r i m i n a s traitors evil a n d d e p r a v e d , to abvss, w eak ness a n d h u m iliatio n." Bush: " H e is trying to claim victory in the midst of a rout. And h e is not voluntarily giving up Kuwait. He is t r y i n g tv' save the rem nants of po w er and control in the Middle bast bv every m e a n s possible. A nd here too, Saddam wall fail.' Iran asserts I .S. has hidden war goals N IC O S IA , C yp ru s — Iranian P resid ent H a s h e m i Raf- sanjani said ruesdav that America and its allies were rejecting a cease-fire in the gulf war b ecau se thev have plans that g o b ev o n d ridding K u w ait of Iraqi troops. R afsanjani said that " i n the stag es w h en peace efforts were about to bear fruit op p ortu nities were m issed o n e after the o t h e r , " according to Iran's official Islamic Re­ public N ew s Agency, m onitored in C y p rus. R afsanjani's co m m e n ts ca m e in a m eeting with for­ mer Prime Minister Rajiv G a n d h i o f India, w h o arrived in T e h ra n o n M onday for talks on the gull war. He said that " e a c h time, the United States and its allies found an excu se for in tensify ing their pressure in order to attain their goals until the situation reached this p o in t." Page 4 Wednesday February 27,1991 T H E D A ILY T EXA N EDITORIALS Viewpoint spmofts e x p r e s s e d m The Daily Texan are those o( the editor and the tenter of the article the Board of R e g e n ts or the T e x a s They S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s B o a rd of O p e ra tin g T ru s te e s O p in io n s e x p r e s s e d in Dissenting Opinions and staff or q u e st c o lu m n s are th o se of th e w rite - i t e not n e c e s s a r y th o se of the U n iv e rsity a d m in istra tio n U nion D ues Yes on Prop Two, no on Prop One R ecent financial pressures have m ad e buildin g a more perfect U nion a difficult task. To m eet m o u n tin g m oney problem s, a pair of Texas Union fee re fe re n d u m s are on the ballot today and Thu rsday. O n lv Proposition T w o , h o w e v e r, best serves the student bodv and should be adopted Proposition Two calls for fee increases (S2 per long session, SI per su m m er s essio n ) " t o fund stud ent activitv and educational pro g ram ­ m in g ." P rogram m in g receives ab ou t 1 percent of stud ents' Union fees. With the nominial fee increase, the program m ing com m ittee could pro­ vide benefits w hich w ould significantly e n h a n ce UT life. rh e com m ittee could bring more forums, concerts and lectures to cam pus. I he Union could expand multicultural program m ing and lead­ ership d ev elop m en t, as well ah better support the task forces on en v iro n ­ m entalism and diversity Part o f the e x p a n d e d fee would create a $ 7 0 ,(XX) ca m p u s co-sp onsor­ ship fund. From college councils to sports clubs, e v e n student organiza­ tion would be eligible to receive the Union m o n ey . Proposition T w o is unique: it's a tax that's worth it. Onlv students control the funds, and stu d e n ts benefit directly by them. Proposition O n e , though, is flawed. It would authorize tire University Budget office to automatically' increase all Union fees (and abdicate s t u ­ dent approval) "in order to cover future salary and or benefit increases mandated b\ the State of Texas Legislatu re for Union e m p lo y e e s ." Unlike the Universitv, the Union is not a true public institution; it receives no m o n ey from the school or the state. Th e U n io n 's onlv reve n u e s ou rces are stud ent fees and retail sales (such a-- d ining services and reservations). But the Union must pay i t s 468 w orkers in m uch the sam e way the state does. The fees stud ents pay for the Union accou nt for approximately 10 percent of its incom e. Proposition O n e , how ever, forces stud ents to bear the entire a m o u n t needed to m eet e m p lo y e e salary and benefit hikes. Proposition O n e , by anv other n am e, would be exploitation. All wage increases, no matter how large, would be paid com pletely by students and without their input. Th e proposal's inequitable burden sharing is a misguided attem pt to m eet m and ated salare increases. The Union Board of Directors should consider requiring the other Union revenue sources (w hich a ccou n t for most of its income anyw ay) to a n er their share of the need ed salary increases. In addition, the Board should investigate possible fu nd ing through the University. A s Proposi­ tion O n e reads now , stu d ents pay for all the U n io n 's raises and benefits, and that sim ply isn't tair. Stu d e n ts can vote on the refe re n d u m s, as well as all the candidates, today and to m orrow from 9:15 a .m . to 4:15 p.m . Polling locations are listed in The Texan, or stu d e n ts can call the S tu d e n ts' Association at 471- 3 Inn. — A dam I lerslt HERE5 THE KREMLINS PEACE PLAN FOR KUWAIT.M l WESENP IN SOVIET TROOPS,a STORM THE TV STATIONS, SHOOT CITIZENS»»» PRIVE OVER PROTESTERS ...OH, SORRY, WITH OUR TANKS that£ m y > BALTIC PEACE PLAN» Support students with Union votes I n the immortal w ords of Km Michael Tooker GUEST COLUMNIST m eans more money for multicul­ tural p ro g ram m ing and leadership developm ent. " W h e n a Hubbard: fellow savs, 'It ain't the m o n e y but the principle of the thing,' it's the money St) here w e as s tu d e n ts stand, faced with yet a n o th er Union re­ ferendum. In 1989 the cry was " S a v e the U n io n ," in fall 1990 the cry was " S a v e Union D in in g ," and n o w the crv is " a vo te 'v es' is a vote for e m p o w e r m e n t . " W h y d on't they |ust cry " Y e s , it's the m o n e y !"? After all, isn't that all " t h e v " w a n t ... ou r m o n e y ? T h e a n s w e r is NO ! W h a t " t h e y " w ant is our support. First off, let's d efine w h o " t h e y " are. T h e Texas Union Board of Di­ rectors is a stud ent m ajority bodv com prising 11 stu d ents and six faculty staff. With all the recent stud ent fee increases it's easy to understand why there is fear of an administrativ e cou p to ov erthrow our pocketbooks. It ju st so h a p ­ pens how ever, that this d oes not qualify as such. In fact, the tw o Union propositio ns are ju st the opposite; they are op portu nities to supp ort stud ent g o v e r n a n ce and e m p o w erm e n t. W h y is t h a t7 Here are tw o reasons. is ■ S tu d e n t em p loy e es: Currently’ the Union has no control ov er its e m p lo y e e wage and benefit stru c­ ture. W hile oth er stu d ent sen dees such as Rec Sp o rts and the S tu ­ dent Health C e n te r can increase stud ent fees to supp ort legislative­ ly mandated w ag e and benefit in­ creases, the U nion canno t. W hat that m eans the Union must s o m e h o w co v er increasing w a g e s even tho ug h th e y 're out of its c o n ­ trol. As a result, services provided to stu d ents are in d a nger of being cut back in o rder to meet what am o u n ts to basic cost o f living a d ­ ju stm ents. As stu d ents b enefiting from U nion services, w e need to supp ort the e m p lo y e e s w h o m ake services possible. M a n y these such e m p lo y e es are s tu d e n ts. In fact, of the nearly 450 e m p lo y e es of the Union, 300 are stud ents. So if you value the op portu nity for your fellow stu d ents to be e m ­ ployed a n d com p en sa ted fairly for their hard work, a vote for in d e x ­ ing is p roof o f vour support. ■ P rogram m ing: Currently the Union sp end s SI 11,000 on stud ent p rogram m ing or only $1 per s tu ­ dent per year. H ow d oes that com pare to o th e r schools? A & M s pends $50 0,00 0 per year. T h a t's em barrassing! Far be it for me how ever, to use the b a n d w ag on te ch n iq u e that " E v ery oth er school s p e n d s m ore m oney on pro gra m m in g so we should to o ," but the discrepancy here is laughable. a d v o c a t in g in So why' will vou benefit from an increase in p ro g ram m ing fu nd s? How fu nny vou should ask. By voting " y e s " for U nion p ro g ra m ­ ming, the Program Council will create a $ 7 0,0 00 ca m p u s co-sp on- sorship to support more overall s tu d e n t p ro g ram m ing on cam pu s. This m e a n s y our $2 not only benetits the Union but other s tu d e n t a ro u n d o r g a n iz a ti o n s cam pu s as well. fund In addition, " v e s " for pro g ra m ­ ming will m ean m ore mone\' for major speakers, e n te rtain m e n t, in­ ternational forum s and concerts that are not offered to s tu d e n ts on this c a m p u s b ecau se of lack of funding. M any o f these p ro g ram s will be free! " Y e s " for pro g ram m in g also T h e point is this: " Y e s " tor pro­ g ram m ing a m o u n ts to n o t only more program s for you to attend but also m o re p o w e r for th o se stu­ dents who plan th e m . Program s at the Texas U n ion are d ev eloped by- students, for s tu d e n ts. This addi­ tional m onev will be controlled and allocated bv stud ents. As a re­ sult, more control will be put into the hand s of stud ents. So what h a p p e n s if w e d on't vote ves? "d i s e m - In a w ord, p o w e r m e n t." To m eet increasing costs the U n ion m a y be forced to cut services, cut jo bs, cut building hours and cut p ro g ram s. T h e end result is the c o n tin u ed erosion of s tud ent control. S o m e think by N O T supporting these p ropositions thev are p u n ­ ishing the a d m inistration. 1 low ev- er, in reality thev are onlv p u n is h ­ ing students. Vote " v e s " on both of the Texas Union pro positio ns. Tooker is a m arketing senior. Cory Birenbaum Last year at (his time every freak on c a m p u s crawled out from under his rock to cast his ballot tor student-radical Toni L u c k e t t . Ton i prom ised to build a coalition that would represent the diverse interests of all students. Instead she used the SA presid ency to bankroll her Political­ ly C orrect friends. Th e S A d evolved into warrin g factions that left it paralyzed and ignored bv the ad m inistratio n. Toni was not alone. Toni's cronies this year's terrible tw osom e of Eric Dixon and Mona Kiblaw i. Together they m ism anaged the SA and humiliated the University in The N ew York l unes, N ew sw eek and Time. T he single most im portant q u e stio n of this election is: W ho will u n do the d a m ag e and restore the students' faith in the S A 7 1 pro­ pose the following reform s to build trust with the stud ent body: included ■ D e-fu nd all political g ro ups. T h o m as Jefferson said that " t h e ultimate tyranny is to com pel s o m e o n e to fund a caus< he dis­ a g r e e s w i t h ." Today the SA is the personal bank a ccou nt of separatists (Black Student Alliance) and sexual d eviants (Gav and Lesbian S tu d e n ts Association). Both a g e n ­ das are sickening to the vast majority of students t)t the University. 1 would give no money to a ny g roup that uses the funds for overtly political purposes, w h e th e r it is C I S P E S o r VC T. ■ Sto p all "spirit of the b o d y " resolu­ tions. N ob od y is elected to the SA because of his k now led ge of foreign affairs. So why should the SA take it upon th e m ­ selves to d en o u n ce A m erican policy in El Salvador or the Persian Gulf? W h o cares w hat the SA thinks about non -c a m p u s is­ sues? Let us focus on c am p u s issues that w e can actually affect. ■ Increase fu nd ing for cultural groups. G roups such as drama and d eb ate tradi­ tionally are shortchang ed in fu n d in g and this is w rong. T h e s e groups c o m p e te and increase the prestige of the University. ■ C ontract out all medical services on ca m p u s to nearby hospitals. I think w e all have horror stories about witch d octors at our health center. W e deserve better. We deserve quality health care. ■ Make all of c a m p u s accessible to the that a inexcusable handicapped. "w o rld c la s s " institu ation should not be opeiv to all s tu d e n ts with the desire and ability to be here. is It ■ Block m and a to ry multiculturalism. All recent attem pts at "d iv e r s ity " have in­ stead been thinly veiled peddling of white guilt. Real multiculturalism should not teach that w h ites are "ic e p e o p l e , " that heterosexuals are " b r e e d e r s ," and that capitalism is " s l a v e r y ." T his is indoctrination, pure and sim ple. Let the pushers of diversity use the po w er of moral suasion to convince p e ople to study other cultures, not the threat o f not graduating. And the multicultural let classes be created as the d em a n d exists. ■ Teach W e stern culture. W e ca n n o t u n ­ derstand oth er cultures until we fullv u n ­ derstand our ow n. Curriculum reform should reflect this truth. Every graduating senior should k now that H om er was a poet befo re he was a S im pson. ■ Block raising tuition to pay for eith er a new stud ent services building, or state m andated wage increases for w orkers in the Texas Union building. T h e new stu ­ dent services buildin g is a w hite elephant. By the time it is built, m any of its services will be available by phone. It would cost the average stu d ent $150 over his college career. I also reject increasing tuition to pay the U nion building w orkers. Instead 1 suggest we break the g o v ern m e n t workers union and hire scabs w h o will work for l ess. 1 will represent the stu d e n ts, not the labor unio n. ■ Preserve the statue of Jefferson Davis. He is part o f Texas' s o u th e rn heritage an d I have n ever been a s h am e d of T exas' unique history. H e represents the brave men of Texas w h o died to protect the d oct­ rine of " s ta t e s rig h ts" and to d efend the Sou thland . Besides, Davis looks at peace behind the statu e of that o th er sla v e o w n ­ er, George W ash in g to n . You ca n n o t erase racism by erasing history. ■ Block attem pts to hire minority faculty from second -rate colleges and universities. The Dixon/Kiblawi plan to fulfill their q u o ­ tas by hiring m inorities from Eastern N ow here State is foolish. B eca u se so few minority faculty are available n ationw id e for m a n y faculty positions, a halt-de­ cent minority professor would already be at an Ivy Leagu e school. W e m ust c o n c e n ­ trate on hiring great professors, regardless of race, from the best universities of A m e r­ ica. And these new faculty m e m b ers must teach to the un d e rg rad u ates, no matter how their research mav be. This, not quotas, will e n s u re class avail­ ability. important As vice president I would pu sh hard for this agenda. 1 con sid er it the very best way to earn the su p p ort of the s tu d e n t body, and the a ttention of the Adm inistration. As vice chairm an of the Y o u n g C o n s e r v a ­ tives of Texas, and p resid ent o f Texas Po­ litical U nion (a non -p artisa n g roup that d e ­ to bates students), 1 have the organizational e x p e ­ rience to bring the S A in line. If elected 1 will drop ou t of all political organizations to signify that I want to represent all s tu ­ dents, not just conserv ativ es. I will also issues of political im portance reject the $ 4 ,00 0 a year stipen d that the vice president to. Stu d e n ts is entitled should not be bribed into serving their fel­ low student. I w e lcom e any advice from stud ents on issues 1 have not included on mv agenda. This is, after all, your SA. M ichael H opkins As usual I find my o w n view s and those of The D aily Texan in conflict, as I am sure d o m o s t p e o p l e . H ow e ve r, as kind as The Texan it has provided m e with in order this s p a ce that 1 m ay respond to the e n d o rs e m e n ts it has m a d e , an d c o n s e ­ quently, 1 will d o so. is, My s ta te m e n t is sim ple: S tu d e n ts d on't allow us to screw ou rselves again this year! W e have seen w hat an ineffective and politically motivated S A presid ent can do (basically not much). During the past year Ton i Luckett has reigned havoc on the stu d e n ts as she has tried to push her politically extrem e ag end a w h ile ignoring many true s tu d e n t concerns. S h e has used her position an d influence in o rd e r to cre­ ate a p reaching pulpit from w hich she can e sp o u se her o w n private beliefs. the innovative lea d ership style Last year The Texan w h ole h e arte d ly e n ­ dorsed Toni for the presid ency, say ing she had it would take to unite this c a m p u s an d move this university into a new era. 1 would say The Texan w as alm ost correct in saving this but a different word choice would have been better. In retrospect may 1 say that it would have been better for The Texan to say " s h e had the innovative leadership style it would take to splin ter this c a m p u s into h u n d red s of factions and thu s allow the Universitv to realize it had made an error in electing her. S o m e of my readers m ay n o w be saying, well, we already k now this, but how does all this relate to our p re s e n t election? S im ­ ply a n s w e re d , becau se The Texan has done it again. T he Texan has again e n d o rs e d political SA insiders, sayin g that th ey are true lead­ ers. Well, w e say hell, if th ey are such great S A lead ers w h ere w e re they last year w h e n Toni w ent on her ra m p ag e? Perhaps thev w ere out g etting d o u g h n u ts . We m e an no attack on Eric D ixon or Julie Bray, but w e feel they can n o t w a s h their ha nd s of all the p roblem s o f the past year. After all, D ixon w as the e xecu tiv e director of the SA; sh o u ld n 't he hav e b ee n able to steer Toni clear of som e of the p ro b lem s she cre­ ated for herself? He shou ld also h a v e been able to help keep the S A a united group, battling instead of th em selv es. T hev may b e leaders, but we d on't think they are the o n e s that can re­ unite the SA and start d ea ling with stu­ dent issu es again. the a d m inistratio n In recent days w e h a v e s p o k e n to many stud ent organizations and p e rh a p s come off a little fiery. This is d u e to a sim ple fact: W e are not g oing to lie to vou, the stu­ den ts, and p u m p you full o f bullshit about how great things are in o u r stu d ent gov­ e rn m e n t. Simply put, there are many problem s. T h e other c an d id a te s have c h o ­ sen to m a ke flowery s p e e c h e s , laced with tidbits of the success they claim to have accom plished. Certainly w e could make that speech also, but w e c h o s e not to. In­ stead w e'v e ad dressed w h e r e th e prob­ lems are, what we plan to d o ab ou t them, and w h ere we want the S A to g o in the future. We certainly a re n 't perfect bv any m e a n s , but we d o feel it is a bout time s o m e o n e gets in there w h o really cares ab ou t things such as class availability, G reek relations and m ulticulturalism . W here was 'T exan '? 1 am writing to express my c o n ­ cern about you r lack of p e rfo rm ­ ance, specifically on M o nd ay , Feb. lb. Your coverage of UT activities l i a s been less than ad eq u a te in the past, but this time you m issed the story entirely. 1 am talking about tin* " G r e a t Drag C ’le a n - U p ." I know for a fact that you were notified in several w ays by group officials of the press c o n feren c e and the event. T here should be no excuse that you were not aware. I tend to believe that v our a b se n ce is due to your warped s e n se of priorities. The ev e n t involved the m ay o r's office, K eep Austin Beautiful and the UT adm inistration. T h e goal is to clean the Drag (w hich hap p e n s to be the m o st highly visible bor­ der o f our cam p u s ) of the illegally posted fliers and notices. T h e School of Architecture ran a design contest to provide alternate places to put these bulletins in the form of kiosks. T he first clean-up was on Satu rd ay, Feb. 15. Nearly 200 stud ents (five different types of stud ent g ro u p s and unaffiliated the m ayor stud ent volunteers), and his wife, representativ es from Keep Austin Beautiful, the A ustin A m erican -S tatesm an and C h a n n el 36 were there — w h ere w ere y o u 7 You have failed to report a m a ­ this jor positive action that directly a f­ fe cts c a m p u s . M i n o r ity g ro ups need their publicity as well as scandals; but, in cov ering these stories, you must no t tail to in­ clude other significant stories. As the student paper of a major univ ersity you have the responsi­ bility o f giving s tu d e n t involve­ m ent o n the ca m p u s full attention, w h e th e r or not it is controversial or " b a d . " You have failed with Clean-U p the Drag and I am em barrassed to say you are a part of the UT sy s­ tem. H ow ever, you d o have a ch a n c e to salvage this particular storv There will be more w eekend clean-ups th roughout the s e m e s ­ ter. You will be notified of them again, and all you have to do is be there this time. l\e¡on M. ( agü ere M em ber, Phi Beta Chi Professional W omen's Business f raternity D iversity key issue T h e T exas U n ion Chicana/o C u l­ ture C o m m itte e strongly feels that the platform of SA presidential can d id a te Eric Dixon and vice- presidential candid ate Mona Ki- blawi coincides with our goals and values for a more div erse universi­ ty. In particular, w e strongly s u p ­ port their goals on diversity. As of the fall 1990 sem e s te r there are a total of 2,33 9 professors, with only 77 of th em b ein g H ispanic p ro fes­ sors. (The O ffice of Institutional Studies, w hich provided the in for­ mation, d oes not break d ow n the ethnicity to C h ica n a or C h ica n o professors, only into H ispanic professors.) Their c o m m it m e n t to the d iver­ sification o f the faculty by looking into traditionally black and Latino colleges and smaller liberal arts colleges is an exem plary way to begin the University. the diversification of W e also com pletely supp ort their sta nce on th e diversification of the stud ent body. Since the s tu ­ dent hotly is definitely not repre­ sentative of the s ta te 's population, we strongly d efend their proposal for the Univ ersity to focus on re­ tention as o p p o s e d to re cruitm ent to com bat the a c a d e m ic ad ju st­ m ent and that cause these s tu d e n ts to leave the University. financial b urd en Finally, w e c o m p le te ly agree with their view s o n curriculum is­ sues, which inclu des su p p ort for the p roposed E3Ü6 syllabus and the inclusion of m o re C hicana/o courses. Raul C oronado Texas Union C hicana/o C ulture C om m ittee I THF. D A IL Y T e x a n Wednesday, February 27, 1991 Page 5 ÜQD(á©K)G PODfe SUSAN HAYS FOR AT LARGE, PLACE 2 TSPBOARD ine other avenues of savings for TSP. namely the identification and elimination at wasteful spending. TIM WALKER FOR AT LARGE, PLACE 2 TSP BOARD MIMI McKAY FOR COLLEGE OF COMMUNICATION PLACE 3 TSP BOARD tions. I have worked the past year on the Cactus staff in the stuident leadership group. My time there has already familiar­ ized me with several of the more import­ ant issues the TSP Board will have to deal with next year. In general I have ex­ perience addressing board members and working on committees with several or­ ganizations, among them the Texas Un­ ion Management Committee. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY: As a TSP board member — responsible for the largest student publications organ­ ization in the United States — I will be committeed to understanding every issue that we discuss This commitment in­ volves a willingness to work extra hours to research issues, to be active in com­ mittees, and to poll student opinion on controversial questions. Thus I will try to be a sound link between the student pop­ ulation and the Texas Student Publica­ tions. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: With money growing tighter each day, my main goal will be to find the best solution to the budget crunch while still guarding the artistic rights of the editor and workers of The Daily Texan, the Cactus, the Pere- gnnus, Utmost, and KTSB. As student publications, these organizations deserve the freedom and autonomy they need to produce first-class publications. K. SCOTT LEWIS FOR AT LARGE, PLACE 3 TSP BOARD K. SCOTT LEWIS EDUCATION AND SKILLS: Graduated from Longview High School in 1988. Attended Kilgore Jr. College for 2 years. Member of the Business Club and named as runner-up in Who's Who in Ac­ counting. Transferred into Texas in the fall of 1990. EXPERIENCE: Business manager of high school year­ book and newspaper during junior and senior year. The newspaper had a month­ ly circulation of 2100 and newspaper and yearbook had a combined budget of more than 50,000 dollars. President of Quill and Scroll, runner up in UIL accounting, and received an award of excellence in communication. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY: I feel that the University is a place for peo­ ple to broaden their goals and philoso­ phies of life and culture. It’s a place where a person can be independent and be themselves, but at the same time gam new insight on other cultures and life­ styles by working with and interacting with other students and organizations. I do feel however that the university itself should play only a minor role in this broadening of insight. When multicultural- ism is forced into the classroom a sense of rebellion and dictatorship occurs. Stu­ dents should be allowed to get as much or as little multiculturalism out of the Uni­ versity as they desire. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: My goals and objectives are to carry on the tradition and continued success of Texas Publications while allowing for and looking for new ideas and opportunities for its continued improvement. JOHN MOSTYN FOR AT LARGE, PLACE 3 TSP BOARD EDUCATION AND SKILLS: Sophomore at University of Texas. Major: Psychology & History. Minor Sociology. I am a very active person and have a good understanding of people and I have the ability to get my viewpoint across, as well as others viewpoints across EXPERIENCE: I now serve on the Intramural Council. This council makes rules and settles JOHN MOSTYN disputes after they have been ruled on by the supervisor. I have also been assistant editor for a local paper in my hometown, Tyler. I have also worked for a radio sta­ tion selling airtime for advertisements. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY: To attempt to do my best at whatever that task may be. In order to improve myself and the environment I live in. I believe that to improve your own environment is to improve yourself because we are all affected by our environment. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: I plan to receive my degree in 1993.1 then plan to attend Law School, hopefully at the University of Texas. I would like to try to open the student publications to a larg­ er group of students. It seems to me that the extreme groups dominate student publications such as The Daily Texan. I hear everyday that students do not think it is even worth reading. I believe that by expanding the student publication to a more general student population it will in­ crease the number of readers, which in turn would increase the number of ad­ vertisers. LEA GAREY COMMUNICATION PLACE 1 TSP BOARD MIMI McKAY EDUCATION AND SKILLS: Graduate student in journalism and library science since Spring 1989. Coursework in media and society, media ethics and minority journalism. Thesis in progress on censorship and the alternative press. B.A. from U.C. Berkeley in Political Theory EXPERIENCE: Free-lance reporter and researcher for the Austin Chronicle. Advertising and pro­ motion assistant at KLRU-TV. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY: To keep the character and policies of the publications administered by the TSP Board fully responsive to the student body which they serve and free from cen­ sorship. To vigorously oppose all board members that wish to impose censorship or work against the interests of the stu­ dent body. To work to make the editors of The Daily Texan, Cactus. Peregrinos, Ut­ most and the station manager of KTSB freely elected positions and full voting members on the TSP Board. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES. With relevance to this position, as stated above. LEA GAREY EDUCATION AND SKILLS: I’m a junior with a 3.65 average in Radio Television & Film. EXPERIENCE: I have worked extensively with Texas Student Television in every position from flunkie to publicity director to assistant station manager. My involvement with TSTV has given me vast experience in student assembly matters as well as TSP procedures. I have also made it a point to keep in touch with pressing issues in the other media groups on campus. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY: Everyone should be involved in University policy making. Instead of trusting second or third hand information on student re­ I want to find out for ferendums, etc myself what's happening and influence the outcome This is my reason for run­ ning for the TSP Board I want to have an impact here I chose TSP because I be­ lieve it is intended to protect the rights of students. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES My goal as a TSP Board member is to provide real student input. The board has its work cut out for it with the Texan budg­ et and the incorporation of broadcasting. I plan to speak to as many students as possible to get their views heard on perti­ nent board controversies LESLEY RAMSEY FOR COLLEGE OF COMMUNICATION PLACE 3 TSP BOARD LESLEY RAMSEY EDUCATION AND SKILLS: I am enrolled in the senior fellows pro­ gram in the College of Communication. I am a photojournalism senior with an over­ all GPA 3.8. EXPERIENCE: Make-up editor at The Daily Texan. I did an internship at Walpole Productions, a publishing company of international trade magazines where I worked as assistant to the president publisher. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY: I believe that we in the mass communica­ tions industry owe a tremendous respon­ sibility to the public in that our editing de­ cisions - both of words and images - determine people s agendas of world and local concerns and influence the way in which the world views itself GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: As a board member of Texas Student Publications, I would support KTSB in securing an FCC license, promote fiscal responsibility and student accessibility, and place continued emphasis on main­ taining the high standards of quality that make our publications among the best in the nation. WOTTS ©©TO©©» □ H EDUCATION AND SKILLS: Humanities program, UT College of Liber­ al Arts: Harvard University intensive lan­ guage (summer 1985): Southwestern University (1986-1987). EXPERIENCE: Utmost magazine, editor ('90-'91), con­ tributing editor (’89-'90). assistant editor (’88-'89). KTSB - volunteer DJ, alternative country show. Texas Student Lobby, co­ director ('89-'90). Election Supervisory ¡ Board, Spring 1990. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY: TSP should be more than a self-perpetu­ ating bureaucracy. Students worked to build entities such as TSP, the Union, and the Co-op only to see them cease to serve students. It s time to turn that j around. TSP exists to serve The Daily Texan, Utmost, Cactus, Peregrinos, KTSB & TSTV, and the board must look toward its multimedia future. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: TSP's structure hinders its operations. The board is so far removed from the publications stations’ day-to-day opera­ tion intelligent decision making is hard to come by. Problems are recurring — in­ stead of being solved — with editor sta­ tion manager selection, Texan editor election, and finances, to name a few. The TSP board needs an overhaul in structure and attitude. I have the experi­ ence and out look to get TSP on the right track. GEOFF HENLEY FOR AT LARGE, PLACE 2 TSP BOARD TIM WALKER EDUCATION AND SKILLS: I have received training in many aspects of mass-media communications, as well as in leadership and organizational skill areas. For years I have headed projects, worked alone and on committees in lead­ ership positions, and served in roles bridging the gap between administrations. My skills include writing and public speak­ ing, and I am working to gain expertise in these and other communication-skills areas. EXPERIENCE: Professional newspaper intern — Midland Reporter-Telegram. 2 years Editor-in- Chief — high school newspaper. Exten­ sive experience in all phases of scholastic journalism, from advertising to typesetting to editorial decision making. Writing, edit­ ing, & layout experience in school year­ books. Experience in writing & producing for radio & video productions. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY: It is my belief that change is a vital aspect of growth in any organization. Change is necessary, because some of the best ide­ as are brand new. At the same time, how­ ever, the process of change should be a careful, well-tempered one. Without solid, responsible leadership and dedication, executing bright ideas becomes a misera­ ble, ineffective process. I try always to keep my mind open, receptive to good ideas no matter where they come from, while remembering my responsibilities. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: I take great pride in this University, and I think the TSP Board should work to keep the publications of UT on the cutting edge of all college publications and produc­ tions. The newspaper, yearbooks, and ra­ dio and television stations are reflections of U.T., and it is my goal to keep them shining as beacons for the greatness of this institution, responding to change and continuing to excel. DAVID DJANG FOR AT LARGE, PLACE 3 TSP BOARD GEOFF HENLEY EDUCATION AND SKILL: I am a government senior who has received numerous academic and lead- erhsip honors, including Who’s Who Among College Students in America. My technical skills include mastery of all of the state-of-the-art IBM and Macintosh word processor publication software, in­ cluding IBM's Word for Windows and Ma­ cintosh Cricket Graph. EXPERIENCE: In auditing budgets and inventories, I have some three years of experience as an inventory supervisor for a major retail firm. In writing for publications, I have three semesters of experience with col­ umns in The Daily Texan, Naval Orange and the Phi Alpha Delta Pre-Law newsletter. My leadership skills are well established by the successes of an or­ ganization I founded to preserve the in­ tegrity of academia. PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY: I believe as a trustee that it will be my duty to ensure that TSP remains solvent, and independent from outside pressures like the administration. Because TSP must be solvent, I will be a vigilant auditor and creative source of revenue for Texas Publications. Advertising monies will be my focus, and not new student fees. GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: My first objective is to preserve the integ­ rity of TSP by keeping it independent of external pressure. A second goal will be to initiate new criteria for training report­ ers so as to guarantee improved student story writing. A final goal will be to exam- DAVID DJANG EDUCATION AND SKILLS: Because I am seeking a liberal arts de­ gree, the largest college on campus, I feel I am developing the skill of critical thinking to represent the student population well. To the best of my ability, I will ensure that each organization in TSP has the fiscal power and fair rules to create top-notch productions. EXPERIENCE: With insight to the Texas Student Publica­ Clarification The deputy director of the C enter for Fast Kinetics Research w rote us to point out that the chemical war­ fare research m entioned in Thurs­ day's guest colum n ("T h e colors of war are red, w hite, blue and burnt orange") was not done at the cen­ ter. The person working on this project holds a joint appointm ent, and the work in question falls out­ side the center. The Texan regrets any m isunderstanding. Series in the w rong It is interesting to note that Derek Robert's project in his three-part Daily Texan series ("T h e left is in the right") has been to "exp o se the flawed politics of people with whom [he has] closely b o n d ed ," a topic Mr. Robert finds im portant and topical "becau se of the value [he places] on struggles against rac­ ism, sexism and class exploitation." It's good to know that at least his heart is in the right place. U nfor­ tunately, Mr. Robert's analyses have proven to be sadly misguided and alarm ingly unfelidtous, given the warm fuzziness he purports to hold for the targets of his polemic, as a "critic in good faith," if you will. Mr. Robert must be seriously tak­ en to task for at least two reasons. First, nobody since the '50s, save perhaps coffee-shop-Che-W anna- bees (and then only in jest, or as a bizarre fashion statem ent), has held vulgar, essentialist positions he has so wittily lam pooned. Stalinists are an easy target for any hack who has thum bed through a copy of their "F irst Foucault R ead er." However, the enorm ous prolifer­ ation of m ovem ents which have .been (often problematically) sub­ sumed under the category "leftist" over the past 30 years cannot be brushed aside, or even in any way adequately criticized, via a sopho- cri­ moric, tiq u e , h a stily from Foucault's Archaeology o f Knowledge. (And what about "cred it where credit is d u e ," Mr. Robert?) reductionist-ideology scrib b le d Secondly, and most unfortunate­ ly, Mr. Robert's series finale ("L eft­ ist com plaints belie com placency") betrays his ow n deeply problematic, in d e e d c o n s e r v a t iv e p o s itio n , through his dism issive and strange­ ly bitter rhetoric. Robert perpetuates the patriar­ chal, aggressive and confrontational rules of the discourse game, sup­ posedly all in the nam e of em brac­ ing non-confrontational coalition building within "th e le ft." The politics of the (well-inten­ tioned, but fundam entally m isguid­ ed) people Mr. Robert is attempting to educate are "flaw ed " because they persist in pursuing "w orthless identity taxonom ies" and "p ath eti­ cally interests]" and engage in "h op eless attem pts at politics." [personal limited Robert underlines this last senti­ ment with the snappy syllogism "You are, therefore, h o p eless." As a parting shot, he w arns those who would take issue with his dism an­ tling of the "R ep ression H ypothe­ sis" to just "G e t over it!" suggestion Perhaps Mr. Robert should follow jean Baudrillard's to "Forget Fou cau lt," and begin to ed­ ucate himself regarding the real substance of current issues and de­ bates within (that distressingly over-extended category) "th e le ft." His critique is about as effective and timely as polemicizing against "th e right" for urging the populace to "kill a com m ie for C h rist." Pierre Lamarche Graduate student in philosophy Agency is non-profit This letter is in response to the editorial by guest colum nist M ichele Arocha ("18th Anniversary Roe vs. W ad e," The Daily Texan, January 22). In her article, Arocha presents outright falsehoods as if they were fact, a com m on practice of the anti­ choice movem ent. Her accusations of profit-making by Planned Parenthood are a prime example. Planned Parenthood is a non-profit agency which serves the com m unity w ith high quality family planning. Fund-raising and grant writing are required to m eet the cost of providing services. Profiteering is neither a goal nor reality of this so- cial-service agency. and Rather than criticizing Planned lies Parenthood about the agency, Ms. Arocha should be advocating for Planned Parenthood. spreading The work of this agency, provid­ ing family planning services and sexuality education to our com m u­ nity prevents the need for abortion. Arocha and her colleagues should spend their time, energy and re­ sources supporting Planned Parent­ hood and other such agencies w hose work helps prevent unin­ tended pregnancies. But Arocha, like others in the anti-choice m ovem ent not only aim to prohibit w om en's access to safe and they legal abortion services, also work against the provision of contraceptive and educational ser­ vices. This contradiction can only prompt the thinking public to ques­ tion the true motivation of Arocha and her friends. Ellen G. Sanchez Director o f education Planned Parenthood o f Austin T h e Da il y T e x a n Page 6 Wednesday. February 27,1991 UNIVERSITY UT: Keynote speakers list exempt from disclosure David Loy Daily T e x a n Staff I he University has refused to disclose the list of candidates being considered for key note speaker at spring graduation and is asking the state attorney general's office for an opinion. A letter dated Feb. 7 from Mel Hazle- vvood, U T Sv^tem attorney, asks the attor­ ney general for an opinion as to whether the material — requested by The Daily Texan under the Texas Open Records Act — meets either of two exemptions provided by the act. Ha/lewood states in the letter that tli$ University should not have to disclose the information because it is protected under a section that "protects advice, opinion and recommendation used in an agency's deci­ sion-making process." He adds that the purpose of the exemp­ tion is to encourage "frank and open ac­ tions and discussions within the agenc\ in its deliberative processes." A spokeswoman for the attorney gener­ al's office said Tuesday that the agency UT System attorney Mel Hazle- wood says the release of in­ formation on the speakers would violate the privacy of those who are under consid­ eration. could take up to six months to examine the University's request. She added that the status of the request could not be disclosed. Hazlewood said Tuesday that the Uni­ versity believes disclosure of the com­ mencement information would be unfair to event organizers and to speakers who are currently being considered. In the letter, Hazlewood states that the second case for exemption falls under the act's p"ov ision that information made confi­ dential bv common law privacy rights is not required to be disclosed. I le argues that the requested information consists of private facts and the University does not have to disclose them under this provision. In addition, he states that the release of the information on the speakers would violate the privacy of those people who are under consideration. Hazlewood says that this is another right protected under the second provision. "W hite we can find no case that has ap­ plied the zones of privacy precisely this in­ stance, we nonetheless believe that there is an individual interest and independence in making decisions as to whether to appear in public," the letter states. "Further, we contend that there is an individual interest in avoiding disclosure of one's decisions in instances such as t h i s . " Civil rights proponents fear rollback of advances Je n n y W alker D a ily T e x a n S ta ff Proponents of civil rights and af­ firmative action are witnessing a the "reversal of gains won 1960s," according to a panel of civil rights leaders who will be featured on a local public affairs program Thursday evening. in I he panel discussion, which was filmed Tuesday afternoon at the University in the KLRU-TV studios, was led by Barbara Jordan, a former U .S. representative congresswoman who placed a major role in the Watergate hearings. Jordan, also a professor at the LB] School of Public Affairs, was joined on the panel by Ed Sherman, a pro­ fessor at the UT School of Law; Guadalupe Luna, a staff attorney for the Mexican American Legal De­ fense and Educational Fund; and Jim Harrington, legal director for the Texas Civil Rights Project. In the 1960s with Johnson's suc­ cession of Kennedy, we [African- Americans] felt we had champions in the highest levels of govern­ ment," said Jordan. "In 1964, with the passage of the Civil Rights Act ... we thought, 'W e have arrived.' Then something happened." That "something" w*as the com­ ing of the Reagan and Bush ad­ ministrations and what civil rights activists have tagged the "anti-civil r ig h t s era," Jordan said. "The 1980s w a s a disaster period for civil rights," Jordan said. "Some have called it the decade of greed, others the decade of intolerance." She added that the 1990s have thus Forum speakers address gulf war SA candidates plug platforms during last day of campaigning Rebecca Stew art Daily Texan Staff Speakers representing several progressive student organizations addressed racism, U.S. involvement in the Persian Gulf and Middle East­ ern perspectives towards the war during a Tuesday evening forum. Eric Dixon, former chair of the Afro-American Culture Committee, Mona Kiblawi of the General Union of Palestinian Students, Louis Men­ doza of Todos Unidos and Monem Salam of the Pakistani Student As­ sociation spoke at the "Oppressed Voices Speak on W a r" forum. the With the start of the Students' As­ sociation elections less than a day away, four speakers also plugged their candidacies for SA positions. About 20 people attended the event sponsored by the Inter- Cooperative Council as part of its Alternative Perspectives Series on the gu'r war. Eric Dixon, speaking on the meaning of Bush's "N e w World O r­ der," said he feels that the U.S. missed opportunities for peace that would have prevented war. "W e are there because of imperi­ alism and capitalism. W e must real­ ize that since the end of the Cold War, the U.S. needed a new' ene­ m y," Dixon said. "This may well become a new world of no order." Kiblawi dicussed why linkage is important to Palestinians. She ex­ plained that linkage refers to solv­ ing border disputes throughout the Middle East. Kiblawi compared Iraq's invasion of Kuwait to Israel's occupation of the Gaza Strip. "Both of these are violations in my mind. W e need to address the reality that the issues are related to each other," she said. "There will be no peace in the Middle East until the Palestinians have their free­ dom." Mendoza expressed his views on the racial implications of the gulf war. Mendoza said people of color have been taken advantage of by the U.S. government and military. "M a n y people of color are forced into the military because of econom­ ic reasons. Thirty-one percent of the troops are African-Americans while this group only makes up 12 percent of the U.S. population. Most people of color are located on the front lines or are forced to do the grunt work or less skillful jobs," he said. Salam, the last speaker, spoke on the post-war prospects for the M id­ dle East. He said Arabs are present­ ly div ided into two groups, the gulf Arabs and the mainland Arabs, with the mainland Arabs represent­ ing poorer Middle Eastern nations that support Saddam Hussein. "These Arabs support Saddam because they feel like he is punish­ ing the wealthy nation of Kuwait. Only a man like Saddam could keep Iraq together," he said. "Pushing Iraq out of Kuwait will leave him with a powerful army able to be equipped with nuclear weapons within a year." B union Distinguished Speakers Series Joey Lin Daily Texan Staff Barbara Jordan and other panelists answer questions about civil rights. The tape will air Thursday at 8 p.m. far seen only stagnation in the civil rights movement. According to Sherman and Harr­ ington, a major obstacle for the civil rights movement is today's conserv­ ative federal court system, to which former President Reagan appointed more than 500 judges. "In political campaigns, [judicial appointments] aren't addressed," Harrington said. "But they need to be because judges help move us toward where we want to be [in terms of civil liberties] and the ap­ pointments of Reagan and Bush are now pushing us back." Sherman added that in the spring of 1989 the Supreme Court handed dowm rulings on eight civil rights cases which, in two months time, decimated much of the progress “The 1980s was a disas­ ter period for civil rights.” — Barbara Jordan, former U.S. representative made for civil rights since the post- civil war era. In a backlash to these rulings, Sherman said, came the controver­ sial Civil Rights Act of 1990. Presi­ dent Bush vetoed the bill because he feared that it would promote the use of quotas in hirings. ing the issue of racial quotas for po­ litical gain. Luna said, "Thanks to Reagan's attacks on affirmative action, we [people of color] are now in a posi­ tion of having to defend what we're doing." I hey said that the Civil Rights Act of 1990 was worded specifically to avert quotas, and would have pro­ duced needed results in the civil rights arena. "W e 're not advocating mandatory hiring of unqualified people," said Jordan. "O n ly some degree of pref­ erences.” Jordan and the others cast criti­ cism on Bush for vetoing the bill and on other politicians such as Jesse Helms and David Duke for us­ Jordan called on leaders of the University, "presidents and vice presidents alike," to do whatever it takes to retain minority students. rence— just ask these ,_________ w . ■ big rock stars ^W hether you’re a brother, or whether you re a lover— you owe it to yourself to v o te .* B ary G ibb ^ H e ain't just jive ta lk in '.* Maurice Gibb Polling Locations (Polls will open at 9:15 a.m. and close promptly at 4:15 p.m.) Architecture/Liberal Arts...West Mall Communications/Social Work...Communications Breezeway Engineering...26th St. crosswalk behind RLM Business/Education/Graduate Business Library and Information Science...UTC Breezeway Nursing...Nursing School Building (on Red River) Law/Fine Arts/LBJ School of Public Affairs ...S.B.A. Office in Law School Natural Sciences/Pharmacy...Between Painter and Welch Halls I I March 5, 1991 • 7:30 pm Texas Union Ballroom, 24th & Guadalupe The University of Texas at Austin Free Admission Co-sponsored by The University of Texas Finance Association & American Airlines STATE & LOCAL ' T h e D a i l y T e x a n Wednesday, February 27,1991 Page 7 Critics decry napalm use Inadequate care for bum victims cited Heather Wayment Daily T exan Staff an N apalm, explosive gelatin used as a controversial bom b ing w eap o n States has a g a i n s t sparked criticism again tor its use in the gulf war. by t h e V i e t n a m e s e , the United is aimed only at U .S. military officials insist the w eapon Iraqi in Kuwait. But a gro und barriers V ietnam veteran and a physician said M o n d a y the chemical that w ea p o n will undoubtedly hit Iraqi leaving victims w ithout soU ers, proper care. It they drop the b om bs, there's no telling w h ere it g o e s ,” said Alan Pogue, w h o w as a medic d uring the likelihood of Vietnam W ar. " T h e hitting soldiers is g re a t.” T h e U .S . military did not reveal it was using napalm b o m b s in the gulf until re porters saw the b o m b s being loaded on U .S . Marine C o rp s b o m b ­ ers, according to T h e Associated Press. U .S . co m m an d sp o k e s m e n said the b om b s were dropped on oil- filled tre n ch e s built by the Iraqis, not on soldiers or civilians. The na­ palm ignites the oil, preventing the Iraqis from setting fire to the barri­ ers in a ground invasion, sources told the wire service. Lt. William Korach, a D ep artm ent of D efen se sp ok e sm a n , confirmed information M o nd ay . Korach the “If they drop the [napalm] bombs, there’s no telling where it goes. The likeli­ hood of hitting soldiers is great.” — Alan Pogue, medic during the Vietnam W ar admitted that although the b om b s are not aim ed at Iraqis, s o m e sol­ diers may be hurt or killed by them . " P e o p l e might well be h u r t,” he said. " T h i s i'' a war and people will be hurt in all sorts of w a y s ." P ogue said it is impossible for the military to limit the effects of the na ­ palm or prevent casualties Napalm is difficult to control because w h en the su b stan ce explodes, "it is like throw ing ]e ll-t) — it splatters ev e ry ­ w h e r e , " he said. The explosive substance consists of a com bination ot highly fla m m ­ able fluids such as kerosene or |P-4 jet fuel, mixed with granulated soap p o w d er to form a thick gel. l h e U .S . e m p lo y m e n t of the w eapon also worries Pogue becau se it m ay be "crea tin g c a s u a l ti e s we can't e v e n tre a t." He explained that he had c o n tin u ­ al problem s treating napalm victims in V ietn am sin ce their b urns re­ quired special treatm ent and facili­ ties that w ere not available. D espite medical a d v a n ce s sin ce that time, providing a d eq u a te treat­ ment for napalm victims rem ains a concern. Dr W e s Wallace, an e m e rg e n c y room physician, said that if the gulf war p ro du ces a large n u m b e r of n a ­ palm victims, treating th e m would be extrepvelv difficult. W allace said napalm sticks to its victim, ca u sing d eep seco nd - to third -d egree burns, and c o n tin u e s to burn b ecau se it is hard to re­ m o ce. Skin grafts m u st be used to replace the d estroyed skin. l h e United States cu rrently has onlv 2 ,10 0 ot the specialized b ed s needed to treat burn victims, and about 90 percent of the b ed s are a l­ ready being used to care for p a­ tients, h e said. " B u r n victims m ust have special facilities to s u r v iv e ," he said. He added that e v e n with the best ot care, a 50-vear-old burn victim h a s onl\ a 50 percent ch a n ce of surviv­ ing. T h e U n ite d S t a t e s d r o p p e d tilled with napalm during b o m b s the Korean War. Th e U .S . military’ also ust d napalm in flame throw ers during World W ar II. Its use did not b eco m e controversial until the V iet­ nam W ar, w h en m an y napalm b o m b s w ere d ropped on civilians. Korach would not co m m e n t on how m anv such b o m b s have been d r o p p e d on in Kuwait or how long the military will c o n tin u e to drop the b om b s the b a ttle fie ld Paul Murphy was thrown into the windshield of his pickup after it ran into a telephone pole Tuesday. 1 dead, 1 injured in truck accident John M cC on m co D aily Texan S taff Michelle Koidin Daily Texan Staff T h e driver of a pickup died in South Austin T u es d a y w h e n he lost control and his truck s m a s h e d into a te lephone pole, according to police. Paul M u rphy , 54, o f 6510 Berk- man Drive, w as thrust forward into the w ind shield o f his tan Ford pick­ up w h e n the truck ran off the 3200 block of M anch aca R oad and hit a telepho ne pole. M u rphv had on e p a s s e n g e r in the truck, Richard C o ok , 43, of H ou s­ ton. C o ok w as ad m itted into Brack- enridge Hospital T u e s d a y afternoon with a head laceration, said hospital sp ok esm a n Larrv BeSaw . BeSaw said C o o k w as in fair c o n ­ dition late Tu esd ay . Sgt. Ernie Becker of the Austin police investigations detail said co n s u m p tio n of alcohol is s u s ­ pected in c on n ection with the crash. traffic Student governments must cooperate to get regent seat Matthew Connally Daily Texan Staff S tu d e n ts have a good ch a n ce of g aining a seat on the U T S y s te m Board of R egents, a s tud ent lobbyist said T u es d a y , but state representatives belie ve it will not hap p e n unless all state university stud ent g o v e r n ­ m ents coo perate and form a c o n s e n s u s on the issue. " I think the co n c ep t for a stu d e n t regent is acce p tab le " w h e th e r votin g or n o n -v o t­ ing, said H ou se S p e a k e r Pro Tern Wilhelm i- na Delco, D-A ustin. " W h a t e v e r kind you get, you w an t to m ax im ize stud ent in p u t ." S u sa n Hays, a m e m b er of T exas S tu dent Lobby, said stu d e n t re gents are b eco m in g "k in d of a trendy th in g " for politicians to support. Texas is o n e of only a b ou t 10 states that d o not have direct stu d ent input in the g ov erning b od ies of their public uni­ versities, she said. "H a v in g the g o v ern o r vocallv supporting it is |ust a huge d iffe re n c e ," Hays said, a d d ­ ing that " t h is session w e 'v e got the lieuten­ ant g ov ernor a nd gov ern or both supp orting it." Gov. Ann R ichards favors installing a non-voting s tu d e n t regent first and then at­ tem pting to pass legislation later for a vot­ ing m em ber, according to R ichards' press secretary, Bill Cryer. Delco said the biggest obstacle stud ents face is that they are not o rg anized , "1 want to know w h y it's necessary to ask us to file three different [student regent] bills,” Del­ co asked, referring to a m e a s u re sh e plans to introduce and separate bills from Rep. Sherri G re e n b e rg Sylvester Turner, D-H ouston. and Rep. G re e n be rg , D-A ustin, follow ing up on her cam paign prom ise, filed a bill Tu esd ay for a votin g student reg en t rep resenting all the universities in the U T Sy stem . the schools would select two student reg en ts for stag­ gered tw o-year terms. Each stu d ent regent U n der G re e n b e rg 's bill, would serve as a n on -voting m e m b er d u r­ ing his or her first vear in office and then have full voting rights during the second year. "1 have long believed that stu d ents should have a voice on [the Board of Re­ g e n ts ]," G reen berg said. "I d o n 't th ink it's too much to ask that out of nine m e m b e r s to have one s tu d e n t." Turner, D -H o uston , filed a bill earlier this session for a n on -v o tin g stud ent regent. Hays said she had not k now n about Tu rn e r's bill. " T h e biggest problem with stud ents lob­ bying is |ust trying to get everything co o r­ dinated and w orking together with A & M and Texas T e c h / ’ Havs said. The gov ernor m ade three ap p o in tm en t^ last month to the UT S y ste m Board of R e­ gents, a m o n g them the first black m an ever to be nom inated to the position. Delco plans to file a third stud ent regent bill in the H ou se. Sh e said her m e a su re will probably ask for a non-voting stu d ent re­ gent, b ecause she d oes not think a bill for a voting m e m b e r would pass. Sen. G on za lo Barrientos, D -A ustin, will introduce the sam e bill in the S e n ate . B a r ­ the Se n ate N om inations rientos chairs C o m m ittee, w hich reviewed Richards' re­ gent candidates. SPRING BREAK IN HAWAII PARTY IN PARADISE Purchase tickets by tomorrow, February 28. FOR S169 EACH WAY YOU CAN PARTY YOUR HEART OUT! Travel must be on Mon. or Tues. in both directions. Houston, Austin, San Antonio to Honolulu via CONTINENTAL. Or for $189 each way, you can travel on any other day. While in Waikiki, you can stay at the beautiful Hawaiian Monarch Hotel for as little as $25 per person/per nite - double occupancy. Some travel restrictions may apply. Call now for more details. You must purchase ticket by February 28th. Travel must be completed by May 31 st, 1991. CALL SupERTRAVEl SAN ANTONIO 8200 IH 10 WEST, SUITE 214 512-525-9266 V AUSTIN 2905 SAN GABRIEL, SUITE 101 512-477-6761 Page 8 Wednesday, February 27,1991 THE DA ILY TEXAN C A M P A IG N ! ÍA Ijf 1 1 n SA Election Guide J # ^ 1 Editor's note: In addition to the scheduled races, we w ill run statements and photos that were left out of Tuesday's guide. 2-YEAR AT-LARGE Chris Krechting Undoubtedly, what this universitv needs some unitv and some leadership to bridge this growing gap of frustration felt bv ev­ eryone here at UT. In >rder to bridge this go p we must tackle issue1- tough some which I am willing to do wholeheartedly. Among the issuer I consider or vital im­ portance to make this a Top 25 university again are class availability, student-to-facuí- ty ratio, the low per capita spending at this the richest universitv in the nation, minori­ ty retention and, finally, the financial aid problem here at UT. If we attack these is­ sues UT can once again be seen with the 'big bovs' of education. Jalpa Patel J 'if, It you would like to see equal representa­ tion, real progress, compromise instead of bickering, multicultur­ al programming and an emphasis on a ¡ more effective SA, then vote for Jalpa Pa- — -_______________J tel as two-year repre­ sentative at-large. Currently I serve on SA as the College of Pharmacy representative and on the Citizen Affairs Committee. One issue in this election that is import­ ant to me is increasing the number of clash­ es available here at UT. There is a signifi­ cant number of faculty members who do not teach one single class at UT. Instead of lowering the numbers of students, we should increase the teaching faculty. LIBERAL ARTS David Portnoy A vote for David i Portnoy is a vote for a creative j responsible, representative. As a j | liberal arts representa- J tive to the SA I will ad­ dress all issues objec­ then w ork tiv e ly , diligently to create so- __________lutions to any prob­ lems that may arise. 1 have neither a grand agenda nor any pet projects; what I do pos­ sess is the patience, enthusiasm and work ethic to see all projects through to a suc­ cessful completion. A vote for David Port­ noy is a vote for progress in the SA. BUSINESS Christina Ann Adam I plan to work close­ ly with the Business Council, the business organizations and the Students' Association the to ensure* that needs of the students are well provided for. Politics and favoritism nave no place in a stu­ dents' association so I would like to serve as a true representative of the school of business by taking suggestions from the students through comment boxes around campus. David Baden 4 As undergraduates at the University, 1 feel we have a responsibili­ ty to the University as well as the communi­ ty. It elected as a rep­ resentative tor the Col­ lege of Business, I will work diligently to en­ sure that the students are well-represented, Sean Beinart As a current mem­ ber at-large I am al­ ready familiar with the Students' Association. As a business repre­ sen ta tive I w ou ld focus my efforts on is­ sues that encompass all business students expanding including centralized advising, creating a park and ride with Metro to help solve the parking problem, putting pressure on the Board of Regents through the media to address ciass size and availability and making the SA more accessible. Matt Brown One duty that SA representatives have p e rfo rm e d in a d e ­ quately in the past is that of regularly in­ forming their constitu­ ents of issues being considered and the action taken by the . SA on those issues. Students cannot come to informed opinions and make those opinions known if they are kept in ignorance. the Todd Fisher As a ¡unior, I have had the opportunity to experience the prob­ lems with UT and the Business School. One major reason for UT dropping from the top 20 nationally is due to the enormous student faculty ratio. Also, BO­ BS percent of tenured professors do not cur­ rently teach at the undergraduate level. Getting them into the classrooms would al­ leviate some of the problem. Larry Herman M y main objective if elected to the position of business SA repre­ sentative will be to work to solve student related issues. I would like to implement a program to go to the students and find out issues concern what promise to devote my full program, so that the SA effective. Craig Kooda them the most. 1 attention to this can become more It elected a Students' Association represent­ ative tor the Business School 1 would take it upon myself to make it easier for students in the business school to get involved with the University. The Uni- versity should be used as a tool in one's education and not merely as a place where you attend classes a few hours a day. 1 would set out to achieve these ta s k s b y introducing new programs and making the ones now available more recognized and accessible. David Mann % i H The problem areas I see need work with with the idea of a student regent. W e definitely need one - ggggw and I will work hard to JL - > see that the student voice is heard. In addi- V I ■ B * * x&k t Jfe L l with f \ **on' we neec* to w or^ the Legislature and the regents to increase funds for teach­ ing, not just research. These are only a few areas that need work but they deal with the 1 irness School directly and need immedi­ ate attention. Jeff Wender A successful leader must possess the abili­ ty' the to represent needs of the entire constituency. As SA Jeff representative, Wender brings hones­ ty and openness to an organization in des­ perate need of new blood. Fo most, the SA represents another political action group, pushing only its per­ sonal agenda. In my opinion, the SA was created not only for the student, but to aid the student. John Davison The most important task for the Student Assembly to achieve is U N ITY. Without it, nothing is possible but discord. Once this is achieved, a distinction is­ between campus sues and social issues must be made — and understood. 1 think that anv issue that the S A consid­ ers should pass two criteria: (1) Does it im­ prove the educational opportunity at the University? (2) Does it contribute to social harmony among students? There is too much hatred on this campus. W e must agree to disagree and learn to live and let live. COMMUNICATION Carolirye Baird ífcV* ¿g ^he SA has the po- tential to be a highly visible and effective organization. As your communication repre­ sentative to the SA, 1 will work to make the institution have more interaction and input from the student body at-large, as opposed to the special interest groups that currently dominate the agenda. Too often student needs are overlooked by administrators because of a lack of unity; I feel that together our voice can be heard. Silvia Cheskes I am interested in maintaining good con­ nections between the students and the U n i­ versity. The Students' Association is here to help the students and not many students take advantage of this I have opportunity. S A Election ? - **>ons P o lls o re o p e n W e d . & T hors. 9:15 q.m . - 4 :1 5 p.m . (in c a se o f rain) Architecture Liberal Arts W e st M a ll UGL Porch C o m m u n ic atio n s Social W o r k C o m m u n icatio n s b r e e x e w a y E n gin e e rin g 26th St. cro ssw a lk UTC b re e z e w a y C o m m un ications Bldg. lo b b y Behind R IM Student lou n ge a re a of ECJ (m ove farth er b ack) Bu sin ess G r a d u a te School o f B u sin e ss Library a n d In fo rm a tio n Science N u rsin g Law Fine A rts LBJ School o f Public A ffa irs N u r s in g School Bldg. (on R ea River) (alre ad y in doors) S.B.A. Office (in L aw School) (a lre a d y in doors) N a tu ra l Sciences P h a rm a c y Betw een Painter a n d W elch H alls W elch Hall, 2n d floor the time, dedication and experience to in­ crease student awareness of SA activities and to work to solve current issues. Lisa Mogil Many UT students know nothing about the SA and I believe the SA must keep the University better in­ formed so it truly will be an organization FOR TH E ST U D EN T S. Through Texan re- _ ports, effective com­ munications with the colleges and honest, knowledgeable and easy to talk to leaders, students will learn how' to become more in­ volved in University decisions and activi­ ties and know where their money actually goes. Hilari Z. Weinstein In my past year's position as communi­ cation representative, I things learned two the Students' about Association. First, it e x p e rie n ce d lacks leadership and the willingness to compro­ mise. Second, it lacks leaders w'ho are devoted to the needs of their constituents and the University as a whole, rather than their personal vendet­ tas. In my campaign for re-election, I hope to bring both experienced leadership and the desire to effect positive changes. ENGINEERING Michael Decherd The SA has become a real campus pres­ ence in recent years and it promises to be­ come more of one in the future. The stu­ dents in the College of Engineering need dy­ namic representation that will protect their interests and involve them in important de­ cisions. By mobilizing student opinion, we can get the changes implemented that best serve student needs. I firmly believe that the administration appreciates student in­ put, if handled correctly. I will work to make the SA more in line with mainstream thought, for 1 think that the "radical" per­ ception it carries with it hampers its effec­ tiveness. Lynne Fowler issues I believe that unity is one of the most im­ portant that faces the students of the University. In such a large university the Students' Association needs to unify the stu­ dents. The UT Stu- dents' Association un­ dertakes many significant projects, yet it fails to publicize its deeds. By promoting its activities the SA can help involve the stu­ dent body. If elected I will do my best to make the student body more aware of SA activities. Through monthly updates in the Vector, 1 will keep engineers more informed of critical issues. — ——— — —^ Nick Montfort I W'ish to serve stu­ dents in the College of Engineering by work­ ing to make the Stu­ d ents' A sso cia tio n more accountable. If I am chosen to repre­ sent engineering stu­ dents, I will draft, pro­ pose and fight for a constitutional amendment to make student funding of the SA an optional fee. Addi­ tionally, I'll keep engineering organizations informed about SA legislation and will ac­ tively seek students' opinions on issues. I want to be a true representative, not a poli­ tician; I hope that I will earn that privilege, so that I can work to give all students — not just SA members — a voice in the Students' Association. Nitish Sethi As a student in the College of Engineer­ ing, I feel that we as a whole are somewhat alienated from the rest of the University. Be­ cause of this alienation the concerns of the en­ gineering students are not given the attention that they deserve. Some might feel that our alienation is actually a self-induced seclu­ sion and we do not want to be a part of the larger university. I feel by keeping the lines of communication open and bringing up topical issues I can be the link between the College of Engineering and the rest of the Universitv. VOTE FEB. 27 & 28 i f The Institute of Latin Am erican Stu dies Student A ssociation an n ou n ce s its E le v e n th A n n u a l S tu d e n t C o n fe re n c e M arch 1-2, 1991 Flawn A cade m ic Center. Fourth Floor W e welcome A m b a ssa d o r J o a o B a e n a Soare s. Secretary General of the Organization o? Am erican Sta te s (O A S ) a s the Keynote Speaker His address will commence at 5:30 p m on Friday. M a r c h 1. All students are invited to attend Panel topics to be discussed during the conference include: Environment * Social Movements Gender * Literature Politics Government * Development * Border Studies For more Information please contact the Institute of Latin American Studies Student Association 471-5551 OD SsstSoaQcilollooo ÍF©íbí?iasi£?s? a<5<5i2 4 and A p p lic a tio n forms are available in TSP must be returned w ith resu m e and a sta te m e n t t© th e TSP Board o f Operating T r u ste es on w h y you w a n t to be T exan Editor. T he TSP B oard w ill in te r ­ v ie w a l l a p p lic a n ts and a p p o in t th e E d ito r o n March 7, *991. MEET YOUR MATCH Vitesse Semiconductor, the world’s leading supplier of cutting edge VLSI GaAs integrated circuits, is seeking talented, self-assured graduates who are motivated by the opportunity for real contribution, recognition, and responsibility. This year Vitesse is hiring: • CAD ENGINEERS • DESIGN ENGINEERS • PROCESS ENGINEERS • RELIABILITY ENGINEERS • PRODUCT/TEST ENGINEERS • DEVICE PHYSICS ENGINEERS • PROOUCT MARKETING ENGINEERS • ASSEMBLY/PACKAGING ENGINEERS Where you’ll be in five years depends on where you’ll be next year, so meet with our representative at our presentation on Sunday, March 3,1991, in ECJ 1.214, from 6:30- 8 30 p.m., and sign-up for our interviews being conducted on Monday, March 4. Remember, many companies are working on artifical intelligence... We use the real thing! Vitesse Corporate Headquarters 741 Calle Plano Camarillo, CA 93012 Information Forum: 3/3/91 interviews: 3/4/91 Vitesse Product Development Center 470A lakeside Drive Sunnyvale, CA 94086 VITESSE SEMICONDUCTOR CORPORATION AUDIO a n d VIDEO EXCHANGE OF TEXAS 4SMS09 4902 Bournet Ref. Mon. Wad, Fri 1-6. Tttnr* 1-8. So l 11-6 _______________Cloood Son 6 Tus* I'HE D A I L Y TEXAN Wednesday. February 27. 1991 Pag» \ a a K I ¿ V h p C K - i Q ® m .... \ $ 1 0 A/"*' ' / V . 'T x / :i a T h e c o re of e d u c a tio n C asis E le m en tary students line the sidew alk by the C apitol for A pple Day. S ponsored by the Texas A sso ­ ciation of School A dm inistrato rs and the A ssociation of T exas C olleges and U niversities, the Tuesday event sym bolized the ‘unobstructed path for all youth to fo l­ low and reap the golden a p p le ’ ” — the ideal jou rn ey for T exas students from pre-school to college. A bout John McConnico Daily Texan Staff 300 students of all ages attended, as did Gov. Ann R ichards — w h o spoke at the cele b ra tio n — Lt. Gov. Bob B ullock and S peaker G ib Lew is. All three w ere presented w ith apples w rapped in gold foil in a pp re cia ­ tion fo r their efforts to build a better education system for the state. T his w as the first tim e the event had been celebrated. ( onvicted killer put to death E xecu tion ends 1 1-year ordeal fo r v ictim 's fam ily Associated Press had a final statem ent, he replied: " R e a d y w a r d e n ." H U N T SV IL L E — A convicted killer quietly w a s put to death early Tuesday for killing a man w h o se terrified child refused to obev the d em a n d s of g u n m e n w h o were rob­ bing a sup e rm ark et. L a w r e n c e L e e B u x t o n , 3 8 , strapped to the Texas death c h a m ­ ber gurnev, had little visible reac­ tion to the lethal injection, gasping only fo ur times before all m o ve m e n t stopped. Asked bv a prison w arden if he He was pro­ n o u n ce d dead at 12:2 1 a .m . GST. a b o u t s e v e n m in u tes after the d ru g s w ere first a d m inistered . B u x t o n w a s convicted o f kill­ 40-year-old ing Joel Slotnik of Katy during a S e p te m b e r 1980 robbery. A uthorities believed B u x ­ ton had inte n d e d to shoo t Slotnik's 5-vear-old son , Aaron, w h o was crying and did not lie on the floor as gun m en d e m a n d e d . Instead, S lot­ nik was the neck. fatally w o u n d e d in "It s been a long time in c o m i n g ," Slotnik's w id ow , Linda, said. " M v family hop ed and prayed it would happen. A s far as I'm co n c e rn e d , he's getting w hat he d e s e r v e d ." The Slotnik family had been liv­ ing in the 1 louston area for only two months w h en the slaving occurred. They had m oved from O hio . Lawmakers blast latest court ruling Associated Press S o m e law m akers criticized the Texas S u p re m e C o urt for " m e d ­ d lin g " in school finance reform leg ­ islation T u esd a y , but said H ou se and S e n a te l e a d e d ' plans could be fine-tuned to fit the cou rt's latest opinion T h e court M o n d ay issued a new finance reform, ruling on school saying in a 5-4 decision that rich school districts m av constitutio nally raise more supp lem ental edu cation funds than poor o n e - It did not sav how m uch m ore, but said the sys tern m ust remain equitable. Justices did not back a wav from two earlier, u n a n im o u s rulings that the current school finance sy stem i- u n c o n s titu t io n a l. S u p r e m e Court has said it would not tolerate "vast d isparities" in fu nd ing n a i l ­ able to school districts b ecau se ol their differing propertv wealth. T h e " W h a t they did back avvav from was their a p p a ren t decree ... that vou could have no local e nrichm ent without e q u a liz a tio n ," said Sen. Carl Parker, D-Port Arthur. Parker, w h o sponsored a school finance reform bill that passed the S e n a te last week, called the latest op inion "a clear instance of ju d k ial legislative pro­ m ed dlin g c e s s . " the in The greatest beneficiaries ot ibis op inion, I can sav without tear ol contrad iction, are wealthy propertv o w n e rs w h o have managed to help create tax havens for th e m s e lv e s ." said Parker, S ena te Education C om niittee chairm an. "T h e y [the justices! hav e forevei denied the very poor district- any op p ortu n ity of e v e r fullv catch in g up, bv decreein g that a little bit ot unequal is O K , " h e said. local property His bill would in four years give virtually every school district access to the s a m e a m o u n t of m o n e y at tin sam e l o lo. al m ake up propertv wealth, it would shift h u n ­ dreds of millions of dollars in local tax re v e n u e from rich to poor school districts. for disparities tax rate, in Bush will ask for ‘fast track" Powers to be used in M exico talks A ssociated Press told cong ressional W A S H I N G T O N — P re s id e n t Bush leaders Tu esd ay that he will seek a tw o-vear extension in h i s authority to negoti­ ate n o n -am e n d ab le trade a g re e ­ m e n t s with cou ntries like Mexico. T h e president said he w ould re­ quest the "f a s t -tr a c k " negotiating authority so m e tim e t h i s w eek, s e t­ ting the stage for the first co n g r e s ­ sional b a t t l e ov er the a d m i n i s t r a ­ tion's plans to negotiate a free trade ag re em en t with that nation. Bush is expected to use the "fast- to n egotiate a tra ck" authority North A m erican free trade a g re e ­ m ent with M exico and C an a d a, and to continu e international trade n e ­ g o tia tio n s u n d e r th e U r u g u a y Round of the G eneral A g ree m e n t on Tariffs and Trade. The presid ent has until March 1 to re quest an e xtension o f the " fa st track" negotiating authority. C o n ­ gress could d en y him the fast track with a vote by eith er the H ouse or S e n a te by ju n e 1. Un d e r the track, o n ce an ag re em en t is reached it can n o t be am e n d ed by C o n g re ss. fast Sen. Lloyd B en tsen , D-Texas, chairm an of the S e n a te Finance C o m m ittee, predicted the a d m inis­ tration would have a fight on its h and s as it seek s the extension. B entsen said he would support the e xte n sio n , but cautioned that the adm inistration and C o ng ress should agree on s o m e of the goals Of the negotiations. "W ith regards to the U .S .-M e xico free trade negotiations ... we have to keep in mind^concerns about the e n vironm ent. With w ages o n e -s e v ­ enth of ours, w e w an t to be sure w e 're going to wind up with a net increase in jo b s ," Bentsen said. ! louse S p eak er I liornas Folev, D- W a s h ., told reporters at the W hite 1 louse that Bush said he would send legislation to Capitol Hill later this w eek to e xtend fast-track a u ­ thority. is s o m e "1 think we'll certainly consid er it 1 think very c a re fu lly ," Folev said. there in having so m e a s s u ra n ce s from the a d m in is­ tration on s o m e of the subjects that'll be included in the negotia­ tio n ." interest " I n general, But, he added: I think the a d m inistration s ee m s will­ ing to tr\ to find an a g re em en t on the negotiating pattern in order to move forward on the fast-tra ck." C o n c e rn s are being raised in C o n ­ gress that a U .S .-M e x ic o free trade a g re e m e n t would c a u se m assive job losses here and serious e n v iro n ­ m ental p roblem s in M exico as U.S. industries m ove south of the Rio G ra n d e , lured by c h e a p w ag es and lax pollution stand ard s. T h e d om estic fruit and vegetable industry is also co n c e rn e d about com petition from M exican produce, and on M o n d ay , the National Knitwear & S p o rts w e a r Association urged C o n g re s s to d en y the presi­ d en t fast-track authority. industry T h e associatio n's executive direc­ tor, S eth B od ner, said in a letter to m e m b ers of C o n g r e s s the that sw ea ter especially has been serio usly inju red by imports. And despite m o d e rn technology and industrially efficient plants, the industry rem ains vu ln erable to low- w ag e based import com petition. Last week, Rep. D a n te Fascell, chairm an of the H o u s e Foreign Af­ fairs C o m m itte e , urged the presi­ dent to put en v iron m en ta l and w o rk er safety issu es on the table w h e n the United States and Mexico negotiate a free trade a g re em en t. Fascell said he was concerned a bout "u n e q u a l levels of g o v ern ­ m ent intervention in a g ricu ltu re," regula­ including tions, restrictions on the use of p es­ ticides, and w orker health and safe- tv regulations. en v iron m en tal u m m m at U N IV E R S IT Y T O W E R S I YOU’RE NOT JUST A FACE IN THE CROWD 801 W 24th Street Daily Tours Unique Student Residences ■In Seiei tod Units L IN C O L N P R O P E R TY C O M P A N Y We Care Cor O ur Residents MEN’S GAMES Feb. 27 Mar. 3 at TCU Arkansas WOMEN’S GAMES Feb. 27 Mar. 2 TCU at SMU Men’s Roster Women’s Roster No. 3 11 12 13 20 22 24 30 33 34 4! 42 43 44 Name Benford WtHtams Courtney Jeans Joey Wnghf Teyon McCoy Albert Burditt Tony Watson Winn Shepard Dexier Cambridge Gerald Houston Corev locfrridge Hank Dudek Locksley Collte Artdfew Fowler Guillermo Myers Pos G F G G G F G F F F C F C F F C No. 10 12 15 21 23 24 31 32 33 41 42 43 44 51 52 Name Jobrrna Pointer Amy Clabom Jennifer Clark Ednea Campbell Eurica Johnson Kristi Inman Fey Meeks Yolanda Phillips Bemta Pollard Mtcbelfe McCutchen Vickt Hail Courtney Canavan Kellie Donaldson Joanne Benton Cimeira Henderson Pos. 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J - A' T he Daily T ex a n Page 10 Wednesday, February 27,1991 WORLD & NATION Economists predict short-lived, mild recession V V U n L U OC I A I M I I TUESDAY'S DOW JONES: 2,864.60 DOWN 23.27 Volume: 164,170,000 shares * Associated Press W ASHINGTON — An ov erw helm ing majority of the nation's top economic fore­ casters share the Bush adm inistration's ex­ pectation that the current recession will be shorter and m u c M e s s severe than the aver­ age d o w n tu rn since World War II. The National Association of Business Economists survey show ed on Tuesday that 4P or the 54 forecasters participating in the poll, or 91 percent, believe the recession will last nine m o n th s or l e s s — m eaning it should be over by mid-vear, Their length a n d severity projections were a bit l e s s r o s y than the White House's. The eight previous recessions since 1<*5 have averaged 11 m o n th s in length d uring which the economy fell an average 2.5 p e r­ cent The consensus of the NAB! forecast­ e r s project the d ro p in the G N P this time to be ¡ust 1.0 percent. I he poll was conducted in the first tw o w eeks of February. "C om p ared to historic norms, that is a fairly recession," Richard Rippe, NABE president and chief economist for Dean Witter Reynolds in N ew York, told a s h o r t new s conference. "In terms of severity, the recession is expected to be fairly shallow compared to historic no rm s." A recession generally is defined as at least two consecutive quarterly declines in the gross national product — the nation's total o utput of goods and services. The Commerce D epartm ent said the G N P fell at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 1990. President Bush based his fiscal 1991 b udget on a ssu m ptio ns that the recession would be mild and last |ust two quarters, the with economic g row th resuming in April-June period. The NABE forecasters were slightly less optimistic, projecting a tiny contraction in that quarter but m o d er­ ate grow th thereafter In other economic new s Tuesday: ■ The C om m erce D epartm ent said orders to U.S. factories for durable goods declined 0.7 percent in January after advancing 2.7 percent a m o nth earlier. O rders for durable goods — items ranging from trucks to tu r­ bines that are expected to last m ore than three years — have bounced up and d o w n for more than a year. ■ The dep a rtm e nt also said the U.S. m e r­ chandise trade deficit narrow ed to $108.68 billion in 1990, the smallest gap in seven years and d o w n 5.4 percent from the imbal­ ance posted in 1989. Both exports and im ­ ports set records, although import grow th was slower than exports. the The NABE forecast projected the econo­ my will decline 0.2 percent in 1991 on a year-over-vear basis. That includes contrac­ tions of 1.6 percent in the current quarter and 0.3 percent from April through June before posting moderate grow th rates of 1.9 percent in the third quarter and 2.5 percent in the fourth. Gorbachev warns of strife Associated Press MOSCOW — President Mikhail Gorbachev on T uesday lashed back at Boris Yeltsin and other radicals w ho are d e m a n d in g his resignation, saying thev were trying to oust him thro ugh d e m o n stra tio n s, street "an d they m ight succeed." W arning that would lead to civil war, Gorbachev distanced himself from the forces of radical reform and aligned himself closer to C o m ­ munist Partv traditionalists in a m a­ jor speech setting the tone before a national referend um March 17 to hold the Soviet Union together. three huge rallies The anti-C om m unist opposition has staged in Moscow since the Kremlin's Jan. 13 military crackdow n in Lithuania, for Gorba­ with chev's resignation as he has turned toward hard-liners. increasing calls Yeltsin, his political rival and president of the Russian federation, went on national television Feb. 12, accused Gorbachev of sacrificing perestroika tor personal p o w e r and d e m a n d e d hi" immediate resigna­ tion. The speech by Gorbachev, to Byelorussian intellectuals in Minsk du rin g his f i r s t domestic t r i p in a half-year, was also his f i r s t public com m en t about Yeltsin's d e m an d. "T he democrats are striving for p o w e r," Gorbachev said, referring to Yeltsin and other reformers. "A n d since their initial plan for a lightning capture of p o w e r by legal means through the Congress and Suprem e Soviet did not work, thev decided t o use what some analysts define todav as neo-Bolshevist tac­ t i c s . "You know what 1 mean. It's the transition of the streets: organizing dem onstrations, r a llie s , strikes and hunger strikes," Gorbachev said. the struggle to Gorbachev said his political o p p o ­ nents were waging "psychological w arfare" against him. "In the absence of positive pro­ grams, they address the people — the working class — over the h ead s of the parliament, with an appeal to dissolve this a n d that, and force the president to resign, and the situa­ is tense, strained," he said. tion "A nd thev m ight succeed. And that's what they calculate on. "W e categorically reject a ny at­ tempts to repeat the forcible capture of pow er which w ould almost inevi­ tably be followed by a civil w a r," Gorbachev said. Gorbachev said he has been ham pered the past 18 m o nths "bv the most intense p o w e r struggle." In an a p p a re n t reference to d e ­ m ands at recent d em onstrations for the national parliament to resign, he accused his o p p o n e n ts of trying to dismantle the Soviet Union's "first democratically elected organ." In fact, the 2,250-member C o n ­ gress has h u n d r e d s of depu ties se­ lected by party-controlled organiza­ tions. In addition, its m em bers have given Gorbachev increased pow ers in recent m o n th s so that he rules virtually bv decree. Starvation still threatens Sudan Associated Press JEKMI1R, S udan — Over cracked, dry earth and through war-flattened towns, the people of southern Sudan walk in search of food. For Top Nyal, it is an annual 130-mile trek. Along with nearly 1,000 followers, the chief walks from the village of Waat this riverside settlement near Ethiopia looking tor food. to Others like Nyachol Nyal and David Beil Both say if rains do not come soon a nd Western relief is not forth­ coming, they will die. But United N ations experts working with the so u th ­ erners say this part of Sudan is unlikely to suffer w ide­ spread famine this year. The brushv south contrasts with S u d a n 's desert-like north, w here more than 6 million people are threatened with starvation, according to U.N. estimates. "In terms of real trouble, it's up there in the north. What we're trying to d o here is build resilience," said Patta Scott-Viliers, w h o works in sou th ern Sudan for UNICEF's O peration Lifeline Sudan, devised as an emergency relief program for one of the w orld's poor­ est regions. In 1989, its first year of operation, UNICEF's OLS delivered 100,000 tons of relief food and supplies to governm ent- a n d rebel-held tow ns in southern Sudan in an operation participants say prevented massive famine deaths. Since then, the program has concentrat­ ed on providing basic health care an d simple supplies like fishing hooks, lines, hoes and seeds. O'Reilly, based in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi, said the south, hom e to at least 5 million people, a pp ears to have escaped outright disaster this year. But he cau­ tioned, "You're still dealing with an emergency situa­ tion w here the state of the population could easily tip into famine." S P R I N G B R E A K S P E C I A L ! C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD A n ti-U .S . s e n tim e n ts fla re Associated Press Jordanian police prevent a crowd of about 500 pro- Iraqi dem onstrators from marching on the U.S. Em­ in Amman. The crowd attempted to break bassy through police lines, but was stopped after riot police intervened. Jordan contains a large number of Pales­ tinians who are generally in support of Iraq. - * , , y ¡ > *» I m m Associated Press Vast mudslide in Papua New Guinea takes 200 lives, leaves 5,000 homeless PORT MORESBY, Papua N ew Guinea — A m udslide in the Papua N ew Guinea highlands w iped out several villages, killing at least 200 people, g ov e rn m e nt officials said Tuesday. Prime Minister Rabbie Namaliu said it was too soon to know exactly h o w m any people were buried in w hat he called one of the nation 's w orst natural disasters. Papua N ew Guinea, north of Australia, is a former Australian protectorate that gained ind e pe nd e nc e in 1975. The country has a mainly Melanesian population of 3.5 million and shares its border on the main island of New Guinea with Indonesia's Irian Jaya province. Namaliu said the landslide occurred S u nd ay in the m ountainous northeastern corner of Chim bu province following recent torrential rains. He said it destroyed roads and v illages that were home to more than 5,000 people. After d arkness halted a military rescue mission, offi­ cials said rescue teams would wait until davbreak W ednesday to search for m issing people. Daley nominated for full term in Chicago Chicago Mayor Richard Daley easily captured the Democratic nom ination for a full four-year term Tues­ day, while Arizona voters settled a sh o w d o w n for gov­ ernor betw een Republican Fite Symington a n d Demo­ crat Terry G oddard. Symington, a millionaire land developer w h o touted himself as a political new comer, led G od dard, a former Phoenix mayor, in the N ovem ber balloting. But write- in votes prevented him from gaining a majority and forced the runoff. 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You do have to come by and fill out the entry form in person. You may enter as often as you wish but each entry m ust be handwritten. No photocopies will be accepted. The drawing will be held on March 5 and the winner’s name will be posted in the Satellites and announced in the Daily Texan. E nter a t t h e c a m p u s lo c a tio n m o s t c o n v e n ie n t t o you: £ «r College of Business Adm inistration Dining Center CBA, Room 3.318 • Mon.- Fri. 7:30am - 3:00pm £ ^ > Law School Dining C enter Townes Hall, Rm 1.108A • Mon.- Fri. 7:30am - 3:00pm £ ' Fine Arts Dining Center Fine Arts Building, Room 1.102B • Mon.- Fri. 7:37am - 3:00pm £ j g > Engineering Teaching C enter II Snack Bar ETC II • Student Lounge, 2nd Door • Mon.- Fri. 7:30am - 2:00pm n o j u o m j B L K i n i m FRENCH BREAD PIZZA o r i ri m u Acne Research Study Free Treatment For Qualified Males Age 15 Or Older Up to $220 Financial Reimbursement Provided For More Information, Please Call 3 4 6 - 9 9 5 5 g t i k BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP INC. Mon.-Fri. 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. R E S E R V E O F F I C E R S ' T R A I N I N G C O R P S CASH IN ON GOOD GRADES. If you’re a freshman or sophomore with good grades, apply now for an Army ROTC scholarship. It pays off during college. And afterwards. ARMY ROTC THE SMARTEST COLLEGE COURSE YOU CAN TAKE. Find out more. Call Captain Miller at 471-5919/4910 or stop by Steindam Hall (RAS), Room 110. Spring Fashion Show To Benefit The Muscular Dystrophy Association I F e a t u r i n g F a s h i o n s f o r S p r i n g F o r m á i s , F r o m 1 9 9 1 a n d S p r i n g B r e a k SU N D A Y , MARCH 3 2:00 pm-4:00 pm CLUB XS 110 E a s t R iv e rsid e D riv e Supreme: $1.39 M.MJLM.MM • Pepperohi: $1.29 MM. M. M MM M.M X X X I No purchase n e cessary to en te r or win. All e n tries m u s t be handw ritten. Photocopi j s not accep ted . FulH im e M M M I I em ployees o f The Texas Union are not eligible. Bicycle provided courtesy o f Little C harlies P in a . r, '^ H r < > \ AS SEEN IN ELLA A M ) VOGUE A d m ission S5.ÜU donation at door Win Fabulous Door Frizes I i k Iik K s ( oinplu ncnta n beverage and discount coupons i" pariuipaiinK mere lu n is Co-Sponsored by Adrians Bridal and Form al W ear, K-96.7 F M , and Ju sl Add W ater ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT T h e D a il y T e x a n Wednesday, February 27,1991 Page 11 Hey, hey Paula Poundstone's rapport with audience adds spark to traditional humor Chris Barton Daily Texan Staff COMEDY C o m e d i e n n e P a u la P o u n d - storre, alread y spooked by the theory’ that com- edv consists of only three jokes, each rew orked over and over, thor­ must be oughly terrified by a certain TV spot for a K-Telesque compilation of clas- sical music. In the ad, an elderlv (spokesman boasts that all m odem music — even that of the Beatles — is based on the sam e traditional Works of Beethoven, Bach and the Jike. The im plications of that claim for Poundstone's line of work are und­ erstandably disturbing. W hat if, for example, the material of every co­ median working today — from the Church Lady to Judy Tenuta — is based on the same tired routines left over from vaudeville? "T hat always kind of scares m e ," Poundstone muses. "I think, 'O h , shit. They're all based on pie throw s.' I m ean, it's possibly true, but apparently no one has put it to­ gether yet. I kind of push under the rug those kinds of theories as quick­ ly as possible, snuff out those peo­ ple that bear them. There's probably a whole com edy syndicate w here we just have the people spreading these malicious stories wiped o u t." Poundstone has done more than her share of the laugh mob's dirty work, roughing up those theories merely through the success of her abstract humor. Rather than relying night after night on the same pre­ pared material (and possibly those same jokes), Poundstone bases much of her stand-up act on spontaneous "con versation " with the audience. three Her approach, although not unique, has been remarkably suc­ cessful, taking her far above the festering heap of sw eaty, smarmy stand-up it's no comics. And surprise that the sort of interaction upon which Poundstone thrives comes easier these davs than it did several years and billings back. "O stensibly, vou're a better act by the time you're a headliner, first of all. And second of all, the show is promoted with my name, and therefore ... a lot of people in the room are familiar with what I do and have chosen to com e see me in particular," Poundstone says. "W hen you're opening for a mu­ sician not onlv do the people not have anv idea why I'm here, but a lot of times they're pissed off that they have to watch some goofy girl tell jokes first. When you headline, it's sort of like com puter dating. Som ebody has already screened th em ." But despite P oundstone's healthy rapport with her audience and her desire not to alienate the very peo- ‘Miracle’ dishes out lusterless inspiration Solid acting can t compensate for script Enc Rasmussen Daily Texan Staff Ir you were going to make a p r o fo u n d s t a t e m e n t a b o u t d is h w a s h i n g you might say th a t all d is h w a s h e r s , dom estic and professional are incorrigible day- dreamers All of us, at one time or another, slump over a casserole dish, soaked up to our elbow s in Palmolive, and com pose a poem, dream of playing concert piano, or imagine living in Manhattan as a wealthy lawyer. So, how do you analyze a p!a\ like The M iracle o f Washing Dishes? Broken into seven episodes, Dishes glimpses the lives of five women (all played by Mary Agen Cox), in different stories w here dishw ash­ ing serves as the onlv connecting metaphor. setting Playwright Lindsey Lane ap­ proaches the idea in a quasi-relig- iou s m anner, the hr-: scene in a restaurant named for the Buddha: Dishw ashing be­ com es the magical silver chain connecting all hum anity. Unfor­ tunately, Lane has given herself too many loads of dishes to do. Lane's characters (a waitress, a liberated superw om an a homeless person, an elderlv woman and a Peace Corps trainee), although in­ teresting, barely rise above carica­ ture. Instead of u^ing her theme for exploring hum anity's clean side or its escapist nature, Lane h a n d s us a nice bundle of nifty vignettes. She would rather im­ press you than entertain you. The play’s only recurring char­ acter is Dixie, a waitress with a wise country twang, a rock guitar­ ist for a boyfriend, and broccoli in her dishw ater. S h e's g ot one o t those great philosophies o t life: "T h e dishes are always g o in g to pile u p ." Dixie gripes about her name too; it's just the kind of nam e someone would have if they washed dishes in a small town restaurant, she sax s. This self-referentiality d is­ tracts from the storv, and the en ­ tire name is^ue act^ a s an unneces­ sary plot com plication, further distancing the audience. Happily* D i x i e ' s soap-bubble reveries even ­ tually inspire her to pack it up and follow^ her dream s The other characters vary in im ­ portance. Lillian, a brassy elderly w om an, reflects on a lifetime of throw ing dishes at her husband. Kathleen, a hard-nosed business woman with repressed dishw ash­ ing desires, wins a few chuckles; she scores p o i n t s for her post-fem ­ inist com m entary. Then there's twice-divorced Peace Marcie, a Corp'- volunteer in Guatemala, who discovers how precious d ish ­ es can actually be. The last character we meet, Re­ nee. roams the dark streets trying to keep her one cup clean As she saunters underneath the vertigi­ nous spotlight, yelling in the air to nobody, we learn about her past in graphic, bloody detail. Lane d oesn't condescend to the character, and her story goes for the jugular — a simple appeal to in the m dst of shock your senses her storytelling she reduces the dishw ashing m etaphor to a con­ venient plot function; it becom es mere decoration. tw o-sided, Cox f a r e s well with her material. The environm ental stage has plenty ot space and few props, forcing her to rely more on body language and accent more than on other acting tricks. Her hardest role was probably Marcie — the only character w ithout an exaggerated personality fall back on. Cox is dynam ic enough to give it w ouldn't have otherw ise, but she doesn't save it. the play a depth to It the characters were a little deeper or the motif clearer, The M iracle o f W ashing Dishes might have succeeded. Unfortunately, a play about dishw ashing is only one of those rushes of inspiration you get when you're ... dishw ash­ ing. THE MIRACLE OF WASHING DISHES Author: Lindsey Lane Starring: Mary Agen Cox Director: Jim Fritzler Theater: Courtyard Theatre, 2414 Exposition Blvd. Date: Through March 17 r r " j Chahad*s P u r im PARTY" fflasQuerstfe $ Cesium# Wednesday- Feb. 27, beginning with Megillah reading at 7:00 pm ’ Live Banc ’ Great Food & Drink rnends Chabad House. 2101 Nueces 472 -3 9 0 0 Purim is a time to... 1. L i s t e n to the reading o f the Megiila - Scroll o f Esther on Wed. night and Thursday daytime. 2. S en d a gift o f at least two kinds o f prepared foods (pastry, truit. D u rin g T h u rsd a y d a y tim e : beverage, etc.) to a Jewish friend. 3. G i ve chanty to (at least) 2 poor people. 4. E a t a festive Fhinm meal and rejoice in the Punm spint C H A BA D will be on campus W'est mall to assist you with all o f the above. On Thu. Megillah will be read at Chabad. alter morning services at 7:30A M . For more additionl reading times & more details call 4 7 2 -3 ^ 0 0 R X VS. I S A R X MADRAS SHIRTS $19.90 Stand-up conversationalist Paula Poundstone charms the many and irritates the few with her special brand of one-on-one humor. Poundstone will share her unique insights Thursday through Sunday at the Laff Stop. to entertain, pie she m eans the more pointed portions of her act make 100 percent audience satisfac­ tion im possible. "I'm not a fan of Bush, and I make that fairly clear at various p o in ts ," P o u n d sto n e ex p la in s. "A nd occasionally, there's some right-wing nutcase in the room that gets all pissed off, but you know, as much a^ I'm not a fan of Bush, he's also president, and there's nothing I can do about it. "S o the right-wing nutcase got their way at the voting booth and really didn't have anything to be all pissed off about. W hich occasional­ ly I point out to these people and it generally gives them little solace. It's not enough for them to havb their candidate win; they have to have everyone like him as w ell." Like manv com edians of her stat­ ure, P oundstone's ascent has meant fewer hecklers and more opportuni­ ties in other arenas. Sh e's already racked up two HBO specials, and although m odest about her im pres­ ("I'v e channeled my sive career monev into buying food and shel­ ter” ), Poundstone nonetheless has considered involvem ent further with television and branching into movies. "It hasn't worked out vet, but it's not because I have an aversion to th a t," Poundstone says. "T h e beau­ ty of standup is that you are the writer, director and producer. I'm n o ta big actress. I'm not like Dustin Hoffman or Meryl Streep. I'm more like Darrvl H annah. it. "1 wish I were more imaginative, but I've never been replete with ide­ as in life. Occasionally I think of som ething, and then I realize it's I ' l l be well into been done. And thinking of I I'll know, I can be a w hite girl in Kan­ sas, and she gets sw ept up in a tor­ nado,' and then several m inutes into this plot, I'll go, O h, that's right — Wizard of’ Oz.' Maybe it's the jokes same thing about all three being done already.” think, 'O h, PAULA POUNDSTONE Where The Laff Stop. 8120 Research Blvd. Date: Thursday through Sunday r I I I I I I I I I I I I h All You i ptzzawofksj Can E at H ours: All day Sun. & Mon. 1 1 -2 Tues.-Sat. BUFFET includes great pizza, salad. 4 1 5 W. 2 4 t h St U n d e r the Castilian 472-DAVE 1 9 2 6 E. R iverside By MiniMax 448-DAVE 3000 Duval Near Posse East 476-DAVE With th»s coupon Limit 4 per coupon SPRING ALLERGIES? If you are between 12 and 59 years of age and have suffered from SPRING allergies for af least the last two years, you may qualify to partici­ pate in a study of an investigational medication for the management of seasonal allergy symptoms. You will receive FREE skin testing and physi­ cal exams. Financial compensation provided upon study completion. For more information, please call: HEALTHQUEST RESEARCH 345-0032 Georgetown 863-8660 Round Rock 244-0542 RELIGIOUS AWARENESS WEEK Promoting Understanding .Among People ot Different Faith¡ “Students Speak Out About Their Different Faiths" — Panel Presentation by Interfaith Council Representatives Today 12*1 Texas Union, Eastwoods Room Refreshments Sponsored by the Interfaith Student Council c l o t h in g ; o u t l e t BitfllY MEN’S/LADIES SHORTS JUST $19.90 8611 N. MOP AC EXPRESS Vt AY E X IT STECK ISL 512-794-9036 8611 N. MOP AC EXPRESSW AY E X IT STECK N., 512-794-9036 Page 12 W ednesday, February Í 1991 T h e D a ily T e x a n Gulf war Continued from page 1 ou tsid e D hahran said it killed 28 A m erican serv icem en and w ou nd ed 100. A fter the Iraqis invad ed Kuw ait on Aug. 2, the L S -led m ilitary co a ­ lition w as assem bled u n d er U .N . au th ority to force them ou t o f the em irate. But in the recen t w eeks of war inform al aim s h av e w id en ed to inclu d e th e red uc­ tion o f Iraqi m ilitan m ight and pos­ sibly ev en the o u ster ot Sad d am . the allia n ce's T h e Soviet U n ion , w hich tried to m ed iate a p eacefu l settle m e n t of the 40-d ay-old w ar, urged the U nited N ations to call an im m ed iate c e a se ­ fire in view of the Iraqi w ithd raw al a n n o u n ced T u esd ay by B aghd ad ra­ dio and later bv Sad dam But Bush d eclared the w ar would go on. is not "S ad d am in terested in peace but oni\ to reg rou p and tight an o th er day " Bush said in a tough sta tem en t to the m edia in the W hite H ouse Rose G ard en. Bu^h also said Sad d am had m ade nc form al com m itm en t to ren o u n ce Ira q 's h isto ric claim to K uw ait, or to accept resp on sibility for w ar rep ara­ tion- — K ith required under U \ . S ecu rity C o u n cil resolu tion s. Iraq;-, w h o lav dow n their a r m s — from tan k s to sid earm s — will not be attack ed as thev retreat, Bush fair saio O th e rw ise, g am e for the D esert Storm forces. then w ere T he retreatin g soldiers ap p aren tly w ere a b an d o n in g som e arm s. v e h icle s C B S re p o rter Bob M cK eo w n said littered th eir m ilitary Kuw ait city streets and a P entagon official said thev w ere leav ing be­ hind su p p lies and heavy equ ip m en t and com m an d eerin g all k i n d s o f ci­ vilian v eh icles to flee. P entag on officials called the Iraqi rollback a "fu ll retreat " It w as u n ­ clear, h o w e v e r, ju st how m any of the 3 0 0,000 to 4 0 0 ,0 0 0 Iraq; troops that had been in K uw ait rem ained . O fficials o f the exiled Kuw aiti g ov ern m en t said the Iraqi arm y ac­ tually had been w ith d raw in g tor three or four d avs, and Sad d am 's The war is not over and we re going to continue to attack and attack and attack.” — Marine Brig. Gen. Richard Neal Sigma Nu Continued from page 1 hazing w en t on th ro u g h o u t S a n d ­ e rs' pled ge period — S e p t. 8 to N ov. 11 — in v estig atio n s w ere first co n ­ ducted after S a n d ers' m o th er found him crying in his clo set after the j N ov. 10 in cid en t. th e n ear-co m p letio n o f sy n ch ro n ized the pullout ord er w as w ith retreat From K uw ait city , a h igh w ay leads north to Basra, ju s t 73 m iles aw ay. Bad w eath er and clo u d s o f sm oke from h u n d red s of oil-w ell fires set by th e Iraqis m ay hav e m asked parts o f the retreat. In th e final d avs o f th eir o ccu p a ­ tion o f the citv , Iraqi tro op s blew’ up or set fire to m ajo r b u ild in gs, rep ort­ edly inclu d ing the P arliam en t and big h otels. The suit n am es the Sigm a Nu G eneral Fraternity h ead qu artered in V irginia, the n ow -d issolved U psi- lon C h ap ter of Sigm a N u; th e Sigm a Nu H om e A ssociation of Texas, w hich ow n s and m ain tain s the local c h a p t e r 's T im o th y p r o p e r t y ; Q u a m stro m , K ith as an individual , and as p resid en t of the fo rm er local a ctiv e s R ich ard A sel, ; c h a p te r; M atthew D en n is, Henry- G on zales III, Jo n ath an H am m and C h arles S tid h am ; and ch ap ter alum ni Todd B ow den and C h risto p h e r Tem ple. R esistan ce lead ers also told A P 's : John K ing, o n e o f th e first jo u rn a l­ ists to e n te r the citx that the retre a t­ ing Iraqis took th o u san d s o f Kuw'aiti h o stag es w ith them , inclu d in g som e from p ro m in en t fam ilies. T he U S. militarv said it cou ld not that such h o sta g e s had confirm b een seized . A fter th e Iraqis fled, Kuw aiti civil­ ians took con trol of th e city 's police station s, and "la rg e n u m b e rs " of Iraqi arm y stragg lers w ere round ed up and put in holding areas, the Free Kuw ait C am paign said in a statem en t. O n Tuesday aftern o o n , the U .S . com m and said M arines and A rm v tankers w ere locked in a battle w ith Iraqi arm or at the in tern ation al air­ port sou th ot the city. A com m an d sp o k esm an , M arine Brig. G en . Richard N eal, d escribed the resistan ce as stiff and said , "W e 'r e seeing retreat u n d er fir e ." Later P en tagon op eration s d irecto r Lt. G en . T h o m as Kelly said th e air­ port battle had died d ow n an d su g ­ gested the Iraqis m ight pull back under cov er o f d ark n ess. O n the lookout for sn ip ers and the allied forces e n ­ booby traps tered the city w arily. Am erican strateg ists fo resaw hard fighting ahead. A fter in v estig atio n s by the UT ad ­ m in istratio n , Sigm a N u 's national organization and the UT Interfrater­ nity C o u n cil, Sigm a Nu w as dealt a triple blow N ov. 20 w h en the IFC expelled the local ch ap ter, the n a ­ tional organ ization revoked its 104- MAPS Continued from page 1 arv. Stu d e n ts involved in the M A PS program said its can cellation will be a great d etrim en t to the U niversity. Shirley R eyes, a fresh m an , said her tu tor told her th e U niversity m ight not b e able to fund th e pro­ gram an y m o re, but he said he would co n tin u e to tu to r her. "It's u p settin g to know that they are not the p ro g ra m ," R eyes said . "L a s t sem ester, that is w hat helped m e p ass my c la s s e s ." fu n d in g Norm a B a r K z a , w h o w as tutored through the program last sem ester, said, "A lot o f the p eop le w ho are not on financial aid have a sou rce of tu toring throu gh M A P S ." Barboza ad ded that sh e w as u n ­ d er the im p ression that the program w as over. Lataya D u ren , a fresh m an using the program , said M A P S w as a year-old ch arter and the U n iversity its ch arter for a m ini­ su sp en d ed mum of six years. A cco rd in g to the suit, filed in the Travis C o u n ty , the d efen d a n ts are liable for d am ag es b eca u se "a s a d i­ rect and proxim ate result o f [their] co n d u ct [San d ers} w as inju red and su ffered substantial physical pain and su fferin g as well as m ental a n ­ g u is h ." S a n d ers, w h o now stu d ies at T exas C h ristian U n iversity in Fort W o rth , h as not recovered from the ab u se of N ov. 10, his law yer said T u esd ay. "C le a rly h e suffered seriou s in ju ­ ries. M y u n d ersta n d in g is he ha^ a fracture o f the low er sp in e, h e 's got m uscle sp asm s ov er th e kidney area, som e nerve d am age in the rib area and h e 's u n d er th e care o f the c o u n s e lo r ," said Bill W h iteh u rst, S a n d ers' atto rn ey . " I t w as a pretty bad e v e n in g ." " O n e o f o u r reason s for bringing this law suit is that ev en after several d ea th s ou t th ere — the U n iv ersity cracked d ow n on it [h azin g ), the L eg islatu re cracked d ow n ... and it still h a s n 't d o n e a n y th in g " to elim i­ the situ atio n s u n d er w hich nate g reat b en efit b ecau se, even though sh e yvorks, sh e can n o t afford the cost o f tu toring . S h e said the pro­ gram also allow ed her fo u r hours of tu torin g as op p osed tw o hou rs sh e w ould get at th e L earning Skills C en te r. the to S te p h a n ie M cG ee, chairw om an of the S tu d e n ts' A ssociation M u lticu l­ tural A ffair1- C o m m ittee, said she b elieves it yvould b e ironic if th e UT re sto re ad m in istratio n cou ld not fu nd ing to a program that it fre­ q u en tly to u ts. " W h a t K ith e rs m e is that this is on e o f th e program s th at th e a d m in ­ istration pu lls ou t on th e d esk w h en the a d m in istra tio n 's co m m itm en t to reten tio n is ch allen g ed . N ow that th e h eat is off, th e y 're n ot b ack in g th e co m m itm en t w ith th e n ecessary financial s u p p o rt," sh e said M cG ee exp lain ed that th e reason M A PS is now in need of m ore m o n ­ ey’ b ecau se the program "b e ca m e too su ccessfu l for its o w n g o o d ." M A P S tu tors K g a n receiv in g pay su ch traged ies occu r. "O b v io u sly it w as g o in g on in a big way at the Sigm a Nu h o u s e ," W hitehu rst said. " I t 's not ju st th e attitu d e e n v iro n ­ m en t, but th e p hy sical en v iro n m en t that existed at that h o u s e ," h e said . H e said th e p ro p erty had recen tly b een in sp ected by th e national o r­ g an izatio n , w h ich e ith e r ov erloo ked or w a sn 't aw are o f 'th e P i t / 'th e H ole' and 'th e G ra v e ,' p hy sical sp aces on th e pro p erty w hich w ere used by for h azin g pled ges. th e ch a p ter M . E . L ittlefield , execu tiv e d irecto r of the nation al Sigm a Nu fratern ity , said earlier that "S ig m a N u w as found ed in o p p o sitio n to h a z in g ." H ow ever, W h iteh u rst said , " I t 's hard to b elieve — that m ay K — but if so , [the local ch a p ter] strayed from their fo u n d in g fath ers. the nation al " I t w a sn 't on e n igh t g o n e b ad , it w as ov er a period o f tim e ," he said . " I f fratern ity d id n 't know th ey shou ld have know n b e ­ cau se they had in sp ectio n s. I think th ere w ere a lot of p eop le w h o ju st sort of turned their h ead s the oth er w a v ." W h iteh u rst said he w an ts to " le t them [fratern ities w h o haze] kn ow that if they d o th is th ey run th e risk of K i n g fin ancial resp o n sib le for their action s — b o th as a gro u p and in d iv id u a lly ." A ccord ing to W h ite h u rst, a fter they the d efen d an ts are m u st each a n sw e r to the law su it. N o resp o n se will result in a d efau lt lud gm ent ag a in st th e d efen d a n t. N ext is th e "d is c o v e ry " p h ase in w hich d ep o sitio n s will be th e litiga­ tion s and a m e n d m e n ts to th e suit. served T h e O ffice o f the D ean o f S tu ­ d en ts office d iscip lined sev en Sigm a Nu m em b ers last D e c e m K r , w ith p en alties ranging from p ro bation to p erm an en t exp u lsio n from the U n i­ versity. W h ite h u rst said th at to his kn ow led g e the five actives n am ed in the svnt w ere am o n g th o se d iscip ­ lined by th e U n iv ersity . "T h e re m ay well K o th ers th at w ould K nam ed [in the suit] later on d ep en d in g on th e d iscov ery part ot the c a s e ," he said. T h e U n iv ersity itself "w ill not hav e a role in this case ... [h o w ev er,] th ey m ay have certain in form ation that w ould K used 1 iter in th is ." last fall. M cG ee p re sen ted th e S tu d e n t A s­ sem bly w ith a resolu tion last T u e s ­ day to g arn er th e a sse m b ly 's s u p ­ port for co n tin u in g the program . T h e reso lu tio n , w hich passed u n a n im o u sly , called for "s u p p o r t­ ing effo rts o f th e M A P S program and req u estin g vice-p resid en tial fi­ nancial su p p ort for i t ." M cG ee said sh e w as co n sid erin g the possibility o f q u ittin g her tu to r­ ing jo b at the b eg in n in g of this s e ­ m ester, but sh e stayed w ith th e p ro­ gram even th o u g h sh e w as losin g m o n ey b ecau se " t h e p eop le I tu ­ tored d ep en d ed on m e ." th e K ase in ad eq u ate Ja m es, p re sid e n t o f the B lack S tu d e n t A lliance, also ag reed that for M A P S sh o w s th e ad m in istra tio n 's "la c k o f validity to th e co n cern s that th ey say they h av e for m inority s tu ­ d e n ts ." fu n d in g Jam es said cu tb ack s are a ffectin g m in ority stu d e n ts all ov er the U n i­ versity. H e ad d ed th at the cu tb ack in fu n d in g of an en d ow ed U n iv ersi­ ty is "p a ra d o x ic a l" and the a d m in is­ tration is "s a y in g o n e th in g and n ot follow ing up on i t ." "H isto rica lly , m in ority stu d e n ts from m a in ­ have K e n exclu d ed stream s o c ie ty ," Ja m es said . H e exp lain ed that this is not an isolated e v e n t. O n th e federal lev el, the Bush ad m in istratio n recen tly cu t m in ority sch o larsh ip s and financial aid. "B la ck stu d e n ts are K c o m in g very fed u p ,” he said . "W h e n th e U n iv ersity ig n ores th e co n c ern s of stu d e n ts s o m e th in g n eed s to K d o n e ." M cG ee said m any stu d e n ts in ­ volved w ith the p rogram are u p set ov er the lack o f fu n d in g but hav e n ot step p ed forw ard . "People d o not w an t to fight a losin g b a ttle ," s h e said . "Y o u ju st d o n ot ch a lle n g e the U n iv ersity — if th e stu d e n ts are on esp ecially sc h o la rs h ip ." S P R I N G B R E A K n r - i F m m 1 mu m i * | f HU» $ •Njfi Mffv Deacflfw ««moo | ft u s to 7 eocng iqrt • t o e to ctaüsrec to o ' emo ^ • fm m ia a m ^ stmt. & * arc. BRMtons " f t «Utotaps hograms !.D.Afemr. ¿ * v w •OrNoaDor sttot tor oomor t man.. , M rauDec • At t» K . to&. & service cnvih ft ft R e o e c c a dacKSor ® * 326-3661 f SPANISH IN COSTA RICA Life with Local Families Study at Rural I ampus Tuition, books, meáis, & lodging only S326 per week 1ALEV TOOLS jeAÉ25 I P.O. B o x IM S » ! t W alton B e a rh , P i. 32541* Come to the hot spot for 8prln£ Break O kaloosa Island s where it s a: F o rt W alton Beach, Florida O ne b lo c k from C a sh s Faux P as Check out o ur Spnng Break rates Deposit requirec I Call fo r reserva tio n s (904) 243-7156 Spring B reak! Acapulco 2200 R io Grande 4690999 COSTA RICA Beaches White Water Rain Forest For summer specials call: MALDi T011S 45t)t only* Page 14 Wednesday, February 27,1991 I HE I)A IL \ 1 EX AN Tan VOIR HIDE Salons give head start In bronzing race Christy Reming Health and Fitness Staff As the sultry sum m er season ap p ro ach ­ es, stu d e n ts p o n d er their chances of fitting into last vear s bathing suit and once again indulging in that annual art of tanning to a golden brow n This search for the perfect tan norm ally takes place betw een the w in ter m onths and the beginning of spring break w hen som e go forth to the local tan n in g salons in order to get a head start on th e tanning process Pam Manley, m anager of Tan Etc., sa\> that the m onth before sprin g break holds the highest am ount of calls for ap p o in t­ m ents. "W e get an average of 200 calls a dav now that spring break is com ing up. But those w ho w ant the perfect tan on their first session are in for a surprise. In o rder to get a base tan, a person m ust go through at least 10 sessions, but even that base tan is d e p en d e n t on a person s skin type and tanning ability. Even tanning salons cannot solve the problem of getting a su n b u rn due to expo­ sure. "W e start people o ut on 15 m inutes and w ork them up to 30 m in u te s,' M anley explains. "H alf an h o u r in the tanning bed is like tw o hours in the m iddav sun, and most people will burn if thev re in there for too lo n g ." in o rd er for people to get a really good tan, thev m ust attend about 20 sessions and go back at least one or tw o tim es a week in order to m aintain it. "All tanners at the salon cannot use o u td o o r oils, but thev can w ear sun protection on their face." M anley says. M anley also stresses that th e belief that tanning beds can cause serious dam age to ovaries or testes is a m yth. "P eople can tan in the m ost com m on the n u de tanning beds 1 m isconception k now ," she savs. "I'm not sure if they do, but there is absolutely nothin g w ro n g with it. it's about ... "Before people start a tan nin g program , they should consult their doctor. O n the back of a card that w e have all of our cus­ tom ers fill out, we state e v e n thing th e law tells us to because it's for their ow n protec­ tion. The cards ask about previous tanning experience and m edications because long tanning tim es can be harm ful to people on Retin-A, birth control pills or p h o to sy n ­ thetic m edication." Even tho ugh tanning gives the im pres­ sion of a healths body, doctors and derm a­ tologists frow n on long stavs in the sun. ' There is really no was to get a tan w itho u t dam aging the skin. Dr. Bob D odd an A ustin phvsician, explains. "P eople realls should not lie out because the d an g er to cause som e serious dam age to the skin is there. "Long-term exposure to the sun can lead to >km cancer and prem ature aging often on the face and the areas vou realls d o n 't w ant aging to show up on. "G radual tanning causes the sam e type of dam age as one long das in the sun , but the burn is less acute at the time. There is reallv no treatm en t for su n b u rn ... the best was to not have a problem w ith s u n b u rn is to not get one ' Dr. D odd says sunscreens are the best form ot protection, and there is no such thing as a bad su nscreen. "T he num ber on the bottle corresp o nds to the am o u n t of protection it gives you from ultraviolet rays, 15 being th e highest am o u n t of pro- te», lion, even thoug h vou will see 20's and 30's on the m arket." "P eople w ith verv little pigm ent, for in­ stance, redheads with blue eyes, have a tendency to burn m ore easily and require a realh good su n sc re e n ," he savs. "P eople w ith m ore pigm ent, like blacks, Mexican Am ericans, and O rientals can get aw ay with a four or a six as far as sunscreen p ro ­ tection goes. These people w ho have m ore pigm ent tend to suffer problem s a little m ore because thev d o n 't think they need su nscreen.' Dr. Dodd also m aintains that tan n in g salons are no better for skin protection than lying out. "T he tan is different in term - of color and th e types of ultraviolet rays u se d ," he savs. A tanning salon tan is biochemically different and can be sp o t­ ted a mile aw ay ." Dr. Dodd insists that the best wax to protect vour -'kin is to w ear sunscreen, hats clothes, and sunglasses w ith ultravio­ let protection because eves often suffer the harm ful effects of exposure. "Y our face, e a r - and the back of vour h a n d s are also at riss because they are norm ally alw ays ex­ po sed ," he savs COTHRON’S SPRING BIKE SALE Raleigh M ongoose GT Haro Dyno Roland MARCH 6-9, 1991 AT LEAST 20% OFF EVERYTHING C o m e In ft Sign Up For Free Mountain Bikes & Accessories To Be Given A w ay At Each Location! 5 Pre-Selected Bikes Will Be Sold At 50% Off From Each Store Each D a y ro th ro n 's \ BIKE SH O P Rio Grand# at W. 6th Burnet Rd. at Steck 478-2707 454-9548 We A ccep t VISA, MC, A M X ft DISCOVER PRESENT THIS A D FOR 2 5% OFF ACCESSORIES. EXP 3/31/91 5 SAT Fortview at Ben White 447-7076 SiJri«g P r t s F i n a l m a r k D O W N / / O u t e r w e a r - q f C l e a r a n c e J I 30' 50% off y ^ IN S U L A T E D O U T E R W E A R / rii G O R E TEX i W ATERPROO F B R E A T H A B L E R A IN W E A R . \ J Y 1 S H E LL E D é UNSHELLED F L E E C E R ID S o u t e r w e a r 1 V ^ D O W N B O O T I E S AND M O R E F R O M r - H ELLY M A N S E N ) N IK E , T H E N O R T H FACE, PATAGONA, S IE R R A D E S IG N S A N D O TH ER F IN E N X A N U T A C T U R E R S ALL S A L E S F INA IN ST O C K O N LY •20 years in Austin* Whole Earth Provision Co. 4006 S. Lamar 444-9974 2410 San Antonio St. 478-1577 8868 Research Blvd. 458-6333 FACTORY OUTLET S A V E 4 0 -6 0 % S E R E N G E T l DRIVERS Mike Priour, an international business junior, stands in a hexagonal tanning booth. John McConnico Health and Fitness Staff Roffler School of H a ir Design Supervised Instruction by Professionals Perm Shampoo & cut & Blow-dry $19.95 $5.00 No a p p t necessary 'a d d 1 c h arg e for long h a u 5339 Burnet Rd. 458-2620 (M u st b rin g ad I T u p . -Sat 9 00 4 10 ( loppfi M on Friends don't let friends drive hungry Take T O G O ’S with you on your Spring Break Trip. Come bv for Spring Break Special Ph. 478-9595 HELP INFERTILE COUPLES BY BECOMING A SEMEN DONOR AT FAIRFAX CRY0BANK 1) Excellent Compensation 2) Complete Confidentiality 3) Donate 1 -3 times/week with no appointments 4) Donate 7:30-1:30Mon.-FrL 5) Age 18-35.6 months participation required CALL 473-2268 FOR AN APPLICATION Need extra cash? Lealthy, n on -sm ok in g m en b etw een th e ages o f 18-45, w eighing 140-190, and within 15% o f ideal w eight arc needed to participate in a pharm aceutical research study and receive $400. You m ust be available to remain in our facility for the entire period to be eligible. Check-in Hmm: 4 - 5 pm Friday, March 15 Friday, March 22 Check-out tim e: 8 - 9 pm Sunday, March 17 Sunday, March 24 M r I I X - J Í 1 Lealthy, n on -sm ok in g m en betw een the ages o f 18-45, w eigh in g 140-190, and within 15% o f kleal w eight are needed to participate in a pharm aceutical research study and receive $400. You m ust be available to remain in our facility for the entire period to be eligible. Check-in tim e: 4 - 5 pm Saturday, March 16 Saturday, March 23 Check-out tim e: 7 - 8 pm Monday, March 18 Monday, March 25 c o m p e n s a t i o n H e a l t h y , n on -sm ok in g men betw een the ages o f 18-40, w eighing 140-200, and within 15% of ideal w eight are needed to participate in a pharm aceutical research study and receive $1000. You must be available to remain in our facility for the entire period to be eligible. Climk In llm m I 2 I pm Friday, March 22 Friday, April 5 Friday, April 19 Chuck-out fim n: 7 - 8 pm Sunday, March 24 Sunday, April 7 Sunday, April 21 1 o qualify for these studies, you must pass our free physical exam and screening tests. Meals, accom m odations, entertainm ent, and lots of fun recreational activities are provided free-of-charge. Choose one of the studies above that tits your needs. For more information, please call during the following times: Monday-Kriday, 8am-8pm; Saturdav, 9am-5pm; Sunday, lpm-Spm 462-0492 wminces “The University Bookstore” Across from West Mall - “ON THE DRAG ” 2244 Guadalupe • 477-6M H ours: M onday th ru Saturday 8:00 a.m . - 6:30 p.m . Sunday 10:00 a.m . - 5:00 p.m . Both RayBans S 0 /1 9 934 We beat any Retail Price BIG DOG SUNGLASSES D O B IE MALL 1ST LEVEL 2021 GUADALUPE i f f t l 1 4 * f 4 * t ■ w ’ U I I I BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE ...WANT ADS...471 -5244 W e’re a lost generation, y’all T H E D AILY T e x a n Wednesday February 27,1991 Page 15 Katrina Brown Spring Break Staff I pick up my Fruity Rita and sashay over to Buck He's just won the volleyball gome and he's look­ ing good, sweat and sand clinging to him from his tree-sized neck to his neon green Speedo. Dusk has fallen over the beach, and the tanners are packing up their Wesson and heading back to the ho­ tels. M C Hammer is playing in the distance, and I close my eyes to ap- preciate his words. This is my song to you , Puck, I think, as 1 am frozen in time for just a moment. I finally get the courage to speak, and what my soul delivers is scarce­ ly more than a whisper: "You partv hearty, huh?" I ask. He doesn't an­ swer. I'm in love. I reach out to touch but soon withdraw, stung by reality. The tears well up in mv eyes as I turn to leave, reali/mg that Buck was really just a cardboard stand-up left on the beach bv the Bud Dry distributors. 1 need to shave my legs anyway. Back at the condo, the girls can tell I.isa. Jennifer, Lisa I'm bummed and Steph are talking about the guys they met on the beach that dav. Four Sig bps from Oklahoma "They're pre-med," Steph State tells me. "They're gonna be doctors, / a ll." tor an afternoon of quarters. " It w as so funny," Jennifer tells them. "O n the wav, ho was laughing at this fat girl with a brace on her leg Which was kmda harsh, I guess, but y ’all, he's so sw eet.” "Brittany, get fired up,” l,isa com­ mands "W e 're meeting everybody at Pappadeaux's bv eight." I go into the bathroom to start getting ready. I try to decide which Epilady on the counter is mine, and finally settle on the cleanest one, I sit on the edge of the tub and start shaving as I flip through the latest Mademoiselle. These models all make me sick they're so skinny. But you know they don't partv. Lisa walks into the bathroom and shuts the door. "Jennifer is such a bitch Í lent her my wraparound for last night and some guy threw up all over it and now’ she won't even wash it. She savs it's not her fault he got si< k " Lisa unwraps a Zinger, breaks it in half, and starts digging out the cream filling with her finger. "I mean, she's got fhat multiple per­ sonalities thing, like wrhat Vicky had on One Life to Live " "Jennifer's really sw eet,” I tell Lisa. "She just needs to figure out who she is. Do you have any more Marlboro Light 100s?" Í ask. "I'm trying to quit, but 1 get so hungry, /know , and I'm sick of all those Pop Rocks." [ennifer has done the best, man­ aging to make it back to Kyle's hotel "So rry," Lisa says, licking filling off her diamond ring. "N ix those candies, though, or you'll have a one-way ticket to Slim-Fast city." "H u rry up, girls." Steph yells from the living room, "or we'll re­ voke your license to party'" I get ready quickly, drinking a Pearl Light and munching on a salad Jennifer gut from Wendy's. W'hen 1 come out, the girls are sit­ ting on the sofa, watching Dirty Dancing on the V C R "Wooooo, Bnttany'" screams Steph. "Watch out, gentlemen!" "YaTl are so special," 1 say "To­ night could be the beginning of the best spring break EV ER .” Of course, 1 deny that I look good, saying instead that my legg­ ings make me look fat but for some totally random reason my eyes are drawn to the sea outside our win­ dow and these crazy words pop into my head: "S o we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past." And I'm like, I don't even know what they mean. It's not until we're out the loor and walking together toward the guys' condo, like eager lemmings to the edge of the precipice, do I real­ ize that I've never even had Ca?un food and since 1 don't reallv like fish anyway it's probably gonna totally suck, for me it least. I wonder what it would feel like to take off all mv clothes and walk out into the water until it covered me all the way up to the top ot mv head ,.HOT LINE 'Corpus i M A K E R ESER VA T IO N S NOW! ! ! ! ! ! ! 1- 800- 445-9463 SPRING BREAKERS $45.00 I TO 4 GUESTS PER ROOM + TAX :ORPUS CHRIST INN 1- 800- 445-9463 2838 SOUTH PADRE ISLA N D DRIVE Editor Jeanne Acton Writers Joseph Abbott Katnna Brown Felloe Campos Diane Smith Artist Korey Coleman KTSB RADIO 91.7 CABLE FM AUSTIN’S ALTERNATIVE SPRING BREAK _ OST HERE! aM (¡cun, ctfipAtd Teteu * Üfü, $2.00 Off «*» Spring 3re«k T-Shirt (with this iúitpom) XtT T* ROUND-TRIP AIRLINE TICKETS ON CONTINENTAL AIRLINES FOR SPRING BREAK! AND OTHER GREAT PRIZES Look for specially marked cans in all UT Pepsi m achines. If you get one of these cans, call the phone # on the sticker to find out what you’ve won! Other Prizes: • sunglasses • coolers • beach towels Airline Ticket Restrictions: 1. Good only in Continential U.S. 2. Tickets must be used before 4/30/91 3. Blackout dates Feb. 14-19 & March 21 -April 2 TEXAS TEXTBOOKS 2 4 1 0 -B E. R iv e rsid e 4 4 3 -1 2 5 7 2 3 3 d G u a d a l u p e 4 7 4 - 9 5 7 V E x Page 16 Wednesday. February 27, 1991 THE DAILY TEXAN The leader of the packed: he'll never ever be any good Joseph Abbott H e a ith a n d F itn e s s S taff tor O n e of th e m o s t im p o r ta n t parts of p r e p a r in g th a t big s p r in g break trip is p a c king. P ro p e r suit­ case p ac k in g te c h n iq u e u t n bo th e ke\ trulv e n jo y a b le sp rin g brea k to a T h a t's w h a t th e y tell me, a n y w a y . I w o u ld n t k n o w I n e v e r g o o n a m big s p r in g break trips. It | get to go a n w h e r e at all, it's h o m e Rut the e d ito rs of this a u g u s t publication a s k e d m e to give v ou, the reader, for sage advice on p a c k in g nr. sprin g break. I d o n 't k n o w w h y , but hey, i t ' s m o n e v . N ot m u c h m o n e y , but m o n e y . s o ■ Pack lig ht. M om h as extra of al­ most ev e ry th in g , a n v w a y s h a m ­ poo, to o th b r u s h e s , to o th p a s te , ex­ tra clothes, etc. O t c o u rse not all of CUSTOM TEE SHIRTS QUALITY SILKSCREEN1NG IN HOUSE ART DEPT. SHIRTS 1 SPECIAL DISCOUNTS QUANTITY 48 84 144+ jmupv-Twim $4,00 $3.75 CALL i »ji. u h «rfiwcrr-u-*» /w rsr u OFFER G O O D UNTIL FEB 15. 1991 222 RIO GRANDE SUTE 110 D AUSTIN, TX. 78705 LOW PRICES the clothes tit real well, since it s bee n at least a c o u p le of y ea rs since I w o re th e m ; but generally vou d o n ' t h a v e to worry' a b o u t f o r g e t­ ting s o m e th in g . It'll be ta k en care of. ■ R o llin g y o u r clo th e s sa v es on space a n d h e l p s p r e v e n t w r i n k le s . At least it d o e s w h e n M om d o e s it; s o m e h o w this n e v e r q u ite w o rk s w h e n I trv it. S he said this w as the w a v mv fathe r d id it w h e n h e w as in the Armv. Actually', 1 usually ig­ this h in t a n d w ad all m y nore clothes since th e v 'r e u su a lly all dirtv a m way. U s­ ing M o m 's w a s h e r a n d d r v e r is a lot c h e a p e r, especially in d r v e r time. suitcase, into the ■ D o n 't forget to leave ro o m for s o u v e n ir s , n e w clothes, etc. A ctual­ ly, 1 can see h o w this w o u ld h a v e a b e a rin g o n s o m e o n e goin g to, say. S o u th P a d re Island. For me, this is just a r e m i n d e r that trips h o m e u s u ­ ally m e a n t r i p s t o th e mall. My sis­ ter also g e t s m e stuff occasionally, a l th o u g h t h i n g s like t h e A rk a n sa s RazorbacksJhasketball s h i r t I'm g e n ­ erally te m p te d to " fo rg e t'' to pack, c o n s id e rin g h o w m u c h grief thev ca u se m e back here. ■ D o n 't b o t h e r p a c k in g te x tb o o k s or h o m e w o r k . I h is I c a n s p e a k to from p erso n a l experience. N o m a t­ ter h o w m u c h vou say yo u will term p a p e r w hile that w o rk on v o u 're at h o m e , you w o n ' t . ■ D o n 't forget to p ac k s u n g la s s e s a n d s u n ta n lotion. The s u n is o u r friend, b u t e v e n w ith frie nds th e re is such a th in g as o v e rsta y in g y o u r w elcom e. I onlv th r e w this in b e ­ c a u s e 1 w a s trv in g to th in k of th in g s that p e o p le g o in g to be a c h e s n ee d . Since 1 s p e n d m o st of m y tim e at h o m e in d o o rs (and since I'm n ot into skm discoloration) I u su a lly d o n 't b o th e r w ith this. r i NEED MONEY? QUICK? Instant Cash Loans On Anything of Value 10% OFF YOUR NEXT PURCHASE OR UP TO $5.00 OFF INTEREST PAYMENT ON YOUR NEXT LOAN WITH THIS COUPON Buv-Sell-Trade-La va \va y y Televisions y Stereos VCRs y Car Stereos y Musical Instruments y Speakers y Amps y Tools y Microwaves y Cameras y Jewelry y Guns and More' I | 1103 IH35 at 11th St. C h e c k C a s h in g • W e s t e r n U n io n • M oney O r d e r s • N o ta r v P u b lic • F a x M a c h in e • C o pier 472-3200 M on.-Fri. 9-6 S at 9-4 | ^ j j j Next to C U S T O M D O O G iA BUVN A C tO P P IN G C U S T O M | PUSH WKKIMWiO C U S T O M [HANO-WOCISSIDB&W fcu T fav T " I C O LO t/iA W (N LA A G IM IN T S F O t M SPLAY Q « FU iU C A T T O N C U S T O M I CONTACT S H U TS ¡ C U S T O M ONI HOUB PWNTS & SUDIS [ C U S T O M | COPY A t f STQiATTONS C U S T O M [ S lt V fC I A IfU A 1 H J T Y ¡CUSTOM jWOTOMAMCLAIS óOlWMortin Like» King 474-1177 TH€ _ iC • • • iT f I «Ti— Í F 1 N E S T # 474 6806 1716 SftN ANTONIO ST. Continuing in the European Tradition of haircare the MANE EVENT introduces European Skin Care by B o n n i o featuring- pore-cleansing facials complete body waxing manicure pedicure lash & brow dye Call now for an appt and receive a 15% discount (until March 8) Within walking distance of U.T. C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD SPRING BREAK S1ZZLERSÜ! V\ KT. Bctíy, chains fron $29.95 K? KT. A iklrts from $14.95 N O THING FEELS LIKE REAL G OLD irtoti s p rin g s JEWELRY : 625 Barton Spnngs Rd. M on-Fri 10-6 4 7 8 -9 2 3 4 t É ¡ f ? M i l The Morning After But if you’re really in a hurry... You studied all night. Your alarm didn't go off It's 7:55 a m YOU'RE LATE! The Honda Elite™ can get you there on time with the push of a button and no shifting. Parking'’ No Problem' If you can't avoid the 8:00 a.m. class, get a Honda Scooter. It could be a morning you look forward to. H O N D A Come ride w ith iis. Introducing a First Time Buyer Plan for College Students and a Price of only S6 3 S ♦ T T& L ALWAYS WEAK A HELMET EYE l'i«iTE< TION I'KOTKf TIYE < LOTHINH. and pit am* le^peit tin environment Head vour mvnti manual thoroughly Eor rider training information tall the Motorcycle Safety Foundation at I KOO 417 47(H) P CD %A 1991 CBR600F2 * 5 2 9 8 • t t & l Total Performance. • R e d e s i g n e d from t h e g r o u n d up, t h e H o n d a C B R 6 0 0 F 2 is t h e h ig h e s t- p e r f o r m a n c e , m o st c o m p e t e n t m i d d l e w e i g h t s p o r tb ik e e v e r p roduce d. • A v a il a b le in W h ite /R e d or B la c k B lu e P i n k color s c h e m e HONDA • KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6 5 0 9 N orth L a m a r 4 5 9-33 11 or 4 5 9 -8 9 4 4 H O N D A C vm e ride w ith t is. Fe b . 2 I - M A R . 3 NEW 1991 aaooel Packs 1990 model Closeouts $139 •Lowe Triloqy Convertible •North Face Snow LeOfetti §235 *179 •fAountainsmith DiteQOOC &&0 ¿"22Á •Kelty Radel \ $159 •Lowe Contour III i i e 0 i i i 9 • SPECIAL PRICES l t MODEL CLOSEOUTS ON TENTS ANO SLEEPING B A SS. F acto ry representatives fro m LOWE C a r ib o u t h e n o r t h Face DANA DESIGNS will be present on weekends only • 2 0 y e a rs in A u s tin * Whole Earth Provision Co. 4006 S. Lamar 444-9974 2410 San Antonio St. 478-1577 4S8-6333 8868 Research Blvd. Largest Selection! of Horn- Rimmed & Round Frames Take part in the world of underwater adventure without getting wet. Our Series I(XX) diver 's watch allows you to look like a professional athlete w ith a minimum of exertion. It's equipped with a unidirectional turning bezel and a scnew-m crown that ensures water resistance to 660 feet. PACK SNOW t S^LE. T H E D A IL Y T e x a n Wednesday, February 27, 1991 Page 17 See our ad In the doca coupon book Chotee of stainless steel (shown), steel and gold, o r black and gold. Protect your eyes with sunglasses While the selection Is a t Its best, shop Russell Korman Com pany todayl f e w ? 4 flN K .O m n SVT NH ►--------- 38th & Lamar • 451-9292 Open 10-6 Monday-Saturday Diane Smith Spring Break Staff With closer, spring drawing many college students are entertain­ ing thoughts of basking under the sun on a warm, sandy beach, shoot­ ing dow n snow-covered slopes, or just plain taking a drive through the Texas countryside. Whatever your favorite spring pastime, there is a pair sunglasses designed to fit your need and pro­ tect your eyes from the sun's p ow ­ erful rays. Bill Kreger, manager of Goggles at Barton Creek Square, said three types of lenses are used in sunglass­ es. These are cosmetic, which are lightly tinted and are primarily de­ signed for fashion wear; general purpose, which are darker and are designed for all-around use; and specialty, which are very dark and are designed to protect from the glare on mountain snowfields. Kreger explained that there are three forms of ultraviolet ravs: UVA, UVB and UVC. UVA rays can cause cataracts and retinitis, while UVC rays are naturally absorbed in the atmosphere. "It is generally good to have at least 60 percent UVA blockage," Kreger said. Sixty percent is also the limit for what the American Nation­ al Standard Institute will endorse, he added. The most popular sunglasses this year, according to Gage Chariton, sales clerk at Sun Gear Guadalupe, are Ray Ban Aviators and Wayfarer. Chariton said the tear-drop, gold- rimmed and green-lens Aviators are "the kind Tom Cruise wore in Top Gun" and the Wayfarers are the style Cruise wore in the movie Risky Business. Kreger pointed out that Ray Ban has received Oscars for roles in movies such as Die Hard II, Havana, Pacific Heights, Internal Affairs and Firebirds. Advertising Staff Box Cindy Anderson Catherine Durkin Susan Lebfrom Doug Lyon Lisa Perry Jylie Robinson Stace Sorrells Wendy Watkins Jennifer Hicks, salesperson at Big- Dog Sunglasses, agreed. "The Way­ farer is probably what w e sell the most of," she said. Hicks said classv style and a flattering look make the Wayfarer popular among customers. "They have been around a long time and they have a classic look that looks good on a lot of people," she said. Hicks believes that Ray Ban offers the look, style and affordability cus­ tomers want. "That's w hy I think Ray Ban does so well," ^he said. To pick an ideal pair of sunglass­ es, Hicks said, consider "what you are getting for your m oney." "When you pay more money, you get better quality. Cheap $10 sunglasses do not do the job be­ cause you never know how much protection there is," Hicks said. Hicks added that dark, cheap glasses allow harmful rays into the eyes. "We try to give college students a deal," she said. "There's always a deal som ew here.” For those who wear corrective lenses and seek the sam e protection from the sun, but cannot afford a new pair of sunglasses, there is also a large selection of clip-on lenses. Goggles offers flip-up styles with polarized lenses that reduce glare from the water or road "a lot like a polarizing lens for a camera," said Kreger. Another style is circular clip-on lenses. These are generally sold at optical goods centers. Deborah Wade, salesperson for Santa Fe Optical Co at 1601 W. 38th St., said these clip-on lenses offer the same benefits as regular sun­ glasses, but are more convenient for people w ho wear corrective lenses than buying a w hole new pair of glasses. The lenses com e in a variety of stvles ranging inprice from $49 to $90. BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE. WANT ADS...471-5244 I t ' l l Be Easy Riding w ith University Texaco's Spring Break Check-out Package Special Package includes; OU & Filter Brake Inspection Belt & Hose Inspection Tire Inspection fo r only $19.95 ($5S.oo Value) FULL SERVICE DRIVE 9 SELF SERVE PRICING University Texaco Center Your Totally Convenience Center Captain tyuackenbnxh's Cafe B akery & G allery 2120 Guadalupe St. (The Drag) 1 01 6 G u ad alu p e Sales 4 5 2 -5 5 1 6 S ervice 452 -9 610 MON-FRI 7 a m -9 pm SA T Sam-Opm l t n o o i S U N 0 / / T \ V * . . . C Á e o - H Í y e n c c « t e a 1 4 ¿ 4 S p r e a d ‘S x ez a é Large Metal Large Metal II Wayfarer 39.95 39.95 39.95 Hazlewoods Travel 2222 Rio Grande 478-5000 U.T. 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First 3 Blocks S. of Ben White 462-0001 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS ...471-5244 EXAMS# CONTACTS# GLASSES (ftmkOw M#» ■ 1 9 0 4 GUADALUPE 4 7 6 ' 1° 0 0 Offering the latest in contact lens technology...At affordable prices T h e D A itY T e x a n Page 18 Wednesday, February 27.1991 Razorbacks take title for 3rd straight year Associated Press F A Y E T T E ­ VILLE. Ark. — For the first tim e since he arrived A r k a n s a s years ago, M a y b e rry o n t h e w h en the Razorbacks took swc the court T uesday night. Coach N olan R ichardson p ut him there so senior subs Ron H uery an d Ernie M urry could be in th e startin g lineup along w ith senior starter Ar- lyn Bowers. H uery, Bowers and M urry com ­ bined for 39 points w hile O liver M il­ ler and Todd Day totaled an o th e r 39 as third-ran ked A rkansas beat Bay­ tied a S o uth w est lor 106-74 and C onference record w ith third straight u n d isp u ted title. its to the tied record The Razorbacks, m oving next sea­ the S outheastern C o nfer­ son ence, th ree straight SWC u n d isp u te d ch am p i­ on sh ip s, set by Southern M ethodist U niversity in 1955-57. A rkansas will go for a 16-0 finish in the league at Texas on Sunday. for T he A keem O la ju w o n -C ly d e Drexler team at H ouston in 1983 w as the last to go 16-0 in the SWC. "It w as senior day and that w as som ething to get excited a b o u t," R ichardson said. "This gam e w as dedicated to o u r seniors. "It w as to u g h n o t starting Lee af­ ter he started 9=1 gam es in a row. But a coach can m ake decisions like that w hen there a re n 't any big egos on the team . 1 th o u g h t a long time abo ut it. H e's a great individual an d he took it w ell." "I th e think first conference th e s till c h a m p i o n s h i p w a s sw eetest," M ayberry said "W e've got a chance to go undefeated in conference. So, w e sh o u ld n 't have a problem getting u p for Texas." Baylor suffered 31 tu rnovers and M ayberrv said th at w as the killer. "W e got too m any easy b askets," he said. Baylor Coach G ene Iba said he th o u g h t his Bears w ere in the gam e until the final m in u tes of the first half. A rkansas scored the final 6 points of th e half for a 51-33 lead at interm ission. A rkansas to p p ed 100 p o in ts for the 16th tim e this season — also a conference record. W ith 4:01 left an d A rkansas lead ­ ing 98-66, Miller, w h o led all scorers w ith 20, held u p a T-shirt w ith SWC and See Ya!! on th e front an d a h u g e red 3 with th e w ord PEAT in black on th e back. H uery an d Day scored 19 each for the Razorbacks (28-2) w hile Roose­ velt W allace contributed 14 and Bowers 11. David W esley scored 19 points for Baylor (12-13, 4-11). Baylor led once, 2-0. It w as tied once, 2-2. From th ere, A rkansas ran off 11 straight p o in ts. Spurs sink Blazers in OT Associated Press SAN A N TO N IO — David Robin­ son said he felt su re he w as ab out to give the San A ntonio S purs a victo­ ry over the Portland Blazers w h en he w ent to the free throw line w ith 1.9 seconds left in overtim e. "I feel confident in th at type of situ atio n ," said Robinson, w ho m issed his first shot, b ut m ade the second, giving th e Spurs a 102-101 trium ph T uesday night. "1 really felt like I w’as going to p u t them both in." Terry Porter, w ho led Portland c o n te n d e d R o b in so n w ith 28, should not have hit any. "It w as a q uestionable call all the w ay," Porter said. "A n d w h en a re­ feree th a t's o u t of position m akes it, it's even w orse. You d o n 't m ake those calls late in the gam e. But I guess you live a n d die by th e call." Robinson, w ho grabbed a career- high 21 re b o u n d s, an d Sean Elliott finished w ith 25 po in ts apiece as the Spurs let a 17-point halftim e lead slip aw ay b u t held on to register the franchise's 1,000th victory an d the second over the Blazers in three nights. "C redit San A ntonio w ith good defen se," P ortland coach Rick Adel- m an said. "T he first half really h u rt us and it w as very tough battling back." Joey Lin Daily Texan Staff Fey Meeks reaches for the rebound in Texas’ 77-53 win over Tech. The Lady Longhorns held the Red Raiders to a 37.5 percent shooting mark. Texas pastes Tech for 2nd place Mark Babineck D a ily T e x a n S ta ff T hough it's almost a cer- taintv that Arkansas will take first place in the Southw est C onference this season, 14th- ranked Texas m ade it clear that second place is off-lim­ its. Women The Lady Longhorns (18-7, 12-2 SWC) punctuated their message with a 77-53 trounc­ ing of Texas Tech (20-6, 11-4) Tuesday night at the Erwin Center. Sophom ores C inietra H enderson (26 points) and Fey Meeks (18) paced Texas with career- high scoring perform ances to extend the Lady Longhorns' record over the Raiders to 37-0. H enderson attributed her solid perform ance to simplv getting the chance to shoot. " I hev were able to get me the ball, and I just had to put it in the hole," said H enderson, who scored 20 in the second half. "A post player has to earn respect dow n low, and they w o n 't give vou the ball if vou can 't score. You just Jet them know you can score, an d you'll get it." Texas Coach jo dy C o n rad t said she was pleased w ith her frontcourt play, w hich also in­ cluded Vicki H all's 17 points, b u t ad ded th at the gam eplan included taking the inside shots. "W e th o u g h t that [u n d ern eath th e goal] w as w here we had the ad v a n ta g e ," C onradt said. "W e w anted to take it to the basket, particularly inside, and force them to play d efen se.” The gam e w as very different from the 66-63 Texas victory Jan. 23. That contest, played in Lubbock, w as close th ro u g h o u t and w as finally w on on a |u m p shot by Hall w ith 26 seconds rem aining. But the Erwin C enter rem atch w as over early. Though Tech never led the gam e, it m anaged to stay w ithin 10 points thro ugh m ost of the first half. But the m om entum sharply tu rn ed tow ard the Lady Longhorns w hen Eurica Johnson hit a fade-aw ay jum psho t w'ith 5:22 left in the period. That began a 13-2 run th at effectively buried the Red Raiders bv halftim e w ith a 35-18 lead. The first haíf total for Texas Tech tied the low ­ est yield by the Lady L onghorns this season. "It w as an excellent gam e, particularly in the first half," C onradt said. "W e put a lot of pres­ sure on them , and they w ere n 't able to run their offense." The Red Raiders shot an anemic 28.6 percent before halftim e, and finished the gam e at 37.5 percent. The Ladv Longhorns, conversely, ripped the conference's leading defensive squad w ith 53.2 percent shooting, one of the reasons Tech Coach M arsha Sharp w as discouraged abou t her team 's play. "W e w ere d isap p o in ted w ith the w ay w e shot the basketball in the first h alf,'' she said, "it w as really the difference in w h eth er w e stayed in the gam e or n o t." Reserve forw ard Tami W ilson led the Raiders with 14. ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Last-place Texas C hristian (5-20, 2-12 SWC) will face Texas W ednesday night at the Erwin C enter at 7:35 p.m . The Lady L onghorns pasted the Lady Frogs 84-58 on Jan. 26, before injuries felled three key TCU players. For the second consecutive gam e, the leading rebounder for the Lady L onghorns w as a guard. Johnna Pointer, starting for injured Edna C am pbell, grabbed nine boards an d scored six p o i n t s in the gam e. Craig M. Douglas D a ily T e x a n S ta ff So m uch for the pow er short- age. ‘ T exas (14-5) to d id n't seem be the lacking long ball Tues- ‘ a g a i n s t d a y L O D Q h O rn S Southw est Texas (1 3 -4 ), blasting its w ay to a 10-4 victory o v er th e th e Bobcats b e h in d strength of three home runs before 1,294 at Disch-Falk Field. S t a t e Six of the Longhorns' 10 RBIs came on hom e runs. Clay King con­ nected for a three-run shot in the second that w as im m ediately fol­ lowed by Shane Halter's solo blast. Roger Luce s tw o-run h om er in the seventh inning w as the third of the day. left-handed All of Texas' ru n s carne off Bob­ cats starter William Brunson (3-1), w ho pitched a com ­ plete gam e, g i v i n g up nine earned r u n s o n nine hits. Two w eeks ago, in Brunson defeated Texas A&M College Station 4-3, yielding only three hits and striking o ut 14. Youth Travel "Coach [Cliff Gustafson] had told us how good this pitcher was, so I guess everybody was really bearing d ow n a lot," King said. King led Texas w ith four RBI, ad ding a sacrifice fly in the fourth to go along w ith his first hom er of the year. H alter's blast w as his second of the year, and his RBI triple in the fourth inning gave him a team -lead­ ing five on the season. Luce leads the Longhorns w ith six hom e runs, one shy of his 1990 total, an d the only Longhorn to m atch his 18 RBI is King. Texas cam e into the season not expecting to hit a lot of hom e runs. The L onghorns played m ore gam es than any o ther school in the S o u th ­ w est C onference last season, yet finished third am ong league team s in hom e ru n s w ith 44. H eading into the season, G ustaf­ son th ought Texas w ould not be able to m atch that total this year, partly because he lost his leading hom e run hitter David Tollison, w ho had 12 in 1990. "I d o n 't like to talk a lot about pow er playing in this park, especial­ ly w hen the w ind is blow ing in from left m ost of the tim e," G ustafson said. "I am pleased w ith o u r offen­ sive perform ance; we w ere able to come through with some big hits, which is som ething we h a v en't been able to d o ." Texas' bats bailed starter Rodney Pedraza o u t of trouble, b u t th e b en­ eficiary of the explosion w as Scott H arrison (4-0), w ho picked up the win with th ree innings of sh u to u t relief w ork and five strikeouts. Pedraza gave up single ru n s in the first, third and fourth innings (two earned) on tw o RBI doubles first basem an Gary from Bobcat Flerrm ann and an o th e r from catcher Tiny Van R heen, w ho e n tered the gam e hitting .150. Pedraza was yanked after th e fourth for H arri­ son. "N o t a w hole lot w ent right," Pedraza said. "I th o u g h t I had good pitches, but I co u ld n 't put them w here I w anted them . I know I can do it; it's just a m atter of p u ttin g it together. Som etim es w h en you lose som ething, It's just a m atter of find­ ing it ag ain ." D uring the early spring, Pedraza (2-2) w as considered by m any the m ost talented pitcher on the Long­ h orns' staff, and som e even expect­ ed him to step forw ard and partially fill the void left by O akland A's rookie Kirk D ressendorfer. But after w inning his first start, Pedraza lost a pair of gam es, re­ b o u n d ed against M cN eese, and looked unim pressive again Tues­ day. Even w ith the sporadic perfor­ m ances, th o u g h , G ustafson still be­ lieves in P ed raza's talent. But how long he will con tin u e to do so re­ m ains a difficult question. Texas 10, Southwest Texas 4 Southwest Texas Hawkins Cf Swanson 3b Davis 2 b H errm ann 1b C abaniss If Vates rf Sizemore dh V. ■ iah dh Zeuqe ss Van Rheer Totals ab 5 5 4 5 5 3 2 1 3 3 36 r 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Texas h bi 0 0 M urray f 2 0 Dorsey Cf 1 0 C herrone cl 3 3 P ugh 1b 0 0 L uce r 0 0 Mor and d h 0 0 H askins rf 0 0 K ing 3b 1 0 Ha ter ss 2 1 M oody 2b h bi 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 4 2 1 31 10 9 10 Southwest T e x a s ............................ 101 100 001— 4 9 2 Texas................................................... 040 400 20x— 10 9 1 K nq Swanson Van Rheen SW1 10 Texas 3 2B E LOB Rheer Hask ms Mor land M o o dy 3B HR SB Mcx dy CS Halter King ( i ) Halter (2) L u ce (6) Herrm ann (4) Don.*-» SAC K ing Murray Davis Herrm ann 2 Z e ug e Van IP R ER BB SO Southwest Texas B 'unson L (3 1) Texas Pedraza Harrison W (4-0) Portertie d WP ’ A H arrison B runson 2 31 1 294 King, Halter, Luce homer Southwest Texas State 10-4 Longhorn Shannon Dorsey is thrown out trying to steal second base. John McConnico'Daily Texan Staff ROUNDTRIPS!- from $710 L0 N D 0 N from $1080 S Y D N E Y from $528 C OSTA RICA from $1085 T O K Y O from $1346 BANGKOK from $800 ST O C K H O LM from $ 1776 N E P A L $999 from R IO * 7 D A Y LE N N IN G R A D / M O SC OW T O U R from $775 • Flights W orldwide • Low Cost One Way Fares on Request • Refundable. Changeable Flexible • Eurail Passes, I D Cards. Tours • Som e Restrictions Apply • Call or Write lor Free brochure 'Departs DFW/H0U ■ 7204V? M E L R O S E A V E L O S A N G E L E S . C A 90046 1- 800- 777 -0112m ) 213- 937-5781 STATRAVEL 120 OFFICES WORLDWIDE S265 LONDON S320 PARIS MADRID S320 HONG KONG S483 S281 JAMAICA S560 RIO ONEW AY FROM AUSTIN ALSO TEACHER and BUDGET FARES! EURAIL PASSES USSR / Europe Tours Language Learning Centers Counci (Travel 2000 GUADALUPE AUSTIN, TX 78705 — 4 7 2 - 4 9 3 1 — , ... «* w . i! if* rg§§?3 9ms Au P o / y frs m SALON- 1014-CN.LAM AUSTIN,TX78703-(512)474-7376 606 Maiden Ln. Between 35th and 37th off Guadalupe Ph. 453-4349 THE DAILY TEXAN Wednesday, February 27. 1991 Page 19 Gymnastic m ‘nemesis' next for I T Meredith Whitten Daily T exan Staff 1 he UT men's gymnastics team is getting an eariv glimpse of the fu­ ture The team leaves Thursday for two meets in (. alifomia — one I hursdav night in Santa Barbara and one Sat­ urday in San Luis Obispo At both meets Texas will com­ pete against Cal Poly, the Long­ horns' biggest competition in the club division, and after this week­ end the team should have a good idea of what to expect at the United States Gymnastics Federation colle­ giate national championships in April They're our nemesis," U T all- arounder Mark Schaffer said. "This should definitely be a precursor to nationals." Last season. Cal Poly came in sec­ ond behind Texas at the U SG F na­ tional the Longhorns know to keep a close eye on them again this year. championships, and "They're doing better than last vear," Texas Coach Mark Hartwell said. "Let me put it this wav: the\ scored 217 at nationals last year and we scored 214 at a dual meet with Air Force this year. So we're not guaranteed a win this weekend." Last year. Cal Poly came to a Tex­ as-hosted meet, where the Long­ horns beat them soundly two nights in a row. The two teams' next meet­ ing was at nationals. "Thev're going to be sporting a full team and they'll be looking to get the national title," Schaffer said. Besides Cal Poly, Texas will also face the University of California at Santa Barbara at Thursday night's meet. UCSB, the host of the meet, is a Division 1 varsity team. Although the Longhorns are a club-status team, thev are used to going up against Division I teams such as U CSB and Air Force. After Thursday's meet, the Long­ horns will drive to San Luis Obispo for Saturday's competition with Cal Polv, UC Davis and Sacramento, all of which are club teams. UC Davis will be hosting the U SG F nationals, which gives the California teams an advantage. "Gymnastics is such a subjective Please see Gymnasts, page 20 Shot blocker extraordinaire Albert Burditt takes a rare shot attempt. I Sr i- ne Photos No. 6 Horns wary of sleeping Tigers Jim Miller Daily Texan Staff W h e n the Texas women's tennis team travels to San Antonio to face T rin ity on Thursday, the competi­ tive level may not match that of the 1 adv Tigers of old, but Texas Coach Jeff Moore said he is making sure his team is aware of the possibility of an earlv- season upset. Tennis "Trinity is a little bit down this year, but thev are a traditional rival, and we're play­ ^ ing them away, so we will have to be focused," Moore said. keeping focused. "W hat's happened with Trinity is they've lost some plavers from both teams [men and women] because they have moved down to Division III." Texas (4-1) is enjoying fine play this sea­ son from Denville, Ñ.J. sophomore Vickie Pavnter, the Longhorns No. 3 singles player. Last weekend, Pavnter defeated the na­ tion's 32nd-ranked amateur woman, Man- dv Wilson from Tennessee, in straight sets 6-2, 7-6. Kentucky's Antionette Grech also fell to Pavnter 6-3, 6-2. Paynter is currently ranked 47th in the nation. Pavnter attributed her success to merely "1 just thought I was reallv playing con­ sistently in even match," she said. "Even in the match that I lost [Georgia], I played consistent points. And on the two matches that 1 won, 1 reallv stayed focused, even when 1 got ahead." While Texas has an all-time losing record against the Tigers (3-10), Trinity recently abolished most of its scholarship pro­ grams, a decision which has contributed to the departure of several top athletes. As a result, Trinity' is not the tennis powerhouse that it was in the 70's and ear­ ly 80’s, the years in which the Tigers con­ sistently contended for national champion­ ships. B R E W Y O U R O W N B E E R !! C O M P L E T E H O M E B R E W KITS: ($44.50) (Winemaking kits also available) 472-9700 B E E R in M I N D 2 for 1 ADULT VIDEO SALE Buyl Get 1 FREE lowest price free EXPIRES 3 V r .a c wtft tfte'oflers 9 a .m . to 10 p.m. Daily EVERY WOMAN’S CONCERN Catch the latest wave of devel­ opments and technological ad­ vances in The Daily Texan's issue. Ad­ exciting new vertisers don't miss this unique opportunity to reach the university market. Racking up blocks, boards key to Burditt’s floor time Paul Hammons Daily Texan Staff Albert Burditt is only human. Like anv other freshman basket­ ball player playing before the hometown crowd, the Austin na­ tive can't help but think about mak­ ing the big offensive play, bringing the crowd to its feet. "I think about dunking the ball a lot," he said. But, he added, "That's probably the only time 1 |\/]0 PI think about scoring." At this point in his career, Burditt won't strike fear into opponents' hearts as a scoring threat. He took onlv two shots against Stetson Monday night, one coming on a tip-in off an offensive rebound. But his scoring hasn't been the reason for his in­ creasing playing time. In 12 mindtes of the second half, Burditt pulled down eight rebounds — second on the team — and gave Texas one of its two blocked shots in the game. That has been typical of his performance this year. Despite limited playing time, he trails only starter Pan­ ama Mvers for the team lead in blocked shots by nine, and is only four blocks away from LaSalle Thompson's freshman block record of 36. That has helped take the pressure off some of the Longhorns' inside defenders, who until this year had not had a true backup center. The spot had been filled either by converted forwards, such as Hank Dudek, or projects, such as George Muller. "W e don't worry so much [about inside depth], Texas Coach Tom Penders said. "I feel a lot better knowing we have him [Burditt] behind Panama. He can come in and block shots, alter shots and get re­ bounds. He gets some rebounds that not many people can get." For now, at least, Burditt said the adjustment to de­ fensive specialist hasn't been a problem for him. "I'm more concerned about rebounding," Burditt said. "That's how I'll get my offense — if I can get rebounds and score off them. 1 feel just being in my freshman year, I want to establish mvself and be a good defensive player, which is what Coach Penders stresses Over the next couple of years 1 want to score more and more." For now, however, he can be satisfied with more and more playing time. After starting two games at forward early in the season, Burditt went back to the bench as the play of Lockslev Collie improved But since that time, hi-' playing time has increased, and he now averages about fifteen minutes per game. He surpassed that total against the Hatters, playing 17 minutes, and 12 of those came down the stretch in the second half when the Longhorns were finally able to pull away for the win, in part due to Burditt's strong defense inside. "Albert has been a major contributor to this point," Penders said. "Albert's matured with every game. O f­ fensively he's not there yet, but he's played great de­ f e n s i v e l y . " Burditt said he's more concerned about adapting to the physical nature of college basketball than he is about improving his scoring output, which may be because he received a quick indoctrination into that style of play while practicing against Myers. "I'v e played players with questionable skills that made up for it with strength," Burditt said. "In high school I was pretty much one of the biggest players. 1 knew thot was going to be one of my concerns, but I didn't think it was going to be a major, major point." Burditt said he would like to increase his playing weight to 225, about 10 pounds above his present weight. And as his size increases, his scoring should, too. "H e 's a freshman," Penders said. "H e's not looking for his shot at this point." Freshman Jackie Moe holds the Horns’ fourth spot. Michelle Dapra Daily Texan Staff Hazlewoods Travel 2222 Rio Grande 478-5000 U.T. Spring Break Specials CANCÚN fOund trip dir ‘CANCÚN •ACAPULCO is n .g h ts O n ly s229 s369 s379 s389 s129 •PUERTO VALLARIA 6 n ights SOUTH PADRE 7 nights EUROPE $318 navei good lot na MADRID GENEVA ZURICH OSLO MILAN FRANKFURT LONDON STOCKHOLM ‘ Lake Tahoe Ski 5 nights 3 day lifts air " f f c O ‘Packages are quad occupancy and include roundtrip air. transfers, hotel and parties! And more. more, and more! CHEAP TICKETS!! Call 24 hrs. a Day Give Me a Bre P r o S p r in g B r e a k " | Russell Athletic Orginal V/indshorts $5." Reg. ■ £ - RusseW MWeúc Sv/e&uVurts 99 JAU N TED (TWiJJ or Fabric) $.99 Reg. $1» $1. Longhorn Spiri I P 26th and G uadalupe I m i p p I Computer & Electronics SPECIAL ISSUE Publishing April 17 For Advertising Information, call 471-1865 < Page 20 Wednesday, February 27,1991 T H E D A IL Y TEXAN Hansen still treading winning waters after unusual career Editor s note: this story is the two profiling Texas first of swimmers before the Southwest Conference C hampionships, to be held Thursday through Saturday at the Texas Swimming Center. Lew Cohn Daily T e x an Staff the world's Can a swimmer switch schools right after the \C AAs, "it out a vear, defeat top swimmer the following summer, miss the World Championships and "till have a shot to win her second \ C A A championship in the most grueling of events, the 1,650-vard freest) le? A"k Texas swimmer Erika Han- sen, NCAA champion and former Olympian, after the NCAA Cham­ pionships March 21-23 in Indianap­ olis. At the moment, she s busy training tor the SW C Champion­ ships, which start at noon Thurs dav. Hansen has been through a trau­ matic cycle of events ever since she won the mile freestyle title as a freshman for Georgia in 1989. After that triumph, she made a decision which she doesn't regret — to trans­ fer to Texas. "After the NCAAs, Georgia didn't have much of a spring pro­ gram," the redshirt sophomore said. "The school was on a quarter program instead of semester, so they weren't out of school until june. That's a problem when s w i m ­ ming hits its peak in the summer. Since [Texas Coach] Mark Schubert had coached me at Mission Bay, it had a lot to do with mv decision." Hansen first swam for Schubert as a member of the Mission Bay Ma- kas one of the most successful teams ever switching over from Foxcatcher or Germantown, Penn., her senior vear. The two had a good relationship as coach and swimmer. "I started off at square one," Hansen said. "1 really hadn't swam well for three two or years. It was a struggle for me, ^ut >t was fun tor I swimming \ \ _ i l \q g rt h im " 1 rans ter ring to Texas meant H a n s e n sitting out a year under NCAA rules. Bv doing so, Hansen missed swimming a s a full member of Tex­ as' national championship squad in 1990. It was frustrating for her to sit out of competition while her new teammates and friends swam in the NC AAs, she "aid. "It was hard," she said. "1 was just as happy as everyone else, though. I felt like 1 had contributed as much as everyone else had by being in the pool, working out each dav. It was hard to watch them, though. Í had left the NCAAs ex­ hausted to go to my meet, and I hadn't even swum.” This year, Hansen has helped an­ other swimmer, roommate Whitney Hedgepeth, deal with her transfer from Florida. Hedgepeth is also a former N CAA champion, so Han­ sen's experience is paying off. "Not many people understand what you're going through," Han­ sen said. "They don't intentionally leave you out of things, but you feel left out at times. I try to keep her s p i r i t s up and tell her to wait until next season." Last summer, Hansen hit a break­ through point at the Long Course Nationals. She defeated Janet Evans in the 400-meter individual medley the first night of competition, be­ coming only the second swimmer in 1990 to defeat Evans — the first being Stanford freshman Summer Sanders. Hansen qualified for the World Championships in Perth, Australia, but was forced to skip them after getting sick during the fall. " I was very disappointed," she said. "I still think I made the right decision not to go. 1 had just missed the 1986 team. I think I made a big breakthrough this summer. I don't think anyone pushed me out of the picture. They still know I'm there." This semester she has come back full circle, getting close again to her NCAA championship form. In her first time sw'imming the mile this year, she qualified for the NCAAs with the second-best time in the conference behind teammate Katy Arris with a 16:32.23. "I wouldn't say I'm having a great season or a terrible one either," she said. "I've been consistent. I'm ex­ cited for the conference and NCAA meets and I think I'm ready." Senior sprint-freestyler Leigh Ann Fetter has received yet another prestigious award. The Texas Sportswriters Associa­ tion has named her the Texas Sports Woman of the Year for 1990 after she set an American record in the 50-vard free. Coach suspends Beauchamp after reserve's steroids arrest Texas Coach David McWilliams has suspend­ ed backup quarterback Brent Beauchamp from the football team indefinitely after Beauchamp s arrest last week on charges of illegally buying steroids from an Austin drugstore. Beauchamp, a 6-4, 190-pound walk-on from Atlanta, Texas, was charged with fraudulently obtaining drugs after he allegedly bought 30 ccs of testosterone using a forged perscription. The offense is considered a third-degree felony, and could result in up to 10 years and a ¿10,000 fine should Beauchamp be convicted. The incident also led to a surprise test on 38 LT athletes Mondav. L T Athletic Director De- Loss Dodds said the results would probable be ready in about a week. Testosterone cannot be purchased legally. It is a type of steroid used to promote muscular den­ sity and has been used bv athletes to increase performance. Fight ruling allows Lindsey to play Bavlor guard Dennis Lindsey was allowed to play m Tuesday night's 106-74 loss to No. 3 Ar­ kansas after the SW C director of officials re­ viewed a videotape of the Bears' game Saturday against Southeast Lousiana. Lindsey was ejected after an altercation be­ tween the two teams. Officials originally an­ nounced that Lindsey was thrown out for fight­ ing, which is an automatic one-game suspension under new N CAA rules. But officials in the conference office reviewed a videotape of the incident Mondav evening and announced Tuesday that Lindsev's ejection did not fall under the fighting violation. Fenders’ pizzas give Horns fans pep Men's basketball Coach Tom Penders provid­ ed 30 free pizzas Tuesday for the four ramps of students waiting in line for tickets to Sunday's Texas-Arkansas game. Erik Pearson, a government sophomore who had been waiting in line since 11:43 a.m. Tues­ day, said Penders came by the students during the afternoon and promised to deliver the pizzas that night, "A t 10 o'clock, sure enough, they were there. There was enough pizza for everybody," Pear­ son said. "W e trv and show our support for Coach Penders and the Running Horns. It was fantastic that he wanted to show his support for us." The ticket office began handing out visa bands after 10 p.m., Pearson said. Former Colt Unitas Files Chapter 11 BALTIMORE — Former Colts quarterback Johnny Unitas filed for bankruptcy after the city of Baltimore refused to repav a portion of an outstanding loan it had guaranteed, Unitas' at­ torney said Tuesday. Unitas, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, filed for protection from creditors under Chapter 11 on Friday. Front staff and wire repartí M iller’s Crossing 7:30 & 1 1 :40 p.m. T o n ig h t H o g g A u d it o r iu m H m o n n fifoo ALL DAY V. " ALL SEA TS—ALL SHOWS ^ h é e w m m m k iapy C_ T o n ig h t - S u n d a y H o g g A u d it o r iu m '>•< 9:40 p.m. Frida T o n ig h t - S u n d a y U n io n T h e a tre <. 7:30 p.m. The Word Within T o n ig h t - S u n d a y U n io n T h e atre s |t 9:15 p.m. T o n ig h t U n io n T h e atre A lfred H itchcock s N o t o r i o u s 11:15 p.m. TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS W ORK FOR Y O U R S CALL 471 -5244 Gary G r c ^ 'r t a n a Anne M ane Johnson ¡ ROBOTJOX iH.ii 5 00 7 30 9:30 |m i Sn et vocLae i Mery S ie e r n POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE >< 4:45 7:00 9 15 Sean Connery n RUSSIA HOUSE 4 45 7 1 5 9 45 COUPLES THEATER-Fri. & Sat. 7pm-6 am SINGLES THEATER-Qpen 7 days 24 hours TAPE RENTALS-S3 for 2 days MAGS.-Buv One Get One Free S5 PRIVATE VIEWING ROOMS Gymnasts Continued from page 19 sport," Hartwell said. "You always do better in vour own gym. The judges out there [in California] know' them." To qualify for nationals, teams submit scores from their meets all season. Then the top three teams compete for the title. According to Hartw’ell, Texas, Cal Poly and either the University of Buffalo or a California team will make up the championship three­ some. But he added that the Long­ horns definitely lead the pack. "W e are clearly the leaders going into nationals," he said. After the meets, however, the Longhorns will have a good idea where they stand. "This should give us an idea w'hat we need to do to win nationals again," team member Steve Jourdan "A REA L NAIL-BITER ..THE VANISHING' WILL LONG Al l Lit IT S OVER." HAUNT Y O U MIND ViNKxíáJheo I -Míete! HitaÉme*» in s *\G H | S m « S ^ FROST I VANISHING 7:20 - 11:45 f FIAIKEISTEII u I l M n O U I M O u 4:45 - 9;30 ASH * * » wm2 m 4 G u e d e K p e 477-1324 \ said. The team has had several weeks since its last meet to prepare for this week's competitions. That, coupled with no injuries, leaves Texas in a position to show well at both meets. "W e've been refining our skills and stressing pommel horse," Schaffer said. "W e've been improv­ ing our strength and endurance. We look sharp. 1 anticipate higher scores than at our other meets." Although Texas is a member of the Texas Gymnastics Conference, most of the team's meets are out of state, such as Colorado or Califor­ nia, posing the Longhorns difficul­ ties in travel and finances. "It's a pretty grueling schedule," Hartwell said. "They have to give up a lot of things and work their schedules around it." BEAD GALLERY (At Nomadic N o tio n s). 1)18 West Sixth • 478-6200 ! DOZEN ROSES ♦ $14.95 Fiesta Flowers ( 'ash A- ( ;im 4 ♦ I 3830 N. 453-7619 Lamar ; ; ♦ J 4 T - {. WISDOM TEETH ( T IM E S P U B L ISH E D A R E FO R TODAY ONLY ) If you need the removal of wisdom teeth BIO M EDICA L R ESEA R C H U Q P G R O U P INC; ...C all 451-0411 Financial incentive provided to cover consultation, x-ray, plus qualifying surgery in exchange for your opinion on pain medication following oral surgery. FDA approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeons. THERE ARE THINGS KNOWN AND THINGS UNKNOWN AND IN BETWEEN ARE THE DOORS... JIM M O R R ISO N m ■ * N O T H IN G B U T T R O U B L E |l*l.i:i| TMX . S L E E P I N G W IT H T H E E N E M Y K THX 1 2 :4 0 2 :5 0 5 :0 5 7 :2 5 9 : 4 5 * N E V E R E N D IN G S T O R Y II 1 :00 3 :0 0 5 :0 0 7 :0 0 9 :0 0 . O N C E AR O UN D H 1 2 :1 5 2 :4 0 5 :0 5 7 :3 0 9 :5 5 * G R IF T E R S l< 1 :0 0 3 :1 5 5 :3 0 7 :5 0 1 0 :0 0 * H A M L E T |i*d 1 :0 0 4 :0 0 7 :0 0 9 :4 5 * W H IT E FAN G |l*(. 12:« > 3 : 0 5 5:1 5 7 :2 0 9 : 3 0 * I IN D E R G A R T E N C O P (•■«I * D A N C E S W IT H W O L V E S &*<;i3j 1 :0 0 4 :3 0 8 :0 0 GREAT HILLS 8 US 1(3 I M U T MILIS THAU 794-8076 * L A. ST O R Y P»«:*3| 1 :0 5 3 :2 0 5 :3 0 7 : 4 0 9 :5 5 * N E V E R EN D IN G S T O R Y II l»*d 1 :0 0 3 :0 0 5 :0 0 . O NCE A R O U N D R 1 2 :4 5 3 :0 5 5 :2 5 7 :4 5 1 0 :0 5 . H A M LE T ÜFlíl 1 0 0 4 :0 0 7 :0 0 9 :4 5 . W H IT E FA N G I ' d 1 2 :4 5 3 :0 0 5 :1 5 7 :3 5 9 :4 5 . H O M E A L O N E >'< 1 2 :5 5 3 :1 0 5 : 2 0 7 : 3 0 9 :4 0 • K IN D E R G A R T E N C O P d’d 7 :3 0 9 :4 5 U ltN ET * 0 at WEU5 W AH CH 388-0533 • S IL E N C E O F T H E L A M B S H 7 :2 5 9 :4 5 ________ * N O T H IN G B U T T R O U B L E | l* (.ll| 7 :1 5 9 : 1 5 __ * K IN G R A LP H It'd 7 :0 0 9 :2 0 .G O D F A T H E R P A R T 3 H 5 :3 0 9 :3 0 . C A D E N C E [i’ll 13 7:05 9:25 H O M E A LO N E ll’d 7 : 1 5 9 :4 0 . E D W A R D S C IS S O R H A N O S |i >(;h | 7 :3 0 9 :5 0 * R E S C U E R S DOWN U N D E R it». TlOO . M E R M A ID S | l't»Í3 j 9:45 IBART0N CREEK I MO PAC at 100P 360 327-8281 . S C E N E S FR O M A M A LL iK. THX 1 2 :4 5 3 :0 0 5 :3 0 7 4 0 9 :4 5 . S IL E N C E O F T H E L A M B S It 1 2 :1 0 2 :3 0 5 :0 0 7 :2 5 9 :5 5 . S L E E P IN G W ITH T H E E N E M Y it 1 :0 0 3 :2 0 5 :4 5 9 :0 0 1 0 :1 5 O N C E A R O U N D K 1 2 :3 0 2 : 5 0 5 :2 0 7 :4 5 1 0 :1 0 G R E E N C A R D |l*<. l:l| 1 2 :3 0 2 : 4 5 5 :1 5 7 :4 5 1 0 :0 0 G H O S T h i 4 : 3 0 7 : 0 5 9 : 4 0 RUSSIA HOUSE k 4 :4 5 7 :2 5 9 :5 5 You arc invited to hear C h a r le s L a k e s First black American Olympic Gymnast and top US gymnast at 1988 Olym pics, at a Free Public Lecture on D 1 A N E T 1 C S ® and Gymnastics Demonstration IF®ibiriii®iry 2?» 112)2)1 7 IR®<ú U © ® N©Tttto ®U US IHIwy 22>D ¡p.m. Him Sponsored by the Hubbard Dianetics Foundation of Austin. Call 474-6812 for more information. I I Within the past 3 0 days, students of the uni­ for phonograph versity spent $4 71 ,7 29 records la p e s and com pact d iscs Source The University Marker Í University Market Facts... Beioen Associates ’ 987 PRESIDIO THEATRES “MEET MEAT PRESIDIO" EVERY WEDNESDAY $ 3 2 5 (SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS EXCLUDED) STUDENT DISCOUNTS DAILY $4.50 WITH VALID I.D. MATINEE ALL SHOWS BEFORE 8:00 PM ■- ID E 8 448-0008 R IV E R S ID E 8 P L E A SA N T V A L L EY RO SILENCE OF THE LAMBS i< SM ART STEREO 2 15 4 45 7 30 10 0 5 ________ NO F R E E P A S S E S HE SAID, SHE SAID |i < i i | SM A R T ST EREO 2 2 0 4 4 5 7 1 5 9 45 NO P A S S E S O R KLBJ DISCOUNTS DANCES WITH WOLVES S M A R T ST EREO ___________ 3 3 0 7 0 0 1 0 15____________ SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY h S M A R T ST EREO 3 .1 5 5 4 5 8 OS 10 30 NO P A S S E S O R KLBJ DISCOUNTS HOME ALONE |i*.| SM A R T ST EREO 2 3 0 5 0 0 7 1 5 9 30 NEVER ENDING STORY H’d SM A R T ST E R E O _____________ 2 3 0 5 :0 0 ______________ KINDERGARTEN COP H < > i| SM A R T S T E R E O _____________ 7:00 9 30______________ LA STORY |i’«ii:i| SM A R T S T E R E O 2 45 5 IS 7 45 9 45 NOTHING BUT TROUBLE It’d SM A RT STEREO 2 4 5 5 15 7 45 9 55 NO PASSES Oft KLBJ DISCOUNT CYRANO DE BERGERAC It’d MR. AND MRS. BRIDGE |i’< >>l ________ 2 4 0 5 1 0 7 45 10 15_________ THE NASTY GIRL H’<.n| ___________ 5 3 0 7 30_______________ THE FIELD |i < "l 3 0 0 9 50 GOOOFELLAS H 4:0 0 7 00 9 45 VILLAGE CINEMA 2700 ANDERSON 451-8352 n OllIK HOI! fin Wd M fe ■ i HI Ill'll GWflliii'IHf MffllMf OMK - i Df MB tfCM jR -r ^ T sS a art:* ‘il- *$s »3fM*. •. COMING MARCH 1 ' n ' i» K u L. Ron Hubbard’s Owner's Manual for the Human Mind and NY Times #1 Bestseller T E X A N CLA SSIFIED S T H E D A IL Y T e x a n Wednesday, February 27, 1991 Page 2 "LONGHORN WANT ADS" — Specifications — » 2 0 w ord s, 5 days S5 * M e rcha n d ise fo r Sale. Pnced a t $ 1 0 0 0 or less Price must a p p e a r in ad * I* item doesn't sell, a d ­ vertiser must call b e fo re 11.00 a.m on the d a y the ad is scheduled to end to fo r q u a lify the 5 a d d i­ insertions a t no tio n a l charge. * M ust specify L on ghorn W cm t A d " classification to q u a lify fo r $ 5 ra te * C h a n g e s a llo w e d fo r ' Pi ce O n ly TO PLACE A W O RD OR LINE A D CALL: 471-5244 CLASSIFIED W O R D A D -R A TES____________ * C h a rg e d by the w o rd 15 w o rd m ini­ mum. Set in 5 pt type only. Rates o re to - c o n se cu tive days Each w o rd 1 tim e Eoeh w o rd 3 times Each w o rd 5 times Each w o 'd 10 times Each w o rd 15 limes Each w o 'd 2 0 times $ 38 $ 1 0 2 $ i -15 $ 2 5 0 $ 3 0 0 $ 3 4 0 per insertion $1 0 0 charge to c hange copy First two words m ay b e all copital letters 25c fo r ea c h a d d itio n al w o rd m cap ital let­ ters M a stercard an d V¡sa accepted CLASSIFIED LINE A D 'R A T E S "C harged by the line. O n e column mch minimum A vailab le .n 5 to 14 pt type 1 col * I inch 1 T,me $ 8 2 0 WORD ANDLINE AD DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y Tuesdoy W e d n esd ay Thursday Friday Friday Horn M o n d a y H a m Tuosday ’ am W e d n esd ay ! 'om Thursday Horn TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD, CALL: 471-8900__________ CLASSIFIED D ISPLA Y* A D RATES * C h o rg ed by the column inch O n e column mch minimum A variety o f type toces and sues an d borders avoiloblp Foil Rales Sept 1 M a y 3 0 I to 4 9 column inches Per M o n th $ 8 6 0 Per Colum n Inch O v e r 5 0 col m p ei month call for ■ otes CLASSIFIED DISPLAY DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y T uesday W e d n e s d a y T hurs day F rid a y F rid a y , 4 p.m . M o n d a y , 4 p.m T uesday, 4 p.m . W e d n e s d a y 4 p.m. T hursday 4 p m In the event o f errors m ad e in a n od vertisement notice must tie given by IT a m the first d ay. as the publishers a re responsible fo r onty O N E mcorrect insertion All claim s fo r adjustments should b e m o de no! Icrter than 3 0 days ofier publication Pre pend kilts receive c e d i! slip rf requested at time o i c a n ­ cellation a n d if am ount exceeds $ 2 0 0 Slip must b e presented for a te o id e r within 9 0 days to be valid C (edit slips a re non transferable In consideration of The D aily Texan s acceptance o f advertising copy for publication, the agency and the a d ­ vertiser wiil indem nify a n d save h a rm ­ less, Texas Student PuWicabons an d its officers, em ployees a n d agents against all loss, liability d a m a g e and expense Oi whensoever nature ansing out of the copying printing, o r publishing o f ¡ts odvertism ent including w ithout lim ita­ tion reason able attorney's fees result­ ing from damns of suits for libel v o la lion of r.qht of privacy, plagiarism and copyright a n d trad em ark infringem ent. DEADLINE: 11:00 a.m . p rio r to publication M A S T E R C A R D V I S A A C C E P T E D M a s te r C a r d C L A S S I F I C A T I O N S TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. A u to * 20 — S p o rlt- F o re ig n A utos 3 0 — Trucks -V o n * 40 — V *h*c»#s to T r o d * SO — Serv ice Bepotr 6 0 - P a rt* A c ce sso rie s 70 - M otorcycles 80 B k y d e s 9 0 — V ehicle le a s in g 100 — V ehicle* W anted RIAL ISTA TI SALES 1 10 — Se rv ice s 1 2 0 - H o u se s 1 3 0 — C o o d o s-T o w n h o u se * 140 — M obile H o m es - Lots 150 — A c re o p e - Lots 1 6 0 — O u p ie x e s- A p o rtm en t* 170 — W onted 180 — L o o n s MERCHANWSf 190 — A p p lian c e s 200 — F u rn itu re -H o u se b o id 2 1 0 — Stereo-T V 2 2 0 - C o m p u te rs- Equipm ent 2 30 — P h o to -C a m eras 240 2 5 0 — M usical In strum en ts B o a t* 260 H o b b ie s 270 — M ochinery - Equipm ent 2 80 ~ S p o rt m q -C am p in g Equipm ent 2 90 — F u rn itu re-A p p lian ce Ren tal 3 00 — G a ro y e -R u m rn o q e S a le s 3 1 0 - Trode 320 — W anted to B uy o r Rent MERCHANDISE 330 - Pets 340 - Lo n gh o rn W ant A ds 345 - Misc. RENTAL 3 50 — R en tal S e rv ice s 3 0 0 - f u m . A pts 3 7 0 — Unf. A pts 3 80 — Furn D u p le x e s 3 90 — Unf. D u p le x e s 4 0 0 — C o n d o s-T o w n h o u se * 4 1 0 — fu rn . H o u se s 4 2 0 — Unf. H o u se s 4 2 5 — R oom s 430 — R o o m -B o ard 4 3 5 — C o -o p s 4 4 0 — R o o m m ate s 4 5 0 — M obile H o m es - Lots 4 8 0 — B u s in e s s R e n tals 4 7 0 — R e so rts 4 80 - Stor o y e Spo ce 4 9 0 — W onted to R e n t-L e ase S00 - Mist ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 1 0 — E ntertoin m ent-Tickets 520 — P e rso n a ls 530 - Travel- T ro n sp o rta tia n * 540 - Lost A Found 550 — Licen sed Child C are 560 - Public N otice 570 — M usic-M usicions EDUCATIONAL 580 — Mu s k o í Instruction 590 — Tuforiny 6 0 0 — Instruction W anted 6 1 0 — Misc Instruction SERVICES 6 20 — L e g al Se rv ice s 6 30 — C om puter S erv ices 6 4 0 — E x te rm in ato rs 6 SO — M ovin y-H aufiny 660 - Sto ro y e 6 7 0 — P ain tin g SERVICES 6 8 0 - Office 690 — Rental Equipm ent 700 — Furniture Repair 7 1 0 — A pplian ce R epair 720 - Stereo-TV R epair 730 - H om e Repair 740 - Bicycle R epair 7 50 — Typing 760 — Misc. Se rv ic es EMPLOYMENT 7 70 — Em ploym ent A yenciee 780 - Em ploym ent Se rv ice s 790 - Part time 810 — O ffice-C lerical 8 2 0 — Accountiny- B o o fckeepln y 8 3 0 — Administrative^ 840 - S o le s 850 - Retail 8 6 0 — t n y in se r iny- Technical 8 7 0 - M edical 8 80 — P ro fe ssio n a l 8 9 0 — C lu b s-R e sta u ra n ts 9 00 — Domestic - H o u se h o ld 9 1 0 — P o sition s W anted 9 20 - Work W anted BU SIN ESS 9 3 0 — B u sin e ss O pp o rtu n itie s 9 40 — O pp o rtu n itie s W anted 1-5244 SELL YOUR ITEM in th e "LONGHORN WANT ADS" 2 0 W o r d s , 5 D a y s s 5 0 0 OR WE WILL RUN THE AD AN ADDITIONAL 5 DAYS AT NO CHARGE! 'See Specifications TRANSPORTATION MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 10 — Misc. Autos 220 — Computers- 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 400 — Condos- 425 — Rooms W _ i Q Sm < X u 9 W 2 - *— $ K o o o I r t 1 O n e B l o c k F r o m C a m p u s AVAILABLE NOW! 2 br/2 ba Apts, across from Law School. $ 5 5 0 -5 5 8 5 / including cable. mo. ABP Pre-leasing immediate fo r occupancy or summer. Call 4 7 4 -9 5 2 3 or 452-5197. 2 20 -1 4 B A d o r a b le H y d e P a rk o p a r tm e n t Effi­ 'o o m cie n c y a n d I t s C le a n , la r g e so m e w ith fire p la c e s , c o v e r e d p a r k ­ ing p o o l 011 shuttle, c a b le p a id From $ 2 5 0 t o $ 3 5 0 Chimney Sweep Apartments 105 W. 38V2 St. 459-1711,453-4991 m icrowove * * W EST C A M P U S 1 Large 2 2 b ig c to sets S 5 5 ü ! F e leos Ir o e ' Paqe Properties 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 2 mg 4_ ?0B C _____________________ * * UNIQUE EFFICIENCY1 Sou’-'io tilt fueploce cf w a il > closets shut*- w all pool $ 2 6 0 S 2 9 5 ' f i PRO PFRTlf - : 8 0 8 5 1 8 2 4 20B C___ IN ! f .\Cl T W O B E D R O O M special* S. n o u s flo c p la n storting at 5 8 2 5 m o Close *o UT 4 '8 0 9 9 2 2 a 2 0B A 2 18 10B 390 — Unf. Duplexes NEWLY RENOVATED 2 br/2 ba apts. Across from Law School. $640- Unf. $670-Furn. ABP in­ cluding cable. Now pre­ leasing for Fall. Call 474- 9523 or 452-5197. 2 -2 0 -1 4 B HUGE 1-1 AND 2-2 Gas, heat, water & cabie paid On quiet street. Ceiling fans, ver­ tical blmds, pool. For $350 to $450. 3 Elms Apt. 400 W. 35th St. 453-1804,452-1121 C E N T R A l O L D ! R 1 ! appliances A ceilmg fons blmds h ard w o o d s 8 9 A Ramey $ 2 8 0 2 0 9 / 2 18 2 0 8 ________________________ carport individual 4 ? 2 - 2 BR I BA C H C A 3 re .lin q fans c o r p o r t sto ra g e w ith w a s h e r d ry e r C onner tions O w n e i pays w ater a n d g a s 2 6 0 "A Parker 8 6 3 8 2 2 3 a n y tim e 2 21 5B In 4 6 2 ( ' 8 8 ° M f or 1 5 1 2 2 !8 !0B SECLUDED 4 5 th Red River. 2-1 studio fire p la c e car p o r t clo se to shuttle & si*, ppm g $40C 4 9 9 8 7 8 7 2 2 7 3B _ 400 — Condos- Townhouses NEW OW NERSHIP A P P L E T O Y O T A n o w h a s C O L L E G E G R A D P L A N on n e w v e h ic le s (Largest Selection of Toyota s in Austin) Come by for Details APPLE, TOYOTA m i 805 W. 5th Street * 8 478-5676 S9"9 G O V E R N M E N T SEIZED vehicles lo rd s M e rc e d e s S 1 0 0 Corvettes from 'C he , , , Surplus Your o re o (T) 8 0 5 - 6 8 / - 6 0 0 0 Ext 8 '->413 2 13 : j p ______ 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos , 7 J A l f A R IM E O convertible A iinne S / 0 0 0 s le 'e o g o o d b ody runs g o o d O B O ' 6 5 6 6 . 5 B _________ 50 — Service-Repair K. C. CAR REPAIR Foreign El Domestic Mobile Available 4 5 1 - 1 1 4 6 70 — Motorcycles M O O N LIG H T M O T O R C Y C L E - M o to r- cycle service an d salvage at discounted pnces Tow ing a v a ila b le Broken bikes bought 4 4 0 - 0 8 0 8 2 - 1 3 - 2 0 B ________ FO R SALE 1 9 8 6 H o n d a Spree m oped G re a t condition. 1 6 7 2 miles Block hel- # m et in cluded Asking $ 3 0 0 by a p p o in t­ m ent only 4 4 3 - 4 1 9 ? 2-2 1 10B 1 9 8 3 Y A M A H A S R 2 5 0 exciter excellent •"condition, lo w miles, accessories provid ~ ed Call 4 S 4 - 3 2 2 7 2 2 7 - 5 P L80 — Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE SALE * AH 1990-91 Mountain B * e « on Sale Fuii • GT 0 Diainondback • Stwnano * 21 Speed FUJI M ountain Bike CR-MO Frame, Shtmano parla - only $269 00 * STUDENT SPECIAL • FREE U-Lock with bike purchase - or S10 00 olt 1 yr. free service, extra discount on 2 Bike purchase SOUTH AUSTIN BICYCLES 444-0805 2210 South 1st M C « VISA «A M E X P .* DISCOVER Mountain Bikes 928-2810 NOW-1991 GT BIKES • MANY 1990 MODELS REDUCED 100 CX) STU D E N T DISCOUNTS BUCK S BIKES V IS A M C A m E x p D isc o ve r W elco m e N O W P A Y IN G cash for selected used m ountain bikes C othran 's Bike Shop, 150-1 F ortview 44 ' 7 0 7 6 John 2 15' 2 OB K _________________________________ SP EC IA LIZED H A R D R O C K rttountambike 17" ra ie ly ridden 2 pan new tires $ 2 2 5 O B O 44 4 - 6 2 8 0 . 2 - 2 6 -2 B r a l e i g h m o u ñ t a í n b i k s Schunano parts 91 m o d el $ 2 6 5 0 5 7 7 after 6 p m 2 - 2 6 2B 21 speed 331 REAL ESTATE SALES Equipment P E R SO N A L C O M P U T E R A m ,tra d P C W 8 2 5 6 With punter S 2 5 0 O B O 4 5 3 - 5 6 4 ! after 6p m 2 - 2 7 5B PC XT Turbo S 3 9 5 , 2 0 m e g H D 6 4 OK R A M m o n ochrom e D O S 3 3 with color E G A S 4 9 5 2 5 0 - 2 8 / 4 219 1 628 2 - 2 / SB *lo p o > m o u s e 3 6 0 K Im eg R A M 2 8 f AT S 6 0 0 4 0 m e g H D. 1 2 floppy mouse m o n ochrom e D O S 3 3 with color E G A . S 7 75 2 5 0 2 8 7 4 2 1 9 -1 6 2 8 2 -2 7 -5 B L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S O N E T W IN b e d mattress an d box ip i ngs O n e year oíd S 5 0 . 4 4 2 8 3 / 6 2 2 1 -5 6 ________________ ________________ FOR SALE Schwinn 10 speed in g o o d condition, fenders rear bookrock pum p an d lock included S / 5 , 3 2 3 9 4 1 8 , leave m essage 2 -2 1 -5 N C C O L O R TV VCR stereo cordless phone answ erin g m achine 10 speed bike, voc- cum. A ta ri 2 6 0 0 a n d gam es Price horn S 3 0 -S 1 2 5 . 3 3 9 3 1 4 6 2-21 SB TA N D Y U 0 0 F D laptop com puter 2 disk drives soft w a re V ery ne w h aid ly used SHOO Call M a tt at 4 9 5 - 5 5 4 7 6 8 k m em ory deskm ate 2-21 SP ______ C O LL EC TO R 'S bureau <•« ellent condition must see a p p re c ia te S 2 0 0 o r best offer 3 2 0 0 9 9 2 2 - 2 2 - 5 N C ________________________ ITEM Antique w o o d en tc 1981 P L Y M O U T H C H A M P G o o d mpg. H e a te r broken 4 8 0 9 4 3 8 2 2 2 -5 P __________________________ $ 6 0 0 Alison M U S T SELL H ew lett P ockard 2IS stotisti col calculator, four months old, instruc­ included $ 5 0 n eg otiable tion b o o klet 4 7 2 - 2 7 3 2 le a v e message 2 - 2 2 -5 P D E N O N 1 5 6 0 C D player b ra n d new $ 6 5 0 C erw in V e g a A T 8 speakers Technics receiver with 7(J w p S 2 5 0 , ch rem ote $ 2 5 0 4 / 8 6 3 5 2 7 b a n d eq 2 2 5 -5 B _______ A LP IN E 7 9 0 5 C D tuner pullout m odel Excellent condition, p ro g ra m m a b le disc scanning ran d o m play 24 preset chan nels S 3 5 0 3 3 8 1961 ultei 6p m 2 - 2 5 - __ 5P FEN D ER 5 String boss burgundy new $ 3 7 5 Peovey 1 3 0 w att bass rig $ 3 2 5 C all Evan after 9 p m 4 7 4 - 7 7 6 8 2 -2 6 -5 B FOR THE discreet audiop hile, poir o f JBL L112 lo ud speakers Cull and m ake offer 4 4 5 - 7 2 9 0 Brod Best offer over $ 7 0 0 2 2 6 5B_____________ ___________________ Y O K O T A T U O L U M N E m ountain bike B rand n ew condtlion with U -lock Asking S 3 0 0 or best offer Poid $ 4 0 0 7 9 4 - 9 4 5 2 b efo re midnight 2 - 2 6 - 5 B 1 9 8 5 RED H o n d o Spree G o o d conch hon, c a rb u re to r recently clea n e d Has Current tag a n d inspection sticker $ 2 5 0 or best offe r 4 7 6 0 1 4 8 2 -2 6 - 5 B R O S S IG N O l SKIS, boots, an d fittings S 175 Also red 1 9 8 7 H o n d a A e ro 5 0 m o p e d S 3 8 5 C all 3 8 5 - 8 2 7 9 com e by 2 4 0 0 W ickersham # 139 2 - 2 6 - 5 N C H P 19B Business Consultont H o n d a Expresses-not 4 9 9 - 8 9 7 3 2 - 2 6 56 running II S 9 0 2 $ 7 5 S P R IN G BREAK m FORT lA U D E R D A lE 1 le o v e 3 -8 , ro und trip ticket from Austin return 3 14 B oarding pass issued S 2 5 0 ' O B O 3 7 1 -1 8 6 3 2 - 2 7 - 5 N C SC 2 0 0 0 X Durocce. C A N N O N D A l t an d Ciocc S i SP w C a m p a g o n o lo Super reco rd Both w Look pedals E xcellent rocm g tvkes Ciocc S 8 0 0 4 7 7 - 2 9 3 4 2 2 7 - 5 N C _________________________________ SPEAKERS1 BSR 5 -w a y . 15 w oofers Per- fe d tor D o im or A pt $1:>0 lu x m a n au diophile receiver S 7 5 0 Both S 3 5 0 4 7 / 4 6 3 1 2 2 7 5B_____________________ S O N Y TV 15" m odel KV 1515 Runs g reat $ 2 0 0 O B O C all Sergio and le a v e mes sage 4 4 1 - 0 6 8 3 2 - 2 / - 5 B Y A M A H A M O T O R C Y C L E leather |Ockei designed by H em G encke, size 4 0 , two months old. S 1 6 0 4 4 5 2 6 5 8 D w a y n e 2 2 7 5 N C 345 — Misc. C A S H B u y in g G o ld -S ilv er Broken Chains, Class Rings Unwanted Jewelry s p ra n g Students Since !•< Y> Liberty Coins 4 5 th A G uadalupe 4 5 2 -3 8 1 1 130 — Condos - Townhouses T-SHIRTS $5 O N THE DRAG Distinctive Concepts Active Artwear 2338 Guadalupe Sidewalk vendor in front of Tex­ as Textbooks. Daily 11:30-4.30. Mention this ad for 10% off. 2 -1 4 -2 0 B SCRUBBED O FF? A fe you tired of poym g o 3 0 0 0 ° o m ark-u p for skirt hair p io d ffer 'he best prod ufiy o ’ the m ull¿ I (,an ucb m onufoi lured to d a y ot lo w e i pne es' Coll 4 4 b 1851 2-21 5 P ______________ L O O K A N D FEEL years younger with health, beauty an d fitness products Coll 51? 2 9 b 4 4 5 0 2 - 2 I - 5 B ____ S O LO FLE X W IT H leg extensions, $ 5 5 0 , ah.." 6 p m call 2 8 ? 2 2 9 : ? 2 ’ 5B W H Y RENT? ...WHEN YOU CAN OWN! Sales, bargains, R.E.O., governm ent, o w ner financed ★ Professional prop. mgmt. ★ FALL PRE-LEASING NOW! Call Jerry Oakes at PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 /4 6 7 -7 7 8 1 2-12-20B -A MERCHANDISE 210 — Stereo-TV M U S I SELL cusiom cor speaker b ox. t w o 10 M & M G o d fo th e r 1 0 0 w att w o ofers $ 2 0 0 0 8 0 4 8 0 -8 2 8 1 R.chord 2 - 2 2 -5 B Now P re le a sin g S u m m e r H ates S ta r tin g at $295 • 1 B R & 2 B r • C e ilin g F a n s • C e n tr a l A ( • O n S h u t t l e • L a u n d r y R oom • F u lly F u r n ish e d • Pool R i o N u e c e s 6 0 0 W .26th 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 •a b t H X n q c n o > . £ • Q r n W L J H i H ^ 7 h L * immmJ a0 " " " ! C/3 I7 < 2 } p L j h J X ed Z 6 h X f e w T H R E E O A K S & P E C A N S Q U A R E A P A R T M E N T S • Summer Rates from S250 • 1 Bdr 1 Ba • Furnished • Laundry • PRELEASE FOR SUMMER OR FALL 4 5 1 - 5 8 4 0 4 0 9 W . 3 8 t h S t. H O U S T O N 2801 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 B R A N D Y W IN E 2 8 0 4 W h it is A v e . - 4 7 2 - 7 0 4 9 D A L L A S 2 803 H e m p h ill P a r k - 4 7 2 - 8 ) 9 8 W ILSH1R E 501 W . 2 9 th - 4 7 2 -7 0 4 9 Great Summer Rates • F u l h F u m ix h e d • L a u n d ry R o o m • C entral A ir H eat • 2 B lo ck.' F r o m U T W . APTS. 3 Bd-2 B Huge 1 BtRuxuty Unit*. Exceptional Furnishings ■ Pretty Poof Pat» Shuttle just a few steps. 4 7 6 * 0 3 6 3 ByAppt. CENTURY PLAZA Eff.'s • 1 & 2 Bedrms. All Bills Paid 4210 Red River 452-4366 Summer Fall Leasing (S p e c ia l S u m m e r R a te s ) Townhouses CALL MITCH TO PRE-LEASE S800-S1200 *. ROBBINS PLACE $800 $1200 ** ST. THOhAAS $700-$1400 . . CENTENNIAL $500-$2000 ** ORANGETREE $550-$1100 .* CROIX $800 $1300 ..OLD MAIN . . 1900 SAN GABRIEL $800 $2000 .* TOO MANY MORE TO LIST... MITCH 47 6-2673/P M T 2 7 -2 0 8 -C NORTHHILLS Spacious 2/1 ’ ? townhome 10 mtn. from UT. Shuttle stops at front door. Cedar deck, ceiling fans, fireplace, utility room w/ W/D Lots of storage space Shopping Center 1 ? blocks Available March 1st $550. 272- 5783, 272-4076 2 18 10B m D D O R M TDRV Room S ' kitchen shored, very nea r no untvers»ty 2 6 0 2 G u a d alu p e, 2 21 SB ? BLOCK F R O M c a n pa»d Furnished tf nee< hon Coll 4 7 6 *9 1 5 6 2 440 — Roommates R O O M M A T E SERVICE W ill help you find a com pat­ ible roommate. Male or female. Call Sam. 280-7118 2 -12 2 0 8 C FEMALE R O O M M A T E iS ) n eed- Summer lo r fu lly fu rn is h e d W e st *. tn * cond o Price neg ra b ie Call 4 " .' -*. 4 for derails 2 2 ? 108 ! R O O M M A T E W A N T E D house C h a rm in g w o o d flo o rs w a il * 1 ? bills 3 2 3 - 6 1 4 .i 2 7 5 ! * U " S 2 5 0 to share 460 — Business Rentals PRELEASING HAS BEGUN 3 -2 house, huge 2 -2 condos. W est Cam pus a n d H y d e Park areas. U N IV E R >'TY AR E A 281 5 fr u th R e in ' O ffic e Renfai ph one 713 4 8 ? $ 0 0 / ¡ te r 6 0 0 (o r in fo rm a tio n p n n o p a H $.»»u 2 2 7 -5 P _______________ ■WIIMIIMMMIIBililillllMI III W Will Kli 111 fll IIITI TUT-' I" ~' ' ANNOUNCEMENTS 510 — Entertainment- Tickets T ic k e t s N e il Young, R udolph N u re y t W W F , N e w Kids, Scorfju ->i ail shov Stmg. A u s t m R odeo G a rth Brooks, Poison, The Jud N m ¡a Turtles 4 7 8 - 9 9 9 9 2 19 M B E 520 — Personals $ 1 0 0 0 $ 8 0 0 $ 4 0 0 $ 7 0 0 I hope W A N T E D Stimulating spondence W 'b bright brainy mg w o m e n oges 2 0 3 5 W i *. s.jnny O P C Bo« 3 8 9 ' 2 7 -1 9 P Io w a C'ty IA 5 2 2 4 4 * ' ■■ 530 — Travel Transportation 1704 West Ave. O ro n g e tree . Croix, Centenm ol L O O K N O W Rio Grande Properties 474-0606 2 - 2 5 5B E PRELEASING HAS BEGUN 3 - 2 h o u se, h u g e 2 - 2 c o n d o s . W e s t C a m p u s a n d H y d e P a rk a re a s . 1704 West Ave. O r o n g e tr e e , C ro ix , C e n te n n ia l L O O K N O W Rio Grande Properties 474-0606 PRELEASING N O W St T h o m a s L e n n o x O r o n g e t r e e C e n te n n ia l PMT Ask fo r John o r Terri 476-2673 2 19 2 OB E * * G O K G F O U S I O W N N O m E STYLE 2 1 .’ fireplace Vv D, c o u n ts kitchen balcony cp wc F R O N T PAGE PROPERTIES 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 $ ’ 50* PRE LE A S IN G 2 4 ?0B C______________________________ C O N D O M IN IU M S W EST campus p*'> (essional easing with a non-pressure at mosphere Cam pus Condos. 4 4 4 8 0 0 C all Brad Seiner 2 -8 20B C O N D O S & H O U S E S F O R ~ 5RF LEASE ALL PRlCt R A N G E S CALL N O W 4 74 4 8 0 0 T O D D K U R IO 2 - 8 20B__________ IF SHUTTLE 4 4 0 1 S p e e d w a y 'BR ;a*t 17 it vaulted ceiling G as. h e a H w a ie r p aid ¡51 4 o 5 6 . 4 5 9 Private balcony d o ra q e _ 2 13 20B 0 8 8 9 ..D E C O R A T O R SYLE' 2 2 loh and flat big bedroom s CP W D W est C am p i s S 6 0 0 6 5 0 F R O N T PAGE PROPERTIES 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 2 -1 4 20B -C O R A N G E TR E E O N i Y T W O 3 B tD - R O O M S AVAILABLE 2 2 0 0 5 Q f 1 3 FOUR C O V E R E D PARK FIREPLACES IN G PLACES 5 1 .8 0 0 D A N O R SHAR RO N PMT 4 / 6 2 6 / 3 2 21-5B PRE I EASE BEST DEAL WEST CAMPUS WINCHESTER 2 2 STARTING $ 6 5 0 CALL D A N OR SHARO N PMT 4 7 6 2 0 7 3 2 21-5B • • C E N T E N N IA L * N IC E* Furnished tout iou( cathedral ceiling1 All amenities! $ 1 2 0 0 * Call Jane • R Ó N T PAGE PR* )P 2 - 2 6 2 0 6 C________ ERTiES 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 O R A N G E TREE c o n d o 2 - 2 * : 2 story furnished Pre lease fireplace. VV D n ow ! C all James 4 74 9 7 4 4 2 2 0 58 420 — Unf. Houses H Y D E P A R K 3 homes available fo r pre-leasing in Hyde Park and Hemphill Park. 4-2, 3-2, 8-3. 2 7 2 -5 7 8 3 , 2 72-4076. 2 18 !0B 4 7 7 LIVE 24 his O ld fashioned charm of I to 3 b e d ro o m homes H o rd w o o d gas. appliances $ 2 5 0 - 6 0 0 2 l g 2 0 B A ? I I N EAR if shuttle laiqe kitchen W D -1 15 C all connections S3?t> Available* 4 5 4 1175 2 2 0 2 0B PRE LEASE JUNE or Aug beautiful 4 b e d room Coll in T arrytow n $1 8 0 0 m o KAR EN at Cam pus C ondos 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 2 . J l i)B x HYLJE PARK n ear Shipe Park Shuttle 2 bedroom ! bath hardwood flo o i ceil range & refrigerator $ 4 2 5 mg . 2 3 20B 3 3 9 - 6 7 5 9 tans H A W A .i 4 rou n d tn p bekets 'or $ l v u your dtscounr travel p ro g ra m far distance telep h o n e service 8 1 ’ ¡ 2 ' : 2 0 8 D INTERNET PROGRESSIVE tra v e l u :m M a l e travel plans earl» W e w i lowest fares possible 3 71 3 7 '* 10P S P R IN G HR! A t n V erm ont $ 2 0 0 'r trrp gets.you mto the snow ’ 14 4 2 5 - 5P______________________ S P R IN G BR! Ax South P ad re I"* C n * 3 sleeps *v’ ur $ 6 0 0 w eek 0 74 must be 21 2-2*. vp 560 — Public Notice EX G A Y S group m eeting A re * o f the g a y scene2 Coll 4 4 1 20B EDUCATIONAL 580 — Musical Instruction 590 — Tutoring RESEARCH ASSIST \ \ ( j Fullservice PROOFREADING LIBRARY RESEARCH OUTLINE DESIGN UTERATURE REVIEW Grad/Undergrad levels Dobie Mail, Suite 29 478-0871 SERVICES 630 Computer Services LEA R N M IC R O S O F T ontosh in a 3 hour s 0 5 8 4 2 2 1 -5 8 750 — Typing 2 7 th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 N O W P R ttfc A S lN G summer tull walk UT 11, small qu»et com plex W e ll mat tam ed 2 /1 1 Hem phill Pork 4 / 8 - 1 8 7 0 2- 2 0 20B_______________________ _________ V IS IT IN G P R O F E S S IO N A L fam ily one child W o n t 2 BR furnished summer sub let. June August Laundry po o l id e a l Coll 6 1 7 .4 9 7 * 2 0 0 8 evenings 2 2 2 1QB G R A N A D A A P A R TM E N TS ^18 E 40th Beautiful tw o b ed ro o m studio Also one b ed ro o m an d efficiency A vailab le tmrne diateiy C all 4 5 3 * 8 6 5 2 for ap pointm en t AH bills p a id 2 - 2 2 10B-C LUXURY ? 1 j .} H A R D W O O D S carpet c o vered parking, washer dryer pool, hot tub $ 7 2 5 611 E 45th 3 4 5 6 5 9 9 2 2 6 2 0B -A fireplace BA re AC ROSS F R O M university T r fn g erato r, m icro w ave w ater an d gas p aid $ 1 8 0 5 0 0 Elm w ood Place 3 4 5 1 5 5 ? ? 2 6 20B _____________ 2 BLO CKS N o rth o f UT. M , $ ? ? 0 hes 4 7 7 2 2 1 4 4 5 4 4 4 4 ! 2 27 10B K ut«li 1 1 F U R N IS H E D H y d e Park a re a , close to UT, call Tom, 451 5 0 9 0 or Ttna. 4 4 / 5 1 9 7 2 27-5B_________________________ ★ 3 7 0 — Unf. Apts. r * ENFIELD * \ AREA! 4 Huge efficiencies Pool huge 4 $ walk-in closets basic cable $ ♦ $ great carpet and tile Call * ! 482-0398 ¡ * ♦ ♦ O X F O R D P L A C E ONE BE DR O O M S LARGE AND EXCLUSIVL PRICED FROM S475 00 ON-SITE MNGT. CALL SETH 478-0933 (H M ) 474-0606 (W X ) P L E A S E L E A V E M E S S A G E PENTHOUSE APTS. from $ 35 0. Two blocks west of campus, best new mgml 1 -Vs Incredibly large 2-2's starting from $ 5 7 5 and 3- 2's (split-level) starting from $ 77 5 Furnished or unfurnished, cable paid, beautiful pbol, laundry facilities cov ered parking. 1801 Rio G rande 480-0201 2 - 2 2 2 0 6 C BRAKER WOODS • 8 minute w alk from UT near Seton • N e w central A C /C D /W a te r h ealer • O ld English architecture • Very quiet & beautiful, exclusive, • Best property m anager & personal care! • 1-1's starting at $ 3 2 0 -$ 4 0 0 ! • 2 l's starting at $4951 • Exercise room , free cable Buckingham Square 711 W. 32nd 453-4991 ? 8 20B -K All Bills Paid Efficiencies and 1-1's from $245- $395. 2 Blocks from shuttle. PEPPERTREE II APTS. 410 W. 37th 451-8532/452-1121 ★ EFFICIENCIES ★ $205/m o. $195/mo. fo r Summer. Prime location. Red River. Shuttle Bus. to W a lk in q distance H E B ★ 371-0160 ★ 2 - 8 2 0 B F ★ WEST CAMPUS ★ Eff. N O W AVAILABLE * N e w c a r p e l & m im b lm d s * G a s a n d w a t e r p a in * W alk to campus * O n ly $ 2 9 5 m o n tM 450-1058/450-0702 L e a v e M e s s a g e NORTHCASTLE APARTMENTS N e w ly rem odeled one and tw o bed­ room apartments Large floorplans and extras designed to meet your needs Five minutes from Far West shuttle Pre-leasers welcom e up to six months in advanc e 345-0870 2 6 -2 0 B -A VILLA NORTH ★ 2-1 & 1-1 in H yde Park ★ on Shuttle Routes ★ Gas, water & heating ★ O n-sife laundry ★ Dishwasher'disposal ★ $ 1 0 0 OFF" M o v e -ln Special * 4 5 8-8 056 45 20 Duval *far lease thru Summer Í 0 ?0B A PRELEASE N O W ! o r m ove now! SOUTH SHUTTLE Condo1 Washer dryer* gart^e* 2 2 $515 Summer special* G reat one bedrooms (rom $ 3 * 5 PROPERTIES ONE 44 7 -7 3 6 8 .’ 2 6 2 0 8 A In Four-plex 614 W N o rth Loop. V e ry attra c tive, alm ost new. 2 b ed ro o m s, 2 ple p arkin g . C on ve n ie n t loca - lio n bors N e o r bus. Q u a lity neigh- N o pets $ 3 5 0 plus electric. 4 7 2 -7 6 1 7 . 2 2 7 58 C 2 1 ALL G A S paid $ 3 7 5 U eu n q u e l, co vered parking -» 1 0 6 A ve A 4 5 1 -5 8 2 5 2 2 0 1C8 If s h t'ie L O C A T IO N 1 L O C A T IO N A n d oil bills p aid neat d o w n to w n UT Capitol* O ld e r bu.ldmg renovated th large rooms or a plenty )l am b iance C all o w n er a t 4 7 4 4 8 4 8 2 2 5 2 0 8 C______________ A H B ills paid* O n e arg e roan* eH . en cy w ith appliances and lull both N e a r e n q m e e im g school $ 2 2 5 9 2 6 2 4 3 2 2 6 2QB-C_________ I 1 a t $ 2 6 5 * N e a r U ’ tampur. SMALL bus stops m front o l com plex L'ool a id On-site m aintenance 4 / 7 22*72 2 2 6 2 18 20B -K 10B RENTAL 3 6 0 - F u r n . Apts. r THE ASHFORD ^ ★ — N o High Pressure 2 13 2 0B C M 0 0 0 0 V E You 'll Get — An y Com plex You W ant - N o Application Fees - All Price Ranges Come by 8 1 9 W. 2 4 th (Univ. Tow ers) or CALL NOW! FREE FREE FREE 2 T C a m p u s A re a Specialists 3 4 5 B e d r o o m h o m e s 3 2 C o n d o s iron*. $1 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 C o n d o s fro m $ 6 7 5 0 0 1 1 C o n d o s tr o m $ 4 7 5 0 0 Rio Grande Properties Realty 4 7 4 -0 6 0 6 (wig Now Predeasmg Condos, Apartments, and Houses C * i t v PROPERTIES — _ 478-6565 2717 Rio G ra n d e 12 OAKS CONDOS 704 WEST 21st • Ceiling fan • Microwave • Washer and dryer • Covered parking • Walk to campus 2 Bedroom/2 Baths available Preleasing Summer and Fall 4 9 5 -9 5 8 5 o r 251-7515 2 13 2 0 B E ★ WE'LL FIND ★ YOUR NEXT C O N D O !! All prices and sizes! ★ O r o n g e t r e e ★ C r o i x ★ ★ S t . T h o m a s ★ P a r a p e t ★ a n d m o r e ! 0 0 0 0 a Call Mary Talbot Co. 2813 Rio Grande ★ 4 8 0 - 8 8 0 0 ★ 2-7 20B-C ★ LOFT ★ Spiral staircase, beautiful courtyards, microwave b a l­ conies, city views, on shuttle, 1 & 2 bedrooms available, unit starting $310. Advan- taqe Pioperties 4 4 3-3 000 . 2 2 6 20B Gather up all your unwanted goods and give us a call. Well help you place a low- cost Classified Ad! 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 trendy neighborhoo d baths, p riva te patio. Q u ie t A m ­ H U G E 2 2 AT C E N T E N IN IA L H UR R 1' LAS! O NE AVAILABLE $1 2 0 0 O N I YR D A N O R SHARO N PMT 4 *6 I t ASE 2 6 7 3 2 -2 1 -5 B P IA N O LESSONS Experienced tew ther N o tio n a l G e ld Jucfi.- !’ < gm ner a d v a n c e d Children, a d u lt. 8 73 830*7 .>-11 2 0 B E ¡* ★ W ALK TO ★ CAMPUS 1100 EAST 3 2 N D ST. AVALO N APTS. One BR $?85 W a ll in closets ceiling fons on site management lountlry Orea» for law engineering sludenh M E S Q U IT E TREE APARTMENTS O n e b e d r o o m fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n ts C lo s e to c o m p u s , n e a t shu ttle D is h w a s h e r A C, C e ilm g fa n . L a u n d ry facilities and Hot g L Water and TV c a b le p a id . N o p ets 2 4 1 0 L o n g v ie w R esident m a n a g e r « 3 0 1 F o r in fo 4 7 8 - 2 3 5 7 U N I T S A V A IL ABL t A || á Now Pre-Leasing for Summer/Fall (Special Summer Rates) Large Efficiencies, 1-1’s, 2-2’s, Starting at $250. ALL BILLS PAID ■ • Furnished Unfurnished • West Campus Shuttle ^ • On Site Mgmt & Maint • Pool • L a u n d r y R o o m • Covered Parking su rarftin y C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED A D 4 7 6 -3 6 2 9 2 2 6 1 0 B - A N O W ' TRANSPORTATION 50 — Service-Repair TRANSPORTATION 70 — Motorcycles 2 - 2 6 20B -C 2 4 0 8 L e o n 4 7 6 - 8 9 1 5 * EDUCATIONAL 590 — Tutoring 4 5 8 - 6 1 8 5 DYER TRANSMISSION & AUTOMOTIVE, INC. Domestic & Foreign Transmission Overhauled • Allison Transmissions Overhauled H O N D A . C o m e r i d e w ith us Engine Overhauled A/C Repairs 7513 North I.H. 35 Austin, TX 78752 2 0 % O F F any TRANSMISSION WE INSTALL i t Í i i Í ^ G A B R ^ $6 9 8 reg. $1000.00 H I S R I Í M E A p a r t m e n t s • ALL BILLS PAID • FURNISHED • WEST CAM PUS-5 BLKS • UT SHUTTLE STOP f;,\ './• .. '' - • EFFICIENC IES • DELUXE 1 BEDROOMS • % BEDROOMS • ON-SITE MANAGEMENT -w * . * • ' • (fc' - • ’ i 2 2 1 2 S a i t G a b r i e l S t r e e t A u s tin . T e x a s 78705 ( S i t ) 4 7 4 - 7 7 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 5 9 - 3 3 1 1 6 5 0 9 N . L a m a r "XB&i. 'qaT T U T O R I N G S E R V I C E 504 W. 24th St. 477-7003 Over 14 years of Professional Service Helping Students MAKE THE GRADE • ENGINEERING • ASTRONOMY • SPANISH • FRENCH • GERMAN • ETC • MATH • PHYSICS • CHEMISTRY • BIOLOGY • ENGLISH • BUSINESS IF YOU DON T SEE YOUR SUBJECT WE MAY STILL BE ABLE TO HELE • 1 Block from UT Campus • Lot* of Patience • Vary RES0NABLE RATES • In Language You 8 Understand P A ID IN T E R S H IP S with m arketing com p a n , Sophom ores and ,uniors great Storting resume exp erien ce Call G o r y at 385-4 751 le a ve m essage 2-27-5B $ 1 6 .4 1 ? Your oreo * 6 .5 : 6 - ' 6 0 0 0 Ext R 9413 for G O V E R N M E N T J O B S S 5 9 932 yr N o w h,,,ng Coll listings 1 16 3 7 P EMPLOYMENT 800 — G eneral Help Wanted of N e w York R eceive o meaningful Tina Turner Creditors 700 Club Page 22 Wednesday, February 27,1991 THE DAILY TEXAN SERVICES EMPLOYMENT EM PLOYMENT EM PLOYMENT EM PLOYMENT WEDNESDAY C 'Wi Tv■MMth me Ft Worm TX 7 5 0 — Typing 790 — Part time 790 — Part Time 790 — Part time 800 — General Help Wanted K T B C K V U É K X A N K B V O K L R U a x a a m a m Today Try Toons ZIVLEY The Complete Professional Typing Service l IO C H 8 U S T I* 2707 Hemphill Park 472-3210 472-7677 LONGHORN CO PIES • Resumes • Theses • Term Papers • Word Processing • Binding • Laser Pmting 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 PAPERS RESUM ES RUSH JO BS Dot's Typing 2002 -A G u d alu p e 472-5353 Speedway TYPING DOB1É M A LL Laser Printing/Spell check Applications/Resum es Term/Research Papers Application Forms Audio Transcription A S A P W o r d Processing P o p éis R ep o n s Tnese, com pleted with care and atten­ tion S 85- lost minute « 4 5 ' 48 8 5 2 f : q p ______________________________________ N E E D A pope*- O' resume -vn ea : 16 y e a r s P r o o ^ e o d 'n q o v o ilc b 'e quick turnaround 8 3 6 6 78 ? 2 ’8 2OB e x p e r i e n c e ZIVLEY WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING 27th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 S A M E - O A Y serv-ce on word processing S ' 30 p a g e 1 Inc'jO»-'. losar-pnnt.ng E< pert quality h app y cus’om en Reports theses letters resumes, moiling lists M i -hoe 46 ; 8 3 8 6 2 ; u 2QP_____________ Q U A L IT Y T Y P lN G / w o r d processing N e a r Qvs Be a pod of our outreach fund ro'stng $ta*f Hr$ 2 10 p m CoM Janet or Amy ot 4 74- 2117 ibetween 10 am and 7 pm¿ 2 27-5B Sot Morn 9 00-12 00 pm _______________________________ 2-22 20B-K S 9 5 15 hourly a v e ra g e S e l: or- repro- duchons (prmts part-ti-e at school, o w key m a n ag e m err • samp schools Na- riorsolPublisher 2-27 3P R E S E A R C H A S S lS ’ A N r for dow n tow n Real Estate office C im puter skills a p h is M ornin g hours p 'e ‘e rred Bill ShoooH o n e Assc. ¡ates 4 7 9 -8 3 0 0 2-22-5B D O W N T O W N I— O TE L needs em ployees ro fill -umerous positions Applications at 30C r 1th 2-22 3B TYP STS NÍ-ED EC m m ediately CaH 4 7 8 0871 2-22 4P M A L E S IN G E R outg.onq . yacious. and crazy, with c a r (necessary) for M o n k e y 3u..ness smq.ng telegram'. G r e a t poy "e< t)*e hours 4 4 5 -5 9 4 4 2 25-58 L IF E G U A R D S N E E D E D at excellent p ay f interested coll 713- it- Houston oreo 9 3 7 -7 2 4 7 iea-e nam e a n d number 2-25-5B t recorder answers. L E A S IN G A G E N r P a n r.n-e up to 30 PV hry w eek fo r student p roperty on shuttle -oute Hours nclude weekends 1911 W illo w Creek Dr 444-0010 2-25- 5E_________________ _ PARTT M E assistant for doctor's office Som e e k p e re n c e nP ressar> phones in surance Send -esponse ta Tne Doily Texon, P O D r a w e ' D-3, Austm TX 78713 3B___________________________ in filing C O U R IE R , G E N E R A L m ain ten an ce n e e d ­ ed -memoons for m edical cH 'ce 24 hours week G o o d driving record, knowl edge of Austin, initiative goo d humor reguued 4 73-237C M aryi.nn 2 25-58 C A M P U S i “ c fc S S E N T A T 'v E S w an ted to prom ote national ed ucafionol com p an y Earn S S S bonus Coll 4 78 8 4 0 0 2 25 46 C O l f ER. FR D A Y P E R S O N , n ee d e d for d o w - w o n taw office, M-F, 12-6pm. must hove cor and q ao d driving record 4-“ 6 1080 2 2/-3B________________________ TRANSPORTATION MANAGEMENT PART-TIME POSITION COLLEGE STUDENTS — IMMEDIATE OPENING — Roadway Package System, Inc. has a challenging entry level opportunity in operations The position is responsible for: dispatching, dock opera­ tions, interfacing with sales force and upper level manage­ ment, and various administrative duties. These positions will groom an individual for sales or upper level operations management in Austin The ideal candidate will be energetic, hardworking and goal-oriented Pursuing a BA B S degree in Business Man­ agement, Operations. Distribution or Transportation with good communications skills essential. We offer an excellent compensation and benefits package and the opportunity for advancement to full-time upon graduation Qualified candidates should send their resume including salary history, in confidence, to: ROADWAY PACKAGE SYSTEM, INC. Attn: TM 9101 Wall Street Suite 300 $ PUT YOUR COMMUNICATION SKILLS TO WORK! FIRST USA TELEMARKETING s cur ren fly a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s hr the f o llo w in g p ro fe s s io n a ls ★ MARKETING AGENT R e p re s e n ta * ves w ill b e re s p o n s i­ b le fo r m a rk etin g co n s u m e r p ro d u c ts a n d servic es p rim a rily p re m iu m c re d 't C a ra s n atio n w id e This position re q u ire s e x ­ c e lle n t co m m u n ca t o-' skills w ith s o m e soles e x p e r ie n c e p re fe rre d . D a y & e v e n in g hours a v a ita ts le 8 30- 12 3 0 M -F, o r 1-5 M -F o r 5 3 0 - 9 3 0 M -F W E G U A R A N T E E S ó 'h o u ' plus benefits* C o m m issio n m a y b e e a r n e d o n som e p ro tects P L E A S E a p p lv m p e rso n M -F 10 om -4 3 0 pm ot FIRST USA TELEMARKETING 505 Barton Springs Rd. Suite 600 EOE 2-13-20B-C Part time greeter, part- time, evening, & week­ end positions. Heavy cus­ tomer service. Mature person with positive atti­ tude needed to greet customers & provide storewide assistance. Close proximity to UT. Company offers text­ book loans & discounts on most merchandise. If interested, apply in per­ son, 2246 Guadalupe, weekdays 9 am-1 pm. 2 26-46 in Make S250 two nights. Sell 50 funny col­ lege T-shirts and make $250. Sell 100 - Make $600. No Financial O b ­ ligation. More informa­ tion 1-800-245-3087. 2 27 IB ~ R U N N E R / ~ FILE CLERK L e w firm seeking part time ;4 hours 1-5 pm M-F, Runner, file ro om person to start im m ed iate i> V e h ic le req uired NON-SMOKING O F F I C E P*ease coll 477-7599 for interview 2 2 ’ 3B LEARN BOOKKEEPING SHORT WALK UT FULL- P A R T T i v f B o o k k e e p m g /o c- counting trainee 'deal tor prebusiness mo|or. also, typing w o rd processing com pu tinker “ram ee (45 wpmj, also, p re io w errand runne- Nonsm oking self starters S4 .0 0 -S4 25 W rite app lication 8-4 w ee kd ays 4 0 8 W 17th 2-18 2 0 6 E The only pressure we'll apply is to your muscles. E A S Y M O V lEY I pay up to 1 10 00 tor Goxi O a ss Rings I also txxy • GoW Weortmg Sartas • Rmgs • Chains leven 4 txo xeoi James Lewis Gold Buyer 458-2639 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * NEED EXTRA INCOME F0RIS9Í? Eamí500-$l000ieeki»s^ínwiopes. Fot detais -RusbSl .OOMthSASEta OW Group hie. W19UL Sherwood * Ortantto, FL326t6 . Fast growing Austin-based telecommunication company needs full fime/parf time tele­ marketing representatives. Ex­ cellent communication and telephone skills a must! Profes­ sional attitude and demeanor required. Must be organized and detail oriented. Apply m- person at 600 Congress Ave., Suite 1250.12th floor. M-F. 8- 5. _______________________________ 2-22 20B-D WANTED NEW FACES Actors, models, teens, & adults C o m ­ mercials, print, fashion, video. Inter­ view ing now. Experience encour­ ag ed . b u t not required 467-1637 Beverly Hills Inc. 6448 Hw y 290E Ste #F106 UCENSf »?01 2-26-20B i/2 DAY-GREAT PAY AAA/PM SHIFTS High $'s, casual dress, re­ lax ed atm osphere a n d flexi­ ble schedule. FT/PT SHIFTS A VA ILABLE Daily cash bonuses! Be in­ dependent, apply today at 5501 N. Lamar, C-105 (Be­ tween Gmny's and Chinese Restaurant) 12-12:30 or 6- 6:30 O N LY ! 2-25-3B A CAMP STAFF Sp end the summer m the Cotskill Mtns summer experience working in a resi dentiol cam p for persons with devel- opm entally disabilities Positions are a v a ila b le for Counselors, Program Leaders, and C ab in Leaders All stu­ dents a re e ncouraged to apply-espe- o a lly those w h o a re mo|ormg or co n ­ sidering allied health fields. Season dates: Ju n e 4th to August 25th. G o o d Salary, Room. Boord, ond some travel allo w an ce Call Jennifer, (512) 396- 759 3. O r send letter to C am p Jened, P.O . Box 483. Rock H.ll N Y 12775. (9 1 4 )4 3 4 - 2 2 2 0 _____________ 2-25-7P A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R Need courteous, motivated, mechanically in­ clined couple to manage o 29 unit opt com­ plex Apt management experience not re quired However, mdividuols must provide excellent references, possess some responsi ble prior work experience & must be bond- able Compensation includes o furnished 1 BR apt a modest salary Send resume to man­ ager at 108 W 45th St, #101, Austin, TX 78751 or coll 452-1419 for interview appf If no answer 453-2771 ___________________________________ 2-19-208 Help Wanted Now! Checkers, Package Clerks, Night floor mainte­ Stockers, and nance Apply in person only. Tom Thumb 5311 Balcones M o p a c at N o rthland exit. 2 -2 2 -7 B E ★ WENDYS ★ has positions available at our MLK location. Flexible hours for students. Starting salary up to $4.50 per hour depending on experience. Apply m person Monday-Thursday between 3-5 at 413 West MLK. 2-18-20B-K THE A U ST IN PA RKS & R EC R EA T IO N DEPT. Aquatics section is now accepting appli­ cations for the 1991 seasonal staff* Posi­ tions include Barton Spnngs lifeguards, pool instructors, site managers ond assistant site managers, lifeguards, swim ond area supervisors. Applications are available at the Aquatics Office, 901 W Rivers.de. or call 480-3025 E O E _______________________ 2-4 20B-C WANTED Tom Thumb. Full/part time. Deli bakery clerks. Apply in person only. 5311 Balcones. Mopac and Northland exit. 2 21-5B-E S T U D E N T B U S B O Y n e e d e d * W o r k for your m e a ls at d o r m ito r y A d |U S ta b le hours, n e e d e d for about 12 hrs w e e k C all M rs O 'C o n n o r 4 72-6717 2 *8 10B G R A D U A T IN G S E N IO R S ! Summer em p loym ent opportunities for students ac cep ted ta Low Sc h o o l Coll Cap t T R Fey ot 4 7 / - 5 7 0 6 or 1 8 0 0 8 7 6 200 4 2 20-20B________________________ 1 C A LL to A von does it a ll1 N o experi en ce N o problem* Free training i3 5 9 12 2-21-20B-A fered of- S10-S400/Up WEEKLY M oiling B rc c h u r e ,' R IJS H Se ll Addressed Envelope Incom e. 1660 Lakeside. Suite 301 CD U, Riviera. A Z 8 6 4 4 2 2-21-5P S U P E R V IS O R Y N IG H T s t a f f 7 ^ e d 7 t ~ 7 dep e n d en t living center Fndoy an d So* urdoy nights 11pm /am G re a t o p p c ' nity “o study cal* Kit 4 6 ? 9 9 2 2 n oon M-F 2-26-2B 9am The Daily Texan Health and Fitness Guide is coming soon - Thursday, February 28th - to help you qet in shape and feel healthy! Call 471-8900 for more information. T . : . • . FEBRUARY 27 U S A H IC K W G N Lovnc Al My Children . Days of Ou lives tkghway to Heaven rrv Programme Mow: l modera •y AM 1 X CBS The Murvns Good Momng America 8 “ Joan Q A# 3 3C Pnce Is Ftglx Young & Restless 1 0 “ 1 1 “ 1 2 " • Salty Jessy Baptaei Wheel Concentran Home Tel Truth Trmwach Match Game Love Qoser look * PM 1 M n PM C 30 <5 PM As (he World Gudng light Genkto One ufe to Uve Another World General Hospital Sana Barbara Oonatae Inst ó - Ü 4 ™ ' JO 5 " -J PM 30 1 Q PM : Q PM 3 30 Han Cocry T-vmc Card Chanenosrs News CBS News ABC News Nerrs News Cost# SMw Flash Jake and the Filman WKXJ News Grown Wonder Grgwg Doogr AnYthng Equal Justice News Nmhtne Newtiart Wo the In Edition Oprah Winfrey Jeopardy* N8C News Wheel Unsolved Mysteries Mght Court Semteid Hirter News Tomaht Show Letterman Nutt (35) Hunte Bob Costas 1 0 ™ !U 30 1 1 Ü ! 1 1 30 Cnee's Ta» Snon and AM U 30 Senon PdPrg Giirrn Haooy Days U vera flag» & Kattae lee Kate i Mamas Madock Bamaby Jones Hogan Garnet Pvfe Tale Spm fork Water Nwa Hdot ALF • • . • rrv Programme! Mr Rogers Sesame Street ITead Square One Noht Court Movie House of Games Nova Bus Rot MacNek/ Lehrer Star Tmk Next Arseno Hal Movie Volante Force Nova Scientific Amenca Mtfk Russell Off Ae News Who's T B S n G * g r Bew trac UOe House B E T 32) (600) Pd Prg • a i m l*as kk Hoaers Sesame Street (TV Progrannr Move For i lovers Pd Prg U N I 31 TV Muter M ew El Reyde Otas M A X A M C n 31 T N T ITS (600)9 to S M ow On the H Waterfront Mow foon Stan on ¡6.30) Popeye Parade f-agde M u o n Mow; *tonaway Mow (6.00) Cartoon fxpress Ónfy _ 0u Voces Live From Perry Mason Desmonds OUce Desafio El Lodo M ow Retun to Peyton Place Mow One Mrate to Zero Father of theBnde Hammer 1 1 d d Mow Judge a msc Lass» Mivathe Eueeka's Castle Elephar* Fred Penner DaW Banana Bara Bevwrac Maprvn P i jean fow s Gerakto Screen Video Vibrations Encadenados Cnstat TV Mu»r MoW Hot Rock M ow Mr Lucky . ■ Dmdend 145J Elephant Judos Chan React use Koala Noratos Name Tune Wipeout Mavaü» Todays Tom S Video Soul Ptfflmsxn Mcwe a Crestndge Fkntstones Firtstones b-adv Butch Good Tmes fop C*y Natacha Cnssna Manhattan Melodrama M ow One Mmute to Zero Mow Hoitywod Flooer Pytam* Press luck Looney Heathckft L451 Stolen Horn Mow Mr Lucky Conspirator Ten of (Js m Looney N e * \ AGnffith 0. V r honeymonrv Wheeke . ‘A ‘ ¡ 'I Clap 'n Hibkkes A. Griffith Happy Days Video IP Mana StfN a e s Our Voces Noocwo De Mueres American Mow Mow: List Live From NBA Basketball Desmonds Pobre Oiabta Mow Homer and Video Sou De Nad» Édcke !45) tkrter (.45) Back t15) F'wed Planet Apes Mi Soldad Corel En Viw Work) Visen M ow El Reyde Desmonds Ed Gordon Mtímiyn Love Our Voces Oros Mow; Dow the Dram 150) Next of Km Vagabond lo w Reflections Mow Wha Pnce Hollywood’ : Nest Mow Vagabond lo w Hoh Dance Cartoon Express Glkgan Buos Burmv and Pals Mew Rartree County ... Doub» Dare Make Gntíe Chas. 5 MacGyw msp jeanrte .....I. V. Mr Ed . ' « I . - AT. Mow mstoe Get Smart Story Muder. She Wrote Mow Blues Brothers • • Mtarn Vce Gran Acres Mow V.I.P.* Eauakzer Draonet Best al SNt Femwood Hitchcock Donna Reed Patty Duke N*w* . Mgnt Cout Grbbswfte Mow Missrg M u - live From ( 40) Frene Reflectxms • WiesSmq My 3 Sons 459-6353 452-5656 * e s t a b lis h e d 1 9 6 2 removal of ' “ U N W A N T E D H A I R ’ ’ It’s P e rm a n e n t. E le c tr o ly s is can help both women a n d men feel better about themselves. M o n - S a t 9 am -9 p m ANOCRSON LN 20 R e s e a r c h B lv d iHw\ 183) (|n Cen(r{. Poin, by ^ St^ LIFE FNN/BRV FAM NASH ESPN SHOW DISN ACTV ACTV ACTV Avengers Body. Jans inside Go« Mow: College Basketball Aaadental Sa Garden Too Card Rendezvous Country Mow: H Get By . Mow: Women's Mow; Mrs. Columbo Women's College Superman College Rxskethsll Police Strxv Th* a n Altitudes Lifestyles Baby Knows ... 30 Bom Market Preww Momexi D ISC 34 .. ■ - Dnosaucers iffles Bq Valley Assiyment Discovery Vdeo Momng 700 Club Dr. Edell • Fugitive A BE 34 Survival Between O'Hara US Treasury HSE « (5 30! Prtvam Grade HB0 a Mow Her Aktx (45) Memories n t Me Snow Slang Attitudes ..a.......a Gourmet Soenser Markettxie SuDDlements Market Watch For Hre ER. Supermarket Mxtday Market Rpt tkgh Tech T. UHman Moorv lighbng Attitudes ........ 1 ShopTalk Market Wad Street Countdown Faher Ftiw MarketWrap Batman • ■ Sheila Pd Pro Backnoads Pd Pra Fghl Slavery 1 • C.0.PS. Popeye ta-'T . Lifestyles Entrepreneu Profiles Tom Brown (Ft 3) Patrick fopond Scarecrow and King Mow Who's Mmding the Store? Your Work) Pasouaie Do It Self Dr. Eden Your World Pasouaie Do It Self So. Garden M Natue Rendezvous WkJ. Wild i-.l v'tv; Wings Prof Natixe A -k m ■ American Church S i Standard Tme Amencan TooC«d Crook On Stage VdeoPM . • Charke Chase VI Nashville Now 7 AM 1 35 n AM O C 1 0 AM 30 1 1 A" 1 *...aO 1 2 ™ , C 30 -j PM 30 1 O PM L 30 q PM _ J ta i. Mow: Blue de Vile ... 4 ™ 30 r PM 5 30 6 ZJii E.R. EN G 7 PM L A Law o o Danger Kids Work Q PM . 7 30 10IU 30 11 PM ' 1 35 m AM Seft- 38 Supermarket High Tech Ou House Beyond 200C Avengers Mow: Face of Trespass Fugtove Cutting Horse Swtnmmg • Famify Playhouse Mow Runaway inside Go* Womens College Basketball Gold Medal . Suvtval Between Century Batdeime Arvmals n War Livmg Goff College Basketball Trad Mow Somebody Has To One-Night Breaking In (10) Domg Time (10) Spellbinder m (5.00) Once n Henry's Cal Henry's Cat Mow: Frst Love .... . Chances Are Freeway Kklmas Mow Coratsftp of Eddie's Father Mow Chances Are (Cork) Sports Men's Pro Ski Tora Getting Fit Workout Body Body Body by Fmai Fora Wrestling Bowlg Up Close in PGA Soorts College Basketball m Donald Duck Pooh Tree 5® © Deflvwance Commrariv Billboard (MO) Community (MO) Comnuiity BtHboart Billboard .. DumtX) Mow: No Deposit No Lre-.-y Relran Light Time Oil We Uve In . . - , COPS. Community Briboani WtC m Blessed Vi yr People Speak : ■ ACS Heakng Let Freedom Rmg Praioet Tree Estamos en Message ... . Texas Hondo Show Seno Centra Churches Owne Love Dance Probecenter Blessed Lunch Box Mus* Box Anne of Avonlea. 4 Danger Bay ; m * Raccoons . - " Donald Duck W r. lose Kris, Inc. M W ) Mow: Bambi Positive Uvng Kriz Klub Aanuncture Employee ACC Motherland Your Pet Texas Musk Austm Muse Probecenter In Austin Blessed V*gm El Evangeko Austr Unity Thrs Is Ausbn Hyde Park - rta’r Vvgn Astronomy Network Puppet Tree East Church Ptxtmorvide ETC Brawd Akve Acess Group AOS Service OanaerBav Mow: Blaze Mow Doctor Oolitde : . College Basketball . Mow T Ullman Molly Dodd Mow: Spenser For H«e Scarecrow and Kfig Beyond Invention War Chron. Nashville Charke Chase VI At the knprov Century Doctor and Mow: Whos Minding the Store? Tom Brwm Now Wld Adventurers Crook, Batdeime Animals m War College Mow: Basketball Sports Centra Hollywood Mow: Funre Tubs 2 Girl ( 45) Corned Light Alternative Hour New College Track and (:15) Into the Fre . Racquetbail Feld (05) Ozze ( 40) Howli Howto Views Pry.| Live Hotkne Testament Breastfeed Deliverance Commuxty Billboard Commraxty BJIboard INSURING S U C C E S S A T UT — SINCE 1980 813 W. 24th ST. W E D N E S D A Y P R I M E T I M E 7:00 pm Q CD THE FLASH After Pike attacks the Flash, Barry is sent ten years into the future to a city destroyed by Pike and his thugs. ^ * ★ MOVIE HOMER AND EDDIE (1989) James Belushi, Whoopi Goldberg. An escaped mental patient fleeing across the country meets a simple-minded hitchhiker, and they form an offbeat friendship. 'R' Q m ® MACNEIL/LEHRER NEWSH0UR Q ® MR. ED Wilbur auditions for the part of Robin Hood in a movie 02 * ★ MOVIE THE INSIDE STORY (1948) Marsha Hunt, William Lundigan. An old Vermonter urges another man to keep his cash in circulation to avoid the Depression. ® CD the WONDER YEARS The family expects Kevin to correct Buster the dog's bad behavior 03 ® UNSOLVED MYSTERIES A crash is covered up by the military; a con man leaves women emotionally and financially devastated Q ffi 5. + ★ * MOVIE HOUSE OF GAMES (1987) Lindsay Crouse, Joe Mantegna. An inquisitive psychiatrist is drawn inescapably into the intense, high-stakes world of professional gambling. R' ® www MOVIE BLAZE (1989) Paul Newman. Lolita Davidovich. Louisiana Gov. Earl Long creates a notorious scandal by his determined courtship of stripper Blaze Starr. R g l5ei 7:30 pm REFLECTIONS ON THE SILVER SCREEN • T U T O R IN G — ALL SUBJECTS • M E N T O R IN G • C L A S S N O T E S • T E ST & E X A M R E V IE W S • TYPING — R E SU M E S — TERM PAPERS OPEN 7 DAYS-A-WEEK T IL MIDNIGHT SUNDAY-THURSDAY 4 7 2 * 6 6 6 6 James Earl Jones discusses his film career and his role in The Great White Hope. ® BEWITCHED Samantha uses magic to help Gladys' brother, a musician, overcome his fear of performing in public. GB GD GROWING PAINS Eddie and Mike join a Parents Without Mates club and use Chrissy and Ben as their children. (R) Q 8:00 pm 0 CD JAKE AND THE FATMAN A mother flees from a killer after witnessing a murder and leaves McCabe, Jake and Derek in charge of her baby. Q ® WWW MOVIE WHAT PRICE HOLLYWOOD? (1932) Constance Bennett, Lowell Sherman. A Hollywood waitress is aided in her quest for stardom by a drunken ex-director © ® NOVA When Korolev died, his plans to land a man on the moon died with him; a secret kept for 20 years is investigated, g ® GET SMART © (D D00GIE H0WSER, M.D. The Howser household is disrupted when Katherine decides to join the Eastman staff, g ffl ® NIGHT COURT Judge Stone, alone and heartbroken, considers quitting until a guardian angel steps in. Guest: Mel Torme 3 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Clemson at Duke (L) ® DRAGNET ffi ® ANYTHING BUT LOVE Hanna s plan for one last night with Marty before leaving for West Africa is thwarted, g ffi ® SEINFELD Jerry suspects a student of stealing a statue, g 8:45 pm (□) w MOVIE THE HUNTER (1980) Steve McQueen, Kathryn Harrold. A modern-day bounty hunter uses unconventional methods to track and capture fugitives and bail jumpers. PG' 9:00 pm o ® wiou g ® w MOVIE DOWN THE DRAIN Andrew Stevens, Teri Copley. A hotshot lawyer gets his clients cleared of charges and then inducts them into his criminal gang. 'R' © ® NOVA The manned launch to the Soviet space station is witnessed; cosmonauts and their families are interviewed as they prepare for six months in space, g ® BEST OF SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE The Loopners hire a refrigerator repairman who’s so unhip his pants fall down. © N E W S QD ® EQUAL JUSTICE Rogan prosecutes a doctor accused of the mercy killing of a terminally ill woman; Briggs unloads a messy case on JoAnn. g S3 ® HUNTER Hunter and Novak search for Novak's kidnapped daughter g OS ® STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION The crew s shore leave on a peaceful planet is interrupted by a threat to Wesley s life and a mysterious vessel that protests Federation expansionism g ® w MOVIE HOLLYWOOD HOT TUBS 2: EDUCATING CRYSTAL Jewel Shepard. Patrie Day. A woman is put in charge of her family’s hot-tub business. 'R' ® w MOVIE LOVE NEST (1951) June Haver, William Lundigan An Army veteran and his wife struggle to keep up the ramshackle apartment house they have bought ® FERNW000 2NIGHT Meg Endicott talks about today's morality and what to wear to your wedding if you're pregnant. 10:00 pm O ® 6 0 ® f f l ® NEWS © ® SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN FRONTIERS 8:30 pm 9:30 pm EM PLOYMENT EM PLOYM ENT EM PLOYMENT EM PLOYM ENT 800 General Help Wanted 810 - O f f ic e - Clerical 830 — Adm inistrative- 8 4 0 — Sales M anagem ent M T E t U G E N C E JO B S Al branches U S Customs. D E A etc Now hiring C all 1- 8 0 5 -6 8 7 -6 00 0 . Ext K 9413 2 4 ? 3 P typist, bookkeeper S6 hr PART-TIME Need transportation Coll 346-7154 2 26 26___________________________________ W A N T E D 100 p eop le W e will p a y you to *ose 10-29 lbs in 3 0 days All natural 817 5 9 5 -6 5 8 7 2-14-20B 820 — Accounting- Bookkeeping 8 1 0 - O f f ic e - Clerical SHORT WALK UT FULL-/PART-TIME, (1) Typing/ word-processing / compu-finker trainee (45 + wpm), (2) Book­ keeping trainee (prebusiness); (3) Prelaw: do legal errands in own car; Nonsmoking self-start­ ers. $4.00-$4.25. Write app. 8- 4 weekdays, 408 W. 17th. 2-18-208 E C O U P IE W A N T E D 'o m a n age smoll s v d ent p ro perty Apartm ent, utilities, and bonus Exp erien ce prefered 4 5 3 - 4 9 9 ' 2-18 10B ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ USE TEXAN CLAS- ISIFIEDS Í I471-5244! ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A * LEARN BOOKKEEPING SHORT WALK UT FUIL-/PART-TIME Bookkeepmg/oc- countmg *ramee deal for prebusiness motor, also, rypmg/word-processmg/ compu-tmker trainee (45 wpm|, also, prelaw errand runner Nonsmoking self­ starters $4 00-$4 25 Write application 8-4 weekdays, 408 W 17th. 2-18 20B-E G asoline wholesaler needs part-fime accoun­ tant to assist in the man­ agement of C stores. Work schedule flexible. Up to 30 hrs. per week. Send re­ sume to P. O. Box 2068, Austin, TX 78768. 2-21-56 EM PLOYMENT 840 — Sales ÍK I t m t Jl i Q SUMMER JOB INTERVIEWS Average Earnings $3900 U n iversity Directories, the nation’s largest publish­ er of campus telephone directories, hires over 250 college students for their summer sales program. Top earnings $5,000-8,000 G a in valuable experi ence in advertising, sales and public relations sell­ ing yellow page advertising for your campus tele­ phone directory Positions also available in other university markets. Expense paid training program in Chapel H ill. NC. Looking for enthusiastic, goal- oriented students for challenging, well-paying sum mer job. Internships m ay be available. Interview s on campus Tuesday, M arch 5th Sig n up at C areer P lan ning and Placem ent E V E N IN G H O U R S Entry level supervisor N o prior experi­ ence needed Circulation Soles Supervi­ sors needed for supervision of individual s ellin g subscriptions in local neighbor hoods Outgoing personality necessary Excellent hours for college student 3 30-10 pm, doily/Sunday $180 per week guornoteed plus equal or greater commission Full benefit & use of compo n y v e h ic le w h ile on th e |o b [P e r s o n a l v e ­ hicle required for occasional use) Apply in person 9 offl Noon. M - F Austin American-Statesman 166 East Riverside E O E 2 26 98 860 Engineering- Technical PROGRAMMERS Full time position with local computer services com pany Super a d v a n ce ment opportunity Desired skills/expe­ rience C, M S D O S , windows, d ata b a s e p ro g ra m m in g , V A X / V M S , Ingres, S Q l, H W & S W configuration Excellent keyb o ard skills. Previous w ork experience & marketing skills a re also highly desirable Must b e d e ­ pendable, organized, articulate, non- smoker with neat a p p e a ra n ce S1000 to S I 5 0 0 monthly 459-9263 2-27 3B P R O G R A M M E R W A N T ED M ust be fa miliar with D O S and D base III pro­ gramming PT evenings, 515/hour Adam 47 2 9 0 9 5 2-22 DB 880 — Professional Residential Treatment Center near Oak Hill hiring full-time M H W and part-time Sat7 Sun. overnight M H W . Excel­ lent references a MUST. Call Stacey at 462-2669 or 288- 2687 M, Tues or Fri. be­ tween 9 AM-1 PM. 2-26 9B EM PLO Y M EN T 800 - G eneral Help Wanted N A TTO N A I TELEC O M M UN IC A TIO N S LONG DISTANCE TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPANY IS INTERVIEWING FOR PROFESSIONAL PART-TIME MARKETING/SURVEY REPS. We offer: • Hourly plus commissions. • Paid holidays, free long distance • Competitive product offerings • Strong marketing support provided Plan your Spring schedule to work with our schedule Shifts are 8 30 am 12 30 pm or 1 00 pm-5 pm (M-F) No nights or weekends Must possess good communication skills Will train bright, enthusiastic individuals Mkt Fin., pre Law majors are encouraged to apply Advancement opportunities CALL 453-5000 between 8:30-4:30 p.m. AROUND CAMPUS If you submitted any announce­ ment to appear on Wednesday, please resubmit the announcement. This excludes recurring announce­ ments. The Texan apologizes for any inconvenience. Around Campus is a daily col­ umn listing University-related ac­ tivities sponsored by academic de­ partments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, or­ ganizations must be registered with the Office of Campus Activities. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, 25th Street and W hitis Avenue, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit sub­ missions to conform to style rules, although no significant changes w ill be made. MEETINGS The Freshman Students Associa­ tion will meet at 8 p.m. Wed- nesdsay in University Teaching Center 4.110. Abdullah Alshayji from the Free Kuwait Organization will speak. Orange Jackets w ill meet at 5:30 in University p.m. Wednesday Teaching Center 4.124. The University Chess Club w ill meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in College of Education Building 370. The University Gaming Society will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Union Building Forty Acres Room. Games played will in­ clude AD &D , Gurps and Sha- dowrun. The International Awareness Committee will meet at 5:30 p.m. in the Texas Union Wednesday Building Chicano/a Culture Room. The Fulbright Scholars' Associa­ tion will meet at 5 p.m. Friday. Call 469-0706 for location. The Texas Union Program Coun­ cil will meet at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Union Building Board of Directors' Room. The Steve Biko Committee w ill meet at 6 p.m. every Wednesday in the Texas Union Building Afro- American Culture Room. College Republicans w ill meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in University Teaching Center 3.122. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 p.m. Fridays for a graduate student fellowship book discussion. For more information call David at 459-7104.. The Canterbury Episcopal Stu­ dent Association will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Canterbury Stu­ dent Center, 27th Street and U ni­ versity Avenue. Dinner will be at b p.m., holy communion will be at 6:45 p.m. followed by group activi­ ties or a discussion program. The Designated Driver Program will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays in University Teaching Center 4.102. DDP is accepting committee applications. Teach For America National Stu­ dent Organization will meet at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Peter T. 1 lawn Academic Center 19. Habitat For Humanity will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in Fexas Union Building 4.222 Students Uniting Nations w ill meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday in Rob­ ert A. Welch Hall 2.306. The Texas Juggling Society w ill meet from 7:30 to 10 p.m. in Russell A. Steindam 1 lull 213 and 215. Students For Study Abroad w ill meet at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday on the Texas Union Building patio. All those who have studied abroad or want to go abroad are welcome. Texas Students for the Impeach­ ment of George Bush will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Texas U n ­ ion Building 4.222. Mu Iota Epsilon, Minorities in Education, will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in College of Education Building 284. Le Cercle Franjáis w ill meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday at Les Amis Cafe, 504 W. 24th St. The Undergraduate Philosophy Association will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday in Waggoner Hall 415. The Society of Professional Jour­ nalists will meet at 7 p.m. Wednes­ day in the lesse 11, (ones Communi­ cation Building Lady Bird Johnson Room (fitth floor). James Garcia of the Austin-American Statesman will speak. University Amiga Computer So­ ciety will meet to discuss the con­ version of the heathen in the up­ coming Amiga Expo at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.256. U T Ballet Folklórico w ill have a mandatory meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Anna Hiss Gymnasi­ um 136. Officers will speak about the spring show. Sign up sheets for committees will be posted. S P O O K S w ill meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the Chi Omega house, 2711 Rio Grande St. W el­ come new weenies. Actives need to bring their picture pages. Faculty/Staff Christian Fellow­ ship will meet at noon Wednesday in Parlin Hall 8A to discuss Chris­ tian views toward war FILMS AND LECTURES InterVarsity Christian Fellow ­ ship will show the video "Stained Images" from 7 to 9 p.m. W e d n e s ­ day in College of Business Adminis­ tration Building 4.344 with a discus­ E v e ry o n e s i o n welcome. a fte rw a rd s . University N O R M L w ill show "Reefer Madness" and "Hem p for Victory" at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.308. The Department of Geography is sponsoring the lecture "Environ ­ mental Management of Oak W ilt Disease in Central Texas" at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Geography Building 408. Carl Schattenberg, Parks and forester, Recreation Department will speak. The Department of Theatre and Dance and the Center for Dramatic and Performance Studies are spon­ soring the film Singirt' in the Rain with Gene Kelly at 7 p.m. Wednes­ day in Fine Arts Building 2.204. The Health Professions Council is sponsoring a discussion with Ty N ew ton, Texas A & M medical school financial aid officer, from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday in University Teaching Center 3.124. SHORT COURSES S U R E , Students United for Rape Elimination, is offering a self-de­ fense workshop at 7 p.m. Wednes­ day in L. Theo Bellmont Hall 546. Survivors of sexual assault, women of color and people with disabilities are particularly welcome. The Baptist Student Center is sponsoring conversational English classes for international students at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the center, 2204 San Antonio St. The UT Amateur Radio Club is holding no-code amateur radio li­ cense classes at 6:30 p.m. Wednes­ days in Engineering Science Build­ ing 145. Students are welcome to start at any time. to the Macintosh The Computation Center and Joe C. Thompson Conference Center will offer the follow ing courses next w e e k : ■ Introduction from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday. ■ Harvard Graphics from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday. ■ Introduction to Microcomputers from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Thurs­ day, $24 with UT ID. ■ Claris MacDraw II from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday. ■ PC SAS Basics from 8:30 a.m. to I LAf^C&A5 'CWSfc k S/C fOiMP dHfc >'q 0iR- k f> vJi'fh TOT p o f i . «fe J 'w ? 15 HAtWeV Fro5< \ OH "CMC WHe*£ 1 O F Tey/*5 J Toe PoPzi-AR AtCxHo. 5ouiR- >/g£L.5 PU y-t NO .:• 39 J A Hew CRctp..- ^hc RmkA parley J ’QvigRCi,£ A R t A u V Hi? if Ar* AL&tHO p i t R EA L. -r'Atl V k ..¿QJiARtt OAp m r c i U U - v U i l Ü \tOt> WHAT ASCTaT HofcE Trtfs*) WVTtt A rmuo- ’¿sw um / T J^ ' X TRIED 40 w e Him for. you, CARLA BUT I VTMCZE YCXm | PERFECT ft# I HE D.\ILV TEXAN Wednesday. February 27, 1991 Page 23 A C R O S S 1 U ltim a te 5 D ais 10 G o h u ngry 14 A rc h ite c tu ra l fe a tu re 15 B a s e b a lle r H an k ■— 16 O u ts id e p re f 17 M a g i's g u id e 2 0 R ela tiv e 21 G o lf ite m s 2 2 P a tie n ts 2 3 C ro w d 2 4 S h a k e s p e a r e ’s w ife 2 5 D e c la re 2 8 D re s s up 3 2 A c c o u n t 3 3 W o rrie s 34 A sian c oin 3 5 K ing o f Is ra el 3 6 G h a s tly 3 7 L o c a te 3 8 C u rv e 3 9 R a p id ity 4 0 W o rld -w g a ry 41 D o w n In — — 4 3 S tre tc h e d th e n eck 44 B ra ts 4 5 J o g o r tro t 4 6 A c to r H o w a rd 4 9 L ib e ra l — 5 0 W ro n g : p re f. 5 3 le v e e 5 6 K ing b e a te rs 57 C rim e a n c ity 58 Re 5 9 H eld b a c k 6 0 E x c es s iv e 61 Evince D O W N t F e m a le 2 O p p o s e d 3 W o u n d 4 — a n d fe a th e r 5 M o s t s e c u re 6 E m a c ia tio n 7 G re e k g o d 8 P ro c u re d 9 M a d e b e tte r 10 T e n ta c le , eg 11 S o re n e s s 12 Suffix for old or y o u n g 13 M a le s 18 E a re d s e a l 19 Floorings: in fo rm a l 2 3 B la c k b ird 2 4 L o fty h o m e 2 5 R e s o u rc e 2 6 H id e 2 7 D ru n k a rd 2 8 M is s ile s 2 9 O rie n ta l 3 0 Tight 31 C o m p le te d 3 3 T o o th p o in ts 2 , 3 4 I I P R E V IO U S P U Z Z L E S O L V E D [PÍAÍP A, r D E M E N 7 r ¡A G E B E N c L , ' |N S T t A M a <>S l lA lG L E c n O A m T m [SjE m ? 3 6 E e ls 3 7 A d o m ic ile 3 9 D r o ll q u a lity 4 0 Lively 4 2 S trip 4 3 S n o o z e 4 5 F u rn a c e p a rt 4 6 C a rria g e 4 7 C e re a l 4 8 S te a d y 4 9 T a le n t e d 5 0 E n g a g e 5 1 A w a y fro m th e s u r f a c e o f 5 2 S t o r e 5 4 F lo o r c o v e r 5 5 H o lid a y s u f f . W S É P '"' ■ V QUEEN OF THE UNIVERSE™ by Sam Hurt C © UIHHT K I N D lO F FILLING? HEY, LET'S PlAY "COWBOYS AND NATIVE AMERICANS’’. I’LL BE THE WISE NATIVE WITH A SPIRITUAL REVERENCE FOR THE ENVIRONMENT. F a m i l y T r e e T h e m i/ ifiry c o n ­ siders- anyone who’s even confer* sexual contact u>fh SomeoneoP vUe saw« sex c^ueer. So, ani| 9 ¡r í w ho e ve r pj aued d o c t o r u>tfh 3 F r ie n d is 9 U