T h e Da il y T e x a \ Vol. 91, No. 46 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, November 5, 1991 25c Report examines tenure procedures Francine Bosco Daily Texan Staff Research and publication are the main cri­ teria in assessing merit raises and tenure pro­ motions while undergraduate teaching re­ mains undervalued, according to a report released Monday by a Faculty Senate com­ mittee. Dale Klein, chairman of the subcommittee on teaching/research balance, said three sub­ committees were formed last semester to study aspects of the promotion and tenure process and to evaluate the balance between teaching and research at the University. The results are from preliminary findings of two anonymous surveys — one sent to all faculty members of college and school pro­ motion and tenure committees, and the other sent to all permanent faculty. The only information the respondents provided was their rank and college or school. Pat Davis, chairman of the subcommittee on college promotion and tenure commit­ tees, said that his questionnaire was intend­ ed to survey impressions and attitudes of faculty members across campus. Of the 139 surveys mailed, 86 were returned. "Basically we asked them to assess the rel­ ative weightedness and appropriateness of each area in promotion consideration. Half of the respondents felt there was appropriate emphasis on teaching and research but some still see an overemphasis in certain areas," he said. "There are differences between col­ leges and those on promotion and tenure committees who feel there isn't a balance see a greater emphasis on research." According to the subcommittee's report, the College of Communication places the most emphasis on teaching and the College of Natural Sciences the least when evaluating promotions from assistant professor to the associate level. Natural Sciences and the School of Law emphasize research most when considering promotion to the associate professor level while the School of Architecture considers it the least. The The report also found that faculty mem­ bers favor placing greater importance on ser­ vice activities, such as committee member­ ship and community work, in assessing merit raises and promotions. teaching/research subcom m ittee mailed 1,750 questionnaires to faculty mem­ bers of all ranks last spring and 721 were returned. In addition, they received 320 sets of written comments. The questionnaires asked faculty members to rate the impor­ tance of certain activities when considering promotions and merit raises. Philip Schmidt, chairman of the subcom­ mittee, said he was surprised with the num­ ber of responses and that the results were so closely correlated with those of the promo­ tion and tenure subcommittee. Please see Report, page 2 Voilà! Joey Lin Daily Texan Staff Govalle Elementary fourth- and fifth-graders, along with Art In- structor Suzi Krakauskas, right, put finishing touches on their mu- project on Oct. 6 and expect to finish Wednesday. ral at Trudy’s Texas Star cafe, 409 W. 30th St. They began the SA calls official student-faculty ratio unrealistic Holly Wayment Daily Texan Staff Officials said Monday the UT student- faculty ratio this fall decreased from 20.4-to- 1 to 20.3-to-l, but Students' Association members said the "tru e" ratio should be much higher. "It's very obvious when you walk into a class at this University that there is no 20- to-1 ratio," said Greg Ayala, SA representa­ tive. "By and large, the ratio is more like 50- to-1, 100-to-l, or even 500-to-l, depending on the class." According to Ayala, the SA University Policy Committee is investigating the stu- dent-faculty ratio. "You would think the ratio would in­ clude only the faculty who are actually teaching," Ayala said. "B u t in reality, a number of the faculty included in the ratio are not teaching." Maryann Ruddock, assistant director for the Office of Institutional Studies, declined to comment on the committee's claim, but explained how the ratio was calculated. "The ratio is derived by dividing the number of full-time equivalent students by the number of full-time equivalent faculty," she said. Full-time equivalent faculty include pro­ fessors, associate professors and assistant professors, instructors and lecturers, Rud­ dock said. According to a September 1991 U.S. News and World Report article, the University has the highest student-faculty ratio among the nation's top universities. According to the magazine, the University had the third worst student-to-faculty ratio, in last year's rating of 204 of the nation's universities. Ayala blamed the extremely high ratio of students on the Texas Legislature. "They don't have their priorities straight," he said. "M any blame UT administrators, but the state Legislature is the real enemy for not allocating enough funds for higher edu­ cation." According to James Vick, vice president for student affairs, "There's been a lot of criticism how one arrives at the num ber." Vick said the administration is focusing not on how the ratio was calculated, but on re­ ducing the current ratio. "It's important that we continue to work toward reducing this num ber," he said. UT President William Cunningham, who was out of town and could not be reached for comment Mondav, said in a written statement on Oct. 24, "W hile we have made some progress in this area, our stu­ dent-faculty ratio is still too high." Cun­ ningham plans to reduce the ratio to 19 to 1 by 1994. 19 killed as S. Africa paralyzed by mass labor walkout Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Mil­ lions of blacks went on strike Monday as anti-apartheid groups shut down large parts of the economy in a bid to force the white government to share power. At least 19 people were killed in strike violence. The massive strike, which was to contin­ ue Tuesday, was officially called to protest a new tax. But it was widely seen as a pow­ er struggle between the government and black opposition groups. The strike appeared to be one of the most politically effective actions taken recently by opposition groups, which have fre­ quently been left on the defensive by Presi­ dent F.W. de Klerk's rapid reforms. Skeleton staffs made up of mainly white workers kept many businesses operating at partial capacity, but the streets of some cit­ ies were deserted. Johannesburg's sidewalks were clear of the hundreds of blacks who normally sell fruit and vegetables, and white supervisors unused to cash registers struggled to serve whites. Essential services were not hit by the strike, and power stations, most transpor­ tation and other services ran normallv. Strike organizers claimed at least 3 mil­ lion people were taking part in the action, but the figure could not be confirmed. The Congress of South African Trade Unions alone has 1.2 million members. The African National Congress and the allied Congress of South African Trade Un­ ions, the groups that called the strike, want a say in economic policy. Although de klerk has scrapped apartheid laws, the op­ position says little has changed. "The organized working class has today and will tomorrow strike a body blow to apartheid," said Jay Naidoo, general-secre- tarv of the trade union congress. The government alleged that many blacks were intimidated into staying home, a charge denied by the groups. Opposition leaders threaten further action if the gov­ ernment does not accept their demands. Business spokesmen said they had no na­ tionwide figures, but that 50 percent to 80 percent of black workers did not show up at most major businesses. The country has 30 million blacks. Government officials estimated the strike will cost the economy about $800 million in lost production. Lottery and student loans round out final 4 amendments Editor's Note: This is the last in a four-part series on the 13 constitu­ tional amendments under consider­ ation Tuesday. Propositions 10-13 will be analyzed. Chris Damon Daily Texan Staff ■ Proposition 10 The constitutional amendment au­ thorizing the Legislature to exempt from ad valorem taxes Iproperty taxesI cer­ tain property of a non-profit corporation that supplies water or provides waste­ water service. In Texas, more than 800 non-prof­ it water supply corporations pro­ vide fresh water and sewer services to an estimated 2.5 million people in largely rural areas. According to state law, three or more people may form a non-profit water supply cor­ poration to furnish water services to communities or individuals. Al­ though the nature of the non-profit corporations is to provide water ser­ vices without making a profit, cor­ porations nonetheless are only able to provide at-cost services to people able to pay for it. Although non-profit water supply corporations provide the same ser­ vices public utility districts provide, the water corporations are required to pay property taxes, whereas pub­ lic utility districts are exempt. State law requires the taxation of property in proportion to its value unless specifically exempt from tax­ ation in the constitution. Charities UTAREA POLLING LOCATIONS The following locations will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. 136 - Rldgetop Elementary School, 5005 Caswell Ave. 137 - Criss Cole Rehabilitation Center, 4800 N. Lamar Blvd. 145 - First Evangelical Free Church, 4425 Red River St. 147 - Jester Hall West Lobby, 101 E. 21st St. 148 - Jester Hall East Lobby, 101 E. 21st St. 152 - Maplewood Elementary School, 3808 Maplewood Ave. 334 - Pearl Street Co-op, 2000 Pearl St. 335 - St. Austin’s Church, 2026 Guadalupe St. 343 - Taos Co-op, 2612 Guadalupe St. 131 - Asbury United Methodist Church, 1605 E. 38 1/2 St. 146 - Robert E. Lee School, 3308 Hampton Road 320 - Mathews Elementary School, 906 West Lynn St. 321 - O. Henry Junior High School, 2610 West 10th St. 328 - Dili Elementary School, 2007 McCall Road 329 - Bryker Woods Elementary School, 3309 Kerbey Lane 331 - St. Luke United Methodist Church, 1306 West Lynn St. 336 - Senior Activity Center, 2874 Shoal Crest Av. 337 - Old Austin High School Annex,1200 block of West Av. 344 - First English Lutheran Church, 3001 Whitis Ave. 345 - W.R. Robbins Alternative School, 3908 Avenue B 346 - Church of Christ in Hyde Park, 310 W. 43rd St. Source: Travis County Clerk's Office Phillip Melito Daily Texan Graphics are exempt from property taxes by the constitution, but the Texas Su­ preme Court ruled earlier this year that non-profit water supply corpo­ rations are not charities because they provide services only to those who can afford them and not to the community at large. Proposition 10 would amend the constitution to allow the Legislature to exempt non-profit water or sewer corporations tion. from property taxa­ Supporters of the amendment say rural Texans pay more for their wa­ ter services than urban Texans, due to the tax-exempt status of munici­ pal water districts. Rural water cor­ poration customers pay more, they say, because of the passed-down tax. Supporters believe the tax sav­ ings reflected in lower utility rates would help provide low-cost ser­ to economically distressed vices communities around the state. Opponents say the tax bases of rural school districts have already been hard-hit by declining property values. Exempting non-profit corpo­ rations from taxation would further deprive distressed communities of much-needed revenue. They say that paying property taxes should be part of the cost of doing business for non-profit corporations as it is for other corporations. * Proposition 11 The constitutional amendment au­ thorizing a state lottery. Article 3, section 47a of the state constitution outlaws specifically state lotteries. It states that "the Legislature shall pass laws prohibit­ ing lotteries and gift enterprises in this state." Proposition 11 would amend the constitution to allow the Legislature to authorize the state to operate bin­ go lotteries. It would further allow the state to contract with other or­ ganizations to operate lotteries on the state's behalf. Supporters of Proposition 11 be­ lieve a lottery would be a popular way for the state to raise much- needed revenue without having to implement additional taxes. Lottery proponents call the proposal a "vol­ untary tax," saying people are free to choose whether or not to buy a ticket. Texans already spend a great deal of money on the lotteries operated by 33 other states, money support­ ers say would stay at home if Texas ran its own games. They predict that $462 million generated from a lottery would forestall an increase in the state sales tax, already among the highest in the nation. And if ap­ proved, supporters say legislation has already been passed that would make the Texas lottery among the most fair in the country. Opponents charge that promot­ ing a lottery in Texas would be a reckless and irresponsible policy with considerable social costs. Call­ ing it state-run gambling, critics point out the state would have to engage in deceptive marketing tech­ niques to promote a game it knows most players will lose. Opponents have cited studies in­ dicating that lotteries are a regres­ sive tax which take a larger portion of income from the poor than from the wealthy. Seducing the poor to pay more than their fair share of the state budget, they say, is grossly unfair. ■ Proposition 12 The constitutional amendment to in­ crease from 20 percent to 50 percent the percentage of Texas water development bonds previously authorized by Texas voters that may be issued for economi­ cally distressed areas. Texas voters passed a constitu­ tional amendment to issue $500 mil­ lion in general obligation bonds in 1989. The money was to be used to finance local water and wastewater development projects, as well as Please see A m endm ents, page 2 iiiiw L r ■' ■ 1 k ’ L N ! A 1 * 3 » w J f u Ssi# ■ a What’s left of the Texas A&M bas­ ketball program gets slapped with a 2-year probation by the NCAA for rules violations concerning use 10 of an illegal talent scout. Also inside: Mexic-Arte celebrates Dia de los Muertos with a traditional display of altar pieces containing items presumed to help the deceased s 12 journey into the afterlife. Professors at the Institute of Latin American Studies point out the apparent hypocrisy of legislators’ efforts to better Texas-Mexico re­ lations and the University’s slash­ ing of three major academic ex­ 5 change programs. If elected, Weather: Politician weather: I promise to do my best, to get pork-barrel projects, for God and my state/district, to help big busi­ ness to acknowledge ethics laws, to have lows in the upper 40s and highs in the mid- 50s, to change with the southeast winds at 5-10 mph and to put cloudy skies in every pot. interests, Index: Around Campus.................................. 14 Classifieds......................................... 13 Comics................................................15 Editorials........................................... 4 Entertainment. S p o rts ............................................... 10 State& Local . University World & Nation . . . . . , ............................ . , , , . . . . . . . . . . . 6 5 3 . . . . 12 Monday Wednesday, 4p.m. Thursday, 4p.m. Tuesday Friday, 4p.m. Wednesday Thursday............Monday, 4p.m. Friday................. Tuesday, 4p.m. ...........11 a.m. Classified Word Ads (L ast B u sin a s* Day Prio r to Pub lica tio n ) 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. We Rim Bikes 7 days a week. Weeknights till 7 p.m. NORTH 13376 Research Galleria Oaks Center 258-7278 Depoek required on *1 rant» It. SOUTH 1603 Barton Springs Near Zilker Park 477-3472 Ma/or Credit Card* Accepted Page 2 Tuesday, November 5,1991 T H E D v il.Y T E X \ \ Editor Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors News E d ito r................ Associate N ew s Editor News Assignm ents Editor Senior Reporters Associate Editors Entertainm ent Editor Associate Entertainm ent Editor . Sports Editor Associate Sports E d i t o r ................ General Sports Reporters Photo Editors .................... Special Pages Editor........................ Graphics E d ito r ................................ . . . . .................... Around Campus Editor Assistant News Editor News Reporters P h o to g r a p h e r s ............................... ........................ Editorial A ssistant Editorial C olum nists .................... Entertainm ent Assistant Sports Writer . Sports Assistant Graphics A s s is t a n t ........................ ............................ Makeup Editor . Wne Editor . . . Copy Editors ................................ Comic Strip Cartoonists ................................ . . . . T h e D a i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff ................................ . ............................... . . . .................................... . . ............................................... Mark Babineck. Mindy Brown. Matthew Connalty Mtc hael Casey Tint T ran. Hope S * on Candice Driver dI* d Loy .............................................................................................. Shat 7 sur j . ........................■ .Francme Bosco. Michael Brown. Chris Damon. Rebecca Stewart. Hoik Wayment, James. W ikerson ................................................ Curt Bessetman David Bezanson Jason Aycock ................................................................... Eric Rasmussen ............................................................... ... ....................................................................... . . . Jaime Aron . . . ................ Jon Becker. Ray Dise Tom Grace. Matt Schulz .................................................... Michelle Dapra. Austin Holiday .............................................................................. Shannon Prosser ........................................... ........................... .... ................................................................... Craig M Douglas Kotey Coleman , Issue Staff . . . . Austin Holiday ............................................... ................................... ................................... ... . Heather Wayment Annemarie Braun Eric Feistel Adam Hersh, Kevin Williamson Joey Lin. Ted Warren . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................................................................... Joilene Wood Anne Gainer, George Klos ........................................ ...............................................................................Jennifer Goldstein ...................................................................................... Jason Lovelace . Anna Pellman ............................................................................... .................... ......................................................................Phillip Metrto ........................; ...................................................Jennifer Johnson ........................................................... Joseph Abbott Gigi Causey. Jodi Nordby Liz Purcell Korey Coleman. Carl Greenbiatt, Tom King Jeanette Moreno. David Morris Marc Trujillo. Greg Weiner ■ . Advertising Local Display Art Director Graphic Designer Classified Display C lassified Telephone S a le s Classified Telephone Clerks Julie Anderson Michael Chang, Brian Connell Meredith Eggleston Christine English David Hemphill. Jylle Joyner, Michael Lakier, Doug Lyon. Melina Madolora Wendy Rodriguez, Renee Simon. Aiissa Snow Elsa S n yd e r. Jeanette Spinelti, Moises Worthalter Landon Sims Tiffany Butler Brad Corbett. Soma Garcia, Lisa Granger Sharon Skinner. Stefam Zellmer Art Carriiio Candace Cobb Matthew Seymour. Sheronda Scott .............................................................. ... ................................................ .................................................................. Cmdy Garza. Andi Harrison. Christ' Stradford. David Ross. Wendy Wood The Daily Texan (U S P S 146-440) a student newspaper at The University of texas at Austin is published by 'X 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday. Texas Student Publications 2 50 0 Whitis Austin. Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not m session Second class postage paid at Austin TX .’ 3710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (4 ’ 1 4591), at the editorial office i Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 to t). For locai ana national display advertising, car 471 -1 86 6 For classified tisplay ana national classified display advertising, call 47r 8900 For classified word advertising, call 471-5244 Entire contents copyright 1991 Texas Student Publications The Daily Texan Mail Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fall ana Spring) , Summer Session One Year (Fall. Spring and Summer) . ............. . . .............................. . ................................................ ............................................................. ................................................ To charge by VISA or MasterCard call 471 5083 $30.00 5500 20 00 7500 . . . Send orders anc address changes to Texas Student Publications. P.O Box D. Austin TX 78713 8904 or to I S P Building C 3 200 or call 471 5083 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904. Graduate Opportunity Program Workshop Series The Graduate Opportunity Program offers workshops of interest to graduate students. The Workshops are free and open to the public. P u b lish in g hi P r o fe ssio n a l J o u rn a ls: A *anel D is c u s s io n Wednesday, November 6, 12 noon to 1 pm, in the Eastwoods Room (2 .1 0 2 ) of the Texas Union. For more information contact (he Graduate Opportunity Program at 4 7 1 -7 8 1 1 . Report Amendments Continued from page 1 Continued from page 1 foun d "In general w e faculty sp en d significantly m ore tim e on gra d u ate in stru ction a n d research activities th an on u n d e rg ra d u a te in­ struction. I've often heard teaching should be m ore im p o rtan t b u t c a n 't be because professors w an t to be in the lab all tn e tim e and 1 th in k this dispels th a t m y th ," he said. to A ccording th e repo rt, m ore than half of the re sp o n d e n ts w ere full p r o t e s t s and m ore than 25 percent w ere associate professors. In ad d itio n , 56 p ercen t of the re sp o n d e n ts serve on their d e p a rt­ m en ts' g o v ernin g bodies or p ro m o ­ tion and te n u re com m ittees. "It is im p o rtan t to no te th at the results of the survey re p re sen t, in large m easu re, the view s of faculty w ho have already achieved som e m easure of success in the p re se n t rew ard system , at least insofar as prom otion and ten u re are con ­ c e rn e d ," Schm idt said. In the an o n y m o u s w ritten com ­ m ents, faculty m em bers com plained m ost often of im balanced rew ard system th at favors research over instructio n especially at the u n ­ d e rg rad u ate level. the flood control, aquifer recharge and w ater con serv ation projects. O f the $500 million, 20 percent ($100 million] w as earm arked to be used to provide loans an d g ra n ts to e c o n o m ic a lly d is tr e s s e d a re a s w hose residents can n o t afford to pay for sew er and w ater services. K now n as colonias, these areas are typically found along the Texas- Mexico bo rd er an d are characterized bv profound poverty a n d ab h o rren t sanitary con ditions. W ith th e $100 million allocated to colonias, th e Texas W ater D evelop­ m ent board has app ro v ed fun din g for 13 w ater a n d sevyer projects th at will serve ab o ut 50,000 people. H ow ever, that n u m b er reflects only 20 percen t of all colonia resid en ts. The w ater dev elo p m en t board can­ not allocate m ore fu n d in g w ith o u t perm ission from th e voters. Proposition 12 w o uld a m e n d the co nstitution to allow th e Texas W a­ ter D evelopm ent Board to increase the fu nds d ed icated for econom ical­ ly distressed areas from 20 percen t to 50 percent. A p ercentag e increase of this size w ould ch an n el an a d d i­ tional $150 m illion in existing fu n d s to the colonia project. P roposition 12 does not seek to sell m ore bonds, b u t ra th e r to reallocate fu n d s al­ ready ap p ro v ed by voters. S u p p o rte rs of th e pro positio n say the additional fu n d s are n eed ed to finish u p a job already b egun. By increasing the portion of m oney ear­ m arked for colonias, they say basic w ater services can be p ro v id ed to colonia resid en ts w ith o u t co m pro­ m ising w ater d ev elo p m en t pro­ gram s in o th er areas of the state. T hey say incidents of disease are high in colonias w h ere raw Sew age is d u m p e d in the streets w h e re chil­ d ren play. is a O p p o n e n ts of P roposition 12 say the problem local o n e and shou ld be dealt w ith locally. T hey say u n sc ru p u lo u s land dev elo p ers lured p eo p le into the colonias w ith prom ises of low-cost h o u sin g an d w a te r/w a s te w a te r serv ices. T he state h as h ad to m ake g ood on those bogus pro m ises at co nsiderable ex­ p e n se to taxpayers. T hey say h o m e ­ o w n e rs in colonias sh o u ld o rganize m unicipal utility districts or n o n ­ profit w ater su p p ly co rp o ratio n s to m eet their w ater n e ed s instead of relying on g o v ern m en t to bail them out. ■ Proposition 13 The constitutional am endm ent pro­ viding for the issuance of general obliga­ tion bonds not to exceed $300 million to continue existing programs to provide educational loans to students, w ith re­ paym ents of student loans applied toward retirement of the bonds. In 1965, the L egislature a u th o r­ ized th e Texas H igher E ducation C oordinatin g Board to issue general obligation b o n ds for loans to state resid en ts w h o atte n d college in Tex­ as. Several stu d e n t loan p ro g ram s are adm in istered u n d er th e u m b rel­ la of the H inso n-H azelw o od College S tu d e n t Loan program . T he p ro ­ gram offers low -interest loans to low -incom e stu d e n ts. It assisted 26,000 stu d e n ts in 1990. An identical prop osition w as n a r­ row ly defeated by 7,600 v o tes in A u g u st 1991. S u p p o rte rs of Proposition 13 a s­ sert th at th e program enjoy s an ex­ trem ely low default rate and p ro ­ vides a valuable service to T exas stu d e n ts at n o cost to th e taxpayer. O p p o n e n ts of the p roposition say voters already rejected it once this year. By resu b m ittin g th e a m e n d ­ m ent so soon after its A u g u st rejec­ tion, th ey say, the Legislature m is­ takenly assu m ed that voters did not know w h a t they w ere doing. Let Resume Net take the Hassle out of your Job Search. Circulate your Resume to as many as 30,000 corporations for less than 1C per contact! Call 1-800-531-7638 I I & re* k FREE DRINK w / purchase of la.ge Gyros M-F 10-8 SAT 10-6 SUN 12-8 Ateit Lover/Veg: Large 52.99 Small 52.49 Greek Chicken Kabob Plaie w/ Salad 53.49 I ■ J V 7 7 - 0 0 5 5 22nd &. 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Affordable living in a pleasant setting, with cultural attractions and recreation within easy reach of both University campuses. Call toll tree for more information and an application: 1-800-852-9074 Ask for Departm ent 2TX FAX 314-362-3369 Application deadline: Ja n u a ry 1, 1992 1 STANLEY II. KAPLAN Take Kaplan O r Take Your Chanc es FREE SEMINAR GRE: Nov. 5th MCAT: Nov. 7th CALL 472-8085 to reserve a seat today and receive a $50 savings on the prep, course. With this coupon receive 20% off any regularly pric ed Ray-Ban sunglass. SunGear 2420 GUADALUPE 469-0476 MONDAY S DOW JO N E S '3.045 61 DOWN 10 74 VOLUME 155.530.000 DOWN 10 74 VOLUME 155.530.000 l A Z ^ ^ E D I O V V U n L U OC V V v Z l l L L z OC ^ ^ K I K I A T I ^ I U N Ì m AV I | V / I 1 I III I) Ml N I I \ \ V Tuesday November 5. 1991 Page;#,1 Ukraine to join economic union Republic’s entry considered ‘vital’ to success of new economic system Associated Press reversed M OSCOW — The resource-rich U kraine its go-it-alone strateg y M onday a n d agreed to join a new econom ic u n io n th a t M ikhail G orbachev has h o p ed w ould re­ place th e old centrally ru n system . The a n n o u n c e m e n t w as a break ­ th ro u g h in th e Soviet p re sid e n t's ef­ forts to bring all 12 rem ainin g re­ publics th at belonged to th e Soviet U nion into the new econom ic u n ­ ion. The participation of th e U kraine, the Soviet U n io n 's secon d-m o st p o ­ p u lo u s republic a n d a m ajor food p roducer, h ad been seen as vital to the success of any a tte m p t at eco­ nom ic cooperation. The action cam e after G orbachev convened a closed-door m eeting of the go v ern in g State C ouncil w ith a w arn in g th at the po st-co u p lead er­ sh ip had the b reak u p of the Soviet U nion, "an d w e have a p p ro ach ed an ab y ss." to p rev en t failed Bowing to p ressu re from R ussian F ederation P resid en t Boris Yeltsin to cut costs, the State C ouncil also e n d o rsed a decision to elim inate ab out 80 Soviet m inistries and d e ­ p a rtm e n ts from the bloated national bureaucracy, an d d iscu ssed w h at to do w ith th e foreign, d e fen se an d in­ terior m inistries. U krainian Prim e M inister Vitold Fokin told the State C ouncil his re­ th e econom ic public w ould sign treaty w ithin tw o day s, the Tass new s agency rep o rted , q u o tin g G or­ bachev spok esm an A ndrei G rachev. M em bership in th e econom ic u n ­ ion by th e U kraine h as been stri­ dently o p p o sed by se p aratists in the republic of 51.7 million people. The republic will vote on its in d e p e n d ­ ence from the Soviet U nion on Dec. 1. Initial reaction from Kiev on Fok­ in 's a n n o u n c e m e n t w as skeptical. " It's like tw o 89-year-olds in an intensive care unit, prom isin g to be nice to each o th er after they get m arrie d ," said Bogdan K ravchenko, a C an ad ian adviser to th e U krainian g o v ern m en t. D espite its ag reem ent to join the econom ic u n ion, the U kraine assert­ ed its in d ep en d en ce in a n o th e r way its first formal M onday, creating Despite its agreement to join the economic union, the Ukraine asserted its independence in another way Monday, creating its first formal armed forces. arm ed forces. T he N ational G uard will consist initially of 33,000 m en w h o form erly w ere Soviet Interior M inistry troops. A candid G orbachev spoke of his inability to hold th e nation to geth er as he o p en ed th e session of th e State C ouncil, w hich w as set u p af ter th e failed A u g u st cou p as an in ­ terim g o v erning body w ith su p rem e authority. A fter th e coup, "h o p e aro se that w e w ould be able to m aster the situ ­ ation, take the road of reform s and p rev en t a b reak-up of th e u n io n ," G orbachev said. G orbachev told the leaders of 10 republics an d his to p econom ic and political advisers at the m eeting th at the nation w as in "th e m ost critical situ a tio n ." "T his did not h a p p e n and w e have ap p ro ach ed an a b y ss," he said. H e said, how ever, th at he still b e­ lieved the increasingly in d e p e n d e n t republics w ould retain som e form of unio n because they "c a n n o t cope w ith this tragic situ atio n " by acting alo n e1. Tass said G orbachev su p p o rte d Y eltsin's radical econom ic reform plan to free prices a n d priv atize in ­ d u strie s free m arket to create a econom y by next y ear in Russia. \V hile th e Soviet g o v e rn m e n t has been paralyzed, th e R ussian gov­ ern m e n t m oved to s h u t it d o w n Fri­ day w ith th e cessation of fu n d in g from the giant republic to at least 70 m inistries — a decision later e n ­ dorsed by the leaders of m ost of th e republics. The State C ouncil o n M onday su p p o rte d to dissolve the m ove m uch of th e Soviet g o v e rn m e n t a p ­ p aratus. Foreign M inister Boris P an ­ kin said he w ould red u ce p erson nel at his m inistry by 30 percen t, the In­ terfax n ew s ag ency re p o rte d . Angry words Associated Press Protester Victor Reyes was one of more than 2 ,000 Nicaraguans who marched to the National Assembly building Sunday. The demonstration was sponsored by anti-Sandimsta groups and was organized to protest a variety of government policies. Economists predict Fed rate cut Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — The Federal R eserve, fru strated so far in efforts to jum p -start a w eak econom y, will decide T u esday to low er in terest rates once again, m any private econom ists predicted. H ow ever, o p inion w as divided on the q u estio n of w h e th e r a new ro u n d of rate cuts will be en o u g h to avoid a d o u b le-d ip recession. Som e an aly sts said M onday th at they believed W ash in g to n poli­ cym akers will be forced take m ore dram atic ste p s in a bid to d is­ sipate w id esp read gloom ab o u t the econom y. to T hese econom ists saw th e chance for a triple-play package of fu rth e r Fed rate cuts cou p led w ith a tax-cut package from C o ng ress to p u t m o n ­ ey in co n su m e rs' pockets an d an easing of bank reg u latio n s aim ed at alleviating the credit crunch. "T here is a d a n g e r th at this recov­ ery could stall or even tilt in to a double-dip rece ssio n ," said D avid Jones, chief econom ist at A ubrey G. Lanston & C o., a g o v e rn m e n t secu ­ rities dealer. "T o g et p ositive effects on co n su m er confidence, you have to do m ore th a n p eo p le are exp ect­ in g ." Jones said th at if econom ic d a n g e r signals grow m o re severe, th e a d ­ m inistration, C o ngress a n d the Fed could very well agree on a joint ef­ fort th at w ould p ro d u ce a tax-cut bill early next year along w ith fu r­ th er Fed rate cuts an d a g reem en t am o n g ban king regu lators for b o ld ­ e r efforts to get ban k s to start le n d ­ ing again. W hite H ou se b u d g e t director Richard D arm an seem ed to o pen the possibility to such a scenario re­ g arding tax cu ts in an interview pu blish ed M onday. W hile ruling o u t a tax cut this year in th e interview in the Wall Street Journal, he said, "If the econo­ m y is still sp u tte rin g , th en it is co n ­ ceivable to m e th a t th ere w ould be th e right political context in w hich to enact a resp o nsib le tax cut [next year]." W hile eco nom ists w ere split on th e chances of a tax cut in 1992, they w ere in general ag reem en t th at at least o ne m ore ro u n d of Fed rate cu ts w as in th e offing, given th e dism al econom ic reports of recent w eeks. rep o rted The g o v e rn m e n t last w eek that the u n e m p lo y m en t rate clim bed to 6.8 p ercen t in O ctober w hile hom e sales took their biggest nose dive in 2Vi years. A fter the u n ­ em ploym ent rep o rt Friday, Presi­ d e n t Bush re n e w ed his call for th e central bank to low er in terest rates. M any econ om ists predicted they w ould vote to red u ce the d isco u n t rate by one-half a percen tage p oint, to 4.5 p ercent, a n d n u d g e its target for federal fu n d s rate d o w n to 4.75 percent. T he d isco u n t rate is the interest the Fed charges to m ake b an k loans w hile the fu n d s rate is the interest b ank s charge each o th e r for o v er­ n igh t loans. High court to review race-based jury selection decision Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — The S u p rem e C ourt said M onday it will co n sid er barrin g crim i­ nal d efe n d a n ts from usin g race as th e basis for excluding p o tential ju ro rs from th eir tri­ als. The court, w hich already h as o u tlaw ed race-based exclusions m ad e by prosecutors, said it will stu d y an ap p eal in w hich G eorg­ ia p ro secu to rs say such racial bias is u n la w ­ ful no m atter w h o practices it. A decision is expected by July. In o th e r m atters, th e court: ■ For th e first tim e in its history strip p ed from tw o m en, from C alifornia an d D ela­ w are respectively, th e privilege of filing ap p eals w ith o u t p aying a $300 filing fee an d significant p rin tin g costs. The court, by a 6-2 vote, said both m en had ab u sed th e privilege by rep e a ted ly fil­ ing frivolous ap p eals. ■ R efused to revive a law su it by th e fam i­ ly of a N avy recruit from W isconsin w h o died d u rin g a train in g exercise in w hich his in structors forced him back into the w ater after he panicked. ■ Rejected an a p p e a l by senio r citizen g ro u p s aim ed a t forcing busin esses receiv­ ing federal aid to e v alu ate w h e th e r they are com plying w ith a law b an n in g age d iscrim i­ nation. ■ H eard a rg u m e n ts in a Louisiana case over a sta te 's au th o rity to keep so m eone confined to a m en tal hospital w h o has re­ gained sanity after b eing acquitted of a crim e because of insanity. broad pow er to strike prospective jurors by u sing p erem p to ry challenges. At issue in th e juror-exclusion case from G eorgia is the use of perem p to ry , o r a u to ­ m atic, challenges th ro u g h w hich defen se law yers or p ro secu to rs are allow ed to excuse prospective jurors from trials w ith ­ o u t giving th eir reasons. In a landm ark 1986 decision, th e justices said p rosecutors m ay nev er disqualify p o ­ tential jurors based on th eir race. T he ru l­ ing curtailed dram atically the traditionally The court last April ex p a n d e d the 1986 decision by ruling th at a crim inal d e fe n d ­ ant, regardless of his race, can challenge a pro secu to r's racially biased use of p e re m p ­ tory challenges. T hat decision said w hite d e fe n d a n ts as well as black d e fe n d a n ts are en titled to new trials if convicted by juries from w hich blacks w ere excluded because of their race. Mideast conference ends on indecisive note Associated Press MADRID, Spain — A rabs a n d Israelis w ent hom e M onday w ith m ixed feelings of frustration an d anticipation after an in ten se foray into the realm of peace. Israel a n d Syria w ere m ired in recrim inations, b u t pro m ised to m eet again. Few concrete ach iev em en ts resu lted from last w eek 's th ree-d ay M iddle East conference and th e three sets of direct Israeli-A rab talks that en d ed early M on d ay w ith a bitter Israeli-Syrian session. But th e talks sm ash ed a 43-year taboo on d i­ rect Israeli-A rab talks, settin g in m otion a p ro ­ cess of face-to-face neg o tiatio n s to resolve one of the m ost intractable regional conflicts in the w orld. The U nited States a n d Soviet U nion sp o n so red the talks, an d P resid en t B ush's a sse ssm en t was: "W e have a long w ay to go an d in terru p tio n s will probably occur, b u t h o p e s are b rig h t." The b rig h te st are for nego tiatio n s b etw een Is­ rael an d th e 1.7 m illion P alestinian s living u n d e r its m ilitary rule in th e W est Bank a n d G aza Strip. The dim m est are for a th aw b etw een Israel an d Syria, the re g io n 's stro n g e st m ilitary p o w ers, and m ost b itter foes. "I w ould like to ex p ress o u r regret for leaving this city w ith o u t having tangible re su lts," said Syrian Foreign M inister Farouk al-Sharaa. In a re m in d e r of ho w relen tless th e conflict is, h ard-line Israelis in a u g u ra te d a new Jew ish se t­ tlem ent in the G olan H eig h ts just h o u rs after th e talks e n d e d . S yria's m ain d e m a n d is for the re­ tu rn of th e G olan H eig h ts, cap tu re d by Israel in the 1967 M ideast w ar. T here w ere also rep o rts th at Israeli tro o p s shelled the p ositio ns of radical M uslim guerrillas in L ebanon. In the Iranian capital of T eh ran, Shiite M uslim d e m o n stra to rs b u rn e d A m erican an d Israeli flags and an effigy of Uncle Sam o u tsid e th e form er U.S. Em bassy co m p o u n d to m ark its takeover 13 years ago by Iranian radicals. The late-nig ht talks in M adrid w ere th e first- ever direct d iscussion s b e tw ee n Israel a n d Syria an d th ey lasted five h o u rs, into early M onday m orning. But th e enem ies failed to m ove even an inch from th eir p ositions, or even shake h an d s. Even coffee break s w ere taken in sep a­ rate room s. N o n eth eless, both agreed to m eet again — if the U nited States com es u p w ith an acceptable location. O fficials on both sides said W ashington or o th e r sites in N o rth A m erica w ere possible. A n Israeli sp o k esm an said M onday that Israel w ould still prefer th at th e talks be held altern a te ­ ly in Israel a n d Syria, or along th eir border. But Syria rem ained just as a d a m a n tly in favor of a neutral site an d accused Israel of being in tran si­ gent. / < 7® $ House defeats controversial FDIC bill Associated Press Yitzhak Shamir, left, talks with parliament chairman Eliahu Ben-Elissar. Associated Press Czechoslovakian president fights to keep fending republics together PRAGUE, C zechoslovakia — Czech an d Slovak leaders agreed M onday to try o ut P resident Vaclav H avel's latest plan to save th e co u n try from division. Rising sep aratism in Slovakia, the poorer, eastern third of C zechoslovakia, has m ade it im possible for Czech an d federal officials to forge an ag reem en t to keep th e co u n try together. Slovakia's parliam en t had sch ed u led a vote on th e sovereignty issue, b u t d ecided M onday to delay the vote, rep o rters in Bratislava said, in an a p p a re n t sign of their w illingness to c o n sid er H avel's proposal. Belgian paratrooper units abandon Zaire KINSHASA, Z aire — H u n d re d s of Belgian p ara­ tro opers b o arded ferries a n d sailed aw ay M onday, leaving their form er colony p aralyzed by riots, looting a n d a political deadlock as P resident M obutu Sese Seko clings to pow er. Two barges crow ded w ith 365 w aving soldiers pulled aw ay from a C o ng o River la n d in g stage as a small n u m b e r of Z airean s re tu rn e d farew ell salutes in a d ren ch in g tropical d o w n p o u r. A few d ozen sold iers w h o stay ed b e h in d to g u ard the Belgian Em bassy rem oved the p erim eter of barbed wire they h a d set u p a ro u n d th e m ission an d w ith ­ drew into th e building, leaving p o sts o u tsid e em pty. Foreigners leave eastern Germany for west BERLIN — Scores of foreign asylum -seekers, escorted by ultra-leftists carry in g clubs a n d axes, fled to a church in w e ste rn G erm an y o n M onday after about 200 ro w dies attacked their refuge in the east, au th o rities said. Police rep o rted 35 peo p le h u rt in clashes that began S u n d ay after a soccer m atch in G reifsw ald b etw een a local club a n d a Berlin team . H ooligans from Berlin attacked local spectators in the Baltic Sea tow n an d then w e n t on a ram page at a form er m ilitary hospital h o u sin g foreign asylum -seek­ ers, police in G reifsw ald said. W eekends this fall have b ro u g h t d o z en s of attacks on foreigners in both eastern and w e ste rn G erm any. Police have increased protection a n d few er assau lts have been rep o rted in recent w eeks. Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — T h e H o u s e on M o n d a y overw helm ingly d efeated legislation d esig n ed to rescue the nearly in so lv en t Federal D eposit Insurance C orp. an d provide new b u siness o p p o rtu n itie s for the n a­ tion's struggling com m ercial banks. The 324-89 vote se n t law m akers search in g for a m ore acceptable package. O n e available possibility w as a narro w ly d raw n bill already in tro d u ced w hich w ould rep le n ish th e FDIC an d m ake a few reg ulato ry ch anges that have g en e ra t­ ed little controversy. Before a d jo u rn in g for the year, C on g ress m u st pro­ vide m ore fu n d s for the FDIC or leave the agency in d a n g e r of b eing un ab le to protect 110 m illion d ep o si­ tors. T reasury Secretary N icholas Brady called on the H ouse to "n o w craft new co m p reh en siv e legislation to ad d re ss the real problem s of the b an k ing system ... including an a p p ro p ria te balancing of in terests betw een the insurance, securities an d banking in d u strie s." "A narrow recapitalization of th e b ank insurance fund will only delay th e day of reck o n in g ," he said. But D em ocrats m ost involved in crafting th e bill said they saw little chance of p assin g a n y th in g m ore th an the narrow ly d raw n bill, given th e level of contro versy and scant few w eeks left before a d jo u rn m e n t. The Senate p la n n e d to sta rt d eb atin g its version of the b an k in g bill this w eek. T he H o u se a n d Senate v er­ sions th e n could be m elded in a conference com m ittee later, still allow ing C o n g ress in th e e n d to sen d the p resid e n t broad ban k in g legislation d e sp ite M on day's defeat. T he Bush adm in istratio n , w hich objected to changes in th e bill m ade at th e urg in g of D em ocratic leaders, cam paign ed to defeat th e H ouse m easu re. It w as joined by D em ocrats o p p o se d the package w ould have placed on b ank ers. to restrictio ns The n a tio n 's largest ban k s lobbied h ard against the m easure w hich took n in e m o n th s to draft an d w as u n ­ d er deb ate on the H o use floor for th re e days. M ajority L eader R ichard G e p h a rd t, D-M o., plead ed for passage of the m easu re. "W e hear a lot a b o u t w h a t th is lobby w a n ts an d w h at th at lobby w a n ts," G e p h a rd t said. "L e t's forget ab o u t the lobbies an d start w o rry in g a b o u t w h a t's good for the A m erican people an d th e A m erican taxpayers for a c h a n g e ." BEST A V A I L A B L E C O P Y T H E I) Ml Y TEXAN P age4 Tuesday. Novembers, 1991 ^ s ALS TH E DAILY TEXAN Editorial Board Matthew f o r m a l l y Curt Besselm an Associate Editor Viewpoint opinions expressed e those of the writer of the article Th those of the University administration or the Texas Student Publications Be tees Opinions expressed in staff those of the writer The Daily Texan e> are not necessc i. the Board of Regc tard of Operating rt or guest columns Editor ers ord >Srh Dav id B e / a n s o n A s s o c ia te E d ito r itted to Firing Line should be fewer than guest colum ns should be no more than 800 bm issions to the Texan basem ent offices at I W hitis Avenue, or mail them to The Daily < D. Austin TX 78713 Letters may be edit- na r punt ti ¡ation style : S peak no Evil Cunningham shrewdly refuses to answer to parents B efore U 1 P resident William C unniugham canceled his usual q u estion -an d -answ er session at his P aren ts' W eekend speech Saturday, he told the au dien ce the cau se of stu ­ dents' problem s on cam pus. “The1 bottom line is very sim p le,” he told par­ e n ts . "U I is too efficient for our stu d en ts' w el­ fare.” T h at's one w ay to put it. C u n n in gh am said the sky-high student-faculty ratio — now at 20.39 according to the adm inistration — d em ­ on strated w hy the U niversity needed m ore m oney. This ratio, w hich is alw ays m uch sm aller than the one figured by th e Students' A ssociation, is based on a com plicated form ula designed solely for adm inistrative pu rp oses. It is produced prim arily for the adm inistration to use in planning and policy decisions and is no real indication of the average num ber of stu­ dents in an average UT class. But it m ade a nice distraction foi C un n in g­ ham to give p arents. C om p arin g the U niversity to oth er colleges nationw ide, he pointed out that the U niversity ranks 44th am on g flagship state institutions in student-faculty ratio. As to whv this is the case, the president only said m ore m oney w as n eeded. 1 le didn't give parents the "b o tto m line” — the reason the cam pus is overcrow d ed . Vice President for Student Affairs Jam es Vick answ ered this succinctly tw o w eeks ago: "T h e University is a research institution.” in other w ords, the U niversity is very efficient in sp en d ­ ing its funds on R&D while it undersells u n d er­ graduates for high-tech com petitiveness. A Faculty Senate subcom m ittee o n Teaching/ Research Balance confirm ed Vick's m essage this week. The com m ittee said M onday that in re­ gard to the prom otion and tenure p rocess, un­ dergraduate teaching rem ains a low er priority than research. In the 1990-91 UT budget, w hen the Legisla­ ture allocated a full 99 percent of w hat the Texas H igher Education C oordinating Board recom ­ m e n d e d for faculty salaries, the U niversity J m ade up the extra 1 percent. But w hen the Leg­ islature allocated only 49 percent of the board's recom m endation for research en h an cem en t, the University added enough to fund it at 462 per­ cen t of the b oard's recom m endation. J ' I ho state is spending less and less on its uni­ versities. A ssociate Liberal A rts D ean Sheldon Ekland-O lson, w ho did an sw er p aren ts' ques­ tions, explained to them that the adm inistration would increasingly need their help now that the state Legislature has slashed the U niversity's budget. If th at's the case, then the U niversity will have to begin valuing education m ore and com petitive research less. — M atthew Connally Pornography linked to rape T he question of a causal re­ lationship betw een por­ n o g ra p h y se x u a l crim es against w om en is central to a n d Anne Gainer TEXAN COLUMNIST the pornography d ebate. If such a relationship exists, our forefathers could hardly have intended the First A m endm ent to provide pro­ tection for such speech. To many in our society, this form of ' free'' speech has proven very costly. betw een Statistics which support the cor­ relation pornography and sexual crim es against women are usually relegated to som e dis­ tant corner away from public scru­ tiny. The laws on the books even against the hardest-core, most vio­ lent pornography are scanty and often unenforced. Pornography of any kind dis­ plays women as sexual objects. Forms of violent pornography show w om en being tortured and murdered merely for sexual plea­ sure. This clearly constitutes deg­ radation to w omen — but is there more here at stake? Studies, such as the one con­ ducted by Dr. Dolf Zillm ann of In­ diana University and Dr. Jennings Bryant of the U niversity of Hous­ ton, have found that the more pornography a person views, the more lenient their view of sexual assault. Syndicated colum nist Michael M cM anus, writing about the com ­ m ission that produced the 1986 Am erican C om m issioners' Report on Pornography, com m ented that if "it would be strange indeed graphic representation of a form ot behavior, especially in a form that alm ost exclusively portrays such behavior a s desirable, did not have at least some effect on patterns of beh avio r." I Ins seem s logical, and statistics seem to bear it out. An FBI study, quoted in t h e final report ot the attorney general's commission on .37 pornography, m urderers that confessed to multi­ ple killings, 29 used hard- and soft-core pornography t o fuel their anticipatory fantasies. that of found Police vice squads report that 77 percent ot child m olesters o f boys and 87 percent of child m olesters of giiU admitted imitating sexual behavior they had seen modeled in pornography. A Michigan police detective w ho studied sexual assault cases from 1956 through 1979 found that in 41 percent of the 38,000 epi­ s o d e s studied, the assaulter used pornography ju st before or during the attack. Alaska and Nebraska residents buy five tim es as many pornography m agazines per capi­ ta as North Dakota and have a rape rate six times higher. Such statistics are not em otional data m anufactured by anti-por­ nography zealots. They are on record in the law enforcem ent of­ fices that deal with the negative effects of pornography on society. Sim ilar statistics have been found again and again in all parts of the country. Supporters of pornography call such statistics "in co n clu siv e." Per­ haps. But what constitutes "c o n ­ clusive"? O ur society refuses to set guidelines to regulate the por­ nography industry. Such an issue is too volatile to leave on the back burner or in som e hazy, gray zone of the law. Hie American Civil Liberties Union howls about the rights of child pornographers and distribu­ tors of pornography (w ho earn as much as a million dollars or more a day, which they can pour into hiring lawyers to defend them). M eanw hile, sexual crim es are on the rise — especially am ong the juveniles who purchase 70 percent of all pornography m agazines. In countries w here pornogra­ phy restrictions have been adopt­ ed, rape rates have decreased. But lawmakers in the United States are still fidgeting about putting any restrictions on a largely unre­ gulated industry. Pornography's status as a form of speech does not m ake it im­ mune to scrutiny. W e should w or­ ry about the pornography market and its effects before we risk find­ ing out firsthand. Gainer is a journalism sophomore. Bush swallows quota bill T he civil rights bill that Pres­ By any stretch of the im agination, this am ounts to creating quotas. John Sepehri TEXAN COLUMNIST ident Bush vehem ently op­ posed in the last congres­ sional session is now headed for passage with B u sh 's endorse­ ment. C urrent events played the key role in Bush's turnaround. Republican senators told Bush they w ere em barrassed by looking like the bad guys all the time. The G O P w as also em barrassed by Da­ vid D uke's strong show ing in Louisiana (though it n eed n't be; Louisiana politics has little to do with the outside world). The New York Times suggested that only a civil rights bill could lighten ten­ sions caused by the Thom as hear­ ings. Remedies for sexual harassm ent were to have been expanded un­ der the vetoed civil rights bill, al­ lowing supporters of the proposal to manipulate public aw areness of the Clarence and Anita saga to their advantage. Bush should be against these back-door approaches to passing C ongress' civil rights initiatives. Instead, he proves him self to be the politically opportunistic Presi­ dent. Talk about harassm ent and racially charged cam paigning are em otional fronts for frank discus­ sion of the q-word. The congressional civil rights bills contain language that pro­ m otes the establishm ent of quotas and turns the sacred Am erican be­ lief in legal burden o f proof up­ side-down. The dam age to A m erican princi­ ples of jurisprudence will be im ­ m ense. The main focus of the act is to m ake it easier for people to win discrim ination cases by plac­ ing the burden of proof on the accused. This runs directly cou n ­ ter to traditional A m erican legal notions, which rightly make a point of insisting accusers prove their case. The crucial issue in the Clarence Thom as hearings w as that Thom ­ as should be considered innocent until proven guilty. O pponents of Thom as never proved that he was guilty. If senators had listened to argu­ m ents that sim ple doubt should be enough to derail Thom as from " T h e congressional civil rights bills con­ tain language that promotes the estab ­ lishm ent of quotas and turns the sacred American b elief in legal burden of proof u p sid e-d o w n ." the position, we would hear sto­ ries about pubic hair on Coke cans every time a controversial nom i­ nee cam e up. Likew ise, if people know that the burden o f proof is on a business to show it did noth­ ing w rong as opposed to accusers having to prove their case, then frivolous law suits will proliferate. This country isn't exactly short on frivolous law suits now . Joh n D anforth's s u p p o r t e r , In both the D em ocrats' bill and Sen. (Thom as' c h i e f ir o n i c a l ly the sam e enough) com prom ise, language that places burden of proof on a business m akes quotas inevitable. U nder the bill, if som e­ on e brings cause against a busi­ ness for discrim inatory hiring, the enterp rise must prove "bu sin ess n ecessity " its hiring practices. justify to If the burden of proof w ere on you to prove innocence w henever som eone raised a claim against you for certain actions, you would try to' prevent any situation that might lead into court. Businesses will feel obligated to hire pre-set num bers of minority em ployees so they can say, "Y o u can't sue us. O ur work force is 18 percent Hispanic, 12 percent African- Am erican, 5 percent Asian, 3 per­ cent N ative Am erican, and .0003 percent G alapogos Islander — just like the surrounding co m m u n ity." D em ocrats deflect the quota is­ sue by outlaw ing them . But at the sam e tim e, the business-necessity language of the bill can have no other result than to produce hiring by num bers. Faced with a paltry fine for using quotas, or the po­ tential for many punitive law suits, the choice for businesses becom es pretty clear. To outlaw quotas on the one hand, and to create language that invariably leads to them on the other, is m adness. su g g e st Proponents of the civil rights bill a rg u m e n ts th at against the bill are m oot, because the act's purpose is m erely to re­ verse recent Suprem e Court decisions — in effect, to re­ turn the law to w here it w as. This argum ent begs the question. It d oesn't m atter w here the law w as before if it was wrong. several Sim ply calling legislation a civil rights bill d oesn't make it good. By the logic of som e, a civil rights bill could direct the United States to launch a nuclear strike on Iraq, and just by virtue of being labeled a civil rights bill deserve passage. The elem ents of the original civil rights bill that prom ote quotas and destroy traditional Am erican con­ cepts of should never have been made law. jurisprudence The Am erican people opposed the D em ocratic civil rights bill by a fairly large m ajority for good rea­ sons. To sneak through an essen ­ tially equivalent bill by m aking a cause out of harassm ent, or b e­ cause of the im age-consciousness of certain politicians, is w rong. to rem ove The civil rights bill could have been rew orked lan­ guage that prom otes quotas and changes burden of proof while in­ cluding m easures against sexual harassm ent. But since it w asn't, Bush should have his veto stam p ready. Unfortunately, we have a presi­ dent w ho is concerned primarily with fights he know s he can win and from Dan coverage Rather. rosy Sepehri is a Plan I I junior. 1 f i * ” . ...... . ... Action infringes free Zen speech On Halloween evening, I was standing in front of the Kinsolving dorm itory around 9 p.m . with a group of friends w hen a group of about 30 people walked past singing a Christian spiritual song. After they had passed, one of my friends said "H ey , thev just ripped a poster off that tree!" We went and fished it out of the trash where they had thrown it — it advertised a Zen campus group or a talk by a Zen master or something o f that sort. If you are in a group that habitually does things like this, or if you participate in depriving others of their right to free speech, think about what you are doing. What right do you have to decide what other people see or listen to or think about? Why have you becom e my personal censor? Do you think the Bill of Rights is flawed and should be ignored? Have you becom e so much w iser than everyone else that you think it is best that you decide w hat we can read? Do you know what attitudes like this can lead to? Will you next begin punishing those m is­ guided individuals w ho do not have the exact same beliefs and values as you? Do you know w hat a total­ itarian society is? It couldn't hurt to think about it. Michael i Ihlik Physics Condom machines stir sexual drives I am writing to express my absolute agreem ent with the position o f M atthew C onnally ("C heap 1 rick," The Daily Texan, O ct. 24) with regard to the condom m achine issue. I do not consider myself to be prom iscuous, but I have had sex with several indi­ viduals and I definitely agree that it is nothing at all like having a beer with a friend. As for Tracy U rban's assertion (Soapbox, Oct. 29) that placing condom m achines on cam pus would "m ak e sex more available to people not thinking about having it," I can 't agree more. W hy, the mere mention of the word "co n d o m " arouses me. 1 can't bear to imagine w hat I might do if I actually saw a condom m achine in a cam pus restroom . I know I would want sex right there and then. If no willing par ner was around, I'd be forced to slip on a con­ dom and have sex with m yself right there in the rest­ room. O bviously, this would not be a "spiritual expe­ rience" and could prove to be highly em barrassing if som eone walked in. Please save me from myself. Do not support the resolution advocating condom m achines on cam pus. M ark Bernanli Graduate student Texan comics beat competitors 1 am writing in response to a Firing Line letter that criticized The Daily Texan com ics and several strips in particular ("Sad istic com ics not funny, Texan, Oct. 18). I have been reading The Texan since my freshman year, and I admit the comics have ranged from bi­ zarre to sepulchral. I also know that the com ics page is the first page 1 turn to w hen I pick up my morning paper, l or a college student to put out a daily strip is no simple m atter, and 1 respect anyone w ho does so. Cam eron Johnson continually w ages an ongoing battle against the viles of hom ophobia through the most simple and clever means: exposure. Tom King's Digger' ¡ones is dark and morbid; it's also funny. King is the most dynam ic and outgoing of our cartoonists, as his recent blend of photography and com ics dis­ plays. Jeanette M oreno's recent Other exem plified the soap-operatic twists that are overflow ing in our ever- day lives. Seldom is the day that the funny page fails to bring a sm ile to my face. If the com ics d on't suit your tastes, start one o f your ow n. Ashok Upadhyaya M olecular biology Tuition should not be raised T he adm inistration seem s Tim O’Keefe GUEST COLUMNIST graduate tuition will probably hurt the University. tuition intent on doubling gradu­ ate tuition. We m ust make our voices heard. Th e Texas Tea Party scheduled for this W ed nes­ day and Thursday gives us an ex­ cellent opportunity to show that we will not meekly accept a tuition increase. Teach your classes, hold your office hours, do research, or ju st study out on the South Mall to show your concern. The theme of the Texas Tea Par­ ty is "N o Tuition W ithout R epre­ sen tatio n ." We are protesting be­ cause graduate stud ents have not been given a voice in this process. M ost graduate stud ents would accept a tuition hike if they were involved in the decision-m aking process and w ere convinced that the hike was fair, was necessary to maintain the quality of th e Univer­ s i t y , and that the m oney would be spent wisely. I here l i as not been an impact study to set1 how the hike would alfect graduate students. There lias not been a report on how the money raised would be spent. There has not been a thorough re­ view of the budget, either, to look into alternative sources of reve­ nue, or to dem onstrate the neces­ sity of raising tuition. Furtherm ore, there has not been adequate student involve­ ment in this process, which is so obviously im portant to us. Until the adm inistration show s o th er­ wise, there are good reasons to be­ lieve that tuition should not be raised. G raduate student tuition only accounts for roughly 2 percent of the U niversity's annual budget — doubling graduate tuition would only increase the University's total revenue by a small am ount. It's hard to believe there's now here to dig up that 2 percent other than out of the pockets of the graduate students, who can least afford it. M ost graduate students are financially independent, with sub- incom es. And while stinence C hancellor Hans Mark adm its that tuition is only a "su p p lem en t" to the bu dget, doubling tuition would break som e graduate stu ­ dents financially. The University is supposedly trying to becom e a top research in ­ stitution, which is one of the rea­ sons for the hike. But an im port­ ant part of the process is attracting top graduate students. Doubling tuition will make the University less attractive to top graduate stu ­ dents, who will probably go to other universities that offer tuition waivers. In the long run, doubling Doubling graduate is only a stopgap m easure, and will not solve any of the long-term , system ic financial problem s of the University. The need for m ore m oney will com e up again, and if we passively allow tuition to be doubled this time the obvious and easy way to raise it will be increas­ ing tuition again. The adm inistration has linked faculty pay raises to graduate stu ­ dent tuition raises in a blatant, cynical attem pt to divide and conquer. There is nothing w rong with raising faculty salaries — the University should try to hire and retain the best faculty it can. tuition But financing faculty pay raises in­ through a graduate crease — taking money away from a graduate student who makes $8,000 a year to give a raise to a professor who m akes $40,000 or $50,000 — is perverse and regres­ sive. We w holeheartedly reject this attem pt to set graduate students and faculty in opposition. W e also invite faculty to join us and teach their classes on the South Mall. Ultimately, a tuition increase will affect everyone. O'Keefe is a graduate student in philosophy. UNIVERSITY Tuesday, November 5. 1991 Page 5 T i l l I ) Ml Y I I \ \ \ Faculty disputes program cuts Timing of UT-Mexico exchange eliminations questioned Adam Hersh Daily Texan Staff list of m ost Texas Better Texas-M exico relations are on the w ish law m akers, p ro m p tin g several UT p rofessors to d is­ p u te the decision to su sp e n d an d slash academ ic exchange p ro g ram s betw een the U niversity an d Mexico. "C u ts m ay be justified in so m e cases, but it's ironic that w hile th e g o v ern o r p ro ­ m otes academ ic exchange b etw een Texas and Mexico, the pro g ram s are being elim i­ n a te d ," said Alan K night, professor of history a n d m em ber of th e In stitu te of Latin A m erican Studies. Reflecting b u d g e t cutbacks, th e U niver­ sity pulled its fu n d in g from th ree m ajor program s: the M exican C en ter, w hich o r­ ganizes cultural an d academ ic exchanges; the M exican Fellow s Program , . w hich brings Mexican research ers to th e U nited States; and the A m erican S cholar's Pro­ gram , w hich helps UT faculty an d g ra d u ­ ate stu d e n ts stu d y in Mexico. “If I had it my way, Texas cer­ tainly would put more money into these programs.” — Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo Bryan Roberts, a professo r of sociology th e an d ILAS m em b er, ack n o w led g ed U niversity's fiscal positio n an d places m uch of the responsibility on state g o v ern m en t to prov ide a d d itio n al funds. tight "In this one area of state fu n d in g , it w ould be nice if th e re w ere m ore concern for the in stitution al an d academ ic policy side of Texas-M exican re la tio n s," R oberts said. R oberts said a b o u t $50,000 w o u ld be n eed ed to restore th e p rog ram s. The M exican C e n te r w as the UT g ro u p responsible for M exican P resid en t C arlos Salinas d e G o rtari's visit w ith UT Presi­ d en t W illiam C u n n in g h a m in A pril. Since the center receives som e p rivate fu n d s, it will op erate on a "sk eleto n staff," Roberts said. B uddy Garcia, legislative aid to state Sen. Eddie Lucio, D -B row nsville, favors increased private c o n trib u tio n s to form er state-assisted program s. "By having som eone like G ov. [Ann] R ichards backing the Free T rad e A gree­ m en t and b etter ties w ith Mexico, the m essage will be for p rivate in d u strie s to get in v o lv ed ," Garcia said. "H e r approval could lead to m ore d o n a tio n s by private b u sin e sse s." O th e rs at the sta te h o u se believe the g o v ern m en t sh o u ld play a g reater role in p ro m o ting cultural a n d academ ic pro-: gram s. "If I had it m y w ay, Texas certainly w ould p u t m ore m o n ey into th ese p ro ­ g ra m s," said Rep. H enry C uellar, D -Lare­ do. "N ex t legislative sessio n, w e need to m ake su re the L egislature a n d u n iv ersities back th ese p ro g ram s." Roberts said w ith o u t th e fu n d in g , the U niversity will have a stro n g intern atio n al rep u tatio n based on in d ividu al teach ers but will lack an "in stitu tio n al p re se n c e ." k I B M g t V E R H X Li 3- P U S H ing fo rw a rd Members of Pi Kappa Phi geared up for their PUSH for Aw areness project Monday to benefit severely handicapped people. They will cart around a w heelchair in the South and West malls for 91 hours, finishing their national service project 12:30 p.m. Friday. Joey Lin Daily Texan Staff SA rallies for Proposition 13 to fight ‘lack of information’ Eric Feistel Daily Texan Staff T h e S tu d e n ts ' A sso c ia tio n , flanked by a rap g ro u p , set o u t on the W est Mall M onday to find s u p ­ port for P roposition 13 on T ues­ d a y 's ballot — a constitutional am en d m tm t that, if p assed , w ould p u m p $300 million into Texas' s tu ­ d e n t loan coffers. P roposition 13 a u th o riz es $300 m illion in additional b o n d s to be sold by the state of Texas to con­ tinue the H inson-H azlew ood S tu ­ d en t Loan Program . th e p ro p o sitio n A ccording to Sim on S hostak, co- chairm an of the S tu d e n ts' A ssocia­ tion Legislative Ad Hoc C o m m it­ tee, th e H inson-H azelw ood loan program w as vo ted d o w n in A u g u st by Tex­ as voters d u e to a "lack of inform a­ tio n ." for Since created in 1965, the p ro ­ th at help s s u p p o rt over gram 26,000 Texas college stu d e n ts has paid for itself, according to a flier distrib u ted by SA m em b ers at the rallv. the "T he b o n d s are repaid by the stu d e n ts as th e loans are repaid. A nd in terest paid p rovides fu n d s for even m ore lo a n s," the flier stated. "W ith o u t additional fu nds, th e pro gram will run o u t of m oney loans by next sp rin g ." for n ew Shostak said the rate of stu d e n ts defau ltin g on their loans is only 6 percent, w hile the national av er­ age of defau lts on sim ilar loan p ro ­ gram s is 16 percent. W illiam T iede, co-chairm an of the SA Legislative Ad Hoc C om ­ m ittee, said it is "real im p o rtan t the stu d e n ts tu rn o u t to su p p o rt stu d e n t issues and P roposition 13 h elps o th e r s tu d e n ts ." "B ut voting for it will also help u s as a g ro u p to get b etter treat­ m e n t from the L egislature," Tiede said. "In the p ast, stu d e n ts have n o t v o te d ." 'T h e Texas H igher Education C o o rd in atin g Board has even been m aking a profit on th e p ro g ra m ," Tiede said. "T he state is n o t going into deb t over th is." The rap g ro u p B rothers C u p perfo rm ed a song at the rally M on­ day to d ra w a tte n tio n to the issue. The th ree-m an g ro u p , con sist­ ing of Bazooka Jerm , Lefty Leb- b ow itz an d M .C. L augh in g Boy, ex p ressed th eir su p p o rt in th e lyr­ ics of My Gun is Quick. p r o p o s itio n p re v io u s ly T h e failed in A u g u st because Texas voters did not k n ow th a t th e p ro ­ gram taxpayers cost " d o e s n 't m o n e y ," Shostak said. University plans new parking garage, but students likely to face lengthy wait Annemarie Braun Daily Texan Staff The co nstruction of th e n ew faculty p arking garage prom ises to pro v id e UT faculty a n d em plo vees w ith m uch -n eed ed p ark in g space yet stu d e n ts will have to w ait a few m ore y ears to curb th eir park ing w oes. A ccording to Ray Jam es, m an a g e r of p ark in g an d traffic ad m in istratio n , there is a 3-1 stu d e n t-to -p ark in g space ratio w hile th e faculty's ratio is 1.2 to 1. But according to Joe Pow ell, associate vice p re sid e n t for bu sin ess affairs, " th e m ost critical n eed w as for staff an d faculty p a rk in g ," especially in W est C am p u s. Jason A tchley, a b u sin ess ju n io r said, "I d o n 't th ink it is fair, the availability of faculty p arkin g is greater th a n th at of stu d en ts. I c a n 't see the justification for building faculty p ark in g ." The new park in g garage will be available to stu d e n ts on a lim ited first-com e, first-served basis after faculty spaces have been filled. Powell said there are also p lan s to build a n o th e r parking garage th at w ould be u sed m ainly by stu d e n ts b u t th e p lan s w ere still in the "talk in g sta g e s." H e a d d ­ ed it could take as long as f our to five years for a f o r m u ­ lated plan. "I h o n estly th ink w e will have a n o th e r garage som e­ d a y ," Powell said. But he also a d d e d "th e L egislature is looking really h ard at construction an d th ey just d o n 't w ant a lot of d eb t serv ice." • Just five years ago the p arking garage at 25th Street and San Jacinto B oulevard w as built, w ith faculty also g ettin g first bid on th e spaces. S tu d e n ts w ho p ark in th a t facility pay $150 for a long sem ester and $90 for the su m m er. For th e fiscal year en d in g in A u g u st 1991, Jam es cited th e rev e n u e for the existing parking garag e at $260,000. Ihis is barely covering the expenses of th e cu rren t g arag e," since it has a m ortgage of $3 m illion, Jam es said. Powell ad d ed "all of th e rev enue th at goes into that garage goes into th e debt service." To help fund the new garage, the cost of faculty an d staff perm its are increasing. Powell said w h e th e r a new stu d e n t parking garage w ould also call for a raise in stu d e n t perm its w ould d e p e n d largely on th e econom y an d th e L egislature's disposition. Jam es said if the p erm its did go up, th e y w ou ld go u p a "m o d est a m o u n t." He a d d e d the adm in istratio n d o e sn 't w ant to raise the cost. M erit Brantley, a fresh m an in m athem atics, said sh e w ould not buv a higher-priced parkin g perm it. Powell said the p ro p o sed p ark ing garage will be lo­ cated just so u th of Jester C enter. Are You Studying For Last Year ’s LSAT? If you’re not taking Stanley H. Kaplan to prepare for the new LSAT, you could be wasting time studying for an exam that’s already outdated. That’s because unlike most test prep companies, our research department acts on test changes before others even know they exist. And with Kaplan, you’ll benefit from our 50 years of experience?small classes and superior teaching methods. 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Tu n D a il y T k x a n Page 6 Tuesday, November 5,1991 STATE & LOCAL judicial redistricting on trial in Louisiana, Texas Associated Press NEW OKI EANS — State attorneys told a federal appeals court Monday that blanks don't need their own voting districts for electing judges because Louisiana's current system is fair to minority voters. system is not "Louisiana's racially motivated, it's the way the judiciary' is set up to elect judges," Robert Pugh, an attor­ ney representing i ouisiana, told the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. "Thirty-sev­ en other states that elect judges-at-large elect them the same w ay." The 5th Circuit also heard Monday from attorneys representing Texas in a similar case. The three-judge panel heard arguments on whether judicial sub-districts should be created in both states to give minorities a better chance at winning state judgeships. Minorities claim the current election sys- * terns dilute minority voting strength in vio­ lation of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. Pugh argued a federal judge's plan to create mostly black judicial sub-districts in racially some areas would guarantee motivated voting. He also said sub-districts could bring about judicial segregation, by having black judges hear only trials with black defendants. "W e're looking at a setup like apar­ theid," said Pugh. "That's not the direction we should be moving tow ard." U.S. District Judge John Parker of Baton Rouge had ordered Louisiana to hold judi­ cial elections in 18 new, predominantly black sub-districts in the Oct. 19 primary. Numerous candidates had filed to run in the new districts. However, at the request of Gov. Buddy Roemer's attorneys, Parker's .ruling was stayed by the 5th Circuit just a few hours before the qualifying period for those elec­ tions closed. Roemer's office asked for the stay until after the federal appeals court ruled in the Texas case. In that case, the League of United Latin American Citizens wants counties to be di­ vided into smaller sub-districts so minori­ ties would have a greater chance of electing their chosen candidate to the bench. "If you have a district that's 60 percent white and 40 percent minority, a white will always w in," said Bill Garrett, an attorney representing LULAC. "W hat we're saying is give minorities more of a chance." Washington attorney Robert McDuff, ar- 1 guing for black plaintiffs in the Louisiana case, said there was no reason Parker's or­ der to create the sub-districts should be left to any more litigation. "Judge Parker's order enforced the Vot­ ing Rights Act and implemented a remedy that would do the job," McDuff said. "A nd it was a remedy that would be the least intrusive to the [state's! system ." State attorneys argued early in the case that judges are exempt from section two of the Voting Rights Act. They argued that judges, unlike legislators, do not represent the people who elect them. That view was rejected by the Supreme Court. Of the 200 judges in Louisiana, fewer than 10 are black and most of those serve in New Orleans, which was exempted from Parker's order. Controversial amendments may increase voter response Chris Damon Daily Texan Staff Texas voters will have the oppor­ tunity to check the work of the Leg­ islature at the ballot box today as a host of proposed amendments to the state Constitution approach the final and most formidable leg in their journey through the legislative process. The fate of 13 proposed amend­ ments that run the spectrum of po­ litical possibilities will be voted on Tuesday. Texas voters have the chance to accept or reject proposi­ tions as diverse as student loans, a state-run lottery system and fresh water for rural communities. Although voter turnout for the previous constitutional amendment election in August was exceedingly low [about 11 percent], Tuesday's election is expected to draw more “This is our hectic time of year. W e’re expecting between 30 and 35 per­ cent turnout.” — Travis County Clerk Dana D eBeauvoir voter interest because of the contro­ versial nature of some of the propo­ sitions. Travis County Clerk Dana DeBeauvoir said Monday her staff was bracing for a busy day. "This is our hectic time of year," lottery, she said, explaining ethics prison amendments will draw more voter interest from past years. than amendments expansion, the and "W e're expecting between 30 and 35 percent turnout," DeBeauvoir said, adding that rate is well above the anticipated state average of 20 percent. "Travis County typically per­ forms better in the state] terms of voter turnout," she said. [than Six percent of Travis County's 306,000 registered voters cast their ballots in absentee voting in Octo­ ber, but DeBeauvoir said the num­ ber is still rising as ballots continue to arrive in the mail. DeBeauvoir said a new method of casting ballots will be implemented students this election, but UT should have little difficulty with the new system. "It's like a standardized test," she said. in­ "There's no punching volved, you just color in the bub­ ble." The optical scan system that will read the ballots will feplace the punch-card devices that have been used in Travis County for the past 20 years. H an ging o u t a t th e b ar Edward Dezeda of Austin took advantage of his day off Monday afternoon to do chin-ups by Town Lake. In an effort to build up his arms, Dezeda has engaged in a rigorous routine of 300 push-ups and 150 chin-ups. Border towns prepare for potential spread of cholera epidemic Associated Press EL FASO - 1 he city of El Faso has fallen behind other U.S. cities and even its sister city across the border, Ciudad Juarez, Mexi­ co, in making plans to prevent and treat cholera, a deadly disease spreading through South America and parts of C en- tral America and Mexico. El Faso City-County Health Director Dr. Laurance Nickey says it'll likely be mid-No­ vember before the county has a cholera contingency plan. "W e don't have the staff, we don't have the time and, frankly, we don't have the money to do [cholera prevention]," Nickey told the El Paso Times. "W hen we have to do all of the other things that we normally do, this really stresses the system ." The disease can kill in hours, due to rap­ id dehydration through vomiting and vio­ lent diarrhea. Since its outbreak in South America in January, 320,000 illnesses and 3,200 deaths have been caused by cholera. In Mexico, 1,883 people have become sick and 26 are dead. Cholera first hit the U.S.-Mexico border Oct. 5, in Agua Prieta, Mexico, borne by a Guatemalan traveler. In El Paso, the squalor in "colonias," neighborhoods without water and sewer service, and the hundreds of daily border crossers provide conditions for spread of the disease. Cholera bacteria thrives in human feces and lives for days in tainted water wells or communal water supplies, common in colo­ nias. Ken Smith, of New Mexico's Department of the Environment, says rural New Mexico border towns where migrants live — such as La Union, La Mesa and Mesquite — will be monitored. Other border-dwelling New Mexicans are relatively safe: 85 percent of the border county of Doha Ana has chlorinated munic­ ipal water. In Juarez, the Mexican federal govern­ ment is airing radio and television commer­ cials telling people how to protect them­ selves. The federal Health Ministry has printed posters and distributed them in health clinics and hospitals. Health inspec­ tors sporadically check sewage for signs of cholera. And Juarez General Hospital, which is expecting to treat most of the city's cholera cases, has a warehouse of rehydration med­ icine ready for potential patients, adminis­ trator Dr. Hugo Staines said. Elsewhere on the border, the San Diego County Health Department has warned health officials to be on the lookout for symptoms of the disease. California is of­ fering money to agricultural workers who report suspected cholera cases. In Nogales, Ariz., and Laredo, county health departments sent educational flyers to schools weeks ago. El Paso's city-county health department sponsored a workshop to teach lab techni­ cians how to recognize the disease, but it wasn't until a week after the report of the Agua Prieta case that El Paso began testing city sewage. Some old flyers encouraging restaurant workers to wash their hands were reprint­ ed, Nickey said. LAST CALL FOR PREP! Get 9 weeks of the most effective LSAT preparation in just 2-4 weeks! Time is growing short, but you can still take advantage o f Kaplan’s special Compact LSAT Prep Course for the Decem ber 7th exam. It’s not a cut version. It’s the same number o f hours o f live instruction — same number o f classes — we re simply offering them in the few remaining weeks before the test. So you have one last chance to prepare with the #1 in test prep and attain your highest possible score on the Decem ber LSAT. If you want to score your highest, don’t let this opportunity pass you by. And if you feel you need more time, check your local Kaplan Center’s free repeat policy. To enroll, just visit your nearest Stanley H. Kaplan Center, or enroll by phone: 1-800-KAP-TEST Our First LSAT Compact Prep Course begins: November 16th Check your local Kaplan Center for additional dates. 811 W. 24th Austin, TX 78705 512/472-8085 I STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. © 1991 Stanley H Kaplan Kducational Center Ltd. Doctors assail U.S. policy on high-risk procedures Associated Press ATLANTA — M any m edical g ro u p s — b u t not the n a tio n 's larg­ est — on M onday assailed th e feder­ al g o v e rn m e n t's a tte m p t list w hich m edical p ro ce d u res pose a risk to p atie n ts w h en perform ed by doctors w ith AIDS. to th e A m erican T he A m erican D ental A ssocia­ tion, the A m erican College of S u r­ geons, ( ollege of Physicians an d the A m erican A cad­ em y of O rth o p ed ic S urg eo n s w ere am o n g g ro u p s telling the C en ters for D isease C ontrol th at th ere isn 't sufficient to d eterm in e w hich m edical proce­ d u re s are "e x p o su re -p ro n e " and w hich a re n 't. evidence scientific The CDC called M o n d ay 's m e et­ ing to fine-tune its gu id elin es re­ that A ID S-infected c o m m ending "ex p o su re- d octors p ro n e " p ro c ed u re s except w ith the co n sen t of th e p a tien t a n d ou tsid e experts. refrain from The g uidelines could m ean the e n d of practice for an in d eterm in ate n u m b er of infected physicians, s u r­ geons a n d dentists. T he CDC s g uidelines, even w ith o u t the force of law , often becom e the stan d a rd of practice for hospitals, local regu- lators an d insurance com panies. M any m edical g ro u p s said there is n 't sufficient evidence to d e te r­ m ine w hat is risky on th e basis of the only rep o rted case of transm is­ sion — am o n g five p atien ts of an infected Florida d en tist. "N o pro ced u re, o th e r th an den tal extraction, has ever been sho w n to transm it HIV [AIDS virus] infection to a p a tie n t," said LaM ar M cG innes of the A m erican College of S u r­ g eons. H e called for "fu rth e r re­ search rath er th a n the form ulation of D raconian social policy ." T he n a tio n 's stood virtually alo n e la rg e st m edical g ro u p , th e A m erican M edical A sso­ ciation, in ag reem en t w ith th e CDC on M on­ d ay — a n d even th e AM A recom ­ m ended defining just o n e proce­ d u re , C a e s a re a n d e liv e rie s of n ew b o rn s, as "e x p o su re -p ro n e ." Dr. N ancy Dickey, a tru stee of the AMA, said the m edical profession m u st act now , before an y m ore cas­ es of docto r-to -p atien t tran sm issio n are found. "It's im p o rtan t w e not be seen as self-serving indiv id u als w h o w an t to w ait for the first 20 cases," she said. "W e m ay h av e to m ake som e a ssu m p tio n s." E V E R Y W O M A N ’S C O N C E R N Confidential, Professional Reproductive Care • Adoption Services • Free Pregnancy Testing • Problem Pregnancy Counseling • Abortion Services • Birth Control • Pap Test D IS S E R T A TIO N T H E S IS A LP H A G R A P H IC S LSAT PREP $295 Nov. 14-24 28 hrs. 469-3110 BUY, SELL, R E N I, TRADE... 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Lamar 453-7619 \ \ R E P A I R * Boots • Shoes * Leather Goods * Luggage {CUSTOM MADE | * Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc C apitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca • • 478-9309 EXAM CONTACTS Starting at s99* Complete •price incluaes exam, l p a ir clear daily- wear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1 sf follow up. EXPIRES Nov 12 WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2 4 1 5 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT 477-2282 M /C VISA AMX DISC Thornburgh goes on attack Pennsylvania Senate race heats up on election eve Associated Press PHILADELPHIA — Republican Dick Thornburgh, looking for his lost m om entum in Pennsylvania's U.S. Senate race, attacked Democrat Harris Wofford on Monday for either lying or being naive about the cost of national health insurance. Cam paigning hard on the eve of the election, Thorn­ burgh ripped aw ay at w hat has been the most potent issue in the nation's only U.S. Senate race this year. C andidates also took their last shots in governor's races in Kentucky and Mississippi, in congressional races in Pennsylvania and Virginia, and in m ayor's rac­ es in more than a hatf-dozen big cities. feature some closely watched ballot issues, particularly a m easure in W ash­ ington state that would limit the term s of elected offi­ cials, including the state's representatives in Congress. W ashington voters also will consider w hether to permit Tuesday's elections also physician-assisted suicides for the terminally ill. The election that has draw n the biggest headlines — the Louisiana governor's race betw een ex-Ku Klux Klansman David Duke and former Gov. Edwin Ed­ w ards — isn't until Nov. 16. The Pennsylvania Senate cam paign, pitting President Bush's former attorney general against a hitherto unheralded Democrat, has grabbed m uch attention. Many see it as a dry run for next year's presidential and congressional races. Wofford erased a 40-point deficit in the public opin­ ion polls by telling voters they had as m uch right to a doctor as a lawyer, and that he would fight in W ashing­ ton for universal health care coverage. "Harris Wofford is either lying or dangerously naive w hen he says that the governm ent can provide health insurance for over 30 million uninsured people, lower health insurance costs for everyone else, and pay for long-term care for the elderly, all w ithout a dim e of new taxes," Thornburgh told reporters. 3UY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -5244 Super Saver Coupons STUDENT SPECIAL SUPOCUTS-Slyh Hie Difference Let S U P E R C U T S treat you to a special $6 S U P E R C U T . 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(eyecare) V I S I O N C E N T E R S v v EXAMS • CONTACTS • GLASSES 1904 Guadalupe • 476-1000 (Bank One Mai • Park Free Bank One Lot) 2826 Bee Cave Rd. • 327-5736 "Austin s 10 Minute Professionals” H H D IS C O V E R Q u ic k L u b e ’ s No Appointment Service and Save! 3 4 th & Lamar 4 5 2 -5 7 7 3 *3°° OFF OUR 15-POINT FULL SERVICE OIL CHANGE • 6 CrtS Premium Oil • New Filter Installed • Chassis & Hinges Lubricated • All Fluid Levels Checked & Filled • Windshield Washed • Cdr Vacuumed Not Valtd with Anv Other OW®* EXP. 1/5/92 Radiator Flush $37.95 Plus Tax EXP. 1/5/92 lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli^OUPONllllllllllllllllllllljlllllllllHIIIIIIIII lillC O U P O N lt |||C O U P O N | PIZZA TIME 4 7 4 -1 2 3 4 2 FREE COKES WITH EVERY ORDER Fast & Free Delivery (coupon required) ¡¡ Large Two I Topping g Pizza ■ $5.00 plus tax MEDIUM one topping pizza $ 4 . 4 9 plus tax Expires 11-11-91 Expires 11-11-91 BllHtIlillilHtllltllilltlllHllltÍllHIIIHNH|couF>ON|tl|tl||iHtlllIH)tlHltllHNtllH^^^H CONTACTS! HOLIDAY SALE DAILY OR EXTENDED WEAR > 1 Package Includes: V l U U * 1 Pair of Soft Contacts • Doctor’s Exam • Fitting & Follow-ups *1 st Time Contact Lens Add $10.00 For Training & Care Kit Price does not include tinted or astigmatism contacts Barnes Hind Softmate Contacts D avid L. D rin k a rd O .D . 7801 N. Lamar, Suite D-74 at Lamar & 183 452-4160 I [Expires 12/10/91 j i l l l l i l l i l i l M FREEDESSBRT (with this coupon, at north location only) (Valid through Nov. 19, 1991) Join us north for dinner: 1/2 Price Burgers on Mondays after 5 pm 1/2 Price Chicken Fried Steaks on Tues. after 5 pm 1/2 Price Grilled Fish on Weds, after 5 pm 1/2 Price Grilled Chicken on Thurs. after 5 pm N orth 10508 N. Lam ar S outh 1530 B arton S p rin g s • Prices as km as $3 88 * Now serving cheese bread- . .y To ROBERT SOLOMON & KATHLEEN HIGGINS will sign copies o f their new book Jeannette Spinelli SALESPERSON of the Month FOR OCTOBER 1991 Cl \ ! DECORATE YOUR PERSONALITY TH ERE'S SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE IN THE CLASSIFIEDS T he Daily T exan 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 CAUGHT I ACT % % i Erotic £ TUESDAY, NOV. 5th 5 :0 0 -7 :0 0 PM at Scholz 's G arten 1 6 0 7 San Ja cin to sp o n so red by CACTUS YEARBOOK PHOTO STUDIO Seniors Graduating Seniors Graduate Students Last name A -L •> Oct. 31-Nov. 1 Last name M -Z •> Nov. 1 & Nov. 4 -7 UNIVERSITY CO-OP 2246 Guadalupe • 476-7211 • Open 7 days a week Location: Texas Student Publications Room 4.122,25th St. & Whitis Ave. Hours: 10 a.m .-3 p.m. & 4 p.m. - 7 p.m. Cost: Seniors -$2; Graduating Seniors & Graduate Students -$3.50 GIVEAWAY ERT AINMENT STRICTLY BUSINESS It's strictl\ business. yeah strictly business Strictly business round hero / lon cy . you and I should/ m ake som e time It's dog-eat-dog, but you and I arc cleat * No, those are not real lyri< s (as far as we know). Yes, it s the kind of film that screams for a cheesy title song, much like Coming to America or Fast Times at Ridgem ont High had. Not that the films are bad, mind you, but those songs! Anyway. W e've got posters from the film, and w e're giving them away to the first people who stop by after 10 a.m. and answer us this: O f what Spike Lee joint was Halle Berry (center) a cast member? W e ask, and we shall receive a big line of hungry fans wanting posters. Joseph C. Phillips, Halle Berry and Tommy Davidson star in the film. C o n n e r y can’t save new ‘Highlander’ Alvaro Rodriguez Daily Texan Staff In the end, there can be only one. — The High hunier its H o w often does a m ovie's best line so fully de­ scribe the failure I of sequel? Well, such is the ease with the bit­ te r ly s tu p id Highlander 2: The Quickening. Director Russell M ulcahy returns to orchestrate — som ew hat — these 91 m inutes of slop. And once again inarticulate C hristopher Lam bert reprises his role as C onnor M ac­ Leod of the clan M acLeod. Luckily for us, Sean Connery magically reappears as Ramirez, offering one of the film 's few saving graces. The prem ise of The Quickening w dow nright confusing — it seem s to branch out in many directions at once and end s up going now here. At the end of the last picture, M ac­ L eo d had becom e the last of the Highlanders, and he heard all these sounds, and he ran along the beach with his new babe, and he w as des­ tined to live out his life as a mortal on Earth. So far, so good. HIGHLANDER 2: THE QUICKENING Starring: Christopher Lambert, Sean Connery Director: Russell Mulcahy Playing at: Great Hills 8, Highland 10. Lakehills 4. Northcross 6 Rating: ★ (out of four) In 1999, the ozone layer is com ­ pletely kaput, so now, scientist (?) M acLeod — wait, I thought he w as running on a beach? Now h e's a goddamn phvsicist? Anyway, M ac­ Leod helps design som e goofy Star W ars laser that shoots into space satellite (ahhh), bounces off a (oooh), and creates this streaky pink-and-blue shield over the earth, blocking out the harmful ultraviolet rays of the sun. i w entv-five years later, MacLeod is an old fart driving around in a nice Porsche and falling asleep at the opera. M eanw hile, there's noth­ ing new under the shield: just a lot of heat and hum idity. Basically, life sucks lem ons. Then, an eco-terrorist group led by I ouise M arcus (Virginia Madsen) breaks into an auxiliary facility that supports the m echanism s operating the shield. M adsen finds out that, over the last 25 years, the ozone lay­ er has repaired litpelf (ta-da!). The Shield Corporation, which operates and m aintains that glowing thing, is merely cheating the world out of som e major bucks and keeping the beautiful rays of the sun away! O h , brother. M eanw hile, on the planet Zeist, the the original hom etow n of H ighlander tribe, the evil General Katana (Michael Ironside) is getting antsy because he thinks M acLeod will return to Zeist and take over in­ stead of living the rest of his days on Earth. So Katana sends two sus- picious-looking porcupine-headed toughs to Earth to kill M acLeod. film) So while M acLeod fights off the two goofballs in leather jum psuits, he calls for Ram irez (who died in the first to his aid. to com e Ramirez materializes, naturally. But in Scotland? Now we have to w aste screen time while Ramirez gets from Glasgow or w hatever to New York. And, foolishly — no, stupidly — di­ rector M ulcahy stops at a tailor's along the way so Ramirez can get som e new digs. W e w ant science fiction, M ulcahy! Not som e tired fast-m otion dress-up scene! The fight sequences are m ediocre. W hen M acLeod battles the two bad­ dies in the air, it's rather neat. It be­ com es obvious, how ever, that shots LOONEY TUNES HALL OF FAME 2:30 5:00 7:40 10:10 B UY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... W ANT ADS...471 -5 2 4 4 t M ( 0 KGSR AND JOHN ROBERTS BMW want to send you and 3 friends to Houston for ■BBBSIBWPWiiatBBM iTH’f f The Ultimate F ootball Weekend * * « lîÏ Ï R i n i i \ m m Your party of 4 flies on Southwest on Friday evening. Enjoy 2 suites for 2 nights at the Galleria Houston. 4 tickets for each game at Astrodome. Return to Austin Sunday evening. All you have to do to qualify is listen to KGSR in the Morning. Winner will he announced Thursday 11/7 at 7:20am. 107.1 .KGSR ■ Morning In the r JO H N R O B E R T S B M W 4108 S. IH-35 at Ben White Willi'11!1 The ofredas (offerings) of Los Dias de los Muertos, created by local artists, bear gifts from those still living to the spirits that have passed on. Though the theme may seem morbid, the spirit of the holiday is festive. E ric B a ld a u f/D a ily T e x a n S ta ff 0 1 s d e L o s M u e r to s Jennifer G o ld s te in Daily Texan Staff that W h o e v e r th o u g h t d eath could be festive? skulls O r appropri­ w ere a te fo r g i f t s frie n d s ? Wel l , for starters, the a n c ie n t M e so - cu l­ A m erican tures, people w ho viewed death as only one stage in the life-and-death cycle. The culture held that the de­ parted soul depended on those left behind to supply food, drink and gifts for their journey into the next realm of existence. T his tradition, still vigorously alive in M exico, can be found right here in Austin at the M exic-Arte M useum . The Novem ber holiday, called Dia de Los M uertos, or Day of the Dead, was brought to the m useum by co-coordinators Sylvia O rozco and Pio Pulido in 1984. 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 MILE SO. o f MONTOPOLIS Phone 3 8 5 -5 32 8 O p í i t l N ^ ^ A D U I ? V ID E O / » r i l T C D C E N T E R ______ COU PLES TH EA TR E-Fri & Sat. 7pm -6am SIN G LES TH EA TR E -O pen 7 days 24 hours TA PE RENTALS-$3 for 2 days M A G S- Buy O ne Get O n e F re e $5 PRIVATE VIEW ING ROOMS mGay & Lesbian I International film Festival Dobie Theater November l-lQ 1991 Call 477-1324 for showtlmes HELD O V E R ' . S t r a n g e r s G ood co m pa n y ^ 7:15 I WITII0IT )0I , : , v f; $ \ m o i him; 11=45 It’s A C om plex W orld 11:30 K O P J E 21St «G liK U lu O « « 7 7 -1 3 2 « 1 M O V !! D IA L EVERY TUESDAY ¡345 B A R G A I N M A T I N E E S E V E R Y DAY A IL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6 P M I «-35 a t M ID D LE F IS K V IllE RD 4 5 4 -9 5 6 2 2_ 49pp|8p|. elf. ^ ■ M Ü 1 « I HIGHLANDER II BILLY BATHGATE 2:50 5:05 7:20 9:35 THE YEAR OF THE GUN 2:35 4.55 7:20 9 40 PARADISE 2:45 5:15 7:309:50 HOUSE PARTY 2 DECEIVED 2:10 4:05 6:00 7 55 9:50 HIT MAN 2 05 4:00 5 55 7:50 9:45 HOMICIDE 1:55 5:45 9:50 ONLY CURLY SUE ? 45 5:05 7:15 9 30 THX -JS1 THX _ÍB1 THX _(B1 Stereo (pern Dolby LB1 Dolby (PG13) Dolby M Stereo (El Stereo (ESI Stereo 451 Stereo THE FISHER KING 1 45 4 25 7 10 9:45 ] HIGHLANDER II 7 9 4 8 0 7 6 US 183 & GREAT HILLS TRAIL3 SHATTERED 2:00 4:00 6:00 8:00 10 00 OTHER PEOPLE’S MONEY 1 40 3 40 5 40 7:40 9 40 THE PEOPLE UNDER THE STAIRS 2 00 4 0« 6:00 8:00 10:00 FISHER KING 2 00 4.35 7:10 9:45 THX (R) THX (R) Dolby ___ (BL Dolby (R) Stereo __ (BL Stereo __ (BL Stereo __ (BL Stereo THE HIT MAN 1 55 3:55 5 55 7:55 9 55 (R) B A R T O N CREEK 5 I MOPAC a t LOOP 3 6 0 I HOUSE PARTY 2 2:00 3:55 5 50 7:50 9:55 TERMINATOR II 2 00 4:30 7.00 9 40 ____ 3 2 7 -8 2 8 1 I 1 LITTLE MAN TATE 2 40 5 30 7:40 10:00 BILLY BATHGATE 2:30 5:00 7:3010:00 OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY 2:20 5.15 7:40 9:55 THE PEOPLE UNDER THE STAIRS 2:35 5:10 7:20 9:35 PARADISE 2:25 5:10 7:25 9:50 THX (PG) Dolby ____(Ri Dolby ____(Bi ____im Dolby (PG13) All are welcome here, es­ pecially those with no costume and no knowl­ edge of the tradition. lived th e re ," O rozco "W e used to go to Los D ias de' Los M uertos in M exico City, w hen Pio says. "W h en we cam e here w e w anted to continue that tradition because it's a beautiful one, and it's also another celebration for the M exican peo­ p le ." At first, Austinites did n't know w hat to make of a holiday that ex­ ists to aid the dead. "T h ey thought it was weird. I rem em ber we had people passing out fliers at the mall once and som eone reported it. They thought it had som ething to do with S a ta n ," she says. Five m inutes inside M exic-Arte on the transcendental holiday, and all thoughts of Lucifer are extin­ guished. Spicy incense perfum es the air; m arigolds cluster around the bases of elaborate altar pieces; or- $94 A MONTH! Students of the Big Hearted State Receive Payment Donate Life Saving Plasma A U S TIN P LA S M A 510 W . 29th 477-3735 nate paper cutouts, called pa pel pi- cado, stream across the walls in po­ tent purples and soft pastels; and hundreds of individual flames glow from thick candles to light the way for the spirits. A salsa beat, pounded from a w ooden xylophone, floats up over a wall of portraits dedicated to the dead. Skeletons sporting tuxedos, cow boy hats, w reaths of marigolds and dreads dance and cheer the m u­ sician on, "B ravo! Bravo!" All are w elcom e here, especially those with no costum e and no know ledge of the tradition. In M exico, Day of the Dead festiv­ ities often engulf entire tow ns. Ju s­ tine Birbil, a student from M exico City, explains: "O n e year, I w ent to a really small town outside M exico City having a big celebration — it was a carnival basically — the entire town was lit up and they had cake stands and parades, people carrying the coffins, people cheering, all Please see Holiday, page 16 ROSES $ 9 . 9 5 per dozen Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 Daily S p ec ia ls FTD • 4501 Quw taKjp* • On UT Shuttto R t , BEAUTY... ALWAYS IN FASHION A rad ian t, glowing, com plexion is the ultim ate fashion a cce s­ sory. W h atever fall fashion looks you choose, you need the beauty basics. Halina provides a com plete a rra y of beauty services: F a cia ls • E y eb ro w Shap ing • Eyelash and Brow l inting • M ak eu p Design • W axin g (F a c e and Body) • M an icu res • P ed icu res • M assages 32 Years Experience: Warsaw. Pans. Vienna. N ew York. Texas fed HALINA EUROPEAN SKIN CARE ** 5 4 0 3 Clay Avenue, Austin 4 5 2 - 3 5 0 0 A SPECIAL EXHIBITION OF LATIN AMERICAN APT THf/5CHiOOL oftheSOUTH TORRES-GARCIA LEGACY E L TALLER AN/D |T5 SEPTEM6ER15-DECEMBER 1 ARCHER M. HUNTINGTON ART GALLERY NO VEMBER 6 — W ednesday Noon Gallery Talk, Re-Inversions: Modernist Issues in the Contem porary School of the South. Mari Carm en Ramirez, Curator of Latin American Art, Huntington Art Gallery. NO VEMBER 7— Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Concert, Southern Lati­ tudes; An Evening of Mestizo Music, Chaski, Flute and Harp Duo. NO VEMBER 10— Sunday, 3 p.m., Docent Tour, Torres-Garcia and His W orkshop. ART BUILDING 23RD & SAN JACINTO » THE U N IVERSITY O F TEXAS AT AUSTIN M O N D A Y-SA TU R D A Y 9 A M . - 5 P.M , THURSDAYS TILL 9 P M , SUNDAY 1 P.M - 5 P.M. * ADMISSION IS FREE ■ FOR M O R E INFORMATION CALL 471-7324 This ad courtesy of W allace’s Book Store TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS TH E DAILY' TEXAN Tuesday, November5,1991 Page 13 TO PLACE A W O R D OR LINE AD CALL: 8:00-5:-00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 --------------------------------CLASSIFICATIONS----- 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 CLASSIFIED WORD AD* RATES Charged by the word. Based on a word 15 minimum — the following rates apply: 1 day........................................................ ......$5.70 2 days...................................................... .... $10.80 3 days...................................................... .... $15.30 4 days...................................................... ....$19.20 $21.75 5 days...................................................... First two words may be all capital letters. 25c for each additional word in capital letters. MasterCard and Visa accepted CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD* RATES ‘ Charged by the column inch. One column inch mini­ mum. A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available. Fall rates Sept. 1 -May 30. 1 to 49 column inches per month.. $8.60 per col. inch Over 50 column inches per month. Cal I for rates. TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Auto* 20 — Sports-Foreign Auto* 30 — Trucks-Van* 40 — Vehicles to Trade 50 — Servtce-Repair 60 — Parts-Aocetsories 70 — Motorcycles 80 — Bicycles 90 — Vehicle Leasing 100 — Vehicles Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES 110 — Services 120 — Houses 130 — Condos-Townhouses 140 — Mobile Homes-Lots 150 — Acreage-Lots 160 — Duptexes- Apartments 170 — Wanted 180 — Loans M ERCHANDISE 190 — Appliances 200 — Furniture-Household 210 — Stereo-TV 220 — Computers- Equipment 230 — Photo-Cameras 240 — Boats 250 — Musical Instruments 260 — Hobbies 270 — Machinery- Equipment 280 — Sporting-Camping Equipment 290 — Furniture-Appliance Rental 300 — Garage-Rummage Sales 310 — Trade 320 — Wanted to Buy or Rent M ER C H A ND ISE 330 — Pets 340 — Longhorn Want Ads 345 — Mi sc RENTAL 350 — Rental Services 360 — Fum Apts 370 — Unfurn Apts. 380 — Furn Duplexes 390 — Unfurn Duplexes 400 — Condos-Townhouses 410 — Fum. Houses 420 — Unfurn. Houses 425 — Rooms 430 — Ftoom-Board 440 — Co-ops 450 — Mobile Homes-Lots 460 — Business Rentals 470 — Resorts 480 — Storage Space 490 — Wanted to Ftent-Lease 500 — Misc A N N O UNCEM ENTS 510 — Entertainment-Tickets 520 — Personals 530 — Travel- Transportation 540 — Lost 6 Found 550 — Licensed Child Care 560 — Public Notice 570 — Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580 — Musical Instruction 590 — Tutoring 600 — Instruction Wanted 610 — Misc. Instruction SERVICES 620 — Legal Services 630 — Computer Services 640 — Exterminators 650 — Moving-Hauling 660 — Storage 670 — Painting 680 — Office 690 — Rental Equipment 700 — Furniture Rental 710 — Appliance Repair 720 — Stereo-TV Repair 730 — Home Repair 740 — Bicycle Repair 7 5 0 — Typing 760 — Misc. Services EM PLO YM EN T 770 — Employment Agencies 780 — Employment Services 790 — Part Time 800 — General Help Wanted 810 — Office-Clerical 820 — Accounling- BookXeepmg 830 — Administrative- Management 840 — Sales 850 — Retail 860 — Engineering- Technical 870 — Medical 880 — Professional 890 — Clubs-Restaurants 900 — Domestic-Household 910 — Positions Wanted 920 — Worn Wanted BUSINESS 930 — Business Opportunities 940 — Opportunities Wanted M a s t e r C a r d ADVERTISING TERMS In the event of errors made in advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a.m. the first day, as the publishers are respon­ sible for only ONE incorrect insertion. All claims for adjust­ ments should be made not lat­ er than 30 days after publica­ tion. Pre paid kills receive credit slip if requested at time of cancellation, and it amount exceeds $2.00. Slip must be presented for a reorder within 90 days to be valid. Credit slips are non-transferable. In consideration of The Daily Texan’s acceptance of advertising copy tor publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harmless, Texas Student Publications and its officers, employees, and agents against all loss, liability, damage, and expense of whatsoever nature arising out of the copying, printing or publishing of its advertisement including without limitation reason able attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, plagiarism and copyright and traoemark infringe­ ment DEADLINE: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication M A S T E R C A R D V IS A A C C E P T E D TR A N S PO R TA TIO N RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL A N N O U N C E M E N T S A N NO UN C EM EN TS A N N O U N C E M E N T S 10 — Misc. Autos 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — U nf. Apts. 400 — Condos 4 3 5 — C o-ops 4 40 — R oom m ates 520 — Personals 530 — Travel 5 6 0 — Public N otice Townhom es SPRING PRE-LEASE NORTH CAMPUS 2/2 A l t AMENITIES INCLUDING W /D, MICROWAVE, FANS ETC S650/M O . MITCH 476-2673 PMT. 11-01-20B-C__ AVAILABLE n o w WEDGEWOOD 2/2 ALL AMENITIES INCLUDING W/D, MICROWAVE, FANS, COVERED PARK­ ING $ 7 0 0 .0 0 /M 0 . 476-2673. 11-01- 20B-C._____________________ _ SPRING PRE-LEASE BUENA VISTA 2/2 O N E BLOCK TO CAMPUS. ALL INCLUDING W /D, COV­ AMENITIES ERED PARKING ETC $ 7 0 0 0 0 /M 0 476 -26 73 PMT. 11-01-208-0_________ 4 2 0 — U nf. Houses 477-LIVE fashioned (24 Hours) old charm of 1-5 bedroom homes; hard­ wood, gas, appliances. $200-1200.11-1- 20B -A______________________ ____ 4 2 5 — Rooms 4 BLOCKS UT. 408 W 17th. Quiet, non­ smoking, petless Private room, private bath, huge closet, CA/CH, W /D, 2nd floor, share equipped spacious kitchen $295 ABP (lease) 474-2051, 474-6639 10-24-20B-E fully 4 BLOCKS UT 408 W 17th. Quiet, non- smoking, petless. Private room, private bath, huge closet.CA/CH, W /D 2nd floor, shore Lilly equipped spacious kitchen 474- $295. ABP 6639 10-24-20B-E (lease) 474-2051. 4 4 0 — R oom m ates R O O M M ATES 837-5977 If you n e e d a ro o m m a te or a p la c e to live, g iv e us a call — 2 4 hr. s e rvice. 406-1689 (Beeper) ROOMMATE SERVICE WANTED FEMALE roommate, nonsnok townhome Dec 1st. er, shore north ] 7 dep own room. bills — $215mo, both 371-1443.11-1-6P.__________ SEEKING GRAD student for 2BR 1BA brick house on Laurel Lone in Hvde Park Hdwd floors, backyard for dog 1 util many windows 499-0377 11-4-5P $325/m o. • AN N O U N C EM EN TS 510 — E n tertain m en t- Tickets ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A A bo ut you I've dream t thrice. So interested in you am I. M y age is it that keeps you away? O r that my Span­ ish teacher you are? For good grades I like you not. W ho your are is w onderful enouqh. 11-5-1B 530 — T ravel T ransp o rtatio n T ran sp o rtatio n SKI B R E C K ! only $229 plus tax Ski-in Condos Lifts Bus Parties Ski Rentals --U .& S k i 469 0999 2200 R i o G ra n d e ski division of 4 BLOCKS UT 408 W. 17th. Quiet, non- smoking, petless Private bath, huge closet, CA/CH w /D , 2nd n n f : k | p floor, shore kitchen . $295 abp (lease) 474-2051, o r female. Call Sam. 474 -66 39 10-24-20B-E . room, private W ill help y O U T in Q Q C O m - r n o m m n t e M a le equipped spacious p a i i D i e roommaie. mate fully ,. , . Need female to sub-lease room in Uni­ versity Towers for Spring 2-1, 19 meals, $2975/semester. 4 7 8 -8 8 3 2 .11-4-5B. 2 8 0 -7 1 1 8 10-15-20B-C TO M PETTY AM Y GRANT SPURS UT SPORTS OZZY W W F 4 7 8 -9 9 9 9 7 0 6 W . MLK ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ A 11-5-20B-A BAHAMA CRUISE $ 9 9 per person 5 d a y/4 night hotel. Plan now fo r your break. Very limited offer. Call now 1-800-621- 057 2 10-23-10P 5 6 0 — Public N otice COVERED PARKING Spaces available for $175, good now until end of the se­ mester. 4 7 2 -5 8 4 6 .10-15-20B-K N O ROMANCE? Talk to our ladies ond get a woman's point o f view Live. 1- 900-896-1555 $1.99/min. AC N Miami, Florida 19 ■ 11-01-30B PRIVATE TALK Phone sennce. 1 800- 735-5477 MC/Viso/Amex TALK LIVE TO beautiful Miami girls. 1-900-884 4666. $2.50/min. ACN Miami, Fionda 18 . 11-01-30B ED U C ATIO N AL 580 M usical Instruction GUITAR LESSONS. R & B, Rock, jazz, country. 10 years teaching experience Andy BullingJon. 452-6181 10-I6-20B-A 590 — T u to ring MASTER TEACHER W ill tutor composition m all areas from middle to graduate school. $ 15/hr. 329-8803 10-30-5B SERVICES 710 A p p lian ce R ep a ir UNITED SERVICES Air Conditioning & Heating-Service, install, maintenance. Commercial/Residential We recloim/re- cyde TACLB#009723E. 282- freon. 424 7 10-15-20-C "LONGHORN WANT ADS" - Specifications - ► 20 words, 5 days S5 * M e rc h a n d is e fo r Sale Priced at S1000 or less. Pnce must appear in ad • If item doesn't sell, a d ­ vertiser must call before 11 0 0 a m on the day the ad is scheduled to end to qualify fo r the 5 add tional charge insertions at no * Must specify Longhorn W ant Ad classification to qualify fo r S5 rate ♦ Changes allo w e d fo r Hr :e O n ly 1986 TO Y O f Corolla, 4dr, 5spd, am/fm stereo. White, excellent condition. $3,950 O BO 45 9 -6 6 2 9 .10-30-5B 1984 J2000 Sunbird 4-door, good con­ dition. Best offer 472-0883, 463-0771. 11-4 5B ___ 2 0 — S p o rts-F o reig n Autos 1986 MAZDA RX7 G Xl, A/C, sunroof, PW, PB, A M /FM cassette. 2X2 Excellent condition. $5,550 459-66 29.1 0-3 0 5B 50 — S e rv ice -R e p air PHOENIX MOTOR WORKS, INC. BMW Porsche Mercedes Saab Jaguar Volvo Pre-Purchase Inspection All scheduled maintenance Expert Craftsmen Personal Attention 512/474-2072 1127 West Sixth Street Austin, TX 78703 8 0 — Bicycles M O U N TA IN BIKE SALE 1990- 91 GT BIKES REDUCED 20% FREE U-Lock with Ad and Bike Purchase Student Discounts BUCK’S BIKES 928-2810 VISA. MC, AMEX, DISCOVER WELCOME REAL ESTATE SALES 120 — Houses N O N -Q U A LIFY IN G ASSUMPTION G o o d c e n tra l lo c a tio n , 2-1, w o o d floo rs, big lot, g r e a t stu­ d e n t h o m e. Bill Shopoff & Assoc, ask fo r Patsy 4 7 9 -8 3 0 0 10-21-20B-C NEAR UT-Large 3-2. Fireplace, hard­ wood floors, plus separate apartment, extra income, 1420 Northridge. $7995. 3 27 -08 95 11-4-108 130 — Condos - Townhouses WEST CAMPUS BARGAINS! O r a n g e t r e e 1 & 2 bdrm s. w ith security, v a u lte d ceilings, a n d c o v e re d p a rk in g fro m $ 4 4 ,9 0 0 ! F in an cin g a v a ila b le . C a ll M ic h e l Yssa, b ro k e r, a t P M T . . . 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 , 4 7 4 - 9 4 0 0 10-15-20B-C ; LUXURY 1BR West of Zilker Park-Spyglass Rd. Cathedral ceilings FHA approved for low down payment $55,000. Coll Gary 328-1111. Harren Interests Real­ tors U-05-20B. i.x m i!nnn7rn»i i i r r r mi in i w in m — inrrrm M ERCHANDISE 190 — A p plian ces paid. SUPER CLEAN, reconditioned washers and dryers, excellent condition. G uar­ anteed. Delivery ovailable. 339-6909. 10-16-20P _________ 2 2 0 C om puters- E quipm ent FOR RENT, computers, punters, quality for less, free delivery and pick-up, Ren- lobyte 453 1900.11 4-20P. 345 — Misc. * 1 1 0 ” I’ll pay up to 110“ for Men’s Gold Class Rings. Also buy­ ing wedding bands, charms, gold chains, bracelets. Even if Broken — Paying Cash. Jam es Lewis 458-2639 C A S H Buying Gold-Silver Broken Chains, Class Rings Unwanted Jewelry Strvtyg Stnct 1976 L i b e r t y C o i n s 4 5 * A GuedxSup* 452-3811 M O V IE POSTER C O LLEC TIBLES "1 0 0 'S to choose fro m " $5 and up shipped a nyw here - rolled Call fo r a listing o r to place an ord e r T 8 0 0 -3 4 -M O V IE P.O. Box 19019 Tucson, AR 85710-9019 11-5-46 RENTAL THE ASHFORD Now Preleasing for Fall Large Efficiencies, 1-1’s, 2-2's Starting at $265 • Furnished/Unfurnished • West Campus Shuttle • On-elte Mgmt & Maint. • Pool • Laundry Room • Covered Parh ng ALL BILLS PAID 476-8915 2408 Leon. BLACKSTONE 2910 M edical Arts St. ALL BILLS PAID! N ew ly remodeled 2 bdrm -2bath free cable! Furnished o r Unfurnished N o w leasing fo r fall and spring Call 474-9523 10-24-20B-C Hillside Apts. 1&2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean & Quiet All Utilities Paid 478-2 819 514 Dowson Rd. Just off Barton Springs Rd. 10-9-20B-A WALK TO CAMPUS A V A L O N APTS. 32nd at IH -35 IB r - $ 2 9 5 2Br/2Ba - $ 3 9 5 Walk-in closets, ceiling fans, on-site manager and laundry facilities. G reat for Law, Engineering, and Music stu­ dents. 4 7 6 -3 6 2 9 _________________ 10-17-20B-A 3 7 0 — U n f. Apts. A V A IL A B L E N O W 1-2-3 B e d ro o m s 1-2 B a th s L A K E V IE W 2401 S. Lakeshore 444-3917 On Shuttle , Extended Cable, Pool Indoor Gym, Tennis Courts Fitness Center & More! M USTANG APTS. Available in December Efficiencies from$324-349 All bills paid 482*0398 Q uiet Hyde Park Living! Nice large efficiency w ith huge closet - $ 2 9 5 * Large 1-1 with lo w utilities!— $ 3 3 5 . O n shuttle. Gas, cable, and w ater Retreat Apts. 4 4 0 0 Ave. A 452-1121,458-1985 10-17-20B-K SPECIAL MOVE-IN RATES! Large 1 & 2 b ed roo m apartments. N e w carpet, ceiling fans, miniblinds, fireplace, balcony. Q uiet w et bar, garden setting, Beautiful p o o l/p a v i­ lion area. W oter, gas, and cable paid. N o pets! Starting at $ 34 5. G arden Path Apts. 8 35 -56 61 at 8017 Gessner Dr. (west o f IH -35 just o ff 183). HOMESTYLE LIVING ft. IN 1,200 sq. Townhouse. Negoti­ able rent for quali­ fied applicants, 440-1332. 10-1Q-20B Penthouse Apts Two blocks southwest o f cam­ pus, Beautiful and quiet area, best new managment, 1-1's from $4 00. Incredibly large 2 bed­ rooms starting from $600. Fur­ nished o r unfurnished, cable, water, gas and trash paid, beau­ tiful pool, new laundry room, covered parking, being rem od­ eled. Also luxurious West Cam­ condos pus and Tarrytow n available! 1801 Rio G rande 480-0201 10-17-20B-C TOWNHOME-STYLE LIVING Due to unu sual circum stances, V IL­ LA V A LLA R T A has a o n e b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t a v a ila b le fo r im m e d ia te m o ve -in . W a lk to class fro m P a ra ­ dise in W e s t C am pus. A lso p re ­ le a sin g efficie n cie s, sm all 1-1's, & la rg e 1-1's f o r S p rin g 1 99 2. V illa V a lla rta 2 5 0 5 L o n g v ie w 3 2 2 - 9 8 8 7 10-31-10B ZINFANDEL APARTMENTS in west campus, is leasing one bedrooms with loft, ceil­ ing fans, and covered park­ ing fo r only $ 4 0 0 a month! Call Today! 476-2733 11-1-5B-C BARCLAY APTS. is now leasing remod­ eled efficiencies with new carpet, ceiling fans, and appliances! On shuttle route. Call now 476-2733 11-1-5B-C NORTH CAMPUS 1-1 fo r $365/m o. 2-1 fo r $500/m o. Lots o f Amenities! Call Now 476-2733 11-1-5B-C COMPLETELY REMODELED! Large 1 & 2 bed roo m apartments. N e w carpet, ceiling fans, miniblinds, w e t bar, fireplace, balcony. Q uiet garden setting. Beautiful p o o l/p a vil- lion area. W ater, gas, add cable paid. N o pets! Starting at $ 3 4 5 . G arden Path Apts. 8 3 5 -5 6 6 1 at 8017 Gessner Dr. (west o f IH -3 5 just o ff 1831. 11-4-10B-C OFF RIVERSIDE-Efficiencies, all appli­ ances, water paid. $190. 1300 Parker Lane. CPI Realtors 442-7964 10-15-20B SHOAL CREEK-38th St. efficiencies $275. All appliances, laundry room, water paid 3903 Peterson. CPI Realtors. 3 4 5 -6 5 9 9 .10-15-20B-K CLARKSVILLE CHARM Large efficien­ laundry cies, stove, refrigerator, CA/CH, room, water paid. $275. 808 Winflo, CPI Realtors. 345-6599, 473-8445 10-15- _________________ 20B-K BARGIN EFFICIENCIES ALL bills paid. 2 blocks. UT studious environment. Washer dryer 2502 nueces. 474-2365. 10-17-20B.___________________ LOCATION! LOCATION! and all bills paid near UT, downtown, ond the Capi­ tol! O lder building renovated with large rooms and plenty of ambiance! 476- 9130.10-28-20B- C__________________ WEST CAMPUS 2BR/2BA. Washer/ dryer,loft, ceiling fan, microwave, UT Shuttle $650/m o. 4 7 8 -3 9 4 3 .10-30-5B 305 W 35th, AVAILABLE NOV. 1, effi­ ciency apartment, UT shuttle, dishwash­ er, mini blinds, ceiling fan, $295/m o. 474-5043. 11-1-5B •••’_____________ ONE-BEDROOM, newly painted, ceiling fans, patio, CA/CH, 4411 Guadalupe. Pat - 3 2 0 8600 or 454-1874.11 05-5B. ONE-BEDROOM, 301 West 39th Street, 1/2 block from shuttle, swimming pool, laundry fan, only $285/m onth. 326-9215 or 450- 0 3 6 5 .11-5-5 B _ room, courtyard, ceiling 4 0 0 - C o n d o s - T ow nhouses CONDO'S * Dom inion by St. Davids! 2-1 very attractive, $750. * 1601 Faroh, 1-1 beautiful condition, ready now! $415. * Somerset on San Gabriel, 2 - 2 * E nfield/Tarrytow n duplexes, $ 3 5 0 /$ 3 9 5 * O ra nge tree 1-1 with ♦O the r listings available Call Harrison-Pearson Isaac 472-6201 10 28-20-B-C GORGEOUS W est Campus 1-1's from $ 50 0, 2-2's from $ 7 0 0 ! PERSONALLY CARED FOR BY O W N ER ! •C entennial*O ra ngetre e *C roix*P rese rvatio n Square »plus Tarrytow n Props, ond more! Karl Hendler Props. 476-2154 10-30-20B-C C O N D O 2-1, UT 1 block, W/D, all ameni­ ties, Spring pre-lease, $675. 480-8602. 10-28-20 B____________ TIRED OF paying high rent? 900 sq. ft., 2/2 $425, near intersection of Burnet ond Steck. 258 8 0 8 5 .10-30-5B_______ AVAILABLE N O W LARGE WES! CA M ­ PUS 2/2 ALL AMENITIES INCLUDING W /D MICROWAVE, CEILING FAN ETC $65 0 00/M O . Mitch 476-2673 PMT. 11-01-20 B__________________________ AVAILABLE N O W WEST CAMPUS LARGE 1/1 ALL AMENITIES INCLUDED $525 0 0 /M O CALL MITCH 476-2673 PMT 11-01 20B. SPRING PRE-LEASE CROIX 1-1 ALL A M E N IT IE S IN C L U D IN G W /D , MICROWAVE, SECURITY ETC. MITCH 476 -26 73 PMT. 11-01-20B-C._________ SPRING PRE-LEASE ORANGE TREE EF- A M EN IT IES F IC IEN CIES ALL INCLUDING COVERED PARKING, W / D, SECURITY ETC. $ 4 5 0 .0 0 /M 0 MITCH 476-2673. 11-01-20B-C. 10-18-20B-C g a rage $ 3 9 5 360 — Furn. Apts. in a small, quiet complex, in a residential neighborhood. Large 1-1's, vaulted ceilings, new car- N iw T W N N O V A T E D , Fully furnished Pet< lo w U tility bills, private pool, in Hyde Park. Close to Ut shuttle 4200 $ 2 95. Ave A. 451 -69 66.10-U-20B.__________ Call between 1 & 6pm. 3 BLOCKS North of UT Efficiency. $190 utilities. 477-2214. 10-31-20B-C. 4 5 0 - 0 5 2 3 10-29-20B ( SELL YOUR ITEM in th e "LONGHORN WANT ADS" 20 Words, 5 Days s 5 ° ° OR WE WILL RUN THE AD AN ADDITIONAL 5 DAYS AT NO CHARGE! 'See Specifications APPLE HARD Disk 20me^ tation included Asking 2 36 1.10-30-5NC. teg, all documen $250. Call 462- FURNISH YOUR Apartment! Dresser $45, Couch-like now $150, tables $30, misc. $5. All in good condition. 346- 2 5 4 4 .10-30-5NC.___________________ H O N D A ASCOT 1982 FT50C, immacu­ late condition. W ell loved. 17K with cov­ er and two helmets, $750 (negotiable). Call Shane anytime 320-8554. 10-30- _______________________ 5N C STUDENT FURNITURE One sectional couch, 3 pieces, $150. Large desk, $50. Dresser, >25. 443-1678. Leave message. _______________________ 10-31-5B. FURNITURE. Two loveseats, $30 each; one couch. $35. 451-8768.10-31-58 TV $125, VCR $100, answering machine DORM REFIGERATOR 1.7 cu. h like new' X-MAS PRESENT, Kent 20 girls bicycle, 835^5427 11-05- black with pink rims, white seat Practi cally new >65 Call Doug 343 /921. 11- 5-5P ->hone $35 vacuum $40 $70.00. Call Beth 5NC. P X-MAS PRESENT. Kent 20' $30, cordless pn cassette deck $30, turntable $35, reel-to- reel tape recorder $150, Atari 2600 and 15 games $50. 339-3146. 10-30- 5NC. FURNITURE: navy/tan couch Large wood/glass coffee 4 5 0 -0 6 9 2 .11-5-5NC________________ - $125 table - $85. IBMXT CLONE W /color monitor, mouse, printer, software:MSWord, C/Pascal, other scientific programs. $700 OBO 343 -19 49.11-05-5NC._______________ NINTENDO WITH 10 games, $150 Pio­ neer home stereo system, $300. Enter­ tainment center, $250. Rattan dinette set, $300. Call afternoons, 442-9810. 9-4- 5P.______________________________ _ HOME STEREO Denon DRA-25, 30 watt amp., $140; Polkaudio monitor 4.6 yeake rs 100 watts, $250; Sony CDP-391 CD player with thing 2 months old. 4 7 7 -6 0 8 2 .10-29-5B M AG N U M ACOUSTIC Guitar w/case, like new, $150 OBO, handcrafted cher- rywood, 4-string dulcimer w/case, beau­ tiful condition, $75 OBO 343-1949.11- 05-5NC. TV $125, VCR $100, answering machine $30, cordless phone $35, vacuum $40, cassette deck >30, turntable $35, reel-to- reel tape recorder $150, Atari 2600 and 15 games $50. 3 39 -31 46.10-30-5B. BRAND NEW Cannondgle Road bike. 60cm, red, great condition, $50 0 OBO 480 -9 7 2 0 ask for Chris or leave mes­ sage 10-30 5B. INTELLIGENT Data systems 286 remote, $120;. Every- computer 40MBHD 51 4 HD and 51 4 DD DOS 5.1. WP 5.1. Math CAD Panasonic printer $650 .495 -2 0 6 7 .1 0 -3 0 -5 8 iq s H O N D A 650 Custom 1980 $900 or trade for? 416-8607.10-30-5B SONY M INI component system: CD double tape deck, tuner, 7-bond equal izer, remote Brand new SJÄLi OBO. Call M ookie at 323-9010. 10-^O-5P. '78 TOYOTA Corolla runs great reliable car. $650.00 451-2145. 11-05-5B. 1980 PONTIAC V-6, AC, AT, AM/FM, tape, $700. Call John 452-2458 leave message. 10-31-5NC. DORM-SIZE good condition. 4 4 8 -4 0 9 8 .10-31-5B. refrigerators, $40 each- SKI BO O TS-Nordica -Ladies size 7 1/2. W orn only once $75, OBO 477-6321, leave message. I0-31-5B HOME STEREO D e iw 7 P M A 700V 100 watt amp. $325 Denon TU 600 tuner, 20 pre-sets $125 Both (or $400 795- 9608 11-01 5N C ____________________ RALEIGH TECHNIUM 22 14 speed road bike Shimano components, computer slat cushion, frame bog, water bottle. $275 Extras! 795-9608 11-01-5NC ACOUSTAT ELECTROSTATIC speaker, new $1600 for $999. ONKYO CD player DX2700 new $400 for $250, six month old 476-3982 11-5-5B. Queen-size waterbed with occesories, $120. 3 8 7 -2 0 Math Coprocessor, $190. 478-1037.11-4-56__________________ SONY HIGH Power. XR5507 AM /FM cassette Pull-out with CD input, coustic 80 watt amplifier $250 for both or E>est offer 474 -69 63 11-04-5B___________ SUZUKI MOPED FA50 low miles, runs/ looks good. New battery, helmet $260 OBO. Rusty 4 5 4 -5 5 3 8 .11-04-5NC. ALPINE CAR stereo. Neoriy new, with tape player, power amp and four speakers. All hardware $175. 328- 6328 11-04-5NC U se th is h andy m ail-in form today! Billing Information: Phone number:__________ Name:__________________ Address phone number is billed to: Street______________________ _____ City__________________State--------- Zip. Contact Information: Phone number of person placing ad:. Phone number (home):___________ Phone number (work):------------------ Best time to contact:______________ Schedule Information: Dates and days you want to run ad:. C lassification: (340) “Longhorn Want Ads” (l) (6) O D (16) (2) (7) (12) (17) (3) (8) 0 3 ) (18) (4) (9) 0 4 ) (19) (5) (10) (15) (20) Return this form to: DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS P.O. BOX D AUSTIN, TX 78713-8904 or Call 471-5244 Specific G uidelines for $ 5 Special: •. merchandise for sale under $1000. • must specify price in ad • price includes 20 words • 5 days with an extra 5 days at no charge if your item doesn’t sell. (m ust call before 11:00 am on fifth day to get 5 exU a days) • private party ads only Deadlines: 11 am for next days paper Published Mondav-Friday Billing: □ Charge to my Visa ( ) MasterCard ( ) Visa #____________x _ /M C#. Q Please bill me D Payment Enclosed T h e D aily T e x a n Page 14 Tuesday. November 5. 1991 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N SERVICES EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 790 — P art time 7 9 0 — Part tim e TYPIST WANTED tar all hours. Familiarity of Word Processing a plus Calt 478- 0871 10-31 4B _ LINGERIE EXTRAORDINAIRE Now hir mg soies associates Must be 21 ond reli­ able Excellent pay For short hours M ari­ lyn 243 3 4 22 10-31 4B________________ PART TIME Opportunity Phone solictta •ion. 2-3 evenings per week. 2 hrs per evening CoH Insurance 458 2957 11 04 2 B ___________________ Jim, Farmers U G h T h O U S E W O R K inq Flexible hours 2-8pm hour/week max, 451-3914 11-5-1B __ computer tram- $ 5 'hr. 10 PAT & LUCY'S Tutonna is now hiring stu­ dents m all subiects SS-'hr Serious m- quries only 504 W 24th(next to Mod Dog & Beans) 11 5 5 ________ B PART TIME Flower Shop help wonted. Experience preferred, but not necessary Call 282 0994 between 9 5 H 5 5B SECRETARY/ REC EPTIO N IST For veterl- nory practice $5/hr M-F 8 30 12:30 « Experience, references 4938 1) 05 4B____________________ _ required. 476- 8 0 0 — G e n e ra l H elp W an ted ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT E a r n $ 5 ,0 0 0 + /month fisheries Free transportation! Room & Board! Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary Male or Female. Get the early start that is necessary. For employment pro­ gram call Student Employment Ser­ vices at 1- 2 0 6 - 5 4 5 - 4 1 5 5 ext. 103. 10-18-20P Computer conference telemar­ keting for booth and attendee registration sales. Flexible day­ time hours up to 2 9 hours per week. $ 5 .0 0 plus incentives. An­ derson Mill location. Call 331- 7761 for interview or come by 12343 Hymeadow Dr., Bldg 3, Austin 7 8 7 5 0 . 10-30 5B A quiet job Mornings and weekends. Answer telephone, occa­ s io n a lly w ork with plumber, do your school work on our time. Excel­ lent for students. Long term employment. Up to 40hr/wk with the week­ end. 821 Taulbee Ln. 451-4449. 10-31-5B $$TELEMARKETERS$$ $$$NEEDED$$$ employ­ Immediate ment available. No setting ap ­ selling, p ointm ents. 4- 8:30pm Five blocks west of UT. C all 495-9055 or come by 706 W . MLK, Suite #13 Between l-5pm 10-31-20B-K The C ity o f Austin's Planning and D e ­ velopm ent Departm ent is accepting applications P L A N N E R Ill-Job Share. for the position of E X A M P L E S O F T A SK S: Support City and p rivate sector dow ntow n p lan­ ning/activity groups and o rg an iza­ tions in researching and analyzing d ow ntow n issues including, but not limited to: revitalizotion, security, CIP, and cultural affairs. Support the Team in perfo rm ance of special long and short ran g e planning studies. D evelop tools and techniques to im prove the operations o f the Departm ent and the City in providing im proved customer service a n d planning services. M IN IM U M EN T R Y R E Q U IR E M E N T S : This position will be filled at one of the levels depending upon follow ing qualifications. P L A N N E R til: Bachelor's d egree in Planning, G e o g ra p h y, Socio l Science, Land scap e Architecture, or a p lan ­ ning related field, plus three years of e xp erience in planning related work. O n e y e a r o f experience in Planning related w o rk m ay substitute for one y e a r of the required education with a maximum substitution of four years. T w elve semester hours of relevant g rad uate co lleg e course w ork m ay 650 — M oving H au ling * GOTTA' MOVE IT? * LET US DO IT' A#1 MOVERS The careful, friendly movers. Full, Fas* service. Professional ex pertise at independent rates Check us out You'll like our rtyie (512)860-2297. 10-24 206 K 750 — Typing ZIVLEY The Complete Professional Typing Servire BlOCKBUSTf* Z IV L IV S □ rut HOUSI 2707 Hemphill Park 472-3210 472-7677 LONGHORN COPIES • Resumes • Theses • Term papers • Word Processing • Binding • Laser Printing 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 FA X # 476-2602 PAPERS RESUMES RUSH JOBS Abel's Copies 1906 G U A D A L U P E 472-5353 P R O F E S S IO N A L W O R D Processing Transcription »eports th«ses, manu scripts etc P U and delivery S ? 0 0 / page. Diane 335-7040 10-14-20B-A r ZIVLEY TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS 2 7 th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 VVORD-UP PR O F ES S IO N A L, personal izad word-processing. Flexible hours; last, editing, spelling guarantees! laser printing. 34m and Speedway. Coll an y­ time 479-0649 10-17 20B. TYPING M A L L Speedway D O B E E Laser Pnrrting/Spell Check TerrrVResearcn Papers G ra p h iT a b le s A pplications/R esum es D esktop Publishing 4 6 9 -5 6 5 3 Q UICK A N D EXCELLEN T TYPING. Term papers, manuscripts,business documents ¡ab applications. Competitive rates on II Shuttle, easy pen king. Michele, 7am 10pm. 454 7 9 2 7 .10-22-20B-A ZIVLEY APPLICATIONS ■ RESUMES 2 7 th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 FREE PICK-UP. delivery1 Seven days, per sonai service laser word processing, tree typestyles $2'pg Communique 836-0697 10 78 206 C. _______ P R O F E S S IO N A L HELP with W o rd Pro­ cessing, editmy, writing Laser printer, spell checking M O D E M support. Mason, 323-6915 11-1-206 ZIVLEY m A L W A Y S H IR IN G G O O D V O IC E S 282-1908 10-17 20B c s $ $ I s $ $ % $ $ $ $ $ S I $ $ $ First USA Marketing Services, a division of First USA Inc. is currently seeking the following marketing professionals: ♦Consumer Credit Reps! Représentatives will be responsible for marketing consumer products and services, pnmarily credit cards nation wide. Excellent communication skills with some sales experience is p ie ferred. W e guarantee $6- hour pius benefits Commission* m ay b e earned . Typing stills of 25 wpm preferred. Scheduled shift is M o nd ay-Frid ay e 8;30am 12:30pm e l.-OO-S OOpm • 5:30-9:30pm Please apply in person M o n d a y through Friday, 8am -6;30pm at: First U S A Telemarketing, O n e Texas C e n ­ ter, 505 Barton Springs Road, Suite 600, Receptionist N o Phone Calls, Please! Equal O pportunity Em ployer First USA $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 11-1-20B-C Part-time morning receptionist/ secretary needed for North Aus­ tin Law Firm. Must be able to .an­ swer telephone, file, type 45 wpm, fluent w /W P 5.1. Bilingual helpful. Salary negotiable. Mail resume to 111 W. Anderson Ln. Suite 100, Austin, TX 78752. Attn. Veronica. 10-11-20B NEED A self-starting EE upper division or gradu­ ate for consulting busi­ ness. Flexible hours. Low hassle working condi­ tions near campus. Must be U.S. citizen, available 20 hrs/week. Contact Dwight 477-6011. Send resume and copies of birth certificate, transcript and personal references to 825 W . 11th, Austin, 78701. 11 4 2B • SHORT WALK UT • law-related errands, Full/ Run part-time, great for prelaws. O w n economical, reliable car. $4.25. Also hiring: typists; ac­ counting/bookkeeping trainee; investigator/bill collector train- person. it/h a n d y e e ;fix Nonsmoking self starters. 408 West 17th St. Write application. 9am-4pm weekdays. • • 11-4-20B-E TELEBANKING ASSOCIATE PART TIM E-20 HOUR W EEK-AM OR PM B A N K O N E is seeking candidates with go od customer service skills and a pleasant telephone voice impres­ sion. This position requires six months banking experience in a customer ser­ vice or related a re a or tw o years ex perience in a customer service orient ed business environment. Requires excellent verb al and written com m u­ nication skills. B A N K O N E offers a p leasant w o rk ­ ing environm ent and a variety of b en­ efits for part time em ployees that in­ cludes medical and dental insurance coverage options. Q ualified candidates a re invited to at­ tend a JO B FAIR on Inursd ay N o ­ vem ber 7, 1991, from 3 0 0 P M to 5 :0 0 P M at B A N K O N E Hum an Re­ sources, 2 2 1 W . 6th street. Parking will be provid ed in our g a ra g e off of 5th o r C o lo ra d o . C andidates will be asked to com plete an application and h a v e an opportunity to visit with a re­ cruiter. B A N K O N E on Equal Opportunity Employer EXTEND-A-CARE IS HIRING personnel to start now ar.d Jan . 6th, 1992 W e need p e o p le w h o h av e experi­ e nce working with groups of elem en­ tary ag e children Som e positions re ­ quire exp erience with hand icap p ed and em otionally disturbed children O th e r positions include staff to act as m ale role models. Must b e 18 o r old ­ er, with high school diplom a or equiv­ alent Hours 2:15-6pm, M-F. $5 40/ 11-5-2B substitute for six months of required exp erience with a maximum substitu­ tion o f two years E N T R Y RATE: $1,027/month - 20 P L A N In c R II: Bachelor's d e g re e in Planning, G e o g ra p h y, S o c ia l Science, Land scap e Architecture, Science, or a planning related field, plus two years o f exp erience in planning related w ork. T w elve semester hours of re le ­ vant grad u a te course w ork m ay sub­ stitute fo r six months of required e x ­ p erience with a maximum substitution EMPLOYMENT 800 G e n e ra l Help W anted The City of Austin's Planning and Devel­ opment Department is accepting applica­ tions for the position of PLA N N ER III - Jo b Shore EXAM PLES O F TASKS: Coordinate with other staff to develop neighborhood im­ provement strategies in C D B G Target Neighborhoods including, but not limited to: assistance to pilot neighborhood sup­ port project in Blackshear neighborhood, development of evaluation system for project, and coordination of interdepart­ mental activities for Target Neighbor­ hoods. Provide staff support to Planning in development of ordi­ Commission for neighborhood protection nances (e.g.. Scenic Arterials ordinance). Assist in developing data bases (e.g., lond use sur­ vey). Assist with special long and short range planning studies (e.g., airport rede­ velopment). M IN IM U M ENTRY REQ UIREM EN TS: This position will be filled at one of the follow­ ing levels depending upon qualifications. PLA N N ER III: Bachelor's degree in Plan­ ning, Geography, Social Science, la n d ­ scape Architecture, or a planning related field, plus three years of experience in planning related work. O n e year of ex­ perience in Planning, related work may substitute for one year of the required ed­ ucation with a maximum substitution of four years. Twelve semester hours of rele­ vant giaduate college course work may substitute for six months of required ex­ perience with o moximum substitution of two years. ENTRY RATE: $1,027/month - 20 hours per week. PLA N N ER II: Bachelor's degree in Plan­ ning, Geography, Social Science, Land­ scape Architecture, Science, or a plan­ ning related field, plus two years of experience in planning related work. Twelve semester hours of relevant course work may substitute tor six months of re ­ quired experience with a maximum sub­ stitution of two yeors. ENTRY RATE: $944/month - 20 hours per week. Applications/resumes must be received in the Employment Office no later than 1:00 pm on Friday November 15, 1991 at the following address: City of Austin Human Resources Department P O. Box 1088 Austin, Texas 78767 Attn: Chris U. Salas Attn: Job Order; 53020-0011EC Equal Opportunity Employer 2B-K 2 7 th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 A SA P W o rd Processing Papers. Report-, Iheses completed with care and atten tion $1.85-Last minute O K 451-4885 11-4-20P THE W O R D C O N N E C T IO N word pro­ 24-Lour turna cessing ot SIO Q /py round, pick up and delivery Call D lindsay at 343-6393 for appointment Ì1-4-20B________________________ 760 — Misc. Services CONTACTS FOR LESS $ N C 0 R P 0 R A T E D g Replacement Contact ÿj Lens Service £ As Low as | i$16 eachfi § For Orders or a Free *£ £ Catalog Call $ g 1-800-755-LENS $ $ Must have contact lens £ prescription  OCCUPATION IN FO RM A TIO N Are you interested in a particu­ lar occupation? For info about education & degrees needed, estimated annual salary, sug gested umversities/cost, & em ployers hiring in the fields of your chosen occupation send name of occupation of interest w/money order or cashiers check of $ 2 0 .0 0 to Occupation Information 5 0 2 5 Stage Road, Suite 123 Memphis, Tennessee 3 8 1 2 8 .9 0 1 -3 7 3 -4 5 4 5 11-5-4B TIRED FEET O r body? massage b y Lor 8 3 5 0 0 2 3 cc a v a ila b le 1 0 -3 0 -20B license * 3 1 8 ? O u t EMPLOYMENT 780 — Em ploym ent Services s -S E A J R S —x I I Resume Service S E V E N D A Y S A W E E K HANCOCK I HAT CENTER CE 4 5 9 -2 3 0 5 I J 2 BARTON CREEK 329-1Î49J HELP W A N T ED , N o phone calls. Apply at Ken's Donuts, 2820 Guadalupe 10- A i d e T r a i n i n g N e t w o r k 3 2 6 - 30-5B , . 3555 11-5-4B hr. of two years. A pply 5 55 5 N, Lam ar D-113 EN T R Y RATE: $944/m onth - 20 hours E O E __________________________________11-5-3B per w eek Qualified Special Ed Staff need­ ed Must have experience with developmentally disabled and emotionally disturbed children. Must be 18 or older with high school diploma or equivalent. Hours 2:15-6pm, M-F. $5.75/hr. Apply 5 5 5 5 N. Lamar D-113 A p p lic a t io n s / r e s u m e s must b e received in the Em ployment O ffice no later than 1:00 pm on Friday N o v e m ­ b e r 15,1991 at the following address: G t y o f Austin Hum an Resources Deportm ent P.O . Box 1088 Austin, Texas 7 87 67 Attn: Chris U. Solos Attn: Jo b O rd er: 53020-0013EC Equal O pportunity E m p lo y e r ^ ^ EOE _________________ 11-5-3B PART-TIME Night and evening help A p ­ ply in person, shop 24 - 213 E.6th St. 10 30-5B.________________________________ W A N T E D PART Time Childcare worker Flexible hours. Apply in person 901 Trinity 8 30am 6pm, 10-30-5B D R U G "E M P O R IU M Westlake Hills is hir­ ing seasonal and port-time stacker, cosmetics, and pharmacy technician Ap ply in person ot 3700 Bee Caves Rd. EO E 10-31-58. G O V E R N M E N r ' T O B S ~ $ 16,040- $59230/yr. N o w Hiring. Call 1-805- 962-8000 Ext. R-9413 tor current fed- erollist 10-1-35P________________________ E A R N M O N E Y R e a d in g B o o k s l $30,000/yr. income potential Details 1- 805-962 8000 Ext Y-9413.10-9-25P. G Y M N A S T IC A N D Dance Instructors for children's classes. Teaching experience and reliable transportation required. 323-6013 10 28-20B A _____________________ EMPLOYMENT 790 — P a rt tim e A N Y O N E EARN $l,000/wk Coll for a p ­ pointment. 467-8720. 10-31-5B IN TERESTED in working at a private soft ball complex? Evenings ana weekends. Call Pat or Segn at 441-0937 M-F b». tween 10-2 TO-31-10B SA LES A S S O C IA T ES needed. Highland Mall, womens' apparel Salory + com­ mission 453-267/, please leave mes­ sage. 11-1-1B M A K E C A SH in one hour Paid daily Call 343-8262, 794-0738. 6-8pm 11-4-5B TUTOR N EED ED for 13-yr-old boy in Math, Science, and History $10/hr, M- Th. Coll 454-1708.11-5-58.______________ MAIL O RD ER company needs help W ork from your home doing various lobs. Coll 445-8368 11-5-15B 820 — Accounting- B o o k k e e p in g SHO RT W A L K UT Accounting/book­ keeping trainee Full/part time Non- smoker. $4.25/hr. 408 W est 17th Street. W rite application, 8-4 weekdays. 10-18* 208 Sell Texan A dvertising by phone. E arn up to $100* w orking 10 h o u rs per week! * W ith Draining an d d ed icated labor! T h e D a i l y T e x a n needs five students who can work 10am to 12noon daily, M onday thru Friday. D eadline to A pply: W ednesday, N ov. 6 Apply at T SP 3 .2 1 0 , 9am -12noon or l" 4p m . Sales experience helpful, but not required, as we will train. Interview session Thursday, N ov 7, 10am. AROUND CAMPUS P B > • - " è- 'J m - Nr- s . j m ß - Around Campus is a daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by ac­ ademic departments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organizations must be registered with the O ffice of Campus A ctivi­ ties. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, 25th Street and W h itis Avenue, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, although no signifi­ cant changes w ill be made. ¿MEETINGS A A Promises Group 2 w ill meet from noon to 1 p.m Tuesdays and Thursdays at the All Saints Ejpiscopal Church, 207 W 27th St. in Gregg Hall 314 It is a closed meeting for al­ coholics only. A 1ESEC w ill meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Graduate School ot Business Building 2.122. Amnesty International w ill meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Benedict 1 lali 222. Beta Alpha Rho w ill meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Graduate School of Business 2.124. M ark Perl­ mutter of Perlmutter & Reagan will speak Campus Crusade for Christ w ill meet at 7 p.m. Tuesdays in Burdine Hall 106. Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship w ill meet at 7 p m Tuesdav in University Teaching Cen­ ter 4.134. Christians on Campus w ill meet at noon Wednesday for Bible study in four locations: Texas Union Building 2.102; College of Busi­ ness Administration 4.336, 4.338; Batts Hall 207. Tuesday's meeting at 12:30 p.m. is in Par- lin Hall 8B. ' Delta Delta Sigm a (pre-dental fraternity) will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Graduate School of Business Building 3.138. Dr. Keith will speak on pre-dental advice. Faculty/Staff Christian Fellowship w ill meet at noon at the University Teaching Cen­ ter 3.120. Homecoming Committee of Student In ­ volvement Committee will meet at 4 p.m. Tuesday upstairs in Lila B. Ftter Alum ni C en­ ter. Longhorn Jum ping Team w ill meet at 9 p.m. at Burdine Hall 130. Orange Jackets w ill meet at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday in University Teaching Center 4.124. Pagan Student Alliance w ill meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in College of Education Building 278. Phi Alpha Delta Pre-Law Fraternity Inter­ national will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in U n i­ versity Teaching Center 4.132. Phi Chi Theta w ill meet at 6:30 p.m. Tues­ day in Graduate School of Business Building 3.130. Cedrick Mitchell w ill speak. Business at­ tire required have technical sessions at the Geology Build­ ing 100: 9504 N 1-35. Phi Theta Kappa A lum ni w ill meet at 5:30 p.m Wednesday in Engineering Teaching Center II 2.102, S A V E (Students Advocating a V a lid Educa­ tion) w ill meet at 7:30 p.m. W ednesday in Ben­ edict Hall 130. Multicultural recommendation will be discussed. Texas Student Television (T S T V ) w ill meet from 6 to 8 p.m. W ednesday at the T STV Stu­ dio in the Hogg Auditorium basement. Gener­ al meeting, public invited. Texas U nion Chicana/o Culture Committee will meet at 6 p.m Tuesday in the Texas U n ­ ion Building Chicano Culture Room, 4.206. N ew members welcome. Texas Union Recreational Events Com m it­ tee will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesdays in the Texas Union Building T-House Lounge, 3.316. Texas U nion Special Events Committee w ill meet at 5:80 p.m. on Wednesday at the Texas Union Eastwoods Room, 2.102. University Alanon Group w ill meet from noon to 1 p.m. Mondays, W ednesdays and Thursdays at the Student Health Center 429. University Pre-Law Association w ill meet at 7:30 p.m. on W ednesday in University Teaching Center 3.132. M urray Susynowitz, assistant dean of admissions at the University of Houston Law Center, w ill speak. Non­ members welcome; membership includes 10 percent off Princeton Review for the LSA T. U T Kendo Association w ill meet to train in the art of Japanese swordsmanship from 7:30 to 9:45 p.m. Tuesday in L. Theo Bellmont Hall 502A. Beginners welcome. For information, call 476-7905. U T Russian C lub w ill meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday in Calhoun Hall 422. Jose Alaniz will discuss "Im ages of Russians in Postwar American C inem a." LECTURE Center for Asian Studies is presenting Jagat Mehta, former secretary of the government of India under Indira Gandhi and former visiting professor of Asian studies and public affairs at the University, at 3:30 p.m. W ednesday at Tinker Library in Peter T. Flawn Academic Center 405. Center for M id d le Eastern Studies is pre­ senting the following: ■ Slide presentation/lecture titled " A Visit to Tataristan and Central A sia," at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in the M iddle East Resource Cen­ ter, Student Services Building 3.102. ■ Colloquium Series: "Doing Research in America's Eq yp t," to 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Middle East Resource C en­ ter, Student Services Building 3.102. Anthro­ pology Prof. Robert Fernea w ill speak. from 3:30 Department of Geological Sciences w ill ■ Mike Starcher, UT M .A , will speak on "Sequence Stratigraphic Analysis of the Hueco Group Northern Sierra Diabio, West Texas," from 4 to 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday. ■ Julian Castro, UT M .A ., will speak on "Reservoir Characterization and M odeling of the W aha Field, Bell Canyon Formation, West Texas," from 4:30 to 5 p.m. on Wednesday. H ille l is presenting W alter Zanger, Israeli media personality, speaking on "Jerusalem: Center of the W o rld ,” at 2:30 p.m.on W ednes­ day at Hillel House, 2105 San Antonio. Call 476-0125 for more information. Hispanic Graduate Business Association and International M B A Association are pre­ senting Guillermo Guemez. Guemez is Exec. Dir. of Consortium Private Enterprises of Mex­ ico for North American Free Trade Agree­ ment. AH interested in international business issues welcome. Texas Union Recreational Events Comm it­ tee will meet from noon to 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas Union Building Santa Rita Room, 3.400, for "Lu n ch with the Longhorns." Coach David M cWilliam s will speak. Bring lunch. SHORT COURSE Csardas U T International Folk Dancers w ill present a workshop on couple dancing for be­ ginners from 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. every Tues­ day in Anna Hiss Gym nasium 136. N o experi­ ence or partner necessary. $5 fee for entire semester. Students United for Rape Elim ination w ill have a self-defense workshop from 11 a.m. to noon every Tuesday in Recreational Sports Center 2.114. Learning S k ills Center registration hours for verbal and math graduate record exam prep and integration applications are from 9 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. through Tuesday, N ov. 5 at Beauford H. Jester Center A332. Call 471-3614 for more information. OTHER Baptist Student U nion, 2204 San Antonio St., will hold a luncheon at noon Wednesdays. Cabinet of College Councils/Students for Academic Integrity are seeking committee members for promoting scholastic integrity at UT. Applications may be picked up in the Tex­ as Union Building 4.310. Deadline for applica­ tions is Friday, N ov 8. Campus Vision, the college m inistry of University Bible Church, will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Pharmacy Building 2.116. For in­ formation, call 451-3108. Circle K International is having a Bowl-A- Thon at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Showplace Lanes, Computer Sciences Department is present­ ing the U.S. Governm ent Job Fair from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Texas Union Ballroom, 3.202. The fair w ill feature speakers and w ork­ shops from various government agencies and the Career Center at the University L S A T (L aw School Admission Test) regis­ tration materials must be postmarked by Tues­ day, Nov. 5, to avoid a late fee. Materials are available at the Measurement and Evaluation Center or 471-3032. Services for Students with Disabilities needs volunteers for the fall semester. Previ­ ous volunteers and new applicants are wel­ come. For information, call 471-1201. Student Health Center offers a variety of workshops relating to nutrition, sexual health, acquaintance rape prevention, A ID S and sub­ stance abuse prevention to residence halls, fra­ ternities and other student organizations. Call 471-6252 for more information. The Student Health Center is accepting ap­ plications from the following: ■ Students, preferably with international travel experience, who are interested in work­ ing as travel counseling peer instructors two to six hours per week at the Student Health C en ­ ter during the 1992 spring semester. M ay be taken for three hours course credit, pass/fail, in E D P 369K for the spring semester or as a volunteer position without course credit. ■ Juniors and seniors with a strong interest in the health professions w ho are interested in working in the Upper Respiratory Clinic six to eight hours per week during the 1992 spring semester. Receive two hours course credit, pass/fail, in Kinesiology. For information, contact Wanda Hubbard, 471-4955 ext. 212. Student Volunteer Services needs vo lun ­ teers to work in a specialty facility serving head injury survivors. Volunteers are needed to read to patients, assist with walking pa­ tients outside,.feeding, entertaining and vist- ing. Two hours per week commitment. For more information call 471-3065 T A S P deadline: Wednesday, Nov. 6, is the deadline for the Nov. 16 T A SP Test. Call N a ­ tional Evaluation Systems at 512-926-8746 to register for the test. Non-exempt students without T A S P scores on file before spring se­ mester jeopardize their spring registration. For information, call the T A S P office at 471-TASP. U T Racquetball C lub w ill hold challenge courts from 6 to 8 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday in Recreational Sports Center courts 4 and 5. Come by and talk about joining the club at $10 a semester. U T S E D S (Students for the Exploration and Development of Space) w ill sell coffee and doughnuts from 7:30 to 11 a.m. every Tuesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall lobby. STUDY FOR ONE YEAR OR FOR ONE OR TWO TERMS IN O XFO R D and live w ith British S tu den ts HOW W ise IS DIFFERENT FROM MOST OVERSEAS PROGRAMS: • A ccepted s tu d e n ts receive a d m issio n s letters (an d la te r tra n sc rip ts) directly from a n Oxford (or C am bridge) college. • S tu d e n ts a re directly e nrolled a s full s tu d e n ts of th e Oxford college. • Q ualified early a p p lic a n ts m ay s h a re a co-ed S tu d e n t R esidence a sso c ia te d w ith St. C a th e rin e 's College, O xford (fully Integrated w ith B ritish stu d e n ts). • S tu d e n ts a ccep ted before N ovem ber 1 (for th e W inter Term ) o r before May 1 (for next year) a re g u a ra n te e d h o u sin g w ith B ritish s tu d e n ts . • S tu d e n ts will NOT be ta u g h t In (and receive tra n s c rip ts from) a n A m erican college o p e ratin g ln Oxford. WISC is o n e o f th e f e w com pletely integrated (academ ically a n d in housing) o v e rse a s program s in the UK. • P revious s tu d e n ts ln y o u r field will sp e a k to you on th e phone. For inform ation, call or write: THE WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL STUDIES COUNCIL 214 Massachusetts Avenue N.E., Suite 450, Washington, DC 20002, (800) 322-WISC Students may also Intern and Study in Washington and London The RAND Graduate School (RGS) is fully accredited by for academ ic year 1992-93 invites applications for its doctoral RGS degree program in Public Policy Analysis. Deadline is February 3, 1992. An integral part of RAND, RGS the Western A ssociation of Schools and C olleges. Curriculum consists of rigorous multidiscipli­ nary course work, including quantitative methods, economics, social sciences, technol­ ogy and policy workshops, and on-the-job training (OJT), leading to the dissertation and award of the Ph.D. in Public Policy Analysis. Subfields of specialization include health poli­ cy, national security policy, and Soviet studies. Students typically receive OJT support equiv­ alent to doctoral fellowships. Fellowships are also available for applicants with special inter­ ests in education or Soviet studies. A master’s degree, or equivalent post-bachelor’s degree training and experience, for admission. is required A representative of RGS will be at the Liberal Arts Placement Center, Flawn Academic Center on Wednesday, November 6,1991. The RAND Graduate School 1700 Main Street P.O. Box 2138, Santa Monica, CA 90407-2138 RAND is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 810 — O ffice- Clerical 890 — Clubs- R estaurants SHORT WALK UT Run law-related errands, Full/ for prelaws. part-time, great O wn economical, reliable car. $4.25. Also hiring: typists; ac­ counting/bookkeeping trainee; investigator/bill collector train- e e ;fix person. it/h a n d y Nonsmoking self starters. 40 8 West 17th St. Write application. 9am-4pm weekdays. H ' 10-22-20B-E 8 40 — Sales TELMARKETERS N EED ED . Best payment plan in town. Super easy to sell Apply in person. 612 Brazos. 472-5195.11-05-4B. 870 — M edical HEALTH CAREER STUDENTS Gain valuable experience in health care while working as a Nursing Assistant. Flexi­ ble hours and days are per­ fect for students. Call Nurse . . . . . _ . , 880 — Professional TEACHERS NAEYC accredited program now accepting applications. toddler positions Full-time available. Experience pre­ ferred. Apply at Creative World 2020 Denton. 837- 8822. 10-28-10B-K Youth Care Counselor Position available for direct care of emotionally disturbed children in residential treat­ ment center. Must have sin­ cere interest in children, ability to model appropriate life skills, high energy level. Expe­ rience preferred. Shift work. $5.50/hr. Contact Settlement Homes 1600 Peyton Gin Road, 836-2150. 11-4-5B UT COEDS Looking for part-time work? Hiring blackjack dealers for Austin Night Clubs. Flexible hours starting at $5/hour plus tips. Will train. Call Tammy, BDC 834-7859 11-1-6B B A R T EN D IN G M A K E G reat money! TABC certification, flexible classes Aus­ tin School of Bartenders. 459-1587. 10- 29-20B-E 9 00 — Domestic- Household CHILDCARE Immediate opening for reliable person for full-time childcare and houskeeping. Must be responsible, reliable and enjoy children. Must have own reliable transportation and excellent driving record. Expe­ rience is preferred. References re­ quired 346-1332. Leave Message. 11-5-5B Need now through May 1992 after school care for 2 children ages 6 and 8 2-6pm or 3-6pm, M-F Car Required Mopac/Far West Blvd. area 345-0612 11-5-5B PART-TIME HELP needed with house­ keeping. Approximately 5-10 hours per week. $4.25 per hour. Call 346-1990. 10-24-10B-E_____________________________ FULL/PART time live-in/out. Six year old girl. 837-1553 nights, 471-0625 oi 474-1778 days. 11-5-4B CALL 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED A D EMPLOYMENT 870 — M edical HEALTH CAREER DAY 91 W ed nesday, N o v e m b e r 6 , 1991 1 0 A M -2 PM FRANK ERWIN CENTER • Job Opportunities • Health Care Exhibits • Educational Programs Sponsored by: TNA-District 5, ACC H ealth Science Center, and UT Austin School of Nursing EMPLOYMENT 880 — Professional T r a n s l a t o r s . A leading technical translation firm, is looking' tor students or faculty members interested in PT, FT or freelance work as translators of technical/scientific materials. Must have native command of English and comprehensive working knowl­ edge of Japanese. German. Russian, French or other languag­ es. Scientific and/or technical background helpful. Excellent compensation. Will train if necessary. Send resume to PLS, 340 Rrannan St Suite 305. San Francisco. CA 94107. From The Associated Press wire Stop the presses: Another boxing controversy MEXICO CITY - The World Boxing Council sard Mon day it would not sanction the Nov 23 fight between cham­ pion Evander Hoiyfieici and Francesco Damiani as a heavyweight title bout. Holyliefd signed to box Dannani at Atlanta when his scheduled Nov 8 tight with Mike Tyson was postponed because ot f yson s rib injury The WBC said its executive council had voted to with hold sanction because Damiani is not ranked among its lop 10 heavyweights The WPi said Holyfieid s promoter Mam Events, had reguested a ranking for Damiani but that the ratings com­ mittee refused to place him among the top 10 The WBC will only sanction a heavyweight champion­ ship tight it the champion, Holyfieid, makes his mandatory defense against the No I ol the world and the official challenger," the WBC said No other defense shall be approved by the WBC We expected this, said Kathy Duva. a spokesperson tor Mam F vents We have no problem with that Its their championship and we understand their position He will Still he putting the IBF and WBA belts on ttie line Tyson is ranked No i by the WBC Damiani is unranked by all three sanctioning bodies , Oh we*, th e re ’s still the annual fa th e r-to n game SEATTLE — Ken Griffey, a three time All-Star who made baseball history by playing in the same outfield with his son, said Monday he is retiring after a 19-year major league career The Seattle Mariners said the 41-year-old Griffey cogjd be offered a job with then organization He has said he would like to be a coach, a minor league hitting instructor or a television comrnentatoi 'Senior may still work for the Mariners," said Brian Goldberg, his Cincinnati-based agent. Senior is weighing some options now Guffey was a member ol the Big Red Machine in Cincin­ nati that won the World Series in 1975 and 1976. He hit a home run against every major league club except O e v e , land. Ken Griffey Jr . the Mariners ?l-yeat-old center fielder, already is a two-time AL All-Star. The Gritleys are the only father and son combination to play in the major leagues at the same time ' Playing with Junior over the last two seasons was defi­ nitely the highlight ol my career, Griffey said in a state­ ment Griffey, who resides m West Chester. Ohio, near Cincinnati, did not immediately return a call for comment Gritfey missed most ot 1991 with a herniated disk in Ins neck He began the season on the disabled list after hurl­ ing the neck in a car accident during spring training He came off the disabled list April 16 and tut .282 in 30 games with nine home runs and nine RBIs Recurring pain in his neck forced him back on the disabled list on June 6 Griffey underwent surgery in Cincinnati on Sept 11 to CHICAGO (3) — Carlton f tsk c; Scott Ftetr her 2b. Dan repair the bulging disk I was hoping to be able to come back tor one more year Griffey told the Seattle Post Intelligencer Sunday night But I realized about a ween alter the operation that it probably wasn t going to happen Griftey finished his big league career with a 296 batting average He had 2.143 hits. 152 homers 859 RBIs and 200 stolen bases He broke in with Cincinnati in 1973 and hit 384 in 25 games He became the Reds starting right fielder in 197.5 and batted 305. He then hit 269 in the seven game World Series victory over Boston with four RBIs Griffey hit 336 the following season and finished sec­ ond in the NL batting race at 336 He was selected for the 1976,1977 and 1980 AH-Star games Griffey was traded to the Yankees in 1982 and played parts ot five seasons m Now York before going to Atlanta m 1986 He went back to Cincinnati in 1988 and |omed Seattle in 1990. They became the first father son combination ever lo start a game together on the same team when Ken Sr played left field and Ken Jr. played center on Aug. 31. 1990 On Sept. 14. 1990, the two hit consecutive home runs off California's Kirk McCaskill in Anaheim Stadium Griffey's second son. 20-year old Craig, played last summer for the Mariners' rookie league team at Tempe, Anz and hit 253 And in other baseball n e w s ... NEW YORK Mike Cubbage. who finished the season as interim manager of the New York Mets, will return next season as third base, base running and infield coach. New manager Jeff Torborg completed his coaching staff Monday with the additions of Cubbage, Barry Foote as dugout coach ar,v Dave LaRoctie as bullpen coach They |0in Tom McCraw. who was hired as hitting and first base coach, and Mel Stottlemyre, who is returning for his ninth season as pitching coach Foote and LaRoche were coaches under Torborg with Ihe Chicago White Sox this year John Stephenson, who was bullpen catcher with the White Sox this year, is joining the Mets in the same capac­ ity. Free Agents, List NEW YORK — The 80 players who have tiled lor free agency Players with six or more seasons ol major-league service whose contracts have expired and who are not bound by repealer rights restrictions may file for free agen­ cy by Nov. 11 AMERICAN LEAGUE BALTIMORE (2) Dwight Evans, of. Glenn Davis. 1b BOSTON (3) — Joe Hesketh, Ihp, Dennis Lamp, rhp Dan Petry, rhp. CALIFORNIA (7) — Bert Blyleven, rhp; Donnie Hill, 2b; Wally Joyner, 1b; Kirk McCaskill, rhp; Jeff Robinson, rhp Dick Schofield, ss. Dave Winfield, of. 2b rfip ss. P.isqua ot DETROIT (4) — John Cenitti. Ihp Jerry Don Gleaton. Ihp. Pete lui.avigha of; Mark Salas, c KANSAS CITY i4) — Steve Crawford rhp Jim F.isenre- ich. of Kurt Stitlweil. ss, Danny TartabutT ot MILWAUKEE 12) Jim Gantner 2b. Willie Randolph MINNESOTA (1) OAKLAND (4) - Brian Harper, c Ron Darling rhpy Mik° Gatlego 2b; Ernest Riles. 3b. Curt Young Ihp SFATTlf. (2) — Alvin Davis 1b Bill Krueger, Ihp TEXAS (5) — OH Can Boyd, rhp; Bnan Downing, of. Rich Gossage rhp; Geno Petrali. c; John Russell, c. TORONTO (4) — Jim Acker rhp Tom Candiotti, rhp Dave Parker of; Mookie Wilson of NATIONAL LEAGUE ATLANTA (3) Jim Clancy rhp; AJejandio Pena rhp, Doug Sisk, rhp CHICAGO (1) — Rick Sutcliffe, rhp CINCINNATI (2) - Mariano Duncan. 2b; Ted Pow er HOUSTON (2) — Jim Deshales. Ihp; Rafael Ramirez, LOS ANGELES (7) — Alfredo Griffin ss; Orel Hershiser, dip Jay Howell rhp Mike Morgan, rhp Eddie Murray. 1b. Juan Samuel, 2b Mitch Webster ol MONTREAL (2) — Mike t itzgerakl. c; Ron Hassey c NEW YORK (3) - Daryl Boston of Garry Templeton, ss; Frank Viola, Ihp PHILADELPHIA (6) — Danny Cox. rhp Steve Lake, c, Randy Ready, 2b. Rick Schu. inf. Dickie Thon, ss: Mitch Williams, Ihp. PITTSBURGH (5) Bobby Bonilla ot; Steve Buechele. 3b; Bob Kipper. Ihp: Mike LaValliere, c; Bob Walk. rhp. ST LOUIS (1) SAN DIEGO (4) Pedto Guerrero. H Atlee Hammaker, Ihp Jack Howell. 31). Dennis Rasmussen, ihp Tim Teufel. 2b SAN FRANCISCO (3) — Dave Anderson ss Terry Kennedy, c; Don Robinson, rhp Today's Trivia: What did the Texas Longhorns do to their football u ni­ forms in 1963 that significantly changed their appearance? It must have worked because they won a national champi­ onship that season Quote du jour: Put your money where your mouth is I'ni a basketball player, and I m ready to play I've said that all along, and now its time to prove it Former Missouri forward Doug Smith the sixth player selected in the NBA draft, who signed with Dallas on Saturday and is expected to make his NBA debut Tuesday against Cleveland Monday's Trivia Answer: When Earl Campbell played for Texas, he Wore No. 20 It was retired in 1979 Butch Hadnot wore No 40 last year but ttiat was while he was waiting to Inherit No 5 his high school number, from Mark Murdock. Digger Jones, Boy Mortician by Tom King 10 Prettyface, e.g. 14 A “ Hair” lyricist 15 Type of lily 16 Figure skater’s feat 17 Oodles 18 Diarist Nin „ 19 Talk deliriously 2 0 Sudden, unexpected event 23 Unfold 24 Cast a ballot 25 Hutch display 2 8 Hippo's relative 31 Plundered prizes machine9 40 New Deal agcy. 41 Gone up 42 D.D.E. knew Bradley here 43 Topknot 44 Nose 45 Luncheon mold 48 Declared so Difficult task 57 Zhivago’s love 58 Paint pigment 59 Shower gift 60 State ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE TH E D a i l y T e x a n Tuesday, November 5,1991 Page 15 A C R O SS Crossword Edited by Eugene T. Maleska I s 1 1 iè 61 Wide-awake 6 2 Raison d ’ 63 Meets a bet 64 Co-creator of more 3 7 Monday 1 Stylish 5 Daub 32 “To the tables 34 Contribute Morrie s 21 17 t4 2 3 1 20 “The Flintstones” 65 Unit of force No. 0924 6 f ë T ï f i T3 I ‘ 0 1 té 1 i6 « 1 59 I 1 65 31 37 40 50 57 60 63 1 Zodiacal sign 2 Christmas-play prop 3 Adored one 4 Like; fancy 5 Terrify 6 Massenet opera 7 Jack of TV’s “Easy Street” 8 Landed 9 Foolhardy 1 0 Refuge 11 Glorify 12 Song-and- dance show 13 Extort money from 21 Monogram of “The Conning Tower" man 22 LuPone role 25 Family group 26 “ Now Is the ," 1946 song 27 Smidgen 28 Different slant 29 Suffix with resist 30 First-row chessman DOW N 25 26 23 27 m 28 29 30 35 36 39 I 34 m42 m 44 49 48 45 46 47 51 52 53 54 55 56 ■ 32 38 41 ■ 58 1 61 1 64 32 Have the nerve 33 Mayberry's town tippler 34 Chan’s expression 35 Deejay's disk 36 Phooey' 38 Organized walk 39 Like bricks or raisins 43 Coronas, e g 44 Bracketed word 45 Reference book 46 Italian white wine 47 Blender button 48 Rear end 49 Torso trunk s i Ham s father 52 Kareems alma mater 53 Next in order of place 54 Pseudoesthetic 55 Some "Hee Haw” humor 56 Spot for baby-dangling Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 5656 (750 each minute). BIZARRO By DAN PIRARO I'v e TOlD Y o u a b o u t RUNNING IN THE HOUSE Ht,TLAlCrTC. \ IT's ABeui ML' yjlANT h\T> you DO FDR y o u F s t r i p : / I r —? \ STUFF I , I PIP TODAY: "■* M IN E 'S ABDUT DFAP a U L m ri, SHOULD Go , i M A l w a y s J e - M K [O p e n k h , T I N P FW j j W t s t } IT sbury SEE, I'M NOT REALTY A CABBIE. I'M A PERFORM - ANCE ARTIST. THIS IS JUST -TEMPORARY, UNTIE MY HUS - BANP 6ETS ANOTHER JOR... I SEE. PO YOU HAVE ANY CH/LPREN? YEAH. I'V E GOT A LITTLE 6/RL. I &-f i TAIES FROM THE LAND OF P lIN T Y BY M A R C TRUJILLO REALLY? WHAT POES SHE THINK OF YOUR JOB? MY JOB? UM... IT'S VERY, VERY. VERY X— BORINSf j ^ r r -------------J EXCUSE ME, BUT IMHO THREW HER m u s m è boy h Outthewinpow i m T P Q t A V W E U b g R S l A O R f c N P mm i A lg W o vuvn i?<¿ You K ? (NICE, fin P m i . y \ U M . p v)uL5< jh ta Y Coot (A b ifö 4 0 G lH v A t l û ô f o A Aid. f W • S fe íW fc lH H O í t V f W / V H i o JfcRMfcfUL cK<- T f t ( ; - ■ • J W W t \ f r 1 € ■ ( o v J Hj us A - f o Me 6 sP A r - ip w o l . • > G e V co u p ¿QtNL&OVi V J V V > fop,G É-r m rocMe G v T F T A U - Y , r f t f € r 4 . GchüG < 0 A iMwwiynimmxMRBI i ! T H irik l M 6 e < ^ f ic - f ii- l O V f O f S í r t d h P i VJlTri- o v f W A i M HITA UP? Subject to change. Fomily Tree by Cameron Johnson / T h a t ’ Ll b e J i ^ O - O Q j S / r ^ -------------------------- f Alc?L>5 5 e t i, / M a r i in. M o u l i e l i k e L jo u 'v « n e v e r SyTvto us5« c) b e ío T f V " ^ Queen o f the Universe M r . B o f f o 1 I ll ! ;! \v—7 l-X\ y— it L\yJ... v) y AMP AtJOW&E TWl H ô . . THIS B £lti6,"DEBT- FBEE i s n T a t a l l w h a t i t s CRACKED UP TO SB. I HOU) THIS IS PVPWE. LIKE IT ‘ A COHIC STRIP STEEP6.P I H H IS T O F x T , L J tT H P u E H T Y O F H U H T\H <& a a p FISHIHGTHRCUH \ H FO F> G O C O P\EASU 6 E . HOLD \T THEJNtL, ST rA H C S EFx ! WHAT'S» T H E AAAvTTtit^- T WELL, NOTHIH& EX C EP T THAT TH E H ilu S ARE CKAui M K& WITH HEXICAvH PJS&OLAR.S. LE I G M X Y o a , T P V-M6H-TAIV. VT P O F -T H R . H iiS V O tA T H C . F o a - d / by Sam Hurt r c f p k h n v M t n o f t v tXACTIV UHAT P O W T O F U f t P l N G O v e R a tall b u ild in g ? . THE. ^ 1991 litOwn* M#.».* S«fvic*t I AH HigM» Hw inri Page 16 Tuesday. November 5. 1991 THE D A ILY TEXAN STUDENT SPECIALS thru 11/12T91) 4 Pair C o n ta cts - $99* Enjoy new lenses 4 times per year with our planned replacement program Exam, fitting, and follow-up-only $65 with U.T. ID. (Extended Wear $88) (First-time wearers $15 add'l tor care kit & instructions) lasses-Buy 1 Get 1 Free* (Free pair from selected frames) Q£ $36 off any 2nd fram e & len ses free in 2nd pair 2510 Guadalupe Free Parking 472-5881 Lambert Continued from page 12 are used m ore th a n once. But, oh well, th e sins, the u n c o u n ta b le sins. Lam bert is his u su al rasp y self, w hich I guess is g ood. M ad sen is com pletely unbelievable in h er role, but th a t's not entirely h er fault — d am n the script w riters. C on n ery pro vides m u ch -n eed ed su p p o rt in this faulty fantasy. Just to h e a r him say "G reetin g s, H ig h la n d e r," in that w o n derfully regal tone of voice has to be w o rth so m eth in g, th o u g h probably not th e price of ad m ission . A nd w h a t's the deal w ith the screenw riters m aking th eir villains into o n e-liner-sp ew ing assholes? M ichael Ironside has been in o ne too m an y action pictures, an d his perform ance here is strictly blah. O h, for a w riter to script an intelli- ad versary w h o se g e n t th o u g h t range ex ten d s fu rth e r th a n ch eap clichés. The original Highlander m ad e only abo ut $7 m illion in A m erican th e ­ aters. H ow ever, the film fo u n d u n ­ believable success on th e E uropean m arket, w here the cut of th e film screened w as 27 minutes longer. T here are, I am sure, several A m eri­ can fans of the original w h o w ould like to see tho se lost 17 m in u tes. In­ stead, w e w ad e th ro u g h 91 m in u te s of The Quickening, w aitin g for the A ngel of D eath to p u t th e m ovie an d th e au dien ce o u t of th eir m is­ ery. O h, yeah. In th e e n d , th ere can be only one. O n e star, th a t is, for such h d read fu l rip-off of g ood peo­ p le's m oney. A nd one dollar, m ay­ be; because if y o u 're th a t m u ch of a sucker, you'll see Highlander 2: The Quickening at the dollar th eater. Holiday_____ Continued from page 12 cem eteries w ere o p en a n d you could w a n d e r aro u n d . T hey have ... cerem onies there at nig h ttim e th ey b ring the d eceased p e rso n 's fa­ vorite food a n d d rin k a n d th ey place flow ers a ro u n d th e grave a n d cele­ brate d e a th — it's n ot a m orbid p a r­ ty" At th e M exic-Arte gallery, w h ere n o cem etery is accessible for cele­ bration (probably a good th in g for those of u s th at are new to th e c u s­ tom ), th e d e a d are rem em b ered in altar pieces d o n e by local artists. Som e are traditional a n d feature silk flow ers, p e p p e rs, th e M exican flag an d religious figures. O th e rs are highly u n co n v en tio n al, th e piece w h ich has a bath ro o m sink at its c en ter and d ead m arigolds (the like Day of th e D ead flow er) at its base. Som ehow , th ey are all u n ite d w ith ­ in the sam e spirit, an d w ith the sam e respect, for th o se th a t have left th eir w orld. M ost of th e gifts a n d offerings decoratin g th e altar pieces are avail­ able from M exic-A rte's tw o sh o p s, the p e rm a n e n t store at th e muse­ u m 's front a n d th e te m p o ra ry b o o th at its rear. C ans of sliced mango and sugar guava, T -shirts, skulls the bread of th e dead (el p a n d e los m u ­ ertos), m arigolds, m in iatu re skele­ to ns a n d graves, a n d M exican beer are piled high o n store tables. Pack a picnic basket of all th ese goodies, an d h ead on d o w n to th e grav e­ yard. (calaveras), candles, p o sters, Beyond, the Ordinary in Rear * prescription required or exam available R,ck Irwin, O.D. E N T IR E S T O C K D R E S S S H I R T S ARROW • ENRO • DAMON ALL STYLES i Q 95 ALL I ZJ SIZES S L A X M E N S W E A R 5224‘‘S S Í S fm IMMIGRATION BARBARA H INES,. Attorney at Law BOARD CERTIFIED Immigration and Nationality Law Texas Board of Legal Specialization A ll Types of Im m igration Cases Inform ation about Im m igration A ct of 1990 ! 1005 E. 40th 452-0201 I N C A T S International Cat Collection Chirm M in g D ynasty Black and Red on White S I L K S C R E E N E D T E E S & S W E A T S 100% Colton Becfv-T (S-XXL) SI 6 M ADE 50 50 Sweat (S-XL) S27 IN THE S3 S& H; TX Res. add 8% tax L-S.A O r d e r N o w , M C /V IS A (5 1 2 ) 3 3 8 -1 8 3 3 17 D esigns an d Various Colors Available FREE COLOR BROCHURE Incats, Inc. Suite 400. Dept C fr820 Business Park Drive Austin. TX 78759 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... W ANT AD S...471-5244 NOW OPEN SUNDAY 12-5 1 MB SIMMs $37 120ns T 7 T " T r ? ' T 1MB SIMMs 80ns..............$45 4MB Classic Upgrade.........$99 105MB External Drive...... $499 Mage 2400 Baud Modem ...$75 HP DeskWter................. $549 Black Rfcbons................ $225 MacProducts USA 2021 Guadalupe Suite 23 Second Level Dobie Mall Free Parking 469-5000 We stud r f a L o n d o n $575* Paris $ 3 2 4 * Frankfurt $ 3 2 4 * Madrid $ 3 4 4 * Hons Kong $ 4 7 9 * Caracas $ 2 9 1 * •Fares above are one way from Austin. Restrictions apply. Council Havel 2000 Guadalupe Austin, TX 78705 479-4931 Call for your FREE student travel catalog. AT&T's long distance savings plan can take you to this location. £ imr . % \ * " 0 ,0* -«Wn ..yss>vw.' - , \ \y AT&T has always helped college students call the places they want to call. In fact, one of our savings plans for off-campus students, the SelectSaver™ Plan, lets you direct-dial the one out-of-state area code you call most often. For just $1.90 a month, and 12 cents a minute, evenings, nights and weekends. 20 cents a minute, weekdays* □ And now AT&T can take you to another place you’ve always wanted to go. Just enter the AT&T “It Can Happen to Me” Sweepstakes. You could win a trip for you and a guest to any U.S. and any European rock concert. All you have to do is fill out the coupon below □ So let us help choose the savings plan that’s right for you. And then try your luck at our Sweepstakes. Both will be music to your ears. To sign up for an AT&T savings plan for off-campus students, call 1 800 654-0471, Ext. 7457. To enter the AT&T “It Can Happen to Me’ Sweepstakes, fill out the coupon below. •Includes continental U S , Alaska, Hawaii Pfierto Rico and the U S Virgin Islands Savings based on calls over 56 miles Actual savings potential depends on subscriber calling patterns Processing lee of $2 00 applies Day rates apply from 8 am to 5 pm ©1991 AT&T AT&T O FFIC IA L R U L E S -N Q PU R C H ASE NECESSARY 1. To enter, handprint your name, address, phone number and zip code on an official entry form or a plain piece of paper. Official entry forms can be found in the October 31st, 1991 issue of Rolling Stone, the October 18th. 1991 issue of Entertainment Weekly, the November 1991 issue of US magazine, the Novem ber/December 1991 issue of U The National College Newspaper and the Fall issue of Directory of Classes You may enter as often as you wish, but each entry must be mailed separately to: AT&T "IT CAN HAPPEN TO M E " SW EEPSTAKES, P.O. Box 4870, Grand Central Station, New York, NY 10163 All entries must be received by Decem ber 30,1991 2. W in n ers w ill b e s e le c te d in a ra n d o m dra w ing fro m a m o n g all e n trie s re ce iv e d . D raw ing w ill b e c o n d u c te d on or abo u t Ja n u a ry 15,1992 by M e d ia A m e ric a , Inc., a n in d e p e n d e n t o rg a n iza tio n w h o s e d e c is io n s a re final on all m a tters rela tin g to th is sw e e p s ta k e s . (1) G ra n d Prize: A 4~day/3 -night trip fo r tw o to s e e the c o n c e rt of w in n er's c h o ic e a n y w h e re in th e c o n tin e n ta l U .S., in clu d in g ro und trip c o a c h a ir tra n sp o rta tio n to a n d fro m th e n e a re st m ajo r city, first c la s s hotel a c c o m m o d a tio n s , hotel and a irp o rt tra n sfe rs , tic k e ts to th e c o n c e rt, b a ck sta g e / V IP p a s s e s , lim o u sin e s e r v ic e to a n d fro m the c o n c e rt, m e a l a llo w a n c e a nd s ig h ts e e in g ; p lu s a S-day/4-night trip fo r tw o to se e th e c o n c e rt of w in n e r’s c h o ic e a n y w h e re in E u ro p e , in c lu d in g rou n d trip c o a c h air tra n sp o rta tio n to a n d fro m the n e a re st m ajor city, first c la s s ho tel a c c o m m o d a tio n s , h o tel and airp o rt tra n sfe rs , tic k e ts to the c o n c e rt, b a c k sta g e / V IP p a s s e s , lim o u s in e s e r v ic e to a n d fro m th e c o n c e rt, m e a l a llo w a n ce , a n d sig h ts e e in g , p lu s o n e y e a r ’s w o rth of AT A T L o n g D is ta n c e S e r v ic e a w a rde d a s $ 8 0 0 in A T A T L o n g D is ta n c e G ift C e rt ific a t e s a nd a n A T A T C o r d le s s P h o n e (total a p p ro x im a te retail v alue o f G ra nd P rize = $15,940.00); (15) F irst P rizes: A n A T A T C o r d le s s P h o n e, $25 in A T A T L o n g D is ta n c e G ift C e rtific a te s a nd fiv e c o m p a c t d is c s of w in n e r’s c h o ic e (total retail v alue = $200). A ll p riz e s w ill b e aw a rde d a n d w in n e rs n o tifie d by m a il. T rip s s u b je c t to a va ila b ility a n d co n firm a tio n o f re s e rv a tio n s a n d m u s t b s ta ken by D e c e m b e r 31,1992. C h o ic e of c o n c e rt lo c a tio n s is s u b je ct to a rtis ts ’ p e rfo rm a n c e s c h e d u le s , a v a ila b ility of tic k e ts and b a ck sta g e / V IP p a s s e s , a n d fin a l a ppro val by M e d ia A m e r ic a , Inc. L im it of o n e prize p e r p e rso n . P riz e s are n o n tra n s fe ra b le and no s u b s titu tio n s or c a s h e q u iv a le n ts a re a llo w ed . T a x e s , it any, a re the re s p o n s ib ility o f th s in d iv id u a l w in n ers. G ra n d P rize W in ner a nd travel c o m p a n io n m ay b e a s k e d to e x e c u te an a ffid a v it o f e lig ib ility a n d re le a s e . G ra n d P rize W in ner arid travel c o m p a n io n c o n s e n t to th e u s e o f their n a m e s a nd lik e n e s s e s fo r p u b licity o r tra d e p u rp o s e s w ithout fu rth e r c o m p e n s a tio n . N o re s p o n s ib ility is a s s u m e d for lo s t, m is d ire c te d or late en trie s or m a il. 3. Sweepstakes open to residents of the U.S., 18 years of age or older, except employees and their families of AT&T, its affiliates, subsidiaries, advertising agencies, MEDIAAMERICA, INC. and their program suppliers This offer is void wherever prohibited, and subject to all federal, state and local laws 4. For a list of w in n o rs, s e n d a sta m p e d , s e lf a d d r e s s e d e n v e lo p e to: A T A T “ IT C A N H A P P E N T O M E ” W IN N E R S LIST, P.O. Box 5019, G ra n d C e n tra l S ta tio n , N ew York, N Y 10163 by Ja n u a ry 30th, 1992. Enter the AT&T “It Can Happen To Me’’ Sweepstakes. To enter, complete this form and mail to: AT&T “It Can Happen To Me” Sweepstakes, Box 2501, Cedar Grove, New Jersey 07009-2501 Name______________________________________________ College. Address City___ Phone L ) Year in school State Z ip C urrent Long Distance C om pany AT&T___ M CI___SPRINT’ C urrent C alling Card C om pany AT&T___ M CI___SPRINT □ O n C am pus Student □ Off Cam pus Student OTHER _ OTHER _ _ (7437) All e n trie s m ust b e received by 12/30/91. No p u rc h a se necessary. Void w h e re p ro h ib ited You m u st b e 18 years o f age o r o ld e r to enter. ©1991 AT&T U