TH Da il y Te x a n The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Wednesday, June 17,1992 Vol. 91, No. 158 2 Sections TVeaty will scrap bulk of nuclear arsenals Associated Press WASHINGTON — The U nited States and Russia each would scrap all b u t 3,000 to 3,500 of th e ir deadliest nuclear w eapons under Tuesday's agreement that President Bush called "a tribute to the new relationship" betw een the former Cold War foes. The sw eep of th e cu tb ack s exceeded m ost ex p ectatio n s. A d e sp e ra te e le v e n th -h o u r race to conclude the accord for the summit meeting between Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin contributed to the drama. "With this agreement," Bush said, " th e n u c le a r n ig h tm a re recedes m ore and more for ourselves, for o u r c h ild re n o u r grandchildren." a n d for The cuts are to be carried out in two phases by no later than the year 2003 and go far bey o n d the reductions in bombers, missiles and submarines required under the new START treaty. That accord, still to be ratified by the Senate, took nearly a decade to negotiate w ith the Soviet U nion. The agreement announced by Bush and Yeltsin was ham m ered out in only five months. Even in the final hours, Secretary of State James Baker was saying he did not know if an agreement was to an d th a t p o ssib le several extraordinarily tough issues were defying resolution. " O u r ab ility this agreement so quickly is a tribute to the new relationship betw een the United States and Russia, and to the personal leadership of our guest, Boris Y eltsin," Bush said in the White House Rose Garden. reach Ebullient over the results, Bush said both sides w o u ld elim inate in te rc o n tin e n ta l b a llistic th e ir missiles, w ith m ultiple w arheads, including the 10-warhead Russian SS-18 missiles and the 10-warhead American Peacekeeper ICBMs. T hat m eans the only m ultiple- w arhead missiles rem aining in the A m erican and R ussian n u c le a r arsenals would be those based on submarines. Yeltsin's remarks on the accord cau sed some confusion a b o u t w h e th e r the R ussians w o u ld eliminate only their SS-18 missiles or other land-based missiles w ith multiple warheads as well. Adminstration officials said later it was clear that Yeltsin had agreed to get rid all of them. The officials provided details of the accord on grounds they not be identified by name. The U nited S tates had aim ed from the outset at forcing Russia to give up its remaining SS-18s. Associated Press Boris Yeltsin and George Bush reached an accord after five months. No new funding slated for schools Associated Press State leaders told school superintendents in a Tuesday letter not to expect a state tax increase for public education in the next legislative session and urged them to keep local taxes down. "There will be no new state money for public education next biennium and you can expect per-pupil state aid to remain, at best, constant," said the letter signed by Gov. Ann Richards, Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock and House Speaker Gib Lewis. T hey said the sta te can n o t raise the additional $3 billion that would have been required under the current funding law for 1993-94 and 1994-95. That law was found to violate the state constitution by the Texas 'S uprem e C ourt, w hich gave law m akers until June 1, 1993, to come up with a new plan. . The letter, sent to school districts with other m aterials by the Texas E ducation Agency, also urges school districts "not to raise local taxes beyond what is necessary to maintain current per-student revenue." Increases of $617 million in state funding, and $626 m illio n in co u n ty e d u c atio n district money, should go ahead as planned in the upcoming school year, state leaders said. But E ducation C o m m issio n er Lionel "Skip" Meno told adm inistrators that the $617 million is not enough to fully fund the law, which calls for increasing state aid to districts wfith higher local taxes. V\ hen there is not enough money to go around, districts lose money that they expected, a process called proration. Meno suggested that school districts tor budgeting purposes count on twice the $231 million proration that occurred in 1991-92. T a x p a y ers also are c h a llen g in g in a federal appeals court continued use of the c o u n ty ed u c atio n d istric t system . I he CEDs, each m ade up of one or several counties, were created to help shift money from wealthier to poorer school districts. At a L egislative E d u catio n Board meeting, Lewis, D-Fort Worth, said he s not satisfied w ith student performance in the wake of large increases in public education spending over the past several years. "I d o n 't see the results for the m oney that's been invested," Lewis said. But Dan Casey of the Texas Association of School B oards said th a t costs a rt constantly increasing, through inflation and paying for state-required programs. Eric Baldaut/Daily T e x an Staff Gone to pot Juan Tamez, front, and Rick Early, workers with the Housing and Food Division at the University, helped clean out the basement of the Alice Littlefield Dormitory at the corner of Whitis Avenue and 26th Street Tuesday. The dormitory is undergoing renovations. Weinberger charged with felonies Associated Press WASHINGTON — Former Defense Secretary Caspar W einberger was indicted Tuesday on felony charges of perjury and obstruction of the congressional investigation into the Iran-contra affair. _ W ein b erg er is the m ost sen io r R eagan administration official to be charged in the arms- for-hostages affair — an initiative he repeatedly said he opposed. At a n ew s conference a t h is a tto rn e y s I am W ashington office, W einberger sa id , innocent and will fight this injustice to the end." A federal grand jury charged Weinberger with two counts each of perjury and false statements and one count of obstructing the congressional Iran-contra committees. The former defense secretary was charged with lying to Congress about his knowledge of arms sales to Iran and his knowledge of Saudi Arabian contributions to the Nicaraguan contras. n o tes He also w as accused of concealing extensive on h ig h -le v el Reagan p e rso n a l administration discussions about the arms sales and aid to the contras. Weinberger headed the Defense Department from 1981 to 1987. u e ren se u ep c u iu ic iu The indictm ent comes 5 1 /2 years into an independent counsel's investigation that has led to eig h t gu ilty p leas by form er R eagan administration officials and others. But th e tw o m ost hig h - profile defendants — former national security adviser John P o in d e x te r and his aide, O liv er N o rth — saw th eir c o n v ictio n s th ro w n out because they w ere ruled to have been tainted by use of testimony the two had given C o n g ress u n d e r g ra n ts of immunity. Weinberger Sources k n o w led g eab le about the investigation said earlier this spring that in d ep en d en t counsel L aw rence W a lsh 's in v e stig a tio n w as concentrating on form er P resident R eagan's possible role in an Iran-contra cover-up. H ow ever, the so u rces said law y ers for Weinberger and former Secretary of State George Shultz told pro secu to rs their clients h ad no inform ation suggesting a cover-up involving Reagan or anyone else. P ro sec u to r C raig G illen told re p o rte rs Tuesday, "I don't want to say that we are trying to get closer to President Reagan. That s not w hat this indictment is about. " O u r inv estig atio n has been significantly narrowed by the events today," Gillen said. I didn't say that it's pointing in any direction or focusing on anyone." Weinberger, at his news conference, said, "At no time did I ever knowingly misrepresent the facts or deceive Congress or anyone else. "I w as not willing to accept an offer by the Office of Independent C ounsel to plead to a misdemeanor offense of which I was not guilt\, nor was I willing to give them statements which were not true about myself or others. He would not elaborate on that last point. W einberger characterized the indictm ent as "unfair and unjust" and said "a terrible injustice has been done to my family and to me." R eagan said in a s ta te m e n t released in California: "Caspar W einberger has served his state and his country honorably and with great distinction for more than a quarter of a century. I know him to be a man of the highest integrity and am co n fid en t he will be fully vindicated of the charges against him." UTCAT to store scholarship, course information Kevin Williamson Daily Texan Staff C e n tra liz e d sc h o la rsh ip and course in fo rm a tio n for u n d e r­ graduates could be available on the UTCAT com puter system by the spring sem ester, Students' Assoc­ iation members said Tuesday. SA P re sid e n t H o w ard N irk en said all of the UT colleges and departments have responded to the SA 's for sc h o la rsh ip information to be compiled onto the UTCAT computer system. re q u e s t the colleges, "T h e w h o le goal h ere is to compile information from financial in d iv id u a l aid, departm ents and ex-students. The way it is now, it's hard for students to find w h a t sc h o la rsh ip s are available to them. A lot of them are not even aware that scholarships are given by Nirken said. th e ir d e p a rtm e n ts," The UTCAT system is a computer network which students can access through com puters at the U nder­ the Perry- g ra d u a te L ib ra ry , C astañ ed a L ibrary and the Law L ibrary. UTCAT can also be accessed from hom e c o m p u ter modems. UTCAT c o n ta in s a stu d e n t directory, a list of regent's rules, co u rse an in fo rm a tio n e n c y clo p e d ia , alo n g w ith o th er information. and N irken said there is no current estimate on the cost of the program. "T h e co sts could be a key problem, but I think it's something that can be overcom e. One of the main cost concerns is the amount of program m ing time. Our schedule and our ability to coordinate with the program m ers could also affect _ — “The whole goal here is to compile information...” — Howard Nirken, president of the Students’ Association how quickly we are able to m ake the scholarship bank available, Nirken said. The SA w ill be g a th e rin g the information over the summer and it will be en tered onto the UTCAT system during the fall semester. The information should be accessible by students during the spring, Nirken said. In a d d itio n to financial aid in fo rm atio n , e x p a n d ed co u rse listings and descriptions could be available th ro u g h the co m p u ter system by the spring semester. Sean M ast, chairm an of the i. ~ í C / - .H o r r o C ' m i n r i l i Q S; Cabinet of College Councils, said other inform ation such as course listings, in stru c to rs and p re re q ­ u isites could be m ade av ailab le through expanded UTCAT services. The course inform ation w ould also include a brief synopsis of each course, including the percentage of grades determined by tests, quizzes and homework. "We used to put out a publication called O f Course that had sim ilar information in it," Mast said. "But it only came out once a year, so it w a s n 't v ery p ractical for students and we stopped doing it. On the UTCAT it will be available year-round, so I think people will use it more," Mast said. Neither the scholarship bank nor the expanded course inform ation w ill c o n ta in for graduate students. in fo rm a tio n INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Catch up on your summer reading with Toni Morrison, Jay Mclnerney and Terry Macmillan. Also inside: Students push for Texas bullet train. Weather: Low in upper 70s, high in mid-90s with partly cloudy skies and winds out of the SW at 15 mph. Index*. Around Campus........................... 8 Sports Classifieds.................................... 9 State & Local................................ 6 Comics 8 University.......................................ü Editorials....................................... 4 World & Nation.............................. 3 Entertainment...............................7 .............................. Perjury charged in murder case Miguel M. Salinas Daily Texan Staff The T rav is C ounty d istric t attorney "know ingly perm itted" two Austin police officers to perjure them selves in a January m u rd er case, resulting in a request for a new trial, the defendant's attorney said Tuesday. Joe Turner, a lawyer hired by the family of Ernest Perez, said Sgts. B rent M cD onald and H ector Polanco testified that they did not tak e a w ritte n sta te m e n t from w itness John Salazar w hen they really had. Perez was convicted Jan. 31 of m u rd e r an d a g g ra v a te d robbery. T u rn e r said o th e r w itn esse s interview ed at the scene claimed Salazar w as too far away to have seen the crim e. A fter the police officers discovered the evidence w as S a la z a r's statem ent somehow disappeared, he said. in c o n siste n t, A ccording to a m o tio n filed Monday in the 3rd District Court of Appeals, "When the fight occurred, Salazar was being questioned by two police officers 100 yards away and could not have possibly seen the ev en ts he d escrib es in the statement." The m otion also sta te s th at S a la z a r's statem en t to the tw o officers, im plicating Perez as the m urderer of Correctional Officer Rod R edm an, w as in " d ire c t contradiction" to his testimony and the testimony of every other state witness at Perez's trial. D uring an in v e stig a tio n of Polanco and McDonald currently being c o n d u c te d by the Ira v is County grand jury and the Austin police in te rn a l affairs d iv isio n , Salazar testified he was coerced into giving the false statem ent about Perez, the motion stated. at "The statement was not given to D efendant tria l because, according to the prosecutor, 'the police say he [Salazar] did not give a statement,' " the motion stated. Turner said the district attorney Please see Police, page 2 Page 2 Wednesday, June 17,1992 THE DAILY TEXAN Police: Officers accused of hiding information Continued from page 1 w as aw are th at M cD onald m ade notes of what Salazar said. The fact that the prosecutor did not provide the defense w ith that evidence at the trial is cause for a new trial, he said. Even though the statem ent does not exonerate Perez, it is how the s ta te m e n t w as c o lle cte d by th e police officers that is sufficient cause for a new trial, Turner said. “The statement says my client did i t / ' he said. “ But the point of our whole grounds for motioning for a new tria l is if th e y co erced th is statem ent out of this w itness then the jury should have been allowed to hear that because it casts a doubt on the c re d ib ility of the o th e r s ta te m e n ts . M aybe th ey w e re coerced as well. “ It's hard to believe that police officers can get up on the stand and com m it p e rju ry and the d istric t attorney's office knowingly permits it and a conviction can stand on that testimony. That just cannot be the law in this country. “ If you can e sta b lish th a t the p ro secu to r knew or should have know n about perjured testim ony, then it should require an automatic reversal/' S tep h en M cC leery, a s sis ta n t d istrict a tto rn ey in charge of the case, was unavailable for comment Tuesday afternoon. A cco rd in g to the m o tio n , the district atto rn ey filed a notice in A pril ren d erin g the testim ony of McDonald and Polanco, who both said they had not taken a w ritten statem ent from Salazar, as “ false and incorrect testimony.'' “ After a jury trial and conviction occurred in this case, the Travis County District A ttorney's Office, while investigating other m atters, learned that certain w itnesses for the state m ay have presented false or incorrect testim ony relating to th e ex isten ce of a piece of evidence," the notice stated. “ Although the evidence should be made known to the defense/' the notice continued, “the state believes that the evidence, if known to the defense at tria l, w ould n o t have affected the verdict." Turner said the district attorney will probably object to the motion for a new trial. “The position they've taken so far is th at alth o u g h th ere m ay have been perjured testimony, it did not affect the verdict," he added. RAY BAN® SAVE 20-60% WE BEAT ANY RETAIL PRICE1 BIG 00G SUNGLASSES ££23 476-0171 2021 Guadalupe r Yes! We have ‘ student airfares. Costa Rica London Paris Madrid Moscow Hons Kong $189* $372* $428* $419* $478* $609* •Fares abcve are one way fares from Austin. Restrictions apply. Taxes not in­ cluded. Council Travel 2000 Guadal upe St. Austin, TX 78705 512-472-4931 We issue Eurailpasses on-the-spot l T he Daily Texan Permanent Staff ................................................................................................................ Geoff Henley Editor Managing Editor........................................................................................................................................ Scott Stanford Aft.qnr.iatn Mananmn Editors.................................................................Jason Avcock. Chris Barton. Asim Bhansali, Kate Dona ho, Kristine Wolff ..................................... Rebecca Stewart ............................................................. Michael Brown, Jennifer Koch, James Wilkerson ..................................................... Chrirtv Flemlna. Leslev Ramsev. Miauel M Salinas. Ted S Warren, Kevin Williamson .................... Anne Gainer, John Sepehri ............................................... Mary Hopkins Sports Editor................ ............ Mike Guentherman General Sports Reporter........................ .................................................. .............................................. Anna Pellman ................. Eric Baldauf. Jean-Marc Bouju Cartoonists.................... ....................... Jose Alaniz, Carl Greenblatt, Tim Harrison, Walt Holcombe, Tom King, Phil Mehto, Jeanette Moreno, Lance Myers, Marc Trujillo, Shannon Wheeler ) Issue Staff ................................................................ University Desk Editor............................................................................... State & Local Desk Editor......................................................................... Wim Frtifnr News reporters............ Photographer Editorial Columnist Entertainment Writers. Sports Assistant Copy Editors................. Advertising .... Gigi Causey, Craig Enos, Justin Noble ............................................. Jennifer Quoss .............................................. Jeff Hutchison Art Director Graphic Designer...... niaftMfied Disnlav niasRifiori rnlnnhone Sales Clarks ................. .............. Nathan Moore. Sharon Sk.nner ................................ Janell Sexton Donna Hillis. Caro) Marie Parker ................ Marla Thomoson. Sonia Garcia, Wendv Wood, Rachel Martin, Shawntee Williams, Amber Hawkins, Elsa Snyder The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is pub­ lished by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis, Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in ses­ sion. Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial ofllce (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.101). For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865 For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900. For classified word advertising, call 471-5244 Q» im m « r Q o c c m n Entire contents copyright 1992 Texas Student Publications. The Daily Texan Mall Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring)................................................................................................................................................................... $30 00 ...................................... ......... ............ ................... .......5 6 . 0 0 T u r n Q a m a c t o m / P a ll a n H R n H n n l .............................................................. 20.00 One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer)................................ .............................................. ............................................. 75.00 To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904, or to TSP Building C3.200, or call 471-5083. ......................... ....................... POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The D a ily Texan, P .O . Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904. ------------------ - Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m. Tuesday................. Thursday, 4 p.m. Wednesday.......... Friday, 4 p.m. Thursday...........Monday, 4 p.m. Friday............... Tuesday, 4 p.m. .......................................I t a m C taM ffod W ord Acte (Laat Btt&tnma Day Prior to Publication) Students support TGV Justin Noble Daily Texan Staff A UT s tu d e n t g ro u p pledged its s u p p o rt to the proposed bullet train at a public hearing held Tuesday by the Texas High-Speed Rail Authority. "Students need to speak out for high-speed trains because we [students] are the fu tu re ," said Karen N e tz e r, head of F u tu re A lte rn a tiv e s for Safer Transportation. "We are the ones who will be using the service, or the ones who will suffer if it does not get built." The hearing was conducted to gather public comment for an environmental impact study to be carried out by Woodward-Clyde Consultants, said David Barrows, a com pany se n io r sc ie n tist. The firm w ill e v a lu a te e n v iro n m e n ta l an d socioeconom ic effects of the proposed rail project. Tire bullet train — capable of speeds up to 200 miles p er hour — w ill e v e n tu a lly link H o u sto n , D allas, Austin, San Antonio and possibly Waco and College Station, according to the student group. The project will be carried out by the Texas High Speed Rail Corp., using French technology. N etzer believes the project will have a beneficial environmental impact. "There will be less toxic emissions and a cut in the amount of oil and gas used for transport," Netzer said. The advantages for students would be a quicker, safer ride home, she added. A few students, however, feel that FAST does not speak for everyone on campus. "I resent the fact that [Netzer] got up there saying that she represented the whole stu d en t body," said Dawn Wright, a journalism senior. "I don't support any side until I can educate myself on all the issues." If the project is approved, Universal Field Services will acquire the land for public use, said spokesman Charlie Clinger. The company will appraise the land to be taken, d eterm in e com pensation to be paid and provide relocation assistance to dislocated land owners, he said. Many farmers who live along the proposed route said they feel threatened by the prospect. Dennis Bradford, a land owner in Caldwell County, said much of the land in his area has been passed on for Robert Ryan shows the route of the supertrain. Jennifer Quoss/Daily Texan Staff many generations. “ I'd just as soon tie myself to a tree and go to jail than sell it for a train," said Bradford. Robert Ryan, project director for the Texas H igh Speed Rail C orp., said the train w ould be a g reat economic advantage to the state. “ It w ill create $5 billio n in cap ital in v estm en t, in c lu d in g 2,000 new jobs d ire c tly in v o lv e d w ith building the project/' said Ryan. “ It would also be a s ig n ific a n t a ttra c tio n for to u rists an d b u sin e ss travelers.” Woman shot in domestic row A domestic dispute left a woman in serious condition Tuesday night after she was shot in the back With a .38-caliber p isto l n e a r the UT campus, police said. Cynthia Wallace, 31, of 1005 Echo Lane, w as tre a te d for g u n sh o t w ounds after she w as shot, said Brackenridge Hospital spokesman Larry BeSaw. police, A cco rd in g the to c o n fro n ta tio n a p p e a re d to be a fam ily d is p u te because se v era l references to children were m ade during an argum ent in the parking lot of a 7-Eleven at 1901 Rio Grande St., but it was still unknown what led to the Shooting. Sgt. Alex C am pos, supervising in v estig ato r at the scene, said a male suspect w as arrested in the the p a rk in g shooting. The p o lice w o u ld no t release the n am e of the su sp ec t Tuesday night. lot sh o rtly a fte r “He was still here trying to find her or get to her anyway," Campos said. After the shooting, the suspect followed Wallace into the 7-Eleven w here she w e n t for assistan ce, Campos said. "She went inside the 7-Eleven to seek help and the guy followed her, still looking for her, still pointing the g u n ," C am pos said. “ The people at the 7-Eleven called for help because he went in there with the gun still looking for her, he kicked the d o o r o p e n and they protected her as best as they could while they were calling 911." The in cid e n t w as u n u su a l because of the time of day at which it occu rred and th e n u m b er of people who w ere around, Campos said. A m an at the 7-E leven, w ho wished to remain anonymous, said he was in the store and ran when he saw the man with a gun. "I just saw him come in the store w ith a g un, an d I ju st took off running," he said. "A s soon as I saw him I was out of there. ... I saw a gun and that's all I needed to see." Local Display.............. .................................. Jylle Joiner, Brad Corbett, Melina Madolora, Wendy Rodriguez, Alissa Snow, Jeffery Harston, Al Herron, Kevin Vinger, Trudy Ballard. Danielle Linden, Amee Shah Landon Sims Miguel M. Salinas Daily Texan Staff RESTOCKED. & REDUCED. If great climates make fun cities, then Austin has to be the most fun of all! Everybody loves Austin, especially in the summertime. There's a million things to do, and hundreds of places to do them. in A ustin W hat better way to show­ case your own hot spot than to advertise in The Daily Texan's Summer in Austin tabloid? Call now to reserve space or get help with a layout. Publishes: 6 /2 4 /9 2 Retail Adv. 4 7 1 -1 8G5 N E W E A R L Y F A L L C O N S O L ID A T IO N S ! W e’ve re o p e n e d w ith to ta lly new c o n s o lid a tio n s o f n a m e b r a n d \II N Ti \ Associated Press M EX IC O CITY - M exico o n Tuesday tem porarily agreed to con­ tin u e cooperating w ith the U nited S ta te s in th e w a r a g a in s t d r u g s w hile both countries negotiate new ' ground rules. P r e s id e n t C a rlo s S a lin a s d e G o rta ri's a d m in istra tio n h ad s u s ­ pended cooperation M onday night to p ro te s t a U.S. S u p rem e C o u rt decision allowing suspects abducted abroad to be b rought to the U nited States for trial. Mexico im m ediately revoked per­ m issio n fo r D ru g E n fo rc e m e n t A dm inistration agents to operate in th is c o u n try and a n n o u n c e d th a t Mexican agents in the United States w o u ld s to p th e ir w o rk . T h is, in effect, froze all cooperation. But M exico changed its p o stu re th e B ush a d m in is tr a tio n a f te r assured it that W ashington did not p la n to im p le m e n t the S u p re m e C o u rt d ec isio n . W a sh in g to n also ag reed to o pen talks on the issue w ith Mexican officials. A F o reig n A ffairs D e p a rtm e n t statem ent said Mexico ' 'tem p o ra ri­ ly” agreed f° continue cooperating "in order not to allow this period of negotiations to interrupt the inten­ sive program s of cooperation in the fight against narcotics." The Suprem e C ourt's 6-3 decision in W a s h in g to n a n d M exico s response M onday cast a pall on rela­ tio n s b etw e en th e tw o c o u n trie s, w hich had reached an exceptionally w arm level. In W ashington, Secretary of State Jam es Baker said T uesday th at he w a s c o n fid e n t c o o p e ra tio n w ith M exico on fig h tin g d ru g s w o u ld continue. "Before this announcem ent by the U.S. S uprem e C ourt, the relations betw een Mexico and the U.S. in the w ar on d rugs had never been bet­ ter," said Rep. C harles Rangel, D- N.Y., chairm an of the H ouse Select Com m ittee on Narcotics Abuse and C o n tro l. In a s ta te m e n t fro m W a s h in g to n , he c r itic iz e d th e S uprem e C ourt decision but urged Mexico to reconsider. U .S. A m b a s s a d o r Jo h n Negroponte met Tuesday afternoon with Mexico's deputy foreign minis­ ter, Andres Rosenthal, and later said they had d iscu ssed the co u n trie s' 1978 extradition treaty. N egroponte said he did not think the incident w ould affect the p ro ­ posed Free T rade A greem ent with Mexico and C anada or the w ar on drugs. A Mexican official, who spoke on c o n d itio n of a n o n y m ity , sa id Mexico w anted the United States to m ake clear it will n o t use the new tool given it by the Supreme Court. T he o ffic ia l sa id N e g ro p o n te brought proposals to continue coop­ eration in the d ru g w ar while taking Mexico's concerns into account. By some accounts, m ore than half the cocaine and marijuana entering the United States is shipped through M exico, m u ch of it from S o u th America. An a g r e e m e n t tw o y e a rs ago to 60 U.S. D ru g a llo w e d up Enforcement Adm inistration agents to w ork in Mexico and 60 of their Mexican counterparts to work in the United States. AIDS quarantines spark controversy Associated Press GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. - Q u aran tin es long have been used to combat the spread of contagious diseases, but critics say authori­ ties w ent too far by confining tw o people infected with the AIDS virus. H ealth officials in M uskegon confined a 31-year-old w om an accused of having sex w ith at least six m en w ithout telling them she was HIV-positive. The O klahom a H ealth D epartm ent took similar action against a 24-year-old man. No crim inal charges have been filed in either case. In a sim ilar case, an AIDS-infected man in P o rtla n d , O re ., p le a d e d no c o n te s t to c h a rg e s th a t ste m m e d fro m h is h a v in g unprotected sex w ith two wom en. He was sentenced to house arrest for six m onths and ordered to abstain from sex for five years. In the Michigan case, Dr. Douglas Hoch, m edical director of the M uskegon C ounty D e p artm en t of H ealth , la st w eek recom ­ m ended confining the m entally im paired w om an to an adult foster home, pending a hearing on W ednesday. "W e felt w e had to do som ething to alle­ viate the health threat in term s of her con­ tact w ith other people who are unsuspecting or u n a w a re of h e r HIV in fectio n , Hoch said. ’ In N orm an, Okla., state officials said Leo Wells had unprotected sex w ith at least one person, but could not understand the need to practice safe sex because he is m entally handicapped. Last w eek, an O klahom a C ounty judge lifted the quarantine but ordered Wells to undergo a 60-day substance abuse program . The ju d g e said th e need for a q u aran tin e would be re-evaluated at the program 's end. AIDS experts say the tw o cases are d is­ turbing, but do not indicate a trend. " T h e re a re in te r m itte n t a n d is o la te d a tte m p ts to tr y q u a r a n tin e la w s ," s a id Caresa C unningham , spokeswom an for the AIDS Action C ouncil in W ashington, D.C. "I don't think w e will see the end of these easy, quick legal fixes until w e see the end of the epidem ic." Leonard Glantz, associate dean of Boston U niversity's School of Public Health, called it a "a troubling use of a police power." H is to ric a lly , p u b lic h e a lth o ffic ia ls ordered quarantines to control outbreaks of highly infectious and deadly diseases, such as y ello w fe v e r, sm a llp o x an d b u b o n ic plague, Glantz said. HIV, the AIDS virus, is different because it is spread only th ro u g h the exchange of b ody fluids th ro u g h intim ate contact, the sh a rin g of infected in tra v e n o u s needles, through tainted blood products or from a w om an to her fetus. Federal health officials have never recom­ m en d ed q u a ra n tin in g people w ith AIDS. The U.S. C enters for Disease Control now recom m ends quarantines only for patients w ho refuse treatm ent for extrem e cases of drug-resistant tuberculosis. "Q uarantining is a last-ditch effort, used only when all other venues of rendering a p a tie n t n o n -in fe ctio u s h av e failed, said Carl Schieffelbein, assistant director of the CDC's Division of Tuberculosis Elimination. M ichigan civil law allow s authorities to detain HIV-infected people for six m onths if they have unprotected sex w ith uninform ed partners. At least six people — including a 14-year- old boy — have told authorities they had unprotected sex w ith the wom an and were u n a w a re of h e r in fe c tio n , T ag u e said . A uthorities say she has an IQ of 72 and is addicted to crack. "I don't have a heck of a lot of sym pathy for the men w ho had sex w ith the w om an in M uskegon," said Frank Rhame, director of th e HIV C lin ic a t th e U n iv e rs ity of M innesota H ospital. "If people w ere p ro ­ tecting themselves like they should be then this kind of law w ouldn't be necessary." George Annas, a Boston U niversity pro­ fessor of health law , said he sym pathizes w ith officials w ho consider using q u aran­ tines. "The problem with quarantining peo­ ple with AIDS is there's no cure. So that's a lifetime sentence," he said. "But you can t fault them for trying to protect the public." Mourning death Azerbaijani women wept in the village of Khankynlar Monday for a 12 -year-old girl kille d by shell fire during fig h tin g betw een Azerbaijani and Armenian militants. Armenia has prevailed in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region in recent weeks. 'BS Somali drought kills 5,000 daily Associated Press................. __ NAIROBI, Kenya - As m any as 5,000 chil­ dren under the age of 5 are dying daily in drought-stricken Somalia, and m illions of p e o p le are in p e ril, a U .N . e n v o y sa id Tuesday. The envoy, M oham ed Sahnoun, did not e stim a te h o w m an y p e o p le w e re d y in g daily, b u t said the situation w as worse than the 1984-86 drought and famine in Ethiopia, when an estim ated 1 million people died. "I've never seen a worse situation than in Somalia," said Sahnoun, a U.N. undersecre­ tary and special representative to Somalia. "It's appalling." Aid officials estim ate 4.5 m illion people in Somalia are threaten ed w ith starvation d u e to a drought and m onths of clan w a r­ fare that prevented food im ports. D rought is also gripping southern Africa. R ival clan s fig h tin g for c o n tro l of S o m a lia 's c a p ita l h a lte d th e ir com bat in March and reopened the city's port in May. Since th e n , U .N ., Red C ro ss, and S a u d i A rabian ships have delivered 23,000 tons of relief food to M ogadishu. But S ah n o u n said 50,000 to n s of food w ere needed im m ediately for M ogadishu s m ore th a n 1 m illion people and those in camps north and south of the capital. Vast parts of the Horn of Africa country s north, center and south have received no h u m a n ita ria n a ssista n c e w h a tso e v e r, he said in an interview w ith The A ssociated Press and the French new s agency Agence France-Presse. "W e a re v e ry far fro m th e m in im u m requirem ents to alleviate the em ergency sit­ uation in term s of starvation and hunger," said Sahnoun, assigned to Somalia in May to help stop the fighting, aid efforts tow ard n a tio n a l re co n ciliatio n an d id e n tify an d publicize the nation's hum anitarian needs. S. Africans mark Soweto uprising Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, S outh Africa - B lacks n a tio n w id e b o y c o tte d w o rk Tuesday to com m em orate one of their biggest rebellions, and Nelson M andela called it the start of a cam paign th at w ould b ring dow n the w h ite govern­ ment. D e sp ite w id e s p r e a d a p p e a ls fo r peace, at least 34 people died in politi­ cal violence surroundin g the anniver­ sa ry of th e 1976 S o w eto u p r is in g , including nine people gunned dow n on a Soweto ram page late Tuesday. P re s id e n t F.W . d e K lerk said th e m a ss a c tio n c a m p a ig n c a lle d by M andela's African N ational C ongress w ould aggravate violence, b u t the ANC said the cam p a ig n w as n ec essary to push the governm ent tow ard a m ultira­ cial democracy. "W e are d e te rm in e d th a t m ajority rule should be introdu ced not tom or­ row , b u t to d a y ," the ANC p re sid e n t told about 25,000 people at a rally in Soweto, outside Johannesburg. The protest call has led to some of the bitterest rhetoric betw een the ANC and governm ent since black-white negotia tions deadlocked in May. The w orsen­ ing political climate makes a negotiated breakthrough appear unlikely any time soon. June 16 traditionally has been a day blácks stay away from w ork to rem em ­ ber the Sow eto uprising, w hen police fire d on h ig h s tu d e n ts . H undreds of blacks were killed in riots sparked by the uprising, turning world atten tio n to South A frica's ap arth eid policies. sch o o l From Johannesburg to C ape Tow n, n o rm a lly b u s tlin g city cen ters w ere qu iet and m any businesses closed for lack of workers. Absentee rates in cities ranged from 50 percent to 90 percent, according to various estimates. C o m m u te r tra in s from S ow eto to Johannesburg, norm ally full, w ere 99 percent em pty, officials said. T he last co m p arab le black p ro te st w as in November, w hen a strike called by the ANC and its allies to oppose a new tax crippled cities for two days. De Klerk's governm ent has abolished apartheid laws and has agreed in prin­ ciple to extend voting rights to the 30- m illio n black m ajo rity .B u t de Klerk rem ains firmly in control, and the ANC says the governm ent, w hile negotiat­ ing, is actually trying to delay the tran­ sition to a multiracial democracy. T he g o v e r n in g N a tio n a l P a rty blam ed the ANC for bloodshed, saying, "In n o cen t South A fricans are paying w ith their lives for the ANC's arrogant and intransigent strategy." The A N C 's bitter rival, the Inkatha Freedom Party, also opposed the strike call and urged blacks to go to work or risk losing their jobs.Police blam e the A N C -In k ath a feud for the d e a th s of thousands of blacks since 1984. th e w o rs t In o n e of in c id e n ts Tuesday, gunm en ran dow n a Soweto street and through an apartm ent build­ ing firing at people, police and w itness­ es said. Police said five p e d e s tria n s w ere killed and four people died in the apartm ent building. The gunm an fled. There was no im m ediate w ord on the victims' or killers' political affiliations. W hile the strik e w as successful, it w as u n c le a r h o w m u ch s u p p o rt the ANC could m uster for future protests. In a d d itio n , w h ile ra llies in m ajor cities w ere w ell-attended, the crow ds w e re n o t o v e rw h e lm in g . T he ANC claimed it w ould draw 1 million to ral lies n atio n w id e, b u t police estim ated 80,000 people attended all the events. Members of the Pan-Africanist Congress marched Tuesday through Khayelltsh, near Cape Town. Michigan bars life terms for drug dealers Associated Press Tornadoes injure at least 36, spill chemicals in Midwest Tornadoes raked parts of the M idwest for a second straight day Tuesday, dam aging buildings in several M innesota, South Dakota and Nebraska comm unities and leaving at least 36 injured, authorities said. The w o rst dam age appeared to be in C handler, a to w n of ab o u t 300 in so u th w e s te rn M in n eso ta. A tw ister there w iped out a new housing developm ent and badly dam aged a high school, a local television station reported. It also hit two buildings where potentially danger­ ous farm chemicals were stored, possibly contam inat­ ing the w ater supply, an official said. "T he chem icals have been strew n about w ith the ra in /' said Kevin Bums, spokesm an for the M innesota D epartm ent of Public Safety. "O u r concern is about the ex tent of the con tam in atio n . We d o n t w a n t to alarm anyone, b u t we are concern ed." He said the chemicals w eren't immediately identified. Gov. Arne Carlson's office sent the National G uard into the tow n to m ake sure nobody w as trapped in rubble, C arlson spokesw om an C yndy Brucato said. Red Cross teams also w ere going into the area. Economic indicators accelerate in May W ASHINGTON — H ousing starts and industrial production, twin engines driving a sluggish recovety, a c c elerated in M ay. T he b ro a d e s t m e a su re of the nation's foreign trade also im proved. The C o m m erce D e p a rtm e n t said h o u sin g sta rts jum ped 11 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.23 million. It was the sharpest advance since a 19 percent rise in February 1991. The Federal Reserve said industrial production rose 0.6 percent in May, the biggest increase since a 0.7 per­ cent advance in July 1991. Associated Press LANSING, Mich. - M ichigan's m andato ry life sentence w ithout a chance of parole for drug dealers, th e to u g h e s t in th e n a tio n , w as stru c k d o w n as u n c o n stitu tio n a l T u e s d a y by th e s ta te S u p re m e Court. The law applied to anyone caught possessing m ore than 650 grams of cocaine, about 23 ounces. The high court said that w as "unduly dispro­ portionate" and equal in Michigan only to the penalty for first-degree m urder. "The defendants in this case have been punished m ore severely than they could h av e been for second- d eg ree m u rd e r, rap e, m u tila tio n , armed robbery or other exceptional­ ly g rav e an d violent crim es, the majority wrote. The ju s tic e s fo u n d th e la w 's denial of parole to be u n c o n stitu ­ tio n a lly h a r s h and o rd e re d th a t those sentenced u n d er the law be considered for parole after serving 10 years. A b o u t 160 p e o p le have been sentenced under the law . Last year the U.S. Suprem e Court ruled that the Michigan law did not violate the U.S. C onstitution's ban on " c r u e l a n d u n u s u a l p u n i s h ­ m ent." The state constitution has a sim ilar p ro v isio n b u t su b stitu te s "or" for "and " A labam a is the only other state where possession draw s a m andato­ ry life sentence, but it applies only if an offender is caught w ith a m ini­ m um 22 pounds of drugs. H ow ard Simon, executive direc­ tor of the Am erican Civil Liberties U nion in Michigan, said he h a d n 't read the opinion but "it sounds like this is a major victory for some sani­ ty in our prison system." "It robbed judges of the ability to m ake a distinction of w hether the person before them w as a big-time drug dealer or a first-tim e offend­ er," he said. C hris D eW itt, a sp o k esm an for s ta te A tto rn e y G e n e ra l F ra n k Kelley, said K elley's o f f i c e h a d n 't had time to analyze the decision. " O u r p o s itio n w a s th a t th e Legislature's actions w ere constitu­ tional. The court feels otherw ise and w e 'll h a v e to live w ith th at d eci­ sion," he said. í) \ l l N I lll II \ \\ Paan 4 Wednesday June 17.. 1992 VIEWPOINT Geoff Henley Editor Anne Gainer Associate Editor John Sepehri Associate Editor Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Dally Texan are those of the editorial board. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. Opinions expressed in staff or guest columns are those of the writer. Letters submitted to Flrlnp Une should be fewer than 250 words, and guest columns should be no more than 750 words. Bring submissions to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or mail them to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. Letters may be edited for grammar, length, libel and Texan style. The Daily Texan editorial board will meet with stu­ dents, faculty, administrators and members of the pub­ lic by appointment to discuss matters of public interest, political endorsements and Texan policies. To sched­ ule a meeting, call the Texan offices at 471 -4591 Supreme Court ruling violates sovreignty of nations Terrorists and Third World potentates make such abductions. This necessity - and given that anything not expressly prohibited is allowed- would give terrorists a wide range of employment options. Stevens' examples should not be disregarded as flippant. The court's decision comes at a time when U.S. Attorney General William Barr has sought to expand U.S. powers in rounding up drug lords and terrorists. But what amounts to a poor substitute for interdiction and counter-intelligence opera­ tions would also give credence to the wild claims by the Moammar Gadhafis of the world who would seize U.S. citizens for alleged crimes. After all, though the court says nothing about reciprocity in the treaty, Mexico would have the same right. And lest we forget, we have extradition treaties with 103 other nations. Moreover, as shown in this case, it would not necessarily mean that state agents would be the ones who would seize nationals in their homes. Countries no doubt would have to hire more bounty hunters, thugs and terrorists to Perhaps the most galling error is Rehnquist's attempt to wash his hands clean of the kidnap­ ping. The Nixon appointee said that Mexico has protested the abduction through diplomat­ ic notes as violating general international prin­ ciples. But since diplomacy and federal law enforcement fall within the purview of the president, Rehnquist concludes that such mat­ ters should be resolved by the executive branch. This view is ironic given that if the court ruled that it did not have jurisdiction, authori­ ties would have had to return Machain home. But our nation's highest court should not be troubled by such trivial issues when there is sovereignty to deny. owe a debt of gratitude to the U.S. Supreme Court. The high court's Monday decision, which allowed the United States to abduct and bring to trial a murder suspect, in violation of an extradition treaty, will make extraditing criminals a formidable task. Overturning two lower courts, Chief Justice William Rehnquist said U.S. courts could try for murder and torture a Mexican doctor who was apprehended by bounty hunters and delivered to U.S. authorities. Rehnquist said Dr. Humberto Machain's abduction did not violate a 1978 extradition treaty with our southern neighbor because the "treaty says nothing about the obligations of the United States and Mexico to refrain from forcible abductions of people from the other territory or other nation." But such a narrow analysis opens the door for many other exceptions not expressly pro­ hibited. As Justice John Paul Stevens wrote in the dissent, the U.S. government could, if it "thought it more expedient," torture or sim­ ply execute a person rather than attempt extra­ dition. Equally outrageous is the fact that this par­ ticular treaty does not compel either govern­ ment to deliver its nationals to the other. Only if a nation has the power to do so, and it deems it necessary, would it have to turn over criminal suspects to another. The other option, if extradition is not granted, is to request that country prosecute its own nationals. Sweeping in and snagging a suspect violates the principle of sovereignty implicit in this clause. If Mexico refuses to extradite and the United States responds by kidnapping the suspect, Mexico's sovereign decision has been violated. Kemp agenda benefits cities Nobody who w itnessed the Jeff Hutchison TEXAN COLUMNIST killing, looting and arson in Los th at o cc u rre d Angeles last month could fail to see the need for change in the national urban agenda. First, though, the problems need identifying The liberal thesis was sum m a­ rized in Bill C lin ton 's accusation that the Los Angeles riots were the result of “ 12 years of denial and neglect." Empirical evidence, how­ ever, suggests otherw ise. M eans- tested funding for 38 programs tar­ geting poor kids and their families in creased 18 p ercen t during the Reagan era to $123 billion. We now spend 53 tim es m ore, in constant dollars, on social programs than we did in 1965. Yet there has been little decline in rates of poverty. Of course, during the first years of G eorge Bush's adm inistration, domestic policy innovations were on the back burner. Bush largely ig n o red H o u sin g and U rb an Development Secretary Jack Kemp. But in the w ake o f the LA riots, Bush d isco v ered K em p and h is “ bleeding-heart conservatism " to show concern with urban poverty. The enterprise zone exemplifies K em p ’s free m arket approach to social problems. Within the model EZ, there are zero percent tax rates to en cou rage econom ic d evelop­ ment. The EZ concept also entails minimizing or eliminating all regu­ lations. Obtrusive safety and envi­ ronmental codes represent luxuries that the poor can ill afford. K em p also a d v o c a te s ten an t o w n ersh ip of p u b lic h o u sin g . U n fo rtu n a te ly , c o n g re s sio n a l D em ocrats have sabotaged this proposal by insisting that for every unit p riv a tiz e d a n o th e r p u b lic housing unit must be built. A supe­ rior alternative to the erection of instant slums is housing vouchers - which the poor could cash in for housing - coupled with the elim i­ nation of rent control to free up the h o u sin g su p p ly . So m e e stim a te such a program would cost only 40 percent of the present system. The nation must also reform the welfare system. The New York Times recently published a classic exam ­ ple of how it p rev en ts the p oo r from saving and acquiring assets. T h e A id to F a m ilie s w ith D ependent C hildren penalized a fa m ily b e c a u s e th e ir d a u g h te r saved $4,900 tow ard her co lleg e edu cation, forcing the m other to spend the savings and repay $9,432 in benefits in order to remain eligi­ ble for the program. Another bleeding-heart conserv­ ative means of empowering people to escape the ghetto is education. Admittedly, inequalities exist in the quality of education. Massive, cen­ tralized redistribution that results in enormous bureaucratic w aste is not th e so lu tio n — e d u c a tio n a l choice is. Students receive vouchers w h ich they u se at the sch o o l of their choice whether it be public or private. Choice is strongly favored by p o o r p a re n ts, b u t it h a s m et opposition from some liberal elites, who like Ted Kennedy, send their children to private schools. O ne th in g s u p p ly -s id e r s lik e Kemp tend to ignore is the moral roots of the LA riots. Econ om ic h a rd sh ip s do n ot ex p la in w h at happened. The unemployment rate in South Central Los A ngeles, in 1990, was only 7.1 percent. The per capita income of California is well above the national average. Yet Los Angeles County received more fed­ eral money than any other county in the nation did in 1991. Econom ic incentives will never revitalize inner cities until citizens obey the law. Fortunately, the new K em p /B u sh agenda has a p ro v i­ sion to confront the fringe elements of society - “Weed and Seed " - a $500 m illion program designed to “ w eed" out drug dealers and vio­ len t crim in als with law e n fo rc e ­ ment sweeps and “seed" neighbor­ hoods with social programs, such as job training and drug education. Ultimately, any new urban agen­ da mtist address the disintegration o f the b la c k fa m ily . T h e m ed ia attention accorded to Dan Quayle's Murphy Brown speech has triv ial­ ized the important issue of family values. The fact that in 1988, 63.5 percent of all black babies were ille­ g itim ate su g g ests th at Q u a y le 's concerns are legitimate. Jack K em p , D an Q u ay le and oth er th o u g h tfu l c o n s e r v a tiv e s realize the nation cannot abandon urban Am erica. They also u nder­ stand the bankruptcy of centralized p s e u d o -s o c ia lis t n o t-s o -G r e a t S o c ie ty ap p ro a ch e s to p o v e rty . Instead, bleeding-heart conserva­ tives show the way to start anew with programs based on free-mar- ket principles and traditional val­ ues. Hutchison is a Plan II sophomore. Abstinence-based education impotent to fight social ills My reaction to the gross distortion Scott Spear GUEST COLUMNIST o f the fa cts in the Ju n e 11 Viewpoint entitled "Proposed sex education courses fail to solve problems" is "There you go again." We may have a new Daily Texan editor, but the narrow ultra­ conservative religious agenda devoid of factual accuracy persists. First of all, Ted Whatley is not proposing a curriculum or academ ic courses. He is offerin g gu id elin es for an A ISD b oard - appointed citizen task force to use in rec­ ommending curricula for adoption. These suggested curricula would be comprehen­ sive and present scientific information to AISD students at an age and developmen- tally appropriate time. The guidelines con­ tain six key con cepts th at a cu rricu lu m should contain w ith content appropriate for different age groups. The key concepts are: human develop­ ment, relationships, personal skills, sexual beh avior, sexual health and society and culture. The values inherent in the guide­ lines include: sexu ality is a natural and healthy part of living; all persons are sexu­ al; sexuality includes physical, ethical, spir- itual, psychological and emotional dimen­ sions; all sexual decisions have effects or consequences; prem ature involvement in sexual behaviors poses risks; and individu­ als and society benefit when children are able to discuss sexuality with their parents an d /or other trusted adults. The Viewpoint's second distortion of the fa cts c o n c e rn s “ a su rv ey by A lan G u ttm ach er," who incidentally has been dead since 1974, that purports to show that “14-year-old girls with comprehensive sex education are 40 percent m ore likely to have sex than those who have not." Where is this survey in existence besides the facti­ tious m aterials distribu ted by the absti­ nence-only education crowd threatening the AISD school board? I am familiar with the scientific literature on this topic and know of no such study. The third misrepresentation of the facts concerns the study from the LBJ School of Public A ffa irs. The co n clu sio n s o f this paper were so poorly substantiated by fac­ tual material that the paper was returned to the authors for rewriting and the city department staff involved in its inception dissociated them selves from the p roject entirely. That this material is in circulation is due to the zealotry of two of the authors, not the validity of its findings. The fourth piece of misinformation in the Viewpoint regards the results of the absti­ n en ce-o n ly e d u c a tio n in p la ce in San Marcos, Calif. The "m iracle" of San Marcos does not bear up under closer scrutiny. The high school guidance counselor who had reported 147 pregnancies in 1984 has been credited with describing a decline to 20 pregnancies in 1986-87, but she.herself says that she did no record-keeping after the first year Speaking of the decline, she is q u o ted in th e D ec. 19, 1991, San D iego Union as saying, " I think the district office made it up." The San Diego Union article goes on to state, “ T h ere is no ou tsid e ev id en ce to show that the San Marcos school district's teen-age pregnancy rate fell in those years, and a preponderance of data suggests it did not. Precise pregnancy rates cannot be ca lc u la te d in th o se y e a rs b e ca u se no records are kept of pregnancies that end in abortion or miscarriage. However, births are recorded by place of residence, and in census years birth rates can be calculated for specific areas. The birth rate of mothers aged 14 through 17 years in San Marcos m ore than doubled in the 1980s, rising from 6.9 per thousand in 1981 to 18.5 per thousand in 1990, according to research conducted by the county Departm ent of Health Services. Each year of the presumed miracle, more babies were bom to school-age mothers in the city than the en tire pregnan cy rate recorded by the school district, which is slightly larger than the city. While the dis­ trict claims only 20 pregnancies in the 1986- 87 school year, "3 4 babies w ere born to sc h o o l-a g e m o th ers in 1986 and 46 in 1987." The distortions and fabrications present­ ed as facts in the Viewpoint article are all too common in the battle being waged in the nam e of ab stin en ce-on ly edu cation . Parent consent logic flawed C o rre c t me if I'm w ro n g , b u t P au l K am prath's letter (“ Minors need parental consent," The Daily Texan, Thursday) seems to argue that because teen-agers risk catch­ ing AIDS when they engage in unprotected sex, the government should further endan­ ger the lives o f som e o f these teens (th e fem ales) by restricting access to an early abortion, the safest course of action after the girl is pregnant. This in order to “ prompt them to consider seriously the gravity of their mistake." WTule I'm not sure that the threat of legal bureaucracy and a delayed abortion will be more effective than the threat of AIDS in encouraging teens to behave responsibly, in the interest of fairness, I propose we apply K am p rath 's standard accross the board; adults as well as children should be taught that "hassles and delays are the result of not thinking before they a c t." Sm okers w ith lung cancer, drinkers w ith liver disease, overw eight people having heart attacks, executives with ulcers, skiers with broken leg s, w om en in lab or, starv in g E n glish majors, and anyone with AIDS should have to sch ed u le a co u rt ap p earance, appear before a judge, defend their lifestyle, and obtain judicial approval before receiving treatment for their ailments. If Kamprath's logic is correct, such a sys­ tem will end self-destructive, irresponsible behavior in America. And if it doesn't end such behavior? W e'll have the structure in place to solve another of Am erica's social ills. If the judges denied these requests for tre a tm e n t, we co u ld d ra stica lly red u ce health care costs. K. Reidt Austin resident Safe sex transcends all? Public sex education can be viewed as sexual capitalism, which views individuals purely as consum ers of potentially “ safe" sexual goods. Its negative subliminal mes­ sage is: Look upon yourself as a sexual com­ modity to be bought and sold for the high­ est possible safe price. Do not allow questions of ultimate value or in fin ite y earn in g s of o n e 's " s o u l " to interfere with sexual transactions. After all, man is just a bundle of physiologic drives that is neither capable nor worthy of giving or receiving lifelong faithfulness. Ignore w isd om or freed o m . Especially worship statistics. And statistics show the majority of teen-agers are sexually active, most marriages don't last, all "rela­ tionships" fail and no one is perfect. lo ve. W o rsh ip So why try? Give up. Fit in. Do not take doubts or subjective uncertainties about the wisdom of multipartner sexuality seriously. Suffering unfulfilled sexual desire or sacri­ ficing for lifelong faithfulness is a bummer, a hypocrisy designed by frigid puritans to enslave the inteiiecruaiiy unenlightened, the (still) few remaining sexually unemancipat- ed and the religiously atavistic. But above all, be sincere, honest, open, caring and safe in all your sexual partner­ ships. Bert Meisenbach, M.Ü, Staff physician, U.T. Student Health Center Prudes return to The Texan I did n ot rea liz e how m uch I m issed Matthew Connally until I heard about the AISD proposal of comprehensive sex edu­ cation from kin dergarten until the 12th grade. I alw ays enjoyed the spectacle of Matt working himself up in a lather when­ ever som eone suggested that m aybe the existence of hum an sexu ality should be acknowledged and that shouting “Now you kids cut that o u t!" is perhaps not the best AIDS prevention policy. I knew that if Matt had been editor, he would have written an editorial about the AISD plan the minute he found out about it. This editorial would have taken the tone of WTHMETOfMWMJOO- Abstinence-only messages have consistent­ ly been shown to be ineffective in prevent­ ing adolescent pregnancy in scientific stud­ ies that have evaluated these program s since the passage of the American Family Life Act in 1981 which mandated that fed­ eral funds be spent only on abstinence edu­ cation. In addition, abstinence-only educa­ tion is judgmental and some of the curricu­ la I have seen are sexist and racist as well. Abstinence-only education is based on reli­ gious theology that is not acceptable in the public schools of a pluralistic and democra­ tic society. The role of the public schools is to teach facts, not "m orality" and religion. That is the job of parents and churches. Young people need factual information that allows them to make informed deci­ sions in concert with their own values. The discom fort with issues of sexuality by a vocal m inority in the com munity should not be allowed to force the AISD school board into abdicating its responsibility to protect the health of children in the district. Dr. Spear is chairm an o f the UT-Austin Committee on H IV Disease. Tv>,/x'x;y:w r~rn— ”77— ■ Jl 1 r_; W 7T 7 : ' < ^ .............. "T h is plan is terrible. W hat's wrong with abstin en ce? W h at's w rong w ith w aiting u ntil m arriage? N ot a dam n thing! And how come the Student Health Center is sell­ ing condom s when they encou rage sex? And how come Magic Johnson never talks about abstinence? Huh?" T h e e d ito ria l on the A ISD plan (“ Proposed sex education courses fail to so lv e p r o b le m s ," The D aily T exan, Thursday) with its thesis that students do not learn contraceptive use from the cur­ riculum but do manage to pick up a hidden sublim inal message to have sex, gave me hope. W hile the editorial was three days late and not as reactionary as Matt's work, its c en tra l m essa g e of im p o sin g o n e 's morality on others, and ignoring problems rather than using solutions which conflict with that morality, shows great promise. I look forward to a year of prudery with the Texan editorial staff. Daniel Frank Plan II/Computer science UNIVERSITY -Wednesday. June 17, 1.992 PageS Jobs available to flexible grads Gigi Causey Daily Texan Staff D espite a tigh ten in g in the job m arket, college graduates should take note of their assets before they begin to panic, a UT Career Center official said Tuesday. Director Lynne Milbum pointed out that graduates' chances of being hired w ere based m ore on their in d iv id u al p erso n alities and the amount of experience they had than on generalized job m arket trends portrayed by the media. D onn a K och of the Texas Employment Commission said the current recession has hit ev ery­ body across the board." A great number of college gradu­ ates are out of work and unable to find jobs because of the bad econo­ my, said K och , TEC p lacem en t supervisor of the Fort W orth/M id- Cities local office. But officials at UT career assis­ tance centers agreed there are jobs to be found if students - especially those from the U niversity - were more willing to make compromises either in their choice of location or the level of their entry position. in the Gay Lansdon, director of place­ m ent of Communication, said although the Austin job market was "very tight," there was a n o ticeab le im prove- C o lle g e “[The recession has] hit everybody across the board.” — Donna Koch, TEC official ment overall in the job market. "If students would go out where the jobs are, then there are a lot of jobs out there," she added. P ete M an n , d ire c to r of the E n g in e e rin g C a reer A ssista n ce Center, said the college had a high job accommodation rate this year. "Granted, a lot of students would like to stay in Austin. Certainly not everybody can," Mann said. "M any students end up taking jobs else­ where with hopes of coming back to Austin." M ilbum said UT graduates may not be as subject to job market woes because of the University's standing among other U.S. colleges. "Big business is choosing a hand­ ful of u n iv e rsitie s to go to [for recruiting] and UT is certainly one of them. That's certainly an advan­ tage," she said. But M ilburn also said students often believe the "world of work" is only big business. Students have access to opportunities in smaller firms as well as non-profit organi­ zations, providing they take advan­ tage of resources, she added. Campus tour Eric Baldauf/Daily T exan Staff Building on Tuesday morning. In hopes of encouraging interest in the field long workshop. Official calls state university tuition waivers illegal ___________ — ---------------------- —— #/ t>__i - : Christy Fieming Daily Texan Staff Tuition waivers may be granted in other states but they are illegal for Texas public universities, a UT official said Tuesday. W illiam Livingston, vice president and dean of graduate studies, said state law pro­ hibits the waiving of tuition payments for any student at the University. "G r a d u a te s aw ard ed fe llo w sh ip s or sc h o la rsh ip s $200 or m ore m u st pay tuition," Livingston said. "Sometim es it is p aid by the d e p a rtm e n t or ou t of the research grant or the fellowship. Some fel­ low ships have a stipend plus m oney for tuition and fees." The labels given to such payment situa­ tions are "confusing," he said. "It is easy to call these tuition waivers. It's a matter of labels. Reducing tuition for out-of-state TAs to resident tuition is not a waiver," Livingston said. Private institutions may offer true tuition waivers, Livingston said. Scott Swearingen, president of the Liberal A rts G rad u ate C ou n cil, said the college should grant fee waivers in response to the recent graduate tuition increase. "Every TA in the College of Liberal Arts should be given a fee waiver in the amount of the recent tuition increase," Swearingen said. "It wouldn't hurt the college because the c o lle g e d o e s n 't get th e fe e s , the U n iv e rsity d o es. S in ce th e U n iv e rsity ram m ed this down the college s throats, they don't deserve our money." “Reducing tuition for out-of- state TAs to resident tuition is not a waiver ” —William Livingston, vice president and dean o f graduate studies Leopoldo Rodriguez, a graduate student in econom ics, questioned the adm inistra­ tion's priorities. "T h e priorities in the Tower are geared toward research for business and industry, he said. " I don't think it was the intent of the Legislature to benefit these regions at the expense of education." "A w a rd in g w aivers is not rev o lu tio n ­ "Ti.',. in ary," Rodriguez said. "It's already in place in other universities." Aiko Nakatani, director of admissions at the U n iv ersity of M ich ig an , said fee or tuition waivers depend on the appointment of the teaching or research assistant. "Tuition is often paid by the department or by research con tracts," N akatani said. "Som e departments may pay the fees. Some colleges charge more for tuition than oth­ ers." The average annual graduate tuition costs at the University of Michigan are $3,300 for resident graduate students and $6,800 for -non-resident graduate students, she said. A resident graduate student taking nine hours at the U niversity will pay $468 per semester, excluding fees, when the graduate tuition increase takes effect in 1993. Non­ resident graduate students will pay $1,422 rpsiHpnt g rad u ate stu d e n ts w ill p ay $ per semester, minus fees. Juanita Hunt, financial counselor at the University of Florida, said eligible graduate students who teach and take eight hours of classes per semester can receive a fee waiver through their department. Resident gradu­ ate students pay $693.84 per semester and n o n -re sid e n t g ra d u a te stu d e n ts pay $2,313.12 per semester. With tuition waivers, called matriculation waivers, residents pay $150 per semester, Hunt said. A non-resident waiver allows TAs from out of state to pay $1,734.78. Mike Miller, a counselor in the Ohio State University graduate admissions office, said TA s and resid en t a ssista n ts receiv e fee w aivers through their academ ic d ep art­ ments. UT offers hepatitis vaccinations TL IMy w r Johanna Franke Daily Texan Staff As part of a drug study at the Student Health Center, students can receive free hepatitis B vaccinations begin­ ning Wednesday. "It's not surprising that the Student Health Center is holding this vaccination, because the groups at risk are people who are sexually active," said Lynne Sehulster, staff epidemiologist at the Texas Department of Health. The vaccine is given in a three-dose series and is well tolerated by most people, she said. "It's one of the best vaccines we have on the market today," Sehulster said. T h o se e lig ib le for th e stu dy m ust be c u rre n tly enrolled as UT students, plan to live in Austin for the next six months and have no history of hepatitis B infec­ tion or vaccination. They should neither be pregnant nor need the vaccine as a requirem ent for a field of study or as a result of hepatitis B exposure. Hepatitis B is a serious liver infection that is spread — like the HIV virus that causes AIDS — through con­ tact w ith infected blood and sem en, said Dr. Scott Spear, physician and coordinator for clinical research at the health center. The disease also can be passed by con­ tact with contaminated saliva, so activities such as kiss­ ing or sharing toothbrushes can spread the disease, he said. Sexual activity accounts for 30 to 40 percent of all hepatitis B cases reported in the United States each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Officials at the health center recommend the vaccine for students "a t risk," which the CDC defines as having two or more sex partners within six months. M ost of the rep orted ca ses of h e p a titis B at the University were sexually transmitted, Spear said. College students who travel to countries where the disease is prevalent or who experiment with drugs also are at risk, said Mike Keenan, adult immunization coor­ dinator at the state Health Department. "M ost of the cases that are reported occur in young adults," he said. Initial symptoms of the disease are similar to those of flu, and include fever, fatigue, joint or muscle pain, loss of appetite, nausea and vom iting, Spear said. Those with hepatitis B may also get jaundice — yellowing of the skin and eyes — which is a sign of liver inflamma- tion. There is no cure for hepatitis B, w hich can cause weeks of illness, hospitalization or perhaps death, Spear said. "Once you're infected, there's not very much you can do." About 10 percent of the people who have hepatitis b are chronic carriers and will be infectious for the rest of their lives, Spear said. These people also have a higher risk of getting primary liver cancer and cirrhosis of the liver, he said. "Hepatitis B is second only to tobacco in causing can­ cer," Keenan said. "Because symptoms may not be recognized in one- third of the people infected with HB, it is possible to be infected and to become a carrier and to transmit the dis­ ease without even knowing it, Spear said. The vaccine, which usually costs $138, will be avail­ able for eligible students until the supply is exhausted. Ex-Stu dents’ Association names Distinguished Alumni honorees The UT Ex-Students' Association announced names of six Distinguished Alumni Tuesday. to The honorees include John Chase, one of the first A fric a n -A m e ric a n stu d e n ts a d m itted the University; Broadway director Tommy Tune; former D allas M ayor A nnette Strau ss; form er C ollege of E n g in e e rin g D ean E a rn e st G lo y n a ; Dow Jo n e s International Group vice president and Pulitzer Prize winner Karen Elliott House; and Thomas Law, former president of the Fort W orth law firm Law, Snakard and Gambill. Chase was the first black student to enroll in the UT School of Architecture. He was also the first African- A m erican to be accepted into the Texas Society of A rchitects and was appointed by President Jim m y Carter in 1980 to the Commission of Fine Arts. Tune graduated from the University with a bachelor of fine arts degree in 1961. Since then, he has acted in, choreographed and directed several Broadway musi­ cals and has won nine Tony awards. He is the only performer to have received a Tony in four categories. Strauss was mayor of Dallas from 1987 to 1991 and is a c o -c h a ir o f the P re s id e n t's C o m m issio n on America's Urban Families. Gloyna graduated with a civil engineering degree from the U n iversity in 1949 and was dean of the College of Engineering from 1970-1987. He currently holds an endowed professorship at the University. University in 1970 and won a Pulitzer Prize for inter national reporting in 1984 after covering the Middle East for The Wall Street Journal. She became vice presi­ dent of the Dow Jones International Group in 1989. Law earned a bachelor's degree from the University in 1939 and graduated from the UT School of Law in 1942. He has practiced law in Fort Worth since 1946 and was president of the State Junior Bar of Texas. U T film students produce can cer video UT film students are producing a film for the American Cancer Society to educate cancer patients and their families on common myths and misconcep­ tions of radiation treatment. "W e wanted this to be a human experience," Robert Foshko, senior lecturer in radio-television-film and director of the project, said Tuesday. "W e wanted to give a survey view through the treatment, not a scien­ tific or mechanical one." The students are producing the 30-minute film to d isp el m yth s ab ou t ra d ia tio n and to en co u rag e patients to ask questions about the treatment. "W e want people to not be afraid to ask questions and to report their own history to doctors," Foshko said. Foshko explained one of the common misconcep­ tions about radiation treatment is whether it bums the skin. " I t does not burn tissue," he said. "Radiation alters genetic codes in tissues; that is why sunburns are often dangerous. Normal tissues repair that dam­ age." Compiled by Kevin Williamson and Christy Fleming, H ou se receiv ed a jo u rn a lism d egree from the Daily Texan Staff TOEFL If you need a high score on the TOEFL Kaplan can help! • Flexible hours for independent study • Weekly tutoring session with an experienced teacher • Over 300 hours of study material 472-EXAM £ STANLEY H. KAPLAN JL Tab*» kfardan O r Take YoUf Chances SON HING Chinese Restaurant BEER • W INE • SAK E Lunch Specials at $3.25 Combination Dinners at $5.25 2801 Guadalupe, suite A 478-6504 Lunch • MF 11:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Dinner • Sun-Thur 2:30 p.m.-10 p.m. Frl-Sat 2:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m. Walking Distance from UT • FREE Parking Call in & Carry out available ÍPIZZA7 472-FAST Buy Any Pizza, Receive A 12” Cheese Pizza for $2. i I OFFER MAY EXPIRE WITHOUT NOTICE VALID WITH ALL OTHe h OFFERS. \ Tennis a elbow anyone P h a r m a c o would like to help you with yours, ilealihy vol­ unteers, ages 18 and older with tennis elbow are needed to participate in this research study evaluating a topical medication for the relief of pain associated with tennis elbow. Qualified participants will receive $150 com pensation upon completion of the study. This study requires four clinic visits over a nine-day period at no charge to the participant. Fo r more ia fo rm a tio a , please call: 478-4004 P H A R M A C O T m D aiia T f.x W Page 6 Wednesday. June17. 1992 STATE & LOCAL Prison official reviews tents for county use Ted S. W arren Daily Texan Staff T rav is C ounty m oved clo ser to becoming the only Texas county to hou se p rison inm ates in m ilitary surplus tents, as the deputy director Ja il S ta n d a rd s o f Commission examined three sample tents at the Del Valle Correctional Complex Monday. the T e x a s W ayne Gondeck said his visit to Del Valle M onday was part of "a n early review stage." State standards au th orizin g the use o f tents w ould m ost likely be ap p ro v ed in m id -Ju ly , G o n d e ck said. The cou n ty w ould also have to a u th o rize fin al co n stru ctio n and funding, which is estimated at $1.2 m illio n fo r m o d ific a tio n s to the tents and four temporary buildings. Perm anent facilities for 300 would cost over $7 million and take two to three years to construct. S h e riff's D epartm ent C pt. G reg M artinez said about 25 tents have been obtained free of charge from surplus supplies at Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio. Inmates set up three tents last week to allow state and county personnel to evaluate u sin g the te n ts fo r tem p o ra ry inmate housing. The three self-su p p o rtin g tents are olive green and have zippered d o o rs and scre en w in d o w s The ten ts are set up side by sid e in a fenced field at Del Valle and have their internal walls removed to form a 16-by-48-foot living space. Travis County and Department of Corrections officials are looking for a quick and inexpensive way to alle­ v ia te o v ercro w d in g cau sed by a large percentage o f state inm ates serving time in county facilities. " W e n eed th o se 300 b e d s , we n eed them n o w ," said T ra v is County Chief Deputy of Corrections Dan R ich ard s b efo re the C ou n ty Commissioners Court Tuesday. T ra v is C o u n ty S h e r iff D oyne Bailey told the com m issioners the n e a rly 300 b ed s w e re n eed ed to house inmates currently sleeping in day rooms and hallways. Under current recommendations, th e ten ts w ou ld h o u se up to 96 inm ates from the boot-cam p-style C o n v ic te d O ffe n d e rs R e-E n try Efforts program. One hundred nine­ ty-two others would be housed in m ore c o n v e n tio n a l tem p o ra ry buildings. "W e're going to be inventing the tent facility w heel," county facilities engineer Vic W inter told the com ­ missioners. David Nunnelee, a spokesman for the Texas Departm ent of Criminal Ju s tic e , said the sta te hou sed as many as 3,800 inmates in tents from 1981 to 1984 But a court order pro­ hibited the use of tents after 1985. The prison reform ruling and prohi­ bition of tent use remains in effect today. " T h e court told us we cou ld n 't use [tents] any longer. ... [They] said it was inhum ane and u ncon stitu ­ tional," Nunnelee said. After the tents were phased out, the state sold them to the Florida state prison system. W inter said the state's previous e x p e rie n c e w ith te n ts w as " n o t good." "T h e inmates damaged them and in o n e c a se , s e t a ten t on f ir e ," State policy Richards hears proposals for Lesley R a m se y Dally Texan Staff After seven months of brainstorm ing, the State of Texas Energy Policy Partnership Tuesday marked the halfway point toward developing recom mendations for a statewide energy policy. Gov. Ann Richards praised the group's progress at the Tuesday meeting, and said it establishes a prece­ dent for the rest of the nation "It's important to Texas, and if. you can think of the bigger picture, it is important to the n ation /' Richards said. "W hen you look at the work you are doing here, you are really fashioning a course of what the nation should be doing in die future." Railroad Commission Chairwoman Lena Guerrero, who organized STEPP, was also praised by Richards for pushing toward what the governor called a contro­ versial goal. Guerrero, organized STEPP last January to develop com prehensive recom m endations for a state energy policy for the governor to take to the Legislature when it convenes next y ear., ; The group is made up of people from various ener­ gy industries, consum er and environmental groups, and researchers and regulators. At Tuesday's m eeting, the STEPP subcommittees gave updates on their progress, and when available, presented preliminary recommendations. The O il Subcommittee announced that it may pro­ pose a "green tariff" to the U S . Congress, JWml. r r 'i ^ 4 conservation, ‘green tariff "W e'v e found a number of areas where federal laws a r e n o t id e a l in a lo t o f c a s e s ," said K a th le e n Magruder, co-chair of the subcommittee. . M a g ru d e r e x p la in ed that e n v iro n m e n ta l law s imposed on U.S. oil companies make their products ^ m i y p n n | « p » — A "green tariff" would be imposed on oil coming here from countries witiaout environm ental restric m tions, Magruder said. Magruder said her subcommittee would probably recommend that the money from the tariff be applied to education and deficit reduction, or be distributed to low -incom e households or consum ers all over the country, -> W r m ft/ . M ich ael O sb o rn e, c h a irm a n o f th e R en ew ab le Energy Subcom m ittee, urged STEPP participants to honor the treaties signed at the recent Earth Summit. "W e believe in the world of tom orrow ," Osborne said, "T h e global economy will punish the inefficient ... We must embrace renew ables." Lynn Whitten, a spokesw om an for G uerrero, said ST E P P 's m issio n 'One of the points is that this is not a project to pit one fuel against an oth er," W hitten said. "W e are a state rich in resources and Texas can benefit from all of them ." . STEPP's mission is to design an energy policy for Texas that encourages a diverse, reliable and sufficient supply o f energy for the state that is environmentally and economically balanced. Wlm {* : . EXAM + CONTACTS Starting at $99* Complete •price includes exam, 1 pair clear daily- wear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1 st follow up. EXPIRES MY 31,1992. 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 MF 477-2282 SAT 10-6 M/C VISA AMX DISC 10-2 T e x a n Ad D e a d lin e s O ay o f S p o c o R o»orv«tlo »» ond T a x a n P u b lic a tio n : C o p * M u st •" R ET A IL ARO C L A S S IF IE D D ISP LA Y Monday Texan.................Wednesday, 4 p.m. Tuesday Texan .................Thursday, 4 p.m. W ednesday Texan.................. 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No other discounts apply SUNGLASS VALUES Vsunglasses WITH THIS AD ONLY E llh a r tria R a y B a n ® n o n ^ a a c r ip t t o n Wayfarer or large Metal® aviator style 4 youra lor only $44.00. Styles available: 10206. L2823. L200S, 12062 ml ad. Opt/ca/ • VISION CARE PLANS • O V ERN IG H T S E R V IC E B a rto n U reaK s q u a r e o c t -c.oc.¿> - i i«y«».«..v, .*.«» — • . r»n*7 nrno _ fci-iil 451 “031 9 Northcross Mall 451-2200 Eye exams available from Independent Doctors ol optometry located next door. Inm ates at the Del Valle Correctional Complex filed past a tent Tuesday Winter said. The choice of CORE inmates for the T ra v is C o u n ty te n ts is good because they are m ore disiplined than the regular prison population and less likely to cause damage, he said. B a ile y said th e co u n ty p riso n p op u lation w as only expected to increase this sum m er as vacations and training "slo w down the sys­ tem " and arrests increase. W inter said the tent and tem po­ rary b u ild in g fa c ilitie s cou ld be ready for inm ates in tw o to three m onths if the com m issioners give their approval for funding and con­ struction. This could take place as early as n ext T u e s d a y 's c o m m is sio n e rs' meeting. Eric Baldauf/Daily Texan Staff under study by state prison officials. c 'apitol police officers questioned over photos in free speech lawsuit Craig Enos Daily Texan Staff T w o C a p ito l p o lic e o ffic e rs accu sed of v io la tin g a h o m eless advocate's constitutional rights dur­ ing a protest spent Tuesday, the sec­ ond day of their trial, answ ering questions on the witness stand. 4 The p lain tiff, N ancy Tim brook, was arrested in December 1989 after her o rg a n iz a tio n , the U rb a n Homesteading Group, built a 7-foot w o o d en d is p la y on the C a p ito l grounds bearing the message "Still no room at the inn." Protesting at the Capitol is legal and requires no permit. But accord­ ing to state law, erecting a building or structure on the Capitol grounds without authorization is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine. Timbrook was tried on the charge in June 1990 and acquitted by Travis County Court-at-Law Judge Steve R u sse ll b ecau se of a lack o f ev i­ dence. Russell is now presiding at a civil trial brought on by Timbrook's law­ su it a g a in st the C a p ito l p o lic e . T im b ro o k 's law su it alleg es false arrest, m alicious prosecution and violation of her constitutional rights of freedom of speech and freedom of assem bly. Tim brook is seeking $50,000 in damages. T im b ro o k 's Jim Harrington of the Texas Civil Rights P ro je c t, sp en t m uch of T u esd ay q u estion in g the d efen d an ts, Sgt. G ov E ld e r and S g t. M ich a e l M cD onald, about m issing photos taken by the police at the time of the arrest. a tto rn e y , Harrington said the missing pho­ tos would prove the wood prop did not m eet the legal definition of a structure. He criticized police for not p ro d u cin g the p hotos, along w ith th e stru c tu re its e lf, w h ich Elder said was apparently thrown out of a w arehou se used to hold police evidence. E ld e r said p o lice a rreste d T im b ro o k re lu c ta n tly , and on ly b e c a u se she refu sed to te ll her group to dismantle the prop. " W e had no p roblem w ith the rally," Elder said. "It's the structure we had a problem with." Elder characterized the protesters as "p eacefu l" and called Timbrook The plaintiff, Nancy Timbrook, was arrested in December 1989 after her organization . . . built a 7-foot wooden display on the Capitol grounds with the message “Still no room at the inn.” " a v ery nice la d y ," p ro m p tin g Harrington to ask Elder, "C ouldn't you h ave rem oved the stru ctu re without arresting Ms. Timbrook?" " I d id n 't fe e l th at w ay at the time," Elder replied, and added that the protesters might have resisted or rebuilt the prop. A ssista n t D is tr ic t A tto rn ey Dennis Garza, representing the offi­ cers, said the arrest was warranted. Garza said the protesters refused to comply with police. The officers, he said, had no choice but to make a "judgment call" to enforce the law. G arza said because the officers first co n su lted w ith the attorn ey g en era l's o ffice to d eterm in e if a statute had been broken, they acted without malice. HEPATITIS B: Thr V a c c in e PR EVEN TAblE STD Free H ep atitis B (H B) V accin e now available $138 value free for a limited time through a drug study being conducted at the Student Health Center. To be eligible for the study you must: • Be a currently enrolled UT student. • Be living in Austin for the next six months. • Not be pregnant. • Not need the vaccine as a requirement for a field of study or as a result of HB exposure. • Have no history of HB infection or vaccination. H epatitis B is an in creasingly com m on sexually transm itted disease. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) warns that having two or more sex partners within six months increases the risk of contracting HB. The CDC estimates that sexual activity accounts for 30 to 40% of all cases of acute HB in the U.S. H epatitis B: T he disease HB is a serious liver infection that can cause weeks of illness and may leave an individual infectious for life HB is a virus spread by contact with infected blood and semen like HIV, but unlike HIV, HB may be spread by contact with other body fluids such as saliva. Sharing contaminated razors and toothbrushes can spread HB. In addition to people with multiple sex partners and individuals who share needles other risk groups for HB include: health care workers and paramedics coming in contact with infected blood and body fluids; patients receiving blood products or dialysis; and ethnic groups, such as Indochinese, Koreans, Eskimos, and Haitians with a high incidence of the disease in their native countries. Incidence of H epatitis B The CDC estimates that there are 300,000 new cases of HB infection in the U.S. each year. H epatitis B sym ptom s Initial symptoms of HB may be mistaken for the flu": fever, fatigue, joint or muscle pain, loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting. One-fourth of those infected develop jaundice (yellowing of the skin and eyes) as a sign of liver inflammation. Serious cases require may keep hospitalization, or even cause death. a person bedrid d en , T h e carrier c o m p lic a tio n Approximately 10% of the people infected with HB will become chronic carriers - infectious to others for the rest of their lives. The CDC estimates that there are one million HB earners in the U.S. with 30,000 new cases being added each year. HB carriers are at a much higher risk of pnmary liver cancer as well as cirrhosis of the liver. Because symptoms may not be recognized in 1 /3 of the people infected with HB, it is possible to be infected and to become a carrier and to transmit the disease without even knowing it. What can you do? There is no cure for HB. However, a safe and highly effective vaccine that protects against HB infection is available. If you are interested in HB vaccination, call the Student Health Center at 471-2166. S tu c íe n t H eaI t H C en te r THe UNivERsiry o l Texa s a t A u s t ín A ~ ! \ O l A A ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Tm I) MiT T fX w Monday. June 17. 1992 Page 7. ‘Brightness’ fades as Mclnerney ages Jeff Rhoads Daily Texan Staff Don't trust anyone over 30. Jay Mclnerney was in h is la te 2 0 s w hen the w o rld read h is B rig h t Lights, Big City, a chroni­ cle of a y o u n g m a n 's w eek and LITERATURE d e b a u ch e ry as d o w n ­ tow n clu b-h op p er and fun o f as fact-checker for the New Yorker. E ig h t y e a rs and th ree b o o k s la te r, M clnerney has created Brightness Falls, in w hich the baby-boom er generation finds itself at Party's End, 1987, when you have traversed the point of adulthood and it is time to Settle Down and Raise Children. Russell Calloway finds himself stalled in h is jo b as an e d ito r at the p re stig e o u s C o rb in , D ern p u b lish in g firm . H arold Stone, R u ssell's boss and form er m entor, takes books Russell has nursed through pre­ - m m • . i 1 publication and slashes the number to be printed and sold. W hile the econ om y is booming, Russell feels he is falling behind. Russell's wife Corrine hates her job as a stockbroker. She worries about the stability of the stock market and of Russell's fidelity. She wants to have a child, but Russell does not feel emotionally or financially ready for a baby. W hen R u sse ll d isco v e rs th a t a m ajo r shareholder in Corbin, Dern wants to sell her stocks, he makes his gamble. With the help of investm ent banker Trina Cox and co rp o ra te ra id er ern ie M elm an , R u ssell launches a desperate buy-out attempt of his own publishing firm. H e's not wealthy, but by borrowing millions, he can buy the com­ pany and then sell off bits and pieces to pay o ff the loans. W hile Russell and Corrine worry about the takeover scheme, their best friend Jeff Pierce succumbs to heroin addic­ tion. Afraid of the success generated by his first novel, Jeff withdraws from friends. M clnerney sets Jeff's recovery from his heroin habit against the collapse of Russell's takeover attempt. Ambition, drugs, sex and Y A 7 — 11 P i L i i ,~ l U / t Wall Street. It's the story of the '80s. C i-U a f Q (\e~ r In his most ambitious novel, Mclnerney savages all of New York high society, much as Tom W olfe did in T he B on fire o f the Vanities. M clnerney can reveal w orlds of meaning about greed or decadence through the most simple flourish or gesture. In one scene, Jeff sits through an agoniz­ ingly useless session of group therapy while drying out in a Connecticut clinic: W hile they a ll fir e d up their c ig a rette s, Beverly, the MSW, was asking the new guy to introduce him self His name, he said, was Brad B alfour... "I'm a venture capitalist from New York City, capital o f the world." ... He exhaled a cloud of sm oke that would have done a blast fu rn ace proud, looked out the window and sighed archly. ... For all his insouciance though, his hands trem bled and his eyes w ere ringed with the unflattering mascara o f sleep deprivation. " I'm a drug addict." ... She nodded and let him off with this admission. Mclnerney is at his best when he portrays how people act when they are unashamedly embroiled in sin. But any novel about the BRIGHTNESS FALLS Author: J a y Mclnerney Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf Price: $23_____________________________ _ Decade of Greed must show how people must pay for the fun they have. It's a liter­ ary formula not even a writer as gifted as Mclnerney can avoid. In the last chapters of the book, Russell regrets his greed, he and C orrin e rep air their broken marriage and Jeff runs around and apologizes to all the friends he's hurt. It's only at this point that his characters act less like real people and more like robots programmed by their creator. N ow that he h as reached m id d le age, Mclnerney seems to feel the need to lecture the rea d er on h ow we sh ou ld h elp th e hom eless and ap p reciativ e friends m ore while they are alive. If you're under 30, read this book, but beware. W riters since Saint Augustine have sown their own wild oats in youth, only to piously condemn the same sins for the edification of younger genera­ Morrison enlivens book: Characters ring true, clear Don’t wait to ‘Exhale’ Manhunting women make dubious role models * 'M 1 •1 > :W e ' Y ' m tions. In M clnemey's case, it is the only flaw in an excellent book. The D aily Texan thanks the University Co- Op for lending Brightness F a lls and Jazz. Sarah Thurmond Daily Texan Staff I n the 1970s, T oni M orriso n q u ick ly b e ­ cam e o n e of America's most c r i t i c a l l y acclaim ed and v a lu a b le con - t e m p o r a r y A f r i c a n - A m erican w riters w ith h er first book, The Bluest Eye. She continued this route into the '80s with works such as Sula, Song o f Solomon, Tar Baby and the Pulitzer Prize-w in­ ning novel Beloved, bringing to life accounts of the hardships, as well as joy and beauty, in everyday life. At times, M orrison's characters seem bizarre, but they are always h u m an , in tric a te fille d w ith thoughts and emotions. People of all backgrounds relate to her char­ acters. And M orrison's haunting, so m e tim e s h o rrific p lo ts h ave become her finest trait, the one that separates her from other African- American woman writers. Sim ilar to M orrison's previous s to rie s , Ja z z , h er sixth n o v el, revolves around a simple plot with com plicated characters fillin g in the gap s. H ere, w e learn abou t Violet (or "Violent" as she is called by th e n e ig h b o rs on L en ox Avenue), a hairdresser with a fasci­ nation with birds, and Violet's hus­ band Joe Trace, a friendly, w ell- liked and respected salesm an for C leop atra beau ty prod ucts. The fifty is h co u p le m arried you n g, moved to the "C ity" after years of hard labor, but have no children. Joe, feeling sexual urges but no verbal or physical response from V iolet, has a short affair with an 18-y ear-o ld o p p o rtu n ist nam ed Dorcas. The young woman, who's a lre a d y se e k in g a rich e r m an, breaks it o ff w ith Joe. In a fit of rag e, he sh o o ts and k ills h er. Violet, who is already a little crazy, finds out about the affair and goes to D o rc a s' fu n e ra l, w h ere she attempts unsuccessfully to slash up the dead woman's youthful face. sim p le The tragic love trian g le is the basis for Jazz - a basis that may be too th is b o o k . for Morrison's gift for laying down the foundation of her stories early and leaving question s to be filled in later remains. But, unlike her pre­ vious works, the suspense doesn't build. You d on 't feel spellbound, the or h u n t d e sp e ra te ly answers. for Jazz does contain rich characters - another of M o rriso n 's talen ts. Through an om niscient narrator, M orrison explains w hy a wom an like V iolet "h a s stum bled into a crack or two," and why Joe, an oth­ erw ise faith fu l and d ep en d ab le man, felt the need to find a lover in Dorcas. M orrison, however, does allow V io let, Joe and D orcas to reveal their inner thoughts - which seem rational enough until their actions betray selfish motivations. But one flaw arises: At tim es, there are too many long-w inded details. Descriptions of the "city" and the characters' pasts are nice and necessary, but Morrison, who u su ally w rite s m ore su ccin ctly , often overdoes it in Jazz. Passages that seem to go on forever som e­ how obscure the point of the pas­ sage along the way. However, M orrison beautifully tran sp o rts the read er into m id- 1920s America and the days after the Armistice. Jazz music seems to linger in the air throughout this novel - it helps describe the atmos­ phere of the times and the mood of the characters. To the old er ch aracters in the book, this music is almost as evil as the devil him self: "T h ey did not know for sure, but they suspected that the dances were beyond nasty b e ca u se th e m u sic w as g ettin g w orse and w orse. ... Songs that BOTH A N N I V E R S A R Y A?URN£RlNtl«I*INMÍNT CO WCiiNlMIOIt C 17 20 2 40 5 1 0 7-4QJL5Q------------------------------------------ DELICATESSEN (R) 12:40 2:50 5 2QBQQ 1QJL RAISE THE RED LANTERN (um i? m i? 30 5 00 73010:00__________ DOLBY STEREO _QQLfilSJIREQ Meredith Boyd Daily Texan Staff T e rry McMillan gives the heroines of her new book W aiting to Exhale in telligence, beauty and an inner stren gth that is reflected in their rich, complex lives. Even though her female charac­ ters suffer from acute tunnel vision, you'll like them. They're interesting LITERATURE and real A w om an nam ed Sav an n ah "geeks up" for a New Year's Eve party, and prays that the fire truck salesman she's been set up with is not Mr. Right because she's leaving Denver for a new job in Phoenix. Meanwhile, in Arizona, her best friend Bemadine has lost the chance to kick her husband out; he left her for his 24-year-old bookkeeper. After dumping a money vam pire nam ed R u ssell, R obin becom es desperate enough to date a geek with a 3-inch penis and size 38B chest flab. And Gloria wraps herself up in raising her son, running her salon, and avoiding size 20 dresses, but somehow she makes time to beg for sympathy sex from her kid's father. When Savannah asks’"W hat is it that we all have in common?" Gloria's answer — "W e re black and female - applies, but it's hardly thorough. Savannah wants another answer, one that defines the book's title: all four are holding their breath for a man. Robin works her way into the most hilarious situations with Michael, The Man With Breasts. Savannah's blind date turns into the Wolfman. Bemadine s post-divorce fling with a married man turns into a fiasco when he won't stop calling. McMillan gives her characters character. Gloria bears a son out of wedlock and raises him drug-free, crime- free and fortified with smarts, enthusiasm and a sense of responsibility. While Robin seems a little ditsy and shallow, she helps her mother care for her mentally ill father. They all play im p o rtan t roles in A riz o n a's African-American community. We cou ld p raise these w om en up and dow n the block, except for the one flaw that mars their individual characters: addiction to men. Savannah answers her question about their common denominator - "None of us have a m an" - but she misses their real problem: they want men too much. Their talk begins to sound like a mantra. You may hope that McMillan's characters will learn to realize the beauty in their lives w ithout men, but don't you hold your breath. McMillan skirts the edge of a commentary like this, but to accomplish it, she'd have to resolve the novel without Prince Charming. It doesn't happen. Men figu- Savannah wants another answer, one that defines the book’s title: all four are holding their breath for a man. ratively and literally come to the rescue. Now let me drop the feminist rhetoric. It just plain gets boring when a tome, a three- or four- h undred p ager, in clu d es m ore co n v ersa tio n s and thoughts about men than anything else. The lives of Gloria, Savannah, Bernadine and Robin become side stories; the quest for a man is the plot. G enerally, McMillan waxes on details and wanes on interest. Do we have to know the title of every song these women Listen to? She has written a decent book, howe\ - er. If you're looking for a man, or just found one, you might enjoy it. If for some reason searching for a man just doesn't interest you, don't bother. The D aily Texan thanks the U niversity Co-op for lending W aiting to E xhale to our writer. WAITING TO EXHALE Author: Terry McMillan Publisher: Viking Price: $22 ____________ _ Cash & Carry 2 DOZEN ROSES $ 1 8 .9 5 Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 Doily Specials FTD • 4501 Quedatup* • On UT ShuWt» Rt Need Money for College? WE W IL L GET YOU SOME! Guaranteed Scholarship Program American Academic Resources 4 5 8 - 2 4 1 4 DOZEN ROSES $ 8 .9 5 Cash & Carry Fiesta M owers 3830 N. L am ar 453 7619 Become a m em ber of our winning team! I ^ *S9km U ■r ®s 1 C A N T IN A Now taking applications for full or part-time positions. No experience necessary. We'll train you and work with your school schedule. ______ Apply in person:__________ Tuesdav-Saturdav. 9:00-5:0Qpm 6601 I-35 North, 459-9214 FEMALES Do you have Menstrual C ran es? Clinical research study for eligible candidates: 320-0330 i É b io m e d ic a l R E S E A R C H G R O U P ' i t • 1 8 4 5 y ears of age • No cu rre n t use of birth control pills, I.U .D .s, or contraceptive implants • Mild to m oderate m enstrual pain FIN AN CIA L IN CEN TIV E PRO VID ED Call between 9:00 a.m.4:00 p.m. 3200330 r I “ L a B e l l e 1 N o i s c u s c " A Uoi by |jtqnci dm» I ends Thuf 2:15 - 7 30 1 i c t i m e t ) I n I M i t s H 1 r c s i r v A L 1200 1 m m s t e r i I N T A B O X 12:30-4 45-720 -9 30-11 30 1 1 1 I I 21M & 'ju a o a M M « T M W 4 J| 1 Tonlgt j Hoggi Tonight a! 8:45 p.m. I Auditorium (R) ‘O U T R A G E O U S !” | 7:00 p.m. Hogg Auditorium (NR) ii____ »i ^ Tonight at 8:45 p.m. Union Theatre (R) In the Shadow of the Stars Tonight at 7:00 p.m. IJnlBiiThealre (MHL Les Am3 Cate— Open Mon -Sat Until 1 30 at n;qht 2 4 th & San A n to n io Edited by Eugene T . Maleska No. 0506 Page 8 Wednesday, June 17,1992 THE DAILY TEXAN ' A R O U N D C A M P U S Around Campus is a daily col­ umn listin g U n iversity-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organizations registered with the Campus Activities Office. Announcements must be submit­ ted on the proper form by 11 a.m. the day before publication. Forms are available at the Daily Texan office, located at 25th Street and W hitis Avenue. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions. M EETIN G S The Muslim Students' Associa­ tion w ill meet to discuss summer activities Wednesday at 5 p.m. in University Teaching Center 1.104. For more information, call 454-1568. C L A S S E S The Computation Center and Joe C. Thompson Conference Center w ill offer the following computer classes next week: SA S Basics, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday in TCC 3.108, $36 with UT ID. Word 5.0 for the Macintosh new features, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday in TCC 2.118, $24 with UT ID. Introduction to Excel 3 W ind ow s, 8:30 a.m. to 4 Tuesdav in TCC 3.108, $36 with UT ID. PageMaker Beyond'the Basics, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Wednesday in TCC 2.118. SPSS/PC Basics, 8:30 to 4 p.m., Thursday in TCC 3.108, $36 with UT ID. Macintosh System 7.0 Features, 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Thursday in TCC 2.118, $24 with UT ID. W ord for W indow s 2.0 Basics, 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Thursday in TCC 3.108, $24 with UT ID. Graphics and D raw ing w ith M acDraw II, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Thursday in TCC 2.118, $36 with UT ID. The Entrepreneurs' Association w ill sponsor a workshop for busi­ ness owners Tuesday from 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. at 925 Capital of Texas Highway South, Suite B-220. Call 328-9884 for more information or to register. a M ethods The Student H ealth Center is sponsoring of Contraception class for men and women Thursday from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. in SHC 448. The Student H ealth Center is offering C PR classes (Basic Life Support - Course A, B or C). Call 471-4955 ext. 212 or go to SHC 347 to register. OTHER The Huntington Art Gallery will show a video "David Bates" in con­ junction with the exhibit "A Tribute to M ari and James M ichener: Selections from the M ichener Collection" Thursday at noon. The Muslim Students' Associa­ tion will hold a recitation of verses Islam from the holy text of Thursday at 6 p.m. in College of Business Administration 4.342. For more information call 454-1568 or 477-8252. Student V o lu n teer Services needs volunteers to spend quality time with a 28-year-old mentally retarded woman during recreational activities such as swimming, horse­ back riding, piano, dancing, paint­ ing, shopping, bowling and exer­ cise. Call 471-3065 for more infor­ mation. Student V o lu n teer Services needs enthusiastic volunteers to assist with a summer carnival for children on Thursday from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Call 471-3065 for more infor­ mation. The first part of a summer-long Navajo textile exhibit "Textiles from the Classic Tradition," w ill be on display until M onday at Texas Memorial Museum. A l a n i z Crossword A C R O SS 32 Type of cross or 1 Firmness of purpose a Broiled 15 Board the Yankee Clipper 16 Lie back 17 Flighty person 19 Rim s 20 Faultiest 21 Dotted, as with stars 22 Hail or farewell 23 Fleur-de- 24 Tin Tin 25 Be inclined 27 St - fire 29 Let it stand 30 M akes beloved cat 34 First lady 35 N apoleon's marshal 36 Red headings 40 Muddlers 44 Fencing sword 45 Row s 47 Bovine animals 48 G o tch a” cry 49 N Y winter time so Inhabitant: Suffix 51 Apollo's mother 53 Fla city 55 Taj M ah a l’s site 56 What a chatterbox can do A N SW E R TO P R E V IO U S P U Z ZLE 59 Blanket 6 0 Organized body of knowledge 61 Thrift-shop concerns 62 Triggerman DOWN 1 Expand credit 2 Animate 3 Salary 4 Eyes, to poets 5 H S. chemistry room 6 Witness 7 Matriculates 8 Astronaut Virgil (Gus) col. 9 C om m and of a 10 Here, in Isére 11 D egrees of attys. 12 — , égalité, fraternité” 13 Brutus and Antony, e.g. 14 Relaxation of hostilities 18 Decorate 26 Steel-plow pioneer 27 Upright 28 White National Monument 29 Sharp: C om b form D oonesbury by g a r r y t r u d e a u RIVETING NEWS, LAWMAKERS' THE CASE AGAINST SMOK­ ING IS SV LL IN P IS - PUTE' ¿A LL OFF YOUR ADVERTIS­ ING BAN! THE BAN SU N - CONSTITUTIONAL ANY- > WAY! PEOPLE HAVE C A RIGHT ID KNOW, WHICH IMAGE 1HB1R CIGAR­ ETTE &RANP PROJECTS' S o f A f r S KELITo Th e HAPPY-Go -UiCKY CoMs s E d G ASKIN 'S So O L TW ftHG TH E DRAINAGE CLOGS C E N S O R E D FOR YOUR PROTECTION T h ig H m a s t e r s! AEROHOR-U The v'MCtb sisreR S u p s Y N c h e r s ! M r . e ig . (Re5e¿-Teo sY os, l a ' Homt Attt> Th e P iHK Kis sES SfVTAK'S PCKSOblAU FlouSC BAblD FouR \)tFCCX\\J£ l4Al£PICKS Tne H e ro e s \n F ee AL Dé MoKs THE BAN WILL BRING CHAOS! COWBOYS WILL START SMOK­ ING VIRGINIA SLIMS! BLACKS WILL SMOKE WHITE BRANDS1 YOU CANT,rHACK'^ YOU CANTP0-. 'COUGH!' THIS! PA/axA T A I» FROM THE LAND OF PLENTY BY MARC TRUlllLO $" W f fm //vy HELLO LIT T LE BO>f E l 31 Ancestors: It. 33 Shepherded 36 Land broker 37 Lift from under 38 Fab Four 39 Centuries: Fr. 40 Ingenuous 41 Pressing 42 Track previous steps 43 One of a c a ge r’s pair 46 A son of Isaac and Rebecca 54 M o s e s ” author 55 M ars Comb, 52 Gum bo vegetable form 57 Entire 53 Annual theater award 58 Uncle, in Uruguay Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420* 5656 (75c each minute). need 0 It) ( HAfLi a you CAN) Y o u k FUND' \ / I L L SNOklNP» IL L ^ SHAME MY tLAYD1 UW GOD -pLEASt ¡*HX uAyF !y Meet DCCTO#.VJOOÍ HAVU them m. iM*h£D kC Mt.BkJT 1 AS* SOD. IVftO'S AXjhIWj VOW?' CHtftJE. woo, TUAYS who! HX0ISG THSE P0C Wo«W> OP Mir (dH fl**soK, 1‘VE. t&i Tt> MAMfc MS PRKE. MID RxSOM1. WHH, ICOi! ASEBt- 1A8& wSCA SUNS0K IM MAOWMMJjaW PEMHXSÜI ft T h e G l u m C l u b J£ F F 1UR5N’ T UóOfíLLy V £ R y F o n d o F £*oR.ci5me>( B U T o n c e B E T r y ft T E Tfte cfrr, he knewj SoítieTHiNái HRD Tb && d o n e : . . , ' carl greenblatt by Unce fAyers comic strip (t . harrison) g a g i i r u x by Shannon W heeler THAT'S j a a r c T R U E . C t U E V E R ? o o \ou a t A u x e C C X E N t tH A L I F E A F T E R . c > o s n \ ? -jf- í(_Lf -1M S t O CEaíSoA sW i P, 1 *1 okb£& T o m A K t TW C ^A F t A. * Af i RFC T A B c c .’ 1/ A H A H A . ^ fm 'M T h e Da il y T e x a n Wednesday, June 17,1992 Page 9 TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS TO PLACE A WORD OR LINE AD CALL: 8:00-5:-00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 --------------------------- CLASSIFICATIONS---- DEADLINE: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication MASTERCARD VISA ACCEPTED 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 ___ CLASSIFIED _______ WORD AD* RATES_______ Charged by the word. 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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 if amount exceeds $2.00. Slip must be presented for a reorder within 90 d ays to be valid. Credit slips are non-transferable. In consideration of The Daily Texan’s acceptance of advertising copy for publication, the agency and the advertiser wili indemnify and save harmless, Texas Student Publications and its officers, employees, and agents against ail 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 darns of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, plagiarism and copyright and trademark infringe ment TRANSPORTATION M ER CH AN D ISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. 360— Furn. Apts. 360 — Furnr. Apts. 370— Unt. Apts. 370 — Unt. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. SOUTH SHUTTLE QUIET/COOL Your oasis in chaos! W e d c am p us efficiencies o n W C shuttle G as, water, e xp a n d e d coble poid 910 West 2£th Street $ 2 4 0 - 2 6 0 p er month, summer rates Availab le now . Co» for a n oppointment, leave y o u r nam e a nd n um ber o r com e b y at 6 p.m. Efficiency Luxury efficiency 2-2 Luxury 2-2 3-2 New, Huge 275 310 3 9 2 500 7 5 0 Southside Properties 448-4438 1931 E. Oltorf, Next to Domino's 6 -1 2 -2 0 B -A it! “ s o u t h sh u t t l e ~ GRAND OPENING! Remodeled huge units on beau­ tiful wooded creek. 1-1 $335, 2- 2 $450. G as paid! Only Properties One 447-7368 6 -1 2 -2 0 6 c o b b l e s t o n e " APARTMENTS l-Ys $350, 2-Vs $445. G as w a­ ter, and cable paid. Heating in the winter is gas. O n shuttle. 1105 Clayton Lane 453-4037 Pre-leasing for Fall 6 -1 6 -2 0 8 ★ U L T IM A T E ★ S T U D E N T P R O P E R T Y Access Gates/24 hr. Guard Exercise room, Sauna, Tennis Full indoor B-Ball Court 1 • 2 • 3 Bedrooms Lakeside on Shuttle A D V A N T A G E 4 4 3 -3 0 0 0 ★ ★ 6 -1 7 - 2 0 B - O Super, Groovy Deal! Fresh efficiency with walk-in closet, overlooking tranquil courtyard. 31st & Duval area. Local, caring owner. $295. Apartment Finders. 458-1213 6 -1 7 -2 0 8 G O IN G O A Z Y ? NOT! Necessary — when 1 call can do rt all — you tell us your needs — we'll find Condos - Apartments — $285-$1500 Apartment Finders 458-1213 4 -1 7 -2 0 6 W A L K T O UT. Furnished o r unfurnished Sum m er 1-1 storting at $310. Profession­ ally m a n a ge d b y Davis 1 Associates 3 1 0 0 Sp e e d w a y 4 7 8 - 6 0 0 5 6-1 5-20 6- W E S T C A M P U S -R e o lly cute 2-2, newly remodeled, wosher/dryer, etc , ougust- ougust lease $ 6 5 0 4 7 7 -9 7 1 2 6 -1 6 -2 0 8 ★ * SU P ER D E A L ' N ew er 2 -2 $ 4 3 0 near IF. N ow . Front P age 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 6- 1 6 -2 0 B -A ______________________________ E F F IE N C Y A P A R T M E N T S - g r e o t summer spec>ai-pre-leasing for fall in H y d e Pork oreo. 3 2 7 -8 9 8 5 . 6 16 -20B -A ___________ S U M M E R S P E C IA L only $ 2 5 5 / m o 1 bdrm in Hyde Park la ra e pool, ceiling fon, courtyard, 1 block from UT shuttle 301 W 39ifi St. 32 6-92 15 , 4 7 4 2 3 6 5 6 -1 7-5B A 390 — Unf. Duplexes 2-1 S O U T H E A S T la ra e p n vo c y yard Large master BR Fireplace, n ew C AC H , g a r a g e near UT shuttle $ 5 8 0 . 32 7 - 4 2 4 6 6 9-10B_________________________ H U G E 2/2 Q uiet location on shuttle Gas, water, cable paid $ 5 2 5 summer/ $6 1 5 fall 4 0 0 W .j5 th Street 4 5 3 -1 8 0 4 4 5 2 - 1121 6-1 -2 0B -K _________________________ S H O R T W A L K UT Art/Mus.c 2-1, hord- w o o d s $410, available 7 1 5 0 6 Elm­ w o o d - A 9 2 8 - 6 5 5 4 (Joe)/477-4890. 6 -1 7-2B ________________________________ 400 — Condos- Townhouses ♦ * W E S T C A M P U S ! Super spacious 2 b e d ro o m $ 5 7 5 / $ 6 0 0 G a s paid! Front Pa g e 4 8 0 - 8 5 ) 8 6-1-20B -C _____________ * * H Y D E P A R K N ice 1/1 Small com ­ plex. $3 1 5 Front P age Properties 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 . 6 -1 -2 0B -C ________________________ G R E A T S U M M E R B A R G A IN Furnished- Unfurnished, pool, loundry, walk to campus, quiet. Ideal for grads, law, music 4 7 6 8 4 7 4 , 4 5 3 - 2 3 6 3 6 2 -2 0 B -K 912 W 22 Vj ,2 Story $3 6 0 , 3 BDR house, H yde Park $ 7 5 0 , 1 B D R summer $ 3 2 0 , 4 8 0 - 0 9 7 6 6p m -7p m 6-4 -1 0P fans, walk-m closets, S P A C IO U S , Q U IE T 2 -2 's UT o ne block C A /C H , pool, dishwasher, laundry Red Rrver/ 30th Summer/ $ 5 0 0 4 7 7 - 3 3 8 8 , 4 7 2 - 2 0 9 7 6 - 4 -2 0 B - A _____________________________ N O R T H O F UT Efficiencies $ 1 7 0 -$ 2 1 5 . 1 b ed roo m $ 2 1 0 -2 5 5 4 7 7 -2 2 1 4 6-4 - 2 0 B -K _________________________ ___ W A L K T O U T-W est campus. Plus 1-1. S p e ­ cial summer rate -$ 28 5. 25 1 4 Peari. 4 5 2 -5 2 1 8 . 3 3 8 - 1 6 2 2 6-4 -1 08__________ 2 -2 C O N D O , $675/m o., 30th and Sp ee d w a y. Fireplace, W / D connections, built-in microwave, hot tub, a n d pool. C oll Jill at 2 5 1 -76 15 .6-10 -1 08___________ N O R T H C E N T R A L 1 block bus 1 mile shuttle. 1-1 $ 2 7 5 Small, quiet, con ve n ­ ient complex. 2 5 0 -0 9 9 1 . 6 -1 2 -2 0 B -K C O F F E E ■iiiarranng CONDOS * APTS * HOUSES West Campus North Campus All Shuttle Routes Call or stop by for more info. 2813 R io Grande Ste. 206 474-1800 B EAU TIFU LLY U N F U R N IS H E D larae l-l at Centennial All amenities included Availab le n ow for immediate move-m. $ 6 7 5 / m o 3 2 8 - 9 3 3 9 EPI 6 -3 -2 0 B -E 6 -1 -2 0 B -A H Y D E P A R K Efficiencies! 4 2 0 9 A ve n u e B C ab le a n d hot w ater p aid $3 1 5 sum mer/ $ 3 4 5 fall 4 5 0 -0 2 1 7 , 452-1121. 6 1- 2 0 B -K RENTAL 425 — Rooms ON THE BORDER 10 — Misc. Autos '8 7 P O N T IA C G ra n d A m condition, must sell. 6-12-10B. excellent lo w miles, $ 4 5 0 0 2 5 1 -5 4 2 0 , 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 19 88 IN T E G R A O n e owner, 2 dr , 5 s p d , AC, sunroof, cruise, cassette, olloys, dealer maintained, 6 0 K $ 8 5 0 0 negoti oble 44 1 -3 1 6 7 6-11-7P_________________ '8 3 M A Z D A Ó 2 6 L X G re a t shape clean, $ 2 5 0 0 o n# owner, sunroof, stereo Evening 3 2 8 2091, d o y 9 2 8 - 7 5 0 5 6- 15-58___________________ 80— Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE SALE 1990- 91 GT BIKES REDUCED 20% FREE U-Lock with Ad copy and New Bike Purchase Student Discounts BUCK'S BIKES 928-2810 REAL ESTATE SALES 130 — Condos - Townhouses Tipus r W A L K T O C am p u s from the security of St rge 2/2, vaulted ceilings, all James. Large 2/2 vaulted ceilings, all 57K. Seller motivated. M itch amenities _____________ 3 2 8 - 9 3 3 9 . 6 -3 -2 0 B -E BEAU TIFU L W E ST C a m p u s 2 -2 under 50K. All amenities including W /D , m i­ crowave, etc. Seller motivated. Mitch. 3 2 8 - 9 3 3 9 . Ó -3 -2 0B -E __________________ G E O R G I A N 2-2. Four b locks to the Tow­ 5 9 K Seller er, all amenities included motivated. M itch 3 2 8 - 9 3 3 9 . 6-10-15B-E limited access, P E N T H O U S E C O N D O S , 1-1, high securi­ ty, covered pocking Priced to sell at $ 3 2 ,9 0 0 . Call Cam pus C on d os. 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 . 6 -1 2 -5 B -K secured, C L O S E S T C O N D O to UT 2-2, new car- pet and paint, $ 6 9 K M u st see to a p p re ­ ciate. Call C am p u s C o n d o s 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 . 6 - 1 2 - 5 B K ______________________________ C RO IX , 2-2, jacuzzi, pool, fountains, flush landscaping, full-size W /D , a p p r o x i­ mately 9 0 0 square feet A d fast Call Cam pus C on d os. 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 . 6-1 2 -5 B -K 3-2 't C O N D O , two-story, 4 blocks from UT, tw o-car garage, W / D , quiet co m ­ plex. Call for an oppointment. C am p u s C o n d o s 4 74 4 8 0 0 6-1 2 -5 B -K TEXAN WANT ADS! 471-5244 RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. 200 — Furniture- Househoid r F R E E D E L IV E R Y ! $ 99.95 * TWIn Set w/Freme $109.95 * Full Set w/Freme $ 79.95 * Desk, Lamp, Chair $ 39.95 A 4 Drw. Chest $139.95 * Dresser w/Mirror $139.95 A 5-piece Dinette $159.95 A Sofas C en tex Furniture W h o le sale AAlfl U I e m sr 450-0988 L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S ^ T W O M O U N T A I N bikes $175/$100, Ep son computer $ 2 5 0 , W indsurfer $100, couch $6 0, bookshelf $30, 2 filing cab i­ nets $2 0/ eo ch W o o d desk top $2 0, porch rocking choir $3 0. 451-2145. 6- 17-5B___________________________________ M A C I N T O S H C L A S S IC 2.5 M b R A M 4 0 In onainol M b H D . software included 17- pockogm g. $ 8 0 0 . Don, 4 5 8 - 6 5 3 4 6- 5 8 linq st ) W a tail $1 0 0 0 . socnficed at $ 5 0 0 w o m e n s n ngs size 6, m en's - 9 4 7 4 - 2 6 6 4 o r 4 7 7 - 8 4 Q 1 .6 -1 7 -5 -N C _______________________ S E L M E R S - 8 0 oho sa x 8 years old, p e r ­ fect condition $ 2 0 0 0 or best offer 4 5 4 - 8 4 9 2 6-1 7-5B 345 — Misc. L O N G H O R N W A N T A D 3 C O N T A C T L E N S 1 Optical fram es w h o le ­ sale to public, $5-$15, designer frames/ imitations ovoiloble. 8 3 7 - 8 5 7 2 , leave m essage. 6-1 2-5B M O U N T A I N BIKE 1 9 9 2 Klein Pinocle De o re XT, M a v ic nms, Ritchey stem, a sk ­ ing $1 00 0. 2 5 0 - 9 0 3 7 , leave m essage 6- 11-5 8_______________________ ____ M O V IN G , M U S T sell O n ly used twice. M a rc y Pro weight bench So m e cost- iron weights $ 8 5 3 4 3 - 6 8 2 0 Leave message. 6 -1 1-5N C TALL A L U M I N U M fram e Rally cross­ country for mild off-ro od use, gel seat, computer, p e rfe d condition, $ 3 5 0 . James 3 3 5 - 4 6 3 0 . 6-11-5B_____________________ S I M M O N S FULL size b ed $150, coffee table a n d end tables $ 6 0 for set Call Bnan at 4 4 5 - 2 8 3 6 . 6-1 2 -5 B IN F IN IT Y S T U D IO monitor speakers - 2 w oofers each, 3 m id-ranges each, 1 twitter e och $ 3 2 5 each. 4 5 4 - 5 5 6 9 6- 12-5 B________________________ G R E A T DEAL! Q u e e n size waterbed complete C o o l in summer, warm in w in ­ ter. $ 7 5 Call A n d re w o r Sh a ro n at 4 6 9 - 9 4 6 4 6 15-5B_________________________ S C H W IN N M A N S bike, cruiser, e xce l­ lent condition, 5 spd., $150. W o m a n 's Schw inn Cruiser Supreme, $150. Call 2 6 1 - 5 4 7 3 . 6-15-5B._____________________ 19 82 H O N D A 250cc, reliable, e co n o m i­ cal transportation $ 4 5 0 O B O . Helmet included 4 7 4 - 5 6 8 7 , leave m essage 6- 1 5 -5 B _______________________ _ BEAU TIFU L L E A T H E R - B O U N D complete set of Encyclopedia Bnttamca (1989) $ 6 0 0 G re at B oo ks collection $ 6 5 0 4 7 2 - 1 6 6 9 6 - 1 5 - 5 B _____________________ N E W A L P IN E 7 4 0 0 am/fm cassette cor receiver. 6 button station presets Still in b ox $180/Q .B O. 4 5 9 -2 1 5 5 . 6 - 1 5 - 5 N C T W IN B E D extra lona with frames, sheet- $35. K in g frames $10 End table, TV a nd LP record carts $ 4 -1 0 4 5 8 - 2 0 4 5 6-15- 5B K IN G W A T E R B E D $125. Coffee o n d end tobies $5 0. Exercise machine $5 0 . O r- g o n $5 5. Shelves $15 Curtains $15. W eigh ts $ 2 - 2 5 4 5 4 4 0 2 9 . 6-1 5-5B D E S K A N D chair for sale. W hite desk, block chair G re at condition $125/set cash! Call Christy 4 7 8 -8 9 4 1 . 6 -1 5-5B -K T W O P O R T A B L E Refrigerators for-sale. $ 5 0 eoch or best offer Coll 4 4 4 - 3 8 2 8 , leave m essage. 6 -1 6-5B '7 8 B U IC K LeSobre 2 door, A C , g o o d condition, $ 8 5 0 D a y 471-9113, Evening 4 7 6 - 8 2 3 8 . A sk for Rick. 6-1 6 -5 8 set, F O R S A L E -B a m b o o $ 4 0 0 o r best offer. For more inform a- tion, co» 4 7 9 - 8 1 8 8 6 -1 7-5B _____________ ro om living O A K D R A F T IN G table with fluorescent lamp, 4 draw ers $125. Call evenings 4 4 3 - 1 3 0 6 6 -1 7-5B -K M A K E A S T A M P E D E FOR S U C A S A APARTMENTS SUMMER LEASES AVAILABLE 3-9-12 m o. le a s e s S ta r tin g a t $ 2 7 S • Pool • Laundry • Furnished Apartments • On-Site Mgn • IF Shuttle C A L L T O D A Y 451 2268 203 W 39TH RENTAL 350 — Rental Services r MOW PRELEASING ’ Condos, townhomes, apts., d u p lexes, h o u ses. P rices from $400. CaB Matt or Carol, 478-6565. C * i * T Y 2SL PROPERTIES J L RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. Walk To Campus £2 HOUSTON 2001 H e m p h ill Park 472 83 9 0 PALLAS 28 01 H e m p h ill Park - 4 7 2 -8 3 9 8 BRANDYWINE 28 08 W h it is A ve. 472 70 4 9 WILSHIRE 301 W. 2 9 th 472 70 4 9 Great Locations! • Fully Furnished • L au nd ry R o o m • C e n d a l Air/Heat • 2 B lo ck s From U T • N o A p p lic a tio n Fee • I B R / B A 1 O n -*ite manager • Affordable deposits Chaparosa Apartments 3110 Red River CLOSE TOU.T. — Small, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks from Law, on shuttle, attractively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3BR 474-1902 S Q U A R B A p a r t m e n t s * NOW PREJLEASING FALL * FURNISHED * 5 B U S FROM CAMPUS * ITT SHUTTLE STOP * EFFICIENCIES * DELUXE I BEDROOMS * 2-1 ECONOMY STYLE * ON SITE MANAGEMENT A J L L B B U L S P A I D 2212 San Gabriel Street Austin, 7ft705 ( S I 2)474-7732 THREE OAKS & PECAN SQUARE APARTMENTS • 1 BDR/1 B A • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Community Atmosphere • On Shuttle • No Application Fee • Preleasing • On-site manager • Affordable deposit 451-5840 4 0 9 W . 3 8 t h S t . O n e B l o c k F r o m C a m p u s Laundry Room Fully Furnished • 1 BR & 2 BR • Ceiling Fans • On Shuttle • • • Pool • Permit Parking • On-site manager/ maintenance • Vertical mini-blinds • Affordable deposits • Bargain Summer Rates Rio Nueces 6 0 0 W . 2 6 t h 474-0971 THE A S H F O R D Now Preleasing for Summer and Fall Large Efficiencies, 1-1 ’s, 2-2’s Starting at $240 • Furnished/Unfurnished • West Campus Shuttle • On-Site Mgmt & Maint • Pool • Laundry Room • Covered Parking ALL BILLS PAID 476-8915 2408 Leon B L A C K S T O N E LOWER SUMMER RATES 2910 Medical Arts St. a c r o ss from law sc h oo l A L L B IL L S P A ID Newly remodeled 2 bdrm-2 bath Free Cable I Furnished or Unfurnished 474-9523 PARKING SPACES AVAILABLE at The C a s t i l i a n $45 per session, Covered Parking. Act Fast. 2323 San Antonio 478-9811 VACAN CY AVAILABLE AT THE CASTILIAN! A C T FAST! ( 5 1 2 ) 4 7 8 -9 8 1 1 WARWICK APTS. 2 -2 'S, 1-1'S * EH. limited access gate pools, microwave Just blocks from campus N o w leasing for tbs Summer/Fall 2907 West Ave. 320-0915 EFFICIENCIES F R O M $260 + E. A M E N IT IE S INCLUDE: • Dishwasher • Disposal • Laundry * IE Shuttle • Microwave (opt) • Across from • Individual Storage City Park • Pool • BBQ Pits * Resident Manager • Furnished & Unfurnished 108 PLACE APTS. 108 W. 45th 452-1419,385-2211, or 453-2771 C A L L T O D A Y Ó -1-20B -A Hillside Apts. 1 & 2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean & Quiet All Utilities Paid 478-2819 514 Dawson Rd. Just off Barton Springs Rd. 6-1-20B -E LARGE TWO BEDROOM SUMMER SPECIAL $ 3 9 0 * Small, quiet complex * * Pool and laundry room * * Furnished * * Walk to Campus * CAVALIER APTS. 307 E. 31ST 451-1917 6 - 2 -2 0 B - K $300-$ 3 50 FOUNTAIN TERRACE APTS. Furnished 1 bdr. and efficiencies. Walk in closets, ceiling fans, pool, carpeted, CA/CH, water and gas paid W A L K I N G D ISTA N C E TO UT MGR. APT. # 1 3 4 6 1 0 W . 3 0 th 4 77-8858 6 -3 -2 0 B -E 302 W. 38th Summer/fall leasing on efficien­ cies, 1 bdrm. Convenient to H an­ cock Center, UT, Hyde Park, block to shuttle and city bus line. All appliances, pool, laundry room, gas, water, and cable paid. 453-4002 6 - 8 - 2 0 8 4& 5 Blocks West UT Large, quiet, clean efficiencies. Kitcnen, walk-in closet, laundry, gas/heat cooking, water and gas furnished. 903 W 22 1/? $245 2104 San Gabriel $255 4 7 6 -7 9 1 6 6-1 1-20 6-A *WALK TO CAMPUS* AVALON APARTMENTS 32nd at IH-35 Efficiencies $310 1 bdrm. $ 3 45 Walk in closets, ceiling fans, on ­ site manager, laundry. Conven­ ient to east campus. Great for law, engineering, business, and music students. 476-3629 478-1350 6 -1 2 -2 0 B - BATH, refrigerator a n d B E D R O O M m icrow ave $1 8 0 5 0 0 E lm w ood Pioce 3 4 5 -1 5 5 2 6 -1 7-36 370 — Unt. Apts. CASA GRANDE P re le a se N o w Available for summer Efficiencies-bills paid 1-1,2-2, 3-2 Open for fall Efficiencies, 1-1,3-2 • Reasonable rates • near UT • pool • laundry • parking • large room s • furnished/unfurnished • On UT shuttle 1400 Rio Grande 469-0940 SO U TH SHUTTLE N e w Property Skyline views, access gates, looow bills. Every interior item new!!! Effi­ ciencies to 2-2's $325-595. only Properties One 447-7368 for 3-2 1344 sq. ft. (that's gi­ gantic) fall. BRAND NEW, A C ­ CESS GATES, FREE CABLE. Assigning choice units now. South Shuttle, also 1 BRs, 2 BRs. only Properties One 447-7368 6 -1 -2 0 B -A SOUTH SHUTTLE oops....numerous, nice, large 2-2's. $392 student special (at least a $450 value). Q u i­ et Oltorf property. Properties One 447-7368 6 -1 -2 0 B -A PENTHOUSE^PTS 2 blks S W of Campus 480-0201 Incredibly M anaged 1-1's from $400, 2-1's and 2-2's from $575-$650. Cable paid, beautiful pool, loundry facilities, covered parking, security gate, remodeled. Extremely Lar^e^ ADORABLE HYDE PARK APARTMENTS! Efficiencies, 1/1 and 2/2. Some with fireplaces, covered parking. Cable paid. 105 West 38 1/2 Street. 459-1711, 452-1121 ' 6-2 -20 B-E PEACES. QUIET IN HYDE PARK! Efficiencies $315 Summer/$345 Fall Cable, gas, hot water and c o o k ­ ing paid. 4400 Avenue A 458-1985, 452-1121 ' 6 -2 -2 0 B -E I U m m e r I p e c a T - $275 * Small efficiency * • Close to campus • * Cleon, Gutei Complex * . All Bills Poid * » C ove re d Parking • * 25c Loundry * Leon Apartments 2302 Leon 4 6 2-093 0 V2 O FF Summer Arguably south shuttle s ni­ cest community, 1-2 Brs Most ameni­ ties. W rop around decks, best poo! only Southside Properties 448-4438 1931 E. Oltorf, Next to Dominos 6-1-208-A ALL BILLS Paidl Efficiency $ 3 0 0 summer/ summer/$ 4 5 0 faU. $ 3 2 5 foU 1-1 $ 4 0 0 4 5 1 -8 5 3 2 , 452-1121 6 -1 -2 0B K . ______ ★ 6-1 7-20 B -E N E A R L A W School! 1-1 $ 3 0 0 summer/ $ 3 4 0 fall 4 74-1240, 452-1121 6-1 -2 0 B K F R E E P h o n e I n s t a l l a t io n F R E E C a b l e H o o k -U p WITH CABLE M A X X whenyou sign up for next year at ¡0NTESS& by June 30th * NEWLY REMODELED AND RECARPETED Located Just one block from the UT campus on the WC Shuttle Route 19 Meats per week Maid service twice weekly NEW computer room Pools, suodeck*, Wfl screen TV Dorm sponsored parties AND MUCH, MUCH MORE! Stop by for f s e m e s t e r A b o v e t o t e s r e f le t I lo l l p . i v m e n l p l. in C0NTESSA PARTNERSHIPS • 2707 Rio Grande • (512) 4764648 *N«r Contracts omy S A L A D O A P T S . Large 2-2’s & 1-1's Now Leasing for Summer/Fall 2707 Salado 320-0915 1 B L O C K UT, N o w pre-leaw na 1-1, quiet com plex W e » furn u h e a and I tamed 2721 Hemphill Park. 4 7 8 - 6-1-208-K. , small, Im am -1870, E N F IE L D R D 2-1 furnished or unfur- rushed, ceiling fans, mini blinds, pool, larae courtyard, quiet. ER shuttle Antilles 4 7 7 -1 3 0 3 . 6-11- A|ts. 2 2 0 4 Enfield Rd A s exciting as it can be, going away to college can be just as scary as moving to a foreign city. There’s the campus and its surrounding area with its own customs, traditions, and population of 70,000. Smack in the middle of another “foreign" city of almost 500,000 people. As if thal’s not enough, college is probably al>oul the longest amount of time you’ve ever spent away from home. That’s why Doble Center is the perfect gateway to your college life. Our small residential city has less than 1,000 people who are 6-1-20B-K there for you, either for friendship or to help make your transition easier. There are complete dining, recreational and academic facilities service mall of meeting within the tower itself. Atop a retail and which can make quick work your scholastic or per- needs. Conveniently at the southern the UT No place And no place sonal located border of campus, else is so complete, else is closer to campus. Dobie Center. No place else. N O R T H O F UT Efficiencies $ 1 7 0 -$ 1 9 5 , 1 6 -3 - bdim s $ 2 3 0 $ 2 5 5 20 B -K 4 7 7-22 14 . B U C K I N G H A M S Q U A R E Aportments! 711 W . 3 2 n d Street 1 a n d 2 b ed roo m aportments in quiet residenhol n e igh b o r­ h oo d 4 5 3 - 4 9 9 1 6-1-20B-K. C A P S T O X I R F . A t . E S T A T E S E R V I C E S . IN C . 2021 Guadalupe • 472-8411 Pageiu weanesday, June 17,1992 T H E D A ILY TEXAN RENTAL RENTAL SERVICES 400 — C on d o s Tow nhom es 400 — C o n d os Tow nhom es O R A N G E T R E f C O N D O - 2/2 - 1 or 2 roommate* - S650/month Coll after 5. (2 1 4 )2 4 8 -3 5 4 7 ó 17-208 420 — Unf. H o u se s HOUSES 3 -2* Available N o w 1902 David St. an d 4515 A ve F. Both 2 *tory, lots of room. Price negottoble $1100-$1300. Rio G rand e Properties 4 7 4 - 0 6 0 6 6-12-10B-E G O R G E O U S 3/2, 2 block* S W compus. Hardwood floor* fireploce, renovated $1150/monltv Pall. AI*o rear unit* $ 3 2 5 - $435. N o w 476-2154 5-5-20B-C 4 77-llV E (24 hour*) old fashioned charm of 1 to 5 bedroom* home*, hardwood, go*, appliance* $200-1200. 6-1-20B-A. 477-LIVE 24 hr*. Old fashioned chorm, 4 bedroom* $ 995, 3 bedrooms $695, 2 bedroom* $ 335, 2 bedroom* $ 52 5 6-3- 20B-A_______________________________ 425 — Room s SHO RT W A L K UT, Quiet non-smoking, pellet* Pnvote bedroom, ihcire kitchen. For prívate bath $26 8 ABP, call 4 7 7 - 419/ message 474-2051 D P 406- 4 5 2 3 To share bills both $160-$240, co# 472 -5 6 4 6, 472-1797 6-2-208-K PRIVATE R O O M S West Campus Central oir. furnished, carpeted. Jeff 4 73-2700. _________________ 6-12-10P LIBERAL M IN D E D person needed to shore houte m Hyde Park area Close to UT Non-tmokers $ 2 2 5 • 1/3 utilities. Coll Steve 4 54 498 5 6-12-58 W A LK TO campus $175. ail bills paid Great view, central air, furniture avail­ able Coll 476-9156 6-17-3B 435 — C o -o p s Discover the CO-OP Difference! • Homecooked meals • All bills paid • 2-6 blocks U.T. Summer: Singles $300-340 Doubles $270-285 Fall/Spring: Singles $370-420 Doubles $320-330 Call soon! ICC CO-OPS 476-1957 510 W. 23rd SHORT W A L K UT, Quiet, non-smoking, petleis Private bedroom, share kitchen For orivate bath $ 2 6 8 ABP, call 4 77 - 4197, message 474-2051, D P 406- 4523. To share bills, bath $160-$240, call 4 72-5646, 4 7 2 -1 7 9 7 .6-2-20B-K 440 — Room m ates ROOMMATE SERVICE Will help you find a compat­ ible roommate. Male or female. Call Sam. 280-7118 6-1-20B-A SHORT W A LK UT, Quiet, non-smoking petless. Private bedroom, share kitchen For private bath $ 26 8 ABP, call 4 77 - 4197, message 4/4-2051, DP, 406- 4 52 3 To share bills, bath $160-$240, coll 472 5646, 472-1797 6-2-20B-K NEAT, RESPSO N SIBLE male housemate, shore with two male graduate students, on shuttle, 5 minutes campus/shopping nonsmoker, $185 + v3 bills. Mork 4 5 8 1939 Ó-11-5P 580 — M usical Instruction GUITAR L E S S O N S R & B Rock, |azz, country. 10 years teaching expenence. Andy bullington, 452-6181 6-1-20B-A. 590 — Tutoring • TUTORING • REVIEWS OPEN 7 DAYS Til Midnight. Sup.-Thur. H o u s e o f U \ T U T O R S U X 472-6666 TUTOR N E E D ED for high school students for geometry and biology (human anat­ omy) 4 7 6 -4 5 6 7 .6 -1 2 -5B W RITING TUTOR, PH D English Pub- lished novelist, Dobie fellowship H ar­ vard. 12 years creative and composition. 480 8 4 3 0 6-15-56 SERVICES 750 — T yp in g Z IV L E Y The Complete Professional Typing Service TER M P A P E R S D ISSE R T A T IO N S A P PLIC ATIO N S R E S U M E S W O RD P R O C E S S IN G L A S E R PRINTING BLOCKBUSTER 27TH S T R E E T 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 472-3210 472-7677 LONGHORN COPIES • Resum es e Theses e Term papers • Worn Processing • Binding • Laser Printing 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 F A X # 4 7 6 - 2 6 0 2 CONTINUES Let us help you find a condo the right way NOW PRE-LEASIN G Croix St. Thomas Centennial Orange Tree Waterford Delphi Old Main Call 474-4800 G O R G E O U S W est Cam pus 1-Vs from $550, 2-2's from S800-S1100 Som e furnished, personally cared for by owner. Summer rotes discount • C#ot#oniol • Oonge Tree • Pr#*«rvat»on Sqwore, plus • Tarrytown House* & Condo* KaH Hertdler Props. 4 7 6 - 2 1 5 4 6-1-20B-A CONDOS 3-2 August 1 availability. $1300- 1350. Houses and huge 2-2.5 condos. Call for addresses. Rio G rande Properties 4 7 4 - 0 6 0 6 6-12-106-E UT ST U D E N T S C O N D O S Condos, Houses, G a ra g e Apts., lots and lots! For Fall, flexible move in dates, all shapes and sizes, 1-ls $ 3 5 0 -5 6 0 0 2-2s $ 7 0 0 -$ 1 3 0 0 . 3-2s $1200- $1350. • 6-12-tOB-E ★ LOFT Spiral Staircase City Views Indoor Hot Tub 1 and 2 bdrms A D V A N T A G E 4 4 3 - 3 0 0 0 • ★ 6 -1 7 -2 0B -O ENFIELD Newly remodeled, community, covered ing. 2-1, $650. small p a r k - Apartment Finders 458-1213 G O IN G C R A Z Y ? NOT! Necessary — when 1 call can d o it all — you tell us your needs — we'll find it! C o nd o s - Apartments — $ 2 8 5 - $ 1 5 0 0 Apartment Finders 458-1213 6-17-20B c o z y ” C O M M U N IT Y ! Charm ing neighborhood feeling in this modern con­ do. Light & fresh — $350. Apartment Finders 458-1213 6-17-20B FURNISHED CONDO 2-2 most furniture, dishes, & linens. W asher & Dryer, mi­ crowave, new carpet, ap- Broximately $1100 s.f. 16 lock from Intramural. Sum­ mer rate $500. Call quick. 83 6 -5070. _________________________ 6-17-5» C LO SE TO Campus $495, 1-1, W/D, 114 East 31st # 3 0 4 , Evergreen Properties 331-1122 6-1-20B____________________ * * Georgian! Great 2 bedroom $7251 All amenities Front Poge Properties 480-8518 6-1-20B-C O R A N G E TREE -Large 2/2. Secure/up­ stairs. Avoilable 8/22, 9/12 $1200/$ 1100 month 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 EPt. 6- _________________________ 3 -2 0B - E terms 3 2 0 0 DU VA L Over 1800 sq ft. Two car garage All amenities $1300/mo Avail- oble 8/20. 3 2 8 9 33 9 EPI. 6-3-20B-E PEN T H O U SE IN West campus 1300 sq. ft., master bath, lacuzzi All imaginable amenities Avoiloble 8/20. $1300/mo. 3 2 8 9 339. EPI 6-3-20B-E____________ ST. THOM AS-Tastefully furnished 2/1'*- Secuntv, oil amenities Available summer or fall pre-lease $825/month. 3 28 - 9 3 3 9 EPI 6 - 3 - 2 0 B - E ______________ C E N T E N N IA L 2-2 Unfurnished, security, covered parking. $1050/month Avail- oble 8/2T 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 EPI 6 3-20B-E R O B B IN S PLACE Five lorge, unique 2- 2's to choose from. All amenities Avail­ able summer Of fall pre-lease from $ 7 7 5/month 328-9339. EP! 6-3-20B E ______________________________ C R O IX 2-2 Com er unit, W/D, secuntv, covered porking Available now/ Fall, $ 9 7 5/mo. Call Steve, 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 6-10- 15B-E___________ ENFILELD SHUTTLE Lorge 2-1, 1000 sq ft carport, available now/fall $650/ mo Call Hugo. 328 9 3 3 9 EPI 6-10-15B- E____________________________________ 2-2. E N F IE L D /E X P O S IT IO N O v e r 1100 sqq ft. C o vered parking $8 5 0 /m o Coll H u go 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 EPI. 6- 1 0 - 1 5 B - E __________________ Luxury W EST PLACE 2-2 W /D , pool, covered parking, available now/Fall. $ /25 /m o. Coll H ugo 328 -93 39 . EPI 6-10-15B-E N E A R C A M P U S 2 3 0 0 Leon, 2/2, W /D , microwove cathedral ceiling, porking, summer $400. 4 7 8 -69 50 , p a ge r - 483 ________________ 2 4 9 6 6-11-106 F b E D R O O M , 1 bath co ndo San G a b n e l an d W est 25th Covered pa rk in g mi- crowove, W /D , $450/summer. $650/ school year $ 3 5 0 deposit Co# 3 4 5 - 6518 6-15-5B_____________ _____ * * P A L L A D IA N PARKI Fresh interiors, nice, bright, sp o o o u i 2-2's from $775. Com pusl Front Page 4 80-8518 6-16- 2 0 8 -A _____________ ★ ★ Cam puu'walk! N ice 1-1, washer/ dryer, microwove, CP, furnished, avail­ able $ 4 0 0 Front Pog« 480-8518 6-16- 2 08 -A 6-17-20B E D U C A T IO N A L 7 5 0- T y p i n g i----------------- ------------ PAPERS RESUMES RUSH JOBS Abel’s Copies 1906 G U A D A L U P E 4 7 2 - 5 3 5 3 T Y P I N G til Midnight Sun.-Thurs OPEN 7 days House of f t v T U T O R S U X 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 N IC H O L A S P. C. Professional W ord Pro­ cessing WordPerfect 5.1, H P Laser pant­ ing 2 8 0 -2 7 4 9 6 -3 -2 0 6 _______________ A SA P W O R D Processing Theses completed w/care & attention $185 Rush lobs okay Candace, 451- 4885 5-8-10P - Reports/ EM PL O Y M EN T 790 — Part Time $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ First U SA Marketing Services, a division of First USA, Inc. Is currently seeking the following marketing professionals: ♦Consumer Credit Reps! Representatives will be responsible for marketing consum er products a nd services, primarily credit cords nation­ wide. Excellent com m unication skills with som e sales expe ne n ce is pre ­ ferred. W e guaran te e $ 6/ h o u r plus benefits. C om m issions m ay be earned. Typing skills of 2 5 w pm preferred. Scheduled shift is M on d a y-F rid a y. • 8 :0 0 a m -2 30pm • 5 :3 0 -9 :3 0 p m Please apply in person M o n d a y through Friday, 8 a m -6 :3 0 p m at First U S A Telemarketing, O n e Texas C an- ter, 5 0 5 Barton Sp rin g s Road, Suite 600, Receptionist. N o Phone C all Please! Equal Opportunity Employer First U S A $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ 6-1 2 0B -A S H O R T W A L K UT Run legal errands, Full part-time, great for prelaws. O w n econom ical, reliable car $4.25. A ls o hiring; typists, file clerks, accounting/bookkeeping collector investigator/bill trainee; tra in e e ; p e r s o n . it / h a n d y N o n sm o k in g self-starters. 4 0 8 W est 17th St. W rite application. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. w eekdays. fix 6 -2 -2 0 B-K Marketing/Business majors, male or female. National company expanding Texas market. Part-time with possi­ ble future for aggressive, self-assured individuals. Must have professional ap ­ pearance and enjoy meet­ ing people. M a n y benefits including dental insurance. Call 3 4 5 -8 7 0 6 for appoint­ ment. 6-11-5NC $ 700 .0 0 C O M P E N S A T IO N Are you a healthy, non-smoking, male between the ages of 18 and 40; weigh­ ing within 1 5 % of your ideal weight? If so, you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $700.00. The dates and times of the study are listed below, you must be available to remain in our focility for the entire period to be eligible: Check-in Time: Afternoon Friday, June 19 Friday, July 10 ' Check-Out Time: Morning Monday, June 22 Monday, July 13 Bnef out-patient morning visits will be re­ quired on the following dates June 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, July 14,15,16,17,18, and 19. To qualify, you must pass our free physi­ cal examination and screening test*. Meals, accommodations, entertainment, and recreational activities will be provid­ ed free-of-charge. For more information, please caH 4 6 2 -0 4 9 2 P H A R M A C O RESEARCH FO R BETTER HEALTH 6-11-5B-K ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ TELEM ARKETING P O SIT IO N S AVAILABLE Evening and weekend shifts. Flexible scheduling. Salary plus bonus. Call 477-9821 Robert M. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 6-17-20B $1000.00 C O M P E N S A T IO N Are you a healthy, non-smoking, mole be­ tween the ages of 18 and 40; weighing be tween 132-198 and within 10% of your ideal weight? It so, you may qualify to participate m o pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $100000. The dates and times of the study are listed below, you must be available to remain in our facility for the en­ tire period to be eligible: Check-in Time: Afternoon Friday, June 26 Fndoy, July 3 Friday, July 10 Friday, July 17 Check-Out Time: Morning Sunday, June 28 Sunday, July 5 Sunday, July 12 Sundoy, July 19 In addition, bnef out-patient visit* will be re­ quired on the following dates June 28. July 8, 12,19 (pm) June 29, 30, July 1, 6, 7, 8,13, 14,15, 20,21,22,29 (am). To qualify, you must pass our free physical examination and screening teds. Meals, ac­ commodations, entertainment, and recre­ ational activities will be provided free-of- charge For more information, please call 4 6 2 -0 4 9 2 P H A R M A C O RESEARCH FOR BETTER HEALTH 6-17-3B-K GREAT H O U R S for student* Immediate opening*. 5:30-9.00 pm, M-F, $4.25- $10.00/hr. Coll 454 -8 0 3 2. 6 -I-2 0B N EED JO B? N o w hiring! Perfect for stu­ dent*, 5 30-9 00, M-F, $4 25-$10 0 0 / hr Coll now, 329 -7 0 6 2. 6-1-20B noger need- mplex N o expe- 346-1990 6-4 RESIDENT APART M EN T mo ed tor small UT area coi nence necessary Co# 10B H OUSEBOY/YARDBOY/Errond Runner, flexible hour* 3 2 2 -0 5 6 9 6-12-58 H O U SEC LEA N ER FOR two working Dro- fessionali. Close to UT, must like aogi, cats and stairs $10/Kr., 4 hrs/wk. 4 74- 1673 6-15-5B_______________________ Basket - 371 help -7907 6-16-48 Cookie H A N D IC A P P E D STUDENT needs attend­ ants to feed me, interpret my speech, clean house, take me places, etc Flexible hour* $4.25/hr. Co# Sean 462-1485. 6-17-106____________ ________________ 800 — General Help Wanted J O B S G O V E R N M E N T $59,230/yr. N ow Hmng. Call (1) 805 9 6 2 -8 0 0 0 Ext. R-9413 for current feder­ al list. 6-1-35P. $ 1 6 ,0 4 0 - E A R N M O N E Y re a d in g b o o k sl $30.000/yr income potential Details. (1) 805 9 6 2 -8 0 0 0 Ext Y 9413. 6-11-23P G o n n a roll the b o n e s Jennifer Q u oss/D aily Texan Staff Albert Acosta, one of the curators of the G enesis Exhibit, showed Marc Low, right, one of the many casts on display Tuesday at Barton Creek Square mall. The show is unique, Acosta said, because it arranges its cast models in chronological order. A ticket for admission to the exhibit of prehistoric fossils costs $2, and the exhibit is open during regular mall hours. Houston power company agrees to share control of nuclear plant IMMEDIATE OPENINGS $4K -6K m o. PT/FT 458-5748 HAD ENOUGH? 6-15-5B Exciting, dynamic, outgoing per­ sonalities needed for environ­ mental firms Austin expansion. Self starters ready to do it!! Call 4 5 3 - 7 4 9 6 6-16-4B 6-16-5B Associated Press Associated Press HOUSTON — Houston Lighting & Power Co. has agreed to give up s o le m an agem en t con trol o f the South Texas N uclear Project in a plan that would put all four of the plant's owners on an equal footing, a newspaper reported Tuesday. Under an agreement intended to se ttl e a d is p u te w ith C orpu s Christi's Central Power & Light Co., the facility would be operated by an in d ep en d en t en tity , the H ouston Chronicle reported. The newspaper cited d o cu m en ts HL&P recen tly file d w ith the S ecu ritie s and Exchange Commission. Before it g o e s into effec t, the' agreement must be approved by the plant's two other owners, the city of Austin and the city of San Antonio, along with the state Public Utility the N u clear C o m m issio n and Regulatory Commission. The Bay City tw in plant, which was nearly $5 billion over budget w hen finished nine years behind sch e d u le , has a h isto ry o f leg a l wranglings. HL&P sued its contrac­ tor, Brown & Root, for mismanage­ ment and w on a $750 million settle­ ment. The four ow ners also have fired lawsuits back and forth. Larry Jones, manager of public information for CPL, said it is too EM PLO Y M EN T EM PLO Y M EN T EM PLO Y M EN T 800 G en eral Help Wanted 800 — G en eral Help Wanted 840 — Sales s t u d e n t s ” C A M P A IG N FO R R E C Y C L IN G C am paign staff positions available! W ork in an exciting cam paign atmos­ phere this summer to pass legislation for recycling. Join other students who ore having fun and creating social change by working on our grass roots campaign. 2-10, M -F $175-$225 "end of summer bonus" Call Chris 479-8481 F O O D SERVICE UTILITY P O S IT IO N O N UT C A M P U S Responsibilities include; assist in setup of banquet room s for events and han­ dle kitchenwares and dishwashing. Flexible hours, mostly afternoon or evening. Call Ray at 443-1111 for an appointment. 6-16-5B to study while G o o d time b ein g paid. Relief night au d i­ to r n e e d e d im m e d ia te ly . O th e r relief shifts also avail­ able. Experience not neces­ sary. Personality, d e p e n d ab ili­ ty, maturity a must. A p p ly at Best W estern Seville Plaza. 4 3 2 3 South IH 35. _____________________________ 6-I6-4B A L A S K A S U M M E R E M P L O Y M E N T - fish­ eries. Earn $5,000 + /month Free transportation! Room & Board! Over 8 ,0 0 0 openings. N o experience necessary M ale or Female. Most |obs ’ ’ arti ter June 20. For employment begin ext. 1-206-545-4155 program 2139 6-1-20P call FULL-TIME A N D part-time attendant* needed for disabled students. Coll M ary O'Donnell at 471-2166 for more infor­ mation. 6-4-10B. LIVE-IN FEMALE attendant/roommate to assist student with disability starting fall semester $800/mo. Nursing student* en- couraged to apply. 471-2166. 6-9-20B. STUDENTS earn $ 5 0 0 to $ ÍÓ Ó O W e k stuffing envelopes. For information send one dollar ond self addressed stamped envelope to Universal Exp., P.O Box 4 40246, West Somerville, Massachusetts 02144. 6-11-23P_____________________ E A R N M O N E Y R e a d in g b o o k sl $30,000/yr income potential. Details (1) 805 9 6 2 -8 0 0 0 Ext Y-9413 6-15-23P. 810 — Office- Clerical S H O R T W A L K UT Run legal errands, Full part-time, great for prelaws. O w n economical, reliable car, $ 4 25. A lso hiring, typists, file clerk*, accounfing/bookkeeping collector investigator/bill trainee; tra in e e ; p e rso n . it / h a n d y N o n sm o k in g self-starters. 4 0 8 W est 17th St. W rite application. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. w eekdays. _______________ é-2-ÍQBr.K C W SYSTEM S Inc., a computer consulting company, it looking for part-time con­ tract help answenng phones. Please call (512)469-0245. 6-T6-5B fix SEMEN DONORS NEEDED is Fairfax Cryobank seeking semen donors for ifs sperm bank program. The program is confiden- fial and all donors will be compensated. A s a potential donor y 0 O '^ THE UNIVERSITY Or * a Al AüS f MSCJ733b55 a*14 6 » Z t L L » i n » * 1» 1 No Fair. No Fare. Your UT student I.D. gets you on any Capital Metro bus * To anywhere in the city: Anytime. Who says life isn’t fair? F Y O U R L A S H . D . I , . _ 1n C o n i t a t M t* t r n i ^ *For ail buses except Special Transit Servia vehicles (STS) and Special Event Shuttles. Schedule booklets available in the Student Union and m ajor grocery stoics. Call d74-12(X). & T h e Daily Texan Thursday Coverage of Astros vs. Padres Wednesday, June 17, 1992 Astros shut out Padres, 11-0 Baseball Major league coverage, page 11 Associated Press HOUSTON - Brian Williams and Scooter Tucker, battery mates in the minor leagues a week ago, provided a w in n in g com binatio n of career firs ts for th e H o u s to n A stro s Tuesday night. W illiam s p itc h e d six s h u to u t innings for his first m ajor league victory and drove in two runs with his first m ajor le a g u e h it, and Tucker got his first three hits in the majors, leading the Astros to an 11-0 victory over San Diego. Tucker and Williams were called up from the Astros' Triple-A team at Tucson Friday. It was Williams' first start of the season. He gave up six hits, struck out five, walked four and didn't allow a runner to reach third base until the sixth inning. "I wanted to stay in long enough to rest the relievers and give us a ch an ce to w in ," W illiam s sa id . "You're not always going to get 11 ru n s b u t it gave me a chance to prove that I belong and I think 1 did that. "I got my first win and my first hit. You can't ask for much more." Tucker went into the game 0 for 3 since reporting to the big leagues and was glad to see his first hit fall. " I t w as a big relief. I w as wondering if it would ever come," Tucker said. "I th in k I relaxed a little after the first one." Tucker and Williams looked like veterans in the field. "I told him before the game, 'This is our first time to go against these g u y s /" Tucker said. "W e pitched his game instead of knowing a lot about the hitters. It seemed to work Xavier H ernandez pitched three innings for his first save, finishing the combined seven-hitter. Loser Rich R o d rig u e z (3-2), making his first start of the season, pitched four innings. His last inning was his downfall. "T h a t w as going to be his last in n in g if he c o u ld h a v e g o tte n through it,” Padres m anager Greg Riddoch said. "Then the pitcher got a h it off his w rists and tw o ru n s scored and after that it got ugly." W illiam s' fourth-inning double p ro d u c e d tw o ru n s to s ta rt the Astros' 15-hit attack. Eric Anthony lined a single past Rodriguez's head into center field to s ta rt the fo u rth in n in g . O ne o u t later, T ucker w alked and Rafael Ramirez struck out. W illiam s then looped a double down the right-field line for his first major league hit and went to third base on T ony G w y n n 's fie ld in g error as both Anthony and Tucker scored. Craig Biggio's single scored Williams. Ken Cam initi doubled, w ent to third on a grounder and scored on A n th o n y 's high-chop g ro u n d o u t behind first base off reliever Gene Harris, who replaced Rodriguez to start the fifth six th off Houston got three more runs in the re lie v e r L arry Andersen on singles by pinch-hitter Luis Gonzalez and Steve Finley and Biggio's sacrifice fly. The Astros added two runs in the seventh on Tucker's RBI single and a groundout by Ramirez. Two more runs scored in the eighth on a single by Chris Jones and final run scored w h en T ucker w as h it by a p itch from reliever Randy Myers with the bases loaded. Associated Press M ADRID, S pain — S p a in 's q u irk y trademark law is threatening to turn Nike's sponsorship of A m erica's Olym pic track and field team into a m ultim illion-dollar fiasco. Nike Inc. is in the midst of an ugly legal battle w ith a Spanish attorney w ho owns the N ike nam e in Spain — registered 60 years ago by a Barcelona sock maker. A nd w ith the O lym pics less than six weeks away and Nike planning to plaster its disputed name on U.S. athletes' uniforms, the company and the attorney, Juan Amigo Freixas, are playing a game of courtroom chicken w ith the one w ho sw erves first likely to lose tens of millions of dollars. Navratilova upset early by American Associated Press EASTBOURNE, E n g lan d — Top-seeded M artina N avratilova w as the victim of a sen satio n al upset Tuesday at the Eastbourne w om en's grass-court tournam ent, w here she had not lost a m atch since 1987. L ittle -k n o w n L inda H arvey- Wild of Hawthorn Woods, 111., beat Navratilova 6-3, 6-7 (4-7), 6-3 in the second round of the final warmup for Wimbledon. Navratilova had problems with a b lu s te ry w in d th a t sw irled around the center court. "I am not going to cry, I thought about in the locker room but then I said, 'N o,' " N avratilova said. "I am more frustrated than anything else. " I p lay e d as w ell as I could. There was nothing to be ashamed of or em barrassed about, she just coped w ith the conditions better than me." S e co n d -seed ed M ary Joe Fernandez led the advance of other seeded players, beating Sandrine Testud of France 7-6, (7-5), 6-4. Pam Shriver and Lori McNeil b o th d e fe a te d o th e r A m erican women. Shriver downed Heather Ludloff I 6-3, 6-1, and McNeil ousted Robin I White 6-4, 6-4. Rosalyn Fairbank-N ideffer of the U nited S tates beat eig h th - seeded Kimiko Date of Japan 7-6, (7-4), 6-1. Jana N ovotna, the fourth seed Nike battles Spaniard over Olympic uniforms have experienced harassment." Is it piracy? Or just clever? "They can think what they want," Amigo said from B arcelona. " If the O ly m p ics h a d n 't come to Spain, Nike w ould never have landed here because they w o u ld n 't know where Spain was." Amigo bought the Nike name from the original owner, who produced knitted wear briefly du rin g the 1936-39 Spanish Civil W ar b u t k e p t tra d e m a rk — a the p h o to g ra p h ic n e g a tiv e of the h e a d le ss Winged Victory of Samothrace statue in the Louvre M useum — long after production ceased. The registration applies only to sports apparel, not shoes, but it is the U.S. track team 's shirts and shorts that w ill be the most visible to the television cameras. Peeler bargains Missouri star eligible for draft Associated Press JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — A n th o n y P eeler p le a -b a rg a in e d him self out of a jail sentence on Tuesday and now awaits his fate in next week's NBA draft, where he is projected as a first-round choice. Peeler, the M issouri basketball star, received five years' probation after plead in g gu ilty to a felony w eapons charge and tw o related misdemeanors. The pleas will keep Peeler from being tried for allegedly attacking a woman last month in her Columbia, Mo., apartment and pointing a gun at her head. " H e w o n 't sp en d any tim e in ja il," a s sis ta n t p ro se c u to r Tim W ynes said a fte r a 30-m inute h e a rin g in C ole C o u n ty C ircu it Court. Wynes said prosecutors agreed to the plea bargain "because the victim asked us to ... she was tired of being in the spotlight." Peeler and his attorney, Patrick Eng, declined to answer questions after the hearing. The NBA said T u e sd a y th at Peeler, the Big Eight Conference player of the year, still is eligible for the June 24 draft. The 22-year-old Peeler m ade a d eal w ith p ro se c u to rs to plead g u ilty to the felo n y charg e of concealed p o ssessio n sem iautom atic pistol. He got five years of supervised probation for the weapon charge. of a Tw o o th er felony ch arg es — unlawful restraint and unlawful use of a w eapon — w ere red u ced to misdemeanors. He got a suspended 30-day sen ten ce in the Boone the C o u n ty Jail m isd em ean o r charges, plu s tw o years of supervised probation ón each charge. for each of The probations are to run at the sam e tim e, m eaning Peeler faces five years of supervised probation — the m axim um allo w ed u n d e r Missouri law. " It m eans th e re 's a p ro b atio n officer looking over his shoulder for the next five years," Wynes said. He said Peeler will be allowed to travel if he has a job. Other terms of the probation require Peeler to have no contact with his accuser and to u n d e rg o abuse counseling. do m estic "This is not only just, it's right in line w ith w hat he ou g h t to get," Wynes said, noting Peeler has no previous criminal record. There was no testim ony during the hearing and the w om an was identified only by the initials A.L. The athlete responded "yes sir" when asked by Circuit Judge James F. McHenry whether he understood the charges. Peeler sat quietly at the defense table, wearing an olive-colored suit and white shirt. McHenry heard the case on a change of ven u e from neighboring Boone County. He had been free on $16,000 bond since his arrest May 30. E arlier, Peeler h ad e n te red innocent pleas to the charges. The felony charge carried a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $5,000 fine. M artina N avratilova blasted a forehand shot at Linda Harvey-W ild during their match Tuesday. H a rv e y -W ild defeated N avratilova. Associated Press