Dave Mason brings memories of '60s rock to Austin, page 11 — — ----------------------------- .— _ ---- _ _ # BEST A/AIUbi£ copy Oa il y T e x a n Vol. 90, No. 95 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Friday, February 15, 1991 25c SA candidates address multiculturalism issue Editor's Note: T h is is the first in a series of articles exam ining issues faced by the Students' Association presidential candi­ dates. Aaron DaMommio Daily Texan Staff The candidates for Stu d en ts' A ssociation p re sid e n t, w hile all more or less professing support for multicultur­ alism, offered different takes Thursday on the often controversial sub­ ject of increasing multicultural education at the University with programs such as revi­ sions to E306. While the revisions to the class are on hold because the com m ittee charged with developing them resigned in protest two weeks ago, the issue remains prom inent in student minds. Bill Tiede, a liberal arts sophom ore, said proposals like revising the book list for the E306 course fail to take multiculturalism far enough. He offered a proposal to increase multicultural education at the University that he said is “ much more broad and al­ lows [students] to be exposed to many more id eas." He proposed modifying the language re­ quirem ent of UT degrees to allow the op­ tion of taking an equivalent num ber of hours of multicultural courses instead. “M ost students after they graduate can't remember more than a few words of the language they stu d ied ," he said. He noted that one of the original purposes of the lan­ guage requirem ent was to expose students to other cultures and said his proposal bet­ ter meets that goal. Michael M ark, a liberal arts senior and current SA representative, called multicul­ turalism “an issue of fairn e ss/' “If we are required to study British litera­ ture ... then it's not fair in turn to ignore Spanish literature, African-American litera­ ture, Asian literature or American Indian literature," he said. Mark, w ho supports the proposed revi­ sions to E306 courses, suggested that the University exam ine its minority retention and recruitm ent programs, cut those that do not work and spend its funds tin the programs that have proven them selves. To seek such changes, he said he would lobby UT President William Cunningham and the UT System Board of Regents and, if that failed, request an audience with Gov. Ann Richards and key legislators. Jennifer Kowalik, a governm ent sopho­ more who is running with vice presidential candidate Bret Lock, contrasted her ideas about multiculturalism with mandatory classes. the idea of “ I think that force-feeding information to students by making them attend a m anda­ tory course like E306 on multiculturalism would not be effective because even if you could compel attendance, you could not compel attention or en th u siasm ," she said. Asked if current classes already compel in m onoculturalism , Kowalik attendance said many classes on cam pus are slanted by virtue of being taught by professors with varying opinions. Sh e stressed the im por­ tance of preserving the option of the cur­ rent E306 classes — largely focused on W estern culture — while inserting som e multicultural sections. Mark Hopkins, an econom ics junior whose brother Mike is his running mate, said current SA President Toni Luckett has pushed multiculturalism so far that people are tired of it. “C hanging people's attitudes d oesn 't happen ovetfm ght," he said. He supports revisions of E306 classes as long as they are carefully monitored to prevent them from becoming “an indoctrination of stu d en ts." When asked if classes which deal mainly with W estern culture indoctrinate students, he said, "A m erica formed from W estern culture. W e're not being indoctrinated, w e're being educated in our own h isto ry ." He also said he believes core require­ ments should be loosened, perhaps with an American History course focusing on the contributions of blacks. Scott Gaille, a governm ent junior, said the E306 class changes would define "ra c ­ ism as only possible by whites and sexism as only possible by m ales." Asked about minority retention and re­ that cruitment programs, he responded Please see Candidates, page 16 Allies continue air war, respond to civilian deaths Associated Press D H A H R A N , Saudi Arabia — From the Kuwait i coast to central Iraq, U .S. and al­ p ilo ts lie d away pounded targets fresh at Thursday, unimpeded by the inter­ national furor over the Baghdad bunker tragedy. The U .S. com m and, in response to the death of hundreds of civilians in W ednesday's Baghdad bom bing, said it was looking for new ways to Hmri such casualties — possibly in­ cluding advance announcem ents of its targets. The air war, buildup to an armor- and-infantry push into Kuwait, appeared to have made m ajor prog­ ress. The com m and said one-third of Iraq's tanks and artillery in the battle zone have now been de­ stroyed. Strategists are believed shooting for 50 percent destruction before or­ dering the ground assault. The com ­ mander of British forces in the Per­ sian Gulf, Lt. G en. Sir Peter de la reporters Thursday Billiere, there are already “ proposed d ates" for the offensive. told A fourth U .S. aircraft carrier, the USS Am erica, has moved into the joining the Ranger, Persian Gulf, the Midway and the Theodore Roo­ sevelt, a Pentagon source confirm ed Iraqis mourn killed civilians, page 3 Thursday. The America had been in the Red Sea. Planes from the w ar­ ships are expected to fly cover over allied troops in a ground assault. In the Desert Storm air cam paign, two crew m en of a U .S. Air Force EF-111 w ere killed when their plane went down in northern Saudi Ara­ bia, apparently after being damaged in com bat, and a British Tornado bom ber was lost while attacking Ira­ qi airfields. Its two crew m en were listed as missing. A London new spaper Friday quoted a senior U.S. military source as saying the shelter in Baghdad was not a command center but was bombed because Iraqi military offi­ cers w ere believed to be sheltering there. The London new spaper The Inde­ pendent, in a dispatch from Riyadh Saudi Arabia, quoted the U.S. source as contradicting the official U .S. position that the facility’ wa^ bombed because it was a command- and-control center. Reporter Robert Fisk wrote that source spoke on condition of ano­ nymity. The source was quoting as saying, "T h e re's not a soul who be­ lieves that it was a command-and- control bunker. I think the official statem ent on this will change in the coming days. The military did be­ soldiers. We lieve it contained Please see Baghdad, page 2 H e a rta c h e Peace rallier Evelyn Miller, a worker for the Campaign for Peace in the Middle East, listens to a speech by Janet Manley of Greenpeace. The demonstration titled “The War is Breaking Our Hearts" was sponsored by John McConnico Deily Texan Staff the the Council of Women, Austin Peace and Justice Coalition and The Campaign for Global Security and was held at the Federal Building at Ninth Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. See story on page 7. TSP board extends deadline for ‘Texan’ editor applicants INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Fee hike, renovation approved by regents Buck Sralla Daily Texan Staff M embers of the Texas Student Publications Board of O perating Trustees voted Thursday to extend bv two weeks the deadline for The Daily Texan editor applica­ tions after the lone applicant did not m eet the unwaiv- able minimum grade point average requirem ent for the job. Since applicant Greg W einer, a governm ent senior, does not m eet the 2.5 minimum grade point average requirem ent and has not com pleted the specified sequence of journalism courses, the board, acting in accordance with TSP Handbook provisions, declared a vacancy and voted to suspend the predeterm ined qual­ ifications for the editorship. The board will appoint an editor outright at its March 7 meeting. Because the board suspended the qualifications, any student — with or without any Texan experience — could now apply and be considered for the editorship. W einer has worked at The Texan for three years in nearly every m anagerial capacity. The standard procedure for selecting an editor in­ volves the board's certification of applicants, followed by election by the student body. For the past two years, the race for Texan editor has gone uncontested. Before the board decision, TSP voting board member Martin G ibson, a professor of journalism , expressed the concern that appointing students to the editorship rather than electing them could send a negative m es­ sage to the UT population. "I don't think we ought to appoint the editor. That's not any g o o d ," he said. "If we have to [make an ap ­ pointment], w e ought to have some way to get the students' in p u t." But Kevin M cHargue, current Texan editor, said that while he understood how appointm ents could be perceived negatively, he said a student election in which all the experience qualifications for candidates were suspended would turn into "a popularity con­ t e s t " "It's a lose-lose situation. If som eone wins [an at large election] w ho is not qualified, you're going to have to directly flog the w ishes of the students ex^ pressed in the poll. It's a very dangerous situ ation ," said M cHargue, a non-voting board member. After the m eeting, W einer said he felt the matter was handled fairly. “The board has to follow rules that have been set up for it to follow. I appreciate the fact that the board was sufficiently concerned about garnering stu ­ dent input and thinking this out. It's certainly better not to rush into it," he said. Donze Lopez, TSP board president, suggested hold­ ing a pre-appointm ent forum in which students would pose operative questions to the applicants as a way of involving the UT population in the decision-m aking process. Agreeing with M cHargue, Lopez said he was against using a voter referendum to elect a Texan editor because the students, for the most part, would be unfam iliar with the requirem ents to lead a new spaper. Fernando Dovalina, assistant managing editor of the Houston Chronicle and voting m em ber ot the board, said that in his opinion students could show their input by expressing an interest in applying for the job of editor and discussing their ideas with the board. “ I'm concerned about the reputation that The Daily Texan h a s," he said. “Believe me, it's read and ob­ served by people throughout the state and elsew here in the business. It's important that you have a responsible person at that job and not som ebody who is merely popular." Voting board members Lopez, G ibson and Dovalina each said that although the minimum criteria for being considered for editor of The Texan had been suspended, they would still use the standards listed in the TSP handbook as guidelines for choosing an applicant. Dovalina said that while practical experience would weigh slightly more on his decision than classroom ex­ perience, he added, “That's not to say the classes should be thrown out the window. I think you need to weigh those two things and make a ju d g m en t." In a letter to the board, W einer said he intended to make a num ber of significant reforms. " The Texan is currently in a state of transform ation. In the past few years, the paper's style has sw ung radically from one extrem e to another. It is time now that the various thoughts and forces behind The Texan be unified and channeled toward a more singular v isio n ," he said. Clarification: In a page 6 story Wednesday on the Students’ Association elec­ tions, The Daily Texan was not provided with the name of Jalpa Patel, a pharmacy junior, as a candidate for one-year repre­ sentative , at-large. The Texan regrets any misunderstanding. Also inside: Oil companies reportedly tripled their income in the last quarter 3 Of 1990 Weather: My -va le n tin e -f o rg o t-m e -b e - cause-he-w as-sitting-in-a-bar weather: Looking at the empty Chivas bottle he brought me as a memento, it’s hard to enjoy those sunny skies. And even though there are highs in the lower 60s, l’m lower than the worm at the bottom of the tequi la bottle Maybe the NE winds of 10-15 mph will blow me toward Foley’s, so I can return those satin boxers I bought for him the other day. He’ll be back, though, and my once affectionate love will be somewhere in the lower 30s. Next time, baby drink it on the rocks.___________________ Index: Around Campus 8 C lassifieds............. 13 Comics.................... 15 Editorials....................... 4 11 Entertainment S p o rts .................................. 9 14 Television.................... 5 University 3 World & N a tio n .................... David Loy and Rebecca Stewart Daily Texan Staff The UT System Board of Regents approved an increase in optional student te e s, as well as an $8 million renovation of the Texas Union Building, at Thursday s m eeting at Balcones Research Center. Ih e higher fees, which are effec­ tive the iall 1901 sem ester, will raise the athletics charge from $52 for the academic year to $37. O ther raises include a $6 increase in the athletics dependent fee and a $1.30 increase in the Analecta literary lournal. The regents also approved plans for an $8 million renovation of the im- Texas Union Building The provem ents include modifying and upgrading of the present m echani­ e le c tr ic a l c a l, and p lu m b in g s\ sterns. The project is b e in g fu n d e d through the Rev­ enue Financing S v s t e m D e b t Proceeds, which are repaid from Texas ex istin g Union fees. from Temple R e p r e s e n t a ­ tives the Faculty \dvisorv Group spoke to the regents to gain support for the UT library system . instead of addressing However, Please see Regents, page 2 Secretary of state declines to rule on District 51 runoff M atthew Connally Daily 1 exan Staff Secretary of State John Hannah said Thursday he would not make a ruling on w hethei David Rodriguez the Texas is eligible House District 51 seat. to run tor "I don't think one pet son in an adm inistrative job should bt rinding the facts," Hannah said. ' I his of­ fice is not geared nor has the au thoritv to d eterm ine" w hethei Ro­ driguez is eligible. Rodriguez petitioned Tuesday for a recount attei Saturday's election left him tied for second place with Maria Luisa “ LuLu" Flores. An el gibility ruling would have dete mined which candidate would fa< top vote-getter G len Maxey in a rui off. R odrigue/ s eligibility to acquii the seat cam e into question M ood/ after countv records revealed th. he had not lived in District 51 for . least a vear before the deadline t tile his candidacy, as required b law. I hursday, two I iispanic forme candidates fot the seat delivered t Hannah a letter signed by four i the Hispanic former candidates rt Please see Rodriguez, page 16 sge 2 Friday, February 15,1991 THE DAILY TEX VN T h e D a i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor M a n a g in g E ditor Associate Managing Editors News Editor Associate News Editors News Assignm ents EcMor Senior Reporters Associate Editors Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Photo Editors Photographers Images Editor Asso ate Images Editors Graphics Editor Around Campus Editor . . . . Kevin McHargue Randy Kennedy Dtpu Bhattacharya Katrina Brown Scott Stanford Jett Turrentine Hope S ven Matthew Canto- Dane Schiller Jenny Huang Matthew Connally ( State I Aaron DaMommio (University). Steve Higginbotham (City) Michelle Koidin (Police) David Loy (University) Dimca Quesada (University) Adam Hersh Dave Winter Shannon Prosser ................................. , ..................................................Shai Tsur Keith Nelson Mindy Brown Jaim e Aron Mark Babineck. Craig M Douglas Kirk J Crippens Michelle Patterson Michelle Dapra Marc Fort Scot* Lewis Jo ey tin. Susanne Mason. John McConnicO Jack W Plunkett Greg S Weiner Jeanne Acton Bobby Ruggiero Felipe Campos Mindy Brown Issue Staff Part-time ReportersFrancme Bosco. Carl Nemec, Howard Pieper. Amy Schlegel, Rebecca Stewart Buck Sralla Nancy Thomas Sam Kaplan Angela Shah David Bezanson Karen Hinojosa Jim Miller . Kristine Wolff ....................................................................................... Michael Casey Melissa Gilbert. Jennifer Jarratt, Sarah Story. Tanzy Wilson Korey Coleman. Cameron Johnson. Robert Rodriguez Greg Werner Editorial Columnist Editorial Assistant Entertainment Assistant Sports Assistant Sports Wr ter Makeup Editor Wiie Editor C :cy Editors Comic Strip Cartoonists . . . Local Display Art Director Class fe d Display Classified Telephone Sales Classified Telephone Service Advertising Cmdy Anderson Scott Butler Michael Chang Catherine Durkm Melame Hanson Dave Hemphill. Sandra Kuetiler V chaet La Kier Susan lebfrom Doug Lvon Melina Madolora Lisa Perry Jyile Robrnson. Elsa Snyder Stace Sorrells Wendy Watkins Dwight Wilhelm Landon Sims Brad Corbet: Cmdy Garza Sheronda Scott Joyce Inman David Ross Jennifer Brooks Art Carrillo. Andi Harrison Chnsti Shadford Michele Dapra, Tammy Ferguson Sonia Garcia Dianne Hodgtns. Shaw- McMmn Hr sty Tang The Da . Te«an iU S PS 14S-44C is published ny exas S tudent Publications 250C W hitis Austin TX '8 7 0 5 The Dai * 7n*an is published Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday and Friday e xcept holidays exam periods m d when school is not m session Seconc class r-ostage paid at Austin T x 78710 a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin N ew ' contributions w • be a, cepie d by telephone t4 7 t 4 5 9 11 at the editorial oM>ce iTexas Student Publications Buiidmq 2 12? i or at the s w * aboratory C om m unication B uiidinq A4 ’ 0 1) For lo cal and national display advertising, call 471 ’ 865 For classified display and national classified display advertising can 471 -8900 For tiassihed word advertising call 471 5244 Entire contents copyright 1991 Texas Student Publications The Daily Texan Mail Subscription Rates O ne S em ester (Fall or S pnnqi 'w o S em esters (Fall and Spring) Summer S ession One Year sF alt S pring and Sum mer 1 S30 00 55 00 20 00 75 00 Send o rders and address changes 10 Texas S tudent P ublications P O Box D Austin TX 78713 8904 or to To ch arge by V ISA or M asterC ard cat- ' 1 5083 TS P B u itding 13 200 O rcaM 471-5083 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D. Austin, TX 78713-8904 Advertising Deadlines for The Daily Texan D a y __________ Monday — Tuesday — Wednesday Deadline -- Wed., 4p.m. ■- Thur., 4p m. - Fri., 4p.m. D ay ______ _________ Deadline Thursday Friday — images - Mon., 4p.m. Tues , 4p.m. Fri., 4p.m Classified Word Ads Deadline 1 1 a m Last Business Day P rior to Publication B E A L ) ( íALLERY (At Nomadic Notions) HIM West Sixth * 478-6200 ♦ ROSES! ROSES! ROSES! ♦ + GREAT VA LEN T IN E P R IC E S ! J Casa Verde Florist J 4 5 1 -0 6 9 1 Daily Specials 5 FTD • 4501 Guadalupe • On UT S h u ttle Rt. CO 32nd & Guadalupe O l/ x r *1 M 1 N MANAGEMENT Student & facu lty Discounts Available Board Certified: American Academy of Pain Mgmt. Fellow, American Back Society 706 West M LK Blvd., Stc. 7 (512) 480-8889 The Trucks HAVE ARRIVED! The wait is now over! We have restocked, and are now ready to offer you some great bargains on some great men's and ladies' traditional c lothing. Come by and see our huge selection of clothing, shoes and accessories! MacProducts USA 2021 Guadalupe Suite 23 Second Level Dobie Mall Free Parking 469-5000 DOORS NOW OPEN! Baghdad Continued from page 1 thought it was a military personnel bunker." I t. Col. Steve Roy, the Penta­ gon s night duty officer Thursday, denied the Independent report, " I he premise that we bombed the facility because it was a site tor Iraqi leadership and not a command-and- control center i s wrong," Rov said. "W e bombed it because it was a command-and-control center." In Baghdad, the day-after scenes were etched in sadness and hate. Body after body was pulled in grisly procession from the rubble of the underground structure bombed by U.S. warplanes early Wednes­ day, while it was crowded with ci­ vilians seeking refuge from air at­ tacks. Palestine Liberation Organization head Yasser Arafat visited the site and pledged solidarity with Iraq. "I'm truly astonished at what has happened," he told reporters. "It has exceeded completely the man­ date of the United Nations. It is a crime." The Iraqis said it was only a civil­ ian bomb shelter. But U.S. officials said indisputable evi­ dence, from radio intercepts, recon- thev had naissance photos and other sources, that the concrete facility was being used as a military command-and- control center. They said they were unaware it harbored any civilians Specialist*' at Jane's, the British military-affairs publishing house, said they believed it might actually have been a two-level, dual-use bunker — a bomb shelter atop a mil­ itary ihursdav whether this ' rings true,” Pentagon operations director I t Gen. I hum­ as Kelly said, "N o, n does not " facility. Asked The death toll remained uncer­ tain, in part because workers still had not reached all areas of the shattered structure. Civil defense officials estimated more than 500 died, mostly women and children. A mortuary director said 288 bodies had been removed, including 91 children, C N N 's Peter Arnett reported. Reporters at the scene counted at least 40 corpses, mans decapitated or missing limbs, extricated over one 90-minute peri­ od Thursday. For their part, the Americans have blamed President Saddam Hussein and the rest of the Iraqi leadership for the tragedy, saying the\ deliberately put civilians "in harm's w a v" at a potential target. Regents Continued from page 1 problems presently affecting faculty and students, the group presented a computer system called the "Schol­ ar's Work Station." This system, if adopted, would cost $3,000 to $15.0(H) per unit. New regent Ellen Temple ex­ pressed her concern for the library system after viewing the faculty group's presentation. "1 think it's always important to address the libraries; it's important to all the components," Temple said. Other items approved by the re­ gents include: ■ The renaming of the Katherine Pearce II building in the women's cooperative housing complex to the Jack and Katherine Pearce Building. ■ The appointment of three Col­ lege of Liberal Arts endowed aca­ demic positions. G. Karl Galinsky, professor of classics, will become a Floyd A. Cailloux Centennial pro­ fessor. Alan S. Knight, professor of history, will now hold the C.B. Smith Sr. Centennial Chair in Unit­ ed States-Mexico Relations. Thomas G. Palaima, associate professor of classics, will become a Raymond Dickson Centennial professor. Sim ply Send Roses or call about our other Valentine Specials. Fiesta Flowers 3830 N Lam ar 4 53 -7 6 1 9 REPAIR • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage C U S T O M MADE • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca. Austin. 478-9309 n v e 40 MB External Hard Drive Seikosha Mac Printer Macintax All disk holders 10% off SIMMs 1 MB SOd 399 209 75 55 PC ALERT! Your Macintosh Resource Center is now also your IBM/PC Resource Center! S hoe SALE , E v e ry 5 h o e £t B o o t in S to c k Here is a small sample of our huge selection. ¿Clarks Dress ¿105“° *495° ^Clarks pump f 59*° ¿3960 ¿gHi-Tec Walker ¿Sperry casual 139s** gRockport heeled pump ¿100^*49 60 ¿jVa&queCioretex hiker |179^5H2960 dg LaCrosse duck shoe $49^ *29 ^ ¿g LaCrosse after ski boot ^09^559^ ^limber land Trail shoe ^79^ ^39^° IAT TEXAS' HOTTEST RESORT. W ITH COOL PR IC ES, STARTING FROM $30’ H it the road to Port Royal in Port Aransas for Spring Break and chill out in the world's largest lagoon pool. An awesome 500-foot long wet and wild playground with swim-upcabana bars, hidden grottos, cascading waterfalls, whirlpools and our super water slide— all just steps from the white sandy beaches of Mustang Island. Plus: • Luxurious suites w ith built-in stereos, wet bars.washers & dryers, kitchens & sundeck terraces • Poolside party with live music every Wednesday • Special rates on horseback riding • Free tennis & beach volleyball • Restaurant & baron premise • "Sunset cruises & buck beer" • Greyhound races D Q U I 1 ■ - ^ B ^ B --- B W B ^ * S o when school s out, come hang out at the biggest and best pool in Texas. Park Road 53, Mustang Island Port Aransas, Texas 78373 1- 800-242-1034 * Price based on 6 people per 2 bedroom/ 2 bathroom suite. Stay 7 nights, get one free. SPRING ALLERGIES? If you are between 12 and 59 years of age and have suffered from SPRING allergies for at least the last two years, you may qualify to partici­ pate in a study of an investigational medication for the management of seasonal allergy symptoms. You will receive FREE skin testing and physi­ cal exams. Financial compensation provided upon study completion. For more information, please call: HEALTHQUEST RESEARCH 345-0032 Georgetown 863-8660 Round Rock 244-0542 "Survey says..." When asked: "Why wouldn't you use a condom with a new partner?" The number one answer for UT women and number two answer for UT men was, "afraid of partner s reaction." However, when asked: "If a new partner suggested using a condom, I would feel..." 93% of UT men and 99% of UT women answered, "...that it was a good idea." Think about it. Risk talking about it. Just do it! Were open every Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 10-7, Saturday 10-6, & Sundays from 1-5 with great bargains on our beautiful new merchandise! 8611 NO, MOPAC EXPRESSWAY. EXIT STECK NO, IN i . t a . O U T L E T _______ ..■ .. , ATLANTA BETHESDA BIRMINGHAM DALLAS FORT WORTH JACKSON MEMPHIS NORMAN OKLAHOMA CITY TULSA •20 years in Austin* Whole Earth Provision Co. V 2410 San Antonio St. 478-1577 4006 S. Lamar 8868 Research Blvd. 458-6333 J 444-9974 Responses were obtained in an informal survey conducted by UT Student Health Center Sexual Health Peer Instructors during National Condom Week in 1990. For information issues related to condom use, visit the Student Health Center Sexual Health Peer Instructor Display on the West Mall today from 10am - 3pm. Register for a free, safer sex tee-shirt. _ 5-lS I ■ Student Health Center, Health Education Department, 471-6252 N atio n al Condom W eek 2/14 - 2/20/91 WORLD & NATION T h e D a i l y t e x a n Friday. February 15. 1991 Page3j THURSDAY S DOW JONES 2.877 23 DOWN 31.93 Volume: 230.750.000 shares Oil companies triple income Prices declining, report says Associated Press WASHINGTON — Major oil com panies recorded a 77 percent in­ crease in profits in the fourth quar­ ter of 1990 as high crude oil prices nearly tripled their incom e from oil and gas production, the govern­ ment reported Thursday. The report by the Energy Depart­ ment said there was no evidence of price gouging by the com panies. * The com panies' "greatest gains in profitability were directly tied" to the sharp increases in crude oil pric­ es that occurred in the m onths after invasion of Kuwait on the Iraqi Aug. 2, the report said. But the report noted that in recent m onths oil prices have been declin­ ing and because of a supply glut may fall more w hen the fighting stops in the Persian Gulf. "If that is true, the sharp increase in oil and gas profitability ... will be transitory," said the report by the department's Energy Information Administration. The governm ent's findings for the last three m onths of 1990 were largely expected since they reflected individual earning reports disclosed separately by most of the major oil com panies last month. The govern­ m ent report did not break down earnings by individual companies. A major company is one that pro­ duces crude oil, refines it and sells the products like gasoline through its ow n retail outlets. Calvin Kent, head of the Energy Information Administration, said the agency found no evidence of price gouging by the oil com panies and that for the entire year of 1990 oil industry profits were not unusu­ ally high. "You had the results that you w ould have expected with the rise in crude prices [after the Persian Gulf crisis] and the significant retail “You had the results that you would have expect­ ed with the rise in crude prices [after the Persian Gulf crisis] and the signif­ icant retail margins that existed. That’s where the money was made — in production and retail.” — C a lv in K en t, E n e rg y In form ation A d m in istra tio n margins that existed. That's where the m oney was made — in produc­ tion and retail," Kent said in an in­ terview. Edwin Rothschild, an energy ex­ pert for Public Citizen, a W ashing­ ton-based advocacy con su m er group, said the findings were "a clear indication that windfalls were made" by the oil com panies. "Consumers were taken for a ride," said Rothschild. As was true in the third quarter, producing com panies did especially well w hile independent refiners did poorly. The refiners could not raise prices for their products fast enough to keep pace with the rising cost of the crude oil they had to buy from producers. Profits for the independent re­ finers fell 54 percent during the last three m onths of the year. Profits from refining at major com panies declined by 7 percent. These declines were because the price of oil products overall "decreased more rapidly than did crude oil prices" from their early-fall peak and motorists shifted away from high-octane gasoline where traditionally the greatest margins exist, the report said. T ra g e d y m a sk s Associated Press Filipino children wore cardboard gas masks as they marched to the presi­ dential palace Thursday to remind the government to evacuate all Filipino overseas contract workers trapped in the Persian Gulf. The children are primarily the sons and daughters of Filipino workers. Iraqi mourners vow retribution Associated Press B A G H D A D , Iraq — Iraqi m o u r n e r s marched along­ side flag-covered c o ffin s T h u rs­ day, tiring auto­ matic rifles into the air and crying out for revenge for the U.S. air strike that Iraq said killed hundreds in a shelter. "By God we swear, w e will make them pay this their blood crime!" members of the crowd of 5,000 yelled. for Scores more bodies were pulled from the building that w as blasted apart early W ednesday by U.S. war­ planes, and a Cabinet minister de­ picted President Bush as a war crim­ inal comparable to Hitler — a comparison Bush him self has used when speaking of Saddam H ussein. ih e Iraqi military reported nearly 400 allied air raids late W ednesday and early T hursday, including 135 against "residential targets" across the country and 251 sorties against military targets in the southern war zone. Iran's official Islamic Republic N ew s Agency said the southern Ira­ qi port city of Basra underwent in­ tensive attacks, aimed primarily at an oil refinery and petrochemical complex. The agency also reported numer­ ous other raids, one of them target­ ing the southeastern town of al- Qurna, the reputed location of the biblical Garden of Eden. The manager of Baghdad's al- Rashid hotel, m eanwhile, denied U.S. claims that his establishment housed a military communications center, and allowed foreign report­ ers to search the 14-storv building. I he death toll from W ednesday s raid remained uncertain, in part be­ cause rescuers had not vet reached all areas of the shattered a box e-and- below-ground shelter. This report w a s clean'd in, Im p. th orities in accordance w ith m ilita n cu r ¡tu rules. German teachers, school workers stage warning strike Associated Press BERLIN — More than 15,000 teachers and school workers staged a warning strike in eastern Germany on Thursday in the lat­ est sign of the region's growing econom ic troubles. In Bonn, the Economics Ministry said eastern German industrial output plunged 10.5 percent in December. Across the former Comm unist nation of 16 million residents, local leaders are clam­ oring for more m oney from the federal gov­ ernment, unem ploym ent is increasing and rents are rising beyond the reach of many people. For many, the euphoria over October's unification of the two Germanys has been replaced by worry and feelings of insecurity about the future. Teachers walked off their jobs in the cit­ ies of Dresden, Leipzig and Chemnitz, forc­ ing three-quarters of the local schools and kindergartens to close for the day. school personnel took to the streets in d em ­ onstrations during the one-day job action, according to the GEW teachers' union. The strikers were dem anding higher w ages and job protection, despite efforts to trim dow n the bloated Communist-era work forces. Economics Minister Juergen M oellemann said earlier this week that rebuilding the industry in eastern Germany will take long­ er and be more difficult than originally thought. In all, about 15,500 striking teachers and At the same time, the federal govern­ ment said it was sending $6 billion to east­ ern Germany this month to keep towns and cities financially afloat. On Thursday, M oellemann said the 10.5 percent drop in eastern German industrial production underscores the "seriousness of the economic situation there." W estern Germans, w hose industrv re­ m ains strong, say they will have to rebuild eastern German industry from top to bot­ tom The region's Communist-built plants a n d factories are in worse shape than origi­ nally estimated, and they are turning out almost no products that are competitive on world markets. Thursday's strike of teachers and school workers was onlv a part of the growing troubles. Eastern Germany's state governors met in Dresden to plan their latest strategy for getting more money from Bonn. Kurt Biedenkopf, the maverick governor of Saxony, revived Ins threat of a Suprenu Court suit to get increased funds. Associated Press Research indicates ibuprofen users twice as likely to suffer from ulcers PHILADELPHIA — The w idely used pain reliever ibuprofen doubles the risk of ulcers, according to Vanderbilt University researchers, and som e experts say people taking it may want to consider lower doses or alternatives. But for those suffering chronic pain and inflamma­ tion, researchers said ibuprofen may be the best choice, as it has the low est ulcer risk am ong the drugs studied. Those drugs belong to a prescription class called non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs or NSAIDs. "Occasional low -dose users should not be con­ cerned about the increased risk," said the study's lead author, Dr. Marie Griffin. "It is unlikely that taking one or tw o ibuprofen several times a month poses any significant risk." The researchers did not study aspirin, which is also an NSAID, but said that aspirin is "at least" as risky as ibuprofen. A cetam inophen, used in the pain re­ liever Tylenol, is not an NSAID and is not associated with ulcers. Ibuprofen, available w ithout a prescription since 1985, is sold under such brand nam es as Advil, Medi- pren, Motrin and Nuprin. Soviets m iffed at Iceland over Lithuania MOSCOW — The Foreign Ministry said Thursday it had recalled the Soviet ambassador to Iceland and dem anded the Reykjavik governm ent explain its deci­ sion to establish diplomatic ties with the secessionist republic of Lithuania. There was no immediate reaction from Iceland. "Lithuania remains one of the union republics of the Soviet Union. Ignoring this fundamental fact is an attempt to interfere in the Soviet Union's internal af­ fairs," Kremlin spokesm an Vitaly Churkin said. Iceland on M onday became the first country to for­ mally recognize Lithuania's March declaration of in­ dependence. All three Baltic republics — Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia — were absorbed into the Soviet Union in 1940 under a secret pact betw een Adolph Hitler and Josef Stalin. Most Western countries never recognized the incor­ poration. Global warming conference yields few results CHANTILLY, Va. — Delegates from about 100 na­ tions concluded a 10-day conference on global warm­ ing Thursday with little agreement on anything ex­ cept to pursue the problem further later this year. Environmentalists expressed disappointm ent over the pace of the United Nations proceedings, the first negotiating steps toward approving a treaty to limit em issions of the so-called "greenhouse" gases. Many European countries would like a treaty with a timetable for cutting carbon dioxide em issions, the major contributor to global warming. Som e nations already have committed to stabilizing or reducing car­ bon dioxide by the year 2000. Carbon dioxide is an inevitable product of the burn­ ing of fossil fuels. Other nations, including the United States, have been reluctant to commit them selves to specific em is­ sion reductions, fearful that a dramatic shift away from fossil fuels might threaten econom ic growth. Ex-Drexel employees recall firm ’s heyday NEW YORK — This Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. conference had nothing to do with junk bonds, insid­ er trading, federal investigations or a guy named Mi­ chael Milken. It also had everything to do with them. On the anniversary of the firm's downfall, hun­ dreds of former em ployees toasted Drexel not for the criminal entanglem ents but for the success that made it Wall Street's m ost feared and envied investm ent house in the cutthroat 1980s. On Feb. 13, 1990, Wall Street's Raiders declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy court protection, after failing to survive a four-year criminal probe, a guilty plea to securities fraud and a $650 million penalty that made it a pariah. Milken, the junk bond guru, w ould have been w el­ come, but he's preparing to serve a 10-year prison sentence. Milken is the troubled genius w ho made Drexel junk-bond rich. His m istakes also caused its dem ise. Douglas, Blanc injured in helicopter crash SANTA PAULA, Calif. — Actor Kirk Douglas nursed cuts and bruises Thursday but cartoon voice artist N oel Blanc was in critical condition as investiga­ tors tric»d to unravel how their helicopter crashed with an airplane. The sin gle-en gin e aerobatic | plane burned after the collision W ednesday. A veteran airline cap­ tain in the stunt plane was killed along with a student. Blanc, 52, son of the late Mel Blanc, was in critical but stable condition at Santa Paula Memorial H ospital, su p ervisor n u rsin g Cecelia Moore said. Blanc suffered a fractured leg, broken ribs, a bru­ ised kidney and a ruptured lung. He was using a breathing ma­ Blanc chine. Douglas, 74, w as listed in fair condition at Cedars- Sinai Medical Center in Los A ngeles, spokesman Ron Wise said. The actor, w ho wears a heart pacemaker, suffered a scalp cut, scrapes and bruises. The helicopter and plane collided about 40 feet above ground shortly after both aircraft took off. vVinnie Mandela trial delayed Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — The kidnap and assault trial of Winnie Mandela was postponed I hursday until M arch 6, so prosecu­ tors could search for a w itness w hose disappearance put their case in jeopardy. P r o s e c u to r Jan S w a n e p o e l received the postponem ent by argu­ ing that it would be "im possible" to proceed after one key w itness van­ ished and two others subsequently were too scared to testify. Mrs. Mandela, wife of African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, and three co-defendants are being tried on charges thev kid­ napped and assaulted four young men in Soweto in December 1988. All pleaded innocent M onday to four counts each of kidnap and as­ sault. One of the four young m en, Stompie Seipei, was found dead with his throat slit in a field in Janu­ ary 1989. The m issing man, Gabriel Mekgwe, and the two w ho are re­ fusing to testify survived the alleged assault, and their testimony is vital to the prosecution's case. M ekgw e disappeared Sunday night, hours before he was to take the stand. On W ednesday. Kenneth Kgase and Tab iso M ono said Mekgwe's disappearance frightened them, and they refused to testify. Judge M.S. Stegmann said he sym pathized with Kgase and Mono but did not consider their tear of reprisals "a just excuse" for declin­ ing to give evidence. Stegmann ordered the men d e­ tained Thursday morning, then re­ leased them after the postponem ent w as announced. If they refuse to testify w hen the trial resumes, they could face up to five years in prison. If Mr. M ekgwe is found and is well, they [Kgase and Mono] will probably be willing Sw anepoel said. to testifv Despite their fears, both Kgase and M ono have refused police p ro ­ tection and are staying at an undis­ closed ad d ress in Johannesburg. several saying he w as A man claim ing to be M ekgw e tel­ ephoned Johannesburg newspapers and new s agencies W ednesday, in H arare, Z im babw e, an d w as safe. The caller said he refused to return to South Africa because he did not w an t to testify ag ain st fellow ANC members such as Mrs. M andela. The head of the ANC's Harare of­ fice, Max M olonyeni, said T hursday he was unaware of M ekgwe enter­ ing Zimbabwe. Kgase, M ekgwe an d Memo testi­ fied last year at a separate trial that they were abducted In members ot Mrs. Mandela's b o d y g u ard team . They said thev were taken to Mrs. Mándela s house, w here she and others assaulted them. AZT poses possible risks for minorities Associated Press WASHINGTON — N ew research suggests that blacks and Hispanics infected with the AIDS virus may be harmed by early treatment with the anti AIDS drug AZT. But scientists agreed Thursday that the unexpect­ ed finding, while disturbing, needs more studv before treatment recom m endations are changed. Members of the Food and Drug Administration's ad­ visory committee on anti viral drugs stressed that the preliminary findings of the study were inconclusive. It does raise a flag," said Raul Meier, a statistics professor at the University of Chicago. Members noted that the Veterans Affairs Department study was small, with 338 participants, and that the results were inconsistent with other, larger studies that showed benefit from early treatment with AZT. Ihe FDA based its decision to relabel AZI for early treatment use on those larger studies. The VA study also was not designed to measure ra­ cial differences, and therefore might not bean accurate reflection. And it was unable to measure the impor­ tance of other factors, such as socioeconomic status, lifestyle and access to routine medical care. However, several panel members said they felt the findings important enough that thev w ould tell their minority patients before letting them decide on a treat­ ment course. "The findings may be a fluke but I'm concerned thev might not be," said Dr. Richard O'Brien, a researchei at the federal Centers for Disease Control in Vtlanta. He also said physicians should be informed of the study findings. Dr. Wayne Greaves, head of the infectious disease division at Howard University and a consultant to the panel, said that while he agreed the evidence was not strong enough to relabel AZ I , he w ould tell his m inori­ ty patients what the study has found. "I will tell them the data co n trad icts earlier stud ies, that early AZT therapy mac not be useful and may even be harmful to minority patients," he said, adding that the study "is preliminary and will need to be repli­ cated. The study supported the findings of earlier studies that showed \Z T slow ed progression to AIDS among whites infected with the virus w ho were treated in the early stages. But minorities treated with the drug reacted differ­ ently — many did not benefit, and the health of som e deteriorated with early treatment. Also, it indicated that blacks and 1 lispanics were helped more w hen giv en AZT in the later stages of the disease than in the early stages, the reverse of whites. The study w as designed to evaluate the differences between giving AZT, the onlv approved anti-AIDS drug, to patients who have mild sym ptom s ot the dis­ ease and to patients w ho are in the later stages. Page 4 Friday, February 15,1991 TH E DA ILY TEXAN EDITOR!/» S Viewpoint op oions exp^ssed n The Deity Texan are those of the editor and the writer o! the arttc fe They are not necessarily those o! the University admm stratton the Board of Regents or the T*>*as Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Opinions expressed in Dissenting Opinions and staff or guest columns are those of ’he writer A cid Indigestion Balcones violations are UT's latest safety lapses * T he su rgeo n general m ay soon need to is­ su e a w arn in g that attend ing the Univer­ sity is h a z a r d o u s to our health. Last month, the Environmental Protection Agency charged the University with \ 7 viola­ tions (it federal h a zard o u s w aste requirem ents at the Balcones Research Center (off Burnet Road). Penalties exceed $170,000 tor actions that include storing C lass A explosives in cor­ roding cans and k eepin g h a z a rd o u s chemicals in soda bottles covered with rags. For most of us here on main cam p u s, the vio­ lations at Balcones seem w orlds aw ay. S o m e ­ how the possibility of a storage facility blowing up or contam inating groun d water in \ o r t h Austin just d o e s not carry the sa m e im mediacy it would have if it h a p p en ed in the RI M b ase ­ ment. But incidents similar to the one at Balcones can happen on c a m p u s precisely because the lax safety enforcem ent there is part of the sam e one hired here by the Universitv . The infrac­ tions have becom e par t of a series of Universitv environmental and safety violations which to­ gether p o se real threats to stu den ts, faculty and staff. A sb estos insulation, which c a u se s lung scar­ ring and cancer, is riddled throughout the Uni­ versity (including dormitories). Officals have known for vears of its presence in the Union basem ent, vet much of the asb esto s still re­ mains there. I wo years ago, an internal audit of the L I Division of Physical Plant concluded that the Universitv inadequately trained em ploy ees in asb esto s removal an d failed to report removal to the EPA as required by law. (This frightening qualitv control is in spite of an $8 student fee hike since last spring, part of which helps clean up the m ess). The administration is certainly accustom ed to sh o d d y safety efforts. After all, Preside it Wil­ liam C u n n in g h am se rv e s on the board of Freeport M cM oRan, on e of the worst industrial polluters in the nation. N ot suprisingly, top-level adm inistrative in­ difference has trickled dow n. Mike C am pbell, a former UT environm ental health inspector, first reported the Balcones violations. O nce his s u ­ pervisors were informed of the incidents, Campbell states, "T h e y didn't seem to think there w a s any problem. The UT Safety Office Iust doesn 't seem to care much about regula­ tions and safe ty ." The University n eed s to stop its complacency toward the health of e m p lo y ees an d students. P erhaps a Stu den ts' A ssociation investigation into University compliance with EPA stan d ard s w ill help secure safety stan d ard s in the sam e w ay the SA Shuttle Bus committee did so. S tu den ts sh ou ld not need to a d d "prettv p le a se " onto requ ests for proper a sb e sto s re­ moval an d h a z a rd o u s w aste storage. The Uni­ versitv is part of our livelihood, an d it n eed s to work hard to e n su re safety for all its m em bers. — Adam Hersh v FLU m ore wLÍXS AND W£'U HAVE YOU OPENED VP SO WE CAN SET ON WITH the operation. I f su rg ic a l surgery were lik e su rg ic a l bom bing Gw E ( ¿ . a . A " u p ? Another cost of war trip The N o rm an d v S ch olars w ould like to clarify ou r p osition con ­ the cancellation of our cerning five-w eek to France ( " S t u ­ den ts cancel French trip ," The Dai­ ly Texan, T h u rsd ay). First we did not cancel the trip, the ad m in istra­ tion did. M ost of u s w ere w illing to sign w aivers releasin g the U ni­ versity o f an v liabilities but this option w as rejected. The article im plies w e are a p a ­ thetic an d resign ed to their d eci­ sion; in actuality, w e are extrem e­ ly d isa p p o in ted . M ost o f u s h ave chosen to rem ain w ith the p ro ­ gram b ecau se the c la sse s an d in­ stru ctors are excellent, bu t also b e­ cau se w e w ould h ave difficulty ch an gin g p lan s this late in the se ­ m ester. It is bitterly ironic that this "p ro g ra m for p e a c e " h as been called o ff d u e to war. Elsa Garza Government Soviet studio letter w as E d ito r's note: T h is sig n e d by 18 others. just the facts, please I d o n 't know w hether Barbara Harlow' is a go o d E nglish p ro fe s­ sor, but her "k n o w le d g e " of h isto ­ ry sim p ly su ck s! Sh e d o e sn 't know that Jord an attacked the then 9- m iles-w ide Israel in 1967 an d that Israel g ain ed control o v er the W est Bank through self-d efen se. Sh e d o e sn 't know that for 20 years prior to 1967 not a sin g le w h isper w as heard ag a in st " J o r ­ danian o c c u p a tio n ," hence sh o w ­ ing the identity of W est Bank A r­ ab s an d East Bank A rabs. She d o e sn 't know that Iraqi so ld iers w ere fighting in w ars ag a in st Isra­ el so that an y linkage to the other Iraqi ag g re ssio n in K uw ait is only a sick kind o f p ro p a g a n d a by Iraq. Scores o f Israelis h av e been m u rdered by W est Bank terrorists before C N N w'as e stab lish ed so Is­ rael d o e sn 't ow e the ex-Jo rd an ian s favors. Sh e d o e sn 't realize an y that an v A rab P alestinian m ay leave Israel a s free a s a bird (if they d o n 't love her) an d g o to Jo r­ d an w here they en joy a p o p u la ­ tion m ajority in a land four tim es a s big a s Israel. H er belief in an A rab P alestinian h om elan d m yth is solely a su p p o rt of a Jo rd an ian political plot to regain the Jew ish hom eland in Palestine. > a ron Shelter Graduate student Learn the first time Steve C arter's editorial ("U .S . sh ould ab an d o n d ecim ated Ira q ," The Daily Texan, Feb. 11) n eglects recent historical ev en ts. The allies w ould p refer not to be in volved in this conflict but the w o rld 's e x p e ­ rience with G erm an y in W orld War I an d W orld W ar II is on e not to be rep eated . Little m ore than 20 vears after G erm an y su rren d ered after its a g g re ssio n in W orld War I, it returned m uch stro n g er an d m enacin g in the form of H itler's World W ar II. T his seco n d w ar cost too m an y lives — lives that could h ave been sav e d if G erm an y w as su p e rv ise d after W orld W ar I with the O ccu p ation . S h ou ld the allies give the sam e op p ortu n ity to H u sse in ? S h o u ld w e negotiate p eace with H u ssein regard in g his political an d m ilitary pow er on lv to w itn ess a rep eat perform ance five, 10 or 20 y ears from n o w ? Sh o u ld w e giv e him the time to perfect his chem ical/ biological w e a p o n s an d d e v e lo p a nuclear arsen al? N o, I h o p e the al­ lies d o n 't giv e him the seco n d chance they g av e G erm an y . Bob Gray LBf School of Public Affairs Error in 'Firing Line' B ecause o f an ed itin g error, Richard H olbert's Feb. 7 Firing Line "B ib le d o e sn 't prom ote se x ­ i s m " w ron gly states "In Joh n 1:1- 42, Je su s sp e a k s with a S am aritan w om an (in a tim e w hen Je su s did not asso ciate with S a m a rita n s)." The correct version re a d s "In John 1:1-42, Je s u s sp e a k s with a S a m a ri­ tan w om an (in a tim e w hen Jew s did not asso ciate with S a m a ri­ ta n s)." The Texan regrets the error. Biomass fuels can end U.S. dependence on foreign oil T he United S tates d o esn 't face a fuel crisis d u e to the w ar in the Persian Gulf, but we could just a s easily have Brendan Corkery TEXAN COLUMNIST R equiring The civil rights movement lacks its prior commitment T he civil righ ts m ovem en t that began in the Sam Kaplan TEXAN COLUMNIST been in the m iddle of on e right now it H ussein had g o n e into S a u ­ di Arabia as well a s Kuw ait. While we "«till have the luxury, w e sh ou ld take ste p s to reduce our d e p e n d e n ce on foreign oil O n e w ay is by u sin g b io m ass fuels m ad e econom ically com petitive by a tax on im ported oil. B iom ass fuels are renew able re­ so u rces like w oo d, m eth an e from organ ic w aste, and su g a r cane. S u g ar cane is particularly in terest­ ing, as the U nited S tate s could easily benefit local relation sh ip s in the C aribbean b asin an d ou r ow n national security b\ judiciou sly exploiting su g a r can e resou rces tor alcohol fuels. A tax on im ported oil — ab ou t Slh a barrel — w ould p rod u ce q u it e now inevitable. "T hat's just such a sensitive spot to develop o n ," N ofziger said. "B ut if anybo dy could do a good job, it's him . ... The bottom line is th e land is going to be develo ped, and th at's going to harm the en v iro n m en t " Last N ovem ber, C ouncilm em ber Bob Larson w orked out a com pro­ m ise w hich w ould sw ap 14 en v iro n ­ m entally sensitive acres ow n ed by the developers for eight acres of parkland adjacent the PUD, which Larson said w as h id d en am id tall buildings an d "n o t visible for public in sp ectio n ." to H ow ever, the land sw ap m ust be app ro ved by the public in the May 4 election. If the sw ap is not passed, th en the PUD will be ap p rov ed. Mexican police arrest man in Matamoros murder case A ssociated P re s s MATAMOROS, Mexico — A nearly 2-vear search has en d ed w ith the arrest of a m an w ho used to w ork at a ranch w here a gro u p ot d rug traffickers in 1989 killed at least 13 people, som e of them in occult rituals, Mexican authorities said. Baudelio C havez Lopez, 4U, w as arrested on suspicion of com plicity in the m u rd ers and drug trafficking allegedly com m itted at th e ranch, Mexican au th o rities confirm ed T hursday. Police say the late Adolfo de Jesus C onstanzo headed the ring C havez told authorities it has been several years since he w orked at the R ancho Santa Elena ow ned bv the H ern an d ez family, said Jose Elias Gallegos Benitez, secretary for the Fourth Feder­ al District C ourt in M atam oros. Som e m em bers of the H ern an dez family are charged in the case, and accused of being princi­ pal figures in the d ru g ring. A uthorities allege that he w orked as an em ­ ployee of the drug ring at the ranch just south of the Rio G rande until bodies w ere discovered there in April 1989. "H e has been a fugitive since th e n ," said Jose Gabriel A ndrino H ern an dez, com m an der of the Mexican Federal Judicial Police in M atam oros. After a Tam aulipas State Judicial Police officer spo tted him , police based in Revnosa arrested C havez last S aturday in the bord er tow n of Rio Bravo, betw een M atam oros and Revnosa. A ndri­ no said C havez w as w orking in an autom obile body repair shop w h en police arrested him Sat­ urday. A m ong the 13 bodies au thorities u n earth ed at the m utilated the Rancho Santa Elena w as corpse of 21-year-old UT s tu d e n t M ark Kilroy. Two o th er bodies discovered at a nearby farm also are believed to be victim s of th e sam e d ru g ring. C o nstanzo and his accom plices killed rival dru g dealers and innocent victims, police say. Some of the victim s allegedly w ere sacrificed in rituals d esigned to protect their sm uggling o p e r­ ation w ith spirits invoked through the Afro-Car- ibbean religion Palo M avom be. C on stanzo an d an associate w ere killed by a n ­ o th er m em ber of the ring, purp o rted ly at Con- stan zo 's orders, w hile police w ere closing in on their Mexico City h id eo u t in May 1989. C havez, w hose nicknam e is "el Lelo" or the sillv one, rem ained in the CERESO state prison in M atam oros T hu rsday. His attorney, C esar Ce- ballos Blanco, declined com m ent. C havez w as form ally charged before Fourth Federal District Judge Francisco Salvador Perez on Tuesday night. C harges include d ru g trafficking, violation of federal burial and exhum ation law s, hom icide, kidnapping, carrying w eap o n s reserved for the m ilitan', carrying w eap o n s w ith o u t a license, carrying m ore than five m ilitary w eap o n s, crim i­ nal association, im perso natin g a police officer and "attacks against the general lines of com m u­ nication," such as telepho ne lines. Alleged m em bers of the sam e d ru g ring held in the M atam oros prison include Serafín H er­ nand ez Garcia, Helio H ern an d ez Rivera, David Serna Valdez and Sergio M artinez Salinas. They w ere charged w ith the sam e offenses as C havez, and have testified against C havez at prevous hearings, court secretary' Gallegos said. Judge Perez said T hursday that it could be m onths before he reaches verdicts in their cases. Drunken drivers may face stiffer penalties N ew law w ould authorize police to revoke drivers' licen ses, issue permits for DW Is M atth ew C onnally Daily Texan Staff H ouse Speaker Gib Lewis a n ­ nounced W ed nesday he h as a d d ­ ed to his list of legislative priorities a bill to im m ediately su sp e n d the license of d ru n k e n drivers. The A dm inistrative License Re­ vocation bill, originally pro p o sed by M others A gainst D run k Driv­ ing, w ould give police officers au ­ thority to take im m ediate po sses­ sion of from drivers charged w ith driving w hile intoxi­ cated. licenses "P assage of this bill w ould send a m essage that Texas is serious about getting d ru n k drivers off of our ro a d s," Lewis said. "It w ould add an im m ediate an d certain civil penalty in add ition to and sep arate from anv crim inal penalties for DW1." A ny driver caught w ith a blood alcohol co n ten t over the legal limit or w h o refuses to take th e test w ould have his/her license sus­ p en d ed im m ediately. The driver w ould be issued a tem p o rary p e r­ m it valid for 40 days d u rin g w hich tim e a su sp en sion hearing w ould be held. D rivers w ith a blood alcohol .10 or m ore licenses su s­ concentration of w ould have their pended for 90 days. If the driver has an y prior convictions in the previous five years, the su sp e n ­ sion w ould be for one year. A driver w h o refuses to take a breath test w o u ld face a 180-day suspension o r a one-year su sp e n ­ sion if he or sh e had a DWI convic­ tion in the p ast five years. The N ational T ransportation Safety Board estim ates that if li­ cense revocation law s w ere p assed three years ago, 500 Texans w ould not have been killed. The safety board asked Texas and all o th er states to toughen their d ru n k en driving law s after its investigation of a 1988 alcohol-re­ lated bus crash in K entucky that killed 27 people. D uring the first half of 1990, 636 persons w ere killed and 16,936 persons w ere in jured in alcohol- related crashes in Texas, according to the Texas D ep artm en t of Public Safety. N ationw ide, m ore than 20,000 lives are lost each year because of alcohol-related crashes. Lewis said passag e of the bill w ould qualify Texas to receive $16 million over five years in federal highw ay g ran ts for traffic safety and anti-DW I program s. Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, autho red the bill an d carried it in the Senate. ¡ Ultracuts offers the ultimate i : Ultracut I w coupon I W e Honor | Competitor’s Coupons! | 2928 Guadalupe 1931 E. Oltorf * Exp Z '26/91 322-9025 462-2833 DO YOU SUFFER FROM COLD SORES OR , F EVER BLISTERS? CALL NOW TO ENROLL IN RESEARCH STUDY BEFORE YOUR NEXT ATTACK! • 16 years of age or over • Medical care at no cost to you • $275 financial incentive provided. GROU P INC 3 4 6 -9 9 5 5 Monday-Friday 8:30 AM-4:30 PM FURTHER Mark- Do w n s Inventory CLEARANCE I n s u l a t e d o u t e r w e a r , Go r e t e x ¿ w a t e r p r o o f B r e a t h a b l e Ra in w e a r , S h e lle d « ü n s h e lle o Fleece f r o m : W e lly H a n s e n ,N ik e , The N o r th Face,Patagonia, S ie rra designs i more 2 0 - 5 0 W 4 0 - 5 0 & O W A Pa n t s from P a ta g o n ia , r u f f Hewn! R o y a l r o b b in s í m ore F l a n n e l I 3 5 - 4 0 % OFF a n d F l a n n e l / w o o l s h i r t s •SELECTED n a m e BRANDS 4 0 - 5 0 / o o f f ¿y W o o l COTTON £ SILK S W E A T E R 'S 2 5 -4 0 % off ^ SilkJ L IF A , C A P IL E N E S DUO FO LD U N D E R W E A R In S to c k O n ly All S a l e s F i n a l hole Earth Provision Co. 444-9974 4006 S. Lamar 2410 San Antonio St. 478-1577 8868 Research Blvd. 458-6333 J V With Call Return from Southwestern Bell Telephone, the callers you lost when you couldn’t get to your phone in time won’t be lost anymore. You can get them right back. Just by hitting *69 on your touchpad. Call Return enables your r it d f - call K etu rn phone t0 dial 1116 number of your incoming call. So, in a flash. you get hold of the ones you thought had gotten away. Subscribe to Call Return for only $3 a month. When you do, you can also ask about Southwestern Bell Telephone’s other convenient calling options, including Call Cue. Contact your Southwestern Bell Telephone business office for details. Call Return. When your phone’s equipped with it, Z rt X Southwestern Bell what was once lost is easily found. Te*epf>one The one to call on: Not available in all areas or to party-line customers. Service connection charge not included Some telephones may not be compatible with some calling options. Peace rally emphasizes women’s efforts in war Carl Nemec Daily Texan Staff A vision of 2 million women dressed in white m arching to stop the war in the Persian G ulf brought together a group of 13 men and women on V alentine's Day to tell how the war w as "breaking their hearts." Several women at the small rally at the Federal Building spoke about how the war had affected them and what they wanted to do about it. "E ven though w e're not large in number, the m essage is clear: As women we have a responsibility to stop the war, and we will stop the w ar," said Jody Dodd, co-founder the Council of W om en. The of group organized the rally along with the the Austin Peace and Ju s­ tice Coalition and the Cam paign for Global Security. Almost one m onth since the be­ ginning of the war, the num ber of people rallying both for and against it has dw indled from the hordes that dem onstrated in January. Soon after the war broke out, Dodd said she told a friend that she imagined 2 million w om en in w'hite stopping the war. Her friend said she had had the same vision, only there w ere 5 million women. During Thursday's rally, one woman read a Valentine she had written to the United States. "W hat, if anything, is worth killing for? What is worth dying for? It's crucial to question 'w hat for,' " she said. is A nother woman said, "W ar earth abuse, human abuse. All you're doing is killing people." Bill Gilstrap of the Austin Peace and Justice Coalition said he cried W ednesday after he heard about the deaths of as m any as 400 people in a Baghdad building bombed by the United States. He said Americans should raise the issue ot human values in the war, rather than the issue or mili­ tary superiority. "O u r soldiers are our family members and Iraqi sol­ diers are family m embers of Iraqi fam ilies," Gilstrap said. "W e must drive home that our hearts beat with the same blood as Iraqis," he said. Dodd said Americans should sup­ port the war with som ber regret" instead of the "fervor of nationalism and flag waving. "It's being treated like a football gam e, [but] people are d y in g ," she said. Formed after O peration Desert Storm began, the Council of W om ­ en was founded on the prem ise that "w om en will play a m ajor part in ending the w ar," Dodd said. in Geneva She said four international w om ­ en 's groups met last w eek and shared the sam e vision of w omen ending the war. "W om en all over the world are thinking the same th in g ." "W e are nurturers and caretakers. W e've had to be negotiators and have had to bring the voice of rea­ so n ," Dodd said. "It's our inherent natural talent to be peace-k eep ers." She said the Council of W om en will allow men into the group for support but does not w ant their leadership or suggestions on what direction to take. The participants at the interna­ tional conference also asked U .S. women to bring food and medicine to the Middle East, Dodd said, so the Council of W omen is organizing a fund-raising effort to buv goods to send to the Persian Gulf. "Every American should feel eth i­ cally bound to support this, since it's our bom bs" hitting the cities, she said. Activist calls for creation of black militia in Dallas Associated Press DALLAS — A black activist's move to organize a black militia in Dallas won the backing of a city councilman and county com m is­ sioner, who said a "blood b ath " will erupt unless m inorities are included in the political and econom ic m ain­ stream. The activist, M .T. A 'Vant of sub­ urban Garland, said he is encourag­ ing physically fit black men and women to help im prove conditions for blacks by joining his paramili­ tary group. "W e are forming in response to the institutional violence the city of Dallas to perpetuate against A frican-A m ericans," A'Vant told The Dallas Morning News. continues Some com m unity leaders and of­ ficials have expressed reservations about the group, including William Rathburn, who takes over as Dallas police chief on March 4. Rathburn referred to such armed citizen groups as "urban terrorists." But Dallas County C om m issioner John W iley Price and City Council m ember A1 Lipscomb said they sup­ port A'Vant. Lipscomb said A 'V ant's tactics don't concern him nearly as much as the things that make peaceful people frustrated enough to resort to violence. "T h e institution of racism is one of the m ost violent acts there is ," Lipscomb said. "T h ere is going to be a blood bath in this city. "W h en you've got a spike boot on your neck, how can I say any m ea­ sure is too extrem e?" Acne Research Study Free Treatment For Qualified Males Age 15 Or Older Up to S220 Financial Reimbursement Provided For More Information, Please Call 346-9955 BIOM EDICAL R ESEA R C H G R O U P «NC. Mon.-Fri. 8:3 0 a.m .-4 :3 0 p.m. 2404 Guadalupe M-Sat. 10:30-7 30 Sunday 1:00-6:00 478-3536 1605 Riverside Dr. (1 Vh Blocks East of I-35) M-Sat. 10:30-7:30 448-0735 Swimwear Mix & Match Separates For a Perfect Fit Tops: A, B. C, D Bottoms S. M, L | l u f k i n ] i n d u s t r i e s , i n c . Lufkin Industries, Inc. is a diversified manufacturer o f • industrial gearing • oil Field equipment «iron castings • steel fabrications • highway trailers Founded in 1902, in Lufkin, Texas, Lufkin Industries is a world leader in oil field pumping unit and com m ercial gear drive technology and production. To con tinu e our growth and strengthen our position in the world market, we are seeking talen ted individuals who are in terested in building their engineering career with one of the best teams in the country. Graduate E ngineer - M echanical Entry level engineering position, leading to a career in the design o f advanced power transmission machinery LUFKIN offers a competitive wage and Assistance C enter or benefits package. For campus interviews on February 21, contact: the Engineering C areer Lufkin Industries EEO/AA M/F/V/H Jim Riggs P.O. Box 8 4 9 Lufkin, TTC 75901 4 0 9 /6 3 7 -5 2 6 7 EVERY WOMAN S CONCERN C o n fid en tial, P rofessional Reproductive C are s Adoption Services s Free Pregnancy Testing • Problem Pregnancy Counseling • Abortion Services • Birth Control s Pap Test S T 1 REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES ,«r* i«7« 1 HI IM1LY lfcXAIN f-riaay, reoruary i d , r a g e / WISDOM TEETH If you need the removal of wisdom teeth B IO M E D IC A L R E S E A R C H I P J P G R O U P INC. ...C a ll 451-0411 • Board Certified Ob-Gyn«cologists • Licensed Nursing Staff • Experienced Counselors • On RR Shuttle 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 1009 E. 40th Financial incentive provided to cover consultation, x-ray, plus qualifying surgery in exchange for your opinion on pain medication following oral surgery FDA approved Clinical Research Study Surgery performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeons Catch a Peak of Colorado Next Summer University of Colorado at Boulder W hat will you be doing next summer? T h e same old thing? O r will you . . . C a tch th e ch allen ge. Attend the 1991 C U -Boulder Summer Session with over 500 courses, including Intensive Spanish Sum m er Institute, International Business, and Performing Voices o f Women, to name just a few. C a tc h a bargain. Summer tuition at the Boulder campus is lower than during the regular academic year. C a tch 1 ,0 0 0 peaks. Colorado has more than 1,000 spectacular mountains above 10.000 feet and 53 peaks soaring over 14.000 feet. Your only obstacle will be deciding which ones to climb, hike, or bike up. Several term s to Fit your sched ule. T erm A : Ju n e 3 - Ju ly 5; T erm B : Ju ly 9 -A u g u st 9 ; T erm C : Ju n e 3 - Ju ly 2 6 ; T erm D : Ju n e 3 -A u g u st 9 . Inten sive cou rses also available. C all (3 0 3 ) 4 9 2 - 2 4 5 6 or m ail the co u p o n for a CU -Boulder 1991 Summer Session Catalog, which contains everything you need to know about special courses, registration, housing, tuition and fees, financial aid, services, and class schedules. Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Institution Yes, send me the free 1^91 C U -B o u ld er Summer Session Catalog N a m e Address ________________________ ......... -........ C ity ......... State____________ Zip. Date o f Birth __ _________________ Social Security N u m ber* _______ Mail To: Office of Admissions Regent Administrative C en ter 12^ Cam pus Box 7 U niversity o f C olorad o at Boulder Boulder, C olorado 80 '09-0007 1 3 S A M R IN E Y P L A Y I N G W I T H F I R E •JH in clu d in g G ripped By Fear Tragedy - f o r Vo ik Sacrifice Trigger 2 Anatomy Ot A Snot) Soul Manager *12.99 co *4.» cs Q M A U T * «VARNER anos I N C L U D E S R IG H T H E R E . R IG H T N O W R E A L . R E A L , R E A L W E L C O M E B A C K VICTO RIA SPW0LET0P RECORDS THE DAVE BRU8ECK QUARTET N E W W I N E THESE TITLES I N C L U D E S : Blue Rondo A La Tu rk; Koto Song; O u t of the Way; New W ine; Take the A Train...an d more ROOF TOPS PETER KATER E N L I G H T E N M E N T V A N M O R R I S O N MERCURY TUFF GONG;ISLAND] • except noted FI REHOUSE in clu din g Shake & Tumble All She Wrote Home Is Where The Heart Is Love O f A Lifetim e THE TRASH CAN ilNATRAS C A K E IN C lU O tS ONLY TONGUE CAN TILL ANO 08SCU81TY X NOCAS ^ * i f | W • Burnet at 49th 458-5253 video 454-7777 • Manchaca at Ben White 443-7997 • Lamar at 11th 479-8422 • 9312 North Lamer at Rundberg 837-8808 MUSIC. MOVIES AND MORE YOUR TOTAL ENTERTAINMENT STORE S a le e n d s M a rc h S th - Q u a n titie s lim it e d S W S 5 o J ■ I I i i m m m m m m m u m m m m ] ^ i H I 1 i i I i I a I i I i ■ I I i i I 0 G O U T X jij # Bar*B*Q ¿ 6 b BER T’S BAR B Q — The home of the meatiest and juciest BBQ for ‘20 years! Suc­ culent ribs, sausage, beef with trimmings. Specials Daily! 610 W. Martin Luther King. THE P IT BARBEQUE — 5423 Cameron Rd., 453-7866; 3815 Dry Creek (at FM 2222), 451-0000. Serving delicious barbeque made fresh daily. RUBY’S BARBEQUE — All natural brisket, homemade sides and vegetarian plates too. Lunch specials until 5 pm M-F. Late night until 4 am. Friday and Saturday. We deliver also. 29th and Guadalupe. 477- 1651. m jm M ARTIN’S PLACE “ D IR TY S” — Austin s oldest restaurant serving UT great burgers since 1926. Curb service, out­ door or indoor dining available. 2808 Gua­ dalupe. 477-3173. HAMBURGER HILL — Make a short trip for South Austin’s finest burgers of many varieties. Open 7 days. 11600 Man- chaca. 282-8856. HICKORY STR EET BAR & GRILL — Nestled behind a beautiful garden is a UT Casual Dining Tradition featuring a vast array of specialty Food Bars (salad, soup, potato, bread, & sundae bars), A ustin’s best lh lb. Gourmet Ham­ burgers and delicious entrees. Open 7 days. 800 Congress Ave. 477-8968. CHEZ ZEE BAKERY & CAFE — 5406 Balcones Dr. 454-2666. 4 Stars Hilary Hylton - 11/25/89. “Reincarnated in the for­ mer Chez Fred location. The new menu fo­ cuses on fresh fish and pasta. Flavorful and innovative dishes are moderately priced. Who could resist the bakery case full of tem pting desserts.” Breakfast, lunch, din­ ner, Sun.brunch! WEST END CAFE — Enjoy Austin style, comfort and cuisine. Indoor outdoor dining. Come as you are. Daily specials. A ustin’s original cafe. 1200 W. 6th St. 472- 7319. O’B R IE N ’S CAFE — 624 W. 34th. 451-9665. Known for its relaxed family din­ ing, quality foods, and tasteful prices. Ev­ erything is fresh and homemade daily, from dressings to desserts. Live Irish music. Sat. nights 9 p.m.-midnight. mex LA VISTA AT THE HYATT R E ­ GENCY r — Every Tuesday night is Col­ lege Night through February! Present your student I D. and get our sizzling fajitas for two for $9.95. Famous Jum boritas and ¥¿ yard long beers. 208 Barton Springs, 480- 2034. Fajitas-to-go also available. 7 J WEST CAMPUS CAFE. BAK ER Y, AND BICYCLE CLUB — All like natural, full menu dming. Cookin’ Grandma did, without preservatives. 2 Fer Specials offered Morn, Tues,, Wed. Bakery items Expresso, Capucmno. 2512 Rio Grande St. II 19 R ■ m m n a m m m m a n m m a m m m m m m m m ^ n ■ a m m m m 8a a R a a ■ m m m a m m m p B i B B R * IS I FI ■ I n r- r m m m m■ m m m m m m r B a a a n r p a m m Pi i p n m m i i p m w m m w m m w p i ■ p a a p n m m n w m m m m n m m m m u ■ m m m n p n m M m m m m m m m pi p m m m m m m m m m m m m P p p m m m m m m m m m m m * I I m Around Campus is a daily colum n listing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered stu­ dent organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organizations must be registered w ith the O ffice of Cam­ pus Activities. A nnouncem er|^rnust be subm itted on the correc^rorm , available in The D aily Texan office, 25th Street and W hitis A venue, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The D aily Texan reserves the right to edit style subm issions ru les, a lth o u g h no s ig n ific a n t changes w ill be made. to conform to MEETINGS University M ethodist Student Fel­ low ship will m eet at 9:45 a.m . for a discussion of "A C hristian U n d er­ standing of P eace” and at 6 p.m . for w orship and fellow ship S un d ay at University United Methodist Church, 2409 G uadalupe St. The Indian Student Association will meet at 8 p.m . Monday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102. Chinese Bible Study w ill m eet at 6:30 p.m . Friday in Taylor Hall 2.006. Spanish Tertulia w ill meet at 4:30 p.m. Friday at Waterloo Ice H ouse, K)8 W. 24th St. University Church on the Rock w ill meet for prayer and w orship at 7 a.m. Mondays and W ednesdays in Univer­ sity Teaching Center 3.110. Fellow­ ship m eetings are held on Fridays. For m ore information call 474-4372. The Shire of the Ivory Tower w ill meet from 2 to 6 p.m Saturday at Pease Park. Battle gam es and cultural events will follow. For more informa­ tion call 926-6930. Korean Presbyterians on Campus will meet at 7 p.m . Saturdays at the Korean United Presbyterian Church, 5500 A venue G. The University N eo-D adaist Front will meet from 7.30 to 9 p .m . Saturday in Texas Union Building 4.108. M em­ bers need to bring their copies of "Saddam Hussein Com es Out of the Closet, Invites N avy O ver.” Campus Pro-Life w ill meet at 6 p.m. Friday in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.256 for the group's fifth anniversary. Campaign for Peace in the M iddle East will m eet at 6:30 p .m . Friday in the Texas Union Building African American Culture Room (4.110) to dis­ cuss Student Day of Action events. Kuk Sool Won w ill m eet at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Clark Field to prac­ tice traditional Korean martial arts. Wear comfortable clothing. The European Student Association will m eet at 7 p.m . Sunday at 26th Street and Speedway to visit Gunth­ er's Restaurant, 11606 North 1-35. Af­ ter dinner w e will show Cinema Paradi­ se at Carmen's, 3421 Pecos St. For more information call Ulf at 320-0650. The Buddhist A ssociation w ill meet at 7 p.m . Friday in Texas Union Building 2.102. The Panhellenic Students' A ssocia­ tion will meet at 7 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Governors' Room (3.116). We will sh ow the film Zorba the Greek, Students Older Than Average w ill Please see Around Campus, page 15 Buy it and try it! \ Buy a “Safe-n-Sound” cassette or compact disc and if you're not completely satisfied - return the cassette or compact disc within 30 days and we will exchange it for another cassette or CD of the same value. Receipt will be required for exchange. COMPACT DISC I I CASSETTE ALIAS CONTAINS: HAUNTED HEART • SAY WHAT I WANT TO SAY • MORE THAN WORDS CAN SAY • WAITING FOR LOVE SUSANNA HOFFS WHEN YOU'RE A BOY in c lu d in g M y S id * o t t h « B e d Uncondttionel Love No Kind ot Love Thot * Why Girls Cry Boys Keep Swinging AUSTIN CAPITAL Austin 454-8501 BARTON CREEK SQUARE Austin 328-6064 MUSIC €XPfl€SS m m ‘ . ¿ ¿ ¿ ^ M o n t g o m e r y W a r d m m 11" 11 r'MLTzrgrni’ii— Visa, MasterCard, Am erican Express & Discover CATFISH CATFISH PARLOUR — Bring your appetite and enjoy our all you can eat farm raised, boneless filets for only $*.50 or by the plate for $6.95. The “all you can eat is served homestyle. fried in pure Canola oil with beans, french fries, cole slaw and our famous hush puppies. Equally delicious is our chicken, shrimp, chicken fried steak p la tte rs and SEVERAL NON-FRIED MEALS. Children’s menu. Senior Citizen's plate and carry out service also available. Two locations: North—11910 Research Blvd., South— 4705 E Ben White 1 mile east of IH35). Open daily 5-10 pm, Sunday 11 am -10 pm. Weekday lunch only at Ben White location. $4,95. E S f HUNAN KING CHINESE R ES­ TAURANT - All YOU can e a t buffet. Lunch $3.99. Dinner $4.99 w/UT ID. 6517 Airport Blvd. (in front of Solo Serve) 452- 5172. ITALIAN CARMELO — Homemade Italian food, award winning pasta and a pastry se­ lection th a t is absolutely primo! 504 East 5th Street, 477-7497. JAPANESE AZUMA JA PA N ESE RESTAU­ RANT AND SU SH I BAR — Tradi­ tional Japanese cuisine. Open Mon.-Fri. for lunch, Mon.-Sat. for dinner. Hwy. 183 North. 258-3780. PIZZA CONAN’S PIZZA — Chicago Style Deep Pan Pizza. All you can eat lunch buf­ fet, M-F, 11-2, $3.49. Fastest lunch on the drag. All you can eat dinner buffet, M, 6-8 p.m., $4.59. Always free delivery. Best Pizza in Austin. 51 STEAK THE OLD SAN FRANCISCO STEAK HOUSE — Enjoy the warm a t­ mosphere of the 1800’s. We serve the finest steaks, seafood, lamb, poultry and prime rib. All meals served with fresh country bread, our famous block of cheese, dinner salad and baked potato. Nightly entertainm ent. 8709 N. IH35. 835-9200. MEXICAN PINCH-A-POLLO — Discover a healthy way to eat chicken! M arinated and cooked on a grill to a tender juicy perfection. Served with tortillas and hot sauce. Addi­ tional plates, side orders available. 7915 Burnet Rd. (at Anderson Lane) 452-3088. Orders to go. Mon.-Sat. 11:00 am-9:30 pm. ■ ■ ■ a m m m a ■ a a a m m m m m m a a a a u a m m a a a m m m m a a w m m m m m m m m m SI m m m m ¥ mm m m m m ■ n m m m m m m m a m m m m m m m ■ m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m a r ■ m m i m » m m ■ m m m m i m m I I I ! I I I I i í it ■ * a ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ i m m m mm m I N I ■ m » m m I f Desert D u e l: Horns meet Devils Q DO DTQ I 1 I Craig M. Douglas Daily Texan Staff Until th e College W orld Series in O m ah a, this is about as big as it gets. In term s of college baseball, no nam es dom inate like Cliff G ustaf­ son and jim Brock. B etw een the tw o coaches, nine national titles have been hoarded in A ustin and T em pe, Ariz. The tradition and com petitive spirit of the clubs are un m atched. So w h en they m eet, the o th er gam es just d o n 't seem to m atter. "For a very long tim e, w hen people have talked ab o ut college baseball, the first tw o things o u t of their m outh w ere A rizona State and Texas," said Miami Coach Ron Fraser, w hose fhen-fourth- ranked team w as b eaten by the L onghorns 2-1 in a three-gam e se­ ries last w eekend. The No. 6 L onghorns (7-2) and No. 3 Sun Devils (8-4) will con tin ­ ue w h at is arguably the best regu­ la r-season series in college base­ ball w ith a three-gam e w eekend in series at Packard Stadium Tempe on Friday, Saturday and S u n d a v . "This is the o ne that all the kids look forw ard to, the one that goes on a lot of calend ars," Brock >aid. " It's clearly the best series in col­ lege baseball." Both the Sun Devils and the L onghorns e n te r the w eekend loo king to an sw er a few questions. A\rizona State is a team that began the season ranked No. 1 bv Base ball America, but fell apart last w eekend by d ro p p in g three gam es to Florida State in Tallahassee. The Devils lost tw o of the gam es in extra innings, 6-5 and 4-3, but w ere slaughtered the m iddle gam e, 21-5. in As for the L onghorns. G u staf­ son said the next three davs will tell exactly w hat kind of a team he has. "T his is likelv the tough est team that we will face all year, and we'll find out a lot about ou rselv es." he said. "M ost of all, w e need to learn som e things about our p itch ­ ing, and this is the o p p o rtu n ity to do it." Please see Devils, page 10 Calvin Murray hopes to heat up the Horns this weekend in Tempe. Kirk J. Crippens/ Daily Texan Staff Texas hopes to bounce UH, prepare for postseason Mark Babineck Daily Texan Staff Texas Coach Jody C o nradt is banking on the belief that practice m akes perfect. W ith hopes for at least a share of the S ou thw est C o n ­ title all b ut w iped ference aw ay by h er team 's 10-2 league record (16-6 overall), the coach of the 16th-ranked that Lady L onghorns said upcom ing gam es d ow n th e final stretch of the season pose m ore of a hind ran ce than an y th in g else. W om en "I told this team at the b eginning of th e w eek th at I w as really not concerned about the g am es," C o nradt said. "W e're not reallv con- cerned abo ut the gam es right now ; w e just h a p ­ pen to have gam es th at get in the w ay of our practice. O u r practices are going to be geared tow ard seeing how m uch b etter w e can get be­ tw een now' and the end of th e season. "W e've already let o u r last chance slip by in term s of a ch am p io n sh ip an d an y th in g signifi­ cant. W hen w e start the playoffs, w e'll have as good a chance as any o ne, b u t w e 're just not as good as wre need to be, an d w e're not playing as hard as w e need to play " The seem ingly hard tim es being e n d u re d by the Lady L onghorns d o n 't faze H ouston Coach Jessie Kenlaw, how ever. H er Lady C ougars (15- 7, 7-4 SWC) fell to Texas 43-79 on Jan. 13 in a foul-filled contest at the Erw in C enter, and she recognizes th at d esp ite th e turm oil C o n ra d t's crew has e n d u re d this year, they are still the favorites. "Even th o u g h th ey 'v e had som e losses, they still have a good team, Kenlaw said. "In o rd er for us to even have a chance of staving in the ball gam e, we re going to have to execute versu s their pressure [defense]." 1 he player that the Lady C ougars d ep en d upon m ost to execute is LaShaw n Johnson The junior guard is averaging 13.7 poin ts per gam e but has led her squad in scoring in five of the last six contests. A gainst Texas last m onth, she w as H o u sto n 's high scorer w ith 17. W hile Texas' big three offensive threats Edna C am pbell, Vicki Hall and C inietra H e n d e r­ son — carry an en o rm o u s part of the scoring b urden, H o u sto n 's prim ary w eapon is its bench. The Lady C ougars lead the conference in bench scoring at 29.2 points per gam e, w hich m akes up 34.7 percent of their total offensive o u tp u t. The Lady L onghorns' reserves score at a 17-point clip. T h e Friday, February 15. 1991 Págd9| Longhorns eyeing hungry Cougars Paul Hammons Daily Texan Staff sea so n , C o m in g into this it w as considered a given th a t the H o u s t o n C ougars w ould be gearin g u p for a second straight NCAA b a sk e t­ to u rn a m e n t ball M en bid right about now. As the season has unfolded, h o w ­ ever. it has becom e clear that there rem ains only one given a b o u t tho C ougars' chances at a bid to March M adness: To get in, they need to beat Texas Sunday In fact, H ouston Coach Pat Foster thinks the C ougars will have to beat ev eryone else as well. i d o n 't think [to u rn am en t pros­ pects] are really g o o d ," Foster said. O bviously vve have to w in som e gam es — probably alt of them — and we h av en 't sho w n th e ability to do that vet T hat's pretty m uch the way we have to look at it." lex as Coach Tom P en d ers is a lit­ the a b o u t tle m ore optim istic C ougars' chances. It they lose to us th e v 're not dead,' P enders said, " b u t they m ight have to w in the rest of them The tournam ent com m ittee w o n ’t adm it it, but th ere's nam e recogni­ tion with H ouston, if they w in 18 or lc> gam es, they're going to get in, but they h a v e to start playing the wav they can plav "Talentw ise, they're a team that should get in and it thev d o get in they've got a chance to beat som e p eo p le." Playing consistently has been a problem for H ouston all year. The sam e team that eked out three-point w ins over relatively w eak Texas Tech and TCU team s in H ouston — and then lost to SML bv six — cam e back the next week to beat a strong Baylor team bv 10. The C ougars have lost three of their last five gam es, and tw o in a row , including a 10-point loss to Rice la^t S unday. P en d ers said the C o ugars' stru g ­ gle seem s to d ate back to a l o s s at D ePaul Jan 12 "It's kind of a m ystery to m e w hy th e y 'v e struggled since m id-Janu­ ary, P end ers said, "it could be in­ juries, it could be chem istry. I've w atched a few of their gam es, and it seem s that as [guard] Bvron Smith goes, so goes the team , an d h e's had a couple of bad gam es back-to- back, an d th at's kind of scary fur us because he alw ays seem s to play well against us " It the C ougars beat Texas, it w ould be their tir^t win against a ranked o p p o n e n t this year. H o u s­ ton has played som e tough team s, but has lost to G eorgetow n bv 12, DePaul bv 14. Texas bv six and A r­ kansas bv seven and 16 "The better schedule you plav, the better off y o u're going to be — that s a given,' Foster said. "W e've played a strong schedule this year and that helps. W e've lost to som e good team s But y o u 'v e got to beat som e good team s, an d w e h a v en 't d o n e that y e t." Foster said he thinks the C ougars w ould be a s tro n g bet to e n te r the 64-team field if they could p u t on a strong run to end the season, m ain lv because the S outhw est C onfer­ ence has begun to receive m ore re ­ spect from the selection com m ittee than it has ¡n past years "W e've had three team s in the NCAAs for several y e a rs," Foster said, " a n d 1 don t see how they could den y us this year it som eone w ould step u p and d o som ething. We could be in a good position if w e'd step up and win som e gam es, but w e just haven t d o n e it this y e ar." Since the gam e is being televised it could be regionally bv ABC, H o u sto n 's last big chance to im ­ press the selection com m ittee before the conference to u rn am en t SMU Let SUPERCUTS treat you to a special $6 SUPERCUT *. That's $2 off our regularly $8-pnced SUPERCUT" Good only at these locations: Pork Green Center at Riverside and Pleasant Valley 3025 Guadalupe at 30th & Guadalupe iCoupon required) Valid through April 12. 1991 J V ( X 3 < v i r Xh>t q o o u vnfh Qfty oflWrr s Lew Cohn Daily Texan Staff The Texas m en will close out part of their season this w eekend w ith a pair of dual m eets against TCU and SMU at the Texas Sw im m ing C en ­ ter. The H orned Frogs visit A ustin Friday night to face the top-ranked L onghorns the m eet (7-0), w ith starting at 7 p .m . T he Ponies are in tow n S aturday to challenge Texas at 7 p.m . TCU has im proved this year, and according to Texas Coach Eddie Reese, historically pose a challenge to Texas w h en ev er these tw o team s get together. "T C U 's a they lot better w ere last y ear," he said, "W e had to w in the 100-yard breast last year to w in before w e reached the 400-yard free relay. N o m atter how good they are, they alw ays stan d u p an d sw im th an great against u s." SMU is led by sophom ore dis­ tance sw im m er C had H un d eb y , w in n er of the 25-km sw im in the W orld C h am p ion ships at Perth, A ustralia, this January. Every time he gets into a pool, he co ntinues to am aze Reese. "H u n d e b y is very, very stro n g ," he said. "When w e sw am them at The Dallas Morning Nexus m eet, [Tex­ as'] A dam [W erth] w as ah ead of him by five lengths w ith halfw ay to go. Then C had w on the race by tw o lengths over A dam . He'll be one of their rallying points. He'^ a trem en ­ dous second-half sw im m er, and you'll see at the m eet; h e 's o ne of the strongest o u t th e re." The L onghorns re tu rn ed from last w eek's dual m eets against M ichigan and Indiana in Bloom ington, Ind., w ith tw o tiring victories. "W e w e ren 't ugly is one way of putting it," Reese said of the wins. We w e re n 't the typical Texas team, either. We w ere rushed on the trip H ad w e been able to sw im at 7 p .m ., vve d have been re ste d ." ■ ■ ■ it w as incorrectly p rin te d in 1 h u rsd a y 's sports section that W hit­ ney H ed gepeth will sw im for the Lady L onghorns against Team USA in an exhibition. Instead she will swim as part or th e Team USA squad w ith he r friend Lea Loveless of Stanford against Texas in the ex­ hibition. The Texan regrets the error STUDENT SPECIAL PtRCUTS-Slyle Makes the no no shirt shoes noPROBLEM PARTY RIGHT AT THE RADISSON.® Come see the newly renovated headquarters for Spring Break (800) 2 9 2 -7 7 0 4 . SHERATON BEACH RESORT. Be at action headquarters. Ask for Party Hardy rates. (800) 222-4010 U.S. (800) 672-4747 TX. (512) 761-6551 NOBODY KNOWS THE ISLAND BETTER THAN WE DO! Fine rental properties near Spring Break Headquarters at the Radisson. P.O. Box 2392 South Padre Island, TX 78597. 1-800-426-6530. sprit ig fQ | B R E A K U I There’s no better place to Spring Break than South Padre Island. Located just 20 minutes from Mexico, come enjoy our warm tropical breezes, clear blue water, great shopping and extraordinary nightlife. Now more accessible than ever through Valley International Airport in Harlingen via American, Continental and Southwest. S o kick off your shoes, shirt and come on down for a no problem Spring Break. Radisson.. HUGE PRIVATE CONDOS. Two Bedroom/Two Bath Reasonable rates. 4901 Laguna Blvd. (5 12 ) 7 6 1 -7 8 0 8 , E x t 5. GAbbEON BAY GbUB W HEN YOU PAR TY, R EM EM B ER T O ... South Padre Island Convention & Visitors Bureau, P.O. Box 3500, South Padre Island, Texas 78597. 1 - 8 0 0 - 3 4 3 - 2 3 6 8 81 km *a t o il S m ith P a d r e Is la n d B E A C H R E S O R T SPRING BREAK <91 PACKAGE 6 days/5 nights only $595.00 (4 persons) Package good only for March 1991 and must be purchased by Feb 15, 1991. Call for reservations. (800) 5 3 1 -7 4 0 5 U.S. (800) 2 9 2 -7 5 0 6 TX. (512) 7 6 1 -5 4 0 1 # n r v HOLIDAY INN BEACH RESORT SOUTH PADRE ISLAND 1 F R E E PARTIES. F R E E W ATERSPORTS. BEST PR IC ES . MOST P R O P ER T IES . SOUTH 55 PADRE!> CENTRAL RESERVATIONS ÜSÜ 1-800-Hi PADRE O a ) Comprehensive science, reasoning, reading and writing review for the New MCA! b.) Test-taking strategies to fit the new fot nut c ) Live classroom prep with the expert^ d ) Personal attention e.1 Practice tests which review hundreds of questions and explanations on self-paced audio tapes t ) Individual review 7 davs a week g ) New home study materials h ) Or all of the above from someone vvho has helped thousands get into medical school every veai ( all Stanley 11 Kaplan today to reserve a place tit c l a w Everyone else has. BREAK IS LAN D -S TYLE Condos and beach houses to fit every budget. Call toll free: 1 -8 0 0 -5 2 7 -0 2 9 4 . P.O. Box 3260 South Padre Island, TX 78597. SU RF, SUN, SAND & CASH Foster’s Volley ball Tournament March 11 15, 1991 March 18 31,. 1991 For Registration & Information, call: 1-800-343 2368 Call 472-EXAM TODAY to reser \ e your seat in class. There are only 3 classes left to pre­ pare for the April exam, and spac­ es are going quickly! SIAM TV H. KAPLAN lake Kaplan Or lake Your Chances age 10 Friday. February 15 1991 T H E D VILY T E X A N Devils ontinued from page 9 not ! ked S u n D evil lin e u p h ite m e n t. Manor Downs' spring season kicks oil’Saturday John McWilliams Da>¡v Texan Staff i n e norst - p ee r o u t ot th e barn" M an o r D o w n s ba* S tr e tc h , e a g e rh m th e o p e n in g of M a n o r D o w n s s p rin g rr T h e y 're n ot th e only o n e s. At 1 p rrt. d a y a fte rn o o n th e h o rs e s will h av e a to race, an d b e tto rs w ill h av e an o p p o to w a g e r on th e o u tc o m e w h e n M a n o r o p e n s th e sta rtin g c a te for its first q u a rte r h o rse m eet. A fter su ffe rin g a d ism al tall racing < track officials are m o re optim istic tf to th e b ettin g w in d o in th e sp o rt a m o n g ti "Any racetrack has to build a clientele to compete against television and people going to football gam es.” — Billy Bovvers, Manor Downs general manager Billv B ow ers, M anor D o w n s g e n e ra l m a n a ­ ger sa id h e liked th e tra c k 's c h a n c e s ot u n ­ p ro v in g on laM se aso n s at ida nee a n d han- d ie fig u res b e c a u se of the lack ot co m p e titio n T for th e e n te rta in m e n t dollar. B ow ers sa id th e Texas L o n g h o rn s ' success a d v e rse ly affected on M an o r s a tte m p ts to b u ild a fan base. football field th e " A m racetrack h a s to b u ild a clien tele to c o m p e te a g a in st te lev isio n a n d p e o p le g o in g to football g a m e s,” Bovvers said In a n a tte m p t to w o o fan s back to th e track, M a n o r D o w n s h as sta rte d a n ag g re ssiv e a d ­ v ertisin g c a m p a ig n th a t in c lu d e s 67 telev isio n a d s a w eek , 2ft b illb o a rd s a n d a 15-m inute h ig h lig h t s h o w , w h ich w ill air on C h a n n e l To sta rtin g M arch 3 at m id n ig h t. W ith tin' new m a rk e tin g stra te g y , M a n o r D o w n s h o p e s to im p ro v e on last s e a s o n 's a v ­ era g e dailv a tte n d a n c e of 1 890 a n d a v e ra g e daily w a g e rin g of $174 171. B ow ers said he p ro je c te d a v e ra g e daily a t ­ te n d a n c e to be 3,(XX) for th e m e et a n d 3(X),000 to 350,000 fo r a v e ra g e h a n d le W e p ro v e d it th e laM w e e k e n d [in tall) th a t p e o p le w o u ld com e o u t a n d b e t," B ow ers said. Bovvers said the track w o u ld a tte m p t to m ake im provem en ts to the parking lot and facility by the end o f the spring; h ow ever, the track is facing financial trouble according to recent p r e s s accoun ts. The Ñw A n to n io E x ­ press \eics reported that M anor D o w n s has been su ed by on e of its contractors for failure to pay $1^2 (XXI in unpaid l u l l s . There h ave also b een reports that Manor D o w n s o w e s Travis C ounty for unpaid taxes, .is w ell a s o w in g m o n ey to other i ontractors. Bovvers had no com m en t con cern in g the ti- nancial allegations. The spring season will last until Sun day, M ay 19, w ith a 1 p .m . post tim e sch ed u led for F eb ru ary a n d M arch, with racing sch ed u led Friday th ro u g h S u n d a y . Starting in April, the track will race I h u r s d a v through S u n d ay w ith a 3 p .m . post tim e for w eek d ays and the usual 1 p .m . post for w e e k e n d s. UT tennis team tuning up with Tech, Kansas I h e L adv L o n g h o rn te n n is team b eg in s c o n ­ ference play F rid ay a s it trav e ls to L u b b o t k to face th e L ady R ed R aid ers in a 6 p .m . m a tch . I he w o m en re tu rn to P enick A llison S u n d a v tor a n ll a.m . m atch w h e re th e v will be p itte d a g a in st th e L ady Javhavvks of K ansas Texas d e fe a te d b oth clubs last se aso n 8 -0 a n d 9-0 resp ectiv ely . Iex a s C oach left M oore said that he w as p le ase d w ith his team s p ro g re ss th is w a r an d se em e d c o n fid e n t w h e n a s k e d it th e team w as o n c o u rse for a n o th e r S o u th w e s t c o n feren c e c ro w n in 19 9 1. " O n p a p e r w e a re th e team to b ea t this se a ­ son. " h e sa id , " a n d th e rest of th e te am s are c ro w d e d to g e th e r a s far as th e ir plav g o e s ." Texas l och p ro b ab ly w ill not p o se m u c h of a ch a llen g e to th e N o. 6 I o n g h o rn s . w h o are w ide l\ re g a rd e d as " th e p ro g ra m in th e co n feren ce. The te am w elc o m e d a n e w m e m b e r to the sq u a d th is w ee k in A n d ria G o rm el. G orm el is a w alk-on s tu d e n t from C oco Beach, I la., a n d will see action Friday from the No. 6 sin gles p osition, rep la cin g se n io r Stacie O fte n , w h o has a m edical school in te rv ie w a n d c a n n o t plav. A long with G orm el, M oore has basically set his lin eu p for the u p com in g season w ith return­ ing A ll-A m ericans Susan Gilcrist and Carla C os- sa "firm at the top tw o sin gles sp o ts” and Vickie P a y n te r p la c in g th ird . At positions tour and five, M oore has Joanna Plautz a n d Jackie Kloe "running neck and neck. Often and A lecha I lallmark are alternating at th e N o 6 s p o t." I exas looks to run by competition at indoor meet The C a c tu s Y earb oo k sta ff is now a cce p tin g nom inations for the 1991 Jim Miller Daily Texan Staff O u t s t a n d in g S tu d e n t a n d G o o d f e l l o w A w a r d s N om inations deadline is Feb. 15 Dick ud nom ination form s at Texas Student Publications, 25th and Whitis, Room 3.200, weekdays, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 o.m. Matt Schulz Daily Texan Staff D o m in a n t is p e rh a p s th e b est wax to d escrib e th e L adv I o n ghorns* re­ cent rec o rd at th e S o u th w e st C o n ­ ference track c h a m p io n s h ip s. In six of th e p a -4 e ig h t w a r s , T ex­ as h as e m e rg e d v ic to rio u s from th e SVVC in d o o r m e et w h ich w ill be held in Fort W o rth th is w e e k e n d . W ith e ig h t a u to m a tic or p ro v isio n a l qualifiers for th e N C A A c h a m p io n ­ sh ip m eet c o m p e tin g fo r 1 exas, the L ady 1 o n g h o rn s w o u ld a p p e a r to be the favorite. Texas ( oach lo rry C ra w fo rd b e ­ lieves, h o w e v e r, th a t th e c o n fe re n c e is stro n g e r this y ear th a n th e past. in We d o n 't c o n s id e r o u rse lv e s to fa v o rite ," C ra w fo rd said. th e be "T h e c o m p e titio n w ill be m u c h C A 1 I » I 506 T R IN IT Y 469-9003 í 7 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15 l-TEX SATURDAY. FEBRUARY IB MICHEÁL E. JOHNSON AND THE K ILLER B E E S SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17 SAVE BARTON CREEK BENEFIT WITH l-TEX, ZILLI0NAIRES LOST IN AMERICA HOW WOULD YOU GET FROM A 12:05 CLASS Hi NEW YORK ID A 1:45 LECTURE IN LA? f yoi4 b o o k e d the C o n c o r d e , other new te c h n o lo g ie s like digital y e . still d o n ’ t stand much chance of gettir g across the country in less + r o r a r h o u r . But with inno- vat o n s b e i n g a a t a , or i n i c a t i o n 'J/ r QDOb cellular te le p h o n e s, d i g ­ ital switching, P B X ’ s, n e t­ work d e v e l o p m e n t a n d s o f t w a r e systems. A n d you can p la y a r: integral p a r t in b r i n g i n g the se id e a s to reality, d e v e l o p e d at N o d i ' ern Te e c o m you if / o u r d e g r e e is in E l e c t r i c a l won * have to. E n g i n e e r i n g , C o m p u t e r S c i e n c e , The fiber optic t e c h n o l o g y we re C o m p u t e r E n g i n e e r i n g , a n d y o u d e v e l o p i n g will e n a b l e students to are looking for the type of o p p o r ­ atte nd classes b e in g held a cross the tu n ity w h e r e the c h a l l e n g e s a r e c o u n t r y , or a c r o s s the o c e a n . as u n l i m i t e d as y o u r p o t e n t i a l , W e re also at work on a r a n g e of talk to us. B N R t i I V t northern f c i c c o m WE WILL BE ON CAMPUS FEBRUARY 26th AND 27th BNÍ tb rth e rn T e le co m , h o* W 0 lo b s i s R ic h q rd s o r:. IT R e se a crnd iH e U * A n e q u a l o p p o r t u n ity e m p lo y e r igle Park. N( P-K 91DONRUSS 36CTB0X $15 91 FLEER 36CTBOX $15 (/) ■o O X H cn o > X □ (/) s © 11 -6 :3 0 M O N - S A T S U N 1 2 -5 1Wk South of St. Ed’s 3500 S. Congress 443-3779 s a T mr!re e ie i !!j% nAW lica Mexico, Ecuador, Paraguay, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Braxil Work • Share • Live • Learn You can have a summer full of adventure and personal growth whole improving health for the people of Latin America. Write or call: Amigos de las Americas 5618 Star Lane Houston, Texas 77057 800/231-7796 713/782-5290 Application dealine: M a r c h 1, 1991. Incentives available for early commitment CHRIS’S LIQUOR 5201 CAMERON RD. 451-7391 OPEN 10-9 PM 2418 S. LAMAR BLVD. 442-2288 OPEN 10-9 PM 6 for 6 for 6 for 6 for 6 for GUINESS STOUT 12 oz Stout Imp. from England 6 for 7ECATE CANS 12 oz Beer Imp. from Mexico PACIFICO CLARA BEER 12 oz Beer Imp. from Mexico WURZBURGER HOFBRAU 12 oz Beer imp from Germany ST. PAULI GIRL BEER *2 oz Beeiimp from Germany SIERRA NEVADA ALE 12 o i Pale Ale Brt-wed in Ca ANDES BEER 12 oz. Beer Imp. from Chile RATTLESNAKE BEER 12 oz. Beer Brew ed in Texas RINGNES BEER 12 oz Beer Imp. from Norway SPATENCLUB WEISSE 500 ml Imp. from Germany PILSNER URQUELL 12 oz Product of CzedxxlOYalua DOS EQUIS BEER 12 oz. Product of Mexico STEINLAGER BEER 12 oz. Product of New Zealand 6 for HEINEKEN AMSTEL LIGHT 12 oz Product of Holland 6 .4 9 3.99 4.89 6.49 5.19 6.49 4.59 4.99 4 .1 9 1.69 5.49 4.49 4.49 9 .99 MILWAUKEE’S BEST & 40.99 . . 12 for 6 for 6 for 6 for each 6 for 6 f o r JACK DANIELS BLK 86 Pr Tennessee Whiskey SKOL VODKA 80 pr Fine Vodka STOLICHNAYA VODKA 80 pr Vodka Imp from Russia CUERVO GOLD 80 p< Tequila Bottled in Mexico B&B LIQUEUR 80 pr Fren ch Liqu eur 750 ml I I . Y l a t%r% 1 75 It O . o v l 1 7511 4 4 , 7 7 a A a n 7 5 0 m l I U < 7 7 750 ml « ¿ 7 $ # s tro n g e r th is v ea r b e c a u s e th e ta le n t is m o re e v e n lv d is trib u te d th a n in th e p a s t." M an y ot th e a th le te s w h o w o n e v e n ts a t last y e a r's m e et re tu rn for se v eral n e w ­ Iex as, a lo n g w ith c o m e rs w h o will lie e n te rin g th e ir first SW G title m eet. A m o n g th e n e w c o m e rs is fre sh ­ m a n s h o t- p u tte r E ileen V an ish w h o lias a lre a d y qualified for th e n a tio n ­ al m e e t o n th e s tre n g th o f h e r ÜT- record th ro w of 51-8, w h ic h is m o re th a n fo u r feet fa rth e r th a n an v c o n ­ feren ce co m p e titio n h as th ro w n . T elisa Y oung, a fre s h m a n trip le ju m p e r, also b e c a m e a p ro v isio n a l q u alifier for th e N C A A s w ith a ju m p of 41 A m e ters. Still, C o a c h C raw fo rd b elieves th e l.ad v L o n g h o rn s ' stre n g th lies w ith s p rin t r u n n e r s such as se n io rs C ar- le tte G u id rv an d S an d ie R ichards, b o th of w h o m a re r e tu rn in g SW C ch a m p io n s . C ra w fo rd also said b e ­ fore th e s e a s o n b eg a n th a t sh e felt th a t this y e a r 's c ro p of s p rin te rs w ere as g o o d as a n y sh e h a s e v e r had a t UT. " O u r s tre n g th s a re in th e s h o rte r e v e n ts ," C ra w fo rd said. lo n g -d ista n c e O th e r re tu rn in g c h a m p io n s in ­ clu d e lin a Hall a n d th e 1,600-m eter rela y team of R ich a rd s, se n io r Kellie R o b erts an d so p h o m o re s N icole A te s a n d B arbara S elk rid g e. r u n n e r DAN’S 1600 LAVACA 5353 BURNET ROAD 478-5423 459-8689 SHOP DAN’S FOR B E T T E R V A LU ES EVER Y O AY HO U R S 10 AM TO 9 PM S P E C IA LS CA SH O R CH ECK SPECIALS GOOD FRIDAY & SATURDAY PINCH 15 YEAR OLD 86 P r Scotch W hisky CANADIAN AGE 80 Pr Canadian Whrsky OLD CROW 80 Pr B o u rb o n W hwkey J.T.S. BROWN 80 Pr B o u rb o n W hiskey CLAN M ACGREGOR 80 Pr S c o tch W hisky DOBRA VODKA 80 Pr V odka RON RIO RUM 80 Pr V I Rum LEGENDRE BRANDY 80 Pr F re n ch Brandy STERLING VODKA 80 Pr E n g is h By Tanqueray 1.75 LT. JIM BEAM 80 Pr B o urbo n Whiskey KENTUCKY TAVERN 80 Pr Am erica n W hiskey W.L. W ELLER 90 Pr B o u rb o n W hiskey GEO DICKEL NO. 8 80 Pr T e n n e sse e W hiskey L.T.D. 80 P r Canadian W hisky SCORESBY 86 Pr Sco tch W hisky DEW ARS 86 Pr S c o tch W hisky CRAW FORDS 80 Pr S c o tc h Whisky CHIVAS REGAL 12 YR 80 Pr S c o tch W hisky USHERS 80 Pr S c o tch W hisky TEMPO TEQUILA 80 Pr W hite or Gold BOM BAY GIN 86 Pr Engfcsh Gin RON RICO 80 Pr P uerto Rican Rum G ILBEY’SGIN 80 Pr Gin McCORMICK VODKA 5.99 7.49 6.99 8.99 4.99 5.99 7.99 11.49 15.99 12.99 19.99 18.99 11.99 15.99 24.99 15.99 36.99 17.99 11.99 24.99 13.99 12.99 8.99 B A L L A N T IN E S 86 Pr S co tch W hisky W HITE H O R S E 80 Pr B o t n Scotland G L E N T R O M IE 12 Y R 86 Pr All Matt S c o tch SERRANA 53 P r M ex C offee L iqueur KAHLUA 53 P r C o ffe e U q ueu r M ARTEL V.S. 80 Pr F re n ch Cognac B&B 80 Pr F re n ch Uq ueu r DRAMBUIE 80 Pr S c o tch U queu r RAYNAL BRANDY 80 Pr F re n ch V SO P PORTUGESE PORT H utcheson 1963 V intage SLIVOVITZ 94 Pr Y ug oslava P lum Brandy KORBEL Ca Bru t or E« Dry GALLO WINES Ca C habit* Blanc. R o se Blush COOKS CHAM PAGNE Ca E xtra Dry or Brut ASTI S P U M A N T E Italian TostJ Spk SEBA STIAN I Ca W hite Ztnfandel B A L L A T O R E Ca G ran Spum ante C A R L O ROSSI Ca Chabfes, Rhine B lu sh M A N IS C H EW IC Z N Y C o n c o rd G rape W ine BEER 12 OZ. CA N S BUDW EISER MILLER LITE SCHLITZ LO N E STAR BUINNESS B E C K S R ED STRIPE P E A R L li o rR e g 12 O Z . NR B O T T L E S 750 ml 17.99 11.99 -9.99 l O O Q 750 ml I V i ! / 9 7 s . - 6 . 9 9 -14.99 -17.99 ,-24.99 -20.99 mo- 7.99 -14.50 -16.99 ,■»-6.99 e that a visitor w ould walk through it and experien ce the w ork s in a certain order. The first oom p re ­ i sen ts w ork s bv Josh u a Brow n, I T alu m n u s, su rro u n d ed ?v art anti m ask s from the O ut oi Vírica store. The curved m ask s, exported from G h an a and N igeria an d w orn only bv m en, ie riv e from he Vin- can aesthetic art u sto rian s ike to call "th e c o o l" - e x p re ssio n s art prim arily self-as­ sured exp ressio n istic work reflects m at kind ot m ner- stabiiitv, p lu s a concern tor h isto­ ry. Brown s tranquil ind T a te lv , J o sh u a d e a ls with Egypt an d a n tiq u itie s," W illiam s 'It reflects in his w ork explains the style an d the texture U p until the 60s ind 70s, t w as lo t e a sv to find black p eo p le w ho w ere aw are that E gypt is a part of alack histo­ ry Xrtists ire becom in g m ore fas­ cinated ind *xp ressin g it in their vorks Xtter Brow n s vurk , lie other artists go iff m ill sorts ot iifterent in d d iffu se n otion s of directions w hat the black m an w at ind h as becom e. Willie Prvor a So u th w est Texas U n iversity grad u ate, on- structed a totem pole out of cvlin- ineal ih ap es that reveal his quirky ind his love of sen se of valance engineerin g. '1 like he nu ts an d bolts of hum.1, ' he say s. Poet Telma W illiams sh o w s her works ilo n g sid e sketch es by Rickv Farro!. The h em es of W illiam s po- etrv isu aily com e from her feel­ in gs ib ou t the 'in visible m an svn- drorne ' — the in creasin g ab sen ce of fathers tram the black nmilv Joni Hughes n ixed m edia art n corp orates a m eticu lou s an d elaborate sy m b o io g v n w orks like Peace Be Still m d Three Pace Lest Vobodies. The w o rk s ire effective nostiy n term s of sp ace ind -ug •iesnorr. Yet, w h en sp e ak in g about ie r art, iu g h e s th row s rut alm ost m pen etrable art con cep ts. ou take 9th 'A 'I w as o v en m v Bible vhen grade w as baptized in H u g h e * exp lain s. ’ -C mo r dance. It talks ab o u t how the hbie 'etrunsiated. The w ords w ere is i lu sn e d togethei the vo w els revelation an d ev olu- lon are he sam e w ord. The nr-t reing that w e u id e rsta n d w as naie am i fem ale or there w ere 'v c lem gs. W illiam s s e le c in g iie*e d iverse irtists or he exhibit reflects lltitu d e lei p h iloso ph ical ovv.ird lit n ;eneral. net h od ot iioosc 'W hen 'I'm nostiv a er, ale -avs. artist I ook oi (ualih ot p resen tation . ju d ge aesth e tic*. W hen som eone 3 art stomal I d o n 't ju d g e th a t." ’Cit-taugnl paint­ is ech n iqu e mo d on t hink s too w o-dim en HE EVOLUTION SU C H W A V Where: BiacK Xits Xiiianct xavdsuia 8: Dates, mouyn vtarchj Twenty years after Traffic first made noise, Dave Mason plays again the music that made him semi-famous th rough the '70s. "E v ery th in g in my life tran slates into m v s o n g s ," he sa y s. At the tim e, m ost p eo p le still knew him either in reference to Traffic or a s the gu y w h o w rote Fee- lin Alright, which b ecam e a Joe C ocker hit. But M ason alw ay s had a stron g core o f fan s, m any o f w h om were o v e rse a s in V ietnam . " A lot of those g u y s h ad m y tape an d a H endrix tap e in the foxhole for three d ay s. I've h ad a lot of them com e u p and tell m e that, an d it's a great thing to k n o w ," he say s. "B u t the '60s w ere a big tim e for a lot o f p eo p le, e s p e ­ cially the tro o p s that g o t so ab u sed not by the w ar, but by Am erica w hen they cam e b a c k ." M aso n re­ turn s th ose fav ors to this d ay bv p lay in g ben efits for v eteran s, like the on e held last year in H ou ston . A fter releasin g Dave Mason and Split Coconut, M ason finally hit it big with Let It Flow, w hich sp a w n e d the sin gle We Just Disagree. top 10 T h ou gh critics arg u e d that the al­ bum w as full o f M O R -ish in stru ­ m entation in a bid for m ain stream p op u larity, Let It Flow becam e M a­ so n 's crow n in g ach ievem en t a s a solo artist an d the m ost m ature to d ate. But later efforts failed to m eet ex­ p ectation s, an d M a so n 's recording th ro u gh o u t the '80s p ro v ed sp a rse an d sp o rad ic. 1987's Two Hearts w as his m ost recent effort, an d with no new contract on the horizon, M ason is seem in gly conten t to play sm aller clu b s to an ap p reciativ e crow d "T h e in du stry is ch an g in g for the w o rse in record s an d radio. T h ere's no real FM an y m ore, an d p ro ­ g ram m ers d o n ’t even to record s, they ju st p lu g in a cart, an d th at's their sh o w . S o clu b s are w hat 1 have to p lay right now b ecau se th ere's no recognition in rock h isto­ ry for m e b ec au se th ere's no hit r e c o rd s," he say s. listen Yet w hile "h it” reu n ited g ro u p s like T he G ra ss R oots, S tep p en w o lf larger an d the T urtles p lay to aren as, often it is on lv with on e or two original m em b ers that c h u m out the hits to a set of fortvsom e- thing flow er children turned attor­ n e y s an d d en tists "1 see the old fan s, but I a lso see a lot o f y o u n ger p eop le at the sh o w s w ho m aybe borrow ed mv album from an older brother or paren t M ason sav s. looks is S o life for D ave M ason now laced with both conten tm en t an d for­ though he frustration , w ard to the up co m in g .Austin date, featurin g his new electric band. "W e w ere su p p o se d to play \u stm l ast year, but all our eq u ip m en t got stolen from Rockefeller's in H o u s­ ton, s o w e had to cancel the gig, he s a v s , ad d in g with a laugh , but we got the van back. 1 hev left it on the side ot t he highw ay DAVE MASON W here S n e a k e r s 9515 N Lamar Blvd. Day: Sunday CRITICS' CHOICE Marshall trades Rose Marie for Neil Simon DIRTY DOZEN BRASS BAN D The Dirty Dozen may be New O r­ leans' penultim ate m usical institu­ tion (after the Neville Brothers). A traditional m arching band with in­ flections of R&B, blues, bebop and whatever else is floating around the Crescent City, the Dirty D ozen has received attention lately with their recent collaborations with Elvis C o s­ tello and the Nevilles. Their show w as postponed last Novem ber, but they're back and will be at Antone's Friday night with the Sue Foley Band. CREATIVE OPPORTUNITY ORCHESTRA H ere's your ( fiance to see (and be seen with) a < utting ed ge Austin jazz group. The Creative Opportunity O rchestra is having a live videotap­ ing Sunday at the KLRU studio 6A (home of Austin City Limits). Joining the Orchestra will be the "H om efire G u e sts:" Dan Del Santo, Dennis G onzalez, Jam es Polk and Will Tay­ lor, Bill Gmn and Joy String. Vocalist and artistic director of the Orchestra, Tina Marsh will sing selections from Porgy and Bess arranged by Bill Ginn. The taping begins at 7 p.m. and tickets are $7 ($5 for students and seniors). TEXAS SONGWRITERS' EVENING Renowned Austin m usic tigures Townes Van Zandt, G uy Clark and Robert Earl Keen Jr. bring their Aus­ tinite folk/country songwriting blend to the Cactus Cafe for a one-night stand Saturday at 8 p.m. TICKETS!!! The Daily Texan will give away four p asses (each p ass adm its two) to Capitol City Playhouse's production of Ray C ooney's Run For Your Wife; passes are good until March 9. Run For Your Wife is London's longest running com edy and may lx' the most popular farce about bigam y of the entire 20th century. Sounds good? Be one of the first four people to run (get it?) dow n to our office in the basem ent at 2500 Whitis Ave. Friday after 10 a.m . and you can nab a pass from Roseanne the lovely secretary. Brett Polen Daily Texan Staff P e t e r (Hollywood Si] u a res) M a r ­ s h a l l will be at th e P aram o u n t S u n d a y p e r ­ form in g in Neil S i m o n ’ s Ru- mors. I i v e - t i m | E m m y A w ard w inner an d 16-year host o f the Hoi lyuvod Squares, M arshall has re­ turned to the stag e an d foun d a lite after the legen d ary g am e sh ow (un like current h ost John D dvidson, w h o can't seem to find Ins ow n niche IV, stag e or infom en. uils). While m ost p e o p le a ssu m e that M arsh all's career started w ith televi sion tic-tac-toe, he w as actually a sin ger first "1 started sin g in g with the ban d, 1 w as a sin ger anil it evo lv ed into a nightclub a c t," sa y s M arshall "A c tually, it evolved into a lot ot stuft ... into theater, into Squares, b a ik into theater l us t a w hole kind of potpourri of th in gs " RUMORS Author: Neil Simon Starring: Peter Marshall Director: Peter Lawrence Theater: Paramount Theatre 713 Congress Vve Date: Sunday I he g am e show p eop le foun d M arshall on Hroadwav w hen he ap p eared with Julie M onis in Sky> i inpet in 1960. 1 \e n earhct M arshall had m ad e a n am e for h im self m a com edy team w ith lo iru m \v*on an ap p earin g several t im e s on the t .1 Sullivan Show M aish all has also ap p eared tn Bye Bye Binlte with v hi ta Rivera in 1 o n d o n High Button Slwes, \nything Goes the Musk Man and 42nd Street an d he touted for two se a r * in the national vom panv of la Cage \u \ I idles think "M an y that (Hollywood Squares I wfa s m \ w hole caieet But 1 had a career before this and I !l hu\< a career aftei say s M arshall In ad d ition to his stint on Sqiuires. M arshall h as hod several cos iges on I he Love Bind, trips to lanta^y T land an d reserv atio n s at Hotel IK h as even d o n e a lot ot film s I ve d on e a lot ot real b a d fijm s “Many think that [H olly­ w ood S quares] was my whole career. But 1 had a career before thts, and I’ll have a career after. Peter Marshall 1 did a m fact, lau g h s Marshall thing malted the xeex t and So>¡ng ) on Xiong and busign Pulvei an d .1 picture called Hu Cavern which w as piettv g o o d actually. Just .1 lot ot film But theatei is M arshall s real tal l b s Rumors perform ance h o s «.*nt received great rev tews Neil Sim on s latest plav follow s his highlv su c c e ssfu l sem i autobro trilogy Brighton Beach graphical Memoirs Biloxi Blues an d Bioaduuy Bound S eein g that theie w as no fourth stc’i v in the sen e s, “sim ón w ent bovk to w riting )Ust out an d *d vs M arshal) out tu m n Rumors is the -.toi v ot a high class couple whv» host a dinner party u>t their b e s t friend to «.elebrate then anm veisdiv Hovvever d u m e i g o e s -ivv' v w hen the help d isa p p e a rs the FVtei M arShail in lem am s uncooked dm nei ¡ bullet hole host receives his eai R um ors b egin to the g u e sts attem pt to uitei even ts that led u p tv* th«. {. esv, a pa V, tv's M a rsh it em ove*. his a tot I V V U Bobby Ruggiero Daily Texan Staff th in gs w ere I f r ig h t t h i s in w o rld . V an illa Ice w o u ld n 't be at the top of the charts, an d D ave M ason w ould be m ore than ju st a footn ote in rock a h isto ry . A s fo u n d in g m em ber (with S tev e Win- w ood) o f the sem in al band Traffic an d later a s a so lo artist, M ason proved h im self an extrem ely talen t­ ed sin ger, so n gw riter an d gu itarist with his ow n distinct style of laid- back g ro o v e s an d textured lyrics. S o w hy, after 20 y ears, d o m any p eo p le still ask "D a v e w h o? D idn 't he d o the original v ersion o f Rock On?" "I d o n 't know w hy p eo p le d o n 't know ab ou t m e ," M ason ch u ckles. " A s far a s m y fan s g o , they d on 't think that. A s for the oth ers, either they're stu p id or not aw are o f m e ." In the era before there w ere su ch th in gs a s " s u p e r g r o u p s ," Traffic w as a band o o zin g talent. With M a­ son on gu itar, Jim C ap ald i on d ru m s, C h ris W ood w ork in g sa x o ­ ph on e an d flute, an d w u n d erk in d Steve W inw ood on k ey b o ard s an d lead vo cals, the m usic of Traffic w as both eclectic an d exp erim en tal even by late '60s sta n d a rd s. Their 1968 a l­ bum d ebut Mr. Fantasy an d follow- u p Traffic h ave becom e classic rock sta n d a rd s that greatly influenced the art-rock m ovem en t o f the m id 7 0 s . "W h en w e started, w e w an ted to d o so m eth in g that w as new , but w e d id n 't know w hat that w as until w e got together. We w ere all k i d s — 18, 19 y ears old. It w as ju st a question o f th row ing aro u n d the m usic an d se e w hat w e g o t ," M ason say s. Jim i H en d rix A fter leavin g the ban d shortly a f­ ter Traffic, M ason d id so m e se ssio n an d w ork w ith lau n ch ed his ow n so lo career. He h ad been fru strated that, thou gh his abilities w ould h ave been the center o f m ost oth er b a n d s, the p resen ce of lim ited his c o m p o sin g W inw ood an d sin g in g time. M ason w ould re­ unite w ith his old ban d for tw o sh ort sp a n s, the first o f w hich p ro ­ d u ce d the excellent live albu m Wel­ come to the Canteen. With the release o f his solo al­ b u m s Alone Together, Head keeper an d It's Like You Never Left, M ason d e ­ fined his niche: laid-back rock an d so m b er vo cals that w ould continue P a q e 12 F r i d a y . F e b r u a r y 15. 1991 T H E D x I L N T E X A N SEMI NAP. Guest Speaker M a r k D a w b e r m a n of Dauberrnan CPA Review February 15, 1991 U T C 2 .1 0 2 A 4:00-6:00 p.m. Sponsored by University o f Texas Accounting Association and KAPLAN-DAUBERMAN STANLEY H.KAPLAN EDUCATIONALONTER LTD F o r m o r e in f o r m a t io n 4 7 2 -E X A M Sat. I i b. If* at 2 p .m . Son, I ••!) !7 at 2 and I p.m . T h e a tre Room T ic k e t- S3 at al! I T T M T ic k e t( "enters C H \K G K - \ - T I C K K T . 177 6060 IT DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE AND DANCE iFOfttfcRLY THE DEPARM.NT Of DRAMA) Hozlewoods Travel 2222 Rio Grande 478-5000 U.T. Spnng Break Specials CANCUN •CANCÚN •ACAPULCO •PUERTO VALLARÍA. 'Lake Tahoe Ski 5 nights 3 da y lifts air SOUTHPADRE FORT LAUDERDALE MUSTANG ISLAND CORPUS *229 *369 *379 s389 ‘ 1 2 9 * 1 4 7 *128 *399 L0N00N 'Packages are quad occupancy and include roundtnp air. transfers, hotel and parties' And more, more and more' C H EA P T IC K E T S !! Call 24 hrs. a Day Friday-Sunday Sf. S Hogg Auditorium Monsieur Hire will not be shown this weekend due to ship­ ping problems.______ P o d M u t t i f i G o o s e opening f o w l Not S aturday Coffee Sergeants fmmShow Texas Union 24th & ddCactuS-^L Tonight J im m y L a fa v e Saturday Guy Clark Townes Van Zandt Robert Earl Keen Texas Union 2 4 th & Guadalupe “A WONDERFUL COMEDY... POSTCARDS 5 AS LXHILUUTLN'G AS THE FIRST AITTMN 3REEZE... - Richard Corte». ÍTME “ A DAZZLING MOVIE FROM MIKE NICHOLS AND c o m p a n y : fVnmi (lunnnfam- CBS-TV F rid a y & S a tu rd a y S u n d a y 7 :3 0 p.m U n io n T h e a tre MERYL S'REEP SHIRLEY MacLAINE DENNIS QUAID “★ ★ ★ ★ ELECTRIC FILMMAKING, ACADEMY AWARD QIHLTTY. TTOSltUlVGPtJTORM LM L5BTu n tilSIRUP L.Y0SHÍHII1 VUtLALML" - mi« •• « uiuniM »!. play bo y H...IUI c < i>( r L m r r t l N ra llh ( are P rr(a > a t> I r * l * • R irth ( n n iro l • PAP S a ra r. \m« ■ |< ,«n I:..,..,! l*i M tH i A IL SEATS—ALL SHOWS J 4608 WESTGATE BLVO. ROBOTJOX POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE 5 00 7 15 9 30 PREDATOR 2 5 15 7 30 9 45 ( TIMES PUBLISHED ARE FOR TQQAY ONLY ) P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S STUDENT DBCOUNTS DAILY S4.50 WfTH VALD10 MATINEE ALL SNOWS BEFORE 6:00 PM 448-0008 RIVERSID E 8 RIVERSIDE S PLEASANT VALLEY BO_____________ SILENCE OF THE LAMBS i< SMART STEREO 11 45? 15 4 45 7 30 10 05 12 35 ___________ NO PASSES___________ NOTHING BUT TROUBLE > SMART STEREO 1 30 4 30 7 15 9 55 12 30 NO PASSES OR K L 3 J D ISC OU NT THE GODFATHER III k SMART STEREO 2 00 5 15 8 30 11 45 HOME ALONE f< SMART STEREO 12 152 305 007 159 30 11 45 SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY it SMART STEREO 1 00 3 15 5 45 8 05 10 30 12 40 ___________ NO FREE PASSES___________ LA STORY 111.I ll SMART STEREO 12 302 45 5 15 7 459 45 12 00 NEVER ENDING STORY i*«.| SMART STEREO 12 30 2 30 5 00 7 00 9 30 DANCES WITH WOLVES |f*.n| SMART STEREO ______ ’ 2 00 3 30 7 00 10 30______ POPCORN k SMART STEREO 12 00 MI0 VILLAGE CINEMA 2700 ANDERSON; 451-8352 ■ / HARRISON FORD I W tft'zrr 1 - I V F rid a y & S a tu rd a y 1 1:1 5 p.m . i< Hogg Auditorium F rid a y - S u n d a y U n io n T h e a tre 9 :4 5 p .m F r id a y -S u n d a y 9 ;3 0 p.ni H o g g A u d ito riu m NEW IINE CINEMA THE NASTY GIRL k i.n l 12 45 2 50 5 15 7 30 9 50 MR AND MRS. BRIDGE OOLBYSTEREO |f*-M| '2 002 405 10 7 45 10 15 THE FIELD |f*.u| DOLBY STEREO 12 30 3 00 5 30 8 00 10 10 GOODFELLAS h DOLBY STEREO 1 004 00700945 S t l THOMPSON OFF 1S3 t ml e so. n m o n to p o lis Phono 385-5328 COUPLES THEATER-Fri. & Sat. 7pm-6 am SINGLES THEATER-Open 7 days 24 hours TAPE REN T ALS-S3for2days MAGS.-Buy One Get One F r e e ___ S5 PRIVATE VIEWING ROOMS Ml III-S A V E OPTICAL OUTLET . ' ■ Two Locations To Serve You Better: m ^ ___ » . 811 E. William Cannon Or. Century S. Shopping Center 5720 B. Burnett Road Allendale Village Shopping Center 448-2848 467-6968 JOHN HURT as Stephen Buchanan RAUL JULIA as Dt Frankenstein BRDGET FONDA JASON PATRK as MarySMtoy as lord Byron Austin Fxciusive 4:45 - 9.40 ’AN UNFORGETTABLE THRILLER” -M ic k 1 .«Salle, S AN F R A N C IS C O O H K O N IC Lfe GENE BE RV OE T S 4 ^ , * | STIWEO SO U N D IN D IC A T E D BY ♦ GREAT HILLS 8 US 1*3 l GREAT HILLS TRAIL 7 9 4 - 8 0 7 6 * NOTHING BUT TROUBLE lfl.nl TMX 12^30 2.45 5:00 7M5 9:30 * L A. STORY |l'l.n| 1:05 3:20 5 30 7 40 9 55 * NEVER ENDING STORY lT IN. I 1:00 3:00 5 00 ♦ ONCE AROUND II 1 2 :4 5 3 :0 5 5:2 5 7.45 10:05 tURNET RO. «1 WEUS IRAMCH 3 8 8 - 0 3 5 3 _____ ♦ S ILEN C E 0 7 THE LAMBS 11 5 :0 0 7 :2 5 9 :4 5 • NOTHING BUT TROUBLE | l * * . n | 5 1 0 7 J I 5 J Í 1 S «CADENCE If I. Ill 5 05 7 05 9:2 5 * GODFATHER PART 3 l< 5 :3 0 6 :3 0 HOME ALONE |fl 5 0 0 7 : 1 5 9 : 4 0 * EDWARD SCISSORHANDS |f(.I l| 5 :2 0 7 30 9 50 * RESCUERS DOWN UNDER _________ 5:00^ « MERMAIDS |f< -l <| 5 :1 0 7 :1 5 9 :4 5 » SILENCE OF THE LAMBS U THX 12 1 0 2 :3 0 5 :0 0 7^25 9:55 ♦ SILENCE OF THE LAMBS II 1 2 :1 0 2 :3 0 5 :0 0 7:2 5 9 :55 * SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY II 1:00 3 :2 0 5 :4 5 8 :0 0 1 0:15 GREENCARD I f .I l| 1 2 :1 5 2 :4 0 5:05 7 35 10 00 ONCE AROUND II 1 2 :3 0 2 :5 0 5:2 0 7 :4 5 1 0 :1 0 » ONCE AROUND R 1 2 :1 5 2 : 4 0 5 : 0 5 7 3 0 9 5 5 * GRIFTERS K 1 : 0 0 3 : 1 5 5 : 3 0 7 : 5 0 1 0 :0 0 * KINDERGARTEN COP Iff.I 7 : 3 0 9 : 4 5 * SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY II THX 1 2 :4 0 2 : 5 0 5 : 0 5 7 2 5 9 :4 5 * NEVER ENDINC STORY II * WHITE FANG |f< 12 5 5 3 : 0 5 5 :1 5 7 2 0 9 :3 0 . KINDERGARTEN COP iff.I 12 3 5 2 : 5 5 5 : 1 5 7 4 0 1 0 00 . DANCES WITH WOLVES If*. H| 1 :0 0 4 :3 0 8 :0 0 G H O ST PREDATOR 2 # v ! p h o '° c ■s 00 * „ S isó te ' S mi* .eicia'0* __ aM<*"‘ y, roi»v * v • - Never A Sale, Always The Lowest Prices! tg icaf, fu ssy , m an ip u lativ e, a n g e d c r e a tu r e s w ho play t a k e . . * IVIen a r e In s e n s itiv e , m e s s y , u n co m m itte d s e x u a lly o b s e s s e d c lo d s w ho ju s t w ant ^ h ot s e x follow ed by a co ld b e e r ... b u t th e it s h e fell in lo v e w ith D an. jm % T h e sto ry o f tru e lov e... b o th v e rsio n s IM kM P ; jbirumiTwU Reefer Madness . . . t h e t r u e s t o r y H 1 2 : 0 0 " C a ll Us : T o d a y " • Is A Possible ■ Saving of *70 I on Car Insurance * Worth 10 Minutes ■ I of Your Time? BARBARA & U S A FOR A FREE ■ ■ NO-OBLIGATION ■ ■ INSURANCE RAT I m QUOTATION CALL AUTOMOBILE OR VISIT MY OFFICE AT B 1 5 0 5 T o w n C r e e k (off E. Riverside Dr.) £ Austin, T e xa s m A ate H o m tu w o e r GET TO KNOW **' , ’Vtotofm-k GEICO T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D S 8 :0 0 -5 :0 0 p .m ./M o n d a y -F r id a y /T S P B u ild in g 3 .2 0 0 "LONGHORN WANT ADS" -Specifications — Merchandise for Sale Priced at $1000 or es*. Price must appear in ad If item doesn't sell, a d ­ vertiser must call before 11 00 a m on the doy the ad is scheduled to end *o for the 5 a d di­ qualify tional insertions at no charge Must specify 'Longhorn W ont A d" russification to quality for $5 rate Changes a llow e d "Hr ;e Only fa r TO PLACI A WORD OR U N I AO CALL: 471-5244 C L A S S IF IE D W O R D A D 'R A T E S C h a rg e d by 'h e w o r d 5 w o r d m int m ure Set ,n 5 p t ty p e >ily Rates a re E ach w o r d 1 tim e E och w o r d 3 tim es E ach w o r d 5 tim es E och w o rd 10 tim es E ach w o r d 15 hmes E och w o r d 2 0 hmes $ 3 8 $ 1 0 2 $ 1 4 5 $ 2 5 0 $ 3 0 0 $ 3 4 0 p e r in s e rtio n $1 0 0 c h a rg e to c h a n g e c o p y First tw o w o rd s m a y be alt c a p ita ! lette rs 2 5 c fo r e a c h a d d itio n a l w o rd m c a p ita ! let ters M a s te rc a rd a n d Visa a c c e p te d C L A S S IF IE D L IN E A D 'R A T E S C h a rg e d b y th e Im p O n e c o lu m n inch iim m u m A v o ilo b le in 5 to 14 p t ty p e c o l t in c h I T im * $ 8 2 0 W ORD A N D LINE AD DEADLINE SCHEDULE TO PLACI ACLASSIFIID DISPLAY AD, CALL 4 7 1 -8 9 0 0 ________ CLASSIFIED DISPLAY* AD RATIS im A . b o rd e of *.pe ta b le F all Rates Sec>t 1 M a y 3 0 1 to 4 9 c o lu m n inches Per M o n th $ 8 6 0 Per C o lu m n Inch ?n p e r m o n th , c o ll f o r O v e r 5 0 coi rates CLASSIFIED DISPLAY DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n da y T uesday W e d n e s d a y T h u rs d a y F n d a y Thursday, 4 p.m F nd a y, 4 p.m . M o n d a y , 4 p.m . Tuesday 4 p.m . W e d n e s d a y , 4 p.m In th e e v e n t o f e rro rs m a d e m a n a d ­ vertisem ent, n o tic e m ust b e g iv e n b y 11 o m th e h iy f d a y , as the pub lish e rs a re re s p o n s ib le in s e rtio n A ll claim s fo r o n ly O N E in c o rre c t fo r adtustm ents sh o u ld be m o d e n o t la te r th a n 3 0 da ys a fte r p u b lic a tio n Pre p a id ktHs 'ece>vp c re d it slip if re q u e s te d a t tim e o f ca n - if a m o n o ' e xc e e d s e lla h o n a n d $ 2 0 0 Stir- must be p re s e n te d fo r a r e o r d e r w ith in 9 0 da ys to be v a lid Credit slips are non transferable In c o n s id e ra tio n o f The D a ily T e x a n ’s a c c e p ta n c e o f o d v e rh s in g c o p y h r p u b lic a tio n th e a g e n c y a n d th e a d verhset w t¡! in d e m n ify a n d save h a r m ­ less Texas S tu d e n t P u b lica tio n s a n d its o ffic e rs , e m p lo y e s, a n d a g e n ts a g a in s t a ll loss lia b ility d a m a g e a n d e xpense o f w h a ts o e v e r n a tu re a ris in g o u t o f the c o p y in g p n n h n g , o r p u b lis h in g o f its o d v e rh s m e n t in c lu d in g w ith o u t lim ita ­ tio n re a s o n a b le a tto rn e y s fees re su lt­ in g fro m claim s o f suits fo r lib e l v io la - non o f rig h t o f p riv a c y p la g ia ris m a n d c o p y r ig h t a n d tra d e m a rk in frin g e m e n t DEADLINE: 11:00 a.m . p rior to publication mmm M A S T E R C A R D V I S A A C C E P T E D Ma“ CLASSIFICATIONS A u tos TRAN SPO R TA TIO N 10 — M isc. A u to s 20 — S p o r tt 3 0 — T r u c k s -V o m 4 0 — V * h k i # $ t o T ra d e 5 0 — S t r v k * - l « p o t r 6 0 — P a rts - A c c e s s o rie s 7 0 — M o t o r c y Hers 8 0 — S k y de s 9 0 — V * h i c k l o o s i n g 1 0 0 — V s h K l t t W o n te d #1 A l CSTATI S A L IS 1 1 0 — S t r v K M 120 — H o u se s 130 — C o n d o s -T o w n h o u s e s 1 4 0 — M o b ile H o m e s - Lots 1 5 0 — A e r e ó l e l o t s 1 6 0 — D u p le x e s - 1 7 0 - W o n ted 1 8 0 — l o a n s MERCHANDISE 1 9 0 — A p p lia n c e s 2 0 0 — F u r n itu r e - H o u s e h o ld 2 1 0 - S t e r e o TV 220 — C o m p u te rs E q u ip m e n t 2 3 0 — P h o to -C a m e r a s 2 4 0 - S o o t s 2 5 0 — M u sic a l In s tr u m e n ts ? 6 0 m H o b *» *» 2 7 0 M a c h in e r y - iQUipm enrf 2 8 0 — SporH fH |*Cam fN ng Iq u ip rrw n f 2 9 0 — F u r n itu r e Appi to m * R e n ta l 3 0 0 — G G r o g * - K u m m o g * S o te s 3 1 0 — T rocte 3 2 0 — W a n te d to B u y o r R en t MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 — R efs 3 4 0 — l o n g h o r n W a n t Ads 3 4 5 - M .sc RENTAL 3 5 0 — R e n ta l S e r v n e s 3 6 0 — Funri A pts. 3 7 0 — U n f A p ts 3 6 0 — F u rn D u p le x e s 3 9 0 — U n f D u p le x e s 4 0 0 — C o n d o s -T o w n h o u s e s 4 1 0 — T u rn H o u s e s 4 2 0 — U n f H o u s e s 4 2 5 — R o o m s 4 3 0 — R o o m -B o a r d 4 3 5 — C o -o p s 4 4 0 — R o o m m a te s 4 5 0 — M o b ile H o m e s -L o ts 4 6 0 — B u s i n e s s R e n ta ls 4 7 0 — R e s o rts 4 0 0 — S t o r a g e S p a c e 4 9 0 ~ W o n ted to R e n t- L e a s e SOO — M ist AN N OUN CEM EN TS 5 1 0 — E n te rta in m e n t - T ickets 5 2 0 — P e r s o n a l* 5 3 0 - T ro v ef- T r o n s p o r to t io n % 5 4 0 — L o st A F ou n d 5 5 0 — L ic e n s e d C hild C o re 5 6 0 — R u b ik N o tic e 5 7 0 —- M u s k Mu s * - 6 4 0 K B 3 6 0 K B 5 V .fi m o n o 10! v 'B D 5 3 8 5 AT Systems 2 0 M B $ 5 9 5 6 3 - 2 2 3 2 1 -2 8 -2 0 P ____________________ 330 — Pets V A L E N T IN E S PUPPIES! A d o r a b le A u s ­ tra lia n s h e p h a rd s, 6 wks aid. a ll m ales shots $ '0 0 . C a ll 4 7 7 - 7 0 2 0 o r 4 8 0 - 8 9 6 1 2 -1 2 -5 B G O V E R N M E N T SEIZED ve t.-tie s S 100 Fords M e rc e d e s C b e vys S urplus Y o u r a re a 6 0 0 0 , f« * S 9 4 1 3 2 1 3 -2 3 P C o rv e tte s i l l 8 0 5 - 6 8 2 fro m 81 BUICK REG AL L im ite d V 6 w e ll m am ta m e d clean, p o w e r n e w \:q s . sticker, a n d t.res $ 1 8 0 0 4 4 8 4 6 2 6 2 11-5B 8 7 BU IC K L e S a b re 4 - d o o i A C . A M FM A ll p o w e r fu lly lo a d e d a s k in g S 6 6 0 0 C o ll Faye 1 4 3 -2 9 1 2 2 13 3 8 ____________ HOTTEST JEEP in A u stin 79 tu c k e d o u t tires H u rry ' C l- 5 . N e w e v e ry th in g 33 S 7 ,5 0 0 7 5 0 5 4 4 0 2 14 2B fu e l m ie cte d 1 9 7 9 V O t K S W A C O N RABBIT A u to m a t B 'a n d ic new b ra ke s b a tte ry m u ffle r E xcellent c o n d it.o n 1 S 1 2 5 0 O B O R a n d y 3 2 2 - 0 7 5 0 . 2 -1 4 -5 P fo u r a o o r <.,:n _ tin te d w in d o w s A M F M cassette 1 9 8 4 BUICK Sky H a w k A u to m a tic . PS, 16 M C E 1 S2 5 0 0 O B O Tnsh 3 3 5 - 3 9 7 0 . W K - 7 9 4 -1 3 5 5 2 -1 5 -5 B 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos H O N D A A C C O R D 1 9 8 2 2 - d o o r a u to ­ m a tic A C A M /F M cassette D e a le r m- n e w e n g in e 6 7 3 3 . 2 -1 3 -3 B fi 9 9 5 n e g o tia b le 8 3 5 8 9 H O N D A CRX fo r sale FM . A M C a s ­ sette, A /C . a u to m a tic transm issio n Ex c e lle n t c o n d itio n $ 7 7 5 0 c a ll 4 4 5 - 5 6 4 7 2 1 5 - 5 P _______________ 70 — Motorcycles M O O N L IG H T M O TO RCY CLE - M o tor •:ve'e sew .ee a n d s a lv a g e a t d is c o u n te d p a ce s T o w in g a v a ila b le B ro k e n bikes b o u g h t 4 4 0 0 8 0 8 2 -13 2 0 6 L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S 80 — Bicycles M , MOUNTAIN BIKE SALE * AJI 1990-91 M ountain Bikes on Sale Fu|i * GT f) Diamondback • Shimano * 2 1 Speed FUJI Mountain Bike CR-MO Frame Shimano parts S 2 6 9 00 only * STUDENT SPECIAL FREE U-Lock with b * e purchase - or S 10 00 oft I yr. free service, extra discount on 2 Bike purchase SOUTH AUSTIN BICYCLES 444-0805 2210 South 1st M C« VISA» AM EXP «DISCOVER Mountain Bikes 928-2810 NOW-1991 GT BIKES • MANY 1990 MODELS REDUCED 100 00 STUDENT D ISC O U NTS BUCK’S BIKES VISA MC Am e*p 7 5 B I K E S $ 2 5 a n d u p S o u th - 9 0 0 W B e n W h ite (a c ro s s fro m A A H o s p ) N o rth - 5 4 th S t. 4 A irp o rt (a c ro s s fro m L a m m e s C a n d y ) E v e ry S a tu rd a y Austin Bicycle Salvage 2 4 4 -7 4 4 4 N O W P A Y IN G cash fo r sele cte d used m o u n ta in b ikes C o th r o n s Bike S hop, 1 5 0 4 2 0 B -K fo r tv ie w , 4 4 7 - 7 0 7 6 , Jo h n 2-15- REAL ESTATE SALES 130 — Condos - Townhouses WHY RENT? ...WHEN YOU CAN OW N! S a le s, b o r g a tn s . R F O ., g o v e r n m e n t, o w n e r fin a n c e d ★ P r o fe s s io n a l p r o p m g m t. ★ FALL PRE-LEASING N O W ! C a ll J e rry O a k e s a t PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 /4 6 7 -7 7 8 1 2-12-20B-A 198 4 H O N D A INTERCEPTO R 5 0 0 Runs g o o d $ 1 0 0 0 O B O D a v id 4 5 8 - 6 5 2 8 1-5B 7 '8 6 SC W I N N V O Y A C E R 118 b ik e c h ro m e • tmsh e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n ¡ess th a n 100 m i $ 1 9 0 neq 4 5 8 4 9 2 9 2-11-5B to u rin g C O N O V E R P IA N O fo r sole A s k in g p n c e $ 5 0 0 C o n ta c t M ic h a e l a t 3 4 6 - 7 6 1 2 2 11-5B____________________________________ C E R W IN V E G A b o x w o o te r s a n d h o rn tw e e te rs h a ndles 500V Y $ 3 0 0 Jam es 4 - '4 9 .’ 0 9 2-11 5P T w o 12 inch C E N T U R IO N SPORT DLX b ra ke s , a e r o b ra k e le vers, m d e x system shifters, lig h t w e ig h t, h a rd ly used $ 1 6 0 (n e g o tia b le ) 3 4 6 - 2 6 7 0 2 - Í2 - 5 N C d io c o m p e G U C C l W A T C H M e n s 18k g o ld b a n d w iih g o ld Im m a c u lo te 1 m th old . has w a r r a n t, w o r th $ 7 0 0 sell S 4 5 0 4 To 8 ’ 7 9 2 U - 5 N C fa c e G O L D S G v M a e ro b ic m e m b e rs h ip g o o d 'n r o u g h 10-2-91 4 5 4 1 2 5 9 2 12-5NC $ 9 5 o r best o tf e ’ SUPER S IN G LE w a te r b e d n e w ly re fin ­ ished $ 1 5 0 C a ll K e ith 441 1 6 4 2 2 12- 5N C V E R N O N S BLA C K Texas civii statutes, c o d e s a n d ruies C o m p le te set A n n o ta ­ tio n s n o t u p d a te d N e g o tia b le 3 3 8 5 5 7 8 2 6 6 - 9 2 3 4 2 -1 2 -5 B ______________ O N K Y O 1 A 2 6 0 0 3 -h e a d 3 m o to r c a s ­ sette deck g r e a t C D re c o rd in g b ra n d n e w , w ith w a rra n ty S eilm q f o r $ 3 8 0 . O B O 3 2 6 - 9 0 2 ) 2-12 5B_______________ N E W IB s p e e d F ire n z e M i 5 0 5 b ic y c le ‘ o r sale $ . 5 0 C a ll 4 8 0 - 8 2 0 2 IQ om . 6 p m 2 12 5 N C _____ TE XAS SIZE D s le e p e r s o fa (91") C o n te m - fo b n c . p e ra ry q r e a t c o n d itio n $ '7 5 C o li 2 6 3 5 4 1 9 2- Í2 - 5 B Ie rra c o tta c o lo r solid B IA U P U N K T H I-P E R fO R M A N C E C ar s te re o d io 'ta 1 re c e iv e r F our m onths n e w a n ti-th e ft c o d e b u ilt-in a m p lifie r tra c k seek, lots m o r e 1 $ 7 5 0 O B O 3 2 2 0 7 5 0 . 2 - 1 2 - 5 N C _________ IB M EXECUTIVE p io p o r tio n a l ty p e w rite r 11 c a rb o n n b b o n A ttra c tiv e re e l ty p e - g o o d c o n d itio n c o rria g e - 1 9 5 5 m o d e l B a rg a in a t $ 4 0 8 3 4 1 5 4 3 2 -1 2 -5 B FURNITURE 2 n ig h t stands $ 8 e a c h ? b o o k c a s e s $ 2 5 a n d S 3 0 sm all mi t ro w o v e a lm o s t n e w $ 8 0 S e x e ra ' chairs a n d to b ie s 8 3 4 - 1 5 4 3 2 -1 2 -5 B in g o o d FO R SALE S c h w in n 10 speed c o n d itio n , fe n d e rs >'ac> p u m p a n d lo i k n c lu d e d $ '5 3 2 3 - 9 4 1 8 le a v e m essage 2 13-5B re a r b C AR VER C p r e -a m p lifie r Som e h o lo - in g 'O p h ic g e n e ra to r N e v e r used still b o x $ 4 5 0 o b o T odd 3 7 3 2 8 4 ? , le a v e m essage 2 -1 3 - 5P T W O LARGE b a ll p y th o n s b e a u tih 1 must -.eC G o o d e a te rs a n d *-ie n d ly Tank a n d h o tr o i k n e g r ' a b le 4 6 2 9 7 9 5 2-13 5P C O L O R _ r v VCR~ a n s w e rin g m a c h in e c, rd'ess p h o n e re c e iv e r spc akers, 'u rn tables, vacum m s cassette d e . i b ik e S 3 0 -S 1 7 5 . 3 3 9 - 3 ) 4 6 2 -1 4 -5 N C '0 speed ITEM A n tiq u e w o o d e n C O L L E C T O R S kju re a u e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , m ust see to a p p r e c ia te S 3 0 0 . p ric e n e g o tia b le 3 2 0 - 0 9 9 2 2 14 5B W IN D S U R F N G SAILS M is tra l W o rld C u p Ime, 6 0 C A M used tw o seasons G o o d c o n d itio n p o w t " ‘ >. M a rk 4 5 8 9 8 5 5 2 14-5B 'a c t $ 1 5 0 USED FURNITURE COLLECTIBLES VINTAGE CLOTHING JEWELRY DECORATIVE ITEMS A u s t i n A * U t a « £ 4 S t c / u i n a e 5117 N. Lamar J10-6 7 Days a Week |lirJ J É c a s h " B u y in g G old-S ilver Broken Chains. Class Rings Unwanted Jewelry Liberty Coins T-SHIRTS $5 O N THE DRAG Dis,’ nc,,ve Concepts AOve Adv/ear 2338 Guadalupe Sidewalk vendor in front of Tex­ as Textbooks Daily 11:30-4 30. M ention this ad for 10% off. 2 ’ 4 20B E V E N IN G DRESSES 4 5 2 - 5 1 2 4 2 12 58 rent Call Cane RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. ★ WALK TO ★ CAMPUS 1100 EAST 3 2 N D ST. AVALO N APTS. One BR $285 Walk-m closets, ceiling fons, on site management laundry Great for low- engmeennq students. 4 7 6 -3 6 2 9 2 -8 -lO B A $ 2 4 5 ALL BILLS p a id E fficiencies, 2 b lo ck s UT F ree c a b le 4 7 4 2 3 6 5 H o llo ­ w a y 2 5 0 2 N u e c e s 2 -4 -1 7 B D W A L K T O U n ive rsity 1 b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t D ish w a sh e r m ic ro w a v e w a te r / ga s $ 2 8 0 2 1 0 8 San G a b r ie l p a id 3 4 5 - 1 5 5 2 2 -1 ? -4 8 F U R N IS H E D S E C O N D -F lo o r 1-1 n e a r UT N e w c a rp e t, c e ilin g fo n s mi c r o w o v e $ 3 5 0 • t 4 7 8 - 6 0 0 5 . 2 -1 3 -5 B v e ry F U R N IS H E D 1-1 v. C e ilin g fons, mic 5 0 0 sq. ft $ 2 9 5 5B iry n e a r UT o n shuttle d is h w a s h e r, o w a v e E 4 7 8 6 0 0 5 2-13 370 — Unf. Apts. 4 $100 OFF!* 4 T o w n L a k e 4 C irc le A p ts 4 4 7 -5 9 7 1 • Free Cable • Free Hot Water • W D Connections • UT Shuttle • Bus Line • Large 1 BR - S290 • Large 2 BR 2 BA - S390 i Í i i i First full month's rent with this ad. Mot valid with any aj other discounts. other discounts L O C A T IO N ' L O C A T IO N ' A n d o il bills p a id n e a r d o w n to w n U T/C apitoM O ld e r b u ild in g r e n o v a te d w ith la rg e ro o m s a n d p le i-r> o f a m b ia n c e C a ll o w n e r a t 4 ’ 4 4 8 4 8 1 -2 8 2 0 B -C _ _ _ _ _ _ ★ * WEST CAMPUS! large 2 - 2 big c ‘essionol leasmg a nan-p-essure at mosphere Campus Condos 4 '4 4800 Cal! Brad Seiner 2 8-20B CONDOS & HOUSES FOR PRE LEASE A l l PRICE RANGES CALL NO W 474 4 800 T O D D k jg Q 2-8-208 IE SHUTTLE 4401 Speedway 1 BR loft, 17 ft vouhed ceiling Gas heat water paid Private balcony storoae 451 4656 459 0889 2-13-20B _______________ 1-1 m Hyde Pork On shuttle, tots of trees S3501 Cull Jatke at Harrison Peorson : n 6201 495-9141 2-13-5B C 3000 G u a d a lu p e Place cute ceiling fans full > khen $300 477-1581 o“ ce 32 ; -340? home 2 '4 5B i bdr • •DECORATOR SYEE 2 2 oh and flat big bedrooms C! W A Wes’ Campus $600/650 FRONT PAGE PROPERTIES 480 3518 2 14-20B-C_______________ reacS June ' Hugé L 1000 W 25th bed 3-both townhome fur­ nished beautth condition, Sd50 950 Coll Isaac Of Harnson-Pearson 4"2 6 201 2 14 5B C____________________ fireplace NORTH CAMPUS-910 Duncan # 6 0 ' 1-1 attractive and spacious overlooks pool, new paint .ery nice $4 35 Call Isaac at Harrison Peanon 4 '2 6201 2-14-5B-C EFFICIENCY CO ND O in small establish ed community Water ond electricih paid 405 E 31s* S750 mo 2 1 condo n like new ommunity $500 mo Red R v er 30th Stieet Mike 447-1029 2 15- 4 9 5 - 9 5 8 5 o r 4 2 0 — U nf. Houses 2 5 1 - 7 5 1 5 2-13-20B E Houses fo r Pre-Lease!!! • 2,3,4 5,6 Bedrooms • West Campus. Hyde Park and Tar- PRELEASING HAS BEGUN 3 -2 house h u g e 2 -2 c o n d o s . W e st Campus and H yd e Park a re u s 1704 West Ave. O ra n g e tre e G cmx, C e n te n n ia l LOOK N O W Rio G ronde Properties 47 4 -0 6 0 6 2-7-lOB E CALL MITCH TO PRE-LEASE ..CEN TEN N IAL $700-51400 . . ORANGETREE * S500-S2000 *• CROIX, . * OLD MAIN $550-51100 $800-51300 * . 1900 SAN GABRIEL S80C $2000 . . TOO MANY MORE TO LIST MITCH 476-2673/PM T ”" Ñ O W PR E J L A sI n G ^ WEST & N O RTH CAM PUS CROIX O LD M A IN E BENCHMARK • & MORE C a l ! M i ú k e l l e a t P M f m • 3 0 2 8 / 14 SB in be a u tifu l c o n d o m in iu m L A R G t 1-1 c o m m u n ity N e a r Ri v e r side a n d P leasant * V a lle y W Ü micro w o v e $ 4 5 0 A v a .I a b le Feb 1 Kemp M a n a g e m e n t, 4 4 / 2 5 3 5 1 25 2 0 B C r y t o w n • $600-52000 Can KAREN Campus Condos 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 _ _ 1-29-20B-K 477-LIVE 24 HR$ Old fashioned charm of 1 to 2 bedroom homes hardwood gas, appliances. $250 $600 1*22-208 A PREtEASE 5BR ?BTH on 29th"$t Plenty of parking $1750 rent Available June 1st David 482-9299 2-12 SB BEAUT!FULLY REMODELLED ? ! West of UT campus Hardwoods W D connection, qaroge $795 Heathcock Propert.es 343-19QQ. 2-15-1B_________ It ceiling 3-2 FEMALE ROCK house for rent $4 75 Nnar ’ ins mini-blinds washer drxe dishwasher disposal pa ho deck acuzz' privacy *enxe pet ok 4: 9-6611 8-noon 7 ’ 3 4P LARGE 3 7 7 Fenced yard Quiet CA Ct" vs D connections Northeast 6305 Walnut Hills Drive $->00 4 /2 -3 5 7 6 2 I4-3P LARGE BEDROOM Beautiful home three blocks north U l Many amenities $260 (two people, $360 1 4 78 9 435 — Co-ops s m a ll coo room, mostly neighborhood, 9448 2-15 5B non smoking single etonon meats quiet miles from UT 4 77 440 — Roommates NEEDED DEPENDABLE roommate S235 plus 7 bills Nm> 2 BK 2 BA fireplace Col' aher 5pm 444 4328 2 5 10P 2 7 2 0B C 425 — Rooms * . ROBBINS PLACE S800-S1200 ★ *» ST THOMAS S8 0 0 -SI200 ' 2-13-20B C RENTAL 3 6 0 — Furn.Apts. RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. RENTAL 3 7 0 — Unf. Apts. 1 Hh DAILY 1 EX AN Friday. February 15. 1991 Page 13 SELL YOUR ITEM in th e "LONGHORN WANT ADS" 20 Words, 5 Days s 5°° OR WE WILL RUN THE AD AN ADDITIONAL 5 DAYS AT NO CHARGE! 'See Specifications Z IV L E Y The Conoie’e Profess one Typing Service l l O C x B u c T f * 27TH S T B ffT 2707 Hemphill Park 472-3210 472-7677 LONGHORN COPIES • Resumes • 'h e s e s • Term Papers • Word Processing • Binding • L ase r Printing 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 PAPERS RESUMES RUSH JOBS D o t ' s T y p i n g 2 0 0 2 -A G udalupe 4 7 2 -5 3 5 3 Speedway TY PING D O B I E M A L L Laser Printing/Spell check Applications/Resumes Term/Research Papers Application Forms Audio Transcription 4 Ó 9 - 5 6 5 3 ROOMMATE SERVICE Will help you find a compat­ roommate. Male or ible female. Call Sam. 2 8 0 - 7 1 1 8 20B-C LAlD-BAC K M F to shore 3 2 home w pc at N po- Rumtserg and Lamar $250 ■ 1/3 util-ties 836-6164 evenmqs 2 12 56 NEFD FEMALE housemate 3-7 $700 bills UT bus route own bedroom louo dry machines 452 0506 Stephar . 2 13-6P RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE wonted SntKe 3-1 Hyde Park house H jge room ova ctble UT shuttle S250 bills 477 922) 2-15-2B 4 6 0 — Business Rentals UNIVERSITY AREA 2815 Frjth retoil or office rento phone 1 713 48. 5003 at ter 6 00 tor Information principals only 2-15-5P 5 0 0 - M i s c . SEMESTER PARKING1 Available n We Campus at 22nd and So” Antonio C( 478-8559 215-10B-C A N NO UN C EM EN TS 5 1 0 — Entertainm ent- Transportation COME O N D O W N SPRING BREAK!! Plaza Squar $29 90 S3V M otel with thi' double occupar Pgdre r . '. i- 'ie * 1 y o u ’ r ervaf'on 1 - 8 0 0 - 5 5 2 - 5 3 3 4 2 2 5 5 C e n tr a l B lv d B ro w n s v ille TY 7 8 5 2 0 O n c o n d o SPY N G BREAK S outh P a d re s imc r-d- f< A .,,lia b le M a rc h 8 15 S 0 0 0 S2 d e p o s ' M a i • ■» (7 1 3 )6 9 0 8 0 2 5 2 5B r e a c h »leepy H A W A II-4 -o u n d tn p hcke H fo- d is c o u n t tra v e l p ro g ra n * fo r te le p h o n e service d is ta n c e 2-14-20B-D I 560-- Public Notice Y E llC Y V D Y E 4 V xro c h in * lo m p u 'e r b u l­ le tin b o a r d vy^e."- 0 io b rlrty b a s e d s u b ie d m a ffe r Rev e w o f o th e r c o m p u te r b u 'le tir b o a rd s f - 28 - 2 OP 4 ’ 3 -.' 7 0 2 ( 5 U g r o u p m e e tin g A re yo u b o re a ¡ j j ’ 8 4 8 7 1 v s c e n e / C a ll EX G A Y S o ’ th e g o 2 0 8 V» -vNTED •: o se '0 '0 0 p e o p m W e * p a y y o u -2 9 lb s us 3 0 da ys AH n a tu ra l 6 5 8 7 2 - 1 4 - 2 0 8 EDUCATIONAL 580-- Musical Instruction Tickets TICKETS G U t ’ AR A n d s Suth LESSO NS - v B 0 years te o c h rn g e x p e r e - c e n g 'o n 4 5 7 6 ' 8 ‘ '- 3 1 - 2 0 8 - A • cv o zz P IA N O 1■ESSONS E xc e rte n c e d p ro n a N a tio n a l Gvrrkl Ju dge Be H ank W illia m s, Jr N eil Y oung, a tn n e r a d V a m lla Ice R andy Travis, Ru­ d o lp h N ure ye v. W W F N e w Kids, Iro n M a id e n , Scorpions, Sting Ausfm R o d e o - all shows. 4 7 8 - 9 9 9 9 THE N E W J e n in h o ’ Call 813 789-7404 5-10B TICKETS H ank W illia m s, Jr., N e il Young V a n illa Ice, R andy Travis, Ru­ d o lp h N ure ye v, W W F N e w Kids Iron M a id e n , Scorpions, Stmq Austin R odeo - all shows. 4 7 8 - 9 9 9 9 520 — Personals SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TEXAS S pring Break at Sunchase IV C on d o m in ium s 1, 2, & 3 b e d ­ ro o m condos. C e n tra lly lo c a te d fu lly furnished co m p le te kitchen. S p e cta cu la r views. ( 5 1 2 ) 7 6 1 - 5 5 2 1 2 11-106 530 — Travel Transportation S p r in g B r e a k ! A c a p u lc o U N I V E R S I T Y B E A C H C L U B - 2200 Rio Grande 4 6 9 0 9 9 9 SPRING BREAK' South b e o c h s id e C lose to te st'. S '730 Pool tennis o 253 1469 for advance 17-V t ’ Don’t be left out in the Cold1 >:■ FREE HEATING 3 FREE COOKING § FREE HOT WATER;: Gobble Up This Deal L e a s e a t B r o w n s t o n e , o . v 5 9 0 - -Tutoring 1 t TUTORING 1 OFEN70AVS t i M i d n i g h t , S u n . - T h u r . 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 RENTAL 400 — Condos-Townhouses Come Home to the Your REAL Condo Lifestyle! Located m tht’ prr'-ttqutUN .1 t’M C a coiidontlniuiiw are unigindy tu m ish u t u n a b le s t y lis h environimtat tx p n -»ic 'uilt on a thx'ugi residents and every maintenance derm Prepare uour ncil meals or x h t*» * 'lom pl deliv> restaurants wh.r prosid< Our reputation is Com puter con tro l Separate ala rm >s liw id i coveted pai Separate kKkmrg Sm oke det« > tx’is G ood h gh iin g in a P e isona iited m an A a e n i ti e s .utwdral eilingv in 3rd-Boor units High ceihnqx F‘ii\ . u < garden entrance m lxi-flenn units Ceding tans m Irving room and bedrooms Hidden viE washersdrv» i> tu iK equipped GE k itch e n includes 'lo st-b e e refrig era tor m aker, dishwasher m icrow ave, selt-cleaning oven and d»(> >pa»«' A potot m*m Hi* é w*Up*p*i (to pLkup 9 On Hi* mait* Boot to Jooi tra*4 A autui«Mi>ki ON IF SHUTTLE CaU Linda or Cynthia NOW a t . 4 5 4 -9 6 2 1 1-800-235 TRI1 i i i Page 14 Friday, heoruary i:>, i***! i ne, i /a i l . i * i *a a .^ SERVICES F R ID A Y FEBRUARY 15 SA T U R D A Y TBS BET MAX TNT USA NICK K TBC 0 ( 3 1 ¡ KVUE i£ | ! K X A N KBVO M ( D K LR U m ^ TBS i l l BET a Bop Wa Pew Pan Bonanza Vdeo LP 750 — Typing ZIVLEY APPLICATIONS RESUMES 27th & G u a d a lu p a 472-3210 472*7677 KTBC KVUE X KXAN M j L Too* CBS n * JOSZZSL Oax M o m a Amena KBVO -JBBLaJLki Tmy Tonne Sim - «p i Days jkádSLJí. N p t S «jp»e u KLRU aa.T L i s 1 M J B B 1 ■rsane Seeet rrv °ro yan SJfty Jessy te m a . dm Ttuat U R I J S f c y NMock M e at Sane £ Lone Days of Qw nghray to TV ves One .<» 73 -V» Anorn» Afono BamaP* janes Ü2CBB. A* My CNttnr •Genera nospka Ocrarve 11 Q AM . M . 10 11 *" _ a 12 Jam %wrs Phc* a *EL_ ya rg & Resaess A* 71» Wonc Guong 3 C _ Geraa 3 "* 29. ^■n GAgar J i L 6001 P« *3_____ W v » My : M f » «■a Pd Peg BoOOy jane Pery Masor Rarsan M ora Sns Cl Tte p*s ¿2W Vdeo Vteaiors AMC J S L . xacaoor it M as. rang 4UÚL. Mpne- Mads ( 'Si Alttrs ot Artnabet Mew *** Wads Out UNI *XL TV M«ar (600) Cocoon (Cart) WtMC Mowe ttemeerxa Mow» MOOV Oka C06) Etagnertt afiaer Move Bouqr Dice Des*» ,x ~ a TV I Naiacna J L - J L . ■*630! f S E 2 L CTQSN •6001 Canoon Express ■ & £ & . Move Song wmou- T d ~ D w c e Cl ENpftmt ■ JB w e msp i t o L 2 L . ir a a a i Caste M £ e a Deed. í S O ü l No c a s iSefl-SL Todays Pepper auSOn,, ■B Looney daSte Doubk Dare mep iwney Mr EC WGN - S — Bmare Z¿¿_ Magree- Pi Joan fkvers Gemdo K Griffith O C NHpHN tew Inch Ugh t o t e Ctap h *fi£- Chas j£ S E _ M SvW i Move Messenger or Dean 8eS ot SNL ■Fm rwi Htthcock ,tesr*gg Oortna Reed Patty Duke OlLmSSL Mgbt Cout .Sypta* Few M22LM Menace 32 g (5:30) CommiMty C orruw y 84tooan) Bklboard Commirty Bdbcart Comnuwy Bklboard • . Adge j a a l . Cham N na t e a J s L Wpeout Win ÜSL EtcPymxd 2 0 E 2 L - Pro » Ludt a t ______ Ten of Us .tea,, Cartoon Express MarC-w?- Hdchcock S tt _____ HRCÍYlA» S w np Mar» Vc* Move Party Camp Move The Earm s Mee Move 8 r u r to Move Mad s vtysr Piece Mow Karate and Made Ü 2 2 L . 15) Mtan d Annabel Move Pvtact Futougr Move BnOe Wafts Out G A g r SmM X * x j Pats Second SflQ___ Mow Qownnouse Mowe None But me Lorety tttan Move N O t Move Dar» C*y______ Game dOi French Woman Move Easy tmnq BasnttaE* & J L . ol Whale M z s J s a But Lorety i B J S S L i 20; LTeguee NBA BasM tai Muder She Wrote a a m (Cort) (Cont) Mew» Pooh Owns Ttiorougnbre Pathfroer Tree .. Donare Duck Dekverance * BPboard [Xrtoo Mowe Duck Sap Mowe Mapc Snowmar Execvce March Eevort Lunch Box Artists Poets ( 10) Poke* Story the Freeway kángs (45) Vctor/ ATP Senior PGA Getting H Wartout Body Body Body by Serxx PGA in PGA Serna PGA Got KPs-TV Mowe Acv Of Huck Fm • Muse Box Mcwe Meet the C OP S Commnty Billboard Comnxntv Bklboard Danger Bay Pound Raccoons Care Bears Donald Duck Wn. Lose KPs. Inc v-Rams Present 'echnokm Comrmnty Zend* Back T» BOtoard Motherland . Mpkey Vdeo Brg Fnendly Giart Garonne Health VOID LP Vdeo Soul Work) Vts*n Sesame Street tWesang •ft Rogers Newtar N atrt Njpon» Geograprvc Ext*ra Amsh tMMkes Nancv Sews U P Haocy Davs Mowe Sytik Soean Pd Ptg Ton 7 AM Mucoet •tubes ...... ... J S Wttne ward Re» Girtek) and ; nends kAove Mart ’ war Beettewce New M S • Bugs A Tweery Ora M l Olympc Ht ter test Ltffle Rosey WtlD!! Mane Zeppeen 8 “ Q AM I- J S L 10 AJ 1 1 A" M 30 1 2 JO 4 PM CaoanN Kd n Play QtetmunkJ By the Bad ^jyNxt Capt J ConOradt Pad Famky Coflon Basxett# 1 30 CBS n PM Sports . P»t) Banner Tour „ L ..JS q PM 0 JSL, " » A ..... ....... JL | C PM Cortege Basketbak WOe Wort) PGAGoi of Sports • Mrsyng Fad ot SSM! LAS News 5 » C PM 6 f l 7 PM ... Ail n AflCNews News Eye of Youtg Rd»s w r a Golden ••re» Boftots Ja ry Kds TamMaas F^gstug F ir House Scparsars PO ftg Tarn Crttege Baafatoal . PdPra Mowe Aduane k f i» Sequel Rockford Fkes Star Ttek Next Hdden Tn* Colors New Yankee Vctory w v .. Cmp Y n U r Joy of M ySufto Mtiwk -91 rtwse Irarence a pm d 30 Sp t ienny Q PM Candd Camera ... 3 J ^ Under Cora Golden COPS Wkd Am Et x y Nest Twr Peaks Carol & Co. Dear John COPS Made n Come Stnp Meade Ptanei 1 0 “ 1 : 4 0 AM 30 Mowe S« Aganst the Rock News Mqwe WkC SMtrtay Weekend Jam Mght Uve Mowe Birch Amencan Giadators • OuOaw Josey Waies tnfnte voyage Travels Oft A* Austin City Lm«s NBA BaskeibaS Mowe Next Of K r Mane firne of The/ Ksses Vdeo S a i Mane Glory FEBRUARY 16 AM C 9 S TN T 3 £ U SA Í » NICK ! W GN 3K at (B.O)) a Dudoa F»m M A X ¡ n M v» Reang W » the Moon M ora Ski P » U (Cont) Mowe Deser (45) Suoút ffefiL Mowe Tori' Tars' Tur* i UNI 31 •630l PWawsxr Mora El CaPaAo Ok* ¿area Mora B Guardar Oe a Muerte Mane Mora Pokes de Narcóticas Dance tor ta r * Cct Marvel Mow Bno» Ja n e Hondo West Was Won Mowe H r rt the kso toso Street Hawk Yoq You T tirt Fast vouthauaw Your Mew Dont S« Arrow Oems Dams Mora now** Hulk Mowe Best Reti/ns Years of Our Lives Mora Fatal Raouw U s » utte Red l.45i Squeeze Mljwe A¿*Si Mowe -»s Kndrt 0» Doc House -Tpac s ft/i V r v v'ce Mr Wizard Cm t an TV Bugs B u ry and Pad MacOyra Dems Cozy Kds Fteshmer Mate God * Hush - . Counler- stnke Mowe RamPo. Pt Insp. Loonev Looney Lives Mowe Bnde Mora Now Voyager > Get Smart Drajtet . . Hachrtker Mowe Tone Avenger . • Best Of SNL Femnwod Hkchcock Green Acres Mowe Donna Reed Oudaw Mane Hrs Krd of Woman Mowe Lora of Carman (05) Hard to KA ( 45) Grave Mane God (%jsh 135) fia Mowe Tow Aveng» Baandc SafsOo Guante • Tu Musca Bakandc Vscn Mane B Guardan Peooe ChartandD Bus/tess NWAPlO Wresting Sou Tran Mane Mote Amencar Gcahte Mora Flash Gorton ■ 21 June Street Sow ! x a Manor In Hangr kt $100 00G BUIs Eye NBA BasketbaA ESPN SHOW ACTV ACTV ACTV HBO a s Mora Mktemun . Mowe T r« Trackers Mowe Daffy « Outdoor Chaiienoe J Houston f f l Mowe Buck Privates Mart Sosn V • Í Jnce Fly Fshng .Fshtn Outdoors Soorts Across America Upon a Tim* n the West Mora Tap Mowe Bad News Karting Coilea Bears Basketball Famky Playhouse Tenas Mowe Heaven Can Wart World Cup its Gary Mowe New York ¿tones DISN f f l Mekey1 M en» F-aggle Donad Du» Mowe: Hey There, its Yog Bear Mouse Club Ana of Avorkea. 2 OTV Romanan Mowe No Deposit No Retun Mora BeteweCed if® (500) Comm Bkiboard Cotorsounds News Chrstopn» TOPS Cotorsounds Kds TV Mart: Gras Health Toe to Head Let Lme People Ao/xnctue Hondo Show Slang (.05) Starman - Reel TOPS Mowe Somebody Sena PGA Golf ■ Mora Professor V-Rams Presents Dorte Gkks PacyOuke My 3 Sons (5.-00) Comm. Commtnfy Bftboard Sabbath Gosoel Trufh D a w n Evangeksm From Lncofn Pk. Temple Celebration or Praw Jesus Christ Cradle of Jazz Holy Tempie Testament El Evangeko 31 (600) Comnutey Bftboad Cratke of Jazz Now Hear fitiS Probecenta 0190 Probecenter Technosa War Started Hondo Sha» Blues Party Vdeo Carokne AOS Mage Vdeo . Sex Facts Has To College Basketball Mowe Bkie Steel College Basketball College Basketball Golf • One-Mght Mora Fatal Beauty 120) Th/d Degree Bun Sk x b College Basketball M Carbaaak Secrets Soorts College Basketball Mowe. Drty Rotten Mora Doctor Scoudrels Doiittle Mowe Muse Box Mora Bear (05) Sup» Mowe 11 Mew Days. 11 Sayonara Country Clubs 6th S i Race/ Citizens Live Chnst Witness Christian Hondo Show Bibka Church of the Paih Sex Facts Fronted, Pok» Party HDTV Technosa Comno Revolution War Started AOS TOPS Wrdow To Austin Cradle ol Jazz Mghts Mowe Street • ■ Cheap Meteors Softball Christian Now Hear Commuvty Bktboart This : Rap C*y Tear S u m l Pd Pm CoAege Basketbak . Heroes and Hertage Taen Summt News FtanksP! College BasketbaS • Mirtxgrv Lore Rap C*y HSE n (5 00,- Program Gude Steve Jium y Bfty Tubbs Eddte Karmt Gerok) Honey Hole M l Hockey Hockey USA Pat Foster Gen* ita Coüege Basketball * • ■ R Martin Q, Wiser Wresteng • • . - (15) US. (tyhpe (15) Mgrt (:15) Tag, AAE A Jam ey S u w * O wngfor Saves Golden Age of Rock Mora Five Branded Women Caromes Comedy Mss Margie Al Creac/es Mora Bobby ueeM d Comedy on the Road At the knprov Mowe Bobby Deemed U F E FNN/BRV FAM DISC NASH 2 1 2 2 Sccwements Amer Baby a a 35 7 AW 1 * (500) Sel- Q AM E R tovesw Franc* Geroert Popeye b M q am SiJy'-nows A rt* Craft rtcr, Tech IRS Tax Anral Q iyaey Backyard Garter-Joy Aleen» Mowe My Favonie Bnrette Heathckff Prof Nahre Day DvDay Attitudes NMuai Coro F stone Bonanza WkdNi Safar Amencan Great Goumet Vrgnan L'estytes lifestyles S iW K aie Soterrarte! litestwes Lifestyles I U»m r Moon *gnong ifeshrtes SCORE Cart 1 _ a q 7 PM Hotel Rifleman Wagon Tran Big Vakey Mora Dewfs Mountan Japan Cotnlry Sdetw Go Ou Way DawdL Woiper Wort) Away C a rry SCORE Cart Bonanza Dsc Sport Oscovery Showcase Ginsmoke Vietnam Jutxiee Amencan Tommy rtnter Cttorti! S i On Stage Wkd Beyond 200C Beat Country Coast to Coast . Challenge Church S i Bordertown New Zorn) Rn fin fin BlkStaftpn Mowe Great Mans Whskers Wings Soenser For Hr* L A Law PoorRch Grt. 1 • • Poorftch Gd. 2 Mowe Nqnsky • • • • T unman (95) Lenny Drty Dozen Suvtval M9ÜT.B9M LA Law f.,35) Lemy (.05) Thteshod Manac TDC-TV Vdeosyncra Dr Ruth M JZ L te L Self Zola lewn Pad Mowe Woman n Strange Terra X Austrakan Annals QieQonr Barbara Mandrel Music Shop Texas Church St ONOdtV Barbara MardreH Music Shop Texas ...... i o A; 1 1 . . “ * ....w . 1 2 " " . M .. 4 PM . L q PM t .JÑ A FM 4 ft C PM 5 M t o f s 7 PM ....... :...m 0 PM 8 39 Q PM „ / ± 1 0 " . i L i .. 1 1 ... 1 1 2 30 'VL‘: Tetas Testas Ptonaa Fiestas Festas Panas Festas Patitas Festas Crtcano Artists Poets Blues Party Km TV Akve and Dangerous Vanguard» Hispana People Technosa DuH-a- VrSkXi Santa 8artsn ms l i - Ü S a L Oorw Wñnfrgy jeooarv News WhSS. Sep» hoopers Dar» Shadows kkngrt ■lasa Shoe kSSEac- a Onosaucers U B B 8«g Va*ey ttogan jESLaSL Son rry Tom & aaaere Firestones «dec Sou A «/an M Rogrs I B a C i M L Good Teres Sesame JtfNrsons Nnp S U L Ait Street Bert 3 s Campan WflOS Rap Cey Osana vdeo lP Sor, Notts Mara Ussses.. Oe Mjb t k S o n One te t e M acf» Letra Happy Days Sfrforfl Mora: Get fth e Grave frac Sanford Screen Veteo Sou Agars the Law OC. Wee* Wat St Stir Tie* Next Uonel Hs npaon Arserao EM Gra* Mom Coat Mners Daughter Austin C*y u nts Off V ¡J&_ S o w * ot ÜKÜ_____ Wove Sooner or £S5Z_ Mdn^e Love Santort Screer Potee Oflbtt Dr Nade OJSS&SL Pad Roonquu En Mro Ü3XS., j u a _ Portada HBO CQ Mowe PMr CkXhes (451 Back to School kssgnrw t Discovery Vdeo Momng NASH S i AAE a Surraa Between C*y of Angels Fggrtrve HSE 39! (5:00) Prat/ar Gutoe Araigers Body Jams Arencan x Gan» Rendezvous TceGart Cel Outors Mcwe Nothrig Sacred Scuba Cottege Basketball News to Us Mowe Women of Brewster Place «Ase Shoo Standard fime Arencan Too Cart Craok. On S t » VtoeoPM Shortstones Defveccfto Cortege Mowe Great Skxjx Upnsmg Shortstores Fugttive Basketbal • • Wort) Stage Yacht Racng E Broem Mowe. Ghos WnterSoeec Fever 700 CU) F\ase Stieka EM WML Soorts Wort) Pasauai* Do 8 Set! Amer Baov George Wastangton H 4 *) Father Great PUse Your Work) Hard Copy T-yrx Cart Ü ______ J M X S L ■Guns of Parad» Danas Sons anc Dauqnsrs News T w ¿ C S Í.M . Smon PflPtc New A K News News k v i Ful house fmry Sevtgers ■tea. 20 20 05» Mgre me Ngm ■xr't O PM i L a Q PM 1 - A 10 12 1 1 " * H. ■ .«M, 7 AM Atwudes Lfestytts a g Q AM Batiy Knows Bor- Q A * Ssttr Kae D«y&y Dar G arnet Somsm For Hn °revww Morxno Marxetirp “<«W5 Man* WakJi Mdday Market Rpt i o r *».? Mutual T. lim an Moon- kgrtrg Man* SitopTaft Attitudes m Street CartOowti 1 0 “ 1 1 5 ....M » 1 7 p" -j PM ¿ L f) PM ......C lu PM . .. H g r PM Father MartefWTc Baman C O f 5 FYseye Pasauaie Do R Self Sa Garten M Nati/e Mowe Mrs Detfeid Wants to Mary Pweve (tin T»i fin U FE FNN/BRV FAM DISC ESPN SHOW DISN ACTV ACTV ACTV Sueermartttt Mutiai Beyond 200C Avengers W Mfter Mowe: Tap Motowcrt) 5 3d C PM LA EN G Liestytes Ertreoreneu hew Zone Brother Renoez/ous 6 n 1 ™ .M ......' Q PM .... 8 M Q PM 3 30 'o 1 1 - 1 2 “ LA Lm Mowe Oosess/ve Love T LBrran Mgty Dodd Soenser For Haa Set* PtgHes Mowe Mikey and Mcky Camen McRae Mowe Oh1 W h* a Lately War Mftey & Vartac m George Wasiwigtor M l ttirigs (Pt 4 of 4) War Chrtn. 'r w w 700 CU) Tmewatch On Stage Texas NashwAe Now CraoK On Stage Bordertown Stfar burOertcwr Mowe: Sa Black Horses Wkl Otsotvery Shotrtase NashwDe Now St/wva B«»ween Mowe Matenrar At the knprav Mowe Matewan M coJ Ttw CCHA SoortsTalk NBA Mowe Back to School Basketball • • • Ud Oo k Sports Ski Wort) Wort) Cup Slang Paradse Amer Cud Mowe Sort of Adventure Mowe Comrtg to Golf Arenca SpeedWeek Busness Perspective In Austin Mowe Ewok New Athens Mowe Cotirj Advenu/e Good Age Labor Beat Uve From Austin Move Dash Catch That WtKh Is Chnsban Es Amor Opposng of the Uberation Impacto Kids r One-Mart Mane Mm ! Games Soorts Body- txadmg Karting Glory Days Mowe Mowe White Ghosi Niagara Vdeot Banana Phkmor Vdeo (96) Secrets of Mowe Meet the GAobar Jungle Love/Akve ADS Temple Authonty WMf * ■ Dneto ... ¿ S S L _____ • ¿S S 2 __ [ ■ E S R M I3 P R I I V I E T IIV IE 7:00 pm O (D GUNS OF PARADISE Ethan protects a ruthless killer from vigilante townspeople. S ★ MOVIE THE GIRL IN THE EMPTY GRAVE (1977) Andy Griffith, Sharon Spelman. After a husband and wife are discovered dead, a small-town police chief begins an intensive investigation. (S) ★ * MOVIE CLOWKHOUSE (1989) Nathan Forest Winters, Brian McHugh While their parents are out of town, three boys are terrorized by a trio of escaped mental patients dressed as clowns. R’ QD (£) MACNEIL/LEHRER NEWSHOUR Q ® “Mr Ed' NICK AT NITE VALENTINE^ WEEK ® * MOVIE MESSENGER OF DEATH (1988) Charles Bronson, Trish Van Devere. A journalist investigates a murder involving two feuding Mormon factions. R’ QD CD FULL HOUSE The wedding day for Jesse and Rebecca s wedding arrives, but the groom turns up missing (Pt 2 of 2) Q 83 X SUPER BLOOPERS AND NEW PRACTICAL JOKES Will Smith shatters the windshield of a car at an auto glass shop when he pumps up the volume of a special stereo system. Q ® CD AMERICA S MOST WANTED Men posing as police officers and federal agents are sought in connection with rapes and burglaries. 3 WORLD CUP SKIING World Freestyle Championships, ballet competition from Lake Placid, N Y. (T) @ * * MOVIE COBRA (1986) Sylvester Stallone. Brigitte Nielsen A no-nonsense cop is assigned to protect a model after she witnesses a murder committed by cult members who want to rule the world. R Q ® CD FAMILY MAHERS After Eddie wrecks the family car, Steve comes up with a plan to raise the repair money. Q 7:30 pm 8:00 pm O CD DALLAS Bobby gets closer to catching Sheila Foley; J R. plots to recapture Ewmg Oil and uses blackmail to deter Cliffs career. □ ® *★ MOVIE DARK CITY (1950) Charlton Heston, Lizabeth Scott. After an unhappy romance during a war, a social outcast turns to gambling and finds himself the target of a psychopathic murderer. (D (D WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW g © QD PERFECT STRANGERS Balki s stint as a rap musician appears headed for success □ CD ® DARK SHAOOWS Angelique casts a love spell on Barnabas' fiancee and Jeremiah. Victoria is transported back in time, g © GD AGAINST THE LAW MacHeath representing a boxer's widow, investigates the circumstances surrounding his death in the ring, g 4 J WARREN MILLER S SEVEN DAYS IN PARADISE 8:30 pm ® * * MOVIE NIGHT GAME (1989) Roy Scheider, Karen Young. A detective tracks down a madman who murders young women only when the Houston Astros wm. © i WALL STREET WEEK g © C D GOING PLACES g 0 ROAD TO AMERICA’S CUP ® ♦ * MOVIE OPPOSING FORCE (1986) Tom Skerritt, Lisa Eichhorn. A grueling military survival program becomes a nightmare for the recruits after the commander goes insane and wages a real war on them. R' 8:45 pm 13) ★★ MOVIE WINTER KILL (1974) Andy Griffith, Sheree North. A series of bizarre murders moves a mountain resort community toward panic as the police desperately search for the killer. 9:00 pm Q CD SONS ANO DAUGHTERS Bing plans a camping trip with his sons while Tess and Mary Ruth fight over a jacuzzi. g © (D LIONEL HAMPTON: BACK TO PARADISE Highlights include Sweet Georgia Brown, Hamp's Boogie, When the Saints Go Marching In and In the Mood. ® BEST OF SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE The Coneheads compete on an episode of Family Feud © N E W S © (D 20/20 g © ® MIDNIGHT CALLER A singer who is fighting his heroin addiction reappears to restart his romance with Nickey Guest: Roger Daltrey g © ® STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION The crew becomes involved in political intrigue concerning a Starfleet admiral who g|rows younger and a group of Federation officials held hostage. & SPIRIT OF ADVENTURE Rafting Into Siberia 9:30 pm ® FERNW000 2NIGHT Susan Cloud demonstrates how Indians eat. 10:00 pm O G D © ® f f i ® NEWS d® ★ * * MOVIE EASY LIVING (1949) Victor Mature, Lizabeth Scott. An aging football player with a heart condition faces a choice between his health and his wife's lust for money. © ® GREAT PERFORMANCES This intimate portrait features trumpet virtuoso Wynton Marsalis performing with his jazz quartet and teaching master classes, g OS ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS A woman with a gun attaches herself to a man on a commuter train. © NIGHT COURT g © D ARSENIO HALL U n ESPN’S SPEEDWEEK 10:10 pm ® ★ MOVIE THE FRENCH WOMAN Francoise Fabian, Dayle Haddon. By day, they are the highest paid fashion models in Paris, but by night they are prostitutes, seeking to possess the world’s most powerful men. R 10:30 pm O QD CHEERS When Diane intrusts Sam with a rare and valuable book as collateral on a loan, he has a small accident, g ® GREEN ACRES Arnold becomes Hooterville's first millionaire pig. (Pt 3 of 3) ® CIRCLE OF FEAR © ® TONIGHT SHOW Michael Landon, Mary McDonnell, comedian Blake Clark Q SPORTSCENTER ® ★ MOVIE WHITE GHOST (1988) William Katt, Wayne Crawford. An American soldier with a penchant for Kabuki makeup continues to fight in Vietnam after the war, and an Army squadron is sent to stop him. R' 10:35 p m © ® NEWHART The only woman George ever loved comes back into his life g 10:45 p m © ★★ MOVIE THE SURVIVAL OF DANA (1979) Melissa Sue Anderson, Robert Carradine. A teenager goes to live with her grandmother after her parents divorce. 11:00 p m o ® t a x i © ® AUSTIN CITY LIMITS Alan Jackson mixes traditional country with honky-tonk; Mark Collie blends country sounds with rockabilly and folk. ® DONNA REED Donna proves her frugality when she and Alex are invited to a wedding © ® WWW MOVIE COAL MINER’S DAUGHTER (1980) Sissy Spacek, Tommy Lee Jones. Country singer Loretta Lynn begins in a life of squalor and poverty and becomes wealthy and famous, but finds that success has its own problems. PG 0 BODYBUILDING IFBB North American Championships, women's competition from Las Vegas (T) 11:05 p m © (D NIGHTLINE g 11:30 pm Q ® SIMON AND SIMON ® ★★ MOVIE NONE BUT THE LONELY HEART (1944) Cary Grant, Ethel Barrymore A cockney wanderer searches for some sort of spiritual fulfillment with his sad and lonely mother. ® DOBIE GILLIS Dobie tries to impress a Russian ballerina by dancing outside her window © ★ MOVIE THE RED MENACE (1949) Robert Rockwell, Hanne Axman. A disillusioned war veteran joins the Communists, believing they hold the answer to his problems. © ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 11:35 pm f f l ® INTO THE NIGHT Actress Lisa Hartman, Tamayo Otsuki, Actress Cree Summer 11:50 pm ® ★ * MOVIE THE LAIR OF THE WHITE WORM (1988) Amanda Donohoe, Hugh Grant. A beautiful vampire heads a secret pagan cult of worm worshipers in a remote part of England, enticing innocent people into their bizarre rituals. R' 12:00 am © ★ MOVIE SOONER OR LATER (1978) Denise Miller, Rex Smith. A 13 year old girl learns a lesson in life when she falls in love with a handsome singer in a rock n roll band. ® PATTY DUKE A prince proposes to Cathy. @ CALIFORNIA KARTING ZIVLEY WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING 27th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 S T A R R Q U A L IT Y WORD PROCESSING Fnendly, oro'ess ona: service! 7 days a week1 • Dissertations • Reseorch papers • Book manuscript 1 page or 1000! 4 4 4 - 0 8 0 1 2-15-ie-C FAST. A C C U R A T E w o rd processing Re­ ports, manuscripts Excellent spelling,gram m ar S' 45 poge Cana» 4 5 2 -4 5 0 9 page- 483-2691 1- 2 3 -2 0 6 -esur-es graph-cs ZIVLEY TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS 27th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 ASAP Word Processing Papers'Reponv These: completed wit*- core ond atten­ tion S i 85- las' m,nu!» o k 45Í-488S 2- r ?0 P________________________ S U S A N 'S W O R D Processing Personóle -business desk top publishing and pres •irtohon services 4 7 8 -0 8 2 5 2-14-2S-A EM PLO Y M EN T 780 — Em ploym ent Services ^ ^ V 1991 Grads Get A Job - In Silicon Valley! 'j Job Hunt on Your PC! 'The Silicon Valley Profiler* - a Hi-Tech Employment DataBase o Over 1600 Company Profiles, o Prints Cover Letters/Labels, o Runs on IBM XT/ATs. Order by Mail today from: InfoDiSCS $ 39.95 3687 Bryant/# 200 + $ 2 7 1 C A T « Pelo A Ho, CA *4306 Updates Qrtiy 415-4 S3-2212 800-755-2212 Specify: 5 1/4* or 3 1 /? Form at POSTAL JO S S S il 41-14 ?0 per hour for •:iom and apol-ca’ion information call 1- 800-999 9838 Ext ÍX150 8am-opm 7 days 2 15-18___________________ 790 — P a rt Tim e $ $ PUT YOUR COMMUNICATION SKILLS TO WORK! FIRST U S A T E L E M A R K E T IN G is cur­ rently accepting applications for the following professionals ★ MARKETING AGENT R e p re se n ta tiv e s w ill b e r e sp o n si­ for marketing consumer ble products ond services, primarily premium credit cards nation­ w id e This position require* e x­ cellent communication skills with som e sales experience preferred D a y & evening hours a vailable: 8:30- 12 30 M-F, or 1-5 M-F, or 5 30-9 30 M-F w e g u a r a n t e e S6/Hout plus benefits1 Commission moy be earned on some protects P L E A S E ap p ly in p e rs o n M F TO am 4 3 0 pm at FIRST USA TELEMARKETING 505 Barton Springs Rd. , Suite 600 F O E 2-I3-20B C Always Hiring Good Voices 282-1908 FEBRUARY 17 NICK WGN SU N D A Y KTBC IL L Austr Rheitiend CBS ■StrtY Morxng 7 AM ' JSL n AM JL a . 10 1 1 AM11 JO 12 PM Simon CBS Sports Special KVUE S3 GT LSmiL 8 Schuller Kenneth Copeland Great HMs ? Bnntdey Tins Week JM LEL College Basketball KXAN KBVO Webster Pd Pro Mrades Larv Jones Methodist Reftejos Avan Work) ot Disney Mowe Hatan' Hyde Part H(Xf Scnday I2É2L ThePts;. Pd Prg EDonx/Jel Greenleal Family Basketball 4 PM - Ü L a C PM A js l Ü5L College Bastoifrlli Ü E S _____ 60 Minutes Muder She Wrote Very Best Of Ed Sullrvan Special Q PM - — JSL 10 PM , u JS L News NkMe 11 ™ * 1 ;W 12 AM l c 30 Pax) Figure PGA Golf SkatinL, Mowe 20.000 Leagues On Scene Jf f iM . Suiday Best World ot Discovery Fumy fumy Movie What, baby Real Lite Expose Love. Lies and Muder Jane’ News (Pt 1 o! 2) News Newhart Star Search Movie: Wait Until Dark P£P2L Mowe Number 0 » True Colors MS.____ liwng foaUe Mamed H»»en Come Stnp Live Star Trek: Next Fnday the 13th Pd Prg Off A/ TBS J Ü L Fkntstones te L Brady Bunch A Griffith BET J 2 - (600) Pd i s _____ Bobby Jones Good News M22L____ For/Record J&2S_____ Ramsey Pd Pig Pd Prg Mas. Shadows ot Dart StatoiKS Tom & Pt2SL WCW Man Event Mowe Soylent Green KLRU J R 2 L Sesame Street Mr Rogers ass_____ Long Ago ■WCAm S Afnca TonvBrtwti DC Week MJL Frmg Lme fc&aahkn. Smthsonan Work) Amencan Experience Owl War flatar.„ Natl Geographic Nature UNI JU L. (6:30) Ptatawsion Hoyy ¿¡n&MSi. World Visan Debates J-Canales Mowe Asalto en Tquana MAX J 2 L . AMC JS L . TNT J S L (Cont) (Cont) Popeye -Mgyif Tliree Movie Road USA J L - Cartoons Jem Amgos1 Agert Bugs Bim y and Pals Cartoon Express Mowe: Kmg Kong t e $ L HoKywood Mowe Butch CassOy ■Mgine Bnde by Meaim, Mowe Dangerous Comer aasagqs Mowe: Daytime (15) USSSL MacGyver Fútbol/ Soccer Mowe: Last Amencan Hero M£vfi_ Starman Boxeo Budnwtser ü£2l„ Scrooged Notioero Siempre en Domngo (15) coverbov Mowe: Fnsco 100 Treasi/e Island Nvoka 135) Tap Mowe Ambersons Roots Reflections Mowe. Judgi Steps CHA Mowe 0»- 8ow imam Mowe Sxibad the Sailor Mowe: Mating Youig Cattieme. Part 1 Mowe Blackbeard the Pxate Young Catherine. Part 1 D2ÜÍJ2SSL Swamp H&ggL Mirter She Wrote Mowe 138*1 Counter- stnke Equalizer Miami Vice Hollywood Pad______ a Duckula Heathcxft Katkooey ■f.tepy Yog I2 S L Kablooey SK8 TV Crazy Kids texs____ Fifteen Freshmen Pardon Me Maac. Can t on TV SüJteSBL Ffteen ferns Crazy Kids fefetefet» Freshmen L2S22L Looney Get Smart fewnet Best ot SNL iSMIt HschCOCk Pd Prg PLPra. Paid National Geoyaptac Bobby Jones Elizabeth R Explorer For/Record Desde la Oscuridad leyendas de Amor Mowe Business Pd Prg Asi Se Mowe Halloiwen 5 Ü 2 s Company Aüa^íL Oft Ax Netwk fiLfia. WgrtL Pa*) Canales World Vaon iaapv» on Bail Mowe: Ox- Bow Trailer Camp Maas_____ Imitation CBS News ABC News Mamas Farr Pd Prg Unrwson Big Valley Scrvtval tosde God Gunsmoke War Chron. Cavalcade Golf Tennts Mowe Revenge Nerds# U F E FNN/BRV ® S jppiements Swiss FAM M D ISC NASH a f f l Diabetes Lifestyles Pole Deaf Speed Truckm Truck Orohans Amencan Medc^ Televisión Winston Hdden Hero Vrgman CoHectnr s 7 AM . - J L 0 AM (600) Setí- 8 39 Q AM Physician Fam 3 » internal Cardiology 1 0 AM ,39 ... 1U 11 AM _ J J . J B 1 2 PM 4 PM Physician F^m Internal L s l j ’.' Physician úgbert C.OP.S Batman Brother Bonanza Wagon Train L ís íY le ... Lifestyles Lifestyles Investing w uasL_... IRS Tax France San______ SCORE Cart . iS J O PM ta flg S ffii- i Dentistty .....f a q PM Fam Infectious _ . 3JU A PM L dt , Thrombofysi Future Wave SCORE Cart _ ■ ■ • • ■ ■ Mowe Oueists Mowe Importance of Being Earnest Bonanza Broth» * í ü . ...... Rtn fin fin -*_ -d-V Eat M / Sports Charles Stanley J John Wmma C PM Isis in Gallstones 30 C PM Lifeline Mag M 7 PM Milestones Physician -....: .....a .fe fM T .... Q PM Cardiology jrjsmsj , ... 1 0 PM ... ...39 . Fam Physxaan Prescnboi Wo 11 P* ' iO 1 0 am 30 Seff- Q PM 06/GYN South Bank Change House Coast to Coast Anmal Odyssey Erenow» Austrakan Animals Wkd Thmgs Nature of Things Discovery Sunday Enchanted Islands Wings MofOCSOOrtS Cel Oudrs In- Bass feWoor B i Dance Hdden Hero Amencan Sports NHRA Winston Motorsoorts Trocían' NHRA Winston Bkl Dance Bass fe* CA/drs Speed Trockin Larry Jones Best of the Truck Japan BBC Discovery Sunday Hdden H»o Wnston Ca Oudrs A&E a s Journey Survival Mowe: A Study n Scarlet Stdrtstones A & E Revue Madama Butterfly * Mora: Bobby Ueertiek! Wort) Chaiienoe Begraphy H»vy Fort Our Century HSE n (590) Program Gude Outdoor Sato*?» Golf Tennts College basketball HBO f f l ESPN f f l SHOW f f l DISN f f l ACTV if® ACTV 0 2 Babar Lifestyles Class Act W eartof Mora Runaway Lee Hanev In PGA Mekeyi Mother (590) Comm. (Cont) Faith Community Bklboard Gospel Hklcrest Mowe Dog Fraggle Sena PGA School Stoooed War Soorts Reporters Mowe Dream Donald Duck From Disney With Love Snowman Sports Talk Mass Impact Am. Troth Live Soorts Center College Basketball Mora-ftocki Mora Shaggy Factav Mowe: Ratboy * . Ctxmps :>'■. -ji, , ‘!i bon Speaks Baptist War Started Motherland Estamos en Hyde Part Hour Mowe Wee Wilke Tetas ACC Wink* Gardeners Esta es Tnumohant What s On Your M n P Mowe Nate and Hayes Ovmnasfrc * Mora Big Bde Mowe Black Stalhon Impacto Centex PC Great» Persian TV Tabernacle Wort) Cup Skmg . Sena PGA God Mowe listen to Anne of Avonlei 2 Mowe; Experts College Basketball • Mora: Runaway Soorte Courage m Sports • Users KdzKlub Evening With Coinrsounds Health Tip; Alternative Views Love Hour Rivertend Knowing fins Is Es Ama Unitv Church Mora Ben|i the Ht/ned Preview Bee Gees Gomg Horn* Earttkme News Agenda Baptist Overcomer Stone Help Me Mowe Dream team Mowe Revenoe Nerds II Movie Gentlemen Monica Mowe Glory (95) Cary Prefer Grant let People Speak Chapel Celebration Bearrg New Athens of Prase Commmrtv Farms ■ Mowe Wee Wilke Banana Pandoras Bktboart Toe to Head Hondo Show images o1 A Wort) Women's Wtege Mowe: Downtown Top Rank Boxng A & E Revue Carolines Comedy Basketball Tenas ¿ • u ' 1 ■« Mowe Flashback • Images of A Wort) College Hockey ( 20) Action • Spate Cent» Ladies Pro Bowlers Tour Bowlg C A L L 471 - 5 2 4 4 TO PLACE A CLA SSIFIED AD MORE CLASSIFIEDS PAGE 16 Best ot the BBC Amencan Sports Cavalcade Japan Racquetball j a . (15) What üaatB____ Mass Star Search Wild. Wild West Mowe 39 Steps Mowe Wonder Woman Mowe Sea Mowe Sixteen Candles Mowe Brewsters Miliioos Monsters foOay's FBt Mowe Messenger ACTV S3 (590) Comm Commtnfy Billboard Sex Facte Toastmaster Toastmaster . Heart TOPS People Speak It s Your Turn Hondo Show Wai Staled ACS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT E M P L O Y M E N T EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 800 — G e n e r a l H e lp W a n te d 800 — G eneral Help Wanted 800 — G eneral Help Wanted EMPLOYMENT 890 — Clubs-Restaurants HELP WANTED ATTENTION SUPPORT your troops. W e need your help Call Jeff or Eddie 459- 3400 2-11-58___________________ 1 CALL to Avon does it oil* N o experi­ ence N o problem! Free training of- fered. 335-9712 1-23-20B-A___________ 790 — Part Time 790 — Part Time 790 — Part Time Part time artist needed $5.00 Hr. 834-3030 for several projects. Must have line art drawing ex­ perience. Call for an a p ­ ★★★ STUDENTS ★★★ Concert Tickets Soles Phone Rep Positions Part-time Evening Hours pointment. 4 6 9 -9 0 0 0 . Bonnie Bentsen, Director Mon.-Th Frid ay 5:30-9:00 pm 5:30-8:00 pm S H O R T - W A LK UT Run law-related errands, full/part­ time. Great for prelaws. O w n eco­ reliable car. $4.00- nomical, $4.25. Also hiring bookkeeping trainees; typing/word processing trainees. Non-smokers. 408 West 17th St. Written application 9 a.m.- 4 p.m. weekdays. 2-14-20B-C of Sales. 2-13-3B Sat. Mom. 9:00-12:00 pm _____________________ 1-21-20B-K E M P L O Y M E N T 800 — G e n e r a l H e lp W a n te d é i N A T IO N A L T ELEC O M M U N IC A T IO N S LONG DISTANCE TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPANY IS INTERVIEWING FOR PROFESSIONAL PART-TIME MARKETING SURVEY REPS. W e offer: • Hourly plus commissions • Paid holidays, free long distance • Competitive product offerings • Strong marketing support provided Plan your Spring schedule to work with our schedule Shifts ore 8 30 am 12 30 pm or 4*00 pm-5 pm (M-F) No nighls or weekends Must possess good communicotion skills Will tram bright, enthusiastic individuals Mkt Fin, pre-Law maiors are en couraged to apply Advancem ent opportunities CALL 453-5000 between 8:30-4:30 p.m. 2-8-20B-E FUN PLACE TO WORK LEARN BOOKKEEPING Short Walk UT Fuil/Part-time A ccounting /Bookkeep ­ ing Trainee Id ea l for Business Fresh­ men. Also need lego! e rran d runner (Pre'ow ). Also typist/word processing trainee (45 * wpm). A ll $4.00- $4.25 Nonsm okers. 4 08 W . 17th St. W n tte n application. 9-4 w e ek d ays 2-7-ZOB-E H IR IN G TEAC H IN G assistants Must be available M F, either 8-12 30 or 2 30-6 Hyde Park CDC 465 8383 2-12-5B AN TIQ UE FURNITURE sales Excellent soloty Must be highly motivated Profes­ sional appearonce necessary 452-1023 2 15-5B 800 G e n e r a l H e lp W a n te d ★ TELEMARKETING^ ★ Evenings and Weekends Salary Plus Bonus 4 7 7 - 9 8 2 1 Robert Murski ★ ★ 2-4-208-E PH O TO G RA PH ER needed for Coctus yearbook. Prior dark room experience necessary Bring portfolio to photo editor ot T.S.P 4 112 $4 per hour G reat op­ portunity for dips. 2-14-5NC W A N T ED T-shirt folder screen cleaner for T-shirt warehouse Also office help needed 478 1785, leave qualifications. 2-15 3B E A S Y M ONEY I pay up to 110 00 lor Gold Class Rings I also buy • Gold Wedding Bands • Rings • Chains (even if bro ken) James Lewis Gold Buyer 458-2639 NEED EXTRA INCOME m FOR 1991? E ® t , 503 W. Martin Luther King Guadalupe & 38th SL e S Q ? 459-22*22 Special Delivery & Pizxa To Co Only SW GuadaluPe & M LK 459-22*22 Dine - In & Pizza To Co Only D E P L O Y M E N T E M P L O Y M E N T E M P L O Y M E N T I W — G e n e ra l Help W anted 800 — G e n e ra l Help W anted 890 — Clu bs- R e stauran ts C a m p Canadensis, 8 week overnight co-ed cam p in the Pocono M ountains of Pennsyl­ vania is now hiring counselors for the summer of 1991. June 21-August 18. W ill be on c am ­ pus W e d n e sd ay Feb. 2 0 or- coll (21 5 )5 7 2 -8 2 2 2 . 2-13-6B ★ Help Wanted ★ Sm all co py/typin g store., but g r o w ­ ing, G ro w in g, G R O W IN G . Expen- enced, responsible person willing to w ork & g ro w with us. N e e d a n y / A Z U M A JA P A N E SE Restaurant, 11906 Reseorch Blvd W aitperson and cashier needed Apply in person 2-12-56 PIZZA TIME dnvers ond inside help want­ ed A p ply in person Driver s earn $6-8/ hour 2 9 2 8 G uad alup e 2-13-56 90 0 — D om estic- H o u s e h o ld A F T E R S C H O O L C A R E needed for first d u tie s H o u s e k e e p i n g g r a d e r Dependable required transportation 2 3 0 -6 30pm 2 8 2 - 4 4 9 6 after 6 30pm 2-11 58__________________ B E G IN N IN G IN JUNE. 2 children, noon to 6pm M -F Poll position olso available M u si have car, reference, non-smoker. 3 2 8 - 0 9 4 7 after 6pm 2-12-4B all: copy, binding, M acin tosh e x p e ­ rience Positive personality, A BLE Repnnts & D ot's Typing. 2 0 0 2 -A R E SP O N SIB L E H O U SEK EE P ER , nanny Light housework 8 and 11 year olds C a r necessary. M T.Th afternoons 10 hours minimum Cotl 3 3 5 -7 9 8 1 2-12-5B G u a d a lu p e St. 4 7 2 -5 3 5 3 . 2-13-5B BABYSIT PERFECT one year old. 9 -2 pm, W Th $50/wk N on-sm oker References. 4 4 7 -1 5 5 0 .2 14-5B_____________________ A F T E R S C H O O L C H IL D C A R E needed 3 5 30pm. M -F Coll 263-59 01 . 2 14 5B 9 1 0 — P osition s W anted N E W M E T H O D of education of children by means of computers 15 yeors of ex oenence with method W idely used in South America with am azing results 3 4 3 - 0 / 3 9 2-12-5B____________________ B U S IN E S S 2-7-7QB-E 930 — B u sin e ss O p portun ities L O O K IN G FO R o w oy to eorn extra in­ com e? Leave o messoqe at 4 4 5 - 3 0 4 9 for oppomtment 1-2 5 -2 0 8 COUNSELOR/STAFF F O R CAM P COBBOSSEE Sum m er positions available for gen e ral counselors a n d specialists, at competitive sports cam p in M aine. M ust have strong skills & ability to >nstruct, coach, or assist in Tennis, one o r m ore of the following: B a s e b a ll, B a sk e tb a ll, Soccer, Hockey, Lacrosse, Archery, Riflery, A ils & Crofts, martial Arls, English H orseback Riding & All including. W aterfront Activities Sw im m ing (W SI), Sailing, W aterski- n g, W indsurfing, S C U B A . Located lake on a beautiful in Central M a m e, N e a r Boston, Excellent Fa­ cilites, Top Salaries, R o o m /B o a rd / Loundry, a n d Travel A llow a n ce C a ll or write Steve Rubin — 5 Silvermine Dr., South Salem, N Y 10590. — (914) 5 3 3 -6 1 0 4 ( O N C A M P U S IN T E R V IE W S — FE BR U ­ A R Y 20th at Peter Flown A cade m ic Center) 2-11-5P HAVE THE SUMMER OF YOUR LIFE A N D GET PAID FOR IT. Top 3-camp organization in the Pocono Mountains of NE PA. Our 60th year. Posi­ tions m all areas — water and land sports, Fine Arts and Outdoor Adventure. Please call 1-800-533- CAMP (215-887-9700 in PA) or write 407 Benson East, Jenktntown, PA 19046. 2-15 IB ACTIVISTS THE EARTH CANT WAIT Nation's #1 water lobby. Clean W a ­ ter Action, hirin g students N O W • Help organize tor Texas Legis­ lature toxics * S t o p d e e p well injection o f « L e a rn m a n a g e m e n t a n d e ffe c ­ tive com m u n ica tio n skills T u p c a n d id a te s o re m otivated o n d ar- tic jiote P r o v e n ability to le a rn inform ation a n d c om m u n ica te d yn am ica lly C a r e e r s b e y o n d sch oo l, benefits & travel Call 474-0605 2 15 2B ""EXCITING JOBS- IN ALASKA H IR IN G M e n W o m e n , Sum m er/ Y e a r R o u n d Fishing, C an n eries, L o g g in g , M in in g , Construction, Oil C o m p o n t e s Skilled/U nskilled Transportation $6 00 plus weekly C A L L N O W ! 1-206-736-7000, Ext. B1036 2-1 4-2P PAY-LESS CONVENIENCE STORES is looking for a few more G O O D r / \ » * r n u a i i r r x n * v / D C rxu i C » v v iiiL i k j w k ? or \ ~ \ j r f \c dt any of these locations ond we will gkidty schedule you for on interview • 2805 Son Jocmto • 1001 W Lynn • 5 3 0 3 Comeron Rd • 2 4 0 0 Burleson Rd 477-42 59 477-3981 452-0741 444 3690 W e offer STABLE EM PLOYM EN T, HEALTH & M E D IC A L IN SU R A N C E , V A R IE D SHIFTS ond no poor experi­ ence « required! EOF 2-8-5-8 ★ W ENDYS ★ has positions available at our M LK location. Flexible hours for students Starting salary up to $4.50 per hour depending on experience. Apply in person Monday-Thursday between 3-5 at 413 West M L K 1-2T-20B-K THE AUSTIN PARKS & RECREATION DEPT Aquatics section is now accepting appli cations for the 1991 seasonal staff1 Posi­ tions include 8orton Springs lifeguards, pool kfeguords, swim instructors, site monogers and assistant site managers, o n d o rea supervisors Applications ore available at the Aquatics Office, 901 W fcverstde, or c o * 480 3025 EOF 2 4-208-C 810 — Office- Clerical SHORT-WALK UT Run law -related errands, full/part­ time G re a t for prelaws. O w n e c o ­ nom ical, reliable car. $ 4 0 0 - $4 25. A lso hiring, bookkeep in g trainees, typing/w ord processing trainees Non-sm okers. 4 0 8 W est 17th St. WriHen application 9 a.m.- 4 p.m w eekdays PART TIME office help W o rd Perfect 5 1 Flexible hours S4.50/hr Please coll 4 5 1 -0 0 5 9 2 13-5B 8 20 — A c c o u n tin g - B o o k k e e p in g LEARN BOOKKEEPING Short Walk UT Full/Part-time Accounting/Bookkeep­ ing Trainee Ideal for Business Fresh­ men Also need legal errand runner (Prelaw). Also typist/word processing trainee (45 + wpm) All $4.00- $4.25 Nonsmokers 408 W 17th St. Written application 9-4 weekdays. 2 -7 -2 0B -E PART TIM E 2 0 hours/Accounting clerk, 10 key b y touch, typing, A/R, A/P gen erai office work Need transportation SS/hr Coll 3 3 8 3012 2 15 2B 840 — S a le s SOFTWARE SALES PERSONS Needed port time with our investment software company. This training posi lion will lead to excellent poy & long­ term career opportunities available upon grauation Liberty Research Corp. 467-0887 ________________________________2-12-5B 8 5 0 - R e t a i l T-shirt company in Highland and Barton Creek Malls want experi­ enced salespeople to sell wom ­ en's t-shirts, fashion accessories ond lewelry Need monogers, assistant managers, full and part-time staff. Great pay! Fun job* Call 346-1086 to set up in­ terview 2-13-5B 880 — P ro fe ssio n al Part-time, experienced translators needed for Kore­ an, Chinese, & Vietnamese. MUST HAVE HEAVY SCI­ ENCE AND TECHNICAL BACKGROUND. Reply to: Translators, P.O. Box 4828, Austin, TX 78765. __________________________ 2 11-56 Part-time, experienced translators needed for Spanish & Italian. MUST HAVE HEAVY SCIENCE AN D TECHNICAL BACK GROUND. Reply to: Trans­ lators, P.O. Box 4828, Aus­ tin, TX 78765. ________________________________ 2-11 56 TECHNICAL EDITORS Needed immediately 2 part-time p o ­ sitions and 1 full-time position 1 part- time position requires formal training in biology or bio-chemistry, the sec­ ond part-time position ond the full­ time position require training in EE ond/or ME. Please send resumes to: Editor, P.O Box 4828, Austin 78765 EOF 2-11-5 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE ... WANT A D S ... 471-5244 U J < / > Set of Nails sqn°o Regular pnce V W Offer ends Feb 16.1991 Debcran s Unique Hair & Nails 1912 W Anderson Ln. #209 4 Í 1 -7 3 0 6 T U E S.-F R I SaU-Spm TUTORING SERVICE ^ 5 0 4 W. 24th St. 477-700: Over 14 Years ol Professional Service Helping Students ‘M A K E T H E G R A D E ' • ENGINEERING • MATH • ASTRO NO M Y • PH YSICS • SPAN ISH • CHEM ISTRY • FRENCH • EULOGY • GERMAN • ENGLISH • ETC • B U SIN ESS (f *00 DON T SEE YOKE SUBJECT WE MAY S T IU BE 48LE TO HEL^ • i Block tram UT Campus • lotsol Palience • very REASONABLE Rates • In Language You II Understand University Texaco Center Your Totally Convenience Center • Full Service Drive'i' Self Serve Pricing • Food Mart • Complete Automotive Service - Foreign & Domestic Satisfaction Guaranteed! 3016 Guadalupe 452-5516 Sales Service 452-9830 w T e x a c o MON-FRI SAT SUN 7 am-9 pm 8 am-6 pm 12 noon-6 prn T he T exas Union R ecrea tio n C en ter p resen ts T he A sso cia tio n of C ollege U nions - In tern a tio n a l 1991 R egion al G am es T ou rn am en t. Friday, Feb. 15, 7:0O|>m Texas Ik io ii Recreation Center Rules to be discussed before ploy. Entry Fee: $2.00/ person. Top 2 quolifieis will go on to compete in the Regional Finals at the University of North Texas in Oenton on March 1st- March 3rd. Transportation, hotel accomodations ond toumoment expenses will be paid by The Texas Union. Call 471-0247 for more information B o w l i n g T o u r n a m e n t ; S a t u r d a y , F e l t . 1 6 , 2 d M * p m 3 game series. Entry Fee: $2.00/ person, lop 4 men and top 4 women qualifiers will go on to compete in the Regional Finals at the University of North Texas in Denton on March 1st- March 3rd. Transportation, hotel accomodations and tournament expenses will be paid by The Texas Union. i C id ? Lower Level Texas Union 24th and Guadalupe Eligibility for all tournaments: Any UT student currently enrolled for a minimum of 3 hours with at least a 2.0 GPA. C hoose new Daily Texan ed ito r and new TSP Board m em bers You can m ake a difference—just ask th ese big rock stars O O e x y 's M id n igh t R u n n e r s — " W e V * a s k e d that ou r p ro m o shot be u se d for a n y crtlise W e ’re attracting new fan s for our follow up to C o m e O n E ile e n .' O N k * G iber— "D o you remember m e? M y big hit. Hot Chéd in the C iy. was a plea for runaways to get out and vote Don't let me down.* OThe Dig (circa 1985)— "Had we thought to register as a snider» group during the m d-80s, we would have been bigger than Twang. It pays fq get involved’ ORetar:ed Elf— "We re prooably the only band in town that could fofthqfX: own votmg biock You and fourteen of your triends could probably s m S : N& this election.' Candidates Continued from page 1 they are already dealt w ith by the UT adm in istration, so he w ould not m ake them if h e w ere elected unless they w ere being handled ineffec­ tively. Eric Dixon, a speech an d philoso­ phy senior a n d c u rren t SA executive director, said the first step for th e U niversity in d eveloping a stro n g er m u ltic u ltu r a l to concede that there is a problem . Several areas n e ed w ork, h e said, including recru itm ent a n d retention of n on-w hite faculty a n d stu d e n ts. e d u c a tio n is In faculty recruitm en t, he said the U niversity te n d s to "p e rp e tu a te its the ow n excuses." For exam ple, U niversity m aintains th at th ere is too small a pool of qualified m inori­ ties w ith advanced d egrees to hire m any m inority faculty, b ut a t the sam e tim e looks only to large, well- know n u niversities for recruits, he said. G arth Davis, a p hilo so p h y junior, said he is "fully d ed icated " to m ulti- culturalism . "I d o n 't see th at as a 'left' issue," he said. "I think the m ajority of s tu d e n ts here believe racism is an inju stice." Davis said the U niversity's prob­ lems w ith recruitm ent and reten tion of m inority faculty and stu d e n ts attest to th e existence of racism on this cam p u s." He proposed varying E316 re­ quirem ents so th a t various cultural E314 classes could be taken in their place. "I think by varying the core requirem ents of E316 w e w ould be proving our dedication to p roviding a m ore diverse ideology," he said. junior, said Brian Byrd, an international busi­ ness the SA should m ake sure the D ep artm en t of Eng­ lish rep resen ts each culture. "T he SA needs to d o the footw ork of looking into syllabi," he said, n o t­ ing that w hile various cultures should be rep rese n ted , he agrees w ith English Professor Alan Grib- ben th at w riting sh o u ld com e first in w riting classes. W hen asked if the English De­ p artm en t m ight resen t stu d e n ts tell­ ing them w h at to do, he said, "T he adm inistration in the end calls th e shots, but if th e SA does this profes­ sionally an d can g arn er stu d e n t su p p o rt for this, it can be d o n e and m inim ize the re se n tm e n t." I think the ad m inistration w ants to listen," he a d d ed . Dallas A ddison, a Plan II junior, said he favors a m ore m ulticultural- ly oriented curriculum , b u t does not think p ressu re on th e ad m in istra­ tion has d o n e m uch good. He described a cu rren t proposal he w ould su p p o rt if elected called "liberated learn in g ." The program , w hich allow s stu d e n ts to create their ow n courses, could becom e a tool to advance m ulticulturalism on cam pus, he said. Rodriguez Continued from page 1 questing a ruling on R odriguez's com pliance w ith th e residency re­ quirem ents of the Texas C o n stitu ­ tion. "W e are not saying th at D avid does or does n o t m eet the require­ m e n ts," said Raul Rosa, o ne of the tw o delivering th e letter. "All w e are saying is th a t the issue is not settled an d sh ould be ad d re sse d be­ fore S atu rd ay 's re c o u n t." Paul Ruiz, the o th e r ex-candidate delivering the letter, said they w a n t to prevent M axey from w in ning outright. If R odriguez w ins the re­ count an d th en is declared ineligi­ ble, Flores w ould not have th e o p ­ portun ity to challenge M axey again. The letter w as signed by form er can didates Rosa, Ruiz, Juan O choa an d Rolando Pina. H annah resp o n d e d w ith a letter to the four, stating th at the inform a­ tion on R odriguez's application for a place on the ballot indicates th at he is eligible. "T he a p p ro p ria te forum to d e te r­ m ine Mr. R odriguez's residency and ultim ately, his eligibility, is a court of law an d not this office," H a n n a h 's letter stated. R odriguez m oved to District 51 in January 1990 b ut d id not change his voter registration a d d re ss until after voting in the N ovem ber 1990 elec­ tion. M ark H am pton, R odriguez's cam ­ paign m anager, said R odriguez is an eligible c a n d id ate because he has lived in the district for the required am o u n t of tim e. IMMIGRATION i-jAj * Hesidertcy Status in U S A based on Family or Employer Sponsorship * Work Permits and Visas for Students and Pro­ fessionals * J-1 Waiver of Foreign Residency Requirements Gloria Lee Vera Attorney at Law 443-4788 1946 S IH-3S, Suite 202. Austin, Texas 78704 Licensed by the Texas Supreme Court Srnce 1976 Not certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization Austin Shoe Hospita Now Serving UT Boot and Shoe Rep New Location MLK @ Nueces 473-2929 12 Austin Locations