Flooding continues to soak Midwest, page 5 e Da il y T e x a n -> A, I 1 -i 0 (V y 'Hi Vol. 92, No. 180 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, July 20, 1993 25c C iinton retreats on gays in military issue Students skeptical on president’s announcement judgm ent until a Senate hearin g T uesday with testimony from Defense Secretary Les Aspin and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Associated Press WASHINGTON — Retreating on a politi­ cally ex p lo siv e issu e, P re s id e n t C lin to n an n o u n c ed " a n h o n o ra b le c o m p ro m ise" M onday allowing gays to serve in the mili­ tary but only if they refrain from all hom o­ sexual activity. Gay service mem bers w ho revealed their sexual o rie n ta tio n w o u ld be tossed o u t unless they could prove they did not engage in h o m o sex u al ac ts an d d id n o t h av e a propensity to do so. C linton said his policy "is not a perfect solution." E rin McDowell Daily Texan Staff hut w hen it comes to civil rights there are no comprom ises," H ood said. "W e are absolutely not satisfied with this com pro- Students and Austin residents rem ained skepl President Clinton form ally announced his " d o don't pursue" policy on gays in the military. Sonny H ood, a m em ber of the A ustin Lesb C aucu s, said the com prom ise w as not "enco homosexual com m unity. "Budget matters can be com prom ised, I'm wi forced to remain in hiding. group. deal M onday after n 't ask, d o n 't tell, Despite the change in policy to stop questioning recruits about their sexual orientation, homosexual conduct will still be grounds for dismissal from the military. "This is all based on ignorance, and it hurts the country as a ian-G ay Political whole. The fact is that gays have served in the military, and they u ra g in g " for th e will continue to do so," said Robert Stofferson, board m em ber of Iling to talk about Please see Reaction, page 2 Stopping far short of hi^ one-time pledge to lift the ban on hom osexuals in the mili­ tary, Clinton was bitterly criticized by gay leaders w ho said h om o sexuals w ould be "W e elected a leader and got a barom e­ ter," said Tim McFeeley, executive director of the H um an Rights Cam paign Fund, the n a tio n 's largest gay and lesbian political For many in Congress, however, Clinton's policy was too lenient toward homosexuals. Sam Nunn, the Democratic chairm an of the S en ate A rm ed S ervices C o m m ittee, has prom ised to offer legislation th at w o u ld lock into law the current ban on homosexu­ als in the military. Clinton said he hoped Nunn would drop the idea. The senator said he would reserve Under the new rules, gays w ould be sub­ ject to dismissal for all forms of hom osexual activity, from holding hands to sexual acts. On the other hand, they w ould not be dis­ charged for simply going to a gay bar, read­ ing homosexual publications or m arching in a gay-rights parade. Rep. Ronald Dellums, D-Calif., chairm an of the H ouse A rm ed Services C o m m ittee and a leading congressional liberal, said: "A first step has occurred today, but a com plete reversal of the ban is still long overdue." Rep. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., a co n serv ativ e Democrat with misgivings about lifting the ban, said that under the president's plan, it Please see Gays, page 2 President dumps defiant Sessions Officials predict U.S. District Judge Louis Freeh will replace FBI director Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Clinton took months to fire FBI Director William Sessions, b u t he had already settled on a successor U.S. District Judge Louis Freeh of New York when he did so, adm inistration officials say. Freeh is a 43-year-old form er FBI agent and federal prosecutor. The president was expected to announce his nom ination Tuesday. D uring a picture- taking session on Monday in the Oval Office, C linton said his new director w ould have "good law enforcement qualifications." A dm inistration officials, speaking on the condition of anonym ity, said that, barring an y u n fo reseen la te -m in u te d iffic u ltie s, Clinton would nominate Freeh. Clinton interviewed Freeh last Friday and w as the only c a n d id a te for th e FBI p ost under active consideration, the officials said. F reeh b ec am e a in M a n h a tta n in S ep tem b er 1991 afte r five years as an FBI agent and a decade as a fed­ eral prosecutor. fe d e ra l ju d g e C lin to n 's firing of Sessions on M onday en d ed a long c o n fro n ta tio n b etw e en the adm inistration and the em battled FBI chief. The White House wanted Sessions to resign, but the director refused steadfastly. In dismissing Sessions, Clinton cited "seri­ ous questions" about Sessions' conduct and le a d e rsh ip . A nd A tto rn ey G eneral Janet Reno cited "deficiency in judgm ent" on the part of the director. Sessions was accused of ethical lapses by th e Ju stic e D e p a rtm e n t's O ffice of Professional Responsibility in January. The OPR accu sed him of d is re g a rd in g ru les restricting his use of FBI cars, airplanes and other benefits. S essions in siste d M o n d ay th a t he had done nothing wrong and suggested his dis­ missal had been politically motivated. "It is because I believe in the principle of an independent FBI that I have refused to voluntarily resign," he asserted at a new s conference. He is the first FBI director to be dismissed in the agency's seven decades. Appointed in 1987 by then-President Ronald Reagan, the 63-year-old former Texas federal judge had 4 1 /2 years left on his 10-year term , but he Associated Press Sessions continues to defend himself. served at the pleasure of the president. S enate R epublican L eader Bob Dole of Kansas called the firing "a potentially w orri­ some precedent." And Rep. Henry Gonzalez, D-Texas, w ho represents the San Antonio, Texas, district where Sessions used to sit as a federal judge, called the fired director "an honest reformer ... cut down by intriguers in the FBI." S essio n s to ld r e p o rte rs it h a d ta k e n Clinton two calls to fire him. First Clinton called to tell him he was being dism issed, th en he called back to say it w o u ld take place immediately, Sessions said. "So that you will know with clarity the effect of my co n v ersatio n w ith P resid en t Clinton, I am in the building as a visitor. I am escorted wherever I will be in this build­ ing. And I am now a citizen, a private citi­ zen," Sessions said. Sessions accused the Clinton White House of trying to politicize the FBI, noting that at his confirm ation hearing in 1987 chairm an Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., had w arned him " y o u r antenna better be u p " if the W hite House called seeking special favors. Canada knew HIV-infected blood given Associated Press OTTAW A — C a n a d a 's H e alth D epartm ent knew that blood dis­ tr ib u te d to h e m o p h ilia c s in th e 1980s w as contam inated w ith the virus that causes AIDS, but could do nothing about it, a top official said Monday. G reg S m ith , d ire c to r of th e d e p a r tm e n t's sp e c ia l a s s is ta n c e d iv isio n , m ade th e co m m en ts in reaction to a weekend new s report th a t sa id th e d e p a r tm e n t kn ew a b o u t H IV -c o n ta m in a te d b lo o d being given to hemophiliacs. A R adio-C anada report S unday fo rm e r d e p a rtm e n t q u o te d a em ployee, Dr. Michael O 'S haugh- nessy, as saying he told superiors in 1984 th at 56 percent of th e blood sa m p le s he tested co n ta in e d the v irus HIV, w hich causes the fatal disease. "W e knew a lo t [so o n e rj th an t h a t ," S m ith to ld the C a n a d ia n P re ss n e w s ag en cy on M o n d ay . "T h ere w as nothing to replace it with. ... You had to make some dif­ ficult medical choices" of w hether to d en y tra n s fu s io n s — th e re b y risking a patient's bleeding to death — or risk the p atien t developing AIDS. A m ethod for purging blood of HIV, heating it, was not developed until 1985. There are about 2,000 hemophili­ acs in C anada. It w as not know n how m any had received contam i­ nated blood or had developed AIDS from the transfusions. A H ouse of C om m ons subcom ­ m itte e re p o rte d in M ay th at the H e a lth D e p a rtm e n t m ay h av e know n of the contam ination as far b ack as 1982 and re co m m en d ed th a t a m ore com plete in q u iry be conducted. D avid P ag e, p r e s id e n t of th e Canadian Hemophiliac Society, on M o n d a y sa id th e ra d io re p o rt u n d e rlin e s the n eed for a public inquiry. In the United States, Health and H um an Services Secretary Donna Shalala asked two weeks ago for a h ig h -le v e l in v e stig a tio n of how thousands of hem ophiliacs got the A ID S v iru s from c o n ta m in a te d blood. Gimme shelter Ninety-five-year-old Richard Doneit shades himself from the sun while waiting for the Capital Metro bus at Guadalupe and 30th streets. Temperatures topped 90 degrees on Monday. V M l Sean Gallup/Daily Texan Staff New jury selection draws larger crowds, mixed reviews Michael Gaffney Daily Texan Staff! The scene M o n d ay at th e L ester E. P a lm e r Auditorium looked like a m ilitary induction day for a popular war. In a way, it was. A bout 3,000 people had been sum m oned for ju ry duty, most of whom had no idea the county had found them because they are licensed to drive. In 1991 the Texas Legislature decided to expand the source list for potential jurors by using the nam es of licensed drivers as well as the long-used voter registra­ tion rolls. District Judge Jon Wisser said the change has brought criminal trials, he added. Since February, the Travis C ounty D istrict C ourts have identified potential jurors by using " ra w d a ta " from th e T exas D e p a rtm e n t of P u b lic S afety , said Michele Brinkman, chief deputy district clerk. A nd so far, the new sy stem has re ceiv ed m ixed reviews. The district now sum m ons 3,000 people every other M o n d ay , 600 m ore th an th e old sy stem p ro v id e d , Brinkman said. About 900 people are accepted for jury duty from the pool of 3,000. "W e have to call m ore jurors than before because m ore of th em are b ein g e x c u se d ," B rin km an said. "Obviously we've just got a larger pool of people." extra expense and slowed the process in his court. "Because we have increased the num ber of jury sum ­ mons we mail, it's costing us m ore," Wisser said. "It's taking longer to weed through — there are m ore prob­ lem s with m ore people w ho are d isqualified for not speaking English ... we get more people with prior crim­ inal records." The jury selection process is further slow ed, Wisser said, because the Office of the Texas Secretary of State does not screen driver's license rolls for ex-felons or cur­ rent county of residence. But defense attorneys should be pleased because of the m ore re p resen tativ e mix of p eo p le available for "W e're getting more people from the lower socio-eco­ nomic section of society, [and] a higher percentage of minorities," Wisser said. "If I were a defense attorney, I'd be happy, because they are interested in getting a better cross section of society." Municipal Judge Philip Sanders said he sees no prob­ lem in his court as a result of the change. "W e're so involved in the volume and setting up the system, I can't say I've noticed any difference," Sanders said District Judge M argaret C ooper also said her court Please see Jury, page 2 Fighting rages on in war-torn Sarajevo Associated Press SARAJEVO, B o sn ia-H erzeg o v in a — Fierce combat raged M onday around M ount Igman, a gateway to besieged Sarajevo where outgunned government defenders said they faced the w ar's strongest Serb assault in the region. A U N. official warned that as many as 32,000 people could be forced to make a perilous dash into suffering Sarajevo if ethnic Serb troops cap­ tured the mountain southwest of the capital. The a tta c k a p p e a re d p a r t of th e effo rt by Bosnian Serbs and Croats to escalate pressure on the Muslim-led government to accept partition of Bosnia into three ethnic regions. The leader of Bosnian Serbs reportedly has set a Tuesday dead­ line for the government to come to terms or face "total defeat." Bosnian arm y sources called the Serb assault unprecedented, worse than a tank-backed offen­ sive the Serbs w ag ed to c a p tu re th e w estern Sarajevo district of Otes in December. Serb forces used at least 25 tanks in the attack on Igman and had helicopters for transport pur­ poses, said the sources, w ho spoke on condition of anonym ity. They said Serb artillery through­ out the area shifted from their usual targets in the city to shell government positions on Igman. The sources said fighting continued thro u g h ­ o u t the day on several p arts of M ount Igm an, w ith the heaviest combat on the slopes above the Serb-held town of Hadzici. They claim ed to have in flicted h eav y Serb casualties, but they refused to discuss their own losses. INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Apollo Weather: “Houston, the Eagle has landed In the mid-70’s through partly cloudy skies. Anticipated return in the upper 90s. Over and out.” Index: Around Campus............................10 Classifieds...................................... 9 Comics........................................... 10 Editorials.................................... ..—4 ............................. 8 Entertainment S ports.......................................... 12 State & Local...................................7 University......................................... 6 World & Nation................................3 Page 2 Tuesday, July 20,1993 T hf. D a ily T f.xan Continued from page 1 "a p p ea rs that the old policy contin­ ues It keeps m ilitary ho m o sex u als in the closet." Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., one o f tw o o p e n ly g a y m e m b e rs o f C ongress, said he w as d isap po in ted a nd th a t the p lan " f a lls s h o r t of w here I thought we w ould be. Fhis does not meet the m inim um ." Sen. E dw ard K ennedy, D -M ass., called Clinton's decision, "a d isa p ­ pointingly small step, but at least it is a step in the right direction." The fractious debate has been one o f the m ost p a in f u l c h a p te r s in Clinton's presidency, th ro w in g his adm inistration off stride and u n d e r­ cutting him politically. It also h ig h ­ lighted the deep strains in his rela­ tions with the military. Clinton said that if he h a d lifted the ban entirely, C o n g re ss w o u ld h ave o v e rtu rn e d his d e c isio n . O n the other hand, he said th at cu rren t restrictions are being considered by federal courts " in w a y s th a t m ay not be to the lik in g o f th o se w h o oppose any change." C linton said h is p la n s trik e s " a sensible balance" betw een th e rights of the individual a n d th e n ee d s of the military to rem ain stro n g ." "It is not a perfect so lu tio n ," said Clinton, flanked by the jo in t Chiefs of Staff, w ho led th e op p o sitio n to a more liberal policy. " it is not id en tical w ith som e of my ov n goals," C linton said. "A n d it certainly will not please everyone — perhaps n o t anyone — and clear­ ly n o t th o s e w h o h o ld th e m o s t adam ant o p in io n s on e ith e r side of this issue." C lin to n s a id th e J o in t C h ie fs " m o v e d a v e r y lo n g w a y " fro m o p p o s in g a n y r e la x a tio n o f th e restrictions. Key elem ents of C lin to n 's policy: ■ M ilita r y r e c r u i t s w ill n o t b e a s k e d o r r e q u ire d to re v e a l th e ir sexual o rien ta tio n . T hat policy h as b e e n in effect on an in te rim basis since Jan. 29. ■ As before, hom osexual conduct w ill be g ro u n d s for separation from the m ilitary. ■ H om osexual conduct is defined as h o m o sex u al act, a sta te m e n t by th e s e rv ic e m e m b e r th a t d e m o n ­ s tr a te s a p r o p e n s i t y or in te n t to e n g a g e in h o m o s e x u a l a c ts , o r a hom osexual m arriage or atte m p ted marriage. ■ M ilitary c o m m a n d e rs w ill n o t in itiate inqu irie s or in v e stig a tio n s " s o le ly " to d e te rm in e a m e m b e r's sexual orientation. H o w e v er, co m ­ m a n d e rs a re e m p o w e re d to o rd e r in v e stig a tio n s if th e re is " c re d ib le in fo rm atio n " that a m em b e r of the armed forces had engaged in hom o­ sexual conduct. "This is an end to the w itch h u n ts that spend millions of do llars to fer­ ret o ut individuals w h o ha ve served As the debate over gays in the military continues in the United States, in China little attention is given to men who show affection for each other. Tw o People’s Liberation Army soldiers held hands as they walked through a market in Beijing Monday. their c o u n try w e ll," the p re s id e n t said. H o w e v e r, T h o m a s S to d d a r d , c o o r d in a to r of t h e g a y - r i g h t s C am paign for Military Sendee, said, "U n d er the new policy, lesbian and gay service m em b ers m ay still not acknow ledge w ho they are." S to d d a rd said th e policy w o u ld prev en t hom osexuals from express­ ing affection tow ard a loved one or from e n g a g in g in p r iv a te s e x u a l cond uct — as is p erm itted for h e t­ erosex uals. " U n d e r th e new p o lic y ," S to d ­ dard said, "lesbian and gay service m em bers m ust still lie and d i s s e m ­ ble in o rder to se r\c their co un try ." Clinton said gays w ould have "a limited right” to express their sexu­ al orientation. H o w e v e r , su c h a d i s c l o s u r e w^ould c r e a te " a r e b u t t a b l e p r e ­ s u m p tio n " that the se rv ic e m a n or w om an w as engaging in hom osexu­ al acts or has a propensity to do so — which are grounds for discharge. T h e D a ily T e x a n i P e r m a n e n t S t a f f Editor............................................................................................................................................ Rebecca Stewart Managing Editor .............................................................................................................................. Fed S Warren Associate Managing E ditors...........................Jeanne Acton, Johnny Ludden, Dane Scbillerj ffhtistoplner Smith News Editor.............................................................................. Justin Noble Associate News Editors............................................................................... Christopher M Brick, Meghan Griffiths News Assignments Editor.................................................................................................................. Mushtaq Kapasi Senior Reporters.................................................. Steve Scheibal, Chris Scbneidmiller, Angela Shat. Kelfy F abb Associate Editors..................................................................................................... Craig Ackerman, Robert Rogers Entertainment Editor........................................................................................................................Carmen Maverick Christy F leming Associate Entertainment E d ito r............. Around Campus/Listings E ditor..................................................................................... ..Scott R. Bartels Sports E ditor................................................................................. Associate Sports Editor........................................................................................................ General Sports Reporter.. Picture Editor ................................................................................................. ................................... John Pondygraft Associate Picture Editor................................................................................................................................. Kbua Bui Graphics E ditor.............................................................................................................. .....................Korey Coleman C on trib u to r........................................................................................................ Rob Caswell Doug Beck, David Boswell, Michael DeLeon, Divya Srimvasan, Tim Harrison, Vincent Lin C artoonists.. lanPrikryi. Howard Sherman .................................................................................................... Mott Schulz ■ ...Joseph Garza Issue S t a f f News Reporters...............................................Raina Anderson, Rachel Finley, Michael Gaffney, Erin McDowell, Edna C.OIiveros, Peter T ropoli Photographers...................................................................................................... Kimberly Brent. Sean Gallup Makeup Editors .......................................................................................................Herman Finkier. Michael I Hide Wire Editor ..Jonathan Bell ..................................................................................................................... Copy E d ito rs ................................................................ Editorial C olum nists......................... Gabriel Demombynes, Scott Lewis Entertainment W riters.................k f j j b -- ----------ft.................................................. Suzanne Bonifert. Michael Zey Entertainment Assistant............... ................. ................................................................................. I lanica Parish .....................................................................................................................Andrea Reece Sports Assistant Lloyd Cox. Greg Moreno. Edna C OIiveros washed silk blouse & shorts Comfortable washed silk in our classically inspired blouse and short separates. Available in seven colors. Ties Peacock f r o m ^ 2 9 . 9 0 Advertising ................. .................Brad Corbett, Brad Floyd, Sonia Garcia, Jane Trosl, Mark Wikofl Local Display. Graphic D esigner........................................................................................................ Dana Wallace Amee Shah Classified Display Nathan Moore, Jennifer Lanier .,.....„„,4*.Bob Roeh, Shawnte Williams, Christine English Classified Telephone Sales Clerks .....................rn ....r- M , . , . ^ ............... Lori Montgomery, Rachel Martin, Kim Krause, Christy Evans Karen Ausrnus, Stelfani Weber. Megan Zhang .................................„ „ .................. „ Wendy Hopper Layout Coordinator .....................................— ........... .......... ....... 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Tuesday, 4 p.m. 11 a.m ClaMifuwl Won* Art» on) If you need the removal ot wisdom teeth call 320-1630 BIOMEDICAL I RESEA RCH 1 g r o u p J E Financial incentive provided in exchange for your opinion on pain medication following oral surgery. Approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeons. 8611 N o rth M opac E xpressw ay. Reaction Continued from page 1 the L esbian-B isexual-G ay S tu d en ts Association. Stofferson called the com prom ise " u n s a tis f a c to r y " b u t co m m en d e d C linton for opening dialogue on the issue. " T h is re a lly o p e n s up p e o p le 's eyes, and it's good for young gays a n d l e s b i a n s to k n o w th a t th e y a r e n ’t alone in fighting discrimina­ tio n ," Stofferson said. But Rich Bailey, president of the G a y , L e s b i a n a n d B isexu al V e t­ erans G ro u p of Central Texas, said th e n e w p o l i c y still a m o u n t s to "blatant discrim ination/' "T he p r e s i d e n t s e e m s to th in k t h a t if e v e r y o n e ' s h a p p y , t h e n everyone got som ething — he said it w a s a m a t t e r of p rin c ip le , a n d apparently he's sacrificed his princi­ ples," Bailey said. The organization was formed in r e s p o n s e to c o n tr o v e r s y o v e r the military's ban against homosexuals. Bailey, w h o w a s a p e tty officer t h i r d c la s s in N a v y in t e l l i g e n c e before being "th ro w n out" in 1982 for d isc lo sin g his h o m o se x u a lity . Bailey had served in the N a v y for four years. Some, however, spoke out in s u p ­ port of C linton, despite objections to the policy. "Personally, I do n't think [homo­ sexuality is] m orally right, but w e will have to s u p p o r t the c o m m a n ­ der in chief to the best of our abili­ ty," said Capt. Michael Fleetw ood of the UT A rm y Reserve Officers' Training Corps program. "It d o e s n 't so u n d tdo m u c h dif­ ferent from the policy we have had, b u t the question is, w h y fix so m e ­ thing that isn't broken?" he said. Jo h n B u tle r , c h a i r m a n of th e D e p a r t m e n t of S o c i o lo g y a n d Jury Continued from page 1 has not been adversely affected. " I t 's n o d e la y w h a t s o e v e r ," C ooper said. But she a d d e d th at "th e d riv er's lic e n s e r o l ls b r in g o u t a g r e a te r num ber of ex-felons, so m ore w ind up being disqualified." M e lis s a H a jd a , f in a n c ia l- ju r y d e p u ty for the U.S. D istrict C ourt, s a id th e A u s tin d iv is io n c o u r t receives a new jury source list every two years, and contacts prospective jurors every tw o m onths. " W e d ra w fro m a list th a t h a s 30,000 to 50,000 n am es," H ajda said. "I contact as m any people as I need for tw o m onth s." O n h is w a y o u t o f P a lm e r A u d i to r i u m , A u s tin ite B re tt Johnson stop ped to com m ent about being sum m on ed to jury duty. "I'm glad to be selec ted," Johnson ‘Nowhere in the w orld has the m ilitary been set up to solve issues of social behavior, and the military has never made a change on social engi­ neering.” - John Butler, chairm an o f the D epartm ent of Sociology Bronze Star V ietnam veteran, called the issue a "n o -w in situatio n." " N o w h e r e in the w o rld h a s the military been set up to solve issues of social behavior, and the m ilitary has never m ad e a change o n social engineering," Butler said. " T h e m ilita r y is n o t b a s e d on social e n g in e e r in g ; it is b a s e d on m a n p o w e r needs," he said. Butler said there is no c o m p a ri­ son between gays and the effort by blacks to en ter the m ilitary. " S c h o la r s h a v e n o t a d d r e s s e d ho m o sex u ality in the m ilitary, and this is a behavior. Even if it's biological, it's a behav­ ior," Butler said. " T h e o n ly r e a s o n b la c k s e v e r s e r v e d fh is n a tio n w a s b e c a u s e m a n p o w e r w a s n e e d e d ," h e said . "O bviously, gays have m ade signif­ icant contributions not as hom osex­ uals b ut as soldiers." T h e UT R O T C h a s n o t a s k e d recruits about their sexual o rie n ta ­ tion in the last six m o n th s because of C linton's grace period to analy ze th e issue, a n d Fleetw ood expected this policy to continue. said. "I'v e lived here 38 y ears a nd this is my first time." I m m i g r a n t Ed N iles, a ls o s u m ­ m oned, said he feels a responsibility to serve on jury duty'. Niles, w h o came from Budapest, H u n g a r y , in 1963, s a id h e liv e d u n d e r a r e p r e s s i v e c o m m u n i s t regime before coming to America. " I com e from a c o u n t r y w h e r e this s y s te m d o e s n 't e x is t," N iles said. "A t that time there was no court. If I'm living in a free country, p a rt of being a responsible citizen is to serve in the c o u n try 's judicial sy s­ tem." W hatever its long-term effect, the addition of the driver's license list to the state's juror resource pool has the l e n g t h e n e d courts. reach of th e You can still enroll in Austin's best MCAT prep course. 474-8378 We Score More The best course for the best scores! T h e P rin ceto n Review U afUliatMl w ith n e ith e r P rinceton I n lv ersity n o r the College B unrd Costa Rica | London Paris Frankfurt Moscow Tokyo $470* 'Above (ares are each way from Austin based on roundtrip purchase. Restrictions apply. Taxes not Included. One way fares slightly higher. EURAILPASSES issued on the spot! Cornea Itawd 2 0 0 0 Guadalupe Austin, TX 78705 472-4931 WORLD & NATION I I I I D \IIA Tf \ w Tuesday. July 20. 1993 Page 3 Students: Guns are easy to get Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — N e a r ly 60 p e r c e n t of s t u d e n ts s u r v e y e d in g rad es six thro ugh 12 told pollsters they could quickly get a h a n d g u n if th e y w a n ted one. T h irty -n in e p e r­ cent said they knew som eone killed or w o u n d ed by gunfire. The survey of 2,508 stu d e n ts in 96 m id d le s c h o o ls a n d h ig h sc h o o ls n a tio n w id e re le a se d M o n d a y also fo u n d a p r o n o u n c e d fe a r o f v io ­ lence and concern a b o u t crim e. T h ir ty - f iv e p e r c e n t s a i d th e y th o u g h t it w a s e ith e r " s o m e w h a t lik e ly " or " v e ry lik e ly " th a t th e y w o u ld n ot reach “ a rip e o ld a g e " because they w ould be “ w ip e d o u t from g uns." T h e s u r v e y s h o w e d t h a t " t h e im pact of g u n s is n o th in g sh o rt of p e rv a s iv e " in th e liv es of s c h o o l­ children, said pollster Louis H arris, w hose LH Research Inc. co n d u cted the survey for the H arv ard U n iv er­ sity School of Public H ealth. H arris said that fear of g u n v io­ lence and a v aila b ility of w e a p o n s a m o n g c h ild ren w a s n o t ju s t c o n ­ fined to in n e r cities. R esu lts w e re sim ilar am ong stu d en ts in su b u rb s, sm all tow ns and ru ral areas. O verall, the poll show ed th a t 59 p e r c e n t of s tu d e n ts ag e 10 to 19 reported they “could get a h a n d g u n if I w anted one." T he p ropo rtion w as slightly high­ er am o n g city re sid en ts — 63 p e r­ cen t — w h ile 58 p erc e n t of s u b u r­ b a n s t u d e n t s a n d 56 p e r c e n t o f those in sm all tow ns or ru ral areas said they could easily get guns. O f those w ho said they could get g u n s , 62 p e r c e n t r e p o r t e d th e y w o u ld be able to o b ta in o n e in 24 hours, the survey found. “There is a h u g e u n d e rg ro u n d w h ere kids see a n d g et g u n s so r e a d ily ," H a rris told reporters at a new s conference. H e d ism isse d th e s u g g e s tio n th a t stu d e n ts ' an sw ers w ere m o tiv ate d by show ing bravado. " I d o n 't th in k k id s m a k e th e se things up, they're straig h tfo rw ard ," he said, citing prev io u s experience p o llin g c h ild re n a b o u t d r u g u se. “ Kids know better than their elders w h a t's going on." F o rty-three p e r­ cent of m iddle-school stu d en ts said they knew w here to get guns if they w a n te d th e m , s a id th e s u r v e y , w hich w as financed b y the Chicago- based Joyce Foundation. MONDAY'S DOW JONES. 3 535.28 UP 6.99 VOLUME. 215.872.200 Poor Latinos working more Study chips away stereotype Associated Press D E T R O IT — H is p a n ic fa m ilie s liv in g b e lo w th e p o v e rty lin e a re m o re lik e ly to h a v e a t le a s t o n e a d u lt w o rk in g th a n a re im p o v e r­ is h e d b la c k o r w h ite f a m ilie s , according to a new study. In 1991, m ore than 27.5 percent of all H is p a n ic f a m ilie s b e lo w th e p o v e rty line h ad a t least o n e fu ll­ tim e w o rk e r, c o m p a re d w ith 21.8 percent of po o r w hite and 11.9 p er­ c e n t o f b la c k fa m ilie s, th e re p o rt said. In 1992, 79 p e rc e n t of H isp a n ic m e n w o r k e d , c o m p a r e d w ith 67 p ercent of black m en a n d 74 percent of w hites, according to the re p o rt by the N ational Council of La Raza. T he stu d y w as issued M onday at La R aza's fo ur-day ann u al co n v en ­ tion in D etroit. Established in 1968, La Raza is th e n a tio n 's largest com ­ m u n ity -b a s e d H is p a n ic o rg a n iz a ­ tion. The re p o rt's d a ta w ere draw n from several sources, La Raza offi­ c ia ls s a id , in c lu d in g U.S. C e n s u s d a ta a n d in fo rm a tio n g a th e re d by academ ic g ro u p s, H isp an ic g ro u p s and p rivate th in k tanks. C ecilia G a rcia, a sp o k e sw o m a n for th e C ongressional H ispanic C au­ cu s In stitu te , said th e stu d y h e lp s d isp el ste re o ty p e s of H isp an ics as being unem ployed. “T here have been stereotypes that lu m p us in th at categ o ry of victim — p e o p le c o n s ta n tly lo o k in g fo r m ore w e lfa re ," G arcia said . " T h is could finally give recognition to th e stru g g le that so m any L atino fam i­ lies u n d e rg o . W e do w o rk . W e d o w h a tev e r we can to feed o u r fam i­ lies." But according to th e rep ort, lack of e d u catio n has forced m ore H is ­ p a n ic s th a n e v e r in to lo w e r-s k ill jo b s. A s lu c ra tiv e m a n u fa c tu r in g p o sitio n s h av e d is a p p e a re d in th e la st d e c a d e , H is p a n ic s in g r e a te r nu m b ers have m oved to low -paying service jobs th at p ro v id e few or no benefits, the repo rt said. A lm o st o n e - th ird o f H is p a n ic s have no health insurance, co m pared w ith 20 p e rc e n t of b la c k s a n d 13 p e rc e n t of w h ite s, th e re p o rt said. A c c o rd in g to th e U .S . C e n s u s B u reau , 28.7 p e rc e n t o f H isp a n ic s a re b e lo w th e p o v e r ty lev el. T h e U.S. governm ent considers a fam ily of four u n d er the p o v erty level if its annual incom e is $14,350 or less. To lift H ispan ics o u t of po v erty , educational reform and public p ro ­ gram s m ust shift focus on this com ­ m u n ity , La R a za P r e s id e n t R a u l Y zaguirre said. " W e a re th e m o st u n d e r r e p r e ­ se n te d m in o rity in p u b lic p o lic y ," Y zaguirre said. “ We h a v e n 't raised o u r voices enough. W e h av e n 't h ad the data. We h a v e n 't h a d the policy decision-m akers." ostenkowski linked to scam Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — P ro s e c u to rs sec u re d a key g u ilty plea M o n d ay in th e ir p ro b e of th e H o u s e P o st O ffice, an d c o u rt d o c u m e n ts s u g ­ gested that Rep. D an Rostenkow ski, one of the m ost pow erful m em bers of C ongress, m ay h av e been a recip­ ient of em bezzled fu n d s in th e case. Form er H ouse P ostm aster Robert R ota p le a d e d g u ilty to co n sp ira cy an d em bezzlem ent charges for h elp ­ ing o ne fo rm er la w m a k e r a n d one c u rre n t m em ber of C ongress obtain c ash illeg ally for p e rso n a l u se, by subm itting official H ouse vouchers. P a p e rs released in the case said Rota, in the 1970s an d 1980s, aided an d abetted a “ C ongressm an A and C o n g ressm an B" in “ w illfully and k n o w i n g l y " e m b e z z lin g m o n e y w h ic h w a s c o n v e rte d to th e la w ­ m akers' personal use. O n e e m b e z z le m e n t c o u n t sa y s Rota “ aided and abetted C ongress­ m a n A in w illfully an d kno w in g ly em bezzling and converting to C on­ g re s s m a n A 's o w n u s e " th e p o st office funds. The sam e lan g u ag e is u sed for C ongressm an B. W hile no n a m es a re m e n tio n ed , the c o u rt p a p e rs contain d ates and a m o u n ts of v o u c h e rs su b m itte d to the post office for stam p purchases. A n d th o s e d a te s a n d a m o u n ts m atch v ouchers su b m itte d by Ros­ tenko w ski an d fo rm er Rep. Joseph Kolter, D-Pa., as recorded in public records issued by th e H ouse. A so u rc e close to the in v e stig a ­ tio n , s p e a k in g o n c o n d itio n o f anonym ity, also confirm ed th at Ros­ tenkow ski w as C ongressm an A and Kolter w as C ongressm an B. A dding figures in the indictm ent, R ostenkow ski w o u ld have received $ 2 1 ,3 0 0 b e tw e e n M a y 1985 a n d A p ril 1991 — a b o u t th e tim e th e c u rre n t inv estig atio n began. K olter $9,300 w o u ld h a v e r e c e iv e d b e tw e e n A u g u st 1986 a n d D ecem ­ ber 1990. R o s te n k o w s k i's o ffic e h a d n o im m e d ia te co m m en t a n d a tte m p ts to reach Kolter here an d in P ennsyl­ vania w ere not successful. Both R ostenkow ski, ch a irm a n of th e ta x - w ritin g H o u s e W ay s a n d M eans C om m ittee, an d Kolter have p reviously denied w rongdoing. Prosecutors said Rota had agreed to c o o p e ra te in th e ir p ro b e . U .S. A tto rn e y J. R am sey John son called th e g u ilty p le a " a sig n ific a n t ste p fo rw a rd " in the case. The court pap ers said other m em ­ b e rs o f C o n g re s s p a r tic ip a te d in sim ilar schem es w ith Rota b u t w ere n ot p a rt of M onday's plea. A s W ay s a n d M e a n s c h a irm a n , R ostenkow ski is le a d in g his c h a m ­ b e r's effort in H ouse-Senate nego ti­ a tio n s to w in p assag e of P resid en t C lin to n 's deficit redu ctio n package. If he should be indicted for a felony, H ouse caucus rules req uire th a t he step d o w n until the case is settled. A statem ent su b m itted by federal p ro s e c u to rs to U.S. D istric t C o u rt s a id R o ta " g a v e c a s h to c e r ta in m e m b e rs of C o n g re s s d ire c tly in exchange for official v ouchers each of w h ic h falsely c e rtifie d th a t th e m e m b e r h a d r e c e iv e d p o s ta g e stam p s for the voucher." P rosecutors said m em bers so m e­ tim es received cash directly for the vouchers. O ther tim es they received sta m p s, w hich later w ere re tu rn e d for cash. R o ste n k o w sk i, K o lte r an d R ep. A ustin M urphy, D-Pa., have p rev i­ o u s ly r e v e a le d th e y w e re u n d e r investigation in the case, and called th e p ro b e a " w itc h h u n t " b y th e U.S. atto rn ey 's office. A ssistan t U.S. A tto rn e y T hom as M otley said that prosecutors agreed n o t to p ress a d d itio n a l c h a rg e s in retu rn for R ota's cooperation. It w as u n c le a r w h e th e r a d d itio n a l H o u se m em bers w ere involved. Life amid the ruins Sachiko Asari places flowers and bottles of w ater as an offering where her house once stood on Okushiri Island in Japan. A relative of Asari was one of the 181 people killed in the June 12 earthquake. Associated Press U.N. envoy touts successes in Somalia Associated Press M OGADISHU, Somalia — The U.N. special envoy com plained M onday th at the escalation of v io len ce in M o g a d ish u h a s o b sc u re d th e success of the h u m a n ita ria n effort elsew here in Somalia. Envoy Jonathan H ow e stressed th at he still believes U.N. forces will be able to w ith d raw on schedule by M ay 1995, a targ et d ate previ­ ously m entioned by U.N. officials. By th en , th e 27-nation U.N. m ilitary coali­ tion will have rooted o u t gunm en an d bandits, enabling this east African nation to rebuild its econom y an d restore social an d political sta ­ bility, h e said. " T h e r e 's a lre a d y th e s ta rt of c o m m e rc ia l a c tiv itie s w e 'r e all p r e tty e x c ite d a b o u t ," H ow e told re p o rte rs at th e h eav ily g u a rd e d U.N. h ead q u arters com pound. H e spoke shortly after tw o A m erican m ili­ tary police w ere w o u n d e d by s n ip e r fire in M ogadishu. The soldiers, w ho w ere n o t id en ­ tified, w ere rep o rted stable w hile un d erg o in g treatm ent at the m ain U.S. field hospital. T h irty -fiv e p e a c e k e e p e rs h a v e d ie d since June 5 in attacks blam ed on g u n m en loyal to renegade clan leader M oham ed F arrah A idid, w ho controls southern M ogadishu. M ore than 100 U.N. soldiers have been w o u n d ed . U.N. forces have retaliated w ith helicopter attacks on several c o m p o u n d s believed used by A id id 's gunm en, resulting in heavy Somali ca su alties a n d trig g e rin g in te rn a tio n a l criti­ cism about excessive force by U.N. forces. H ow e, w h o w as appointed special rep resen ­ ta tiv e o f U .N . S e c re ta ry - G e n e r a l B o u tro s B outros-G hali in M ay, said the recent violence h as b e e n la rg e ly c o n fin e d to th e re la tiv e ly sm all sou thern portion of the capital. He said it sho uld n ot o vershad ow the U.N. m ission's b ro a d er achievem ents. " I t 's tim e the o th e r sto ry w as to ld ," said H ow e, a retired A m erican adm iral. H e said starvation has largely been eradicat­ ed in ru ra l a re a s sin ce th e fo reig n m ilita ry in terv en tion began w ith a U.S.-led operation in D ecem ber. Schools, sh u t d o w n by anarchy and fam ine du rin g tw o years of civil w ar, are o pen again, and h arv e sts a re picking up, he said. D isp la c e d fam ilies, a m o n g m o re th a n 1.2 m illion refugees w ho fled the w ar, have begun re tu rn in g to rebuild th eir h o m e s an d y oung m ilitia m e n sa y th e y a re tir e d o f f ig h tin g , H o w e sa id . H e e x p re s s e d c o n fid e n c e U .N . forces soon w o u ld e n d w eek s of anarch y in M ogadishu itself. “ In a couple of m onths, w h en we have fin­ ished o u r sy ste m m a tic d isa rm a m e n t of this city, you will be able to w alk around at least w ith the sam e degree of com fort you have in Rome or N ew York," he said. A Somali worker helped unload relief supplies. Associated Press Colorado court rejects gay law Associated Press DENVER —- T he C o lo rad o S u p re m e C o u rt refused M onday to resurrect the sta te 's anti-gay rights am en d ­ m ent, ruling th at th e m easu re that triggered a nation­ w id e boycott of C o lo rad o p ro b a b ly vio lated the U.S. Constitution. An actual ruling on the a m e n d m en t's constitutionali­ ty will com e w hen a civil law suit goes to trial in O cto­ ber. In the m eantim e, the co u rt said in a 6-1 decision that it found no reason to lift a trial ju d g e's injunction preventing A m en d m en t 2 from taking effect. The court said the initiative “ to a reasonable p ro b a ­ b ility " v io lates th e U.S. C o n s titu tio n 's 14th A m en d ­ m ent, w hich forbids states from d enying equal protec­ tion u n d er the law s to anyone. A m en d m en t 2, a p p ro v ed N ov. 4 by 53 percent of Col­ o ra d o 's voters, w ould ban state and local law s prohib it­ ing discrim ination based on sexual orientation. It also w ould strike dow n gay-rights ordinances on the books in A sp en , B o u ld er an d D en v er. T he c o u rt a c k n o w l­ edged that A m endm ent 2 w as passed by a m ajority, b u t said: " O n e 's rig h t to life, liberty and p ro p e rty ... and other fundam ental rights m ay not be su bm itted to vote; they depend on the outcom e of no elections." T he decisio n w as h a iled b y civil rig h ts a d v o c ate s, w h ile A m e n d m e n t 2 s u p p o rte rs sa id th ey re m a in e d optim istic the m easure ultim ately w o u ld becom e law. A D e n v e r le g a l e x p e r t s a id th e d e c is io n m e a n s A m endm ent 2 is unlikely to pass constitutional m uster w hen the law suit challenging the initiative goes to trial. “ It looks as th o ugh the C olorado courts are ready to strike it dow n. The question is, w ill the [U.S.] Suprem e C o u rt take th e case," said John Reese, a U niversity of D enver law professor w hose specialty is constitutional law . W hite A m e n d m e n t 2 has n ev er taken effect, it h as becom e a rallyin g g ro u n d for gay rights activists and led* to a natio n w id e boycott targeting Colorado. W hile the boycott cost the state m illions of dollars in conven­ tio n b u sin e ss, it so far h as n o t a p p re c ia b ly affected to u ris m , o ffic ia ls sa y . T h e la w s u it c h a lle n g in g th e am end m en t is to be heard by D enver District Judge Jef­ frey Bayless, w h o issued th e injunction on Jan. 15. It w as filed by nine in d iv id u a ls and the three cities th a t had gay-rights ordinances. T he state S u p rem e C ou rt said A m e n d m e n t 2 alters the political process so that a “ targeted class" is denied access to traditional protections from discrim ination. “ A m endm ent 2 singles o u t and prohibits this class of persons from seeking governm ental action favorable to it an d thus, from p articip atin g equally in th e political process," the court said. “ N o other identifiable g ro u p faces such a b u rd en — no o th e r g ro u p 's ability to p a rtic ip a te in th e political process is restricted and encum bered in a like m an n er,'' the ruling said. T he a u th o r of A m e n d m e n t 2, W ill P e rk in s of C o l­ o ra d o S p rin g s, o n e of th e fo u n d e rs of C o lo ra d o for Fam ily Values, said if the am en d m en t is voided at the O ctober trial, “ w e'll have to w ait an d see w h en it gets to the U.S. Suprem e C o u rt." Associated Press C linton falls in polls NEW YORK — N early th re e in five A m ericans say that P resid en t C lin to n h a s b ro k e n his p ro m is e s too often, and just tw o in five give him a h ig h tru st rating, according to an A ssociated Press poll. After forging through harsh eco­ n o m ic te r r a in a n d e n c o u n te r in g flak even in his ow n party on C api­ tol Hill, C linton found som e refuge e a r lie r th is m o n th w h e n h e g o t good m arks for his perform ance at the econom ic sum m it in Japan. But in the poll taken im m ediate­ ly thereafter, 47 percent said C lin­ to n h as n o t sh o w n he is a stro n g leader, co m p ared w ith 37 p ercen t w ho th oug ht he is. That w as a reversal from a com ­ parable AP poll three m onths earli­ e r, w h e n C lin to n w a s r a te d a stro n g le a d e r by 49 p e rc e n t to 37 percent. C linton also fell in an oth er com ­ p a r is o n : T h o s e w h o h a v e m o re confidence in him than in C ongress to deal w ith the c o u n try 's problem s totaled 39 percent in the poll taken July 9-13. It w as 55 percent in a poll taken Jan. 27-31, just after the in a u ­ guration. ru n n in g day-to-day affairs. But the lack of strong central leadership is likely to h in d e r progress on tough trad e and econom ic issues. Miyazawa won’t step down Radioactive bats in Siberia TOKYO — Prim e M inister Kiichi M iyazaw a confounded p arty lead ­ ers M onday by refu sin g to resign a f te r v o te r s e n d e d th e L ib e ra l D em ocrats' 38-year m ajority in p a r­ liam ent. W ith n o p a r ty in c le a r c o n tro l and no person dom inating the Lib­ eral D e m o cra ts, Jap an c o u ld face w eeks of political instability as p a r­ ties and factions jockey for pow er. T he L ib e ra l D e m o c ra tic P a rty , d esp ite being linked to a series of c o rru p tio n sc a n d a ls, re m a in s th e la rg e s t p a r ty b y far a n d h a s th e inside track on creating a g o v ern ­ ing coalition w ith the h elp of other c o n s e rv a tiv e p a rtie s . O p p o s itio n p a rtie s a n d in d e p e n d e n ts w o u ld h av e to o v e rc o m e m an y p o litical d iffe re n c e s to c o b b le to g e th e r a coalition. D uring the form ation of the new g o v e r n m e n t, J a p a n 's p o w e r f u l b u re a u c ra ts are ex p ected to k e e p M OSCOW -«r- Bats that fed from a p olluted lake ap p aren tly are the source of u n u su a lly high levels of ra d ia tio n at a c h ild re n 's ca m p in Siberia, scientists say. A u th o ritie s d e te cte d th e ra d ia ­ tio n in recent w eeks in a w o o d en b uilding at the cam p in the city of C helyabinsk. Scientists initially w ere p u zzled, b u t later discovered som e bats w ith high levels of radiation, ITAR-Tass new s agency reported, quoting the local n ew spaper Evening Chelyabin­ sk. A u th o r it i e s b e lie v e th e b a ts picked up the radiation w hile feed­ ing at nearby Lake K arachai, w here a chemical plant d u m p s its w aste. C helyabinsk and o th e r S iberian cities are centers of chem ical an d n u c le a r r e s e a rc h fo r th e S o v ie t in dustries and often heavily p o llu t­ ed. EDITORIALS T h e I ) mi \ T e \ vn Page 4. Tuesday. July 20. 1993 T h e Da il y T ex a n Editorial Board Rebecca Stewart C raig A ckerm an A ssociate Editor Editor Robert Rogers Associate Editor Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor and the writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. Opinions expressed in staff or guest columns are those of the writer. Letters submitted to Firing Line should be fewer than 250 words, and guest columns should be no more than 750 words. Bring submis­ sions to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or mail them to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. Letters may be edited for grammar, length, libel and Texan style. VIEWPOINT ]D01n't As]k ’■ fk Clinton won't tell if you don't Clinton wimped out on Monday and left gay soldiers rotting in the closet with their moth-eaten Army uniforms and a "don't ask, don't tell” policy that reeks of indecision. The timid compromise sticks a symbolic Band-Aid on the festering wound of inequality, but does not really solve the issue of whether homosexuals can serve in the military. Clinton avoided the deep issues like an ostrich sticking his head in the sand. On the one hand, incoming soldiers will not be asked to reveal their sexual orientation. Of course, the military has not asked that dirty little ques­ tion since the end of January. On the other hand, "homosexual conduct” can still get you kicked out of the service. Evidently, "homosexual conduct" includes all kinds of touchy-feely no- no's like holding hands and kissing. This type of behavior is obviously inap­ propriate in a military context. Officers and sergeants have more important things to do than play spider games w ith each other's fingers. But isn't physical and sexual interaction on duty already banned under general defense guidelines? The only justification for a specific ban against homosexual conduct would be a study which concluded that gays are more likely than other servicemen and women to engage in illicit bodily configurations in military contexts. This type of evidence has not been produced. The most ridiculous part of this wavering compromise is the "limited right" to sexual expression that Clinton unsuccessfully attempted to articu­ late clearly. If a serviceman or woman makes a statement which shows that he or she has a "propensity' to engage in homosexual acts," then the burden of proof shifts onto his or her shoulders. The soldier must then present evi­ dence that he or she did not engage in homosexual acts. This has got to be one of the strangest reversals of the presumption of inno­ cence in American judicial history'. How do people prove that they didn't kiss someone? It's sort of like asking your roommate to prove that he never baked a cake. Those who support the ban on gays in the military' do so because they regard the homosexual lifestyle as aberrant — not because gay service is a national security threat. The Ú 5. military, which trained for years in prepara­ tion for World War in against the Soviets, will not be shaken by open homo­ sexual participation. Yet, instead of admitting their antipathy to the lifestyle, Republicans and some Democrats have tried to legitimate their antagonism by profferring a set of improvable assertions about potential decreased military preparedness. In truth, the whole issue has been monumentally blown out of proportion. But U.S. representatives know where the electorate stands, so they don't mind compromising on gay rights. Since Clinton decided to wade into this flame-broiled mess with empty promises in the campaign, he should have acted with more conviction when the Congress called. Either gays have a right to fight or they don't. But this middle-of-the-road policy just paints Clinton into the comer of cowardice. — Craig Ackerman _L Tke otkerTbn't ask, 7 £)t*r? “W€ AMShJS Springs yield grass-root spirit Today I did something I haven't done since I Gabriel Demombynes TEXAN COLUMNIST was 7 years old, when in a fit of insanity my family abandoned Austin and moved to the Chicago suburbs. Today, I swam Barton Springs end to end. In the shade just before the shore at the shal­ low end, an older woman sat in a w heelchair munching from a bag of granola and listening to Public Enemy blare out of her boom box. I said, "M orning." She said, "H ow dy." Chuck D said, "W e've got to fight the powers that be." I moved on. I waded out past some kids waging a vicious squirt-gun war. When the w ater reached my hips, I plunged into the blue-green and settled into a lazy, heads-up breast stroke. I floated by a gaggle of gossiping moms and then past the div­ ing board, where a 12-ish redhead was refining his bellyflop technique. After passing two m iddle-aged men sw im ­ ming laps from side-to-side, I kicked into a hard freestyle for the deep-water stretch. I dodged a lovestruck couple sharing a raft, sprinted the final 50 feet and hauled myself onto the dam's concrete top. I was reminded that what the developer hacks never have understood is that Barton Springs is not just a nice place to swim. The people who know what Barton Springs means to the city are not the developer creeps, the Jim Bobs and the corporate engineers with their farcical claims of scientific objectivity, but the common citizens w ho have lived and loved the c ity and its springs. A w onderful testam ent to the springs as a community resource is Barton Springs Eternal, a collection of photographs, essays, and oral histo­ ries just published by the Hill Country Founda­ tion. (The Co-Op will have a book signing with the author on Friday.) My favorite snippet from the book is a passage by Roy Bedichek, a writer who was part of an informal intellectual circle that often gathered at the Springs during the '40s and '50s. Bedichek wrote, " I think knowledge and love of one's own immediate physical environment constitutes the very (and only) basis of genuine patriotism. ... Personally, if I have to fight for this country, I will not fight for the flag, or democra­ cy, or private enterprise, or the American 'way of life,' or for any other abstractions, which seem cold as kraut to me. But I will fight to the last ditch for Barton Creek, Boggy Creek, cedar-cov­ ered limestone hills, blazing star and bluebon- nets, golden-cheeked warblers and black-capped vireos, and so on through a catalogue of the nat­ ural environment of Austin, Texas. It is through this natural environment that I love America. Everything else is subsidiary for this love of your native land is basic." If these were ju st one m an's thoughts, they might be written off as the idle musings of some nature freak. But the spirit of Bedichek's ideas thrives throughout the city and in the pages of Barton Springs Eternal. Barton Springs defines our city as a community, as more than just a haphaz­ ard mound of urban consumers. Ultimately, how we take care of Barton Springs and other public resources like it reflects our vision of ourselves, of who we are and who we want to be. Demombynes is a Plan ll/engineering senior. FIRING LINE Government has no obligation to provide abortions for indigents The July 2 Viewpoint "C hoice: Don't abort federal funding" demonstrates just how poorly one can make an argument. The editor seeks federal funding for abortions to ensure everyone can exercise their right to choose, regardless of income. If she had looked at available statistics, the editor might realize that abortions divide almost evenly by income level. One-third of abortions occurred among poor women, one-third among middle-class women and one-third among wealthy women. These records account for 1987, under a Republican administration that presumably restricted federal funding. Apparently poor women are exercising their rights anyway. The editor's argument also overlooks that the right to choose involves two sides — one-half of women with unplanned pregnancies carried to term, while one-half aborted. Pro-abortionists aren't equally vigi­ lant in demanding assistance for the other aspect of choice. The editor's obsession is with abortion, not choice. Finally, the argum ent that the governm ent must fund abortion to preserve it as a right is ludicrous. Peo­ ple have a right to free press, but the government has no obligations to pay their printing costs. The Constitu­ tion guarantees a right to keep and bear arms, but no government dispensaries for guns exist to fund people in exercising their right. Abortion, if it is a right, is no exception. The editor parted ways with logic in her weak argu­ ments. The piece was not persuasive; it was merely a pro-abortion clarion call. f. Scot Burk UT alumnus Death penalty right for rap killer Justice was done in the rap murder trial. The death sentence is exactly appropriate in this case. My deepest sympathy and support for her lawsuit against Time- Warner, Inc. go to Linda Davidson and the state of Texas, which lost a trooper. I am conservative economically, but am liberal about some social issues (as a gay man). I would have been insulted if there had been any other verdict; I would have felt my life and all our lives were incredibly cheapened. The defense attorney, Allen Turner, insults anyone with a brain when he says that people need to realize his client is not a morally responsible agent. He is com­ pletely unfounded in his assertion that if his client "had grown up in the suburbs, we would never have seen him here today." He also grossly insults tire peo­ ple of his client's environment who are not sociopathic murderers. In ad d itio n , the ju ro r who held up the v erd ict endorsed T u rn er's unfathom able reasoning by his indecision. It should not have been "the hardest thing he's ever done" to make the obviously right judgment. Ken Kennedy Austin resident Don't discriminate against gays To understand the issue of gays in the military, it's helpful to separate sexual orientation from conduct. Regarding sexual orientation, excluding gays from the military is discrimination. Scientific evidence now supports what gays have been saying for years: Sexual orientation is an ascribed trait, heavily influenced by one's genetic heritage, over w hich one has no con­ scious choice. Les Aspin's so-called compromise does nothing to end the discrim ination. Any policy that forces gays to remain closeted perpetuates the severe ignorance and misunderstanding of gays in our soci­ ety. Straights never get the opportunity to know gays as individuals instead of as a vague mass of untrue negative stereotypes. Regarding conduct, it's a double standard to forbid only improper heterosexual conduct while forbidding all homosexual conduct. The military should enforce a single standard forbidding gay or straight sexual activ­ ity where the circum stances are improper. A single standard is easy to enforce, encourages discipline and doesn't discriminate. M ichael T ru st's childish fear of show ering with someone w ho's gay is irrelevant. Our society holds people accountable for their actions, not their thoughts. A single standard of conduct forbids improper sexual behavior, gay or straight, in the shower or anywhere else. Trust's boring repetition of lies about gays is also irrelevant. Under a single standard, any soldier, gay or straight, whose conduct is improper would be disci­ plined. The focus, appropriately, would be on the con­ duct of the individual, not on negative stereotypes attributed to a much misunderstood minority group. Michael Garbarino Law student Veterans deserve fee exemptions As honorably discharged Texas veterans, who have exhausted their federal resources, and who were his­ torically required only to demonstrate that fact to be eligible for exemption from tuition and fees at colleges and universities in Texas, we oppose the provision in H.B. 1356, section (1), (a), requiring that we "demon­ strate financial need as defined by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board" as contrary to the orig­ inal intention of the Hazelwood Act itself. The intent of the act was to recognize and reward the efforts of vet­ erans to further their educations, and thereby demon­ strate their continuing commitment to themselves, their families, their communities, their state, and their nation, with their services, skills, dedication and taxes. The imposition of a "financial need test" will place undue administrative burdens on the institutions we seek to attend; and the financial need test will create administrative barriers to entry and obstacles to acade­ mic progress for all Texas veterans due to delays and requirements for unnecessary documentation. Veterans should use every legal and political means to prevent the implementation of this amendment. Don Stallings UT staff Keith J. Kelly Austin resident a d is g r a c e the w a y m e w h o le l a w pr o fessio n is m a l i g n e d these d a y s — w h y , i 'm G o in g To Lo o<3e a F o r m a l Co m p l a in t w it h the La w y e r s ' a n t i- d e f a m a t io n l e a g u e / ' Title IX makes quota system It w as announced Frid ay that Scott Lewis TEXAN COLUMNIST what is the result going to be? The women bringing the suit probably think it will be a heightened respect for w om en 's sp o rts. W h ile an ad m irab le g o al, it is also an improbable one. politics will override sanity in UT sports. Under the terms of a federal lawsuit settlement, the Uni­ v ersity will have to spend m ore than a million dollars a year enforc­ ing the quota of 44 percent female p a rtic ip a tio n in UT a th le tic s. Enforcem ent will require cutting m en 's a th le tic p ro gram s and expanding the number of female sports on the varsity level. The varsity-level sports added w ill be w om en's soccer, softball and possibly even gymnastics and crew. Men don't have these sports on a varsity level, but all is fair in love and litigation. T h e U n iv ersity w as targeted with the lawsuit not because of its record on w om en's athletics but because of its deep pockets. Smaller universities would go broke build­ ing facilities and doling out schol­ arsh ip s for such an extravagant mandate. The problem with all of this non­ sense is the notion that the Univer- ' sity is guilty of sexual discrimina­ tion. If the numbers don't add up, this argument goes, there must be so m e m a n ia ca l m ale p lottin g against the future of women. T h e w ord d isc rim in a tio n has been used so often , for so many ca ses, that it has been rendered meaningless. The definition of dis­ crim ination m entions nothing of proportionate representation, and it is silly to apply such a high stan­ dard to the University. The University was tar­ geted with the lawsuit not because of its record on wom en’s athletics but because of its deep pockets. Smaller univer­ sities would go broke building facilities and doling out scholarships for such an extravagant mandate. Imagine for a moment that the short people of the University used the same logic of the women bring­ ing this suit. They would file a suit claim ing underrepresentation in athletics. If they won the suit, horse racing would become a varsity sport. The U n iv ersity w ould be forced to spend millions building a track and providing scholarships for jockeys. The basketball program would be slashed to low er the average height in UT athletics. All of this under the guise of ending discrimi­ nation. W ith the se ttle m e n t in p la ce, Shifting some money around will not make certain sports m ore or less pop ular. Few stu d e n ts, for example, will ever be tempted to skip a football gam e and w atch women's gymnastics. The fact that the gym nastics program attain s varsity level will not alter that. A more likely result of this legal settlement will be a financial strain on the U n iv ersity . D e sp ite its resources, the U niversity will be hard-pressed to com ply with the settlement without raising student fees. Another result will be the resent­ ment of those in men's soccer and crew program s. These guys have been trying for years without suc­ cess to reach varsity level and will likely not embrace the settlement. It seems that supporters of this d ecisio n have lost sig h t of the meaning of college athletics. They look at this as just another opportu­ nity to implement a system of quo­ tas to ensure the world looks more like they wish it would. If these people don't lighten up, they will take the fun out sports in order to fulfill their own schemes of social engineering. Lewis is an accounting senior. Flooding may ease off in Midwest Midwest flooding Feet above or below flood level (10:30 a.m. CDT Monday, July 19) T h e D a il y T e xa n Tuesday, July 2 0 .1 9 9 3 Page 5 Associated Press The sun shone. For much of the sw am ped, muddy M idw est, that was one of several signs M onday that the reg io n 's six-w eek flood onslaught might be starting to ease. O th er sign s: T h e M ississip p i R iv e r's record cre s t a p p a re n tly passed St. Louis; upriver, a bridge reopened and narrowed a 200-mile gap between open spans; and fore­ casters said rainfall may slacken in com ing weeks. The crisis wras far from over, however. Businesspeople and residents who couldn't wait to flush their toilets and take showers in Des Moines, Iowa, caused at least a day's delay in restoring water ser­ vice to 250,000 people whose taps have been dry for nine days. On Sunday night, the city's water- treatm ent plant, contam inated by flood waters July 11, began pump­ ing w ater back in to 810 m iles of m ain s and p ip es. But th e flow slow ed w hen p e o p le , a g a in st orders, tapped the water. Serv ice now w o n 't sta rt being restored until at least Wednesday, a Associateci rress Mark Richardson and Ron Buchanan play pool in Red s Again Tavern in Portage Des Sioux, Mo. day later than planned, said L.D. McMullen, the water plant's general manager. The water won't be fit to drink for several weeks. Des Moines is the largest U.S. city ever to go without running water for so long. Parts of south St. Louis were still under as much as 10 feet of water after the River des Peres, a concrete- lined drainage channel, overran a lev ee. H u n d red s of hom es w ere flooded. Streets leading into the area © ^ Montevideo disappeared in a shimmer of water edged with garbage. Evacuations continued in several Kansas com m unities, including at least 2,000 people in Manhattan and a mobile home park in Kansas City, after a series of severe th u n d er­ storms overnight. Parts of Wiscon­ sin and Illinois also remained flood­ ed from heavy weekend rain. T h ro u g h o u t the reg io n , m any ro ad s and rail lin es rem ained cloéed. Even if the heaviest rains are history, the flooding isn't going to recede quickly. The Mississippi, still swollen in its upper reaches in Minnesota, could rem ain abov e flood stag e down river for more than two weeks, said Bob Anderson of the Army Corps of Engineers. The crest was expected to reach C airo, 111., on Thursday; below th e ré , the riv e r b ecom es wider and deeper and will absorb the powerful flow from the north. And while the river remains high, levees protecting low-lying areas becom e in creasin g ly v u lnerable. "T h e longer the w ater stays at a flood stage, the greater the risk is to the levee system," Anderson said. Mississippi cresting, but no time to relax Associated Press ST . LO U IS — T h ey call it The C rest, the long -aw aited m om ent w h en rag in g w aters reach th eir highest level. And while the Mississippi appar­ en tly has peaked in St. L ou is, at almost 47 feet, it is no time to rest or relax. "W e're still in a danger period for the next week to 10 days. The water is well up on the levees," said Gary Dyhouse, a hydrologist at the Army Corps of Engineers. "O ur fears will decrease as the river decreases." “People feel a sense of relief, maybe they can get through this without any more damage.” N ational W eather Serv ice hydrologist — Tom D ietrich, The N ation al W eath er S e rv ice said the surging Mississippi proba­ bly crested in St. Louis at 46.9 feet Sunday night before dropping an in ch ea rly M ond ay. The riv er should fall slowly in the next few days, though Dyhouse said heavy rains up north could still push it up another inch or so. The crest is a pivotal moment — both psychologically and practically — but experts say it should not be considered a sign that life on the Mississippi soon will return to nor­ mal. "The good news is that the river has crested ," said Tom Dietrich, a National Weather Service hydrolo­ gist. "P eople feel a sense of relief, m aybe they can get through this without any more damage.' "The bad news is that it's going to stay high for q u ite a w h ile ,’ he added. "There's still a lot of water coming down the upper Mississip­ p i." River towns south of St. Louis, including historic Ste. Genevieve, still have not seen their highest lev­ els, and sandbagging continues. The river is expected to crest Wednes­ day at Cape Girardeau at 48.2 feet, 16 feet above flood stage. A 480-mile stretch of the Missis­ sippi from Dubuque, Iowa, to the mouth of the Ohio River is above flood stage. But those problems are S o u r c e : A c c u -W e a th e r , N ational W e a t h e r S e r v i c e AP/Wm. J. Castelto expected to disappear below the juncture of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers at Cairo, 111., where the river gets deeper and wider. At Cairo, "the Mississippi is like coming down a two-lane in the mid­ dle of rush hour entering an eight- lane superhighway in the middle of night," Dyhouse said. The Mississippi has been rolling so furiously that on Sunday, 7 mil­ lion gallons of water were passing through St. L ou is each se co n d , Dyhouse said. At that rate, he noted, it would take just 77 seconds to fill up the 131-foot-high Busch Stadium, which seats more than 57,000. SU PE. SAVER CpUrON STUDENT SPECIAL Makes the Difference Let SUPERCUTS treat you to a special $5.95 SUPERCUT™. That’s $2.05 off our regularly $8-priced SUPERCUT™. Good only at these locations: Park Green Center at Riverside and Pleasant Valley 3025 Guadalupe at 30th & Guadalupe 5730 Burnet Road at Burnet and Koenig UTS (Coupon required) Valid through August 4 ,1 9 9 3 •• 29fh & Kin tirando Across from Tetas Freni li Bread* !\l« Deliver) ! 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I COUPON — ------------ «UN Ask about our twilight rates 389-1070 • 2 miles east of I-35 on Riverside Dr. in Austin In clu d es co m p lete eye e x a m w Try the first enhancing-tinted disposable contact lenses available in soft shades of aqua royal hlu everereon (eyecaré) VISION C E N T E R S ^ V * Dr. James A. Dugas 19C4 Guadalupe (Bank One Mall - Free Parkina in Bank One Lot) 4 7 b - l 00C I m I) mi ' Ti \ w P a g e 6 T u es d a y . J u ¡y 20. 19 9 3 UNIVERSITY Nuclear consortium to examine role of plutonium from R esearch ers the T exas A&M University System, Texas Tech University and Amarillo technology plant Pantex will join UT researchers in the project. Pantex is one of 13 plants in the United States that make up the nation's “ weapon construction complex," said Michael Bourn, executive director of the Amarillo Economic Development Corporation. Although the U.S. Department of Energy will “downsize" most of these plants as a result of military budget cuts, Bourn said he hopes Pantex will be expanded to develop alternatives for nuclear technology, such as cancer treatment. But the expansion of plutonium research at Pantex will harm Amarillo, said Beverly Gattis, president of the Amarillo chapter of Serious Texans Against Nuclear Dumping. The radioactive substance can be inhaled and is carcinogenic, she said. “ Plutonium is one of the m ost deadly things mankind has to deal w ith ," Gattis said. But Klein said that is a “misconception" about plutonium, which he said also can be used for fuel in n u clea r-p o w e red su b ­ m arines and converted into electricity in nuclear power plants. He added that the fuel provides an alternative energy source to uranium, which must be mined. Gattis said the technology does not exist now to convert plu ton iu m into read ily available fuel as cheaply and safely as ura­ nium. " W e have got u ranium w h ich is far ch ea p er. The tech n o lo g y for u ranium ex ists," Gattis said. “ How long will it be until we need plutonium energy?" As a primary goal, the consortium will study the environmental impact of plutoni­ um, Klein said. The consortium will recruit an o v e rsig h t co m m ittee of u n iv e rsity employees and Amarillo citizens to partici­ pate in the Department of Energy's projects at Pantex. But Gattis said storing and converting the plutonium into usable energy is difficult. “Reprocessing is a dirty business," Gattis said. Bourn said expansion at Pantex will bene­ fit the Amarillo economy because it is the largest independent employer in the Texas Panhandle. “In terms of economic impact, it would be bigger than the super collider," he said. Kelly Ta b b Dally T exan Staff O ffic ia ls from the U n iv ersity and a n u clear tech n o lo g y p lan t in A m arillo announced Monday a newly formed con­ sortium to research “peaceful purposes" for plutonium. “ We are looking at rearranging the way thev operate and construct and dismantle w eapons," said Dale Klein, UT associate director for research in the college of engi­ neering. Japanese students get a taste of UT Peter Tropoli Daily Texan Staff In 1963, Kapsuni Lnouye, a foreign exchange student from Japan, graduated from the U n iv ersity as a Fulbright Scholar. Last week lnouye, now a high school principal in Japan, returned to Austin for the first time in 30 years heading a delegation of 37 visting Japanese students. Inouve and the stu d en ts, from the so u th ern Japanese seaport town of Oita, are participating in the sixth year of the "O ita in T exas" program. Oita is Austin's Japanese sister city. While interacting with students here and visiting sites in Austin, the students are studying English and getting a taste of dorm itory life while staying at Beauford T. Jester Center. The two-week trip is part of the Texas International Education C on sortiu m 's Texas Intensive English Program to help teach foreign students English. "O ur intent is for them to improve their English and to gain a better insight of American and Texan cul­ ture," said Maria McGivney Arrellaga, communica­ tions coordinator for the TIEC. Triney Yates, an instructor for the students, said before the students arrive, "th eir English is pretty basic" and that learning intensive English " is a real big jump ... [although they] have already done four years of reading and translation.“ Inouve remarked at the amount of change that has taken place in Austin in 30 years and said that he had a hard time finding things on campus. “When I first came over here, I thought it was a very spacious campus, but now I don't feel that," he said. "But there is one thing that has never changed here — Southern hospitality," lnouye added. The students had similar observations about Austin. Kazuyuki Abe, 17, called Austin a “cowboy town" and Rie Tashima, 17, said “ even though its really hot, it's a great place." H ow ever, some of the observ ations w ere m ore whimsical. Kentaro iw akiri, 15, was amazed at the w idth o f the streets here and said that he never dreamed of that until he left Japan. Several of the students also expressed a fear of crime in the United States, saying they see and read news stories that paint a crime-ridden picture of the United States. "Japanese kids are more sheltered than American k id s ," said David Fem ea, program officer for the TIEC. He added that the fatal shooting of a Japan ese exchange student in Louisiana last year received a lot of press coverage in Japan and that the Japanese find the lack of gun control in the United States "absurd." Kazuyuki Abe, 17, said the Japanese exchange stu­ dent was shot in Louisiana because of his “careless­ ness." Miwa Moiteke, 16, also agreed that the student was careless, but said that the idea of someone carrying a gun was scary. Auditors eye school over inmate grants Associated Press HOUSTON — A federal audit reveals a H ouston- based vocational school inflated attendance costs and improperly approved Pell grants for 3,370 state prison­ ers during a three-year period, a newspaper reported Monday. Auditors for the U.S. Department of Education say Microcomputer Technology Institute shouldn't have dis­ tributed the grants between 1988 and 1991, The Houston Post reported. The au d ito rs say b ecau se the p riso n ers w ere n 't required to pay anything beyond the amount of their grant, no tuition was charged so there was no need for “ A lm o st all inmate w ithdrawals from MTI program s are ca u se d by the in m ates’ release or transfer to another facility, MTI has absolu tely no control over these tra n sfe rs.” — George Lewis, M T I’s lawyer taxpayer assistance. Prison students account for more than 60 percent of MTT's enrollment, the audit said. MTI officials disputed the findings. Institute president R obert O ben h aus called the rep ort “ in co rrect and unfair." Education officials are expected to review the audit and d ecid e w hether to uphold the fin d in gs. If the departm ent rules against the sch ool, M TI could be forced to return as much as $5.7 million . " I cannot overstate the negative im pact that your audit will have on MTI if you continue to make these unjustified charges," Obenhaus wrote in a letter to fed­ eral auditors. The school based its tuition rates on an hourly charge of $4.42 for inmates. Its usual charge is $6 per hour. MTI programs for inmates include studies in office automation, computers, cooking, air conditioning and refrigeration and industrial cleaning and maintenance. Auditors claim the company also overstated living expenses needed by inmates. The report said inmates need about $1 every day to meet expenses. It claims the school received $1,700 per inmate, the maximum allowed for any student receiving Pell funds. A uditors also found that MTI designed its course schedule so few, if any, prisoners would graduate. The withdrawal rate at a Fort Worth program was 9 9 per­ cent. The average rate for the entire program was 68 per­ cent. “Almost all inmate withdrawals from MTI programs are caused by the inmates' release or transfer to another facility," said George Lewis, M TI's lawyer. “MTI has absolutely no control over these transfers.'A uditors agreed that the institute had no control over releases or transfers of prisoners. But they noted that MTI had offered a 70-day training program at the Fort Worth facilities, where stays ranged between 65 and 70 days. A brush with destiny Karen Bohac, a visual arts senior, is taking a summer painting class as part of her course requirements. Bohac, who wants to be an art teacher, plans to grad­ uate this December. Texas Exes seek more graduates The UT Ex-Students' Association will work through­ out this year to help sell higher education in Texas, the organization's new president said Monday. But the organization's biggest goal this year will be to raise awareness and participation of UT graduates in the organization, said John Barnhill, who also is a gen­ eral sales manager for Blue Bell Creameries Inc. Barnhill officially began serving as president of the Ex-Students' Association July 1. association must work harder on the retention of grad­ uates in the program, Barnhill said. "W e have several hundred additional names of grad­ uates," Barnhill said. "I feel like they need to be mem­ bers." A communications team, to be formed this year, will bring experts together in an effort to reach out to UT graduates, Barnhill said. Bamhill said the organization also has to convince Texans about the importance of higher education. 'We should do it at a time when the legislature is not I Despite the 55,000 graduates currently registered, the having a funding crisis," Bamhill said. Barnhill, who has been a member of the organization since he graduated in 1959, serves on the UT System Chancellor's Council and is a member of the Longhorn Foundation Advisory Council. Shuttle bus clips 2 cars north of campus A Capital Metro shuttle bus was involved in two minor traffic accidents just north of campus Monday. Two cars each suffered minor damage to the left-rear comers, and no one was injured in either crash. Four police cars responded to the accidents, which occurred just before 5 p.m. Police blocked off the south­ bound lane of University Avenue for almost an hour. A white Dodge Colt was reportedly hit first as the bus tried to make a left turn onto 29th Street from Guadalupe Street, said Rochelle Hall, 26, who was dri­ ving the Colt. Hall said the bus driver did not see her as he turned left, and the back of the bus hit the left rear comer of the Colt. The Colt sustained only minor damage. Minutes later, the same bus allegedly grazed the left rear corner of a gray Buick Century. Get the edge with Cliffs Notes. Cliffs Notes give you a greater understanding of the classics. More than 200 titles. Learn more and earn better grades as you study. / OFF THH DRAG TEXAS TEXTBOOKS tiversid« Place Shopping C«nl«r 2410 8 tost Riverside 4 4 3 - 1 2 5 7 V > 7 ™ I V / / ? OH THE DRAG TEXAS TEXTBOOKS 2338 Guadalupe 4 7 8 - 9 8 3 3 Guaranteed Approval TH ESIS & DISSERTATIONS Don’t gamble. Just rely on our 2 1 '/ears of expertise and your committee-approved thesis, dissertation or PR will be accepted-we guarantee it. Regular and rag content copies. Wide choice of inexpensive and premium bindings. P0 Box 80728. Lincoln. ME 68501 G IN N Y'S Dobie Mall • 21st & Guadalupe • 4 7 6 -9 1 7 1 • 7 days a week« Mon-Thur till midnight The Daily Tenon Cla//ified Ad/ 1 7 1 - 5 2 1 1 c a s a v e r d e r l o n s t 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 Daily Specials FTD • 4501 Guadalupe • On UT Shuttle Rt. Hook Up With PrO'Cuts rTisi $1 2801 GUADALUPE $6.95 REGULAR PRICE Merrill W . Russell D.D.S. " X e e d l o l o s s I ) c n t i s t r \ " 477-9282 1004 Mi'dic.il A rts Si. I o e e t e d o n l l u ' l \ K s h u t t l e r o u l e 2 b l o e k s f r o m t h e l e w sc h o o l I i m r r s j h ( Anlli ri n) hour ,i m e Am'pU'ti STATE & LOCAL Rape Crisis Center provides comfort, counseling Chris Schneidmiller Daily Texan Staff W alking inside the Austin Rape Crisis Center is like stepping into the office of a small, cozy business; not as somber as one might expect. But upon closer inspection the nature of the center becomes apparent. The walls are lined with posters and pamphlets calling for w om en to em pow er them selves against rape. The normal business conference room is replaced by a small room with cushioned seats and stuffed animals, designed to com­ fort sexual assault victims as they receive counseling. Since 1974, the center has provided coun­ seling and advocacy to women to help them regain control of their lives after a sexual assault or other act of sexual intrusion. "It's very important for a person to have someone there to provide support ... it can feel like they're going crazy, like they're out of control," said Kat Hammer, a case man­ agement counselor at the center. C enter em ployees cou nsel wom en on issues including incest and sexual harass­ ment, but most of the women at the center are counseled for sexual assault, said Lynn Thompson-Haas, the center's director. A counselor's involvement in a case may begin only minutes after an attack, when they meet the victim in the hospital. In the following weeks, the center provides coun- “It’s very important for a per­ son to have someone there to provide support... it can feel like they’re going crazy, like they’re out of control.” — Kat Hammer, Rape Crisis Center counselor seling, and help in dealing with police and medical services, including HTV testing. A fter an assau lt, many wom en suffer from "rape trauma syndrome," experienc­ ing nightmares, depression and other prob­ lems, Thompson-Haas said. Counselors can help rape victims for as long as necessary, sometimes for months or years, she said. tim being on trial as much as the perpetra­ tor," Johnson said. "The most important thing is just to listen to th em .... Get them to the stage that it's not the first thing they think about when they wake up in the morning," Thompson-Haas said. So far this year, 128 rapes have been reported in Austin and in 1992 there were 272, said Sgt. Charles Johnson. The center itself takes on 50 new cases each month and is currently handling about 300 cases. Johnson and Thompson-Haas both said that for each woman who reports being raped, eight other assaults go unreported. " I think th e re 's a stigm a attached to [rape.] There has been a history of the vic­ M any w om en do not w ant to su b ject themselves to a jury trial and public scruti­ ny, Thompson-Haas said. "Someone's going to get blamed, we just try to give them enough inform ation [to make the choice]," she said. Thom pson-H aas said cou nselors m eet with police officers, city attorneys and even schoolchildren to educate them on the reali­ ties of rape. Women should not be expected to fight back and increasing the danger to them ­ selves during a rape, she said. "If someone makes it out alive, they did the right thing," Thompson-Haas said. Killer bees confirmed in Valley man’s death Associated Press HARLINGEN — It's official: The honey­ bees that swarmed and killed an 82-year-old rancher last week were the dreaded African­ ized variety — better known as killer bees. "O ur lab has confirmed that the bees are Africanized, and that's all we can say offi­ cially because we have nothing to do with the autopsy," said Kim Kaplan, a spokes­ woman for the U.S. Department of Agricul­ ture in Greenbelt, Md. Final autopsy results are not yet available, but the pathologist who did the autopsy list­ ed the preliminary cause of death as acute fluid buildup in the lungs caused by insect stings. " I 'm alm o st p o sitiv e that the bees — whatever kind of species they were — were responsible for the cause of death," patholo­ gist Ruben Santos said. If the cause of death is confirmed, Lino Lopez would be the first person killed by Africanized bees in the United States since the aggressive variety migrated into Texas in 1990. He apparently tried to drive the bees out of a wall in an abandoned house by poking a stick wrapped with a burning burlap sack into the hive. Lopez was dead on arrival at a hospital, with about 40 stingers still attached to his body, authorities said. Bee researchers said the fatal swarming of the Starr County rancher demonstrates'that p eop le should call p est-co n tro l exp erts rather than trying to dispose of bee hives themselves. "D on't be trying to deal with them unless you know what you are doing," said Horace Van Cleave, an entomologist at Texas A&M University. Africanized bees look like the more com­ mon European honeybees and carry the same venom, but they are much more likely to swarm invaders of their nests. "If a person is hypersensitive to bees, it is somewhat immaterial how many stings they get," Van Cleave said, recalling an incident in w hich a man died of one sting by the European variety. Added Kaplan: "A fricanized honeybees aren't out looking for victims. They aren't out hunting. So if you don't go bugging them, you have less of a chance of them bug­ ging you." An entomologist brought a few colonies of African bees to Brazil in 1956. They escaped and cross-bred with local bees, and the so- called A fricanized bees slow ly m igrated north. The genetic migration was found to have reached Texas in the small town of Hidalgo in October 1990. Since then, the variety has been found in 58 South Texas counties and continues to spread. As Africanized honeybee genes passed from the tropics into more tem perate cli­ mates, they have mixed with the genes of European honeybees, said William Rubink, a research entomologist at the USDA's Honey­ bee Lab in Weslaco. "T h is may be the beginning of greater degrees of hybridization," Rubink said. South Texans can expect wild honeybee populations to becom e more Africanized, and therefore behave more aggressively, Rubink said. C oolin’ down Pam Cook, an employee of the Association of Retarded Citizens Channel 24, cool off at Barton Creek during their lunchtime jog of Texas, and her husband, Don Cadden, who works at KVUE from the YMCA. Barton Creek is in Zilker Park. Sean Gallup/Daily Texan Staff Study: no job loss with NAFTA Associated Press A m erican w o rk ers sh o u ld n 't worry that enactment of a free trade a g ree m en t w ith M exico w ould spark the flight of jobs south of the border, says a recently issued gov­ ernment report. In te re sts as d iv erse as lab or unions and erstwhile presidential can d id ate Ross Perot have cam ­ paigned against the North Ameri­ can F ree T rad e A greem en t on grounds it would cost U.S. jobs. But the C on g ression al Budget Office, in an analysis prepared for the Senate Finance Committee, sug­ gests that most U.S. workers have nothing to fear from a closer trade relationship with Mexico. "C o n tra ry to som e com m only expressed fears about NAFTA, there would not be a w holesale m ove­ ment of manufacturers to Mexico to take advantage of the lower average wage," the study said. In the short term, NAFTA could spur a net gain of 35,000 to 170,000 Am erican jobs, the congressional researchers concluded. At worst, they said, 200,000 jobs would be lost over a decade. "W ith almost 120 million people Immigration Law Matt Trevena Lawyer 1012 Rio Grande 476-1959 Honors Graduate U.T. Law School Member State Bar of Texas Member American immigration Lawyers Association. Not Certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization. BETTER GRADES, M O R E FREE T IM E , m i d M O RE FUN, t i n s f a i l s e n i e s t c M : ■ Personalized Study Scheduling that serves especially to fit YOUR needs! ■ Teet-taking and study strategies tanging from "How To Ace Any Test, Including Finals" to "Turning Any Hard Class Into An Easy, Carefree Class" * All-around study tips that are simple, effective, and to the point! ■ And Much Mora! TO235 1- 800- 707-8839 Dtlmil itSilB luoMir1 C o ll to , t c c o i d o d d o t o i ls N O W o n f t to c o ,v o o S P F C lA l F iO N llS ! D o n t w o it u n t il t lto s o n io s to r b e g in s . B t P K C P A K E D N OW ! cu rre n tly em p loyed , N A F T A 's ex p ected co n trib u tio n to to ta l em p lo y m en t is n e g lig ib le ," the study's authors said. Their findings were challenged by a vocal congressional opponent of the trade agreem ent and a think tank that has projected 550,000 U.S. jobs lost over 10 years if the pact is implemented. "American jobs are too important to be sacrificed on such weak analy­ ses," Rep. Marcy Kaptur said Mon­ day. The Ohio Democrat, who earli­ er this y ear toured sev eral U .S. plants that have relocated to Mexi­ co, called into question the econom­ ic model used for the Congressional B u d g et O ffice stu d y and oth er assessments of the trade agreement. "T h ere is a trem endous lack of d ep e n d ab le on NAFTA's employment effects," she said. in fo rm atio n The Economic Policy Institute, a labor-funded think tank opposed to NAFTA, also questioned the CBO findings. "W e don't believe those job losses will be more than offset by job creation," EPI's Thea Lee said Monday. The budget office report said that despite Mexico's lower wages, the United States retains several eco­ nomic advantages. Among them are a h igh ly p ro d u ctiv e lab or force, good infrastructure, large concen­ tration of high-incom e consumers and a stable political environment. Lee said Mexican workers have proven them selves up to the pro­ ductivity levels of their American counterparts. "If you look at specific plants, for example the automobile plants that GM and Ford have in M exico, they are state-of-th e-art, high-tech, brand-new plants with well-trained workers producing on the order of 85 percent — som e­ times 100 percent — of U.S. levels even though the w ages they are paid are o n e-ten th of A m erican workers," she said. O pponents have used concerns over job loss and the environment to fan o p p o sitio n in C o n g ress, which is likely to consider the pact this fall. The Clinton administration is negotiating side agreem ents to address concerns over the environ­ ment, job loss and import surges. Overall, CBO said, im plem enta­ tion of NAFTA would have little U.S. impact— in part because Mexi­ co's economy is less than 5 percent the size of the U.S. economy. Austin groups receive federal grants Ralna Anderson Daily Texan Staff T hree A ustin-based org an iza­ tions were among the 29 groups in the South w est to receive grants from the U.S. Environmental Pro­ tection Agency for projects promot­ ing a clean environment, according to recent EPA reports. This is the second year the EPA has aw arded g ran ts, to ta lin g $170,000 for this year, to organiza­ tions and groups that create pro­ gram s to im prove and en h an ce environmental education. Austin groups receiving grants are K eep A u stin B ea u tifu l, the Austin Independent School District and the p u blic in form ation and education office of the Texas Water Commission. The program w as estab lish ed through the National Environmen­ tal E d u catio n A ct, w hich w as signed into law in 1990. The act required that the EPA solicit and select suitable environmental pro­ jects from proposals nationwide. In 1992 the EPA received over 3,000 applications from around the nation requesting $100 million, but the agency announced July 6 more than 200 grants for a total of about $2.4 million in grants. The largest grant in the South­ west region was a $12,000, award­ ed to the Keep Austin Beautiful organization. "T h e EPA looks for innovative and creative programs," said Robin Loving, executive director of Keep A u stin B ea u tifu l. "W e w ere delighted that our project was cho­ sen." The project is called "The Green Classroom" and it brings senior cit­ izens together with young children to teach them gardening and com­ posting. "T h e children learn by d oin g ," Loving said. " It instills environ­ mental ethics in people." The TWC received a grant for a program which utilizes a trained magician to teach grade school chil­ dren about the environment. "A trained magician will deliver in an entertaining way programs on water conservation and other facts on pollution co n tro l," said D oretta C on rad , TW C fed eral funds coordinator. "W e hope this program will give good facts and teach them good ch o ices about environmental products and prac­ tices." The grant winners are chosen by a peer review, which is chosen by the EPA, and the EPA allocates a portion of its budget to finance the awards. In Dallas, the Sierra Club Foun­ dation received a grant for its pro­ gram, Inner City Outings. The program provides outdoor experiences for inner-city and dis­ abled children, said David Crabb, chairman of the Inner City Outings Committee. The Sierra Club has 38 communi­ ty outreach programs of this type around the nation. "W e educate the children by tak­ ing them hiking, backpacking, and canoeing," Crabb said. "They are able to take an up-close look at nat­ ural environments and learn very valuable facts." The award grant will enable the o rg an izatio n to buy and rep air their camping equipment and fund more extensive camping trips, he said. This is the first year the EPA has funded the Inner Outings program. Usually it was paid for through pri­ vate and corporate donations. EXAM CONTACTS Starting at s99* Complete ’ price includes exam’ 1 pair d e a r daily- wear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1 si follow up. EXPIRES July 30,1993. WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VAUD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT 477-2282 fft-6 M /C VISA AMX DISC j5^ MCAT E x p e rt Tea c h e rs P e rm a n e n t C e n te rs T otal Training F IN D O U T M O RE AT O N E OF OUR FREE M CAT S EM IN A R S : 6 p.m. Tuesday, July 20 The Austin Center 811 West 24th Street Austin, TX 78705 C all 472-EXAM KAPLAN RULES ATTENTION FACULTY AND STAFF INSURANCE INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS Insurance informational meetings have been scheduled to provide you with informa­ tion about the group insurance changes for 1993-94. Representatives will be avail­ able to answer your questions. Please attend one of these meetings to have your insurance questions answered. MAIN CAMPUS: Date July 21st July 23rd July 27th July 30th ARL/BRC: .Time Location 12:00 noon - 2:00 p.m. Welch 1.316 12:00 noon - 2:00 p.m. 12:00 noon - 2:00 p.m. 12:00 noon - 2:00 p.m. Welch 1.316 Welch 1.316 Welch 1.316 August 6th 12:00 noon - 2:00 p.m. Welch 1.316 August 5th 11:30 - 1:00 p.m. The Commons Large Auditorium t Page 8 Tuesday, July 20. 1993 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT H " T Exhibit traces roots of historical El Camino Real S u za n n e Bonifert ; e x a n S t a r D a ily ART Other describe mais u‘ horse ai the trail W h e th e r or not you slept through vour six required hours of histo­ ry, El Cam ino Real: Un S endero His tor co is an impressive exhibit that presents jo u rn e y a through the last three centuries of histor\ this trade in v o lv in g ________________ J route in .New Mexico. The exhibit displays 36 p a n e ls of d ra w ­ ings, paintings and photographs that trace the history surrounding El Camino Real. This travel artery was an important geo­ graphical feature of the Southwest, influenc­ ing culture, trade and exploration. The first panel details the roots o f El Camino Real, which was developed from 16th centurx Indian trails. The panel also describes how the tra il's name, w h ic h means "King's H ig h w a y ," was applied to all main gov rr.rnert roads in the Spanish ami New World colonies. p ersp :tive* T h e the tim e p erio d i exhibit inchides pho togniphs of i trom eiaboirate caithied r a !» to t>reath talcine landscapes D raw ITU;s of cereri nial dirCSS/ building antJ hunt usic scores are also in cl tided Ir, addith i n ; tools and p h o to s of In d ia r Apache Ind ians ei n a m e s anc1 OCCL>P itio ris of tographed Look might even find Gero>nim< al p,anels : tow ac tual O n ie p an el show in g ; pro vided Siame of the tilo se p>ho- fvh and you . » b e i % enou 1 .1,, In addition to the t •a ne' s, ther0 a r e sex eral photograph C a n n irenderlings of P■resen t--day landscapes in New Vlexic q S o i t te of the ren­ derings are so reur tim e to experience this well-done exhibit covering the "then and n ow " of El Camino Real. The last panel reads, "T h e configuration of the trail itself and the arti­ f a c t s scattered nearby provide indispensable knowledge about this fascinating aspect of New Mexico's history'." So if you go just to enjoy yourself, be care- fui — y o u might actually learn something. Set, costumes make play ( *K M ic h a e l Z e y D aily Texan Staff It's been 50 years since the debut, and O klahom a! is still O K. M ore than that, it is the wonderful musi­ cal experience that has been capti­ vating audiences for generations, Oklahoma! marks the 35th anniver­ sary for the Zilker Park Summer M u sical. Fo r 3 decades, Z ilk e r Park has been providing summer entertainment that is both great fun for the entire family, and best of all free. Oklahoma! was Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammer- stein IPs first collaboration. It was a huge smash that lit­ erally changed the entire course of musical theater at the time. The title song (which was written in under an hour) is a classic. And this show couldn't ask for a bet­ ter production. This whimsical tale takes place in the Oklahoma terri­ tory before it was admitted into the Union as a state, and revolves around its inhabitants. The story’ centers on a pair of romantic triangles. In one triangle, Ado Annie (Jacki Roach), the well-intentioned girl who just can't say no, is tom between two suitors, the lecherous Ali Hakim (Scotty Roberts) and the dusty-brained W ill Parker (Kirk Addison). All three turn in amusing comic performances without ever trying to play a scene-steal­ ing contest. The other triangle includes C urly (B ill H enry) and Laurie Williams (Am y Barker), the terminally cute cou­ ple, and the obsessed Jud Frye (Joe York). Henry and Barker are wonderfully memorable as the young lovers, g ivin g justice to classics like Oh, W hat a B eautifu l Momin', Surrey With a Fringe on Top and People Will Say We're in Love. But York turns in the most moving perfor­ mance, ranging from comic facetiousness in Pore Jud is Dead to repressed hostility in his stirring soliloquy, Lonely Room. Director Bil Pfuderer keeps the stage busy with flow­ ing movement. People move on and offstage in large groups with the greatest of ease. Not once did the action seem to sag. He did an admirable job on keeping tight control of such a large cast. Credit Betty Siegel's cos­ tumes and Ja y Jag im 's sets for givin g this m usical Broadway-caliber production values. A do Annie and Will practice that Oklahoma! love. OKLAHOMA! Authors: Richard Rodgers and O scar Hammerstein 11 Director: BiS Pfuderer StarringrBili Henry, Amy Barker, Jo e York Playing at: Z ilke r H illsid e Theatre Date: Through Aug. 14 The only complaint is the sound. It's a little hard to hear in the far back. If they could just turn it up a bit. There is an old anecdote concerning the show's cre­ ato rs, Rodgers and Hammerstein. Whenever anybody' had criticized them directly for making their shows too schm altzy and sentimental. Rodgers and Hammer- stein's response would be, "Yes, they are." This is something one needs to remember when view­ ing Oklahoma! or any other Rodgers and Hammerstein musical. They are sentimental and saccharin, and they make no bones about it. They are meant to be frivolous, not thought-provoking. After the show, expect the catchy songs to be running through you r head, as opposed to any important message. This is why Oklahoma’ is so perfect for the Zilker Park Sum m er Musical. Grab your blanket and picnic blanket and get out there early before all the best spots are tak­ en. But regardless of your distance to the. stage, Okla­ homa! is still a pleasant and entertaining way to spend a warm summer night. General Cinema T U E S D A Y IS B A R G A iN D A Y ALL SEATS ALL SH0M-ALL DAY & NIGH! TOO! $ 3 0 0 TUESDAY ONLY EXCEPT: JURASSIC PARK, LAST ACTION H ER O , ROOKIE OF THE YEAR IN THE LINE O F FIRE FREE WILLY BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6pm G E N E R A L CINEMA HIGHLAND 10 T [ 1-35 a t M I D P I E FISKVILLE R D 4 5 4 - 9 5 6 2 I j F R E E WILLY 12:05 2:25 4:40 7:15 9:25 PG THX j IN T H E LINE O F FIR E ON 2 SCREENS R 1 40 4:25 7:10 9 55 THX | JU R A S S IC P A R K PG13 35 4 15 7 00 9:40 6-Track Digital THX 2:20 5:10 8:00 DOLBY I R O O K IE of the Y E A R 12:15 2:30 5:00 7:20 9 45 PG »out SNOW W H IT E 1:00 3.-00 5 :0 0 7:00 G sitRfO I SON IN LAW 12:002:004:006:008:0010:00PG13SURtO SLEEPLESS IN SEATTLE 12:303.005 157:50 10:05 PGooin : DENNIS the MENACE 1:00 3:15 5:30 7:40 9:55 PG SURfo I C U F F H A N G E R 9:15Rsitiwo M E N A C E D S O C I E T Y 2:15 4:40 7:15 9:30 R s t e r e o G E N E R A L CINEMA GREAT HILLS 8 ' I U S 183 & G R E A T H IL L S TRAIL 7 9 4 -8 0 7 6 F R E E WILLY 12 45 3:00 5:10 7:25 9:40 PG TH X WEEKEND AT BERNES II 1 10 3:30 5:40 8:00 10:05 PG THX ROOKIE of the Y EA R 1 00 3:15 5:30 7:45 10:00 PG tXXir SON ifi LA*» i:05 3:25 5:45 7:55 10:05 Hitt ikh.it DENNIS the MENACE 1:15 3:20 5:25 7.30 9:35 PG doesy :bt L A S T A CTIO N H E R O 1 45 4:30 7:10 9:45 PG13ootir ONCE UPON A FO R EST 1 00 3:00 5:00 7 00 9.00 G s t e r e o GUILTY A S SIN 2:20 4:50 7:20 9 40 R STEREO SHOWTIMES FOR 7/19 & 7/20 J W A X 2 :1 5 7 :2 5 1 2 :0 0 n M A R iA Z f lf 4 : 4 5 9 : 3 5 M i k e & S p i k e ' * A L L S I C K & t w i s t i :d F e s t i v a l o f A n i m a t i o n « 1 1 : 4 5 _________ S I I ■— .«J —- ft,.. a - BUY, SELL, RElSnr, TRADE . . „ I WANT ADS . » . 471-5244 If yo u ’re taking one of these tests, take Kaplan first. We teach you exactly what the test c o v e rs and show you the test taking strategies y o u ’ll need to score your best. No one teaches you to think like the test m akers better the Kaplan. For more information call 472-EXAM K A P L A N The answer to the test question. El Camino Real: Un Sendero Historico show s at Franklin Plaza through W ednesday. M ic h a e l H ide/D aily T e x a n Staff ‘W illy ’ gets 2 flippers up S c o tt C a lo n ic o D aily T e x a n Staff FILM T h e feel-good the m ovie of sum m er has finally arrived in it .Austin and comes the shape of a 22- foot, 7,000- pound orca by the name of Keiko. in Free W illy is the heartwarming tale of a troubled youth and the friendship that he strikes up w ith a k ille r w hale. Check those societal constraints at the door and feel like a kid again. If you like to watch whales cavorting in slow motion, then Free Willy is a definite must-see. Jesse (Jason James Richter) is a tough yet sensitive juvenile delin­ quent forced by a cruel, uncaring society to live by his w its on the streets of the city- W h ile spray- painting his w ay to fame and for­ tune, however, he is finally nabbed by Johnny Law. D w ig h t (M y k e lti W illia m s o n ), Jesse's tough yet sensitive social worker, gives Jesse a choice: H e can live with a set of foster parents and clean up his graffiti, or he can go to ju v e n ile hall. K n o w in g there wouldn't be much of a movie if he w ent to jail, Jesse w is e ly opts to clean up his mess and move in with his foster parents — the G re e n ­ woods (Michael Madsen and Jayne A tkin son). M ichael M adsen (the psycho guy in R eservoir Dogs) is miscast as Jesse's foster father. It turns out the place Jesse was spray-painting is an am usem ent park, home of the w ily and untrain- able killer whale W illy (Keiko). Jesse is introduced to W illy by Randolph (A ugust Schellenberg), the park's wise N ative American handyman. P R ESID IO T H E A T R E S WE R E BIG ON B A R G A I N S HEY STUDENTS! YES, FOLKS. That's right! Now students pay only $4.00 w/ID - Bargain matinees until 6:00 pm $3.00 - Children and seniors $3.00 - and only $5.00 for adult admission! For Village Only. STUDENT OISCOUWTS 0AILŸ i WITH VAUÖ STUDENT I.Ö. , RIVERSIDE 8 IN RIVERSIDE M ALL 448-0008 IN THE LINE OF FIRE (R) It 45? 15 5 00 7 30 10 15 HOCUS P0CUS (pg> I 15 3 15 5 45 8 0!) 10 30 NO PASStS H O DISCOUNT TICKETS SMART STEREO NO PASSES N O DISCOUNT TICKETS SMARI SJEREO FREE W ILLY {PG) 12:30 3:00 5:15 7:20 9:45______ SLEEPLESS IN SEATTLE 46 B E A K ly n n f o r e s t H rjn U C A N 'T BEEN1. Dear Cameron, Douglas. Kris, Dave, and men with egos so big, they can’t take a little jibing. First, please reference Sara Hickman's song Take it like a man. Elvin Chaq, at least, made a valid criticism. You men, however, have taken things a bit too far, and frankly, I think everone is tired of reading about my strip in Firing Line. There are by far, more poignant, pressing issues of the day then one terribly drawn and written comic strip. I spoke with you, K ris, on the phone, and I agree that the media bears some responsibility in the kinds o f views and stereotypes it propa­ gates; but I think you sadly underestimate the reader’s intelligence in being able to distinguish between fact and fiction in the comics page. The fact that many men have trouble putting down the toilet seat is unquestionable. The fact that many women have been manipulating many men ( and vice versa) for eons is also unquestion­ able. If you men can not appreciate mocking these facts, then I truly feel sorry for you. Poor, ignorant Douglas, who writes, “ this concept [] portrays women as the subservient being that relies on men for all their needs,” (in reference to a woman requesting to her subser­ vient man to take her to ‘ ‘dinner at the most insanely expensive restaurant [he] can find” ), only shows his innocence of never having been sweetly wrapped around a woman’s little finger. Calling my strip, “ men-hating” is a bit TAKE IT FRoMME- W ortEN ARE M PO 66I0LE1. your friend, Lynn extreme. It is an irony that only men have chosen to write about this injustice that I call “ Con­ science Calling.” Boucher, Cohen, and M iller have obviously never appreciated satire. Cer- tainly.lam no Sw ift, and my strip is no A Modest Proposal—but thanks for showing me that I sure can press the right buttons! c o n s c ie n c e c a ll i n g V . DATS WHElJ '*?Ü Ju& T UiAkTT HAD ONFOF-TUCSG TO A B tf e F A l M t J TOTAULV? Alte I THûse OME OF , teA/N1 ly n n f o r e s t F m p ï ï ï ï W HAT THE HELLj WAi> E ATWfr Çs. b i Z W S + K T ) Tow 'l “ S?M>RENa K & a lJ j l vA/\*Vi( *3 k ^ 3 r 1 A o H t- e .- fk m i 6*t\p yr\CoRVr0\\ii\y Tov^cM<$ K-et lip - S .________________ ' f o r so lora wVvjle, vaTí+oMa o M ^ h u j < ' r e r w m s Ju e n , " ÍC X 3 5 f ^rvxoKifl^ dop«, . f m 's Nice.. / \ ll I 'v e b e e n LEA ftN lN Q is Hew To Plio T A, GIANT R06c5i. I'VE- /AAftTEREp THE WEAPONS *FLKvHT CobHToL5„. Of COURSE, ITS JvKT A VlPtO G|/W£. LvvJhAT f\ WASTE. OF TlAAE-f A pe[_eori ’M.m? He’s Beem IEAWWç THE. DIFFERENCE. BETWEEN HAUUCINOGENIC MUSHROOMS and e n c h a n t e d tóaos t o o l s * [wastes, whltej of vs / u ONE VWT NOT ^ oxM«5,0Ne * * i w T K v — < m i Hg u oe$ A é W . tv t U€ K iug. , T T v n M T . t 6HVÜ A 6V9 WHO looYW Mofleo» Cw?AhW 5H& fcATHrtoofA ' J]0a w , r / ( i ) S r \ t j J lppU3r JE>£Cf^ tiEl, Wße TA6 I* THE place WritRE R e u te t Afci-EeKvTi'fcJ wHo Di&APPe£fz^ I* A efcV Comí to l\ye y O f o v r T H E THc/n Pm !» / (« jv rf \ i0! ' fi# / [> ^ n r - f t i y f f i 6¿rem ry IM X W M ,---- s e r r a r o r CDVY F M U C K I N G f E ß ß L f " r na m i * in m , \ m w. is me m .HE » . I u«l ma KINW RWED 1 B R / f f il By Joe Martin TH E FUSCO BROTHERS by J.C. Duffy i t s B £ E n a l o v e l y e v e n i n g , a l v i n ... UU0ULl> V O U L IK E TD CO H E IN FOR ( § /e e fs TP/KF & ¿ ¡“ To TO pit Mr. Boffo . 7 ^ L E A S T L I V E L Y t o m b AN A L 0 O M w r m TU E. \ÑOt2Q " Ü N P L U Ô Ô E P ' IN T H E T I T l H t Page 10 Tuesday, July 2 0 ,1 9 9 3 T h e D a il y T e x a n Great Locations! 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. m [ c * » To Piace a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 Classified Word Ad Rates Charged by the «ore Based on a 15 word minimum, th e foKowtng rates apply 1 d a y . $ 6 1 5 2 days __________ ___ $11 7 0 3 days $ 1 6 6 5 .... — -........ .—.-$ 2 0 4 0 4 days 5 days $ 2 3 .2 5 ........ First two words may be all capital letters. $ 2 5 for each additional w o rd m le tte r s MasterCard and visa accepted c a p ita l _____ Classified Display Ad Rates Charged by the column inch. One column mch minimum. A vanety of type faces and sizes and b o rd e rs available. Fall ra te s Sept 1-May X ). 1 to 21 column inches per month. $ 9 2 0 per col. inch over 21 column inches per month Call for rates. FAX ADS TO 471-6741 8:OÜ-5:OÜ/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication TRANSPORTATION 10—Mise Autos 20-Sports-Foreign Autos 3 0 —Trucks-Vans 40-Vehicles to Trade 50-Servtce-Fteper 60-Parts-Accessones 70-Motorcycles 80-Bicycles 90-Vehicies-Leasîng 10O-Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES ■ M E R C H A N D IS E 1 9 0 - Appliances 2 0 0 —Fumiture-Househ old 210-Scereo-TV 220-Computers-Equiprnent 2 3 0 —Photo-Ca mera 240-Boats 250-Musical Instruments 260-Hobbies 270-Machinery-Equipment 280-Sportmg-Campmg Equipment 1 1 0 - Services 120-Houses 130-Condos-T ownhomes 140—Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160-Ouplexes-Apartments 170-Wanted 180—Loans 2 90-Fumrture-Appliance Rental 300-Garage-Rummage Sales 310-Trade 320-W anted to Buy or Rent 330-P ets 340—Longhorn W art Ads 345—Misc. RENTAL 350-Rental Services 360-Fumished Apts 370-Unfumished Apts. 3 8 0 —Furnished Duplexes 3 90—Unfurnished Duplexes 4 0 0 —Condos-T ownhomes 4 1 0 —Furnished Houses 4 2 0 —Unfurnished Houses 4 2 5 —Rooms 4 3 0 —Room-Board 435—Coops 4 4 0 —Roommates 450-Mobile Homes-Lots 4 6 0 —Business Rentals 470-Resorts 480-Storage Space 4 9 0 - Wanted to Rert-Lease 5 0 0 —Misc. ANNOUNCEMENTS 510-Ertertainment*Tickets 5 2 0 —Personals 530—Travel-Transportation 5 4 0 —Lost & Found 5 5 0 —Licensed Child Care 5 6 0 —Public Notice 570—MusicMusiaans EDUCATIONAL 580-Musical Instruction 590-Tutormg 600-instruction Wanted 610-M tsc. Instruction BSSES 6 2 0 —Legal Services 6 3 0 —Computer Services 640-Exterminators 650-Moving-Hauling 660-Storage 670-Patntm g 680-Office 690-Rental Equipment 7 0 0 —Furniture Rental 7 1 0-Appliance Repair 720-Stereo-TV Repar 7 3 0 —Home Repair 740-Bicycle Repair 7 5 0 —Typing 760-M tsc. Services EMPLOYMENT 770-Employment Agencies 7 80—Employment Services 7 9 0 -P a rt Time 800-General Help Wanted 810-Office-Clencal 820—Accounting-Bookkeepmg 8 3 0 —Administrative- Management 840—Sales 850—Retail 860—Engmeemg-T echnical 870-Medical 880—Professional 890—Qubs-Restaurants 9 0 0 —Domestic Household 9 1 0 —Positions Wanted 9 2 0 - Work Wanted BUSINESS 9 30—Business Opportunities 940—Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED ADVERTISING TERMS In in th e e v e n t of e r r o r s m ad e advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a.m the first day, as the publishers are re s p o n s ib le fo r only ONE in c o rr e c t insertion. All claims for adjustments should be m ade not la te r then 3 0 days a fte r publication. Pre-paid kills receive credit slip if requested at time of cancellation, and if am o u n t exceeds $ 2 . 0 0 . Slip m u s t be presented for a reorder within 9 0 days to be valid. Credit slips are non-transferrable. In c o n s id e ra tio n of th e D aily T e x a n 's a c c e p ta n c e of a d v e rtis in g copy fo r publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harmless, Texas S tu d en t Pub lication s and its o ffice rs, employees, and agents against all loss, lia b ility , d a m a g e , and e xp e n s e of w h a ts o e v e r n a tu re arising ou t of th e copying, p rin tin g , or publishing of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney's fees resulting from damns of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, plag iarism and copyright and trademark infringement T R A N S P O R T A T IO N M E R C H A N D IS E R E N T A L R E N T A L R EN T A L R E N T A L R E N T A L R E N T A L R E N T A L 10 - Misc. Autos 2 2 0 - Computers- Equipment jm 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 - U irf. Apts. 1 9 8 8 FORD M u sto n g -lx, b lu e , 4 cyi, outomotic, a go o d jtudenf car. $ 2 2 5 0 C o ! 2 8 0 - 6 2 6 8 o f fe r 6 :0 0 . 7 3-58 20 - Sports-Foreign Autos 1 9 8 4 A'JDI 5 0 0 0 S turb o, le o th e r in te r io r , t e m e tt e , p o w e r s u n ­ r o o f/ w m d o w j/lo c k s , excellent con­ d itio n . $ 2 0 0 0 G e o r g e 4 5 0 - 0 1 6 5 /4 7 1 - 7 7 1 1 e x te n s io n 2 1 2 . 7-14-5B 30 - Trucks-Vans M T V M A Z D A AC, 1 9 9 0 A M / F M c a s s e tte s te re o , p o w e r w m dow s, p o w e r locks, 4 6 K , m a­ B e a u tifu l- lo o ks lik e n e w - ro o n 8 3 7 -3 6 8 5 o r 3 3 9 - oniy $ 1 1 9 5 1996 7-20-58 8 0 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Cost!!! BUCK’S BIKES 928-2810 R E A L ESTATE SALES 11 0 - Services EXPERIENCED C A M P U S re a l es­ tate sales s p e cia ls! A ll ca m p u s areas. G overnm e nt repos Jerry Oaves PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 7-1-20B- B 1 2 0 -H ouses RESTORED 1 9 1 7 Italianette. 911 W . 2 1st, quiet street 1 7 3 5 s q .ft., 3 -1 /4 bedrooms, 2 -1 /2 both. Din­ in g r o o m , f ir e p la c e , b a s e m e n t. $ 1 6 2 ,0 0 0 477-6871 7-9-206 130 - Condos- Townhom es ELY PROPERTIES 476-1976 Invest in the future Buy instead of rent Condos starting mid-30's U N IV E R S IT Y P E N T H O U S E . 1 2 0 0 *q ft 2-2. Blocks to cam pus. C o n tro lle d access, W / D $ 8 5 k . Ely P ro p e rtie s 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 . 7 -1 2 - 20B-8 5% D O W N . Q u a lify in g assum p­ tio n . W e s t C a m p u s C o n d o , I B R / lo f t , s e c u rity , W / D , 5 1 . 9 K 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-9-2088 2 0 0 - Fum iture- Household ♦ A A A * A A A A A A • * FREE DELIVERY > For UT S tud en ts ' J * Full S*» w/Frem# i (.T w in Set w/Frsrne 4 f « Drw. Chext ^ D reue r w/Mirror A* Sofas H 5-Piee* Dinette ,■ Desk. Lamp, Chair j " * 109.95 ’ l" S 8 9 .9 5 ) ► S 49 9 5 ', h *139.95 ^ *159.95 )► *129 95 ) ► ( 79.95 ._ Centex Furniture ^ ^ W holesale * ■* *9618 N. Lamar 1 (2001 S. Lamar 450-098« k 445-5808 ) ► ♦ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ # Q r a n d t * W G Furniture, Lighting & Accessories 1 Hardwood Beds...............$260 Kitchen Table................... $225 Mattress (Q)..................... $125 Table........................... «., .$ 65 Futons........................ $250 “ Free Catalog **Free Delivery Call 474-2755 PRE-OWNED FURNITURE HOME & OFFICE Homeless Furniture Delivery 331-4455 *H w y 183 N M-Sat 10-7; Sun 12-6 TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS CALL 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 C O M P U T E R S ! ! C o m p u te rs a n d p e rip h e ra ls previously ow ned by local as­ sociation at g a ra g e sale p ric­ IB M P S /2 m a ch in e s in ­ es c lu d in g 8 5 1 3 m onitors, hard d r iv e s a n d e x te n d e d k e y ­ b o a rd s from $ 1 8 0 fo $ 3 7 5 M o d e m s , AT system b o a rd s and more! Call Linda at 370-1305 M onday through Friday for information and directions. LONGHORN W A N T AD S M IC R O M A S H C P A Exam S tu d y S o ftw o r e fo r M a c in to s h . P a id $ 7 5 0 . S e ll $ 5 0 0 n e g o tia b le . O th e r study guides a v a ila b le also. C a ll Yvette 4 4 8 -1 9 4 9 . 7-14-5B MUST SELL! Panasonic W o rd Pro­ ce s s o r w / e x t e r n a l d is k m e m o ry a n d 7 -lin e screen. G re a t C o n d i­ tio n ! Tutorial disk a n d m anual in­ 7-15- cluded 5B 4 5 2 -7 2 5 5 $17 5 T V. $ 1 2 5 , VCR $ 1 2 5 , c o rd le s s p h o n e $ 3 5 , a n s w e rin g m a c h in e $ 3 5 , vacuum $ 4 0 , re ce ive r $ 7 5 , turn table $75 , cassette deck $ 7 5 3 3 9 -3 1 4 6 7-14-56 LARGE OFFICE style desk, $ 1 0 0 S u p e r s in g le w a te r b e d , p a d d e d r a ils , h e a te r, $ 1 2 5 . C a ll a n y ­ time, 4 7 6 -2 5 7 4 7-19-5NC W A S H E R & d ry e r, G e n e ra l Elec­ tr ic , w h ite , e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n , $ 2 0 0 ,9 9 0 0 6 5 9 7-16-5B T W O KEYBOARD m ahoga ny Bald­ w in organ $ 3 0 0 . Antique six foot c a w fo o ! bathtub $ 3 0 0 . C a ll Tom 8 3 6 -6 9 7 3 . 7 ! 6-56 THREE OAKS & PECAN SQUARE A P A R T M E N T S • 1 BDR/1 BA • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Community Atmosphere • On Shuttle • No Application Fee • Preleasing • On-site manager • Affordable deposit 4 5 1 - 5 8 4 0 4 0 9 W . 3 8 th S t. DISCOUNTS ON ALL 2 BR APTS. CONTROLLED ACCESS SECURITY GATE (KEY or COOE) NOW PRELEASING Only One I BR Left TV STAND w ith glass d o o rs $ 5 0 , s o fa -la rg e size $ 100, study ta b le w ith ch a ir a n d la m p $ 1 0 0 . 4 4 2 - 7 3 0 8 , N ancy or Daniel. 7-l6-5nc All of the dmenities:. ? M icrow ave Oven s Ceiling Fans 7-8-206-8 1 9 8 6 FORD E s c o rt, 4D R , A u ­ to m a tic , A / C , C u s to m -tin i S ell as is $ 9 7 5 /O B O C a ll 8 - 5 ,M-F, 4 7 1 -5 4 2 2 , Destin 7-l6-5ne FULL-SIZE BED $ 5 5 . 0 5 5 7 7-19-56 C a ll 4 8 0 - MUST SELL Brother W o rd Proces­ s o r -m o d e l K e y ­ 3 4 0 0 . b o a rd /p rin te r and m onitor. G rom ­ mar Check. D isks/ribbon included H a rd ly used $ 2 0 0 O B O . 7 9 4 - 9 7 6 1 , leave message. 7-19-5N C USED CARPET. G o o d s h a p e B ro w n 1 1 'x 2 5 ‘ , 8 'x 9 ', 1 0 ' x l l ' , blue 9 'x 13' $ 1 0 each C a ll 323- 2 8 8 6 leave message 7-20-5P Totally Autom atic Kitchens ;] Tropical Pool Setting Covered Parking la rge Closets Decorator Furniture C O N V E N IE N T T O H A N C O C K C EN T ER , U T I S A N M A R C O S SH U TTLE'S PARKPLAZA- PLAZA COURTS A P A R T M E N T S "LU X U R Y AT REASONABLE PRICES" 9 IS E .4 1 S T 4 5 2 -6 5 1 8 R E N T A L 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. ir A p a r t m e n t s 3110 Red River CLOSE TO U.T. Small, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks from Ixtw, on shuttle, attractively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3B R Starting at $430 4 7 4 - 1 9 0 2 9- •Walk in lampas •Pooludluitfn •Sunil, tjuirt Miinplci •fartiskttd •$5KII for Fall Cavalier Apartments 3*71.31« • 451-1917 • 1 BR & 2 BR • Ceiling Fans • On Shuttle • Laundry Room • Fully Furnished • Pool • Permit Parking • On-site manager/ maintenance • Vertical mini-blinds • Affordable deposits • Preleasing/Fall and Spring R io N u e c e s U O O W . 2 0 t h M 74-097U Walk To Campus l a i a - . j S B TUBM -p. , « n .9 . J i l l . i ” 8 ¡ i _ _ u j a : s HOUSTON 2801 Hemphill ftrlt ■ 472-8398 DALLAS 2803 Hemphill Park 472-8398 BRANDYWINE 2808 Whitts Ave. 472-7049 W1LSHIRE 301 W. 29th 472-7049 Preieaning Fully Eurrmhed Laundry Room Centra! Air/Heat 2 Blocks From UT No Application Fee 1 BR/BA Orvsitr manager Affordable deposits S P A C IO U S , Q UIET 2 -2 , C A /C H , fans, pool, sundeck, cable, laundry. Red R iv e r /3 0 th . S u m m e r /$ 6 0 0 . F a l l/ $ 7 5 0 . 4 7 7 - 3 3 8 8 /4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 6 -2 4 -2 0 & 0 Y r . / $ 7 0 0 4 B L O C K S W E S T U T Refurbished, quiet efficiencies. Kitchen, laundry, water, gas. Furnished. Gas heat/cooking, $ 3 0 0 /$ 3 2 5 903 West 22 1 /2 477-5514. 6-25-20b EFFICIENCIES LEASING FOR FALL From $ 3 6 0 »Disposal •Bookshelves •Dishwasher •Individu al storage • l / 2 b lk . Shipe park »Pool »O n IF •P a tio /B B Q Shuttle «Laundry •Furnished/U nfurnished 108 PLACE APTS. 108 W . 45th •Resident M g r. C A R IN G O W N E R S . P e rso n a l a t­ tention. W C and surrounding area E ff.1 -2 b e d ro o m s . K a rl H e n d le r P rope rties, 4 7 6 - 2 1 5 4 6 -2 9 -2 0 B - C. 302 West 38th Fall leasin g on 1-bdr. C o n ­ v e n ie n t to H a n c o c k C e n te r, UT a n d H y d e P a rk , h a lf a b lo c k to sn u ffle . A ll a p p li- cances, p o o l, la u n d ry room , gas, water and cable paid. Call 453-4002 630-2066 V I.P. APARTMENTS Fall leasing I B r 's a v a ila b le Pool, shuttle at d o o r. G as & w a te r p a id . C o n ­ te m p o ra ry fu rn ish in g s, la rg e clos­ ets 4 7 6 - 0 3 6 3 by a p p o in tm e n t. 101 E.33rd at Speedway. 7-b-20b W A L K TO C A M P U S . O n e b e d ­ room s from $ 3 8 0 .0 0 . Q u a lity fur­ niture, full kitchen. G rea t for stud­ e n ts W a te r p a id AF S , 4 5 8 - 1213. 7-12-20P-C 8 0 7 WEST 25th # 2 1 0 . 2-2 MIL, furn ish e d , C A /C H , p o o l, security system , a p p lia n c e s $ 1 3 0 0 /m o . C a p ita l P ro p e rtie s 458-6415. 7-12-1 OB a ll It 's T h e H o t A l t e r n a t i v e Sec @r, ceiling fans, onsite laundry/m anager. Convenient for law, engineering, music students, and all East Campus. 4 7 6 -3 6 29 or 459-9898 GREAT 1-BEDROOM APARTMENTS 1 / 2 block from la w school •Furnished •Q uiet FALL RATES $380/mo. TOWERVIEW APTS. 926 E. 26th #208 320-0482 716-206C * L e a s e li n e • UT Area • All Shuttles ¿> FREE Service % 4 6 7 -7 1 2 1 J 711 W . 3 2 n d Street. B U C K IN G H A M S Q U A R E A p a r t ­ ments 1 and 2 bedroom apartments in quiet r e s id e n tia l n e ig h b o r h o o d . 4 5 3 - 4991 6 -2 3 -2 0 b c. PEACE & Q u ie t in H yd e Parkl Ef- fic ie n c y a n d 1 / 1 . G a s , W a te r, C a b le p a i d 4 4 0 0 A v e n u e A . 4 5 8 -1 9 8 5 6 -2 3 -2 0 tx SHANTI APARTMENTS 3 3 0 4 Red River Spacious 1-1, 2-1 Pool, Laundry, amenities. Ideal for older students. Starting $ 4 5 0 Shuttle, walk to campus 479-8259, 453-2363. 6-24-20W * * 4PLEXI SM ALL, o ld e r , W e s t cam pus 1-1. Fall $ 3 9 5 , Summer $ 3 2 5 . F ro n t P a ge. E iie e n 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 , 2 6 6 -9 2 7 6 e v e n in g . 6-2 4 - 20B-C * * H Y D E PARK T o w n h o m e /S p a - c io u s 1-1 c a b le p a id , s h u ttle , $ 4 9 0 . F ro n t P a ge, Russel 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 , 4 7 6 -0 8 2 7 Hm 6-24-20B G * * N E W C O M P L E X /H U G E 1 -1 , Front s h u ttle /w a lk , access gates P o g e , R u ssell 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 , 4 7 6 - 0 8 2 7 Hm. 6-24-20B-C • • N E IG H B O R H O O D AT- MOSPHERE! C lose to U.T., shut­ tle, con tro lle d access Remodeled 2 b e d ro o m , $ 5 9 0 . Front P a ge, Markus 480-851 8 6-24-20& C ••W E S T CAMPUSI Small, neat 2- 2 , $ 6 5 0 . S u p e r c lo s e F ro n t P a ge, E ile e n 4 8 0 - 8 5 18, 2 6 6 - 9 2 7 6 , evenings. 6-24-20B C *UT STUDENT-RESORT* ~ PRE-LEASE indoor basketball court, weightroom tennis, free cable, lim ited access gates, gigantic floorplans 1-2-3 Bedrooms $ 4 0 0 + PROPERTY MAX 462-3030 6-26206 NORTHWEST HILLS, OLTORF/RIVERSIDE, C AM ERO N ROAD SHUTTLES Efficiencies - $ 3 0 5 + O ne Bedrooms - $ 33 5+ Two Bedrooms - $4 3 0 + Three Bedrooms $ 6 2 5 + PROPERTY MAX 4 6 2 -3 0 30 •SPANISH LAKEFRONT* ‘ VILLA* U.T. shuttle, lim ite d access gates, hike & bike trails, huge pools, sal­ t illo t ile , fre e c a b le O n e B e d ­ room s - $ 4 3 0 + , T w o B e dro om s - $ 6 3 0 + , Lofts - $ 5 7 5 PROPERTY MAX 4 6 2 -3 0 30 SPECIAL SUMMER RATES Large Efficiencies N ear Campus. Red River Shuttle PRE-LEASING FOR FALL C e iling fans, new floor N o p e ts /N o roommates 371-0160 6-29-20bb ♦ADVANTAGE* LOFT SPIRAL STAIRCASE ALARM, FREE CABLE WASHER/DRYER INCLUDED $ 3 5 5 + *4 4 3 -3 0 0 0 * ♦ADVANTAGE* $100 OFF JUNE, JULY, AUGUST SHUTTLE BUS EFF., 1-2 BEDROOMS $320+ *443-3000* tw o b e d ro o m s CAMPUS AREA ond on UT shuttle fro m O n e a n d $ 3 8 5 .0 0 . Some utilities p a id 6, 9 , 1 2 -m o n th le a s e s . AFS, 4 5 8 - 1213. 7 -1 2-20P-C ALL BILLS P a id ! 1 /1 $ 4 5 0 sum- m e r / $ 4 8 0 fa ll. E le c tric ity , G a s , W a te r, C a b le P a id . 4 5 1 - 8 5 3 2 . 7-13-20B-C RENTAL 370 - UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS SQ UARE ►artments A par * NOW PRELEASING SUM/FALL * FURNISHED * 5 BLKS FROM CAMPUS * IT SHUTTLE STOP * EFFICIENCIES/ M * 3 BEDROOM - 2 ‘A BATH * 2-1 ECONOMY STYLE * ON-SITE MANAGEMENT A LL B ILL S PAID 2212 San Gabriel Street Austin, Texas 78705 (512)474-7732 o w tU t\4 te 0 A M R T M fN T HOMES A LL B ILL S PAID FEATURES: Available in Select units. • C e ilin g f a n s • M ic r o w a v e s • C lu b h o u s e • S p a c io u s w a lk - • U T & C ity B u s lin e • W e t b a r s in C lo s e ts • F r e e 4 9 - c h a n n e l • F e n c e d p a tio s • M in i- b lin d s e x p a n d e d c a b le • B u ilt- in b o o k s h e lv e s • 3 s w im m in g p o o ls Excellent Roommate Plan Cameron Road U.T. Shuttle 454-2537 1200 Broadmoor Drive ADVANTAGE EFF $ 3 0 5 1-1 $ 3 6 0 2-1 $ 4 3 5 3-2 $ 6 3 5 SHUTTLE, FREE CABLE, ACCESS GATES *443-3000* * ADVANTAGE* 50% SUMMER DISCOUNT $348+ * 4 4 3 - 3 0 0 0 * * ADVANTAGE* PRE-LEASING ULTIMATE STUDENT PROPERTY W EIGHT R O O M , SHUTTLE, IN D O O R B/BALL FREE CABLE, ACCESS GATE. 1-2-3 BDRMS $ 37 8+ *443-3000* 2 2 0 0 RIO G r o n d e - 3 hug e b e d ­ ro o m s, p e rfe c t h a r d w o o d flo o rs , ceiling fans, uncomm on foyer, cool porch, big oak trees, track lighting. F a ll/S p r in g $ 1 , 3 0 0 . 4 6 9 - 0 4 6 9 . 72-2066 to c a m p u s . N E A R UT. W o lk L a rg e e f fic ie n c y $ 2 9 5 . 1 b d r $ 3 2 5 . N e w c a rp e t, paint, c a b le . 4 7 2 -6 9 7 9 76-2060 6-26206 1 /1 WEST Campus. Pool and shut­ $ 3 6 0 C a ll Luis at 4 7 8 - tle stop 2 5 2 3 . 7-7-10B-C TOTAL REMODEL! 2-1, $ 5 2 5 . 1- 1, $ 4 5 0 . G a s p a id , m o d e ! to v ie w A v a ila b le 7 -1 . 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI 7-8-20B-B 1 Bdr, HYDE PARK- 4 3 0 3 Duval. p a r t ia l ly fu r n is h e d , c a r p e t, a p ­ pliances, AC , basic cable $ 3 7 5 . C all 3 2 8 -8 2 3 6 . 7-2-2066 C A R IN G O W N E R S . P e rson al a t­ tention. W C and surrounding area. E ff.1 - 2 b e d ro o m s . K a rl H e n d le r P ro p e rtie s , 4 7 6 - 2 1 5 4 6 -2 9 -2 0 B - C. TOWNLAKE VILLAGE Spacious 2BR Townhomes N ew ly Renovated Move-in special Twelve month lease G rea t for students & professionals UT Shuttle/6, 10, 12 month lease options 4 4 0 -0 5 9 2 , 9-5:30. 7-15-2066 W EST CAMPUS 1-1's. G e ttin g to be ve ry scarcel W e 'v e got some. C o v e n tr y P la c e , 2 8 1 4 N u e c e s . F ire p la c e s , W / D , v e ry c o z y , c le a n Rio G r a n d e P ro p e rtie s . 4 7 4 -0 6 0 6 . 7-19-1166 2 -2 'S W EST C a m p u s, lots o f d if ­ fe re n t com ple xes, a ll p rices. Pal- la d ia n , C e n te n n ia ls , C r o ix , etc. Huge units Early August move-ins. R io G r a n d e P r o p e rtie s . 4 7 4 - 0 6 0 6 . 7-19-1166 * * R E D RIVERI V ery la rg e , g re a t s h a p e 1-1 $ 4 2 5 . F ro n t P age 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 720-206C Red R iver Place Check out our new look! Located at Red River & 26th St. Walk to the Law School. EFFICIENCIES AND 1 BEDROOMS Call Trace at 4 7 3 - 5 3 4 1 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ a ★ 1-1 $475-525 T ★ 2-2 $700-750 * CAMINO REAL ★ APARTMENTS * 2810 SALADO ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Sun 1-5 ★ . 472-3816 * 9 & 12 month leases 4 Vi blocks from campus ^ Previewing times: M-F 10-4, Sat 11-5, 7^ ★ ^ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ E F F . & 1 -2 - 3 - 4 B D R M A P A R T M E N T S S ta rtin g a t $ 3 6 0 P r e l e a s i n g F o r F a l l 11 FLOOR PLANS Spacious Two Pools Student Oriented Colorado River Furn ./Unf. Shuttle Bus 5 Min. To Downtown Modern Microwaves Lofts W/Fans Excellent Maint P O IN T SOUTH—BRIDGEHOLLOW R enta/ Office: 1910 WUiowcreek 444-7536 GRAD STUDENT SPECIALS MAX for your money EFF'i, 1-1’*, and 2 -1 '* N o rth side o f UT area, H yde Pork. Clear, quiet, roomie, Flexible move-in dates 4 3 0 6 Ave A # 1 0 1 , # 1 1 2 . 6 1 0 W 30th # 1 3 3 , # 1 0 5 O p e n House Reserve w ith deposit Rio G rande Properties 4 7 4 -0 6 0 6 7-19-1166 LARGE 1-1 $ 4 5 0 N e w carpet, new paint. W alk-in closets, ceiling fan*, central air, pool. G as and water pa id , flexible move-in dates W a lk to UT FOUNTAIN TERRACE 6 1 0 W . 30th St. 4 7 7 -8 8 5 8 7-20-2060 WEST CAMPUS EFFICIENCIES Q uiet and spacious. Gas, water, and cable p a id , la undiy room, security lighting, on W C shuttle, discounts on year leases. $ 2 8 0 per month-summer $ 3 5 0 per m onth-fal!/spring BARRANCA SQUARE APTS. 9 1 0 W . 2 6 th /4 7 8 -l 3 5 0 7-20-2066 Hillside Apts. 1&2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean & Q uiel All Utilities Paid 4 7 8 -2 8 1 9 5 1 4 Dawson Rd. Just off Barton Springs Rd, 7-20-2066 • • G R E A T A P A R T M E N T ! S m a ll 1 / 1 . F urnished, o ff 3 8 th , $ 3 8 0 . Front Poge 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 7-20-206C ••W E S T C AM PUS! Spacious 2-2, g a s p a id P o o l, b a r b e c u e , w a lk /s h u ttle , $ 7 2 5 . F ront Page 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 7-20-206C 3 9 0 - Unf. Duplexes 3B LK S N O R T H o f la w s c h o o l. L a rg e 4 / 2 , d u p le x re m o d e le d , C A /C H , W / D co n n e c tio n s , h a rd ­ w o o d s , la rg e w in d o w s , on q u ie t le a s e . s tre e t, $ l 3 0 0 / m o , 1 y r A v a ila b le A u g . 2 0 . O w n e r 4 7 7 - 9 7 1 2 . 6-29-20B 2-1 REMOTE W e s t C om pus Total r e n o v a t io n , g r e a t h a r d w o o d s , W / D , 1 9 1 5 D a v id St. $ 9 0 0 . 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-8-20&B 3BLKS TO class. Small 2-2 duplex re m o d e le d , h a r d w o o d s , c e ilin g fa n s , W / D , p a r k in g , $ 7 0 0 / m o . ly r . lease. 4 7 7 -9 7 1 2 . 7-14-20B. 4 0 0 - Condos- Townhom es C O F F E E f’ K i » P E R T IE S Benchmark Thirty-First St. Buena Vista Centennial Croix Gunter Place West University Orangetree Seton St. Thom as Place C O N D O S • A P T S • H O U S E S 2813 Rio Grande Suite 206 4 7 4 - 1 8 0 0 m s s S M Campos Condos 474-4800 C - I T - Y PROPERTIES ==== NOW LEASING! Condos* Tcwnhomes*Apts. 706 W. MLK 478-6565 4 0 0 - Condos- Townhomes • • S U N C H A S E C O N D O I R e a lly b ig ! 2-2, pool, ja cuzzi, controlled access. Front Page, M arkus 48 0 - 8 5 1 8 6-24-20B-C * * W ALK/SHUTTLE I SUPER C o ndo 1-1. V ie w o f T ow er. W / D , CP, m icrow ove, $ 4 7 5 . Front Page, Ei­ leen 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 / 2 6 6 - 9 2 7 6 , e ve n ­ ing. 6-24-20B-C LUXURY 1 and 2 BR's, ABP High- rise liv in g , w a lk in g distan ce to UT c a m p u s . C o n tr o lle d a c c e s s to b u ild in g and p arkin g 1 8 0 0 Lavo- ca 4 7 6 -9 7 1 0 6-28-20B C A R IN G O W N E R S . P e rson a! at- tention W C and surrounding area Eff. 1-2-3 bed roo m s, fu rn is h e d /u n - fu rn ish e d K a rl H e ndle r Properties, 4 7 6 -2 1 5 4 . 6-29-20B-C. PENTHOUSE W ITH a vie w 1 2 0 0 sq. ft. Jetted tub, 2 balconies, lux­ ury in W est Campus A va ila b le 8- 15 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-1-20&B R O B B IN S PLACE. U n iq u e f lo o r ­ p la n s , q u ie t W e s t C a m p u s , 2 -2 , W /D , covered pa rk in g . A v a ila b le 8-21. 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 7 -1 -2 0 6 C Quadrangle 2 b d /2 .5 ba, 2 story Beautiful grey carpel, patio plus deck, W /D , 2 fireplaces, carport, Immaculate, $ 1 0 0 0 /m o . Call PMT 476-2673 7-t-20bb W estridge 2-2 furnished, Covered parking, elevator, pool, patio, WC shuttle Call PMT 476-2673 7-1-206b Contemporary Efficiency Hardwood floors, garage, W /D , view, $495 Call PMT 4 76 -2673 7-l-20bb Gables 3-2 with garage New carpet, new paint $1200. Avail. 8-22 Call PMT 476 -2673 7-t-20bb OXFORD PLACE " $565-$585, 1 bedroom Pre-leasing for fall Call Lisa 469-0925 22 1 /2 and San G abriel -1-206-6 Pecan Tree Cute 1-1,3 blks to tower W /D , new carpet, $475 Call PMT 476-2673 POPOLO Efficiencies $ 3 3 0 Fall 1 br-1 ba, $ 3 4 0 Fall 1 Block from shuttle 111 W . 38th St. Call Lisa 469-0925 7-1-206-8 3200 Duval Townhome 1 800 sq ft, 2bd/2ba 2 car garage Enormous, $1200/mo. Call Bill at PMT 476-2673 Benchmark-gorgeous 2bd/2ba, garage parking Never leased before- Won't last! $1000/mo. Call Bill at PMT. 476-2673. 7-l-20bb R E N T A L 4 0 0 - C 0 N D 0 S -T 0 W N H 0 M ES ' PROWn MANAGMINT -OF FIXAS ★ LIT T LEFIELD HOUSE CONDOS ★ 2606 Rio Grande F u rn ish e d , lu x u ry 2-1 s and -2 s A m a q jtie s in clu d e : C o v e re d p a rk in g , secu rity, h o ttu b . P rices s ta rt at S825 Call PMT @ 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 RENTAL RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT 4 0 0 - Condos- Townhomes 4 0 0 - Condos- Townhomes 5 1 0 - Entertainment- 7 9 0 - Port time Tickets Bates casts self onto roster T h e D a il y T e x a n Tuesday, July 20, 19Ô3 Page 11 Veteran surprises doubters in return Associated Press You just can't get rid of B ill Bates. You can bring on younger, faster, muscular players out of the college. You can tear up his knee and put him in the hospital. You can tell him his p layin g days over. Bates won't listen and he won't quit. Expect him to make the roster of the w orld cham pion D allas C ow ­ boys for the 11th consecutive sea­ son. D allas coach Jim m y Johnson just m arvels at his gritty warrior. “ Three weeks ago I would have given you 10-to-l odds that B ill Bates would have a chance to make the team ," Johnson said. “ But he's an am azin g p erson . It re a lly is incredible what he has done. “ N ow I'd say w ith the expanded ro ster th e re 's no w a y he w o n 't make the team. H e's too valuable on special teams." The 32-year-old Bates missed the final 11 regular season games, and the playoffs after tearing the anteri­ or cruciate ligament in his left knee. “ Until that injury, I had been for- Bill Bates continues to impress coaches despite his limited speed. tunate to never miss many games. I was mad. I wasn't going to let them cut on me," Bates said. Bu t reason p revailed as Bates, who has battled to make the C ow ­ boys roster every train ing cam p, decid ed he w a s n 't going d ow n without a fight. “ I could have put my head in the sand and said it was the end of my football w o rld ," Bates said. “ I chose to accept it, and I decided to give everything I had to come back." Bates got to go to the Super Bow l as a spectator. It m ade him even more determined to come back. “ I trained hard for nine m onths/' Bates said. But, u n til tra in in g cam p Bates w asn 't sure how his knee w o u ld hold up. “ I got hit and looked around to see if I still had all the pieces," Bates said. When all the pieces were still in ­ tact, Bates knew he was back. Will there be other shark attacks from British champ? Associated Press S A N D W IC H , England — W hith­ er now Greg Norm an? W ill he build on his nearly perfect play in w inning the British Open on Sunday for the second time, and all the work that went into it? O r w ill he meander to m ediocrity as he did after his first rush to glory in 1986? N o rm an b e lie ve s he is on the verge of a re v iv a l of his golf for­ tunes, no lo n g er snake-bit, no longer the victim of his own over­ confidence or, at times under pres­ sure, his lack of confidence. “ I have now got m y sw ing back to where I can trust it under pres­ su re ," N orm an said before flyin g home to Florida in his own jet. He used to play this game as if he thought it was terribly easy. Tee it up, whack it and go. G olf chews up players like that, turns their arro­ gance against them , taunts them with bad lies and leaves them talk­ ing to themselves. Norm an muttered to himself a lot in his lean years, w ondered w h y everything that had seemed so nat­ ural now felt so hard. It got so bad he very nearly quit. "W h e n I w as d o w n ," he said , "w h at turned it around for me was I looked at m yself in the m irror one day. I was frustrated. Looking at myself, I said, 'W hat do you w ant? G ive up the game? Fight back? Be the best you can?' W hen you look in the mirror, you cannot lie." W hat he saw was: ■ In 1986, he led the Masters, U.S. O pen and P G A C h a m p io n sh ip entering the final round but lost all three, the w o rst d e fe at co m in g when Bob Tw ay holed out from the bunker on the final hole of the PG A . He won the British Open. ■ In 1987, Larry M ize holed a 120- foot chip shot on the first p la yo ff hole to beat him in the Masters. ■ In 1990, he lost at Bay H ill when Robert Gamez holed a 176-yard shot for eagle and at New7 Orleans when David Frost holed a bunker shot. ■ In 1991, he and Faldo went out as co-leaders at 12-under for the third round of the B ritis h Open'. Norman lost 9 strokes to Faldo, and prom p tly slid into the m ost p ro­ longed slump of his career. The answers he settled for w ere not to steep him self in sports psy­ chology or to throw7 out his clubs or to seek lucky charms. The answers w ere to w o rk h ard e r, ad just his swing, and work harder still. c a s s i f i e d A d s C a 4 7 1 5 2 4 4 F . \ C O R F . TICKETS ALL EVENTS BEST PRICES 474-4468 5 6 0 - Public Notice R U S S IA N N E W S P A P E R Investía, S u b s c rib e T o d a y : Sells- USSR- DIST, P.O. Box 1033, Roundrock, TX 78680 7-8-20B M O N E Y F O R c o lle g e a v a ila b le through our data base Sch o la r­ s h ip s / fin a n c ia l a id . 512-450- 0935 from 8a.m.-10o.m. 7-9-I06B 5 9 0 - Tutoring • TUTORING • REVIEWS OPEN 7 DAYS til Midnight, Sun.-Thur. ru 'T SilltW 472-6666 ED U C ATIO N AL Sin c e 1980 58Q - Musical Instruction G U IT A R L E S S O N S : R & B, rock, |azz, country. 10 yeors teaching experience Andy Bullington. 452- 6181. 7-20-20B-C SERVICES 7 5 0 - Typing ZIVLEY The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING BLOCKBUSTER 27TH STREET 2707 HEMPHILL PARK I472-321Q 472-7677 COLOR COPIES Start at 90« LASER PRINTING TYPING BINDING Longhorn Copies 2518 Guadalupe 476-4498 FAX 476-2602 W O O D S T Y P IN G and W o rd Pro­ cessing Typewriter or Macintosh- laser 220 0 Guadalupe (side en­ trance). 472-6302. 7-720BB K A Y 'S W O R D Processing, loser printing, spellcheck, $ 1 .5 0 / p g ., pick-up and delivery 280-3915. 7-15-20B. 7 6 0 - Misc. Services S H O R T W A L K U T Bo ok keeper Trainee, Typist Runner (own eco­ n o m ical, re lia b le c a r}, $4 5 0 + trips W r ite a p p lic a tio n , 4C8 W est 17th 6-24-206-D D A N C E T E A C H E R , b a lle t back- ground required N o teoching ex­ perience necessary. Full training and alt m aterials provided C o ll Sharon at 244-9111. 7-14-208 LADY IN w h ee lc h a ir needs part- time assistance with daily personal care and light housekeeping 476- 7725 7-15-10B E X T E N D A C A R E N E E D S p e o p le who hove experience working with elementary age children. Start as o f Aug-17, s a la ry $5 4 0 /hr. Hours 2-6p.m., M-F. apply at Extend-A-Care, 55 Nor#» I- 35 EOE 7-204B storting AFTER-SCHOOL CARE for 2 sons ages 9&1 1 in central Austin neighborhood N eed to pro­ vid e transportation for a ctivities and be w illing to do light house w o rk ond 15hrs of la u n d ry work/w eek plus holidays if ovail- o b ie $ 7 / h r. D a y tim e 480- 1868, Even in g s/ W eek e n d s 480- 0394 7-20-5B O P P O R T U N IT Y FO R part-time ex­ perienced salesperson The Shef- tall Com pany, 2 244 G u a d a lu p e Hours 11-2 and 2-6. Ask for Mr. Rutter. 7-20-5B Library Clerk, Stole Agency, 20hrs /wk , I -5pm. Duties include recording, shelving, and retrieving governm ent docu­ ments. W ork with public. Qualifi­ cations: high school diplom a or G E D , a p p licab le library or office experience Must pass filing test with 9 0% accuracy $594/mo. Call 463-5474, M-F. EO E D. 7-20-tB 8 0 0 - General Help W anted SEMEN DONORS NEEDED Fairfax C ry o b a n k is w ill seeking semen donors; for its sperm bank pro­ gram. The program i$ confidential an d all! b e d o n o rs compensated. As a potential donor you will undergo screen­ ing procedures to insure good health and fertility potential. You must be between 18 and 35. If jyou a re interested, please call: 473-2268 FAIRFAX CRYOBANK a division of the Genetic i I.V.F. Institute AUSTIN PLASMA CENTER YOU GET 1 7 #0 CASH F i r s t D o n a t i o n B e n e f i t s f o r y o u : • FREE Physical on 1st donation • FREE Screening on every donation (HIV, Hepatitis, Syphilis, etc). • All supplies are used ONCE. • Plasma may he donated twice a week. N o w O p o n S a t u r d a y C a l l f o r I n f o . 477-3735 29th otid Guadalupe SECURITY OFFICERS Now hiring full and part-time night secunty officers for locations near the UT campus area We are looking for people onentated officers with experi­ ence the public. Uniforms provided in working with Excellent opportunity for students. Call ZIM C O SECURITY CONSULTANTS, INC. 343-7210. Mon.-Fri. 1pm-4pm C H IL D C A R E T E M P O R A R IE S , sub­ stitutes n e e d e d for c h ild c a r e , $ 5 / h r. T e a c h e r s / A id e s . Full­ tim e/port-tim e Also perm anent C a ll 219- |ob o p p o rtu n ities. 8839. 7-19-3B G IN N Y 'S PRINTING ♦ CO PYING D o b ie M a ll 476-9171 SERVICES 760 • MISC. SERVICES PREGNANT ? C o n s id e r A d o p tio n Prenatal Care/Counseling/Housing Caring Professional/Expenses Paid rr.niTOT ***** n Full-Service Agency Your Choice: Identified, Open or Closed Adoptions Available 24 Hours . . . Call Collect (713)468-1053 M P L0 Y M E N T 790 - P A R T TIME 7-l-20b4> *■» ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ LUXURY/SECURITY, WEST Campus Condo 2 /2 , full-size W /D , Avail­ able August $900 Action Man­ agement 448-5209. 7-19-5B-C C E N T E N N IA L 2-2: Unique floor plans Furnished nicely. One block from campus, $ 11 00 Coll Nick- Campus Condos, 474-4800. 7-20- 5BO 7-1-20W» 2 B R / 1 BA N e w c a rp e t, new tile W asher/D ryer. Call Monnie ot Compus Condos, 474-4800. 7- 20-560 7-2-20B-B 3 B L O C K S UT, 3/1 +loft, pri- vote, W / D connections, move-in 8 /1 5 , $ 1 5 0 0 nine months, 467- 6944 7-15-20B 7-2 206-B 4 2 5 - Rooms Nueces Corner 1-1 with addition­ al loft $650 / I yr. Call PMT 476-2673. Tom Green Condos 2bd w / loft- could be 3bd $900 Call Bill at PMT 476-2673. 7-1-20W> Slick 1-1 W edge wood Condos 10 ft. Ceilings, pool, tiled counters, fur­ nished, $495. Call PMT 476-2673 Parapet Condos Elite 2bd-2ba Fully furnished Just redone with new carpet and paint Call PMT 476-2673 7-2206-B Old Castle Hill Enfield efficiency 1111 W. 10th Avail. 8/1 $325 Call PMT 476-2673 Centenniel The nicest furnished 2 bd here. Berber carpet. First Class. $1100 Call PMT 476-2673 W e s t University Place Largest West Campus 2 bd for the money $900 Call PMT 476-2673 Hyde Park Hacienda 4 unit luxury Condo 4111 Speedway $750 Call PMT 476-2673 7-2-20B-B Rio Grande Condos 1 b d -1 ba split-level brick firep la ce , W / D small W e s t C am pus co m p le x $ 4 9 5 /y r Call PMT 476-2673 7-2-20B-B ENFIELD 2-2.5 Townhome Available now Covered parking, microwave Unfurnished $900 AFS 458-1213 7-12-206-0 TIRED OF L O O K IN G ? W e have a complete list of one and two bed­ room condos in central campus and E n fie ld A F S , 458- 1213. 7-12-20P-C lo c a tio n s. O R A N G ET REE 1-1. Controlled ac- cess, W / D , covered parking, will go fast! $625. 476-1976 EPI. 7- 9-20BB N O R T H C A M P U S , 1-1, 8 0 0 sq.ft. W a lk to Law and Engineer­ ing, $500. A vailab le 7-15, 476- 1976 EPI. 79-2066 B U E N A VISTA 2-2, minute walk to Business School, controlled access, $ 9 5 0 . A v a ila b le 8-21. 476- 1976 EPI. 7-9-2066 S T .T H O M A S 2-2, furnished, con­ trolled access, fuli size W / D , 3 to choose from. Available 8-21. 476- 1976. 7-9-20B6______________________ O R A N G E T R E E - LA R G E 2-2, co n ­ trolled access and parking Seton side, W / D , $1050. A vailable 7- 15. 476-1976 EPI. 7-9-20B-B S P E E D W A Y AT 34th. C A / C H , FP, walk-in, w asher/ dry­ er, m icrow ave, dishw asher, c o v ­ ered parking, unfurnished. A va il­ le a se . a b le 8 / 1 9 / 9 3 , y e a r 's $550/mo. 474-2032 7-12-2060 2 2 0 0 RIO G ran d e. 3 huge bed­ rooms, perfect hardw o od floors, ceiling fans, uncommon foyer, cool porch, big oak trees, track lighting. Fall/Spring $ 1,300 469-04169, 7-14-1366 C LO SE TO campus, shuttle, $395 1-1 A ll a p p liances. 4 4 0 5 A v e ­ nue A #24 Evergreen Properties. 331-1122. 7-16-20B HURRY , d o n 't miss these 1/1 's in this convenient, quiet com­ plex off 38th Street. A fford ab le specials start of only $395, 6-12 month leases available. Move in today! Call Greg 450-9155, Digital Pager, to schedule a snowing. RECAR & ASSOCIATES 345-9886 7-16-56B TW ELV E O A K S Condos. 704 W . 21st 2-2's from $ 8 0 0 . C o n ­ trolled access. W a lk to Campus. 495-9585. 7 ’ 9-206B •‘ ENFIELD T O W N H O M E * * **2-2.5** 2 story, opprox 1000 sq ft Fireplace, balcony, pool, ¡acuzzi. Covered parking, microwove, UT shuttle route $850/month, Available 8/1/93 Owner/Agent 836-4437 ST. T H O M A S , W e s t U n iv e rsity Place, O ro ng etree 2 Bedroom s starting at $900. Call Nick- Cam ­ pus Condos, 474-4800. 7-20-56D BEST VIEW IN AUSTIN! 10th floor Capitol and Tower views. 2-2, utilities paid, $930. Move in August 1. CALL NICK Campus Condos 474-4800. 7-2056D C R O IX 2-2: N e w paint and car­ pel. Vaulted ceiling G reat for 3 people W a lk to campus Avail­ a b le no w C a ll Nick- C a m p u s Condos, 474-4800 7-2656-0 * ’ C E N T E N N IA L , L A R G E S T I 2-2, controlled access, near pool. Real nice- A v a ila b le Fa ll. Front Page 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 7-20-206C 4 2 0 - Unf. Houses ? M c i l k t c C a m p u s ? Luxury 3 br/3 ba H ouse with} ^ceiling fans. CA/CH, W/D< Hardwoods, Fenced Yard and^ co ve re d parking. 1 year leased Aug. 1st $1500. 474-7745 W E S T C A M P U S at 2 8th St. large 3/1 house, hardwoods, ceil­ ing fans, $ 1 2 0 0 /m o , l y r lease, 477-9712. 6-29-208 3 /2 H O U S E , 3 8 0 7 A v e n u e B. Fenced, $850/m o A vailable Au- gustl. Call between 6pm & 7pm, 480-0976. 7-12-106C Larg e 2-2 W E S T C A M P U S ho use. Plenty of room for 4, newly remodeled, C A / C H , W / D , fans, firepiace, hardw oods, park­ ing, etc. $ 1200/m o. ly r lease 477-9712. 7-14-20B 477-LIVE 24 Hrs. O ld fashioned charm, 2-4BR homes Hardwood, gas, a p p lia n c e s , $ 4 5 0 / $ 1200. For fax listing, call 451-4386. 7- 15206D C E N T R A L E A S T 1-1 house with view of Town Lake $325. Avail­ able 8-1. 458-8198. 7-20-4B-C UT/JEN FIELD /M O PAC/SHUTTIE- 2- l , C A / C H , hardwoods, W / D con­ n e ctio n s, 1608 W ethersfield , $ 9 0 0 . 331-7030. 7-20-20B-D 1 0 4 0 sq .ft. SHORT WALK U.T. Quiet, Non-Smoking, Petless Private bedroom, share kitch­ en. For private bath, $345 A B P ; c a ll 4 7 7 - 4 1 9 7 , D.P. 4 0 6 -4 5 2 3 , m essage 474- 2 0 3 2 .To sh a re bins, bath $ 1 80-$330, call 472-5646, 472-1787. 6-29-20B-D C H R IS T IA N H O M E has room for rent Slaughter/M anchaca area $250/mon, deposit and half bills. Call 292-1745. 7 20-10B 4 3 5 - Co-ops SUM M ER & FALL HOUSING REAL HOUSES 2-3 bike* to UT Singles & Doubles REALFOOD Homecooked meals Open kitchens REAL PEOPLE Friendly, democratic environs J0INUSN0W1 ICC Co-ops 476-1957 510 W. 23rd SHORT WALK U.T. Q uiet, Non-smoking, Pet- less P rivate bedroom share kitchen. For p riva te bath, $345 A B P ; c a ll 477-4197, D.P. 4 0 6 - 4 5 2 3 . M e s s a g e 474 -2032 . To share bills, bath $180-$330. C all 472- 5646, 472-1787. 6-29-206D 4 4 0 - R o o m m a te s SHORT WALK U.T. Quiet Non-Smoking, Petless Private bedroom, share kitch­ en. For private bath, $345 A B P ; c a ll 4 7 7 - 4 1 9 7 , D.P. 40 6 -4 5 2 3 . M e s s a g e 474- 20 3 2 . To share bills, bath $ 1 80-$330 c a ll 472-5646, 472-1787. 6-29-2060 N E E D E D FEM ALE roommate, goes home on weekend preferred All furnished , must be cle a n , neat. 517-0131. 7-15 56 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e ed ed to shore 3bdr house in West Campus. W i l l bathroom . o w n $365/m o. C a ll 474-8471. 7-15- 5B h ave W E S T C A M P U S - 2 B R / 2 B A . Voult- ed ce ilin g s, $ 3 5 0 / m o . Move-in Aug.21. W indw ood Condos, 709 W .2 1 s t #203 A rya n (713)326- 4729, message. 7-16-5B. G R E A T O F F - C A M P U S co n d o for non-smoking female, 2-2 1/2, fans, security, computer and printer, mi­ crowave, more. Fall lease $250+ biils, share a room. Kristin 385- 4391. 7-15-12B W A N T E D : R O O M M A T E $150+1/4 Share house with three males, no pets, smoking, or slobs. 4 9 13G, 453-6258. 7-19-2P R O O M M A T E W A N T E D , fem ale senior/grod student to share house with two fem ale students. W a lk to U .T $ 2 9 2 p e r month +1/3 bills. Deposits necessary. Refer­ ences. Must like pels. C all 477- 7327. 7-20-3P 4 6 0 - Business Rentáis DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH Near UT Campus, retail commercial or office space, approx. 36,000 sq. ft., will divide or remodel to suit, parking ramp available. No bars or restaurants. Contact Gene Olson at University Towers 8 :30 - 5:00 472 - 5 8 4 6 . EMPLOYMENT EM P LO Y M EN T 8 0 0 - General- 8 7 0 - Medical Help W anted A S S E M B L E A RT S, crafts, toys, and jewelry items from your home Excellent pay. Coll 448-6456 7- 9-20B-8 REAL SUMMER JO B Citizen Action is looking for interesting, articulate people for campaign staff. See how go vernm en t re a lly works. Pads that resume. Hours: 1- 10pm. Pay: $300/wk. Call 444-8618 for interview 7-1-20B N E E D E D ! 100 p e o p le to lose w e ig h t N O W . N o w ill pow er needed. N e w l Vivian 512-329- 5413,328-1018. 7-8-20B-B D A Y L A B O R E R S n e e d e d , cash poid d a ily . Report to 6 0 6 East 7»h St. 476-1444 7-12-20B S E E K IN G E M P L O Y E E S for Kid Space D aycare in Northwest Aus­ tin. 918-0121. 7-14-58 PART-TIME B A R T E N D E R S , Bor- back/Cleaning crew. Coll Richard at A c ro p o lis T-F, l-3pm 472- 7253 7-16-3p. PRE-SCHOOL N EED S on afternoon teocher to work with 2- and 3-year- olds. Please coll 329-1909. 7-15- 56 Summer JOBS for the ENVIRONMENT $ 2 5 0 0 -$ 3 5 0 0 /s u m m e r *Pass the Clean W a te r Act ‘ Learn C a m p a ig n Skills *M a k e a difference Call Hank at 479-8481 MAKE THOUSANDS Employer will call you for job of your choice. A RE Y O U looking for a part-time office nursing job? 24 hr/wk plas­ tic surgery. Send resume to: The Doily Texan, P.O . Box D, DDT-3, Austin, TX 78713-9804. 7-19-5B IM M EDIATE O P E N IN G full-time re­ ceptionist for busy dermatology of­ fice. Experience required. Send resume1 to: Daily Texan P. O . Box D-WG1, Austin, TX 78713. 7-20- 58 880 Professional A C C R E D IT E D P R E S C H O O L near campus is hiring for Fall. Full and part-time, d e g re e d or studying E C E or C D p referred. Send re ­ sume to U U M C E arly C h ild h o o d Center, 2 4 0 9 G u adalupe, Austin, 78705. Coll 474-5101 EO E. 7- 15-5B FR EE W O M E N h a ircu t. P le a s e call Darlene at Aziz Salon. 474- 2457, ext. 217. 7-19-5B Youth Care Counselor Position a v a ila b le for direct ca re of emotionally disturbed children in residential treatment center. Must have sincere interest in children, a b ility to m odel a p p ro p ria te life Experi­ skills, high energy level ence or d e g re e preferred Shift work. $ 5 .75/hr to start $ 6 .25/hr In 6 months. M inority applicants encouraged to apply. Contact Settlement Home. 1600 Peyton Gin Rd. 836-2150 7-204B. 8 9 0 - Clubs- Restaurants W indjam m er's Telem arketers Super, outgoing, energetic, persua­ sive sales people needed to make phone calls on behave of Austin new up scole night clu b . H ours available ore 9:00am-noon and 1- 5pm. Please call 495-9464 for appointment. 7-20-5B 9 0 0 - Domestic- H a u se h o ld Tellurlde, COM Family seeks live-out nanny/housekeeper. Beginning August 1. NvF, noon to 6pm. $250/wk plus Ski passl Send resume & picture to: P.O. Box 3233 Telluride, CO 81435 or coll (303) 728-5972. 7-8-20B LIVE-IN W A N T E D for fem ol# in wheelchair Nights Sunday-Thurs- d a y . W e e k e n d s off. D a y s free Neor Zilker. 328-1761. 7-14-5B NEED PART-TIME housekeeping ond ch ild ca re. G o o d o rg a n iza tio n al ond domestic skills. Reliable car and references required. Please call 473-2166. 7-16-5B FALL A N D spring sem esters 3- 6p.m., M-F, after school childcare for tw o cu te e lem en ta ry school kids Light cooking and laundry. Must have car. F a rW e s t/ M o p a c area. 345-0612 . 7-2040B Up To ♦ $1000.00 Compensation 4 Send $2 SASE to: P. O. Box 650220, Austin, TX 78765 4 Are you a healthy, non-smoking, male bet-4 ween the ages of 18 and 55? If so, you may J qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical4 research study and receive up to $1000.00. T The dates and times of the study are lis te d j below; you must be available to remain in^ our facility for the entire period to be eligible: Check-In: Afternoon Friday, July 30 Friday, August 20 Check-Out; Morning Monday, August 2 Monday, August 23 Friday, September 10 Monday, September 13! Outpatient visits will be required on the fol-< lowing dates: August 3, 4, 5, 24, 25, 26. September 14, 15, 16. To qualify, you must pass our free physical* examination and screening tests. Meals,; entertainment, and recreational activities will* be provided free of charge during overnight; stays. For more information, please call 462-0492 7-20-20B 8 1 0 -O ffice-Clerical SH O R T W A L K U.T. Bookkeeper Trainee, Typist, Runner (own eco­ no m ical, re lia b le co r), $ 4 .5 0 + trips W r it e a p p lic a tio n , 408 West 17th 624-20B-D 8 2 0 - Accounting- Bookkeeping SH O R T W A L K U.T. Bookkeeper Trainee Typist, Runner (own eco­ n o m ical, re lia b le c a r), $ 4 .5 0 + trips W r it e a p p lic a tio n , 408 W est 17th 6-242060 B O O K K E E P E R / O F F IC E A SSIS- T A N T n e e d e d im m ed iate ly with computer skills. Part-time, flexible hours. $6/hr. V irginia Hines ot 328-8200. 7-15-7B 8 5 0 - Retail Store Manager Full-time position needed Experience required. Send resume to : Longhorn Spirit 2350 Guadalupe, Austin, TX 78705 or Fax 478-0503. P H A R M A C O : : L S R PART-TIME BA B Y S IT T E R / H E L P E R . College student, non-smoker, own transportation. Experience and ref­ erences required. 343-9012. 7-20 48 7-15-5B D O R iA 'S JE W E L R Y in the m alls needs energetic, m otivated sales­ people. Must have car. Excellent working condition, bonus program, fle x ib le hours, ond je w e lry d is­ count. 454-9444 from 10-6 7-13- 4BC BABYSITTER/HOUSEKEEPER N O N - SM O K E R . English speaking. O w n transportation. G o o d driving record. References. $6/hr. Earn­ ings reported. M thru F or M W F . Live-in/out 4690761 7-20-5B Shark attack Safety Kenny Gant does his “ shark dance” after sinking a birdie putt during the Dallas Cowboys Golf Classic Monday at Barton Creek. The Cowboys return to practice at St. Edward’s University on Tuesday. Associated Press Astros Continued from page 12 Pirates starter Bob W alk lost his first hom e gam e this season and o n ly h is second since last M a y . W a lk (10-7) had been 7-0 in eight starts at Three Rivers Stadium this season and on a 14-1 home winning streak since losing to San Diego on M ay 16,1992. Pete H a rn isch (9-6) held P itts ­ burgh to just one hit in five innings after allowing two runs in the first. Doug Jones got the final two outs for his 15th save. H e entered the ninth w ith ru n ­ ners at first and third but got pinch- hitter Lloyd McClendon and Carlos Garcia to ground out. A nthony opened the sixth w ith his ninth homer to break a 2-2 tie. His sacrifice fly in the seventh fol­ lowed singles by Steve Finley and Tour Continued from page 12 over the lead m idw ay through the 15th stage from P e rp ig n a n to Andorra of 144 miles. M o n d a y 's leg had the m ost climbs of the Tour, nine, including the g ru e lin g 7,897-foot P o rt Jeff Bagwell. The Pirates loaded the bases in the first on two w alks and Jay Bell's double. Don S la u g h t doubled in two runs. C h ris D onnels, subbing for the injured Ken Cam initi at third, had a two-run single for the Astros in the fourth inning. Anthony opened the inning with a single. Luis Gonzalez extended his h ittin g streak to 10 games for Houston, during w7hich he is 17-for-34. ■ N o tes: Left-h an d ed p itch e r Greg Sw indell, from the University of Texas, threw from the bullpen m ound before the game in P itts ­ burgh. it w7as the first time he has w o rk e d from a m ound since he went on the disabled list on Ju ly 6 w ith a left shoulder strain. d'Envalira. Rincon won by almost two m in­ utes, but the favorites' group came through ra p id ly . R o m ing er took second, followed, in order, by Riis^ T h e Da il y T e x a n , Tuesday, July 20/1993 Ryan Express better late than never Texas distills Brewers with solid pitching Associated Press ARLINGTON — Looking m ore like the Nolan Ryan of old than an old Nolan Ryan, baseball's all-time strikeout leader m ade a trium phant return to baseball M onday night. C o m in g off h is lo n g e st c a ree r stint on the disabled list, one that led h im to w o n d e r if h e 'd ev e r pitch again, Ryan returned from a 72 -d ay la y o ff to lead the Texas Rangers past the Milwaukee Brew­ ers 5-3. "Tonight w as a special night for m e b e c a u se th re e w e ek s ag o I d i d n 't k n o w if I w o u ld p itc h again," Ryan said. Ryan, 46, try in g to salvage his record 27th and final major league season, scattered three hits — all doubles — over 5 2 /3 innings. He gave u p tw o earned runs, struck ou t six and w alk ed one, leavin g w ith a 4-2 lead after throw ing 91 pitches, 57 of them for strikes. Ryan (2-2) averaged 94 m ph on his fastball, which he set up with a consistently sh arp curveball, and his fa ste s t p itc h w as 96 m p h to Greg Vaughn in the fourth inning. He ex ited to a s ta n d in g o v atio n from the sello u t crow d of 40,676 and came out to doff his cap after­ ward. Just as im portan t as giving the pitching-thin Rangers a solid start, Ryan rep o rted no physical p ro b ­ lems after taking himself out when m an ag e r Kevin K ennedy visited the m ound in the sixth. "I was ready. I felt that if I had stayed out there m uch longer, I'd have gotten into a deficit, and that m ight have affected m y next start [S un day]," R yan said. "R eally, I had accom plished w hat I'd hoped to tonight." Tom Henke, the fifth Texas pitch­ er, w orked the nin th for his 20th save. f a s t BREAK SCORES Baseball Texas.......................... Milwaukee................. ............ 5 ...........3 H ouston..................... ............ 4 Pirates......................... ............ 2 St. Louis..................... ............ 4 A tlanta....................... ...........0 Chicago C ubs............ ............ 6 C incinnati.................. ...........1 Florida........................ ........... 3 C olorado.................... ..........1 San Francisco............. M ontreal.................... ........... 6 ......... 2 New Y ork.................. ........... 2 San Diego.................... .... (10) 1 Philadelphia.............. ............7 Los A ngeles................ ........... 5 Boston.......................... ........... 8 C alifornia.................... 6 Baltim ore.................... ........... 6 Kansas C ity................. ........... 5 T o ro n to ....................... ......... 15 Chicago White Sox ........... 7 C leveland.................... ........... 4 O a k la n d ....................... ........... 2 N ew York Yankees.... ........... 8 Seattle........................... ........... 2 M innesota.................... ......... 4 D etroit.......................... ........... 2 BRIEFS ■ P R O F O O T B A L L : Former Texas Longhorn safe­ ty Lance Gunn signed a con­ tract w ith the Cincinnati Ben- gals. Gunn, a seventh round choice and the 175th player chosen overall in last y ear's draft, is expected to compete for a reserve spot in the Ben­ gal secondary. ■ PRO BASKETBALL: C H IC A G O — T he NBA c h a m p io n C h icag o B ulls ended a three-year courtship of T oni K u k o c by sig n in g th e th re e -tim e E u ro p e a n Player of the Year to a m ulti­ year co ntract M onday. The B ulls d id n o t re le a s e th e d etails of the contract. But the deal reportedly is w orth as much as $17.6 million over eight years. Kukoc, a 6-foot- 11 g u a rd , a v e ra g e d 17.8 points, 6.3 rebounds and 5.8 assists in helping Benetton to second place in the European Club C ham pionship and the Italian League. Kukoc is expected to play alongside Michael Jordan in the Bulls' backcourt. C o m p i l e d f r o m A s s o c i a t e d Press and staff reports Ranger fans hope Nolan Ryan can stay off the disabled list and feed opponents the heat of his fastballs for the rest of his final season. Ryan's 321st career victory, cou­ pled w ith C h icag o 's 15-7 loss to Toronto, cut the White Sox' lead in the AL West over the second-place Rangers to two games. Ryan struck ou t four of the first nine batters he faced, including Dar­ ryl Hamilton leading off the game, in his first start since May 7 when he strain ed a hip m uscle in his first start back from arthroscopic knee surgery. His comeback w as further delayed when he sliced his foot on the blade of a w ater ski. Ryan, who several times glared at home plate um pire Jim McKean for a small strike zone, was aided by 20 m ph headw inds that kept doubles by Robin Yount and Tom Lampkin “Tonight was a special night for me because three weeks ago I didn’t know if I would pitch again.” — Nolan Ryan, Texas pitcher in the ballpark in the first and sec­ ond innings and pushed a would-be hom er by V aughn just foul in the fourth. Kennedy said Ryan's return was picture-perfect. "T h e gam e p lan w as alm ost as good as you could p icture it," he said. "We wanted him to throw in th e low 90s [pitches], five to six innings. He show ed good bite with his curveball. That really keeps his fastball difficult to hit. A fourth-inning double by Kevin Reimer sparked a two-run rally and gave Milwaukee a brief 2-1 lead, but Gary Redus hit a tw o-run triple in th e b o tto m of th e fo u rth to p u t Texas back on top, 3-2, and Rafael Palm eiro ad d e d a RBI chopper to first base in the fifth. Franco p u t Texas u p 1-0 in the first with a 423-foot hom er to center- field off R icky B ones (6-6). He added an RBI single in the seventh th a t chased Bones, w h o g av e up Pyrenees allow teams to shine Indurain, Banesto teammates keep control of race in mountain stages Associated Press ANDORRA — M iguel Indurain and the other Tour de France lead­ ers p lay ed a w a it-a n d -se e gam e M ond ay in th e first stag e of the Pyrenees, jockeying for position, while C olom bian O liviero Rincon took the day's race. Tuesday will be a rest day for the racers, but m ost of the top riders enjoyed a leisu rely d a y M onday eyeing each other. In d u ra in ea sily held on to th e leader's yellow jersey as the T our began three stages in the Pyrenees. He has a lead of 3:23 over A lvaro Mejia of Colombia, 4:31 over Zenon Jask u la of P o la n d a n d 5:44 o v er Tony Rominger of Switzerland. Indurain, Mejia, Jaskula, Bjarne Riis and R om inger w a ited in the pack until they had about six miles to go. They then accelerated and picked off most of the front-runners w ith only Rincon left. Rominger spent most of the day n e a r In d u r a in , w a itin g fo r h is a tta c k . H o w e v e r, ch an ce to R om inger lacked the resources he had in the Alps and only m ade one final b u rs t to m ove to second as Indurain let up. In d u r a in w as h e lp e d b y h is Banesto teammates, who took turns leading the pack. Gerard Rue of France did much of the work in the final half of the race for Indurain. W hen he faded, Pedro Delgado, who won the Tour in 1988, came to the aid of Indurain and paced him u p th e final clim b b efo re g iv in g way. "A ll the team w orked in a great w a y ," sa id R ue, w h o e n d e d u p more than eight m inutes behind but did his job until three miles w ere left. "Miguel prefers a high tem po and continuous. My role w as to accom­ p an y him as far as p o ssib le, and 'P e ric o ' fin ish ed th e w o rk ," Rue said. " T h a t B an esto — it's a g re a t team ," said Eric Boyer of France, a m em b er of th e riv a l G A N team . "They did their work from start to finish." M eanw hile, Rincon broke aw ay from a small group that had taken D O Y O U HAVE GENITAL WARTS (C ONDYLOMA/VENEREAL WARTS) MALES AND FEMALES (ages 18-70) NEEDED FOR RESEARCH STUDY TESTING A NEW THERAPY FOR THE TREATMENT OF GENITAL WARTS FREE CARE AND UP TO $300 FINANCIAL COMPENSATION (UPON COMPLETION OF STUDY) CALL 327-5725 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION (ALL REPLIES CONFIDENTIAL) CliniCor, Inc. Please see Tour, page 11 Please see Astros, page 11 - - J , - your merchandise doesn't sell in 5 days, you get 5 more days, FREE! * M u s t c a ll b e fo re 1 1 a m o n fifth d a y to g e t 5 e x tra d a ys Guidelines: • M ercha n d ise fo r sale under $ 1 0 0 0 * M ust specify p rice in a d * Price includes 2 0 w ords • Private p a rty ads o n ly Associated Press eight hits, walked three and struck o u t one in 6 2 / 3 in n in g s. It w as Franco's 11th hom er. Y o u n t g re e te d re lie v e r M ike Schooler w ith a solo hom e run, his sixth, in the eighth inning. Yount, who will undoubtedly join Ryan in the Hall of Fame, said noth­ ing R yan does anym ore su rp rises him . " It w as the sam e guy w e 'v e been se e in g th e last few y e a rs ," Y o u n t s a id . " H e c e rta in ly i s n 't going backw ards. W hat's am azing is he's still such a power pitcher." "I couldn't ask for a better situa­ tion to come back into, the way the team h as re c o v e re d ," R yan said . "W e're in the m iddle of the pennant race." Astros skin Bucks Associated Press PITTSBURGH — Eric Antho­ ny hit a tiebreaking hom e ru n in th e six th in n in g , a n d th e Houston Astros went on to beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-2. I (Mail-in form:) ¡Billing information: I Phone : I Name: I I I Street I City______________ _ I j Contact information: Address phone number is billed to: I Phone num ber o f person placing ad: I — ------------------------------------------------------ I Phone num ber ( h o m e ) ____________ j Phone n u m b e r(w o rk )______________ ! Best time to contact: I Schedule Information: I Dates and days you w a n t ad to run: State Zip Classification: (340) "Longhorn Want Ads Print or type"] your ad here: 1 S 11 16 2 7 12 17 3 8 13 18 4 9 14 19 5 10 15 20 1 1 am for next days paper Published Monday-Friday Billing: C harge to my Visa ( ) M astercard ( ) Visa # _________________________ - E x p .________ M C # E x p ._____ /jea s£ Bil[me^_D_________Payment enclosed □ H D 7 GREAT S O U N D — AT AFFORD­ ABLE PRICES: H D 5 SPEAKERS $150/PAIR; H D 7 SPEAKERS $200/PAIR. A N D THE HD5V, ES­ PECIALLY SHIELDED SO YOU CAN PUT IT RIGHT NEXT TO YO UR TV OR C O M P U T E R - ONLY $85 A PIECE. C OM E HEAR. 3300 WEST ANDERSON LANE at M O P A C 454-5033