T we Da il y T e x a n The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Wednesday, March 24, 1993 25C Russian parliament moves against Yeltsin Associated Press MOSCOW — Russia's Constitu­ tional Court cleared the way Tues­ day for parliament to remove Boris Yeltsin from office, concluding that the president violated the constitu­ tion when he declared emergency rule. The Supreme Soviet scheduled a session Wednesday to debate start­ ing u n p rec e d e n te d proceedings against Yeltsin, who said he acted to protect Russia's democratic reforms. Gleeful hard-liners shouted for the president's immediate ouster in a brief but raucous meeting of the legislature shortly after the court ruling. " It's absolutely clear there are grounds for initiating the impeach­ ment process. That's without ques­ tion," parliam ent speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov, Yeltsin's main rival, announced after the court decision. Khasbulatov is expected to push Wednesday for the Supreme Soviet to convene the larger Congress of P e o p le's D eputies, w hich can rem ove the p re sid e n t by a two- thirds vote. The Congress was elect­ ed in 1990 under Communist rule. Yeltsin's aides say the president — who was democratically elected “It’s absolutely clear there are grounds for ini­ tiating the impeachment process.” — Ruslan Khasbulatov, parliament speaker Please see Viewpoint, page 4 in 1991 — would not obey a vote by lawmakers to remove him. Khasbulatov said Vice President A lexander R utskoi w ould take pow er if the C ongress — w hich could m eet as early as Friday — ousts Yeltsin. Rutskoi, who like Khasbulatov is a former Yeltsin ally, has denounced the p re s id e n t's actions. Despite the political crisis, ordi­ nary Russians went about their lives as usual in the capital. Only a few h u n d red pro- and anti-Y eltsin dem onstrators turned out at the White House, or parliament build­ ing, for rival protests. A pro-Yeltsin rally in St. Peters­ burg attracted about 15,000 people who chanted "Yeltsin!" and "Refer­ endum!" After deliberating all night, the Constitutional Court found in a 9-3 ruling that Yeltsin's address to the nation Saturday violated eight arti­ cles of the constitution. Kremlin spokesmen declined to comment on the decision, but said Yeltsin w ould go ahead w ith an April 25 referendum. The president maintained public silence Tuesday for the third day in a row , cau g h t up in the p riv ate agony of burying his mother, Klav- dia Yeltsin. She died over the week­ end, at age 85, after rep o rted ly becoming upset by her son's politi­ cal troubles. In his speech, Yeltsin declared emergency rule and announced a public vote of confidence in his leadership. He said the referendum could lead to a new constitution that would replace the Congress and Supreme Soviet with a bicamer­ al legislature. The court said Yeltsin had the right to call for the nationwide vote of confidence, but not to declare that his decrees take precedence over the decisions of all other government bodies. The court's finding, couched in legal jargon, said he "altered the constitutional separation of powers betw een the federal organs of power." Texans visit Capitol Hill Williamson, Sharp testify on proposed legislation Rebecca Stewart Daily Texan Staff Texas Railroad Commissioner Barry Williamson and state Comptroller John Sharp were in Washington, D.C., Tuesday to testify before Congress on budget reforms and proposed energy taxes. Williamson attacked President Clinton's proposal for an energy tax. While Williamson said he supported Clinton's goal to reduce the federal deficit, he did not agree that reduc­ tions should start with increased taxes. "Balance the budget here in Washington, and not on the backs of h ard w o rk in g men and w o m en ," W illiamson told m em bers of the House W ays and Means Committee Tuesday. Williamson said the energy tax singles out one region of the country, specifically Texas. He said according to 1990 Department of Energy reports, Texas has the high­ est energy consumption in the country, adding that Tex­ ans use 720 million gallons of gas each month. Williamson concluded that the burden of an energy tax would be placed on the state because it consumes so much energy. The Clinton administration proposed a broad-based energy tax last month. The tax would be based on a fuel's British therm al units, or Btu. One Btu is the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit. It is estimat­ ed that the tax could raise about $22 billion in annual revenues. "As the Energy Belt of America is slowly waking up from the nightm are and readjusting painfully to the Please see Texans, page 2 Death row vigil John Santis, a civil rights activist from Chile, consoled Elodia Carrillos de Reyes outside the Governor's Man- Tuesday in Huntsville. See related story, page 8. sion after the execution of Dominican Carlos Santana David Fitzgerald/Daily Texan Staff UT minority scholarship funding safe Meghan Griffiths Daily Texan Staff The status of race-based scholarships for feder­ ally funded u niversities is now on steadier ground, UT officials said Tuesday, after Educa­ tion Secretary Richard Riley sent a letter to about 7,500 college presidents assuring his support for the programs. The March 4 letter follows a 1990 U.S. Depart­ ment of Education statement, made by former Assistant Education Secretary Michael Williams, that race-based scholarships violated the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Although UT officials said the 1990 announcem ent had not actively affected scholarship programs at the University, Riley's letter would be taken as a positive sign that UT minority scholarship money will not be threat­ ened by the Education Department. "We view this scholarship program as a very im portant part of our recruiting," said James “Most people around the country took a wait-and-see kind of approach.” — Don Davis, associate director of student financial services Vick, vice president for student affairs. "We plan to continue w ith the program w e've had in place." Shortly after the statement was issued, former education secretary Lamar Alexander delayed enforcement of the plan, saying that more study of the issue was needed. "We all felt that probably [Williams] kind of stepped out of whack when he came out with his original statem ent," said Don Davis, associate director of student financial services. "Most peo­ ple around the country took a wait-and-see kind of approach." "I really think we're pretty safe," he added. Currently, the University doles out more than $4.5 million annually in m inority scholarship programs, which are offered on the basis of a stu­ dent's grade point average, recommendations and high school standing. The programs include scholarships such as the Texas Achievem ent Award, the Texas Achievement Honors Award and the Minority Transfer Award. . A bout 1,800 UT stu d e n ts receive general minority scholarships in addition to financial aid offered through individual colleges, Davis said. The letter also said universities should not worry about changing their program s despite further reports scheduled to be released in June. If the plan to restrict race-based scholarships had gone through, the impact on the minority community at the University could have been substantial, said Typhannie Beasley, chairman of the Board of Directors of the Minority Informa- Please see Scholarships, page 2 Democrats defend economic package Associated Press WASHINGTON — Urged on by President Clinton, Senate Democ­ rats defended the administration's economic package against critics of its defense cuts and new taxes Tues­ day. Meanwhile, a panel of lawmak­ ers approved a companion job-cre­ ating measure. In a long day of voting, Democra­ tic leaders labored to keep their 57- 43 majority together as lawmakers debated the outlines of a five-year, $502 billion deficit-cutting plan. The actual tax and spending changes will have to be enacted in future legislation. Separately, the Senate Appropria­ tions Committee gave a quick nod to a m easure that would show er road-building and other job-heavy projects with $16.3 billion. Majority Democrats seemed likely to muscle both m easures largely intact through the Senate in the next few days. N evertheless, Clinton used his first full-fledged news conference to remind lawmakers that the public likes his plan to boost taxes on the Majority Democrats seemed likely to muscle both measures largely intact through the Senate in the next few days. rich, cut defense and shift spending to education and other program s that could feed future economic growth. "Each of these elements — reduc­ ing the deficit, asking the wealthy to pay their fair share, investing in the fu tu re and creating jobs — w ill work as a package," the president said. "And Congress should pass the package." But that wasn't to say that battles weren't going to have to be waged first. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman of the Armed Services Committee, was trying to amend the deficit- red u c tio n p lan to en su re that defense spending not be raided to beef up social programs. And R epublicans, led by Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., were ready to strike at the package's most sensi­ tive point: the $32 billion it would raise over five years by boosting taxes on the best-off Social Security recipients. One surprising opponent of Lott's plan was former Sen. Warren Rud- man, R-N.H., now co-chairman of The Concord Coalition, a budget watchdog group. "Subjecting Social Security bene­ fits to income tax — just like the pri­ vate pension benefits received by millions of Americans — is a fair and equitable provision," Rudman said in a written statement. The deficit-reduction plan merely outlines future action, but the mea­ sure's political significance is huge. It calls for trim m ing next year's budget shortfall to $254 billion and the 1998 gap to $214 billion — much lower than would otherwise occur. Clinton and his Democratic allies got big boosts last week when the D em ocratic-dom inated H ouse approved its own versions of the jobs and deficit-cutting measures. But the challenge for Democrats was greater in the Senate, which is more conservative and where the party's leaders lack the 80-vote edge their House counterparts enjoy. INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY ■'T - • • ' ; .. , r. ‘ ; *; 1 ' v - \ ' «y . k C o rre c tio n : In a page 7 story Monday, The Texan reported that organizers of the Aqua Fest sum­ mer concqrt series would be offer­ ing a $30 wristband that would allow admittance to local clubs after Aqua Fest Concerts. Actual­ ly, Aqua Fest attendees will be given club wristbands free with each night’s $7 admission fee. The Texan regrets the error._____ W e a th e r: M ostly cloudy with highs in the mid-70s, lows in the mid-50s and SE winds at 5-10 mph. Index: Around Cam pus................. ...11 Classifieds.......................... ...12 Com ics............................... ...11 Editorials............................ .... 4 Entertainment..................... .... 9 Sports.................................. ...14 State & Local...................... .... 7 University........................... .... 6 3 World & N ation..... ;............ Michael L Hide/Daily Texan Staff Prospective graduate students can now take the GRE on these computers instead of on paper. Graduate hopefuls get GRE results fast Valerie Godines Daily Texan Staff Waiting for GRE results used to take prospective g rad u a te s tu ­ dents a nerve-wracking six weeks, but thanks to a new com puter- based test, it now takes a heart- stopping second. And while students applying to graduate school used to have only five Graduate Record Examination test dates each year to choose from, they can now choose to take the computerized test at any time, according to Charlotte Kuh, execu­ tive director of the Educational Testing Service office in Princeton, N.J. which oversees GRE testing. Students are limited to taking the com puterized exam once a year because of limited test ver­ sions, Kuh said. "The program just started, but we hope to have some new ver­ sions soon," she said, and added that students may still take the written version as many times as they want. The new testing method began in October 1992, but few students are aware of the service, Kuh said. "The flexibility [computers] pro­ vide will allow us to provide test­ ing that is tailored to the user," she added. Steve McBrearty, staff associate for ETS, said the computer-based exams are currently offered year- round in major cities in 37 states at ETS offices and at Sylvan Learning C enters — a national com pany that has contracted with ETS to Please see GRE, page 2 Page 2 Wednesday, March 24, 1993 T h e D a il y T e x AíN Meadow Brooks murder suspect taken into custody Christopher M. Brick Daily Texan Staff A m an charged w ith m urder in last w eek 's sh o o t-o u t at a South Austin housing project turned him­ self in to police late Monday night. Jam es Ervin Sorrells Jr., 25, of 4911 Lucksinger Lane, walked into V is tin Police H e ad q u arte rs and su rre n d ere d about 11 p.m. M on­ day. H e is charged w ith intentional murder. The charge stems from the shooting death of Louis Conner at the M eadow Brooks Housing Pro­ ject, 2300 Wirtz Ave., on the night of March 16. According to police reports, Offi­ cers Steve Dominguez and Ernesto Pedraza were working as off-duty security' guards at the complex on the n ig h t of the shooting w hen a fight broke out. As they tried to break up the fight, several others started, and the officers called for assistance. P olice re p o rts sh o w th a t the melee got out of hand and "as the crowd and fight grew, the officers w e re b e c o m in g s e p a ra te d from each other an d requested that the responding units respond at code 3 — red lights and sirens." Before police could arrive, a man cam e o u t of A p a rtm e n t 104 and began firing a handgun. A second m an — a lle g e d ly S o rre lls — Scholarships Continued from page 1 re tu r n e d fire from th e re a r of A p a rtm e n t 101 and th e officers, w ho w e re a rm e d , to o k co v e r behind a tree. C o n n er w as sh o t d u rin g the exchange. A cco rd in g to p o lice re p o rts , P e d ra z a id e n tifie d h im se lf as a police officer and ordered the sec­ ond man to drop his weapon. The man instead turned to the officers and raised his gun. After Pedraza fired one shot, Sor­ rells turned and ran through A part­ ment 101. Conner was pronounced dead at 2:03 a.m. March 17 at Brackenridge Hospital. Investigators found shells from a .380-caliber handgun later traced to Sorrells on the floor in A partm ent 104, a n d m ed ica l e x a m in e rs re m o v e d a b u lle t m a tch in g th e shells from Conner's back. W itn esses id e n tifie d S o rre lls, known to them as "Killer," from a photo lineup after police searched th e ir c o m p u te rs for peo p le w ho have used the alias "Killer." S orrells w as in cu sto d y at the T ravis C o u n ty C entral B ooking Facility Tuesday night after identi­ fying himself to officers at the front desk of Austin police headquarters. He faces five to 99 years in prison if convicted of intentional m urder. The M arch 16 s h o o tin g w as A u s tin 's se v e n th h o m ic id e th is year. tion Center. "M inority num bers on this cam­ pus [w ould] decrease dram atical­ ly," she said. "The school system is geared tow ard the m ajority," and the U n iv ersity needs to in crease scholarship funds, she added. H ow ever, the University w ould have likely developed an alternate plan to provide m inority students with scholarship funds if any action had taken place, Davis said. A lthough no formal plans w ere m ade, som e alternatives included geographically based scholarships benefiting minorities, he said. T h e Da i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor ...... .........................................................................................................Geoff Henley Managing Editor ........................................................................................... Angela Shah Associate Managing Editors....................... Asim Bhansali, John Sepehri, Andy Thomas, Kevin Williamson News Editor....................................................................................................... Ted s Warren Associate News Editors............................................................................ Teri Bailey, Anne Gainer News Assignments Editor........................................................................................... «elty xabb Senior Reporters Christopher Brick, Meghan Griffiths, Justin Noble, Rebecca Stewart, James Wilkerson Associate Editors...................................................................................... Patrick Barta, Jeff Burk Entertainment Editor...............................................................................................Jeff Rhoads Associate Entertainment Editor............................................................................Carmen Maverick Around Campus/Listings Editor.............................................................................. Christy Fleming ........................................................................................ Christopher Smith Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor..........................................................................................Tres Peacock General Sports Reporters.................................................. Jason Lovelace, Gene Menez, Matt Schulz Picture Editor....................................................................................................... Patrick Sison Associate Picture Editor.......................................................................................... Huy Nguyen Graphics Editor.................................................................................................. Korey Coleman Cartoonists.......................................... Jose Alaniz, Carl Greenblatt, Howard Sherman, Korey Coleman Issue Staff News Reporters....................................................... Jonathan Bell, Michael Gaffney, Valerie Godines, David lippeatt, Mushtaq Kapasi, Melinda Krenek, Erica Shaffer Photographers..................................................................................... Michael Hide, Marc Garcia Makeup Editors......................................................................... Mark Beavers, Laura A. Stromberg Wire Editor........................................................................................................... Scott Bartels Copy Editors..................................................... Greg Bilbro, Greg Moreno, Tamara Prior, Jeff Walters Editorial Assistant......................................................... Editorial Columnists........................................................................Evan Fitzmaurice, Ted Willmore Entertainment Assistant............................................................................................. Mitch Clark Entertainment Writers.............................................................. Courtney De Ginder, Eric Rasmussen Sports Assistant...................................................................................................Joseph Garza Sports Writer...................................... «.Troy Brown, Larry Remmer Advertising Local Display................................ Sonia Garcia, Jylle Joyner, Kelli C. Coe, Brad Corbett, Elsa J. Fores, Melina Madolora, Jeffery Harston, Trudy Bullard, Danielle Linden, Mark Wikoff Art Director ....................................................................................................... Tiffany Butler Graphic Designer............................................................................... Dana Wallace, Amee Shah Classified Display.......................................................... Nathan Moore, Brad Floyd, Lisa Amesquita Classified Telephone Sales..........................................Bob Roeh, Shawnte Williams, Christine English Clarks..................................................... Rachel Martin, Kim Krause, Christy Evans, Karen Ausmus, Laura Stadler, Maria Requesto, Wendy Hopper The Daily Texan (U S P S 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is pub­ lished by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis Ave., Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published daily, except Saturday and Sunday, holidays and exam periods. Second class postage paid at Austin TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.312). For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865. For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900. For classified word advertising, call 471-5244 Entire contents copyright 1993 Texas Student Publications. The Dally Texan Mail Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring).........................................................................................$30.00 Two Semesters (Fall and Spring)...................................................................................... 55.00 Summer Session........................................................................................................... 20.00 One Year (Fall. Spring and Sum m er)..................................................................................75.00 To charge by V ISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904, or to T SP Building C3.200, or call 471-5083. P O ST M A ST ER : S e n d a d d re ss c h a n g e s to The Daily Texan, P.O . B o x D, Austin, T X 78713-8904. Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m. Thursday, 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday............ Monday, 4 p.m. Friday.................Tuesday, 4 p.m. Classified Word A d s ................................... 11 a m (Las! B usiness Day Prior lo Publication) r So how did you do?^l It’s time to bring your Spring Break phoios in! W h y ? you could he a Winner! Eater me Texas umoa Marketing committee s S p r in g Bre ak Photo Contest •2 categories ’ most scenic & craziest •3 winners in each: •1st Prize: $50.00 Gap gilt certifícale $25.00 gill certificates from Tower Records & me Campus store •2nd i 3rd Prize gill cerlllicaiet irom Tower Records i lie campus store •Contest runs March 22n i-A irli 2nd. •Entries m u st he su b m itted m e r e April 2nd. mis week every day is double prim day at me Campus store. Cornell proposes creation of gay dorm Associated Press ITHACA, N.Y. — Student Carla Roland was walking along a stone path on the Cornell Uni­ versity campus one day last fall when she saw a m essage scrawled in colored chalk. It said "1- 800-DIE-HOMO." "M y life c h a n g e d ," said th e 2 1-year-old senior, who is gay. "It's so vivid in my mind. It was a huge turning point for me." Roland and several other students soon asked for a separate living area for hom osexual stu­ dents. The Ivy League campus is split over the idea, w ith debate focused on whether segrega­ tion is the best way to foster tolerance. Cornell's Student Assembly passed a proposal this month calling for a wing of a campus dor­ m itory to be reserved for about 60 stu d en ts, hom osexual or heterosexual, interested in pro­ moting "gay, lesbian and bisexual awareness." O ther colleges have established gay-oriented housing units in recent years with little contro­ versy. "Ideally, it'd be good for everybody to be able to live together, but there is a large am ount of hostility tow ard gays and lesbians because of who they are," said Thom Turner, co-chairman of the National Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Stu­ dent Caucus. "People can't get any learning done if there's this overall threat of violence to them ." Opponents said the proposed dorm at Cornell would be segregationist and would worsen rela­ tions between gays and heterosexuals. Supporters said it would give gay students a place w here they could feel com fortable on a predom inantly heterosexual and often hostile campus. "T he creation of this unit will send a very strong signal that invisibility and harassm ent no longer will be tolerated," said Joseph Barrios, who represents gays, lesbians and bisexuals on the student assembly. "It would mean coming home and not having to be afraid." C o rn e ll P re s id e n t F ran k R h o d es, w ho declined to be interview ed, said in a letter to assembly president Pankaj Tal war: "I fully share the assembly's support for diversity in the uni­ versity com m unity." student assembly's assertion that gay students feel unempowered and unprotected on campus and said he didn't know whether the gay living unit would dissolve barriers or create them. Rhodes has 30 days to decide on the proposal. Cornell already has special-interest dorm ito­ ries, called theme houses, for students interested in music, languages, ecology and other issues. Junior Jonathan Bloedow said he condem ns harassment of homosexuals but doesn't think a gay dorm is the solution. "I draw a distinction between acceptance of individuals and acceptance of individuals' ideol- ogy," he said. Since fall, about 20 students at the University of M assachusetts at A m herst have lived in a gay-lesbian-bisexual "corridor." The University of California has about 40 students living in two gay "theme" dormitories, and Rutgers Universi­ ty started a gay studies living unit for about 10 students this year in its "special interests" dor­ mitory. Officials at the three schools say the special areas were set up with little fuss. "They did it and it's done and that's it," said But Rhodes said he was "distressed" by the Rutgers housing m anager Robert Spear. Texans Continued from page 1 brave new world, it cannot bear the b r u n t of a new tax sp e c ific a lly d irected at en e rg y ," W illiam son said. In u n re la te d testim o n y , S harp testified before the House Subcom­ mittee on Legislation and National Security on the implementation of a N ational P erform ance Review as p art of a task force organized by Vice P resident A1 Gore. The p ro ­ gram would be similar to one cur­ rently used in Texas. S h arp w ill se rv e as a sp e c ia l adviser to Gore and oversee a six- m onth effort to trim fat from the n a tio n 's b u d g e t. S h arp said the state learned a lesson after initiat­ ing the Texas Performance Review two years ago. "W e learned that budget cutting GRE Continued from page 1 adm inister the tests. Kuh said the new testing method o ffers c o n v e n ie n c e a n d in s ta n t results. W hen a student is finished with the com puter exam, scores can be produced instantly if requested. Brent Fogt, a UT graduate adm is­ sions counselor who recently took the GRE on com puter said he was pleased w ith the sam e-day feed­ back. "I am the type that worries, and h a v in g to w a it six w e ek s w as a headache," Fogt said. "W hen I took the test on the com puter, I d id n 't hesitate to get my results." "W hen I took the last [w ritten] GRE it w as in a big a u d ito riu m , with shuffling papers, nervous stu­ dents and all that. When I took it on the computer, it was a lot quieter," he added. Kuh said the tests are identical in difficulty but added that the com­ p u te riz e d exam costs m ore. The written exam costs $45 as opposed to a $90 charge for a pre-registered com puterized exam. W alk-in stu ­ d en ts m u st p a y $120 to take the computerized test. "It's w orth it. The stu d en t reac­ tion has been extremely positive," said S h aro n C h e rry , d ire c to r of te c h n o lo g y a t A u s tin 's S y lv an Learning Center. they all have th eir ow n w orking sta tio n ," C herry said. "A n d s tu ­ d e n ts w a n t to g et th e ir re s u lts im mediately — they d o n 't want to have to wait." Kuh predicted that about 15,000 students will take the new test this year. She said about 410,000 stu ­ dents will take the written version. " T h is is ju st g e ttin g off th e ground so it is going to take time. But I th in k it w ill p ick u p afte r awhile." Kuh said she is relying on infor­ mational bulletins given to students d u rin g registration of the GRE to notify them about the new option. "S tudents w ho aren 't com puter literate shouldn't be afraid, because th e re 's a very good tu to ria l p ro ­ gram that explains everything. It is a very simple program ," McBrearty said. Kuh said another benefit of the new testing method is that it takes about 10 days to get test results to g ra d sch o o ls. T he w ritte n -te s t results, how ever, take about four weeks to be delivered to designated schools. In Austin, students may take the exam at the ETS office on Tuesdays, T hursdays or Fridays. The Sylvan Learning Center offers the exam on an as-needed basis. "This is the wave of the future," "It's a very quiet atm osphere and Fogt said. is the hardest thing to do and that raising taxes is the second-hardest thing to d o ," Sharp told the sub­ committee. A spokesm an for Sharp said the audit will be completed w ithin six months to prevent tam pering from lobbyists and other special interest groups. He also said all information collected will be confidential until the final report is completed. "It's secretive during the process so the lobbyists don't have time to m arshal their forces," said Sharp spokesman Kelly Fero. "N obody except the vice p resi­ d e n t, S h arp an d [sta te D e p u ty C om ptroller Billy H am ilton] will know th e w h o le th in g ," Fero a d d e d . " T h a t's to c u t d o w n on leaks." London & Milan $99 round trip Australia $50 round trip Recently released guide reveals a step-by- step process for taking advantage of hundreds of dally international and domestic flights on major airKnes to almost anywhere in the world. Plus many little known travel and lodging secrets, send only $14.45 (check or money order) to: Chris Eaton 7760 McCallum Blvd. Suite 15312 Dallas, TX 75252 3 0 d a y u n c o n d itio n a l money back guarantee. Daniel Encina In Living C A N O N L A S E R C O L O R C O P IE S Why settle for black & white when you can have color? Full color reproduction onto paper, transparencies & T-shirt transfers. Reductions, enlargements, copies from slides. Letter, legal & 11x17. - m m m OINNYS PRINTING ♦ COPYING R U S S IA N P O E T YEVGENY YEVTUSHENKO Dobie Mall • 21 st & Guadalupe •476-9171 • 7 days a week* Mon-Thur till midnight B O O K S I G N I N G A N D R E C E P T IO N AT TH E UNIVERSITY CO-OP T H U R S D A Y . M A R C H 25 • 1:30 - 3:00 PM In the G e n e ra l B o o k Department, on the S e c o n d Level Yevtushenko will read from his work In the Art Auditorium U.T. Art Building at S a n Jacinto and 23rd Street UNIVERSITY CO-OP_______ 2246 Guadalupe*476-7211*Free Parking at 23rd and San Antonio Texas Union campus Store • 471-3292 Mon-Thu: 730-6:00 Fri: 7:30 - 5:i A If y o u ’re ta k in g o n e of th e s e te sts, ta k e K a p la n first. W e te a c h you e x a c tly w h a t th e te st c o v e r s a n d s h o w yo u th e te st- ta k in g s t r a t e g ie s yo u 'll n e e d to s c o r e you r b e st. N o on e t e a c h e s y o u to thin k lik e the te s t m a k e r s b etter th a n K a p la n . For m ore in fo rm atio n c a ll 4 7 2 -E X A M . K A P L A N T h e a n s w e r to the te s t q u e stio n FRANKLIN COLLEGE SWITZERLAND Ideally situated in the heart of Eurppe, Franklin is the perfect choice for Study Abroad students. Located in Lugano, Switzerland, Franklin College is a U.S. accredited liberal arts college. Each semester in features course-related Eastern and Western Europe. Residential student apartments on or adjacent to the college's cam pus over-looking Lake Lugano. travel For information about our 1993 Summer Program, or for Semester or Year Abroad, please contact our U.S. Admissions office: Franklin College 135 East 65th St., Suite H New York, NY 10021 Tel: (212) 772-2090, Fax: (212) 772-2718 TUESDAYS DOW JONES: 3.461.86 DOWN 1 62 VOLUME 231 870 304 O 1 ^ 1 A l i I M A T I WORLD W NATION Reno seeks abortion clinic safeguards Wednesday. March 24. 1993 Page A k l Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — N ew legisla­ tio n is n e e d e d to p ro te c t w o m e n en terin g abortion clinics because a recent Suprem e C o u rt ruling u n d er­ m in e d fed eral a u th o rity to a ssu re such access, A ttorney G eneral Janet J?eno said Tuesday. " C u rre n t federal law , in light of the [court] decision, I d o n 't think is a d e q u a te ... to p re v e n t o r to h elp p re v e n t physical in terferen ce w ith access to a b o rtio n c l i n i c s / ' R eno told reporters. O n C a p ito l H ill, S en. E d w a rd K ennedy, D-M ass., in tro d u ced leg­ islation th at w ould m ake it a federal crim e to attack m edical personnel or clinic p ro p e rty . It also a llo w s th e U.S. atto rn ey g eneral to b rin g civil su its to o b ta in in ju n ctio n s ag ain st su c h c o n d u c t. A s im ila r m e a su re has already been in tro d u ced in the H ouse. R e n o 's c o m m e n ts c a m e in h e r first new s conference since becom ­ ing the nation's top prosecutor. On other m atters, she: ■ C a lle d fo r all U .S. a tto r n e y s nationw ide to subm it their resigna­ tions so that the C linton adm inistra­ tion can p u t its ow n people in place. "W e are g o in g to try to d o it in a v e r y o r d e r ly w a y th a t d o e s n o t im pact in any w ay on any pending m atter," she said. ■ D enied reports that a successor already has been chosen for em bat­ tled FBI D irector W illiam Sessions. "I h a v e n 't chosen him and the presi­ dent h a sn 't chosen him and I d o n 't know w ho else w ou ld choose him ," she said . She said n o decision h as been m a d e w h e th e r to re tain Ses­ sions, w ho is accused of using gov­ ernm ent transportation for personal purposes and oth er m isconduct. ■ R uled o u t th e Ju stice D e p a rt­ m ent getting involved in the shoot­ ing death of Dr. D avid G unn as he headed tow ard an abortion clinic in Pensacola, Fla. "F lorida law on this subject is m ore effective than federal law ," said the form er Florida prose­ cutor. A fter sp eak in g w ith G u n n 's wife an d daugh ter, she said she w as sa tisfie d w ith th e p ro g re ss of th e case. O n w o m e n 's access to a b o rtio n clinics, the Suprem e C ourt ruled last January in a Virginia case that fed­ e ra l ju d g e s c a n n o t s to p , th ro u g h in ju n ctio n s, p ro te s te rs w h o try to block su ch access. T h e c o u rt said sta te la w s — n o t an 1871 fe d e ra l law, the Ku Klux Klan Act — m ust be relied on to p revent such block­ ades. The Bush adm inistration had su p ­ p o rte d th e d e c isio n . But R eno, in one of her first actions, directed the Ju stic e D e p a rtm e n t to re v ie w th e law s to see if fed eral in te rv e n tio n w as possible. That review , she said, led her to conclude th at a new law w as needed. "I h av e a sk e d o u r staff to w o rk w ith congressional staff to do every­ thing possible to develop legislation th a t a d d re s s e s th ese issu e s in th e m o st e ffe c tiv e m a n n e r p o s s ib le ," she said. "P assage of this legislation is a p r io r ity , it is i m p o r ta n t a n d w e're going to work w ith C ongress to secure passage of it." Associated Press Attorney General Janet Reno weathered her first news conference at the Justice Department Tuesday. Clinton meets the press Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — P r e s id e n t C lin to n said Tuesday at his first form al new s con­ ference th at it is probably constitutional to restrict the d u ty assignm ent of hom osexu­ als in th e m ilitary . H e also sh a rp ly c riti­ cized Japan on trade. H is 40-m inute session w ith reporters in the W hite H ouse East Room began w ith a flurry of questions on Boris Yeltsin and the Russian political crisis. But before long the em phasis tu rn ed to other m atters, ranging from qualifications for his Suprem e C ourt nom inee to his p la n s for allow ing o p enly gay people in the m ilitary. B rought back to the gay s-m ilitary topic th at threw him off stride in the first w eeks o f h is a d m in is tr a tio n , C lin to n s a id h e w o u ld not rule o u t lim iting hom osexuals' m ilitary assignm ents "d e p en d in g on w hat the g rou nds and argum ents w ere." C linton has taken the first steps tow ard allow ing openly gay people in the m ilitary. H ow ever, confronted by w idespread o p p o ­ sition from m ilitary leaders, the p resident d e la y ed his po licy for six m o n th s as th e Pentagon exam ines w h eth er it w o u ld cause problem s. H e said T uesday it is probably constitu­ tional to restrict th e d u ty a ssig n m e n ts of hom osexuals. In answ er to questions: ■ O n replacing Justice Byron W hite, Clin­ to n s a id h e w o u ld w a n t a n y S u p r e m e C ourt nom inee to su p p o rt the constitution­ al right to privacy — the u n d e rp in n in g of legalized a b o rtio n s — b u t th a t he w o u ld n o t specifically ask c a n d id a te s h o w they w ould vote in abortion or other cases. ■ O n a crucial tra d e issue, he said th a t c h a n c e s fo r s e llin g A m e ric a n g o o d s to Jap an on an e q u a l b a sis are " s o m e w h a t rem ote" in view of the h u ge and persistent trad e su rp lu s enjoyed by Tokyo. H e renew ed his su p p o rt for higher tariffs on foreign-m ade m inivans, saying he w as "asto n ish e d " that the Bush adm inistration "g av e a $300 m illion a year freebie to the Japanese for no a p p a re n t reason. A nd w e got nothing — and I em phasize nothing — in retu rn ." ■ O n R ussia, C linton d re w a sh arp dis­ tinction betw een Yeltsin as " th e first dem o­ cratically elected president in 1,000 years of R ussian governm ent" and th e "com m unist era" law m akers w ho w an t to im peach him. W hile o ffering a w arm en d o rse m e n t of the em battled Russian leader, Clinton said he w o u ld n o t sp e c u la te on w h e th e r U.S. policy w ould change or w h ether A m erican aid w o u ld still be fo rth c o m in g if Y eltsin w ere im peached. In th e o p e n in g d a y s of C lin to n 's p resi­ dency, C linton's su p p o rt of hom osexuals in the m ilitary p rovoked an u p ro a r from the Pentagon and som e m em bers of Congress. Som e h a v e su g g e s te d th a t h o m o s e x u a ls should be kept from com bat or sea d u ty or o th er assignm ents, w hile oth ers h av e said that w ould n ot be constitutional. C linton said that if you can discrim inate against people based on w h eth er they say they are hom osexuals — the current situa­ tion in the m ilitary — "I w o u ld think you c o u ld m a k e a p p r o p r ia te d is tin c tio n s on d uty assignm ents once they're in." Judge sets air-fare deadline Associated Press ATLANTA — A federal judge gave trav­ elers until June 1 to file claim s for air-fare discounts u n d e r a $458 m illion settlem ent of a law suit accusing nin e U.S. carriers of fixing prices. U.S. D istric t Ju d g e M a rv in S h o o b se t th e c la im s d e a d lin e w h e n he ap proved the deal M onday. "T h at w ill be the final ex ten sio n ," said D iane N ast of Philadelphia, a lead attorney in the class-action law suit that accused the n atio n 's biggest airlines of using an in d u s­ try com puter system to jointly raise fares. A bout 2.6 m illion d isco u n t claim s have b een filed so far, a n d a tto rn e y s say th ey e x p e c t a b o u t 1.5 m illio n m o re . M a rtin R udolph, a court-appointed claims ad m in ­ is tra to r, sa id T u e sd a y he h as tw o sh ifts w o rk in g d aily to process th e p a p e rw o rk . C la im a n ts a re e x p e c te d to re c e iv e th e ir coupons by the m iddle of next year. The airlines denied w ro ng do in g b u t said they agreed to settle the 3-year-old case to avoid a lengthy and expensive trial. N a m e d in th e la w s u it w e re A m eric an A irlin es, C o n tin e n ta l A irlin e s, D elta A ir Lines, M id w a y A irlin e s, N o rth w e s t A ir­ lines, Pan A m erican W orld A irw ays, Trans W orld Airlines, U nited A irlines and USAir. T hough Pan Am and M idw ay have gone o u t of business, people w ho b oug h t tickets from them still are eligible for the coupons. A nyone w ho bo u g h t tickets betw een Jan. 1,1988, and June 30, 1992, for travel on any of the nine airlines to, from , or connecting at any of 34 airp orts across the cou n try is eligible. O nly in a few selected cases w ill d o c u m e n ta tio n b e re q u ire d . P e o p le w h o pu rch ased five or m ore tickets d u rin g the period or w h o took trips totaling $2,500 or m ore will be aw ard ed coupons w orth u p to 10 percent of the cost of the original tickets. Those w ith few er purchases will get vouch­ ers w orth u p to $100. Tom Parsons, editor of Best Fares, an air­ fare m ag azin e b ased in A rlington, Texas, said th e financially trou bled airline in dus­ try, w hich bitterly d enounced the an titrust law suit, ironically m ay b enefit from it. "Y o u 're going to see the su it becom e a m arketing tool to stim ulate b usiness for the airlines," he said. 'T o r the leisure traveler, its going to stim ulate travel. It's an a d v er­ tisem ent for the airlines." C laim form s are available from Airlines A n tit r u s t L itig a tio n , P .O . Box 267, Pennsauken, N.J., 08110-0267. M any travel agents also have the forms. Sailing away A Vietnam ese fam ily huddled in a boat w a iting to fle e C am bodia S a tu rd a y in Takhmau, about 10 miles south of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. In the wake of ethnic vio­ lence against that claim ed 35 lives on March 10, these fleeing families take what little they have and make the trip hom e to Vietnam along the Mekong River. Associated Press Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — N e a rly 4,200 te e n ­ agers w ere killed by firearm s in 1990, m ore th an ever before, the g overnm ent reported Tuesday. H e a lth a n d H u m a n S erv ices S e c re ta ry D onna Shalala called the statistics "frighten­ ing and intolerable." O nly m o to r v ehicle accid en ts kill m ore teen-agers and young ad u lts than firearm s, th e N a tio n a l C e n te r for H e a lth S ta tistic s reported . O ne in every four d eath s am ong those aged 15 to 24 in 1990 w as a firearm s N E W S IN BRIEF Associated Press Record number of teen-agers slain by guns in 1990 “ These are the data behind all the stories we’ve been reading every day.” — Lois Fingerhut, author of the study “ Firearm Mortality Among Children, Youth and Young Adults, 1-34 Years o f A ge” fatality. T hirty-nine percent m ore deaths occurred from firearm s than from n atural causes. The firearm s hom icide an d suicide rates for young m en w ere five to 10 tim es higher than for females. A m ong all 15-to-l9-year-olds, there w ere 4,173 firearm s deaths in 1990, an increase of n e a rly 600 o v er th e y ear b efore a n d 1,675 m ore than in 1985. The rate for black m ales in that age group h a s so are d from 37 d e a th s p e r 100,000 in 1985 to 105 d e a th s p e r 100,000 in 1990; am ong w hite males, it nearly doubled from five deaths p er 100,000 to alm ost 10. "These are the data behind all the stories w e 'v e been re ad in g every d a y ," said Lois F in g e r h u t, th e a u th o r of th e s t u d y on "Firearm M ortality A m ong C hildren, Youth and Young A dults, 1-34 Years of A ge." S h a la la , in a s ta te m e n t, d e c r ie d " t h e w aste of young lives. As a society, w e need to d o a better job of und erstan d in g w h y this is h ap p en in g and w h a t we can d o to tu rn these num bers a ro u n d ." Richard A bom , president of the C enter to Prevent H andgu n Violence, said the U nited S ta te s h ad ru s h e d to th e a id o f c h ild re n starving in a far-off land, but "w h ere is the in te rv e n tio n n e e d e d to sa v e th e c h ild re n w ho are dyin g needlessly rig h t here in the U.S.A.?" A bom also heads H a n d g u n C ontrol Inc., which is lobbying for tighter restrictions on gun sales. Fingerhut said there w ere 19,722 firearm s deaths am ong children and v ou n g a d u lts in 1990, and 37,155 death s by firearm s am ong Am ericans of all ages. A m ong the 4,173 teen -ag ers, 1,936 w ere w h ite m ales; 1,640 b lack m ales; 319 w h ite females; 163 black females; 115 w ere classi­ fied as others. Arab-Israeli tensions grow with killing JERUSALEM — A Jew ish settler k ille d a P a le s tin ia n o n T u e s d a y w h o w a s b o u n d h a n d a n d fo o t a f te r s ta b b in g a n o th e r s e ttle r . R adio re p o rts said th e A rab w as shot eight or nine tim es in the back at close range. P rim e M in is te r Y itz h a k R abin u rg e d I s r a e lis o n T u e s d a y to defend them selves instead of com ­ plaining about A rab attacks. But he said that d id not m ean they should be shooting Arabs. Israel radio said the settler w ho o p ened fire believed the P alestin­ ian ha B E lt T?F AM V m lb. Red Seedless Grapes ^KETCHUP) KEG 0 AETCHUR- 'H U P \ H EIN Z/ .TOMATO k e t c h u p CHANGE WHAT YOU MEAN BY CLEAN! V° U R H A fR Butter Fla*0' 64 oz. Chilled Minute Maid Orange Juice Limit 2 with $10 or more additional purchase. Pepsi Cola And Selected Pepsi products. 12 pk., 12 oz. cans. Limit 4 with $10 or more additional purchase. AppleTree Microwave Popcorn Heinz Keg-O-Ketchup 32 oz. Limit 2 with $10 or more additional purchase. Lay's Potato Chips 6.25-6.5 oz. Wisk Power Scoop Detergent 38 oz., 15 Uses. BUY ONE GET ONE W' BAKED FRESH DAILY PARTY FAVORITES s K Í of Texes ■ I Shade l o t i o n •UiN8(,OCK t o « O N Blue Bell Ice Cream 1/2 Gal. All Rims. Limit 2 with $10 or more additional purchase. Finesse Shampoo or Conditioner 10 oz. Coppertone Sport S P F 30, Sun Block S P F 45 or Shades S P F 45. 4 oz. Lone Star or Lone Star Light Beer 20 pk., 12 oz. cans. Bonus Pack. DOUBLE UNIVERSITY | Page 6 Wednesday. March TSP to consider ad on Holocaust Justin Noble Daily Texan Staff The Texas S tudent Publications Board will hold an emergency meet­ ing T hursday to decide w hether a new H olocaust revisionist ad will run in The Daily Texan. In a Tuesday night m eeting, the b o ard also a p p ro v e d next y e a r's TSP budget. Projected income for The Daily Texan and Texas Student Television are expected to exceed th e Cactus and e x p e n se s a n d Peregrinus yearbooks along w ith KTSB radio are projected to have shortfalls. A n d , th e b o a rd ch o o ses Thursday to overturn the decisions of Texan E d ito r G eoff H en ley , advertising manager Jim Barger and the TSP review committee, a new ad purchased by Holocaust revisionist Bradley Smith could run in Friday's edition of the newspaper, at the ear­ liest. if The ad is an access television list­ S m ith 's B radley on for in g “ C o n tro v e rs ia l Auschwitz." V id eo Nearly two years of controversy cam e to a h ead in late F eb ru ary when the TSP board voted to pub­ lish a p re v io u s ad p u rc h a se d by Smith that questions the reality of Jewish death camps in Auschwitz. In February, the review com mit­ tee v o ted to ru n th e ad , an d the seven votes needed to overturn the com m ittee decision could n o t be found on the TSP board. This time, however, the review committee has voted not to ru n the new ad, and TSP G eneral M anager Dick Lytle said it is highly u nlikely the TSP board will produce the seven votes necessary to overturn that decision. In other business, a separate bu d­ get for KTSB w as p a s s e d by th e board to account for the new FM frequ ency th e sta tio n w ill sh a re with community station KOOP. KTSB w ill n ee d a b o u t $36,000 extra each year for Associated Press service, utilities and other expenses. R oughly $20,000 will come from Student Service Fees, Lytle said. In a le tte r d a te d M arch 5, UT President Robert Berdahl referred the pro posed KTSB/KOOP tim e- share settlem ent to the UT System O ffice of A cadem ic A ffairs for reviews according to Lytle's report at the meeting. Of all the publications under TSP, The Texan is expected to bring in the m ost income, just over $2 m illion for fiscal 1994, w ith a su rp lu s of $4,206. The greatest shortfall, $1,535, is expected from the Peregrinus Law School yearbook. Shuttle services slated for reform Erica Shaffer Daily Texan Staff S tudent leaders and representa­ tives from C apital M etro unveiled proposed changes in UT shuttle bus services and the U niversity's con­ tract with the transportation compa­ ny Tuesday. The proposals were presented at an open h ouse held in the Texas U nion at w hich stu d en ts had the opportunity to hear about the histo­ ry of U n iv e rsity sh u ttle service, where it stands now and its future. David Barker, a UT graduate stu­ dent w ho serves on the President's S h u ttle Bus C o m m ittee, said the m eeting w as an atte m p t to open com m unication betw een UT s tu ­ dents and the Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority. "It's about making sure students have as much access to information about the sh u ttle bus system and that we have feedback from them so we can m ake decisions and think about policy changes," Barker said. The p ro p o se d changes include lim ited S unday service on a trial basis and shifting w eekday start tim es from 6:30 to 7:15 a.m. The tr a n s p o r ta tio n co m m itte e also would develop a way to deal with overcrowding on buses during peak morning hours. The c o m m itte e also p la n s to a d d re s s a d ju s tin g th e N o rth R iverside shuttle route by coordi­ nating time between buses to better reflect rush hour traffic, and sched­ ule afternoon breaks for P leasant V alley ro u te d riv e rs to d ecrease passenger transfers and delays. Lynda Cobb, the stu d en t rep re­ se n ta tiv e on th e C a p ita l M etro Board of D irectors, said the p ro ­ posed changes will begin to come to g e th e r w h en a new c o n tra c t stressing service quality goes into effect sometime in the fall of 1994. Howard Nirken, president of the S tudents' A ssociation, said un d er the current agreement, student fees for shuttle service will increase from $35 to a b o u t $39 p e r se m e ste r. Nirken said the increase is due to inflation. Under the new arrangem ent, the U n iv e rsity an d C a p ita l M etro would have to develop a set of ser­ vice sta n d a rd s, w hich the tran sit authority would have to follow. “ W hat w e 're talking about are stan d ard s th at w ould say exactly what levels of service we should be providing," said Tim Newby, direc­ tor of planning for Capital Metro. “ The idea is to build in p erfo r­ mance-based standards that would say, for example in the area of safe­ ty, 'we have to make a certain num ­ ber of inspections per the num ber of m iles tra v e le d by th a t b u s ,'" he said. Marc Garcia/Daily Texan Staff All aboard! ElementaVy stu d e n ts boarded buses as they left the C hildren's Symphony Performance held Wednesday at the Bass Concert Hall. S tudents from Austin Independent School D istrict, Round Rock Independent School District and other area districts. Lonesome Dove’ actor reflects on value, limitations of his films David Lippeatt Daily Texan Staff Films can change the world by reflecting it, actor Tommy Lee Jones told a crowd of a b o u t 200 s tu d e n ts at th e W.C. H ogg Auditorium Tuesday evening. Jones, know n prim arily for his roles in JFK and the CBS mini-series Lonesome Dove, addressed the impact of film on culture as th e fe a tu re d s p e a k e r for th e S tu d e n t E ndow ed C entennial L ectureship Series. "Films can do good if they reflect the world as it truly is," Jones said. "W hen they see this reflection, audiences can buy it or not — they can decide if w hat's out there is good or bad." Jones said films have the pow er to affect people in a variety of ways. "Film s can m ake us happy, sad, fright­ ened, challenged or even spiritual," he said. "That's what we go to the movies for." At the same time, Jones said it is naive to think that the effects of film and television are overly strong. "I was offended by [Dan] Q uayle's sug­ gestion that M urphy Brown is responsible for the decline of the A m erican fam ily," Jones said. "I have too m uch faith in the American people to think that the nation's moral tone is set by television." Jones said he uses his film and television roles to break down what he sees as myths prevalent in modem society. The movie JFK was healthy for the coun­ try in that it challenged established thinking about the Kennedy assassination, Jones said. JFK really set up an 'alternate m ytholo­ gy ' about the assa ssin a tio n ," Jones said. "You m ay find som e exaggeration in the film, but it's much less than w hat's in the Warren Commission report — that thing is full of holes." "The movie did the country some good" by telling the other side of the assassination s to ry ," he ad d ed . Jones, w ho s ta rre d as W oodrow F. Call in the W estern Lonesome Dove, said the mini-series broke dow n his­ torical stereotypes. ' 'The story was about frontier history, but really a rev isio n ist h is to ry ," he said. "I would call it an alternative W estern." "In Lonesome Dove I was very concerned about authenticity," Jones said. "I wanted to challenge th e estab lish ed m y th th a t the A m erican fro n tie r w as all ab o u t a clash betw een superior w hites and inferior sav­ ages." Established history of the West was "basi­ cally a racist, sexist, imperialist paradigm ," he said. Jones attributed much of the popu­ lar success of Dances with Wolves to the g round-breaking revisionism of Lonesome Dove. Jones was nominated for an Academy Award for his work in JFK. "I was honored to be nom inated for the aw ard," he said. "D on't get the idea, how ­ ever, that the Academ y A w ards are based on artistic m erit or any kind of scientific process. They're a [motion picture] industry award show." On a playful note, Jones said that between stage, television and film, his favorite kind of performing was "singing in the shower." The Student Endowed Lectureship Series w as m ade possible by contributions from students during the University's Centennial celebration in the early 1980s. Speakers are chosen by a student committee. The lecture­ ship is also supported by contributions from the follow ing stu d en t organizations: The Friar Society, Mortar Board, Omicron Delta K a p p a, O ra n g e Jac k ets, S ilv er S p u rs, Spooks, Texas Cowboys and Texas Posse. Summer Living in New York City T You can live in the heart o f historic Greenwich Village this summer. ▼ Central NYC location in charming neighborhood 1 -3 bedroom suites m modem, air-conditioned, 24-hour security apartment buddings Excellent living faoLnes for individuals and families Eligibility to buy a pass to use N Y U s sports and fitness center; free, noncredit evening lecture series SPECIAL SUMMER RATES One-Week Minimum Stay ▼ May 19-August 1 1 ,1 9 9 3 For more information on the Summer Living Program at the NYU School of Law residences, please return the coupon below or call 1-212-998-6512. ( Mati k>: | NY U School o f Law S um m er Living | 40 W ashington Square South ■ New York, NY 10012-1099 I Fax: 1-212-995-3156 Approximate dates of say? From__ to- T H E WAY JESUS SAID! "For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." (John 3:16) To have everlastin g life you must accept, confess, and b elieve the follow ing! 1. that all (including you) have sinned and come short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23); 2. that the wages of sin is death (physical M d spiritual) (Romans 6:23); 3. that Jesus Christ died for your sins (Ro­ mans 5:8); and 4. that if you will confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus, and believe in your heart that God has raised Him (Jesus) from the dead, you will be saved (be given eternal life). (Romans 10:9) To accep t Jesus Christ as Savior, pray ea rn estly from you r h eart, the follow in g prayer! Dear Lord, I confess that I am a sinner. I believe that Jesus Christ died and rose again paying the penalty for my sins. Right now, as honestly as I know how, I repent of my sins and ask Jesus to save me, to come into my life, and to give me eternal life. I trust that He has saved me and, with His help, I will live for Him the rest of my life. In Jesus name I pray, amen. PRESENTED BY: HIS TRUTH MINISTRIES, Stuck without a designated driver? We can get you home! DESIGNATED DRIVER PROGRAM For a FREE, SAFE cab ride home CALL. . . 471 7506 THURS. - SAT. 11pm - 3am 1. The U1 Designated Driver Program provides free taxicab rides home for UT students and two friends who are too intoxicated to drive. I 2. You must show UT ID to the taxicab driver for verification. J 3. UT DDP will only take you HOME; we will not take you to 4. Each UT student may take two (2) non-student guests to the sam e another party or bar. destination free-of-charge. For more information, contact Campus Alcohol and Drug Education Program, Student Health Center, 471-6252 i l l Y Yes! ^ We have student airfares Costa Rica London Paris Frankfurt Moscow Tokyo $166' $302' $322' $375' $357' $399' ‘ Above fares are each way from Austin based on roundtrfp purchase. Restrictions apply. Taxes not Included. One way fares slightly higher. EURAILPASSES issued on the spot! Counol Ifcavd 2000 Guadalupe Austin, TX 78705 ►f 472-4931 NEED A JOB? £ CHECK THEÜAILY TEXAN "«CLASSIFIEDS! Ñ Ü fl c r r r / s t a t i / z i r c o o e > ( DAY TELETHONS ________________ SCH OOL / COM PANY/ at n h a t i o n EVENING TELEPHONE I New York University is an affirmative action/equal opportunity institution\. _ l j A C h r is t - c e n t e r e d B ib l e & T r a c t M in is t r y FOR INQUIRIES WRITE TO: His T rut h M in is t r ie s ., I n c ., P.O. Box 1421, A u s t in , TX 78767 One Week Only REGISTERTO W IN COOL S U M M E R PRIZES ALL WEEK LONC We Use Quality AGFA Paper and Chemistry AGFA^ op UNIVERSITY CO-OP Cameras 2246 Guadalupe*476-7211«Free Parking at 23rd and San Antonio Nothing Eicape i AGFA Film Sorry, omployoos ond ihoif families are ineligible ‘6 2 4 9 . ATO* ♦ FRATERNITIES ♦ SORORITIES ♦ CLUBS, DORMS ♦ ORGANIZATIONS ♦R U S H ORDERS ♦ F R E E D E L IV E R Y ♦ HIGH TECH :/ l AUTO EQUIPMENT M 5T,N ■PRIMING M T-SHIRTS STATE & LOCAL Wednesday. March 24. 1993 Page Regulators uphold car insurance rates Melinda Krenek Daily Texan Staff Despite pressure from insurance com pa­ n ies, th e S tate B oard of In su ra n ce ru led T u e s d a y th a t th e basic ra te a u to m o b ile in su ran ce com panies use to set custom er policy fees should not be increased, but the board did approve a 10 percent rate increase for high-risk drivers. Board members and consumer advocates said the decision to keep benchm ark rates the same will allow people with all types of insurance to find better deals in the rate-reg­ ulated m arket. The benchm ark rate is the m iddle reference rate insurance companies follow when they increase or decrease their individual rates. By approving the 10 percent increase of the Texas Automobile Insurance Plan rate — set by the state for people turned down by insurance com panies — the state hopes to slow dow n rapid TAIP custom er grow th. C urrently, TAIP custom ers pay 27 percent above the benchmark rate. Board members approved a price range of 30 percent above or below the benchm ark rate for TAIP customers. Previously, compa­ nies could increase their rates by 25 percent and could lower them by 30 percent. Board Chair Claire Korioth said the board d id n o t co n c ed e to in su ra n c e c o m p a n y re q u ests to increase the b en ch m ark rate b ecause they did n o t w an t to artificially inflate rates. " T h e p u rp o s e of th e b e n c h m a rk is to encourage com petition in the m arketplace and stability," Korioth said. Texas Farm ers Insurance Co. and M id- Century Insurance Co., part of the Farmers In s u ra n c e G ro u p , ask e d th e b o a rd to increase the statewide private passenger rate by 14.6 percent in hearings held in February. Jess Irwin, attorney for the Texas Farmers Insurance Co. and Mid-Century Co., said the board should have increased the rate. "W e are disappointed that the board has not recognized an upw ard m ovem ent," he said. "The rate indications developed by our actuaries indicated the need for an increase.' But insurance companies that wanted the b e n c h m a rk ra te to in c re a se in o rd e r to enhance their profits did not adequately con­ sid er th e n ee d s of cu sto m ers, said A m y Johnson, public counsel for the Office of Public Insurance Counsel — a state agency representing consumers. "We do not want a rate increase," Johnson said. "I consider [the unchanged benchmark rate] successful for the consumer." Johnson said insurance com panies were asking for a 52 percent rate increase in the TAIP rate. Steer clear Robin Oertli of Cele 4-H exhibited the Grand Champion steer at the “ A uction fo r Youth 1993” at the A ustin T ravis C ounty Livestock Show and Rodeo Tuesday. The steer was sold to Jack Carmody, owner of Ranger Excavation Company. Marc Garcia/Daily Texan Staff Austin to recycle additional paper Jonathan Bell Daily Texan Staff A u s tin ite s can now recycle glossy advertising inserts with the rest of their new spaper through the city's curbside recycling pro­ gram, city officials said Tuesday. The city of A ustin, C ham pion R ecycling C orp. an d the A ustin American-Statesman have launched a program to ensure the continued pickup of new sprint for recycling and the use of recycled materials in Austin. Joe W ord, assistant director of the city's Environm ental C onser­ vation Service D epartm ent, said th e c o m p a n y th a t p re v io u s ly b o u g h t A u s tin 's n e w s p rin t fo r recycling, ACCO W aste Paper of A u stin , has been co n tracted by C h a m p io n to p re -p ro c e s s th e material. Michael Sullivan, p resid en t of C h a m p io n R ecycling, sa id his facility has the capacity to process 500 tons of new sprint a day. "For a start-up, we think w e're doing fairly well," Sullivan said. The C ham pion facility, located near H ouston in Sheldon, uses a process called de-inking to make the colored paper recyclable. Austin M ayor Bruce Todd said there needs to be m ore national environmental awareness. "W e h av e n o t k e p t up w ith o th e r in d u s tria liz e d n a tio n s ," Todd said. He also praised A ustin's recy­ cling track record, saying the city has taken a "le ad ersh ip " role in recycling. Roger Kintzel, publisher of the American-Statesman, said the inclu­ sion of C h a m p io n in A u s tin 's recy clin g p ro g ra m " c lo s e s th e lo o p ." The city p ick s up u se d newspapers, C ham pion buys and recycles them and the new spaper in turn, buys the recycled material, he said. W ord said curbside pickup of g lo ssy n e w sp a p e r in s e rts w ill begin immediately, and that pick­ up of standard m agazines would begin in July. M agazines cannot be included because they are printed on differ­ ent p a p e r th a n in serts, and the city's pickup vehicles do not have the div id ers needed to keep the magazines separate, Word said. According to Kintzel, 37 percent of the 35,000 tons of new sprint the paper will use in 1993 will be recy­ cled material. Howard Wilson, director of the UT Departm ent of Physical Plant, said the University is planning a new cam pusw ide recycling p ro ­ gram to take effect Sept. 1. Committee examines confidentiality law Mushtaq Kapasi Daily Texan Staff R eporters gathering inform ation from confidential sources will be able to p rotect a source's identity w ithout the threat of breaking the law, according to legislation debat­ ed Tuesday by a Texas Senate com­ mittee. "There is som ething fundam en­ tally great ab o u t this dem ocracy, and part of it is the freedom of the press," said Sen. Rodney Ellis, D- Houston, who is sponsoring the bill, c alled th e T exas F ree Flow of Information Act. David D onaldson, a representa­ tive of Texas M edia, a coalition of media organizations, told the Senate Criminal Justice Committee that the bill w ould establish and clarify the rights of reporters w ho use confi­ dential sources. The law would give reporters the right to refuse to divulge confiden­ tial in fo rm a tio n o r so u rc e s, he added. Under the bill, reporters will not have to reveal their sources unless a reporter is an eyewitness or a partic­ ipant in a crime. In the p a st y ea r, at least th re e re p o rte rs in Texas an d m o re throughout the country have gone to jail to p ro tec t the id en titie s of co n fid e n tia l so u rces, D o n a ld so n said. "Reporters can and will be sent to jail for doing their job and protect­ ing the sources. I don't think anyone w ants this happening," said Chris Bell, an attorney for Media United for a Shield Law. Even th o u g h th e Bill of R ights provides for freedom of the press, the U.S. Supreme Court has clearly ruled that confidentiality of sources is not g u aran teed u n d e r the First Amendment, Bell said. "R ank-and-file rep o rters are in favor of this bill because confiden­ tial sources are a staple of the indus­ try," he added. So far, 26 states have a d o p te d similar laws to protect sources and the new s m edia in cases of confi­ dentiality. Joe Jerkins, a spokesm an for the Texas Association of Broadcasters, said th at m em b ers of the m edia often must deal with subpoenas for inform ation that he said could be found elsewhere. "O ur job is to provide new s and entertainm ent to the public, not to serve as an investigative arm of a law firm," Jerkins added. But Sen. D avid Sibley, R-Waco, questioned the intent of the legisla­ tio n , say in g it w o u ld affect only scattered cases of source confiden­ tiality and would primarily keep the press from having to com ply w ith subpoenas. "Banks and hospitals have to deal with subpoenas in the real world all the time. Why should [the media] be tre a te d any d iffe re n tly ? " S ibley said. T he H o u se S ta te A ffairs C o m m ittee d isc u sse d M o n d ay a House version of the Free Flow of Information Act, sponsored by Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo. Rep. S y lv e ster T u rn e r, D- H o u sto n , said " th is bill is m uch broader than any that exist." Knox Fitzpatrick, assistant district atto rn e y for D allas C o u n ty , also expressed concern that the reporter p riv ile g e in th e bill co u ld be so broad, it could prevent guilty per­ sons from being convicted and hin­ der criminal justice. Man leaves Waco compound; standoff continues Associated Press WACO — A m an em erged from the Branch Davidians' fortified compound Tuesday, but the cult leader rejected an offer for a national radio pulpit if he ended a nearly month-long standoff with federal agents. The FBI offered D avid Koresh access to the Christian Broadcasting Network at the time of his surrender, as well as assurances that he would be able to contact his followers held as material wit­ nesses at a county jail. Koresh dismissed the offer "out of hand" dur­ ing negotiations M onday, FBI agent Bob Ricks said. "Basically he said it's not worth the paper it's printed on," Ricks said. "H e will probably not be able to get as gener­ ous a response from us" in the future, Ricks said. A noon Tuesday deadline for Koresh to accept the deal passed w ithout w ord from inside the M ount Carmel com pound. But at m idm orning, another man walked out of the compound. As w ith the 13 a d u lts w ho left before him , Livingston Fagen, 33, of Britain, was taken into custody and held as a material witness. No court appearance had been set by midday. The standoff began Feb. 28 in a bloody gun b attle th at killed fo u r fed eral ag e n ts and an unknown num ber of cult members. Koresh reneged on a March 2 promise to sur­ render if a 58-m inute tape-recorded statem ent were played on several radio stations. And sever­ al times after Koresh has indicated many people w ould be leaving the compound, only a trickle of followers have walked out. By K oresh's count, 78 adults and 17 children all of whom he has claimed as his ow n biological or adopted children remain in the compound. The release process apparently is ham pered by K oresh's h ealth , w hich m ay in clu d e in tern a l bleeding, Ricks said. Koresh was wounded in the initial gun battle, and his ability to move around the com pound frequently has been lim ited, negotiators have been told. Also slowing dow n the process, Ricks said, is that before people leave the com pound, Koresh insists on giving them personal Bible instruction. Ricks said the FBI will keep negotiating. S in ce 1980 472-6666 IF YOU N E E D Y O U R m S D O U LL 3 2 3 -6 5 3 3 P R O V ID E D FO R Y O U R P A R T IC IP A T IO N IN A C L IN IC A L R E S E A R C H S T U D Y . S U R G E R Y P E R F O R M E D B Y B O A R D C E R T IF IE D O R A L S u r g e o n s . NEW PROGRAM!! i ' HOLESTEROL § CHECK V V V An elevated blood cholesterol level increases your risk for heart disease. Know your cholesterol level and reduce your risk! Register for "Cholesterol Check." The program includes: •blood test called a serum lipid profile •informational packet with your lab results •optional, free "Cholesterol Check" risk reduction class The charge for the blood test/packet is $15. The blood test is not required for class attendance. To schedule your blood test, call the Student Health Center Lab at 471-4955, ext 152 or come by room 247. To register for the Cholesterol Class, call the Health Education Dept, at 471-6252 or come to room 459. This program is for registered UT students only. "Cholesterol Check" Risk Reduction Class Schedule MON THU MON MAR 29 APR 8 APR 26 3:30 - 5:00 11:00 -12:30 4:30 - 6:00 cVrhStiMtmt Hwttfc G u a n a j u a t o M E X I C © ¿Italy 2 w , 1 International Studies Abroad 8 i f l Sem ester Program s Earn Academ ic Credit Summer deadline: April 5 Fall deadline: June 30 / I Q f ) Q E Q Q U f c . £ l cn I— CD i MPE vSalamanca \ Cadi^ FH&Nbt S p a u r S u b m i t y o u r n o m i n a t i o n today! N O M I N A T I O N S A R E N O W B E I N G A C C E P T E D F O R T H E HARRY RANSOM AWARD FOR TEACHING E X CE LLE NC E IN THE CO LL EG E OF LIBERAL ARTS Any faculty member in the College of Liberal Arts is eligible to be nominated for the award. Nom inations may be made by any student, faculty or staff member on The University of Texas at Austin. N O M I N A T I O N F O R M S A V A I L A B L E I N D E P A R T M E N T A L O F F I C E S A N D T H E O F F I C E O F T H E D E A N W E S T M A L L O F F I C E B U I L D I N G 101 A N D 201 [XEADUNE¿ MARCH Z4¿ 1993 c^4;t Quackenbusk's Fine A rt C ards an d P o s t e r s Q ifts Jew elry » Coffee by th e P ou nd 2 1 1 6 Quadalupe 4 7 6 -1 0 01 open 7 days a week______ Page 8 Wednesday, March 24,1993 T h e D a il y T e x a n Death row vigil held for Dominican Michael Gaffney Daily Texan Staff Across the street from the Governor's Mansion, an aged blind man, a mother of a boy condemned to die and a wandering human rights activist were stunned Wednesday when they learned that Carlos Santana, a convicted murderer, died by lethal injection that morn­ ing. "W e didn't know," said John Santis, an unemployed human rights activist from Chile. "A t 12:30 [a.m.] we were told his lawyer was going to appeal." Santana was convicted of killing a Houston armored truck driver in 1981 and for 12 years had exhausted all possible appeals procedures. But Monday night, the U.S. Supreme Court denied a final request for a stay just before the execution was carried out. The group began the vigil outside the Governor's Mansion Sunday, to protest the death penalty and try to stop the execution of Santana, a citizen of the Dominican Republic, and sever­ al Mexican citizens condemned to die in Texas. Santana was pronounced dead at 2:54 a.m. Tuesday, making him the 55th person put to death since the state resumed capital punishment in 1982. Texas is the high­ est-ranked state in the United States for executions. According to the Texas Constitution, the governor may not grant commutation of a death sentence without the recommendation of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles. After Santis told other protesters that Santana had been executed, the group sat down on their lawn chairs and cried. "It's bad news," Santis continued, "but that will not stop us. We're here to tell the governor we want her to stop the killing." W hile Santana, 40, was a citizen of the Dominican Republic, death-row inmates Ramon Montoya, Ricardo Aldape Guerra and Irineo Tristan Montoya are among the nine Mexican citizens sentenced to death for capital murder. M ontoya's mother, Emilia Montoya Tristan, said through an interpreter that she and the other pro­ testers would continue their vigil until "the governor shows an interest." The Mexican government has been working on behalf of the three men to see that their rights are protected, said Daniel Hernandez, one of Mexico's associate con­ suls to the United States. "O ur assistance is obtaining statements from relatives and friends in Mexico, and in some cases it involves financial support," Hernandez said. The Mexican government does not agree with the death penalty "as a matter of principle," Hernandez added. "[But] the U.S. has a sovereign right to establish their own laws." A ld ap e, 30, was co n v icted in a 1982 slay in g of Houston police officer James Harris. Aldape contends that he is innocent and that another man actually mur­ dered the officer. Ramon Montoya, 39, was sentenced to death for killing Dallas police officer John Pasco on Jan. 16, 1983. Despite Montoya's foreign status, Texas law requires that he be put to death, and he is currently scheduled to die at 12:01 a.m. March 25, according to Bob Walt, assistant Texas attorney general. "[Foreigners] are subject to the same laws ... they're just as eligible as any citizen for the death penalty," Walt said. Leticia Vasquez, deputy press secretary for Gov. Ann Richards, said the U.S. Supreme Court denied Ramon Montoya's petition for commutation late Tuesday. If he dies Thursday morning, Ramon Montoya will becom e the first Mexican citizen executed in a U.S. prison since 1942, according to The New York Times. Irineo Montoya's mother walked from Houston with about 30 other death-penalty protesters — some repre­ senting a Mexican national movement La Raza — and p led ged T u esd ay to stay o u tsid e the G o v e rn o r's Mansion until the state listens to her plea. With wire reports D o g d a y a f t e r n o o n Yvette Valencia, a 17-year-old junior at Westlake High School, and José Benitez, a 17-year-old senior at Travis High School, examined a puppy at the Humane Society of Austin Tuesday afternoon. Yvette was con­ sidering adopting a puppy from the shelter. The shel­ ter is located at 1156 W. First St. Michael L. Hide/Daily Texan Staff Census stats highlight poverty Associated Press WASHINGTON — Congressional in South T exas and d istric ts Houston have the highest house­ hold poverty rates in the state, a review of 1990 C ensus fig u res shows. But congressional districts in the Houston area, along with districts near Dallas, also reported the fewest households living below the federal poverty line of $13,359 for a family of fou r. The in fo rm atio n w as gleaned from an analysis of Census records for the state's 30 congres­ sional districts. Recording the highest poverty rate, with 37.5 percent of its house­ holds liv in g below the p ov erty level, was the 15th Congressional D istrict, w hich stretch es from H id alg o C ounty along the Rio Grande all the way up to Karnes County, southeast of San Antonio. Thirty percent of residents lived below federal poverty rates in the 27th D istric t, w hich ru ns from C am eron C oun ty alo n g the Rio Grande north to Corpus Christi. The 23rd District, which covers a huge expanse of West Texas from south of San Antonio practically all the way to El Paso, also reported 30 percent of its households living in poverty. T w en ty -eig h t p ercen t of the households lived in poverty in the 28th District, which runs from San Antonio south to Starr County, on the U.S.-Mexican border. Recording the fifth-highest poverty rate was the 29th D istrict in the H ouston area, with just under 28 percent of its households living below poverty lines. The 3rd District, which com­ prises a wealthy enclave of Dallas, had the lowest household poverty rate, with 4 percent of its house­ holds living in poverty. That was followed by two other Dallas-area districts, the 6th and the 26th, w hich reported household poverty rates of 4.5 and 6 percent respectively. Two Houston area dis­ tricts, the 7th and the 22nd, had the fourth- and fifth -low est poverty rates, with 6 and 8 percent respec­ tiv ely . The av erag e h ou seh old income in Texas' congressional dis­ tricts ranged from a high of $59,033 in the Dallas-area 3rd District to a low of $25,100 in the 28th District in South Texas. Districts in the Dallas and H ouston areas reported the state's highest household earnings. In addition to the 3rd District, the other districts reporting the highest hou sehold earn in gs w as the 7th D istrict, north of H ouston, with $58,822; the 26th, near Dallas, with $51,959; the 6th, also near Dallas, with $49,555; and the 22nd, near Houston, with $49,006. low est The districts reporting the lowest household incomes were scattered in South Texas, Houston and the fig u re, P an h an d le.T h e $25,100, was in the 28th District in South Texas. The 15th District, also in South Texas, reported $25,110 in household income; followed by the 29th D istric t in H ou ston , w ith $25,161. The 13th D istrict, in the Panh an d le, reported an average $27,316 household incom e; while the 20th District in San Antonio, had an estim ated $27,517 h ou seh old income. Novello pushes for Hispanic health care Associated Press SAN A N TO N IO — Su rgeo n G eneral A ntonia Novello said Tuesday that Hispanics need more access to health insurance and more information on disease prevention. Dr. N ovello also said H ispanic women must pay attention to their own health and said that message can be spread with cultural sensitivity by emphasizing the family, and that a woman's good health is essential to the good health of her family. "You cannot deal with Hispanic health unless you deal with the culture of the H ispanic," Novello said. "Prevention through the eyes of the beholder is needed with attention to cultural sensitivity." Novello made the remarks after a two-day conference in San Antonio on Hispanic health, the third of five such forums across the country. The findings of the meetings are to be presented for consideration in President Clinton's health care reform package. Of 22 million Hispanic people in the United States, Novello said, 7 million have no health insurance, often because where they work does not offer it. H ealth experts told N ovello that m obile clin ics, streamlined government forms and centrally located health facilities would help Hispanics gain more access to health care. The health officials gave specific suggestions on how to collect better health data, how to get more Hispanics in health professions and how to improve research. Needed to test new medication. Examination by Board Certified Gynecologist. Financial Incentive Provided. For more information, call: 320-1630 and ask for Ext. 211 BIO M ED IC A L j J J & a R E S E A R C H G R O U P INC. D o you need to a computer? Whether you have a term paper, resume or you’re just a ~ computer junkie, F iesta^ Copy — * # C° n Fiesta’s Copy * Macintosh Shop has what * Shop has what *! you need to get * ! you need to get * Laser printer it done ' it done. • Color printer 1 L U W I I C . - • ^ , 1-35 at 3 8 ' -Laminating • Binding 2 in the Fiesta Delwood Center rsSiwcuSS! ¡5Ó"/ HE U O R.K .ED in t h e s a /v te l ir r a r y HE'D 8 E E W AT B E F O R E F w \SmiNG Sc h o o l . H E 'D C o m E t o t h e FRCO UEflT LUMLHES ON A U o u lO cttAbuATE TtC fT «tR fcEN C H FROM T IM E TO T IM E . ST oNS ¿-'¿CM i n t m E IN A SEAR , uj'TH DECREES AROUND CAMPUS Around Campus is a daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organi­ zations registered with the Campus A ctivitie s O ffic e . Announcem ents must be sub m itted on the proper form by 9 p.m. two days before pub­ lication. Forms are availab le at the D a ily Texan office at 25th Street and W hitis Avenue. The D a ily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions. MEETINGS Am erican Society of C iv il E n g i­ neers w ill meet on W ednesday at 7 p.m. in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102. Jim Clarne, Austin city project manag­ er, w ill discuss the proposed sewage line into the Barton Springs watershed area. For more information call 471- 5778. Am nesty International w ill meet every Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Geogra­ phy Build ing 316. A ll are welcome. Call Liz at 473-8377 for more informa­ tion. Chinese Fig h tin g Arts w ill meet Mondays, W ednesdays and Fridays from 6:30-8:30 p.m. in L. Theo Bell- mont H all on the fifth floor. Karate and kung fu are taught. Beginners are welcome. W e w ill also be teaching Won Hop Loong Chuan. For more in­ formation call David at 453-1925. Colombian Students Organization will meet on Wednesday at 6 p.m. in Texas U nion Build ing Cactus Cafe. Everyone is welcome. For more infor­ mation call 453-4281. El G rup o de Danza y Arte F o lk ­ lórico w ill meet every M onday and W ednesday from 6-8 p.m. in Anna Hiss G ym 136 for practice. Fello w ship of Christian Athletes will meet every Wednesday at 9 p.m. in Beauford H. Jester Center A121A. Everybody is welcome. Ind ian Students Association w ill meet on W e d n e s d a y at 8 p.m. in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.302. You must attend for information on the camping trip on Saturday and UT-Arlington's Festival of India on April 2 and 3. For more information call Monica at 458- 8592 or Chintu at 482-0145 if you have not signed up for camping, the talent show or for the Festival of India. K T S B Student Radio w ill meet on W ednesday at 7 p.m. in U niversity Teaching Center 4.134. This meeting is for general staff and anyone intere&ed in volunteering. Robert "Doctor Love" Zimmer w ill speak. For more informa­ tion call 471-5106. Longhorn Pharmaceutical Associa­ tion w ill meet at 5 p.m. on Wednes­ day in Pharmacy Building 2.108. Pro­ fessional pharmacists w ill speak and refreshments w ill be provided. C all Trang at 478-0903 for more informa­ tion. M e th o d is t U n iv e r s ity G ro u p at Hyde Park w ill meet at the Hyde Park Methodist Church, 4001 Speedway, at 8:30 p.m. every Wednesday. W e w ill play games, eat food, share informal conversation and plan events. C all Kathy at 478-4713 for more informa­ tion. Mexican American Health Profes­ sions O rg a n iz a tio n w ill meet at 7 p.m. on W ednesday in Texas Union Bu ild in g A sian C u ltu re Room. For more inform ation call Delio at 326- 3938 or Sandy at 326-1292. Texas Ju g g lin g Society w ill meet every W ednesday from 7-10 p.m. in Russell A. Steindam Hall 213 and 215. Everybody is welcome. For more in­ formation call Matt at 445-5937. Texas U nio n Finance Committee w ill meet every W ednesday at 5:30 p.m. in Texas Union Building Gover­ nors' Room. For more information call Jeff Bernfeld at 440-1025. A ll majors are welcome and there are no dues. Texas Union M arketing Com m it­ tee w ill meet from 4-5 p.m. e very Wednesday in Texas Union Building 3.116. A ll interested students are wel­ come. U n iversity Chess C lub w ill meet every Wednesday at 7 p.m. in College of Education Building 524 and 526. University Democrats will meet on W ednesday at 7 p.m. in U niversity Teaching Center 3.124. State Rep. El­ liott Naishtat, D-Austin, will speak. U n iv e rs ity G am in g Society w ill meet every W ednesday at 7 p.m. in the Texas U nion Building 40 Acres in clu d e A D & D , Room. G am es G U R PS, Polemaster, Diplomacy, and Axis and Allies. For more information Frolicking Pebble call Dave at 472-6534. consultation for participation. University International Socialists will meet on Wednesday at 5 p.m. in Texas U nion B u ild in g 4.206. Dana Cloud w ill speak on "W h at Can We Expect from N A F T A ?" University National Organization for Women w ill meet every Wednes­ day from 7-8 p.m. in Texas U nio n Building 4.110. UT Ballroom Dance Club will meet every Wednesday from 8-10 p.m. in Anna Hiss G ym 136. These w eekly Wednesday night lessons are geared for beginners and include the fox trot, rumba and East Coast swing. Classes are taught by Richard Fowler, profes­ sional dance instructor. For more in­ formation, call Deanna Sikes at 495- 5697 or Jennifer Lucio at 832-4966. U T Sh o to k a n K a ra te w ill meet every Monday and Wednesday from 6:30-8:30 p.m. in Recreational Sports Center 2.112. Advanced class begins at 6:30 p.m. and beginners class at 7:30 p.m. On Fridays join us in L. Theo Bellmont Hall 502A. Advanced class is at 5:30 p.m. and beginners class is at 6:30 p.m. On Sundays we will meet at Recreational Sports Center 2.112. Ad­ vanced class is at 2 p.m. and beginners class is at 3 p.m. Newcomers are al­ ways welcome. No experience neces­ sary. For more information, call Lynn Halbrook at 495-2996. U T Tennis C lu b w ill meet every T uesd ay, F rid a y and S u n d a y at Whitaker Intramural Tennis Courts at 51st and Guadalupe streets from 4-6 p.m. Com e out to one of our non­ mandatory practices and join the UT Tennis Club. All students, faculty and staff are eligible to join. For more in­ formation call Jason at 451-7681. SPECIAL EVENTS Lutheran Cam pus M in is try w ill sponsor a free soup and salad dinner followed by Lenten services at 6:45 p.m. at the U n iv e r s ity Lu th era n Church on Wednesday. For more in­ formation call Carolyn Richter at 472- 5461. SHORT COURSES B a p t is t S tu d e n t C e n te r offers conversational En g lish classes for international students and for their spouses on M ondays, W ednesdays and Fridays from 3-4 p.m. Classes are held at the Baptist Student Cen­ ter at 2204 San Antonio St. Learning S k ills Center w ill spon­ sor a free four-week speed-reading class beginning on Tuesday on Tues­ days and Thursdays from 12:30-1:45 p.m. Register in Beauford H. Jester Center A332 during this week. Limit­ ed to UT students. FILMS, LECTURES, & DISCUSSIONS Center for Post-Soviet and East Eu­ ropean Studies w ill sponsor a film, Pyatachok, on Wednesday at 4 p.m. in Calhoun Hall 422. Department of Art and Art History will sponsor a lecture by Michael Her- ity on "Herm it Islands of the Atlantic Coast of Ireland, 400-700 A .D ." on Wednesday at 4 p.m. in Art Building and Museum 1.110. Huntington Art G allery w ill spon­ sor a lecture by Susan Rather, assis­ tant professor in the Department of Art and Art History on "Eakins and Henri: Painting the Figure" at noon on W e d n e s d a y in the H a rr y Ransom Center. University Honors Center and the N o rm a n d y S c h o la r Program w ill sponsor a discussion on the Holocaust led by M ike Jacobs, Holocaust sur­ vivor. The public is invited and wel­ comed to bring lunch to the lecture on Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. in Carothers Honors Residence Room 7. Wom en's Studies Research Sem i­ nars in celebration of Women's Histo­ ry Month w ill sponsor a lecture by Cheryl Malone and Mariah Skaane on "W om en 's Studies in H igh le c h : A D em onstration of N e w L ib ra ry Sources" on Wednesday at 4 p.m. in Perry-Castañeda Library 1.124. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES Department of Psychology is con­ ducting a study on premenstrual syn­ drome. Women from 18 to 45 who suf­ fer from P M S and who are not taking oral contraceptives may call 474-5625 for more information on this three- month study. Participants receive free m S IA * ¿cainst hers ukí lips A DOUGHNUT IHT0 COFfUH! Student Volunteer Services is look­ ing for folks to assist an organization working to eradicate breast cancer as they host a 5K road race on campus. Volunteers w ill be needed to assist with getting publicity materials put around Austin and with duties on the day of the race. Excellent opportunity for student groups looking for service projects. For more inform ation call 471-6161. Student Volunteer Services is look­ ing for b ud dies to assist A u s tin schoolteachers in overcoming com­ puterphobia. Technology mentors are needed to assist a small team of teach­ ers learn the basics of computers. You need not be a computer wizard your­ self; just be comfortable and familiar with the workings of either Macintosh or IBM personal computers. For more information call 471-6161. Student Volunteer Services is look­ ing for bilingual volunteers to assist an agency lo oking to expand re­ sources and improve the quality of life for m any Spanish-speaking A u s ­ tinites. Volunteers who can teach lan­ guage classes, w rite for a bilingual newsletter, translate documents or in­ terpret are needed. For more informa­ tion call 471-6161. Student Volunteer Services is look­ ing for volunteers to assist in one of two large and traditional Austin fund­ raising efforts to help people w ith multiple sclerosis. Volunteers can as­ sist with a bicycle tour scheduled for A pril 16-18. These opportunities are excellent for groups looking for ser­ vice projects. For more information call 471-6161. OTHER Campus Alcohol and Drug Educa­ tion Program sponsors a bring-your- own-lunch every W ednesday from noon until 1 p.m. in Student Health Center 450. The joy of living without the use of alcohol or other drugs can be attained through knowledge, skills and the support of others. If there are any questions, call 471-6252. D ep artm en t o f A stro n o m y w ill sponsor a Wednesday night Star Party at 7:30 p.m. on the 14th floor roof deck of Robert Lee Moore H all. It is free and open to the public. For more in­ formation call the McDonald Observa­ tory Skywatcher's Report at 471-5007. Ghana to Texas Cultural Exchange w ill sponsor a perform ance in the G o ld sm ith H a ll C o u rty a rd on Wednesday from 12:30-1:30 p.m. Liberal Arts Career Services w ill sponsor an inform ation session by M acy's on Wednesday from 7-9 p.m. in L ila B. E tte r A lu m n i C en ter Schmidt Room. For more information call 471-7900. Student Christian Fellowship w ill sponsor an international student min­ istry every W ednesday at 7 p.m. at 1909 University Ave. Learn conversa­ tional English through one-on-one Bible study. For more information call 477-5701. Student Health Center is now ac­ cepting applications from students, preferably with international travel experience, w h o are interested in working as travel counseling peer in­ structors from 2-6 hours per week at the Student Health Center during the 1993 fall semester. May be taken for three hours course credit, pass/fail, in ED P 369K or as a volu nteer position w ith o u t course credit. Undergraduate Dean's O ffice of the College of Business Administra­ tion w ill conduct a presentation on the management information systems major on M onday from 4-5 p.m. in University Teaching Center 3.122. Eleanor Jordan and representatives from the Data Processing M anage­ ment Association and the Career Ser­ vices Office w ill speak. For more in­ formation call 471-0690. United Campus M inistry and the Texas W esley Foundation will spon­ sor Lenten w o rsh ip services on Wednesday at noon at the Congrega­ tional Church of Austin, 408 W. 23rd St. The Rev. Susan Sprague and the Rev. Marion Childress-Usher will con­ duct the service. A ll are invited. For more information call 478-5693 or 474- 1151. U n iv e rs ity C hurch on the Rock w ill sponsor a prayer meeting every T h u rs d a y at 7 a.m. in Robert Lee Moore H all 6.124. For more informa­ tion call 474-4372. by Howard Sherman m The Glum Club 15 VoUR &RFRTH Pt L i t t l e 7 3 o F r ^ s h ? F\ u Ttlje Too rry rn y ? u )fiN T To RecfiPTvRZ THfiT Pp iSiy, " I J u s T Ffífe menrr" Flavor? tpun iky *n\y m o R N lM c B R S R T H "™ 8V RjRj ñ P , IN BoTH 6 R fW y &RouiKl ftN P Kieu) ORifie y s L L o w / carl greenblatt 5 o TMFfl '5 youR 5 g C R 6 T . 1 you TUooCMT it cmt H f f w u - y ? Mr. Boffo (S ' a n o t h e r w a y TO T E LL WHEN YOUÍ3& PEAÜK16 WITH A VOPEY O P T l A A t S T A N D A V O P & V P E S S I M I S T / HE THIfJIB CARING OW N- ERS West Campus !Bdr/2Bdr First class, excellent rates 476-2167 C A S A D E SALADO APTS. 1-BEDROOM, FURNISHED. WATER, GAS, AND T.V. CABLE PAID, NO PETS. SWIM­ MING POOL, AC AND CEILING FANS. LAUN­ DRY FACILITIES. CLOSE TO CAMPUS, NEAR SHUTTLE. RESIDENT MGR. #112. 2610 SALADO ST. UNITS AVAILABLE N O W FOR INFO CALL 477-2534 3-12-2060 M O V IN G - M UST~seH 1 9 6 7 and 1 9 6 8 M u sta n g s, automatic, 2 8 9 . $ 3 0 0 0 O B O both run g r e a t 2 5 5 -5 3 7 2 . 2-26-20B. 20 - Sports-Foreign Autos l 9 8 0 F IA T C o n v e rtib le $ 3 0 0 0 O B O by April 15, go o d condition, ne w tires o n d top. Ben 2 6 4 2 5 3 9 . 3-22-5B 30 - Trucks-Vans '7 0 S C O U T . $ 1 9 0 0 . Runs great le a v e V e ry c le a n m essage 4 4 2 -4 4 0 2 3-24-5B N e w pain t, 50 - Service-Repair F R IE N D L Y S E R V IC E for all a u tos K iel m a n 's K in d C a r C a r e . C o ll 4 6 7 - 1 8 0 2 . W o r k Ben anytim e guaranteed. 3-11-7P. 80 - Bicycles M O U N T A IN BIK E C L E A R A N C E ‘92 Models Must Go Many Reduced to Cost!! G T Mt. Shasta Bndgestone Haro B U C K ’S B IK E S 9 2 8 - 2 8 1 0 wh.le supply lasts REAL ESTATE SALES 110 - Services E X P E R IE N C E D C A M P U S real es- tate sale s specialist. A ll ca m p u s Jerry areas. G o vernm en t re p o s O a k e s P M T 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . 2 -1 8 - 2 0 8 8 . 130 - Condos- Townhomes S A L E S 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 MERCHANDISE 320 - Wonted to Buy or Rent WANTED! "SEX" by Madonna (5 1 2 )4 4 4 -5 0 2 0 3-23-2 B L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S .pedal- M O U N T A I N BIKE 2 1 . 5in zed stumpiumper. Block, Shim ano D e o re DX , Scott A T 4 bars, pana- ra c e r s m o k e / d a r t tires Pete 4 8 2 -9 2 1 3 3-12-5B $ 5 5 0 TV $ 1 4 0 , Reel-to-Reel $ 1 5 0 , V a ­ cuum $ 5 0 , A n s w e r in g m a c h in e $ 3 5 . R e c e iv e r $ 1 5 0 , E q u a liz e r $ 5 0 , C ord le ss phone $ 3 5 , S p e a k­ ers $ 100. 3 3 9 - 3 1 4 6 . 3-5-5Z F O R S A L E Twin a n d o v e r siz e d twin beds. Both clean and in good c o n d it io n $ 7 5 for e ither set Coll 7 9 5 -9 4 2 2 3-22-5B 1 9 3 2 P O N T I A C G r a n d P n x , in- cre d ib iy d e p e n d a b le runs great, o n e o w n e r , $ 1 0 0 0 O B O , C all 4 6 9 -0 1 2 9 12-5nc. 1 0 8 , 0 0 0 m iles 3- 1 9 7 6 M E R C U R Y M o n a r c h , fa ir $ 8 0 0 c o n d it io n , lo w m ile a g e O BO -m ust sell. 4 6 7 -0 9 9 2 3-22- 5B F O R S A L E : new twin futon with frame a n d beautiful cover, $ 1 0 0 . Renee 8 3 6 -7 4 0 2 . 3-22-5B R A L E IG H G R A N D S p o r t lO s p d , 2-3 1 / 2 " frame, accessories, excel­ lent condition. $ 1 3 0 . 2 5 1 -0 7 0 0 . Recorder 3-22-5nc. M A C I N T O S H PLUS computer- 20- M B external hard drive, keyboard, m o u se , Im a g e w r it e r II prin te r, M S w o r d a n d Excel softw are, a c ­ ce sso rie s. $ 4 0 0 . 8 3 6 - 2 0 6 9 3- 24-5B. W N G - S IZ E W A T E R B E D with book- ca se , h e a d b o a r d , limited motion m a ttre ss, E x c e lle n t c o n d it io n $ 1 0 0 4 6 7 -7 2 5 7 . 3-24-5B P C F O R s a le 6 4 0 K c o lo r a n d b la ck o n d w hite m onitors 2 0 M B m e m o ry d i a b lo printer o n d soft­ w are $ 1 6 0 . 4 4 1 -8 7 3 3 . 3-24-5B 345 - Misc. I N S T A N T S T U D E N T $ 5 0 0 0 ~ G d d C a r d N o interest. C a ll [8 0 31 7 4 8 - 9 0 3 0 3-22-5b RENTAL 360 - Fum. Apts. O N E B L O C K ca m p u s. N o w p re ­ leasing 1-1, well funished and main­ S m a ll, Q u ie t c o m p le x . t a in e d . 2 7 1 1 H a m p h ill Park 4 7 8 - 1 8 7 0 . 3-5-20643 S P A C I O U S , Q U IE T 2-2, C A / C t + fans, pool, sundeck, coble, laundry. Red R iv e r / 3 0 t h S u m m e r / $ 6 0 0 . F a l l / $ 7 5 0 . 4 7 7 - Y r/ $ 7 0 0 . 3 3 8 8 / 4 7 2 - 2 0 9 7 . 3-5 -2 0 W 3 THREE O A K S & P E C A N S Q U A R E APARTMENTS • 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 0 409 W. 38th St. m Preleasing for ►< m Sum m er & Fail m M Furnished or Unfurnished M ►4 1911 Willow Creek Or. h I! K 444-0010 tizxrziizzzizzziJ Professionally Managed by Davis & Associates u xa . M ' ‘ ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease Furnished and Unfurnished 2-2 $610 1-1 $395 W est Campus 476-1976 H O U STO N 2801 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 D A L L A S 2803 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 BRAN DYW IN E 2808 W h in s Ave. - 472-7049 W ILSH IRE 301 W. 29th - 472-7049 Great Locations! V Fully Furnished ¥ Laundry Room V Central Air/Heat V 2 Blocks From U T V No Application Fee ¥ 1BR/BA I ¥ On site manager I ¥ Affordable deposits Í SANDPIPER1] 2810 Rio Grande (4 blks to UT) Furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath dishwasher, microwave, some covered parking, swimming pool PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER and FALL Discounted rates for summer 4 7 2 -5 7 2 2 leave message CASTLE ARMS I APTS. Newty Remodeled 3 2 0 - 0 5 1 9 32nd & Speedway ★ 1 4 2 bedroom A Basic Cable Paid ★ Hot Waler Paid ★ Laundry room ★ On-slte mgmt. On Shuttle S O U T H S H U T T L E BRAND NEW! 1,2.3 BR'S: 365.00 + ACCESS GATES, FREE CABLE. NOW, SUMMER, FALL SUPER LUXURY. NOW, SUMMER, FALL. BErT ''RICES. DON'T LEASE WiTHOl'': SOUTH SHUTTLE CHECKING Properties One South 447-7368 . . BLACKSTOXE PRELEASING FOR SOMMER AND FALL 2 9 1 0 M e d ic a l A r t s S t. a cro ss from law school L O W E R S U M M E R R A T E S ALL B ILLS PAID Newly remodeled S U M M E R O N L Y L E A S E S 2 bdrm-2 bath FREE CABLE! Furnished or Unfurnished 474-9523 v . . i . p Luxurious 3 BR-2 BATH • Pool > Shuttle! ... 101 E. 33rd St. 4 7 6 - 0 3 6 3 PACT A\ [ M l I t U f 306 E. 30th 478 -6 6 1 4 (Mike) M a M a is o n 222 2 Pearl 4 74 -6 4 6 6 (Peter) 4 78 -6 6 1 4 (Mike) All Bills Paid C a ble T V M aid Service SALADO APTS. Large 2-2‘s Now Leasing for Summer/Fall 2704 Salado 320-0915 W ARW ICK APTS, 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath limited access gate pools, microwave Just blocks from campus Now leasing for the Summer/Fall 2907 West Ave. 320-0915 4 B L O C K S UT (on shuttle.) Luxury stu d io s/ p ro fe ssio n a l a tm osp he re . Furnished, covere d pa rkin g, la u n ­ dry 1 7 0 0 Nueces. C a ll Quentin 3 2 2 -9 5 7 2 . 3-24-1 OB. ELY PROPERTIES 2-1 $495 1-1 $395 Total renovation in progress N ew carpet, paint, exterior Great for law/engineering students 476-1976 3-23-2066. O P E N SATURDAY SUNDAY M A N A G E D B Y C A R I N G O W N E R Furnished/Unfurnished Efficiencies, 1-2-3 bedrooms W est & North C am pus TarryTown 476-2154 2-1 .-20tC. P E A C E & Quiet in Hyde Parkl Re­ treat A partm ents 4 4 0 0 A v e n u e A . E ffic ie n c y $ 3 4 5 + E . 1 / 1 $ 4 2 0 +E. G a s heating, hot water, cook­ ing, cab le pa id . 4 5 8 - 1 9 8 5 , 4 5 2 - 1121. 2-19-20B-C. E F F IC IE N C IE S - O N E a n d two bed- ro o m s a v a i la b l e for fall, from $ 4 2 5 a n d up. 4 6 9 - 0 9 2 5 A s k fot Lisa. 2-19-20B-B Big 2-2 * Washer/Dryer* $590 FRONT PAGE Call Eileen 480-8518 ________________________?-?7-20bC ALL BILLS p a id 1-1 $ 4 5 0 . Elec­ tricity, a a s , w a te r, c a b le p a id O n shuttle. 4 1 0 W 3 7th Street 4 5 1 -8 5 3 2 2 -2 5 -2 0 b C . N E A R L A W S c h o o l I 1/1 $ 3 4 0 +E. E C Shuttle. 4 7 4 - 1 2 4 0 , 4 5 2 - 1 12 1 . 2-25-20B-C. H Y D E P A R K I Efficiency $ 3 4 5 + E . C a b le pa id . Pool, c o v e re d p a rk­ ing, laundry. A v a ila b le M a r c h 1. 4 5 9 - 1 0 5 W 3 8 1 / 2 Street. 1 7 1 1 ,4 5 2 - 1 1 2 1 2 -2 5 -2 0 b Q . * " W E S T C A M P U S I O lder, b ig 2 2 's . C e il in g fan s, m ic r o w a v e s , $ 6 0 0 s u m m e r/ fa li. Front P a g e 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 3-1-20b-C. * * U N IQ U E E F F IC IE N C Y I Saltillo tile, fir e p la c e , p o o l, IF shuttle, $ 3 5 5 / 3 6 5 . Pre-lease now , sum ­ mer/fall. Front P a g e 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 3-1-20b-C, L A R G E !ÍBR T o w n h o u se n e w ly re- modeled, on UT shuttle. C a ll 4 4 0 - 0 5 9 2 . 3 4 - 2 0 B L A R G E 1 - B E D R O O M A p t s , in small, auiet g a rd e n setting. Free C a b le , not/cold water. N o pets 8 3 5 -5 6 6 1 . 3-5-20B-D S O U T H SH U T T L E N e w r e n o v a ­ tio n s, C e r a m ic tile th ro u g h o u t. Free ca b le A b so lu te ly n e w c o n ­ d itio n , $ 3 2 5 + . P r o p e rtie s O n e 4 4 7 -7 3 6 8 . 3-9-20B-C S O U T H SHUTTLE: $ 2 9 0 + M Y $ 3 1 5 , 2 BR 's: $ 4 5 8 , 3 B R Y A v a il­ a b le now , summer, fall. Pro p e r­ ties O n e 4 4 7 -7 3 6 8 . 3 -9 -2 0 B C ~ A D V A N T A G E *~ $100 OFF JUNE, JULY, AUGUST SHUTTLE BUS EFF., 1-2 BEDROOMS $320+ *443-3000* 3-11 20P Three Times The Charm... THE HAMLET 1100 Reinli Y Austin, TX 78723 Ceiling Fans* Ceramic Bathtubs' *1 Bedroom/1 Bath ‘2 Bedrooms/1 Bath *2 Bedrooms/2 Baths Walk-in Closets* ‘Townhomes Available Swimming Pool Laundry Facilities Mini-Blinds COBBLESTONE 1105 Clayton Y Austin, TX 78723 Gas & Water Paid ‘Available at select properties (512) 452-3202 REINLI ARMS 1012 Reinli Y Austin, TX 78723 Spacious units starting at $375 For Leasing information call or come by The Hamlet office. REAL ESTATE SERVICES, INC. « ¡ ¡ ¡ • ¡ ¡ M S Austin " " Apar tin i-nt Association ottnUaueC U 1 B I L L S P A I D FEATURES; A vailable in Select units • Ceiling fans • Clubhouse • Spacious walk- • UT & City Busline • Wet bars • Microwaves in Closets • Mini-blinds • 3 swimming pools «Free 49-channel expanded cable • Fenced patios • Built-in bookshelves Excellent Roommate Plan Cameron Road U.T. Shuttle 454-2537 1200 Broadmoor Drive c,t& The R idge Spacious Designs Start at $379! Pre-lease for Summer & Fall NO W ! Friendly voices are waiting at 345-9315 PRE-LEASE N O W ! Close to Cam pus or All Shuttle Routes Apartment Finders Service 458-1213 N O PRESSURE ’* * ' ■«•wrmwwriMwn.uw!. *tw > M H M B B H m n in | View Point Apts. 2518 Leon West Campus Efficiencies Now Leasing For Sum m er • Enjoy w ooded view s from apartments, balconies and pool/deck. • Starting at $32 5 • Central Air & Heat • Furnished available • Professional orvsite m a n a g e ­ ment and m aintenance • W alk or bike to shuttle and ca m pus • C o m e r of 26th & Leon • 5 B lo ck s west of G uadalupe Call 476-8590 lb r. 6 5 0 s q . feet. N O D E P O S IT , Alarm system. 15 minutes from UT on bus route. $ 4 15/month. A v a il­ a ble June 1st. 4 5 1 - 8 5 5 6 . 3 -2 3- 2B ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ C A M IN O R E A L ★ •£ A P A R T M E N T S ^ 2810 SALADO ★ ★ ★ 1-1 $475-500 J 2-2 $675-700 « a ' f t 9 & 12 month leases ^ ■^r A '/? blocks from campus j l Previewing times: ★ M -F 10-4, S a t 11-5, ^ ★ S u n 1-5 ★ ★ 472-3816 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ JU ST REMODELED ★ 1-2 Bedrooms ★ 1-35 and C apital Plaza ★ new carp et and p a in t ★ Paid w ate r and gas ★ UT/CR Shuttle SANTA FE APARTMENTS 110 1 Clayton lan e 4 5 8 -1 5 5 2 400 - Condos- Townhomes Campus Condos Centennial, 22. Fum, $1300 Croix, 2 2. $1100 Guad. Sq., 1-1, Fum., $375 Orangetree, 2 2, $1300 Ptoeces Corner, 1-1, Fum., SS50 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 W elcom e to the Littlefield H ouse * Nicely furnished 2-2's ■ C overed Parking ■ Controlled Access 2606 Rio Grande 320 0915 JUST REDUCED! Old Main 2 B R - $875 Apartment Finders Service 458-1213 O N E B L O C K from c a m p u s, 2-2, Buena Vista Ccndos, 1 9 0 8 San An­ tonio. A v a ila b l e 8 - 1 5 - 9 3 . 4 7 7 - 5 0 2 5 . 2-I9 20B " OPEN SATURDAY SUNDAY M A N A G E D BY C A R IN G O W N E R S Condimirtiums/Houses W e st & North C am pus TarryTown 476-2154 2-19-20bC ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease Croix 1-1 $600.00 10 units 2-2 $1000.00 5 units W e have more than anyonel 476-1976. ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease Orangetree 2-2.5 Courtyard $1400 $1100 2-2 Outside W e have several of each. 476-1976 2-19-20b-B. ELY"PROPERTIES Pre-lease Robbins Place 2-2 $850-1100 1000sq/ft-1300sq/ft Great Extra large unit 476-1976 2-l9-20b-B T H E A SH FO R D Now Preleasing Large Efficiencies 1-1 ’s perfect (or roommates Large 2-2’s Starting at $285 ALL BILLS PAID 476-8915 2408 Leon w w w n e < m i w n n n n m n a n * ADVANTAGE* EFF. $305 1-1 $ 3 6 0 2-1 $435 3-2 $635 SHUTTLE, FREE CABLE, A C C E S S GATES *443-3000* 3-11-20P * ADVANTAGE* PRE [EASING ULTIMATE STUDENT PROPERTY WEIGHT ROOM, SHUTTLE, INDO O R B/BALl FREE CABLE, ACCFSS GATE. 1-2-3 BDRMS $ 3 7 6 + *443-3000* 3-11-20P ‘ADVANTAGE* LOFT SPIRAL STAIRCASE ALARM, FREE CABLE WASHER/DRYER INCLUDED $355+ ‘ 443-3000’ 3-11-20P-C 3BDR 2 . 5 both. A ll bills p a id . Very spacious, ceiling fans, locat­ ed in W e s t C a m p u s, on shuttle stop. $ 1 4 0 0 /m o . San G a b rie l Square Apartments 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 . 3- 22-5B-C. 1-1 LOFT available for immediate move-m. 2 7 2 8 Rio G rande, 3 2 2 - 9 8 8 7 . 3-22-5B-B 7 2 5 S Q . F T . $ 3 9 0 1 8 3 & IH - 3 5 . C le a n , p riv a te , b a lc o n y , c a b le , s e c o n d flo o r, ro o m y , b e d ro o m , apartment. 8 3 4 -2 4 3 9 . 3-22-5B. Pre-leasing W est Campus Timberwood Apts. Efficiencies, funished/ unfurnished, fireploces, loft, huge trees, walk to campus $ 2 7 0 -$ 4 2 5 summer/fall 1 0 0 0 W . 26th St. 4 7 8 -4 8 8 6 3-24-20B-B L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y , $ 3 2 5 . W e st C a m p u s . G a s o n d W a t e r p a id . Quiet com plex with pool. Fountain Terrace, 6 1 0 W*est 30th St. 4 7 7 - 8 8 5 8 . 3-23-20B-D. N O R T H O F U.T. efficiency: $ 2 1 0 p lu s utilities. Q uie t, mature, n o pets. 4 7 7 -2 2 1 4 . 3-23-20B-D. 390 - Unf, Duplexes L A R G E R E S T O R E D 2 -2 , 2 b lo c k ! w est of H R C . U p sta irs, im m a cu­ late, w a s h e r -d ry e r, p le a s a n t scre e n e d p orch, gre a t y a rd , fire­ p la ce , T ow er view , priv a te p a r k ­ ing, $ 1 , 1 0 0 . Quiet, petless, non­ smoking. 4 5 2 -5 3 2 9 . 3 3 2 0 6 D . RENTAL 400 - CONDOS-TOWNHOMES Rio Grande P R O P E R T I E S Pre-lease Today Move in June or August Ng Application Tee! • Benchmarks 1-1.2 -2 $6 50+ • 1900 San Gabriel 1-1,2-23-2 $900+ • 1 7 0 4 West A ve 1 -1 ,2 -2 .5 $825+ •Orangetree 2-2.5 $ 1 4 0 0 + •Centennial 3 -2 3 -2 ,1 -1 $ 75 0 + •Westviews l- l,2 - 2 ,l g 2 -2 $600+ •O ld M a in 2 -2 ,2 -1 $ 8 75 + • Chestnut S q . lg.2-2.5 $ 10 5 0 + • Preservation Sq. 2 -2 ,2 -1 $ 6 25+ • Robbins Place 1-1 $ 5 7 5 + •Coventry Place 1-1 $ 4 7 5 + • Carrete 1 -1 $400+ • 7 0 6 W .26th Ig. E F F $3 5 0 a L L 474-0606 C * I - T • V = = ^ PROPERTIES NOW PRELEASING! 706 W. MLK 478-6565 C O F F E E Benchmark Lantern Lane Seton Littlefield Buena Vista Centennial Mews Croix 3200 Duval Old Mam Orangetree S t Thomas Thirty-First Si Treehouse Waterford 1 ,2 and 3 B e d roo m s H O U S E S , T O O ! ■8 bedroom s) VILLAS of LA COSTA The IN Place To Live ★ Exterior upgrade now in progress ★ Access gates sodn ★ Sparkling swimming pool ★ Lighted Tennis. Courts ★ 1st Stop on CR Shuttle 1016 Camino La Costa 4 5 4 - 5 6 3 8 3-24 2064 USE TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS] RENTAL 350 - RENTAL SERVICES F i r s t C a l l RENTAL 370 - UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS UT Shuttle Fall Pre-lease / Off Summer Special eff, 1, 2, 3 & 4 BR $295 + Washer & Dryers/Microwaves Free Cable/Access Gates Lofts/Townhomes .Weightrooms/Saunas Save Time & Money One Call Does it All 3-10-20&-C. $1931 #H E. Oltorf & Z Z Z Z Z 2 448-4800, j j j s r r r r r r r v A RENTAL 360 - FURNISHED APARTMENTS . • 1 LOCATION - LOCATION COME SEE BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APTS. C e n t u r y P la z a 4210 Red River 2 Bd.. 1 Bd. & Efficiencies ALL B llL S 452-4366 _ C e n t u r y S q u a r e 3401 Red River 2 Bd.. 1 Bd. & Efficiencies ALL BILLS .< ^ - \ - ?“4 7 8 -9 7 7 5 • G r a n a d a I I I III 940 E. 40th 3 Bd., 2 Bd., 1 Bd. & Efficiencies • CONVENIENCE • POOL • PATIOS • LAUNDRY FACILITIES • RENTAL 360 - FURNISHED APARTMENTS Preleasing For Summer and Fail 11 FLO O R P L A N S Spacious Two Pools Student Oriented Furn./Unf. Shuttle Bus 5 Mm. To Downtown Modern Microwaves Lofts W/Fans Excellent Maint. P O IN T S O U TH — B R ID C E H O LLO W R e n ta l O ffice: 1 9 1 0 W illo w c re e k 4 4 4 - 7 5 3 6 Colorado River S f Q f f Á R B A p a r t m e n t s * NOW PRELEASING SUM/FALL * FURNISHED * 5 BIKS FROM CAMPUS * UT SHUTTLE STOP * EFFICIENCIES * DELUXE 1 BEDROOMS * 2-1 ECONOMY STYLE * ON-SITE MANAGEMENT A L L B I L L S P A I D 2212 San Gabriel Street A u s t i n , T e x a s 7 8 7 0 5 ____________________ ( 5 1 2 ^ 4 7 4 - 7 7 3 2 RENTAL RENTAL 400 - C ondos- 4 0 0 - Condos- Townhomes Townhomes RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICES EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 4 20 - Unf. Houses 5 1 0 - Entertainm ent- 7 5 0 - Typing 7 9 0 - Part-Time 8 0 0 - General Help W anted 8 0 0 - Genera! Help W an ted 8 1 0 - O f f i c e - C l e r i a l T h e D a il y T e x a n Wednesday, March 24,1993 Page 13 Since 1980 472-6666 EDUCATIONAL 3-3-20BC 5 8 0 - Musical Instruction Tickets A T T E N T IO N B a u h a u s /L o v e a n d R ockets fa n s : send for A FREE D A N IE L A S H g ift. Quantities are limited Send a postcard with your address to: ASH Giveaway c/o Beg­ gars B an q u e t, 2 4 7 M a d is o n Avenue Suite 804, NYC NY 10016. 3-22-3P 5 6 0 - Public Notice Money for College * Guaranteed! Myth #1 There are many more than applicants scholarships available. (That may be true for the well- known scholarships, but over $6 billion goes unawarded for lack of applicants.) Myth #2 Most scholarship awards are based on aca­ demic and athletic ability, or financial need. (M o st sch olarsh ip s are actually aw arded on the basis of career interests, study objectives o r ba ck­ ground. And fam ily financial state­ m ents are not required.) can qualify for You endowments that will pay part or all of your college cost. Find out how easy it is! Valuable free information is yours for the asking. Call or write today! Sound Solutions P.O. Box 91744 Austin, TX 78709 512-288-5044 5 9 0 - Tutoring. GUITAR LESSONS: R & B, rock, jazz, country. 10 years teaching experience. Andy Bullington, 4 5 2 - 6 1 8 1 . 3-3-20B-C SERVICES 7 5 0 - Typing Z I V L E Y The Complete Prolessional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING ■ Ü BLOCKBUSTER 27TH STREET 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 Longhorn Copies RESUMES THESIS FORMATTING BINDING LASER PRINTING TYPING 2518 Guadalupe 4 7 6 -4 4 9 8 FAX 476-2602 PAPERS RESUMES RUSH JOBS A bel’s Copies 1906 GUADALUPE 4 7 2 - 5 3 5 3 T Y P IN G ‘til Midnight Sun.-thurs. OPEN 7 days House of | t \ TUTORSUX Since 1980 4 7 2 -6 6 6 6 W O O D S TYPING and W o rd Pro­ cessing Typewriter or Macintosh- laser. 2 2 0 0 G uadalupe (side en­ trance). 4 7 2 -6 3 0 2 . 2 18-20B-B PDQ W o rd Processing Papers: $ 1.50 a page * Spell Check ‘ Loser Printing ‘ Resume ($ 7 .0 0 ) ‘ Custom Calendars * 5 minutes from UT Full range of services available. Cali 453-4568 for details. 222 206-0 W O R D PROCESSING Profes­ sional typist experienced in gradu­ ate and undergraduate work. $ 1.50/page Barbara Tollus 453- 5 124 3-3-20B. WORD-UP WORD Processing. In­ expensive Flexible, late hours; last minute work. Loser Printing. 34th and Speedway. 4 79 -0 6 49 3-3-20B EV EN IN G TYPIST: le g a l termi- nology- Student special rates. Call Irene 8 3 2 -6 3 6 5 m-f or 512- 863-9335 after 6pm. 3-11-20P. CALL 3 3 9 -4 3 9 0 for perfectly typed letters, resumes, term pa­ pers, news letters. Bookkeeping services also available. 3-22-20B. RESUMES-PROFESSIONALS; QU IC K turnaround. Term pa­ pers/m anuscripts. C all or fax. Karin 331-9350 3-22-20B. 760 - Misc. Services HOUSE SITTING business owner available to care for your home in live-in setting. N o smoke, drink, pets, or kids. Michael 474-7171. 3-23-20B EMPLOYMENT 7 9 0 - Part lime WILL TRAIN students for openings. 5 : 3 0 -9 :0 0 , M-F. Coll 4 5 4 -8 1 3 2 . 2-25-1 OB STUDENTS LOCAL CHARITY NEEDS HELP W ITH TICKET SALES TO AN NU AL EASTER EGG HUNT. Ideal telephone positions. Flexible work schedule. $ 6 /h r + comm. + cash bonuses. Apply 8 0 0 7 Gessner Drive (2 blocks west of 183 & l35)9-4pm 834-3030. 2-26-20B 2 SECRETARIES needed from 8 : 3 a 1 :0 0 an d 1 : 0 0 - 5 : 3 0 M -F . A c­ counting or legal background. 474 - 0 7 2 8 . 2-25-20B H A N D IC A P P E D STUDENT needs patien t d e p e n d a b le attendant to nelp with daily tasks. Must have transportation and driver's license. $ 4 . 5 0 / h r . Flexible hours. 4 6 2 * 1485. 2-26-20B-B SHORT WALK U.T. Bookkeeper Trainee, Typist, $ 4 .4 0 . Runner (own economical, reliable car), $ 4 . 5 0 + trips. W rite application, 4 0 8 West 17th. 3-5-20B-D. EXCHANGE HOURS for cash. O p portunity for extra income distrib­ uting nationally known products. For appointm ent, call 4 1 6 -0 4 3 4 . 3-12-5B. Part-time instructors to teach SAT, LSAT, G M A T , GRE, M C A T , and D A T review p ro g ra m s . Re­ quirem ents 9 0 th % + te a c h in g ex­ perience. Send resum e/cover let­ ter detailing experience to Kaplan 811 W 24th St, Austin, Tx 7 8 7 0 5 . 3-11-5B. M C IN T O S H BASED software firm needs part-time office help. Pre­ fer PM and call 3 4 5 -2 4 9 3 or fax resume 3 4 5 -26 97 3-22-58 RESEARCH INTERVIEWERS N O SALES N e ed ed immediately: Permanent part-tim e telephone interview ers. Local market research firm located near UT campus. Day and evening shifts ava ilab le. A pplications ac­ cepted at 901 W est MLK Blvd, 9- 6 daily. 3-12-6B-C CA M PUS LIFESTYLES— PART-TIME, entry-level position Requires data entry and 10 key by touch. Flexi­ ble hours. Apply in person: 1804 C h ic o n St. S u ite 1 0 4 . 3 2 2 - 9 4 0 6 . 3-12-5b-B. NEAR U.T. Summer day-camp coun­ selor positions. Hancock Recreo- tion Center. 4 5 3 -7 7 6 5 . 3-22-5B. Real Estate Investment/ Management Co. is seeking on energetic, profes­ sional individual to work part-time (20-25hrs/wk) North Austin office Working knowledge of W P 5.1 and lotus 1-2-3 (V3.1) skills are a must, accounting/finance major is a plus. Please send resume to: CWS Management 12330 Metric Blvd. 3-22-5B W E T R A IN , days a n d w eekends off, shuttle access. 5 :3 0 -9 M-F. Call now 3 2 9 -7 0 6 2 /4 5 4 - 8 1 3 2 . 3 2 8B-8 Summer Camp Counselors, Administrative Staff, Nurses and Lifeguards needed for G irl Scout resident camps near Athens, Texas and on Lake Texoma; for more infor­ mation, call extension 320 at (2 1 4 )8 2 3 -1 3 4 2 or 1-800- 422-2260. EOE. 3-22-7P. W A N T T O EARN EXTRA C A SH ? I need someone who knows M acin­ tosh and can tutor me one evening a w e e k . C o ll Don or la in a at (512)385-9700 . 3-22-5B. PART-TIME SALES position for smil­ ing, energetic person at girls dance- wom en's active shop, Activities, Highland M all 4 5 4 - 5 4 9 4 . 3 -2 2 - 5B. RECEPTIONIST NEEDED part-time W ednesdays, F riday evenings 4- 8 : 3 0 , h a lf a d a y on S a tu rd a y . $4 5 0 /h r Ask lor Gwen or Larry 3 4 6 -2 7 8 0 . 3-24-3B. T W O STORY remodeled 5 / 3 spa­ cious, light and bright, fireplace, C A C H , M a y 15 > 1 8 0 0 a g e n t 4 7 7 -1 1 6 3 . 3-24-20B 4 25 - Rooms SHORT WALK UT. Gorgeous up­ stairs, unfurnished. M any Extras, quiet, petless, nonsmoking. 2-Bed­ room Duplex $ 56 0/ro o m , or os 3- $ 3 6 0 / $ 3 6 0 / $ 4 10 bed ro om $ 1 1 0 0 for oil 4 5 2 -5 3 2 9 . 3-5- 20B-D. R O O M FOR rent: female g rad u ­ ate student p re fe rre d U p d a te d North Austin home, 2-1, tile floors, C A /C H , trees. $ 2 8 5 /m o . + 1 / 2 u tilities. C o ll Renee 8 3 6 -74 02 . 322-5B l / 2 a c r e lot, 4 35 - Co-ops 5UMMER& FALL HOUSING REAL HOUSES 2-3 blks to UT Singles & Doubles REAL FOOD Homecooked meals Open k itc h e n s REAL PEOPLE Friendly, democratic environs J0IN U S N 0W ! ICC Co-ops 4 7 6 - 1 9 5 7 5 1 0 W. 2 5 rr^ 4 4 0 - Roommates j®¡ JSá, jAb. A Á i#* A Jb>. A A A- A, ¿ ¡L A «•&. m U .T .’s ROOMMATE m SOURCE Find a great ro o m m a te for * j M you r busy lifestyle. Texas Ex r * o w n e d a n d o p e ra te d . H ** >4 M s, ^ Conv»ni*rtty located at 1709 San Antonio, j, ^ M W IN D S O R R O O M M A T E S 4 9 5 * 9 9 8 8 w *v ■» w**' 4 A A A j ^4* -w -sr-e- *L A A A . A A A A A A i4* ~ ROOMMATE SERVICE Looking or have place? Will help you find o compat­ ible roommate. Male or fe­ male. Call Sam. 2 8 0 -7 1 1 8 SHORT WALK UT. Gorgeous up- stairs, unfurnished. M any Extras, quiet, petless, nonsmoking. 2-Bed- room Duplex. $56 0/ro o m , or os 3- $ 3 6 0 / $ 3 6 0 / $ 4 1 0 . B edroom $ 1 1 0 0 for oil. 4 5 2 -5 3 2 9 3-5- 20B-D. PERFECT OFF-CAMPUS condo for non-smoking female. Sans comput­ er/p rin te r, W /D , M icrow ave, Se­ curity, more. Share room + bills. $ 2 3 5 /m o . Kristin 3 8 5 -4 3 9 1 . 3-8- 10B UT SHUTTLE. Non-sm oker G ra d Student preferred. Large bedroom shared bath $ 24 0+ holt utilities de­ posit. 416 -7 8 7 6 . 3-23-5B. PERFECT OFF-CAM PUS condo for non-smoking female Sans comput­ e r/p rin te r, W /D , M icrow ave, Se­ curity, more. Share room + bills. $ 2 3 5 /m o . Kristin 3 8 5 -4 3 9 1 . 3- 22-10B. FEMALE STUDENT needs respon­ sible, clean, non-smoking roommate to share cute 2-1 d up lex Im ile from campus $ 2 7 5 + bills +depos- it. Heather 4 9 9 -8 3 4 3 . 3-24-5P. LO O K IN G FOR a roommate, mole or fem ale, to share two-bedroom apartment. Contact Sochin at 34 5 - 1014. 3-24-1B. 4 6 0 - Business Rentals JELLY CLUB on 6th street is for rent on a nightly basis Capacity up to 4 0 0 persons. 4 7 2 -3 7 1 2 . 3- 10-8B ■ p m z m a 510 - Entertainment- Tickets C a m p u s C o n d o s Panpcl, M .nm .. S900 Pres. Sq. 7: , $1188 ELY PROPERTIES P re-le as e St. Thomas Furnished 2-1 $ 8 0 0 up Furnished 2-2 $ 1 1 0 0 up 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 2-19-20WJ C E N T E N N IA L * * Largest 2 -2 * * Call Eileen FRONT PAGE 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 2-22-20bC. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Super C o n d o ! 1-1 ....$450 FRONT PAGE 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 222-20bC *Ton$ of W in d o w s * 2 -2 ....$ 8 0 0 W est Campus FRONT PAGE Call Glen 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 2-22-20bC. *BIG ROOMS* 2-2, $925 FRONT PAGE Call M ark 480-8518 THE MARIDA 26th and San G abriel Large 2 & 3 BDR Condos with parking garage 2 BDR from 5 8 0 0 3 BDR from $ 1 2 5 0 G M PROPERTIES 4 5 9 -6 4 9 9 3-22-20B-B H U G E 1-1 I uxury co n d o . Fire- ploce, security system, pool, W / D connections, shuttle. $47 5 4 4 4 - 2 9 2 6 3-23-3 B ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease Classy Old Main 2 bedrooms $895 Secured Parking, controlled access Furnished) Unfurnished 476-1976 3-24-20&-B ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease Westridge 2-2 $ 7 5 0 W /D , Microwave, Covered parking Lorge Penthouse, 2-2 $1200 Fobulous Views 476-1976 ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease San Gabriel Place 2-2 $675 West Campus, W /D , Micro. Great Deal 476-1976 ________________3-24-20B-B ELY PROPERTIES Savannah W /C 2-2 $ 7 5 0 yr W /D , microwave, Just a few left 476-1976 3-23-20B-B ELY PROPERTIES Palladium 2-2 $ 8 0 0 4 9 0 0 yr 85 0-8 00 sq ft furnished/unfurnished W /D, microwave 3 blocks to campus 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 3-23-20B-B. T W O UN ITS 1BR-1BA N o pets. Close to com pus. Secure an d safe. A v a ila b le June 1. C a ll Ming 2 5 8 -6 5 7 2 . 3-23-5B 4 1 0 - Furn. Houses 2-22-201>C. ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease Ultimate W est Campus penthouse. Jacuzzi in master bath. Awesome views. 10-foot ceiling. $ 1 2 0 0 Available June and August. 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 2-2S-10M TWELVE OAKS Condos: 7 0 4 W . 21s t. Pre-lease e a rly for best rates. 2 -2 's from $ 8 0 0 . 4 9 5 - 9 5 8 5 . 3-l-20b-B. FURNISHED HOUSE - 3B D R /2B A , d o u b le g a r a g e , skylights, f ir e ­ p lace, near Zilker pork $ 1 , 1 9 5 . Coll Adorns Realty 4 4 3 -2 5 2 8 . 3- 24-31. 420 - Unf, Houses UT PRE-LEASINGI Best selection of houses and duplexes. 1-7 BDR's Eyes of Texos. 4 7 7 - 1 1 6 3 . 3-9- 20B-D. 4 7 7 -L IV E 24 H R S , O ld fash io n lto3BR homes. Hardwood, charm, Í¡as, appliances $ 4 2 5 / $ 6 5 0 and 2-1, $ 2 6 0 . Lease purchase). 3-9- 20B-D. “ BEST PRICE I 2-2's, W est Com- pus, w a s h e r/d ry e r, $ 6 5 0 . Front Poge 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 3-l-20b-C . HOUSES FOR rent. 2 , 3, 4 bed- rooms. Ask for Jeff at Rio Gronde Properties. 4 7 4 -0 6 0 6 . 3-11-10B-B. 1BR WEST Campus condo. Extra clean. All appliances, walk to UT, $400/m onth. 3 3 8 -1 2 8 5 . 3-10-8B ELY PROPERTIES Pre-lease G reenw ood Towers Huge 2-2 1400 sq.feet, $1200 All Bills Paid 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 HUGE CROIX one bedroom, 7 1 5 square feet, oil am enities, excel­ lent condition. C all Stuart at Rio Grande Properties, 4 7 4 -0 6 0 6 . 3- 11-10B-B WEST UNIVERS­ ITY PLACE 8 0 8 W . 29th St. Large 2 BDR Condos PooT, parking garage 12 mo. leases from $9 00 G M PROPERTIES 4 5 9-6 499 3-22-20B-B SUPER H U G E m odern Duplex 3- 2 .5 , 1 8 0 0 squ are feet, w alk to cam pus, new c a rp e t and n ew paint. C all Stuart at Rio G rande Properties, 474 -0 6 0 6 . 3-11-10B-B. 4 -2 , $ 9 5 0 , near UT, on shuttle, C A /C H , W / D , e x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tion. Pre-lease for summer or fall. John Heberling, 2 6 1 -7 0 7 3 . 3-22- 5B in LARGE H IS T O R IC p ro p e rty West Campus. Suitable for office or rooming house 4 7 9 -5 2 3 0 or 1- 800 -54 4-29 22. 3-12-10B. HYDE PARK. C h a rm in g 2 - 1 , fenced yard. A vailable June 1st. $ 7 5 0 . $ 5 0 0 deposit. 3 7 1 -3 7 1 7 . 3-24-3B ELY PROPERTIES 8-4 house Total renovation in progress All possible amenities included Available August 1 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 3-23-20B-B. CENTRAL 2-1. Cute as a button. $ 6 5 0 . Everyth ing b ran d n ew . A v a ila b le A p ril 1st. 3 7 1 - 3 7 1 7 . 3 -2 4 3 B RENTAL 4 0 0 - C0ND0S-T0WNH0USES Ü H PRELEASE i ! Com plex Address 9 M 0 / 1 2 M 0 Com m ents C O F F E E P R O P E R T I E S B EN CH M AR K BUENA VISTA BU ENA VISTA CENTENNIAL CENTENNIAL CH ELSEA CROIX CROIX DELPHI ENFIELD PLA ZA ENFIELD T 0 W N H 0 M E S GEORGIAN GUNTER PLACE G UNTER PLACE GUNTER PLACE HOUSE HYDE PA R K CO NDO S LANTERN LANE LANTERN LANE IE N 0 X LITTLEFIELD HOUSE LITTLEFIELD HOUSE M EW S M EW S M EW S N UECES PLACE NUECES PLACE OLD MAIN O RANGETREE ORANGETREE O RANGETREE O RANGETREE PALMETTO PALMETTO PAR APET PECAN TREE Q UAD RAN G LE QUADRANGLE Q UAD RAN G LE RED RIVER SABIN AL SET0N SO M ERSET ST TH O M AS ST. TH O M AS THIRTY-FIRST ST TOM G REEN TOWNE PAR K TRAIL TR E EH 0U S E TREEH 0U SE T R E EH 0U SE W EST UNIV. PLACE WINOTREE 3001 CEDAR 1908 SAN ANTONIO 1908 SAN ANTONIO 501 W. 26TH 5 0 1 W. 26TH 1 00 0 W .2 5 T H 806 W. 24TH 806 2 24TH 706 W. 24 IH 1610 WATERSTON 2605 ENFIELD 715 W. 2 2 1 /2 2813 RIO GRANDE 2813 RIO GRNADE 2813 RIO GRANDE 910 W. 23RD 3400 SPEEDW AY 2008 SAN ANTONIO 2008 SAN ANTONIO 915 W. 23RD 2606 RIO GRANDE 2606 RIO G RANDE 905 W. 22 1/2 9 05 W 22 1/2 905 W 22 1/2 2206 NUECES 2206 NUECES 2501 PEARL 2529 RIO GRANDE 2529 RIO GRANDE 25629 RIO G RANDE 2529 RIO G RANDE 2110 RIO G RANDE 2110 RIO G RAN DE 2801 RIO G RANDE 2107 RIO G RAN DE 611 E 45TH 611 E 45TH 611 E 45TH 4701 RED RIVER 712 G R A H A M PLACE 2513 SET0N 2206 SAN G ABRIEL 807 W. 25TH 807 W 25TH 203 E 31ST 3115 TOM GREEN TOWNE PARK TR 2612 SAN PEDRO 2612 SAN PEDRO 2612 SAN PEDRO 808 W 29TH 106 E. 30TH Size 2-2 1-1 2-2 1-1 2-2 2-1 1-1 2-2 2-2 2-2 2-2 2-2 2-1 5 2-2 2-2 3-1 1-1 1-1 2-1 2-2 2-1 2-2 2-2 2-2 2 -2 5 1-1 1-1 2-2 0-1 1-1 2-2 2-2.5 1-1 2-1 2-2 1-1 1-1 2-2 2-2.5 0-1 2-2 1-1 2-2 2-1 2-2 2-2 2-1 3-2 0-1 1-1 2-2 2-2 2-2 1150/1050 650/600 1000/900 700/650 1200/1075 725-675 650/600 1050/950 925/875 950 YR. 800 YR 825/775 750/710 725 YR 750 YR. 1175 YR. 450/425 575 YR 775 YR 1200/100 900/850 1200/1100 850/775 950/900 1250/1150 450/425 700/650 1125/995 525/500 625 YR 1225/1125 1300/1200 450 YR 800 YR 900/850 485/450 725/675 1000/900 1050/950 400/375 900/850 675/625 850/800 950/900 1200/1100 825/775 725 YR 1300 YR 500/450 650/600 1200/1100 1000/900 850/800 BEAUTIFUL!! LARGE, FURN OR UNF LARG E UNITS, 1 B L K TO UT HAS N EW C ARPET 2-2/W LOFT FOR 3 R D B D RM HAS N EW CARPET/2 STORY 2 STO RY FLAT UNIT, W/D CONN 2 STORY. W/D CONN 2 STORY, HARDW OO D FLRS ON UT SHUTTLE FURN. 1 BLOCK TO UT! NEW CARPET, HUGE LIVING FURN LUXURY. FURNISHED CONDO GOOD FOR 2 T E 0 P L E 2 S T O R Y /G 0 0 0 FOR 2 P P L FRONT PENTHOUSE UNIT 2 S TO R Y - FURNISHED L U X U R Y FURN IN W EST NO W ASHER /D RYER S ET 0 N SIDE, OUTSIDE GATE 2 STORY, OUTSIDE GATE NICE C O M PLEX , CLO SE FLR PLA N FOR UP TO 4 NICE LARGE/2 STO RY UNIT NICE EFFICIENCY LTD A C C E S S GATES/GARAGE C LO SE N C A M P U S LARG E DECK, M A N Y W INDOW 2 CAR G ARAGE IN N C A M P U S W. C A M P U S BUT S E C L U 0 E 0 H AS G ARAG E HAS G ARAGE RATES L E S S FOR 2 P P L 4 7 4 - 1 8 0 0 ** C O O L DRIVERS** *W A N T E D * For ice delivery. Flexible hours. Heavy lifting. Must know Austin, hove excellent driving record, be custom er o rie n te d and com m it through summer Call 4 7 4 -4 4 5 3 betw een 9-5. Ask for Dan, M ary Alice, or Suzi. 3 234BD PART-TIME TELLER POSITION AVAILABLE 2 :3 0 - 7 : 3 0 four days a week and 8 : 0 0 - 2 : 3 0 S aturdays T e lle r or cash handling experience preferred. Paid vacation and sick leave Send resume to: IBM TEFCU, Personnel P.O. Box 9 9 2 6 - Austin, TX 7 8 7 6 6 -0 9 2 6 EOE 3-23-3B Bookstore Sales Associates T h ree 2 5 to 3 5 h r / w k p art-tim e sales positions. Must be ab le to three days during the week work: 1 2 n o o n -7 :3 0 p m plus alte rn ating w eekends Sat 9 :1 5 o m -6 p m and Sun: 10:45am -5pm . M ature indi­ vidual must have high school diplo­ ma or GED plus 6 mo. of cosh han­ dling and customer service experi­ ence Duties include cashiering, minor pricing and customer service. G ood communication and people skills. M e d ic a l, dental, textbook lo a n a n d oth er benefits. Close proximity to UT. Merchandise dis­ counts. It interested, apply of: University Co-operative Society 5 0 7 West 23rd Street M-F: 9am to 1 pm 3-22 5B-D SEMEN DONORS NEEDED ^ A - , . - ■ ■ w i l l f-V ': l Fairfax C ry o b a n k is seeking semen donors for its sperm bank pro­ gram , The program is) c o n fid e n tia l a nd all d o n o r s be! 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 ¡you a re inte re ste d , please call: 4 7 3 - 2 2 6 8 F A I R F A X C R Y O B A N K o division of the Genetic & I.V.E. Institute GREEKS & CLUBS $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ First USA Telemarketing Services, a division of First USA, Inc. Is currently seeking the follow ing marketing professionals: ‘ Consumer Credit Reps! Representatives w ill be responsi­ ble for m arketing consumer pro­ ducts and services, primarily credit cards nationw ide. Excellent com­ munication skills with some sales ex­ perience is preferred. W e guaran­ tee $ 6 /h o u r plus benefits. Com­ mission may be earned. Typing skills of 25wpm preferred. Sched­ uled shift is Monday-Friday. • 5:30-9:30pm . Please ap p ly in person M o n d a y thróugh F rid ay, 8 a m -6 :3 0 p m of First USA T e le m a rk e tin g , O n e Texas Center, 5 0 5 Barton Springs Road, Suite 6 0 0 , Receptionist. N o Phone C all Pleasel Equal Opportunity Employer First USA $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 3-22-20B-C THREE STUDENT communities need­ ing part-time leasing agent Must be w illin g to w ork w eeken d s. Call for appointment. 4 5 2 -3 2 0 2 . EOE. 3-225B M ASTER VALET clean ers need counter attendant at south west lo­ c a tio n 3pm -6pm M -F, 8am -1 pm e ve ry other Saturday A p p ly at 2 4 0 3 Lake A ustin Blvd. 4 7 7 - 9 9 9 7 . 3-24-3B. PLAY LEADER part-tim e eve ning hours. W ork with children experi­ e n c in g em o tio n al or b e h a v io ra l problems. Some experience with C a ll Austin c h ild re n re q u ire d C h ild G u id a n c e C e n te r. 4 5 1 - 2 2 4 2 . 3-24-5B. FOX PROGRAMMERS S tr a te g ic d a t a b a s e system , m icro soft consulting c h a n n e l p a rtn e r, needs part-tim e Fox- B A S E + M A C a n a FoxPro pro­ grammers, prior experience re­ q u ir e d . L a rry Joseph 4 7 2 - 5 8 1 0 . 3-2 4-5 B. A C C O U N T IN G FIRM seeks per- son with good phone voice to con­ tact businesses from our o ffic e . Flexible daytim e hours. Hourly+ bonuses. 3 4 6 -9 5 9 1 . 3-23-4B. ASSISTANT TEACHERS N e ed energetic, warm individuals as ossistant teachers in nationally accredited infant/toddler program. Part-time hours, flexible schedules O n UT shuttle. Some C D C /E C E hrs. a n d e x p e rie n c e p re fe rre d . EEO employer. Call Helen. St. Luke Infant C are Center 4 7 8 -3 1 1 3 323-58 TRAIN D R IV E R /M E C H A N IC , Zilk- 9! Park Railroad. Must be able to lift 1 OOlbs Friendly personality a must. 4 7 8 -8 1 6 7 . 3 24-38 “ YOUTH ACTIVITY STAFF If you have e x p e rie n c e w o rk in g w ith elem e ntary school children, are ava il­ a b le M /F , 2 - 6 / 6 : 3 0 pm lik e to h e a r w e w o u ld from you. A cce p tin g a p ­ plica tio n s fo r current and summer e m p lo ym e n t. Lo­ cations in Austin Complete Extend-A-Care application at 55 55 N . Lamar, Suite D I 13, M-F. EOE. 3-24-7B-D E A R N IN G O P P O R T U N IT Y . You can earn extra income through a part-time business. Call (713J-784- 2 9 7 3 . 3-24-5B. PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST M -W -F 8 -5 . M ust be o r g a n iz e d , w ork w ith p eo p le , a n d w ork unsuper­ vised im p o rtan t. C a ll a n d leave m essage. 2 5 8 - 9 1 2 1 . 3-24 5B. Phone skills DELIVERY DRIVERS 5 -1 0p m , reli­ able car and good driving record. $6-$ 12/hr. 3 4 3 -1 9 2 9 . 3 24-4B 8 0 0 - General Help W anted EA RN M O N E Y re a d in g bo o ksl $ 3 0 .0 0 0 /y r income potential De­ tails. (1) 8 0 5 - 9 6 2 - 8 0 0 0 , Ext. Y- 9 4 1 3 . 2-17-20P ATTENTION LOSERS! Eorn money w h ile you lose 10-1 8 0 lb s . Diet M a g ic l Do cto r R ecom m ended . 1 0 0 % G u a r a n te e d . ( 5 1 2 ) 4 5 0 - 1653. 2-22-20B R A IS E A C O O L $ 1 , 0 0 0 IN JU ST ONE W EEK! PLUS $ 1 0 0 0 FOR THE MEMBER WHO CALLS! No obligation, No cost And a FREE IGLOO COOLER if you qualify, Call 1-800-932-0528, e x t 65 HELP!!! We're Swamped W O M EN & MEN FULL TIME PART TIME We have hundreds of fam ilies in the Greater Austin area who have sent for information from us regarding the purchase of EN CYCLO PED IA BRITANNICA. Our sales reps are among the highest paid in the world EARN U P TO $720 PER WEEK NO COLD CANVASING NET CO M M ISSIO N ON TWO O RD ERS FULL FRINGE BENEFITS CALL NOW FOR APPO IN TM ENT 459-1177 An Equal Opportunity Employer AUSTIN PLASMA CENTER t Y 0 U G E T , $ 1 7 C A S H First Donation Benefits for you: • FREE Rkysiial on 1st donation • FREE Sireening on every donation (HIV, Ho|Hrtitis, Syphilis, et«). • All supptlios are used ONCE. • Plasma may be donated tw ite a week. Organizations Welcome Coll for Info. 4 7 7 - 3 7 3 5 29th and Guadalupe LOSE WEIGHT NOW! 125 People wanted NO WILLPOWER NEEDED Doctor recommended. All natural product 100% guaranteed. Easy tablet form. Call anytime: 303-692-5274 SECURITY OFFICERS Now hiring full and part-time night security officers for locations near the UT campus area. We are looking for people orientated officers with experi­ ence the public Uniforms provided Excellent oppor­ for students. Call ZIMCO tunity SECURITY CONSULTANTS. 343-7210. Mon.-Fn. 3 pm-6 pm in working with INC A T T E N T I O N G R A D S T U D E N T S READERS NEEDED to eval­ uate student writing. Tem­ p o ra ry positions, a p p ro x ­ im a te ly s.even weeks, be­ g in n in g M a rc h 2 4 . W e p ro v id e tr a in in g . Tw o shifts are a va ila b le . Day shift: 8:3 0 a m -3 :4 5 p m , M- F. Evening shift 5 :0 0 p m - 1 0 :1 5 p m , M -F. H o u rs f le x ib le . a re no t B a c h e lo r's d e g re e re ­ quired; prefer English, lan­ g u ag e arts, e d u ca tio n or re la te d fie ld . D u rin g in ­ terview , dem onstration of w r itin g a b ility re q u ire d . Pay rate: $ 7 .0 0 per hour. C a ll M ea sure m ent In c o r­ p o ra te d for further in fo r­ mation and application: (5 1 2)-8 35-6 0 9 1 . 3-8-ibC EA RN M O N E Y re a d in g booksl $ 3 0 . 0 0 0 / yr incom e potential. De­ ta ils . (1) 8 0 5 - 9 6 2 - 8 0 0 0 , Ext. Y- 9 4 1 3 ' 2 1-28P E A R N M O N E Y r e a d in g b o o k s l $ 3 0 .0 0 0 /y r incom e p otential De­ ta ils (1) 8 0 5 - 9 6 2 - 8 0 0 0 , Ext. Y- 94 1 3 3-24 23P AS S IS TA N T C O A C H n e e d e d for sum mer le a g u e sw im team . M a y through June Experience desired. Carol 4 5 4 -0 7 4 4 3-12-5B. STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES and female television commercial extra nee ded for m arke ting firm . J C , (3 1 3 )7 6 1 -4 9 3 6 . 3-12-5B ATTENTION COLLEGE STUD ENTS $ 9 . 2 5 / $ 7 . 2 5 to start, fle x ib le schedules, scholarships ava ilab le, all majors considered. 4 7 2 -5 6 9 4 . 3-22-20B. CAM PUS REP. Earn and le arn as a com pus rep lo r p ro gressive n a ­ tio n a l c o r p o r a t io n . P o te n tia l $ 2 0 0 0 /m o n th . Contact Universal D a ta S o lution s, Inc. 1 -8 0 0 -8 4 6 - 9 2 0 0 , ext. 7 5 0 0 3-24-3B PERFECT COLLEGE job - friend ly telep hone voices w anted evenings o n a w ee k e n d s . 4 5 8 - 5 1 3 3 . 3-22-10B. ranted e\ $ 6 / h r . T E N N IS STAFF, prestigious co-ed summer camp in Shenandoah Moun­ tains of W est Virginia seeks dyna­ mic tennis counselors. Top sala­ rie s , p riv a te lessons, tra v e l a l­ lowances. Call 1 -8 0 0 -2 4 7 -2 8 7 0 . 3-22-1 OP WRITERS AN D photographers want­ ed for Study Breaks M a g a z in e Please call 4 7 7 -3 1 4 1 . 3-23-3b. CRUISE SHIPS N O W HIRING - Earn $ 2 ,0 0 0 + /m o n th + w orld trav. e l ( H a w a ii, M e x ic o , fh# C a r ib ­ bean, »cf.) H o lid a y , Summer a n d C a re e r e m p lo y m e n t o v a ilo b fe . N o experience necessary For em­ ploym ent p rogram call 1-206-634- 0 4 8 6 ext C 5 8 6 7 3-22-156 LANDSCAPE SUPERVISORS want- ed. Previous e xp e rie n c e helpful, b uf w ill tra in a g g re s s iv e /c a p a b le in d iv id u a ls to e a g e r (5 12)832-1122 . 3-23-10B le o rn STUDENTS BEWARE! Summer is coming fast. ARE YOU PREPARED?' D o n 't settle for o dull, lo w -p a y in g summer jo b Starting im m ediately through m id-M ay we are go in g to be o ffe r in g fu ll-tim e p o s itio n s which w ill last throughout the sum­ m er. A m b itio u s peo ple can earn g re a t m oney, travel, cosh scholar­ ships, and much more. American Learning Systems 479-651 1 Ask for Miss Mor.roe W e 're no' only in Austin, we also h o v e o ffic e s tr. D a lla s D e n v e r, Houston and O klahoma City Call Now, Summer recruiting has begun. 3-23-206 p a r t -t im e’ GENERAL o f f T e ~ Flexi- bie his M-F. Full-time m ail sorting. A p p ly ir, person only Q uantum Systems, 81 0 1 Cam eron Rd. suite 209 . EOE 3-22 3B EARN EXTRA m oney d is trib u tin g m a g a z in e s . Fun, e a s y , se fio u s - Must have re lia b le tra n sp o rta tio n . C a ll 2 0 5 -0 1 6 8 Leave message. 3-22-5B A C C O M M O D A T IO N S e x ­ change (or supervising my two tee­ nagers, N W Austin. M a tu re stud­ ent John 335 -69 08. 3 22 5B IN WANTED: VOLLEYBALL MANAGER Requirements O rg a n iz e d person with good academ ic standing able to work spring and fa ll. Must be a b le to a tte n d a ll p ra c tic e s and games Knowledge of the gome a bonus. Computer skills o plus For m o re in fo r m a tio n : C o n ta c t T ina Johnson 471 -7 6 9 3 . 3-2 4-1 OP CO NTESSA DORMITORIES is now acc e p tin g resident assistant a p p li­ ca tio n s tor the '9 3 - '9 4 a c a d e m ic year. Stop by 2 7 0 7 Rio G ra n d e 9 -5 p m , M-F, d e a d lin e A p r il 2nd , 12pm. 3-24-5B-C. HIRE A H o rn T e m p o ra rie s needs students fo r TEMPORARY a s s ig n ­ ments (non e n rolled o.k .) C om put­ e r / C le r ic a l (w o rd p ro c e s s in g , d a te e n try , b o o k k e e p in g ,) Some the f o llo w in g s k ills p r e fe rr e d : W o r d P e rfect, M S W o r d , Excel, Lotus, etc. $ 5 . 5 0 to $ 7 . 0 0 per hour. VERY O PEN CLASS SCHED­ ULES re q u ire d . C a ll 3 2 6 - 4 6 7 6 . 3-24-20B- C SPRING/SUMMER JOBS Slate's largest citizen watch­ dog group now hiring for cam­ paigns to reform healthcare and stop utility ripoffs. Fight corporate arrogance and greed. Training and benefits. Hours 1 -10 pay $ 3 0 0 /w k . Call 444-8618. 3-24-8B A F T E R N O O N P O S IT IO N S a v a il- a b le in m a ilin g business. N o ex­ p e rie n c e n e c e s s a ry 4 6 7 - 2 5 7 7 Austin Presort 601 E. 5 3 rd . 3-23- 2B. A T T E N T IO N R T F /JO U R N A L IS M MAJORS. V id e o pro d u ctio n com ­ p a n y seeks student film and vid eo m o ke rs to v id e o ta p e a t sum m er le a rn w h ile y o u e a rn l c a m p s C A M P 1 - 8 0 0 - 2 8 4 - 8 4 3 7 , TV A p p ly N o w l 3-23-4B. SALESPERSON FOR in fa n t fu rn i­ ture, clothing, and m aternity wear. W o rk S a turdays on ly 10-6 C a ll 3-23-5B- M artha or Lee 4 5 4 -2 5 4 4 Spend the summer in the beautiful Catskill Mountains of New York. Achieve a challenging and rewarding summer experience working in a residential camp for adults w ith p hysical and developmental dis­ abilities. Positions available: Counselors, Cabin Leaders, Program Leaders. A ll students a re en­ couraged to apply. Season dates June 1- August 19. Good sal­ ary, room and board, and some travel allow­ ance. C all G eorge at 512- 3 53-581 6 for informa­ tion or w rite to Camp Jened, P.O. Box 483, Rock H ill, NY 12775 (914)434-2220. 3-23-4P-B. COMPUTER~DATA TECHNICIAN Full-time, $ 1 3 ,0 0 0 per year minimum, plus health benefits Qualifications, personal computer fam iliararity ana touch typing skill. A p ply 5 5 5 5 N Lamar Suite D ) 13 EOE 3-34.7B-0 810 - Office-Clerical Full time abstractor/title clerk: detail oriented, energetic person w ith good math, writing & verbal skills. Some data entry/ability to read maps. Organized, quick learner fo r high volum e, fast-paced environment. understand & Apply at Stewart Title Austin, Inc. 100 Congress, Suite 200 CLERKS S e v e ra l p o s tio n s . F u ll o r p a r t ­ irme Some have p o te n tia l to be­ com e perm anent These d yn a m ic c lie n ts a re ro o kin g fo r a few d y ­ C o u ld be a n a m ic e m p lo y e e s g re a t c a re e r s te p p in g stone Be one of the first to a p p ly and w ork in this p ro fe ss io n a l business e n v i­ ro n m e n t D o w n tc w n a n d N o r th ­ west Austin CoB today • Messengers • Copy clerks • Maifroom clerk* • Retail clerks Burnett Personnel Services 7 9 4 -0 0 7 7 3 23 3B 820 - Accounting- Bookkeeping SHORT W A L K UT A c c o u n t- ing/B ookkeeping trainee Full/part- tim e N onsm oker $ 4 4 0 . W rile a p p lic a t io n 8 -4 w e e k d a y s 4 0 8 West 17th 3-5-20B-D 840 - Sales SPRING BREAK le a ve you w ith o sum m er w c k h e o d a c h e ? E a rn Interest in $ 4 7 2 /w k this summer sales C a ll 4 8 2 - 8 5 6 5 befo re 5pm S W C O . 3 23 3P 870 * Medical BRIGHT, ENERGETIC person in ter­ e s te d in m e d ic in e w a n te d fo r a part-time afternoon position a* busy S Austin fa m iiy p ra c tic e Hrs 1- 5 p m /M - F c a ll 3 8 8 - 4 7 1 3 a fte r 4pm 3-22-3B m e d í c a l ASSISTANT Medical assistant needed must have experience working in a busy doctor's office Depertdoble/self- m otivated/independent learner. Must also have experience in w ork­ ing with computers Part-time position available C a ll 8 3 7 2 6 4 0 for on interview. 880 - Professional ^ L m C A L T ENVIRONMENTAL Career with a conscience. Clean Water Action- the nation's #1 w ater pollution lobby is now hiring environm entally m otivated in d iv id u a ls for our public outreach If you can work team. the hours of lpm-10pm at least 4 days a w eek, have e xcellent com m unication skills, and want to make a dif­ ference, then call Jamie at 474-2438 2-25-20B-B SPORTS W RITER n e e d e d im m e­ d ia te ly . D e g ree or ex p e rie n c e . Corsicana Daily Sun 1-800-460- 7 3 5 5 . Ask for Gary. 3-22-5B 890 - Clubs- R es fa u rants P A N D E M O N IU M FAMILY FUNPLEX Experienced m anager W knd. hostesses/tele-recpt. snk bar/p lay ro o m attendants 502 E. Highland Mall Blvd. 3 J -2 0 B -B SHAKESPHERE'S PUB: c o c kta il waitpersons needed Apply in per­ son, 4-7pm ot 314 E 6tn street 3- 12-6B. *~BLACKJACK* DEALERS BDC now h irin g b lackjack dealers for Austin's finest n ig h l clu b. W ill tra in S tarting pay $ 5 / h o u r plus tips. A p p ly in person only W e d ­ n e s d a y M a rc h 2 4 th , 3 - 5 pm at H e a d lin e r s East, 4 0 6 East 6 th Street. N o phone calls please 3 23 2B N O W H IR IN G security and w ait- staff A pply W ednesday and Thurs­ d a y , 2 5pm . A b ra tto 's , 3 1 8 East 5th. 3-24 2B. EL TORITO is now a c c e p tin g a p ­ p lic a tio n s fo r fo o d servers, c o c k ­ ta il servers and p a rt-tim e hostess positions A p p ly b etw e en 2-4pm M o n -S a t. 6 1 3 4 H w y 2 9 0 E a n d 135. 3-24 36 900 - Domestic- Household M O T H E R 'S HELPER n e e d e d , 4- 8 p m . M-F, plus some w e e k e n d s . W e w i ll p r o v id e g o r o g e a p a r t ­ ment, bilis paid, plus $ 4 0 0 . month. C h iid c a ie expe rience, rete ience s, ow n transportation required. Non- sm oker, E n glish s p e a k in g . 4 6 7 * 2 9 1 2 3-22-5B CHILD-CARE NEEDED for infant in my home W e d n e s d a y s a n d Fri­ days 9-p References and trans­ p ortation re q u ire d H a rris Branch near Manor 272 -54 53. 3-22-5B fo r C H ILD C A R E NEED ED f u ll­ t im e .'p a rt- tim e w e e k d a y s M -F, starting M a y 15th C h ild re n ages 8 a n d 5 . M ust have re lia b le tran s­ portation. C a ll 4 5 4 -0 3 2 0 . 3-24- 5B H O M E A S S IS T A N T - P # rt-tim e . Assist mildly disabled man_ Varie­ ty of duties $ 5 .0 0 /h r. C all 346- 2 5 2 5 . 3-23-5B-B. W A N T E D : LIVE-IN fe m a le b a b y ­ s itte r fo r lO y r old C a ll d ig ita l p a g e r 4 8 0 - 6 4 6 8 o r 4 4 3 5 7 3 3 . Leave message. 3 23 46 BUSINESS 930 - Business Opportunities PCXZKET HUNDREDS WEEKLY pro- cessing en v elop es! P ro fita b le , practical PT/FT project. Coll 24- H O TLIN E h o u r (2 14)601-1830 . 12-2-1 OP. a u to m a te d Sanctify o f Contract K T K W A R T T I T L E A U S T I N S H O R T W ALK U.T. Bookkeeper T rain ee, Typ ist, $ 4 . 4 0 . Runner Jown e c o n o m ica l, re lia b le car), Í 4 .5 0 + trips. W rite application, 4 0 8 West 17th. 3-5-20B0 PART-TIME LIGHT clerical position available flexible hours M-F. Call 4 9 5 -9 9 1 7 . 3-22-5B. PART-TIME S E C R E TA R Y/R E C E P­ T IO N IS T needed for busy mental help office. Some experience pre­ fe rre d . A p p lic a tio n s taken at 7 7 1 9 W o o d H o llo w Drive, Suite 1 52 , Austin 3-22-5B C ALL 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 T O PLA C E Y O U R C L A S S IF IE D A D EMPLOYMENT 790 - PART-TIME C i r c u l a t i o n A s s i s t a n t (Inserter) 19 hours per week maximum For Fall Semester $ 6 .1 6 to $ 6 .3 3 per hour depending upon qualifications W ork hours begin at 2 a.m. Assist in Circulation Department of The Daily Texan on nights when inserts are placed in paper. Requires High School graduation or GED; ability to lift heavy loads; valid Texas Driver's License and an acceptable driving record. Applicant selected must provide a cur­ rent three year Driver's License Record. Call Terry Reilley at 471-5422 or Art Rinn at 47 1-5 88 7 for appointment The University of Texas at Austin is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer $ 2 0 0 -$ 5 0 0 WEEKLY A sse m b le p ro d u c ts at home. Easy! N o selling. Y ou 're p a id direct. Fully G ua ra ntee d. FREE Infor- m a tio n -2 4 H o u r H o tlin e . 8 0 1 -3 7 9 -2 9 0 0 C o p yrig h t # TX042950. I1 * :: 2-23-20P ¡1 k I | I CRUISE LINE Entry level on board-landside positions available. Summer or year round, great pay, transportation paid. Tampa, Florida 813-229-5478 3-2-20B J O B S -W A R E H O U S E S U M M E R work. 3 eight-hour shifts 2 loca­ tions: Dallas, ( 2 14J-869-0250, or Houston, (713) 8 2 0 -3 8 2 0 . 3-2-20b- B T h e Da il y T ex a n W ednesday, March 24," 1993 Men’s golf team wins backyard tourney Jean -P au l H ebert w ere the three Texas golfers to shoot par or better for the tou rn am en t. Fou r Texas golfers had at least one round under par. Other Longhorn finishers include Frazar, who finished in a tie for third w ith a 3-u n d er 213, and Hebert, who finished in a tie for seventh place with a 216. Taylor Tipton, com ing o ff of a third place finish at the Golf Digest Tournament at The Woodlands, fin­ ished in a 12th place tie. Frazar, Tipton and Skinner all shot final round one-over par 73s to complement Leonard's five-under 67 in leading the Longhorns to vic­ tory. Head coach Jim C layton and assistant coach Greg Martin were pleased w ith the team 's p erfo r­ mance. "T h is was a good overall effort for the guys. We played w ell for three rounds," Martin said. " A ll five o f our p lay ers co n ­ tributed with kev scores. This was a real team effort. It's always good to win at your home course in your hometown. That's not always an easy thing to do," Clayton said. Clayton also praised his team for not allowing inclement weather to rattle his team. Second p lace w ent to eig h th - ranked A rkansas, the only other team to finish under par for the tou rn am en t, w ith an 856. No. 1 ranked O klahom a State finished third with an 869. Second-ranked Arizona finished with an 881. After an impressive fall, expecta­ tions were high for the Texas men's golf team. However, results this spring have been disappointing through the first three tournam ents of the season, including a seventh-place finish at the Golf Digest Tournament earlier this month. H ow ev er, C oach C la y to n was encouraged by his team 's perfor­ mance over the last two days,"This is a big boost for our team. This win came at a really good time for us." Larry Rlmmer Daily Texan Staff Junior Justin Leonard shot a tour­ nament record 11-under-par 205 to lead the University of Texas men's golf team to victory in the Morris Williams Intercollegiate golf tourna­ ment at the Hills of Lakeway. In addition, Texas broke a tourna­ ment record of 6 under par for 54 holes by a whopping nine strokes. Leonard, H arrison Frazar and UT tops Hornets Lummus powers No. 3 Horns, 12-2 Troy Brown Daily Texan Staff In his longest outing of the year, pitcher Mark Lummus threw five outstanding innings Tuesday night giving up no earned runs and strik­ ing out four as the Texas baseball team drilled Emporia State 12-2 to sweep the two-game series. The Longhorns (28-5) ran their career record to 34-0 against the Hornets (3-6) with solid hitting and timely defense. Texas set a confer­ ence record with six double plays, in clu d in g fou r in the first five innings. “ I just needed to keep the ball down and throw strikes," Lummus said. "You are just killing yourself [as a p itch er] if you d o n 't let Harkrider catch balls all day." Shortstop Tim Harkrider started four of the six double plays and was in on another. Lummus, a 6-3, 230-pound lefty from C leburne had pitched only five and one-third innings this sea­ son before T u esd ay's game, and a fter five fu ll in n in gs Tuesday night, he had had enough. "I just ran out of gas in the fifth," Lummus said. " I was about dead f a s t BREAK SCO RES NBA | Cleveland................................ 127 I San Antonio..............................90 Houston...............................:112 Charlotte...............................103 Atlanta..................................125 Dallas.....................................107 Orlando.................................103 ........................ 89 Miami j Chicago.................................. 107 | Minnesota...............................100 Philadelphia.......................... 88 ; Denver...................................... 80 Utah....................................... 119 Indiana.................................. 101 Phoenix.................................121 New Y ork ...............................92 Portland 108 j Seattle....................................... 99 ............... Sacramento...........................121 104 Los Angeles Clippers B R IE FS N P R O B A S E B A L L : W INTER H AVEN , Fla. — The death of two Cleveland Indians p itch ers and the injure of another in a boating accident late Monday left the Chain O 'L ak es b allp ark Tuesday in quiet tears and shocked sorrow. Steve O lin was killed instantly when a power boat rammed a dock in darkness, ap p aren tly at head level while traveling at a high rate of speed. Tim Crew s, who officials said was driving the boat, died a few hours later after being hospitalized with head and lung injuries. Bob Ojeda suffered cuts on his head and was in serious condition after surgery. He is expected to m ake a full recovery. Investigators found alco­ hol on the boat, but said it would be several days before toxicolog y stu d ies d eter­ mined if the p layers had been drinking. The 18-foot fib erg lass Skeeter bass boat had a 150- horsepower motor and a top speed of 60 mph. After the accident, police found it at n ea r-fu ll The speedometer had stopped at 39 mph. th ro ttle. The accident occurred on Little Lake Nellie, about 27 miles north of Winter Haven, at the end of a day the play­ ers sp en t p icn ick in g w ith their families on the team's only break of the spring exhi­ bition season. O lin and C rew s are the first active major leaguers to die in an accid en t since 1 hurm an M unson of the New York Yankees perished in a 1979 plane crash. The last prominent base­ ball figure killed in an acci­ dent was Billy Martin, who died in an au to crash on Christmas Day 1989. A m em orial se rv ice for players and families is sched­ uled for W ednesday night. Andre Thornton, a form er Indians p lay er who is an ordained minister, will lead the services. C om piled fro m A sso cia ted Press reports ... —.— _ 'mBM ü __ Center fielder Jerry Taylor is thrown out by Emporia State catcher Phil Kriesman while attempting to steal third base. tired then." Texas led 2-0 in the bot­ tom of the third, when left fielder Stephen Larkin tripled on a line- drive off the right field fence which scored Braxton Hickman and Jerry Taylor. Tim Harkrider then beat out an in field sin g le w hich h it off Emporia State first baseman Danny O'Leary and scored Larkin. The score remained 5-2, until the sixth inning when Kieschnick blast­ ed his 11th home run of the year scoring Tony Vasut who had sin­ gled earlier in the inning. Unlike the rest of his homers, this ball actually did not leave the park as it hit a bar holding up the barbed wire on top of the fence then rico­ cheted into center field. Kieschnick then lum bered around the bases and beat the relay throw at the plate only to find out seconds later the hit was already ruled a home run. "I guess all that running was for nothing," Kieschnick said. " I knew I hit the ball hard but I thought it was a double. So I ran it out." K iesch n ick , w ho b ro k e Sco tt B ry an t's career record for hom e runs Monday, is now closing in on the Texas career RBI mark. He now needs just seven to past Bryant for fifth place on the all-time list and 54 to break David Denny's record of 228. Kieschnick also had a single and walked twice. The Longhorns will play host to So u th w est T exas at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Marc Garcia/Daily Texan Staff Player investigations still pending Gene Menez Daily Texan Staff Even though criminal charges against three Longhorn football players were dis­ missed, their cases have been set aside pending further investigation, the Travis County attorney said Tuesday. County Attorney Ken Oden said Stonie Clark, Brian Howard and Tyson King do not currently face charges, but an investi­ gation will be conducted in three to six weeks to determine if action should be taken against them. All three players were charged on Feb. 24 w ith crim in a l tre sp a ssin g , w hile Howard was also charged with assault with injury. The charges stemmed from an a lterca tio n at a p arty on Jan . 30, according to the police report. "T h e situ ation is under con tin u ing investigation with no one charged but no one exonerated," Oden said. The p lay ers w ere su sp end ed from sp rin g p ra ctice by T exas coach John Mackovic until their cases were resolved. Mackovic reinstated the players to prac­ tice Monday after he learned the charges were dismissed. He said he spoke to Oden and the play­ e rs ' rep resen ta tiv es and u nderstood Oden's staff needed to conduct a further investigation. " I knew that this case w as not com­ pletely resolved ," M ackovic said. "W e have expressed com plete coop eration with everyone. "W e're as interested in things being handled the right way as anybody." ■ N O TE S : M ackovic m oved C orby Brooks, a redshirt freshm an defensive lineman, to offensive guard. Mackovic said redshirt freshmen Taje Allen and Robert Crenshaw returned to spring practice in good shape and should push for playing time next season in the defensive backfield. Bigwigs in for Austin golf benefit Matt Schulz Daily Texan Staff Every person w ho w alks into the Barton Creek Country Club this week is going to get a close look from everyone else for the next few days. Whether walk1 ing through on foot or hitching a ride in one of the many golf carts on the premis­ es, few moves will go unnoticed because at ev en ts lik e the E ast A u stin Y outh C lassic no one w ants to miss out on a brush with greatness. Through Saturday, Barton Creek will be crawling with stars of sports, music and the silver screen as well as kids and older fans grasping three-ring binders filled with transparent plastic pages that cover the baseball, football or hockey cards of their heroes. After Tuesday's casual practice rounds, real competition begins on Wednesday. Washington Redskins quarterback Mark Rypien, soap opera star Jack Wagner, talk show host M aury Povich and Denver Broncos quarterback John Elway will be among the celebrities participating in a head-to-head shootout beginning at 2 p.m. Admission for Wednesday's play is $5 and an all-tournament pass, which is good through Saturday, costs $25. Among the more than 50 celebrities on hand will be football greats Dan Marino, Lawrence Taylor, Joe Namath and Jan Stenerud, O lym pic hockey hero Mike Eruzione, Texas basketball coach Tom Penders, baseball Hall of Famers Johnny Bench, Ern ie Banks, Joe M organ and R o ilie form er H arlem Globetrotter Curly Neal and actor Dennis Quaid. F in g e rs, But even more numerous than the stars that will be invading Barton Creek are the throngs of fans pestering the golfers, clad in tee-shirts bearing the likeness of their heroes but with pen and baseball, basket­ ball or football card in hand. However, the point of the event is not to help autograph seekers fill their books. The tournament will raise money to help community groups fight crime and drugs in East Austin and is the first stop of the n ew ly -exp an d ed G o lf Association tour. The tour also stops in Chicago, Toronto, Baltim ore and Lake Tahoe. C eleb rity Hot Rockets top Hornets, 111-103 Mavericks, Spurs still stumbling Associated Press CHARLOTTE, N .C — Hakeem Olaiuwon scored 31 p o in ts and K en ny Sm ith 27 as the Houston Rockets beat the Charlotte H o rn ets fo r the eighth consecutive time, 111-103 Tuesday night. The R ockets, 12-1 against the Hornets over­ all and 6-1 at the Charlotte Coliseum, led by 11 points through three q u a rters, but Charlotte started the fourth period with a 14-4 run, dosing the gap to 86- 85 on Muggsy Bogues' 20- toot jumper. m H aw ks 125, Mavericks 107 In A tlanta, the D allas M av erick s stay ed w ith A tlanta u n til th e fo u rth quarter, when the Hawks took control and rolled to a 125-107 victory behind a 2 8 -p o in t by effo rt Dominique Wilkins. It was the eighth victory in nin e gam es for the Hawks, who became the last NBA team to beat the M av erick s th is season . D allas, now 1-31 on the road this season, defeated at A tlanta Reunion A rena on N ov.; 14. 1 13-105 Sean R oo ks the Mavericks with 23 points and 12 rebounds. led m Cavaliers 127, Spurs 90 In Richfield, Ohio, Brad scored 25 D au gh erty p o in ts and C lev elan d coach Len n y W ilk en s moved into third place on the career victories list the Cavaliers routed Antonio. The Spurs, losers of nine of 15 games since the AH- btar break, tell two games behind Houston. A ll-S ta r ce n te r D avid Robinson was held to nine points in 31 minutes, just the fourth time in his NBA career that he has failed to score in double figures. WISDOM TEETII 320-1630 If you need the removal of wisdom teeth call Financial incentive provided in exchange for your opinion on pain medication following oral surgery. Approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified/Eligible Oral Surgeons. 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