SPORTS 3 1 V1 S a o j COPn c not rannpri The T< measi win o\ ^2¿£-£066¿ * * * * * * X i OSVd 3 3 3 A i a a "HSONVA 1 S V 3 ¿ 2 9 2 -N^oNiHsn gnd oaoiH lSBnmnos oni ONiHsngndoaoiw J.S3KHinos üMMMM M alphing off Don Most waxes musically as DJ Vince Fontaine in Grease, playing at the Bass Concert Haii this weekend. MM Firing squad The UT Army ROTC is the latest group seeking to fire a cannon at home football games. Vol. 95, No. 19 i h e Da il y T ex a n Council will study schools’ policy for gays The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Thursday, September 28, 1995 3 Sections 250 SHANNA GAUTHIER D a ily Texan S ta ff ---- --------------- p r o te c tin g le sb ia n , g a y and b is e x u a l s tu ­ d en ts from harassm ent. M e m b e r s o f th e C ity C o u n c il s a id W e d n e sd a y they w ill co n sid er a city c o m ­ m issio n s reco m m e n d atio n s to red u ce d is ­ crim in atio n against lesbian, gay and b ise x u ­ al yo u th throu gh sch oo l and lib rary -b ased program s. 1’he ten-point proposal, subm itted by the A u s t in H u m a n R i g h t s C o m m is s io n , in clu d es recom m en d ations to: • im p le m e n t p o lic ie s in p u b lic s c h o o ls • p r o v id e tr a in in g fo r a ll s c h o o l s t a ff ab ou t the issues facing these stu d en ts. • ad vocate and su p p ort the d ev elop m en t o f so cial and h ealth se rv ic e s to m eet th eir special needs. • m a k e s e x u a l o r ie n ta tio n in fo r m a tio n av ailab le and accessib le at pu blic libraries. In a prepared statem ent, com m issio n o ffi­ cials said they are striv ing to erad icate iso la­ tion, p hysical or v erbal assau lt again st gay s tu d e n ts in p u b lic sch o o ls, and to co m b a t su icid e am ong these students. C o u n cilm em ber Jackie G ood m an said the c o u n cil w ill lo ok at the re c o m m e n d a tio n s and d eterm ine if the city has the m oney to fund the recom m endations. S h e a d d e d that- th e re a re a n u m b e r o f o th e r factors to c o n sid er w ith the p ro p o s ­ al. W e have to look at the legality o f train- ing [for state and city staff] b ecau se certain l e v e ls o f i n t e r v ie w i n g a r e o f f - l i m i t s ," G ood m an added. T he reco m m en d atio n s are based on testi­ m o n y from state p u blic h earin g s last year, and they are d esign ed to ad d ress the co n ­ cerns of A u stin 's gay youth, said Jam es Hill, R ig h t s c h a ir m a n C om m ission . th e H u m a n o f " W e h a v e to r e m e m b e r th e v o ic e s o f y o u n g p eo p le," Hill told the council. T he com m issio n 's proposal could reignite a d ebate that raged in 1994 o v er w hether to o ffe r m arital b en efits to the d o m estic p art­ n ers o f city em ployees. T he C ity C o u n cil in itially passed a m ea­ sure exten d in g the benefits, bu t a coalition o f local religiou s o rg an izatio n s and co n se rv ­ atives put a m easure on the b allo t to rev erse c a ll e d th e d e c i s i o n . T h e P r o p o s i t i o n 2 2 , p a s s e d b y a m a r g in o f alm ost 2-1. i n i t i a t i v e , N eith er M ichael B rand es, w ho w as c a m ­ paign m an ager for the g ro u p that pu t Prop. 22 on the ballot, or Jan G alb raith, ch airm an o f th e T r a v is C o u n ty R e p u b lic a n P a r ty , w ould co m m en t on the c o m m issio n 's p ro ­ posal W edn esd ay. Please see Proposed, page 2 OVERBOARD Professors predict Samsung deal will be bounty for UT Company’s tax deals under fire S a m s u n g E le c t r o n ic s ' n e w $ 1 .3 b illio n m icroch ip plant in A ustin could p rovide as m an y ed u catio n al and v o catio n al o p p o rtu ­ nities for U T stu d en ts as econ om ic o p p o rtu ­ n i t i e s fo r th e c it y , U T p r o f e s s o r s s a id W ed n esd ay. B u t b o th D u p u is a n d C a m p b e ll s a id S am su n g 's arrival also w ill create jo b s o u t­ side of the sem icond u ctor realm to support the plant and em p loyees there. SC O TT PATTERSO N D a ily T exan S ta ff "A lot of peripheral com p anies will com e " It cou ld be a v e ry g o o d r e la tio n s h ip ," in as w ell," D u puis said. C am pbell said. high -tech jobs. S a m s u n g , w h ic h w a s e x p e c t e d to an n ou n ce p lan s to build the plant in A ustin W edn esd ay, had to d elay the ann ou ncem ent for "in tern al re a so n -," becau se the com p an y " r e q u ir e d a d d itio n a l tim e to fin a liz e its a n n o u n c e m e n t," a c co rd in g to a s ta te m e n t released by the com p any . B u t J e f f r y W e n d e r , a s p o k e s m a n fo r S a m s u n g , c o n firm e d th at th e c o r p o ra tio n still is p lan n in g to build its first A m erican m icro ch ip plant in A ustin. R u sse ll D u p u is, h o ld e r o f th e Ju d so n S. Sw e. n n g e n R eg en ts G i i The Daily Texan,P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 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. 1 1 a m Classified Word Ads (Lasl Business Day Prior to Publication) L ^ aa/es C G e/iter ca /v ^ fo r- u oti /ftcau&e^tfou're- Abortion Service Nitrous Oxide Available Free Pregnancy Testing Confidential Counseling OB-Gyn Physician Non Profit S.H .E. Center Pap Sm ears • V.D. Testing Birth Control • B reast Exam s T X LIC. # 0 1 1 8401 N. IH-35 Suite 2 0 0 Austin (512)459-3119 hempilation fyecLtiu r i r x s THE B L A C K C R O W E S Ra i n y Day W o m e n # 1 2 & 3 5 H A T E R C o n v i c t e d C Y P R E S S H I L L I W a n n a Ge t H i g h D A V I D P E E L A N D T H E 3 6 0 ' S 1 L i k e M a r i j u a n a Z I G G Y M A R L E Y & T HE M E L O D Y I n M A K E R S T h e F l o w T H E S C R E A M I N ’ C H E E T A H W H E E L I E S H i g h T i m e We W e n t B L U E S T R A V E L E R I Wa nt To T a k e You H i g h e r H I G H F I D E L I T Y S m o k i n ' C h e e b a C h e e b a G O V ’ T M U L E D o n ’ t St ep On T h e G r a s s , S a m R A G I N G S L A B P o t H e a d P i x i e s I A N M O O R E C h a m p a g n e & R e e f e r S A C R E D R E I C H Sweet L e a f S U B L I M E L e g a l i z e I t G U S H o m e g r o w n Wh o ' s Go t T h e 3 1 1 H e r b 7 D R I V I N ’ N ’ C R Y I N ’ Too R o l l i n g S t o n e d W I D E S P R E A D P A N I C A n d It S t o n e d Me An album to bene/jit the National O rganization {¡or the R eform ofj M a r iju a n a L aw ó. f r e e d o m i s n o r m l . CAPRICORN WEB SITE: h t t p : / / www. c a p r i . c o r n . c o m $ 7 9 9 / $ 1 2 9 9 9 / 2 6 - 1 0 / 2 6 DESIGN DETAIL N O. 0 I 3 u i l [d i n ( 3 T h e E s s e n t i a l W a r d r o b e Sixt h in a Seri es of Fall Warcti THE UELUET TOUCH It s immediately indigent, a bit sensuous and even somewhat mysterious. It’s velvet. The cloth of royalty, prom presses and today’s most updated looks. But forget the pomp and circumstance of formal wear, ne new velvet silhoi»ttes are more casual and easy-wearing, designed to accent a variety of looks. From jeare to pr n t dresses to classic check patterns, the velvet touch is everywhere this fall. Velvet Moc Turtleneck $63 Velvet Polo Knit, $73 Career opportunities at J.P Morgan for University o f Texas-Austin students interested in Financial Accounting Municipal Finance Please plan to attend our information presentation on Thursday, September 2 8 5:00-7:00pm Alumni Center, Schmidt Room All majors welcome The A rboretum M arket, (3reat H ills Trails, A ustin T o r e c e i v e o u r f r e e m e n ' s and l a d l e : : a c a l a g c a l l 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 7 6 - 5 3 7 3 H A R 2 L D ’ S JPMorgan Internet http: www .jp m o rg n n .ro m J.P. M o rgan i> an e q u a l n p p o r li m i t \ e m p lo y e r WEDNESDAY'S DOW JONES: 4,762.35 DOWN 3.25 / VOLUME: 000,000,000 WORLD & NATION T h e D a i l y T e x a n THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,1985 3 NEWS BRIEFS Senate passes spending bill Cuts m a d e in environmental protection, housing programs and veterans benefits Associated P ress W A S H IN G T O N — O v e r D em ocratic objections, th e S e n a t e p a s s e d a $62 billion spending bill W e d n e s d a y t h a t would slash money for e n v i r o n m e n t a l p ro te c tio n , hous­ ing program s a n d v e t e r a n s ' benefits. D em ocrats, w h o s a i d i n a d v a n c e that they lacked th e v o t e s t o m a k e substantial changes in the b ill, u r g e d P r e s id e n t Clinton to veto it. The H o u s e p r e v i o u s l y approved equal or d ee p er s p e n d i n g c u t s , so those dif­ ferences m u st still b e r e s o l v e d . The Senate a p p r o v e d t h e legislation 55- 45 after R e p u b lic a n s r e b u f f e d Democratic attempts to r e s to re f u n d s f o r environm en­ tal cleanup o f t o x i c d u m p s , h elp for the homeless, h e a lth p r o g r a m s fo r veterans and a c h e rish e d C l i n t o n n a t i o n a l service program. I he legislation is t h e f i r s t o f three broad domestic s p e n d in g b i l l s b e i n g considered by the Senate th is w e e k . S e n a t e Minority Leader T hom as D a s c h l e , D -S .D ., called the bills "extrem ism on p a r a d e " an d said the o n ly recourse was to u rg e a presid en tial veto. "T h e re 's no point in try in g to fine-tune this m ess," declared D aschle. T he Senate bill w o u ld c u t th e E nviron­ m ental Protection A gency's b u d g e t by one- fourth to $5.6 billion, in c lu d in g a $430 mil­ lio n sla sh in its S u p e rfu n d p ro g ra m for toxic w aste cleanup. C linton h a d sought an increase to $7.3 billion. It also would cut h o u sin g program s by $5 b illion, one-fifth of c u r r e n t spending, e lim in a te C linton's A m e ric o rp s national service initiative and red u ce veterans' pro­ gram s by $395 million. S en. Bob Kerrey of N e b r a s k a w as the lone D em ocrat to join th e R epublicans in passing the bill. T h e re d u c tio n in th e E P A b u d g e t — th o u g h less severe than th a t appro v ed by th e H o u se —■ still " p la c e s th e A m erican public at serious risk," said EPA Adminis­ tr a t o r C arol B row ner. S h e s a id air and w a te r p o llu tio n control effo rts w o u ld be cu rtailed and w ork at h u n d red s of Super­ fund toxic w aste sites w ould stop. R e p u b lic a n s d e fe n d e d th e s p e n d in g red u c tio n s as p art of a b ro ad e r cam paign to red u c e the federal deficit. " It sets priorities in very to u g h tim es," said Sen. C hristopher Bond, R-Mo., the bil- 1 s floor leader. "We've done as good a job as possible w ithin the dollars available." But D em ocrats said the p rio ritie s w ere w ro n g a n d th at m any of the c u ts w o u ld finance tax reductions for the w ealthy. O verall spending on ho u sin g w o u ld be c u t b y $5 b illio n to $20.4 b illio n . T h a t w ould be 20 percent below current sp en d ­ ing, a n d 16 percent less than C linton had r e q u e s te d . P u b lic h o u sin g c o n s tru c tio n funds w o u ld be reduced by $1.6 billion and s e n a to r s a p p ro v e d new r e s tr ic tio n s on h o u s in g p ro g ra m s th a t c ritic s said m ay lead to ren t increases for poor tenants. An a tte m p t to resto re $360 m illio n to h e lp th e h o m e le s s w as re je c te d 52-48, despite pleas that the 32 p ercent cut in the hom eless assistance p ro g ra m w o u ld h u rt "those that are m ost in need." The H ouse has m ade even deeper cuts of $440 m illion in the fund for the hom eless. "T he hom eless are at the very bottom of the scale. T hey're out there in the streets," said Sen. P aul Sarbanes, D -M d., p le ad in g unsuccessfully to restore fu n d s to at least current levels. H o u sin g ad vocates w on o n e v ic to ry as se n a to rs ag re ed to resto re la n g u a g e th a t w o u ld allow the D ep a rtm en t of H o u sin g a n d U rb a n D e v e lo p m e n t to c o n t in u e en fo rcin g law s against " r e d lin in g " — or d is c rim in a tio n by n e ig h b o rh o o d s — by insurance com panies and banks. T he legislation also w o u ld sc u ttle C lin­ to n 's year-old A m ericorps national service initiative, one of his favorites, by p ro v id in g no m oney for it. An attem pt to restore $425 m illion — h alf of w hat Clinton h a d so u g h t — w as rejected 52-47. MOVING High court announces ‘96 agenda A ssociated Press W ASHINGTON — The S uprem e C ourt jum ped the gun W ednesday on the sta rt of its fall term and agreed to hear appeals by tw o form er Los A ngeles policem en convicted in the 1991 v id e o ta p e d beating of R odney King. T he ju stice s let s ta n d th e fe d e ra l c o n v ic tio n s of S ta c e y K oon a n d L a u r e n c e P o w e ll b u t a g r e e d to d ecide w hether a trial judge w rongly w as o rd ered to consider giving them longer sentences than th ey first received. M onday is the official beginning of the co u rt's 1995- 96 term , b u t the justices got a head start by an n o u n c ­ ing they will h ear arg u m e n ts in the Koon an d P ow ell a p p eals as well as eight other cases. C h ief Justice W illia m H . R e h n q u ist m a y h a v e to m iss the opening of th e new term , how ever H e u n d e r­ w en t back surgerv W ednesday. In other cases, the court. ■ A greed to d ec id e w h e th e r the g o v e rn m e n t m u st a d ju st 1990 census fig u res to m ake u p for a n u n d e r­ co u n t of m inorities. A n u m b e r of local govern m en ts, In clu d in g N ew York, C hicago and Los A ngeles, w a n t an ad ju stm e n t to b o o st the m inority f i g u r e s ■ Said it will co n sid er for the first tim e how federal co pyright law applies to co m p u ter softw are p ro g ram s. ■ A greed to clarify w h a t issu es sho u ld be d e c id e d by judges, and not juries, in paten t-in frin g em en t law ­ suits. ■ V oted to hear a ch allen g e to the m ilita ry 's d e a th p e n a lty by a s o ld ie r c o n v ic te d of a p a i r o f T e x a s killings. Koon and Pow ell w ere sentenced to 30 m o n th s in p riso n in th e King case. A w idely broadcast v id eo tap e show ed police officers beating King w ith their b ato n s after a M arch 3, 1991, traffic stop. Koon, Powell and tw o o th er officers w ere ac q u itted in a C alifornia state co u rt on charges of a ssa u lt and excessive use of force. The verdicts set off three d ay s of dead ly rioting in Los A ngeles. T he fo u r o ffic e rs th e n w e re in d ic te d o n f e d e r a l charges, an d Koon and Pow ell w ere convicted in 1993 of violating K ing's constitu tio n al rights. P ow ell w as co n v icted o f b ea tin g K ing d u r in g his arrest, w hile Koon w as fo u n d guilty of allo w in g the beating to occur. Both m en w ent to prison in O ctober 1993. Ih e 9th U.S. C ircuit C o u rt of A ppeals u p h eld their co n v ictio n s last year, b u t o rd e re d new' se n te n c in g s a fte r ru lin g th a t th e o r ig in a l p u n is h m e n t w a s to o lenient. Ih e court said the trial judge im properlv o rd e re d a sh o rter sentence th a n the 70 to 87 m o n th s called for u n d e r federal sentencing guidelines. L aw yers for K oon a n d P ow ell said the tria l ju d g e p r o p e r ly s h o r te n e d th e s e n te n c e s b e c a u s e K in g 's ac tio n s co n trib u ted to th e in c id en t and b e c a u se th e officers faced losing th eir jobs and possible ab u se in prison. P o w e ll's ap p e al a rg u e d th a t the 9th C irc u it c o u rt used the w rong legal sta n d ard an d should h ave relied on a rule outlined by Justice Stephen G. Breyer w h en he w as a federal appellate judge. The justices tu rn ed do w n K oon's arg u m en t th a t hi', federal prosecution violated his constitutional p ro te c ­ tion ag a in st d o u b le je o p a rd y because he p re v io u sly w as acquitted on state charges. A nd the court rejected P ow ell's challenge of a jury instruction and a statem ent by prosecutors that he said w as im proper. P assengers a rriv e in H a v a n a , Cuba, from Santiago de Cuba on W e d n e s d a y . C u b a n s arrive from rural are as to the city e v e ry d ay in hopes of finding m e a n s to escape from th e current economic crisis. ASSOCIATED PRESS Israeli cabinet approves W est Bank government Associated Press JERUSALEM — F o r e i g n M in is te r Shimon Peres called it " a p r e s e n t to a world tired of w ars" — t h e I s r a e l i Cabi­ net's approval W e d n e s d a v o f a p la n to bring self-rule to m o s t o f t h e 1 m illion Palestinians in the W e st B a n k . The PLO's executive c o m m i t t e e gave the accord a p p r o v a l t h e d a y b e fo re , and the Middle East p e a c e m a k e r s will gather at the W hite H o u s e o n T h u rs d a y for a formal signing c e r e m o n y . But there a re s till l o o s e e n d s that could unravel the d eal. Prime M inister Y i t z h a k R a b i n will meet with PLO c h a ir m a n V a s s e r Arafat prior to the signing, a n d P r e s i d e n t Clin­ ton may have to d o s o m e a r m - tw is tin g to get the last details in p l a c e . Three issues — a t i m e t a b l e f o r Israeli t h e s i z e o f an troop w ith d r a w a l, autonomous enclave a r o u n d t h e West Bank city of Jericho, a n d t h e s c o p e of Palestinian prisoner r e l e a s e s — m u s t be resolved before T h u r s d a y 's s i g n i n g . The accord m u st a l s o b e a p p r o v e d by Israel's 1 20-m em ber p a r l i a m e n t on Oct. 5, and N issim Z v illi, s e c r e t a r y - g e n ­ eral of Rabin's L abor P a r t v , p r e d ic ts a one-vote victory. 'Nobody know s w h a t w i l l h a p p e n it the final agreem ent is n o t a p p r o v e d ," Zvilli said W ednesday. " T h e r e is a d an ­ ger that it could p a r a l y z e t h e p ro c e ss ASSOCIATED PRESS A P alestinian wom an shouts at Is ra e li soldiers in th e o c c u p ie d W est Bank city o f Hebron, which P a le s tin ia n s have declared th e ir ow n. with the Palestinians." A more immediate issue is the Pales­ tinian dem and for the release of prison­ ers from Israeli jails. Israel has agreed to free 2,000 of the 5,500 now held — one group shortly after the sig n in g of the W est B ank accord, a second on the eve of Palestin­ ian elections and the rest later. But Israel has refused to gran t early release to about 350 Palestinians convicted of killing or wounding Israelis. Arafat also wants Rabin and Peres to free Sheik A hm ed Y assin, sp iritu a l leader of the Islam ic fundam entalist group Hamas, which has carried out a campaign of suicide attacks in an effort to foil the agreement. Ontario’s premier promises cuts in social spendings Associated Press TORONTO — R iot p o l i c e b a t tle d protest­ ers trying to s to r m O n t a r i o ' s le g isla tu re Wednesday as th e n e w c o n s e r v a t i v e pre­ mier, earning h is n i c k n a m e " C h a in s a w ," outlined plans to sla sh s o c i a l s p e n d in g . The premier, M ike H a r r i s , is a form er golf pro and teacher o ften d e p i c t e d a s a Canadi­ an version of N ew t G i n g r i c h . An estim ated 5,000 p r o t e s t e r s — includ­ ing union m em bers, w e l f a r e r e c ip u n ts and Indians — surged o v e r t h e le g is la tu r e 's front lawn, forcing police to u s e c l u b s a n d pepper spray to keep th e m a w a y f r o m th e build­ ing's large w ooden d o o r s . Inside, law m akers a t t h e n e w legislature's opening session h e a r d a g o v e r n m e n t digni­ tary rea d H arris' formal policy statem ent. An h o u r after the speech ended, the legisla­ tive b u ild in g was evacuated a fte r security received several bomb threats. H arris, elected in June, confirm ed that his g o v ern m en t plans radical s u r g e r y on the vast w elfare state serving the 10 m illion peo­ ple in C anada's most populous prov ince. "O ver the past decade, O ntario h a s lost its w a y ," H a rris said in th e s p e e c h . " T h is adm inistration is charting a n e w course ... making major change, fundam ental change, in the w ay government w orks." Harris intends to reduce an n u al spending by $6.7 billion, a 20 percent d rop, bv impos­ ing h u g e cuts on welfare, p u b lic housing, m ass tra n s it and c u ltu ral p r o g r a m s . He vows to lay off at least 13,000 civ il servants, im p o se w o rk -fo r-w e lfa re re q u ir e m e n ts , scale back affirm ative action and scrap laws favorable to labor unions. O u ts id e th e le g isla tiv e ch a m b e r, so m e anti-H arris dem onstrators broke sticks from their sig n s an d starting sw inging them at police W ednesday, O thers threw w ater bot­ tles and stones. O ne w om an's face w as cov­ ered in b lood as police tried to beat back the crow d. T h e re w as no im m ediate w o rd on other injuries or arrests. Critics of H arris accuse him of requiring too m u c h sa c rific e from th e p o o r A n ti­ poverty g ro u p s are alarm ed by his 21 p er­ cent cuts in w elfare payments, effective Oct. 1. The re d u c tio n aim s to trim ab o u t $740 m illio n fro m th e p ro v in c e 's $ 4 .6 -b illio n social assistance bill The m ost a si per- son w ould get u n d er the new r a t e s 85 a m onth, do w n from $491. O pinion polls, however, show sti lie su p p o rt for H arris, w ho has prt slash provincial taxes by 30 pert enl next few years. H arris also says O ntario's univei : h care system n eed s an ov erh au l L n it m ore affordable. H e has hinted at u ts in a program providing free drugs to th Iderly, and is considering proposals to c lo s e dozens of hospitals. "A sig n a l h a s g o n e o u t to th e [h ea lth ] m in istry th a t th e re are no sa cred c o w s," H arris said this week. Federal shutdown spared 6 weeks ■ W A S H IN G T O N — T h e C linton a d m i n i s t r a t i o n a n d c o n g re s s io n a l R e p u b lic a n le ad e rs a g re e d W ednes­ d a y to avert a federal sh u td o w n begin­ n in g S unday, forced b y b u d g et grid­ lock. A fter a week of bargaining, the two s i d e s sh o o k h a n d s o n a d e a l that w o u ld keep agencies o p eratin g for the f irs t six w eeks of fiscal 1996, which b e g in s O ct. 1, even th o u g h m ost of C o n g r e s s ' s p e n d in g w o rk rem ain s incom p lete. In the m eantim e, the two s id e s can c o n tin u e s o r tin g through t h e i r b u d g e t d iffe re n c e s a n d avoid b la m e from a public th a t seem s weary o f stalem ate in W ashington. W h ite H o u se C h ie f o f S taff Leon P a n e tta said the pact w o u ld for now a v o id drastic' GOP slashes in educa­ t i o n , e n v ir o n m e n t a n d o th e r p ro ­ g ra m s. The m easure "will establish a level p la y in g field, ex ten d in g the deadline fo r C ongress to do its job and allowing u s to resolve the significant differences th a t rem a in over b u d g e t issu es," he s a id . "W e should be a b le to do that w i t h o u t v ic tim iz in g th e A m erican p e o p le or dam aging o u r econom y in th e pro cess." China voids nuclear plant sale to Iran ■ N E W YORK — In an o th e r sign of im p r o v e d U .S .-C h in e s e re la tio n s , C h in a is d ro p p in g p la n s to sell two n u c le a r reactors to Iran, Foreign Min­ iste r Q ian Qichen said W ednesday. T h e a n n o u n c e m e n t reflected a far m o re conciliatory tone from Beijing in rec en t weeks. At the sta rt of a meeting w i t h S e c r e ta r y o f S ta te W a rre n C h ris to p h e r, Q ian also b ack ed away f ro m fro m h is g o v e r n m e n t's h arsh re a c tio n to the unofficial U.S. visit of T a iw a n 's president last sum m er. B ut the m ore friendly d ialogue did n o t r e s u lt in the a n n o u n c e m e n t of a m e e tin g th is O ctober b e tw e e n Presi­ d e n t C lin to n and C h in e se P resident J ia n g Z em in. Such an an n o u ncem ent w a s w id ely expected. " H a v in g a s u m m it m e e tin g and w h e re it w ould take place is still under d isc u ssio n ," said a senior adm inistra­ t i o n o f fic ia l, w h o d is c u s s e d the C h r is to p h e r - Q ia n m e e tin g o n ly on c o n d i t i o n h e n o t b e id e n t i f i e d by nam e. T h e official said the Q ian "m ad e it clea r th a t the Iran reactor deal would no t be im plem ented." T he U nited States has been pressur­ in g R ussia, so far w ith o u t success, to c a n c e l a c o n tra c t to b u ild n u c le a r p o w e r plan ts in Iran. The U.S. position is th a t th e sale of any n uclear technolo­ gy, ev e n for civilian p o w er generation, co u ld h av e dangerous consequences. H e w elcom ed the C h in ese decision b u t a d d e d : "I'm not saying this clears u p e v e ry possible problem " regarding C h in e s e dealings w ith Iran. The Bei­ jin g g o v e rn m e n t is also su sp e cte d of se llin g missile parts to Iran as well as to P a k is t a n . If p ro v e n , th a t w o u ld re s u lt in cutting off U.S. assistance to C h in a. P r o s e c u te r ’s m u rd e r s p u r s a ll-o u t m a n h u n t ■ B O S T O N — The b o ard e d -u p build­ in g s a n d used fu rn itu re sh o p s in the c i t y 's D o rc h e s te r s e c tio n lo o k e d as tire d as ever W ednesday as clusters of p e o p le w aited for bu ses to take them to w o rk . Anci m uch to the relief of residents in th is poor, racially m ixed neighbor­ h o o d , o n ly a few police officers were o n p a tro l, despite the all-out h unt for th e s u s p e c te d black k iller of a w hite p ro se c u to r. P o lice w ere searching for the killer of P au l R. M cLaughlin, 42, an assistant s t a t e a t to r n e y g e n e r a l w h o w as g u n n e d d o w n M o n d a y in h is W est R o x b u ry n eig h b o rh o o d . H e h ad just g o tte n off a com m uter tra in and was e n te r in g his car w hen a h o o d ed g u n ­ m a n s h o t h im in th e h e a d a t close ran g e. In v estig ato rs said M cLaughlin may h a v e b e e n targeted b ecause he prose­ c u te d d r u g d e a le rs a n d g a n g m e m ­ bers. " W e h av e leads and w e 're exploring th e m a ll,” said police S u p erin te n d en t John Boyle, w ho w ould n o t com m ent fu rth e r o n the investigation. P olice described the susp ected killer as a 5 -fo o t-7, 14- or 15-year-old black m a le w e a rin g a black, h o o d ed sw eat­ s h irt. A u th o ritie s refu sed to say how m a n y w itnesses p rovided th a t descrip­ tion. B la c k le a d e rs c a u tio n e d th a t the v a g u e description could fit any one of h u n d r e d s of teen-agers in Boston, and m a n y also w ondered how th e w itness­ es c o u ld h av e seen the su sp ect in the e a rly ev e n in g shadow s. — C om piled from A ssociated Press re p o rts 4 T h e D a ily T e x a n THURSO MY, SEPTEMBER 28,1995 EDITORIALS T h e Da il y T e x a n Editorial Board Ja s o n K ra u s ' A s s o c ia te E d ito r R o b ert R o g e rs L a m a r C r a v e n s E d ito r A s s o c ia te E d ito r O p in io n s exp ressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or w riter o f the article. T hey are not necessarily those of the U niversity ad m inistration, the B oard of Regents or the Texas Student P ublications Board o f O p erating Trustees. VIEWPOINT Rule of]law I I W edn esd ay calling for increased m easures to help lesbian, gay -A. and bisexu al youth. A nu m ber o f the p anel's recom m endations — such as p rov id ing special social services for hom osexual teens and g i v in g stud ents infor­ m ation that portrays hom osexuality positively — w ill spark seriou s opposition. M any parents might have legitim ate concerns that school d istricts could intrude into private fam ily life. But at least one suggestion of the com m ission should be u n d isp u t­ ed. T he panel suggests that schools im plem ent p o licies "to p rotect les­ bian, gay and bisexual students from harassm ent, violence and d is­ crim ination.' Protecting gay teen-agers from physical assau lt by their schoolm ates is not an exam ple of political correctness. It is instead a com m itm en t to the rule o f law. State law does not perm it p eo p le to attack h o m o sexu ­ als b ecau se of their sexual orientation; ad o p tin g school p olicies to p re­ vent such illegal action is a tough-on-crim e ap p roach that in other co n ­ texts m any conservatives would favor. N o student should have to fear p hysical assau lt as the p rice of attend in g school. All citizens, regardless o f sexual orientation , d eserv e the equ al protection of the law, and the proposal by the A ustin H um an Rights C om m ission suggests m erely that school ad m in istrato rs ad opt polices to gu arantee the safety of all stu d en ts — som ething that schools should b e doing in the first place. R obert R ogers Showgirls Otherw ise unknow n A m erican w riter E lean o r H. P orter created a sym bol o f innocence in her teen -age optim ist, P ollyan n a. In the 1950s D isney put the popu lar h ero in e on the big screen, so for years, "P o lly an n a" has been a byw ord o f sw eetn ess and light. Yet as the w orld has changed, "P o lly a n n a " has b ecom e a d erisive term for the naive. All the criticism b ein g lodged at Paul V e rh o ev en 's new film S how ­ girls neglects this b ecau se the film is a full frontal nudity attack on Pollyanna. W hile lacking the p o ign an cy o f The B lu e A ngel's essay on loneliness or the incoh erent art h o u se p retension s o f last y ear's lim p Erotica, Show girls pretend s to be noth in g m ore than en tertainm en t. It rew orks an old show biz form ula — new kid in tow n m akes it big. But in this revision of 4 2n d Street, the lucky u n d erstud y is a lap d ancer instead of a tap d ancer. Like the V egas show s it depicts, the scrip t of Show girls relies m ore on spectacle than the rest of poor A risto tle's neglected advice for play w riting. T h ere's no thou ght but cynicism , no diction but profanity and no characterization other than pricks and bitches. Everyone in the film is on the m ake, and no em otion presented is unadulterated by am b i­ tion. In addition, the girls in this show refu te every outm oded notion of a "fair sex ," for, w h ile sugared and spiced, they are anything b ut nice. Indeed, these are the very' avatars o f feline fem inity, tougher at their T& A than a W harton class o f M BAs. At the center o f it all is "N o m i," w h o 's real nam e turns out to be "P o lly ." Indeed w hen sh e auditions for the chorus of the V egas show she ev en tu ally (and im probably) headlines, the d irector thinks her odd choice o f costu m e m akes her look like P ollyanna. Show girls is her story, and from the very first fram e, it's a tale of violation — of self, of sense and of the senses. B u t the target of the script never changes and the show stays tru e to its them e. O f co u rse the film w ill m ake a fortune b ecau se sex sells, but it also p ro v id es m ore fuel for the ire of "I'll d o anything to be p resid en t" R e p u b lican -can d id ate Bob Dole. The K ansas senator attacked H olly­ w ood th is su m m er for exactly the kind of am oral entertainm en t S how ­ girls represents. Sure, this film proves his point, but its plot-thin take on tit d an cers is not m erely an assau lt on "fam ily v alu es." It's really an essay on am bition. S how girls turns P ollyanna on her op tim istic head, and it d oes so w ith u n flin ch in g cynicism . But it m erely m arks an entertain m en t in d u stry com e o f age, becau se after d ecad es o f scandals in C on gress, the n ev er-en d in g O.J. trial and the U n iv ersity 's ow n sellout to Freep ort M cM oR an , life is alread y full of antid otes to innocence. — Lam ar C raven s Te x x n Should Austin purchase stadium? Ballpark would benefit East Austin Too many questions not answered h A u s tin ite s v ote for the stadium bond p ack ag e on O ct. 7, a field o f co m m u n ity and eco n o m ic d ream s w ill com e true. nnillT' Pfl NT ► T h e bo n d election ___________ w ill p lace the city in a p u b lic /p r iv a te p a rt­ nership w ith a C lass A A A m inor leag u e b a seb a ll team to b u ild a m u ltiu se en tertain m en t facility in E ast A u stin fo r sp o rts, c o n ce rts, com m u nity even ts and celebrations. The only thing o p p onen ts w an t to th is e lectio n d iscu ss see m s fin an cin g . T h e the financing is a m inor issue w hen one con sid ers the com m u nity and e co ­ nom ic benefits to be derived from this investm ent. re g a rd in g to be T he co m m u n ity b e n e fits are m any, althou g h d ifficu lt to quantify. T he stadium w ill provide a v ehicle for d e sp e ra te ly need ed e co n o m ic d ev elo p m en t in E ast A ustin . For in stan ce, im p ro v e ­ the ro ad w ay m ents that w ill be m ade u n der the proposal are long overdue. Placed on the bank s of the C o l­ orado, the stadium will also cem ent the identity o f A ustin w ith the b e au ­ ty o f the river. A s w ith other cities that have m ade sim ilar investm en ts, the stadium and the team will help create a sen se o f com m u nity. Salt Lake C ity M ay o r D eedee C orradini d escribed her city 's ballpark as a "m arv elou s thing to bring our co m ­ m unity together. It's im portan t for co m m u n itie s feel a sen se o f to geth ern ess." O th er cities such as N o rfo lk , B u ffa lo , and C o lo rad o Springs h av e also experienced sim i­ lar success w ith their m inor-leagu e p u b lic-p rivate p artn ersh ip s in recent years. to The eco n o m ic benefits of the b all­ park w ill also be trem endous. An ind ep endent stud y by the acco u n t­ ing firm o f C o op ers and Lybrand, LLP., ind icates that the stadium will bring A ustin rou ghly $12 m illion to $15 m illion ev ery year in overall eco ­ nom ic im pact, w ith m ost of the gain focused in E ast A ustin. To gain these benefits, all w e need to do is m ake a sm all, m inim al-risk is T h e in v e stm e n t. designed to m inim ize the city 's risk. p ro p o sal C hris Bjom son TEXAN COLUMNIST C osts o v er b u d get will be picked up by the team , not the city. T h e bonds are only issued w ith a gu arantee that the team m oves to A ustin and puts up its share o f the financing. The rep ay m en t package on the bond s w o rk s out to $1 m illion a year for 20 y ears or about $4.42 p er hom e­ ow ner in p roperty taxes. A ccord in g the te rm s o f the p a rtn ersh ip to agreem ent, the city can exp ect to recover ap p roxim ately $400,000 o f the initial cost w ith sim ply average fan interest in the ballclub. R ev enu es from o th er ev en ts w ill un d ou bted ly be even greater. From an id eo lo gical stan d p o in t m any p eop le argue that the stadium deal should be d o n e solely by free en terp rise b ecau se it is a private venture. But the real v alu e of the ballpark is not ju st in hav ing a baseball team . It lies in h av ing a recreation al facili­ ty for the com m u nity to use in m any w ays. There are other cities w illing to m ake the inv estm en t and reap the benefits. If w e d o n 't build it, som e other city will. Now, le t's go throu gh the ad van­ tages. W e'll get a $12 m illion boost to the econ om y for less than $1 m il­ lion. T here will be indirect savings in the form of the resulting eco n om ­ ic d ev e lo p m e n t in E ast A u stin . A lth ou gh this m u ltip lier effect is gen erally d ow nplayed by the oppo­ nents of the stadium , the benefits are real. And the intangible gains to the com m u n ity are ju stificatio n for the investm en t all by them selves. is M in or fun. leag u e b a seb a ll Becau se it m akes sen se in com m u n i­ ty and eco n o m ic benefits, le t's m ake a sm all inv estm en t and have a little fun. V ote "y e s " to build our field of dream s b efo re it fad es aw ay. Chris B jornson is a graduate student at the Lyndon B. Johnson School Affairs. He can be reached by email at: Ipkh 701 @ uts. cc. utexas. edu. P ublic o f I COUNTER- lo v e b aseb all, d o n 't g et me w rong. It se e m s e v ery o n e e x p re ss in g o p p o s i­ tion to the proposed b a se b a ll sta d iu m bond p ack ag e has to ______________ p re fa c e d iscu ssio n this w ay. R egardless of m y tru e-blu e patrio tic ard or for the national pastim e, I d o n 't w ant to p itch in to buy a stad iu m right now. A lth ou gh the p u blic will su b si­ d ize only h alf o f the sta d iu m 's co n ­ struction costs, its hazy future and c u rren t ad c a m p a ig n hav e c o n ­ vinced m e to v ote no. sta d iu m O rig in a lly , b a c k e rs dashed past the requ irem ent for a public bond election b y getting the C ity C ou ncil to issue "ce rtificate s of o b lig atio n ," w h ich are bond s w ith ­ out th e p u b lic approval req u ire­ m ent. W hy did stadium backers try to ram rod th is th ro u g h w ith o u t pu blic input? Is this ju st another e xam p le of A u stin 's w elfare largess to land d ev elopers? T he answ ers are unclear. I'm not sayin g it's sin is­ ter, ju st fishy. T h e curren t ad cam p aign and the vision o f the future w e 're bein g hvped also g iv es one pause. C h eck out p ro -sta d iu m p ro p ag an d a: In essence, an y th in g A u stin ites w ould like to see on the stad iu m site is b ein g p ro m ised to th em . Y o u th sports, kayak racing, high school football, N C A A re g io n als and a con cert venue are su p p osed to find a h o m e h ere. S ta d iu m b a c k e rs sh o u ld cease this sh a m e le ss n e s s before they start pro m ising us su b ­ m arin e races and s p a ce s h u ttle launches. to W h at b e tte r w ay tu g at A u stin 's heartstrings than by d ra g ­ ging the A ustin m usic scene into it? D o n 't tired old acts su ch as A sleep at the W heel and Jerry Je ff W alker play around tow n enough already? A ustin has plenty o f con cert sites. South Park M eadow s, The A ustin M usic Hall, T h e Backyard and L ib ­ erty Lunch are private businesses that serv e this need. N ot to m ention the p u b lic accom m o d atio n s such as City C oliseum , A ud itoriu m Shores, the E rw in C en ter and B ass C o n cert G eorge Klos GUEST COLUMNIST H all. T h ey also do the job. O n a m o re practical level, the sta­ d iu m w o n 't suffice as a con cert site b ecau se the baseball season and the p eak co n cert season (sp rin g and su m m er) coincide. T he team o w n ­ e rs c e rta in ly w o n 't p e rm it th eir field to b e trashed d uring the sea­ son. T hat leaves abou t three m on ths fo r o u td o o r con certs b e fo re cold w eath er sets in. Forget it. The pro m ises ring ho llo w — as do the nu m b ers band ied ab ou t — becau se the team and the city w o n 't ev en neg otiate a con tract u n til after th e e lectio n . So w e really d o n 't kn o w w h at w e'll be getting. T h e stadium will cost the pu blic m o re than the $10 m illion bond issue. C ap ital M etro will sp end $2.5 m illion on access roads — o u t of y o u r sales tax. T he city will p rovide w a te r and w a stew a te r s erv ices p ro b a b ly b y ra isin g e v e ry o n e 's rates. All figures are b efore cost ov erru n s, by the w ay. R e v ita liz a tio n o f E ast A u stin c o m e s up o cca sio n a lly , b u t th is arg u m en t is questionable. C ertainly so m e folks will profit — team p res­ id en t L arry Y ount ow ns acreage ad jacen t to the stadium site. O ther d ev elo p ers and land ow ners in the n eig h b orh o o d will also cash in, but few jobs w ill actually be created . B aseball w o n 't add any thing to the lo ca l e co n o m y , b u t o n ly d iv e rt e n tertain m en t d ollars that w ould h av e been sp ent elsew h ere in tow n. If you d riv e d ow ntow n on 1-35, lo ok to the w est. S ee that bulky, ugly, d ep ressin g -lo ok in g build ing ? T h a t's the A ustin C on ven tio n C en ­ ter. It has been pu blicly financed a is the m ost few years b ack and recen t b o on d oggle o f u n necessary p u b lic con stru ction . T h e baseball sta d iu m in A u stin 's " if you build it they will is c o m e " m e n ta lity . en o u g h . V o te "N o " on O ct. 7 or soon er. is o n ly E n o u g h la te s t th e Klos is a graduate student in history. ‘Daily Texan’ should be nicer to Boyles, Cowboys D ear Robert R ogers, I'v e been receiv ing The D aily Texan, but even if I had not, I'd know w hat w as going on. T h e H ouston C h ron icle printed an article by D ebbie G raves abou t S herry Boyles. I'd alread y pulled it o ff the wire, but it w as nice to see it printed. G rav es m entioned in the article that a Texan colu m nist had com plain ed about the $352 Boyles sp ent on h e r p lane ticket to W ashington. I also read in a recent new s article that som e stu d en ts w ere unhappy ab o u t this "m isu se " o f stu d en t funds. I w as glad to see a rebu ttal of that in the F irin g Lin e recently. I agree w ith its w riter th at grousin g ab ou t B o y les' p lane ticket is rid icu lo u s. She's try in g to give back to stu ­ th ey th e kind o f d e n ts d eserv e. Sh e's tryin g to help. fin a n cia l aid I am asham ed to id entify m y self w ith a sch o o l fu ll of people w ho carp about a $352 p la n e tick et w hen B oyles is gettin g so m u ch acco m p lish ed . I d o w ish that T he Texan w ould get off its " W e 'v e g o tta find a v illain " soapbox for ju st a seco n d and look at the big picture. On an oth er subject, I am saddened and appalled by y o u r editorials refuting the effects o f the C o w b o ys cartoon. Robert, h av e you talked w ith a single Cowboy? I have. A t 4 a.m . near the last weekend I w as ed itor, one of them called me. He w an ted to m eet for coffee at that hour. I said no at first b ecause I didn't know who he w as But we talked for a while on the phone. He pleaded w ith m e to ad vise reporters that G abe H iggins' friend s and fam ily w ere suffering too m uch to answ er qu estion s such as, How do you feel about the C o w ­ boys' involvem ent w ith his d eath ?" "D am n it, G abe w as a person. H e w as my friend. He w as m ore than a god d am n C ow boy ," the friend said. (H e never told m e his nam e.) I said, "W hat I h ear is that y o u 're in a lot o f pain. O ur reporters are often on d ead ­ line. T hat's w hy they have to ask for a quote. I'm sure they d o n 't m ean to hurt you r feelings." In the m yriad articles about the case, I've read over and over that the other C ow boys d o n 't know w hat happ en ed to G abe. They th em selves do not v ilify the C ow boys, becau se the accident w as ju st that. A fluke. It m akes for good cop y to keep harping on the "It w as them d arn fraternities. Boy, how d y, we oughta ju st get ridda 'e m " line o f reasoning. But as w ith any death in the new s, sen sationalism gets you now here but the yellow jou rn alism bin. Th in k about reality for a change. A you ng boy is gone. If you m ust dissect the C o w b o y 's role in his death, m ake dam n su re you d o n 't triv ialize G abe H iggins' life. T h is is for the F irin g Line, if you hav e space, by the way. I'll w rite a less in d ig n an t letter soon. Mary Hopkins Galveston resident Crashers at OU line rude I was infuriated by events that took place this morning in the line for visa bands for the TX-OU gam e. FIRING LINE M y friend s and I thought that this year w e w ould be su p er fans of Texas football, and stand in line at the crack of d aw n to get a low visa band nu m ber so that w e w ould be assured that w e w ould get tick ets for this year's gam e, w hich will be, for m ost of us, our last 1 X -O U gam e as u n d erg rad u ­ ates. W e arrived at L. Theo B ellm ont Hall at 4:30 a.m . T u esd ay and w e w ere delighted to find out that w e w ere about the 50th people in line. E verything w ent fine until abo u t 7 a.m. w hen a large g rou p of fratern ity m em bers, about 200, d ecided th^t they w ould claim there space in lin e b esid e their frat brothers w ho stayed at the stad iu m all night long. E ssentially they m ad e a group o f 20 of their pledges sleep in line so that they could save places for about 200 o f their fra­ ternity brothers. To add to this insult they began to go behind us and recruit o ther fratern ity types to stand in front of us in line also. T h e only reason they could give for their irrational actions w as that their fraternity p resid ent told them to d o it. All of these p eople w ho cut in line in front of m yself and my fellow U T stud ents lo ok ed to be ad u lts, b u t th eir actio n s betrayed them . In kind ergarten m ost o f us w ere social­ ized in the skills o f stand ing in line. In fact, m ost of the U T stu d en ts w ho cam e after these m oronic frat boys seem ed to find the end of the line just fine. It seem s to m e that these arrogant and unfeeling fraternity types feel that they are above the com m on UT student. They have recruited a bunch of mindless fellow frat boys to coop erate in and con d o n e th eir actions. T h e point to m y letter is that I w ould hope that the peop le w h o cut in front o f m e in lin e could gain a little in telligence and com m on cou rtesy and learn how to resp ect the righ ts of others. T h ey have d em eaned their ow n pled g es by m ak in g them sleep at B elm ont all night, and they have d em eaned ev eryo n e w ho stood in line for visa b an d s that m orning. I h o p e that these frat b oys grow up som e tim e b efore w e hand them a U T d eg ree and send them o ff into the w orld w h ere p eop le w on't be as cou rteou s to such im m atu re actions. Michael D. Frazier Government senior Linebackers not pansies T h e F irin g L in e co m m e n ts m ad e b y G abriel H errera ("U T players d ro p b a ll") in the M ond ay Sep t. 25 edition o f T he D aily Texan con cern in g the L ongh orn football team 's effort against N otre D am e are n o th ­ ing m ore than a p athetic heap o f u n w ar­ ranted criticism from an in d ividu al w ho is obv io u sly not the Longhorn fan h e claim s to be. W hile I w as also d isap p oin ted in th e final score of the gam e, I see no ju stificatio n in the negative statem ents H errera m ad e con cern in g the L o n gh orn defense. To say that "o u r linebackers play like pansies" is nothing short of laughable. F a c­ ing a m assive N otre D am e offensive line that is one of the largest in the country, o u r linebackers played w ith a great deal of heart and intensity and did a d am n good jo b o f ov ercom in g th eir size d isad v an tag e. fu n d a m e n ta ls " and W hen a d efen se is outsized to the exten t that our d efen se w as in So u th Bend, the " b a s ic s " H e rre ra claim ed the L o n gh orn s lack take a b ack seat to sheer d rive and d eterm ination . T h e L onghorn d efen se, and the offen se for that m atter, show ed the nation they p ossess load s of d rive and d eterm ination . N o t one at this g reat U niversity w anted to w in the N o tre D am e gam e m ore than the T exas p layers did. T h ey b u st their ass rep resen tin g this school, and to ask them to "p la y like you m ean it, as H errera did, is an inexcu sab le insult. T h e L ongh orn p layers have a great d eal of p rid e in th em selv es and the U niversity, and no one h as the righ t to q u estion that, esp ecially if they claim to be a fan o f the team . Bert Green Chemical engineering sophomore F irin g tin e letters can be brou¡ to the Texan basem ent offices at 2 _ „ . Street and W hitis A venue o r m ailed to P.O. B ox D , A ustin, TX 78713. T h ey They also can be e-m ailed to T E X A N ® 'i@ u tx v m s .c c a te x a s .e d u , F irin g U n e letters m u st be few er th an 250 w o rd s. U T stud ents should in d u d e th eir m ajor an d dassification, an d all w riters m u st p resen t identifi­ cation o r in d u d e a phone num ber. The Texan reserves to e rig h t to ed it letters. Third Continued from page 1 dential front-runner. Tom Pauken, Texas Republican Party chair­ m an, said th at the new p a rty 's su p p o rt of Perot or P o w ell w ill alm o st c e rta in ly h it the G O P hard at the polls. But P auken added that third- p a rty candidacies of lesser know n politicians, in c lu d in g U.S. Sen. Bill B radley, D-N.J., w ill help Republicans. O ther state officials said it is too early even to guess ab o u t w hat effect Perot w ill have on the election. "It's real h ard to say how [a third party] m ay effect the election until you know w ho the can­ d id a te w ill be an d w h e re th e y sta n d on the issues," said Ed M artin, executive director of the Texas Dem ocratic Party. B ut no m a tte r w h o la u n ch e s a th ird -p a rty candidacy, officials in both parties said a new c o m p e tito r w ill d r a m a tic a lly r e s h a p e A m e ric a 's p o litica l la n d s c a p e a n d co u ld be d a n g e r o u s to e ith e r th e D e m o c ra tic o r th e Republican nom inee. "I am v e ry d is a p p o in te d in R oss P e r o t's atte m p t to begin a n ew p a rty ," P au k en said, ad d in g that a third p a rty w ill m ake C linton's reelectio n b id easier. P a u k e n also p re d ic te d C linton will lose the election in Texas w hether or n o t an in d e p e n d e n t p a rty e n ters the race, but the presid ent could w in the election w ith ­ out receiving 50 percent of the votes, as he d id in 1992. "Bill C linton can't w in a head -to -h ead race against a Republican in Texas," P auken, said. KUT: Station to lose $43,000 in 1995 and 1996 T h e D a ily T e x a n Thursday, S eptem ber28, 1995 P a g e s Republicans at the national level agreed that despite the result in 1992, a new party will not guarantee a Clinton victory. " D e m o c r a ts w h o th in k R o ss P e r o t's announcem ent will save them are in for a rude aw akening," said H aley Barbour, chairm an of the Republican N ational Com m ittee, in a p re ­ p ared statem ent. "Bill Clinton know s his best c h an ce for re -e le c tio n is to slip b ack in the W hite H ouse w ith 43 percent of the vote like he did in 1992, b u t both he and Perot will learn things are m ighty different than in 1992." N a tio n a l D em o c ratic o fficials also sa id a th ird -p arty can d id ate w ill not affect the elec­ tion, b ut they differed w ith their GOP counter­ p arts over the eventual result. "I rem ain v ery c o n fid e n t th a t Bill C lin to n will w in re-election in a tw o-person, three-per­ so n or fo u r-p e rso n race," sa id D on F ow ler, c h a ir m a n o f th e D e m o c r a tic N a tio n a l C om m ittee, in a prepared statem ent. But no m atter w ho w ins the election in 1996, a third p arty w ill alm ost g uarantee an end to A m erican politics as usual. A nd regardless of d iffe ren ce s on o th e r issu es, D em o c rats an d R ep u b lican s u n a n im o u sly h o p e th ey h a v e a p la c e in th e p h y s ic a l s p h e re as th e n a tio n enters the 21st century. "There w o n 't be a three-party system ," Perot sa id on C N N s L arry K ing L iv e" M o n d a y n ig h t, w h e re h e a n n o u n c e d th e n ew p a rty . R eferring to R epublicans and D em ocrats, he ad d ed , "O ne of these parties will disappear." Continued from page 1 utes them to N ational Public Radio and PBS. The CPB received $275 million this year fro m th e fe d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t, G io rd a said. That am ount will be reduced bv 15 percent in each of the next tw o years, and G iorda said after th a t fu n d in g is u n ce r­ tain. KUT, w ith an a n n u a l b u d g e t of $1.6 m illion, w ill lose ab o u t $43,000 in both 1995 and 1996 w ith the federal cuts. G iorda said C ongress' aim right now is to faze ou t yearly appropriations to CPB w hich "c o m p a re d to the trillions in the federal b u d g et is a very small am ount." "As of right now w e do n 't know w hat will hap p en in the future," G iorda said. "F unding w ill go do w n to zero, b u t the big question is w hen." B ut th e re a l d e b a te , h e a d d e d , is w hether taxpayer m oney should be used to fu n d CPB, o r if m o n e y fo r p u b lic b r o a d c a s tin g s h o u ld be r a is e d o n ly through private donations. "W hat's really at issue is an ideological point of view ," G iorda said. Bob Brooks, a UT p rofessor of radio- telev isio n -film , sa id federal fu n d in g is im portant to assure quality program m ing by a public station. W ith o u t th e f u n d s , s u p p o r te r s lik e Brooks say, public broadcasting stations will have cut back on program s w hich for y e a rs h a v e d is tin g u is h e d the s ta tio n s from their com mercial counterparts. "It m a k e s all th e d iffe re n c e in th e w orld, Brooks said. "The w hole area of public radio has im proved so much in the services they provide since federal fund­ ing began." But A ugust Grant, an associate profes­ so r of r a d io - te le v is io n - f ilm , sa id th e im pact of funding cuts is not as great as advocates of public broadcasting m ake it sound. "W e're n o t c u ttin g th e ir w h o le b u d ­ get," G rant said. "I'm in favor of com m u­ nity supported broadcasting, b u t there's a big difference betw een com m unity su p ­ po rt and taxpayer su p p o rt. There could be som e cuts an d it's not going to h u rt that m uch." G rant said it is im portant to note that the 15 percent cut is com ing out of 17 p er­ cent of the KUT budget. It is not a 15 p er­ cent cut of the total budget. "W hen you do the m ath w e are o nly ta lk in g ab o u t 1 or 2 p e rc e n t," he said . The cut is a small portion of their b u d ­ get. It w ould be d ifferent if w e w e re n 't having so m any problem s w ith the feder­ al deficit. At som e po in t you have to cut b a c k y o u r f u n d in g o r y o u ju s t h a v e unending grow th." Jan G albraith, chairm an of th e T ravis C o u n ty R epublican P arty, said fu n d in g re d u c tio n s are n ec essary to h e lp b rin g dow n the federal deficit. "W e d o n 't have that luxury" to contin­ ue funding public broadcasting at cu rren t levels, G a lb ra ith said . "W e h a v e m o re im p o r ta n t th in g s to w o rry a b o u t lik e M edicare, highw ay system s and national s e c u r ity . W e ju s t c a n 't a f f o rd p u b lic broadcasting right now ." G albraith said KUT listeners, n o t tax ­ p a y e rs, s h o u ld ta k e re s p o n s ib ility fo r keeping the station afloat. "By returning m ore m oney to the tax­ p ay e rs, th a t w o u ld en a b le p e o p le w h o donate to public TV and radio to be m ore generous," G albraith said. Betsy P ilkington, m anager of m em ber services at KUT, said public broadcasting stations provide a com m unity service the sam e w ay m u se u m s and p ark s do, an d w hile the U nited States spends $1.09 p er person each year on public broadcasting, o th e r c o u n tr ie s s p e n d m u c h m o re . C a n ad a an d Ja p a n sp e n d o v er $30 p e r person, and G reat Britain spends close to $40 per person, she said. "If you w ant to keep a service you have to pay for it," Pilkington said. rW [fW | L y Get a tan, get in shape & get paid at the same time! iWj I M ty (|{ doesn’t get any better than this) A high quality, fast growing, innovative entrepreneurial landscape company is looking for hard- working individuals with high integrity and good communication ^ skills. Need to be able to work some full days. REWARDS: Pay starting at $7.50/hour. Schedule is flexible. If interested, send resume to: Clean Cut Inc. 1 Ml 8711 Burnet Rd. Suite F-73, Austin, TX 78757 • • o r Fax to (512) 452-2378 Attn: Melissa ¡DEED CASH HOW! A C M E QOLD Se SILVER STO R E 459-G O L D Buying and Selling: Q O L D - SILV ER - PLATINUM In The Forms Of: JEW E LR Y - C O I N S - BU LL IO N Also Buying: RO L E X A N D FINE W A T C H ES - SILVERW ARE ' Treating People with Honesty a n d Respect’ free estim ates • no appointm ent needed 7 0 1 0 BURNET ROAD • STE. C • AUSTIN, TEXAS 7 8 7 5 7 B F R A N C E A U S T R A L IA R U S S IA E N C L A N D Global Internship and Language Programs B H F °r program details complete the coupon below and mail it to: Boston University International Programs 232 Bay State Road, Box Q, Boston, MA 02215 • 617/353-9888 Internet: abroad@biLedu • World Wide Web: http://web.bu.edu/abroad An equal appormmty, affirmative action institution F R A N C E A U S T R A L IA R U S S IA E N G L A N D Home Institution _ Cwrrtm Suuui: dPr Phone_{ X If you prefer, call 617/353-9888. 0 on Thursday SEPT. 28 Were Always Bolllngl DoubleDave will be wandering around the UT Campus. The first person* who asks him the question, “Are you D oubleDave?” will be given $100 in cash. •This person cannot be known to DoubleDave nor can a person known to DoubleDave be present when this question is asked. (E b m || ty J ^ THURSDAY, SEPTBMBBI28,1995 6 T h e D a i l y T e x a n UNIVERSITY Army ROTC requests privilege to fire cannon K E L L I D U N N _________________________ Daily Texan Staff The UT Army ROTC on W ednesday entered the race to replace the Texas Cow­ boys in firing a cannon at home Longhorn football games. ROTC officials submitted a request to the Office of the Dean of Students Wednesday to fire a cannon at the games in place of the Silver Spurs, w ho fired the C ow boys' "Sm okey the Cannon'' at the first home game Sept. 16. "We'd really like to increase the visibility of Army ROTC on campus," said Lt. Col Brenda Alicea, a professor of military sci­ ence. "We would like to have that mission." She said the ROTC does not currently own a cannon, but the group will try to bor­ row one from a local Army unit. "It's equipment that we can get on a tem­ porary basis," Alicea said. On Sept. 15, administrators decided that the Silver Spurs, the UT organization that handles Bevo, could fire Smokey at home games. Glen Maloney, associate dean of students and UT athletic rally advisory committee member, said Wednesday he does not think the committee would consider having a stu­ dent organization other than the Spurs fire the cannon. "I think that the d ecision to have the Spurs use Smokey is working and most peo­ ple are comfortable with that decision," he said. Maloney said he will discuss the ROTC request with Jim Vick, vice president of stu­ dent affairs. He added that the University may find other uses for the ROTC's cannon, at other events or if anything happens to Smokey. Smokey could break. Over the next few games, who knows what could happen?" Maloney said. Spurs president and econom ics senior Marc Goldman said the Spurs' knowledge of and involvement in UT traditions quali­ fies them to continue firing the cannon. "The Silver Spurs did a great job firing the cannon at the last football game," Goldman said. We know how the field works, we know how' the system works." M aloney said other groups have also made requests to fire the cannon, including the Texas Wranglers, the Texas Cowgirls and individuals from the Department of Engineering. He said the Spurs were chosen because they had access to Smokey. Earlier this month, the Cowboys agreed to lease Smokey to the Spurs for five years, after which the Cowboys would resume the right to own and fire the cannon. The Uni­ versity has suspended the Cowboys for five years for hazing violations. G oldm an has not sp ecified w hat the Spurs will pay the Cowboys to use Smokey. But he has said the sum is not large and is given as a dem onstration of the Spu rs' appreciation for permission to use the can­ non. Maloney added that the ROTC is the first group besides the Spurs with access to a cannon to submit a request to fire a cannon at games. Vick said the arrangement with the Spurs has been satisfactory, but he wouldn't rule out any possible changes in the future. "I don't anticipate a change; I don't rule one out," Vick said. But he added, "I felt good about the way that things went at the Pitt game, I was pleased that other students were involved." Vick said the Rally Committee will con­ tinue to look at alternatives to the Spurs fir­ ing the cannon, but right now, "everyone who's been involved is satisfied with the arrangement." ELECTRIC B00GAL00 Proposition 187 debate hits UT K E V IN F IT C H A R D Daily Texan S ta ff Austin lies more than a thousand miles from California, but the Universi­ ty becam e one of m any p roving grounds Wednesday in the debate sur­ rounding C alifo rn ia's con troversial Proposition 187. David Hinkley from the Coalition of Immigrant Rights and Rick Oltman of California's "Save Our State," stopped at the University Wednesday to debate Proposition 187, which would deny all social services except emergency med­ ical care to illegal immigrants in Cali­ fornia. Hinkley, who opposes the measure, and Oltman, a supporter, have been traveling around the country debating the measure, which 59 percent of Cali­ fornia voters approved last year. A fed­ eral court kept the measure from taking effect the m orning a fter it passed, allowing courts to decide its constitu­ tionality. Though both C alifornia residents agreed Wednesday that immigration reform is needed, they differed on how far the reform should go and whether the p ro p o sitio n is the best w ay to achieve it. Hinkley argued that Proposition 187 does not answer the immigration prob­ lem because it does not provide for stricter patrol of the borders and does not address deportation. Instead, he said, the proposition "w ill certainly bring about discrimination and racism" because all members of minorities will be suspected of immigrating illegally. The law requires that civil servants in all fields verify that anyone seeking social services in California is a legal resident. But Oltman responded that both of Hinkley's arguments are invalid. "187 isn't allowed to touch the bor­ ders," Oltman said, adding only the fed­ eral government has jurisdiction over border patrol and is not doing its job. Oltman also said there would be no discrimination under the proposition because everyone would be forced to identify themselves when requesting civil services. Oltman added that before the large flood of immigration in the late 1980s there was no suspicion of minorities being illegal aliens, saying "it is not 187 creating suspicion; it is the large num­ ber of ille g al im m ig ran ts w alkin g around creating suspicion." Hinkley countered that the measure's proponents create a skewed picture of- the present immigration situation. "O f the thousands of people coming over the border everyday, most of them go back the same day," Hinkley said. "T h en there is the im age of illegal im m ig ran ts lin in g up to get food stamps as soon as they cross over to the U.S. There are strong w elfare safe­ guards here. You'd have to have forged documents to get past the safeguards in the system." Though no le g islatio n sim ila r to proposition exists in Texas, a similar law w as passed in 1977, but was declared unconstitutional in 1982 by the U.S. Supreme Court. But a bill simi­ lar to 187 has been introduced in Con­ gress by U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, R-San Antonio. "Any type of law or proposition like [Prop. 187], if it doesn't effect us now, it could affect us all in the future," said Hina Ahmed, chair of the Texas Union Student Issues Committee, which spon­ sored the event with the Union Chi- cana/o Culture Committee. director of the Minority Information Center. Bichler said the event should help to inform students of what is going on in the SG. But he added that some student organizations proba­ bly will use the forum as an opportunity to complain about the SG. Teleconference coincides with signing of peace treaty A live national teleconference with Shimon Peres, the Israeli foreign minister, will be open to all UT students Thursday, the day that Israeli and Palestinian Liberation Organization officials are scheduled to sign the second phase of a peace treaty. The University will be one of 100 campuses around the country to participate in the teleconference, which will be broadcast from Washington, D.C. Israel and the Students' Association for Middle Eastern Studies will sponsor the forum, scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. in Room 104 of the College of Education Building. Leaders of the sponsoring organizations said they hope students will participate in the teleconference by calling Peres to ask questions about the Israeli-PLO peace treaty or any other issues. T h e purpose of [the teleconference] is to create dia­ logue between students and the foreign minister," said Sarit Shapira, president of the UT chapter of Hillel. Caron Gremont, co-president of the UT group Texans for Israel, said all students are welcome to participate in the conference, not just Jewish students. "The intent is really to bring in everyone with differ­ ent opinions and start communicating," Gremont said. C om piled by Tom Vaughn, Daily Texan Staff, with Locally, the Jewish student group Hillel, Texans for Associated Press reports T H E M O S T I N T E N S I V E C O U R S E F O R T H E M C A T CoCuttiBia MC3l(T %eviezv Serving the Tl(Tpre-medicalcommunity M.D.’s TRAINING M.D.’s-OF-THE-FUTURE Classes N o w F illin g haaiffligifBHi 1-800-300-PREP ✓ th e m o s t h o u rs th e b e s t in s tru c to rs th e b e s t m a te ria ls ✓ th e b e s t re s u lts th e lo w e s t c o s t U T ’s intensive M C A T prep course! r IMMIGRATION BARBARA HINES, pc Attorney at Law B O A R D C E R T IF IE D Immigration and Nationality Law Texas Board of Legal Specialization A l l T y p e s o f I m m i g r a t i o n C a s e s S t u d e n t V i t a e , W o r k V i s a s e n d F a m i l y - B a s e d I m m i g r a t i o n 1 00 5 E. 40th 4 52 -0 2 0 1 , EXAM + 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting at Ml 9* Complete *price includes exam, 2 pair clear daily- w ear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1 st follow up. EXñRES OCT. 27, 1995. WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT M-Th 10-7 4 7 7 -2 2 8 2 fRI 9.6 M/C VISA AMX DISC Travel & Outdoor Outfitters to the Texas Community > i since 1 9 6 9 Clothing • Luggage - Footwear • Travel Guides • Camping and Expedition Gear • Fine and Fun Gifts. i r s p } r>. I ( íLW-S ^ Whole Earth Provision Company 2410 Son Antonio St. • 478-1577 4006 S. Lamar Blvd. • 444-9974 4 1 MMmmm UNIVERSITY BRIEFS Russ Taylor, a second year m aster’s student, rehearses lines from Shakespeare’s Richard II Loren Winship Drama Building. A ND R EW NELSEN/Daily Texan Staff in front of a mirror on the second floor of the F. SG to sponsor West Mall student forum Thursday Students will get the chance to grill Student Govern­ ment representatives about UT issues and SG projects at a forum on the West Mall Thursday. SG officers and representatives will be available for questions and comments Thursday from 12:30-1:30 p.m. on the West Mall in a forum designed to increase com­ munication between students and SG members, said Sherry Boyles, SG president. It is a chance for any students passing by to ask us questions or point out something they are concerned with, said Brandon Bichler, SG vice president. "Essen­ tially we are giving ourselves to the student body." The forum, which will be sponsored by the Legisla­ tive Relations Agency of the SG, will have a micro­ phone set up for students to ask questions. "It is a good way for us to find out what kinds of things are on [students'] minds," Boyles said. Boyles added that this is an easy way to create more interaction with the general student body and the SG. They don t have to come find us in the Union, they can be walking to class and stop and talk to us," Bovles said. SG officers and representatives who will be present at the forum include Boyles, Bichler and Marlen Whitley, AUSTIN REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES C O N FID E N T IA L, P R O F E S S IO N A L R E P R O D U C T IV E C A R E Free Pregnancy Testing- Abortions Confidential Counseling Adoption Alternatives Em ergency Contraception Board Certified Ob-Gyns Licensed Nursing Staff Licensed by Tx. Dept, of Health One Block E of Burnet Rd. a t 4 9 " ’& G ro v e r REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES 4 8 0 4 Grover Ave. 458-8274. since 19 78 Guys S Girls! 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We will be conducting on campus interviews on Wednesday and Thursday and October 4 & 5. -tu d r—i i i H PICK THRE: 7-9-2 LOTTO: 4-5-10-17-39-47 STATE & LOCAL APD defends new officer rotation plan against lawsuit T h e D a i l y T e x a n § THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20,1995 SCOTT PATTERSON Daily Texan Staff _________________ skills on patrol. A ustin police officials on W ednesday d efended the d ep artm en t's policy regarding specialized assignm ents for officers, a rotational plan that is the focus of a law ­ suit against the departm en t by 22 officers w ho say the policy is discrim inatory. The policy, enacted in February 1994, is designed to m aintain a broad level of experience on patrol, said Ann Taylor, Police D epartm ent spokesw om an. "The basic idea here is to get officers to be m ore gen­ eral in their k n o w led g e," Taylor said. She said those officers w ho have held specialized positions can use the The policy states that an officer can rem ain in a spe­ cialized assignm ent for a m axim um of five years. Taylor said the lim itation is necessary because w ithout it some assignm ents may not have any openings "for years and years." But the Police D ep artm en t m ay have to defend the system in court in light of the law suit, w hich charges the policy is a form of age discrim ination. Their law suit asserts that under the policy, a d isproportionate num ­ ber of officers above age 40 w ere transferred from spe­ cialized positions to patrol beats. On Jan. 1, 1994, only 37 percent of officers in special­ ized assignm ents w ere older than 40, but m ore than 60 percen t of the officers w ho h ave been tran sfe rred to patrol beats un d er the policy are older than 40, accord­ ing to the lawsuit. "The defendant's transfer policy has had a disparate im pact on patrol officers, including the plaintiffs, over the age of 40 years," the law suit states. "There is, and has been, no business necessity for the transfer policy." But Taylor disp u ted the contention, saying a rotation system gives officers a fair opportunity to apply for spe­ cialize d p o sitio n s a n d a d d re sse s con cern s m a d e by som e m inority officers last year "about their representa­ tion in specialized assignm ents." The policy states that in the rotation process, "the most tenured personnel will be rotated first," and "this transi­ tion period will take place over the next five years." The only cases in w hich an officer, after five years in a specialized assignment, may not be subjected to transfer if there is no one qualified to take your place," or if all is patrol positions are filled, Taylor said. The lawsuit w as filed in state District C ourt Monday. The suit dem ands an injunction, either tem porary or per­ m anent, to stop enforcem ent of the policy. It also asks that the Police D epartm ent reinstate officers previously transferred under the policy, and seeks unspecified com ­ pensatory damages. Slagle asked to resign chair Associated Press Top statewide-elected Democrats including Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock have asked state party Chairm an Bob Sla­ gle to resign im m ediately and rec­ om m ended noted fund-raiser Bill White as his replacement. The m ove is n ee d ed " in o rd e r that we may all begin planning for the future," said the letter signed by B ullock, A tto rn e y G e n e ra l D an M orales, C om ptroller John Sharp, Land Com m issioner G arry M auro and Treasurer M artha Whitehead. The ch oru s also w as joined by Texas AFL-CIO President Joe Gunn, a longtime Slagle ally. But e a rlie r S lagle, w h o announced he will not seek another term, said in a return letter Wednes­ day h e's staying p u t for now. He said he does not believe there is con­ sen su s am ong the " ra n k and file p a rty le a d e rs " on w h o sh o u ld replace him. Bullock said, "I guess you might say there certainly appears to be a consensus on Mr. Slagle." If Slagle does not resign early, his successo r w ill be selected at the Democratic Party State Convention in Dallas in June 1996. G unn, in a sta te m e n t se p a ra te from the elected officials' an d in w hat he called a "gut-w renching" decision, said that it is too late for a new chairm an to raise m oney and plan for the 1996 general election. The state leaders' letter thanked Slagle for his service, saying, "You have given unselfishly of your time and m oney in your service to the Democratic Party of Texas, and we are grateful." ASSOCIATED PRESS Texas Democratic Party Chairman Bob Slagle poses in his office Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1995 in Austin Texas. But it went on, "We, the top elect­ ed Democrats in Texas, request that you resign and vacate the office of chairman immediately in order that we m ay all begin planning for the future." The five said they realize Slagle w ould have to be replaced through action by the State Democratic Exec­ utive Committee but recommended W hite " a s o u r p erso n al cho ice." They said they hoped Slagle w ould use his "influence and assistance to convey our wishes to the SDEC." H o u se Speaker Pete Laney, D- Hale Center, did not sign the letter. H is spokesw om an, Janet W arren, said he had no com m ent about it. Unlike the other leaders, the speaker does not run in a statewide election but is a state representative chosen by other H ouse m em bers to lead them. Slagle said he is not against step­ ping dow n before June, "provided there is a genuine consensus am ong SDEC m em bers and rank and file Democrats about w ho the next chair should be." "A lthough it may well be possi­ ble that a consensus for Bill's candi­ dacy will develop, that consensus does not yet exist," he said. "In fact, should I announce my resignation immediately and attem pt to join an Austin-based effort to 'im pose' Bill White as chairman, Bill's candidacy may ultimately suffer." Baylor College of Medicine and Rice University Announce A Summer Program for Minority Students Interested in Medicine The Honors Premedical Academy June 9 - July 18, 1996 The Honors Premedical Academy (HPA) provides rigorous coursework in science and communications at Rice, as well as a variety of clinical and laboratory experiences in settings throughout the Texas Medical Center. The goal of the HPA, funded in part by The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, is to increase the number of underrepresented minorities in medicine. Students who complete all academic components of the program receive nine hours of undergraduate credit. Tuition and fees, housing, a small stipend, and some meals are covered by the program. Academic Courses English 3 1 7 - Medical Technical Communications. Designed to increase communication skills of HPA students, this course includes journal writing, medical school application essay preparation, interview skill development, and oral presentation strategies. Course activities complement work in clinics and laboratories, and promote insight into the function of language in medicine. the molecular and cellular aspects of Biology 403 - Molecular and Cellular Aspects of Development. This course the commitment, focuses on differentiation, and maintenance of selected tissues, organs and systems. Lectures are complemented by practical experience in Baylor’s gross anatomy laboratory. AHS 399 - Preceptorship in the Health Sciences. This preceptorship is designed to provide students with greater understanding of medicine and/or basic science research. Students are assigned to clinical or research settings and participate in daily activities under the supervision of Baylor faculty members. Enrichment activities include: MCAT preparation; counseling; weekly seminars; a speaker series; a Medical School Recruitment Fair; and a variety of social activities. For additional information, write or call: The Honors Premedical Academy, Baylor College of Medicine, 1 7 0 9 Dryden, Suite 5 4 5 , Houston, TX 7 7 0 3 0 ; (8 0 0 ) 7 9 8 -8 2 4 4 or 7 9 8 -8 2 0 0 (in Houston). Debates ensue on the future of legal representation for the lower class H E A T H S H E L B Y Daily Texan Staff f e d e ra l in itia tiv e s S ta te o ffic ia ls a n d a tto r n e y s d e b a te d to re s tru c tu re fu n d in g to o rg a n iz a ­ tions that provide legal representa­ tio n to th e p o o r a t a co n fe re n c e W ednesday. The U.S. H ouse Judiciary C om ­ m ittee approved a resolution Sept. 13 to abolish the Legal Services C or­ p o r a tio n , a g o v e r n m e n t- fu n d e d e n tity w h ic h d is tr ib u te s fe d e ra l fu n d in g to n o n p ro fit p ro v id ers of legal aid, and replace it w ith a state- run block grant program . "In a very real sense ... our job is to accept the realities that w e face," said F ra n k N ew to n , c h a ir of the Texas Equal Access to Justice Foun­ d a tio n , w h ic h c o - s p o n s o r e d th e debate w ith the State Bar A ssocia­ tion. T he re so lu tio n a d o p te d by the J u d ic ia ry C o m m itte e w ill co m e b e fo re th e full H o u se for d e b a te "p ro b ab ly n o t until the m id d le of O c to b e r ," s a id C a r lto n C a rl, s p o k e s m a n fo r U.S. R ep. Jo h n B ryant, D -D allas. B ryant v oted to save the Legal S ervices C o rp o ra ­ tion. T om P a u k e n , c h a ir m a n of th e s ta te R e p u b lic a n P a rty , sa id th e LSC in recen t y ea rs "h a s becom e heavily p o liticized " and has used federal tax dollars to su p p o rt law ­ suits on behalf of the p o o r w hich have been "totally rem oved" from the LSC's original purpose. "We need to return pow er to the states. The Legal Services C orpora­ tion is subject to so m an y abuses, w e'v e got to sta rt all o ver again," P auken said. H e add ed the LSC has som etim es provided a forum for law yers w ish­ in g to a d v a n c e s o c ia l p o lic y through lawsuits. In th e p a s t y ea r, th e C h ris tia n C oalition has attack ed the LSC as an im m o ra l in stitu tio n . C o alitio n C hairm an Ralph Reed has said the LSC p ro m o te s o n e -p a re n t h o u s e ­ h o ld s by h e lp in g p o o r c itiz e n s obtain divorces. But so m e S tate Bar r e p re s e n ta ­ tives said W ednesday the LSC is a v ia b le in s titu tio n th a t s h o u ld be retained. The Legal Services C o rp o ratio n "w a s c h ro n ic a lly u n d e r f u n d e d " from the tim e of its creation in 1974, N ew ton said. N ew ton added the LSC provides three-fourths of all legal service for the poor in Texas. D enying those citizens the LSC aid w ould cut off m ost funds currently used for legal aid to the poor. Elim inating the LSC w ould result in "the end of legal council for m il­ lions," Carl said. In a p rerecorded statem ent, U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, called the m easures targeting the LSC an "effort to silence alternative voices." S u ch m e a s u re s " w o u ld im p o s e num erous restrictions" on legal care for the poor, he said. Besides the H ouse resolution, the Senate A p p ro p riatio n s C om m ittee narrowly passed a similar resolution Sept. 12 to eliminate half of the LSC's current budget, Doggett said. D oggett, w ho called the re so lu ­ tions "blockheaded," added that the m easure probably will be introduced for a vote of the full Senate "any day now ." A riv a l S e n a te fa c tio n , led by N ancy K assebaum , chairw om an of th e L abor an d H u m an R esources Committee, has introduced a bill that w ould reauthorize the LSC for five y ea rs b u t w o u ld cut fu n d in g an d restrict the legal activities of lawyers involved with the corporation. "W hatever happens [in Congress], it w ill h ave a d rastic effect," said Julie O liver, executive d ire c to r of Texas Lawyers Care, the arm of the State Bar specifically concerned with voluntary legal care. "It will signifi­ cantly im pede the system ." LEARN BARTENDING "The P ro fe s s io n a l W a y " • Job Placement Assistance Nationwide • Day & evening classes • 40 Hour/2 week course Men & Women 323-2002 International Bartending Institute 5 5 5 5 N . Lamar Ste. 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Not good with any o th er discounts. “Austin's ONLY Authorized Dealers!" Red W ing Shoe Store 3005 S. Lamar T he C orners Shopping C enter 443-3766 Mon-Fri 9:30-6 Sat 9:30-5 Red Wing Shoes P a g e 8 Thursday, September 28,1995 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Space center in financial trouble Associated Press H O U ST O N — F in a n c ia l p ro b ­ lem s related to sagging attendance have a space-related tourist attrac­ tion n e a r N A SA 's Jo h n so n Sp ace C e n te r seek in g to re s tru c tu re its $68.4 million debt. Space Center H ouston, w hich is operated by a nonprofit group and is not directly affiliated with NASA, stu m b le d fin a n cia lly th is m o n th when it made only a partial m onth­ ly b ond p a y m e n t, s a id c e n te r spokeswoman Jennifer Casey. The center has 60 days to m ake up the payment on $68.4 million in ta x -e x e m p t b o n d s th a t fin a n c e d construction, Casey said. General m anager Richard Allen, p r e s id e n t o f the M a n n ed S p a c e F light E d u catio n F o u n d atio n Inc. that runs the center, said the facility is attempting to restructure its debt. "W hen the project began, outside c o n s u lta n ts o v e r -p r o je c te d o u r atte n d a n ce le v e ls , w h ich cau sed reven u e sh o rtfall. C o n se q u e n tly , this restructuring has becom e neces­ sary," Allen said. Space Center Houston, a 183,000- square-foot facility, opened in Octo­ ber 1992. A bou t 2 m illion p eop le were expected to visit the Disney- designed center each year to wTatch s p a ce -re la te d IM A X film s, touch m oon rocks and fly space sh u ttle simulators. A tten d an ce, how ever, has been less than 1 m illion per year. Even with a flurry of summer excitement o v er th e h it film A p o llo 13, this year's attendance is not expected to top 750,000. T h at is few er than the n u m ber who visited the Johnson Space Cen­ ter before the tourist facility opened next door. Johnson, home to Mission Control and N ASA 's astronaut corps, is now closed to the general public. Previ­ ously, people were allowed to roam the cen ter free of ch arg e to view artifacts and exhibits. Space Center Houston charges $11.95 for adults. C asey said officials are trying to com e up with new w ays of luring patrons to the center. "W e 'r e w orking at stopping the d o w n w a rd d e c l i n e ," sh e s a id . "W e 're really just trying to stop the dow nward trend by incorporating new exhibits and new attractions." Are You A Healthy Male fir Female? 3iood Type 0 - A- B- o í AB- W e are looking for healthy men and women between the ages of 18 and 5 5 , who are not taking any over-the- counter or prescription medications to be a part of our research study. N o overnight stays are required for this 12 week study and you can earn up to $ 1 0 0 0 for your participation. You and also w i l l laboratory testing. physical receive exams For more information, cdfc 4 6 2 - 0 4 9 2 Welfare bills anger minority organizations U “Never in the to an independent p resid en tial cand id ate — they both mentioned retired Gen. Colin Powell — in disgust over Congress' action and C lin­ ton's inaction. Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — As C ongress m oves to deny welfare benefits to legal immigrants, orga­ nizatio n s rep resen tin g H isp an ic, A sian and Jewish interests warned W ednesday that they w ill hold law m akers and P resid en t C lin ton accountable if the provisions become law. "N ever in the history of the United States, at least not since Reconstruction, has such egre­ gious, such D racon ian legislation ever even been consid ered ," said Raul Yzaguirre, presi­ dent of the National Council of La Raza. La Raza, the National Asian Pacific American Legal Consortium and the C ouncil of Jew ish Federations charged at a Capitol Hill news con­ ference that the measures would create a tier of second-class citizens: legal, taxpaying residents denied the benefits others can receive. "T h is is a strategy, I warn, that will have new costs," said Karen Narasaki, NAPALC's execu­ tive director. The organizations called on President Clinton to veto the legislation, criticizing him for not having spoken out against the immigrant provi­ sions contained in the welfare bills passed by the House and Senate. history of the United States, at least not since Reconstruction, has such egregious, such Dra­ conian legislation ever even been considered,” — Raul Yzaguirre, President of National Council of La Raza Administration officials said they will work to m itig a te the e ffe cts on legal im m ig ran ts w hen House and Senate negotiators meet to iron out differences in the bills. White House spokesw om an Ginny Terzano defended Clinton's accomplishments on immi­ grant issues. "H e throughout his three years has [established] a strong record on providing more opportunities for H ispanic-A inericans," she said. Narasaki and Yzaguirre suggested that Asian and Latino voters may well throw their support "T his legislation represents the worse fonrt of ... scapegoatism as im m ig ran ts are told that they are only welcom e to com e here if they'll pay for all possible difficulties in their future even as they pay taxes to support services for other A m ericans," said Diana Aviv, director of the Council of Jewish Federations' W ashington Action Office. Sweeping welfare reform legislation passed by the House last March would bar legal immi­ grants from receiving food stamps, M edicaid, cash w elfare, Sup plem ental Secu rity Incom e and certain other benefits. Exceptions would be made for refugees, veterans, those 75 or older and certain persons with disabilities. The S en ate's version, approved last w eek, would m ake future im m igrants ineligible for m ost n eed s-b ased a ssista n ce for fiv e y ears. S ta te s cou ld d en y aid to m o st c u rre n t and future non-citizens. The Senate-passed measure also would consider the assets and income of a fu ture im m ig ran t's sp on so r av a ilab le to the immigrant for 10 years when calculating eligi­ bility for benefits. Execution halted to appoint lawyer for inmate Associated Press The T e x a s C o u rt o f C r im in a l A p p eals h as stop p ed T h u rsd a y 's sched u led execu tion of con v icted killer Roger Dale Vaughn, citing a new law requiring that a lawyer be n am ed to r e p re s e n t h im as h e appeals his case. It was the first time an execution h as b een h a lte d d u e to th e 1995 Texas law, which requires the state to pay fo r a tto rn e y s to re p re sen t indigent death row inm ates in so- ca lle d h a b e a s co rp u s a p p e a ls in state court. Habeas corpus appeals raise con­ stitutional issues, such as w hether the d e fe n d a n t re ce iv e d e ffe c tiv e assistance from a lawyer. They fol­ low direct appeals, which basically address alleged m istakes by prose­ cutors or others during the trial. " I now have no legal co u n sel," Vaughn, 40, told the court in asking for th e stay. " I am in d ig en t, as I have been since my trial, and I can­ not afford to hire a law yer." The court said a law yer w ill be appointed to represent V aughn as soon as possible. Vaughn, a former electrician, was sentenced to death in the O ctober 1991 strangling of a Vernon woman d u rin g a b u r g la r y at h e r h o m e. D ora W a tk in s , 66, w as s e x u a lly assaulted and strangled with a piece o f c lo th , a c c o r d in g to p ris o n records. At the time of the attack, Vaughn was an escapee from the Lubbock C ounty Jail. H e had been charged with forgery and robbery. The requirem ent for a law yer to be appointed is part o f legislation designed to speed up the appeal process by imposing new deadlines and rules. R e p r e s e n ta tiv e s o f d e a th -ro w inm ates have raised concerns that lim itin g ap p eals w ould ra ise the risk of innocent people being exe­ cuted. Backers have said while inmates have the right to present legitimate claim s, they should be kept from unduly dragging out appeals. Appointing lawyers at the habeas corpus appeal level has been cited as an im p o r ta n t p r o te c tio n for inmates, who according to a legisla­ tive analysis already were entitled to a locally appointed law yer dur­ ing the direct appeal stage. The Leg­ islature set aside $2 million over the next two years for legal fees in the new program. " T h e h a b e a s re fo rm h as so m e good and som e questionable parts to it. Certainly from our perspective, one valuable addition in Texas is the provision for appointment of coun­ sel to assist people on death row in their preparation of their post-con­ viction a p p e a ls," said Steve H all, administrator of the Texas Resource Center, a defense organization. "U ntil this law was passed, Texas relied exclusively on uncom pensat­ ed v o lu n te er a tto rn ey s to do this work, and that caused a representa­ tion crisis the level o f w hich you simply did not see in any other state with the death penalty," he said. The Legislabire set aside $2 m il­ lion over the next two years to pay the atto rn eys under the new law , said Ron Dusek of the state attorney general's office. SON HING Chinese Restaurant BEER • WINE • SAKE Lunch Specials at $ 3 .2 5 Combination Dinners at $ 5 .2 5 2 8 0 1 Guadalupe, suite A 4 7 8 - 6 5 0 4 5 f o r $5 REG. ROAST B E E F SANDWICHES Lunch • MF 11:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Dinner* Sun-Thur 2:30 p.m.-10 p.m. Frl-Sat 2:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m. Walking Distance from UT • FREE Parking Call in & C arry out available No Limit. No Coupon Needed Go West It s beflet out her® 29th X Sun Hing Chinese Restaurant 2 Dozen Roses s19.95 Cash & Carry Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 D a i l y S p e c i a l s FTD • 45“ & Guadalupe • On UT Shuttle RL O N E H O U R E6 S U D E PRO CESSING 2 4 X = *4.95 3 6 X = *6.55 PHOTO STUDENTS - ADDITIONAL 10% DISCOUNT CUSTOM PHOTOGRAPHIC LABS W. MLK AT NUECES • 474-1 177 P H A R M A C O : : L S R Guadalupe It's time we grab the golden rin Watch The American Promise. From carousel horses in Missoula, Montana, and memorial murals in the Bronx, New York ... to a peaceful sunset in Kotzebue, Alaska, and a blinding w hite snowstorm in W yom ing ... our democracy is chang­ ing in rich, colorful ways. Discover these and dozens o f other fascinating stories about Americans coast-to-coast w ho believe in the promise of our country and are making it reality. And why now, more than ever, it's tim e to believe again. In a timely, exciting, new documentary called The American Promise. Watch The American Promise October 1, 2 and 3 at 8 p.m. ET on PBS. Presented by KQED, San Francisco. Check local listings for time and station. The soundtrack recording. V o ic e s , is available from Windham Hill Records. The com panion book, F ro W lL S e C a n The A m e ric a n P ro m is e > published by KQED, San Francisco, will be available at bookstores soon. M a d e p o s s i b l e b y T h e F a r m e r s I n s u r a n c e G r o u p o f C o m p a n i e s . Don Most plays D.J. Vince Fontaine in the touring production of Grease! ENTERTAINMENT T h e D a i l y T e x a n THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,1995 9 Fuentes accused of plagiarism Malph is the word KVRX TOPLESS 39 ■ The 39 most played artists on UT student radio station 91.7 FM KVRX (cable 99.5 FM) for the week of Sept. 19 - Sept. 25 were: 1. Chemical Brothers 2. Ani DrFranco 3. Medicine 4. Southern Culture on the Skids 5. Superchunk 6. Air Miami 7. Papas Fritas 8. Leon Redbone 9. The Adults 10. Big Sandy & His FlyRite Boys 11. Cottonm outh (TX) 12. D on W alser (TX) 13. Thinkin Fellers Union Local 282 14. Gastr Del Sol 15. Kissyfur 16. M oonshine Willy 17. M arti Brom (TX) 18. The Inhalants 19. Lisa Gerrard 20. V /A — Free to Fight 21. Palace Music 22. Ali Hussan Kuban 23. V /A — Total Trip Hop 24. M iss U niverse (TX) 25. Jam es Harman Band 26. Matt Heckert 27. Chulas Fronteras & Del Mero Corazón 28. V /A — This Is Acid Jazz 29. Jule Brown 30. Brave Com bo (TX) 31. Tarnation 32. Tar 33. Dirty Three 34. Dub Specialist 35. Supersuckers 36. Ibiza After Hours 37. Crown R oast (TX) 38. Redman /M ethod Man 39. KRS-ONE on the record ■ The big news of the day is that Time W arner is bowing to pressure and will get out of the gangsta rap business. W arner is selling off its share of ow nership in Interscope records. W arner owns 50 per­ cent of the com pany and also does all of their distribution. No word on how this will effect its artists. Interscope and ■ The Paramount theatre will hold its first annual garage sale of the stars, to benefit those unfortunate rich people. Okay, okay, actually the pro­ ceeds will benefit the theatre. The sale will take place Satur­ day, Sept. 30 at the Scarbor­ ough Building on the south­ west corner of 6th and Con­ gress. There's a special "p re­ view hour" starting at 9 a.m. where for 10 bucks you get first shot at the items. Regular admission is $1. There will be items from local as well as nation celebrities (Tom Kite, Lyle Lovett, etc.) ■ Sunny Day Real Estate is gone. The lead singer, Jeremy Enigk, found Jesus whereas the bass player and drummer found a better gig with the Foo Fighters. Look for a posthumous release on Sub Pop in late October. Also keep your eyes open for a Sub Pop re-issue of Redd Kross' N uerotica on CD about the same time. ■ The Austin Film Festival (minus the Heart of) Screen­ w riter's C onference begins next Thursday. Aspiring screenwriters need only check the scheduled luminaries for Black inspiration. (Lethal W eapon, Long Kiss Goodnight), Bill W ittliff (Lone­ some Dove, Legends o f the Fall), Callie Lorre (Thelma & Louise) and many others notables will attend. Shane — Com piled by Michael Bertin and Rob Alexander, Daily Texan Staff Associated Press MEXICO CITY — A little-known writer who accused novelist Carlos Fuentes of plagiarism has Mexico's literary lions in an uproar. When the dispute went public in late August, some said Fuentes, a winner of Spain's two highest literary awards, was a chronic crib, while others said "B ah.” Fuentes himself has issued no comment. A woman who answered the telephone at his Lon­ don home said the novelist was too busy to discuss the squabble. In a lawsuit filed in Mexico's federal civil court, Victor Manuel Celorio Garrido claims Fuentes' 1994 novel Diana or the Solitary Huntress is an embroidered copy of the unpublished novel he wrote in 1986 called The Blue Unicorn. Judge Gustavo Rodriguez Par- rao of the 4th Federal Civil Court in Mexico City, who is hearing the case, has asked both parties to present evidence. Both Fuentes and the 38-year- old Celorio claim their respective novels are autobiographical. "Ha, ha, ha!" Elena Garro, the laureate former wife of Nobel Octavio Paz, told the newspaper El Universal. "Carlitos has always liked to steal other people's things." Garro, a literary figure in her own right, said she and Paz know Fuentes from way back in Paris when he started out. "T h e first book he published, a thin volume of stories called The M asked Days contains an idol com pletely plagiarized from Adolfo Bioy Caseres,” she said. "I'm not surprised!” said G uillerm o Cabrera Infante, a Cuban-born writer who lives in London. He claimed Fuentes once plagiarized one of his screenplays in the novel Birthdays. Emmanuel Carballo, a leading critic, said the whole thing, "in the best of cases, is a simple coin­ cidence. Carlos Fuentes is a writer who doesn't need a life vest to swim .” Carlos M onsivais, another leading writer, called it "a ridicu­ lous accusation.” O thers said, plagiarism or not, Fuentes' talent cannot easily be surpassed. In a terse statment, Editorial Alfaguara of Spain, which pub­ lishes Fuentes' w ork, accused Celorio of seeking notoriety and called him a "m ed iocre" writer. Diana has been a best seller in AP FILE PHOTO Fuentes has been accussed of plagiarism by Victor Garrido. U Carlitos has always liked to steal other people’s things.” Baña Garro, on the accu­ sations of piager ism by author Carlitos Fuentes — Spanish. Even so, Celorio told a recent news conference that he is not seeking any monetary com ­ pensation — all he wanted was for Alfaguara to withdraw the novel from the market. But the lawsuit clearly asked for an unspecified amount for "m oral damage” and demanded an embargo of all profits from the sale of Fuentes' book in Spanish and at least four other languages in Mexico and abroad. An English translation by Alfred MacAdam is to be pub­ lished in the United States by Far­ rar, Straus, Giroux in October under the title Diana: The Goddess Who Hunts Alone. Claiming this is not the first time Fuentes plagiarized other peoples' works, Celorio present­ ed as proof an article bv historian and critic Enrique Krause in the Ju ne 1988 literary m agazine Vuelta, which Paz largely owns. But nowhere in Krause's arti­ cle, a sharply critical review of Fuentes' work, does he directly accuse Fuentes of plagiarism. At 66, Fuentes is a prolific writer. He has been publishing at least one book a year — mostly novels — work that has earned him Spain's Miguel Cervantes de the Prince of Saavedra and A sturias prizes, the highest awards for Spanish literature. KEVIN SCHOOLEY___________ Daily Texan Staff ' It's got groove. It's got meaning. Grease was the word that millions of theater and movie patrons heard throughout the seventies, and now the Bass Concert Hall will be over­ flowing with bobby socks and pom­ padours, as the musical that gave Travolta his big post-Kotter break comes through town. Currently the fifth longest-running musical of all story of T-Birds time, the Grease! and Pink Ladies, Rydell High and Greased Lightning, and (of course) Sandy and Danny burns some rub­ ber at the PAC through Oct. 1. As did the 1978 movie, the 1995 grandiose Tom my Tune Production stars some great television icons. Adrian Zmed (T./. Hooker, Bachelor Party, Dance Fever with Danny Ter- rio) returns to Rydell this time to play Danny Zucko. Zmed is familiar with the Rydell campus, as he appeared in the original Broadway production of Grease!, and starred in the film Grease 2 with Michelle Pfeif­ fer. Em m y A w ard-w inner Sally Struthers (All In The Family, Five Easy Pieces, those commercials where you can get a degree in "High School" or "T V /V C R Repair") lays down the law as Miss Lynch, and Don Most lets his voice be heard as the brassy radio jockey Vince Fontaine. Playing characters who are char­ acters is nothing new to Most, who from 1974 to 1980 was Ralph Malph on the ABC series Happy Days. No longer in the company of Potsie and The Fonz anymore, Most has focused the majority of his post-Days career on the theater. Before joining the Grease! cast, Most sharpened his theater claws by gracing the stage in Barefoot In The Park, Damn Yankees, Strike Up The Band, and by reuniting with former Happy Days co-star, Tom "M r. C ." Bosley, in the premier of A bel’s Sister. Most's stint with the Grease! company began about two months ago. During the past few weeks on tour, Most has brought a new aspect to what normally would be consid­ ered a supporting role in Grease'. Like Wolfman Jack in American G raf­ fiti, the character of Vince Fontaine has normally been more of a voice than a face. "In the original and in the movie, he [Fontaine] really only appears as the MC and in judging the dance contest. Now, I intermittently pop up through all of act one," Most said, describing the stretched-out role in the Tune production. GREASE! Starring: Don Most, Sally Struthers, Adrian Zmed Director: Jeff Calhoun Playing at: Bass Concert Hall Cost: $20-$40 Date: Through Oct. 1, Tue. - Fri. at 8 p.m., Sat. - Sun at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. the theater are w itnessing it... it interacts in a big way with the audi­ ence. I get to do a dance contest, there are sing-alongs, dedications... by the time the show is ready to begin, everyone's really hot and ready," he said. Bring your dancing shoes and poodle skirts. But, alas, one cannot talk to Don M ost without breaking down and asking him about Happy Days. Who w as cooler: Arnold or A l? Was Ralph better friends with Ritchie or like W eezer? So Potsie? Do you many questions... "Th ey've also created a w hole new pre-show where Vince Fontaine comes out as the DJ. He's doing a remote of his radio broadcast for his radio station live, and the people in Most originally auditioned for the role of "P otsie" (played by Anson Williams), but when he discovered the part w as taken, he basically cre­ ated the character of Ralph Malph I i STRLAR SOMC SOLUTIONS Artist: Starfish Label: Trance Syndicate Rating: ★ (out of five) There's a story about a harbor in Massachusetts that was plagued by an infestation of starfish. The lob- sterm en who w orked the harbor were tired of starfish clogging their nets, so they decided the answer to their problem was to cut the starfish to pieces and toss them back into the water. Of course, they'd forgotten that starfish can regenerate from even a small section cut from the body, and the problem got to be that much worse. With that in mind, I'll avoid cut­ ting Starfish's debut LP Stellar Sonic Pollu... er, Solutions to pieces, just in case the band som ehow has the regenerative qualities of its animal kingdom namesake. Instead, I'll just tell you exactly how bad it is. Somehow, after hitting the stage this spring with their overly-repeti- tive riff-rock, Starfish managed to become the latest craze, reaching that inexplicable status of "buzz band of the week" that had been vacated by Sixteen D eluxe scant weeks before. In the media frenzy that followed, the band somehow managed to reach into the churning waters and pull out a record deal with Trance Syndicate. Trance was already teetering on the ledge between respectability and the "an ything local" label status after signing the less-than-a-year-old Sixteen Deluxe and putting out their shaky-at-best BackFeedM agnetBabe. But now that Starfish is a Trance band, there are really some things to be accounted for. Starfish basically pumps out fairly palatable pop-punk riffing, packag­ ing it in two to three minute songs. It's not too bad for a Ramones meets Fugazi sound. But Starfish gets real­ ly bad when it comes to singing. H earing the syrupy-sw eet vocals pouring out in insipid, invariable verse-chorus-verse format is about as enjoyable as w atching all the CHiPs reruns in a row. mental hooks, and even sets up the vocals so that it would be possible to deliver some interesting lyrics. But instead, they opt for inane, repetitive choruses. The hooks reach in and get under the skin, but there's no weight behind them. Just listen to the non­ sense behind songs like Runaround or Rockcetera and wait for something meaningful to happen. (Thankfully the songs are short; you w on't have to waste much time) If this were some sort of statement, a self-deprecatory cry against the meaninglessness of rock music, Stel­ lar Sonic Solutions could be accept­ able as some sort of avant garde work. God knows, the work certainly picks out this fault in itself. But if it truly is a statement of sorts, it's so well-dis­ guised that I couldn't tell. If Starfish had a clue, they'd start playing all-instrumental sets (their only good songs are the instrum en­ tals Kliffordai'e and Princeton Reverb Song) and wait until a singer with something to say comes along. It would be less embarrassing for them and Trance Syndicate that way. — joe Sebastian TRACE Artist: Son Volt Label: Warner Bros. Rating: ★★★★ (out of five) Som etimes you've got to die to get some notoriety. Just ask Jackson Pollock. You can't, he's dead (that's the point). But just try to buy one of his paintings. The death of Uncle Tupelo would seem prima facie to have been a bad thing. Every time a good American rock 'n' roll band falls by the way­ side the ratio of bad bands who for som e godforsaken are allowed, neigh encouraged by the free market system to continue pro­ ducing album s to quality bands increases just that much more. reason Plus such a loss is a bummer in and of itself. But Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy, Uncle Tupelo's creative element, got to the point where they couldn't stand each other and so parted. Starfish blasts out great instru­ But Tweedy has already experi- Jay Farrar, far right, and his Son Volt bandmates Trace out their debut. enced greater success in his new musical life. His band Wilco gar­ nered instant adoration from critics and, after landing a slot on the Horde tour, gained a fan base of actual normal people. Now it's Jay Farrar and his new band Son Volt's turn. It's probably easiest to describe Sun Volt's debut Trace in negative terms. It isn 't pom pous. It isn 't obtrusive. It isn 't overproduced. And it isn't much like any of the homogeneous product that's stan­ dard radio fare these days. All of the album 's 11 tracks are put together with an elegant simplicity. And the sound is reminiscent of... well, Uncle Tupelo (duh). In fact any one of of the songs on Trace would be right at home on Anodyne, Tupelo's last outing. Farrar and bandmates texture their songs' guitar founda­ tions with subtle layers of fiddle, banjo and lap steel for a understated rock sound with country flair. But to call the m usic country would be an undeserved com pli­ ment to radio's "country" music. Trace d oesn't have any of the prepackaged melodraticism that is rampant in both country and pop music. Example: When Darius Ruck­ er (a k a Hootie) croons, "I only wanna be with you," he sounds like a singer in a bad cover band trying to pry emotion out of a Hallmark sentiment written on the back of a cereal box. When Farrar in his slight nasal drawl sings, "Both feet on the floor two hands on the w h eel/ May the wind take your troubles away," he sounds authentically rustic and road weary. Top to bottom, well actually one to 11, there is no weak spot on the album. The songs flow evenly from the bar-chordesque intensity of tracks like Route 5 to delicate acoustic tracks Windfall and Ten Second News. So quit mourning. The death of Uncle Tupelo is proving to be a good thing for all those involved. Tweedy has done well and Farrar is poised to do even better. But perhaps the biggest beneficiaries of all are the band's fans. Now there's twice as much to go around. — M ichael Bertin W eW Aim icÁ Artist: Elvis Costello Label: Rykodisc Rating: Reissue In 1984 British songw riter Elvis C ostello released Goodbye Cruel World, arguably the weakest album of his career. It also proved to be the last record he would make with his old co-conspirators the Attractions for some time. In search of a new sound, he hooked up with American guitarist T-Bone Burnett and headed off to L.A. to record with some of the great American rock 'n' roll session players. The result, which finally emerged in 1986, and now has been from the ground up with director Jerry Paris. "I think Jerry sort of had the most influence in pushing the character in a certain direction. The character (originally) was very indistinct. He was into the car club scene. That was it, with whatever dialogue. In the very opening episode, he was the kind of guy who liked to be the cen­ ter of attention. He was showing off his hickey and cracking jokes. That was the jum ping-off point," he said. From that point on, Most took full reign of the character. And when the cinem atography show changed between the second and third seasons, he really got a chance to ham it up. the of "From the second to the third year, we went from being a one- cam era show to a three-cam era show. All of a sudden, you're shoot­ ing it like a play in front of an audi­ ence. Now, it was forced into being a very talky show. It [the Malph char­ acter] had to change as a result of the format we were performing under," he said. The rest is TV history. Goodbye gray skies, hello blue. After twenty-plus years in show biz, Don Most definitely exemplifies his Ralph Malph catch phrase: "I still g o t i t ! " ■ reissued by Rykodisc, is nothing short of amazing. In King o f America, Costello final­ ly cements his command of Ameri­ can musical styles; no small achieve­ ment for a native Liverpudlian. His country songs were even good enough to be covered by Johnny Cash and George Jones. The acoustic sound of the album is up-front and personal. its effects, It's hard to single out individual songs from the original album's gen­ erous portion of 15 pieces. Little about depressed govern­ Palaces, ment housing and is Costello at his folksiest. American featuring a lovely Without Tears, accordion part from Jo-El Sonnier, tells the maudlin story of English GI brides who discover that America is far from what they'd imagined it to be. There's also the jazzy ballad, Poi­ soned Rose, in which Costello deliv­ ers an impassioned, soulful vocal. And the list of superlative tunes goes on and on. Moreover, the album ends with a trio of remarkable songs. Jack o f All Parades and Suit o f Lights, featuring the Attractions, contain some of the most stately m usic they ever made together, featuring poignantly clever lyrics like: "C an't you give us all a break/ Can't you stop breathing," and "Once I knew a girl who looked so much like Judy G arland/ that people would stop and give her money." Finally, there's Sleep o f the Just, a haunting, melancholy tale about a soldier w ho's sister is a pin­ up girl on his barracks' wall. King o f America is a fine album, but the Rykodisc reissue has made it even better. It's certainly the jew el of their Costello reissue series, so it fol­ lows that the utmost attention be paid to its preparation. The album features extensive liner notes from the man himself, accom panied by rare photos. There are also five bonus tracks from the sam e era tacked on at the end. And as an extra bonus, those w ho buv the limited edition get a CD of six essential live tracks featuring Costello backed by key players from the King o f America sessions. Kudos to Rvko for setting a new standard in CD reissues. — Michael Jolly Cast of ‘Twelfth Night’ keeps good company Page 10 Thursday, September 28, 1995 T h e D a i l y T e x a n ARRIVAL comes to this Thursday and Friday Open ‘til 3AM $1 w/ student I.D. M U S K H & S m F i , N A s s 0 c 1 A T i O N MUSICIAN M A G A Z I N E $1.98 a t tha soo r § r *2 | ■ e C £ r c a»'WR E ?§ f? f c £► -*• r? 3= r* t . / / / / # # .-tjr ksT1 3? tic k e ts at S ? Ticket C enters « 5 O N L Y % SPlNSlilD 11: § Z ROCK t h e D aily Texan n 1 k i l l ! i TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK FOR YOURS CALL 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 (Paul Norton) who spend the major- ity of their time either drunk or making tun of Malvolio, a stiff and pretentious steward for Olivia. He is the brunt of many jokes and is locked up for being loony. The char­ acter of Malvolio is played wonder­ fully bv Ehren Christian, who also happens to be a UT doctoral student in vocal performance. The fact that Christian appears a totally different person in street clothes from his character is indicative of his acting ability. He has that talent of throw­ ing himselt into his character, mak­ ing Malvolio one that the audience can relate to as well as laugh. And Christian is not even a veteran actor. I am a singer bv trade," Christian said. "The people here have been real encouraging.” An opportunity like this is an opportunity to gain practical acting experience, he said, adding he w ould like to do some acting year- round. 1 learn a lot from watching them ether actors] work, Christian said. ’. am honing stage skills that I don't get to do in opera." He said it is difficult to balance course work and performance, but that is not a major problem because he i- a graduate student. Other actors who are undergraduates have a more difficult time. Elisha Hipólito, who portrays the charac- U rs Viola and Cesario is enrolled for 18 hours at the University. Hipólito said balancing school and acting is difficult, but she has SUMMER (HIM ] CLASSICS: A U S T I N ’ S M O V I E P A L A C E SCI-fl MASTERPIECE WED. - FRI T H E A B Y S S the d i r e c t o r '5 cut [Starring ED HARRIS. M ARY ELIZABETH M ASTRAN TO N IO & M ICH AEL BIEHN ] (1989) W ed., Thu. & Fri. - 7:30 Back bv popular demand! The restored director's cut of lames C am eron's sp ectacular underw ater adventure saga is his rnastenvork. A suspenseful. one- of-a-kind movie experience, it weaves a taut tale of an cC-rig s crew who must recover a downed nuclear sub. Stunning. Oscar-winning effects, incredible sound engineering, and a stimng Alan Silvestri score add up to an absolute BIG SCREEN must-see! [Super35mm) (D O LB Y STEREO) [RATED PG-13] Evenings/$5 Matinees (before 61/ $4 Students w ID / S3.50 713 Congress Ave. IN F O : 472-5411 Kids under 12/$3.50 WTD ALL SEATS S3 A N D R EA B U C K L E Y __________ D a ily Texan S ta ff The Bard is back in Austin. This time in the form of Twelfth Night, or mat You Will, a play with so many mistaken identities it could give Three's Company a run for its money. from All of Shakespeare's wonder is presented to you by the Austin Shakespeare Company at Rock Island in Zilker Park. The company transports the audience back to ancient Illyria with the use of one stage. The lack of props does not the performance. detract Instead, it allows the audience con­ centrate on the diverse personalities. In common Shakespeare fare, cen­ ters aroifnd a noble, Duke Orsino (James Lane) who is in love with Olivia, a wealthy countess, (Amy Lee Pearsall) who of course lusts after someone else. In this case, that someone else is the king's servant, THEATER REVEW TWELFTH NIGHT Starring: James Lane Amy Lee Pearsall, Elisha Hipólito. Ehren Christian, Bill Durham Paul Norton Director: Noel Koran Playing at: Zilker Rock Island Zilker Park, 454-2273 Cost: Free Date: Through Oct 8 Thu Sur. 8 p.m. Viola, (Elisha Hipólito) who i- pos­ ing as Orsino's servant Cesaiio Set' It is just like when Jack thought Chrissy was pregnant But since this is a corned\ thi c is no suicide or killing ust ots ot osi and playful banter The sou . of is Si: Arc. i \n this bantering S Aguecheek (Bill D u u ostv Belch (Scot Purke\. it r PNf. jvm 1» nunc* 4 ‘SS - H ’ST r u i s n R \ i >0 7 T f 1 2 ‘OC A M 5 OO 7 3 0 9 3 5 11 4 5 n i A i i i r m i / M il 4 30 7 00 9 30 12 Of ^ MEET THE FEEBLES r o a m i o r - i . i 21 r* L LvHodohiiv á 7J-* General Cinema BARGAIN LATINEES EVERY DAY All SHOWS STARTING BEFORE TONIGHT IS COLLEGE NIGHT ALL SEATS $5.00 AFTER 6PM • valid coliege id required H IG H LA N D IO ,7 A 1-35 or M ID D L f F IS K V IL L E RD 454-9562 UMSTm»(0 HEROES 45 3 4$ $ 45 ! X 10 10 PG’ 3 W .F H A C K E R S : 50 5 10 7 33 ’0 10 -G’ 3 DtfeTt. THX C L O C K E R S 1 5C * 33 ' 05 * 45 c TTTY D E S B C R A D O *• « 4 1$ 7 H » JO * *HX Mflfc M O RTAL KO M BA T MO 4 SO 7:15 9:*S »G13 DOtr TH E U S U A L S U S R E C T S 2 33 5.-00 7 15 ♦ 35 ( DOIP B A R G E R O U S M IN D S 1 45 ; x ■* 2C 5 5C S Ü0LP TO TRLK AMOLTT : ’ ¡ t í O J C l ü t STEREO • 45 3 « ‘ 35 ’ 3Z « 25 G SHttO LPOLlO 14 2 :15 S X 1 15 EG n « C G REA T H ILLS 8 ,7 4, US 183 8 GREAT HILLS TRAIL 7 9 4 -S 0 7 6 ' X 4 OC ' 03 » 45 • THX S E V E N OS -WC SCREES S SCREES OSE SCREES -WC 2:DC 4 SO 7 30 10 15 S DOtB A N G U S 1 10 3 'C 5 10 7 10 9 10 RG13 STEREO TO W O H G PO O 1:45 4 3C 7 40 10-10 9G13 DOir L A S T OF T H E O O G M EN 1 30 4 20 7 10 9 40 <>G DOUT D E S P E R A D O 2 10 4 40 7 25 10 05 R THX MRU B A B E ' 35 3 05 5 05 G STEREO T H E P R O P H E C Y 1 50 4 15 7 05 9 20 R STEREO W A T ER W O R LD 7 00 9 45 RG13 STEREO G IFT CER TIFIC A TES ON SALE E A R P IE R C IN G C L O T H IN G J E W E L R Y O p e n 1 :3 0 -5 :3 0 8 1 2 W . 12th 4 7 2 - 3 3 1 6 PRESIDIO THEATRES W E R E B IG O N B A R G A IN S HEY STUDENTS' YES FOUCS ' u t ! nght Horn S t- X rts 313* omy $4 25 r r , . • . •• a: ••• • • a x se^ors S3 50 • ana on*, S5 25 *or aduh a a m tssW For > ii.sje Only S' STUDENT DISCOUNTS DAILY WITNVAUD STUDENT I.D. Times Va.n) tor Friday September 29. 1995 Only AS_________ DTS D 2 'AL *5 945 ' I 31____________ :>j,g* 5 - RIVERSIDE 8 IN RIVERSIDE MALL 448-0008 SEVEN (R) :2 ; 4 ; ; ie L lM 3 liJE DRESS(R , 002 5<<: MOONL SHT AND VALENTINO Ri 12 20 2 3C5-aC~3C9 5 £ l2 l5 ■ALiOfl» T*f CURSE il/C iH E.ra : • 2 <5 2 ' 5 5 30 S DC ' . 31 '2 42__________ DOLBY S= ~ m fdo ’-M s fop f e n £ j j í ew * 12 15 2 3S 5 o: ^ 3 3 1 0 X 1 2 2 :___________ DOLBY $s DESPERADO¡Ri ' I 45 3 ' 5 S 33 5 X 10 3512 42 CLOCKERS(Rj ’ :>: 4 ’.5 7 X 345 '2 3C UNSTRUNG HEROES (PG) 1215 215 4X17 1 5 9 30 12 00 DOl S y SR KflB MSB DOLBt SR D0LSV SR D0l B> SP VILLAGE CINEMA 2700 ANDERSON 451-8352 UNZIPPED (R) 3 005 30800 1310__________ BANDIT QUEEN (NR) 2:30 5 00 7.30 KIDS (NR) INO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED} UL2B ________________ THE BROTHERS MCMULLEN (R) ' 15 4 45 7.15 9 50 SISTER MY SISTER 2 45 5 15 7 45 10 20 DOLBY s 3a Maria (Rebecca Gebhart) and Feste (Paul Norton) in Twelfth Night. performed in UT productions while enrolled, and this is not that differ­ ent. She said this is a "different aspect" than performing opera and provides a unique opportunity. "You have to take these opportu­ nities where you find them," Hipóli­ to said. These two characters were not the only ones associated with the Uni­ versity. From actors such s James Lane, who portrays Duke Orsino, and Jon Wiley who plays Viola's brother, Sebastian, to Director Noel Koran, others are currently working on or have already completed studying at the University. Twelfth Night is a great Friday or Saturday night outing, provided the weather is decent. Don't forget to bring blankets, ice chests and spare change for when the characters beg you for money during intermission; they are damn persuasive. MÜSQUITE GRILLED STEAKS, SEAFOOD & PASTA «hISoixne • 479-0817 • Open 5pm N^itv • Reservareis Accepted COMPLIMENTARY ENTREE -$12.50 max.- il I One FREE entree «iiH purchase ol entree oí equal or greater value [Moximuni _ ol $12.50 oF per entree [Valid lor up to 10 people Sun-fn, and on Sot. ¡I seated before 6pm or abet 9pm Not valid wilh other ofiers Not valid Oct 20 1 131, NoO, 417,11,22 L 28. Ok. 3l, f é U Exp*» 10/26/95 m u o r w j I DJNCE ACROSS TEXiS G e n e ra l C in e m a TONITE & FRIDAY* legendary Reggae Superstar Burning Spear w / The Lotions Sat.. Sept. 30 Cingbreadmen King Valentine Sun.. Oct. 1 NCJW presents a benefit for Hippv Joe McDermott • Storytellers • Puppets & More 2-4 pm Buffalo Tom Fri.. Oct. 1 Í* Superchunk Little Sister Fri.. Oct. 20* Joe Ely And at the Electric Lounge Oct 1&2* Oct. 6&7* Vic Ckouiutt Jonathan Richman *Adv. Tlx @ Waterloo 405 W. 2nd 477-0461 Club Listings THURSDAY NIGHT COLLEGE NIGHT EMOTIONS LIVE ON STAGE Discounts at Door w ith College ID FRIDAY M el Garrett SATURDAY Ken Ryan Happy Hour 4-7 Wed-Fri Longhorn Cafe Opening Oct 9 Call 441-9101 2201 E. Ben White r n i / i z c b M N I G H T t c COLLEGE N IG H T ! Show Your Student ID Thursdays After 6:00 PM and Get In For $ 5 .0 0 HIGHLAND 10 I-35 at Middle Fiskville Rd. 454-9562 GREAT HILLS US 193 & Great Hills Trail 794-8076 Look on specially marked cans of ESS* in UT vending machines for your concession discounts from General Cinema. Expires December 7, 1995 Voted M S I P l l l k On University of Jems Campus Jemn Best £ist -1991 1 9 2 6 E. R iverside 448-D A V E 3 0 0 0 D u v a l By P o s s e E as t 4 7 6 -D A V E 415 W. 2 4 th Th e C a s t i l i a n 472-D A V E We're Always Boiling I la s t, Iresh D elivery SUNDAY • OCTOBER 29 AUSTIN MUSIO HALL TICKETS SOLD EXCLUSIVELY TO STUDENTS FOR FIRST WEEK OF SALES TICKETS O N LY $17.50 + S/C WITH COLLEGE I.D. TICKETS u n i v e r s i t y C O -O P AND so* V " £ 1£ f j : £ " G£r OR Ca" fo Charae 1-800-966-SHOW AVAILABLE A T ANY STAR TICKET OUTLET INCLUDING B ! Flarge Cheese Steak S trom boli PhülY Chees« Steak Stromboli with oodles of Mozzarella,White American Cheese & a boodle of Beef Steak , wrapped in Double Dave s Great Pizza Crust It s Mouthwatering! $799 *9 80 Value I I I ■ ■ I I I ■ I | C h o o se fro m : T h e W o rk s T h e V e g g ie T h e M e a t e a te r D a v e 's F a ve T h e B a rb e c u e C h ic k e n One Medium Pizza Second Medium s&99 Only 5 Mata C r * 2 FREE VtfluuU W /Purchasa of 7 Rods 3 FREE PeftwU * . I ¡ \ 1 ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ¡ ■ a ■ I I i M > i a H e I ■ ■ ■ > ■ ■ a ■ Jm ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ wAt ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a J T h e D a ily T e x a n Thursday, September 28, 1995 Page 11 H ig h lan d 10, 1-35 at M id d le F isk v ille R oad, 454-9562 H ackers 7:30, 10:10 M oonlight & V alentino 1:25, 3:35, 5:45, H ackers 2:20 B raveheart 8 U sual Suspects 2:30, 5:15, 7:25, 9:40 U nstrung H eroes 1:50, 3:50, 5:50, 7:50, 8, 10:10 9:50 B abe 1:45, 3:40, 5:35 D angerous M inds 2:45, 5 D esperado 1:40, 4:15, 7:10, 9:30 A pollo 73 2:15, 5:30, 8:15 B ig Green 2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:30 Clockcrs 1:50, 4:30, 7:05, 9:45 S teal Big, Steal Little 1:30, 4:10, 7, 10 G reat H ills C inem a 8, 9828 G reat H ills T ra il, 794-8076 B ig Green 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:30 Sei>en 1, 4, 7, 9:45 Seven 2, 4:50, 7:30, 10:15 To W ong Foo 1:45, 4:30, 7:40, 10:10 H alloween 12:45, 2:55, 5:10, 7:15, 9:20 Last o f the D ogm en 7:10, 9:40 D esperado 2:10, 4:40, 7:25, 10:05 D evil in a Blue D ress 12:35, 2:50, 5:05, 7:35, 10 B abe 12:40, 2:30, 4:30 L ak ecreek F estival 8 T h eater, 13729 R esearch B lvd ., 219-9195 D evil in a Blue Dress 2:40, 5, 7:30, 9:40 The Big G reen 2:30, 4:40, 7, 9:20 S teal Big, Steal Little 2:20, 5, 7:40, 10:15 Seven 2:20, 4:50, 7:20, 9:50 H alloween 2:50, 5:10, 7:40, 9:30 Usual Suspects 2:10, 4:30, 7:10, 9:30 D angerous M inds 3, 5:20, 7:50, 10 R iv ersid e 8, 2410 E. R iv ersid e D rive, 448-0008 Seven 12:10, 2:45 5:15, 7:45, 10:15, Devil in a Blue D ress 12, 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45, m idnight M oonlight & V alentino 12:20, 2:30, 5, 7:30, 9:55, 12:15 H allow een 1, 3:15, 5:45, 8:15, 10:30, To W ong Foo 12:15, 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10:05, D esperado 12:45, 3, 5:30, 8, 10:30, 12:40 Clockers 1, 4:15, 7, 9:30, 12:15 U nstrung Heroes 12, 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30, 12:45 12:30 12:30 8, 10:40 10:05 9:30 10:30 U nstrung Heroes 12:15, 2:15, 4:30, 7, The U sual Suspects 12:30, 3, 5:30, 8, C lockers 11:45, 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 H ackers 11:45, 2 Som ething to Talk About 5:15, 7:30, 9:55 D angerous M inds 12:30, 2:45, 5:15, 7:75, 10:05 L a k e h ills 4, 2428 Ben W hite Blvd., 444-0552 Shoiogirls 2:15, 5, 7:45, 10:20 Show girls 4:15, 7, 9:45 U nstrung H eroes 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:30 To Wong Foo 2:30, 4:45, 7:30, 9:55 Hackers' 2 * N orthcross 6, 2525 W. A nd erson Lane, 454-5147 T he Usual Suspects 12:20, 2:50, 5:15, 7:50, 10:10, 12:20 Seven 11:45, 2:20, 5, 7:35, 10:10 D angerous M inds 12, 2:30, 5:15, 7:45, 9:50, m idnight D evil in a Blue Dress 12:15, 2:40, 5, 7:30, 9:45 12:10 H allow een 12:30, 3, 5:30, 8, 10, 12:15 T he Big Green 11:45, 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, K ids 10 S ister M y S ister 2:45, 5:15, 7:45, 10:20 L in co ln 6, 6404 1-35 N orth, 454-6469 D evil in a Blue Dress 12, 2:10, 4:30, 7:20, 9:40 Seven 11:45, 2:20, 4:45, 7:30, 10:10 Seven 7, 9:45 To W ong Foo 12:15, 2:40, 5:10, 7:45, 10 B raveheart 5:15, 8:40 H allow een 5:25, 8, 10 Living in O blivion 4:55, 9:50 H ogg A ud itorium , 475-6666 Thu. 28 Fri. 29-Sat. 30 Black Cat 7 My Father is a H ero 7 W estgate 8, W estgate M all, 832-2636 Seven 11:30, 2:15, 5, 7:45, 10:30 Seven 1:30, 4:30, 7:15, 10 A rabian Knight 12, 2, 4, 6 C lockers 1, 4, 7, 9:45 M ortal Kombat 12:15, 2:30 D angerous Minds 12:30, 3, 5:45, 8:15, 10:35 H ackers 12:30, 3, 5:30, 8, 10:15 Angus 12:15, 2:45, 5:15, 7:30, 9:30 Last o f the Dogmen 8, 10:20 U sual Suspects 5:15 B raveheart 8:15 $1.50 A qu arius 4, 1500 S. P leasant V alley R oad, 444-3222 The Net 7:30, 9:40 Lord o f Illusions 7:40, 9:45 Species 7:35, 9:50 Friday 7:20, 9:30 $1.50 W estgate 3, 4608 W estg ate Blvd., 892-2775 Free W illy 2 7 :15 U nder S iege 2: Dark Territory 9:55 Lord o f Illusions 7:30, 9:45 The A m azing Panda A dventu re 7, 9:30 D o b ie T h eater, D o b ie M all, 472-3456 N adja 4:50, 7:30, 9:35, 11:45 (noon, 2:30 Sat. and Sun.) Tie Died 7:25, m idnight (2:20 Sat. and Sun.) Sun. 1 M on. 2 Fue. 3 W ed. 4 Jeffrey 4:45, 7:15, 9:45, 11:50 (11:45, 2:15 Sat. and Sun.) Sun. 1 S how girls 4:30, 7, 9:30, m idnight (11:30, 2 Sat. and Sun.) Snake in the Eagle's Shadow 9 My Father is a H ero ' 11:15 The Unbearable Lightness o f Being 4 My Father is a H ero 5 Black Cat 7:15 Snake in the Eagle's Shadow 9:15 Black Cat 7:15 The U nbearable Lightness o f Being 8:45 Une Fem m e D ouce 7 Black Cat 7 Snake in the Eagle s Shadow 9 Art fo r T eachers o f Children 7 A M ore Perfect Union 9 Burnt by the Sun 11 Children 7 Burnt by the Sun 9 A M ore Perfect Union 11 Art f o r T eachers o f Children 5 Burnt by the Sun 7 A M ore P erfect Union 9 T exas U nion T h eatre, 475-6666 Thu. 28 Fri. 29-Sat. 30 Art f o r Teachers o f m idnight R ocky H orror Picture Show m idnight A rbor 7, 10000 R esearch B lvd., 346- 6937. Steal Big, Steal L ittle 11:45, 2:30, 5:15, M oonlight & V alentino 12, 2:30, 5, 7:30, V illa g e C inem a Art, 2700 A nd erson L ane, 451-8352 U nzipped 3, 5:30, 8, 10:10 B andit Queen 2i30, 5, 7:30 T he Brothers M cM ullen 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:30 9:50 LIVE MUSIC A N O T H E R CUP 608 W. 24th Street, 472-629(1 T hu. 28 R enee W ood w ard . King C h eese Sat. 30 N athan M oore, Lisa Fain Sat. 30 A N T O N E S 2915 G u ad alu p e St., 4 7 4 -5314 T hu. 28 W .C. C lark Blu es Revue C.J. C h enier & H is Red- Fri. 29 Hot L ouisiana Band Sto ry v ille, M alford M illig an ,T om m y Sh an n on , C hris Layton , D avid G rissom , D avid H olt G uy Forsy th Band Su n. 1 M on. 2 M alford M illig an , D erek O 'B rien , L arry Fu lch er, R iley O sb ou rn , G ib b D roll W ed. 4 R hythm C hild, The B o rrow ers A U S T IN O U T H O U S E 3510 G u ad alu p e St., 451-2266 T hu. 28 T exas In stru m en ts, T he C leav ers Fri. 29 T h e L ib rarian s Sat. 30 E ric B lak ely , H erm an the G erm an and d a s C o w b oy , L au g h in g Dogs, Aunt B e e 's First P rize B eets, T erri H end rix, L o st John & B oom er, Jubal C lark Please see Live Music, page 12 HTHE Open M on.-Sat. until 1:30 at night 24th & San A n to n io Established 1962 ‘Unwanted Hair Problems?” A t Jean’S w e offer: 1 Q ua lity P ro fe ssio na l services ■ Private & relaxed a tm o sp h e re A p p o in tm e n ts tal on tim e C o n fid e n tia lity s| 459-6353 452-5656 . _ ANDERSON LN Mon-Sat 8 1 2 0 Research Blvd. 19am-9pm by Laff Stop STUDY ABROAD Semester, Sum m er and Year Programs Ecuador • Spain England • Erance Canada • Mexico Costa Rica • Italy STUDIES - A B R O A D 817 W. 24th St. Austin, TX 78705 480-8522 •SINCE 1987* Stephen Farber, M O V IE U N E PLUS FRIDAY & SATURDAY H appy Hour till 10pm , No C over till 10 pm C o n te f o r t h e P e c a n St* F e s tiv a l Live M usic O utsid e A ll Day S a t. and Sunday Come watch all the football games and join our quarterback club. GREAT DRINK SPECIALS PER QUARTER AND PER TOUCHDOWN WHERE EVERYBODY MEETS ON SIXTH STREET 508 E. 6th Street, two blocks west of I-35 LAKE TRAVIS • AUSTIN, TEXM AI 1 OH 56.95 per person Monday-Fajitas (AH EAT Wednesday-Sirloin Steak Friday-Catfish EVERY WEEK XT'? w w OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 2 6 6 1683 S a fe R id e H o m e AVOID DRINKING AND DRIVING Let UT DDP Get You Home! EDPUT Designated Dnver Program 471-5200 Thurs. - Sat., 11pm - 3am For a FREE. SAFE cab ride home CALL . . . The UT Designated D river P rog ram p rovides free taxicab rides for L T students and up to 3 guests (student or non-student), w h o are ' too intoxicated to drive, to one destination. 1 lours of operation are T h u rsd ay through Saturday, 11pm to 3am , excluding breaks and holidays. You m ust show a valid L T ID to the taxicab d river for verification. UT OOP will onlv take you to o n e destination, the hom e of the student who called DPP. It the oth er p eople want to go to another destination, they will h ave to p ay the fare. Please tip your cab driver. F c ; more inform ation, contact STU D EN T HEALTH CENTER Cam pus Alcohol and Drug Education Programfl NICOLE KIDM AN GIVES THE BEST PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR. She's this year's dead-on lock for on Oscar nomination." -R o d Lurie, KM PC-710 "NICOLE KIDM AN DELIVERS A KILLER PERFORMANCE. Van Sant deftly blends film, video interviews and headlines." - Stephen Saban, DETAILS THE BLACKEST, MOST WICKED COMEDY IN AGES. NICOLE KIDM AN IS AS G O O D AS SHE IS BEAUTIFUL- AND THAT'S AS G O O D AS IT GETS." - Patrick Sfoner, PBS FLICKS "NICOLE KIDM AN IN THE BEST PERFORMANCE OF HER CAREER. A jaunty in-your-face fable fo r our time." - Bruce Williamson, PLAYBOY OUTSTANDING CINEMATIC ENTERTAINMENT. DON'T MISS ITS - Paul Wunder, WBAI NICOLE KIDM AN DEVIOUSLYI IS DELICIOUS. It is her best v, performance." .■ G eorg e Perrnachio, KFMB-TV "OUTRAGEOUSLY'. ENTERTAINING :&j AND PROVOCATIVE. FUNNY, SHOCKING AND WICKEDLY r t PACED. NICOLE I KID M AN DELIVERS | A DELICIOUSLY W in y AND CAPTIVATING PERFORMANCE." - Bill Diehl, ABC RADIO NETWORK : KID M AN IS TERRIFIC A VERY FUNNY FILM LIKELY TO EARN/ NICOLE KID M AN B AN OSCAR N O M IN ATIO N ." - Jeff Craig, SIX7Y SECOND PREVIEW A ll she wanted was a attention P ag e 12 Thursday, September 28, 1995 T h e D a ily T e x a n P E R R \ -C A S T A N E D A LIBR A R Y 4 9 5-43 00 T h e Ruth Stephan P oetry C ollection O v e r 5,000 books o f p o etry av a li­ a b le for in-librarv use onlv S ix th floor area 6A W O M E N & T H E IR W O R K 1~10 Lavaca St 4 ~ '-1 0 6 4 "The Book Re-C onfigured by I s fem ale T exas artists T h ro u g h O ct. 7 G E N E R A L L IB R A R IE S 495-4348 "C onsum ed: A m erica’s Passion for Food"' G ro u n d floor. Main Building until O ct. 17 T E X A S U N IO N G A LL ER 'i 475-6636 "C ro ss Cultural Legacies T hird floor T hrough Sept 30 A U S T IN M U SEU M OF A R T at Laguna G loria 3809 W 35th St Robert W ick Through Oct 15 458-8191 HARR\ R A N SO M CEN TER Seventh floor Mirror, Mirror Costume P -ign for the Am erican and Bntn-h Stage 18~0s-1970s 1 hrough Sopt 2Ú H A RR'i R A N SO M C EN TER Seventh floor 4 " 1-8^44 "History in Poetry 472 B.C. to 1*494: From the Persian W ar to Pocahontas to the T exas Range Wars Harrv Ransom C enter W renn Room M onday through Fridav 9 a.m . to 4:30 p.m through O ct. 6 A U STIN M U SE U M OF A R T at Laguna G loria 3809 W. 35th St., 45S-B191 Cerem onv of Spirit Nature and Memory’ ::i C ontem p erare Latino A rt” Through N ov. 5 Talk Radio H vde Park Theatre, 511 W 43rd St 499-1 :\ s Through Sept 30 Oleanna C apitol City Plavhouse 214 W Fourth St 472-2966 Through Sept. 30 C abaret State T heatre, 719 C ongress A ve 472-5143 W ed s.-Su n s., through Oct. 1 TH E BA C K ') A R D A T BEE C A V E 13101 W H\v\ 71 2 63-9707 Thu 28 W illie N elson & F .im ih Fri 29 s.it 30 lo h n Trine P am TilTs B R O K E N SP O K E 3201 S L am ar Rlvd 4 42-61 89 Thu 28 B ru ce R obiso n Fri. 29 D erailers Sat 30 T ue. 3 W ed. 4 D erailers Jo h n n v Bush D eb ro ah P eters C A F E Z IN O 5416 P ark crest D riv e 453-2233 Thu. 28 C h u ck Pinnell Fri 29 M ad y k a v e T rie Sat 30 N an cv W ebb Sandv A llen Dan Hall A ttitu n es Tue. 3 W ed 4 B en Jo h n so n s p h o to g ra ­ phy ex h ib itio n o p en in g C A R O U S E L L O U N G E 1110 E. 52nd St 4 5 2 -6 “ 90 Thu. 28 Ja y C lark F n 29 Sat 30 Ja y C lark Tue. 3 R o ck et 69 lav C lark C E N T R A L M A R K E T CAFE 3 8 th S tre e t an d N o rth L am ar B lv d 206-1000 Thu. 2 s Step h en D oster. L eighton H am ilton Fri. 29 Beto v los F airlan es Sat. 30 T he Brew Su n. 1 G len A lvn M on. 2 O p en M ic w ith Eric B lak ely C H E L SE A S T R E E T PUB & G R IL L B arton C reek Sq u are M all, 327-7794 Fri. 29 R o n n ie Lee Ew ing Sat. 30 R on n ie Lee Ew ing UVE MUSK (continued) 1 ow n Sw m gtet Fri 29 D ale W atson B ru ce & Sat 30 C h arlie R obison 1 he D erailers The C o rn ell Hurd Band W ed 4 Kri> McKav - Too M am G u itars THE C O P P E R T A N K 504 Trimtv St 4 ~ S - S 4 4 4 Fri 2° Sat. 30 A rrival Rat R anch D O N V S D E PO T 1600 \\ Fifth St 478-0336 Thu 28 K ira 1 v n r Fri 29 M cC on ag hv D onn 4t T he S ta tio n M asters Sat 30 D onn & The S ta tio n M on 2 Tue. 3 M asters 50s M u sic w ith D onn and the Sm o o th Tones D onn & The S ta tio n M asters W ed. 4 M u rp h v ’s Law E L E C T R IC L O U N G E 302 B ow ie Road 4 ”6-3873 Thu. 28 1 ow b row W ookie Fri Sat 2 9 30 Su n. 1 M on. Tue. 3 W ed. 4 D u m p tru ck Sick L ittle M onkey D anny D elm g er B rave C o m b o, Jav elin b o o t W an n ab ees M agnolia Sp oon T h e H o rm on es V ic C h esn u tt, The F riend s of D ean M artin ez, Bill W ise V ic C h esn u tt, T h e F rien d s o f D ean M artin ez, Bill W ise, W ham o H eath er N ova, B en Folds Five, M ered ith M iller A sy lu m S tre et Sp an k ers, G iflig an Stu m p E M O 'S 603 Red R iver S t., 477-E M O S Thu. 28 B aboon, P olio, A nd rom ed a Strain and 1 he W anted S.it 30 S tarfish , P laid R etina, Arm Mon 2 U n ico rn M ag ic 1 ue 3 The P resid en ts o f the U n ited S tates Anti N ow here 1 eag u e, B l a n k s D ead End C ru isers W ed 4 H agfish , For L o v e Not Lisa FA T T U ESD A Y 508 F . Sixth S t 474-0632 F n 29 Sat. 3 0 Tov S u b s Pet P eeve Sun. 1 29 30 H O LE IN TH E W ALL 2538 G u ad alu p e St., 472-5599 T h u .28 The G av Sp o rtscasters Fri The T ailg aters Sat lesu s C h rist Su perflv, Gomez, A ltim on t 69 M ag n olias, D ow n, The L ib rarian s H ild eg ard , Dan Israel Jon ny G ou d ie, B reedlove, Rick B rou ssard , Tonv & M iles C attleg u ard , L ong G one D ad dy. Lone S ta r Q u een s R o ck et Fuel Soda Pop, Paul M in o r's Su p er Ego, Hot W heels Jr. M on 2 W ed 4 Tue. 3 JA Z Z -6T H S T R E E T 212 E. Sixth St., 479-0474 Thu. 28 Fri 29 Sat. 30 Jazz Pharaohs The Brew Brian R obertson L IB E R T Y LUN CH 405 W . Second St., 477-0461 T h u .28 B urning Sp ear Fri. 29 B urn in g Sp ear Sat. 30 G in g 'b read m en , King Tue. 3 W ed. 4 V alen tin e P resid en ts of th e USA Spot TH E C O N T IN E N T A L CLUB 1315 S. C o n g ress A ve., 441-2444 Thu. 28 Je sse D ayton, The Big Fri 29 H erm an th e G erm an and das C o w b oy , O ld '9 7 s, M iss Xanna D o n 't M A G G IE M A E 'S 512 T rin itv St., 478-8562 Thu. 28 B oiyoy, Be W ires ^ 9 Fri. 29 K id stu ff, T he K raze Sat. 30 K id stu ff, T h e K raze T u e. 3 W ed. 4 Be W ires Be W ires T H E O L D A L L IG A T O R G R IL L 3003 S. L am ar B lvd., 444-6117 T hu . 28 B rian R obertson Fri. 29 T erry E beling Sat. 23 R ich Sto ck to n , K in d red Su n. 1 Soul K az, Jazz and Blu es T H E R IT Z U P S T A IR S 320 E. Sixth St., 474-4748 I hu. 28 H eath er B en n ett T rio Fri. 29 B lu e M onks Sat. 30 R ose and B enn ett D IS C O V E R Y IN C U B A T O R 2002 M an or Road, 495-9448 F ri. 29 O liv e Sat. 30 E u g en e's Ja z z Jam Su n. 1 O p en Jam Sessio n M on. 2 O p en M ic T ue. 3 B est of O pen M ic T H E S A X O N PU B 1320 S. L am ar B lvd., 448-2552 T hu . 28 R u sty W ier, O lin M u rrell Fri. 29 S a t.30 D on W alser, Jon E m ery V an W ilks, Ju liea n n e B anks M o nte M o n tg om ery Y o u n g and R obin son , Ju liean n e B anks, Jo an n a H ow erton , D ick ie Lee Erw in F orlin i & C ross, Jan et L yn n, Son G eezin slaw Su n. 1 T u e. 3 W ed. 4 T O U L O U S E 402 E. Sixth St., 478-0744 T hu . 28 A rrival A rrival Fri. 29 Sp in fx Sat. 30 V E L V E E T A R O O M 521 E. Sixth St., 469-9116 Fri. 29 H ank K rem er Sat. 30 H ank K rem er ■ , S r *z< m ’"•••tlIfUfflIíHÍi CUP-0' * A W Í 8 'SmKtntiHwm*#1 Y o u r l i f e b e f o r e U F C U ’ s C o m p u t e r L o a n u ,«■ ^m íiíüüííi CUP-0- * a m e H ■ • jrrir m r p r t i i._ J Í ,M- _”r Tv ,3 I Y o u r l i f e a f t e r U F C U ’s C o m p u t e r L o a n T h e 7.9 % S t u d e n t C o m p u t e r L o a N How can University Federáis Compuier Loan make once you get your computer you can take advantage your life better? 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Featuring a tu r f inspired outsole for superior traction and durability, Hexalite® material in the heel for lightweight cushioning, a molded EVA midsole for further cushioning and a leather upper to encourage breathability. This shoe beh eves in women athletes. eg 1 9 9 5 R eebok In te rn a tio n a l L td. All R ights R eserved REEB O K and H E X A L IT E are reg is tered tra d e m a rk s of R eebok In ternatio na' REEBOK COMPETITOR and REEBOK apparel are available at the following locations: Academy Oshman's Super Sports 800/ 752-9674 Tech, Baylor kick off final season of Southwest Conference football BRIAN DAVIS Daily Texan Staff The Southw est Conference had its biggest chance of the season last w eek to grab national headlines with victories. But after only two of the seven teams w on, the SWC now m ust focus on its ow n race w ith Tier 1 bowl alliance status going to the champion. The Texas Tech Red Raiders and the Baylor Bears open the conference schedule Saturday w ith a gam e that neither coach likes to have this early in the season. "We never have liked this gam e at this tim e in the schedule," Texas Tech coach Spike Dykes said. "A lot of schedule changed, but it's a part of conference football. It's som ething w e live w ith b u t d o n 't particularly like." folks h ave their Tech w as the only SWC team idle last week, and Dykes used the open week to w ork on fundam entals for his y o u n g er players. But after w atching tapes of Baylor, Dykes could be m istaken for a Bear fan. "Baylor has a dangerous team, a good b len d of size and speed," Dykes said. "They have had four great recruiting classes, and their running backs [A nthony H odge and Jerod Douglas] rem ind you of Lee- land McElroy and Rodney Thomas for A&M." Last year in Lubbock, Tech jum ped out to a 21-0 lead by half- time and never looked back on its w ay to a 38-7 final. Tech quarterback Zebbie Lethridge was 14-of-34 for 194 y ard s w ith one interception. R unning back Byron H an sp a rd started the Tech scoring w ith a 34- yard first-quarter touchdow n run. "Last year, they were com ing off an A&M loss and w e played our SWC FOOTBALL best gam e last year," Dykes said. "Everything w e did w orked, and everything they did d id n 't w ork." But Tech is no different from other football team s w here injuries are concerned. Split end Field Scovell and defensive end Tony Daniels will miss the gam e against Baylor. "W e have had no consistency to w ork w ith in the passing gam e," D ykes said. "Q uarterbacks get way too m uch credit w h en things go good, and d o n 't get enough w hen they go b id . We just dropped two big, big, big gains [against Missouri] that w e just d ro p p ed ." Tech could get som e relief this w eek w hen form er q u arterback Tony D arden moves to w ide receiv­ er. The sophom ore w as w illing to change positions in an attem pt to get m ore playing time. "H e was positive to a m ove and he's got a lot of com petitive nature," Dykes said. "A t times he looks like a true, bona fide w ide receiver." The move will give quarterback L ethridge an o th er ta rg e t going against a Baylor squad that is com ­ ing off a 14-0 sh utou t of N.C. State. Baylor linebacker L aC urtis Jones w as nam ed SWC D efensive Player of the Week for his 13 tackles, 19 assists, tw o sacks, a n d tw o pass deflections against the Wolfpack. Baylor coach C h u ck Reedy believes that his aw ard is just a cred­ it to the team 's defense. "H e had a good ball gam e, b u t he alw ays has good gam es," Reedy said. "It just goes to o u r defense for getting a shutout. "This is the best football team I've had, b u t I've said th at all along," Reedy said. "They h ave m ore expe- SWC FOOTBALL Conference Baylor TCU TEXAS Texas A&M T exas Tech Rice SMU Houston 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 S aturday's games Texas at SMU, noon Rice at Army, 12:30 p.m. Texas Tech at Baylor, 11 a.m. Overall L T 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 0 rience, m ore m aturity, m ore depth, a different schem e, and w e u n d e r­ sta n d [the schem e] b etter, along w ith having m ore confidence." "We have to disregard the early scheduling and play a good game ourselves," Reedy said. "I don't make the schedule, I just play it as it comes." Baylor holds a slig h t overall ad vantage (18-17 in SWC play) in th e te am s' histories. S a tu rd a y 's gam e is scheduled for a 6 p.m. kick- off at Floyd-Casey Stadium in Waco. ■ In College Station, No. 9 Texas A&M had bruised feelings coming o u t of the C olorado loss according to head coach R.C. Slocum. "All these gam es count, b u t there are bigger gam es on ou r schedule. Fans know it, players know it, and coaches know it," Slocum said. "W e have talked about a bow l chance w ith a big bowl, w hether it's the O range, Sugar, or Fiesta." Backup tight end Dan Cam pbell suffered a broken leg and to m ankle lig a m e n ts in T u esd a y 's practice. A fter surgery late T uesday night, he should be out six to eight weeks. S trong safety Tvpail M cM ullen (h am strin g ) and offensive g u ard Jam es Brooks (ankle) are still being held out of practice and are ques­ tionable for the Oct. 7 gam e against Texas Tech. Gray: Former UT standout now at SMU Continued from page 16 G ray w as a q u arte rb a ck /d efen ­ sive back recruit from Lubbock's Estacado H igh School, current Texas com erback Taje A llen's hom etow n school. A lthough young at the tim e, Allen rem em bers w hen G ray starred in Lubbock. "I w as small, b u t I knew all about him ," A llen said. "D u rin g high school they used to alw ays point back to the guys that w ere good w ay back w hen, so I knew w ho he was, definitely." a n d Ironically coincidentally, Allen w ears the sam e No. 2 jersey that G ray w ore as a Longhorn. The tw o have since becom e friends. Back in his hom etow n of Lub­ bock, G ray is giving back to the com m unity that once gave to him. G ray ru n s a su m m er football cam p for kids in fourth through eighth grade. "I think the kids have a great tim e and it gets them off the streets for four days," he said. G ray does not m ake any m oney from the camp, w hich he w ould like to eventually expand to all of the area schools. C urrently G ray holds the cam p at Estacado H igh for 200 to 250 kids. Allen was asked by G ray to w ork at the cam p a couple of sum m ers ago b u t had to decline. Allen did say that he w ould love to eventually help G ray out. In ad d itio n to h is com m unity w ork th ro ugh the football cam p, G ray donates $5,000 each year to his old high school for one boy and girl to use for college. As far as returning to his alm a m ater to coach, Gray w as enthusias­ tic about the possibility. "I think you alw ays w an t to coach at y o u r alma m ater," G ray said. In fact, Gray said th a t Texas was the first school to receive his resum e. But he th e L onghorns alread y had estab lished assistant coaches and his chances w ere slim. realized USC head coach John Robinson expressed interest in G ray b u t he already had a defensive backs coach. SMU assistant head coach Clovis H ale helped lure G ray to the M us­ tang program . "When I came up here, I was wel­ comed," Gray said. "They rolled out the red carpet." He added that SMU head coach Tom Rossley reminded him of a high school coach. He w as sold. Fred Akers, G ray's head coach at Texas, is h appy for his form er star. "I'm glad he decided to choose coaching," Akers said. "H e really studies the game and w as not satis­ fied w ith just know ing his position." "I think Jerry is one of the most intelligent and m ost fierce com peti­ tors w e've had at UT," A kers said. "H e u nderstands people and can m otivate them ." G ray has big aspirations. He said being a defensive coordinator or head coach is a goal of his and he w ould like to see it happen soon. H e know s that it is unrealistic for som e­ one to sta rt at the top in the coaching profession, but the sooner the better. G ray, 33, does not w ant to w ait around until he's 45 or 50 years old to land a big job. "I'm not afraid of failing, I'm onlv afraid of not trying," he said, borrow ­ ing a quote from Michael Jordan. UIIJDOIII TGETII F in a n c ia l incentive provided in exchange for your opinion on an investigational pain medication following oral surgery. Approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeon. If you need the removal of wisdom teeth call BIOMEOICAjL In Austin call: 320-1630 g r o u p U«L Outside Austin call: 1-800-320-1630 * INTRAMURAL SOCCER ENTER BY OCTOBER 4! GREGORY GYM 2 8 8 :3 0 AM - 5:00 PM Men, Women, Coed Leagues $50.00 entry fee for 5 games Sundays-Thursdays 4:00 PM -10:00 PM Entries will be taken through Wednesday, October 4. Play begins October 8. [Late entries taken next week through Friday as league openings exists] I n t r a m u r a l s o c c e r o f f i c i a l s n e e d e d : ~$ 8 .00/gam e (Referee) ~$6.00 /gam e (Linesman) Play and officiate Clinic: Tuesday, October 3 • Complete information available in Gregory Gym 28 or 30 • 4 7 1 - 3 1 1 6 JESTER. C E N T O . CAMPUS TEXAS U N IO N STORES Fine quality photo developing at both Campus Store Locations Jester Center • Texas U nion Vhen it com es to preparing for the LSAT, GRE, GMAT, or MCAT, there's no point going anyw here else. O ur classes are small (15 students or fewer), so you’ll get lots o f personal attention. A nd not only will you benefit from highly trained instructors but you’ll also get the m ost up-to-date m aterials available. W ith all that said, it’s no surprise that over 95% o f our students would recom m end us to their friends. If you'd like more inform ation, give us a call. Because when it com es to the LSAT, GRE, GMAT or MCAT, why settle for second best? jm i h e PRINCETON REVIEW 4 74 -T ES T DON'T SETTLE FOR #2 ON THE LSAT, GRE, GMAT OR MCAT T V P n n c e tn n Review is dim a ffiliated w ith ETTS, L S A S . A A M C , or P n iK e fc » L 'n iv m itv TE X A N C L A S S IF IE D A D S W O R K FOR YO URS C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Thursday, September 28, 1995 Page 15 Volleyball Continued from page 16 Continued from page 16 Rangers their own. H ouston came back and scored four straight points to close the gap to 7-6. Texas then scored six points in a row w hile racking up three m ore blocks. The H orns' lead grew to 14-9 before the C ougars cam e roaring back to close the gap to 14-13. W ith H ouston serving, Texas ea rn ed a sideout w hen sophom ore Jane W inkel drilled a kill off of setter Sami Saw yer's face. On m atch point, Busch set up Sanee for the kill and the win. A lth o u g h H aley w as p leased w ith the w in, he w as not im pressed by his team 's perform ance. "W e did not play well an d we d id n 't execute," H aley said. "W e've been talking about w inning ugly, and th at's w h at we did tonight. We gave up a lot of points and d id n 't w in m any. A t least w e are com peti­ tive so th at's a good sign." In the th ird gam e Texas' pow er cam e to life as Sanee and junior m iddle blocker Sonya Bames regis­ tered 12 kills apiece. Barnes played a virtually errorless game, in w hich she had a .435 hitting percentage and eight digs. Texas this season. Rogers (16-7) improved to 4-0 in September, keeping the A 's in check on six hits over eight innings to pitch the Rangers to their fourth victory in five games. Clark got the first-inning outburst started off Todd Van Poppel (4-8) with a solo homer, his 15th. Juan G on­ zalez followed w ith a single, took sec­ ond on Mickey Tettleton's single and scored on a single by Ivan Rodriguez. Greer then delivered the big blow' of the game, clearing the bases w ith his 13th homer to push Texas' lead to 5-0. Oakland cam e back w ith a two-run third to pull to 5-2, but the Rangers answered w ith two unearned runs in the fourth for a 7-2 advantage. Tettle­ ton's tw o-run hom er in the fifth, his 28th, pushed the lead to 9-2. Mike Pagliarulo added an RBI dou­ ble and Benji Gil had a run-scoring single in the eighth. WILD-CARD RACES AMBttCAN LEAGUE L 65 66 68 NATIONAL LEAGUE L 65 66 69 W 76 74 72 W 75 74 71 P e t 539 .529 .514 Pet .536 .529 .507 New York California Texas Colorado Houston Chicago G B — Yk 3% GB — 1 4 Golf: Lady Horns tee off in Albuquerque Continued from page 16 and Angela W ray. The entire team is looking to com e together an d play up to its potential in this w eekend's tournam ent. "I expect [Bowie] to have a m uch better tournam ent," W atkins said. "This will be a good test to see how our new com ers hold up, com peting as a team w ith our seniors." O ne point the Longhorns w ill key upon will be the lack of accuracy they show ed at the Fall Preview tourna­ ment. W atkins m ade a point of this, and devoted extra practice tim e in an attem pt to solve the problem. "T he par-3s and ou r m id -iro n approaches p u t us in a bind a t Fall Preview , and there is no reason for that," W atkins said. "We have to be a lot m ore accurate this w eek." Distance looks to be a factor this w eekend, considering th e g rea t length of the A lbuquerque courses, a problem the team should have no trouble overcom ing. "W e'll have four of our longest hit­ ters going," W atkins said, "and that will be an advantage at A lbuquerque because it's a fairly long course." The play of the new com ers will be key in the finishing of the team, as it w as the younger players w ho shined at the Rolex Fall Preview, b u t it w ill take a group effort to win. F reshm an Jenny Lee, one of Golfweek’s "Freshm en to W atch in 1995-96," will m ake her collegiate debut, and W atkins is very confi­ dent in her upcom ing perform ance. "[Lee] has been playing well in practice and she's ready to get start­ ed," W atkins said. "She's been strik­ ing the ball extremely well lately, and I really expect good things from her." U nder W atkins, the H orns have w on tw o consecutive S outhw est Conference C ham pionships and are looking for their third. They have never placed below 10th in any of the 23 they have entered, and have even posted tw o Top 10 finishes at the NCAA C ham ­ pionships. to u rn am en ts "N ow is the time for us to have high expectations," W atkins said, "and now is the time to live up to them." Runners: Duo earns points by staying close Continued from page 16 my speed to try to push other team members." For Nespeca, an 800-meter track runner by trade, the cross country sea­ son represents a different type of chal­ lenge. While a lack of experience in distance running may prove to be her toughest hurdle to clear, it is one that she is well on her w ay to overcoming. "SMU w as m y second cross coun­ try' race," Nespeca said. "1 had a greater am ount of confidence because that first m eet was behind me." the T hat increase in confidence seem s to have translated into trem endous im p ro v em en t on track, as N especa's 19:35.5 finish is alm ost three m inutes faster than her debut tim e. In d eed , B ungard cites her advancem ent as a dom inant factor in the H orns success at SMU. "N atalie m ade a big jum p," Bun­ gard said. "H er im provem ent was crucial to ou r im provem ent." Su m m er F ilm ! D o u b le P r in t AYS 0NDAY (Si HURSDAY Johnson's finish was also a pleas­ ant surprise, but of a different sort. She w as able to slip in betw een C ar­ rington and Frausto, w ho typically run first and second in practices. "A lot of tim es I run better in meets th a n in practice," Johnson said. "I have a little extra experience, w hich helps." Johnson also feels that the fact that she w as able to jum p ahead of other runners points to the team 's unique ability to finish as a pack. "We are a very close team ," John­ son said. "The m iddle runners are close enough to sw itch in and out w ith each other." In addition to their skills as runners, both Nespeca and Johnson possess certain character traits that enable them to help build team morale. "Sara's w ork ethic is her biggest attribute," Bungard said. "She will run until she drops, and this positive attitude feeds the rest of the team. Natalie works hard, too, but she is also very light-hearted, and that helps lift the team's spirits sometimes." As the L onghorns look to im prove even further at UTSA, they w ill depend on the total package that each runner provides. More im p o r­ tant than the individual runners, how ever, will be the pack. As long as UT's m iddle runners can take some of the b urden off of C arring­ ton, success should be forthcom ing. "Cheri is d oing okay as it is," Bun­ gard said. " O n Friday, Dana, Sara, and Natalie need to m avbe m ove up a couple of spots, but they still need to stay together as a group." Longhorn Spirit F IN A L D A Y S 50% EVERYTHING OFF 2 3 5 0 Guadalupe • Next to the Gap Austin, Texas • ( 5 1 2 ) 4 7 8 -7 8 6 5 rice (10/18) baylor oo/7) U a h « i A a u / n / 0 7 \ U V U a l i V I I 17/ U I texas teen (io/4) te x a s a& m o m . v%s ; / > r 1 ^ ^ don’t miss the- LAST go-around I I You can draw/buy tickets to any or all matches right now! j Go to Bellmont, PAC, Union or Erwin Center, or call 477-6060. Next up: TEXAS TECH, next WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4 at 7 pm. j I All matches at Rec Sports CenteT. Call 495-Go UT for more info. texas volleyball 16 T h e D a ily T e x a n THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,1985 SPORTS Walks help Pittsburgh slide past Astros in 11 innings Astros pitcher Dave Veres leapt over Pittsburgh’s Orlando Merced as Merced slid into home after a wild pitch in the seventh inning of W ednesday’s game. The Pirates won, 6-3, in 11 innings. ASSOCIATED PRESS Texas spikes Houston SCORES BASEBAU AMERICAN LEAGUE Texas 11, Oakland 2 New York 6. Milwaukee 3 Detroit 7, Boston 5 Baltimore 7, Toronto 0 California 2. Seattle 0 Chicago 6, Kansas City 0 Cleveland 9. Minnesota 6 NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 6, Houston 3 (11) Chicago 5, St. Louis 3 San Diego 4. San Francisco 2 Atlanta 6. Philadelphia 0 New York 5, Cincinnati 4, game 1 New York 9, Cincinnati 2, game 2 Florida 9, Montreal 3 Los Angeles 7, Colorado 4 H ES9H N a s h v ille c lo s e r to n a b b in g O ile r s ■ N A SH VILLE, Tenn. — said M ayor Phil Bredesen Wednesday that Nashville has gained ground to attract the Houston Oilers with a $67 mil­ lion promise from the state. The state will contribute $55 million from general bonds for construction of a stadium, with an additional $12 million for road improvements around the complex, Gov Don Sundquist announced as Bredesen, legisla­ tive leaders and Oilers vice pres­ ident and negotiator Mike McClure looked on. The stadium is expected to cost about $250 million and Nashville has about $100 million available, but negotiations had gotten sticky la-t week when Sundquist said the state wouldn't spend $50 million or $60 million. Bredesen said he has always resisted giving an estimate of how likely Nashville is to get the Oilers, but "as of this morning, I think we have a first down, first and 10 on mavbe the visitor's 30- yard line.” The Oilers have said thev will I begin negotiating with Houston city officials on a non-exclusive basis on Dec. 1. NFL sources have said the team will choose Baltimore if an agreement is not reached in Nashville, The Ten­ nessean reported. Nashville has until Oct. 20 before its exclusive negotiating rights with the Oilers ends. Rockets re-sign forward Chilcutt to m ulti-year deal ■ HOUSTON — The Houston Rockets signed forward Pete Chilcutt to a multi-year contract Wednesday. Terms of the deal with the reigning NBA champions were not disclosed. The 6-11, 235-pound Chilcutt played in 68 games as a Rocket last season after signing in November 1994. He averaged 5.3 points and 4.7 rebounds and start­ ed in 17 regular season games. He averaged 4.5 points and in 20 playoff rebounds 2.9 games and started in 15. "W e feel that it is very impor­ tant to keep the continuity with our team and the guys that led us to the championship,” said Bob Weinhauer, vice president of bas­ ketball operations. "Pete was a major part of our championship run and we knew it was impor­ tant to have him with us again.” UT women s tennis at ITA Claycourts ■ BALTIM ORE, Md. - The U niversity of Texas women's ten n is team officially kicked off th eir fall season Wednesday as tw o players took the court for the first day of the ITA Clav- co u rt Championships. Texas junior transfer Melody Falco advanced to the third round in singles play with a 7-6 (7-5), 6-0 win over Oleanne Gutkin of the University of Miami followed by a 6-3, 7-5 victory over Duke's W endy Fix. Meanwhile, LTT sophomore Nomena Rasoloma- lala lost.to Joanne Baucu of Mar­ quette in the first round of singles play, 6-4, 6-3. C ristin a M oros, the other Lady Longhorn in the tourna­ m ent, plays her first singles m atch on Friday. M oros and Falco will team up for doubles play, which begins on Thursday. — Com piled from staff and A ssociated Press reports Groups with sports calendar item s should call 471-4591 o r com e by The Daily Texan a t 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. Associated Press HOUSTON — H ouston reliever Todd Jones hurt the Astros' chances of winning the NL wild card Wednesday by walking the bases loaded in the 11th inning. M ike H ennem an w as alm ost as much to blame, giving up a two-run single to Rich Aude that led Pitts­ burgh to a 6-3 victory. The loss snapped a four-game win­ ning streak and dropped the Astros one game behind Colorado in the NL wild­ card race. The Rockies lost to Los Ange­ les late Wednesday night, 7-4, putting the Dodgers a half-game ahead of the Rockies in the NL West race. Pittsburgh scored three runs in the seventh, the Pirates' first runs in 19 innings, before Houston tied it in the bottom half. With one out in the 11th, Jones (6-4) walked A1 Martin, who stole second. later, Jones intentionally O ne out walked Orlando Merced and walked Jeff King. Henneman then gave up Aude's two-run single to center. "This has got to be one of the tough­ est things I've had to face,” Jones said. "T h e team was struggling and I didn't do my job. [Doug] Brocail pitched well, [Doug] Drabek pitched well but I let the team down.” Carlos Garcia followed Aude's hit with a single that scored King. Dan Miceli (4-4) pitched two innings and struck out four for the victory. Jeff McCurry pitched the 11th for his first major league save. The Pirates scored in the seventh against a succession of Astros reliev­ ers. Pittsburgh hadn't scored a run since the sixth inning of M onday night's game against the Astros. Jacob Brum field singled off Jeff Tabaka, Jay Bell singled off Jim Dougherty and Merced drew a walk from Dean Hartgraves, loading the bases. Jeff King hit a two-run single and Merced scored on a wild pitch by Dave Veres. The Astros tied it at 3 when John Cangelosi singled, stole second and scored on Jeff Bagwell's single. Bagwell and Craig Biggio had RBI hits in the fifth off John Ericks. Ricky Gutierrez walked and Drabek sacrificed. After Cangelosi walked, Big­ gio singled home the game's first run and Bagwell doubled for a 2-0 lead. ■ Rangers 11, A thletics 2 — In Arlington, The Texas Rangers are alive in the playoff race. Barely alivy. Rusty' Greer's three-run homer high­ lighted a five-run first inning and Kenny Rogers matched a career high with his 16th victory as the Rangers beat Oakland 11-2 Wednesday night. The Rangers kept alive their slim hopes for the franchise's first playoff appearance in 23 years. Another loss by Texas or a victory by New York will knock the Rangers out of the wild card race. In the AL West, Texas moved within four games of Seattle heading into a four-game series against the Mariners. It would take a sweep by the Rangers and a split or series victory by Oakland against California for Texas to tie for the division title. "I'm glad I've got a chance but I don't like my odds.” Rangers manager John­ ny Oates said. "Maybe we've got four wins in us against Seattle. Nobody said it was going to be easy.” Seattle has won eight of nine against Please see Rangers, page 15 Packing it in Middle runners Johnson, Nespeca strive fo r points rather than recognition JEFF MCDONALD Daily Texan Staff In cross country, as in life, it sometimes pays to run as a pack. The Lady Longhorns cross country team found this to be true a week ago in Dallas, and will seek to employ such a philosophy this Friday as they compete at the UTSA Invitational in San Antonio. "If we can pack together, w e can p u s h ____________________________________ other down a few places," sophomore Sara Johnson said. "The closer you are, the better off you are." TEXAS CROSS COUNTRY team s This season the team sports an impressive group of middle runners, and it is their performance that could make or break the season for the Horns. Last weekend at SMU, Johnson, freshman Dana Frausto, and sophomore Natalie Nespeca took 16th through 18th places, pro­ pelling the Longhorns to a fourth-place finish overall. "W e really ran more consistently at SM U ," assistant coach Randy Bungard said. "Sara, Natalie, and Dana stayed together and didn't let anyone split them up." Such was not the case in the season opener at Baylor. Senior front runner Cheri Carrington placed fifth, but no other Longhorn was able to crack the top 40. Consequently, the team gained 204 points and fin­ ished ninth overall. By packing three extra runners in near the top, the team improved its score dramatically, and was able to achieve a higher finish. According to Bungard, a consistent performance from the m iddle of the pack will be vital if the team is to succeed. "M iddle runners are even more important than the front runner," Bungard said. "They are really the key to success in cross country." Running in the middle, however, often means run­ ning outside of the limelight. It would be easy for run­ ners like Johnson and Nespeca to grow' discouraged running behind a star like Carrington or a prodigious freshman such as Frausto. Despite the lack of attention, the two sophom ores seem to understand their roles and do their best to fill them. "I really just do the little things," Nespeca said. "I use Please see Runners, page 15 ' MATT YOUNG Daily Texan Staff Last year the University of Houston w om en's volleyball team did something no other SW C team had ever managed to do: they beat Texas twice in the same sea­ son. The No. 14 Lady Longhorns made sure that would not h a p p e n again as thev rocked the Cougars in four games, 11-15, 15-11, 15-9, 15-13, in front of 1,837 fans at the Recreational Sports Center. TEXAS V0LIEYBÁLL All year, Texas (6-4) has been pointing at this game against Houston (7-4) as one of the key games of the season. All of us talked together about this," coach Mick Haley said. "W e take a lot of pride in winning this conference, and the fact that we lost twice to Houston last year was tough to take." In last season s upsets Texas was both­ ered by injuries that contributed to the losses, while Houston had some young players that stepped up. This season the reverse has been true. Houston was w ith­ out one of its star hitters, Emily Leffers, who went down with a season-ending knee injury early in the season. Freshman hitters Bethany Hill and Crystal Kubena are also coming off injuries that limited their playing time in the loss. Freshman outside hitter Demetria Sanee notched another double-double as she recorded 22 kills and 13 digs on the match. Senior Carrie Busch had 57 assists, while senior Angie Breitenfield added 10 kills and a career-high five solo blocks. Junior Nashika Stokes led the w ay for the Cougars with 22 kills and 16 digs. The deciding fourth game seemed to be a game of spurts. The Horns opened the game with four consecutive blocks jumped out to an early 7-2 lead and before the Cougars could m ake a run of Please see Volleyball, page 15 Former Longhorn star DB Gray adjusts to coaching role at SMU ICHARLES POLANSKY Daily Texan Staff As a Longhorn, Jerry Gray was one of the best comer- backs in school history. He will be on the sidelines of the Cotton Bowl this Saturday. But not on the Longhorns' side. Gray is in his first year as the secondary coach for SMU, Texas' opponent this weekend. Gray, a two-time consensus All- American, was one of the corner­ stones on some of the finest Long­ horn defenses in history during his college career (1981-1984) and holds the team single-season interception record of seven in 1984. Gray w as recently named to the Texas all-tim e team and he appreci­ ates the honor. "It means a lot," Gray said. "I guess my name still means some- thing down there. Now I'm on the same team with Earl Campbell, possibly the best pro and college running back ever." t,r a y Gray was a first-round draft pick of the Los Angeles Rams and enjoyed a nine-year career during which he played in the NFL Pro Bowl four times. Gray also played for the Houston O ilers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers dur­ ing the last two years of his pro career. Gray said coaching was always in the back of his mind as a player and he enjoys what he is presently doing. "Coaching is som ething I like to do and right now, coaching is as fun as playing," Gray said. "W hen I w a. playing I knew how to play, but now I am learning how to coach." , One of the things Gray has had to adjust to besides all the film viewing, paperwork and preparation is moti­ vating his players. There are some ups and downs to coaching. Now as a coach you are responsible to get someone else motivated instead of somebody doing that for you," Gray said. As good a player as he w as at Texas he briefly consid­ ered attending Oklahoma and playing for Barry Switzer. Gray said that this sum mer he dropped by the Dallas TEXAS SPORTS INFORMATION Former Texas All-American defensive back Jerry Gray (2) is in his first season as secondary coach at SMU, which plays Texas this Saturday in Dallas. Cowboys' Austin training camp and approached his once potential coach. Hey, coach, remember m e?" Gray asked. Where are you from?" Sw it/er responded. "Lubbock," said Gray, laughing. "You're that kid that we couldn't get to come play quarterback at Oklahoma," Sw it/er said with a smile. Please see Gray, page 15 DAILY TEXAN STAFF Texas freshman middle blocker Lakisha Bledsoe spikes one over the net during the Lady Longhorns’ 11-15, 15-11, 15-9, 15-13 win over the Houston Cougars Wednesday night at the Rec Sports Center. Cavs trade guard Price Associated Press CLEVELAND — M ark Price, a four-tim e A ll-Star point guard and the N BA 's career leader in free throw accuracy, was traded to the W ashington Bullets on W ednesday in exchange for a first-round draft pick in 1996. The Bullets, w hich had the worst record in the Eastern Con­ ference last season, had been seeking a high-profile, veteran point guard to run its talented but young frontcourt, which includes rookie Rasheed Wallace, second- year player Juwan Howard and third-year pro Chris Webber. "W ith the addition of Mark Price, we feel as though we have accomplished that goal and have not had to part with any of our corps of young talent,” Bullets general manager John Nash said in a statement. Facing at least half a season with­ out starting center Brad Daugherty and a need to add some youth to an aging roster, the Cavaliers felt they had to deal Price, general manager Wayne Embry said. C leveland 's In 48 games last season, Price slow dow n led offense and averaged 15.8 points per game on 41.3 percent field goal accuracy. Price shot 40.7 per­ cent from 3-point range and 91.4 percent from the free throw line. UT heads to New Mexico M IK E W IL S O N Daily Texan Staff The Texas Longhorn w om en's golf team will head to New Mexico this weekend with a mix of young and old faces, all with one thought in mind: to win. looking The team will compete in the Dick M cGuire Invitational Tournam ent this Thursday through Saturday in Albuquerque, N.M., to improve on its fourth-place finish two weeks ago at the Rolex Fall Tournam ent. The Horns, ranked No. 2 in Golfweek m agazine's presea­ son poll, will be expecting a high finish now that they have one tour­ nament under their belt. "Now that we've gotten our first tournament out of the way, lixik for us to be in the top three from here on TEXAS WOMEN'S GOLF out," head coach Susan Watkins said. The excellent play of freshman Kelli Kuehne paced the Longhorns at the Rolex tournament, where she received m edalist honors with rounds of 70-73-68— 211. Kuehne, who was unbeaten in 20 tourna­ ments in her high school career and is currently the W om en's Amateur Champion, has continued her dom i­ nance in college. Kuehne, along with junior trans­ fer Heather Bowie, were among 10 players Golfweek named to its pre­ season All-American team. Earning honorable mention honors on the team were Texas seniors Kori Johns Please see Golf, page 15 Management Information Systems and Computer Science Fall and Spring Graduates V * * * * You Are Looking For... ✓ Leading edge technology ✓ A n innovative training program ✓ C om petitive compensation plan ✓ Excellent benefits package ✓ C areer path planning ✓ C ontinuing education sponsorship ✓ O p p o rtu n ity to use skills in a creative We Are Looking For Individuals Who... ✓ A r e versatile ✓ Have a strong desire to learn and succeed ✓ A r e technically proficient ✓ A r e proven leaders ✓ Have a strong business acumen ✓ A r e proactive ✓ Possess excellent written, communication, work environment and interpersonal skills Let’s Talk. Positions for BBA, BS, and MBA available Interviews to be conducted Oct. 1 0 -llth & 25th in the College of Business UT alumni will he present to answer questions. 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Box 619810 D /FW Airport, TX 75261-9810 Fax: (214) 453-6888 l n i 3 Directories It’s amazing what we can do together.' ffM ^W Q u ; Award M alcolm Baldrige N a t i o n a l Quality « P f " G TE D irectories C orporation Page 18 Thursday, September 28,1995 T h e D a il y T exa n Crossword Edited by Will Shortz No. 0 8 1 7 31 Sh a k e s p e a re 60 W o m a n pincher, i ? 3 4 5 i 7 8 ib 11 15 13 14 15 17 63 65 ACRO SS 1 Aesop, e.g. 9 Rogues 15 Slowly fade edition 32 Fam ilial m arker 34 Tenfold 35 Shining exam ple 16 McKinley s first V ic e P resid en t 17 Lute family member 18 A A affiliate 19 Diminutive suffix 20 Born 21 Comparison test item 22 Novelist Jaffe 24 Object of a literary hunt 26 Hoover and Roosevelt, e.g. 28 Breaks 30 -Magnon 38 R e n o u n ce s 4 0 You b et!" 41 L o s ---- 43 C o w b o y 's rope 45 Blu e material 4 6 Corral 47 A gam em no n 's home 51 Does faw n work 52 H itchcock nail-biter, with “The" 54 Ph ysio g n o m y 55 Q u alm ish n ess 57 Y e llo w ---- 59 View from the French Riviera A N SW ER TO P R E V IO U S P U Z Z L E N N W I O A H S P 1 N H A R D B A L L ■ B O E R M A p S R 1 E A R 1 A A G R A N D c H 1 L D W A D D L E L O R R E T O R 1 E C H O O D G L Y N 1 S R E B A N 1 M Y R A S A D 1 R O N S C R O S S B O W M L L E A L L E L C 1 D 1 K E S E G O T 1 S T O R E S S P R A D s l C L 1 M B S E E S A W | G A R C H B 1 S H O T 1 T o S N O w p E A N s L A T E i L A D N E S S E R N E D R E W ■ V E N *- | m ayb e 61 Ja w b o n e 63 6 0 s w eather satellites 64 Distaste 65 A m erican Dadaist 66 Suffuse DOWN 1 Thighbones 2 Land of Arthurian legend 3 Tropical flavor 4 Sturm Drang (turmoil) 5 Mr. Trotsky 6 British 7 O logies 8 Perfect rating 9 " Ja w s " terror 10 Drink type 11 Strand 12 “ . . . from R angoon to ": Kipling 13 Sen ator who gave G o ld en F le ec e aw ards 14 A.M. or F.M. broadcaster 21 Sib 23 Quick to iearn 25 M unitions m aker 27 Ferm ented sa u ce s 29 Site of iniquity in antiquity 31 M editerranean 35 22 33 28 25 32 36 ■ 26 37 ■36 L 19 ■ I FI 23 ■ • I 29 | 30 1 39 ■40 J ■43 |46 I| 52 56 JI 57 i 58 ■59 ■55 j a p 54 53 47 44 42 62 45 60 48 41 51 61 ■ 27 49 50 64 66 I 1 33 “ ---- the . seaso n 4 6 mater ( brai n cover) 53 M ore logical 56 Actress W a rd Puzzle by Rand H Burns 34 G en etic strands 35 Flits (about) 36 Tragedienne Duse, 1859-1924 37 C h in ese 39 National park near Mount Rushm ore 42 W arranty violator 48 Its only neighbor 58 H ou se ad abbr. is Sen e g al 49 Sp otted cat 60 O verh ead item, a t Daytona 50 Unruffled 61 Triple-A handout 52 “ H ea ven s to !" 62 British verb ending Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1 -900-420- 5656 (75C each minute). holiday 44 Kennel sound to Seer the V/E6JC ffa w c W r te Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU IT'S ALL BO - I GUS, SHERIFF1 sows bo n e- HEAP BUREAU- k CRM WHO... 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Good condition high mileage. 467- 873 8 9-15-1 OB 1986 CJ7, immaculate, 3 3 ,0 0 0 miles 6-cylinder, power steering, power brakes, A M /FM stereo. $9000, 448-3188. 9-22-5B 1988 FORD Escort, 2-door, 4- speed. 72K miles. Good condi­ tion 9-26- $1500. 349-2588 78 20 - Sports-Foreign Autos 1988 HO NDA CRX SI. Excellent condition, sunroof, red, $4500. Mobil 461-5698 or 258-9234. 9 15-1 OB ASKING $15 00. Classic V W bee­ tle. Ugly body, great engine Won- dedul restoration project. 322- 0 3 8 6 9-22-1 OB '91 MERCURY Capri convertible. 58K, Red A M /F M cassette, 5- speed Clean and well maintained. $6600. 302-1923. 9-25-5B f t 1988 HONDA CRX si. Yellow, sunroof. Great fun sporty and reli­ able $4800. negotiable. Call 477 7935, 474-7732. 9 27-3B. SUZUKI SAMURAI, 1987. Excellent condition, low mileage. New soft- ton $3300 OBO tires 452 7772, 452-1248. 9-25-5B good '8 7 HONDA ACCORD LX White auto. Looks and runs great. 87K, $ 4 9 5 0 Call Allendale Motors, 459-9506 or 413-0727. 9-27-5B. ~91 HYUNDAI EXCEL White, 4- speed, 60K Rehable transporta­ ron good radio $2650. Call Al- lenda'e Motors, 459-9506 or 413- 072 7. 9-27-5B 70 - Motorcycles '92 KAWASAKI EX 500- racing bike. for $1,9 7 5 Call Jon, 255-2520. 9- 15-1 OB Must sell. As is 80 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Cost!!! B U C K ’ S B I K E S 928-2810 SAVE $100 to $200 in high perfor­ mance mountain bikes with suspen­ sion Diamondback Fuji Proflex. South Austin Bicycles 2 2 1 0 S. 1st 444-0805. 9-25-1 IB. 120 - Houses WESTOVER HILLS Lovely family home (approximately 2950 sq ft.) with good floor plan for entertain­ ing. 4 bedrooms, 3.75 baths, 3 liv­ ing, 2 dining, side entry garage, many extras, walking distance to Hill elementary & Anderson High. Easy access to Mopac, 360 & 183. AHS warranty $ 2 1 7,00 0 3454016. 9-7-20B wmmmm 200 - Furniture- Household FREE DELIVERY fo r UT Students! • TW IN SET w /FR A M E $ 8 9 .9 5 • FULL SET w /F R A M E $ 9 9 95 •Q U E E N SET w /FR A M E $ 1 3 9 .9 5 $ 4 9 .9 5 • 4 DRAWER CHEST $ 6 9 .9 5 •STUD EN T DESK $ 1 6 9 .9 5 •S O F A S $ 1 2 9 95 • 5 PIECE DINETTE Centex Furniture W holesale 6 618 N LAMAR 2 0 0 ' .8 LAMAR 450-0988 445-5808 Beds, Beds, B eds The factory outlet for Simmois Sealy, Springair We carry closeouts, discontinued covers, 4 factory 2nds From 50-70% off retal store prices All new. complete with warranty Twin set, $69 Full set, $89 Queen set, $119 King set, $149 1741 West Anderson Ln. 454-3422 WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE! Computer tables $35 Swivel chairs. $15 Student desks $45 Drafting chairs $35 Heavy duty filing cabinets. $45 Cox O ffice Products 10938 Research 345 7691 M-F 8 30-5 30 Beds 4 Less Name brand mattresses at 50% or more off. Serta- Basset-Therapedic-Corsica- na. Call for prices. Student Discounts 3 2 3 -2 3 3 7 -B E D S (across from Target on 1 8 3 ) LUXURY FIRM queeniize mnerspr ng mattress set Still packaged, $257 Also, multi-colored, delivered overstuffed used, sofa. Never $ 2 6 5 .2 8 0 287 9 9-25 20B 220 - Computers- Equipment $99 95 DISCOUNT SOFTWARE Microsoft HP48GX, Office, $189.95. Call HAS Collegiate Ex press 1-800 332 1100 Ext 5, 9 19-4B. UPGRADE YOUR system to a 486 DX4-100 for only $19'- Or, up­ grade your RAM by 4 mb for only $167 Call 322-0733 9-27-5B 4 8 6 DX4-100 8 mb RAM, 8 5 0 mb hard drive, 14" SVGA monitor, 14 4 fax/modem, kbd, mouse, tons of software, and warranty Only $1179 Call 322 0 733 9-27-5B PENTIUM 90 Mhz. 5 4 0 MB Hard Drive Video. 14" SVGA $1300. 474-2598. 9 28-58 8MB RAM 1MB PCI 1.4 Floppy 14" APPLE Color Monitor $250 still sealed in box 377 5 9-28-5B New 469 SAN GABRIEL SQUARE Apts. N O W LEASING! •Furnished • 5 blks from Campus • 2-1 Economy Style •Efficiencies 'Deluxe 1-1 • UT Shuttle ALL BILLS PAID 2212 San Gabriel St. 474-7732 LARGE 2 B E D R O O M ' Walk to campus. Pool and laundry. Small, quiet complex. Furnished or unfurnished Foil/ Spring $690 C a v a lie r Apartments 3 0 7 E. 31st St. 4 5 1 - 1 9 1 7 9-22-20B-A Daily Texan Classifieds Call 471-5244 ERCHANDISE - 345 MISCELLANEOUS CONDOM EXPRESS YES FI S FIN A LLY H E R E !!!! Im ag in e receiv in g your condom : v ia FREE DELIV ERY to your h o m e o r office. C o n d o m Selections: T rojan Extra Strength • Trojan Ribbed • Trojan EN7 • Ram ses Sensitot • Ramses U ltra T hin • Rainses M int Scented • Gold Circle C o in • Sheik S uper T h in Latex • t lasx Act Thin 6* Sensitive • Ll.ix-, A ct Ribbed. 9-5-20B A V IS A O R M A S T E R C A R D A C C E P T E D Call (5 1 6 ) 7 9 9-3470 e x t. 0 1 2 o r Fax (5 1 0 ) 799-2621 E-m ail p ro 2 1 " ix.netcom .com Leave name, address, tel. 3 . acct. 3, exp. date. Satisfaction guaranteed. GE 4 cu.ft refrigerator, $110. Mahogany dresser, $50 Kenwood JL730 3-way speakers $ 9 0 /p a ir 80" 3-cushion navy blue leather couch, $450. 419-0295 9-19-5NC SOLID W O O D desk w/book- shelves hutch. $150. Matching dresser, $75 and mghtstand, $50. HP48G graphing calculator, $75 still in box Mark, 9299181 9-22-5B TW IN MATTRESS box spring $150 Double ,-ecliner $70. Brown sofa $75 Green stuffed chair $10 Box end table $10 Coffee table $50 288-7947 9-22-5P 626 1981 MAZDA 5-speed, 122 0 0 0 miles $500 Call 302- 33 3 8 evenings/ message or e-mail at jsadams@mail.utexas.edu. 9-25- 5B 4 DRAWER file cabinet. Excellent condition, made by Hon, $80. Old kitchen from France with drawer, sturdy, $275. 476 -27 30. 9-22-5B. table ALBUMS AND 12" singles. Selling nice selection of clean vinyl $ 3 -5 / ea 834-0713. 9-22-5B. LOVE SEAT, bookshelves, love seat chair set, desk, sofa, dining math/ science study guides. 834-0713. 9-22-5B 2 0 0 CHANNEL Programmable scanner. Listen to police, fire, am­ bulance, air traffic and morel Hard­ ly used. $150, OBO Call Greg 451-5559. 9-26-5B YAKIMA BIKE rack, $150 Hogan irons and TM Woods, $125 Clas­ sic 1969 Schwmn, $50 478- 798 2. 9-26-5B PENTAX SET including a 52mm ME Super Pentax, a 135 mm K 1000 Pentax, a 28x85mm Micro-Foxusing Zoom, an LTD 505 case, and much more Original Value $980. Ask­ ing $395 448-3744 9 26-58 SEGA CDX system 10 games with all accessories $20 0 708-0736 9-25-5NC. KING SIZE oak waveless waterbed with mirrored headboard and lights 2 sets of sheets In good condition $20 0 OBO. 418-3754. 9-26-5NC M AC FULL 2-page 21" monitor (1 152x870) 256 greyscale. Great for Desktop Publishing/CAD $170. 454-6718. 9-26 5NC. 13", 19", and 2 7 “ color TVs $65 $185. 2 VCRs and 2 lawnmowers, vacuum cleaner-$35. Convection microwave, 442- $ 1 0 0 720 3 9-27-5B Coll BABY BOA constrictors! Healthy captive born beauties Perfect col­ lege pet Only three left, won't last long at $90. Mon*ana acoustic guitar touched, perfect shape. $150 OBO 480 048 7, leave message 9-27-5B Never WHITE, W OO DEN desk chan and bookcase, $75 OBO Call 7 9 5 . 9014. 9-27-5B Runs VW BEETLE 1970 grey great Very A M /FM cassette. little rust. Spiffy rims. Recently rebuilt front end. $1200 OBO 4 7 9 5 0 7 9 926 -5N C DORM-SIZE CARPET, all sizes! Full-si ze $ 120, window to door $80 smaller $60 01 less W ill de liver and install. Call 467-2723 9- 26-5NC. DP WEIGHT bench w/weights $55 HP 10B calcucalter, $20 Tasco telescope, $65 Business of fice chan, $70 Like new 458 1483 9-28-5B MOUNTAIN BIKE Bridgestone MB 5 8 months old. Great Condition $400 448 4574 9 28-5B W O R D P E R F E C T 5 1 $12 9 795 8084 9-27 58 fo r W in d o w s Lotus Smart Suite $89 FULL-SIZE FUTON with mattress and cover Great condition Unpaint ed $150 9-27-5B Call Melissa: 473-8922 TREK 728 touring bicycle Mint condition 25.5 inch frame 18 speed Fenders and racks $500 458 9667. 9-28-5NC TW O TWIN beds for $100 Eve rything included. Good condition. Call Gina at 473-8996 (h) or 474- 2591 (w). 9-26-5B KENMORE STACKABLE washer/ dryer 2 1/2 years old. Like new $450. Must sell. 478-1085 9 28-5B TV $75. Cordless phone $30 Turntable $75. Stereo Receiver $50 Vacuum $40. 339-3146. 9-26-5NC IBM COMPATIBLE for sale. Tandy 1000 SL. 40 Meg HD, color moni­ tor, printer, software, mouse, manu­ als, $400 Call Troy, 4 5 4 -6 9 7 1 9-26-5NC EXERCISE BICYCLE, stationary, digital control Good condition Also miscellaneous $10 0 obo household items 467-2674 9-28 5B O r d e r b y M a i l , F A X o r P h o n e FAX: P.O. Box D Austin, Texas 78713 471-6741 Classified Phone: 471-5244 2 0 w o r d s D d a y s Additional W ords....$0.25 ea é T \W 3 w ^ wsnmm w m w i O i my r w r X V / i l M 2 8 14 2 0 2 6 3 9 is 21 27 4 10 16 22 28 5 1 1 17 2 T 29 r. 12 IK 24 M) 1 i r i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i ( O tte r 25 13 19 lim ite d to p riv a te p a rty (n o n -c o m m a rc ia l) a d s o n ly In d iv id u a l ite m s o ffe r e d N A M E............................................................................. PHONE............................ I fo r s a le m a y n o t e x c e e d $1 .OOO, a n d p ric e ■ m u s t a p p e a r in th e b ody o f th e a d c o p y If I ite m s a re n o t sold, five a d d itio n a l in s e rtio n s A n n R F Q Q g will b e run a t n o c h a rg e A d v e rtis e r m u s t M L / L / n c o o I c a ll b e f o r e 11 a m . on th e d a y of t h e fifth th a n ■ in s e rtio n N o co py c h a n g e | re d u c tio n in p ric e ) is a ilo w o a (o th e r CITY....................................................STATE. ZIP. n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I FREE RENT IN DECEMBER Move In today. Large 2-1 and 2-2 in Hyde Park Village, $795-$825 Swimming pool, spa, covered park- ¡ng, card access gates. Call Jesse, 451-2343. 9-27-5B 380 - Furn. Duplexes CLOSE UT Hot-tub, QUIET. fenced yard, garage gym, cable, carpet, fireplace, firewood, secure parking. 472-4740. 9-26-5P 400 - Condos- Townhomes UNIVERSITY REALTY Gazebo Condo - West Campus I -I/lo ft vaulted ceiling, ceiling fans, microwave, new carpet & paint $625.°° 4 7 4 9 4 0 0 WEST CAMPUS HIGHRISE CO NDO 1 / 1 's and 2/2's available at 24 0 9 Leon this is the premiere condo community in West Campus W alk­ ing distance to campus. Micro­ waves, ice makers, washer/dryer in each unit, balconies, two cov­ ered garages, access gates, pool, glass elevator, etc Discount for 1- year leases Call Wess Walters Realty, Inc.: 345-2060. 9 6-20B OFF DUVAL/WEST 38th Close to Campus, $89 5/m o 2 /2 , W /D . 3111 Tom Gren, #311 Evergreen Properties, 331-1122. 9-8-20B-A SHUTTLE OFF FW /Hart Lane. $995/m o. 3 2 1 F:-eploce 3802B Knoll wood Evergreen Properties, 331-1 122 9-8-20B-A 2 /2 - 1 /2 HUGE QUADRANGLE 1300+ Sq ft. Garage parking, W / D. Move today Motivated! $1 100. 476-1976 9-7 20B D in WEST CAMPUS bungalow 1/1 W asher/ dryer gcroge type apart ment. Move in today $525 476 1976 9 7 20B-D •MOST LUXURIOUS 2 / 2 Cambridge Towers 8th Floor Exquisitely furnished $ 1700/m o •GORGEOUS 2 /2 Hardwood Floors West Campus. Was $1300 Make Offer I •BEAUTIFUL 2 /1 Condo $750 KHP 476-2178 9 I2-20B C 1 BLOCK T O UT Large 1-1 's. A ll bills paid. Covered parking, pool, security. G reat views! Greenwood Towers High-Rise Building 1800 Lavaca 4 7 6 -9 7 1 0 Ask for Julie 9 5 2 0 * A WEST CAMPUS Croix 2-2 $950, Now Campus Condos 474-4800 9-20-10B A LARGE TOW NHOM E, 1 -1 1 /2 bedroom balcony. Huge closets $525 near intramural field 701 North Loop 459 38 0 6 453-8891 9-22-6 B-A g e o r g Ia n 2 Bedroom /1-1/2 Bath $ 8 0 0 Immediate move-in, W /D , fireplace, pool, covered parking, microwave, French doors fo balcony. C all PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 9-27-5B D. 4 2 0 - U nf. Houses FOR LEASE. 2-1, French Place area Newly remodeled, trees, W / D connections, stove. No pets. 1305 E. 29th. 331-6700, or 335- 1801 9 22 SB V i l l a _ Students Welcome On UT Shuttle Free Cable 2-1 885 sq. ft. $535 2-1.5 1000* sq. ft. $625 3-1.5 1200+ sq. ft. $795 1201 Tinnin Ford 4 4 0 -0 5 9 2 Ó U fttídK cC A*A«TM€NT homes 1 BR st. 2 BR St. >420 >525 2-2 A B P $650 $ 1 0 0 O F F 1 st M o n t h w it h T h is A d A vailable Im m e d ia te ly For more info call 4 5 4 - 2 5 3 7 MOVE IN TODAY 1 & 2 BR’s SR Shuttle $ 4 6 9 - 610 4 4 4 -7 8 8 0 isurtaHLHiHiaifLifiHUiuiiHLKLaaiaMiif ¡ L A C A S I T A | I - I $ 5 2 5 I H [L- G as, heat, & w a te r paid S w im m in g Pool 9 m o . lo w u tilities 4 7 6 - I 976 ¡ If U: LbLHLbLbLblbLblblbLHlHLHlHLblblblblbLH lE; [c je NEAR LAW school, on shuttle, I - l . large ! 240. 9-5-20B-D $ 3 9 5 -$ 4 l0 474 BULL CREEK! Spacous l / l , $475 + E Cable, gas paid. No pets 4 5 0 0 4 6 0 . 9-5 20B-D I I APARTMENTS. Newly remo­ deled Students welcome $ 4 2 5 / rent $ 2 0 0 / deposit. On the north side 873 8540 9 I 3-20B SPECIAL 2BR $47 5 MOVE-IN 1 st/mo 1BR$425 1 st/mo Some hardwoods Quiet building A /C . to shopping and shuttle Close 4 71 9 Harmon. 467-8911 9 22 20B-A. W AIK UT 4 1, $ 1 3 5 0 Stove, re frigerator, C A /C H , hardwoods. info, call Available now. For 24hr 477-llVE 9-22-20B A EFFICIENCY APATMENTS. ABP, small patio 4 2 5 sq ft. $40 0/m o 444-4226 9-27-20B QUIET ONE bedroom 3 0 1W 39" large, pool, courtyard, laundry room, central air. Half-block from UT shuttle. Available now $ 4 2 5 / mo. 326-9215 or 452-3852. 9-26- 5B.D. ‘ AVAILABLE N O W * Efficiency Apartment Four Blocks West Campus Gas, water paid. $ 4 1 5 / month Call Pedro for appoint­ ment. 4 9 9 -8 0 1 3 9 27-7B-C ONE BLOCK UT. 602 Elmwood Co-op. Quiet, friendly, nonsmoking, petfree. Private bedroom, share kitchen, bath $245-$265 plus $ 100 for bills, phone, five shared suppers 474-2618. 9-1-20B-C CLOSE FURNISHED. Law School On Shuttle $250, ABP 476-3634 9-15-10B to W EST C A M P U S Walk to UT. Two large rooms with bath in beautifully remodeled 2- story home Has A /C , hardwood floors and miniblinds. Kitchen privi­ leges. Female only. Quiet gradu­ Lease ate students preferred. $ 3 3 5 / available October 15th mo + shore of utilities 4 5 4 - 2 9 8 7 435 - Co-ops Housing Available!] Come experience the co-op difference! ICC'» large, old e r home» are convenient, a ffo rd ­ able, & stud ent-ow ne d. Our backyards, sundecks I and 24-hour kitchens are | a great deal. Call now. $ 3 9 5 -5 0 5 /m o ./fo o d & bills Inter-C ooperative Council, inc. 510 W. 23” St. 4 7 6 -1 9 5 7 O o p / ! Y o iif fid C o u ld H o ve Been Here W A N T E D 1 0 0 STUDENTS! Lose 10-30 lbs next 90 days. New metabolism breakthrough. Dr recommended Guaranteed. $34 95, M C /V , Nadine DeMartino, 1-800-352-8446. 9-27- 530 - Travel- Transportation S6¿ S e * u i< z tc o 4 i Dec. 31-Jan. 12 Steamboat PARTY, LODGING & LIFT TICKETS F ro m O n ly pius $ 1 7 .9 5 service & tax ONE BLOCK UT. 602 Elmwood Co-op Quite, friendly, nonsmoking, petfree Private bedroom, share kitchen, bath. $245 $265 plus $ 100 for bills, phone, five shared suppers. 474-2618 9-12-20B-C 440 - Roommates SPRING BREAK C an cú n Acapulco Ixtapa Puerto Vallarla 8 0 0 - 2 3 5 - T R I P 1C H R I S T M A SI DVT tfA A C O L O R A D O B R E A K s STEAMBOAT MM BRECKENRIDGEl VAIUBEAVERCREEr ! tou FMI iwoMuTion mo utay*no*tt|| ¡ 1 ' 8 0 0 ‘ S U N C H A S E t e f f i B E g g m s u H m b RO O M M ATE SERVICE Looking or have a place UT I D. discount Business since 1988 Served over 7 ,0 0 0 people Sam 4 5 3 - 4 3 9 6 9-1 20B-A ONE BLOCK UT 602 Elmwood Co-op. Quiet, friendly, nonsmoking, petfree Private bedroom, share kitchen, bath $245 $265, plus $100 for bills, phone, five shared suppers. 474-2618 9-5-20B-C FREE RENT in nice home with big In exchange for living trees in yard with elderly lady Nursing student preferred Susan 919-7258, home 447 5719 9-25-5B DOBIE - FEMALE roomate wanted now for sidesuite. Call 505-0021. 9-26 3P ROOMATE SHARE large 3 2 1 home Anderson Lane, CA /C H , fireplace, Responsible spn trolly oriented woman seeks same. $ 350/m o + 1 /2 bills 467- 9128 9-27-5B garden $ 2 5 0 /M O O N ER SHUTTLE FEMALE, NONSMOKING, TRUSTWORTHY, CONSIDERATE. RESPONSIBLE & NEAT PREFERABLY BY OCTOBER 1 ST. I HAVE DIFFICULTY TALKING WALKING, & SEEING I AM ENTIRELY INDEPENDENT 4 7 4 -5 3 9 0 LIVE IN Sun Marcos Rent is cheap­ Female grad student seeks fe er male roommate. Prefer grad stud ent Own room W asher/ dryer Near river $275+ 1/2 utilities (512)392-0845 9-27-5B SHARF SPACIOUS 3 /2 Mancha v/female profession- ca/Stos sney. of, $ 3 1 0 plus i / 2 utilitie s. Qu¡et, security syjte+- big fenced yard, own pn ne 444 488 1 9 8-56. mi 111'AIM 510 - Intertainment- TickeFs RENTAL • 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS ^V o o d L u H s avez a n d /o r call 4 7 6 - 1 1 8 3 for an appointm ent. 9 -18-10B Energetic person to hang posters and distrib­ ute flyers to students near campus for Kaplan. For more info, call Kim at 472-8085 ext. 5 A V O N REPRESENTATIVES needed, p otential $ 2 0 0 -$ 2 0 0 0 / m o Flexi ble hours. Benefits. Independent representative 1 -8 0 0 -8 4 1 -2 8 6 6 . HELPI IF yo u speak G erm an, Ja­ panese, Dutch, Portugese, Czech, H ebrew , c a ll M rs. Spence now! 3 2 8 -1 0 1 8 9-22-20B-A secretary. Basic accou ntin g skills needed Terrific expe rie n ce of­ fered. C onvenient, fle xib le hours 4 5 8 -3 6 3 6 . 9 -2 7 -10B S UNDAY NURSERY w o rke r needed for Hyde Park United M etodist church. S unday m ornings C a ll Bet­ ty, 4 5 2 -2 6 0 2 9 -2 7-3 B PART-TÍm E INFORMATION CLERK For the C o rp o ra tio n s Section o f the Secretory o f State needed A n­ swers telephone in q u ire s o nd uses • Safe. Medically Super­ 9-15-10B $40 CASH/WEEK $160 PER MONTH Schedule Own Time • Extra Clean, State-of- the-Art Facdity vised. Relaxing • Only 15 Minutes from UT Campus BIO MED A NEW High Tech Plasma Facility Please Call for Appt. 251-8855 H O U R S : 8 A M - 7 P M HORSE LOVER needed im m ediately to feed and clean stalls a t small stables A p p ro xim a te ly 1 5 h rs /w k Transportation a must! H am ilton Pool Rd. A partm ent p ro vid e d plus salary 2 6 4 -0 0 4 1 . 9-20-8B M O R N IN G re ce p tio n ist positions a va ila b le fo r im m ediate em ploy­ ment at sm all d ow n tow n lo w firm Professional a p p e a ra n ce , phone skills, a nd positive attitude re­ quired . C o m p u te r/ cle rica l skills a plus Please a p p ly in person at IH-3 5 & P llu g e rv ille Exit 7 0 0 Lavaca Street, Suite 7 2 0 (in W est side IH-35 behind E X X O N the Texas Com m erce Bank Tower) Bring this ad - Exp 10/1/95 between the hours of 8 3 0 -1 0 A M a nd 2 30-4 3 0P M 9-19 206 BUSY PROFESSOR needs help o r­ 6th, N o phone interviews 9-26-5B BABYSIT M ,W ,F afternoons with my 8 month o ld dau gh ter C am p M a b ry a rea Prefer co lle ge student o r graduate, or p rio r in fan t e xp e ri­ ence Provide references. C a ll Su­ san, 4 6 7 -8 4 1 0 9-26-10B COUNTY LINE O N THE HILL c u rre n tly s e e k in g e n e rg e tic , re s p o n s ib le in d iv id u o ls fo r g a n iz in g small outside o ffice G en­ lin e c o o k , b u s in g a n d h o st e ra l o ffice duties a nd some re­ p o s itio n . E v e n in g h o u rs . E arn search. Flexible hours $ 6 5 0 /h r + bonus 4 4 1 -3 6 4 4 9-21-7B h o u rly w a g e PLUS c a s h tip s . ($ 6 -1 0 / h r . ) 3 2 7 - 1 7 4 2 W o m e n 's c o n s ig n m e n t s h o p A s k f o r D e e D e e n e e d s f r ie n d ly a s s is ta n t so m e a fte rn o o n s a n d / o r s o m e fu ll d a y s . R e s p o n s ib ilitie s w il l in ­ c lu d e w o r k in g w ith c u s to m e rs & s o m e p a p e r w o r k . C lo s e d M o n d a y s . Please call 451-6845. SECOND TIME AROUND _______________ 9-21-7B CAMPUS W O R K . Fun atm osphere in b rand new , a ir-co n d itio n e d food kiosks on campus. Flexible hours. 9-25-20B TELEMARKETING PART/FULL-TIME 6 .5 0/H R . Immediate openings for appointm ent setters a nd customer service telemarketers G reat opportunity for students A pp ly in person at 8 1 4 0 M o p ac, B uilding 4, Suite 100, Austin, TX o r coll V olt at 3 3 8 -4 4 4 4 9-25-5B Dependable w orkers needed 4 7 7 - G YM N A STIC S INSTRUCTOR for 13 6 7 9-20-8B 3 -7 yr olds. W e e k d a y afternoons. $ 8 -1 0 per class 44 1 1 3 0 4 /3 2 7 - N O EXPERIENCE necessary W ill tra in enthusiastic in dividu a ls. Per­ 5 5 7 4 9-27-2B fect position fo r in dividu a ls seeking CHURCH NURSERY seeking re­ part-time e m /p m o p p o rtu n itie s sponsible and loving people to care $ 5 /h r+ C a ll fo r interview , 459 - fo r ages 4 & under Pleose call, 8 8 6 4 9-22-5B 3 4 3 -7 1 2 0 . 9-27-3B N W AUSTIN Church seeks re li­ W A N T E D HIGHLY m otivated, re­ a b le nursery workers fo r Sunday sponsible leaders for m anagem ent m orning a nd various oth e r times. positions Transportation necessary. $ 5 5 0 / h r C a ll M elissa 3 3 5 -5 9 6 1 C a ll Jerry fo r interview , 5 05 - fo r info. 9-22-5B 2 3 4 9 . 9-27-20B STUDENTS W A N T E D fo r d o n o r in­ sem ination Send letter o f interest u ti­ w ith p hone# to P.O. Box 9 0 3 4 1 , A ustin, 7 8 7 0 9 . C o n fid e n tia l. 9-21- 7B CHILDCARE A F T E R N O O N staff needed to w o rk w ith infants and KEVIN'S COOKIES & DELI B r a n d n e w d o w n t o w n sto re h ir in g c h e e rfu l a n d d e p e n d a b le m o r n in g a n d a ft e r n o o n h e lp . toddlers, 2 -ó p.m . and 3 -6 p m., M- G r e a t lo c a t io n , f r ie n d ly a t­ F. 4 5 1 -1 1 1 6 . 9-25-5B m o s p h e r e C a ll 4 7 2 - 2 3 8 8 o r PART-TIME W AITPER SO N needed M-F for off-cam pus d o rm ito ry. M e a ls + salary. C a ll 4 7 4 -7 3 9 1 With your first IHesaving donation receive ¡¿ 19C A S H I F O R N E W D O N O R S w r a i t h » C o u p o n and earn up to ¡ $ 1 5 0 / M O N T H i I b y donating twice a week I New donors please call for an appointment. We require yoe bring witb you . 'Seoct Seority Cord 'Proof of RtsMeixe ! "Pktore ID (UT ID, T D t...) I AUSTIN PLASMA COMPANY INC I L.5 J0 W. 2 9 th Jtj 4 7 7 ;3 7 ¿5 J I | , I I I I I . , ! ^ I I P R E S ID IO THEATRES now hiring part-time manager trainees Apply in person only 2;00-5:00pm at W estgate 8 Theater, 4521 Westgate Blvd. le G R E A T P / T J O B ! |jj ¡C 'Te1 ri tan Get in shape & Get g paid at the same time jjj ffi Pay starting at S7 50 'Hr fc C lea n Cut, Inc. & 8711 Burnet Rd. -Ste. F-73 1 | b See Ad in Today's Paper B í a a g i jjm W A c t U| i.-i uic-i d uq L.-1 t-i FLEXIBLE HOURS W o rk in g w ith c h ild re n , M-F. Full-time o n d part- tim e postions 7 3 4 4 . 9 -1 3-20B a v a ila b le 4 lb - 9-25-5B EMPLOYMENT - 790 PART-TIME EOE 800 - General 9-27-5B rtfnp w arned Casual Job No Stress H and Out Brochures No Sales No Telem arketing $6/Hr. + Bonuses Rapid Pay Advancement 4-8 M-F 10 Positions Available Call Now! Craig 2-4 pm 453-8828 E M B A S S Y SU IT ES* Would you like to work in a clean, dru g free environm ent and earn Insurance Competitive Wages. benefits. Bonus Quarterly Program . Company M atched Savings & Retirement Plan, and Employee Room Discounts? Full or part tim e positions available. Com e work on our Team! FT or PT Front Desk Clerk PT Switchboard Operator PM Apply in person at the Front Desk 5901 N. IH 35 454-8004 Preemployment Drug Screening required EOE M /F /D /V ¡3 ATTENTION! Éj t O O * 6 n M Ww l Help Wonted T e le m a rk e te r (Part-tim e) J o in a c o m p a n y o n th e c u ttin g e d g e o f re s id e n ­ tia l se c u rity . W e're lo o k ­ in g f o r a n e x p e r ie n c e d T e l e m a r k e t e r w ith e x ­ c e l le n t c o m m u n ic a t io n M o n d a y - T h u r s d a y a n d + b o n u s. In te re s te d c a n ­ d id a te s s h o u ld c all M ik e C o p e a t (5 1 2 ) 4 6 7 -9 9 2 7 , o r a p p ly in p e r s o n a t: 6 4 4 8 H ig h w a y 2 9 0 E ., S te . D 1 0 9 , A u s tin , T X 7 8 7 2 3 ; f a x ( 5 1 2 ) 4 6 7 - 9 3 2 2 . E O E . I1BRINKS H O M E S E C U R I T Y .Affordable protaJhm A name you am trusl ® Part-Time ALTERATIONS PERSON C K L E X / is opening its The B uckle the I-akeline in 161st stone M all in Austin and is looking for a part-tim e alterations person. If you enjoy working in a fun environm ent then for you! this the is Flexible an and hours excellent em ployee discount. jo b APPLY IN PERSON at R ound Rock T exas F.m plovm ent C om m ission O ffice 2107 N orth M ays Street Tuesday, Oct. 3 or Wednesday, Oct. 4 from 9:30am to 4:30pm T E L E Q U E S T PERFECT Before o r A fte r Class APPOINTMENT SETTING FOR FORTUNE 500 COMPANIES $9.00 TO $15.00 PER HOUR • EVFNING POSITIONS • PART/FULL TIME • DOWNTOWN LOCATION EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY TO WK EVENING HOURS 25 HRS A W EEK & EA R N UP TO $250.00 T O $300.00 W EEK LY 477-3252 c o m e b y 8 1 6 C o n g r e s s A v e - F ro s t B a n k P la z a 9-26-46 AFTER-SCHOOL CAREGIVER, h ig h ly n urturing, com m itted person needed C o m p etitive p a y 4 59 - 0 2 5 8 9-26-5B OFFICE CLERK/ RUNNER F o r la w o ff ic e . T h re e b lo c k s fro m c a m p u s M -F l- 6 p m . VV $ 6 / h r . M u s t h a v e o w n tra n s ­ p o r ta tio n . P le a se c a ll o ffic e a d m in is tr a to r . 477-7543. 9-26-4B PART-TIME M O R N IN G sandw hich p ro d u c tio n / d e liv e ry p eo ple need­ ed. C all 4 7 2 -5 3 0 1 , A .M . 9-28-5B PART-TIME SALES clerk n eeded at m a ilin g and p a cka g in g store M-W - F, 12-7p.m . Saturdays, 1 0 a m - 3 p m Starting a t $5 7 5 / h r . 443 - 5 8 4 8 . 9-2 8-5 B PAR AD IG M N O W h irin g gra du ate student note takers in C hem istry a n d B io log y Pleose c a ll o r come b y P aradigm : 4 0 7 W 2 4 th St. 4 7 2 -7 9 8 6 9-28-3B WORK O N CAMPUS! THE DAILY TEXAN is a c c e p t in g a p p lic a t io n s f o r A C la s s if ie d A d T a k e r D u tie s In c lu d e t a k in g v o lu n t a r y a d s b y p h o n e , f ilin g , t y p in g , c o o r d in a t in g p r o je c ts , a s s is tin g $ $ s a le a n d s u p e r v is o r y s ta ff w ith c le r ic a l ta s k s . E x c e lle n t c o ­ w o r k e r a n d c u s to m e r s e rv ic e s k ills n e e d e d . Shift A vailab le M-F, 1 l-2 p m APPLY IN PERSON THE DAILY TEXAN Room 3 .2 0 0 selling h Students utilizing their *1 in pi ¡3 upcoming technical Cj ¡2 projects H projects. H skills Iil • Calling Businesses • Competitive Pay • Flexible Schedules For more info: please call 454-4467 Ships 1 1 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ ! $ $ $ $ $ $ ? $ $ EUN $ $$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ J START AT $7. PER H O lR jJ $$g i a r a .n teed $$ $$BOWSES $25. TO 150.$$ $$ $$WKLY S$ $*5 9 pm. M-THIR ^OVERTIME AVAILABLE ^ jJO PP. FOR ADVANCEMENT $ $ $$ $$ CALL DEE OR TOM 512/832 5331 $ $ $$ $$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ PAY IS HOURLY ♦ COMMISSION COURIER C O M P A N Y seeking Training with pay is available in all positions. v v 25-5B - 4 A LASKA SUMMER EMPLOY­ M E N T- STUDENTS N e ed e d! Fish­ in g Industry Earn up to $ 3 0 0 0 - DRIVER PART-TIME for co m p an y pick-ups $ 8 /h r . C a ll Jim, 4 4 3 - 5 7 1 3 . 9-27-5B. $ 6 0 0 0 + per m onth Room and C ABIN ET SHOP help w a nte d W ill B o a rd ! T ra nsportation! M a le or tra in part-tim e or full-time. C a ll 345-5222 Female N o expe rie n ce necessary. 9 9 0 -5 9 5 1 . 9-27-3B C a ll A 5 8 6 7 1 8-30-24P (2 0 6 ) 5 4 5 -4 1 5 5 ext. TRAVEL A BR O A D A N D W O R K — M a ke up to $ 2 5 -$ 4 5 /h o 'u r teaching 818 1 9-2 7-5 B TEACH PRESCHOOL a t the Austin N a tu re C e n te rll 3 2 h rs ./w k , M-F. $7 0 2 / h r C o nta ct Rachel, 3 2 7 - 860 - Engineering- Technical P R O G R A M M E R , P AR T-TIM E 22-20B 8 4 0 - Sabs S tu d e n t o r g a n iz a t io n s , f r a t e r n i­ tie s , s o r o r itie s , o r n o n - p r o fit g r o u p s n e e d e d AUSTIN VALUE CARD. s e ll to th e E x c e lle n t f u n d -ra is in g o p p o r t u n i­ ty . C o n t a c t G r e g M i t c h e ll a t Heie if desired N o experience neces­ ( 5 1 2 ) 3 9 6 - 0 3 2 8 , e v e n in g s . 912-20B EMPLOYMENT* EMPLOYMENT 850 - Retail 880 - Professional 890 - Clubs- STUDENTS A N D non-students need­ ed fo r part-tim e telephone w o rk. N o sales required Laid-back a t­ mosphere c a ll C ra ig W a lk e r w ith Texas Research at 4 9 5 -9 6 9 8 9-26- 9B Eclectic print shop needs temporary help. C ould turn in to permanent position sary W ill train Shifts ranging from 6 a.m . to as late as 2a.m Especially need help from lO p .m - 2a m. including weekends. $ 5 / h r A s k f o r C h ris ta l a t 1 0 0 2 W . 1 2 th St. drive rs M o rn in g a nd afte rn oo n po­ sitions a va ila b le G o o d d riv in g re co rd a nd ow n vehicle re q uired C a ll 4 5 1 -6 5 4 4 for ^ fo rm a tio n 9- DRUG EMPORIUM, W e st Lake H ills iers, N o w h irin g a ll shifts, cash­ stackers, cosmetics, and 9-25-5 B p h a rm a cy technicians. A p p ly at 3 7 0 0 Bee Caves Rd. 9-26-4B LOVE CLOTHES? If y o u 'r e r e a lly in to fin e c lo th e s , y o u 'll lo v e w o r k in g a t S e c o n d L oo ks! G r e a t h o u rs a n d p a y . Full o r p a r t- tim e N o r t h a n d S o u th lo c a tio n s . R e ta il e x p e r ie n c e h e lp fu l. Afternoon art class & full-time jobs available in North-Central preschool. Benefits include health club membership & partial paid health care. Please call 452 -5 4 3 7 9-22-5B CO M M ERCIAL REAL ESTATE INTERN Retail broker lo o k in g for a g g re s­ sive, "w an t-to-le arn " ca n d id a te s w ith strong in itia tiv e to fun ctio n as intern w ith a d m in istra tive assistant duties. Q u a lifie d ca nd id ate s w ill be a b le to function w ell in a high ly interactive a nd person ab le , yet de­ m anding ond very high-caliber busi­ Restaurants PREP W O R K . G o o d w o rkin g co n ­ d itio n for interested in te llig e n t per son Training giver- in sm all vegi- ta ria n G ou rm et restaurant 4 7 2 - 2 8 1 6 9-26-4B 900 - Domestic- Household W an ted : Preferably education major w / strong writing skills for tutor/babysitter 2-3 weekdays • 1 dav. /w eekend Flexible Hours call Myra @ 4 5 8 -2 9 3 5 FEMALE G R A D student in w h e e lch a ir needs part-tim e assis tance w ith p e rson al care a nd er­ rands C all 4 7 6 -7 7 2 5 9-8-10B Assist in setting up Visual Basic ness environm ent w ith strong o ra l p ro gra m for client server (W in do w s a nd w ritten co m m u nicatio n skills. N T SQL) database pro|ect. M ust be fa m ilia r with Visual Basic Pro­ gram m ing and have one ye ar relev ant experience with progra m m ing in Duties w ill in clu de assisting in a A U P A IR -W A N T E D TO g o to v o rie fy o f functions (p rim a rily as- Athens, G reece For in form atio n , 5‘stmg a broker in the re ta il d iv i­ ca ll N ik i a t 4 7 9 -8 9 9 7 , 10-5 P.M s e n ), including w o rd processing, 9-25-5 B basic and in w in d ow s environm ent scheduling, accounting, and detailed Position needed for 6-9 months, m arket analysis Please c a ll D fle xible 2 0 h rs/w e ek, $7-8 0 0 / h r C u rry, Keller W illia m s C o m m e rcial Resume to M ike N oel, 4 0 2 0 S In­ at 5 1 2 -3 1 4 -8 3 0 0 or fa x resume to 5 1 2 -3 1 4 -8 3 2 4 9-27-5B 9-27-38 dustrial Dr # 1 0 0 , Austin, TX 7 8 7 4 4 or Fax to 4 4 0 -8 9 3 0 9-21-7B D A N C E OR g ym nastics teachers, p a rt/fu ll-tim e , or sub. Some e x p e ri­ PC SOFTWARE firm needs part- tim e em ployee 1 0 1 5 h rs ./w k . Ex­ ence and 3 2 3 -6 0 1 3 9 28 5B re lia b le tra nsp o rtatio n. p erien ce needed w /D O S , p ro g ra m e dito rs, PC tro ub le sho o ting and 8 9 0 -C lubs- g o o d ve rb al skills. S tarting $ 7 . 5 0 / hr. C a ll 8 3 5 -1 2 8 5 . 9-25-5B" M S ACCESS DATABASE PROGRAMMER High-tech m arketing a ge ncy. Ex­ p erien ce w ith d istrib u tin g a p p lic a ­ tions to workstations, N o v e l N e t­ w orks, tro u b le ­ PC w orksta tion shooting, internet & e-mail technolo­ g y a nd the s a le s / m arke ting p ro ­ cess a plus. Full-time (fle xib le ), plus benefits & p ro fit sharing. Must be w e ll o rg a n ize d , p ro ject & g o a l o rie n te d . Fax resume, co ver letter, Restaurants STEAK & ALE 221 1 W . Anderson Ln. *Host person start at $ 5.5 0 /h r. * Also hiring servers Earn great money. 453-1688 THIRTY-SOMETHING PROFES­ SIO NAL couple seeking live-in nan­ ny to help w / c h ild c o re a nd lig h t household duties. W e lls Branch area C a ll 9 9 0 -1 4 7 3 9 2 6-58 W A N T E D BABYSITTER fo r b oy age 7. Must have c a r I5 h rs /w k . South Austin C a !1 4 0 4 7 3 8 7 (day); 2 8 2 -4 5 8 5 (evenmg) Leave message 9-26-5B Responsible student needed 3 :3 0 -6:30 , M -F to do light household chores & laundry & to assist our 1 2 & 14 yr. olds In their endeavors. Must have reliable transportation & swim well. W ill pay $ 6 /h r. for de­ pendable, conscientious help. Call 4 4 8 -3 5 2 9 . ___________________________ 9-25-5B 9-28-2B a nd sa lary requirem ent to D M G - S N A C K SHO P/BEVERAG E cart Tuesday-Friday 12 -4 p m H ourly D a tabase P rogram m er 3 2 7 -0 9 2 1 help. Part-time h elp a v a ila b le . Riv­ w o ges n e g otia b le Experience and 870 - Medical a v a ila b le 9-21 10B 9 27 3B e rside G o lf C ourse Positions im m ed ia tely 3 8 9 -1 0 7 0 references or Stewart 2 5 2 -2 0 7 9 9-25 5B re q u ire d C a ll A b ig a il 9 - 1 1-20B L O O K IN G FOR part-tim e in-home ch ild c a re for 2 m onth o ld boy. PHLEBOTOMISE PART-TIME 4 :0 0 -9 0 0pm Tuesdoy-Friday, 9 00-5 0 0 Saturday W ill train. $ 7 2 5 /h r A p p ly in person: Austin Biomed Lab 14415 Owen Tech Blvd. N o smokers. N o phone calls. ^ u d d E l j c E e r s - IS N O W HIRING 0 1 7 1 . 9-25-5B W A N T E D AFTERS : h O O I nanny for 9 and 1 1 year old Mus* have ow n vehicle. N o nsm ake r 3 38 - Part-time and Full-time positions N o experience necessary. G o o d starting p a y W ill w o rk w ith CHILD C A R E / Tra n spo rta tion need­ ed $ 2 5 0 /m o n th 10-15 n o u rs / week. C o ll S haron 4 6 3 -9 5 6 2 or M ike, 4 1 9 -9 0 0 8 . 9-27-5B schedule Casual atm osphere. DAY N A N N Y nee de d for h e lp w ith A p p ly in person. new born 2 0 -3 0 hours a week. C all M onday-Thursday 2-4PM 3 0 6 -1 9 8 2 . 9-26-4B 4 0 2 4 South Lamar. 9 -27-20B . TALEGATERS N O W h irin g w a itp e r- sons Flexible hours, foo d e x p e ri­ ence necessary. C o m e by 3 0 6 E. EXPERIENCED, LOVING N A N N Y N eeded to w o rk afternoons 6th Street M.Tu 2-4 p.m 9-27-5B 1 2 :4 5 -6:00 p m w ith two child­ ren, ages 2 1 / 2 and 5 in N W Hills. Non-smoker, transporta­ tion, and desire for fun, play, and learning necessary. 338-1855 ________________________ 9-26-56 BABYSITTER W IT H c h ild ca re refer- enees w a nte d N e e d c a r fo r o cca ­ sio na l afte rsch oo l a n d w eekends j 3 7 1 -7 5 3 1 9 -28 3B RESPONSIBLE STUDENT needed to supervise a nd tra n s p o rt tw o c h ild ­ ren, ages 12 a n d 14 after school 3 :3 0 -5 .3 0 . Light housekeeping $ 6 / h r 2 9 2 -6 7 6 3 Non-sm oker 9-28-5B TO PLACE AN AD CALL 471- RETAIL FASHION Full & Part-time Sales morning, afternoon, evening & weekend positions available B U C K L E X T The B uckle is opening its 161st store in the in Austin and is looking for Lakeline Mall enthusiastic people in selling the latest styles from the hottest nam es in fashion - Lucky, M ossim o, Calvin Klein, Dr. Martens, G uess, Levi’s and more! Learn to sell fashion clothing in a fun atmosphere. Excellent benefits package, a great em ployee discount, flexible hours and advancement opportunities available. interested APPLY IN PERSON AT Round Rock Texas Employment Commission Office 2107 North Mays Street Tuesday, Oct+ 3 or Wednesday, Oct. 4 from 9:30 to 4:30pm Parks, Hotels, Spas, + more Des­ P .O .B o x 1 8 0 5 8 , b a sic co nve rsa tion a l English n Ja­ p a n , Taiw an, or S K orea N o tea ch ing b ackg ro u n d o r A sia n la n ­ g u a ge s re q uired For info call: (2 0 6 ) 632-1 1 4 6 ext J5 86 71 30-24P. 8- RESORT JOBS - Students N e e d e d I Earn to $ 1 2 /h r. + tips Theme tin atio ns inclu de Florida, H a w a ii, C o lo ra d o & So. C a lifo rn ia . C a ll Resort Em ploym ent Services 1 -206- 6 3 2 - 0 15 0 ext. R 5 8 6 7 1 8 30-24P CRUISE SHIPS HIRING - Earn up to $ 2 0 0 0 + /m o n th , w o rkin g on Cruise o r Land-Tour com panies. W o rld travel Seasonal & full-time em ploym ent a v a ila b le N o expen W A N T TO G A IN TRAINING/EXPERIENCE w h ile h e lp in g g e n e r a l p a l In ­ c o m e p re s id e n t? S e n d re s u m e w it h le tte r e x p la in in g in te re s t C itiz e n s W h o C a re , A u s tin , T e x a s , 7 8 7 6 0 . to E O E . C U S T O D IA N NEEDED part-tim e fo r U niversity-area C hurch M-F 4 OOpm-6 0 0 p m and alterna te Sun­ days 6 0 0 a m -1 0 0p m C a ll 4 7 8 - 8 5 5 9 for interview. 9-26-5B ence necessary. For info, c a ll 1- A M E R IC O R P S V O L U N T E E R S 2 0 6 -6 3 4 -0 4 6 8 ext C 5 8 6 7 I 30-24 P 8- Travis County Housing A uthority has HIRE-A-HORN- The Employment Service For Students W e always need dependable peo­ ple for various full d ay (8-5) gener­ al labor and cle rica l assignments Long and short term. If you have a M W F or T-TH schedule o r if you can w o rk full-time, call 326-H O R N (4 6 7 6 ) $ 6 0 0-$8 0 0 /h r. 9-1-20BC * STOP THE WAR O N THE ENVIRONMENT! W o rk w ith the S ierra C lu b , the na­ tio n 's oldest a n d largest e n viron ­ mental group. Learn cam p aig n skills and make a difference FULL/PART TIME POSITIONS. CALL KELLY: 4 79 -8 4 81 . 9-7-206 O N E PAGE RESUME $25.00 10 o rig in als w / m atching envelopes openings for tw o full time Ameri- corps Volunteers to perform com ­ munity service by o rg a n izin g a nd op e ra tin g youth activity and educa­ tio na l enrichm ent programs for youth in tw o public housing complexes Earn a living stipend and education­ al benefits w h ile serving yo ur com ­ munity To a pp ly g o to 1 00 N o rth IH 3 5 , Suite 3 0 0 0 , Austin, Texas M-F, 8-5. Positions open until filled. Equal O pp o rtun ity Employer. M AKE MO ENY-SELL hottest on cam pus. G orgeous b od y-p ainte d m odels. G re a t fra t fun d ra iser. C o ll Body TZ 8 0 0 -4 3 9 -4 4 4 6 . 9-2 8-1 P FLORIST SEEKING full a nd part-time 4 5 1 -6 7 2 8 . 9-2 7- d e live ry help 5B Pick Your Shift Daytime or nighttime, Sat­ urday or Sunday, working with various ages of child­ ren. A pply anytime: Tree Tops Learning Center - La­ mar to 34th St. - West on 34th. St. 3 4 0 0 Kerbey Ln. Call JoAnn 836-6575 ^ __________ 9 -2 7 -5 N C Cover Letters are $5 extra U.S. G O V T JOBS H irin g N o w : Pick-up & d elivery are extra 1 0 0 's o f Entry Level O p e n in g s U p ­ ATTENTION G RAD STUDENTS SCORERS NEEDED to evaluate written responses Temporary positions, app ro xim a tely four weeks beginning early N ovem ber. W e provide tra in ing Hours are 8:30am -3 4 5p m ,M-F Hours are not flexible Bachelor's degree required, prefer English, Languoge arts, education or related fields D uring interview, demonstration of w riting a b ility required Pay rate $7 0 0 per hour C all M easurem ent Incorporated for ap­ p lication (5 1 2 )8 3 5 -6 0 9 1 . FAST FUNDRAISER - Ra se $ 5 0 0 in 5 d a ys - G reeks, groups, clubs, m otiva te d m div.duals. Fast, e a sy- N o fin a n c ia l o b lig a tio n (8 0 0 )8 6 2 - 198 2 Ext.33. 9-25-4P POSTAL JOBS Start $ 12 .0 8 /h r For exam and a p p lica tio n info, call ext TX 533, 7 6 9 -8 3 0 1 (2 1 9 ) 8AM -8PM , Sun-Fri 9-28-6P 9-28-20B-D S10 * Office-Clerical SHORT W ALK UT. P aralegal runner tra in ee Typist (w ill tra in on M a c), b o o kkee p in g trainees, cle rica l. N onsm oking 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 . 9 7-20B-C PART-TIME ASSISTANT needed for H yde Park la w o ffice $ 6 /h r . T& TH, 10 5 Please call 4 5 2 -0 0 0 1 9- 2 2-58 PARTTIME SECRETARY Flexible schedule in blocks o f 2 1 /2 hours for m orning on M W F or TTh, and skills, prefer students, $ 6 p er hour, C o nta ct T E W ile y C o between 9 :3 0 o nd 11 30a m , 1 5 0 6 W est 6th, N o phone interviews 9-26-58 AUSTIN LEGAL COPIES is im m ediately hiring parttim e & fulltime runners ond support person­ al to w o rk in dow ntow n law firms. S pecifically for the follow ing shifts: M-F 3 :30-8 00pm 9Í3 20+C TTh afternoons Require typing EXPERIENCED PART-TIME recep­ M-F 8 :00am-1 00pm tionist needed fo r skin care clin ic Professional dress required. S alary w e e k d a y evenings M-Th 3 0 0 -7 0 0 $ 6 / h r and up A pply in person at a nd Saturdays 9 0 0 -5 :0 0 Fax re­ Austin Legal Copies, sume 1 )5 1 to 4 5 4 -1 5 5 4 or co ll 4 5 9 - 9 2 7 5B 3 2 7 Congress Ave Suite 1 00 Circulation Assistant (Inserter) 19 hours per week maximum $ 6 .1 0 per hour depending upon qualifications W ork hours begin at 2 a.m. Assist in Circulation Departm ent of The D aily Texan on nights when inserts are in paper. Requires High School placed graduation or GED; a b ility to lift heavy loads; valid Texas Driver's License and an acceptable driving record. A pplicant selected must provide a current three year Driver's License Record. Call Angie after 11 pm at 471-5422 for appointm ent " L S H The University of Texas at Austin is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer 1^S33BSSBS8883833S8SS8SS3SHi I f $240" to $550" Weekly! Fun, Fast-Paced Atmosphere Flexible Schedules: 9-1 • 1-5 • 5-9 Benefits Plus Bonuses 1-800-929-5753 NEWSPAPER DISTRIBUTORS The University of Texas at Austin Circulation Assistant The Daily Texan is seeking a Circulation Assistant to pick up newspapers at the dock, load own vehi­ cle, and deliver the newspapers to boxes on cam ­ pus and to other Austin and University locations. Deliveries must begin at 4:00 AM and be com ­ pleted by 7 AM, Monday through Friday - no weekends. Requires High School graduation or GED; ability and willingness to provide own vehicle (van or covered pickup), to show proof of insurance, and to provide a valid driver s license and acceptable driving record Applicant selected must provide a current Department of Public Safety driver's license record Newspaper delivery experience is preferred. Salary is $6 10 per hour, for a maximum of hours per week, plus $.28 per mile. 1 9 F o r a p p o in tm e n t call TOMMY ALEWINE 471-5422 MEN AGES 20 to 65 Up To $500.00 Compensation Are you a healthy, non-smoking man between the ages of 20 and SS0 If so. you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $500.00 The dates and times of the study are listed below; you must be available to remain in our faculty for the entire period to be eligible: Check-In; Saturday, October 7 Check-Out: Monday, October 9 in addition, brief out-patient visits will be required on the following dates: October 10,14,21,28 November 4 To qualify, you must pass our free physical examination and screening tests. Meals, accommodations, entertainment, and recreational activities will be provided free of charge. For more information, please call 462-0492 A n E qual O ppo rtun ity/A ffirm ative A ction E m p loye r o r th e spouse o f o student Position A vailab le M onday, 10-2 T e le p h o n e In q u irie s not acc e p te d A p p lic ­ ants must be a U n ive rsity o f Texas stu dent (2 1 9 ) 7 6 9 -8 3 0 1 ext TX 5 3 3 , POSTAL JOBS Start $ 1 2 0 8 / h r For exam a nd a p p lic a tio n in fo coll 8A M -8P M , Sun-Fri 8-17-6P The U n ive rsity o f Texas a t A u s tin is an PART-TIME ADVERTISING /SALES E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity /A h rm a tiv e A c tio n Em­ p lo ye r representative n eeded for study b reaks m o g azm e Base + com m s Resumes for internships, part-time ston C a ll 4 7 7 -3 1 4 1 9-28-5B and full-time |obs WRITTEN WELL MPLOYMINT - 790 PART-TIME V V ^ V V V V > V V V V V % V V V V V V V V V V V l i 9 -1 1-20P d a te d D a ily. C a ll Toll Free 1 (8 0 0 ) 5 4 9 -2 3 0 0 Ext # 3 0 1 4 EMPLOYMENT - 850- RETAIL Hispanic women’s cancer rates higher A sso cia te d P ress SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, Texas — For some it is a lack of education. For others, a lack of money. Some are sim ply too modest. W hatever the reason, Hispanic w om en are less likely to go see a doctor and m ore likely to con­ tract diseases such as cervical cancer and diabetes, participants of a binational conference on w om ­ en's health said W ednesday. The U.S.-Mexico Border Conference on W om ­ e n 's H ea lth a im s to id e n tify h e a lth p ro b le m s prevalent am ong H ispanic w om en and find w ays to educate them about the need for prevention. "The w om en that tend to have those diseases ‘ may not know w h at to do about it, w here to go, how to cope, h o w to a d a p t," said Paul Villas,' executive director of the U niversity of Texas Bor­ der Health Coordination Office, w hich organized the conference. We know the link between low education and health, the link betw een poverty and health," Vil­ las said. The statistics tell the story. In Texas, H ispanic w om en living along the U.S.-Mexico bo rd er are twice as likely as Anglo w om en to contract cervi­ cal cancer, said Dr. N ancy Weiss, director of the Texas Cancer Registry. The m ortality rate also is twice as high am ong Hispanic w om en, she said. "There are various barriers to it. For some it is lack of access to services. For oth ers it's tra n s­ p o rta tio n p o ssib ilitie s, an d for o th e rs it's the w om en's fear itself," Weiss said. Cervical cancer cases are highest am ong His- panics age 45-49 and 60-64, but w om en as young as 25 are dying from the disease, W eiss said. The num bers are similar in other border states, such as California. A study conducted there from 1988 to 1992 found 15 cervical cancer cases for ev ery 100,000 A n g lo w o m en and 30 cases for every 100,000 H ispanic w om en, said Dr. D avid Goldsm ith, of the W estern Consortium for Public Health in Berkeley, Calif. "C ervical cancer is one of the m ost im portant an d clear-cut cancer differences th a t w e know betw een H ispanic w om en and alm o st all other ethnic g ro u p s in the U nited States," G oldsm ith said. "A m ong Hispanic w om en age 40 and older in California, they're show ing up at the em ergency room s and in the clinics w ith term inal cases of ce rv ica l ca n ce r. T h ese a re p r o d u c tiv e , a c tiv e m others and grandm others that are really being killed at a m uch too early age." W hat frustrates the m edical com m unity is that cervical cancer is preventable w ith early detection. W ith increased screening, 116 cases and 40 deaths could be prevented annually in Texas, Weiss said. Said G oldsm ith: "It is a m atter of getting m ore education out and getting health care providers to be more vigilant in getting their patients to have pap sm ears done." Diabetes is another disease that appears to be m ore prevalent am ong Hispanics, and oftentimes treatm ents also are ignored. A bout 15 p ercen t of T exans suffer from d ia ­ betes, but that rate increases to about 30 percent a m o n g H is p a n ic s liv in g o n th e b o r d e r , sa id A rm ando Lopez, health coordinator for the Bor­ der Health C oordination Office. F actors affecting the h ig h e r rate in clu d e the sedentary lifestyle along the border and high-fat diet of Mexican-Americans, Lopez said. The goal of the conference, w hich ends T hurs­ day, is to further educate health care professionals about these issues so they can pass the inform a­ tion along to w om en in their com m unities, Villas said. But ultim ately, he said, H ispanic w om en m ust take control of their ow n health care needs. That m ay m ean giving u p fragm ents of the lifestyle that's synonym ous w ith their culture. "The scope is to encourage w om en to look at the big picture. Their role is m uch bigger than the tra d itio n a l," V illas said. " If a w o m an w an ts to stay in that role, w e applaud it. But if she doesn't w ant to be there, she needs to know o p tio n s .... By d oing that, I believe that w e can im p ro v e their health." Hospital ordered to pay for procedural mistake A sso cia te d P ress HOUSTON — A hospital has been o rd e re d to p ay $12.7 m illio n to a w o m an w h ose so n su ffe re d b ra in d am ag e after a n u rse injected h er w ith a la b o r-in d u c in g d r u g ev e n though she had already started labor. A ccording to testim ony, the m is­ take resulted in severe injuries to 39- year-old Lisa Lee, and left her son, A lexander, w ith severe brain d am ­ age. After the injection, doctors w ere to c o n d u c t e m e rg e n c y fo rced removal of Lee's uterus. L ee's law su it alleged th a t n u rse Rosario Tarriman, a Parkway H ospi­ tal n u rse w ith four m o n th s experi­ ence, in jected th e la b o r-in d u c in g d r u g w ith o u t a p p r o v a l fro m th e w om an's physician. The verdict on Tuesday came after tw o d a y s of d e lib e r a tio n s in a m onthlong trial in the court of state D istrict Judge C arolyn Clause G ar­ cia. A ttorney M ark Clore, w ho repre­ se n ted Lee, said the la rg e d am ag e aw ard is needed to provide intensive medical care and therapy for Alexan­ der. The g o v ern m en t m ight o th e r­ wise be saddled with paying for such care, the lawyer said. 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Be tu r e to take the full 2-dav supply of samples before deciding you feel nothing, Read T h e D aily T e x a n for the latest in news, sports, and entertainment! PAPERS PLUS LIGHTERS \ i n c e n s e NITROUS WIDE SELECTION OF WATERPIPES 504 W. 24th 4 7 8 7 2 3 6 . 1 1 - 1 0 :3 0 M -S , 1-8 S U N We’re selling 100s o f books and need to buy 100s more! Cash or double value in trade credit. i f Book Market 000’s o f to 'A Price Books! Dobie Mall - Food Court 499-8708 Mon-Sat 10-10 m a c in to s h L a g i c ■Convenient onsite troubleshooting ■Consultation »Service/Repair "Buy/Sell/Trade 476-4470 3004 Guadalupe rhdennis@io. com 7-6 v^AYS -toV veup s A '/e + H e CALL 1 -8 0 0 -4 8 8 -8 8 8 7 . n \ The Tejas Club On the occasion of its 70th anniversary salutes the faculty and staff o f the University o f Texas. Thanks to all for 70 wonderful years. 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Check your local yellow pages for the Pizza Hut® location nearest you. 1H U T F M 2 00015 —MM * ^ mmm mmm Stuffed Crust Pizza $Q99 1_ )# LARGE I am^ mmmmmmm mmmm mmm mmm mmmm mmm mmmmrnm ommmt B etter T han Pvpr B etter Than Ever BIGFOOT™ Pizza 51A 9 9 T Delivery Specialty ^ 7 Pizza Any 2nd Medium ^ 5 - ^ w S 7 9 9 T M E W P e p p e ro n i" ,_r---------- . j & CheeseStufFed Crust Pizza $1fl99 f O flK c ip r a i 11/11/95 Valid only at participating units owned by subsidiaries of Pizza Hut Inc Specialty pizzas may vary One coupon per party per visit Not valid with | LAR GE I First To pp in g FREE FREE Garlic D ip p in g Sauce _ t y by subs*an« of Pizza Hut Inc Or* coupon per I ® ■ l U l ( V ) cash redemption value 01995 Pizza Hut, Inc V Pf1 VBrt No’ va,KÍ '"’th any other offer V* cent I ■ — B f f B H S mm I I ‘H u ti ® redemption value 019% Pizza Hut Inc mption value ©1995 ñzza Hut Inc a other offer Delivery charges may apply '/* c - 1C !l i l i K H I ^ First T o p p in g FREE FREE G arlic D ip p in g Sauce Make it a Specialty Stuffed Crust Pizza for $3 More — _ NO COUPON REQUIRED Rfee* 'H u ti I V iU only « ixunupain, umo owned br luhuduno oí Pim Hui. Ik . Speoakv I P S * ™ » :™ ' ^ U d j r r y ihar^nav jpph W O a m a * redemption value 0 1995 Pan Hut Inc Not valid wth any «hr, ■ ¿ a ? S i C 99T ^ " s 1 1 9 9 l Pairs I 1 Medium m 1-Tbpping Pizza I E Í l l & 1 Medium Specialty Pizza Add 12 Wings $4 | Add 12 Wings $4 NO COUPON REQUIRED P l m . 2 1 i h Tw taidu n« o n S L r S r t T - l!,,Í T * í ,*..unm Specialty Pizzas r — 't t~-’ »•».» Not valid with cash redemption value 01995 - >*■» C~| 'euemprion value o i » i ■ í " “ a Hut Inc P t o 4flut| * T O I F . w ™ 1 , u l ® « OHw e y t w 11/19/95. Vahd only .! parttopatjng unm °» su»«9anB of fo u Hut, Inc On, toupon per ■ PC w it Not .ax) with an, other offer V»H ot c 5 t ■ — W M i i i i i a w «T I iE i w u u i i l i i a " » i m mmm mmmm mmm» mmrnkmm m mm mmm mmm mmm mmmm 86T I i a g K s z s p r I ■ ■■ ■■ l U T 'H u t! ® l ,"-1> j p p |v c i w p,OJ h Ui. L w j h 1 I I I ■ < I I