b e s t a v a ila b le c o p y i 3 N I ■ MO ‘ 9 N I H S I m n d O ^ O I U b b ¿ 1 J 3 0 N V A , XI OSVr l I • H l L 9 1 l S 3 « H i n O U M 3 / q n n 3 1 V 1 S ¿103 n v « > ' ? f * I f M Í > • » » í T < I » Da il y T e x a n Vol. 91, No. 175 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, July 13. 1992 25c Students hired for UT patrol 8 selected to be extra eyes, ears of University Police M ig u e l M. S a lin a s Daily Texan Staff UT students, beware. Big Brother and Sister are watching. Armed only with a walkie-talkie and sev eral h ou rs of train in g , Pamela Burrell is one of eight UT students who have been recruited to serve as the eyes and ears of the University Police Department. Becau se of a cu rren t budget crunch, the department has hired these Co-eds On Patrol, or COPs, not only to beef up security on cam­ pus, but to help improve student- police relations. "W e want students to understand that the police are more there to help them than to get them in trou­ b le /' Burrell said. " I was shocked th at the p eo p le w ere so n ’ce at UTPD." UT police Capt. Rollin Donelson said a shrinking budget provoked the creation of the COP program, which began last month. "W e might be able to hire four or five part-tim e students where we could only hire one commissioned officer," Donelson said. "And that gives four or five places we can have eyes and ears and then call a commissioned officer over to take action against the violator." The eigh t stu d en ts are not to arrest or restrain anyone, Donelson said. " If they have a problem they have a radio and they're supposed to call the appropriately trained person," he said. "A ll they should ever bt is a good witness." "A ll they are going to provide is information. They should never get into a confrontation with anybody,'' he added. Three major areas on campus — parking lots, office buildings and dorm itories — are being targeted for the ex tra stu d en t p atro ls, Donelson said. "W e would never allow them to do something negative, like write parking tickets," he said. "It's kind of like students patrolling for stu­ dents." D onelson said the UT P olice Department has a satisfactory rap- “We want students to understand that the police are more there to help them than to get them in tro u ble.” — Pamela Burrell, one of eight students chosen for the program port with the UT student communi­ ty, but the COP program will improve that relationship. "T ra d itio n a lly , p olice d ep art­ ments have been getting away from the com m u nity," D onelson said. "The University Police Department has tried to reverse that trend." "W e are more in touch with the students if some of the students work with u s," he added. Even though there is potential for d an ger, B u rrell, an accou ntin g senior, said the police experience is ideal for her future plans to be a sp e cial agen t for the Intern al Revenue Service. Besides riding along with com­ m issioned UT p olice o ffice rs to learn radio procedures, Burrell and the other seven COPs had 16 hours of classroom training, including instruction on how thieves break locks on bikes and film s on rape prevention, theft and self-defense, Burrell said. "W e d o n 't h assle a n y b o d y ," Burrell said. " I t 's not up to us to take any action." "M ost of them [students] don't even know what we're doing," site said. COPs are not easily identifiable as their uniform s consist of a burnt orange shirt with the COPs logo displayed on the front, Burrell said. around A typical day for Burrell includes w alkin g the P erry- Castañeda Library or Beauford H. Jester Center and watching for sus­ picious activity. "Nine out of ten times it turns out to be nothing," Burrell said. "But one time we found a guy living in the stairwell at Jester." " I t 's not like I'll be busting the mob or anything lik e th a t," she said. CBS reporter Bob Schieffer and Gov. Ann Richards sit above Mad­ ison Square Garden, site of the Democratic National Convention. Associated Press Clinton prepares for election battle Associated Press NEW YO RK — Bill C lin ton reached out to Jerry Brown and Je sse Jackson on Su nday as Democrats worked to polish their four-day national convention as a harm onious prelude to the fall campaign. Delegates mulled the party's chances of capturing the White House. M adison Square Garden was ready at last; technicians experi­ m ented with the aren a's video system and put a noisy brass band through its rehearsal paces. Away from the glare, Clinton worked on his convention accep­ tance speech, and warmed up for the Thursday night delivery with a blast at the Republicans. Their "lack of leadership is appalling," he said in a statem en t. "T h e American people deserve better." His ticketm ate, Sen. A1 Gore, arrived in the convention city, met w ith d eleg ates from his hom e state of T enn essee, and said D em ocrats offer the nation the prospect of "positive, progressive and constructive" change. Earlier, Gore, party Chairman Ron Brown and others made the rounds of the talk shows, stressing party unity as Clinton heads into the cam paign against President Bush and independent Ross Perot. A Los Angeles Times survey indi­ cated the race is a statistical dead heat. "T h is is the most unified the Democratic Party has been in two d ecad es," Ron Brown said. The co n v en tio n , he added, " i s the k ick o ff of the general election campaign." C lin to n and Gore w ill leave New York .on Friday on a six-day bus tour through eight states, end­ ing in St. Louis. C lin ton w orked Su nday to Please see Convention, page 2 Melon sm ellin’ Ernest Asbedo searched for a ripe cantaloupe for a customer Saturday Market. Asbedo commutes daily from Luting to sell watermelons and can- morning at the Webb Farms fruit stand in the Travis County Farmer's taloupes during the harvest season. - % ________ Jeane Wong/Daily Texan Staff Watershed vote may not affect UT Kevin Williamson Daily Texan Staff The University could be exempt from both the Save Our Springs initiative and an Austin City Council alternative appearing on the Aug. 8 bal­ lot, UT System and dty officials said Friday. Although the University owns several tracts of land in the Barton Springs watershed area, it may be exempt from whichever ordinance is passed in August. According to James Wilson, UT System execu­ tive director for endow m ent real estate, the University is exempt from zoning laws when developing land for educational purposes but must meet city zoning requirements if develop­ ing land for commercial purposes. "T h e only land we have in that area is the Dobie-Paisano ranch and the old Nike missile base on Bee Caves Road. As far as I know, there are no plans to develop any of that land " Wilson said. tract near Town Lake in exchange for a 30-year lease on the L io n s' M unicipal G o lf C ourse, owned by the UT System. U T Sy stem V ice C h an cellar a.i~ G eneral Counsel Ray Farabee said the System has not yet made a legal inquiry' into the situation. A ccording to Farabee, the U n iv ersity was required to follow local regulations because the land was developed as a source of revenue. "There are some isolated tracts here and there. If we were to develop any of the land, we would probably have to meet the city's standards for protection of the water. We would try to reach some sort of cooperative agreem ent with the city," Farabee said. Farabee cited an earlier arrangement in which the city government allowed the University to develop commercially part of the Brackenridge tract as an exam ple of a "co o p erativ e agree­ ment." Last fall the city granted the University zoning permission to develop commercially 105 single­ family dwellings on 90 acres of the Brackenridge Wilson said it is unlikely that the University w ill come into conflict w ith either watershed ordinance, because there are no plans to develop the area. The Nike m issile base site was given to the University as a gift, and the Dobie Paisano ranch serves as a retreat for two writers who are select­ ed every two years by the University. No development has been proposed on either site. Assistant City Attorney Raul Calderon said the watershed ordinance issue is "a complex ques- Piease see Exempt, page 2 Food trucks enter Sarajevo suburb Associated Press SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — The 71-day-old siege of Dobrinja was lifted briefly on Sunday when U.N. armored cars escorted a dozen tru cks of food to 3 0,000 people trapped in the Sarajevo suburb. R eb elliou s Serb m ilitia s and troops loyal to the Bosnian govern­ ment agreed to a six-hour truce to allow in trucks carrying 108 tons of powdered milk, canned beef and other food, guarded by eight U.N. armored cars, U.N. officials said. But fighting raged unabated out­ side the capítol. Croat and Muslim forces were reported withdrawing as Serb troops claimed to capture two strategic towns in the north and make advances in the Herzegovina region to the south. Serb forces also bom barded Muslim-held Gorazde from the air and with tanks, Bosnian officials said . H ouses w ere b u rn in g and co rp ses lay in the stree ts, Enes Musovic, a Bosnian television jour­ nalist, reported from the town about 30 miles south of Sarajevo. The fighting came just days after Yugoslav Premier-designate Milan Panic met with world leaders at a European secu rity conference in Helsinki, Finland, and pledged tc end the bloodshed in Bosnia. Western nations also stepped up pressure on the Serbs by agreeing to send w arships to the A driatic to monitor compliance with the U.N. trade em bargo on Y u goslavia, which now contains only Serbia and Montenegro. The seven American and Euro­ pean warships in NATO's standing M editerranean force sailed from Portugal late Saturday in prepara­ tion for duty in the Adriatic. The n in e-n ation W estern European U nion, the m ilitary arm o f the European Community, began form­ ing a naval force for the Adriatic on Saturday. H ow ever, the W est rejected Bosnia's appeal for military inter­ v en tion in the con flict. The two naval forces will only keep track of ships sailing to Yugoslavia and will not blockade the coast. Most people said Sunday was the first quiet day in a m onth and many, particularly children, looked sick or malnourished, he said. Police search for kidnapper IÜ ;/ *■■■* I ,• ! •• Miguel M. Salinas Daily Texan Staff Austin police are searching for a man who abducted his estranged wife and shot her boyfriend when he tried to follow them late Sunday afternoon, police said. Investigators said Charles Ray Davison, 36, abducted C ecilia Ann Ingram , 36, of Pflugerville, from 1002 Warrington Drive in Austin where she and her boyfriend went to pick up her son from a Boy Scouts outing. "At that point [Ingram] was confronted and abducted by her estranged husband who was armed at the time," Sgt. Hector Reveles said. "H e then took her in his car and fled the scene. Her boyfriend then gave pursuit in another vehicle." Shots were fired at 9411 Dessau Road dur­ ing the chase, but Davison stopped his car at the 9700 block and shot Ingram's boyfriend, Randy Taylor, 32, also of Pflugerville, in the chest and in each arm, Reveles said. T aylor was at B racken ridge H ospital late Sunday, said Robin Griffin, hospital spokeswoman. con d itio n fair in “We do have some previous assaults that we've been able to find in [Charles Davison’s] criminal history.” — Police Sgt. Hector Reveles Davison and Ingram were last seen in a dark blue 1991 Chevrolet Silverado pickup that Davison stole from 9701 Brown Lane, Reveles said. Davison was described as 5 feet, 10 inches tall, weighing 260 pounds, with salt-and-pep- per hair often worn in a ponytail. He was last seen wearing a light-colored Western shirt and blue jeans. "W e do have some previous assaults that we've been able to find in his criminal histo­ ry," Reveles said "Obvioush he's very dan­ gerous." Davison may be heading to Gilmer, or may still be in the N orth A ustin area n ear Rundberg Lantr oi North Creek Drive, police said. Police said Davison is in the process of moving to Gilm er, Texas, but is currently staying at a home on North Creek Drive in North Austin. Ingram is 5 feet 6 inches tall, wears eye­ glasses, and has dirty blond hair and a slen­ der build, police said. She was last seen wear­ ing light-colored jeans and a purple T-shirt. Schools have neither time nor money for costly experiments. 4 D e m o c ra tic N a tio n a l C o n v e n tio n W e a th e r: The D em o cratic N atio nal Convention figures to be about as exciting as M onday’s weather, which has been about the same for the last month. Highs in the mid-90s, ho-hum. Bill Clinton says “I accept your nomination” and “need to be a party of unity and strength” and “God bless America” —yawn. Lows in the mid-70s — stop, you’re killing me. Gov Ann waxes lyri­ cal about George Bush, winds from the SE at 15 mph, Tipper Gore mugs mercilessly, partly cloudy, tension city, about as thrilling as a root canal. Index: Entertainment....... Around Campus.... .......2 Sports.................... State & Local........ Classifieds............. .... 10 University.............. Comics.................... .......9 Editorials................. ...... 4 World & Nation...... 8 12 6 5 3 Page 2 Monday, July 13, 1992 THE DAILY TEXAN T h e Da il y T e x a n ............... .............. .. EdMor Managing EdMor ...... Associate Managing Editors .... Nows Editor __________ ____ Associate News Editors ........... Senior Reporters.......................... , ~ Associate Editors ........ Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editors Sports M u s t m Associate Sports Editor ...... General Sports Reporter ........... Photo EdMors................ Graphics EdMor ____ ___ Cartoonists................................... _ . State and Local Desk Editor™ Univorsity Desk Editor World and Nation Desk Editor News reporters .......... Photographers ........................ Editorial Columnists................. Entertainment Assistant........... Entertainment W riter............... Sports Assistant....................... Copy Editors............................. Permanent Staff - ............ — <■■»■—— m— m u i ... Geoff Henley .................................................................................... Scott Stanford ...............................................Jason Aycock. Chris Barton. Asim Bhansali, Kate Donaho, Kristine Wolff — ............................................................... Rebecca Stewart - ......................... Michael Brown. Jennifer Koch, James Wilkerson ................ Christy Fleming, Lesley Ramsey, Miguel M Salinas, Ted S. Warren. Kevin Williamson .Anne Gainer, John Sepehri .................................................................................................Mary Hopkins Thaddeus Evert, Sarah Thurmond .................. .............................Jason Lovelace ........................................................................................ Mike QuantwHnan .................................................................................................A m a Paim aii ~ •«——................. ~.~..~^™™^™„,„Eric BakJauf, Jean Marc Bouju ..............................................................................................Korey Coleman ..Jose Alaniz, Carl Greenbiatt, Tim Harrison, Walt Holcombe. Tom King. Phil Melito, Lance Myers. Marc Trujillo. Shannon Wheeler Issue Staff ,----— ........ .......— ...... ~ ™... ..™_..„Jeff Rhoads — ............. Johnny Ludden ..Andy Thomas — .............. — Doug Anderson, Johanna Franke, Dennis Pu, Jamey Smith ..............Patrick Sison, Jeane Wong ......................................................................John Beliveau. George Ratliff -E ric Rasmussen .............................. —...— ................ ................... — ............................................................................... Steve Crabtree ......— .— — ............ — „— ...... Amy LaGrone ......................................................................Joseph Gyura, Bethany Matz ..... ™ Art Director Advertising Local Display................................................. Jylle Joyner. Brad Corbett, Melina Madolora. Wendy Rodriguez. Alissa Snow. Jeffery Harston, Al Herron, Kevin Vinger, Trudy Ballard, Danielle Linden, Amee Shah .Landon Sims Graphic Designer.................................................................................................................................Tiffany Butler Classrfred Display............................ Nathan Moora, Sharon Skinner Jassified Telephone Sales........................................................Janell Sexton, Donna Hillis, Carol Marie Parker C tefks..................................................................Marta Thompson, Sonia Garcia, Wendy Wood, Rachel Martin. Shawntee Williams, Amber Hawkins, Elsa Snyder The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is pub­ lished by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Wbitis, Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.101) For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865 For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900. For classified word advertising, call 471-5244 Entire contents copyright 1992 Texas Student Publications. The Dally Texan Mall Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring)............................................................................................ Two Semesters (Fall and Spring)....................................................................................... Summer Session ........................................................................................................ One Year (Fall. Spring and Sum m er)............................................................................................................ 75.00 To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O. Box D, Austin TX 78713 8904 or to TSP Building C3.200, or call 471-5083. $30 q q 55 qq POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904. 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. 11 a m Classified Word A d s .......................... (Last Business Day Prior to Publication) mA mm Exempt Continued from page 1 tio n ," an d w as n o t su re h o w the r e g u la tio n s w o u ld a p p ly to th e U niversity. H ow ever, C ald ero n d id say the U niversity w ould be affected by the other' proposed environm ental pro­ te c tio n o r d in a n c e , th e B a lc o n e s C anyonland C onservation Plan. Because the BCCP w as created as a re sp o n se to fed eral re g u la tio n s, the U n iv e rsity is u n d e r the sam e regulations as other entities, accord­ in g to R o g e r D u n c a n , a s s i s ta n t d ir e c to r A u s tin E n v iro n m e n ta l and C o n se rv a tio n Services D epartm ent. th e of " N o one h a s to follow B C C P," D uncan said. "It's a voluntary p ro ­ gram designed to help people m eet th e f e d e r a l r e g u la tio n s . If th e U niversity d o e sn 't use BCCP, it will still h a v e to m eet fe d e ra l e n d a n ­ gered species regulations." Convention Continued from page 1 Airport drug profile case to begin Ted S. Warren' Daily Texan Staff A civil s u it a g a in s t th e A u s tin Police D epartm ent by a m an claim ­ ing he w as d etain ed and searched last y e a r b y u n d e rc o v e r n a rc o tics agents usin g an "in a c c u ra te " d ru g c o u r ie r p r o f ile w ill go to tr ia l M onday. A u stin re sid e n t L eW ayne K elly claim s the profile — guidelines used b y p o lic e to d e f in e th e a c tio n s , clothing and m annerism s of poten­ tial crim in als — subjects inn o cen t p e o p le to s e a rc h e s a n d is a lso unfairly enforced against m inorities. Kelly, a d ru g and alcohol c o u n ­ selo r an d a m em b er of th e A u stin N a tio n a l A sso c ia tio n fo r th e A d ­ vancem ent of Colored People crim i­ n al ju stic e c o m m itte e , is see k in g $20,000 in m onetary and injunctive d a m a g e s. K e lly 's co u n se l w ill be provided by the Texas Civil Rights Project. Kelly's case gained national atten­ tion last year after he w as stopped by police at Robert M ueller M unici­ pal A irport as he arrived to pick up a friend. Kelly said after being led outside and searched for narcotics, officers told him his clothing — jeans, cow ­ b o y b o o ts , a n d a St. E d w a r d 's U n iv ersity T -shirt — alo n g w ith a briefcase he w as carrying, m atched a d ru g courier profile u sed by the city. The o ffice rs d id n o t fin d a n y ­ thing and Kelly w as released. A fter th e incident, Jim H a r r in e - / ton, legal director of the Texas Civil Rights Project, said the g ro u p w as c o n v in c e d K e lly w a s s e a r c h e d because he w as black. Tw o days after his search, Kelly had a w hite friend go to the airport w earing the sam e clothes and boots he h a d b e en w e a rin g . T he frie n d stayed at the airport for an h o u r and a half, b u t w as n o t q u e stio n e d or approached by officers. The suit w as filed last year u nder rules in the Texas C onstitution that pro h ib it "u n re aso n ab le search and seizure." The T exas C iv il R ig h ts P ro je c t a ls o c la im s o ffic e rs v io la te d th e T exas E q u al R ig h ts A m e n d m e n t. The civil rights group said the d ru g p r o f ile is " d i s c r i m i n a t o r i l y e n ­ forced” against m inorities. sm ooth relations w ith Jackson and B ro w n . A id e Jeff E lle r s a id th e A rkansas go v ern o r telephoned the tw o m en, one an occasional antago­ nist, the other a rival from the p ri­ m ary cam paign w ho has yet to offer a n e n d o r s e m e n t. Ja c k so n s a id S atu rd ay n ig h t th at he p la n n e d to vo te for C linton . Brow n to ld s u p ­ porters in C entral Park that "things are m oving in a positive direction," th o u g h n o t a t th e s p e e d so m e D em ocrats w ould like. 20 00 A m o n g o th e r fo rm e r p r im a r y rivals, P aul T songas g re e te d s u p ­ porters in a M an hattan re sta u ra n t, and said his m essage of fiscal a u s­ te rity a n d th e n e e d fo r eco n o m ic recovery h ad gotten through. Political conventions custom arilv g iv e th e n o m in e e a b o o s t in th e polls, and D em ocrats w ere angling for a big one. To th a t e n d , th e y s c r ip te d a m a d e - f o r - te le v is io n p r o d u c tio n desig n ed to h ig h lig h t not o nly the n o m in e e b u t so cial ills th e D e m ­ ocrats h a v e p ro m ised to tackle. A 14-m inute videotape w as produced to d e p ic t C lin to n 's tr iu m p h o v e r h u m b le b e g in n in g s in sm all-to w n A rkansas. A n AIDS victim w as on th e s c h e d u le , a n d a N ew H a m p ­ shire m an, Ron M achos, w ho c a n 't sw itch jobs because he w o u ld lose health care needed for a child w ho had open-heart surgery. C linton p un ctu ated the them e in a b rief statem en t. "F o r th e last 12 years o ur governm ent has failed the A m e ric a n p e o p le . T he R e a g a n - B u s h -Q u a y le a d m in is tr a tio n h a s d e p riv e d th is c o u n try of a n y real investm ent in our p eople." The delegates favored C linton by a large m argin. But D em ocrats have lost five of the last six presidential elections, and questions lingered. AROUND CAMPUS A ro u n d C a m p u s is a d a ily c o l­ u m n l i s t i n g U n iv e r s ity - r e la te d a c tiv itie s sp o n s o re d b y academ ic d e p a rtm e n ts, stu d e n t services and s tu d e n t o r g a n iz a tio n s re g is te re d w ith the C am pus A ctivities Office. A nnouncem ents m ust be subm itted on the p ro p e r form by 11 a.m. the day before publication. Form s are available at the D a ily T exa n o ffic e a t 25th S tr e e t a n d W hitis Avenue. The D aily Texan reserves the right to edit subm issions. CLASSES The Student Health Center is spon­ soring a M ethods of C ontraception class for women Monday from 4:30-6 p.m. For registration information, call 471-4158. The Program for Rape Education and P re v e n tio n offers ed u catio n al w orkshops for any group of UT stu- dents. The free workshops emphasize sexual com m unication skills to p re­ v e n t acquaintan ce rape an d can be presented at any group's convenience. For m o re in fo rm a tio n , call Jam ie Shutter at 471-6252. MEETINGS ~ The Pagan S tu d en t A lliance will m e e t M o n d ay at 7:30 p .m . in the Education Building 416. T h e U n iv e rs ity Yoga C lu b w ill meet Mondays from 5:30-7 p.m. in die T exas U n io n E a stw o o d s Room . Participants should wear comfortable clothing and not eat two hours prior to the meeting. For more information call Stephanie H om er at 926-4323. OTHER T he A stronom y D ep artm en t will h o ld a p u b lic te le sc o p e v ie w in g M ondays from 9-10 p.m. in Painter Hall Observatory. You might win $100 or other cash prize this week! Complete the forms below and take them to sponsors shown on each form. Only one form per person per day per sponsor will be accepted. 9012 Research 183 & Burnet 452-8350 Ü í m i h A J Open daily at 5pm & noon Sundays Name: Address: City State Phone TTTT1 M l LLÜ GitanosOn the Dras 2230 Guadalup Name. Address State Phone 482 8844 I 908 C o n g re s s 474-0137 Mon-Fri 11-3 & 5-10 S a t 1 1 :3 0 -1 0 :3 0 Additional drawing for $10.00 Gift Certificate Name; & Address: _________ Phone: c u r r o m p h o t o m b s 601 West MLK Blvd. 474-1177 Name: _ Address City____ «at ■................... State: CÜ W H I W M U U I I D O L M U S Phone. Zip: --------- ... ■ m TTi T i / I M f ( I I I W H.tLh*Uai Cafe i G rocery 1206 W. 34th (2 blocks W est of Lamar) Formerly Mike & Charlies 451-5550 Happy Hour (M F 3-7) $1.50 Beers/Wine $1.00 off All Drinks “Monjuni's — The Best Little Secret in Austin" Name:_______________ ________ Address:_____________________ City: Phm Springcreek Apartments, 'ris true, Are Northeast and hidden from view.. But the features we’ve got Make our apartments real hot - And our rents are affordable, too! W ASHERS, DRYERS and MICROWAVES IN EVERY HOMEI Springcreek Apartments f>407 Springdale Road ♦ A ustin, Texas 78723 Name. Address:___________——— - ( 5 | 2 ) 9 2 6 - 8 2 3 0 -— lim it City:__ __________ „ State: ________________ Phone. 12 th & Lamar (Across from ec*lec«tic) « te # . i O N THE DRAG 4 78 -9 8 33 2338 G uadalupe Name Address Cily OFF THE DRAG 4 43 -1 2 57 RIVERSIDE PLACE S H O P P IN G CENTER 2410-B EAST RIVERSIDE State:____ Zip Phone Name:_ . Address If City:__ Name:_ ■ Address f Cily OVEN V Y S I M H I I S 2 2 0 0 GUADALUPE (at 22nd) 4 7 6-522 1 FREE SANDWICH Buy a medium or large and receive a small sandwich free. Name Address: .State:____ Zip:_ Phone. f M f l S 1 11 X l i m i m m i j . t m k W O f t N ' GO 2 2 0 0 G u a d a lu p e - low er level 4 7 6 - 7 9 9 7 E V E R Y D A Y S P E C I A L $ 3 . 8 0 nu/vrA ? ‘ entree3> fhed rice, soup, eggroll, (rice noodle w/rare tender beef) §3.50 _ V. Mon-Sat 11-8 p.m./Free Delivery Mon-Sat 5 p.m -8 p.m./Min. $7 Name: Address:_________________ State. City: O K U »** ’%) ' Zip ~ Phone l A I t S R ick ’s $ 1 . 3 5 C lean ers 4 7 2 -1 7 1 1 (2 9 0 8 Guadalupe location only) Corner of 29th & Guadalupe * Name: Address City: State:____ Zip Phone: Additional Weekly drawing for a FREE Pro-Cu 2801 Guadaulpe (neat to Blockbuster Video) Name Address: •--------------State...... Zip ' Phone C-OWNTO'wW a week r — - am to f r C r I f t U E j g r V ' J ¿ U j pm % OFF EVERY PURCHASE Wl IH THIS COUPON Serving The Best of Bar-B-Q'ed Beef • Chicken • Ham • Sausage • Ribs — -■ *a 48 hrs notice for up to 2.000 people « State:____ Zip Phone State:____ Zip P h o n o Name: Address City: o x i : 324 E. 6TH 512/472-2785 - D A Y - S D O W , Y V ; r i •• 4 8 v O i J j U f WORLD & NATION Yeltsin promises to slash inflation, deficit I III l ) \ m T l \ \ \ Monday. July 13. 1992 Page 3 Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — R ussian P re sid e n t Boris Yeltsin has promised to slash govern­ m ent deficits and cut inflation nearly in half by the end of this year in return for a $1 bil­ lion loan, says a senior international mone­ tary official. Y eltsin's July 5 agreem en t in M oscow w ith In te r n a tio n a l M o n e ta ry F u n d Managing Director Michel Camdessus is the first installm ent on $4 billion the Russians hope to get from the IMF. It also opens the way for $24 billion in aid from the United States and other countries this year. The official, speaking on condition he not be identified by name, said that the 14 o th e r re p u b lic s of th e fo rm er Soviet Union will need an additional $20 billion. The new agreement pledges that Russian prices, now rising about 15 percent to 20 percent a month, will go up less than 10 per­ cent a month, or 120 percent a year, by the end of this year. "Pretty high inflation indeed, but a signif­ icant curbing of the tendency," the official said last w eek, exp laining d etails of the agreem ent on the condition that the infor­ mation not be released until Sunday. By w ay of com parison, prices paid by American consumers have been rising less th an 5 p e rc e n t a year, a c co rd in g to the h in d 's figures, while Brazilian prices have been going up more than 500 percent annu­ ally. The official explained that Yegor Gaidar, the acting Russian prime minister, wants to concentrate this summer on which of the 15 former republics will keep using the ruble and which will make a "civilized exit." Estonia created its own money on June 18, a m ove b ein g c o n s id e re d by L atv ia, L ithuania, U kraine and a few o th ers, he added. Belarus, K azakhstan, U zbekistan and others want to stay with the ruble. He said the aim is to complete work on this issue by Oct. 1 and then start negotia­ tions on the next loan. Lending governments could put in place by early 1993 a promised $6 billion fund to shore up confidence in the ruble, he said. Yeltsin also prom ised to cut the Russian governm ent deficit. Now, the governm ent has to borrow about 17 rubles out of every 100 rubles' worth of goods that the country produces. Another official called the Russian pro­ portion enormous. The fund's correspond­ ing figure for the United States — where the deficit has long been a major problem — is ab o u t $6 o u t of ev e ry $100. The U.S. Treasury says it is headed toward $5 next year. The official said Yeltsin promised to bring the Russian figure down to the same level, about 5 rubles out of 100. The German and Japanese governments borrow less than two marks or yen out of every' 100 their people produce. Spy chief faces trial in cover-up Ex-CIA official told Congress he knew nothing of Iran-contra Associated Press WASHINGTON — The CIA's for­ mer spy master — Clair George — goes on trial this m onth in the Iran- contra scandal, charged with cover­ ing up the Reagan W hite H ouse's se c re t arm s n e tw o rk th e Nicaraguan contras. to If testimony begins as scheduled next w eek, G eorge w ould be the highest-ranking CIA official to ever be tried on charges related to his job. Closed hearings on the use of classified in fo rm atio n are taking place this week. George was d ep u ty director for operations — in charge of all the C IA 's o v erseas sp y n e tw o rk s — when he told Congress late in 1986 that the agency d id n 't know w ho was supplying guns and am m uni­ tion to the rebels fighting the leftist government of Nicaragua. That statement and others George m a d e w e re lies, an in d ic tm e n t ch a rg ed . It accuses him of th re e counts of obstructing Congress and a grand jury and six counts of per­ jury and making false statements. It was George's boss, CLA director William Casey, who moved the con­ tra support system over to a then- unknown WTiite House aide, Oliver N o rth , after C ongress barred the CIA from assisting the contras mili­ tarily in 1984. It was "a handoff, just like in bas­ ketball. ... You got the ball, go on with it," North testified at his own trial in 1989. C asey d ied in 1987 before he was questioned in detail. Iran-contra prosecutors plan to show th at num erous CIA officers including George had a w ealth of d ata on N o rth 's n etw o rk in 1985 and 1986, according to pretrial court papers released in the case. The chief witness against George is A lan Fiers, form er chief of the CLA's Central American Task Force. He will allege that George orches- trated a cover-up by ordering Fiers to rem ove references to N o rth 's o peration from a statem ent to be given Congress. George's lawyers will argue that he w as too busy w ith w o rld w id e CIA responsibilities to pay attention to information about North and the C o n tra s, a c c o rd in g to th e c o u rt papers. George would be the third major figure to go on trial in the 5 V2 -year- old Iran-contra i n v e s tig a tio n , w hich has cost m ore th a n $30 m illion and re ­ su lte d la st m o n th 's in d ict­ m en t of ex -d e ­ fense se c re ta ry C a s p a r W ein­ berger. in George Form er natio­ nal security ad ­ viser John Poin­ d e x te r w as fo u n d g u ilty of five felonies and N o rth o f th ree , b u t their convictions w ere overturned or set aside on appeal. The George case in effect began on Oct. 5, 1986, w hen one of the s u p p ly p la n e s in N o rth 's sec ret o p e ra tio n w as sh o t d o w n over Nicaragua. Congressional committees w ant­ ed to k n o w w h a t o p e ra tio n the plane was part of. Fiers said there was one key fact that George didn't w ant revealed — the evolution of the State D epart­ m en t's N icaraguan H um anitarian Assistance Office into an arms-run- ning operation. A ccording to F iers' g ra n d ju ry testimony, George told him: I d o n 't w a n t to m en tio n the story" of NHAO because "that puts the spotlight on the White House administration, Ollie North ... and I don t want to be the first person to do that." G oing to th e doctor Associated Press Volunteers carry two Burnese women, stricken with severe diarrhea, near the town of Taknaf, Bangladesh. Malaria, pneumonia and other diseases have been spreading rapidly through Burmese refugee camps since the monsoon season arrived on July 1. Questions surround Noriega case Associated Press M IAM I — L eg al an d p o litic a l issu e s s u r r o u n d in g M an u el Noriega's case rem ain far from set­ tled ev en th o u g h the d e p o se d P anam anian lead e r has been sen ­ tenced to prison for drug traffick­ ing. Noriega, the only foreign leader ever captured and brought back to the United States for trial, hinted as m uch w hile p ra is in g his law yer, Frank Rubino, before hearing his 40- year prison term announced Friday. "Bless Frank, w ho fought like a Spartan to the last bullet — which “Someday in the future, in a different administration, the truth will come out.” — Frank Rubino, Noriega’s attorney we have not yet shot," Noriega said, w ith emphasis. T hen he trie d to im p lica te th e U n ite d S ta tes in g e n e ra l, an d President Bush in particular, in sev­ eral nefarious plots, including the a s sa ss in a tio n of a n o th e r fo rm er Panamanian leader, a sabotage cam­ paign inside Panam a and an effort to kill the shah of Iran. curry favor w ith a possible future Democratic administration, quoting c a n d id a te Bill C lin to n 's w ife, H illa ry , a n d p ra is in g fo rm e r P re s id e n t C arter. H is a tto rn e y joined in. "Someday in the future, in a dif­ ferent administration, the truth will come out," Rubino told U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler. He also seem ed to be try ing to The case already has caused rip­ ples in Congress, in part because of plea bargains made with drug-traf­ ficking witnesses who pointed fin­ gers at Noriega. Many received cash or were allowed to keep drug prof­ its. Most also received U.S. residen­ cy visas and sharply reduced sen­ tences. Those deals grew from "a pattern of fe v e rish w o rry th a t N o rie g a might be acquitted," said U.S. Rep. C harles Schum er, D-N.Y., head of th e H o u se crim e su b c o m m itte e o v e rse e in g fe d e ra l p ro s e c u to rs . 'W hen the whole thing is finished, we ought to carefully examine how the governm ent w ent about all of this." Associated Press Pope undergoes testing for abdominal problem VATICAN CITY — Pope John Paul II entered a hospital Sunday for tests, and his spokesm an said the p ontiff had an in te stin a l p ro b le m th a t m ight re q u ire surgery. Joaquin N avarro described the ailment as "intestinal dysfunction." He said the condition may be related to the stom ach wound the pope suffered during an assas­ sination attempt in 1981, but that still had not been determined. During his regular Sunday appearance from a window of his study overlooking St. Peter's Square, the 72-year-old pope startled the crowd when he said: "I would like to tell you something con­ fid en tially . This ev e n in g I'm going to Gemelli Clinic for some diagnostic tests. I ask your prayers so that the Lord is near to me with his help and with his support." Diapering changes proposed HARRISBURG, Pa. — The bathroom sink is too sm all. The floor is cold and uncomfortable. And doing it in public at ball parks or airports is undignified. F athers often face a m essy dilem m a when they have to change their infants diapers in public places — m ost men's bathrooms don't have changing tables. But one Pennsylvania state lawmaker is hoping to help m odern dads. Rep. Ruth Rudy, a D em ocrat, is p u sh in g a bill to force builders to p u t changing tables in m en s bathroom s in new stadium s and other large public places. "It's a necessity of our times, really, Rudy said. Officials across the country are hearing more complaints as a growing num ber of men take to highways, stadium s and air­ ports with babies in tow. If approved, Rudy's proposal could be the first diaper-table law in the country, said Rita Thaemert, staff assistant at the National Conference of State Legislatures in Denver. Iraqi students taunt inspectors M A N A M A , B ah ra in — S tu d e n ts d e m o n stra te d o u ts id e the A g ricu ltu re Ministry in Baghdad on Sunday to protest U .N . in sp e c to rs' a tte m p ts to e n te r the building, the official Iraqi News Agency reported. The vigil by U.N. chemical and biologi­ cal w eapons experts entered its second week with no sign that Saddam Hussein's government was ready to permit access to the building, suspected of housing docu­ ments on missile program s. Iraq says the m inistry is used only for civilian purposes. The agency did not say how m any stu­ dents took part in the demonstration, one of a series since the inspectors began their watch on the building July 5. In Iraq, such dem onstrations are gov­ ernment-staged. Mandela plans U.N. appearance JO H A N N ESBU RG , S o u th A frica — ANC President Nelson Mandela will take his complaints against the South African g o v e rn m e n t b efo re the U .N . S ecu rity Council this week. Mandela also will visit the Democratic Party convention in New York as a guest of p a rty C h airm an Ron B rown. There were no plans for Mandela to address the delegates. South Africa's foreign affairs minister, Pik Botha, will represent the government at th e U.N. m e e tin g , sc h e d u le d for Wednesday. M andela so u g h t the U.N. session to publicize his complaints against the white g o v e rn m e n t fo llo w in g a sta le m a te in black-white political talks and the June 17 m assac re of m ore th a n 40 b lacks in Boipatong township. Rabin presents new Cabinet to Israel Associated Press JERUSALEM — Prime Minister-designate Y itzhak R ab in u n v e ile d a C a b in e t on Sunday that is dovish toward the Arabs and said it w o uld be ju d g ed by its ability to advance peace talks. A top E g y p tian official said th e A rab states were ready to resume talks with Israel in September. Osama el-Baz, political advis­ er to P resid en t H osni M ubarak, said the prospects for peace looked more promising w ith R abin rep lacing Y itzhak Sham ir as Israel's prime minister. Rabin said S a tu rd a y th at he h o p ed to m eet w ith A m eric an o ffic ia ls by e a rly August to talk about speeding up negotia­ tions with Palestinians about autonomy for the Israeli-occupied Arab territories. The U.S.-sponsored talks were suspended pending Israel's parliamentary election last m onth, in w hich Labor defeated Sham ir's hard-line Likud party. Rabin is to be sworn in M onday after w in­ ning parliam entary approval for his govern­ m ent. L a b o r's co a litio n w ith th e le ftist M eretz bloc and the religious Shas p arty holds 62 seats in the 120-member Parliament and has the backing of two Arab and three Communist deputies. G athered in a Tel Aviv m ovie theater, L abor's 3,000 central com m ittee m embers approved the Cabinet by an overwhelming show of hands Sunday. Rabin told them his government would be ju dged on its "ability to m ove the peace process forward, first and foremost w ith the Palestinians." Yasser Arafat, chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization, said Saturday that he saw no basic change in the Israeli govern­ m ent. "R abin is the sam e as Sham ir, but Rabin covers his gloves with silk," he said. Allies inch toward Yugoslavia intervention Barry Schweid Associated Press HELSINKI, Finland — Secretary of State Jam es B aker called w h a t re m a in s of Yugoslavia "a quagmire," again suggesting it would be a mistake to be draw n into the bloody ethnic conflict in the Balkans. P re s id e n t B ush even su g g e ste d th a t Bosnia was "a hiccup" not remotely related to the security interests of the United States. But despite Baker's foreboding and Bush's detachm ent, the upshot of the Conference on Security and C ooperation in Europe is that the United States and its allies moved a step closer to involvement in the conflict. NATO, the military alliance dominated by the United States, decided on Friday to send a naval force to the Adriatic to m onitor the U.S.-led trade blockade of the federation of Serbia and M ontenegro, w'hich is all that remains of Yugoslavia. The W estern European Union, acting in tandem with NATO, took a similar decision. It m ay re q u ire a n o th e r U.N. S ecu rity Council resolution, but the warships under normal rules of the game would fire back if attacked. It may require another U.N. Security Council resolution, but the warships under normal rules of the game would fire back if attacked. Bush, even wTtile insisting he had given no new order w’hile in Helsinki, acknow l­ edged that U.S. w orships attached to tw’o carrier task forces in the M editerranean rou­ tinely venture into the Adriatic, alongside Yugoslavia. Asked if U.S. ships would participate in N A T O 's m o n ito rin g o p e ra tio n , B aker replied: "Yes." Brent Scowcroft, the president's assistant for national security, said when asked if the U.S. would play a role: "Of course. We're a part of NATO." It m ay turn out that the presence of an allied naval force would discourage anvone from defying the U.N. sanctions. Or, if any­ one did, the violator would meekly submit to interception and not challenge the inter­ ceptors by opening fire. But the decision ups the ante in an area w h e re te m p e rs are flaring. H isto rically Europe's pow der keg, it wras where World War I started. The Bosnians, hammered by Serbian and Croatian militia, are desperate. Belgrade has not lost hope of derailing Bosnia's faltering drive for independence. The president of the beleaguered nation, Alija Izetbegovic, p lead ed wi t h Bush to pressure Belgrade to withdraw’ the Serbian militia and also the weapons Yugoslavia left behind. He said he did not ask for troops because he knew Bush could not go that far, but he asked the p resident to consider using air power to take out Serbian artillery that has shelled Bosnia for more than three months. Baker said that request w’as being taken under consideration. The decision could depend on w'ho blinks first. Baker broke the U.S. diplomatic isolation of Belgrade on Friday to m eet w ith Milan Panic, the Y ugoslav-born Am erican b usi­ nessman who is prim e minister-designate of his native country. . I m D mi \ T k\ \ \ Page 4 Monday. July 13. 1992 Geoff Henley E d i t o r Anne Gainer A ssociate Editor John Sepehri A ssociate Editor VIEWPOINT Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Dally Texan are those of the editorial board. They are not necessarilv those .he University adm inistration, the Board of R egents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Ooeratinn o rustees. Opinions expressed rn staff or guest columns are those of the writer. Letters submitted to Firing Une should be fewer than 250 words, and guest columns should be no m ore than 7 Texan P u ~ bo x D. Austin, TX 78 13. Letters may be edited for grammar, length, libel and Texan style. * * * * * * WhÍt¡S AV9nU0' ° r ma" them t0 The ° h ‘“ h D ^ * The Daily Texan editorial board will meet with stu­ dents, faculty, administrators and members of the pub­ lic by appointment to discuss matters of public interest, political endorsements and Texan policies. To sched­ ule a meeting, call the Texan offices at 471 -4591. Educators should focus on individual achievement President Bush s appeal for school districts than ind ivid u al learning sound novel, they ignore the crux of the problem. to design their own plans for elementary ed u cation was m et en th u siastically by 686 prop osals from around the nation. The New A m erican Schools D evelopm ent Corp., the non-profit company started to aid in imple­ menting President Bush's America 2000 plan, announced Thursday that 11 of the 686 propos­ als had been chosen to receive grants. Despite failure to get funding for its America 2000 proposal, the Austin Independent School District in conjunction with the A+ Coalition — AISD, the City of Austin, the University, IBM and Anderson Consulting — still hopes to con­ tinue with the project on its own. The fact Austin failed to m ake the list was bem oaned by A ISD school board P resid en t Beatriz de la Garza, who commented that the competition was just too stiff. And others, such as M anuel Justiz, dean of the UT C ollege of E d u c a tio n , and A nn M c L a u g h lin , the A + Coalition's president and chief executive, are pushing for other w ays besides the grant to implement the proposed program. Austin's proposal not only missed the oppor­ tunity to receive national funding, but concen­ trated more on creating a new system rather than looking for exam ples that have worked. Supporters of the A+ Coalition's proposal have referred to education in the country today as based on a "19th century" model, echoing the rhetoric of the '60s when the education system began to unravel. While recommendations in the proposal such as having "core groups" that would keep stu­ dents and teachers together for two years, a lead teacher and volunteers who are experts in certain areas, and an emphasis on group rather The problem is precisely that our school sys­ tem is no lon ger based on the 19th centu ry model. The em phasis on learning itself is no longer param ount. Rather than address this issue, A ustin's plan appeared more intent on in ven tin g new notions to bury the prim ary purpose of school rather than getting "back to the basics" and individual learning. Though the A + Coalition and President Bush have adm irable goals, they should realize it does not require a gimmick to teach — Ameri­ ca had been doing it fairly successfully until 30 years ago. W ith a strapped econom y and a grow ing deficit, A m erica along w ith A ustin m ust discard uncertain theories and concen­ trate merely on teaching students the material. Requiring four years of high school instruc­ tion for each of the four basic subjects at levels com p arable to ones in oth er in d u strialized countries would be a start that would produce the same results it did 40 years ago. Contrary to popular belief and despite social change, the way children learn hasn't changed. The sham­ ble our educational system is in today stems from the restructuring of it to incorporate new theories. The result is evident. The educational system has neither the time nor the money right now to p erform co stly exp erim ents on students. While some proposals might contribute greatly to the educational system, what we have now is not working. Rather than continuing our tin­ kering with a broken model, the most logical ste p w o u ld be to re tu rn to m eth o d s that worked, with emphasis on individual learning and achievement. Moffett messes up earth,air anywhere He gets a five o'clock shad­ George Ratliff TEXAN COLUMNIST ow at noon, he owns the largest gold m ine in the w orld and he gets mad as hell when h e's told he can 't pollute large water sources — h e's big, bad Jim Bob Moffett and he's hop­ ing to buy your vote. M o ffett wants you to side with him Aug. 8 against the Save Our Springs ini­ tiative designed to protect Barton Springs. Students of the University who think they have no connection w ith M o ffett sh ou ld read on, because we're more involved with him than many would suspect. Self-lauded for having the best grades on the 1960 UT football team, Moffett considers himself an abused and misunderstood m an. W hen the A u stin C ity C ouncil thumped down the chief executive o fficer o f Freep ort M cM oRan's June 1990 planned unit develop­ ment proposal for Barton Springs, he threatened to tattle on Austin to other Fortune 500 CEOs. So ago­ nized was he by the defeat that he compared himself to Jesus Christ, "I keep thinking about that guy on the cross, I tell m yself 'Forgive them, for they know not what they do.' " The poor martyr was the fifth- highest-paid CEO in 1990, pulling in a m easly $8.8 m illion for the year. With that kind of cash, Mof­ fett's able to buy almost anyone. The m ayor of New Orleans, for example, was magically inspired to write a letter which Moffett read before the council. The letter called Moffett's Freeport McMoRan "an exemplary corporate citizen." T h is le tte r w as w ritten after Freeport McMoRan was rated the No. 1 corporate source for water pollution in 1988 and the No. 6 so u rce for toxic ch em ical dis- charges — all in the M ississippi water used by New Orleans. When the citizens of New Orleans rose up against Moffett's plans to dump 12 million tons of radioactive gyp­ sum from F re e p o rt's chem ical plant up river from New Orleans, Moffett called the citizens "igno­ rant" and said, "As far as I'm con­ cerned, the banana republic still lives. I can assure you we receive better treatment in some foreign countries than we do here." W hen referrin g to "fo re ig n c o u n tr ie s " M o ffett su rely had Indonesia in mind, home to his largest gold mine in the world, where they've torn down moun­ tains to extract copper, gold and other m inerals. The mine lies in Freeport's 6.1 million acres of land about one-fifteenth of Irian Jaya of Western New Guinea, an east­ ern province of Indonesia. Gener­ ally regarded as one of the largest rain forests on the planet , it is home to several indigenous peo­ ples. When Free-port strip-mined the homeland of the indigenous group, the A m ungm e, they lost their hunting grounds and gardens without compensation. G eorge M an b io t, who w ent undercover into Irian Jaya in 1987, w rites in h is b ook P oison ed A rrow s,"the [Amungme] people rebelled, and with stolen dyna­ mite, blew up the pipeline carrying copper ore to the coast. [Their] vil­ lages w ere then strafed by the Indonesian army from helicopter gu nships and bom bed by [U .S. made] Broncos; to intimidate the population, girls were raped then killed. ' Indonesia's government — headed up by General Suharto, whom M o ffett d escrib es as a 'compassionate m an" — owns a 9 percent of a Freeport mine. A nother investor in M o ffett's corporation, aside from the mass- murdering General Suharto, is UT President and UT Chancellor-des­ ign ate W illiam C u nningham . In d eed , our Bill sits on the Freeport board of directors, flies in F ree p o rt je ts and even spent a weekend at the company's cabin retreat in Colorado. In return for the favors, the UT Geology Depart­ ment has a contract with Freeport to explore Irian Jaya for minerals. And now M o ffe tt's F reep o rt McMoRan has come to Austin to develop the Barton Springs area. We are asked by many high-dollar officials to put our trust in this cor­ poration based on the assumption that it is within their interests to develop with environmental pro­ tection in mind. With the vote on the SOS initiative coming up, we'll be bombarded by glossy fliers urg­ ing us to allow developers to pol­ lute Barton Springs so a few old men can shoot golf. There should be no confusion on this particular issue. On one side is a group demanding responsible development and on the other side is Dollar Bill's buddy, Moffett. He bought New Orleans. He bought Indonesia. He bought C unning­ ham and the Geology Department. Now he wants to buy you. R atliff is an English/radio-televi- sion-film senior. NP.it IS NOT Won CALLING! Russia should wait to indict Soviets Every day brings a new revelation about the John Beliveau TEXAN COLUMNIST_________ sorry state of affairs in what was once the Soviet Union. Unrepentant cold warriors may chuckle about how the mighty have fallen, but the average citizen is simply amazed by the spectacle unfolding before him. Rome may not have been built in a day, but the Soviet Empire fell almost that fast. it is all the more shocking if one considers that Russia is the largest nation on earth, and her borders enclose a land rich in natural resources. Russia is the world's largest producer of gold, yet she is heavily in debt. Siberia sits on oil reserves that have been estimated to be as large as those in Saudi Arabia, yet gasoline is scarce. The most recent example of Russian poverty is the case of the Kruzenstern. She is one of the Russian tall ships that attended Fourth of July celebrations in New York harbor. After the fes­ tivities her captain was forced to appeal for handouts when the ship ran out of food. A poor showing for a nation that was once a superpow­ er. Against this background of decay and col­ lapse, a trial began in Moscow on Tuesday. On trial was no less than the Soviet Com m unist Party itself. After last August's attempted coup, Russian President Boris Yeltsin outlawed the formerly all-powerful party and confiscated its assets. In an ironic twist, ex-members of the party that once made a mockery of the courts brought suit, challenging Yeltsin's authority to ban them. Last week opening arguments over the case began in the Constitutional Court, Russia's equivalent of our Supreme Court. This legal challenge originally started because the party members wanted access to their confis­ cated buildings and funds, but it quickly came to symbolize much more than that. Now, nothing less than the last 70 years of Russian (Soviet) his­ tory is on trial. The party members argue that the Communist Party of the Soviet Union was not the state, and should not be held accountable for all of the crimes committed by the state since 1917. They claim that the bloody collectiv ization, mass killings, and the gulag system were perpetrated by aberrant members of the government, and their affiliation with the CPSU is irrelevant. The CPSU cannot therefore be banned, any more than any other political party. The government argues that for over 70 years the Soviet government and the CPSU were syn­ onymous. Advancement in the ranks of the gov­ ernment was concurrent with and dependent on advancement in the party, and that the party acted as a law unto itself. Therefore the govern­ ment believes the party should be banned for its past actions. The verdict in this trial will doubtlessly have far-reaching rep ercussions in Russia today. Nearly every member of the government, cur­ rent and former, was a CPSU member, and an indictment of the party is an indirect indictment of all of them. But this trial, and its inevitable verdict, could not have come at a worse possible time. Yeltsin just finished a hat-in-hand visit to the G7 econom ic sum m it w here he tried to reduce Russia's massive foreign debt with new economic aid. The Russian economy is in a tail- spin, inflation is rampant, and commodities non­ existent. The road to capitalism will be a hard one, and this is not the time to expend energy in self- examination. It took Germany a decade to recov­ er from the econom ic im pact of the Second World War, but the Germans are only now com- ing to grips with the social legacy of their Nazi past. The reunited Germany is again facing the specter of Nazism , a resurgent force among many youth who see the foreign "guest work­ ers" as a threat to their jobs and polluting the purity of their nation. G erm any w ill survive, ju st as the United States survived the upheavals that accompanied desegregation in the 1960s. We survived for a number of reasons, but paramount among them is our political and economic stability. Having a strong governm ent and food in our b ellies allowed us the luxury to face up with our past, and deal with it. Russia under Yeltsin is many things, but polit­ ically and economically stable are not on the list. Where once there was one Party, now there are many tiny parties, which has turned Russia's parliament into a bickering, ineffectual body. The economy is in shambles. Those who are are ill-equipped to deal with the revelations about CPSU conduct, will be even less equipped to deal with the verdict. As necessary as this trial may eventually be to expiate guilt and allow Russia to make a clean break with her Communist past, now is not the time. Russia lacks the essential stability to cope with the outcome, and any further blow' may topple the already teetering Russian house of cards. It has been said that the unexamined life is not w'orth living, but introspection is a commodity denied all but the most affluent. M illions of prim itives the world over lead unexam ined lives, at no apparent detriment to their happi­ ness. Unfortunately, for Russia to examine its past without the interval of time to heal some of the more serious wounds is a mistake because it threatens current and future stability. Beliveau is a Plan II junior. Don't railroad farmers In his commentary' on the opposition to a high-speed rail in Texas ("H igh speed rail a n ecessity for T e x a s," M onday), Michael Levatino characterizes people who live in small communities as foolish and unaware of w hat's best for them. Their concern for the future of land which may have been in their families for generations is related to a "shameful trend dating back to the Civil War era when Texans fought for the right to be ignorant." Why must Southerners continue to be insulted by the arrogant and ignorant atti­ tudes of those who continue to see us as we were mythically represented during the Civil War era? If Texans can be seen as ignorant, this condition is at least partially attributable to the treatment of the South­ ern states by the ruling pow ers o f the North in the period after the Civil War, when communities were destroyed. Levatino claims to know better than the farmers what their livestock and crops can en d u re: "T h e argu m en t that an im als around the train will be adversely affected is m isguided because the track will be fenced in." Levatino's argument is not only m isguided, but a good exam ple of his opinion that those dumb ole fanners don't know any better. Although I agree that it may be necessary for a few farm ers to make some sacrifices for the good of the entire state, I take offense at Levatino's extremely condescending tone and use of damaging stereotypes. Michelle Page UT graduate Keep trucks off the grass This campus has sidewalks for pedestri­ an traffic and streets for vehicular traffic. I know of no building that is not adequately served by an alley or loading zone. There is absolutely no excuse for the volume of service vehicle traffic on sidewalks at this University. It is insane. Every day a campus mail truck lurches across walkways on the East Mall, rutting lawns and flowerbeds, and parks on the front steps of the Geology Building Today i watched truckloads of electricians careen down the South Mall, scattering pedestri­ ans and birds, to park in front of the Old Music Building for a lunch break. These are but a few examples. I know of no greater aesthetic affront to our surroundings than the ubiquity of cars and trucks where they do not belong. I implore the Division of Parking and the Physical Plant to reconsider their policies regarding this matter and to encourage uti­ lization of service alleys and loading zones w h en ev er p o ssib le, in stead of m erely whenever convenient. Benjamin Sloan Graduate student ... UNIVERSITY Placement centers offer recession-busting job help M on da y. Ju iy 13, 1992 P age 5 Karen Welch Daily Texan Staff F o r s tu d e n ts co n c e rn e d a b o u t th e ir future, the U niversity's placem ent centers can be an oasis in the expanding desert of unemployment. M any of the U niversity’ s colleges have placement centers that offer help in obtain­ ing internships and career placem ent after graduation. These and m any of the other serv ices a v a ila b le, have b eco m e a m ajor resource to students who find them selves faced with increasing unem ploym ent rates and competition from recently unemployed and more experienced people. "The econom y has certainly affected us to a degree," said Sharon Lutz, director of the Business Placement Center. But Lutz added, "A lthough we have felt i t ... it appears U T has held up very w ell." So m e o th e r c o lle g e s and u n iv e rsitie s around the country’ have not had as much su c c e s s w ith e m p lo y m e n t ra te s am o n g g ra d u a tes as the U n iv e rsity has e x p e ri­ enced, she said. To help business students, the Business Placem ent C enter holds about 120 w ork­ shops a year. In the w orkshops students learn how to put together a résumé as well as how to behave and d ress for an inter­ view. In a d d itio n , the B u s in e s s P la c e m e n t Center, as do many other placement centers, holds on-campus interviews for graduating students and prospective employers. Deann Blackstone, director of the Natural Science Placem ent C enter, said interview rooms are located in the placement center. She added that the center provides stu­ dents with a " pre-formatted résumé d isk." Thus disk is loaded into a data base, which a llo w s the p la c e m e n t c e n te r to m a tch nésumés with prospective employers. For students w ho have not decided on a m a jo r, th e C a re e r C e n te r, lo c a te d in Beauford H. Jester C enter, has counselors trained to help students choose a field. "W e are a cen tralized career s e r v ic e ," said Lynne M ilbum , director for the Career Center. The center helps students from different m ajors find internships and em ploym ent, M ilbum said. Up, up and away Brian Elmore of Austin helped Chuck Bergez train Sunday afternoon for the pole vault event in the Junior Olympics Tuesday in San Antonio. Patrick Sison/Daity Texan Staff 12 exposure ro ll $2.79 (7< per print plus $1.95 developing charge) 24 prints 15 exposure D isc ...... 30 prints $3.79 (7< per print plus $2.74 developing charge) 24 exposure r o ll...... 48 prints $5.39 f7< per print plus $3.71 developing charge) 36 exposure r o il...... 72 prints...... $7.3 ( 7c per print plus $4.87 developing charge) Gallup to build polling center in Austin Darby Ahrens Daily Texan Staff UT students and departments alike will benefit from a national polling organization's plans to build a telephone polling center and to relocate its cen ter for H ispanic research to A ustin, UT officials said Thursday. The Gallup Organization, which conducts the G allup Poll opinion survey, plans to establish a large polling center in Austin by September and will hire about 150 interview ers, prim arily col­ lege students, said Veronica Inchauste, director of the Office of Survey Research. "T h e y 're looking at all the U T p o p u latio n ," In c h a u ste said . "T h e r e w ill be a lo t o f w ork opportunities." G allup's center for Hispanic research will com­ prise researchers who interpret polls and surveys concerning Hispanic issues. Inchauste said the relocation of the center to Austin will provide jobs for Hispanic students. 'T h e y 're going to try to hire H isp anic stu ­ d en ts,' she said. "T h e y 'll be h irin g bilin g u al interviewers." Gallup was searching for a city with a universi­ ty with a good Latin American studies program, Inchauste said. Gallup w as attracted to Austin because the U niversity already conducts exten­ sive studies on Latin American issues, she added. Gallup will increase its employee size to about 600, Inchauste said. They will hire mostlv UT stu­ dents and other college students. "It's going to be a good source of income for students," she said. O ther UT departm ents expressed enthusiasm about Gallup's plans. Wayne Danielson, chairman of the Department of Journalism, said journalism students trained in polling and surveying are potential employees of the Gallup telephone polling center. " I think it would be a good thing. I'm excited — it's a high-quality operation," Danielson said. "A ustin is a good site. ... It's good experience for journalism students. Polling plays a large part in journalism and politics." Greg Urban, director o f the Institute o f Latin American Studies, sees the relocation of Gallup's Hispanic research center as a major move toward Hispanic research in Austin. "W e're certainly very excited about it," Urban said. " It provides a window of opportunity’. ... It couldn't have come at a better time. This is com­ ing at the right m om ent." Urban said the existence of the research center will "provide an enhanced network of contact." Austin will becom e a "h u b of activ ity ," where opinions and surveys concerning Latin American issues can easily be obtained, he said. The center w ill expand pu blic outreach and will "brid ge the gap between academia and the public," Urban added. Danielson said he was pleased with the reloca­ tion of G allup's center for Hispanic research. "I'm especially interested that they are moving th e ir S p a n is h -la n g u a g e o p e r a tio n h e r e ," Danielson said. "U T needs to look toward Latin America. We need to be thinking more in hemi­ spheric term s." Professor says Huck Finn may have black origins Voice of Mark Twain s famous character derived from African-American roots Dennis Pu Daily Texan Staff A UT professor recently proposed th a t H u ck Fin n , from th e cla ssic A m e ric a n n o v el A d v e n tu r e s o f Huckleberry Finn, may have African- American origins. In a bo o k to be released in the spring titled Was Huck Black? M ark Twain and A frican-A m erican Voices, Shelley Fisher Fishkin, professor of A m e ric a n stu d ie s, su g g e sts th a t " A f r ic a n - A m e r ic a n v o ic e s h a v e helped shape what we have thought of as m ainstream A m erican litera­ ture." She claim s the Finn character is not entirely based on a poor white M issouri boy, Tom Blankenship, as commonly thought. A lth o u g h B lan k en sh ip w as the model of Huck Finn's social charac­ ter, his voice derives from African- Am erican roots, Fishkin proposed, saying that Twain appreciated the expressiveness of black language. F ish k in said T w ain m ay h ave used Jerry, a 15-year-old slave, as a model for Finn's role as a trickster. T w a in v o ic e d h is a d m ir a tio n o f Je r r y w h en he w ro te in 1901, " I believe he was the greatest orator in the United States." One o f the most striking pieces of evidence backing Fishkin's proposal is a little-know n article that ran in T he N ew York Tim es in 1874 titled " S o c ia b le Jim m y ." In th e article, Twain characterized Jimmy, another slave, as "the most artless, sociable and exhaustless talker" he had ever come across. T w ain also g iv es an ex cerp t o f Jim m y's speech, which Fishkin com­ p are d to F in n 's . In d o in g so she fou n d p a ra lle ls in la n g u a g e and ch aracter w hich she said su p p o rt her claim. Fishkin said she believes there is a tendency "to write a segregated his­ to ry — black w ritin g s com e from b la ck cu ltu re and w h ite w ritin g s com e from white culture." S h e said her fin d ings "b rin g on the thought that classrooms must be open to and appreciative of African- A m e ric a n v o ic e s as w as M ark Twain's im agination." 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KAPLAN Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances 1 SPEEDREADiNG CLASS STARTS JULY 14th 472-EXAM For other locations call 800-KAP-TEST STUDENTS YOUR NAME, ADDRESS, PHONE NUMBER, AND OTHER INFORMATION BELOW are considered directory information. Under federal law, directory information can be made available to the public. You may restrict access to this information by completing a request to restrict the release of directory information in the Office of the Registrar. Forms will be available to students enrolled in the second summer term on Friday, July 10 and Monday through Wednesday, July 1 3 through 15. If you file a request to restrict directory information, no information other than the fact that you are currently enrolled will be given to anyone-INCLUDING YOUR FAMILY MEMBERS-except as maybe required by law. The restriction will remain in place until you revoke it, or until you fail to register for a long semester. The attorney general has ruled that the following items are directory information: • date and place of birth • m ajor field of study • participation in officially recognized activities and sports • ethnicity • w eight and height if a member of an athletic team • sex • marital status • classification • dates of attendance • the most recent previous educational institution attended w ho are credited w ith funds remaining in their general property deposit • student parking perm it inform ation • names and attendance records of • expected date of graduation students in individual courses • degrees, awards, and honors received • names and addresses of former students For details about the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 see the General Information bulletin, 1991 -1992. DIRECTORY INFORMATION SHOULD BE KEPT CURRENT. Communications from the university are mailed to the address you give to the registrar's office. An incorrect address may interfere with your registration or cause you to miss important University correspondence. You are responsible for any correspondence mailed to you at the address on the registrar's records. T m D u l y T i \ w | Page 6 Monday. July 13. 1992 STATE & LOCAL Senator aims to make tobacco companies pay health costs Doug Anderson Daily Texan Staff S ta te S e n . T e m p le D ick so n announced Friday a proposed bill that would hold tobacco companies legally accountable for public costs o f m edical treatm ent given to v ic­ tims of tobacco-related illnesses. "I have been fighting for my life against lung cancer and I am here today for other Texans w ho are in sim ilar situations," said Dickson, a S w e e t w a t e r Democrat. " W i t h o v er 4 3 0 ,0 0 0 p e o p le dying each year to b a c c o , fro m th e to b a c c o industry has cre­ a te d m a s s iv e c a r n a g e in o u r w orld. This bill Dickson w ill a tte m p t to m ak e c ig a r e tte industries pay a part of its fair share for the huge d estru ctio n they are causing for this country, including a $3 billion loss in m edical expenses to this state," Dickson added. Karen Daragan, spokeswoman for Phillip Morris USA, one of the lead­ ing tobacco com panies, said, "O u r on ly co m m en t is that the state of Texas already collects $700 m illion in excise taxes from cigarettes. There is no justification, in an overcrowd­ ed court system, for the state to take any more money from anyone." Jo e l D u n n in g to n , fo u n d e r and chairm an of the national organiza- tio n D octors O u g h t to C are, said although he su p p orts the b ill,.th e fu tu re o f the le g is la tio n rem ain s unlikely. 'The problem is that there are not e n o u g h S e n a to r D ic k so n s w ith enough political courage to take on the to bacco in d u stries, w ho have in v e ste d m illio n s o f d o lla r s in e ffo r ts to c o n tro l C o n g r e s s ," Dunnington said. A lth ou gh th ere are g ro u p s like DOC and the A m e ric a n M ed ica l A ssociation that lobby for tobacco regulations, "W e are usually always o u tsp en t by the tobacco industry, w ho has elected politicans and con­ tinues to influence h ealth policies with its heavy- Handed tactics," he said. A lth o u g h th e p e r c e n ta g e o f A m e ric a n sm o k e rs c o n tin u e s to decline because of ed ucation cam ­ p a ig n s , D u n n in g to n s a id , " T h e tobacco com panies are now target­ ing the Third World, using the polit­ ical pull they have w ith the Bush a d m in is tr a tio n . C o u n tr ie s th a t refu se bu ying tobacco are th rea t­ ened with severe sanctions." But the bill w ould probably not pass due to influence of the, "deep- seated tobacco lobbyists in A u stin /' said Alan Blum, a doctor at UT M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. "The to b a cco c o m p a n ie s h ave become the leading drug pushers on the Earth," he said. The significance of this bill, Blum said, is not to change policy but "to make the connection between smok­ ing and high medical costs." Austin students and parents protest proposed fine arts cuts Jamey Smith Daily Texan Staff Several hundred in d ign an t stu ­ dents and parents gathered in front of the state Capitol Saturday morn­ ing to p ro te st p ro p o sed fin e arts c u ts in th e A u stin In d e p e n d e n t S c h o o l D is t r ic t's b u d g e t fo r th e 1992-93 academic year. AISD adm inistrators are looking for w ays to red u ce a $7.8 m illion d is c r e p a n c y b e tw e e n w h a t th e school bu d get p rovid es and w hat the d istrict needs to m aintain cu r­ rent programs. Adm inistrators attribute the lack of funds to diminishing state dollars and increased enrollm ent. Among possible cuts suggested are teaching positions in band, art and drama. Protest organizers said under one AISD proposal they could lose up to $2 m illion in fine arts funding for the next year. Bill Keese, president of the Bowie High School Band Boosters, started the speakers' portion of the rally by a sk in g th e crow d to o b se rv e a mom ent of silence. "T h a t's the sound you 'll hear if cu ts are m ad e to o u r m u sic p ro ­ gram s," Keese said afterward. The remainder of the demonstra­ tion was anything but quiet as more than a dozen students, teachers and parents spoke before a crowd which cheered at every pause. Early in the r a lly , a le tte r fro m G o v . A nn Richards supporting fine arts educa­ tion w as read to the crowd. B e fo re and after th e sp e e c h e s, m em bers of the UT A lum ni Band joined members of several area high school and middle school bands to Protest organizers said under one AISD proposal they could lose up to $2 million in fine arts fund­ ing for the next year. play T exas, O ur Texas, The Eyes o f T exas an d se v e ra l o th e r ro u sin g songs. One parent held a sign that said, N ot A d m in is tr a tio n , " C u t Education." " T h e a d m in is tra tio n is o u tr a ­ geous," said the parent, who asked not to be identified in print because he w o rk s for A ISD . " I th in k it's appalling that the board will consid­ er cutting vital education programs and then pay the administration the kind of salary they m ake." Austin high school bands played The Eyes of Texas at the conclusion of Saturday's rally. Patrick Sison/Daily Texan Staff National Hispanics’ group wants removal of ‘Mañana University’ T-shirts Johanna Franke Daily Texan Staff M e m b e rs o f the N a tio n a l H isp a n ic Institute are w orking to remove w hat they say are offensive T-shirts from a local m en's apparel store. N icole N ieto, associate disector for pro­ gram adm inistration of the N H I, said she cind other m em bers protested Thursday at the K-G M en's Wear store at Barton Creek Square m all as part of their effort to have the shirts discontinued. The T -sh irts, w hich inclu d e statem ents such as "M añana University," "Siesta Time all " N o C o m p ren d e" in their designs, perpetuate stereotypes, Nieto said. th e T i m e ," " P e n d e jo " and "T h e 'M añana University' shirts insinuate that H ispanics w o n 't go to college — that everything can w ait," she said. "T h e 'Siesta Time all the Tim e' shirts promote the stereo­ type of laziness." The word "p en d ejo" is an offensive term in Spanish and the "N o C om prende" shirts p e rp e tu a te the ste re o ty p e o f ig n o ra n ce , Nieto added. The shirts were hanging on racks and dis­ played on mannequins when NHI members a rriv ed to p ro te st T h u rsd a y at the K -G M en's W ear store, she said. C a m e ro n H ick s, m a n a g e r o f the K -G M en's W ear store, said, "A bou t 12 of them [members of the NHI] cam e in and started lo o k in g at th e ra ck s an d m a k in g sn id e remarks. They said they were not protesting K-G but the T-shirts." A fter th ey saw the sh irts on the racks, they began passing out fliers, Hicks said. Ernest N ieto, ex ecu tiv e director for the N H I, said co m p la in ts abou t the T -sh irts began July 1, w hen a high school Spanish teacher in Colorado contacted the NHI after b ein g "o ffe n d e d at the sy m bo lism s p o r­ trayed by these clothing articles." A fte r p re ssu re fro m th e NH I and the League of United Latin American Citizens, officials at the K-G M en's Wear headquar­ the " M a ñ a n a te r s U niversity" and "P en d ejo " shirts from the shelves Wednesday. in D e n v e r p u lle d But G rover said the other six d esign s, made by Señor Lopez, the California com ­ pany that created the two T -sh irt screens that were discontinued, will still be sold at K-G M en's W ear stores. Nicole N ieto said the NHI will continue to w ork to g et all of the T -sh irts o ff the shelves of K-G M en's Wear stores and other stores. "W e're not planning on going back to the m all. O ur p la n s are to o rg a n iz e and go before the Austin City C ouncil," she said. PRICES TOWN!! Buy or Sell Whether you're selling your 1 st summer books or buying your 2nd summer books, or both, exas Textbooks offers the best prices, and the friendliest service at two convenient locations. We guarantee the lowest prices on every new or used textbook. If any textbook store in town beats our prices on any book, WE WILL REFUND THE DIFFERENCE. Coupon FREE 100% Cotton T-Shirt w /$ 2 5 purchase or buybacks E x p ir** July 3 1 , 1 9 9 2 ON THE DRAG TEXAS TEXTBOOKS 478-9833 2338 Guadalupe Park FREE in Any West Campus ALLRIGHT Parking Lot (Minimum purchase required) M onday-Friday 8:0 0 a.m .-8:00 p.m. Saturday 9:00 a.m .-7 :00 p.m. Sunday 11:00 a.m .-5 :0 0 p.m. McwtwCord $7 •« any BACKPACK Featuring QUEST W ith Lifetime Guarantee Valid Only With Coupon Not Valid W ith Other Discounts Valid thru July 31, 1992 OFF THE DRAG TEXAS TEXTBOOKS 443- 1257 RIVERSIDE PLACE SHOPPING CENTER 2 4 1 0-B EAST RIVERSIDE OVER 500 FREE PARKING SPACES Monday-Saturday 9:00 a.m .-9:00 p.m. Sunday 11:00 a.m .-5:00 p.m. FOCUS T hf. i ) \ m T f x a v Monday. July 13. 1S92 Page 7 MODERN A mother prays at her son’s confirmation ceremony at a Matamoros cathedral. I ' f ' / ‘ Two juveniles are being booked for breaking and entering and held at the Policía Preventiva Municipal (city police station), where the majority incarcerated are minors. Matamoros police attempt to improve current system hile Brownsville residents prepared for July 4 celebrations on this side of the border, many well-dressed Matamoros residents attended a confirmation ceremony at the Cathedral of the Diocese of Matamoros on the other side. They g ath ered in the sp acio u s ca th e d ral with whitewashed walls, meticulously polished floors and newly varnished pews, to watch the bishop lead the confir­ m ation cerem ony in front of an elaborate white and gold altar adorned w ith freshly cut flowers and candles. The cool air was filled v/ith the scent of incense and pollen. Such wealth w7as not on display at the State Police Station across tow n the same day, w here about 12 youths were crammed into tw7o 6-by-8-foot cells. "W e've had up to 67 people in these cells," said Horacio Galván, commander of the State Police. When that happens, the detainees have to stand shoulder to shoulder. would like to have better facilities, better equipment, more personnel and more time to spend with our families." It is also believed that low salaries play a part in the repu­ tation Mexican police have for corruption and bribery. "If you start picking up the salary, they will start working harder," Galván said. The Mexican government is also working hard to clean up its poor hum an rights record. Federal law requires jails to release detainees after 24 hours if evidence cannot be brought before the prosecutor. How ever, according to an A m nesty International report written in May 1992, Mexican police are notorious for ignor­ ing the requirement. Juan Carlos, a 23-year-old who w ould not give his last name, said he spent three days in a cell before being moved to prison for driving a stolen car. The Mexican governm ent is making efforts to m odern­ ize its law enforcement agen­ cies, sa id R icardo M o n - temayor, assistant director of D e le g ació n d e T rá n s ito [Transit Police]. "We w ould like to have b etter facilities, b etter eq u ip m en t, m ore p erso n n el and m ore tim e to sp en d with our fam ilies." — Andres Sanchez, Matamoros police officer "It w as three days of hell," Carlos said. "In the jails, peo­ ple piss on the floor and it's too crowTded." Carlos said the only people affected by the Mexican gov­ ernm ent's efforts to improve civil rights were those w ho could afford lawyers. "Hum an rights are for the rich people," he said. Galván, on the other hand, stressed his aim to treat peo­ A g en t R ay m u n d o A r e l­ lano, liaison officer for the B row nsville Police D ep art­ m ent, said the com plaint in the past has been that m oney for program s initiated from Mexico City often don't reach the border towns. The conditions of the police stations in Matamoros echo Arellano's sentiment. In the Delegación de Tránsito, there were no elevators. Paint w as peeling from the walls and the air conditioner was not working. Outside Montemayor's office lay a pile of m angled bicycle frames, and there was a large puddle of w ater from the broken pipes that jutted their wray out from the hallway walls. The m usty air was filled with the sound of shuffling people and the clickity-clack of an antique type­ writer. The Policía Preventiva Municipal [city police] station also lacked air conditioning and computers although, according to assistant director Enrique Salazar, the police are expect­ ing to have a computer sometime next year. "The city and state are trying to build a more m odem sys­ tem," Salazar said. Apart from equipment, police officers would like better pay and shorter hours, Galván said. Although there have been salary increases in recent years, officers are still under­ paid and overworked. State police work 24 hours on, 24 hours off, seven days a week with only two weeks' vacation each year. City police work the same number of hours in 12-hour shifts. "Sometimes when they [the state police] are working on a case, they d o n 't go hom e for d ay s," G alván said. "W e ple the same despite their backgrounds. "W e've p u t a stop to that," he said. "There will be no more preferential treatment." The state police have the wrorst reputation for hum an rights violations and corruption, Galván admits, although he is determined to change that reputation. Various law7 enforcement agencies in Texas have offered in train in g co u rse s an effort to im prove relations between lawr enforcem ent agencies on both sides of the border and to help Mexico modernize its training techniques. to M exican police o fficers The Department of Public Safety recently held a training camp for the Mexicans in Austin and Brownsville will be offering one in November, Arellano said. Sgt. W illiam K in g sb u ry , tra in in g officer for th e Browmsville Police D epartm ent, said that proper training increases professionalism. When we teach officers any procedure, from high-risk stops to unarmed combat, we always emphasize appropri­ ate use of force," he said. "It is important to only use the amount necessary." Montemayor, of the Delegación de Tránsito, didn't know about the D epartm ent of Public Safety train in g efforts although he was "110 percent behind Texas police offering the courses." He said he was excited about the B row nsville Police Department's plans to train Matamoros police officers. ♦ photographs by Eric Baldauf ♦ ♦ story by Justin Noble ♦ Five Mexicans climb onto American soil after swimming across the Rio Grande. Matamoros police officers guard the Mexican side of the Rio Grane T h f D v ii v T k \ w Page 8 Monday, July 13. 1992 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Mall Steve Crabtree Daily Texan Staff E v e r c a tc h y o u r s e lf w o n ­ d e r in g w h e re you could go to fin d th e G re e k god o f fo rtu n e , a p a r a g o n o f p erfect w o m a n ­ h o o d , a v a r ie d a s s o r tm e n t of w ild anim als, and all the latest fash­ ions g ath e re d together in one con­ v e n ie n t lo c a tio n ? T he a n s w e r o f course, in this d ay and age, w ould be The Mall. The Magical M ystery M all, a new play by N ancy Orv, is a strange mix o f com edy and grim surrealism . O n the surface, it's a lighthearted fanta­ sy abo ut a forbidden love betw een a m o rtal an d a god. But u n d e rn e a th lurks a symbolic fable about the loss o f in d i v id u a lity u n d e r p r e s s u r e from the pow ers-that-be — a kind of a com edic 1984 for the '90s. A nd yes, it's set for the m ost p a rt in that ultim ate bastion of A m erican con­ formity, the shopping mall. sh e s a n o r a c le Theresa Tow nsend is a frustrated businessw om an w ho has flashbacks w h e r e in fo r K o regenon, the god of fo rtu n e , in ancient Greece It turns o ut she was, in fact, his oracle, b u t Z eus erased her m em ory and banished h er to a dreary' existence in the 20th century for c a rry in g on a fo rb id d e n affair w ith K o re g e n o n . O n a g e n e r o u s im p u ls e , th o u g h , Z e u s a llo w s K o re g e n o n to s p e n d o n e d a y in m o d em tim es, w here he m ust urge Theresa to shrug off the im pulse to be "n o rm al," and re g a in h e r god- desshood by daring to be herself. K oregenon ap pears to Theresa in a n u m b e r o f d iffe re n t g u is e s. H e confuses her so badly she decides to go to the m all to regain a sense of n o rm alcy . W ro ng m ove. The m all turns out to be an oppressive w orld w here sh o p p ers m u st stand in line to validate their existence, and m ust purchase a m ap just to find the way out. Presiding over the w hole place is B arbie, th e g o d d e s s of p e rfe c t w om anhood, w hom shoppers m ust w orship. T heresa m u st slay Barbie and lib erate herself from th e co n­ fines of the mall in ord er to discover w ho she truly is. A d d in g to the fu n are a h o st of c h a ra c te rs try in g to hold T h eresa back. Three O lym pian fairies appear to p la y little gam es w ith o u r hero­ ine. A t one p o in t, th e y tu rn u p as aerobics in stru c to rs, at a n o th e r as anim als, and yet again as Theresa's family. At every o p p o rtu n ity , they try to underm ine Theresa's self-con­ fid e n c e by te llin g h e r sh e m u s t alw ays pretend to be som eone else. So the central them e, the evils of c o n fo rm in g , is h a m m e re d h o m e repeatedly. But that's okav — it's a telling reflection of A m erican soci­ e ty , a n d it p r o v id e s so m e o f th e p l a y 's fu n n ie s t s c e n e s . B a rb ie 's h ila r io u s p r o d u c ts illu s tr a te th e ridiculous pressure, placed especial­ ly on w om en, to look and act just so. "The perfect w o m an d ra w s a tte n ­ tio n a w a y from the n o s e ," B arbie tells h e r adorers as sh e flashes the B arbie N ice-G irl N o se C lip. "T he perfect w om an has no nose — just b ig b lu e e y e s a n d a p e r m a n e n t smile. There's nothing sm elly about the perfect w om an." Later, Theresa is beset by a g roup of m a ll g h o u ls in b la n k e ts w h o a s s u r e h e r th a t sh e, w h o k n o w s no thing , m ust alw ays copy others. "They," w ho know everything, will d ire c t h er. W hen she trie s to ask w ho "they" are, the ghouls recoil in shock, shouting, "She has asked the forbidden question!" "They" are the M all O ffic ia ls , lik e O r w e ll’s Big B ro th e r, try in g to e x e rt as m u c h control over their p atro ns as possi­ b le , a n d th e y d o n t lik e to g iv e th em selves aw ay. O ry m a n a g e s to show that, w hile this m a y not be a totalitarian regim e, capitalists have their ow n tho ugh t police: corporate a n d e n tr e p e n e u ria l in te r e s ts a re c a p a b le of a lm o s t f r ig h te n in g m anipulation of the general public. The actin g is a m ixed bag here. C layton M urrell is suitably haughty a s K o re g e n o n , C la ire M cN am ara gives a d eligh tful tu rn as Barbie, elevating p ristin e bitchi- a n d THE M AG ICAL MYSTERY M ALL Author: Nancy Ory Director: Tom Mellett Starring: Lisa Haygood, Clayton Murrell, Claire McNamara Playing at: Hyde Park Theatre, 511 W. 43rd St. Date: Through Aug. 1 n e s s to a n a r t fo rm . B u t L isa H aygo od annoyingly o v erd o es the w hining as Theresa. Sure, she's d is­ c o n te n te d w ith life, b u t it w o u ld p r o b a b ly be e a s ie r to e m p a th iz e w ith h e r (a n d to b e lie v e in h e r p o te n tia l for g o d d e s sh o o d ) if she d id n 't constan tly com e across as a petu lan t 5-year-old. Also rath er jarring is The Magical M ystery Mall's heavy integration of com ic and tragic elem ents. D irector Tom M ellett w rites in his p ro g ram notes th at his aim w as to h av e the comic structure highlight the tragic aspects of the play, effecting a kind of "comic catharsis" upon the au d i­ ence. A n in te re stin g co n cep t, and for m uch of the play it is carried off w e ll. T he h u m o r p o in te d ly illu s ­ tr a te s th e a p p a llin g w a y so c ie ty absorbs individuality. B ut th e p la y lo s e s c o h e re n c e w h e n it d e lv e s to o d e e p ly in to T h e re s a 's p sy ch e. Scenes like the o n e w h e r e T h e re s a m u s t re liv e beatings by her father, w h o clearly Two shoppers worship a conformity goddess in Ory’s Mystery Mall. favored her pretty little sister, are so m e lo d ra m a tic , th e y d e m o lish the re la tio n sh ip b e tw e en com ic effect and tragic insight. The lighthearted tone of the first act disappears, leav­ ing th e p ro d u c tio n m ore confused than cathartic. N onetheless, there are som e gen­ uinely hilarious m om ents. The play show s a penetrating take on society. Viewers m ay find it w o rth w h ile to forgo that shopping expedition and take an experim ental theater trip to the Mall. Ally Walker upstages Van Damme’s film Mary Hopkins Daily Texan Staff Universal Soldier pick s u p w h e re Flatliners left off. The m y ste ry is, w hat happ en s to the soul, or per- s o n a lity , a f te r death? In Soldier th e a n s w e r is, ju s t s o u l th e w aits ... y o u can freeze th a t b o d y , reheat it, speed it up, inject it full of serum s, and presto! It's alive again. But seriously, the m ovie's real hope is to fit as m an y stu n ts, shots, car c h a s e s a n d d e to n a tio n sc e n e s as th e y c a n in tw o h o u r s a n d s ta y u n d e r budget. S u rp risin g , u n d e rn e a th all th a t hackneyed blockbuster m ovie-m ak­ ing lies a new leading lady w e hope to see later in films aim ed at people p ast 9 years old. A lly W a lk e r p la y s V e ro n ic a Roberts, a fearless-to-a-fault journal­ ist for a TV netw ork. S he's blonde a n d b e a u tifu l, b u t sm o k es a cig a ­ rette as if it's a cigar. A fter she cov­ ers another m iraculous takeover by the arm y 's highly-touted univ ersal so ld ie rs, s h e 's fire d for ta r d in e s s from her on-air job. W ithin m inutes, she en tan g les herself in a m ess by m uscling into the arm y 's classified territory for a scoop on her ow n. S he s e n s e s s o m e th in g 's fis h y a b o u t th e u n iv e r s a l s o ld ie r s . Id io tically , she a n d a p a rtn e r p u ll r ig h t u p to th e a rm y 's c la s s ifie d location. She lifts the cover on w hat looks like a casket, and finds a u n i­ v e rs a l s o ld ie r p a c k e d in ice. She gapes u n til the guy opens h is eyes and begins to sit up. Then she takes off running. A pack of universal sol­ d ie rs s u rro u n d s her, and sh e begs for m ercy once one of th e m "acci­ dentally" kills her partner. The sol­ diers hear orders to c ap tu re or kill her im m ediately. O n e of th e so ld iers in ex p licab ly d iso b e y s. C o u ld it be re la te d to a c r y in g A s ia n w o m a n h e n o tic e d after the h o stage th w a rtin g earlier th a t day? H e 's seen so m e o n e like this before, b u t where? W e know the source. The first few m inutes of the film outline his story. It's sta n d a rd V ietnam footage: Sgt. Scott A n d re w s (D olph L u n d g re n ) goes m ental, kills off his ow n men, m akes a necklace of their ears and g ets re a d y to to rtu re an in n o c e n t V ietn am ese co u p le. E nter th e last sq u adron m em ber, Luc D evereaux, (J e a n -C la u d e V an D a m m e ) w h o w atch es the w o m an w h im p e r and w a il. H e e n d s u p g o r in g th e sergeant w ith a rifle. But before the s e r g e a n t h e p u m p s Devereaux full of chest w ounds. Cut to b o d y b a g s z ip p in g o v e r th e ir faces. e x p ir e s , The arm y calls the dead soldiers MLAs, and doctors use new process­ es to speed u p their deceased cells. A little m em o ry ad ju stm en t serum injected into their spinal cord keeps them in line, u n til D evereaux an d A ndrew s regain memory' fragm ents. In the present, Veronica Roberts' s q u e a lin g a n d w a ilin g tr ig g e r s another flashback of the Vietnamese w om an. S pontaneously, D evereaux decides to rescue her. They d rive off in a n a rm y v e h ic le , a n d e v e r y m in u te , it se em s, he recalls m o re about w ho h e really is. H e's d e te r­ m in ed to fin d o u t w h a t th e a rm y has d o n e to him . A t first, R o bert's only in tere sted in fleshing o u t her scoop, b u t D evereaux's gentle p er­ so n a lity and F ren ch accen t g e t to her. Soon, she risks her life for him. This isn 't the kind of m ovie th at ev e n p r e te n d s to m a k e s e n s e . Im plausibilities litter the script. It's an action m ovie w ith lots of m achin­ ery, b u t Van D am m e a n d W alk er pull off charm ing portrayals of their comic book characters. M ercifully, th e d irecto r, R oland Em m erich, chose to p u t his m o ney on th e sp e c ia l e ffe c ts a n d s tu n ts rather than on endless close-ups of gory deaths. Plenty of squibs full of k e tc h u p b u r s t, b u t th e d e a d a re m ostly characters w e haven't gotten to know well. So the m ovie tu rn s o ut to be fa irly w a tc h a b le . T h a t's an u n e x p e c te d developm ent. Un i v e r s a l s o l d i e r Starring: Jean-Claude Van Damme, Dolph Lundgren, Ally Walker Director: Roland Emmerich Playing at: Lincoln 6, Riverside 8, Northcross 6, Lake Creek 8 Rating: ★ ★ (out of four) PRESIDIO THEATRES WE’RE BIG ON BARGAINS WOW! NEW PRICES AT THE VILLAGE! YES, FOLKS. That’s right! Now students pay only j $4.00 w/ID - Bargain matinees until 6:00 pm [ $3 00 - Children and seniors $3.00 - and only $5.00 for adult admission! FREDERICK WISEMAN'S TITICUT FOLLIES MindWalh • filM for paaitoftitt tM n liri One W eek O nly 2:15 - 7:30 ALL SICK and TWISTED Festival of An im ation 4 45 9 40 12 00 JUU MIXIFCIX 11:45 2 : 0 0 - 4 :3 0 - 7 :1 5 - 9 : 3 0 * Gu*d«k.«>* 477-1324 SMART STEREO (R) RIVERSIDE 8 IN RIVERSIDE M A LL 4 4 8 -0 0 0 8 UNIVERSAL SOLDIER 1:00 3:305:45 8:151030 COOL WORLD (PG13) NO PASSES/KLBJ 12.3.Q1QQ 5J 5 F;3Q 9:55_________ SMART STFRFf) A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN (pg, 11:45 2 05 4:40 7 15 9:50_________ SMART STEREO BOOMERANG (R) no p a s s e s /k lb j 12J5 2.45 5.QQ 7:5Q 1Q;15________SMART STEREO BATMAN RETURNS (pgi3> 12 00 2:30 5:00 7:30 9 55 PRELUDE TO A KISS GO! 'V o ' M a r c u s ' that Girls you SLEPT uJitM MAS a S ovp ^teM D / A BIG Bo y ­ f r i e n d .' MOSS I T h e G lu m C la b 1HE PA Y Th rt FRO bly ¿-0 5 T IT \\ vto In carl greenblatt / camV TfiUFhK'rLl ,..v.roVíKtsíííJbacyí \ o f f GvkaWtokems*cjtefc/// ME YOU LITTLE£ % /# of chuckv's qonha Give _ _ t « « ! T o K e N S f J V f l P r iJ U f k V 'c AftWtJA A W E ^oo those Tokens upytof c^ f J x ^ . 6tT THE III HIS WHAT? C^UCKYJ NO, MY MOTHER! i I SAID MY m o ther hated M E' lAE'RE LOSING THE CONNECTION AGAIN.. O T T O A N D T H E C O R P I I L O I D S b y J o s e A l a n i z ¡ SOIÚ NOJ Wá!¡0±V9 ifOKjS 'jiwwv i jnwvk* TNese TMIN6S JU S T K E E P ON C o m in g ! This A i n ' t g o W A 66 AS E A S Y A S I THO UGH T' R iP e s 0V£R, 8LU&&BR- aurri i s , B u t h e 's r u t t t y t > O N 'T KN O u> Ü H O RuBR fR . Roy n o r m a l - c o o k i m g THIS Place I f o r Crossword ACROSS 1 Mam moth------ National Park in 38 Down 5 Bow. Barton or Schumann 10 Happy 14 Arabian sultanate is Wading bird 16 Tops 17 Path for Daniel Boone 20 Shelter 21 Wheels for Nero 22 Cleanse in water 23 Rational 24 Lillie and Arthur 26 Western region of 38 Down bought from Chickasaws 33 . . . lovely as Kilmer d’état 34 Emend 35 Bunk 36 37 Czar's decree 39 Melody 40 Single 41 Ending for song 42 Notched, as a leaf 43 L and , national recreation area in 38 Down 47 Formerly, of yore 48 Grain crop 49 Jai-alai basket-mitt 52 “N o talk to m e”: Housman ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE I HE D a i l y T e x a n Monday, July 13, 1992 Page 9 Edited by Eugene T. Maleska 54 Water, in Lyon 57 Southeastern hts of 38 Down so Actual «1 Augmenting 62 Pier 63 Freshen 64 Irish dramatist 65 Artless DOWN 1 Hood 2 Female friend in France 3 Singer Jerry 4 Conclusion 5 Time: Comb, form 6 Meager; frugal 7 In which 38 Down ranks 37th 8 Young flowers 9 Reply to a ques 10 Flashy; flamboyant 11 Bank transaction 12 Tropical cuckoos 13 Strike out 18 Rub out 19 Region 23 Straw beehive 25 Amerind or canal ;4j — 3“ 7.. 14 If N o , 0 6 0 1 71“ t r f j h r - T ~ 8 ff |Lé I» r■<. ’I ■r — L *■'35 29 38 39 30 31 33 36 J 37 ■ 40 ■41 44 43 49 50 51 52 5E 56 47 j1 J56 I1 I 54 61 45 46 r 53 59 _■54 1 I 65 62 57 60 63 26 Biblical patriarch 27 Expiate 28 Vinegar bottle 29 Chipper: Dial 30 Desi Arnaz's autobiography 31 Perceive 32 Borders 37 Salt Lake City team 38 Bicentennial state: June 1, 1992 39 Sp. married women 41 Of an ecological succession 42 Singer John 44 C a n Rivers ?”: J 45 Farm chore 46 Fodder 49 Freshwater fish 50 Blunted sword 51 Sail support 53 Climb, m a way 54 Lab burner 55 Opposed 56 Flying org 58 D D E s 1956 opponent 59 Fortify Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 5656 (75c each minute). Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU HI, SHARON. IT'S 300PSIE. SIP IN 7 OH, HI, HON ! I'M AFRAID you ju s t MISSED HIM. He'S ON HIS WAY HOME. / CAN YOU PATCH MS THROUGH TO THE CAR7 I SORRY, HON. HE'S TIED UP ON HIS GROUP THERAPY CON­ FERENCE CALL. liv e ? ve an apartment rent? C^H the Texan Classifieds. Need a |ob? Read the Texan Classifieds. Need to sell a car? You get the hint? , Use The Daily Texan Classifieds t’s YOUR newspaper^ For Advertising information Call: TALK FROM THE LAND OF PLENTY BY MARC TRUJILLO Y E A , T H A T ’S T H E T H I N G ABOUT CARTOONS S o m e a r e h a p p y a n o s o m e a r e s a p . MR.SPEED IS N T THIS A HEFSO COMIC? o O WMErA DOES T U E V A L -lA rtT E N 0 trt< *c o r\E ? H m ph. T H A T S E E M S t o HAVE SC A R f p EM O F F . H EY'. THE tiT T L E G U Y ’S LE Av i i V ' I U H A . . . D im e n s io n a l t r a n s p o r t » X'M SAVfcP*» o \M, /-T* Y o , g u p p y WAIT* Y o u 'R E MY T ic R E T OUTTA H ...» |O X W * > Í O N 3 S SVOW5I0 SWH>nW! Í S » . 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Efficiency to 3BR 474-1902 B LA C K STO N E LOWER SUMM ER RATES 29 1 0 Medical Arts St. across from law school ALL BILLS PAID Newly remoueled 2 bdrm-2 bath Free Cable! Furnished or Unfurnished 4 7 4 -9 5 2 3 THE ASHFORD Now Preleasing for Fall L a rg e E fficien cies, M ’s, 2 -2 's S t a r t in g a t $ 2 8 5 • Furnished/Unfurnished • West Campus Shuttle • On-Site Mgmt & Maint. • Pool • Laundry Room • Covered Parking A L L B I L L S P A I D 4 7 6 - 8 9 1 5 2 4 0 8 L e o n parkincTspaces^ AVAILABLE at The Castilian $45 per se ssio n, Covered Parking. Act Fast. 2323 San Antonio 478-9811 * a 4 --*1- WEST CAMPUS Walk to UT Large 1-1’s $ 3 6 5 Fall Pool, Laundry, Parking 12 Month Leases Available On-site Manager 474-2215 or 478-9404 2207 Leon S A IA D O APTS. Large 2-2’s Now Leasing for Summer/Fall 2707 Salado 320-0915 W ARW ICK APTS. 2 B edroom , 2 B ath limited access gate pools, microwave Just blocks from campus Now leasing tor the Summer/Fall 2907 West Ave. 320-0915 HOUSTON 2801 H e m p h ill Park 472 8398 PALLAS 2801 H e m p h ill Park - 472 8398 BRANDYWINE 2808 W h m s Ave. 472 7049 W1LSHIRE 301 W. 2 9 th ■ 472-7049 Great Locations! • Fu lly Furnished • Laundry Room • C e n tra l A ir/H e a t • 2 Blocks From U T • N o A p p lic a tio n Fee BR7BA ’ O n s ite manager 1 A ffo rd ab le deposits I SANDPIPER 2810 Rio Grande (4 blks to UT) F u rn ish e d 2 b e d ro o m , 2 bath d ish w a sh e r, m ic ro w a v e , s o m e c o v e re d p arkin g , s w im m in g pool PRE-LEASING FOR FALL 472-5722 VACANCY AVAILABLE AT THE CASTILIAN! ACT FAST! ( 5 1 2 ) 4 7 8 -9 8 1 1 O N E BEDRO OM $ 2 3 0 plus electnc N o pets. Col! 4 77 -2 21 4 7-2-20B-K W ALK TO U T. Efficiency, A.B.P, $285. 4 05 E. 31st For appointm ent call 453- 8 81 2.7 -1 3-58 RENTAL 370 — U nf. Apts. EFFICIENCY $185 ABP Two blocks from UT laundry on premises H o llo w a y Apartments, 2 5 0 2 Nueces, 4 7 4 -2 3 6 5 7-13-10B G R A N A D A APARTMENT5 - 1 bedroom and efficiency available 9 2 0 E 40th St See manager in #104 4 5 3 -8 6 5 2 7-1Ó- 168 ^ HAMLET A P A f t T M I N T H O W E S WE OFFER 24 Hour Computer Lab Preleases For Fait On CR Shuttle Pool (lots of fun) Laundry Room ErfisJifiat&HotHjaa Call Debbie or Jennifer 452-3202 1100 Reinli St. t x \ / ★ Eff ★ 1 br. $310 $ 3 45 W alk in closets, ceiling fans, on­ site manager, laundry. Conven­ ient to east campus. G reat for law, engineering, business, and music students. 4 7 6 - 3 6 2 9 ★ 6-17-20B-E Great one bedroom apartments. One half block from law school. Summer $260, fall $340. Furnished, Quiet. Towerview Apartments 926 East 26th St. #208 320-0482 6-18-20B LEASING EFFICIENCIES A N D 1 BEDROOMS FOR FALL & SPRING FROM $310 + E. AMENITIES INCLUDE: • Dishwasher • Laundry • Disposal • Microwave (opt) • Individual Storage • Pool • BBQ Pits • IF Shuttle • Across from City Park * Resident Manager e Furnished & Unfurnished 108 PLACE APTS. 108 W. 45th 452-1419,385-2211, or 453-2771 CALL TODAY 6 -2 6 -2 0 8 -0 Hillside Apts. 1 & 2 Bedrooms Furnished o r Unfurnished Clean & Quiet All Utilities Paid 478-2819 514 Dawson Rd. Just o ff Barton Sprinqs Rd. 6-29-20B-E $ 3 0 0 4 3 5 0 FOUNTAIN TERRACE APTS. F urnished 1 b dr. a n d efficien cie s. W a lk in closets, c e ilin g fans, p o o l, ca rp e te d , C A /C H , w a te r and gas p a id . W A L K IN G D IS TA N C E T O UT MGR. APT. #134 610 W. 30th 4 7 7 -8 8 5 8 7-2-20B-E LARGE TW O BEDROOM SUMMER SPECIAL $390 PRE-LEASING FOR FALL * Furnished * * Walk to Campus * CAVALIER APTS. 307 E. 31ST 451-1917 6-30-20B-K 302 w 738th Summer/fall leasing on efficien­ cies, 1 bdrm. Convenient to Han­ cock Center, UT, Hyde Park, 16 block to shuttle and city bus line. All appliances, pool, laundry room, gas, water, and cable paid. 453-4002 7-6-208 THE BARRONE G raduate and Law Student furnished studio apartments. Full meal plan and parking included. Computer, study, and laundry room access. (512) 476 -4 6 48 7-6-20B 370 — Unf. Apts. FREE P h o n e I n s t a l l a t io n FREE C a b l e H o o k -U p WITH CABLE MAXX when you sign up for next year at [Tfcfc 0 f f N T E S S & W f i S T by July 31st* NEWLY REMODELED AND RECARPETED Located Just one block from the UT campus on th< WC Shuttle Route 19 Meals per week Maid service twice weekly NEW computer room Pools, sunder :ks. big screen TV Dorm sponsored parties AND MUCH, MUCH MOREI Stop by for a tour today! Call 4 76 4 6 4 8 Double Rooms $ 2 ,0 2 r>/st*mester Private Rooms $ 2 ,r>20/semestf‘r Graduate Studios $2..16.I/sem ester Above rates reflet t full payment plan C0NTESSA PARTNERSHIPS • 2707 Rio Grande • (5 1 2 ) 4 7 ^ 4 6 4 8 -New Contracts Only TWO ROOMS AT OPPOSITE ENDS OF THE WORLD Spacious Floor Plans Walk In Closets Ceiling Fans Stainless Steel Sinks Mini Blinds Outside Storage Creekside Park with Picnic and Barbecue Area Sand Volleyball Court Tennis Court Two Swimming Pools Two Jacuzzis Two Laundry Rooms Clubroom Easy Access to Major Employers 12 Minutes to Downtown Walking Distance to Schools Ample Parking 24 Hour Maintenance LEASE BY JULY 31st FOR SPECIAL STUDENT RATES Large Two Bedroom approx. 939 sq. fl. Pebble Creek Apartments 8805 North Plaza Drive • Austin, Texas 78753 • 512-836-6658 ADORABLE HYDE PARK APARTMENTS! Efficiencies, 1/1 and 2/2. Some with fireplaces, covered parking. Cable paid. 105 West 38 1/2 Street. 459-1711,452-1121 6 -3 0-2 0 8-E PEACE & QUIET IN HYDE PARK! Efficiencies $315 Summer/$345 Fall Cable, gas, hot w aier and cook ing paid. 4 4 0 0 Avenue A 1105 Clayton Lane 4 5 3 -4 0 37 Pre-leasing fo r Fall 6-16-20B ★ ★ ULTIMATE STUDENT PROPERTY Access G ates/24 hr Guard Exercise room, Sauna” Tennis Full indoor B-Ball Court 1 • 2 • 3 Bedrooms Lakeside on Shuttle ADVANTAGE 4 4 3 -3 0 0 0 ★ ★ 6 -1 7 -2 0 8 -0 458-1985,452-1121 6 -30-20B -E Super, Groovy Deal! Fresh efficiency with walk-in closet, overlooking tranquil courtyard. 31st & Duval area. Local, caring owner. $295. Apartment Finders. 458-1213 ' 6-17-20B NO RW OO D APARTMENTS Preleasing for fall Huge 2-1, W -D , pool, laundry, small quiet complex on U.T. shuttle. 56 0 6 North Lamar 451-1917 7-7 -20 B -K G O IN G CRAZY? NOT! N e ce ssa ry — w h e n 1 c o ll ca n d o it all — yo u tell us y o u r needs — w e 'll fin d it! Condos - Apartments — $285-$1500 Apartment Finders 458-1213 __________________________ 6-17-20B ♦ * SUPER DEAL' N ew er 2-2 $ 43 0 n ea r IF. N o w Front Page 4 80-8518 6 16-20B-A ^ EFFIENCY APARTMENTS- great summer sp ea al-p re -le asin g fo r fall in Hyde Park area. 3 2 7 -8 9 8 5 . 6-16-20B-A ★ * SUPER SPACIOUS11 West campus I I $ 3 5 0 /$ 3 75 Pool, shuttle, bnght Front Page 4 8 0 8518 7-8 20B-C Sprmgcreek Apartments, 'tis true. A re N ortheast a nd hidden from view But the features we ve g o t M ake out opartments real bot- A nd our rents are a ffordable, too! WASHERS DRYERS ond MICROWAVES IN EVERY HOM E Springcreek Apartments 6 4 0 7 Springdale Road Austin, Texas 78723 (512)926-8230 7-10-1B WALK TO UT Furnished o r unfurnished S385 Professionally m anaged by Davis & Associates 3100 Speedway 478 - 6 0 0 5 6-23-20B-E BUC K IN G H A M SQUARE Apartments 711 W .3 2 n d Street. 1 and 2 bedrrom apartments in quiet residential neig h bo r­ hood. 453 -4 99 1 6 -2 9 208-K Units now available 2610 Salado St. fo r information 4 7 7-2 534 7 -6-20B -A 4&5 Blocks West UT Large, quiet, clean efficiencies. Kitchen, walk-in closet, laundry, gas/heat cooking, w ater and gas furnished. 903 W 2 2 V i $2 45 2104 San Gabriel $255 476-7916 7-13-20B-0 370 — U nf. Apts. ★ GREAT ★ SUMMER RATES Small, quiet com m unities $ 2 7 5 * Eff. 1-1 2-1 $ 2 9 0 * $ 4 3 0 * * Plus Electric On IF Shuttle PRELEASING FOR FALL 4 7 2 4 8 9 3 WALK TO UT, Furnished o r unfurnished Summer 1-1 starting at $310. Profession­ ally managed b y Davis & Associates 3100 Speedway. 4 7 8 -6 0 0 5 .6 -1 5 -2 0 8 - A WEST CAMPUS-Really cute 2-2, newly remodeled, w asher/dryer, etc., august august lease $ 6 5 0 477-9712 6-16-20B RENTAL 425 — Rooms ON THE BORDER A s exciting as it can be, going away to college can be just as scary as moving to a foreign city. There’s the campus and its surrounding area with its own customs, traditions, and population of 70,000. Smack in the middle of another “foreign” city of almost 500,000 people. As if that’s not enough, college is probably about the longest amount of time you’ve ever spent away from home. That’s why Dobie Center is the perfect gateway to your college life. Our small residential city lias less than 1,000 people who are there for you, either for friendship or to'help make your transition easier. There are complete dining, recreational and academic facilities service mall within the tower itself. Atop a retail and which can make quick work your scholastic or per- needs. Conveniently at the southern the UT of meeting sonal located border of No place And no place Dobie Center. campus, else is so complete, else is closer to campus. No place else. R E A L E S T A T E S E R V IC E S IN C 2021 Guadalupe • 472-8411 RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT 3 7 0 - U n f . Apts. 400 Condos Townhom es 400 Condos Townhomes 400 -Condos Townhomes 540 — Lost & Found 790 — Part time Six Blocks from the Universi­ ty. 2511 Pearl. 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath, living room with at­ tached kitchen, carpet, fire­ place, airconditioned and heated. All street parking. Rent $260. Contact T.E Wiley Co. 472-9228. ___________________ 7-10-106 A l l BILIS PAID' 1-1 $400 iummer/$450 foil 451-8532 452-1121 6 29 208-K EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS ovoilable Hyde Pod: area All major appliances G as paid N ear shuttle route 452-7717 6-29-208-0 fons, walk-in SPACIOUS, Q UIET 2-2's! UT one block closets, pool, CA/CH, laundry Red River/30th dishwasher 477- S625-S700 3388 7-2-208-A Summer/$500 HUGE, G O R G E O U S, LUXURY 1-1, secun ty system, fireplace, stained glass, court­ yard, vaulted ceilings, energy efficient W /D FANTASTIC' $815'monfh 1908 San Gabriel W alk to UT 482-8680 7- 3 - 5 8 _____________________________ W A LK TO Campus, 1-1 loft, $325 Cornerstone Apartments, 2728 Rio Grande 322-9887 7-6 208 FRENCH PLACE Apartments 1/1 approxi­ mately 650 sq ft on EC shuttle $300/ summer, $340/fall Small, quiet complex for groduote and la w students ideol PetsoHowed 474-1240, 452-1121 7-6- 20B-K an ♦ * ENFIELD, SHUTTLE"' Approximate ly 1000 sq. ft. $555.00 2-1 Quiet com­ plex Gas Paid Bright Pool Front Paqe 480-8518. 7-8-20B-A FREE G A R A G E apartment exchange 11 hours house/yard work 17th Street UT student only 472-6450 7-10-5B O N E BED R O O M available, 34th and Guadalupe 328-1733 7 ¡0-108 390 — Unf. Duplexes WEST CAMPUS 2 BEDROOM HOUSE with large rooms and ceiling fan, dishwasher and disposal central air and heat and fire­ place, water is paid. A find for only $800/month. For a tour...Apartment Finders. 458-1213 7-10-10B Six Blocks from the Universi­ ty. 2511 Pearl. 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath, living room with at­ tached kitchen, carpet, fire­ place, airconditioned and heated. All street parking Rent $260. Contact T.E. Wiley Co. 472-9228. 7-10-10B 2-1 SOUTHEAST. Large privacy yard Large master bedroom Fireplace, so­ phisticated burglor alarm system new CACH, garage, near UT shuttle $580 327-4246. 6 - 2 5 - 1 5 8 ___________ 908A KEITH Unique 2-1 duplex Walk to UT/Concordia Quiet street Ready now N o pets Kmppa Properties 451 5050 6-30-108 to campus. $1100 G O R G E O U S, SPACIO US 3 2. CH/CA walk Property Management of Texas, Tern 476-2673 7 8 56____ 1 BED R O O M for fall $450/mo Private, year lease, nice yard, close to U.T 327- 9232 7-10-I0P N EA R H IG H LA N D Mall and DPS 2 ' Carport, potio 477-2214. 7-10-20B C LA RGE 1 bedroom. Near UT, modem kitchen, yard, carport, quiet, $425, owner 479-6153 no dogs, Sept 1. 7-10- 2 0B___________________ LOFT Spiral Staircase City Views Indoor Hof Tub 1 and 2 bdrms A D V A N T A G E 443-3000 CONTINUES Let us help you find a condo the right way NOW PRE-LEASING Croix 6-17-208-0 ENFIELD Newly remodeled, community, covered ing. 2-2, $650. small park- Apartment Finders 458-1213 6-17-208 St. Thomas Centennial Orange Tree CEN TEN NIAL 2-2, furnished $1050 g a b le s 2-2^9, two cor garage, furnished, $900. SALAD O 1-1, $400-$450 N e w Carpeting AH have washer/dryer By owner 479-6865 Waterford Delphi Old Main Rio Grande CONDOS-HOUSES FREE LOCATING SERVICE 7 days a week Over 200 properties to choose from. Call for prices and Locations. West and North Campus. 474-0606 C O F F F F wmiúiiiiiiM CONDOS ★ APTS ★ HOUSES West Campus North Campus All Shuttle Routes Call or stop by for more info. 281 3 R io G ra n d e S te . 2 0 6 474-1800 7-1-208 C E N T E N N IA L C O n d O m i n i u m S-2- 2's. Furnished or unfurnished, starting at $1000 per month. 452 0225 Johnson & Company Realtors. 6-22-20B-A C O N D O W A L K UT, two bedroom, fire­ place, microwave, dishwasher, washer/ dryer, parking. $625/mo CaH 255- 6653 6-24-14? 3-2 s - O N LY o few left for fall N ew duplexes on San Pedro, Centennial, and some houses Better hurry! Coil Rio Grande Properties 474-0606 6-25- 15B-E___________________ 1-1 s FURN ISHED or not For fall, covered parking, pool, all shapes and sizes $350 $550 Call Rio Grande Properties 474-0606 6-25-15B-E_________________ PA SH 1 2-2.5 2-story. Luxury living Huge bedrooms, oil amenities, available Aug­ ust $1 200 $1 300 - Rio Grande Proper ties 474-0606 6-25-15B-E W E S ! C A M PUS 2-2's All amenities cov­ ered parking, hot tub ond pool Flexible move in dates, for July and August $ 750-S 800 - come look1 N o applica­ tion fees 474-0606 6-25-15B-E TREEHOUSE 1-1 Over 800 sq ft Green belt view, garage All amenities. $700/ mo 328-9339 EPI 6 30 20B-E O A K V IEW 1-1. Walk to campus. All amenities, covered parking AvI 8/24 $500/mo 328-9339 EPI 6 30-20B-E ELMS LUXURY. Large 1-1 with brick fire­ place W/D, etc AvI. 8/5 $ 600/mo 328-9339 EPI 6-30-20B-E_________ ORAN GETREE 1-1 Overlooking pool Garoge with 2 parking spaces AvI 8 $675/mo 328 9339 EPI 6-30- 24 20B-E __________________ 3200 DUVAL. O ver 1800 sq. ft. Two cor torage. All amenities. $1050/mo AvI, /20 328-9339 EPI 7-1-20B-E C EN T EN N IA L 2-2. Unfurnished/fur­ nished, security, covered parking, $1050/ mo Available 8/22 328-9339 EPI 7- 1-208 E ___________ ____________ PENTHO USE IN West Compus. 1300 sq. ft, master both, io cu z zi All imaginable amenities Available 8/20. $1300/mo 328-9339 EPI 7-1-20B-E ST THOMAS--Tastefully furnished 2/1's. Security, all amenities Available summer or 328- 9339 EPI. 7-1-20B-E ________________ fall pre-lease $825/month. O RAN GETREE -large 2/2. Secure, 4 parking. Available 8/22, terms 9/12 S1200/$1100 month 328-9339 EPI 7- 1-20B-E EN FIELD /EXPO SITIO N O ver 1100 sq $850/monlh. Call Hugo 328-9339 20B-E ft Covered parki luxury 2-2 n 2 BED R O O M Campus condos. All appli­ ances, covered parking under $700! Agents: Sue 338-9125, Joe 928-4616 7- 1-10P LANDM ARK SQ U A R E Luxurious 2-1 3 blocks to UT, security, covered parking all omenihes 52K Mitch 328-9339 7-3- 18B-K N EAR UT Very large 2-2, shuttle, CA/ CH, hardwoods, appliances, $595, owner, 479-6153, no aoqs, Sept 1 7-10- 20B-A A A PALLADIAN PARK* Fresh interiors, nice, bright, spacious 2-2 s from $775 Campus! Front Page 480-8518 6-16- 20B-A________________________________ CO N TEM PO R A RY CLARKSVILLE Duple* on Cul-de-soc 3 bedroom/2 bath. W/D connections. Ceiling Fans Mmi blinds pnvocy fence Fresh paint. Excellent con dition Available now or Aug. 1. 1619 A & B W 11th St. $1000/mo. N o pets Call 794-9494 KVA, Inc 7-I3-5B-IC A A Compus/'walk1 Nice 1-1, washer, dryer, microwave, CP, furnished, avail­ able $400 Front Page 480-8518 6-16- 20B-A O RA N GETREE C O N D O - 2/2 - 1 or 2 roommates $650/month. Call after 5 (214)248-3567 6-17-20B RENTAL 425 — Rooms C o m e H o m e t o 'M adison O ur atm osphere is frien d ly and hom elike. W e're affordable and close to U.T. D on't m iss this last opportunity to reside at ^M adison Dorm itory. Com e by for a tour during your U.T. orientation. TO URS GIVEN DAILY - 709 W. 22nd STREET O N W EST CA M PU S SH UTTLE Bring this ad for a $ 2 0 0 d i s c o u n t off your 1992-93 lease. Offer expires 7-31-92 4 7 8 - 9 8 9 1 Limited Space Available A A * ST THOMAS--very large, very nice 2/2 furnished Pool/hot tub $1100 CaH JA S O N 474-4800 7 6 208-K A A A NICE FURN ISHED 1/1 m North Campus $400 CoH 474 JA S O N 4800 7-6- 208-K_______________ Immediate occuponcy 2 BED R O O M 1 1/2 bath, bus line, car­ port $400/ month Like new townhouse 346-1593 7-7-58 LARGE 2-2 in North campus, mately 960 sq ft, all opplionces, place, 9298 7-8 4B. approx» fire­ covered parkmq $775 495- ★ A Georgion/Winchesferti Nice 2-2 s AH omemties. West Compu *!! $72 5* Front Poge Properties 7-7-20B-A CLEAN O N E bedroom, 3000 G u a ­ dalupe summer $300, foil $340 $300 deposit 795-0986 7-10-108 THIS IS if! I have what you need in any location 2-2, $600 and up Aqent Jo e 474-1800,7-10-58 1900 SA N GABRIEL Huge luxury con­ dos, 2 ond 3 bedrooms, fireplaces, hardwoods, private garages A ID 476- 9998 7-10-10B 4 1 0 — Furn. Houses TRAVIS HEIGHTS Beautiful furnished ex­ ecutive 3-3 with in-ground pool. 6-12 month lease. $1,400 Realtor 327-7229 7-7-208__________________________ LARGE COUNTRY stone home Fur­ nished on 20 acres 1 hour north of Aus­ tin. Perfect for ortists/wnters, $500/ month 323-5735 or 458-0722 7-10- 5B 4 2 0 — Unf. Houses 477 LIVE 24 hours Old fashioned charm, 4 bedrooms $995, 3 bedrooms $695, 2 bedrooms $525 7-1-20B-A U.T N EIG H BO R H O O D house 1 Bed room. 1 bath, excellent condition Fenced yard, storage, 10 minute walk to U T $495. Call New Management Company 476-6616 7-7-5B 4/2 1/2. W A LK to subdivision's pool, park, tennis Ceiling fans, secunty system 44^5049 doys, 892-1013 evenings 7- HYDE PARK Classic 2 2 brick búngalo 2- car garoge $900/montb 3904 Ave G Texos Realty 476-8585. 7-10-15B H O USES FOR rent, near UT, cute 2-1 Rockhouse, hard­ woods, quiet $550, owner 479-6153 Sept 1 7-10-20B-A fence, opplionces, 425 — Rooms SHORT W A LK UT, Quiet, non-smokmg, petless Pnvate bedroom, share kitchen. For private bath $268, ABP, call 477- 4197, message 474-2051 D P 406- 4523. To share bills, bath $160-$240 coll 472-5646,472-1797 6 30-20B-K HALF BLO CK from campus $185-$225, ABP Walk everywhere furniture avail­ able, central an Call 476-9156 7-10-58 435 — Co-ops FOUND IN West Campus area. block cot weoi identify, 499 l orange color 7-13 3NC young CaH to 560 — Public Notice Applications are now being accepted for the fall appren­ ticeship classes. The following classes will be offered by the Central Texas Chapter of A s­ sociated Builders & Contrac­ tors, Inc. (ABC): Electric I, II, III, & IV; H VAC I, & II; Plumbing I & II, and W elding I. Classes will begin the week of S e p ­ tember 1, 1992. All courses are approved by the Depart­ ment of Labor-Bureau of A p ­ prenticeship and Training. Deadline is August 21, 1992. For more in­ formation, come by the A BC offices located at 1033 La P o ­ sada, Suite 145, Austin, Texas 78752, or call 512-458-3166. Acceptance is not based on race, color, religion, sex, age, physical impairment, or n a ­ tional origin. W om en and mi­ norities are encouraged to apply. for application 7-10-18 NATIONAL RESEARCH, Hispanic gays oges 18-25. All participants must be se nous, no controversy 370-4199 7-7- 20B EDUCATIONAL 580 Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSONS- R & B, Rock, |0zz. count™. 10 years teaching experience Andy Bullmgton, 452-6181 6-29-20B-A 590 — Tutoring 'ft TUTORING” y i' SERVICE 15 YEARS OF PROFESSIONAL SERVICE HELPING STUDENTS M A K F . H 1 E Ü M I 2 Ü ! ¡U I1 11r Tutoring in MATH & MORE 504 W. 24th St. 477-7003 . The Cooperative Advantage Five West Campus locations Good friends Great food Summer fun Fall: Private Room $425 mo. Double Room $345 mo. Includes all bills & 19 meals r. E 4 7 6 - 5 6 7 8 Office— ’1906 Pearl St. Student Owned and Operated Discover the c ; o - o p Difference! • l l o i m - t - o o l u - d m e a l s • A l l b i l l s p a i d • 2-(> b l o c k s I . T . S lil l o / ir iim jr .v f o r 2 m l S o m f u e r S e . v s / o i i ; Singles S.iOO-.HO D ou bles S 2 7 0 - 2 S 5 I a ll/S p r iu * * : Singles S370- 420 D o u b l e s s : t 2 0 - : t : t o < a l l s t u n t ! k :c: c o -o p s 476-IT) 5 7 5 IO TV. 23rd SHORT W ALK UT, Quiet, non-smoking, petless Private bedroom, share kitchen For private bath $268 ABP, call 477- 4197, message 474-2051, D P 406- 4523 To share bills, bath $)60-$240 coB 472-5646, 472-1797. 6-30-20B-K 4 4 0 — R o o m m a t e s ROOMMATE SERVICE Will help you find a compat- ible roommate. Male or female. Call Sam. 280-7118 6-29-20B-A FULLBRIGHT SCHOLAR (Female, 37) From Denmark to do research in Austin needs furnished sublet from Aug. 1 to app. Dec., 1992. My project is on American popular cul­ ture, particularly film and TV, there­ fore I need a TV set and a VCR, for the use of which I am willing to pay extra. This also applies if you have a computer. Location os close to the University/shuttle as possible. I am quiet and tidy and will take good care of your home. Please contact 323-2906 ____________ _______________ 7-8-SB AUSTIN ROOMMATE SERVICE Have a place or need a ploce? Need a roommate now or for the foil? CALL 335-2218 ________________________ 7-13-1P SHORT W ALK UT, Quiet, non-smoking, petless Pnvate bedroom, share kitchen For private bath $268 ABP, caH 477- 4197, message 474 2051, D P 406 4523 To shore bills bath $160-$240 coH 472 5646, 472-1797. 6-30 208-K PERFECT OFF-CAMPUS townehome for non-smoking female. 2-2 1/2, shore a room W/D, computer ond printer, secun­ ty, microwave, fireplace near shuttle $235 ♦ share bills Knstin 385-4391 7- 1-108 • T U T O R I N G • R E V I E W S O P E N 7 D A Y S ’til Midnight, Sun.-Thur. H o u se of T U T O R S U V 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 W RITING TUTOR, PHD English Pub lished novelist, Dobie fellowship Har­ vard 12 years creative and composition 480-8430 6-23-70B SERVICES 750 — Typing ZIVLEY The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING BLOCKBUSTER 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 472-3210 472-7677 LONGHORN COPIES • Resumes • Theses • Term papers • Word Processing • Binding • Laser Prntmg 2 5 1 8 G u ad alup e 476-4498 FAX # 476-2602 ACAD EM IC TYPING P A P E R S R E S U M E S L KTTH S iU One Free Edit------- So You never have mistakes Basic Term Paper Price $2/pg Double Space with 24 hr notice 504 W 24tti Si 477-8141 PAPERS RESUMES RUSH JOBS Abel’s Copies 1906 GUADALUPE 472-5353 EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part time F A X IT ! F a x y o u r I D E A S T O 4 7 1 -6741 ATTENTION CO LLEGE students! N ow hinng energetic ond enthusiastic individ­ uáis to wort part-time this summer $5/hr r bonuses. CoK Charles between 2- 4pm, M E at 453-8782 6-25-20B K O REA N LA N G U A G E translation need ed for computer company Must be fluent 10 ha/wk., $5 00/hr Call 476- 9852 ext 203 7-7-58 T H E D A ILY T e x a n Monday, July 13,1992 Page 11 Braves sweep four from Cubs Associated Press C H IC A G O — Je ff Blauser broke out o f a slum p w ith three hom ers Sun day, including a three-run shot in th e 10th in n in g th at g a v e the A tlan ta Braves a 7-4 v icto ry and a four-gam e sw eep o f the C h ica g o Cubs. Blauser, b atting o n ly .163 (8 for 49) in his p re v io u s 23 gam es, h it solo homers in the second and sixth in n in g s b efore his gam e-w inning blast off Pau l Assenm acher (2-2). K e n t M e rc k e r (3-0), the fifth A tlanta reliever, w orked tw o score­ less innings for the w in. A lejand ro Pena got the last three outs for his seventh save. A 's 8, B lu e Jays 0 T O R O N T O — R o n D a rlin g p itch e d a a tw o - h itter an d M a rk M cG w ire hit his m ajor league-lead­ in g 28th ho m e ru n as O a k la n d d efeated T o ro n to fo r its th ird straight victory. D arlin g (8-7) had faced on ly one b atter over the m inim um through seven in ning s. H e w alked lead o ff batter D evon W hite in the first, but W h ite was caught stealing. M ik e Bordick doubled to right to s ta rt the second and W a lt W e is s w alked, chasing loser Pat H entgen (5-1). R o yals 5, Brew ers 1 M IL W A U K E E — K e v in A p p ie r collected his 10th w in of the season and K e v in M c R e y n o ld s d ro v e in tw o runs and scored one, lead in g Kansas C ity over M ilw aukee. A p p ie r (10-3) scattered six h its o ver fiv e in n in g s, w o rk in g out of bases loaded jam s in the first and third innings. The Royals took a 4-0 lead against B ru c e R u ffin (1-3) b efo re a 56- m inute rain d elay in the bottom of the first. A ngels 5, Tigers 4 (10 in ning s) D E T R O IT — G a ry G a e tti's run- sco rin g sin g le in the 10th in n in g g ave the C a lifo rn ia a v ic to ry over Detroit. Ju n io r Felix led off the 10th w ith a single off M ike Hennem an (0-5) and stole second. Steve Frey (3-1) got the w in w ith two innings of scoreless relief. Red Sox 3, W h ite Sox 0 B O S T O N — Frank V io la pitched s e v e n s h u to u t in n in g s an d Tom B ru n an sk y and Bob Z u p cic home- red as Boston beat Chicago. V io la (8-5), w in less in his p re v i­ ous four starts, gave up three hits, struck out three, w alk e d tw o and allow ed only two runners past first base in seven innings. Brunansky homered into the Red Sox bullpen in the second inning on Sunday. It was his fifth hom er of the season and secon d o ff W ils o n A lvarez (2-3). Dodgers 9, C ardin als 0 LO S A N G E L E S - The D odgers finished the 18-dav homestand w ith an 12-10 m ark, le a v in g them one game deeper in the basement of the N a tio n a l Le a g u e W e s t th an th ey were when the homestand began on June 25. Gross (5-9) w on for only the sec­ ond tim e in his last eight starts, scat­ tering nine h its w h ile strik in g out five and w alking four. R o o kie D o n o van O sborne (7-5) left after 1 2/3 innings w ith a 5-0 deficit in the shortest of his 1 8 major league starts. T w in s 9, O rio les 4 B A L T IM O R E — Pedro M unoz hit a three-run hom er in the first inning after a two-out intentional w a lk to K en t H rb ek, liftin g the M innesota past Baltim ore M ila c k i (5-7), w h o gave up five runs in 2 2/3 innings, is 1-5 w ith an 8.14 E R A in his last eight starts. Tom Edens (5-0) p itched 3 2/3 in n in g s o f o n e-h it r e lie f fo r the Tw ins. G ian ts 4, Expos 0 S A N F R A N C IS C O — B illy S w ift sca tte re d s e v e n h its o v e r se ve n innings and w o n for the first tim e since M ay 7 as San Francisco defeat­ ed M ontreal. C h ris Jam es hom ered and d o u ­ bled for the Giants, w h o have w on seven of their last nine. Sw ift (7-1) pitched out of trouble in the first, third and fourth as the Expos stranded six runners through the first four innings. M ariners 7 , Yankees 6 N E W Y O R K — Ja y B u h n e r's th ree-ru n h o m er in th e se v e n th inning led Seattle over N ew York. Bu h n er's hom er w as his 15th of the season, third in the four-game se rie s an d e ig h th in h is c a re e r against his form er team. E r ik H a n s o n (7-11), the th ird M a rin e rs p itcher, w as the w in n e r after replacing reliever D ennis Po w ­ ell. Buhner's hom er, w h ich follow ed singles by Edgar M artinez and Tino M artinez, came o ff Greg C adaret (4- 7). EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 800 — G eneral Help Wanted 8 4 0 - - Sales 8 9 0 - C lu b s - Restaurants CONCEPT O u r customers coll us 300-550 over­ age/week. N o w hiring two shifts 9 am-2 pm & 2 pm-7 pm M-F. N o e x­ 9 0 0 perience necessary. Top closers d e ­ sired. Coll 454-5357. hours M-F, 10 am-4 pm. Personnel 7-13-5B CATFISH STATION Experienced food ond cocktail wart people needed Please bnng reference sheet Apply in person 418 E Sixth 7 13-58 D o m e s tic - Household EA R N M O N E Y re a d in g books! $30000/yr income potential Details. (1) 805-962-8000 Ext V-9413 6-11-23P STUDENTS earn $500 to $1000/week stuffing envelopes For Information send one dollar and self addressed stamped envelope to Universal Exp., P.O. Box 440246, West Somerville, Massachusetts 02144 6-11-23P E A R N M O N E Y R e a d in g books! $30,000/yr income potential Detoils (1) 805 962-8000 Ext. Y-9413 6-15 23P NIGHT DESK clerk wonted llpm-7am shift Full-time Apply in person ot Stars Inn. 478-1631 7 6-58 ____________ DANCERS W ANTED You con moke up to $200 a day The Lody 478-2444 7 8-5B TELEMARKETERS W A N T ED hours, dependable $5/hour + sion 339-6194. 7-13-48 evening commts- Attendant needed for Art School infor­ mation booth on the drag. Must be per­ sonable with own transportation Flexible hours. $4.25 plus commission eauais $6-$10 our 454-0454. 7-13-38 ENTRY LEVEL positions ovailable with growing software company needed Receptionist, Secretary, Marketing, PR Coll 794-3822 for more information 7- 13-58 810 Office- Clerical MAKE $1000 or more per week/telemar­ keters needed, evening. North Austin 836-7330 7-1-208 TELEMARKETERS N EED ED tor pari-nme position with o major brokerage firm, 3 hours/mght, 3 nights, week beginning August 1 Please colt Deborah fo r more information 469-3448 7-6-58 AMBITIOUS- C O M PA N Y seeking five gutsy people for safes & monoqement * gutsy c 45T-2Í ' ‘ 2206 7-7-48 ' ‘ * 880 — Professional VIDEO EDITOR/PRODUCER Edit Suite, Computer Graphics, Field Camera & Project Produc­ tion experience required. Live staging of technical shows in­ volved. Team environment. Cli­ ent interface. Send resume or apply at Media Event Concepts, Inc. 2211 Denton Dnve, Suite J 78758 7-13-28 TELEMARKETING POSITIONS AVAILABLE Evening and w eekend shifts Flexible scheduling. Salary plus bonus. Call 477-9821 Robert M. 6-17-208 $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ First USA Marketing Services, a division of First USA, Inc. Is currently seeking the following marketing professionals ♦Consumer Credit Reps! Representatives will be responsible for marketing consumer products and services pnmonly credit cards nation­ wide Excellent communication skills with some sales experience is p re­ ferred. W e guarantee $6/bour plus benefits. Commissions may b e earned. Typing skills of 25 wpm preferred. Scheduled shift is M ond ay-Frid ay • 8 :00am-2 :30pm •5 30-9 30pm Please ap p ly in person M o n d a y through Friday, 8am-6 30pm at First USA Telemarketing, O n e Texas C e n ­ ter, 505 Barton Spnngs Rood, Suite 600, Receptionist. N o Phone C all Please! Equal O pportunity Em ployer First USA $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 6-29-20B-A S H O R T W A L K legal errands, Full port-time, Run great for prelaws. O w n economical, reliable car. $4.25. Also hiring, typists, file clerks, accounting/bookkeeping trainee, investigator/bill collector tro in e e , fix it/ h a n d y p e rs o n . Nonsmoking self-starters. 408 W est 17th St. W rite application. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. weekdays. 6-30-20B-K Need caregiver to help sit with elderly lady in wheelchair, give medication reminders, and assist with complete personal care. Must be dependable, patient, kind, and strong. Will involve patient transfer from bed to wheelchair. Enfield & Exposition area. 478 8063. 7-10-2B $800.00 Compensation Are you o healthy, non-smoking, male be­ tween the oges of 18 ond 45, weighing 110- 200 pounds, ond within 1 5 % of your ideal weight? If so, you may qualify to particpote tn o pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $800 00 The dotes ond times of the study are listed below, you must be available to remain in our focility for the entire penod to be eligible Check-In Time Afternoon Friday, July 31 Fnday August 21 Check-Out Time Morning Sundoy, August 2 Sunday, August 23 In addition, bnef out-patient visits will be re­ quired on the following dates August 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. 11, 24, 25, 26. 27 28, 29. 30* 31,September 1 To qualify , you must pass our free physical examination ond screening tests Meals, a c­ commodations, entertomment and recre­ ational activities will be provided free of charge For more information, please coH 462-0492 P H A R M A C O R ES E A R C H FO R BETTER HEALTH 7-13-76-f GREAT $$, flexible hours, student wel- come 451-2206 7-7-4B_________________ PART-TIME VETERINARY technician for centraHy located vetennary clinic. Pro­ fessional, detail-onented, structured environmnet Hours included evenings, weekends, holidays Apply in person 709 West Lynn. M-F 12-3pm. 7-8-78 RESIDENT APARTMENT manager need­ ed for small UT area complex. No expe­ rience necessary. Call 452-5218. 7-10- 10B 800 — G e n era l Help W anted SEMEN DONORS NEEDED is Fairfax Cryobank semen seeking donors for its sperm bank program The program is confiden­ tial and all donors will be compensated. As a potential donor you will Undergo screening procedures to insure good health and fertility potential. You must be between the ages .of 18 and 35. If you are inter­ ested, please call 4 7 3 -2 2 6 8 FAIRFAX CRYOBANK A division of the Genetics 8. I V F Institute NEED $$$ FOR SCHOOL? CONSIDER NANNYING! Recruiting for 1 year posi­ tions in Wash. D.C. area. Up to $350 weekly + room & board. Love kids? Call 385-0855 Now! 7-13-5P A vailable Immediately Excellent opportunity for aids to drive beverage carts for Circle C G olf Club; $4.50/hr. + tips; full or part time positions available. Call Ken at 288-4297. __________________________ 7-13-28 ACT NOW $150 Need two positive people with great communicaiton skills. PT/FT, will train. 451-2412 7-13-38 STUDENTS W O R K FOR SOCIAL CH A N G E Summer and career campoign positions availobie for individuals who wont to • Leom campaign skills • Put democracy bock into politics • Save the world! W ork m an exciting atmosphere and make a difference1 M-F, 2-10 pm, $200- $250/wk CoH Tom ot 479-8481 7-13-38 J o b s ^ $Tó7oT o g o v e r n m e n t $59,230.yr. N ow Hinng. CoH (1) 805 962-8000 Ext R 9413 for current feder- ollttt 6-1-35P S H O R T W A L K UT legal errands, Full part-time, Run great for prelaws. O w n economical, reliable car. $4 25 Also hiring, typists, file clerks, accounting/bookkeeping trainee, t fo in e e ; investigotor/bil! collector it/ h a n d y p e rs o n fix Nonsmoking self-starters. 408 W est 17th St. W rite application. 9 a.m.-4 p.m weekdays. 6-30-208-K Reliable part-time reception­ ist/secretary needed for very busy law office. Skills needed: highly organized and motivat­ ed, detail oriented, good com­ municator and 6 am player. Send resume to: 912 Bastrop Highway #205 Austin, TX 78741 U 2 M — . 820 Accounting- B ookkeeping SHORT W A LK w7 Accounting/ Book­ keeping trainee FuK/part time Non- smoker $4 25 408 West 17th St. Write application, 8-4 weekdays 6-30-20B-K 830 — A dm inistrative- M anagem ent RESIDENT M A N A G ER needed lor smoH complex located m UT area Compensa­ tion is one bedroom apartment Utilities and smotl bonus Previous management experience preferred Apply m person at 711 W . 32nd St #112. 7-6-208-E 840 — Sales FUN & MONEY $ $ Need positive and enthusi­ astic people, PT/FT, will train. 451-2412 7-7 48 AUDIO/LIGHTING/STAGING TECH Live Corproate Events requiring techni­ audio/lighting/staging cian. Expenence with A/V audio visual shows required. Team en­ vironment. Client interface Send resume or apply at Media Event Inc. 2211 Denton Concepts, Dnve, Suite J, 78758 ___________________ 7-13-28 VÍDEO EDITOR/PRODUCER Edit Suite, Computer Graphics, Field Camera & Project Produc­ tion expenence required. Live staging of technical shows in­ volved. Team environment. Cli­ ent mterfoce Send resume or apply at Media Event Concepts, Inc 2211 Denton Drive, Suite J 78758. _____________ 7-13-28 P U B L IS H IN G " Business partner sought for magazine/newsletter publishing venture. No investment required except your time. Respond to: Lorelei Publications P.O. Box 650023 Austin, TX 78765 7-13-28 AUDIO/' IGHTING/STAGING TECH Live Corproate Events requiring audio/lighting/stnging techni­ cian. Expenence with A/V audio visual shows required. Team en­ vironment. Client mterfoce. Send resume or apply at Media Event Concepts, Inc. 2211 Denton Dnve, Suite J, 78758 7-13- 7« CHURCH DAY school in northoost Austin ftaerts dograod and certified teachers for kindergarten and first grade dosses Musi be knowledgeable of DAT CoH 467-9740 7 13-28 after W A N TED , school childcare help. 2 : 3 0 - 6 : 0 0 pm, M-F, starting September i. Must have excellent refer­ ences, reliable transporta­ tion, be a non-smoker and love children Excellent pay for the right person. Call 328-0947 evenings. 7-3-108 Need immediately— some­ one to care for children ages 10 and 13 from 12 to 6pm Monday-Friday. Must have reliable transportation. W II also have household re­ sponsibilities. $4.50/hr. Call Mellissa 467-4554 8 to 6, 258-9894 after 6. 7-10-26 Hill Country Views Live-in position available. Care for 3' 2 year old boy. Some housekeeping responsibilities. Full time, flexible, room & board + salary. Expenence, referenc­ es, transportation required. Call Liz or leave message 329-8127 7-13-48 A D O R A B iF BROTHERS 4 and 2, need babysitter 8om-2ptn, M-F, soturdoy 9ar” 4pm. Child development child psy­ chology mo|ors preferred, $7/hr Coll 458-6890 between 4 30 ond 6 30pm 7-8-58 H O U S E K EEPE R W A N T ED W e pay well rf you clean well $10/hr, call 458-4222 for information 7-10-2P b a s y s it t e r T ie e d e d R e s p T JT b iT T T J transportation references. CoH Debbie ot343-8022 7-10-2B BUSINESS 930 Business O pportunities JEN K O S m o n e y m a k i n g HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO MAKE SOME REAL MONEY! JOHN MILLIONAIRE b e s t s e l l i n g R E P O R T S CAN S H O W YOU HO W E A S Y ANO S IM P L E IT CAN B E D O N E G U A R A N T EED , ANO F O R o n l y A LIM ITED TIM E S O ACT N O W B E F O R E TIM E R U N S O U T TO G E T Y O U R S H A R E OF S O M E RE AL M O N EY F O R FULL D ETA ILS SEN O *2 00 ANO A LA R G E (#10) S E L F A D O R E S S E D S T A M PED E N V E L O P E TO J.M. SANTIAGO DEPT. 312-8 P.O. BOX 203 KILLEEN, TX 76540-0203 Baseball Braves sweep Cubs in Wrigley page 11 Monday, July 13, 1992 Tuesday 63rd All-Star game preview Page 12 L in o has lead a fte r 7 stages Associated Press K O BLEN Z, G erm any — P as­ cal Lino held onto the yellow jer­ sey as the overall leader of the Tour de France on Sunday, but the French cyclist will be hard pressed to stay there with a piv­ otal time trial up next. M o st o f th e fa v o re d c o n ­ tenders for this year's cham pi onship kept one eye on the route and one on the challengers in the eighth stage, a 128-mile leg from V alkenbou rg, the N etherland s, to Koblenz. Jan Nevens of Belgium won it in 4 hours, 45 m inutes, 23 sec­ onds, w ith Jesper Skibby of Den­ mark :03 behind. In the overall standings, Jens H e p p n e r o f G e rm a n y m o ved into second p lace, 2:51 behind L in o , a n d S k ib b y to o k o v er third, 2:54 behind. G reg L eM o n d , a th ree-tim e c h a m p io n , w o rld ch a m p io n G ia n n i B u g n o o f Ita ly and d e fe n d in g ch a m p io n M ig u e l In d u ra in fin is h e d in a p ack about fou r m inutes back. They are fa v o r ite s M o n d a y , th o u g h , and L in o is n 't g iv e n much hope of retaining his lead. th e LeMond will start Monday 35 seconds ahead of No. 11 Bugno and 64 seconds ahead of No.% 12 Indurain. The trio trails Lino by roughly 4 1 /2 to 5 1 /2 minutes, but figures to put a big dent in that, if not erase it completely. E ric B r e u k in k , w ho h ad to w ithdraw from last y ear's race when he and his PDM team all su d d e n ly d ev e lo p e d sto m a ch problems, may also get into con­ tention. Breukink won both time trials in 1990 and stands 20th this year, 6:29 back. Two top cyclists had to drop out of the race Sunday. Fabio Parra of Colombia, third in 1988, fell early and suffered a possible fractured rib, according to o r g a n iz e r s . And It a ly 's M o ren o A r g e n tin , the w o rld ch a m p io n in 1986, a lso w ith ­ drew. SPORTS FANS! 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Call | for competitive prices. I I I I WALKER TIRE COMPANY Because so much is ririinq on our name 6926 N. Lamar 5501 Burnet Rd. | 454-8772 454-7788 I 9th and IH-35 In mm mm tmmE mm J * I I I I I I | | Mets then our pitching did a good job of holding them. I'm very pleased with w h ere we are n o w ," said H ow e, whose team is 41-47 at the All-Star break. Al Osuna pitched the eighth and Xavier Hernandez closed it out for his fourth save. " O u r b u llp en has d one th e job and Finley and C am in iti are both having big years," Howe said. "W e ju st need m ore consisten cy o ffen ­ sively. Our pitching has proved it can w in." Fernandez (7-8) went six innings, giving up three runs on fou r hits. He struck out four and walked four. The Mets, w ho w ere expected to b attle P ittsb u rg h for the N L East title , slid e in to th e b re a k sev en games behind the Pirates. Indians 6, Rangers 3 A RLIN G TO N — M ark W hiten's th re e -ru n h o m e r in the e ig h th inning lifted Cleveland to a victory o v er T e x a s, T o b y H a r r a h 's firs t d efeat in fou r g am es as R an g ers' interim manager. It was the Indians' first victory in th e ir la st se v e n g a m e s w ith the Rangers. Associated Press H O USTON — Butch H enry and the Houston Astros may have made a discovery Sunday. The New York M ets, how ever, continue to search for the a n sw e rs to th eir u p -a n d - down season. Henry gave up a run on six hits in working seven strong innings in the Astros 3-1 victory over New York. "It was a big effort, but he pitched w ell his la s t tim e o u t," H o u sto n m anager A rt Howe said of Henry. M aybe h e's com ing into his ow n and finding out he can pitch in this league." Henry (3-6), w ho had six strik e­ outs and one walk, was just pleased to pitch well in this game. "A n y tim e I pitch good it's a big plus," he said. "T h e key today was good defense. W hen I got behind, I just decided to throw the ball and let them hit it. "Luckily, they hit it right at som e­ body." The A stro s scored two ru ns o ff Sid Fernan d ez in the first in n in g, keyed by Ken Cam initi's RBI triple. C am in iti h a s b ee n on a te a r th is week, going 9 for 24 (.375) in his last six games. Steve Finley w alked in the first before Cam initi's triple. Jeff Bagwell then drove in Caminiti with a sacri­ fice fly. " W e ju m p ed o n Sid ea rly and New York’s Patrick Howell was safe Associatod Press at second after Houston’s Craig Biggio was unable to handle the throw. Rafael Palmeiro w as 5 for 5 with four singles and a triple for Texas, his fourth career five-hit game. tin e z d o u b le d . W h iten fo llo w e d with his seventh homer of the year, lining an 0-1 pitch into left. Carlos Baerga started the eighth fo r C le v e la n d w ith a s in g le o ff reliever K enny R ogers (1-4). W ith one out, pinch h itter C arlos M ar- W h ite n sc o re d in th e s e v e n th in n in g o n a s u c c e s s fu l s u ic id e squ eeze by Sand y A lom ar to give Cleveland a 3-2 lead. Whiten led off with a single and went to third on an infield hit behind third base by pinch-hitter Brook Jacoby. A lo m ar th en p u sh ed th e b u n t past Rogers for the run. Palmeiro tripled in Dean Palmer to tie it in the bottom of the inning. S te v e O lin (3 -3 ) th e n re p la c e d starter D ennis C ook and got Ju an Gonzalez to bounce out. C o o k g av e up th re e ru n s an d eight hits, striking out eight to tie his career high. Olin allowed three hits in two innings. Longhorn athletics faces Title IX legal battle Anna Pellman Daily Texan Staff The recent civil action by seven w om en ath­ letes against the University-of Texas has cata­ pulted the Title IX issue into the media spot­ light with articles about the effects it's had on w omen's athletics. Title IX's ability to affect w om en's athletics has been narrow ed and w idened repeatedly o v er th e y e a rs by C o n g re ss and th e U .S. Supreme Court since its enactment in 1972. On June 23, 1972, Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 was enacted, and three y ears later, P resid en t Ford au th o rized the final Title IX regulations requiring compliance from schools by July 21,1978. A portion of the law reads: No person in the United States shall, on the basis o f sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimi­ nation under any educational program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance. It w asn't until 1984 with the Suprem e Court decision in the Grove City College vs. Bell that Title IX lost som e of its impact. In Grove C ity vs. Bell the Suprem e C ourt ruled that a specific activity or program must receive federal funds to be covered by Title IX. S in ce G ro ve C ity C o lle g e d id n ot re ce iv e direct federal assistance, only the students did in th e form o f P ell G ran ts and lo a n s, the Supreme Court ruled in favor o f the college. Four years later, Congress passed the Civil Rights Restoration A ct of 1987 on M arch 22, 1988, overriding a presidential veto, restoring Title IX to institution-wide coverage. " I t 's irre le v a n t w h ere the fed eral fund s co m e fro m o r how th e y a re u sed ev e n if they7re not used for the athletic departm ent," Kathryn Reith of the W om en's Sports Founda­ tion said. " I f the chem istry departm ent at a university received a federal grant, then the entire institution m ust comply with Title IX, not just the chem istry departm ent." Title IX's m ost recent lawsuit concerns the Supreme C ourt's decision in the Franklin vs. Gwinnett County Public Schools. On Feb. 26, 1992, the Supreme Court ruled that m onetary damages can be sought under 1 ítle IX w here before only injunctive relief - m eaning the institution would have to stop discrim inating - was available. The seven w om en filing su it ag ain st the U niversity are seeking injunctive relief, not monetary damages, from the University. The athletes currently participate in soccer, gym ­ nastics, softball and row ing, w hich are not varsity sports but club sports offered by the Division of Recreational Sports at the Univer­ sity, except for softball, which is not offered at UT as a club or varsity sport. The plaintiffs believe that the University is d iscrim inating against them on the basis of their sex by not allowing their club sports to be varsity sports. The plaintiffs also claim the U n iv e rsity is in v io la tio n o f a re g u la tio n under Title IX that requires equal opportuni­ ties for both sexes in athletics. The regulation states that factors determing eq u al o p p o rtu n itie s in clu d e: p ro v isio n of equipment and supplies, publicity, travel and per diem allow ance, selection of sports and levels of com petition to accom m odate inter­ ests of both sexes, "W e 're not just talking about the quantity of opportunities, w e're also talking about the q u a lity of th e o p p o r tu n itie s ," R eith said . "P la y in g club sports is very d ifferent from varsity sports. The varsity sports receive all the su p p o rt and en co u rag em en t w hile the club sport athletes spend half their time rais­ ing m oney to support them selves instead o f' playing." There are 41 club sports at the U niversity that rep resen t 1,844 p articip an ts. All clu bs receive a portion of the $55,000 budget that Rec Sports has for club sports, which includes $15,500 from the UT m en's ath letic dep art­ ment. All sport clubs submit a budget request to Rec Sports for funding and they receive a p ercen tag e o f the total am oun t o f requests submitted by the sports clubs. This means that the m en's soccer, gymnas­ tics, and rowing clubs have the same chances of receivin g m oney from Rec Sports as the w om en's clubs in the same sports. There are also no m en's varsity teams for soccer, gym­ nastics, or rowing at Texas. "W hen your team works very hard to com ­ pete and su pport th em selv es, bu t they g et now here it's very fru stratin g ," Texas m en's so ccer co ach R ob ert Parr said , "e s p e c ia lly when you have more soccer players coming in than football players, but the opportunities for m ale and fem ale so ccer p layers stop w hen they graduate from high school." 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