THE OLDEST COLL F GE DAILY IN THE SO I lv T exan 2 5 CENTS I I i BACK You thought she’d left you alone now? Oh no, my friends, Tiffany is back, serenading lucky listeners at The Forum. See Entertainment, Page 16 VOL. 101. NO. 118 TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 2 001 UT seeks leading role in South America Faulkner announces goal to strengthen partnerships south of equator D w D i / o n n By Ryan D. Ptttman Daily Texan Staff Buoyed by rich endow m ents, unique exchange programs and strong relationships with its foreign counterparts, the University is poised to become the leading U.S. institution in South America and will strengthen domestic ties with the continent, U T president Larry' Faulkner said Monday. Calling South America a "new domain for Lr I, Faulkner said UT efforts will position it as the U.S. college with the largest and most important presence on the continent. "It's evident that what happens in Latin America has enormous and increasing impor­ tance to our state and nation," Faulkner said. "1 would like the University to be the largest con­ vener of people and programs in South America. It's intimately related to the interests of the University and what we do." Not only will students and faculty benefit trom the UT presence in South America, the Texas economy, which exports 70 percent of its foreign goods and services to Latin American countries, will be helped bv stronger ties to its southern neighbors, Faulkner said. Faulkner and Nicolas Shumway, director of the UT Latin-American Studies Program, trav­ eled to Brazil last week to help forge a new partnership with the country's leading institu­ tion, the University of Sao Paulo. The two met with university leaders to discuss what pn> grams could be created to foster academic and student exchange between the tw, > institutions. "[Our] objectives were for UT to create bet­ ter contacts for student and faculty exchange and collaborative research, pai ‘ cularly with the University of Sao Paulo, arguably Latin Am erica's best research universe Shumway said. The University currently ha >1 confirmed or pending partnerships with universities in eight South American countries. The Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin- American Studies, renamed lor the Austin phi­ lanthropist who donated $10 million to the Plans for South America The University currently has 31 confirmed or pending partnerships with institu­ tions in eight South American countnes. The partnerships allow UT students and faculty to study at South American universities and “contribute to the economic, social and political advancement of the South American region." Major UT partnerships with South America____________ Venezuela: Universidad Central de Venezuela Chile: Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Argentina: University of Buenos Aires Colombia: Universidad Nacional de Colombia Uruguay: University of the Republic of Uruguay, Montevideo Peru: Escuela de Administración de Negocias Para Graduados, Lima Ecuador: Pontificia Universidad Católica de Ecuador Brazil: University of Sao Paulo See TIES, Page 2 Source: International programs division o f the UT Office o f Graduate Studies College Station fears mad cow disease Health officials order 22 cows in quarantine killed By Amber McAnally Daily Texan Staff I he Texas Animal Health Com m ission said last w eek that 22 cow's currently under quarantine in College Station will be euth­ anized due to fears they m ight be carriers of mad cow disease. Th e U.S. D epartm ent of Agriculture placed the cows, imported from Germany betw een February 1996 and Septem ber 1997, under surveillance in March 1997, just after the European outbreak of the disease. 1 he cows, which have been under quar­ antine ever since shortly after their im por­ tation, haven't tested positive for the dis­ ease but pose a threat because of their European origins, Officials said. "T h e risk is m in u scu le," said G ary Weber, executive director for regulatory affairs for the National Cattlem en's Beef Association. "But it's im portant w e let con­ sum ers know we care about prevention. " Bovine spongiform encephalopathy, bet­ ter know n as mad cow disease, is a trans­ missible, degenerative brain disease that affects the central nervous system of cattle, destroying brain tissue and eventually causing dem entia and death. The disease can also be to hum ans. transm itted International health officials believe the recent epidem ic has been spread through infected cattle meat, which is used as feed for cattle. Weber said he expects the anim als to be euthanized to occur within the next two w'eeks. See COWS, Page 2 Bills, activists attack clean air law loophole An employee of a slaughterhouse in Agrate Brianza, near Milan, Italy, supervises the arrival of cows Monday. The herd which became the r r r r 6 TTd under quarantine in College Station will be euthanized due to fears they m ight be carriers. The Texas Animal Health Commission said. T President Bush’s and disease in * * * was slau6h,ered in a" a tte m P‘ >° "«It the diseases spread A herd ofT^ cows cuTrently Governor Perry’s Math and Reading Initiatives $2.45 billion available for a school district employee health insurance plan By Jeffrey Norton Daily Texan Staff I hirty years after the opening of a loophole in the Texas Clean Air Act, members of local envi­ ronmental organizations held a rally on the steps of the State Capitol Monday to call for the end of the "Grandfather Loophole," an amendment to the 1971 law. Two bills regarding the loophole have been proposed this session — House Bill 356 by Rep. Zeb Zbranek, D-Winnie, and House Bill 3545 by Rep. Warren Chisum, R-Pampa. "We re here to celebrate the loophole's 30th birthday, and to make sure this is the last birthday the bill ever sees," said Robin Schneider, director of the Texas Campaign for the Environment. The 1971 Texas Clean Air Act requires plants to obtain permits stating they have passed environ­ mental standards or use the best available pollu­ tion controls. But under the clause, all plants oper­ ating or under construction before the bill was passed are exempt and expected only to voluntar­ ily comply with the environmental standards. But as of Jan. 15, only one of an estimated '50 grandfather plants had obtained a Voluntary' Emissions Reduction Permit. Neither Exxon Corporation Baytow n nor ALCOA, two companies who am exempt due to the clause and who haven't obtained the permits, could be reached for comment Monday One of the original arguments against forcing older companies to comply with the environmen­ tal standards of the Texas Clean Air Act was that the closure of factories could have meant the loss of many jobs. In addition, a majority of the facto­ ries weren't expected to last very long. "The way they justified it was all of these tired old plants that go back before World War II were going to close anyway in five years, and if you force them to go now workers will needlessly lose their jobs," said Jim Clark, a co-sponsor of the Texas Clean Air Act. But now, Clark said, the loophole gives the grandfather companies an unfair advantage eco­ nomically. 1 lie old plants became enormously valuable because they didn t have to pay' the money others did for pollution control," he said. Zbranek s bill would close the loophole by Sept. 1 and would eliminate the voluntary per­ mitting controls. Chisum's plan doesn't require permits until 2005 for cities that don't meet basic e m issio n s standards — those that do not require ozone days — and 2007 for those that do. But members of the Texas Campaign for the Lnvironment and the Sierra Club have criticized Chisum s bill for extending the voluntary cixiper- ation program for another war. It s just stalling— they've had 30 vears," said Todd Mane, a member of the Texas Campaign for the Environment. I he Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission reported in 1999 that 500,000 tons ot air pollution could be prevented if the loophole was eliminated. ¡h e House Regulation Com m ittee is expected to discuss the issue Tuesday. Environmental Christina B u rk e /D a ily Texan S ta ff Sonia Santana protests Monday on the south steps of the Capitol against the amendment of the Clean Air Act of 1971. A case of stolen identity Universities, students susceptible to Social Security theft Editor s note. I his is the first o f a th ree-port series about identity theft at the University. By W aliya Lari Daily Texan S ta ff Six cre d it card b ills, fin a n cia l aid lo an s and fo u r 'F 's on his acad em ic record is the p rice K aeg an W elch had to pay fo r n e v e r w o rry in g ab o u t his So cial S e cu rity num ber. Last y e a r w h ile W elch, a g o v e rn m e n t sen ior, w as stu d y in g ab road in Sp ain , so m e o n e g o t a hold o f his Social S e cu rity n u m ber and assu m ed h is identity. "W h e n I w as stu d y in g ab ro ad , m y p aren ts starte d re ce iv in g all these cre d it card b ills ," he said . "A n d then th ey receiv ed g rad es fo r the sp rin g sem este r from the U n iv ersity, and th at d id n 't m ake b ecau se I w as i * S p a in ." sen se In ad d itio n to g iv in g W elch fo u r 'F 's , this p erso n also a p p lie d fin a n cia l aid. fo r an d re ce iv e d "T h e only re a so n th ey had fo r d oin g it [re g isterin g fo r classes] is b eca u se they a p p lied fo r fin an cial b eca u se they a p p lied fo r fin a n cia l a id ," he said . "A n d sin ce I w a s n 't in sch o o l, th ey receiv ed the fin a n cia l aid , no p ro b ­ le m ." urn m ill AL S O C l | ju ¿ p ( j||jl||l|j|i illllllllill M any tim es, fin a n cia l aid ch e ck s are sen t d irectly to the stu d en t. The fin an cial aid first goes ou t to pay o u tstan d - in g U n iv e rs ity o b lig a tio n s ," sa id H e n ry U rick , Seo SECURITY, Page 8 The Disches go to... The baseball se a so n is half over, which m eans it's time for The Daily Texan's m idseason awards. S e e S p o r ts , P a g e 9 CONDITIONS OPINION WORLD & NATION UNIVERSITY STATE & LOCAL SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT CLASSIFIEDS THE EDGE COMICS 4 3 6 7 9-11 15& 16 12& 13 2 14 High Low Partly cloudy, 40% chance of rain, humid Finance committee passes state budget bill Bill to increase funding fo r students, medicaid Senate Bill 1 highlights By Robert Mayer Daily Texan Staff • $71.4 million for Children's Health Insurance Program to serve more than 444,000 children as projected • 5 percent or $100 mini­ mum raise for ail state workers and non-faculty higher education employees > $30 million for 1 he Senate Finance unanim ously C om m ittee passed a $1117 billion two- year state budget M onday that features increased fund­ ing tor higher education financial aid, state employee pay raises and M edicaid increases. Education and health and hum an the services are biggest recipients of Senate Bill 1, receiv ing $47.9 billion and $34.7 billion, respective­ ly. Sen. Rodney Ellis, D- the H ouston, chairm an of Senate I inance Committee, said the committee worked hard to increase funding to state programs but often its efforts were thwarted by a constrained budget. " 1 his is a lean session in terms of fu nd ing " Lilis said. I his budget meets the basic needs (9 a growing Texas while m aking significant progress in several key areas vital to theecx inomv and pecv See SB1, Page 2 Betting on the future Congress to decide fate o f collegiate sports w agering By Aaron Schoenewotf Daily Texan Staff A battle is underway in Congress this week, as tw groups ot lawmakers push competing bills designe to curb illegal gambling on amateur athletics — and will clearly take more than a noil of the dice to detei mine the winner. One group, led by a bipartisan delegation tnan Nev ada, seeks to deal with the problem bv conducfim more studies on the issue and strengthening enforce ment of pre-existing gambling law s! Another group, which has the support of thi National Collegiate Athletic Association, wants to bai all forms of sports wagering on amateur athletics Since 1991, sports betting has only been legal in th< state ot Nevada. The Nevada proposal 1 he first proposed the Nationa Collegiate and Amateur Athletic Protection Act o 20(11, was introduced in February b\ the two rep re sentafives and two senators from Nevada. legislation, I he bill directs the U.S. Attorney General to estab­ lish a task force on illegal wagering and mandates See BETTING, Page 2 Page 2 The D a ily Texan Tuesday, March 27. 2001 Euthanasia of 22 cattle expected by mid-April COWS, from 1 'P e o p le lo v e th ese a n im a ls he said It s sa d th ese d i - "I d o n 't th e m U n fo rtu n ately , b e c a u se ot eases, w e c a n 't affo rd a n v slip p ag e b la m e O riginally, 29 c attle w e re im p o rte d to Texas from G e rm a n \ of w hich to u r h a v e been d e s tro y e d to r testin g T heir testin g a d u lts c a m e o u t n e g ativ e to r m ad co w d isease, a n d th re e o th e rs d ied of ca u se s n o t re la te d to th e d isease T he o w n e rs o f th e c attle wall b e c o m ­ p e n sa te d for th e loss of the a n im a ls bv th e N a tio n a l B eet A ssociation, th e Texas Beet C ouncil a n d the L S. g o v e rn m e n t, W eb er said C a ttle m e n s s p o k e s w o m a n A n n a C h erry , to r L S D A . said sh e w a s n 't a w a re th a t th ese cattle w ill be co n fisc a te d for the p u r ­ p o se o f e u th a n iz a tio n T he a n im a ls p o se n o th re a t to o th e r a n im a ls o r h u m a n s w h ile q u a ra n tin e d she a d d e d --he said "W e c o u ld 'v e b een e x p o se d . T h a t's w h y th e y re u n d e r q u a ra n tin e ." The\ h a v e n o d is e a se re a liz e th e v Paul G ottlieb, c h a irm a n of Section of M o lecu lar G en etic s a n d M icro b k oc - in th e L I zoology d e p a rtm e n t said th ere is no se rio u s n>k o f m a d coin d is­ e ase s p re a d in g in the U n ite d States " T h e y 're b e in g u ltra c arefu l he It pays, b e c a u se v o u car. sec the said im p a c t it s h a d o n E u ro p e I h e N a tio n a l V e te rin a rj S e r. ices L ab o rato ry in A m es, Iow a, w ill test the c o w s' b rain tissu e to r th e disease and the carcasses o f th e a n im a ls will b e in cin erated . But K am b er S h erro d , a p sychology ju n io r an d re p re se n ta tiv e fo r S tu d en ts A g ain st C ru elty to A n im a ls said the cattle s h o u ld n 't be e u th a n iz e d . 'I d o n t th in k it's a p p ro p ria te to kill a n im a ls for a n y re a s o n ," sh e said . H u m a n s m a d e th ese cre a tu re s c an n i­ bals, a n d now th e y 're w o n d e rin g w h y th e y h a v e these d isease s. H u m a n s are the re aso n s th ey are d is e a se d ." c a ttle O th e r q u a ra n tin e in clu d e fo u r co w s in V erm ont, tw o in M in n eso ta an d o n e in Illinois. u n d e r N o sp ecim en of cattle h a s e v e r te ste d p o sitiv e for m ad cow d ise a se in the U n ited States. CORRECTION On the front page of Monday's paper. Cyndi Krier was m isidentified as a for­ mer Houston city health director. The Texan regrets the error. ^ “ T h e E v e l K n i e v e l ^ ¿ o f P e r f o r m a n c e A r t ” ^ - New York T iin es^ ^ Í L / /. The University U ndergraduate Art ^ History Society is pleased to p re s e n tí ¿ a screening and lecture by New Y o rk / ¿ City performance artist David Leslie. Í ¿T h e March 27th lecture is free to t h e / ¿ p u b lic and will be held in ART 1 .1 0 2 / ¿ at 6:00 p.m. Food and beverages ^ ^ will be served. ¿ ^ zzzzzzzzztzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzA TEXAS SB1, from 1 p ie or o u r state Tlii Toward FaooII. KYYSS t .rani p ro g ra m ncveiyeri a 11 tion a. $.Vx nnl- lion a x ’"»; u hu:h F llh VI! v: !v h o i \ ■- w *11 moti- \ ate n fore* h ig h v. hixt sfTKA ‘ S Y oo > V.10r con­ tin u in c th e n e c IKY: Vo:■> c CP. .vcv \Vt c o n t h.i\ i o r chic! N Vis in *e\a> ic ith n v , i OilOgi? o n ¡lie t.W . The c... raise** the }\ thoM i agibk to : the T\: \ \ v i to $ ” iXV w hu"h COU ivi o; tional . \ K V . . . Ellis síno. ¿ to r tw \ c V; v*. ; e / m m e e»iip for ant fr. >25 AV !o an .addi- Y..YY. 1 aid k u is w hv Coin Ci*wili g e t !‘TVt lot Ot 0 kt m il t>/V prop tion e % ie :CO to It g n es a v h o. a'*p4 p/i r!liouikarh 'e' e 's. W In» 1¡orne no v. a from d is a d v a n ta g e d ho u seh o ld s, so m eth in g to a sp ire to a n d to k n o w that it thev plav by the ru les an d w o rk hard thev, too, d o w ell." S en ato rs gave health a n d h u m a n services a >1 0 billion increase in g en eral rev en u e from 2000-2001 geared to w ard su ch en titlem en ts as M edicaid a n d the C h ild re n 's H ealth Insurance P rogram . 1 m real p ro u d of o u r a tte m p t to a d d re ss basic health and h u m a n services needs," Ellis said . "W e're not d o in g nearly as well as a n u m ­ b e r o f o th e r states are d o in g , b u t w e re b eg in ­ n in g to a d d re s s those issues." Ellis said they tried to d e crease the high state e m p lo y e e tu rn o v e r rate at state agencies that cost Texas b etw een S I27 m illion an d $254 m il­ lion a n n u a lly by e a rm a rk in g $814.1 m illion to w a rd sta te em p lo y ee p a v increases. I trieel to liberate a g o o d pav raise, w hich w e h a d n o t h ad tor state* em p lo y e e s in a n u m b e r o f years, said Sen. G o n z a lo Barrientos, D -A u stin . O verall, I w ish it w a s d o u b le, but this re d a m g o o d w ith w hat w e h a d ." All state em p lo y ees a n d non-faculty h ig h e r e d u c a tio n em p lo y ees w h o h a \ e at least o n e y e a r o f service are slated fo r a five percent, $100 m in ­ im u m raise. C orrectio nal officers will receive a n a d d itio n a l $6 a m o n th for each y ear of service in 2002 a n d again in 2003. SB1 is expected to b e h e a rd o n the senate flo o r W ednesday. If p a sse d , as expected, it w ill join the h o u se s v ersio n o f th e bill — w hich h as y e t to m a k e it o u t o f c o m m itte e — in a con feren ce co m m ittee m ad e of s e n a to rs a n d rep re se n ta ­ tives w h o will iron o u t a com prom ise. T he S e n a te s p ro p o s e d $111.7 billion b u d g e t actually exceeds th e $106.8 billion limit s e t b y C om ptroller C aro le K eeto n Rylander. But Ellis said thev w e re g o in g to use c o s t - s a v ­ ing re c o m m e n d a tio n s th a t Rylander m a d e i n h er January E-Texas re p o rt to make u p th e d if . ference. However, S heila C lan cy, spokesw o m an t o r the comptroller, stiid w h e th e r the senate b u d g e t is hig h er than th e c o m p tro lle r's re c o m m e n d a ­ tio n is irrelevant b e c a u s e it's likely that th e b ij ] w ill un derg o m a n y c h a n g e s once it e n te rs tb<¿ conference a>m m i tte e . "It doesn t m a tte r a t th is point w h e th e r t b e sp e n d in g exceeds a n y re v e n u e estim ates," s H e said. "L aw m ak ers p a s s th e ir version o f tH e b u d g e t k n ow ing t h a t it ex ceed s and k n o w i n g it'll b e trim m ed b a c k ." partner TIES, from 1 m b e r '' o s -odelv considered the studv of \ i the U nited States for th e a $ h ..m w a\ said, t to bo ast b u t like it's true, thi institute is the o ld est oen- studies in the nation an d than 30 I T acad em ic d e p a rt­ :x s: ci ' I atm An "We S h u m w i Found ter for L integrates - v m en ts and 14 professors. ••' - '* - . D aniela B randazza, a first y ear g rad u ate stu ­ d e n t in L atin-A m erican Studies, is o n e of 120 m a s te r s s tu d e n ts a n d 250 u n d e rg ra d u a te s enrolled in the program . "W e have the o p p o rtu n ity to get a verv real p erspective ab o u t the issues a n d problem s facing S outh A m erica by stu d y in g here," B randazza said. "It really is an excellent p rog ram ." Faulkner, w h o an n o u n ced his intentions for the U f presence in Latin A m erica d u rin g his 2(XX) S tate o f the U niversity ad d re ss, said he w a n ts to h elp stren g th en ties b e tw e e n the U.S. an d S ou th A m e ric a n like S tan fo rd U n iv ersity and the U n iv ersity o f C alifornia at 1 os A ng eles d id in Asia. co u n trie s m u c h M a n y of the po sitiv e d e v e lo p m e n ts that h a v e h a p p e n e d in the A m e rican —A sian relationship o v e r the last 20 y e a rs h a v e been facilitated tr e m e n d o u s ly b y A m e ric a n u n iv ersities," F a u lk n er said. "D u rin g th e next 20 years, w e will see som e sim ilar o p p o rtu n itie s in South A m e ric a so I w ould like th e U n iv e rs ity to facilitate t h ^ t exchange in m u ch th e s a m e w ay." Luciano M arq ues, a n adm inistrato r at t h t j U niversity of Sao P a u lo , said grow ing UT p r e s - ence in South A m erica d istin g u ish es it as the prex- e m in en t U.S. u n iv e rsity . I heir resources art* phenom enal," M a r q u e s I hey an* d e e p ly c o m m itte d to stud en t a n c i said. faculty exchange b e tw e e n o u r tw o countries." Competing legislation could curb illegal sports gam bling BETTING, from 1 stu d en t b o o k ie s o n campus. increased penalties for illegal sp o rts g am bling w ith a m ax im u m im p riso n ­ m ent for som e offenses of u p to 10 years. th e A dditionally, legislation requires each u n iv ersity to d esig n ate one or m ore officials to coordinate the im p lem en tatio n o f a co m p reh en siv e p ro g ram to red u ce illegal g am b lin g and gam bling control disorders bv stu d en ts an d em p lo y ees of the u n iv e r­ sity. c o -s p o n s o re d Sen. John Ensign, R -N ev ad a, said he leg islatio n because he believes it w o u ld be a b et­ ter w a y to b attle illegal w ag erin g th a n a com plete ban th e "T his bill p u ts N e v a d a o n the offense, he >aid in a statem ent. "It is d o in g so m ething a b o u t the problem by attacking 99 p ercen t of g am blin g that is not legal in this country. The bill will also tak e a closer look at w ho is d o in g the illegal g am b lin g a n d h a rs h ­ ly p u n is h those w h o are fo u n d guilty." Rep. Shelley Berkley, D -N e v a d a , said her reasons for su p p o rtin g the bill m irro r those ot Sen. Ensign. "T he gam in g industry' is the engine that drives the eco n o m y o f S o u th ern 1 Minerva Spanish School The Best Spanish School in Guatemala www.xelapages.com/minerva EscuelaMinena@hotmail.com N evada, so g a m in g issues are trem en­ d o usly im p o rta n t to us," she said in a Statem ent. "B an n in g all betting on [NCAA] gam es in N e v a d a 's sports books is a m isg u id ed an d illogical w a y to com bat the problem of illegal g am bling on college cam puses. It's bad public policy" . . the betting ban w ould just be th e beginning for o p p o ­ nen ts of gam ing, and those w h o w an t to legislate m orality." The A m erican G am in g A ssociation, a national lobbying g ro u p for the casi­ no industry, s u p p o r ts the the bill, claim ing that w h ile illegal w ag erin g is a problem , the bill is m ore feasible than a com plete ban. John Sheik, vice p re sid e n t of the A GA , said his o rg an izatio n agrees w ith m any of th e p o in ts m ad e by* the N C A A in its cru sa d e to end illegal w agering. "W e agree w h o le h e a rte d ly th a t there is a tre m e n d o u s am o u n t of ille­ gal sp o rts w ag erin g , p articularly on college c a m p u s e s," h e said. "T h e N C A A claim s th a t there are stu d en t bookies on e v ery cam p u s and that there is a potential th reat to the integri­ ty of a sp o rtin g e v e n t if som eone w h o has a gam bling m o tiv e is try in g to influence the o u tc o m e of the gam e. We d o n 't d isag ree w ith them at all a b o u t w h at the p ro b lem is." Sheik said the real d eb ate is ab o u t w h a t solutions sh o u ld be* im plem en t­ ed o n the federal level. " [ The N C A A 's] solution is to elim i­ nate th e one p ercen t of sp o rts w ag er­ ing that takes place in N ev a d a , w here it s legal, it s taxed, it's reg u la ted and w h e re there are all k in d s o f o th e r safe­ g u a rd s and re q u ire m e n ts," he said. 1 h at is sort of like sa y in g th a t there is a n u n d e ra g e d rin k in g p ro b lem on c a m p u s , so let's s to p a d u lts from g o in g to the re s ta u ra n t a n d h av in g a glass o f w ine." The ban: Down but not out F o llo w in g a s e rie s o f college p o in t-sh a v in g sc a n d a ls in the early a n d m id-1990s, in w h ic h ath letes u n d e rp erfo rm ed in g a m e s on w hich th ey had placed b ets, so m e political lead ers w an ted to ta k e a closer look at th e issue of banning. T h e N atio n a l G a m b lin g Im pact S tu d y C om m ission, w h ic h w as creat­ e d by th e 104th C o n g re ss and a p p ro v e d by fo rm er P re sid e n t Clinton o n A ug. 3, 1996, w a s ch arged w ith s tu d y in g the social a n d eco n om ic im p acts of g am b lin g o n all levels of g o v e rn m e n t and social in stitu tio n s s u c h as college ca m p u ses. I he c o m m issio n re c o m m e n d e d th a t betting on collegiate a n d am ateu r athletic events that is c u rren tly legal be b a n n ed altogether a n d th at stu d en ts sh o u ld be w arn ed o f th e d a n g e rs of gam b lin g, b eginn ing a t the elem en­ tary level and c o n tin u in g th ro u g h col- tege. F ollow ing the re c o m m en d atio n s of th e com m ission, legislation w a s intro­ d u c e d last year that w a s in ten d ed to europecuDbudqet l Our N 7 E M I S L earn e verythin g you need to know about trav e lin g to E urop e on a bu dget FREE s e m in a r covers: * D is co u n t A irfa re s * H o w to G e t A round * B u d g e t A c c o m o d a tio n s • W h a t You N e e d to K now B e fo re You Go • P lan n in g Y our Itin e ra ry • Tours • T ra ve l S a fe ty Enter to win a trip to Europe O th e r giveaw ays in clude: rail passes, trav e l gear, travel b o o k s and m ore!! Wednesday, March 28 3:30 - 5:30 p.m. Texas Union Quadrangle Room- 3rd Floor U b im w lT m rel ____ w w w . c o u n c i l t r a v e l . c o m - — - "Vx/'y /or //<>// you/ t /)< < /a Abortion Service N itrous Oxide Available F ree Pregnancy T estin g Alternative C ounseling OB-Gyn Physician Birth Control C en ter Pap Sm ears • B reast E xam s TX LIC. # 054 8401 N. IH -3 5 Suite 2 0 0 A ustin (5 1 2 )4 5 9 -3 1 1 9 b a n legal a n d illegal w a g e rin g o n col­ lege sp o rtin g events, [h e leg islatio n n e v e r m a d e it to the I lo u se flo o r for a fin al vote, how ever. Gambling hits home I bis session, advocates o f th e g a m ­ b lin g b a n are ho ping th a t a n e a rly start will h e lp their chances. I h e U I c o m m u n ity w ould bt> affected if e ith e r bill makes it a c r o s s President B u sh 's d e sk successfully. re -in tro d u c e d Rep. Tim Roemer, D -In d ia n a , said he le g isla tio n b e cau se sim p ly stu d y in g th e p ro b lem is n o t en o u g h . th e " M a rc h M ad n ess p r o v id e s an a p p ro p ria te occasion for th e C o n g ress to b u ild on the m o m e n tu m o t last year," h e said in a sta te m e n t. "W e m u s t reaffirm o u r c o m m itm e n t to pre­ s e rv in g the integrity of a m a te u r athlet­ ics a n d p rotecting o u r s tu d e n t-a th - letes fro m the d an gerou s in flu e n c e of h ig h -s ta k e s betting." S u p p o rte rs of the bill b eliev e it has a g o o d ch ance o f passing th is session b e c a u se o f all the su p p o rt it g a in e d in d e b a te last year. R o em er s a id he th in k s last y e a r's version o f th e bill w o u ld h av e p assed bv 350 v otes. T h e N C A A has co n sid ered sp o rts w a g e rin g o n college g am es a p ro b le m tor y e a rs a n d has been fullv b e h in d the ban . Bill S au m , d irecto r o f A g en t, G a m b lin g a n d A m ateurism A ctivities for th e \ C AA, said he feels it is in ap ­ p ro p ria te w h en ad ults b et o n kids." "W e w a n t to quit se n d in g m ixed m essag e s — w e w ant to m a k e it illegal every w here, h e said. VVagering and athletics just d o e sn 't go to g eth er. In the la st tw o sp o rts bribery" c a s e s at N o rth w e ste rn a n d A rizon a S tate, su b ­ stantial a m o u n ts of m oney w e re laid legally in N evada. In the A riz o n a State case, n e a rly $1 m illion w as w a g e re d ." V\ hile th e N C A A s u p p o r ts so m e p a rts ot the N ev ad a d e le g a tio n 's bill, the g ro u p arg u es that n o th in g s h o rt of a total b an w o u ld affect g a m b lin g on college cam p u ses, S aum said . "1 th in k it w ou ld begin to c h a n g e the culture* because then e v e ry b o d y w o u ld n 't b e g o in g on sp rin g b re a k to Las V egas a n d betting o n th e N C A A to u r n a m e n t," he said. "I it w o u ld b e to u g h er to get a lin e to take a w ag er. Y oung people fu n d a m e n ta lly d o n 't w a n t to break the law." th in k I h e N C A A prom otes a n u m b e r o f e d u c a tio n a l p ro g ram s in place to com ­ bat illegal w agering, Saum a d d e d . The g ro u p also encourages c a m p u s secu ri­ ty" to d o m o re tow ard fig h tin g illegal . - . u M T Ü L Í P S i w CASH & CARRY 5 “ r m r 1 I DAILY SPECIALS, TOO! I CASA VERDE FLORIST | ^ FTD 1 8 0 6 W . K o e n ig Ln. 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 ! l o UT P re s id e n t Larry" Faulkner s a i d he thinks th e concerns of the N C A A , and o th e rs a r e justified. "I h a v e s o m e g en eral support f o r w here th e y a r e g o in g w ith [the legisla­ tion], lie s a id . "T he concern of th e N C A A is th e c o rru p tio n of athletics b y the p re ssu res o f g am bling and that is a risk in this co u n try ' now ." F aulkn er a d d e d th a t he has n o t se en any specific in c id e n ts of UT stu d e n t involvem ent th a t w o u ld lead him to have any' s p e c ia l concerns. In g en eral, the University d o e s n 't investigate g a m b lin g incidents u n le ss a report is filed first, an official said . M oreover, o f f - c a m p u s gam bling is technically' o u t of the jurisdiction o f U T d is c ip lin a ry program s. Ash G e o rg e , a kinesiology ju n io r w ho has p a rtic ip a te d in friendly' b e t­ ting b etw e en Friends, said he d o u b ts a ban on all g a m b lin g w o uld affect m o s t illegal w a g e rin g , I h e le g isla tio n is too broad — th e g o v ern m en t is not trig enough to c o n ­ trol w hat in d iv id u a ls do," he said . I hey are* n o t g o in g to spend the tim e and m o n e y t o b u st som e petty b e t­ ting." G eorge s a id h e estim ates one-third of L I s tu d e n ts h av e placed a bet o n a collegiate s p o r ts e v e n t at some p o in t in their lives, w h e th e r through a b o o k ­ ie or o th e rw is e , and that it w ould b e fairly easy for UT student to find a professional bcxikie through w hich to place bets. Dr. V a g d e v i M eunier, o u tre a c h coordinator at th e U T Counseling a n d Mental 1 le a lth C enter, said her office offers a s s is ta n c e fo r students w ith gam bling p ro b le m s b u t that it is rarely an issue. M aybe it's n o t som ething that s tu ­ dents are re p o r tin g w hen they first come in, s h e s¿úd. "T h ey may bring it up later d o w n the road, after th ey have been m e e tin g vvith a therapist fo r a session o r tw o ." th a t M eu n ier a d d e d the m o s t im portant th in g for a student to recog­ nize is th a t g a m b lin g can be a serious problem. For g a m b l e r ^ som etim es the thrill is just m oney, h o t very" often it's n ot," she said. "P eo p le w h o are com pul­ sively g a m b lin g u su a lly are not v e r y rich. I ts a c o m p u ls iv e behavior th a t has ad d ictiv e q u a litie s." LAW SCHOOL I FREE S Y M P O S I U M Law school admissions experts will give you the inside scoop on law school and the admissions process. Tuesday, April 3 Austin. TX Hyatt Regency on Town Lake 6:00 PM - 8:30 PM Don’t miss this opportunity to meet admissions deans from: SMU Thurgood Marshall UH Law Center Tulane Law School South Texas College of Law Baylor UT Law School Texas Tech Law School Texas Wesleyan Oklahoma City Law School Space is limited, so RSVP today! Call 1-800-KAPTEST or visit Kaptest.com/events to reserve your seat! Want to be a student representative at alumni and University events? Applications f o r U T Ambassadors a r e now avajjable at the A lum ni Center, Second Floor Applications are due b y 5 p.m. on Wednesdav A tiril 4 Questions? Call 232 58 6 6 The UT Ambassadors serve as student representatives at Texas Exes and University events, providing information on scholarships, camptexas, and student life. Some of the Texas Exes and UT events include: * Game Day Open Houses * Texas Exes Chapter Events * Student Panels UT Ambassadors also assist in organizing personalized campus tours and activities for prospective students, alumni, and friends of the University. 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P O Box D Austin TX 78 ’ - 3-8004 ° U ° T S P B u ,ld in 9 C 3 2 0 0 , or call 4 7 1 -5 0 8 3 P O S T M A S T E R S e n d a d d re s s c h a n g e s to Th e D a ily Texa n P O Box D A ustin T X 7 8 7 1 3 o $37 00 7 4 0 0 30 00 100.00 3/27/01 _W&N B r ie fs Arab leaders fa c e thorny issues at la n d m a rk summit AMMAN, Jordan — F a ce d with the possi­ bility of political t u r m o i l in their own coun­ tries, Arab leaders c o n v e n in g a landmark summit face the e lu s iv e task of forging a uni­ fied stance on Iraq 's international isolation and Israel-Palestinian c o n flic t As Arab heads of s t a t e landed in Amman on Monday, their aides s tru g g le d for the third consecutive day b eh in d clo sed doors to reach consensus on those t w o issues, the thorniest on the agenda of the A r a b summit. The meet­ ing, which opens T u e s d a y , is the first regular Arab League summ it in 1 0 years. Appearing during m a r a t h o n talks, minister after minister wearily a s s u r e d reporters many points of contention h a d been settled regard­ ing Iraq. Syrian Foreign M in is te r Farouk al-Sharaa seemed even more u p b e a t, declaring that "a common ground has b e e n reached and points of disagreement are n o w narrow ." Army plane c ra sh in Germany kills 2; Air Force jets missing WASHINGTON — U .S . military aviation suffered two blows M o n d a y with the fatal crash of an Army p la n e in Germany and the disappearance — and a p p a r e n t loss — of two Air Force fighter jets in S co tla n d . In Billings, Mont., P r e s id e n t Bush asked a crowd of about 10,000 a t a local arena for a moment of prayer "fo r t h e tw o soldiers... who lost their lives in G e r m a n y and two of our pilots who are m issing o v e r Great Britain." British authorities w e r e investigating a report from a caller of a n exp lo sio n at the exact moment the fighter jets v a n is h e d from radar. An Army RC-12, a tw in -en g in e propeller aircraft used to d e te c t, identify and locate enemy radar and e l e c t r o n i c communications, crashed in a forest a b o u t eight miles from Nuremberg, killing th e t w o pilots on board, Army spokeswoman H i l d e Patton said from 5th Corps headquarters a t Heidelberg. At roughly the sam e t i m e , the Air Force dis­ closed that two F-15C f ig h te r s were overdue on a return flight to t h e i r home base at Lakenheath in so u th ern England after con­ ducting low-level flight tra in in g in Scotland. Several hours later, t h e A i r Force said there had been no word from t h e tw o F-15 pilots nor any confirmation of th e ir fa te . The lack of com­ munication suggested a s t r o n g possibility that they had crashed, o fficials said . British to b a c c o firms fired up over s m u g g lin g issues LONDON — L o n d o n e rs tired of the high cost of smoking know j u s t w h ere to go — the black market. On the bustling, tr a s h - s t r e w n shopping streets of low-income n eig h b o rh o o d s around the city, skittish men w h i s p e r "cigarette, ciga­ rette," while their eyes d a r t u p and down the sidewalk, scanning for p o l i c e . The difference: The c h e a p cigarettes have been smuggled in from lo w -ta x Portugal to Britain, whose tobacco l e v i e s are the world's highest. The illicit trade now a c c o u n t s for one out of three cigarettes smoked in B ritain , the Tobacco Manufacturers' A sso ciatio n say s. Big Tobacco, in a g l o s s y brochure distrib­ uted to taxpayers, arg u e s t h a t smuggling pro­ motes other crimes, d e p r e s s e s tax revenue and makes cigarettes more e a s i l y available to chil­ dren. The government p re d ic ts th e measures will lead to the seizure of 10 b illio n cigarettes and an extra $3.45 billion in r e v e n u e over the next three years. Compiled from A ss o c ia t e d Press reports s e x . d r u q s A ^ 1 . 9 . W o r l d & N a t i o n Disputed nuclear ataste arrives in Germany The Daily March 27. 2001 By The Associated Piess WOERTH Germany — A train loaded with some 60 tons of nuclear waste crossing into Germany from France late Monday, w as angri­ ly awaited by protesters along its route to a waste dump. The train crossed the frontier just south of Woerth in southwestern Germany shortly after 11 p.m. It faced a 375-mile journey northeast to the waste dunjp at Gorieben The shipment is carrying radioactive waste left over after spent nuclear fuel from German power plants was reprocessed at a French plant. Hoping to avert violence, Germany put 15,000 police on alert along the route as the train headed toward its border. About 2,000 officers awaited the train in the border area, and the station at Woerth — where a German locomotive was to be attached — w as heavily guarded. Protesters were camped out awaiting the train's arrival, and police removed a group of people who earlier blocked the track south of Woerth. In northern Germany, hundreds of people took part Monday in sit-down protests on rail tracks near the waste dump. Some 400 were removed by police, and at least 35 more were detained after loosening ties under a 50-yard section of track. The political impact was already being felt in Berlin as the train trundled through France earlier in the day. The Green party' faced cries of betrayal from anti-nuclear activists that are among its core supporters Rooted in the anti-nuclear movement, the party' now is in the government that approved tire first cross-border waste shipment since 1997. Anti-nuclear activists said authorities pre­ pared at least nine alternate routes for the transport across Germany to be able to skirt protests. Police braced for a repeat of clashes with protesters that accompanied the last shipment four years ago. They promised tough action against any blockades by demonstrators. Especially vulnerable was the final 12-mile stretch from a rail terminal to the w aste dump, where trucks will transport the containers — each with about 10 tons of radioactive w'aste sealed in 28 glass casks. In Valognes, France, a few Greenpeace activists stood watch early Monday as the transport left, firing flares and wra\ing banners against the nearby La Hague reprocessing plant before being removtd bv police. "Every transport from La Hague makes another transport to La Hague possible, seam­ ing the continued operation of the nuclear power plants," said Rasmus Grobe, a spokesman for a protest group whose symbol, a large yellow' X, has appeared on walls and roads across the countrv s i mm* at m. Associated P re ss Special police force officers arrest a demonstrator near Lueneburg, Germany, after he and others blocked railroad tracks a s part of an ongoing action against the planned nuc,ear waste transports to Germany, which started Monday. In the 1990s, nuclear waste transports often led to battles between police and demonstrators. , V f High court to decide if executing mentally retarded 'cruel, unusual’ By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court rejoined the heated national debate over the death penalty Monday, announcing it will decide whether the Constitution's ban on "cruel and unusual punish­ ment" bars execution of mentally retarded people. The justices said they will hear an appeal by North Carolina death-row' inmate Ernest McCarver, whose lawyers say he is retarded. The justices halted his execution early this month just hours before he w as to have been put to death. The justices decided in 1989 the Constitution allows execution of mentally retarded killers. McCarver's lawyers say Americans' views on the issue — what legal arguments refer to as "standards of decency" — have changed since then, "There has been a substantial change in American society," his lawyers wrote in his appeal. "The penal­ ty of death is plainly cruel w'hen imposed on those whose culpability is lessened by their inability to rea­ son." The Constitution's Eighth Amendment bans "cruel and unusual punishments." The question, McCarver's lawyers contend, is whether a punish­ ment offends contemporary standards. Prosecutors said considerable evidence showed that McCarver wras not mentally retarded, but they added that even if he was, his execution would not violate the Constitution. North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley denied clemen­ cy, saying McCarver planned the 1987 stabbing and choking death of a co-worker, motivated by revenge. This month, the justices blocked the execution of another man said by his lawyers to be borderline retarded. Antonio Richardson had been scheduled to be put to death March 7 in Missouri. The court also plans to hear arguments Tuesday in another case involving a death-row inmate whose lawyers say he is mentally retarded. The case involving Johnny Paul Penry of Texas does not ask whether the Constitution prohibits exe­ cuting the mentally retarded. Instead, Penry's lawyers say jurors who sentenced him to death for murder did not have the chance to properly' consid­ er his mental capacity. It was not immediately clear how’ the justices' decision to hear McCarver's case this fall will affect the Texas appeal. But Penry's lawyer, Robert S. Smith, said that if the Supreme Court decides the mentally retarded cannot be executed, "I would hope and believe that that decision will be applied to Penry'." The Supreme Court used Penry's case in 1989 to rule that the Constitution allows the execution of mentally retarded killers. There have been 702 inmates executed nationwide since a Supreme Court-ordered moratorium ended in 1977. Ot those, about 35 had showed evidence of mental retardation in tests, said Richard Dieter of the Death Penalty' Information Center, a group critical of how capital punishment is administered. The 1972 ruling that halted executions nationwide said existing laws made capital punishment too arbi­ trary. Executions resumed in 1977, and during recent years the nation's highest court and Congress have moved to limit and speed up death row inmates' appeals. Recent debate over the death penalty has centered on arguments that some death-row inmates are inno­ cent. Last year, Republican Gov. George Ryan of Illinois imposed a moratonum on capital punish­ ment in his state after 13 inmates were exonerated. McCarver, 40, was convicted of the January 1987 stabbing and choking death of Woodrow Hartley, a 71-year-old worker at the Concord, N.C., cafeteria where McCarver had worked. The inmate's lawyers say he has the mind of a 10- year-old and reads at third-grade level. The Supreme Court halted his execution on March 1 after he had been served his last meal. In denying clemency, Easley said McCarver was competent enough to gain employment and earn driving privileges, and no court had found him incompetent. First images released of Afghanistan’s destroyed Buddhas By The Associated Press BAMIYAN, Afghanistan — Taliban soldiers on Monday showed oft the yawning chasms where two soaring Buddha statues once stood, allowing for­ eigners a first glimpse of the sandstone rubble that is all that remains ot flu* ancient wonders. A 1,500-vear-old statue that was once taller than the Statue of Liberty is now a blasted heap of stone. The other figure, once twice as tall as the laces on Mount Rushmore, was also gone — except for a few stone folds of its robe. Gazing down from a dusty’ plateau overlooking the mountain monuments of Bamiyan, the heavily armed soldiers seemed amused bv their visitors' interest and starved for company after months of fighting in the remote province. They said they were only following the orders of the Taliban’s reclusive leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, who last month declared all statues idola­ trous and ordered their destruction. "Step by step, we blew them up," soldier Abdul Raouf said. "First we blew off the leg of the big one and then we went to the smaller one and b l e w it up It took us four days to finish the big statue. He was verv strong." Spent artillery shells, lined up like sentries, stood at the base of the mountain alcove where the tallest statue once stood 170 feet high —- 20 feet taller than the Statue of Liberty without its base. It was believed to be the world's tallest stand­ ing Buddha. Stairs near the site of the other, a 120-foot Buddha, led to dustv rooms, their walls decorated with empty niches where smaller statues once stood. Fhe mountain face was riddled with small caves, ancient homes to Buddhist monks centuries earlier. Residents of Bamiyan considered the monuments neighbors. They called tht taller one "Solsol," meaning year after year. They believed the other one was a woman and called her "Shahmama," or kingmother. On Monday, the Taliban flew about 20 foreign journalists aboard an aging Russian-made propeller plane from Kabul, the capital, to Bamiyan in centra! Afghanistan. It was the first flight by the national airline, Ariana, to the wartom area in 20 years. Taliban soldiers armed with rocket launchers and heavy machine guns then took the reporters — the first foreigners known to have visited the area sime the destruction — to a plateau overlooking the statues. I here, the journalists saw that holes had been cut into the statues, carved about 500 feet apart, for the placement of explosives. BENCHMARK RESEARCH Get your UT news in The Daily Te x m Are You Suffering From A URINARY TRACT !Nr Urinary Trac t infections iUTIi. if you: • Are 18 years or older • Have been experiencing UTI sym p to m s for less than 72 hours, and • Do not have allergies to quinolones, You May Qualify For This Study. Qualifying volunteers will receive study-related medical visits, procedures, and medication at no cost, as well as patient stipend of up to S i 20.00. Contact the Benchmark staff at 888-258-8947 for more information and to see if you qualify T H E Ike “Byzantine Vingin B Y Z AÑT 5 •T* hiC* The Inflamable Press The author o f A P erishable t load Poems b y : David Offutt A v a ila b le at Am azon.com v n t C I k f 888 - 258-8947' RESEARCH i c m m m e FR O M ’A ’ TO 7 '... a F r o m n m 'm Spirit t é l l t ¡ i t M $ toZ¡l>po Lighters as well as I jtispnois, Class, Tin & Mod Coalmen, loot Ms, lam e, Jewehy, Smajs... much m ere..,! ««f PUT yoUR b r a in r ' TO WORK! UT Learning Center Tutors and Peer Counselors $10 per hour Qualifications: How To Apply: Currently enrolled UT student. Overall GPA of 3.0 or better. Additional qualifications described in application. Pick up an application at the Learning Center (Jester A332) or download one from our web page: www.utexas.edu/student/utlc/ 1931 Euf Olftrf 448-3313 617 M kef 482-0630 ... . All Applications Due Monday, April 2,2001 Zapatistas elicit media frenzy A fit st-hand account of tveent Zapatour in Mexico City: International p,-ess oivrlooks complexities of a guerilla movement 4 T he Daily March 27. 2001 Editor Cecily Sailer S e n i o r VssiK'iatc E d ito r Garrick P ursley E d i t o r * W endy Skillern Jennifer Pollack Opinion* expriNs»\) m .. ■ /<•».;■ an - thon ot tin .•>: tor tho i-ditonai hoard or unli-t ot tk artit.it' Thtn tiiv nrit ntxvssjrih tho-* o t :ht- I tint tsit\ .id - , - tratitHX tin’ IVxird ot Rcfjentsor the Fexa* Student Pnhi .ation* Btxird OfOpBratirK; I mslgx's VIEWPOINT Their Day In Court Since the birth of the m odem legal profession, lawyering has been a m ale-dominated career. Law schools, especially the prestigious Ivy League institutions, have been viewed as boys clubs since they opened their doors to the first entering class. The patriarchal nature of the legal field, however, appears to be headed o u t the door, according to this year's statistics. American Bar Association data indicates that wom en accounted for 49.4 percent of the 43,518 students w ho entered American law schools last fall, which is amazing, considering that just 40 years ago, the entering law school classes were only about 4 percent female. And the trend is going to continue, if projections based on the profiles of law school applicants for next fall's first year class are accurate. 1 he ABA savs that m ore w om en than men applied for adm ission to law school for the fall 2001 semester, estab­ lishing, tor the first time in history; a female majority in this traditionally masculine field. The ramifications of this developm ent for both the state of the legal profession and that ot the law in general could be revolutionary and far- reaching. For decades, feminist legal scholars have argued that male dom ination of the legal field is centrally responsible for the unequal treatm ent w om en receive in society. Regardless of attem pts by male jurists to create legislation and cast.» law to remove institutional obstacles to female advancement, such laws always rem ain the products of mens minds, or at least of a system dom inated by male sentiment. W hether you think that feminism should be about gen- der-blindness or finding equality while embracing differ­ ence, there is a definite benefit, at least in term s of public perception, to having a female majority in our law schools On the one hand, this is another step for women, prov­ ing that they can come to dom inate the same institutions that men can control and have controlled for m any years. O n the other hand, the female majority in the law schools probably heralds the beginning of a general shift in the kinds of perspectives that shape the law from prim arily m asculine to m ore inclusive of the feminine. Some m ight argue, however, that the system itself will still be- m ale-dom inated, even if there are more female lawyers, because of deeply entrenched institutional bann­ ers to female advancem ent in the professions m ost often pursued by lawyers: lawyering, politics and business. So the most powerful and influential positions in those fields will continue to be occupied by men, leaving wom en to do the grunt work. While that may be true for a while, hope­ fully it w on t stay that w ay for long. Women seeking careers in the post-law school job m arket today probably encounter rem nants of the same barriers their predecessors experienced trying to gain admission to law school 40 years ago. Those barriers, according to the m ost recent adm issions statistics, have crumbled. With m ore and m ore w om en entering the legal profession, the institutional hurdles that exist in em ploym ent wall also begin to crumble. W hen the majority ot the 2(X)4 "crop" of new lawyers is female, em ployers wall have no choice but to m ake adjust­ m ents in their operations to allow for wom en to advance past the glass ceiling and into the offices that have previ­ ously been exclusively male territory. N ow w om en finally have more than just a foot in the dcxir — they've blown the d oor w ide open. Daik Texan Staff 1 he m edia has found a new 1 atm lover in Subcom andante Marcos The leader ot the indigenous peasant m ovem ent that first exploded in Mexico s southernm ost state on Ian. 1 1944 has reached mythical status. Marcos has never show n his face, w hich means he m ust be devastatinglv attractiv e. 1 le speaks in pure m etaphor so everything he savs m ust be bnlliant, and best of all he's an arm ed revolutionary. The sw arm s of for­ eigners clad in faded Che Guev ara T-shirts that flocked to Mexico Citv to w itness the arriv al of the "Z apatour" attest to the fact that rebellion has never been sexier. A L I Research L n d erg rad u ate Fellowship sponsored mv tnp to Mexico City over S pring Break to w itness the Z apatour in the zócalo (the m ain square), the final stop of the three-week caravan of arm ed Indian peasants, their followers and international press that began in Chiapas on Feb. 23. The peasant arm y calls itself the Emiliano Z apata National Liberation Front (EZLN) and along w ith their leader, the charismatic Subcom andante Marcos, the peasants have w aged a low-level w ar against the Mexican governm ent since 1944 dem anding that the country cease to m ar­ ginalize its 10 million indigenous people, m ost of w hom live in extreme poverty'. Throughout the rebellion, the EZLN and Marcos have delibt ratelv utilized the mass m edia in order to enjoy more international support than any other Latin American guerrilla movem ent. Marcos, a mestizo — a person of half Spanish and half indigenous descent — from Mexico C ity identified as Rafael Sebastián Guillen, moved to C hiapas in 1982 and has been living w ith the Indians and sharing their hardships ever since. The guerrilla leader's sly m anipulation of the media has ineveitably turned the Zapatista m ovem ent into a sordid media circus, and although Marcos fights daily with Mexico's President Vicente Fox over w ho will play the ringleader, international activists will always be his m ost enthusiastic observers. While m edia attention has granted the Chiapanecan Indians desperately needed help from w orldw ide hum an rights organi­ zations, it has also created sw arm s of for­ eign sym pathizers w ho blindly don their adm iration on the m ovem ent w ithout rec­ ognizing its complexity. I hese internation­ al supporters prove that to North American m edia giants, rebellion in the 21st century7 is just another form of entertainment. P opular cu ltu re's The mass m edia has romanticized the Z apatistas since day one, calling their arm ed uprising "justifiable violence in order to overcome a corrupt Mexican state." Popular music gr< >ups such as Rage Against the Machine and the French band M anu Chao have dedicated num erous songs to the Z apatista m ovem ent. Marcos an d Documentary films such as A Place Called Chiapas (1998) have earned box-office suc­ throu g h o u t N o rth A m erica an d cess Europe, and benefit concerts and fund-rais­ ers have eru p ted on college cam puses across the country in support of the EZLN. fascination w ith Marcos and his peasant armv reared its ugly head on March 11, hours before the Zapatistas were scheduled to arrive in the zócalo. Foreign tourists w ho had pu t their Cancún trips on hold this Spring Break, scurried around the zócalo buying last- m inute souvenirs to com m em orate the Zapatour. French-, English- and Italian­ speaking spectators rum m aged through street vendor s stacks of T-shirts and ski masks that read "Soy Marcos" or "I am Marcos." They fought over straw dolls dressed like Marcos, clad in a ski mask, with am m unition strapped around their lit­ tle w ooden arms. The tourists pulled out w ads of pesos, their watches worth more than the street vendors m ake in a year. They fawned over their new mementos, rushing back to the safe shelter of their hotel terraces to get a bird s eye view of the Z apatour as it m ade its w ay through the narrow streets of dow ntow n Mexico City. The hotel is full," said Santiago, the manager of a Mexico City landmark hotel. " I here are people from Germany, France, Italy, all here to set* the Zapatistas." But drink all day and play ball gam es rather than w orking their land or getting an ed u ­ cation. They have 10 or 11 children and have no w ay to support them if they d o not w ork the land," said Cruz. "M arcos claims to support the Indians. Well, I am an Indian, and .ill his m ovem ent has do n e is h u rt me." The Z apatour m arked the first m arch to the Mexico City zócalo since the 1910 Mexican Revolution w hen Emiliano Zapata led his arm y from C hiapas in order to con­ front the governm ent. T hus the march entered the ranks of other com plicated pop­ ular struggles in Mexico, but unlike its predecessors, the m ass m edia and interna­ tional supporters have given this m ove­ m ent a uniquely post-m odern twist. The media has transformed this complex and controversial struggle into the newest popular culture phenomenon. Although the Zapatistas' foreign supporters have helped the movement by threatening the Mexican governm ent perhaps even to a greater degree than an AK-47, many of Marcos' tans have inadvertently made sec­ ondary tht* movement's purpose by over­ looking the internal controversy that sur­ rounds it. I have never seen this m any people in the zócalo, and they are not just Mexicans, they have com e from all over the w orld to sup p o rt the m ovem ent," said Rosa, an eld­ erly' Indian w om an w ho m oved to Mexico C itv from the state of G uerrero to sell p an­ cakes from a small street booth in d o w n ­ tow n Mexico City. A lthough Rosa is indige­ nous, she adm its that she does not know m uch about the Zapatistas and thus cannot say it she supports them or not. M arta Resnikoff, a struggling middle- class Mexican actress, adm its that while their cause is im portant, she does not tm st or su p p o rt M arcos and his movem ent. "He's a big pain in the ass," she said. "But that doesn't m ean that his cause is not im portant. The Indians live in misery and our governm ent should help them ." Resnikoff fu rth er com m ented th at although the tight tor Indian rights is an im portant cause, m any other problem s plague Mexico. "There are other tilings beside Marcos," Resnikoff said. "We are in a recession, people are getting poorer, no one has work, and all anyone can think about i* Marcos, Marcos, Marcos." C m z s, Rosa's and Resnikoff's opinions of Marcos and the Zapatistas attest to the fact that unlike foreign supporters, not all Mexicans blindly support the m ovement. By ignoring the complexity an d controver­ sy w ithin Mexico, international activists have allowed themselves to become little more than paw ns in Marcos' struggle for the international media spotlight. Popular culture's love affair w ith Marcos has also left Mexicans w ondering w here all this attention has been in the past. After the devastating 1985 Mexico City earthquake an unidentified Mexican m an dressed in a cape and m ask to resemble the popular Mexican wrestlers, Luchas Libres, called himself Super Barrio and paraded around the city assiduously helping homeless and evicted fam ilies find food an d shelter. 1 nlike Marcos, Super Barrio never m ade it onto MTV. The day after the Zapatour, I stopped bv the zócalo to see w hat had become of the indigenous street vendors selling Marcos dolls an d ski m asks to international tourists. I found the indigenous people who Marcos had spoken so enthusiastically of the dav before going about their lives as usual. Ih e street vendors h ad returned to sell­ ing Bic lighters and scratchy salsa album s to passing businessmen. Women w rapped in colorful scrapes nursed their babies and F*- ggt- d for m oney on street com ers w hile their older children sold gum nearby. Green Volkswagen taxis flew past indigenous street kids w ho spray w ater on passing w indshields for a few extra pesos. And as tor the gringo sym pathizers, I suppose they* were already in Cancún, sipping m argaritas and listening to Manu Chao. Chozick. an English and Latin American Studies senior, is a fine arts writer for The Daily Texan. She is writing her thesis on the internal Mexican perspective on the Chiapas rebellion. Mexic s t u d y is th e p u b lic h leffer, ' n a ! C e n te r fo r Fair i ‘ ' ! a s e d o n self- Id • n w h o c a n e a s il y lie a b o u t w h e t h e r th e y h a d u s e d a p r e p c o u r s e th e ir sc ore s, S c h a e ffe r s a id , a d d i n g th a t th e re a re o t h e r m e t h o d o l o g i c a l p r o b ­ lem s. i m p r o v e to "[B riggs] l u m p s t o g e t h e r all k i n d s of c o a c h i n g ," S c h a e f fe r said. " S o m e o n e w h o s p e n t an h o u r l o o k ­ in g at a b o o k is c o m p a r e d to s o m e o n e w h o s p e n t six w e e k s p r e p a r i n g . " The N a ti o n a l C e n t e r for F air a n d O p e n T estin g b e l ie v e s th a t c o a c h i n g d o e s w o r k , just n o t as m u c h as p r e p c o m p a n i e s say, S c h a e f fe r sa id , a d d i n g th a t a 1 00-poin t in c r e a s e c a n m a k e a h u g e d if fe r e n c e in a s t u d e n t ’s a d m i s s i o n h o p e s . But B riggs s a id h e d is a g r e e s , a n d th a t c o lle g e s lo o k a t th e s t u d e n t as a w h o l e — n o t o n ly SAT sc o re s. B rig g s sa id he w a s t r y i n g to s h o w th a t c o m p a ­ n i e s c la im s to in c re a s e sc o re s c a n n o t be v a l i d a t e d a n d th a t a qu ic k -fix i m p r o v e m e n t m e th o d d o e s n ' t e x i s t . F rying to s a y th a t all s t u d e n t s th a t h a v e access to te st p r e p w ill le arn th e tric k s a n d d o e q u a l l y w ell is w ro n g , Briggs sa id . "You m u s t ta k e in to it is u n r e a lis ti c to a c c o u n t s o c io e c o n o m ic s , a n d t h i n k t h r e e - m o n t h p r e p th a t g iv in g s t u d e n t s a c o u r s e w ill a u t o m a t i c a l l y level th e p l a y in g field." Texas School or Lew Federalist Society/ the Texas Review Society, and the Young Conservatives of Texas present: itbor, Commentator and ■ M b Ittornejj ^ n n £ o u lte r Bush and the Courts: A Fight For the Soul o f America" An,i Coulter is the best-selling author of High Crimes and Misdemeanors: The [ Clinton (Regnery). She has appeared on ABC's "This Week," NBC s Today Show," "Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher," "Good Morning America, CNN s "Larry King Live," CNBC's "Rivera Live," "Equal rime," and many other TV shows as a legal and political analyst. UT Law School Room 2.124 Friday, March 30 @ 12:30 pm Complimentary lunch from Jason's Deli Tin I T Luh School is located at 26 St. ut Medical Arts. Please RSV'P to a dminiafederalistsociety.org. S. i k >k i I r < ¡ut n By i m Y o u n g A m i-r jc a ’s F o u n d a t io n 7 Hu; Ihin Th\\\ M ar o f f ic e r h o n o re d Bill to ban human cloning By Melissa Thrailkill Daily Texan Staff Although Sen. Jane Nelson, R-Flower Mound, finds biotechnology, "fascinat­ ing, there is one aspect that frightens her — human cloning. The fright prompted her to draft Senate Bill 102, which would ban human cloning in fexas. Nelson introduced the bill to the Senate Committee on Jurisprudence Monday, who left the bill pending so that Nelson and Committee Chair Rovce West, D-Dallas, who authored a similar bill, could consolidate both pieces of legislation and present a committee substitute. Nelson said while the recent advance in biotechnology has helped scientists explore medicine and develop cures, it brings about disturbing ethical and moral questions. The science and technology available today are truly7 amazing, and they provide great hope to people living with severe ill­ nesses," she said. "But they also challenge our most basic ideas about life and cre­ ation. I believe our lives are a gift from God." 6 In addition to prohibiting a person from cloning or attempting to clone a human being, SB 102 would make such activity a civil penalty punishable by a fine of up to $10 million. Health care providers and health care facilities licensed bv the state could lose their licenses if thev were to vio­ late this law. The health risks involved with cloning moti\ated Nelson to write her bill. According to animal cloning researchers at Texas A & M University', Nelson said, it takes 100 attempts to successfully clone an animal. And even then, she adds, the ani­ mals often have severe health problems, such as developmental delay, heart defects and malfunctioning immune systems. For us to write off a deformed human baby as an error ..., we just can't do that," Nelson said. SB 102 would not restrict biomedical research that requires the use of cloning technologies, such as vital stem cell research, said Jill Aslakson, policy director for the Texas Health Care and Biosciences Institute. " I he same technology' used to clone human beings is the same technology used in biomedical research," she said. "W hile w e want to prohibit the cloning of human beings, we don't want to jeopardize ... other biomedical research." Aslakson said such biomedical research has helped scientists come closer to devel­ oping cures for diseases like cancer and diabetes. Currently, federal law prohibits the use of federal funds for human cloning research and h as asked those in the health and medical fields to issue a voluntan moratorium on the cloning of human beings. Five states have passed laws pro­ hibiting human cloning. Fuller Bazer, director of the Institute of Biosciences and Technology at Texas A&M. said most scientists aren't interested in cloning humans, but that this legislation is necessary to prevent those who are "There are a few individual», who for whatever reason, want to do this," ht said. 1 don t get the impression that there’s a grounds we 11 of scientists who want to do this." West said he may add a criminal penal­ ty for those looking to gain profit from cloning humans when revising SB 102. ■ , ,, M atthew Hempel Daily Texan Staff kü .. man and I m d S Departmen' Honor Guard Keep watch over the casket of former police­ man and retired Chief City Marshal of the Municipal Courts. Edward J. Stringfellow. during his funeral Í * r J division andiTererriteri' '"th T o he' other parts of Texas, according to officials. Stringfellow. 71. died March 21. after a series of illnesses. fi' S' blaCk aS5ig" ed >° ,he ” olice A p a rtm e n ts tfrst narcotics «"th arresting more than 500 suspects while working undercover in Houston and nf £ ~ Plan for East Riverside thoroughbred racetrack incites controversy 'It By Kristin Carlisle Daily Texan Staff sions an1 made sionsaiemade. If the horse racing industry' has its way, 100 acres of empty land in a resi­ dential neighborhood on East Riverside Drive will become the site of a thor­ oughbred racetrack, complete with liquor sales and gambling. The Austin Jockey Club, which has obtained a state racing license and pre­ liminary approval from the Texas Racing Commission, wants to build the racetrack on land located on the comer of Riverside Drive and Ben White Boulevard. While the land, valued at $2 million is zoned for residential use only, the Austin Jockey Club filed a request with the Austin Citv Council last month to allow for construction of a racetrack and grandstand. Some residents are vehemently opposed to such a proposal, saying the property should be put toward the development of low-income housing — something that has become a rarity’ in Austin. It s not typical to put a horse' track smack in the middle of the' communi­ ty, said Susana Almanza, chair of the Vargas Neighborhood Association. "We are in such a housing crisis all over Austin, not just in east Austin .... The city should take advantage land] so that future housini developed there." Before the council considered the request, they' called for a study of the land's potential for housing develop­ ment last report, T hursdav, indicated that housing devel­ opment would be' a costlv and compli­ cated endeavor. released I he Stuart I lérsh, compliance services manager for Neighborhood 1 lousing and Community Development, which conducted the report, said a w eb of gas and electric transmission pipelines makes the land unsuitable for single­ family housing in its present condition. He added that the land may be better suited for a mixture of apartment and commercial development. "It would be very' difficult to build single family housing on that site," 1 lersh said, adding that the g >stof mov­ ing the pipelines would be substantial. Almanza believes the city’ could take on the costs of making such changes. I he city has a lot of power to do a lot of things, especially in east Austin," Almanza said. "Pipelines can be pro­ tected and be buried deeply, and 1 think it the city really wants to, it can build low income and affordable housing there." Almanza added that residents are ,hat lh" concerned that the race track would bring traffic, the smell of horses and crime into their quiet residential com­ munity 1 low ever, Jean Cook, deputy director tor the Texas Racing Commission, said stiff regulations curbing crime would be imposed upon race track officials. "T he people that hold the licenses are subjected to I BI and DIN fingerprints and background checks, as are any­ body and everybody that works at the racetrack, Ccxik said. Robert 1 leil, principal planner for the city, said whether the track would be beneficial to the community should be considered further before any final deci­ I think there are a lot of issues that should be’ looked at before zoning is changed, Heil said. "Affordable h o u s ­ ing would benefit any neighborhood in Austin. I he harder question is what is the b e st way to pro\ ide affordable housing in the citv and where are the places where it makes the most sense." Meanwhile, residents are completing a master development plan for the area, which dtx's not incorporate the race­ track. I he plan will be presented to the planning commission May 1 No date is scheduled vet for the city council's con­ sideration of the request for a zoning change. State health insurance plan on Senate agenda By The Associated Press unfilled this year. Lawmakers on Monday’ began dis­ cussing how thev will help pay for a statewide health insurance program for school employees, one week after some said the task would require a future tax increase. The Senate Public Education Committee was briefed by Finance Committee Chairman Rodney Ellis, who — without using the words "tax increases — told the education panel to be mindful of any long-term changes. It could cost as much as $3 billion a year to fully’ fund a statewide insur­ ance program. Educators say the lack of affordable health insurance or roadblocks to obtaining coverage are contributing to the teacher shortage in Texas. About 46,000 of 250,000 positions went Whatever decision vou make, whatever we don't fund in the finance bill, we've got to pay for it later," Ellis told members of a panel discussing the health insurance issue. I here are con­ sequences for what we do." Rising health costs and an unpre­ dictable economy are among the fac­ tors lawmakers should consider, Fllk said. " I his session, we have to make some tough decisions and any action we take now will cost us considerably more in the future," said Ellis, Houston. Ci­ At a time when budget writers are working with the tightest budget in 10 years, school employees' health insur­ ance is competing against other expen­ sive issues like Medicaid simplification and state employee pav raises. In the Senate budget bill approved Monday', Ellis carved out $2.45 billion in funding that could be used in full or in part on an insurance plan this bien­ nium. He cautioned that the money was only a one-shot deal and that lawmak­ ers would have to find new funding to continue any program in future ses­ sions. House Education Chairman Paul Sadler, who last week expressed frus­ tration over tlx1 lack of movement on the insurance issue, called Ellis fund­ ing proposal "tunny money" because much of it was contingent on voter approval and included s i.2 billion school districts are already paying. Sadler, D-Hend erson, said he sup­ ports a statewide insurance plan and believes the state should partially fund it. PPD D E V E L O p M E N r ly W V'i r>rr. Prior You can earn m oney w h ile contributing to the future of m ed icin e by p a rticip a tin g in a PPD D evelo p m ent researcn study. W e co n ­ duct m e d ica lly supervised research studies to help e va lu a te n e w investigational medications. W e need both healthy individuals an d those with specific m ed ical conditions to p a rticip a te in our studies. Studies are % a v a ila b le to a cc o m m o d a te alm ost a n y schedule. You h ove to meet certain criteria ^or a s^y dy, including our free m ed ical exam an d screening tests. DDpPr! US ( ° r arisw ers your questions ab out “j d evelo p m en t. A n d look for our current study opportunities listed below . Be a port of som ething big a t PPD Developm ent. C U R R EN T S TU D Y UPPORTUMRTRES COMPENSATION REQUIREMENTS Postmenopausal or Up to $1500 Hysterectomized W om en 1 8 to 45 Healthy and Overweight Wom en 1 8 and Older Up to $2500 Healthy and Non-Smoking Men 1 8 to 45 Up to $1 100 Men and Wom en 19 to 58 Up to $600 Healthy and Non-Smoking Healthy and Non-Smoking Men and Wom en 1 8 to 45 Up to $2400 Healthy and Non-Smoking Fri., Apr. 6 through Sun., Apr. Outpatient Visits: Apr.8 (pm) 9,10, 11, 18 W ed ., Apr. 4 through Sun., Apr 8 W ed ., Apr. 1 1 through Sun., Apr 15 W ed ., Apr. 1 8 through Sun., Apr 22 W ed ., Apr. 25 through Sun., Apr 29 Outpatient visits: Apr. 14, 22 29, M a y 5, 12 Fri. Mar. 30 through Mon., Apr 2 Fri., Apr. 20 through Sun., Apr. 22 Fri., Apr. 27 through Sun., Apr. 29 Fri., M a y 4 through Sun., M a y 6 ‘COST EFFECTIVE - Economics Major i “FABULOUS” - Theater Major i. MOTIVATING - Psychology “FOOD FIGHT” - Undeclared Major 4th Year Sophomore The entire student body agrees: There s nothing better than a hot, fresh and custom made Whatabumer'Ao N othing that is, except two delicious Whataburgers for the price o f one. So come on in w ith this coupon and enjoy the “meatiest” deal of the year. FREE WHATABURGER uiltlt the purchase oi a UIHATABURGER Valid at: A N Y A U S T I N | I | W H A T A B I K U K R i I " | Í Í Piense present this coupon when «dering Offer not good wnh am other offer Void where prohibited. No substitutions Limit one coupon per customer Uld oils cost extra Prices and participation may van Expires March -il, ¿001 ¡WHMABUB6ER mm—m m h _ i WKATABURCfR Just like you like it: UT use of Social Security numbers questioned 8 Tin: Dailí March 27. 2001 Identity fraud the fastest growin crime, FTC says SECURITY, from 1 f i n a n c i a l a s s i s t a n t d i r e c t o r of s t u d e n t s e r v i c e s . When there a re r e m a i n d e r f u n d s , [it] g o e s d i r e c t l y to the s t u d e n t O t the e x c e s s f u n d s , 80 p e r c e n t a r e direct d e p o s i t e d in to the s t u d e n t ’s a c c o u n t a n d the oth e r 20 p e r c e n t a re m a i l e d to their h o m e s . " 1 he ' e d e r a l i r a d e C o m m i s s i o n r e p o r t s th a t i d e n t i ­ ty. f ra u d is the f a s t e s t g r o w i n g c r im e . A c c o r d i n g to the Priv ac y R i g h ts C l e a r i n g h o u s e , a n o n p r o f i t c o n ­ s u m e ’ i n f o r m a t io n , r e se a r c h a n d a d v o c a c y p r o g r a m e s t a b l i s h e d in 1992 at the U n i v e r s i t y o f S a n D i e g o C e n te r f o r P u b lic In terest Law , an e s t i m a t e d 50 0 ,0 0 0 to 700,000 p e o p l e w e re v i c t i m s of i d e n t i ty th e ft in 2000 The m a jo r i ty of th e se c a s e s w e r e c a u s e d b y a v i im in al o b t a i n i n g s o m e o n e e ls e s S o c ia l S e c u r i t y num ber. ! he u s e o f S o c ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r s a s s t u d e n t id e n t ific a t io n n u m b e r s on c a m p u s m a k e s s o m e feel s u s c e p t i b l e , Ben B r u m m e t t . a g o v e r n m e n t a n d E n g lish ju nior, - a i d h e ' s u n c o m f o r t a b l e w ith the fact that no ha- to g i v e o u t his S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r at lea,-t once a w e e k for sc h o o l p u r p o s e s . I h a ve c o n c e r n s a b o u t this. I h a te g i v i n g o u t m y Sen nil S e c u r i t y n u m b e r , " h e s a i d . lik e u n l o c k i n g all y o u r i n f o r m a t i o n . L ik e if s o m e b o d y g o t vour n a m e a n d S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r they c o u l d d o all k i n d s o f g o o d s t u f f like g e t c r e d it c a r d s , a c c e s s p e r s o n a l e v e n ge t tax on v o u . " i n f o r m a t i o n a n d i n f o r m a t i o n _____ _______ _____________ " I t ' s j u s t w o r k . P e o p l e a s k m e all the tim e w h a t m y S o c ia l is a n d 1 h a v e to s a y it o u t l o u d a n d a n y o n e c a n h e a r it s h o u l d b e th ro w n that. 1 a r o u n d like th a t ." ju st d o n ' t th in k th at A l t h o u g h the U n i v e r s i t y is not r e q u i r e d to o b t a in s t u d e n t s ' S o c i a l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s a n d u s e th e m a s i d e n t i fi e r s , it o f t e n d o e s so o u t o f c o n v e n i e n c e . Vice P r e s i d e n t T e c h n o l o g y D a n i e l L p d e g r o v e s a i d u s i n g o n l y s t u d e n t s ' n a m e s a s i d e n ­ tifie r s m a y n o t be r e lia b le . I n f o r m a t i o n o f It y o u r n a m e is M a r y J o h n s o n o r A r t h u r L e e a n d s a y in the la st 20 y e a r s th e r e h a v e b e e n 100 p e o p l e w ith e a c h n a m e , then w e w o u l d n e e d a n o t h e r i d e n t i ­ fier,' he s a i d . "Y o u c a n ’ t be s u r e that there w o n ' t be a d u p l i c a t e . " A c c o r d i n g to U p d e g r o v e , the U n i v e r s i t y w o u l d not n eed to c o lle c t s t u d e n t s ' S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s for i d e n t i f i c a t i o n if it d i d n ' t in t e r a c t w i t h o t h e r b u s i n e s s ­ e s a n d o r g a n i z a t i o n s . the n u m b e r i n g s c h e m e It v o u r e n t e r p r i s e w o r k s a lo n e , it d o e s n ' t m a t t e r w h a t i t 's u n i q u e , he s a i d . " W h e r e t h i n g s g e t c o m p l i c a t e d is w h e n the e n t e r p r i s e h a s to s h a r e i n f o r m a t i o n with o t h e r e n t e r p r i s e s . " l o n g a s is a s S t u d e n t s w h o u s e c e r t a in g o v e r n m e n t a l p r o g r a m s t h r o u g h the U n iv e r sit y , s u c h a s f i n a n c ia l a id , are re q u ir e d to g i v e their S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s . S o c ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r s m u s t be c o ll e c t e d f o r s t u d e n t s w h o a r e a l s o U n i v e r s i t y e m p l o y e e s for ta x e s . ------------------- — B r u m m e t t ha- a l s o bee n a victim of id e n t i t y theft. la st D e c e m b e r he I ate r e c e i v e d a c a l l f r o m the fr a u d office a t C a p i t o l O n e Bank. “ More people have a c c e s s to your Social Security num­ ber than need a c c e s s to your Social Security number.” I t h o u g h t it w a s b e c a u s e I h a d lo-t mv c r e d i t c a rd d o w n to w n, a n d I w a s like, thev rt c a l l in g 'th is - cool m e the next d a y , ' " he s a i d . " A b o u t 1 - s e c o n d s late r I f i g u r e d o u t w h a t s h e w a s ta lk in g a b o u t . " ~ — Daniel Updegrove, vice president o f information technology " S o th is e n t e r p r i s e d e c i d e d that s i n c e f o r s o m e o f the p e o p l e s o m e o f the tim e they h a v e to collect the S o c ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r , the s i m p l e s t t h in g to d o is to d e c l a r e that the S o c ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r is a l s o the u n i q u e i d e n t i f y i n g n u m ­ b e r , ” he s a i d . " T h a t w a y th e s t u ­ d e n t e m p l o y e e s w o n ' t h a v e to c a r r y tw o d if f e r e n t n u m b e r s . " R e g i s t r a r Ted P f e if e r s a i d this c a m p u s is not a l o n e in its u s e of b r u m m e t t w a s t o l d th at e a r li e r in the m o n th s o m e ­ one h a d ta k e n h is n a m e a n d S o c ia l S e c u n t v n u m b e r tor a cred it card . In a w a y h e w a s and s u b m i t t e d lucky b e c a u s e a c c o r d i n g to the P R C , it t a k e s 14 m o n t h s on a v e r a g e for p e o p l e to fin d o u t that they h a w b e e n a v i c t i m o f In b o th b r u m m e t t a n d Welch - s i t u a t i o n s the c r i m i n a l s pro- v i d e d w r o n g i n f o r m a t i o n for q u e s t i o n s s u c h a s m o t h ­ e r - m a i d e n n a m e a n d d a t e o f birth. i d e n t i t y th e ft. I h e -e q u e s t i o n - a r e m e a n t to be u - e d as a c h e c k in a se anv t h i n g l ik e t h is h a p p e n - . " W elch s a i d . " It def- lm te ly s u r p r i s e s m e that the p e r s o n r e c e i v e d a c a rd d e s p i t e the w r o n g i n f o r m a t io n . It w a s n 't o n l y o n e c a r d b u t m a n y c r e d i t c a r d - . " C it i b a n k , o n e o f the c r e d i t o r s that g a v e a f r a u d u - b lit c red it c a r d u n d e r Welch s n a m e , d i d n ot return c a lls f r o m Tht Daily Texan. i he fr a u d o f f ic e th at c o n t a c t e d B r u m m e t t g a v e him the a d d r e s - o f the p e r s o n w h o h a d a p p l i e d for the credit c a r d it w a s i l o s e to c a m p u s , w h ic h m a d e him think the theft o c c u r r e d on c a m p u s . • > hat c u e d m e o f f that it w a s s o m e o n e c o n n e c t e d to the L m v e r s i t v w a - that they l iv e d o f f o v e r o f f 24th Street nv [ U n i v e r s i t y ] T o w e r s ,' he - a id . f h e p o l ic e a d v i s e d B r u m m e t t n ot to c o n t a c t the p v -- o n b e c a u s e thev w o u l d i n v e s t i g a t e . Me b l a m e s pr.u i ( c - for m a k i n g S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s v u l ­ nera b le. Mv S o c ia l S e c u n t v n u m b e r is all o v e r the p l a c e , " r h e re - t e s t g r a d e p o s t i n g s for ce rta in c la ss - y ! “ h a v e to - u b m i t it f o r c e r t a in p a p e r s a n d h o m e ­ ‘ e- S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s a s p e r s o n a l i d e n t i fi e r s . " A s a s o c i e t y we h a v e c o m e to d e p e n d o n s o m e k in d o f a u n i q u e i d e n t i f y i n g n u m b e r that t r a n s c e n d s all file s a n d n u m e r i c a l l y i d e n t i f i e s the i n d i v i d u a l . S o a - a s o c ie t y w e ' v e d e p e n d e d on the S o c ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r to d o that, he s a i d . I he U n i v e r s i t y is not u n i q u e in that. H o w e v e r , I think w e are u n i q u e in r e c o g n i z i n g the i m p o r t a n c e o f the S o c ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r a n d th e n eed to r e s p e c t it a n d in p r o v i d i n g s e c u rity in r e g a r d to its a c c e s s . " P fe ife r s a i d h is o f f i c e is g o v e r n e d b y a n u m b e r of state a n d f e d e r a l l a w s a n d that he a n d h is s t a ff e n s u r e s t u d e n t s ' p r i v a c y r i g h t s b y a d h e r i n g to them . 1 can h o n e s t l y s a y that w e h a v e a l w a y s p r a c t i c e d s a f e u s e of S o c i a l S e c u r it y n u m b e r s , " h e s a i d . " S o m e s c h o o l s p u t S o c i a l S e c u r it y n u m b e r s in the s t u d e n t d i r e c t o r y ; w e ' v e n e v e r d o n e th a t." A c c o r d i n g to U p d e g r o v e , a n y w h e r e f r o m 100 to 400 p e o p l e h a v e a c c e s s t o s t u d e n t r e c o r d s . M o re p e o p l e h a v e a c c e s s to y o u r S o c ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r t h a n n eed a c c e s s to y o u r S o c i a l S e c u r it y n u m b e r, he s a i d . " T h e p r o b l e m is th at the S o c ia l S e c u r ity A d m i n i s t r a t i o n n e v e r i n t e n d e d the n u m b e r to be u s e d a s an i d e n t ifie r ; it w a s o n l y to b e u s e d w ith i n t e r a c t io n w ith c e r t a i n g o v e r n m e n t a l p r o ­ g r a m s . S o w h e r e v e r the n u m b e r is u s e d in p u b l ic , it c r e a t e s a p r i v a c y a n d s e c u r i t y risk for i n d i v i d u a l s . " U p d e g r o v e i s n ’ t a b l e to d i s c u s s the s e c u r i t y s y s t e m o f the c o m p u t e r d a t a b a s e , b u t he d i d s a y it is v e ry s e c u r e , lo d a t e he h a s n t k n o w n o f a n y b r e a k - i n s into the s y s t e m . I he c o m p u t e r that h o u s e s the s t u d e n t i n f o r m a ­ is in a p h y s i c a l l y - s e c u r e d a t a center, a n d the tion ' ‘O' 1 r-tel-j. p a s s w o r d s a re he ld b y a v e r y s m a l l n u m b e r o f t r u s t ­ ed p e o p l e , " he s a i d . " C o m p u t e r p r o f e s s i o n a l s w o u l d n e v e r call a n y t h i n g 1 0 0 - p e r c e n t s e c u r e . I t 's v e r y e x p e n s i v e to m a k e s o m e t h i n g that s e c u r e ; F o rt K n o x is not 1 0 0 - p e r c e n t s e c u r e . L e t ' s ju st s a y that i t s very, v e ry s e c u r e ." O n c e a p e r s o n h a s s o m e o n e e l s e 's S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r, a n u m b e r o f s e r v i c e s on c a m p u s can be a c c e s s e d . "It's like l o s i n g y o u r cr e d it c a r d , " P f e ife r s a i d . " I f th e y h a v e y o u r n u m b e r , c e rt a in a c c e s s e s that n u m b e r allow e d v o u to h a v e m a y b e c o m p r o m i s e d . " P fe ife r s a i d s e r v i c e s , i n c l u d i n g T E X , call f o r e x t r a v e r f i c a t i o n i n f o r m a t i o n . O f all the s e r v i c e s w e p r o v i d e , 99 p e r c e n t re q u ir e s o m e s o r t o f a n a d d i t i o n a l u n i q u e n u m b e r, lik e a pin for T E X or a U T E I D ," he s a i d . S c h o o l s that re ceiv e f e d e r a l f u n d s a re r e q u i r e d to fo llo w the F a m i l y E d u c a t i o n a l R i g h t s a n d P r iv a c y Act ot 19/4. A m o n g o t h e r t h i n g s , the act, a l s o knowrn a s the B u c k l e y A m e n d m e n t , r e q u i r e s w r it t e n c o n s e n t for the r e le a s e o f e d u c a t i o n a l r e c o r d s or p e r s o n a l l y i d e n t i f i a b l e i n f o r m a t i o n . P u b l i c s c h o o l s a r e a l s o r e q u ir e d to p r o v i d e a s t a t e m e n t e x p l a i n i n g w h y a n d h o w the S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r will be u s e d . The fin a n c ia l a id a p p l i c a t i o n is a U n i v e r s i t y d o c u m e n t that c o n t a i n s that p a r a g r a p h . I he n u m b e r is u s e d to v e r i f y c i t i z e n s h i p o f the a p p l i c a n t a n d c o n f i r m that the n u m b e r d o e s n ot b e l o n g to a p r i s o n e r o r a d e c e a s e d p e r s o n . I he a p p l i c a n t i s n o t if i e d w ith a w a r n i n g n o tic e a n d t h e s t u d e n t m u s t r e s p o n d to that b e f o r e e l i g i b i l ­ ity c a n be d e t e r m i n e d , " U ric k s a i d . " I n s o m e c a s e s w e will a s k for c o p i e s o f the s t u d e n t s ' S o c ia l S e c u r i t y c a r d s to e n s u r e to o u r s a t i s f a c t i o n that w e h a v e g o o d i n f o r m a t i o n . " H e s a i d t h e s e a re p r e c a u t i o n s a g a i n s t f r a u d . Th ere a re a d e q u a t e r e d u n d a n c i e s b u ilt in t o the s y s t e m to c a t c h or b r i n g to the lig h t t h o s e t y p e s of a t t e m p t s , he s a i d . " T h e r e 's a l s o a n ic e little p a r a ­ g r a p h h e re [ f in a n c ia l a id a p p l i c a t i o n ] th a t d e t a i l s the c o n s e q u e n c e s for c o m m i t t i n g f in a n c ia l a i d f r a u d . You re d e a l i n g w ith f e d e r a l f u n d s ; th is is t r a n s m i t t e d t h r o u g h the m a i l . I 'm not an a tto rn ey , b u t i f y o u r M ik e W oodson 'Daily Texan Staff in ten t is to f r a u d the g o v e r n m e n t y o u c o u l d a l s o be l o o k i n g at m a i l f r a u d . " D e s p i t e t h e s e c h e c k s , the p e r s o n w h o s t o l e W e lc h 's n u m b e r w a s a b l e to i l l e g a l l y o b t a i n m o n e y t h r o u g h the f in a n c ia l a i d office. I \ e h e a r d that t h e y o n lv sc r e e n 10 p e r c e n t o f the p e o p l e a p p l y i n g f o r f in a n c ia l a id , so I g u e s s th a t w a s ­ n't o n e that th e v s c r e e n e d a n d reallv c h e c k e d , " Welch sa id . r e f e r r i n g U ric k s a i d there is s o m e tru th to th e r u m o r Welch is all a p p l i c a t i o n s a re s c r e e n e d , th e v a st m a jo r i t y a r e c h e c k e d b y c o m p u t ­ ers. to. A l t h o u g h If b y t h o r o u g h r e v i e w y o u m e a n b y the h u m a n eye, then 10 p e r c e n t is p r o b a b l y t r u e , " h e s a i d . " B u t the D e p a r t m e n t o f E d u c a t i o n h a s c o n f i d e n t i a l c h e c k s to e n s u r e the rig h t p e o p l e g e t the m o n e y . B e c a u s e w e are d e a l i n g w ith t a x p a y e r m o n e y , w e w a n t to m a k e s u r e it s g o i n g to the rig h t r e c i p i e n t ." I he B u c k e l y Act d o e s n o t p e r m i t th e p o s t i n g of S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s . H o w e v e r , it is c o m m o n on c a m p u s . P r io r to g r a d e r e p o r t i n g p e r i o d s , th e offic e o f the p r o v o s t s e n d s o u t le t t e r s to the f a c u l t y r e m i n d ­ ing t h e m it i s ille g a l. W h e n m y s t a f f w a l k into t h e d e p a r t m e n t a l o f f i c e s d u r i n g g r a d e c o ll e c t io n tim e a n d s e e g r a d e s p o s t e d w ith S o c ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r s , w e t ea r th e m o f f the w all a n d w r it e a le tte r to the d e p a r t m e n t i n f o r m i n g them o f their r e s p o n s i b i l i t y to p r o t e c t t h o s e t h i n g s , " 1 feifer s a i d . But I th in k y o u se e a lot l e s s o f this [Social S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s p o s t e d ] t h a n y o u d i d three y e a r s a g o w h e n the W eb a c t i v i t y r e a lly s t a r t e d to hit." Ironically, m a n y i n s t r u c t o r s p o s t g r a d e s w it h S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s to p r o t e c t the i d e n t i t y o f t h e ir s t u ­ d e n ts. ot " I he l e x a s f a c u l t y d o e s n ' t t h i n k o f t h e m a s S o c i a l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s , t h e y th in k o f t h e m a s u n i q u e U n i v e r s i t y n u m b e r s , " B u t there s a n o t h e r e x a m p l e of U p d e g r o v e s a i d . S o c ia l S e c u r i t y n u m b e r s b e i n g i n a d v e r t e n t l y d i s ­ c l o s e d . It a s t u d e n t is c a r r y i n g an a l p h a b e t i c a l lis t o f the s t u d e n t s , th e n th e y c o u l d e a s i l y s e e w h a t n a m e g o e s w ith w h a t n u m b e r . " i d e n t i f i c a t i o n SPRING SPECIAL (New Patient Only) Routine Cleaning « m _ _ Exam & Cavity X-rays j y # 5 ALPINE DENTAL 2915 Medical Arts St. 2 Blocks from UT Law School JA N . Bring This Coupon to our key shop and we will give you a AA F R E E " K E Y S riüdi n i j p . u t U v r r I T JU LY each month for a year. $1.80 value, single cut domestic (American) car, home, mail box, cabinet, pad lock, etc. Or credit off higher priced key. One coupon per person per day. ACTION LO CKSM ITH 24-Hour Locksmith «459-5151 101 E. North Loop Blvd. (4 b lo c k s East o f L am ar on N o r t h L o o p ) C lip this coup on and bring it in. SEPT. OCT. DEC. JU N E MARCH 1 I Ia p r i u . m HELP a i u e WANTED 99C Second Dozen Buy Any Dozen And Get A Second Dozen O riginal Glazed For 99-» an pounds. I want our linemen to play th whole game and be able to run, and heavier guys can't do that." to While Tubbs may not be lithe, he can move to the ball. And that's w hat Reese is hoping for from his voung defensive tackles who now step into the limelight which previously shone on All-American Casey Hampton and first-round NFL selectio n probable Shaun Rogers, who were seniors last season. Sophomore Adam Doiron and fresh­ man Stevie Lee, who is sitting out spring practices with a leg stress frac­ ture, join T u b b s on a revamped interi­ or line hoping to use speed to d u p li­ cate the success of 2000. But to sav that the Texas coaching their new scheme, w as staff, with unhappy with the athletic ability that I I .........................................i Hampton and Rogers brought to the Longhorns defense would be a mis­ statement. Hampton and Rogers co m ­ bined for seven sacks and 32 tackles for a loss for a defense that ranked seventh in the country. And the tackles v\ere the heart of the defense both on the field and in the locker room. than "To say we want more athletic peo­ [Rogers] [H am pton } and ple would be foolish," coach Mack Brown said. "R eese's point is that we want Stevie Lee to be under 300 pounds and we want Tubbs to átav under 300 pounds." Reese hopes that the speed of his new tackles can make up for relative inexperience which sometimes leads to missed plays and bad reads. Of the three targeted to fight for a starting spot, only Tubbs has seen extended playing time. AN hen Rogers fell to an ankle injury against Houston, Tubbs answered the call tor Texas. The injury kept Rogers out of most or all of the gam es against Oklahoma and O klahom a State, allow ­ ing Tubbs to amass 5.3 sacks in his lim­ ited action, two more than Hampton or Rogers earned. Doiron and Lee both redshirted for most of 2000. "It hurt my heart that [Rogers] went down, but it let me play next to Casey [Hampton]," T u b b s said. "And when you re to Casey Hampton, you have to step up your game, or he 11 make all the plays and you'll be standing in his shadow all the time." p layin g next See D-LINE, Page 11 Marcus Tubbs leads the new class of ITT defensive tackles. Cha-Chee Thalken Daily Texan Staff Woods fires past field for Play ers title By T h e A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Forget the slump and bring on the Masters. Tiger Woods held off a late charge V'ijay Singh on Monday to cap­ ture I he Players Championship, his second straight victory after early season doubts. Woods lost a duel with Hal Sutton in a similar Monday finish a year ago. 1 his time, Woods didn't need much fight to finish one stroke ahead of Masters winner Singh to take one of the few golf prizes he didn't already own. The victory "m e a n s mv slump's over," said Woods, the u nquestioned favorite at Augusta National two weeks. in Woods had a 67 and was at 14-under 2 /4 after a final- hole bogey. Singh had a 68. Bernhard Langer was two shots back after a 67. Little known Jerry Kelly had a r3 and was four off of Woods. Tiger Woods: Has won two straight. There w asn 't much magic round, certainly none in Woods' to match his twisting 60-footer for birdie on No. 1, s island green Saturday or the 90-foot eagle chip on the second hole Sunday that first gave him the lead. It didn't matter as each chal­ lenge faltered. Woods, who won the U.S. Amateur here at 18 years old in 1994, was pressed a bit when Singh recovered from a triple bogey on the 14th hole to go eagle-birdie on Nos. 16 and 17. But moments after Singh hit his 10- foot birdie putt on the 17th, Woods tapped in tor birdie on the 16th hole — he barely lipped out a 50-foot eagle putt to restore his lead to two shots. Woods scared the crowd and him­ self at the island hole, flying a 9-iron right of the flag that spun perilously close to the water. But like everything Monday, it settled into the rough and Woods left with par. "1 executed the shot just the way I wanted to, it slid a bit more in the wind," Woods said. On the 18th, where Woods was in the water Saturday, he drove into the rough, chipped out and got down in two putts for the victory and the $1,080,000 first prize. Singh, a Ponte Vedra Beach resident who regularly practices at the TPC at See WOODS, Page 11 And the Disches Go to ... With the season half over, the Texan awards its second annual Disches David Sessions Daily Texan Colum nist the that Now venerable Tinseltown tradition, the Academy Awards, has completed its 73rd e d i ­ tion, own March awards ceremony — the sec­ ond annual Disches. it's time tor the lex an Named utter legendary Longhorn coach W.J. Disch, whose name also graces Texas' Disch-Falk Field, the Disches honor the Longhorn base­ ball team's more interesting achieve­ ments through the first half of the season. We d o n 't expect Joan Rivers to the show up and critique what 1 o n gh o rn s are w earing at the Disches. But she might be interested in Texas 2-2 record when wearing orange caps, or the fact that sh o rt­ stop O m ar Quintanilla now w ears his practice belt in games because, u s he put it. "after I switched belts, 1 started hitting well." St), with all due respect to the red carpet madness and Steve M artin's witty o p en in g m o nologu e at the Oscars, just get on with this show7. let's BES I PLAY —- Quintanilla's catch against Oklahoma lust Friday looked like something from Crouching Tiyer, Hidden D ragon. I he freshman from LI Paso ran down a sure bloop single to left-center, reached to his left and brought dow n the ball with his back turned to the plate. It you'd seen it in a movie, you'd have thought it little unrealistic, because was a nobody gets to a ball like that w ith ­ out special effects. O u tfield e r Matt Rosenberg was nominated for t h i s award for hi numerous diving catches, including one in Houston's Enron Field that got regular play on the jumboTron. But like Tom H anks, picking Rosenberg is just too easy. B I G G E S T S U R P R I S E — For the second year in a row, Texas' pitching staff walks away with this award. The Horns' 2.64 ERA is even better than the v l l mark last y e a r's ex cep ­ tional s t a f f had at the same point. Something tells me this is the last season anyone i.s surprised by what pitching coach Frank Anderson gets out of unheralded recruits. M O S T U N D E R R A T E D PLAYER — Ryan Brooks The senior third baseman is not exactly a household name, but if he continues his recent hot streak, he'll he the publicity start deserves Brooks was hitting just .118 before Big 12 play started, but has raised his average to .325 on the season. getting Brooks' turnaround has been a big part of the Longhorns 9-3 con fer­ ence record, and he's earned a spot in Texas' infield with his solid d efen ­ sive ability and strong bat. B E ST G A M E — In terms of sheer nail-biting excitement, no game all year was better than the Horns' 15- inning, 5-4 win over Sam Houston State on Feb. It). Instead, Montes Albert Montes, who was Texas' interim closer at the time, entered the game in the eighth for what seemed like an easy save opportuni­ ty. surrendered three runs in the top of the ninth to fall behind, 4-3. Texas got a run back in the bottom halt of the inning, and then Montes sh u to u t tossed innings to earn the win s i x Sam A nd erson drew a bases- loaded walk to end the game, which was the longest extra-inning game tor Texas since 16-inning win at Baylor in 1991. W O R S T G A M E — In terms of sheer frostbite-inducing weather, no game all year w'as worse than that same 15-inning, 5-4 win over Sam I louston State. While nearly all of the 3,882 fans tit D isch-Falk Field had en o u gh sense to find shelter, those of us in the press box had no choice but to deal with the near-freezing tempera­ t u r e s and circling winds. No amount of nail-biting excitement can make up tor the loss of feeling in one's extremities. W O R S T R O A D T R IP — Enron Field in 1 louston Enron's a beautiful ballpark, and the Astros College Classic is a w on­ derful tournament. But Texas took an 0-1 into H ouston and returned to Austin at 0-4. At least now they know how lose Lima feels. record B E ST T U R N I N G P O IN T — Texas' 7-2 loss to TCU at the Disch on March 6 was the catalyst for the rarest of motivational tactics — the im prom ptu p layers-o n ly m eeting after the game. I he loss, which was Texas' third straight Tuesday defeat, forced the I onghorns to deal with their lack of o ffensive prod uction . S in ce then, Iexas has won eight of 11 gam es while showing more patience at the plate. B E ST Q U O T E (THAT WE CAN I RINT) — 1 hat l o s s to the Horned Frogs also prompted some of coach Augie Garrido s funniest material. the But only Ben King p ro vided Frogs with something to put on their bulletin b o a rd : Every single o n e of t h o s e guv See DISCHES, Page 11 Kelly West/Daily Texan S taff Once considered done, Dream back in lineup By The A s s o c ia te d P ress HOUSTON — Two weeks ago, Hakeem Olajuwon's season and career were in jeopardy because of a blood condition in his left leg. Tuesday night, he expects to in the lineup the Rockets they play Utah Jazz. Houston w "He's an amaz­ ing player. He w^as very sharp in practice and I didn't see any rust," coach Rudy Tomjanovich said after the team s practice session Hakeem Olajuwon: Will return. I Monday. "We expect him to play (Tuesday) night but we don't know how much." Olajuwon returned to full work­ outs with the team Monday for the first time since doctors announced March 13 that the Rockets center would be sidelined three to six months while taking medication for a blood clot in a vein in his lower left ieg. Further tests last week, including a second opinion by famed cardiolo­ gist Dr. Denton Cooley, revealed the blood vessels in Olajuwon's left leg are now open, clearing his return. Doctors originally had Olajuwon taking a drug called coumadin, a See DREAM, Page 11 Texas’ Nate Dusing is one of four current Texas swimmers competing this week. Associated Pre: Nation’s elite swim to Jam ail for meet By S c o tt M cD o n a ld D aily Texan S ta ff I he world is a stage and they are merely swimmers. And this week the eyes of the world will focus on Austin to see what the United States has to offer as the U.S*. National Swimming Championships begin today at the jamail Swim Center. in More than 800 of the fastest swimmers the country will descend upon the 40 Acres this week as the waters of the Jamail Swim Center will widen from the 25-yard course to a 50-meter course. I his week's championship meet will also serve as the qualifier for the World Championships as well as the World University Games. Preliminaries each day begir at 9 a.m. with finals each night taking place at 6:30 p.m. and Manv former " 1 he World Ch ampionship in the second most prestigous event in the world," said Jim Gray, director of the jamail Swim Center. " I t ' s second onlv to being on the Olympic team " current Longhorn swimmers w ill be com­ t h i s week s event. Josh peting m Davis and Neil Walker, former Longhorn and Olympic sw immers, W’ill be swimming as well as Longhorn seniors Nate Dusing, Jamie Rauch, Scott Goldblatt and Colleen I anne. Dusing, Rauch and Goldblatt recently completed their careers as See SWIM, Page 11 around H**Horn what’s the BUZZ? ‘When Venus and I were walking down the stairs to our seats, people kept calling me n— • One guy said. 'I wish it was '75: we'd skin you alive.' I had trouble holding back tears. I think Indian Wells disgraced America.’’ Richard Williams, father of Venus and Serena Williams, alleging racial slurs were directed at him during a past tennis tournament. ACROSS THE WIRE what’s on deck track the Texas Erin Aldrich and Tanya Jarrett have finished up their careers on team, leaving the team to a new breed of stars. One such is Angel Patterson. athlete Read about her in the Texan Wednesday. Wednesday in Sports theBOX Scores NBA Philadelphia 90. Milwaukee 78 Denver 109. Chicago 104. OT Dallas 98. Utah 90 Phoenix 104. L A Lakers 83 Seattle 104. Cleveland 86 Portland 104, L A Clippers 96 New York at Golden State, late NHL Philadelphia 3. Ottawa 3. tie Montreal 4. Carolina 2 Buffalo 4. Atlanta 0 Edmonton 4. Columbus 2 San Jose at Los Ange'es. late NCAA Women's Tourney Connecticut 67. La, Tech 48 Purdue 88. Xavier 78 Notre Dame 72, Vanderbilt 64 SW Missouri St. 104. Washington 87 MLB Spring Training Houston 4, Toronto 1 Texas 3, Boston 2 Florida 6. N.Y. Mets 5 Los Angeles 4. Montreal 4. tie Tampa Bay 7. Minnesota 4 N.Y. Yankees 15. Cleveland 3 Kansas City 3. Cincinnati 2 St. Louis 6. Baltimore 3 Pittsburgh 6. Philadelphia 1 Anaheim 5. Milwaukee 3 Arizona 8, Colorado 7 Chicago Cubs 6, San Francisco 3 Seattle 8. Chicago White Sox 6 Atlanta 6. Detroit 5 Oakland vs. San Diego, late Grizzlies, Hornets both apply for move to Memphis next season MEMPHIS T en n - baibeeue and Elvis Mem VBA team s to having tw applied to mo\ e there After thnx decades of Faster than vou can sav >his has gone from no i franchises that have learching tor big-time learned M onday it could be the Vancouver Grizzlies or pro -ports the ah the new home o Charlotte 1 loméis M em phi- best is another step ir M ayor WAV. Here day - a n 1 ahead ot it. and this that evolutionary process,' ton said. I he Grizzlies and H ornets both asked the VBA for permission to relocate to M emphis, effective next season Each team said it w ould play in The FYramid, a So? million arena opened in 1991, until a new stadium existing u p to 525(1 million could be built. The FVramid seats 19,0(X1 for basketball. G nzzlie- owner Michael Heislev passed on Louisville Ky„ A naheim , Calif., and N ew Orleans in choosing Memphis, w hich w ould be the VBA's smallest m arket. The Hornets, meanwhile, w ant the option to mov e in case Charlotte voters reject a new $215 million dow ntow n arena in a referendum in June, co-owner Ray W ooldridge said. Chinese star center could land on Mavs roster next month Cincinnati's Griffey leaves game with pulled left hamstring BEIJING — Chinese basketball star W ang Zhizhi could be playing in an VBA gam e next month. HAiVES Cl P i. Fla. — ken Griffey Ir. had to be helped off the field M ondav after he appeared to pull his ham string w hile rounding third base. The Cincinnati Reds center fielder w as both­ ered earlier this spring by a sore left ham string. 1 here was no im m ediate w ord on the severity of the injury'. Griffev w as on second bast1 in the seventh inning and tried to score on Alex Ochoa s single to left. Griffey stum bled a- he rounded third and hobbled halfway to hom e before falling to the ground. Trainers, te a m m a te s a n d m a n a g e r Bob B oone cam e o u t the d u g o u t a n d s u rro u n d e d him w hile he rolled on his b ack in p ain . A fter a few m inutes, he got u p a n d p u t his arm s a ro u n d team m ates D eion S an d ers a n d Jason LaRue, lim ping off the field w ith his left foot off the g ro u n d . The / -foot-1 center has been pursued by the* Dallas M avericks but has not vet signed. He w ould be the first Asian to play in the VBA. His first gam e tor the Mavericks could be against the A tlanta H aw ks on April 5, China's official X inhua N ew s Agency said Monday, quoting Mavericks assistant D onnie Nelson, w ho is in China. Mavericks spokesm an G regg Elkin, in U tah v\ ith the team Mondav, said he w as unsure w hen Wang w ould first play for Dallas. "It'll be som etim e betw een the current road trip and the end of the regular season, which is April 18, Elkin said. Golfers four strokes back after first round of Morris Williams Texas sits four shots back and in fourth place its host at Golf Morris Williams, after the tw o rounds. tournam ent, the C leveland Top-ranked Georgia Tech leads the field at three-under, with No. 5 Oklahoma State right behind at two under. The Yellow Jackets Brvce M older — the third- ranked college player in the nation — leads the individual scoring at nine-under par after firing 67, 68 on the first day. Texas freshm an Jason H artw ick leads the H orns at tw o-under after a 69 in the second round. M att Dobyns gave Texas its only' other golfer under par, bv following a first round 69 w ith a 74. J.J. Wall (1-over), Cullev Barragan (6-over) and Matt Brost (7-over) round out the Texas side. I he tournam ent will conclude with Tuesday's final round at the Austin C ountry Club. Compiled from Associated Press reports airWAVES P Today TEXAS CALENDAR THUMBS Ul> THUMBS DOWN NBA NHL Toronto at Miami ..........................7 p.m.. TBS Charlotte at S. Anton» . .7:30 p.m.. FOXSW Buffalo at Pittsburgh 6:30 p.m.. ESPN2 TENNIS Ericsson Open ............................noon. ESPN BASEBALL vs. A&M-Corpus Christi 6:30 p.m. Disch-Falk Field MEN S GOLF Morris Williams Tourney All Day SWIMMING U.S. National Championships 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Jamail Swim Center Drew Henson in Yankee pinstripes As you have probably already read. Drew Henson has decided to play for the Yankees rather than return as quarterback for Michigan. That's great. Now there's one less team in Texas' way toward a national let's not get ahead of ourselves. ... well, Rick Ankiel, the next great pitcher? The St. Louis pitcher continues to struggle with his control, and at this rate there is only one way he can become a star: starring in Major League IV; Return to Little League. DID YOU KNOW No one in 28 years has won both the Players Championship and Masters in the same year. Tiger Woods, who won the Players Monday, will attempt to snap the streak. Smashey heats up to By Bob Jones Daily Texan S taff Fhe w e a th e r w as c o ld , b u t T exas ju n io r K a v sie S m a s h e y w a s h o t u n d e r th e co llar. C h illy te m p e r a tu r e s a n d q u e s ­ tio n a b le calls d u r in g T h u r s d a y 's a g a in s t A r k a n s a s n ig h t m a tc h c o u ld a n g r y a n p r e v e n t S m a sh e y an d h e r Texas te a m m a te s fro m the R a z o rb a c k s, 7-0. s te a m in g p a s t n o t tte r d is a g re e in g w ith q u ite a few of th e line c a lls o f h e r o p p o n e n t A d r ia n a L o p e z , so m e of w h ic h w e re o v e r r u le d bv th e line ju d g e , ir r i ta t e d S m a s h e y u s e d h e r a n te m p e r to d is p a tc h 1 o p e z 6-0, 7-6 ( 6 - 1 ). an " I 'm e m o tio n a l p e r s o n ," S m a sh e y sa id . "So w h e n so m e o n e m a k e s m e m a d , w h e n th e b a ll's in a n d sh e calls it o u t, it m a k e s m e m ad a n d I p la y b e tte r." W ith the w in , S m a sh e y h a s now- p r e v a ile d m a tc h e s , on th e te a m . II in s tr a i g h t s in g le s th e lo n g e s t su c h s tr e a k S m a sh e y a lso w o n h e r d o u b le s m a tc h w ith ju n io r R e b e k a h F o rn e y a g a in s t H o g s M e g a n F e rre ria a n d Tara R e id 8-2. I he H o r n s ' d u o is r a n k e d 27th a n d has b e g u n to gel as a ta n d e m sin c e c o n c e n tra tin g on s im p lif y in g th e ir g a m e a n d p la y ­ in g w ith o u t w o rry in g a b o u t w h o is s ta n d in g o n th e o th e r s id e of th e net. 6 - 2 . A fte r s tr u g g lin g in h e r firs t set, F o rn e y c a m e b a c k to w in h e r s in ­ g le s m a tc h o v e r Jo u lia B o y a d jie v a v ic to r y m a rk s / -5 , F o r n e y 's th ird in a row , a n d h e r m id s e a s o n s tru g g le s , in w h ic h sh e lost six s in g le s m a tc h e s in a row , se e m to be a th in g of th e p a s t I h e "T h e h o le se a so n w ill b r in g u p s a n d d o w n s ," F o rn e y sa id . " I t's d e f in ite ly b e e n a little b it o f a d o w n so far, a n d I w as re a d y to g e t lead Texas past Hogs o u t of it, so I'm h a p p y to be b a c k w in n in g ." c a m e c o u r te s y o f P o ssib ly T exas b ig g e s t s in g le s w in ju n io r V la d k a U h lir o v a w h o c o n tin u e s to a m a z e o p p o n e n ts a n d ta n s in th e a b s e n c e o f th e in ju r e d fo rm e r Big 12 P la y e r o f th e Y ear J a n e t W alker. I he 45th r a n k e d U h liro v a p u lle d o ff a n o th e r u p s e t v ic to ry a g a in s t A rk a n s a s , th is tim e fig h tin g p a s t N o. 19 C h in Bee K h o o 6-3, 4-6, (13- 11). A th ir d se t tie b re a k w a s u s e d th e o u tc o m e of to d e c id e th e m a tc h , a n d th e v ic to ry s tr e tc h e s U hlirova s N o. I se e d w in s tr e a k to se v e n m a tc h e s, d u r in g w h ic h sh e h a s b e a te n Ip e k S e n o g lu o f P e p p e r d in e a n d N o. 30 J a h n a v i Parekh of Baylor. th e n N o . 21 " V la d k a h a d a n o th e r b ig w in o v e r a T op 25 o p p o n e n t," h e a d co a c h Jeff M o o re sa id . "A t k ey tim e s d u r in g th e m a tc h sh e p la y e d th a n o v e r ­ s m a r t te n n is , r a t h e r p la y in g t h e b a ll." Texas' s w e e p g iv e s t h e H o rn s a re c o rd of 13- 2, a n d s ta n d s a s th e ir t h i r d s h u to u t of t h e se a s o n . " 1 he te am c a m e o u t s tr o n g , a n d in so m e in s ta n c e s le t th e ir o p p o ­ n e n ts b a c k in to th e m a tc h e a rly in th e s e c o n d s e t, b u t th e n m a d e g o o d e ffo rts to g et b a c k o n tra c k ," M o o re sa id . " I t's an im p o r ta n t w in te am e ffo rt in b e c a u s e c lo sin g o u t m a tc h e s." it w as a Ie x a s w ill h a v e th e e n tir e w e e k to rest a n d r e g r o u p a f te r p la y in g in fiv e d a y s . T he f o u r m a tc h e s re s p ite is su re ly v a lu e d as T exas w ill face a to u g h c o n te s t w h e n N o. on 5 c o m e s S a tru d a y . W in o r th e H o rn s w ill h a v e to re c o v e r q u ic k ly to c o m p e te a g a in s t a n o th e r so lid s q u a d in N o. 22 W ake F o re st on S u n d a y . c a llin g th e n , F lo rid a lo se Vladka Uhlirova and the Horns topped Arkansas 7-0 Monday. Charlie Ferguson Daily Texan Staff And then there were four Notre Dame, Purdue, Connecticut and SW Missouri St. roll to Final Four By The Associated Press DENVER — Ruth Riley, capitalizing on her All-American counterpart's foul trouble, scored 32 points as top-seeded N otre D am e beat Vanderbilt 72-64 on M onday night to advance to the Final Four. Riley, a first-team All-Amencan cen­ ter, h a d 22 of her points in the second half C hantelle A nderson, a second-team er, sat out the M idw est m uch of the half in Regional final. as V anderbilt's A nderson, saddled w ith four fouls for m uch of the second half, fouled out w ith 6:22 left and the third-seeded ( orn m o d o res trailing 61-52. Vandy rjiuJd get no closer than eight points after that. A lin a Ratav had 17 points, and YiWey Siem on ad ded 16 for N otre Da m e (32-2), w hich set a school record for victories in a season. led Z u /a n a the K iim esova C om m odores (24-10) w'ith 27 points and 12 rebounds. A nderson had 14 ¡joints, and guard Ashley McElhiney added 12. Following a 40-40 halftime tie, the Fighting Irish outscored Vandy 32-24 in the second half, shooting 48 percent in the half com pared to VandyD 29 per­ cent. N otre Dame, w hich battled for the nation's No. 1 ranking all season before finishing second to Connecticut, shot 56 percent for the gam e w hile V andy w as at 42 percent. Ratay and V anderbilt's Jillian D anker traded 3-pointers to start the gam e ■ Purdue 88, Xavier 78 BIRM INGHAM , Ala. — Katie Douglas, Kelly Komara and Camille Cooper are going back to the Final Four. X avier's remarkable postseason ride is over. Komara played a superb gam e till­ ing in for injured point guard Enka Valek and D ouglas hit tw o critical 3- pointers w'hile battling through an off night shooting as Purdue beat Xavier 88-78 M onday to w in the M ideast Regional. Douglas, Komara and Cooper all played on P u rd u e 's 1999 national cham pionship team. They still have a chance to w in another. The Boilermakers (30-6) will play the West Regional winner, Washington or the S outhw est M issouri State, national semifinals Friday night in St. Louis. in Xavier (31-3) had become one of the darlings of the N CA A tournam ent after upsetting Tennessee, the No. 1 seed overall, 80-65, in Saturdav's regional semifinals. But the M usketeers couldn't keep the magic going and saw their 21-game winning streak, the nation's longest, come to an end. Komara, nam ed the regional's o u t­ standing player, w as forced to move from shooting guard to the point after Valek tore the anterior cruciate liga­ m en t the Boilermakers' victory over Texas Tech on Saturday. right knee in her in She responded with 20 points on 6-for- 12 shooting five assists and four steals. "Kelly Komara w as huge for us tonight," Douglas said. “Just talking to Kelly before the game, she w as readv to play. She provided a huge spark for us. rhank God she wras there in the first half because I sure w asn't." ■ UConn 67, Louisiana Tech 48 PIT ISBURGH — Lose a star, plug in another. V\'in a cham pionship, go after another. The years and players may change, yet it alm ost w ouldn't be a w o m en 's w ithout Connecticut. Final Four Diana Taurasi, a freshman w ho did­ n't even start until UConn lost its two returning All-Americans, dom inated w ith her scoring and court savvy as the H uskies rolled into the w om en's .semi­ finals again w ith a 67-48 victory over Louisiana Tech on M onday night. This will be the H uskies' fifth tnp to the Final Four u n d e r coach Geno A uriem m a since 1991. They w on national titles in 1995 and last season. Taurasi, w'ho com bines the discipline that A uriem m a dem ands with a sleek gam e polished on the Los Angeles p laygrounds, had 17 points, 10 rebounds and four assists as the second gam e of the season betw een the long­ time w om en's powrers turned into a romp. "I d o n 't know', I've never gotten nervous," said Taurasi, the nation's top high school player a year ago. "I'm just out there playing w ith four other girls, playing carefree. "W hen I w as grow ing up, I never played with girls — they use to whine all the time — so I'd just go to the play­ ground and plav with the guys." ■ SW Missouri St. 104, Washington 87 SPOKANE, Wash. — She w'ow'ed them in the West. N ow Jackie Stiles is headed back to Missouri to the biggest stage of all. V ith a lot of help from her friends — especially Tara Mitchem— Stiles brought Southwest Missouri State to St. LouLs and the w om en's Final Four with a 104-87 vic­ tory over Washington M onday night in the West Regional final. South wrest Missouri State (29-5) will play Purdue in the semifinals M onday night in St. Louis, just a 3 1/2 -hour drive from the Lady Bears' Springfield cam pus. Stiles scored 32 points despite sitting out 4 1 /2 m inutes early in the second half and fouling out w ith 3:25 to play. As she left the court, she drew a stand­ ing ovation from the capacity crow'd of just u n d er 11,000, nearly all of them W ashington fans. The 5-foot-8 dynam o — the leading scorer in w om en's NCAA Division I history — led the Lady Bears to their second Final Four and first since 1992. Stiles scored 73 points in her two gam es in Spokane to become the first w om an to top 1,000 in a season in Division I. sh arpshooter She isn't the only blonde, ponytailed big-tim e for SMS. Mitchem scored 23 points on 7-for-7 shooting, three* of them 3-pointers,and 6-of-6 free throw s. Associated Pr< UConn's Shea Ralph holds up the net after watching the Huskies be Louisiana Tech 67-48. \ T h e D a ily T e x a n Tuesday, March 27, 20 01 Page 11 Love Affair? Bobby Knight’s hiring in Lubbock has fans abuzz By The Associated Press LU B B O C K — Bob K n ig h t fev er h a s s w e p t th r o u g h L u b b o c k as q u ic k a s a M a rc h d u s t sto rm . A n d m o s t e v e r y o n e in t o w n is tr y ­ ing to ta k e a d v a n t a g e of Texas Tech s h i r in g of the f o r m e r I n d i a n a co ach b e f o r e n e w e s t re cruit h a s e v e n h a d a c h a n c e to s e t­ tle in. u n i v e r s i t y ' s th e O n M o n d a y , K n ig h t's Red R a id e rs h a d th e ir first w e i g h t- tr a in in g s e s ­ sio n at 6 a.m., after m e e t i n g w ith t h e i r ti m e for S a t u r d a y m o r n in g . c o a c h f i rs t th e his V\ h ile te a m w a s liftin g w e ig h ts , K n ig h t h a d a l r e a d y ta k e n o ff f r o m h is n e w h o m e t o w n — w h e r e bo ok s, T -shirts a n d a n y t h i n g a s s o c ia te d w ith the v o latile coach w e r e flying off sto re s h e lv e s — for a n i g h t t i m e c h a t w ith L arry K in g in Los A n g eles. " I t's b e e n really crazy," s a id N a d i a Soliz, a s a l e s w o m a n w ith C a m p u s D e sig n s , w h ic h s p e cialize s in Tech m e r c h a n d i s e . " W e 'v e r e p r i n t e d so m a n y tim e s a n d w e k e e p r u n n i n g o ut. S a t u r d a y m o r n i n g w e s o l d o u t in 30 m i n u t e s for o n e K n ig h t T-shirt, a n d th e s e c o n d o n e s o ld o u t w ith i n a n h o u r." A n d th e c ra z e h a s n ' t b e e n lim ited to 7 -shirts. Books a b o u t K n i g h t are a ls o big sellers a n d s e a s o n tickets to th e m e n ' s b a s k e t b a l l g a m e s a r e g o in g fa s ter th a n t h e y 'v e g o n e in ye ars, said R u sse ll W arren, d ir e c to r o f ticket o p e r a t io n s . K n i g h t a s k e d p e o p l e F r i d a y to th i n g s t a r t b u y i n g M o n d a y m o r n in g . Exact ticket sale fig u re s w e r e n ' t a v a ila b le b y 6 p.m . M o n d a y . ti c k e ts first F oo tball a n d w o m e n ' s b a sk e tb a ll n o r m a ll y d o m i n a t e th e s p o r t s scene in L u b b o c k , w h e r e th e L a d y R a id e r s w e r e n a ti o n a l c h a m p i o n s in 1993 a n d h a d a n Elite E ig h t a p p e a r a n c e last y e a r a n d a S w e e t Six te en a p p e a r ­ an ce th is year. t h a t s o m e o n e w h o " I 'm n o t m u c h of a b a s k e tb a ll fan, b u t n o w is a n a tio n a l p e r s o n a lit y is h e re I w a n t to be at th e g a m e s , " said B rad Jury, 38, of L u b b o c k . H e sto o d in line d u r i n g his lu n c h h o u r to b u y R ed R aid ers s e a s o n tickets. L ast year, 3,542 m e n ' s s e a s o n tick­ ets w e r e so ld c o m p a r e d to th e L a d y R a id e rs ' 5,646 se a s o n tickets. M o n d a y w a s th e first tim e Bland H a r p e r h a d f o u n d h im s e l f in line for m e n ' s b a s k e t b a ll tickets sin ce m o v ­ ing to L u b b o c k in 1985. " I 'v e h a d fo otb all s e a s o n tickets for 15 years, b u t it w a s n ' t w o r t h m y tim e to go to w a tc h a losin g m e n ' s b a sk e tb a ll te a m , " h e said. Tech co a c h J a m e s D ic k e y w a s fired M a rc h 9, a fte r h is te a m fin ish ed w ith a lo s in g re c o rd for the f o u r th s e a s o n in a row. T h e te a m still m i g h t n o t h a v e the best of r e c o r d s n ex t year, bu t: "W e h a v e a n e w co a ch a n d I th i n k h e 's g re a t," said 7 6 -y e a r-o ld H a r p e r , w h o th e U n i v e r s i t y of g r a d u a t e d fr o m Texas b u t s w it c h e d his a llian ce to L u b b o c k a lo n g w i t h his m o v e . " I 'm g o i n g to w a tc h h im b u i l d a team . W ith his e x p e r i e n c e c o a c h i n g a n d ab ility to tra in m e n , I p e r s o n a l l y d o n ' t th i n k Texas Tech c o u ld h a v e m a d e a b e tt e r sele ctio n ." R ed R a id e r O u t f i t t e r vice p re s i­ d e n t S t e p h e n S p i e g e l b e r g s a i d b e s i d e s selling T-shirts, h e w a s b u s y m a n n i n g t a l k in g w ith K n ig h t fo llo w e rs fr o m across the n a ti o n w h o w a n t to k n o w m o r e a b o u t th is a g r i c u l t u r e - b a s e d city of 200,000. th e p h o n e s a n d " W e a re d o i n g a lot of p u b l i c rela­ tio n s a n d tr y in g to w e l c o m e th ese fa n s in to th e Texas Tech fam ily," he said. " W e k n e w h e h a d a p r e s e n c e a n d a fo llo w in g , b u t I d i d n ' t k n o w it w a s th is large. It just g o e s to p r o v e this m a n is a le g e n d ." S p ie g e l b e rg said b e s i d e s In d i a n a , h e h a s re c e iv e d o r d e r s fr o m p e o p le in O h i o , K e n tu c k y , P e n n s y l v a n i a , G e o rg ia , C alifo rn ia , C o lo r a d o , a n d F lo r id a — to n a m e a few. O h i o r e s i d e n t Jim May, w h o u s e d to co a c h ju n io r h ig h b a s k e t b a ll in A n d e r s o n , Ind., w a s a m o n g th o s e p l a c i n g o r d e r s . H e d e c i d e d o n a Texas Tech flag, a b a s e b a l l cap, a n d a fe w T-shirts. " W h e n I t a u g h t s ch o o l in I n d i a n a , I h a d t w o b o y s w h o p l a y e d for B o bb y K n ig h t," M a y said. " W h e n I m o v e d b a c k to O h io , I r e m a i n e d an I n d i a n a fan a n d a Bob K n ig h t fan. N o w I h a v e b e c o m e a Texas Tech Texas Tech fans have embraced the hiring of Bobby Knight as their new hoops coach. Associated Press b a sk e tb a ll fa n ." M a y sa id K n ig h t is a c o a c h w h o really c a re s a b o u t his p l a y e r s a n d goes o u t ot his w a y to h e l p o r g a n i z a ­ th e k id s t i o n s a n d e v e n s u p p o r t s w h o d o n ' t e v e n t u a l l y g o o n to the N BA o r s ta v in his p r o g r a m . "W e see th e n eg ativ e , b u t w e d o n ' t often h e a r a b o u t th e p o s i ti v e , " M a y said. " H e is a m a n w h o a l w a y s g o es o u t of his w a y to h e lp ." The 60-yea r-o ld lo n g t im e I n d i a n a coach, w h o led the H o o s ie r s to th re e n a t i o n a l c h a m p i o n s h i p s , w a s fired last fall a ft e r h e g r a b b e d a s t u d e n t by the a r m a n d w a s said to h a v e v io l a t­ ed a z e r o - to l e r a n c e b e h a v i o r policy. L a rry Crisler, m a n a g e r of T ech’s u n i v e r s i t y - r u n D o u b l e T S h o p p e , said L u b b o c k is th e p e rf e c t place for K n ig h t to get a fre sh s ta rt a n d in tu r n h e lp a n ailin g p r o g r a m c o m e into p ro m in e n c e . " I n W e st Texas, p a rt o f o u r c h a ra c ­ ter is to a llo w a n i n d i v i d u a l e v e ry o p p o r t u n i t y to be th e p e r s o n th a t w e th i n k he can be," C r is le r said. "I t h i n k C o a c h K n igh t h a s m a d e som< m i s t a k e s in his p a s t. O u r c o n c e r n i n o t his p a st, b u t o n e ot how m a n v g a m e s can w e w in ." A n d if a p r o b l e m like th o s e th a t o c c u r r e d at I n d i a n a arises: s a id I m s u r e w e c a n g e t o v e r it, Soliz, the C a m p u s D e s ig n salc'sper so n . "W e'll look p a s t it. H e 's a g r e a t m a n . You can a s k a n y b o d y w h o B o b b y K n i g h t is, a n d e v e r y o n e k n o w s . " Horns ready to begin life without star defensive tackles D-LINE, from 9 w ill li n e u p a fe w f e e t a w a y f r o m t h e ta c k l e s . s a y s T u b b s s o m e o f t h a t h e l e a r n e d m u c h a b o u t p l a y i n g h a r d o n e v e r y d o w n f r o m H a m p t o n , w h o w a s n o t o r i o u s l y r e l e n t l e s s . R o g e r s t a u g h t h i m f i n e r p o i n t s o f t e c h n i q u e , T u b b s s a i d . d e f e n s i v e C o r v R e d d i n g h a s a l r e a d y n o t i c e d th e t h e y o u n g d i f f e r e n c e b e t w e e n t a c k l e s ' p e r f o r m a n c e d u r i n g th e r e g u l a r s e a s o n a n d t h i s s p r i n g ' s p r a c t i c e s . T e x a s e n d t h e "T u b b s a n d D o i r o n a r e c o m i n g a l o n g w a y e v e r y d a y a n d t h e y e v e n lo o k a w h o l e lo t b e t t e r t h a n la s t y e a r , '' h e s a i d . " T h e y ' r e u n d e r ­ s t a n d i n g t h e s c h e m e s a n d r u n n i n g h a r d to t h e f o o t b a l l . " R e d d i n g , f e l l o w d e f e n s i v e e n d K a le n T h o r n t o n a n d v e t e r a n m i d ­ l i n e b a c k e r D .D . L e w i s m a y d le h a v e a s m u c h t h e y o u n g l i n e m e n ' s s u c c e s s a s a n y ­ o n e . W it h a d e f e n s e like T exas, w h i c h h a r p s o n f i ll in g h o l e s w i t h d e f e n d e r s , i n t e r p l a y b e t w e e n th e p o s i t i o n s is c r u c i a l . to d o w i t h f r o m t h e s i d e , If a T e x a s e n d like t a l e n t e d p a s s - r u s h e r C o r y R e d d i n g c a n c o l l a p s e t h e p o c k e t t h a t f o r c e s t h e o p p o s i n g q u a r t e r b a c k to s t e p u p , o f t e n i n t o a h o l e fille d b y a w a i t i n g d e f e n s i v e ta c k l e . If s e c o n d a r y b l a n k e t s fh e T e x a s o p p o s i n g r e c e i v e r s , t h a t a l l o w s t h e t a c k l e s m o r e t i m e to m a k e a play. A n o t h e r k e y w'ill b e L e w i s , w h o " H a v i n g a s t r o n g m i d d l e l i n e ­ b a c k e r lik e [L e w is ] r e a l l y h e l p s , " s a i d D o i r o n . " H e ' s a b l e t o fill th e h o l e s t h a t w e c a n ' t a n d t h a t m a k e s t h e d e f e n s e t h a t m u c h b e t t e r . " t h a t R e e s e s a i d j u s t k n o w i n g t h a t t h e r e a r e v e t e r a n s b e h i n d t h e m s h o u l d h e l p T u b b s , D o i r o n a n d Lee. " I t h a s to t a k e t h e l o a d o f f t h o s e k i d s , ' h e s a i d . " O u r s e c o n d a r y a n d l i n e b a c k e r s h a v e a lo t m o r e t h e e x p e r i e n c e a n d p r e s s u r e o ff t h e y t h e d o n t h a v e to m a k e a s m a n y p l a y s a s w e d i d la s t y e a r . " t a k e s t h a t t a c k l e s so T h e r e i n lies th e h e a r t o f T e x a s ' d e f e n s i v e ro l e r e v e r s a l : w h e r e a s H a m p t o n a n d R o g e r s ' p l a y m a k - in g a l l o w e d t h e rest o f t h e t e a m to m a k e t h e e x p e r i e n c e d s q u a d s u r r o u n d i n g t h e t a c k l e s s h o u l d a l l o w t h e m to m a k e p l a y s o f t h e i r o w n . t h e p l a y s , t h i s y e a r A n d w i t h e x p e c t i n g a lot. t h a t lo g ic , R e e s e is "W e h a d p l e n t y o f b e e f l a s t y e a r, b u t t h e s e g u y s a r e m o r e a t h l e t i c , " R e e s e s a i d . " S h o o t , I 'm r e a l i s t i c a l ­ ly l o o k i n g fo r t h e s e g u y s to p l a y as w e l l a s H a m p t o n a n d R o g e r s d i d , a n d 1 t h i n k th e y w i l l ." to le t "We d o n ' t w a n t t h e d e f e n s e d o w n , " T u b b s s a i d . " A n d it w e r u n lik e c o a c h th e p l a y s R e e s e te lls u s to, h o p e f u l l y w e can b e th e p l a y e r s th a t c a r r y o n t h a t t r a d i t i o n . " Sessions delivers second annual Disches for UT baseball DISCHES, from 9 f r o m I C U w 'a n t e d t o c o m e h e r e , " h e s a i d . " W h o w o u l d n ' t w a n t to c o m e to t h e U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s ? T h e y ' r e all g o i n g to b e f i r e d u p to p l a y u s. W e ' v e g o t a t a r g e t o n o u r b a c k s , a n d it s a y s 'T e x a s ,' a n d so e v e r y b o d y w a n t s to b e a t u s . " T h e y h a v e 113 s t r i k e o u t s a n d j u s t 28 w a l k s , a n d o p p o s i n g t e a m s k n o w F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y w i l l b e t o u g h d a y s a t th e p l a t e . L o n g h o r n , h e ' s l e a d i n g t h e t e a m in h i t t i n g (.341), a t - b a t s (12b), h its (43) a n d s a c r i f i c e s ( n i n e ) . p i t c h e r s d o n ' t s t a r t a i m i n g a t t h a t t a r g e t o n K i n g ' s b a c k . N o t b a d fo r a g u v n o b o d y h a d th e s e a s o n e v e r h e a r d o f w h e n s t a r t e d . P I T C H E R — G e r r i t lik e e v e r y c o m b i n e d B E S T W e ll , j u s t f o r S i m p s o n a n d A l b e r t M o n t e s T he t w o j u n i o r t r a n s f e r s s h a r e t h e a w a r d , s i n c e S i m p s o n h a s a 1.88 E R A a n d M o n t e s h a s a 1.89. s i n g l e th e D i s c h e s h a v e O s c a r te l e c a s t , r u n a li ttle lo n g , so t h a t ' s it f o r th e s e c o n d a n n u a l D is c h A w a r d s . S ee v o u a t t h e a f t e r - p a r t i e s . B EST BAT — Q u i n t a n i l l a p i c k s u p a n o t h e r s t a t u e t t e f o r h is a b i l i t y to c o n s i s t e n t l y s t e p u p to t h e p l a t e a n d h a m m e r t h e b a ll to t h e g a p . A t El P a s o S o c o r r o H i g h S c h o o l, Q u i n t a n i l l a h i t .542 h is la s t s e a s o n a n d h a r d l y saw ' a s t r i k e f r o m p i t c h e r s . f r i g h t e n e d a N o w Q u i n t a n i l l a ' s o p p o s i n g t h a t W h e n to th e t h e H o r n s t r a v e l B a l l p a r k in A r l i n g t o n to fa c e T C U l e t ' s h o p e t h e T C U o n A p r i l 17, Tiger holds off Singh to claim second straight tourney WOODS, from 9 S t a d i u m s i s t e n c y to k e e p u p — h e h a d five b i r d i e s a n d t h r e e b o g e y s . c o u r s e ' s s i g n a t u r e ho le. c o u r s e , in t h e w a t e r t h e s h a r p e s t g a m e d o w n . S a w g r a s s C o u r s e , s e e m e d to h a v e th e m o s t m o t i v a ­ t i o n a n d to S i n g h ' s c h a s e W o o d s M a s t e r s v i c t o r y w a s a l m o s t l o s t as W o o d s t a s h i o n e d o n e o f g o l f ' s m o s t a m a z i n g y e a r s w i t h n i n e v ic ­ th e U.S. O p e n , to r ie s , P G A B r i t i s h C h a m p i o n s h i p . i n c l u d i n g O p e n a n d ti e d S i n g h t h i n g s a t 1 3 - u n d e r w i t h h is 4 - f o o t e r fo r b i r d i e o n th e 13th h o l e . B u t W o o d s m a d e h is o w n b i r d i e m o m e n t s l a t e r o n th e 12th h o l e fo r a o n e - s t r o k e le a d . S i n g h ' s c h a n c e s e n d e d fo r g o o d , lik e so m a n y o n P e te D y e 's f a m o u s H i s d r i v e o n th e 14th h o l e w a s a w i l d s w i n g t h a t h e a d e d left i n t o t h e w a t e r . th e w o r s t s t r o k e all w e e k f o r S in g h . It w a s p r o b a b l y S i n g h t h r e w d o w n h i s d r i v e r in d i s g u s t , k i c k i n g it b e f o r e h i t t i n g a g a i n . H e left w i t h a t r i p l e - b o g e y - 7 — h i s w o r s t s c o r e o f th e w e e k . H e g o t a s c lo s e a s t w o s h o t s to W o o d s a f t e r a n i m p r o b a b l e e a g l e o n th e 16th h o le . S i n g h t u r n e d his p u t t e r s i d e w a y s a n d u s e d t h e toe to p o p t h e b a ll off t h e b u l k h e a d a n d i n t o th e c u p . H e f o l l o w e d w i t h h is b i r d i e o n N o . 17 a s W o o d s l o o k e d a c r o s s to t h e l a n d t h e p a t c h o f t h a t is S i n g h h a d a p u t t o f a b o u t 35 fe e t th e fin a l h o le , b u t fo r b i r d i e o n s e n t it 10 feet p a s t a n d m a d e par. I m a d e o n e b a d s w i n g a n d t h a t ' s all it t a k e s , " S i n g h s a i d . L u n g e r h a s n ' t w o n in t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s s i n c e th e 1993 M a s t e r s a n d l o o k e d u n l i k e l y to c h a l l e n g e , e s p e ­ c ia lly a f t e r m i s s i n g a p a r p u t t o n t h e l()th h o l e o n h is first s t r o k e w h e n p l a y r e s u m e d . R a i n d e l a y e d th e s t a r t o f S u n d a y ' s r o u n d a n d p l a y w a s s u s p e n d e d b y d a r k n e s s . H e m a d e t w o s t r a i g h t b i r d i e s o n t h e 11th a n d 12th h o l e s a n d w a s o n l y t w o b a c k o f W o o d s . B u t L a n g e r t r u l y c o u l d n ' t f i n d th e c o n ­ th e K elly , p a i r e d w i t h W o o d s , w o u l d ' v e b e e n t o u r n a m e n t s m o s t a m a z i n g s t o r v T h e 3 4 - v e a r - o ld n e v e r h a s w o n in 175 P G A T o u r e v e n t s a n d s u d d e n l y w a s m a t c h e d w i t h W o o d s in t h e Sb m i l ­ li o n t o u r n a m e n t . Kelly, a s t r o k e b e h i n d w h e n p l a y s t o p p e d S u n d a y , o p e n e d b y d r i v ­ i n g in t o a le f t- s id e b u n k e r o ft th e f a i r w a y a n d m i s s e d a b i r d i e p u t t b e f o r e W o o d s t a p p e d in f o r a tw o - s h o t th e l e a d . K e l l y 's b i r d i e o n 15th h o l e b r o u g h t h i m to 1 2 - u n d e r a n d th e c h a r g e h e h a d left. t h a t s all missing nine contests with blood clot DREAM, from 9 b lo o d th inner, th a t c o u ld resu lt in m o r e s e r io u s if he in te rn a l e n c o u n t e r e d h a r d c o n ta c t w h ile on th e court. injury th i n n e r . H e O la ju w o n s w it c h e d to d a ilv injec­ tio n s of h e p a r i n , a l o w m o l e c u la r w e i g h t b l o o d h a s s t o p p e d u s i n g h e p a r i n a n d is n o w t a k i n g a s p i r in daily. H e als o will w e a r elastic s u p p o r t s to c k in g s w h ile p l a y i n g a n d will u n d e r g o m o n i t o r ­ in g b y d o c to r s for th e rest of th e s e a ­ son. "It is g re a t to g e t back, it is a g o o d feeling h o w the rest o f th e g u y s m a d e m e feel so g o o d a b o u t g e tt in g b ack ," O l a j u w o n said. "I th in k I a m a h e a d (w ith c o n d it io n i n g ) b e c a u s e I d i d n ' t s t o p w o r k i n g o u t a n d I k e p t s h o o t in g th e b a sk etb all." O la ju w o n h a s m isse d n in e g a m e s g o i n g in in t o T u e s d a y ' s c o n t e s t C o m p a q C e n t e r a g a in s t th e Jazz. T h e R o c k e ts h a v e th r e e s t r a i g h t lo st g a m e s , p u t t i n g th e ir p la y o ff h o p e s in s e r io u s d o u b t. "I t h o u g h t t o d a y h e lo o k e d th e sam e. We are lac kin g s o m e sc o rin g p o in t s in th e m i d d l e so w e c a n really u s e h i m , " g u a r d Steve F rancis said. Io m ja n o v i c h n e e d e d to h e a r s o m e ­ th in g po sitiv e. "1 l e a r n e d a b o u t the first m o n t h in this job th a t y o u e x p ect th e u n e x p e c t ­ the b a d e d a n d th a t u s u a l ly it is u n e x p e c t e d , " T o m j a n o v i c h sa id . " W h e n y o u get a p o sitiv e u n e x p e c t ­ ed, it's g re a t." O la ju w o n h a d c o n c e d e d th a t his s e a s o n w a s o v e r last w e e k be fore the n e w r o u n d of tests. H e h a d s c h e d ­ u le d a b u s i n e s s trip to A c a p u l c o b u t ca n c eled it b e c a u s e o f th e g o o d n e w s . It w a s just a n o th e r twi s t in th e final y e a r ot O l a j u w o n 's c o n tr a c t th a t p a y s h im S i b . 5 million. D e s p it e his m e d ic a l c o n d itio n , O l a ju w o n h a s n o t ru l e d o u t p la y i n g next se a s o n a n d th e R o c k e ts w o n ' t d i s c o u n t h is re tu rn . of o u t " I t's ju st a p a r t of life, y o u d o th e b e s t y o u can a n d d o n ' t w o r r y a b o u t w h a t ' s c o n t r o l , " O l a j u w o n said. "I gist t h a n k G o d that it w a s n ' t a n y t h i n g major. T wo w e e k s later, 1 a m th a n k i n g G o d a g a i n th a t y o u can g o play." y o u r Four current Longhorns to get shot at National meet SWIM, from 9 L o n g h o r n s b y w i n n i n g the N C A A last w e e k ­ n a ti o n a l c h a m p i o n s h i p e n d in C o lle g e S tation. D u s i n g set th e A m e r i c a n re c o rd in th e 2 0 0 -y ard i n d i v i d u a l m e d l e y a n d s w a m o n all b r o k e r e l a y s f o u r T e x a s A m e r i c a n , N C A A a n d U.S. O p e n re co rd s. t h a t L a n n e r e c e n t l y c o m p l e t e d h e r c a re e r a t Texas b y h e lp i n g le a d th e L o n g h o r n w o m e n ' s s w i m m i n g a n d s e c o n d d i v i n g te a m to a th ird -p la c e finish t w o w e e k s a g o in L o n g Is la n d , N.Y. S h e w o n th e 5 0 -y a rd freestyle a n d t h e 1 0 0 -y a rd in p la c e d freestyle. T h is w e e k sh e w ill s w i m in th e 50- a n d 10 0 -m ete r fre esty le races. T h e J a m a il S w i m C e n t e r is n o s t r a n g e r to h o s t i n g big e v e n ts . T h e 2,100-seat s w i m m i n g facility h o s t e d t h e C o u r s e C h a m p i o n s h i p s in 1993 a n d 1990, th e U.S. O l y m p i c S w i m m i n g Trials in 1988, 18 c o n f e r e n c e c h a m p i ­ N C A A o n s h i p s L o n g U.S. a n d 10 C h a m p i o n s h i p e v e n ts , m o s t rec en tly th e m e n ' s N C A A m e e t in 1996. T h e N C A A v\’ill h a v e its w o m e n ' s s w i m ­ m i n g a n d d iv i n g n a tio n a l c h a m p i ­ o n s h i p at th e Jam il Swum C e n t e r in 2002 a n d th e m e n ' s in 2003. v e r y " W e 'v e h a d it h e re b e fo r e a n d it's facility," U .S.A . a S w i m m i n g R e p r e s e n t a t i v e M a r y W a g n e r said. g o o d s w i m m e r s O t h e r n o t a b l e th is w e e k e n d are C a l's A n t h o n y E rvin, th e g o l d - m e d a l w i n n e r in th e 50- m e t e r freesty le at th e 2000 O l y m p i c G a m e s . M i c h i g a n s e n i o r C h r i s I h o m p s o n , w h o b ro k e the A m e r i c a n rec ord in th e 1,650 vard freesty le last w e e k e n d - in C o lle g e S ta tio n , w ill th e 1 ,5 0 0 -m e te r swum fr e e s ty l e . C u r r e n t T ex as s w i m m e r s T o m m y H a n n a n a n d Ian C ro c k e r will s w i m the butterfly. T u e s d a y n ig h t is UT N igh t. All Texas facu lty , s ta ff a n d s t u d e n t s rece ive free a d m i s s i o n w h e n p r e ­ s e n t in g th e i r ID card. L)\(;H()RX FOOTBALL NOTES Applewhite faulters, though not his fault M a j o r A p p l e w h i t e e x p e r i ­ e n c e d a f e w b l u n d e r s as T ex as' s e c o n d - s t r i n g q u a r t e r b a c k d u r ­ i n g M o n d a y ' s p r a c t i c e at F r a n k D e n i u s Field. c o n s e c u t i v e T h e s e n i o r w a s i n t e r c e p t e d on t w o p a s s i n g a t t e m p t s , o n e of w h i c h wras a s h o v e l p a s s h e throw ' o v e r a d e f e n s i v e l i n e m a n . A n d th e f o l l o w i n g p lay, A p p l e w h i t e f u m b l e d th e s n a p . tr i e d to B u t T exas h e a d c o a c h M a c k B r o w n p l a y e d d o w n th e m i s ­ ta k e s a f t e r p r a c t i c e , s h o w u n g th a t A p p l e w h i t e w a s n o t e n t i r e l y r e s p o n s i b l e f o r w h a t h a p p e n e d . I n s t e a d , B r o w n p l a c e d m o s t of th e b l a m e o n th e b ig b o y s u p fr o n t. "It r e a l ly w a s n ' t h is f a u l t , " B r o w n s a i d . " T h e o f f e n s i v e l i n e ­ m e n ju s t d e c i d e d n o t to b lo c k a n y b o d y . to b o lt i n s t e a d . " I h e y d e c i d e d Drake working to improve wide-outs W i d e r e c e i v e r s c o a c h D a r r y l D r a k e m u s t h a v e k n o w n h e h a d s o m e t h i n g s p e c i a l l a s t fall w i t h h is y o u n g w i d e r e c e i v e r s R oy W illia m s , B.J. J o h n s o n a n d S lo a n T h o m a s . T h a t's w h y d u r i n g t h e s e a s o n , D r a k e o p t e d m o r e t h e f r e s h m e n ju s t g e t a c c l i m a t e d to t e m p o o f c o l l e g e f o o t b a l l t h e t h a n to o m u c h i n f o r m a t i o n o n t h e m t o o fast. to p u s h try let to to " L a s t y e a r, w i t h t h o s e g u y s b e in g f r e s h m e n , I t r i e d to ju st let t h e m p lay ," D r a k e s a i d . " T h e r e w a s n ' t lot o f r e a l l y a w h o l e c o a c h i n g g o i n g o n, b e c a u s e w i t h f r e s h m e n y o u c a n o v e r c o a c h t h e m a n d c o n t u s e t h e m . " D r a k e o b v i o u s l y k n e w w h a t he w a s d o i n g . W i l l i a m s h a u l e d in 40 r e c e p t i o n s fo r 809 y a r d s , J o h n s o n g r a b b e d 41 r e c e p t i o n s fo r 698 y a r d s , a n d T h o m a s m a d e n in e r e c e p t i o n s for 208 y a r d s . B u t t h o s e r e c e i v e r s h a v e n ' t b e e n i n v o l v e d in p a s s i v e l e a r n ­ ing thi^ s p r i n g . D r a k e h a s b e e n te a c h i n g th e w i d e - o u t s a s m u c h as he c a n a b o u t th e p o s i t i o n so th a t t h e Big I h r e e c a n c o m e b a c k e v e n s t r o n g e r n e x t tall. I l e w’a n t s th e m to b e th e best. " T h i s s p r i n g I 'm a s t o u g h o n t h e m a s I 'v e e v e r b e e n o n a th a t t r y i n g to m a k e g r o u p , t h e m it 's u n a c c e p t ­ u n d e r s t a n d a b le n ot to be th e b e s t " D r a k e s a i d . " A n d t h e y ' r e h u n g r y to b e th e b e s t . " t h i n k I d o Featured matchup i n t e r e s t i n g O n e o f t h e m o r e th is s p r i n g to w a t c h m a t c h u p s h a s b e e n b e t w e e n w id e rece iv er R o y W i l l i a m s a n d c o r n e r b a c k Q u e n t i n J a m m e r . O n e of Texas b e s t w i d e - o u t s m a n - o n - n an a g a i n s t o n e o t Texas' b e s t c o n er b a c k s . to r e m a i n J a m m e r o p t e d in c o ll e g e fo r his s e n i o r s e a s o n in th e N F L d r a f t li e u o f e n t e r i n g a early , w h i l e W il li a m s is o n e th e b e s t y o u n g r e c e i v e r s tin n a t i o n . ; J a m m e r s e e s th e m a t c h u p is t h a t w ill h e l p h im s o m e t h i n g p r e p a r e fo r th e t v p e s ot n , e i w i h e w ill s o m e d a v fa c e in t h e NIT h e " I t ' s b e e n g r e a t , s a i d " A n y t i m e v o u c a n g e t a ' ' f o o t 4- in c h 2 0 8 - p o u n d g u y w i t h -.peed w h o is a n e x c e p t i o n a l a t h l e t - ■ it a l w a y s w ill m a k e y o u b e tf e t At th e n e x t le v e l, y o u ' r e g o n n a i av e to c o v e r th o s e 6 -f o o t 4 -iiu h g:i v s w h o c a n r u n . " B r o w n th e a g r e e - m a t c h u p w ill c e r t a i n ! ' m • k • b o t h p l a y e r s better. t h a t " R o y W il li a m s h a s bet i ' i in g g r e a t b a tt le s w i t h Q u e n t i n J a m m e r , " B r o w n s a id n o t g o i n g to pla\ age,ir.st b o d y a n y b e t t e r t h a n tlv>M e r s w h e n t h e y p l a y in t h e fa I I h v i ..n\ , u End Arounds T h e a n n u a l o r a n g e - w i u : is s c h e d u l e d s p r i n g g a m e S a t u r d a y , M a r c h 31 at 3 p.n F o l l o w i n g th e s c r i m m a g e m u s w ill h a v e a c h a n c e to g e t th e n f a v o r i t e L o n g h o r n p l a c e r ' s a u t o g r a p h . ... le x a s h a s a s c r i m m a g i s c h e d u l e d R o ) a l - M e m o r i a l S t a d i u m b u t it m i g h t g e t m o v e d I u e s d a x b e c a u s e th e w e a t h e r i- fore» .is: e d t o t u r n so u r. fo r W e d n e s d a \ to Compiled by Bill Bredesen, Daily Texan Staff World Cup Qualifiers 3/27 3/28 6pm «pm 2pm 4:30pm 7 :3 0 p m USA vs. H o n d u r a s Colombia vs. Bolivia Peru vs. Chile Ecuador vs. Brazil Uruguay vs. Paraguay is pm C o sta Rica vs.T rin id ad N Tobago COME EARLY!! 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Dutty 478-2900, 2928 M an o r Rd SZ9-10 S O L M O M evolution9.0 ski boots b a reiy used $ 18 0 sz9 10 Techmca TS7 skiboots $60. 474 73 ! 5 or compton@mail utexos edu SZ9 .5 K2 and sz IO Vans snow boardboots $50 eacf ! 5 5 cr Voi ftei so-omon bind ant KarvingSk > ngs nsone $ 2 5 0 474 " 315 or compton@ mai’ utexos edu I 2 C M R O S S IG N O L Snow board Rossignol binding $12 0 165cn G eneric True Snowboard blax uind- ng Brand new $200 4 74 7315 or compton@mail utexas edu BED K IN G , extra thick PILLO W TO P madress box, complete set unused s’ m plastic Cos' $1400, sact • e $395 C an deliver 647 4881 BED Q U E E N Black wrought • 1 A N O P Y orthopedir mattress 'box Still in p ackage Cost $1 195, sacri­ fice $350 C a n del ver 64 ’ 487 4 BED Q U E E N EXTRA THICK PIL LO W T O P , mattress & box, all new, Sac still ■! wrapper Cost $ 1 1 0 0 rifice $295 C an de iver 647 4 9 9 8 STA N D A R D H A N D B O O K o ‘ •” G tecturai En g in e e in g by M c G r aw H ¡i new include rteracfive calculations a¡sk $70, yiughanw ong@ yahoo corr iA R G E B E D R O O M suit, solid oak 3 dressers king s.ze bed pillowtop mattress footbocrc H ead b oard nghts tand $4500/worth 13 000 310-0839 S O U T H W E S T AIRLIN ES RT ticket $. *5 we a so p ay cash for Soutf west Airlines Rapid Rewara tickets Cali Chr 832-725-7555 M A RESS-SET Q U E E N : ze double sided pillow Still packaged 'W o rth $600 Selling $19 5 W ith ” ee :e- very/w arranty C all Tneresa at 442-8830 top í DN mattresses. $ 75 /ea • 34-6362 Cam pu s A re a and Al! Shuttle Routes w .vw t o w e r r e a l e s t a t e . c o m *6- “ i V - f 4 f V f + f v f v f y f y C O N E pus. V Col! t mg 7 DS FOR SALE* North cam- 951 campus, a !! shuttle routes, r free list or personal show- I 2258 MERCHANDISE 200 - Furniture- Household C A B IN E T STYLE < ter 442 462 4 Light woo a nter'amment cen- £ -ft $ 80 obo ¡yulow top M A ’ *i-'- - S-SE Q UF L N size double sided Sfil packaged W orth $60 0 Se - g $ 195 ' W it! free a> veg- warranty C all There sa at 4 42-8830 FURNITURE college G R E A T O ak $75 -*erta nment center W h ite -yicxer dtesser $10 0/o b o C all 4 4 9 5 5 2 P r ces neg for wmst* asses* «ssss» sp 'n g , ■RENCH C O U N T R Y twm beds ma .anity tress/box table w /mirror/bench, Laura Ashley linens am p /d e co ra five pillows Excellent condition. 255-7089 Anytime. bedside F U T O N W / M A T R E S S F d a s : ,/ • ' •win bed G re a t for small apart ments. $10 0 negotiable 3 46 0902. LOVF S O F A chair $750/set. G o o d condition Call 828-4406. seat and L O N G H O R N A U T O S P E C IA L S PO LK I $50 0 ext 4 6 2 0 IM P O U N D S ! Hondas from tor >,stings 1 800 3 19-3323 tops 85 380FL M ercedes convertible ooth garaged excellent, tn|Oy 9 4 ,0 0 0 miles spring. $14 000 N e w battery/fuei pump 254 770-0908 cjood an 9 9 0 V W C abnolet Convertible I I 5 K , 5 spd Red w / black top $ 39 95 C all 801 4898 MERCHANDISE L O N G H O R N A U T O S P E C IA L S ' - 9 6 C H R Y S .E R Sebnng JX I convex tero- & ’ - e G o o a b eige c a ,-vas top Leaded, V6 a o- mc* : A C 8 0 1 4 89 8 $ i c 0 0 C c -other 93 M E R C E D E S 300E 1 ow ner Books & Recc-ds 148K. Cha-coc * Extra " c e ! $929.*- s e'e nter ; C a ll 801-4898 19^0 H O N D A scrambler 70cc s C ")'■ ■ v cond'tior N é w endure ‘ res Runs good legal and off Stree' Road style. $ 95 0 C h a 401-8822 1978 C H E V Y von Fndge. Runs a re a ’ 4 0 C 8 8 2 2 Plush nter‘Or $ 2 0 0 0 Char ° 7 H O N D A Civic 5-soeed 4-door S ilve r/ N a vy , cold an, -ew fires per feet cond * on $87 50 626-5131 V W 95 C ab rio 50k, convertible, auto, eather 2-dr., new tires, cold a • white Perfectly prishne cond.- tion 626-4660 $9975 obo Records 1996 RED Honda Preíude VTEC I9 0 H P 72k m ies Loaded ieather interior AC. C D $ i 5 8 20 More nfo prelude netf+ms com 512-423-8396 94 C H E V Y Cap rice Loaded, exct ent condition great c ty/hw y cor oowerfu jxurious w e " rr i nt<; lea 138K $3 9 9 5 476 3 43 8 dov eve- n ■ g Richard 1995 M ITSU B ISH I G T W h ite , g ray change' 62k miles fast Call for price 335-6224 3'jO0SL auto C D Beautifu & leather o5 B M W 73 5 i G re at condition Sunroof new brakes, working A C fully $29 50 O B O C c Steve 475-6721/451-561 ' loaded RENTAL 360 - Furn. Apts. N IC ELY FU R N IS H ED W e s t Campus Apt 1 1 $ 59 0 3 closets patic poor Apartment Finders 322-9556. ALL BILLS PAID! G r a n a d a III R ed R iv e r a t 4 0 th Effys- 1 a n d 2 b e d r o o m w ith b a lc o n y s shuttle By appf 453 8652 Century Plaza 4 2 10 R e d R iv e r n o w le a s in g e ffy 's 1-2-3 b d rm op ts Shuttle H a n c o c k S h o p p in g , Pool 452-4366. PARK PLAZA 91 5 E 41s* Across from Hancock Shopp r g Shuttle, pool Effy 1 ana 2 bedroom great furniture every convenience 452 6518 PLAZA CO URT 9 23 E 41ST ST PARK A V E N U E PLACE E F F IC IE N C Y A P A R T M EN T S N o w Pre-leasing Summer and hy Summer specials $ 1200 June 1 August 20 Effec Fall-effec $49.5 a month lease. ABP, Free cable furnished H jrry! W o n 't iastl Call 478-2520 SUB-LEASES N EED ED fot 2/2 m M e irose Apts for summer In : vidual co r'racts $461 /mo, f ee cab le free ethernet. furnished Call 680-5407 C A S A DE -ALADO APARTM EN TS 261 0 Salado St Bed Deal in W est c am pus Preleas ug Fa Spi ng ‘ Family owned I Bedrocm units/Fally furnished ‘ Swimming j x> Caundry room O w n e r pays for basic cable, gas O n y few units available Call Brian N ovy 327-7613 M ESQ U IT E TREE A PA RT M EN TS " Pre-leasing I-bedrooms W e st Cam pus L jlly furnished, Frost-free u-frigerator Self-c¡eaning oven. Dishwasher Ceilm g fans, Study desk TV Cable, Jacuzzi, Alarm system & taundry room S . mmer d scount for I 2 month eas-ncj 24 1 0 .ungview Dr On-, a few units availab le C all Brian N o v y at 3 2 7 - 7 6 1 3 Apartment for Sublet Great location - walking distance to campos Guadalupe and 29th • i BR/i BA • Washer/Dryer • Dishwasher • Nice living room area • Balcony • Great kitchen - fridge and microwave Price negotiable Call Lisa: 472-8822 WALK TO C AM PUS Avalon Apartments 32nd at IH35 2x2 $745 W aik to Engineering Law, LBJ school and all East Cam pus W a lk in closets, ceiling fans, or site laundry, manager on site 459-9898 O pen 7 days and evenmgs. 370 - Unf. Apts. W E S T C A M P U S Pre-leasmg 2814 Nueces 1 I s W / D fireplace dish­ washer. micro, covered parkinq $700 3 4 " 8 3 9 7 S P A C IO U S 3/2, C A C H high speed internet free c a b le / W D com Qui- Law et, serious smokeless/petless school/LBJ 1/2 block $30 00 472-2097. ~ ~n o w "p r e -l e a s i n g ’~ Dos Rios 2818 Nueces A G re at Efficiency! Stackable W / D dishwasher, microwave, and awesom e built ms1 Best of all, you c o r walk to cam pus1 418-8470. BILLS PAID & W A L K TO ALL S C H O O L ! Efficiencies 1-1's 2-2 , Starting at $495 Apartment Find ers 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 T O W N H O M E C O N D O S ' Elegant 2 story gates washer/drye' west cam pus Apart ment Finders 322 9 55 6 pool units ~ W EST C AM PU S/ UT Shuttle 2204 San Gabriel pre-leasing for Fall, 1-1, $700, spacious, great floor plan and luxury amenities! 476-01 1 1 FASTEST shuttle W A S H E R / D R Y E R route I ! $60 0 2-2 $905, cool, gates covered parking Apartment Finders 322-9556 Q U IET C O M M U N IT Y i O n bus-line 9-ft ceilings alarm, micro, pool, hot *jb I 1 $ 5 71 2-2 $84 0 apartment finders 322 955 6 OÑ-UNF A PART M EN T Sea-ch form best and most complete service All areas covered. Apartment Finders w w w ausapt.com BEST DEAL on Campus! W a lk to school, washer/dryer covered park ng access gates. 2-2 c iy $1 225! Apartment Finders 322-9556 * S U M M E R P R E L E A S IN G * W e s t A North Cam pus 1. I s storting $575 2/ I . starting $825 2, 2 - starting $ 90 0 UT shuttle routes! C overed parking W / D 's etc Matt 474-4800 W A L K TO school N o w preleasmg for summer and fall O n e bedroom and efficiencies Fountain Terrace Apartments 6 10 W 30th Street 5 12 477-8858 LARGE W E S T campus 2 / 2 I block 'rom UT W / D, covered parking June $ 14 00 Call Matt 474-4800 N O W PRE L E A S IN G For F a ll!" Campus A rea apartments, condos and houses Call Sam 4 7 4 4800 LIVE IN Luxury a w a y from the hustle and bustle of campus! housing, UT shuttle hot tubs study rooms, and lot more 474-4800 Affordable gym, Sam uper Longhorn W a n t A d s Orde r Form m msnat vmm «asst ssssss ssssss ***** Order by Mail, FAX or Phone p c Box D Au tin, Texas 78713 FAX: 471-6741 Classified Phone #: 471-5244 _________ E-mail: classads@www.utexas.edu 2 0 words 5 d a y s $8 S° Additional Words...$0.25 ea. 13 1 Q 25 L 14 2 0 26 15 2 1 27 Off* limited to private party (non-commercial) M EH i tANDISE ads only Individual items ottered for sale may not exceed $1 000 and a pnce must appear m the body of the ad copy If items are not soid charge Advertiser must call before 11 a m on the day of the fifth insertion No copy change (other than reduction in price) is allowed C I T Y N A M E . ive additional insertions will be run at no A D D R E S S , 1 0 16 2 2 28 11 17 23 29 1 2 18 24 30 .PHONE. 440 - Room m ates R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to share 3 / 2 home in Hyde Park O n ly Kool Kats need ap p ly C all 4 7 8 1 888 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D 4-2 house $750/ mo plus utilities in Roundrock 512-733 8928 B REA K ER KR A M ER area Room fc f mature nonsmoking w om an ABP $ 4 0 0 /mo 837-4774 lease to FEM ALE R O O M M A T E needed take over for 2001-2002 school year at Jefferson Commons new 4bed /4b ath $435 (month +1 /4utilities C all Jess, 9 1 9 329 7 brand FEM ALE R O O M M A T E needed to sublease o 4bed/4bath apartmen' $457/m onth +1/4 utilities. C all jes sie 919-3297 490 - W anted to Rent-Lease STU D EN T U W - M A D IS O N seeks summer sub-lease Parking a plus C all 608-286-5313 IM N O S @ y a h o o com 500 > Misc. G a b e to FEMALE R O O M M A T E w anted .hare 4 bedroom house Private bedroom Close to campus April $566/month C a ll 806- August. 373 2215 or em ail nisty@ tcac net TOR LEASE; Central 1250 sq ft loft apartment and 1550 sq. ft. 4 2 house. 585-023 1 Residential/commeric lal ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 1 0 - Entertainment- Tickets MEET STUDENTS from over 25 Texas Colleges FIND OUT W H ERE THE PARTY ISMl lexasCollegeS nqles com SIGMA CHI FIGHT NIGHT F r i d a y M a r c h 3 0 th . Doors open at 7pm C a l l 4 7 4 - 0 3 7 3 o r 4 7 4 - 9 3 9 2 for tick ets Featuring Young MC. AROUND CAMPUS LISTINGS ISRAEU D A N C IN G B E G IN N E R S to ad vanced welcom e 8 30-9 30pm m the Union Lonestar room Comi and bring friends1 Call S a ra h at 4 58 6321! ema shw80@hotm ail com with questions o - STULTL N T S FO R a Free Tibet meets in M ezes every Tuesday evening 208 from 8 O0-9 1 5 For further n formation contact Nicole at 499 8 83 0 I A G (TEXAS Advertising Group) meetings every other Tuesday Start ing ja n 23 @ 7pm C M A Auditor- um Free pizza IN c7 proudly ZETA PHI BETA S O R O R lÍY , Om icron Theto Chapter presents f ner W om anhoo d W ee k Tonight they will host Teen Summit Local high school students are invit- < d tc discuss college life with UT stu­ dents Everyone is welcome. Sinclair Suite, Texas Union, 7 0 0 p m. Con­ tar.' Shan ,o at 472-4082 or at sho­ rn so8@hotmail.com for more mfor motion. U N D ER G R A D U A T E ART HIS!OR~Y S O C IET Y presents a screen mg anc' 'ecture by N e w York City perform ance artist D avid Leslie The lecture is free to the public and will be held in ART 1 102 at 6 00 p m. Food and beverages will be served 8 .0 0 p.m THE DAILY TEX A N ,s hosting a fo' rum on Race and Diversity at UT W ed n e sd ay, M arch 28 from 6 00 p.m. in UTC 2 1 12A The forum arms to encourage discus sion about racial issues on campus and will feature a diverse panel of UT students w ho will share then ideas and experiences All member- of the UT community are nvited to attend and participate in the discus sion A five-day, m-depth series or. race will ap p ear in The D aily Texan from April 2 to April 6 PA L ES T IN IA N R EF U G EE W E E K w.i! feature information concerning refu­ gee camps at various campus loca tions and will include modern and historic camps, a photo exhibit, and an For Israeli military enclosure more information call 374-071 2. Banquet A F R IC A N STU D EN T S A S S O C IA T IO N will host M a n y Nations, O n e Saturday W o rld on M arch 3 1, at 7 :0 0 p m in the Burnt O ran g e Room Pre-sale tickets arc $12 0 0 For more information con tact O m onele O hen at 445-0993 STU D EN T S A S S O C IA "Books for Africa A F R IC A N TIO N hosts a drive #ns week The collection port is ot the Center for African Am erican Studies in Jester Center and at the Jester Toble. For more information contact O m onele O hen at 445 099 3. N O W PRELEASING In W es Campe Dei ondos $16 50 Croix . O rangetree 2 2 Som erset, St Thomas 2 2 W e d g e w c 12 2 $18 00 $1400 $1651 $ 1 500 Avo n Ar g ■ Call Matt 474-4800 U N IQ U F 1 I W I ’ H STUDYi Q uiet community on RR shuttle storting at $650 322- 9556. Apartr ■ nt rs ; French CUTE W E S T Cam pus doors patios • -: r cable $ 6 2 0 Apartment Finder- 322-9556 I i W H A T A G R E .- ' D EAD 2 ’ $ 8 9 r sma" Nor*h Cam pus c- mmunity. Apartment Finders 322 9 5 ' ( RIVERSIDE, FAR W e s ! Enf*e!d/Tarry town and beyor d Apartments con­ dos town homes a v ai uble C ; 'o- day! Sam 474 480 0 LOOKING FOR APARTMEN1 CLOSE TO UT AND D O W N T O W N ? C ome to Sandstone Apartments 240 8 M ano r Road 1 & 2 Bd available W e have dishwashe-s disposals md large w a lk -n closets. Rent starting at $ 55 0 Deposit $ 2 0 0 C all 4 7 8 - 0 9 5 5 for info. DETER IN TRUD ERS A m azing door stopper' alorm. G r e a t fot dorn apt motel rooms C all now. 1 800 70 7 1 8 4 1 H YD E PA RK Large EFFICIENCIES Summer O n * Spec ia $530 Year Lease $565 Furnished Avc: ab e (+$20 mo) FREE C A B lE D W / D ;>/Bo ■ .helve- Poo B6Q, Patio Laundry/Storoge/Res Mqr O n IF' Shuttle 108 PLACE A PA RT M EN TS 1 Oh W 45 St 452 1419 335 221 1, 453 2771 W A LK TO i A M PU S ! G re a t ] bed- roo'- $585. N eat efficienc.es $485 472-6979 G O IN G FAST! “ D O N 'T BE LEFT OUT' MARQUIS MANAGEMENT IS NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER/FALL 2001 NORTH CAMPUS .Tlxt M re et C ondos Castle \rmx \pts. < h iin n n Sweep \pis. U t i\ \parlnienlx P a r k Place Apts. WEST CAMPUS \am i > I ' . ido.s Nueces O aks ( ondos Cam ino Real The Salado \pix I lie C a rre lls Seton Sq u are 1 nisersity Q u arte rs 1 ni\ersil\ C ard e n s S F A Apartment Finders Service Cam pus Area $495 Eff ALL B IL L S 1-1 Furnished $590 1-1 Cute Hyde Park $595 1-1 Washer/Dryer $675 2-1 West Campus $749 $1000 2-1 Red River 2-1 Hyde Park $1085 2-2 Washer/Dryer $1225 2-2 All Bills Paid $1250 Shuttle Eff Free Cable $510 1-1 Close in & Quiet $575 2-1 Access Gates $610 $735 2-2 Cable Paid 2-2 W/D Connects $840 2-2 Washer Dryer $916 2 1 0 9 Rio Grande 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 h t t p : / / w w w . a u s a p U ' o n i A W E S O M F HYD E Park Neighbor hood! Gates, pool, studyrooms ele- -ators 2 s and 2 2s Apartment Findem 322-9556 GREAT I I S and 2 2s Located on IF nuttle, 1-1 s starting at $695. 2-1 s starting at $895 Apartment Finders Service 322 955 6 UT SHUTTLE hardtTe, ucce free cable $595 2 . 322 9 55 6 ' ike & bike, Ap art!-,t : s gates, ute 1 I I inders BEST B A R G A IN W est Campus! W asher/D ryer. Pat.o, Covered Park ng I 1 $675 Apartment finders 322-9556 A W H O L E flc Campus 1/1 4 7 4 4 8 0 0 yourselfi $700 W Sam Aug U N IQ U E EFF Screened porch $625 Sam 474 4 8 0 0 W Campds neat shuttle. Aug NICE 2 /2 'S IN HISTO RIC TRAVIS H EIG H TS 2 / 2 $ 9 0 0 Security deposit on 2/2- $450 Q uiet pool Ic ndry, on-site management. G a s water, w.istewate & trash, a ck-up paid N o dogs please. 3 minutes from downtown Macb d Apoitments - 4 6 2 Ó 0 3 2 N O W PRE LE A S IN G • >r summer an : fall serr - iters W e have sparkling pools and we re ix a t e d an UT sf jt tlr- oute 452 3202 I / 1 W IT H large loft Very close to Summer lease campus. $ ’ 75/ m< May-Aug. Anne 322 00 6 4 • ■ $62 5 1 BDRM A ' sublease m nedioteiy campus. 2799 sot ig to Close •. C all Matt or N eil 474 SU M M ER SUBLEASE Enf.el . ” : C : 2 I / 2 bath townhome, new carpet, 2 story, covered parkinq. C a ! 512 472-08! 2 < C A LL 472-3816 > ■ www.marquismgmt.com lmarquisaus@mindspring.com | aik. jlk + i L I U C A S IT A \ ► *1-1 from $575 ^ £ • 2-1 from $825 4 North Campus - 2 blocks to UI> \ Free Color TV With This Ad i i ► 476-1976 ► 970-0754 i -T T T > W E S T U I E W CONDOMINIUMS N o w PR E -L EA SIN G 2804 Rio Grande Luxury 1&2 B/fR C ondos w / W & D Private Parking Swimming Pool Call Today 474-4484 N O W LE A S IN G apartments and condos for professionals Luxury amenities garage parking, W / D 's Call pool/spa nowi Sam 474 4800. rr; reation centers orREAF DEALi S hrjftir FREE cable access gates, ceiling fans Efficien­ cies $51 0 1-1 $575 2-1 $695. Apartment Finders 322-9556 N IC EST A PA RT M EN T in W e s t Cam pus! W a lk to UT pool, sundeck gates, balconies, elevators, r,i cros. Huge I I s $74 5 390. Apartment Finders 322 9556. M ove S U M M E R SU B LEA SE 2 l ! m M a y until July 31st "flexible Pool/hot-tub, W / D W e s t Campus, $1275/m o 4 5 7 1 7 9 9 S P A C IO U S & Convenient North Campus community! IF shuttle and gas paid 1 1 $675 2-2 $10 00 Apartment Finders 322-9556 RED RIVER B A R G A IN ! 2-1 $850, gas paid, great location Apartmen* Finders 322 955 6 C O O L W E S T Campus P o d 1 Efficien ' replace, poo! cy with LOFT and $610. Apartment Funders 322- 9556 IN H Y D F PARK' T O W N H O M E S ] and 2 bedrooms G reat location avo Lible. Apartment Finders 322- 9556 ¡ 370 - Unf. Apts. I — ---------------------- 370 - Unf. Apts. EFF. & 1 -2-3-4 BDRM APARTMENTS S t a r t i n g a t $ 5 1 0 Now Preleasing! • Gated Community • Student Oriented • On UT Shuttle Route • Microwaves • Water & Sand Volleyball • Lofts W/Fans • 5 Min. to Downtown • Excellent Maintenance • Spacious • Basketball 4 4 4 - 7 5 3 6 renovated 1-1. LARGE N E W L Y refrigerator, d/w , disposal. Range N e a r busline. N e a t courtyard N on smoker N o oets From $450 451 1999 2/2 S AVAILABLE in north campus area C all Eunished./Unfumished 474 1902 W E S T C A M P 1 S Apartment summer sub-lease 2/2, 2 4 people walking distance tc cam pus W / D water paid. O n shuttle route C all 472- 622 2 W E S 'B D mer 494-0233 ( A M P U S sub-lease for sum C all I B A $ 6 5 0 / M O W E ST 5 / 2 5 / 0 1 W / D $875 / mo 2 8 1 4 N ueces 347-8397. C A M P U S availab le Large 1 I walk -n closte fi replace covered parking Coventry Place Apt EFFICIENCIES - 1/1 Available M ay 4 blocks to UT. C ourtyard , hard w oo d floors starting at $475 Call 480-0976. M-TH 6 pm - 7 pm LARGE 1-1 Enfield Road H W F free cable, t overed parking UT shuttle. $60 0/m o A vai able 4 / 1- 8 8 1 0 576 ! BA Tu b 1 EASE I B - Hyde Park quiet c¡ se to ¡I > H< huge pat.o, dishwasher A C . Optic r to stay for the Fall C all 451 9 00 8 June-August. 390 - Unf« Duplexes GREAT 3/1.5 Located .< H\ ie Park A great p lace to (v e with hardwood floors iQCuzz bath W D connections spacious kitchen large bedrooms and a beaut.' heck A vailab le n August $ 1 8 0 0 a month C .it P a te 480 8522 o r 587-4891 (c e ll) IU X U R IO U S N E W 3/3 1/2 7 Du plex at W M Cannor and Mon, ‘ aca Avc: ab le 4/1 $1 4 8 0 5 ' 2 658- 951 0 400 - Condos- Townhom es M E T R O RENTAL 400 - Condos- Tow nhom es 2/2 availab le W A T E R F O R D Au- gust-to-August Very spacious Up t , 4 can share $1,52 5 00 C all Van 517-9690 w w w waterfordcondos.com W E S ' A N D North campus condos corner availab le Hyde pQfL Tom G re e r w w w rentut- condos. hom estead. com . Croix N ueces 420 - Unf. Houses *SUM M ER PRELEASE* 7 0 6 W 25th hardwds 4 / 2 $ 26 00 46 i I D eoew hardwds 4 / 2 $ I 800 3701 W erner hardwds 2/1 $1 0 0 0 471 1 C asw eil carpet 2/1 $80 0 6 0 0 East 46th 4 / 2 hdwds $ 2 4 0 0 ‘ FALL PRELEASE* 201 2 Enfield 2/2 - , e $ 1 200 E y e s o f T e x a s 477-1 163 AVAILABLE N O W ! 1 to 2 bedrooms For 24 hours informa $57 6 ,$ 8 2 5 tion email 477-LIVE home.austin.rr cc>m/the/477live call or IX AUSTIN-COMPI.ETELY private goted, Hill Counry Ponderosa on 2 5 nc res d o se to downtown reminiscent of early TX homesteads. Artistically crafted in 2 0 0 0 using reeycledf/pr itive elements w tn best of today s building mater ials N atural limestone landscape formations, main house and guest house $ 1 ,1 5 0 ,0 0 0 C all Debbie it The Pinnacle Group 775 2694 ses 32 ¡0 H A M P T O N W A L K to campus from -hese delu-o 6/3 and 9/4 t ivailable for Fall Pre case. A, possible amenities Large rooms : off street parking, G $.L 6 00 0 0 / mo 4 7 6 1976 Ely Proper S. 4t:5 - Room s R( O M AVAILABI f in North Austin $ 75 month all bills included and 2 month deposit. Call 990-1455 f Rl E R O O M ,n exchange for Math Tutor Must ho-c car for Fall of 2001 346-7444 S U B LEA S E R O O M in Cpm ino Real A p a r '" e r ' O " 1. $442 50 mo. You get your own bedroom and bath- 'oom and it s W e s t Campus, so it s very convenient C all M ason 457 I I 27 R E A L T Y Pre-Lease for June/August R O O M AVAILABLE A S A P 4-2 house in Hyde Park Rent $362/m o +1/4 b i s and $40 0/depc 293- 032 5 t Cc: 435 - Co-ops L ivin g d o e sn ’t g et b e tte r th a n th is! We have the coolest houses in west campus filled with some of the coolest people you'll ever meetl Our prices range from $459-582 per month and include food and bills. Our houses are 2-5 blocks from campus, o ffe r 24hr kitchens, and a variety of dietary options. Summer rates lowerl are Check out the housing co-ops at ICC. 510 W. 23rd St. 476-1957 www iccaustin com Centenniol Benchmark Croix Croix G a z e b o G a z e b o Nueces Place 3 1 st Condos O ld M am O ran g e Tree S alad o Place Seton Timber Ridge 3-2 $2395 2 2 $ 15 00 1-1 $800 2-2 $ 1 5 5 0 1-1 $625 1-1 V//loft $85 0 1-1 $650 2-2 $ 13 00 2-2 $ 16 00 22 $1850 1-1 $65 0 1 1 $925 $16 00 4-2 M any other complexes available! Houses and Duplexes, too! 479-1300 w w w . u t m e t r o . c o m L i W edgewood 4 La Casita t Pearl Si > Hyde Park Oaks Sunchase ? J Sabinal i W estplace 4 Winchester Lenox ^ K Croix i Q uadrangle J french Place i Centennial \ 3210 A Hampton i 3210 B 1 1 2-1 21 11 1-1 2-2 2-2 22 2-2 22 2 2 5 3 2 3-2 6-3 8-4 !► S5 7 5 \ S6 7 5 ► S8 2 5 ► ' S8 5 0 S8 5 0 S8 5 0 \ $1,295 \ S I 295 ► S I 295 ¿ S I , 495 S I 595 S I , 595 5 S I 695 >. $2,295 ^ ¿ S3 900 $5,200 See all our listings online ot www.elyproperties.com Best Service Best Selection 476-1976 W ES T P LA C E FRESH paint, new car pet hardwood floors' W / D cov ered poiH ng vaulted ceilings plus 2/2 $ 1 2 0 0 Avail N O W more June ci August. C all Matt 474 480 0 4701 RED Riveri N e a r H EB N e at Effk lency! Front Paqe Fall $55 0 480-8518 P E C A N W A L K I’ Spacious 1-1 Page 4 80 8518 350 6 S p e e d w a y Front Fall $65 0 N EA R IF Fields 601 N e lra y Cool 1- I June, Front Paqe 480 8518 $595 3206 K IN G Small 1-1 N ice June. Front Page 480-85 18 $595 G R E E N W O O D town/UT Hirise Bills Paid. M a y 8518 T O W E R S ' Down Big 1-1 $900 All st, Front Page 480- W IN D T R E E ! 106 East 30th 2-2, June move in $ 1200 N ice! Front Page 480-85 I 8 E F F IC IE N C IE S !!' U N IQ U E Saltillo' tile, fireplace, tropical pool $550 fro n tP a g e 480-8518 LEN O X , 2 / 2 , large corner unit, fire place, w /d , 2 covered parking Re cently updated Lots of windows W a lk to campus $ 1550 799 956 9 W A T ER F O R D 3/2 availab le June- to-May. unit $ 2 ,35 0.0 0 C all Van at 517-9690 ww w waterfordcondos com Huge story 2 SHUTTLE LUXURY! Fitness Center, alarms, washer/dryer, pool access ¡ates computer room 2 s, i 4 s available Apartment I nders 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 Ely Properties \ Now Pre-Leasing 440 - Room m ates R O O M M A T E N EED ED to sublease half of 2-2 for summer 26th & Red River C all 320-0560 R O O M M A T E N EED ED Apr,I to Au- gust W e s t Cam pus apt. covered parking (cheap) 51 7 4 8 0 9338 PERFECT FOR female grad student Ig rm/sh bath 8mrn/UT S.'S Q /m o plus utilities A vailab le 0 4 / 1 5 N a n cy 352-375-6996 800 485 9500ext 685 2445 PERFECT FO R male grad student Ig rm/sh bath 8min/UT $40 0/m o plus utilities A vailable 04/01 N a n c y 352-375-6996 800- 485 9500ext 685 244 5 Hyde Park I EM A IL R O O M M A T E Large 2/1 Share room. $295+ 1/3 utilities M o ve in summer or fall 454 9 1 2 0 M A Y 26 A U G U S T I 8 Responsible honest, conservative female room­ mate I / I apartment $285/m onth + l/2 b ills A C p aid no drugs D'Ann 467-7541 needed 5 3 0 - Travel- Transportation SPRING BREAK A.B.I. Park and Ride off-site airport parking Minutes to A B I A. on our shuttle buses Avoid the rush. Covered $9 95 per day Uncovered $5 95 per d ay O p en 24 hours 7 3 1 0 East Ben W h ite Blvd 732-0880 5 6 0 - Public Notice $3 ,0 0 0 PAID The Egg Donation Center of Dallas" Non-smokers 18 29 years old (2 1 4 )503-6 553 O o p / ! Your fid G ould Have Been lloro .STATE. .ZIP. P O I N T S O U T H Rental Office: 1910 Willowcreek T h e D a il y T e x a n Tuesday. March 27. 2001 Page 13 EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 810 - Office-Clerical RECEPTIONIST- G ra ve s D ougherty H e a r o r & M o o d y a ‘a rg e d o w n 'o w -1 a w firm x seeking tw o p a rt tim e reception-sts A p p lic a n ts must be a b le to type a m inim um o f 4 5 w p m have excellen t c o m m u n ica tio n skills a p ro fe ssio na l a p p e a ra n c e a n d a h istory o f d e p e n d a b ility in past positions H ours a re I 0 0 0 -2 0 0 o r 12 0 0 -4 0 0 , M F Interested a p p lic a n ts a re e n c o u ra g e d to fo rw a rd a cover letter a n d resume to P O Box 9 8 . Austm TX 7 8 7 6 7 or fa x to (5 1 2 ) 4 7 8 - 1 9 7 6 attn Teresa K en n ed y CURRENTLY RECRUITING for O rd e r Processors w h o a re profess ono d e p e n d a b le m otivated e ne rg etic a n d team players The id e a l c a n d id a te s w ill possess the fo llo w in g skills A b o v e a ve ra g e d a ta e n try skits atte ntio n to d e ta il, e x p e rie n ce w ith M S O ffic e a b ility to co m m u nicate (w r.tten a n d oral) fle x ib ility w ith w o rk schedules (these a re first shift positions) a n d p rocedures, a b ility to multi task a n d p rio ritiz e a n d basic math kn o w le d g e Prior custom er service e xpe rie n ce a n d / o r b a n k in g e xp e rie n ce a re p re fe rre d The starting p a y rate >s $ 1 1 p e r hour Interested? Fax or e m a il yo u r resume to us* Fax 5 1 2 7 2 8 -0 4 8 2 (Attn O P positio n ) Email to denisecannop@ spher on com 820 - Accounting* Bookkeeping NEAR UT $ 9 -1 0 P T $ 1 0 -1 4 F T B ookkeeping Trainee TTH am pref, 4 /4 - 0 8 5 3 P aralegal C o u n e r 4 7 4 T y p is t/C le ric a l M W F am 2 2 4 6 pref S m oke-free w ill tram 4 7 4 2 1 1 2 Law yersA idS ervice c o m /|o b s 840 - Sales FUN JOB* S im ply the h igh e st pay- ng most flex ble telem arke tin g p o s i­ tion in central Texas P eriod 1-888 3 4 4 9 5 7 4 A C C O U N T EXECUTIVE N e g o tia te business w ith a g e n cy buyers W rite p re p a re a n d d eliver sales presentations to adve rtise rs C ultivate new-to-station adve rtise rs throu g h co ld-callin g a nd a gg re ssive prospe cting Prior television sales expe rie n ce prefe rred G o o d com p ute r skills Send resume a nd co ver letter to Hum an Resources FOX - 7 /K V C 1 3 I I 9 E. 10th Street Austm. TX 7 8 7 0 1 Ref position title on e nve lo p N o pho ne calls please EEO E m ployer 850 - Retail W A N T E D PLANTNER DS a n d PLA N T N E R D W A N N A B E E S S m a ll in fa m o u s G a rd e n C e n te r in W e s t Lake H ills is lo o k in g for Part-tim e a n d Full-tim e h e lp e rs, to W a te r Plants a n d H e lp C us­ to m e rs o r to W a te r C u sto m e rs a n d H e lp Plants. W ill tra in M u s t h a v e a keen a p p re c ia tio n o f Plastic Pink F la m in g o s. Irre v ­ e re n t sense o f h u m o r re q u ire d C o m e by a n d fill o u t an a p p lic a h o n at 5 9 0 2 Bee C a ve R oad (@ hwy 3 6 0 ). C o n ta c t B runo @ 3 2 7 - 4 5 6 4 860 - Engineering- Technical D O W N T O W N N E T W O R K s e cu rity s o ftw a re c o m p a n y has p / t p o s itio n s a v a ila b le fo r s o ftw a re te stin g a n d s u p p o rt, fle x ib le s c h e d u le E x p e rie n c e w ith PC h a r d w a re , a ll W in d o w s O S , a n d n e tw o rk in g n e e d e d E -m ail resum es to re s u m e s @ a s h le y la u re n f.c o m A U S T IN DIGITAL Inc. d eve lo ps flig h t d a ta m a n ag em en t a n d a nalysis softw are tor a irlin e ffg h t safety departm ents W e have a full time C + + d e ve lo p e r positio n o pe n for a top tie r sp rin g 2 0 0 1 CS g ra d Please e m a il your resume to em p lo ym e n t@ a u sd ig com or fax it to 5 1 2 - 4 5 2 - 8 1 7 0 ENTRY LEVEL tech p osition Excel­ lent o p p o rtu n ity for students to le a m Flexible hours cu ttin g te ch n o lo g y to F m a il h r@ fire w ire d ire ct.co m resume 870 - Medical PHLEBOTOMIST Frien dly, o rg a n iz e d , m o tiva te d PHLEBOTOMIST n eeded fo r busy, fast p a ce d , p rim a ry ca re clin ic F lexible hours C o m p e titive s a la ry ASCP N C A A SM T H E W . or e liq ib le Please fax resume to (5 1 2 ) 3 2 0 - 0 7 0 2 m a il to 2 9 0 9 N IH -35, Austin, TX 7 8 7 2 2 , o r e m a il to LA B @ austinpcc.com EOE ■ m 880 - Professional PART TIME A D M IN TEC/' ■ • The Texus Dm Justice W a r- a - • a c c e p tin g a p o PoS+Or C ' A • O p e ra - J o b * w e eke n d shift tr Sun The so month*-' M ir - a re HS >r G t TX D e p o rt o f f or o b ta in ce - - months o f em p.; yment ,. TX a p p in cler c o l se< support ¡ -efer • ra tio r W n -ra n - Shoa* C ree k (5 1 2 ) 4 0 6 57c be receivr- . ■ $ 2 96 00 I >f O rm in o ! • Austin is s *. k the lit H E 'S This is t; S at & e • 'ents b y the > HETS II v f ■ p e rie n c e six ' in /o te o f higu* '8 7 5 7 >s must 890 - Clubs- Restauro rtfs KERBEY LA N o w h ir - q IE - i E @ o u r v a t D iffe re n t s ch ‘ i"s lo i * : e a Fax re s u m e tc a b le 4 4 7 - 8 3 4 9 o r c a ll o u r it .ff.e e rt 4 4 fo r m o re & t ) set i H irin g k -chen ■ : in persei 3 7 0 4 K erb- 1 2 6 0 / Resec 2 6 0 6 G la fl-, : A p p ly 7 5 7 FOE TEXAS LAN D A N D CATTLE N o w FJirin< fo r w aitstaf 1101 South M c p a c Please a p p ly in p e rso n . 3 3 0 -0 0 3 0 . PLUCKERS IS N O W HIRING A s sis ta i:- M i )■ ug< • $ 8 & u f + b o m D e liv e ry D riv e r , $ - i & u p Coolcs & D h w a s l -rs $ 7 / ’ & u p W a ite r s $ 1 0 h r • Phone persom i- $ 6 5 ( A p p ly a t 2 2 2 . R C a ll D a v id it 2 3 6 p ' & up Je ot 2. W A N T T O m a k e a n d h a v e fun? Lions M u n ic ip a l G o lf C i jr e a t ’ oney. e f a t h irin g for p a rt hi ts itio n c o u n te i i F le x ib le ho u r; ie S o m e g o lf p n v ii t for s tu d e n ts 1 C a ll Brut 4 7 8 -5 4 6 6 z re a f e a t a shier iu a d a tf Be t week i me b y 2 5 0 N TEXADELPHIA N O W h in n a Do positions! A p p i, lurlu pe JO Y D A NCERS t n d v g in to m o iio w i< I i fie- FT/PT TABC a • Joy o f A ustin IH - 5 B o u n d 21 8 - 8 0 1 . 900 - D o m e stic - H ousehold S IN G ! i M seek • g : . If resp on sib le ir ch ild re i uo! to c o re fo r » hom e 11 & 8 yr o ld a re ! >me a t 3 JOpm 2 1 / 2 yr o ld need to be p ic k e d up at 00p Tuesday Fr ¡dc: V a lid DL, nc M us' Please a ll V m scnoo O p m -5 :3 0 p m ■ ker $ 1 0 / h r e 3 2 6 3 '8 7 S E E K IN G RESPONSIBLE fun-lovm g n a n n y p us O sas'rin t for 4 ye ar o ld tv. v a lid DL, Ci ce rtifie d . C a n c m tra d e same w e e F ax resum e a- N o r ,m akers, w illiiio tc be w ith a fi end to references to 3 2 7 -1 9 4 0 or email g h u n k ¡ n @ p a d r ¡nc. M O T H E R S H f ER noo ns pe w ee! in g fun w ith 4 y portatic i refere 9 8 1 2 . » after cn m g a n d hav- c h ild re n Trans- <30 $ 10 / h r SUMM ER C H school-age c h ild re n are a , G re a t pc tra n sp o rta tio n ri a fte r 6pm ' +.1 R tw o 1 Rock yol, refe enees d, ? 5 Í >098 C h ild oeks reference ' FRET SUMMER / b o a r d for 15 h rs /w k a n d m in im a l chores em rut- JSl spot ble help astic w /d a r lin g n tio n o l hours p a id South A istin e a sy corn- mute Thomps 2 8 8 2 5 8 / h o l m an th o m pso n íñ . 4-yr o*d. BABYSITTtR N I ! 2 4 th in rr y hon r M -f Elissa 4 1 9-935 s' : ¡ M o y i- lo O / m c P /T BABYSITTI R o ld b oy a nd 2 v h r / w k , 2 0 + m 4 78 -5 03 » ‘ -:f d g er 4-yr 10 15 P a rb a ra SUMM ER MME P A N IO N nee b o y Spe' ci you C a r, reference si b le 4 7 3 8 8 6 . rS IT F E R /C O M - 12 / y r / o l d or poc e d liv e in pos 880 - Professional 880 - Prof/ / s i a l TEXAS Ivou CAN www. I -800-GO-GUARD.com EMPLOYMENT ■ T ' . I J I . H ' I J M 790 - Part time APARTM EN T M A N A G E M E N T OP PORTUNITY F /T o rP /T intern M g m - M a rke tin g e a r UT Amb> tious se-* starter M Ui- ‘ask ■ e v d w /c o m p u te r sk.iis $ 1 0 /h r 3 2 6 - 9 4 4 2 GREAT JOB1 ^ b io g r a p h y & w o rk mg w ith a nim als Assistant fo r pho to ­ g ra p h ic h elp w ith p arrots $ 6 0 0 hr cash on b. |mom- mgs) summer 3 7 1 1 832 '.sute ce nt-a l A S T R O N O M IC A L TIPS) Fun atm os JuiCeJom t on Barton S prings phere Flexible Road Hours 4 1 8 1 8 0 0 (near Z iker Park) SALES P O S ITIO N S a v a ila b le 1 H ig h ly ■■ -> sel1 a t busy a- m o tiva te d pe washes G re a - 'o r cc ;g e students* W ill w o rk w /s c h o o l schedule! G re a t p a y com m ission base d 3 7 2 -9 6 0 9 3 5 0 -6 5 8 6 FU N JO B 1 S im p ly -tie highest p ay ing most fle xible telem arke t ng p o s ­ t-on m cent-a. Texas P eriod I 8 8 8 3 4 4 9 5 7 4 C A N Y O U sew? M a k e Props? Esth Part-time, er s Follies w ants y u* fle x ib le hours 3 2 0 - 0 1 9 8 f u n ! $ 8 / h r ASSOCIATE SALESPERSON N e ed ed Enthusiastic, energ etic M u st be 18 o r o ld e r, starting o ' $8 0 0 . A p ­ p ly Pipe W o rld , H ig h -u d M o 1 & N o rth c ro s i M a ll p ersor W H O W A S YOUR FAVORITE TEACHER? Whose will YOU be? 790 - Part time S W E A T , SPIT G R U N T SC R A T C H LIFT H E A V Y O BJECTS, W O R K O U T D O O R S S m all g a r d e n ce n te r needs o u tsid e h e lp fu ll tim e o r p a r t tim e W il l tra in . Irre v e re n t sense o f h u m o r a m ust A ls o m ust h a v e keen a p p re c ia tio n o f p la s tic p in k fla m in g o s . C o m e fill o u t a p p lic a tio n a t 5 9 0 2 Bee C a v e R oad C o n ta c t B ru n o @ 3 2 7 - 4 5 6 4 W A N T E D P LA N T N E R D S a n d PLA N T N E R D W A N N A B E E S S m a ll in fa m o u s G a rd e n C e n te r in W e s t Lake H ills is lo o k in g fo r Part-tim e a n d Full-tim e h e lp e rs to W a te r Plants a n d H e lp C u s­ tom e rs o r to W a te r C u sto m e rs a n d H e lp Plants W il l tra in . M u s t h a v e a keen a p p re c ia tio n o f Plastic Pink F la m in g o s , irre v ­ e re n t sense o f h u m o r re q u ire d C om e b y a n d fill o u t an a p p lic a tio n at 5 9 0 2 Bee C a v e Road (@ hwy 3 6 0 ) C o n ta c t B runo @ 3 2 7 -4 5 6 4 . P /T CLERICAL positio n a v a ila b ie fo r g ro w ng m e d ica i co m p a n y Fax re­ sume attn: Chr-s 5 I 2 4 5 4 9 5 2 1 O R G A N IZ A T IO N SKILLS w a n te d im ­ m e d iate ly Assist -n¡ured person at d -cumentmg events hom e p a y $ 8 / h r . C a ll 3 2 9 8 4 2 4 ^ linq S e cu re y o u r sum m er |o b n o w . Stepping Stone School. W o r k w ith c h ild re n . PT shifts F le x ib le s c h e d u lin g $ 8 - 1 0 / h r T u ition re im b u rse m e n t a v a ila b le Call Today! 459-0258. A T T E N T IO N COLLEGE STUDENTS U p to $ 3 0 / h r w / c o m m g r e a t sc h e d u le g r e a t hou rs A v g . $ 3 0 0 - 5 0 0 / w k C a ll 3 7 3 1 2 9 0 fo r in te rv ie w A p p o in tm e n t. C a s h p a id w e e k ly N o t te le p h o n e sales C OMPUTERS FOR KIDS NEEDS VOLUNTEERS to h elp test a n d repan d o n a te d com puters. Dutty W 4 80 - 0 8 7 7 M 2 9 4 1 ! 5 8 REALTOR NEEDS assistance w ith m a rke ting C o m p ute r -mils re q uired Flexible h o u rs Fax resume to 4 7 / 8 4 6 6 $ 8 /h < LIBRARY TECHS Excellent P 'T p ositions, 8 :0 0 to noon or 2-5 0 0 pm, M -f w a lk in g d-stance from cam pus Join the Legisla 'ive lib ra ry c -aping, p a s tin g , scanning, d ata-entry: c o p y in g HS g ra d /G E D w ith d a ta -e ntry e xp e rie n ce , d e ta il o rie n te a $ 8 1 0 5 0 / r r o plus bene fits State a p p lic a tio n re q uired C a ll M a ry C a m p , 5 1 2 4 6 3 591 I S C A N N IN G TECHS I x ce lle n t P /T p ositions, 8 0 0 to noon o r ! S 0 0 pm M F w a lk in g d ista n ce from ca m p us J,; n the le g is la tiv e lib r a r y c lip p in g , pa stin g scanning; ciuta-ei try; c o p y in g . HS g r a d /G e d w ith d ata -e ntry e xper unce, d e ta il-o rie n te d $ 8 1 0 5 0 mo, plus benefits State a p p l requ. C a ll M a ry C a m p , 5 1 2 4 6 3 5 9 1 I M A K E A DIFFERENCE' W o rk w ith le a d in g citize ns g rc u p to lea n the nuts a nd bolts o f grassroots o rg a n z ig Fun a nd diverse w o rk p la c e locate d n W e s t C a m p us Fle xib le schedule g re a t jo b for sum m er, possible mtern cre d it C a ll T o dd a t C le a n W a te r A ctio n 4 7 4 - 1 9 0 3 . L O O K IN G FOP p " r e ta n ’ clerk at M a rk e tp la c e a t the O a sis on Lake '-u v is W e e k e n d , a n d some eve nmgs S tarting p a y $ 8 . 2 5 / h r Col* A lla n o r V irg in ia 2 6 6 -2 1 2 6 T n d u s t r i ó u s p e r s o n - n eeded for once a w eek cle a n in g a nd otht-' lig h t ma ntenance items on a 4 I h b o a t at Lake Travis M ust be a b le to lift 5 0 lbs F a m ilia rity with boats a plus but w ill tra m the i g h t a p p lic a n t A p p ro x 3-4 h rs /w k a t $ 6 0 , w k c o n ta ct W a y n e C la rk 0 * 5 1 2 -3 4 6 -1 8 2 9 o r w c la rk @ c la rk in s o n .c o m PIZZA CLASSICS n o w h irin g d e liv­ ery d riv e r, a n d cooks Paid d a ily $ 1 0 $ 1 5 hr C a ll 3 2 0 -8 0 8 0 after 4 pm Runner fo r busy p ro p e rty m a n a g e m e n t o ffic e . R eliab le tra ns., p ro o f o f Ins & g o o d d riv in g re c o rd . V a rio u s duties, fle x ib le hours M-F. Call 4 7 4 -5 0 4 3 o r a p p ly I 5 0 2 W 6 th St. NEEDED 17 students to be p a id to lose we g ht C a ll Stevens 9 1 2 -1 9 1 0 LO C AL W H O LE S A LE ~ M O R T G A G E C O M P A N Y look-ng fo r p / t c le rica l help. Flexible schedule $ 9 / h r O p p o rtu n ity fo r f / t summer e m p loym en t a n d / o r p erm an e nt p o sitio n a fte r g ra d u a tio n A p p lic a n t must kn o w M -c-o so ft Excel Fax re sum e to 3 4 5 1 9 1 4 A ttn . Pam la w o ffic e HIE CLERK-RUNNFR for smG dow-E tow n $ 7 . 5 0 / h r a nd m ile a g e --im bursem enr. 4 7 7 -1 2 1 6 Fax num ber 47-1 0 5 2 3 . PERSONAL PARI TIME ass stam n eeded for busy executive a p p ro x . 2 0 / h r s / w k flex 1 rs M a k e appts run e rrands ught o ffice w o rk French speak-ng a plus W e stla ke lo catio n fa x interest letter o f 3 2 9 -0 2 0 6 At*-- f Thom pson resume a n d LF GISLATIVE CO RRESPON DEN T P /T I - m e d iate o p e n in g s a t Legista tive Tracking Serv W o rk in a nd a ro u n d State C a p ite l. C a ll Jason 3 2 0 1 5 2 5 h rfF g a lle ryw a tch com L O O K IN G FOR PARI TIME W O R K ? The N a v y Reserve W a n ts You*** G re a t B e nefits In va lu a b le L earning E xperience G re a t Frien ds W e Dare You To Take The C h a lle n g e 111 If you a re b etw e e 2 6 & 3 6 o r a V eteran o f any bra nch o f the U S A rm e d I -es c a ll |51 2) 4 5 8 - 4 0 5 8 790 - Part time 790 - Part time Cam p Takajo for Boys Naples, Maine Tripp Lake Camp for Girls, Poland, Maine. Picturesque lakefront location, exceptional facilities. Mid-June thru m id-A ugust. O ver 100 counselor positions in tennis, sw im m ing, land sports, w ater sports, tripping, ou td o o r s k i l l s , theater arts, line arts, m usic, nature study, secretarial 250-8252 or Pripp Lake at 800-997 4347. Submit application online at www.takajo.coni o r www n ipplahecamp.com. ( all Takajo at 800- 790 - Part time 790 - Part time Earn E xtra Cash $50 cash per week D o n a te Plasma Safe Clean Simple ANNOUNCEMENTS 560 - Public Notice SPECIFIC EGG DONOR $ 3 0 0 0 + must be b lo n d e , blu e o r g re e n eye d, A , B, o r A B b lo o d a n a mm 1 1 0 0 SAT o r 2 5 A C T C a ll 2 1 4 - 5 0 3 - 6 5 5 3 , or e m a il sp e cds@ yaho o com re fer to "s p e cia l d o n o r s e a rch " EDUCATIONAL 580 - Musical Instruction MUSIC F A C H If ■■ ? a s s is to -' n eeded fo r p riv a te p me studio A b ility to w o rk v. frans- p o rta tio ’ ciosses 4 4 2 5 ) 1 5 . 590 - Tutoring ■ c í'-t M u st have A fte r m GET S P A N IS H TU TO R IN G TODAY** O r IEARFnI SPANISH T O D A Y 11 Ask me huv. 600 - Instruction all B> •• my, 9 9 0 -2 2 9 4 Wanted FULL A t . ) p a -' tim e p ositions ovo no­ b le for aftercare tu to rin g services fa- p riva te m id d le school students C o n ­ ' M c G ra ’ i a ' P c a q o n Prep tact Das 4 5 9 5 0 4 0 c >r em ai! d g v e ^ p c ; ’ ;;< ■ p com SERVICES 760 - Misc. Services NEED 2 0 0 pounds? ¡ose 2 0 100°o n atu ra l FDA re g ula ted 1 00 % g u a ra n te e d d o cto r reco m m e nd e d 8 6 6 2 8 • 6 7 1 3 q to r H erb ! EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part time A I S . NEEDS substituís teachers M ust h ave co m p le te d 2 years o f col le ge courses W e ca n a cco m o d a te yo ur schedule 4 1 4 2 6 1 5 A U S T IN PARKS & R E C R E A TIO N DEPT needs people to work with kids for the S - nor Playground Program 3 0 4 0 h r s Í 7 . 0 0 - 8 5 0 Interview s w ill be held M a rc h 2 8 fro m 5 : 3 0 - 7 p m A ust - Parks & Recreation D o pt O ffic e 2 0 0 S L a m a r Pit ,t a ll 4 8 0 - 3 0 4 3 fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n W A N T A GREAT SUM M ER JOB? D e m a n d in g • g h ly -re w a rd in g summer c a m p bs a v a ila b le a t o ld est ca m : i n th< southwest C o m e teach sports a nd td o o r activities w h ile h elp 1 g kid s g ro w Top p ay. o o l G u a d a lu p e W o rk b ea utifu l River nerr- K e r'. le D o w n lo a d an a p p lic i:• >n a t .vww.vtstC' am ps com or g iv e us a c a ll at 1-800 -545 -3233 . NEAR UT $ 9 O f $ 1 0 - 1 4 FT le g a l seiv-ces firm , fle x ib le hours M W F am p-- f w -ll tra n PT/FT Info lines p a ra le g a l c o u rie r 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 ; typi s t/c ie r k al 4 7 4 2 1 1 2 b o o k k e e p ng tra te e 4 7 4 0 8 5 3 O r a p p ly o n lin e 1 la w y o rs A id S n r-, ,-e c o m /¡o b s PART TIME ' JTERt JL SUPPORT T E C H N IC IA N O n e o f A m e rica s la rg est internet tech- . p p o rt co m p an ie s is e x p a n d in g a n d needs q u a lifie d ans W e p ro v id e tra in in g tech- but k n o w le d g e f W in d o w s 9 5 / 9 8 a n d M a c O S a must, Internet E xplo-i - N e tsca p e Eudora a n d If you need m o d e - tra in u - w f o • 0t y o u 'll start a t $ 8 yo u le a m , m ake $6,- strong ¡ : y 10 - - ■ d ia g n o s -ig a n d solví ig cu stom er s internet co n n e ctw -y pro b le m s W o o in g hours are th d a , ■. eeke d a nd fle xil e o ig h l shifts a v a ila b le Y o u 'll be le a rn in g va lu a b le skills in a casual in d w o -k in g so m eplace e n v iro n r c t that ! i . nice on yo u r resume G o to this site o n lin e to a p p ly: < w w v / 'e ie n e tw o fk .c o m /a p p ly > P e o p le S h o u ld n t Be P a id To H a v e So M u c h Fun, But W e A re ! Fun w o n ng w e lem en tary a ge he - 1 ( t d ren • $ 1 0 / h r & up for supervisors • $ 8 / h r & up for g ro u p le aders. 6 7 lo c u t >ns in e ie m e n tcry schools H ours 2 :0 0 -6 0 0 / 6 3 0 p m •Veekends free 'E x t e n d A C ire For K id s * 5 5 N IH 3 5 4 '2 9 9 2 9 X 2 6 4 G Y M N A S T IC S C O A C H Entl - la stu- p e rso n a lity to t» g nr er a n d n term ed'ate COO. I gyr- -:cr ts I 8 - . , to ! 2 yrs. N o n -c c m p e tit . . > ro g ra m V arious shifts 4 ' 2 5 hrs week W e stla ke tes fro m ca m p u s Start a re a 10 - $ 8 / h H ng n o w a n d fo r summer C h a m p io n s A c a d e m y 4 2 6 - 0 9 9 7 lo o k,n g - r v r i ■ ¡dents for 3 PART-TIME $ $ $ high ly for help w ith my bus.ness. M u st be o u tg o in g & m o tiva te d $ 3 0 0 -$ I 5 0 0 , mo 453 10-15 4 8 7 4 - ./w e e k . C O U N TR Y H O M E LEARNING CENTER in N W A ustin lo o k in g for p a rt-tim e Pre-school tea chers a n d substitues. C a ll fo r in te rvie w . 3 3 1 - 1 4 4 1 CH ILD D EVELO PM EN T CENTER SEEKS: PT & FT te a c h e rs $ 7 8 / h r . PT/FT S ch e d u le s a v a ila b le The C h ild re n 's C e n te r o f A u s tin 7 9 5 - 8 3 0 0 o r fa x 7 9 5 -8 3 1 1. MARKETING TRAINEE N e a r UT $ 9 - 1 0 /h r, 1 0-25 h r /w k . C rea te & im ple m e nt m i -¡fo oted m ktm g plan 4 '4 -2 0 1 -1 : a w y e : , A 'd S e rvice.co m C H ILD D EVE LO P M E N T CENTER SEEKS: PT & FT te a c h e rs $ 7 - 8 / h r . P T/FT S c h e d u le s a v a ila b le . The C h ild re n 's C e n te r o f A u stin . 7 9 5 - 8 3 0 0 o r fa x 7 9 5 -8 3 1 1. Call Austin BioMed Lab 251-8855 630 - Computer 630 - Computer Services Services 630 - Computer Services COM PUTER PRO BLEM ? DON’T PANIC,CALL TRUE NURDS at 326-9997 We will com e to your home or office and provide computer repairs, upgrades and training. We also build new system s. EMPLOYMENT 800 - General Help W anted WAITSTAFF NEEDED fo r re tire m e n t co m m u n ity lo c a te d at M o p a c a n d Bee C aves Rd. FT/PT $ 7 5 0 / h r , no tips. D rug screen re q u ire d N o late eve nings. C a ll 3 2 8 - 3 7 7 5 ext. 2 0 2 . ATTE N TIO N W O R K fro m hom e Up to m te rn e t/m e a l 4 3 0 8 $ 2 5 / h r - $ 7 5 /h r o rd e r P /T F /T 1 8 8 8 5 2 2 - O W N A com puter? Put it to W o rk* Up to $ 2 8 / h r $ 7 8 / h r PT/FT 8 7 7 - 2 5 4 2 7 5 5 w w w M iH o m e B iz com $To7 h r g u a r a n t e e d ’ W o r k o n c a m p u s F /T o r P /T fo r as little as 5 - 1 0 h r s /w k o r as m a n y as 4 0 h r s /w k . Be y o u r o w n boss C re a te y o u r o w n sch e d u le L im ite d p o s itio n s . CALL 1 - 8 0 0 - 8 0 8 -7 4 4 2 X 8 0 LIFEGUARDS P O O L M A N A G E R S S W IM INSTRUCTORS LIFEGUARD INSTRUCTORS H ir in g n o w fo r sum m er p o s itio n s in the A u s tin a re a S ta rtin g p a y $ 8 / h t C e rtific a tio n classes a v a ila b le Call Central Texas Pool M anagem ent 8 3 3 -8 6 0 0 . W E A TT E N T IO N need H e lp 1 $ 5 0 0 $ 1 5 0 0 PT $ 2 0 0 0 $ 6 0 0 0 FI Free T ra in in g 6 1 0 -0 7 0 4 w w w b ig p o cke tca sh com (8 0 0 ) QUALITY IN N CENTRAL hu ng front desk a tte n d a n t & n ig h t a u d ito r PT/FT Fle xib le hours A p p ly in per son 9 0 9 E K oe n ig FUN JOB F le xib le schedules! N o w h irin g sprin g a n d summer seasonal staff for a re a parks Have fun w o rk in g a t the lake. Cash h a n d lin g , visito r assistance, FT/PT T ravis C o u n ty Parks, 4 7 3 - 9 4 3 7 A p p ly a t 2 0 9 W 9 th Str # 1 0 0 WWW co travis tx u s /tn r/p a rk s /g ra p h ic A D A M S TR A N S LATIO N SERVICES is lo o k in g FRENCH, Spanish, Portuguese, S w edish, G e rm a n, Danish Turkish Russian, Polish, Slovene Slovak, H e brew , H u n g a ria n , C zech, N o rw e g ia n Finnish, Japanese, Chinese, S im p lifie d & tra d itio n a l C hinese Italian, Dutch native speakers w ith g o o d u nd e rsta n d in g o f English for Linguistic com p ute r assisted review s Basic co m p ute r e xpe rie n ce re q uired VERY fle x ib le hours T ra in in g is P rovided For m ore in form atio n p lease e m a il us at m a rth a d avilla @ a da m stra n s com or you m a y fa x yo ur resume to 5 1 2 -8 2 1 -1 8 8 8 . W e look fo rw a rd to spea kin g w ith you. FLORAL DELIVERY sales and d e sig n ­ er p ositions a v a ila b le . Full a n d part tim e $ 8 $ 1 1 / h r A lff s Florist 6 0 0 C onqress 4 7 2 9 1 4 1 fle x ib le hours A T T E N T IO N COLLEGE STUDENTS. U p to $ 3 0 / h r w / c o m m , g re a t s ch e d u le , g r e a t hours. A v g $ 3 0 0 - 5 0 0 / w k C a ll 3 7 3 - 1 2 9 0 fo r in te rv le w A p p o in tm e n t C a s h p a id w e e k ly N o ! te le p h o n e sales. P o ll y E s C O A T-C H EC K /S EC U R ITY ter s for coat-cneck , n o w ■ - ng a na security Please a p p ly in person at 4 0 4 C o lo ra d o Street Tuesday thru Fn da y 1 2 p m -5 p m SUPERVISOR W A N T E D fo r d o o r to d o o r sales c rew M ust have forge c a r or va- S alary +cornm G re a t u ay F le xib le schedule Cash p a id weekly. C a ll 3 7 3 -1 2 9 0 S W E A T , SPIT. G R U N T S C R A T C H , LIFT H E A V Y O BJECTS, W O R K O U T D O O R S S m all g a r d e n ce n te r needs o u ts id e h e lp - full tim e o r p a r t tim e . W ill tra in Irre v e re n t sense o f h u m o r a must A ls o m ust h a v e keen a p ­ p re c ia tio n o f p la s tic p in k fla ­ m in g o s C o m e fill o u t a p p lic a tio n a t 5 9 0 2 Bee C a v e R oad C o n ta c t B ru n o @ 3 2 7 - 4 5 6 4 C ABIN ET S HO P w ill tra in Part Time a nd Full T me 8 3 6 -9 5 3 3 . A M B IT IO N URBANSPACE Realtors 4 5 7 8 8 8 4 RIVER PLACE C o u n try C lu b is lo o k ­ in g for c e rtifie d life g u a rd s swim in ­ structors. a n d c a m p counselors C a ll M ic h e e S nide ' a t 3 46-1 I 14 BUTT SEX??? Tired o f ta k in g it u p the ' y in g -y a n g ' fro m y o u r boss o r c o -w o rk e rs ? W e a r e se e kin g fun a n d frie n d ly p e o p le fo r g r o u n d flo o r sales a n d m a n a g e m e n t p o s itio n s . F le x ib le h o u rs . G re a t p a y W ill tra in . 5 1 2 - 3 7 1 - 7 3 1 5 . SU M M E R LE A G U E - Swim Coach needed. H igh s a la ry , short season. Sencl resum e to G ato rs G re a t H ills S w im Team 2 0 0 6 Leberm an Lane A ustin, TX 7 8 7 0 3 . For m o re in fo rm a tio n , c a ll John K o v a s 7 5 0 - 3 8 5 4 800 - General Help Wanted Summer Conference Advisors/Facilitators NEXTECH THE N A T IO N A L SUM M IT OF Y O U N G T E C H N O L O G Y LEADERS S eeking e ne rg etic staff fo r summer co n fe re nce in Austin A ll positions re q u ire d h igh e nergy, desire to w o rk clo sely w ith high school h on or students a n d sixteen day* com m itm ent in Austin; June 2 5 July 10, 2 00 1 A d v is o r positions: B achelors D egree o r co m b in a tio n o f e d u ca tio n a n d expe rie n ce, h ig h ly e ne rg etic a b ility to w o rk long hours in teract, m otiva te a nd supervise y o u n g p eo ple O p e ra tio n s po sitio ns C o lle g e Ju n io r/S e n io r, 21 years o f a ge , possess v a lid d rive rs license h ig h ly energetic a b ility to w o rk lo ng hours, interact w ith a n d supervise yo un g peo ple R em u neration includes $ 10 0 / D a y for T ra in in g June 2 5 - 2 9 2 00 1 $ 1 2 0 / D a y R o o m /B o a rd D u ra tio n o f C onfe re nce July 1 - 10 2 0 0 ) To A p p ly send R e su m e/C o ve r Letter to N e xTech 2 0 0 1 9 5 1 3 Blue C ree k Lane A ustin, TX 7 8 7 5 8 o r E m ail to je dw ards@ en visio n erm com Envision EMI is a nd Equal o p p o rtu n ity E m ployer L O O K IN G FOR " g o o d d e liv e ry drive rs, part-tim e a n d full-tim e p o sitio n s a v a ila b le M o n d a y though Frida y, no w e ekends some nights a v a ila b le Prefer if you have truck, m im van , o r station w a g o n type ve hicle $ 3 0 0 - $ 6 0 0 / w eek S tart n o w , 3 2 8 - 8 3 6 0 TE N N IS kids INSTRUCTORS Part-time positio n s a v a ila b le M a y 2 3 -ju ly 2 0 S a la ry base d on e xpe n ence C a ll Lonnie 4 8 0 -3 0 2 0 for SCIENCE STORE needs PT/FT inside sales, o ffice , sh ip p in g C a ll M on- Sat 9 a m -2 p m 8 3 7 -6 0 2 0 SPANISH TRANSLATOR w a nte d*! P arttim e S panish tra nslato r needed in Austin im m e d ia te ly Pay starts at $ 1 5 /h r C a ll Larry 4 6 1 9 0 1 8 M O N TE S S O R I S C H O O L m west teachers assistants Austin n e e d in g Flexible co m p etitive h o u rly /ra te c a ll 2 6 3 -9 3 4 2 hours, for SUMM ER LIFEGUARDS n eeded p riva te in p o o l n e ig h b o rh o o d N W /A rb o re tu m a re a C a ll Ellen at 5 0 2 -0 9 6 2 to a p p ly STUDENT WORK $ 1 2.00 base - Appt Flex. 1 0 - 4 0 /h r s , s a le s /s e rv ic e N o e x p nec. T ra in in g p ro v id e d s c h o la rs h ip s - C o n d itio n s a p p ly C a ll 1 0-6, 4 5 8 - 6 8 9 4 w o rkfo rstu d e n ts.co m FRIENDLY RECEPTIONIST w a nte d fo r W e s t C a m p us office , part-tim e $ 7 / h r C a ll 4 7 4 9 4 0 0 HILTO N A U S TIN AIRPORT N O W H IR IN G for fo llo w in g positions ban qu e t servers PBX o p e ra tors, w aitstaff, front desk b a n q u e t house person aga en ts n ig h t a u d itio r FT/PT positions a v a ila b le g re a t benefit p a cka ge s offe re d a p ly in person H um an resources d ep arm e nt M o r' Thurs 9 5 9 5 1 5 N e w A irp o rt 5 1 2 3 8 5 -6 7 6 7 lbs every w e ek LOSE 2 8 g u a ra n te e d natu ra l Dr ed #1 7 9 4 5 100% recom m end in E órope Call 5 1 2 -3 2 8 T E LE M A R K E TIN G P O S IT IO N S ' a v a ila b le n o w W o r k n e a r UT c a m p u s 2 0 h o u r s /w k S unday Thursday evenings $ 8 15 hr N o sel i ng ' volved a p p c utm ent setting o nly M ust have g o o d co m m u nicatio n skills Friendly atm osphere C a ll Tom a t PBC M a rk e tin g 8 6 7 - 6 7 6 7 " EARN $45 CASH! Radio Music Study. H is p a n ic a n d A fr ic a n A m e ric a n fe m a le s o n ly A g e s 1 8 2 8 . W e d n e s d a y , A p ril 4 th , 6 :3 0 -8 :0 0 p m . Tony 462-3460 or Toll free 866-830-5382 810 - Office-Clerical BUSY D O W N T O W N COMPUTER FIRM Seeks P /T A d m in is tra tiv e A ssista nt, fle x ib le schedule N e ed strong o rg a n iz a tio n a l skills a nd be com pute- lite ra te M ust have re lia b le tra n sp o rta tio n To a p p ly , send resum e to re su m e s@ a sh le yla u re n t.co m R unner an d clerical open in gs n ear CJT, $9-10 P.T., $ 1 0 -1 4 F.T. At Lawyer s A id Service, just 4 blocks from UT. we help attorneys filing legal documents. Enjoy flexible hours, sm oke-free office, neat casual dress. Start now. Clerical jo b info 474-2112 info for Paralegal courier trainee 474-2246 More info. S A pply online Law yers A idServ ice. com PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST fo r e v e n in g s a n d w e e k e n d s , a p p ro x , 21 hrs w e e k ly . E x p e rie n c e p re fe rre d b u t n o t re q u ire d M a il resum e to 2 3 0 1 Lake A ustin B lvd., 7 8 7 0 3 o r fax (5 1 2 ) 4 T 4 4 5 8 9 A ttn : T ra cy OFFICE ASSISTANT"” need to keep p a y r o ll/ta x o ffice e fficie n t Tasks in clu d e m arke ting , m a ilm g research co p yin g , faxing filin g , etc 2 0 h rs /w k -4 h rs /d o y Please fax 01 e m a il contact in fo rm a tio n o r resume to B re e d lo ve & A sso cia te d , 512 3 4 7 -9 3 3 1 (Fax), info@ bree d love -o nlin e com (email) FULL-TIME ADMINISTRATIVE CLERK needed fo r la rg e d o w n to w n Firm Position involves filin g , b o o k k e e p in g p h o to co p yin g , Faxing specia l pro jects, some o vertim e and other duties as needed C om puter skills help ful H ig h school d ip lo m a or G ED re q u ire d N o n smoker Pay var íes d e p e n d in g u pon relevant expe rie n ce. To a rra n g e an in terview send resume to A ttn S h e lle y M o rg a n P .O . B o x 1 1 4 8 , A u s tin , TX 7 8 7 6 7 o r Fax to 5 1 2 / 4 7 4 - 1 1 2 9 EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part time L A W FIRM SEEKS C L E R K /R U N N E R D o w n to w n la w firm seeks resp on sib le student interested in g a in in g e xp e rie n ce for a career in la w Student must be re lia b le h ig h ly m o tiv a te d o r g a n iz e d have tra n s p o rta tio n a n d possess c o m p u te r skills Student must be a b le to start im m ed ia tely and w o rk thro u g h o u t the summer (full o r p a rt-tim e ) and part-tim e d uring the fall a n d spnnq semesters If interested, please fox a resume to Jennifer a t ¡5 1 2) 4 7 6 - 7 6 4 4 PT FUN JOBS a t Lake Side co nvenience Spr-ng & Summer p osi­ store tions a v a ila b le $ 7 5 0 / h r Flexible scheduling T ra in in g p ro vid e d Re­ ta il e xp e rie n ce pref d 8 0 1 -6 0 0 7 790 - Part time OFFICE A C C O U N T A N T M a in ta in a nd re c c e accounts in clu d in g vouchers in terde pa rtm e n ta •- :• sfers a nd p a y ro ll H e lp resec • e p o rto n d track fin a n c ia l ir'o -m a tio n for a n n u a l b u d g e t A d c -' onal o ffice su p p o rt as assigned ncludm g re g istering s'udents Q U A L E xperience ■ a t t a in in g a n d re c o n c ilin g finan, a accounts B ach e lor s prefe rred Experience w ith UT DEFINE System preferred. E xcellent custome service a nd co m m u n ica tio n skills A b ility to w o rk h a p p ily as par» o f a team T e m p o ra ry (m ay bee o me perm anent) P a rttim e 2 5 /h rs wk fiex. hrs $ I 2 /n e g , d e p e n d in g on q u a lific a tio n s S 'crtm g date 4 / 16 / 0 1 S era resume to kle m o m e @ m a il utex a s .e d u file dert. for docu- N O W H IR IN G rnent m a n a g e m e n t co m p a n y Flexi­ ble hours fo r students P /T d aytim e Please c a ll 8 3 7 9 8 4 7 afte r 10am fo r an a p p o in tm e n t O R G A N IZ E D , ENE >E TIC peo ple o n e n te d & co m p uti Part- M an ag em en t. time Hours Pay n e g otia b le 7 9 6 -4 9 5 0 A p a rtm e n t fle x ib le -erate MALE A TT E N D A N T • eeded 1 hour m o rn in g. $ 1 4 /h r F lexible scnedu e no expe- nence n e e de d C a ll 4 7 8 4 2 8 4 evening hour 1 /2 800 - General Help Wanted LOSE W E IG H T , ea- t 2 7 students, a ll not -al anteed, #1 in Eur oe 7 9 4 5 Iafesafe guar- C a ll 3 2 8 - N e e d SUMMER LEADERSHIP INTERNSHIP A p p ly n o w for f ve weeks of le a d e rs h ip a n d challen g e Earn scholarship $ 7 5 0 plus o $40» o p p o rtu n ity Space ’united C o n ta c t M a jo r P a lla d in o a t (5 1 2 ) 4 7 1 - 5 9 1 0 / 5 9 1 9 E m ail:arotc@ uts.< c u te xa s.e d u SPRING IS ALMOST HERE! W e W ill Pay You To Lose W e ig h t! 3 $ / lb s + re fe rra l bonuses. 100% N u tritio n D o c to r R e com m end ed M a rk & Jillia n 3 0 6 -8 1 7 7 ~FREE~GOLF~ C ircle C Ranch g o lf c lu b is n o w h irin g c a rt a tte n d a n ts& be ve ra g e c a rt attendants Please apply in p e rs o n 7 4 0 1 H w y 4 5 . LIFEGUARDS NEEDED 3 7 6 6 5 1 0 C a ll 281 RE A TAIL/M A IL ORDER H o m e brew supp ly in N o rth Austin M ust have o w n tra n sp o rta tio n B rew ing k n o w l­ e d g e essential. Start rr n e dia tely C a ll Lynn 9 8 9 -9 7 2 7 CH ILD DEVELOPMENT CENTER SEEKS PT & FT teachers $ 7 8 / h r PT/FT S ch e d u le s a v a ila b le The C h ild re n s C e n te r o f A ustin 7 9 5 - 8 3 0 0 o r fa x 7 9 5 -8 3 1 1 W O R K FR O M home using a com put­ er PT/FT $ 1 . 0 0 0 - 5 , 0 0 0 /m o Full tra in in g , 9 5 2 3 fre e b o o kle t 8 0 0 -9 3 4 THE STORY OF TEXAS " THE BO B BULLOCK TEXAS STATE HISTORY M U S E U M 'G if t S hop Sales C lerks P /T & F/T 'P a r k in g G a ra g e C ashiers 'R e n ta ls & Spec ¡al f vents Assistant 'T h e a te r Hosts P /T & F/T 'T h e a te r Technicians 'V is ito rs Service Assistants 'H u m a n Resources P T /T em po ra ry (Reservations & Ticketing) M A N Y MORE Submit a stan d ard state o f Texas a p p lic a tio n to: State Preservation B oard 201 E 14th Street Ste 9 5 0 A ustin TX 7 8 7 0 1 ( 5 1 2 ) 4 6 3 5 4 9 5 w w w tspb state.tx us. FRATERNITIES»SO RO RITIES C LU B S »S T U D E N T G R O U P S Earn $ 1 ,0 0 0 -$ 2 .0 0 0 this semester w ith the easy C a m p usfu nd ra ise r.com three hour fu n d ra isin g even t N o sales re q u ire d Fund ra isin g dates a re fillin g quickly, so c a ll to d a y! C o n ta ct C a m p u stu n d ra ise r.co m at (8 8 8 ) 9 2 3 - 3 2 3 8 or visit w w v /.c a m u s fu n d ra iser.com G s w i / v T INSTRUCTORS Lifeguards N o w H irin g fo r S um m er $ 8 + /H r . Paid classes 459-0258. NEAR UT, $ 9 1 0 P.T., $ 1 0 - 1 4 F T. Legal services firm fle x ib le hours w ill tra m PT/FT Info lines p a ra le g a l c o u rie r 4 7 4 2 2 4 6 tv p is t/c le ric a l 4 7 4 -2 1 12 b o o k k e e p in g trainee 4 7 4 -0 8 5 3 O r a p p ly o n lin e l L a w y e rs A id S e r v ic e .c o m /jo b s FULL A N D p a rt time positio n s a va ila ble for a fte rca re tuto rin g services for p riva te m id d le school students Con tact D a vid M c G ra th a t P arag on Prep 4 5 9 -5 0 4 0 o r em a il d a ve @ p a ra g o n p re p com CHILD D E V E LO P M E N T - ' CENTER SEEKS: P I & FT te a c h e rs $ 7 8 / h r PT /FT S ch e d u le s a v a ila b le . The C h ild re n 's C e n te r o f A u stm . 7 9 5 - 8 3 0 0 o r fa x 7 9 5 -8 3 1 1. C A M P U S JO B *h i RESEARCH TELEPHONE PROJECT OFFice o f Survey R esea rch / C o lle g e o f C o m m unications Telephone m te rv ie w e rs /n o sa le s / tram n o w Looking fo r mostly B ilin g u a l in S pa n ish/E ng lish E vening & w eeke n d shifts 2 6 0 9 U nive rsity A ve U A 9 Room 2 1 0 6 4 7 1 -2 1 0 0 o r 4 7 1 4 0 8 4 V aler;e PAID INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE. S o u th w e st A u s tin P u blisher has o p e n in g fo r P R /¡o u r n a lis m /a d v in te rn s h ip s n o w th ro u g h the sum m er. U p to 2 0 h r s /w k a t $ 7 + / h r C a ll A m a n d a at 7 3 2 - 2 6 0 3 o r fa x to 7 3 2 - 2 6 6 6 9 8 / 9 5 / N T 4 In s ta llin g /M a in ta in in g UT AREA, F lexible S chedule. Desk­ side S u p p o rt R equiring Thorough K no w le d g e Trouble­ W in d o w s s h o o tin g /U p g ra d in g PC H a rd w a re /P e rip h e ra ls P ractical Ex­ p erien ce W ith M u ltip le O ffic e Soft w a re Products, D H C P /D N S , LAN TCP/IP Hubs C a t 5 W ir mg. Email Resume kearls@ habitathunters com PART-TIME CASHIER even in gs a nd w eeke n ds a p p ro x 2 0 h rs /w k refer re q u ire d , e xp e rie n ce p re fe r­ enees red E liza be th 4 7 8 -6 4 19 NEED A LITTLE HUG N eed a little kiss N eed a little yogurt in your hair. A ustin 's o n iy in fan t ca re center is lo oking fo r some ve ry special p e o ple to assist teachers w o rkin g w ith c h ild re n 2 to 2 4 m onths o ld Flexible schedules, fun staff, g re a t b ab ie s, super parents, central Austin. UT shuttle, EOE For more information call Helen or M ary 4 7 8 -3 1 13. PART TIME PLANT C A R E T E C H N IC IA N Part tim e p o sitio n c a rin g for interior plants A p p ro x im a te ly 12 hours per w eek N W Austin o re a lo catio n Flexible w o rk schedule C o m p etitive p a y Job starts im m ed ia tely C a ll MALLSCAPES at 8 0 0 -8 7 5 6 2 5 5 ext. 2 1 4 o r fa x info to 9 7 2 4 01 3 3 5 5 D allas. TX co m p a n y O n -|o b tra in in g G o o d p e o p le skills C o m p e titive sa lary C a li o r fa x in fo a n d set u p in t e r v ie w RECEPTIONIST 9A M -1 PM G ra p h ic w o rk helpful-best if kn ow M S Publish­ er Fax resumes to 7 9 4 -0 6 3 4 P /T A F T E R N O O N staf' needed M u st be e n e rg e tic a nd a positive role-m odel fo r s c h o o la g e d ch ild re n A m b e r 3 2 7 -7 5 7 5 S W IM M IN G INSTRUCTOR S u m m er a fte rn o o n s o r eve­ n in g s W S I a n d e x p e rie n c e p re fe rre d Lon g e s ta b lis h e d p r i­ va te s w im schoo l. 3 5 4 0 m in . N o rth o f ca m p u s S m a ll cla sses, w a rm w a te r, Great Pay! C a ll 2 5 9 - 4 5 4 5 o r 2 5 9 - 1 5 9 6 P/T FLEXIBLE hours U p to $ C a ll W e s B rid el a t 3 2 9 4 2 4 9 2 /h r LIBRARY CLERK W a lk to w o rk L e g isla tive in C a p ito l seeks P /T c le rk for g e n e ra l lib r a r y d utie s: c o p y in g , fa x in g , sh e lv in g , m a il p r e p a r a tio n . 8 : 0 0 to n o o n , M -F. HS g r a d o r G E D w ith o ffic e o r lib r a r y e x p $ 8 1 0 5 0 / m o , plus be n e fits State a p p l re q u ire d C a ll M a ry C a m p , 5 1 2 -4 6 3 -5 9 1 1 SURVEYORS - N U STATS~ RESEARCH & C O N S U L T IN G is lo o kin g fo r resp on sib le p e o p le to co n d u ct te lep ho n e -nterview s for la rg e scale research proiects A tte ntio n to d e ta il necessary E xperience p re fe rre d , but w ill tram C o m p e titive w a ge s based on e xp e rie n ce F le xib le hours betw een 5 0 0 p m -1 I 0 0 p m M on-Fri and noon to 7 pm w e ekends 2 0 + h o u rs a w eek Ph 6 3 7 -6 7 0 0 ext 4 0 6 0 em a il, rd ic k e rs o n @ n u s ta ts .c o m , Fax: 4 1 6 - 8 0 3 5 , W a lk In: 801 E W illia m C a n n o n , Ste. 1 15 BICYCLE ASSEMBLERS M u st have bike shop e xpe rie n ce. C o n ta c t Jay a t Free w he e lin g 4 7 7 -6 7 8 9 M O R N IN G H E L P $ 9.0 0H R Internet startup seeking self started to h andle in co m in g p ho ne calls a n d other Relaxed ca sual environ m e n t tasks close to school E-mail resume to jobs @ e-screemng com ADMINISTRATIVE T E C H N IC IA N (p a r t- tim e 2 0 ho u rs a w e e k ) Performs c o m p le x, a d m inistrative supp ort w o rk C o m p le x ty p in g using W in d o w s e nviron m e n t a n d / o r MS so ftw a re C o p y , a n d c o lla te m aterials Assist w ith lite ra ture o rd er requests a n d m a il outs to ECI p ro g ra m s B oxing a nd m o vin g of m a terials up to 2 0 lbs Entry into Access d a ta b a se back-up co ve ra g e to In fo rm a tio n a n d Referral Line M ust have H ig h S chool E quiva le ncy PLUS tw o ye ars o f full-time p a id e xper-ence p e rfo rm in g c le ric a l or a d m in istra tive su pp ort w o rk, in c lu d in g a t least 3 months w o rk e xp e rie n ce w ith W in d o w s environ m e n t a n d / o r M S S oftw are. Form al tra in in g in W in d o w s e n viron m e n t a n d / o r M S S oftw a re m ay substitute fo r the three months s p e cia lize d e x p e rie n ce d M u st be a b le to lift, b en d a n d c a rry items w e ig h in g 1 0 -2 0 p ounds p e rio d ic a lly M o n th ly sa lary $ 8 1 0 5 0 a na State Benefits (C all 4 2 4 4 8 8 0 e xt 4 for further in form atio n ), postin g num ber 01 E C I-042 A p p lic a tio n s a ccep ted until 3 / 3 0 / 0 1 N O RESUMES ACCEPTED Send stan d ard State of Texas a p p lic a tio n to ECI, 4 9 0 0 N Lamar, A ustin, TX 7 8 7 5 1 o r FAX to 5 1 2 -4 2 4 -6 7 6 6 ECI is an E E O /A A o ctio n e m p loye r, w w w e c i.s ta te .tx .u s R O U N D RO C K ch ild re n 's gym seeking PT g y m /tu m b lin g teachers fo r c h ild ren 3m o-9yrs W e e k e n d /e v e n in g s a must. M ust be ene rg etic a n a love ch ild re n. E xperience w ith d ra m a , dance, gym nastics a n d / o r sports plus U p to $ 9 0 0 / h r plus bonus, 1 5 -3 0 h rs /w k . Please c a ll 2 5 5 - 0 0 0 3 SEEKING P /T a cco u n tin g intern For lo cal m o rtg a g e c o m p a n y. Flexible hours a nd a re la xe d atm osphere O p p o rtu n itie s For perm an e nt positio n w ith an agg re ssive g ro w in g co m p a ­ ny Fax resume to 5 1 2 -6 1 5 -2 4 7 0 800 - General Help Wanted 800 - General Help W anted Full Time / Part Time Child Care positions are available at Gingerbread Academy. If you like Children and wants to make a contribution in their life, Call 442-7721 800 * General Help Wanted 800 - General Help Wanted _ HOUSTON SUMMER JOBS! Miller Swim Academy is now hiring swim instructors, lifeguards, and pool managers. Excellent pay! Sixty locations throughout Houston. 713- 777-7946 call between 3 p.m. - 6 p.m. 890 - Clubs- Restaurants 890 - Clubs- R esfau rants E N I G MA Night Club i s n o w h i r i n g : • door host • security • wait staff • public relations Apph/ Wed - Fri between the hours o f l and 4. 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M a rch 2 7 . 2 0 0 1 Crossword E dited by W ill S hortz ACROSS 29 Storekeeper s stock Abbr 64 Musical work 65 Russian writer (footnote Maxim 1 14 30 E t a b b r) tpoine 7 .. 4 14 Carl 31 Cam pus locale 33 Large shoe specification 35 S elf-m over’s rental 40 Y 44 "Mission likely'" possible" group7 45 " you nuts7" 46 Jazzman Herbie 47 “ 50 British rule in colonial India 52 Rebel Turner 53 Y 59 Rat s learning place 60 Lined up 61 Maine forest sight 67 Don Juan's mother 68 Go-___ 69 “The door s open'" 70 Lightly burn 71 Farm mothers 72 T a -ta !" 73 P o e t St Vincent Millay D O W N 1 Electricity Qr water Abbr 2 42 Long, e g 3 Six-sided figure 4 Pilot s com m unicator 5 Dodge product 6 W ithout questioning or debate 7 Add as an ingredient 8 W riters for old ■ - ¿8 ■ \ P1P 1 4 0 44 64 68 ? l IÓ 9 IW E R T O P R E V IO U S P U Z Z L E F I ¡ £ j U A D L E | 0 B E Y R U D E L E U T C H K E M Y R P E Y O 0 T S r t Ts dj e A R M E • O N S ■ t W E E N E A R T '■ W.E E ^ H j A N A l E D G E - D Y E R N D T ! N T 1R p 1 | ^ j m m ■ E : B :S I a B E —f \ E E IRI T S R U N C R Y U S E A T literary colum ns 28 Stage actor N 9 Boii 10 Large estate 11 12 December drop-in acid 13 Prepared to sing the nationa anthem Lanka 21 25 Was positive 26 Prefix with lateral 27 Swimming pool shade Alfred 32 Focus of a genom e stuoy 34 Early 60 s singer L ittle ___ 36 Order with eggs 37 Left 38 Armoone 39 G ave for a while 41 Prefix m eaning 27-Across 42 Cursor m over 43 Derriere 48 Oil-rich Indians No. 0213 ® b a t 3 i n t T T “ T2 13“ (EPISODE 7 - DIAMOND IS FOREVER 1777/,! 36 37 38 39 ~ PP ■23 L P r 73 S I G N S O F T H E A P O C A L Y P S E r AFTER A SEASON OF SITTING D O W N A N D W A TC H IN G COLLEGE BASKETBALL. D IC K VITALE GOES IN FOR HIS AN N U AL “M A R C H MADNESS CHECKUP.” L — ___________________ -J Oh, I gotta tell ya' Doc, it's Hemorrhoid City down there! It’s totally not awesome, baby! 49 Seat of power 51 Toast topper 53 Light up 54 Sweet fruit 55 Sky-blue 56 They m ay go out on a limb 57 Strong suit 58 Clam or 62 Rapper C om bs 63 Poet Pound 66 It may be m oney in the bank: Abbr Answers to any three clues in this puzzle are available by touch-tone phone 1-900-420-5656 (95c per minute) Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years 1-888-7-ACROSS DAVE YO U M A N S I r í L L m t x ¿ c t u / t . c v j / y s n e a k e r s BA C f c i ’A C f c S H C C C C C C s t i c k e r s ¡p s ^ B e a m e s S D W C E A S S t s / m o r e m - $ 1 1 - 8 ; s u n 1 2 - 5 ( F A V lt i P / K ü K T RAN co/^oos RMTAil % & A T W *IC > N f z L K - o f n a u So i t w a £ written so ; f mus+ d o n é . / WelcOiYlg Ijorr\e, C o tta . c o m m a n d s , DAY2001@MAIL.UTEXAS.EDU by mac b la k e I 'o q o«+ cook Fnd.+^\ «* 0cJred s a b e a v e r macb@madmanmail.com ° TUC rlfJAX D A r w . Ríu ? > (J ¡. 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G l\ r , . t f R A N S f E N T m d e r g - r a d T k e oAe pK;foso^>Lvj s t * ¿ e d t 5 O vufcíA ^ A^c_?YT6¡5 return or rem ain a m illio n m iles w av. the e n jo ym en t of a n y tru ly cheesy '80s hit com es w ith a s m id g e n of g u ilt T h is kind of g u ilt co m p e ls a m an to b u rv his B u n a n a ro m a singles beneath his Be a tle s records, d esp ite a lp h a ­ betical l 11615 Angus Road, Ste. 102 Austin TX 78759 O th er services provided: W eight Loss* High Blood Pressure* Laser Hair Rem oval* Stress M an a g e m e n t* Diabetes* Sm oking Cessation’ Acne Treatm ent* Physicals R e g a l cinem as www.ragaleinamas.com CHARGE TICKETS BY PHONE 512-42-BEGAL r ~ W W f < U T « *Ben_W hHe ■’ • i 1 RING A PPLY AT THEATRE aptionedCHOCOi-AT IPG 13) '4 Y ¡T iSN T S 0 ( R ) 10 REQ UIRED ✓ : NEMY AT THE G A T E S(R ) ID REQ UIRED Wednetday Oiiconn^Show* All Day excluding ✓ Film ♦ No Passes * No Passes or Super Savers Advance Tickets at Box Office-Credit Cards Accepted METROPOLITAN I 416-5700x3811 416-5700x3807lb-35 S AT STASSN EY LANE r-a; i ^tr.i yy;.y | • . dig CHARGE T IC K ^ A SBY%UHONE*5in^-42 -REGAU950 N O W H IR IN G A S S T MGF1S N O W H IR IN G A P P L Y AT T H E A T R E ✓ HF A R T B H E A K E R S ( P G 13) V ' GET OVER IT IP G -13) HANNIBALIR) ID REQUIRED ' DOWN TO EARTH (PG 13) CAST AWAY ( P G -13) R E C E S S SCHOOL S O U T IG ) rHE WEDDING PLAN NER (PG 13) LINCOLN IH-35 NORTH ✓ * SAY IT ISN T SO (R) - ID REQ UIRED ✓ H EA R T B R EA K ER SiP G - 1 3 ) 15 MINUTES (R) - ID REQ UIRED THf M EX IC A N (R r ID REQ UIRED DOWN TO EARTH (PG - 13) HANNIBAL (Ri ID REQ UIRED jU'< ✓ THE BROTHERSIP) ID REQUIRED ✓ EXIT W O U N D S (R ) ID R E Q U IR E D 15 M INUTES(R)-ID REQUIRED M O N KE Y 0 O N E (P G 13) DO WN TO E A R T H (P G - 1 3 ) 11? 15 1 152403:305.00)7 . : S H A D O W OF THE V A M P IR E (R ) ID R E Q U IR E D SN A IC H (R ) ID H E Q U IR E D CRO UC HIN G T IG E R (P G 13) - > 44 « GATEWAY :APITAL OF TEXAS AT 183 BEHIND WHOLE FOODS 416-5700x3808 CHARGE T IC K ^S^BVpHONEa5e?-4g-RFf;Ai +qao N O W H IR IN G A P P L Y AT T H E A T R E ✓ * S A Y IT ISN T S O (R ) ID R E Q U IR E D H E A R T B R E A K E R S (P G 13) 114; 12 if THE BROTHERS(R)- ID REQUIRED VC ‘ v ✓ EXIT W O U N D S (R )- ID R E Q U IH E D 15 M IN U T E S (R ) ID R EQ U IR E D ' 4 v ■ ; NEMY AT THE GA TES (R) ID REQUIRED CROUCHING TIG ER (PG 13) CH0C0LA1 (P G - 13) RO l LERCO ASTER (1999)(N R) PO LLO CK (R) ID REQUIRED PANIC (R) FA ITH LESS (R) - ID REQ UIRED MOOD FOR LOVE (PG) ID REQ UIRED DIG 20 DIG 40 DIG I:50dol '50dol IOdou OOjDOL 100 DOL TH E M E X IC A N (R ) ID R E Q U IR E D , i S E E S P O T R U N (P G ) D O W N 10 E A R T H (PG - 1 3 ) H A N N IH A L (R )- ID R E Q U IR E D S N A T C H (R ) ID R E Q U IR E D O B R O T H E R . W H E R E A RT TH O U '' (P G 13) (12001 154 (12:45 3:00 5:20): T R A F F IC (R ) C A S T A W A Y (PG -13) ID R E Q U IR E D 4f ; Times Valid For Monday. March 26, 2001 Only © 2001 STEP BY STEP PRINTABLE SOLUTION Spring Game Special Edition G E N E R A L M E E T IN G wed. march 29 @ 7pm in WAG 101 all ut students welcome! w w w . k v r x . o r g And go to the game Saturday, March 31st & support your UT Longhorns!! Saaak Peaks 100th Episode Sneak Peek meets its Creator! followed by Episode 101: SXSW Film * * watch the 9- 10 hour on time warner cahle is * * go to www.kartv.com ter the primetime line-up KVR-TV A H a p p y M e d i u m T X S t u d e n t T V broadcast9 ■ dorm 15 - www.kvrtv.com U v - tv f. tfjL y .- jtfc P ■:! • ;