|d t o |j|m in $ to support medical faculty's families, page 6 , . . . . b h ¿ I 1 d f) N V À o a o i u X i Q StM U * 4 /¿9 ¿ i S3MHi nos U 6 Ç W 8 4 9 1 Ç Ü Da i l y T e x a n Vol. 91, No. 25 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, October 7, 1991 25C Richards hopes ethics commission will keep legislators on track Jeff Rhoads Daily Texan Staff G ov. R ic h a rd s sa id F rid a y th e n e w ly c re ­ a te d T exas E th ics C o m m issio n m u s t giv e elected officials th e g u id a n c e a n d in fo rm a ­ tio n th e y n e e d to " d o r ig h t." " W h a t w e really w a n t to fig u re o u t h e re is h o w to c re a te in g o v e r n m e n t a b o d y th a t is g o in g to g iv e th e r e a s s u ra n c e th a t th e p u b lic n e e d s th a t th e ir in te re s ts a r e c o m in g firs t," R ic h a rd s sa id . " It is n o t, to m e , a v ery c o m p lic a te d p r o p o s itio n ." T h e E thics C o m m issio n , c re a te d last s p rin g by th e T exas L e g isla tu re , w ill sta rt e n fo rc in g a n e w b a n o n h o n o ra ria Jan. 2, 1992. T h e c o m m issio n w ill a lso m o n ito r m o n e y s p e n t by lo b b y ists a n d re c o m m e n d c h a n g e s in la w s to th e L e g isla tu re . G ov. R ich a rd s also se e s th e E thics C o m ­ m issio n a s a "p u b lic fo ru m o f in fo rm a tio n a n d d e c is io n -m a k in g " for p u b lic officials w h o n e e d h e lp in m a k in g eth ica l d ec isio n s. S ta te c itiz e n s " d o n o t a s k v e ry m u ch of u s ," R ic h a rd s to ld m e m b e rs o f a n E thics C o m m issio n tra n s itio n ta sk force. "T h e y a s k u s to try to m a k e th e rig h t call a t th e rig h t tim e. A n d so m e tim e s th a t's difficu lt to d o ." " W h ile w e s p e n d a n aw fu l lot of m o n e y u p d a tin g th e skills o f p e o p le in u s in g n e w m a c h in e ry ," sh e s a id , " w e rea lly d o n 't s p e n d a n y tim e u p g r a d in g th e skills of p e o ­ p le in eth ical b e h a v io r. A n d y et th e q u e s ­ tio n s h a v e b e c o m e a s d ifficu lt a n d co m p lex as all th is v ery th e n e w m a c h in e ry s tra n g e w o rld w e find o u rse lv e s in ." in R e s p o n d in g to th e s u g g e stio n th a t th e E thics C o m m issio n h a s to b rin g a b o u t a " m a s s iv e r e s to ra tio n " of p u b lic tru s t in th e p e rfo rm a n c e o f g o v e r n m e n t officials, R ich ­ a rd s said , "I th in k th a t it's n o t so m u c h a m a tte r of re s to ra tio n a s a m a tte r of re a s ­ s u ra n c e th a t w e 're d o in g e v e r y th in g w e k n o w to d o ." R ich a rd s said sh e h o p e s T ex a n s w ill m a k e th e E thics C o m m issio n s tr o n g e r by m a k in g it p a rt of th e T exas C o n s titu tio n in th e s ta te w id e elec tio n N ov. 5. "If [th e c o n s titu tio n a l a m e n d m e n t is n o t a p p ro v e d ], th e n th e c o m m issio n w ill p ro ­ ce ed a n y w a y , b e c a u s e w e 're g o in g to h a v e an E thics C o m m issio n , w h e th e r it is a c o n ­ stitu tio n a l c o m m issio n o r sim p ly o n e c re a t­ e d by th e L e g is la tu re ," R ich a rd s sa id . "1 th in k th e q u a lity of th e w o rk w e d o will be th e p ro o f of th e p u d d in g ," R ich a rd s said. R ic h a rd s a lso n a m e d P atricia H a v e s, t h e p re s id e n t o f St. E d w a r d 's U n iv e rsity , a s th e h e a d of a tra n s itio n ta sk force for th e T exas E thics C o m m issio n . T h e ta sk force w ill a r ­ ra n g e offices a n d staff for t h e E th ics C o m ­ m issio n b e fo re th e c o m m issio n m e e ts so th e c o m m issio n can " s ta r t o n th e rig h t fo o t" o n Jan. 2, H a y e s sa id . S h e a d d e d th a t m a k in g th e E th ics C o m ­ m issio n p a rt of th e C o n s titu tio n w o u ld n o t p u t a "fo x g u a r d in g th e h e n h o u s e ." H a y e s to ld th e ta sk force it h a s " b o th th e o p p o r tu n ity a n d th e o b lig a tio n to se t th e to n e for th e E thics C o m m issio n itse lf." 4-day hearing on CWO ends City Council admits need for new compromise plan Michael Brown Daily Texan Staff T h e p u b lic h e a rin g o n th e C o m ­ p re h e n s iv e W a te rs h e d O rd in a n c e e n d e d S a tu r d a y — a d a y e a rlie r th a n e x p e c te d — a fte r m o re th a n 40 p e rc e n t o f th e s c h e d u le d s p e a k e rs failed to a p p e a r . A n d w h e n it w a s o v e r, C ity C o u n c il m e m b e rs th e a d m itte d n e e d for s o m e k in d o f n e w c o m p ro ­ m ise d o c u m e n t b e fo re T h u r s d a y 's first v o te o n th e o rd in a n c e . A b o u t 360 p e o p le a d d r e s s e d th e C ity C o u n c il d u r in g th e fo u r-d a y h e a rin g to v o ice v a rio u s o p in io n s a n d m a k e s u g g e s tio n s o n lim itin g p o llu tio n of g r o u n d w a te r in s o u th ­ w e s t A u s tin , w h e r e th e a q u ife r th a t fe e d s B a rto n S p rin g s is re p le n is h e d . F ra n k C o o k s e y , m a y o r of A u s tin w h e n th e C W O w a s first p a s s e d in 1986, re c e iv e d a s ta n d in g o v a tio n S a tu rd a y fro m m u c h o f th e a u d i­ ence. H e criticiz ed fo rm e r o p p o ­ n e n ts of th e o rig in a l o rd in a n c e w h o h a d u n d e r g o n e w h a t h e te rm e d a " m a r v e lo u s c o n v e r s io n ," s u p p o r t­ in g it n o w th a t it m ig h t b e s tr e n g th ­ e n e d . C o o k s e y re c o m m e n d e d th e c o u n ­ cil c o n s id e r th e o r d in a n c e w ritte n by th e city staff, w h ic h h e ca lle d th e " m o s t u n b ia s e d g r o u p " to h a v e o f­ fered a n a m e n d m e n t. th e in te rim o r d i­ d e r, s u g g e s te d n a n c e , in effec t u n til O ct. 27, b e r e ­ ta in e d u n til la n d o v e r th e a q u ife r c o u ld b e b o u g h t a n d tu r n e d in to a p a rk o r p re s e rv e . S ite e n g in e e r Bill H o w ell to ld th e co u n cil h e d r e w a n a p p r o v e d p la n for a c h u rc h in th e B arton S p rin g s c o n trib u tin g z o n e , b u t th e co st w a s " tw o - th ir d s h ig h e r for th e e n g in e e r ­ in g a n d tim e " to c o m p ly w ith th e in te rim o rd in a n c e . T h e co u n c il is s c h e d u le d for a first v o te T h u rs d a y o n a m e n d m e n ts to th e w a te r s h e d o rd in a n c e . But M a y o r B ruce T o d d sa id h e th o u g h t n e ith e r of th e tw o a m e n d ­ m e n ts c u rre n tly b e fo re th e co u n cil — a m e n d m e n ts su b m itte d b y th e P la n n in g C o m m issio n a n d th e M a y ­ o r 's C W O T a sk F orce — co u ld m u s te r fo u r v o te s th e m in im u m n e c e s sa ry for a p p ro v a l. C o u n c ilm e m b e r G u s G arcia s a id h e d id n o t k n o w if e ith e r p ro p o sa l c o u ld g e t a m a jo rity of vo tes. G arcia sa id a n o th e r a m e n d m e n t, a n n o u n c e d la st w e e k by th e e n v i­ ro n m e n ta l g r o u p S ave O u r S p rin g s , w o u ld " g e t o n th e ta b le " in tim e for T h u rs d a y 's v o te . T o d d sa id la st w e e k th e S ave O u r S p rin g s p ro p o s a l h a d no c h a n c e of b e in g p a s s e d . G arcia a n d C o u n c il­ m e m b e r M ax N o fz ig e r h a v e s h o w n s u p p o r t for th e g r o u p 's p la n . A n o th e r s p e a k e r, S h erri A le x a n ­ Please see CWO, page 2 Yo! Out of the w ay C h ris to b a l P e re z D a ily T e x a n St a f f Phil Brown ran past the Rice defense, with a little help from the officials, to lead Texas to its first win in 1991. Brown was starting in place of Butch Hadnot, who only played one down Saturday because of an injured ankle. Please see related story, page 8. Moy resigns Rebecca Stewart Daily Texan Staff T h e T ex as U n io n B oard o f D ire c to rs e le c t­ ed L a u re n K alisek to re p la c e fo rm e r c h a ir­ w o m a n S ib y P h ilip s by a n u n d is c lo s e d v o te, a n d w e re n o tifie d o f a s e c o n d b o a rd m e m b e r's re s ig n a tio n a t its F rid a y m e e tin g . K alisek, a s c o -c h a irw o m a n , w a s filling in for re c e n tly r e s ig n e d P h ilip s a t th e tim e of elec tio n . K alisek d e c id e d to r u n la st w e e k a g a in s t Eric D ix o n , w h o w a s re c e n tly a p ­ p o in te d p ro x y for S tu d e n t A sso c ia tio n P re s ­ id e n t G a rth D avis. " A t th e la st m e e tin g w e s ta te d th a t th e p o sitio n w a s o p e n a n d se t a n a p p lic a tio n d e a d lin e for S ep t. 3 0 ," K alisek sa id . A fte r re c e iv in g o fficer r e p o r ts a n d d is ­ c u s sin g old a n d n e w b u s in e s s , th e b o a rd w e n t in to e x e c u tiv e se s s io n — in w h ich o n ly b o a rd m e m b e rs m a y b e p r e s e n t — to d e lib e ra te o v e r th e tw o c a n d id a te s . A fte r G a g e P ain e, b o a rd m e m b e r a n d a s ­ sis ta n t d e a n o f s tu d e n ts , n o tifie d K alisek a n d D ixon o f th e r e s u lts , th e b o a rd c o n tin ­ u e d in e x e c u tiv e s e ssio n b e fo re a d jo u rn ­ m e n t. A fter th e m e e tin g , b o a rd m e m b e r A n g ela L o ck h a rt sa id s h e e x p e c ts K alisek to se rv e w ell in h e r n e w p o sitio n . " I'm v e ry ex c ite d a n d I th in k L a u re n w ill d o a terrific job; it w a s a to u g h d e c isio n to m a k e ," L o c k h a rt sa id . K alisek sa id s h e w a n ts to m a k e th e b o a rd a m o re c o h e r e n t b o d y . "I th in k o n a g e n e ra l lev el, I w a n t to m a k e th e b o a rd m o re u n if ie d ," K alisek sa id . " O b v io u s ly , th e b o a rd is p r o n e to p o l­ itics, b u t w e ca n try to w o rk to g e th e r ." B efore v o tin g o n a n e w c h a ir, b o a rd m e m b e rs w e re n o tifie d o f B eth M o y 's re s ig ­ n a tio n as T ex as U n io n O p e r a tio n s C o u n c il c o o rd in a to r o n O ct. 3. M oy c ite d in s titu ­ tional p ro b le m s as h e r re a so n for le a v in g . M oy w ro te in h e r re s ig n a tio n le tte r, "I h a v e b e c o m e fru s tra te d w ith th e lim ita tio n s w ith in th is in s titu tio n w h ic h h in d e r s tu ­ d e n t d e v e lo p m e n t. "W h ile I re m a in d e d ic a te d to s e rv in g s tu ­ d e n ts , w o rk in g w ith in th e p o litics of th is e n v iro n m e n t tim e a n d e n e rg y w h ich I am n o lo n g e r ab le to g iv e ," s h e c o n tin u e d . re q u ire s M o y 's c o m p la in ts re se m b le th o s e P h ilip s s ta te d u p o n h e r re sig n a tio n o n S e p t. 11. " B e c a u se of th e c u rre n t T exas U n io n a n d U n iv e rsity a d m in is tra tio n , specifically th e T exas U n io n d irec to r, I felt c o n tin u a lly p a ­ tro n iz e d a n d o v e rlo o k e d in m y c o n trib u ­ tio n s a s T exas U n io n b o a rd c h a ir a n d m e m ­ b e r ," P h ilip s w ro te in h e r re s ig n a tio n le tte r. K alisek a n n o u n c e d th a t th e O p e ra tio n s C o u n c il c o o rd in a to r p o sitio n is c u rre n tly o p e n a n d th e co u n c il w ill h a v e th e o p p o r tu ­ n ity to c h o o s e a n ew c o o rd in a to r. " I 'm so rrv to se e h e r leav e. S h e [M oy] a d d e d a lo t to th e U n io n . I t's really sa d to see h e r go, b u t I s u p p o r t h e r r e a s o n s ," K al­ isek said . Gorbachev blasts anti-Semitism Associated Press M O S C O W — B rea k in g d e c a d e s of silen c e b y S o v iet le a d e rs, P re s id e n t M ik h a il G o rb a c h e v on S u n d a y s h a rp ly d e n o u n c e d h a tre d fo r Je w s a n d b e m o a n e d th e ir e x o d u s fro m th e S o v iet U n io n . G o rb a c h e v 's s ta te m e n t w a s c a rrie d b y th e T ass n e w s a g e n c y o n S u n d a y a n d re a d th e n ig h t b e fo re a t a c e re ­ m o n y m a rk in g th e 50th a n n iv e r s a r y of th e N azi m a s s a ­ cre of th o u s a n d s of Je w s a t Babi Y ar, in a s u b u r b of th e U k ra in ia n c a p ita l of K iev. G o rb a c h e v sa id p e rs e c u tio n of Je w s d id n o t e n d in th e N a z i era . In S o v iet so c iety to d a y , h e sa id , "S ocial e x p re s s io n s o f a n ti-S e m itis m h a v e n o t b e e n s u r m o u n t­ ed a n d c e rta in re a c tio n a ry circles a re e x p lo itin g th is fac t." S oviet a n d fo re ig n Je w ish le a d e rs h a v e b e e n p re s s in g G o rb a c h e v for se v e ra l y e a rs to s p e a k o u t a g a in s t an ti- S em itism . H e m a y h a v e finally d e c id e d to d o so n o w b e c a u s e since th e A u g u s t c o u p , h e h a s b e e n free of th e h a r d ­ lin ers w h o r e s is te d c o n d e m n a tio n o f an ti-S e m itism . G o rb a c h e v m a y also h a v e w a n te d to p le a se fo re ig n Je w ish le a d e rs w h o c o u ld s u p p o r t h is d riv e for in te r n a ­ tional aid for h is c o u n tr y 's a ilin g e c o n o m y . M a n y of th e 1.4 m illio n S o v iet Jew s sa y th e y a re h a ­ ra sse d d a ily a n d fear a rev iv al oi n .e p ro g ra m s a im e d at Jew s in R u ssia a t th e tu r n of th e c e n tu ry . Je w ish w rite rs h a v e b e e n b e a te n , a n ti-Je w ish graffiti h a v e a p p e a r e d a n d h a te m o n g e rs o p e n ly d is trib u te leaflets th a t b o rro w from H itle r to c o n d e m n th e 'Z io n ­ ist m e n a c e " a n d call for a tta c k s o n Jew s. E ven th e offi­ cial p re s s h a s ca rrie d b la ta n tly an ti-S e m itic articles. T h e w o rs e n in g e c o n o m y a n d political u p h e a v a l of G o rb a c h e v 's ru le h a v e c a u s e d m a n y S o v iets to look for sc a p e g o a ts, a n d Je w s h a v e b e e n p rim e ta rg e ts. “Social expressions of anti-Semitism have not been surmounted and certain reactionary circles are exploiting this fact.” — Soviet President M ikhail G o rb ach ev A poll re le a s e d la st m o n th a t th e first in te rn a tio n a l c o n f e re n c e ,o n an ti-S e m itism h e ld in th e S o v iet U n io n in d ic a te d th a t 11 p e rc e n t o f all S o v ie ts w a n t Je w s to leave. M o re th a n 10 p e rc e n t of th o s e p o lle d sa id all S oviet Je w s s h o u ld b e m o v e d to th e F ar E ast a n d m o re th a n h alf b e lie v e th e fig h t a g a in s t Z io n ism s h o u ld b e s tr e n g th e n e d . In th e poll, c o n d u c te d by M o s c o w 's Je w ish S cientific C e n te r, 4,200 p e o p le w e re s u r v e y e d in 10 S o v iet cities last O c to b e r. N o m a rg in of e r r o r w a s g iv e n . G o rb a c h e v , in h is s ta te m e n t, sa id Je w ish e m ig ra tio n h a s d e p riv e d th e S o v iet U n io n o f so m e of its b e s t citi­ ze n s. "W e h a v e e s ta b lis h e d th e rig h t to e m ig ra te . But, to tell you fra n k ly , w e g rea tly re g re t th e fact th a t o u r c o m ­ p a trio ts a re le a v in g , th a t th e c o u n try is lo sin g so m a n y skillful, e n te r p ris in g p e o p le ," G o rb a c h e v ta le n te d , In th e p a s t, h e h a s called th is e x o d u s of Je w s a " b ra in , said. d r a in ." M ore th a n 500,000 S oviet Je w s h a v e e m ig ra te d to Is­ rael sin ce 1969 a n d a b o u t 200,000 to th e U n ite d S ta te s a n d e ls e w h e re . U p to 1 m illion m o re a re e x p e c te d to e m ig ra te w ith in th e next few y e a rs. A t a m e e tin g last W e d n e s d a y w ith S h o s h a n a C a rd in , le a d e r o f th e N a tio n a l C o n fe re n c e o n S o v iet Je w ry , G o rb a c h e v a c k n o w le d g e d th a t an ti-S e m itism w as a p ro b lem a lth o u g h n o t a " d e e p - r o o te d " o n e . INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Correction In a page 7 story Friday, Austin Chronicle political writer Daryl Slusher was misquoted as saying that the appointment of Pam Reed to the Texas Water Com- ,mission would be a “ stake in the heart of Barton Springs.” Slusher actually said that further develop­ ment in South Austin would dam­ age the creek and he had a “ wait and see” attitude concerning Reed. The Texan regrets the error. Inside; Supreme Court nominee Clar­ ence Thomas denies a former employee’s allegations of sexual 5 harassment! Weather; Partly cloudy with highs in the up­ per 70s. Winds from the east to southeast 5 to 10 mph. . . . , . Index: Around C am pus................................ 12 C la s s ifie d s ........................................13 15 . Comics . E d ito ria ls................................ 4 Entertainment....................................10 8 .................................... Sports State & L o c a l................................ 7 6 University ......................... 3 World & N a tio n ............................. . . . . . . . CNN airs Anderson tape; hostage awaits ‘good news’ Associated Press D A M A S C U S , S yria — A m eric an h o sta g e T erry A n d e r s o n , a p p e a r in g h e a lth ie r th a n in th e p a s t, sa id in a v id e o ta p e d in te rv ie w S u n d a y th a t h is c a p to rs th e y w o u ld to ld h im so o n h a v e " v e ry g o o d n e w s " for th e W e ste rn h o s ta g e s . T h e ta p e , o b ta in e d by th e C ab le N e w s N e tw o rk , w a s a c c o m p a n ie d by a s ta te m e n t in A ra b ic sig n e d by h is S h iite M u slim c a p to rs, Islam ic Jih ad . T h e g r o u p sa id th e ta p e w a s a c o n tin u a tio n of th e p ro c e ss th a t b e ­ g a n w ith th e re le a se of B riton Jo h n M c C arth y in A u g u s t. is th e In th e 1 2 -m in u te ta p e , A n d e rs o n , w h o h a s b e e n a c a p tiv e for 6 V2 y e a rs lo n g e s t-h e ld W e ste rn a n d joy u p o n h o sta g e , d e s c rib e d h is h e a rin g a ra d io b ro a d c a s t of th e d a u g h te r h e h a s n e v e r s e e n , a n d said th e c o n d itio n s o f h is c a p tiv ity h a v e tw o in y ea rs. im p ro v e d th e p a s t A n d e rso n , 43, a p p e a r e d calm , re ­ laxed a n d a le rt, s p o k e in a s tro n g voice, a n d e v e n few tim es. la u g h e d a H is sis te r P e g g y S ay, w h o h a s c a m p a ig n e d re ­ tire le ssly lease, said h e a p p e a r e d in m u c h b e t­ ter h e a lth a n d s a id s h e b eliev e d h is for h is s e n s e of h u m o r w a s in ta c t d e s p ite h is lo n g o rd e a l. " It c e rta in ly lo o k e d like h e w a s e n c o u r a g e d th a t th is w a s so o n g o in g to e n d , " sh e sa id by te le p h o n e fro m h e r h o m e in K en ­ tu ck y . A n d e rs o n , th e c h ie f M id d le E ast c o rr e s p o n d e n t fo r T h e A sso c ia te d P re ss, called o n all p a rtie s to accel­ e ra te th e n e g o tia tio n s a im e d a t an overall s w a p to free th e n in e W e st­ e rn h o s ta g e s in L e b a n o n . All c a p ­ tiv es sh o u ld b e fre e d , h e sa id , n o t ju s t W e s te rn e rs b u t h u n d r e d s of L e b a n e se d e ta in e e s . C N N sa id it h a d o b ta in e d th e ta p e , m a d e e a rlie r S u n d a y in B eirut, from a L e b a n e se p ro d u c tio n c o m p a ­ ny. Ed T u rn e r, e x e c u tiv e vice p re s i­ d e n t of C N N in A tla n ta , said th e n e tw o rk d id n o t p a y to o b ta in th e v id e o ta p e . C N N officials in D a m a sc u s s ai d it w a s p ro v id e d by A l-M ash rek , id e n ­ tified as a L e b a n e se te lev isio n p r o ­ d u c tio n c o m p a n y , a n d b n u g h t to D a m a sc u s bv c o u rie r. T h e n e tw o rk said it d id n o t c o n d u c t th e in te rv ie w itself, b u t th a t it w a s a llo w e d to s u b ­ m it q u e s tio n s to th o s e w h o m a d e th e ta p e. T h e ta p e , a ire d 011 C N N a fte r re ­ p e a te d d e la v s, w a s of p o o r a u d io Please see Hostage, page 2 Paqe 2 Monday, October 7,1991 T H E D AILY TEXAN T h e D a i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff .................... , . . ....................................... E d itor M anaging Editor Associate M anaging E d itor* New s E d ito r ................................... Assoc ate N ew s Editor New s Assignm ents Editor Senior R e p o r t e r s .................... . . . . . . Associale Editors Entertainm ent Editor Assoc ate Entertainm ent Edttor Sports E d i t o r ........................... Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Photo Editors . . . Special P a g e s Editor G ra p h ic s Editor . . . Matthew Connally Michael Casey . . . . . . ................................ M ark Babmeck Mindy Brown Tir» Tran H o p e S . Y en ............................................................. .................................................................... David Loy Candice Driver . . . . . . . . ShaiTsur . . . . . F ra n c e B o s c c Mi h a e Brow n Chris Damon. R e b e c c a Stew art Holly W a ym e n t Ja m e s W iikerson ....................... Curt B e s s e lm a n David Be zan so n ....................................... Ja s o n Aycock . . . E n c R asm u sse n Ja im e Aron .............................. Craig M Douglas Jo n Be ck e r R a y D ise Tom G ra c e Matt Schulz M ichelle Dapra Austin Holiday .......................... Sh an non Prosser . . . . . . Korey C o lem an A ro u n d Campus E d itor A ssistant N e w s E d itor N e w s R e p o rte rs P h o to g ra p h e rs E d ito ria l C o lu m n is t E d ito ria l A s s is ta n t E n te rta in m e n t A s s is ta n t S p o rts W rite r S p o rts A s s is ta n t G ra p h ic s A s s is ta n t M akeup Edttor W ire E d itor C o p y E d ito rs C o m ic St- p C a rto o n is ts Locai Display Art Director Graphic Designer Classified Display Classified Telephone Saies Classified Telephone Oerks Issue Staff MicheHe Dapra Scott Stanford Christy Flem ing. Je n n y Lin Mike M cCardel Je ff Rhoads. E ric a Shatter Angela Sh ah David Fitzgerald. N o hem y G onzalez Jen n ife r D e La y A m anda Hock Amta Angelone Patti W arner G e n e M enez Phillip M eiitc •............................................ Jo A n n Estrada Jo s e p h Abbott Ten Bailey. Giq C a u sey. M ike Guntherm an, Fun Lau C am eron Jo h n s o n Tom King Je a n e tte Moreno. D a v d Morns, M arc Trujillo. Greg M W ein e r Advertising M • i> Chang Brian Connell Meredith Eggleston David Hemphii; Homer Hsu Jylle Joyner, Michael Lakier, Doug Lyon Melina Madotora W endy Rodriguez, R enee Sim on Elsa Snyder Jeanette Spmelli Moïses Wortha ter landon Sims .......................................................... Brad Corbett Sonia Garcia. Lisa Granger Sharon Skinner. Stefani Zellmer Art Carrillo. Candace Cobb, Matthew Seym our Sheronda Scott Cindy Garza Andi Harrison. Christ! Stradford David Ross W endy Wood The Daily Texan iU S P S 146-4401 a student newspaper a! The University ot Texas it Austin is publisher.! by Texas Student Publications. 2500 Whitis Austin T x 78705 The Daily Texan s published Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday and Friday except holidays exam periods and when school >s not in session Second class postage paid at Austin. 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Monday, 4p.m. Friday................. Tuesday, 4p.m. 1 1 s m. Classified Word Ads (Last Bu vn aaa Day Prior to Put*cation) f I n te r n a tio n a l S tu d ie s A b ro a d EARN ACADEMIC CREDITS Fall, Spring & Summer Programs Spain • F ran ce • M exico Spring Deadline: November 15 4 8 0 -8 5 2 2 817 W. 24th St. Austin, T exas 78705 H ostage: Islamic Jihad allows hostages to speak on videotape Continued from page 1 quality, and the network tran­ scribed Anderson's comments on the screen. Prior to being aired, it was viewed in Damascus by The Associated Press ft was not known whether tneVt- deotape was made under the same conditions of duress that appeared to characterize past taping» of hos­ tages from Beirut released by the kidnappers; It appeared Islamic Jihad allowed the tape U*be made in part to in- crease the pressure on Israel to re­ lease more of the 300 or so prisoners i t holds in southern Lebanon, main­ ly l ebanese Shiites. Continued from page 1 The Islamic Jihad statement said the tape was a way of "showing our hostages stating* their opinions, which serves practical steps to bring an end to the hostage case. Anderson said his captors told him they would have "very good news" for the Western hostages as well as the Lebanese detainees held by Israel and its proxy militia in southern Lebanon. He said they were not told what the good news was or who would be released and when. Anderson said he and two other hostages he is held with -— Ameri­ can Thomas Sutherland and Briton Terry Waite — were "highly en­ couraged by news events." He thanked U.N. Secretary-Gen­ eral Javier Perez de Cuellar, who has spearheaded diplomatic efforts to arrange a comprehensive swap, tor his "skill in these very, very dif­ ficult negotiations." He said he could not recommend any further steps to Perez de Cuel­ lar, adding: "He's doing quite well bv himself." "This is no longer the time for bargaining," he said. "This is no longer the time to get some small advantage out of each step ... Ev­ eryone on all sides simply must co­ operate." CNN producer Gayle Young said those who provided the tape con­ tacted CNN in advance and asked for questions to ask Anderson. CNN provided questions, but not all of them were asked and some of them were changed, she said. On the tape, the portions where the questions were asked were blanked out so the questioner's voice could not be heard. "By the content of the message it was obvious that he was saying what his captors wanted him to say," Young said. "But he did not appear to be talking under stress." CWO: City Council admits need for compromise after hearing lodd added that the Planning Commission proposal could be revised to include parts of the task force suggestions. But because the two groups have taken such diver­ gent approaches to pollution con­ trol, a compromise amendment could contain a wide range of possi­ ble combinations. Martin Rincon Of the two ordinances, the one proposed by the Planning Commis­ sion has come under greater attack by environmentalists for allowing relatively more development to oc­ cur in the Barton Springs recharge zone and the contributing zone. Environmental groups said the only wav to prevent pollution of Barton Springs is by curtailing the overall level of construction over the aquifer and the adjacent land. Developers argued engineering controls can be used on developed land to control pollution as effec­ tively as a halt on construction. Both ordinances are said bv their proponents to meet the council's re­ quirement of "non-degradation." Non-degradation means that the amount of pollutants running off a site should be no greater after devel­ opment than before. The Planning Commission mea­ sures "concentration" of pollutants to arrive at non-degradation, while the task force proposal relies on the measurement of "load." Concentration is a relative mea­ sure based on the percentage of pol- lutants captured, whereas load is an absolute number measuring the to­ tal amount of pollutants removed from a site. Environmental groups like Save Our Springs said the only way to ensure non-degradation is through measuring load rather concentra­ tion. For the council to vote on a new amendment at Thursday's meeting, as it had planned, the amendment will have to be filed by Monday. T ru m a n S c h o la r s h ip O p p o r tu n ity $94 A M O N T H ! Students of the Big Hearted State Receive Payment Donate Life Saving Plasma A U S T IN P L A S M A 510 W . 29th 477-3735 DOZEN ROSES $ 7 .9 5 Cask & C arry Fiesta Flowers 3830 N. Lamar 453-7619 Juniors, with a 3.4 GPA and who have a high potential for leadership and future success in public service, are eligible to apply for a T rum an S ch o la rsh ip for the senior year and graduate study. 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Drug screening is a condition of employment. t FRIDAY'S DOW JONES. 2.961 76 DOWN 23.03 VOLUME 163.990,000 WORLD & NATION Croatia moves to war after Serbian threats T m D a i l y T e x a n Monday, October 7, 1991 Page 3 Associated Press ZAGREB, Y ugoslavia — E m battled C roa­ tia m oved to a “ w ar fo o tin g ” S u n d ay , h a n d in g o ut g u n s a n d un ifo rm s to n e w vol­ u n te ers, w hile federal w arp lan e s struck po­ sitions near th e rep u b lic's capital. The E uropean C o m m u n ity th re aten ed trad e an d econom ic san ctio n s a g ain st Yu­ g oslavia's w arrin g p arties u n less th e fight­ ing sto p p e d by m id n ig h t M o n day. But C roatian forces an d th e federal arm y and Serb guerrillas c o n tin u ed battlin g th ro u g h ­ o u t th e republic. The arm y — facing d esertio n s, m orale problem s, a rm o r c a p tu re d by the C roats, and the ap p ro a c h of w in te r w e a th e r — ap p eared to be trying to strike a decisive blow to brin g C roatia quickly to its knees. “ It's a great o ffe n s iv e /' said C roatian In­ 1 hey are form ation M inister B ranko Salaj. th ro w in g e v ery th in g they have at u s .” C roatian officials, a p p a re n tly follow ing P residen t Franjo T u d jm a n 's call to arm s late S aturday, said they had b eg u n m obilizing th ere w ere in areas w h e re v o lu n teers en o u g h w e a p o n s. “ W e are m aking all m ilitary p re p a ra tio n s that w e can, p u ttin g C roatia o n a w a r foot­ in g ," Salaj said. “ W e c a n 't go back a n y ­ m o re ." In aH, at least 600 peo ple have died since C roatia d eclared its in d e p e n d e n c e on June 25. Som e estim ates p u t the toll at 2,500. The fighting b etw een C ro ats a n d Serbs has been caused by the refusal of m any of the 600,000 ethn ic Serbs in C roatia to live in an state. C roats blam e th e w ar on Serbian expansionism and say Serbs have n o thing to fear from an in d e p e n d e n t Croatia. in d e p e n d e n t C roatian In Z agreb, air raid sirens w ailed three tim es, a n d frightened re sid e n ts ru sh e d to bom b sh elters to the so u n d s of d ista n t ex­ plosions. Federal w arp lan es, firing m issiles, a t­ tacked a sm all airp o rt six m iles so u th w e st of Z agreb, h itting th e co m m an d p o st of a form er air force trainin g center that h ad b een taken over by C roatian s. Officials said o n e p erso n w as killed a n d th ree in ju red , an d several nearby h o u ses w ere d am ag ed . C roatian forces attacked a federal arm y b ase at Sam obor, 12 m iles w est of Z agreb, seeking w ea p o n s stored th ere. Federal tro ops resp o n d ed w ith artillery a n d m o rtar fire, an d resid en ts of th e tow n w ere ev acu ­ ated. A sked if C roatian forces w ould try to cap tu re tw o large a rm y barracks in Z ag reb , Salaj said, “ It's entirely possible, it's w ar Fighting w as also re p o rted raging so u th of Z agreb, in th e eastern C roatian region of Slavonia near th e b o rd e r w ith Serbia, an d n ear th e m edieval w alled city of D ubrovnik on th e A driatic. Federal forces closing in on D ubrovnik reached the ed g e of Cilipi airport, ab o u t 12 m iles from th e old city cen ter, a w orld-fa­ m ous tourist attraction. A TV rep o rt later said the airp o rt had fallen. A federal naval co m m a n d e r w as also killed w h en C roatian forces fired at a fed er­ al helicopter near th e a irp o rt on S atu rd ay . Ex-Soviet officer admits to killing Report: Secret police murdered almost 7,000 WWII Pole officers Associated Press LO N D O N — A form er Soviet se­ cret police c o m m a n d er h as a d m itted his role in th e m u rd e r of m ore th an 6,000 Polish officers in W orld W ar JI, according to a n e w sp a p e r re p o rt 'p u b lis h e d on S un d ay . The Observer n e w sp a p e r said Vla­ d im ir T okaryev, 89, m ad e a vid eo ­ ta p e d sta te m e n t describing h o w the /N K V D police agency, th e p recu rso r ' jof the KGB, killed 6,925 Polish offi­ c e rs in A pril 1940. • - H e said 250 Poles w ere killed eve- j*y n ig ht in th e secret police h e a d ­ q u arte rs in K alinin, a b o u t 100 m iles -northw est of M oscow . Kalinin is /n o w k n o w n by its historical n am e of -T ver, w hich w as resto red last year. ■ - T he rep o rt w as w ritte n by N icho­ la s Bethell, a h isto rian an d C o n serv ­ ative m em ber of th e E u ropean P ar­ liam ent, w h o has also tran sla ted ■Russian literature, in clu d in g Alex­ a n d e r S o lz h en itsy n 's The Cancer Ward. Bethell said he h a d ob tain ed vi­ d e o tap e s of sta te m e n ts by I okaryev a n d P yotr S o p ru n en k o , 83, w ho w as identified as th e NKVD officer in charge of Polish priso n ers. S o p ru n e n k o told of receiving an o r d e r from th e P olitburo, signed by th e execu­ Josef Stalin, o rd e rin g tion s, Bethell said. P ro secutors say T okaryev a n d S o p ru n en k o are th e only m en still living w h o so far have ■been identified as h av in g a case to a n sw e r. ~ “ U n d er p re se n t legislation, they p ro b a b ly w o n 't be able to paeceed. But th e re will n eed to be a piece of je tro a c tiv e legislation m aking m ass lim itless m u r d e r of c rim e ," Bethell said in an interview S u n d a y . - W hile there is no tim e limit on Trying "crim es ag ain st h u m a n ity ,” The Soviets ap p ly this only to crim es com m itted in the nam e of N azi G er­ m any, the rep o rt said. this sort a Bethell said he obtained th e tapes tw o w eek ago in M oscow , w h ere he “ They had no basis in law, even in those days. An execution carried out under their authority was, quite simply, a mur­ der.” — Ma j . G e n . V l a d i m i r K u p i e t s m et w ith m ilitary p ro secu to rs. A year ago, P resid en t M ikhail G o rba­ chev directed them to investigate the killings of som e 15,000 Polish of­ ficers, including 3,897 Poles at Ka­ tyn an d 4,403 near K harkov. Tokaryev said th e killings at Kali­ nin w ere carried o u t at n igh t by a b o u t 30 NKVD m en , led by an offi­ cer nam ed Blokhin. The bodies, b u ried near M yed- noye village ab o u t 20 m iles outsid e K alinin, are now being d isin terred in the presen ce of Polish observers, Bethell said. Bethell said th e Soviet p rosecu­ re c o m m e n d to an d e x p e c te d I ok ary ev a g a in st to r s c h a rg e s S op ru n en k o . “T he system of NKVD special com m issions w as com pletely o u t­ side the Soviet co n stitu tio n . They had no basis in law , ev en in th o se days. An execution carried o u t u n ­ d er their a u th o rity w as, q u ite sim ­ ply, a m u rd e r," Maj. G en. V ladim ir K upiets, lead er of a four-m an team of p ro secu to rs, w as q u o te d as say­ ing. Bethell said the investigatio n has been h a m p e re d by th e su sp e n sio n of Maj. G en. A lexander K atyusev because of his "in activ ity " d u rin g the A u g u st co u p a tte m p t. O n the d a y of th e co u p a tte m p t, KGB officers in K alinin tried to stop the ex h u m atio n of Polish m ass graves, Bethell re p o rte d . "T h ey told us th at o u r w o rk w as u n n e c essa ry and that they w o u ld not g u a ra n te e our safety. Still, w e carried o n ,” Ku­ piets w as q u o te d as saying. FDA Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — D an g ero usly a d u lte r­ ated food, su b sta n d a rd m edical devices an d p rescription d ru g s of d u b io u s effective­ ness are reaching co n su m e rs becau se the Food an d D rug A d m in istratio n ca n n o t stop them , says a H o u se report. For exam ple, said th e re p o rt being re­ leased M onday, th e FDA believed a p artic­ ular b ran d of chew able V itam in D tablets d esigned for ch ild ren w as too p o te n t an d a Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE, H aiti — T he Senate p resid en t said S un d ay legislators w ere co n sid erin g nam ing a S u ­ prem e C ourt justice to replace exiled P resid en t Jean- B ertrand A ristide an d calling election s w ithin 90 d ay s. D ejean Belizaire said no decision on such an a p p o in t­ m en t h ad been m ad e b u t th a t it could com e as early as M onday or T u esd ay after talks w ith political a n d b u si­ ness leaders to settle on a so lution to the crisis. "W e are not th e g o v ern m en t, b u t we are the only legitim ate civilian in stitu tio n th a t can m ake d e cisio n s," Belizaire said of th e N ational A ssem bly, H aiti's p arlia­ m en t, w hich w as elected w ith A ristide last D ecem ber. H e said any p ro p o sal for resolving the w eek-old cri­ sis m ust be a p p ro v e d by the S en ate an d C ham b er of D eputies, w hich form the N ational A ssem bly. T he law m akers m et w ith m ilitary, political an d b u si­ n ess leaders late into th e n ight at th e N ational Palace. A half-dozen soldiers searched all th o se e n terin g or leav­ ing the building. In a joint sta te m e n t S u n d ay n ig h t, the c o u n try 's m a­ jor political parties u rged th e N ational A ssem bly to go ah ead and nam e a provisional p re sid e n t "to avoid ch a­ os that th rea ten s the very fo u n d a tio n of the n a tio n .” Several dip lo m ats, in clu d in g U.S. A m bassad or Alvin A dam s, a d d re sse d a Senate crisis com m ittee. Backing u p claim s by G en. Raoul C edras, the arm ed forces' provisional com m ander-in -ch ief, th at the mili­ tary did not w a n t to govern, Belizaire said the arm y h ad refused to assu m e interim p o w er. “ W e have no g o v e rn m e n t to keep th e state going, the Senate p re sid e n t said. H e said “ there w as very little tim e" to reach a solution. The proposal being con sid ered S u n d ay w as th o u g h t Stabbing roundup Associated Press Israeli police rounded up Palestinians after a fatal stabbing of a female German tourist in the Old City of Jerusalem Wednesday. The sacred hill in Jerusalem known to the Jews as Temple Mount and to the Arabs as Haram es-Sharif was the scene of many riots a year ago. Ethnic violence persists in Germany Associated Press B O N N , G erm any — G erm an y o u th s fire- bom bed refugee h o stels an d beat u p im m ig ran ts across th e co u ntry , police said S u nday. A federal agency rep o rted th e re are far m ore neo-N azis in the n atio n th a n prev io u sly th o u g h t. th e far-right R epublican party w on its first seats in H a n o v e r's city council d u r ­ ing local elections in L ow er Saxony state. M eanw hile, The R epublicans, w h o cam p aig ned w ith a n ti­ foreigner slogans like, "T h e Boat Is l u ll,” cap ­ tu red only 3.5 p e rc e n t of the vote in H anover, b u t en o u g h to w in o ne o r tw o seats. Just a w eek earlier, th e radical-right G erm an P eo p le's U nion w o n seats in B rem en's p arlia­ m en t on an an ti-foreign er cam paign. From H esse state in w e ste rn G erm any to Bran- d e n b u rg state in th e east, rig ht-w ing radicals be­ sieged asylum sh elters an d in ju red at least six foreigners d u rin g th e p ast 24 h o u rs, police said. Ethnic an d racial violence h as b een raging in G erm any for several w eeks. The attackers d e m a n d th at all foreigners be driven from th e co u n try . T he h a tre d is ethnic an d racial in n a tu re , b u t also stem s from co m p e­ tition for jobs, h o u sin g a n d social w elfare funds. Law au th o rities have said th e re are about 2,000 neo-N azis in form er East G erm an y , site of som e of th e w orse attacks. But in a new ly released re p o rt, th e Federal O f­ fice for th e Protection of the C o n stitu tio n said the figure is m uch h ig h e r in th e econom ically d e p ressed region. . "It can be assu m e d th a t the neo-N azi scene in the form er GDR is g reater th a n 2,000, in all likeli­ hood several tim es g re a te r," the intelligence-col- lecting agency said. The agency said a b o u t 2,700 neo-N azis w ere in form er W est G erm any an d th at m any of them possess explosives a n d g u n s. The C ologne-based agency com plained th at police in eastern G erm any have collected scant inform ation abou t the righ t-w in g radical scene in th at region. “ W hat is lacking is a b alanced, co m p eten t pic­ ture of the situation — th e first an d m ost im p o rt­ an t p reco ndition for an effective battle ag ain st political violence," th e agency said in a report. U naccustom ed to political violence, police in the form er C o m m u n ist p art of G erm any have been o v erw h elm ed. Som e officers have ev en sym p ath ized w ith rig h t-w in g radicals. A ccording to th e C ologne agency, 99 arso n a t­ tacks o n asylum sh elters w ere com m itted from Jan uary until th e e n d of S eptem ber. possible cau se of elev ated blood calcium levels w hich could d am ag e k id n ey s and possibly lead to d e a th . But the FDA c an n o t o rd e r recalls, so the agency began neg o tiatio n s w ith the m a n u ­ facturer in stead . N o a g ree m en t h ad been reached at th e tim e th e rep o rt w as w ritten, an d th e tablets w ere c o n tin u in g to be sold. In a n o th e r case, a hog p ro d u c e r in Indi­ ana w as feedin g his anim als seed corn con­ tam in ated w ith a fungicide a n d pesticide. The FDA w as co n cern ed th a t th e chem icals w ould en d u p in th e p ork a n d be absorbed by h u m a n s, but it had to ask the state v e te r­ inarian to q u a ra n tin e th e hogs a n d th e state c h e m ist's office to em bargo th e seed corn because it lacked the a u th o rity . H o w ever, w hile a p p ro p ria te ch ann els w ere b ein g p u rsu e d , th e p o rk w as still on the m arket. T hese exam ples and m ore w ere collected by the H o u se Energy a n d C om m erce su b ­ com m ittee staff on in vestig atio n s a n d o ver­ sight to show w hy a bill sch e d u le d for a subcom m ittee vote this w eek is n eed ed . The bill w ould give th e FDA enforcem ent po w er over th e in d u strie s it regulates, sim i­ lar to th a t already en jo y ed by the A gricul­ ture D e p a rtm e n t o ver its charges. But FD A -regulated b u sin ess g ro u p s o p ­ pose it, saying th ere w a s " n o evidence, p a t­ tern or practice to su g g e st" th e FDA n e e d ­ ed a n y th in g m ore th a n ad d itio nal financial an d h u m an reso u rces to d o a b etter job. The G rocery M an u facturers of Am erica said th e report, titled Filthy Food, Dubious Drugs and Defective Devices: the Legacy of FDA's Antiquated Statute, h a d "a sensational title, b u t little new in fo rm a tio n ." The legislation w o u ld give the FDA p o w ­ er to o rd er d e stru c tio n of go o d s th a t risk h u m a n or anim al health an d m a n d ate that o th er u nsatisfacto ry goo ds be clearly th e U nited stam p ed “ R efused e n try S tates." to The bill also w o u ld give FDA p o w e r to: ■ Issue su b p o e n a s w h en p ro d u c ts are being in vestigated. ■ E nter estab lish m en ts, w ith o u t p e rm is­ sion of th e o w n er, w h en crim inal activity is su sp ected. m ■ Set civil p en alties for violations. Haitian senate may replace exiled leader EF Associated Press Belgian king refuses resignation of language-divided government BRUSSELS, Belgium — King B audouin on S unday refused th e resign ation of th e linguistically-divided go v ern m en t a n d told it to p rep a re for con stitu tio nal ch an g es th at w o u ld e x p a n d regional a u to n o m y . T he m onarch m et w ith the cen ter-rig h t g o v e rn ­ m e n t's leaders th ro u g h o u t th e w eek en d in an attem p t to calm linguistic p assio n s b etw een the French- an d D u tch-sp eaking p arties of th e coalition. The tw o D u tch -sp eak in g Flem ish p arties clashed bitterly last w eek w ith their F rench -speaking c o u n ter­ p arts over arm s a n d telecom m unicatio ns contracts. T he d isp u te h asten e d th e dem ise of W ilfred M ar­ te n s' g o v ern m en t o nly w eeks before the en d of its four-year term . A fter the kin g 's decision, M artens im m ediately called for a m eetin g of th e C abinet to seek com m on g ro u n d on a c o n stitu tio n al proposal. Peace conference planned in Afghanistan KABUL, A fgh anistan — Prim e M inister Fazle H aq K haliqyar disclosed p lan s S un d ay for peace talks in ­ volving the C om m u n ist-sty le g o v ern m en t, m o d erate M uslim rebel lead ers a n d A fghanistan s exiled king. But fu n d am en talist guerrillas rejected th e talks and v o w ed to co n tin u e p re ssin g the 13-year-old civil w ar th at has killed m o re th a n 1.5 m illion A fghans an d u p ro o te d m ore th a n a th ird of the co u n try s 15 m illion people. P resid en t N ajibullah w'ill not perso nally take p art in the talks, w hich are expected to take place in G eneva u n d e r U nited N ations su p e rv isio n in late O cto ber or early N ovem ber, K haliqyar said. Victims of Indonesia plane crash buried JAKARTA, Indonesia — M ore th an 130 m ilitary m en killed in the crash of an In d o n esian air force plane w ere buried S u n d ay w ith ho n o rs. T he C-130 H ercules tra n sp o rt crashed sho rtly after takeoff S aturday , killing 134 air force m en ab o ard , as well as a security g u ard an d an em ployee at a g o v e rn ­ m ent trainin g cen ter d estro y ed by th e flam ing w reck ­ age- Vice M arshall Siboen, th e air force chief of staff, p ro v id ed th e u p d a te d d e a th toll S un day. He co n ­ firm ed that o n e air force m a n su rv iv ed the crash b u t w as in critical conditio n w ith m assiv e b u rn s. The m ilitary on S atu rd ay h a d initially rep o rte d a toll , , of 132 killed. Smithsonian returns Alaskan native hones LARSEN BAY, Alaska — T he bo n es of h u n d re d s of Kodiak Island natives w ere reb u ried in L arsen Bay, A laska, in a R ussian O rth o d o x cerem on y nearly 61) years after the S m ithso nian In stitu tio n took them for research w ith o u t islan d ers' p erm ission . T he skeletal rem ains of 756 peo p le, taken frOm th e island off A laska's so u th e rn coast in the 1930s, w ere flow n hom e last m o n th in card b o ard boxes Som e ol th e rem ains w ere 2,000 y ears old, w hile o th e rs w ere of people w h o died of a" 1918 flu epidem ic, archeolo- gists an d islanders said. T he rem ains w ere buried S atu rd ay in a 50-foot-long tren ch on a grassy hill on th e o u tsk irts of th e village. Associated Press Victims of the Haitian coup pile up in the morgue. likely to b ar A ristide from new elections, an d it w as not k no w n w h e th e r law m ak ers w o u ld allow him to return to H aiti. U n d er th e c o n situ tio n , no p re sid e n t can suc­ ceed him self. T H K D A I! V I’KX W Page 4 Monday. October 7. 1991 EDITORIALS T te B-2 v w fe , Wonders a^am st Killer bees!.. Pitbulls... And arfe at a picnic !... This sate Would be easier w the Soviets were . st\W a threat TH E D A IL Y TEXAN Editorial Hoard M atthew C o n n ally Curt B esselm a n A sso cia te E d ito r E d ito r D avid B ezan son A sso cia te E d itor Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Daily Texan 3re those of the writer of the article They are not necessarily those of the University adm inistration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of O perating " rustees O pin­ ions expressed in staff or guest colum ns are those of the writer. Letters subm itted to Firing Line should be fewer than 250 words, and guest colum ns should be no more than 800 words Bring subm issions to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue or mail them to The Daily Texan, P 0 Box D. Austin TX 78713 Letters may be edited fo r length libel and Te\an grammar punctuation style VIEWPOINT O n T he P ro w l State watchdog only a French poodle M e m b e rs o f th e n ew T e x a s E th ics C o m m issio n say th at, for the m o st p art, th e y d o n 't e x p e c t th e y w ill hav e to clea n up a n y- th in g in sta te g o v e rn m e n t b u t bad P R , or th e " p e r c e p tio n " of im p ro p riety . T h o se p illars o f m o rality p ro b ab ly a re n 't s h a k in g in th eir b o o ts w ith th e co m m issio n sp o rtin g kid g lo v e s — th ey p ro bab ly have as m an y sto m ach b u tte rflies a s U T P resid en t C u n n in g h a m h a s b efo re an interv iew w ith h is sp e ech w riter for A lcalde m ag azin e. T h ro u g h o u t h e r cam p aig n and th e 72nd legislative s e ssio n , G ov . Ann R ich ard s d ep icted th e v o te rs' faith in th eir re p re se n ta tiv e s a s abysm ally low . "T h e y [T exan s] are su sp icio u s ab o u t o u r m o tiv es, y o u rs and m in e ," sh e said in F eb ru ary . " T h e y are d istressed ab ou t th e sed u ctiv e sm ell of m o n ey in th e political p ro cess and th e in flu e n ce of n arro w sp ecial in ter­ e s t s ." A s a resu lt, an e th ics co m m issio n w as form ed by th e L eg islatu re to in terp ret th e n ew e th ics law w h ich th e n o b le self-p o licin g L egislatu re p assed th is y ear. T h e co m m issio n w ill hav e au th o rity to reg u late a broad ran g e o f q u e stio n a b le leg islativ e issu es. Y et th ro u g h o u t th e d eb ate ov er the bill, leg islato rs in sisted th e p ro blem to be m ere p erceiv ed corru p tio n . G ra n ted , th ey are in n o ce n t until p ro v en gu ilty, b u t th is com m issio n m igh t n ot know th e difference*. T h e y 're o n ly co n cern e d w ith PR. O n e o f th e n o m in e e s fo r th e co m m issio n , A rlington law y er Ja m es C rib bs, a fo rm er law p artn er w ith sta te S en . Bob M cF arlan d and now' a lobb y ist, m ad e clea r th e in te n tio n s o f th e co m m issio n . He said th ey will directly ad d ress th e p u b lic's w orry o v er in flu e n ce p ed d lin g in state g ov­ e rn m e n t: " I th in k th is e th ics co m m issio n h as got an o p p o rtu n ity to try to help righ t that w ro n g by h e lp in g th e leg islato rs and h elp in g th e lobb y ­ ists to d eal w ith th is new' law ." In sh o rt, th e e th ics co m m issio n w ill sp eak for leg islato rs and lobbyists in tellin g th e p u blic th at e v e ry th in g is A -O K . A n o th e r n o m in e e said, 1 th in k w e n eed to tig h te n u p ou r reg u latio n s and m ake it u n d erstan d ab le to th e p u blic th at, as far as 1 kn ow , th e re are no m ajo r, g larin g p ro b ­ le m s ." W ell w o n 't th at b e a relief to h ear. A s lon g as im p ro p riety is o n ly in th e e y e o f th e p u blic, n o th in g will im p ro ve b ev on d p e rce p tio n s. W e know' th at H ou se S p e a k e r G ib Lew is sp e n t tim e in jail. T h e p e rcep tio n th is tim e is that h e 's in d icted on al­ leged eth ics vio latio n s. W e also k n o w state R ep. H u go B erlanga w as jailed for refu sin g to turn ov er self-in crim in a tin g record s. A nd didn t a state re p re sen tativ e die recen tly from a co ca in e o v erd o se? U .S . re p re se n ta tiv e s' ch e ck s seem to b e hav e created th e p ercep tion th at th e y are b o u n cin g by th e h u n d red s. G ov . A n n R ich ard s told a task fo rce Friday to "set the to n e' for a state E th ics C o m m issio n th at will scru tin ize th e eth ical b e h a i ior o f public officials, startin g in Ja n u a ry . S h e d escrib ed the task force as a "s u p e rb an d quality g ro u p ." " I d o n 't th in k an y b o d y is g o in g to raise any q u e stio n s ab o u t th e eth ics o f th e p articip an ts o f this task fo r c e ," R ich ard s said. 1 he leg islato rs w ho recom m en d ed th em d id n 't p erceiv e an y ethical p ro b lem s. Sh e told th e task fo rce, w h ich sh e created by e xecu tiv e ord er, "W h a t w e really w an t to figure o u t h e re , w'ith the co m m issio n , is how w e can create in g o v ern m e n t a bod y th at is go in g to offer th e reassu ran ce that th e pu blic n e ed s th at th eir in te re sts are co m in g firs t." T ry ag ain . T h is o n e 's given us a p rev iew o f th e ro sy co n clu sio n s it will d raw . — M atthew C onnally ftU J M CoHSTlTUTTdi Democrats need better strategy to win A t a D em o cratic P arty co n fe re n c e held branch o f th e nation al g o v e rn m e n t. D em o crats m u st in d icate to th e p o p u lace a clear plan o f action b efo re p assin g law s in C o n g re ss; they m ust m ake it clear that th eir p o licies can be im p lem en ted th ro u g h the law m a k in g p ro cess, if n ot by m e a n s o f th e p re sid e n cy . Jennifer DeLay TEXAN COLUMNIST S e p t. 21, Jerry B ro w n , a fo rm er g o v er­ n o r of C aliforn ia an d p o ssib le ca n d i­ d ate for th e p re sid e n cy , called for th e revitaliza­ tion o f his party. B row n ad d ed th e D em ocratic Party m u st ad v o cate ch a n g e b e ­ cau se it is now " s e e n by m illio n s o f A m erican s as th e party o f th e sta tu s q u o ." that W h o is he kidd ing? G ran ted , th e D em o crats hold a m ajo rity of seats in both h o u ses o f C o n g re s s an d th u s tend to con trol the p ro cess o f cre a tin g fed eral law'. But C o n g re ss, th o u g h it w as orig in ally in te n d ­ ed to be th e m o st im p o rta n t b ra n ch of g o v e rn ­ m en t, is p re sen tly treated as se co n d a ry in im ­ p o rtan ce to th e p re sid e n cy ; th e m ed ia portray the leg islatu re as a fractio u s b od y existin g to eith er co rro b o ra te or balk th e w ish es o f the ch ie f execu tiv e. C o n g re ss m ay m ake an d p ass th e law s, but w e look to th e p re sid e n t to p ro v id e th e in sp ira ­ tion for policy an d n ew law s, an d h av e d o n e so sin ce Fran klin R o o se v e lt. T h e D em o cratic Party h as n ot had a firm grip on the e xecu tiv e b ra n ch sin ce R ichard N ix o n 's in 1968. T h e ele ctio n o f Jim m y ascen d an cy C arter in 1976 can arg u ably be a ttrib u ted to W aterg ate; C a rte r's term o f o ffice w as in any case w id ely regard ed as a fru stra tin g failu re. S in ce 1976, D em o crats h av e n ot w on the e le c ­ toral v o tes of a n y state larg er than G eo rg ia, w'hich se n d s on ly 12 re p re se n ta tiv e s to the e le c ­ toral colleg e. E ven if D em o cra ts u se th eir cq n tro l o f C o n ­ g re ss to d efy th e p erceiv ed R ep u b lica n d o m i­ n an ce and im p lem e n t a D em o cra tic a g e n d a , th eir legislative triu m p h s are n ot clea r to v o ters fo cu sin g on th e e x e cu tiv e b ra n ch . D em o cratic leg islato rs try in g to fo llow th e p arty p latfo rm set ou t in e le c tio n y e a rs w ould p ro b a b ly n o t b e recog n ized as su ch ; w'hat a v e ra g e v o te r can re­ cap his or h er p a rty 's p latform ? If th e 1988 p re sid en tia l race w as a n y in d ica­ tion, th e pu blic is n o t ev en in te reste d in the sp ecifics of p arty p latfo rm s. N ot o n e o f th e th ree m a jo r n e w s m a g a z in e s p rin ted th e p lat­ form o f e ith er p arty ; o n ly U .S . N ew s a n d W orld R eport m ad e a n y th in g m ore th an a p a ssin g re f­ e re n c e to the D em o cratic p latfo rm . T h e m ed ia d ev o tes m ore tim e to a p a rty 's e lectio n stra te g y than its policy a sp ira tio n s. If Brow 'n's "m illio n s o f A m e rica n s " h av e n o clea r view o f D em o crats' in te n tio n s, hovv can th ey regard th e party as the a rch ite ct of th e statu s quo? To m ake B ro w n 's sta te m e n t tru e, th e D e m o ­ crats m u st d ev elo p a clear ag en d a an d re a sse rt the role o f C o n g re ss, th e on ly d irectly e lected H ow ever, th e D em o cra ts in co n tro l o f C o n ­ g ress are far from co n tro llin g th e p re sid e n cy , and th ey k n o w it. T h e 1988 e le ctio n d e m o n ­ strated th at the D em o cra ts c a n n o t w in w ith their cu rren t " i f you ca n 't b ea t 'e m , jo in 'e m " ap p roach to ca m p a ig n in g . T h e 1988 c o n v e n tio n ch o se to p ass o v e r th e old co re o f b lu e-co llar su p p o rte rs in fav or o f a nearly issu e le ss, m edia- cen tered ca m p aig n . Im itative tactics hav e y ield ed n o th in g in th e q u est for th e o ffice o f the p re sid e n c y . T h e D em ­ o crats will n o t e n te r th e e x e cu tiv e o ffice an y tim e soon u n le ss th ey d ev elo p a n o n -d eriv a tiv e political stra te g y . In a p re sid e n tia l m ark e t d o m ­ inated by th e R e p u b lica n s, th e y are u n likely to com e ou t on to p in an im ag e c o n te s t. P olitical iss u e s and d esire to refo rm sh ou ld take p re ce d e n ce ov er th e g ro o m in g o f ca n d i­ d ates for th e m ed ia; th e D e m o cra ts c a n 't act on B ro w n 's d esire for rev italizio n w ith o u t re d efin ­ ing th eir p rio rities. T h e y d o n 't h av e a ch a n ce in hell o f w in n in g the '92 e le ctio n u n le ss th ey d isp e n se w ith co u rtin g the m ed ia and strive for action in th e face o f the c o u n try 's p ro b lem s. D eLay is a R ussian junior. Fijis harass female drivers L ast W e d n esd a y , as a fem ale stu d e n t w alked aw ay from her car, sh e tu rned back to see if th e d o o rs w ere locked and saw a m an sta n d in g by the car a im in g a football at her. A p p a re n tly , he in te n d e d to hit h e r in th e b ack and p reten d it w as an a ccid e n t, b u t sto p p ed w h en sh e tu rned aro u n d . T w o o th e r m en w ere p re se n t, and o n e y elled , " G o a h e a d , d o it!" I h e ball w as n e v e r th ro w n , b u t th e m an k ep t his arm raised in a th re a te n in g g e stu re . U n able to find p ark in g on ca m p u s, this w o m an had th e a u d acity to p ark in front o f th e Phi G am m a D elta h o u se. O n a p re ­ viou s o ccasio n , so m e F ijis g ave h e r m e n a c­ in g look s for p ark in g in fro n t o f their h o u se. T h e n ext d ay , s h e fo u n d h er car sm eared w ith fries an d h a m b u rg ers. It see m s th e se in cid e n ts o f v an d alism an d h a ra ssm e n t are co m m o n , b u t g o u n re ­ p o rted . A m o n g th e last s e m e s te r's targets w ere o n e cam p u s re sid e n t w h o had " n ig ­ g e r " scraw led o n h e r car an d a n o th e r w h o had h er w in d sh ield sm ash ed in (o f th e se w o m en , tw o w e re b lack and o n e H isp a n ­ ic). T h e last tim e w e ch e ck e d , g u y s, that sectio n of 27th S tre e t w as o w n ed by the C ity of A u stin and op en to p u blic p ark ing . As you know , o n -cam p u s p ark in g is no party, e sp ecially for w o m en w h o hav e to w alk to and from th eir cars at n igh t. P reviously* the U n iv ersity d ealt w ith this fra tern ity 's p ro b lem s by req u irin g th e Fijis to take w o rk sh o p s in cu ltu ral d iv ersi­ ty. H o p efu lly , th e se h o u rs o f "se n s itiv ity tra in in g " w ere not co m p le te ly in vain. If you still feel th e u rge to v an d alize p ro p er­ ty and attack w o m e n , m ay b e so m e serio u s co u n selin g w ould be in ord er. K arina C ubilla G overnm ent tim etable. A ssert, Evolution not in the rocks S o m e claim th at e v o lu tio n is a fact and b ase th eir assertio n on th e " f a c t " of th e g eologic th e y m ay. P rov e, th ey ca n n o t. T h e "g e o lo g ic tim e ta­ b le " seen in m any textb o o k s d o es indeed su p p o rt e v o lu tio n , but th e "g e o lo g ic tim e ­ ta b le " see n in m any textb oo k s is actu ally im agin ary p ro d u ction of e v o lu tio n - the th in k in g an d n ot a reflection of th e actu al record o f the rocks. A .E .J. E ngel of th e C a lifo rn ia In stitu te of T e ch n o lo g y m ak e s th e fo llow in g a d m is­ sio n : "N o m o re th an 1 p e rce n t or so o f the h isto ry of the E arth is d ecip h e ra b le . But th at 1 p ercen t is d isp ersed th ro u g h a series o f e v e n ts or e p iso d e s, e x te n d in g back th ro u g h g eologic tim e. By im ag in ativ e m a­ n ip u latio n of the ev o lv in g data w e can re­ co n stru ct a m ag n ificen t and aw e so m e h is­ tory o f the earth and its life ." ("T im e and the E a r th ," A m erican Scientist 5 7 .) "Im a g in a tiv e m a n ip u la tio n " not p ro of. E volu tio n p red icts that th e earlie st strata will h av e fe w e r and m o re sim p le fo rm s relative to lo w e r strata, bu t su ch is not w h at is fo u n d . G eo rg e S im p so n , "M r. E v o lu tio n ," co n fe s s e d , "T h e r e m u st be so m e special reaso n w hy varied fo ssils are su d d en ly p re sen t in th e C am b ria n an d not b efo re. T h is m a jo r m y stery o f th e history of life h as natu rally excited a g rea t d eal of in a rg u m en t and s p e c u la tio n ." (Q u o te d T he M eaning o f E volu tion .) is A "m a jo r m y s te ry " is n ot p ro o f. W ere e v o lu tio n tru e, in te rm e d ia te fo rm s w ould su rely ab ou n d in th e fossil reco rd , b u t S te ­ p h en G ou ld o f H arvard h as a d m itte d , "A ll p alen to lo g ists k n ow that th e fossil record co n ta in s p re cio u s little in th e w ay of in te r­ m ed iate fo rm s: tra n sitio n s b e tw e e n m ajor g ro u p s are ch aracteristically a b r u p t." (N at­ ural H istory, Ju n e -Ju ly , 1977, p .24. Q u o ted in R eason an d R ev elation , A pr. 1984) D r. C o lin P a tte rso n , s e n io r p a le o n to lo ­ gist at th e B ritish M u seu m o f N atu ral H is­ tory in L o n d o n , re sp o n d in g to a q u e stio n co n c e rn in g state d , "th e r e is n o t o n e su ch fossil for w h ich on e cou ld m ak e a w ater-tig h t a r g u m e n t." (Q u o te d in R eason and R ev elation .) in te rm e d iate fo rm s Boh Berard C lassics/G reek I w ou ld UT must punish all abusers! like to w h o le h e a rte d ly agree w ith A aron L ev in e on his s ta n ce ag ain st sm o k in g ("S m o k e rs ta rn ish g a m e ," Firing Line, F rid ay ), b u t I b eliev e th e re is a need to police o th e r actio n s w h ich I h av e had the m isfo rtu n e o f e x p e rie n cin g at football g am es. T h e first o ffe n siv e a ctio n w h ich sh ou ld be sta m p ed ou t by th e iron fist o f o u r n ew , p lain -clo th ed U T PD o ffice rs is th e d rin k ­ ing o f th at h ig h ly ad d ictiv e s u b s ta n c e , al­ coh o l. I w o u ld p refer to re in sta te p ro h ib i­ tion n a tio n w id e . A lcoh ol te n d s to p ro d u ce loud , b o is te ro u s , a b n o x io u s b eh a v io r in its v ictim s. Ju st as re p u lsiv e sm e lls sh ou ld be b a n n ed , as L ev in e h a s su g g e ste d , so sh ou ld re p u lsiv e sig h ts. P u n ish m e n t sh ou ld b e sw ift an d sev ere. 1 w ould su g g e st m aking th e o ffe n d e r d rink the rest o f the alco h o l, in d u cin g p ro fu se v o m itin g . T h e o ffe n d e r sh o u ld be esco rted from th e g am e an d , if fo u n d "p u b licly in ­ to x ic a te d ," tak en to jail. M in o rs cau gh t w ith alco h o l sh o u ld h av e th e ir p aren ts called to inform th em o f th e ir s o n 's or d a u g h te r's m orally d ep lo rab le act. C o n sid e rin g that 90 p e rc e n t o f th e s tu ­ d en t b o d y will be e sco rte d o u t o f th e sta d i­ um for e ith e r sm o k in g , d rin k in g , or b ein g o b n o x io u s, I also su g g e st th a t th e re m a in ­ in g g o o d , law -ab id in g , G o d -fe a rin g s tu ­ d en ts be rew ard ed for " ju s t sa y in g n o " by allo w in g them to sit in th o se se a ts w h ich w ere vacated by th e o ffe n d e rs : T h is will e n co u ra g e p eo p le to n arc on th o se s tu ­ d en ts w h o are n o t o b e y in g th e ru les, th u s red u cin g som e of th e n e ed for p o lice. P. Scott Elders U n iversity C hapter, N ation al O rgan ization for the R eform O f M ariju an a Law s Student money for CISPES would aid Salvadoran rebels W h e n th e stu d e n ts voted c o n g re ssm e n and o th ers w h o m ight .be sy m p a th e tic to re v o lu ­ tio n a r y m o v e m e n ts in L a tin A m erica. K G B port th e FM L N or n ot. S a lv a d o ra n stu d e n ts w h o o p p o se th e FM L N w ould b e forced to co n trib u te to a cau se th e y are d iam etrically o p ­ p o sed to. Mark Peña GUEST COLUMNIST in L y n ch 's bill. d e f e c t o r to o u st T on i L u ckett tie- an d h e r b an d of d y ed , n e o -h ip p ie ca u se h o p p ers, th e re w as a se n se o f h o p e th at p erh ap s the S tu d e n ts ' A sso ciatio n w ould cease its a b u se o f p o w er. M an y voted for G arth D avis as SA p re sid e n t — ra th e r th an T o n i's p o ­ litical d iscip le, Eric D ixon — b e ­ ca u se th ey view ed th e SA as an in stitu tio n caterin g to th e political ag en d a o f th e left, rath er than th e n e ed s o f th e stu d e n t b od y as a w h ole. Even th o u g h D avis b rin g s so m e m u ch n eed ed san ity to the SA , th ere are u n fo rtu n a te ly still m e m ­ b ers on the a ssem b ly that use th eir in flu en ce to p ed d le im p ro p er an d , at w orst, illegal sch e m es. th e M arxist SA re p re sen ta tiv e Sh ola L y n ch , front on b eh alf o f gro u p C o m m itte e in Solid arity w ith th e P eo p le o f El Salv ad or, is cu rren tly sp o n so rin g a bill that w ould g et y o u r S tu d e n ts ' A sso cia ­ tion to give th em $ 1 ,5 0 0 in aid to th eir fu nd raisin g . K eep in m ind that it takes m o n ey to raise m on- ey. T h e scam g o e s s o m e th in g like this: C IS P E S u ses m o n ey allocated by the SA to p ro m o te and assist th eir W o rk -a-T h o n p ro gram to ben efit the p oor in E ast A u stin . T h ey g et s p o n so rs to d o n ate m o n ­ ey . M ean w h ile, th e y put on a big PR sh ow for th e m edia and o th e r easily d u p e d , w e ll-m ean in g so u ls by in stallin g h o m e secu rity d ev ic­ low -in co m e es and p atch in g up h o u sin g . A cco rd in g to L y n ch 's bill, th e m oney will b e u sed to fund h ealth care clin ics an d to aid in th e e sta b ­ lish m en t o f a w o m e n 's p aram ed ic p rogram in El Salv ad o r. But a cop y of C IS P E S ' in tern al W ork-a- T h o n m em o s tell a d iffe ren t and d istu rb in g sto ry . T h e Y o u n g C o n ­ servatives o f T e x a s, in co n ju n ctio n w ith the M o v e m e n t for D em o cra ­ cy in El S alv ad o r, recen tly o b ­ tained m em o s co n ta in in g in fo rm a­ tion that w as su sp icio u sly om itted For ex am p le , C IS P E S b o asts ab o u t the fo llow in g in a W ork -a- T h o n sig n -u p sh e e t, "T h e W ork -a- T h o n w ill su p p o rt th e A lejan d ra B ravo Field H osp ital. T h is field h osp ital is th e heart o f th e FM LN [F arab u n d o M arti N ational L ib er­ ation Front] m ed ical sy stem in C h a la te n a n g o [El Salv ad or]. W hile d ev elo p in g th e cap acity to h an d le th e im m ed iate m edical n e ed s of the FM L N m em b ers and th e s u r­ ro u n d in g p o p u latio n , it is also lay­ ing th e b asis for a global health care sy stem th ro u g h o u t El S a lv a ­ d o r ." T h e w o m e n 's p aram ed ic p ro­ is also referred to as the gram P a ra m e d ic " F M L N W o m e n 's T rain in g P r o je c t." W h ile L ynch and C IS P E S try to p o stu re th e m ­ selves as co m p a ssio n a te p eop le w h o se o n ly in te rest is in serv in g th e S tu ­ th ey w an t h u m an ity , d e n ts' A sso cia tio n to fund a band of M arxist th u g s to take care of th eir m ed ical n e ed s. A nd g u ess w h o w ould pay for it? You w o u ld , w h e th e r you s u p ­ T h e S tu d e n ts ' A sso ciatio n u se m a n d ato ry stu d e n t fees for c a u se s they d eem w o rth y of fu n d in g — in clu d in g p artisan pet p ro je cts that m an y stu d e n ts w o u ld n 't fund th e m se lv e s if g iven the ch o ice . T h e FM L N is a M arxist arm y that h as b ee n fu nd ed by th e So v iet U n ion , C u ba and the S a n d in ista s sin ce 1980 in th e a ttem p t to o v e r­ throw th e elected g o v ern m e n t of El Salv ad or. F arab u n d o M arti, w h o g ives his n am e to th e g ro u p , w as an a g e n t in S ta lin 's old C o m in te rn w h o w as S a n d m is ta e x p e lle d m o v e m e n t b ecau se of h is o b e d i­ e n ce to M o sc o w 's party line. fro m th e C IS P E S w as fo u n d ed in O cto b e r 1980 by Farid H a n d e l, b ro th e r of th e c h ie f of th e El Sa lv a d o ra n C o m m u n ist Party, ih e p u rp o se of C IS P E S w as to act as a p u b lic re la ­ tion s m o u th p ie ce to rally su p p o rt for th e FM L N from " p r o g r e s s iv e " S t a n i s l a v L ev ch e n ck o , in h is b o o k K G B T he H idden H an d, talk s ab o u t how th e A m erican C o m m u n is t Party and C ISP E S h av e jo in tly targ eted co l­ lege stu d e n ts a cro ss A m erica b e ­ cau se " s tu d e n ts w e re easily m a ­ nipulated by so cialistic slo g an s and u top ian v is io n s ." L ev ch e n ck o w as in ch arg e o f Sov iet A ctiv e M e a su re s and w as in stru m en tal in stre a m lin in g m o n ­ ey from th e co m m u n ist p arties o f El Salv ad o r, C u b a , N icarag u a, th e S o v iet U n io n an d the U n ited S ta te s to C IS P E S ch a p ters n a tio n ­ w ide. T h e W o rk -a -T h o n p ro g ram w hich th e U T c h a p te r o f C IS P E S w an ts you to fu nd is a n a tio n w id e fund raisin g d rive, hardly a s p o n ­ tan eo u s act o f co n s c io u s n e s s -ra is ­ ing in East A u stin . It is n ot th e role o f the S tu d e n ts ' A sso ciatio n to u se stu d e n t m o n ey to fu nd a rm ie s aro u n d the w orld, tim e w h en e sp ecially at a th e F M L N and th e S a lv a d o ran g o v ­ e rn m e n t are clo se to sig n in g p eace acco rd s th at w o u ld e n d the 11- y ear-old \va r - N or is it p ro p er for th e SA to u se s tu d e n t fu n d s for feet-good p ro g ra m s in East A u s­ tin. T h e SA is n e ith e r an en tity of social w o rk ers n o r a bod y th at d e ­ cid es fo reig n p o licy . It's an o rg a n i­ zation for s tu d e n ts and only s tu ­ d en ts. L ast y ear, L u c k e tt's cro n ie s fu n d ed C IS P E S . T h is y e a r C IS P E S is a sk in g for $ 1 ,5 0 0 from th e S A , p lu s $ 4 ,0 0 0 from th e U n io n . If you o p p o se hav in g y ou r m o n ey u sed for n o n -stu d e n t iss u e s ; or o b je ct to su b sid izin g stu d e n t g ro u p s on ca m p u s, co m e by th e Y C T table o n the W est Mall an d sign a p etitio n statin g as m u ch . T h e S tu d e n ts ' A ssociation v o te s on th e bill T u e s ­ day at 7 p .m . A s Thom as Je ffe rso n w arn ed , "T o co m p el a m an to fu r­ nish fu n d s for th e p ro p ag atio n of id eas he d isb elie v e s an d a b h o rs is sin ful and ty ra n n ic a l." Peña is a govern m en t junior. t Thomas denies harassment charges Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas "ve ry forcefully denied alle­ g a t io n s by a law professor that he sexually ha­ ra s s e d her when she worked for him a decade ago, a Republican senator said Sunday. And the White House dismissed the accusations as "un- founded." But Democratic senators called the accusations very serious and two said a delay in Iuesday's scheduled confirmation vote might be necessary. Thomas himself made no comment on Anita 1 fill's allegations, which were first disclosed by National Public Radio and Nezvsday. The University of Oklahoma law professor told the Judiciary Committee last month that I hernias had detailed scenes from pornographic movies to her when she worked in the early 1980s as his legal assistant at the Department of Education and the Equal Employment Opportu­ nity Commission, according to a source familiar with the allegations. Hill told the committee that Thomas had asked her out and when she refused, began to describe his sexual interests and the porno­ graphic scenes, but he never touched her, the source said. " I felt as though I did not have a choice, that the pressure was such that I was going to have to submit to that pressure in order to continue getting good assignments, being able to work and be comfortable in the work environment," Hill said in an interview with National Public Radio. J H L ZJm The committee did not dis- close Hill's allegations public* ly before sending Thomas' nomination to the full Senate late last month without rec- ommendation 1 he commit- tee the W h ite House of the accusations and a two-day FBI inquiry en­ sued. inform ed W hile Thomas maintained his silence, the White House issued a statement saying it had "reviewed the [FBI] report and determined that the allegation was unfounded." A Senate vote is scheduled for Tuesday and a majority of senators have indicated their support for Thomas, a conservative appeals judge who would become the second black to sit on the na­ tion's highest court, succeeding the retired Jus­ tice Thurgood Marshall. Sen. Joseph Biden Jr., D-Del., chairman of the Judiciary Committee, could not be reached for comment on Hill's allegations or the committee's handling of it. But Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, called the allegations "ve ry serious charges, very disturbing" and said the full Senate should re­ view them before voting on Thomas' nomina­ tion. Metzenbaum spokeswoman Nancy Coffee said the senator thinks a possible delay of the confirmation vote "is definitely something that should be discussed." Sen. Paul Simon, D-Ill., hopes senators' ques­ tions on the matter can be addressed before Tuesday's scheduled vote, but if they cannot be, the senator "believes it's important enough that it might be necessary to delay the vote," said Simon's press secretary, David Carle. Hill issued a statement Sunday saying she was contacted initially by the committee staff on Sept. 3 "as someone who had worked with Thomas" and "after numerous discussions with ‘ Judiciary Committee staff, I decided to disclose the alleged sexual [about that harassment) to the committee only." information She said she subsequently submitted an affi­ davit to the committee and had no intention of making her allegations public until contacted by National Public Radio, which Hill said "had a copy of my sworn statement. ... 1 took the op­ portunity ... to respond to the information be­ fore it was publicized. At no time have I ever sought out the press to raise my concerns." T H E D AILY TEXAN Monday, October 7, 1991 Pag e 5 LSAT PREP $395 4 week course Oct. 17-Nov. 10 469-3110 Focus on the techniques you need to answer the questions. Realize there are much quicker, simpler approaches, and improve dramatically with less total practice because you've seen what to do. Lawyer instructor with top 2% score and over 8 years LSAT experience. Reading specialist. Practice with real LSAT exams. TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK FOR YOURS CALL 471-5244 URINARY TRACT INFECTION?? B A R T O N R E S E A R C H IS S E E K IN G Q U A L IF IE D F E M A L E S T O P A R T IC IP A T E IN A R E S E A R C H S T U D Y T R E A T IN G U R IN A R Y T R A C T IN F E C T IO N S . P A R T IC IP A N T S M U S T $ HAVE A URINARY TRACT INFECTION AND ? ARE PRESENTLY NOTTAKING ANY MEDICATIONS. FREE EXAMS AND MEDICAL CARE EARN $ 1 0 0 FINANCIAL REIMBURSEMENT FOR COMPLETION OF STUDY MITON K S IA K H INC 4 4 1 - 3 7 9 3 4029 S. C A PIT A L O F T X HW Y, #125 A U ST IN , T X 78704 Poll: Problems hinder education Associated Press N E W Y O R K — Nearly nine out of 10 beginning teachers believe many of their pupils are too overwhelmed by family and other outside prob­ lems to succeed in class, a survey released Sunday shows. The finding, contained in a teach­ er opinion poll commissioned by Insurance Co., Metropolitan Life raised fresh doubts about the pros­ pects of achieving national educa­ tional goals agreed upon two years ago by President Bush and the na­ tion's governors. The first of those goals aims at en­ suring that bv the year 2000, all chil­ dren arrive at school "ready to learn." The 1,007 public school teachers in the survey were questioned twice: in July and August of 1990 before beginning their first school year, and again last spring after completing their first year. Seventy-five percent initially agreed that "m any children come to school with so many problems that it's very difficult for them to be good students." But after a year in class, 89 percent said they held that view. Fifty-eight percent responded af­ ter a year of teaching that even the best teachers will find it difficult to educate more than two-thirds of their pupils, compared with 45 per­ cent who said so before their first classroom jobs. that times But an identical 89 percent replied their students both would benefit "if I do my job w ell." The survey, conducted by tele­ phone by Louis Harris and Associ­ ates Inc., had a sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. The sample was drawn from a list compiled by the American Associa­ tion of Colleges for Teacher Educa­ tion consisting of 1990 teacher col­ lege graduates who would complete last their first year of teaching spring. "Despite all the rhetoric and re­ ports, I think we still underestimate what young people are going through today," said Keith Geiger, president of the National Education Association, largest teacher union. the nation's Among other results: ■ Sixty percent initially agreed that "teachers are respected in to­ day's society." That dropped to 57 percent after a year of teaching. ■ Fewer supported the idea of na­ tional teacher testing after a year of experience than at the beginning: 57 percent versus 66 percent. ■ Both before and after a year in class, some 98 percent stressed the importance of working well with parents. But seven out of 10 com­ plained that many parents treat schools and teachers as "adversar­ ies." ■ Eighty-five percent still viewed teaching as their long-term career choice after a year of teaching — down from 90 percent before their first school year. 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What’s more, with our special student offer, it’s easier to get the Card now while you’re still in school than it may ever be again. So get the Card. And get ready to cover new terri tory on either side of our Great Continental Divide. • Minneapolis, St Paul. Si Louis and New Orleans are considered cities east of the Mississippi River •* A credit of up lo $3 T) lor calls will appear on each billing statement for 12 months afier enroll mem J i ’ O is equal to the charges for a domestic 30 minute night weekend MCI Card Compati btlny call and appropriate surcharges You must enroll for this service by December 31,1991 Membership Has Its Privileges* CALL 1-800-942-AMEX TRAVEL RELATED services An American Express compeny I f you're already a Cardmember, there’s no need to call Information about y o u r certificates w ill be arriving soon C o n tin e n ta l Complete terms and conditions of this travel'offer will arrive with your cemfftates Contmental Airlines alone is respons.ble for fulfillment ot this offer American Express assumes no liability for Continental Airl.nes performance © 1991 American Express Travel Related Services Company Inc T hk D a h .v T e x a n Page 6 Monday. October 7,1991 UNIVERSITY UT spending millions to aid medical faculty dependents Associ ited Press H O I STON — rhe University of lextis said it sp e n t $2 4 million last year to help send h u n d r e d s of chil­ dren and d e p e n d e n ts of som e facul­ ty m em bers to colleges including Harvard, Yale, Princeton — even Texas \ & \ ! University. I'ht pa ym e n ts were for d e p e n d ­ ents of physician faculty m e m be rs at six medical schools in H ou ston , G alveston, Dal­ las, San A ntonio a n d Tvler. the university's f u n d s at UT h elped pay the tui­ tion of 371 children an d d e p e n d e n ts of physician faculty m em b ers at the university's medical schools, ac­ cording to records obtained by the Houston Chronicle u n d e r the Texas O p en Records Act. The tuition allowances averaged >4 209 for each stu dent, university officials s a id . The tuition allowances — along with $3.6 million in car al­ lowances —- are part of the salar\ a nd benefits package the University of Texas gives its physician faculty m em bers Money for the tuition and car al­ lowances com es from fees the u n i­ versity medical facilities charge p ay ­ ing patients fur physician services. Com ptroller John Sharp earlier this year criticized the state's u n i­ versities for advocating higher taxes a n d tuition increases while s p e n d ­ ing some of their locally generated dollars on questionable expenses. W hen contacted by the Chronicle, Sharp said it w as the first time he had heard of the tuition allowances an d declined com m ent. N o similar tuition allowances are available for any of the o th e r m e d i­ cal at L i s medical schools. And no tuition allowances personnel are offered to the children or d e ­ p e n d e n ts of faculty m em bers at the university's academic institutions. “ It [the tuition allowance] is not an u n u su a l thing. It looks am azing on the surface, but it's n o t,” said A nn Friou, UT director of ne w s and public inform ation. "It's a stan dard benefit in the in d u s try .” Friou said tuition allowances are not given to o ther medical school personnel or academic faculty be­ cause thev d o not generate direct fees for services. “Teachers d o n 't get paid by their stu d e n ts to teach th e m ,” she said. Steve Stuyck, assistant vice p re si­ dent for university relations at the UT-M.D. A nd erson Cancer C e n te r in H ousto n, said the tuition allow­ ance has been a part of the taxable benefits package to physicians at the facility for 10 years. YCT questions SA’s spending Erica Shaffer D a ily T exan Staff The Young C onservatives of Texas criticized the Stu­ d en ts' Association Friday tor “ frivolous” s p e n d in g on orientation retreats for newly elected SA m embers. “ We just fee! that at a time w h e n library h ou rs are being th re a te n e d a n d m agazine subcriptions are being cut, the SA going out on a retreat a n d singing songs aro un d a campfire is not an exam ple of the fiscal re­ sponsibility they sh ou ld be exhibiting as s u p p o se d s tu ­ dent le a d e r s /' said Ed Sullivan, p residen t of YCT. SA president C,urth Davis d e fe n d e d the retreats, sav­ ing they are a I 1 tradition. " E v e n kind of business does this, Davis said. The Legislature did it last sum m er. It's a great w ay to plan for the fu tu re.” But Sullivan said the SA's goals could be accom­ plished by gatherin g on a w e e k e n d at the Texas L nion and going o \ e r the SA constitution and Robert's Rules of Order p rocedures for cond uctin g meetings. Sulli\an said the retreats looked frivolous on the sur­ face a n d that Davis would have to justify spen ding for them in the spring. “ W hen the SA requests its b u d g e t for the next y e ar,” Sullivan said, “ they will face tough questions from the Stud en t Services Fee C o m m ittee a n d the Y C Is on how thev can justifv this sp e n d in g .” Davis, w h o a p p o in te d Sullivan to the fee committee in the spring of 1991, said he w as not worried about fai ing the S tu d e n t Services Fee Comm ittee. Sullivan said no budget analysis was d o n e for this !iscal year, but the YC Is w o u ld do one w hen the fig­ ures become available. “ I am sure that Mom a n d Dad or the w orking stu ­ dent will be ha p p y to find o ut their ha rd-e arn ed s tu ­ dent fees, som e of which go to the SA, are being sp en t in this frivolous m a n n e r ," Sullivan said. Eric Dixon, SA attorney general, said the retreats w ere better for ac­ quainting newly elected m e m be rs with SA procedures. “ It's necessary to p u t people in an isolated e n v iro n ­ m ent so they can concentrate o n the role they w ere elected to d o ," Dixon said. S am antha Welsch, executive director of the SA, said activities at the 1991 retreat — which w'as held at I he Inn at Lake Travis — included a multiculturalism w o rk ­ shop and a question and a n sw e r session with U1 presi­ dent William C u n n in g h a m a n d James Vick, vice presi­ dent for stu d e n t affairs. Retreat participants also learned to write p ro po sals and to m anage publicity, Welsch said. Davis said the retreats did not cost very m uch, since the exp en ses were split b etw e en the SA a n d the Cabi­ net of College Councils. But Davis a d d e d that he did not have any th in g to do with the retreats a n d that the executive director and financial director were resp o n si­ ble for organizing the events. How ever, Welsch said sh e w as u n s u r e of the actual e xpenditure for the retreat, saying, " w e sp e n t a s u b ­ stantially less a m o u n t than w as sp e n t last y e a r.” SA Financial Director H e a th e r W ittm an w as unavail- f able for com m en t Sunday. N o a h is Com ing c o l o r ] S p e r m s c u t s I $45 $16-$20 $35 I W/AD t I |^West Ave. | 472-6961 Merab @ | Russ & C o j 1805 TWO DOZEN ROSES $15.00 Cash & Carry Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 Daily S p e c ia ls FTD ■ 4501 G uadalupe • On UT Shuttle Rt. H A LU A H N (H A R N 2 K IS GOODWILL INDUSTRIES STORES Halloween’s finest Flappers, Punkers and fantastically painted faces are created in Goodwill Industries stores. You’ll find incredible bargains on unique costumes, face and hair paint and Halloween decorations. Roam the racks of one-of-a-kind apparel. Sort through shelves of novel notions. And emerge with a unique Halloween costume reflecting your own creative flair. ■* o TUWWtk Let it all flap out The Roaring Twenties were quiet, compared to Halloween with you. ** FMMR Punk. Go crazy. Go to Goodwill it CUWN Paint your face. . . then paint the town. Complete your cos­ tume with face and hair paint, in 20 vivid colors, from any Good­ will store. 0 ) 1200 Round Rock Ave. (Hwy. 620) Round Rock, Texas Open: Mon-Sat 10:00-6:00 11:00-6:00 Sun 388-2911 (2 ) 7121 N. Lamar @ Airport Blvd. Open: Mon-Sat Sun 9:00-9:00 11:00-6:00 454-5006 (5) 836 Airport Blvd. Open: Mon-Sat 10:00-6:00 11:00-6:00 Sun 389-3277 (6 ) 1111 E. First St. Furniture @ this location Open: Mon-Sat 10:00-6:00 11:00-6:00 Sun 322-0815 (3) 4444 N. Lamar Blvd. @ 45th St. Open: Mon-Sat 9:00-9:00 451-2306 (7) 2800 S. Lamar (§> Manchaca Open: Mon-Sat 9:00-9:00 442-8802 Sun 11:00-6:00 Sun 11:00-6:00 (4) Goodwill Books and Records 4420 N. Lamar Blvd. @ 45th St. Open: Mon-Sat 9:00-9:00 11:00-6:00 Sun 451-0632 (8) 5734 Manchaca @ Stassney • Open: Mon-Sat 9:00-9:00 448-4849 Sun 11:00-6:00 Paint-A-Thon UT student and Whole Foods employee Aimee Coo­ per, history sophomore, participated in the Art Alert Paint-A-Thon Sunday at Pease Park. Women and Their Work sponsored the event. Beginning at noon, business and children’s teams began painting with an artist as a coach to produce winning works of art. Ap­ proximately 35 businesses and about 200 Austinites turned out for the event. Nohemy A. Gonzalez Daily Texan Staff Professor shares ideas for future space living A University of H o u s to n profes­ sor of his know ledge concerning pro blem s of living in and designing for space Friday with UT stu d e n ts. architecture s h a re d Larry Bell, director of the Sasa- kawa International C e n te r for Space Architecture at H o u sto n , described the hypothetical h u m a n Space Station Freedom . life o n Bell said the lack of gravity in space p ro du ces the m ost problem s for hu m a n s. People have difficulty stan ding straight because there is no d o w n w a rd -p u llin g force. He also p ointed o u t u n iq u e situa­ tions zero-gravity creates for archi­ tecture stud en ts. "You could have a meeting going on at the top of this room [near the ceiling], a n d one d o w n here w h ere w e a r e ,” Bell said. S IC S A A c c o r d i n g to Bell, researches o n Antarctica to see h o w crews are affected by the isolation in extrem e e n v iro n m e n ts a n d h a n ­ dling the difficulties of p roviding the n e e d e d pow er. Also, SICSA stu d ie s the concept of artificial gravity a n d its necessi­ ties on possible space trips to M ars which could last three years. Bell said stu d ie s sh o w lu nar soil could be used to p ro d u c e oxygen. SICSA a n d the College of Archi­ tecture at U of H will sp o n so r the first International Design for Ex­ treme Env iron m e nts A ssembly from Nov. 12-15. Ryoichi Sasakaw a, w h o created SICSA five years ago, d o n a te d a to UT's G raduate million dollars School of Business the th ro u g h Ryoichi Sasakaw a Young Leaders Fellowship Fund in June. Ex-students honor alumni The Ex-Students Association h o n ­ ored six former UT stu d e n ts as dis­ tinguished alum ni Friday night d u r ­ ing a cerem ony at Bass Concert Hall. The 1991 D istinguished A lu m n u s A w a rd s w ere pre se nted to e ngineer N asser Al-Rashid of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; lawyer Ruben C ard e n a s of McAllen; lawyer Frank D enius a n d Pennsylvania State University presi­ d e n t em eritus Bryce Jordan of A u s ­ tin; lady Rita Clem ents of Dallas; a n d former Tex­ as S u pre m e C ourt Chief Justice John Hill of H ouston. former Texas first The 1991 recipients join 137 other UT alumni w h o have w on the Dis­ tinguished A lu m n u s A w ard since it w as initiated in 1958. A com mittee of Ex-Student Association and U i officials selects recipients from n o m ­ inations subm itted by m em b ers of the association. Compiled by Angela Shall and David Lay, Daily Texan Staff. COMPANY NIGHT OC A D M IT OHE n > z *< o YOUR TICKET TO SUCCESS OCTOBER 8,1891 ALUMNI CENTER 7-8 P.M. BUSINESS ATTIRE SPONSORED BY H.B.S.A STATE & LOO AL Monday. O ^ tò b é /^ lg Q l'^ a y | Study shows black students more likely to be disciplined Associated Press D A LLA S — A n e w s p a p e r s tu d y of sc h o o l re c o rd s in d ic a te s th a t a b lack s tu d e n t is n in e tim es m o re likely to be p a d d le d th a n a w h ite s tu d e n t in so m e s u b u rb a n D allas sch o o l d istric ts. T he s tu d y of 1989-%) sch o o l re c o rd s bv The Dallas M orning N ew s n o t o n lv s h o w e d th a t b lack s w e re m o re likely to be p a d d le d , b u t a lso th a t black s tu d e n ts a re far m o re likely th a n w h ite s tu d e n ts to be s u s p e n d e d . T he m o st re c e n t n a tio n a l fig u re s c o m p ile d by th e O f­ fice for C ivil R ig h ts in 1988 in th e U .S . D e p a rtm e n t of E d u ca tio n s h o w s a black s tu d e n t is a lm o st tw o tim es m o re likely to be p a d d le d th a n a w h ite s tu d e n t, th e n e w s p a p e r re p o rte d S u n d a y . H isp a n ic s tu d e n ts , too, a re d isc ip lin e d m o re fre­ q u e n tly th a n w h ite s. But g o v e r n m e n t sta tistics s h o w th e d isp a ritv is far g re a te r for b lack s tu d e n ts . T he D allas I n d e p e n d e n t S chool D istrict b re a k s from th e n a tio n a l tr e n d , d isc ip lin in g b lack a n d w h ite s tu ­ d e n ts a lm o st e q u a lly , th e M orning News sa id . But o u t­ sid e th e citv, u n e v e n sta tistic s a re b e g in n in g to stir in ­ te n s e d e b a te . A s m in o rity p o p u la tio n s h a v e g ro w n in s u b u rb a n sc h o o ls, th e s e is s u e - h a v e s tr a in e d re la tio n sh ip s b e ­ tw e e n so m e p a r e n ts a n d e d u c a to rs in se v eral D allas- area d istric ts. G o v e rn m e n t a g e n c ie s h a v e b e g u n in v e s tig a tin g alle­ g a t i o n s of discrim inatory-' d isc ip lin e in s u b u rb a n R ich­ a rd so n a n d D u n c a n v ille , th e Morning News n p o rte d . S everal a re a d istric ts a re try in g to e lim in a te p a d d lin g , or a t least e n d th e racial d is p a ritie s . In P lan o , a d istric t w ith a g ro w in g m in o rity p o p u la ­ tion, black s tu d e n ts w e re n in e tim e s m o re likely th a n w h ite s tu d e n ts to b e p a d d le d in 1989-90. Larry G u in n , th e d is tric t's d ire c to r ot sp e c ia l p r o ­ g ra m s a n d d isc ip lin e, said P lan o is w o rk in g to re d u c e its p a d d lin g s a n d s u s p e n s io n s . B ut h e sa id th e re s no n ee d to a d d r e s s th e d is p r o p o r tio n a te p u n is h m e n t o f m in o rities. " I t s n o t a goal for m e to h a v e th e n u m b e rs d e a d e v e n ," G u in n sa id . "M y goal is to h a v e a p r o g ra m th a t -n its th e n e e d s of all c h ild r e n ." S o m e black p a re n ts in o th e r d istric ts also alle g e th a t th e ir c h ild re n h a v e b e e n tre a te d u n fa irly . Police officer suspended for speeding in city car T h e c o m m a n d e r of th e A u stin P o­ lice D e p a rtm e n t in te rn a l affairs d iv i­ sio n w a s s u s p e n d e d w ith o u t p a y for s p e e d in g a n d o p e r a tin g a city v e h i­ cle a fte r d r in k in g alco h o l. A m o n th lo n g in v e stig a tio n in to c h a rg e s a g a in st Lt. R o g er N a p ie r re ­ in h is 10-day s u s p e n s io n su lte d w ith o u t p ay , a c c o rd in g to C h ie f Jim E v erett. A c c o rd in g to p o lic e re p o rts , N a ­ p ie r d ro v e a c ity -o w n e d ca r a s ­ sig n e d to h im a fte r d rin k in g d u r in g d in n e r a n d a foo tb all g a m e . H e w e n t d o w n to w n to visit a frie n d a n d w as p u lle d o v e r te r s p e e d in g w h ile re tu r n in g h o m e a b o u t I a .m . T h e officers w h o p u lle d N a p ie r o v e r d e te r m in e d th a t h e h a d b e e n d rin k in g . T h e re p o rt s ta te d th a t th e officers d e c id e d th r o u g h " e x p e r i­ e n c e a n d tra in in g " th a t N a p ie r w a s not legally in to x ica ted . They th e n d ro v e him h o m e . N a p ie r's s u s p e n s io n b e g in s M o n ­ d ay . Pickup kills boy near school O n e b o y w a s killed a n d a n o th e r se v erely in ju re d a fte r th e y w e re hit bv a tru c k w h ile try in g to c ro ss a r o a d n e a r B ro o k e E le m e n ta r y School F riday. Brian Bell, 7, o f th e 4800 b lock of R ed Bluff R oad, w a s p ro n o u n c e d d e a d a t B rac k en rid g e H o sp ita l a t 4:28 p .m ., a c c o rd in g to h o sp ita l sp o k e sm a n L arry B esaw . H is b ro th e r, Je re m ia h , w a s listed in critical c o n d itio n w ith a se v e re h e a d in ju ry a n d a b ro k e n leg S u n ­ d ay n ig h t a t C h ild re n 's H o sp ita l of A u stin at B rac k en rid g e , said h o s p i­ tal s p o k e s w o m a n R obin G riffin. a c ro ss T h e tw o b o y s w e re hit by a pick­ u p tru c k a s th e y a tte m p te d to follow th e ir 11-year-old b ro th e r, C h ris to ­ p h e r, in te rse c tio n of th e S p rin g d a le R oad a n d E ast First S tre e t a b o u t 3:30 p .m . T h e b o y s w e re g o in g h o m e a fte r school an d w e re a b o u t a block th e ir h o u se . from N o c h a rg e s h a v e b e e n filed in th e a c c id e n t. Neighbors find body by odor A n u n id e n tifie d w o m a n 's b o d y w a s fo u n d S a tu rd a y in a n u n d e v e l­ o p e d p a rk in E ast A u stin . in v e stig a tin g a foul N e ig h b o rs o d o r fo u n d th e b o d y of a black w o m a n in h e r late te e n s or ea rly 20s a t 11609 N ick o ls A ve. a b o u t 11:30 a .m . Police d e sc rib e th e w o m a n as 5 feet 7 in c h e s tall, a b o u t 105 p o u n d s a n d w e a rin g o n ly a p a ir o f w h ite , la c e -u p te n n is sh o e s. T he h o m ic id e d iv isio n of th e A u s­ tin Police D e p a rtm e n t has in s tru c t­ e d th e T ra v is C o u n ty m edical exam - i n e r 's r e l e a s e in fo rm a tio n c o n c e rn in g a n a u to p s y p e rfo rm e d o n th e b o d y S u n d a y , ac­ c o rd in g to D a rle n e D u n n , a m edical e x a m in e r's office in v e stig a to r. o f f ic e n o t to Del V alle suspends players Three Del V alle football p la y ers im p lica te d in th e ro b b ery a n d a s ­ sa u lt o f a w o m a n in S e p te m b e r w e re s u s p e n d e d from school a n d n o t a l­ lo w ed to p la y in F rid a y 's h o m e c o m ­ ing football g am e. T h e th re e football p la y e rs — Jam es H arris, 17; C h ris Jo n e s, 17; a n d A n th o n y M u rrell, 16 — w e re re m o v e d from school T h u rs d a y a n d T riday, a n d n o t allo w ed to p a rtic i­ p ate in e x tra c u rric u la r ac tiv itie s, ac­ c o rd in g to D el V alle H ig h S chool P rin c ip a l G o rd o n P e r e /. T h e th re e a re facing c h a rg e s s te m m in g fro m th e a s s a u lt a n d ro b ­ b ery of a w o m a n at B arto n C re e k M all o n S e p t. 24. T h e w o m a n 's p u rs e w a s sto le n a n d s h e w a s h it in th e face, a c c o rd in g to p o lic e re p o rts . A n o th e r D el V alle s tu d e n t, C h ris Jon es, 17, w a s a rre s te d in J.C . P e n ­ n ey in H ig h la n d M all w h ile a t­ te m p tin g to uso th e v ic tim 's c re d it card . H a rris is c h a rg e d w ith th r e a t­ e n in g th e clerk w h o tu r n e d in th e sto len ca rd . P erez sa id fu rth e r a c tio n s w ill be ta k e n a g a in s t th e s tu d e n ts if th e y are fo u n d g u ilty o f th e crim es. fo u r H a rris c a u g h t to u c h d o w n p a s s e s in D el V alle's S e p t. 27 w in o v e r N e w B rau n fe ls H ig h S chool, e n d in g a 1 3-gam e lo sin g stre a k . lost its h o m e c o m in g g a m e F rid av to Bow ie 1 iigh S chool, 32-6. Del V a l l e Woman hit in I)WI accident O n e w o m a n re m a in e d in s e rio u s c o n d itio n S u n d a y n ig h t a fte r b e in g in ju re d in a n a u to a c c id e n t S a tu rd a y a fte rn o o n . S h irlev G o m e z , 39, w a s ta k e n to B rac k en rid g e H o sp ita l a b o u t 2:30 p .m . a fte r th e v a n sh e w as in w a s in a collision w ith a car d r iv e n by A n ­ th o n y W e st o n FM 969, a c c o rd in g to R obin G riffin , a B ra c k e n rid g e H o s ­ pital sp o k e s w o m a n . A n A u stin Police D e p a rtm e n t affi­ d av it sa y s W est w as a r r e s te d so o n a fte r is b e in g c h a rg e d w ith D W I. th e a c c id e n t a n d Juan M a rin o , 27, w as in th e v an w ith G o m ez , a n d w as in fair c o n d i­ tio n S u n d a y - a c c o id in g to G riffin. C o m p ile d b y lames W ilk e rs o n , D a i l y Texan Staff ■ J j, 1 ^ ^ ^ ' * * ■'-X /' * •✓ /.» ••» > V » * - A . Va ^ â â * Jk * A A A A A A A A & a A A A A A A i v Cv A ^ Y\ Y\ as A TTEN TIO N G REEK S DON T FORGET TO HAVE YOUR PICTURE TAKEN FOR THE 1992 CACTUS YEARBOOK GREEK SECTION GREEK STUDIO SCHEDULE September 30, October 1, October 2 Alpha Chi O m ega • Alpha Delta Pi • Alpha Epsilon Phi Alpha Epsilon Pi • Alpha Gamma Delta • Alpha Kappa Alpha Alpha Phi • Alpha Phi Alpha • Beta Theta Pi Delta Chi • Delta Kappa Epsilon • Delta Sigma Phi Delta Upsilon • Psi U psilon • Theta Xi October 3, October 4, October 7 Alpha Xi Delta • Chi Omega • Chi Phi • Delta Delta Delta Delta Gamma • Kappa Alpha • Kappa Alpha Psi • Kappa Sigma Lambda Chi Alpha • Omega Psi Phi • Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta • Phi Kappa Sigma • Phi Kappa Theta Pi Kappa Alpha • Pi Kapa Phi Sigma Alpha Epsilon • Alpha Tau Omega October 8, October 9, October 10 Delta Sigma Theta • Kappa Alpha Theta • Kappa Delta Kappa Kappa Gamma • Pi Beta Phi • Zeta Phi Beta Sigm a Alpha Mu • Sigm a Chi • Sigma Delta Tau Sigm a Phi Epsilon • Tau Kappa Epsilon • Theta Chi Zeta Beta Tau • Zeta Psi • Zeta Tau Alpha Phi Kappa Psi • Phi Beta Sigma C on tact y o u r CHAPTER PRESIDENT for an a p p o in tm e n t. LOCATION: T exas S tu d en t P u b lica tio n s Bldg., R o o m 4.122, co r n e r o f 25th S tre et and W hitis A ven u e H ours: 8:30 a.m . - n o o n and 1:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. CLASS SECTION FEE: Gradute Students. Graduating Seniors, $3.50; Seniors, Juniors, S oph om ores. Freshm en, $2.00 I In s id e o u t David Fitzgerald Daily Texan Staff Austin Habitat for Humanity, Inc., the local chapter of a Habitat for Humanity International, started its annual House Raising Week Saturday. Habitat has built 28,000 homes in 30 countries around the world and has 630 chapters in the United States and Canada. People who wish to sign up for a house must meet criteria set by the group. Habitat looks for families trying to get out of deplorable living conditions. Law school debates school financing Michael McCardel Daily Texan Staff P ublic sc h o o l fin a n c in g h a s s p u r r e d m a n y d e b a te s , b u t s p e a k e rs a t a U T L aw S chool s y m p o s iu m a g re e d th a t T exas is m o v in g in th e rig h t d ire c tio n . "L e g isla to rs d o d e s e rv e a p a t o n th e b ack . They' h a v e m o v e d w a y d o w n th e lin e sin c e th e 70 s,' sa id N a n c y F ra n k , a s so c ia te d ire c to r of th e E d u c a tio n E co n o m ic ta k e P olicy C e n te r. "T o so lv e t tim e."# th e s e p ro b le m s w ill N u m e r o u s to p ic s w e re d is c u s s e d d u r in g S a tu r d a y 's s y m p o s iu m , e n title d " I e x a s P ublic S chool fin a n c in g L e sso n s in L aw a n d P o litic s", in c lu d in g th e E d g e w o o d v s. K irby ca se a n d ju d icial r e q u ir e m e n ts o f th e L eg isla­ tu r e to f u n d p u b lic e d u c a tio n . " W e 'r e n o t s u r e w h e r e w e 'r e g o in g o r h o w w e a re g o in g to g et th e re , " sa id Ie x a s L an d C o m m is s io n e r G a rry M a u ro in h is k e y n o te a d d r e s s . " W e a re h e r e to rea ch a c o n s e n s u s th a t sa tisfie s th e c o u rt a n d sa tisfie s th e L e g isla tu re a n d a c o n s e n s u s w h ic h w ill g iv e u s q u a lity e d u c a tio n a s I e x a n s ." T h e sch o o l fin a n c in g d e b a te w a s s p a rk e d in 1989 w h e n th e T exas S u p re m e C o u r t ru le d th a t " g la rin g d is p a ritie s " w e re p r e s e n t bcT w een Texas' w e a lth y a n d p o o r sc h o o l d istric ts. O n e y e a r la te r, th e c o u rt to ld th e L e g isla tu re it m u st h a v e a c o n s titu tio n a l p la n to fu n d s ta te sc h o o ls e n a c te d by S ep t. 1, 1991. T h e n e w sc h o o l fin a n c e p la n c re a te s 180 c o u n ty e d u ­ ca tio n d istric ts, b o u n d a r ie s g e n e ra lly d r a w n a lo n g c o u n ty lin es, ea ch of w h ic h w ill p a y a p ro p e r ty tax to be se t by th e sta te . P ro p e rty -ric h sc h o o l d is tric ts m u s t a lso g iv e th e ir ex ­ cess tax r e v e n u e to p o o r d istric ts so th a t p e r - s tu d e n t s p e n d in g e q u a ls o u t. " T h e re a re p o o r d istric ts a n d rich d istric ts, w e m u s t rea lize th a t," sa id a tto r n e y D av id R ich a rd s. " It d o e s n t m a k e s e n s e w h e n o n e d istric t s p e n d s $12,000 p e r s tu ­ d e n t a n d a n o th e r s p e n d s o n ly $3,500 p e r s tu d e n t." R ic h a rd s r e p r e s e n te d th e p la in tiff in E d g e w o o d vs. K irby. " D e s p ite all th e a r g u m e n t a b o u t th e im p a c t of e d u c a ­ tion o n c h ild re n , th e s e c a se s a re tax a r g u m e n ts . T h is is basically a tax d e b a te w h e r e p e o p le a re try in g to b e tre a te d e q u a l," said M ark Y u d o f, clean of th e S ch o o l of L aw . th e S p e a k in g on r e q u ire m e n ts , F ran k said " N o b o d y is e v e r q u ite s u r e w h a t th e y a re d o in g . M a y b e w e h a v e n 't d o n e e n o u g h . M a y b e w e 'v e d o n e to o m u c h . B asically w e a re in a q u a n d a r y ." fu n d in g jud icial C o n s o lid a tio n of sc h o o l d istric ts is p e r h a p s th e m o st d ifficu lt is s u e to face b e c a u s e n o b o d y " w a n ts to lo se th e ir sc h o o l d is tric t," F ra n k sa id . C u rre n tly , a r o u n d 60 p e rc e n t of all s tu d e n ts a re e d u c a te d in sc h o o ls fin a n c e d b elo w th e s ta te a v e ra g e . M ► 4 f SELF-ESTEEM ISSUES group starts in Mid-October Conducted by Pam Latham ♦ (in association with ♦ ♦ Rachel G u n n « , MSW , CS W -ACP ) ♦ Insurance or sliding scale payment ♦ C all 4 4 2 -1 2 2 4 for details ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I q f TAEKWONDO & JUDO U .S .M .A .I. 4301 GUADALUPE 454-0336 WISDOM TEETH If you need the removal of wisdom teeth BIO M ED ICA L R E S E A R C H G R O U P 'NC, ...C a ll 451 -0411 Financial incentive provided to cover consultation, x-ray, plus qualifying surgery in exchange for your opinion on pain m edication following oral surgery. FDA approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery perform ed by Board Certified Oral Surgeons. T e x a s B lo o m s ★ We h av e o rch id p la n ts ★ 2 0 % O f f fresh cu t arrangement Staghorn Fern *4” eas h O c a r r y ty c c lm l D ob ie Matt 4 7 4 -7 7 IS Best Mexican Food — On the Drag — Cristobal’s 2200 Guadalupe 478-8226 To Go Orders 2-5 PM Special $5.00 Fajita Plate (Reg. $6.30) $4.50 Enchiladas (Reg. $5.81) Includes tax and tea ATTENTIO N! 1991-92 Athletics Fee Holders NoivRenewable Basketball Season Ticket Packages Applications taken October 7-10 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Bellmont Hall Ticket Office A pplications must be m ade in person M onday th ru Thursday w ith valid A th letics Fee ID ’s. Paym ent is required at the tim e an application is made. T icket packages are $60 per person and are lim ited to four per application. G uest rickets are n o t available as season tick et packages. Tickets will be filled random ly and m ailed to th e prim ary applicant. ■ For additional information call: -3 3 3 3 me-* ^ C ' -r FOR RESULTS, STANDINGS AND MORE, SEE FAST BREAK ON PAGE 15. Aikman-to-Novacek equals ‘W’ for Pokes A sso cia te d P re ss ifKsx M ILW AUKEE — I t a y H o rto n m ade a big pitch for job security S u n d a y , w hile team m ates Troy A ikm an and Jay N ovacek played catch all day as the C ow boys beat the G reen Bay Packers 20-17. H orton , a cornerback w ho is u n ­ h ap p y h e h a sn 't b een offered a new contract in his o p tio n year, retu rn e d an interception 65 yard s for a to u ch ­ dow n to get th e C ow boys started . later, Ten seco n d s Issiac H olt picked off a n o th e r pass by Blair Kiel, se ttin g u p a 13-yard to u c h ­ dow n p ass from A ikm an to N o v a­ cek as th e C ow boy s im proved to 4- 2, their b est sta rt since going 6-2 in 1986. The se c o n d -q u arter to u c h d o w n s cam e 73 seco n d s a p a rt a n d gave the C ow boys a 14-0 lead. "I w as trying to bait Kiel into thinking I w as covering [Sterling] Sharpe. I ju st broke to th e sidelines and c a u g h t th e b all," said H o rton, w h o had to p u sh team m ate Larry Brown o u t of th e w ay on his w ay to the end zo ne. "I kn ew I h ad som eb ody beh ind m e and I just w an ted him to block so m eb o d y ," a d d e d H orton. The C ow boys recovered Kiel's fum ble in se n d in g th e Packers to their fifth loss in six gam es. also See NFL roundup, page 14 "T he interception by H orton real­ ly gave us a com fortable feeling, an d then w e got th e o th e r intercep­ tion w ith them going against the w ind and got the 14-point lead ," said C ow boys Coach Jimmy Jo h n ­ son. "'W e stop tu rn in g th e ball over and w e're going to w in a n d un fo r­ tu nately I w as involved in all of th e m ," said Kiel, startin g for in­ ju red D on M ajkow ski. "I d o n 't m ake the tu rn o v ers a n d w e w in ." N ovacek, w h o led NFL tight e n d s w ith 59 catches last year, cau g h t 11 passes for 121 y a rd s and A ikm an com pleted 31 of 41 for 287 yards. to show a bal­ Dallas c o n tin u e d anced offense as Em m itt Sm ith g ained 122 y ard s on 32 carries. "I sp read o ut m ore an d cau g h t a lot m ore balls as a w id e o u t," said th e gam e N ovacek, w h o e n te re d w ith 19 catches. "W e w ere ru n n in g som e plays to set som e o th e r plays u p . W ith th a t good, w e d id n 't th in k w e 'd be able to get o p en like th a t." their ru n d efen se Kiel w as 18 of 35 for 212 y ard s a n d late in th e gam e th e crow d be­ gan ch an tin g for M ike Tom czak. "I d id n 't feel like ch an g in g q u a rt­ erbacks o r I w ou ld have d o n e it," said Packers C oach Lindy Infante. "N o t th at I d o n 't h av e any faith in Mike, but w e had p re p a re d Blair to play this gam e a n d I th o u g h t th a t going th e w ay w e d id , he w as the guy to do it." The Oilers’ special teams paved the way to victory over the Broncos. Associated Press H o u sto n 's offense d id n 't have a long drive u ntil late in the quarter, w hen it w ent SO yards, aided b v a 49-yard pass from W arren M oon to E rnest G ivins. H ayw ood Jeffires snagged a three-vard pass to com ­ plete the drive. Elwav com pleted 24 of 42 passes for 301 v ards, but the O ilers defense took a w av too m uch early. "T heir pass rush w as really good and the secondary w as good b eh in d it," Elway said. "Y ou just c a n 't give a team 28 poin ts, especially in th eir building. We gave o u r d efen se no chan ce." M oon com pleted 19 of 31 passes for 334 yard s, including five to G iv­ ins for 151 yards. D ishm an said playing ag ain st El­ w ay helped th em get ready for their com eback. P ardee praised D ishm an for co n ­ trolling the em otional o u tb u rsts th at m arked his earlier career, b u t at least o n e Bronco d id n 't care m uch for D ish m a n 's perform ance. "D ishm an got a couple of to u c h ­ d o w n s a n d I d id n 't like th a t," B ron­ cos receiver M ark Jackson said. "H e w as talking trash all day. H e had diarrhea of the m ou th. It w as d is­ gusting. We used to call him D ishrag an d he still is." SPORTS T h e I ) \ ii y T e x vis Page 8 Monday, October 7,1991 Oilers regain form, sack Broncos 42-14 A sso cia te d P ress HO U STO N — r h e H o u s t o n O ilers n ee d e d an em otional start S u n d a y 's to g a m e a g a i n s t a n d D e n v e r cornerback Cris D ishm an gave it to them in style. D ishm an re tu rn e d a tum ble 19 y ard s for a to u ch d o w n a n d set up a n o th e r score w ith a 43-yard in ter­ ception re tu rn , igniting the O ilers to a 42-14 rout th a t erased the bad taste of not plaving for tw o w eeks after losing to N ew E ngland 24-20. “ 1 d o n 't th in k th e re 's a n y o n e in the league that is playing better tor their team than he is for us right n o w ," O ilers Coach Jack Pardee said of D ishm an. "H e iust keeps m aking th e big plays for us every w eek ." It w as the fourth straig h t w eek D ishm an had co n trib u ted an in te r­ ception or fum ble recovery, b u t he w as by no m eans the only m em ber of the O ilers' w recking crew . The O ilers sacked John Elway five tim es for 54 yards. W illiam Fuller had th ree sacks, Bubba M cDowell recovered a blocked p u n t for a to u ch d o w n , had a sack a n d blocked a field goal attem p t on th e final play of the first half. T he O ilers scored 35 p o in ts in the first half a n d coasted to victorv. “W e knew we had to come out from the start and be the defense we know we can be. We made up our minds to come out and do that early.” — O i l e r safety Bubba McDowell The aro u se d O ilers held G aston G reen, the A FC 's leading ru sh e r, to 36 yards on 15 carries. The defen se set the to n e from th e first plav of th e gam e, w h en Sean Jones sacked John Elway fo ra nine-yard loss. "New E ngland hod o lot to do w ith it, M cDowell said. "W e w en t up there an d got a little lackadaisi­ cal. We knew w e had to com e o u t from the sta rt an d be th e defense we know w e can be. We m ade u p ou r m inds to com e out an d do th a t early." The O ilers took o u t their an g er on the startled Broncos (4-2), hopin g to go 5-1 for th e first tim e since 1981, first vear as head Dan Reeves' co ach . "M v h a t's off to H o uston, thev played well and m ade big plays ear­ ly," Reeves said. "T he blocked p u n t w as a really big plav. Thev are as good as any team I've seen in the first half of a gam e this y e a r." Horns back on track Texas finally climbs into win column behind running attack, special teams Tom Grace n Grace D aily T exa n Staff Texas used a com bination of tough defense, solid ru n n in g and o u tsta n d in g special team s plav to defeat th e Rice O w ls 28-7 in the S o u th w est C onference o p e n e r for both team s. Texas (1-2) began its SWC title d e ­ fense w ith its ninth consecutive league victory and e x ten d ed its w ili­ ning streak over Rice (2-2) to 26 years. "W e scratched the slate of th e last tw o gam es, and cam e into the co n ­ ference w ith a goal of w in n in g it, an d th a t's w h at w e plan to d o ," qu arterback Peter G ardere said. "S om ebody said 'W elcom e back’ af­ ter th e gam e. I said 'W e'v e been here, it's just been a little slo w .' G ardere got the startin g nod over Jim m y Saxton, w ho w as m oved to A-back, a n d the incum bent com ­ pleted 11 of 20 passes for 103 yards, in cluding a clutch 21-yard to u ch ­ d o w n pass to Darrick D uke w ith only 16 seconds left in th e first half, giving the L onghorns a 14-0 lead. to u ch d o w n T hat w as Texas' first pass in 16 quarters. G ardere keyed the L o n g h o rn s' fi­ nal scoring drive by k eeping the ball on a fourth-do w n option and then scoring on a sim ilar play w ith 2:48 left in the gam e to seal th e victory. Saxton w as G a rd e re 's prim e ta r­ get, catching five p asses for 29 yards. Saxton played o n e series at qu arterback but threw n o passes. His o nly a tte m p t w as an u n su c cess­ ful halfback op tio n -p ass in te n d e d for G ardere. "I knew Pete w as g o in g to start on M onday, an d I h o n estly d id n 't expect to play th a t m u c h ," Saxton said. "I w as just h a p p y to be out there a n d play A-back. This w as a real team w in, everybody cam e to­ g e th e r." The 67,323 in a tten d an ce expect­ ed to see a quality ru sh in g attack b ut w ere surprised w h en th e big “Somebody said ‘Wei- “Somebody said ‘W el­ come back’ after the game. I said ‘W e’ve been here, it’s just been a little slow.’ ” i — Texas quarterback Peter Gardere nu m b ers cam e from Texas players and n o t Rice's Trevor C obb, w ho entered the gam e as the leading ru sh er in th e N CA A averag ing 216 yards per gam e. R unning backs Phil B row n an d Shane C hilders m ore th an ade- quatelv filled in for Butch H adnot, w ho w as slow ed by an ankle injury suffered d u rin g the A u b urn gam e. H ad n o t w as onlv on th e field for one play Saturday. Brown picked u p the slack, ru s h ­ ing for 119 y ards on 18 carries. Brown gained five first d o w n s d u r­ ing the gam e and rip p ed an 80-yard- er on the first play from scrim m age only to have it nullified by a Kenny Neal clip at the 50-yard line. Brown w as credited w ith a 27-yard carry on the plav, his longest of the day. red sh irt C hilders, a freshm an, learned of his first startin g a ssig n ­ m ent at th e breakfast table just prior to leaving for th e stadium . H e re­ sp o n d ed by racking up 66 yard s on 15 carries including several in key short yard ag e situatio ns. His first collegiate to u ch d o w n p u t the Long­ horns ah ead 21-0 early in the third quarter. A drian W alker w as suffering from low er back m uscle sp asm s but m ade th e m ost of his th ree runs by picking u p 54 y ards, including a nif­ ty 37-yard d arte r w here he cut to his right and w en t u n to u c h e d into th e en d zone to o p en the scoring early in th e second period. Texas' defensive front line, led by tackle T om m y Jeter, successfully sh u t d o w n th e O w ls' g ro u n d gam e and pressu red Rice's quarterbacks. ■ See new polls in Fast Break, " naqeT^P page 15 The secondary capitalized by in ter­ cepting four passes, including tw o by M ark Berry. "T om m y Jeter m ight have m ade just ab ou t every tackle out th ere," Texas Coach David McW illiams said. Jeter w as credited w ith only eight tackles b u t he w as in total control at the line of scrim m age. Cobb, w ho had only 68 yard s on 28 carries said th at this Texas defense w as the best he has faced in his entire career. The one bright sp o t for Rice w as the play of freshm an qu arterb ack Josh LaRocca, w ho e n te re d the gam e on the O w ls' second p osse­ sion of th e third period. LaRocca guided Rice d o w n the field on a 10-play, 80-yard driv e ac­ cou n tin g for their only score of the day. LaRocca found Jim m y Lee o p en in th e right corner of th e en d fo u rth -an d -n in e play zone on a from the Texas 26 to avoid being sh u t out. Rice m ust w ait at least o n e m ore year before trying to en d th e 26-year victory d ro u g h t against Texas. M cW illiam s said the key c o n trib u ­ tion in the w in cam e from th e sp e ­ cial team s. P u n ter Kelly M cClana- a n o th e r g ood outin g, han had bu ry in g several kicks the O w ls' 15 y ard line. Rice's average drive in th e first half started on its ow n 11, a n d from there, the Texas d efense consistently took over. in sid e "W e h ad to w'in this gam e or th e season m ight be d o o m e d ," Jeter said. "W e 're now into th e SWC, an d those o th e r losses d o n 't m atter any m ore. "E very bod y in th e locker room is th inking ab o u t Big R ed ," h e said, e m p h a s i z i n g th is w e e k e n d 's m atch u p w ith the No. 6 O k lahom a Sooners in Dallas. "I th in k w e'll have a good gam e a gain st O U , an d I thin k w e 're going to roll th e re st of the se a so n ." Shane Childers, who found out he was starting during breakfast on Saturday, scored on this goal-line leap. Owls fail acid test, but see improvement Christobal P e re z'D a ily T e x a n Staff Matt Schulz Daily T exa n S taff S atu rd ay w as su p p o se d to be sort of a com ing-out p arty for th e Rice O w ls and their star ru n n in g back Trevor Cobb. It w as su p p o se d to be the d ay that Cobb an d the O w ls p ut history b eh in d them a n d m a d e the college football w orld take notice. M aybe next year. An a d m itted ly o u tsized a n d inex­ perienced Rice team fell to Texas 28- 7, b ut th e O w ls left th e gam e feeling that th ey finally m ay be on th e brink of becom ing a force in the SWC an d s h a tte rin g lo sing streak again st Texas. th e ir 26-year "I th o u g h t th at o u r kids sh o w ed me a lot m ore today th an they did in o u r gam e w ith Texas last v ea r," Rice Coach Fred G old sm ith said. "I think that o u r program is at the point now , th o u g h it m ay be hard to be* lieve, w h ere I feel better ab o u t it than I have in the p ast th ree y e a rs." In th e first three gam es of th e sea­ son, Rice looked as if it finally h ad a team that could co m pete w ith the top team s in th e S o u th w est C o n fer­ ence! th e cam e im pressiv e offensive But a g a in st w e a k e r n u m b e rs like N o rth w e ste rn , T ulane team s an d Iowa State. W hile th e O w ls d e ­ fense also looked strong , sh u ttin g dow n N o rth w e ste rn an d T ulane, they began to show signs of collaps­ ing ag ain st Iowa State w h en they gave u p 11 p o in ts in the last three m inutes. A gainst Texas, how ever, Rice w as o u tm atch ed . The L on g h o rn s held Cobb, w ho e n tere d th e gam e leading th e nation in y ards per gam e, to only 68 y ard s ru sh in g , nearly 150 yard s b en eath his season average. This w as the kind of high-profile gam e that w as su p p o sed to establish Cobb as a le­ gitim ate H eism an T rophy can d i­ date. Texas' great size advantage, both offensively an d defensively, h in d ­ ered C o b b 's efforts as the Long­ h o rn s d o m in a te d lin e of scrim m age for th e entire gam e over a m uch sm aller Rice team . th e "A t tim es, 1 personally felt like I ^ ■ See SWC roundup, page 14 w as g etting driven a ro u n d a b it," linebacker Tony Barker said. "Y eah, they w ere bigger th a n us, b u t I think th at w e could o u t quick them . Still, w h e n it cam e d ow n to b ru te force, l think that they could out- m an u s." D espite the great ad v an tag e th a t the L on g h o rn s held over the O w ls on the front lines, G oldsm ith said his y o u n g team played well. "W h en it cam e d o w n to it, they h u rt us at the line of scrim m age," G oldsm ith said. Senior g u ard Trey T eichelm an lost his fo u rth consecutive gam e to Texas, but he k n ow s the tren d m ay soon reverse fields. "T here is a g ap [betw een Rice an d Texas], but that g ap is being quickly clo sed," senior g u a rd Trey Teichel­ m an said. "N o w , w e 're playing w ith team s th a t used to just blow us off the field. Teams really can 't take us as an off w eek anym ore. T hat m akes m e feel go od, because I know I'll be leaving a team th at is really on the rise." The Rice Owls used Saturday’s game against Texas as a barometer to measure their program’s progress. Christobal P erez Daily T e x a n Staff Texas swings into action at Preview Gene M enez Daily Texan Staff ............. No. 6 Texas l ong- horns men's golf team tees off Monday against 11 other in Al- top-ranked buquerque, N.M. at the ap- propria telv nam ed Ping schools Q* II Il «ÊÊÊldL-mm—-m . Golfiveek Preview. Men The Preview gives Long­ horn Coach Jimmy Clayton a chance to evaluate his de­ fending Southwest Conference champions and formulate his expectations for the rest of the team's fall schedule. "W e have good cooperation within the team and a lot of depth, however, we would like to give everybody an opportunity to play in the fall," Clayton said. Teams selected to participate in the Preview were chosen by a combination of how the team finished in last year's NCAA Championships and current golf ratings. The tournament will be played on the University of New Mexico's South Course, the same site as this season's NCAA Championships next June. Six Texas players will be participating with the five low scores from each round comprising the team score. Seniors Cameron Gree’nwood and junior Taylor Tipton, sophomores John Sosa, Justin Leonard and Jean-Paul Hebert and redshirt freshman Harrison Frazar make up the squad competing in the Preview. "1 think we are playing very well right now and have a great chemistry. I cannot see us play­ ing badly," said Leonard, who tied for fifth in last year's Preview and placed fifth in the sea­ son's first tournament three weeks ago, the In­ ternational Friendship Invitational in Koniyamar, Japan. At the Invitational, team members not only had to deal with the pressure of the tournament, but also had to overome an airline error that acci­ dentally canceled their reservations. The team finally arrived at the tournament location at 1 a.m ., six hours before the scheduled tee-off. "W e only had two hours sleep, never saw the course before, and had to play 27 holes with two guys that didn't speak English," said Leonard. "It was like being out there for eight hours by yourself." Nevertheless, the team ended up finishing third out of 15 mostly Japanese competitors. Clayton said he hopes to keep seeing that type of performance. team ," Clayton said. "I want us to go out there and establish some consistency as a "O f course, the perfect situation would be for the team to win, an individual to finish first and the some of the others to come in the top 15. That would give the team confidence." The Longhorns are bolstered by the return of four All-Americans (Michael Cooper, Hebert, Leonard and Sosa) plus Frazar is getting his first collegiate tournament experience early in the season. "1 want to try to get a basic feel of what's going o n ," Frazar said. "1 want to go out there and see what I can do." But Frazar has seen tournament pressure be­ fore. He is a two-time all-state selection in high school and winner of the 1990 Tournament of Champions on the American Junior Golf Associ­ ation Tour. Leonard's first day at the invitational consisted of a tournament-best, two-under-par 34 on the east nine holes of the Taragura golf course. His 216 four-day total was four strokes better than Tipton's 220 which tied him for ninth. Hebert also shot a final day, tournament-best 33 on the central nine, leading to his tie for 17th and 224 total. Cooper and Sosa both carded 228s, placing them 33rd. "Under the conditions, everybody played very well," Clayton said. "I was real proud of how the guys played.” Because of NCAA regulations, schools are al­ lowed to participate in only one tournament overseas every four years. Travel and hotel costs were covered by the sponsors of the invitational. Clayton called the trip "a once in a lifetime opportunity." Brigham Young University and Clemson Uni­ versity also made the trip to Japan. BYU took second place with a team total of 874, eight shots ahead of Texas, and Clemson finished with an 889 total, taking fourth. THE DAILY T e x a n Monday, October 7,1991 Page 9 0 KRAMER U N E DRIVING RANGE 1825 Kramer Ln. 835-2514 Noah is Coming TEXAS s USTH, TEXAS & Live Music Sundays in the Beer Garden Oct. 13th Call for into. & Tuesday is Dollar Draft Night Ice Cold 16 oz. cup & “Happy Minutes” 50$ Beer 3-3:15 Every Day Cold 10 oz Domestic Draft “SERIOUS FUN SINCE '81" Z610 Guadalupe • 47Z-ZQ1Q How To Deal 1 th t a 1st Month's Phone Bill. Brought To You By 1 •The I«« free M i t e s offer is for a credit equal toJOO m inutes i t in terstate Sprint PLUS ’ cattin g per account at the Sprint 3000 m ile niqht/uieekend rate Credit unit appear on the third month m uoice This o lfe i mag not be used in conjunction unth any other prom otion Offer ualid only for Sprint PLUS and Sprint S e le c t' se m ic e s and on in state c a lls w here authorized Hew custom ers only Good t h r r a r t M f f l ‘ M l US Spnnt Com m um cot.ons [om pany lim ited Partnership Lady H orns finish 8th at Stanford Patti W arner Daily Texan Staff ____________ T h e Lady Longhorn cross country team of­ ficia lly r e -e n ­ tered the NCAA cro ss c o u n try scene Saturday by p la c in g eighth out of 16 in the Stanford H o rn s Relays in Palo Alto, Calif. Junior Davina Manship led all Texas runners with a 12th-place fin­ ish and a time of 17 minutes, 13 sec­ onds. Senior Tina Hall finished 26th and HalP said senior Shola Lynch finished 27th. the team was not pleased with the results but she looked at it as a good starting point. She said the team learned which fundamentals it will need to work on to improve overall performance. The Stanford meet "really woke us u p ," she said. "It brought us back to reality." Hall said the biggest problem Tex­ as faced was the inability to run as a pack. She said Texas started out too fast individually, allowing the other teams to catch up. .•» Hall said Arkansas and Oregon, the top two finishers in the meet, had the ability to run well as a team rather than individually. Texas Coach Terry Crawford con­ sidered the Stanford Relays the first real test for the newly reformed Lady Longhorns as they make their way back from a disappointing 1990 in which members of the team per­ formed only individually and not as a unit. Teams are given points for their top five finishers. The team with the lowest score wins. The Lady Longhorns will be in ac­ tion at 5 p.m. Friday when they host the Texas Relays at Hancock Golf Course. AUSTIN BASEBALL CARDS Sports Cards & Supplies • All Sports Cards * Football • Basketball (‘91 Hoops/Fleer) » Buy « Trade » Sell 5555 N. Lamar L-137 (Facing Guadalupe- 4 blocks No. of Intramural Fields) 454-4520_____ RAY BAN® SAVE 20-60% WE BEAT ANY RETAIL PRICE* G DOG SUNGLASSES d» ,1 it-j -in T* ,v 'Oj. ids, i- . /■ :V< -.v-fd • ' - 4 1 2 th & Red R iver • 4 7 7 - 7 0 0 6 V t * ^ 4 2 r- >' ' ______________ . - X T t o t t mnm : .. » „ . 3 B L O C K S S O U T H r ... M c - \ O F T H E E R W IN C E N T E R . . . it: 'V " . .W- Ta Cif" • A 15-foot-wide wood fired brick oven bakes a w a rd w in n in g , .L ^ Stadium »«J »V « IH 3$ E/vrtn MIX tilC K C «n l« r0ism st OVEN■ t a d lta o n□ Marrtoft□ C r « « t□ 12m SI 6th St. W a tt« . . - ,' P . Near the Dew ‘ M arriott, Radisson r ,A and Waller Creek — Lrafy V ; • I if.-* Hotels • All fresh lngredl ents, sour dough breads, great atm osphere • Full bar, great frozen m argaritas • Serving continu- j \ ously from ll:O O a .m . d T 5 . THE WORLD'S MOST FAMOUS MUSICIAN - AND THE RECOGNIZED MASTER OF THE EXOTIC SITAR - BRINGS THE INTRICATE SOUNDS OF INDIA TO AUSTIN. T R A V EL THROUGH AN AURAL LANDSCAPE OF SPIRITUALITY WITH A TRUE MUSICAL LEGEND AS YOUR GUIDE. WITH SWAPAN CHAUDHURI, TABLA; AND STEPHEN SLAWEK. SITAR. SUNDAY.OCT. 13,7 P.M. BASSC0NCERT HALL. $16.50 (3 FLEXART CARD PUN CH ES) TICKETS AT ALL UTTM TICKET-CENTERS. CHARGE-A-TICKET: 477-6060 INFORMATION: 471-1444 CENTER ATIfT AD the B(*st Slows in All tlie I3est Theatres. ian amid I H E D A IL Y I LXAN Monday, uctooer /, i r dye Associated Press LO S O L IV O S , Calif. — Elizabeth Taylor took her eighth walk down the aisle Sunday, marrying con­ struction worker Larry Fortensky in a ceremony before Hollywood's chosen few at pop singer Michael Jackson's lavish ranch. Taylor was given away by Jack­ son, a close friend, and her eldest son, Michael Wilding, at a wooden gazebo at the Neverland ranch in the Santa Ynez Valley wine country, 100 miles northwest of Los Angeles. Jackson publicist Lee Solters, who attended the wedding, said the cer­ emony was "very simple." An air­ the borne gatecrasher provided most dramatic moment by para­ chuting into the compound, Solters said. The unidentified man was handcuffed and led away. Taylor, 59, announced in July that she was marrying the 39-year-old Fortensky. She professed her love and devotion and promised: "This is it!" Exclusive coverage deals were made with photographer Herb Ritts and gossip columnist Liz Smith. Sales of the material were expected to fetch millions of dollars for A ID S research. Jackson transformed Neverland into a fairytale site for Taylor and her 160 guests, including former President Reagan and his wife, Nancy, and former President Ford and his wife, Betty. The guest list reportedly included Gregory Peck, director Franco Zef­ firelli, Arsenio Hall, Pia Zadora, George Hamilton, Liza Minnelli, M erv Griffin, Quincy Jones and Home Alone actor Macaulay Culkin. The 2,700-acre ranch offered se­ curity and a semblance of seclusion, despite the best efforts of dozens of reporters and photographers to in­ filtrate the ceremony. Nine tethered helium balloons — some with happy faces on them — floated 500 feet high to prevent low- flying helicopters from drowning out the ceremony. Undaunted, about 15 choppers circled the com­ journalists pound, photo-hungry and determined tabloid reporters leaning out of their windows. One person braved the air traffic in an ultra-light plane, snapping pictures. Outside the ranch, the Globe ta­ bloid set up a hospitality center, where reporters were invited to in­ spect its two helicopters, fuel trucks and mobile darkroom. AUSTIN 6 S21 T H O M P S O N O F F 183 1 M ILE SO . o f M O N T O P O LIS Phone 385-5328 a d u lt V ID E O C E N T E R COUPLES THEATRE-Fri & Sat. 7pm-6am SINGLES THEATRE-Open 7 days 24 hours TAPE REN TALS-» for 2 days MAGS- Buy One Get One Free $5 PRIVATE VIEW ING ROOMS - — — — • coupon i - — - R O FFL ER SCHOO L OF HAIR D ESIGN SHAMPOO CUT BLOWDRY Si $| *5 I S e r v ic e s p e rfo rm e d by s u p e r v is e d s t u d e n t s ! 5339 Burnet 458-2620 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...W ANT ADS...471 -5 2 4 4 And our latest winner is .. Larry Fortensky! Larry, COME ON DOWN! Associated Press AUSTIN YOUNG ADULT MEDICINE EDWARD P. TYSON, M.D. C o n f i d e n t i a l H e a lt h C a r e I n c l u d i n g General Health Care Contraception Gynecology Eating Disorders Sexually Transmitted Diseases • Evaluation of Abnormal Pap Smears 706 W. M .L.K., Ste. 2 •Convenient to U.T.» 477-3385 By appointment "HOW DOES A M IN E COUNT TO TWENTY-FIVE? ON BOTH HANDS." | l ^H irgers SAVE 9 0 0 Pierce’s Oven-baked Broiled Chicken Sandwich for only $ -4 3 9 1 Minimum orders required in our limited delivery area Only One Coupon per Address per Day. Coupon Expires 10/20/91 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily • 3303 N. Lamar • 452-2317 IT’S A um , PRESIDIO THEATRES 2700 ANDERSON 451-8352 T I I I I I I I I I _ J ARE YOU SHU PAYING F I Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story K. T. Oslin FREE SHOWS THIS SEASON AEQUALIS, Contemporary Chamber PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, Silent Movie Our annual Halloween salute MERCE C U N N IN G H A M DANCE C OM PANY, THE FLYING K A RA M AZO V BROTHERS, Modern Dance Crazy Jugglers THE GREAT ORGAN SERIES (4 shows) YOURS FREE WITH FAN CLUB. CALL 471-1444 TO FIND OUT ABOUT THE FAN CLUB TODAY! ON SALE NOW RAVI SHANKAR, Sitar, Oct 13 FAN Club Tickets: $13 - a $3.50 discount GREAT ORGAN SERIES I, Oct 13 FREE to FAN Club (It doesn't get much cheaper than this!) CONTEMPORARY DANCE ASSOCIATION OF JAPAN, FAN Club Tickets:$8 - a $4 discount Oct. 17 Students: If you purchased a Performing Arts Optional Fee during registration (look on your fee receipt) then you already have the FAN Club membership! Just come by our Ticket Office and get a sticker for your ID. K.T. OSLIN/M IKE REID, Country, Oct 19 FAN Club Tickets:$ 12.50 - a $5 discount AEQUALIS, Contemporary Chamber, Oct. 23 FREE to FAN Club (It doesn't get much cheaper than this!) PAILLARD CHAMBER ORCHESTRA, Oct 28 FAN Club Tickets:$ 13 - a $3.50 discount BUDDY: THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY, Broadway Musical, Oct. 29-31 FAN Club Tickets: $23 - a $5 discount THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, Silent Movie, Oct. 31 -Nov. 1 FREE to FAN Club: 10 p.m. show on Oct. 31 PAUL WINTER CONSORT, Earth Music, Nov 16 FAN Club Tickets:$ 13 - a $3.50 discount GREAT O RGAN SERIES II, Nov 17 FREE to FAN Club (It doesn't get much cheaper than this!) LES BALLETS AFRICAINS, Nov 25 FAN Club Tickets:$8 - a $4.00 discount Events and dates subject to change. Tickets to all shows listed can be purchased at the Performing Arts Center Ticket O ffice, 23rd and East Campus Drive, in the Bass Concert Hall (just north of M em orial Stadium). Ticket O ffice hours are: M onday-Friday, • 10 a .m .-6 p.m. Call 4 7 1 -1 4 4 4 for more information. Free season brochures and program notes are also available at the Ticket Office. FELL PRICE FOR HCKETS? Les Ballets Africains Paul Winter P E R ff k è M I CENTER AT UT All the Best Shows in AD the Best ITieatres. 1 Hrmtok r * B \\\ Hwíhu Ki-srrwd HEMDUt 451-8352 P R E S ID IO T H EA T R ES WE RE BIG ON BARGAINS M ATINEE SPEC IA L ALL SH O W S BEFO R E 6:00 P.M. ONLY $3.50 STUOENT DISCOUNTS DAILY I WITH VALID STUDENT I.D. RIVERSIDE 8 IN RIVERSIDE MALL 448-0008 FISHER KING (r> 1:30 4:15 7:00 9:45 12:30 THE SUPER (R) 3:00 5:30 8:0010:15 12:15 NO PASSES/KLBJ RICOCHET (R) 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:0512:20 NO PASSES/KLBJ NECESSARY ROUGHNESS

2:15 5:00 7:30 9:55 TERMINATOR 2 w 12:15 NO PASSES/KLBJ VILLAGE CINEMA 451-8352 700 ANDERSON BARTON FINK (R) ? 4 0 5:10 7:45 1 0.15 MY FATHER’S GLORY (G) 3:00 8.1Q. EATING (nr) 5:00 10:20 PASTIMES (NR) 2:50 5 00 7:30 9 45 SEX, DRUGS, ROCK & ROLL (nr) 3:10 5:30 8.00 10:00 Uû£A F U N K Y L A D Y Rolling Stone calls her "the first lady of stand-up comedy." She's slayed you on Arsenio, laid you out on Letterman. Sent you nowling on HBO . Now let tier send you rolling in the aisles...in person! 8 pm Friday, October 1 8 Tickets $17.50 & $15.00 On Sale Now at all UTTM Ticket Centers. CHARGE-A-TICKET: 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 Information: 472-5411 PARAMOUNT THEATRE 713 Congress Ave. Around C am pus is a daily col­ um n listing U niversity-related ac­ tivities sponsored by academic de­ partm ents, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in A round C am pus, or­ ganizations m ust be registered with the Office of C am pus Activities. A nnouncem ents m ust be subm itted on the correct form , available in The Daily Texan office, 25th Street and W hitis Avenue, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit su b ­ m issions to conform to style rules, although no significant changes will be m ade. MEETINGS G rupo de Danza y Arte Folklori- co will meet from 6 to 8 p.m . every M onday and W ednesday in Anna Hiss G ym nasium 136. PRSSA will meet at 7:30 p.m . Oct. 8. in Jesse H. Jones C om m uni­ cation C enter 2.320. Bill Cryer, p u b ­ lic relations director for Gov. Ann Richards, will speak. It's not too late to join. CISPES (Com m ittee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) will m eet at 7:30 p.m . M onday in the Texas Union Building Chicano C ul­ ture Room. Everyone is welcome. N ational Society of Black Engi­ neers will meet at 5 p.m . Tuesday in Chemical and Petroleum Engineer­ ing Building 2.204. Czech Club will meet at 1 p.m . Monday in Calhoun Hall 422. O kinaw an Karate C lub, formerly Vechirvo, will meet from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. every' Monday and W e d n e s ­ day in L. Theo Bellmont Hall 502A for a regular workout. M iddle East Awareness Project will hold a m eeting from 7 to 8 p.m. followed by a discussion from 8 to 9 p.m . Monday in the Texas Union Building 4.1 IS. All are welcome. Students for Choice will meet from 4 to 5 p.m . M onday in the Tex­ as U nion Building Eastw oods Room. Baptist S tudent Union will hold a conversational English class for in­ ternational their stu d en ts spouses from 3 to 4 p.m . M onday, W ednesday and Friday in the Bap­ tist Student Center, 2204 San Anto­ nio St. and Circle K International will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in University Teaching C enter 3.124. A lpha Chi will meet at 7 p.m . M onday in Beauford H. Jester C en­ ter A303A. UT Equestrian Sports will meet at 8 p.m . Tuesday in Burdine Hall 130. All students interested in inter­ collegiate riding, please attend! Texas Union M ultim edia Com ­ mittee will m eet from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m . M onday in Texas Union Build­ ing 4.108. Mu Iota Epsilon will m eet at 6 p.m. Mondav in University leach ­ ing C enter 1 102. Semester plans will be discussed U niversity Yoga Club will meet at 5:30 p.m . every M onday in the Texas Union Building D ean's Room. Wear loose clothing and d o n 't eat for tw o ho4rs before class. UT Sailing Team will m eet at 8 p.m . every M onday in Robert Lee Moore Hail 5.104. Overeaters A nonym ous will meet at noon every M onday in Pari in Hall 8B. U niversity Church on the Rock will meet at S a.m. Tuesday in Uni­ versity Teaching C enter 1.132. Ev­ eryone is welcome. For information, call 474-4372. UT W ater Polo C lub will meet from 8:30 to 10 p.m. Monday, Tues­ day and Thursday in the Texas Swimming Center for practice. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will m eet at 8:30 p.m . Tuesday in Beauford H. Jester C enter W110 for graduate student Bible study. For inform ation, call Lisa 495-5546. UT Tukong Moosul will meet from 5:30 to 7 p.m. every Monday, W ednesday and Friday in Anna Hiss Gym nasium for martial arts training. Everyone is welcome. The General Faculty will meet Oct. 17 instead of Tuesday. LECTURE D ivision of Housing and Food will sponsor a panel discussion at 8 p.m. M onday in the Beauford H. Jester C enter Auditorium entitled "Justify your Religion." C enter for Asian Studies will sponsor a lecture at 3 p.m . Monday in the Peter T. Flawn Academic C enter Dobie Room. Bapsi Sidhwa, a Pakistani author, will speak. U niversity Catholic Center, 2010 University Ave., will sponsor a talk at 7 p.m . M onday by the Rev. David Garcia and Sister Celia Cavazos on "Discerning G od's Will" at the C en­ ter. Probe C enter Students will spon­ sor a lecture from 4:30 to 6 p.m . M onday in College of Business Ad­ m inistration Building 4.348. Profes­ sor Robert Koons, Ph.D., of the UT Philosophy Dept., will speak on "Faith, Feeling and Reason." as part of the marketplace series. SHORT COURSE The Program for Rape Education and Prevention (PREP) offers free educational w orkshops for any group of UT students. O ur program em phasizes sexual com m unication skills to prevent acquaintance rape. W orkshops can be presented at al­ m ost any date, time or place that is convenient to you. For information, call Jamie 471 -6252. OTHER University Tae Kwon Do C lub will m eet from 8 to 9:30 p.m . every Monday and Thursday in Anna Hiss Gym nasium 136. The club wel­ comes both new com ers and experi­ enced people to attend or watch. International Freshm an Student Association is currently taking ap ­ plications for m em bership. Pick up and drop off forms at the Interna­ tional Office or the Student Activi­ ties C enter Desk on the fourth floor of the Texas Union Building. Services for S tudents w ith D is­ abilities needs volunteers for the fall sem ester. Previous volunteers and new applicants are welcome. For in­ formation, call Annie 471-1201. Texas Wesley Foundation will have a brown bag lunch at noon M onday in the Texas Union Build­ ing Eastwoods Room. The Rev. Bruce Nieli of the Texas Catholic Conference will speak on "The In­ fluence of C ulture on Religion in Hispanic Texas." Office of the Dean of Students will hold inform ation m eetings on becoming an orientation adviser from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m . Oct. 14 and from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m . Oct. 15 in University Teaching C enter 2.112A. UTSEDS will hold an inform al noon get together even' M onday for anyone interested in space in the Xexas Union Building Armadeli. The M easurem ent and Evalua­ tion C enter will adm inister the fol­ lowing tests for credit and place­ ment on Tuesday: HIS 315K ($45), HIS 315L ($45), M3Ü1 ($38), CS 304P ($45), CS 315 ($45), E 316K ($38), Latm ($45), and the MIS 310 ($45) at 6:15 p.m. Also offered will be the Word Processing test ($25) at 4 p.m . and the Gram m ar, Spelling and Punctuation ($25) at 6:15 p.m . The history essay tests have required reading lists, which can be obtained from the M easurem ent and Evalua­ tion Center. Fees can be paid from 2 to 6 p.m . on the test day in Beau­ ford H. Jester C enter ticket office. For information, call 471-3032. University Pre-Law Association will hold a Law Fair from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m . M onday in the Peter T. Flawn Academic C enter lobby. More than 50 law schools will be represented. REPEAT W R O s ^ ‘ a Contact Lenses $ 3 4 .5 0 a pair (daily wear) $ 6 8 .5 0 a pair (flexible wear) • special savings on tinted, tone, bifocal and Aphakic lenses. _ iü Ay?!!1! : í i 11 STOP SMOKING PRIVATE S E S S I O N S Using Latest Technology As Seen on ABC World News w/Peter Jennings, Time Magazine, Psychology Today & Wall Street Journal. $15 0 No Withdrawal, No Weight Gain 1 Yr. Guarantee^ I | i UVE MUSIC & DANCING 7 NIGHTS A WEEK B iggest D ance Floor In A ustin Free Dance Lessons M on day and Tuesday N ights FULL MEAL BUFFET SUN.-FRI. 4-7 P.M. N ightly D rink Specials u n til 11 D JtL MON $1 00 Pony B«*r and 75« Dfaft. TUES. 84« Well Oinks, Draft Beer 4 Wine WED. $1.50 Domestic Longnecks THUR. $1 50 Any Single Liquor Drink 4 Longneck FRI.-SAT. In-House Spot Specials SUN $4,50 Pitchers 4 $1.50 Frozen Margaritas For More Information-Call 441-9101 2201 E. Ben White Blvd. Austin, TX 78744 £ y e 0 $2EL50 (single , vision) 'complete $ 4 4 .5 0 (Bifocals, D25, D28, Round) • Special Savings on no line Bifocals, Trifocals & Daly carbonate lenses Sunglasses $65.00 M -F 10-6 444-8999 Sat10-2 2001 S. Lamar Next to Centex Furniture 1 Block N. of Oltorf Prescription Required, Some Restrictions apply to Prices. 0 0 leach BAUSCH & LOME’S PREMIUM CONTACT LENSES SPRINGDALE OPTICAL Manor Road & 1 83 (Near HEB) Mon-Fri 10-8 Saturday 10-3 Exams Available o A A A y Z u * O U U U Walk-Ins Welcome RX Required TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 lex&t VotteyhaW Lady Longhorns V S . Texas A&M 7 p.m. Wednesday Recreational Sports Center # # Help break the RSC attendance record s e t la st yea r vs. A8iM ** Watch the UT m en’s volleyball team b a ttle A8iM a fter the m atch ** Head to the OU-Texas pep rally a t 10 p.m . on cam pus $$ HELP INFERTILE COUPLES - BE A SEMEN DONOR Student A thletics Fees free — draw tic k ets at Jester Store, PAC or Erwin Center Reserved Adult $6/S tu d en ta fit Sr. citiz en s $5 General adm ission $5 and $4 Call 4 7 1 -7 6 9 3 for more inform ation TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 For more information contact Major Pufpaff at 471-5910 or stop by Steindam Hall(RAS), Room 110. TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YOURS CALL 471-5244 FAIRFAX CRYOBANK A DIVISION OF THE GENETICS & IVF INST. 3200 Red River Suite 207 Located across from CALL 473-2268 for an application Excellent compensation, complete confidentiality. Donate 7:30-1:25 weekdays with no appointments Age 18 to 34; 6 months participation required Save up to 50% on self-serve copying, binding, MacintoshR and typing. Weekdays: 7 to TO a.m., 7 p.m. to midnight, Fridays to 8 p.m. All day weekends. Dobie Mall. 476-9171. qinnys P r in tin g • C o p v in g R E S E R V E O F F I C E R S ' T R A I N I N G C O R P S CASH IN ON GOOD GRADES. If you’re a freshman or sophomore with good grades, apply now for an Army ROTC scholarship. It pays off during college. And afterwards. ARMY ROTC THE SMARTEST COLLEGE COURSE YOU CAN TAKE. SUNDAY & MONDAY Mo o c H H D O 5-10 PM ALL YOU CAN EAT PIZZA, 99 % iíA S O £ SALAD, & H D O a & HO o Ö E H o o mm Û- Oo a M CL o o mm Om 4 1 5 W. 24th St. Under the Castilian Next to Posse East 472-D AVE 3 0 0 0 Duval 476-DAVE 448-DAVE 1 9 2 6 E. Riverside By Short Stop A O o c H - 0 o o c H •V o o C H O pportunity C a l l in g . American Airlines Direct Marketing Corporation, a division of AMR Information Services, Inc., has immediate openings for telephone sales representatives for our Cargo Reservation Sales Division. Requirements include: • Effective phone manner • HS diploma or GED equivalent • 2 years college preferred or 2 years public/customer service or sales experience • Bilingual Spanish/English beneficial but not required • Typing 25 WPM You'll enjoy many rewards at AADMC; a congenial work environment with state-of-the-art equipment and 6 weeks paid training at $4.25 per hour on American Airlines SABRE Systems. Upon completion of your training, you'll receive a pay rate of $5.5u per hour, and an enhanced benefits program that includes life/medical insurance (after 6 months), paid vacations (after 12 months), credit union, 4 0 1 K and paid holidays. Advancement opportunities are also available. For more information, please call: 512/929-4999 Monday-Friday, 9 am - 5 pm You may apply in person between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. at the Tracor Complex, 6500 Tracor Lane, Building 27, or at your nearest Texas Employment Commission office. AmericartAirlines Direct Marketing Corporation An equal opportunity employer. Ad paid for by employer. © AAAR Information Services, Inc, 1991, L E T Y O U R C R O W D S T A N D O U T ... Get your group’s photo taken for the 1992 Cactus Yearbook! The Cactus staff is now accepting space reservations from registered student organizations for inclusion in the 1992 yearbook. Cost is $150 per page, $30 per group photo. To reserve space, come by the Cactus Office in the Texas Student Publications Building, Room 4.112, corner of 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or call 471-9190. Do it NOW. All pages must be purchased by October 16. CACTUS YEARBOOK It's YOUR Book TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS TR A N S PO R TA TIO N RENTAL RENTAL R E N T A L A N N O U N C E M E N T S EDUCATIONAL SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES 10 — Misc. Autos 3 6 0 — Furn. Apts. 370 — U nf. Apts. 4 4 0 — R oom m ates 530 — Travel 590 — Tutoring 750 — Typing 750 — Typing 760 — Misc. Services T h e D a i l y T e x a n Monday, October 7, 1991 Page 13 SHOAL CREEK - 38th St M 's $305, effi­ laundry ciencies $275 All appliances, room, water paid 3903 Peterson CPt Realtors 345-6599 9-10-20B $195/mo., 1/3 u til, M7F, Hyde Park fringe, big yard, coll after noon. 451-7816 10- 2 5P ______ LIBERAL MINDED person to share house efficien- m Hyde Pork oreo near U.T., $ 20 0 + 3 CLARKSVILLE CHARM Large laundry cies, stove refrigerator CA/CH, util., non-smoker, call Steve 454-4985. 10-4-5P room, water paid $275 808 Winflo, CPI Realtors 345-6599 473-8445. 9-10- 2 0B T ra n s p o rta tio n 9 j t V 1 7 1 T > I > r / ^ ! Í 5 R L L I V ! only $209 plus tax Ski-in C o n d o s Lifts Bus Parties Ski Rentals :- . t J . f > S k i 469-0999 2 2 0 0 R io G r a n d e ski division of SPRING BREAK IN - T H E BAHAMAS M arc h 16-20 L uxury cru ise to Freeport 5 d a ys 4 nights, hotel Included ' $229 per couple. O lecounted elder* j G ro u p D isco u n t T ra v e l 1-404-816-2111 the ANOTHER DATELESS night? Coll most exciting and enticing date line in town 1-900-463-9000, $2.50/min. 9- 19 30P.__________________________ __ talk line 1-800-735- LIVE ADULT KISS(5477). {Visa, MC, AE) with beauti­ ful exciting women waiting to please you. 1-900-786-4545. 9-19- 30P_______________________ ___ $2.50/min. STEPHEN F AUSTIN Chapter O rder of DeMolay organizational meeting M on­ day, Oct. 7, 7 3 0 p.m., Scottish Rite Tem­ ple, 207 W. 18th Members welcome. 10-4-2P USE TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS! FOR YOURS CALL TODAY! 471-5244 LIBERAL MINDED person to share house m Hyde Park oreo near U.T., $ 20 0 - '3 util., non-smoker, coll Steve 454-4985. 10 4-5P____________________________ N O N S M O KIN G FEMALE to share beau­ tiful 2-1 house. West Campus $262 50 plus 'if! biHs. M argaret 477-5249. 10-7- 4P 4 9 0 — W an ted to Rent Lease HYDE PARK efficiency needs renter im­ mediately, $275 month, newly remod­ eled quiet neighborhood, colt mornings 4/, *-9778 1Q-4-3P A N N O U N C EM EN TS 510 — E n tertain m en t- Tickets * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * D O N HENLEY TO M PETTY A M Y GRANT SPURS UT FOOTBALL K.T. O S LAN D 4 7 8 -9 9 9 9 7 0 6 W . MLK * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ________________________ 10 2-20B-A TWO SEASON tickets for sale to all home gomes. Coll 504-482-4304. 10- 2-5B.______________________________ CHEAP ROUND Trip air to Dallas. Thurs­ day pm 10-10, return Sunday pm 10-13. 250 -58 52. leave message. 10-7-1B 5 20 — Personals Free Spring Break Vacation in Cancún! College Tours, the nations largest and most successful spring break tour operator needs enthusi­ astic campus representatives. Earn a free trip and cash. Nothing to buy - we provide everything you need. Call 1 -8 0 0 -3 9 5 -4 8 9 6 for more information. ____________________________10-3-5B RESPONSIBLE FEMALE exec, from NC w ill care for home during December in exchange fo r place to stay. Contact (919) 787 -22 92 after 6pm 10-7-108 Z I V L E Y WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING 2 7 th & G u a d a lu p e Z I V L E Y APPLICATIONS : RESUMES 2 7 th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 472-3210 472-7677 PROFESSIONAL WORD PROCESSING Resumes, papers $1.50/page Near UT Creative Fast Spell Edit Rush Weekends. 322-0213 9-26-20B QUICK A N D EXCELLENT TYPING Term papers, manuscripts, business docu­ ments, job applications. Competi'iv# rates Michele, 7om-10pm. 454-7927. 10-4-20B-A T U T O R S 4 7 2 -6 6 6 6 SERVICES 750 — Typing ZIVLEY The Complete Professional Typing Service B I O C K B U S T I * H V L E Y ’S Speedway T Y P IN G D O B IE M A L L Lassr Printing/Sp*ll chock Applications/Resumes Term /Research P apart Application Forms Audio Transcription 4 6 9 -5 6 5 3 Z I V L E Y TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS 2 7 th & G u a d a lu p e L E T T E R P E R F E C T W O R D PROCESSING & RESUMES • Resume Consultation • Competitive Rates • Laser Printing 3 2 0 0 Red River #401 4 6 9-9 66 3 T Y P I N G ’til Midnight Sun.-Thurs. OPEN 7 days T i r r o n s f l X 4 7 2 -6 6 6 6 LONGHORN COPIES • Resumes e Theses e Term papers e Word Processing e Binding e Laser Printing 2518 Guadalupe 4 7 6 -4 4 9 8 FA X # 4 7 6 -2 6 0 2 PROFESSIONAL WORD Processing/ Transcription theses, manu­ scripts, etc. P/U and delivery. # 2 .0 0 / page. Diane 335 -70 40. 9-13-20B-A reports, PAPERS RESUMES RUSH JO B S A b e l ’ s C o p i e s 1906 G U A D A L U P E 4 7 2 - 5 3 5 3 THE WORD CONNECTION word pro­ cessing ot $100 /p g turna­ round, pick up and delivery. Call D lindsoy ot 343 -63 93 for appointment 10-7-20B__________________________ 24-hour 760 — Misc. Services Immediate Help in applying for personal loans from $15,100 to $50,000. Debt consoli­ dation to $80,000. 1-800-445-0938 9-18-14B Taking Statistics? Bask concepts simply explained in our programmed manu­ al, STATISTICS FOR PO­ ETS. Piece of mind for only $19.95. Pangloss Press Box 2225 Ballston Spa, N.Y. 12020. __________________________ 9-23-20B WANTED 49 people to lose up to 30 pounds in the next 30 days Dr Recom­ mended 100% natural. Coll Julie 476- 0205 9-13-17B WHAT'S YOUR I.Q.? Now Available: a self-ad­ ministered I.Q. evaluation. Know your I.Q. Send $6.95 check to Interna­ tional I.Q., Dept. D, PO Box 161607, Ft. Worth, Texas 76161. 10 20B-K HAIR/PHOTO Models needed Contact W alter Mmefee at Hair Spray Salon 478-4213, Wednesday Sarurdo, Horn- 6pm for oppoirtn-efli N o Irons Makeo­ vers only1 10 3 76 EMPLOYMENT 780 — Em ploym ent Services a Resume Service7 ) SEVEN DAYS A WEEK HANCOCK CENTER L 459-2305 BARTON CREEK 329-1349 J 790 — Part Time ALWAYS HIRING G O O D VOICES 282-190 8 9-19-20B-C WORK - FUN N ational firm opening new executive Austin o ffice . Full/part-tim e positions available. For a p p o in tm e n t c a ll Sharon 453 -8 8 9 9 ■ 9-23-20B 5 6 0 — Public N otice 27TH STREIT 472-3210 472-7677 2707 Hemphill Park 472-3210 472-7677 EXPERIENCED WORD Processing, re­ ports, resumes, thesis, etc. Quick turno round, $1.40/page Most cases. 388- 1275. 9-30-20P. 1983 BMW 5?8e One owner Excellent condition Complete service history Coll Dowd 4 7 4 - 2 0 or 346 5721.10-2 5B_ 20 — S p o rts-F o reig n Autos '9 8 9 IRÛC Z Chevrolet W ith Alpine ra­ dio and stereo power locks automatic. $89 50 469 9095. 9-18-20B_________ 84 VW GTI Black with red interior. Ex­ cellent condition Great gas mileage! 5 2 2 9 3 00 255 -37 35 10-2-5R_______ 1983 VOLVO DL. AC. auto, new tires, condition original owner, excellent $ 3 9 0 0 .3 2 8 -3 0 5 7 10-3 3 B _________ 1981 PEUGOl 505 S gas automatic, high miles but rebuilt engine, loaded Very reliable $1400, 453-5050, 280-3409 10-3 7B-E 70 — M otorcycles r " f " r E É _ O I L ! 1 : T.J.’s Cycle is giving free ■ Bel-R ay oil w ith every I Tune-up thru Oct 31 with | this ad. Call 453-6255 for | an appointm ent. 6 2 1 5 N. L A M A R 1 J 1 9 8 9 K A W A S A K I E X 5 0 0 , 5 K m .ie s o n e o w n e r , g o o d s h a p e , w h ite w ith g o ld trim, $1995. 263 2057 10-2 56 got 8 0 — Bicycles BICYCLE SALE UT DISCOUNTS UT students & faculty, we want your business. New mountain bikes, hybrid, & road bikes. From $249.00. DIAMOND- BACK, MONGOOSE, & FUJI. FR EE U-Lock with bike purchase. H elm et D iscount» Lifetim e W arranty 1 year free service Extra discount on 2 bike purchase. MC, VISA, Amex. Discover welcome. South Austin Bicycles 444-0805 2210 South 1st MOUNTAIN BIKE SALE 1990- 91 G T BIKES R E DU C ED 20% FREE U-Lock with Ad and Bike Purchase BUCK’S BIKES 928-2810 VISA. M C. AM E X. D ISCO V E R W E LC O M E REAL ESTATE SALES 130 — C ondos - To w nh ou ses WEST CAMPUS BARGAINS! O rongetree 1 & 2 bdrms. with security, vaulted ceilings, and covered parking from $ 4 4 ,9 0 0 ! Financing available. Call Michel Yssa, broker, at PMT. 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 , 4 7 4 - 9 4 0 0 9-16-20B-C . STUDENT BARGAIN 2 blocks UT ALL BILLS PAID EFFICIENCIES 2502 Nueces 474-2365 BLACKSTONE 2910 Medical Arts St. ALL BILLS PAID! Newly remodeled 2 bdrm-2bath free cable! Furnished or Unfurnished Now leasing for fall and spring Call 474-9523 9-26-20B -C $300-3501 BEDROOM Walk-in closets, ceiling fans, CA/CH, pool, water and gas paid FOUNTAIN TERRACE APTS 610 W. 30th 477-8858 10-4-20B-E 370 — U nf. Apts. AVAILABLE NOW 1-2-3 Bedrooms 1-2 Baths L A K E V I E W 2401 S. Lakeshore 444-3917 On Shuttle Extended Cable, Pool Indoor Gym, Tennis Courts Fitness Center & More! HOMESTYLE LIVING IN 1,200 sq. ft. Townhouse. Negoti­ a b le rent for quali­ fied applicants, 440- 1332. 9-11-20B Penthouse Apts Two blocks southwest o f cam­ pus, Beautiful and quiet area, best new managment, 1-1's from $ 400. Incredibly large 2 bedrooms from $ 6 0 0. Fur­ nished or unfurnished, cable, trash paid, water, gas and beautiful pool, new laundry room, covered parking, being remodeled. 1801 Rio G rande 480-0201 9-16-20B-C W CIEO T O AK S $ 2 2 5 LARGE APT. NEW CARPET FREE CABLE CLOSE TO CAMPUS 4 7 7 - 5 7 5 7 EFFICIENCIES STARTIN G AT $ 2 9 0 e D is h w a h e r • Disposal • M icro w a ve (optional) • Individual Storage • Pool • Bor-B-Q Pits • Laundry • IF Shuttle • Across from Park City • Residential M a n a g e r • Furnished & Unfurnished 108 PLACE APTS. 108 W . 4 5th 4 5 2 -1 4 1 9 3 85 -2 2 1 1 4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 CALL TO D A Y! 170 — W a n te d WANTED TX OU Tickets W ill pay top dollar. 477-1418 10-4-5B r M ERCHANDISE 2 2 0 — C o m p u te rs- E quipm ent 386-20 CAD work station. Mathco pro­ cessor two floppies keyboard, 19 moni­ tor, various software, mouse, 120M tape color plotter $4000. backup. C-size 837 8658, 8 3 5 -33 08 10-2-5B IBM PS/2, 55SX "6ÖMB/H. 4MR RAM. loaded with software and goodies, $1600, new $2500, negotiable. "JR" 451-2075.10-4 5P 3 4 5 — Misc. JAMES LEWIS GOLD & SILVER EXCHANGE W E A R E AUSTIN 'S »1 GOLD & SILVER B U Y ER S B EC A U S E W E G U A R A N T E E T H E H IG H EST CASH BU Y PR IC ES FO R YOUR USED. GOLD JE W E L R Y DIAMONDS. WEDDING BANDS HIGH SCHOOL RINGS D EN TA L GOLD STERLIN G SILVERWARE ANYTHING G O L D OR S I L V E R IN A N Y C O N D I T I O N ! 4 8 0 1 B U R N E T 4 5 8 - 2 6 3 9 — $ 2 9 5 . NICE 2BR at $335 1BR o* $250. Carpet, all appliances, pool. 1302 Porker In. 442 7964 CPI Realtors 9 10-20B OFF RIVERSIDE efficiencies, all appli­ ances water paid $190. 1300 Parker Ln. CPI Realtors. 442-7964. 9-10-20B. HUGE 1-1 Apartment townhomes. Very low utility bills, small quiet complex in a residential neighborhood, private pool. $325/m o 450-0523 9-12-206 LO ND O N SQUARE M s, 2-2 s and 3-3's townhomes UT shuttle units available now. 240 0 Town Lake Circle. 445-7096. 9-25-10B.__________________________ CHARMING ROOMS, efficiencies, stu­ dios. Convenient to University CA/CH, historical downtown location. $300 and up 478 4218, 477-1163 10-4-20B LOCATION' LOCATION! and all bills paid near UT, downtown, and the Capi­ tol! O lder building renovated with large rooms and plenty of ambiance! 476- 9130.9-30-20B C___________________ All appli- SPACIOUS EFFICIENCIES! miniblinds, anees, walk-in closets, carpet, gas and water poid RR/metro. $250/mo, 371-0160. 10-1-10B-C_______________ ” SPECIAL' Very roomy 2-2, $450 ♦ walk/shuttle, controlled access, pool/hot tub FRONT PAGE 480-8518 10-2 20B C._________________________________ 1717 W. 35th. Large 1-1's with ceiling fans and huge closets. Only, $375! Coll 451- 7694, 469-9075 1Q-2-5B-C__________ WEST CAMPUS; Unique 1BR in historic older house Hardwood floors and trim, good condition. 906 W. 22nd #7. $325. 4 4 4 -7 0 5 5 .10-3-20B-A ENFIELD AREA Close to shuttle 2BR7 1BA, hardwood floors, carport, no dogs! $425 • bills. Available Dec 1st. Renters need to be quiet 4 6 7 -7 6 2 2 .10-4-5B. 4411 GUADALUPE, one bedroom, ground floor, CA/CH, ceiling fans, patio, $325. Pot 320 -86 00 or 454-1874.10-7- 5B.________________________________ NEAR CAMPUS. 1-1, Red River shuttle, walk m closets, gos/water paid, $350! $100 o ff second month 444-0687.10-7- 10B-C. 3 90 — U n f. D uplexes GREAT LOCATION 45th and Caswell, near shuttle line 5 bedroom duplex. Available now $1300/mo Coll for ap­ pointment 479-0010. 10-1-10B. LARGE 2BR/2BA. Stove, refrigerator, washer/dryer, fenced, UT shuttle, North- east residential neighborhood. 328- 7712, 345-4101.10-3-5B. 400 C ondos- Tow nhouses Now Pre-teasjng Condos, Apartments, and Houses c I T V _ PROPERTIES 478-6565 2717 Rio G rande GORGEOUS W est campus 1-1's from $ 5 5 0 , 2-2's from $ 8 0 0 ! PERSONALLY CARED FOR BY O W N ER ! * Centennial * O ron getree * C roix * Preservation Square * plus Tarrytow n props, and more! K arl H e n d le r Props. 476-2154 9-16-20B-C LUXURY CONDOS! West campus, all amenities. 1-1's from $550, 2-2's from $600 & up. Pool, covered parking, 2409 Leon, 327-7415. 9-17-20B-C_________ FURNISHED/UNFURNISHED R west campus, all amenities, starting $365 2818 Nueces. 20B-C 327-7415. 9-17- from HANCOCK PLACE: 2-1 in professional community! Hardwood floors, covered parking, W /D, security, $700/m o. Mitch 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 .9 18-20BC "SPECIAL* 1-1's Covered washer/dryer, microwave, walk $350 $375 FRONT PAGE 480-8518. 9-4-20B ___________________________ parking, k to UT 1-1's Covered parking, "SPECIAL" k to UT washer/dryer, microwave, walk $350 $375 FRONT PAGE 480-8518. 10 2-20B-C________________________ 1601 FAROH #1704 1-1, beautiful condi­ tion, great view, very quiet, ready now! $450 Call Issac, Harrison-Pearson, 472- ________________ 620 1.10-3-10B-C. UT AREA. Spacious 1-1, enormous closet, W /D, $450 114 E 31st Sara Madera, Broker 469-0894, 328 -1 0 0 0 .10-3-7B 2210 PEARL 1-1, second floor, balcony, covered parking, $350. Call Isaac at Harrison-Pearson. 472-6201. 10-3-10B- C______________ SOMERSET 2216 San Gabriel, 2-2, W /D, microwave, lots of storage, vaulted ceil­ ings. Call Issac at Harrison-Pearson, 472- 6201.10-3-10B-C .___________________ ONE BEDROOM condo. 44th and Speedway. Water, gas and heat paid. 451 -46 56.10-7-10B 4 1 0 — Furn. Houses PEACEFUL- 14 miles FM 969, Clean 3-2, CA/CH W /D connections 1056 sq. ft., couple, $425, 472-2097 10-20B-C 10-1-20B-A Q u ie t H yde Park-Living! N ice la rge efficiency w ith huge closet 4 20 — U nf. Houses Large 1-1 with lo w utilities — $ 33 5. O n shuttle. Gas, cable, and w ater paid. Retreat Apts. 4 4 0 0 A ve. A 4 5 2 -1 1 2 1 ,4 5 8 -1 9 8 5 9-19-20B-K SPFCIAL M O VE-IN RATES! Large 1 & 2 bed roo m apartments. N e w carpet, ceiling fans, miniblinds, w et bar, fireplace, balcony. Q uiet garden setting, Beautiful p o o l/p a v i­ lion area. W ater, gas, and cable paid. N o pets! Starting at $ 3 4 5 . G arden Path Apts. 83 5 -5 6 6 1 at 8017 Gessner Dr. (west o f IH -3 5 just o ff 183). 9-20-20B-C THE A R R A N G E M E N T APARTM ENTS Efficiencies, 1-1's and 2-2's avail­ able now. Convenient on UT shuttle. Open Saturdays. Davis and Associates M a n a g e m e n t co. 4 4 4 -7 8 8 0 2 124 Burton Dr. 9-20-10B-A 1-1 only $ 27 0/m o . N o rth Austin a re a , L a m a r/ F airfield, all electric, on-site la u n d ry, p o o l, m any a m e n i­ ties, pets w /d e p o s it, g re a t lo ca tio n , call fo r m ore info. 8 3 4 -8 5 9 6 9-26-20B-C THE ARRANGEMENT APARTMENTS ALL UNITS AVAILABLE! Convenient to UT Shuttle O pen Saturdays. AVAILABLE N O W - NE minutes from campus. 2-1 sunk-m livingroom w / fire­ place, ceiling fans, w /d connections, $395.218 8049 10-2-5B___________ AVAILABLE N O W -N orthe ast 3-1 New carpet, appliances, W /D connections, off Airport. 218-8Q49.10-2-5B________ AVAILABLE N O W -5 -3 storage, w /d connections, minutes from campus. $n0 0/m o. 218 -80 49.10-2-5B_________ “ AVAILABLE N O W -N orthe ast 3-1 w/d connections, storage, fenced yard. Call for move-in special 2 18 -80 49.10-2-5B_ 477-LIVE fashioned (24 Hours) old charm of 1-5 bedroom homes, hard­ wood, gas, appliances. $200-$1200. 10- 3-20B-A 4 25 — Rooms LARGE CLEAN Carpeted room Private entrance/bath/refrigerator. No kitchen Quiet individuals. N o pets Bills paid $255 453 5417. 9-18-20B__________ 4 BLOCKS UT 408 W 17th. Quiet, non­ smoking, pettess. Private room, private bath, huge closet, CH/CA, W /D, 2nd floor, share spacious xitchen. $295 ABP (lease) 474-2051. 9- 27-20B-E_____________________ fully equipped CAMPUS AREA Furnished Shore bath/ kitchen $100 deposit, $225/m o ABP 4 3 5 - -C o -o p s 4 BLOCKS UT 408 W 17th. Quiet, non­ smoking, petless Private room, privote bath, huge closet, CA/CH, W /D, 2nd floor, share fully equipped spacious kitchen $295 ABP (lease) 474-2051. 9- 27-20B-E _______________ __ 4 4 0 — R oom m ates ROOMMATE SERVICE W ill help yo u fin d a c o m p a t­ ib le roo m m ate . M a le o r fe m a le . C all Sam. 280-7 1 1 8 9 16-20B-C Davis & Associates M anagem ent Co. 4 4 4 -7 8 8 0 2124 Burton D r 4 BLOCKS UT 408 W. 17th Quiet, non­ smoking, petless. Private room, private bath, huge closet, CA/CH, W /D, 2nd floor, share fully equipped spacious kitch en $295 ABP (lease) 474-2051 9-26- 10-7-20B A 20B-E MONEY FOR COLLEGE! 1 - 8 0 0 - 9 2 5 - 2 3 4 5 RECORDED MESSAGE RENTAL 3 6 0 — Furn. A pts. THE ASHFORD Now Preleasing for Fall Large Efficiencies, 1-1's, 2-2's Starting at $265 • Furnished/Unfurnished • West Campus Shuttle • On-site Mgmt. S Maint. • Pool • Laundry Room • C overed Parh ng ALL BILLS PAID 476-8915 2408 Leon LARGE ONE Bedroom five blocks from campus. WC shuttle, All Bills Paid $450 474-7732 10-3 10B PEACEFUL, SPACIOUS 2-2 UT 1 block, fans, walk-in closets, pool, CA/CH, dishwasher, Red River/30th, $550 477- 3388 10 7 20B-C \ "LONGHORN WANT ADS" -Specifications — • 2 0 w o rd s 5 days S5 • M e rch a n d ise fo r Sale Priced a t S 1 0 00 o r less Price must a p p e a r in a d * If item doesn t sell a d vertiser must call b e fo re 11 0 0 a m on the d a y the a d is scheduled to e n d to q u a lify tio n a l ch arg e fo r insertions a t no the 5 a d d * M ust specify L o n g h o rn W a n t A d classification to q u a lify fo r $ 5 rate ♦ C ha n g e s a llo w e d fo r Hr O n ly NGH0RN TASS - 5 2 LONGHORN WANT ADS SELL Y O U R IT E M in th e "LONGHORN WANT ADS" 20 Words, 5 Days s 5 ° ° OR WE WILL RUN THE AD AN ADDITIONAL 5 DAYS AT NO CHARGE! 'S e e S p e c ific a t io n s YOKOTA 21" mountain bike, Shimano BED-FULL 200GS push buttom shifter, 21 speed, frame, excellent condition, $70 IV5 years old $250. Tom 339-2471, drawer dresser, $40 Vanity w/m irror. 33 8 -4 4 0 0 ext 7647. 10-2-5P. size-mattress, boxsprmg, PORTABLE CD Player, complete with two 4- speakers, headphones, shoulder strap, two adapters. Connect with home stereo. $120, 416-0795. Dog crate. OBO $5 delivery 250- Excellent condition. TWO MEG memory SIMM for IBM PS-2 model 70, 50Z, or 55SX. $100. 445- FORD 7 3 5 6 .10-2-5B 1988 H O N D A CRX - 5spd., condition, A/C. $5,300, 474-4587. excellent v« £ i!? . , N r negotiable ______ FULL-SIZE foam mattress box spring, met . 10-4-5P 10-2-5NC FAIRMONT Wagon. O riginal IBM-286, 1MB RAM, two floppy 40MB owners. G ood body. G reat utility hard, VG A graphics, mouse, 2400 $900 OBO. Call 926-4445.10- modem. Lots ot software, excellent condi­ '° 1^5 __________________ i" “ k” !"., 2 Ä m S L Î $ 4 5 0 .4 5 9 -3 9 7 7 .10-2-5P. 0_________ IBM-AT Compatible. EPSON FX-80 CHAMPION BRIARD female, one year Printer, Mouse, DOS, W ord, GWBasic, old-double champion sired. Tawny col- Fortran, PC-Plot, LOTUS 123. Manuals plus original disks $60 0 OBO. 620- or $80 0 282 -04 53 10-2-5P 5346 10-7-5B. AFGH AN SHOW quality pups, champ onship pedigree, $250 282-1-0453. 2-5P. 10- BRAND NEW Apple macintosh classic Hardly used. Software included. Includ­ ing think PASCAL $1000 negotiable. 4 7 8 -0 7 8 9 .10-7-5B tion. $795. 416-0795 10-2-5NC HIGH QUALITY Snorkling equipment. Fitted Fins, mask, snorkel, boots W ill Sell sepa- rately. Total package for $125. Call Ryan 326-9027. 10-2-5NC BRAND NEW Bauer XF38 precision in­ line skates. Men's size 9 Helmet, gloves, pads $200 OBO 4 4 7 -3 3 3 7 .10-7-5B. 1986 YAMAHA 125 Scooter. Red. G ood condition. N ew tire and brakes Very re liable. 60 * mph. 75 + mpg. Helmet in- cluded. $60 0 495-3577. Paul 10-2-5B '86 MOPED Honda Spree Great condi­ tion. Black, great for school plus small helmet. $450. 4 7 6 -5 6 4 4 .10-2-5B FLUTE: SILVER Gemeinhardp, open-hole, practically new, been in storage, asking $500. 454-6538 10-3-5B. CAMERA OUTFIT: Pentax MESuper w / ALPHA 160 Windsurfer & many accesso- 50mmP2, 35-140 zoom, MEwmder2, bounce flash, filters, Tamrac bag, $299. Nighhawk 650. $900. 338-5578, 266- Call 4 76 -83 14.10-3-5P $ 3 0 0 -$ 5 0 0 . 1983 H o n d a 9 2 3 4 .10-3-5NC y ries TOURING BICYCLE Trek 728 25Vj inch TELESCOPES. CELESTIAL Celestron 8' frame. Reynolds 531 tubing 18-speed $1000, Celestron 5.5' $700; Newtom- Huret derailleurs. Cinelli handlebars. Little an Reflector 3' $175; 60mm Refractor S99; N e gotiable- Must sell. 451-9431. used. $600. 4 5 8 -9 6 6 7 .10-3-5P. CANNONDALE BUGGER bicycle trailer. $75, excellent condition. 458-9667.10- 3-5P. FURNITURE for sale, good condition, navy blue couch $200, two end tables $35/each. Call 371 -96 33.10-4-5NC . , , , . . KAWASAKI '83 CSR305 motorcycle. Re- ... liable great running condition Perfect 72 VW Beafle. Needs work before ,t will student bike New parts Leaving country, run. 2 year old engine Don Hknow what Call Daryn 345-4885, $850 neg 10-3- « w r° n9. S500. Vanna 469 -96 53.1 0-4 - 5K___________ _____________ 5,1 ROLEX, STAINLESS, looks great, r e c e n tly ___________________________ — _ serviced, $60 0 OBO, Brian 10-3-5P 445-4990. MACINTOSH 512K Excellent condition , NINTENDO WITH 10 games S150 Pio­ neer home stereo system, $300, Enter­ tainment center $250. Rattan dinette set, $300. Call afternoons, 442-9810 9-4- 5P ___________________________ TV, VCR, stereo, answering machine, cordless phone, vacuum, cassette deck, recorder turntable, Atari 260 0 and 15 games $30-150. 339-3146.10-1-5B___________________ reel-to-reel tape MIYATA 23' 12 speed. Excellent condi tion. Road bike. Tall post and neck New kevlor. $225. Mike 4 5 2 -4 7 3 3 .10-1-5B 1984 HO ND A CRX runs great, looks good. AMFM cassette, 90K, oil change every 3K, AC needs repair and 5spd 480 -90 15.10-1-5B__________________ NEW 1991 SPECIALIZED Allez Epic (60 centimaeter). Only 50 miles. 105 group Look pedals New price, $930. $650 firm. 472 -35 46 10-1-5B frame. Excellent condition Spare parts included 371-0741 M att 10- APPLE j^ G B M ÌIT E R 7_5ß negotiable. 34d-62Í>1. IU -o -jd ig Bike $350 27, n OBO __________ FOR SALE. King size waterbed Black heater Printer $250 home. W affle mattress and $ 10 0.34 6-3 551.10-2-5B 23' Schwinn racing bike $300. 9037. Leave message. 10-2-5NC Two disk drives includes software and STURDY ATB, Jamis 5000, 24 wheels, 2 250 onginal documentation. Must sell $350 knobby tires, 12 spd, aero bars, gel seat, OBO 251-7128 10-7-5B $100.345-5845 10 7-5B. Use this handy m ail-in form today! $ 5 S p e c ia l L o n g h o r n W a n t A d s” C la ssifica tio n : (3 4 0 ) “Longhorn Want Ads” B illin g In fo rm a tio n : Phone num ber:.-------------- Name:____________ *-------- Address phone number is billed to: Street------------------------------------------- City. _____-— — State--------- Zip. C o n tact In fo rm a tio n : Phone number of person placing ad:. Phone number (h o m e ):_ --------------- Phone number (w o rk ):_ ---------------- Best time to contact: -- S c h e d u le In fo rm a tio n : Dates and days you want to run ad:. CD (6) ( I D (16) (2) (7) (12) (17) (3) (8) (13) (18) (4) (9) (14) (19) (5) (10) (15) (20) R e tu rn th is fo rm to: DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS P.O. BOX D AUSTIN, TX 78713-8904 or Call 471-5244 S p e c ific G u id elin es fo r $ 5 S p e c ia l: •. m erch an dise for sale under $1000. • m ust specify price in ad • price includes 20 words • 5 days with an extra 5 days at no ch arg e if your item doesn’t sell. (must call before 11:00 am on fifth day to get 5 extra days) • private party ads only D e a d lin e s: 11 am for next days paper Published Monday-Friday B illin g : □ Charge to my Visa ( ) MasterCard ( ) 7 M C # . V isa # . □ Please bill me Q Payment Enclosed T h e Daily T exan Page 14 Monday, October 7, 1991 T H E D A IL Y T EX A N Skins down Bears to stay perfect Associated Press C H IC A G O — D itk a M ik e called "th e it litmus test" and the undefeated VV a s h i n g t o n Redskins made sure the Chicago Bears failed. m n e d th e ir ret timing a pair o u r th q u a r t e r :ory o v e r Ditka': Mark Rvpien, The Redskins ord to 6-0 Sunday by of interceptions into 'Cores for a 20-7 vic- s Bears, who had thrown a 26-yard to Art touchdown pass Ylonk in the second quarter, hit Monk with a five-yard clinching score with 6:20 left after Fred Stokes had Jim Harbaugh's pass. intercepted Kurt Gouveia's interception then set up Chip Lohmiller's 23-yard field goal with 4:26 to go and the Redskins rode off with the victory as the Bears fell to 4-2 with a second straight loss. This is the litmus test," the Bears coach said earlier in the week. "W e are going up against the best team in the N F L ." The Redskins proved Ditka prophetic as they took a 10-0 lead in the first half. They were denied their fourth shutout when the Bears moved 62 yards in the third quarter and scored on a one-yard run bv Neal Anderson. That cut the lead to 10-7. But the two interceptions in the final period took away any chance for the Bears ■ Lions 24, Vikings 20 — In Pon­ tiac, Mich., the Minnesota Vikings learned the hard wav that you can't take anything for granted when Bar- rv Sanders is on the field Sanders scored on a 15-yard run with 36 seconds remaining to cap a furious 21-point comeback in the fi­ nal 6:50 as Detroit defeated M inne­ sota. He also caught nine passes for 76 yards and was instrumental in all three late drives. At 5-1, the Lions are off to their best start since 1980. They took sole possession of first place in the N FC Central when Chicago lost to Wash­ ington. The Lions' only loss, a 45-0 rout at Washington in the opener, came when Sanders was sidelined by injury. Sanders finished with 116 yards on 25 carries for his fourth consecu­ tive 100-yard game. The only other player in Lions history with four consecutive 100-vard games was Bil­ ly Sims in 1983. ■ Buccaneers 14, Eagles 13 — In Tampa, Fla., perhaps Philadelphia's pitiful offense was responsible, or maybe even the self-described voo­ doo priest who claimed to break a curse over Tampa Stadium. Whatever the reason, the Buc­ caneers ended a seven-game losing streak with a sloppy victory over the Eagles. in Philadelphia held Tampa Bay to 83 yards total offense before giving up two touchdown passes to Chris Chandler the fourth quarter. Chandler came off the bench to re­ place an ineffective Vinny Testa- verde and threw an eight-yarder to former Texas A & M running back Robert Wilson for a TD after Broder­ ick Thomas smothered punter Jeff Feagles inside the Philadelphia 10- yard line. ■ Dolphins 20, Patriots 10 — In Foxboro, Mass., there was nothing wrong with Dan Marino that the N FL's worst pass defense couldn't fix. Marino, who threw one touch­ down pass in his previous three games, threw two in one minute late in the second quarter as Miami came from behind and beat New England. ■ Seahawks 13, Bengals 7 — In Cincinnati, Seattle finally won on the road against a self-destructing Bengal team that can't win any­ where. ■ Jets 17, Browns 14 — In Cleve­ land, Ken O'Brien made sure the Browns paid a price for shutting down the N ew York's top-ranked running game. ■ Giants 20, Cardinals 9 — In East Rutherford, N .J., maybe all N ew York needed was a little — make that a lot — of turmoil and a team meeting to get going this sea­ son. ■ Chargers 21, Raiders 13 — In Los Angeles, Henry Rolling re­ turned a fumble 53 yards to set up a San Diego touchdown early in the fourth quarter and later intercepted a pass as the Chargers upset the Raiders for their first victory this season. The victory snapped a seven- game San Diego losing streak dating back to last season. ■ Steelers 21, Colts 3 — In Indi­ anapolis, Bubby Brister's second- half touchdown passes of 21 yards to Eric Green and 24 yards to former Razorback Barry Foster led Pitts­ burgh over winless Indianapolis, spoiling the N F L coaching debut of Rick Venturi. SWC foes can’t catch Lady Horns at Relays Michael McCardel Daily Texan Staff I This season, [the Lady Long­ horn s w i m team was sup­ posed to face a m u c h - i m ­ proved South- Uvest C on fer­ ence. * W o m e n But at the S W C Relays held Friday at Texas Christian in Fort Worth, Texas won every relay and proved it is a serious threat to earn its eighth na­ tional championship in nine years. " I was real impressed with the team, especially with our fresh­ m en," Coach Mark Schubert said. "This tournament was very excit­ ing and I look forward to the rest of the season." He added that his top perform­ ers of the tournament were sopho­ more W hitney Hedgepeth, sopho­ more B.J. Bedford and senior Julie Cooper. Hedgepeth swam on the first- place teams in the 400- and 200- meter freestyle, 200-meter butter­ fly and the 400-, 200- and 100- meter medley. Cooper swam in all freestyle re­ lays and Bedford swam back­ stroke. Another problem the Lady Longhorns were supposed to face was an earlier start than ever be­ fore. The season was pushed up because of Olympic tryouts next March. "Som e people did not swim quite as fast as normal because this tournament is usually •a month lat­ e r," Schubert said. "B u t we will swim even better at Stanford in a m onth." The Lady Longhorns' biggest challenge at the moment are inju­ ries. Beth Barr, sophomore, is suf­ fering from an arm injury, sopho­ more Andrea Fisher has tendonitis in her shoulder, sophomore Julie Sommer is recovering from ab­ dominal surgery and junior Jodi Wilson underwent back surgery during the summer. "W e have alot of important peo­ ple recovering now and these four girls are key," Schubert said. Bears stop Cougars, Astrodome streak Jon Becker Daily Texan Staff H O U S T O N — The eighth- ranked Baylor Bears re­ mained undefeated with a 38-21 victory Saturday over the H o u s t o n , Cougars' 15-game home w in ­ ning streak. e n d i n g Both teams moved the ball well as Baylor had 499 total yards to Houston's 470. But the difference in the game was that the Cougars committed seven turnovers, while the Bears had only one fumble. The Bears raised their record to 5-0 for their best start since 1980 when they won the South­ west Conference title. Houston fell to 1-3. Baylor quarterback J.J. Joe completed 16 of 23 attempts for 262 yards and two touchdowns. He also ran nine yards for a touchdown. Houston quarterback David Klingler threw' for 460 yards on 35 completions in 57 pass attempts. However, he also had three interceptions and two fumbles. "Baylor is a good football team and they made some great plays," Klingler said. "They're going to be a force to be reckoned w ith ." The Bears used a little razzle-dazzle to score the game's first points. W ith a fourth and goal at the Houston 2-yard line, Joe pitched to running back David Mims, who handed off to receiver Lee Miles on a reverse. Miles went around the left side for a touchdown, giving Baylor a 7-0 lead. The Cougars struck back on their next posses­ sion. After an unnecessary roughness penalty on Baylor moved the ball to the Houston 41-vard line, Klingler threw deep for receiver Marcus Grant, who made a sensational diving catch for a 54-yard gain. The catch and another Bear per­ sonal foul set up Ostell Miles' 2-vard touchdown run. Late in the third quarter, Houston was behind 24-21, but on the move, when its often-criticized offensive line was burned for a big play. Baylor defensive lineman Santana Dotson burst into the Cougar backfield and hit Klingler's arm, forcing a fumble that was recovered by the Bears' Allen Aldridge at the Houston 30. Baylor found the end zone three plays later on a 7-yard screen pass from Joe to Mims. Klingler said the offensive line is improving and refused to blame it for his miscues. " I'v e got to take the responsibility," Klingler Lee Miles is all smiles as he breaks away from Houston’s defense. David Fitzgerald Daily Texan Staff EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 790 — Part time 790 — Part tim e 790 — Part tim e 790 — Part tim e 790 — Part tim e 800 — G e n e ra l H elp W anted 810 — Office- Clerical $400.00 Compensation A re you a healthy non-smoking male b etw een the ag es of 18 an d 45, and within 1 0 % of your ideal w eight? If so, yo u m ay qualify to participate in a pharm aceutical research study and ★★STUDENTS ★* Greatest Jo b in Austin Ben Hur Shrine Circus Circus Ticket Sales Ideal Telephone Positions Part-time Evening Hours re ce ive up to $40 0.00. The dates and $6-10/hr. 834-3030 times of the study a re listed below; Apply: 8 0 0 7 G essner Dr. you must b e a v ailab le to remain in (2 biks. west o f 183 and 1-35) 9-19-20B-K our facility for the entire period to be eligible: PART-TIME Secretarial help wanted for the fol­ lowing periods M ,W 9:30-12:30; T,TH 9 30-12:30; T,TH 12:30-4:30. You need typing only. We teach our personal computer needs, all applicants tested. Starting salary $4.75/hr. Contact T.E. Wiley Co., 1506 West 6th, between 8:30am- 10am. PART-TIME C O M P U T ER O PER A T O R O p ening , $642-683/m onth, 20 hrs/ wk, M o nd ay- Frid ay, 5-9pm. Must be flexible b etw een 4-midnight. 6 mo. exp erience or 3 semester hours. C o m ­ puter S cience required. Contact Texas A ir Control Board , Hum an Resources Departm ent. (512)908-1815. E O E / A A em ployer. 10-2-5B 10-7-2B ss $ s $$$$$$$$$$$$$$ First USA Marketing Services, a division of First USA, Inc. is currently seeking the follow in g marketing professionals: ★Consumer Credit Reps! Representatives will be responsible for marketing consumer products and services, primarily credit cards nation­ wide Excellent communication skills with some sales experience is p re ­ ferred W e guarantee $6/hour plus benefits. Commissions may be earned. Typing kills of 25 wpm preferred. Sched uled shift is M o nd ay-Frid ay • 8:30am -l 2:30pm • 1 00-5 00pm • 5:30-9 30pm Check-m Tim«: 3:00pm Friday, October 18 Friday, October 25 Check-out Time: 8-9:00om Monday, October 21 Monday, October 28 Please ap p ly in person M o n d a y through Friday, 8om-6:30pm at: First U S A Telemarketing. O n e Texas C e n ­ ter, 505 Barton Springs Road, Suite 600, Receptionist. N o Phone Calls, Please! Equal Opportunity Em ployer First U S A $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ • 10 4 20B-C To qualify, you must pass our free physical exam and screening tests. M eals, accom m odations, entertain­ ment, and recreational activities p ro ­ vid ed free-of-charge. For m ore information, please call 462-0492 P H A R M A C O R E S E A R C H F O R BETTER H EA LTH • 10 4-2B-E ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 3 0 T ra v e l-T ra n s p o rta tio n JANUARY 2-14 * 5, 6 OR 7 NIGHTS STEAM BO ' J BRECKENRID?* VAIL/BEAVER CRF JANUARY 2-9 ★ 5, 6 OR 7 NIGHTS ' JANUARY 3-12 ★ 5 OR 7 NIGHTS Call Today! et // // M j TH a n n u a l 5335? I WINTER S E BREAKS *191 o‘ < i Ä i &&&&&& J V ' ea'D no'8'e „ S*' „o"*0' U 'e ' • < C f * * n t t " n q o G * a S ®, C°c i 'su - **' 10th ANNUAL COLLEGIATE WINTER SKI BREAKS TOLL FREE INFORMATION A RESERVATIONS 1-800-321-5911 TEACHERS NAEYC accredited program now accepting applications. Part-time P.M. positions 2.30-6 M-F. Pre­ school and school age children ex­ perience preferred. Apply at: Creative World 2023 Denton 837-8840 9-26-12B SLICERS RESTAURANT 3616 Far W est Blvd W ell groom ed, energetic and dependable cashiers needed. Full/part-time. Flexible hours, excellent w age potential. Call fo r appointm ent M-F 7:30am - 9:30am only. Rick M adden 3 4 5 -9 4 6 6 . 10-7-5B-E PIZZA TIME Now hiring delivery driv­ ers. Make $4-6 per hour. Good atmosphere-make lots of money and have fun. Apply in person. 2928 Guadalupe ________________________________ 10-1-5B SPECIAL EDUCATION. Com- p an io n /teach er/ca retaker needed for a very intelligent 6yr old with cerebral palsy. latest Opportunity to teaching and therapy meth­ ods. Weekends, 10 + hrs/wk. Call Paula or Dan 458-1596 after 6pm. learn 10-2-5B Extend-A-Care needs people who have experience working with groups of elementary age children. Some positions require experience w/handi- capped & ED children. Other positions include staff to act as male role models. Must be 18 or older w/high school diplo­ ma or equivalent. Hours 2- 6pm M-F. $5.40/hr Apply at 5555 N Lamar D113. E.O.E. ___________________________ 10-2-3B THE D E S IG N A T E D Driver Program need s d riv e rs Thursd ay. F rid a y , llpm-3am. Must be 22 yrs. Saturday. old. $5/hr. 385 -4592.10-1-5B__________ PART-TIME Help needed for day care center. Experience preferred. 2:45-6pm M-F. Working with school-aged children. 442-0405. 10-2-5B D ISABLED UT student, off-campus, needs leave P/T attendant, call name and number. 10-2-5P. 385-14/5, THE A R B O R Cinema is now hiring for Re­ part-time help. Apply at 10000 search Blvd. 10-3-5B. EMPLOYMENT 800 — G e n e ra l H elp W anted UNIQUE TALENT.. UNIQUE OPPORTUNITIES Dial America Marketing Inc., is one of the nation’s largest telemarketing organizations with over 33 years in the telemarketing business and over 45 offices in the U.S. In our office located in Austin, we have these exciting entry level opportunities for: FULL and PART-TIME QUALITY VALIDATION REPRESENTATIVES With our exciting past and even more exciting future, we can otter the right individuals a great opportunity to work with an industry leader. You will be providing a consumer sales confirmation service for our clients in an exciting professional atmosphere. A few of our opportunities include: Chinese (Man- darinese and Cantonese), Korean, Japanese or Spanish: not to exclude English speaking professionals. Dial America offers these superior benefits: • Competitive hourly wage • Life, health, dental, vision, and disability plans including 401 (K) • Professional paid training, vacations and holidays • Flexible shifts available We are hiring for immediate openings, so apply in person Monday-Friday 10 am-6 pm at 4120 Friedrich Ln., Suite 350, Austin. Dial America . . . people talking to people c h ïl d c a r ë TEACHERS AIDE Teachers aid e ne ed e d part-time W e d n e s d a y and Friday. The person selected for this position will be re­ sponsible for assisting a classroom teacher in the g e n e ral supervision an d m anagem ent of a doss of 6-16 children b etw een the ag es of 6mos- 5yrs. C all 4 7 8 - 2276 an d ask for Ja n if you'd like m ore information. 10-7-3B T-SHIRT C O M P A N Y Downtown needs warehouse help folding T-shirts, clean up and some lifting. Also office help(sales ' experience helpful). $5/hr. 4“ experience helpful). $5/hr. 478-1785 leave work experience. 10-3-3B. ! lifting. Also office help(s Intaglio printmaking, ARTISTS'. A SSIST A N T needed Flexible framing, hours. shipping studio maintenance, experience preferred, but not required. South Aus- tin. $5.50/hr. 447-8710.10-4-5B. C O O K IE C O M P A N Y is seeking o de­ pendable person with dependable transportation for product delivery. Mon- Thurs. afternoon 2-6pm. $6/hr. Please call Kent 476-9103.10-4-5B. PART TIME STUD EN T HELP W A N T E D Variabe duties and hours in □ small res­ taurant. Call immediately 453-2813. M o e or Connie 10-4-2B LA . ta w needs part-time office help. W o rd Perfect 5.1 required. W rite D e­ borah at 1120 Capital of Tx Hwy S. Build­ ing 2, Ste 207, Austin, TX 78746. 10-7- W A N T E D S IN G E R S , balloon deliverers, and dancers. Part-time including week­ ends. Must be talented outgoing reliable and own a car. Call M onkey Business 445 -5944.10-7-5B._____________________ 8 0 0 — G e n e ra l H elp W an ted RAISE $500...$ 1000...$ 1500 F O O L RAISING F o r y o u r fra te rn ity , s o ro rity , te a m o r o th e r c a m p u s o rg a n iz a tio n . A SS O LU TS L T NO INVESTMENT R f Q U IR t D ! CALL 1-800-950-8472, ext. 50 $$TELEMARKETERS$$ $$$NEEDED$$$ Immediate employ­ ment available. No setting ap­ selling, p ointm ents. 4- 8:30pm Five blocks west of UT. Call 495-9055 or come by 706 W . MLK, Suite #13 Between l-5pm ______________________________ 10-2-20B-K E A R N M O N E Y R e a d in g B o o k j! $30,000/yr. income potential Details (11-805-962-8000, Ext. Y-9413. 9-5- 24P J O B S $ 1 6 ,0 4 0 G O V E R N M E N T $59230/yr. N o w Hiring, Call 1-805- 962-8000 Ext. R-9413 for current fed­ eral list. IO-1-35P LONG TERM OPPORTUNITIES N.W. Austin insurance compa­ ny has the tollowing long term assignments available: #1 JR. SECRETARIES/ APPOINTMENT SETTERS R e q u ire s 40 + wpm , g e n 'l cle rical skills & 6 + m os telem arketing or c u s t o m e r s e r v ic e e x p e r ie n c e M on-T hurs., 12-9 pm a n d v a rie d Fri & S a t. hrs. #2 APPOINTMENT SETTERS 2 positions a v a ila b le M on-Thurs, 5-9 pm & S a t. 10-2. R e q u ire s 6 + m oe. te le m ark etin g or cu s to m e r s e rv ic e exp er reliable tra n sp o rta­ tion, & verifiable w ork history. 3508 Far West Blvd. #170 343-6366 Office Specialists SH O R T W A L K UT Run law -related errands, Full/ fo r prelaws. part-time, great O w n economical, reliable car. $4.25. Also hiring: typists; ac­ counting/bookkeeping trainee; investigator/bill collector tra in­ ee. Nonsm oking self starters. 4 0 8 West 17th St. W rite a p plica­ tion. 9am -4pm weekdays. 9-24-20B-E PART-TIME Secretarial help wanted for the fol­ lowing periods M,W 9:30-12:30; T,TH 9 30-12:30; T,TH 12:30-4:30. You need typing only. W e teach our personal computer needs, all applicants tested. Starting salary $4.75/hr. Contact T.E. Wiley Co., 1506 West 6th, between 8:30am- 10am. 10-2-5B MAIL CLERK The corporate office of Prime Cable has a position opened for a Mail Clerk. Responsibilities include routine duties such as running er­ rands, operating minor office ma­ chines, collecting and distributing mail, stocking all refrigerators and kitchens, ordering office supplies and performing other related du­ ties as assigned by supervisor. Candidate will have the ability to handle a variety o f routine office duties which requires some judg­ ment and initiative. A satisfactory driving record and a valid Texas driver's license are a must. Please submit a resume and salary requirements to: Potricia V. Hrabina Human Resource Director Prime Cable Suite 1900 Austin, Texas 78701 PLEASE, N O PHONE CALLS PRIME CABLE IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER EOE M/F/V/H 10-4-3B-E 8 2 0 — Accounting« B o o k k e e p in g SHO RT W A L K UT Accounting/book­ keeping trainee Full/part-time Non- smoker $4.25/hr W 17th St W rite appli­ cation, 8-4 weekdays. 9-19-20B-E "Know Before You Go," where to work, live and ski free in Colorado's re­ sorts. Current Guide to Aspen, Vail, Brecken- ridge and more! $16.95. Call 1-800-788-6174. 10-2-20P TELEMARKETING PO SITIONS AVAILABLE Evening and weekend shifts Flexi­ ble scheduling Salary plus bonus Call 477-9821 R O B E R T M . 10-4-20B-E JOB O P E N IN G : M eteorologist/ Program m er with C experience. Program m er w ith an education in w eather preferred. UNIX ex­ perience helpful. Full time posi­ tion w ith excellent benefits. Resumes to W eatherD ata, Incor­ porated, O perations D epart­ ment 8 2 5 N orth Main, W ichita, KS 6 7 2 0 3 . 10-7-1P PERFECT PART- TIME E M P L O Y M E N T Large national non-profit health organi­ zation needs long term assistance con­ tacting past contributors by phone to re­ new their support. Low pressure, team atmosphere. Straight hourly pay. M-TH, 5pm-9pm. Limited openings. CALL FOR M O R E INFO . KELLY TEM PO RARY SERVICES 345-2999 10-7-1B-A PH O N E OPERATORS PT/FT ANYTIME Earn up to $10/hr plus C A S H bonuses daily. Fun and easy with time to play. Call Mr. Thomas at 451-2420 between 11&12 ONLY! T tr 7 -3 B - A BLUE JEA N JO BS EARN OVER $300/WK A M / P M FT/PT SH IFTS A V A IA BLE Do you have the 9-5 blues? Do you w e a r tank tops, T- shirts and tatters. W e offer casual dress, comfortable atmosphere, great co-work­ ers, and flexible schedule. Be independent, apply to­ day at 5501 N. Lamar, C- 105. (Between Ginny's and Chinese Restaurant.) 12- 12:20 or 6-6:30pm O N LY !! 10-7-3B-A M AIL O R D ER company needs help. W ork from your home doing various lobs. Coll 445-8368 9-23-15B__________ EA RN $25 00 & free trips selling Spring Break packages to Bahamas, Mexico, Jam aica, Florida! Best trips & prices! Spring Break Travel, 1-800-638-6786. 10-2-5P STUD EN TS EA RN Extra $1,000-2,000 per month on part-time or full-time b a­ sis. Flexible hours. Call 459-3535 for ap- poinment. 10-2-7B-E. W A N T E D FULL Time responsible shop helper to work in busy modern first closs repair business. Clean driving auto record required Contact Elisa 472- 5555 10-2-5B___________________________ J O B S G O V E R N M E N T $16,040- $59,230/yr. N o w hiring Cali (1) 805- 962-8000 Ext R-9413 for current fed­ eral list 8-12-35P said. " I had five turnovers in the game personal­ ly and that's not giving yourself a chance." Other than Joe, the Baylor offensive stars were Mims, who had 16 carries for 98 yards, and re­ ceiver Melvin Bonner, who had nine catches for 169 yards including a 77-yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter. He caught the pass in full stride and had enough room to slow down in the last 15 yards to the end /one and taunt defend­ ing cornerback Jerry Parks. "You're looking at the most optimistic-guy in the w orld," Houston Coach John Jenkins said. " I expected us to be 4-0 right n o w ." Although disappointed with the Cougars' start, Jenkins said he is more determined than ever. He also defended the run and shoot of­ fense, which has put up only 41 points in its last' three games. ■ Arkansas 22, T C U 21 — In Fort Worth, E.D . Jackson's 3-yard touchdown run with 5:36 left capped the Razorbacks' rally as they upset the previously unbeaten Horned Frogs. Arkansas increased its record to 3-2 overall and 2-0 in the S W C w-hile TC U dropped to 4-1 and 1-1. TC U had hoped to go 5-0 for the first time since 1942. Jackson scored after a 71-yard drive, with the big play coming on a 29-yard pass from Jason Allen to Ron Dickerson to the TC U four yard line. ■ Texas A & M 37, Texas Tech 14 — In Lub­ bock, if Texas A & M Coach R.C. Slocum ever doubted his quarterback Bucky Richardson's toughness, those worries were laid to rest in the 21std-ranked Aggies' drubbing of Texas Tech. Richardson rushed for three touchdow-ns and scrambled for 76 yards while overcoming an in­ jury to his right foot that sidelined him for much of the second quarter. The Aggies, (3-1 overall, 1-0 in the S W C ) rushed for 322 yards and amassed 443 total yards, while holding Tech (1-4, 0-2) to eight yards on the ground. ■ Southern Methodist 31, Tulane 17 — In New Orleans, Dan Freiburger, a junior quarter­ back making the second start of his career, threw three touchdown passes as Southern Methodist beat Tulane in a battle of winless teams. Freiburger completed 27 of 36 passes for 310 yards in relief of Mike Romo, who is out for the rest of the season after tearing a ligament in his right knee last week against Baylor. SM U (1-3) ended the nation's longest major- college losing streak at 13 games. Tulane (0-6) has lost seven in a row. EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 850 — R etail RETAIL S A LES —Highland Mall. Depend­ able, energetic, sales associates needed Jewelry/wom ens' 453- 2677, leave message. 10-4-3B accessories. SA LES P ER S O N . Tuesday-Thursdoy 1- 6pm. & Saturdays. Sanford's Shoes. 477 8421.10-7-5B-E 880 — Professional for North M H W needed Austin group-home for de- v e lo p m e n ta lly d is a b le d adults. FULL-TIME P O S IT IO N M O N - FR I 3-11 G re a t benefits, pleasant woTking enviroment. Experi­ ence needed. Please send letters of interest or resumes to: CLP-HUMAN RESOURCES P.O. BOX 4008 AUSTIN, TEXAS 78765 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 10-1-9B-A Residential Treatment center in S. 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Coll 459-9572 or 835-9590.10-2-20B NATIONAL CONFERENCE 15 Companion of The Top Twenty Five By The Associated Press The Top Twenty Five teams m the Associated Press 1991 college first-place votes m parentheses, records through Oct. 5, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point tot a 25th place vote, and previous ranking football poll, with . Record ............... Pts Pvs 1 1.498 1 416 2 1 404 3 4 1 ?98 7 1.213 1 ?08 5 8 1,129 1,083 11 991 12 895 13 860 14 692 17 689 18 687 15 653 10 638 19 607 9 579 6 439 20 372 22 303 23 287 112 — 105 16 92 25 t Florida St. (58) 2 Miami ( 1 ) ...................... 3. Washington (1) 4 Tennessee 5 Michigan 6 Oklahoma 7. Notre Dame 8 Baylor 9 Penn St 10 Florida 11 Ohio St 12 Pittsburgh 13 California 14 Nebraska 15. Syracuse 16 N Carolina St........................ 17 Iowa 18 Clemson 19. Alabama 20 Illinois 21. Texas A&M 22 Georgia 23 Mississippi.......................... 24 Auburn . 25 Colorado . Other receiving votes Arizona St 74, Mississippi St 30. Fresno St. 24, Southern Miss. 23. Air Force 19, East Caro­ lina 16. Missouri 12, North Carolina 12. UCLA 11. Georgia Tech 8. Indiana 7, Rutgers 4. Southern Cat 4, Texas Christian 3 Virginia 2. Wisconsin 1 5 0 0 4 0-0 4 0 0 4-0-0 . 3-1-0 4 0 0 4-1 0 5-0-0 5-1-0 4 1-0 4-0-0 5-0-0 4-0-0 3-1-0 4-1-0 5-0-0 3 IO 3 1-0 4-1-0 3 1-0 3-1-0 4-1 0 . 5-1-0 3-2-0 2 2-0 .......................... . . . . The Top 25 By The Notre Dame Observer The Observer, the student newspaper at the University of Notre Dame is conducting a Top 25 college football poll voted on by college sportswriters from 37 schools repre­ senting 10 conferences — plus three independents — across the nation Total points are based on 25 points for a first place vote 382 10. Florida 1 ! Ohio State 381 304 12. Clemson 302 13 California 300 14 Pittsburgh 292 15 Iowa 289 16 Nebraska 264 17 NC State 230 18 Syracuse 202 19 Alabama 149 20 Illinois 117 21 Texas A&M 98 22 Georgia 62 23 Auburn. 32 24 Colorado 29 25 Mississippi Others receiving voles Georgia Tech 24 SouthemCal 19 Arizona State 17. Southern Mississippi 11. Indiana 9 UCLA 7. Air Force 7, Mississippi Slate 7 Miami (Ohiot 4 Texas 4 Texas Christian 4, Rutgers 3 Fresno State 3 Missouri 3 East Carolina 2 BrighamYoung 2. Comeii t Schools participating in this week s poll Alabama An zona, Arizona State Ball State Brigham Young. Colorado Columbia Cornell Duke. Fionda Illinois. Indiana Kansas Kentucky Miami Michigan North Carolina State Notre Dame Oregon, Oregon State Penn, Syracuse. Texas. Utah, West Virginia, Wisconsin The Daily Texan's Vote Here is how Texan Sports Editor Jaime Aron, Associate Sports Editor Craig M Douglas and Texas football writer Tom Grace voten m The Observer poll. 1 F londa Stale 2 Miami 3 Washington 4 Oklahoma 5. Tennessee 6. Baylor Michigan 8 Notre Dame 9 Ohio State 10. Penn State 11 Florida 12 Nebraska 13 Pittsburgh 14 California 15. Alabama 1& NC State 1 r Clemson 18 Syracuse 19 Iowa 20 Georgia 21. Texas A&M 22 Illinois 23. Southern Cal 24 Mississippi 25. Texas National Football League AMERICAN CONFERENCE East Houston Pittsburgh Cleveland Cincinnati Denvet Kansas City LA Raiders Seattle San ' iiego ........ 0 Central 4 3 2 W est 4 3 3 3 i East Washington Dallas N Y Giants Philadelphia Phoenix D e tr o it.................. Chicago Minnesota Green Bay Tampa Bay New Orleans A tla n ta .................. LA Rams San Francisco W L 0 2 3 3 3 . . . . 6 4 3 . . . . 3 3 . . . Centrai 5 4 2 1 . . . 1 W est 5 2 2 2 . . Buf'alo at Kansas City 8 p in Monday's Game 1 2 3 5 2 2 3 3 5 1 2 4 5 5 0 3 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 800 156 69 600 US 104 72 69 400 68 136 000 66 7 128 107 63 65 600 91 108 500 500 111 86 97 127 167 Pet PF 1 000 189 PA 65 667 115 113 93 95 500 90 80 .500 92 105 500 833 128 ! 19 97 111 667 69 106 333 167 83 115 73 113 167 47 1 000 121 88 62 73 109 69 95 400 400 400 Today's Trivia: This is the week for Longhorn fans Texas vs OU All week this space will he dedicated to that pursuit Today all we want to know is who won the fuss meeting Nah that's too easy Tell us the year, too Quote du jour: A pair of fond 'areweils I did the hist ame in 1 ■ • and the last in 1991. and somewhere in between I got a little bit of a caieei going Oetroit Tigers broadcaster Ernie Harwell who broadcast the first ever game at Baltimore s Memorial Stadium and the las! on Sunday also his last with the Tigers. W L 0 .5 3 3 3 3 4 2 6 0 PA Pet. PF T 0 1000 162 115 500 120 ! 22 0 500 120 112 0 66 111 333 0 43 134 000 0 Friday's Trivia Answer: John W. Heisman was the Rice Owls coach from 1924-1927. After Saturday, it looks like Trevor Cobb won t be mentioned m the same breath as the trophy's namesake anymore. through one point for a 25th place vote 1 Florida State (25).......................... 2 Miami 3. Washmgton(t) 4 Tennessee 5. Oklahoma 6. Michigan 7 Notre Dame . 8. Baylor 9 Penn State . . . 649 .- 613 605 561 536 525 489 473 439 Buffalo Miami N Y Jets New England Indianapolis Digger Jones, Boy M ortician by Tom King I C A H w o r k w H T A m a t THIS TAKE CM R IS ALMOST TOO £ASS. TOO BAO THE LITU_E CRETAN CHDbTj UE/Wfc ® A WILL . HA,HA.' THE DAILY TEXAN Monday, October 7, l y y i Page !i> Crossword Edited by Eugene T. Maleska 64 I.over 65 Rule, 13 Britannia com poser 66 U nfeigned 67 Keen 68 Shakespearean king 69 Risk 70 Tupelo or tam arack 26 27 29 ACROSS 31 Nitwit i Littleneck 5 F e l l o w 9 Netman Lendl 13 Kick over the traces hearty 16 Proboscis 17 a Nightingale" 18 Region 19 Broadway a n ge ls’ delights 20 Dowser 22 Corrida cheers 23 River at Leeds 24 Subm it form ally 26 Within reach 30 Cognize 32 Israeli diplomat 3 5 Gentleman’s gentleman 3 9 Slip 41 Sash 42 In agreement 43 Forsake 44 Wooden strip 46 D ischarge 47 Raison d ’ 49 Scrape off 51 Small bird 53 Samoan port 55 Early 20th- century art cult 5 6 Weakens; dilutes 62 Check texts 6 3 Nora’s dog ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE No. 0826 § ~ n r 1? 1 7 K T 5 “ 16 * ü 2 ? y24 25 H 1 38 36 ¡•íATg» ••m 30 34 « 1 1 1 •.M -. : 44 g 5 35 ^ 46 53 r 56 57 21 32 63 66 69 DOWN 1 Boast 2 “ — and the Swan” : Yeats 3 Prom ote a crime 4 A pportion 5 Bergere 6 Author Bret 7 One of the W aughs 8 Large fowl 9 Experiencing trouble 10 Curtain fabric 11 M ichaelm as 12 Suffix with mad daisy or sad 14 Navigation system 21 Broad 25 Star or TV program 26 Biblical brother 27 Lacerated 28 Israeli dance 29 Out of trouble 30 Purl’s kin 33 Tree trunk 34 C am el’s-hair fabric 36 Glen Gray's Casa O rchestra 37 Okla. city 38 Head: Fr. 40 Network of nerves 45 Small am ount 48 Recompense 50 Iraqi port si Chaplain 52 S uburb of M inneapolis 53 Perfume 54 Clergym an who wrote "You Can Win' 55 D istribute cards 57 On the Barents 58 Blockhead 59 Hebrew m easure 60 M tlne’s “ When W e Y oung” Very 61 Govt, certificate Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 5656 (75C each minute). BIZARRO By D A N PIRARO »3 OKAY, TH/5 15 UKB OUR FIRST PAW, 60T/T? ÙVE'RE- START- IN6ALC0VER A6A/N! YEAH, RJ6HT. REMEMBER WHAT THE FACILITATOR TOLV YOU! TRY TO IMA6INE I'M 18 A6A/N ANP WE'RE MEET- INO FOR THE FIRST TIME! / \V ■ 1 — Tooth & Justice by Shannon Wheeler ,----------------------------------------------------------------—— , . . 1..... ................. ..........- 1 rT .........................11 ’ T 7 1 THIS IS THE e>E5T IN OUR. U V E S T IM E GETS WORSE9 n y ¡ t i _ 0 ¡ ¡ A « ’ i s S ^ 3 . I MB AN, SURB YOU CAN ¡JUST F0R5JARTER5, 1ST THE YOU'RE ABOUT 15 POUNPS MOOP TAKE- HEAVIER/__ * \ y j £ rv ,