Jamie Fischer leads golfers to 5th SWC Championship, page 8 - ■ : ! T \ A T f \ 7 HP] •3M, *,NIHSll9nd083IUolsanMl W 9 1 I i I FACAN ALj A J f 31V1S 804 1 IV h o o o o h o o o o J f - P t A J l Vol. 90, No. 138 1 Section Th e studerV n e w s p a p e r of T h e U nive rsity of T e x a s at Austin Wednesday, April 24. 1991 25c Rescue efforts pour in for victims of Costa Rican earthquake Associated Press SAN JOSE, Costa Rica — Res­ cuers searched the rubble of build­ international aid began ings and pouring in Tuesday for victims of a powerful earthquake that killed at least 79 people, injured more than 800 and left thousands hom eless. The Monday night quake, which measured 7.4 on the Richter scale, was the deadliest in Central Ameri­ ca since 1986, when an earthquake left 1,500 people dead in El Salva­ dor. Officials said there were at least 50 confirmed deaths in Costa Rica and 29 in Panama's remote Atlantic province of Bocas del Toro, which had not registered an earthquake since 1916. Bridges and roads throughout Costa Rica were destroyed or dam­ aged by the earthquake, making it difficult the extent of deaths and damage. Neighboring Nicaragua sent helicopters to fly over areas cut off by landslides and road damage. to assess The epicenter was near Puerto Limon, a sleepy Caribbean port of 130,000 people about 75 miles east of this Costa Rican capital. In that city, two hotels, the cus­ toms house, an office building and scores of homes collapsed. A hospi­ tal was damaged and Red Cross workers were treating injured in the streets. Red Cross spokesman Miguel Orozco said hospital patients and those in the earthquake were being treated in a tent set up in the street near the hospital. injured "This place looks like one of these Hollywood apocalyptic movies. It felt like the world was coming to an end as everything moved and heaved," Rigoberto Perez, a resi­ dent of Puerto Limon, said by tele­ phone. Thousands of people, fearful of the streets than go aftershocks, slept around bonfires rather home. in -rrp Ps K. Earthquake In Costa Rica Caribbean Sea Puerto Limon 100 Kilometers Associated Press ceded 100 feet and some terrified for Puerto Limon residents fled When the quake hit, the sea re- Please see Quake, page 7 Pedestrians observe damage wrought by Monday’s powerful earthquake. Stanford cast1 effects changes in grant use Jenny Lin Daily Texan Staff A change in rules governing federal grants to univer­ sities — in the wake of the exposure of abuses at Stan­ ford University — will attempt to limit misuses of fed­ eral funds. Stanford University's request for reimbursement for a $1,200 antique commode, a $10,000 set of silverware, a yacht, a grand piano and assorted floral arrangements spurred an investigation by the General Accounting Office of Congress and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The two investigating bodies refuse to reveal the names of the institutions being investigated, a list that comprises 17 universities according to the Washington Post Service and 19 according to The New York Times. UT vice presidents James Vick and G. Charles Frank­ lin said Tuesday they believe the University is not un­ der investigation because its policy has always been conservative. "If they do select UT it is because of the size and amount [of federal funds] that we receive," Franklin said, noting that the Univerity is a large research insti­ tution. The proposed rules change, issued bv Richard Dar- man, director of the Office of Management and Budget, is an amendment of Circular No. A-21, the Cost Princi­ ples for Educational Institutions. The proposal would add 13 categories to the list of items for which the government will not reimburse uni­ versities, For example, the government would crack down on attempts to charge parties to its tab by disal­ lowing entertainment and alcoholic beverage costs. Universities could no longer ask to be reimbursed for officials' housing and personal living expenses, goods or services for personal use, membership fees in social organizations, contributions to charities, or advertising and promotion for the institution. In addition, institutions are specifically warned against using federal funds to defend themselves from government allegations of fraud. Federal monies may not be used to pay fines or penalties from violations of laws, nor for insurance against defects in the institu­ tion's materia! or workmanship. Darman stated in a press release, "Recent informa­ tion shows abuses in reimbursements claimed by uni­ versities for indirect costs supporting government funded research. These require additional guidelines to clarify policy and stop the abuse." With a possible investigation looming above, some Please see Abuses, page 7 Librarians face new roles High-tech libraries don't always go by the book Aaron DaMommio Daily Texan Staff Abby Martin, a graduate student in library and information science, says she doesn't want people to think she's a "dumpy broad." "I think people still have a real vision of librarians as the old stereo­ type of an old woman in a bun with glasses," Martin said. Her worry is shared to one extent or another by many in her field, who believe that the prejudices of the public have not changed to con­ form to the new roles librarians are beginning to fill in society. Some now prefer to be called "in­ formation specialists" and all have found increased prestige and op­ tions available to graduates of li­ brary science programs. The career's low profile obscures the fact that most positions in the field require a master's degree in li­ bran science. Mary Lynn Rice-Lively, library sci­ this ence librarian, argues information that and Colorado River I Greenbelt makes library science a professional degree similar to a law degree in its training of students for a particular career. Many librarians working in spe­ cialized areas have additional mas­ in their specialties. ter's degrees Brook Sheldon, dean of library and information science, said som e stu­ dents may not want to practice a particular profession but enjoy helping others pursue it. Martin has no desire to be tradi­ tional in her career choice. "I don't really see myself working at a public library," she said. Library science graduates can choose today from jobs with infor­ mation brokers, document delivery firms, indexing or abstracting com­ panies and database creaters, she said. Ralph Alberico, head librarian at the Undergraduate Library, agreed that librarians can now use their skills in other areas, such as in in­ dustry, and may get higher salaries there. "I think most people w ho are in INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY UT professor records sounds from the Papua New Guinea rain forest and songs from the Kaluli people who inhabit it to fund efforts to pro­ tect the Kalulis’ home, which is being threatened by mineral explo­ 5 ration. Weather: Unemployment Blues Weather. “ Oh, my days are mostly clouded In a market oh so crowded Twenty percent’s my chance of rein­ ing in a job. When 80s are the high I read my mail and cry ‘Thanks for applying, but get lost, you worthless slob.’ So when those cool winds blow. At 15 mph I’ll know, It’s time to donate blood and finally sell the Saab.’’ this work are in it because thev en­ joy it," he said. Sheldon said librarians used to limit themselves to helping people find the information they already knew thev wanted. "I'd like to think that the new concept is a broader concept of ac­ cess in which the librarian in a way becomes the intermediary or the counselor for someone needing in- fcrmation," she said. Corporations, she added, have begun to recognize that people with information-gathering can save them enormous amounts of time. A specialist can prevent an en­ gineer from reinventing the wheel — or present data in ways that are tailored for that engineer. skills "The way the information is pre­ sented may bring a whole new per­ spective,' she said. Rice-Lively described a trend toward value-added information, in which rather than merely telling Please see Libraries, page 7 Job rate up in 1990 but low in March Jaime Aron Daily Texan Staff____________________ While state Comptroller John Sharp was announcing Tuesday the good new s about em ployment in Texas in 1990, Commissioner Mary Scott Nabers of the Texas Employ­ ment Commission took some of the luster off the celebration bv an­ nouncing bad news for March of 1991. Sharp released figures compiled bv the publication Fiscal Notes show ­ ing that nearly one out of every five new jobs created last year in the United States went to a Texan. The state added more new jobs — a 2.5 increase — than anv other state in 1990. "While manv states saw their work forces dwindle in the w ake of lexas the national recession, the its moderate econom y continued Please see Jobs, page 7 Saving fa c e Joey Lin Daily Texan Staff M ariano V enturino C ham po, 13, carves the edges of a wooden mask. He is here with his father from Suchia- pas, C hiapas, M exico, for a m ask exhibition. Ruta Maya Coffee is sponsoring their first visit to Texas. The exhibit continues today from noon to 2 p.m. in the T ex­ as M em orial M useum . Project eliminates Boggy Creek floods Boggy Creek Public Works Project Area Mark Babineck Daily Texan Staff East Austin residents don't have to worry about being bogged down any longer after a $26 million U.S. Army Corps of Engineers project to stop Boggy Creek from flooding surrounding houses. The creek, which begins near the intersection of Airport Boulevard and 1-35 and winds its way to the Colorado River near Shelton Street, has had a history of severely flood­ ing the the neighborhood over years. During the the past decade, the corps worked to deepen the creek, pave the bed with concrete and line the sides with rock and man-made meshing to keep storm water w here it belongs. The project, completed earlier this year, should keep the area dry even in the worst of tem­ pests. To celebrate the efforts that went into getting the project off the ground, the City of Austin is co­ sponsoring ceremonies at Parque Zaragoza, at 741 Pedernales St. to dedicate the public works project. The park is bisected by Boggy Creek and was a frequent victim of its swells, which dum ped water into area homes with as little as 2 inches of rainfall. Ella Salazar, an official in the A us­ tin Public Works Department, said completion of the project marks the end of a long struggle to correct a problem that has plagued that part of town for years. "Residents kept coming to City Hall and requesting some type of solution," she said. "The people wanted som ething done, but the city alone couldn't afford it. But the bottom line was that we had to fix it." A series of events then took place that began to charge the situation. Jorge Guerra, owner of the El Azte­ ca restaurant at 2600 E. Seventh St., spearheaded the first efforts to find a solution in 1968. Guerra began a letter-wnting campaign that eventually resulted in a public hearing in the fall of 1975. In attendance that night at Go- valle Elementary were U.S. Rep. J.J. "Jake" Pickle, the entire Austin City Council, county officials and 350 concerned citizens, led by Guerra, who voiced their frustration at what they considered the city's lack of ac­ tion. "As soon as [the Army Corps of Engineers] got close and began to see what was happening, they real­ ized what problems we had,*' Guer­ ra said. "If the city wasn't able to correct the problems, the federal government came in and not only the 10- and 50-year prevented Felipe Campos Daily Texan Graphics storms, but the 50- and 100-year storms." The creek is designed to protect the 14 miles of streets encompassing 1,500 hom es and businesses that spent years repeatedly getting soaked. The waterway was original­ ly too small and shallow' to handle all the runoff from the develop- Please see Creek, page 7 Index: Around Campus Classifieds Comics............... Editorials . Entertainment. . Sports ............... State & Local Television University. World & Nation . 13 10 13 4 9 8 6 11 5 3 Page 2 Wednesday, April 24, 1991 THF, D A ILY TEXAN T h e Da i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor Managing E d ito r............... Associate Managing Editors News E d ito r...................... Associate News Editors News Assignments Editor Senior Reporters Kevin McHargue Randy Kennedy Dipu Bhattacharya, Katrina Brown, Scott Stanford, Jeff Turrentine Hope S. Yen Matthew Canton. Dane Schiller Jenny Huang . Matthew Connaliy (State). Aaron DaMommto (University), Steve H.gginbotham (City). Michelle Koidin (Police), David Loy (University). Buck Sralla (State) Adam Hersh, Dave Winter Associate Editors Shannon Prosser Entertainment Editor Shai Tsur Associate Entertainment Editor Keith Nelson Sports Editor Mindy Brown Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Jaime Aron Mark Babmeck. Craig M Douglas Photo E d ito r s ................................................................................... Kirk J Cnppens Michelle Patterson Michelle Dapra Marc Fort, Scott Lewis, Joey Lin, P h o to g ra p h e rs ............................................. Susanne Mason John McConnico. Jack W Plunkett .................................................................................... images E d ito r.......................................................................................................... Associate Images Editors Jeanne Acton Bobby Ruggiero Graphics Editor . . .....................................................................................................Felipe Campos Around Campus E d ito r............................................................................................................................ Michelle Patterson . . Greg Weiner Issue Staff R eporters...................... Fabienne Labourey. Jenny Lin. Matthew Reeves. Jenny Sansbury, Rebecca Stewart Jenny Walker Kevin Matthews ...................................................................................... .............................................................................. Gabriel Demombynes ..................................................................................... Sarah Thurmond ............................................................................................. Deanna Roy .............................................Lew Cohn, Sarah Hornaday Lesley Ramsey Editorial Columnist Editorial Assistant Entertainment Assistant Sports Assistant Sports W r it e r ............... Makeup Editor Wire Editor Copy E d it o r s .................................David Dzierzanowski. Melissa Gilbert Ten Rucker Tanzy Wilson Graphics A s s is t a n t ........................................................................................................ Korey Coleman Comic Strip Cartoonists ..................................................................................... .......................... ...............................................................Michael Casey Korey Coleman. Cameron Johnson. Greg Weiner | Local D is p la y Art Director G rap h ic D e sig n e r C la ss ified D is pla y Classified Telephone Sales Classified Telephone Service. Advertising Cindy Anderson, Scott Butler. Michael Chang. Catherine Durkin, Melanie Hanson. Dave Hemphill. Sandra Kuehler, Michael La Kier, Susan Lebtrom. Doug Lyon. Melina Madolora. Lisa Perry, Jylle Robinson. Elsa Snyder, Stace Sorrells. Wendy Watkins. Dwight Wilhelm ................................................................................................ Landon Sims Glen Dongieu* . . . . . Brad Corbett. Cindy Garza. Sheronda Scott. Joyce Inman, David Ross Jennifer Brooks Art Carrillo Andi Harrison. Christi Stradford Michele Dapra, Tammy Ferguson. Sonia Garcia. Dianne Hodgins. Shawn McMmn, Kristy Tang . . . . . . . . The Daily Texan (U S P S 146 4 40 ) a student newspaper at The University ot Texas at Austin is published by Texas Student Publications. 2 5 0 0 Whitis. Austin. TX 7 8705 The Daily Texan is published Monday Tuesday. W ednesday Thursday and Friday except holidays exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin. TX 7 87 10 New s contributions will be accepted by telephone (4 7 1-4 5 91 ), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications 8 uilding2 12 2 ) or at the news laboratory (Com m unication Building A4 101) For local and national display advertising, call 4 71 -1 8 6 5 For classified display and national classified display advertising call 4 7 1 -8 9 0 0 For classified word advertising call 471 -5244 Entire contents copyright 1991 Texas Student Publications The Da*y Texan Mai Subscription Rates One S em ester (Fall or Spring) Two S em esters (Fall and Spring) Summer Session O ne Year (Fall. Spring and S um m er) TS P Building C3 2 00 or call 4 71 -5 0 8 3 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications. P O Box D. Austin. TX 7 8 7 13 -8 9 04 . or to T o charge by V IS A or M asterC ard, call 471 -5083 ' S30 00 55 00 20 00 75.00 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P.O Box D. Austin. TX 78713-8904. Advertising Deadlines for The Daily Texan Monday ---------------- Wed.. 4p.m. Tuesday ---------------- Thur., 4p.m. W ednesday----------- Fri.. 4p.m Thursday ---------- Friday--------------- Images -------------- Mon., 4p.m. \ Tues., 4p.m. Fri., 4p.m. Classified Word Ads Deadline. 11 a m Last Business Day Prior to Publication REPAIR • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage CUSTOM MADE • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca • Austin •478-9309 Longhorn Copies d * Thesis Printing r.r Copying o* Binding Thesis Special 24-hour turnaround on binding 2518 Guadalupe (parking in back o ff S an A ntonio) S 476 -4 498 © FAX 476 -2 602 TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 C L O T H IN G O U TLET n m m MEN'S COTTON SWIM TRUNKS J11ST $14.90 8611 N. M OPAC E X P R E S SW A Y E X IT STECK N., 512 794 -9 0 3 6 I s / Every Day Low Prices $&• m HairCuts Perms start at s1 5 " C & S s*¿>« 5725 N. IH35 451-2534 American Dream Cards * < Knows Bo! * H o c k e y C a rd s . 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People who care about you and your baby: • L ife lin e 4 7 7 -1 0 9 2 • M ary w o o d M a te rn ity and a d o p tio n 4 7 2 -9 2 5 1 • A ustin C risis Pregnancy C e n te r 4 5 4 -2 6 2 2 "all services are confidential" Sponsored by: CPM / 7 | j ____________________ Rape bills facing committee delays Matthew Reeves Daily Texan Staff Three bills currently proposed in the Texas H ouse w ould facilitate easier prosecution of sexual offend­ ers, but one lobbyist said two of the resolutions are being kept from a floor hearing by a group of male leg­ islators. G.K. Sprinkle, a lobbyist for Tex­ as Association A gainst Sexual Assu- alt, said the H ouse C alendars C om ­ mittee, which sets the dates for hearing a bill on the floor, has kept the H ouse from hearing HB 261 and HB 263. HB 263 w ould prevent a spouse from being exem pt from prosecu­ tion in a sexual assault, and HB 261 will prevent law enforcem ent offi­ cers from requiring w om en to be polygraphed before pressing sexual assault charges. Sprinkle said the bills have been sitting with the C alendars C om m it­ tee since M arch 18, which gave m em bers at least four m eetings in which they could have scheduled hearings. "If a person on the com m ittee has a problem w ith the bill, they can tag it, and it's just on hold [indefinite­ ly]," Sprinkle said. "T hat's w hat they've d o n e." HB 302, w hich was just recently granted placem ent on the H ouse agenda for next week, would elim i­ nate using previous sexual activity as a defense against girls 14 to 16. It was sponsored by Rep. Carolyn Park, R-Bedford. "N ow they can bring in the p er­ so n 's present and past sexual activi­ ties, and it seem s to cloud the jury's ju d g m en t," Park said. "T here's just som ething w rong w hen the victims becom e on trial them selves." H ouse Bills 263 and 261 were both authored by Rep. Debra D anburg, D -H ouston, and will rem ain in the com m ittee indefinitely. Lee Avelar, chief clerk of the Cal­ endars C om m ittee, said, "I have no idea w hen those bills will be placed. O u r com m ittee d o esn 't have a set time to m eet, and we have not post­ ed our next m eeting." C urrently, spouses are exem pt from prosecution in sexual assault cases and police officers can require polygraphs before w om en press charges. Danburg said the exem ption of a male spouse from prosecution for the rape of his wife needs to be cor­ rected. "This further perpetuates the m yth that rape is som e sort of act of sensuality — w hen it is an act of violence," she said. She added that HB 261 w ould prevent unreliable evidence from af­ fecting the jury's decision in a rape case. "The police know as well as anybody else th at the polygraph is not reliable evidence." Several experts on rape and its re­ percussions have criticized the Cal­ endars C om m ittee for not placing HB 302 sooner and for letting the other tw o bills rem ain in w aiting with only five w eeks left in the ses­ sion. How ever, Rep. Betty D enton, D- Waco, said she thought the delay was due to lack of state funds for the prison system . there "A nytim e there is an increase in is also a concern penalty, w here to p u t the crim inals," she said. "Right now , anything that costs m oney is not getting recep­ tion." But Sprinkle said the m en on the com m ittee are just fearful that the new legislation will allow more falsely accused m en to be punished. UtmesT City M a g a z in e of UT, Texas •The Survival Guide •The Leisure Guide •Best/Worst Faculty Poll •The Career Guide •AIRFARE* BUSTERS Wallace's Book Store Bulletin Board Wednesday, April 24th is Secretary’s Day and in appreciation of the support you provide we would like to honor you. Present this coupon for 25% off any merchandise in stock and a FREE Balloon Bouquet. Exceptions: Textbooks & already reduced merchandise Offer good April 22-April 26 Wallace's University Book Store 2244 Guadalupe 477-6141 Mon-Sat 8:00-6:30 Sunday 10-5 M/C VISA AMX DISC. a u d i o & video exchange of texas inc. 1-800-232-8783 1-713-961-5109 Departures 5/6—6/9 600.00 Frankfurt 620.00 Berlin 620.00 Munich 620.00 Paris 880.00 Vienna 7/10-9/30 670 00 690.00 690.00 690 00 920.00 ★Roundtrip from Houston ★Budget Fares Available ★Eurail Passes n C LO SE TO U T ! Ask for other destinations 77] tí/ austin ‘s audio & video alternative. buy sell exchange new used A n o -n o n a ” ? ’ Tl dosed Sun i Tuts. 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St. D avid’s Health Care System - St. D avid’s Hospital, St.D aub’s Pavilion fj St D avid’s Rehabilitation Center - ÍH 35 at 32nd Street T U E S D A Y 'S D O W J O N E S 2 ,9 3 0 4 5 U P 2 .7 3 V o lu m e: 167 8 4 0 .0 0 0 s h a r e s WORLD & NATION House committee approves waiting period for handguns T h e D a il y T e x a n Wednesday, April 24.1991 Page 3 Associated Press W A SH IN G T O N — T h e H o u se Judiciary C o m m ittee a p p ro v e d a se v en -d ay w aitin g p eriod for h a n d g u n p u rc h a se s T u esd ay , p av in g th e w ay for d e b a te by th e full H o u se o n a m ea su re s u p p o rte rs say will help stem th e n a tio n 's crim e e p id em ic. T he p a n e l a p p ro v e d th e so-called Brady bill o n a 23-11 vo te a fte r rejectin g an a lte r­ n ativ e p ro p o sal to re q u ire "p o in t-o f-sa le" checks of c o m p u terize d crim inal records. T he a m e n d m e n t failed o n a 23-11 vote, b u t its sp o n so r, Rep. H arley S taggers Jr., D -W .V a., p la n s to p ro p o se th e p rovision again w h e n th e full H o u se d e b a te s th e is­ su e. T he a m e n d m e n t h a s 100 co sp o n so rs. Both sid es say th e y expect a close vote w h e n th e Brady bill co m es to the H o u se floor in tw o w eek s. The bill g ain e d m o m e n tu m last m o n th w h e n it w as e n d o rs e d b y e x -P resid en t Rea­ gan, w h o h a d lon g o p p o se d th e m easu re. The W hite H o u se h a s sig n aled a so ften in g of its o p p o sitio n to th e bill, in d icatin g it m ight accept it if C o n g re ss p a sse s key ele­ m e n ts of P re sid e n t B u sh 's crim e bill. A tto rn ey G en e ra l Dick T h o rn b u rg h re­ iterated th a t p o sitio n T u esd ay . If Bush " g e ts favorable reaction on the essen tials of his crim e bill, I th in k he is m uch m ore inclined to look favorably on any allied legislation th a t m ig h t com e to h im ," T h o rn b u rg h told a m e e tin g o f m ay­ ors, w h o have e n d o rse d th e Brady bill. The co m m itte e 's actio n c h ee red s u p p o rt­ ers* w h o n o te d th a t o n e R epublican law m ak er o p p o se d to th e m e a su re in 1988, Rep. F rench S la u g h ter of V irginia, v o te d for the bill. th e crim e su b co m m ittee , Rep. C h arles S c h u m er, D -N .Y . a n d chair­ m an of said H o u se S p eak er T h o m as Foley, D -W ash., has p ro m ise d d eb a te an d a v o te in ab o u t tw o w eeks. T he bill is n am ed after form er W hite H ou se p re ss secretary Jam es B rady, p a ra ­ lyzed in the 1981 a tte m p t on R e a g a n 's life. Brady, w ho a tte n d e d T u e sd a y 's vo te w ith his wife, S arah, said he w as o ptim istic th at C o n g ress w ould pass th e m e a su re , w hich failed in th e H o u se bv 46 v o tes in 1988. "T h ese are g o o d people; th e y will d o the rig h t th in g ," B rady said. But M rs. Brady co n ced ed th a t ev en if th e bill w in s H o u se p a ssa g e next m o n th " th e S enate sid e 's a d iffere n t ball g a m e ." S u p p o rte rs arg u e th at the bill is n e e d e d to p re v e n t convicted crim inals an d m e n ta l­ ly d istu rb e d p eo p le from p u rc h a sin g g u n s. "I believe C o n g re ss is on th e verge of into public tra n sfo rm in g public o p in io n p o licy ," S chum er said. "T h e old, a rg u m e n ts ag ain st th e Bradv w ith ered aw ay , replaced bv g o o sense and a d isg u st w ith th e b lence in o u r stre e ts." O p p o n e n ts co n te n d th a t it wi police sto p crim inals from gettinj is th erefo re not w orth th e incon will im p o se on law -abiding citize "T h e Brady bit] is like a g u n trigger; it m ay look good on the d o e sn 't w o rk ," said Rep. Lam ai Texas. "W e can d o in seven m inute; be d o n e in s e w n d a v s ," Stagger; in tro d u ced his a m e n d m e n t. War crimes trial delayed U.S. hesitant to try Saddam Hussein in absentia Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — T he U nited S tates o p p o se s try in g S ad d am H u ssein for w ar crim es a t th e p re se n t tim e b ecau se to try him in ab sen tia m ig h t p ro lo n g his g rip on p o w er, a se n io r S tate D e p a rtm e n t official said T u esd ay . John Bolton, a ssista n t se cretary for in ­ tern a tio n al o rg a n iz atio n affairs, said, "w e hav e n o p re se n t p la n s to find S ad d am H u sse in a n d b rin g him to ju stic e ." U n d e r q u e stio n in g by Rep. Lee H am il­ to n , D -Ind., Bolton said try in g S ad d am w ith o u t h av in g him p re s e n t m ig h t p ro ­ lo n g his te n u re. A n d th e U n ite d S tates will n o t u se m ilitary force to seize S ad d am for a trial, h e a d d e d . L ater, Bolton told re p o rte rs th a t a co n ­ viction in ab sen tia w o u ld rem o v e a n y in ­ centive for S a d d am to find a w ay to step d o w n from p o w er. T hat is b ec a u se a conviction u n d e r th e G eneva c o n v e n tio n s of 1949 w o u ld obli­ gate p a rtic ip a tin g c o u n trie s — v irtu ally every co u n try in th e w o rld — to tu rn him over to a u th o ritie s, foreclosing a n y p o ssi­ ble deal th a t w o u ld g ra n t him safe p a s ­ sage in exchan g e for his resig n atio n . P resid en t B ush said last w eek he m ig h t co n sid er such an a rra n g e m e n t. "T h e goal o u g h t to be to h av e S a d d a m H u ssein find a n o th e r job so o n e r ra th e r th a n la te r," Bolton said . H e a d d e d th a t "w e certainly w o u ld w elcom e efforts by th e Iraqis th e m selv es to deliv er S a d d a m u p for in te rn a tio n a l c u sto d y ." T he S en ate last w e ek a p p ro v e d a re so ­ lu tio n calling o n B ush to seek a w a r crim es trial th ro u g h th e U .N . or in co n cert w ith D esert S to rm allies. T he E u ro p e a n Econom ic C o m m u n ity also h as called for w a r crim es trials, b u t U .N . S ecretary -G en ­ eral Javier P erez d e C uellar h a s b e e n cool to th e idea. M eanw hile, a d eleg atio n of five H o u se m em b ers ju st back from a w e e k e n d trip to th e refug ee a re a s of n o rth e rn Iraq said U.S. tro o p s d e fe n d in g th e refu g ees are unlikely to leave by th e targ e t d a te of late M ay or early Jun e. All m em b ers of th e b ip artisan g ro u p ho pe th e U .S. m ilitary c o m m itm e n t can b e lim ited to a sh o rt period , M cH u g h said, a n d th a t a U n ited N atio n s p ea c e k ee p in g force o r a political a g re e m e n t can pro v id e th e n e e d e d se c u rity for K u rd ish refugees. •"A lot d e p e n d s on th e ability of o th e rs to pick u p th e slack ," h e said. "N o b o d y can h o n e stly tell you precisely w h e n this m ilitary o p e ra tio n will c o n c lu d e ." M c H u g h 's c o m m en ts reflected a g ro w ­ ing u n e a sin e ss am o n g th at B u sh 's decision to p ro v id e m ilitary p ro tec­ tion for h u m a n ita ria n relief in th e Iraqi b o rd e r area co u ld p rove difficult to e n d . law m ak e rs Justices bolster police power Recent rulings show Supreme Court’s conservative movement Associated Press W A SH IN G T O N — A n in creasingly co n serv ativ e S u p re m e C o u rt gave police significant n ew p o w e r T u e sd a y to chase a n d a p p re h e n d p eo p le w h e n officers h av e a h u n c h a crim e w a s co m m itted . By a 7-2 vote, th e ju stices re in sta te d th e d ru g -p o sse ssio n co nviction of a y o u n g C alifornia m an w h o fled at th e sig h t of police a n d d ro p p e d crack cocaine d u rin g th e chase. T he co u rt ru led th a t th e cocaine m ay be u se d as ev id en ce b ec au se h e h a d n o t b een "s e iz e d " by police at th e tim e he d ro p p e d th e d ru g . p ro tects T he C o n stitu tio n 's F o u rth A m e n d m e n t, w h ich u n re a so n a b le a g a in st search es a n d se iz u re s, d o e s n o t ap p ly u n ­ til an in d iv id u al h a s b e en physically re­ stra in e d or su b m its to police au th o rity , Justice A n to n in Scalia w ro te for th e court. Justice Jo h n P aul S teven s, in a stro n g ly w o rd e d d isse n t, sa id th e ru lin g co uld " e n ­ courag e u n la w fu l d isp la y s of (police) force th a t will frig h ten c o u n tle ss in n o c e n t citi­ zen s in to s u rre n d e rin g w h a te v e r priv acy rig h ts th ey m ay still h a v e ." But Scalia said , " S tre e t p u rs u its alw ay s place th e p ublic a t so m e risk, a n d c o m p li­ ance w ith police o rd e rs to s to p sh o u ld th erefo re be e n c o u ra g e d ." Jam es L ozenski, th e law y er w h o re p re ­ se n te d th e C alifornia m an , said , " I t's a very sad d a y for civil rig hts in th is c o u n ­ try ." H e said th e ru lin g gives police " a n aw ful a m o u n t of a u th o rity to h a ra ss p e o ­ p le ." In a n o th e r d ecision , th e c o u rt u n a n i­ m ously u p h e ld a fed eral labor rule re q u ir­ ing h o sp ita ls to let th e ir e m p lo y e es o rg a ­ n iz e c o lle c tiv e b arg aining u n its, acco rd in g to th e ir jobs. s e p a r a te e ig h t in to T he rule, a d o p te d by th e N atio n a l La­ bo r R elations B oard in 1989, a p p lie s to m ore th a n 4,000 acute-care h o sp ita ls n a ­ tio nw ide. The p olice-chase ru lin g is th e la te st in a series of d ecisio n s b o lste rin g police p o w ­ ers a n d lim itin g th e rig h ts of crim inal s u s ­ pects a n d d e fe n d a n ts. A w eek ago th e c o u rt n a rro w e d th e right of d e a th row in m a te s to m ake re ­ p e a te d a p p e a ls in federal co u rt, a ru lin g th a t could h a s te n m an y ex ecution s. Last m o n th th e ju stices v ee re d d ra m a ti­ cally from p re v io u s h o ld in g s w h e n th e y said d e fe n d a n ts w h o se coerced co n fes­ sio n s w ere u se d im p ro p e rly as ev id e n c e are n ot auto m atically en title d to new tri­ als. Justice D avid S o u te r's a p p o in tm e n t to th e c o u rt a p p e a rs to h av e solidified th e con serv ativ e m ajority in d ec id in g crim inal law cases. S o u ter, w h o rep laced liberal Justice W illiam B ren nan , jo in ed the m a ­ jority in T u e sd a y 's ru lin g a n d th e tw o o th e r recen t decisions. Striking workers target plenum Associated Press filled striking w o rk e rs M O SC O W — T e n s of th o u s a n d s of the stree ts of M insk o n T u e sd a y , th e eve of a C o m m u n ist P arty m eetin g to m ake M ikhail G o rb ach ev ac­ c o u n t for th e p o p u la r d isc o n te n t in th e nation. r e p u b l i c T he strike in th e cap ital of th e s o u t h w e s t e r n o f B yelorussia w as its se c o n d in less th a n tw o w eek s a n d cam e am id la­ bo r u n re st th a t b e g an M arch 1 w ith a w alk o u t by coal m in e rs w h o w a n t G o rbachev to re sig n as p re si­ d e n t. T he w o rk ing-class a n g e r at G o r­ bachev o v er th e S oviet U n io n 's cru m b lin g eco n o m y is certain to be taken u p at th e C o m m u n ist Party C en tral C o m m ittee p le n u m in M oscow on W e d n e sd a y . to give G orbachev, w h o also h e a d s th e p arty as g e n e ra l-secreta ry , will be ask ed th e 410-m em ber C en tral C o m m itte e an a c c o u n t of his h an d lin g of th e eco no m ic col­ lap se a n d o th e r issu es tro u b lin g th e n atio n . T he criticism is ex p ected to be stin g in g , a n d th e re m ay be calls for his resig n atio n as p a rty leader. T he p len u m c a n n o t rem o v e him from e ith er of his p o sts, b ut it could co n v en e a p a rty C o n g ress a n d reco m m en d h is d e p a rtu re as g eneral-secretary . th in k th e g en eral-secretary will receive very h a rsh criticism b u t will p re se rv e his p o s t," said Alexei Prigarin, a C e n tra l C om m it­ tee m em ber, in a n in terv iew w ith T he A ssociated Press. " I "T h e re will be a real fig h t," said Z oya Krylova, a n o th e r C entral C o m m ittee m em ber. "T h e plen u m will be very h e a te d . It's a h u g e c o u n try u n d e rg o in g c h a n g e an d no w w e n eed to d ecid e w h ich w ay to g o ." T he increasingly u n p o p u la r 60- year-old Soviet le a d e r faces criti­ cism th ese d a y s n o t o n ly from ra d ­ ical his " p e re stro ik a " re fo rm s b e g u n six p o litic ia n s w h o say Students marched through Kiev Tuesday in support of striking miners. y e a rs ago have n o t p ro c e e d e d fast e n o u g h , but also from h ard -lin e C o m m u n ists w h o say h e h as g one too far. T he h a rd -lin ers are likely to bo h is sev erest critics d u rin g W e d n e s­ d a y 's m eetin g, w h ich will be held b e h in d closed d o o rs a t th e C entral C o m m ittee h e a d q u a rte rs o n O ld S quare, n e a r th e K rem lin "T h e re is a m o u n tin g challenge to P resid e n t G o rb ach ev from w h a t w e call con serv ativ e forces in the p a rty a p p a ra tu s ,' said p resid en tial s p o k e sm a n Vitaly Ig n ate n k o . "T h e a p p a ra t is a b o u t to take re­ v e n g e for p erestro ik a ... a n d G o r­ b achev is facing a ch a lle n g e to his le a d e rsh ip , a n d th is is m a k in g it­ self felt, so P re sid e n t G orb achev is in a n u n e a sy p o s itio n ," Ig n ate n k o told a new s briefing. G orbachev will d e liv e r an eco­ nom ic rep o rt to th e p le n u m , Igna­ te n k o said, a n d h e "e x p e c ts som e u n p le a sa n t issu e s" will be raised . T he w o rk ers in M insk h a v e been se eth in g since A pril 2, w h e n th e K rem lin raised p rices sh a rp ly o n m o st goods a n d services. Fields of fire Associated Press A Kuwait; man steps down from a berm after taking a look at one of the oil wells that w as set ablaze by the w ithdraw ing Iraqi army during the occupation of Kuwait Approxim ately 500 oil wells have been burning in the northern and southern oil fields of Kuwait since the end of the Persam Gulf war. Baker not sure if agreement closer after peace negotiations with Syria Associated Press DA M A SCU S, Syria — N earing the e n d of h is M ideast m issio n , Sec­ retary of S tate Jam es B aker III said T u e sd a y h e h a d a " u s e fu l d isc u s­ sio n " d u rin g talks w ith S yria's p re s id e n t b u t w o u ld n o t say w h e th e r a g re e m e n t w a s closer on an A rab-Israeli p eace conferen ce. len g th y A fter nearly 10 h o u rs of talks w ith H afez A ssad , Baker p re p a re d for a quick side trip to th e Soviet U nion to talk to Foreign M in iste r A lexan­ d e r B essm ertn y k h a b o u t c o sp o n so r­ ing th e conference. In W ash in g to n , W hite H o u se press secretary M arlin F itzw ater said B aker a n d B e s sm e rtn y k h w ould d isc u ss " th e M id d le East peace process, th e situ a tio n in th e P ersian G ulf a n d a rm s c o n tro l." In M oscow , V italy Ig n a te n k o , a th e for P re sid e n t M ikhail sp o k e sm a n G o rbach ev, said tw o foreign m in isters p robably also w o u ld d is­ cu ss p lan s for a B ush-G orbachev su m m it m eetin g . H e reiterated that the Soviet lead er h o p e s for a Ju n e su m m it an d said o n e w ould p ro b a ­ bly be held th e n , b ut F itzw ater said no d a te h a d b e e n set. A tired -lo o k in g Baker, asked after his m eetin g w ith A ssad w h e th er he had m ad e p ro g re ss, said "I h o p e we d id . W e'll se e ." H e told re p o rte rs as he retu rn ed to his hotel room ; "W e had som e useful d is c u ssio n ." if A sked th e S yrians agreed, Baker said: " I'm n o t going to speak for o th e r c o u n trie s ." A ssad m ay h o ld th e kev, on the Arab side, to w h e th e r the U nited States succeed s in p ro d u c in g n eg o ­ tiations to en d th e 43w e a r Arab-Is- raeli conflict a n d a d d re ss in g the d e ­ m a n d s of 1.7 m illion P alestinian A rabs w ho live u n d e r Israeli a d m in ­ istration on the West Bank a n d in G aza. The S yrians are d e te rm in e d to re­ cover the G olan H eig h ts from Israel, b u t P rim e M in ister Y itzhak Sham ir, m in d fu l of attack s on villages in n o rth e rn Israel before the 196> Six- Day w a r, is d e te rm in e d to h o ld on to the te rrito ry . Even th o u g h A ssad d rew close to P resid e n t B ush c o n trib u tin g tro o p s tor th e w ar on Iraq, he is tak­ ing a ca u tio u s a p p ro a c h to Baker s peace m ission . bv in th e ir m e etin g Baker te le p h o n e d S ham ir him Jer w ould be p u t off until Frid gave the p rim e m in ister an i of his m ee tin g s earlier this w ith E gyptian P resid en t Hos barak a n d K ing F ahd c ' bia. tell em He i ac co u n t iis w eek osni M u- iudi Ara- Associated Press 6 wealthy gulf nations agree to aid poor neighbors to tune of $10 billion RIYADH, Saudi A rabia — Six oil-rich gulf n a tio n s ag reed T u esd ay to p ro v id e a t least $10 billion in aid to E gypt, Syria a n d o th e r A rab co u n tries th a t help ed rid K uw ait of Iraqi o c cu p atio n . " It's a historic d e c isio n ," said A bdullah Bichara, sec­ re tary -g en eral of th e G u lf C o o p eratio n C ouncil at the e n d of a m eeting of fin an ce m in isters from th e region. Saudi A rabia's m in iste r of finance, M o h am m ed Aba!- khail, ho w ev er, told re p o rte rs th e s i/e of th e fund h ad not yet been fixed. H e said th e council w o u ld an n o u n c e th e final figure later. C ouncil m em b ers S aud i A rabia, K uw ait, the U nited A rab E m irates, O m a n , B ahrain a n d Q a ta r h o pe to w ield g re a te r political influence in th e p o st-w a r era by re w a rd in g th e ir allies, especially E gypt a n d Syria. Pratt & W h itn ey w as a w a rd e d th e initial co n tra ct for en g in e s tor th e 650 A dvanced lactical l ig h te r p lanes, w h ich the Air Force estim ated w o u ld cost $95 billion by the tim e all of th e m are d eliv ered startin g in tin year 2005. A lready q u e stio n s have been raised in C o n g ress ab o u t the necessity for the p lan e, a n d w h e th e r th e tru e cost will tar exceed th at e stim ate. Rice m ad e his d ram atic a n n o u n c e m e n t at a new s conference after stock m a rk ets h ad closed, clim axing a 54-m onth c o m p etitio n for th e h ig h -sta k e s initial con­ tract. T he G eneral D ynam ics C o rp . a n d B oeing C orp., m aking its re-entry in to fig h ter p ro d u c tio n after m ore th a n 50 years, are L ockheed s p rin cip al p a rtn e rs. Iran claims several Iraqi refugee aircraft TEHRAN, Iran — Iranian c rew s have b e g u n p ain tin g their air force insignia on som e of th e Iraqi w arp lan e s that w ere m ysteriously flow n in to the Islam ic republic d u rin g the gulf w ar. d ip lo m a ts said T u esday. The claim , w hich could not be in d e p e n d e n tly firm ed in d icates T ehran p la n s to k eep at least soi the m ilitary aircraft th at s o u g h t refu g e from the of led Pentagon awards contract for new tighter air offensive in n e ig h b o rin g Iran. W A SH IN G T O N — T he P e n ta g o n o n T u esd ay picked a team led by th e L o ck h eed C o rp. to receive a $12 1 billion d e v e lo p m e n t con tract for a fig hter jet th at Air Force Secretary D o n ald Rice said "w ill a ssu re A m erican air su p e rio rity well into th e next c e n tu ry .” the in a n o th e r sign that T e h ra n plan s to hold o n t un- planes, F oreign M in ister Ait A kbar Velayati said in clu d in g so m e airlin ers day p lu n d e re d from K uw ait, " w o u ld be re tu rn e d w h e n the c r i s i s is o v er.' th at only 22 aircraft, Page 4 Wednesday, April 24, 1991 TH E D AILY fEXAN EDITORIALS Viewpoint opinions expressed m The Daily Texan are those of the editor and the writer of the article They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Opinions expressed in Dissenting Opinions and staff or guest columns are those of the writer Shuffle Board Seize opportunity to create student regent position R ep. Sherri Greenberg pledged to put student concerns at the top of her agen­ da as a member of the Texas House, nore the dem ands of thoese students." Correction: the Legislature can ignore the stu­ and she seems to be keeping that promise. dents if they become complacent. To stay in­ volved, students can attend the public hearing at 6 p.m. W ednesday in the Reagan Building, Room 104. Greenberg and state Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos have introduced bills to put a students on the boards of their respective universities. This pro­ posal has topped student lobbyists' agendas for years, and it has come frustratingly close to re­ ality several times. This year Greenberg and Barrientos w ant to make the student regent bill more than a legisla­ tive also-ran, and they have asked students to help. "There is swelling support for student repre­ sentation on the boards of regents," Greenberg says. "Clearly the Legislature can no longer ig­ And if you go, encourage legislators to opt for a voting student regent. A non-voting student regent is better than nothing, but not much bet­ ter. A voting regent still leaves non-students (campaign contributors, motel chain owners and a handful of intelligent people) with a 9-1 advantage. One vote barely begins to give students real representation, but it is a beginning. And it will only happen if students dem and it. — K evin M cH a rg u e Scientists' quest for cold fusion must steer clear of media hype u st w h e n you th o u g h t it h a d fizzled, cold I fusion is back o n th e h o t plate. T w o LIT I ch em ists, c o lla b o ratin g w ith U.S. N avy re­ arch ers, h a v e d u p lic a te d th e U niversity of U tah e x p e rim e n t tw o y ears ago a s th e g re a te st idea since cave p eo p le first ru b b e d tw o sticks together. th a t m ad e h ead lin es Jo sep h L agow ski, p ro fesso r of ch em istry , a n d B.F. Bush, p o std o cto ral fellow in c h e m is­ try, w rote in a recen t p ro fessio n al jo u rn al a rti­ cle th a t th e y h av e fo u n d th e first h a rd ev id e n ce th a t th e e x p e rim e n t p ro d u c e s h e liu m , a p ro d ­ uct of n u clea r fu sio n . T h is su g g e sts th a t the reaction th a t d riv e s th e stars m ay be p ossible at room te m p e ra tu re . But d o n 't sell y o u r oil stock yet. Even if the process is n u clear, w hich is q u estio n ab le, it m ay n o t b e fusion. A nd even if it is fusion, w hich is d o u b tfu l at best, it still m ay n o t be a useful en e rg y source. • This will take a little explain ing . T he basic cold fusion e x p erim en t co n sists of m ak in g a special electrolytic cell. W rap p la tin u m w ire a ro u n d a rod of p a lad iu m a n d p u t it in a b e ak e r full of d e u te riu m oxide, also k n o w n as h eav y w ate r, a n d — m in u s th e technical refin e m e n ts — th a t's it. T his c o n tra p tio n is d e sig n e d to electrolyze th e heav y w ater. W hen e x p erim en ters try this w ith " lig h t" w ater, th ey g et h y d ro g en a n d oxy­ gen. But if th e y electrolyze heavy w ater, La­ gow ski say s, th e e x p erim e n t p ro d u c e s d e u te ri­ u m , oxygen an d — inexplicably — h elium . T he rese a rc h ers id entified heliu m u sin g m ass sp ectro m etry . O r in te rm s for u s layfolk, they Kevin Matthews TEXAN COLUMNIST se n t th e p ro d u c ts of th e e x p e rim e n t by a big m ag n et. The particles se p a ra te in th e m ag n etic field alon g cu rv es p ro p o rtio n a l to th e ir m asses, a n d in this case, h elium w as p re s e n t. th e b u rn in g q u e stio n w h ere d id th e h eliu m co m e from ? to scien tists So is: A ustin G leeson , c h a irm a n of th e D e p a rtm e n t of Physics, c a u tio n s th a t th e iso to p e th e re­ search ers fo u n d is c o m m o n in th e air a n d m ay have c o n ta m in a te d th e sy stem . G leeson also says th a t th is k in d o f helium w as th e w ro n g o n e to d e m o n s tra te a fusion reaction. Lagow ski d ism isse s co n ta m in a tio n as a p o s­ sibility becau se helium , a stab le gas, d o e s n o t form c o m p o u n d s. H e says th e reaction co u ld only h av e been nuclear, th o u g h n o t necessarily fusion. L agow ski's o th e r m ain c o n te n tio n is th a t his ex p erim en t has linked th e p ro d u c tio n of heliu m to p erio d s of "excess e n e rg y ." In o th e r w o rd s, the h elium o n ly co m es o u t w h e n th e e x p e ri­ m en t g ets hot. "W e believe th a t th e se tw o p h e ­ the sam e so u rc e ," he n o m en a ex te n d from said. G leeson says that th ese fin d in g s "conflict w ith so m uch basic p h y sic s" th at th e reaction m u s t n o t be nu clear. By p lu g g in g th e te m p e ra ­ tu re s th a t L agow ski m e asu red in to e q u a tio n s for fusion reaction s, G leeson calculated th a t the e x p e rim e n t sh o u ld have p ro d u c e d a m illion tim es the n e u tro n s th a t w ere actu ally d ete c te d . "If you take th e n e u tro n factors w h ic h th e y say th e y see, th a t is n o t m uch e n e rg y ." N eith e r scientist is optim istic a b o u t th e elec­ trolytic cell's poten tial as a n e w e n e rg y source. L agow ski n otes th a t th e billions of do llars fun- neled into warm fu sio n h av e y et to p ay off, b u t he thinks an y c h an c e of h a rn e ssin g star p o w e r from a bottle m erits fu n d in g . G leeson say s th a t th e e x p e rim en t p ro d u c e s too little e n e rg y to b e a w o rth w h ile e n e rg y al­ tern ativ e. " I'm n o t b e ttin g a n y m o n e y o n it," h e said. T he N avy sh o u ld take care h o w m u c h it bets. In a p ress release, th e N avy h e ra ld e d th e n ew fin d in g s a s "clear ev id en ce th a t n u c le ar p ro ­ cesses are o c c u rrin g ." Such p ro m o tio n h a s no place in su p p o se d ly objective science. G iven th e h isto ry of m edia h y p e over th e e x p erim en t, cold fu sio n re se a rc h ­ e rs sh o u ld be extrem ely re lu c ta n t to m ake claim s th e y c a n n o t d e m o n stra te . Lagow ski a n d B u sh 's research is c o n stru c ­ tive. It has sh ifted th e fusion d e b a te from U tah- pian fantasy to reaso n ab le science. But La­ gow ski readily a d m its th a t n o o n e can say for su re w h a t p ro d u c e s th e h elium . T he a n sw e r is w o rth find ing , b u t n o t a t any cost. Matthews is a Plan II freshman. FIRING LINE Support transcript bill In re sp o n se to th e article by D a­ vid B arron in th e T h u rsd a y , A pril 18 e d itio n of The Texan on HB 501, som e re ad e rs m ay n o t h a v e u n d e r ­ sto o d th a t this bill w o u ld leave all g ra d e s received o n th e s tu d e n t's official tran scrip t. N o th in g w o u ld be e x p u n g e d . T he bill sim p ly al­ low s a s tu d e n t w h o tak e s a co u rse a seco n d tim e, a n d receives a h ig h ­ er g ra d e , to hav e th e h ig h e r g ra d e the replace in m athem atical calculation of th e is no s tu d e n t's G PA . T h e re "re w ritin g of h isto ry " as Jack W h iteh ead , asso ciate d e a n for s tu ­ d e n t affairs for th e C ollege of C o m m u n icatio n w as q u o te d as saying. low er g ra d e th e T he bill is eligible for a v o te in th e H o u se 's H ig h e r E d u catio n C o m m ittee W e d n e sd a y , A pril 24 at 6 p .m . in Room 104 o f th e Rea­ g a n B uilding. Christopher Peter Biggins History Republicans endorse T h e C ollege R epublicans have en th u sia stic ally e n d o rse d Robert B a m sto n e for m ay o r a n d G ilbert M artin ez for C ity C ouncil Place 5. W e stro n g ly believe th a t b o th g en ­ tlem en h av e th e skills, b u sin ess se n se a n d co n serv ativ e p rinciples to h elp g u id e A u stin th ro u g h th e p re s e n t to u g h eco nom ic tim es. Both in d iv id u a ls believe th at A u stin sh o u ld n o t b e involved in w a ste fu l projects su c h a s th e air­ p o rt in M anor a n d th a t w e sh o u ld live w ith in o u r m ean s. T hey are n o t co ntrolled by special in te rests a n d p lan to p u t an e n d to th e seem in g ly u n e n d in g stream of useless c o n su lta n ts. W e e n co u ra g e ev ery b o d y to get o u t to v o te for resp o n sibility a n d efficiency in o u r city g o v e rn m e n t. Paul Yioutas College Republicans Democrats endorse too A tte n tio n all s tu d e n ts w h o a re co n cern ed a b o u t th e e n v iro n m e n t, it is tim e to d o m o re th an ju st co m ­ plain a b o u t th e state of o u r e n v i­ ron m ent! call The tim e is N O W to m ak e a d if­ ference rig h t h e re in A u stin , th e " h o m e " n in e place y o u m o n th s o u t of th e year. T he U n i­ versity D em o crats ch allen g e y o u to rally s u p p o rt for th e e n v iro n ­ m ental c h a rte r a m e n d m e n ts . W e hav e a sse m b le d a W est M all rally on W e d n e sd a y , A pril 24, at n o o n to in tro d u c e to y o u th e c a n d id a te s w h o are stro n g s u p p o rte rs of th e en v iro n m e n ta l a m e n d m e n ts a n d h av e e a rn e d o u r en d o rse m e n t! E ven if you are n o t re g iste re d to vo te in A u stin w e a sk th a t y o u com e to th is rally a n d e n c o u ra g e th o se w h o are reg istered h e re to m arch to th e U GL a n d vo te a b s e n ­ tee for th e se ca n d id a te s: G in n y Ballard (Place 2), G us G arcia (Place 5), C h arle s U rd y (Place 6), a n d vo te "Y es" to th e e n v iro n m e n ta l ch a rte r a m e n d m e n ts. Ronald J. Ray University Democrats Sweethearts no more: Ambassador candidates outline goals E d ito r's note: T h e electio n for UT a m ­ b a ssa d o r is T h u rsd a y . T h e five p o llin g places are p rin te d on p ag e 5. LANCE KING N o m in a te d by: P h arm ac y C ouncil A ctivities: ■ P h arm acy C ouncil p re sid e n t ■ C a b in e n t of C ollege C ouncils, vice ch air­ m an ■ S tu d e n t A ssem b ly re p re se n ta tiv e ■ D obie C e n te r D o rm itory, re sid e n t direc­ tor ■ P re sid en tia l Ad H oc C o m m itte e for th e E v aluation of th e D ean of th e C ollege of P h arm acy ■ C apitol A rea Food Bank ■ K appa Psi P h arm aceu tical F raternity ■ C a m p u s A lcohol an d D rug E ducation P ro g ram (CADEP) C o m m itte e ■ W h o 's W ho A m o n g A m erican C olleges a n d U niversities ■ C actu s G oodfellow D iversity at th e U n iv ersity of Texas is o u r g re ate st a ttrib u te . H o w ev er, w e m u st striv e to p ro m o te sh a rin g a n d accepting of o u r differences. A s UT a m b a ssa d o r, I w ill be d ed ic a te d to th e re cru itm en t of th e b rig h te st stu d e n ts ; e n co u ra g e in itiatives th at n u rtu re a n d s u p p o rt cu ltural an d in d i­ vidual e x p ressio n ; co m m u n icate to facul­ ty, a d m in istra to rs a n d a lu m n i a b e tte r u n ­ d e rsta n d in g of th e n e e d s a n d id ea s of al stu d e n ts; a n d m o st im p o rta n tly , seek in ­ p u t from all a re a s of th e c am p u s c o m m u ­ nity. In e sta b lish in g th e new role of UT am b a ssa d o r, it is im p e ra tiv e th at a sp irit of tra d itio n , c o o p eratio n a n d service be in ­ clu d e d , as well a s d ed ic atio n to th e overall b e tte rm e n t of th e U n iv ersity . T he fu tu re of th e U niversity of Texas a t A ustin lies w ith ­ in o u r ability to u n ite as stu d e n ts a n d co o r­ d in a te o u r efforts w ith th o se w h o sh a re o u r vision of excellence. WAYNE C. MARSHALL N o m in a te d by: C a b in e t o f C o llege In v o lv em en t Intercollegiate re p re se n ta tiv e, C o uncils A ctivities: ■ C hair, C ab in et of C ollege C ouncils ■ S tu d e n t M en 's A thletic C ouncil ■ Publicity chair, S tu d e n t C o m m ittee o n A thletic a n d I ra d itio n s ■ R ep resen ta tiv e , P resid en tial C o m m itte e to S tu d y th e U n d e rg ra d u a te E xperience ■ S tu d e n t m e n to r, S tu d e n ts H elp in g A d ­ m issions R ecru itm en t Effort ■ Special ev en ts co-chair, C o m m u n icatio n C ouncil ■ Rowel C lass S p rin g '91, Silver S p u rs ■ N ational M erit C o m m e n d e d S tu d e n t ■ W h o 's W ho A m o n g S tu d e n ts in A m eri­ can C olleges a n d U n iv ersities ■ C actu s G o odfellow It is im p o rta n t th a t th e UT A m b assa d o r be as co n cern ed w ith re la tio n sh ip s o u tsid e the U niversity as w ell as w ith in . I w ould like to the th e p o sito n m o ve p a s t th e s ta tu s as a fig u reh ead a n d m o v e in to th a t of bein g an e n v o y for th e U n iv ersity. I w o u ld like to see th e po sitio n m ost ac­ tive in th re e w ays: ■ T h e re c ru itm e n t a n d o rie n ta tio n of p ro ­ sp ective s tu d e n ts b y c o o rd in a tin g H om e T ow n recru itin g a n d p a rtic ip a tin g in such p ro g ra m s a s th e SH A RE a n d P review p ro ­ g ram s, the H o n o rs C ollo q uium a n d e v e n ts su ch a s UT D ays a n d T exas A ch iev em en t D ays. ■ To be a m o re active figure w ith in th e U niversity b y sp ea k in g to o rg a n iz a tio n s, kee p in g in te re ste d p arties in fo rm ed o n th e a m b a s sa d o r's role a n d activities a n d c re a t­ ing a n e tw o rk a m o n g o rg a n iz a tio n s to a d ­ d re ss issu es p e rtin e n t to s tu d e n ts . ■ To be a viable a n d c o m p e te n t re p re s e n t­ ative of th e s tu d e n ts of th e U n iv ersity of Texas at interco llegiate e v e n ts a n d fu n c­ tion s of th e E x-S tu d en ts' A ssociation. MARTY MEEKINS N o m in a te d by: S tu d e n t In v o lv em en t C om m ittees Activities: ■ UT L ead ersh ip Board: p e e r a d v ise r ■ Phi A lpha D elta Pre-Law F raternity: vice p re sid e n t ■ A lpha L am bda Delta: vice p re sid e n t ■ 1991 Texas-Exes P resid en tial L e a d e rsh ip A w ard • UT L e a d e rsh ip Board M u lticu ltu ral E d u ­ cation T rain in g C o m m itte e ■ 1991 C actu s G oodfellow ■ SIC S ch o larsh ip C o m m ittee: S teerin g ■ O m icron Delta K appa ■ 1990 Texas-Exes P resid en tial L ead ersh ip A w ard ■ 1991-92 SA S tu d e n t Services C o -C h air For th e p a st several y e a rs, a m o v e m e n t the c a m p u s to m ak e th in g s h as sw e p t m ore equal — a n d th e act of creatin g a m ale UT a m b a ssa d o r h as k e p t w ith th a t m o v em en t. Being th e first year for UT a m ­ b a ssa d o rs, m y actio n s w o u ld a d e fin in g o ne. As a m b a ssa d o r, I w o u ld d o m y b est to re p re se n t th e w h o le u n iv ersity at official fu n ctio n s, actively recru it a n d se rv e to pro m o te u n ity th ro u g h u n d e rs ta n d in g at UT. T here is a stro n g n eed to d o m o re m i­ nority I w ould like to lead th at m o v e m e n t at an official level w ith h o p e s to create a larger re c ru itm e n t o n this c a m p u s. pool of m in o rity s tu d e n t a p p lic a n ts for th e U niversity. M y p a st le a d e rsh ip a n d activities h av e lent to m e a b ro ad u n d e rs ta n d in g a n d love of th e U niversity. A n d d id I m e n tio n , I BLEED ORANGE!!!!!! DAMON G. MUNCHUS N o m in a te d by: Texas U n io n Board of D irectors A ctivities: ■ C h air, T exas U nion B oard of D irectors ■ P re sid e n t, O m eg a Psi Phi F raternity ■ Plan II acad em ic a d v ise r ■ M em ber, Texas U n ion A d v iso ry C ouncil ■ M em b er, H em a n S w e att Civil R ights S y m p o siu m S teerin g C o m m ittee ■ UT S u m m e r H o n o rs C o llo q u iu m m e n to r ■ U TPD A d visory Board ■ 1990-91 O m e g a Psi P h i frate rn ity M an of th e Year ■ U niversity S ch olarship ■ In tram u ral athletics As UT A m b a ssa d o r 1991-92 m y m ost im ­ p o rta n t m ission will be to e m p h a siz e th e a ttra c tiv en ess of th e u n d e rg ra d u a te e d u c a ­ tional exp erien ce h e re at th e U niversity of Texas at A u stin . In d o in g this I h o p e to con vey to th e U niversity a n d n o n -U n iv er- sity c o m m u n ity th e im p o rta n ce of a q u a li­ ty u n d e rg ra d u a te e d u c a tio n as a c o rn e r­ sto n e of an y w o rld -class u n iv ersity . A d d itio n ally , as d e m o g ra p h ic s ch a n g e bo th locally an d n ationally in th e com ing y ears, w e m u st reach o u t to th e div ersity of tale n te d s tu d e n ts w ith in this state if o u r U niversity is to p ro sp e r a n d grow as o n e of th e top ed u c atio n a l in s titu tio n s in this co u n try . At th e sam e tim e w e m u st also realize th at w e are e d u c a tin g o u r fu tu re , a n d th erefo re certain resp o n sib ilities are in h e re n t in creatin g the fu tu re society in w hich w e will all live. A s UT A m b a ssa d o r I will strive to c o m m u n ic ate this vision to all p eop le in side a n d o u t of th e sta te of Texas. SHERRY ELENA CROOK N om inated by: O ra n g e Jackets Activities: Zeta Tau A lpha, M o rtar Bord, O ra n g e Jackets, GEARED, Texas U nio n Recre­ ational E vents C o m m itte e, C hair, L unch w ith th e C oach, UT L ea d e rsh ip Board, M agna C u m L aude, D e a n 's list, G reek L ead ersh ip C o n feren ce co-chair, M ulticul­ tural C o m m ittee, C actu s G o od fellow , Big Sisters. If elected UT a m b a ssa d o r, I h o p e to hig h lig h t th e UT value I c h erish m ost: d i­ versity — in p eo p le, c u ltu re s, academ ics, ath letics — in o p p o rtu n itie s of every kind. I w o u ld try to d o th is h o n e stly , m a k in g fair, a p p ro p ria te ch oices an d d e m o n s tra t­ ing c o m m itm en t to c h a n g in g th e w ro n g as well as great p rid e in th e excellence th a t exists. W here th e se g o als are ach iev ed is critical. As a n A u stin p la y g ro u n d lead er, I w o rk w ith ch ild re n living alm o st in th e T o w e r's sh a d o w w h o h av e no k n o w led g e o r h o p e of th e U n iv e rsity 's p ro m ise. T h e UT am b assad o r sh o u ld b e an a m b a ssa d o r- at-large, reach in g o u t to all Texas citizens. JENNIE GERMANN N om inated by: S tu d e n t In v o lv em e n t C o m m ittee Activities: ■ O rie n tatio n (D ean of S tu d en ts): a d v ise r (1990); staff (1991) ■ Office of A dm issions: staff; to u r g u id e; Inform ation ■ S tu d e n t In v o lv e m e n t C om m ittee: M arch 2nd C o-chair (1990-91); overall C o-chair (1991-92) ■ S tu d e n ts' A ssociation: Judicial C o m m is­ sion (1990-92); C itiz e n s' Affairs co-chair (1990-92) ■ O m icron D elta K appa: secretary (1990- 91) ■ M o rtar Board (1991-p resen t) ■ O ra n g e Jackets (1990-present) ■ Texas-Soviet E x change C ouncil (1989-90) ■ P re sid en ts' L e a d e rsh ip A w ard (1991) As UT a m b a ssa d o r, I w o u ld d o th re e th in g s to p ro m o te a d iv erse a n d p ro g re s ­ sive im age of th e U n iversity . ■ First, I w o u ld sta rt y o u n g by in tro d u c in g e le m e n ta ry a n d ju n io r high s tu d e n ts to college. I w o u ld like to in sp ire y o u n g s tu ­ d e n ts to see college as a realizable goal, reg ard less of th e ir social e n v iro n m e n t. ■ S econd, I w o u ld p ro m o te a n d s u p p o rt th e ex p an sio n of m inority re cru itm en t p ro ­ g ram s on c a m p u s su ch as SHARE, th e W elcom e P ro g ram a n d P review . A n d 1 w o u ld define " o u ts ta n d in g " to include n o t only athletically a n d academ ically ta le n te d stu d e n ts, b u t s tu d e n ts w h o excel in th e arts, th eater, co m m u n ity service o r o th e r areas as well. As sta te a n d federal fu n d in g to s tu d e n ts is c u t, w e n eed to re m in d th e se stu d e n ts th a t UT offers an excellent e d u c a tio n at an affo rd ab le price. ■ Finally, I w o u ld .like to involve th e U n i­ v ersity m ore closely in th e c o m m u n ity . S tu d e n ts m ake u p a large p a rt of th e A u s­ tin c o m m u n ity a n d I feel th a t w e h av e an exciting o p p o rtu n ity a n d re sp o n sib ility to d ev e lo p an invo lved service rela tio n sh ip w ith o u r c o m m u n ity . I w ou ld like to tap stu d e n ts ' m o tiv atio n a n d th e e n e rg y a n d focus it into c o m m u n ity service. KATHERINE MIZE N om inated by: Friar Society Activities: Liberal A rts C ouncil, Polis m ag azin e, S tu ­ d e n ts for a S tro n g e r E d u catio n , U n iv ersity D em ocrats, Analecta literary m ag azin e, English h o n o rs p ro g ra m , S tate Bar m oot co u rt team , in tra m u ra l football, bask etb all a n d softball, Friar Society. I have b een a t UT for th e p a s t five years: first as a n E nglish m ajo r a n d n o w as a law stu d e n t. I h a v e b e e n active in ex trac u rricu ­ lar activities th ro u g h o u t m y tim e at UT. A s a result, I hav e seen th e U n iv ersity from a n u m b er of d iffe re n t p e rsp ec tiv e s. W h at is great a b o u t th is U n iv ersity is its diversity: diversity in acad em ic areas, d iv ersity in th e goals of its s tu d e n ts , d iv e rsity in po liti­ cal id eologies, a n d c u ltu ral diversities. As UT A m b a ssa d o r, m y goal will be to c o n ­ vey this p ic tu re of UT, to b o th a lu m n i a n d p ro sp ectiv e s tu d e n ts . MELISSA TARUN N om inated by: Texas U nion A ctivities: ■ Texas U n io n Fine A rts C o m m ittee: c h a ir­ w o m an 1990-91 ■ Texas U n ion P ro g ram C ouncil: 1991-92 assista n t c o o rd in a to r ■ O ra n g e Jackets ■ OF COU RSE! Publication e d ito r 1991, staff 1990 ■ M ap lew o o d E lem en tary School M en to r Program ■ " A n y to w n " H u m a n R elations C am p C o u n selo r ■ Filipino S tu d e n ts ' A ssociation ■ D ean of S tu d e n ts o rie n ta tio n ad v ise r 1990, staff 1991 ■ Texas C O O L (C a m p u s O u tre a c h & O p ­ p o rtu n ity L eague) ■ Liberal A rts C ouncil As UT A m b a ssa d o r, I w o u ld w o rk to ste r­ erase th e n e g ativ e "U T S w e eth ea rt eo ty p e th a t h a s d e v e lo p e d a n d fu rth e r e s­ tablish th e p o sitio n of UT a m b a ssa d o r as an in tellig ent, friend ly, capable a n d a m b i­ tious s tu d e n t re p re se n ta tiv e . I w o u ld ac­ tively p a rticip a te in b oth U n iv ersity re­ cruiting efforts a n d re te n tio n , especially from cultu ral g ro u p s a n d a re a s of th e state that are o ften o v erlo o k ed . I w o u ld e n c o u r­ age th e UT a d m in is tra tio n to w o rk w ith all ca m p u s g ro u p s to esta b lish a n inclusion- ary sp rin g c eleb ratio n as an a lte rn a tiv e to p ast R o u n d -U p e v e n ts a n d to p ro m o te m ore in te rac tio n a m o n g s tu d e n ts . I th in k it is also im p o rta n t th a t c o m m u n ica tio n w ith a lu m n i is k e p t o p en ; a m b a ssa d o rs sh o u ld k eep th em u p to d a te w ith s tu d e n t co ncerns a n d h o w alu m n i can h elp us. t I Ih llX /C Z D C IT A / I E b I * ^ 3 I I t h e d a i l y T e x a n Wednesday, April 24,1991 Page 5 j Dying voices UT professor tries to save rain forest by saving its sounds Jenny Walker Daily Texan Staff While millions of acres of rain for­ est are being destroyed each year, a UT associate professor has managed to preserve the sounds of jungle life in an effort to inspire listeners to stand up against deforestation ef­ forts and preserve native cultures from their demise. Proceeds from Voices o f the Rain­ forest — an original collection of sounds from the Papua New Guin­ ea rain forest and songs from the Kaluli people who inhabit it — will fund efforts to protect the Kalulis' home, which currently is being threatened with mineral explora­ tion. "I believe, and the people of Pa­ pua New Guinea believe, that you can have development without dev­ astation," Steven Feld, associate professor of anthropology, said 1 uesday. "P eople can better their lifestyle without trashing their envi­ ronm ent." Feld began his study of the Kaluli people as a doctoral student in the 1970s. He has since spent a com­ bined total of almost five years in the Bosavi Forest, and the Kaluli even built him a hut there. " it's not a burden being there," Feld said. "It's a challenge, but not a burden." Feld said he hopes to spend a lot more time in the forest, but he may not have a chance if oil companies are allowed to develop the Bosavi. The population of the Bosavi has al­ ready fallen to a-fraction of its origi­ nal size. "N o one under the age of 25 composes or sings songs or tells traditional stories," Feld said. The songs of Kaluli who do con­ tinue to com pose and sing have now been captured on high quality Dolby equipment, and brought to America. The sound heard on the tape is a never-before-heard mix of rhythms, birds, insects, creeks and streams to which the Kaluli lend their voices. Feld was able to achieve a top- quality recording thanks to a little help from a friend, Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart. Voices o f the Rainforest is the 15th recording in Hart's "T h e W orld" series of ecolog­ ical music. Feld said he is optimistic about the future of the Kaluli people but only guardedly so. He said he real­ izes the forces he's up against, ac­ knowledging that the struggle is not going to be easy. "Th ere's a lot of resistance organ­ izing going o n ," he said. "I believe the Kaluli are going to have to sur­ vive various onslaughts." Steven Feld hopes to educate people through music on problems of deforestation and preserving native cultures. John McConnico Daily Texan Staff Nominees for UT ambassadors plan to expand position Rebecca Stewart Daily Texan Staff The U niversity has already changed the name of the UT Sw eet­ heart to UT ambassador, and the candidates want to change the job as well. Students will choose next year's ambassadors in a campuswide elec­ tion Thursday. Polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . The name change and the addi­ tion of a male position was ap­ proved last summer by the execu­ tive committee of the Ex-Students' Association. The change was intro­ duced by Julie Monday, the 1990-91 Sweetheart, who said it was a major concern for last year's candidates. "M any students wanted a change because there were a lot of people who found the name offensive," Monday said. "T h ere has also been a lot of criticism of the job just be­ cause of the nam e." The eight candidates this year are Sherry Crook, social work junior; Jennie Germann, Plan II/history junior; Katherine Mize, second-year law student; Melissa Tarun, sociolo­ gy junior; Lance King, pharmacy senior; Wayne Marshall, com muni­ cation junior; Mart)' Meekins, Plan II/h isto ry ju n io r and D am on Munchus, Plan II junior. The Ex-Students' Association se­ lection committee chose the eight fi­ nalists on the basis of scholastic achievement, campus involvement, community activities, awareness of student concerns and their propos­ als for next year. Candidates must have a cumulative 2.5 GPA or high­ er, have completed at least 30 hours and be currently enrolled at the Uni­ versity. the Vice President According to Monday, the ambas­ sador's duties include aiding the O f­ fice of the Dean of Students, the O f­ fice of for Student Affairs, the Ex-Students' Association and the Office of Ad­ missions. O ther obligations include representing the University during recruiting and acting as a campus representative during alumni events and the Cotton Bowl. Most of the finalists agreed Tues­ day that improving recruitment at the University will play a large role in their duties as ambassador. Some also said the changes in the position were a positive step. said Crook, nominated by the Orange recruitment should Jackets, start as early as elementary and jun­ ior high school to get students inter­ ested in going to college. " I would like to do more as an ambassador by going to junior high o r elementary schools t o let them know t h a t U T is out t h e r e , ” Crook said. "The UT ambassador should reach o u t t o all Texas citizens." Germann, nominated by the stu­ dent involvement committee of the Ex-Students' Association, said the position's new name is more repre­ sentative of the job she wants to do. " I want to be honest with people. When you're out talking to incom­ ing students, the student is seeing if he or she is right for U T," Germann said. "In this position, you have to give a clear picture of the Universi­ ty ." Mize, nominated by the UT Friar Society, said that as an ambassador, she will represent a broader cross- section of the University. "T h e position represents UT as it really is. But there are a lot of sides that have been going unrecog­ n ized," Mize said. "A fter being at UT for five years, I think I've seen the University from a number of perspectives." Tarun, nominated by the Texas Union, said the UT Sweetheart had a negative image and she wants to change that to make the new am­ bassadors respected representatives of the University. " I think the name change is a big start just to show it's not just blond hair and blue e y e s," Tarun said. " I want to establish the position of UT am bassad or as an in tellig e n t, friendly, capable and ambitious stu­ dent representative." King, nominated by the Pharma­ cy Council, said diversity is import­ ant to the University and more at­ to tention needs recruitment and retention. to be paid "I think that the ambassador posi­ tion is a unique opportunity to pro­ mote the University in a positive ligh t," King said. "There has been a lot of bad press that's come out of here and has scared off a lot of po­ tential students. We must strive to promote acceptance of our differ­ en ces." Marshall, nominated by the Cabi­ net of College Councils, said he wants the ambassadors to increase recruitment and participation in programs such as SHARE and PRE­ VIEW. He added that he wants his role to be more active. "1 would like to see a position move past the status as a figurehead and move into that of being an en­ voy for the University," Marshall said. Marty Meekins, also nominated by the Student Involvement Com­ mittee, said the creation of a male ambassador makes things more equal. "In the past, the term 'sw eet­ heart' was diminutive to w om en," Meekins said. "But the change to the term 'ambassador' serves as a better title for the jo b ." Munchus, nominated by the Tex­ as Union Board of Directors, said the ambassadors should emphasize UT A m b a s s a d o r Pol l i ng L o c a t i o n s Business Education Library & Inform ation Sciences Between UTC & PCL; if rain: under UTC ledge Law Nursing Fine Arts LBJ School of Public A ffairs Engineering N a tu ra l Sciences Outside A rt Bldg. on San Jacinto; if rain: inside Art Bldg. S o u t h e a s t c o r n e r o f 2 6 th ^ & S peedw ay; if rain: inside r l M Communications Social W o rk Pharm acy Communication Bldg. breezew ay; if rain: inside Bldg. A Liberal Arts Architecture G rad u ate (other than Business/ LBJ & Law) W est M all between UGL & W M B; if rain: under UGL ledge _______ _____________ Felipe Campos Daily Texan Graphics undergraduate education at University. the "1 hope to convey to the Universi­ ty and non-university community the importance of a quality under- graduate education as a cornerstone of any world-class university," Munchus said. The winners ot the election will be a n n o u n c e d a t a reception at th e Ex-Students' Association at 4 p.m. Monday. Okay, this is easy— a lot easier than that whole frying pan/ drugs/brain analogy. BO knows everything, right? From skeet shooting to anesthesiology, our favorite gridiron galloper is a flyball-catching tome of trivia. OO O Well, it just so happens we have our own BO about campus— the Cactus yearbook. The Cactus staff is keeping the scores, capturing the moments, and unlike that other BO, they’re rarely striking out. Tell TEX you want BO The Cactus, optional fee #26, is only $28.50. So, just do it Wl INTERRUPT YOUR EDUCATION FOR AN IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT. With your nose to the grindstone, you may have missed the arrival of the N eX Istatbn™ computer. Yes, the one that combines the brute force of a workstation with the ease-of-use of a P( But you have fortunately looked up in time to catch the news of this universe-expanding sale. Between now and June 30th, the N eX i station and its trusty companion 400dpi laser pnnter may be purchased for $2 50 less than one might normally expect. For more cance of these find mgs, a perst mal d™ lls on the P °lem,al s^ nifl' ¡su would be in order. Solve the my steries of the universe a n d save $250. Texas .Union MicroCenter Located in the Varsity Center, 2 1 0 East 2 1 - Street Open Monday - Friday, 11:00a.m . to 6:00p.m . Phone: 4 7 1 -6 2 2 7 . The M ic r o C enter's special pnces are avaiabie only to eigibie UT Students, Faculty and Staff. Prices and availability subject to change without notice. - j - . . T h e D a i l y T e x a n Page 6 Wednesday, April 24, 1991 STATE & LOCAL Opponent accuses Todd of bowing to developers Steve Higginbotham Daily Texan Staff C harging that A ustin mayoral candidate Bruce Todd is bow ing to d e v e lo p e r s and special-in - te r e st g r o u p s , of s u p p o r t e r s opponent Robert Barnstone cited large cam paign don ation s received by Todd from th ese groups. Todd retorted that the donations are an exam ple of his ability to gain con ­ sensus. A cam paign contribution and ex­ penditure list from Todd's mayoral cam paign includes several d e v e lo p ­ including Caprock Planned ers, Unit D evelopm ent ow ner Larry Peel and former Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes, w ho along w ith former G ov. John Conrially tried, but failed, to devel­ op near the spot w h ere the Barton Creek PUD n ow rests. The Caprock PUD has been stalled since last year because en v i­ ronm entalists and neighbors com ­ plained to the City Council that the d evelopm ent w ould hurt the sur­ ro u n d in g en viron m en t. Barnes' project failed in part because there w ere no highw ays leading to his d e­ velopm ent. The Southw est Park­ w ay, w hich Todd played a major role in creating as former county com m issioner, leads to Barnes' old d evelop m en t site and to the adja­ cent Barton Creek PUD. But Todd, w h o has been en ­ dorsed by the Austin Sierra Club, said developers and environm ental­ ists respect him because of his abili­ ty to listen to both sides and reach a com prom ise. "They recognize that I can bring som e con sen su s job done," Todd said. "They know I'm fair and that the best interests of the city are m y agenda." to get the G eorge Avery, Austin Sierra Club conservation chairman, added that develop ers typically give donations to all candidates and that Barnstone had been left out because of his in­ ability to com m unicate w ith them . "Barnstone has received gifts from th ese p eop le in the past. ... I think h e's fallen out of grace with these developers," Avery said. "They don't really see him as a per­ son they can work with, regardless o f the w ay he v otes on an issue." that they A ndre G uerrero, B arnstone's cam paign m anager, said, "Isn't it interesting [the Sierra Club] don't w ant people to com pro­ mise on the environm ent and then accuse Robert Barnstone of not com ­ prom ising with developers. That's very contradictory. "Nam e a developer that has com e up with a plan that is sensitive to the environm ent and Robert will talk to him ," Guerrero added. A very said Todd's actions as county com m issioner w ere so m e­ tim es contradictory, but during the end of his term he becam e m ore sensitive to the environm ent. Todd has been criticized in the past for his support of virtually e v e ­ ry controversial roadw ay project in Travis C ounty, but he has been lauded by the sam e environm ental­ ists for his work on the Balcones C anyonlands Habitat C onservation project, w hich w ould set aside se v ­ eral segm en ts of Travis C ounty for habitat preserves. New income tax bill scrutinized Matthew Connally Daily Texan Staff For the first tim e in the current Legislative session , lawm akers exam ined an incom e tax bill, but d eem ed it too early in the gam e to seriously debate the proposal. "What this bill w ould do — w e're taxing the people who can afford to pay the taxes," said Rep. Garfield T hom pson, D-Fort W orth, the bill's sponsor. "We're trying to take aw ay this regressive sales tax and to re­ lieve the taxpayers som ew h at." T hom pson said once the bill w as in place for a period of time, it w ou ld gradually increase state revenue and allow the Legislature to eventually reduce the property tax. After 90 m inutes of testim ony in the H ou se W ays and M eans C om m ittee T uesday, the com m ittee took no action on the bill. HB 250, based closely on the federal tax system , w ould tax adjust gross is m ore than $50,000 beginning Jan. 1, 1992. Tw o-thirds of Texans make less than the m inim um and w ould be exem pt. incom e that A sliding scale w ould determ ine the tax rate, starting at 3 percent for incom e more than $50,000 and goin g up to 5 percent on incom e more than $200,000. T hom pson said it w ould generate $973 m illion w h en fully im ple­ m en te d in 1993. T hom pson said the Legislature m isled the public with the h op e of significant boost from a state lottery, and that law m akers failed in past sessio n s to solve budget problem s. Lt. G ov. Bob Bullock has led the cam paign for an incom e tax bill, insisting the state n eed s increased reve­ nue to finance public education and counter the pro­ jected $4.7 billion budget shortfall over the next bienni­ um. The proposal set forth by Bullock calls for a 5 percent tax on adjusted gross incom e above $25,000, com pared to the $50,000 level set by T h om pson's bill. Bullock said his plan w ould raise $2 billion this year and $6 billion in 1993. The current tax system relies on a high sales tax, the property tax and the franchise tax. Under the budget approved by the H ouse A ppropri­ ations Com m ittee — w hich assum ed current revenue and no n ew taxes — Travis C ounty w ould receive $160.3 m illion less over the next tw o years than it n eed s to maintain current state-funded services. The University w ould lose $61.3 million from its budget over the next tw o years, a loss UT President William C unningham said w ould have a "devastating effect on Texas higher education." He said the University w ou ld have to consider elim i­ nating 313 teaching positions and 300 adm inistrative and staff positions. You asked for a computer that’s college material. real We heard you. S i _ __ Joey Lin/Daily Texan Staff Loyal listeners of radio station KTXZ gathered at Mexico Lindo Restaurant to protest and listen to speakers. Listeners gather to protest radio station’s stall firings Fabienne Labourey Daily Texan Staff Angry fans of K-Tejas radio gath­ ered in South A ustin Tuesday to protest the firing of alm ost all the station's staff — w hich they charac­ terized as a political act — and to encourage M exican-A m ericans to fight such discrim ination. "This is som ething that is not new to us, to be discrim inated, to be second-class citizens," said Paul H ernandez, a KTXZ fan, addressing about 60 p eople at M exico Lindo restaurant at 4619 S. C ongress A ve. "We know how it feels to suffer; w e also know how to fight." Most of the station's staff w as fired last w eek — with the exception of an engineer, the station traffic di­ rector and the com pany bookkeeper — for w hat station ow n er Neal Spelce called "good b u sin ess prac­ tice." Spelce, a n ew s anchor for KTBC- TV, also im plied in an interview w ith the A ustin American-Statesman that Joe M orales, the former station manager, w as fired because he w as stealing. H olding signs saying. "Boycott KTXZ," "Clear Joe's nam e," and "KTXZ staff deserved better," fans said they m iss the people w ho w ere fired and added they were ready to protest S p ek e's m ove by boycotting the station and constant­ ly calling the new staff to com plain. that “I feel that they closed it down because it was be­ coming a voice for the Mexican-American peo­ ple.” KTXZ fan Paul Hernandez Daniel Baladez said he stopped listen in g to the station even though he m isses his favorite m usic. "I'm a faithful listener of it; I'm having a hard time not listening to it," he said. KTXZ listeners also said the M exi­ can-American com m unity should unite to protest such acts of discrim ­ ination. "We need to stand up," said Brenda Lee Huerta, KTXZ's former n ew s director, w h o w as crying w h e n statem ent. "[Spelce] didn't think w e w ould. ... He w anted us to keep it quiet." sh e gave h e r H ernandez said he thought the radio's staff w as fired because KTXZ raised controversial issu es affecting the M exican-American com m unity. "I feel that they closed it d ow n b ecau se it w as becom ing a voice for the M exican-American peop le," he said. C ath y Vasquez-Revilla, publisher an d ed ito r of La Prensa, a g re e d with H e rn a n d e z . "In th e p a st, the Span­ ish radios n e v er talk ed about poli­ tics," sh e said. tb cíú A w om an, w h o asked not to be identified for fear of losing her job, said the firing of the KTXZ staff il­ the discrim ination m ost lustrates M exican-Am ericans have experi­ enced at som e point in their life. "It's happening in the state, the county, the city, that H ispanics are being fired with no reason," sh e said. "W here I work, there w ere four M exicans w h o all got fired u n ­ justly." G us Garcia, a candidate for Place 5 on the City C ouncil, said the firing m eans that M exican-Am ericans' "distrust of the system " is valid. H e added that the Mexican-Americart com m unity n eed s to have its ow n station. "Let's turn this negative incident ... into a positive on e. Let's try to get the capital to buy the station," he said. The staff also said they w ant to protest the firing in order to clear Morales' nam e. "We w ere just very hurt that Mr. Spelce could m ake statem ents that im plied w hat he im plied, because he didn't have anything to substan­ tiate it," Huerta said. Ivonne R eyes, another former staff m em ber, said those w h o w ere fired will need the m edia to "help clear w here the m oney w ent.'' "We're public figures and it can really hurt, w herever w e are," sh e said. First Annual GCCA Longhorn Chapter Auction and Banquet \ IBM PS/2 Model 55 SX (U31) 2MB memory 30MB fixed disk drive 8513 Color Display Preloaded software: IBM DOS 4.0 Microsoft Windows 3.0, Word for Windows hDC Windows Utilities ZSoft SoftType $2,535 IBM PS/2 Model 55 SX (W61) 2MB memory 60MB fixed disk drive 8515 Color Display Preloaded software: IBM DOS 4.0 Microsoft Windows 3.0, Word for Windows and Excel™ hDC Windows Utilities ZSoftType $3,025 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. April 26, 1991 Austin Women's Federation 24th and San Gabriel For T ickets and Information, Please Call: MicroCenter Located in the Varsity Center, 210 East 21" Street Open Monday - Friday, 11:00a m to 6* y ' ■ \* w e f Mac Classic 2 mg of RAM, 40 mg Hard Drive, Keyboard included. $1145.00 JJnion MlcroCenter Located in the Varsity Center, 210 East 21st Street Open Monday - Friday, 11:00a.m. to 6:00p.m. Phone: 471-6227. The MkroCenter's special prices and services are available only to eligible UT Students, Faculty and StafT. Prices and availability subject to change without notice. U e d n e s d a y 8-11 PM E v ery W ed n esd ay Night * All th e Pizza, & B re ad sty xz you can e a t and th e first b e e r is included. Additional draft only .25<: Men s6 Women s5 Couples s9 3000 Duval Bv Fosse East 476-DAVE 1926 E. Riverside By Short Stop 448-DAVE 4 1 5 W . 2 4 t h S t . Under the Castilian 472-DAVE V WmwortttJ DON'T PANIC! FINALS ARE IN 2 WEEKS "TAKE 2 ASPIRINS" AND CALL DR. EXAM 472-EXAM IN ONE 8-HOUR VISIT, YOU WILL*. • DOUBLE YOUR READING SPEED IN 1 DAY • INCREASE COMPREHENSION LEVEL • OPTIMIZE YOUR TIME BETWEEN N O W AND FINALS • LEARN DYNAMIC REVIEW TECHNIQUES • TEST-TAKING STRATEGIES APRIL 21 st o r 28th TIME: 1 pm to 9 pm SMED ttta a m T h e D a i l y T e x a n Page 8 Wednesday, April 24,1991 SPORTS Fischer leads golfers to women’s SWC Championship ■1" A ** Sarah Hornaday Daily Texan Staff SWomen T h e senior n in t h - r a n k e d Lady L onghorns were led by Jamie Fischer in a successful bid their fifth consecutive S outhw est Con fere n ce C ham pion - ship Tuesday. to win in Texas, w hich never to u rn a­ the trailed m ent, won the event with a three-round total of 930 (308-306-316). SMU's 935 (315- 310-310) skim m ed the I ady L onghorn's 11- stroke lead to five in the closest conference the to u rnam ent's nine-year m atch-up in history. The No. 12 ranked M ustangs w ere followed bv 14th ranked TCU's 943 (320- 311-312). A pleasant tou rn am ent surprise w as Fischer's "better late than never" win. The fifth-year senior posted her first collegiate win at the cham pionships in San A ntonio. And she held nothing back in her last SWC appearance. Fischer tied for the lead w ith team m ate and tw o-tim e SWC m edalist Michiko Hatto- ri after the first day. H er second-round score of 71 was both a career-best and the course record for The Club at Sonterra. The on e-under par round gave her a five-stroke lead going into the final round. "1 was happy to get this round done w ith," Fischer said. "1 w asn 't relaxed until I “Every shot was a big test of concentration. I just made some of the putts and got out with bogeys instead of dou­ bles.” — UT golfer Jamie Fischer had the tap-in on 18. test of concentration, the putts and got out of doubles." The senior's 54-hole w as also a career best, low by five strokes. Every' shot was a big I just m ade som e of w ith bogeys instead total of 219 (73-71-75) beating her previous SM U's Leslie G reen finished second indi­ vidually w ith a 223 (76-73-74). Hattori, the 1990-1991 SWC Player of the Year, said she w as disappointed with her 77 on the final round. The score brought her three-day to­ tal to 226 (73-76-77), the score that won the 1990 SWC C ham pionships, and a third- place finish. The 1990 SWC C ham pion, Barbara Blackwell rounded out the top four w ith a 229 (80-74-75). Texas Coach Pat Weis was happy with her senior leaders but not satisfied w ith the team . "1 still say it w an't a good solid team w in," Weis said. "If w e're going to be com ­ petitive at nationals, we need everybody to play to their potential everv d ay." Junior Piper W agner slipped out ot the top 10 in the final day to finish 11th w ith a 240 (79-80-81). In their SWC C ham pionship debut, both sophom ore Jenny T urner (84- 81-83) and freshm an Linda C hen (83-79-86) tied for 20th with a 248. Team Standings Individual Standings Texas SMU TCU Texas A&M Texas Tech Baylor Jamie Fischer, Texas Leslie Green SMU Michiko Hattori, Texas Barbara Blackwell, SMU Rebecca Sims, A&M Barbara Plant, TCU Cristy Sommerfeld, BU Annette Kealoha, TCU Tricia Allen, TCU Jane Kragh. TCU 308 315 320 324 327 341 306-315- 930 -310-310—935 -311-312- 943 -327-316—967 -326-328—981 322-335- 99P 73-71- 76-73- 73-76 80-74 77-81 79-77 83-73 80-81 80-77 81-79 7 5 - 2 1 9 74— 223 77—226 75—229 75—233 79—235 8 0 —236 75—236 ■79—236 -79—239 Texas takes sloppy win over Southwestern Sports injuries require therapy, money to heal E ditor's note: T his is the second in a four-part series on sports m e d i­ cine. T his installm en t covers the cost of health care for the athlete, e sp e c ia lly the s u rg e ry , am ount of tim e needed for the in ­ jury to heal afterw ards. a n d Lew Cohn Daily Texan Staff The injured party is a male ath ­ lete participating in a pickup game of basketball. As he jum ps u p to grab a rebound off the backboard, he lands on an oppon ent's foot and tw isting. From the sharp, cracking sound of bone, the dam age is serious. falls backwards, The injury obviously n eed s treatm ent, so the m an seeks out a doctor of sports m edicine to help him heal the ankle. But how much is this health care going to cost him in m oney, tim e and pain? The first question that m ust be answ ered before any health care can be adm inistered is "H ow se­ vere is the injury?" Dr. Ed Lewis, an orthopedic surgeon and doctor ' of sports m edicine, said the price range is very w ide, but medical in­ surance can provide som e cost re­ lief. "T here's h u n d re d s of different operations," Lewis said. "It can vary from $100 to $5,000, d e p e n d ­ ing on w hat kind of surgery you require. Insurance usually covers m ost of the cost. It dep end s on the insurance policy, and the type of coverage a patient has." W hat is the difference betw een privately ow ned and public prac­ tice? S tudents may find it relative­ ly inexpensive to go to the S tudent Health C enter for treatm ent of an injury. The doctors are profession­ als who usually operate a private practice as well, and the quality of care is generally the sam e. for Dr. Laura Flawn, the team sur­ geon the Texas w om en's team s, operates out of the S tudent Health C enter an d charges about the sam e for stu d en ts as she does the athletic departm ent. "W e estim ate that [our service] costs probably between $200 and $300 per injury per stu d en t," she said. Any surgery perform ed is done off cam pus because the S tudent H ealth C enter does not have the necessary facilities. "The Student H ealth C enter once was a full hospital," UT train­ er Spanky S tephens said. "Six years ago they closed dow n the hospital part of it, and ou r [the athletic d ep artm en t's] costs w ent up dram atically. But the doctors feel com fortable their w ork at their offices." in doing H ow ever, private practice spe­ cialists offer m ore personal service and are usually better equipped to handle m ore difficult injuries such as knee blowouts. Dr. John G enung, a form er UT athlete and an orthopedic s u r­ geon, often perform s delicate sur- gerv on knees and other harder-to- cure the injuries. Because of difficulty of this type of operation, his prices are higher than those of other doctors. "For a knee injury that is rela­ to tively uncom plicated, $1,000 $2,000 is the price that is charged," G enung said. "H ow ever, for su r­ gery to repair the anterior cruciate Please see Medicine, page 14 Matt Schulz Daily Texan Staff It w a sn 't p ret­ ty, but the Long­ horns took it. & In th e first gam e after the n o w - i n f a m o u s sw eep in College S ta tio n , 1 2 th - r a n k e d T e x a s rode the bat of Calvin M urray to an 8-5 victory over NAIA o p p o n e n t S o u th w e s te rn Tuesday night at Disch-Falk Field. H o m S In an extrem ely sloppy gam e that featured six errors, three by each team, the Longhorns overcam e two tw o-run deficits to beat the Pirates in w hat was possibly the last gam e between the two team s as a result of upcom ing S outhw est C onference schedule revisions. "The guys w ere p ressing ," Texas Coach Cliff G ustafson said. "They still had the A & M series in the back of their m inds and hopefully this will p ut that behind u s." The L onghorns trailed 5-3 going into the bottom of the sixth, w hen M urray hit his first hom e run of the season, a tow ering shot that cleared both fences at Disch-Falk to drive in shortstop Shane H alter, w ho had been hit by a pitch from Southw est- ern 's Steve Avery. "H e came up w ith the big hit for u s," G ustafson said. "H is hom e run w hen w e w ere dow n by tw o runs turn ed the gam e aro u n d ." "H e gave me a 3-2 fastball an d I hit it," M urray said. "Ever since I was m oved back to the leadoff spot, I feel I've been hitting better and getting m ore confidence." M urray also singled and walked while scoring three ru n s an d taking his 35th stolen base of the season. le fth a n d e r In relief of starting pitcher Doug ja y V a u g h t P ettit, pitched the final three innings for the Longhorns to earn his first win of the season against no losses. John McConmco Daily Texan Staff Calvin Murray slammed a home run in the sixth inning, allowing the Longhorns to overcome a two-run deficit. “The guys were pressing. They still had the A&M series in the back of their minds and hopefully this will put that behind us.” — T exas C oach Cliff G ustafson Glen Burrow (2-2) took the loss for Southw estern. at second base. Sm ith had three of the Pirates' four steals. G ustafson had nothing but praise for Vaught. "O utstanding!" G ustafson said. "I think h e's becom ing m ore an d more im portant to the team . H e's got a good breaking pitch and his fastball for tw o or three innings is o utstan d in g ." Four of S o u th w estern 's five runs came during a bizarre fourth inning which could have been m uch w orse for Texas. The final tw o outs in the inning came off of base run n in g er­ rors in w hich tw o different Pirates overran second base and w ere tagged out. The inning featured a steal of hom e plate by S o u th w estern 's Scott Smith, after a failed pickoff attem p t S outhw estern scored its final run in the sixth as a result of tw o Long­ horn errors and a passed ball by catcher Mike M orland. With tw o outs, Pirate first b ase­ man Dan M ishler singled to right field. W hen Sean Q uintana, w ho had reached on an error by first basem an Scott Pugh, attem p ted to score on the play, right fielder D ean Haskins threw a strike to the plate. However, Q u in tan a w as called sate w hen M orland m issed the tag, not being able to get the ball out of his glove. Texas took the lead for good in the bottom of the seventh, capitaliz­ ing on on a wild pitch by Burrow and a subsequent throw ing error by Pirates' catcher Brian A nderson. The errors allow ed Pugh an d Mor- land to score, giving the L onghorns a 7-5 lead. As a result of expected conference scheduling changes at SWC m eet­ ings in early M ay, it is likely that this will be the last m atchup be­ tw een these tw o team s for som e time. "It will be the last tim e w e play them as long as we have the double round-robin schedule in the confer­ ence," G ustafson said, "because w e just d o n 't have enough room in o u r schedule for th em ." D espite the sloppy perform ance by his team , G ustafson felt that his team responded well, com ing off of the disappointm ent of the A&M sw eep and struggling in T uesday's early stages. "1 d o n 't think this gam e can do anything but help u s," G ustafson said. "I think that anybody that we had played next w ould p u t us in that kind of situation. The fact that we played and m ade a lot of m is­ takes and still m anaged to win should help u s." BARGAIN MATINEES EVERYDAY ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6 PM STEREO SOUNP IHD1CATIP BY a GREAT HILLS 8 WELLS BRANCH 8 BURNET RO. at WELLS BRANCH US m & GREAT HILLS TRAIL 388-0555 794-8076 * M O R T A L T H O U G H T S H THX 2 4 5 5 :0 0 7 :1 5 9 :3 0 «W ARLOCK ® 2 :5 5 5 :1 0 7 :2 5 8 :4 0 * b o o k o f Low e (p g o ) t h x I ® 5 3 5 0 5 :5 0 7 :5 0 9 : 5 0 * O U T FOR JUSTICE É THX 2 :0 0 4:0 0 6 :0 0 8 : 0 0 1 0 :0 0 * DEFENDING YOUR LIFE ¡PGJ THX 2 5 5 5 1 5 7 : 4 0 9 : 5 5 * CHINA CRY 85-13] 2 5 0 4 5 5 7 :2 5 9 : 4 5 * THE M ARRYING MAN (D 2 : 2 5 4 :5 0 7 2 0 9 :4 5 ♦ NEW JACK CITY K 2 4 5 4 5 5 7 1 5 9 :4 0 ♦ D A N C E S WITH WOLVES [FgPJ 1 4 5 5^10 a 3 0 ___ ♦ THE HARDWAY R ____________ 2*50__________ ♦ THE LONG WALK HOME [PC] 5 : 0 0 7 1 5 9 :2 0 ♦ M O R T A L T H O U G H T S S j T H X 2 4 5 5 1 0 7 3 0 9 : 4 5 * W A R L O C K K T H X 2 .5 5 5 :1 5 7 3 5 9:5 5 ♦ B O O K OF LOWE | l 'G I 3 | 2 :1 0 4 : 0 5 6 : 0 0 7:5 5 9 : 5 0 « D E F E N D IN G Y O U R L IF E [¡‘(-I 2 3 0 5 0 ° 7 2 5 9 4 0 ♦ C A R E E R O P P O R T U N IT IE S Ii>(; 13] 2 :0 0 3 5 0 5 :5 0 7 5 0 9 :5 0 ♦ C L A S S A C T IO N H 2 4 0 5 1 0 7 : 4 0 9 : 5 0 ___ ♦ G 0 0 0 FELLAS H 2 :0 0 5 : 0 0 8 :0 0 ♦ T H E HAROWAY 1B1 1 2 :3 0 __________ ♦ R E V E R S A L OF FORTUNE [ft 5 1 0 7 3 5 9 : 5 5 ♦ T E E N A G E M U T A N T NIN JA T U R T L E S 2 T H E S E C R E T OF 0 0 Z E [P G ) 5 : 3 0 7 :4 5 _ ♦ THE S IL E N C E OF THE L A M B S (r) ♦ C A R E E R O P P O R T U N IT IE S IP G I3] _________ 5 :3 0 7 : 4 5 ________ ♦ NEW JACK CITY ,K 5 :5 0 7:5 0 ♦ T H E D O O R S K 5 : 3 0 8 : 0 0 ♦ T H ¿ F IV E H E A R T B E A T S K 5 1 5 7 4 5 _ ♦ T H E P E R F E C T W E A P O N K 6:00 8 00 ____ ♦ H O M E A L O N E [ l ‘t i ] 5 :5 0 7:55 BARTON CREEK MOPAC at LOOP 360 327-8281 ♦ THE MARRYING M AN Q l1 2 3 0 5 0 0 7 3 0 1 0 :0 0 ♦ TEENAGE M UTANT N IN JA TURTLES 2 THE SECRET OF OOZE [PGl THX 1 : 5 0 3 : 4 0 S :3 0 7 : 2 0 9 : 2 0 ♦ SILENCE OF THE LAM BS Lfij _ 2 2 5 4 5 5 7 2 0 9 : 4 5 THE HAROWAY [Kj 2 : 3 5 4 : 5 5 7 :2 5 9 : 5 0 SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY ® 2 : 4 0 5 1 0 7 4 0 9 : 5 0 TEMPORARILY CLOSED. 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Members & faculty free; nonmembers $5 Tickets ECB lounge April 24-26 12-4 and at B • B- Q 3000 Harris Park Blvd. near Law Library ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Suicidal Tendencies challenges audiences, critics T h e Da i l y T e x a n Wednesday, Aprit 24,1991 Page 9 Bobby Ruggiero Daily Texan Staff F o r most su c­ ce ssfu l b a n d s, th e h o m eto w n c a n c o n c e r t serve as a trium ­ phant return, a ch an ce to recon­ nect with roots or a wjfy to give the th an k s fans that got it started in the first place. to But if the band is Suicidal T en d ­ encies and the hom e tow n is Los A ngeles, this kind of happy return is only a pipe dream ; the group has effectively been bann ed from play­ ing the citv. "W e still can' t get a gig in L .A . because of all the rum ors about vio­ lence w hen w e p la y ," says Mike M uir, Suicidal T en d en cies frontm an and founder. "B u t n o th in g 's ever happened . T h e rum ors start flying and it end s up that so -an d -so got killed, and clubs that w e never played blam e us for their c lo sin g ." C ontroversy has alw ays follow ed the group, w hich form ed in 1983 as a punk outfit but sw itched to hard­ core thrash m etal four years later. M uir has been around to see all the ch an g es. The b an d 's socially critical lyrics about alienation and personal SUICIDAL TENDENCIES & QUEENSRYCHE Where Erwin Center Date Thursday pride struck a chord with fans, w ho m ade their rough, brutal join the Army a hit and the song Institutional­ ized (w hich w as also part of the soundtrack to Repo Man) an anthem for disaffected youth. Now , the band has realized its potential with the G ram m y-nom i- nated heavy m etal album Lights ... Camera ... Revolution, a tour de force that takes on lo n eliness, street life, pride and televison evangelists. It's a the tough album grou p 's best effort. that m arks " I d o n 't think that Suicidal is real­ ly reb ellio u s," M uir says. "S tan d in g up for yourself is not being rebelli­ ous, it's the only choice you have. I it's kind of sad that w e're think brought up to worry m ore about w hat the oth er person thinks about us. that people aren 't brou ght up with m ore self-es­ te e m ." It's unfortu nate the lyric sheet and say, 'Show m e.' And they've never been able to. You better know w hat you 're talk ing about before you start talk in g ." Heavy metal and rap are the m u­ sical groups most often attacked by con servatives, and parents and Muir thinks he know s w hy. "A lot of it has to do with fear — tear of w h at's different. W hen people get older, they w ant kids to be more passive, more accepting. I've found out that w hen you qu estion people, they get upset. I believe in qu estio n ­ ing authority w hen you d o n 't un­ derstand or w hen th ere's a better w a y ." Fans, particularly teen s, have re­ s p o n d e d to this "th ra sh p o sitiv e" m essage and m ade Suicidal a sm ash even w ithout the benefit of radio airplay and m ainstream videos. "O u r support is more word-of- m outh, grass ro o ts ," he says, "W ith a lot of cult ban d s, they cross over and get better k now n, so that the people w ho originally them can't anym ore becau se the reason they liked the band w as because no­ body else d id ." like Som e critics have objected to the grou p 's nam e as well as its m usic, m aintaining that it leads to d elin­ quency and a h ost of other horrors. "W h e n I'v e talked with these peo­ ple, they m ake all these accusations about w hat w e say, and I bring out As tor Su icid al's m usical topics, M uir adm its that the farm kid in Iowa thrashing to a son g about Last Los A ngeles street life m ay not be able to identify person ally w ith the tune. But he believes that m uch of the lyric's unfam iliar territory will The Suicidal Tendencies gang proves you don’t have to be the New Kids to hang tough in a parking garage make sense dow n the road. "W h e n I was a kid, my m other w ould tell me som ething, and I'd alw ays say, [incredulous voice] I kno w ,' but som etim es it took years to m ake any real sen se for m e ," he says. know , I Suicidal Tendencies, like fellow thrashers Metallica and A nthrax, represents a new breed of heavy to sav metal bands with about "It d o esn 't all have to be about partving and ham m ering chicks. Suicidal deals w ith p eop le's insecurities, and th at's not w hat a lot of people want things Say s M uir, so ciety . to hear. The' thing fit nice we have to Ic sw ers. r try to m and neat, ok deeper r t h e a li­ "In stea d of everybod y trying to change everybody else, we need to take control of our ow n lives, and the world would be a lot b e tte r." Come to praise, not bury, ‘Caesar’ JULIUS CAESAR Author: George Frideric Hande! Starring: Merrette Rentmeester, Carol Hopkins Director: Robert DeSimone Theater: UT McCullough Theatre Date: Thursday, Saturday nelia, the w ife of C aesar's slain en em y Pom peo. R en tm eester's voice lends itself to a kind of piercing yet dignified m ourning — tor her dead husband, for her im prisoned son, for the g ener­ ally tragic lot of a widow in an unfriendly land. W hen her ch aracter t u r n s from w eeping widow to defiant Rom an m atron, R en tm eester's extrao r­ dinary voice m akes the sw itch a s well. H er refu s­ al of an u nctu ous Egyptian s m arriage proposal crackles with patrician rage. 1 lie o p era's central fem ale figure, C leopatra (Carol H opkins), crafts an entirely different per­ sona. H opkins sings with a playful arrogance as the ancient Egyptian tease. In her sedu ction of C aesar — w hich grow s into a real love —- H op­ k i ns reveals the em otional depth of the queen The men do not quite m easure up to their fem ale cou nterparts. C aesar (A ndrew Seigrist) has a pow erful voice but his bearing d oes not suggest that o f a tierce Roman statesm an. C or­ n e l i a ' s s o n , Sesto (Robert D oyle), is querulous and unconvincing; his w arlike pronouncem ents and gestu res appear ridiculous. C leo p atra's r i val and brother, T olom eo (Don K ennedy), h e l p s m ake up t o r the other tw o with a n expansive perform ance. He is the essen ce of the corp ulent, haughty, i n s e c u r e em p ero r, capa­ ble of m onstrous cruelty but easily intim idated. The costum es, w hile lush and im aginative, have no sense of tim e. M ost of the ch aracters parade in velvet garm ents covered in lace and sequins. The w om en sport gigantic earrings that no proper Roman w om an would have been caught dead w earing; and the m en w ear pants — a style of d ress Rom ans considered intoler­ ably effem inate. O n the Egyptian side, the costu m ers hit closer to the mark, alth ough Tolom eo's robe looks for all the world like an oversized sh ow er curtain. A few oth er bad d ecisions m ar th e production som ew hat — notably the use of P om p ea's severed head as a prop. D irector R obert D eSi­ m one would be better off leaving the box closed during that scene. But the flaw s' only real im pact is to distract from an otherw ise solid and en jo vable show'. Ju­ lius Caesar com es; it sees, and if it d oes not exact­ ly conquer, it at least scores a m ajor victory. Kevin McHargue Daily Texan Staff irra­ F o r som e u n sp ok en , tional reason, operas su ng in English alw ays sound a bit odd Perhaps English ears dem and that the lofty strains of opera be m atched by lyrics of an appropriately florid and in d e c ip h e r a b le R o m a n c e tongue. H ow ever, this is not alw ays the case. The UT O p ­ era Theatre perform ance of H andel's Julius C ae­ sar, for instance, su cceed s in being stately and exotic despite the fam iliarity of its language. OPERA Perform ing a G erm an opera about a Roman general in Egypt on a Texas stage nught seem to invite confusion, but the beauty of H andel's work and the skill of his UT interpreters tran­ scend the cross-cultural gridlock. W hile it is jarr­ ing to hear singers sing of N orth Africa in m usic with a distinctly N orthern European lilt, the o p ­ era itself rem ains beautiful, delivered by a s e n s i ­ tive and graceful o rchestra. The co rn ersto n e of the m u sic's em otional im ­ pact is M errette R en tm eester singing as L o r- mann $foo ALL DAY ■ LI I C C L T C A l t CUAVA1C ALL SE A TS -A L L SHOWS Julius reassures a distraught Cleopatra that her breasts are still intact. Ramona Cearley ROSES $9.95 Casa Verde Florist . 4 5 1 -0 6 9 1 | Daily Specials FTD • 4 5 0 1 Guadalupe • On UT Shuttle R t. 4 "O N E OF THE TEN BEST FILMS OF > THE YEAR. IT TAKES YOUR BREATH AW AY!" C Y D E B A N O G E R A C 4 :3 0 - 9:15 ends T h u r 1 THE KILLER 4 :45 - 7 : 10- 9:30 7:15 (S i !> > 12:00 B lo n d E m a n u e l l e 1 2 :00 III II I 21* > GuWX» 4r7-m« J AUSTIN 6 ADULT V ID E O • S I THOMPSON O ff I I S 1 MILE * 0 . of MONTOPOLIS CENTER Phono 3 8 5 -5 3 2 8 ? COUPLES THEATER-Fri. & Sat. 7pm-6 am SINGLES THEATER-Open 7 days 24 hours TAPE RENTALS-S3 for 2 days MAGS.-Buv One Get One Free A compelling tale of two brothers who form a malignant triangle with a Steinway plano--the legacy of their famous pianist father. April 19-20, 24-27 at 8 p.m. B. Iden Payne Theatre Tickets $7 ($6 UTU» available at all UTTM TicketCenters CHARGE-A-TICKTT 477-6060 Information: 471-1444 UT DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE AND DANCE (FORMERLY THE DEPARTMENT OF DRAMA) Johnathan Brandts m THE NEVER ENDING STORY PART II m 4:45 7:00 9:15 Cathy Bates (Oscar to/ best actress! & ¡ames C o o n MISERY k 5:00 7:15 10:30 4naie McDowei A Geioia Oepmaieu m GREEN CARD mu 5:15 7:30 9:45 \ ( TIMES PUBUSHEO ARE FOR TODAY ONLY ] PRESIDIO THEATRES “MEET ME A T PRESIDIO EVERY WEDNESDAY S 3 25 (SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS EXCLUDED) STUDENT DISCOUNTS DAILY $4.50 WITH VALID IX). MATINEE ALL SHOWS IB » *-*» - L : - RIVERSIDE 8 RIVERSIDE A PLEASANT VALLEY RD 448-0008 M O R T A L T H O U G H T S R 2 :3 0 5 :1 5 7 4 0 9 :5 5 O U T FOR J U S T IC E K _________ 3:00 5:308:15 10:30 ___ ___ TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLE II SECRET OF THE OOZE __________ 2:45 5 0 0 7:15 9:3 0 _________ T H E M A R R Y IN G M A N K ______ 2:15 5:00 7:30 IP O» N E W J A C K C IT Y K _________ 3:155.45 7:5010:05_______ S IL E N C E OF T H E LA M B S R _________ 2 15 4:45 7:159:40________ D A N C E S W IT H W O LV E S tr< 3:30 7:00 W A R LO C K K 3:30 5:45 8 0 0 10 15 ________________ VILLAGE CINEMA 2700 ANDERSON 451-8352 ! _ R O S E N C R A N T Z & G U IL O E N S T E ARE D EA D l'«.| 2:30 4 45 7.1 5 9 45 E A T I N G Mi : 2 55 5 05 7 50 10 05 EN D OF IN N O C E N C E 2 4 5 5 : 0 0 7 3 0 9 30 H E A V E N & E A R T H 1 2 33 4 55 7 40 9 55 K Page 10 Wednesday, April 24, 1991 T H E D A IL Y TEXAN " L O N G H O R N W ANT A D S " — Specifications — * 2 0 words, 5 da ys S 5 * M e rchand ise Sale Priced at S 1 0 0 0 or less Price must ap p e a r in ad for * If item doesn't sell, a d ­ vertiser must call before 11 0 0 a.m, on the day the ad is scheduled to end to qualify for the 5 a d d i­ insertions at no tional charge * Must specify 'Longhorn W ant A d ' classification to qualify for $ 5 rate. j ^ * C h a n g e s ( "Pr'te Only". allo w e d for TO PL A C I A W ORD OR LINE AD CALL: 471-5244 CLASSIFIED W O RD A D ’RATES ! time ’ C h a rg e d by the w o rd 15 w o rd mini­ mum Set m 5 pt type only Rotes are for consecutive d a y s ta c t' w o rd E o c h w o r d 3 times fo c h w o r d 5 times E ach w o rd 10 times EocH w ord 15 times E ach w o rd 2 0 times $ 38 $ 1 0 2 $ 1 4 5 $ 2 5 0 $ 3 0 0 $ 3 4 0 per insertion $1 0 0 charge to c h a n g e c o p y First two w o rd s m oy be oH capital letters 2 5 c for e o c l' additional w o rd in capital let­ ters M astercard o n d V isa accepted CLASSIFIED LINE A D 'R A T E S 'C h a r g e d by the line O n e colum n inch minimum A vailab le in 5 te 14 at type 1 col - 1 inch 1 Time $ 8 2 0 WORD T O D U N n r o --------------- DEA D L IN E SC HEDULE M o n d a y Tuesday W e d n e sd a y Thursday Friday Fn d o y Horn M o n d c y Horn Tuesday Ham W e d n e sd a y Ham Thursday H a m TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED D ISPLAY AD, CALL: 471-8900 CLASSIFIED D IS P L A Y 'A D RATES_______ ___ __ ' C h a rg e d b y the colum n inch O n e colum n inch minimum A variety of type faces a n d sizes a n d b ord ers available Fall Rates Sept 1 -M a y 3 0 1 to 4 9 colum n inches Per M o n th .............. $ 8 . 6 0 Per C olu m n Inch in per month, call for O v e r 5 0 col rates C L A S S IF IE D D IS P L A Y D E A D L IN E SC H ED U L E M o n d a y .................. 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Equipm ent Sp oriin g -C am p in g Equipm ent f u m itu re - A p p lia n c e R e n tal 2VO - 2 80 3 0 0 - G a r o g e - R um m age S a les 3 1 0 - Trade 3 2 0 - W anted to Buy o r Bent MiRCHANOI S I 3 3 0 — Pets 3 4 0 — L o ngh orn W ant Ads 3 4 5 - Misc. RINTAL 3 5 0 — R ental S e rv ice s 3 * 0 — Furn. A pts. 3 7 0 — Unf. Apts. 3 8 0 — Furn D u plexes 3 9 0 — Unf. D u p lexes 4 0 0 — r o n d o s-T o w n h o u se s 4 1 0 - Furn. H ou ses 4 2 0 — Unf. H ou ses 4 2 5 — Room s 4 3 0 — R o o m -B o ard 4 3 5 - C o-op s 4 4 0 — R oom m ates 4 5 0 — M obile H om es-L ots 4 7 0 — R eso rts 4 8 0 - S to ra g e S p a ce 4 9 0 — W anted to R ent- L ease 5 0 0 - Mtec ANNOUNCiMCNTS 5 1 0 - E ntertainm en t- Tickets 5 2 0 — P e rso n a ls 5 3 0 - Travei- T reim p ortatio n 5 4 0 — Lost A Found 5 5 0 - L icen sed Child C are 5 6 0 - Public N otice 5 7 0 — M usic-M usicians EDUCATIONAL 5 8 0 — M usical Instru ction 5 9 0 — Tutoring 6 0 0 — Instru ction W anted 6 1 0 — Misc. Instru ction SERVICES 6 2 0 - L egal Serv ices 6 3 0 - Com puter Services 6 4 0 - E x te rm in ato rs 6 5 0 — M oving- H auling 6 6 0 — Sto ro g e 6 7 0 — Paintin g SERVICES 6 8 0 — Office 6 9 0 — R ental Equipm ent 700 — Furn itu re R ep air 7 1 0 - A ppliance R epair 7 2 0 — Ste reo -T V R epair 7 3 0 — H om e R epair 7 4 0 — Bicycle R epair 7 5 0 — Typing 7 6 0 — Mi sc . Services EMPLOYMENT 7 7 0 — Em ploym ent A gen cies 7 8 0 — Em ploym ent Services 7 9 0 — Po rt tim e 8 0 0 — G e n e ro ! Help W onted 8 1 0 — O ffice-C lerical 8 2 0 — A ccounting B o o k k e e p in g 8 3 0 — A dm inistrative- M an ge me n ! 8 4 0 — S a le s 8 5 0 - Retoil 8 6 0 — E n g in eerin g- Technical 8 7 0 — M ed ita! 8 8 0 — P ro fe ssio n al 8 9 0 — C lu b s-R estau ran ts 9 0 0 — D om estic-H ouseh old 9 1 0 — P o sitio n s W onted 9 2 0 — W ork W anted BUSINESS 9 3 0 — B u sin e ss O pportunities 9 4 0 — O p p ortu nities Wonted T R A N SP O R T A T IO N M E R C H A N D ISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — ■ Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. T H E A S H F O R D Now Preleasing for Summer/Fall (Special Summer Rates) Large Efficiencies M ’s, 2-2’s, Starting at $250. • Furnished Unfurnished • West Campus Shuttle • On-Site Mngmt & Maint. • Pool • Laundry Room • Covered Parking ALL BILLS PAID 476-8915 SALADO APTS. Large 2-2’s & 1-1’s Now Leasing for Summer/Fall 320 0915 G R A N A D A 920 E. 40th St. 453-8652 Efficiencies 1, 2 & 3 Bcirm Sum m er/Fail Leasing Prelease NOW! CASA GRANDE $410 EFF-AII Bills Paid SummerFall $300 $340 1 - 1 Summer Fall $300/$340 2 - 1 Summer/Fall 2 - 2 Summer Fall $400 $440 3-2 Summer/Fall $550 $640 Summer Rates Available Furnished Unfurnished Large rooms, parking laundry, pool, on UT shuttle, near UT 1400 Rio Grande 479-0389 327-3446 SUMMER PRICES SLASHED! ELEG AN T S P A C IO U S A P A R T M E N T S (C O N T R O L L E D A C C E S S SECURITY) NOW PRELEASING 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. All of the amenities: S Microwave ovens -.Ceiling fons Totally automatic kitchens Tropical pool setting Covered parking la r g e clglets Decorotor furniture CO N V E N IE N T TO H A N C O C K CENTER. UT & SA N M 4 Í C 0 S SHUTTLES PARK PLAZA- PLAZA COURT A P A R T M E N T S " L U X U R Y A T R C A S O N A B L C M U C t S " 915 E. 41st 452-6518 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * Í H Y D E P A R K A P T S . Efficiencies 1 Bdrm/1 Bath 2 Bdrm/1 Bath J * * Sta rtin g at $250 i, • Fully Furnished if • On-site laundry room if • On IF shuttle it • Next to Pool/Park ★ • Gas Paid Í ★ 458-2096 (45th and Speedway) * I ★ * # * + + w * ★ { ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ i THE MARKS Í 3100 Speedway £ is pre-leasing for J J Summer & Fall! * i t )+ 4 4- 4- 4 4 4- * * • 1 bedroom 1 baths • Ceiling fans • Microwaves • Dishwasher (some units) • Furnished & unfurnished • Two pools • Walk to campus • IF shuttle bus • Wide range of prices & amenities ^ 4- 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4- ♦ Í 4 7 8 - 6 0 0 5 ★ » ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ' X * I/.*}.P . APTS. 101 E. 33rd 3 B O - 2 B H u g e 1 B d -L u x u ry U ra l. E iceptiona l F u rn ish in g s Pretty Poo l P i t » Shuttle tust • tew s te p s 476 0363.,»,*. » CENT11Y PLAZA Eff.’s - 1 & 2 Bedrms. All Bills Paid 4210 Red River 452-4366 Summer'Fall Leasing (Special Summer Rates) WEST CAMPUS Walk To U.T. Large 1 -1 s $ 2 2 0 Summer Pool. Laundry, Parking 2-2’s & fall leasing available On-site-manager 474-2215 or 478-9404 2207 Leon WARWICK APTS. 2-2’s, 1-1 ’s & Eft. limited access gate pools, miciowave Just blocks from campus N o w le a s in g for the S u m m e r F a ll 320-0915 M E S Q U IT E TREE APARTMENTS One bedroom furnished apartments. Close to campus, near shuttle. Dishwasher, A/C, Ceiling fan, Laundry facilities and hot tub. Water and T.V. cable paid. No pets. 2410 Longview, Resident manager #301. For info: 478-2357. UNITS AVAILABLE NOW ! 4 -2 0 -2 0 B -C RENTAL 3 7 0 — Unf. Apts. Need an Apartment for the Summer...Call T H R E E O A K S & P E C A N S Q U A R E APARTMENTS • Summer Rates from $250 • 1 Bdr 1 Ba • Furnished • Laundry • PRELEASE FOR SUMMER OR FALL 4 5 1 5 8 4 0 409 W. 38th St. Now Preleasing Summer Rates Starting at $295 • 1 B R & 2 B r • Ceiling Fans • C e n tra l A C • O n S h u ttle • Laundry Room • Fully Furnished • Pool R i o N u e c e s 600 W. 26th 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 10 — Misc. A uto s 1 9 86 F O R D T E M P O - 4 door, manual, sporty! A/C, am./fm cassette, solid car, in g o o d condition, a steal at $ 2 9 5 0 * 3 4 5 - 6 9 6 2 4 -3 -2 0 B - C ___ _ M E C H A N IC W A N T S to buy a Toyota run Célica or C oro lla or smaT pick up nmg o r not 1 9 8 0 up 8 3 6 - 7 6 9 9 4 - 5 -2 0 8 9 8 D O D G E D A T O N A Immaculate, per- fect condition am/fm cassette. A v e ra g e retail $ 5 6 0 0 , asking $ 4 5 0 0 o b o M o v in g overseas, must sell Lanell, 8 3 6 - 6 3 6 t 4 - 2 2 - 5 B ________ ____________________ O t D S M O B IL E C U T L A S S Suprem e 19 83 8 9 , 0 0 0 Miles. V-6, A/C, PW . 4-D o o r, N e w Tires, N e w Battery, Running G o o d , 4 7 2 - 5 1 6 8 S I, 3 5 0 . 4 - 2 2 3 P _______ 8 4 N I S S A N S T A N Z A lo a d e d p o w e r e v ­ erything, sunroof, gre at condition, white, low miles, $ 3 9 0 0 O B O , 4 5 1 - 6 0 6 9 4- 2 4 -5 B 8 4 C H R Y S L E R Le B o ro n convertible S 2 1 0 0 O B O must sell 4 7 4 7819. 4 - 2 4 - 5B_____________________ 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 1973 M E R C E D E S 4 5 0 SE, o n e owner, qreen. tan Í lo“ Y cor $ 4 5 0 0 . 4 7 7 - 8 0 3 3 4-1 7 -8 B leather d e p e n d ab le ond 8 4 V W RABBIT, four door, W o lfsb u rg edition automatic, A/C, A M / F M cassett, 84K, S 2500. 4 3 1 -0 7 9 2 4 18-58 1981 T O Y O T A Cei.ro G T AC. A M / F M ■odio, new battery, tires. Runs great $ 1 5 0 0 n egotiable 4 4 7 - 8 2 4 7 4 - 2 3 - 5 B 70 — M otorcycles M O O N L IG H T M O T O R C Y C L E ” M otor cycle service and sa lva ge at discounted prices Towing available. B ’oken bikes bought 4 4 0 - 0 8 0 8 . 4 - 4 -2 0 B 80 — Bicycles A L P IN E M O U N T A I N bike Black with Shim ano G S 2 0 0 com pnents Index shift- ng. Ergo, gel seat Been ridden twice. O n e y ro ld $ 2 5 0 . 3 4 6 - 9 7 58-anytime. 12 2 -2 7 9 5 . 4-1 8-2 0 B TREK 3 0 0 racing bicycle 21 frame, 12 new, speed, dark g ra y metallic, $ 1 9 5 ,3 3 5 - 7 1 9 9 4 - 2 3 - 5 B like N O W P A Y IN G cash for selected used mountain bikes. C o th ro n 's Bike Shop, '5 0 4 Fortview 4 4 7 - 7 0 7 6 , John. 4 -2 4 - 20B 100 — Vehicles W anted ★ ★ W E S T C A M P U S ! Large 2 -2 b ig clo­ sets. cf, microwave, cp, $ 5 5 0 ! Pre-leas- ¡ng. Front P age Properties 4 8 0 8518. 4- 1 0 -20B -C REAL ESTATE SALES 120 — H o u se s IA R G E H O U S E near campus, suitable for co-op. students, or d a y c a re Smaller 2-1 on-site included, 4 4 7-1136, leave m es­ sage before 4pm, A y b a r 4 17-10B 130 — C o n d o s - Tow nh ouses WEST CAMPUS C0ND0S~ 2 BR, 2'h BA, 2 3 0 0 Leon V 2 0 4 a n d * 1 0 2 , very well maintained, quiet com plex, w alk to drag/cam pus. TC AD. 9 2 8 sq u are feet, leased thru M a y $ 6 2 , 9 0 0 a n d $ 5 9 ,9 5 0 . financing a va il­ able 2 8 1 5 Rio G ra n d e , 1 BR/1 B A with loft le ase d through M a y , security system, all the extras, $ 3 5 , 0 0 0 200 — Furniture- H o u se h o ld SM A L L S O F A a n d matching chair, n eu ­ tral color, g o o d condition, $100, 4 4 4 - 2 4 0 9 . 4-19-5B 220 — Com puters- Equipm ent 386/16 3 0 m g hd, IB M compatible, ke y­ b o a rd monitor, color monitor optional M icro so ft w arranty 4 5 8 - 4 7 6 7 , $1,700. M A C I N T O S H Im ag eW n ter II, excellent condition, com es with extra ribbons. $ 3 4 0 O B O . C all Patrick 8 3 5 4 3 4 3 . 4- 18-5B _ 230 — Photo- Cam eras C A M E R A S : BUY, sell, trade Rentals, re­ pairs. All makes, models. 3 0 minute p ro ­ cessing Precision C a m e ra 4 7 7 - 3 8 4 1 4- 2 3 3B __________________________________ 290 — Furniture- A p p l i a n c e Rental H ID E A B E D couch, kitchen table with leaf & 6 chairs, desk a n d chair, L azy B oy reclmer 4 7 4 - 8 8 9 6 4 - 2 4 - 5 B L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S IB M XT 10 M H z, H D lOmb, 1.44 m e g a n d 3 6 0 K drives, m onitor 2 4 0 0 b aud modem. Softw are word, lotus, Pascal $ 7 0 0 , Jeff 4 9 5 - 2 2 4 7 . 4-1 8-5B __________ G R E A T M O T O R C Y C L E , 1 9 7 8 H o n d a C B 7 5 0 F , Bell Helmet, Plates, Inspection included, classic styling, 'eliable, $ 6 0 0 . Call R a nd y at 3 2 0 - 0 7 9 4 ' 4 - I8 - 5 P S A N Y O 2 0 ' R E M O T E color tv Excellent $ 1 5 0 5 0 condition, l ’ j ye a rs old, b o u n d volume R e ad e r's Digest, 19 60 - 1978, S 5 0 , 4 7 8 - 9 0 8 7 . 4 -1 2-5B S M IT H C O R O N A M e m o ry C orrect 3 0 0 M e s se n g e r typewriter Full office fe a ­ tures U sed once like new, with carrying case, $100. 4 / 4 - 4 4 0 1 4 - 1 8 - 5 N C 1 9 7 6 CH EV ETT c h e ap to g o o d home, n eeds work, 1 owner, well-loved. $ 4 4 0 3 8 6 - 4 0 9 2 W , 2 8 0 -7 0 4 1 H 4 -1 8-5B C A R F O R sell 1 9 8 0 Ford Fairmont station w a g o n G o o d body, A M / F M , original owner, great utility vehicle. $ 9 5 0 call 9 2 6 - 4 4 4 5 4-1 8 -5 8 _____ Z -Z T O P tickets, great seats1 O n ly $ 2 3 each -up to six together Call D a n ny 4 6 9 - 5 7 3 7 . 4 -1 9-5B B IC Y C L E F O R sole: 2 7 inch m e n's 12 speed racing bike like new, askm q $1 7 5 4 4 8 - 0 2 8 7 4-1 9-5P G O L D C O U C H $ 4 0 , stereo stand $10, huge lo u ngin g pillow $10, Full size bed $2 0 . la w n m o w e r B & S 3.5 h p engine 4 12- 5B $ 5 0 4 5 2-61 61 1 9 8 3 K A W A S A K I G P Z 5 5 0 Perfect con- dition, 10,000 miles, $1000. N e w Sh oe i helmet. $110 S id , 4 7 8 - 9 9 / 4 4 -1 9 -5 P R E D C H A R V E L with neck through b od y $ 5 0 0 guitar a sking $ 3 5 0 . O B O . G reat condition. 4 6 9 5 7 2 9 4-2 2 -5 B . S E G A G E N E S IS with two controls, 8 gam es, including Joe M a d d e n 's football a n d Tommy L a so rdo s baseball G reat g ra p h ic s' $ 2 9 5 Tony. 45 4 -1 7 8 1 4-15- 5 6 _________ Call Joy, K V A , Inc 3 4 3 6 9 9 0 4 - 3 -2 0 B K M O V I N G : W oterbed, fully loaded, $125. Futon $ 7 5 Rocking chair $ 3 0 TV stand $ 2 0 , desk $3 0 . Call 4 4 3 -0 5 1 8 . 4 - 2 2 - 5 B F O R E C L O S U R E - BEST b arga in in west campus! R o b bins Place large 2-2. Seller financed with low d o w n paym ent Call M ichele Yssa 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 / 4 7 4 - 9 4 0 0 . 4 4 -2 0 B -C _______________ B U E N A V IS T A - O N E B L O C K T O U.T A S ­ SUMABLE F H A FIRST L IE N A S K IN G $ 7 1 ,5 0 0 .0 0 C A L I M IT C H 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 PM T 4-17-15B C W E S T R ID G E "P E N T H O U S E 2/2 FIRST T IM E O N M A R K E T IN M A S T E R BATH, IV C E IL IN G S , V IE W S, ALL A M E N IT IE S M IT C H P M T 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . 4-17-15B-C $ 8 5 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 C A LL J A C U Z Z I UT G R A D U A T E m oved- desperate to sell condo. N o m oney dow n, no closing costs, |ust qualify a n d assum e note (601)- 2 5 5 - 1 7 6 ° 4 2 3 4B I C A L L 471 -5 2 4 4 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD I M O V I N G O U T floral fabric sofa and loveseat, perfect conditions, both for only $.300. Call N atalie of O c ta via n o 3 2 6 - 3 713. 4 - 2 2 - 5 N C F O R S A L E hvm Futon, frame mattress, cushions, S W print, $ 2 0 0 call Jill 4 4 0 - 0 4 0 7 . 4 2 2 -5 P M O V I N G SALE. Tattles, tv, office desks, mattress, sleeping bag, shelf, lamp, c a l­ culator a n d other items. $ 5 - $ 8 0 3 2 6 - 4 7 9 0 . 4 - 2 3 - 5 8 B EA U T IFU L C O L O R TV, VC R, vacuum, a nsw e rin g machine, stereo, turn toble, Atari 2 6 0 0 & gam es, bike Price from $ 3 0 $150. 3 3 9 - 3 1 4 6 4 - 2 3 - 5 N C FULL SIZE couch, g o o d condition, $150, O B O B ra n d new d a y bed p aid $ 2 0 0 , asking $150, O B O 3 2 6 - 3 2 8 4 4 2 3 5B M I C R O W A V E O V E N , $3 5, C o b r a a n ­ sw ering machine, $ 4 0 ; Se ars g a s dryer, $5 0; Q u e e n size waterbed, $ 8 5 G reat condition! D a v e 4 7 3 - 8 3 8 6 4 2 3 5B L O N G H O R N W AN T A D S 1 9 " Z E N IT H color TV G o o d picture with cable $ 5 0 M atthew 4 7 2 - 5 8 3 9 . 4 -2 3 - 5 B __________________ FREE C A T to g o o d h om e Sp ad ed, de clawed, g o o d com panion, m ixed breed. Persian features 3 8 5 - 8 1 3 4 . Accessories, $5 .00. 4 - 2 3 - 5 B M A Z D A G L C 1981 A M / F M A C m anual 4 D 3 2 2 - 9 0 0 6 , Leave m e ssage $ 1 0 0 0 4 - 2 3 - 5 P _____ ZZ T O P U P T O 12 seats close togethei D e a d center floor within 6 ro w s of stage. $ 1 0 0 or best offer. 2 8 8 - 2 2 7 3 . 4 2 4 - 5 N C ____________ '8 4 M A Z D A TLC 115,000 miles mostly long-distance. Stereo, g o o d mpg, -tan dord, ideal for students $ 1 4 0 0 O B O 3 2 6 - 4 7 9 0 . 4 - 2 4 - 5 N C __________________ M A C I N T O S H W R IT E R II printer for sale. A skin g $2 1 5 or best offer. 4 7 8 - 2 0 9 7 4 -2 4 - 5 B ______ ________________________ 19 7 8 Y A M A H A S R 5 0 0 , perfect c o n d i­ tion, new tires, brakes, a n d shocks, 4 0 0 0 miles, $ 3 9 5 0 6 0 , 4 5 9 - 6 4 8 0 4 - 2 4 - 5 N C c a m e ra . C A N N O N 1014XL professional super 8 m o vie a n d a nim atio n editor/ view ers a n d extras $ 3 7 5 3 2 6 - 9 8 0 9 4- 2 4 - 5 B ________________ _________________ with m o to riz e d L a p d isso lv e G R E A T D E A L S!: stand, $9 5 ; two Schw inn Varsity IB M Selectnc III with ten speeds (man om an) $ 5 0 each, p ap a sa n choir $4 0, , 4 y new $7 0 . new Ridell ice skates _______________ 4 7 8 - 8 8 3 3 4 - 2 4 - 5 B G R E A T F O R G R A D U A T E ' Ex-executive selling eight Christian D io r suits, 4 2 r e g ­ ular. Retail, $ 6 00 . selling for $ 5 0 each. Call tod a y -4 4 2 - 5 0 2 6 . 4 - 2 4 - 5 B THE O R L A N D O E S C A P E round trip a ir­ fare for two to Florida o r A n yw h e re in U S for $ 3 0 0 3 3 5 - 0 3 6 1 4 - 2 4 - 5 B K E N W O O D K A 8 8 0 D 10 0 watt per c h a n n e l a n d k e n w o o d K X 6 6 0 H X tape deck $ 3 0 0 4 9 5 - 2 4 7 3 4 - 2 4 SB in te g ra te d a m p lifie r C U S T O M S P E A K E R b o x with o n e p air 15’ a n d o ne pair 8 ' Fosgate w oofers. Looks great, so u nd s great $ 3 5 0 . obo. 3 4 3 - 6 5 0 4 4 - 2 4 - 5 N C B R O W N Q U E E N size sleeper sofa. E x ­ cellent condition. Super comfortable. $ 4 0 0 , obo. 3 4 3 - 6 5 0 4 4 - 2 4 - 5 N C 345 — Misc. C A S H Buying Gold-Silver Broken Chains. Class Rings Unwanted Jewelry S e rv in g Stu d e n ts S in c e ’ 9 '6 Liberty Coins 45th & Guadalupe 452 3811 RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. ★ 5 BLOCKS WEST UT ★ Large, quiet, immaculately clean semi-efficiency. Kitchen, walk-in closet, laundry, ga s heat & cook­ ing, water/gas, furnished O n site manager. Fall $275-Sum - mer $235. RED O AK APARTMENTS 2104 S a n Gabriel 476-7916 ★ ★ 4 - 2 3 - 2 0 B - A W EST C A M P U S EFFICIENCIES " Y o u r O a s i s in the C h a o s o f W e s t C a m p u s ! " Quiet, friendly, and spacious. Gas, water, and cable paid, laundry room, security lighting, on W C shuttle, discounts on year leases. $225/m o $300/m o Summer Fall/Spring Baranca Square Apts. 910 W. 26th Call 478-1350 f o r a p p t 4-23-1 IB HOUSTON 2b01 Hemphill Park - 472-839b BRANDYWINE 2804 Whitis Ave. - 472-7049 DALLAS 2801 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 W 1 L S H IR E 301 W . 29th 472-7049 Great Summer Rates • f u lh Fu rn ish e d • L a u n d r y R o o m • C e n tra l A ir Heat • 2 B lo c k s F ro m U T L U X U R Y 2-14/4. H A R D W O O D S / c a r p e t , i.overed parking, w asher dryer pool, hot tub, $ 7 2 5 . 611 E 45th 3 4 5 - 6 5 9 9 9-18 14B-A fireplace S U M M E R SU B LET C o z y 2-1. N e w ly re­ shuttle modeled, furnished, on Enfield O n ly $ 3 90/m onth Coll 4 7 7 37 12 4 18 7P T R A N S P O R T A T I O N - " f l* G U I D E MOUNTAIN BIKE SALE bpeuiai purchase of 1990 M on­ goose Mountain Bikes, on sate for $40-5100 off teg pnces FUJI, GT Mountain bik.es starting at $269 Free U-lock with new bike pur­ chase 1 year free service SOUTH AUSTIN BICYCLES 2210 South 1st 444-0805 C U P T H IS H A N D Y G U ID E FOR FUTURE REFERENCE TO AUTO N EEDS Mountain Bikes 928*2810 N O W - 1991 GT BIKES • MANY 1990 MODELS REDUCED 100 00 <&) STUDENT DISCOUNTS BUCK’S BIKES V ISA W( Am E.«p Discovei Welcome $ 2 4 5 - $ 2 9 5 Fountain Terrace Apts. F u rn is h e d la r g e 1 B R a n d e fficie nc y ap a rtm e nts. W a l k in closets, C A / C H , c e ilin g fa ns, w a t e r a n d g a s p a id Fully c a rp e te d , w a lk in g d is ta n c e to UT. S p a c io u s c o m p le x w ith p o o l. In quiet, g o o d n e i g h b o r h o o d 6 1 0 W 3 0 t h 4 7 7 - 8 8 5 8 4 -U -2 0 B -E RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. L i u e o n e r a d i u e v N o t i n O n e SQUARE A p a r t m e n t s * NOW PRELEASING Sl’M/FALL * EFFICIENCIES 1 RJHISP5 * 5 BLKS FROM CAMPlfS * IT SHUTTLE STOP * DELCXE1 BEDROOMS * 2-1 ECONOMY STYLE * ON-SITE MANAGEMENT AML B I L L S P A I D 2212 S a n G a b rie l Street Austin. Texas 78705 (512) 474 7732 ( What You W on ’I S cen t Willow Creek HilC A partm ents.) Absolutely no p € S t S alloivedl Now Preleasing H u ge I & 2 Bedrooms O n P V Shuttle Route Free Cable T V 444-0010 C o m e S ee What We've Leased Today! W . H I L L S J L A N T A N A 1802 West (one blk. west of Rto Grande) PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER/FALL ★ Furnished ★ 45 Channel Cable Paid ★ Laundry Facilities ★ Pool & Fountain ★ W alk to Campus ★ Off West Campus Beat ★ W e Recycle Reduced Rates for Summer 4 7 8 - 7 5 1 9 - e é 459-331 Check out our Full Selection of Us< G h f * r k n u t SELL YOUR ITEM in th e "LONGHORN WANT ADS" 20 Words, 5 Days 0 0 OR WE WILL RUN THE AD AN ADDITIONAL 5 DAYS AT NO CHARGE! 'See Specifications N O W L E A SIN G Summer, Fall, Spring Reserve N o w and Secure Super Rates • W alk to UT 2-2,1-1 • C A /C H , Pool, Laundry facilities • Cable connections, dishwasher, disposal • G a s stove, furnace, water heater • Assigned Parking • Pleasant Atmsophere • Available week of M a y 20 and Aug. 20. 4 7 4 - 5 9 2 9 4-24-10B-K SA N D PIPER APTS. 2810 Rio G rande Large 2-2, pool, microwave, ceiling fans. Summer — $380 Fall — $560-$610 472-5722 4 -2 3 -2 0 B LONGHAVEN APTS. 916 W. 23rd Large 1-Vs, 2-1's. Call N o w — O n ly Few Leftl W est Cam pus 479-6105 ______________________ 4-23-20B N O W PRELEASING For Summer & Fall Discount for Summer & long term lease. St. M oritz Apts. 800 W. 25th 476-4060 4 -3 -2 0 8 • ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ i Hillside Apts. 1 & 2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean & Quiet All Utilities Paid 478-2819 514 Dawson Rd Just Off Barton Spnngs Rd. 4 -1 0 -2 08 -A A D O R A B L E H Y D E Pork Apt's. Efficiencies 1-Vs ond 2-2's. Furnished o r unfurnished. Clean, large rooms, som e with fireplaces. Covered parking, pool, on shuttle, cable paid. From $ 2 7 0 -5 0 0 Chim ney Sw eep Apts 105 W 38 h St. 459-1711, 453 - 4991. 4 8-20B-K. SP A C IO U S . Q U IET, 2-2's, UT 1 block, C A /C H , fons, walk-in closets, pool, dish washer. Red River/30th. $ 5 5 0 -$ 6 0 0 . 4 7 7 -3 3 8 8 4-10-20B-C ST T H O M A S 2-1's beautifully furnished summer & foil security, pool K A R E N - Cam pus Condos. 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 4-19-108 S U M M E R O N L Y one an d two bedroom. $ 3 0 0 -$ 7 0 0 K A R E N -C a m p u s Condo, 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 4-19-10B 2BR 2 ’ 2BTH, BI-LEVEI. 4~beds, 4 desks, dressers, nice living furniture, tv, security, pool, hot tub, much more ER shuttle, front door. Summer $210/person, four need­ ed 4 9 5 -3 9 3 5 A lso available in foil. 4- 22-5 8 G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T Quiet Enfield oreo 1 BR 1/2 block shuttle Ideal for sin­ gle student. 4 7 8 -9 3 4 3 days 4 7 8 -8 6 0 7 evenings/ weekends. 4-23-118 M O V I N G B A C K home, large 1-1 apt., 7 5 0 sq. ft., fully furnished, in large co m ­ plex, steps from IF and city bus, move M a y 15th, $150. Summer $250. 458 - 1 6 2 2 .4 -2 4 28 N E A R C A M P U S , 1-1 (62 0 Sq.Ft). W d T m closet, RR shuttle, gas/w ater paid. Sum ­ mer/Fall rote. 4 4 4 -0 6 8 7 , 474 -51 54 4- 2 4 -2 0 B ________________ __ LA R G E 1-1, C O V E R E D parking, oil bills paid. C lose to W C shuttle, 2 4 0 8 Leon. Leave message, 480-0142. 4-24-1P 370 — Unf. Apts. ONE MONTH FREE RENT Pre-leasing for Summer/Fall • low deposit • extra large apartments • prompt maintenance/very clean • NR shuttle bus • swimming pool • newly decorated • large 1 bedroom-750 sq. ft. • large 2-2 1025 sq. ft. BROOKHOLLOW APARTMENTS 1414 A re n a Dr. 4 4 5 -5 6 5 5 4 -2 2 -1 3B -A RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL A N N O U N C E M E N T S SERVICES 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 400 — C o n d o s- 400 —- C o n d os- 425 — Room s 435 — C o -o p s 510 — Entertainment- 750 — Typing T H E D a il y T e x a n Wednesday, April 24 1991 Page 11 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * Í ★ 24 FLATS APT. ★ Í * Enfietd and Wesl Lynn Huge 2 * * bed 1 Vi bath, $485 mo Great * Í tor roommates Poot. laundry J * room on site, UT shuttle B A SIC + + * C A B L E ' CALL J * 482-0398 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ONLY $100 For first months rent NO W Preleosinq for Fall!! — On SR and PV shuttle route — 2 Pools — 24-Hour Maintenance — Large efficiencies — 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. — 2 Laundry Facilities THE BRIARS 1835 Burton Dr. ★ Call Now 442-6789 ___________________________ 4-5 -20 8-E ^STAYING FOR THE SUMMER! Efficiencies & 1-Vs close to campus starting from $250! Cute properties, several amenities! 450-1058 4 -1 6 -2 08 -C Huge M s and 2-2s Gas, heat, water, and cable paid. On quiet street. Ceiling fans, vertical blinds and pool. From $375-$490 Preleasing for Summer and Fall Three Elms Apartments 400 W. 35th St. 453-1804 453-4991 4 -1 6 -2 06 K E F F IC IE N C IE S A N D O N E B E D R O O M S F R O M $ 2 5 0 A M E N IT IE S IN C L U D E : • Dishwasher • Disposal • Microwave (optional) e Individual Storage • Pool • Bor-B Q Pits e Laundry e IF Shuttle e Across from City Park e Resident Manager e Furnished and Unfurnished 108 PLACE APTS. 108 W . 45th 452-1419 385-2211 453-2771 CALL TODAY! __________________________ 4-1 9 -2 06 -C SOUTH SHUTTLE MOVE NOW! (OR JUNE O R A U G J TOTAL LUXURY! R O O M M A T E $480 2 BR LOADED! W / D Conn., Patio, Excellent pool orea, and trees. PROPERTIES ONE 2030 E. 0LT0RF #102A (Willow Court by Diamond Shamrock) 447-7368 4 -2 4 -2 0 B -A 2200 RIO GRANDE 3 Huge Bedrooms — perfect Hardwood floors, ceiling fans, uncommon foyer, coo! porch, big oak trees, track lighting, $1100. 4 6 9 - 0 4 6 9 4 -2 4 -2 0 6 ~ ART-DECO FLAT” Accented brick walls, free­ lots of standing fireplace, light, vaulted ceilings, huge patios, 1 & 2 bedrooms available starting at $350! Advantage Properties 443-3000 4 -2 4 -2 0 B -C ~C¡MARR0N CROSSING 9500 Jollyville Rd. Austin, TX 78759 Cimorron Crossing where perfect lo­ cation ond spocious apartments come together beautifully. 1 BR/I B A Fea­ tures large walk-in closets & living rooms w/fireploces Special $100 off first mos. rent. Coll 3 4 6 -4 8 5 3 4 15-206 BLACKSTONE APTS. 2910 Medical Arts St. ALL BILLS PAID! 2 bdrm.-2 bath Free cable! Now pre-leasing for summer & fall Call 474-9523 4-18-206-C L O C A T IO N ! L O C A T IO N ' A n d all bids paid near downtown/UT/CaprtoH O lder building renovated with targe room s ond plenty of ombtonc*. C o l owner at 476 - 9130 4-1-208-C_____________________ # 7 SHUTTLE: For mature students, smo# complex, lorge pool, tennis, cable se­ curity, on site m anager 1 ond 2 bed roo nV $ 24 5. Village Park Apartments. 8 3 6 -4 6 8 6 4 -4 -2 0 6 A ________________ 4-18-146 PR EL EASE Th e best!. Keystone ond Spruce apartments. 4 blocks UT six-sev­ en, M o n d a y Thurs 4 8 0 -09 76 . 4-4 -20 P Don't wait around to get the rent you want! Pre-lease now for summer and fall and lock your­ self in best location of Austin: Northwest Hills. Northcastle Apartments 345-0870 “ p e n t h o u s e a p t s 7 Tw o blocks west of campus, best new mgmt. 1-1's from $ 350. Incredibly lorge 2-Vs ond 2-2's starting from $575. Fur­ nished o r unfurnished, coble pota beoufi ful poof, foundry foolihes covered park­ ing. Security gates, remodeled 1801 Rio G rond e 480-0201 A lso som e beouhful 1 & 2 condominiums m W est Campus. 3 -2 9 -2 0 8 -C Peace and quiet in Hyde Park. Efficiencies. Gas, heat, hot water, cooking, and cable paid. Pool. 2 blocks from shuttle. Start­ ing as low as $ 2 50 sum­ mer. Preleasing Fall. Call 458-1985, 452-1121. 4-17-206 PROPERTIES O N E • Huge! 2-2 Roommate floorplon $450 (25% off summer) • Total Luxury! 2-2 1-1 $525 $340 447-7368 4 -1 0 -2 08 -A SOUTH SHUTTLE TRAVIS HEIGHTS/CREEKSIDE ► Huge 1-1 ► Roommate Plan 2-2 N e w interiors, gos-everythm g paid! Tennis a n d basketball PROPERTIES ON E 447-7368 4-1 0 -2 06 -A Great location. Exclusive, quiet, residential. 8 blocks from UT. 2 blocks from shuttle. Cable paid, exercise room, pool & laundry. 1 Bdr starting at $340. 2 Bdr at $495. Best manager and clien- tel. 711 W. 32 nd. Buckingham Sq. Apts. 453-4991 4-17-206 • LARGE APTS. ★ • Easy occess to U.T. — Bus #1 go e s directly to the d rag • Very lorge 1-1's, approx. 6 2 5 -7 5 0 sq ft. (of $ 2 8 0 -2 9 5 ) e Pool • Plenty of parking • Convenient to everything • O n M etro route • Laundry facilities • Low year round rotes Norwood Apts. 5606 N. Lamar 451-1917 ___________________________ 4 -4 -2 0 6 -C 1-1 5 BLOCKS EAST OF LAW SCHOOL Starting at $285 + E Small, quiet complex with pool, laundry 474-1240 452-1121 3 -2 8 -2 0 B -K $ 3 25 $ 4 5 0 LA RG E 2-2. Hyde Park, C A /C H , appli- ances, gleam ing hardwoods, near shut­ tle, $ 5 5 0 O w ner 479-6153, 4 7 9 -04 96 . N o Dogs. 4-18-14B-A 8EE HIVE Apt's. Hyde Pork efftciences. Nice, clean, som e with private patios. O n shuttle coble, ond hot water pota Storting at $270. 4 2 0 9 Avenue 6. 450 - 0217, 453-4991 4 -8 -2 0 B -K ___________ FO U R B E D R O O M - 1 bath, 1600 sq ft. walking distance to UT, 2811 Salod o Available 6-1, for one year lease $ 9 0 0 / mo 2 5 8 7817, 258 4131 4-10-208 LA R G E 2-21 N e w point, ceding fans, 4 22- huge c 12B-C closets. $450, 451-7964 W A L K T O UT! 2-story 1-1 with vaulted ceiling. A Í have ceiling fans, new paint ond corpet $ 3 5 0 451-7694 4-22-12B-C 2-1 H A R D W O O D floors, 4 blocks from campus, en ergy efficient, $ 5 5 0 + bills, available June 1 4 7 7 -4 5 3 9 4-23-4B W E S T C A M P U S . G reat location. Efficien­ $2 50-Summer rate. Fall cies & 1-1's. rates starting $ 2 9 5 4 4 4 -0 6 8 7 or 4 7 4 - 5154 4-2 4 20B______________________ 3 8 0 — Furn. Duplexes LARGE TWO BEDROOM W alk to campus, furnished, small, qui­ et complex, pool, laundry room. $ 3 7 0 summer, $ 4 8 0 for foil. CAVALIER APTS. 307 E. 31st 451-1917 320-0687 _____________________4 2 4 -2 0 B -K 390 — Unf. Duplexes N IC E 2 and 3 bedroom, near UT. AH a p ­ pliances, $ 42 5 to $ 6 9 5 for June 1. O w n e r 4 79 -61 53 ,47 9-0 49 6. 4-18-14B N IC E 2 and 3 bedroom, near UT. AH op- pitances, $ 4 2 5 to $ 69 5 for June 1. O w n e r 4 7 9 -6 1 5 3 ,4 7 9 -0 4 9 6 4-19-14B LA RG E 2-2, Hyde Park, C A /C H , oppii- ances, gleam ing hardwoods, near shut­ tle, $ 5 5 0 O w n er 479-6153, 4 7 9 -0 4 9 6 N o D o g s 4-19-14B-A contem porary duplex. C L A R K SV IL L E 3 B R /2 B A with W / D connections, ceiling fans, mini blinds, and deck O n quiet street. $9 0 0 /m o Coll 3 4 3 -6 9 9 0 K V A Inc. 4-19-5B-K_______________________ 1-1 All appliances, freshly pointed, a p ­ prox. 6 0 0 sq.ft. Available July 1. W a lk to campus, $ 3 7 5 H o pe Properties 453- 6 6 7 3 4 -2 2 -5 8 ______________________ LA R G E 3 -2 ap prox 1,423 sq.ft., new car­ pet, freshly painted Available July 1. W a lk to cam pus $1,100. H o pe Properties 4 5 3 -6 6 7 3 , 4 -2 2 -5 B __________________ 4 0 0 — C o n d o s- Tow nhouses N o w P r e - t e a s m g C o n d o s , Aoartrnentx. andHouseh _ C I T V PROPERTIES 478-6565 2717 Rio Grande GREAT LOCATION! 2604 S a la d o 1 -1 C o n d o f u l l y f u r n i s h e d e washer/dryer e microwove e ceiling fans 2 blocks from campus Call 477-6661 PRE-LEASING ★ WEST CAMPUS TIMBERWOODAPTS. Efficiencies: Fum ished/U nfum , Lofts, Fireplaces, Pool, Laundry, H uge Trees, W a lk to Campus, 1000 W . 26th St. $235-285— Summer; $290-345— Foil 478-4886 ★ NO FEES ★ ★ ★ Talisman -1501 Barton Spgs., 3-3, $1150 ★ 1910 Robbins Place, furn. 1-1, $ 5 5 0 h Pecontree - 2107 Rio G rande, 1-1, fum., $ 4 2 5 ★ Palmetto - 2110 Rio G rande, 1-1, 4 -2 -2 0 B -A $ 4 2 5 SUPER RATES! Summer/Fall/Spring ★ O rongetree - $ 6 5 0 ★ Croix 2-2 fum. $ 9 25 ★ 2 5 2 9 Swisher, $ 8 0 0 2 - 2 , 1 - 1 Spacious, CA/CH, cable, large windows, pool, laundry facilities, security gates. 474-5929 ★ 1908 San Antonio, fum. 2 2, $ 9 5 0 ★ 2210 Peori, 206, R $ 4 25 ★ 1601 Faro - Cham bord 1-1, $ 4 25 ★ Pecontree, 1-1, w/loft furn , $ 4 5 0 4-23-11B-K ★ 1601 Faro, 1-1, 2 story. Ready now! X . . i r A l C O N D O m . r-v & Apartments Pre-leasing N O W ! Sum m er, F o H /S p n n g Greg Campbell Please Past Residents, Referrols, & Appointments Only Call 476-2673 P.M.T. _____________________________ 4-1-206 LUXURY C O N D O S MERIDA 26th and San Gabriel. Large 2 and 3 bedroom condos. G a ­ rage parking. 2 bedrooms from $750 and up. Summer rates from $450. 339-1341 4-24-106 ★ LOFT ★ Spiral staircase, beautiful courtyards, microwave, bal­ conies, city views, on shuttle, 1 & 2 bedrooms available, unit starting $310. Advan­ tage Properties 443-3000. ______________ 4 -3 -2 0 6 -C C E N T E N N IA L -L A R G E 2/2 F U R N ISH E D ALL A M E N IT IE S W /D . M IC R O , FANS, C O V E R E D P A R K IN G ETC. S1 2 0 0 /M O . M IT C H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 PMT. 3 -2 9 2 0B -C L E N O X LA RG E 2/2 F U R N IS H E D ALL A M E N IT IE S. W / D M IC R O , FA NS, C O V ­ ERED P A R K IN G ETC S1200 0 0 / M O M IT C H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 P M T 3 -2 9 -2 06 -C 2/2 F U R N IS H E D ALL ST T H O M A S A M E N IT IE S: W /D , M IC R O . FA NS, C O V E R E D P A R K IN G ETC $1200 00/ M O M IT C H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 P M T 3 -2 9 20B-C______________________________ R O B B IN S P LA C E -B IG ,B IG .B IG 2/2 A IL A M E N IT IE S: W /D , M IC R O . FANS, C O V E R E D P A R K IN G ETC. $1200.00/ M O M IT C H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 PMT. 3 -2 9 -2 06 - C____________________ C O N D O IF shuttle 4401 Spe edw ay 1BR/ loft, 17 ft. vaulted ceiling. G as, heat/w a­ ter paid. Pnvate balcony storoge Also summer pre-leasing. 451-4656 4-1- 20B-C _______________________________ ST. T H O M A S , Centennial, Lenox, 2-2 starting at $1,100 All amenities, fire­ place, covered parking, microwave, W / D, g a te -v e ry prestigious. Terri, PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 4-3 -20 B-E S U N C H A S E H U G E 2-2, fireploce, mi- crowave, W /D , covered parking, gate. Starting at $700.Terri, P M T 4 76 -2 6 7 3 . 4 -3 -2 0 8 -C ___________________________ DELPHI- G O R G E O U S 2-2 in W est C a m ­ pus for $800! Fireplace, ceiling fan, mi­ crowave, gate, covered porkinq. Coll today Tern, PM T 4 7 6 -26 73 . 4 -3 -20 6- C___________________________________ TERRIFIC 2-2 C O N D O located near Riv­ erside. Large floorplon 1705 Crossing Place. Call for unit ond appointment. $ 4 3 5 O n shuttle. Immediate occupancy, 8 35 -26 52 . 4 -5 -20B CR O IX ; W E ST Cam pus 1-1 parking space, appliances, + W /D , microwave, pool, $ 5 0 0 Call collect (817)332-8846 d a y ­ time. 4-8-15B-C THREE LEVEL 2-2 Vj furnished! Two-cor garage, available June 1, $ 9 5 0 Ask for Keith 476-1111.4-11-19B-C_____________ THREE LEVEL 1-lVj 2-cor gorage, pool, hot tub, ovoilaEile June 1, $750. Ask for Keith 476-1111. 4-11-19B-C L E N N O X FALL pre-lea sx-ta 2-2, all amenities, security, covered parking, pool $950/m onth 2 8 2 -8 7 4 8 4-12-106 FO R LEASE Sept. 1, condo fully furnished, system on. 2-2 wosher/dryer, security 4 4 2 -8 4 2 0 after 5 00pm, W ickersham Ln. 4 4 2 -8 4 2 0 4-17-108________________ C L O S E T O cam pus on shuttle! 1 Bdrm for rent. $ 3 5 0 pre-lease for summer ond fall. Call M a r y Tolbot Co. 4 80 -8 8 0 0 . 4- 17-15B-C_________________________ P R E ST IG IO U S ST. T H O M A S 2-1's be gin ­ ning at $ 6 5 0 for summer pre-lease, available for fall Coll M a ry Talbot Co. 4 8 0 -8 8 0 0 4-17-15B-C________________ C E N T E N N IA L , CRO IX, Delphi, Sunchóse ond morel 2-2's pre-ieasing for summer ond fait beginning $400-1200 Coil M a ry Tolbot C o 4 80 -88 00 . 4-17-15B-C O R A N G E T R E E 2-2 1/2 townhomes be­ ginning at $1200. N e w carpet Call M o ry Tolbot Co. 4 8 0 -8 8 0 0 4-17-15B-C S A N T A FE STYLE 2 /2-P O O L , HOT-TUB, SECURITY. SKYLIGH TS, W /D , M IC R O S 8 0 0 0 0 / M O A V A ILA B LE 6/1 ETC. M IT C H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 PMT 4-17-15B-C C R O IX -F U R N IS H E D 1/1 A V A ILA B LE 6/1. ALL A M E N IT IE S IN C L U D IN G W /D , M IC R O , SECURITY, S 5 2 5 .0 0 /M O . CALL M IT C H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 PMT 4-17-15B-C Townhouses Tow nhouses S # u m M Q W E D G E W O O O 2/2 O N THE P O O L AVA ILABLE 6/1 S U M M E R $ 5 0 0 00/ f a u / S P R i n g $900 0 0 / m o CA LL M IT C H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 PMT 4-17-156 C L A RG E C L E A N carpeted room Private entrance/baflvrefngerator N o kitchen Quiet individua! N o pets 38th Stree' B.lls pata 453 5417 3 29 2 06-A S U M M E R SUBLET great furnished room. Hyde Park A C N onsm oking groduo*e student preferred $ 2 0 0 Roncfy 320- 0 7 9 4 4-22 5B SH O R T W A Lk UT Quiet, non-smoking, peHess Shared kitchen. For private bam. ABP $275 495 9 34 6 Shored b»s, bath $180 Co» 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 4-2 4 -2 0B -E R O O M S ! W E ST compus. privóle both, targe house furnished A C hardw ood floors, ABP' Coll 4 76 3974 C he ap' 4 24 5P 430 — Roo m -B oard FREE R O O M and board in exchange for housekeeping and help with children Non-sm oker with experience and refer­ ences. Must hove dependable car CaH on d leave message 343-1423 4-19-56 435 — Co-ops This Summer You Deserve A Break! At Last, Free Lh 1 Contracts month, or sum me: Fully furnished Air-cond i tine e d All bills j laid 19 meals/fweek Swimming bool Next to campus From 8299/mo. Move in >íáv 15 Tickets TICKETS 21 Top, Q u e e n s Ryche, S an - di Patt¡ G reate r Tuna and Chris Isaak, S a n A ntonio Spurs, UT Sports (buy/sell all events). 4 7 8 - 9 9 9 9 ____________________________ 4-2 3 206 520 — P e rson als M A R R IE D D O C T O R loves tvs wife bur seeks sensual telephone se* with young female Dtscrefion assured Write M.D., P O Drawer P-l, Austin Te *as 78713- 890 4 4 -1 6 -9 P ________ ______ M ? 9 511". 170L8S physicist newcomer seeks the nght female for friendship and more M oil response to P O B o x D-3, A ustin TX 78713 4 2 4 .S B____________ 530 — Travel Transportation ' ' FLY FOR LESS AS A COURIER! Major Airline Houston to Tokyo— S37S rountfnp pius first time registration tee SS0 Houston to Lonctan roundtrip,1325 CALL NOW VOYAGER \^212-431-1616 713-684-605 ^ N E E D R ID E R S T O G U A T E M A L A mid June, $ 55.00 one way Study Spanish in Quetzalten a n g o . (505) 242-3194 4-18- 11B__________________________________ IN EUROPE- F R O M * $388 S U M M E R each way on discounted scheduled air lines to Europe from Austin Call (800) 325 2222 4 -1 9 -4 P __________________ 540 — Lost & Found G O L D N E C K L A C E found on IBJ lawn Call and taentib at 495 2<737 4-22- 3 N C _____________ M A L E browc iang eared F O U N D hound N o ta g s collar Found in Shoal creek area 8 3 7 -5 5 3 9 /wk 4 5 8 -2 4 4 3 / hm 4 -2 6 -3 N C 560— Public Notice f f l C ^ l l ' * H o m e y o l d e r h o u a e a « 2 -6 btockaU T «Great m ea la « A l l M li a • F r ie n d s • F u n ! Doubles $260-275 (summer) $299-309 (fall) Singles $295-329 (summer) $335-389 (fall) •a! S J S 3 \iv jta a i s IC C C O -O PS 476-1957 510 W. 23rd 440 — Room m ates RO O M M ATE SERVICE Will help you find a compat- ible roommate, or female. Call Sam. M a le 280-7118 _________________________ 4-17-20B-C M A L E R O O M M A T E needed norvimoker Furnished condo in west campus area $ 3 0 0 + share bills M ust like pets. Cofl 4 6 9 -9 7 5 6 4-18-5P_________________ LIBERAL M A LE , junior, dependable e asy-go ing seeks sam e to share 2B/2B apartment in South Austin $232.50/m c half bills Will 3 2 6 -21 53 4-19 5P A-DATE-TONIGHT. Hear talking person­ als from locol women and men who (Names & would Phone inlcuded) 1-900-346- 3377 $1 95 minute 3 -27-20P like to meet you bers ★ M A LE N O N S M O K E R for 2BR/2BTH on CP shuttle $ 2 3 0 - 1/2 bills 451-0796 4 - 1 9 - 5 B _______________________ TA IK LIVE Beaufifu' women waiting to talk to you' $2 49/ minute, ten minute mimmun 3-27 20P -900-329-0005 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D nonsm oking female to share a 3-3. Luxuriously furnished Talisman condo neor Zilker Park Sum m er'Fall/Spnng 474 -10 02 4- 22-56. A-D A TE-T O N IG H T Hear talking person­ als from locol women and men wbo (Names & would inlcuded: 1-90C 346 Phone numbers 337 7 $ 1 9 5 minute 4-24-20P like *o meet you ST T H O M A S -F U R N IS H E D 2/1 W IT H S f CURITY, C O V E R E D P A R K IN G , W /D , M IC R O ETC S 8 0 0 / M O CALL M I T O 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 PMT 4 17-15B-C ______ W E ST R ID G E 2/2 LAST O N E A VA ILAB LE 6/1 A l l A M E N IT IE S I N C L U D IN G W /D , M IC R O , ETC AVA ILABLE 6/1 7 0 0 0 0 M iT C H 4 76-2 67 3 PMT 4 17-156 C O R A N G E TREE-LARG E 1/1 P O O L SIDE VAU LTED C E ILIN G , W /D . 2 S E C U R E D C O V E R E D V650 0 0 / M O C A L I M IT C H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 PM T 4 17 15B C___________________________________ P A R K IN G AVA ILABLE June 30th o nd Guad alup e 1- 1, appliances, laundry room, summer $275/foH $340. 345-6518 4-18-106 2-2 S A V A N N A H Condo, 915 W 2 2 n d ’? St. pi San Gabriel) Summer/foH leasing Tino 447-5197.4 18-206 PRE LEASE S U M M E R O N IY - C E N T E N - NIAL, O R A N G E TREE, C R O IX 3 2, 2-2, 1-1 ST A R T IN G F R O M $ 3 5 0 $ 80 0 M IT C H 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 4 18-148-C C R O IX S U M M E R large 1-1 fu||y furnished or unfurnished, security, d e a n pool $ 4 7 5 negotiable! Juk 476-4475. 4-19- 5P____________________________ UT G R A D U A T E moved- desperate to seH co ndo N o m oney down, no closing costs, just qualify ond assume note (601)- 255 1769 4 -2 3 -4 6 N O R T H W E S T HILLS. Large one bed room, 2nd floor N ice balcony W alk to shopping, UT shuttle $ 3 5 0 6910 Hart, (M a la g a ) Private Properties, 467-7182, 3 43 -0 9 9 0 . 4-23-106_________ O R A N G E T R E E C O N D O ! Beoutiful west cam pus 2 -2 ’/5, 2-dory, furnished, cov ered parking, fireploce, W /D , etc Coll James. 4 7 4 -97 44 . 4 -2 3 -4 B -C 2 9 0 7 PEARL ST. Large 2 -2 co ndos with fireplace, ceiling fons, microwave, and w/d. Pre-lease for Foil. $75Q /m o Dis­ counts for 12 month lease, or Summer only rentals. 328-6137. (Broker). 4-23- 206_________________________________ F U R N IS H E D 1 bedroom co ndo on cam ­ pus $575/m o. Available 6*1. CaH VIP 8 3 5 -2 6 4 2 4-23-106_________________ W EST U N IV ERSIT Y Place, 8 0 8 W . 29th St. 2BR-2BTH, covered parking, swim­ ming pool. From $800. 339-1341. 4-24- 106_________________________________ THREE B L O C K S from campus O n e b e d­ r o o m , se cu rity , microwave, W /D , $ 5 0 0 /m o summer 3 2 0 -0 8 3 6 4-24-5B __________________ fu r n ish e d apt, 2 -2 C A /C H , W /D , fireplace, available M a y 21 5107 leralynn, $ 7 0 0 3 23 - 9 2 6 2 4-24-3B 410 — Furn. H ouses TRA VIS H E IG H T S sublet summer/fall 3 BR - 2 B A C A /C H , decks, trees, Steinway gran d piano. $850. 441-1973. 4-18-58 420 — Unf. Houses LUXURY WEST CAMPUS Homes 6-7-8 bedrm, modern, high efficiency, CA/CH, high ceilings, stain glass, yards, decks, hardwoods & carpets. Ceiling fans, W /D connections. M i­ crowave, etc. Walk to UT/shut- He. 482-8680. 4 -8 -2 0 6 g in g e r b r e a d ” Stately Hemphill Park home available for fall Pre-lease. 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, alcove study, hardwood floors, 2 porches, CA/CH, ceiling fans, fenced yard w/huge trees. 474- 0606 or 272-5783. Ask for Miss Lorie. ___________________________4 8 -2 0 B -A » H O U S E S PLU S* $ 6 0 0 -$ 2 0 0 0 UT, Hyde Pork, Tarrytown, West Lake Cofl ___ Bob, 4 7 8 -8 8 3 7 Broker 4-11-206 VERY U N IQ U E 3-2 house in Hyde Park! Call M o ry Talbot Co. 480 -88 00 . 4-17- 15B-C_______________________________ CUTE H O U S E 2-1 detached g o rage fenced yord, ready to move in $ 5 2 5 / mo 307 W 45th 4 7 3 -8 8 6 6 4 -2 2 -5 B T W O STO RY 3BR. A block from campus. Yord, patio, quiet neighborhood, w/d, fons, $1200, 476-7614 4-23-56 477-LIVE (24 H O U R S) O ld fashioned charm of 1 to 2 bedroom homes hard­ wood, gas, appliances. $ 25 0 -$ 6 0 0 . 4- 2 4 -2 0 8 _____________________________ 2-1, 1'/? block from low school, $ 70 0 C A /C H , stove, refrigerator W / D con­ nection A u g 15th, 477-1513. 4-24-5B 425 — Room s N E A R UT law school, on RR shuttle, lorge room. C A /C H , shore baths, $22 5 ABP 3310 Red River 4 7 6 -3 6 3 4 4-10-20B-A CO LLEG E H O U SE S CO -O PS C a ll for a free c o lo r bro c h u re 4 7 6 - 5 6 7 8 O ffic e : 1906 R e a d S t SH O RT W A LK UT Quiet non-sm ck- g, petiess. Shared kitchen. For private bath, A B P $27 5 495 -93 46 Shared bills, batf $180 Coll 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 .4 -2 4 -2 0 B -E ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ » U SE ! T E X A N ; C LA S- i SIFIED S 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 $20 0 M A L E R O O M M A T E nonsmoker 2BR - 1? electric Close PV 2Bth shuttle Seek mature, dependable stu- dent. 3 89-2533 4-23 3P R O O M M A T E N E E D E D nonsmoking, female for summer only Have furnished 2 2 apt Cali Lisa 873-9271 M W F after 3pm. 4-23-7P R O O M M A T E needed summer only 3BR 2 BA house one room available CaH for details 3 8 5 -0 5 6 6 4-23-9P R O O M M A T E N E E D E D West campus summer $175/m o bills. 5 blocks campus, sta t Junel, 2BD- 2BTH 474-9912 4 -2 4 -3 8 Summer/Foil - C O N V E N IE N T S 19 0 Sh^retí~bHK~Ñ rs~ sm oking graduate student preferred ER shuttle hardw ood floors, high ceilings, etc 4 7 2 -0 1 8 8 .4 -5-3P________________ SHO RT W A L K U T Quiet non-smoking, petless Shared kitchen For pnvate bath. ABP $27 5 4 9 5 -9 3 4 6 Shared bills, both S 180 Coll 472 5 6 4 6 4 -2 4 -2QB E N E A R C A M P U S Share a beautiful house with mature graduate students $105 * Utilities Available M a y 1st, 4 7 7 -4 0 4 8 4 24-5P 490 — W anted to Rent Lease R E SP O N SIB L E TH IRD yeor taw student w ll rent your furnished apt. this summer References 915 694 -03 66 . 4 ’ 7-206 C H R IS T IA N organization S T U D E N T ooking for targe house close to Univer­ sity Call 3 2 2 -0 4 0 4 4 ¡8 uB-A B U Y IT ! Smart Shoppers Read) t h e T e x a n W ant-Ads! If YOU CAN MAKE IT THROUGH THE MIDSEMESTER, POST-SPRING BREAK CRUNCH, O N E B E D R O O M at quiet complex close to shuttle in Hyde Park! Pnvate deck, laundry, covered parking 452-4414. 4- 10-206-C____________________________ S P A C IO U S , QUIET, 2-2's, UT 1 block, C A /C H , fans, walk-in closets, pool, dish washer Red River/30th. $ 55 0-$ 60 0. 477 -3 3 8 8 . 4-1 0 -2 0B -C______________ $100 M O V E - IN ! Sagebrush an d Stafford House. Large 1 & 2 bedroom - floor- pfans available. Close to UT. 478 -09 92 . 4-11-20B-A__________________________ SM A L L 1-1 summer $235, foil $265! front of N e a r UT campus, bus stops in complex. Pool an d on-site maintenance 4 7 7 -2 2 9 2 4-11-19B-C________________ E F F IC IE N C IE S 915 W 21st $275. 210 W . 38th $ 2 2 5 4 6 7 - 0 9 7 3 . 4-17-8B________ T^BEAUTIFUL R E M O D E L E D * * Large floor plans, pool, weight room, efficien cy/1-1 from $300. 2 Bdrm from $520. Wotk/shuttle F R O N T P A G E PROPER- TIES 4 8 0 8 51 8.4-17-5B-C____________ 2-1 ceiling fons, appliances, go s ond wa ter poid $ 3 8 5 Central location. 453 - 5 4 3 4 4-18-56_______________________ S A P C IO U S 1 bedroom apt Vouhed ceil­ ings, ceiling fons. fenced-m yord ond very cozy 3410 Duval St. Fourplex C, all bills paid. H o ppy H om es Leasing. 458- 2 5 2 5 . 4 - 1 8 - 5 B __________________ ALL BILLS paid! O n e lorge room efficien­ cy with appliances an d full both N eo r engineering school, $ 2 2 5 9 26 -7 2 4 3 . 4- 18-14B-C____________________________ LA RG E 2-1's an d 1-1's! N ew ly remodeled, free cable, UT shuttle, swimming pool, small, quiet complex. 4 59 -9 9 7 4 . 4-22- 7B-C________________________________ A V A ILA B LE JULY, Sept. 1 1-1 $235, 2-1 $235, one block bus, O n e M ile Sh a d ­ o w 2 50-1325 4-22-106 $ 4 4 5 Summer Leases Available Call Isaac at HARRIS0N-PEARS0N 472-6201 4-5-206-C SUMMER A N D FALL PRE-LEASING ★ 1910 Robbins Place, 2-2, ★ 3000 Guadalupe Place, 1- ★ 2107 Rio Grande, 1-1, $800. 1,1340. $400. ★ 3001 Cedar, 2H-2. $1,000. ★ Greenwood Towers, 2-2, ABP, $850. ★ Westgate Tower, 1-1, $750. Summer Discounts Available Call Tom H A RR ISO N -PEA R SO N 472-6201 ____________________________ 4-15-208 FANTASTIC 2-2 C O N D O Across from campus, covered parking, security gate, fire­ place, ceiling fans, W/D, mi­ crowave, balcony, walk-in closets, pool & spa. With or without bedroom furniture, summer $650, fall $950. Call 440-7792 _____________________________4 -2 3 -4 8 WANT THE BEST CONDO? West Campus, North Cam­ pus, we do it all. Call: Bo French Campus Condos, 474-4800 4 -2 4 -2 0 6 ★ ★ BARGAIN HUNTERS ★ Beautiful, large 1-1, $ 3 25 ★ Beautiful 2 bdrms. from $ 4 7 5 ★ Furnished con d os - all amenities ★ 1-1 $ 3 8 0 , 2 -2 starhrtgs $ 6 5 0 ★ Centennial fum. - super unit ★ N e w everything, 2 BR $ 5 2 0 ★ M ore, more, more, a n d more! RENTAL 480 — Sto ra ge Space SUM MER STO RA GE * 1 00 S P E C I A L * U - L o c k - l t • U - K e e p - t h e - K e y 10 x 20’s Rates: • 51 “ p a y s 2 months rent •101“ pays 3 months rent No Deposit on E. B e n W h ite Blvd. C a l l 4 4 3 - 5 8 5 8 C O N G R E SS M IN I STO RAGE 4 4 3 - 1 1 0 0 • SECURE STORAGE AT AFFORDABLE PRICES • FULL-TIME ON-SITE RESIDENT MGR. • 5x10s 10xl0s , , S C 00 w r r 5 O F F F,RST M O N T H ’S R E N T With T h is Ad. 451 S S . CO N G RESS Call Now! FRONT PAGE PROPERTIES 480-8518 ★ 4-4-20B-C i ★ I WEST CAMPUS BARGAINS! • Preleasing Orongetree, St Thomas, Centennial, O ld Mom . $1100 e Robbm 's Place, Croix, $550-$1100 e Seton Avenue, N ueces Ploce, 1-1 from $550. Call M ichel Esa. Realtor, PMT 476-2673,474-9400 4-8 2 0 6 C THEN YOU DESERVE AN cASKHOUSING SEARCH. You got back from Spring B reak — a nice week away from ... the sem ester — only to be thrown into the final whirlwind. You have more books and articles to read, papers to write, tests to tak e than you possibly can, but TAKE A LOOK AT THE APRIL 26TH HOUSING GUIDE. If you still need shelter for the sum m er or the coming fall, this will slip you into the right deal without upsetting ... the whirlwind. The Daily Texan Housing Guide the a n sw e r to the h ou sin g question. Watch for it April 26th. LONGHORN COPIES • R e s u m e s • Theses • Te*m Papers • Word Processing • Binding • t ase r Ftonttng 2518 Guadalupe 4 7 6 - 4 4 9 8 P D Q Word Processing Papers $1.50 a page • Spell Check • Laser Printing • 3 months storage • 5 minutes from UT Full range of services available Call 453-4568 for details. 4-10-206 A PAPERS RESUMES RUSH JOBS D o t 's 2 0 0 2 - A u u d a i u p e 4 7 2 - 5 3 5 3 Speedway 7YPING D O B IÉ M A L L Laser Printing/Spell check A pplications/Resum es Term /Research Papers Application Form s A udio Transcription 469-5653 ★ RUSH OK! LASER PRINTER FAST! Better W ord Processing 447-5011 W O O D S TYPING and word processing 220 0 Guadalupe, when you want it done nght 4 72 -6302 3-28-20B FAST ACCURATE word processing Re ports, manusenpts. resume' graphics Excellent spetimg/grammar $1 4 5/page Corvdy 452-4509, pager 483 2691 4 ’-20B-D Z I V L E Y TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS 27th & Guadalupe 472-3210 472-7677 pE R S O N A l SERVICE with Communique W ord p'Ocessmg Laser printed notce of typeface $ 2/page, pick-up/deiwery available! 8 3 6 -0 6 9 7 4-17-15B-C Z I V L E Y APPLICATIONS RESUMES 27th & Guadalupe 472-3210 472-7677 W O R D P R O C E S S IN G Professional ex penenced fyP'st Graduate and under graduate work S 1 50. pg North Borpo raTuMos 453-5124 4-18-20B Z IV L E Y WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING 27th & Guadalupe 472-3210 472-7677 LETTER PERFECT service 3 2 0 0 Red River #401 Call 469-9663. paper-, eports resumes, and processing. 4-24-5B 760 — Misc. Services W anted: Art fair assistant this weekend. Leave Friday afternoon, Houston. H elp me set up, take d o w n booth, a n d spell me. I provide ride, hotel room, learning expe ri­ ence. $20. Female only. S u ­ san. 441-0061. _ 4 -23-26 Thesis hardbound to U.T. specifications or your color. Title-author stamped on spine $19 each including tax and postage. O ne week delivery. Library Binding Com pany 2 900 Frankim, W aco, TX 76710.1-800-792-3352. CALL 471-5244 TO P L A C E A CLASSIFIED A D TALK LIVE. Beoutita women waiting to tofk to you! 1-9 00 -32 9 -0 00 5 $2.49/ minute, ten minute mmimun. 4-24-20P ED U C A T IO N A L 580 — M usical Instruction GUITAR lE S S O N S R & B Rock ozz, country 10 years teaching experience Andy Buffington. 452 6181 4-4-20B-A 590 — Tutoring A FFORDABLE PRO F E SSIO N A L intensive tutoring- all subtect writing assignments English, History, Literature. Government, Philosophy, Anthropology 4 9 5 -9 3 3 3 4-3-206______________________ _ T U T O R IN G , T R A N S L A T IO N t e a c h in g S P A N IS H Tutor, M A . B A experience N eg otia b le 258-3198 or after 6 258-3169 4-18-5B rates Boon S p a n is h SERVICES 650 — M o v in g - H au lin g SPECIAL R.ATES on moving and storage- Local* Statewide*Woridwtae ACCENT M O V IN G & ST O RA G E 447 -0 2 0 2 4-8- 2 OP_________________________________ ABLE-BO DIED movers households offic es. pianos. neavy equipment pocking, insured, local-long distance Call TJ 512 441-2622 4-16 206__________________ 750 — Typing Z I V L E Y The Complete Prohssm ol Typing Service b lo c k b u s t e r 2 IVLEV’S 277H ST BIIT 2707 Hemphill Park 472-3210 472-7677 N EED A paper or resume typed2 16 y e a rs e xp e rien ce . P r o o f r e a d in g available quic» turnaround 8 3 6 -6 7 8 7 4 4 208________ ______________ Y O word processing $1 50 pag service work occepted rd processing $1 50 page Eull- Spelling guaranteed Off hours :epted 459 804/ 4 ’*2-156 ASA P W ord Processing Papers. Reports, Theses completed with care and atten­ tion $1.85- Last mmute o k 451-4885 4 17-20P E M P L O Y M E N T 800 — G e n e ra l Help W anted MASSIVE INCOME Full T im e/P art Tim e Extraordinary New Sh e e r Product. 100 Million Pair of Panty H o se Are Being Sold per W eek and They all Run ... till N O W * TIMING IS THE KEY TO WEALTH You could be rich by getting in on the front. DISTRIBUTORS WANTED Call Today 800*771*5690 24 hr recorded message N A T I O N A L TFLEk COMMUNICATIONS LONG DISTANCE TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPANY IS INTERVIEWING FOR PROFESSIONAL PART-TIME MARKETING/SURVEY REPS. W e o f f e r : • Hourly plus commissions • Paid holidays free long distance • Competitive product offerings • Strong marketing support provided Plan yout s c h e d u le to work with our s c h e d u le Shifts a re 8 30 a m 12 30 p m o; 1 00 p m 5 p m (M-F) N o ntghfs or w e e k e n d s M u st p o s s e s s g o o d c o m m u n ic a t io n skills Wtfl train bright, enthusiastic in d iv id u a ls Mkt Fin pre Law m ajors a re e n c o u r a g e d to a p p ly A d v a n c e m e n t opp ortunities CALL 4 5 3 -5 0 0 0 b*tw^n 8:30-4:30 p.m. Page 14 Wednesday, April 24, 1991 TH E D A ILY TEXAN Bears pick up Giles after draft skips him Jaime Aron Daily Texan Staff LONGHORNS 31 O s c a r G ile s had a tough day M o n d a y . H e w as teased by a phone call from the A tlanta Fal­ cons d u rin g the ro u nd of sixth the draft but they d id n 't call back until after all 12 roun ds w ere com ­ pleted and 334 players had been taken. Giles was not am ong them . DRAFT Later in the evening, his p hone rang m uch m ore often. Seven team s called to invite him to their free agent cam ps allow ing Giles the choice of his team s. After scrutiniz­ ing each team s' depth chart and the players each drafted, he decided on the Chicago Bears. "I cou ld n 't explain it," Giles said about his exclusion from the draft. "All I w anted is an op po rtunity to show my stuff. I knew it w ould be a situation w here a team has to take a chance on me. 1 w ant to show the rest of the NFL w hat they m issed." Giles said the Bears, w ho selected form er Longhorn Stan Thom as with their first pick of the draft, plan to use him as an outside rushing end sim ilar to a linebacker. A lthough he played defensive en d at Texas, Giles was told that at 6-foot-l, 245 po u n d s he was too small to rem ain there “It worked out pretty good. In a way, maybe [not getting drafted] was a good omen.” — Oscar Giles and w ould have to m ove to line­ backer. H e prep ared for the draft by w orking out as a linebacker. M any tho ugh, w ere u n aw are of team s, that fact an d m ight have been hesi­ tant to draft him as a defensive end. "The Bears like my versatility," he said. "T hey w ere first looking at me as a defensive end but w hen 1 told them I can also play linebacker they said that was a plus. If they had know n that sooner, 1 m ight have been picked up higher." If Giles m akes the team , he could be team m ates w ith form er Long­ horns Stan Thom as — C hicago's first draft pick — and Steve McMi- chael. The Bears offered Giles a contract he said w as com parable to th at of a ninth or 10th roun d selection. He signed a tw o-year, no o p tio n deal w orth $75,000 the first year, plus in­ centives. He also received a $15,000 signing bonus. "It w orked out pretty g o o d ," an optim istic Giles said. "In a way, may be (not getting drafted] w as a good o m en ." LONGHORN NOTES Ski C lu b w ins 3 rd at SW TSU The UT Ski C lub com peted at the S outhw est Texas State Bobcat O p en this past w eekend in rough and w indy conditions at the A ustin Aqua- plex, finishing third overall. The w om en's team took first place in its divi­ sion, led by M ary Kay Koenig, w ho finished first in the slalom, an d Jody H ooten, first in the jum p w ith a distance of 127 feet. Jennifer Lynch fin­ ished second in the jum p. Jeff Bradford finished third in the slalom for the m en 's team , w ho also finished third overall. Finishing first was the U niversity of Southern Louisiana, ranked No. 10 in the nation, and com ing in second w as fifth-ranked SWTSU. The ski club will com pete this w eekend in a tournam ent at Louisiana Tech. Lacrosse loses match, playoff berth An unfortunate call cost the UT m en's lacrosse team a berth in the playoffs next w eekend. But in this case, an official w a sn 't to blame. The L onghorns called the w rong side of the M edicine Continued from page 8 the knee [the outer which forms a cross], $2,500 to $3,000 should be expected d u e to the difficulty of the surgery." ligam ent of G enun g said most insurance poli­ cies will cover 80 percent of his ser­ vices, alth oug h som e will go to 100 percent. A nother im portant factor in as­ sessing the benefits of sp orts m edi­ cine is how long it will take for the injury to heal properly. "A soft tissue sprain can take 20 days to heal," Flawn said. "A stress fracture m ay to six take m onths. A knee injury m ay take up to an d over a full year to heal p ro p ­ three coin in a coin toss w ith the Rice O w ls to d eter­ m ine the last playoff representative in the SWC cham pionships. The O w ls, although m atched by Texas w ith an 11-3 record, m ove on to Trinity University while the Longhorns, last year's SWC cham ps, will stay at hom e and think of their lost opportunities. Texas needed to beat Rice in a m atch Saturday to have any hope o f m aking the playoffs and did just that, erasing a 6-4 halftim e deficit and sw am ping the O w ls in the second half to w in 11- 8. Texas blitzed Rice behind a furious offensive attack and o u tstanding goal play, playing w hat team president John senior attackm an and Oliveri called "o u r best gam e all y ear." U nfortunately, because of their 11-8 loss to Rice tw o w eeks ago, the L onghorns needed to beat the O w ls by at least four goals to avoid a tie for the last playoff spot. The L onghorns just m issed on several close scoring opportunities at the end of the m atch, and untim ely penalties cost them severely. After M onday's coin flip, the Longhorn play­ ers are left to p o n d er w h at m ight have been. But w ith only one graduating senior, the Longhorns will return a young yet experienced team for next year in hopes of avoiding an o th er d isap­ pointing finish. Brian Keagy/Daity Texan S ta ff Women's sailing overpowers Tulane The UT w om en's sailing team w on its sixth straight S outheastern Intercollegiate Sailing As­ sociation dinghy district cham pionship S aturday in Dallas. The victory, how ever, cam e after a protest was aw arded to the Longhorns, giving Texas 24 points and putting the team ahead of Tulane, w hich finished second w ith 28 points. The Longhorns led by five points going into the last race, w hich is w hen the protest for tack­ ing too close took place. After about an hour, a judge ruled that Texas' boat had the right of way and aw arded the Long­ h orns the cham pionship. M eredith W hitten/D aily Texan S ta ff erly." the to rehabilitate In any case, physical th erap y is needed injury back to w orking strength. Accord­ ing to m ost doctors like G enung, it is the m ost im portant part of the process, and if it is not und ertak en , the m oney sp en t on surgery and other care has been w asted. "I definitely think physical th era­ py is the m ost im portant p a rt," G enung said. "U sually on a knee, you w ould go w ork o u t three tim es a w eek with a therapist. It w ould take four to 12 w eeks d ep en d in g on the extent of the dam age and sur- gery. "T he goal is to have the injured knee as strong as or stronger than w hen it w a sn 't injured. If the per­ son is trying to get back to being com petitive, then hopefully it will be stro n g er." After undergoing the entire pro­ cess, how well can som eone expect to heal? "O n a stress fracture or m uscle in­ jury, an athlete can expect to be ful­ ly recover." Flawn said. "W ith a knee derangem ent, how ever, the athlete sh o u ld n 't expect 100 p er­ cent." G enung autom atically ap p ro ach ­ es each knee injury w ith the know l­ edge that a knee is hard to fully rehabilitate. "W hen people get [a knee] injury, I tell them th ey 're never going to be 100 percent ag ain ," G enung said. "The key is to get them to 99.9 p er­ cent on that knee. We try to get 100 percent, but I d o n 't think we ever do." Lewis said, "T here are a w hole lot of problem s w e can cure. Some we d o n 't know how to do. It's not a perfect science yet, so som etim es com plete recovery is not expected." Spring 1991 Minority Scholars Forum T h e M in o rity S c h o la r s F o ru m , w h ic h b e g a n in th e F a ll o f 1 9 8 7 , h a s th re e p rim a ry p u rp o s e s : - T o p ro v id e a fo r u m f o r in te rd is c ip lin a ry d is c u s s io n f o r m in o rity g ra d u a te s tu d e n ts - T o d e m o n s tra te th e r e a l c o n trib u tio n th a t s c h o la r ly a c tiv ity c a n m a k e to th e m in o rity c o m m u n ity - T o a c q u a in t u n d e r g ra d u a te s w ith a c a d e m ic re s e a rc h Llpguistics at Work: The Study of Language and its Application" A n a S a n tisteb a n D o c t o r a l c a n d i d a t e in L in g u i s t i c s A p r i l 2 5 Thursday, 12 Noon to 2:00 P.M. Texas Union 4.206, Chicano Culture Room A n in fo rm a l r ec ep tio n w ill fo llo w . F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n , c a ll th e G ra d u a te O p p o rtu n ity P ro g ra m a t 4 7 1 -7 1 5 1 . -TEAM, AT MOUNTAIN VIEW COLLEGE Enroll through the Admissions Office EARN THREE CREDIT HOURS IN THREE WEEKS EARLY REGISTRATION April 29 - May 2 9 a.m. -1:30 p.m. & 4 p.m. - 7 p.m. REGULAR REGISTRATION May 10 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. May 13 8 a.m. -1 0 a.m. Classes begin M ay 13 and continue through May 31 (classes will meet on Memorial Day) DAY (9 a.m. - 11:40 a.m.) Section Instructor C L A S S E S O F F E R E D : CIS 103 RD 102 ENG 202 ENG 205 ENG 206 GVT 201 MTH 202 PEH 118 PEH 119 PEH 219 SC 101 CIS 103 ENG 205 HST 102 HD 105 SC 101 Introduction to Computer Information Systems (Lab 11:45 -12:40) Speed Reading Learning British Literature American Literature American Literature American Government Introduction to Statistics Beginning Go* Beginning Tennis Intermediate Tennis Introduction to Speech Communications Introduction to Computer Information Systems (Lab 8:45 - 9:40) American Literature History of the United States Interpersonal Relations Introduction to Speech Communications EVENING (6 p.m. - 8:40 p.m.) 205 205 205 205 205 205 205 205 205 205 205 705 705 705 705 705 Pollock Olesen Wickham Dexter Coad Strain Anderson Smith Battles Battles Grissom Pollock Grimes Thomas Wilson Grissom Inter-term Is designed tor highly-motivated students who can devote time to an accelerated, fast paced program of study. (Students may enroll in only one inter-term dass unless approved by the coordinator.) For Information, please come by the Admissions/Registrar's Office (W-154) or call (214) 333-8600. Educator»! GpportunMet are offered by Ir e 0 * t a i County Com n xrtty C o l age D fcrfct without regard to race, color, age. nattonal ortgtn, refftfon, *e« or handicap Mountain View College 4849 W. Illinois Ave Dallas, Texas 75211 Stuff you’ll always remember. • Your picture in the book—this year, we’re coming after you! • More students in photos and stories. • Complete chronicling of march to Cotton Bowl and Final Four. • Academics, from your point of view—not the proFs. • Student quotes—what you think without climbing West Mall steps. • In 2012, the Cactus will transport you back to 1992. Cactus Yearbook OPTIONAL FEE Plus, with the publications package you'll get the 1991—92 Student Directory! • 8 Issues of Utmost • The Cactus Yearbook • The Student Directory ...all for only $37.50