SPORTS Pitt stop The 19th-ranked Longhorns hope for a victory Sa vt¿v-vut>h/ as they kick off the new football season on the ro< against the University of Pittsburgh Panthers. 3A I 8 0 11 -ION V A i S V 3 t ¿ 9 1 XI O S V d H N I 9N I HS I 1 0 ( 1 3 0 8 3 I W IS. 4HHI. nOS W84 6 9 I I ? / SO UM3 1 1 STATE & LOCAL Waste reduction A new state committee announces a recycling measure designed to decrease the amount of waste filling up in Texas landfills. T h e Da il y T exan ’ Haiti releases refugees for travel to U.S. ___________________ The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Friday. September 2, 1994 2 Sections 25c Associated Press PO RT-A U -PRIN CE, Haiti — The m ilitary- installed g o v ern m en t has begun allow in g H aitian s g ran ted U .S. p olitical asylu m to th e U .S . E m b a s s y said l e a v e H a iti, Thursday. N inety-one 1 laitians took tw o buses to the n e ig h b o r in g D o m in ic a n R e p u b lic on W ed nesd ay and caught ch arter flights to the United States, em bassy spokesm an Stanley Schrager told The Associated Press. N early 2,000 H aitians with U.S. approval for political asylum , m any of them key su p ­ p o rte rs of exiled P resid en t Je a n -B e rtra n d A ristide, w ere blocked from leaving when com m ercial air travel to Haiti w as banned July 30. The ban w as part of world sanctions aim ed at forcing the arm y out of pow er. Ninety-one Haitians took two buses to the Dominican Republic on Wednesday and caught charter flights to the United States. The de facto government had refused to allow the Haitians to leave by charter flights or other means since a July 30 ban. The de facto govern m en t had refused to allow the Haitians to leave bv charter flights or other m eans since the ban. N o reason was given for the govern m en t's turnabout. H um an rights grou p s w eakly applauded W ed nesd ay's release. "T h is is a small first step ," Kenneth Roth, director of the private H u m an Rights W atch organization, told The A ssociated Press. B ut he said it d o e s n ot h elp " t h e v a st majority of Haitians w ho face severe repres­ sion and are forced by the United States to ch oo se betw een interm inable detention in G u an tan am o and a largely inaccessible in­ country processing p roced u re." Roth w as referring to the U.S. N avy base at G uantanam o Bay, Cuba, w here the Coast G uard has been sen din g all H aitian s w ho fled by se a . O th er H aitia n s w h o w an t to leave h ave to undergo a lengthy U.S. proce­ d u re in th eir co u n try for a sy lu m . F e w e r than 5 percent of applicants are accepted. Although up to 3,000 political killings have taken place since soldiers overthrew Aristide in 1991, de facto Foreign M inister C harles David insisted W ednesday that those accept­ ed for U.S. asylum face no danger. B e fo re W e d n e s d a y 's d e p a r tu r e , 1 ,9 8 5 Haitians with U.S. approval for asylum had been w aiting to leave, 1,084 of them with all necessary travel docum ents, said Schrager, the U.S. spokesm an. S c h r a g e r said h e h o p ed th re e o r fo u r groups could be m oved out every week. W e have established a precedent, so we b e lie v e th a t it c a n c o n t i n u e ," h e s a id , ad ding that rep o rters w ere not notified of W ed nesd ay's departu re beforehand for fear of endangering the venture. Also T h u rsd ay, the U.S. m ilitary said it w as preparing a cam p in Surinam e to hold 2 ,5 0 0 H a itia n s b e in g tr a n s f e r r e d fro m G uantanam o Bay. The site w ill be 25 m ile s s o u th o f P a ra m a rib o , cap ital ot S u rin am e, a sm all n ation on the n orth east sh ou ld er of South A m e r ic a , th e U .S . S o u th e rn C o m m a n d announced at its headquarters in Panama. A nd in T rin id ad , th e h ead of the U N. m onitoring mission that w as thrown out of Haiti in July sajd the world is ready to step in to expel its m ilitary rulers and restore the elected government. C olin G rand erson , a T rin id ad ian d ip lo ­ mat, is returning to the Dominican Republic to le a d a n ew U .N .-O r g a n iz a t io n o f A m erican States m ission to Haiti after the coup leaders leave pow er. Employees blast Anthem coverage AND REA BUCKLEY Daily Texan Staff The U niversity's health care plan cam e under fire T h u rsd ay from an em ployees' union com plaining of inadequate coverage and an undem ocratic board election. The T e x a s S ta te E m p lo y e e s U n io n alleged in a new sletter circulated on the W est Mall T hu rsd ay that Anthem H ealth Plans Incorporated, the com pany m an ag­ ing h ealth ca re co v e ra g e l or UT facu lty an d sta ff d o e s n o t p r o v id e a d e q u a te health care. "A n th em h a s r e d u c e d th e p lan to a sh am b les: claim s go unp aid for m onths, d octors aren't getting paid, and physicians are dropping out in d rov es," the n e w s l e t ­ ter said. The U n iversity's new health in su ran ce plan began with the calen d ar school year, said P eg gy Miller, co -ch air of the health care co m m itte e of th e U n iv e r s ity S ta ff Center. S he a d d e d th a t sh e d id not w a n t to reh ash t h i n g s th at had h a p p e n ed in the p a s t, b u t w a s o p tim is tic a b o u t th e U niversity's future with Anthem A lth o u g h A n th em will try to re so lv e past com plaints and make im provenu in the plan, it will not com pletely revise . Please see Anthem, page 2 Student health care costs may increase LEAH RAUCH AND JENNIFER SC HULTZ Daily Texan Staff C o lleg e stu d e n ts m ay h a v e to pay m ore for health care or lose the se n ices they now receive, representatives from universities around the state said d u r­ ing a conference Thursday at the Texas Union. At the con feren ce, dubbed "H ealth C are Reform and College H ealth," uni­ v e rsity o fficia ls d iscu ss e d m e a su re s that could be taken to ensure that col­ lege h ealth s e rv ic e s a re in clu d e d in lo c a l, s ta t e o r n a tio n a l h e a lth c a r e reform plans. A d m inistrative and stu ­ d ent re p resen tativ es also spoke with U.S. Rep. J I, |aki Pickle, D -A ustm , ab o u t the sta tu s of h ealth c a re bills b e fo re C o n g re s s an d th e ir p o ssib le im pact on college health care servii*s. Dr. Robert W irag director of the UT S tu d e n t H ealth C e n te r, said co lle g e health care has been mentioned in only one bill before C ongress I his lack of attention has cau sed m any university health ce n te r d ire cto rs to w o rry that their services will be replaced by more expensive alternatives. "It is im portant that students health needs are « c o g n iz e d . It max be ju st a passing reference, but there are over 14 m illion college stu d en ts in this cou n ­ try, W irag said. " There are enough of them n atio n w id e that it is im portan t for federal legislators to recognize th health needs." U n iv e r s ity h ealth c e n te r d ire c to rs also w ant legislators to understand the special financial n e e ds of college stu dents A cco rd in g to the A m erican C ollegt Health Association, 29.5 percen t ot col lege students com e from fam ilies that earn less than $30,000. The U.S. Census B u re a u in d ic a te s th a t 45 p e rc e n t of th ose b etw een 18 and 24 will e x p e ri­ ence extended periods with no health insu ranee. "In our ser\ ice, students get the best bargain in health care in the cou ntry," said K en n eth D irk s, d ir e c to : of the Please see Health, page 2 ASSOCIATED PR E S! Unidentified youth of the Protestant loyalist neighborhood of Belfast’s Shankill Road burned an Irish flag during a demonstration Thursday. After confronting each other on the W est Mall on such issu e s as gun co n tro l and sex e d u catio n, M ichael East, right, and Eric Brown, English freshman, briefly agreed that the U nited S tates is treating Cuban and Haitan refugees unfairly by placing them in detention cam ps. East was a guest speaker for the Young Conservatives of Texas. STEVE NAGY/Daily Texan Staff Graduates paying back more college loans Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — D efau lts on s tu d e n t lo an s are d eclin in g as in d eb ted g ra d u a te s scram ble to " d o w h at's righ t" and the g o v ­ e rn m e n t u ses n ew to o ls to d ig in to th eir w ages and tax refunds in case they don't T axp ayers are exp ected to spend $2 billion th is y e a r p a y in g o ff u n c o lle c te d stu d e n t loan s, d ow n from a peak of $ 3 .6 billion in 1991, Education Secretary Richard Riley viid Thursday. "A fte r years of rising defaults, it's going the other w a y ," he said. T h e p r o p o r ti o n o f lo a n s in d e f a u lt d rop ped to 15 p ercen t in 1992 — the latest year for which figures are available — from a high of 22.4 percent tw o years earlier. "W h a t it dem onstrates is that the country is not m ade up of a bunch of people trying to c o n th e f e d e ra l g o v e r n m e n t ," said L eo Kornfeld, deputy assistant ed ucation secre­ tary. The large majority o f people are trying to do w hat's right." As usual, fed erally backed loans for stu ­ d e n ts o f b e a u ty , h a ir an d c o s m e t o lo g y schools were am ong the hardest to recover. I he governm ent took its biggest gam ble in N evada, w h ere three gam in g schools joined a long list of oth er in stitu tion s to d riv e up the state's default rate on student loans to 34 percent, by tar the cou ntry's highest. L o u is ia n a (2 3 .1 p e r c e n t), C o n n e c ti c u t (2 2 .3 ) , A la s k a ( 2 1 .1 ) , F lo r id a ( 2 0 .4 ) an d California (20.1) were the other states w here m ore than one in five student loans w ere in default. B orrow ers in Montana, North Dakota and V erm o n t w ere the best at p ay in g up. Less than 6 percent of ex-students in those states defaulted on their loans — defined as going at least six m onths without a paym ent. The g o v ern m en t has to u g h en ed stu d en t loan rules in the last few years, low ering the bench m ark for penalizing schools with hi£h d efau lt rates, g arn ish eein g the w a g e s and incom e-tax refunds of delinquent borrow ers and making it harder for them to get credit card s and other loans. "W'e can see substantial progress through the coop erative efforts of C ongress, schools and the Edut ation D ep artm en t," Riley said Please see Loans, page 2 mm the mm TODAY No m ore c y b e r-a n y th ln g weather: There is a 40 percent chance that anything written by j anybody in the civilized world will contain the prefix cyber Cyberhighs in the 90s. Cyber- lows in the 70s. Cyberwinds at 10-15 cybermph will surely bring the sound of silly cant to our ears. Index: Around Campus................. 11 Classifieds........................... 12 Comics................................ 11 Editorials........................... 4 Entertainment........................9 Sports................................. 16 State & Local................. 8 University...............................6 World & N ation..................... 3 Associated Press B E L FA S T , N o rth ern Irelan d — Britain returned four IRA prisoners to N orth ern Ireland on T hursday, in w h at first looked like a q uick an d p o te n tia lly e m b a r r a s s in g r e w a rd to th e Irish R e p u b lica n Arm y as its cease-fire took hold. P rim e M in is te r Jo h n M a jo r 's office in London said he w as furi­ ous that the timing m ade it appear h e h ad re s p o n d e d to th e IR A , w hich had d em an d ed just such a g e s tu r e w h en it a n n o u n c e d th e cease-fire W ednesday I he transfer w as especially sen­ sitive because tw o p risoners w ere con victed of a 1984 bom bing that nearly killed M ajor's p red ecessor, M argaret Thatcher. " T h e p rim e m in ister w as livid about this, in that this w as a deci­ sio n ta k e n by o f f ic ia ls an d n ot r e f e rre d to m i n i s t e r s ," s a id a sp okesw om an in M ajor's Lon don office, sp eakin g on con dition she not Ih* identified. Earlier, Major appeared to m ove clo ser to accep tin g that the cease fire is the p erm an en t halt to v io ­ le n ce d e m a n d e d by B ritain and Ireland. It took effect at m idnight Wed nesday. A Protestant clergym an who has m et w ith p ro -B ritis h " l o y a l i s t " gu nm en said they m ay cease fire to o , th e y c a n be a s s u r e d N o r th e rn Ir e la n d 's p la ce in the United Kingdom isn't threatened. if Thursday night, a gunm an killed a Roman C atholic man w orking on a car in a p redom inantly C atholic area of north Belfast, police s a i d . It w as the first shooting death since th e c e a s e -f ir e b e g a n . N o g ro u p claimed responsibility. In a secon d attack in n o rth ern Belfast Thursday night, a taxi was hit by gunfire but the Catholic d ri­ ver escaped uninjured. Local coun­ cilm an Joe Austin said the d riv er w as lured to a h ouse by a bogus ca ll an d th e s h o o tin g o c c u r r e d w h en he a r r iv e d . T he U ls te r D efense A ssociation , a P rotestant c la im e d p a r a m i lita r y g r o u p , responsibility for that attack. th e A fte r IR A 's c e a s e -t ir e an nouncem ent W ednesday, G erry Adam s, president of its allied politi­ cal party Sinn Fein, called for m ov­ ing IRA p riso n ers ou t of E n glish jails and other gestures. The IRA and Sinn Fein w ant IRA prisoners transferred from England to Northern Ireland so that they can be closer to their families. The four prisoners had been told July 5 that th e y w e r e d u e fo r a tr a n s f e r , Major's office said. Major did not object to the trans­ fer, b u t "1 think w h at the p rim e m inister is co n cern ed ... that this particular transfer ux>k place today, at su ch a s e n s itiv e t i m e ," th e spokeswoman said. Major ordered an inquiry into the tr a n s f e r a u th o r iz e d by P ris o n s Service. The p r is o n e r s w e re IRA m en P a tric k M a g e e a n d G e r a rd M cDonnell both serv in g life sen ­ tences for bom bing a hotel w h ere Thatcher w as staying. Britain returns 4 IRA captives to Northern Ireland after cease-fire Anthem: Employees union criticizes UT health coverage plan Continued from page 1 employee coverage, she said. "M edical plans and prescription plans will be the sam e," Miller said. In M ay, the UT Sy stem granted U niversity employees a position on the board making deci­ sions concerning UT health care. Tom Buchmann, new chair of the UT Insurance Advisory Com m ittee and the first UT employee elected to the board, said he hopes to be useful to faculty and staff at the University. "[I] w ant to im prove Anthem accounts and perform ance," he said. Buchmann said he has already mailed a five- p ag e letter to UT em p lo y ees covered by the Anthem plan, asking them to name their top five priorities concerning the plan. "I am going to try to represent the majority ... try to be fair," Buchmann said. T he TSEU also alleged in a n ew sletter that Buchm ann's election was undemocratic. Union representative Travis Donoho said the time between notification of the position and the voting deadline was too short. B u ch m a n n , an a c c o u n ta n t in th e p a y ro ll d ep artm en t, said he is alread y fa m ilia r w ith insurance claims. 1 have been w orking with insurance payroll for 14 y ears," he said . "I h ear the d ay-to -d ay complaints and ... [am] going to try to do som e­ thing about it." The electio n b a llo ts w ere d istrib u te d on a Friday to Anthem policyholders at the University and due the follow ing Tuesday, said Donoho, organizer for TSEU /Com m unication Workers of America. In sim ilar state electio n s, there is at least a month before the ballots are due, he said. Health: Student plans in jeopardy Loans Continued from page 1 Continued from page 1 D ep artm en t of Stud ent H ealth S erv ices at Texas A&M University. My greatest concern is that unless care is taken to consider college health and the special sendees needed bv stu­ dents, the present availability of health care for students will all but disappear." UT Stud ents A ssociation P resid ent John Black said the SA plans to work closely with student leaders across the state and the health center to maintain easy access to university health sendees. "W e need to make sure that there will be a sim ple, cost-effective w ay to m eet students' needs. Whatever action is taken bv legislators, we need to be right in the middle of it," Black said. Although Pickle said Congress has no inter- e s t in ch an g in g the w ay c o lle g e stu d e n ts receive health care, representatives at the con­ ference asked him to discuss university health sendees with other congressmen. "It is too early to tell w hat kind of impact national health care reform would have on col­ lege health services, bu t any tim e that you open up a statewide dialogue, vou are basically doing something I call problem solving," said D avid D rum , a sso c ia te vice p re sid e n t for Student Affairs. "By talking with people from universities in different regions of the state, you gain a better understanding of their prob­ lems and concerns." At the co n feren ce's end, four com m ittees were chosen to bring college health sendees to the attention of policy makers. in releasing the default rates. "Y et, more progress needs to be m ade." Riley reported a fourfold increase in the am ount of money collected from the income tax refunds of delin­ quent borrowers. The full weight of collection efforts will bring in more than $500 million on old and newly defaulted loans this year, he said. It was the second straight year defaults have declined. T he rate fell to its lo w est level sin ce the E d u catio n Department began reporting the figures in 1986, officials said. The d efault rate at private trade schools — w here delinquency is usually highest — stood at 30.2 percent, just more than twice the national average. That w as a decline from 41.2 percent in the prevdous year. Page 2 Friday, September 2.1994 T h f D a il y T exa n The Daily Texan — ...... Mary Hopkins .................................................................Abraham Levy ra n * Got* ..estoy HenseH Jeff Rhoads Kevin W illiam son ««m ..... — ............. ............ Mike Wallace Mushtaq Kapasi. Laura Strom berg —...........- ............................................ Raloa Anderson Andre* Buckley Alex De Martian, Mary McManamee —....................M eghan Griffiths G eorge Klos .............. -................*— .................................. Chrrs Riem enschneider ........................ ...................Tara Copp .................................................... ............. Scott Ba deis Jason Dugger David Livingston And-B* L Everett M ark LVmgstoo, Johnny Ludden. G ene W erwz ........... Saan Gallup, John Pendygraft M ichael Bnck Naka Nathaniel D avd Boswell. Sherm an Eng C J uvkies, »atcent un, Dave Rivera. Chns Turner. Eric Wild .................. Rob Caswell Volunteers Cathy Garoa ~om Vaughn .e a - Rauch. Jennifer Schultz. Tracy Schultz Sh.gehdo Ommura, Mike O'Leaiy, Roan Sheibi R»u Acana Nab. Ma-%. Ma?r>ew Davis. Cheryl Gooch, Jeff Motfit. Nicole Chsokn Stacey Roongues Nenie Eraytkn Ketfc Dunn. K»m Houser MoBy Samt James Robed Russell. Jim Moore Kimberly Morgan Tu Sheth. Andy Wang Advertising Local Dispiay Brad Corbett Sara Eckert. Danny Grover. Nicoto Jackson, Lynn Lackey Khsten M*ns‘«to. Nathan Moore. Kathleen Myer. Joe Powei. Jean-PatH Romes LayoutCooronator ........... o .................................................................. r Classihec etophone Sa*es B nanD eL o s S to M w .D e w a v n e T n S Lisa Humphreys, Nathan Moore . Carohne Langley. Stephan® Rosenfeld ^ Klrp’ Krause, Jennifer Reyes Pnscilia Rce Kimberly Stuber Sandra Toon The Daiy I exa^ íUSPS ’ 46-A40). a student newspaper at The Umversirv of T»*as at Austin « pub­ lished by exas S-uoen; °ub4k^tK>ns 2S00 Wh.ta. Austin TX 78705 The Da.iy Texan is putoAshed uesday. Wed-esday. Thursday and Fhdey, except hokdays. exam periods and when schoo. » Monoav rv* it session Second das* postage paid at Austm, TX 78710 News contribuí ions wtH be accepted by telephone (471-4581). at the eddonal ofhce (Texas Student u&Ncafeorts Budding 2 .122) Of a: ttie news laboratory (Cocnmuocation Bui*d«ng A4 101). coi ioca and nabona display advertising. cad 471-18S5. For cfess>tod cWsptoy and national class*** display advertising caí 471-8900 For Classified word advertising caR 471 -5244 Entire contents copyright 1994 Texas Student Publications The Deify Texan Mail Subscription Rates One Semester (Fan or Spring). Two Semesters (Fa« and Spnngi Sum m er S ession One Year (Fai Spring and Summer) .............. 530 00 55 00 20 00 75 00 To charge by VISA or MasterCard caí 471-5083 Send omers and address changes to Texas Student Rutxicaítons. P.O Box 0 Austin TX ' 6~*x-89o* or to TSP Building C3 200, or caí 471 5083 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan. P.O. Box D. Austin, TX 78713-8904 Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday. 4 p.m Thursday, 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday. 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday Fnday. :i*»rw c »■»:>- *.-< Monday 4 p - Tuesdav 4 r ~ 11 mm t- r-.tmaar turn Bumnmt :>• . u t o n T S a l e ! DO YOU HAVE ACNE? C LIM C O R’ is conducting a study, testing a new cream treatment of acne. Qualified participants must: for the • Suffer from acne • Be male or female ages 13-50 • Be able to attend 8-10 visits over 3 months F ree care and medication provided throughout the study. Up to $ 3 0 0 reim bursem ent upon com pletion of the study. Interested candidates should call 3 2 7 - 5 7 2 5 CLIMCOR’ Austin, Texas LSAT GRE If you’re taking one of these tests, take Kaplan first. We teach you exactly w hat the test covers and show you the test taking strategies you’ll need to score your best. No one teaches you to think like the test m akers better than Kaplan. For more inform ation call 472-EXAM. KAPLAN T h e a n s w e r to th e te s t question. JUST A REMINDER: You MUST present a: Fee Receipt fwith class listed) or Syllabus & UT ID in order to purchase a packet from R i e l ' s C o p ie s 1808 Guadalupe S t (Next to Bank OmI 4 7 2 -5 3 5 3 Thank you for your cooperation. Extended Hours Thru Sept. 16th Mon-Fri 8am-8pm • Sat & Sun Noon-6pm Closed Monday, Sept. 5th for Labor Day ^ ' 6dUCated Person Barry Levitch Advertising senior Klos hazy about pot facts The Daily Texan should be embarrassed bv the poorly written Viewpoint by Georee Klos on Aug. 29: "H em p f o r 'v icto ™ Activists miss the point." 1 would argue that it is Klos who misses the point. He contends that, in pointing out the non-recreational uses of the hemp plant, the activists are merely masking their desire to get high. Okay, I'll give him that, out w hat s wrong with their doing so? Klos reminds me of people who sneer businessm en at who push environ- men tally -frien d ly products, saying, "They just want to get rich." Well, if their "greed" also benefits our plan­ et, more power to them! The same applies here — if these stoners can also provide us with a productive resource, then let them! 2 dr. FILE *39“ up 4 dr. FILE *59“ up Also, Klos derides these alleged benefits trie plant offers and the hemp activist liter­ ature regarding the plant's history, vet he never once presents a single shred of evi­ dence to debunk their claims! I m sure the Austin American-Statesman will be offering Klos a job soon. Apparently, he thinks that simply snickering at some­ one constitutes a refuting argument. By simply regurgi­ tating society's pre­ vailing attitudes, rather than doing i n v e s t i g a t i v e research of his own, Klos show s he is w ell-prepared to join the ranks of mediocre non-jour­ nalists who current­ ly staff most of our nation's new spa- pers. Also, in taking the title of his Viewpoint from the U.S. government film promoting the virtues of hemp (before illegalization, of course), Klos only makes himself look stu­ pid. That very film supports the activists' contention that "hem p won World War II," and provides evidence of what non-smok- able hemp can do. Lee Nichols UT alumnus Correction: Phillip V an D erSlice's col­ umn, Longhorn's legal hassles typical of college ath letes," (Aug. 31) incorrectly stated that M ik e Adams and Lovell Pinkney did not attend school in the spring because of academic troubles. In fact, the two voluntarily stayed out of school in the spring because they had to work. The Texan regrets the error. If you or someone you know and love has lost themselves to alcohol or drugs and you don’t know what to do... Call Us! Summer Sky Outreach 1- 800- 628-3265 New Location 2815 Fruth 4 7 - C Y C L E used bikes from $100 we recycle cy cle s" t X - L O N G U L O C K M H 9 95H w/coupon Limit one per Customer • tog. 1 $32.95 expires 10/31/94 Get in on the Action at Armadillo Sport Your Action Sport Headquarters You s u p p ly t h e s w e a t, we’ll s u p p ly th e g ear! In-line Skates * Lacrosse Disc Golf Beach Volley Mention th is ad for 10% OFF any item o f apparrei. 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I Inlr r n .tm r i.l B u - . m - Mm him *. , tr, W l . , 7 » i ¡ , rfT" , * " Innrnat.im.IBu-ui. -. Mmhw. . ( ' l"“" i*l |>-n«*r rat* j.lu- f. INK, ■ M «« »V ' 7 . ,lil' “ I " - * I - " ' I h. k, 7 ...... «-(mr.lm* ^ ^ ' . 11 th<- mi.nth A .lit appr»«*| iBW 794 1 2 dr. LEG FILE 3 0 x 6 0 D E S K TOP H LEG S E T S128°° BARKER BARGAIN CENTER 1045 REINLI 454-7511 I. f r v a m - ■ Daily Texan Classifieds i Call É 471-5244 ■ BOOKS RECORDS. MAGAZINES OFF ROMANCE OFF MYSTERY 20% 20% 20% 20% 20% SALE OFF HISTORY OFF MUSIC OFF EVERYTHING Don t miss the excitement of our 20% off sale now through September 5. With everything reduced an additional 20%, it's no mystery why new & used books, CDs, tapes and LPs are disappearing so rapidly. So hurry in today for the widest selection of books at the lowest prices in town. 8868 Research Blvd • 454-3664 (1/5 mile east of Bumet Rd & 183 Intersection) 2929 S Lamar Btvd • 443-3138 3110 Guadalupe • 451-4463 All stores open 10-10 Mon -Sat • 12-9 Sun We pay cash for books. CDs cassettes IPs videos & nxxe all day every jay T h e D a ily T e x a n FMMV, SEPTEMBER 2,1894 UNIVERSITY ____ UT ‘Latino USA’ radio show passes 200-station milestone TRACY C. SCHULTZ Daily Texan Staff The aw ard-w inning radio program Lati­ no USA soon will be carried bv m ore than 200 public radio stations. The 3 0 -m in ute p ro g ra m , p ro d u c e d bv th e L T C e n te r for M e x ic a n A m e ric a n Studies and KLT-FM, is the only national English-language radio program focusing on the new s an d cu ltu re of Mexico, C en­ tra l A m e ric a a n d L a tin A m e ric a , sa id M aria M artin, executive p ro d u c e r of the program . Associate p ro du cer Francisco Contreras said 196 radio stations across the country have picked u p the p ro gram since begin­ ning in April 1993. The program is carried by radio m arkets not know n for having high Latino po p u la­ tio n s, in c lu d in g A lask a a n d U ta h , said Vidal G u7m an, th e p ro g ra m 's m arketing and p ro d u ctio n m anager. He a d d ed that population grow th of Latinos in the U nit­ ed States has contributed to the need for in c re a se d n e w s se rv ic e s from all L atin Am erican countries. "O ur prim ary target is to make sure we are in all Latin markets," Guzm an said. He attributes the program 's success to its ability to meet the needs of existing markets. The p ro g ra m , w h ich c a te rs to p u b lic radio's potential audience of 20 million lis­ teners, opened new gates to understanding Latino culture, the program 's officials said. The program "gives the Latino p erspec­ tive on issues" and gives them the chance to voice their needs to the decision-m ak­ ers, M artin said. "The program could be a show case for the kind of p rogram m ing not done anvw here else, pushing other m edi­ um s to be m ore open." The p ro g ra m o ffers a m u lti-te x tu re d Latino view , including art, poetry, politi­ cal features and AIDS, he said. The recent passing of the N orth A m eri­ c an F ree T ra d e A g re e m e n t h a s ra is e d Am erican econom ic interest in M exico and other Latin Am erican countries. "A m ericans are becom ing m ore aw are of strong econom ic connections in M exi­ co ," h e s a id , a d d in g th a t a w a r e n e s s increases in te re st in the Latin A m erican culture. A lth o u g h M artin an d C o n tre ra s said they are pleased that the program airs on so m any stations, the show is n ot alw ays on at the best times, and they will w ork to im prove the tim e slot in certain m arkets. "W e h av e to convince [o th er stations] that there is a m arket for this," M artin said. In A u stin , L atino USA is b ro a d c a st at 4:30 p.m., every Friday on KUT. Assistant producer Francisco Contreras edits tape for this week s L a tin o USA program. PAUL A LCALA Daily Texan Stafl Undergraduate Writing Center soon available to all students ALEX DE MARBAN Daily Texan Staff In September the U ndergraduate W riting Center will expand by more than 400 percent to accom m odate stu ­ dents from all departm ents. Instead of helping struggling w riters in only tw o areas — English and the Division of Rhetoric and Com position — the U niversity's year-old w riting center will now take in any student with w riting difficulties. Beginning Sept. 14, 40 consultants will w ork w ith stu­ dents one-on-one by brainstorm ing, drafting and revis­ ing papers, helping w ith organization, and correcting problem s w ith gram m ar, punctuation and English usage. 'Staring at the blank page is a frightening experience to a lot of students," said C hris Holcomb, a sixth-vear English g rad u ate stu d e n t wrio will be ad v isin g at the center in fall. M ore than 90 percent of UT faculty rated the writing abilities of their students in the poor to fair range, accord­ ing to a report released by the University’ Council in Jan­ uary 1994. The report also found that much of the faculty disliked the long hours involved in editing and proof­ reading stu d en ts’ papers. In addition, m any professors lacked the skills to critique student work. "A v er\’ busy instructor ... rarely has the tim e to sit dow n and talk for an hour WÜh [a] student," said Sara Kimball, director of the U ndergraduate W riting Center, yvhich will be on the second floor of the Peter T Flawn Academic Venter. Consultants will spend an average of 30 to 40 m inutes with 4,000 m ore students than attended the program in 1993-94, Kimball said. People have a lot of great ideas, b u t they need to said M elinda Menzer, a graduate student in focus them English and a consultant at the center last year. John Dalv, a professor of speech communication, said good w riting skills are essential to a successful career. he bigge-. complaint I hear from different businesses is that m a m , m any students, by the time they graduate from college, still cannot w rite well," he said. C onsultant- at the center, m any of wriom are English g ra d u a te students, said the biggest obstacles stu d en ts face are generating new ideas and revising their w ork. I'm not com pletely com fortable w ith m y w riting ," said engineering junior Michael Lowry. "It could alw ays use som e im provem ent." Lowtv said he had not heard of the center but looks forw ard to taking advantage of its services. Bv October, w riting tips from the center will be avail­ able th ro u g h In te rn e t o n th e W orld W id e W eb and G opher program s. Online W riting, also available in October, will perm it students to access w irin g centers at other universities. There s no o ther w ritin g center in the w'orld th a t's using real-tim e interaction to help stu d en ts w ith their writing, said Susan W arshauer, coordinator of com put­ er services for the center. Frustrated w riters will find at least five consultants giving advice from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. M onday throu g h T h u rsd ay and Fridays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m . UNI VERSI TY BRIEFS TEX system expanded Students should have an easier tim e talking to TEX after a recent expansion of the system. The re g is tra r's office in stalled 100 m ore lines to the U niversity's T elepho ne E n rollm ent E xchange over the sum m er to prepare for fall r e g is tra tio n , a sso c ia te r e g is tra r Mike Allen said. The expanded system has about 250 lines, Allen said. " There h av e been v irtu a lly no d ifficulties w ith the sv stem ," he said. "The system is only full 10 percent of the time." Since stu d e n ts p a y a $5 phone registration fee each semester, the m o n ey fro m the fees sh o u ld go tow ard the expansion of TEX, he said. The S tu d e n ts' A ssociation had approached the Office of the Regis­ trar to im prove TEX w ith an 800 num ber, b u t the registrar's office decided merely to expand the cur­ rent system, he said. An 800 num ber wras economical­ ly unfeasible, Allen said. TEX w'as also extended to su p ­ port m ore financial aid phone lines at the Frank C. Erw in Jr. Special Events Center. "The m ore features we have, the m ore lines wre need," Allen said. Career Center jobline available to UT students For s tu d e n ts co ncern ed ab o u t today's tight job market, an infor­ m ation service at the Career Center could help find w ork w ith a sim ­ ple phone call. to T e x jo b s is a v a ila b le fre e of charge to all students and allow s in fo r m a tio n a b o u t a c c e ss e m p lo y m e n t o p p o rtu n itie s o v er the p h o n e 24 hours a dav, seven days a w^eek, said Texjobs C oordi­ nator Leslie Landrev. Students m ust register to use the service at the UT Career C enter in Beauford H. Jester Center. Since its creation last July, the serv ice h as a ttra c te d m o re th a n 2,000 w’a n t-a d s from e m p lo v e rs an d re g is te re d a b o u t 5,000 s t u ­ dents, said Landrev. "Since Tuesday, on average 200 stu d en ts every dav com e into the C a re e r C e n te r," said Sally Ja ck ­ man, an assistant office m anager at the center. s tu d e n ts A lth o u g h s e a rc h Texjobs mostly for part-tim e posi­ tio n s, fu ll-tim e jobs a n d in te r n ­ ships are also available, L an d rey said. Students can access positions in several fields, ranging from arts to engineering, Landrey said. If a stu d en t is interested in one of the jobs advertised on the se r­ vice, they can get m ore in fo rm a ­ tion about the position at the cen­ ter, she added. A cco rd in g to figures from th e center, students seeking jobs m ade m ore than 54,000 calls to the sys­ tem in its first year of operation. The Texjobs service is sponsored by the Career Center, the Office of Student Financial Aid and the Vol­ unteer Center. Texjobs is co-sponsored bv the C areer C enter, the Office of S tu ­ dent Financial Affairs, the College of N atural Sciences and the V olu n­ teer C enter, L andrey said. — Compiled by Andrea Buckley a n d S h ig e h ito O n im u ra , D aily Texan staff It’s Harvest Time at the MicroCenter Performa 636 8/250 CD $1,729.00 Apple Color Plus 14” Display , AppleDesign Keyboard 66/33-MHz 68LC040processor, IDE Hard driie Expandable to 36MB of RAM, Upgradable to PowerPC Advanced multi-media expansion option Includes: ClarisWorks 2.1, At Ease, American Heritage Dictionary Mac Gallery' Clip Art, Click Art Performa Collection Spectre Challenger Spin Doctor Challenge, PC Exchange, eWorld, MacLink Plus Translators Pro Macintosh Writing Companion, Internet CompanionTM, Student Assist Microsoft Bookshelf '94, Grolier’s Multimedia Encyclopedia Time Magazine Almanac ’94 ST■ a S g KhüF Apple PowerBook n 520 jJPowerBook 520 4/160 $2,035.00 50/25- MHz 68LCQ40 9 5 ” sixteen-levelgrey scale Passive-Matrix Screen Includes: ClarisWorks 2.1, PowerBook Mobility Bundle Macintosh Writing Companion, Internet Companion1 Student Assist Closed September 1-5 210 East 21st Street Special Hours beginning August 27 through September 9. Texas Union MicroCenter *75'655° ■ Salon Q uality Nails * M A N IC U RES • P E D IO R E S « C A L I FOR APTT Acrylic Full Set $35 • Fills $20 L i l y ' s M a i l s DOZEN ROSES $8.95 Cask & Carry 3830 N Lamar 453-7619 FIESTA FLOWERS All Film & V C R * 99 Including New Releases and Adult Mon - Thurs 4631 Airport at 45th st. 4 5 0 - 1 9 6 6 Featuring a fine selection o f cult and foreign at our Airport store. 5744 M anchaca at Stassney 447-7388 11139 N orth IH35 at Braker 837-9510 A Dictionary as unique as the country we live in. • New Words - More than 15,000 new words and meanings (nerd, birth- parent, sound bite, wa/t- ron), including 50 regional notes (boda­ cious, critter, frappe) • Accessibility - Crisp, browsable design with 2,500 draw­ ings, photos and charts • Usage Notes - Opinions from John Kenneth Galbraith, Susan Sontag, Edwin Newman and other distingushed professionals 4 -r,lLeOp SPORTSPAGE Comics & Cards *8410 E. 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TX 78753 (518) 873-8800 TM A © 1 9 9 4 M o fw J Enl»rtom m enl G ro u p , Inc A* n g h t, rew K v^d P E T O I ü USh Av S T E A K H O U S E An Austin Tradition • W ord Histories - Entertaining essays ^ telling how words interact with history and culture (what's the connection between assassin and eternal pleasure?) • Synonym Notes - Shared meaning and shades of meaning help you find just the right connotation (why concern is more thoughtful than anxiety) The Am erican Heritage College D ictionary, Third Edition makes a ll the difference. $1 Q95 N O W I Z J Reg. $21.95 UNIVERSITY C0-0Pl:|.!»]ILW»1;U 2246 GUADALUPE • 476.7211 • M-F 8:30-7:30 • SAT 9:30-6 • SUN 11-5 M E M JMN6 BEHIND THE STORE W/$3 PURCHASE 6IAMT STEAKS! & x * $ u s s | U J U j m A y S I J A K H O (1 S I 9012 Research Blvd. ( SE comer of Bymet I 183) Open Daily at 5pm & Noon Saturday-Sunday T h e D aily T exan Friday, September 2,1994 Page 7 Dallas NorthPark Center 214. 987. 9700 8 T h e D a i l y T e x a n munr, sb to w e r 2,1994 STATE & LOCAL PICK THREE: 44-4 Austinites voice opposition to utility rate hikes LAURA AASLETTEN Daily Texan Staff Residents told the Austin City Council Thursday night that a proposed increase in utility rates, the first in five vears, would be detrimental to Austin residents. Austin resident Sylvia Ledesma said the Austin Electric Utility Department and the City Council were not looking at the rate increase through the eyes of a consumer. "They use utilities to make money," Ledesma said. "We use utilities to survive." If the City Council and the Electric Utility E>epartment looked at the proposal through the eyes of a consumer they would not raise rates, she said. Austin's booming economy and rising Electric Utility Department costs have raised the 1994-95 projected budget by $75 million from the 1993-94 fiscal year. The City Council will consider two pro­ posed methods to increase electricity rates. If the EL?D proposal is approved, Austin If the EUD proposal is approved, Austin residents can expect their electric utili- ty rates to rise 9.87 percent. residents can expect their electric utility rates to rise 9.87 percent. But this rate is based on a projected drop in fuel costs. If fuel costs do not drop, 80 percent of the electric utility custom ers can expect an 18.28 percent increase in their average electric bills. In addition, m onthly garbage fees are expected to rise from $11 to $12 per month, and wastewater services are expected to rise 20 percent over the next year. A proposal from the Austin Electric Utili­ ty Commission slightly lowers the projected residential rate increase by cutting $11 mil­ lion from the EUD budget The commission is asking the City Council to approve an 8.19 percent rate increase if fuel rates drop as projected. But Scott McCullough, the City Council's consumer advocate, said $9 million more needs to be cut from the 1994-95 budget to take care of the residential customers." He said the Electric Utility Commission m erely moved m oney around to create $900,000 in "soft" budget cuts. "[Councilmembers] just need to send the utility commission back to scrub the budget and find the rest of the squeal in the Die " McCullough said. State tries to reduce waste UT targets recyclable trash T O M V A U G H N Daily Texan Staff In an effort to reduce the amount o f waste filling Texas landfills, a state committee kicked off a new recycling effort Thursday. More than 21 million tons of trash — more than one ton per Texan —were disposed of statewide in 1993, and 80 percent of the waste is recyclable, according to a pre­ pared statement from Gov. Ann Richards. The Texas Natural Resource Conservation Committee announced a proclamation from Gov. Richards declar­ ing Nov. 15,1994 the first annual Texas Recycles Day. Along with representatives from the Texas Recycles to Day steering committee, the TNRCC pledged improve existing programs and start additional ones. Last year UT President Robert Berdahl founded the President's Advisory Recycling Committee to promote recycling on campus. The UT committee, composed of students, faculty, and staff, has encouraged the use of recycled materials and the placement of recycling bins for paper and aluminum across campus, said committee member Patricia Alvey. According to a LT committee report, the University could benefit from reducing disposal costs. Speaking before a mountain of trash at ACCO Waste Paper in Austin, TNRCC chairman John Hall urged Tex­ ans to start recycling programs. "Recycling is a step we can all take without pain or cost to save money and help the environment," Hall said. ''Our waste disposal costs are rising, yet we are seeing more and more private companies saving substantial dollars by implementing aggressive recycling pro­ grams," he said. NABIL MARK/Daily Texan Staff TNRCC Chairman John Hall stands before a moun­ tain of aluminum cans and other recyclable waste. Tim Mikus, an environmental specialist for Texas Instruments, said "Our employees initiated a recycling program in 1990, and since then w e've been able to reduce our solid waste by 65 percent." This will be the incentive to increase recycling in both urban and rural areas of Texas," said state Rep Robert Saunders, D-LaGrange, a key sponsor of the state's recy­ cling legislation. Hutchison picks up endorsement from key law enforcement group CATHY GARCIA Daily Texan Staff The gap in the race for U.S. Senate w idened Thursday as incum bent Republican Sen. Kav Bailey Hutchi­ son received a key endorsem ent from the Combined Law Enforce­ m ent Associations of Texas. In an election where crime has been a major focus for candidates and voters, the support of thel 6,000- member police organization could be a boost for Hutchison's growing lead in the polls. But challenger Richard Fisher, a Dallas business­ man, says he will win the race. "It's not a question of comeback, but a question of getting [Fisher's] message to voters," said M artin Johnson, Fisher's spokesman. "He's going to be going everywhere [in Texas] in the next 68 days." A new Texas Poll, conducted Aug. 18-27, shows that if the election were held today, 49 percent of likely vot­ ers would choose Hutchison, while 30 percent favor Fisher. Nineteen percent were undecided, and 2 per­ cent would select another candidate. The poll's margin of error is plus or minus 4 percentage points. Hutchi­ son the endorsem ent because she has helped in matters in v o k in g quotas, Equal Employ­ m ent O pportunity Commission complaints and reverse discrimina­ tion cases, said Mark Clark, director of governmental relations at CLEAT. received STATE BRIEFS Judge denies defense motion in Baugh case ■ A district judge struck dow n a defense motion to remove the presiding judge in the m urder trial of Cathy Lynn Henderson Thursday after setting a date for a pretrial hearing. The hearing was scheduled Thursday in Travis County District Court by Judge Tom Blackwell. Blackwell also rejected a motion by defense attor­ neys to pre\ ent Judge Jon Wisser from presiding over the trial. In February, Wisser signed a search warrant allow- ing Travis County sheriff’s deputies to seize a map drawn by Henderson from Henderson's attorney, Nona Bvington. The map led investigators to a shallow grave in McLennan County, where the body of 3-month-old Brandon Baugh was found. GOP seeks Frost probe ■ DA LLA S — Republicans are seeking a federal investigation into allegations that U.S. Rep. Martin Frost im properly spent taxpayer money by using a federal employee for campaign work. Dallas County GOP Chairman Robert Driegert said Thursday that he has asked U.S. Attorney Paul Cog­ gins and Dallas FBI agents to look into the charges. Driegert also has filed House ethics charges against Frost, D-Dallas. Frost, who faces Republican Ed Harrison, has called the issue election-year politics. Compiled by Mary McManamee, Daily Texan Staff, with Associated Press reports GCIfTRRNTEED 1ST PRICES ON OR OFF THE DRUG! T e x a s T e x t b o o k s , In c . g u a ra n te e s th e lo w e s t te x tb o o k p r ic e s o n b o th n e w a n d u s e d te x tb o o k s (a t b o th lo c a tio n s ) . If a n y te x tb o o k s to r e in to w n b e a ts o u r p ric e on a n y b o o k w e w ill c h e e rfu lly re fu n d th e d iffe re n c e . Full R e fu n d s U n til S e p te m b e r 16, 1 9 9 4 A ll b o o k s p u rc h a s e d fro m T e x a s T e x tb o o k s , c a n b e re tu rn e d fo r a fu ll re fu n d u n til S e p te m b e r 16, 1 9 9 4 . T o r e c e iv e a fu ll re fu n d , a ll b o o k s m u s t e a c c o m p a n ie d by a re c e ip t, a n d n e w b o o k s m u s t b e in n e w c o n d itio n . P ric e la b e ls m u s t b e in ta c t. 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Touchstone Pictures' Sim ple Twist of Fate is not this kind of m ovie. But it's cute. Steve M artin, w ho w rote the film 's screenplay, is introduced as Michael M cCann, a happy-go-lucky ball of energy overjoyed w ith his pregnant wife, w ho soon will m ake him a father. A w aiting the arrival of his progeny, Michael learns rather unexpectedly th at som e m ilkm an action has been going on. C ru sh ed by th is know ledg e, M ichael splits from his wife and transform s him self into a skeptical, herm itic, lifeless carp en ter-m iser. H is only solace lies in a nightly ritu ­ al of counting his copious cash sup- ply. He lives this disdainful existence for a few years or so until the tow n scoundrel (Stephen Baldwin) h a p ­ pens upon M ikey's stash o ' cash and takes off w ith th e goods in the m id­ dle of the night. H aving been jilted yet ano ther tim e, M ike appears alm ost suicidal at this point, until, as luck w ould have it, another tw ist of fate lands an abandoned 5-year-old girl into his life. this This is w here the cheese com es in. little m iss S ure e n o u g h , nam ed M athilda brings so m uch joy into M ichael's life that he forgets about his pecuniary loss. As if bv tra n s­ m agic, m iserly M artin form ed into an outgoing, loving, "w ild an d crazy guy." is |fo h je m d in Ike I tU w t A d i! 1d p l m y m o d . 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 film A SIMPLE TWIST OF FATE Starring: Steve M artin, Gabriel Bvme, Stephen Baldwin, C atherine O 'H ara Director: Gillies M acKinnon Playing at: H ighland 10, W estgate 8 Rating: ★ ★ 1/> (out of five) flows pretty sm oothly. As m uch can be said for the acting, although M ar­ tin irrefutably proves his talent for dram atic acting, clearly outshining everyone on the screen. is The film 's stro n g e st attrib u te, fairy-tale its alm o st though, appearance. M ost of this can be attributed to the soft lighting and eerie choir singing betw een scene changes, b u t it m akes for an effective combo. Also, the father-daughter chem ­ istry generated by M artin and the various young girls that play M athil­ da is genuine, and this is m old that M artin seem s to fit in easily. Some things about the flick, ho w ­ ever, d o n 't w ork quite so well. For starters, the m ood of the w ork is far too serious. So serious that the au d ience d o e sn 't alw ay s know w hether to laugh at the comic relief or not. Also, the jokes are really biting, m aking for a serious-hilarious-seri- ous-hilarious roller coaster rem inis­ cent of w alking w ith a piece of glass in one foot. All things considered, though, this flick is a reasonably safe bet, espe­ cially for sappy m ovie fans and die­ hard fans of M artin. Steve Martin wrote and stars in A Simple Twist of Fate. Sadly, his h a p p in e ss is sh o rt­ lived. The to w n p o litic ia n /b a d - b o y /ric h guy (Gabriel Byrne) begins to notice young M athilda. You see, h e's the one w h o knocked up M ichael's ex in the first place so M athilda is actually his biological daughter. Being the bad d ude that he is, he w ants to strip Mike of the only joy for himself. Soon our hero is subpoenaed and the court m ust decide w ho gets dibs on the girl. Even though M artin's Mike can provide her w ith Saturday Night Live hum or and love (after all he w as Father of the Bride), the m ean ol' politician has lots of bonus cash and can afford to give M athilda a coun­ try club upbringing and send her to p riv ate schools and bu y h e r a Beemer. The plot, alth o u g h a little too w arm and fuzzy for som e view ers, PROFESSIONAL WINDOW TINTING BA C K -TO -SC H O O L SPEC IA L J A li. any car wltti U.T. ID SUNBUSTERS ^ 5 ^ i o w T i n t i n g j 7 9 4 -8 4 6 B H Ü B 7 / 'm s are- Ms. a n e tu ^ o c k a r a 'ATTORNEY-------- O pen evéry night until 1:30 a.m. 474-JAIL 4 7 4 -5 2 4 5 24th & San A ntonio Licensed By The Supreme Court ol Texas 1973 Not Cert By The Tx Bd ot Leg Spec m DESSAU HALL Tuesday W ed n esd ay 5<■" JHJDui him Tmes are for September 2-5, 1$$4 ^CLASSIC [TlOVkCS AT IK TttCflM! Great films or» tfie giant screen of the historic Param ount Theatre I Austin's most magical movie ex-jperiencel Fri.-Sun., S ep t. 2 -4 RESTORED SPECTACULAR! :g e »esr nene • Mu»f b* avc-*' anead o r —a o - w (c-aa- ** °FrE* C 'OOi OMM SHAIF a-EC GUINNESS «A- o r Scr—n i Steao Fri. a» y 3 0 So*. * Itm . a* 2 ; 3 0 p m 7 :3 0 pm Tues., W ed., Fri., S ept. 6, 7, 9 EPIC WESTERN! CUN* EAS'WOOC lit VAN C.EE- Sorgio Uonei ■ " i ! ? Mt tt n * * aate — w w —t A*9U ♦ m m m*m T u r b b ♦ o» Á 4 4 « ♦ V mr mm m 4» ** am ♦ tea a — loona > fto—.oovo.-m ' ?6t 'apag-**- Atete- * - o •neva C ¡remotcopt p-r-~* 7:30 pm onty Thurs., A S e t., S e p t. 8 A 1 0 RESTORED SPECTACULAR! GREGORY PECK DAV® NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN T i n t ( k m o r i V A V A I H N f l : Allied com mondo* pk>? tc destroy Germon gwrt* *w* 96 btockfewste- ho* bee^ restored tc *s G nemaac 004 rtereoph arwc q -ory 7 :30 pm only W ed.-Fri., S e p t. 14-16 JOHN WAYNE CLASSICS! Jo h n Ford's The Searchers Ford * v 5 6 mas*erp*ece features W qyn* tr, o '«tenHess **orch for o mee# captured by Ind.on* One o f *>• ’’’on -Rúan- a «Vasten» *v*- mod* 7 :1 5 pm H o w a r d H a w k 's R i o B r a v o ANolE DICKINSON, DEAN MARTIN and WAITER BRENNAN co*fo« witH "THE DUKE' n 4v» 1959 clo»»tc 9 :3 0 pm o n ly S ot.-S un., S ep t. 1 7 -1 8 AN-NOLD x 2! SC^vN AkZEKiEG“3R • Comeron s T E R M I N A T O R 2 :3 0 * 7 :2 5 pm T E R M I N A T O R 2 *.-*0 A * 3 0 pm ago*-* isr nm ' -v - —* Evte- *-<* »>*— 50m on — 9*o~ »c-—- >r -hi» nj¡ ^olt-v Ste*c >oter f Tues.-Thurs., S ep t. 2 0 -2 2 THE ULTIMATE PRIVATE EYE! iACK NCKXSON -aye t o m a n P o l a n s k i 's C H IN A TO W N -so-» s * t -HREv BOGA" BACA„ _ H o w a r d H a w k s ' T h e B i g S l e e p tsoge- » Romwd Chonte- » p"vi-* teEnrtna cMo-?-« 'ft» 9 :4 5 pm T u e s.-T W s., S ep t. 2 7 - 2 9 NEW AND IMPROVED! ED HARRIS one MARY ELIZABETH MASTRANTON 10 James Cameron's t h e a b y s s t»eV*«*i No» cor e»p*.»nc« -e expontea 'director » THf SPECIAL tW n O N 7:30 pm only Stectocjia- i>nd»r«n«ate action inflen htgniiQnf (hit -•noa-ted *pK fnotn -ioWy-'ood i 'bac boy ot octior or -rtiic- Srwdy píoce» 'TH* Abyu* among A* cn»c ipectoci*» "A'.a. Screen ana Stereo; Sated "FG-13' T ues.-M on., N ev. 22-28 BACK WHERE IT BELONGS! CLARK GABLE o n d VIVIEN LEiGH Nightty at 7:30; So*./Sun. m atinees a* 2:30 Sorry, "o motín— pnce», no Wedneidoy tpeciol ADMISSION PRICES /On dcoble ORK — T im e W a rn e r Inc. s a p p a re n t in te re st in G eneral Electric C o .’s NBC div ision sh ow s th e e n d u rin g a p p e a l of th e m ajor broadcast netw orks in an era of pro­ liferating TV choices. It also dram atizes the rapid m edia transform ation as program suppliers seek ties w ith distrib u to rs w ho can th a t t h e ir s h o w s re a c h a s s u r e d e sire d a u d ie n c e s an d h elp them defray rising production costs. Media analysts say all three major netw orks — ÑBC, ABC and CBS — could u n d e rg o o w n e rsh ip changes in the next few years. Tim e W arner, w hich becam e the w o rld 's b ig g est m ed ia a n d e n te r ­ tainm ent com pany in a m erger less than five years ago, has been talking w ith G en eral E lectric a b o u t NBC, tw o sources said Thursday. The sources, w h o w ere speaking on condition Of anonym ity, said GE h as talked a b o u t th e p ossibility of selling all or p a rt of the NBC n e t­ w o r k a n d its c a b le s e rv ic e s lik e CNBC to Time W arner. The sources also said the talks are c o n tin u in g b etw e en GE an d Tim e W arn er, an d c o u ld re su lt in som e General Cinema BARGAIN MATINEES EVERT DAY AU SHOWS STARTING BEFORE bm H IG H LA N D IO .7 4» *-35 ot MIPDLi FISKVIUE BD 454-9567 [ A M M TWIST of FATE 12 » 2 50 5 10 7.35 9.5C FG13 2 H 5 THERE GOES HY BABY 12 45 2 *5 5-207 25 * 35 « t> r W A G O N 'S E A S T ! • 30 PG ': CAMP HOWFCRE 12 00 2 15 * 30 7 00 9 20 »G POir r r C O U L D H A P P E N TO YOU 12-00 2 20 4 40 7 10 9 25 K SURfO t « k [ J H M M R PA RK I 20 4 10 7:00 9 35 RG13 m u . C O L O R of W G H T '2 00 2 25 4 50 T 30 10 00 R stereo LTTTLE R A S C A L S 1210 2-00 3:50 5:45 7:20 FG s t h k * T H E MASK 12.40 3 00 5 25 7.50 0 00 FG13 TFTY I t h e C U E N T 12:00 2 20 4 45 7 15 9 40 PG13 STf«o LJOH K IN G 12 15 2:10 4.05 5 55 7 .45 9 45 G stwk: GREAT HILLS 8 .7 4» US 183 A GREAT HILLS TRAIL 7 9 4 -8 0 7 6 | | THERE GOES MY BABY 12.45 2.55 5 05 7 25 9 35 R WtP F R E S H 12:2 5 2:40 5.10 7 40 10.00 R tKXT 1 N A T U R A L B O R N K I L L E R S 12:00 2 30 5 00 7:30 10 00 R TFTY | C O R f H N A , G O R R I N A 12:05 2 25 4:55 7 20 9 45 PG 3 P WAGON'S E A S T 9 25 PG13 STiRfO CAMP N O W H E R E 2 30 2:45 4 55 7 15 PG S im o IN THE ARMY NOW .J U R A S S I C P A R K t 25 4 15 7 DC 9 40 PG13 .’iSfO U m E I U S C J .L S 30 3 20 5 5 FG srm r r C O U L D H A P P E N T O Y O U 12.20 2:35 4 50 7 10 9 30 PG srtRio CHECK TIMES DAILY M E X I C A N F O O D SPANISH VILLAGE Free Order of Bean Cr Cheese Nachos w ith a 60 ox. pitcher of Margarita Jaime9 2 0 % o f f F o o d o n l y w i t h U T ID Happy Hour Mon-Fri 2-7 O p en I I AM 10PM M on-T hu rs II AM -11PM Fri & Sat A ll M ajor C red it C ards A ccepted 13* J a d m a * Red River ess N o t v a li d w i t h a n y o t h e r o f f e r o r c o u p o n iS* 476-5149 802 Red River Now You Can Take An Erotic Journey To Where Few Have Ever Gone. 713 Conaress Ave • 4 7 2 - 5 4 1 1 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE . . WANT ADS. . . 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 sort of strategic partnership. O ne source said: “ N oth ing m ay even come of this." The New York Times an d The Wall Street Journal each rep o rted on d is­ c u s s io n s b e tw e e n GE a n d T im e W arner in T hursday's editions. T he talk s w e re s a id to e x c lu d e N B C 's seven o w n e d -a n d -o p e ra te d stations because federal law restricts cab le sy stem o p e ra to rs like T im e W arner from ow ning stations serv­ ing the same areas. T im e W a r n e r , GE a n d N BC declined to com m ent on the reports. The New York Times reported sepa­ rately that the W alt D isney Co. has e x p re sse d in te re s t in b u y in g CBS Inc. E a r lie r th is y e a r , CBS n e a r ly m erged w ith ho m e sh o p p in g chan­ nel operator QVC Inc. D isn e y a n d CBS s p o k e s m e n declined to com m ent, and The New York Times s a id CBS C h a ir m a n L aurence A. Tisch d en ied any d is­ cussions w ith Disney. C alifo rn ia-b ased D isney has fre­ quently been m entioned as a possi­ ble su ito r for a n e tw o rk , a n d CBS a n d ABC o f te n h a v e b e e n m e n ­ tioned as possibilities. D isn e y , lik e T im e W a rn e r, is a m ajo r s u p p lie r of m o v ie s a n d TV p ro g ra m s an d p re s u m a b ly w o u ld like to secure a reliable outlet. “ P ro g ra m costs a re so h ig h , the studios need additional w indow s to s h o w t h e m / ' s a id H a ro ld V ogel, e n te r ta in m e n t a n a ly s t a t M e rrill Lynch & Co. N ot long ago, som e m edia w atch­ ers sa id th e n e tw o rk s re se m b le d d in o sau rs facing extinction because view ers w ere flocking to num erous e m e rg in g n e w c a b le a n d p ay -T V netw orks. But the share of view ers w atching th e n e tw o rk s in p rim e tim e sta b i­ lized at about 61 percent. By placing strong orders for time in th e fall TV s e a s o n , a d v e rtis e rs s h o w e d th e y s till a p p r e c ia te th e h u g e a u d ie n c e s th a t th e n e tw o rk s can deliver. Roses / wo / h>¿( a s 1 7 .9.5 ( ■ ■ t . . l'íis íi V e rd e F lo ris t 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 D a ily S p e c ia ls F T P • 45D1 G u a d a lu p e • O n UT S h u ttle Rt W e l c o m e B a c k S t u d e n t s ! Friday, Sept. 2 No Cover & 75G Drinks 5-11 p.m. $3 Cover w / Student ID 1st Floor Salsa Merengue 2nd Floor Rock en’ Español 217 Congress Avenue • Auslin, Texas Proper attire required • 479-5002 PRESIDIO THEATRES W E Rfc B IG O N B A R G A I N S HEY STUDENTS! YES. FOLKS That's right! Now students pay onty $4 25 w/ID - Bargain matinees until 6 00 pm $3 50 - Children and seniors $3 50 - and only $5.25 tor adult admission! For Village Only STUDENT DISCOUNTS DAILY WITH VALID STUDENT LD. RIVERSIDE 8 IN RIVERSIDE MALL 4 4 8 -0 0 0 8 NATURAL BORN KILLERS (R) ■ ! » ( & , 11 452 15 4 4573010 10 1240 DIGITAL FRESH (R) 1Z.3Q 3,00 5.30 7.55 10.30 12 45 MILK MONEY (PG13) mam; a h.hz CORRINA. CORRINA (PG) a tt8 l5 5 5 S M A R T ST F R F O CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGEfUPGt^" 1120 3 15 7.00 9 50 I? 35 FORREST GUMP (PG13) t i g I flO 1 0 0 9 4 $ 12 25 COLOR OF NIGHT (R) 5 10 7 451015 12 45____ THE MASK (PG13) 11,50.2 00 7.10 9.30 12.00 TRUE LIES (R) 4 2 0 SMARI STEREO ANDRE (PG) 1145 3J0L__ *0 KEENS® MSFEtUi DISCOUNTS S M A R T S T E R E O ju a ai stereo VILLAGE CINEMA 2700 ANDERSON 4 5 1 -8 3 5 2 THE ADVENTURES Of PRISCIUA UUEEN Of THE DESERT (ft) 12 30 2 45 5 15 7 45 10 20____________________ DOLBY Cl AO PROFESORE (NR) 12.1A115 4.45 7 15 9 45 BARCELONA(PG13) 00 3 15 5 3 0 9 :0 0 10 10 EAT DRINK MAN WOMAN (NR) <2 00 2 30 5 00 7 30 10 00 DO LBY L R O T l O U E _____________ Top 4 0 Hits 2 : 0 0 - 4 : 3 0 - 7 : 2 0 - 9 : 3 5 ! ■ « 2 1 s t 8 . G e a d o l u p e 4 7 2 - F I L M “Fasten your seatbelts for this journey into the female sexual psyche.” LOS ANGELES TIMES “Explores the boundaries of modern sexuality.” TRANSPACIFIC MAGAZINE “Brilliant, rare, sensual sex play from female view point.” PREVIEW, London “Deliciously raunchy and intellectually stimulating... seduction via food and wild acrobatic sex" SEATTLE FILM FESTIVAL “ Proves to be one of the freshest depictions of sex in cinematic history.” FILM THREAT MAGAZINE I I m m m m m , *0 ONE UNDER! I 17 ADMITTED Dazed and Confused 5 0 th w k! 11:45 T H E E N D L E S S S U M M E R II 12:00 a.m. 2 :15-4:45- 7:15- 9:25 We Have the Makings For Great Jobs! Crew Members Day & Evening Shifts S ta rtin g a t $ 5 /h o u r! Wendy’s International, Inc., has immediate op portunities available at our location in the Texas Union Building at The University of Texas. Individuals will enjoy flexible work hours, company provided uniforms, on the job training and competitive wages. For one of these exciting opportunities, please call (512) 475-6499 or apply between 2-5pm, Monday-Friday, at the following Wendy's locations. T e x a s U n io n B u ild in g or 415 MLK in Austin (ask for C lay Routh) V M S Equal Opportunity Employer C A M P U S Crossword E dited by W ill Shortz N o. 0 7 2 2 T he D aily T exan Friday, September 2 ,1 994 Page 11 Around Campus is a daily col­ umn lis tin g U n iv ersity -rela ted activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organizations registered with the Campus Activities Office. Announcements must be subm it­ ted on the proper form by noon two days before publication. Form s are available at th e D aily T ex a n o f f ic e at 2 5 th S tr e e t a n d W hitis A venue. The D a ily T ex a n r e s e r v e s th e rig h t to e d it subm issions. MEETINGS Texas C heer inform ation m eeting for cheerleadirtg, pom an d m ascot tr y o u ts , 4 p .m . S ep t. 6 o r 5 p .m . Sept. 7, L. Theo Bellmont H all 328; call C am pus Activities Office at 471- 3065. U n iv e r s ity D e m o c ra ts , 7 p .m . Sept. 7, U niversity Teaching C enter 4.124; Lloyd Doggett, U.S. congres­ sio nal can d id ate , an d Tim W eltin, e x e c u tiv e d ir e c to r of th e T ra v is C o u n ty D e m o c ra tic P a r ty , w ill speak. Call Erin Davis at 837-6183 or 475-6664. SPECIAL EVENTS 91.7 KVRX, the U niversity's only s tu d e n t ru n , ow n ed and o p e ra te d radio station, will hold a rally on the W est Mall 11:30 a.m .-l:30 p.m . Fri­ day; Carol Teixeira, station m anag­ er, will speak. M usic will be given aw ay. Call Debbie, operations m an­ ager, at 471-5106. A lp h i C hi d a n ce , 9 p.m . S a tu r­ day, Texas U nion B uilding Q u a d ­ rangle Room (3.304); m em bers free, DJ b y T e d d & th e A sia n U n d e r ­ g ro u n d . E -m ail A nne_k@ utxv m s. cc.utexas.edu. C hab ad Jew ish S tu d en t O rg a n i­ z a tio n in v ite s Jew ish s tu d e n ts to Rosh H ashanah serv ices and activi- conscience calling the GUIDE MOVING IN ties. 7:45 p.m . M onday w ill be the first service of the new year; T ues­ day and W ednesday services begin at 10 a.m ., an d at 1 p.m . each day the Shofar will be sounded. Tashlich service will be held 7 p.m. Tuesday at the UT Botanical Pools, followed by an evening service at 8:30. Ser­ vices are free, b ut RSVP for a festive meal after each service at 472-3900. F ilip in o S tu d e n ts A s s o c ia tio n second annual basketball shootout, noon Saturday and Sunday, at G re­ gory G ym nasium . S tu d y A b ro a d O ffice w ill hold in fo rm a tio n s e s s io n s F rid a y a t 2 p.m ., T uesday a t 11 a.m ., W ednes­ day at 10 a.m ., T h u rsd ay at 3 p.m . and Sept. 9 at 2 p.m . a t the S tu d y Abroad Office, C arothers Residence Hall 7. Call 471-6490. U psilon Pi E psilon freshm an ori­ en tation p arty , 6:30 p.m . T uesday, T.U. Taylor Hall 2.106; chairm an of co m p u ter science d e p a rtm e n t and u n d e r g r a d u a te c o u n s e lo r w ill speak. Free pizza. Call UPE at 471- 9522 or e-mail upe@ cs.utexas.edu. SHORT COURSES L earning S kills C enter free four- w eek classes o n s tu d y stra te g ie s , speed reading and GRÉ prep begin Sept. 12; class e n ro llm e n t th ro u g h Sept. 9. Stop by LSC in Beauford H. Jester C enter A332 or call 471-3614. U n iv e rs ity F o lk D an ce S o c ie ty w orld dance class, 8-10:30 p.m. Fri­ days, Texas U nion B uilding Tow er Room (5.102); w ear slick shoes, p a rt­ ners not required. FILM/LECTURE/ DISCUSSION C e n te r fo r P o s t-S o v ie t & E a st E uropean S tu d ie s b ro w n bag talk, noon Friday, C alhoun 422; four Pol­ ish parliam entarians will speak. Call Sara M cM enamin Kim at 471-7782. HELLO I ’H PETER T odD.' X 61)655 THEY DRAGGED HE OUT TO TALK TO VALI, SINCE Í ’VE 6££N AT UT. FOR 5EÍEÑ YEARS. THEY NANT ME To IMPART TALL ViffH SOM£ OF Mi Guess it's vIorkeD Fcp he. i 'm iN LAW SzHoCL NoW, AND J AlS(F HAVEN T 6oN£ iMSME' BESIDES rH£i DON ’T CAU Me tHC "H&CT m ^ioohie, LAtiyexorA&rei"#* .. J : VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES D iv is io n o f H o u s in g a n d Food Service needs stud en t tuto rs for lit­ eracy and GED p rogram for adults. C la sse s a re h e ld 1-2:30 p .m . a n d 2:30-4 p .m . F rid a y s. C all S tev e at 471-5031. S tu d en t V o lu n te e r C en ter needs stu d e n ts to facilitate w eekly m eet­ ings of parents seeking to stren gth ­ en their fam ilies an d to sto p child abuse. Call 471-6161. Texas Inten sive English Program need s conversation club leaders to h e lp fo re ig n s t u d e n t s w h o a re stu d y in g English; call Linda T harp at 471-4511 8 a.m.-noon. U T I n te r n a tio n a l O ffic e PA LS Program needs stu d e n ts in terested in exchanging cu ltu ral inform ation and language practice w ith interna­ tional students. Interested stu d en ts can pick up inform ation at the Inter­ n a tio n a l O ffic e, 100 W. 2 6 th S t., Room 114; call Liz M urphy at 471- 1211. OTHER D e p a r tm e n t o f P h il o s o p h y b ro w n b a g lu n c h , n o o n to 1 p .m . Friday, D avid L. M iller C onference Room, W aggener Hall 316; p ro fes­ sors Robert Solom on an d K athleen H ig g in s w ill sp e a k on "N ie tz sc h e and Existentialism ." Call 471-4857. M exican C e n te r of th e In s titu te of Latin A m erican S tu d ies confer­ ence on "M exico's Electoral A fter- m ath," 9 a.m .-6 p.m . Friday and Sat­ u rd a y , Bass Lecture H all; call 471- 5551. U T I n d i v i d u a l E v e n ts T e a m a n n o u n c e s a u d itio n s fo r p u b lic speaking and literary interpretation e v e n ts Sept. 2; call P eter P o b er at 471-1957 to schedule an audition. lynn forest F R E S H M A N T I P + 8 U .T PK6FÉSS0RS ARE N o t REALLY s o S V £ ie s iv e a l i e n s / c o n t r a r y t o popular. beu e'f, H o s t "Do NOT B fTE ErrHER. TALK T o YOUR PROFESS ORS - THEY’RE UWEC/1. BESIDES, ALL Of THEM VOOU6D RATHER M?|TE A RE COM HEN DA! l«M Do RpEAWK1 P E T E R 'S P H I L O S O P H I E S * 1 PE RSONAL rXA OlTIONS COLLEGE n A GREAT PLACE TO BEéVN P¿- SoM£ PERSONAL TRADCnoMS' NcnJ THAT ioo'RE AWAY FKOM Your PARENTS, iov'RE MoRF TREE To Do WHATEVER You WANT LUCE STAYING o u t uMjlL. ‘fA H (O.tc .OK,Sc 3oM£0F*>ÜD/DTHAT AT MoHf ) I 1* MIDNI6HTSHAXCJAJB Ou£ of HY T£KfONAL FAVORifC TKA- ( d id i MENnck-marr kersey lane cafe \S IN A MOUSE’ WHAT AM A T ) M A & H O U A CA FE '• HucH t h e SA H t kEKBEY. AR6UASLY UTTER VEiN PANCAKES. CHECK oO T THE M>6NoUA 0N C 0H6RESÍ,: n e a t Q u e s t i o n n a i r e s A n d a P t e r o d a c t y l - L l s A rtts 0*4 Q u A c k £ N B u s H *5 • t w o GREAT SPOTS IF iOO RE JUST jN THE MOOP For c o f f e e there's NOTHING Q u r r e L i k e a c o p o f c a p p u c c in o AND A GOOD f R íe n D to TALk TO AT Z iN THC MoRNiNE,. DrOoHS IS H£ADl46 OUT f t * A SNAEk DURING AU-NIGKT£RS(ANP EVEN WHEN THERE ftNT AN EXAM-Wft*- A80Ü TH £*E ARE a v rn e A FEW OTHER ALL- N i6 *rr spots You c a n fR EaoC N r No, I ' r N o r 6 E T T |N ¿ p a id TO TEU. You A b o u t THESE -PLACES...THE POINT 15-. )f YOU HY 2 0 6 G£STfoN£'. PLAVEK'5*. the surge* and H?\£5> puT YOU UAVF TO GET A SHÉfct1 ENoRf\dUS AND TO CONTRIBUTE To THAT fRESM HAN -15. K £ R B £ 7 L a^ E : r r ‘5 A g rea t a ll- WANT COLLEGE To BE MoRE UARABIE, MAKE 30MÍ CU»E fRiLNDS, > N P fopse THOSE TRADITIONS TOGCTHEP I FKESMHA^ FiFTEEhl Fifteen tiny g eem u n s Who ARovjNd Place 6ET ANYTMiNG FCOH 5TCAK AND fUM, TO PANCAKES To V€66*6 TACOS, ALL AT 1 A.M. ( MkbXLAUJi ATTACH FAT CH.06ul£S TO YooR V4A>ST A5 YOU SLEEP THEY CAW BE EXOROSEp’’ VI5/TW6 THE RECCENTER. *>u PA ip ft* T ^ A GRACKLES' SC0UR6E OF U.T. ftO S T OF YOU f r e s h m a n WILL HOT KNOW of THE GREAT 6RACXIF WAR OF SOME YEAR5 AGO. •fUE ftiRP5 WooU> FEAST DURIM& THE DAY IN OUTCYlNé A6TOCULTVLAL CoHHüNTlES,ONLYTORE7XN?N AT pOSKToROCST iM THE TREES A&AJS SPEEDWAY AND ZHTH CASUALTIES WERE MANY .. FEW OF Mi FRIEMDS RETURNED FROM NIGHT CLASSES UNMARKED Si THE BIRDS' EXCpeToRi b o m b a r d h c n t the ¿tacries w e re DOUP...AWD THEY WERE ScAtl. "fnEY were finally pri\I€aj a*ja/ 31 the VAUAbJT EFFORTS of the UT. GROUNDS people WITH THE use OF EXPLOVP/6 SHELLS. t h e GRMkULS r o o s t else- WHERE RECE/Tni, however, THEY WERE SEEaJ HEAR THE HRC. THEY ARE LvRkiHG... WA rriAld» To RECLAIM ‘SPEEDFlAi wAtTi Wé YOU- TO TERROR¡1 £ CHOWBIRHEAD AS PER 'to u R LEASE K0»REtVAENT, &OB, Y O U WM_>SsT PKN fS Sz5 0 “ V M saR K N C E *’ FEE E V E R V NYd N T H , IKl K O D IT IO N T O ^OUR R EW T. F k t L U R E T O PKY THVS, F E E \NVLL R E S U O r B R e AKANb AuL Yo u r v n v w o o w s k n L NvKKANG» Y O U PRY F O R T H E REP M R S H a a tt* ) x w oW 't p k y / x never S ib N E b THE LE R S E I Z E K E SKbNED IT F O R WOL). by Dave Rivera ZEkE X NEED T O HKNJ6 k L\TTVJE T K L - k ... X F Y O U bO V J'T PRY, X CRN R iso B P tK k YOÜR YCNEECRPS ACROSS 1 G rind er 11 M ag istrate in D ry d e n s “ A bsa lo m and A c h ito p h e l” 15 S ultry star of "A M an and a W o m a n ” 16 W estern w o lf 17 C o p yin g , w ith “ a fte r” 18 S hake, in a way 19 911 abbr. 20 S p lin te r g ro u p 21 Brow n b a gg ers? 2 2 O ld P ortu g u e se 28 P o stm a n ’s ch a lle n g e 30 1 981 R olling S tones hit 32 S h o rt-b o d ie d do g 34 Franck d e te c tiv e ------ C lovis Désiré Pel 35 It w o n 't go a lo n g fo r the ride 38 M ake b a lan ce 39 R eflecting reality as a sin g le un it 41 Prefix w ith m etrics co in s grp. 24 Pet n ickn a m e 27 D o c k w o rk e rs ’ 42 S helf co ve rin g s 44 1 961 fad, w ith DOWN “th e ” ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 48 M e s s e n g e r------- 49 Lauder et al. 51 U n esco rte d 52 Brand ad vertise d as “tw o m ints in o n e ” 54 P ro ce e d in g s 56 R uckus 57 S harpen, as a knife 58 W ou ld -b e jo u rn e ym a n 61 A ctor M ischa 6 2 S p o ng e 63 Passé ha irstyle 64 N ot the reig n in g cha m ps 1 Print m edia 2 C a n in e ’s coa t 3 R ich ie ’s TV b u d d y 4 S hot or w ell fo llo w e r 5 S queezes (out) 6 S too d up, in dia le ct 7 W alks p rim ly 8 Look like 9 D aw son of fo o tb a ll 10 Part of a jo u rn e y 11 1973 hit “ ------- K n o w ” 12 M ost th u g g is h 13 Sheer 14 G ets ove rexcite d D oonesbury b y g a r r y t r u d e a u Puzzle by Raymond Hamel 21 Half a coin m o tto 23 Type of tank 25 Like som e review s 26 K irkuk denizen 29 S craps 31 Cat cries 33 L o s 35 Enlisted 36 S w ollen 37 C h e f’s p ro te c to r 39 P assage of , Calif. p o e try or m u sic 40 D e pre ciate 43 Like som e id entitie s 4 5 S ilv e r------- (cloud seed) 46 K itchen g a d g e t 4 7 C o sm e tic 50 Stone m a rke r 53 Mr. T's real name 55 Pretty soo n 58 Half th e N.F.L.: A bb r. 59 T u r n (start m a kin g m on ey) p re p a ra tio n s 6 0 Tiny bit Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 5656 (75C each minute). m m m s EAN BUSINESS! 20 WORDS 5 DAYS Sn v 471-5244 by Chris Turner ? ewild CLOSER TO TH E H E A R T LASTLY, I'D LUCE TO INTRODUCE Our ouW VbuwO REPUBUCAIO, Mo j„ and our lab puppy, Beau rmmr .. store txowY FFEE H l\3 to -B )T X G O T Y O J P IZ Z A G U Y 0^3l\ite[ec>o X T 5 MITCH AMD AM ! Long tim e no see. YEAH, OUR F A M I L Y ' S GROUÑ s in c e : you s a w u s l a s t . NOW T H A T S WHAT X. CALL A BABY CARRIAGE. THE FUSCO BROTHERS by J.C. Duffy Austin: The Capital of Texas and home of the Longhorn. Is it any wonder that The University of Texas would do so much in such a Texas-size way? The Daily Texan is no exception. Read for yourself. Page 12 Friday. September 2, 1994 T h e D a il y T e x a n To Place a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 Classified W ord Ad Rar.p.g Charged by the word Based on a 1 5 word minimum, the following rates apply 1 day 2 days 3 days 4 days $ 1 1 7 0 $ 1 6 6 5 $ 2 0 4 0 $ 6 15 $ 2 3 2 5 5 ndition (Next to Exxon) Austin Bicycle Salvage *44-7444 9 0 - Vehicle Leasing H O N D A C IV IC 8 6 . 4 5 m pg G o o d s h a p e S kyb lu e 1 1 9 k . 2* door hotchbock Standard $ 2 1 0 0 . 3 2 6-383 4 . 8-295B 1 3 0 -C o n d o s- Town hom es 1 BEDROO M Pen ft,, f'r e p ace w o o d e ~ use w ith ioh s p ir a l s 'a ir- cose 2 2 b c e ilin g WD Hoc it O w n c e ilin g tons, ups, o v e - o o k in g p o o l. re n t. fo r th a n le ss $42 5 0 0 26 3 -2 0 0 0 8-30-7B MERCHANDISE 200 - Furniture- Household FREE DELIVERY F o r U T S t u d e n t s ! S 79.95 ■ TW IN SET W /FRAME S 89 95 •FU LL SET w IFRAM E S 49 95 4 DRAW ER CH EST S 59 95 DESK SET $129 95 5-PIEC E D INETTE SOFAS $159 95 DAY BED w/M ATTRESS $ 99 95 Centex Furniture Wholesale 6618 N Lamar 2001 S Lamar 450-0988 445-5808 2 0 0 - F u m i t u r e - H o u s e h o t d 250 - Musical Instrum ents LOV ESE A " S M A t l m ic ro w a v e , o m p tw in b e d (m a ttre ss o n ly ) rtghtstonds brass headboard, eight- d r o w e r d re s s e r, e x e rc is e b ik e , chairs 4 5 2 -2 8 2 6 . 9-1-5B 2 2 0 C om puters- Equipment M ULTI M E D IA C O M P U T E R sys­ tem. 3 3 M H Z 4 8 6 , 2X CD R O M , Sound c o rd , 1M B vid e o , fa x /m o ­ dem 2 5 0 M B H D D 4 M B RAM , $ 1 1 4 5 . C all 4 5 9 -5 0 1 9 . 8-31-3B. 230 - Photo-Cam era 1 9 4 0 'S COMPLETELY restored ma­ h o g a n y s tu d io u p r g h t p ia n o $ 3 0 0 0 4 6 2 9 5 ’ 2 9 - 56 345 - Misc. C A R P E T * ■ ALl AMERK AN FLOORS ) ^ ( D o r m S ize C a r p e t W R e m n a n ts C h e a p ! * 7 5 : 1 0 Burnet Rd. T 4 5 1 - 1 7 7 0 “ W a lk U.T. 2 B e dro om / 2 Bath. N e w carpet & Point. About 8 6 0 sq.ft. Pre­ paid upfront $ 7 5 0 0 ($625 /m onth). If paid monthly, $67 5 all bills, electricity & cable paid except cooling, heating and phone. Voyagers Apartments, 311 on 31 st Street between Duval and Speedway. 4 6 5 -8 1 2 3 , 4 4 5 -5 7 0 9 . ______________________ 8-4-20B-B g r e a t T b e d r o o m APARTMENTS 1 / 2 block from law school. Fall rates $ 4 1 0 /$ 4 3 0 August availability, 3 2 0 - 0 4 8 2 8-10-208-D C flS fl G R flN D f N o w L e a s in g 2 - 2 ’ s Furnished or I nfurnished Immediate Occupancy 1 neir 1 I • pool • laundry • parking • large rooms * On 1 i shuttle 1 4 0 0 Rio G rande 474-2749 N ew ly R em o d eled Large 1 BR w/study $ 4 2 5 W A L K T O UT! 4 7 2 - 6 9 7 9 H Y D E PARK 1 1 7 5 5 sq ft $ 6 2 0 2-1 9 3 5 sq ft $ 7 0 0 2 -2 9 9 6 sq ft $ 7 3 0 12 month lease S tu d y ro o m s , c a r d a cc e s s g a te s , c o v e r e d p a r k in g , p o o l, h o t tu b 4 3 0 5 Duval St. 4 5 1 -2 3 4 3 4 0 0 - Condos - Tow nhom es C 1 T V P R O P E R n I S NOW LEASING! C o n d o s * T o w n h o m e s *A p ts . 7 0 6 W . M L K 4 7 8 -6 5 6 5 8 5 20B-D 2 1 'S $ 6 5 0 Big pool 1 yr. leases THERE S N O T M uch A va ila b le But W e K n o w W h e re The V a ca n c ie s A re ! C o n d o s , H ouses, D u plexe s, A ls o . H a b it a t H u n te rs R e a lto rs . 482 -8 6 5 2 8-10-12P N E W ! N E W ! N e w l 1 's a n d 2 's G ated com m unity, free cable, lo w b ills , f ir s t s to p o n s h u ttle . 4 4 2 6 6 6 8 8-26-20B o n ly . C a ll L o ri. B rin g y o u r friendsl EPI, 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 . 8-9 206 B O NE-BEDROOM/TW O-BED­ R O O M A l t b ills p a id , lu x u r y . W a lkin g distance to dow ntown and UT cam pus. C o n tro lle d e n try a c ­ cess to b u ild in g a n d p a rk in g go rage 1 8 0 0 Lavaca. 4 7 6 -9 7 1 0 . 8- 11-20B SHUTTLE BUSI 2-2, 6 4 0 + . Free ca­ b le , a c ce ss g a te s , c e ilin g fa n s , lo o o o w B ills . C a ll N o w ' A p a r t ­ m ent Finders S e rvice, 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 8-26-6P-B C O N D O S , C O N D O S . C O N D O S , W e K n o w To F ind T hosel Sales a n d Leasing. A lso , Houses, D u p le x e s , A p a rtm e n ts . H a b ita t Hunters 4 8 2 8 6 5 2 8-1G 12P Five b lock's to cam pus.2- 1 a v a ila b le . U nit Features 3 0 0 0 GUAD ALU PE 1 /1 C o n d o n ew ly renovated, new carpet ceil­ ing fans Bus stop $46 5 /m o n th 1- all ap p lia n ces, ceiling y e a r le a s e N o p e ts . 4 7 4 - fans, private balcony. Extra storage and covered 0 1 8 8 /2 8 0 -6 9 9 3 . 8 25 i5B W A L K TO C a m p u s . 3 -s to ry spa- cio us 3 -b e d ro o m /2 5-bath. G o o d fo r 3 4 peo p le A v a ila b le 9-1-94. p a rkin g a v a ila b le W a te r / Please call 3 4 6 -5 7 0 8 . 8-25-5B g a rb a g e p a id . $ 7 5 0 4 5 1 - 7 6 9 4 , 4 6 9 -9 0 7 5 , p a g er # 4 5 0 -9 0 4 9 . 8 29-5BD THE 2 4 F la ts a t E n fie ld / W e s t Lynn 2 - l ’ s, $ 6 5 0 . C a ll 4 5 1 2 8 T H /R IO G R AN DE Rio G ra n d e S q uare e ffic ie n c ie s w ith fre e c a ­ ble $ 3 9 5 call Dan, 4 5 1 -2 2 6 8 8 2 9 -1 OB SMALL, C L E A N , a n d q u ie t com piex I BR 1 BA 6 5 0 s qua re feet $ 3 5 0 $ 5 0 d e p o s it M o ve in im m ediately. Located a t 7 0 3 3 H igh w a y 2 9 0 East C o ll 9 2 6 - 6 9 5 4 , leave message 8-39208 G IA N T 1 5 0 4 s q u a re fo o t 3 bed r o o m /3 - b a th . South c e n tra l lo c a ­ tion. 1 / 2 b ills pa id . $ 7 5 0 /m o n th 4 4 0 1332. 9-1-20B * * ‘ C a rin g O w n e rs * * * D o n 't P a n ic ! Still have b eautiful 1-BR‘s fro m $ 4 7 5 , 2 BR's from $ 6 7 5 Beautiful efficiencies starting at $ 3 7 5 . W est C am pus-Tarrytow n Pool, Security. KHP 4 7 6 2 1 5 4 . 8 3 1 20B D B U C K IN G H A M S Q U A R E A p a rt ments 711 W 32 n d Street I bed­ room opartments in quiet, residential neighborhood 453 -49 91 9 1 20B-D M O V E IN to n ig h t! N o rth cam pus 2 1 W a lk to c a m p u s. G a s , hea t a n d w a te r p a id . 9 - 1 2 m o n th s , $ 6 5 0 4 7 6 1976 EPI 9 1-20 B-B SMALL E F F IC IE N C Y c o tta g e H a r r is 3 1 0 1 A ve $ 3 6 5 /m o n th + u t r ) n N o pets 451 2 93 9. 9-1-2B Park 3 9 0 - Urrf. Duplexes TARRYTO W N 3 0 0 4 B M a y w o o d C ircle 3 2 W / D connections appliances, small fenced yard, ali go ra g e , fir e p la c e $ 1 2 .5 0 /m o n th For appointm ent call 4 5 4 -0 1 5 3 8 26-1 OB 4 0 0 - Condos- Tow nhom es 4 0 1 5 SPEEDWAY 2 / 2 luxury can- do. Fireplace, celing fan, w / d con­ n e c tio n , uf s h u ttle ,$ 8 5 0 4 5 9 - 333 3.8-29-20B ENFIELD 2-1 1 / 2 two-story condo: c o n tro lle d access, c o v e re d p a rk ­ in g . $ 8 0 0 A v a ila b le now ) C a ll A p a rtm e n t F inders S e rvice, 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 8-26-6P4J N E W S FLA SH I C o n d o P rice s C ra s h in W e s t C am pus. G rea test D eals o f Y e ar, c a ll N o w l A p a rt­ ment Finders Service, 322 -95 56. 8 26-6P-B C O N D O I I W EST C a m p u s !) 2-2, $ 7 5 0 . W a s h e r , D ry e r, M i­ c ro w a v e , B a lc o n y N o w ! A p a rt­ m ent Fm ders Service 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 &26-6PB DEALS! DEALS! D e a ls l C a ll Lori Roos for condos in ventory around N o r th W e s t C a m p u s EPI 4 7 6 1976 8-29-20B-b LUXURY T O W N H O M E , 2-1 secur ity m o n ito rin g system , 2 c a r go- ro g e . v a u lte d c e ilin g s /fir e p la c e , p o o l, la c u z z i, $ 8 5 0 CPC 3 2 7 - 1642 8-31-5B 3 1 1 1 T O M G re e n . 2 -2 's . W a s h ­ e r / d ry e r, fire p la c e , n e w c a rp e t $ 8 0 0 /m o n f h . C a ll M in g , 2 5 8 6 5 7 2 9-1-2B THE CROIX on 24 th Street W a lk to UT cam pus. 1 - b e r o o m /l-b o th , fir e p la c e , a ll a p p lia n c e s P rice: $ ?50 n e g o tia b le 3 4 3 0 0 8 8 or 3 4 5 -6 2 0 0 9-1-2B * * * Caring Owners* * * Don't Panic! Still have beautiful 1 -BR's from $ 5 0 0 and 2-BR's from $ 7 0 0 $ 1 2 0 0 . Some very luxurious units W est Cam pus-Tarrytow n K H P 4 7 6 2 1 5 4 ______________________ 8-31-20B-D LUXURY 2-2. W est Campus Condo w ith a v ie w ! W / D , tw o b o le o nies, CP, move in tonig ht. $ 8 7 5 476 -1 9 7 6 , EPI 9-1-5B-B 4 2 0 - Unf. Houses RJ REALTY. H o u se s, c o n d o s to r lease A ll areas 3 3 5 -3 9 1 1 86 0 - 8041 DP 8-25-208 3BR 2 B A to r $ 1 0 5 0 /m o 4 9 0 6 D u val. Fenced y a rd , W /D , b rin g AUSTIN METRO a ll o ffe rs P re s id io G ro u p 4 7 6 1591. 8-25-1 OB-8 APARTMENT LOCATORS P R O F E S S I O N A L F U E LOCATINC SERVICE ALL P IO N fTllS (512) 472-5747 124 W. HP St. Sit. 103 2 -1 . PO OL, C A C H , fe n c e d y a rd deck, garden $ 7 7 5 /m o n th $ 6 0 0 deposit, 2 5 5 -2 1 8 2 . 8 26^>B HYDE PARK 2 -1 : H ig h c e ilin g s , w o o d flo o r s , w a s h e r /d r y e r , CR s h u ttle , $ 8 0 0 /m o n t h 4 5 1 7 De pew 4 5 2 -1 2 8 5 . 8-30-51 LARGE 3 -2 -2 o n shuttle A ll op- pliance s Fenced ya rd , W / D con n ections $ 8 5 0 /m o n th $ 5 0 0 de posit. 4 7 2 -9 4 7 2 . 8-30-5B 2-1 B U N G A L O W W a lk in g d is ­ tance to Barton Springs A p p lia n c ­ fe n c e d es, lo t. $ 1 1 0 0 /m o n th $ 7 0 0 deposit 462- 9 5 1 2 . 9-1-5B d o u b le G o rg e o u s 3 -b e d ro o m / 2 bath; 2-car garage; 2 living rooms, on a cul-de- sac. W on national award. 7 1 5 London Lane, North of UT Law, very close $1 6 5 0 KHP 4 7 6 - 2 1 5 4 HYDE PARK H o u s e 4 5 1 9 Red River 2 b d / l b $ 7 2 5 C H /C A / W a ter p a id W o s h e r/D ry e r N o pets A v a ila b le O c t. 15. M a y b e e a r li­ er, 4 7 7 3 4 4 8 9-2-5P 425 - Rooms SHORT W A L K South UT P .,v o te furnished room, private both, shore fu ll k itc h e n C A C H $ 3 9 5 $ 4 4 5 ABP D o u b le $ 2 7 5 $ 3 0 0 ABP Q u ie t, non sm oking, petless 4 7 4 2 4 0 8 8-6 2 0 6 6 Let us find for you: APTS ' HOUSES • CONDOS 3 4 6 - 5 1 9 4 ^ L e a s e lin e \ • U T A r e a ‘ Now Preleasing FREE Service c, T h e A r r a n g e m e n t SPECIAL MOVE-IN DEALS O N 2-1’ ^ ft 2-2's (no locators) f t 2 BR Townhomes & Flats A Preleasing Now Call 444-7880 \ 4 6 7 - 7 1 2 1 / 2 2 6 8 8-29-10B-B L a r g e i - M i ' u n n i 8-2648-8 •Walk lo (.tropos •htitl aid latuidn Small, flirt iN f ia •hmisped • S O Fall U n lir r Ipartmnils : ¡ # 7 U I M * 151-1817 LOSE BO D Y FATI N a tu r a lly sup­ presses a p p e tite . Increases ener­ g y / m e ta b o lis m , 331 -4 5 4 0 . 8 25 ?0B G u a r a n te e d ! TIRED OF bemg tired? Formula one can give you the energy you need C a ll: (5 1 2 )7 0 7 -4 6 3 7 or 8 0 0 -2 1 6 - 63 99. 8-25 20P "Warehouse Clearance Sale* STUDENT DESK Computer tables, filing cabinets, choirs, sofas, office furniture, dining tables, coffee tables, and pictures C o x O f f i c e P r o d u c t s 1 0 9 3 8 R e search 3 4 5 - 7 6 9 1 M -F 8 : 3 0 a m - 5 :3 0 p m 8-26-206 0 D E M O M ATTRESS b o x springs, queen-size, $ 7 5 M id d le a n d burg In te rio rs , 4 0 0 1 North Lamat 4 5 8 -2 5 7 5 (Jeff). 9 -1-5B FEEL BETTER, lo o k b e tte r, h a v e m ore e n e rg y w ith Form ula O ne C all 3 1 0 -1 0 9 0 8-31-1 OP. ■ E 2 X E 9 I M 3 5 0 - Rental Services FOR THE best re n ta l rotes on fu­ tons, TVs, VCRs, and m ini-fridges, coil M.E.I. at 2 06 -06 16. 9-1 5 B ." 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. SUMMER DISCOUNTS STILL APPLY! PRELEASE NOW! A Few 2 BR A p ts. Left DECORATOR FURNITURE CONVENIENT TO HANCOCK CENTER, UT A SAN MARCOS SHUTTLE'S PARK PLÁZA- PLAZA COURT APARTMENTS "LUXURY AT REASONABLE PRICES" 915 E. 41ST 452-6511 SAN GABRIEL SQUARE Apts. NOW PRELEASING! • Furnished • 5 blks. from Campus • Efficiencies • M ’s • UT Shuttle • 2-1 Economy Style ALL BILLS PAID 2212 San Gabriel St 474-7732 N o w Leasing For Fall FURNISHED 1&2 BDRM APTS 104 E 32nd 4 7 7 -4 4 5 6 (off Speedway) 4 1 0 5 Speedway 4 5 2 -8 6 1 6 (IF Shuttle) B 9 208 M A M A J S O N Luxury Dorm for W om en O nly 3 Fall vacancies leftll 3 blocks to cam pus*fully furnished* A ll Bills Paid*free parking*free cable*on site m anager*exercise room * weekly housekeeping and much more. . • N o re q u ire d m eol p la n •L a rg e e le g a n t d in in g room /kitchen. CALL FOR DETAILS 3 2 0 -7 5 0 0 /4 7 4 -Ó 4 6 6 Pnces starting at $ 3 0 5 0 for a full 9-monfh lease Come by 2 2 2 2 Pearl! 1-1 FURNISHED apartment on 38th St. ABP e x c e p t e le c tr ic ity . 1 / 2 block horn UT shuttle $ 3 9 0 . 4 5 3 4 1 4 8 8-31-3B E F F IC IE N C Y T W O b lo c k s fro m U T $ 2 8 5 a ll b ills p a id O n site m anager and laundry. Q uiet, studi­ ous environm ent. H o llo w a y A p a rt­ ments 2 5 0 2 N ueces 4 7 4 -0 1 4 6 9-2-2B-8 3 7 0 - U n f. A p ts . NICE PLACE TO CALL HOME ★ I l' s fit 2 - l's ready for Sum m er ★ G as C ooking, Gas H eating ★ On CR S hu ttle ★ $425/$575 plus elec. SANTA FE APARTMENTS I I O I C la y to n L an e 4 5 8 - 1 5 5 2 •Walklmampih •ftml a ad laiwin •Small, qiin utropln «firusIN •MwDFill faialier iparlmenls 317 f .llsl *131-1117 W a lk /B ik e to C a m p u s 3 2 n d a t L35 AVALON APTS. * 2 - 2 ’ s / fr o m $ 5 9 5 ( P r iv a c y /o w n b a th ) * 1 -1 's / f r o m $ 3 9 5 W a lk - in clo sets, c e ilin g fa n s, C A C H , o n -s ite la u n d r y , m g r. F ully fu rn is h e d , c o n v e n ie n t to e n g in e e r in g , la w , LBJ s c h o o l a n d a ll East C a m p u s 4 5 9 - 9 8 9 8 o r 4 7 6 3 6 2 9 $ 6 1 5 / M O N T H . Y O l bills W a lk U T 2-bedrc t,o> N e w ca rp e t & p om t. A b o u t 8 sq k Voyagers Apartr-**.ft, 3 1 I o r si 3 between Duval and Speedw 4 6 5 -8 1 2 3 ,4 4 5 5 7 0 9 8 5-208 EL DORADO APTS. Large 1 BR s Heat & Water Paid Quarter mile to campus IF Shuttle $ 4 5 5 Call 472-4893 N o w Preleasing La C a s ita 2 9 0 0 C o le St 1-1, $ 5 2 5 2 -1 , $ 6 5 0 G as heat and w a ter pa id Low E le c tric ity 2 6 th & Red R iver C o v e re d P a rk in g 1 yr. le a se s o n ly | fe O n S ite M g r # 1 0 4 „ . 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 i 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 QUIET CLEAN one bedroom Car p e t, stove, r e fr ig e r a to r , C A C H $ 4 0 0 3 2 8 -8 2 3 6 7 29-20-B-B STOP PAYING~RENT! IT'S CHEAPER TO O W N ! Spacious three bedroom M anufactured Homes at the same cost as a one-bedroom apartment, but with the stability o f ownership. Your monthly payment w ill not go upl WEIGHT RO O M , S W IM M IN G •POOL, CLUB HOUSE, TENNIS COURTS Beautiful park and open fields - only 10 minutes from Campus and D O W N T O W N AUSTINI Cali now for more info 9 2 6 - 8 5 1 0 8-2-206 N E A R L A W s c h o o l! O n s h u ttle Large 1 / 1 , $ 3 9 5 +E Pool, la u n ­ dry 4 7 4 -1 2 4 0 8 i 1868 LARGE 1-BEDROOM on w e ll-m ain­ tain e d property. Beautiful garden setting Easy access to IH -35 o ff 183 N o rth. Free c a b le /w a te r. N o pets 8 3 5 - S ta rtin g a t $ 4 5 0 56 6 1 . 8-3 2060 $ 5 8 5 / M O N T H , Y O U p a y a ll bills, W a lk U.T. 2 b e d ro o m /2 B a fh N e w c a r p e t 4 p a in t. A b o u t 8 5 0 s q ft V o y a g e rs A p a rtm e n ts , 3 1 1 on street 31 b etw e en D uval a n d S p e e d w a y. 4 6 5 -8 1 2 3 4 4 5 - 5 7 0 9 , 8-4 206 W A L K U .T. 2 b e d r o o m / 2 B a th . N e w carpet and paint A b out 8 5 0 $ 7 2 0 0 s q ft. P re p a id a f r o n t ( $ 6 0 0 / m o n th ) If p a id m o n th ly $ 6 4 9 A ll bills, e le ctric ity & ca b le p a id except cooling , heating, and phone Voyagers Apartm ents, 311 on stree t 3 1 b e tw e e n D u va l a n d S p e e d w a y . 5 7 0 9 8 A 20B 4 6 5 - 8 1 2 3 , 4 4 5 HILLSIDE APTS 1 & 2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean & Quief All ufilities paid 4 7 8 28 1 9 5 1 4 D aw son Road Just o ff Barton Springs Rood 652068 N o w Preleasing For Fall L a rg e E ffic ie n c ie s 1 -1 's Perfect For Roommates la r g e 2 *2 '» D on't Pay Expensive U tility Deposits Let Us Pay Them" W est Campus Shuttle 2 Blocks From Shuttle 6 Blocks From UT ASHFORD APTS. 4 7 6 8 9 1 5 « N M I - 3 7 0 U N FU R N IS H ED A P A R T M EN T S PICK OF THE CROP -K r A i Light nds 4 ne 4 M A C IN T O S H LC III, 8M B RAM 80M B HD E xp e n d a b le m em ory, 6 25-5B REFRIGERATOR FRIGID AIRE c ite s id e b y s id e w ith ic e m a k e r. $ 6 0 0 Serta Perfec* s'eeper m at­ tress and boxspring Full size $75 each 502 '4 1 9 8 29 56 A L M O S T N E W m a ttr e s s , b o x s - prmgs, Fame, (full size) $80 451- 6 8 7 4 after 6 30pm 8 30 5B M E N 'S 1 5 b la c k m o u n ta in b ke b y G ia n t /e a r o ld , 18 in ch H a rd ly • dde n. $ 2 7 5 3 3 8 -4 1 7 1 6-30-5B SOFA LIKE new cream with south­ w e s t c o lo r a c c e n ts , c o s t $ 5 2 5 new , sell fo r $ 2 6 5 8 3 6 -4 7 8 5 8- 30-5B WATERBED, QUEENSIZE m irrored h e a d b o a rd , heater, excellent con­ dition Jamie 7 0 7 8 9 4 3 . 8 30-5B a m p lifie r , 4 6 0 C O U S T IC $ 1 8 0 / 0 8 0 T w o 12 m ch R ock­ ford Fosgate Senes O ne speakers, 81 Ford Escort $ 8 0 /p a r, O B l i p a r ts -c a r , S 2 5 0 / O B O 2 5 5 - 7 9 8 5 . 8-30-4NC GAS/ELECTRIC STOVES $ 5 0 TV stand, $3 5 ; queer brass bed (com­ p le te ), $ 3 5 0 q u e e n m a ttr e s s / boxspnngs, $ 1 7 5 ; 6 x 9 w ool rugs, $ 5 0 /$ 100 3 4 5 -3 7 4 7 3-30-5 B DE SK S/B ED FOR sale execu tive d e s k , $ 1 5 0 s e c r e ta ria l d e sk, $ 1 2 5 , contem porary king size wa- e rb e d , $ 1 5 0 e xe cu tive creden- za, $ 2 0 0 M ark 3 02 -07 88 8-30-5B M IN IB U N D S LEVOLOR; 4 1 x 6 4 , $ 1 5 ; 7 2 x 6 4 , $ 3 5 N e w in b o x and w ill fit patio door 4 6 2 -3 8 4 6 8-3C-5B V W FOR so e, 1 9 8 8 Fox G L, 9 1 k M o im e n o n c e re c o rd s , 1- o w n e r c a r $ 8 5 0 . 4 5 8 2 4 1 5 o r 4 9 5 -7 2 7 9 8-30-5e F O L D IN G BED w ith 6 m ch m a t­ tress F o ld s f la t $ 4 0 IB M s e lf o rre c tin g ty p e w rite r, $ 7 5 . 2 5 0 - 9638 3-31 56 FOR SALE H e w le tt P a ckard 19B includes mart- Business Consultant II E xce lle n t c o n d itio n $ 7 5 or best offer Rusty 9 2 6 -1 6 1 1 . 8-31-5B S M A tl RFFRIGERATOR G ood con­ dition. $75 482 9 2 7 7 8-31-5B O M PUTER DELL 3 2 0 , S ll, 4 / 6 0 , subnotebook, 3 .5 ", FD, soft w o re case $ '0 0 HP-12C busi- ne s i calculator brand new $65 346-4498 8-31 5B Apple Plus m onitor, $ 1 0 0 0 O BO , modem in cluded, pre-loaded soft­ w a re . 4 7 3 - C a ll 2 2 6 4 /4 7 1 -1 6 7 9 , 8-31-5B I n d r o n il, TO S H IB A 1 9 ' co lo r T V , alm ost new Recent model in excellent con­ d itio n w ith a n te n n a a n d rem ote. $ 1 8 9 0 8 0 . C a ll H e le n , 3 7 1 - 0 1 4 0 8-31-5B FOR SALE tw m bed com plete and m go o d condition $50. C all 453- 347 5 8 31-5P 3 8 6 / 2 0 M H Z M o n o chrom e note­ b o o k w ith c a s e . B a tte ry , A / C a d a p te r She r w o o d $ 6 0 0 . 1 4 0 W car am plifier $75 . Pioneer 1 2 " c a r su b w o o fe r; $ 5 0 . 4 5 2 - 4 4 7 7 8-31-5P T W O FOR S a le l N o te b o o k PC 4 8 6 2 5 M H z , 1 2 0 M B , 4 M B RAM , e x p a n d a b le to 8 M B w ith f a x / d a t a m odem . $ 1 0 0 0 e ach . 4 8 2 -8 9 3 4 8-31-5B COM PLETE CO M PUTER system ; 3 8 6 D X / 3 3 . 2 M B R A M , 1 2 9 M B H D , 2 f lo p p ie s , V G A m o n ito r , printer mouse, modem , joysticks, sound cord $625. 480-8896 9-1-5P, ALL TERRAIN, 15-speed Schwinn bicycle. 16-inch frame, thumb shift­ ers $ 10 0. C oll 4 58 -17 41. 8 -3 1-5B FULL-SIZE FU TO N m atress, $ 3 0 C a n is te r va cu u m c le a n e r, $ 1 5 . C all 3 2 6 -4 3 2 0 8-31-5B M IC R O T E K TRUELASER P rin te r, 3 M B R A M , TrueT yp e a n d Post­ Script, m ay be used w ith M a c or PC. L ig h tly used. $ 6 9 0 4 5 1 - 9 2 5 2 , evenings. 8-31-5B E LE G A N T W E D D IN G g o w n . White silk Shantung Short sleeves, many pearls, sequins. Cathedral train. Size 8 Perfect conditior $ 4 5 0 385- 391 3 9-2-5P AT&T W O R D processor & ty p e ­ w rite r. Disk m em ory, $ 2 0 0 ob o , 479-0731 9-2-5NC 198 0 CHEVY M onza $52 5. Runs g re o t Perfect c a r fo r o student. P A N A S O N IC W O R D p ro c e s s o r Large w ith printer. Easy to use C a ll 3 2 0 -0 4 8 2 . See ot 9 2 6 East 26th, # 20 8. 8-30-5NC ATI GRAPHICS U ltropro EISA ver­ sio n, $ 3 7 5 ; D ia m o n d V ip e r VLB 2M B Super V G A , $ 3 7 5 ; Summa- screen. Store to disk Tutorial, in­ struction manual included $ 2 5 0 . 385 39 1 3 9-2-5P M A C IN T O S H PLUS w ith m em ory lo a d e d upgrade and 6 0 MB-HD grophics, Summosketch III, $ 2 0 0 ; TI386 N otebook Computer, $ 67 5; w ith s o ftw a re p lu s sty le w r ite r p r in te r , m o d e m , a n d t r a c k b a ll. # 9 G X £ w / 3 M B , $ 4 2 5 ; P o rtable Printer, $50, 3-button mouse $15 C o m p le te syste m $ 4 5 0 . 0 2 5 8 Dan. 9-2-5P M S M o u s e P S /2 , 4 2 0 ; A / B Switch, $10 . Comm boards $20, S h a rp O rg a n iz e r , $ 5 0 PFS Re sume a n d Job-se a rch Pro, $ 2 5 , R ig h t-W rite r & M a s te rw o rd , $ 1 0 each Fan C a rd , $ 2 0 , O ffic e Su­ ite, $ 2 5 , C o m p u te r w o rk station desk $ 6 5 . C N E S tu d y G u id e , $ 5 0 1-MEG Printer Buffer $35 Dash B o ard $ 1 0 ; G ra m m a tik 5 DO S $ 1 0 C y rix 4 8 6 D X 2 /6 6 $ 7 5 CACHE 128K $ 2 0 Stereo C o b in e t w / g la s s d o o r , $ 5 0 , N e w P o p e il's Pasta M a ke r C o m ­ p le te $ 1 0 0 . 2 b a r stools $ 1 5 . each, Eteroche shelf, $ 1 0 0 2 4 4 6 2 6 2 8-30-5B DRESSER, $ 3 5 K m g-s ze w 7 terbed w ith mattress $ 1 2 5 . Com ­ puter ta b le $ 3 0 End tob'e, tw o fo r $ 2 0 . E n te rta in m e n t c e n te r, $35 4 4 5 -5 6 3 4 8-30-5B M AC RS; 3 / 6 0 color 12 inch Sys­ s o ftw a re tem lo ts o f 7 $ 8 0 0 /O B O Perfect fo r students 4 7 8 -2 2 1 6 8 30-5B K IN G SIZE w o te r b e d . B e a u tifu l 'o u r p o s t o o k fra m e B rand new b a ffle d m attress $ 1 5 0 K a re n , 345 -8 1 9 7 . 8-31 5B KA Y A K PERCEPTION Sobre w ith s k irt, $ 2 0 0 F ra m e d b a c k p a c k $ 4 0 3 4 3 -06 65 9-2-5B NICE C O U C H in go o d co nd ition. S team c le a n e d A u g u s t 1 2 th . $ 1 6 0 N o te a rs V e ry c o m fo rt­ a b le C a ll Pat a fte r 5 p m . 3 2 3 - 5 8 4 0 9-2-5B FOR SALE 3 0 x 4 2 p o rta b le d ra ft mg boo rd , mat, and parallel bar, o n ly used one sem ester, $ 1 0 0 ; A rc h ite c tu re G ra p h ic S ta n d a rd s (8 th ) $ 7 0 N in te n d o G a m e b o y w / t w o gom es $ 6 0 3 1 0 -0 8 0 8 leave messoge 9-2 10NC FURNITURE FOR sale M a tc h in g co u c h a n d c h o ir , $ 1 0 0 R ocking c h o ir, $ 2 5 Table a n d 4 ch a irs , $ 0 0 . Best o ffe r 4 7 6 - 4 9 6 9 9-2-5B ta ke s AUTHENTIC IN D IA N ta b la drums for sale Contact follow ing number 4 7 2 -8 4 8 7 9-2 5B M E D IU M FO RM AT K oni O m e g a M 6 x 7 c a m e ra ( ra n g e fin d e r) , 90m m o n d 1 80m m lenses, excel­ le n t c o n d itio n w ith m e ta l c a s e - $ 3 5 0 2 5 0 5 2 6 3 9-2-5B N IK O N EM 2 w ith M D -12 m otor, filters, leather 28-85 Tokina zoom case, e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n - $ 4 8 5 . 250 -5 2 6 3 9-2-5B 2 0 " GT Ricochet Rock Shox exage com ponents.Low miles, very goo d condition, $ 5 0 0 /r.e o with extras 4 43 -45 40. 9-2-5PP. TW IN BED- includes mattress, box I spring, headboard, footboard and j fram e, $ 7 5 . C a ll 8 3 4 -9 0 1 7 after 6 :3 0 p m o r le a ve m essage 9-1 5N C '8 4 PEUG EO T 5 0 5 f o u r - d o o T ü l speed pow er w indow s and locks Sun roof. G ood condition, $ 1 0 0 0 | O B O 4 7 4 -4 5 4 3 . 9-1-5B FOR SALE used Yamaha PM-1000 I sound reinforcement mixing console w ith most components $ 6 0 0 /o b o O th e r m is c e lla n e o u s item s A! 7 0 7 -7 7 4 1 . N o calls after 9pm 9-1 1-5NC CHEAP TICKET! O n e w a y pla n e j ticket from N Y C (IG A ) to Austin M a le $ 1 0 0 O B O C a ll q u ic k . Andy 477-6391 9-1-5B FORMULA O N E I A ll n atural, fa n ­ tastic energy. 10 bottles 150 cap sules, $28 each. Fast, friendly, de­ live ry a v a ila b le C a ll Dave, 292-1 1661 9-2-5B DELI 3 8 6 C om puter. 6 MB RAM, 7 0 8 - 1 7 0 M B -H D , 2 5 M H Z , C o lo r m onitor, o w ner's m anuals, $ 8 2 5 . 335 -6 3 2 9 9-2-5NC. CLASSIC M E N 'S Peugeot 2 4 inch j touring bicycle 10 speed bicycle, sport computer, lock, burgundy, ex­ c e lle n t c o n d it io n , $ 1 5 0 . 8 7 3 - 0 7 9 2 . 9-2-5B JUPITER S O P R A N O S a x o p h o n e . G re o t c o n d it io n . S e lls n e w fo r $ 1 2 7 5 , y o u rs fo r $ 7 0 0 4 9 5 - 4 8 6 8 Ask for Stephanie 9 2-5B 1978 H O N D A Hawi. 4 0 0 G reat I transportation, runs great, perfect fo r n e a r c a m p u s $ 6 7 5 7 9 5 - 0 9 8 0 , Bill 9 2-5P M UST SELL! O k id o ta M i c r o lm e I 192 printer ($95) 'm agew r.te r If ¡$ 1 2 5 ) exec, desk c h o ir w /o a k a rm s /b a s e ($ 1 1 5 ) , C o m m o d o re ] 64 with 1541 disk drive (best off­ er) 4 8 0 0 6 4 9 9-2-5NC HEWLETT P A C K AR D 4 8 S X w ith ; eq u a tio n ca rd and p ro g ra m m in g I manuals, all for $ 2 0 0 / 0 6 0 4 8 0 j 9 9 7 4 9-2-5B ■ S e e * — (WANT M A I L O R D E R B L A N K Order by Mail, FAX or Phone FAX: P.O. Box D A u s t i n , T e x a s 7 8 7 1 3 4 7 1 - 6 7 4 1 Classified Phone: 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 2 0 words 5 days S5 Additional Words....$0.25 ea 1 1 1 1 13 1 i 19 1 1 ----------------------- 14 20 26 1 2 1 3 9 IS 21 27 4 10 16 22 28 5 11 17 23 29 6 12 18 24 30 )/ar > y t fiir n w eds only (V pt tra te ft v u w w i t r indtviriuai items offered I I 'or sate may not exceed $1,000 and price * must appear in the body of toe ad copy. If | m m are to* sold, five sódiitonai insertions t wsfl t#e run 0* no charge Advertiser must cat! before t t a.m on the day of the fifth ■ than ^reducOor■ n pnce) is aNowed sentón No copy change (other NAME...................... PHONE. ADDRESS.. ...... .................. CITY. .STATE. .ZIP. EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part-time EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part-time EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part-time 790 - Part-time T h e D a i l y T e x a n Friday, Septem ber 2, 1994 P a ge 13 EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 790 - P a r t - t i m e 790 - Part-time RENTAL 415 - Rooms S H O R T W A L K N O R T H UT. Sa n d ia C o-op . Friendly, quiet, non-sm ok­ in g , p e tle ss. P riv a te b e d ro o m . S h a r e kitc h e n , 2 b a th s, W / D , m eals, du tie s Y e a r 's le a se from $ 2 4 5 ( $ 3 3 5 w / p o rch ) plus bills, food. A J 4 7 4 - 2 0 14, B J 4 7 2 - 5 6 4 6 C )4 7 2 -1 7 8 7 8-8-20B-B 2 B L K S UT. N e w pain t a n d carpet $ 2 8 5 A B P 1 month deposit. 4 8 0 - 0 9 7 6 6pm-7pm only. 8-25-lOB 2 2 n d C o m f o r ta b le , 9 0 9 W quiet, p r iv a t e r o o m s. $ 2 2 5 to $ 2 9 5 A v m lrib 1» now. Shore com ­ m on a r e a s . W a lk to UT 4 8 2 - 8 6 8 0 8-25-7B R O O M F O R rent by U T / A C C c o u ­ ple, $ 2 5 0 + 1 / 3 electricity, quiet n e ig h b o r h o o d , C h r is tia n . N o to­ b a c c o / a lc o h o l. Fem ale preferred. O w n c a r r e c o m m e n d e d . 9 2 9 - 0 7 0 0 . 8-30-5B T W O B E D R O O M S : O n e is master w ith bath. $ 2 7 5 or $ 3 7 5 . N e a r cam pus 4 7 9 -8 2 8 6 9-1-5B S E M I F U R N IS H E D R O O M for rent in N orth-central A u stin home. Pri­ v a te e n tra n c e , p r iv a t e p h o n e . $300/m onth. 4 5 1 -3 4 8 2 . 9 -I-4 B 435 - Co-ops SH O RT W A L K North UT Sa n d ia c o ­ op, Friendly quiet, nonsmoking, pet- less. Private bedroom . Sh a re kitch­ en, 2 baths, W / D , m eals, duties. Y e a r 's le a s e from $ 2 4 5 ( $ 3 3 5 w / p o rch ) plus bills fo o d A )4 7 4 - B J 4 7 2 - 5 6 4 6 , 2 0 ) 4 1787. 8 -8 7 0 M 440 - Roommates C ) 4 7 2 - U.T.’s ROOMMATE SOURCE Find a g re a t r o o m m a t e for you r b u s y lifestyle "T e x a s E x -o w n e d s in c e 198 9 " . Conv»n»nt!y located at 1711 Son Antonio W INDSOR ROOMMATES 49S-9988 S H O R T W A L K N O R T H U.T. S a n ­ d io C o -o p . F rie n d ly , quie t, n o n ­ s m o k in g , p e tle s s P riv a te b e d ­ r o o m S h o r e k itc h e n , 2 b a th s W / D meals, duties. Y e a r 's lease from $ 2 4 5 ( $ 3 3 5 w / p o r c h ) plus bills, f o o d A J 4 7 4 - 2 0 1 4, B ) 4 7 2 - 5 6 4 6 , 0 4 7 2 - 1 7 8 7 8-8-20B-B S H O R T W A L K S o u th UT Private furnished room, p< vote bath, share full kitche n, C A C H $ 3 9 5 $ 4 4 5 A B P . D o u b le $ 2 7 5 $ 3 0 0 A B P Q uiet, no n sm o k in g, petless 4 7 4 2 4 0 8 M 2 0 M R O O M M A T E SERVICE Looking or have place? W e 'll help you find a compatible roommate. W e'll work within your budget. Call Sam, 476-9032. 8-26-206 L A ID B A C K 2 3-year old mole stud­ ent s e e k s c o p a c e b c ro o m .e N o turbo C h ristians or super ra d ic als Please leave m essage. 3 7 1 - 3 0 4 5 8-31 3P S M A L L R O O M , g r e a t for fe m a le g r a d u a t e student N e a r 51 st/ D u ­ val, p ro fe ssio n a l re n o v a tin g 5 1 2 Bungalow $ 1 8 5 + 4 7 9 1688. 8-31-3P O N E B E D R O O M a v a i la b l e in 4 / 1 Private e n tra nce s a c ia i atm o sp he re $ 2 8 5 Colli 4 5 8 9 4 4 4 8-31-5P. IF shuttle, In H y d e Pork. S E E K I N G C H R IS T IA N m a le room - m ote to s h a r e 2 - 8 / 1 B B a rto n Spr n.gs Zilker Park area Helf utili­ P a f e r # 4 5 0 - 9 5 2 0 L e a v e tie s number 8 31 5B L O O K I N G F O R n o n - s m o k in g fe ­ m ale to s h a re la r g e 1 1 in W e s t C a m p u s Rent $ 3 1 0 + 1 / 2 b ills 4 7 8 - 7 2 14 9 2 5P 4 8 0 - S to ra ge Space S T O R A G E A V A IL A B L E 1 0 x 1 0 , 1 0 x 1 5 . 1 0 x 2 0 . Student discount, security a cc e ss. 1 1 7 1 2 N o rth La­ mar, 2 5 8 -2 3 1 2 8 2 6 -2 0 8 ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 1 0 - Entertainment- Tickets W A N T ED : SPORTS TRIVIA BUFFS. 1 -900-562-1900 ext 1131 $ 2 4 9 / m m - a v g length of call 3 m.: -18 or older-Touch Tone Phone required, teleservice U SA , H a ger­ stown, M D 3 01 -7 9 7 -2 3 2 3 . Test your knowledge against our new talking computer N e w questions oer . all C a n Y O U BEAT IT? 9-2 H 520 - Personals W ILD AU ST IN W O M E N Get Their # ‘s & Meet Tonight 9 0 0 9 9 3 -9 0 9 1 x55 $2.95/m in 18+ B1 213-993-94 50. 8-4- 16P O N E O N O N E LINE Hot X * j s y 1- 8 0 0 8 7 6 9833 $3 9 9 / m m 18+ Ae ge on 7 1 4 -5 5 2 2 3 4 4 8 3 1 2 0 6 - D 530 - Travel- Transportation £ 3 8 2 Í U W C Í Í A S í ANNOUNCEMENTS 560 - Public N o tk e 'BEST ESSA Y W IN S * C O N D O M IN IU M Perfect co lle g e w eekend g e ta w a y near the beachl For free inform a­ tion p a c ka ge , send self-addressed stamped envelope to: Ultimate Condom inium Essay Contest 7 1 2 2 Premont Dr # 2 0 3 F C orpus Christi, TX 7 8 7 4 14 5 1 2 -9 8 5 -0 1 5 3 8-29 5B PAGERS $ 19 4 5 8 - 3 3 1 6 W E DELIVER IN T O U C H TELECO M 5 2 3 9 BURNET R O A D 8-26-20B . D IS C O V E R T H E se cre ts o f S o u l T ra v e l. C a l l E C K A N K A R , 4 5 4 - 1 9 0 0 , a sk for free brochure #1 1 9-2-1 P. EDUCATIONAL 580 - Musical Instruction G U IT A R L E S S O N S : Blues, rock, ja zz , a lternative , folk. 1 0 y e a r s teaching experience A n d y Bulling, ton, 4 5 2 -6 1 8 1 . 8-29 2 0 M G U IT A R L E S S O N . C la s sic a l, folk, Latino. M a st e r s in m usic degree . C a ll Jaime, 2 5 1 -9 2 6 8 . 8-31-5B S I N G I N G L E S S O N S . C l a s s ic a l, M u s ic a l Theater, Pop/Belt, C o u n ­ try M a s t e r 's d e g r e e w ith 2 0 - y e a rs e xp e rien ce N A T S mem ber Free consultation. C a ll 2 8 2 - 9 5 0 3 9-1-20B 590 - Tutoring A M O N T H EXTRA CASH For Helping Others 2 Hours per Week Schedule Own Time • $30/week {2 donations) • Safe, Clean, Relaxing • Medically Supervised Present this ad for o $5.00 BONUS on your first donation $20 v a lu e -E x p . 9/16 /9 4 A New High Tech Plasma Facility Call for Appt. 251-8855 IH-3S & Pflugerville Exit West side of IH-35 behind EXXON BLACKJACK DEALERS ★ \0 EXPERIFMF RFQI IRF.D ★ FR A /MSG A VA H A Hi F ★ IMHEDLA TE POSI T/OSS AVAILABLE Local Company Expanding writing essays research papers elementary grades through college C O L L E G E S T U D E N T S n e e d e d to work 4 8p m. M F $ 5/ hr +bonuses M a n a g e m e n t p o sitio n s a v a ila b le C a ll C r a ig at 4 5 3 - 8 7 8 2 betw een 3 & 4 7-28-20B T E X A S STATE A S S O C IA T IO N PUT IT IN W RITIN G 4 5 9 - 9 0 1 5 TUTORING • TUTORING • R EV IEW S OPEN 7 DAYS til Midnight, Sun.-Thur. O F FIR E FIG H T E R S Is hiring part time salespeople to sell tickets for benefit shows H O U R S : 5-9p m M F, Sat 9 a m -1 pm $ 7 / h r + bon uses C A L L 3 7 1 - 1 2 0 0 L O V IN G S T U D E N T w anted to care for sweet girls a g e s 7 an d 1 0 d aily from 2 :4 5 -6 :3 0 (flexible) in my N W Austin home. S om e w e eken d s an d eve nin gs too M u st h a ve reliable car an d references. $ 5 . 5 0 / h o u r. C a ll Laura, 448-5212. L O V I N G , R E S P O N S I B L E student with child care expe rien ce needed to care for 7 yr old 2 :30-5pm , Til­ th. References a n d transportation necessary. Please call 4 7 6 -9 7 8 5 . 8-29-5 B E A R N UP T O $ 5 0 0 / W E E K W ork- from -hom e/d orm -program W rite: D A T A T E C H de p t. J 6 9 7 3 , P O 8-25-10 B 5 0 1 , W o o d b r id g e , NJ B o x 0 7 0 9 5 8-29-20B N E ED E X T R Á C Á S h T Part-time positions open selling concert tickets 25 hours/week plus bonuses. Call Sam 10am-3pm daily for a personal interview, 371-1265. 8-25-208 A SSIST A N T TEACH ERS N e e d e d at quality infant/ toddler developm ent center. M o rn in g s 8 -1 2 :3 0 . Paid training. Experience a n d / o r E C / C D classes preferred. Flexible schedules. V e ry near ER shuttle. E E O em ployer. Call Helen, 478-3113. PA R A L E G A L R U N N E R W e 'll train Y o u r r e lia b le , e c o n o m ic a l car. T u e sd a y , T h u r s d a y a . m . 's other time, flexible. 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 8-26-20B-B C H IL D D E V E L O P M E N T C E N T E R A M / P M - S C H O O L A G E P R E ­ S C H O O L P O S IT IO N S E XC E LLE N T R E P U T A T IO N . C A L L F O R F O R M A T IO N , 4 5 9 -0 2 5 8 8-26-5B. I N ­ r u n ñ eF ñ eéd e d~ for b u sy property m anagem ent office. M u st have reliable transportation, proof of insurance, a n d g o o d d riving record. M-F, flexible hours. $5/ho ur. Please a p p ly at: 1502-B W est 6th Street. 8-26-208B 825-78 C R E A T IV E A N D p o s it iv e p e o p le to w ork 2-6pm d o ily with elem en­ PART-TIM E C H IL D C A R E needed in m y N o rth w e st A u stin hom e for 4- tary a g e c h ild re n . A c tiv itie s in ­ clude swimming, playground, crea­ y e a r-o ld a n d 2 .5 -y e a r-o ld . N o n - smoker. 9 1 8 -9 8 6 5 8-25-7B tive arts C a ll M a r is a 3 2 7 - 7 5 7 5 . 8-30-5B. $ 1 0 0 / H O U R PO SSIBLE mailing our circulars. For information, call 2 02 - 2 9 8 -9 0 6 5 . 8-25-10 B H O M E STEAM LAU NDRY & C LEA N E R S is taking ap p lication s for part-time counter attendant/ car hops. M o rn in g or afternoon hours available. Apply in person at 2301 Manor Road. 8 25 7B H U R R Y ! T E A C H IN G A ssista nts for p re sc h o o l c h ild re n In A c c re d ite d H y d e P a rk B a p tist C h il d D e v e l­ 8 - 1 2 : 3 0 o p m e n t C e n te r M -F and/or 2:30-6 4 6 5 -8 3 8 3 . 8-25-10B S E C U R IT Y . L O W - K E Y , o u td o o rs. $ 4 . 7 5 / h o u r Y M C A , 1 1 0 0 W e st C a e s a r C h a v e z Free M e m b e r ­ ship. 8-2 5-7 B A D M I N I S T R A T I V E A S S IS T A N T , n e e d s b u s in e s s c le r i­ H o m e cal/computer support for up to 2 5 hours/week Familiarity with W in d ­ ow s necessary. C a ll 5 0 2 -9 5 7 9 . 8- 30-4B D R IV E R F R O M H y d e P o rk -A u stin H ig h by 8 :3 0 a m M o n d a y -F rid a y . O p tio n a l return at 4 :0 0 p m . Excel­ lent pay. 4 5 2 -1 2 8 5 . 8-30-5B N A E Y C A C C R E D IT E D center seek­ ing part-time a fterno on teachers. C h ild c a r e e x p e r ie n c e pre fe rre d . A p p ly w ith C r e a t iv e W o r ld 2 0 2 0 D e n to n . 8 3 7 - 8 8 4 0 . 8 -2 9 - 10B-B MARKET RESEARCH INTERVIEWERS. Starting September 8, 1 9 9 4 Established Research C om pa ny has par' time afternoon, evening and weekend positions available. Starting at $6 0 0 per hour. IM M E D IA T E L Y N E E D E D : W e e ke n d N O W A C C E P T IN G le a sing ogent for Northw est apart­ ment community. Please call W e st­ A P P L IC A T IO N S Apply in person between 1 1 :00 ____________ 8-2-20B S H O R T W A L K UT. T y p ist s (w ill train on com puter); B o o k k e e p in g tra in e e s, c le ric a l, ru n n e rs 4 7 4 - 2 0 3 2 8-3-20B-B G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T note-takers n e e d e d for foil sem ester. P le a se com e b y Parodigm , 4 0 7 W . 24th Street. 8 - 1 1-10B-D PART T IM E C O O K . Lunches only. M o n - T h u rs , C a m p u s a r e a w o rk Se n d resume for appointm ent F. p e r ie n c e not n e c e s s a r y but p re ­ ferred. P.O. B ox 5 2 2 8 Austin, TX 7 8 7 6 3 . 8-10-10 B Perfect Part-Time Employment Customer Retention Clerks W e have immediate openings for a w o o d A partm ents, 3 3 1 - 5 8 7 2 . 8- 25-5B C O M E SEE H O W M U C H F U N A TELEMARKETING J O B C A N BEI W e are now taking applications to fill 8 positions. Great work environment. N o selling. O n campus. 2 0 hours/week. Evening shifts $5 $ 10/hour. C all CJ at PBC M a rk e tin g 4 77-3808. 8-29-388 B U SY BUT Fun Dental Office needs T u e s d a y / T h u r s d a y r e c e p tio n ist. H o u rs: l-6 p m . C lo s e to ca m p u s. Cynthia or Robm, 4 5 8 -3 2 3 7 . 8-25-7B L O C A L D E M O C R A T S N e e d colt­ ers Evening w eekend phonebank- m g $ 5 / h r C o n ta c t Jam es. 4 6 9 - com pany in North Austin for individuéis to work for a non-profit 7 9 4 4 o r a p p l y at 7 0 7 W e s t A ve Suite 2 0 3 8 25 1 2B health organization. Individuals will be calling past contributors to solicit support to the organization. This is not cold cqlling and you are not selling anything. N o commis­ sion, straight hourly pay. W o rk A F T E R N O O N D E L IV E R Y . 1 :0 0 - 5 3 0 , M o n d a y - F r id o y . N e a t a p ­ pearance, g o o d driving record re­ quired. A p p ly at 1 1 7 4 0 Jollyville Road 9 26 ? 0 B hours 5pm-9prr. Must hove excel­ D O Y O U E N J O Y W O R K IN G lent phone skills. C oll Kelly Temporary Services. 2 4 4 7 7 3 5 . N ot an a gency Never a fee E O E 8 10-8BB FR EE L U N C H a n d d in n e r for the right g ra d u a t e student. W a it a n d bus tables 5-7pm Sunday Thursday, 11-1 Sa tu rd a y 2 7 1 1 Rio G ra n d e 4 7 6 -0 3 4 3 810-106 L E N S C R A F T E R b . O p e n in g s tor part-time flexible shifts, in c lu d in g n ig h ts a n d w e e ke n d s. S a le s a n d la b tech p o sitio n s. A p p ly at Bar- f o n C re e k loc a tion . 3 2 8 - 1 2 2 0 . 8- 2 5-10 B W IT H S C H O O L -A G E D C H IL D R EN ? W e hove the |ob for you. Center assistant positions available in the Austin, Leander, Del Valle,& Eanes school districts. Extend-A-Care is now hiring dedicated individuals w ho have a desire to work with groups of children Childcare, tutoring, cam p counseling, & lifeguard experience a plus. Hours 2 -6 /6 30pm, M-F, M W F , or TTh Salary $ 5 .40/hour. G o o d oppor­ tunity for advancement. A p p ly at: E X T E N D -A -C A R E 5 5 North 1-35. 4 7 2 -9 4 0 2 extension 2 6 4 . EOE. A M and 7 0 0 PM, Mon-Sat. N U S T A T S , IN C . 9 0 1 W e st M L K 4 6 9 - 6 4 0 0 A sk for G ail or Melissa. 8-29 10B FILE C L E R K N e e d e d . South. Part- time 4 4 2 -2 6 7 8 . 8-29-10B Fast-Growing com pany seeks marketing assistant to coordinate projects. Strong writing, computer skills a must. Dependability, ener­ gy, and ability to meet deadlines also important Atmosphere is casual but intense, schedule is flexible. Non-sm oking environment. Please send resume to Smart-Mail, 2 6 0 0 M c H a le Court # 1 5 5 , Aus­ tin, TX 7 8 7 5 8 . Attn Roger Aradi. 8 3 7 -1 9 5 5 , Fox 8 3 7 -8 5 1 1 . 8-29-5B M ARKET RESEARCH INTERVIEW ERS Friendly, curious people with go o d communication skills needed. D a y and evening shifts available. 25-35 hours/week. Some week­ end work required. $ 4 .50/hour plus production incentives. 3 2 7 - 8 7 8 7 N o o n to 4 :3 0 for appointment. EOE. 8-29-3 B A C C O U N T I N G FIR M seeking part- time receptionist. H ours: 8 :3 0 a m to 1:30pm 3 0 2 -1 6 8 0 . 8-31-5B s o f t w a r e /h a r d w a r T TELEPHONE SALES- C T G is lo oking for part- time consultants with PC experience. M o stly incom ing calls, no cold calls. $ 7 . 0 0 per hour plus bonuses. C o n ­ tact H o p H ouston at 5 0 2 - S in c e 1980 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 610 - Misc. Instruction INTERN SH IP AVAILABLE! Progressive public interest orga n ­ ization seeks quolifies students for internship College credit avail­ able through UT Government De­ partment. Topics include energy, the environment ethics, a nd product safety C oll Jomes Scott at PUBLIC CITIZEN, 477-1 155. ___________________ 8-295B SERVICES 650 - M o v in g - Hauling 7 M O V I N G ? 10 FREE BOXES! Mention this ad to receive 10 boxes under 50 lbs moved free- A .S. A.P. M o v i n g C o . 3 4 3 - M O V E 670 - Painting W A L L P A P E R T H A T o ld bathroom , kitchen. 7 years experience. G u a r ­ anteed quality $ 1 2 0 0 / s m g le roll 4 5 0 -0 0 4 1 anytime 8-I120P 750 - Typing IM M EDIATE O P E N IN G Downtown consulting firm is looking for a highly motivated, mature, responsible individual for part-time runner position. Dependable transporta­ tion is a must. 478-3456. _____________ 8-31 3B D A N C E A N D g y m n a stic s instruc­ tors for children's classes. Teaching e xpe rien ce a n d re liab le tra nsp or­ tation required. 3 2 3 -6 0 1 3 . 8-30-4B "~TH E~REN AISSAN C E ~ located in N W Austin, is accepting applications for the following part- time positions: dining room servers nights & weekends & dishwashers. W ork in a beautiful environment where you ore appreciated. Part-time positions are excellent opportunities for students. M ust be at least 16. Call 3 3 8 -0 9 9 5 8-30-5B PE^FECT~PART-TÍME OPPORTUNITY! Never stop earning! If you are in need of extra spending money, we have the answer for youl W e have 6 0 immediate openings in the Round Rock area for assemblers to work for a gourmet food distribution W o rk hours are Friday and Saturday only, 7a.m -5p.m., including holidays. Call today for more information. KELLY T E M P O R A R Y SE RVIC E S 2 4 4 -7 7 3 5 Equal Opportunity Employer Never an applicant fee. V A L E T Part-tim e, $ 4 . 2 5 / h r . plus tips, n ig h ts a n d D R IV E R , w eekends, 5-star hotel dow ntow n, must h a v e c le a n d r iv in g re co rd , 3 2 0 -5 9 3 0 . 8-31-3B Part-Time Administrative Assistant South Austin Biotech com pany seeking detail-oriented individual for a variety of clerical taks, Customer service data entry filing, etc. 2 0 to 30hrs/week. Casual environment $ 5 5 0 to $ 7 .0 0 an hour. Call 4 4 5 -6 9 7 9 8:00am to I 00p m M o n ,-Fri. _____________________________ 9-1-3B G R O W I N G C O M M E R C I A L re a l estate c o m p a n y n e e d s part-tim e m aintenance/handym an for fall se­ mester. 10-1 2 h rs/ w e e k, Flexible. M u st ha ve truck. C a ll 4 5 2 - 2 5 5 3 8-31-3B C H IL D D E V E L O P M E N T center h a s o p e n in g for part-time staff in tod­ dlers. 2 's a n d 3's. 4 51 -1 1 1 6. 8-3 M B N U R S E R Y W O R K E R S n e e d e d for infants and school-aged children at N orth Austin church. S u n d a y a n d W e d n e s d a y evenings. $ 5/ hr. C a ll 8 3 4 -1 1 0 0 8-31-5B. P A IN T F U R N IT U R E N o A / C in work space Hard work priming, clear coating, sanding, and distressing. M ust have experience with paint and ow n transportation. Afternoon hours. $6.50/hour. Leave m essage rgording experience. 478-2166. 8-30-4B C O O K N E E D E D in W C m a in ly dinners but F-T possible Mon-Thurs. S e n d resum e to P O B o x 5 2 2 8 , Austin, TX 7 8 7 6 3 . 9-2 10B. F O O D S E R V I C E / B A N Q U E T staff p o s it io n fo r N o r r i s C o n f e r e n c e C e n t e rs 7 a m - l p m , $ 5 . 2 5 / h r . Call linda, 4 5 1 -5 0 1 1 . 8-31-3B T E L E M A R K E T E R N E E D E D . 6 4 5 - 8 :4 5 p m . M o n d a y th ro u gh Thurs­ d a y . B o s e p lu s g r e a t ince ntive . G o o d telephone skills. 3 3 1 -5 8 8 5 . 9-2-5B 800 - General Help W an ted AUDIT INTERNSHIP C a p i t a l M e t r o p o l i t a n T r a n s p o r t a t io n A u t h o r it y p r o v i d e s e x c e lle n t a n o p p o rtu n ity for a S e n io r or g r a d u a t e stu d en t stu d y in g A c c o u n t in g o r B u s in e s s A d m in istra tio n . A p p lic a n t s s h o u ld h a v e P C e x p e ri­ e n ce u sin g Lotus 1 2 3 , light ty p in g skills, a n d the a b ili­ to p e r fo rm d e t a ile d ty a s s ig n m e n t s . M u lt im a t e w o r d p r o c e s s in g e x p e r i­ p r e f e r r e d . e n c e is A p p l i c a n t s m u s t b e en rolled in s c h o o l full-time d u r in g the F a ll sem ester. T h is 2 0 h o u r p e r w e e k in te rn ship in c lu d e s a s s is t ­ in g in testing a n d e v a lu a t­ in g e ffe ctiv e n e ss o f e x ist­ in g in te rn al c o n t r o ls a n d m a n a g e m e n t's a d h e r e n c e to th o se c o n t r o ls ; a s c e r ­ ta in in g the exte nt o f c o m ­ p l i a n c e w it h C a p i t a l M e t r o 's p o l ic ie s , g u id e - in e s , p r o c e d u r e s a n d a p p r o p r ia t e g o v e rn m e n ta l regu latio ns. P a y is $ 6 . 5 0 - $ 7 . 0 0 p er hour. A p p l y at C a p ita l M e tr o b e tw e e n the Í h o u rs o f 1 0 a .m . a n d 3 ( p.m . o r s e n d r e s u m e to 2 9 1 0 E. 5th Street, A u stin, T e x a s E E O : M / F / H / V . 7 8 7 0 2 PART-TIME CHILDCARE Two children, ages 1 1 and 14 M-Fri. 3:30-5:30 $6/hr. Dependable transporta­ tion necessary. References required. Central-Close to UT. Call 3 22-0566. 8-30-4B P A R T T IM E E R R A N D runner, m a in­ tenance for interior d e sig n studio. M u st h a ve ow n re liab le tra n sp o r­ tation . $ 6 / p e r hour. C a ll 4 5 8 - 6 3 9 5 . 8-31-3B W A N T E D B O T H full a n d part-time carriers. Flexible hours. 4 8 2 -8 8 8 6 8-29-5B I N E E D a mature, responsible stud­ ent to p r o v id e a fte rsc h o o l care. N on-sm oke r. M u s t ha v e referenc­ es. Call after 5. 3 4 3 -6 6 4 3 8-30-5B W A N T E D IN D IV ID U A L S for tele­ p h o n e su rv e y ( N O S A L E S ), with good speaking, communication, and people skills. Part-time (Hours Flexi­ ble). $5/hour. C a ll 4 7 4 - 5 5 8 6 Bet­ ween 8am-3pm. 9-2-1B PA R T -T IM E S A L E S C L E R K . M a ilin g and packaging store Hours: 12:00- 7 : 0 0 w e e kd ay s, 1 0 : 0 0 - 3 : 0 0 S a t­ 3 4 6 - 2 0 6 9 , u r d a y s . $ 5 .75/hour. C a ll for la w o ffic e S E C R E T A R Y N O N - S M O K I N G w o n te d 2 0 (lours/week $6/hour. General of­ fice w o rk + lig h t b o o k k e e p in g . 5 0 w p m W o r d for W m d o w s / W P 6.0. 4 7 7 -7 4 7 6 . 9-1-56 P E R S O N T O h a n g posters P/T on cam pus. C a ll 1 -8 0 0 - 3 0 0 -7 7 3 7 for details. 9-1-5B P-T R U N N E R for d o w n t o w n law - firm M -F l-6 pm . R e sp o n sib le pe r­ son needed im m ediately for da ily d elive rie s a n d m isc e lla n e o u s o f­ fice duties. Som e h e a v y lifting in­ volved. M u st h a ve c a r a n d g o o d driving record. 4 7 6 -1 0 8 0 9-1-26 C H IL D C A R E FO R two children 9 & 11, flexible hours. M ust have car. $4 75/hr 4 5 9 -4 4 3 8 9-1-2B O F F IC E C LE R K / S O M E T IM E S Run- ner for la w o ffice 3 b lo c k s from UT c a m p u s. M -F 1 : 0 0 to 6 0 0 . Ple a se coll office m a na ge r, 4 7 7 - 7 5 4 3 . 8-31-3B speech samples for intelligibility ond qualify. Starting salary $5 50/hr. W o rk 1 2 hrs/wk M W -F or work 8 B O O K K E E P E R / T Y P IS T , A U T O me- c h a n ic , h a n d y m a n , e le c t ric ia n , plum ber. M in im u m 3 hr. block. W u k a sc h Architects, 2 0 0 0 G u a d a ­ lupe, 4 7 6 -3 3 0 0 9-2-2B •TUTOR F O R eighth-grade student 3 a ft e r n o o n s / w e e k , 2 h o u rs, $ 5 .5 0 / h o u r «Yardw ork/other odd jobs: $ 6 .50/hour 3 2 8 0 3 8 3 9 2 IB Are you energetic, enthusiastic energetic and ready for a challenge? C W L C is seeking creative and caring individuals for part-time teachingposifion. M-F 2 30-6:30. Afterschool counselors, must be 21 and have a goo d driving record Pre-school Assistant teachers.6 4 3 4 South C ongress at W illiam C annon 4 4 3 -7 7 6 5 EO E. ________________________ 9-1-2B Part-time position available for Business ma|or concentrating in insurance risk management. Enthusiastic individual will need to work 4 hours per day, 5 d ays a week, but may choose which 4 hours to accommodate school schedule. C a n d id a t e m u s f b e p r o f ic ie n t at WordPerfect 5.1. This is an excellent o p p o rt u n ity to le a rn the managed care industry from the ground floor. Salary $7.00/hour Applications will be accepted in the Human Resources Department at PC A HeaHh Plans, 8 3 0 3 Mopac, Suite 237-C, Austin, TX 7 8 7 5 9, or by FAX: 5 1 2 -3 3 8 -2 5 4 7 . 9 -1-5B S e a rc h in g for M a r y Poppins. N e e d mature, loving n a n n y to pick up seven-year-old b o y from school daily, participate in activities. 2 .4 5 -5 :0 0 . Re­ quire: Sincere interest in m y child, reliable car a n d insurance, non-smoker. Includes laundry. 4 6 7 - 7 6 8 3 . 9-2-5B D O Y O U h a v e a n e xc e lle n t e y e for w hat looks g o o d ? A w a rd -w in ­ ning, statewide la n d sc a p e d e sig n a nd m aintenance seeks student in­ terested in d o in g qua lity a p p r a i­ sals. O u r reputation is built on the a p p e a r a n c e of our properties so this pe rson will ploy an extremely important rple in our success. Q u a li­ fied c a n d id a t e w ill s p e n d 1 0 -1 5 m ins per property de tailing w hat looks go o d and, why ond what may need im provem ent. W e will tram w ho has a high likelihood of being a r o u n d for se ve ra l ye a rs, a s w e w ill be in v e stin g in tra in in g. Re­ quires ow n transportation, valid TX D.L., a n d a b ility to d o e xce lle n t q u a lity w o rk w ithout strict super vision. S a la r y is $ 1 2/ hr with a n a v e ra g e of 4 - 0 1 0 hrs per w eek If interested ple a se fax resume to 4 5 2 -2 3 7 8 attn Carmen. 9 2-5B Welcome Back! Looking for some exra cash this fall? W e have M-Th 5:30-11 and Sun 5 9 You will conduct surveys over the phone for market research (no selling involved) ideal for people with go o d phone sills, a professional attitude and familiar­ ity w/computer terminology Tiain- ing provided. South-Central Austin location. These positions will start 9 / 1 2 . Call M anpo w e r Temporary Services at 3 2 8 1002. 9-2 4B M A N A G E M E N T IN FO R M A T IO N SYSTEMS INTERNSHIP C a p i t a l M e t r o p o l i t a n T r a n s p o r t a t io n A u t h o r it y p r o v i d e s a n e x c e l le n t o p p o rt u n it y fo r a n u p p e r o r d i v i s i o n g r a d u a t e le ve l s tu d e n t in c l a s s m a n B u s in e s s A d m in is t r a t io n , S c i e n c e , C o m p u t e r E d u c a t i o n D a t a o r P r o c e s s in g to g a i n e x p e r i­ e n c e in the M a n a g e m e n t In fo rm a tio n S y s t e m s ( M IS ) fie ld . T h is p o s it io n w ill p r o v id e e x p o s u r e to the f u n c t i o n s o f a n M I S D e p a r tm e n t in c lu d in g but n o t lim ite d to the f o ll o w ­ t r a in in g staff in soft­ in g : in L o t u s w a r e a p p l ic a t i o n s , p r o ­ v i d i n g P C n e t w o r k s u p ­ p r o ­ p ort, d e v e l o p i n g 1 -2 -3 , g r a m s d B a s e , a n d C O B O L . P o sitio n r e q u ire s in te rn to w o r k 2 0 h o u rs p e r w e e k . A p p l i c a n t s m u s t b e e n r o lle d in s c h o o l full-time d u r in g the F a ll se m e ste r. P a y is $ 6 . 5 0 - $ 7 . 0 0 p e r hour. A p p l y b e t w e e n the h o u r s o f 1 0 a m a n d 3 p m . a t 2 9 1 0 E. 5 t h Street, 2 n d floo r, A u s t in Texas. E E O : M / F / H / V . 4 / SEMEN DONORS NEEDED wi l l is Fairfax C ry o b a n k seeking semen donors for its sperm bank pro-¡ gram. The program is confidential an d all be d o n o r s compensated. A s a potential donor you will undergo screen­ ing procedures to insure good health and fertility potential. You must be between 18 and 35. If you are interested, please call: 473-2268 FAIRFAX CRYOBANK a división of th* Gonotic A I.V.f. institute Research subjects needed to rate bright, energetic, creative person, Z I V L E Y The Com plete Professional Typing Service f le x ib le D O B IE M A L L I 4 : 3 0 9 : 0 0 pm 3 -5 d a y s $ 6 0 - $ 2 0 0 p e r w e e k. C a ll P a ig e 3 -4 pm. 5 0 5 - 2 3 4 9 .8 -2 5 -1 0 TERM PA P ER S DISSER TA T IO N S APPLICATIONS R E S U M E S W O R D P R O C E SSIN G LA S E R PRINTING FORMATTING H I BLOCKBUSTER 6 26-66 bP 0 1 9 0 for m ore information. hrs/wk T-Th, l -5pm. Schedule not 8-31-5B flexible Permanent position M ust hove Eng­ EMPLOYMENT - 790 PART TIME W A R E H O U S E W O R K E R needed in South Austin C h o o se pt houis, M F 8am -5pm . M ust have g o o d driv­ ing record. Coll 4 4 1 -5 1 4 8 . 8-29-5B ATTENTION w NOW HIRING CASHIERS TETGD MOBIL CO N V EN IEN CE S T O R E S • Good Starting Pay • Flexible Hours • Growth & Advancement Opportunities • Immediate Full & Part-time Openings Northwest A ustin Locations A pply at TEFGD M obil #53 3801 W est Parmer Lane • 8 3 4 - 9 2 0 9 R E C E P T IO N IS T / S A L E S F O R b u s y hair salon. Part-time C lose to cam ­ pus Brad, 4 5 4 -0 0 8 0 . 8-31-5B B R IG H T , E N T H U S I A S T I C student needed for light deliveries a nd gen­ eral help M o r n in g s only To start immediately. Call 4 5 2 -3 1 6 6 8 -3 1-3B N E E D C H IL D C A R E 1 1 y e a r -o ld b o y W e s * Lake 3 : 3 0 - 6 : 3 0 5 d a y s / w e e k G o o d p a y + g a s . T r a n s p o r t a tio n n e c e s s a r y 3 2 8 - 4 1 2 ) 8-31-7B A D V E R T I S I N G S A L E S R e p re se n- tative n e e d e d for S tu d y B r e a k s m ogazm e. Part-time flexible hours B a se plus c o m m issio n C o ll 4 7 7 - 3 14 1 8-3 M B lish as first language and good hearing For further information call between 9-5pm. D Y N A S T A T , IN C . 2 7 0 4 Rio G ra n d e , Suite # 4 S E C R E T A R Y / O F F IC E A S S IS T A N T W o r d p r o c e s s in g spreadsheet pre­ paration, data entry, and some tel­ e p h o n e re se a rch Prior com puter p r o f ic ie n c y re q u ire d . F le x ib le schedule, 1 5 20hrs/w eek. R e sp on ­ sible, o u tg o in g upp er d iv isio n or graduate student preferred Fax re- sum e-476-5011 8 -3 1 -5B W R IT E R S , P H O T O G R A P H E R S copy editors needed for Study Breaks magazine, call 4 7 7 -3 1 4 1 . 8 3 1 -4B RED L IO N Gift Shop part-time sales a ssociate needed W e e k e n d s and holidays a must 3 2 3 5 4 6 6 8 3 1 5B EMPLOYMENT - 790 PART TIME 4 7 6 - 4 7 9 7 8-31-3B part-time evening positions avail. 27TH S TR EET 2707 HEMPHILL PARK Í4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 Resanes Papers / Theses User Printing 79c Color Copies Rash Jobs C o p ie s 1906 G u a a a x ip e St 472-5353 T Y P I N G til Midnight Sun.-thurs. O P E N 7 days H o u s e o f T U T O R S l W S in c e 1980 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 IO R C O T Y W N G S E R V IC E S Q u a l­ ity w o r k , c o m p e t it iv e p r ic e s, speedy turnaround AM w ork g u a r­ anteed correct For m ore inform a­ tion call 4 5 1 -6 9 6 5 9 ! 2 0 8 760 - Misc. Services 4Iterations Hij Pam 3 4 3 -1 6 2 9 2 0 Y rs. E x p e rie n c e A lte ratio n s C u s t o m S e w in q Bridal 9 0 9 0 Jo lly ville R d S te 1 0 2 East o f A rb o re tu m C A L L A N Y W H E R E in Texo» or us for 12 D o your w a lle t a fa v o r C o ll M ic h a e l, O u t s o u r c e 7 0 6 - 4 4 2 4 S-3 I-5 B TO PLACE AN AD IN THE SUPER LONGHORN WANT ADS CALL 471-5244 Do You Need A Great Job? W e 've G ot The Best Jo b O n Cam pus! $ 6 / h r . G u aran te e d ! Earn up to $13/hr. 3 S h ifts A v ailab le 7 D a y s a W eek C a ll T oday 4 1 6 - 8 9 0 0 E aB Back to School Opportunities!! U.T. Students: You're back from summer vacation, you've bought your books and moved into the dorm. But now you have no $ $ $!! Well, if you are interested in working part-time for the largest and fastest growing supermarket chain in Texas, then we want you to come by the H-E-B Employment Office at 6929 Airport Blvd Suite 1 27 for an immediate interview!! Our part-time opportunities are many such as: •Checkers. Fast paced and friendly environment. Most stores have immediate openings. •Grocery Stockers: Overnight availability needed. Heavy lifting required. W e have excellent benefits that include paid training. Educational Assistance, Credit Union membership, & flexible scheduling. The H-E-B Employment Office is open Monday to Thursday 10am to 7pm Friday 1 pm to 5pm, & Saturday 1 0am to 3pm. H-E-B is an equal opportunity employe^ & a drug free workplace. For more info call 302-0705 or for a complete listing of opportunities call the HEB Jobline at 371-5719 or call TexJobs at 495 9900 800 - General Help Wanted P A R T -T IM E T E C H N IC A L S U P P O R T S P E C IA L IS T A p plication d e a d line September 9, 1994 C a p ita l M e tro is accep ting a p p lic a tio n s for a Part-Time Technical Support Specialist The individual selected for this the p o s it io n w ill a s sis t Planning Departm ent in data deve lop m en t an d m a n a g e ­ ment, data collection, report­ ing an d data conversion for G IS system. The q u a lific a ­ tions required for this position are a high school diplom a or equivalent, plus two years college in M I S or a related field, know ledge of D O S and at least six months experience IV, p ro g ra m m in g with Lotus 123, and d BA SEIII+ d B a se is required (or equivalent soft­ w ares), V M S experience is preferred. W o rk in g know l e d g e of H a rv a rd G ra p h ic s preferred. Experience u sing O ra c le a n d / o r S Q L is p re­ ferred Resumes alone will not be accepted for this position. Starting p a y is $ 8 . 3 8 per hour. A p p ly in person bet­ ween the hours of 10 0 0 a m. a n d 3 : 0 0 p.m .-at 2 9 1 0 E. 5th St. E O E :M / F / H / V # RISK M A N A G E M E N T INTERN C a p i t a l M e t r o p o l i t a n T r a n s p o r t a t io n A u t h o r it y p ro vid es an excellent o p p o r­ tunity for a n upper-division A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , P u b lic A d m in istration , o r C rim in a l Justice to g a in experience in ♦he Risk M a n a g e m e n t field T his p o s itio n w ill p ro v id e ex p e rie n ce in the fo llow in g areas: p ro c e ss in g of w o rk e r s ' c o m p e n s a tio n claim s; re se a rch in g O S H A a n d oth er r e g u la t io n s to e n su re Authority co m p liance; assist ing in re v ie w in g a n d d evel­ o p in g R isk M a n a g e m e n t p o lic ie s a n d p ro c e d u r e s m a in ta in in g current records for M a t e r ia ls S a fe ty D a ta Sheets ( M S D S ) ; a ssistin g in sc h e d u lin g training, statisti- al trackin g a n d trend a n a l­ g e n e r a t i n g a n d y s is ; reports. A p p l ic a n t s m ust h a v e P C skills with p ro fi­ c ie n c y in d B a s e a n d Lotus re q u ire d W o r k in g k n o w l­ e d g e of D O S a n d w o rd p ro ­ c e ss in g softw are required; M u ltim a te p re fe rred . This 2 0 h o u r/ w e e k internship p a y s $ 6 . 5 0 - $ 7 . 0 0 p er hour. A p p lic a n t s m ust b e en rolled in sc h o o l full-time d u r in g the Fall sem ester A p p ly b etw een the hours of i 1 0 a.m . a n d 3 p.m ., or se n d re s u m e to, H u m a n Resou rces Dept., 2 9 1 b East 5 th Texas 7 8 7 0 2 . E E O M / F / H / V . A u s t in St., ¿7 cla ssm a n or g ra d u a te level B u s i n e s s in s t u d e n t ¡$19 c a s h ; FO R Y O U ! With your first generous donation of lifesaving plasma (with this coupon). Y O U G E T • Free physical on first donation | • Free screening on every donation (HIV & Hepatitis) We require you bring with you: I J • Social Security Cord ‘Proot o< Residence • 'Pktore ID (UT 10, TDL...) | Í AUSTIN PLASMA COMPANY, INC. I L_5J0 W. 29thjt. • 477-3735J N O W H I R I N G SECURITY OFFICERS a hard time making ends meet’ Need extra income withtnjt sacrificing your (¡P A to get it? If so, we have the perteit job for vou!! At /¡m oi we offer: • Full 4* Part Tune PositKms • Night Positions • • Evening • Nude W hile io u Work - * ( t t Not Required • * N Itool Holidays O ff • • No 1 speriena Neeessars • • I nitorms Pnw ided * t \ I I J 4 3 - 7 2 I O N O W /I M l O M l I K l I > t O N S L 1 1 A K I N l i m e • K O W lv> TUITION REIMBURSEMENTS!! 20 PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATORS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY PART TIME/FULL ÍIME OPENINGS TO SERVICE ANO MARKET FINANCIAL SERVICES AND OUTGOING VOICE NECESSARY TEMP TO HIRE BASIS PROFESSIONAL S7 $9 HOURLY RASE C A LI JOB LINE * § 3 4 5 -1 2 5 4 TO RECEIVE IMMEDIATE ATTENTION SEVERAL SHIFTS AVAILABLE TRI-STAR PERSO NNEL STUDENT TRAVEL SALES! Sunchase burs (s seeking ambitious sales reps to promote ski and beach trips for Christmas and Spring Break) Earn cash and Fee trips Call today: 1-8 0 0 -S U N C H A S I = = S 8 i x M a r k e t i n g S tu d e n t;, M a r k e t E xcitin g Fin an cia l Service to H o m e o w n e rs ! Part-time around your schedule! No License Required, leods Provided, 600 Profit ^ C o l l 1 8 0 0 6 ' S 1 8 6 3 Page 14 Friday, September 2,1994 T h e D a i l y T e x a n P it t : Lo n g h o rn s tra ve l to Pittsb u rg h fo r season opener on Satu rd ay Continued from page 16 too many other good players on the field that we have to worry about." candidate offensive One of those players is All-Ameri­ tackle can Reuben Brown. Brown, a projected first-round draft choice, is athletic enough to cover both defensive ends, Tony Brackens and Thomas Baskin, as well as Reed. He's a terrific athlete and an out­ standing lea ier," said Majors. "H e does his job of blocking." The rest of Pitt’s offensive line, however, will have a tough time containing Brackens, Baskin and the nose guard rotation of Chris Akins and Stonie Clark on Texas' defensive front. W ISIM M I T E E T H f T v If you need the rem oval of wisdom teeth call: 3 2 0 - 1 6 3 0 g i f t BIO M ED IC A L L A A r e s e a r c h B ^ ^ ^ g r o u p , n c : inanaal incentive provided in exchange for your opinion on pain medication following oral surgery. Approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeons. U N I T A R I A N U N I V E R S A L I S T F E L L O W S H I P O F A U S T I N presents HAN S MARK What We are Losing when We Lose Supercollider and Space Station" Septem ber 4th 10:30 Sunday Morning New Orleans Mercantile Building Eleventh & Red River next fo Serrano’s Restaurant . V em plo ym en t EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 800 - G e n e r a l Help W an ted 800 - General Help W an ted 8 0 0 - G eneral H elp W an ted and Baskin Brackens have excelled in the 3-4 alignment and the stellar play of Akins has forced Clark to improve his game. Majors readily admits that the Panthers' line may have trouble. The Longhorns "have some fine players on the [defensive] line," he said. "O ur offensive line — I don't know any of them that say this is a really strong element." Defensively, the Panthers are led by linebacker Tom Tumulty, who returns for his junior year. He led the team in tackles with 73 and also picked off two passes on his w ay to All-Big East honors. This year, Tum ulty comes back to lead a line- backing corps that consists of career special-teamers forced to start. Senior Tom Barndt returns to anchor the defensive line for Pitt. Pittsburgh compiled a 3-8 record last season. Barndt has the ability to take over a game, like he did against Rutgers in 1993 when he racked up four sacks and forced a fumble. But that game was not the norm as he earned only three sacks in the other ten games. 'They have a good defensive line and a good secondary," said Texas quarterback Shea Morenz. "Bu t we should be able to play pretty good if we do what we're supposed to do." If the Horns are able to capitalize on Pitt's weaknesses and put the preseason behind them, the feeling is that they should w in in Pitts­ burgh. And that's a place where Majors couldn't w in a single game last season. EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 8 1 0 - Office-Clerical 8 5 0 - Retail DATA ENTRY clerk Near UT. Non- smoker. 40 wpm typing. Flexible Glomour shots is hiring for promot on representatives Mature schedule. Call 447-7721 8-25-7B-b and enthusiastic customer service N E E D M A T U R E resp onsib le sit­ ie- 'housekeeper for boy. ! I , and g - 8 O’ter school (3-óprr' N W A. , -*' o wr transportation non- smrve- -ete-ences O n ly h c a working ndividua's need ap p ly 258 5 ' 76 8 30-58 NATIONAL MARKET SHARE INCORPORATED Currently interviewing fcr dependable, g oal oriented, "OFFICE ASSISTANT for non-profit corporate headquar ters 4 5 hours/day (flexible $5- $6/hour depending on experience A U S T I N L E G A L C O P I E S IS N O W R E C R U IT IN G Pos* PprUrv*e ond FulUime fw - tri beneftt$) ovoi loble for SpecioH$*s Runners, Recepho sts and On-site fun individual W e work in a Answer phone, word processing relaxed atmosphere with a base pay or $6/hr O ur permanent staff is currently working on an easily attainable credit card sales using W ord Perfect 5.1, maintain mailing Ysts, post and distribute mail file, ond other general office duties Must hove own transporta­ tion to run errands as needed (such as to UPS or the Post Office) protect with a bonus plan Nonsmoker Send resume to: ranging from $7-!5./hr This is B e th p h a g e M is s io n So u th ours ova iobie for : »e e « e d sh its 50 Q-a up S.‘ sfin Leg a Copies s* Avenue Ste 8-1 ocser-ie-**) • fo befog oble fo choose schedule around school as well as being located on a UT shuttle route, our shift times are M-F 12-4pm/ 5-9pm. and Saturdays S 29 36 10-4pm. Please apply at 6 2 0 0 laC a lm a 8-30-I0B iT IO N S Tex­ is Full/Part- MLK 4 Guo- N o phone calls, please EOE 8-29-56 E X P E R IE N C E D O N ca ll part-time copy operators $6.50-7.00/hour, m-th 5 30-9:30pm. Contact Chris of 482-0001 8 29-58 R EC EPT IO N IST /SEC R ET A R Y for C PA office 30 hours/week Good client contact skills. Ability to organize multiple tasks M S W o rd and Excel helpfui W ill train for data entry. Send resume and hand-written cover letter, including salary requirements, to Corole I. Gebhard, 3305 Northland #403 Austin, 7 8 7 3 1. representatives to do outbound ap­ pointment booking, marketing of trode shows ond store front. W e provide great working atmosphere, flexible hours, days full and part-time Coll for information 343-2933 8-9-4 B Local Garden Center needs hard­ working, honest, dependable per­ son who doesn't mind getting dirt under fingernails, sweating and working outside. Must be customer mingos Duties include watering plants, helping customers, or help­ ing plants and watering customers Full and part-time positions avail­ able Weekends are a must. Call Rocky at 327-4564 8-12-8B Seeking energetic and organized individuals for positions os STO CKPERSO N ond ESPRESSO BAR ATTENDANT merchandise helpful, but not necessary. Please apply in person a» The C ad eau 2316 Guadalupe. 8-25-208 a great ¡ob for students. Due 6300 Lo Colma, Ste 430, 78752 oriented Must like plastic pmk fla­ ______________ 8-315BP for downtown law firm. PART-TIME C O U R IER N EED ED Technical 8-30-58 8 6 0 - Engineering- Knowledge of gourmet 1707 East 6th 8-25-10B ;L p W A N T E D Apply in p e r PARALEGAL fc tN N t lo c a l D elivery S e rv ic e seeking full-time and p a r t - t im e d o $ i*> o h $ fo» Foil Good a- v ig record and el ab e f r o n $ p o r t a r o n f© c |U írt^cí D!ea$e caí» 451 -6544 for details. e i c i . - -. (— • me (8-5! c W o rd W P have some oo H RE a H O RN TEMPORAR ES Needs D-io-e order -cxe's fo North A„$* n sc-wo-e compq-* Vov w -cue ncommg coiis fro- o e co e w ont i g >o c a e - soFw ori t o . - ¿ i* oe compi •e f terote Some c.sro-e* service experteno would be r e ofo Work Hours an — w* 10.30 or 11:30 a m to 4 00 or 5 .00 p m $6 00 pe* hour. Co! 3 2 6 - H O R N ¡4 6 7 6 ) - Austin: Middle Earth Youth Opt-ons Communities in Schools, ond B g Brothers/Big S sters W o ri j. th runaway/homeless youth conduct dropout recovery enhance educational eveis serve at-risk vout+ in a variety of settings 'Annual stipend of $7 66: N E E D M O N E Y W IN C A S H W e e k ly Tuesday night strip-off on 4th Street a! O il C A N HARRY S W e a r your Calvin Kleins boxers, ’-backs, & W I N B IG B U C K S I For information call after 8pm ask fo*- Ricky o r Eddie 320-8823 Am ERíC O RPS p r o g * a m Creot ve exciting positions w th W O R K M-TH 4-9 & S A T 9-1 progressive youth service agencie E A R N $ 1 0 0 0 T O $ 2000 8 31-56 W A N T TO W IN VCR's, V A C A T IO N S. JEW ELR Y , BIKES, ETC .? CoiTie work for Ausf r Hilton Part-time a rc full-time positions available All shifts W o t staff, e erge night auditor front desk s erk line cook Housekeeping supervisor, assistant restaurant ma-oget Coll 4 5 1 - 5 7 5 7 A M O N T H YOUR AT&T SECURITY SYSTEM DEAtflf IS NOV. H R 3 TELEPHONE r eps TO SET APPOINT M IN TS TOR CONSULTANTS PLEASANT WORKING* CONDITIONS A COMFORTABLE SCHEDULE, 4 A COMPANY w ith INTEGRITY AU ADD UP TO A GREAT ,O e ' PLEASE APPLY IN PERSON TO DEFENDER INDUSTRIES AME R< 3m AT 7 1 r* 4 39 C O U N T ER HELP wai ted Part-time for clear.ms. After noons, 15-20hrs. $.r 50 W estbon k Dry C lean in g 3 ; 0 0 Bee C a v e P o o d 9999 8 30 48 329 C A SH IER N E E D E D fo ’ downtown rotation, M-F, 8om-2pm Studying perrr tted on job O n ly clean-cut, responsible pe- sonobie neea ap ­ ply. 100 Congress, Suite P-l 322- 3290 9126 ItiU S N A T O R S W A N T ED The gift­ ed cor eorn „p to $70/hour port- i me Must be depend ab le. M od samples to konomics 155 N Col- ■te I ?4 9 2-3B Fort Colt P W A N l f D ft ch locore South of Brodie . a 'e T-Th l-6pm 1-0626 9 I-HR -Weekend and Evening Work available immediately. Hire A Horr. Temporaries needs shopping cart attendants for Central Market Grocery $6 00/hr. Shifts 10am 6pm lpm-9pm, 2pm-10pm Can wear shorts and tennis shoes Reliable people Call 326-HORN. (4676) N O LOSERS! ATTENTION! Mr. Gafti's Service Center is seeking phone operators for fuH and part-time day and evening positions Approximately 25 wpm plus previous customer service experience. Also, must be available weekends For info coll 454-4760 between lOartvópm. (Previous od listed incorrect ph # ) 8-31-5NC ARCHITECTURAL STUDENT, Fourth/Fifth Year- N eed someone to design weekend home from floor plan drawing O p en fo ideas. Earn cosh and a weekend in Cancún I 329-5649, Ron, Evening or d ay message 9 2 c h il d c a r e ” ASSISTANT TEACHER Dynamic committed assistant teacher sought for high quolity, occred red child development center. Full-time Top salary and benefits Early childhood experience des rea Apply to CDC at Temple Beth Israel, 3901 Shoal Creek Blvd 371-0224 EOE 9-1-2B Preschool in N W Austin needs an experienced afternoon teacher to work with 3 & 4 year olds. Please call 451-6134. 9-2-18 EMPLOYMENT • >00 GENERAL HELP WANTED < s > 8 1 0 - Office-Clerical I n t e l l i Q u e s t Telephone Interviewers are wanted for evening positions currently being filled. IntelliQuest is a market information provid­ er for the technology industry. There are no sales involved. Pay starts at $6.00 an hour. Previous market research or telemarketing experience preferred. If you are familiar with computers, have an excellent phone voice and typing skills of 25+ wpm, stop by our office at 1700 S. Lamar, Suite 240 to fill out an application, or call 447-6707 for more information. Research M arketing A ssociate for more than 30 years the Bernard C Harris Publishing Company hos been the leading choice among educational institutions fot producing alumni directories. Our unequaled leve» of exper ence and quality hos contributed to our success, but what really makes Harris unique is our commitment to serv.ce We have immediate openings for Research Marketing Assoc ates ¡r Horns newest entity - the Graduate Conrecfton Graduate Comee* on is a unique research and marketing program created specifically to help public high schools locate their former students bring them back in touch ar d see what they ore doing now! $18,000 to $22,000 r me¡r firy year, Horn- p-ovides o variety of schedules geared to ^ee' the needs of the Austin work force If you ore upbeat, CO' type 30 wpm and are ito'ested in joining a winning team -n a growing new environment that hos great benefits please coi- Ms foyfor ot 302-2800 for consideration. Harris Publishing is located ai 313 E Anderson tone, Suite 300 ___________________H A R R IS c world ctoss compony, making world cbss connections — P i t t s , R o l l i n g , S c b n e H , y \ f a g n e r formerly Pill Pitts Insurance Agency Established Insurance agency has immediate opening for part-time clerical/administrative support position Duties include all facets of clerical support handling mail, computer printing, ordering supplies, answering phone. Hours are 1:00 to 5:30 M thru F. Contact Dona at 451-7555. DfettoCfeu 9*SuWHiW O'fufiOfti TUo*Ctfe«(k 1947 EO E S H O R T W A L K UT T yp ift* (w ill trctin on computer); Bookkeeping trom ees, c le ric a l, runner* 474 2032 8 3 2 0BJJ FILE CLERK Position O n e foil ».me tw o p a n time M o n d a y F' day $6 09/b©yf Fulf benefit* for full­ time pa*»' me benefit* available *end resume to Progress ve Com- par.-ei ATTN Laura Schneider P O Box 1 4 9 1 4 5 , Austin, TX 78714 9145 8 26-206 C U S T O M E R S E R V IC E R e p re se n ­ ta tive I Ten full-time po sition* M o n d a y f iid o y Hour* m ay vo 'y from 8 30 8 00pm $ 7 .7 6 /ho ur ♦ benefit* Se n d resume to Pro gresswe Companies. ATTN Laura Schoe der, P O Box 149145, Aus­ tin, TX 787149145 8-26208 C U S T O M E R IN F O R M A T IO N R e o ■esentotive Five p a n >!rre posi tion* a v a ila b le Hour's 4 00- & 00pm , M o n d o y - Frid ay $6 8 8/hour, benefits a v a ila b le P iea se send re*ufre to Proares sive Co m p on es, ATTN Laura Schneider P O Box 149145 Aus­ tin TX 787149145 826-206 8 8 0 - Professional IM M ED IA TE O P E N IN G S for part- time counselors to work with school- age children C all 447-7906 8- 25-10B YOUTH CARE CO UN SELO R Positions available for direct care for emotionally disturbed children in residential treatment center Must have sincere interest in child­ ren, ability to model appropriate life skills, high energy level Expenence/degree preferred Also on-call positions available for re­ lief pool, Must have flexibility for shifts $5 75/hr. Settlement Home, 836-2150 8-31-3B F IN A N C IA L P L A N N IN G s e c re ­ tarial training opportunity, AFTER­ N O O N S Computer W o rdPerfect p re ferre d Resumes a n sw ered P .O Box 26262, Austin, 78755. 8-31-58. 8 9 0 - Clubs- Restaurants M EX IC O TIPICO now hiring W a if S ta ff n eeded A p p ly in person BLACKJACK DEALERS needed Part-time evenings for Austin's top nightclub. Will Train. Start $5/hr plus tips. For info. Call 473-3887. ___________________________ 8-25-208 O A S IS M A KE your li. ng at take Travis. Outgoing host persons need­ ed. Ask for J a y or C a ro l, 6 5 5 0 Comanche Trail. 8-26-68 The Kitchen Door Bakery-Deli Join the team ot Austin's first gourmet bakery and delicatessen. Full and part-time positions available at both locations Apply m person 3742 Far West Boulevard ENTERTAINERS-DANCERS-EN- T E R T A IN IN G W O R K I G r e a t in ­ com e! D aily p ay Full- and Part- time openings Start immediately N o e x p erien ce necessa ry 37 1 7 6 0 0 , 320-669-6 (p a g e r) 9-2- 108-b 9 0 0 - Domestic- Household N A N N Y N E E D E D mfont 454-3777 8 11-106 Flexible hours $5/hour 20hrs/wk for A F T E R - SC H O O L C A R E , 2 boys, M-F 2 45-6:15 Central, non-smok- mg, transportation ond references required 459-3532 8-25-5B C H ILD C A R E N E E D E D Part-time fle x ib le hours Three ch ild re n . Round Rock oreo Pay negotiable 218-8543 8-25-108 BABYSITTER N EED ED n W estlake Hills home $6 00/hour plus Three ch ild re n 7-9 ye a rs old Fr d a y nights plus Must hove transporta­ tion. 327-0100 8 25-7B ~AFTER-SCHOOL CARE For fourth-grade girl 2 30-5 30/6 30, Start Aug 15 Musi be very responsible, commit ted to a ca d e m ic year excluding spnng and holiday vocation Must have reliable automobile and ref erences Please call Bobbie or Joe 900 * Domestic * Household Top $ for top childcare. If you ore in your third year or higher of a child development/ education/human services degree and wish to work 15-20 hrs./week (Tuesdays, Thursdays, and occassional weekend nights) as nanny/mother's helper with a delightful two-year-old girl. Please call 894-0587 for an interview. Prior experience and references required (Bilingual Eng- lish-Spanish, preferred) 8-30-5B B A B Y S IT T E R , M U S T d rive and hove ca r, to pick up 5-yeor-old from sch oo l. N e e d referen ces Close fo campus $5/hour + auto allowance 477-2832. 8-30-3B N A N N Y W A N T E D for two -year- old and four-month-old Mon Fri. 9- 6pm $ 2 0 0 /w eek plus vacation W estla k e O ption to bring up to other children to my home for op­ portunity for third party income 477-5485 8-31-58 W O R K I N G M O T H E R 'S helper Mon Thurs 4 30-6 30pm Pick up 7-yeor-old and take to lessons Help with meal preparation Some additional babysitting $7/hr Ref­ erences and ca r required 327- 6231 8-31 58 W A N T E D UT student to babysit 6 month old on W e d /Frid ay morn­ ings, other days and evenings as ne ed ed M ust hove c a r, like horses, have expenendce, ond ref­ erences Call 261-9145-lakeway. 8-31-108 AFTER S C H O O L ca re needed for two g irls,(6 4 9 ) M-F 3-6pm Cor with insurance a must. References required $ 5 .50/hr 263-5781 8 31 SB W E S T L A K E P R O F E S S O R seeks hou secleoner 4/hrs every other week- $40 Must have ca f. C o ll 328-4748 8-3 1-3B A F T E R S C H O O L C H ILD C A RE* for three girls, 3 15 5 :3 0 , M onday- Thursday lo st C reek a re a by W e s tla k e $ 5 / h o u r C a ll after 5pm or weekends 328 3915 9-2-5B PART-TIME A F T E R N O O N teacher 2 to 3-year-olds, 3 30-6 30. 9 42 2 Anderson M ill Road 335- 9616 9-2-58 N A N N Y NEEDED to care for child­ ren m our home Teacher's sched­ ule Must hove dependable cor ex­ p e rie n ce , and referen ces 346- 4746 v 1 58 W A R M MATURf responsible non- smoker to babysit 3 great children (5 and 6) in our home Tuesdays 3- 6pm Must have own transporta­ tion, references C arla 478-2800 9-2-5 B BUSINESS 9 3 0 - Business Opportunities 900 #s Your Own Business! Low Start-up! We supply high profit programs! 459-6244 305-9120 (day) 9-2-58. 328-7082 (evening) 8-255B C all 1-800-865-1000 ms*ructing/training others in the use 8-30-4B C lean driving record and reliable car a must. Send resume and availability schedule to: Operations M a n ag e r P O Box 1452 Austin, TX 78767. 8-31-58 immediate opening for full-time secretory/receptionist m small law office Requires Spanish language fluency, good typing skills re q u ire d Salary $ 6 ,50/hour, or negotiable, depending on experience. Submit resume or apply by September 8 to: Cynthia F. Leigh, Law Office of Barbara Hines, 1005 E. 40th St., Austin, TX 78751 Call452- 0201 8-30-4B RECEPTIONIST/SECRETARY. BU SY Univeristy area. Real estate offices non smoker, fuli-time, W in d ­ ows, 50 wpm. Todd 476-1976. 8- 31-20B-B C O P Y OPERATOR needed from 8 5 $6/hr. Experience required Con­ tact Chns at 482-0001 9-I-5B C O P Y OPERATOR needed from 8- 5 $ 6 /h r E x p e rie n ce req uired Contad Chris ot 482-0001. 9-1-5B BRIGH T STUDENT needed for P-T am o ffic e assistant po sitions in busy downtown insurance agency Contact M arg e at 478-8779 bet ween 9&6 9-2-2B Prudential Insurance Co Permanent administrative assistant for agent Flexible hours, located on North M o p a c . Computer and communication skills required. Business/Marketing majors preferred. $6/hour. Previous clerical experience desirable 7 9 4 -0 0 3 4 , Rachel. 9-2 IB 8 2 0 * Accounting- Bookkeeping SH O R T W A L K UT. Nonsm oking Learn bookkeeping Also huing typ­ ists, clerical, runners. 474-2032 8- 3-20B-B N E E D A C C O U N T IN G maiof part- time C a ll (51 2) 258-1594), ask for David M ata or Mitch Kit'' ck 8-31-5B. A C C O U N T IN G IN T E R N needed for local accounting firm Account­ ing major preferred Errands, book­ keeping, & other administrative du­ ties Must hove reliable transpor­ tation. Call 45 M 5 12 8-31-5B AMTECH COMPUTER^ SYSTEMS has an immediate port-time opening for on Accounting/Bookkeeping clerk, occounting student preferred, will train Require 10 to 20 hours o week Pay scoie is $5 lo 7 per hour depending pn experience. Fill out opphcation at 5 615 Burnel Road 9 128 8 4 0 - Sales telemarketers” L O O K IN G FO R THE BEST? Call us! W o rk as a team member setting appointments for the # 1 singles organization in Austin Relaxed and fun atmosphere Coll Carol, 345 -2 33 3 D O Y O U K N O W M A C ? W e are in the second phase of our exciting Intern program at the Apple Assistance Center in Austin At this Center we focus on our commitment to being responsive to our customers. Participants in the Intern program, like other employees, must know how to lister, and respond by tele­ phone with quality, timely solutions fo end user technical questions and problems for Apple customers So, we ore looking for people who have technical skills that go a little beyond the end user level to in­ clude some troubleshooting ond of Mocmtosh systems Applicants should be able to comm r between 20 to 40 hours per week, be able to work evenings and weekends, be enrolled for at least nine hours. Bnng your Macintosh skills to work with us ond we wilt trom you to do technical assistance Appie Computer has a corporate commitment to the principle of diversity. In that spirit, we encour­ age and welcome applications from all individuals Please forward your resume, transcript, ond paid fee receipt for the Fall 94 semester To Annette Randolph, A p p e Computer, Inc 1 200 E Anderson lane M S 2 1 2 TAC Ref UAS, Austin, Texos 78752. 8-26-108 S O F T W A R E C O M P A N Y seeks technical support representatives Must possess knowledge of mocin tosh and w in d o w s os ond soft­ w a re.C o ll Dove at 327-9573 8 2 95 B Programmer Needed immediately for small software development compony. Must be organized, dependable, non smoking self starter Program­ ming experience in Windows and Visual C++ required Part-Time $6-10 per houi fax resume to 870 - Medical C U TE 6-YEAR-OLD boy needs cor 'o m 9 a m 12-2 2pm 10pm week­ days, 7am-11 pm weekends Trans­ portation and S S N required W ill train 837 7553 8-25--106 SO UTH AUSTIN orthodontic office seeks mature foe- ai* dependable non smoker for pt office position. Coll 892-5511 m-th 9-11am 8-29-5B P ERSO N A L CARE attendant for fe male N ig h t duty. C o ll Frank or Mary at 4 620092 8-31-56 880 - Professional FORTUNE 500 Recruiter & Interviewer reveals powerful interviewing information in new student handbook. Money-back guarantee, (MC. VI, Discover), only $49 280-1208 ________________ F U L L / P A R T T IM E O P P O R T U N IT Y w ith c o m m e r c io l r e a l e s ta te a p ­ p raisal firm Independent efficient, detoil-onented F lex ib le hours C o m p e n satio n com m ensurate with ab ility an d experience K no w led g e of real estate and W o r d P e r f e c t pluses Stephen Bro w n, (512)453- 7 4 0 7 8 25-1 IP 9-1-5» Ironsm ith B o d y, Inc. 8 5 0 - Retail PART TIME PO SITIO N open lor ag g rtss »e soles person H o ve an eye for interior design, understand the mportance of customer serv­ ice Wit! tram Apply of 7532 Bur nett Rood light's Fantastic 8 1-86 H i g h l y m o t i v a t e d custom er service orientated person for re to>! tales of beauty products 346 8202 8-29 106 Is looking for professional fitness tramder* who ore friendly, energetic, disciplined, and othle- t*K 2 5~40hrj ore available for ca­ reer-oriented professionals to work at Autin s premier sports and fit ness training cerne» C all 454 I R O N (4 ?66) must hove or be working on degree in a h e a M W toted field 8 3 I 206 PART-TIME E V E N IN G and a fte r­ noon childcare needed Nonsmok­ er Prefer groduate student. Refer­ ences Provide own transportation 327-4158 8-29-5B BABYSITTER WANTED 3 days/week, 8-10 hours/day with 5-year-old boy ond 1 -year-old girl Must have own transportation and references Northwest Austin, live-in possible, live-oyt preferred C all evenings, 338-1444 or 338- 0440 M O TH ER'S HELPER Loving ployful light housework Ref­ toddler care erences, transportation, english re­ quired Prefer Mon 4 W e d , 10-3 pm, some flexibility 338-4013 8 26-56 W A N T E D M O T H ER 'S helper/bo 8-25 206 bysitter for 2 boys (741 1) Mon- day-f ndoy 3 00-6 00pm $5/hour Mutt Have q cor 3469225 B 31- 31. T eliabléT J ter-s c h o o T SITTER/FRIEND/DRIVER M / W / F 3 30-5 00 Looking for friendly, responsible non-smoker for 12-year-old girl Musts reliable cor and great references Northcenfrol Austin $ 5 /h our 32D-6937 (days) 458-9543 after 6 _____________ 8-30A8 BABYSITTER W A N T E D to care for I yeor-old g .rl in Barto n H ill* Must be able to work morning* or afternoon* quired 443-7057 9 128 Local references re­ N EED CHILDCARE for eh.ldren 7 9, 4 10 M W F. Ofter 3, ond some Frid ay and Saturd ay even ngs N eed references C o ll 328 2062 8-31 58 Come Visit Our New Location Bigger & Better ‘ Bring in this ad and get a free patch kit! 240) San Gabriel 473-8700 ‘ Limit one per customer Offer expires 9 17-94 EM P L O Y M E N T E M P L O Y M E N T 8 0 0 - G eneral Help W anted 8 0 0 - G eneral Help W an ted N O W H IR IN G Presidio's Arbor 7. Nights & Weekends. Call 346-7919 HIRE A H O R N is looking for strong dependable hard working individuals for mov­ ing and generol 'abo* assignments hours vary between 8om ond 5pm RESIDENT APARTMENT Manager for 28 units. UT area. Experience preferred Mail C O M M PLUS 2729 Exposition Blvd. # 106 Austin TX 78703. durmg the week as well os w ee­ SEEK IN G NDIVtDUALS for porting kends $6 40-J8 5 0 /h- You must lot attendant Please o d d *v n per- hove your own transportation Please col! 3 2 6-H O RN (4676) son at The Codecu 2 3 ! 6 Guttdo- lupe 8-25-20B N O W IM P S ! 8-1-208-D C H U R C H CH ILD -CA R E workers 9 45am Su ndays needed JO D Y ’S C O IF F U R E S A v e d o C o n ­ cept Solon Tokmg a p p lic a tio n s Lice n se d stylists n e e d e d . M om - cure/ped cure needed. 2 8 2 6 Rio G r a n d e Austin,TX ,7 8 7 0 5 . 478- 0587 8-5-20B THE S O U T H W E S T b ra n c h Y M C A is seeking qualify lifeguards swim­ ming nstructors ond w ater ae ro b ­ ics ns’-ucrors C a k Tim a* 891- 9622 Ext 16 8-10-toe 40 TELEMARKETING REPS AM/PM shifts Stort immediately! Excellent commun-canoi- 5k lls 20+ wpm W ee kly p ay up to $7/hour. Temp/temp to hire 1 11 5om $10 00 W ed n esd a ys 7 00pm-9 30pm $ 2 0 .0 0 Re’e enees req u ired C o ll M a r g o a? 450-1223 for intervie . 8-26-4B Marketing Research Associate position available $8 00 plus benefits Must »%pe 30wpm and have excellent speaking and spelling sk-iis Call Ms. Taylor (512) 302-2800. 8-30-16 T RA VEL A B R O A D a n d W o k M ake up lo $2 000-$4 000+ /mo. teaching basic conversation EngH- ish in japan, Taiwor or $ Korea Coll today 451-2100 TEMPORARIES. PERSO N N EL C O N N E C T IO N N o teaching background or As or 8-25-7B languages required fion call: J58671. 9-2-20P For rformo- (2 0 6 ) 632-1 146 ext P A R K IN G A T T E N D A N T S n e e d e d for Austin Marriott V c e f and cash­ ier positions o v a lab le FuH/Pan- time hours a v a ila b le G re a t stud­ ent job - exible hours C c ' 477- 7366 for more nformat-c’' 8-25 20B C RU ISE SHIPS N O W H IR IN G -Ea- up X) $2000+/monft- working an Cn. se Ships or Land - Tour compc-ies World havet. Summer ond FulLTimeempiovnent A L A S K A E M P L O Y M E N T - Stua- enfs needed! Eorn up to $3000- $6000+ per month Room ana b o a rd 1 Transportation! M p¡e or Fem óle N o e x p e r en ce n e ces­ sary. C a li (2 0 6 ) 545-4155 ext A58671 9-2-20P D A N C E A N D / O R gymnast cs in ­ structors needed for fail Flexible hours Parttime call 453-8090 8 ovoiloble N o experience necessary For more informo*,0n coi) 1-206-634 29-3B 046 8 ext C 5 8 6 7 ; 9-2-20P EMPLOYMENT • 800 GENERAL HELP WANTED T OTS Y V5 X V S ^ V tV '_S.3d ;r> V : I Up To $1500.00 Compensation . Are you a healthy, non-smoking man between the ages I of 18 and 45 weighing between 132-198 pounds? If so | you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical a research study and receive up to $1500.00 The dates and times of the study are listed below you must be available to remain in our facility for the entire period to be eligible. Check-In: Morning Saturday. September 17 Friday September 23 Check-In: Morning Sunday. September 25 Friday, October 7 Check-Out: Morning Sunday September 18 Saturday, September 24 Check-Out: Afternppn Sunday September 25 Sunday, October 9 Out-patient visits will be required on the following dates Extended (4-5 hour) visit on September 19: Brief visits on September 20.26 27 28,29.30. October 1,2, 3,4,5.6.11,12,15.22 For more information, please call 462-0492 PHARMACO"LSR rjaazzzz7?xzacczxzzr. nrrTTZzzxzcaxzxzxosz::, To qualify you must pass our free physical examination and We ort forming work teems that hove a base pay of $7 to $8 on screening tests Meals, accommodations, entertainment hour ond with bonuses we expect the Hants employee to earn and recreational activities will be provided free of charge Soccer Continued from page 16 Continued from page 16 Cougars Top 10 teams, and more Top 5 teams in '95." Pibulvech said he does not know when Texas will reach the upper tier of w om en's soccer, but he pre­ dicted a steady climb. "For every year that I build a program, it's worth two seasons — two soccer seasons w orth," Pibul­ vech said. "I'm not saving that in an arrogant manner. What I'm say­ ing is that with everything I do, the talent and the training habits and the ethics that we have right now, I'm able to cover a few more things that I need to. Now it's up to the players to grab a hold of those things and put it together." "W e still have to clobber our first varsity opponent," said Pibulvech. "And if everybody's healthy this weekend I think we have a good shot at causing some upsets. By the end of the road trip, I know we'll do som ething positive the for developm ent of this program ." scored," said Preston, who complet­ ed 14 of 17 passes for 167 yards while also rushing for 51 yards on five carries. "It goes back to the offensive line. They opened up holes, and when I dropped back to throw the ball, they gave me some tim e." After holding Houston to three- pljiys-and-out, the Jayhaw ks struck quickly again. Cougars comerback John Brown bit on a Preston pump fake which allowed Preston to find a streaking Robert Reed down the sideline for a 63-yard gain. The play was set up by the previous play, an out pattern which Brown broke up successfully. Six rushes later, Levine dived into the end zone for Kansas' second score. The Jayhaw ks' final score of the first half was their most impressive. They were pinned down at their own 1-yard line before taking 14 plays, with only three passes, and Kansas scored touch­ downs on its first three possessions and record­ ed 518 total yards on the way to a 35-13 win. scoring on a 4-yard Sanders touch­ down run. By halftime, Kansas had 312 total yards, 183 rushing, and a 21-0 lead. "W e had some really long drives," Javhaw k coach Glen Mason said. "Really, your goal is just to get a first down. We really didn't have good field position, but we still were able to work with it." Houston, 0-1, scored in the third quarter on a 51-yard pass from Chuck Clem ents to receiver Ron Peters. Clements finished the night 23 of 38 for 308 yards and one touch­ down. The Cougars play at Louisiana Tech Sept. 10. Arizona tops Georgia Tech Associated Press ATLANTA — Freshman reserve Kevin Schmidtke scored on a 6-yard run with 29 seconds remaining as seventh-ranked Arizona overcame lost fumbles and penalties to edge Georgia Tech 19-14 in the season opener for both teams Thursday night. While the Wildcats offense was sputtering most of the night, the "Desert Swarm" defense came up with four quarterback sacks and a blocked field goal to hold off the Jackets. Arizona's winning drive covered 60 yards, beginning with 5:46 left in the game, with Schmidtke and Onti- waun Carter accounting for most of the yardage on the ground. T he Daily T exan Friday, September 2,1994 Page 15 ROOM SIZE - DORM SIZE I C A R P E T S FROM *79 E : *109 Bound 6x9 m . ¥ 5304 N. LAMAR M - F 8 - 5 : 3 0 S a t 1 0 - 3 452-5791 LIQUORS Sale Good Through Monday Sept. 5 th at Both Locations ABSOLUT V O D K A ................................... ltr JIM BEAM B O U R B O N .......................... it r 1 5 . 9 9 SEAGRAM S S E V E N 9 . 9 9 9 . 4 9 JAG ER M EISTER 7 0 ° ................................75 0 ml 1 5 . 4 9 1 7 . 9 9 ltr M ALIBU COCONUT RUM 4 8 ° 75OML 1 0 . 4 9 DEW AR'S S C O T C H ........................ ... .. ltr TUACA LIQ EU R 7 0 ° ........................................750ML 1 6 . 9 9 CAPTAIN M ORGAN R U M .................. ltr TIPPER AR Y IRISH CREAM 34°....750ML TANQUERAY GIN 94.6° 1 0 4 9 6 . 9 9 R U M P LE M INZE SCHN 10 0 °.......... 750ML 1 3 4 9 7 99 1 5 . 9 9 DEKUYPER SCHNAPPS (all (lavors).LTR ltr (jpw n® n/a¿ GOLDSCHIAGER I TLC LEGENQVZY M*ORI V 10 7° Cinnamon Schnapps 75 0 M L LTR JACK DANIELS. BLACK 86° Bourbon LTR GOLD Tequila LTR, SUPERSTORE 7th and RED RIVER (512) 476-9982 A m p lt parking IH 35 R E D R IV E R N RON RIO R U M ................. LTR 5 .9 9 4 .9 9 SKOL VODKA................... LTR 5 .9 9 RIO GRANDE TEQUILA........ LTR 9 .9 9 GOLDEN GRAIN 190’ ALCOHOL.LTR BEAMS EIGHT STAR BBN..... LTR 5 .9 9 SHINER BOCK................... 12oz/6pk 3 .9 9 KEYSTONE LIGHT.............. 16oz/case 9 .9 9 TWIN #2 8030 MESA DR. (512) 346-1861 Next to Randall's Spicewood Spgs. All Spirit* 80° Unless Noted Cash or Check on Sale Items Please EXAM 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting at S119* Complete ‘ price includes exam, 2 pair dear daily- wear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1st follow up. EXPIRES SEPT, 15, 1994. WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VAUD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. Austin V ision C en ter Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT 4 77-2 2 8 2 „ 10-7 M /C VISA AMX DISC 9 6 ST. DAVID S EPISCOPAL COLLEGE GROUP Water Skiing/Cookout At Lakeway Wed. Sept. 7 @ 3:00 P.M. Call Church for directions and to sign up social and outdoor activities worship and Bible study outreach projects Come Sunday at 9, 11 or 5 10:15 Bible Study (starting 9 /1 1 ) 12:15 Brunch Fellowship or call: 472 1196 downtown 7th at San Jacinto SILVER SPU RS/ : TEXAS COWBOYS * Now accepting applications for Fall 1 9 9 4 Please stop by Dean of Students Office FAC 2 4 8 Applications due by 12 noon Sept. 12 * * ★ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Full S ervice/S elf Service Copying CHRIS'S LIQUOR 5201 C A M E R O N R D . 4 5 1 -7 3 9 1 O P E N 10 9 P M 2 4 18 S . L A M A R B L V D . 4 4 2 -2 2 8 8 O P E N 10 -9 P M OAK HILL LIQUOR 6036 MWY 290 WEST 6 for 6 tor .........................6 for _________ __500 ml ea O pon 10am 9pm £ O * 15# e O ■ * T * / 4 a a 1 * 9 9 4 a a 1 * 9 3 £ A t % 0 * 4 * / £ a a * ) * ¿ * 7 4 a a | a l l * ! e a a D * * 7 * 7 Ph 892-0607 SIERRA NEVADA PALE BOCK 12 oz pate bock brewed m the U S OLD AUSTRALIA STOUT 12 oz stout imp. from Australia NEW CASTLE BROWN A LE 500 mL Imp irom England............................. .............. 500ml ea ST. AND REW 'S A LE 500 mL Imp Irom England GUINESS STOUT 12 oz stout imp Irom Ireland H EINEKEN OR AM STEL LIGHT 12 oz beer imp from Holland KIRIN ICHIBAN 500 m l Imp Irom Japan.................................... .......... 500 ml ea. BASS A L E 12 oz ale imp from England CORONA BEER l2oz. beer imp Irom Meneo SAM UEL ADAM S LAGER 12 oz beer brewed in the U.S CELIS PALE BOCK 12 oz bock brewed m Austin 3 SAMUEL SMITH TADOY PORTER OR HUT BROWN ALE Q a a O i * / « 7 12 oz imp born England________________ A a a BECK S BEER 4 * * / * / 12 02 beer imp Irom Germany A A t % ■ ( ■ ■ 1 3 A C a " V a 3 w ......................... ............ 6 for .................-___ 6 for ................... 6 1 or ______ 6 tor A A 6 for 6 for NATURAL LIGHT l6K“ 39.99 SM IRNOFF VODKA 80 pi fine V o d k a ............................... .. 1 75 L KARKQV VODKA 80 pt fine V o d k a _______________________ 1 7 5 1 JO S E CUERVO TEQUILA GOLD 80Pr product ol M e x ic o CHIVAS R EG A L 86 Proof 86 pr Bott in Scottand JACK DANIELS BLACK 86 Proof 86 pi Tennessee Whiskey CRUZAN RUM 8 0 p r i m p R u m .....................1 75 L ............................ 1 75 L ___________ 1 75 L ...................... . 1.75 l 4 0 4 A 1 w * 1 m a a f a 3 3 O O * 7 * 7 * O m ¿ i i a a f% A a a * 7 * 7 * ¿ 4 4 A A A , | y DAN S LIQUOR 1600 LAVACA 5353 BURNET ROAD 478-5423 459-8689 S P E C IA L S G O O D FR ID A Y & S A T U R D A Y Q - Q JIM BEAM y . q y 80 Pr. Straight Bourbon Whiskey ...Ltr. CANADIAN MIST o y in 80 Pr. Canadian Whisky...................Ltr. O • n l 9 -7 Q Q SOUTHERN COMFORT * . ¿7J7 80 Pr. Liqueur..................... .......750 ml. 1 c Q Q JAGERM EISTER 70 Pr. German Liqueur I O • «7x7 ...... 750 ml. 7 U P ................. 2 LT. 79C -------------------------------- 1.75 litre — JACK DANIELS 86 Pr Tennessee Whiskey_____ SEAGRAMS 7 80 Pr. American Whlakay.... WILD TURKEY 101 Pr. Straight Bouibon Whiskey..—___ CUTTY SARK 80 Pr. Scotch Whisky__________ CRAWFORDS 80 Pr. Scotch Whisky.— _______ CASTILLO RUM 80 Pr. Puerto Rican Rum _______ GILBEYS GIN 80 Pr. Qin____________________ KARKOV VODKA 80 Pr. Vodka 2 3 .4 9 1 2 .9 9 2 1 .9 9 2 2 .4 9 1 3 .9 9 1 0 .9 9 11.99 —7 .9 9 SPEYBURN 4 C O n 86 Pr. Malt Scotch___________ 750 ml. I 0 . 9 9 GLENLIVET o n Q Q 80 Pr. Malt Scotch___________ 750 ml. ¿ ¿ . * 7 9 FIREWATER 4 O n o 100 Pr Cinnamon Schnapps. ..750 ml. 1 ¿ . * 7 * 7 BRUT D’ARGENT ROSE c French Sparkling Wine_______ 750 ml. 0 . 9 * 7 MILLER LITE i2ox.can*...i2PAK 6 .5 9 DRAGON STOUT tioLtmiePAK 3 .9 9 BACARDI BREEZEBS....4PAK 3 .8 9 ............... ........... wmmmm C lassifie d s ■ | Call ; f lj m m m ■ ■ r 11 fimo to ¿¿of money lor (his semester from 4 'ifihank. Whether you’re an undergraduate or graduate student, Citibank has a student loan to meet your needs. If you’re short on funds this semester, you’re not alone. During the 30 years we’ve been in the student loan business, students have ■ No payments while you are in school ■ Low interest rates ■ Loans for students of all incomes ■ Monthly payments as low as $50 ■ No penalty for early repayment often told us that they need extra money ■ You don’t have to be a current Citibank during the course of the semester to pay for customer to qualify! tuition, books, and other expenses. 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Communications from the University are mailed to the address you give to the registrar s office. An incorrect address may interfere with your registration or cause you to miss important university correspondence. You are responsible for any correspondence mailed to you at the address on the registrar's records. — ^ R E G I S T R A R mi UNtvtkiirr of rtxAS at austim Copy Centers Located in. Flawn Academic Center Engineering Library Tartton Law Library Call 495-4430 I M A G I N G S Y S T E M S __________ 16M - : .'\* í T h k d .v i i .y T e x a n THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 ,1 8 8 4 SPORTS T E X A S v s P I T T S B U R G H © COLLEGE FOOTBALL TOP 25 No. 7 Arizona 19. Georgia Tech 14 Washington St. 10, No. 22 Illinois 9 swc Kansas 35, Houston 13 REGIONAL Texas A&M-Kingsville 45, SWT 14 SFA 10, Youngstown 10 North Texas 48. Abilene Christian 0 Oklahoma St 31, N. Illinois 14 BRI EFS Davenport shines in U.S. Open debut ■ NEW YORK — One came to say hello, the other to w ave goodbye; Lindsay D avenport in her stadium court debut at the U.S. Open, Pam Shriver in her likely farewell, both lingering to soak up the moment. There w asn't m uch time for sentim entalitv during their first m atch against each other, a 6-1, 6-2 second-round w ipeout bv D avenport that lasted only 53 minutes. But it w as long enough to see the trem e n d o u s prom ise of D avenport at 18 and to feel a tw inge of sorrow for Shriver, w hose m any injuries prevented her to p p in g her ow n splashy debut here at 16 in 1978 w hen she reached the final and lost a close m atch to C hris Evert from S hriver, 6-footer w ho a seem ed gigantic w hen she turned pro and introduced the oversized Prince racket to ten­ nis, looked defenseless against the y o u n g er, taller, stro n g er D avenport after holding serve at love in the first game. "I will be surprised if I get out there again for singles," Shriver said. "I w as feeling very small, very vulnerable." D av en p o rt p u m m eled groundstrokes into the corners and m oved flu idly and efficient­ ly, if not quickly, around the court as she won the next nine gam es. It got to the point w here Shriver curtsied to the crowd w hen they applauded a routine volley w inner m idw ay through the second set. "I hate feeling like there is sym pathy clapping and sarcas­ tic cheers," Shriver said. In other w om en's matches, No. 4 M ary Pierce, the French O pen finalist, had a stomach ail­ m ent and m ore trouble than expected but beat K atarina Stu- denikova 6-3, 2-6, 6-4; No. 7 Jana N ovotna beat Karina Hab- sudova 6-2, 6-3; No. 10 Zina G arriso n Jackson beat Paola Suarez 6-4, 6-3; No. 11 A m anda C oetzer beat E ugenia M an- iokova 6-2, 6-0; and No. 15 M ag d alen a M aleeva beat R uxandra D ragom ir 7-5, 6-3. Clubs expand rosters, anger players’ union ■ NEW YORK — The only baseball activity T hursday involved m ore conflict. With active rosters allowed to expand to 40 on Sept. 1, the Pittsburgh Pirates recalled pitcher Randy Tom lin, who had been on the disabled list at Buffalo of the A m erican A ssociation. The move put the pitcher on strike and halted his $975,000 salary, which comes to $5,328 per day. Eugene Orza, the No. 2 offi­ cial of the Major League Base­ ball Players Association, said the union will file both a default notice and a grievance against the Pirates. After the union files a default notice, the team w ould have 10 d ay s to correct the default or risk having arbitrator George N ico lau declare the player a free agent. Nicolau also would d ecide if the team m ust pay T om lin d u rin g the period he is on strike. O rza said the union also will file a default notice and griev­ ance over the Texas Rangers' recall of infielder Jeff H uson, w hich w as an n ounced W ednes­ day night Texas p u t tw o m ore players on strike T h u rsd ay , recalling o u tfield e r D av id H u lse from O klahom a City and purchasing the contract on outfielder Rob D ucey from the Triple A club. O rza said he w ould speak with the tw o before deciding how the union will react. — Compiled from staff and Associated Press reports K E Y M A T C H U P S T w P osiiions h The Edge QUARTERBACKS: Sean Fitzgerald may be Texas tight end Pat's brother, but he’s no Shea Morenz. With a full sea­ son under his belt, Morenz should start his assault on the Texas record book. RUNNING BACKS: All-American and Doak Walker Award candidate Curtis Martin rushed for 1,075 while missing most of two games in '93. The loss of Darrell Wilson hurts Texas, but Rodrick Walker and Anthony Holmes should still be able to carry the load. RECEIVERS: Even though they're not Lovell Pinkney and Mike Adams, Matt Davis and Eric Jackson could probably start for Pitt. OFFENSIVE LINE: All-American candidates Blake Brock- ermeyer for Texas and Reuben Brown for Pitt cancel each other out. Although four-year Pitt starter Lawson Mollica is solid at center, Texas’ Dan Neil is stronger. DEFENSIVE LINE: Tony Brackens will shine in Texas’ 3- 4 and the platoon of Stonie Clark and Chris Akins at nose guard will give the Horns a fresh supply of strength in the middle. Defensive tackle Tom Barndt, who had seven sacks in '93, leads Pitt’s front four. LINEBACKERS: Junior Tom Tumulty, who led the team in tackles last season, is Pitt’s top linebacker. Tumulty’s team­ mates Gerald Simpson and Jason Chavis are unproven. The change to the 3-4 will let Texas returning starters Robert Reed. Norman Watkins and Kevin Watler capitalize on their athleticism. SECONDARY: Texas’ secondary was among the best in the nation before Chris Carter went down with a knee injury. Pitt s starting backfield is relatively slow. SPECIAL TEAMS: AII-SWC punter Duane Vacek returns for Texas. Phillip Dawson, a high school All-American, takes over the kicking duties. The Horns suffer here with Mike Adams out of the lineup. Nate Cochran averaged 43.7 yards per punt for the Panthers last season. Pitt's kicker, David Merrick, didn’t even make the media guide. COACHES: Johnny Majors will coach his 300th game Sat­ urday. Texas coach John Mackovic may have done his best job by getting his banged-up team on the bus. I • * j W i Watkins SEAN GALLUP/Daily Texan Staff UT junior Curtis Jackson will make his debut at wide receiver after playing tailback his first two years. S.Fitzgerald Barndt Morenz Majors after elusive home victory MARK LIVINGSTON Daily Texan Staff coach football P ittsburgh Johnny M ajors w ill coach his 300th gam e w hen he takes the field against the Longhorns on Saturday. But he'll be trying to do som ething for the first time since returning to Pitt after 16 years at Tennessee. He w ants to w in a gam e at hom e. A lthough Pitt has not been know n for football prow ess in recent years, the school is entering only its second year of the second era under Majors, w ho íeft the U niversity after a national cham pionship in 1976. Pitt, the favorite in only one gam e last sea­ son, compiled a 3-8 record, claim ing victo­ ries all on the road against Southern M issis­ sippi, Rutgers and Temple. The Panthers, how ever, return 20 starters, including a 1,000-yard rusher and one of the top offensive linem an in the country, For the H orns, this will provide the first test for defensive coordinator G ary D arnell's new 3-4 scheme, and the players say thev are ready. "I'm excited," said linebacker N orm an W atkins. "1 think the fellows are real hungry to play som eone besides ourselves. W e've been beating ourselves u p for about a week." M any of the players w ere beat up a little too hard. This preseason has been plagued by key injuries, academ ic ineligibilities and a large dose of controversy, m aking it the most difficult preseason Texas head coach John M ackovic has had in his 30 years of coach­ ing. Because of the suspensions placed on star w ide receivers Lovell Pinkney and Mike Adam s, Longhorn fans are hoping that back­ ups C urtis Jackson, Eric Jackson, Q uinton W allace and M att D avis can step up and fill the positions. But the players are trying not to think about it. "The Lovell and Mike situation has been unfortunate," said outside linebacker Robert Reed. "But w e've kept m oving on, w e've kept finding things to focus about on the field." Majors seem s fine w ith the suspensions. "Well, the w ay I look at it, it doesn't hurt us." he said. "C an't say that I'm sad that they're not playing." the w ide receivers, P ittsburgh running back C urtis M artin will be the center of attention for the Longhorn defense. M artin, w ho rushed for 1,132 y ard s last season, retu rn s for his senior cam paign. D espite m issing m ost of tw o gam es in 1993, he still carried the ball 210 times. "From w hat I understand, it's going to be C urtis M artin left, C urtis M artin right and C urtis M artin up the m iddle," said Reed. "W e're going to have ou r han ds full." A ccording to D arnell, the H orns w ill w atch but cannot afford to change their defensive plan because of him. "H e's a very good player," he said. "But there are very few defenses w here you can play up or gang up on som eone. There are While m uch of the attention is centered on Please see Pitt, page 14 Horns sweep pair from S.A. squads Junior setter Busch impressive in wins ANDREA L. EVERETT Daily Texan Staff U T ; V O L l E Y B A l l SAN ANTONIO — In their first m atch of the 1994 season T hursday afternoon, the Lady Longhorns su r­ vived "The Sw am p." The St. M ary's U niversity A lum ni Gym, better know to St. M ary's fans as The Sw am p because of its lack of air conditioning, is where Texas sw ept the Rattlers, 15-10, 15-6, 15-10. The Lady H orns' second sw eep of the day cam e at UT-San A ntonio, w here it was cooler but just as clean, as they eased past the R oadrunners, 15-10, 15-6, 15-3. O utstde hitters Shantel C ornelius and jenny W armack led the UT attack. Both players w ere given the o p p o rtu ­ nity for m ore sw ings because of yet another injury on the team , as 5-10 sophom ore o u tsid e h itte r L 'Tanya Williams m issed both m atches. "We injected L 'T an ya's foot this morning to try to speed u p the healing of a bruise on her heel," Coach Mick Haley said. The bruise w as apparently caused by im properly fitting shoes. Haley expects W illiams to be back in the lineup som etim e this w eekend, during the Sunw est T ournam ent in New Mexico. Despite the shift in players, C or­ nelius adjusted to bring in a com bined 15 kills in the second tw o gam es at St. M ary's and an im pressive 15 total kills in 25 swings for a .400 hitting percent­ age in the third game at UT-San A nto­ nio. "I felt pretty confident out there," C ornelius said. "I think slow ly but surely, w e are w orking ourselves into a groove." U nfortunately for the young team w ith a lack of ex perience and an unusual am ount of preseason injuries, "slow ly" is the key w ord. "W e're ju s t trying to get a feel for any kind of lineup right now ," setter C arrie Busch said after the second m atch. "The quick offense isn't quite there yet, but I think th at's also d ue to injuries." As w as the case after the Alumni G am e on A ug. 27, Haley sang the praises of the 5-11 junior from Mil­ w aukee, w ho is in her first year as a setter for the Lady Longhorns. "Busch fs an All-American," Haley said. "W hat m ore can I say — she is top notch out there." Busch has been forced to ru n a vari­ ety of differen t plays, d ictated by holes left in the lineup from injured players. And she's not expecting help anytim e soon, as it rem ains u n d eter­ m ined w hen players like 6-5 senior m iddle blocker Sarny D uarte will be healthy enough to com pete. "Right now, w e aren 't counting on anyone," Busch said. "W e have the attitude that w hoever's in there needs to get the job done." Jayhawks trample Cougars 35-13 behind ground attack GENE MENEZ D aily Texan Staff HOUSTON — U niversity of H ouston officials p ut on a fire­ w orks display before T hursday 's football gam e against the Kansas jay haw k s. But the Jayhaw ks w ere the ones w ho produced the offensive explosion on the field. Kansas scored touchdow ns on its first three possessions and recorded 518 total yards on the w ay to a 35-13 d rubbing of the Cougars. The running back trio of June Henley, M ark Sanders and L.T. Levine spearheaded a KU rushing attack that p ounded an H ouston defense for 346 yards on 57 ru sh ­ es. inexperienced S W C F O O T B A L L H ouston coach Kim H elton, w ho saw his team give up first- half touchdow n drives of 80, 90 and 99 yards, gave m uch credit to the Jayhaw ks' offense. "I thought w e w ere better p re­ pared to go against a big, tough team like Kansas," Helton said. "I do n 't rem em ber being dom i­ nated by any team like this one tonight. "A lot of it w as a big strong football team beat them up. A lot of it w as it was their first gam e." The fireworks display before the gam e w as part of a plan to attract m ore H ouston fans to the Astrodom e, but it was not that successful as only a sp a rse crow d of 18,150 w as in atten ­ dance. Luckily for the C ougars, m any of their fans w ere not in attendance to see them fail to slow dow n the Kansas rushing attack. The Jayhawks, 1-0, p o u n d ed it to H ouston on the opening drive. They drove the ball 80 yards, col­ lecting 54 yards rushing includ­ ing a 23-yard run by H enley to the C ougars' 5-yard line. A four-yard pass from q u a r­ terback Asheiki Preston to tight end Jim M oore gave Kansas a quick 7-0 lead. "I felt like we w ent in there our first three drives, and we Please see Cougars, page 15 UT opens play as Division I team Lady Horn soccer team travels to West Coast for Pepperdine, Cal-Poly ANDY WANG D aily Texan Staff The Lady Longhorns will kick off their innau- gural season of NCAA Division I w om en's soccer on Saturday at Pepperdine, and then close out their trip to California on Labor Day with a m atch against California Poly. A lthough Texas has secured 16 solid recruits, H ead Coach Dang Pibufvech and the Lady H orns are content to take small steps up the ladder of suc­ cess. "The m otivation is for us to win our first varsity match, Pibulvech said. "W e have yet to win our first varsity m atch." Texas was elevated to club-varsitv status last sea­ son, b u t failed to win a varsity match. Despite last year's setbacks, team m em bers said new talent and hard w ork will m ake this season very different. "W e all w ork pretty well together," said junior U T W O M E N ' S S O C C E R forw ard returnee and co-captain Kim Reeves. "It's all com e together a lot m ore quickly than I ever anticipated." Pibulvech said he feels that the Lady H orns have a balanced schedule this year, which includes gam es against Top 20 national team s and Top 10 regional teams. Because Pibulvech's goal is to build u p the pro­ gram, he said he feels that the tough schedule will prepare Texas for the years to come. It s a balanced schedule that will keep us alert and give us the challenge we need for next year," said Pibulvech. "N ext year's schedule is far from the balanced one. W e're going to be playing more Please see Soccer, page 15