Rangers* Ryan gets 6th no-hitter in win over A’s, page 7 Da il y T ex a Vol. 89. No. 159 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Tuesday. June 12 199 o r - C Supreme Court rejects flag law; Bush wants new amendment Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — The S u p r e m e C o u r t ru le d M o n d a y th a t C o n g r e s s \ io lated free- sp e e c h rig h ts w h e n it o u t l a w e d flag b u r n ­ ing last year. The d ec isio n im m e d ia te ly set off a n e w political tight o v e r a m e n d i n g th e C o n s titu ti o n to p ro te c t O ld G lory S p e a k in g ter th e 5-4 m a jority, Justice Wil­ lia m B r e n n a n said, 'P u n is h in g d e s e c ra tio n of the flag d ilu te s th e v e r \ f r e e d o m that m a k e s thi- e m b le m so r e v e re d P re s id e n t B u sh a n d Rt p u b lic a n c o n g r e s ­ sional le a d e rs u r g e d q uic k e le c tio n -v e a r ac­ tion to o v e r t u r n th e ru lin g bv a m e n d i n g the First A m e n d m e n t for th e first tim e in its 199-vear h i s t o n Bush told r e p o r te r s he s tr o n g ly favors ch a n g in g th a t he th e C o n s titu ti o n , a n d w o u ld " c o n t i n u e to p r e s s tor w h a t 1 s t r o n g ­ ly believe is in th e p u b lic in te r e s t. " H o u s e M in o rity L e a d e r Robert Michel, R- 111., p re d ic te d a n a m e n d m e n t w o u ld be backed bv o v e r w h e l m i n g m ajorities in b o th h o u se s. W h o w a n t s to b e a g a in s t th e flag, m o th e r a n d a p p l e p ie ? " h e said H o w e v e r. D e m o c r a ts p r e p a r e d to fight w h a t th e y saw as a d a n g e r o u s effort to alter th e Bill of Rights. c o n d e m n ly, I h o ld n o grief for th e flag -b u rn ers. 1 th eir u g ly ac tio n s u n e q u i v o c a l­ said Sen. E d w a r d K e n n e d y , D -M ass. But I a lso reject th e s u g g e s tio n th a t th e o n ly m e a n s left for u s to h o n o r th e flag is to carve a lo o p h o le in th e First A m e n d m e n t . W e d o n ’t n eed to d estrov the First A m en d ­ m ent in order to save the A m erican flag." A v o te in th e H o u s e c o u ld c o m e w ith in tw o o r three w eek s, said a s p o k e s m a n for H ou se Speaker T hom as Folev, D-W ash. Foley o p p o se s revising the First A m en d ­ m ent but has prom ised not to block H ou se action on the proposal. A con stitution al am en d m en t requires ap ­ pro v al by tw o - th ir d s of t h e m e m b e r s of th e H o u se and S en ate and then ratification bv 38 state legislatures. T he iss u e is ex p e c te d to b e a h o t issue in th is fall s c o n g re ssio n a l a n d sta te legislative races. n e s o ta th a t th e fed eral g o v e r n m e n t m a v o r ­ d e r state N ational G u a r d tr o o p s to ta k e p a rt in p eacetim e training abroad over a g o v e r ­ nor's op p osition ■ G a v e police bro ad n e w p o w e r to s to p a n d q u e s tio n s o m e o n e b a s e d o n a n o n y ­ m o u s tips. T h e 6-3 ru lin g r e in s ta te d a n A la­ b a m a w o m a n ' s d r u g co nvictio n. ■ Ruled, 7-2 that th e fede ra l g o v e r n m e n t can c u t b en e fits paid to r ec ip ien ts w h o r e ­ lied o n a g o v e r n m e n t w o r k e r 's incorrect a n ­ s w e r s a b o u t their eligibility. ■ R e fu sed to let a p riv a te Jewish g r o u p d isp lay a m e n o r a h in a p u b lic p a r k n e a r th e B u rling to n, Vt., C ity H all. In other action M on d ay, the court: ■ R uled u n a n i m o u s l y in a case from M in ­ ■ A g re ed to s tu d y th e p o w e r of fede ra l p ro s e c u to r s to seize se xually explicit m a t e ­ ria! a n d b u s in e s s records t of a d u lt b o o k s a n d films In th e f la g - b u r n in g case, tor t h e c o u r t " W e a r e aw a tion of is d e e p m a n y . " flag th e But h e said if there is a pie u n d e r l y i n g th e First Ai th a t th e g o v er n m e n t m a y e x p re ssio n of an id e a s etx finds the g re e a b le ." id* i o tte tht The Ius u d e c i- io firestorm that led t d a te d M o n d a y . D e m o c h o p in g to h e a d oft a con m e n t a n d n e u t r a liz e Ref flag issue s p o n s o r e d the Hie m end- UT considering anti-bias policy Larry Rowe Daily Texan Staff P ossible p ro te c tio n for g a v a n d lesbian s t u d e n t s u n d e r th e U n i v e r ­ c l a u s e n o n - d i s c r i m i n a t i o n s it y 's took a s te p t h r o u g h th e a d m i n i s t r a ­ tive p r o c e s s M o n d a y , w h e n th e g e n e ra l c o u n s e l for th e UT S y s te m received a form al in q u iry into th e le­ gal im p lic a tio n s of s u c h a m o v e . Official c o n s id e r a t io n o f a policy c h a n g e s ta r t e d in th e office of M a rk Y udof, d e a n of th e UT School of Law, after th e A sso c iatio n of A m e r i­ can Law S ch o o ls — in w h ic h th e U n iv e rsity is a m e m b e r — a d d e d to o n e of its b y la w s in J a n u a r y to re ­ quire th a t m e m b e r schools in c lu d e sexual o rie n ta tio n in th e ir a n ti- d is ­ c rim in a tio n policies. T h e r e v is e d b y ­ law la w also b a r s d is c rim in a to ry firm s se r ­ fro m p la ce m en t-o ffice vices. Y udof, w h o said h e v o te d for th e b ylaw c h a n g e in th e a s s o c ia tio n ’s ex ecutive c o m m itte e , th e n w r o t e a letter to U T P re s id e n t William C u n ­ n in g h a m a s k in g h im to c o n s id e r in ­ c lu d in g sex u al o rie n ta tio n in th e law sc h o o l's policy. C u n n i n g h a m re ­ s p o n d e d th a t th e law sch o o l c a n n o t vary fro m U n iv e r s ity -w id e police w h ich d o e s n o t in c lu d e sex u al o r i­ en ta tio n . th e n r e fe rre d C u n n i n g h a m th e q u e s tio n to P eggy K ru g e r, d ire c to r of th e UT Equal E m p l o y m e n t O p ­ p o r tu n ity Office, w h o m e t w ith I I S y stem officials to d is c u s s th e m a t ­ ter, a n d th e y d e c id e d o n a form al inquiry. I I Ra\ Farabet s y s t e m vice c h a n ce llo r a n d g enera! c o u n s e k said M o n d a y his office h a d just received th e i n q u i n from th e office* of the I I S y stem exe cutive vice c h a n c e llo r for academ ic affairs. H e -a id g en e ral co u n sel officials h a d n ot yet form ed a n y o p in io n s a b o u t th e - itu a n o n . S u d o f said he h o p e s tht ■ n . cr-i tv will c o m p ly w ith the law school asso cia tio n bvlaw Hut o resect *; ' probably w o u ld n o t i c o o a r d i . t ; . s t a n d i n g of a n y law school w ith re­ sp e ct to m e m b e r s h i p m tht u n ­ za tion he said 1 h e r e a re m a m m a n y b v la w -. tact ‘ The Y u d o f said c a n ­ n o t in compliancy w ith o n e or tw o d o e s n 't m e a n ireat- e n e d w ¡:h ex p u lsio n yo u w t ha t i Y u d o f said law sc h o o l- aro rem- s p e c te d e v e r \ se v e n y v. - 'o r ac­ c re d ita tio n bv a p a n e l c o m p risin g o n e m e m b e r tro m th e A ssociation ot to u r A m e ric a n Law Schools a n d m e m b e r s the A m e ric a n Bar A ssociation w h ic h d o e - n e t ban an ti-lesb ian geo d iscrim inatio n. tr o m The L I School of I avy will b« re­ lo n g -e- v ie w e d d u r i n g th e m e ste r. Law s c h o o l - a I T P ro f e s s o r of 1 aw Patrie.a C am said 'ss th c o u n ­ try are try m g u determ ine y\ h a t the b est w a v is to comply w ith tin- by­ l a w . " S h e sa id many* w h e e l s c h a n g e d th e ir policies to comply if th e y did n o t alre ad y , w h ile o th e rs are d i— — s u c h as I T law school Please see Bylaws, page 2 Vessel leaks more oil, spill continues burning Associated Press G A LV E S TO N — A b u r n i n g s u ­ p e r ta n k e r s lip p e d partially u n d e r ­ w a te r in th e G u lf of M exico o n M o n ­ d ay , slightly inc re asing c h a n c e s th e th e crip p le d vessel c ould C o a st G u a r d said. sin k, T he r e a r section of th e 853-foot Mega Borg w a s u n d e r w a t e r a n d oil th e w a te r , sa id w'as C o ast G u a r d s p o k e s m a n T o d d N e l­ son. leakin g in to " T h a t in c re ase s th e d a n g e r ot s inking b u t o n ly i n c r e m e n t a ll y ," he said. " W e a re n o t ta lk in g rig h t n o w a b o u t s in k i n g ." T h e N o r w e g i a n ta n k e r w a s carry ­ ing 38 m illion g allons of oil w h e n it w a s hit b y a series of e n g i n e ro o m e x p lo s io n s S a tu r d a y . T w o of th e 41 c r e w m e n d ie d , tw o w e r e m is sin g a n d p r e s u m e d d e a d a n d 17 yvere in ­ jured, n o n e seriously. A flotilla of six fire b oats w a s s h o o tin g 14 s tr e a m s of w a t e r o n th e vessel, 57 m iles s o u th e a s t o f G a lv e s- ■ Environmentalists say spilt will devastate ecosystem, page 2 * Texas charged with little preparation, page 8 ov\ t- m o is d is c h a r ton. Firefigh ters h a d h o p e d to use foam b ut th a t e tto rt w a s h a m p e r e d bv a new r ele ase ot oil " W h a t - h a p p e n i n g ot th e cargo c r u d e oi ! hat ing " N e ls o n said. It m e a n s th e fire - c b ad m o re of the oil faster t h a n The oil w a s flaring a n d ally s h o o ti n g n e w ball- of th e left sid e ot the p u m p h t ing fire bo ats to back oft At m idday . a pool ot oil feet lo n g w as b u r n i n g on t ot th e w a te r trailing trom F a r th e r a w a y , sex eral h b o o m s e x t e n d in g from ti tried to collect so m e of brow n oil on th e \ ater. ship. w ith leeks u-t\ 1 he C o a -t G u a r d said th e re w a - a slick a b o u t lo n g n o r th ot the - h ip a b o u t 15 m iles long to the M onday o n e mile a n d o ne Thirteen-year-old Rene Ruiz shoots pool at the Pan Am Recreation Center at 2100 E. Third St. The center is suffering from recent budget cuts. East Austin rec centers lack funds Lost finances eventually hurt local teen-agers, community Kirk J Crippens Daily Texan Staff M atthew Connally Daily Texan Staff T he battle to get kids off the s tr e e ts takes on th e o ffe n siv e in A u s t i n 's rec re atio n c e n te r s a n d c o m m u n itv sc h o o ls, b u t w i t h o u t th e n e c e s s a r y f u n d s to o p e r a te , it's as th o u g h th e s e te a m s a r e try in g to m o v e a d e f la te d ball. " W e n e e d for th e city to p u t m o r e m o n e y o u t for th e p e o p l e , " said O ralia Y barbo, a m o th e r w h o lives ac ro ss th e s tre e t fro m th e P an A m Rec­ rea tio n C e n t e r o n East T hird S tre e t a n d is o n the n e i g h b o r h o o d a d v i s o r y b o a r d for th e ce n te r. " W e 'v e go* five p e o p l e h e r e s tr e t c h e d to th e lim ­ it as tar a s p u t t i n g th e p r o g r a m s to g e th e r a n d w a tc h in g o v e r th e k id s . " T h e c e n te r 's f u n d s h a v e b e e n slo w ly cut o v e r th e past s i' v ea rs a n d th e staff is tr y in g to m a i n ­ tain se rv ic es a n d p ro g r a m s w ith less m o n e y . " W e really c a n 't a s k that m u c h m o n e y from th e c o m m u n i t v b e c a u s e [this n e i g h b o r h o o d ] just d o e s n 't h a v e th a t kin d of m o n e y , " said A nita Villalobos, d ir e c to r of th e ce n te r. " [T h e result] I've n otic ed is that w e 'v e k ind of fo rg o tte n a b o u t th e 12-to-17-year-olds. T h o s e a r e th e o n e s that h a v e b ee n h a r d e s t h i t . " In th e p a s t th e c e n te r h a d extra staff th a t c o u ld h a n d l e p r o g r a m s for this a g e g r o u p , b u t now th o s e p e o p le h a v e h a d to take o n th e job of m o n ­ itoring th e front d e s k a n d th e g v m b e c a u s e tin- c e n te r c a n n o t afford p a r t- tim e w o r k e r s to w atc h th e facilities. T h e y are b u s y t r y in g to k e e p th e d o o r s o p e n so th e y h a v e le s s a n d le s s tim e to d e v e lo p c re ­ ative o u tr e a c h in to th e c o m m u n ity . Each c e n te r is also r e s p o n s ib le for g e n e r a tin g a ce rtain r e v e ­ n u e , m o st of w h ic h c o m e s from th e a d u l t pro- “ It’s a case of mixed-up priorities.” Lori Renteria, a p ro g ram specialist, M artin C o m m u n it) School g r a m s. But in e x c h a n g e for th e f u n d s th e s e p r o ­ g r a m s b r in g in, t h e c h ild r e n a re left to play in th e streets. " L e t's sa y I told y o u , 'H e r e I g o t $20 for y o u to s p e n d tor th e w e e k , b u t y o u 'v e got to b rin g me 30 b efo re y o u c a n s p e n d th a t 2 0 / " Villalobos said. " T h a t 's t h e b o tto m line r ig h t th e re . W e can t s p e n d [m o n e v ] until w e m a k e [ m o n e y ] ." A u stin c o m m u n i t v sc h o o ls a r e facing a sim ilar p ro b le m . M a rtin C o m m u n i t v School, w h ic h u se s th e b u ild in g s of M artin S e n io r H ig h S chool, re n ts o u t th e g v m to big c o m p a n ie s like M o toro la a n d Texas I n s t r u m e n t s to h old bask etb a ll a n d \ ollevball t o u r n a m e n t s . " I t's a case of m ix e d - u p p r io ritie s,” said Lori R enteria, a p r o g r a m specialist for th e school. "If their n u m b e r o n e p riority w o u ld b e in v e stin g in m ino rities, th e re w o u l d n ' t be so h ig h a d r o p o u t rate a n d n o t a s m a n y of t h e m w o u ld be g e ttin g into g a n g s ." T h e A u s tin C ity C oun c il h a s e x p a n d e d the h o u r s , so th e c e n te r s sta y o p e n later. But staff that are n e e d e d to o v e r s e e th e p r o g r a m s a re still lacking, b o th in rec re atio n a n d e d u c a tio n . "R e c re a tio n is th e h o o k , b u t w e also n e e d to w o rk on their e d u c a tio n a l n e e d s . N ea rly 50 p e r ­ cent of H is p a n ic k ids are d r o p p i n g o u t of high s c h o o l," R e nte ria said. S he had I 1 te e n s — m o st of th e m g a n g m e m ­ bers — w h o w a n t e d to ta k e th e G E D (g eneral tw o e d u c a tio n a l d e v e lo p m e n t) test, b u t o n ly c o u ld afford it. S h e n e e d e d a m i n i m u m o f eight ju st to brea k e v e n , so th e y w e r e u n a b l e to ta k e the test. The c o m m u n ity s c h o o ls are f u n d e d e q u a lly bv th e A u stin I n d e p e n d e n t S chool D istrict a n d th e city. T h e y also g et s u b s i d ie s raised bv c o m m u n i ­ ty sc h o o ls in th e w e a lth ie r p a r ts of A u s tin . But R e n te ria said th o s e sc h o o ls h a v e h a d to k ee p th e ir r e v e n u e s lately b e c a u s e AISD a n d th e city h a v e cut back o n th e i r c o m m itm e n t. "J c o m m e n d th e m a y o r a n d [City C ouncil- m e m b e r Robert] B a r n s to n e for e x p a n d i n g th e p r o g r a m , " sh e said. " B u t w h a t w e really n e e d a re th o s e s u b s id ie s ." A n e x a m p le of t h e p r o b le m is th e O lv m p ic - size M artin Pool, w h ic h , a l th o u g h o p e n , d o e s n 't offer s w im le sso n s b e c a u s e th e n e i g h b o r h o o d c a n 't afford th e m . " H o w m a n y East A u s tin ite s d o y o u se e s w i m ­ m in g aG B arton S p rin g s ? H o w m a n y d o y o u see fig h tin g for it?" R enteria a s k e d . " W h a t d o w'e c a re if it's p o llu te d ? W e c a n 't a fford it a n y w a y . " Since m a n y of th e " f o r g o tte n k id s " a r e a t tr a c t­ ed to th e street g a n g s , th e Citv C o u n c il a n d the A u s tin Police D e p a r t m e n t h a v e b e e n w o r k i n g to p r o v id e th e s e g r o u p s w ith activities, especially s p o r ts co m p etitio n . M a n u e l S e p e d a , 17, a g a n g m e m b e r , sa id th e p r o g r a m s w ork, b u t a d d e d th at th e y o n ly last for p a r t of th e s u m m e r . H e said th e y lik e d th e p r o ­ g r a m , b u t th a t it n e e d s to last all vear. "It a i n 't g o in g to w o r k u n le s s y o u w a n t it to to w o r k , " S e p e d a said. " E v e r y b o d y h a s g o t w o r k to g e th e r ." H e said w o rk p r o g r a m s w e r e n o t a s su c c e s s ­ ful, b u t it w as n ot b e c a u s e the m e m b e r s d id not Please see Recreation, page 2 Poindexter sentenced Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N F o rm e r n a ­ tional se curity a d v i s e r J o h n P o in ­ d e x te r w a s s e n te n c e d to si x m o n t h s in p riso n M o n d a y by a ju d g e w h o ac cu sed h im of u s u r p i n g th e p o w e r of C o n g r e s s by h ing a b o u t the Iran- co n tra affair. im p o s e d b\ The s e n te n c e I S. District J u d g e H a ro ld G r e e n e w a s th e first p riso n te rm for a n y of th e s e v e n p e o p l e c o n v ic te d as a resu lt of t h e affair. G r e e n e said letting P o in d e x te r off w i t h o u t a p r is o n te rm " w o u l d be t a n t a m o u n t to a s t a t e m e n t th a t a s c h e m e to lie to a n d o b s tr u c t C o n ­ g ress is of n o g r e a t m o m e n t . " T h e j u d g e d e liv e r e d a ste rn lec­ tu re a l o n g vx ith th e s e n te n c e , s a y in g " a p rin c ip le P o in d e x te r violated f u n d a m e n ta l to th is c o n s titu tio n a l r epublic - th a t t h o s e e lec ted b y a n d r e sp o n sib le to th e p e o p l e shall m a k e th e i m p o r ta n t policy d e c is i o n s ." to be " Their d ec isio n s m a y n ot be nulli­ fied by a p p o i n t e d officials w h o h a p ­ p e n th a t give in p o sitio n s th e m to o p e r a te p r o ­ g r a m s p r o h ib ite d bv la w ," th e ju d g e said. th e ability H e said P o in d e x te r s h o w e d " n o e v id e n c e of r e c o g n iz in g that p r in c i­ ple a n d th e s e r io u s n e s s of its vio la­ tio n . " G r e e n e a llo w e d P o in d e x te r to re­ m a in free w h ile h e a p p e a l s five felo­ ny co n v ic tio n s of c o n s p ira c y , m ak Please see Poindexter, page 2 ■IINSIDE THEi i - TEXAN TODAY The Varsity Theater, closed since May 17, now makes way for Tower and a bit of controversy. 8 Records Also inside: Tennis star Steve Bryan discusses being NCAA men s singles champ. 7 W eather: Shorter weather. Highs m low 90s: lows n mid-70s; 20 percent rain chance_____ . . . Index: Around Campus Classifieds Comics........................................ Editorials . . . Entertainment................................. S p o r ts ........................................... State & L o c a l....................... Television. . . University. . World & N a tio n .......................... , 2 9 11 4 8 7 6 11 5 3 i 2 sentenced for Bensonhurst murder Associated Press N F W YORK — T w o 19-year-old w h ite m e n o n M onday w e r e dealt th e lo n g e st p o ssib le p r is o n te r m s for th e m o b - b e a tin g a n d d e a t h of a y o u n g black m a n w h o h a d c o m e to their n e i g h b o r h o o d to b u v a cat Justice l h a d d e u s O w e n s h a n d e d d o w n th e s e n te n c e s after a p r o s e c u ­ tor called th e slay ing " N e a n d e r t h a l - tv p e behav ior bv th e w h ite m ob. T he A ug . 23 s h o o tin g d e a t h of 16- year-old 'i u s u t H a w k in s in Brook­ ly n 's B e n s o n h u r s t sectio n in fla m e d racial p a s s io n s in th e city " I t's a sm all |ox for my self b u t a grea t victory for black p e o p l e all over th e s t a t e ," H a w k in s ' father, M oses S te w a r t, said afte r th e sen- tencings. a s O w e n s s e n te n c e d J o s e p h F am a t h e n a m e d b v p r o s e c u t o r s tw o - t h i r d s to 32 a n d trig g e rm a n , y ea rs to life in p r is o n . H e w a s c o n ­ victed of s e c o n d - d e g r e e m u r d e r , r i o t , u n l a w f u l i m p r i s o n m e n t , w e a p o n s p o s s e s sio n a n d o th e r c rim es. D e f e n s e ver D av id said Petri s w o u l d a n d a d d e d h e su r p ris e d . 1 a w - De ­ li e a p p e a l that w a s n t E a r l i e r , Fama O w e n s h a n d e d Keith M o n d e llo tive a n d o n e - th i r d to 16 years in p riso n p lu s a $2,000 tine. M o n d e llo , iden ti tied as th e ringle ader, h a d b e e n ac o t m u r d e r q u i t t e d a n d m m s la u g h te r c h a r g e s, b ut co n v icte d of im p r i s o n m e n t and riot, u n la w tu l disci im in atio n \> O w e n s deliv ered F am a s s e n ­ te n ce th e p ac k e d co u rtro o m , S tew art w a tc h e d intently a n d said ' M 's ’ ’ in H a w k in s ' m o th e r D ian e H a w ­ kins, p u t h e r h e a d o n his s h o u ld e r a n d cried as s h e looked at Fam a. I m glad th e decision c a m e ou t . e v e n t h o u g h it w o n t like it d id brin g m v s o n back D iant 11 w k in s said. H a w k i n s a n d th r e e to B e n s o n h u r s t t n e n d s h ad a primarily g o n e w h ite n e i g h b o r h o o d to look at a u s e d ear; a m o b of w h ite s having b e e n w a r n e d by M o n d e llo s ex girl­ friend a b o u t " o u t s id e r ^ set u p o n th e black te e n -a g e rs Page 2 Tuesday, June 12. 1990 I'm D U L \ Tl \ \N Burning tanker threatens coast Oil could pollute breeding sites, destroying Gulf birds, shrimp j j i U i x — Ui! le a k in g from e-ra v a g e d M ega Borg s>uper- {"911kef* c o u ld se rio u s ly h a n n d o b stru c te d bv h ig h -ra n k in g o ffic ia ls," G re e n e sa id . P o in d e x te r 53, w h o se rv e d as P re sid e n t R e a g a n 's n a tio n a l se cu rity a d v is e r from late 1985 u n til rev e la­ tio n s a b o u t th e Ira n -C o n tra affair forced his resig n a tio n in N o v e m b e r 198b is th e h ig h e s t-ra n k in g R eag an a d m in is tra tio n official to be c o n v ic t­ ed of a felony. H e w a s fo u n d g u ilty ot lving to C o n g re s s in 1986 bv falsely a s su rin g l a w m a k e r s th a t h i s sta tt w a s n o t s e ­ cretly h e lp in g a rm th e N ica rag u an c o n tra s a n d by giv in g false te stim o ­ in a cc u ra te ny a n d p re p a rin g a n ch ronologv to co n ceal U .S. inv o lv e ­ m e n t in a 1985 s h ip m e n t o f m issiles to Iran. Six o th e r m e n in c lu d in g re tire d M a rin e Lt. Col. O liv e r N o rth , a fo r­ m er P o in d e x te r a id e , h a v e b e e n placed o n p ro b a tio n a fte r b ein g c o n ­ victed o r p le a d in g g u iltv to crim es in th e Ira n -c o n tra affair. P o in d e x te r sh o w e d little e m o tio n , ex c ep t to sm ile a t his w ife L inda, af­ ter th e se n te n c e w as a n n o u n c e d . Bylaws %/ Continued from page 1 c u s s in g th e m a tte r w ith th e ir u n i­ v e rsitie s ' c e n tra l a d m in is tra tio n s . L au rie E iserloh, a UT g r a d u a te in law w h o w a s a c o -c h a irw o m a n of th e UT L aw a n d G ra d u a te S tu d e n ts for G ay a n d L esbian C o n c e rn s, said th e U m versitv can o n ly h o p e to b re a k in to th e to p 10 ra n k in g of n a ­ tional law sc h o o ls if it co m p lie s w ith the by law . th e o n lv m a jo r "I th in k it’s p re tty safe to sav th a t it's o n e of law sch o o ls th a t d o e s n 't h a v e sexual o ri­ e n ta tio n in th e a n ti-d isc rim in a tio n p o lio .," sh e sa id , a d d in g th a t " U T 's n a tio n a l r e p u ta tio n is on th e line h e r e ." E iserloh said sh e k n o w s of UT g r a d u a te s w h o h a v e e x p e rie n c e d a n d a n ti- le s b ia n g a y o u trig h t d isc rim in a tio n d u r in g in ­ terview 's c o n d u c te d bv law firm s th r o u g h th e UT L aw S chool p la c e ­ m e n t office. s e n tim e n t A round C a m p u s is a daily colum n lU tin^ U niversity -related activities sponso red by academ ic d e p a rtm e n ts stu d e n t services and re g iste re d stu ­ dent o rg an izatio n s. To ap p e ar in A round C am pu s, o rg an iz atio n s m ust be registered w ith the O ffice of C am ­ pus A ctivities. A n n o u n ce m en ts m ust be su b m itte d on the correct form , availab le in The D aily Texan o ffic e , 25th Street and W hitis A ve n u e , by 11 a.m . the dav before p u b lic a tio n . The D aily Texan reserves the right to edit su b m issio n s style r u le s , s ig n i f ic a n t changes w ill be m ade. to conform a lth o u g h no to MEETINGS The KTSB P roduction D ep artm en t will m eet at 4:30 p.m . Tuesday at the KTSB office in the V arsity C enter. A nyone interested please com e. Ó vereaters A nonym o u s-L o n g h o rn s in L m tv will hold an o p en gray sheet discussion from 9 to 10 a.m . T uesday in Parlin Hall 305. Evervone is w el­ com e. T he C am pus Pro-Life M ovem ent will m eet at 7 p.m . T u esd ay in the College of B usiness A dm inistration Building 4 342. M eetings this su m m er will be everv o th er w eek FILM AND LECTURES T he C om m ittee in S olid arity w ith the People of El Salvador will have a film an d lecture at 7:30 p .m . T uesday at the W om en s Peace H ouse, 1301 E. First St. _______ SHORT COURSES for registration T he L earning S k ills C enter w ill hold interm ediate algebra and GRE prep classes from 8 a.m . to 4:45 p.m . T uesday in Beauford H. Jester C enter A332. For inform a­ tion, call 471-3614. The C o m p u tatio n C enter, Inform a­ tion Services will otter these short in C om putation courses C enter 8: th is w eek ■ Introduction to UNIX P rogram ­ m ing Tools, 5 to 7 p.m . W ednesday, 54 w ith U T ID. ■ Im age Processing, 3 to 5 p.m . T hursday, $4 w ith UT ID. C ourses held in T.U. Taylor Hall 101 include: ■ Introduction to the IBM VM: U n ­ d ersta n d in g the System , 5 to 7 p.m . T hursday, S4 w ith UT ID. A dvance registration is required for all courses. R egister at C om putation C enter 12 (9 a.m . to 2 p.m .) or Will C. Jump-Start Your Day at Hyde P a rk Gym We o p en at 5 : 0 0 a .m . Monday-Fnday 3:00 on Samraay 0 0 on Sun cay Your N eighborhood Training Center 4121 GuaoaiuDe 459-9174 W ISD O M T E E T H If you need the removal of wisdom teeth... CALL 4 ¡|¡É BIO M EDICA L R E S E A R C H G R O U P inc, at 451-0411 Financial incentive provided for your opinion on a pain medication Mon.-Fri. 8:30-4:30 \ I 7. T O N Fiesta Flowers 3830 N. Lamar 453-7619 ROSES $10.95 Cash & Carry Old-fashioned burgers. 2912 Guadalupe • Across from Amonc’s • 477-6600 PROFESSIONAL STUDIO RESUMES • PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS • IMMIGRATION COLOR • B&W íh írtT c fjc 2532 G u a d a lu p e • 477-5555 Í f f í * P A k « N G I N R f 4 8 John Poindexter departs the U.S. District Courtroom after being was sentenced to six months in prison. Associated Press Recreation Continued from page 1 “I think it’s pretty safe to say that it’s one of the only major law schools that doesn’t have sexual orientation in the anti-dis­ crimination policy.” — Laurie Eiserloh, UT law graduate S h e sa id g r a d u a te s c a n n o t sim p ly om it th e ir ac tiv itie s in le sb ia n a n d g ay o rg a n iz a tio n s from job a p p lic a ­ tio n s b e c a u s e it w 'ould a p p e a r to in ­ te rv ie w e rs th a t th e y w e re n o t in ­ v o lv ed in e x tra c u rric u la r ac tiv itie s. A n d le sb ia n a n d g a y s tu d e n ts s h o u ld n o t h a v e to co n ceal a m a jo r p a rt of th e ir lives, e sp e c ia lly b e ­ c a u se fellow e m p lo y e e s w ill fin d o u t s o o n e r o r la ter, s h e sa id . C a in said e ith e r th e S ociety of A m eric an L aw T e a c h e rs o r th e A s­ so c iatio n of A m e ric a n L aw S c h o o l's S ectio n o n Gay' a n d L esb ian Issu e s w ill p ro b a b ly s u rv e y law sc h o o ls in to d e te r m in e w h o c o m p lie s 1990 w ith th e n e w bylaw ' a d d itio n . T h e se ctio n su rv e y e d th e sc h o o ls for th e sa m e in fo rm a tio n in 1988 a n d 1986 — b efo re th e b y la w a d d i­ th a t m a n y of tion — a n d f o u n d th e m p ro te c te d g ay a n d le sb ia n s tu ­ d e n ts . In A pril m a n y s tu d e n ts in th e U T S chool o f L aw jo in e d 37 o th e r law sc h o o ls n a tio n w id e to p r o te s t a lack o f d iv e rsity from th e w h ite , m ale m ajo rity a m o n g th e ir faculties. T h e UT s tu d e n ts in c lu d e d in its p ro te s t a d e m a n d th a t th e S ch o o l of L a w 's p la c e m e n t office p ro te c t g av m e n a n d le sb ia n s from d is c rim in a ­ tion bv law firm s. w 'ant jobs. "S o m e p e o p le a r e n 't g o in g to w a n t to w o rk b e c a u s e th e n p e o p le will k n o w w h e r e y o u a r e ," S e p e d a said , re fe rrin g to th e g a n g rivalry. "B u t if y o u g e t a job w ith s o m e b o d y from a n o th e r g a n g , th e n v o u 're g o in g to be b e tte r o ff." Y barbo, th e m o th e r w h o lives ac ro ss from th e P a n A m c e n te r, said s h e felt th e g a n g m e m b e rs w e re n o t c a u sin g as m u c h th e n e ig h b o rh o o d s a s a re th e y o u n g e r ch ild re n , k n o w n a s "w ’a n n a b e s ," tr o u b le for i w h o a re try in g to jo in th e g a n g s . sa id V illalobos c h ild re n h a v e a low se lf-e stee m so th e y a d ­ m ire th e p re s tig e of a g a n g . th e s e "T h e y d o n 't h a v e a lo t o f g o o d role m o d e ls ," s h e sa id . " If w e p ro ­ v id e th o s e role m o d e ls fo r th e m a n d b u ild u p th e ir se lf-c o n fid e n c e , th e n th e y 'r e g o in g to be s tr o n g e n o u g h to m a k e th e ir o w n c h o ic e s ." H ogg Building 9 (2 to 3:45 p .m . W ednesday, 4:45 p.m . o th e r w eek­ days). Cali th e sh ort-course registrar at 471-3241 for m ore inform ation. N o cash p ay m en ts will be accepted after 2 p.m . T he C o m p u tatio n C enter and Joe C. T hom pson C onference C enter will offer th e follow ing classes this w eek at T hom pson C onference C enter 2.118 and 3.108: ■ W ord the M acintosh: First C ourse, 8:30 a.m . to 4 p.m . W e d n es­ day, $30 w ith UT ID. for for ■ Excel thv M acintosh: First C ourse, 8:30 a.m . to 4 p .m . T h u rsd ay , $30 w ith UT ID. ■ PC SAS Basics, 8:30 a.m . to 4:30 p.m . T h u rsd ay , $30 w ith UT ID. ■ dBase IV: First C ourse, 8:30 a.m . to 4 p.m . Friday, $30 w ith UT ID. Call 471-3121 for registration infor­ m ation. OTHER T he S tudy A broad O ffice needs v o lu n teers to be p ee r ad v isers an d sp e n d at least an h o u r a w eek sh a rin g experience in stu d y in g abroad. For in ­ form ation, call 471-1211 or com e by the International C enter, 100 W .26th S t. S tu d e n t V o lu n te er S ervices is lo o k ­ ing for a m ale s tu d e n t to be a baby sitter, role m odel an d b u d d y for tw o bovs, ages 6 a n d 11. D ays a n d tim es are on a need basis. T h ere is a possi­ bility of this being a paid position. For inform ation, call 471-3065. S tu d e n t V o lu n teer S ervices n eeds su m m er vo lu n teers to w ork w ith chil­ d ren . S hare y o u r skill w ith elem e n ta­ ry-age children in a n o n -profit su m ­ m er program . C om e tw o h o u rs a w eek: w eaving, dance, m usic, sew ­ ing, sports, art, dram a. For inform a­ tion, call 471-3065. T h e Da il y T e x a n P e rm a n e n t S taff Kevin McHargue ........................................................................... E d ito r,.................................................................................... Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors . . Jeanne Acton .................................... Susan Boren, Carol Huneke, Gregor Sauer, Greg Weiner Assistant Managing E d ito r...............................................................................Joseph Abbott News Editor. Associate News Editor News Assignments Editor . . . General Reporters.............................. Chris Barton, Matthew Connally, .................................. ....................... ................ .......................Ron Lubke ..................................................................................Hope S. Yen ......................................... ................... ... Deanna Roy Associate E d ito rs ................ Entertainment Editor...................................................... Associate Entertainment Images Editor Sports Editor . . . . . . . , . Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporter Photo Editor............. ... Associate Photo Editor.............................. Images Editor . . . , . . . Associate Images Editor ....................... . . . . . . . . . . Candice Driver, Larry Rowe, Shane Utter , . Randy Kennedy, Scott Stanford i Katrina Brown ................................................... Dave Winter ..........................................................Sam Jackson Rob Walker Wayne Hardin ................................................Kristine Wolff Hannes Hacker . . . . . . . . , Jeff Turrentine .................. ... . . . . . . . . Jen Howze . . . Issue Staff Senior Cartoonist . . . .. , . . , . . . . , . . . . . , . , . . , , . . . . . Tom King Comic Strip Cartoonists.........................David Erwin, Jeannette Moreno, Robert Rodriguez V olunteers..........................Greg Beets, Michelle Belisle, Margaret Boyer, Kirk J. Crippens, Mary Gelber, Esam Hady, Leonard Herrera, Michelle Hogan, Austin Holiday, Ben Kleiman, Fun Lau. Michael Margolis, Kerry O’Brien, Roger Pinckney, Jim Regan, Guy Rez, Tini Tran, Trevor Wallace Local D is p la y ........................ Classified D is p la y ................ Classified T elephone Sales. Classified Telephone Service Advertising Cindy Anderson, Shannon Carter Melanie Hanson. Dave Hemphill, Philip Leman, Doug Lyon, Beth Mitchell, Michael On, Lisa Perry, Charles Wickman, Anthony Wright . Jennifer Brooks, Brad Corbett, Deanna Jackson, Sheronda Scott, Victoria Woo Mark Baker, Art Carrillo. Elaine Ferioli. April Griffiths, David Hess, Shawn M cMinn Paula Barrett, Tam m y Ferguson, Diane Hodgins, C hristi Stradford, Kristy Tang . . , The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications. 2500 Whitts, Austin TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session. Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4,101) For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865. For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900 For classified word advertising, cali 471 -5244 Entire contents copyright 1990 Texas Student Publications The Daily Texan Mail Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fall and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer) $30 00 55 00 20 00 75 00 To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P O Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209, or to TSP Building C3 200. or call 471-5083 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. 10% OFF vv this coupon E d ’s A uto B o d y S h o p B O D Y A N D F R A M E REPAIR * P A IN T IN G FREE ESTIMATES 10208 F M 620 NORTH AUSTIN - Bidg #1 258-1561 3412 DUKE RD. AUSTIN TEXAS 928-2175 J E W E L R Y v G 50% OFF ALL STERLING SILVER S ale E n d s J u n e 16,1990 We will meet or beat any advertised price 1625 Barton Springs Rd. 478-9234 Open T-F, 10-6, Sat. 10-5 Buy, Sell & Repair a matter of STUDENT SPECIAL MMMtBfinMakes the Difference W e make mortgage loans JoQ tthii.. L Ü L 'u .Q ttt& i U niversity Federal Credit Union 46J1 G u ad alup e S t , P.O. 4 0 6 9 , A ustin. TX 7 8785-406 9 * 512 467 BOttO Let SUPERCUTS treat you to a special $6 SUPERCUT’". That's $2 off our regularly $8-priced SUPERCUT'". Good only at these locations: Parle Green Center at Riverside and Pleasant Valley 3025 Guadalupe at 30th & Guadalupe (C oupon required) Valid through Ju n e 29, 19 9 0 [ J%3 N o t g o o d with any other offer 3. T e x a n A d v e rtisin g A cc ep tab ility AJi o e fv e rh in q it s u b je c t to a p p r o v a l b y T e x as S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s, A d v e rtisin g c o n ta in in g a tta c k s o f p e r s o n a l, s e x is t , ra c ist, e tfm k o r re lig io u s n a tu r e w ill b e re je c te d . A d v e rtisin g w h ic h s u b ju g a te s eithei ic ist, e tfm k o r re lig io u s n a tu r e w ill b e re je c te d A d v e rtisin g w h ich s u b ) a g a te s •• * • u n a c c e p ta b le . In c o n s id e ra tio n o f The O ff tty Tex art's a c c e p ta n c e o f a d v e r tis in g co p y for p u b lic a tio n , th e in d e m n ify a n d s a v e h a rm le s s , T e x a s S tu d e n t P ublication* a n d its o ffic ers e m p lo y e e s , a n d a g e n ts p u b lish in g o f its a d v e r tis e e lu d in g w ith o u t lim itatio n r e a s o n a b le a tto r n e y 's fe e s re su ltin g fro m cla im s o r su its fo r libel, v io la tio n o f rig h ts of p r iv a c y , p la g ia ris m a n d c o p y rig h t a n d tr a d e m a r k in fr in g e m e n t The n e w s p a p e r w ill n o t b e lia b le for fa ilu r e to p u b lis h a n a d v e r tis e m e n t e x c e p t to th e c o st o f th e a d v e rtis e m e n t. A d v e rtisin g a c c e p te d r u n -of-th e - p a p e r a n d p o sitio n is n e ith e r so ld n o r g u a r a n t e e d . in ferio r ro le Í y a n d th e a d v e r tis e r w ill ,«##Ky , aw loss, liab ility ’ - WORLD & NATION V V V j n L .L J Oí IN M I i h e d a i l y t k x a n Tuesday. June 12,1990 Page 3 MONDAY S DOW JONES: 2,892.57 U P 30 19 Volume: 119.550,000 shares Soviet leader to meet with Baltic states Associated Press s p o k e s m e n M O S C O W — P resid ent Mikhail G o rb a c h e v ha s a greed to m eet with the pre sid e n ts o f the th ree Baltic re­ publics for the first tim e sin ce he b rand ed their in d e p e n d e n c e m o v e s un constitu tion a l, said M o n d ay . . T u e s d a y 's s c h e d u le d m e e t in g co m e s amid oth e r n e w co n ta cts b e ­ tw een the Kremlin and L ith uania — the Baltic republic that ha s taken the boldest m o v e s i n d e p e n d ­ e n ce an d has suffered m o st. M o s ­ c o w 's e c o n o m ic b lock ad e ag ainst Lith uania e n te rs third m o n th next week. tow ard its It also c o m e s o n e w e e k after G o r ­ b a chev retu rned from the U nited States, w h ere C o n g re s sio n a l leaders m ad e clear th ey w ould hold up a p ­ proval o f a U .S .- S o v i e t trade deal that G o r b a c h e v w a n ts until the e m ­ bargo on Lithuania is lifted. T h e sessio n b e tw e e n G orbach e v and the Baltic p r e s i d e n t s could sig­ nal a new Krem lin d iplom atic initia­ tive to try to b re a k the im p a s s e over i n d e p e n d e n c e c a m ­ the republics' paigns. G o r b a ch e v has said the republics are free to p u rs u e in d e p e n d e n c e , but insists th e y d o so in acc o rd an ce with Sov ie t constitu tio nal g u id e ­ lines th at w ere set d o w n in April and require a r e fe re n d u m , legisla­ tive approval and a wait of up to five years. Presid en ts V v tau ta s L a n d sb e rg is of Lith uania, A rnold Ruutel of E s to ­ nia and A natoly G o r b u n o v of Latvia will m e e t with G o r b a c h e v and his Federation C o uncil, a new p re si­ dential ad visory bod v, accord in g to s p o k e s m e n from the th r e e re p u b ­ lics. A lso on T u esd a y , L ithuanian Prim e M inister K a /im iera Prun- sk ie n e will m e e t with Soviet Pre­ mier Nikolai R y zhkov to d iscu ss the e c o n o m ic e m b a r g o and her g o v e r n ­ m e n t 's halt o f the conscription of L ith u a n ia n s into the S o v ie t arm y , a L ith uanian s p o k e s m a n said. L a n d sb e rg is and G o r b u n o v met M o n d a y in the l ithuanian citv of P a n e v e z h is to m ap strategy for the Krem lin session, said Rita D ap k u s, a s p o k e s w o m a n for the L ithuanian parliam en t, the S u p r e m e Council. last m o n th three p re sid e n ts fo rm ed a The united to press front their drives to restore the in d e p e n d ­ e n c e th e y lost 50 y ears ag o w h en forcibly a n n e x e d by j o s e f Stalin. T h e lead ers had asked for a m e e tin g w’ith G o rb a ch e v . G o rb a ch e v later m et with Ruutel and G o rb u n o v but he has rem ained firm that th e y m u st eith er s u s p e n d or re voke their d ecla ration s of in d e ­ p e n d e n c e . A lth o u g h E stonia and Latvia have taken a more ca u tio u s path to ward s ece ssio n , L ithuania d eclared its in­ d e p e n d e n c e M arch 11 and im m e d i­ ately b eg a n p a ssing law s to back up law the declaration. s u s p e n d in g co n s cr ip tio n of L ith u ­ anian y o u th s into the Soviet army. Including a G orbach e v e m b a rg o e d all oil, m o st natural gas and oth er raw m a ­ terial s h ip m e n ts to L ithuania on April 18 to press the republic to res­ c i n d l a w s . p r o - i n d e p e n d e n c e Lithuania has said sin ce then that it is willing to n e g o tia te on rolling back th o se laws b u t s te a d f a s t ly re­ fuses to revo k e its d eclaration of in ­ d e p e n d e n c e . G o r b a ch e v declared i n d e p e n d ­ en ce m o v e s bv Latvia an d Estonia to be u n constitution a l o n M av 14. A lgim an ta s C e k o u lis , a S u p r e m e C o uncil c o n s u lta n t w h o w as a c c o m ­ p a n y in g Mrs. P ru n s k ie n e to M o s ­ co w a lo n g w ith D e p u ty Prim e M in ­ ister Algirdas B raza u sk as, said he believed he saw s o m e " m o v e m e n t " on the K re m lin 's position. " M o s c o w is sort o f trying to find c o m m o n g r o u n d , " he said. " T h e very fact that they [Soviet leaders] are co n v e rs in g with us on the basis that w e are not re vo k ing the 11th of the m o v e ­ M arch m e n t . ” [declaration] is Flags flew at half-staff and festivi­ ties w e re ca n ce le d M o n d a y in the to Sov ie t R e pub lic of Kirghizia m o u rn the 116 p e op le killed in a w e e k of eth n ic cla sh es in Central Asia, the Tass n e w s a g e n c y re p o rt­ ed. A girl at Monrovia's Spriggs Payne Airfield wept over the departure of a few friends am on g th o s e evacuated from strife-ridden L ib e n a S u n d a y. Associated Liberian peace negotiations delayed Associated Press threatened to stall o v e r the rebel d em a n d that D oe step d ow n. town peace march. Justice M inister M O N R O V I A , Liberia — Peace talk- b e tw e e n g o v ern m e n t officials an d rebels w h o control most of the co u n try w e re delaved M o n d a y , and insurgents lead ers said th e y could not get their re presentativ es to the site. M e a n w h ile, au th o rities arrested th ree military officers in 12 m u rd e r s in the Lib erian capital T h e peace talks w e r e to h av e b eg u n M o nd ay at a U .S . E m b a ss y facility in F re etow n , capital of n eig hb oring Sierra L e o n e . D elegations from th e g ov e r n m e n t a n d Liberi­ an Council of C h u r c h e s — w h ich is m e d ia tin g the conflict b e tw e e n the forces of P resid en t S a m ­ uel D oe and C h a rle s T a y lo r's insu rg e n t National in Sierra Patriotic Front — arrived M ond ay L eo n e. Rebel sou rces in Ivorv C o ast said th eir d ele g a ­ tion had to travel m o re th an 600 miles ov erland to reach A bidjan and m ake flight c o n n e c tio n s to F re etow n . T h e s o u rc e s said the rebels s o u g h t a s ­ su ra n ces that their flight would be safe while crossing Liberian airspace. E ven b efo re the talks b e g a n , the n e g otia tion s In M o n ro v ia, the o v ernig ht stavings of 12 p e o ­ ple — their hacked or bullet-ridden bodies w e re found M o n d a y — h e ig h ten e d tears in this a l ­ ready te n s e city of 4 0 0 ,0 0 0 residents. \ m ajo r and two lieu tena nts the 1 iberian armv w ere arrested in the killings and tace cou rt- martials, a D efen se Ministrv c o m m u n iq u e said It said th o se slain included the m ayo r ot C lav A shland in w e s te rn M onrovia, a F inance Ministrv auditor an d the relative of a politician hacked to death in Ja nu ary . to w nship Jenk ins Sco tt c o n d e m n e d Mondav s killings. "It is a b so lu te ly appalling he said before leaving with tw o o th er Cabinet ministers and S e n ate P resid ent Tambabas langa- bar to attend the F re eto w n p e ace talks. langabar, the g o v e r n m e n t d elegation - leader, said althou g h h e could not acc e p t rebel d e m a n d s that Doe resign, " w e are very o p tim is tic " about the talk- D oe has b ee n in p o w e r in this W est African nation of 2 5 million re sid e n ts sin ce a violent 1980 cou p. Jang ab ar said negotiators h o p e the talk- will Th e victims, inclu ding a te en -a g e girl, had " u s h e r in a cease-fire and a n e w g o v e r n m e n t . " been ab du cted last w e e k bv m e n in uniform. 1 he D efen se Ministrv said a special -e u iritv patrol has b ee n set up " t o m in im ize the atrocities It did not going on in and a ro und M onrov ia. give details c o n c ern in g the officers' inv olve m e n t in the killings or oth e r atrocities. A bou t 100 C h ristians m a rch e d through traffic in M onrovia appealing for an end to tribal kill­ ings. Doe, in a n interview with L BS on Mondav , denied c h arg e s that his troops w ere slaughtering innocent civ ilians A chartered plane arrived today in c harleston, S C., c arrying a b ou t 35 0 U .S . citizens w h o fled the country. The e v a c u e e s included at least 170 children State D e p a rtm e n t s p o k e s m a n lav Rini said. " W e all w an t to w ak e up in the m o rn in g not afraid ou r necks will be c h o p p e d oft " the Rev. David D aniels told d em o n s tra to rs at a d o w n ­ The e v a c u e e s w ere urged bv the U .S g o v e r n ­ ment to leave the W e st African na tion b eca u se of warfare. Bush, Salinas agree to prepare for formal free-trade negotiations Associated Press to o k a W A S H I N G T O N — T h e United Sta te s first step Mondav and M exico toward n e g o tia tin g a free-trad e pact that a W hite H o u s e official said could o n e d ay lead to a sin gle N orth A m erica n m arket. P resid en t Bush and M exican P res id en t Carlos Salinas d e G o rtari a g re ed at a private din n er Su n d a y n ight to have their trade o f­ ficials begin prep a ration s for the formal talks, Bush s p o k e s m a n Marlin F it/w a te r said. " T h e p re s id e n ts ag reed that the greatest possible m u tual benefit w o u ld deriv e from an a g re e m e n t that entails grad ual a n d c o m ­ p rehensiv e e lim inatio n of trade b a rrie rs ," Fitzwater said. H e said " p re p a ra to r y w o r k " bv U .S. Trad e R e p re se n ta tiv e Carla Hills an d Jaim e P uche, M e x ic o 's m inister of c o m m e r c e and industrial d e v e lo p m e n t, w o u ld be d o n e b e ­ tw een now' an d D e ce m b e r, w h e n the tw o pre sid e n ts will m eet again. That sessio n is tentatively s c h e d u le d for M o nterrey , M exico. Salinas told U .S . b u s in e s s leaders that " t h e m o st im portant im m e d ia te result' of a U .S .-M e x ic a n free-trade a g re e m e n t "w ill be to increase trade and in v e s tm e n t flows b e ­ tw een both nations. " W e need our exports to have -table s e ­ cu re a cce ss to the U .S. m arket, he said in rem arks prepared for delivery to the B u s i­ ness R ound Table. In e x c h a n g e , Salinas said, M exico will provide new m arkets for U .S . g oo d s and new in v e s tm e n t o p p o rtu n i­ ties for A m erican b u s in e s s e s . The tw o c o u n trie s will seek a pact that flow of the inve stm e n t b e tw e e n I it/w a te r will "im p ro v e and exp an d goods, services and the United S ta te s and M exico said. 1 le said c h a n g e s in imm igration a n d e m i ­ The gration laws w ere not envisioned I mted States signed a free-trad e pact w ith C a n a d a in 1488, un d e r w h ich all tariffs and oth er trade barriers a re being eliminated bv the year 2001). "M e x ic o d oes not w a n t to be late for the w o rld 's a p p o in tm e n t w ith the 21st C e n t u ­ r y , " S alinas added . In his 1988 cam p a ig n , Bush p ro p o s e d a sin gle North Am erican "tra d e z o n e ,' a u n i­ fied market of 535 million p e ople without trade barriers Bush -till ad vocates such an a p proach and "it is anticip ated that would bo an end result" of a trade a g re e m e n t with Mexico, l it/w a te r said. H ow ever he noted a s e p a ­ rate free-trade pact w ould also have to be struck b e tw e e n Mexico and v anada. Bush called C an adian Prim e M inister Bri­ an M u lron e v on Sundav night to tell h im of the d ev elo p m en ts , Fitzwater said. B u -h p rom ised the C a n a d ia n lead er to maintain a liai-on and co n s u lta tio n s as we the s p o k e s m a n go throu g h the process said. HSF ' 4 ' •IS É tltl Contras begin disbanding under treaty Associated Press Shamir wins approval for Cabinet, promises to continue settlements JE R U S A L E M — P rim e M inister Y itzh ak S h a m ir won narrow p a rlia m en ta ry approval M o n d a y for o n e of the m o st right-wflng g o v e r n m e n ts in Israel's 42-year history, ga ining 62 v o te s in the 120-seat K n e sset. In p re s en tin g his 1 9 -m em b e r C ab in et, Sh am ir pledged to s ee k peace but p ro m ised e x p a n d e d Jew ish s ettle m e n ts — a pled ge likelv to raise te n sio n s with W a s h in g to n and the A rabs. It is the first g o v e r n m e n t fully in control of the right-w ing Likud bloc sin ce 1984. Canadian poacher takes officials hostage N E W W E S T M I N S T E R , British C o lu m b ia — A 38- year-old m an co n v icted o f illegally h a rv estin g crabs seized five court officials as h o s ta g e s o n M o n d a y b e ­ fore s h o o tin g it o u t six hou rs later with police, police said. A police officer an d the g u n m a n w e re w o u n d e d in the incident, and th e h o s ta g e s — fo u r sheriffs and a court interpreter — e sc a p e d u n h a rm e d , said Casev D e H a ss , a s p o k e s m a n for the N e w W e s tm in s te r po­ lice. Police said the g u n m a n w as s h o t in the up per bodv and w as hospitalized in serious con d ition . PLO denounces violence against civilians B A G H D A D , Iraq — T h e P alestine Liberatio n O r ­ ganization, in a bid to salv age its d ialo g u e with the United States, on M o n d a y c o n d e m n e d attacks on ci­ vilians. But it did not specifically d e n o u n c e a guerrilla raid on an Israeli b each. W a s h in g to n criticized the P L O for failing to explicit­ im plying that the statem ent ly c o n d e m n th e raid, failed to m e e t U .S . anti-terrorism c o n d itio n s . Howev ­ er, the P L O n e w s ag e n cy W A F A reported an o th e r U .S . - P L O m e e tin g took place Mondav in T u nisia. T h e United S ta te s has threa te n e d to cut off its 18- m o nth-o ld d ialog u e with the P L O o v e r its refusal to c o n d e m n the foiled M av 30 attack by a P L O faction. P L O chief Y a sse r A rafat has d isassociated the org an i­ zation from the raid but has not p ersonally c o n ­ d e m n e d it. Associated Press M A N A G U A , N icaragua M o ri1 than 11,000 ro ntra rebels have laid dowm their w e a p o n s un der a peace accord signed with the g ov e r n m e n t and a n o th e r 4,0 0 0 w e re expected to disarm said Mondav this w e e k , officials A ltho ug h the rebels did not meet the S u n d a y d ead line for d isb anding the entire contra force, the rem ain­ ing resistance m e m b e r s were e x ­ pected to report to U .N . officials bv the end of the w e e k . " W e trust it will end this week the U.N . in Nicaragua F e rn a n d o C a s ta n o n o f p e acek e e p in g said of the d em obilization. T h e d isb an d in g of force the U .S - backed armv that fought the form er Sandinista g o v e r n m e n t ettectivelv e n d s N icaragua's 9-vear-old civil war. which cost 30,000 lives and helped push the e c o n o m y close to ruin. P res id en t V ioleta Barrios d e C h a m o rro was expected this w eek to a n n o u n ce the next step in the peace process a plan to trim the Sandin ista P eople's A rm v, the gov­ e rn m e n t forces and most powerfu l w ea p o n of the fo rm er gov e rn m e n t v hamorro, w h o took office April 25, w ants to carry w ith her to a C e n ­ tral American this week proof that her 6-w ee k -o ld con- serv ative gov e m i n e n t is fulfilling re­ gional peace accord s sig ned bv her pred ecessor Daniel O rteg a. s u m m it later C a stan on said that sin ce the Mav 7 start of the d is b a n d in g through Sundav night, 11,228 rebels had han d e d in their w e a p o n s and regis­ tered with L .N. p e acek e e p e rs. and The rebels in clu de a b o u t 12,000 fighters o t h e r s w h o have served a> m e s s e n g e rs , co o k s an d m o th e r roles and n o w w ant the b e n e ­ ¡lie fits and protection ottered bv d is b a n d in g p ro g ram . from The contra fo rces are tu rning in th eir w e a p o n s at security z o n e s set the n o r th e rn H o n d u ra n up bord er to the s o u th e rn C osta Rican frontier. Yatam a rebels have been dem obilizing in th eir h o m e region the remote Atlantic area After several s u s p e n s io n s d isb an d in g picked up M ay 30, w h en rebels and the gov e m in e n t signed a protocol establish­ ing regional d e v e lo p m e n t centers w h e re form er rebels and their fa m i­ lies could lix e. the following Do You Have P R E S C R I P T I O N F O R T H E S U M M E R B L A H S ! C r a m T g ? You can earn $75 for participating in a research study evalúa ting two marketed medications for the treatment of menstrual cramps (dysmenorrhea). Participants will receive: Free m edical evaluation Free medication Up to $75 for their opinions to severe menstrual a monthly basis that dication. For more information, call: 4 7 8 -4 0 0 4 PI P H A R M A . C O CENTER FOR CLINICAL RESEARCH :K aÜfiEK. ■ .. 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S .P .L .A .S .H . on Tuesdays 6 : 0 0 - 6 : 3 0 S n a c k S u p p e r 6 : 3 0 - 7 :3 0 D isc u ssio n B ib le S tu d y Group “W ho N eed s God?” Study b a sed on th e book by Harold K u s h n e r 7 :3 0 - 8 :0 0 V e s p e r s (S tu d e n t W orship* Sponsored by the Texas Wesley Foundation Wesley Foundation House 474-1151 2 2 0 2 Nueces ( 2 blocks west o f campus ) it 1 t l i l i l> \ II \ T K V W Page 4 Tuesday. June 12. 1990 Randy Kennedy Associate Editor T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Editorial Board Kevin McHargue Editor Viewpoint apimons expressed in The Daéty Texan ate those of the editor and writer of the article They are not necessarily those of the University administra­ tion, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Opinions expressed in Dissenting Opinions and staff or guest col­ umns are those of the writer Scott Stanford Associate Editor Letters submitted to Firing Line should be fewer than 250 words, and guest columns should be no more than 800 words Bring submissions to The Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or mail them to The Daily Texan. P O 8ox D. Austin, TX 78713 Please send a copy of your photo I D with mailed submissions. Letters may be edited for length, libel and Texan grammar/ punctuation style J u stic e D elayed Law dean slow to press for change M ark Yudof, dean of the UT School of Law, has helped shape cam pus policy on everything from free speech rules to racial harassm ent. Yet when it com es to inju s­ tice in his own school, his hands apparently are tied. At the m om ent, the Law Placem ent Office does not list sexual orientation in its non-discrim ination policy, despite rules set by Association of Am erican Law Schools. As a m ember of the AALS executive com m ittee, Yudof voted for the guidelines. But as law school dean, Yudof has argued that he can do noth­ ing unless the UT System as a whole changes, and he has done little to force the System to change. If he chose, Yudof could lead the fight to change the non­ discrimination policy, using his position and his credibility with the adm inistration and the UT System Board of Regents. But he chooses instead to stay on the sidelines. The odd thing is that Yudof, a fixture of UT com m issions, has never felt shy about reform ing policy before. He even ventured into the sensitive area of racial harassm ent. O f course, that was always at the invitation of UT President William Cunningham . Perhaps Yudof just can't bring him self to fight for justice on a free-lance basis. O r perhaps justice for gay m en and lesbians is not high on Yudof's list of priorities. Ed M ayfield, an officer in Law and Graduate Students for Gav and Lesbian Concerns, has criticized Yudof regularly for refusing to take "political h eat" on behalf of gay and lesbian students. For his part, Y udof responded in April that gay and lesbian students should not denv their identities, but they should not "necessarily be too aggressive about it." But som eone has to be "aggressive about it," especially since Yudof has chosen such a passive path. He has referred the matter to C unningham , w ho has referred it to the System 's lawyers. No doubt the referring will continue for som e time before gay and lesbian students win the protection they deserve. This cam pus periodically flatters itself as being a tolerant learn­ ing environm ent. Surely that tolerance must include sexual ori­ entation as well as race and gender. Selective justice is not really justice at all. Mark Yudof is not a stupid m an, nor is he a bigot. He knows that the University should oppose all forms of discrimination. All he needs is the courage to act on his beliefs. — K evin M cH a rg u e ----------- — .— _ _ - ■■ ' ... ' aaaaaMi Texan' botched story on Barton Creek hearing A front page article by M atthew Connally and Larry Rowe ("H u n ­ dreds pack hearing on P U D ," The Daily Texan, Friday) quoted Jim Bob M offett, the lead developer of the proposed Barton Creek Planned Unit D evelopm ent, saying articles in The Austin Chronicle were "m isleading, unfair and contain material falseh oo d s." The Texan article w ent on to nam e me, (the Chronicle politics editor), and Polemicist co-editors Tom Philpott and Scott H enson as authors of the articles. That was it. The Texan devoted only a single clause of one sentence to the content of the articles that so enraged Mr. M offett. M offett has made these charges all over town, but has yet to offer a single exam ple to back up his claims. D oesn't it seem that it might have been appropriate for your reporters to call and ask me for a com m ent on M offett's wild charges? O r you could have at least asked M offett for som e exam ples before printing the charges. This would seem even more appropriate in light of som e of the incredible claims M offett has made about his proposed developm ent: i.e. that massive d evelopm ent would have " n o im pact on creek w ater" and that it would in fact im prove water quality in the creek. Even worse than taking M offett's word at face value is how your reporters com pletely m issed the significance of the articles in the Chroni­ cle. The articles w ere the key to getting out the facts on M offett's com pa­ ny, Freeport-M cM oRan, facts that led to the com m unity uprising, which in turn led to a unanim ous council vote against the PUD. The Chronicle was also the first to print councilm em bers' phone num bers and urge citizens to call and dem and that they reject the PUD. Thousands of calls poured in. You m issed that, too. C om e on folks, w e've already got one daily paper in town that doesn't tell the people w hat's really going on. Are y'all training to be like them? Daryl SI usher Politics editor, The Austin Chronicle Sanctions still necessary to end apartheid Although the lifting of the state of em ergency is one of three precondi­ tions to negotiations betw een the African National C ongress and the South African governm ent, it is im portant to make the distinction be­ tween the expiration o f a set of regulations and the actual enforcem ent of justice. The fact is that the governm ent can still utilize the sam e m eans as it could under the state of em ergency. The only difference is that the power to oppress by any m eans is given to police by courts rather than by explicit laws. Furtherm ore, the state of em ergency rem ains fully in­ tact in the province o f Natal. These are just a few of the pow ers the Pretorian governm ent contin­ ues to have and practice: A person can still be im prisoned indefinitely without a trial, police can still conduct searches and seizures without a warrant, and governm ent officials can still ban public gatherings, stop the publication of new spapers and restrict the activities of individuals. Having made another em pty gesture of "reform ," De Klerk implores the international com m unity to lift sanctions. He urges the world to "L et bygones be b y g o n es." He wants us to "forget real or imagined injustices of the p ast." The state of em ergency was not lifted by a repentant South African governm ent, it was lifted bv a pressured South African governm ent. The reforms we have seen s o far, substantial or not, are the result of resist­ ance to apartheid. Sanctions are the only viable alternative to armed struggle in South Africa. The sanctions that are enforced have had a prov­ en, bloodless effect. This is not the time to pat De Klerk on the back. Rather, we should be forcing him to dism antle apartheid entirely instead of rem oving its for­ malities. The Pretorian governm ent practiced apartheid decades before the state of em ergency was declared, and, in the absence of international resistance, it will continue to practice apartheid indefinitely. Laura Roberts M icrobiology EDITORIALS \NI1H me FAU. O f (OMMUNKM Gw k me f aw, of Right win6 OKervwieM-we HAve tost 1Ue@U>WNR! THere is noTminO left FoR US Tc> HAT£ 1 vie hm no r e a s o n FORTSeiKKS Í WAIT... Low tuition robs low-income taxpayers F irst the teaching assistants lost their health insurance benefits, now graduate tui­ tion is rising school by school in a Michael Margolis TEXAN COLUM NIST one. That is enough to pay for an entire education and still be get­ ting an excellent return on the in­ vestm ent (even w ithout counting the benefits of learning and in­ sight and all that). series of decisions, each too small to stir much trouble. UT graduate students are being squeezed, and it is to be expected that they will complain loudly and organize to protect w hat is theirs. the It is also to be expected that som e, entranced with ro­ mance o f rebellion, will com e to see their struggle as being about som ething grander than self-pro­ tection. Inevitably the rest of us are being called upon to support the graduate stud ents not as a fa­ vor to them but because it is right, because they are the unfortunate and p o w e rle s s b a ttlin g th e mighty. The idea o f Am erican graduate the op­ students being am ong pressed of the Earth should be laughable. To the extent that there are class lines in Am erica, they are drawn by acedem ic degrees. Law­ yers are at the top, dropouts are at the bottom , and anyone in gradu­ ate school is headed for the high part of the spectrum . But the cam pus activists appear to be buying it. According to Tom Philpott and Scott H enson, oppos­ ing tuition hikes is part of oppos­ ing institutional racism. H enson and Philpott are political correct­ ness incarnate — editors of Po- lemecist, approved by the Austin Chronicle, one even a victim of mild police harassm ent. O nly Toni Luckett is better qualified to speak for the cam pus left, and she speaks more of her anger than of policy. Henson and Philpott wrote: "T h e im plications of tuition hikes "T h e idea of Ameri­ can graduate stu­ dents being among the oppressed of the Earth should be laughable." for people of color are clear. H igh­ er tuition m eans few er minority graduate students will graduate, which creates a sm aller pool o f fu­ ture P h .D .s on w hich to draw for future faculty. It also m eans that few er m inority graduate student teachers instructors) will teach u nd ergradu ates." (associate That is not inevitable, but even if it were, it does not affect "p e o ­ ple of co lo r" as a w hole — not un­ less all of them are students. Tui­ tion is m oney to the state as much as taxes are, and education costs m oney in the sam e way that any other service does. The question of tuition is a question of taxation and spending priorities. It has im ­ plications for anyone w ho lives, or will live, in the state of Texas. To exam ine its effects only on stu­ dents m akes no m ore sense than assessing the rightness of the Rea­ gan Revolution by exam ining its im pact on country club m embers. For the vast m ajority of blacks and' Chícanos who are not stu­ dents, the impact is quite differ­ ent. They (and the least powerful w hites) pay the highest propor­ tion of their incom e in sales tax. Their children m ust attend the se rio u sly u n d e rfu n d e d m o st schools. It is the poor and the sick w ho are no longer getting health care because the D epartm ent of lacks m oney. Human Services M oney spent on higher education is m oney not spent on these needs. And m oney extracted from students is money not extracted from the poor. regressive M any students may consider them selves poor, but that is pure­ ly tem porary. Education m eans higher salaries, and w hen you taxes with com bine subsidies for higher education you get a forced transfer of wealth from the poorer to the richer. It is w rong under the principles of the left and it is wrong under the prin­ ciples of the right. But it is the sta­ tus quo and not even controver­ sial. Instead the controversy is over w hether to reduce that transfer slightly by requiring those receiv­ ing educations to pay a little more for the privilege. It would be naive to think that the bunch of lizards running this state will actually put the tuition money to good use, but that is not the point. If the fund­ ing of higher education is worth addressing, then surely the first priority should be to end the great injustice at the heart of the sys­ tem. The subsidizing of our educa­ tion is especially offensive because most of us are from relatively priv­ ileged backgrounds. But even if that w ere not true, the transfer would be regressive. As near as can be calculated w ithout precog­ nition, the average person with a a college degree will m ake around $350,000 more over his or her life than the average person w ithout All that is needed is som eone to cosign student loans. The govern­ m ent has to do that, or only the children of the solvent will be ed u ­ cated. But if a surcharge is placed on the interest to cover the bad loans, the program will cost n oth­ ing, w hich should sound good to the Legislature. It seem s self-evident that a truly egalitarian left should favor tui­ tion hikes and loan guarantees. Perhaps the cam pus activists sim­ ply feel that doing so would be political suicide (which it probably would be). Perhaps the very idea of helping people in them selves reeks too much capi­ talist utopia for the politically cor­ rect to stom ach. invest to And perhaps they can not em ­ brace it for reasons that have n oth­ ing to do with declared ideals. The dispute betw een the left and the right is largely a dispute about the division o f pow er betw een the ac­ the business adem ic elite and elite. The justifications for that pow er may vary, but the struggle has gone on for generations. It is very unrom antic and morally irrel­ evant, so on both sides m ost pre­ fer to stress more idealistic ele­ m ents (which are also real). But this is a case in w hich the academ ic elites m ust choose be­ tw een their pow er and their prin­ ciple. If they choose pow er, there is no reason for the rest o f us to help them . M argolis is an economics senior. UT diversification needs outside help Place: The Tower. Valuing Diversity Responding to economic pressures, private firms nationwide have begun trying to improve cultural diversity. The University should consider some of their ideas. Scene: M eeting o f the UT adm inistration. Subject: Racism at the University. Pheiv! The sem ester is over. Now that many stu­ dents are gone for the summer, we can pass a few multicultural measures, hire a few minorities, com ­ pile our recruitment statistics, prepare more PR piec­ es for the rest o f Texas and begin afresh this fall with the disgraceful memories o f Round-Up behind us. Sound good? W rong. The University has a long way to go. The events of 1990 Round-Up were not just "isolated in cidents" perpetrated by individuals to be dealt with and pasted into a scrapbook. The events of the spring and the reaction to them indicate a serious problem of institutional proportions. In an interview with m em bers of the student press on April 13, President Cunningham co n ­ cluded with the follow ing statem ent: "If som e­ one has a m agic button to push, I sure wish they'd tell us quickly because we'd be very hap­ py to push it and get on to other kinds of th ings." Magic bu ttons do not exist. O ppression of the type that exists in America and at the U ni­ versity cannot be eradicated with the push of a button. The only m agic button is hard work, honest appraisal of the system 's faults, total com m itm ent to im provem ent and w illingness to change. Everyone m ust recognize that things will get w orse before they get better. President C unningham , in his April 13 state­ ment, expressed a desire to "build a University and a society that are purged of the evil of rac­ ism ." W hat about ableism ? W hat about sexism? What about heterosexism ? Will we tolerate these evils? M ulticulturalism m eans confront­ ing, challenging and constantly working to elim inate all forms of oppression. The University must be com m itted to build­ ing a supportive environm ent for all mem bers of the UT com m unity. Slaps on the hand and abolition of Round-U p will not do it. Facts and figures will not do it. O ne of President C u n­ ningham 's favorites: "I'v e been in over 70 high schools over the last 18 m onths that w ere mi­ nority high schools, trying to attract those stu­ dents to the University of Texas at A u stin ." (April 13 interview ) That's great, but can a M exican-A m erican student from the Rio G rande Valley or an Afri­ can-Am erican student from inner-city Houston or Dallas really count on the straight and skin­ ny from C unningham about what her or his life Ortho Pharmaceutical Began diversity workshops to stop bias in promotions. Pillsbury Procter & Gamble Created a "vice-president of cultural diversity and personnel development." Implemented an "Onboarding" program to help minority employees adjust to corporate cultures. Harvard Industries Expanded recruitment to include inner cities. Kerry O ’Brien TEXAN CO LUM N IST at the U niversity will be like? A nother favorite statistic: "U T has more m i­ nority students than any m ajor com prehensive u niversity." Could it be because the University has more students than any university but one? Statistics will not solve anything, and neither will ethnic studies requirem ents alone. In fact, according to John Butler, UT professor o f soci­ ology, som e research has show n that education alone can actually reinforce racist beliefs and behaviors. If the University w ants to build "a diverse com m unity in which the worth and dignity of all persons are affirm ed ," all policies and proce­ dures m ust be examined to ensure that each fits this com m itm ent. For exam ple, the University must exam ine: ■ Hiring and prom otion practices for all staff — faculty, adm inistrative staff, secretaries, re­ searchers, physical plant. ■ Physical environm ent (m onum ents and glorifications, access for the differently abled). ■ Curriculum diversification (undergraduate and graduate). ■ Investm ent policies. ■ Alumni relations. ■ Com m unity relations. ■ Non-academ ic recruiting (i.e. sports). ■ Traditions (March 2, Round Up). Source: Newsweek ■ Tuition and fees, financial aid and scholar­ ships. The University needs help and there are peo­ ple and groups qualified to give that assistance, but they are not on this cam pus. Repeat. Help is not available on this cam pus. Diversity training consultants specializing in changing system s have helped corporations like Procter «Se G am ble, O rtho Pharm aceutical, and Digital Equipm ent Corp. institute com pre­ hensive, long-range plans. They usually re­ quire at least a three-year com m itm ent from top m anagem ent. C onsultants then help system s begin the process of rem oving often-subtle bar­ riers for people of color, hom osexuals, w om en and the differently abled. Diversity consulting is not a m atter of m orality, it's a m atter of ne­ cessity. And change does not com e cheaply — good consultants can cost $2,000 a day. So forget the m agic button. The necessary changes will be difficult. The process of im­ provem ent will be painful. But the changes must com e. 7 he alternative is more division, more anger and more "isolated in cid en ts." O ur system stands on more than 400 years of oppression. O ne sum m er will not make every­ thing all better. The University must live up to its creed and com m it itself to honest appraisal of its faults and serious com m itm ent to change. But most im portant, the U niversity m ust seek outside help. O'Brien is a Plan II senior. UNIVERSITY Officials say quakes no threat to Halcones reactor Tu esd ay, Ju n e 12, 1990 P a g e 5 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Aaron DaMommio Daily Texan Staff L I officials said Monday there is no truth to a retired safety engineer's allegation that the University built a nuclear reactor on a fault line without first checking the danger of possible earthquakes. In addition, an April report bv the Nucle­ ar Regulatory C ommission removed the last of six earlier allegations made by a con­ struction contractor who worked on the nearly completed facility at Balcones Re­ search Center. Don Anderson, a retired nuclear safety engineer who now runs a companv called Atomic Energy Consultants in Lago Vista, filed a report with the commission in late April citing 14 possible safety problems at the new facility, called the Nuclear Engi­ neering Teaching Laboratory. The most striking of these, reported in the May 7 Austin Ameruan-Statesman, was the reactor's location near the dormant Bal­ cones Fault, a fact Anderson said deserved study to determine the danger of earth­ quakes to the reactor Anderson based his accusations on two days examination of the University's appli­ cation for a construction permit at the re­ gional offices of the commission in Arling­ ton on April 10 and 11. But according to Dale Klein, technical di­ rector of the U T Bureau of Engineering Re­ search, a seismic study to research the dan­ gers of earthquakes has already been conducted and was included in the safety analysis the University sent to the commis­ sion's Washington headquarters. Don Anderson was just misinformed as to what had and had not been done," Klein said. Anderson could not be reached for com­ ment Monday. Joe Gilliland, commission spokesman, said his agency is investigating the allega­ tions of earthquake danger, but has not yet finished its report. Cliff Frohlich, senior research scientist at the UT Institute for Geophysics and an ex­ pert on earthquakes, said there have been only three earthquakes in the Austin area over the last 100 vears, all of which were too weak to do mm h more than rattle win­ dows " I think anyone w ho did a study of seis­ mic activity in the* \c cim area would con­ clude that the risk of damage from seismic activity was remarkably lo w ," he said. Anderson is not the first to raise safety concerns about the new reactor Greg Hilz, president of ( or.struct ion Inc. of Texas, made six allegations which were later ad­ dressed by commission inspectors. Inc. Construction is a Houston-based general contracting company which the University originally hired to build the facil­ ity and later fired after a contract dispute. According to a commission report, five of Hilz s allegations wore reported to pose no safety problems, but the sixth — charging that the reactor site lay over an under­ ground spring which could allow- water supplies to be contaminated — was left for further study. An April 17 inspection reported that while there is ground water at the site, there is no actual spring since a spring is defined as "a place where water flows upon the land " Inspectors found no evidence of flowing water at the site and did not identify any safety hazards caused by ground water. Since the construction work tor the reac­ tor is finished, only a license is needed for it to begin operating. Gilliland said to get that license, the U n i­ versity must finish "a bunch of administra­ tive matters." Alternative student press not affected by change in campus distribution rule Brian Builta Daily Texan Staff A change in the UT System Board of Regents rules allowing alterna five student publications to be dis­ tributed on campus has had no ma­ jor effects on student organizations and is only a "smoke screen," a group leader said Monday. "It's a nice concession they can easily make," said Scott Henson, co-editor of Polemicist, an alternative student newspaper. "W e were able to distribute anyway. They couldn t enforce the old rule." James Vick, vice president for stu­ dent affairs, said in an attempt to eliminate solicitation, the previous rule — which was struck down by the regents on April 12— prevented publications student-organization from that contained advertising being distributed on campus. W e tried to rewrite the rules to make those publications an excep- tu i to be handled in a different wav/' he said. Stud i it complaints brought the need Sim a rule change to the atten­ tion ot the U l administration, w huli took the initiative in having the rule quickly changed, Vick said. Brandon Lowell, assistant editor of The Criot, a newspaper for Afri­ can^ and Vfrican-Americans at the University, said the new rule was not the best the regents could have written. Vick s,nd the old rule was a good rule that needed a small revision. " I don t want someone standing out­ side of mv classroom ... selling in­ surance,' he said. He nson said the rule change was "an important symbolic step," but that the entire University should be a free-speech area. Powell said "The University should be a mar­ ketplace of ideas. To facilitate that, free speech is a minimum of re­ quirements for an open and free en­ vironment," he said. rule change the would not affect the operation of The Criot since the paper was dis­ tributed on campus before the rule change. "N o w we don't have to worry about someone coming down on us," he said. Although the rule revision is a needed change, it is important to wait and see how the fine points are worked out, he said. Vick said before the rule changed the University had been accused of being opposed to free press, but now student organizations can dis­ tribute on campus if they want to. Regents to begin fund requests M a k in g th e c o n n e c tio n Austin Holiday Daily Texan Staff Ken Rozelle of Kyle applies a sealant that connects the heating tubes of the new recreation center to the main heating system, which lies in the estimated 6.8 miles of tunneling that exist beneath the campus. The recreation center, being built next to Memorial Stadi­ um, is expected to open before the fall semester. Gay, lesbian students to gather statistics on campus hate crimes Jennifer Deutsch Daily Texan Staff Because of what they see as a surge of hate crimes against gays and lesbians on campus, the leaders of the Gay and Lesbian Students Association on Mondav said they plan to compile U T statistics to be submitted for a national report. Racial tension and friction with groups that hold dif­ ferent ideologies have always been a problem on cam­ pus, but recently it has increased, said Danalvnn Recer, a law student and G L S A member. The gay and lesbian community has been working together as a strong coalition. "O nce progress is shown, people begin to feel threatened and use vio­ lence as a tool to suppress our autonom y," Recer said. Frank Serio, a graduate student in mathematics and G L S A member, said the compiling of these statistics — which will be done in the fall — will also be used to make the UT administration more aware of the problem of hate crimes on campus. "There is nothing official at the University' to sav vou can't be as homophobic as you w ant," he said. " I'm not so naive to say that a policy enacted would completely end the problem, but it would show that the University is interested in making a change." Leaders of many other organizations for gay and les­ bian rights said they are happy about the G L S A 's plans to start tins project. "W e are pleased to see that the G L S A is planning to take on the task," said Glen Maxey, executive director of Lesbian/Gav Rights Lobby of Texas. "The attempt to capture violence and harassment on campus w ill make it clearer to the public as to what is going on in the university atmosphere." He added that he hopes to see these statistics in the national report compiled by the National Gay and Les­ bian I ask Force. Maxey explained that a problem with gathering statistics of hate crimes is that many instances go unre­ ported. "M a n y homosexuals feel they invite more harassment by reporting the crimes because there is no police sensitivity," he said. But Maxey stressed the need for these statistics to bring awareness to the problem. "It's a twofold [purpose] when gathering these kind of statistics," he said. " It lets public policy-makers un­ derstand it is a problem. And it allows us to show people that they are not alone. ..." S ave up to $ 8 0 on Your B alfou r C ollege King! You're working hard for your diploma . . . So Balfour is giving you a break! Right now, save $80 on .every 18K. $50 on every 14K, and $‘20 on even 10K gold Balfour College Ring. So take a break and order your favorite. But hurry . .. these senior specials won’t last SALE DEADLINE SATURDAY JUN E 1 6th MastetCard Deposit Required $40 REVO’S BALFOUR EXPRESS 2304 Guadalupe 476-8767 M f- 8 30 5 30 SAT ‘.0 00-5 00 Balfour, °°coi>0ró © # ' H , m Hi. Mm VISION CENTERS Candice Driver Daily Texan Staff The U T System Board of Regents on Thursday will begin the process of requesting legislative funds bv voting on policies for the System's institutions to use in their 1992-93 budget. The proposed policies include an increase in premium-sharing ¡rates for employee medical insurance. "Those increases are estimates made by looking at what happened to insurance rates in the last three years," said Mary Guyon, a U T Sys­ tem official. Currently the state subsidizes S 130 for an individual employee's premium-sharing insurance and $150 for an employee with depend­ ents. The state's premium-sharing allocations for 1991 total $155 for employees and $200 for employees with dependents. The requests expected to be ap­ proved by regents for the next bien­ nium will raise an individual em­ ployee's premium sharing to $185 in 1992 and $225 in 1993. Premium sharing for employees with depend­ ents is expected to double between 1991 and 1993 from $200 to $400. In addition to requesting more L im ite d O penin gs tor chitaren o t UT statt and students CAES Child Development Center 919 W 28 Vs St,, just blocks from campus Pre-school Teacher-Child ratio 1 8: Infant ratio 1 4 Openings for ages 4 months 4 years Open Monday-Friday Ages 4 months-4 years For more information call Kay Jennings at 478-2581 Austin Shoe Hospital Now Serving UT Shoe Repair New Location MLK (a Nueces 473-2929 10 Austin Locations © CE CLINIC “ Those increases are estimates made by looking at what happened to insurance rates in the last three years.” — Marv G uyon, a UT System official premium-sharing dollars per indi- \ idual employee, the System's insti­ tutions will request that more em- plov ees specifically graduate teaching assistants — receive the benefits. Graduate teaching assistants lost premium-sharing benefits as of Sept. 1, 1988, because of rule changes by the Texas Higher Educa­ tion Coordinating Board. In spring 1989, state legislation reversed that decision and declared graduate teaching assistants eligible, but it did not allocate funding for those benefits I he L > ’ u3 budget requests will include eligible graduate teaching assistants,' L¡11 von said. The regents will also approve in­ creased insurance premium rates for 1991. but they are below the state s 1991 appropriation for premi­ um sharing. In other business, the regents will act on a recommendation to in­ crease the budget for food-service renovations at Kinsolving Dormito­ ry. The regents originally approved $2,838,288 for the renovations. The new request is for $4.8 million. According to the regents' back­ for Thursday's ground material m eetin g , the d iffe re n c e ot $1,961,712 is needed tor energy- conservation design requirements, removal of asbestos and replace­ ment of old piping in the building's hot-water system. The money would also be used for modifications to meet current code anti health requirements and the increased cost of food-service equipment. J INSTANT CASH AND BONUS J ♦ ? If you need cash to help you out while I ▲ you are n school, why not donate ^ ^ blood plosma. Vou can donate twice ^ ^ in a 7 day period and receive ^ ^ I $10.00 every donation. ♦ ^ ^ • fo u mst have a valid photo ID sork proof of Austin residency. Stue int ID Accepted). • O n your 6th visit within a month, you will receive $ 5 .0 0 bonus. ~ • Call fc n appointment ♦ (New Donors ( )nly) ♦ " ♦ i 4 FOR INFORMATION, OR FOR DETAILS i ABOi'A, u:'uNAL BONUS PROGRAMS, 4 ♦ PI EASE CALL 450-0756 ♦ ♦ A U S T IN P L A S M A ♦ I ! 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Ken O d e n , Travis C o u n tv atto r­ ney, said he d o u b ts th at arre sts sim ­ ilar to those m ade in Florida could h ap p en in Travis C o u n ty because obscenity law s are "a q u estion for each com m unity to in terp ret "I w ould be su rp rised if that al­ bum w ould be a crim inal violation if it w as n o t sold or d isp lay ed to chil­ d re n ," h e said. "W e have n ever h ad a successful prosecution in the last 15 years o f ... dirty language in p e r­ form ance w here it's sold an d d is­ played only [by o th er a d u lts]." to ad u lts M em bers of the rap g ro u p 2 Live C rew w ere arrested S u n d ay and charged w ith using obscenity in their adult-onlv concert. Som e p eo ­ th e g r o u p 's F irst p le b e lie v e A m en d m en t rights w ere violated. "I just d o n 't u n d e rsta n d how th ese convictions can be u p h e ld ," said M ark Y udof, d ean of the UT School of Law. If it is m arketed as an a d u lt show a n d everyone know s th at th ere m ay be som e profanity, it sh o u ld be protected u n d e r the First A m en d m en t, he said. Y udof said m ost obscenity cases deal w ith p o rn o g rap h y , b u t the idea ot p ro secuting som eone sim ply for using p rofane language is "n o t con­ the the holdings of sisten t w ith court over the last few decades." Jim H arrington , the Texas Civil L iberties U n io n legal d irecto r, ag reed that th e arrests w ere un ju sti­ fied. "Y ou have ad u lts paying to go lis­ ten to the m usic a n d they o u g h t to be able to decide w h at they w an t to hear an d w h at they d o n 't w ant to h e a r," he said. "Y ou d o n 't really need a ju d g e to m ake that deci­ sio n ." H arrington said this is likely to becom e a test case if it m akes it to the U .S. S u prem e C ourt. "1 think the courts are full e n o u g h ... right “I just don’t understand how these convictions can be upheld.’’ — M ark Y u d o f, d ean , U T S chool o f Law now , w ith o u t havin g to be th o u ght- police," he said. M ari Allen, assistan t program d i­ rector of KHFI radio station in A us­ tin, said S u n d a y 's obscenity arrest will indirectly affect w h at the sta­ tion plavs "b ecau se w h at the record labels give o u t to us are going to be a lot m ore to n ed d o w n [lyrically] th a n w h at they have been in the p a st." "Y ou probably w o n 't hear H ea rt's All I Want to Do isJAake Love to You a couple of m o n th s d o w n the ro a d ," she said. Allen said the req u ests for 2 Live C rew have g one u p since the ob­ scenity contro versy started , b u t those requests w ere m ad e m ostly by 13- to 14-year-olds. "I think 80 percen t of their p o p u ­ larity is because they are deem ed as the bad boys of ra p ," sh e said. Allen also called th e arrest "rid ic­ u lo u s" because it will only m ake younger children — w h o will th in k they are rebelling — w a n t to listen to the g ro u p 's so ng s m ore. said Teri Miller, m a n a g e r of H astin g 's Books an d R ecords a t 2338 G u a­ sh e p ersonally d alu p e St., th o u g h t "2 Live C rew w e n t ju st a little too far in their lyrics." ' But she a d d e d th ere are books w ritten w ith th a t k ind of m a­ terial "y e t no a u th o rs are a rre ste d ." th a t A n n e D iam on, a ssista n t m anager of S ound W areho use m usic sto re at 1014 N. Lam ar Blvd., said th e staff p u t stickers on th e reco rd s th at con­ tain obscene m aterial to w arn cu s­ tom ers th a t th ey m u st be at least 18 to buy recordings. "N in ety -n in e p ercen t of the rap al­ bu m s h a d stickers o n th e m ," she said. th e stickered But D iam on a d d e d th at som e heavy-m etal g ro u p s d o n o t hav e ob­ scenity even th o u g h "O zzy O sb o u rn e is pro b a­ bly just as profane a n d o u trag eo u s as any rap g ro u p has ev er b e e n ." stickers on them STATE & LOCAL Suspect still at large in weekend rape case c o n tin u e d A u stin Police th e search M onday for a m an accused of raping a w o m an in h e r South A us­ tin a p a rtm e n t early S u n d ay . Sex C rim es Sgt. D u n n y D onovan said the 18-year-old victim had been out w ith h e r ro o m m ate, w ho in tro ­ duced h er to tw o m ales that w ere friends of the room m ate. A fter sp e n d in g m o st of th e eve­ ning at an A ustin nightclub, the four w en t to a re sta u ra n t an d th e n retu rn ed to th e victim 's ap a rtm en t. The rap e took place ab o u t 4:30 a.m . Sunday. Adult video store robbed A ustin police arrested tw o m en just m in u tes after th e robbery of a UT-area a d u lt bo o k sto re early M on­ day. Robbery Sgt. Scott C ary said Er­ nest Serrano, 41, of 600-A V erm ont Road and Benito M elendrez, 18, of 1114 G u n te r St. w ere arrested on robbery charges. He said tw o m en w alked into the All-Star V ideo at 1910 G u ad alu p e St. ab out 1:30 a.m . w earing m asks and b ra n d ish in g a saw ed-off sh o t­ gun. A fter taking an undisclosed am o u n t of m oney from the clerk an d several p atro n s, th e tw o fled the store on foot, C ary said. Both S errano a n d M elendrez w ere being held on $25,000 bond each in the Travis C o u n ty Jail late M onday. Woman charged in murder An A ustin w o m an rem ained in jail M onday after an a rg u m e n t over a d ru g deal left o n e m an dead of m ultiple stab w o u n d s. Lillie M arie H ay w o o d , 32, of 1160 Poquito St. w as charged w ith the m u rd er of C harles Clifton G adison, 21, also of A u stin, after w h at police reports said w as a m ariju an a buy. Police Sgt. H ector Polanco said H ayw ood had b o u g h t a green leafy substance from G ad ison at th e S u n ­ dance C&W b ar at 1124 E. 11th St. H ayw ood told police she th o u g h t the substance w as n o t m arijuana it an d re tu rn ed to G ad ison , d e ­ re fu n d . W h e n he m a n d in g refused, su sp ect ap p a re n tly pulled o ut a folding pocketknife and stabbed th e victim rep eatedly, Po­ lanco said. a th e G adison w as taken to Bracken- ridge H ospital, w h e re he w as p ro ­ n o un ced d ead a t 9:55 p .m . S atu r­ day. Compiled by Shane Utter, Daily Tex­ an Staff Helping out A number of the temporarily homeless gather daily at HOBO, on the corner of Fifth and Lavaca streets. HOBO, which stands for Helping Our Brothers Out, is supported primarily through private donations and vol- Austin Holiday/Daily Texan Staff unteers. It serves 125 meals a day, five days a week for the people who come here, and provides counsel­ ing services. In addition, it functions as a mailing ad­ dress for more than 1,000 homeless people. Texas unorganized, unprepared for Gulf catastrophe, official says Chris Barton Daily Texan Staff D espite prelim inary o rg an izatio n ­ al efforts b eg u n in th e w ake of last y e ar's A laskan oil spill, Texas w as u n p re p a re d for S atu rd a y 's tan ker explosion a n d oil spill in the G ulf of Mexico, a state official said M onday. Tom H en d erso n , special assistan t to Land C om m issioner G arry M au­ ro, said state agencies have m ade "significant p ro g ress" since th e Exx­ on V aldez spill, b u t still lack the eq u ip m en t a n d organ izatio n they need to h a n d le accidents such as th e M ega Borg explosion. "W e d id n 't have th e eq u ip m en t in place, w e d id n 't hav e a w ritten plan in p lace," H e n d e rso n said of the sta te 's shortcom ing s. "T h e re 's in no single directo r ch arge." A fter th e A laskan spill, Texas to be p u t Gov. Bill C lem ents created th e Oil Spill A dvisory C om m ittee an d the state began to p re p a re for sim ilar ac­ cidents. A drill w as org an ized in the ev en t of a 200,000-gallon spill, b u t the M ega Borg co n tain s 38 m illion gallons. "N o b o d y in is p re ­ p a re d " for a spill th a t large, H e n ­ derson said. the w orld But to be better p re p a re d for fu ­ tu re spills, he said, Texas m u st d e ­ velop a "clear conting en cy plan, p u t a p erso n specifically in charge of the plan, a n d have e q u ip m en t located in the state an d im m ediately avail­ ab le." Texas w as so u n p re p a re d for Sat­ u rd a y 's spill, H en d erso n said, th at state agencies w ere unable to locate an d use its su p p ly of oil-com batant foam until M onday afternoon . "F orty-eight h o u rs resp o n se tim e is not exactly w h a t y o u 'd call Jo h n ­ ny on the sp o t," he said. Because the spill occurred 50 m iles off th e Texas coast — well o u t of th e sta te 's jurisdiction — private contractors h ired by th e o w n ers of th e ru p tu re d tan k er have p u t forth m ost of the clean -u p efforts, H e n ­ derso n said. M uch of the eq u ip m en t u se d , he a d d e d , w'as b ro u g h t in from M obile, Ala. Several state a n d national a g e n ­ cies, including the Land C om m is­ sion, the th e W ater C om m ission, E nvironm ental Protection Agency, th e D ep artm en t of Parks an d W ild­ life a n d the C oast G u ard , have co n ­ trib u ted to efforts to clean up the spill. H en d e rso n said he w a sn 't sure w hich agency is expected to head u p recovery efforts. "U n fo rtu n a te ly , th a t's n o t totally clear," he said. At th e tim e of th e first explosions S atu rd ay , the M ega Borg w as e n ­ gaged in lighterin g, a p rocess by w hich oil is partially d rain e d from a tan k er into a sm aller vessel so th e larger ship will rise in th e w ater an d be able to p o rt in a shallow area. " It's n ot a fin ger-po inting m atter, b u t th e C oast G u ard k no w s lig h ter­ ing h as been increasing su b sta n tial­ ly. W e have 70 o r 80 tim es a m o n th th a t it's p erform ed off th e Texas co a st," H e n d e rso n said, claim ing th a t th e C oast G u ard has been m ore co ncerned w ith ta n k er collisions th an explosions. "T his po in ts o u t th e in h e re n t d a n g e r in this [lighter­ ing] p ro c e ss." ALL YOU CAN EAT! Summer board Plans available for only $255! T h e C a s tilia n h a s e a r n e d th e r e p u t a t i o n fo r h a v in g th e b e s t fo o d s e rv ic e on c a m p u s ... fin d o u t why! r r=r r ~ r r r r r r r r~ r~ |— l— i— r~ ■ i— i— i— r— i----- i— i— ]— i— r - i— r~ T - r r r - 1 r — i T ~ I— I— ■r~ i—r ~ |— f r r (_ • r—!—!— r~ r TITTT rT T T T T ir n i I I I I n i l III III III m iL IL L U li J Li LJ 1 1 R Ü D F latter yourself with fresh fruit, a choice of cereals, breakfast tacos, omelets and eggs cooked to order, fresh Belgian waffles, doughnuts, real fruit juices & coffee from 7:15 -11:00 a.m. From 11:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., you can “Dine A nytim e1 ”, Monday through Friday in the Cordova room overlooking the campus and Capitol City. Choose from one of four entrees (one is vegetarian) at each meal, with steamed vegetables, two soups, bread, bagels, freshly prepared desserts, a huge salad bar, & a couple dozen different beverages, and more! Hamburgers, hot dogs, grilled chicken or cheese sandwiches, french fries and a Deli Bar are always available in addition to the other four entrees. ALL YOU CAN EAT with unlimited seconds. Menus change constantly, and you can pick up a copy listing entrees for the current week. There are three w ays to pay: buy single m eal tickets at a nom inal price; purchase a “block” m eal plan, entitling you to any ten m eals for only $50; or buy a summer meal plan for a full session for only $255, w hich includes 15 m eals a w eek, M onday through Friday. ===^==^ = .-=.-.. Great choices! Great value! Great food! THie Castiii.au 2323 SAN ANTONIO ST. 478-9811 How tloes Chris Petropoulos tap the UT market? Bv advertising in The Daily Texan. “ We have been in business for 26 years. With the large number of newcomers to Austin and the ever expanding enrollment at UT and surrounding universities, we felt Texas Student Publications would help us reach these new people. It has been proven that by advertis­ ing in The Daily Texan, our sales to students, faculty, and staff in the Austin area have steadily increased. " Chris Petropoulos C hris’s Liquor Stores North and South SPORTS T h u D aily T e x a n Tuesday,'June 12,1990 Page 7 Lakers’ coach Riley retires from the NBA Associated Press to I N G L E W O O D , Calif, — Pat Riley b a d e a tearful fare­ well t h e Los A n g e le s L ak e rs o n M o n d a y , s a y in g th a t a fte r n i n e y e a r s a n d f o u r N B A c h a m p i o n s h i p s " t h e r e a r e o t h e r t h i n g s I w a n t to d o w ith m y life." NBA M ik e D u n le a v y , a n a s s is t­ a n t co a c h for th e M ilw a u k e e Bucks, s u c c e e d s Riley, a n d a t a g e 36 b e c o m e s t h e s e c o n d - y o u n g e s t h e a d co ach in th e N BA . Riley, w h o w a s 36 w h e n th e L ak ers hired him a s h e a d coach o n N o v . 19, 1981, s p o k e to a p a c k e d n e w s c o n f e r e n c e at th e F o ru m . H e is leav in g w ith tw o y e a r s left on his contract. It is b e liev e d Riley will b e c o m e a c o m m e n t a t o r for N BC , w h ic h b e c o m e s th e N B A 's p r im e n e t ­ w o rk next se a so n . " I t's just tim e tor m e at a g e 45 to m o v e o n , " he said. " T h e r e a re o t h e r th in g s to d o . T h e r e isn't a n y t h i n g specific I can sa y rig h t n o w . I h ad a choice to m a k e , a d e c isio n to m a k e , a s a p e r s o n . " Riley, a c c o m p a n ie d by his w ife C h ris, w h o also feared u p , said h e w a s n e i th e r " f e d u p " n o r " b u r n e d o u t " — |iist r e a d y tor a c h a n g e . " T h e last 10 y e a rs h a v e b e e n th e g r e a te s t e x p e ­ rience of m v life," h e said. "It w a s a w o n d e r f u l d e c a d e of m e m o r a b l e e x p e r ie n c e s I've h a d . Bas­ ketball h a s b e e n m v life. I've b e e n 20 y e a r s in this g am e. " T h e r e a r e o t h e r th in g s 1 w a n t to d o in m y life. I d o n 't w a n t to be an o ld -tim e r b efo re I d o t h e m , " h e sa id . Riley g u i d e d th e I a k e r s to an N B A -b est 63-19 record this s e a s o n a n d w a s n a m e d N BA C o a ch of t h e Year for th e first tim e in his c a reer. But Los A n g e le s w a s e l im in a te d bv P h o e n ix five g a m e s in th e W e s te r n C o n f e r e n c e se m if in a ls — in id. 1983 the tirst tim e th e L e n c e finals s Paul W est he U n d e r Rili w i n n i n g peí playoff g a m e s, t h e m e co a ch in NBA h isto ry thi itai But after th e I a k e r s ' t su r fa c e d of rifts b e t w e e r agei Je rry W e st a n d bet his p la y e rs Riley, h o w e v e r , d e n i t "I n e v e r felt a n v s e p a h e said at the n e w s conl " I h e re a so n w h y thi! o n s h i p s d u r i n g th e '8 0 s so n is that the team w a s H e said h e m a d e hi a b o u t 10 d a y s a go, but I c o u ld look for a replai fan fare a n d th e n m a k e i SWEET SWING OF SUCC J Mike Dunleavy took over as Laker coach when Pat Riley retired Monday. Associated Press Ryan gets 6th career no-hitter Associated Press O A K L A N D , Calif — N o la n Ryan p itc h e d th e sixth n o - h itte r of his c a ­ r ee r M o n d a y n ig h t, e x t e n d i n g his m a jo r le a g u e record as th e Texas R a n g e r s b e a t th e O a k l a n d A thletics 5-0. R yan, m a k in g o n ly his s e c o n d sta rt afte r r e t u r n i n g fro m th e dis- a b l e d list w ith lo w e r bac k p a in , b e ­ to pitc h n o ­ c a m e th e first m a n R a n g e r s h itters for th r e e d iffe re n t t e a m s a n d is n o w th e o ld e st to t h r o w o n e . Cv Y o u n g t h r e w a n o - h itte r in 1908 at a g e 41. H is last n o -h itte r, w h ic h b r o k e th e re c o rd h e s h a r e d th e H o u s t o n A stros w ith S a n d y K oufax, w a s for a g a in s t th e Los A n g e le s D o d g e r s in 1981. T h e 43-year-old r i g h t - h a n d e r also p itc h e d fo u r n o ­ h itte rs for th e C a lifo rnia A n g e ls . R y a n s tr u c k o u t 14, e x t e n d in g h is m a jo r -le a g u e re c o rd of 10 o r m o r e in a g a m e to 201. H e w a lk e d tw o in his 59th c a r e e r s h u to u t . R y a n (5-3), 0-3 w ith a n 8.86 ERA in his p r e v io u s five starts, w a s m a k in g h is s e c o n d str a ig h t s ta rt a g a in s t the A 's since s p e n d i n g 15 d a y s o n th e d is a b le d list. H e g a v e u p five r u n s in five in n i n g s last W e d n e s d a y in a 5-4 loss at Texas. Ryaji s tr u c k o u t p in c h - h i tte r Ken P h e lp s to lead off th e n in th . Rickey H e n d e r s o n th e n g r o u n d e d o u t to s h o r t a n d Willie R a n d o l p h f o u led o u t to r ig h t to e n d th e g a m e . R y a n th r u s t his r ig h t a r m in to th e air w h e n th e final o u t w a s m a d e a n d t h e n w a s m o b b e d b y h is te a m ­ m a te s , w h o ca rrie d h im off th e field. A few fans j u m p e d o v e r th e fence to join in. T h e r e st of th e c r o w d c o n t i n u e d to c h a n t, " N o la n ! N o la n !" a s th e y h a d o v er t h e final in n in g s . R y a n 's n o - h itte r w a s t h e th ir d th is y e a r, all in th e A m e r ic a n L ea g u e. M a r k L a n g s t o n a n d M ike W itt c o m ­ b in e d to no -h it S eattle o n April 11 a n d R a n d y J o h n s o n of S eattle b e a t D e tr o it o n J u n e 2. R yan, w h o no -h it K a n s a s City a n d D etro it in 1973, M in n e s o ta in 1974 a n d B altim ore in 1975, w a s m a k in g his first sta rt a t th e O a k l a n d C o lise u m since April 11, 1977. M ike N o rris, w h o p itc h e d th r e e in n in g s in relief for O a k l a n d o n M o n d a y n ig h t, o p p o s e d h im th a t n ig h t a n d h a d n o d ec isio n a s th e A thletics b e a t th e A n g e ls 3- 2 . R yan p itc h e d his 12th c a r e e r o n e - h it te r earlier this s e a s o n in a 1-0 victory o v e r th e C h ic a g o W h ite Sox on April 26. H e s tr u c k o u t a s e a s o n - h ig h 16 in th a t g am e. T h e n o - h itte r e x t e n d e d h is c o m b in a t io n of n o-hit a n d o n e - h it g a m e s to 18, a n o t h e r m a jo r -le a g u e record. T h e 14 str ik e o u ts e x t e n d e d his all-tim e m a jo r-le a g u e m a r k to 5/151. R y a n jo ins Jim Bibby a n d Bert Blyleven as th e only R a n g e r p itc h e r s to to ss n o -h itte rs . B ibby's c a m e in O a k la n d o n Julv 30, 1973, in a 6-0 w in , a n d B lvleven's a g a in s t th e A n g e ls o n S ep t. 22, 1977, a g a in w i n n i n g 6- 0 . Media pressure, coaches' praise don’t faze Texas standout Bryan David Wilkinson Daily Texan Staff T h e w o r l d 's b e s t a t h le t e s learn quickly th a t in th e h ig h - p ro f ile a r e ­ na of s p o rts, pu blic ity c o m e s w ith th e territory. S o m e s p o r t s celebrities revel in it, b u t if t h e d e c isio n w e r e left to T exas t e n n is s t a n d o u t S teve Bryan, h e w o u ld s im p ly w in e v e ry m a tc h w ith as little h y p e a n d f a n ­ fare a s possible. S te e rin g clear of th e m e d ia s p o t ­ light, h o w e v e r, will b e m o r e diffi­ cult th a n e v e r for Bryan afte r his lat­ est victory. O n M a y 27, in In d ian Wells, Calif., Brvan b e c a m e th e first L o n g h o rn to w in th e N C A A m e n 's sin g les title since K e v in C u r r e n in 1979, a n d o n ly th e f o u r th UT c h a m ­ p io n ever. " W i n n i n g N C A A sin g le s w o u ld th e be h u g e , " B ryan sa id b e f o r e t o u r n a m e n t b e g a n . " I t 's a v e ry big dea l to m e b e c a u s e t h e w h o l e p u r ­ p o s e of p la y in g is to trv to w in . It's im p o r ta n t, b u t I d o n ' t t h i n k a b o u t it u n le s s it c o m e s u p in c o n v e r s a t i o n ." E arn es t, u n f la p p a b le a n d sta rk ly c o m p e titiv e d u r i n g a m a tc h , Bryan will quickly halt a n y off-co u rt c o n ­ v e r s a tio n c o n c e r n in g h is te n n is ac­ c o m p lis h m e n ts . H is r e tic e n t a n d u n a s s u m i n g n a t u r e s e e m s to c o n t r a ­ dict a d e t e r m in a tio n th a t g r u m b le s , "Y o u c a n 't bea t m e . " But it's all p a rt of B ry a n 's distin ctiv e c h a racter. T h e " S te v e 's a g r e a t p la y e r , b u t h e 's also th e te a m l e a d e r , " s a y s t e a m ­ m a te Patrick F lynn. " H e d o e s n 't th in k h e 's a b o v e a n y b o d y else, a n d as s o o n as h e 's d o n e w ith his o w n m a tc h , w in o r lose, h e s u p p o r t s e v ­ e r y o n e else in th e ir m a t c h e s . " 1 9 - y e a r - o ld k i n e s i o l o g y / s p o r ts m e d ic in e m a jo r, w h o h a s )ust c o m p le t e d his s o p h o m o r e y ea r, a r ­ rived a t Texas in 1988 as th e m o st h e r a ld e d in C o a c h D ave S n y d e r 's 18-year t e n u r e . In his j u n ­ ior a n d se n io r y e a r s at K atv T aylor H ig h School, h e w a s th e t o p - r a n k e d p la y e r in Texas. H e a lso r a n k e d as h ig h a s N o. 7 n a tio n a lly in U . S . T e n n i s A ssociation polls d u r i n g his A ll-A m erica s e n io r year. recruit th a n e x h ila ra tin g for Brvan, h o w e v ­ er. A d id a s a n d P rince se rv e d as s p o n s o r s d u r i n g his s e n io r vear, a ru le s, m a k in g vio la tio n of U.I.L. f u r th e r h ig h for ineligible h im sc h o o l c o m p e titio n . it d o e s n 't "I d i d n ' t like h ig h school te n n is b e c a u s e im p r o v e y o u r g a m e th a t m u c h , " he sa y s. " T h e is n 't c o m p e ti tio n v e r y g o o d , a n d , I h a t e to s a y it, b u t it really w a s n ' t c h a lle n g in g for m e . in h ig h sch o o l " E v e r y p r o m is in g y o u n g p la y e r p la y s in UST A t o u r n a m e n t s b e c a u s e it in v o lv e s p la y e rs from all o v e r th e w o r l d , w h e r e a s h ig h i n ­ v o lv e s o n ly p la y e r s in th e U n ite d S tate s. A s a resu lt, th e level of c o m ­ p e titio n in th e U STA is m u c h h i g h ­ e r . " sch o o l M o r e th a n 100 colleges offe re d s c h o la r s h ip s to Bryan, a n d d u r i n g th e s u m m e r f o llo w in g his s e n io r y e a r , h e n a r r o w e d th e field to four: T ex as, LSU, Cal-Irvine a n d A riz o n a . T h e T exas m y s tiq u e , a rich te n n is h is t o r y a n d trad itio n , a n d a g r e a t co a c h in S n y d e r so ld Bryan o n T ex­ as. "I r e c ru ite d S tev e p r e tty heavily, b u t o t h e r c o a c h e s p r o b a b ly called h im m o r e o fte n o r s e n t m o r e le t­ t e r s , " S n y d e r said. "I d i d n ' t d o a n y ­ t h i n g special, a l th o u g h I m a d e it clea r th a t I really w a n t e d him to c o m e to T exas. " S te v e is a fra n c h is e - ty p e p la y er, a n d it's g r e a t if y o u ca n h a v e a g u y like th a t in y o u lin é b p . H e ce rtain ly d i d a s well in his first tw o y e a rs as a n y o n e I've ev e r h a d . " B ry an h a s in d e e d held his o w n in th e collegiate ra n k s. H e finishe d his f r e s h m a n y e a r w ith a 35-13 rec ord, 5-2 in th e S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e . T h is p a s t se a s o n h e c o m p ile d a s e a s o n m o n s t r o u s r e c o rd , a pe rfe c t 9-Ü S W C m a r k a n d , of sin g le s c o u r s e , c h a m p i o n s h i p . th e n a tio n a l r e g u la r 46-5 F or all of B ry a n 's o u t s t a n d i n g p h y sic a l abilities, college c o a c h e s la u d h im w ith e q u a l f e rv o r for his m e n ta l a p p r o a c h to th e g a m e . " S te v e h a s g o t th e m a k i n g s of a s u p e r s t a r , " A r k a n s a s C o a c h R o bert H ig h school t e n n is p r o v e d less Please see Bryan, page 12 J o h n Moore Dam Bryan became the first NCAA men’s singles champ from Texas in more than a Dumars to play game in father’s memor* Please see Ryan, page 10 Associated Press A's sign Dressendorfer L o n g h o r n A ll-A m eric an p itc h e r Kirk D r e s s e n ­ d o r fe r sig n e d a c o n t r a c t w ith the w o rld c h a m p io n O a k la n d A thle tic s for a r e p o r te d $175,000 s ig n in g b o n u s o n S a tu r d a y . D r e s s e n d o r f e r w a s in O a k la n d , Calif., M o n d a y n ig h t a n d w a s n o t av a ilable for c o m m e n t . J u d y D r e s s e n d o r f e r , K irk's m o th e r , said h e r son w a s g o in g to be s e n t to O a k l a n d 's m in o r le a g u e affiliate in M e d fo r d , O re . W ayne Hardin/Daily Texan Staff N A T C H IT O C H E S , La. — His f a th e r w o u ld h a v e w a n t e d h i m to play, so Joe in P o rtla n d D u m a r s will p r o b a b ly be w h e n th e D etroit P is to n s m e e t th e Trail Blazers in G a m e 4 of th e NBA Finals. " M y m o th e r ta lk ed to Joe a n d told h im his fath e r w a n te d h im to p l a y ," M a rth a D u m a r s said. " H e 'll w a it to c o m e h o m e for th e fu neral so h e ca n k e e p p la y in g . T h a t 's w h a t w e d e c i d e d . " S ervices for J o s e p h D u m a r s Jr. will be S a tu r d a y m o r n in g , th e fam ily said. T h e e ld e r D u m a r s d ie d S u n d a y of c o n g e stiv e h e a r t failure V/z h o u r s b e f o r e his so n h e l p e d th e P isto n s to a 121-106 victory o v e r P o rtla n d . H e w a s 65. T h e finals s c h e d u l e d o e s n o t conflict w ith th e fu n e ra l a n d it a p p e a r s likelv th a t D u m a r s will be able said D o u g to p lay, f a m i l v a I r e l a n d , frie n d . G a m e 5 is s c h e d u l e d for T h u rs­ d a y in P o rtla n d a n d G a m e 6, if n e c e s s a r y , in D etro it o n S u n d a y . f a t h e r ' s A fte r he le a r n e d of h is d e a t h , D u m a r s tra v e le d from P o rtla n d to D etroit to Dumars m e e t w ith his w ife b e ­ fore h e a d i n g to L ou isia n a. But w h e n h e ta lked w ith his m o th e r , it wra s d e c id e d t h e P isto n s' sta r w o u l d r e tu r n to P o r t­ land. T h e e ld e r D u m a r s h a d b e e n a p a t ie n t a t th e A lex a n d ria V e te r a n s Affairs M e d i­ cal C e n te r for t h r e e w e e k s , said his w i d ­ o w O p h e lia . H e h a d s u ffe re d from d ia ­ b e te s since M85, s h e said. Joe 111, w h o sc o re d 33 p o in ts in S u n ­ d a y 's g a m e , did n ot learn of his f a th e r's d e a t h until after th e g a m e . "I told his w ife n o t to tell h im until afte r th e g a m e , " said O p h e li a D u m a r s , w h o w a s w ith h e r h u s b a n d at th e tim e of his d e a t h a lo n g w i t h th e ir s o n s R on a ld , Paul, D a n n y a n d M a rk a n d o t h e r re la ­ tives. The story of th e v o u n g e r D u m a r s a n d his f a th e r b e c a m e a n a tio n a l o n e w h e n D u m a r s , v o te d m o s t \. la^t y e a r 's NBA 1 inals A ng ele s Lakers, p ro m i elder D u m a r s his c h a m p That p r e s e n t a t i o n war 2L> at th e VA 1 lospital bv w h o m a rr ie d th e v o u n g m o n t h s earlier. 1 ler b u s r a m e n to for a g a m e a m e n t th e ring. "It w a s v e rv special D u m a r s said M o n d a y . F o llow ing his s o n 's c big p a r t of D u m a r s ' I y ea rs, sa id C h r is Magg o p e r a te s a sto r e across tl D u m a r s ' h o m e a n d wl Joe III. e r Du Disciplined Costa Rica topples Scotlaiu Associated Press | thi | y | I I U ni t e d State- c o u l d n ' t m a n a g e , C o s ta Rica l i l i I V i I for V w h o fi ni s h e d a he ad ct ^ e A m e r ic a n s in quali- ty in g th e World l up. a*- li gh'h the' g a r d e d te am . But in th e ir d e b u t a m o n g th e elite of soccer, th e y got a goal fro m Ju a n C a v asso o n a s u p e r b feed from C l a u d i o Jara a n d o u t s t a n d i n g g o a l k e e p in g b\ Luis C one jo for a 1-0 victory o v e r S c o tla n d o n M o n d a s I s . a s I T h e v d id m u c h b e tte r t h a n th e U nited S ta te s d i d ag a in st C z e c h o s lo v a k ia , a 5-1 loss th a t c o u ld h a v e b e e n w o rs e . " I 'm v e ry h a p p y for C o s ta Rica, w h ic h is a sm a ll c o u n t r y b u t h a s a big h e a r t,' said C o s ta Rican C oach Bora M ilutin ovic, a \ u- g o sla v ia n w h o to o k o v e r th e s q u a d last F e b ru a ry . H e a ls o c o a c h e d Mexico tv) the q u a r te rf in a ls in 1986. " I 'm m o v e d bv all th e p la y e r s ' effort. T h e v p la y e d v e ry well a n d s h o w e d g re a t tactical d is c ip li n e ." W h e n th a t d isc ip lin e b r o k e d o w n , C o n e ­ jo w a s th e re to m a k e th e kev saves. A s p e c ­ tacular d iv in g s to p o n a p o in t- b la n k s h o t by M o J o h n s t o n w a s C o n e j o ' s b e s t effort. " L u c k is often i m p o r t a n t , " C o n e jo said. " M o J o h n s t o n is a g r e a t p la yer. But w e w o r k e d v ery h a r d w ith Bora to get this re s u i t . " All th e C o s ta Rican p la v e r s w o r e black a r m b a n d s b e c a u s e t h e f o u n d e r of C osta Rica's 1948 c o n s titu t io n , Jose F igueras, d ie d ea rlier in th e w e e k . C o s ta Rica's victory w a s th e th ird u p s e t v'! th e t o u r n a m e n t . C a m e r o o n s t u n n e d the d e f e n d i n g c h a m p i o n A rg e n tin e s th e o p e n e r , t h e n R o m a n ia s u r p r i s e d the S oviet U n io n o n S a tu r d a y . in C a m e r o o n a n d R o m a n ia h a v e b een h e r e befo re T h e C o sta Ricans n e v e r h a d d e a lt w ith W orld C u p p re s s u r e . Thev held u[ just fine. T h at c o u l d n 't be said te r th e Vmericans w h o licked th e ir w o u n d s M o n d a y a s o n e o their p la yers, P e te r Yerme-- a c c u ^ - d m m u te a m m a te s of q u itt in g a g a in st t 'e c h o s lo vakia. "1 think w e c o u ld h a v e d o n e m u c h bet ter, for s u r e , " h e said. I d o n ' t t h in k wt pla y ed th e w a v th a t w e cán p l a v . t ,-i\ h o S l o v a k i a w a s th e b e t te r te a m , t h a t - ‘m e think, w < But at th e s a m e tim e k sh o u ld lose 5-1. I th in k at s o m e point gam e, s o m e p la v e r s g a v e u p a n d that not o u r c tv le ." I d o n ' t N ext u p for th e I n ite d Me. lo o k e d d o m i n a n t against w h ic h A u s tr ia n te a m in its o p e n n b a d vould this o n e g e t 1 . m e !v oc i l ow "I d o n 't see Italy sc o rin g tom goa us or a n y t h i n g like that C h ris Sullivan said. 'It’s possib le tha I 1 t í o h ware t h a n Please see W orl^Cup, page 12 1 Qosta Rican players celebrated Monday during their upset victory over Scotland. Associated Press Chris O athout Daily Texan Staff Abigail Chapm an TS P Photo w.„ ..-qibaa, The Varsity’s mural, without the fire escape, may be all that survives the corporate encroachment of the Varsity’s new tenants, Tower :ecords, ply w ouldn't pa\ $4.50 to see a first- run art film, doomed the foreign format. The Varsity becam e a dollar theater in Septem ber of 1988. "It was a last-ditch effort to stay opr n, and it was finally catching on People w ere beginning to realize that we w eren 't just another dollar theater, and that we were show ing onlv the good movies and not the trash ," W ilson said M onday. "T h e ow ner of the building, Hugh O ates, decided he needed more revenue, and he cam e togeth­ er with Tower R ecord s." O ates, w ho works from an office in W ashington, D.C , ha^ seen the Varsity Theater twice duiing his ow nership of the theater. "H e knew that this would upset people, but the Varsity was |ust a B E P A Í B • Boots • Shoes • Leather Goods • Luggage C U S T O M M A D E • Boots • Belts • Chaps • Etc. Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca • Austin • 478-9309 money -making proposition to him. That's my personal im p ressio n ," W ilson said. Tow er Records President Russ im pres­ Solom on had a different s i o n . "It all started with som e real es­ tate people in Austin w ho discov­ ered that the operator of the theater wanted *o gt t out of his le a se ," So­ lomon said Chuck Eckerm an, the V arsity's operator si ice !977, did not return phone m essages lett at his home Sunday and Monday. "T h e ow ner of the building [Oates] didn t have much to do with them getting o u t," said Solom on, who adm itted that ! ow er's rent will be higher hut not significantly so. O ates, w hose telephone num ber w a s n 't listed in W ashington phone books, hasn't sat with anticipation as the opening credits shim m ered off the Varsity's curtain. He has never melted into the richly uphol­ stered rocker seats as the V arsity's inverted lam ps in soothing indirect light; he never es- caped to the balcony for a m atinee. im mersed him A n d now , apparently because University students w eren't buying enough popcorn and Raisinettes, Austin has a Tower Records. the W ilson, aw are in O ctober of 1989 that theater was dying, ex­ pressed pride Monday that he had helped preserve rem nants of the th Mter's rich history. The seats have been donated to the Capitol City Playhouse, the Vor­ tex Perform ance Cafe and the C hi­ cago H ouse. "M y m ain concern w as about the m ural. W e heard a couple of days before the theater closed that the ar­ chitect w as looking for a m uralist to paint a new mural over the current o n e ," said W ilson who initiated a frantic petition and celibrity drive to protest the proposed new m ural. R epresentatives at Tow er Records m ade it em phatically clear M onday that the m ural would remain along­ side the new Tow er Records. The fire escape, the equivalent of the clock from the movie Safety Last, from w hich a likeness of Harold Lloyd hangs, is to be rem oved, W il­ son said, but the Tow er architects and Lowry are w orking to alter the mural so that its original intent is preserved. "T h ev ju st didn't k n o w ," Wilson said of the com pany's original m edi­ tations. "T h e y 're from out of town, and a lot of them had never even just didn't seen the mural. They know how much the m ural, how much the entire building, m eans to A u stin ." Tow er Records is from out of tow n, and they know that incom ing freshm en will associate the record store with the mural, assum ing that the two som ehow em erged togeth­ er. "A ll w e can do is put in a real good record store and hope people accept it. I d on't think of us a much of a spoiler. It's not quite like hav­ ing a Burger King in th e re ," Solo-* mon said. is ,' "I hope that our com ing to Austin is as much of a cultural event as the theater said Solom on wh<) pointed out that the first Tow er Records assum ed the nam e and the building that had once been Sacra; m ento's Tow er Theater. It isn't only Solom on w ho sug­ gests the necessity of an Austin, Tow er Records; more than a few' students have praised the encroach­ ing chain for its low prices and lon g hours. W hen the store opens in No-* veniber, a college student will able' to buy the latest im ported CD at m idnight for the low price of $12.99, just like you can in M anhattan or W ashington or San Diego or N ash­ ville But w hat of A u stin 7 Tow er Records invades this city with the local significance of a Wal Mart. Like the behem oth Blockbuster Vi­ deo three blocks to the north, lo w er Records is another s\ mbol of Aus­ tin 's g ro w in g h o m o g e n y and shrinking uniqueness. Endangered by a New O rleans- based com pany that w ould see Bar­ ton Creek reduced to trinkets of su­ burbia — four golf courses and rows of indistinguishable houses — Aus­ tin's financial malaise is evident in identity. T he outside its eroding investors that would transform K er- by Lane into a Hard Rock Cafe can be only m om ents aw ay. National record chain Towers over local cinematic landmark Dave Winter Daily Texan Staff he air-condition­ in g w as out at the Southw ood, a theater distin­ guishable from the myriad or d o lla r A u s tin theaters only be- this W ednesday, it sm elled cam like a sw eltering swamp. ag eless art-d eco The exposed screen jilted the few patrons in the royal blue seats be­ tw een rows (if burgundy carpeting and instead faced folds of maize curtain along the left wall. The swirl of colors clashed a s on a painter's palette, and as I sat uncom fortably amidst the obtrusive odors and an­ gles and colors, 1 missed the Varsity it rribly The th eater which first opened its doors in 1936 ele sed them for the last time Thu rs­ day, Mav 17. The enthusiastic crowd that flocked to see Royer ami Me understood a subtle irony that the Austin m edia, hovering around the concession stand, did not. As the movie credits w ound dow n with the theater surrounding it, director Michael M oore inserted that people in Flint, M ich., would never see his movie because the theaters within the city's limits, like the Varsity, had closed. After a free screening the stricken devotees the next day, the 1 arsitv stood more still than the va- for AUSTIN 6 521 THOMWOM Off 153 1 MILE •©. •! MOMTOPOLIS Phone 3 8 5-532 8 M l MALE THEATEE o ftn *4 nouns CALL THEATRE FOR TITLES ALL RSHTAL8 2 FOR ONE EVERY PAY | MON. WED. A FR Lnw o a « * * m t - « h o» ok* j RENTALS $ 1 -5 3 SALES S9.85-164.95 i T A P E E X C H A N G E D IS C O U N T M A G S SO FT, HARD, A A A E M A C K , S W iM Q in A ALL M A L I cant cam pus across the street until the architects from Sacram ento- based row er Records began turning an Austin heritage into its latest outlet. The Varsity began the previous decade by sealing its balcony as an auxiliary theater, replacing the clas­ sic American films that had dom i­ nated its format with art and foreign films, and creating the mural w hich now adorns the outer south wall of the building. Carlos I owry , assisted bv 30 volunteers the over 4 000 square-foot mural of 12 from well known still life scenes American classics in the sum m er of 1080. com pleted Bolstered by the success of m;< h alternative films as Diva and Liquid Sky, the Varsity graced the cover of ¡mayes on V alentine's Day in 1986 as theater had if conquered that had the dem ons subdued other venerable theaters iike thi Grenada in Dallas. the endangered that the realitv The Yarsitv boon was a mirage lifted slowl\ as the decade cam e to a close Amid the acclaim of success the Varsity was turned a profit in only two of 12 m onths in 1985. Two years later, two buffoons m asquerading as vil­ lains and wielding butter knives robbed the Varsity only to discover that the cash registers held but $60 and that butter knives don t scare away theater managers. Varsity em ployee Steve Wilson apprehended the two villians, b u t greater villians, none more effective than poor college students who sim- ADMISSION PH ICES' $5 00 ADULTS. $2 75 CHi DHEN4SR CITIZENS BOX O frtCF OPENS AT 11 30 AM D IC K T R A C Y " STARTS JUNE 15 B A C K T O T H É FU TU R E Hi _ ADULT VIDEO CIN EM ARK T H E A T R E S VILLAGE CINEMA" 2700 ANDERSO N Z t , ’ V 451-8352 f . ' TH E C O O K , T H E T H IE F , H IS W IFE AND HER LOVER > 2 .3 0 5 1 0 7 ,4 5 10 ’ 5 Nil ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED NEW YEARS DAY 3 0 0 5:00 8 :0 0 10 10 NO PASSES u T IE ME U P, T IE ME DOW N 3 15 5 25 7 30 10:00 NO PASSCS-NO CNF UNDER 18 ADMITTED C IN E M A P A R A D IS O TOO B E A U T IF U L FOR YOU 4 4F 1 10 2:45 9 45 T H E D A I L Y T e x a n Tuesday, June 12j 1990 Page 9 T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D S 8:00-5:00 p .m ./M o n d a y -F rid a y /T S P B u ild in g 3.200 "LONGHORN WANT ADS" - Specifications - * 20 words, 5 days S5 ► Merchandise for Sale Priced a* $1000 or less Price must appear in ad ► Private Party Ads Only ► If item doesn't sell, a d ­ vertiser must call before 1100 a m on the day the od is scheduled to end to qualify for the 5 ad d i­ insertions at no tional charge ‘ Must spec K Longhorn ■ W ant A d ” classification to qualify for $5 rate. * Changes allowed for "Pnce Only”, TO PLACE A W O R D O R U N I A D CALL: 471-5244 C LA SSIF IED W O R D A D n M T E S ‘ C h a r g e d bv the w o rd 15 w ord m«T mum Set m 5 pi type only Rates are fo r consecutive d a y s . 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A u t o * 20 — S p o r t * F o r w g n A u to s 30 — T ru cks- V o n * 40 — V tHtcUhi t o Track» 5 0 — S e r v k « - R * p o ir AO — P o rts A rc e * ¿orM»s 70 — M o t o r r y c k t i 80 — B tcyrio * 9 0 — V t h i t l t l o a t m g 100 - V e h ic le s W a n te d R l A i 1ST A T I S A L ÍS 1 1 0 - Se rv ic e s 120 - H o u s e s 1 3 0 — C o n d o s T o w n h o u s e * 1 4 0 — M o b ile H o m e s -L o ts 150 — A e r e ó le - Lot* 1A0 — D u p ie x e s - A p o rtro e i its 170 — W on te d 180 — L o o n s M C ft C H A N O IS f 190 — A p p lia n c e s 2 0 0 — E u m ifu re -M o u s e t ro ld 2 10 — S te r e o -T V 220 — Com puter-s Eq u ip m e n t 230 — P t> o to -C a m e ra s 240 — B o a t s 2 50 — M u s k a f In s tru m e n ts 2 AO - H o b b ie s 2 70 — M a c h in e r y E q u ip m e n t 790 — S p a r t in q -C a m p in q Iq u f p m s n f 290 — F u rn itu re A p p lia n c e R e nta! 300 - O a r a q e -R u m m o q e S o le s 3 1 0 - T rad e 3 2 0 — W o n te d to B u y o r Rent M E R C H A N D IS E 330 - Rets 340 - L o n g h o r n W an t A d s 345 - M isc. R E N T A L 350 — R e n tal Se rv ic e s 340 — Turn. A pts. 370 — U n f A p ts 380 — Turn. D u p le x e s 390 — U n i D u p le x e s 400 — C o n d o s -T o w n h o u s e s 4 1 0 — Furn. H o u s e s 4 2 0 - U n i. H o u s e s 4 2 5 — R o o m s 4 30 — R o o m -B o a r d 4 3 5 — C o - o p s 4 40 — R o o m m a te s 4 50 — M o b rie H o m e s -L o t s 4 6 0 — B u s in e s s R e n tá is 4 70 - R e so rts 4 8 0 S t o r a g e S p a c e 4 90 — W an te d to R e nt L e a se 500 M ite A N N O U N C E M E N T S 5 1 0 — En te rta in m e n t Tickets 52© — H r t o n a l i 5 38 - T rav e l T ro n s p o r t aft o n 540 — L o st 8 F o u n d 550 — L ice n se d C h ild C a re 560 — Rubitc N o tice 5 7 0 — M u s k - M u s k io n s E D U C A T IO N A L 580 — M u s ic a l In stru ctio n 590 — 7 u t o rin g 600 — In stru ctio n W on te d A 10 — Mése In stru ctio n S E R V IC E S 620 — L e q a l Se rv ic e s 630 — C o m p u te * Se rv ic es 640 — E « te rm in a tors 6 5 0 - M o v in q - H o u lin g 660 — S to ra q e 6 7 0 — R a in t in g S E R V IC E S 680 6 9 0 — R e n tal Eq u ip m e n t 700 — F u rn itu re R e p a ir 7 1 0 — A p p lia n c e R e p a ir Office 720 - S te r e o -T V R e p a ir 730 - H o m e Re pair 740 — I k y c k R e p a ir 7 5 0 - Typirtq 7 6 0 — M isc. Se rv ic e s E M P L O Y M E N T 770 — E m p lo y m ent A g e n c ie s 780 — E m p lo y me nt S e rv ic e s 790 - P a rt tim e 800 8 1 0 - O ffice - Clerical 820 — A cco u n fin q - G e n e r a l H e lp W a n te d B o o k k e e p in q 830 - A d m in is t ra t iv e M avtq em eo * S a le s 840 850 Retail 860 - Enq tnee rtnq - Y e c h n k o f 8 7 0 — M e d ic a l P ro fe s s io n a l 880 890 — C lu b s - R e st a u r a n ts 900 — D om estic - H o u s e h o ld 9 1 0 — P o s itio n s W a n te d 9 2 0 — W o rk W a n te d B U S IN E S S 9 3 0 — B u s in e s s O p p o r tu n itie s 9 40 O p p o r tu n itie s W on te d 4 7 1 5 2 4 4 T R A N S P O R T A T IO N T R A N S P O R T A T IO N RENTA L R EN TA L RENTAL RENTA L R EN TA L R EN TA L 10 — Misc. A u to s 100 — V eh icles 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. A pts. L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S FULL SIZE b ed for sale $ 5 0 w om e n's golf clubs b«nnd new $ 8 0 Call Sallv 3 3 5 - 5 7 5 3 6 -6 5 8 F PI A Y B O Y S 1 9 7 7 -8 7 Ltke © w condition $ 5 5 0 N egotiab le Cal! D a n 92 6 -0 9 5 1 . 6 6 -5 B F 19 82 H O N D A Ascot F T 5 0 0 Red. 12 ,0 0 0 miles. Runt great Helmet mcli Hed. M ust sell $ 5 2 5 O B O 4 4 5 - 6 2 0 7 . 6-11-5P - T A N D Y T R S8 0 with printer, software a nd other extras G reat condition. First 5 2 5 0 gets oil. 9 9 0 -5 5 1 5 / 1 -3 9 2 -2 3 6 5 6-11 58 D R U M SET: Block 5 -p u c e C B 7 0 0 . great condition H -H A 1 S Zildjian Crash, Sabi an nde heavy duty hard w are $ 3 2 5 firm W hitev 3 3 8 - 4 9 0 8 Ó-12-6P 3 5 0 — Rental Services * F l o * Í tHREEOAKs A N D M t i c c e s 1 BR & 2 BR Pre-leasing For Summer & Fall $2 9 5 and up * f-ul!y Furnished * 2 Blocks From Campus! * Ceiling Fans * Mini Blinds * Pool * Private Parking * Laundry Rooms * O n UT Shuttle 4 7 4 -0 9 7 1 600 W. 26th f PECAN SQUARE A P A R T M E N T S Pre-leasing For Summer & Fall $ 2 5 0 and up • 1 Bdr-1 B a • Furnished • Laundry 451-5840 n 409 W. 38th St. ^ V V _____________________ 6-12 58 REN TA L G O V E R N M E N T S E lZ F D vehicles $ 10 0 C h e v y s Surplus Buyers g u id e 6 8 7 - 6 0 0 0 Ext S -9 4 1 3 . 6 4 -2 5 P M e rc e d e s F ords C o ' vettes ¡1:805- from A T T E N T I O N - G O V E R N M E N T seize d ve hieles from $ 10 0 Fords. M e r c ° d e s C o r ­ vettes. C hevys. Surplus bu yers gu id e 6 -U - (1 )6 0 2 -8 3 8 -8 8 8 5 Ext ________ 2P_____________ A - 4 0 0 8 198 5 P O N T IA C T 1 0 00 c le o n 3 - d o o r tilt. 4 4 , 0 0 0 m'les, $ 3 0 0 0 / best offer, C n d y 2 5 1 -8 8 9 6 /8 2 8 7 5 6 7 6-11 5B 20 — S p o rts-F o re ig n A u to s 1 9 8 4 H O N D A A C C O R D I X fo u r d o o r AT, A C , stereo, cassette, lo w m ile a g e Maintenance records. Excellec condition * 5 9 5 0 , 3 3 5 - 0 7 1 6 6 - 7 - 2 0 - N C 1 9 7 0 T A N a ir-co n d itio n e d b u g W ill a p ­ preciate* Nice . 4 8 , 0 0 0 e n g in e 1 $ 2 ,0 0 0 , n e gotiab le . B y 6 ’ <3 4 6 9 -9 0 7 1 6 -1 2 -9 B F 1 9 8 0 V O L V O B erto ne C o u p e R a re c la s ­ sic Excellent l o a d e d A lp in e stereo condition 4 6 9 -9 1 5 9 . 6 -1 2 -5 B 30 — T r u c k s-V a n s 1 98 9 F O R D R o nge r, 4 cylinder 5 speed, oc, stereo/cassette for $ 6 9 0 0 4 5 8 - 4 7 3 5 Ó -11-5É L o w m ile a g e 70 — M o to rcy cle s W anted W E S T C A M P U S ! S p a c io u s 2 -2 suoer p ool, b a rb e c u e are a, c o v e r e d po rk — : hot tub $ 5 5 0 . F R O N T P A G E P R O E R T IE S 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 6 - 1 2 -2 0 8 -D __________ REAL ESTATE SA L E S 120 — H o u se s H A N D S O M E H O M E IN TOP CO N DITIO N 4 blocks North of U.T. G o o d neighborhood, 3 bedroom s, new CA/CH, large rooms, 9 ft. ceilings, hard ­ w o o d floors, built >n bookcoses, w o o d burning fi eplace. lovely yard, gre e n ­ house °erfect for professor. $99,500 477-8602 130 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u se s W H Y R E N T ? ” ...WHEN YOU C A N O W N ! Sa le s, b a r g a in s, R.E.O., go v e rn m e n t, o w n e r fin a nced . The time is n o w ! Call Jerry O a k e s at: PMT 476-2673, 467-7781 4 - 3 0 2 0 B C ★ University Arec ★ FORECLOSURES 1, 2, a n d 3 b e c r o o m s fo r sale! M a ” v with seller financing,- se lection limited. C all M I T C H E LY at PMT ★476-2673,477-6853★ 6 -1 2 -2 0 B -C M E R C H A N D IS E 190 — A p p lia n c e s Know where to land your next ^ condo. Choose from many university properties for Fall Call MARY TALBCT CO. 4 8 0 -8 8 0 0 h a b i t a t Yiuntens ITS A JUNGLE OUT THERE... LEAVE THE HUNTING TO US! CONDOS«APARTMENTS HOUSES «DUPLEXES 0 0 * 7 7 7 First Time Buyers Special Student Financing with approved credit H O N D A Come nde with us 4 5 9 - 3 3 1 1 S P R IN G F E V E R S P E C IA L S H O N D A • K A W A S A K I F 0 Ü C E N T E R 6 5 0 9 N. L a m a r 1983 B L A C K A S C O T V T 5 0 0 9 6 0 0 miles, helmet, n e w tires, must sell. C a ll D a n n y , 4 51 -8 5 81 6 -11-20B_________ 1 97 8 H O N D A 5 5 0 K , e xcellent conditio n L o w m ile a g e $ 5 9 5 . 8 3 6 - 5 8 9 7 t e o v e m e ssa g e 6 -8 -5 B 8 0 — Bicycles GT, F U J I, K H S , H A R O B IC Y C L E S A L E (Why Pay More!) only S199 TO $269.00 Will g e l you a new 12-18 spe e d m oun­ tain bike with lightweight steel alloy frame, alloy wheels and index g e a rs Lifetim e w arran ty 1 ye ar free s e r v ic e M C . V I S A , A M E X W e l c o m e S O U T H A U S T IN B IC Y C L E S 2 2 1 0 S o u t h 1st 4 4 4 -0 8 0 5 Mountain Bike Sale! 928-2810 • D I A M 0 N 0 B A C K • P A N A S O N IC • S H O G U N • J A M IS • M a m Reduced Si vc ><; Student Discounts BUCK’S BIKES V ISA M C Am Exp Dtwcover Welcome 27 C U B IC : ot alm ond d o r frost free 38 8 - A m o no side by side refrigerator ___ 1210, coll Jeff. 6 - 6 -5 8 £ 1 4 ' $ M l f d L 2 0 0 — Furniture- H o u se h o id ALLOW US-TO ASSIST AT NO CHARGE TO YOU. 482-8651 S a l e v Furniture Twn ie: a Frame S 9 9 . 9 6 * S 109 95 Fun Set a Ftame Student Desk S 6 9 9 5 4 Drw Chest S 49 .0 0 Dres,se' w Mirror S1 1 9 .9 5 Kotos $ 1 3 9 9 5 5-piece Dinette $ 9 9 . 9 5 C entex Fu rn itu re W h o le s a le 6618 N. Lamar 450-0988 )988 Í808ji 2001 S. Lamar 445-5808 MasterCard De very V sa 220 — C o m p u te rs- Equipm ent IB M -P C 8 0 8 8 2 5 6 K M o n o g ra p h ic m oni­ tor Epson FX 8 0 Printer $ 6 5 0 , N egoti- oble. 4 5 3 - 2 3 0 1 / 3 3 8 - 7 6 9 ? 6 - 6 5 8 M C IN T O S H 51 2K ¡mage Writer!. 8 0 0 K external drive, excellent condition S 8 5 0 4 7 7 - 6 2 1 6 . 6 - 7 - 5 B ____________ 240 — B o a ts V E N T U R E 21 Sw in g keel o utb oard on holler for suit:. Askinq $ 2 . 2 5 0 4 4 2 - 0 0 2 6 B ob 6 12 5R 330 — Pets G O L D E N RETRIEVER puppies A K C teg istered, 9 weeks. C ha m p io n bloodlines, shots, extremely healthy Free starter kit1 6-11-5B. 1-353-1610. TO P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A D CALL 471-5244 © F R E E L O C A T O R S Best and friendliest service in town Catl today1 T h om as G. T hom pson R e a lto r 4 5 2 - 8 6 2 5 H U D f-HA V A SP E C IA L IS T 360 — Furn. Apts. C h a p a r o s a Apartments 3110 Red R iver C L O S E T O U . T . ❖ Sm all, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks from Law. on shuttle; attrac- tively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3BR 474-1902 M O N G O O S E 2 4 ' couriser 3 -p c cranks. G r e a t for c am p u s use. Excellent cond< tion $175. 3 2 7 - 3 9 7 8 , 6 -1 2 -5 B RENTAL 360 — Furn. A pts. N O R T H OF UT efficiencies one bed room $1 35 5 2 6 5 4 5 4 4441 5 -4 -2 0 B -K 4 7 7-22 14 , I ’v e B e e n A r o u n d T h e W o r l d a n d ALL BILLS PAID Starting at $250 180-1 BA 2 B D -2 B A 476-8915 2 4 0 8 L e o n • W A R W IC K * A P A R T M E N T S 2907 West Avenue Now pre-leasing for FALL Spacious 2-2's, 1-1's and efficiencies. • Beautifully Lan dscap e d • Only Minutes toCampus • Water and Gas Paid CALL 474-7426 FOR DETAILS WALK TO CAMPUS 3 2 n d at IH -3 5 Avalon Apts. Summer/Fall Rates _____________________________ 6 -1 1 -2 0 B -E efficiency S 2 2 5 /S 2 4 5 S 2 2 5 /S 2 8 5 1 Br 2 BrZ2 Bo S 3 2 0 /S 3 8 5 Ceiling fons, walk-in closets, on-site manager, laundry Squeaky clean 476-3629 5 - 2 - 2 0 B - A FOUNTAIN TERRACE APARTMENTS 610 W. 30 Mgr. #134 e Large 1 -1 's-Efficiencies . S 2 2 5 / Í2 7 5 e Gas/Water paid e CA/CH, Ceiling Fans e Quiet, nice courtyard, pool and patio e Walk to UT 4 7 7 -8 8 5 8 6 - 5 - 2 0 B - C Hillside Apts. 1 & 2 Bedroom s Furnished o r Unfurnished C lean & Quiet All Utilities Paid 478-2819 514 D a w so n Rd. Just O ff Barton Springs Rd. C L A S S A C T S ! Pre-leasing For Summer & Fall S250 and up • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Central Air Heat • 2 Blocks From UT 472-8398 472-7049 HOUSTON & DALLAS W ILSH IRE & BRANDYWINE 3 S U M M E R SP EC IA LS! J E R R I C K I, II, III: 104 E. 32 n d St. 1 Clock «asi of Speedway at corner ol Helms S 32n 451 -2642 I - I 2*1 W EST C A M PU S 2 STORY STUDIO APARTMENT SPECIAL SUMMER RATE $300 480-0976 if West Campus Y doesn't have to cost a fortune • 6 blocks west of campus • 1 block from grocery, pharmacy, and shopping • Gas heating & cooking - low electric bills • Modem cozy complex • 1 2 b lock from shuttle Summer rales from $225 25*2 St. between San Gabriel and Leon SUMMIT APARTMENTS 1008 W. 25* 2 «495-9477 SUMMER RENT SPECIAL • shuttle bus/city bus • free coble • swimming pool/ courtyard area • laundry facility • mini blinds • water & gas paid 1 Bedroom 1 Bath $245 2 Bedroom 1 Bath $335 Close to shopping, restaurant, enter­ tainment, and easy access to UT. 453-4037 C O BBLEST O N E APARTM ENTS 1105 Clayton Ln. 4-25-20B K • WEST CAMPUS ★ LIVING ★ Condo quality ★ 1 & 2 Bedrooms ★ Pool & jacuzzi ★ Controlled entry ★ On-site management Vanderbilt C o n d o m in iu m s 4 7 9 -6 0 0 4 • ★ 6-7-20B-C RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. STUDENTSI ABSOLUTE bargain Large 2-2, pool, microwave, assigned parking. Summer/Fall, S325/S550. Great loco- lian, 2810 Rio Grande, Sandpiper Apts, Neuman Manaqement 453-4500. 6-7- 7B-A L O C A T IO N ! L O C A T IO N ' A n d all bills paid near downtown/UT/Capitol! O ld e r building renovated with targe room s and plenty of ambiance. O n # month free! Call owner at 4 74 4 8 4 8 Ó-4-2ÜR C 6 1 1 -2 0 B -A Tan glew ood N orth A C and Heat Paid! • R R shuttle at front door • Remodeled laundry rooms • Ceiling fans/microwaves PRELEASING NOW FOR FALL! 4 5 2 -0 0 6 0 1020 E. 45th ProftttlonaOf M rntgtd by Davit and Associate» mwt t f ' f — Pool Hot Tub — 2-2 s. 1 -i s efficiencies — W D connections in 2-2 s • — ■ starting at S2 34 00 A sk about our 2 Bedroom s 8 3 4 - 1 0 2 1 8 8 0 0 N o rth IH 3 5 W1LDCREEK £? Live In Affordable Luxury \ 0 Volleyball Court 0 Tennis Court 0 Fireplaces 0 Jacuzzi O Tw o Pools 0 B B Q c<° 4 J & 1 F & - aye aye a y e Vm EFF. & f -2-3-4 BDRM APARTMENTS S t a r t i n g a t $ 2 3 0 Moving to Willow Creek Hills • Huge apartments • Competitive rates • Nice Furniture • Unfurnished • Free cable • P V Shuttle • M icrow aves ceiling fens • W alk-in closets W h a t are y o u w aiting for! C a l l 4 4 4 - 0 0 1 0 Com e by 1911 W illow Creek Dr. P r e l e a s i n g F o r S u m m e r a n d F a ll 11 FLOOR PLANS • Spacious Colorado River • FumyUnf. • Shuttle Bus • 5 Mm. To Downtown • Modem • M icrow aves • Lofts W /Fans c V» N Í n X ■t i a a. B rfd g e h o lio w I POINT SOUTH d i Oltorf 4 4 4 - 7 5 3 6 P O IN T S O U T H — B R ID G E H O L L O W R ental Office: 1910 W illowcreek SELL YOUR ITEM in the "LONGHORN WANT ADS" 20 Words, 5 Days s 5 ° ° OR WE WILL RUN THE AD AN ADDITIONAL 5 DAYS AT NO CHARGE! 'See Specifications C a m e i on S p r in g s $600 Discount on 1 yr. lease * Extra large 1 br 5245 with discount * 2 br, 1 Vi> bath $325 with discount * New carpet, paint, and appliances * W ater and gas paid * Free cable * Large walk-in closets * Glass Atriums * On Shuttle 3 2 3 - 2 3 0 3 f l ! • Condo Quality • Pool hot tub • Sundecks • 8 B Q Picnic Area • Laundry Facilities • Underground Partang • On-Site Management Summer Rates A v a ila b le 2810 Salado 472-3816 Space limited— Call A/ctv 322-9887 4 interested PROPERTIES ONE W E REPRESENT nearly e ve ry shuttle S o u th apartment property you might be in. Free Service, Free trans­ portation. Pre-lease or M ove-in today! 2030 E. Oltorf #102-A Just past Jock in the Box from IH-35 DIRECTLY O N SR SHUTTLE 447-7368 ____________________ _______ 6 -4 2 0 B -A SP A C IO U S APTS. Efficiencies 4 3 4 sq. ft. $ 2 2 0 -$ 2 4 0 5 2 4 0 -$ 2 6 0 62 5 sq.ft. 1-1's 5 2 6 0 -5 2 8 0 7 4 7 sq ft 1-1's $ 3 6 0 $ 3 8 0 98 8 sq ft. 2 l's NO RW O O D APT. 5606 N , Lam ar 451-1917 • P o d e Plenty of Parking • C on venient!© Everything e O n Metro-roufe • Laundry facilities • lo w year around rates. 4 2 4 - 2 0 K E F F IC IE N C E S $ 2 5 0 . Q u ie t H vd¡ © k c o m p le x G a s a n d watet p a id T w o from shuttle. 458-1985, 450 blocks 0 2 '7 5 -2 7 0 8 K > Page 10 Tuesday, June 12, 1090 TH E D A ILY TEXAN RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. 400 — Condos- 435 — Co-ops Casey comes through for Astros ★ T A R R Y T O W N ★ Unique Efficiencies Great pnce, cetitng fans, buitt-m bookshelves, mtenor design extras! ★ 4 7 7 - 8 2 3 4 ★ HALF MONTH'S RENT FREE! Large 1-1 in small, quiet com­ plex near RR Recently remod­ eled W ater & qas paid. $245. Minimum 6 mo. 'ease. Leave message at 4 6 7 -6 5 0 8 . ★ SUMMER SPECIAL ★ LEON APTS. 2 3 0 2 Leon St. Newly redecorated, small effi­ ciency. walking distance from campus, covered parking, only $ 2 5 9 ALL BILLS PAID'Can ★ 462-0930 ★ S U M M E R RATES & FALL PR E - L EA S IN G ! Starting $ 2 7 5 antv*T»tjh#ci ctaon quiff, gen 2-1, pod covered parking, cio*e »o campus Park Place Apartments 451-5825 4306 A venu e A 5 4 208-C Townhouses S a l a d o P l a c e C O N D O S 2604 Salado PRELEASING Summer $300 FaH $415 * Fully Furnished * 1 BD ' BA ★ 4 B Io c k s U T * Microwaves ♦ C u in e s F a n s ♦ Washer Dryer 4 7 7 - 6 6 6 1 W V Now Pre-teasing Condos Apartments, and Houses _ C i V T T H I R T I E S _ 478-6565 2717 Rio Grande I Robbins Place Condos * * 1910 Robbins Place it * * 2 avad.-Faff it _ 1 avail.-Summer it * ★ f * * Call Nick w ith Mery Talbot * 4 8 0 - 8 8 0 0 n ♦ ♦ ★ ★ ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ♦ ★ A Neat House Nice Room All Bills Paid Great Food Friendly & Fun! S u m m e r R ates: Doubles $ 2 6 0 - 2 7 5 Singles $ 2 9 5 - 3 2 9 F a ll R ates: Doubles $ 2 9 5 - 3 0 6 Singles $ 3 2 5 - 3 7 9 IC C C O - O P S 4 7 6 - 1 9 5 7 ’ G R E A T L O C A T IO N ! • Exclusive, auiet -evdenbai netghborHooc • 8 block* from UT 2 block* from shuttle. • Cable pC'd exer; se -oom pool ¡curar» • 1 Bdrrn at $275 n * ? summer • 2 Bdrms nt $3’ 5 n the Sum-er • New A C and - o’ er Keate- Pre-leasing for fall. Summer rates also available Orangetree condo 2 - 2 ' 2. Norwalk Square condo 2-lVi. Also, 2-2 furnished condo near law school and 3-1 house m University Park. Buckingham Square 711 w. 32nd Street 453-4991 346-7233 4-26-208-K THE LINCOLN LIFESTYLE W e con think of many reasons why you should Irve at Lincoln Ridge. H ere ore iust a few: Free use of the Capitol M etro Shutfte, easy access to 1-35 and our various apartm ent features Lincoln ProDeny Co 6503 Bluff Springs Rd. Aus,’n TX "’9 744 Pk 442-4141 6-4-20B-K 477 LIVE T4 hours oid fash on ;harm of ■-~o 2 oec-ocm, Hardwood aopii- ancei $295-5450 5-3-20B-A 1-^GE 1-1 and 2-2 ,n small quie’ comp on shuttle, gas water, cable po>d, ceiling reOica. plmdi pool sia-ng at •or s S295 453-'804 346-'233 5-4 20B- K AC A 0 EM Y h i l l 1115 '.V iency oportments. S225/month 794- 8284. 5-8-206-E_____________________ -OFT OR NOT! One and Two bedrooms. Tiled entries fireplaces, port Hole win­ dows CP W D connection $4 j O-S62 3 FRONTPAGE 480-8518.6-4-206 SPAOO ü S EFFENCIENC ES ceding ;q~s walk-in closet, pool, shuttle summer spe- oai S23C - electric 305 W 35th 459 49” 'em 6 4 1(38 A NEAR ENGINEERING school- efficiency- jppnances * i-co. unit rarpeted fur­ nished olso ovadabie S225. 1 year pvodopfe -ow 926-7243 ó 4-2 08-C 2-2's GORGEOUS all amenities On shuttle, dry bar Starting at $525 Tern ■y P M ' 4 '6 3025 6-5-1Q6-A S 'ü D E N r SPEC A lS Ac sr.-'e routes 0' campus area Fast fr endfy serv.ee Transportation provided Apartments Unlimited 442 4 729 6-6-5B-E 1-1 $225, 24 $275, water/gos poid, on shuttle 6th/mopac, 1616 W 6th. 476- 2219 6-6-206________________________ ALMOST N E W - attractive 2 bedroom 2 bathroom m fourplex. Convenient loca­ tion. Ample parking. No pets. $350. 4'’2-76'' 458 3486 6-6-56 C LOFT WEST CAMPUS, fireplace, covered parking $375 Apartments Unlimited, 442-4729 6-6-56 ________________ TWO STORY STUDIO, efficiencies, one bedrooms Four blocks UT Jmque a--e* living from $250 480-0976 6-5-17P CONVENIENT LOCATION on shuttle bus route 1 and 2 bedrooms Starting at S225 Cor 4 '2-469 3 6 7-5B £ ______ Kemp M an ag em en t 327-9635 __________________________ 4-20-20S-C NORTHFORK CONDOS. Smofl. quiet complex. One bedroom and three bedroom* available IF shuttle. 4401 Speedway 459-0889 4-24-20BA ELEGANT BEAUTIFULLY decorated/fur­ nished 2-2, oH appliances, washer/ dryer 505 Be'levue $995, summer rates avoilobte 331-4080 4-30-20B-A FURN'SHED 11 3000 Guadalupe Nu- merous amenilie*. Wit! negotiate. Portio! month free rent $295 Julm 477-6131 6- 4 2 O S _______________________ C E N T E N N IA L 2 2 slea b .— ei anly $475 Coil City P'cpe-es 478-6565 6-5 6B A l o s' mmute NORTH CAMPUS Great selection of 2 '2 and 2 2.5 unit* A^qi'ao'e hem $300 Seth City Properties. 478-6565 6-5- 20B-A________________________________ 2-1 CHARMING Hyde Park bungalow. V - carpet CA CH $525 Co" Cit Properties, 478-6565.6-5-20B-A HYDE PARK 2-2 w/d connection. Fire­ place All appliances from S55C Avatl- oble now and preiease. City Properties. 478-6565. 6-5-20B-A________________ W EST CA.VPuS 1-bedroom units from $500 Seton Orangetree Croix Call Seth City Properties. 478-6565. 6-5- 20B-A________________________ ENF'ELD AREA 2-2 ’ Elegant units pool, w/d connections Covered Park- ng From $725 Call City Properties 4^9 65t5 0-5 20B-A NORTH CAMPUS 1-1-loft. Great for two Lots of windows From $550. Call Seth City Properties 6 5-20B-A LOFT UNITS available West Campus An appliances, fireplace Great roommate $550 Tern ot PMT 476 3028 Ó-5-10B A Ü R or 2BR West Campus. Take your pick Palmetto G-onqei-ee Setcn Cro,* Star ng at $425 Ter- at P*rtT 476- 3028 6-5-iQB-A______________________ NORTHWEST HILLS 3-2. Spacious, great location Great pr ce- $850 Terr: at PMT 476-3028 6-5-10B-A____________ CO NDO CQR summer $350 dose to campus parking 2 oedrooms, 2 both Cathedral ceiling 288 0815 6-6-5B W E S ' CAMPUS-large 1-1 na rawr,ori floors, A'C. ceilmg fans. 2 blocks -cm campus, ovoiloble now' $400/mo Mitch owner agent 476-2673 6-6-20B-C NORTHFORK CONDOS. 1 bedroom availobie. Hect ~ater pod 4401 Speedway 459- 0889 6-11-5B Immediate move-m Gas 1-1 EFFICIENCY A IL appliances, window unit $225 month $'-5C aeocs.* Duval- 405 E 31st Street Mike 44’ 1029 6-8- 208_______________________________ BEST SUMMER specials m West campus! 1&2 bedrooms at Orangetree, Croix. St. Thomas Seton Call M rte'e pM" 4 ;6- 2673 6-V-5B-C_____________________ DISTINCTIVE EFFICIENCY' Walk-m clos et satiMo tile ceding fon, fp, bright, otry $250-270 F-ontPage 480-8518 6 8- 14B-D________________________________ TAILORED /7E5: Compus nign ceilings microwave E P Cf H covered parking 1-1 $375 FRONT PAGE PROPERTIES 480 8518 6-12- WALK TO U T.l 3101 Tom Green St. - small quiet complex, large efficiencies, summer specials, parking 452-4414 6-T1- 208-C ____________________________ EFFICIENCY QUIET. Share, garage, washroom 4 ? miles. Northeast of Uni- versify 63G5 Walnut Niils S 2 50 Bills poid 472-3576. 6-11-2B_____________ STUDENTS ELITE1 Microwave security, F P W iocuzzi1 1-1 S305 2 bed PA G E FR O N T conn., pool rooms PROPERTIES 480-8518 6-12-20B-D $ 4 2 0 380 — Furn. Duplexes FURNISHED 2 bedroom, 12 blocks north UT $350 $375 plus electricity N o pe's Peferenc.es 4 5 8 -2 5 2 5 6-12-9B 390 — U nf. D uplexes NORTHCENTRAL. CLEAN two bedroom plus den. ceinng fans, w o o d floors W D connections and c a rp o r $ 4 6 0 453 6942 4-23-2QB_____________________ '940 s 2-1 upstairs, oak Boors ceiling lots of gh' tans balcony T.,e oath $425 1302 Kirkwood. 472-2123 6-11- 20B-D _ _ _ _ _ 2-1, CA/CH near shuttle Fireploc#, deck, private backyard Maytag W Garage attic S510 327 4 2 4 6 6 12- 56_______________________________ 4 0 0 — Condos- Townhouses W h i t i s P l a c e C O N D O S 2000 Whitis Ave. Summer S300 Fall & Spring S450 * Fully Furmshed * 1 BD 1 BA * Next to Dobie * Covered Parking *• Microwaves * Ceiling Fans * W asher Dryer 4 7 7 - 6 6 6 1 ^ y G u a d a l u p e S q u a r e Condos 3316 Guadalupe * Fully Furnished * Walk . Jog or Ride to Campus * Covered Parking * Ceiling Fans * Central Air Heat 4 7 7 - 6 6 6 1 C a l l P r o n t o ! td Padg»n Co ♦ . ♦ ♦ • 1 ♦ ♦ WEST CANPUS perfect fioorplons for 3 people From $750 Call Seth City Prop erties 478-6565 6-5-20B A 420 — U nf. Houses Eyes of Texas Bargains! ♦ tty aePark 4 I SSOO ♦ French Place 3 2/1 ♦ Frerr.r Piece 4 2 ♦ Clorksv"e 2 5 S600 S750 S"*5C: foil SóOC Í : '00 477-1163 ____________________________ ¿-7 20B x P E A S E P A R K Completely renovated 4-2! Approxi­ mately 3000 sq. ft., all amenities in­ cluding, all appliances, W /D , fenced yard and 2-car garage Available 8- 15, 1 year lease only $1800/mo. Call Mitch owner -jgeni at 4 7 7 - 6 8 5 3 ___________________________ 6-12-20B-C TARRYTOWN CHARMERS 6-1, 5-2 fire­ place. nice $'300-'500. 3 2 2 mmcx uiate greot location $1200 agent 477- _______________ 1163 4-25-20NC 477-LIVE 24 HRS, old fashion charm of 1-two 2 bedroom homes, hardwood, gas, appliances S295-5450 ATTENTION GRO UPS elegant 5-4 home Enfield, fireplace hardwoods, 2 I vmg oreas Prelease S ’000 deposit Lease 472 2168. 5-3-208-E _________ EASTWOODS PARK, attractive spacious fire grandmothers home Hardwood place Pre lease $400 deposit $995/ ieose 472-2168 5-3 4B COUNTRY LIVING UT 10 minutes. 888 sq h 3 , fireplace, hardwoods, mim- blmds $400 6 4 0 2 Johnny Morris 4/2 ____________ 2097 6-4 20B C SEPT 1 Spacious family hame.4-2-2,ER 474 Shuttle piaysrqpe SilQO^mo _____________ 4/38 6-5-10B _ HOUSE FOR lease 5-3 7 2 story house Laundry room $'250 45tharvdAve D 425 — Rooms Rooms for Rent 2 8 9 . 0 0 mo. includes food and bills m a fun friendly atmosphere in West Campus 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 1908 SAN Gobtiel rooms Fxrlusive Se­ curity, Pr.vote Courtyard 343-0975 6 5 10B______ _________________________ Short walk to UT Quiet, nonsmoking, petless Shored kitchen For private bath, 495-9346/(474-2408 ABP $700 messoge To share bills both $!4Q S240 Coll 472 5646 4 25 208 A TWO BLOCKS *0 campus Furnished, share kitchen and bath ($195, ABP 251-2016 6 U-5B VERY LARGE clean privóte room/both/ refrigerator'microwave Quiet individu­ als No kitchen. 38th St No pets Bills po.d 453-5417 6 12-208____________ 430 — R oom -B oard Short walk to UT Qu et nonsmoking, petless Shored kitchen For private bath ABP 495-9346/(4/4 2408 messoge) To shore bills, both- $140- $240 Coll 472 5646 4-25-20B-A S200 Taos Cooperative A reflection of your >deas. Leasing for Summer and Fall Spring 289«00 mo and up mdudes food and Mis and fun, friendly people That* only 4 3 3 . 5 0 per session 4 7 6 - 5 6 7 8 Pearl St. Co-op Beat the Heat m our Swimming Pool Now Leasing 289.00 mo and up includes >oo o ' L E A R T i M O A I N O I L 67 Make meet 3 1 Small piece D O W N 1 Plagues 2 Apportion 3 Long-necked animal 4 Helpful one 5 Neon. e.g. 6 Tears 7 Washington's successor 8 W e a th e r indicators 9 A s ta ir e movie 10 Arabian VIR v a r . 1 1 Insincere one 12 In the past 13 Lack 2 1 '* — again!” 23 Souchong and bohea 25 Male animal 28 Next to Quebec 30 Suds of land 32 Greek letters 33 Mix 34 Irish kings' home 35 Surmounting 36 Negative word 37 Illegal liquor 40 Body Joints 42 Hairy mass 43 High above: poet. 45 Manifest 4 7 Plate 48 Quality 50 Joint part 5 1 Like some seals 52 Impurity 53 Separate 54 Seaweed product 55 Church area 56 Lone effort 60 Carpet part © 1990 U n ite d Fe a tu re S y n d ic a te YOU'VE BEEN try/n o T oeer IN TOUCH YU/TH ME, HAVEN'T YOU* \ YOUREME 20 YEARS AGO? WHAT Ar e you p o in s HERB* WELL...YES, I6U ESSM TTWAS 1 HAVE. MY UFE A S f| NOTHING A WORKING MOTHER [ OF THE !5 30 MESSY NOLU. KtNP THATS ! UJHENIW AS YOU, AT WHY YOU HOME WUH A BABY. 11 l& T ! J V¡T5EEMEPIESSC0M■: ¿ á S S T HEY, LOOK, SINCE YOU'RE HERE, WANNA BAKE SOM E BREAP7 A R E YOU NUTS7 YOU P/PNT HAVE TIME THEN! \ PRIME TIM E 7:00 pm © ® WHO’S THE BOSS? Tony Danza When Jonathan takes 14) the accordion for the school band, Tony gets his best friend Bobby to teach him to play (R) q O ® MATLOCK Andy Griffith, Clarence Gityard Matlock defends a Hollywood movie director framed for murdering an agmg actress who is killed during the death scene in a horror him (R) g 0 ® *★ MOVIE TAPS .1981) Timothy Hutton, George C. Scott A group of cadets takes over its military academy in a futile attempt to save the school from being closed and converted into condominiums PG O ( X RESCUE: 911 A race dnver is trapped in his car after it crashes; a police helicopter pursues a burglar through the night and an elderly couple is marooned. (R) □ Q U MACNEIL LEHRER NEWSHOUR 7:30 pm © ® THE WONDER YEARS Fred Savage, Holly Sampson. The Arnold family s ritual seaside vacation is brightened, at least for Kevin, by the presence of a captivating older girl. (R) q 8:00 pm O ® ROSEANNE Roseanne Barr, John Goodman Roseanne mvites Dan s lonely boss over for dinner, unaware that he s emotionally starved and desperate for affection. (R) q O ® IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT Alan Autry, • Carroll 0 Connor Bubba kills a former Sparta local during a holdup attempt and becomes a target of the victim s revenge-seeking widow and his brothers (R) q 0 ( 2 NBA BASKETBALL Final, Game 4 (L) q O ® NOVA On the 25th anniversary of the Cuban missile crisis. Nova examines the world of espionage, pointing out the growing roles of science and technology, q 8:30 pm 0 ® COACH Craig T. Nelson, Shelley Fabares. Friction arises between Hayden and Christine when he expresses disdain for the art world she so loves (R) q 9:00 pm 0 ® THIRTYSOMETHING Ken Olm. Mel Harris. After being reminded of his own mortality -Michael decides that he and Hope must draw up a will (R) q O ® MIDNIGHT CALLER Death is imminent for a kidnapped diabetic infant who s in need of ■insulin, so Killian uses his show to find a gang of baby merchants (R) q 0 ® STAR TREK THE NEXT GENERATION Q 3® WORLD WITHOUT WALLS As political and economic walls crumble all around the world, cultures are threatened. 10:00 pm © ® O ® NEWS 0 ® ARSENIO HALL O ® BOOKMARK Guest P.D. Jam es, author of Devices And Desires and P B S six-part Mystery offering, A Taste Of Death, talks about his book and the series. 10:30 pm 0 ® TONIGHT SHOW Guests. Bill Cosby; Singer Luther Vandross, Com edienne Paula Poundstone O X NEWS 0 ® COMPUTER CHRONICLE O ® NEWHART q 10:35 pm 11:00 pm 0 ® BROTHERS Q 0 X CHEERS 9 O ® NATURE Nocturnal creatures, ow ls have eyes that are specially adapted to seeing in partial light and soft plummage making them noiseless in flight q O ® NIGHTLINE Q 11:05 pm 11:30 pm 0 ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN -0 ® BROTHERS q O X TAXI © ® NEW TWILIGHT ZONE 11:35 pm 12:00 am 0 ® BENSON 7 AM ____: j & O AM t J B i Z L CBS Ths Momrg • Ciood Monang Amenca Today • Q *M - .....1 ... 2ft. Joan ftw s Pnoe is Rqht Young A Resáess 1 0 " 1 1 1 2 S#y 227 Home Strangers Golden M Family 30 a PM 1 30 As The World Guxkng u r t ...... . GeratOo L » o PM1 ' L a Ail My CfxkJren One Lfe To Lm General Hospital Donahue Hard Copy n ....... Hghway To Heaven H J £ J r PM 5 C PM ,5. j o 7 PM : J ? 0 PM ® 30 Q PM J 30 i?> CBSMevs Siews Rescue 911 NBA Basketball News ABC News News Growo Who S Wonder Roseanne Coach tfarty- somethrig News ¡ 35l NewTi ("05) Nkjh 1 0 m ! U 30 News Cheers 1 1 T » . Indomable Aon />va Cantan Para Ti TV Maer Carrusel Cristina Gourmet GanfllDr. Wik! Tom & fvtstorw Fkntstones 321 f e S Z L ..... Up Close L m J o Restruct J R S 8S L - ¿ a s fi------- Mr S B O . .. Street i2a s L _ _ „ 321 Soft Notes Uní Y Ou Voces A. Sabater Sanford Black Em. VOeo Sou Rutx Amándote 1 Schpiement D n s Nflrt Mow Haipi Mow ’Nrtean Ghosts Msappear Fk 412 Nght Uve taugh In League My 3 Sons Mr Ed Rm For Mow Pranha. En • Mow No Retreat n De NoOaero Mow Nora Mow Santoro Black Enl Mtinight Love Our Voces La De Mow Desert Rats You Life Mow Back To C15) Tá The ÉndÓf Tme Betweer Mam Vice O r e HSchcock Dragnet Enemy Teromrv Mow: Pnvate House ofVI\ T U T O R S l W 813 W. 24th ST. • TUTORING - ALL SUBJECTS • CLASS NOTES • TEST & EXAM REVIEWS • TYPWG — RESUME SERVICE — TERM PAPERS • PHOTOCOPIES A LASER PRINTING OPEN 7 DAYS-A-WEEK T U M ID N IG H T S U N D A Y -T H U RSO A Y 472-6666 UFE FNN/BRV FAM NASH AAE HSE « Long Days Edward & Simpson Fugitive Mow Escape • Decades Chromde Wilderness Suvrvai Fugitive Assignment Video Morning - \ - 2 L - i Attitudes Baby Survival Hotel Jane Wallace Goumet Day By . Supermarke Rodeo Heartbeat Attmxles - Supermarke Rodeo Spenser For Hie Moon- ' lighting Mow: Arm Jilban Story Spenser For Hire Cagney & Lacey Self- 7 AM 1 30 o o Q AM :30 3 5 C D * " r — 11 AM ?g 11 1 2 PM - ...\ C 30 a PM . .....,39 n PM _ £ .. 39 Q PM T 30 4 w .....H 39 . c PM .... ,39 C PM .......° . ,39, 7 PM 1 30 I o o S q pm .... ...39 1 0 PM iU.„ i L 11 PM 30 1 1 1 2 AM30 Investment Market Preview Morrena Supplement Market Watch Midday Market Investment MktWatch Investment MktWatch Wail St Countdown To Be Announced Investment Investment Market Entreorene Aida F.ie Aida L& T ns.. Aida File Wowser Mapietown Ou House 700 Club Heart Scott Ross Talk Healthy Pd Prg C«feb _ Hazel HWL. Fattier Father Fmtown Cknosaucer Batman Batman HardcasOe Scrow & Mrs. King Mow Corsican Brothers 700 Club S'crow & Mrs Kmg Mow: Corsican Brothers DISC » Natuai Natural Great Discovery On The Go You Field Test Great Pawuaie On The Go On The Go You Field Test Mom Mom Prof. Wildlife Rendezvous Wdd Discovery Showcase Beyond 2000 Prof In The American Album Secrets Of Nature Wdd Collector's American Magazine Remodeling Top Card Crook, Jiixtee Standard Time On Stage Amencan Magazine Too Card Music Row Video Hokday Gourmet Nashville Now Crook. Hokday Gourmet Nashville Now Crook Mov,e Stone Boy Market Wrap VideoGok) Mow: 1 Decades: Chronicle Wilderness Survival Biography Wresting Greyhound Body. Martial Art Work) LA Downs SportsTaik Maror Mow: New Land League ftasehat! ■ • U S Open Preview Hohliahts Baseball Biography Mow New Land HBO ® Mow 7th Voyage Of Smbad Mow Cat On A Hot Tin Rmf Mow Star Trek V KOs On Mow: Breakout • Survival Series Mow Chipmunk Adventue Mow: PUse Mow: Star Trek V • Crypt Comic Relief 90 ESPN (Com) Soorts NASCAR Winston ¿up Getting Workout Body Body College Lacrosse • Fshn Windsurf» Wrestling Suikst Baseball NBA Sportslook Spots Maw League Major League Rasphall Mow C.H.U.D. || Sports SHOW 0 (6 30) LitOe Teer Father Mow: Wonde • (15) Perry Mason Mow: Nobodys Fool Mow: Little Pnnce Duckkno Mow One Temfic Guy Mow White Ghost (35) Colors (45) Shake- down (25) Motown DISN 0 Donak) Under Mow Leftovers ( 35) Beat Boy Loved TroBs lunch Bo* Muse Box Monsters Of Deec Darnel & Towrs Pooh Factory Raccoons Donak) Kids. Inc. Mekev Mow Wizard Of 0z Cunous Disney ( 50) Saiu Mow Third Man . Ozzie Mow Gentiemen Prefer Monsters Of Deep ACTV (TO (5.-00) Ou#-A- DUI-A- Vison Economics U Stretch Aerobics C OPS Gospel Truth Comm. Uzi Sute ACTV 32 (5:») Comm. Billboard Commuxty Billboard Commintv Billboard • • • tve From Commuatv Austin Onentaoon Billboard Videoia Happening Cokxsound Kids TV Health Persian TV Matthews Hyde Park Sou Greater Love Hou Hklcrest Baptist Impact Tabernacle Chnst Communitv Billboard Gray Atheist Third Austin ARK Live Camera HDTV Singles Hotline ACTV 31 (Com) Commuvtv <board * • Commuvtv Billboard Voce Of Choce Razzle Blanco Jorm Robbms Community Billboard . Stretch Aerotxcs Voce Of Choce Razzle Blanco John Robtxns Alternative Views Alternative Views Commuaty Billboard 4 5 9 - 6 3 5 3 4 5 2 - 5 6 5 6 e s t a b lis h e d 196 2 re m o v a l of ’ ’ U N W A N T E D H A I R ’ ANDERSON LN It’s. P e r m a n e n t . E l e c t r o l y s i s ca n h e lp b oth w om en a n d m en feel better a bo u t th em selv es. M o n - S a t 9 a m - 9 p m 8120 R esearch Blvd. (Hw y. i83> (In C e n tre P oin t behind M ervyn's) M A R I A - ' . ll^ lA V E A f f c V E f t ? XE> T H E R E . W - w m í W & Y ! \ A n m University Market Facts... 67% of all students of the university have an Austin checking account. Nearly 40% have an Austin savings account. 63% have an au­ tomated teller card S o u rc e T h e U n iv e rs ity M arket BeicJen A s s o c ia te s 1987 K f ; f ( j Afe W N L S I C V c iJ T s ^ ? S w 7w %■v. ..... i 4 — . comix o’ the damned ituo.um.crao® Walt Holcombe ft i t 's f u n t o s t a y a liv e ! M E S A I D I T W A o O K / Y / AS LC*4G A SY O U S iO F th r o w s/I *46 c a o o i e s i ^ v o t y c l a k e ' U A U a ! MY \NU E OF m i R I E E d V 6 A R 5 LEFT ME TMIS (SAOKNIKlO,! i B ik Y I MlGEH ASV^tll P U T f\ b u l l e t INl M Y BRAIN DON'T LMEN T u r i4 \t o n U A J U S S Y O U can) m m s IT/ " ~ ) J THE FUSCO B R O T H E R S by J.C . Duffy D o v o u F e e l IT'S (MOTH IMG T H A I M U R S E S fiR O U M D TH E o k a y , r ó l f ? v o u L O O K A l i t t l e f u n n y C L O C K W O U L D N ' T n X n A V B E R U A I A I I M G A S L I G H T T E M P E R A T U R E , B u t o t h e r l u i s e , x F E E L FlNE gr'T^ ^ QUEEN OF THE UNIVERSE™ by Sam Hurt THAT DOE? IT. SIT DOWN, UNCLE. NOU LISTEN VEPV CAREFULLY. LITTLE I WANT TO CLEAR SOMETHING UP KIDG LIKE ICE CREAM SANDWICHES. WE HATE TUMPING OFF CLIFFE 7 ¿J o u r %£ unso Nice MesiDeurs HOME HAS TAiLewj a n vuexpccrcp T U ^ ki r ^¡4 /V tM . DAhJNty- POS— SEfiEP £LVif -• t h e S*J££(2- T H E JUMPSVl r * y h e W / D f a p p e a l T o v j o E jZin O 'C L A T J (¿jowfthJ o v E f 2 4 -5 - /^l/D-W/Fe CRISIS' Net. t h COULD v e ’ Í T A f íf OF THtwCr QHj-EJ. .(A JH O lE .N E ^ 1 f p CONCEPT- A -L* S € * Y REPUB­ LICAN.'/ Ei P o n ' T n o m a TO AN i U N H 0(2 N f e t u s fi t h a t 's RKSh T D A N tJY- E A T Vou|2 MACAPOUI 2 ’ CABESE I’VE óoT T O M A L E A FEW t ^ C / F - F C n i - ^ M T e i 2 T / A / A / M fw T ToNlCpU M A t t U V N O U A V L E H E R E - . L i S T E M F V E GOT A N E ^ TVJIST ° N T X t ELV'T SlO H T I/JG S WAtLT {EUy'S o ^ oY By Doyle & Sternecky l Z j R P B C T T H c w ü & d E í . L : a n v o u M EL? M E ? W V OW N 0ROTHER9 A E A N P O N E P A N ' W V W H O L E W O fZ L P 19 9 5 E N TuSsBO U P 9 I P E P O W H / W M A T A C O I N C I P E N C E / U09Y OUR 3KOTME2 A T K A G lC P A N T 9 I N ' A C C I P E N T .r r X ) v n u a t y o u N E E ^ 19 A N O E PRSNOL-y G A W S O ' C U T T H R O A T " - S I T V £ 2 9 5 - . ? e G H T DOWN/ VVOO^cA o £ 9 ' LO O KIT TWE E L A N K 9 T A R E ON T - A ' r P g L U A ? V s - A ' A POKER FA C E. 6 - 1 2 ©I9 9 0 OOpt Page 12 Tuesday, June 12, 1990 T H E D A IL Y T E X World ( up: Ireland battles to l-l tie on English defensive error Bryan ■»»■»<»■ m'n M.lmlcii — ......................................................................................................................................................................... KmP J Continued from page 7 goals c o u ld be sc o re d \ n d it's p o s ­ sible th a t w e co u ld g e t tw o , th re e g o als, to o ." L ater M o n d a y , E n g la n d p la y e d Ire lan d o n th e isla n d o t S a rd in ia , w h e re c o n fro n ta tio n s b e tw e e n tan s a n d p olice h a v e m a rre d th e d a v s le a d in g to th e g am e. But th e re w ere n o in c id e n ts le a d in g u p to kickoft. In M ilan, a trial to r 14 G e rm a n fan s a rre s te d d u r in g a s k irm is h w ith police on S u n d a y w a s p o s tp o n e d u n til T u esd ay B ut a u th o ritie s e x ­ p elled 4b G e rm a n a n d fo u r G e r m a n ­ s p e a k in g S w iss fan s fro m Italy tor th e n ro les in th e c o n fro n ta tio n s. * E n g la n d 1, Ire la n d 1 — In C a ­ gliari, S a rd in ia , K evin S h e e d y to o k a d v a n ta g e of a d e ft n siv e e r r o r a n d lifted Ire la n d in to a tie w ith E n g la n d in a W orld C u p g a m e w ith o u t inci­ d e n t a m o n g th e fans. 2 ,0 0 0 p o lic e , P lay in g b e fo re heávv s e c u rity — i n c l u d i n g s o m e e q u ip p e d w ith g u a r d d o g s — E n g ­ land to sse d aw a y an earlv le ad g o t­ th e ten on a g o al bv G a ry L in e k e r le ad in g g o al-sc o rer th e N 8b V\ v>rld C u p m Me xico Ire la n d , m a k in g i t s W o rld C u p d e b u t, h a d se v e n p la v e rs w h o also p lay in th e E ng lish f i r st d iv is io n a n d h a s a n E n g lish m a n a g e r, Jack C h arl- ton, w h o w o n a W o rld x u p m e d al in l% b . in T he g a m e w a s a g rim b a ttle ot p h y sic al s tre n g th r a th e r th a n so ccer ability , w ith th e ball c o n s ta n tly a im e d for h e a d s r a th e r th a n feet. A sw irlin g w in d a n d a th u n d e rs to rm th e d id n o t h elp c o n d itio n s , b u t p la y e rs did little to e n te i tain . L in e k er, w h o sc o re d six g o a ls in M exico fo u r v ears ag o , stru c k in th e e ig h th m in u te , ta k in g a lo n g p a ss from C h ris W a d d le off h is c h e st a n d n u d g in g th e hall th e n e t as g o a lk e e p e r P a d d v B o n n e r d iv e d tor it. in to A lthough d e fe n d e rs C h ris M orris a n d M ick M c C arth y trie d to clear, L in ek er fo llo w ed u p to force th e bail in. Ire la n d girt it back a g a in s t g o alie P e te r S h ilto n , w h o e q u a le d th e re c o rd ot 119 in te rn a tio n a l a p p e a r ­ a nc es set bv n o w -re tire d N o rth e rn Ire lan d g o a lk e e p e r P at Je n n in g s. E n g la n d 's S tev e M c M ah o n , a s u b ­ stitu te lost th re e m in u te s ea rlie r, p o sse ssio n on th e e d g e ot his o w n p e n a lty are a a n d th e ball ca m e to S h e e d y , w h o b ea t S h ilto n w ith a 23- v ard d riv e. T he d a y s le a d in g to th e g a m e p ro ­ d u c e d se v eral c lash e s b e tw e e n p o ­ lice a n d fan s o n th is islan d But all re m a in e d calm M o n d a y . like h e ll," "W e b a ttle d Ire lan d m a n a g e r Jack C h a rlto n sa id . "F in a l- 1\ w e g o t a b rea k a n d g o t w h a t w e d e s e rv e d . A It w a s a g a m e w e c o u ld n 't affo rd to lose " E n g la n d w as e x p e c tin g to w in th e g a m e a n d se t u p a m a tc h for th e le ad a g a in s t th e N e th e r- G ro u p la n d s. th e E n g lish w e re In ste a d , lu c k \ n o t to lose. "I th o u g h t w e p la y e d ex tre m e ly w ell m th e se c o n d h alf a n d th e Irish d id n 't c a u se u s m a n y p r o b le m s ," E n g la n d 's c a p ta in , B tv an R o b so n , said th e e n d , I s u p p o s e th e v d e s e rv e d a d r a w ." " B u t at Continued from page 7 C ox sa id . " H e h a s th e b e s t b a c k ­ h a n d p a s s in g s h o t in co lleg e te n n is, b u t m o re im p o rta n tly , h e c o n c e n ­ tra te s like a p ro w h o 's b e e n a r o u n d t o r y e a rs. 1 l e ' s a c o m p e tito r in e v e ry s e n s e of th e w o rd . H e 's sim p ly th e b e s t co lleg e s o p h o m o r e p la y e r I'v e e v e r s e e n ." Bryan tries n o t to p a y a tte n tio n to c a n 't h e lp su ch e x to lm e n t b u t s n e a k in g a listen n o w a n d th e n . "1 try to ig n o re th e p ra ise p e o p le g ive m e b e c a u s e in a w a y it p u ts a lo t o f p r e s s u r e o n m e ," h e sa y s. " A t th e s a m e tim e, I like it b e c a u s e it g iv e s m e ex tra c o n fid e n c e . But I c a n 't let it g e t o u t o f c o n tro l. " T h a t's w h e n it b e c o m e s p r e s s u r e a n d y o u try to live u p to th is im a g e th a t o th e r p e o p le h a v e c r e a te d ." A d e fin ite e x p e c ta tio n th a t B ryan h a rb o rs for h im s e lf is to p e rfo rm College co ach e s laud Bryan for his mental ap­ proach to the game. w ell in th e p ro fe ssio n a l ra n k s. H e 's ju st n o t sure y et w h e n h e 'll g iv e h im se lf th a t o p p o r tu n ity . A lot d e p e n d s o n h o w w ell I d o in p ro to u r n a m e n ts th is s u m m e r ," B ryan sa id . " I 'd like to g e t m y d e ­ g ree , b u t I'll h a v e to w ait u n til a fte r th e s u m m e r to m a k e th a t d e c is io n ." Cox sa id B rvan s h o u ld h a v e n o tro u b le a d a p tin g to th e w e e k -b y - w e e k g rin d of th e p ro circ u it w h e n he m a k e s th a t choice. "It w o n 't ta k e lo n g for S te v e to sh a k e th in g s u p in th e p ro r a n k s ," C ox ''¿ id . " If S tev e is se llin g sto c k s, Ell b u y th e m ." j id S MB SAVE 8 1 w i t ; T E X A H COUPONS Am tcu Cue Ciud **dCu^e food and Fun 24 Hours 51st and Airport oil ” 1 | Hour With This Coupon ! OFF First Limit 1 coupon per person per visit. r 4 • Pool • Food • Beer • Wine • Video Games • Dominoes • Snookers • 24 Hr. Breakfast Pool T ° per hour per player BAR TABLES 250 per game P a s s a s c t o I n b i A A ffo rd a b le, a u t h e n t ic c u is in e from t h e S u b c o n t i n e n t AUSTIN’S FAVORITE INDIAN RESTAURANT ★ ★ ★ ★ T A S T E OF TH E TO W N * ★ ★ i A U ST IN AM ERICAN-STAT DECEMBER 1988 C h i c k e n T i k k a M a s a l a - " d e l e c t a b l e ” D a i l y T e x a n s a m p l e r p l a t e s - " a g r e a t b a r g a i n " Texas M o n th ly T h e m e a l — " d e l i c i o u s " A u stin M agazine I 1 L U N C H B U F F E T $ 1 .0 0 O F F I ■ j^W ith This Coupon A l l Y o u C a n Eat T ^ . J I I ■ r H A L E - P R I C E D D IN N E R ■ B u y a n y C o m b i n a t i o n | D i n n e r and R e c e i v e 2n d C o m b i n a t i o n D i n n e r o f I Equal or Lesser V al u e for ^ 1 / 2 price. I | | 3023 Guadalupe C ou pon R equired Expires 6 /1 8 9 0 477-7766 G / M S t e a k h o u s e 1908 Guadalupe A n n o u n c e s A Breakfast S p e cia l! Good thru 6/18/90) (7 a.m.-10:30 a.m. ► 2 Eggs ► 2 Bacon or Sausage ► 2 Pancakes / G/M STEAK HOUSE < DELIVERY! 11 AM-10PM Sun-Wed 11AM-3AM Th.-Sat 474-GMGM l Serving Austin Since 198 1 * Owned & Operated by Carlos Oliveira and Eddie Hempe S u m m e r H o u rs: Mon-Thurs 10 46 ar 3 00 arv Fn 10 46 am -3 30 am Sa: 4 30 pm -3 30 am Closed Sundays Va Lb. Burger, Fries, Medium $ 0 7 8 Drink ‘ tax Only Valid with coupon only Expires 6 4 90 I J CALL IN I ORDERS I WELCOME ¡478-9299 GREAT FLAM E BROILED BURGERS BIG SCREEN TV • HAPPY HOURS 4-8 300 W. M L K • 478-9299 JA IM E ’S ¡ M E X I C A N F O O D nr Chips, Hot Sauce Bean & Cheese Nachos, & 60 oz. P itcher of M argarita Jaime® $16.00 135 Happy H our Mon-Fri 2-7 Sat 1-2 Open 11 am-10 pm Mon-thurs. 11 am -11 pm Fri & Sat All Major Credit Cards Accepted Not V alid w ith any oth er offer or coupon 2 «---- Ja im es ★ 00 C* y T T Red River Congress 4 7 6 - 5 1 4 9 8 0 2 R e d River