ENTERTAINMENT * 2¿£. Í066¿ Next gener Ambitious students and film team up to create Judson, an award-winning short film. 210 -1 5 1 , 5 ¡Loo ^ : - W 70, ♦ W H!u A D A is. ... W e n e e d to e d u c a te p e o p le ," s a id B re tte {HIS B r o w n in g , a d v o c a c y c o o r d in a to r fo r th e C o a lit io n o f T e x a n s w it h D is a b ilitie s . " I t is no t a la w to b re a k p eo ­ p le 's b a c k s . T h e r e is a lo t o f m is u n d e r s t a n d in g a n d fe a r." T h e A D A , w h ic h w a s e n a c te d in J u l y 1990, p ro v id e s c iv il rig h ts a n d a n in c re a s e d o p p o r t u n it y fo r p e o p le w it h d is a b ilitie s . T h e la te s t r e p o r t c a lle d fo r a f f i r m a t i v e a c t io n fo r p e o p le w it h d is a b ilitie s , c h a n g in g th e f r a m e w o r k for e d u c a tio n so p e o p le w it h d is a b ilitie s a re n o t s e g re g a t­ e d a n d t a k i n g m o n e y o u t o f n u r s i n g h o m e s a n d p u ttin g it in c o m m u n ity - b a s e d p e rs o n a l s u p e r v is io n . " I t is tim e to step b a c k a n d tak e a n e w lo o k at w h e re w e are at a n d w h e r e w e are goin g . S o th a t is w h a t w e h a v e d o n e ," sa id S p e e d D a v is , a re p r e s e n ta tiv e fo r the N a tio n a l C o u n c il o n D is a b ilitie s , w h ic h is re s p o n sib le D a v i s s a id t h e A D A l e g i s l a t i o n h a s h e l p e d im p r o v e d the liv e s o f 49 m illio n A m e r ic a n s w it h d is ­ fo r th e A D A . ab ilitie s. B u t h e a d d e d th e re is m u c h m o re w o r k to be d o n e a n d h o p e fu lly th is re p o rt w il l p r o v id e th e fo u n d a tio n fo r the next d e c a d e o f d is a b ility p o lic y . " W e 'v e m a d e s t e a d y p ro g re s s in th e la s t 10 y e a rs . T h e b ad n e w s is th a t w e h a v e a lo n g w a y to go ,'' D a v is sa id . " W e w a n t th e g o v e rn m e n t to k n o w th is is w h a t p e o p le w it h d is a b ilitie s w a n t fro m th e m ." U .S . R e p . L lo y d D o g g e tt, D - A u s tin , a lso s p o k e at the g a th e rin g to s h o w h is s u p p o r t for the re p o rt. " T h e U .S . is k n o w n th r o u g h o u t th e w o r ld fo r its lib ­ erties, b u t the r e a lity o f w h a t o u r lib e rty a n d d e m o c ra ­ c y is a ll a b o u t is g o in g o n rig h t h e re ," D o g g e t t said. " P e o p l e a r e g a t h e r in g a n d h a v e e m p o w e r e d th e m ­ s e lv e s a n d th e y re c o g n iz e that w h e n it c o m e s to issues lik e A D A , w e a re n o t g o in g to go b a c k w a rd s .' still seeking full UT accessibility JENNIFER S C H U L TZ_______________ Daily Texan Staff t o C a m p a i g n i n g S t u d e n t G o v e r n m e n t a n d a d m ittin g to d o g n a p p m g A&rM' im s c o t R e V e il le a lm o s t a y e a r a n d a h a l f ag o m a d u v N e i l ’S h e f f i e ld a w e ll- k n o w n iio i.vc a r o u n d a b o l i s h t h e B u t to d a y th e a r c h ite c tu r a l e n g in e e r in g s e n io r ^ s c le ro sis in 1993 a n d b e c o m in g d e p e n d e n t o n a w h e e lc h a i r a b o u t a y e a r ag o , S h e f fie ld n o w s p e n d s m u c h o f h & t im e h e lp i n g f ig h t fo r th e r ig h t s o f d is a b le d p e o p le , e s p e c ia lly U T stu d e n ts. S h e f fie ld s a id e v e n th o u g h th e A m e r ic a n s w ith D t$ & g K $ e s A c t w a s s ig n e d a b o u t six y e a r s a g o to p r o h ib it d is c r im in a tio n a g a in s t th e n e a r ly 45 m il­ lio n A m e r ic a n s w it h d is a b ilitie s , th is m a y b e o n e o f h is to u g h e s t b a ttle s y e t B u i ld i n g s a n d ro o m s o n c a m p u s a re in a c c e s s i­ b le , d o o r w a y s ana to o n a r r o w a n d c a m p u s b u ild ­ in g s la c k s ig n s i n d i c a t i n g h a n d ic a p - a c c e s s ib le e n tra n c e s , S h e ffie ld sa id . D e s p ite th e fr u s tr a tio n s v o ic e d b y S h e ffie ld a n d o th e r d is a b le d s tu d e n ts , U T o ffic ia ls s a id th e c a m ­ p u s i s i n c o m p lia n c e w it h A D A re g u la tio n s . T h e g u id e lin e s s e t fo rth b y A D A a re s p e c ific to ig $ *& s u c h a s p u b lic a c c o m m o d a tio n s , tr a n s p o r ta ­ t io n a n d c o m m u n ic a tio n . U n d e r T it le I I o f th e A D A , state a n d lo c a l a g e n ­ c ie s a t e r e q u ire d to in s ta ll w h e e lc h a ir r a m p s a n d p x o v h le s u ffic ie n t h a n d ic a p p e d p a r k in g , a d e q u a te s p a c e i n e le v a to rs a n d b a th ro o m s a n d re a so n a b le access t o a b u il& á jg 's fr o n t e n tra n ce . T h e U n iv e r s i t y , a lo n g w i t h a ll o th e r state a n d lo c a l g o v e r n m e n t ag e ncies, w a s r e q u ir e d to m e e t w i t k p & e s t a n d a r d s fry J a i m a i y 1995, £ "1 w e n t a r o u n d U T s e e in g i f th e y a r e c o m p ly in g s e v e r a l things th a t a m n o t in said iljgpay* Pevsner, a classics ju n io r and Please tee Accessible, page 2 Emerqencv Medical Services worker Guy Benson Management Conference Wakefield was placed in applies fake blood and scar tissue to volunteer Brett a demolished car so firefighters could demonstrate Waketield in preparation for the Prehospital Trauma rescue and injury assessment techniques W H ITN EY J . OWENS/Daiiy Texan Staff nr* : i ' ¡ V 1 1 TEXAN TODAY S in g ln ’ in the Shower laaa... W eather: La... laaaghchgh, CO UGH COUGH!!! Damn, 1 got 98 ounces of water slammed down my throat just as I was about to hit the high note. I almost had it timed so that I shot for a high pitch when the dishwasher turned on and dropped the temperature 75 degrees. That would have given me a really high C, y’know? Of course, it’d also leave me with a 20 percent chance of ever seeing my scrotum again. Index: Around Cam pus............... 7 Classifieds........................8 Com ics.............................7 Editorials...........................4 Entertainment..................10 Sports.................... 6 State & Local.................... 5 University..........................3 Parties debate right to life or to choice Editors Note: This is the final install­ m en t in a fiv e -p a rt series ad d ressin g major platform issues o f the 1996 presi­ dential race. SHANNA GAUTHIER D aily Texan Staff A b o r tio n ju s t m a y be t h e h o t t e s t p o i n t o f d e b a te a m o n g p o lit ic a l p a r t ie s a s th e N o v e m ­ b e r e le c tio n ap p ro a c h e s, w it h the p a rtie s b u ttin g h e a d s o v e r th e g o v e r n ­ Comparing the issues: Abortion perhaps the most divisive political issue in the country is abc following chart summarizes the positions that political parties a m _. ne< Democrats Republicans ►State party: Platform pledges to guarantee reproductive choice, including birth control and safe, legal abortion. ►Victor Morales: Abortion decision should be woman s own. ►State party: Platform calls for constitutional amendment outlawing abortion. Urges government to promote alternatives to abortion, e.g. adoption ►U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. Holds qualified pro-choice stance. Socialists Natural Law Party ►Presidential candidate Mary Cal Hollis: Party opposes subordination of women in society and advocates choice with respect to abortion. ►VP candidate Mike Tompkins: Party 1 I envisions education to prevent un- 1 I wanted pregnancies; believes outlawing 1 | | abortion would be hurtful to women. m e n t's in v o lv e m e n t in th e issue. a n y o n e . a ll a b o rtio n s , ex cep t w h e n n e c e ssa ry M a r y K a y N e l s o n , a 2 4 - y e a r- o ld " N o b o d y s h o u ld h a v e th e rig h t to to s a v e th e life o f th e m o th er. a l u m n a w h o c a l l s h e r s e l f a U T D e m o c ra t, sa id a b o rtio n is an im p o r ­ ta n t is s u e b e c a u s e th e g o v e r n m e n t s h o u ld n o t h a v e th e p o w e r to ta k e a w a y w o m e n 's righ ts. " I t is sc a ry to th in k the g o v e rn m e n t c a n p r o h ib it a w o m a n fro m m a k in g h e r o w n d e c is io n s ." N e ls o n s a id " W e h a v e f o u g h t so lo n g f o r w o m e n 's rig h ts, 1 w o u ld h ate to see th e m ta k e n a w a y . " B u t P a tric k B a m s , a 40-year-old E l P a s o R e p u b li c a n , s a id th e r ig h t o f a b o r t io n s h o u ld n o t b e a f fo r d e d to m u rd e r a b a b y ... at th e tim e o f c o n ­ cep tio n , a b a b y is m a d e ,' B a m s said . T h e R e p u b l i c a n P a r t y h a s b e e n d i v i d e d o v e r t h e a b o r t i o n is s u e b e c a u s e U . S . S e n . K a y B a i l e y H u tc h is o n , R-Texas, an d m a n y o f her s u p p o r t e r s h o l d a q u a l i f i e d p ro - c h o ic e s ta n c e w h il e th e R e p u b lic a n P a rty p la tfo rm is an ti-ab o rtio n B o t h t h e T e x a s a n d n a t i o n a l R e p u b lic a n P a r t y p la tfo rm s call fo r a " h u m a n lite a m e n d m e n t' to the U .S . C o n s titu t io n , w h ic h w o u ld p r o h ib it T h e state p a r ty p la tfo rm s a y s th a t th e p a r t y w o u l d r e s p e c t a n d s a f e ­ g u a r d in n o c e n t h u m a n life fro m th e m o m e n t o f c o n c e p tio n u n til n a t u r a l d e a th b y r e q u ir in g w a i t in g p e r io d s b e f o r e a n a b o r t i o n is p e r f o r m e d , i n f o r m e d c o n s e n t in w h i c h t h e p a tie n t is c o u n s e le d p rio r to the p ro ­ c e d u r e a n d p a r e n t a l c o n s e n t f o r p a tie n ts u n d e r 18 y e a rs ot age. T h e p a r t y is u r g i n g th e g o v e r n ­ m e n t to p ro m o te a lte rn a tiv e s to abor- Please see A b o r t io n , page 2 Connection of domis to Internet under way AMY STRAHAN____________ Daily Texan Staff F o o d S e r v ic e , s a id a ll o n - c a m p u s d o r m i t o r i e s w i l l b e w i r e d b y D o r m r e s id e n ts c a n e x p e c t th e | 1 sa m e q u a lit y o f In te rn e t access in their o w n room s as th ey fin d in L T com p uter labs soon, U T officials said F rid ay. T h e D i v i s i o n o f H o u s i n g a n d Fo o d S e r v ia 1 ann oun ced F rid a y that in stallatio n o f cables in d o rm ito ries to g ive students direct access to the Intern et is in progress. T h e $5 m illio n c a b lin g protect is d e sig n e d to p r o v id e stu d en ts w it h m ore incentive to b u y their o w n p e r­ February'. G T E h a s c o n t r a c t e d w i t h th e U n iv e r s ity to co m p le te m o st of the cab lin g w o rk , D a m a n add ed. L a r g e r d o rm ito rie s , s u c h as th e B e a u f o r d H . J e s t e r C e n t e r a n d K in s o lv in g , w i l l b e w ir e d last, she W h il e effo rts a re b e in g m a d e to im p ro v e In ternet access for d o rm ito ­ r y re s id e n ts , U T o f f ic ia ls a re a ls o c o n s id e rin g a p ro p o s a l to p r o v id e Internet s e n ice to retired faculty an d said. staff. w a itin g p erio d s for students in the S t u d e n t M ic r o - c o m p u t e r F a c i lit y and other U T co m p u ter labs. in A d m i n i s t r a t o r s C o m p u ta tio n C en ter said c o m p u te 's "h a rd - w ire d " to the Internet do not re q u ire a T e le sy s co n nectio n to lo g on an d p ro v id e c o n tin u a l access to n ew sg ro u p s or other W e b sites. W h i l e T e le s y s c o n n e c t io n s u se ph one lines to connect users w ith the In te rn e t, a d ire c t c a b le c o n n e c tio n w ill leave p h o n e lines free w h ile stu­ dents are logged on to the W e b . Ja n ic e D a m a n , associate d ire c to r fo r th e D i v i s i o n o f H o u s i n g a n d W 'a y n e D a n ie ls o n , c h a ir m a n o f th e In te rn e t T a s k fo rc e C o m m itte e , saici a p rop osal to let retired taculty th e a n d staff p a y o n ly $15 a m o n th for th e In t e r n e t t h r o u g h a c c e s s U n iv e r s it y is p e n d in g a p p ro v a l b y U T Presid en t R obert B e rd a h l T h e pro p osal stip u lates that o n ly em p lo yees w h o H ave w o rk e d at the U n iv e rs ity tor at least fiv e years w ill be eligible to subscribe to the service. A s im ila r p ro p o s a l to o ffe r low - c o st access to a lu m n i is c u r r e n t ly u n d e r consideration b y the com m i t- Please see Wired, page 2 HAYD EN HEAD/Daily Texan Staff sonal com p uters an d to alleviate the Page 2 Monday, July 29,1996 T h e D a il y T e x a n Abortion: Parties stake out territory Continued from page 1 tion, especially th ro u g h m arriage and adoption. "Each state can handle the issue leg islativ ely ," said Tom P auken, c h a irm a n of T exas R e p u b lic a n Party. Whether the father is married o r u n m a rrie d to the m oth er, "he should have the right to prevent the woman from having an abortion." Meanwhile, the Democratic Party platform supports the full range of reproductive rights and full access to family planning. Their platform says the party will work to guarantee every woman the rig h t to m ake p erso n al decisions reg ard in g the full range of repro­ ductive choices, including the pre­ vention of an unintended pregnan­ cy and choosing safe, legal abortion. The party also believes the govern­ m ent should not interfere in an indi­ vidual's private and personal deci­ sions. Democratic Senatorial candidate Victor Morales said at a press con­ ference, "The decision is not the g o v e rn m e n t's. It is b etw e en th at wom an and Cod." Mike Tompkins, vice presidential candidate of the Natural Law Party, said the best w ay to reduce abor- approved. "I th in k th e c o n n e c tio n to the U niversity for retired peo p le is a real p lu s ," W oodson sa id . "I do expect to have e-mail and stay in touch with a number of professional c o lle a g u e s" a fte r re tire m e n t in August, he added. Olympic bombing: No suspects as yet Continued from page 1 tions is th ro u g h education — not through legislation. "The Natural Law Party supports educational program s that develop intelligence and creativity, im prove moral reasoning, and prom ote far­ sighted thinking and actions that do n o t c re a te p ro b le m s. The p a r ty believes such edu catio n can p ro ­ duce changes in behavior that will re d u c e u n w a n te d p re g n a n c ie s," Tompkins said. "Because the party believes that legislation to outlaw abortions will simply lead to illegal abortions, the party thinks that it is co u n terp ro ­ ductive for the federal governm ent to outlaw abortion." Mary Cal Holis, presidential can­ didate for the Socialist Party, said since the p a rty su p p o rts socialist fem in ism , it "w o rk s a g a in s t the e x p lo ita tio n of w om en w h o live with subordination in the home and politics," Holis said. "The p a rty advocates full free­ dom of wom en to control their own bodies." Jamie Gorelick said authorities have "d escrip tio n s of people. We have information. ... We have very good leads." But, she said, "We do not have a concrete suspect, as I would term it, right now." Police are confident the m ystery caller was a w hite Am erican male with no distinguishable accent — and that points toward "homegrown" ter­ rorism. "That is one of the principal theo­ ries we are pursuing," Gorelick said. The telephone and bomb remnants w ere sent to the FBI laboratory in W ashington for fingerprint analysis and co m p ariso n w ith p re v io u sly known bombs, he said. The public supplied investigators w ith videotapes and photographs taken in the targeted area before the bombing, he said, and four security cameras in the area may provide use­ ful pictures. He also said more than 600 calls offering inform ation had come in to a special FBI number — 1- 800-905-1514. Investigators also ran into som e apparent dead-ends. A man in north Georgia's Whitfield County was questioned by the FBI after police were tipped he made sus­ picious statements about the bom b­ ing, the local sheriff said. But, said Sheriff Scott Chitwood, "there does not appear to be any connection." In A tlanta, an unidentified m an who described himself as a vendor was arrested for making what police said were "terroristic threats" against a hotel. Police said, however, they d id n 't believe he w as the p a rk bomber. While investigators pursued leads, security officials continued tightening their net around Olympic competition sites, w here g u a rd s sfep p ed up screening of spectators and their bags. Officials asked fans to "leave the bags home" if at all possible, to speed up the lengthening lines at stadiums and arenas. The Georgia state government said it would dispatch by Monday morning an additional National Guard infantry * battalion, the 121st from Macon, to supplement the civilian bag-searchers, metal-detector operators and guards at Atlanta Olympic sites. About 4,000 guardsmen are already deployed on any one day here. The battalion would add "a few hundred" to th a t co n tin g en t, g o v ern m e n t spokesmen said. The civilian, police and m ilitary security arm y on hand here totals some 30,000. The White House said Sunday about 900 FBI agents are now assigned to Olympic duty. The bom bing ra ttled A tla n ta 's nerves, leading to dozens of calls from concerned citizens about unattended bags in public places, and sending police and ordnance-disposal experts scrambling from point to point across town. Chief organizer Payne said Sunday no further explosive devices had been discovered. In an instant, Saturday's bombing transformed Centennial Park from a jampacked crossroads of the world into an epicenter of terror. Accessible: Disabled students say University is lax in making buildings open to handicapped Wired Continued from page 1 tee, Danielson said, adding that such a proposal would be far more difficult to pass given the enormity of the stu­ dent body. Herbert Woodson, retiring dean of the College of Engineering, said he would make use of the reduced-rate In tern et access if the p ro p o sal is Continued from page 1 p re sid e n t of UT G ro u p s U nited Against Rights Discrimination. "A co-op for women is totally inac­ cessible. Many of the other dorms are also totally inaccessible," Pevsner said. Janice Daman, associate director of the Division of Housing and Food, said handicapped students have access to all UT dormitories with cafeterias: the Beauford H. Jester Center, Andrews Dormitory and Kinsolving Dormitory. But dormitories without cafeterias are not accessible, Daman said. Pevsner ad ded th at m any class­ rooms are inaccessible for handicapped students. "I have been asking for an automatic door to W aggener and UT keeps stalling," he said. But Mark W hitburn, an assistant instructor of political philosophy and Pevsner s best friend, noted that under ADA regulations, the University is not E X A M + 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting at S119* Complete ’ price includes exam, 2 pair clear daily- wear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1st follow up EXPIRES AUGUST 23, 1996. WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VAUD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT M-TH 477-2282 FR, 9.6 10-7 M /CVISAAM X DISC required to provide automatic doors. UT officials also pointed out that every building does not need to be accessible to disabled students. "We're not required to have every building accessible. We have to make all of our programs accessible," said Jim Vick, vice president for student affairs. City of Austin ADA coordinator Dolores Gonzalez said, "ADA isn't ab o u t spending m oney. It's really about accessibility." ADA ren ov ations have cost the University money, though. Since 1993, the University has spent $1,770,914 on ADA renovations, said Mary Knight, d irecto r of the UT B udget Office, adding that this excludes ADA renova­ tions which are part of the construction or renovation of UT buildings. K night ad d ed the U n iversity presently has $1.6 million in pending ADA funds. Despite this funding, Sheffield said, he is currently unable to en ter the Undergraduate Library. "I can't go to the microcenter at the UGL right now," Sheffield said, adding that construction around the building has blocked off the curb cuts, which normally allow wheelchair access to the sidewalks. "They're not thinking about it any­ more," Sheffield said. Sheffield added getting through the doorway to his dorm room is difficult because the door is too narrow. "In my room, I have a quarter-inch clearance and they call this an ADA- accessible room," he said. "I cannot live in a room w ith my own bathroom. I got a doctor's note saying I need a connecting bathroom. But they can't do it," Sheffield added. "The attitude at UT lately is that 'We are accessible so we aren't going to worry about it anymore.'" Daman said the Division of Housing and Food has "more [accessible] rooms than w e are required to have," but added that ADA-accessible rooms with AUSTIN OB/GYN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES gc? • First an d Second Trim ester • Com plete Fam ily P lanning Services • Em ergency Contraception • Private Office Setting • Board Certified Gynecologist • Female Physician on Staff • Student Discount (512) 250-1005 9805 Anderson Mill Rd. Austin, TX. 78750 connecting bathrooms are not available in the summer. Daman said the Division of Housing and Food has spent millions to make dormitories accessible. As an auxiliary service to the University, the division's budget is now included in the $1.7 mil­ lion the University has spent. Despite student complaints, UT offi­ cials said they are working to improve accessibility. "We think that overall, the programs are accessible. We know that some enhancements may need to be made," said Patricia Ohlendorf, vice provost and ADA co o rd in ato r the University, adding that some of the complaints nam ed by Sheffield and Pevsner are "som ething I'll ask the Physical Plant about" for "We can't in all cases modify [build­ ings], nor are we obligated to under ADA," Ohlendorf said. O h len d o rf said if problem s are brought to the administration's atten­ tion they will do anything reasonable to fix them. "The U niversity is doing a lot. People will have individual problems. We are in many cases planning on, or are, going beyond the law," she said. But P evsner said he thinks the University is not doing enough. "I don't think UT is making a good effort, viven their resources. Thev are a . Roses- $1 2.95 1 Dozen $19.95 2 Dozen Carnations- 4 for $ 1 Cash & Carry C asa V erde F lorist 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 D a ily S p e c ia ls Guadaluc Get Cash! FéoeWL |( < - Win Cash! Use Our New ATM’s, Win Up To $20 Instantly! Cash in on one of the easiest cash giveaways ever! Over $5,000 will be given away through August 30, 1996. Now, when you use any one of our 12 new University Winners will receive a coupon redeemable at our Dobie Federal ATM’s, you could win $5, $10 up to $20 instantly! Mall Branch. Play today and walk away a winner! University Federal C R E D I T I A B e t t e r W a y U N I O N o f B a n k i n g | 1. Tower Records - 24th & The Drag 2. University Co-Op - On The Drag 3. Dobie Mall - Second Floor 4. Taos Co-Op - 27th & The Drag 5. Univ. Catholic Center - 21st & Whitis (2) NCUA 6. University Towers - 801 W. 24th (2) 7. All-Right Parking - 25th & The Drag (2) 8. Co-Op East - 26th & East Campus (2) D o b i e M a l l B r a n c h 2 0 2 5 G u a d a l u p e S t . 4 6 7 - 8 0 8 0 h t t p : / / w w w . u f c u . o r g e m a i l : m e m b e r s @ u f c u . o r g ble by now," he said. Pevsner also noted that elevators in certain buildings don't go to the top floor, and several bathrooms around campus are too small for wheelchairs. W ayne Price, director of the Department of Physical Plant, said he has not heard of these specific com­ plaints, but added "there are a ton of projects going on around campus" to upgrade facilities. "I am pretty comfortable with what UT has done," Price said. "On an insti­ tutional basis, it is consistent or exceeds what I have seen in other parts of the country." But students say the recent injury of disabled UT student Pam Ockletree when she was dropped from a Capital Metro shuttle bus earlier this m onth shows the lack of consideration the University shows for handicap stu­ dents. Stephanie Thomas, an organizer for A m erican D isabled for A tten d an t Programs Today, an advocacy group for the disabled, said, "The drivers are supposed to assist you, but they are not very well-trained. You can tell this when they look at you w ith fear in their eyes." Thomas said Capital Metro officials admitted earlier this month they were wrong to have buses without wheel­ chair ramps on UT shuttle routes. "Their percent of accessibility is not allowed to go down," she said, adding that with the use of nine unequipped buses, Capital Metro's accessibility rate fell. Since Ockletree's injury, disabled students have met several times with Capital Metro officials to discuss how to make UT shuttle buses safer and NOTICE The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations will conduct an accreditation survey of the Student Health Center on August 29 and 30, 1996. Requests for a public information interview must be made in writing and should be sent to the Joint Commission no later than five working days before the survey begins The request must also indicate the nature of the information to be provided at the interview. Such requests should be addressed to: Organization Liaison Department Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health care Organizations One Renaissance Boulevard Oakbroak Terrace, IL 60181 more easily accessible. "I think some really good things have come out of that," said Gage Paine, associate dean of students. System s will now be in place to allow disabled students to have more influence in transportation issues, Paine said, referring to a new proce­ dure which would allow disabled stu­ dents to give input on how drivers are trained. But Sheffield said the buses should not have needed to be fixed in the first place. Sheffield said in order to make the campus 100 percent accessible, admin­ istrators will need to be better educated on the law and how to accommodate students with disabilities. He said he hopes to be part of this education process by dedicating his career to helping businesses and insti­ tutions become accessible to the dis­ abled and comply w ith ADA stan­ dards. BRIEF July 26,1996 DOW (Industrials) NYSE S&P500 AMEX J S W c l T m S&P100 Nasdaq NYSE Diary Advances: 1,536 New highs Declines: Unchanged: 791 792 23 • New lows Total issues: 3,119 Consolidated volume: 352,014,020 1995 avg. comp, vol.: 422,909,640 Visit our web site at http://www.utexas.edu/texan/ T h e d a il y T ex a n Permanent Staff Editor.......................................................................................................................................................Tara L. Copp Managing Editor..................................................................................................................................Robert Russell Associate Managing Editor.................................................................................................................. Ross Cravens News Editor......................................................................................................................................... Jennifer Schultz Associate News Editor.................................................................................................................... Christine Garrison Senior Reporters.................................................. Andrea Buckley, Shanna Gauthier. Amy Strahan, Mason West Associate Editors.................................................................................................. David C. Barranco, Spencer Proti Photo Editor.......................................................................................................................................... Robert Patton Associate Photo Editor.......................................................................................................................... Alison Codlm Entertainment Editor ............................................................................................................. ... Joe Sebastian Associate Entertainment Editor........................................................................................................ Daniel Maidman Sports Editor.............................................................................................................................................. Matt Young Associate Sports Editor.......................................................................................................................... Otitio Jacobs General Sports Reporters.................................................................................... David Livingston, Mark Livingston Around Campus Editor........................................................................................................................ Cheryl Gooch Graphics Editor.....................................................................................................................................Hayden Head Senior Makeup Editor..........................................................................................................................Geoff Mutvihül Issue Staff News Writers.................................................................. Eric McKinney, Tanna Price, Kevin Watts, Scott Williams Entertainment Writer...................................................................................................... Russell Hurst, Thomas Yoo Copy Editor................................................................................................................Annie Hillar, Fernando Ortiz Jr. Makeup Editors................................................................................................... Steven Agustinus Chandra-Widjaja Photographers................................................................................Beverly Barrett. Alfred Brice, Whitney J. Owens Editorial Columnists....................................................................................................... Geoff Henley, Elad Sharon Advertising Local Display..........................................................................................Amy Forbes, Krista Coatson, Brad Corbett, Danny Grover, Sara Eckert Ctassitied Display.................................................................................................... Nathan Moore, Nancy Flartagan Classified Telephone Sales....................................... Cory Davies, Tony Meister. Monica Ross, Carrie Anderson - ............ .................................. .......Kristin Darwn, Amy Hilton, Jennifer Spence, Jennifer Wkeon Classified Clerks loan Whitaker Layout Coordinator .......... 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(LaM BuMnaM Day Prto» to PuMfcaaon) UNIVERSITY T h e D a i l y T e x a n 3 MONDAY, JULY 28,1888 Internship TANNA PRICE , Daily Texan Staff The Austin chapter of the International G o o d N e ig h b o r C o u n c il m et F r id a y at Dobie Center to develop a pilot internship program that will bring college grad u ates from M exico to A ustin for a profession al " and cultural exchange. UT alu m n u s M ark C ollard , wtio is vice 1 presiden t of International G ood N eighbor Council's Junior Council, said "the purpose • o f this m eeting w as to brainstorm and lay o u t the stru c tu re for im p le m e n tin g the internship project." In tern ation al G o od N e ig h b o r C o u n cil m em b er Betti S tro u d sa id the pro ject is being designed for "young adults interested • in interning with internationally oriented businesses. We're trying to establish a net­ w ork of contacts for this pu rp o se," Stroud said. V isiting m em bers of the Junior Council ‘ will return to M exico M onday and report on the new in tern sh ip stru ctu re to their own chapters, which will hopefully im ple­ ment sim ilar program s there, Stroud said. "This is a pilot program we hope will be a d o p te d by all the In te rn a tio n a l G o o d N eighbor Council chapters," Collard said. "In the future I plan to attend one of these internships in M exico," he added. The International Good Neighbor Council is an association founded in 1954 in Monter­ rey, Mexico, by a group of prominent Mexi­ can and American businessmen. The coun­ cil is a non-political, non-profit organization devoted to the principles of neighborliness between the United States and Mexico. The Junior Council of the International Good N eighbor Council is currently hosting 30 Mexican college students at Dobie Center in a four-day sum m er convention to devel­ op ties between members of the Austin and Mexico chapters and introduce the visitors to American culture. C ollard said he w as one of six UT stu ­ dents who attended last year's sum m er con­ vention hosted by the chapter in Tampico, Mexico. opment. Sergio C ru z, a Junior C ouncil m em ber from Tampico, said the idea for the the pilot internship program grew out of his relation­ sh ip w ith an A m e ric an m em b er o f the Junior Council he met at last year's conven­ tion. "I met my girlfriend through IGNC and we were trying to figure out w ays to be able to see each other m ore," C ruz said. "Sh e su g g e ste d I com e to w ork in A ustin and convinced me I had all the skills I needed to work here in my field." "I had not realized this w as a possibility," said Cruz, a gradu ate student in m anage­ m ent in form ation sy ste m s at M onterrey Tech. Cruz said he is now the pilot program 's first intern, helping out with the convention and p uttin g h is co m pu ter sk ills to w ork w ith a six-w eek in tern sh ip at T ri-A n gel U n lim ite d , a n o n -p ro fit o r g a n iz a tio n focused on collaborative community devel­ G ustavo Rodriguez, a com puter science alu m n u s of M onterrey Tech and v isitin g Junior Council m em ber said, "everyth in g we study in computer science in Mexico is taught in English, all the books we stu d y are American books. There is no reason we co u ld n ot d o th is w ork in the U n ite d States." "The only barriers we face are the lan ­ guage, and finding businesses that will give us an opportunity to work for them. That's what this program is for," Cruz said. - The expense of living in another country is also a barrier to p u rsu in g p ro fessio n al experience across borders, Rodriguez said. Stroud said stu d en ts of both co u n tries face similar obstacles. Most students come out of universities with a degree, but no professional experi­ ence, Stroud said. "IG N C wants to provide affordable opportunities for these students to gain p ro fe ssio n a l e xp erien ce in th eir neighbor country." Stroud, who is also executive director of Tri-Angel Unlimited, said Tri-Angel will be hosting the internship program and h ou s­ ing the interns. T hey'll be spen din g half their day at a business, and half their day interning at Tri- A n gel's C om m u n ity Em pow erm ent C en­ ter," Stroud said . "T h at w ay they'll gain exposure to American business and to com ­ munity service." We are looking for corporate sponsors to provide un paid internship opportun ities, and fu n d in g for sch o la rsh ip s to p ro v id e these young people with spending money," Stroud said. "W e're anticipating accommo­ dating four interns at a time by next year." This program is useful for us because we will have to pay very little for such an expe­ rience. We w ill im prove ou r English and become m ore accustom ed to the culture," Rodriguez said. 477 immigrants are naturalized in an Austin ceremony Friday ERIC MCKINNEY Daily Texan Staff ~ In the largest naturalization ceremony ever held in Austin, 477 immigrants becam e U.S. citizens. Representing 59 different countries, the im m igrants were given the oath of citizenship by U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks in a cere­ mony held Friday at the UT Lyndon B. Johnson Auditorium . A total of 505 people were approved for citizenship, but some were unable to attend Friday. Paul Parsons, past president of the Austin chapter of the Federal Bar Association, said the ceremony is usually held in the U.S. D is­ trict Court in San Antonio, but this time it w as held in Austin because of the large number of people in Central Texas who quali­ fy for citizenship. raiso n s said u«e special ceremony m akes it easier for relatives and friends to attend. The event began at 2 p.m. and filled the LBJ Auditorium with participants and spectators, including former U.S. first lady Lady Bird Johnson, whom Sparks recognized in the ceremony. The crow d w as a d d re sse d by U .S. Rep. Lloyd D oggett, D- Austin. Doggett stressed the importance of citizenship and con­ gratulated the participants on their achievement of citizenship. "We are, of course, in America all im m igrants," Doggett said. Doggett urged participants to become involved in their com m u­ nities. The oldest person achieving citizenship w as Hung Tran, 96, of Vietnam, Sparks said. The youngest w as Kelly Tang, 18, also of Vietnam. Carm en Carpenter, 86, came to America in 1927 but only 66 We are, of course, in America all im m igrants.” — U.S. Ren Uoyd Doggett, D Austin now obtained citizenship, he said. "It w as more formal than I thought," said Hyunsook Chang, 29, a new citizen from Korea who has lived in the U.S. for about 10 years, she said. Catriona Wilkie, 18, also took the oath of citizenship. Wilkie's fam ily cam e to Am erica from Scotland 13 years ago. Although Wilkie becam e a citizen Friday, the rest of her fam ily did not Wilkie said she took the oath early because she will be going to Notre Dam e University next month. M any of ine now c itizen s (.«une íro in M exico, F a rsu n s >oiu. Other countries represented include Vietnam, the Philippines, India, Iran and the United Kingdom. In order to obtain citizenship, im m igrants must live in the Unit­ ed States for at least five years (three years if they marry a U.S. cit­ izen). They m ust also pass English and civics tests. "Most of the questions aren't too difficult, but some U.S. citizens wouldn't know them," Parsons said. An invocation w as given by Rabbi Elizabeth Dunsker of Con­ g reg atio n B eth -lsrael. F la g s w ere p resen ted by the N atio n a l Guard, followed by a piano-vocal perform ance by Melanie Wil­ son, a Huston-Tillotson m usic graduate student, and Beulah Jones, chairperson of the Huston-Tillotson M usic Department. BEVERLY BARRETT D a ily T e x a n S ta ft Kim Vo, left, and her husband, Han Vo, were two of the 477 people who became U.S. citi­ zens in A ustin’s largest naturalization ceremony Friday at the LBJ Auditorium. AG Morales talks about improving life at Texas colonias KEVIN WATTS . Daily Texan Staff ; T e x a s A tto rn e y G e n e ra l D an M o ra le s d is c u ss e d m e a su re s the .‘state of Texas has taken to improve c o lo n ia s or u n d e r d e v e lo p e d , im poverished border towns, and to plan the next steps. ; At the conference this weekend, .titled T exas C olon ias: A Strategic ! Plan For The Future, state and fed- • eral officials, private business own- . ers and residents of the colonias dis- ' cu ssed prob lem s su rro u n d in g the im provem ent of the quality of life . in existing colonias. A ccording to the attorney gener­ al's office, over 340,000 people live . in an estim ated 1,436 colonias, most ) o f which lie in counties along the • Mexican border. S p a w n e d by r a p id , u n b rid le d . industrial growth along the Texas- Mexico border, m ost colonias lack • basic health necessities such as safe 1 w ater for d rin k in g , b a th in g an d sew age facilities. H ouses in colonias . are ty pically built from m aterials such as cardboard and old lumber, Morales said. M orales told his conference audi- ’ ence he hopes corporations and the national governm ents of the United States and Mexico can assist in the improvement of the colonias. He sa id T e x a s an d the U n ited States w ould benefit from a future "where the border region is viewed as the front door to our most impor- ¡ tant trading partners." M orales said Texans m ust not tol­ erate disease and poverty "dotting • the la n d s c a p e o f o u r e c o n o m ic future." In his keynote ad d ress, M orales highlighted the im portance of the Texas-Mexico border from a nation­ al perspective. "T he sleepy border tow ns o f yes­ t e r d a y a r e no m o r e , " h e s a i d , a d d in g that L ared o is now the sec­ o n d b u s i e s t p o r t o f e n t r y in the United States. M o r a l e s s a i d 80 p e r c e n t o f the U n ited S t a t e s ' tr a d e with M e x ic o c o m e s thro ugh T exas, a d d in g that this $20 billion trade partnership is r "still in its infancy." ; "W e can not exp and this partfier- • ¿hip without ex p an d in g ou r invest­ ment in people," he said. "The m essage that should come from th is c o n fere n ce is that ou r w ork is not o v e r ," M o ra le s said , adding that participants in the con­ ference could already claim a signif­ icant victory in the arrest o f new colonia growth. "U nscrupulous developers" were targeted by Texas H o u se Bill 1001 last year, which curbed the growth o f new c o lo n ia s by th re a te n in g d e v e lo p e rs w ith stiff p e n a ltie s if public health stan d ard s are inade­ quate in any new communities. O fficia ls h ave cre d ited the bill with virtually halting the growth of new colonias. T e x a s h as s ig n ific a n t fu n d in g a lre ad y aim ed at h elp in g colonia r e sid e n ts . M o ra le s' d is c u s s io n paper, which w as distributed at the con feren ce, sa y s that in 1989 the legislature established the Economi- cally D istre sse d A re a s P rogram , fu n d ed by $250 m illion in b o n d s approved by state voters. The EDAP has provided the bor­ der region with over $170 m illion for 26 water and wastew ater devel­ opment projects, the paper says. The T ex as le g isla tu re h as a lso channeled over $317 million into 45 projects for facility p lann in g. But the T e x a s W ater D e v e lo p m e n t Board, which ov ersees the EDAP, estim ates the total cost of providing adequate water and sew age facili­ ties to all colonias to be $1 billion, the paper says. Morales listed increased develop­ m en t o f in fr a s tr u c tu r e , g e n e ra l im p ro v e m e n ts in the q u a lity o f colonia life, development of afford­ able housing, and the controlling of ram pant d isease as the next steps to w a r d s " b r e a k in g the cy cle o f poverty and extending the cycle of opportunity." Dr. Irina Chec, professor of envi­ ronmental sciences at the UT-Hous- ton School of Public Health, d ed i­ cated her address to the children of the colonias. Sh e s p o k e on the d iffic u ltie s o f c o n t r o l l i n g d i s e a s e in c o l o n i a s , w h e r e in a d e q u a t e s a n it a t i o n a n d sew ag e facilities create a haz ard o u s env iron m ent aro u n d t h o u sa n d s of hom es. The University of Texas Employees and Retirees N YLCareHealth Plans of the Gulf Coast announces an addition to our newly expanded physicians network: AUSTIN REGIONAL CLINIC (ARC) NYLCare members also have access to the quality Confidence in health care for NYLCare members physicians of AH1 Healthcare System s; Austin m eans even more o p tio n s when c h o o sin g a Diagnostic Clinic; Austin Regional Clinic; Capital Primary’ Care Physician. To learn more about Area P ro v id e rs, affiliated with St. D a v id ’s NYLCare Health Plans and our newly expanded Healthcare S y s t e m ; Preferred In d e p e n d e n t netw ork o f p rim a ry care p h y sic ia n s a n d Physicians of Am erica and TriMed Physicians specialists, please call us at (512) 345-9660. Hospital Organization, affiliated with Round Rock Hospital. c 1996 NYLCare Health Plans of the G ulf Coast NYLCare Health Plans, Inc is a subsidiary of New York Life insurance Company, New York, NY The new name for Sanus n y l CXr e H E A L T H P L A N S 3M EDITORIALS U.S. must prepare against terrorism Forfeit, confidential help | 2 4 honra a dap, CALL: □QD M B B c Ia Il IlI A servia v/f the UT Counsdi m i Health Centei ♦ T hey said they were prepared for anything. This year's O lym pic Games were organized with terror in mind. The coordinators, police, FBI, and all others concerned knew the threats. But know ing w asn't enough. The indicate domestic terror was at work. Two other bombs were found the same day. Luckily, they were caught in time. The Centennial Pavilion, how ­ ever, was not so fortunate. findings initial The afterm ath was m iserable. Ambulances rushed to the scene and jammed the streets. Questions hung on everyone's minds — who did this? Why? How could it have hap­ pened? This year, the authorities seemed genuinely ready. During the 1972 Olympics in Munich, 11 Israeli ath­ letes were killed by a terrorist attack. Elad Sharon TEXAN CO LU M N IST The Atlanta organizers didn't want the same legacy. And so, they tried It w as a noble to overprepare. attempt. And if dom estic terror is to blame, misdirected efforts may be the cause of that failure. the to com prehend Even after the O klahom a City bombing, U.S. officials have been slow threat posed by domestic terror groups. "Patriot" militias across the country are only now being recognized as a real danger. Many thought O kla­ homa would wake up America to its home-grown terrorists. Apparently, we have been slow to rise. Additionally, America is unpre­ terrorist international for pared attacks. At the nation's airports, the threat has long been downplayed. If the TW A Flight 800 explosion proves to be a work of a bom b or missile, Americans may finally real­ ize what a genuine problem terror­ ism has becom e, and how little w e've done to stop it. In 1989, after the bombing of Pan AM Flight 103, Congress passed a law ordering airports to have plas­ tic-explosive detectors in place by 1993. Plastic explosives, w hich destroyed the Pan Am jet, were seen as constituting the "next" wave of threats. But as recently as last month, before the tragic TWA flight, only three plastic-explosive detec­ tors were in place nationwide. This inaction led one expert to call the average U.S. airport "about as safe as a laundrom at." that it actually was passed. After O klahom a, C ongress thoroughly watered down a bill providing the FBI more power in its counterterror­ ism activities. A symbolic version of the bill was passed in time for the bom bing's one-vear anniversary. But the new law does little more than limit death row appeals in the federal courts — an unconvincing deterrent to terrorist activity. Such inaction is unacceptable. D om estic and foreign terror are threats we can no longer afford to ignore. If any good is to come from the recent tragedies, we must begin to heed these terrible portends. If we continue to ignore them, we have no one to blam e but ourselves. The 1989 law was an exception in sophomore. Sharon is a Plan II biochemistry 4 T h e D a i l y T e x a n MONDAY, JULY 29,1990 T h e Da il y T e x a n Editorial Board David C. Barranco Associate Editor Tara L. Copp Editor Spencer Prou Associate Editor Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those o f the editor or writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. VIEWPOINT Those cowards. We wish we could write today without getting personal, but it's impossible. After watching the ambulances, blood and fear Saturday morning, we wanted to find the perpetrators and pull the trigger our­ selves. The person or persons responsible are worthless, they are evil. They sickly chose a international gathering of peace to maim and kill. They are w orse than animals. No other beast on earth plots to tor­ ture another, to kill without reason. More disheartening, em barrassing and shameful is that the bomber or bom bers are likely American — the murderers filled their pipe bomb with long nails, a com m on modus operandi of domestic mili­ tias. Voice analysis of the 911 caller, the FBI's main suspect, suggests he is a white American male. "It wasn't to destroy a building — it was to destroy people," said Lloyd Burchette, a Georgia security consultant. The "people" the cowards hurt were young and old, from all over the globe. They were ail celebrating w hat's best in the human spirit: Our drive for excellence. We, like many, hoped the Olympics could heal the many nations who lost citizens in the TWA explosion. In Atlanta, citizens of 197 countries had an opportunity celebrate one another's victories, to rec­ ognize past enem ies as individuals with lives very similar to their own. Now, in the aftermath, Clinton is making his all-too-familiar speech about how a bomber "will be brought to justice." But it is time for more than speeches. For the second time in two weeks, and the third time this summer, Americans are the victims of terrorism. These horrors are not supposed to happen on our soil. We used to feel safe riding American buses, subways, planes and trains. Now we are wary. It is time not only to express our rage, but to act on it. It remains to be seen what Clinton and Congress will do. But one thing is now pajnfully clear: What w e've done in the past is insufficient. Today, w e rally behind the global Olympic spirit. We must show these murderers they accomplished nothing — except proving they do not deserve to li,ve. Excluding extremes, punitive damages protect consumers Next to booze and sex, lawyer bashing is one of the planet's oldest diversions. In som e Greek and Roman city-states, collecting legal fees was forbidden. In a handful of Wild West cities, practicing law was outlaw ed. Now , we have tort reform. to Tort reform really is nothing new. In the 1970s, litigation increased when states began assigning per­ centages of litigants liability rather than barring recovery entirely in cases of contributory negligence. Previously, a driver who failed to look both ways when crossing an intersection often received nothing, though he w as hit by speeding drunk who ran a red light. Once plaintiffs learned they had com pens­ able rights, more began to sue. But contrary to what the insur­ ance spin doctors say, there has been G eoff .Henley TEXAN CO LUM N IST Traditionally, punitive dam ­ ages are criticized for pro­ ducing uncertainty, and denying m an u factu rers, for exam ple, any accu rate m eans of calculating costs. But th at’s precisely their purpose. no tort explosion. Despite tales of dockets crow ded with im agined injuries, tort claims make up less than 10 percent of most states' civil case load, according to the National If you C enter for State C ourts. include the crim inal docket, tort suits account for less than 1 percent of cases filed. And no, plaintiffs aren't rushing off to federal court instead. The pri­ mary personal injury actions there, product liability suits, are actually on the decline. Excluding asbestos litigation, an unimagmed aberration, product lia­ bility cases in the federal system declined by 40 percent between 1985 and 1991, according to Professor Mark Galanter of the University of Wisconsin. lobby's Despite these facts, few days go by without someone parroting the insurance ridicule. For example, last year an elderly woman received a few hundred thousand dollars in exchange for skin graft surgery on her abdomen. But after the M cDonald's coffee case, Repub­ licans joined manufacturers in their though blanket condem nation of "e x ces­ siv e" aw ards. Even the M cDonald's damages equaled only tw o days of coffee sales, and injury preceded by involved an more than 700 safety complaints, the insurance lobby generated enough outrage to settle the case for far less than the award. Traditionally, punitive damages are criticized for producing uncer­ tainty, and denying manufacturers, for example, any accurate means of calculating costs. But that's precisely their purpose. Som e elem ent of uncertainty is necessary to prevent bean counters at Ford from sham e­ lessly calculating an $11 increase per car was too damn much to keep Pin­ tos from exploding. In Texas, the punitive damages war has taken on a more pernicious form. Our Legislature increased the burden of proof required for puni­ tive damages. Previously, plaintiffs only had to show a defendant's bad acts more likely than not caused injury. Now, plaintiffs must show clear and con­ vincing evidence, i.e. a "high" prob­ ability of causation. This shift began in 1994 with Transportation Insurance vs. Moriel, insurance com pany in w hich an refused to pay medical benefits. In Moriel, the court decided that puni­ tive damages should be more diffi­ cult to collect, so it increased the plaintiffs' burden. Previously, plaintiffs had to show a defend an t's gross negligence, defined as an act or omission that recklessly disregarded another's safety. But the court found that standard insufficient, and now requires plain­ tiffs to show not only a conscious disregard of plaintiff's rights, but the disregard w as that "o u tra ­ geous." What is sufficiently outra­ geous? In all the states, the court found only one case outrageous enough to qualify. In that California case, a health insurance carrier knowingly and wrongfully denied benefit payments for more than two years. But what was deemed outrageous was that the refusal resulted in denial of surgery, funds for pain medication, failure of the plaintiff's business, two nervous breakdowns and repossession of a wheelchair. H ence, our h ighest court w ould be u nim p ressed if an insu rance ca rrie r's w rongful d enial o f p ay ­ just denial of in m ent resulted su rgery or sim ply rep o ssession of your w h eelchair. So y ou 'd better stay health y. Henley is a third-year law student. FIRING LINE Individuality Little Women Native tongue proven in November. Pablo Alcala, what goes on inside that mind of yours? Your Firing Line (7 /2 4 /9 6 ) letter states that the picture of "M exican TV cameraman Jesus Bieton ..." was "a blatant stereotype of a race." How? It was humorous in the sense that with all the hoopla going on at the Olympics, som eone would actually want to sleep. The fact that the picture stated "M exican TV cam eraman ..." was totally irrelevant. If the person in the picture had been from G er­ many, Nigeria, Thailand, or Guam, the picture would have stated "G er­ man, Nigerian, Thai or Guamanian TV cam eraman ..." Alcala's attitude about this pic­ ture is an exam ple of the racial sep­ aratism practiced in today's world Instead of fighting for Mexican civil rights (or African-American, C hinese — w hoever, take your pick) fight for HUMAN rights. Instead of trying to fight for your race, fight for the HUMAN race. As a veteran, I've served and worked with people from all over the world, of all races. I've learned that there is no infe­ rior race, only inferior individuals. If you want to see Jesus Bieton as a "lazy M exican," then you are racist. If he is indeed lazy, then he is not a lazy Mexican, he is a lazy individ­ ual. Until we can see beyond the color of skin, until we can turn organizations like the N A A "C "P into NAAAP (A for All) we contin­ ue to struggle. Technically, Vahid Friedrich (7 /2 6 /9 6 ) is correct: the 18-and 19- year-old O lym pic gym nasts are young women, not little girls. But he fails to recognize that they were all very little girls w hen their opportunistic parents and coaches began training their young bodies into grotesque, distorted shapes, and their young minds into believ­ ing that this was what they "w ant­ ed." Friedrich, don't you recognize a deformed body when you see one? Not one of those women looked her age: Each one appeared to be 2 to 3 years younger than she really was — very nice when you're 30, but not when you're 18! They are each several inches shorter than normal for their age. When muscles are overdeveloped during puberty, bones never reach their full potential. W hat we are looking at is not maturity, but stunted growth! Their abnormally narrow hips will proba­ bly never be able to bear children, and given their virtual lack of body fat, it is highly unlikely that they menstruate anyway! That is why the press, and a growing segment of the public as well, perceive them as "little girls," not because we all suffer from out­ dated attitudes. Sorry, but I did not see dedica­ tion, determination and courage on Tuesday. I saw the results of years of child abuse and I was ashamed of my country, not proud. Cecil Strickland Aerospace engineering junior Michelle Moore U T staff Friday (7 /2 6 /9 6 ,) you wrote that that "m ost Della G ranado said graduate classes in M exico are taught in English." That is not true. Very few, if any, graduate class­ es are taught in English. And those rare cases are because there is a vis­ iting professor who is not fluent in Spanish. W hy would classes be taught in English if the official lan­ guage of Mexico is Spanish? Victor Martinez U T staff Off to the races I suppose we can expect more let­ ters like C orbin Casteel's (7 /2 6 /9 6 ) as election time nears. Many right­ w ingers like Casteel have been playing their desperate "gotcha" game since before the '92 elections. But talk about innuendo. Is Casteel telling us he has observed the C lin­ tons' sleeping arrangements first­ hand? Has he found former KGB agents that recruited a young Bill Clinton? The list of scandals Repub­ licans like Casteel have worked so feverishly to exploit was fairly com ­ plete. Although, with his insider infor­ mation, why does he only "allu de" to Vince Foster's murder? I suspect that most American people don't care about half-baked accusations and associations made by anti-Clintomtes who obviously fear his re-election. Whether or not Casteel's opin­ ions represent the majority will be Mike Platis U T staff Correction I need to make a correction to your otherwise fine article on my deceased colleague Gareth Morgan (7 /2 2 /9 6 .) I did not say, "M organ played an important role in con­ vincing the UT Master Planning Com m ittee toward retaining the Greek Architectural elem ents this cam pus." I said Morgan, in doing research on classics professor William James Battle, who was instrumental in the creation of the central cam pus architecture, used the phrase "exem plum si requiris, circum - spice." The motto, applying to pro­ fessor Battle, was then printed on the invitations to one of the func­ tions of the Master Planning Com ­ mittee, and can be aptly applied to Professor Morgan himself. Karl Galinsky, professor in the Department of Classics Dissidents The rest of the world has political dissidents fighting for a cause. Causes are som etim es w orth fighting for, yet the target should be the source of the cause. Look at the hijacking of an airlin­ er in 1972. The PLO, under Yasser A rafat's leadership, hijacked a plane containing a num ber of Israelis, and took it to Angola. They were fighting for independence from Israeli occupation. Here in America, it seems that terrorism happens for a different reason. The people here seem much more con­ cerned about blowing up buildings because they have to pay taxes. I remind all that the United States is among the least taxed nations in the world. The Republican tax-cut sluts forget that. The attack on the Olympics may not have been an outside attack, it might have been an American or Americans pissed off about taxes or infringements on his or her or their "freedom s" that blew up a lot of people at a non-political event. This was an atrocity which only made the world take on an even more negative sentiment towards Am eri­ ca. A successful bid for 2008? I doubt it. As for the PLO hijacking, Angola gave the Mossad perm is­ sion to storm the plane, no civilians were hurt, three members of the Israeli secret service were killed, one of w hich w as Benjam in Netanyahu's brother. At least they had a cause. Alex Mueller Austin resident Farewell I noted with great sadness the passing of Professor Ernest Sharpe in May 19% . He was, along with Dr. Dewitt C. Reddick, the kindest of them all. My generation hit the campus of the University in the spring of 1946. We had been sidetracked for four years by World War II and gained unlimited freedom of movement and language. In short, we were rather inde­ pendent and some, including me were unruly. I could not keep still in those little cramped chairs, in unbearable heat and crowded con­ ditions of the time while teachers droned on and on The old World War I line from a popular song "H ow you gonna keep 'em down on the farm after they have seen Paris," was very true of the moment. Mr. Sharpe and Dr. Reddick managed to hold our interest, God bless them, and made an im pres­ sion on me that I've carried with me these 50 years. The short piece by the late sports writer, Grantland Rice, says it all for me: To Professor Sharpe, you did good. Jeff E. Townsend UT alum Firing Line letters and Ask Your Lawyer Questions can be brought to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue or mailed to P.O.Box D, Austin, TX 78713. Or, email them to TEXAN@www.utexas.edu Firing Line letters must be fewer than 250 words. UT students should include their major and classifica­ tion, fna all writers must present identification or include a phone number. The Texan reserves the right to edit letters STATE & LOCAL T h e D a il y T exa n MOMMY, JUUT 28,1888 5 Mock wedding ceremony held to protest Doggett’s voting record SCOTT WILLIAMS_________ Daily Texan Staff A self-proclaim ed radical group held a mock wedding on the steps of the G overnor's M ansion Friday^ p ro testin g w hat they called state R ep . L lo y d D o g g e tt's fa ilu re to keep his promises to the gay com ­ munity. Doggett, D-Austin, voted to pass a b ill called the D efen se o f M ar­ ria g e A ct last m on th in the U .S. House of Representatives, drawing protest from the Lesbian Avengers, an Austin gay rights organization. Propon en ts of the bill said it is aim ed at preserving the sanctity of tr a d itio n a l m a rria g e s , b u t g ay rights advocates have said there are no e sse n tia l d iffere n ces betw een hom osexual and heterosexual mar­ riages. The bill, now scheduled for con­ s id e r a tio n by th e U .S . S e n a te , p a sse d th ro u g h th e H o u se by a vote of 342-67 last month. If passed through the Senate, the bill will allow states to ban same- sex marriages, and m andate a defi­ nition of marriage as being between one man and one woman only. The bill will also allow states to invali­ date existing gay and lesbian mar­ riages. Other Austin citizens not affiliated with the Avengers attended the protest to voice their support of gay marriage. L en o re Sh efm an , a m em ber of th e L e sb ia n A v e n g e rs, led the m arch down Congress Avenue and presided as "m inister" at the cere­ mony. "F or two people to join together in a com m itted relationship and a union of love only adds to the fiber of the A m erican q u ilt," Shefm an said. said S h e fm a n the L esb ian Avengers are trying to create a more accepting and loving consciousness among the general public. N ancy D eRosa and Leslie Bode played the part of the female cou­ ple to be joined in the mock w ed­ ding ceremony. "W e w ant to draw attention to the fact that queers can't get m ar­ rie d . W e d o n 't h a v e rig h ts lik e o th e r p e o p le , and w e th in k th at attention needs to be brought about so people will begin to discuss the p o ssibility o f legalizing gay m ar­ riages," DeRosa said. Bode said she was disappointed by Doggett's vote on the issue. "W e have no respect for Doggett because he told us he would sup­ port us in W ashington and it hasn't h ap p en ed . He told us he w ould vote pro-gay on the Em ploym ent N o n -D isc rim in a tio n A ct and he failed to follow through. Now he has let us down again by voting for DOMA. We want to let him know that he will not get away with this," Bode said. B u t a cc o rd in g to a sta te m e n t released by Lloyd D og gett's co n ­ g re ssio n a l o ffic e , a m o tio n w as offered to require a formal govern­ m ental review of the disparity in rig h ts and b e n e fits a v a ila b le to domestic partners as contrasted with those who are married. That motion was defeated by a vote of 249-162. Doggett voted for the motion. Doggett also supported attaching the Em ploym ent N on-D iscrim ina­ tion A ct, b arrin g d isc rim in a tio n based upon sexual orientation, as an am end m ent to the D efense of M a rria g e A ct. T h is e ffo r t w as defeated on a point of order. If the Senate adds one Employment Non- D is c r im in a tio n A ct, th e H o u se could concur and adopt this an ti­ discrimination provision. Other Austin citizens not affiliat­ ed with the Avengers attended the protest to voice their support of gay marriage. T e rril D av is, a co n cern e d gay Austin resident, said some people think gay marriages have no place in this society. "G ay m arriages do exist. They just don't exist in the same way as tr a d itio n a l stra ig h t m a r r ia g e s ," Davis said. "O nly good can com e from having gay marriages on the same legal level with heterosexual marriages." "Couples are already together in a marriage sense and have been for a long time," said Shawn Wheeler, a gay m an a tte n d in g the m arch with his partner Dennis Harvey." A legal m arriage would bring it one step clo ser and g ive us the legal rights we deserve." D uring the m ock cerem on y on th e w est sid e o f the G o v e rn o r's Mansion, Shefman said, "M arriage should not be seen as a threat when it is tru ly v iew ed as a u n io n b etw ee n eq u a ls. Do n o t use the argument that in some way hom o­ sexual love is not equal or mutual to heterosexual love. Queer love is the most equal union." Texas could be overrun by poverty by 2030, study says 44 We have a massive w e're going to have to id en tify things to invest in in the future of Texas right now ," he said. though they will play a dominant role in the state's future over the coming decades. ing minorities. Associated Press "T he future of Texas is tied to the future of its minority population. How well they do is how well the state will do," he said. B E V E R L Y B A R R E T T Daily Texan Staff Nan De Rosa, left, and Lesiie Bode, both m em bers of the Lesbian Avengers, proceed down Congress Avenue to the Governor's Mansion in a mock wedding protesting a U.S. House bill that would give states the right to ban same-sex marriages. nightmare situation coming Texas way if we fail to pre­ pare the w ork force.” — John Sharp, state comptrotor comprising 46 percent of the state's popula­ tion, up from about 29 percent now. The report also finds that education costs w ill increase sharp ly, along w ith w elfare e n r o llm e n t and th e p riso n p o p u la tio n . Average wages, meanwhile, will be down. Steve M urdock, director of the data cen­ ter, said the resu lts m ean Texas m ust do something to remove the barriers now fac­ M u rd o ck stresse d th at his 1 ,0 0 0 -p a g e study, which took three years to compile, is intended to present a p ossible fu tu re for Texas — not a forecast — if no changes are m ade and if d em og rap h ic trends rem ain constant. The report does not take into account pos­ sible changes in the economy, federal laws or funding, w ater su pply or tech n o log y. Any of those factors could alter population patterns. M urdock sáid that's the state's forem ost challenge. " I f we d on't w ant a society that is less- educated, poorer and increasingly violent, "W e m u st recogn ize that th ese in v e st­ ments w ill be larger and m ore long-term than we would prefer them to be. But it will be less than the cost of not investing." A m ong the recom m end ed ch anges are early childhood enrichment programs, more effective education, specialized literacy and language training for immigrants and work­ force training for higher-skilled, high-tech jobs. State Comptroller John Sharp agreed that serious problems could be ahead for Texas if current trends continue. "W e have a massive nightm are situation coming Texas' way if we fail to prepare the work force," Sharp said. The $19.90 Short (long on value - short on price) D A L L A S — B a rrin g fu n d a m e n ta l changes, Texas will be overrun by poverty and have m illions more m inim ally skilled workers and people on w elfare by the year 2030, accord ing to a new study o f d em o ­ graphic trends. The study, dubbed "T e x a s C hallenged ," w as p rep ared for the L eg isla tu re by th e Texas State Data Center at Texas A&M Uni­ versity. It's the m ost com p rehensive look ever at the effects of demographic change in Texas. A copy of the study was obtained by The Dallas M orning News, which published the results in Sunday editions. Experts say the report reflects troubling trends because Texas isn't doing enough to ihcrease opportunities for m inorities even As a result, Texas in the year 2030 could be a dismal place, with a poorly educated and unskilled w orkforce that will make the state uncompetitive in an increasingly glob­ al marketplace. "W e have a time bomb here," University of N orth Texas econ om ist Bernard W ein­ stein told the newspaper. " I f the u p -an d -co m in g w orkforce does not have the req u isite sk ills or langu age ability, we are looking at a lost generation. They are going to either put into the system or draw on the system ." According to the study, Texas' population will grow nearly 80 percent — to 33.8 m il­ lion — over the next 34 years. Hispanics will be responsible for nearly all that grow th, Hero’s welcome Soldier returns home after discharge for refusing Associated Press C O N R O E — A n A rm y m ed ic who was court-martialed for refus­ in g to w e a r a U n ite d N a tio n s insignia w as w elcomed hom e Sun­ day w ith a celebration billed as a "pro-A m erica rally." Spc. Michael New, 23, was given a bad conduct discharge last week after his court-martial earlier this year. " A s an A m erican fig hting man, how could I w ear the bad ges and insignia of another g o v ern m en t?" N ew , d ressed in a blu e b u sin ess suit, told a crowd of more than 100 people who attended the rally. New plans to continue his battle to show that President Clinton vio­ lated the C o n stitu tio n by forcin g U.S. soldiers to fight under the U.N. flag. He w ants an h o n o rab le d is­ charge and plans appeals in military and civilian courts. "I'm now out of uniform but the Congress is not out of jeopardy of los­ ing control of Am erica's military to U.N, command and control," he said. N ew , a lo n g w ith his a tto rn e y , retired Col. Ron Ray of Kentucky, were among nearly a dozen speak­ ers at the rally, which was held on the steps of the M ontgomery Coun­ ty C o u rth o u se . M any su p p o rte rs waved flags and some carried signs or w ore T-shirts proclaim ing New an American hero. In January, New became the first A m erican serv icem an c o u rt-m a r­ tialed for refusing to accept foreign command on a U.N. operation. T h e governm en t has contended that New was never asked to shift his allegiance to the U.N. and remained under the U.S. military command. Ray presented New a plaque con­ taining a U.S. Legion of Merit medal belo n g in g to Jam es " B o " G ritz, a form er G reen Beret colonel. Gritz, who speaks out against a U.N.-led "nev\r world order," wanted New to hav'e the medal, Ray said. Earlier this month, New returned from Germany, where his 3rd Infantry Division battalion had been stationed. It was to be deployed to Macedonia to protect that country's borders if fight­ # T Hey Students! Did You Know Your New UT ID Card Can Be activated as a NationsBank ATM Card?* Stop By Our New Longhorn Banking Center at 2321 San Antonio Phone # 708-3050 by the Castilian Garage! N a tio n s B a n k * ID Card can he activated beginning August I, 1996. Must Have a NationsBank Checking or Savings account. uniform ing in Bosnia spilled over. Last O ctober, w hen N ew 's unit was ordered to report for the first tim e in the blue U.N. uniform , he w as th e o n ly o n e w ho w o re h is Army greens. The rest donned U.N. berets and insignia. Sunday's rally was sponsored by the re ce n tly form ed A llia n ce for C o n stitu tio n al C on cern s. 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NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 7, Cincinnati 1 St. Louis 6, Montreal 4 Houston 3, Los Angeles 2 Chicago 7, Colorado 5 Florida 8, San Diego 2 San Francisco 10, Atlanta 3 Pirates 12, Phillies 8 MLS NY/NJ 4, San Jose 1 D C. 2, Columbus 0 Irvin’s bodyguard next target over lack of license ■ DALLAS — N ow that they're th ro u g h w ith M ichael Irvin, prosecutors w ant to target the football s ta r's b o d y g u a rd on charges of w orking w ith o u t a valid in v e stig a to r's license. p riv a te The alleg atio n s are ag ain st David Wells, 34, the burly for­ m er boxing coach w ho escorted Irvin to court du rin g the Dallas Cow boy receiver's cocaine pos­ session trial. Irvin pleaded no contest in the d ru g case tw o w eeks ago. D allas C o u n ty p ro se cu to rs w ant to indict W ells for som e­ thing unrelated to Irvin's tro u ­ bles On W ednesday; four m is­ d em ean o r co m p lain ts ag ain st W ells w ere to a grand jury, alleging that he has been o p e ra tin g as a p riv ate in v estig ato r w ith o u t a valid state license. fo rw ard ed First A ssistant District A ttor­ ney N orm an Kinne cited state records that show Wells w as last licensed in 1992. Each com plaint carries a penalty of up to a year in jail. Wells told The Dallas Morning News in S unday editions that he w as not aw are until recently that he w as unlicensed. Irvin's bo d y g u ard also is tan ­ gled in an alleged m urder-for- hire scheme. Wells w ent to the FBI last year to report that tw o men had asked him to arrange the m urder of N abil'"M ichael" Aziz, a Dallas- area businessm an for $10,000. Crowds almost rowdy over Agassi ■ STONE M O U N T A IN , Ga. — O lym pic security officials called in extra policem en to control the fans crow d protested a scheduling change that w as going to prevent them from seeing A ndre Agassi. S u n d a y after W hen sp e c ta to rs w e r e 'to ld Agassi w o u ld n 't be playing in the stad ium as scheduled, they delayed a w om en 's m atch w ith persistent booing and chanting. A nd w hen 200 to 300 angry fans gathered outside an adja­ cent court w here the revised schedule called for A gassi to play, officials feared they w ould storm the gates. the b u t th a n 20 police cars M ore arriv ed , situ atio n rem ained tense until an official announced the schedule change h ad been reversed, and Agassi w ould play in the stadium as originally planned. Foreman to fight Grimsley in Tokyo ■ TOKYO — G eorge Forem an is giving it another crack. The 47-year-old form er ch am p io n h eav y w eig h t a n n o u n ce d S u n d a y th a t he w ould fight C raw ford G rim sley on Sept. 15 at the N ational Yoyo- gi A rena in Tokyo. It will be the first ring a p p e a r­ ance in Tokyo for Forem an since 1973, w hen he fought Joe Roman in his first defense of the title he w on from Joe Frazier the year before. H e scored a first-round knockout then. The 24-year-old G rim sley is ranked No. 9 by the WBA and No. 15 by the USB A. Forem an has twice been a heavyw eight cham pion b u t at present holds no major titles, n o r is ranked by any of the m ajor boxing bodies. — Compiled from Associated Press reports SPORTS Coaches agree: Big 12 a definite powerhouse BRIAN DAVIS______________________ Daily Texan Staff ST. LOUIS — A fter W ednesday's announce­ m ent of the Rose Bowl joining the Bowl Alliance, m any Big 12 coaches w ere in agree­ m ent on one thing. That is, college football is m oving closer and closer to a playoff system even th o u g h it's at a tu rtle's pace. Coaches and players from the new league addressed how the Alliance, the Dec. 7 Big 12 C ham pionship Game, the conference's tough academ ic stan d ard s and the exposure that this new conference will prov id e will help estab­ lish one overriding fact — the Big 12 will be the prem ier athletic conference in the nation. "I w ent to all b u t one bow l gam e last year and saw all b ut one of the team s play," Big 12 com m issioner Steve Hatchell said. "Big 12 football team s are for real. Big 12 football team s take on an o u tstan din g non-conference schedule. They played in seven bowl gam es last year, and if you nam e the m easure, Big 12 team s are there." N o one doubts the pow er of the new confer­ ence. But m any are w orried that som e things could tarnish the interior of a conference w ith a spectacular exterior. N ebraska coach Tom O sborne w as very crit­ ical of the Big 12's academ ic standards, which are more rigorous than NCA A standards. The Big 12 does not allow recruits to attend prep school, take college entrance exam s after Aug. 1 after g raduation from high school, or be on scholarship as a non-qualifying student. H ow ­ ever, each school can take one partial qualifier as a freshm an. "W hen you have a m ixing of cultures, you're alw ays going to have som e grow ing pains," O sborne said. "The concern that I have is that the academ ic stan dards of initial eligibility u n d e r Proposition 16, for now, are fairly high. "But w e're going to play by their rules and do w hat w e have to do." Those high academ ic stan d ard s are being p u t to the test w ith Baylor's C huck Reedy, w ho signed 22 players this spring. Reedy said th at 15 players have been cleared to play by the NCAA C learinghouse including Super Prep All-American quarterback O dell James. "W e got a lot on the bubble right now," Reedy said. "W e're going to announce it w hen it's all done. We have 15 guys th at all have the criteria." M ost of the m edia throng th a t attended the conference at the Trans W orld D om e T hurs­ day and Friday hope to get the chance to return in D ecem ber w hen the first Big 12 C ham pionship gam e is scheduled. M ost of the inform al discussions have people penciling in N ebraska and Texas as the tw o N orth and South representatives for Dec. 7. The w inn er of that m atchup, w hoever it m ay be, will be entered into the Tier I Bowl Alliance that has one year rem aining in its cur­ rent existence. In January 1999, the Rose Bowl w as added to the four-bow l alliance w hich will ensure th at the No. 1 and No. 2 team s will m eet to determ ine the true national cham pion. Entering the picture will be the Big 10 and the Pac-10. Both conferences w anted no part of the initial Alliance because their cham pions m et in the Rose Bowl. But a new seven-year ABC television package w orth an estim ated $540 m illion h elped change their m inds and lure those tw o conferences into w hat is being dubbed a "S uper Alliance." "W ith the Big 12, SEC and WAC playoff games, it's easy to see how you could ev e n tu ­ ally end up w ith a 16-team or eight-team play­ off in early D ecem ber," Aggie head coach R.C. Slocum said. "(The press] w ants it, th e fans w ant it,and I think it will be good for college football. This is one m ore step in a positive direction." Am ong all the national cham pionship talk, the fact rem ains that 1997's Big 12 C h am p i­ onship gam e h as yet to find a home. H atchell said th at five team s are in the ru nning for next year's conference title gam e — Kansas City, St. Louis, Dallas, H ouston, and the A lam odom e in San Antonio. N otes: The Big 12 and officals from the Trans W orld D om e announced T hursday that about 7,000 tickets rem ain for the first Big 12 C ham pionship gam e in St. Louis on Dec. 7. A nyone can p u rc h a se up to eight tickets apiece and can call 1-800-916-0084 for tickets or m ore inform ation. 1996 ATLANTA OLYMPICS Karko’s bat guides Sox over Texas, 5-1 Associated Press C H ICA G O — For a change, the Chicago W hite Sox took som e pres­ sure off their pitchers by scoring late runs. The result w as a 5-1 vic­ tory over the Texas Rangers on Sunday that concluded a 3-8 hom e­ stand. "W e a d d ed runs in the seventh and eighth and th a t's w hat w e've been lacking," W hite Sox m anager Terry Bevington said. "It helped out a lot." Alex F ern an d ez pitched eight strong innings, and Ron Karkovice an d Tony P hillips h o m ered for Chicago. "W e h a v en 't been scoring runs late and w p've been ieaving m en on base," D ave M artinez said. "It's nice the to p u t extra ru n s on board ." F ernandez (10-7) scattered five hits, struck out four and w alked one. A fter a 1-hour, 3-m inute rain delay in the bottom of the eighth, Roberto H ernandez finished w ith a perfect ninth. "T he long rain delay ... probably cost him a com plete gam e," Bev­ ington said. Texas lost for the seventh tim e in (12-4) 11 gam es. Roger Pavlik allow ed three runs and six hits in seven innings, struck out four and w alked four. "H e threw well. It was too m uch Karkovice today," Texas m anager Johnny O ates said "H e th rew him a slid e r d o w n an d o v er and Karkovice hit it for an RBI double. W hen he got him out, it took 14 pitches to d o it. It w as just K arko's day against him , O ther than that he. did fine." ... in 39 innings). N otes: In the 11-game hom es­ tand, Robin V entura w as 16-for-35 (.457), raising his average to .290. ... Pavlik has a 2.77 ERA in his last five outings, allow ing 12 earned ru n s Ivan R odriguez is 26-for-58 (46.6 per­ cent) in throw ing o ut runners, the best percentage in the AL. ... To m ake room for n ew ly acq uired catcher Pat Borders, the W hite Sox optioned catcher Robert M achado to Class AA Birm ingham. ... The R angers assig n ed p itcher Kevin Gross, w ho is on m edical rehab assignm ent, to O klahom a C ity of the A m erican A ssociation. R odriguez an d W arren N ew son are the only tw o Rangers to have pinch RBls this season. ptithjefpalf? Americans remain strong overall despite loss to Cubans in baseball and injury to Reynolds in Associated Press ATLANTA - - W ith the Sum m er Oly mpics halfw ay to history, the w in n ers are s te p p in g u p: The D ream Team , the C uban baseball sp rin te r po w erh o u se, M ichael Johnson , hig h ju m p er Charles A ustin, record-setting vol- leyballer Kareh Kiraly, the U.S. w om en's soccer team. su p e r in c lu d in g The losers are h eading home: Three athletes, tw o Russian m edal w inners, w ho test­ ed positive for a banned substance, A ndre Agassi in m en 's doubles com petition. A nd, m ost su rp ris­ ingly, w orld record ho ld er Butch Reynolds, w ho c o u ld n 't finish in his 400-m eter h eat due to an ap p aren t ham string injury. A busy Sunday w here 27 gold m edals w ere d istrib u te d helped sort o ut th e field, as U.S. tennis star MaliVai W ash in g to n boxer A nto­ n io T arv er and the A m erican w om en's volleyball team qualified for th e A tlanta q u arterfin als in their sports. ; Carl Lewis, com peting in his fourth and final O lym pics, needed a spectacular last leap to qualify for the long ju m p final. F a d n g elimination, 35-year-old the reached back and unleashed the best jump of the night — 27 feet, 2 1 /2 inches —- to keep alive his shot at a fo u rth straight g old in the event. r S/& "I h ad to tell m yself, This it foe last m eet o f yo u r life. Do volt w a n t it to e n d like th is ? '" Lewis saict jo in ed D e n n is R odm an th e c a p a c ity c ro w d a t the G eo rg ia D om e to w atch team m ate Scottie P ippen a n d the rest of the D ream th e Team d ism a n tle C roatia, defen ding silver m edalist, 102-71. The D ream ers will play Brazil an d high-scoring O scar Schm idt in the quarterfinals. In baseball, the bragging rights belong to C uba — so far. The C u ban baseball team , after taking an early eight-run lead, held on Sunday for a 10-8 victory over the A m ericans in w hat could be a preview of the gold m edal game. Johnson breezed through the 400 qualifying and finished first in his heat. Once again, he ap peared to alm ost toy w ith the com petition; the finals are M onday night, and he's already m ade the 200 fin a l Team m ate Reynolds d id n 't fare as well, p ulling up lame long before the finish line in S unday's heats. The .Americans picked up a pair of track m edals. Austin w on gold in the high jum p with a ju m p of 7 feet, 10 inches — the first A m erican to w in the event since Dick Fos­ bury, renow ned for the "Fosbury' Flop" th a t m ost jum pers use today, w on in 1968. And ham m er-throw er ASSOCIATED PRESS American Kent Steffes spikes the bail against countryman Mike Whitmarsh during the beach votteybaii finals. Steffes and teammate Karch Kiraly took the gold over Whitmarsh and Mike Dodd. Lance Deal xvon a silver ntediáloá his last throw for the first American h am m er m edal since 19S6, The VS, women's soccer team m ad e foe gold medal game with a dramatic 2-1 overtifoé victory ovfiV Norway. The Americansywill meet China on Thursday in foe first-ever women's soccer final. They tied CM) m the first round. Washington, who lost in this year's Wimbledcm ifoals, readied foe quarterfinals with a.fo7 (8-10), 6-0, 6-2 victory over Kbnneth Carisen of Denmark. Amy Chow was the only US, gymnast to win a medal in indi­ vidual events Sunday, tying Bi Wenjiing of China for the silver in the uneven bars. Miller’s homer in 9th seals Astros’ win Associated Press HOU STO N — O rla n d o M iller caught up w ith Joey Eischen, just in time. M iller hit a leadoff hom e run in the bottom of the ninth inning Sun­ day, giving the H ouston A stros a 3- 2 victory o ver the Los A ngeles Dodgers. "T h at's the first tim e I've ever w on a gam e w ith a hom e run," Miller said. "I'v e been kind of strug ­ gling so it w as a good tim e for me to hit one." M iller's 11th hom e run cam e on the second pitch by Eischen (0-1), w ho had entered to start the inning. "1 w as just looking for a good pitch to hit and he got a fastball u p over the plate," M iller said. "In LA, he threw m e a lot of fastballs inside and I w as sw inging late. This time, he threw m e a curve and then cam e w ith the fastball." Eischen m ade no excuses. " I felt g o o d ," Eischen said. "I probably h a d the best stuff I've had in a long time. I d id n 't get a chance to see w here the pitch w as." D an n y D arw in (9-9), acq u ired from Pittsburgh on July 22, pitched tw o innings for his second victory w ith the Astros. He struck o u t two, allow ed three hits and had one intentional walk. " I t's a p re tty good ratio [tw o straight victories]," D arw in said. "It has been an adjustm ent process. The thing I told myself today, you can't go out there and try to blow every­ one away. I have to rem em ber I th ro w 94 d o n 't [mph] anym ore." D arw in struck out Mike Piazza in the ninth w ith a runn er on base to keep the score tied at 2 "You can't be too careful w ith the m eat of their order," D arw in said. "I d id n 't w ant to p ut him on but I sure d id n 't w ant to give him anything to hit. Fortunately, he chased it." The D odgers took an early 2-0 lead behind Ismael Valdes, w ho did not allow a ru n n er to reach second base until the sixth. John Cangelosi singled, took third on Craig Biggio's double and scored on Derek Bell's sacrifice fly. The A stros tied it in the seventh. Kirt M anw aring reached base on a force play, w ent to third on pinch- hitter D errick M ay 's d o ub le and scored on C angelosi's single. "I felt g o od," Valdes said. "It was just a tough gam e, w hat can I say? "I did m y best, I think. This is a tough gam e to lose. It w as a very im portant gam e for us," he said. The Astros finished their 10-game hom estand 7-3 w ith series victories over Atlanta, San Diego and the Dodgers. Maiko Romero and H ector Vinent, a 1992 O lym pic and tw o-tim e w orld cham pion, gave C uba its eighth and ninth quarterfinalists. CANOE-KAYAK W orld-ranked kayaker Scott Shipley took tw o years off from college to train for the Olym pics. In the race he w anted m ost to win, he finished 12th in w hite w ater slalom. O liver Fix of G erm any took the gold w ith a run of 2 m inutes, 21 seconds. CYCLING A m erican M arty N othstein figured G er­ m any's Jens Fiedler needed the "best day of his life" to beat him in the m en's sprint final. Fiedler had it, w inning the first tw o races of the best-of-3 final, and N othstein w ound u p w ith the silver m edal. N othstein lost the first race by less than an inch and never led in the second against the tw o-tim e gold m edalist. EQUESTRIAN A third O lym pic m edal, a bronze by the dressage team, snow ed A m ericans again are a factor on the international scene. G erm any got the gold and the N eth erland s took the sil­ ver, FIELD HOCKEY A ustralia, led by sisters Katrina and Lisa Powell, jolted the U.S. w om en's team for four goals in the first half and w on 4-0, virtually end ing the A m ericans' m edal hopes. The U.S. m en's team rem ained the only team w ithout a w in or a tie, losing to G er­ m any 3-0. TEAM H A N DBALL(W O M EN) The U.S. team lost to H ungary 30-24, elim ­ in atin g the A m ericans from m edal c o n ­ tention. In other gam es, South Korea defeat­ ed Angola 25-19, D enm ark beat C hina 33-21 and G erm any do w ned N orw ay 28-23. ROW ING Rom ania never trailed in w inning the gold m edal in the w om en's eight on the final day of rowing. The U.S. crew finished fourth. The N etherlands w on the m en's eight by a half­ boat length. A ustralia and C an ad a each en ded the eight-day regatta w ith six m edals. The U nited States finished w ith three silvers an d a bronze SOCCER (MEN) N igeria elim inated M exico 2-0 in the q u ar­ terfinals and will face Brazil in a rem atch in the next round. Brazil m oved closer to its first soccer gold m edal with a 4-2 victory over G hana. In their first m eeting, Brazil beat Nigeria 1-0. TABLE TENNIS Defending cham pion Jan-Ove W aldner of Sweden w as eliminated from m en's singles, losing to Johnny Huang of C anada 21-15, 17- 21, 21-16, 21-15. China's Kong Linghui, the world cham pion, also lost. WATER POLO Spain w on its first g o ld m edal, beatin g C roatia 7-5. Italy, the 1992 gold m edalist, took the bronze, d efeatin g H u ngary, a six­ tim e cham pion, 20-18 in overtim e. The U.S. team b e a t Y u g o slavia 12-8 fo r se v e n th place. WEIGHTLIFTING A kakide K akhiashvilis of Greece broke the w orld record for the 218 1 / 4-pound division w hile w in ning his second O lym pic gold m edal. H e lifted a total 925 3 /4 p o und s w ith his best efforts in the snatch and clean-and- jerk. K akhiashvilis set a w orld record in the clean-and-jerk by lifting 518 pounds. YACHTING Hong Kong finally got an O lym pic m edal — a gold Lee Lai-shan clinched the gold in the w om en's M istral Class by w inning the only race of the d a y to bu ild an in su rm o u n t­ able lead over defending O lym pic cham pion Barbara Kendall of New Zealand. ARCHERY U kraine's Lina H erasym enko shot the top individual score in the ranking round, 673 of a possible 720. The best A m erican finished 17th. The ranking round determ ines pairings for individual matches. The South K oreans set one w orld record an d tied another in team prelim inaries. B A D M IN T O N Rexy M ainaky an d Ricky Subagja of Indonesia, the gold m edal favorites, defeated H uang Z hanzhong and Jiang Xin of C hina 15-7, 15-7. Also reaching the sem ifinals w ere Soon Kit C heah an d Kim H ock Yap of M alaysia, 18-17, 15-8 w inners over Ha Tae- kw on and Kang Kyung-jin of South Korea. B O X IN G Am erican A ntonio T arver stopped D avid Kow ah of Sierra Leone in the first round and advanced to the quarterfinals at 178 pounds. Attention any group vuith AC submissions! My current files are so outdated and inaccurate that I am throwing them away as of Monday (TODAY). If your group has an announcement that should stay in the Around Campus section, please fill out a NEW Around Campus form. Please be cer­ tain that all times, dates, names, places and telephone numbers are correct. I apologize for any inconvenience this may cause. Please remember that after 5 p.m. TODAY, only new Around Campus announcements will be printed. You may drop an AC form in the box in the Daily Texan basement, e-mail it to aroundc@utxvms.cc.utexas.edu or fax it to 471-2952. Thank you for your help in assuring that the Around Campus section is as accurate as possible. — Cheryl Gooch Around Campus is a d a ily col* um n l i s t i n g U n iv e r s it y - r e la te d a c tiv itie s sp o n so red by academ ic departm en ts, studen t services and stu d e n t o rg a n iz a tio n s re g istere d w ith th e C a m p u s A c t iv it ie s O ffic e . A n n o u n ce m en ts m u st be su b m itte d on the p ro p er form by noon two days before publication. Form s are availab le at the Daily Texan o f f ic e at 25th S tr e e t an d W hitis A ven u e. N o ch an ges w ill b e m a d e to A r o u n d C a m p u s e n trie s a fter 5 p.m . one b u sin e ss d ay prior to publication. Y ou m ay now s u b m it A ro u n d C a m p u s e n t r ie s b y e -m a il at: a ro u n d c @ u tx v m s .c c .u te x a s .e d u . P le a s e in c lu d e th e n a m e o f the sp o n so rin g organization, location, tim e a n d d a te o f e v e n t, d a te o f a n n o u n c e m e n t, a co n ta ct p h o n e n u m b er and other relevan t in fo r­ m a tio n . Q u e s t io n s r e g a r d in g A ro u n d C a m p u s m ay a ls o b e e- m ailed to this address. O therw ise, p le a se direct q u e stio n s to Cheryl Gooch at 471-4591. The Daily Texan r e s e r v e s the right to edit su b m issio n s. MEETINGS UT T ae Kwon Do meets from 7-9 p.m . M ondays and W ednesdays in L. Theo Bellmont Hall 502-A. Begin­ ners are alw ays welcome. For infor­ m ation call John Ledbetter at 444- 0321. U niversity Yoga C lub meets at 5 p.m. M ondays in the Sinclair Suite (3.128) in the Texas Union Building. DILBERT® LARRY, I'fA MERE TO ANNOUNCE /AY CANDIDACY FOR SUPREME RULER OF TME U N IV E R S E . AROUND CAMPUS The m ee tin g is free to every on e. Please do not eat in the two hours before the meeting. For more infor­ mation call Peter at 495-3924. Open to the public. UT Cycling Club meets 8 p.m. on M ondays in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102 on M ondays. N ew m em bers a re a lw a y s w e lco m e . F o r m ore information call Jeff at 480-8664. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES U T In te rn a tio n a l O ffic e se e k s v o lu n te e rs to help w ith new stu ­ d e n t o rie n ta tio n in A u g u s t. For m ore inform ation p le a se attend a training session on Aug. 7 at 5 p.m. in the International Office Welcome Center by contacting Pam ela Bona at 471-7883. U T 's L e arn in g S k ills C en ter is offering an English Practice Group for students whose first language is not English and who need practice in E n g lish c o n v e rsa tio n . C la ss e s meet 1-2:30 p.m. Tuesday and 12:30- 2 p.m. Thursday through the second su m m e r se ssio n . N ew co m e rs are w elcom e. R egister in Beauford H. Je ste r C en ter A 332 9 a .m .-5 p.m . M onday through Friday. The In tern ation al O ffic e needs volunteer translators and welcom- ers to help new international stu ­ dents and the Student Health Cen­ ter w ith the TB s c r e e n in g and im m unization process. The help is needed 1-4 p.m. Aug. 27-28, Sept. 3- 4, Sept. 17-18 and Sept. 24-24. For m ore in form ation contact Pam ela Bona at 471-1211. D e s ig n a t e d D r iv e r P ro g ra m needs volunteers to answ er phones on weekend nights. For more infor­ mation call Dawn W illiam s at 475- 8252. ________ OTHER________ The T A SP Office announces that a su p p lem en tal TA SP test will be offered on Aug. 12 in selected loca­ tions. This is the last test before the fall sem e ste r. S tu d e n ts m u st call N a tio n a l E v a lu a tio n S y ste m s at (512) 927-5398 on July 29-31 or Aug. 1-2, 5-9 and 12-14. The lin e s are open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. There is a $65 fee. For more information call 471- TASP. L e g a l S e r v ic e s fo r S t u d e n t s offers legal advice 5-7 p.m. on Mon­ d a y s in the Texas U nion Building 3.116. For m ore in fo rm a tio n call Annette Bernier at 471-7796. H a rr y R a n so m H u m a n it ie s R esearch C enter is sp o n so rin g an exh ibition titled "W illiam M orris a n d h is C irc le " 9 a .m .-4:30 p.m . M onday through Friday and 9 a.m. 7 p.m. Thursdays in the fourth floor gallery. For m ore inform ation call 471-8944. U T S tu d en t G o vern m en t offers a d v ic e from the A u stin T en an ts' Council 2-6 p.m. M onday, 9 a.m .-l p .m . W e d n e sd a y a n d 2-6 p.m . T hursday in Texas Union Building 2.222. The Austin Tenants' Council offers counseling and inform ation on tenant-landlord issues. Call 471- 8024. by Scott Adams THAT'S FUNNY/ TELL US A Pi OUT YOUR NEXT MOVIE, SHARON. S O ... WHEN I EMBRACED YOU BEFORE THE S H 0 6 J... m NOT SHARON STONE. I SA ID THAT TO GET ON THE SH0U). I THINK WE'RE BOTH GLAD I HAVE NO VISIBLE MOUTH. \ M i . T h e D a il y T e x a n Monday, July 29,1996 Page 7 Crossword Edited by Will Shortz i 3 7 ... r ... IS W 'w T3 No. 0617 ACROSS 1 T hick slice 5 To th e rear, n au tically 10 First of all 14 J u n e h o n o re e 15 F ra c a s 15 T a u n t 17 P e n n s y lv a n ia an d P ark, e g : A bbr. 18 E le p h a n t of c h ild re n 's lit 19 B u rd en 20 Ad puff 24 O n e of A lc o tt’s “Little W o m e n ” 25 ‘ Jin g le B e lls ” c o n v e y a n c e 33 C o ve rin g for a b ab y’s bottom 34 Fire 35 Future blossom 38 Ad puff 40 Hawaiian garland 4 1 C h a lm e rs (farm machinery name) 42 “T h e j i g !” 58 “Pal J o e y ” writer Joh n 59 15th or so 6 0 Poet L aza ru s 61 Bay w in d o w 62 A lternatives to pastes 63 Socials 64 J e ll-0 s h a p e rs 65 A n g e l’s to p p e r 23 Not so m uch 47 W all S treet 43 P rin te rs ’ m e a s u re s 44 B a b y fa c e d 45 M ost skilled o p e ra to r, for short 48 “T his o n e ’s 28 O s m o s e 49 Ad puff 30 P i e m o d e 57 Pitch ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE s T A N D O F F A s 1 D E S H A V E O V E R G 0 N E X T E X 1 T L A N E A K E T 0 lLj A S A I R N E ■ R E P R 0 - R A v E R S E D ■ v E P s E L O P E ■ L E V ■ E M U D E R 1 D I R A N ■ s T E P D ■ O N G s T O R V M A t- L ■ D E p I 1¡¡J E R 1 T S A N A I M U M A C L I C A P ■ P A P A N A P L E A T T E N ■ T H 0 ■ G 1 N G 0 O G O • L L U S 1 0 N E M P 1 R E V 1 O L E N C E E A s Y R E A D S Y S T E M DOWN 1 A'rmed fo rce s chow item 2 P o p o c a te p e tl em ission 3 U p p e rm o s t 4 P apal th ro n e point site . 5 S u rp rise a ttack 6 A -fram e s up po rts 7 P riests’ ro b es 8 A c h ie v e m e n t 9 P olished m o saic floor 10 E c s ta s y ’s o p p o s ite 11 G a m e sho w a n s w e r s ign al 12 Adjoin 13 Intertw ine 21 Sister of 24-A c ro s s 22 Eastern V I P 25 No lo n g e r fresh 26 B u rd en e d 27 Hip sw iv ele r of fam e 28 Any s o n g by 2 7 -D o w n 1 14 17 20 ■ 33 36 40 43 ■ I 35 I 1 1 " 23 ■ " 44 ,7 I * * 37 38 s 24 | I « 46 ■ It ft 1 jy . 59 62 K 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 60 63 - ■ e e, 64 Puzzle by Sidney L. Robbins 29 S chm os 30 M istreat 31 Dillies 32 M odify to fit 34 Skirt acc es s o ry 37 M o th e r-o f-p ea rl 38 Site for a p o ker g a m e 3 9 -------- City (D e n v e r’s nic k n a m e ) 45 Historical records 46 Y u p p ie 's auto 47 R and M cN ally 52 “Co rn in ’ ------- boo k 48 P a d d le d 49 S h a rp e n 50 A ctor C ronyn the ry e ” 53 Ice pellets 54 Bright th o u g h t 55 A rch er W illiam 56 B y g o n e gas 5 1 la D o uce b ra n d Answers to any three clues in this puzzle are available by touch-tone phone 1-900-420-5656 (75c per minute) Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: (800) 762-1665. D oonesbury by g a r r y t r u d e a u MEAN BUSINESS! 20WORDS 5 S5T 471-5244 DAYS THE DAILY TEXAN *****ym *e*w «*y r****wert||t « X i'w « cm» toe*** i t • m. on toe Uy ot ■ body of Vw art aopy I BUT OUR FI­ NANCIAL ARBAMBS6 / THATS ONLY BECAUSE I HAVEN'T HAP • TIM B ID FULL T06ETHBRA BUSINESS PLAN1 LOOK, 6RBAT' NE&SISAim iS RISKY,,. Super Lonpfeura Want Ads j f c a l l 4 T X - S 2 4 4 fm o N c Y o ' ® V ® r e c y c le 0 / 0 'k c / e r e c y c l e i ® 0 ' 1 c ' ® r e c v c l e c 17 nm rr'i7 a x t r i T a 001171171^0 11 TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS from page 9 EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 7 9 0 -P o rM fc n * 790 FIELD REPS needed $ 6 /h r guor. plus PART-TIME STORECLERK, flexible hrs, bonuses M-Tti, 4-8pm, Transportation dose to campus $ 5 .5 0 /h r. Must be from campus avail N o soles involved a vailab le on weekends A p p ly in CaM C raig 4 5 3 -8 7 8 2 7-22 2 0 6 0 person at 3701 G uadalupe # 1 0 5 or WORKAT-HOME M O M needs sitter lor coll 4 6 7 -7 8 7 8 7-29-2B infant. Port-time regular hours 3- AUSTIN BRANCH of o large Hous­ 7pm Musi be experienced reliable Refs ton low firm is recruiting o porttim e Aliándole 4 5 9 -8 0 6 8 . 7-23-5B ELECTRONICS ASSEMBLER need­ ed for local company. Engineering or other technical majors preferred 20 h o u r$ /w e e k, $ 6 .0 0 /h o u r C oll Trovis at 8 3 7 -0 2 8 3 or e-mail at trav6 ikey.com 7-23-108 person for the Inform ation Systems include hard­ Duties Departm ent w are installation (i e m oving PCs, installing computer components such as m odem s/netw ork interface cards), and software installation at the locol PC level M in o r printer m aintenance responsibilities THE CASTILLIAN food service is K now ledge of D O S /W in d o w s re­ now hiring for the follow ing part- quired, W ordPerfect 6 1 and net­ time positions dishwashers, serv­ ers and hostesses C all Stocy at 4 7 8 -1 7 3 2 7-22- 10B-D works o plus. This person w ill help assist 85 users at o basic level, and ossist IS team with various pro- 790 - Part-time GREAT OPPORTUNITIES! Recep­ tio n ist/ CSR Temp to hire opportunity. Port time 12-5p m Please coll or come by immed ately. Personnel-con nection 3 4 1 0 For West O vd, 3 4 6 3 1 5 5 .7 - 2 6 5B-C Intern-Marketing $7per Hour 20 hours weekly Creative Self-starter 3 point GPA or Higher 476-4744 7 - 2 6 - 2 0 8 800-G eneral »-J—1— s e e n e i p w a r n e d -1 $ 1 7 5 0 WEEKLY possible m ailing 8 0 0 - General Help Wanted 8 0 0 -General Help Wanted 8 0 0 - General Help W anted 8 1 0 - Office-Clerical 8 4 0 - Sales NOW HIRING SECURITY OFFICERS Having a hard time making ends meet? Need extra income without sacrificing your GPA to get it? If so, we have the perfect job for you!! At Zimco we offer. • Full & FVrt Time Positions • • Evening & Night Positions • • Study While You Work • • C ar Not Required • • School Holidays O ff • • .No Experience Necessary • • Uniforms Provided • PRESCHOOL POSITION AVAILABLE Leod and Assistant Teachers need­ ed for the foil of 1996 for the Jew­ ish Federation of Austin's A ccredit­ ed Early Childhood Program in N W Austin. Must like w o rking with young, toddler-oge children C om ­ petitive salary/heo lth in su ro n ce / p a id personal leave, excellent teaching conditions, small class size, worm ond nurturing at­ mosphere Supportive staff ond friendly environment. C o ll 331- C A LL 34 3-72 10 NOW 1144 EOE Z I M C O S E C U R I T Y C O N S U L T A N T S Ucm c * B-03910 BABYSITTER NEEDED by 2 W est Austin mothers (2 children each} for regular n ig h ttim e / weekend sitting 5 4 1 8 7-29-5B GARDEN SPOT DELI PARALEGAL RUNNER F u ll/ Port-time will Iroin. Your relioble, economical cor Also need typist, bookkeeper Near U.T., Nonsmoking 474 -2 0 3 2 . 7 26-20B-D Programming Trainee, U p groding, Backing Up, Troubleshooting Near U.T, Nonsmoking 4 7 4 203 2 7-26-20B-D ASSISTANT M ARKETING director Please contact Shannon, 302- M A C NETW O R KING . Filemoker FUN PLACE TO W ORK needed for entertainm ent business N O W HIRING PART TIME Must be organized, creative, m ar­ COUN1ER HELP Pleose call 835 -1 9 8 5 between 2-4 pm keting oriented ond independent. Job description in dudes the design­ ing of oil types of prom otional m o­ leríais, buying m edio, directing marketing com paigns, coordinating 7-22-48 9 4 1 5 Burnet Rd # 106 distribution of m aterials, organizing 7 - 2 9 5 6 0 publicity ond much more G raphic PART TIME employee needed a p ­ Start proxim ately 10 hrs/w eek. $ 6 /h r South Austin. C a ll for op- pomtment 2 8 0 0 4 2 5 7-24-8B IMMEDIATE O P E N IN G Sales po­ sition for lingerie store. 3-4 d a y s / week C all between 11-7, 458 - 3 6 5 0 . 7-24-5B PT/FT MYSTERY Shoppers for local stores $8.75-*-/hr. Free Products. N o w H iring Coll N ow . 818-759- 9 0 9 9 7-29-3 P 29-58 PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST for Ave- da salon. C entral location. C all 3 7 1 -1 8 1 8 7-25-5B _ _ _ _ _ PC ADMINISTRATOR/ Runner Need transportation Part-time Downtown $ 8 / h r C oll G inny 4 7 8 -4 4 2 2 for more inform ation 7-25-5P PARALEGAL RUNNER. Full/Part-tim e w il train. Your reliable. economical oar. Abo need typist, bookkeeper Near U.T., Nonsmoking 4 74 -20 32. 7-26-206-D M A C NETW O R KIN G , file m o ke r Program m ing Trainee, U p gro d in g , OFFICE ASSISTANT/ SALES- P/T. Previous sales experience helpful. Also, telephone and com puter ex­ perience a plus Flexible hours. C ontact Robert or Eric, 4 5 4 -7 8 2 7 . 7-29-58 TELEMARKETER NEEDED SALARY IN PLUS C O M M IS S IO N APPLY PERSON BETWEEN 9A M -5P M , 1911 A KO EN IG IN 7-29-5B IMMEDIATE OPPORTUNITIES W orm , energetic, em pathetic peo­ ple needed to assist teachers at quality in fon t/tod dler daycare cen­ Bodung Up, TroufcWxxAng Near U.T, ter Previous experience or clase- Nonsm oking. 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 . 7-26-20B D PART-TIME RUNNER/FILE C lerk for D ow ntow n la w O ffice Responsi­ bilities w ill include running errands A general clerical support M ust hove reliable transportation Please send resume to P.O Box 7 6 3 , Austin, es preferred A M /P M shifts EOE. Call Helen or Mary: 478-3113. 7 2 9 - 5 8 . Job Opening Conference center needs EVENT 7 8 7 6 7 or fax to 4 7 4 -4 5 4 7 7-24 9B ASSISTANT Permanent port time, GREAT JOBS FOR STUDENTS • N O W HIRING* Host Persons, Servers, Service Assistants and Dishwasher W ill w ork with School Schedules N o Late Nights STEAK & ALE 2211 W Anderson In 4 5 3 1 6 8 8 7 a .m .- lp m WiH consider *|ob- share* arrangem ent Responsibili­ ties include but are not lim ited to: being on time, making coffee set­ ting out breakfast items, grocery shopping, picking up dirty dishes, refilling beveroges as needed, keeping kitchen de a n and limited office support $ 6 /h r 7 - 2 4 - 1 8 & C Please c o l 451-501 1 for more in­ form ation /inquiries 729 5*C lects Pay is $ 7 .5 0 /h o u r, 2 0 our circulars. N o experience re­ hours per week desired Send re­ quired Begin now For info coll sume to C. Sandusky, Baker & 301 -3 0 6 -1 2 0 7 6-19-47P Both, 9 8 San Jacinto Blvd., # 1 6 0 0 , Austin, TX 7 8 7 0 1 . SECRETARY W ITH Com puter Skills 7 - 2 5 - 1 8 O ffice experience helpful. Flexible schedule $ 7 /h r C o ll M ott 480- PARTY ANIMAL?? We’ll pay you up to $151 University of Texas at Austin Department of Psychology You must be at least 21 years old to participate TENNIS ASSISTANT for afterschool 8 0 8 3 7-25-106 tennis program quired Must be reliable and have Experience re­ own transportation 4 4 2 -3 4 4 0 . 7- VA NS AUTO PARTS DELIVERY DRIVERS A N D EXPERIENCED AUTO PARTS SALES PERSONS IN ­ NEEDED. FULL/ PART-TIME QUIRE W /M A N A G E R AT A N Y OF OUR SIX LOCATIONS 7-23-20B 4 7 1 8 9 9 3 PARALEGAL RUNNER. Full/ Poritime wiS tram Your reliable, economical cor Abo need typist, bookkeeper Near U T , Nonsmoking 474 -2 0 3 2 . 7 -2 6 -2 0 6 0 EMPLOYMENT - 8 0 0 GENERAL HELP WANTED People shouldn’t be paid to have this much fun. B ut w e a re . TELLERS United Heritage Federal Credit Union is looking for energetic, cus­ tomer service oriented people to provide the best quality, personoL ized service possible W e have the follow ing full and port time tell­ er opportunities for bright, enthu­ siastic, friendly applicants: Georgetown Branch 501 W University Ave M-F 1 3 0 pm - 6 :1 5 pm North M opoc Branch - Austin 122 0 8 N . M opoc Expy M-F 3 :00 pm -7 :1 5 pm M E 8 :3 0 am - 2 pm Flooting Tellers ¡full-time) Must be flexible Schedule and branch wiH vary UHFCU w ill train new team mem­ bers in cosh handling, products ond services The Credit Union offers a M l line of competitive company pa id benefits ond on opportunity for growth w ithin on aggressive fost- poced organization Applicants ore welcome to apply ot ony of our Austin or G eorgetown locations Customer Services Assistant. H andle routine soles ond support by interaction w ith customers phone ond e-mail C oll (rocking, da­ tabase entry ond m onogem enl Re­ quire d: Excel, Filemoker Pro, MS W o rd . Problem solving abil ties. Ex­ design experience o b ig plus. Sol- ory depends on experience; oil Fax resume to levels considered 4 9 9 -0 5 7 2 or brin g by to 6 0 0 W 28th # 1 0 1 . soon as possible. Position begins os 7-2958 cellent oral ond written communico- Assistant office m anoger ond tion skills. A p plications resourc- es0d oedalus com or Human Re­ receptionist for centrally located entertainment business. Must hove sources, The Daedalus G roup, 1 1 0 6 C layton Lone # 2 5 0 W , Aus­ tin, Tx 7 8 7 2 3 . N o calls please enthusiostic dem eanor, pleosont phone personality and be oble to w ork in fost-poced, multi-tosked 7-29-584) environment Computer experience O ffice Assistant. Hondle phones, moil, freight ship­ ments Inventory and order office supplies Routine office duties Pre­ fer Filemoker Pro , MS W o rd Teom worker w ifow itialive 10-20 hours/week Required Initiative, detail-orientation, demonstrated computer skills, excellent oro! ond written com munication skills. Applications: resources ® doedo- lus com or Human Resources, The Doedalus G roup, 11 0 6 Clayton Lane, # 2 5 0 W , Austin, Tx 7 8 7 2 3 N o colls pleose. Optus. M -f, 9am-6pm Early August start ot $ 7 /h r with health benefits Fax resume to (512) 499- 0 5 7 2 or moil im m ediately to 6 0 0 W . 28th #10 1- Austin- 7 8 7 0 5 Small Law Firm looking for honest, hard-working person who likes variety such as running errands, filing, yord ond pool maintenance ond other odd jobs Must hove ow n rel abie transportation Hours or# M-F, 1 2 :3 6 5 p m Extend A Care for Kids is now hiring supervisors and group leaders. We offer a fun filled, stimulating experience with flexible hours and competitive wages for qualified persons wanting to work with elementary age children. No weekends No shift work. Just weekday afternoons of fun. Come join us. Must be at least 18 with high school diploma/equivalent For information on how to apply, call Extend-A-Care for Kids 472-9402 EOE 7 - 2 9 5 6 4 ) C all 4 7 6 - 6 0 3 6 . students preferred, no p rio r exper­ 7-29-5B 7 2 6 5 8 ience necessary 4 7 7 -6 6 5 2 7-18-206 LIQUOR STORE in W estlake oreo Evening shifts and Satvrdoys. AH duties 3 2 7 -7 9 2 0 7-25-76 7 -2 * 2 8 CHILD DEVELOPMENT or Educa­ tion major- Part-time nonny during August $ 6 / Hr. 45 3 -4 0 9 5 7-29-58 Summer W ork Program FULL A N D PART-TIME SHIFTS AVAILABLE WiH Train • G arage Attendant • Front Desk Attendant Perfect ¡ob for student, • $ 1 0 start • P T/F7 P osition s • Can continue in foe fall 8 2 0 - Accounting - Bookkeeping SHORT WALK UT. G ain experience w ith M oc boo kkeepin g system Also hiring typists, clerical, runners. Nonsmoking 474 -20 3 2 7 -1 2 0 6 4 ) 8 4 0 - Sales 8 8 0 - Professional GOURMET SHOP seeks full-time help V oried responsibilities Ap­ ply in person between 2-7pm. Ul- ly& C o 1601 W aterston ot W est Lynn 7-23-5B 8 9 0 -C lu b s - Restaurants retired person or second job Appty to CAMBRIDGE TOWER C O N D O S 1801 LAVACA 7 2 6 5 8 Call 703-5669 PARADIGM IS H irin g Store HelpA 8 1 0 - Office-Clerical 7 2 9 2 8 4 ) Campus Reps for the FoH semester EARN $ 7 -1 0 /H R DeL»ery drivers CoH 4 7 2 -7 9 8 6 or com e by the needed Flexible hours Mucker's store located at 4 0 7 W 24th to W in g Factory 2 2 2 2 Rio G rande or a p p ly Freshmen and Sophomores 4 6 9 -9 4 6 4 7 -2 6 5 B SHORT W ALK UT Typists (wiH Preferred 7-25-68 AIRLINES $8 $ 1 5 / H I Flight At­ tra in on M oc); Bookkeeping tendants Reservations Ri - p Agents and trainees C lencol; Runners N o n ­ mqre 1-800-508-5565 ext 8 4 2 2 smoking 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 7 - 1 6 2 0 6 0 Job info servee 7 -2 9 5 B C TO PLACE AN AD IN THE SUPER LONGHORN WANT ADS CALL 471-5244 i ü Sales-onented experienced Telemarketers ore needed for current credit cord projects • • • • • • • • • • • REQUIRED SKILLS • Reliability • Prior telemarketing experience • G ood computer skills • Excellent verbal skills WE OFFER: • base + Incentive • Generous incentives • Great benebfs pockoge poid insuronce a fter v0 day: • Day, e ven in g & weekends shifts a v a ila b le • Paid training • O ngoing supervision 454-4467 305 E Huntfond IMS Innovative M a rk e tin g Solutions 8 5 0 - Retail Retail tales person available approxim ately 3 0 hrs, week. Evenings ond weekends A self motivated ond creative person for shop with antiques, home furnishings, gifts, ond g eenhouse 9 0 0 - Domestic- Household ARERSCHOO L CARE Pick up my two children, oges 1 5 & 1 1 and care for in my hom e M -f, 3:3 0 - $ 6 / 6 30pm . Start dote 8-12-96 hr.v-gas money NW Austm Trans­ po rta tio n s references required. 33 l-6 5 4 8 |e v e n in g s ), 8 3 8 2 0 8 8 (days). 7 - 2 6 4 6 FAMILY NEAR campus seeks port, time child care help. Flexible hours. Experience preferred 4 7 6 5 9 1 3-ofr-r 3pm 7-23-5B Jane PART TIME nanny (or 2 kids. 3 ond 6 M-F, 1-6 Must en|Oy children, hove go o d driving record C o ll Lori, days- 2 6 6 -2 1 2 6 , evenmgs- 3 2 9 -0 7 2 5 7-24-208 , FAMILY ASSISTANT NEEDED for busy fam ily with appealing teenage son Errands corpooiing, o nd visits to elderly grandmother 3-6 weekdays beginning after Aug 15. N e ar compos O ccasional weekends if desired 4 d r cor preferred Must have references 4 5 1 -7 7 8 8 7-24-138 C oll Lori at 2 6 6 -2 1 2 6 N A N N Y W AN TED Toddlers B> or send resume to The Front Porch: 6 5 5 0 Comonche Trail, lingual preferred 3 h rs /d a y , M-F* $ 5 -6 /h r. W est Austin Referenc­ Austin, TX 7 8 7 3 2 es, car required 4 7 2 -0 9 1 9 . 7- 7-24-208 25-58 7-2958 8 6 0 ~ Engineering- Technical ASSISTANCE W ITH after school 9¡ yeor-old child 3-4 d o y s /w k must ahve relioble transportation 3 4 3 - PART-TIME COMPUTER technic tan 0 3 5 9 . 7-24-5B needed lo r Austin office. Pleose fax resume to (7 1 3 )9 8 4 -1 2 3 0 with salary history. 7-29-5B 8 7 0 ~ M edical FEMALE NURSE'S a id / housekeepers $7 0 0 / h r , flexible hours, needed PART-TIME CHILDCARE N e eded After School For Fafl. Two odo r- able boys oges 3 & 7 G rea t Envi­ ronment! Must be res p o n s ib le ^ hove own transportation Referenc­ es required Please ca ll M issy 4 5 3 -2 0 6 7 o r Christine 7 0 7 -0 7 0 8 Page 8 Monday, July 29, 1996 T h e D a ily T exan To Place a Classified Ad Call 471-5244 or on-line at: http://fetumedia.jou.utexas.edu/ CLASS/ cía sf o mn. htm I Classified W ord Ad Rates Charged by Che word Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply. 1 day........................... $ 6 15 2 days ..................... $ 1 1 .7 0 3 days....................... $ 1 6 .6 5 4 da ys....................... $ 2 0 4 0 .................... $ 2 3 .2 5 5 days First two words may be all capital letters $ 2 5 for each additional w ord le tte rs. MasterCard and Visa accepted ca p ital in Classified Display Ad Rates Charged by the column inch One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces and size s and bo rde rs available Fall rates Sept. 1 May 30. 1 to 21 column inches per month. $ 9 .2 0 per col. inch over 21 column inches per month. Call for rates FAX ADS TO 4 7 1 -6 7 4 1 8:DO-5:00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.2ÜÜ Deadline: 11:0G a.m. prior to publication TRANSPO RTATIO N 10-Misc. Autos 20—Sports-Foreign Autos 30-Trucks-Vans 4 0 - Vehicles to Trade 50-Service-Repair 60-Parts-Accessories 70-Motorcycles 80-Bicycles 90-Vehicles-Leasing 100—Vehicies-Wanted l i M1 4 - 4 h\ i n= -*1 110-Services 120-Houses 130—Condos-Townhomes 140—Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-lots 160-Duplexes-Apartments 170-Wanted 180— Loans £ M E R C H A N D ISE 190-Appliances 200—Fumiture-Household 210-Stereo-TV 220—Computers-Equipment 230—Photo-Camera 240-Boats 250-Musical Instruments 260-Hobbies 270—Machinery-Equipment 280-Sporting-Camping E quipment D Q il_Pi irmfi mo A n n lia n c o P o n F a l C 3 U i Ul 1 ilLUl c M ppildl IL/ti fiCllLCii 300—Garage-Rummage Sales 310-Trade 320-Wanted to Buy or Rent 330—Pqts 340—Longhorn Want Ads 345—Misc. RENTAL 350—Rental Services 360—Furnished Apts. 370-Unfumished Apts. 380-Fumished Duplexes 390-Unfumished Duplexes 400-Condos-T ownhomes 410-Fumished Houses 420-\Jnfumished Houses 425—Rooms 430—Room-Board 435-Co-ops 440-Roommates 450-Mobile Homes-Lots 460-Business Rentals 470-Resorts 480-Storage Space 490 —Wanted to Rent-Lease 500—Misc. ANNOUNCEMENTS 510—Entertainment-Tickets 520-Personals 5 3 0 -T ravel-T ransportation 540—Lost & Found 550—Licensed Child Care 560-Public Notice 570-Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580-Musical Instruction 590-Tutoring 600-Instruction Wanted 610-Misc. Instruction SERVICES 620—Legal Services 630 Computer Services 640—Exterminators 650-Moving-Hauling 660-Storage 670-Painting 680—Office 690-Rental Equipment 700-Fumiture Rental 710-Appliance Repair 720—Stereo-TV Repair 730—Home Repair 740—Bicycle Repair 750-Typing 760—Misc. Services E M P LO Y M E N T 770-Employment Agencies 780-Employment Services 790-Part Time 800—General Help Wanted 810—Office-Clerical 820—Accounting-Bookkeeping 830-Admimstrative- Management 840-Sales 850-Retaii 860—Engineering T echnical 870-Medical 880-Professional 890-Clubs-Restaurants 900-Domestic Household 910—Positions Wanted 920-W ork Wanted BUSINESS 930-Business Opportunities 940—Opportunities Wanted M A S T E R C A R D & V IS A A C C E P T E D in ADVERTISING TERMS In th e e v e n t of e r r o r s m a d e advertisement notice m ust be given by 11 a m the first day, a s the publishers are r e s p o n s ib l e fo r on ly O N E in c o r r e c t insertion All claims for adjustments should be m ad e n ot later than 3 0 d s y s after publication Pre paid kills receive credit slip if requested at time of cancellation, and if a m o u n t e x c e e d s $ 2 . 0 0 S lip m u s t be presented for a reorder within 9 0 days to be valid Credit slips are non-transferrable In c o n s id e r a t io n of the D a ily T e x a n 's a c c e p t a n c e of a d v e r t is in g c o p y fo r publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harm less, Texas S tu d e n t P u b lic a t io n s and its offic e rs, em ployees, and a g e n ts a g a in st all loss, liability, d a m a g e , a n d e x p e n s e of w h a ts o e v e r n a tu re a r is in g ou t o f the c o p yin g, p rintin g, o r p u b lish in g of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of nght of privacy, p la g ia rism an d c o p y rig h t and trademark infringement TRANSPORTATION REAL ESTATE SALES II REAL ESTATE SALES MERCHANDISE I RENTAL 1| RENTAL 10 - Misc. Autos 130 - Condos * 130 - Condos - 350 - Rental Services 360 - Fum. Apts. 360 - Fum. Apts. RENTAL 1 360 - Fum. Apts. RENTAL RENTAL 370 - Unf. A p t * . 370 -U n f. A p t s . Blue, V6, Added features, One owner, clean, Well maintained Extra $4200. Call Marc at 873-0552 7-24- 5B 1 9 8 9 D O D G E Aries- Runs Great, 89K, It. Blue, 5sp.( N o a/c, $ 2 0 0 0 net. 343-2158 7-26-5B 1 9 7 8 2 4 0 -V O IV O 70k miles Runs great 4-door roomy, good work car, no A/C. $ 1 2 0 0 N eg Call 918-2899 7-26-5B 1988 AEROSTAR, A/C, Auto, new paint, tinted windows, 3.0 V6, Only $2650. Call 450-1899 7-25-7B 20 - Sports-Foreign Autos 1982 B M W 320i, Auto, sunroof, 4 dr., looks and drives gpod, will finance. 4 5 0 -1899 7-25-7B 1985 S A A B 900, 5 spd, cold A/ C, clean car, dependable, possible financing 450-1899 7 25-7B 1983 M A Z D A RX7 G Sl, A / C , 5 spd, 89K miles, strong running, $ 1 4 5 0 cash. 450-1899 7-25-7B 198 2 VO LV O Turbo, 5 spd, sun­ roof, drives good, make reason­ able offer. 450-1899. 7-25-7B 1978 VO LVO 242-GT Needs work. $ / 0 0 Negotiable Contact Will 263-4319. 7-29-5B 19 9 3 H O N D A Civic LX. A M / F M cassette, AC, cruise, 5sp., green, 53K, Excellent Condition $9700o- bo. 708-9977. 7-26-4B 70 - Motorcycles '8 4 -Y A M A H A FJ-600 17k miles. $1200. Looks good, runs great. Recent tune-up. Need to sell. 249- 8932. 7-295B 80 - Bicycles M O U N T A IN B IK E CLEARANCE M any Reduced to Cost!!! BUCK’S BIKES 928-2810 REAL ESTATE SALES 1 3 0 - C o r t d o s - T o w n h o m e s FOR SALE Palmetto large 1-1 FHA Approved, 2 .5 % Financing 2 Covered Parking Spaces New AC, New Carpet New Fridge $69,900 Call Jared 474-4800 7-245BC $ 1 7 5 0 D O W N I Beautiful, Fully Loaded 1-1 Condo. 2 Blocks from Campus. Call Kevin 476-1124, RPI 7-25-20B-D U.T. Experts For Sale l a r a s : « m s Treehouse ‘ Palmetto ‘Overlook ‘Elms 1-1 1-1 1-1 1-1 2-2 1-1 2-2 2-1 4-2 37K 42K 49.9K 54.9K 57.9K 67.9K 68.9K 70.9K 71.4K 75.5K 79.9K 89.9K ‘Travis Green 2-2 San Gabriel PI. 2-2 58.5 K Georgian 2-2 67.5K Wedgewood 2-2 ‘Pointe ‘Croix ‘ Paddock Robbins Place 2-2 St. Thomas Pecan Walk 'Denotes FHA 2.5% Down 476-1976 H P 200 - Furniture - Household B e d s , B e d s , B e d s The factory outlet for Simmons, Seoly, Springoir. Vife carry closeouts, discontinued covers, & foctory 2nds. From 50-70% off retoil store prices All new, complete with warranty, i Twin set, $69. Full set, $8 9 Queen set, $119. King set, $14 9 1741 West Anderson Ln. 454-3422 270 Machinery- Equipment Peari 1-1 w/!cft$47,500 Shadowtree 1*1 3000 Guadflktpe 1 -1 EH. Paddock Orangetree ‘Overlook Treehoose levue EH. 1-1 1-1 .1-1 Wedgewood 2-2 Enfield Townbome 2-2 2-2 Somerset W. Univ. Place 2-2 (owner financed) $33,000 $33,000 $35,000 $48,000 $56,500 $67,500 $67,500 $71,000 $81,000 $81,500 $85,000 Lennox Croix 2-2 2-2 $85,000 $92,000 ‘Orangetree 2-2 $108,000 4 FHA Financing 476-2673 1 2 1 4 Barton Hills Dr., #20 1 Studio condo. Great location near Zilker Park. Functional plan with delightful patio deck. Updated in­ terior M any special features $36,000. Call for details or to see 4 4 7 -2 1 0 5 Ruth M e Caleb ' KELLER W IL L IA M S REALTY G as Paid I Efficiency, $380. IBr, First Call Properties 448- $414. 4800, 1-800-504-9067 7-5-20B FREE PRO FESSIO NA L LO CA TIN G SERVICE for condos, apartments, duplexes, and houses. Call Austin Preferred Properties. 260-0808 7-11-20B 360 - Fum. Apts. J / Now Preleasing One Block From Campus • 1 B R & 2 B R • Ceiling Fans • On Shuttle • Laundry Room • Fully Furnished • Pool • Permit Parking • On-site manager/ maintenance • Vertical mini-blinds • Affordable deposits R i o N u e c e s 6 0 0 W. 26th 474-0971 7-25-5B PRESSURE CLEANERS. Complete, ready to use, $99. 1-800-333- 9274. 7-25-1 OP 200 - Furniture Household 350 - Rental Services Blow Off Campus ™ It's Too Expensive! — We Have Well Priced Locations A l[0 v e r Austin Apartments* Duplexes r Homes * OondonÉims With over 20 years serving Austin's leasing needs 443-2526 — Rental Referral- A Free Service [ FREE DELIVERY 1 For UT Students! I 1 • T W IN SET w /FR AM F $ 8 9 9 5 •FUL! SET w 'FR A M E $ 9 9 95 ¡• Q U E E N SET «/ FR A M E $ 1 3 9 951 • 4 DRAW ER CHEST ¡•STU DEN T DESK • S O F A S •5-PIECE DINETTE $ 49.95] $ 6 9 9 5 $ 1 6 9 9 5 $ 129.95 C e n te x Furniture W h o le s a le . 6618 N. LAMAR 2001 S. LAMAR 4500988 445-5808 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE YOUR SUPER LONGHORN WANT AD! F u r n i s h e d I - 1 $ 5 2 0 1 - 1 l a r g e $ 6 5 0 2 - 1 2 - 2 $ 8 7 5 $ 9 2 5 WEST CAMPUS Apartment Finders Service 2 109 R io G r a n d e 4\ 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 ALL BILLS PAID- fully or partially furnished. Preleasing for summer or fall from $505. Properties Plus 4 47 7368. 7-2-20B-D RENT SPECIALS- All new 1,2,3 or 4 BR's with access gates, free ca­ ble, sport activities director. On shuttle. For summer or fall. ‘ Proper­ ties Plus 447-7368 7-2-20B-D T W IN BED $40, Drop-leaf table $100, M i­ $30, Macintosh-SE crowave $30. Call Anne 302- 0 3 6 6 7 2 3 5B USR EXTERNAL modem, 28.8, un­ used, $100. Com paq Notebook 486DX/25, 8MB, 210MB, 1 44M B B&W , VG A, W in 3.11, D O S 6.2, $ 5 0 0 4 6 2 -3760 7-23-5B W E N O K A REFLEX Scuba Fins. Like new, used 2 5 times. Mens size-10, adjustable $40. Like new PADI wheel $20. 462-3528 7-24-5NC BLACK SW IVEL chair $20, Chest $10, Black halogen torchiere $12, Dining set- black glasstop $50, Bookshelf $15, Coffee table $25, Two lamps $3 each, N ew (seoled in box) car seat- Century 2 0 0 0 $45 322-0556 7-25-5B COMPUTER, 4 86/66, 4 M B RAM, 4 1 6 M B HD, 1 4.4 fax modem, 14" S V G A color monitor, M IC R O SO FT OFFICE $ 7 5 0 obo, computer desk $ 1 0 322-0556. 7-25-5B BUNKBED, WHITE metal frame, mattresses included. $75, obo‘. Call Missy 440-7646 7-25-5B IBM Com­ LAPTOP CO M PU TER patible. All original materials in­ cluded Very new condition. Rare­ ly used 472- 4265. Ask for Denise 7-24-5NC Price negotiable recorder TV $125, VCR $125, Reel to Reel tape turntable $75, vacuum cleaner $25. 339- 3146. 7-25-5B $250, O LYM PICS TICKETS- M e n's Foot­ ball (Soccer) Final. 3 / $ 3 0 0 O B O Athens, G A Call Lisa 479-0447 7-24-5NC 86 H O N D A ELITE 15 0 Scooter: 16K, metallic blue, very good con­ dition. Great for student. $650. 708-1663. 7-29 5B M O V IN G SALE- Desk $30. 2 0 ' color TV $75. Matías 478-7677. 7-19-5P M A I L O R D E R B L A N K O r d e r b y M a i l , F A X o r P h o n e PAX: P.O. Box D Austin, Texas 78713 471-6741 Classified Phone: 471-5244 2 0 w o r d s 5 d a y s S5 Additional W ords....$0.25 ea i 7 13 19 25 8 14 2 0 2 6 3 9 15 21 27 4 10 16 2 2 2 8 5 1 1 17 2 3 2 9 6 12 18 24 3 0 lim iter) to p riv a te p arty (n o n -c o m O ffe r m a r c ia l) a d s onty in d iv id u al ite m s o ffe r e d tor s a le m a y n o t e x c e e d $ 1 , 0 0 0 a n d p r ic e m u s t a p p e a r in (tie b o d y o f m e a d c o p y If ite m s a r e no t so ld fiv e a d d itio n a l in s e rtio n s will b e run a t n o c h a r g e A d v e rtis e r m u st nail b e f o r e 11 a m on t h e d ay o f t h e fifth in s e rtio n N o th an r e d u c tio n in p r ic e ) is a llo w e d c h a n g e (o th e r co p y ADDRESS. CITY.....................................................STATE ZIP. NAM E...............................................................................PHONE. THREE OAKS & PECAN SQUARE APARTMENTS * 1 BDR/1 BA Fully Furnished Laundry Room Community Atmosphere On Shuttle No Application Fee Preleasing On-site manager • Affordable deposit 4 5 1 -5 8 4 0 4 0 9 W. 38th St. W a lk To C a m p u s HOUSTON 2801 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 DALLAS 2803 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 BRAND YW INE 2808 Whltis Ave. - 472-7049 WILSHIRF. 301 W. 2 9 th -472-7049 Great Locations! • Preleasing • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Central Air/Heat • 2 Blocks From IT • No Application Fee • 1 BREA • On-site manager • Affordable deposits 7-120&C 1 / 2 Block from Law School Pre-leasing in Hyde Park Large EFFICIENCIES From $435 FREE CABLE Furnished and Unfurnished DW/Disp/Bookshelves Pool/BBQ/Patio La und ry/Storage/Res. M g r. "IF" Shuttle 1 08 Place Apartments 108 W. 45lh Street 452-1419, 385-2211, 453-2771 W EST C A M P U S O N E B ED R O O M FURNISHED, AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY SU M M ER O N LY S 4 4 0 /M O . WITH $ 1 5 0 DEPOSIT G AS, WATER, CABLE PAID O N W C SHUTTLE ROUTE. B A R RA N C A SQUARE APTS. 9 1 0 W 26THST. CALL 467-2477 7-5-20BC 2-BLOCKS UT, 1-Br 405 E 31st, M A U N A KAI, 31st & Duval. $450 + $ 2 0 0 +electric. Rent to August 30 or M ay 30. Appointment 453- 8812. 7-12-20B-D W A L K /B IK E T O C A M P U S Avalon Apartments: 32nd at 1-35 •2-2 $ 6 4 5 •1-1 $ 4 6 5 •Eff $ 4 2 5 Convenient engineering, law, LBJ school and all East Campus Walk- in closets, ceiling fans, on-site laun­ dry, mgr. 4 5 9 -9 8 9 8 O p en 7 days a week 7-17-2050 GREAT OAK- Spacious, Quiet, 2-2's, CA CH , Fans, Walk-in Closets Pool, Cable Red River/30th. S800-S850 472-2097, 477-3388 7-26-16B-D 3 0 2 W 38th Fall/ Spring Leasing on efficiencies & 1 bdrms. Convenient to Hancock Center, UT, and Hyde Park. Half a block to shuttle. All appliances, pool, laundry room, gas, water, and cable paid. 453-4002 7-12-205C GREAT 1 B E D R O O M A P A R T M E N T S ! Furnished, Quiet, $450/m o. Tower View Apartments 9 2 6 E. 26th St # 2 0 8 3 2 0 -0 4 8 2 7-13-206-0 ^ T t Y D E P A R K - O N E B E D R O O M $5.25 New Furniture, Fans Large Walk-In Closet 4 3 0 7 Avenue A 454-9945 7 18-20B-C C A S A DE SALADO APARTMENTS Best Deal in West Campus Only 2 Units Left "Family owned ad managed . property "Fully furnished "Swimming Pool "Laundry Room "Owner pays for basic cable and gas(heat and stove) and water/waste wate» "Pest Control Call Brian Novy at 477-2534 7-25-5B-C C O M M O N S JEFFERSON sufv lease. New apartment, 1 br in 4-2 includes apartment. utilities. immediately. Call Andrea 1-800-5SPRINT, PIN # 2 5 5 2 8 2 0. 7-25-5B $370/mo., Available RENTAL - 360 FURNISHED APARTMENTS Chaparosa Apartments 3 1 1 0 R e d R i v e r C l o s e t o U . T . Small, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks from Law, on shuttle, attractively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bille paid. Efficiency to 3E3R 474-1902 Starting from $490 appliances, 2-1, w/hordwood floors, ceiling ac/ch. Very fans, Nice Available-9/1. Lease $ 8 5 0 / mo 454-2987 7-24-5B W alk To Campus Ready to Move in Nowl Park Avenue Place 3 0 th / S p e e d w a y Lrr l - l * All Bills Paid * Free Cable/Parking * Effienciencies Only * Large Refrigerators * Ceiling Fans/Microwoves * Fully Furnished . * Controlled Access * Laundry Rooms * 1 Block to UT/ Engineering Bldg * Close to all Shuttles "Very Cool Residents * Quiet ‘2 0 Y e a r s S e r v i c e ” $395 m $521 $755 m $495 S5ÜI) $195 $750 1 - l F u rn ish e d Free (¡us 2-2 2-2 Washer/llner \iirlli (anipiis Eff IF l- l Free Fable 1-l 2-1 Free Fable 2-2 New Carpet Nice, Honest, N o Hassles! Call for Fall Prices! Call 474-2224 1-888-474-2224 7-22-2050 FURNISHED 1-1 $5201 West Cam­ pus Balcony! Pool. Apartment Find­ ers Service 322-9556. 7-26-5B FINDERS APARTMENT http://www.ausapt com afs@Jump.Net 322-9556. 7-26-5B service (e-mail) W alk To Campus Ready to Move in Nowl Shuttle F/W. ( 1 U . PV. SR SI50 1-l Free Fable $H25 2-1.5 Free Fable $050 2-2 Access líales $700 2-2 Washer/llner “\nd Mam More” 2109 Rio (¡raidt1 322-9556 hlt|)://ausap(.(oni CUTE 2-1, Great Location. West Campus, All Bills Paid, Parking $ 7 5 0 474-7732. 7-2-20B c J A I l S x • W alking distance to campus • Spectacular 9 and 12 month lease rates • Huge t Bedroom-1 Bath floorplan • Free Covered Parking • Recently Refurbished Interiors • Separate Study Areas w/ Built-In Bookshelves • Suitable for Roommates 28 1 2 N u e c e s CAMPUS AREA’S “MUST S E E ” ADDRESS 472-3816 ountícutcC APAftTMCNT HOMES 1 BR st. @ $440 2 BR st. @ $550 2-2 ABPS650 $100 OFF 1st Month E L with Thb A é fli Available Immediately for more info cod 4 5 4 -2 5 3 7 UVE ALONEI Great efficiencies, West Campus, all bills paid, complete Summer, 9 kitchen, closet space months, 12 months. $4 2 5 -$ 4 7 5 4/4-7732. 7-2-20B W EST C A M P U S Spacious 2-21 O Shuttle!! Onty $75011 $5 0 off Jun. July, August! Available Nowl Front Pag Propert.es, 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 7-2 2 0 B C RENTAL - 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS M a Maison Dorm 23rd/Pearl * All bills paid * West Campus * Free Coble/Parking * Luxury Lobby/ Dining Hall * Exercise equipment * Computer Area * Housekeeping * Fully Furnished . * Controlled Access * Laundry Rooms * Close to all Shuttles * Community Kitchen , Nice, Honest, N o Hassles! Call for Fall Prices! Call 474-2224 1-888-474-2224 7-22-2050 370 - Unf. Apts. C A S A G R A N D E Now Leasing Effs (ABP) $475 1 -1 Extra LG (.ABP) $ 5 7 5 • Furnished or Unfurnished • near I T • jx>ol • laundry • parking • large roorn^ • On I T shuttle 1400 Rio Grande 474-2749 L a C a sita • Only 2 blocks to I T • On site maintenance • Community Pool • Tastefully decorated • On Site Laundry • 1 and 2 bdrra floor plans • Summer ¿4 Fall Spring availability • Covered Parking • Gas heat and water paid • Best value in North Campus Size! 12 months j) months t Summer J j r $ 5 5 0 [ $ 5 7 5 1 1 4 5 0 2-11 $ 6 5 0 1 $ 6 7 5 I $ 5 7 5 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 AVAILABLE NOW SUMMER and FALL ★ l - l ’sflr 2 - I s ★ Ga s C ooking, G as ★ G as. W ater (Sc Cable H eating Paid ★ On CR S hu ttle ★ $ 4 5 0 / $ 5 9 5 plus e le c. S A N T A F E A P A K T N tN T S I IQ I C lay to n i ane 4 5 8 - 1 5 5 2 LARGE MODERN Efficiency In vmoll well maintained, quiet complex Great kitchen, lots of windows, covered parking Year lease N o pets. $440 1 0 I 3 W 23 451-0414 7-5-20BD W EST C A M P U S Efficiencies $ 3 9 5 -$ 4 5 0 Quiet area Call Nick Manogement 6581 343 2402 7-8 2 0 & 0 I -1, Kemp 476- 1 W o o d L s__/zatuxts. sJ o u n d in 1 1V o o J ia b s: • Four UT Shuttle Stops • Spacious One & Two Bedrooms • Ceiling Fans • Hike 8c Bike Trails • Sunrise Lake Views ( 11'liLj n o t ¿S ta it. £njotfinij lij t at 1 lldocifabs tod.au? 443-6363 c,b& S Q U A R E Apartments * N O W PRELEAsLNl, * FI RNISHED/T\n :RMSHFD * 5 BLKS FROM CAMELS * w c s H i m f sroE * E F F IC IE N C IE S * DELUXE M * 2-1 ECONOMY STYLE * o n-s t ie m a n a g e m e n t ALL BILLS PAID 2212 San Gabriel Street Austin, Texas 78705 (512)474-7732 Super Kates Starting @ $755 • Walk to Campus ■ 9 and 12 mo. lease terms available • Spacious 2 Bedroom-2 Bath Apts. • Perfect Roommate Floor Plans Campus’ ‘Must See Swimming Pool • Beautifully Landscaped Courtyard • Picnic Area with Barbecue Grills • Reserved Carage Parking available • On-Site Laundry Facilities • On-Site Mgmt. and Maintenance 2 B 1 0 Salado B e s t A d d re s s in C am pus" ^ a jT s' " F a ll P R E - L E A S I N G — REDUCED RATES 9-12 Month Cease Now Available EH., 1-1, 2-2 Apartments and Condos North & West Campus M A R Q U I S MANAGEMENT CO. 472-3816 or 454-0202 38TH/AIRPORT- EFFICIENCY. ■ “ APARTMENT FINDERS service $365 478-3128 7-11-20&C B t ó t í n g u t ó i i e b Pat 452-3324, Pager 867-2489 l í f e á t p l e THE GABLES © 1 808 Rio G ran d e pool, volleybaU ond tennis courts Great Houses Near UT R EN T A L R EN T A L R EN T A L R EN T A L Great Location North Campus 2/1's & 1/1's available for pre-leaslng. On U.T. Shuttle. Gas, Water & Cable Paid. D o n 't m is s o u t c a ll 454-0202 for appointment. I HILLSIDE APARTMENTS 1-2 Bedrooms Furnished of Unfurnished Clean and Quiet All Utilities Paid 514 Dawson Road Just off Barton Springs Rood 478-2819 7-8-208-0 OUIET, SP A C IO U S 1BR. Separate ■ng, W 'O connection, Walk-ins, Pano storage, Fireplace, Shuttle. Starting $450. Call 447-7565. 7- 8-2QB-D c o v e n t r y ”p l a c e Suttutcen^ieiet Condominiums Half Month Free 2-1 available now, $585 Free cable, w/d conn., fireplaces, garden window, ceiling fans, pool, Capital Metro Bus Route 833 Fairfield®Lamar 837-7397 All Bills Paid Close to Campus Effs, l-I’s Starting @ $415 472-3816 CARING OW NERS Personalized attention only. Efficiencies starting from $385 to $445 O ne bedrooms starting from $495 to $545 Two bedrooms starting from $695 to $800 Gorgeous, Colonial Three Bedroom Hardwood Floors, Super Large $1450 KHP 476-2154 7-1 206C LARGE EFFICIENCIES Special Rates Small, quiet complex Remodeled D / W , CA New floors, pool, laundry $200 deposit N o pets or roommates Available Now Preleasing Call Sandra ond leave name, number, and best time to call 474-5043 ext 103 7-2-206-C Spacious & Convenient Eff $390 1-1 $440 1-1 $490 2-1 $590 Sorry, no preleasing On Bus Route # 1 Straight to C o o p W alk to Grocery ] “ - ■ - - -I A r\¥e 'iw/i T V W u 5606 N. Lamar Blvd. 451-1917 Luxury 1-1 's, Tile, W / D Fireplace, Microwave, Crown Molding. Available Fall from $560 Call Presidio Group 476-1591 709 West 26th Apt. Cute Courtyard Efficiency, Tile, Kitchen, Close and Convenient From $445/mo. Call Presidio Group 476-1591 Summer/Fall/ Spring Special Rates! W a lk UT 21,2-2, CACH Pool, laundry facilities cable connections, dishwasher, disposal, plenty of parking. 4745929 •AMENITIES GALORE* •indoor basketball 'fitness center ‘ study library ‘ sauna pool volleyball One, two, and three bedrooms from $505. ADVANTAGE PROPERTIES 443-3000 or 1-800-578-8341 7-11-2080 SERIO US STUDENT APARTMENT IN HISTORIC HYDE PARK VILLAGE On-site study rooms, cord access gates, covered parking, bicycle garages, pool/hot tub Huge floor plans designed for roommates 4 minutes by bike from UT. Quiet community with upper-level and graduate students in mind Call 451-2343. 4305 Duval St. 2 bedrooms. Ask about our GPA rebate program. M EN T IO N THIS AD FOR $500 DISCOUNT! uuVAL VSLLA APARTMENTS 7-15-2080 SMALL CLEAN and Quiet Complex. 7-2206C Centrally located at 711 W32nd. W e offer rent discounts every month I 453- M O V E IN SPECIAL- 2 BR Town-homes on shuttle $599, Efficiencies only $395 Limited access gales, only 15 min shuttle ride to campus Proper‘¡es Plus 447-7368 7-2-2 0B-D L O W DEPOSITS, summer storage, ■units being assigned now for sum­ mer or fall Hurryl Properties Plus 447-7368 7-2-20B-D 4991 h*p://www Abreak4students com email- abreok@best com 7-1 1-20B-D EFFICIEN CY W ITH all bills paid (450 Sqft) $495 month Orre year lease only Good for graduate students G arag e Apartment in South Austin. 445-5709. 7-22-20BÜ THE ELLIOTT SYSTEM G reat N orthern A pts. I • New Carpet • New Tile • Laundry Room • Near Hike & Bike Trail v $ 389 a month • $150 deposit 371-0652 WELCOME BACK STUDENTS!!! LOOKING FOR THE BEST VALUE IN AUSTIN, CALL THE ANDERSON GROUP AT CAROL 458-9091 MANY SPACIOUS FLOORPLANS TO CHOOSE FROM INCLUDING: - SOME WITH PAID CABLE, WATER, GAS - 10 MINUTES TOUT - UT SHUTTLE ROUTE - RESIDENT ACTIVITIES - SAND VOLLEYBALL - WALK-IN CLOSETS AND MUCH, MUCH, MUCH MORE! PRICES STARTING AS LO W AS$450! WITH THIS AD RECEIVE $100 OFF SECOND MONTHS RENT! WELCOME BACK STUDENTS!!! LOOKING FOR THE BEST VALUE IN AUSTIN, CALL THE ANDERSON GROUP AT SHONNA 447-5971 DAR0U 440-0592 JEANNE 385-7284 M ANY SPACIOUS FLOORPLANS TO CH O O SE FROM INCLUDING: - 10 MINUTES TOUT - UT SHUTTLE ROUTE - SOME WITH PAID CABLE, WATER, GAS - RESIDENT ACTIVITIES - SPARKLING POOLS - SAND VOLLEYBALL - - TENNIS & BASKETBALL COURTS - CEILING FANS - WALK-IN CLOSETS ICEMAKERS AND MUCH, MUCH, MUCH MORE! PRICES STARTING AS LO W AS$450! WITH THIS AD RECEIVE $100 OFF SECOND MONTHS RENT! 7-15-208D DUPLEX IN west campus. 1-1 with hardwoods and W / D $650/mo. 7-26 326-8010 DP: 3042862 10B-C RED RIVER SPACIO US 1-1 **ONLY ONE LEFT** in quiet complex on shuttle, walk to campus, large pool, landscape grounds, laundry, water/cable paid, ideal for Grad, Law Students. $ 5 1 0 453-2363 EFFICIENCY NEAR UT, $325-$345, on UT shuttle. New carpet, paint and tiles. 472-6979. 7-1620B-D LARGE EFFICIEN CY on shuttle ro­ ute. 2500 Burleson Road $410/ mo. Call 444-8411. 7-18-10B-D AVAILABLE IN August, 1-1's and 2- 7-8-206-D 2's. W / D in Unit. On Shuttle Ro­ ute Ice Maker, Ceiling Fans, Pool, Hottub Call Apartment Headquar­ ters, 442-9333 7-17-10B-D LAKESIDE LIVING, 10 minutes from UT, Riverside area, weight room, sand volleyball, controlled access, spacious balconies, shuttle, 2-1, $535-$560, call PMT © 4 7 6 2673. 7-17-20B-D 7-8-206-0 1 BED R O O M apartments in small, quiet community Free cable, hot/ cold water No pets. 835-5661 7-19-20B-D 6903 DEATONHILL Drive, large efficiency, $415/300, pool, club­ house, 327-8833 or 450-6300. 7- 18-10B CONVENIENT LOCATION 1920'S 1-1 Cottage Oak floors. Quiet, Just north of UT 3009 Fruth Yew Lease $725 472-2123. 7 25-20B 1904 S A N Gabriel. 1-1, $500, completely remodeled 2-1, $700. Marcus Management. 320-0010. 7-25-5B REMODELED EFFICIENCIES W est & North Campus! Some utilities paid, On site laundry, Near shuttle 1 Year Lease $425 Call Pedro 499-8013 W est Side Group 7-25-78C W EST C A M PUS 1-1's from $515/mo. 2-2'S from $755/mo. Call 326-8010 DP 304-2862 7-265PB-C AVAILABILITY O N ail shuttle routes. FW , IF, RR, NR, PV, SR, CR. Apartment Finders Service. 322-9556. 7-26-5P-C W E ST C A M P U S Efficiency- $415 Microwave- Access Gates, Pool. Apartment Finders Service 322- 9556. 7-26-5P-C NORTH C A M P U S efficiency $395 Clean Community. August availabil­ ity. Apartment 322-9556 7-26-5B Finders Service NORTH C A M P U S 2-1'$ $695- $710 9 & 1 2 month leases Call for appointment. Apartment Finders Service. 322-9556 7 26-5P APARTMENT FINDERS service http://www ausapt.com (e-mail) afs@Jump Net 322-9556 7-265B 1717 W E S T 35th Huge 2-2. Very Nice $725 451-0988 7-26-10B-C 7-9-206C 1 Bedroom $395 2Bedroom $495 On Bus Route to Campus Completely remodeled gos/water paid. Fenced yard Dog OK. $450 445-6872 or 458-8198 7-266B On-site Manager 3 BLOCKS UT. Clean, cool room. ABPI Laundry Room Free Cable $295. 2303 Rio Grande Call 4800976 M-Th, 6-7 am only 7-29-10B-D Ready to Move in Now ll Call 926-7377 7-18-208C refrigerator. 0 10B 7-22-2080 from $360 (shared) to $525 for 2-1 NEAR UT Shuttle Large fenced 7-23-2080 yard perfect for pets, Large master SMALL 8-UNIT complex, 2-1. tile, CA/CH, stove, salillo 1-block to #47 shuttle. $495/mo. Discovery: 478-6520. 7-29-5B EXTRA LARGE FIVE BED RO O M two bath apartment. 2811 Salado Available Aug 25. Walking dis­ tance to campus $ 1500/mo. 258- 4131. 7-29-10B LARGE 1-1 $495. 4209 Burnett. Available 8/23 for more informa­ tion Call 371-3488. 7-29-5B 380 - Fum. Duplexes Graduate or Law student quiet/ UT shuttle Red River 2-1 + living ar. $750 467 9733. 7-3 20B 1201 BR EN T W O O D : 1-1; garden fresh yard/ garbage main­ ivy tained; bus/ UT access. $515. Appointment, 459-1713 7-29-5B 300 - Unf. Duplexes BLOCK W E ST UT G O R G E O U S Share large restored 3br/2bath with 3 roommates. Whole second floor Hardwoods, yard. Light, airy. C A /C H , W / D , immaculate, quiet. M any amenities Rooms wonderful private room w / screened porch, fireplace. 474-2014 7-10-2060 1915 DAVID- 1/1 G arag e Apt w / hardwood floors Quite unique and only blocks to UT $575 4 7 6 1976 EPI 7-15-20B-D 2517 HARRIS- Pemberton Heights large 2/1 with 1 garage Hardwood floors, ceiling fans, microwave, W / D connections $1 100/mo Available 7/16 Ely Properties 476-1976. 7-22- 20B-D bedroom. Fireplace, Garage, Alarm to study. Ideal place system. $835 327-4246 723-6B THREE BLO CK S To Campus! Big 4-2 Duplex. C A CH , Hardwoods, Ceiling fans, High ceilings, Lots of windows, Outside storage August to August lease $1700/mo. Owner, 477 971 2 7 25-10B 400 - Condos- J Townhorm i UNIVERSITY REALTY 474-9400 P R E - L E A S IN G CMteaniai: 3/2 Available Aug. 15th. unit has full size W/D AND Covered Parking. $1600. DomMoa Candes: Located next to St. Davids Hospital Cozy 2-1 with W/D, Available 8/25 $825. Crfltx: 2-2 Unit will have new carpet and paint. Perfect for 3 people. $1200. 2-2 West Campus 900 sq. ft. Hurry only 3 left at $850 6 bdr.-2 story House Heart of West Campus. Large bedrooms, great porch, new paint. Overlooks Shoal Creek Hurry! $3,000 NOW LEASING FOR FALL Old Castle Hill Eff. $450 Eff. $450 Paddock 1-1 $575 Wedgewood 1 1 $575 Pecan Tree Rio Grande Condos 1 -1 $600 1-1 $750 Croix 2-1 $850 W'edgewood Sunchase 2 2 $900 31st S t Condos 2-2 $950 2-2 $1100 Benchmark 2-2 $1300 Orangetree 476-2673 LARGE 1-1, Perfect location, spacious enough for roommate $525-650. All bills paid. 474-7732. 7-18-20B NORTH CAMPUS AREA 2*1 $675-725 On UT Shuttle Route, Pools, Laundry Facilities, and Morel 11 Call Melanie 451-2268 Ravenwood Properties 7-18-2080 W alk UT 2-2 (832 Sq. Ft.) $625-$675 Eff (362 Sq Ft.) $345-5395 All bills paid except A C.-heating saving at least $50/month New carpet, paint, Appliance service. Swimming Pool Furnished/Unfurnished Special Discount for one year lease and/or paying up front Voyagers Apt. 311 E. 31st St. North Campus 478-6776 CLOSE TO campus. Large effi- ciences from $375- $435. Several locations to choose from. Very nice 451-0988 7-22-10 B C 1 '$ 2's 3's ♦ Eff's Available Starting $425 •On shuttle •Lake side views • Swimming pool •Laundry room Call 444-1458 ENFIELD SHUTTLE. Charming com­ munity: Lorran Apts. 1000+ sq It 2bdrs. from $800 Ceramic tiies, pool, big windows, many closetsl Jennifer at 444-0687 7-23-10B-D D O W N T O W N 2-1, $665 Walking distance to UT and A C C Pool and laundry on premises 708-8845. 7-24- QUIET O N E Bedroom 301 W est 39th. Large pool, courtyard, laun­ dry room, central air Half block from UT Shuttle $425/ month 326-9215 or 459-9832 7-23-5BD HYDE PARK, on shuttle, 1/1, $425-500 2/1, $625 G as/ water paid 4412 Ave A, 458- 2525 7-24-5B-C WALK TO CAM PUS I Charming and Spacious North Campus Apartments M ’s $575 2-1 's $710 2-2's $835-860 W ater /Trash Paid W alk or Take Shuttle to UT Swimming Pool, Laundry Facilities Call Melanie at 451-2268 Ravenwood Properties 7-24-680 Prime Crest Apartments 9001 Northgate Boulevard Austin, TX 78758 836-7231 Royal Crest Apartments 9300 Northgate Boulevard Austin, TX 78758 836 42 37 Spacious 1 and 2 bedroom apart­ ments available nowll I Large p a tios/balconies lots of doset and storage space, pool, laundry, cov­ ered ptcnic/BBQ area, trees and scenic courtyard views Call or come in todayll Prices start at $445 7-26-208 T O W N H O M E 1 bedroom, 2 baths Secluded Balcony, Trees, Ceiling Fan, No Pets $550 701 North Loop New Intramural Fields 454-9945 7-29-208C h y d eTp a r k 4510 DUVAL Great Location by Bus Stop Efficiency $445 1-1 plus Sunroom $465-545 Ceiling Fan, No Pets 302-5699 7-26-208C W E S T C A M P U S Entire Upstairs of Victorian House C A CH , Lots of windows 4 Open space 2110 San Gabriel Funky but cool $825 Year lease 472 2123. 7 25-206 W E S T C A M P U S Very Large 1-1 in Renovated Victorian 10ft. Ceilings, Fireplace, Varnished woodwork W o o d floors, CACH . TileA G b ss Block Bath $825 Year lease 100! W 22nd St 472-2123 7 25-206 » C o m e e x p e r i e n c e & i H o r e • I and 2 BR available • Luxurious Interiors • Beautiful Grounds • W/D in even unit •Pool • Hot Tub • Microwave • Oh UT Shuttle • Ind. Alarm Systems • 1-Ts S695-S725 •2-2’s .«-$1200 MARQUIS MANAGEMENT CO. 472-3816 Fail 1 -1 $775 S S Buena Vista 12-story) Uj Croix fc Gazebo 1 -1 [§ Nueces Place 1 -1 1 -1 (2-Story) Orangetree Pointe Treehouse (Garage) 1-1 1-1 1-1 $7751 $550 $800 j $825 | $625 $800 1-1 2-2 $675 $1300 | Wedgewood [a Chestnut Sq gj (3 Story 1 I 3200 Duval tij Pres Square m Wood Floors) ¡I Quadrangle 2-2 S I200 ft Large) ft I 31* St. Condos2-2 $950 E 2-2 S I 200 ¡1 (i Sunchase ¡5 jS (Nicely Furnished) 2-2 $1400 | 2-2 S l l O o f e m NUECES OAKS Contemporary, Luxury Living • 2 BR Townhomes • Luxurious Interiors • Pool/Hot Tub • Washer/Dryer • Covered Parking • Microwave •Shuttle • Large Floorplan MARQUIS: ‘m a n a g e m e n t CO C O F F E E I W 1 H I H B u e n a V is t a C h e ls e a C r o ix E n fie ld P la c e G a z e b o G u n te r PI. H a n c o c k PI. $ 7 5 0 - 7 7 5 $ 8 5 0 $ 7 0 0 - 1 2 0 0 $ 8 7 5 $ 5 2 5 - 7 0 0 $ 8 5 0 H y d e P a r k O a k s N u e c e s C o rn e r N u e c e s P la ce $ 5 5 0 - 7 7 5 $ 9 2 5 $ 6 7 5 $ 7 7 5 $ 6 7 5 $ 1 0 5 0 $ 5 7 5 $ 7 7 5 O r a n g e t r e e P a r a p e t P e c a n Tree S e to n $ 9 5 0 3 1 s t St. St. W e s t. U n iv. Pt. $ 1 0 5 0 M a n y Others A vailable ! 2 8 1 3 Rio G ra n d e # 2 0 6 474-1800 CARIN G O W N E R S One bedrooms starting from $550 to $785 Two bedrooms starting from $795 to $1275 KHP 476-2 1 54 7 1-206C TWELVE O A K S C O N D O 2-2's from $950 Controlled acess gates, garage Pool/ hot tub Responsive on site manager Call for an oppomtment 704 W est 21 st street 4 959585 7-5-206C ~ * L O F T $ 4 8 0 * ~ SPIRAL STAIRWELL W / D included Studios $405 1 bdrs $435 Advantage Properties 443-3000 or 1-800-578-8341 RENTAL - 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS f PARK PLACE O N THE LAKE t-35/RIVERSIDE T h e D a il y T e x a n Monday, July 29,1996 Page W EST C A M PU S 1 Bedroom Garrett LONELY? CALL TONIGHT! Apartment Upstairs in Victorian House W o o d floors, Lots of light 900-988-3008 Ext 9085 per min. Must be 18 yrs $ E $565 Year Lease 908 W 22nd 619-645-8434 7-265P 610-ffUftc. Instruct BRUCE LEE’S JEET KUNE DO | KALI AND GRAPPÜNG f CALL ABOUT CLASSES after 4:00 - 892-4557 7 5 0 -T yp in g 7-29-56 ▼ Resumes ▼ Papers / Tbeses ▼ Laser Printing ▼ 79€ Color Copies ▼ Rusk Jobs Mitel's Copies 1906 Guadalupe St 472-5353 ACCURATE TYPIN G onto m+ school applications Laser p> word processing Disserta+ons, papers 454-2355 anytime 7-1-2 M M m m 7 9 0 - Part time ON FIRST DONATION ONLY ] W COUPON/EXP. 8/15/96 $20 EACH DONATI $165 PER MONTH Can Donate 2x/week Schedule Own Time • Extra Clean, State-of- the-Art Facility • Only 15 Minutes from UT Campus B IO M E D ANEW High Tech Plasm a Facility Please Call for Appt. 251-8855 West side IH-35 behind EXXP HOURS: 8AM-7 PM , IH-35 & Pflugerville Exit ** Stoneleigh Condos** West Campus Summer Housing! 2-2's (850 sq. ft) starting at $899 1500 W O O D IA W N - Large unique 1/1 vaulted ceiling with all possi­ ble amenities $850/mo. Avail­ able 8/20 Ely Properties 4 7 6 and 1-1's starting st $699 1976. 7-24-20B-D Available immediately 2-2 available August. Wes Wallers Realty 345-2060 1212 GUADALUPE - Luxury 1/1 Penthouse high-rise All bills paid. $750/mo Availoble 8/25 Ely Properties 4761976. 7-24-20B-D 7-15 206-D M EA D O W S- LOADED 2/2 on UT Great community with: shuttle 3 story townhome style 2/2.5 with loaded with omem- 2 cor garogel Available 8/25 $ 1100/mo. ties 476-1976 EPI. 7-15-2060 N U EC ES PLACE- 2206 Nueces- huge $700//no. Available Now Ely Properties 4 7 6 1976 Y-24-20BD C O RN ER STO N E PLACE, 24th at Rio Grande, 1-1's, W / D , M i­ crowave, Covered Parking Nathan at 2 story 1-1, vaulted ceilings, plenty of PMT, 4 762673. 7-24-5B light, quiet community only 2 blocks to UT, $775. 476-1976 EPI 7-15-20B-D H A N C O C K PLACE- 914 E.32nd- 2/1.5 unique community, hard­ wood floors, large open floorplan, pets negotiable, $950. 476-1976 EPI. 7-15-20B-D O R A N G E TREE- 2/2.5, great for roommates, most desirable unit in the most desirable complex in the W est Campus, $1500. 476-1976 EPI. 7-15-2060 W O O D R O W 5604 Woodrow- Huge 1/1.5 Townhome SQUARE- style condo, easy bus ride to UT. Quiet community, $650. 4 7 6 1976 EPI 7-15-20B-D OLD CASTLE HILL, nice efficien­ cies in small, well-maintained com­ munity, ideal place to study, avail­ able now, $450-$475 Call PMT 0 476-2673. 7-17-20B-D CROIX, 1-1, $750, all amenities, available Aug 25. Call PMT © 476-2673. 7 17-20B-D O RANG ETREE, 2-2 luxury condo, great far 2-4 roommates, $1350. Available Aug 25. Call PMT © 476-2673. 7-17-20B4) 1910 RO BBIN S Place- 2/2 with all amenities, vaulted ceilings, great west Ely campus location. $1000. Properties 476-1976. 7-18-20B-D VERY LARGE CONDO 2-2 with 2 car garage, 1550 sq.ft. On West Campus New carpet, Microwave, Dishwasher, Washer & Dryer Available for Fall Call Melani 476 7059 or 833-8974. AVAILABLE N O RT H W EST Hills 1-1 Condo. $550/mo. Call Pat, Agent 331-8757. 7-18-10B O N E HALF O FF FIRST M O N T H 'S RENTI 2BR Condos Lamar/183 W / D conn., FP, REF, Cable, Pool. Some with new carpetl $585/mo. ACP: 419-0099. 7-23-6B-D W est Campus Condos Lennox Condominiums 23rd&San Gabriel 2/2 avail, immed. $1150 1/1 avail. August $725 INTRAMURAL FIELDS- Unique 1 bed­ Very pri­ room, 2bath townhome vate, secluded $550. No pets balcony, trees 701 North Loop 454-9945. 7-2620B-C RARE 9M O N T H Leasel Huge 2-2 at The Lenox. Only $1100 Cafi Kevm 4761124, RPI 7-25-20BD GREAT LOCATIO N! 2-2 condo in W est Campus. W / D , Microwave, covered parking, fresh paint and carpet $950/mo 3 26 8 0 1 0 DP: 3042862. 7-2610BC N E W S FLASH- 9mo. leases on Condos from $975 washer/ dry­ er, covered parking. Tower Real Estate 322-9934 7-265P-C GREAT 2-2 W asher/ Dryer, mi­ crowave, covered parking, W alk to school, accomodates four people Tower Real Estate 322-9934. 7-26 5P-C FURNISHED 1-1 $5201 West Cam­ pus Balconyl Pool. Apartment Find­ ers Service 322-9556. 7-26 5B http://www.ausapt.com afs@Jump.Net 322-9556 7-265B (e-mail) W E ST C A M P U S 1-1 Washer/Dry­ er, Microwave, Desk, Patio, $585 Apartment Finders Service 322- 9556 7-29-5P-C 410 - Fum. H ouses 28EDROO M , 1-BATH in Old Enfield. 5-minutes from campus. 2-blocks from shuttle. Hardwood floors, private backyard. Visiting professor strongly preferred 6937. 7-29-4B-D Rent negotiable. 477- 420 - Unf. Houses 1. No Pets. 480-8518. 7-2-20B-C lyr. $2100. FPP SECLUDED/ TREESI! 1-1's. Older, Uniquel Porches! MLK/ Lamar 8/1, N o Pets, lyr. $625. FPP 480-8518 7-2-20B-C TARRYTOWN HOUSE Grod student needs 1-2 roommates to share great home JUST W EST OF CA M PUS, 24th/Windsor. T W O SHUTTLE ROUTES, W /D , phone, spacious porches, trees, many amenities in great area One bedroom ($325 all bills paid) All units covered-parking, fireplace, OR Efficiency living area ($475 all spa, pool. bills paid) OR 1/2 house with only 2 sharing Contact Janeo 451 -7444 or 6 0 6 rent ($600 all bills paid) 9254 DP for info. 478-0926 6-6-7B D O W N T O W N C O N D O . Safe, Clean, Quiet Near Hike&Bike Trail. 2Bedroom-1 Bath G as/W ater Paid. $725 335-4024 7-24-10B CEN TEN N IA L 2-2. Fully furnished, Covered Berber carpet, Pool, parking Available Now $1300. Call PMT 476-2673. 7-24-20B-D RIO G RAND E Condos Split Level 1-1. W /D , Microwave, Small Quiet 7-8-206 Six bedroom luxury home. 2818 Rio Grande. By appointment only. Security system, hardwoods, fireplace, yard, deck, C A / CH, energy efficient, high ceilings, large rooms, W / D connections, carpet, etc. W a lk to UT. 482-8680 7-11-20BC Community $600. Available Now Cal BLOCK W E ST UT PMT 476-2673. 7-24-20B-D SU N C H A SE C O N D O S Two bed­ room. Huge Pool, Gated, Covered Parking. $950. Coll PMT 4 7 6 2673 7-24-20B-D G O R G E O U S Shore large restored 3br/2bath with 3 roommates Whole second floor Hardwoods, yard Light, airy. CA/CH , W / D , immaculate, quiet. M any amenities. Rooms LARGE 1-1 Westcompus Fndge, stove, from $360 (shared) to $525 for St 472-2123 7-25-20B 4-2 DUPLEX Big bedrooms Lots of trees, windows, charm. Quiet area, hardwood fans, extra storage floors, C A CH , 3 blocks to UT Close to shuttle $ 1700/mo 1 year Available mid-August O w n­ er 477-9712. 7-25-106 * 4 0 )2 Ave. D, 3 3, $1500 *3200 Merrie Lynn, 3-1, $950 ‘ Efficiency, $415. *1704 E. 38th, 3-2, $1000 *1703 E. 20th, 3-1 and 3-3, $900. 494-1972 Call far appointment. FOUR BLOCKS UT. Foil openings -Furnished, Each bedroom has private Quiet, kitchen. Share both. nonsmoking, petfree CA/CH. Singles from $465 ABP/ Doubles from $295 ABP 474-2408. 7-9-20B-D BLOCK W EST UT G O R G E O U S Share large restored 3br/2bath with 3 roommates Whole second floor. Hardwoods, yard Light, airy. CA /CH , W / D , immaculate, quiet Many amenities Rooms from $360 (shared) to $525 for wonderful private room w / screened porch, fireplace 474-2014 7-10-20643 909 W E S T 22nd Private, secure, quiet, Spacious, A /C, high ceil­ ings, hord-wood. Share kitchens, baths and yard W alk UT. $275- SHARE A Four-Bedroom House Private Bedroom. Non-smoking, non-drinking only Clean, quiet, air conditioning. Call at work, 4484)048 7-23-5B UT Shuttle access. W E S T C A M P U S W alk to-UT. Large furnished bedroom in beautiful 2- story home. Hardwood floors, ac/ch. Female only. Graduate students preferred Availoble 8/15/96. Lease-$295/mo +share of utilities. 454-2987. 7-24-5B N IC E R O O M To Rent Hills Home in Barton $350 All Bills Paid Except Phone. 448-3917. 7-25-3B $200 Deposit. ROOMMATE SERVICE Looking or have a place UT ID Discount Business Since 1988 Served over 7,000 people Sam, 453-4396 440 - Room m ates 7-5-206-C a n r X T - T . T T - T X T T T T T I S U.T.’s ROOMMATE SO URCE Instant Service - Student Discounts Member Better Business Bu'eau ‘ Texas Ex-owned since 1989' 171) Son Antonio {at 1 8*) WINDSOR ROOMMATES 495-9988 f c T T . T T T T T T T T T T T » j i FOUR BLO CKS UT. Fall openings Furnished, Each bedroom has pri­ vate bath. Share kitchen. Quiet, nonsmoking, petfree CA/CH. Singles from $465 A BP/ Doubles from $295 ABP. 474-2408 7-9-20B-D BLOCK W EST UT G O R G E O U S Shore large restored 3br/2bath with 3 roommates Whole second floor. Hardwoods, yard Light, airy. C A /C H , W / D , immaculate, quiet M any amenities Rooms from $360 (shored) to $525 for wonderful private room w/ screened porch, fireplace 474-2014 7-11 206-0 2 House $200 Deposit. $450/mo All Bills Paid. 454-3063. 7-17-20P SHARE A N E Austin three bedroom home with professional woman. $350+ l/2utilities N S N D N ear busline 338-1743 7-23-5P ROSE DALE. H A RD W O O D S CACH, W / D , Trees, Quiet neighborhood Laid back, Neat, Responsible M/F, $320 DP 370-7158 "25-3P ANNOUNCEMENTS B U N G A L O W H O U SED 5/3 Multi­ 7-18-206-0 level! C A /C H , M LK/ Lamar. 8/ Co-ops YM CA C O M E TO W O R K TO PLAY Afterschool Staff. 2:00pm to 6:30pm W EEK D A Y S 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 days/week opportunities av~ able Supervising and interacting with children. Various sites in Ac tin. Starts Aug 10th. $5/hr. be ginning. YM CA membership bp fits. Apply in person at 1809 E. Sixth Street. SHORT W A LK UT on train Typ.sts h M ac); Bookkeeping trainees: Clericol; Runners. N smoking. 474-2032. 7-17-20B-D OFFICE ASSISTANT/BOOKKEEPER. Basic occoun g SECRETARY. computer skills needed Te'r experience offered Convemen< flexible hours. 458-3636. 7-1020B HARD W O R K . Gooa Pay $5 + bonus ($ 6 $ 1 0 / hr) Co: G e oi for interview 505-2349 7-10-2Cb HOTEL FRONT desk and moir tenance positions Some exper ence preferred Apply in pe 5656 IH-35 North North. EOE. 7-18-10B Roodway In- CHILDCARE FOR 2 childrer 3 1/ THREE COLLEGE Students Need 7-10-206-0 Roommate ASA P Northwest Area 3- wonderful private room w / screened porch, fireplace 474-2014 Huge, Magnificent 6 or 8 Bedroom, 3.5 Bath! HOUSE FOR LEASE Approx 4000 sq. ft. WALK TO CAMPUS! 10 Parking Spaces with 4 Car Garage! Must Lease Now! Make Best Offer 506 West 22nd @ Nueces For Leasing Information Call Brad (Collect) at 713-784-7758 5 1 0 7-18-20P T k t n f e W EST CAM PUS 3/2 $ 1500 All bills paid Newly -emodeled, has porch. Call Coffee Properties 474-1800 7-25-5B TEXAS AT Colorado Football Texas 2 , 1 ) M ,W 3 30-7:30. Must hovt at Colorado Football Texas ai Coi- orado Football. Ticketman tronsp., refs. Mopac and Bee Coves $6/hr 3 069026 7 25 5B A W E S O M E 8-BED, 3-bath, 5-car garage 2203 Nueces Asking $3500. Call Kevin 4 76 1 1 2 4 RPI 7-2620B W EST CA M PU S 1920's 2-1 Bungo- low W o od floors. High ceilings, Fireplace. 10005 W .22nd St Year Lease $975 472-2123. 7-25-20B (303)430-1111. 7-29-20B 520 - Personals W A TER SKI partner needed to help drive my boot Experience not necessary 2 6 6 75 30 7-24-5B Continued on page 7 EDUCATIONAL - 610 MISC. INSTRUCTION D W , M W , ceiling $575/mo 353-5051. 7-25-20B fans, pool. FOR LEASE Available in August! 2-2, New carpet, New point. $ 1150. Coll Jored 474-4800. 7-24-5BC CENTENNIAL- LUXURY 2/2 totally Nice pool and 2 redecorated covered parking $ 1300/mo. Available 7/1 Ely Properties 476- 1976. 7-24-20B-D TOM GREEN- Large 2/1.5 close to law school. Amenities include: W /D , reserved parking microwave. 2 $900/mo Properties 476-1976. 7-24-20B-D Available 8 /20 Ely PRESERVATION SQUARE- Umque 2 story 1/1 5 unit with spiral stair­ case and 20' vaulted ceilings. Available 8/25 Ely $825/mo Properties 4 761976 7-24-20B-D BU EN A VISTA- Large 1/1 with all amenities One block to business school Totally redecorated 1 /96. $775/mo Available 8/25 Ely Properties 4761976. 7-24-20B-D O R A N G E TREE- Large efficiency inside pool level Covered parking $675/mo in unit with W / D Available 8/25 Ely Properties 4 7 6 1976. 7-24-20B-D 3BED-2BTH C O N D O For Rent $1300 2216 San Gabriel New Carpet& Point. W o n 't lostl Coll Nick at PMT, 4762673 7-297B-D 1500 W O O D IA W N - Large un que 2/2 vaulted ceiling with oil poss ble amenities $ 1200/mo. Available 8/25 Ely Properties 4 7 6 1976 7-24-20B-D RENTAL - 435 CO-OPS 3506 SPEEDWAY- Nice 1/1 on Marcus Management Personalized attention only Most luxurious condos Lots of units starting summer shuttle All amenities including sau­ na, microwave, ceiling fans, etc $600/mo Available 8/25 Ely Some pre-leasing for fall Properties 4761976 7-24-20B-D *2905 Rio Grande, 2-1, *2907 Rio Grande, 3-1, $ 1 100/mo $ 1 700/mo *607 2941/2 St , 1-1, $750/mo *2911 Rio Grande, 5-2, $2300/mo 320-0010 7-265B 1920’S 1-1 Cottoge Oak floors Quiet, Just north of UT. 3009 Fruti Year Lease $725 472-2123 7 2620B V > v 7 V > / J l A - v J l Y i Y A X ▼ X L fOOPFR ATTVF SUMMER HOUSING AVAILABLE! 2-5 blocks from campus • single & double rooms • all bills paid 7-11-2060 $350-400 per month • food included • kitchens open 24 hours 34TH4 SPEED W A Y 1/1, cov ered parking shuttle close fire place, W / D , C A /C H , microwave 474- balcony, airy Fall $650 2024 7-12 2 08 0 AT C A M PU S Cambridge Towers 24 hour S e Luxury Highnse 2-2 curtly Amenities paid 476-8076 7 24-20P $1495, bills m onth to m onth co n tracts available & options for short term hosteling I n t c r - C o o p c r a t i v c C o u n c i l S10W 2.3rd • Austin, Tx -,8~’0S p i i ó 1 2 ) r o - i ' i s " • t . i \ ( S i 2) i " " ( v f ~ \ s * j LEARN Bartending Short Term Program * M Lifetim e Placem ent í Assistance 833-0303 National Business School 825 E. Rundberg In.. Ste B 3 DO YOU WANT TO IN C R E A S E YOUR TOEFL* SC O RE BY AS MUCH AS 100 PO IN TS? Then take T helE LS TOEFL* Preparation Course 10 Weeks 1 hour classroom instruction, day V Experienced, trained teachers I/'1 Practice tests with explanations V* 1 extra hour/day of practice of all 3 sections (including new format) with the most current practice books 0 1 institutional TOEFL* at IELS Language School Phone: 476-3909 1501 West 5‘ Suite D Fax: 476-6004 E-mail: iels©88net net Visit our Web Site at httpJheww 88net net/iels/home htm 10 T h e D a ily T e x a n MONDAY, JULY 28,1888 ENTERTAINMENT UT student film going places a comic strike IT i l l mm - - ¡¡c % 5 1 * - Woody and Randy team up fo r a few pokes at the low- stakes world of professional howling THOMASYOO Daffy Texan staff Kingpin is brilliant. The m ost recent effort from Peter and Bobby Farrelly, who directed the Dumb and Dumber assault on the nation's better sensibilities, is laugh-for-laugh the funniest film around this sum ­ mer. The Farrellys' over-the-toip and off-the-wall first movie was an abrasive no-brainer, an asinine appeal to th e v ile id io t in s id e all of us. B ut it h a d its moments. Kingpin, a movie about low-life bowling hustlers, retains many of those same stupefied, low-brow ele­ ments, but allows the audience to laugh at more than sheer idiocy. The com edy is just sharp. It is full of truly vulgar a n d d isg u stin g m om ents, conniving losers, terrifically tacky bowling outfits, drunken and deranged lunacy and Randy Quaid and Bill Murray. Now, that's comedy. Physical and sight gags abound, and there are a lot of those simple bits of guys getting it in the nads and falling dow n for no reason really. Woody Harrelson is Roy M unson, a bow ling phenom w ho loses his righfhand to some bowlers he hustled. So he has this prosthetic hand which gets made fun of a lot. It also gets p re tty frighteningly d isg u stin g . To make rent, M unson is forced to sleep with his rotten­ toothed, hideously gross landlady. He is shown in the aftermath hurling in the toilet as she lies in bed smok­ ing (shiver). M U M W ndmmSfan Starring: Woody Harrelson, Randy Quáfd, Vanessa Angel, Bill Murray Director: Peter Farrelly and Robert Farrelly Playing at: Great Hills 8, Lincoln 6, Movies 12, Northcross 6, Riverside 8, Roundrock 8, Westgate 8 |: +■*+% (out of five) game, and they head to Reno, N evada for a great big bowling tourney for a million bucks. A long the h ilario u s w ay, they en d u p in som e (often predictable, but w hat do you expect?) crazy predicaments. Ishmael resorts to doing his imperson­ ation of Demi Moore in Striptease, and dow n-and-out in a casino, the tw o have a bizarre encounter w ith Chris Elliot, who pulls a Redford in Indecent Proposal and comes out w ith a vulgar proposition. Quaid is great as usual, and M urray shows a little of w hat has established him as one of the all-tim e great comics. Murray plays Ernie "Big Em" McCrack­ en, the ruthlessly sleazy bow ling cham p w ho left M unson to the irate bowlers who took his hand. Mur­ ray is classic; in his funniest role since Ghostbusters or as H unter S. T hom pson in Where the Buffalo Roam before that, he is truly a pleasure to behold. M unson could have been the best bow ler of all The movie is saturated with outrageously funny time, but instead he turned out to be a big boozing scénes. Just the w ay the characters look is enough to loser. To avoid the horrors of his landlord s loving, make you lose it. So if you get tired of watching yet another segm ent of Olym pic gym nastics on the oT M unson hooks up w ith Ishm aei (Q uaid), a good- tube, go check out Kingpin. natured Amish farm-boy who shows promise at the ________ Long, strange ‘Kaleidoscope’ Book, more or less accurately, traces history o f rela­ tionship between rock and psychedelic drugs JOE SEBASTIAN Daily Texan Staff RUSSELL H U R S T _______ Daily Texan Staff Jacob V aughan is alm ost too in love with cinema for his ow n good. H is w o o d e n e n te r ta in m e n t rack abounds with films on laser disc— nearly twice his collection of com­ pact discs. Yet he in n o t a c a rb o n copy Tarantino, hermetically sealed in his apartm ent forever watching Peckin­ pah in three-days-worn skivvies. Rather, he is a University of Texas senior student of film and a mem­ ber of the student production group Raging Films. D irector V aughan, p ro d u c e r A m y T h o m p so n and scripter Bryan Poyser have recently learned that their latest short film, Jesus of Judson, placed third at the University of Film and Video Asso­ ciation and will go on a national, possibly in teratio n al tour, b egin­ ning in California next month. O n ly 12 n a rra tiv e sh o rts w ere selected out of 350 entries, coming from close to 200 different schools and 20 different countries. “I was blown away. I had no idea I would get anything like that," says Vaughan after the fact. Dave Kluft, panelist of the U niversity of Film and V ideo A ssociation, w a sn 't as surprised at the film's success. "I thought it was one of the best film s I'v e seen from A u stin in a long time. The acting is fabulous, the structure is very interesting, and 1 like the characters. There's a lot of q u irk in e s s from /Vustin," said Kluft. film s th e in H e w as e sp e c ia lly g lad to see Vaughan's film do so well after see­ ing his previous w ork rejected by the festival. "It's good to see sucia im provem ent from a yo un g film ­ maker." But this is not the only recogni­ tion the film has received. A few m onths ago, Judson was accepted at the Independent Feature Film Mar­ ket in New York which showcases independent films for recognition and possible financial backing on future projects. A 20-minute film, Jesus of Judson begins with a 12-year-old Darryl (a g irl, p la y e d by L a u ry n P itn e y - Petrie) apathetically m oving boxes Brian M cGuire, left, and Jason Cromwell, right, rehearse a scene in Jesus of Judson. Director Jacob Vaughan watches in the background. his h e a rt still lies in the sim p le into her family's new house in her new tow n. H er m o ther, an arm y virtues of storytelling. officer, is often relocated, forcing young Darryl to spend much of her time alone with her imagination. Reluctantly at first, she finds her­ self e n g a g e d in th e play of th e neighborhood kids, led by a not-so- normal 20-year-old named Sammy, who is referred to as Jesus of Ju d­ son. S eem in g w ith o u t u lte rio r m otives, he o rg an izes his kids in fantastic role-playing based on ado­ lescent icons an d cartoonish m ili­ tary codes. One day he is their doc­ tor, the next, a magician who gets dollar bills lodged in their ears. Sammy's hom e life is not as care­ free and easy. His father, now sin­ gle, has a p atho logical obsession w ith Sammy, expressing his need for control through very un p leas­ ant, very naked Polaroids of his son. This revelation show s Sam m y's need for escape—his resistance to his father's abuse is pale and spotty, w orn dow n from years of violent flashes of light. Director V aughan will adm it to being strongly influenced by Steven Spielberg. Stylistically, however, his interests lean more toward indepen­ dent recluses like David Lynch, Hal Hartley and the Coen brothers. But R aging F ilm s' p re v io u s film , Block, held less of a story than it did psychological m ap ping of a m an slow ly realizin g th at he is not a w riter. In Jesus of Judson, w ithout sacrificing such insight, Vaughan, Thompson and Poyser draw togeth­ er two characters looking to get past their im agination before churning the wayward wheels of fate. "As long as the integrity of the story is maintained, then I can allow m y self to be cin e m a tic ," say s Vaughan about the subject of style and substance. Raging Films has followed such ideas about style: letting the story and characters dictate camera place­ ments and lighting. As opposed to plunking the camera in the corner for long takes, V aughan visually fin d s ch aracter a ttitu d e th ro u g h m ultiple angles and pristine, if at times stuffy, editing. And with the epoch of indepen­ d e n t film m aking on the ho rizon, one could also describe the industry as stuffy. Thus it is nice to see sucn creative groups as Raging Films — eager to open the cages in the ever changing zoo of American filmmak­ ing while committing: themselves to the joy of narrative storytelling Fever’ explores icy landscape )AN1EL Y. MAIDMAN )iily Texan Staff T ake it from a C a n a d ia n , Cold f ever has cold down. F rid ric k T hor F rid ric k s s o n 's movie is set in Iceland and boy, do you know it. Snow in the wind falls < >ff to a lyric silence. Yellow sunsets pockm ark w hite fields w ith deep violet shadows. You can practically feel your toes getting num b in your sodden boots. M ost of th e sto ry is a s o rt of annoying Icelandic variant of Twin Peaks or Northern Exposure. It huffs md puffs so much with its effort to be w atky that you wish you could tell the director to stop w orrying bout the audience so much. Nonetheless, the last scenes carry surprising emotional weight. The premise is, Hirata (Masatoshi Alagase) is a young Tokyo business­ man in a fish company. His parents died seven years ago in an accident in a remote Icelandic river, and it's t oming up on time for him to visit the river and enact the rituals which will calm their spirits. Hirata would naturally prefer to take his vacation tim e in H aw aii, b u t a tw in g e of rem orse changes his m ind and he heads north. At this point the movie suddenly goes from a square screen of Tokyo to wide vistas of the snowy volcanic wasteland of Iceland. Hirata im me­ diately gets lost at the airport and w inds up, not in Reykjavik, b u t at som e to u risty hot sp rin g s on the tundra. He hires a cab to take him to Reykjavik, and here the sm arm y •ddballness kicks in. "H o w d o you like Ic e la n d ? " inquires the cabbie. "V ery cold," s ys the laconic Hirata. The cabbie ab a n d o n s H ira ta in COW FEVER Starring: Masatoshi Nagase, Lili Taylor, Fisher Stevens, Gisli Hall- dorsson, Laura Hughes Director: Fridrik Thor Fridricksson Playing at: Dobie Rating: ★ ★ b (out of five) . O . J I j# ' - m * » .> order to act in a nativity tableau in a w indsw ept shack. Hirata hitches a ride with a truck of singing blokes. "H ow do you like Iceland?" one asks him. "Very strange country," responds Hirata, evaluation updat­ ed. A h o llo w -e y e d y o u n g w om an sells H irata her frozen car and he sets out to the northern reaches of Iceland. He e n c o u n te rs a w om an w h o photographs funerals (Laura Hugh­ es), a wild-haired young sprite with an ice-splitting voice, two incredibly an n o y in g p sy ch o p a th A m ericans (Fisher Stevens and Lili Taylor play­ ing Brad Pitt and Juliette Lewis in ICalifornia), and finally, a group of Icelander cowboys ("We don't shoot guns or ride horses, but we dress and sing like cowboys.") is the The best thing about the proceed­ in gs la n d s c a p e . In sid e H irata's nasty little car, everything is b o rin g e n o u g h . O u ts id e , th e wilderness is so hostile, so extreme, so patterned on its own alien val­ ues, that one senses this must be the site of tra n sfo rm a tio n s, re d e m p ­ tions, dam nations, transubstantia- tions. W hat m ad end will H irata come upon, clawing his way to his death or a revelation? Lili T aylo r, seen here in I S h o t Andy Warhol, plays Jill, a whiny Am erican psychopath who com­ m u n icates by m eans of a sock puppet, in Cold Fever. Too bad F rid ric k s so n d o e s n 't tru s t the v irtu e s o f his m ateria l more. Hirata does, in fact, encounter a sort of revelation. "I never did any­ th in g for m y p a re n ts w h en they w ere alive," la m en ts H irata at a remote hotel. With the help of Siggi (Gisli Halldorsson), a drunk geezer who comments, "Just stupid people only believes in things they can see and touch," Hirata reaches the cold- flowing river at which his parents met their deaths. He enacts the sur­ prisingly beautiful ritual to set them at rest, and concludes with a Can- dide-like note to his grandfather: "After many difficulties, I have ful­ filled my duty to my parents." W hat sim ple riches there are in that last line. They make you want to forgive the rest of the movie. W hat e x a ctly is p sy c h e d e lic music? Is it the whoosh of Hawk- wind or a wigged out synthesizer? Is it music aimed to transcend the consciousness, or, as the Grateful Dead often maintained, any music heard while on LSD? It's p ro b a b le th a t e v e ry o n e would have his own answer to this question, but former Rolling Stone editor Jim Derogatis tries to tackle it with Kaleidoscope Eyes: Psychedelic Rock from the '60s to the '90s. Derogatis' book is a rather com­ prehensive overview of the history’ of psychedelic m usic, w ith brief dips into the various artists whom D ero g atis feels d e se rv e special attention. Kaleidoscope Eyes is par­ ticularly interesting for its focus on the early day s of m in d -alterin g drugs and the music they inspired, though readers are sure to feel that Derogatis falls farther and farther from the m ark as he approaches the present day. Beginning w ith the accidental discovery of LSD-25 and a descrip­ tion of the first acid trip, the narra­ tive then elaborates on the d ru g culture that was spawned — Timo­ thy Leary, the hippies and the acid culture at large — before attem pt­ ing to relate the idea of mind-alter­ ing drugs to the music that would com e to be term e d p sy ch e d elic (from the Greek psyche [mind] and deloun [to show or reveal]). Derogatis makes the im portant assumption that not all psychedel­ ic music is derived from hallucino­ gen ic d ru g s , b u t th a t it com es equally often from people im itat­ ing their idea of what it would be like to be on acid or mescaline. D erogatis' assum ption is, then, not that the music actually comes from drugs, but that it be perceived to be from drugs. Based on this, he then has a very loose description of psychedelic music to follow, which allows him room to comment on a great deal of music. 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KALBD0SC0PE EYES Author: Jim DeRogatis Publisher: Carol Publishing Group Price: $16.95 ________ However, Derogatis often hangs him self w ith his rock critic style when he closely examines various groups. He zooms in to a subatomic level on groups like the Beatles, the R olling Stones, and Pink Floyd, though even he admits the Rolling Stones were never really psychedel­ ic. It appears that he is just show ­ b o atin g his kn o w led g e of m usic trivia. He also takes great pride in using phrases like "Sitting in the presi­ dential suite at New Y ork's ritzy Peninsula Hotel in 1991 w ith the three remaining members of Gene­ sis..." or "W hen I interview ed so- and-so in such-and-such a year..." to show that, yes, he is a cool hip­ ster rock critic w ho gets to hang ( & M 2 10 4 45 7 20-9 45 2 OO 5 :0 0 -7:35 f l A I WSm 2 20 4 55*7*25 9:25 City"Lost Children 9 20 - 1 1 45 pMtMmrr < I M m n A 4 . 1 1 5 » pm \ / F A R G O 2 00 4 30 7 10 9 35 12 00 1 4 ■ I I ? U « 4 Úmmémhpt 4 7 1 f i i * J 3 with big-time celebs However, he is often quite infor­ m ativ e, p a rtic u la rly in sec tio n s about Brian Eno or the '70s Teuton­ ic p h en o m en o n of "k rau t-ro c k ," though how groups like Kraftwerk or its off-shoot NEU! relate to the common description of psychedelia involves a long and tortuous expla­ nation. As things p ro g ress to the past tw o d ec ad es, D e ro g a tis ' id eas (Codeine, julian Cope and Robin Hitchcock as psychedelic lum inar­ ies) get to be a bit more outlandish, though he can be credited for stick­ ing to his g u n s h ere. He do es redeem him self w ith present-day descriptions of My Bloody Valen­ tine and the Flaming Lips, though he c e rta in ly p a sse s on se v e ra l dozen groups that fit into a similar and no-less influential mold. Despite a few flaws (completely u n d e re stim a tin g the rave scene, w ritin g off H aw k w in d in a few pages) D erogatis still creates an interesting read. The book contains an interesting "Psych Rock Discog­ raphy" at the end (which actually contains several artists D erogatis left out of the text) as well as an end-notes section which is far more com prehensive than m ost people w o u ld b o th e r w ith for a m ere music book. Derogatis does at least adm it in his in tro d u ctio n th at th ere w ere d o z e n s of o th e r a v e n u e s of approach to this subject, so readers s h o u ld sim p ly ac cep t h is few insights and then go have a few of their own.