ENTERTAINMENT Blowing smoke Smok* " w ii «nprs Wavne Wang and Paul Auste impro *Z¿£-£066Z 6 G u i l t y A jury has convicted Yolanda Saldivar in the murder of Tejano music star Selena after two hours of deliberation. 16 SPORTS s Patriot games New England awakens from a season- long slumber to knock off the Bills in Monday Night Football. *¿ 3ivis aoj iiv T i OSVd 13 3AiyO H3awVA 1SV3 )?97 ni oNiHsngndoyoiw isamunos \ | w«d 6 8 / 1 £ /8 0 W8d A A U Da il y T ex a n Vol. 95, No. 37 3 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, October 24, 1995 25C Students, staff blast UT over lead levels ERIC ENDERS_____________________ Daily Texan Staff U T officials are not adequately responding to concerns about possible lead contamination of cam pus water fountains, som e U T students and faculty m em bers said Monday. All but three drinking fountains in the Jesse H . Jo n e s C o m m u n ic a tio n C e n te r w e re rem oved last week after officials found that one fountain had lead levels of 220 parts per billion on the first draw and 33 parts per bil­ lion after the w ater had run for 90 seconds. The Environm ental Protection A gency's safe­ ty limit for lead is 15 parts per billion. UT officials said Friday they expect to find fo u n tain s all ov er cam p u s w ith lead -lin ed tanks, w hich caused the contam inated water in the first fountain. Susan Corbin, an assistant instructor in the S p e e ch C o m m u n ica tio n D e p a rtm e n t w ho w orks in the com m unication center, said she was "highly annoyed, alarmed and confused" w h en she h eard the fo u n ta in 's lead lev els were so high. "I don't think [UT officials] are trying real hard to find out if anyone's been harm ed by it," C orbin said. "I d o n 't see them out here offering any free lead testing, and I'm curious to know w hat my lead level is. They want me to go to m y doctor to find out, and I have to pay for it." D u rin g the next tw o w eeks, all cam p u s w ater fountains will be tested for lead con ­ tent, and all fountains w ith lead-lined tanks will be removed, said Charles Franklin, vice president for business affairs. The testing cost is expected to be from $200 to $400 per foun­ tain , b u t F ra n k lin said he h o p es th at th e H alsey T ay lo r C o m p an y , w h ich m a n u fa c­ tured the fountains, will pick up that cost. Franklin said he does not know how many campus w ater fountains will have to be test­ ed. "A s long as the test results don't exceed the lead limits, the fountains d on't really have to b e r e p la c e d ," F ra n k lin s a id . " B u t w e 'r e removing all the lead-lined fountains because we don't want people to be w orried." But Lanora Davidson, administrative asso­ ciate in the O ffice of Survey Research, which is located in the CMA, said she is worried that she and her three-year old son m ight have lead poisoning. Both are awaiting results of a blood test to determ ine lead content. "I've been drinking w ater [from the conta­ m in a te d fo u n ta in ] fo r fo u r y e a rs , so I w ouldn't be surprised if the lead levels were elevated," Davidson said. "People are a little bit irritated about the statem ents University ... E v e ry o n e g e ts o f fic ia ls a re m a k in g . headaches at work, b it we don't know if the headaches are k ad : ited ." E d S h a r p e , \ ice p i c s i d e n t fo r p u b lic a ffa irs , co n firm ed th a t no s tu d e n ts hav e b een tested y e t for lead p o iso n in g at the Stu d en t H ealth C enter. I he ce n te r's d irec­ tor, D r. R ay Jo h n son , said the test, w h ich costs $19 to $25, w ould not be p erform ed un less a stu d en t sh ow s sy m p to m s o f lead poisoning. "I think people are overreacting to this," Johnson said. "Y ou can't just com e in and say 'I want to be tested for lead.' You cannot do laboratory tests just because there m ight be an exposure." GRAND OLD NAME All students may face 14-hour requirement JENNIFER SC HULTZ AND TOM VAUGHN Daily Texan S taff F a cin g c o n tro v e rs y o v e r the p ro p o se d 1 4 -h o u r cou rse req u irem en t in the C o lleg e o f E n g in eerin g , U T officials M ond ay pitched a plan to the Facu lty C ouncil that w ould encou rag e all stu d ents to g rad ­ uate faster. Th e m u ltifaceted p ro p osal, called "P rin cip le s of E n rollm en t M an ag em en t," w ould force u n d erg rad ­ u a te s t u d e n t s to s h o w a " r e a s o n a b l e p r o g r e s s tow ard their ed u cational ob jectiv es and to grad uate at the earliest d ate p o ssib le." The plan also w ould call for each college to estab ­ lish criteria d efin in g reason ab le p ro g ress and p ro ­ cedu res for m o n ito rin g that progress. "A s tu d e n t w h o fa ils to m a in ta in 'r e a s o n a b le p ro gress' w ould be b arred by h is or her acad em ic dean from co n tin u in g at th e U n iv ersity ," the plan says. It also w ould p u t tou gh er requ irem ents on n on ­ d e g r e e -s e e k in g s tu d e n ts o r c o n tin u in g s tu d e n ts , allo w in g th e se stu d e n ts to be e n ro lle d as u n d e r­ g rad u ates for orn year. E n ro llm en t after that y ear w ould be su b ject to the acad em ic dean. T h e F a c u lty C o u n c il ta b le d th e n ew p ro p o s a l u n til its N o v e m b e r m e e tin g to c o n s id e r fu r th e r w h eth er the reso lu tio n s w ould ru sh stu d en ts into g rad u atio n m ore than is necessary. Th e p lan is the second p ro p osal Of its kind this sem ester. T h e sim ilar prop osed requ irem ent in the C o lle g e o f E n g in e e r in g w o u ld re q u ire fu ll-tim e e n g in e e r in g s tu d e n ts to ta k e a m in im u m o f 14 h ou rs in their d eg ree p rogram s. The plan came under heavy fire from most student council m e m ­ bers and some faculty r e p r e s en ta ­ tives on the council. U T P rov ost M ark Y u d o f said there is pro bab ly a conn ection betw een the tw o proposals, as both deal w ith w a y s to a l lo c a t e s c a r c e r e s o u r c e s a t th e U niversity. T h e plan cam e u n d er h eav y fire from m o st stu ­ d ent council m em bers and som e facu lty rep resen ta­ tives on the council. "W h y shou ld there be a sch ed u le for how long it takes you to stu d v ?" said H arry C leaver, an associ­ ate p rofessor of econ om ics "It seem s to m e th ey are p u sh in g p eo p le to w ard s th eir d eg ree, not h elp in g th em . T h e y are try in g to in c re a s e tu rn o v e r, an d th ere is ce rta in ly no Ju s tifica tio n fo r th a t" in the proposal. S tu d e n t G o v e r n m e n t P r e s id e n t S h e rry B o y le s said a d m in istrato rs did not give en ou gh in fo rm a­ tion about the proposal, and she did not receive a copy of the proposal until M onday. "I'm glad il got tab led . W e need m ore in fo rm a­ tion — w e need to know the intent and effect of this leg islatio n ," B oyles said. A llis o n S m ith , F a c u lty C o u n c il re p r e s e n ta tiv e from the C ab in et o f C o lleg e C ou ncils, said she does Please see 14-hour, page 2 “Tex" Moten, a prominent conservative Republican, explained the origin of his nickname to a group of College Republicans before a rally on the West Mall Monday. Moten later gave a speech on ways to increase minority involvement in the Republican Party. The speech and rally were part of a forum on m inorities in politics held by the UT chapter of College Republicans. ANDY ROGERS/Daily Texan Staff Despite expulsion, UT baptists back gay deacon JASON SPENCER __________ D aily Texan Staff U n iv e rs ity B a p tist C h u rch o ffi­ cials said M ond ay they w ill not ask a gay d eacon to step d ow n, d espite th e A u s tin B a p tis t A s s o c ia t io n 's d e cisio n to exp el the ch u rch from its m em bership. T h e a s s o c ia tio n , w h ich is m ad e up of m ore than 100 A u stin B aptist c h u r c h e s , v o te d 1 0 8 -5 5 O c t. 9 to en d its a s s o c ia tio n w ith th e lo cal chu rch, said G ail C o u lter, associate p a s t o r a t U n iv e r s i t y B a p t i s t C h u r c h < B > , < B > w h ic h sh e said has 2 50-300 active m em bers. "In a sen se, it's a h u rtfu l thing, becau se you get the feelin g that the s e n s e o f o n e n e s s a m o n g B a p tis t g ro u p s h as b een b ro k e n ," C o u lte r said. T h e fa c t th a t th e d e a c o n , .w h o C o u l t e r s a id w is h e s to r e m a in w w Ninety-eight percent of Baptist churches believe that hom osexuality is sinful in the eyes of God. ... Suppose I found out that I have an active pedophile teaching in my Sunday school?” — Harold O'Chester, pastor of Great Hills Baptist CHurch anon ym ou s, is gay w as no secret to m any m em b ers of the con gregation w hen they appointed him and five o th er ch u rch m em b ers d eaco n s in the su m m er of 1994, C o u lter said. S h e a d d e d th a t d e a c o n s in th e c h u r c h a r e a s s ig n e d a g r o u p o f m e m b ers to w h om th ey g iv e p a s ­ toral care, and w h ile d eaco n s p ro ­ v id e "s p iritu a l le a d e rs h ip " to the c h u r c h , th e y h a v e no g o v e r n in g pow er. "I think som e p eop le did know , b u t th e is s u e is th a t h e is a fin e C h ristian p erso n ," C o u lter said. B u t a c c o r d i n g F ia r o ld O 'C h e s te r , p a s to r o f G r e a t H ills B a p t i s t C h u r c h in W e s t A u s tin , to th ere w ere oth er issu es at stake in th e a sso cia tio n 's decision. O 'C h e s t e r s a id U n iv e r s i t y B a p tis t C h u r c h o f f ic i a l s s h o u ld re v o k e th e d e a c o n 's o r d in a tio n , s a y in g , " 9 8 p e r c e n t o f B a p t i s t ch u rches b elieve that h om osexu ali­ ty is sinful in the eyes of G o d ." "Su p p o se I found out that 1 have an active p ed op h ile teaching in my S u n d a y s c h o o l," sa id O 'C h e s te r , a n d in q u ir e d i f s u c h a p e r s o n shou ld not be asked to leave. W hile O 'C h este r said he respects the role U n iv ersity B aptist C h urch has trad itionally played in p ro m ot­ ing so cial ch a n g e in th e city , th is tim e its m e m b e r s h a v e g o n e to o far. "T h e y 'v e alw ays been on the cu t­ ting ed ge of doin g things d ifferent. T h e y w e r e p r o b a b ly o n e o f th e l e a d in g c h u r c h e s in A u s tin in reach in g out to b la ck s b ack in the '5 0 s . ... B u t 1 th in k the jo b o f th e chu rch is to reach out to and help h o m o se x u a ls, b u t n ot to co n d o n e th em ," O 'C h este r said. G ord on B erg stro m , ch airm an of th e A u s tin B a p tis t A s s o c ia tio n 's cred en tials com m ittee, said the d is­ a g r e e m e n t b e tw e e n U n iv e r s i t y B a p tist C h u rch and o th e r B a p tist ch u rches stem s from their different in terp retation s o f scripture. T h e A u stin B a p tist A s s o c ia tio n b e lie v e s th a t h o m o s e x u a lity " is scrip tu rally contrary to the practice o f " u n d e r s t a n d i n g a n d C h ristian ity, B ergstrom said. B u t U n iv e rs ity B a p tist C h u rc h lead ers have a d ifferen t in terp reta­ tion of the B ib le's stance on hom o­ s e x u a lity . To th em , m o n o g a m y is mcrre im portant than sexual p refer­ ence. "In G re e k , th e la n g u a g e o f the N ew T e sta m e n t, th ere is no w ord for h o m o sexu a l," C ou lter said. In o r d e r fo r th e U n iv e r s i t y B ap tist C h u rch to be rein stated in the A u stin Baptist A ssociation, the g a y d e a c o n w ill h a v e to r e s ig n , O 'C h este r said. But C o u lte r said the ch u rch has no* in ten tio n o f ask in g th e deacon, w h o d id n o t a c tiv e ly p u rs u e th e position, to step dow n. "In no w ay did he ask for or seek th is p o s itio n . T h e c h u r c h a s k e d him to s e r v e ," C o u lte r s a id . "W e are not going to take back the o rd i­ n atio n ." B u t n ot e v e ry o n e at th e ch u rch sup p orts the deacon, C o u lter said. "W e lost a n u m b er o f m e m b ers an d s tu d e n t m e m b e rs ... an d th e f in a n c ia l g iv in g h a s b e e n l e s s ," C ou lter said. Scholars confront genocide, history OSCAR CISNEROS Daily Texan Staff Prom inent scholars and reli­ gious leaders urged a UT crowd to fig h t the in flu en ce of those d isclaim ing m ajor genocides o f th e 2 0 th ce n tu ry w ho seek to rewrite history. Steven Jacobs, a rabbi at the U n iv e r s ity o f A la b a m a at Huntsville, told the audience of m o re th a n 100 in th e T e x a s U nion Theater that his com m u­ nity in H u n tsville su ccessfu lly swayed the public agairlst those denying the Jewish Holocaust in Nazi Germany. H e s a id a s tro n g n e tw o rk b e tw e e n th e m e d ia , s tu d e n ts and a c a d e m ic circ le s w o rk ed together to fight the misinforma­ tion. G ro u p s w h ich d isco u n t the H o lo cau st hav e "n o h istorical le g itim a c y " and are try in g to "illegitim ize" Jew s with an anti- Semitic agenda, Jacobs said. "W e live in a nation in which people are not only w illin g to forget about th e Holocaust, but they deny it occurred as w ell," said A aron B reitb art, a sen ior researcher in Los Angeles for the S im o n W ie s e n th a l C e n te r, a human rights group. C o s p o n s o r e d by th e H ille l F o u n d a tio n th e U T and A r m e n ia n C lu b , th e fo ru m , "G enocide and D en ial" focused on the den ial o f the A rm enian genocide, Jew ish Holocaust and recent "ethnic cleansing" in the Please see Genocide, page 2 INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY G ódei’s W eather: If we tell you about both the highs in the 80s and the lo w s in th e 6 0 s, w e ’ d h a ve to le a v e o u t the SE winds at 5-15 mph. O f co u rse , th e re is no w a y o f k n o w in g if a ll this is true. Index: Around Campus............... ,9 Classifieds........................13 ................... 9 Comics Editorials........................... 4 Entertainment.................... 8 Sports...............................16 State & Local..................... 6 .............. 5 University World & Nation................ ..3 Road tolls Cross-border traffic wears down highways SCOTT PATTERSON AND BRIAN ROSAS •.!«!«■£. ....... Daily Texan Staff - - —— — . The N orth A m erican Free Trade Agreement m ay be good for Texas' econom y , but som e state and city officials said M on d ay the flow of goo d s acro ss the b ord er h as been adding som e serious wear and tear on Texas roads. Officials at the state com ptroller's office announced last week that dur­ ing 1994, the first year of N A FTA , more than $1 b illo n worth of goods traveled each week ti rough Texas' five major be der cross . gs. El Paso, E a g le P ass, L a red o , H id a lg o and Brownsville. The added traific is taking years off the life erf Interstate 35, say some state and local officials, who are try­ ing to get ad d itio n a l fu n d in g for im p ro v e m e n ts on A u s tin 's m ain thoroughfare. 1-35 bears the brunt of additional traffic betw een Texas and M exico, said R ich ard H am n er, le g isla tiv e d ir e c to r fo r s ta te S e n . G onzalO B a r r ie n to s , D -A u s tin . H a m n e r added that local officials are trying to h a v e 1-35 d e s ig n a te d a s a "N A FTA Superhighw ay." Such a designation is basically for­ mal recognition of 1-35 as a m ajor com dor for international trade, and would give it priority status for fed­ eral funds, Hamner said. T h e a d d itio n a l fu n d in g , w h ich Hamner said would probably be in the "h u n d red s of m illions" of d ol­ lars, could help pay for projects like a p o s s ib le "1 -3 5 b y p a s s ," a new stretch of the highw ay that would run east of the existing stretch of 1- 3 5 , b y p a s s in g d o w n to w n S an A n to n io and d o w n to w n A u stin . Please see Roads, page 2 ANDY ROGERS Daily Texan Staff Texas legislators want federal priority funds for 1-35, a major corridor for U.S -Mexico trade. 14-hour rule: UT seeks speedier graduations Genocide Continued from page 1 not un derstan d how each college will define "reasonable p rogress." only one-third of students g rad u ­ ate in four years. "Som ebody else's interpretation o f w h at r e a s o n a b le p r o g r e s s is m ight not be what m y interpreta­ tion is," Smith said. I don't think this is in the students' best interest at all." But Y u d o f said the U n iv ersity "doesn 't want to rush anyone out." Heather Orr He said the U niversity needs to exam in e the content o f stu d e n ts c u rre n tly e n r o lle d , a d d in g th at "A credit hour is a credit hour. The question is, what is our obliga­ tion? It doesn't really matter finan­ cially whether a student sitting in a c la ss is a fresh m an or a se n io r," Y udof said. Shirley Binder, director of adm is­ s io n s , sa id the A d m iss io n s and Registration Committee, a cam pus- w id e g ro u p , h as been p re p a rin g the enrollm ent m an agem en t p ro ­ posal for more than two years. She added that the m anagement plan will allow the U n iversity to "accom m odate as m any people as possible," and she said she will not g iv e up on the p ro p o sa l sim p ly because it w as tabled M onday. "W e will come back [to address the plan], I think it's a reasonable thing. We're not hurting anyone," Binder said. Roads: Increased trade brings wear and tear Page 2 Tuesday, October 24,1995 T he Daily T exan T h e Da ily T exan Permanent Staff Editor.................................................................................................... ..............................................................Robert Rogers Managing Editor........................................................................................................................................... Kevin Williamson Associate Managing Editors.................................................................... Ross Cravens, Renae Merle, Robert Russell News Editor............................................................................................................................... ;.......................steve Scheibal Associate News Editors.................................................................................................. Holly Crawford, Andrea Buckley News Assignments Editor.......................................................................................................................... Sholnn Freeman Senior Reporters.............................................................Kevin Fitchard, Scott Patterson, Brian Rosas, Tom Vaughn Associate Editors....................................................................................................................Lamar Cravens, Jason Kraus Photo Editors............................................................................................................................Pablo Alcalá. Alyssa Banta Fntertainment Friitor.........................................................................................................................................Michael Bertin Associate Entertainment Editor.................................................................................................................... Rob Alexander Around Campus Editor.................................................................................... .....................................................Heather Orr Sports Editor.................................................................................................................................................. Tracy C. Schultz Associate Sports Editor............................................................................................................................... Nathan Sanders General Sports Reporters..................................................................... Jason Dugger, Charles Polansky, Matt Young Listings Editor.................................................................................................... I s s u e S t a f f News W riters................................................... Heath Shelby, Stephanie Svoboda. Jason Spencer, Oscar Cisneros, Eric Enders, Gilbert Salinas, Jennifer Schultz, Kara Altenbaumer Sports W riters........................................................................................................................... Brian Davis, Jeff McDonald Sports Assistant.....................................................................................................................................................Mike Wilson Entertainment Writers......................Thomas Yoo, Joe Sebastian, Daniel Y. Maidman, Ken Hunt, Steve Scheibal Editorial Columnists.............................................................................................................Sury Feinstein, Steven Hyland Editorial Cartoonist................................................................*.................................................................................. Jim Talbot Makeup Editor..........................................................................................................................Matt Rappaport. Dave Merrill Wire Editor................................................................................................................................................................. Eliza Celig Copy Editors................................................................................................................................ Shane Williams. Amy Mills Graphics Editor.............................................................................................................................. Ross Cravens, Tim Lord Photographers................................................................................................................................ Kim Brent, Andy Rogers Cartoonists...........................................................................Rob Caswell, Dave Boswell, Mark Harnisch. Brant Rydell A d v e r t i s i n g Local Display Vanessa Flores, Jennifer Case, Brad Corbett, Danny Grover, Sara Eckert, Tonya Grega, Nicole Jackson, Kristine Johnson, Lisa Hynd Graphic Designer........................................................................................................................................Dewayne Tindell Classified Display................................................................................ Nathan Moore, Nancy Flanagan, John Starcke Classified Telephone Sales..............................................................Dana Colbert, Sherry Sauter, Carrie Anderson Classified Clerks.............................................................. Amy Forbes, Crystal Yen Pham, Kelly Poche, Brandi Eicher, Serenity Leiseving, Kimberly Leass Office Assistant, Layout Coordinator...................................................................................Dianne Eaton, Robert Linn The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis, Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session. Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.101.) For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865. For classified display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900 For classified word advertising, call 471-5244. 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P O S T M A S T E R : S e n d a d d re s s c h a n g e s to T h e D a ily T e x a n .P .O . B o x D , A u stin, T X 7 8 7 1 3 - 8 9 0 4 10-24-95 Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m Thursday, 4 p.m Tuesday Friday, 4 p.m Wednesday Thursday............Monday, 4 p.m. Friday................ Tuesday, 4 p.m. 11 a.m. Classified Word Ads (Last Business Day Prior to Publication) Do you have Continued from page 1 Hamner also said the existing portion of 1-35 in Austin is in need of major improvements. "It is evident ... that we are poten­ tially looking at major reconstruction of the whole [1-35] facility," Hamner said. He added that the interstate will be showing more "im mediate infra­ structure deterioration" in coming years, and a lot of it will result from e x c ee d in g ly h eavy tru cks from Mexico crossing the border to bring goods into Texas. Sherri Green, spokeswoman for the te x a s Department of Public Safety, sa id as m an y as 15 p ercen t of all Mexican trucks entering the United States exceed U.S. weight limits, and ONE HOUR E6 SU D E PRO CESSIN G 24X = *4.95 36X = *6.55 PHOTO STUDENTS - ADDITIO NAL I OX D ISCOUNT CUSTOM PHOTOGRAPHIC LABS W. MLK AT NUECES • 474-1177 only 10 percent of those trucks have been inspected by Mexican officials before they enter the United States. State C o m p tro lle r John Sh arp added in a prepared statement that trucks from M exico seem to cause more damage to Texas' thoroughfares than any other type of traffic. "Several studies have shown that Texas highways cannot withstand the w eight of M exican tru ck s," Sharp said. "The weight limit for trucks on U.S. highways is 80,000 pounds. The Mexican Transport Ministry estimates that overloaded five-axle trucks from M exico often w eigh as m uch as 108,000 pounds, and six-axle trucks might weigh up to 130,000 pounds." Sharp said the enorm ous weight of these trucks accelerates road p ave­ ment damage five times as fast as nor­ mal. A highway designed to last 40 years would have to be replaced in only eight years, Sharp said. Green said the state Legislature last session designated a new fund for the departm ent to hire 109 new lic e n se a n d w e ig h t o f fic e r s to enforce state trucking and w eight regulations. Green said 70 will be sta tio n e d p e rm a n e n tly n ear the M exican border. But H am ner said the continued wear and tear on highways like 1-35 m ake im provem ents an im m ediate necessitv. lf*S TIME D S □ E1 Mam1 Starts Oct. 28 Mock Exam Nov. 4 $50°° off MCAT Prep with this ad Excellence in Learning since 1980 House of \\\ I t u t o r sWM 472-6666 2400 Pearl St. in West Campus # jig p Board Meeting Friday October 27 • 3:00 p.m. TSP Conference Room C3.302 • Visitors Welcome If you are a man between the ages of 18 and 45 or a woman between the ages of 18 and 65 with migraine headaches, you may qualify to participate in a research study evaluating an investigational medication. The study will involve 3 clinic visits over a five week period and you can earn up to $600 for study completion. Please call: 462-0492 P H A R M A C O - L S R Continued from page 1 former Yugoslavia. M argo Sack, program director at the Hillel Foundation, said the panel hopefully will promote dialogue and discussion among UT students and facu lty about the phenom enon of denial. "It's a recurring theme in world his­ tory, unfortunately," Sack said. The forum 's first speaker, Roger Smith, a government professor at the C o lleg e of W illiam an d M ary in Williamsburg, Va., said more than 1.5 million Armenians died as a result of genocide in what is now Turkey in 1915 at the h ands of the Ottom an Empire. Smith said the Turkish gov­ ernm ent, form erly the O ttom an E m p ire, resem b les oth er faction s d enyin g genocide in claim in g the deaths never occurred and that the government is not responsible. "A t the beginning of 1915 there were more than 2 million Armenians in Turkey. Today there are less than 60,000," he said. Jeff Markle, a UT graduate student in Middle Eastern studies, said he was impressed by the panel discussion. But Greg Raven, of the Institute for H istorical R eview , a C o sta M esa, Calif., group seeking "to bring history in accord with the facts," said many people try to frame and dem onize revisionists. He added that the insti­ tute does not deny the Holocaust ever occurred, but it questions a number of aspects about it, including the number of Jews who were killed by the Nazis. The Institute for Historical Review was involved in a fiery debate in fall 1992 when the group tried to place an ad vertisem en t in The Daily Texan explaining its beliefs. But the movement of denial has no basis in fact, according to Breitbart. With thousands of documents, testi­ monies, photos and other evidence, the existence of the Holocaust should not be in question, he added Now you can get the taste of slow roasting and melted C h e d d a r in four delicious Beef ‘n Cheddar sandwiches for just $5. Good at « I A rty * location» m m H m * 1715 Guadalupe • 472-1582 1 Blk. South of MLK MONDAY'S DOW JONES: 4,756.48 DOWN 88.88 / V0UIME:408,722,870____________W ll|ll|K | II Xu 111 II I || I 111 T h e : D a ii.y T e x x n 3 I l TUESDAY, Wm m m m M J % H I I l l ■ I I V OCTOBER 24,1995 r Unpaid bills delay U.N. reform Associated Press --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- U N ITE D N A TIO N S — A m erica's closest E uropean allies took the C lin ton a d m in is­ tration to task M onday for failing to pay its U.N. bills, and joined developing countries w hich are seeking reform s in the o rg an iza­ tion's b ureaucracy and the pow erful Secu ri­ ty Council. "C o n trib u tio n s should be paid prom ptly and in full and arrears cleared ," Prim e M in­ ister John M ajor of Britain said, on the sec­ ond o f th ree d a y s of ce re m o n ies m ark in g the 50th anniversary of the United N ations. R eversing the battle cry of the A m erican Revolution, M ajor added: " I t is not sustain­ able for m em ber states to enjoy representa­ tion w ithout tax atio n ." U nlike Su n d ay 's gala opening cerem ony, attended by about 180 kings, presid ents and p r e m ie r s , th e s p e e c h e s M o n d a y w e re sp arsely atten d ed . M ost of the d elegatio n s w e re fro m co u n trie s w h o se le a d e rs w ere speaking. T h e fin a n c ia l c r is is fa c in g th e U n ite d N ations has em erged a s a m ajor them e d u r­ w W It is not ac ce p table that many co un tries, including the foremost among them , should let their arrears pile up. — French President Jaque Chirac ing the celebrations. A joint statem ent, expected to be adopted at clo sin g cerem on ies T u esd ay , states that cou n tries "m u s t m eet, in full and on tim e, their obligations to bear the expenses of the o rg an ization ." It a ls o e n d o r s e s W a s h in g to n 's c a ll to reform and m odernize the United N ations. T h e s e v e n -p a g e d o cu m en t a lso in clu d e d P resid ent C lin to n 's call, m ade Su n d ay in a speech to the assem bly, for nations to w ork to g e th e r to d efea t in te rn a tio n a l terro rism and drug trafficking. "T h e tem p tatio n to d isen g ag e th rea ten s the very existen ce of the U nited N a tio n s," said French President Jacques C hirac. " I t is not acceptable that m any countries, in clu d ­ ing th e fo rem o st am o n g th em , sh ou ld let their arrears pile u p ." G e r m a n y 's fo r e ig n m in is t e r , K la u s K inkel, said the U nited N ations m ust ov er­ com e its financial problem s. "H o w e v e r, if it is to do so, it need s our s u p p o rt and n o t o n ly o u r c r i t i c is m ," h e said. W a s h in g to n o w e s $ 1 .3 b illio n — m o re than a n y o f the 184 o th e r U .N . m em b ers. T he U n ited N ation s is a b o u t $3 b illio n in debt. D u rin g his speech Su n d ay , C linton said he w as determ ined to w ork with the R epub­ lican-dom inated C ongress to pay its bills. T he U nited States, w hich is supposed to pay 25 percent of the U .N . budget and one- third of the p ea cek e e p in g c o s t s , h as w ith ­ h e ld p a y m e n ts to p r e s s u r e th e U n ite d N ations into reform . In h is sp eech , C lin to n called fo r several cost-cutting m easures to win the confid ence o f th e A m e r ic a n p e o p le . U .S . p r o p o s a ls in clu d e c o n s o lid a tin g v a rio u s U .N a g e n ­ cies, re d u cin g tra v el and cu ttin g b a ck on staff. O th e r le a d e rs h a v e said th a t n o m a jo r r e fo r m s o r r e s t r u c t u r i n g o f th e U n ite d N ations can take place until m em ber cou n ­ tries — esp ecially the United States — pay their bills. Both M ajor and C h irac also called for the need to stream line various U.N. op erations. They also called for enlarging the 15-m em ­ ber Security C ouncil, effectively the org an i­ zation's board of directors. C h ira c said Ja p a n , G erm an y and " la r g e sta te s " from the d ev elop in g w orld shou ld be added as p erm anent m e m b e r s . T h e five current p erm anent m em bers — th e U nited States, Russia, C hina, Britain, and France — have veto pow er. PROTEST IN PARIS NEWS BRIEFS Earthquake strikes - China; 14 dead ■ B e i j i n g — A s t r o n g e a r t h q u a k e w ith n u m ero u s a fte rsh o ck s jo lted the s o u th w e s te r n C h in e s e p r o v in c e o f Y u n n an on T u esd a y m o rn in g , and at least 14 p e o p le w e re rep orted k illed . T h e q u a k e , w it h a p r e l i m i n a r y m a g n itu d e o f 6 .5 , s tr u c k at a b o u t 6 :4 6 a .m . (5 :4 6 p .m . C D T M o n d a y ), C h in a 's C e n tr a l S e is m o lo g y B u re a u said . T h e te m b lo r w as cen tered 35 m iles n o rth w e st o f the p ro v in cial cap ital of K u n m in g , a b o u t 1 ,3 0 0 m ile s s o u th ­ w e st o f B e ijin g , said a s e is m o lo g is t w h o id e n tifie d h im s e lf o n ly bv h is su rn am e, M a. " T h e e a r t h q u a k e w a s r e la t iv e ly s tro n g , and th e re w e re m an y a fte r- * s h o c k s ," M a said. H e d escrib e d th e e p ic e n te r, W ild ­ in g C o u n t y , a s m o u n t a i n o u s a n d s p a r s e ly p o p u la te d . A s p o k e s m a n f o r th e U .S . G e o l o g i c a l S u r v e y in W a s h in g to n , D on K elly , said p re v i­ o u s e a r t h q u a k e s in th e a r e a h a v e cau sed casu a lties. A t least 14 p e o p le w ere k illed , said L u o S h a o d e , an o ffic ia l in th e s e is - m o lo g v b u re a u in W u d in g C o u n ty . B u t he said m o st te le p h o n e lines had b een cu t, m ak in g it d ifficu lt to know if m o re p eo p le d ied . Tank car implosion emits poison gas ■ B O G A L U S A , L a. — A ta n k c a r im p lo d e d at a p a p e r m ill M o n d a y , s e n d i n g a h u g e p i n k i s h - y e l l o w clo u d o f p o is o n o u s gas in to th e sk y an d f o r c in g th e e v a c u a tio n o f th e n e ig h b o rh o o d . M o re th a n h a lf th e to w n 's 1 6,000 r e s i d e n t s l iv e in th e e v a c u a t i o n area. W h ile so m e fled to to w n s and h o s p it a ls a s fa r a s 2 0 m ile s a w a y , o th e r s sta y e d h o m e w ith th e ir w in ­ d o w s tig h tly clo se d . H u n d re d s o f p e o p le d esce n d ed on h o s p ita ls to b e tre a te d fo r b u rn in g e y e s and th ro a ts. T w o o f th e h o s p i­ ta ls w e r e in th e e v a c u a t io n z o n e , b u t p a tie n ts w e re n o t m o v ed rig h t aw ay . " T h e y a ll h a v e th e s a m e c o m ­ p l a in t s : s h o r t n e s s o f b r e a t h , e y e s . b u r n i n g , t h r o a t s b u r n i n g , " s a id sta te R ep. Je r r y T h o m a s, a d o cto r at in R i v e r s i d e M e d ic a l C e n t e r F r a n k l i n t o n , fr o m B o g a lu sa . " I t lo o k s lik e a te m p o ra rv t h i n g fo r a l l o f th e m . S o m e a r e re c e iv in g oxygen; so m e are ju st ta k ­ in g b rea th s and it's g o in g a w a y ." 2 0 m i le s Chiapas rebel leader arrested on arms charge ■ M E X IC O C IT V — F e d e ra l a g e n ts, t a k in g a s te p th a t c o u ld e n d a n g e r d e l i c a t e p e a c e t a l k s b e t w e e n th e g o v e r n m e n t a n d C h ia p a s r e b e l s , a n n o u n ce d M o n d ay th ey had a r r e s t­ ed o n e o f th e g u e rr illa m o v e m e n t's le a d e rs on a w e a p o n s ch arg e. A n a ly s ts said th e a rre s t S a tu rd a y o f F e r n a n d o Y a ñ e z M u ñ o z , o n e o f t h e r e b e l m o v e m e n t 's f o u n d e r s , w h o is k n o w n as C o m a n d a n te G e r ­ m a n , c o u ld r e v e r s e g a in s m a d e in ta lk s to en d the 2 2 -m o n th u p risin g . T h e y s a id th e r e b e l Z a p a t i s t a N a t i o n a l L i b e r a t i o n A r m y c o u ld w ell c o n s id e r th e a rre s t a v io la tio n • o f an a g r e e m e n t to s u s p e n d a r r e s t . w a r r a n t s fo r th e r e b e l l e a d e r s a s I lo n g as p e a ce ta lk s w ere u n d er w ay. " T h i s is p ra c tic a lly a d e c la r a tio n o f w a r , a n d in r e a l i t y i m p l i e s a b r e a k in g o f th e t r u c e , " s a id Ju a n F e rn a n d o R e y e s P elá ez , a re se a rc h e r f o r f o r H i s t o r i c a l R ese a rch in to A rm ed M o v e m e n ts. t h e C e n t e r . Suspected kidnapper spotted in Alabama ■ B E N T O N H A R B O R , M i c h . — T h e FBI la u n ch e d a m a n h u n t fo r an e x -c o n a c c u se d o f k id n a p p in g tw o y o u n g b r o th e r s a n d s te a lin g a c a r fro m a p rie s t w h o had h e lp e d b a il him o u t o f ja il on ch ild -s e x c h a rg e s ju st w e e k s ag o . B o y d D e a n W e e k le y , 2 4 , is s u s ­ p e c t e d o f a b d u c t i n g 1 1 - y e a r - o l d A d a n A lv a r a d o an d h is 3 -y e a r -o ld b ro th e r, E le a z a r, m e m b ers o f a fa m i­ ly o f m ig r a n t fa rm w o r k e r s fro m M issio n , T e x a s. T h e th r e e w e re s e e n F r id a y an d S a tu rd a y in M o n tg o m e ry , A la., and th e s e a r c h c o n tin u e d , th e FBI sa id M o n d ay . " W e h a v e a c o n firm e d sig h tin g of M r. W e ek ley and th e tw o c h ild r e n ," sa id C h u ck G o o d w in , a sp o k e sm a n fo r an F B I ta s k fo rc e h a n d lin g th e c a s e . " I t a p p e a r s th a t th e c h ild re n w ere safe and w ell, and w e 're o p ti­ m is tic th at th e y 'll stay th a t w a y ." T h e b o y s d i s a p p e a r e d O c t . 14 a fte r b u y in g ch ip s at a sto re o u tsid e B e n to n H a rb o r w h ile th e ir m o th e r w as w a sh in g c lo th e s at a coin la u n ­ d ry n ext d o o r. — Com piled from Associated Press reports Lobbyist charged in Espy case Associated Press W A SH IN G T O N — A lead in g W ash in g ton lobbyist will plead guilty to federal charges that he arranged $5,000 in illegal cam paign contri­ b u tio n s from a to p a g rib u s in e s s firm to the b roth er o f form er A gricu ltu re Secretary M ike Espy. The charges M onday against Jam es H. Lake by independent counsel Donald Sm altz repre­ sent the first accusations lodged bv Sm altz since he began investigating Espy and his corporate tiers a y ear ago. Lake has agreed to coop erate w ith S m altz's investigation and w ill enter his g u ilty plea W edn esd ay, said L ak e's attorney, Plato Cacheris. Espy w as not nam ed. But the ag ribu sin ess firm in question, Sun-D iam ond G row ers of C al­ ifornia, and one of its executives, Richard D ou­ glas, have ties to Espy and the departm ent. T h e firm an d D o u g la s w e re n ot ch a rg e d . Thev w ere identified only as "C orp oration X " • and a "se n io r execu tiv e." D ou g las' attorney, John D ow d o f W ashing­ to n , c o n fir m e d that the " s e n i o r e x e c u t iv e " referred to D o u g la s and said the a lle g a tio n s involving his client w ere unfounded. Sun-D ia­ mond also denied any w rongdoing. As a result of the charges, Lake will leave the e lite lo b b y in g and c o m m u n ic a tio n s firm he helped found, R obinson L ake Saw y er M iller, s a id a c o m p a n y o f f ic ia l w h o in s is te d on anonym ity. The firm represents a host o f corporate and international clients, including Sun-D iam ond. Lake w as charged with one felony count of w ire fraud and tw o m isd em ean o r ch arges o f m ak in g illeg a l cam p aig n c o n trib u tio n s. The charges involve $5,000 in Sun-D iam ond money that Lake disguised as individual contributions to hide the source, the com plaint sa y s . Federal election law prohibits corporations or political action com m ittees from reim bu rsing individuals for cam paign donations. The contri­ bution limit per election cycle is $1,000 per per­ son and $5,000 for PACs. L a k e fa ce s up to fiv e y e a rs in p riso n and $250,000 in fines. The com plaint says D ouglas at Sun-D iam ond h atched the plan in M arch 1994 to retire the co n g ressio n al cam p aig n d ebt o f H enry Espy, now m ayor of Clarksdale, Miss. Espy amassed more than $75,000 in campaign debts during his unsuccessful primary bid to suc­ ceed his brother Mike as congressman from Mis­ s issip p i in 1993. M ik e had ju s t re sig n e d the House to becom e agriculture secretary. M ike Espy resigned as agriculture secretary last y ear b ecau se of fav ors he received from Tyson Foods, Q uaker O ats and other firms. D o u g las, th o u gh a p ro m in en t R ep u b lican , has been a friend of E spy's since their college d a y s at H o w a rd U n iv e r s ity . D o u g la s h a d accom panied Espy to a professional basketball gam e in 1993 using tickets supplied by Quaker, and had appeared w ith Espy at m any p u blic events. D em onstrators share apples and hold banners of th e ir regional unions in front of the Eiffel Tower. More than 4,000 which they say are driving them out of business. hotel and restaurants owners protested against high taxes Gov. Wilson endorses Dole Associated Press W A SH IN G T O N — T h ree w eeks after fo ld in g his ow n p resid en tial cam p aign, C a lifo rn ia G ov . P ete W ilso n en d o rse d Bob D ole on M ondav as the Republican P a rty 's b e st h o p e o f b e a tin g P resid en t Clinton next vear. W ilson said he w ould turn dow n anv offer for the No. 2 spot on the Republican ticket. D ole trum peted W ilson 's backing as a m ajor boost for his effort nationally and in d e le g a te -r ic h C a lifo r n ia . H o w e v e r, W i ls o n 's o w n s h o r t - liv e d c a m p a ig n exp o sed the g o v e rn o r's rocky stan d in g w ith fellow Republicans back hom e. D ole used the occasion to stress that if nom inated, he would vigorously com pete for C a lifo rn ia 's 54 e le cto ra l v o tes, w on easily by C linton in 1992. " I t w ill not be a rep eat o f w h at h ap ­ p en ed in 1 9 9 2 , w h en o u r p a rty a b a n ­ doned C alifo rn ia," D ole said. In a statem ent announcing the endorse­ m ent, W ilson had a n o t-so -v eiled m e s­ sage to R ep u b lican s h op in g that retired Gen. Colin Powell will enter the race for the G O P nom ination. " B i l l C lin to n is o n e to u g h p o litic a l fighter and defeating him is going to be a w a r," W ilson said in the statem ent. "B o b D ole is cle a rly th e b est g en eral to lead R epublicans into b attle against Bill C lin ­ to n ." polls of likelv Republican p rim a n voters in the state. But W ilson never d elivered those lines w hen hi' m ade his endorsem ent at D o l e 's cam paign headquarters. Pow ell com p let­ ed his book tour last w eek and plans to a n n o u n ce bv T h a n k sg iv in g w h e th e r he will join the G O P field. D ole and W ilson both called Pow ell a friend. But D ole suggested Pow ell's pop­ ularity might not stand up during the rig­ ors o f a cam paign. "I'v e alw ays had the view that in poli­ tics, y o u h a v e tw o tim e s w h en y o u 'r e v e ry p o p u la r w ith th e p e o p le : th e d a y b e fo re you get in and th e d ay you g et o u t," D ole said. W ilson is the 13th of the 30 Republican governors to back Dole. The Kansas sena­ tor has em ployed a classic front-runner's s tra te g y in ro u n d in g up e n d o rse m e n ts from m ajor partv leaders. W ilson was named a national co-chair­ m an of the D ole cam paign and its general ch airm an in C a lifo rn ia . T h e state sen d s 163 delegates to the G O P convention, but m any analysts b elieve the race could be all but over by C aliforn ia's M arch 26 pri­ m ary, becau se of a crow ded schedu le in the preceding weeks. E v en b efo re M o n d a y 's e n d o rse m e n t, D ole had d eep G O P establish m en t su p ­ port in California, even leading V\ ilson in Texas Sen. Phil G ram m also has built a solid netw ork in the state. S in ce W ilson quit the race late last m onth b ecau se of c a m p a ig n fin a n c e w o e s, G ra m m a n d D ole have had the most luck sig n in g on G O P fund-raisers in the state. D o le h a s d o n e b e tt e r w ith W ils o n activists in key prim ary states, p articu lar­ ly N ew H a m p s h ir e and F lo r id a . A nd D ole aides hope to convince Don Sipple, W ilso n 's m ed ia con su ltant, to join their team. D ole also said he would help W il­ son retire his $1.4 million cam paign debt. "T h a t d o e s n 't su rp rise m e ," G ram m said of thP W ilson end orsem en t, callin g Dole and Wfilson like-m inded m oderates. W ilson sh ru g g ed off a q u estion ab ou t his pointed criticism s of D ole d u rin g his s h o rt c a m p a ig n . W ils o n had a tta c k e d D ole for su p p o rtin g past tax in cre a se s, and for su p p o rtin g a G O P w elfare m e a ­ sure W ilson arg u ed did not do en ou gh to d is c o u r a g e w e lf a r e m o th e r s fro m h a v in g m o re c h ild re n . D ole h a s s in c e m o v e d to w a r d W ils o n 's p o s it io n on that issue. " I d o n 't a g re e w ith S e n a to r D o le on every issu e, and that is not n e c e s s a ry ," W ilson said . " I d o n ’t agree w ith anv of the candidates on every issue. But I think h e's given very strong lead ership ." Associated Press TO RO N TO — Fears that Quebec will vote for inde­ pendence next week rocked Canadian financial markets Monday. One federalist leader said the pro\ ince would plunge into "a black hole" if it voted to secede. The Canadian dollar, which traded last week at near­ ly 75 U.S. cents, took a large one-dav tumble to slightly above 73 cents Monday, as traders fretted over the pos­ sibility of a "Y e s" victory in the Oct. 30 referendum. The Toronto Stock Exchange also quavered. Its com­ posite index lost about 2 percent or its value in trading M ondav. N ationw ide banks and the M ontreal-based conglom erate Imasco Ltd. were especially hard hit "Referendum fears dom inate the financial m arkets," Sherrv C ooper, chief econom ist at investm ent dealer Nesbitt B u m s , told a conference call of clients and staft " T h a t's w h at vou call p o litical in s ta b ility ," said P rim e M in ister Jean C h retie n ,. " I t w ill be a lively w e e k ." Chretien, a native of Q uebec who staunchly opposes secession, said he remained optimistic despite recent polls showing a slight lead for the separatists. Hi1 noted federalists won bv a 80-40 margin in d e sp ite final opiniiw p o lls show ing a fight race O ne of the leaders o f the federalist cam paign, Pro- gressive Conservative Party chief Jean Cha rest, urged his fellow citizens to weigh their votes carefully. "T h e choice and the consequences are overw helm ing fo r p e o p le , and are ir r e v e r s ib le ," C h a re s t sa id in Ottaw a. "W e 'd be in a black hole. Where w ould it go from there?" In Q uebec City, capital of the mostly French-speaking p ro vin ce, sep aratists w ere b u oy an t after on e o f the largest, liveliest rallies of the campaign Sunday night. M ore than 4,000 people waved flags, sang nationalist songs and chanted, 'W e want a country'. At one point, the m ayor of Quebec, Jean-Paul L Alli- er, asked the crowd for silence. "L isten to your heart b eat," he said. "A nd you can hear, at the same time, the beat of vour new cou ntry." M an y fin an cial an aly sts p red ict m ajor e co n o m ic upheaval if Q uebec votes to secede, including a fur­ ther plunge for the C an adian dollar, higher interest rates, and a possible exodu s of businesses from Q u e ­ bec. The head of a leading Q uebec polling firm, Jean-M arc Leger, said the dollar's weakness may persuade som e citizens of Q uebec that a "Y e s " victory would be too costlv. Canadian market anticipates Quebec’s secession vote ASSOCIATED PRESS Foreign Exchange Traders make transactions on the trading floor at the Toronto Dominion Bank 4 T h e D a il y T e x a n TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24,1985 T h e Da il y T e x a n Editorial Board Jason Kraus Associate Editor Robert Rogers Editor Lamar Cravens Associate Editor Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of 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 ‘Road to Peace’ On 1 uesday, a new film is premiering in the Dobie Theatre. While perhaps less exciting to the glitterati than the work of Richard Linklater or Robert Rodriguez, the film is a coopera­ tive project on a very uncooperative subject — peace in Palestine. / he Road to Peace: Israelis & Palestinians w as produced by UT English professor Elizabeth Fernea and directed by UT lecturer Yaron Shemer. Fernea, author of numerous ethnographies on the M iddle East, set out to document what the people in the region think about the peace process Too often, politicians and propagandists determine what we know about Palestine, but with this film, Fernea lets the spectators of history comment on its direction and their fate. Fernea worked hard to keep the film free of bias, refusing funding from any source tainted by political agendas. Underwritten by the Ford and MacArthur Foundations, the result is an unimpeachable product, one that will infuriate all who hope to present their oppo­ nents as less than human. Thus the film succeeds in displaying the very real human cost that a metaphor taken literally im posed on two peoples, two religions and two cultures, living unneighborly on a sin­ gle piece of land. I he screening is at 7:30 p.m. with a reception and discussion session to follow. Adm ission is free. —Lamar Cravens Our prisons In the wake of the recent riots in several federal prisons, the effec- tiveness of the entire prison system has come under scrutiny. The hope of recent years that rising imprisonment w ould reduce crime appears to have been rewarded in som e places like New York City, but as a grow ing percentage of the potential work force is locked up behind bars, economists are beginning to wonder and worry about the long-term costs. The nation's prison population h as tripled in the past 15 years to a current 1.5 million — equivalent to alm ost 2 percent of the male work force. And with such get-tough m easures as "three strikes, you're out, the growth is expected to continue apace for the future. And of course, there are costs to all of this. Building and staffing prisons are am ong the obvious ones, as is the productivity' that inmates might contribute if they were free. But less obvious, however, are the depressed earning and productivity of inmates after they are released. Convicts tend to be drawn from the ranks of the least literate’ and least employable, and a prison récord usually m akes them even less marketable. If male prisoners were counted as part of the labor force, the official jobless rate, now just below 6 percent, would climb to 7.5 percent, according to Richard Freeman of Harvard, chief of labor studies at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Rev. Jesse Jackson has begun to crusade against the "prison-indus­ trial complex," as prisons have become a growth industry in Chicago and other cities. But as Freeman noted in last w eek's Wall Street Jour­ nal, since prisons are not very labor intensive, money spent on just about anything else would create more jobs. Particularly onerous have been the social and economic costs that high imprisonment has levied on African-Americans. The Sentencing Project, a W ashington-based advocacy group, offered shocking evi­ dence of that, reporting that one in three black men in their 20s are in the criminal-justice system, either in jail, on parole or on probation. A s the cost of new prison construction continues to mount — it cur­ rently costs upw ards of $60,000 to build a cell — legislatures and tax­ payers m ay become less enamored of the lock-'em-up-and-throw- awav-the-key approach. But Americans shouldn't wait that long. Political leaders should act now to investigate alternative punish­ ments for less-serious offenders. And contrary to the trend here in Texas, they should dem and more and better educational program s for inmates to increase their employability after release. Prisons are not cheap. But their long-term costs may be even high­ er than w e have bargained for. —Jason Kraus E D I T 0 N A L S OkAYjTHxS xsyj't Tttt ,T « E K E F o R fe T W E VATEtX MUST ÓAFE» yfeAH.. N O T T H E C « a | O o oo Are recent Taba Accords desirable? Treaty helps bring peace to region Israel still oppresses Palestinians POINT ► Recently, the Israeli government and the Libera­ Palestinian O rganization tion reached agree­ an ment in Taba, Egypt on their century-old dispute the rights to the West Bank of Israel. This agreement to remove Israeli troops from the most populated areas of the West Bank is a landmark decision that will have many repercussions on the future of the M iddle East. over Ending w ar should alw ays be considered a good thing. The recent decision to remove Israeli troops from the once occupied territories is a move toward ensuring peaceful relations in the West Bank. Though this accord is a risk, Israelis are tired of the unrelenting quarreling in the West Bank. Maintaining control of the occupied territories has been a continuous storm of violence and fighting. The world should readily affirm the Taba Accords as much- needed, positive change. This agreement, signed by Prime Minister Rabin and Yasir Arafat, the leader of the PLO, provides the details on how Israeli troops will w ithdraw from A rab-populated areas of the West Bank and on elec­ tions for the autonom ous Palestinian Council. This agreement represents a convergence between Israelis and Palestinians to redistribute control over the West Bank. In preparation for the election, the West Bank will come gradually under the jurisdic­ tion of the Palestinian Authoritv, which already governs Jericho and the Gaza Strip. In the Knesset, Rabin's fundam en­ tal argument is that Israel cannot continue to rule over another pop u­ lace and expect peace. The Israel that he envisions will extend beyond the borders it had previous to the Six Day War in 1967, when it occupied the West Bank. Israel has agreed to give the Palestinians control over Sure Feinstein TEXAN COLUMNIST the West Bank. In addition, 5,000 prisoners will be returned to the Palestinians. Clearly, these are major concessions by Israel. A recent front page of The New York Times displayed a picture of King Hussein of Jordan, President M ubarak of Egypt, Prime Minister Rabin of Israel, President Clinton and Yasir Arafat. All of the leaders except Rabin were applauding in response to the accord. Rabin is a forerunner of change. His decision to give up control of the West Bank is a gam ble with the fate of Israel. So many people have died, including Israelis and Palestinians; and now, finally, Israel is letting go and allow­ ing the dust to settle where it may. A pprehension seem s to be an acceptable response. Rabin as well as m any others have been torn between the need to improve condi­ tions by giving up the West Bank, and the fear of jeopardizing Israeli security. M aps have been drawn delineat­ ing exactly where Arab police will patrol, where new bypass roads will run and where the Israeli army will be withdrawn. N obody knows what the right answer is to control the situation, and the ramifications are unknown. Israel has m ade the first major move to compromise. The Palestinians need to prove themselves to Israel and* the rest of the world that they are worthy and capable of safely maintaining this land. Apprehension will turn into confi­ dence only when the Palestinians can assure everyone that the Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank will not endanger the future of Israel. Feinstein is a ju n io r in advertising and business foundations. to cry COUNTH- The spoils of the Taba A ccords will once again cause the w orld for Palestine. This latest agreem ent between Palestinian the ____________ Authority and Israel does not alleviate the humiliation, suffering and denial of Palestinians' basic human rights. The accord lets Israel build 62 new m ilitary bases in the West Bank. Is this the end of the brutal military occupation and the begin­ nings of peaceful co-existence? Honestly, no. After 28 years of occupation by Israel, the Palestinians are stiil fighting to keep their identity. The Israelis have labeled West Bank Palestinians "Judean-Sam arian Arabs." Is this an Israeli version of political correctness? With the signing of the Taba Accords, Israel will still have a strangle-hold on the Palestinian economy. Moreover, Israel will continue to dominate the education and acade­ mic freedom of Palestinians. For instance, nearly 600 Gazan students have been denied permits to study at various West Bank Universities. Prominent institutions such as Bir Zeit have requested these permits, but to no avail. Albert A ghazarian, director of public relations at Bir Zeit, remind­ ed the international comm unity that "in the Declaration of Princi­ ples], Israel ... agreed to operate with due regard to internationally accepted norms and principles of human rights and the rule of law. Education and freedom of m ove­ ment are fundam ental hum an rights. There can be no doubt about this — human rights are not nego­ tiable and cannot be offered as a concession." The Israelis justify these restric­ tions because of "security concerns" — that is attacks by militants, even Steven Hyland TEXAN COLUMNIST as security concerns of the Palestini­ ans are neglected. The Palestinians are defenseless against the extreme­ ly well-arm ed settlers and their guardian occupation forces. settlers M ilitant ram page through Palestinian towns, like Hebron, hurling verbal abuses. In fact, The Associated Press reported that Jewish settlers beat the head­ m istress of an all-girl Palestinian school and stoned elementary-age school girls during a protest march. The sam e settlers also assaulted Am erican peace activists. Thus without security for the Palestini­ ans, there can be no peace. As if Israeli oppression were not enough, the Palestinians now face abuses from their o n Palestinian Authority. The PA's military courts allow adm inistrative detentions, arrests and sentencing without due process. Columbia University pro­ fessor Edw ard Said characterizes the PA as "the Vichy government of the Palestinians." Though subject to the ills of hum anity, the Palestinians have persevered. Neither the breaking of their children's bones, the sealing and demolishing of their homes, the razing of their villages, the clo­ sure of their schools, their expul­ sions, nor the encroachment of vio­ lent settlers or curfew s have dimmed their spirit. Despite the continued violation of their fundamental human rights, they trudge on with resiliency, illustrating their strength and deter­ mination to achieve justice. Hope remains,* but only if the world takes the Taba Accords for what they're really worth — noth­ ing. H yland is a se nior in M iddle Eastern studies. L _ Taxes don’t bring wealth Chris Parry argues that Americans are undertaxed, and taxes should be raised. I wonder, if it were demonstrated that rais­ ing taxes does not increase government revenue, and instead that cutting taxes when they are above a certain rate raises more revenue, would Parry support cut­ ting taxes? But that argum ent is too long to make in 250 words. The sim pler one is: When has a country, present or past, ever become more prosperous by raising taxes? Show me an example. Sw eden? Italy? Australia? New Zealand? France? Spain? Have these coun­ fries experienced m assive surges in pros­ perity from their tax increases? Where are the success stories of the high tax, high spending argum ent? Or for the ultimate in Parry's argument, perhaps the government should have 100 percent tax and redistrib­ ute all the money. Perhaps then we could all enjoy the opulence they have in China and Cuba, and used to have in the U.S.S.R. Ben Bateman First-year law student Coach Mackovic not OK In response to Andy Cheetham 's letter last week, I would like to defend his com­ ments regarding coach Mac. I have to agree that our team is not lacking in talent what­ soever, (Phil Dawson proved that to any doubters last Saturday), but lacking in motivation before each game. This motiva­ tion, of course, comes from the coaching staff. In the four years that I have been at the University (the sam e amount of time that Mac has,) I have seen our team consistent­ ly play only to the level competition. It happened last year when we came so close to upsetting C olorado but were then stunned by Rice. Three years ago we again came close to beating a highly ranked team (Syracuse), but then strolled up to Fort Worth and lost to the horned frogs. Texas Tech did beat A&M a few weeks ago if you'll remember (and us last year, and the year before that, and the year before that). I hope that when we do face them (Tech), it is not a repeat of gam es past where our team lacks the drive and the coaching to successfully pound them like we should. Come on, Mac, I wanna see four quarters of football like I saw in the first 12 minutes against OU. Christopher Marshall Geophysics senior De La Garza best for UT I am writing in regards to the Oct. 20 arti­ cle, entitled, "D em ocrats Support Fee Oversight." I am shocked and surprised to see Rep. Glen Maxey calling himself an advocate for students so close to the prim a­ ry election. Unlike Sen. Barrientos, Rep. Dukes, Rep. Greenberg, Rep. Naishat and Eloy De La Garza, when students have had concerns in the past, Rep. Maxey was not to be found. Before he calls him self an advo­ cate for students, he ought to show some leadership for students. If students want a real leader, they should vote for Eloy De La Garza. Am ong many other accomplish­ ments, De La Garza has proved his com­ mitment to students by securing a statue of Martin Luther King Jr., bringing us Multi­ cultural Student Forums, and creating a student diversity and equity assistant to the dean position. Rather than being lured by a politician pandering on student issues, students m ust unite and elect Eloy De La Garza as our state representative. Je ff Shindler President Longhorns for Eloy FIRING LINE Letter was contradictory In grasping for reasons to criticize Bish­ op John Shelby Spong, Michael D. Bachers ("Spong threat to Church," Firing Line, Oct. 23) contradicts himself. Bachers initially asserts that Spong's su g ­ gestion "that the church follow society rather than the more appropriate relation­ ship in which society would follow the church" poses a threat to religion itself. Even if one were to buy this simplistic statement, Bachers later undermines it. In arguing that Spong "should consider the fact that he is serving as a symbol of the opinions of millions before he wrongly uses his coliar as a tool for gaining support and acceptance," Bachers seems to criticize a clergym an's efforts to lead, to form opin­ ion, rather than reflect it. What Bachers first states to be the duty of the Church suddenly becomes an abuse of power. Glenn Otis Brown Plan II senior Spong helps gay youth way. Bishop John Shelby Spong has been a lifeline for many lesbi-gay youth who might otherwise find no oasis of hope in the sea of condemnatory, anti-gay rhetoric that surrounds them. I personally have worked with many gay and lesbian teens who, confronted with the reality of their innate, God-given, same-sex orientation, search for respite and, som e­ times, escape. Listening to the uninformed declarations of those around them, who say that being gay m eans they're condem ned to hell, often drives them to one conclusion, that they must end it all, believing that there is no redemption. And so they try to kill them selves, adding to the statistics that show that more than 40 percent of teen suicide attempts are among those who are gay, lesbian or bisex­ ual. Bishop Spong has brought biblical schol­ arship to these youth who, hearing his m essage, learn what the Bible truly means, rather than just what it says. It saddens me to see letters to the editor expressing such hate, which ultimately can be only self-hate, on the topic of being gay. Michael Bachers would condemn Spong for using the power of his collar "w rong­ ly." Much to the contrary, I believe Bishop Spong has used the power of his collar as it should be used, to express the fundamental m essages of love and acceptance that Jesus preached, this Christ who would love and serve prostitutes before temple priests, this Christ who says that casting the first stone is the real sin. The Bible can be a tool of pow er for love. Unfortunately, it is all to often used as a tool for fundraising, and for power for its own sake. Bishop Spong shows us a much better Chris Kryzan California resident U.S. must support Taiwan Chinese President, Jiang Zemin, will meet the U.S. President Bill Clintion dur­ ing his visit to the United Nations on Oct. 22-24. We've heard that one goal of his trip is to get the adm ission and promise from the United States about his "One China" and Taiwan policy. As members of 21 million Taiwanese people, we feel very angry and can't accept the unreasonable request from China, which believes that Taiwan should be one part of its territory and reunified under its communist government, even though it hasn't ruled Taiwan for any single day. The well recognized "political and economical miracle of Taiwan" is from the efforts of whole Taiwanese people without any rela­ tionship with China and should not be the victim of relationship the U.S.-Sino improvement. We plead: the United States professes the basic values of human rights and self deter­ mination, and the benefits and welfare of 21 million people of Taiwan shouldn't be the token of the negoations between the United States and China. In addition, we hope that the United States reaffirms the commitment to peace in the Taiwan state in accordance with the Taiwan Relations Act and lead the interna­ tional community in recognizing Taiwan as a free and independent. The isolation of Taiwan from the international community is unfair and ignorant of the existence of Taiwan. Finally, we ask the Chinese government to respect Taiwan's sovereignty and stop military hostility toward Taiwan. Meng-Jung Tsai Taiwanese Students Association PMng tine letters can be brought to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue or mailed to P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. They also can be e-mailed to TEXAN#utxvms.cc.utexas.edu. , ; Ftrfar Une letters must be fewer than 250 »,*ords. UT students should indude their major and classification, md all writers must present identifi­ cation or include a phone number. The Tema reserves tfWright to edit tettei*. - 1 - s UNIVERSITY APO competes with A&M chapter in blood drive %0m m u W ■■■ TUESDAY, October 2 4 , 199s I I STEPHANIE SVOBODA D aily Texan S ta ff The A lp h a P hi O m e g a se rv ic e f r a t e r n i t y is o u t fo r b lo o d th is w eek. C o m p e tin g w ith T e x a s A & M U n iv e rsity 's A PO c h a p te r for the s e c o n d s t r a i g h t s e m e s te r , th e g r o u p h a s s e t u p t h r e e b lo o d d o n a tio n a re a s ac ro ss c a m p u s in ho p es th a t UT stu d e n ts an d staff m e m b e r s w ill g iv e a p ie c e o f th em selv es to h elp the co m m u n i­ ty- M e m b e rs s a id th e y a lso h o p e th e fra te r n ity w ill d ra w e n o u g h blood to top to ta ls of A&M c h a p ­ te r , w h ic h w ill h o ld its b lo o d d riv e next m onth. "T h e d r iv e is r e a lly a d v a n t a ­ g eo u s to all p a tie n ts th at benefit," s a id A p ril C o o v e r , A P O b lo o d d riv e co m m ittee m em ber. "B esides, the c a m p u s is a really good place to h av e it. [The drive] really fosters cam p u s sp irit." T ho ug h A PO has sp o n so re d the d r iv e for m o re th a n 20 y e a rs, it h as seen a decrease in the n u m b e r of p a rtic ip a n ts o v er th e p ast few years, C oover said. So last sem ester the UT c h a p ter b e g a n th e c o m p e titio n w ith its A&M c o u n te rp a rt to b o o st in te r­ e s t a n d a w a r e n e s s a t b o th schools. 'W e h a d a b o u t 1 ,5 0 0 u n its d o n a te d last sem ester, an d A&M h a d a b o u t 2,400, so w e w a n t to beat them this sem ester," C oover said. She a ttrib u te d A & M 's victo ry to tim e l i n e s s , s a y i n g A & M A P O m e m b e r s h e ld t h e i r d r iv e th e w e e k o f th e O k la h o m a C ity b o m b in g in A pril, C oover said. But b e a tin g A&M h ad n o th in g to do w ith som e UT s tu d e n ts ' re a ­ sons for d o n a tin g b loo d M onday. "I just w a n te d to help o u t a n y ­ one w ho w o u ld need it m ore than I w o u ld ," sa id D o u g H o rto n , an astro n o m y freshm an. This is not the first tim e H o rto n has d o n a te d blood, he said. H e a d d e d t h a t h e w a n ts to d o n a te blood as often as possible. A nita B halerao, a b u sin e ss h o n ­ o rs f r e s h m a n , s h a r e d th e s a m e sen tim en ts. "I w as w alk in g by an d re m e m ­ b e r e d t h a t I w a n te d to d o it," B halerao said. "I w as finished w ith m y classes and just d ec id ed to sto p by." B h a le r a o s h e a lw a y s s a id th o u g h t th a t it w o u ld be nice to d o , e v e n th o u g h sh e h a d n e v e r d o n e it before. "I th in k a lot of p e o p le sh o u ld c o m e o u t a n d d o n a t e b lo o d ," B halerao said. Both stu d e n ts said it w as a sim ­ ple an d quick p ro c e d u re , an d the v o lu n te e rs m a d e th e e x p e rie n c e m uch m ore p leasant. C o o v er said the w h o le p ro cess takes ro u g h ly 20 m in u te s d e p e n d ­ in g o n h o w m a n y p e o p le a r e there. V o lu n te e r d o n o r s a r e g iv e n ju ic e , c o o k ie s a n d a fre e t- s h ir t w h e n th e y a re f in i s h e d g iv in g blood, she a d d e d . T hey can also e n te r a d ra w in g to w in free m ovie tickets, T-shirts, w o o d e n c r u c if ix e s a n d p o s te r s from the m ovie Vam pire in Brook­ lyn. D espite the co m p etitio n an d the incentives, Lisa Solom on, an APO b lo o d d riv e c o m m itte e m em b er, said the p o in t of th e d riv e is "to save a life." "The re w a rd is th a t w e are sa v ­ ing p e o p le 's lives," she a d d e d . T he d r iv e is c o - s p o n s o re d by ithe S tu d e n t H e a lth C e n te r , th e N a tio n a l H em o p h ilia F o u n d a tio n an d the S tu d e n t G ov ernm en t. B lo o d m o b ile s a r e s e t u p a ll w eek from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . in the C o lleg e of B u sin ess A d m in is tr a ­ tion H all of H onors, at 24th Street and S peedw ay. T h ey a lso a re se t u p in B eau- ford H. Jester C en ter from 5 p.m . to m i d n i g h t M o n d a y t h r o u g h T h u rsd ay , and F riday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . ANDY ROGERS/Daily Texan Staff Bruce Devore draws blood from Brian Stockus, international business freshman, while he is entertained by Darin Baylor, Alpha Chi Omega member, during a blood drive in the Business building .The drive will con­ tinue through the week with additional locations at Jester Center and at 24th and Speedway. Health commissioner urges students to help those less fortunate HEATH SHELBY Daily Texan Staff Texas D epartm ent of Health Com­ m issio n e r D av id S m ith to ld a UT audience Monday night that students can make a difference in people's lives through advocating for those lacking sufficient medical care. Smith, who served as medical direc­ tor of the B row nsville C om m unity Health Center in the Rio Grande Val­ ley for several years, used anecdotes from his South Texas experience to illustrate his plea that future physi­ cians strive to represent the interests of patients. After opening his presentation with a television clip from the pro g ram Health com m issioner David Smith advocated the kind of eye-opening cultural experience which he said he encountered after moving from the N o rth ­ east to the Texas-Mexico border. Northern Exposure, Smith drew heavily on the themes of cultural awareness as it relates to health care. poor health conditions in the city, as w ell as m ed ical po licies w hich he described as inhumane. He advocated the kind of eye-open­ ing cultural experience which he said he encountered after moving from the Northeast to the Texas-Mexico border. "There are no Horatio Alger stories in Brownsville," Smith said. He discussed in detail some of the In the speech, sponsored by the UT H ealth Professions C ouncil, Sm ith said the time he spent in Brownsville gave him "a hefty dose of character," and provided him with a more "reali­ ty-based" sense of some of the nation's underpublicized health problems. He also praised governm ent pro­ grams that encourage doctors to prac­ tice in underdevelop ed parts of the country. Smith also said people should be the m ost im portant factor in health care. He added that in past health care discussions, "patients [were] the only group that w asn't at the table." Helping people is "something that's sometimes lost," he told the crowd of about 30, made up mostly of students from health-related fields. Fausto Meza, a graduate student at the UT Health Science Center at Hous­ ton a n d a D e p a rtm e n t of H ea lth intern, called Smith "a good speaker." He ad ded that Smith provides an excellent example for medical students and doctors to follow. Meza said he is a volunteer with a new students' group that will lobby the state Legislature in coming months to raise funding for a federal educa­ tional loan repaym ent pro g ram for physicians. The program, created in 1985, pro­ vides incentive funding for physicians who choose to practice in underserved areas, including South Texas, Meza said. T he 13-m em ber g ro u p h a s n o t m ade a decision on a nam e for their organization, Meza said. He ad ded the group has held just one m eeting since form ing, b u t has tentatively planned to concern itself with one issue per year. For now, the group's focus will be on increasing participation in the loan repayment program and lobbying the state for increased funding for the pro­ gram, Meza said. The group hopes to use the Internet an d co n ta cts w ith s tu d e n t g ro u p s from other universities to strengthen its voice, Meza said THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS 1995 LAW FAIR Over 80 Law Schools Will Be Present! Wednesday, October 25, 1995 Texas Union Ballroom 10:00am - 2:00pm Sponsored by Liberal Arts Career Services & The Liberal Arts Council ) Catholic? Interested in returning? If you have left the C atholic church because of: hurt feelings, birth control, homosexuality, guilt; divorce, abortion, or any other reason, TRY US AGAIN! Join us for an open meeting to discuss your concerns, questions, doubts, and feelings We will listen. Wednesday, October 2 5th lis t k University Catholic Center Littlefield ^ fountain 7:30 pm University Catholic Center Dobie PCI Jester Center (2 1 st St. & University Ave. - 1 blk west of Guadalupe) For more information, please call 4 7 6 -7 3 5 1 . BRING YOUR FACE to the Cactus yearbook photo studio S T U D IO SCHEDULE: G raduate Students, Graduating Seniors and Seniors Last names beginning w ith A-L O c to b e r 16-20 Last names beginning w ith M -Z Juniors, Sophom ores, Freshmen Last names beginning w ith A-L O c to b e r 30-N ovem ber 2 Last names beginning w ith M-Z N ovem ber 3, 6-8 LOCATIO N: Texas Student Publications Building, Room 3.302. The TSP Building is located at the corner o f 25th Street and W hitis Ave. 8:30 a.m.-Noon & 1:00 p.m.- 4:30 p.m. SITTING FEE: $ 3 . 0 0 O c to b e r 23-27 HOURS: SPECIAL STUDIO AT NIGHT! Class Portraits for all classifications will be taken in the Flawn Academic Center Lobby from 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. on October 24, 25 & 26 and November 7, 8 & 9. 6 T h e D a ily T e x a n T U ES D A Y , O C TO B ER 2 4 ,1 9 9 5 STATE & LOCAL PICK T H R E E : 8 -4 -6 0 Gramm gains Senate competition Democratic U.S. Representative Jim Chapman declares his bid fo r the senate seat BRIAN ROSAS Daily Texan Staff ___________ Guilty B lam ing the political p rocess and th e in c u m b e n t fo r fa ilin g to so lv e problem s ranging from the econom y to crim e, U.S. Rep. Jim Chapm an, D- S u lp h u r S p rin g s, an n o u n ced M o n ­ day he w ill run for R epublican P h il. G ram m 's U.S. Senate seat. C hapm an, w ho will forfeit his U.S. H o u se s e a t to ru n fo r th e S e n a te , said the sta te h as n ot re ce iv e d the r e p r e s e n t a t io n it d e s e r v e s fro m Gram m . "Tod ay, this Senate seat is held by one w ho puts personal and political in te r e s t a b o v e all e ls e ," C h a p m a n said. "Sacrificin g the best interests of the Lone Star State to you r personal am bition is w rong and Texans know it." C h a p m a n c r itic iz e d G ra m m fo r h is la c k o f c o m m itm e n t to T e x a s , and he said G ram m is preoccu pied w ith his presidential bid. "P h il G ram m has abandoned our fight and m oved on to one for him ­ se lf," C h ap m an said . "W e need to put a fighter back in the ring." C h apm an said the problem s asso­ c ia te d w ith th e p o li t ic a l p r o c e s s m ust b e repaired. "T o d ay, finger-pointing and polit­ ical p o stu rin g d om in ate the d ebate over issues critical to ou r fam ilies — like crim e, w elfare reform , build ing a stro n g eco n o m y , p re se rv in g and protecting M edicare and ethics." C h apm an is the third D em ocrat to enter the prim ary race. John O dam , a H ou ston attorney, entered the race Ju ly 31, and V ictor M orales, a high sch oo l g o v ern m e n t teach er, to ssed his hat into the ring on Sept. 15. N ei­ th e r O d a m n o r M o ra le s c o u ld b e reached for com m ent M onday. O ffi­ cials in G ram m 's office also did not return repeated phone calls M onday. KIM BRENT/Daily Texan Staff Vicki Nugent and son Josh Nugent of Longview and Lee Vaden of Sulphur Springs stand among the crowd gathered to cheer on Jim Chapman who announced his candidacy for senator at the Texas Capitol. T o m P a u k e n , c h a ir m a n o f th e Texas R epublican Party, said C hap­ m an h a s to ru n fo r th e s e n a te b eca u se h e could not w in b ack his seat in the House. "M r. C hapm an has decided not to ru n fo r r e - e le c t i o n to C o n g r e s s becau se his liberal voting record in W a sh in g to n is in c re a sin g ly ou t of touch w ith the view s of the conserv­ ative m ajority in the East Texas dis­ trict he is su p p o sed to re p re s e n t," Pauken said. P au ken offered C h a p m a n 's e le c­ tion returns from the past three elec­ tions as proof of his decline in popu­ larity . A c c o r d in g to e le c tio n r e tu r n s , C h a p m a n 's m a rg in o f v ic to ry has b e e n on th e d e c lin e e a c h e le c tio n s in c e h e w a s e le c te d to th e U .S . H ouse in 1986. Pauken said C hapm an is not ru n­ ning for re-election to his H ouse seat " b e c a u s e h e 's g o n e fro m b e in g unopposed in 1986, to w inning with 61 percent in 1990, to receiving only 55 p e rc e n t in 1 9 9 4 ," P a u k e n said . "C le a rly , h e w o u ld h av e faced h is to u gh est ch allen g er had he run for re-election in 1996." But C hapm an said he is the leader T e x a s n eed s to fix the b ro k e n s y s ­ tem. "T h e a lte r n a tiv e is le a d e rs w h o restore faith in the political process," " L e a d e r s w h o C h a p m a n s a id . u n d erstan d th at m o re g o v ern m e n t and higher taxes are not the solution to every problem ." " Y o u w ill fin d m y p h ilo s o p h y e tch e d in th e m a rb le o f th e T e x a s A rchive and found in the C o nstitu ­ tio n o f th e R e p u b lic o f T e x a s . It reads, 'A ll political pow er is inherent in th e p eop le, and all free g o v e rn ­ m ents are founded on their authori­ ty,' " C hapm an said. Congressman Charles Wilson announces retirement Associated Press L U FK IN — The m ost flam boyant m em b er o f the T exas con gression al delegation has decided this will be his last term — not because his job had g ro w n u n e n jo y a b le a fte r a lm o s t a quarter century, but because "sim ply, it's tim e." "T h ere is a time for everything, and m y in te rn a l clo ck te lls m e th a t 36 years in elected office is enou gh," U.S. Rep. Charles W ilson said M onday at a nev. s conference on the steps of the federal courthouse as an "o h n o " and boos em anated from the crowd. In D ecem ber of 1959, W ilson stood in the district cou rtroom acro ss the street to announce his candidacy for state representative. Since then, his Southeast Texas con­ s titu e n ts h a v e e le c te d W ils o n , a D em ocrat, three tim es to the T exas House, tw o times to the Texas Senate and 12 tim es to Congress. "A s I leave public life, I am pleased to announce to you that I'm not mad at anybody, even the R ep u b lican s.... I have always conducted your business in W ashington on a bipartisan basis, and this would have continued," W il- son said. " T h e r e a re th r e e w a y s to le a v e Congress. You can be carried out — that doesn't have much appeal to me. You can be defeated — I haven't had that experience and don't want it. Or you can just decide it's time, and get on w ith a new life w ith no regrets, and s p e c ta c u la r m e m o rie s . T h a t's what I'm going to d o." The 62-year-old Dem ocrat privately had told colleagues that it w as time to explore new horizons and m ake som e m oney in the private sector. W ilson said he is interested in lob­ bying, or w hat is called consu lting. Fie said there is a thin line betw een the tw o and that it is illegal to lobby for the first year after leaving office. " I have various interests. G etting the oil out of the Caspian Sea, which w ould m ean g oing through Tu rkey and G eorgia," he said. Tom Pauken, Texas G O P chairman, said M onday that W ilson's retirem ent gives Republicans an opportunity to p ick up the E ast T e x a s seat he h a s held for so long. O ne contender, Brian Babin, noted that "to d ay m arks the datvning of a new day in East T exas." "A s Am erica entered a new day in 1994, E ast T exas is ready to do the sam e in 1 9 9 6 ," the R epublican said M o n d ay . " I n sh ort, w e 're read y to jo in th e re fo rm r e v o lu tio n th a t is sweeping A m erica." Saldivar convicted of Tejano music star Selena’s murder Associated Press H O U STO N — A ju ry conv ict­ ed th e fo rm e r p r e s id e n t o f th e Selena fan club M ond ay o f m ur­ d e r in g th e b e lo v e d T e ja n o s in g in g sta r, r e je c tin g Y o la n d a S a l d i v a r 's c la im th a t th e g u n w ent off accidentally. W ith w o rd o f th e v e r d ic t — w hich cam e after ju st tw o h ou rs of d elib eration s — a cheer w ent up from a crow d o f several h u n ­ d red ou tsid e the courthouse, and d rivers honked their horns. Saldivar, 35, could g et as little as probation and as m uch as life in p rison w h en th e ju ry retu rn s on T u esd ay to d ecid e on a p u n ­ ishm ent. A fter the verd ict w as read, Sa l­ d iv ar's shou ld ers shook and she began to cry. A b rother and sis­ ter, s ea ted d ire c tly b eh in d her, also w ept. T h e re w as rto visib le re a ctio n from m e m b ers o f S e le ­ n a 's fam ily in the courtroom . S e le n a , w h o se full n a m e w as Selena Q u intanilla Perez, w as 23 w h e n s h e w a s g u n n e d d o w n M a r c h 31 a t a C o r p u s C h r is ti m otel. Regarded as the Latin M ad o n ­ n a, sh e w a s a s u p e r s ta r in th e w orld of T ejano m usic, a bouncy v a r ie ty o f M e x ic a n - A m e r ic a n p o p , a n d w a s w o r k in g on h e r first E n g lish -lan g u ag e record ing in hopes of becom ing a crossover sensation. P r o s e c u to r s c o n te n d e d S a l ­ d iv a r d e lib e r a te ly s h o t S e le n a w hen the singer w en t to retrieve re co rd s to su p p o rt h e r fa m ily 's s u s p ic io n th a t S a l d i v a r h a d em bezzled $30,000 as m anager of Selen a's boutiques. S a ld iv a r " t o o k th e g u n o u t, cock ed the h a m m er, p u lled th e t r i g g e r a n d k ille d h e r . W h a t could b e a w orse w ay to die than to b e shot in the b ack in a co w ­ ardly m an n er?" p rosecu tor M ark S k u r k a a s k e d d u r in g c lo s in g argum ents. " S e le n a le ft h e r m a rk on th e w o rld ," Skurka continu ed . "T h e d efend ant left her m ark on Sele­ na w ith a b u l le t h o le in th e b a ck ." B u t d e f e n s e a t t o r n e y F r e d H agans — pulling the trigger of th e 3 8 - c a lib e r p is to l o v e r and ov er as he addressed th e jury — in siste d th a t S a ld iv a r w a s b en t o n k illin g h e r s e lf an d th a t th e gun w en t off w hile she w as w av­ ing it. H e described Sald iv ar as inex­ p e r ie n c e d w ith w e a p o n s a n d said the gun had a h air trigger. "T im e and tim e again, con sis­ te n tly u n reh ea rse d , ... she said , 'T h is w a s an a c c id e n t; I d id n 't in te n d to h u r t h e r , " ' H a g a n s said. J u d g e M ik e W e s t e r g r e n m o v e d th e c a s e to H o u s to n b e c a u se o f p u b licity in C o rp u s C hristi, the sin ger's hom etow n. Ju r o r s o n ly had to d e c id e if Sald ivar, w ho rose from founder o f the Selena fan club to m anager o f h e r boutiques, shou ld be con ­ v ic te d o f m u rd e r . T o d o th a t, th e y h a d to fin d th a t S a ld iv a r shot Selena deliberately. T h e ju r y w a s n o t g iv e n th e o p t io n o f c o n s i d e r i n g le s s e r charges, such as m anslaughter. S a l d i v a r d o e s n o t fa c e th e d eath penalty b ecau se the crim e con tain ed non e o f the ag g rav at­ in g c i r c u m s t a n c e s n e c e s s a r y u n d er T exas law , such as a m u lti­ ple slaying or a m u rd er com m it­ ted d uring a rape or robbery. N u eces C ounty D istrict A ttor­ ney C a rlo s V a ld e z said he w as n ot su rp rised at the ju ry 's sw ift d e c is io n . " W e w e re c o m in g to H ou ston to see if w e cou ld find ju s t i c e h e r e , an d 1 th in k w e found it," he said. V a ld e z w o u ld n o t s a y if h e plans to seek the m axim um p u n ­ ishm en t. H e said he w ill pursue an e m b e z z le m e n t c a s e a g a in s t Saldivar. H agans said he w ould appeal. T h e d e fe n s e w ra p p e d up its case o n F rid ay after callin g five w itn esses w h ose testim on y la st­ ed all of three hou rs. Th e ju d ge re fu se d to let S a ld iv a r tak e the stand to talk only about her d is­ puted interrogation by police. A fte r th e s h o o tin g , S a ld iv a r h e ld p o lic e at b a y o u ts id e th e m o te l fo r 9 ’ : h o u rs , h o ld in g a gun to her head and w ailing that she w anted to kill herself. * HEARTBU8* SUFFERERS Enjoy a Texas Meat! aid j i e j^ íp á t e m a research * Heartburn brought ouhvTood * Taking mediartitmffir symptoms FINANCIAL INCENTIVE PROVIDED FOR MORE INFORMA TION, CALL: 3 2 0 -1 6 3 0 BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP “ MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 am-4:30 pm FREE PRE-MED SEMINAR Improve YOUR chances of getting into Med School! & & & PRE-MED ISSUES: Getting ready, acing the MCAT, AMCAS, the application, admissions, & interviewing. MEDICAL SCHOOL: Overview & strategies fo r success.. RESIDENCY/CAREER: Choosing the right specialty for you! The future of medicine. TIME: Tuesday, October 24"’ at 7 pm! PLACE: Thompson Center, Rm. 2-102 SPEAKER: William H. Bresnick, M.D. Univ. of Calif. Physician Pre-med & MCAT Expert ‘free ‘Pre-medQuideboofjdistributed ■DON'T SETTLE FOR #2 ON THE MCAT. THE BOTTOM LR EISA HIGHER SCORE ♦4 full-length diagnostic MCATs ♦ 4000+ pages of take-home material ♦ Small classes (15 students or fewer) ♦ 90+ hours of scheduled course time ♦ Free, unlimited extra tutoring ♦ Highly trained instructors ♦6.5 point average score improvement START PREPARING ON OCTOBER 281 CALL FOR DETAILS. THE PRINCETON REVIEW 474-H8T We Score More! EXAM + 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting at $119* Complete ’ price includes exam, 2 p a ir clear daily- w e a r soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1st follow up. EXPIRES NOV. 24,1995 WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VAUD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. A u s t i n V i s i o n C e n t e r D r. M a r k F. H u ts o n , Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT M-ih 4 7 7 -2 2 8 2 „ 9.6 10-7 M /C VISA AMX DISC If You Don't Want to Picture Yourself Here in 5 Years. . . .You May Want to Start Thinking About Your Career. TUc College of GmimvmicMiow Career Expo October 25 & 26 11-3 attheCM A Spots *oreb C o m m u n ic a tio n C o u n c il O ffic e o f th e D e a n C o m m u n ic a tio n C a re e r S ervice s a t e n o ' N b e W 'T E X A N ° ^ s e t r < e s t ó ' SpV'n A9 9 6 ^ quaWvcations , o r m s ^ a " S¿ ° a 9 e i ’ s ° f l ' C 6 ' . w v'cal'° J V G e n e , a > e 'n 3 .30^ • « Tep B°at ° and app°'°, No''ernb Tfte Tb; randidates ana Fnd a y ^ t r u s t e e s * " • nt a BOO" NOW I'M REALLY THRSTY 1 HE DAILY l EXAN I u e s a a y , u c i o o e r i r a g e / Former army ranger convicted of soldier’s rape and murder Associated Press L U B B O C K — L o u is Jo n e s had retired from the Army after serving in the military for 22 years. On Mon­ day, he sat and stared vacantly as jurors pronounced him guilty in the death of an abducted soldier. Jones, 45, faces eith er the death penalty or life in federal prison for m u rd erin g A rm y Pvt. T ra c ie Joy McBride and assaulting a soldier who came to her aid. P ro secu to rs took tw o days last week to build their case on confes­ sion s from Jon es and evid en ce of M cBride's abduction from Goodfel- low Air Force Base in San Angelo. The defense presented no witnesses. Defense attorney Carlton McLarty described his client as remorseful and no threat. "This man is not beyond redemp­ tio n ,” M cL arty said to the nine w om en and th ree m en w ho w ill decide punishment for Jones. Jurors reached a verdict after delib­ erating for 65 minutes. Testimony in the punishment phase was expected ¿6 Totally senseless, totally b rutal.” — Prosecutor Roger McRoberts to span several days. The trial was moved to Lubbock on a change of venue after more than 7,500 San Angelo residents signed a petition supporting the death penalty for Jones. M cBride, a native of Centerville, Minn., had been stationed in Texas just nine days when she disappeared Feb. 18 while talking on the telephone at a laundry building on the base. Testimony indicated that Jones, a Goodfellow bus driver, raped the 19- year-old w om an and then hit her head at least nine times with a tire iron. "Totally senseless, totally brutal," prosecutor Roger McRoberts said. Jones led authorities to her body under a rural brid ge north of San Angelo. But prosecutor Tanya Pierce dis­ puted what the defense characterized as his honesty and cooperation. Pre­ meditation went into such a "cruel, heinous and depraved" crime, Pierce said. Jones stared straight ahead — or down at the table w here he sat — while attorneys made arguments. His sisters declined to comment on the verdict. Defense attorneys asked the jury to consider the defendant's background as an impoverished and abused chi’d who became an Army Ranger. "W e've got to step back and we've got to lo o k at the la rg e r p ictu re . W e've got to look at the life of this m an,” M cLarty said, urging a life sentence instead of the death penalty. " I s th ere so m eth in g abou t L o u is Jones that tells you he should not be destroyed?" Adrian Carillo looks to his brothers for help as he tries to get a drink from the water fountain in Comal Park. Carillo made his way to the water spout, but found that he could not reach the button. Law enforcement remains committed to dismantling Mexican drug cartel Associated Press BROW NSVILLE — The latest arrest of a top assistant of Juan Garcia Abrego shows that authorities on both sides of the border remain committed to dismantling the empire of the powerful and elusive drug lord, U.S. officials said Monday. ship of the organization," said Raul Carballi- do, supervisory senior resident agent of the FBI's Brownsville office. Garcia Abrego heads the Gulf Cartel, one of M exico's largest drug trafficking organiza­ tions. The cartel smuggles hundreds of tons of Colombian cocaine into the United States every year, law enforcement officials say. "It demonstrates to the organization that the pressure is still on, that efforts continue to be made to locate and apprehend the leader­ A native Texan, Garcia Abrego is wanted in Mexico and the United States. Seven months ago, he became the first international drug trafficker named to the FBI's 10 most-wanted list. Last week, Mexican federal agents arrested one of Garcia A brego's top lieutenants on drug charges there. Jose Adolfo de la Garza, also known as "El Borrado" or "The Eraser," was in charge of hit squads that eliminated the com petitors and enemies of Garcia Abrego, Carballido said. Believed to be a form er m em ber of the Tamaulipas state judicial police, De la Garza also supervised the transfer of drug money from the United States back into Mexico. indictment pending in Houston federal court. The indictment alleges crimes including drug trafficking, money laundering and murder. "W e don't know exactly what his current standing within the organization was at the tim e of arrest, but in view o f the role he played at one point, I would consider it a sig­ nificant arrest," Carballido said. De la Garza also is wanted in the United States. He is named along with Garcia Abrego and more than a dozen others in a 26-count Jim Conway, FBI spokesman in Houston, said steps were being taken to try to extradite De la Garza to the United States. At least six G arcia A brego lieu ten an ts named in the indictment are in custody either in Mexico or the United States, but the others — in clu d in g G arcia A b reg o h im se lf — remain fugitives, Conway said. SWISS ARMY WATCHES Our collection includes the new Lancer Sport series for men and women y y -- TPU m* ■ ■ ” . v . • ' B « / Up to the minute fashion...from a name known for exceptional craftsmanship and quality. Choose from our Swiss Army Lancer Sport series in red, black, green and blue, encased in durable stainless steel, Or our Officer’s watches with stainless steel bands The collection, 250.00-350.00 Dillard’s growing with Austin! Join us as we celebrate our newest store at Lakeline Mall. SHOP DILLARD’S MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 10:00-9:00; SUNDAY 12 00-6 00; DILLARD S AND ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS W ELCOME ENTERTAINMENT ‘Mallrats’ falls into trap ‘Cold’ a macabre comedy JOE SEBASTIAN_________________________ Dally Texan Staff Whoever said hit men had to be cool and slick? Can we really expect hired thugs to be savvy fonts of one-liners and cultural commentary á la Pulp Fiction? It's far more likely that they're cold fish who sit around listlessly all day in front of a blank TV. This is the premise of Cold Blooded. Want a hit man? Take some shiftless loser and put a gun in his hand. Then order him away from his basket­ ball games on TV and have him shoot people. He's never displayed any emotion before, why should he after gunning someone down? It's simple. The loser in question is one Cosmo (Jason Priestly), a blank-faced twenty-something inexplicably employed by the mob. His absolute lack of ambition or expression makes Forrest Gump look like a career-motivated Yup­ pie. When the new head of Cosmo's criminal organiza­ tion decides that Cosmo needs to make a career switch to assassinations, he, as usual, goes with the flow. This puts him in the hands of the veteran Steve (Peter Riegert), who quickly discovers that Cosmo is some­ thing of a prodigy with a 9mm in hand. Though Cosmo at first shirks the thought of actually killing anyone, he quickly discovers that it's as easy as pulling a trigger. The occasional feelings of guilt he has are easily resolved through the inner calm he receives from the yoga classes he begins under the tutelage of Jasmine (Kimberly Williams). Things really start to come together for Cosmo. He's rolling in the cash as a hit man. The growing confidence that comes from his success at his day... or, well, night job allows him to win over Jasmine as a love interest, and he has yoga to clear his mind. Of course, the fact that he's involved in the most gris­ ly of underworld professions does create some prob­ lems. Cosmo is so good at his job that he is being pulled inextricably into it, and all the dangers it entails. His own newfound happiness is threatened by the new role the mob wants him to take, and he may be endangering Jasmine by his association with her. It's up to Cosmo to come up with some way out of the situation. Needless to say, this involves some of the same apa­ thy which Priestly has invested in the character throughout the film. As Cosmo, Priestly actually man­ ages to create a valid character (more valid than the vapid sex symbol from Beverly Hills 90666). With a constant non-expression on his face, Cosmo shuffles his way from problem to problem, with no Cosmo (Priestley, left) helps his wounded mentor. C O U IB U O O B Starring: Jason Priestley, Peter Riegert, Kimberly Williams Director: M. Wallace W olodarsky Playing at: Dobie Theater Rating: (out of five) regard for the fact that he may be either gunning some­ one down or plopped down idly in front of the tube. This provides ample opportunity for director M. Wal­ lace Wolodarsky (award-winning writer of The Simp­ sons) to create comic scenes highlighting Cosmo's dys- functionalism. This often turns Cold Blooded into a hilarious comedy, though this is never the intent. The movie is definitely film noir; there is too much passionless violence for it to be anything else. But Cold Blooded brings back the oft- forgotten element of humor into the genre. The movie is well acted and directed. Appropriate use of silence when necessary, in addition to truly bizarre circumstances surrounding some of the scenes, create a nice surreal atmosphere. And in addition to Priestly's own surprisingly good performance, all of the acting is solid. Riegert turns in a great role as an aging hit man who knows the bad side of the business all too well. Even the otherwise-annoying Michael J. Fox's brief cameo is well done — maybe because he gets a bullet in the face. Silent Bob (director Kevin Smith, left) and Jay (Jason Mewes) catch up on their required reading in the testosterone-fueled sequel to Clerks, Mallrats. MALLRATS Starring: Shannon Doherty, Jeremy London, Jason Lee, Claire Forlani Director: Kevin Smith Playing at: Highland 10, Westgate 8, Northcross 6, Great Hills 8 Rating: ★★ (out of five) pilot for a mall version of The Dating Game. They employ the aid of Silent Bob (Smith), who pulls out his repertoire of goofy stunts and in the process twice ends up head first through the wall of a woman's dressing room. Mallrats is not without its handful of moments. But most of the humor is just im mature and kinda boring. Quint and Brodie battle bumbling authority figures, avoid bullies, meet Stan Lee, beat up the Easter Bunny, visit a topless fortune teller, and get high. But a movie can only run so far on sticking your hand down your pants and offering up fart jokes. Most of the film is filled with Jason Lee's odd ravings as he plays the role of an enthusiastic college age slacker, champion of all things banal — from video games to superhero anatomy. And the film depends on him, but loses due to his barely interesting and sometimes annoying performance. Although he tries hard to be insight­ ful or cute, he comes across shallow and insincere. This one is in color, but with the color went the incredible realism of Clerks. And strangely enough, Clerks had more personality in its blatantly honest, black and white potrayal of convenience store life filmed for nick­ els and dimes. The primary difference between Clerks and Mallrats, is not that one is set in a convenience store and the other in a mall. Mallrats fails to deliv­ er the same type of clever charm as its forerunner because it lacks characters that are nearly as original, interest­ ing, or, more importantly, funny as those two clerks. 8 T h e D a i l y T e x a n TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24,1006 THOMAS YOO Daily Texan Staff _______ Mallrats disappoints by failing to live up to Clerks, as Kevin Smith (writer and director of both films) falls victim to the sophomore jinx. What else can you expect from a movie filmed almost entirely in a mall, the prototypical monument to shameless consumerism? Mallrats attempts to ride the Clerks gravy train, but sadly is as devoid of imagination and personality, as is the Minnesota shopping center in which it is set. While Clerks was a suprising success as a refreshingly funny film accounting the antics of two mini­ mum wagers, Smith's second attempt lacks the honesty and sincerity that was the charm of its predecessor. Instead Smith tries to sell a night­ mare of stale satire, mimicking campy '80s movie style conventions (think Porky's or Police Academy). It conjures up what would happen when a couple of so called "gen-x" slackers take over the postmodern TV sitcom wasteland (think Three's Company), complete with the casting of Shannon Doherty and a spoof debasing a particularly cheesy rendi­ tion of The Dating Game. Doherty unexpectedly occupies a somewhat peripheral, ornam ental role in the story, despite her billing as the movie's star, but true to her TV origin as on 90210, she reprises her role, as bratty as Brenda ever was. The film chronicles a day in the life of a group of mallrats who spend their time amid the sales racks at Eden Prairie Mall. It centers around the characters T.S. Quint (Jeremy London) and Brodie (Jason Lee), as they attem pt their botched relationships with their ex­ girlfriends (Claire Forlani and Shan­ non Doherty). to patch up When Quint's ex is needed as a last minute contestant, Quint and Brodie are forced to focus their efforts on sabotaging the TV replacem ent Vignette- styled ‘Blue’ experiments with improvisation D A N IE L Y. M A ID M A N Daily Texan S taff The d yn am ic duo of W ayne. W ang and Paul Auster shifts its focus from Sm oke's subtle h ar­ m onies of affection and alienation, boyhood and manhood, for the fol­ low-up Blue in the Face. The new m ovie is played broader and funnier, and though many of Sm oke's cast m em bers reappear, their subject this time is 'Brooklyn itself. Brooklyn appears as city, neighborhood, war zone, cosmos, lover, promised land and big practik cal joke. Blue tn the Face features the inno­ vative use of Lou Reed as a framing device. W earing his snappy lens- less spectacles, he rambles on about living in Brooklyn: it's less scary than Sweden, which is "kind of empty, and they're all drunk." He knows his way around Brooklyn, as opposed to Paris. He misses the Dodgers. Interspersed with "flashbacks to Lou Reed" are improvised scenes set at the increasingly m ytholo­ gized Brooklyn C igar Com pany. From the m agisterial counter, Auggie Wren (Harvey Kei­ tel) is * still presiding over his rog u e's gallery of neighborhood misfits. behind Some of the old friends are still 4 50 7 2 0 9 35 1 2 0 0 Cold blooded THE n v rm > to CROW 5 0 0 7 30 9 35 12 :1 5 4 45 7 15 KIDS SHOWGIRLS 9 :4 5 1 1 55 4 30 7 0 0 9 30 9 N Á D J A * Í 3 C B J I E 21,1 t G n M > i » 472 H IM B A R G A I N M A T I N E E S E V E R Y D A Y © General Cinema A L L S H O W S S T AR TIN G B EF O R E 6pm H IG H LA N D 1 0 ^ 6 . I 1-33 a t MIDDLE FISKVILH RD 4 3 4 -9 5 62 | THE SCARLET LETTER 1:15 4:15 7:10 9 :55 R IX6lftlTHX TO WONO FOO 1 45 4:10 7:35 10 00 PG13 WHIT MALLRATS 12:30 2:50 5:05 7:25 9 50 R D O W MOW AND THEN 12 30 2 45 5 00 7 15 9 30 PG13 WHIT NEVER TALK TO STRANGERS 1:50 3:50 5 50 8 :0 0 10:15 R SODS WHIM THX CLOCKERS 1:50 4:30 7:05 9 45 R STEREO DEVIL I n ■ BLUE DRESS 1:40 4 15 7:10 9 :3 0 R STEREO THE USUAL SUSPECTS 2 30 5 15 7 25 9 :4 0 R STEREO GET SHORTY O N TWO SCREENS R 2:30 4 45 7 10 9 :2 5 DOUK 12:40 3:00 5:15 7 :4 0 10:10 DTS WWUl THX GREAT HILLS 8 h- | US 183 & GREAT HILLS TRAIL 7 9 4 -8 0 76 MALLRATS 2:10 4 :3 0 7:05 9 :2 0 R STEREO AMERICAN GUILT 1:30 4:10 7:10 9:45 PG13 THX ASSASSINS 1:20 4 20 10:05 R SDDS THX THE BIO GREEN 2 :0 5 4 20 7:15 9 30 PG STEREO NOW AND THEN 2:0 0 4 :30 7:15 9 45 R DOW SEVEN 2 00 4 :4 0 7:30 10 0 0 R DOW TO WONO FOO 1:35 4:15 9:50 PG13 STEREO DCVH. In a BLUE DRESS 1 5 0 4 .2 5 7 25 9 55RSTIRIO ] GIFT C E R T IFIC A T ES ON SALE SOUTHERN FRIED TUESDAY Your ch o ice of our Chicken Fried Steak, Southern Fried Chicken or Southern Fried Veggie Patty served with French Fries or Mashed Potatoes, Vegetable St Texas Toast. 2 for l! 6 P-m - 10 p.m. C*t CM tutitfl 11 A.M. -1 0 P.M. M-SAT 11:30*10 P.M. SUN 807 W. 6TH 472-0693 U P S T A I R S AT T H E C O - O P V i e t n a m V e t e r a n a n d U T L e c t u r e r T o m C a m p b e l l here: Jared Harris, Giancarlo Espos­ ito, Victor Argo and Mel Gorham all return. M el G orham played A uggie's m ondo-randy date, V ioletta, in Smoke and expands her role into a feverish fantasia of stereotypical hot-blooded feminine latinatude. In a fit of pique she hisses into a m ir­ ror: "I rip your guts out Auggie. Like a tiger. Like a fucking tiger. With teeth as sharp as the razor blade." She later seduces Auggie with quotations from Hamlet. The film, shot in six days with largely improvised scenes, is a big huge mess ot moments. Some are wonderful, such as any scené with Mel Gorham. Some are not so hot. Structure is marginally imposed through video interview s with actual Brooklynites. They expound on everything from birthday cakes to the continuing problem of plastic bags stuck in trees. Their hard- nosed persistence unifies a mind- boggling variety of lives and roots. This unity and sense of com m u­ nity is probably the moral of the story. The point is rammed home som e­ what tiresomely with endless nos­ talgic recollections of Ebbets Field, lost hom e of a the Dodgers. team, lost Everybody old enough misses the like the ghost of D odgers, and Harvey Keitel, left, and Jim Jarmusch improvise a scene of Blue in the Face. BLUE IN THE FACE Starring: Harvey Keitel, Lou Reed, Lily Tomlin, Roseanne, Madonna, Jim Jarmusch, Michael J. Fox, RuPaul Director: Wayne Wang, Paul Auster Playing at: Village Cinema 4 Rating: (out of five) C hristm as past, Jackie Robinson appears in a vision to Vinny, and tells him not to sell the Brooklyn Cigar Company. Like we couldn't guess, the store holds together the com m unity much as the ballpark once did. Does it work? No. Even a day later, Blue in the Face fades from the memory. It doesn’t balance its suc­ cesses w ith its failures, d oesn't develop any theme, doesn't move anywhere. It is a daydream of a warm after­ noon, executed with little effort and meant for little effort. It is like a good stretch or a pleasant yawn to watch the film, and little more. M B B W 2 Dozen Roses * 19.95 Cask & Carry «¡i Lü Casa Verde Florist J 4 5 1 -0 6 9 1 Daily Spaeials u FTD * 45* A Guadalupe • On UT Shuttle R t 4 Book a first class seat... and be attended by our knowledge­ able, enthusiastic staff at Austin’s oldest and largest locally owned inde­ pendent bookstore. u M Mi.ave a world class tour in an unequaled ambience for reading, gifts, entertainment, food and drink. Tuos.. I Oct. 24» at 7pm P J. O’Rourke Wed., Oct. 25* at 7pm Tim O’Brien Sun., Sat., Thurs., Oct. 26» Oct. 28» Oct. 29» at 2pm at 2pm at 7pm Deborah Jane Cactus Pryor Scott Hay BookPtople Coffeehouse ™ cct. 1970 4 7 2 .5 0 5 0 9-11 Every Day Bookstore & Lamar W i l l s i g n c o p i e s o f h i s n o v e l T h e O ld M a n ’s T r a il Tuesday, October 24, 2 - 6 p.m. Upstairs at the Co-op U n i v e r s i t y C o - o p B o o k s t o r e * 2 2 4 9 G u a d a l u p e * 4 7 6 - 7 2 1 I I p s i a i i s ( B e t w e e n 2 2 n d a n d 2 3 r d ) • On t h e D r a g I r ut * P a r k i n g w i t h S * P u r c h a s e Poets to slam at Planet Theater KEN HUNT Daily Texan Staff It d o e sn 't have the R om an s-an d - • lion s a tm o sp h e re o f th e av erag e . p o etry slam as e v e ry o n e m o v e s ; ab ou t a bu ffet tab le and chats, w a it­ ing for the show to begin. F u n k y m u sic em an ates from the ; show room on the oth er side o f the • cu rtain . W hen the lig hts dim , poets, ju d g es and sp ectato rs file in. A nd a few m in u tes later, G arland T h om p son Jr. b ou n d s out, beam ing, a w ireless m icro p h o n e in one hand. G a rla n d 's S hoot-O u t A t The P lanet P oetry Slam an d R en t P arty has th at s ce n a rio b eg u n . A nd w h en u n fold s W ed n esd ay, it w ill be the o n e-y ear an n iv ersary o f the series. A u stin bein g w h at it is, slam m in g aro u n d here does n ot requ ire on e to ch oo se w hich sn arlin g pack of p oets to jo in ; ev en W a m m o 's m ore co n ­ ven tion ally m od eled , h ig h -in ten sity slam at the E lectric L ou n g e fosters a sen se of co m m u n ity and m utual sup p ort. slam , T h o m p s o n 's h o w e v e r, red u ces the co m p etitiv e trap p in g s to near in v isib ility. B allotin g is co n ­ in secret by p reo rd a in ed d u cted ju d g es, and in co n trast to the one- p o em -th ree-m in u tes rule observed n ationally, the poet has up to four m in u tes to d eliv er as m any poem s as possible. th e re Instead o f ju m p in g right into the fray , is u su a lly a sp o k en w o r d /m u s ic a l act as an o p en e r. These T am m y G om ez con la Palabra, G losso Babel and the Je ff Parker K night Trio. in clu d e d h a v e “(This form at) d ev elop ed b ecau se o f the e xp erien ces I had w ith trad i- SPOKEN WORD SHOOT-OUT AT THE PLANET Featuring: G uy Forsyth, D avid A lan W enner Playing at: Planet Theater, 2210 M anor Road, 478-1081 Cost: $5 Date: 8.30 p.m. W edn esd ay tional slam fo rm ," T h o m p son , a fo r­ m er L os A n g eles re sid e n t w ith exp erien ce in th eater and film , said. "I w ent throu gh last y e a r's L olla- palooza slam s, as w ell as D allas and H ou ston, and w h ile they w ere fun b ecau se W am m o w as h ostin g them , the form I found to be very d ifficu lt for the poet in m any respects. It m ad e it all very co m p etitiv e and edgy, from anger to fru stration to e la tio n at w in n in g , and fin a lly relief. I guess, being a poet, I w an t­ ed to m ake the p o ets' ride a little sm o o th e r." Y et T hom sp on has been realistic in an e ss e n tia lly a b o u t h is ro le I d id n 't v o la tile m ed iu m . exp ect to be h ere a year, h on estly , and I c e rta in ly d id n 't e x p e ct to b eco m e a part of slam cu ltu re in A u stin ," he said. "N o , " I hop ed p eo p le w ould com e, en jo y th em selv es and exp ress th em ­ selves. I kind o f look at people as hav ing a d ifferent flavor, and the tim es I’ve had the m ost fun artisti­ cally w as w hen there w ere all these d ifferen t flavors m ixed up to create this in cred ible ste w ." The ad d end u m “and rent p arty " to the Shoot-O ut's full nam e d eriv es from a p ractice observed in H arlem and elsew h ere in the first part of this century. If a resident could not pay the rent, that person w ould h ost a rent party, cooking food and invitin g e v ery o n e in the com m unity to join. th a t T h o se atten cjed w ou ld d onate w h atev er am ount possible, a llo w in g the h o st to m eet ren t. “T h a t's the p art that b rin g s the com m u n ity together, united for one com m on g o a l," T h o m p so n said . "It's that g reater part of it that I w ish to ap p ly in 1995 to my event. I'm fond o f say in g that this is m y ow n com m u n ity service p ro g ram ." And this bein g a d ifferent kind o f slam , d ifferen t kinds of people tend to show up to p articip ate or ju st w atch — in clu d in g m any not seen in the m ain o f oth er A ustin poetry circles. the local M em b ers o f th e a te r com m unity, such as repeat w inner Eric Shim m el, figure p rom inently. T h a t's b ecau se I exist in the sp o ­ ken w ord , th e a te r and m u sic w orlds here; it results as a featu re of the p eop le I co m e in con tact w ith ," Thom spon said. “I v igorou sly p u r­ little sue d iv ersity; p eople feel a m o re c o m fo rta b le at m y slam becau se of the w h ole w ay w e do it. It's a theater, n ot a bar, a very user friend ly en v iro n m en t." A v o lu n te e r w ith the P lan et, T h o m p son ob served that som e the­ su ch as A aron ate r p e rso n n e l, Brow n (au th or of the recent p ro­ d uction The M .O . o f M .l ) , have b een recip rocally influenced by exp o su re to spoken w ord. T h e D a il y T e x a n Tuesday, October 24, 1995 Page 9 Bizarre ‘Love’ remains fun DANIEL Y. MAiDMAN_____ Daily Texan Staff Denys A rcand 's new est film Love and H um an R em ains investigates the feasibility o f loye in a landscape o f confused and shifting sexual identities and activities. . It sets out to run the gam ut o f the m o d em h eterosexu als, hom osexuals, disaffected hetero­ sexuals trying to be hom osexual, p ed op hilia, S& M , tran svestism , classic hedonism and (for no good reason) rape and m urder. scen e: This sw eeping social statem ent is undercut by its ow n tone. Instead o f an epic, it feels like a draw ing room com ed y. W here it need s em pathy, it has style. W here it needs scope, it adds characters. W here it needs em otion, it substi­ tutes deduction. The style is striking. Love and H um an Remains is shot with a cold m ix o f w hites, blues and greens and overpow eringiy pure black. An unorthodox use of closeups and odd angles (note the intriguing use o f m irrors in the heroin scen e) works well in support o f the chill at the story's heart. As the characters despair, there is a palpable stylistic correlation in the colorless nights and skies. The music is well integrated into the film, particularly the eerie jin­ gling of bells which haunts the ultra­ clean apartm ent o f the eccentric prostitute played by Mia Kirshner. The ch aracters are g enerally interesting and though the acting varies w ildly betw een student-film LOVE AND HUMAN RBAAN8 Starring: Ruth M arshall, T hom as G ibson, Mia K irshner D ire ctor; M ar he Scorcese Playing at: Texas U nion Theater Rating: ★ ★ 14? (out of five) bad and professionally passable, the people described are differenti­ ated and captivating (largely as a result of dialogue). Candy (Ruth M arshall), the hero­ ine, is a distraught wom an who lo v es the h om osexu al D avid (Thom as G ibson) because it is safe. She is a neatness freak, uttering w ith am using horror at one point, "T h ere's a spot on m y futon." She room s w ith D avid, who is so good-looking that everybody falls for him . He has a heart o f stone, though. "H e's in love with you ," h e's told, to w hich he responds, "L o v e d oesn't exist." David hangs loose with a civil serv an t w ho is q u ietly going insane, a ravaged gay nightclub addict, and a 17-year-old busboy nam ed Kane. K ane has a girlfriend but falls in love w ith David. Jerry , a self-su fficien t lesbian, falls hopelessly for Candy, who in turn is taken in by a philandering yutz w ith a wife. To round it off, K irsh n er (the o n ly really good actress in the film ) plays a psychic and S& M queen w h o seem s like generally a decent babe. It's a w acky gallery of characters that keeps the verbal sparks com ­ in g and it is this eclectic character­ ization that accounts for m ost of interest and e n tertain m en t the value o f the film. Finally, there is deduction, and it is here that the film yields its m ea­ ger intellectual rew ards. And once we settle in for a bloodless m ap­ ping of contem porary sexual cos­ m ology, it's a good ride The geom etry w ith which the plot unfolds, the intercutting and ju xtap osin g of sn ip p ets of one w orld and another, is not so sharp as Egoyan or Pinter, but it's still sharp, and a lot of fun. Th e film leaves you feeling like you 've seen either the w hole w orld or the interior o f a single soul, etched in acid, queasy at the im bal­ ance of love and decadence. Love and H um an Rem ains fails m ost grandly in its approach to its theme. C om pare the m ovie with '93s Savage Nights. It allow ed Savage N ights had an intense, pungent feel to every social stratum it covered. itself to sprawl, in length and plot, to truly epic dimensions. It felt like the gasp­ ing cry of a dying m an, for whom the stakes of finding love are truly as important as the soul's salvation. By contrast, the short, trim, anti­ sep tic, pretty L ove an d H um an Remains w atches the w orld like a tourist and searches for love w ith a clinical and arbitrary interest, so that the resolution o f the them e is predictable and indifferent SCATTERED,SMOTHERED, & COVERED A rtis t: The U nsane Label: A m phetam ine R eptile R ating: ★ ★ ★ ★ (out of five) It's fin ally arrived . N o, not ju st the new U n san e record , but the first U n sa n e record that actu ally delivers. The U n san e hav e a lw ay s been ab le to ch u rn throu gh albu m s of d a rk and h e a v y m u sic, b u t for som e reason past albu m s (U n san e and Total D estru ction ) ju st d id n 't fu lfill the u n n erv in g v ision hinted at by th eir albu m cov ers. W ith a lit­ tle too m uch em p h asis on b ein g noisy, past alb u m s had ju st enou gh w e a k sp ots to h old the band b ack ■on the frin g es o f ch eesy thrash. their live show s co m p le te ly d en ied , but they w ere stu ck there anyw ay. This w as a p o sition S ca ttered , S m o th ered S C ov ered sen d s the band ca re e n in g through th e d ark alley s o f som e vice-rid d en m e tro p o lis, w ith a p u rsu in g figu re of som e h o rro r rid ing clo se b ehind . This m ay be a little on the d ram atic sid e, b u t listen to this albu m in a d ark room and see if you d o n 't b eco m e con v in ced so m eo n e is lu rk ­ ing ou tsid e w aitin g to reco n fig u re you r an ato m y w ith a shotgu n. rh y th m The m ood o f the albu m is b est cap tu red on C an't See, w h ere the g u itar falls e v e r so slig h tly behind th e m ain the refrain , creatin g a sen se o f u ltim ate d isin te g ra tio n . A fter this, w o rkin g y o u r w ay th e a to n a l th ro u g h ch arg e of G et O ff M y B ack or Scrape is m o re an e x e r c is e in cre a tin g p aran oia than listen in g to m usic. th ro u g h S ca ttered , S m o th ered & C o v ered h as an u n n ervin g, b lu esy feel. T his is m ost e v id e n t on A lleged, w h ere a w ailin g h arm on ica lead s into the cra sh in g chorus. O th er riffs and m elo d ies also fo l­ low c la s s ic b lu e s p a tte rn s. T h e b u ried -in -th e-b a se m en t vo cals are m u ch s h a rp e r than in th e past, th ou gh no less d istu rb in g . T hese w ere p resen t to a certain e xten t in past albu m s, but the m uch tigh ter sou n d on Scattered, S m oth ered & SOUND BITES in to band ce rtain ly h ad an o p p o rtu n ity to b re a k '9 0 s g o ld e n - th e b rick e d m a in -s tre a m ro a d -m o st- tra v eled . Y o u 'd th in k th ey w ould hav e taken it. Fu eled by an o ft-u se d tru m p eter and sax p la y er co m p lim e n tin g the so lid co re c o m p o n e n ts o f b ass, g u itars, and d ru m s, as w ell as the in co m p re h e n sib le ly rics o f e n ig ­ m a tic fro n t-m an S p e ed o , R o ck et F ro m th e C r y p t h a s p ro d u ce d som e of the m o st m em o ra b le and o rig in al p u nk ro ck o f th e d ecad e. T h e b a n d p e a k e d m u s ic a lly w ith 1 9 9 2 's C irca: N ow , th e ir last albu m on C arg o R eco rd s, a label in d ie tu rn th e y h e lp ed m ain stay. in to an W ith Scream , D racu la, S cream !, In te rs c o p e th e ir first a lb u m on th e b a n d d is p e ls an y R e co rd s, lose fe a rs th at th e m u sic m ig h t so m e o f its c re a tiv e firep o w er, but Sp eed o , in his a lw a y s -e n te rta in in g lin er n otes, m ak e s clea r R o ck e t's co lle ctiv e d esire to m ove on to b ig ­ ger and b etter w o rld s. "W e h op e you can re la te to our d esire to rock and ro ll," the g u i- P H A R M A C O :: L S R Do You have Mild Asthma? Do you control your asthma with one of the follow ing inhaled medications: Ventolin®, Proventil®, Alupenl®, Maxair™, B re th a ire ® , Torn a la te® , Bronkom eter®, Medihaler-lso™, M etaprel®? If so, we are looking for men and women between the ages of 1 8 and 5 0 with mild asthma to participate in a medical research study. The study w ill involve 4 weekends in our overnight research fa c ility and you can earn up to $1 100 for your participation. M em bers o f U nsane d is c u s s th e ir fa vo rite pre pa ra tion o f hashbrow ns. but b etw een the su d d en a p p e a r­ an ce o f to p -4 0 so ft-p u n k and a m ajor label d eal, the San D ieg o C ov ered a llo w s through. th em to co m e T h e U n sa n e see m e d to be in lim b o fo llow in g the d ep artu re o f o rig in al bassist P eter Shore last fall. the T h at w as c o m p o u n d e d by b a n d 's su b s e q u e n t, and re la ted , d rop from the M atad o r roster. But s in g e r/g u ita ris t C h ris S p en cer and d ru m m er V in n ie Sig n o relli re co v ­ e red q u ick ly by a d d in g th e ir sou n d m an , D ave C u rran, on bass and m oving to A m p h etam in e R ep ­ tile record s, a label w hich should have b een their hom e all along. O f cou rse, an U n san e albu m is not an U n san e albu m w ith o u t the b loo d y cov er art. Ju st add the w ord "b lu d g e o n e d " to the title to get an idea o f w h at is on the fro n t o f S cat­ tered, S m othered & C overed. — Joe Sebastian SCREAM, ORACULA, SCREAM Artist: R ocket from the C rypt Label: Interscope Records Rating: ★ ★ ★ V 2 (out of five) N o on e has e v e r a ccu sed R ocket From the C ry p t o f c o n v e n tio n a lity , Spring 1996 Registration Access Period 1, October 30 — November 11 (Except Sunday, November 5) 2 . 3. 4. 5. 6. Purchase a Course Schedule at a local bookstore, the Texas Union, or the Jester Center Store. Pick up your Registration Information Sheet (RIS) in your m ajor departmental office. See your academic adviser if required or desired. Clear your financial and nonfinancial bars, if any. Check your RIS to determine your access times. Call TEX, (512) 475-9800 using a touch-tone telephone. Your spring fee bill will be m ailed to yo ur designated local or perm anent address on Novem ber 21. Read "Paym ent Procedure D etails" in the Course Schedule. Paym ent m ust be received on o r before D ecem ber 13, 1995. Office o f the Registrar University of Texas at Austin t a r is t / s c r e a m e r s a y s . d e a d ." "P u n k is T h e albu m d oes e x p lo re a lo t o f new gro u nd for th e b an d , m o st o f it p retty fertile. O n e o f the a lb u m 's h ig h lig h ts is U sed, so u n d in g like a B ru ce S p r in g s te e n /b e e r co m m e r­ cial h y b rid , w ith S p e e d o 's re q u i­ s c re a m in g an d d is to rtio n . s ite T hen th e re 's H eater H an ds, w hich co u ld h av e b ee n a S m ith e re e n s co v er, had the S m ith e re e n s used m o re scre am in g an d d isto rtio n . fro m B u t th e b an d d o e s n o t s tra y e n tir e ly its p u n k b a c k ­ g ro u n d , fillin g the alb u m w ith a n u m b e r o f ch arg e d son g s, from th e seco n d tra ck — B orn in '69, to the c lo s e r ,B u rn t A liv e. B u t ev en on th e s e , b a n d m e m b e r s re m a in fo cu sed on sta n d in g ou t from the p a c k , v a ry in g rh y th m s as th ey m a in tain a ste a d y , p o u n d in g beat, and b rin g in g in their sax o p h o n e an d tru m p e t — a lo n g w ith an o cc a s io n a l a cco rd io n , H am m on d o rg a n o r strin g sectio n — to a u g ­ m en t S p e e d o 's g u ita r n o ise and "m u rd e r by v o ic e ," a s he ca lls it. T h e m u sic d o es su cceed for the ban d (and p o ssib ly fail for In te r­ sco p e ) in that it so u n d s like n o th ­ ing e lse on th e rad io o u tsid e of K V R X , and it is d iffic u lt to im a g ­ ine a "R o c k o f the '9 0 s " sta tio n p ic k in g up on so m e th in g th is c r e ­ ativ e. In th at resp ect, R o ck e t From the C ry p t p ro b a b ly tu rn ed th e ir b acks on the m o n ey and fam e a w a itin g th em in the cu rre n t p o p w o rld o' m e d io crity , as th ey ce rta in ly have the ta len t and a b ility to ru n w ith an y o n e on th e airw av es. H o p efu l­ ly, th e y 'll do th e sam e th in g next — S tev e S ch eibal tim e. SOUTHEASTERN RftRALEGAL INSTITUTE T a k e Y o u r D e g r e e O n e S t e p F u r t h e r Increase Your Employmeht Potential Paralegal Certificate Program s 4-month full-time 7 or 14-month part-time Approved by the American Bar Association Prominent Attorney Faculty Employment Assistance 214/385-1446 1-800/525-1446 5440 Harvest Hill, Suite 200 Dallas, TX 75230 London $369 Paris $360* $389* Madrid $408* Frankfurt Zurich $425* Tokyo $478* Costa Rica $179* Caracas $199* • Fares are each war from Austr based on roundtnp purchase Restnaonsappfyardtaxesrttncludea Call for other worldwide destinations. Council fraud 2000 Guadalupe St. • Austin, TX 78705 512 - 472-4931 Eurailpasses issued on-the-spot* Your competitors for law school take Kaplan. NUMBER OF STUDENTS PER YEAR* lS A t KAPLAN Prm, R#v *1 9 9 3 estimate Shouldn’t you? More students trust Kaplan to help them get a higher score because Kaplan is the undisputed leader in test prep. Find out why. Call today. 1 - I I 0 - K A P - T E S T <2¡$> C2S> KAPLAN «TIT* <2E2> e r r » * ln to «k a p to n co m Internet hom e page. http-JTwww.liapton.com America O n ln e keyword Kapton ASSOCIATED PRESS Continued from page 12 Page 10 Tuesday, October 2 4 ,1 9 9 5 T h e D a ily T exa n 1995 WORLD SERIES Batter up Series shifts from home o f the Braves to home o f the DH Associated Press they reach CLEV ELA N D — W orld Series teams get an extra bat with the DH when the Am erican League city. And if ever a pennant winner needed one, it's the C leve­ land Indians. The best offense in baseball has eight hits in two games against Atlanta and is batting a timid .125 for the Series. The middle of the batting order is in a major league slump. No. 3 hitter Carlos Baerga is 0-for-8. Cleanup man Albert Belle — the first hitter in history with 50 home runs and 50 doubles in the same sea­ son — had one lonesome single in the first two games. Eddie Murray, who hit Cleveland's only home run, is batting .167. Paul Sorrento can only help. He returns to first base and becomes the Indians' extra bat with Murray in his accustomed DH spot. Atlanta will use Ryan Klesko, the regular left fielder, as the DH and plug Luis Polonia in left field as its extra bat. Polonia, who batted .264 in 28 games after coming over from the New York Yankees, got the call over Mike Devereaux, the MVP of the league championship, because he swings from the left side and all of the Indians starters are right-handed. Braves m anager Bobby Cox, who managed with the DH in Toronto, is fam iliar with the rule. "Ia lw a y s thought it was a little bit of a N ational League advantage when you get the American League club playing w ithout its favorite Continued from page 12 runs have scored on two errors and a groundout. The Indians are 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position. To repeat: Good pitching stops good hitting. " I guess there's a reason why everybody says that. There has to be a reason to prove that theory, and I think this series hasn't been any dif­ ferent," Glavine said. Kenny Lofton has caused the most trouble for Cleveland. He's gotten two hits and twice reached on errors, stealing four bases and scoring three times. Other than that and Murray's homer, almost nothing from the most fearsome lineup in the game. M aybe many of the Indians are tight in their first World Series, or perhaps some sluggers are trying to do too much. Whatever, whether it's chasing bad pitches or simply miss­ Series: Tribe hopes to avoid repeat of 1954 B ra v e s c o a c h Pat C o rra le s hits to in field ers du rin g practice. D H ," Cox said. "They played all year with it. We don't and in the National League, you've always got somebody on the bench who can DH. So I think it's a slight advantage for the National League." The Braves did not get a lot of mileage from the DH in the 1991 and 1992 World Series. Cox used Lonnie Smith in the role both years and he batted just .154 and .167 and is best for a seventh-gam e remembered baserunning blunder that might have cost the Braves the '91 championship. Since the current format of using the rule in games played in the AL park and not in the NL park began in 1986, the extra bat has been some­ thing of a non-factor, with AL DHs batting .220 and NL DHs hitting .195. Still, the only hitter in the Indians lineup batting more than that right now is Manny Ramirez at .286. "W e 're not sw inging the way w e're capable of," Cleveland man­ ager Mike Hargrove said. ing good ones, it's not working. "W e just haven't perform ed," Lofton said during M onday's work­ out at Jacobs Field. "A nd because it's the World Series, it's a big deal." Just like it was 41 years ago. Power hitters Larry Doby, who led the league with 126 RBIs, and A1 Rosen did not drive in a single run. AL batting champion Bobby Avila hit just .133, and the team that topped the league in homers batted only .190. Lemon, who went 23-7 that season, lost the opener — the game when Mays made his famous catch against Vic Wertz — in the 10th inning-on Dusty- Rhodes' pinch-hit home run. Lemon also lost Game 4 at Cleve­ land Stadium, the final disappoint­ ment for a staff that included Hall of Famers Early Wynn, Bob Feller and Hal Newhouser, plus star Mike Garcia. At Jacobs Field, Charles Nagy will start Game 3 against John Smoltz, 5- lifetim e in the postseason for 1 Atlanta. Braves manager Bobby Cox said Maddux, the three-time Cy Young winner who pitched a two-hitter in the opener, would be moved back to Game 5. Instead, Steve Avery will start Game 4 Wednesday night. "[A very] is throwing too good not to pitch," Cox said. " I think it's best, if you can, to have healthy, rested pitchers." As Lemon and longtime Indians fans know, however, this Cleveland team is just a couple of losses from a rest that will last all winter. "Y es, they can come back. We thought that, too, until it was over," Lemon said. " It 's just a case of doing it." rafe» Cardinals hire As La Russa Associated Press ST. LOUIS — One of the worst teams in the major leagues got one of the best managers. Tony La Russa, who led the Oak­ land Athletics to a championship and three AL pennants in 10 years, signed a two-year contract on M on­ day worth an estimated $1.5 million per season to manage the St. Louis Cardinals. The Cardinals finished fourth in the NL Central at 62-81 under Joe Torre and Mike Jorgensen. La Russa didn't fare much better as the Ath­ letics finished last in the AL West at 67-77, but his track record put him in demand and he took advantage of an opportunity to leave Oakland with two years left on his contract. Cardinals general manager Walt Jocketty was director of baseball administration for Oakland for 10 years before becoming the Colorado Rockies' assistant GM in 1993. He joined the Cardinals last season. "The hiring of Tony La Russa to manage the Cardinals is a huge step in the rebuilding process of this orga­ nization," Jocketty said. "H e's one of the best managers of this era." La Russa has m anaged for 17 years — all in the AL — during which has compiled five AL West titles and 1,320 victories, second only to Tom m y Lasorda of Los Angeles among active managers. He d idn't appear too w orried about changing leagues and said he want­ ed to produce a contending team "a s early as possible." " I believe in high goals," La Russa said. " I believe in big dream s." C ardinals outfielder Bernard Gilkey attended the news confer­ ence and endorsed the move. "H e 's been to the World Series, he's won the big gam es," Gilkey said. "H e 's just a competitive per­ son, and that's what we need." La Russa, 51, brings his long-time pitching coach, Dave Duncan, with him. Duncan replaces Mark Riggins, who was with St. Louis one season. The Cardinals also will retain Lou Brock and Red Schoendienst in capacities that have yet to be deter­ mined. La Russa spoke M onday with batting coach Chris Chambliss and said other members of his Oak­ land staff would be considered for other openings. Jorgensen returns, at least for now, to his job as director of player development for the Cardinals. He's under consideration for the general manager job in Montreal. La Russa said he left Oakland, w hich is under new ow nership, without animosity. " It would have been very easy to get turned on by the challenge they face," La Russa said. "B u t at some point, you wear out your welcome and it's time to move o n." "W e're just grateful Tony chose the N ational L eag u e," A thletics ow ner Steve Schott said. "T h a t means we'll only have to face him if we both get to the World Series." "T hat was a slam dunk," La Russa Schott declined to speculate on said. "N o contest. We are a team ." potential replacements. Golf: Texas struggles through new format tough overall conditions for causing the Longhorns' unusually high scores. All of the teams in the field of 12 are seeming to have problems with the conditions on the par-72, 6,932- yard layout in Birmingham, Ala. Arizona, which is leading the team standings with a 13-over par 589, is struggling, as is second place UNLV at 16-over par. Leading the individual honors is North Carolina's Rob Bradley after a 74 on Monday left him 5-under par and five strokes ahead of Chris Hanell of Arizona State, who is in second place. Texas' Jeff Fahrenbruch, who is recovering from a foot injury to play in his first collegiate tournament, is currently tied for 22nd (78-73— 151). Jason Hebert shot a 77 on Monday for a 182 total, and Marcus Jones is currently at a two-day total of 171. "Robby shot a 74 today, so I guess we had three good scores [Mon­ day]," Clayton said of Elder, Skin­ ner, and Fahrenbruch's M onday fin­ ish. "W hen you shoot up in the 80s, it's hard to have a good team score." The Longhorns, who attended a banquet Sunday night hosted by Shoal Creek, spent Monday night in the hotel studying for classes. The team currently has a 3.5 grade point average, and academics is an area Clayton stresses over and over. "W e always do that," Clayton said of study hall during tournaments away from Austin. "W e always have been able to put our academics first. We didn't have a great day [Mon­ day], so hopefully we can go out there [Tuesday] and play well." Texas needs to work oi)t the prob­ lems before they return home for their next tournament. The Long­ horns host the Harvey Penick Inter­ collegiate Nov. 3-4 at M orris- Williams Golf Course. W inners from that tournam ent have included some of the PGA tour's brightest stars. Ben Crenshaw, Tom Kite, Fred Couples, Mark Brooks, and Justin Leonard all took home Penick trophies during their collegiate days. This tournament is also the final Texas tournament on the fall sched­ ule. Texas will have plenty of time to rest before their spring opener at the P ing /A rizona Golf Intercollegiate on Feb 5 in Tucson, Ariz. Confidence: Horns ready for SWC title run Continued from page 12 beat them," Neil said of the 18-9 loss to A&M in 1993. third quarter at South Bend, Ind. before falling, 55-27. Under Mackovic, Texas has been impressive after an off week. The Longhorns have racked up seven wins, a tie and no losses in his three- plus years as head coach in those games. As much heat as the Longhorns have taken this year, they should have a 6-1 record and with a little luck could be 7-0. Texas blew a 21-0 first-quarter lead to Oklahoma and tied the Sooners and led Notre D am e/ 20-19, in the ■ IN JU RY R EPO RT — Defensive end Tony Brackens has what M ack­ ovic thinks is only a sprained wrist. X-rays should confirm .that thought, the Texas coach said. ... Wideout Mike Adams has a bruised knee and a hip flexor injury and will be limit­ ed in practice this week, Mackovic said. ... Quarterback James Brown was hit on top of his shoulder and is sore. He will be kept out of work­ outs the entire week to recuperate. Mackovic said Brown most likely in would have sat out the week any­ way. ... Linebacker Tyson King has been "banged up" according to M ackovic and will spend the week limited healing his ailm ents workouts also. ... Mark Kuper will undergo arthroscopic surgery Tues­ day to repair what Mackovic thinks is torn cartilage. Kuper will mi^s three to four weeks. ... Safety Tre Thomas' shoulder will be re-evalu­ ated Tuesday, and wideout Quinton W allace is expected to gradually work back from a hamstring injury suffered against Oklahoma. S exual H ealth o n C a m pu s °aiiy Texan HattoVJ and win special Halloween Treats (Prizes listed below) R U LE S : pick one or all 4 categories below and send your typed entry, along with your name, address and telephone number, to The Daily Texan Halloween Contest, P. O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713 by October 25th. A winner will be selected in each category. Each winning entry will be published on our “ Halloween P a g e s” O ctober 27th. In addition, winners will be awarded exciting, fun prizes from area merchants. BEST GHOST STORY 1 it BEST COSTUME IDEA FUNNIEST HALLOWEEN STORY FAVORITE WITCHES BREW (Recipe) Sponsored by T h e D a ily T exan To enter on the World W ide Web: http://stumedia.iou.utexas.edu/iun TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24 3:00 p . m . MEZ 210 “V io l e n c e in S e x u a l R e l a t io n s h ip s ” J o n n a T o b in , Ph.D., U T C o u n s e l in g a n d M e n t a l H e a l t h C e n t e r This workshop identifies myths associated with sexual violence in the context of sexual relationships and discusses the male/female socialization process and the contnbuting role it may play to the victim/ perpetrator profile 7:00 p . m . BUR 108 'Cr “ S e x u a l H e a l t h I s s u e s f o r L e s b ia n s ” B a r b a r a B u z z a r d , C.N.M , UT S t u d e n t H e a l t h C e n t e r a n d A n n C v e t k o v k h , Ph.D., UT E n g l i s h D e p a r t m e n t This session discusses lesbian sexual health issues and typical experiences many lesbians experience when accessing women’s health services. Suggestions for improving interactions with health care providers and health-related resources for lesbian and bisexual women are included 7:00 p . m . BUR 112 ☆ “ I s s u e s F a c in g H I V - N e g a t iv e G a y a n d B i s e x u a l M e n ” S a n d y B a r t l e t t a n d K e n n y S h u l t s , AIDS S e r v ic e s o f A u s tin This workshop aims to help HIV negative gav and bisexual men stay negative while thinking positively as they may face repetitive losses of loved ones, feelings of disconnection from many of their peers and other issues that may undermine health-protective behaviors WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25 3:00 p . m . BUR 108 “ S e x u a l it y a n d R e l i g io n ” C o m m u n ity o f U n iv e r s it y M in is t e r s P a n e l A panel of clergy discuss perspectives on sex and sexuality, answer audience questions, and provide resources for assistance with sexual decision making when religious issues are significantly involved. 7:00 p . m . “ M a x in g a n d K e e p i n g S e x S a f e r ” BUR 108 Ja m ie S h l t t e r , M.S.Eo, UT S t u d e n t H e a l t h C e n t e r This symbol denotes sessions that have been designed for gay ¡lesbian/bisexual audiences. ☆ BUR 2 2 4 - ( G ay, Le sbia n, and B isexual A u d ien c es) O s c a r L e m , P r o j e c t PHASE Both workshops address transmission and risk reduction for sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV disease, discuss target audience- specific barriers to practicing safer sex and explore ways to overcome these barriers THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2 6 1:00 p . m . SZB 330 “ C a p s , S h o t s , I m p la n t s a n d M o r e : C o n t r a c e p t iv e U p d a t e” B a r b a r a B u z z a r d . C.N.M., UT S t u d e n t H e a l t h C e n t e r 7:00 p.m . “ S e x o n t h e R o c k s : T h e R e l a t io n s h ip o f A l c o h o l a n d S e x ” BUR 108 - { H e t e r o s e x u a l Audiences) S h e rr y - B e l l , M E d , UT S t u d e n t H e a l t h C e n t e r ☆ B U R 1 1 2 - (G ay, L esbian and B isexu a l a u d ien c es) R ich a rd H o l t , Ph.D., C o u n s e l in g a n d M e n t a l H e a l t h C e n t e r a n d J a y E jt h n - G r o t s x y , M S.W, Coupland University Co-op ZitU&n Carnea Dept. OnUieA. Inn Fiesta Texas Costume Rental Dinner for Two 2 Pose Package 4 Friday Passes 2 Passes One Free Costume For more information about Thursday's workshops pick up a fiver at the SHC "Sexual OUT Y o u t h A u s tin Health Week” table on the West Mali (11 30am - 1 30pm) and in the Student Health Center lobby from October 17 - October 26, watch for ads m The Daily Texan and notices in The Daily Texan “Around Campus’ section, or call 475-8252. The University o f Texas a t Austin S tu d e n t H ealth C e n te r 105 W 26th S tr e e t 475-8252 hup .//ww w u to n s edu/studm utiealth A SS O C IA T E D P R E S S Patriots running back Curtis Martin tried to elude Buffalo linebacker Sam Rogers (59) and defensive end Phil Hansen during Monday’s game. NFL STANDINGS Buffalo Indianapolis Miami New England NY Jets Cincinnati Cleveland Pittsburgh Jacksonville Houston Kansas City Oakland Denver San Diego Seattle Dallas Philadelphia Washinaton Arizona NY Oiants Chicago Green Bay Tampa Bay Minnesota Detroit Atlanta St. Louis San Prancisc Carolina New Orleans W 5 4 4 2 2 W 3 3 3 3 2 W 7 6 4 4 2 W 6 4 3 2 2 W 5 5 5 3 2 W 5 5 5 2 1 L 2 3 3 5 6 L 4 4 4 5 5 L 1 2 4 4 5 L 1 3 5 5 5 L 2 2 3 4 5 L 2 2 2 5 6 T 0 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0 AMBUCAN CONFERENCE East División PF PA 150 122 145 157 192 126 96 174 120 220 Home 4-0-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 2-2-0 2-2-0 Pet .714 571 571 .286 .250 Away 1-2-0 2-2-0 2-2-0 0-3-0 0-4-0 Central Division Home 1-2-0 2-2-0 2-2-0 1-3-0 0-3-0 PF PA 163 154 139 130 147 167 131 152 137 154 West División PF PA 199 138 213 123 168 137 148 162 131 175 Home 4-0-0 4-0-0 3-1-0 2-1-0 2-2-0 Pet .429 .429 429 .375 .286 Pet .875 750 .500 .500 .286 Away 2-2-0 1-2-0 1-2-0 2-2-0 2-2-0 Away 3-1-0 2-2-0 1-3-0 2-3-0 0-3-0 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East Division PF PA ¿0 3 118 144 173 189 193 114 180 115 156 Home 3-0-0 1-2-0 3-1-0 1-2-0 2-2-0 Pet .857 .571 .375 .286 .286 Away 3-1-0 3-1-0 0-4-0 1-3-0 0-3-0 Central Division Home 3-1-0 3-1-0. 3-2-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 PF PA 204 167 171 137 127 129 156 163 163 173 West Division PF PA 146 147 148 149 198 96 125 154 134 178 Home 3-0-0 3-1-0 3-0-0 2-2-0 1-3-0 Pet .714 .714 625 .429 286 Pet .714 .714 .714 .286 .143 THURSDAY'S GAME SUNDAY'S GAMES Away 2-1-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 1-3-0 0-4-0 Away 2-2-0 2-1-0 2-2-0 0-3-0 0-3-0 AFC 4-2-0 2-3-0 4-2-0 2-3-0 2-4-0 NFC 1-0-0 2-0-0 0-1-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 AFC 3-3-0 2-3-0 2-3-0 3-3-0 2-3-0 AFC 5-1-0 4-2-0 3-3-0 3-3-0 2-5-0 AFC 2-Ó-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 AFC 2-0-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 AFC 2-Ó-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 1-0-0 NFC 0-1-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 NFC 2-0-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 NFC 4-1-0 4-1-0 3-3-0 2-4-0 2-4-0 NFC 3-2-0 4-2-0 4-2-0 1-4-0 1-4-0 NFC 3-2-0 5-1-0 4-1-0 1-4-0 0-6-0 Div 2-1-0 2-1-0 2-2-0 1-1-0 1-3-0 Div 2-1-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 2-3-0 Div 4-0-0 2-2-0 1-3-0 3-2-0 1-4-0 Div 2-1-0 3-0-0 2-2-0 1-4-0 1-2-0 Div 2-1-0 3-0-0 1-1-0 1-3-0 0-2-0 Div 2-2-0 3-1-0 3-0-0 1-2-0 0-4-0 Cincinnati 27, Pittsburgh 9 Chicago 35, Houston 32 New York Jets 17, Miami 16 Jacksonville 23, Cleveland 15 Carolina 20, New Orleans 3 Washington 36. Detroit 30, OT Atlanta 24. Tampa Bay 21 San Francisco 44, St Louis 10 Kansas City 21, Denver 7 Green Bay 38, Minnesota 21 Oakland 30, Indianapolis 17 San Diego 35, Seattle 25 Open date: Arizona, Dallas, New York Giants, Philadelphia New England 27, Buffalo 14 MONDAY'S GAME UIISDOIII TECTH . Financial incentive provided in exchange for your opinion on an investigational pain medication following oral surgery. Approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeon. If you need the removal of wisdom teeth call BIOMEDICAL S In Austin call: 320*1630 I t t t O U P ^ Outside Austin call: 1-800*320*1630 1000s of books at 1/2 price or less. I I BOOK MARKET BUY • SELL • TRADE 2ht t GeedeWpe • DoM* Mal Upstfrs Froa Parkins in Dnfcia Garay* w/ Pardws* 4 9 9 4 /0 1 Man-Sat. 10-10 JUNIOR'S COMICS & CARDS W l ARE TAKING A D V A N Ü ORDCRS 25% OFF MAGIC THE GATHERING "HOMELANDS" (WHILE SUPPLIES LAST) (O m V fR Y GUARANTIED, DEPOSIT REQUIRED) IN THE HEB CENTER AT S IA U G H T E R & M A N C H A C A 782-1302 earliest they've scored this season. Associated Press Patriots C o n tin u e d fro m p a g e 12 and been sacked seven times all sea­ son. Thomas' fumble on his first carry led to M artin's touchdown. His replacement, rookie Darick Holmes, lost a fumble on the first play of the second half and Matt Bahr followed with a 39-yard field goal for a 24-14 lead. Thomas was injured on a 20-yard run to a first down at the New Eng­ land 11-yard line. He was taken to the locker room on a cart and fin­ ished with 42 yards on four carries. He also caught two passes, setting a team record with receptions in 43 consecutive games. The Patriots scored first for the first time in four games on Martin's 20-yard run 4:26 into the game, the Steve Christie's two 23-yard field goals cut the lead to 7-6 after the first quarter. The Patriots responded with a 12-play, 70-yard march capped by Bledsoe's 5-yard pass to Brisby that made the score 14 6. Dave Meggett's 3-yard run made it 21-6 with 1:57 left in the half, but the Patriots couldn't stop the Bills after that as Kelly and Billy Brooks hooked up on a 45-yard touchdown pass play 33 seconds before half- time. Kelly's pass to Carwell Gard­ ner on Buffalo's first two-point con­ version attempt since the rule was implemented last season drew Buf­ falo to 21-14 at halftime. RUSMNG SWC INDIVIDUAL LEADERS ALL-PURPOSE YARDS R s h R e c P r K o r 556 233 0 192 0 628 235 0 53 0 284 532 0 609 230 0 8 6 1 6 113 152 -29 0 0 266 0 291 45 14 0 404 80 145 Player Leeland McElroy, A & M Andre Davis. T C U Jerod Douglas. BU Byron H a nsp ard , TTU Mike A da m s U T Donte W omack. S M U Ricky W illiams UT C h ris Brasfield. T C U S h o n Michell. UT Charles West, UH 628 556 125 609 532 105 590 143 584 92 480 79 79 358 271 61 255 48 Yds/G 1 2 5 6 111.2 101.5 88 7 84 3 83 4 68 6 59 7 45.2 42 5 4.9 4 0 4 9 5.1 4.1 6 3 6 1 4.5 4 4 5.3 590 156 0 480 188 0 6 8 7 2 2 4 6 4 1 2 584 5 Andre Davis, T C U 128 Leeland McElroy, A & M 138 Byron Hanspard, f f u Jerod Douglas. B U Donte W omack, S M U Sh on Michell. UT Ricky Williams. UT Antowain Smith, UH Anthony Hodge. B U Yoncy Edm onds. R U Yds/G 196.2 172.6 144 8 139 8 127.0 102.4 94.3 92 8 91.9 9 0 6 RECBVMG Player Rec Yds Mike A dam s UT 38 6 1 6 34 Larkay James. UH 491 404 C harles West. UH 33 Andre Davis, T C U 22 235 Kalief Muhamm ad, BU 23 349 349 John W ashington, TC U 22 Ja son Tucker, T C U 22 285 Kevin Thornal, S M U 262 25 Albert Connell. A & M 375 21 24 Donte W omack, S M U 156 Avg TD C/G 5 4 3 16.2 14 4 4.9 3 4 7 12 2 1 4 4 1 10.7 1 15 2 3 8 3 7 1 5 9 3 1 13.0 3.7 3 1 0 5 3.6 4 17 9 3.5 3.4 2 6 5 RECBVÜG YARDS Rec Player Mike A da m s UT 38 34 Larkay James. UH 21 Albert Connell, A& M Pearce Pegross, B U 17 John W ashington. T C U 22 Kalief Muhamm ad, BU 23 33 Charles West, UH Ja son Tucker, T C U 2 ? Andre Davis. T C U 22 20 Chris Brasfield, T C U Yds 616 491 375 362 349 349 404 285 235 266 Avg TD Yds/G 8 8 0 3 16.2 14 4 70.1 3 4 1 7 9 62.5 21 3 60 3 I T 3 “ 5 8 2 1 5 9 1 5 8 2 15.2 57 7 1 12.2 47 5 1 13 0 10.7 1 47.0 44 3 1 13.3 PASSING EFFICIENCY Att Cmp Pet Int TD 206 108 524 9 13 110 .570 84 .512 71 534 “70 .449 59 500 163 .570 69 548 32 471 12 480 Player Jam es Brown, U T M ax Knake. T C U Corey Pullig. A & M Jeri Watson, B U Z. Leth ridge, TT Josh LaRocca. R U C Clements. UH Chris Jam es. S M U Derek Canine S M U Mark Humble S M U Pts 1 3 2 2 5 122 64 119 84 115 95 115.18 111.85 111 34 99 28 91 46 82 67 SCORING Player L M c Elroy, A & M _____ 11 B Hanspard. T T U 10 Michael R e e der, T C U 0 Andre Davis, T C U 7 Jarvis Van Dyke^ B U Phil Daw son. UT Tony R oge rs TTU Pat Fitzgerald, U T Ricky Williams, U T S W ashington. B U TD T D R TOP PAT FG 0 0 0 0 14 13 0 0 14 11 7 27 18 5 0 0 0 0 Ó Ó PT/G 13 20 10 00 8 8 3 8 4 0 7 83 686 5 50 5 14 5 14 5.00 Playe r Tucker Philiips, RU Se a n Terry, A& M Brad Cade. TTU Beau Stephens, T C U Mark Schullls, UT Anthony Scotti. S M U Ty Afteberry. BU Ignacio Sauceda. UH Du an e Vacek, UT PUNTING N o G Y d s 7 34 1495 34 1477 6 1791 6 43 6 25 1012 7 26 1045 41 1641 7 1363 6 3 5 7 4 6 “ 1711 132 4 PUNT RETURNS T D Y d s 113 T ~ 0 110 ó 128 85 0 84 0 0 80 0 67 0 50 Player 9 Mike Adam s, UT Dane Johnson, TTU » Vau ghn Dickerson, S M U 12 9 Michael Perry, R U R a y M ickens A& M 9 M Charles West. UH John W ashington. T C U 12 9 Bo Adam s. TTU A v g 44.0 43.4 41.7 40.5 40.2 40 0 3 8 9 37.2 33.0 A v g 1 2 6 1 2 2 10 7 9 4 9.3 7.3 5 6 5 6 KIGKOff RETURNS N o 8 13 8 13 11 16 Player Jerod Douglas, BU Cornell Parker, S M U Leeland McElroy, A & M Chris Brasfield, TCU J. Williams, UH Michael Perry RU Yds 284 359 192 291 240 296 TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 A v g 35,5 “27.6 24.0 22 4 21.8 “ 18.5 INTERCB’TIONS G Y d s 7 42 6 18 7 43 7 25 6 82 6 67 6 3 Player Dedric Mathis, UH Tre Thom as. UT Cornell Parker. S M U Warrick Franklin, R U Dane Johnson. TTU R a y Mickens, A& M Robert Johnson, TTU N o 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 l/G T D 0 57 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 4 3 1 Ó.43 0 0.33 0 0 3 3 0 Ó 33 QB SACKS G 6 -y Player Chris Piland. TCU Ndukw e Kalu. RU Reggie Brown, A&M Craig Swann, SMU Brandon Mitchell A & M 6 6 8 No 6 4 4 4 4 Yds 40 27 25 25 16 T he Daily T exan Tuesday, October 24, 1995 P age 11 Mora’s job in jeopardy NEW ORLEANS — The New Orleans Saints won't say if coach Jim Mora's job is in jeopardy or if they are considering hiring former Dallas Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson. ABC reported Monday night that Sam ts owner Tom Benson had flown to Florida to speak with the coach who led the Cowboys to two Super Bowl titles. Johnson now works as a television football com­ mentator. "In keeping with [Benson's] poli­ cy, he's not making any comments on the coaching situation," Saints spokesman Rusty Kasmierski told The Associated Press on Monday night. C a r r in g t o n ContinuecTfrom p age 12 Such a performance is bound to be a source of confidence for Miss Consistency. "I think I had a really good race at A&M /' Carrington said. "It's a fast course, but my time this year was faster than my time there last year. It feels good to see how much you are improving." Carrington views herself not only as a reliable runner but also as a steady improver, as evidenced by her performance at previous South­ west Conference cham pionship meets. After finishing in the back half of the pack as a freshman, Car­ rington pushed into the top half her sophomore season and placed in the top quarter last year. Carrington said she looks for this trend to con­ tinue with this year's SWC Champi­ onships on Oct. 30. "I've been slowly progressing each year," Carrington said. "M y goal is to be in the top five at conference." Initially for Carrington and the Longhorns, this was to be a rebuild­ ing year full of questions to be answered. Not the least of these questions revolved around how Carrington would respond to Bun- gard, who was entering his first year at the University. The changing of the coaching guard, though, has had apparently little negative effect on Carrington. "[Bungard] is an excellent coach," Carrington said. "H e is light-heart­ ed and makes it easy to work. I have never run this fast before, so he must be doing something right." to becom ing the team's top runner on the track, Car­ rington has also developed into a leader in the locker room, much to the pleasant surprise of Bungard. In addition "[Coming into the season] I didn't know what to expect," Bungard The Dallas Morning News reported in Tuesday's editions that Johnson recently declined an offer to return to the NFL's coaching ranks. The newspaper, citing an unidentified source, said Benson met with John­ son this month regarding his inter­ est in replacing Mora. Johnson told the newspaper that he would still consider returning to the sidelines. "T h in gs haven't ch ang ed ," he said. " If the perfect situation came along, I might come back. Right now, I would say the chances of that happening are less than 50-50." The Saints (1-6) have the w orst record in the NFL and lost 20-3 Sunday to the expansion Carolina Panthers. said. "But she has really come on strong as a leader." Bungard cites Carrington's work ethic and steadfastness as prim an factors in her ability to take an active leadership role, and these attributes readily m b off onto her teammates. "[Carrington] makes sure she is out there no matter w hat," Bungard said. "She has never asked for a day off. The rest of the team can see her doing things day in and day out, no matter what." Carrington also sees her role as a team leader as an opportunity to emphasize the finer points of cross country to her younger teammates in order to prepare them for the future and help them with the present. "I always try to stress the little things," Carrington said. "I try to take care of everybody after races with ice baths and stretching. Those types of things help prevent injuries." Because she is the Horns' top run­ ner and one of the only seniors intense pressure to succeed would seemingly be placed upon Carring­ ton at every turn. However, Car­ rington said that most such pressure comes not from outside sources, but from within. "I put a lot of pressure on m yself," Carrington. "It is my last year, and things have been going well so far. I just really want [the season] to end w ell." Bungard feels that a happy end­ ing is not unrealistic for the consis­ tent Carrington. "[Carrington] will definitely be all-conference," Bungard said. "She has run against everyone she will be facing at conference before, and she has finished 10th at worst. She has run well all year, so if she runs as hard as she can, she'll finish at least in the top 10." T he w o r l d ’s l a r g e s t s t u d e n t and y o u t h travel o r g a n i z a t i o n . 800-777-0112 STA TRAVEL Remember when students brought an apple for their favorite teacher to recognize his or her hard work... You can do more to recognize your Outstanding Professors and Teaching Assistants/ Graduate Instructors Nominate them fora 1995-96 TEXAS EXCELLENCE TEACHING AWARD $1000 award to an outstanding teacher m each school and college $500 award to an outstanding TA or Al in each school and college Selection is made entirely by students through College Council selection committees Nomination forms are available in your dean's office and/or College Council office NO CHROME NO INITIATION FEE NO CONTRACTS 4 1 2 5 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 78751 ( 5 1 2 ) 4 5 9 - 9 1 7 4 COMING SOON DEADLINE FOR NOMINATIONS: N O VEM BER 3,5 PM Sponsored by The Ex-Students' Association of the University of Texas 12 T h e D a i l y T e x a n TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24,1905 SPORTS Pats find missing offensive spark against Bills, 27-14 Associated Press É É - , , ^ ^ FOXBORO, Mass. — The Patriots he 1 a 1 c,l- l3SS ^ , .i . found their offense on a rare M on­ day night appearance and the Buffa­ lo Bills had neither coach M arv Levy nor T hurm an Thom as to stop them. Rookie C urtis M artin, w ith 127 rushing yards, and Drew Bledsoe had their best gam es of the season as N ew England w on 27-14, ending its five-game slide and Buffalo's five- gam e w inning streak. "That, by far, w as our best effort of the year," N ew England coach Bill PP 1 by TIO m ea n s I by n o m ean s th in k that w e ’ve tu rn ed any corn ers or any­ th in g ..” — BUI Par cells, Patriots head coach Parcells said. The Bills (5-2) rem ained in first place in the AFC East. The Patriots Bills. But six m inutes into the game, place in the AFC East. The Patriots Bills. But six m inutes into the game, (2-5) w ere the NFL's low est scoring Buffalo lost Thomas, w ho pulled a (2-5) w ere the NFL's low est scoring Buffalo lost Thomas, w ho pulled a th eir playoff team b u t renew ed left ham string after a strong start left ham string after a strong start team b u t renew ed th eir playoff hopes against a team that began the and did not return. w eekend w ith the N FL's top-rated defense. "O bviously there w as som ething I d id n 't do for the team that the team needed," Pitts said. "I by no m eans think that w e've tu rn ed any corners or anything," Parcells said. "C oincidentally, we beat a team that's leading the divi­ sion. This division is a long w ay from over." W ith Levy from surgery for prostate cancer, assistant head coach Elijah Pitts handled the recovering But he m inim ized the absence of Thomas, saying, "w e did exactly the sam e th in g we h ad p lan n e d for T hu rm an. We d id n 't back dow n w ith anything we had. It just d id n 't w ork." Bledsoe, w ho d id n 't throw' a touchdow n pass until his fifth gam e of the season, com pleted 23 of of the season, com pleted 23 of 40 passes for 262 y ards and a 5-ya p a s s e s for 262 y a r d s and a 5-yard touchdow n to Vincent Brisbv. touchdow n to Vincent Brisby. M artin rushed 36 times, tw o less than Jim N ance's team record, and scored on a 20-yard run. He had rushed for 102 y ards in his pro d ebut b u t only 186 in his next five games. The Patriots, in their first M onday night gam e in eight seasons and the first at hom e in 14, recovered three fum bles and had four sacks against a team that had lost just three fum bles Please see Patriots, page 11 By constantly finishing among the leaders, Cheri Carrington is Always in the running Deja Wahoo Indians hope to avoid repeat o f disappointing 1954 Series Associated Press CLEVELAND — It alm ost seem s like a cruel trick, a m ean joke to play on a team and city that has w aited so long for this m om ent. The Cleveland Indi­ ans, that the club could do no w rong during the whole sea­ son, suddenly can do nothing right in the W orld Series. And now , four after decades of frustration, the horrible mem ories are coming back. It's 1954, all over again. ► Return of the DH, page 10 That team, like this one, seem ed nearly unstoppable. Those Indians set an AL record w ith 111 victories, but then lost tw o close gam es on the road and never recovered, getting sw ept by Willie M ays and the underdog New York Giants. _________ These Indians, w ho led the majors in hitting, scoring and hom e runs w hile w inning 100 gam es, batted only .125 in tw o one-run losses at Atlanta. T hey're coming hom e for G am e 3 Tuesday night, hoping it's not too late to halt the Braves from w inning — and history from repeating. "W ell, it is sim ilar," Hall of Fame pitcher Bob Lemon, the ace of that 1954 staff, said M onday from his hom e in Long Beach, Calif. "It's just one of those things that can happen in a short series," he said. "In this case, it's doing like it did to us. There's no w ay you can figure the thing out. It just happened." Of course, O ctober surprises are no surprise. The Cincinnati Reds w ere supposed to stand no chance against the Oakland A 's in 1990 and overpow ered them in four straight. The New York Mets w ere given little chance against Baltimore in 1969 and w on in five games. Surely, Atlanta is form idable, featuring the best staff in the majors. Still, it's been startling just how well Greg M addux, Tom Glavine and the Braves bullpen have shut dow n Cleveland. Albert Belle, w ho hit 50 hom ers and drove in 126 runs, has been held to one single in six at-bats. Carlos Baerga, w ho batted .314, is 0-for-8. Overall, the Indians have had m ore broken bats (six) than runs (five), and have a grand total of seven singles and one hom e run. Besides Eddie M urray's homer, Cleveland's other three Please see Series, page 10 JEFF M CD O NALD Daily Texan Staff I nteresting nicknam es have alw ays been a part of the w orld of sports. A look back through the annals of sports histo­ ry will reveal references to "The G alloping Ghost," "Mr. October" or "The H um an Highlight Film." L L w w I so m e tim e s call [C arrington] ‘M iss C o n siste n c y .’ ” Randy Bungard, — Texas assistant women's cross-country coach -------------------------------------------- N o w T e x a s c r o s s c o u n tr y r u n n e r C h e r i C a rrin g ­ ton has j o i n e d the club, least at in the m ind of a ss ista n t c o a c h R a n d y Bungard. \ ^ "I som etim es call her 'M iss C onsisten­ cy'," Bungard said. A lthough not quite as colorful or catchy as the m ore w ell-know n nicknam es of p ro ­ fessional athletes, C arrington's new found appellation is no less accurate. C arrington, a senior, has been the team 's front-runner throughout the season, leading the H orns at each meet w hile never failing to place in the top 10. "[Carrington] is so consistent from race to race and w ithin the individual races them ­ selves," Bungard said. "She isn't particular­ ly fast, but she is strong and consistent." C arrington's dependability has been evi­ denced in her consistently high finishes. After opening the season w ith a fifth-place finish at Baylor, C arrington im proved her time but slipped to ninth overall at SMU. C arrington then placed fourth and second, respectively, at UT-San A ntonio and at Run-Tex, and is currently com ing off an Oct. 14 meet at Texas A&M in w hich she finished 10th w ith a tim e of 18:06, a new personal best. Please see Carrington, page 11 Former UT golfer Crenshaw has kidney stone removed Associated Press M asters cham pion and form er U niversity of Texas golfer Ben C renshaw had a stone rem oved from his left kidney M onday but doctors expect him to be ready to play in the Tour C ham pionship later this week. " H e 's fine," C ren ­ shaw 's agent Scott Say­ ers said M onday. "H e w ent in this m orning and will be released this afternoon. He can on go to W ednesday an d w hether he can prac­ tice or not w e d o n 't know but he can play T h u rsd a y " w hen the T our C ham p io n sh ip starts. T ulsa Crenshaw C renshaw , 43, u n d erw en t a procedure called lithotripsy in w hich shock waves are used to sm ash stones into pieces sm all enough to pass. "H e 's had sym ptom s since just after the first of the month, since the Buick Southern O pen," Sayers said. C renshaw then w ent to W entw orth, Eng­ land, early this m onth and w as elim inated in the first round of the W orld M atch Play C ham pionship by C ostantino Rocca. He w as diagnosed first w ith a bladder infection and then w ith kidney problem s but w ent to St. A ndrew s, Scotland, last w eek to play in the D unhill C up anyway. D espite being in discom fort, C renshaw w as the U.S. team 's best player, shooting 71, 67 and 68 in his team 's losing effort. He left for hom e im m ediately after the U.S. w as elim inated. "I'v e got to go quickly," C renshaw said Saturday. "I have to have X-rays for the kid­ ney infection. I w as still passing blood yes­ terday and I have pain in m y left kidney. I've just got to go right aw ay." C renshaw played at Texas from 1971 to 1973, w inning 18 tournam ents during that three-year span before turning professional prior to his senior year. Crenshaw team ed with fellow Longhorn and current PGA play­ er Tom Kite to lead Texas to back-to-back NCAA C ham pionships in 1971 and 1972. New format befuddles Texas BRIAN DAVIS_________________________ Daily Texan Staff O ne week ago, Texas head coach Jimmy Clayton saw his team sw eep the field and w in the Red River Classic by an am azing eight strokes over No. 1 O klahom a State. W hat a dif> ference a week makes. | g | p ffH J “iJaiiim r i ~ Jj- rfr it mirtHI This week at the Jerry Pate N ational Inter­ collegiate, the Longhorns are experim enting w ith a small form at change in the pairings and are struggling to keep pace in the standings. In the new format, all five Texas players are placed together in a group to play the daily round, w hich is different from the norm al threesom es in a regular tournam ent. The for­ m at was expected to help the television a u d i­ ence watch the tournam ent and keep up with his or her favorite team. "This is the first tim e w e've played this for­ m at," C layton said. "All five players play together, and it changes the w ay you play. Team s have talked about this form at, but I d o n 't think that w e'll play this type of form at again." Texas' Brad Elder, w ho w as the individual cham pion at the Red River Classic, shot a 73 M onday to push him self into a five-way tie for fourth place. Senior Robby SkinneF's tw o-day total of 149 (75-74) has him in 11th. "We thought that the tournam ent w as going to be televised on The Golf Channel," Clayton said. "That w as w hy they had this format, and then w hen w e got here, w e found out that it w asn't going to be on TV." Clayton did say that this new five-man for­ m at w as no excuse for Texas' poor play. He credited Shoal C reek's trees on the fairway and Please see Golf, page 10 Texas senior Cheri Carrington has placed in the top 10 in all five of the meets in which the Lady Longhorns have competed this season. nii» ■ ■ ■ • ■ . i nr I|j~■ li tl’n i l li i i f c - ■!■■■ I- . , ,1 ■ RON SHULMAN/Daily Texan Staff Horns enter off week with confidence boost CHARLES P O LANSKY_____________ Daily Texan Staff N ow that the No. 15 Texas Longhorns have a victory over a nationally ranked team on their résumé, they have a bigger goal for the 1995 season — the final Southw est Confer­ ence football cham pionship. Texas used a 50-yard field goal by Phil Dawson into a stiff w ind to nip the 14th- ranked Virginia C avaliers Saturday and are hot on the trail of the once seem ingly unbeat­ able Texas A&M Aggies. : " A&M's been invincible in conference, and seeing them lose a gam e you just sit back and say, 'They could lose like everybody else,"' offensive guard Dan Neil said. Neil in particular w ould like to bid adieu to the storied SWC w ith a conference cham pi­ onship. Texas currently ow ns 24 titles in 80 years of SWC football, the m ost of any confer­ ence team. "W hen I found out that it w as the last year of the conference,' [the cham pionship] has been in my m ind," he said. "W e've w on m ore than anyone else, so it's fitting that we w in the last one." The m iraculous victory over the Cavaliers has the H orns believing that they could w in the final five gam es of the year if they play to their capabilities. "The things that w e've done w hen w e've w on the games, y o u 've gotta be able to do those things over and over again," Neil said. "The little things that nobody talks about." Texas head coach John Mackovic said the win over UVA did w onders for the team 's spirits. "It will definitely give our team a boost," Texas head coach John Mackovic said of the one-point victory. The Longhorns will use the off-week to rest and heal some injuries. Texas' next opponent is No. 22 Texas Tech on Nov. 4 at M emorial Stadium . The gam e is scheduled for a 6 p.m. kickoff and will be televised nationally on ESPN. Last season in Lubbock, the Red Raiders ham m ered Texas, 33-9, in a w indy Jones Sta­ dium for their second straight w in over the Horns. The Longhorns are off to a 2-0 conference ROBERT PATTON/Daily Texan Staff Texas linebacker Tyson King is one of many Longhorns who will use the off week to recover from some nagging injuries. start, good for a first-place tie w ith 2-0 Texas C hristian. Right behind them are Baylor, Tech and the Aggies at 2-1. There will be some m ovem ent this w eekend because the Raycom G am e of the Week finds the H orned Frogs and the Bears hooking up at Baylor's Floyd Casey Stadium . "W e sh ouldn't get puffed up, w e've still got a lot of hard w ork ahead of us," Mackovic said. "W e have five great gam es in our con­ ference, the last conference, and four of the five [teams] are on the doorstep." A tough stretch aw aits the H orns after the m idseason break. A fter the Red Raiders, Texas plays at H ouston, then hom e to TCU and Baylor before the season and conference finale at Texas A&M. Neil is alm ost glad Texas plays the Aggies at Kyle Field. "The last time w e played them there, we w ere able to shut up their fans and alm ost Please see Confidence, page 10 . fast break New England 27, Buffalo 14 Montreal 6, Los Angeles 3 Colorado 3, Anaheim 1 NFL NHL NBA Washington 99, Toronto 89 Detroit 95, Milwaukee 82 Seattle 99, Chicago 97 Portland 122, New Jersey 101 U T’s Harkrider earns tryout with O lym pic team ■ Texas shortstop Kip H arkrid ­ er will be one of 65 collegiate baseball players w ho will be try­ ing out for a spot on the 1996 U.S. O lym pic team this w eekend in H om estead, Fla. The trials begin this Friday and end late Sunday. H arkrider earned a spot on m any all-Southwest Conference teams last season with his perfor­ mance as a freshm an. Playing in all but one gam e for the Long­ horns, he hit .300 and posted 55 RBI. Defensively, he was one of the best shortstops in the country w ith a .964 fielding percentage. Astros’ Watson hired by Yankees N CLEVELAND — Bob Watson abruptly quit as general manager of the Houston Astros on M onday to accept the same job with the New York Yankees in a hiring so unexpected some baseball execu­ tives thought it was a prank. In another development, a Yan­ kees official, speaking on the con­ dition he not be identified, said m anager Buck Show alter had turned dow n an offer M onday to return to the team. However, he and Yankees ow ner George Stein- brenner were to meet again Tues­ day, the official said. W atson has been the Astros' general m anager for two seasons. He was given a two-year contract by the Yankees, and the team holds options for 1997 and 1998. "The key issue w as the uncer­ tainty of the sale and possible m ove of the H ouston club," W atson said. Seattle approves plan for stadium ■ SEATTLE — The effort to keep the Mariners from leaving the city got big boost M onday with approval of a plan to build a $320 million retroctable-roof stadium. The M etropolitan King C oun­ ty Council approved the plan by a vote of 10-3. Im m ediately thereafter, a dissenting group filed a law suit to block the plan. M ariners ow ners had set Oct. 30 as the deadline for agreem ent on a plan to build a new ball­ park for the AL club. Otherw ise, they said they w ould offer the franchise for sale, probably to out-of-state buyers. Team chairm an John Ellis said the legislation w as better than a ballot m easure voters, narrow ly rejected last m onth. There will be no vote this tim e. — Compiled from staff and Associated Press reports CALENDAR TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY ■ M B l'S BASKETBALL: Those w ith a L onghorn A ll-Sports Package sticker m ay purch ase season tickets for the upcom ing Run- nin' H orns season at L. Theo Bellmont Hall. Season tickets are $75 for 16 hom e games. FRIDAY ■ VOLLEYBALL: The Lady Long­ horns will play Florida at 7 p.m. at the Recreational Sports Center. SATURDAY ■ SOFTBALL: The Lady Longhorns will play A lvin C om m unity College at 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. at the Roy V elasquez Com plex, w hich at 2100 located Riverview St. in Austin. is SATURDAY-8UNDAY ■ SOCCfcP: The I ,ady Longhorns host the Longhorn Soccer Clas­ sic at the Longhorn Soccer Com ­ plex. Texas plays M innesota at 1 p.m. on Saturday and Colorado College at 1 p.m. Sunday. Groups with sports calendar items should call 471-4591 or come by T h e D a ily T e x a n at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. S¿»Yifc£ §R«f>£S S t i pe r S a v e r C o u p o n T h e D a i l y T e x a n t uesday, October 24,1995 Page 13 Coupons _____________ ¡ S t iv e r S u p e r S a v e r C o u p o n S u p e r S a v e r C o u p o n Saveli.80 on your next Supercut™ (Reg. s875) Simply bring this couponto these three SUPBKXJTS*. As usual, no appointments are necessary. Come in today, this offer ends 11/17/95. 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We Accept Checks/25C per check Toppings Pepperoiii - Italian sausage - fresh mushrooms - fresh green peppers - beef - Canadian bacon- onion green olives - black olives - anchovies - thick crust S T l’DV PACK 2 Pizzas and 1 Topping I I i Medium..*7.99 | Large *9.99 , I X-Large...*11.99 I | i DELIVERED I a rax 320-£0§Q LUNCH SPECIAL ANY LARGE PIZZA «tax D elivery Everyday 11-4 Lunch only Offer M expire without notice 1/4 lb Burger, Fries & Medium Drink Only 3.01 + Tax ( v a lid w ith c o u p o n o n ly ) Good at Both Locations 411 West 24th • 320-1500 300 W. MLK • 478-9299 Pitcher Night Wednesday See your teeth like never before! with the new Intraoral Camera. FREE Initial Exam and Cavity X-rays with a $50 Cleaning. (New Patients Only) DELTA A C C E P T E D ALPINE DENTAL Merrill W. R u ssell D.D.S. 291 5 Medical Arts S treet ■ 4 7 7 -9 2 8 2 FREE KEY SEPT. OCT. NOV. DEC. BRING THIS CO U P O N TO OUR SHOP AND WE WILL GIVE YOU O N E “F R E E ” DUPLICATE KEY. SINGLE CU T AMERICAN, PLAIN HEAD. LIMIT ONE KEY PER DAY PLEASE. ($1.50 VALUE) 5256 BURNET RD. JU N E APRIL M ARCH V s > v : t :Hour LOi ^mith ' 459-5151 FRIENDS EAT FREE w / co u p o n o n ly 1908 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 78705 Tel: 708-1696 Buy 1 entree and get a second entree of equal or lesser value FREE limit: 1 coupon per order Come try our Low Fat Gen. J oe’s Specials or Chef’s Specials Take out available Expires Tuesday, 10/31/95 Pint Night TONIGHT: Extra Large Single Ingredient Pizza $5.25 Largest N um ber o f Draft Beers of any Brew pub in US w it h t h is C O U p on . , _ g o o d Only Tuesday one Block W est October 24 till 10:00 PM of Central Market 4112 Medical pkw y DISCOVER Quick Lube’s L | £ It No appointment Service and Save! / M 34th & Lamar \ 452-5773 ' j d X lijy i# ^ 2826 Bee Cave Rd. • 327-5736 “A u s t in s 1 0 M inu te P ro fe ssio n a ls* — — S T A T E J N S P E C T I O N S ^ ‘ 1 0 54 __ _ sooo3“ OFF O U R 1 5 -P O IN T F U L L S E R V I C E S E R V I C E O IL C H A N G E • 6 Q ts Premium Oil • New Filter Installed • C h a ssis & Hinges Lubricated • All Fluid Levels C h eck e d • W indshield Washed • Car Vacuum ed Not Valid with Any Other Offer HairCrafters Bring this coupon and save with our specials WT'ckchh Special (M on thru T h u W eekend Special (F ri thru Sun $6.95 HairCut (reg. $8.95) $12.50 Shampoo, Cut & Blow Dry (reg. $15.00) ¡ Open Mon-Sat 9AM-8PM & Sun 12PM-6PM. Walk-Ins welcome, j | I Coupon valid at 2801 Guadalupe only. Not valid with any other offer. I I Prices good at this location only. This offer expires 10/31/95. I_______________________________________________________________________________________ I S u p e r S a v e r C o u p o n $ rr(fte r v a iv e ir What Makes M o n ^ o iia n B B Q j * You s e l e c t fro m o v e r 15 f r e s h v e g e t a b le s 3 t h i n l y s l i c e d m ea ts. * Then you se a so n y o u r p l a t e w it h «my one o r a c o m b in a tio n o f 10 d i f f e r e n t s a u c e s . * F i n a l l y , you w atch w h ile y o u r meal i s co oked on th e M o n g o lia n g r i l l . MO/KjOCfAfil 117 San J a c in t o (corner of 2nd a San Jacinto) 4 7 6 -3 9 3 8 LUNCH STUDENT SPECIAL d i n n e d $4. 94 aarved w/ bread a rica $ 3 o f f 2 or sore DIMKRRS w/ this ad. Good thru 11/15/95. Hot good w/ any other offers. $ 6 . 93 served w/ bread, rica, soup, & duapling K W 0 0 ** * * * CHINESE & VIETNAMESE RESTAURANT Mori-Fri 11-10pm Sunday 5-10pm 4 7 6 - 7 9 9 7 SÜPER-ALL-YOÜ-CAN-EAT-BÜFFET Food From 4 Countries • Always $4.99 11:00 AM - 9:30 PM M-F; Sun. 5-10 PM Japanese • Chinese • Korean • Vietnamese A combination dish of your choice of 2 entrees, egg roil, soup, Q A fried rice or io mein J i O U or to mein All Day chef special - 2 entrees, egg roil,fried rke Pto Hu Tieu Mi Beef Rke Noodle Soup - 3.50 m as m as onri much morel FREE SOFT DRINK1 w / A N Y M E A L ★ mw&cq* with this ad - Exp. 1 1 /6 /9 5 | g 1__ 3.49 FREE DELIVERY S u n .-F n 5-9 30 PM minimum $7 oroei lower ievel wrm b b s b B jp ^ S ^ n |tf||¡pr m m g I m ¿p hasn't gone this far since you lived A M /FM stereo radio - standard? heck yeah! (what's driving without a little driving m usic?) Fold-down rear seats - m eans you can g o places and take lots o f stuff with ya Clearcoat paint - paint you can't see keeps the paint you can see looking good (see?) 100,000-mile spark plugs* - we re talking a long-term relationship here 5-speed transmission and tubular rear axle with spring-over shock sport suspension and progressive ride tuning - is this a rea! set of wheels or what? Your choice of a great-looking coupe (shown), sporty four-door sedan (not shown) or a hot new convertible (hey, we told ya this was a cool car) A H U G E glove box - som e glove boxes are m erely m ouse-sized; this one holds a whole laptop computer D ual air bags and anti-lock brakes - two things you don 't need until you really need 'em (and always wear those safety belts, even with air bags) Daytim e running lam ps in '96 - they're a safety feature, buty hey, they look go o d too PA SSLock ™ theft-deterrent system - m eans you m ight save som e $$$ on insurance (!!!) High-revving, 120-horsepower, fuel-injected engine (hey, this cads for driving, not just looking at) Single-key locking - one key locks & unlocks doors, trunk and all the fun of Sunfire P O N T IA C C A R ES - call an 800 number, get Roadside Assistance - for flat tires, dead battery, even if yo u run out of ga s or lock yourself out (Pontiac* wants to see you and your Sunfire* out driving) Oh, Courtesy Transportation - that's part of P O N T IA C C A R ES too (see? we really do care) f P O N T I A C S U N F I R E WE A R E DRIVING EXCITEMENT Finally, a real set of wheels you can really afford. 'Based on normal maintenance. See Owner's Manual for limitations. C 1995 G M Corp. AH rights reserved. n , c a ll C . Around Campus is a d aily col- „umn lis tin g U n iv e r s ity -r e la te d activities sponsored by academ ic departm ents, student services and stu d en t o rg an izatio n s reg istered w ith th e C a m p u s A c tiv itie s O ffice. A n n ou n cem en ts m ust be subm itted on the p rop er form or T a x e d to 4 7 1 -1 5 7 6 b y n oo n tw o business days before publication. Forms are available at the Daily T exa n O ffice lo c a te d u n d e r the Texas Student Publications build­ in g at W h itis A v e n u e an d 25th Street. You m ay also su b m it A ro u n d ■Campus e n tr ie s th r e e d a y s in a d v a n c e by e-m ailin g arou nd c® P le a s e u tx v m s .c c .u t e x a s .e d u . include the name of the sponsor­ ing o rgan ization , lo catio n , tim e [and d a te o f e v e n t, d a te of an n o u n cem e n t, a co n ta c t p h on e n u m b er and other relevant infor­ m a tio n . Q u e s tio n s re g a r d in g A ro u n d C a m p u s m ay also be e- mailed to this address. Otherwise, please direct questions to Heather O rr at 471-4591. T he D a ily T exa n re s e rv e s the right to edit subm issions. ~~ MEETINGS Ech o Ju lie t w ill p lay at 6 p.m . «very Tuesday on the W est Mall. Education Council will m eet for mock interviews at 8 p.m. Tuesday in George I. Sanchez Building 238. For m ore inform ation call Amy at 505-2602. Ja p a n K a ra te A s s o c ia tio n of A ustin m eets from 7 p.m . to 8:30 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday in Recreational Sports Center 2.112. The first class is free and tuition is $30 per sem ester. W ear stretchable shorts and a T-shirt or a sweatsuit. For more information call 323-9784 or 440-8842. W om yn's Group for lesbian and bisexual women will meet at 8 p.m. T u esd ay in Parlin H all 210. Bring cam ping money and books to share. Tor more information call Bonnie at 476-2749. UT H ab itat for H u m an ity w ill meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Universi­ ty Teaching Center 1.116. For more inform ation call E lizabeth at 708- 8947. C o a litio n of A c tiv ist-M in d e d People United in Struggle meets at 6:30 p.m. every Tuesday in College of B usiness A d m inistration 4.348. For more information call Doug at 432-1206. University International Social­ ists will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the T exas Union C hican o C ulture Room (4.206) to d iscu ss "R ace: A G row ing D ivide?" For m ore infor­ mation call 371-3426. UT G eo g rap h ical S o cie ty w ill m eet at 9 p.m . T u esd ay at P ato 's Tacos, 1400 E. 38th St. to discuss the importance of geography in society. For more inform ation call Frank at 3 4 9 -7 4 4 7 or e -m a il f.r e e d @ m a il. utexas.edu Filipino Student Association will m eet at 6 p.m. W ednesday in Uni­ versity Teaching Center 1.132. Serenity Seekers, a Christian 12- step fellow ship, m eets from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. every Tuesday in Universi­ ty United Methodist Church, Hein- sohn Hall 406. For more information call 478-9387. Circle K International, a service organization, meets at 7 p.m. every Tuesday in Performing Arts Center 2.402A . New m em bers are alw ays welcome. For more information call Vy Pham at 371-1808. U niversity Al-Anon, a free sup­ port group for families and friends of a lc o h o lic s/a d d icts, m eets from n o o n to 1 p .m . e v e r y T u e s d a y , T h u rsd a y and F rid ay in S tu d en t H ealth C en te r 438. T u esd a y and F rid a y m e e tin g s fo c u s on a d u lt children of alcoholics but everyone is w e lco m e to any m e e tin g . For more inform ation call Debi at 471- 3259 or Liz! at 476-2427. S tu d en t C h ristia n F e llo w sh ip m eets from 9:3 0 p.m . to 10 p.m . every Tuesday on the south steps of the M ain B u ild in g. For m ore information call Corley at 834-0015 or e-mail scf@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu Bap tist Student M inistry holds freshman Bible study at 7:15 p.m. every Tuesday at the Baptist Stu­ dent Union, 2204 San Antonio St. For more information call 474-1429. In s titu te for A lte rn a tiv e A rts Studies meets at 7 p.m. every Tues­ day in Calhoun Hall 221. The meet­ ing is for Prometheus, a student liter­ a ry /a rt publication. For more infor­ mation call 453-7193. Pagan Student Alliance meets at 7 p.m every Tuesday in George I. Sanchez Building 278 for free dis­ cussions and classes on alternative healing and earth-based spirituality. F o r m o re in fo rm atio n call Ray Tagan at 416-9063. AROUND CAMPUS C atholic S tu d en ts' A sso ciatio n has m ovie nights at 7 p.m . every Tuesday at the University Catholic C enter, 21st Street and U niversity Avenue. For more information call Matt at 452-9620. T e x a s U n io n A sia n C u ltu re C om m ittee meets at 6 p.m . every Tuesday in the Texas Union Asian C u ltu re Room (4 .2 2 4 ). E v ery o n e interpsted is welcomé to attend. For more information call Anna Kuo at 479-8837. P re -o p to m e tric A s s o c ia tio n meets at 6:30 p.m. every Tuesday in the College of Business Administra­ tion 4.332. For more information call Kevin at 476-2652. Texas Union M ulti-media C om ­ mittee meets from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. every Tuesday in the Texas Union A frica n -A m e rica n C u ltu re Room (4.110). New m em bers are alw'ays welcome. For more information call Zia at 708-9929. U T K en d o A s s o c ia tio n m e e ts from 7:3 0 p .m . to 10 p .m . e v e ry Tuesday in L. Theo Bellm ont Hall 502A. Beginners are welcome to join in le a rn in g th e a rt of Ja p a n e s e swordsmanship. For more informa­ tion call Yuji at 282-5558. Texas Union Management Com­ mittee meets from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. every Tuesday in the Texas Union Board of Directors Room (4.118). All UT students are welcome. For more • in fo rm a tio n call S tep h e n at 472- 7025. C hristian Science O rganization m eets from 4:30 p.m . to 5:30 p.m . every Tuesday in the Texas Union Asian Culture Room (4.224). Every­ one is welcome. For more inform a­ tion call 474-7717. Longhorn Solar Race Car Team m eets at 6 p.m . every Tuesdav in Experim ental Science Building 137. For more information call 475-6740. Astronomy Students Association m eets at 6 p.m . every Tuesday in Engineering Teaching Center 2.132. Anyone interested in astronom y is welcome to attend. For more infor­ mation call Audress Johnson at 495- 5549 o r e -m a il a u d r e s s @ s k y e .a s . utexas.edu U n d e rg ra d u a te T o a s tm a s te rs m eets at 7 p.m . every T u esd ay in U niversity Teaching C enter 4.132. For more information call Philipp at 371-32 14 or e-m ail p h ilip p @ m ail. utexas.edu VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES UT V olunteer Center needs peer health educators to deliver tobacco prev en tio n cu rricu lu m to A u stin- a re a m id d le s c h o o ls . F o r m o re inform ation call 471-6161. U T A m e riC o rp s m e m b e rs are n ee d ed to p a rtic ip a te in se v e ra l h ealth care p rogram s. A m eetin g fo r th o se in te re s te d w ill b e at 6 p.m . W ed n e sd ay in B eau fo rd H. Jester Center 216A. For more infor­ mation call Johan Lundblad at 472- 8551. UT V olunteer Center needs vol­ unteers interested in contributing to this year's NAESC National Confer­ e n c e , T h e T e x a s L e a d e rs h ip X- change Thursday through Sunday. For more information call 471-6161. UT Volunteer Center needs assis­ ta n c e fo r W e stb a n k C o m m u n ity L ibrary's H allow een 5K fu nd -rais­ ing race. For more information call 471-6161. D ivision of H ousing and Food S e rv ic e s se e k s stu d e n t tu to rs to help with a literacy and GED pro­ gram for adults. Classes are 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Fridays. For m ore inform ation call 471-5031. K V R X N ew s see k s v o lu n te e rs interested in producing interesting, informative news and public affairs stories. For more inform ation or to volunteer call Eric at 471-5106. LECTURES Palestine Solidarity Comm ittee, H ille l F o u n d a tio n , S tu d e n ts ' A s so cia tio n for M id d le E astern S tu d ie s w ill show7 T he R o a d to Peace: Israelis & Palestinians at 7:30 p .m . T u esd ay in D obie T h eatre, 21st and G u ad alu p e stre e ts. For m o re in fo rm a tio n call S tev en H ylan d or A n d y C larn o at 302- 0877. A sian S tu d ies is sp on sorin g a le c tu r e by P h ilip p e F o re t, UT D ep artm ent of Asian Studies, on "H ow the Chinese Discovered the Ice: C hina's Second Expedition to A ntarctica" at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in Will C. Hogg Asian Studies Confer­ ence Room (4.118). For more infor­ mation call 471-5811. OTHER Student Health C enter is spon­ soring a lecture by Barbara Blizzard, UT Student Health Center, and Ann C v etk o v ich , UT English D ep art­ ment, on "Sexual Health Issues for Lesbians" at 7 p.m. Tuesdav in Bur- dine Hall 108. Student H ealth C enter is spon­ soring a lecture by Jonna Tobin, UT Counseling and Mental Health Cen­ ter, on "Violence in Sexual Relation­ ships" at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Mezes Hall 210. Student Health Center is spon­ soring a lecture for gay, lesbian and bisexual students by Oscar Lopez, Project PH A SE, on "M aking and K eep in g Sex S afe r" at 7 p.m . Wednesday in Burdine Hall 224. Student Health C enter is spon­ soring a lecture for heterosexual stu­ d en ts by Ja m ie S h u tte r, S tu d e n t H ealth C e n te r, on "M a k in g and K e e p in g S ex S a fe r " at 7 p .m . Wednesday in Burdine Hall 108. Student Health C enter is spon­ so rin g a lectu re by Sand y B arlett and Kenny Shults, AIDS Services of Austin, on "Issues Facing HIV-Neg­ ative Gay and Bisexual M en " at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Burdine Hall 112. Student Health Center is spon­ soring a lecture by the Community of U n iv ersity M in isters P an el on "Sexuality and R eligion" at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Burdine Hall 108. Student H ealth C enter is spon­ soring a m ethods of contraception class for women from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m . T u esd a y in S tu d e n t H ealth C enter 448. For m ore inform ation tall 471-4158. M e a su re m e n t and E v a lu a tio n Center announces that Nov. 3 is the receipt deadline in Princeton, N.J. to re g is te r for the D ec. 9 G ra d u a te Record Examinations. Materials are available at the MEC, 2616 Wichita St., and at the the general inform a­ tion desk in the Main Building. For more information call 471-3032. M e a su re m e n t and E v a lu a tio n Center announces that Friday is the last day to postmark registration for the Dec. 2 Law School A dm ission T e st w ith o u t an ad d ed la te fee. M aterials are available at the MEC, 2616 Wichita St., and at the general information desk in the Main Build­ ing. For more information call 471- 3032. Liberal Arts Career Services will host an IBM job fair to learn about career opportunities with the com ­ pany from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tues­ d ay in th e L ila B. E tte r A lu m n i H o u se C o n n a lly B a n q u et H all. Bring co p ies o f résum é and tran ­ scripts. Casual dress is acceptable. For m o re in fo rm atio n ca ll Ja m ie Duke at 471-7900. Liberal Arts Career Services will host an inform ation sessio n w ith representatives from Foley's from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Lila B. E tte r A lu m n i H o u se S c h m id t & N ow otny rooms. Business attire is su gg ested . For m ore in fo rm atio n call Jam ie Duke. U n iv e rs ity T exas H em p C am ­ paign and the Coalition of Activist- Minded People United in Struggle are sponsoring a rally for a righ t­ eous revolution from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday on the West Mall. A rep resen tative of the A m erican Indian M ovem ent w ill speak. For more information call Doug at 432- 1206. Longhorn Pharm aceutical A sso­ ciatio n w'ill h ave a b o o th on the W est M all from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m . Tuesday as part of Pharmacy Week to promote health care. Vials of life c o n ta in in g e m e rg e n cy m e d ica l information will be distributed. Alpha Phi Omega is sponsoring a blood drive in three locations this w ee k : 9 a.m . to 5 p .m . M o n d a y through Frid ay in Peter T. Flaw n Academic Center lobby; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . M o n d ay th ro u g h T h u rsd ay and 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Friday in the College of Business Administration lobby; and 9 a.m. to midnight M on­ day through'Thursday and 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Friday in the Beauford H. Jester Center lobby. For more infor­ mation call April at 912-1417. UT School of Law is sponsoring Law Day from 10:30 a.m . to 3:30 p.m. Friday in Townes Hall audito­ rium (2.114). Events include class visits and presentations from direc­ tors of financial aid and admissions. For more information call 471-0298. College of Engineering Office of S tu d e n t A ffa irs is s p o n s o rin g a Study Groups Station from 7 p.m. to 9 p .m . e v e ry T u esd a y in E rn e st Cockrell Jr. Hall 1.214 to facilitate the organization of study groups for students in math, science and engi­ neering courses. For more informa­ tion call 471-4321. C sárd ás UT In ternational Folk D an cers will sponsor a six-w eek class in Hungarian dance. No expe­ rience or partner is necessary. The class co sts $5 for the en tire six weeks and lasts from 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. every Tuesday until Oct. 24 in Anna Hiss Gymnasium 136. Study Abroad Office will host a general information session Tues­ day at 3 p.m. in Carothers Dormito­ ry' 23. For more information call 471- 6490. THE FUSCO BROTHERS by J.C. Duffy T h e D a ily T e x a n Tuesday, October 24, 1995 Page 15 Crossword Edited by Will Shortz N o . 0 9 1 2 r 5 3 S ’7“ " 8 f i 13 41 Car in a 1964 64 Word after take ¿ 3 * | 30 m 3^ 34 ! 36 W elcome 38 Northern Ire'and’s ------ baisley 39 California fort 40 Ship's medical 56 Portuguese W est Africa, today 60 Relative of the 61 Robin H o o d ’s ACROSS 1 “How sad!” 5 Sources of milk t o Unhealthy air 14 When hot cross buns are eaten 15 Buick model 16 One of the Jackson 5 17 Simone Signoret role 19 Italian wine city 20 Genesis mountain 21 Western hat 23 Vagabond 26 Big birds 27 Lady at a ball 30 Attention 32 Bartletts 35 “D ie s ” facility song 4 2 Stocking stuffer 43 Barton and others 44 Othello, e g 4 5 Ragged Dick” 47 Plunked oneself author down 48 Death Be Not Proud” poet 49 Not written 51 Dakota Indian 53 Aida’s love ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 14 f7 20 27 35 39 42 45 60 64 67 heron love or high 65 “G olden” song 66 Bulldog's 67 Panic 68 Hornets' homes 69 M use’s instrument DOWN 1 Michigan college 2 Limerick man 3 — partridge i n .. 4 Surprise 5 Miss Garbo 6 Above, to Key 1 I I 40 2 1 '5 ■ 50 65 68 * 26 ■ 37 ■ 52 56 i . ffi 13 66 69 i _ 1 44 38 4' a _ ■ 48 1 ! ..... 1 46 49 53 54 I 55 62 63 M 57 58 i 59 7 Gone by 24 Places that 40 Beat it' 5 4 Lover of an Irish 8 Moscow news name 9 Roofing tile 10 Public square decoration 11 1991 Broadway smash 12 Palindromic name 13 Enter 18 Stable mate draw crowds 25 Hoarder 27 Life of a region 28 Swashbuckler 29 Bareback’’ Flynn rider? 31 Money back 33 Boca — , Fla. 34 Saw wood 36 Be ill 37 Audio systems, 22 Gas gauge level for short 44 Not a purebred Rose 46 Pencil part 48 Senhora 50 Tart flavor 52 Subdues 53 Repeated musical phrase 55 Store news 57 U n ctu ou s 5 8 H ideo ut 5 9 As I Lay D y in g ” character 62 W allet item s 6 3 D ah's p a rtn er Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1 -900-420- 5656 (75c each minute). Doonesbury b y g a r r y t r u d e a u MEAN BUSINESS! WORDS 20 5 ?5T 471-5244 DAYS THE DAILY TEXAN Iwrmed io pnnm parly tnor «wnmanaaO «O» or*i 000 and pnca mutt appaar m t» sweíy «# #» ad copy I Mrm ara not Kx vate Ts*y no< i «ana arfcMorut mewiey* *c*i *«u« cal D*tor* 11 a m. To Place a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 or on-line at: http://fetumedia.jou utexas.edu/ CLASS/clasform .htm l Classified W ord Ad Rates Changed by the word Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply 1 day 2 days $1 6.65 3 days 4 days $ 2 0 .4 0 5 d a y s ............................. $2 3 .2 5 First two words may be all capital letters. $ .2 5 fo r each additional le tte r s w o rd MasterCard and Visa accepted. c a p ita l $ 1 1 .7 0 $6 15 in Classified'Display Ad Rates Charged by the column inch One column inch minimum A variety of type faces and sizes and bo rders available Fall rates Sept. 1-May 3 0 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 8:00-5:QG/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication TRANSPORTATION 10-Misc. Autos 20—Sports-Foreign Autos 30—Trucks-Vans 40—Vehicles to Trade 5 0 —Service-Bepair 60-Parts-Accessories 70-Motorcygles 80-Bicycles 90—Vehicles-Leasing 100—Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES ■ M E R C H A N D IS E 190-Appliances 200-Fumtture-Household 210-Stereo-TV 220-Computers-Equipment 230-Photo-Camera 240-Boats 250-Musical Instruments 260-Hobbies 270—Machinery-Equipment 280-Sporting Camping Equipment 110—Services 120-Houses 130—Condos-Townhomes 140-M obile Homes-Lots 150—Acreage-Lots 160-Duplexes-Apartments 170—Wanted 180—Loans 290—Fumiture-Appliance Rental 300—Garage-Rummage Sales 310—Trade 320-Wanted to Buy or Rent 330—Pets 340-Longhorn Want Ads 345-Misc. RENTAL 350-Rental Services 360—Furnished Apts. 370-Unfumished Apts 380-Furnished Duplexes 390-Unfumished Duplexes 400—Condos-T ownhomes 410— Furnished Houses 420—Unfurnished 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 ANNOUNCEM ENTS 510—Entertamment-Tickets 520-Personals 530-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-Furniture Rental 710-Appliance Repair 720-Stereo-TV Repair 730-Home Repair 740-Bicycle Repair 750-Typing 760-Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 770—Employment Agencies 780—Employment Services 790-Part Time 800-General Help Wanted 810—Office-Clerical 820-Accountmg-Bookkeeping 830—Admimstrative- Management 840-Sales 850-Retail 860-Engineermg-Technical 870-Medical 880-Professional 890-Clubs-Restaurants 900-Domestic Household 910-Positions Wanted 920—Work Wanted BUSINESS 930-Busmess Opportunities 940-Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED ADVERTISING TERMS in th e e ve n t of e rr o r s m ad e In advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a m. the first day, as the publishers are re s p o n s ib le fo r only ONE in c o rr e c t insertion. All claims for adjustments should be m ade not la te r than 3 0 days a fte r publication Pre paid kills receive credit slip if requested at time of cancellation, and if am ount exceeds $ 2 0 0 Slip m ust be presented for a reorder within 9 0 days to be valid. Credit slips are non-transferrable In c o n s id e ra tio n of the Daily T e x a n ’s a c c e p ta n c e of a d v e rtisin g copy fo r publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harmless, Texas S tu d en t Publications and its o fficers, employees, and agents against all loss, liab ility, dam ag e , and e xp ense of w h ats o e v e r n a tu re arising out of the copying, printing, or publishing of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, plagiarism and copyright and trademark infringement TRANSPORTATION MERCHANDISE MERCHANDISE Í RENTAL | RENTAL j RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS I SERVICES 2 0 0 - Furniture - Household 2 9 0 - FumHure* Appliance Rental 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts» ^ y - y go- . ^ •> 38S 4 4 0 * Roommates . A w ------ ^ -------------- AVAILABLE N O W ! Efficiency BEAUTIFUL WEST campus condo 10 - Misc. Autos '9 3 ESCORT 4-door hatchback 5- 20K miles 459- speed A M /F M Cassette $ 7 7 0 0 . A / C 8 6 8 2 . 10-19-58 '8 5 RELIANT-K. W hite, 2-dr, au­ tom atic. N e w tires C old A /C Runs and drives well. $ 90 0. 478- 0 7 9 9 . 10-19-56 70 - Motorcycles M O O N LIG H T JAPANESE M oto r­ cycle Salvage- Repair S p ecializa­ runs, sal­ tion- carburetion make vage. Non-runners bought. 440 - 0 8 0 8 Towing 10-4-20B 8 0 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Cost!!! BUCK’S BIKES 928-2810 2 0 0 ■ Furniture- Household FREE DELIVERY For UT Students! > TWIN SET w/FRAME $ 89 95 $0055 > FULL SET w/FPAME ' Q* FEN SF T w -FfiAMf $'!39 95 $ 49 95 > 4 jR AW f P CHE5T $ 6 9 95 • SILT.: NT DESK $169 95 • SOTAS $129 95 •5PIECF DINETTE C entex Furniture W holesale • A ifiN tAMA’R 1 AMA* • ' " 4 5 0-O^bfc 445 58OH Beds, Beds, Beds The factory outlet far Simmons, Sealy, Sprmgoir We corry closeouts, discontinued covers, & factory 2nds. From 50-70°; off retail store pnces All new complete with worranty T w in set, $ 6 9 . F u ll set, $ 8 9 Q u e e n set, $ 1 1 9 K in g set, $ 1 4 9 1741 West Anderson Ln. 454-3422 WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE! Computer tables .. $35 Swivel chairs $15 Student desks. $45 Drafting chairs $35 Heavy duty filing cabinets.. .$45 Cox Office Products 10938 Research 345-7691 M-F 8 30-5:30 Beds 4 Less Name brand mattresses at 50% or more off. Serta-Basset-Therapedic- Corsicana. Call for prices Student Discounts 323-2337-BEDS (across from Target on 1 83) N E W SUPERSINGLE Black Padded WATERBED com plete with heater $ 2 0 0 O BO . C a ll Emily @ 302- 0 3 4 0 . 10-18-5B 345 * Misc. GREAT PRICES ON Guitars» Amps» VCR’s TV ’s • C D ’s » Jewelry CASH PAWN 2 2 2 0 9 E. Riverside 4 4 1 -1 4 4 4 <% u n tta * u t APARTMENT HOMES 1 BR St. @ $ 4 2 0 2 BR St. @ $ 525 ' 2-2 ABP $ 6 5 0 $100 OFF 1 st M o n t h w it h T h is A d A vailab le Im m e d ia te ly For m ore info call 4 5 4 - 2 5 3 7 „ EFFICIENCY APATMENTS. ABP, small patio . 4 2 5 sq.ft. $ 4 0 0 /m o 4 4 4 -4 2 2 6 . 9-27-20B SAN GABRIEL SQUARE Apts. Pre-leasirtg for Spring • Furnished • 5 blks. tom Campus • 2-1 Economy Style •Efficiencies • UT Shuffle 'Deluxe I-I ALL BILLS PAID 2212 San Gabriel St 474-7732 son Ln. C a b le / water N o pets 8 3 5 -5 6 6 1 . 10-2-20B-C * 2-1, 34TH and Speedway. Gas heating and cooking, pool, shuttle, free cable. $ 5 9 5 /m o . 4 5 4 -34 14 10-6-15B CLEAN, QUIET com plex 2 b r - $ 4 9 5 . C oble, gas, and water UNEXPECTED V A C A N C Y , 1 bed­ room apartm ent, $ 4 0 0 /m o . 3 4 0 5 p a id . 8 0 0 sq. 17-108 ft 9 2 6 -7 3 7 7 . 10- 10-3-20B-A 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. LARGE small, quiet, private community o ff Ander­ 1-BEDROOMS in 10-23-5B 2 2 0 Computers- Equipment Helms. 4 7 7 -8 8 6 2 . I0-20-5B 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. DISCOUNT SOFTWARE M icrosoft HP48GX, O ffice, $ 9 9 9 5 . $ 1 8 9 .9 5 . C all HAS C o lle giate Ex­ press. 1 -8 00-332-110 0 Ext 5 9- 19-4B TRANSPORTATION - 50 SERVICE - REPAIR 707-1396 #3 • 458-6185 #1 837-0747 #2 DYER TRANSMISSION & AUTOMOTIVE, INC. D o m e s tic & Im p o rts Transmission & Engine Overhaul 2 4 2 5 W . B E N W H I T E # 3 A U S T I N . I X 7 8 7 0 4 8 2 2 5 N . L A M A R # 2 A U S T I N , T X 7 8 7 5 3 7 5 1 3 N O R T H I H - 3 5 # 1 A U S T I N , T X 7 8 7 5 2 S P E C IA L IZ E IN F U E L IN J E C T IO N S Y S T E M S 20% OFF ANY TRANSMISSION WE INSTALL A S IA N & IM P O R T S L T l l a g c Students Welcome On UT Shuttle Free Cable 2-1 885 sq. ft. $535 2-1.5 1000+ sq. ft. $625 3-1.5 1200+ sq. ft. $795 1201 Tinnin Ford 440-0592 M OVE-IN SPECIAL. 2BR $ 4 7 5 ls t/m o ., 1BR $ 4 2 5 I s t/m o. Some hardw oods. Q u ie t building. A /C . Close to shopping and shuttle 4 7 1 9 Harm on. 4 6 7 -8 9 1 1 . 10-20- 10B A. QUIET, SPACIOUS 2-2 availab le at N ovem ber Starting 15th. $ 8 5 0 W a lk to UT. C all 472- 3 8 1 6 . 10-18-20B W ALK TO campus. Spacious 1/1 Huge a va ila b le N ovem ber 1 st. bedroom , new tile Lease ava il­ able through M ay or August. Start­ ing at $ 53 5. C all 4 7 2 -3 8 1 6 10- 18-20B 2B R /1B A $ 7 2 0 /M O H a rdw ood floors, close to campus. 9 0 6 W 22n d A p t #4 4 7 9 -0 7 3 1 . 10-18- 58 LARGE 1 -BDR apartm ent. W a lk to campus 6 5 0 sq feet $ 5 2 5 /m o . A va ila b le 6 5 2 3 . 10-19-5B in December. 495- FOR RENT: W est Campus apa rt­ ment. 1 /1 . $ 4 5 0 /m o . A vailable Nov. I G reat shaded lo cation C all 6 2 5 -3 3 0 9 . 10-18-5P QUIET 1 bedroom 3 0 1W . 39th Large pool, courtyard, laundry room, central air. Half-block from 326 -4 7 8 7 UT shuttle I0-18-5B-D AVAILABLE N O W ! 2-1, $ 5 5 0 / mo, $ 2 0 0 deposit. Gas and water Small com munity paid Street and A irport. 10-18-5B E. 46th 4 4 4 -0 0 9 4 deposit, Gas and water paid Small com munity. 4 4 1 3 Speed­ way Hyde Park area. 444 -00 94, 10-18-5B 45TH A N D Duval, 2-1, $ 3 7 5 /m o . A va ila ble 12-20-95. Pre-existing lease, utilities, cable, phone 302- 0 6 3 7 . 10-20-5B W ALK TO campus 1-1 2-story, 35th. 4 0 4 W est Very nice, $52 0. 4 6 9 9 0 7 5 10-19-78 C. LARGE EFFICIENCY. com plex on bus route N ice quiet CACH. A va ila ble end of O ctober $ 3 7 5 / mo. 3 0 2 -5 2 0 4 . 10-19-5B FREE GARAGE apartment for 13 hours house/yard w o rk/w eek. 17th St. Must be UT student. 9 1 8 -3 7 5 7 . WALK UT. 4-1, $ 1 3 5 0 . Stove refrigerator, C H /C A , hardwoods A va ila ble now For 24-hour infor motion, call 477-llV E . A 10-20-20B- IBDR APARTMENT available N o ­ vember 6th for $ 4 0 5 /m o Located on 35th and Speedway Quiet, res­ idential, minutes from campus, pool 708 -8 6 6 7 . 10-24-4B. QUIET, SPACIOUS 1 bedroom. W / D connections, separate dining, walk-ins, patio , shuttle. $ 4 3 5 . C all 4 4 7 -7 5 6 5 10-23-5B A ‘ HYDE PARK! 1-1, $ 4 7 5 . Enfield! 2-1, $ 7 4 5 . Campus! 2-2, $ 8 0 0 IN ew list­ 0-1, $ 4 2 5 . Campusl ings d a ily l C a ll us! Front Page Properties, 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . C 10-24-20B- UNEXPECTED V A C A N C Y ! Large 1 /1 , w a lk to UT, shuttle route, fur­ nish e d / unfurnished. C a ll Terri at 45 2 -4 4 4 7 10-24-5B 3 9 0 - Unf. Duplexes 1-1, W O O D floors, central A /H , walk to UT. 3 2 1 0 A Fairfax W alk. $ 6 5 0 /m o . 0 8 3 6 . 10-4-15B 4 7 6 3 6 3 4 or 312- Near Hancock Center Delightful 2 bedroom, 2 bath. C A /C H , all appliances, ceiling fans, big trees. 1200-A Crestwood. Available now $650. N o pets. Private Properties 50 2 -0 1 0 0 4 0 0 - Condos- Townhomes WEST CAMPUS HIGHRISE C O N D O 1 /1 's and 2 / 2 's available at 2 4 0 9 This is the prem iere condo Leon community in W est Campus W a lk­ to campus. M icro ­ ing distance waves, in each unit, balconies, ice makers, w a sh e r/d rye r tw o cov­ ered garages, access gates, pool, glass elevator, etc. Discount for 1- 1 BLK TO UT Large 1-1 's All bills paid Covered parking, pool, security G reat Views! G reenwood Towers High-Rise Building 1800 Lavaca 4 76-9710 Ask for Julie bathroom . A va ila ble $75 0. 320 -99 18. 10-18-10B im m ediately D O N 'T MISS THIS! Shoal Creek and Anderson Ln N ew carpet. C om fortable 2-1. Laundry on-site, pool. W ater paid 7801 Shoal Creek $5 5 0 4 8 2 -8 7 3 5 Elliott Systems. *HYDE PARKi 1-1, $ 47 5. Enfield! 2-1, $ 7 4 5 . Cam pusl 2-2, $ 8 0 0 . Campus! 0-1, $ 42 5. IN e w list­ ings d a ily l C all us! Front Page Properties, 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . C 10-24-208- 4 2 0 Unf. Houses C O N V EN IE N T LO CATIO N 5 3 0 4 M id d a le , 3-2, ceiling fans, 2 cov­ ered patios, sunroom, large yard. $ 8 5 0 , 288 -3 7 2 2 10-17-206 WEST CAMPUS. C H /A C , 4BR, 1 1 /2 B A , HW F, FP, new ap p lia n c­ es, W /D , fenced, nice 7 9 5 -2 8 8 8 , 4 7 8 -8 1 1 3 , Ed. 10-19 2B 4 2 5 - Rooms R O O M FOR rent. $ 2 2 5 , all bills paid. 3 6 3 4 IO-23-5B Shuttle, close to UT 476- 4 4 0 - Roommates ROOMMATE SERVICE Looking or have a place UT I.D. discount Business since 1988 Served over 7 ,0 0 0 people Sam 453-4396 ROOMATE NEEDED ASAP Large 1-1, Trestles Apts on Cameron Rd. Shuttle. $ 2 8 0 /m o + 1 / 2 utilities Has W /D , partly furnished 371- 1992, females only. 10-20-5B :________________ ROOMATE NEEDED to share 2-2 * as soon as possible $ 3 5 0 /m o . ♦ 1 / 2 utilities $ 1 5 0 deposit. O n O ltorff. Prefer quiet students 91 2 - 0 5 3 3 . 10-20-5B ROOMM ATE NEEDED! N ice 2-1 10 min. furnished, to campus, $ 3 1 0 /m o + 3 0 2 -0 3 4 0 or Isaac 323-2771 C all Emily 10- !/2 E le c HOUSEMATE NEEDED 3bd rm /2 b th house, Hyde Park, C A /C H , hard­ woods, move-m N ov. 1 $ 2 8 3 /m o . +bills +$2 83depo s Dylon, 454- 1706. 10-23-56 RO O MM ATE NEEDED. M /F . 2 / N e ar 2, $ 2 5 0 + 1 /2 utilities H ighland M a ll C all Tom at 323- 6 5 1 3 . 10-23-4B 2 /1 share LADY WILL apartm ent with mature graduate student or em ployed female $ 2 4 0 lovely ABP 4 5 2 -6 5 0 5 . 10-24-4B MALE ROOMM ATE needed for 2 / in Arboretum area 2 apartm ent Very nice! Pool, spa, much more 1 /2 rent- $ 3 9 0 /m o 10-24-4P 7 9 4 -6 3 7 6 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE YOUR SUPER LONGHORN 10-13-20B-A WANT AD! RENTAL - 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS 10-20 5B-A 19-5P 'fjtaiuxe.s \Jound tn 1 Wooátafi¿: • Four UT Shuttle Stops • Spacious One $ Two Bedrooms • ( t iling Fans • Hike & Bike Trails • Sunrise Lake Views *Wny not i^TTobtie^t22^923¿2849^__iM__ SERVICES 7 5 0 - T y p i n g Z I V Y L The Complete Professional Typing Service E TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 27* & Guadalupe 472-3210 Resanes Papers / Tbcses Laser Priotiof 794 Color Copies Rosi lobs ^ b e l ' s C o p i e s 1906 Guodoiup* 3» 472-5353 7 6 0 - M i s c . S e r v i c e s v'u\u r : ; H cV lr ''O n ^ 459-5151 w Fast, Easy Loans up to $430“ ! CASH PAWN 2 2 2 0 9 E. R iverside 4 4 1 - 1 4 4 4 CASH FOR c o lle g e 1 grants a v ailab le Q u a lify ever 9 0 0 ,0 0 0 N o repayments 1- im m ediately. 800 ^243-2435 9-28 208 RESEARCH W ORK or Term Papers w ritten by professional libra ria n Fast and efficient service C a ll (6 1 4 )5 3 2 -6 2 8 0 I0 2 -2 0 P INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV- 1 G reencard Program availab le (818) 772 - 1 8 0 0 6 6 0 - 7 1 6 7 & 7 1 6 8 # 2 0 231 Stogg St. C onoga Park, C A 9 1 3 0 6 1 0 I 3 2 0 P ON FIRST DONATION ONLY W COUPON/EXP 10/31/95 $20 EACH DONATION $165 PER MONTH Can Donate 2x/week Schedule Own Time • Extra Clean. State-of- the-Art Facility » Only 15 Minutes from UT Campus BIO MED A l\IEW High Tech Plasm a Facility Plea s e Call for A p p t , £ 5 1-8 8 55 HOURS 8AM - 7 PM IH-35 & Ptlugerville Extl Wesl side IH-35 behind EXXON I i W ith your first fifesoving donation receive ■ $ 1 9 C A S H 6 o f l R $ B j | L v N fM i a v t a a k N e w donors please call for on appointment. I I We itq e irt yoe brieg with y o c ‘ SoriW Security Card ‘ Proel «f Rh n Uoc* J ‘ Meter* 10 (UT ID, T M ...) I I I AU STIN P LA S M A C O M P A N T I N C I PR ESID IO TH EA TR E S p a r t - t i m e h i r i n g n o w m a n a g e r t r a i n e e s . C o m e b y W e s t g a t e 8 T h e a t r e , 4 5 2 I W e s t g a t e B lv d . , o r c a ll 8 9 2 -2 6 9 8 W AN TED . HIGHLY m otivoted, re­ sponsible leaders for m anagement positions Transportation necessary C a ll Jerry 505- 2 3 4 9 9-27-20B interview, for A V O N REPRESENTATIVES needed average $ 7 $ 1 5 /h o u r. hours. Benefits Flexible Independent repre 1 8 0 0 -8 4 1 -2 8 6 6 9 - sentative 29-20B W ORK in an atmosphere of PLAY Part-time Afterschool Staff, 2 OOp.m 6 :0 0 p m weekdays. Interest a n d /o r experience working with children Various sites in Aus tin, $ 5 /h r Complete app'.cation at Town Lake YMCA, ask for C hild Development Branch inform ation at 1100 Coesar Chavez a n d /o r call 4 7 6 - 1 1 8 3 for an appointm ent 165-206 SHORT W ALK UT ner tramee; Typist (w ill Paralegal run­ train on M ac); Bookkeeping Trainees clerical Nonsmoking 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 . 1O5-206C HEIPI IF you speak Spanish, Italian, Chinese, French, Korean, Russian, please call M r, C uba 9 3 0 -5 6 9 6 . 10-5-208 NEED A 1 5 0 0 -1 5 0 0 /m th flexible schedule? Earn Set your P/T ow n schedule Please call M ark 9 3 0 -5 6 9 6 10-11-206 WE'LL PAY you to lose w e ight All natural. G uaranteed Doctor recom mended C oll Pat: 2 5 9 -5 2 1 4 or Jennifer 301-2462 10-10-20B A NCR, 4 8 6 , DX2 66, Microchannel- Im eg ATI VL, EISA, 4 / 5 4 0 Scsi 1.44 14" SVGA $ 6 5 0 , O BO . leases. year Realty, Inc 206 C all W es W alters 10-9- 3 4 5 -2 0 6 0 . h o - / 2 0 " COLOR TV like new $ 1 2 5 . Sony CD player, $ 5 0 VCR, $ 5 0 Steam iron, $10. 4 7 2 -4 9 6 9 . 10-20- $50 . HP 10B calculacoiter, $20 . SOFA, KHAKI color Excellent con dition, $ 2 5 0 End tables, $10 . Coffee table, $20. Eurway chairs, $ 3 0 Bar stools. $35 C hair and PENTIUM 7 5 . 8M g RAM 25 6 K lM g 54 0 M B HD EIDE cache. PCI Video, 1.44 FD. N o monitor Keyboard, mouse 4 7 4 -2 5 9 8 . ottoman- be^t offer Antique table $99 5. 10-18-58 two eaves w ith 0 1 1 9 . 10-19-5B $ 3 5 0 329 - PIONEER, 1 0 0 W A / V receiver, 6- CD changer, auto reverse dual cas­ 5B sette 2 5 0 w speakers, $ 4 0 0 / for trade 4 7 8 -0 7 9 9 10-19-5B 3 8 6 /4 8 6 computer. QUEEN BED Anne Frame, $75 ; Black overstuffdd chair, $50 ; Ster­ eo cabinet. $2 5 , 2 exercise-bikes M otorola mobile phone, $35 hitch for T au rus/ Sable, $60 . 5 3 6 8 10-18-58 328 - C A N N O N BJ-30 Brand new m od­ el. 1 month old Portable G reat for laptops M ultiple printing car­ tridges Unbeatable at $ 2 2 5 . C a ll 3 4 6 7 1 0 2 . 10-18-5B LAPTOP COMPUTER 4 8 6 DX33, 4 / 2 5 0 fax modem, color Sacrifice for $ 1 0 0 0 4 7 9 -0 3 2 0 10-18-58 W AKE YOUR neighbors! Speakers, lin e a r Phase 8 8 1 2 never used Studio M onitors 2 5 0 watts. $ 2 5 0 or b.o. by N ovem ber 3rd. 7 0 8 -0 1 5 1 . 10-205P DORM-SIZE REFRIGERATOR. Large Used 8 months. $ 7 0 Pan­ asonic m icrowave $40 . AT&T an­ swering m achine $ 2 5 C all 990 - 9 4 0 8 10-20-5B HUNTER 10-SPEED Like new $75 Black techlme desk, $ 1 0 0 2 0 g a l­ lon aquarium set-up, $75 328- it M anuals. 10-20-5B 6 2 8 0 10-19-5NC TV $100 Turntable $7 5 . Cordless phone $ 3 0 Stereo Receiver $ 5 0 Vacuum $ 4 0 3 3 9 -3 1 4 6 ROLAND FP-8 dig ita l piano, $ 1 0 0 0 O B O . Roland W -3 0 synth, $ 8 0 0 sequencer, synthesizer, O BO . Sony stereo C D /d u a l ta p e / receiver, $ 5 0 0 O B O 4 5 2 9 0 6 9 . 10-23-5B DP W EIGHT bench w /w e ig h ts, Tasco telescope. $ 6 0 Business of­ fice chair, $65 Like new. 4 5 8 1483. 10-23-5B N E W T O N 1 2 0 2MBPERSONAL D igital MessagePad Used once Lotso1 Softwarel C onnection Kit Users G uides $ 5 0 0 14 4M odem for M a a n to s h 5 8 0 or 5 2 0 0 $ 3 0 4 7 6 -5 9 5 4 10-20-5B M AC IN TO S H CLASSIC II com put­ er 4M B RAM, 80M B HD. Excel­ lent condition, wrote dissertation on O N THE move? Selling my 3 8 6 N otebook G reat for W o rd Pro­ cessing, check e-mail. 3 8 6 5 x 2M eg 30H D 240 0B modem, DO S5, 1-2-3 W ordP erfects, spreadsheet, case, battery a d o p ­ ter $39 5 250 -3 1 0 5 . I0 -2 0 5 B 3 2 3 -9 7 2 0 . 10-25 5B COLOR NO TEBOO K. Toshiba 1910C S 4 / 1 2 0 4 8 6 O B O 833 -2 1 2 4 10-24-5B $ 8 0 0 , M O V IN G NEED twin beds $ 5 0 /e a c h O B O 3 3 1 -1 9 1 5 10-23-5B to sell 2 KENMORE ELECTRIC dryer W orks great $6 5 . 2 9 2 -4 1 9 3 10-2 3-5 NC 4-speed, H Y UN DAI EXCEL 198 6 2-door hatchback. G o ld exterior, Fair condition W ill tan interior for $ 5 0 0 -$ 7 0 0 obo. leave message 3 2 0 10-23- sell 8 2 2 5 , 5 N C outdoor redw ood table & benches red upholstered chair $60 $ 1 8 9 3 2 6 -4 5 0 1 . 10-24-5NC 8M B / M A C CENTRIS 6 1 0 M icro- 23 0 M B , with CD-ROM pressor M C 6 8 L C 0 4 0 Used for 1 1 /2 years 3 4 9 -7 4 7 6 10-24 5B $ 55 0, negotiable. Y A M A H A ALTO saxophone model 10-19-5NC YAS-61, appraised for $85 0, selling for $ 5 0 0 326-8417 Pam 10-19-5B M A IL O R D E R BL A N K $ 3 7 5 4 5 2 -7 4 8 5 . CLASSIC CHASE lounge $85 , 9/Voodfalzs. c z /fjja x tm & n ii Order by Mail, FAX or Phone FAX: P.O. B ox D A u s tin , T e x a s 7 871 3 471-6741 C la s s if ie d P h o n e : 4 7 1-52 44 2 0 w o rd s 5 d a y s S5 A d d itio n a l W o r d s ....$0.25 ea I 7 13 19 25 2 8 14 20 2 6 3 9 15 21 2 7 4 10 16 22 28 5 1 1 17 23 2 9 6 12 18 2 4 30 lim ite d In d iv id u a l ( n o n - c o m to p r iv a te p a r t y m e r c ia l) ads. o n ly I O t te r I to r s a le m a y n o t e x c e e d $ ’ OOO a n d p r ic e » m u s t a p p e a r in tt-e b o d y o t t h e a d c o p y I» I ite m s a r e n o t s o ld fiv e a d d itio n a l in s e r tio n s I w ill o e ru n a t n o c h a r g e A d v e r t is e r m u s t M L / U M C O o . | in s e r tio n ^ r e d u c tio n in p n c e ) is a llo w e d c a n b e f o r e 11 a . m . o n th e d a y o t th e fifth th a n ite m s o tt e r e d N A M E . . . . . . . . a o g e N o c o p y c h a n g e i n n o c c e ( o th e r C IT Y . ...................................................... S T A l E . i i i ..P H O N E ....................... I I I I .zip......................... ! ............................. Race On Over Preleasing Extra Large Efficiencies M ’s Perfect For Roommates Large 2-2’s 6 Blks From Campus 2 Blks From Shuttle il Bills Paid No Electric Deposit Prelease Now A sh fo rd A p a rtm en ts Call 476-8915 BEST SOUTHWEST AIRFARESI Save cash on Southwest air travel 7 days a w eekl 4 7 4 1685 10- 16-208 5 6 0 - P u b l i c N o d e s FREE FINANCIAL AIDI O ver $6 Bdlion in private sector grants & scholarships is now available All students are e lig ib le regardless of grades, income, or parent's income Let us help. Col! Student Financio! Services 1-800-263-649 5 ext F58671 10-2 17P n i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i 1YITVVA7I V T e x á h C la ss ifie d s are on th e World Wide Web: LW JVv. f h ttp ://s tu m e d ia .jo u .u te x a s.e d u /C L A S S /to c .h tm l EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT Center Supervisor $ 6 .7 5 /h r PART-TIME HELP needed for small EXTEND-A-CARE FOR KIDS WANTED: Part-time job opportunities: Free-lance graphic illustra­ 10-19106 10-23-5B D O W N T O W N LAWFIRM seeks part-time support servic­ es clerk to join our profession­ al team. Afternoons Send resume w ith cover letter to: G reg G illiland 6 0 0 Congress Ave., Ste. 2 6 00 Austin, TX 78701 NEED EXTRA money Excellent in­ come potential. N e tw ork marketing with m ajor long distance com pany. Free brochure 3 3 1 -9 2 3 3 . 10-23- 7B PART-TIMETELLER NEEDED for cen- tral Austin C redit Union app rox­ im ately 24 h rs /w k . Prior teller ex­ A pply in per perience preferred son at: THDCU 4 8 0 0 G rover Ave 10-2 3-5 B BARTENDERS W A N TE D A pply in person to 2 1 1 0 San Jocinto, M-F, 9-5pm 10-23-5B RUNNER/GENERAL OFFICE HELP NEEDED 1 2 :3 0 -5 :3 0 , M-F, N W Austin. Runs, sw itchboard relief, m ail, fil­ ing Professional appearance, clean driving record, a b ility to w ork dur­ ing school breaks required $ 5 .5 0 hr ♦ expenses Advancement possi­ ble. Fox resume to 5 1 2 -3 3 8 -2 9 3 3 or m oil to: PO Box 2 6 0 5 0 , Austin 7 8 7 5 5 10-2066 TECHNICAL STAFF ASSISTANT. Experience w ith audiovisual equip­ ment or a b ility to learn W ill be re­ quired to move furniture and follow room layouts Dependability and or­ tors and model makers and marketing planners. The Advertising Bus 9 1 7 -0 3 5 9 cle rk /ru n ­ C O M B IN A T IO N MAIL n er/rece ptionist for small dow n­ town law firm. Hours, 9a.m .-2p.m . C ontact G roce N ichols at 505- 5 9 1 9 . 10-19-5B com mercial Real Estate com pany in Austin. Hourly w age between $6- Contact M elissa at the W h it­ $8 ney G roup 4 7 6 -0 3 8 3 . 10-18-5B MAC-LITERATE STUDENTS? Liber­ al Real Estate assistant needed part-time plus possible N W luxury room provided for cool liberal male 4 06 -49 98. 10-18-7B PART-TIME FILE clerk O B /G Y N doctor's office Afternoons, l- 5 p m . 454-5721 10-20-3B SUNDAY M O R N IN G Vocational C oach to assist adolescent am bula­ tory non-verbal male C ontact Su­ san at 454 -19 34. 10-23-20B IMMEDIATE OPPORTUNITIES W arm , energetic, empathelic people needed to assist teach­ ers at quality infant - toddler daycare center. Previous ex­ perience or classes preferred. A M /P M shifts. EEOE. Call Helen: 478-31 13. 10-20-5B gan ization a must. Flexible hours between 3pm ond 10pm weekdays COUNTY LINE O N THE HILL currently seeking energetic, responsible individuals for line cook, cocktails, bartenders, and bussing positions Evening hours. Earn hourly w age PLUS cash tips. ($6-10 /h r.) 3 2 7 -1 7 4 2 . Ask for DeeDee. and between 7am and 10pm wee­ (or kends. 19 h r s /w k $ 5 .3 3 /h r more). Located on campus at the Thompson Conference Center To apply, call Jerry Larson at 471 - 2 9 0 9 1024-36 RELIABLE STUDENT to provide af­ transportation ter-school children M-F, 3-6pm, storting January. 3 4 6 -1 4 2 9 1Q-23-5B for my in DOOR SECURITY needed at night i 0-20-206 GLAMOUR SHOTS phone workers G reat student job. Start now. Flexi­ club Parl-time, evenings $5 5 0 / hr C all 3 4 9 -2 7 9 2 after 5 00pm 10-20-5P ble hours, build your own schedule. N orth Austin office $ 5 /h r +bonus- es, 450 -1 9 2 1 . 10-23-3B.A. N IG H T CASHIER w onted, 11p.m.- Le Fun, 4 a m A p ply in person 2 2 0 0 G uadalupe, 9 a .m -5 p .m . 10- 19-38 PRE-SCHOOL IN W est Austin look­ ing for afternoon assistants. C all Susan at 4 7 7 -9 5 4 9 10-19-78 PART-TIME A C C O U N T IN G assis G eneral office fonts needed Flexible work. 15-20 h rs /w k schedule nel, 3 2 8 -7 7 9 9 10-23-2B $6 5 0 /h r C all Person­ 800 - Genera! Help W anted W e offer fun-filled, stimulating ex­ periences working with school-aged students, flexible hours and com­ petitive wages for qualified per­ sons Responsibilities interacting . w ith children, giving guidance and being a role model. A great op­ portunity for students interested in gam ing hands-on experience working with children. Hours: 2 -6:30p m., Monday-Friday. Positions/Salary: G roup Leader $ 6 /h r. (Center Supervisor pos. limited) APPLY N O W AT Extend-A-Care for Kids 55 IH-35 North Austin, TX 7 8 7 0 2 O r Call 4 7 2 -9 4 0 2 for more info 10-12-12B-C Foreign Language Speakers Needed for editing/proofreading in all languages. Call 478-2998 for more information. 10-16-20B HELPI I need bilin gual people now. C a ll M rs Spence, 3 2 8 -1 0 1 8 10- 17-20B-A WORK ON CAMPUS! THE DAILY TEXAN is accepting applications for A Classified Ad Taker Duties include taking voluntary ads by phone, typing, coordinating projects, assisting filing, sale and supervisory staff with clerical tasks. Excellent co­ w orker and customer service skills needed. Shift Available: M-F, 1 l-2pm APPLY IN PERSON THE DAILY TEXAN Room 3 .2 0 0 Position A vailable M onday, 10-16 T e le p h o n e In q u ir ie s n o t a c c e p te d A p p lic ­ an ts m ust b e a U n iv e rs ity o í T e x a s s tu d e n t o r th e spo use o í o stu de nt The U n iv e rs ity o í T exa s a t A u s tin is a n E q u a l O p p o r t u n it y /A fir m a tiv e A c t io n Em ­ p lo y e r 1 0 - 1 6 -1 0 N C $ 7 $ 15/H R phonework LIGHT Ticket sales for youth rodeo, M o n - Thurs. 6-9p m A p p ly 8 0 0 7 Gessn- er Dr 834 -3 0 3 0 . 10-17-9B IN T E L L IQ U E S T Telephone Researcher In te lliq u e s t, in c , a n in te r n a tio n a l m a rk e t­ in g re s e a rch firm s p e c ia liz in g in the h ig h -te c h n o lo g y in d u s try , is c u rre n tly a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s W e h a ve d a y, e v e n in g a n d w e e k e n d shifts A s a n In te lliq u e s t T ele p h o n e R ese arche r you w ill g a th e r s tra te g ic in fo rm a tio n fo r the fo p h ig h -te c h n o lo g y c o m p a n ie s in th e U.S. skills Q u a lifie d C a n d id a te s W il l Possess * E xce lle n t te le p h o n e c o m m u n ic a tio n * Team p la y e r a ttitu d e w h o is m o tiv a te d * F a m ilia rity w ith c o m p u te rs a n d c om ­ b y a c h a lle n g e pu te r te c h n o lo g y * A stro n g d e s ire fo r p e rs o n a l d e v e lo p ­ m en t a n d a w illin g n e s s to le a rn * T y p in g skills o f 2 5 w o r d s p e r m in ute * P revio us m a rk e tin g re s e a rc h e x p e r i­ e n c e is p r e fe r r e d Pay ra n g e is $ 6 0 0 to 8 5 0 p e r h o u r a n d p a id tr a in in g ¡s p r o v id e d If yo u r skills m a tc h th e a b o v e d e s c rip tio n , p le a s e a p p ly in p e rs o n b e tw e e n 8 0 0 a m a n d 5 0 0 p m M o n d a y -F r id a y a t 1 7 0 0 S Lam ar, S uite 2 4 0 o r c o ll 4 4 7 - 6 7 0 7 fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n E q ua l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r ( You Don’t H ave To Q u it To G et A D ay Off While most companies make you conform to their schedules, we’ll let you work when it’s best for you. And if you give us enough notice, we ll gladly give you a day off when you need it. It’s easy to see why people enjoy working here. Especially since we offer: • Flexible Hours • PT/FT positions available • Regular Wage Reviews • FREE Meals • FREE Uniforms • Excellent pay starting at $5.00/hr. Start working immediately Come by 414 W. MLK or call Michael Hansen at 494-0043 $ó.00-$7.50/H R . Part-time evening positions available in fun, friendly environment doing ra d io market research (no sales or soliciting) NEED HOUSEKEEPER with referenc­ W e are located at Congress and 4 h rs/w k, $ 1 0 /h r es, |obs possible Other C all G eorge at Riverside (Fluent in Spanish helpful but not necessary.) 45 1 -0 4 2 6 , mornings. 10-18-98 Call Sun -Thurs. after 4pm 707-7010, Ask for Lindetl. 10-23-2B EMPLOYMENT - 7 9 0 PART-TIME S U M M E R JOBS! $240» to $550» Weekly! Fun, Fast-Paced Atmosphere Flexible Schedules: 9-1 • 1-5* 5-9 Benefits Plus Bonuses 1-800-929-5753 c c c c o c c c c c o c c c c c o c c o Circulation Assistant (Inserter) 19 hours per week maximum $ó. 10 per hour depending upon qualifications Work hours begin at 2 a.m. Assist in Circulation Department of The Daily Texan on nights when inserts are placed in paper. Requires High School graduation or GED; ability to Tift heavy loads; valid Texas Driver's License and an acceptable driving record. Applicant selected must provide a current three year Driver's License Record. Call Angie after 11 pm at 471-5422 for appointment MEN AGES 18 to 40 Up To $600.00 Compensation Are you a healthy, non-smoking man between the ages of 18 and 40? If so, you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $600.00. The dates and times of the study are listed below; you must be available to remain in our facility for the entire period to be eligible: Check-In: Friday, November 3 Friday, November 10 Check-Out: Sunday, November 5 Sunday, November 12 In addition, brief out-patient visits will be required on the following dates; Wednesday, November 15 To qualify, you must pass our free physical examination and screening tests. Meals, accommodations, entertainment, and recreational activities wiH be provided free of charge. For more information, please call 462-0492 PHARMACO"LSR H I R I N G b F A I R j ^ 3 Sunday, October 29th, 1 1 :0 0 -4 :0 0 and Monday, October 30th, 1 0 : 0 0 - 6 : 0 0 at 2 1 8 S. Lam ar (u n d er the tent) Cal l 4 7 6 - B U N S for m o re in form ation Excellent Pay starting at S 5.50-$7.00/hour (with increases available in 30 days) Team Leaders Cashiers • Hosts • Food P roduction Staff • Artisan Bread Bakers • Pastry Production Staff GSSm m . LBAKERYtf COFFEE HOUSE) E u t o N M B a k c k y PART T IM E INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR Flexible Hours... Excellent Pay A verage $200.00 per week for 18-20 hours of work. We are currently expanding our Marketing Department and are looking for outside Sales Representatives to sell subscriptions door-to-door. Hours are weekday evenings ond Saturdays. Training and transportation available. Interested candidates should call 445-3949 and leave name, number and zip code. A u s tin A m e ric a n -S ta te s m a n f r cita CastÉom Seeking a full time desk attendant for the overnight shift. 12 a.m.-8 a.m. Candidates should be personable with an excellent work ethic. Applications available at The Castilian, on the 11 th floor lobby. 2323 San Antonio No phone c alls please. Street. EO E/M /F/H O N T O W N L A K E The Hyatt Regency on Town Lake has the following F T /P T Opportunities: • Room Service •A M Cashier • R o o m S e rv ice / A iM S e rv e r • Front Desk Attendant • Reservation Agent • Weekend Auditor • L4VISTA Restaurant and Patio: • Busser • Greeter •A M Server U.S. GOVT. JOBS H iring N ow : 1 00's of Entry Level O penings Up­ C all Toll Free dated Daily. Ext # 3 0 1 4 1(800) 5 4 9 -2 3 0 0 9-28-20B-D HIRE-A-HORN The Employment Service For Students W e aiways need dependable peo­ ple for various full day (8-5) gener­ al labor and clerical assignments Long and short term If you have a M W F or T-TH schedule or if you can work full-time, call 326-HORN (4676) $6 0 0 -$ 8 .0 0 /h r 10-2 206C TEACHING ASSISTANTS, morning a n d /o r afternoon. Must be able to w ork same hours M-F NAEYC ac­ credited Hyde Park Baptist C hild Development Center, EOE. 465- 8 3 8 3 . 10-6-15B-C STOP1 $ 1 5 0 0 weekly from home! N o gimmicks! Sincere income op- im m ediately portun tyl start To w rite: DataTech, Box 5 0 1 , W ood- bndge, NJ, 0 7 0 9 5 -0 5 0 1 . 15B 10-9- SPRING BREAK free with SunSplash Tours. Highest com­ Travel '9 6 ! missions, lowest pfices. Campus Reps wanted! Sell Jam aica, Can­ cún, Florida 1 -800-426-771 0 10-10-20P Are you looking for a job that matters? FT/PT. Statewide grassroots consumer group now hiring energetic people to fill positions on our staff. Paid training, benefits. Hours 1-10p.m. $ 3 2 5 /w k 444-8618 1 0 - 1 2 - 1 0B ATTENTION GRAD STUDENTS SCORERS NEEDED to evaluate written responses Temporary positions, approximately four weeks beginning early November W e provide training Hours are 8 :30a m-3:45 pm , ,M-F Hours are not flexible. Bochelor's degree required; prefer English, Language arts, education or related fields During interview, demonstration of writing ability required Pay rate $7 0 0 per hour. Call Measurement Incorporated for ap­ plication: (512)835-6091 . 10-11-18B-C WILL PAY you to lose w eight. 100% guaranteed recommended C all Vivian 329- 100% naturol Dr 5 4 1 3 10-17-20B-A PT/FT COMPUTER techinican Must be fam iliar w / G raphics and spreadsheets Brent Rauhut Engi­ neering. 346 -08 70. 10-17-10B. * H iring N o w * International company expanding in area seeks career oriented people to start immediately. W ill train. Call Lisa 451-7215. 10-17-10B A *Jobs, Jobs, Jobs* Hiring immediately- all positions. No experience necessary. W ill train. Call Roxy 451-0870 10-17-10B.A ALASKA EMPLOYMENT! Big $$$ + ADVENTURE - a great expe ri­ ence! Fishing industry, park, resort FREE VIDEO with |obs available. program ! C all SEI for details (919) 9 3 2 -1 4 8 9 , ext A 2 0 . 10-17- 10B CHILD CARE workers. Part-time af­ ternoon positions, M-F. Possible benefits, good work environment, com petitive pay. 2 5 9 -3 3 4 8 . 10- 20-10B HO M E TYPISTS, PC users needed $ 4 5 ,0 0 0 income potential C all 1- 800 -51 3-43 43 Ext B 10-20-7P Delivery drivers wanted. Prefer FT, but will work with PT. $ 3 0 0 /w k . M-F, no nights, no weekends. Prefer small tuck with camper or mini-van, might accept car Beats chauffeuring pizzas around town & pays a lot better. Casual attire okay. Start now! 328-83 60 10-19-58.A FLORIST SEEKING retail sales Afternoons ond evenings clerk 45 1 -6 7 2 8 10-23-58 AFTERNOON DIRECT contact staff needed for N W Austin group home for women. G reat w ork environ­ for ment. more information 10-23-88 Piease call 9 1 8 -2 0 9 4 DELIVERY PERSON. Professional appearance, dependable. M-F 12 30-5 3 0 N eed proof of clean driving record for two years. Reli­ able $ 2 8 /m ile transportation $5 5 0 / h r * C ontact N ancy 474 - 1488 10-20-5B SMALL BUSINESS in N W Austin seeking detail-orient­ ed, responsible individual for order processing Proficiency in Microsoft W o rd o must. Bilingual in Chinese helpful but not required FT(9:00-5:30, M-F) or PT(12:30-5 30, M-F) Please call (512) 331 -4656 or fax (512) 33 1-7810. 10-24-4B CHILDCARE TEMPORARIES $ 5 .2 5 /h r., several openings teachers & aides Temporary & permanent job opportunities Full & part-time. Call substi­ tute switchboard, 328-2477. Serving Austin area day care & private schools since 1985 Member BBB SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS needed for child care Full and part-time Flexi­ ble hours, greal opportunity 250- 0 5 2 9 10-23 5B EXPERIENCED CHILD core workers 7-12 :3 0 p m ., needed Part-time 12 30-6 3 0 p m 8 3 4 -9 5 2 6 10-23- 5B A M A N A G E R / ASSISTANT. Business $ 5 0 0 weekly $400- is boom ­ ing! N o experience we train tIO Offim rie.h l i SHORT W ALK UT ner trainee, Typist Paralegal run­ tram oh (w ill Mac) Bookkeeping Trainees, cleri­ cal. Nonsmoking 4 7 4 -20 32 10-5 20B-C FLOOD MAP RESEARCHER OPENING Rapidly expanding Flood M a p re­ search com pany seeking research­ ers Applicants must be detail-ori­ ented, hove previous office experi­ ence, and exposure to map reading. Hours are 8-5 M-F with part-time hours availab le Pay is $7 0 0 /h r to start, with benefits offered after 9 0 days. should fax Row, Flood Zones individuals Interested resume attn Audrey to 1-800-344- 9 1 3 9 10-19 4B FULL-TIME DATA ENTRY POSITION At a rapid ly expa nding Flood M ap Research com pany Two positions available. Hours are 8-5 or 4-mid- mght M-F. Applicants must hove keystrokes of 1 0 ,0 0 0 or above Pay is $ 7 .5 0 / h r w ith benefits after 9 0 days. W ells Branch location Interested individuals should fax re­ sume to : 1-800-344-9139 attn Au­ drey Row, Flood Zones 10-19 4B PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST - m edi­ cal office Flexible afternoon/even­ ing hours. 459-1151 or fox 454- 1554 10-22-5B DOW NTOWN LAWFIRM seeks part-time support servic­ es clerk to join our profession­ al team. Afternoons. Send resume wjth cover letter to: Greg Gilliland 6 0 0 Congres A ve.,Ste.2 6 00 Austin, TX 7 8 7 0 1 . 10-23-5B PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST. G reat part-time student. W orkin g with people, answering position for phones, computer skills required Local real estate education facility. M ,W ,F 7701 N . Lamar 9 8 8 3 . 10-23-58 451 - RECEPTIONIST NEEDED crazy office 452 -2 6 4 3 10-24-8B for w ild 8 20 - Accounting- SHORT W ALK UT. G ain exper,. ence with M ac bookkeeping sys­ tem. Also hiring typist, clerical, runners Nonsm oking. 474 -2 0 3 2 10-5-20B-C ’ ACCOUNTING STUDENT needed part-time to set up bookkeeping and continuing records. Computer knowledge a must. Flexible schedule: days, evenings, or weekends. 20-30hrs./m o. Polymer Sys­ tems, 7 5 9 - 1 0 1 7 . 10-23-2B Attention Business Students: Part-time RECEPTIONIST/BOOKKEEPER needed at small software marketing firm. Duties include answering phone, bookkeeping, marketing, product shipping, etc Experience with PCs, W indow s, QuickBooks, or M icrosoft W o rd helpful Casual dress, short walk to UT $5.0 0 /h r. Call 49 5-9101. )0-24-2B 830 - Administrative -Management ' G E T SERIOUS Get paid to study m anagem ent at a world-famous university. Your local McDonald's Restaurant (414 W. MLK) is currently seeking energetic and responsible leaders to fill hourly management positions. A nd w e’re serious about rewarding you, too, with: • Up to $8 an hour • Profit sharing plan • Medical/Dental Ins. • Paid V acatio n s • Paid h olidays • Free meals/uniforms • Free health physicals If you ’re as serious about your future as we are, call Michael Hansen (512) 494-0043 m| * e g o n f n Always an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer ^ j U A w C a s L a W M M im m ediate openings ENTRY LEVEL available individuals desiring for marketing experience W e tram. 454 -65 65. 10-24-5B MUSIC BOX Crystal and collect' bles. Lakeline M all, PT/FT. Flexible hours J.R A bbie, 2 5 7 -9 5 2 8 or 255 -19 47. 10-12-10B 20-40 W ES TW O O D LIQUOR hou rs/w k, evenings until 9 0 0 ond Saturdays All duties C a l1 327- 792 0. 10-19-5B PART-TIME SALES. Up to 24 h r * / wk W ill w ork around class sched­ ule. A p ply in person: Texas C e il­ ing Fans, 1205 W 6th 10-20-5B-A The Gift Solution is now hiring soles associates for Highland M all & Barton Creek M all stores Please Call Sarah or Peggy for an appointment at 4 5 9 -9 2 7 2 10-24-4B PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT CHORES Austm D igital, o small com pany that makes software and electronics to analyze a ircra ft Right data, has a reasonably flexible half /'me posi­ tion for a freshman to junior student with a strong interest in computer* or program ming Send resume to Austin Digital Inc., 3 9 13 M edical Pkwy #2 02 Austin, TX 7 8 7 5 6 Fax 45 2-81 70 10-23-3B 860 1 m . Always an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer J Applications accepted M-F 8AM - 6PM. 208 Barton Springs Rd or FAX Resume to 477-0901 EOE S O M E O F * U T S F I N E S T * * * * S T U D E N T S * ¿ W O R K A T I M S ¿ , ’ k IMS is now hiring for new projects, inbound and outbound telemarketing. Excellent base hourly rate plus commission on several projects. Day and evening shifts available. Paid training and excellent work atmosphere. Xft (ol 454-4447 for 4 * ^appointment time.^c . ★ COLLEGE STUDENTS needed tor low-key appointment settmg Evening shift. Base pay ♦ commission Daily cash bonuses. Up to $400 weekly Call between 3 & 9 pm 467-8584 ask for Ron $ 1 7 5 0 WEEKLY possible m ailing our circular* For info call 301-306- 1207 9-28-50P Customer Service Agents Needed Special project in N o rth Austin. Flexible day and night shifts available. Customer Service experience a plus. Call now fo r an appointment. Start immediately. Int^lm P e r s o n n e l » 338-W ORK 8303 N. MOPAC Suite C 138 FAST FUNDRAISER - Raise $ 50 0 in 5 days - G reek*, group*, club*, in dividual* Fast, easy- m otivated N o fina n cia l obliga tion. (800)862- 1982 Ext 33 10-23-4P CRUISE SHIPS HIRING - Earn up to $ 2 0 0 0 * /m o n th , w orking on Cruise Ships or land-Tour companies W o rld travel Seasonal A full-time em ployment availab le N o expe ri­ ence nece**ary. For more inform a­ call tion C 5 8 6 7 2 . 10-2-24P 1-206-634-046 8 ext N A TIO N A L PARKS HIRING- Seo *onal full-time em ployment a vailab le at N a tional Parks, For­ ond ests and W ild life Preserves Bene­ fit* + bonusesl C all. 1-206-545- 4 8 0 4 ext N 5 8 6 7 I 10-2-24P EMPLOYMENT - 8 0 0 GENERAL HELP WANTED 5 5 . 0 0 0 - $ § . 0 0 0 M o n t h l y Wo r k in g d is t r ib u t in g o u r P r o d u c t B r o c h u r e s G e t P a i d - W e S u p p l y B r o c h u r e s F /T O R P /T F O R f r e e i n f o W r i t e 4 5 2 2 6 4 3 10-2A8B DIRECTOR 1375 Conev Island Ave., Ste. 427 Brooklyn, NY 11230, T h e D aily T ex a n Tuesday, October 24, 1995 Page 17 Pi i t your picture rn n h Your Mummy will Love You! Class Portraits for all classifications will be taken in the Flawn Academic Center Lobby 6 p.m. - 9 p.m. October 24, 25 & 26 & November 7, 8 & 9. T1 T !- r r ■ ü iT O IiM 860 * Engineering 8 9 0 - Clubs* Technical Restaurants 9 0 0 - Domestic Household W ANTED EXPERIENCED HTML au­ thors for free-lance work. C all Da­ tabase City at 328-9145 10-13-10B GEORGIA PACIFIC"" will be hosting a pre­ recruitment meeting on October 29th, 6p.m. at ECJ 1.204. All interest­ ed candidates please feel free to stop by. _______________________ 10-23-56 870 - Medical PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST mec col office Flexible afternoon/even­ ing hours. 459 -11 51 or fax 454- 1554. 10-23-5B PHYSICAL THERAPY Assistant for North Austin chirop rac' c clm ic W o rk 7am 9 3 0 o m M ,W F P - e y $ 6 /h r kinesiology or health care expe- C all 8 3 4 -2 3 6 0 or ence app ly at 2521 Rutland Dr Su te 2 5 0 10-24-48 880 - Professional The Avantus G roup, Inc., a group of Fmanciol Consultants north of ' he Arboretum , w ork kmck M o n d a v -f'fd a v C o i 4 7 0 -6 *9 1 W ANT AD! Page 18 Tuesday, October 24, 1995 T h e D aily T e x a n Advertisem ent Intramurals • Outdoor Adventures • Sport Clubs • Open Rec • Fitness/Wellness Rec Sports Review Continuing A University Tradition • Education Through Recreation Basketball Entries Due Thursday Officials & Scorekeepers Needed! Outdoor Activities - Don’t Miss Out! Upcoming Trips Get in the Swim with Non-Student Program Gregory Gymnasium Continuing the Tradition Frequently asked questions about the Gregory Project: How long will the reno­ vation project take? It is anticipated to take only 18 months. When will Gregory Gym close? The current plan is for Gregory to shut down in late December. What about the pool, will it be closed for 18 months as well? The plan continues to be to leave the pool open for use during the renovation. Some minor construction may be required to make the pool accesible during this 18 month project, but the current plan still allows usage of the pool. When will Gregory re­ open? It is anticipated to re-open in the Fall of 1997. This column will appear weekly in the Rec Sports Review to update the uni­ versity community on the up-coming Gregory Gym renovation project. If you have any questions regard­ ing the project or this col­ umn, contact Recreational Sports Publicity dt 471- 1155. Recreational. Sports Center Open ‘til Midnight Sunday- Thursday Rec Sports Review The Rec Sports Review is a weekly production of the Divi­ sion of Recreational Sports. It is designed to keep the University community abreast of all recre­ ational activities. Phone num­ bers for the various programs within the Division of Recre­ ational Sports are listed below 471-3116 Intramurals 471-6370 Open Recreation Sport Clubs 471-4003 Outdoor Program 471-1093 Ffcness/Wellness 471-5234 471-4373 Facility Hotline Gym Stores 471 3134 Editor Amy S. Abramczyk Intramural basketball entries are being taken in GRE 28 through T hursday, O ctober 2 6 , for the fall tournament. Teams may pick their day and time (as available) from the “instant schedule” system. Leagues are scheduled to play Sundays from 3:00 - 11:00 PM and Monday - Thurs­ day form 5:00 -11:00 PM. This year’s tournament, the last in Gregory Gym as we know it, will be a little different. Teams will play three regular season games and everyone will advance to the playoffs. Each team will then play a minimum of two playoff games with first round winners advancing to the championship bracket and first round losers going into the consolation bracket. ALL TEAMS ARE GUAR­ ANTEED FIVE GAMES. A $40.00 entry fee is due upon sign up. Indi­ viduals without teams may sign up on the “free agent” teams being formed by Rec Sports. Men's Division: Fraternity A & B, Housing, Club, Open, Independent B & C, Law-Grad, and Six Foot & Under. You may play for one team in any division you qualify for, but no more than one team per division (i.e. a man can play frat, independent, and six foot/under if he meets all the eli­ each gibility requirem ents for league). Women’s Divisions: Independent, Sorority, and Housing (minimum of four per division required to have sep­ arate playoffs). Coed Division: Recreational and Competitive. Men and women are eli­ gible for a coed team as well as men’s or women’s teams. A te a m m a n a g e r ’s m e e tin g is s c h e d u le d fo r T h u rs d a y , O c to ­ b e r 2 6 , 6 : 0 0 P M in G eology 100. B a s k e tb a ll C lin ic S ta rts T o n ig h t Intramural basketball officiating can offer you many things: money, exercise, a chance to meet new friends, a membership in the UOA (University Officials’ Association), and a skill that can carry on after col­ lege. In our system, we need 200+ IM officials, so obviously you can play IM basketball as well as officiate. With this number, a shift of two to four games a week is all that is needed, but O u td o o r C o o k in g W e e k e n d This trip goes to the ideal camning spot - South Llano River State rark, with its cool, clear water, shady trees, and abundant wildlife. Learn to set up a kitchen outdoors and to cook mouth-watering meals. Dutch-oven skills, meal preparation, and a little bit of guide “cooking magic” will all be shared. The fee includes food (you eat what you make), cooking equip­ ment, group camping equipment, and instruction. (B/E - Beginner/Easy) 1 0 /2 8 -1 0 /2 9 8 :0 0 am - 6 :0 0 pm $ 3 5 U T /$ 4 2 Non-UT In te r m e d ia te B icy cle M a in te n a n c e familiar with how to remove, clean, and adjust the main sets of bearings on any bicycle: hubs (wheels), head­ set (steering), and bottom bracket (pedaling). Also learn the techniques of bearing adjustment and overhaul. If time permits, we will cover the tools and techniques that you will need to get started in wheel-building. The class is small, so individual attention is assured and work stands are pro­ vided. Participants will need to bring a bicycle. Either a road or mountain bike Intermediate/Easy) work. (I/E will 1 1 /7 , 9 , 11 6 :3 0 p m - 8 :3 0 p m ; 6:3 0 p m - 8 :30p m ; 10 :0 0 a m -12 :3 0 p m $ 1 8 U T /$25 Non-UT H ik e B a rto n C re e k Is your bike not running as smooth­ ly as it used to? I)o you feel like you’re wasting energy? Are you interested in how your bike is put together? In this hands-on workshop you will become This trip will explore the Barton Creek Green Belt, one of the most diverse and beautiful natural areas in Texas. We’ll see a variety of trees, wildflowers, classic swimming holes, cliffs, caves, springs, waterfalls, a nat­ ural rock bridge, archaeological sites, birds, butterflies and much more. Most of the eight miles along the trail will be explored. Expect to be amazed by the wonders close to home! (B/M - Beginner/Moderate) 1 1/ 11 9 :0 0 am - 5 :0 0 p m $ 1 0 U T /$17 Non-UT A If you are interested in any of the trips or activities sponsored by the Outdoor Adventures Program stop by Gregory Gym 31 to sign up or call 471-1093 for more information. Pay­ ing for the trips is very convenient and may be made with cash, check, Visa, or Mastercard. All participants are required to be covered by medical insurance and proof (membership card) of medical insurance m ust be shown at the time of registration. If you don’t have medical insurance a $2 per day charge will be added to th< cost of the trip to fulfill medical cov­ erage responsibilities. Trips tend to fill up, so register soon. Gregory Gym Store Used Equipment & Clothing Sale Friday, October 2 7 All Ite m s P r ic e d to S ell WHEN: Friday, October 27, 1995, from 9:00AM -12:00 AM WHERE: In the hallway in front of the Gregory Gym Store Items A vailable: R acquets — Racquetball $3.00 — Squash $2.00 Weightlifting — Gloves — Belts $2.00 $3.00-$5.00 P ersonal A ccesories — Towels — Braces — Gym Bags — Hair Dryers $1.00 $1.00 $2.00 $3.00 Balls — Basketballs $1.00-$3.00 Clothing — T-shirts — Shorts — Shoes — Sweats $2.00 $2.00 $3.00 $2.00 M iscellaneous — Racquetball Gloves $2.00 $2.00 — Swim Goggles — Eyeguards $3.00 — And M uch. M uch More! All Sales Final For more information call 471-3134 Longhorn Open this weekend North Texas Open, UT El Paso Open. LSU Mardi Gras Open, Texas Tech Red Raider Open, and possibly a Longhorn Open. For further informa­ tion, please contact David at 467-743. The Umghom Open, the UT Rac- quetball Club’s racquetball tourna­ ment recognized and sanctioned by the American Amateur Racquetball Association, is this weekend at the Recreational Sports Center. Play begins Friday evening at 5:00pm, and will continue throughout Saturday with the finals on Sunday. Many top- ranked players from all over the state will be competing. A few of the top returning players from last year for the men include Aaron Katz of Dallas, currently the seventh-ranked player in the world, Chris Cole of Houston, and Dave Peck, a former world cham­ pion and current national representa­ tive for Ektelon; and featured women include JoAnn Slater of players Austin, Texas’ top-ranked female player, and Julie Murphy and Laura Rogers, both of Austin. The Longhorn Open’s first year last fall was a tremendous success and was well-received and supported on the UT campus. If you’re interest­ ed in coming out to watch, come down to the Rec Center any time this weekend, or if you have any ques­ tions, please contact tournament directors Amy (469-7448) or Jack (432-1513). UT Wrestling Club The UT Wrestlers are currently working out in Belmont Hall Room 546 every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 7-9 PM. Light and heavy weights are needed, but all weight classes are welcome. Upcoming tour­ naments include: Aggieland Open, you can work as much as you like. In addition, we have outside league games for youth basketball that will pay you as much as $13.00 per game. WE ENCOURAGE EACH TEAM TO FIND SOMEONE TO BECOME AN IM OFFICIAL! T h e c lin ic is a s follow s: Tuesday 6 :0 0 - 8 :0 0 PM Geo 100 R ules/M echanics/S corers W ednesday 6 :0 0 - 8 :0 0 PM GRE 131 On c o u rt stations T hursday 6 :0 0 - 1 0 :0 0 PM GRE 131 P ractice gam es (1 hour) Anyone interested please come by GRE 28 or call D ard Doll at 471-3116 Make up clinics will he held if you can not make it Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday. With everyone advancing to the playoffs, come on out and learn to officiate without the pressure. See you Tuesday! Racquetball Singles - Enter by tomorrow the 25th. Men’s A, B, & C divisions. Women’s A & B. No fee. Draw posted by Friday. Schedule your own matches. Swim M eet - Enter by Tuesday, October 31 for this meet to be held on Thursday, November 2 at the Jamail Swim Center. No fee. Men’s divisions ( housing, fraternity, club, and inde­ pendent) and women’s divisions. Individuals can sign up unattached. Complete list of events in GRE 30. Table T ennis D oubles - Men’s open and recreational division and women’s division. Enter by Novem­ ber 8. Tournament to be held in the RSC on Sunday, November 10 at 6:00 PM. Hot S h o t/F ree Throw - Enter in GRE 30 or on site. To be held in the RSC on Tuesday, November 7 from 7:00 - 9:00 PM.' Drop in by 8:30 to shoot 50 free throws or to shoot from various “spots” on (1 minute). No fee. the floor 3-P oint Shoot O ut - Enter in GRE 30 or on site at the RSC on Thursday, November 9 between 7:00 and 9:00 PM. Shoot 3’s from five spots in one minute. No fee. Racquetball D oubles (Coed) - Enter in GRE 30 by Wednesday, November 8, for this coed racquetball tournament. An A & B division will Schedule your own be offered. matches. No fee. Increase your knowledge about the Cybex machine weights in the O ri­ entation to C ircuit W eights class that will meet Saturday, October 28, 11:00 - 1:00. This will be the last Ori­ entation offered this semester. If you just need a few pointers on your swim stroke, a great way to improve your skills is through the Swim Video Feedback class sched­ uled for Wednesday, November 8, from 6:00 - 8:00. When you pair the experienced eye of a master’s swim coach with the objective lens of a video camera, you can really picture how to change your current stroke pattern into a more efficient one. The instructor has changed on this clinic and it will be our new Coached Swim instructor, Tara Nye. The second session of F itness, M ind/Body and Coached Swim classes begins Monday, October 30 and will keep you trim and relaxed during the holiday season through December 21. There will be a try-out week, October 30 - November 5 to check out any of the class styles to find the perfect one to fit your sched­ ule and preferences. You can also sign up for session 2 by mailing in your registration form or faxing it to 4714994. There are several options for Non- Student Program swimmers. If your goal is more geared toward swim­ ming for fitness and cardiovascular endurance, or you train as a triath­ lete, the C oached Swim program is your best bet. With a coach available Monday - Friday at 6:10 - 7:00 am and also during the noon hour, you have a lot of chances to get in some great workouts along with tips for improv­ ing your technique. A longer Satur­ day morning class is also included. C lasses req u ire pre-registration a n d /o r paym ent of fees. Com e by Gregory Gym 3 0 or call 4 7 1 - 5 2 3 4 for additional inform ation or to receive a course schedule. FREE Overuse Injuries Clinic Put November 13 on your calendar for a FREE clinic on Overuse Injuries. Dr. Ted Spears will discuss the secrets of preventing common overuse injuries from participating in impact sports such as running and aerobics on Monday, November 13, 5:30 - 6:45 in the Recreational Sports Center 2.104. Call 471-5234 to add your name to the registration roster. All classes require pre-registra­ tion a n d /o r p ay m en t of fees. Come by Gregory Gym 3 0 o r call 4 7 1 -5 2 3 4 for additional inform a­ tion. INSTRUCTOR AUDITION! UT Aerobics is looking *for a few dynamic, experienced, committed instructors. Are you one of them? Recreational Sports provides out­ standing facilities, equipment and ongoing support for instructors with many schedule options. Applications must be submitted to the program coordinator in GRE 30 prior to the audition date. The audition is sched­ uled on Monday, October 30, 8:00- 9:30 PM at the Recreational Sports Center. Call 471-5234 for more details. Don’t miss out on this great opportunity to get involved in one of the best campus aerobics programs in the nation!! UT AEROBICS SESSION TWO REGISTRATION If you missed out on the great aerobics at the Recreational Sports Center the first time around - you get a second chance. Session Two begins on Monday, October 30. We have over 50 great classes per week to keep you energized and sane all the way through exam week. Registration is ongoing in Gregory Gym, room 30. Stop by anytime between 8:30 and 4:30, Monday through Friday. We are open until 6:00 PM on Wednesdays for your convenience. Session Two schedules are available at the Recreational Sports Center and Gregory Gym. Don’t delay!