ü o n o r p r s Oh ‘Mickey,’ you’re so fine... What a rush! if, Entertainment/Page 12 Uni\ersity/Page 5 Bat to (Eexan Serving students at The University of Texas since 1900 rules Dodds blameless Chris Oliver Daily Texan Staff D eL oss D od ds, UT d ire cto r of m e n 's in te rc o lle g ia te a th le tic s , shouldn't be held liable for events leading to the resignation of former UT baseball coach Cliff Gustafson, said Texas A ttorney G eneral John Comyn Thursday. Com yn's office filed a response to G u sta fso n 's su it w ith the T ravis County District Court and defended Dodds as acting within the duties of his office. G u sta fso n b ro u g h t th e su it against Dodds on July 23, accusing him of tam pering with an outside in co m e sta te m e n t th a t Gustafson's resignation in 1996. led to Dodds allegedly doctored income figures on the statement, according to G u s ta fs o n 's su it, m ak in g it appear th at the coach w as w ith ­ h o ld ing in com e receiv ed from a su m m er b a se b a ll cam p he m an ­ aged. Gustafson claims Dodds' request­ ed his resignation or he would be terminated. UT alumnus Joe Jam ail, Dodds' personal attorney, said Dodds can­ not be sued as an individual since he acted as an a g en t o f the University. "[D o d d s] n e v e r acted on his own," Jamail said. He added that Dodds wasn't pre­ sent when the outside income state­ m ents in question w ere allegedly w hited-out, and he had no part in it. Jam ail said he is n 't sure w hat Gustafson hopes to gain from the law su it sin ce he never sp ecified how much he wants in damages. "W h a te v e r he w ants, h e 's not going to get it," he said. Jam ail added that he will cross examine Gustafson after he receives his deposition within the next two weeks. C o rn y n 's th at G ustafson admitted that proceeds filin g sta te s earned from the b aseball cam ps w eren't consid­ ered o u tsid e income and that the creation of a second account was intended to circu m vent the U n i v e r s i t y 's accounting pro­ cedures. B ro ad u s A. Dodds Spivey, Gustafson's attorney, is out o f tow n and has y et to read or respond to the filing. At the time the lawsuit was filed, Spivey said Gustafson created a sec­ "S in c e Gustafson the term s o f M r. Gustafson's con­ tract w ith UT stated that the revenues from the baseball camp were part of his com­ pensation, [he] saw nothing wrong w ith the crea tio n o f a sep a ra te account," Spivey said. ond account to pay fo r any sudden expens­ es, sin ce he couldn't rely on P ay _ tim ely ments from the U n i v e r s i t y 's business office. The University reported possible violations to the Internal Revenue Service and the NCAA, but the dis­ trict attorney's office said Gustafson had committed no crim inal viola­ tions. Gustafson was head coach for the UT baseball team for 29 years, and is the winningest coach in NCAA Division I baseball history. Jam ail said it is d isap p o in tin g that Gustafson would file a lawsuit against the U niversity that made him successful. Angry protests blast Milosevic Associated Press B E L G R A D E , Y u g o sla v ia — Defying police intim idation and government propaganda, 150,000 ch a n tin g d e m o n stra to rs c o n ­ verged Thursday in Belgrade to demand Slobodan Milosevic's res­ ignation — the largest outburst of popular resen tm en t again st the autocratic Yugoslav president in years. The rally was a m ajor test for the fragm ented opposition in its efforts to unseat M ilosevic, who has led his country into four disas­ trous wars that have left it in eco­ nomic ruin. "The people have stood up and will not sit back till the changes are m a d e ," o p p o sitio n le a d er Zoran Djindjic told the flag-wav­ ing crowd. "M ilosevic must go for Serbia to be free." "This time we'll go all the way. It's e ith e r him or u s," D jin d jic said, giving the Yugoslav presi­ dent 15 days to resign before "the whole of Serbia will rise up." In an apparent attempt to keep p e o p le aw ay, B e lg ra d e p o lice claim e d W ed n e sd a y th ey had arre ste d a m an w ith a "h ig h ly explosive device" and warned of possible bomb attacks at "massive public gatherings." O n T h u rsd a y , S e rb ia n TV, under strict Milosevic control, also accused the United States of plan­ ning "terrorists actions" in Serbia, the main republic of Yugoslavia. As the rally began in front of the dom ed Y u g o sla v P a rlia m e n t building, a tear gas canister was hurled near the speakers' stand, triggering a brief stampede. One man was carried from the scene, apparently injured. The rally con­ tinued despite the strong smell of tear gas. The tw o -h o u r p ro te st ended w ith ou t o th er in cid e n ts as riot p olice w atched from insid e the parliament building. Several opposition parties orga­ nized the rally, the first since the 78-d a y N A TO b o m b in g o f Yugoslavia ended in June. They called for a transitional govern­ m en t o f e x p e rts to re p la ce Milosevic's regime. The em otio n al crow d carried ban ners reading "S lo b o , Please Ju s t G o " and "Y o u So ld O u t Serbia." They held placards read­ ing "R esign atio n s" and chanted "Slobo Go!" and "Red Bandits!" ce le b ra tio n o f A u th o ritie s h ad lau n ch ed a m a ssiv e ca m p aig n a g a in st the rally, claiming it was intended as ’P re sid e n t a Clinton's birthday Thursday and in support of N A TO 's "o ccu p a­ tio n " of Y ugoslavia — m eaning the in tern a tio n al p eacek eep in g mission in Kosovo. Ivica Dacic, the spokesman for M ilosevic's ruling Socialist Party, said he ex p e cte d "n o th in g " to com e o f the ra lly b ec a u se he claim ed the o p p o sitio n had no popular support. "People think of those who will speak at the rally the same way as th ey th in k of th o se w ho h ave bom bard ed Y u g o sla v ia ," D acic said before the protest. Som e key o p p o sitio n fig u res had said they would not attend, b u t a p p a re n tly ch an g ed th e ir m ind s a fte r se e in g the crow d . Because of the opposition's frag­ mentation, it has so far failed to se rio u sly ch a lle n g e M ilo sev ic, even despite daily protests in the winter of 1996-97. Foreign imports may harm U.S. economy Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — A m ericans sn ap p ed up fo reig n -m a d e cars, c o m p u te r s an d c lo th in g a t a record rate in Ju n e, catap u ltin g the h a lf-y e a r trade d eficit m ore than 40 percent ahead of the pace fo r 1 9 9 8 , w h en th e im b a la n c e reached an all-tim e high. The u n e x p ecte d ly larg e $24.6 billio n Ju n e d eficit, 16.3 percen t above the M ay level, provided a so b erin g back d ro p Thu rsd ay to the opening of hearings by a con- g r e s s io n a lly a p p o in te d p a n e l s e a r c h in g to A m erica's trade woes. s o lu tio n s fo r Prominent econom ists told the U.S. T r a d e D eficit R e v ie w C o m m i s s i o n th a t the c u r r e n t trends are unsustainable and if not reversed, could represent a serious threat to the U.S. econo­ my down the road. This scenario could lead to a sharp drop in the d o l l a r 's v a l u e , d r i v i n g d o w n s to c k an d b o n d p r ic e s in th e United States as foreign investors dum p th e ir d o llar-d en om in ated holdings. T h o s e w o r r ie s a ls o in v a d e d W a ll S tr e e t, w h e re th e w o rse - th a n -e x p e c te d tr a d e n u m b e rs r e p o r te d by th e C o m m e rc e D epartm ent sent the dollar down to a seven-m onth low against the Japanese yen. S to c k p r ic e s fe ll as w e ll as in v e s to rs w o n d ered w h e th e r a w eaker dollar, by pushing up the price of im ports, would make the Fed eral R eserve even m ore a g i­ tated abo u t in fla tio n p ro sp ects. The m ark et has been esp ecially jitte ry in ad v an ce of T u e sd a y 's Fed m eeting. It is w idely expected that inter­ est ra te s w ill rise for a seco n d tim e this year. Through the first half of this TRADE DERCIT/Page 2 Bush says no drug usage in past 25 years Associated Press W ASH IN G TO N — R epu blican presidential candidate George W. B u sh said u rsd ay h e h a s not used illegal drugs in the past 25 years, declaring that if voters object to his refusal to reveal more "they can go find somebody else to vote for." Under mounting pressure, Bush has ab an d o n ed h is stra te g y to dodge have-you-ever questions and for two straight days has tried to establish a political statute of limi­ tations for drug usage. The Texas governor said he could pass White House anti-drug standards set by President Clinton and his father, former President George Bush. Far from putting the issue to rest, Bush's parsed replies raised more questions that his cam paign team in Austin said he won't answer. "I was asked what I thought was a relevant question about whether or not, if I became president, I will have background check s for the p e o p le th at w ork for me at the White House. And if I did, could I pass the challenge of a background check. My answer is ab so lu tely ," Bush said during a news conference in Roanoke, Va. "N ot only could I pass the back­ ground check and the stand ard s applied to tod ay 's W hite H ouse, but I could have passed the back­ ground check and the stand ard s applied on the most stringent con­ ditions when mv dad was the presi­ dent of the United States — a 15- year period," he said. Sp o k esw o m an M in d y T u ck er said Bush had effectiv ely denied U If all that didn’t matter, I can’t imagine what Bush might have stuck up his nose 20 years [ago] will move people one way or another.” — James CarvUe, former canton aMser drug usage in a period beginning 15 y e a rs b e fo re h is fa th e r took o ffic e in 1989 — or sin c e 1974, when the 53-year-old Bush was 28. A day e a r lie r , B ush told Tht D allas M orning N ew s that he had not used drugs in the past seven years — the time frame used in nor­ mal FBI background checks. Bush said Thursday his fath er's White House had the FBI apply a 15-yeai test to his employees. Bush, confronting the first con­ tretemps of his front-running cam­ p aig n , m ay h ave in a d v e rte n tly exposed himself to questions aboul drug use into his teens by saying he could "pass the background check and the standards" applied at the White House today. The C lin to n a d m in istra tio n re q u ires the FBI to ask W hite House applicants about drug usage since their 18th birthdays. Tuckei said Bush would not answ er that same question. A ccording to T u ck er, the cam ­ paign had been told that the Bush BUSH/Page 2 AP photo Goktug, an 8-year-old boy, is carried by rescue workers from the ruins of bis home Thursday, where he had been trapped since Tuesday's earthquake. the area Thursday and another 24- m em ber U.S. team w as expected shortly. Three U.S. Navy ships with 2 ,100 M arines and 1,000 sa ilo rs were ordered to the area to beef up rescue efforts. Adding to the crisis, residents of Istanbul panicked Thursday after TURKEY/Page 2 U.S. trade Here is a look at the U.S. trade report, which includes total imports, exports and deficit. tnckxbs m n k m and goods $10 5 b a t o n ----------------------------------------- Associated Press Death toll rises in Turkey AP photo Protesters burn posters of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic in front of the Parliament building prior to an opposition rally Thurday. The rally was the first anti-Milosevic rally held in die capital in three years. Former deputy Prime M inister Vuk Draskovic, the most charis­ matic speaker in the opposition, had said he would not be at the rally, but later appeared on stage to sp e ll o u t h is d em an d s for Milosevic's ouster. "Serbia is in jail. We are in jail, because ... it is led by those who are toally isolated by the world," D ra sk o v ic said , re fe rrin g to M ilosevic's pariah status among world leaders. "They must go to the political past so Serbia goes to the future," Draskovic declared as the crowd roared with approval. But he also d enounced other o p p o sitio n p a rtie s for m aking PROTEST/P a g e l ISTANBUL, Turkey — Rescuers saved an 8-year-old Turkish boy who had been trapped for m ore than two days under the wreckage of his home, but hope was fading Thursday for thousands of others buried amid the debris of an earth­ quake that killed almost 7,000 peo­ ple. P rim e M in iste r B u len t E cevit admitted what many Turks feared — even the hundreds of profession­ al re scu e w o rk ers sen t in from around the world will not be able to save all of those under the rubble. Many earthquake victims will die of thirst and exposure. "Thousands of buildings are in ruins," Ecevit said Thursday. "It is not possible to reach all of them." Some 35,000 people could be still buried under debris, U.N. deputy spokesm an M anoel de Almeida e Silva told reporters at U N. head­ quarters in New York. More than 70 U.S. experts were in J J A S O N O J F M A M J 1 « t t 1 9 M -10 -15 - a o - -25 - AP graphic Page 2 Friday, August 20, 1999 T h e D a il y T e x a n Bush Continued from page 1 W h i te H o u s e d is q u a l if ie d a p p l i ­ c a n ts w h o had used d ru g s in the 1 5 - y e a r t i m e f r a m e , w h i l e th e C l i n t o n W h i t e H o u s e d o e s n o t . T h e r e f o r e , s h e s a id , th e c u r r e n t W hite H ou se has no "s tan dard of disqualification" for Bush to follow. Refusing to take part in what he c a l l e d th e " p o l i t i c s o f p e r s o n a l d e s t r u c t i o n ," Bush told re p orters Thursday, "I am going to tell peo­ ple I made mistakes and that I have learned from my mistakes. And if they like it, I hope they give me a c h a n ce . And if th ey d o n 't like it, they can go find somebody else to vote for." His answers this week have been as a m b ig u o u s as t h o s e g i v e n by C l i n t o n w h e n he w a s A r k a n s a s g o v e r n o r seek ing the presid ency. F or y ears, C lin to n d o d g e d q u e s ­ tions about drug use until an inter­ viewer asked if he broke any inter­ national laws; Clinton said that he s m o k e d m a r i j u a n a , b u t d i d n ' t inhale. Clinton's, consultant at th'e time, James Carville, said Bush will face d r u g q u e s t i o n s t h r o u g h o u t th e campaign but the issue won't hurt him — especially after Clinton sur­ vived the Monica Lewinsky affair "If all that did n't matter, I can't i m a g i n e w h a t B u s h m i g h t h a v e s tu c k up his n o s e 20 y e ars [ago] w ill m o v e p e o p l e o n e w a y or another," Carville said. Trade Deficit Continued from page 1 year, the U.S. trade deficit is r u n ­ n i n g at an a n n u a l r a te o f $ 2 3 6 b il li o n — 44 p e r c e n t a b o v e la st y e a r ' s $ 1 6 4 . 3 b i l l i o n r e c o r d im balance. Im p o rts of g o o d s and serv ices p o sted a 3.9 p e rc e n t a d v a n c e in Ju n e to an a ll-tim e high of $ 1 0 3 billion. U.S. exports, which have s u f fe r e d fro m the e ffe c ts of the A sian c u r r e n c y cris is , did m a n ­ a g e a s m a l l 0 .5 p e r c e n t g a in to $ 7 8 . 3 b i l l i o n , o n l y t h e s e c o n d a d v a n ce this year. E c o n o m i s t s e x p l a i n e d to the c o m m i s s i o n w h a t is b e h i n d the d e fic it: a s u r g i n g U.S. e c o n o m y d uring the past tw o years against t h e b a c k d r o p o f a w o r l d w i d e s lu m p triggered by the A sian cri­ sis. Foreigners have been happy to sell their p r o d u c ts into the U.S. m a rk e t and take U.S. d o l la r s in paym ent. P r o m i n e n t e c o n o m i s t L e s t e r t h e T h u r o w , a p r o f e s s o r at M a s s a c h u s e t t s o f I n s t i t u t e Te ch n olog y and a m e m b er o f the c o m m i s s i o n , a r g u e d t h a t th e U n ited S ta te s cou ld s e e a s i t u a ­ tion o f "cap ital flig h t" sim ilar to w h at hit South Korea and oth er troubled Asian co u n trie s in 1997. G et T h e D aily T ex a n 24 h o u r s a d a y! h t t p://w w w .d a ily t e x a n.u t e x a s.edu Turkey Continued from page 1 s e i s m o l o g y e x p e r t s at th e c i t y 's Kandillt Observatory reported 210 a ftersho ck s in just two -hours and warned of unusual seismic activity in the bay of Gemlik, south of the city. A lth o u g h the a fte rs h o ck s w ere not felt in Istanbul, some residents, fearing further destruction, walked through the streets carrying pillows and bags. " S in c e a ftershocks a re c o n t in u ­ ing, we want our citizens to be vigi­ lant a little long er," said Istanbul Gov. Erol Cakir. T he g o v e r n o r of B ursa, a large city in northwestern Turkey, urged residents to sleep outside. T h e d e a t h to ll r o s e to 6 ,8 4 1 the T h u r s d a y , w ith n e a r l y 3 4 , 0 0 0 g o v e r n m e n t i n ju r e d , announced. It ordered 10,000 body bags to deal with the disaster, the semi-official Anatolia news agency reported. R e l i e f t e a m s fr o m th e U n it e d States, Britain, Kuwait, Israel and Germany came to help in the search for victim s. C o lla p s e d roads and b rid g e s sev erely h a m p ered relief efforts, and many aid workers com ­ p l a in e d t h a t d i s o r g a n i z a t i o n plagued the operation. At I s ta n b u l a irp o rt, a G e r m a n relief team w as delayed for hours when their equipment and three of their 11 G e r m a n sh e p h e rd s w ere temporarily lost. In Yalova, an elite Israeli rescue unit became lost and had to s to p c i v i l i a n s to a s k fo r directions to a disaster site. "There is a problem of coordina­ tion on all levels among those help­ ing," complained Brig. Gen. Arieh Eldad, the chief medical officer of the Israeli Army. "[But] in such a catastrophe it is surprising that they are organized at all," he added. A m an from M arietta, Ga., and four of his grandchildren were the o n ly A m e r i c a n s k n o w n to h a v e been killed in the earthquake. W E A T H E R Returns with a vengence Now I realize at least 74 people will com plain about the new hom e of the weather, and all I can say is not every­ one liked it when Bob Dylan went elec­ tric. I've said it 100 times, and Gctch time the message grows. Protests Continued from page 1 "unrealistic" plans of "some tran­ sitional g ov ern m e n ts" which no one will recognize and called for e a r ly e l e c t i o n s in N o v e m b e r , echoing a proposal by Milosevic's party. A nti-M ilosevic protests began in Serbia after the NATO air cam­ paign left the country badly dam­ aged, impoverished, isolated and without control over the southern p r o v i n c e o f K o s o v o . T h e c a m ­ p a i g n w a s l a u n c h e d to fo rc e Milosevic to accept a peace plap fo r s e p a r a t i s t K o s o v o th e province. In a last-minute bid to defuse t e n s i o n s , M i l o s e v i c ' s S o c i a li s t Party offered Wednesday to hold elections before those scheduled for 2001. The opposition, fearing fraud, is likely to reject the offer unless Milosevic agrees to inter­ national monitoring of the vote. ROSES 2 DO ZEN $19.95 CASH & CARRY ■ DAILY SPECIALS, TOO! I I C A S A VERDE FLORIST | ^ 1806 W. 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Tuesday 4 p m Wednesday Friday, 4 p.m. ■“r“ - “ ■ ( U « h w i n i Day Pnot to PuM caaon) WORLD & NATION T h e D a ily T e x a n 3 KLA leaders deny acts of retribution HUMir, AUGUST 2 0 ,1 8 8 8 Associated Press PRISTINA, Yugoslavia — Kosovo Albanian rebels rejected accusations they have orchestrated ongoing vio­ lence in Kosovo and insisted Thurs­ day that they have complied with a deadlin e to tu rn o ver w eap o n s to NATO peacekeepers. The K oso v o L ib eratio n A rm y 's statements came a day after attackers hurled grenades and firebombs at die main Serbian Orthodox church in the so u th w e ste rn city of D jak o v ica, slightly w ounding tw o Italian sol­ diers guarding it. In other attacks reported Thursday by NATO, a fire set in a Serb neigh­ b o rh o o d of the ca p ita l, P ristin a , spread to 20 houses on W ednesday before it w as extinguished, while a uniformed KLA soldier w as shot to death by a sniper outside the group's headquarters in that dty. Ethnic violence persists in Kosovo d espite the presence of m ore than 40,000 NATO-led peacekeepers who cam e June 12 after Y ugoslav Presi­ dent Slobodan Milosevic accepted a peace deal to end his crackdown on ethnic Albanians. M o st o f the u n re st h as b een revenge attacks on a dwindling Serb minority, prompting NATO and U.N. officials overseeing Kosovo to hint of a KLA role. KLA leaders denied responsibility Thursday and said the violence and crim e h arm ed the g ro u p 's goal of becoming the leading force in a multi­ ethnic, democratic Kosovo. Hashim Thad, the KLA's political lead er and head of a self-d eclared K o so v o g o v ern m en t, co n d em n ed "e v e ry a c t of v io len ce an d th re a t against Kosovo dtizens that are tak­ ing place with the goal of discrediting the national resistance." The K L A 's m ilitary com m and er, Gen. Agim Ceku, also announced the group was in full compliance with its agreement to turn more than 60 per­ cent of its weaponry to NATO peace­ keepers by Friday. Disarmament must be complete by Sept. 19. The K L A w as tw o d a y s late in NEWS BRIEFS Japanese banks could merge T O K Y O — In what analysts said could be a new series of shakeups in Japan's financial industry, three of the country's top banks said Thurs­ day they are considering an alliance that would create the world's largest banking group. Industrial Bank of Japan Ltd., Dai- Ichi Kangyo Bank Ltd. and Fuji Bank Ltd. each confirmed they are consid­ e rin g a th re e -w a y co m b in a tio n . N ew s re p o rts said the b ank s are expected to formally announce the deal later this month. C om petition has intensified and what w as once unthinkable — that financial in stitu tion s cou ld fail if they d o n 't m easu re up — is m ore acceptable. The bank s refu sed to say w h at form their alliance m ight take, but J a p a n 's le a d in g b u sin e ss d a ily , Nihon Keizai Shimbun, reported they had sealed a deal to create a joint holding company as early as the fall of 2000. T hat stru ctu re w ou ld allow the banks to p u t th eir retail banking, investm ent banking and brokerage su bsid iaries u n d er com m on m an ­ agement and cut costs by combining overlapping businesses, the paper said. Assets at the three banks exceed $1.2 trillion, which would make the n ew e n tity th e la r g e s t b an k in g g ro u p in th e w o rld . T h eir assets would surpass the $735.3 billion of Germ any's Deutsche Bank and the $652 billion of Japan's largest bank, the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi. Suspect in anchor slaying in custody - M E X IC O C IT Y — M exico C ity police have detained a man suspect­ ed of ca rry in g o u t the g an g lan d - style slaying of a popu lar TV star, the M exico City attorney general's office said Thursday. • M e xico C ity A tto rn e y G en eral Samuel I. del Villar told a news con­ fe re n ce th a t E ra s m o P e re z , also known as "El Cholo," was picked up by police W ednesday on a city street and placed under house arrest as a primary suspect. T h ree o th e rs w e re also p la ce d u n d er house arrest as accessories. Del V illa r an d o th e r a u th o ritie s refused to disclose the grounds for the arrests other than to say "there is evidence" possibly linking them to the assassination that requires fur­ ther investigation. The slaying of TV star Francisco "P aco" Stanley in a bloody shootout June 7 stunned Mexico. Stanley was gunned down outside a restau ran t alon g a b usy M exico City freeway. His assailants fired at least 26 bullets into his black Lincoln minivan, hitting Stanley seven times. W a rra n ts for the a rre sts of the three were issued by a Mexico City Criminal court that did not make the evidence public. The w arrants w ere m ade out for Stanley's chauffeur, Jorge Escandon G a rc ia , te le v is io n h o s te s s P a o la Durante Ochoa, and a former Stan­ ley assistant, Luis Martinez Delgado, all of w h o m w e re p la ce d u n d e r house arrest in Mexico City. Churchill asked BBC to keep quiet on bomb L O N D O N — S ir W in sto n C h u rch ill p e rs u a d e d th e B ritish Broadcasting Corp. to avoid running any docum entaries or in-depth dis­ cussion s about the n u clear bom b, fearing the "subject was so likely to affect in ternational p eace," new ly released documents snow. The prime minister intervened in 1954 a fte r le a rn in g th e BBC w as planning a program about the bomb, according to documents made avail­ able at the Public Records Office. The British governm ent regularly releases secret papers that no longer are co n sid ere d a risk to n atio n al security. The d ocu m en ts sh ow C hurchill im m ediately fired off a m em oran ­ dum to Britain's postmaster general, w ho oversaw radio and television communications, saying he doubted "whether it is wise that they should do this." Earl De La W arr, the postm aster general, later met with m e head of the BBC. M in u tes of the m eetin g show he emphasized the prime min­ ister's opposition to any program s about the nuclear bomb. While Churchill later boasted that the BBC willingly agreed to die ban, the d o cu m en ts show the netw ork initially resisted. — Compiled from Associeted Press reports Former guerrilla commander Hashim Thaci, center, sits with KLA Commander Remi, left, and KLA Gen. Agim Ceku, right, during a rally in honor of the KLA Saturday. Thaci promised Kosovo's ethnic Albanians that one day their w ill would decide the future of their homeland. For now, though, his Kosovo Lib- ertaion Army is trying to impose its w ill on the Serbian province and grab as much power as it can in the postwar disorder. meeting a deadline last month, which called for it to hand over all its heavy weapons and 30 percent of its small arms arsenal, such as automatic rifles. In an interview published Thurs­ d ay by the F re n ch n e w sp a p e r Le M onde, U .N . special representative Bernard K ouchner suggested tem ­ porarily resettling Serbs within Koso­ vo to p ro te c t th em from rev en g e attacks. A policy of resettling Serbs, howev­ er, would likely be opposed by both Yugoslavia and the United States. Belgrade is anxious for Serbs to maintain a presence in as much of Kosovo as p o ssib le to reinforce Yugoslavia's sovereignty claims. The West has opposed any moves which might lead to the partition of Kosovo into ethnic enclaves. More evidence of what causes eth­ nic Albanian anger emerged Thurs­ day, with witnesses saying a mass burial site on the outskirts of Pristina could contain more than 200 bodies. Dr. Fadil Batalli, chief of the foren­ sic institute at Pristina Hospital, said he and a friend found more than a dozen bodies apparently stacked in a row. Another man, Hanefi Gashi, 35, also witnessed the bodies, but inde­ pendently of Batalli. Gashi went to the site to try to find his two brothers and two cousins, believed buried there. He saw one family dig up three bodies from the site and take them away to bury them in the town of Urosevac. NATO spokesm an M aj. Roland Lavoie said he would try to alert the international war crim es tribunal about the suspected mass grave. AP photo Red Cross aid sent to war-torn Angola Associated Press L U A N D A , A n g o la — T he International C om m ittee of the Red Cross has delivered the first installment of an em ergency aid p ack ag e to tw o A n go lan cities where more than 400,000 people are sh o rt of food b e ca u se of a rebel siege. The first 100 tons of the 18,000- ton package were flown Aug. 16 to Huam bo, 330 miles southeast of the capital, L u and a, the Red C ross said Thursday in a state­ m en t. A g ricu ltu ra l eq u ip m en t and seeds are also being sent to the cities. During the next six m onths the Red C ro ss p lan s to sen d 3 ,0 0 0 tons of food per month to H uam ­ bo and to the city of Kuito, 100 m iles e a s t of H u a m b o , w h e re tens of thousands of people have fled to escape fighting b etw een th e g o v e rn m e n t an d U N IT A rebels in the countryside. The reb els sh elled K u ito on Thursday, killing one person and seriously wounding four others, th e P o rtu g u e s e n e w s a g e n c y Lusa reported. The Red Cross statem ent said an assessment team flew Aug. 9 t to the northern city of Malanje, w h ich w a s c u t o ff fo r fo u r months due to the fighting. The G e n e v a -b a s e d re lie f a g e n c y delivered m ed ical su pp lies for th e tr e a tm e n t o f 2 0 0 p e o p le w o u n d ed from the figh tin g at the city7s hospital, it said. B attles, ro a d a m b u sh es and rebel sh elling of a irp o rts h ave hampered aid deliveries to most provinces in Angola since a four- year-old U .N .-sp o n sored p eace process unraveled in December. Since then, alm ost a fifth of the country's 11 million people have b een d is p la c e d b y fig h tin g between governm ent forces and UN ITA, a P ortu gu ese acron ym for the N ation al U n ion for the Total Independence of Angola. There are no exact figures for the total num ber of military and civilian casualties since fighting resumed last year. Civil w ar first erupted in Angola after its 1975 independence from Portugal, fol­ lowing a 14-year colonial war. Starr may leave his post early Associated Press W ASHINGTON — Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr told a federal judge he exp ects to leave his post before his job is com pleted, a legal sou rce said T h u rsd ay . A divid ed court panel has given Starr authority to continue his investigation of Presi­ dent and Mrs. Clinton. Earlier this month Starr informed the chief judge of the independent counsel court, David Sentelle, of his decision to leave, the sou rce said, sp eak in g o n ly on co n d itio n of an o n y m ity. The so u rce said S tarr could leave before year's end, but was not specific. "H e indicated there were allega­ tions to be prosecuted or declined," said the source, who is familiar with the conversation. "H e brought up this business about retiring. Certainly the im pression w as sooner rather than later." ABC News first reported that Starr was considering leaving in the next few months, quoting sources on its Web site Tuesday as saying Starr had su b m itted the resu m es of th ree deputies as possible successors. As he left his McLean, Va., home Thursday, Starr said, "I have no com­ ment at this time." Citing Starr's "unusually produc­ tive" record of 24 indictments, 16 con- victions and a p r e s id e n tia l im peachment during his f i v e - y e a r probe, tw o R e p u b lic a n - a p p o i n t e d appeals court judges w rote W e d n e s d a y that they gave Starr the go- ahead to carry on after he said his work wasn't finished. Starr Starr has said his office was trying to wrap up its work and there has been speculation he might leave office before a final report was filed. Stan- said Wednesday his office was work­ ing with the Justice Department on "whether appropriate matters can be referred back to the department." Justice Department officials have told Starr they probably would be unable to take over his unfinished investigation, a department official said, speaking on con d ition of anonymity. A ttorney G eneral Jan et Reno declined Thursday to discuss who might take over any unfinished inves­ tigations if Starr were to resign. "I'd prefer the Department of Justice to address the issues as they arise," she said. But a Justice o fficia l, requesting anonymity, said that, despite some ambiguity in the now-expired inde­ pendent counsel law, it would be log­ ical for Starr to ask the three-judge panel that selected him to name a suc­ cessor, as those judges would have done if the law had not expired. The topics of Starr's investigations still pose the same conflicts for Justice in vestigators that they did w hen Reno referred them to Starr in the first place, so the cases could not come back to Justice, the Justice official said. Starr's office has refused comment. The independent counsel said last week he hoped to wrap up the inves­ tigation and write a final report at the "earliest practicable moment." Stan- told reporters he expected the work to be completed before the general elec­ tion in November 2000, when Mrs. Clinton likely will be the Democratic nominee for a U.S. Senate seat from New York. In its ruling Wednesday, two mem­ bers of the three-judge panel said the court didn't have the authority to go beyond a routine request to Starr ask­ ing where his work stood. The court considered w hether Starr's probe should be terminated under a provi­ sion of the now-expired independent counsel law. AUNG GRACEFULLY U.S. and Russia agree to renew 1972 missile defense system ban Associated Press M O SCO W — The U nited States an d R u ssia reaffirm ed on T h u rs­ d ay their 1972 treaty banning m is­ sile d efen se sy stem s an d a g re e d in p rin c ip le to w o rk o n fu r th e r re d u c in g th e ir n u c le a r w a rh e a d stockpiles. T h e a g r e e m e n ts c a m e a f t e r th re e d a y s of h ig h -le v e l d is c u s ­ s io n s b e tw e e n th e tw o n a tio n s ab out their nuclear arsenals. O n e o f th e m a in p o i n t s th e s id e s d is c u s s e d w as th e U n ite d States' desire to m odify the A nti- B allistic M issile T re a ty so it can b u ild a lim ite d m issile d e fe n s e system . T he s y s te m the U n ite d S ta te s w an ts to build w ould be design ed to shoot dow n a single m issile or a s m a ll n u m b e r o f m i s s i l e s . It w o u ld n ot be effectiv e a g a in st a m assive attack, the kind R ussia is cap ab le of launching, the A m e ri­ can s say. M o s c o w s t r o n g l y o p p o s e s c h a n g e s to th e tr e a ty , s a y in g a m i s s ile d e f e n s e s y s te m in th e U n ite d S ta te s w o u ld u p s e t th e c u r r e n t s t r a t e g i c b a l a n c e . B u t P resid en t B oris Y eltsin ag reed to discuss ABM m od ification s when he m et Presid en t C linton in June. After this w eek 's talks, the tw o sides said the ABM treaty "is the corn erstone of stra te g ic stab ility" b e tw e e n th e m . N o s p e c ific p ro ­ p o s a ls w e r e d is c u s s e d a n d no m ajor d ecisio n s re a ch e d , b u t the s id e s a g r e e d t h a t A B M m u s t rem ain strong. The head of the Russian d elega­ tion at the talks rep eated Russia's stan ce th at an y m o d ifica tio n s to th e t r e a t y c o u ld s e t o ff a n ew arm s race. If th e U n ite d S ta te s b u ild s a m issile d efen se s y ste m , "R u ssia will be fo rced to ra ise the effec­ tiv e n e s s of its s tr a te g ic n u cle a r arm s forces and carry out several o th er m ilitary and p olitical steps to g u a ra n te e its n a tio n a l s e c u ri­ t y ," G r ig o r y B e r d e n n ik o v , the h e a d o f th e F o r e i g n M in is tr y 's d ep artm en t for se cu rity an d d is­ a r m a m e n t, w a s q u o t e d b y th e Interfax new s agen cy as saying. The sides also ag reed in princi­ ple to start w ork on a START III treaty th at w ou ld cu t n uclear w ar­ heads to 2 ,00 0 to 2,500 per nation. B ut b e f o r e th e y ca n w o rk on such a trea ty , th ey have to finish r a t i f i c a t i o n o f S T A R T II. T h a t treaty, w hich calls for both co u n ­ trie s to s c a le b ack from a ro u n d 6,0 0 0 w a rh e a d s to 3 ,0 0 0 to 3 ,5 0 0 each, w as signed in 1993. But Rus­ sia's p a rlia m e n t has yet to ratify it. A R u ssia n la w m a k e r in v olv ed in the talks s^id START II's ratifi­ cation d ep en d s on a U .S.-Russian agreem en t on the ABM question. "The Russian side m ade it plain th a t [S T A R T II] ca n be ra tifie d only if th ere is a m utually accep t­ able s ta n d " on th e ABM tre a ty , V ladim ir L u k in , the ch airm an of p arliam en t's co m m ittee for in ter­ n a tio n a l a ff a irs , to ld th e IT A R - Tass new s agen cy. T h e K r e m lin h a s u r g e d th e low er h o u se , th e S tate D um a, to make STA RT II ratification a p ri­ ority. B ut C om m u n ists and oth er h a rd -lin e rs h a v e b alk ed , sa y in g th e t r e a t y e n d a n g e r s R u s s i a 's security. The U .S. Senate ratified START II in 1996. Robert Hope, 66, shoots hoops at the Cape Ann Y M C A in Gloucester, Mass., Thursday. A study done by Harvard University researchers, pub­ lished in this w eek's British MedicsI Journel, concludes that seniors who take part in social activities live an average of two and a half years longer than more older people who don't often socialize. AP photo 4 T h e D a ily T e x a n THURSDAY, AUGUST 2D, 1988 EDITORIALS 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. W est C a m pu s T ra sh Like bad art created by a drunken sculptor, the refuse of soon-to-be UT alumni buttresses a hefty green dumpster outside a "Greek" house on the corner of two West Campus streets. Precariously, a couch sits atop an ottoman — topped by a used, but still usable, red plastic ice chest. Opposite, a half dozen boxes full of yester­ day's CDs and out-of-fashion Tommy Hilfiger clothes climb like dyslexic Lego blocks at odd angles toward the dumpster lid which belches a vomitus of papers and unrecycled aluminum beer cans. An intact aquarium with a pair of soiled Nike running shoes inside perches on the lid. In front of the heap, a tire-less but otherwise serviceable bicycle points toward the street like an amputated soldier who tried but failed to escape the mass grave. Creations like this are repeated this time of year on curbsides for miles around campus. The practice is disgraceful. When graduating students move out from their student digs, too often large items of refuse, like couches, mattresses, tables and collected household goods, get trashed in appalling quan­ tities. Such trash mostly lacks want, not worth. It's not only an eyesore to student neighbor­ hoods but also a sad commentary on the value some place on material possessions. This habit conjures hard questions about consumerism and personal responsibility — what drives the com­ pulsion to discard still-useful items? Is it vanity or just laziness that keeps the 4x4 truck-driving spawn of affluence from hauling their old love K h y C hapm an T e x a n C o l u m n is t seat to Goodwill where it can find another decade's use? What effect is all this garbage hav­ ing on landfills and natural resources? According to one local expert, the problem is growing. "I've never seen it this bad before," says Ralph Rocco, general manager of Central Texas Refuge. "Not in 10 years." CTR services scores of dormitories and student-filled apart­ ment buildings. Already once this week Rocco has dispatched special trucks with a three-man teams to collect the excess bulk in West Campus. The teams put in an extra long day and Rocco will likely dispatch them again before the semes­ ter starts. "It7s unusual to have to go twice," he says. The company still makes money by charg­ ing landlords for the extra runs, but Rocco isn't pleased to have to send his people to do it. "If they would bag it or set it out as neatly as possi­ ble, it would make things a whole lot easier," he added. During the Great Depression people learned to stretch the useful life of even the most meager pot or pan. Perhaps the fast-money '90s have prompted an epidemic of economic amnesia. For some that's certainly the case. Helping to abate the waste are the hungry pla­ toons of trash pickers — poor people looking for salvageable, saleable or pawnable goods. Some even arrive with trailers in tow to cart off as trea­ sures what others have deemed trash. Where it goes and what it's used for is anyone's guess. One thing is for sure, it doesn't go to the dump. Unfortunately, these roving gypsies risk fines if ever caught, since Austin outlawed dumpster diving several years ago. A better solution for all concerned might be to reserve a state parking lot near campus at semes­ ters' end for an unwanted goods drop-off — a sort of open-air thrift exchange, free to all who care to use it. Imaginative, but unlikely. Though far from the most densely populated nation, America consumes several times more in resources than our closest economic counter­ parts. Repercussions will follow this shortsight­ edness. After the first week of September many sum­ mer graduates will find new and bigger abodes to suit their AMD or Motorola paychecks. And, like freshmen with Daddy's credit card, they will again fill their new apartments and houses with brand-new couches and ottomans that lack the humiliating patina of student life — bigger toys for bigger girls and boys. It would be comforting to believe they learned something here besides trashing the planet and the future. Chapman is an education senior 2Thr iBaihj ®*xan R o b A d d y Editor C e c il y S a i l e r Associate Editor B r ia n W in t e r Associate Editor B r i a n D u p r e Associate Editor K r i s s a h W i l l ia m s Associate Editor H elp W a n ted Got anything interesting to say? The Daily Texan is now hiring editorial columnists for the fall semester. We're looking for fresh, original com­ mentary on a variety of subjects; if you feel like you can bring new, inter­ esting opinions to Page 4, then we invite you to come see us and submit an application. Specifically, we'd like to hire versatile columnists who will write on subjects of particular interest to our University readership. We generally prefer a focus on local and University topics. We don't want retreads of fired national political debates, nor do we want hacks regurgitating the old party line on a controversial issue. Bottom Line: Be original. We like that. Working at the Texan is a significant time commitment. Texan colum­ nists often spend hours researching and interviewing for each piece they submit. The pay is meager, and they get lots of hell from both friends and total strangers alike, yet something keeps them coming back. Hint. It s certainly not the constant, glowing approval of a readership of thousands. Working at the Texan will help you grow intellectually and profession­ ally in countless ways. It's worth the all hell you go through, and then some. More than anything, we want people who like to think. We're looking tor writers who dabble in politics, not politicians who dabble in writing. If you have anything to add to the great intellectual debate, then we want you. You can reach us at 232-2212 or by e-mail at texan@www.utexas.edu. Our offices are located on the comer of 25th Street and Whitis. L o o k in g B a c k Editor's note: To commemorate The Daily Texan's 100th year o f publication, the editorial board as chosen to publish portions of editorials from past years every Fri­ day. The following — "Leave us alone" — was originally published Oct. 2, 1978, under Texan Editor Gary Fendler. Following last March's campus vote to abolish the Students' Association, one expired politico confidently predicted, "Within three weeks to a month we will have a new structure." Well, sue months later we still have no structure, but it is not for a lack of trying on anyone's part. Two organizations have reared their heads since fall registration, eagerly trying to attract innocent freshmen and transfer students along with naive juniors and seniors into their ranks. Both groups, the Student League and Students Concerned About Repre­ sentation, the former sounding more like a group of superheros out of Action Comics while the latter, by its political make-up, should more appropriately read Students Concerned About Resumes, have one thing in common: nei­ ther is worth a damn. Each has touted the much-ballyhooed tune of change. We offer a change, they sing. We can be effective; join us, you'll like us. At least one group has devised a new student constitution which, for obvious reasons, offers few substantive changes. 1 he persons involved in these two groups are basically concerned about the lack of a student voice. They honestly believe this campus needs to have an organization which will lobby and look out for student interests. But they base their concerns on two erroneous assumptions: the students who took the time to vote want this alleged voice and, two, tins campus needs another structure which will fit snugly into the University's bosom. Let us elaborate. After reviewing the final tally on the vote to abolish stu­ dent government, it is clear the students voted to do away with student gov­ ernment period. Voters gave no mandate to any group to rewrite the consti­ tution or restructure the institution and place it before students. When these groups say they are working in our interests, we have to respond, Who asked you to?" It's a curious thing about groups such as the two currently trying to force themselves on students; they claim to work in our interests, they say they are following a distant voice crying, "Restructure, restructure. But we have yet to meet a single individual who belongs to these mysterious noises ... One major, if not THE major, complaint with student government last year was accountability; who did our senators, president and vice president answer to? The first thought that comes to mind is the students, right? Wrong ... After the Senate, with the president or vice president presiding, finished debate on an issue, and money was appropriated to a group for some cause, who had the final say on approval of the action? It wasn t the students. It was the Board of Regents, with an intermediary stop at the presidential level. That7s right. Student organizations would ask for money from the Student Senate, the Student Senate would decide yes or no, and then out of the hands of students the matter would go, up to an administrator and on to the regents. Clearly, this is not student governance. This is student participation in what the regents will tell students to do. Student government was a facade, and any restructuring that continues this chain of authority will also contin­ ue to be a facade, unworthy of student support. The regents and administration can't understand why students did away with their government. We contend students never had true student gover­ nance, at least not in the last seven or eight years. The best thing any group seeking to work in the student interest can do is wait until the students ask for a new form of student government. And, if by chance such a call is heard, then one underlying principle should be consid­ ered: student government, regardless of what form it may take, should answer to students and students only. Anything short of this is regental government, with a little bit of student participation. D a ily T e x a n e -m a il U p d a te s T o subscribe to the Texan's weekly e-m ail update service, p send an e-mail to listprocdmcfedey43C.Utexas.edu with the fo ^ lease bllow- ing text in the body erf die message: subscribe ddfytexan (Your N ame) You'll receive a weekly e-áudl With the w eek's top news and editorial articles. Horns Up / Horns t>own Beer: As the season of back-to-school parties commences it's only appropriate that we pause to salute our favorite intoxicatingly delightful beverage, The ultimate social lubricant, it enhances any gathering, promotes hilarious antics and accelerates the "getting-to-know-you" phase of many a relationship. Remember the number to DDP and try to make it to the toilet before you puke ' but otherwise, cheers! Cigarettes: Sure they'll kill you, but without the occasional nicotine rush, life — especially life in this basement — might just be intolerable. The feds and the state of Texas might be out to get you, but we still love you, Joe Camel. Smoking does, in fact, make you cool. Hear that kids? President Clinton may have ruined our taste for cigars, but the com­ mon cigarette still lights our fire. Cocaine: Without it, we wouldn't have had Studio 54 or all those tunes from the '70s and '80s. And it's not just for West Campus party girls anymore. Better than crack, the lovable nose candy is gaining newfound respectability and news coverage thanks to would-be president George W Bush and his not quite blow-by-blow account of his "youthful indiscretions." It's the between class pick-me-up we're all gonna need after the summer. Scout 'standards' Marshall D. Shaefers obviously has a keen­ ly-developed personal sense of right and wrong but apparently little idea of what the Boy Scouts of America as an organization is about. The Scout Oath is not a litmus test that should be used to decide who stays and who goes. A boy, or young man, does not join Scouts to main­ tain standards, as Shaefers suggests, but rather to learn how to be a decent, law-abiding citizen and to develop those habits so that they last a lifetime. If we exclude those who we feel have not main­ tained every standard, then how are those so excluded ever to leam "better" conduct? Or their children, or their grandchildren? Look at the words of the Scout Oath more close­ ly. "I will do my best" is explicitly clear: We all make mistakes and sometimes act less than id e a lly If the BSA were to kick out'every person who failed to maintain Schaefers' "certain standards," the BSA would have very few Scouts indeed. And, were the BSA to enforce those standards retroac­ tively, perhaps even Schaefers himself might be asked to turn over his Eagle Scout medal. For sure­ ly he violated the "mentally awake" clause when he failed to transcribe the Scout Oath correctly: he T he F irin g L in e added two commas, put two additional commas where semicolons belonged, and left out an "and." And perhaps by relaying his vision of an exclu­ sionary BSA, he has failed to uphold the "to help other people at all times" clause of the Scout Oath as well as certain elements of the Scout Law: Scout is brave helpful, friendly, courteous, kind ... Stephen Cooper Eagle Scout Preservation administration grad student Provisional mumbo-jumbo Rob Addy and the Texan Editorial Board should research their own editorials published in The Daily Texan about welcoming provisional students (i.e., those students who for whatever reason do not meet the qualifications for admission). Despite their tolerant posturing at the beginning of the summer, the Texan Editorial Board now shows its true spots regarding students who "don't deserve to be called Longhorns." Let's hear it for Mr. Addy, and the editorial cartoonist who characterizes those students as "stu­ pid." But mostly they need to research the Uni­ versity' s anti-hazing policy. No doubt, Mr. Addy has determined that since he is directing his com­ ments at classes of students, or potential students, instead of individuals he is avoiding the letter if not the spirit of the policy. The policy includes "any activity that... subjects the student to extreme friental stress, shame or humiliation, or that adversely affects the mental health or dignity of the student or discourages the student from entering or remaining registered in an educational institu­ tion..." in its list of activities deemed hazing. Mr. Addy, the cartoonist and the Texan Editori­ al Board have all engaged in activities which could subject provisional and minority students to "extreme mental stress, shame or humiliation" based solely on their failure to meet an arbitrary set of criteria. This type of Bigotry and Intolerance has no place in a first-class university. The Shame, Mr. Addy, is on you. Charles Tolliver UT alum A sk T h e M ayor Beginning this month, the Texan will be sponsoring a column called "Ask The Mayor" where students can submit questions about city issues to Austin Mayor Kirk Watson. Please send your questions to texan@www.utexas^du along with your home and evening telephone numbers. and liability. F irin g L in e L etter s Please e-mail your firing Une letters to texan@www.utexas.edu. Letters must be under 250 words and should include your major and classification. Please include daytime and evening phone num­ bers with your submissions. The Texan reserves the right to edit all letters for brevity, clarity, C o n ta c tin g T he D a ily T ex a n S ta f f Editorial..........................—.232-2212 Mailing Addrtsa: News .......................... Sports Ww*» Entertainment Copy Desk ...... ,....«.232-2209 471-8618 Austin, TX 78713 232-2211 P.O. Box D (512) 471-2952 (fax) 232-2206 232-2217 Campus Mail Code G3100 News Editor. Monty Markland markland@mail.utexas.edu FRESH START UNIVERSITY T h e D a i l y T e x a n 5 m om , AUGUST 20,1988 Greeks gearing up for safer, sober fall rush r r a t e r m t ie s a re to r ric h b o y s w h o c a n 't m a k e friends or meet girls on their o w n ," said K.T. T hom p­ son, a photojournalism junior. "T h ey are a w asteland o f conform ity." C lifto n M cD an iel, p resid en t o f Beta T h eta Pi, d is­ agrees. U p p ercla ssm e n can re a lly h e lp fre sh m e n g e t to k now A u stin ," he said . "T h e g reek sy stem g ets you sta rte d w ith an o rg a n iz a tio n and p ro v id e s a lo t of unique things you can 't get out of other social groups or U niversity grou p s." Beta Theta Pi is one o f the sm aller chap ters at the University, and m em bers are required to participate in local volunteer program s each week. Rush w eek end s Sept. 3. James Craig May Daily Texan Staff The UT g reek co m m u n ity is g earin g up for ru sh, their fall recruitm ent period, and the UT Interfraternity Council said Thursday this year will be a safer, m ore sober one for prospective m em bers. In light of a string of incidents nationw ide involving hazing and alcohol abuse, the UT Interfraternity C o u n ­ cil said it is trying to im prove rushing practices and its public image. "T h e m ajor step is a w aren ess," said Jack C allahan, IFC president. "H azing is a thing of the past, it has no place in the current greek sy stem ." R ush b eg an T h u rsd a y fo r U T s o ro ritie s, and w ill begin for fraternities on M onday. This y ear's activities w ill be supervised by IFC officers, and all events are dry, w ith no alcohol allow ed. In addition, m ost fraternities w ill hold open house m eetings during the evening, and 25 local houses will h old a re cru itm en t b a rb e cu e on the L y n d on B ain es Johnson School of Public A ffairs lawn Aug. 28. IF C o ffic e rs w ill s u p e rv is e th e e v e n t and in v ite rushees to report any infractions to their offices, locat­ ed in the parking garage of the U niversity Tow ers d or­ m itory. The added supervision stem s in part from an in ci­ dent in the spring of 1998 that raised concerns am ong adm inistrators and students about the old rush system . Late in that sem ester, UT student Tim H esselsw eet, w h ile p led g in g to the K app a A lpha fra te rn ity , w as rushed to the hospital w ith a fractured skull. Shortly afterw ards, H esselsw eet alleged that he had been b eat­ en with sticks and urinated on. B u t H e sse lsw ee t said T h u rsd a y he is now " o p t i ­ m istic that changes may take p lace." He added that change would be the first priority in im proving conditions for all rushees. Jo e Ste p h e n s, IFC S tu d en t A ffa irs L iaiso n fo r the O ffice o f the D ean of Stu d en ts, said this y e a r's rush w ill go sm oothly and em phasized the positive aspects of greek life. "B e ca u s e o f U T 's size, it's e a sy to g et lost in the nu m bers," Stephens said. "Fratern ities m ake the U ni­ versity sm aller, giving guys a chance to m eet people and netw ork right aw ay." I he IFC said UT fraternity chapters will participate in nu m erou s com m u n ity service activ ities in the fall and spring, including a Drag clean-up program and a Habitat for H um anity project in cooperation with sev­ eral UT sororities. But d esp ite co m m u n ity se rv ic e p ro je cts and p ro ­ posed policy changes, m any students continue to hold a som ew hat low opinion of the organizations. Alan K. Davis/DAILY TEXAN STAFF Kappa Delta sisters cheer goodbye to a departing group of freshman girls visiting their sorority house during the open- house stage of Rush W eek. Several groups of incom ing freshman girls toured the University's sororities Thursday, stopping at each house for a brief introductory party. After pledging the oath of citizenship, 495 new U.S. citizens from 64 different countries recited the Pledge of Allegiance with UT President Larry Faulkner. U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks presided over the ceremony Thursday held in the LBJ Auditorium. Stephanie Bruce/DAILY TEXAN STAFF ¿oodin^ ^or a Q uaiit^ Srpdo^ee Experience;? UNIVERSITY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION Dohie ftfaddBranch E ^ ice fj'U.stoutside t/ve ¿ranch in the maddarea) fafe ddhe th ere: • W ed/Thurs/Fri, August 18-20th from 10:00 am thru 3:00 pm • Saturday, August 21st from 11:00 am thru 4:00 pm • M on/Tues/W ed Aug 22-25th from 10:00 A M T H R U 3:00 P M (ifhatare eve (hooding d o r? • Enthusiastic, customer-service types • Prior dales experience a definite plus • Ability to handle cash transactions; 10-key by touch • HS/GED required iQur Quaditp Empdouees Experience includes: • Competitive Pay - minimum of $8.50 an hour • Paid Training • Monthly Sales Bonus • Paid Holidays. Vacation & Sick Leave • Tuition Reimbursement • AND MORE... University Federal C R E D I T 1 A B e t t e r W a y U N I O N ] o f B a n k i n g‘ | 2 0 2 5 dfuadadupe Look for it Wednesday, Aug. 25 critically UTs Gossett moves to quarterfinals ■ PEBBLE BEACH, CALIF. — With a pair of victories on Thurs­ day, Texas sophomore David Gossett advanced to the quarter­ finals of match play at the U.S. Amateur being held at the Peb­ ble Beach Golf Links. Gossett recorded victories over Robert Gerwin, Jr., 5-and-4, in the morning session and Richard Smith, 5-and-4, in the afternoon round to advance. He will now face James Driscoll in the quarterfinals on Friday, which begin at 12:45. Comet's Perrot loses cancer bout ■ HOUSTON — Kim Perrot, the popular Houston Comets point guard often described as the heart and soul of the two- time WNBA champions, died Thursday of lung cancer. She was 32. Perrot died peacefully with friends and family by her side at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, the team said. Perrot, who first was diag­ nosed with lung cancer on Feb. 19, had been seeking alternative treatment in Tijuana, Mexico after undergoing surgery Feb. 24 to remove tumors in her brain, lung cancer had where spread. the Magic continues revamp, deal again ■ MILWAUKEE — The Mil­ waukee Bucks added veteran experience to their young, talent­ ed nucleus on Thursday by acquiring Danny Manning and Dale Ellis from the Orlando Magic trade for Chris Gatling and Armen Gilliam. in a The trade was the fourth major deal in August for the rebuilding Magic, who now look nothing like the team that tied for the Atlantic Division title last sea­ son. — Compiled from wire and Associated Press reports mm ■ Soccer The Longhorns host Stephen F. Austin at Mike A. Myers stadium at 7 p.m. P a ge 8 Friday, A ugust 20, 1999 T h e D a i l y T e x a n To Place a Classified Ad Call 471-5244 e-mail: classads@www.utexas.edu or on-line at: http://%tumedia.tsp.utexas.edu/ c la s s / Classified Word Ad Ratp.q Charged by the word Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply. 1 day............................. $ 6 .9 0 2 d a y s ......................... $ 1 3 2 0 3 d a y s......................... $ 1 8 . 9 0 4 d a y s ......................... $ 2 3 .2 5 5 d a y s ....................... $ 2 6 6 5 First two w ords may be all capital letters $ .2 5 for each additional w o rd le t t e r s M aste rC ard and Visa accepted c a p ita l in Classified Display Ad Ratios Charged by the column inch. One column inch minimum A variety of type faces and sizes and b ord ers available $ 1 0 2 5 per column inch Call for rates. FAX ADS TO 4 7 1 -6 7 4 1 8:00-5:00/M onday-Friday/TSP Building 3.2DG Deadline: 11:0 0 a.m. prior to publication Put your ad on the Web for $2.00 03— 10—Misc. Autos 20-Sports-Foreign Autos 30-Trucks-Vans 40-Vehicles to Trade 5 0 —Service-Repair- 60-Parts-Accessories 70—Motorcycles 80-Bicycles 90 —Vehicles-Leasing 100—Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE S A L E S 110—Services 120—Houses 130—Condos-Townhomes 140—Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160—Duplexes-Apartments 170—Wanted 180—Loans M E R C H A N D IS E 190-Appliances 200-Fumiture-Household 210—Stereo-TV 215-Electronics 22 0—Compute rs-Equipment 2 3 0 —Photo-Camera 240-Boats 25 0—Musical Instruments 26 0—Hobbies 270-Machmery-Equipment 2 8 0—Sporting-Camping Equipment 290-Fumiture-Appliance Rental 300-Garage-Rummage Sales 310-Trade 320-W anted to Buy or Rent 330-Pets 34 0—Longhorn Want Ads 3 4 5 —Misc. RENTAL 350-Rental Services 360-Fumished Apts. 370-Unfumished Apts. 380-Fum ished Duplexes 390-Unfumished Duplexes 4 0 0 —Condos-T ownhomes 410— Furnished Houses 420-Unfumished Houses 425-Room s 430-Room-Board 435-Co-ops 4 4 0 —Roommates 450-Mobile Homes-Lots 4 6 0 -Business Rentals 470-Resorts 480-Storage Space 490-W anted to Rent-Lease 500—Misc. A N N O U N C E M E N T S 5 10-Entertainment-Tickets 5 2 0—Personals 5 3 0 -T ravel-T ransportation 540—Lost & Found 550-Licensed Child Care 56 0—Public Notice 57 0—Music Musicians EDUCATIO NAL 580—Musical Instruction 590-Tutoring 600—Instruction Wanted 610—Misc. Instruction 62 0 —Legal Services 630—Computer Services 640—Exterminators 650-Moving-Hauling 6 6 0 -Storage 6 7 0 —Painting 6 8 0 —Office 6 9 0 —Rental Equipment 700—Furniture Rental 710—Appliance Repair 720-Stereo-TV Repair 730 -H om e Repair 740—Bicycle Repair 750-Typing 760—Misc. Services E M P L O Y M E N T 7 7 0 —Employment Agencies 780-Employment Services 7 9 0 -P a rt Time 8 0 0 —General Help Wanted 810-Office-Clerical 820-Accounting-Bookkeeping 830—Administrative- Management 8 4 0 —Sales 850-Retail 860—Engineering-T echnical 870— Medical 880—Professional 890—Clubs-Restaura nts 900—Domestic Household 910—Positions Wanted 92 0 —Work Wanted B U S IN E S S 930 -B usin e ss Opportunities 940—Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED ADVERTISING TERMS In the event of e r r o r s m ad e in advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a.m. the first day, as the publishers are r e s p o n s ib le fo r only O N E in c o rr e c t insertion. All claims for ad|ustments should be m ade not later than 3 0 days after publication Pre-paid kills receive credit slip if requested at time of cancellation, and if a m o u n t e x c e e d s $ 3 . 0 0 . Slip m u s t be presented for a reorder within 9 0 days to be valid. Credit slips are non-transferrable. In c o n s id e r a t io n of th e D aily T e x a n 's a c c e p t a n c e of a d v e r t is in g co p y for publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harm less, Texas Stu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s a n d its officers, employees, and age nts against all loss, liability, d a m a g e , an d e x p e n s e of w h a tso e v e r n a tu re a r is in g out of the copying, p rinting, o r p u b lish in g of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, p la g ia rism an d co p yrigh t and trademark infringement. TRANSPORTATION MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 10 - Misc. Autos H O N D A C IV ICEX 96. Moonroof $ 9 9 5 0 White 4DR Save 2000! Cruise A B S Dual-Air-Bag. Power 7 2 K A / C AM/FM-cassette Excel­ lent condition well maintained ga- rage. Parked Nice looking car! Call soon! Scot 2 3 1 -8 5 0 4 SPORTY '9 5 Saturn SC 2, dk grn w/black Ithr int., 43K, 6m o warr, excellent cond. Loaded, $ 10 ,9 5 0 O B O . 834 -1 2 5 7. '9 4 S A T U R N SL2. W ell kept, red. automatic sedan w/fog lights, serv­ ice recs $ 5 ,4 7 9 W -723- 7 2 1 5 , H -8 3 5-03 5 5 9 4 K 9 4 H O N D A Accord Coupe Black, 78k, great condition. $ 8 9 0 0 O B O . 3 4 9 -0 4 7 2 86 T O Y O T A Cam ry good condition A C automatic $ 1 5 0 0 O B O . Linda 447 -4 1 5 3. 20 - Sports-Foreign Autos Trans., 198 4 N IS S A N 300ZX. T-tops, A u ­ tomatic Power-Windows, Power-locks, Runs and looks great $ 1 9 5 0 Ron 371 -9 9 9 3, 2 8 8 6 5 1 2 30 - Trucks-Vans Short Bed, 9 8 FO RD Ranger XLT. Flair Side, CD, A / C , Sport wheels, Autumn $12 ,0 0 0 . 261 -5 6 6 9. O ra n ge 8 OOOmi RIAL ESTATE SALES 130 - Condos* Townhomes C A M B R ID G E TO W ER Luxury Highrise at UT! ( M L K and Lava ca ) Only 3 units available for lease or sale P e n th o u se 2-2 P e n th o u se Loft 3-2'/¡ C orn e r Unit 2-2 * Pool "Jacuzzi *Security by o w n e r 476-8076 1 & 2 Bdrm condominiums, FOR SALE Some homes also available Most w/in walking distance to cam­ pus Single & multiple stories. W REI 3 2 6 -8 0 6 6 or 6 3 3 -7 6 8 6 MERCHANDISE 190 - Appliances RENT W A SH E R / D R Y ER or fridge $35/mo. Purchase option. 3/0- 2400. 200 - Furniture* Household Beds, Beds, Beds The liKlory outlet lor Simmom, Seafy, Serto ond Spnngoir We (orry dose outs, discontinued rovers, & foctory 2nds. from 5070% off retoil store prices. All new complete with wwronty Cod trie for more info Twin set, $ 6 9 Full set, $ 8 9 Queen set, $ 1 1 9 King set, $ 1 4 9 Receive on odditiond 5 % discount with ad. M-F 10am-7pm Sot. 10am-5pm 7530 Burnet Rd. 454-3422 www.dormfumiture.com Check us out! 220 - Computers* Equipment CALL US LAST N e w and Used Computers at Great Prices Expert Computing Services. Call at 477-2213 LO G IC A P P R O A C H 'S I 1th A N N IV E R S A R Y N O T G oing Out O f Business Sale Intel® Network, Cards 19 for $ 19 1 4 4 Floppy Drives 3 for $ 1 9 ATX Power Supply w/Free Floppy $29 Free System Upgrade Analysis, W hen You Bring In Your System 2 4 2 4 S Lamar, Austin. (512) 4 4 4 -4 4 4 3 300 - Garage- Rummoge Sales G A R A G E SALE Furniture, kitchen goods, comic books 1 2 3 3 3 Danny Dr 339 -1 8 1 1 8-5 Sat., 10-2 Sun LET T H EM PLAY G a ra ge sale sponsored by G S D & M softball team to raise money to attend the advertising world series. Furniture, clothes, books, eclectic stuff, bake sale Players will be signing autographs free with purchase Sat A ug 21, 7am-Noon. 8 2 8 W . 6th Street (G S D & M G a ra g e on Henderson Street behind G SD & M ). LONGHORN W A N T A D S 4 3-10 G IG hard drives $ 1 2 0 +, CD- rewriter $ 1 9 9 , C D -R O M $45, mo­ dem s/soundcards $10+; Ethernet 1 0 / 1 0 0 $ 25 , Pentium computers $ 3 0 0 + ; monitors $ 2 5 + 4 4 8 -2 0 1 8 SO FA , VERY comfortable, 7 f t , great $ 1 7 5 condition $ 1 7 5 . 2 7 ' T V 13" T V. $ 1 0 0 Air-purifier $50. 4 7 3 2 8 5 7 2 / IN C H G E TV $ I 5 0 $ 4 0 (older model) steam cleaner $ 3 5 0 4 4 3 -4 6 7 4 (Newer model) 19 inch Goldstar color TV Professional __ 1 7 13 19 25 LONGHORN W A N T A D S PA R K IN G SPAC E for rent. At 28th & Nueces $50/m o. Please call 479 -7 4 1 8. C O V E R E D PA R K IN G space for rent At 21st and Rio Grande $60/m o. or reduced rate with long-term con­ tract Contact Michele 4 7 3 -8 3 3 7 M A C P O W E R B O O K , 140 0 C S, 60 M B RAM, 2 G B memory, 1 17 M H z, US Robotics Cruise C ard 28.8, Loaded w/software $ 4 5 0 301- 0 1 2 1 . M U S T SELL floral couch, two arm- chairs, glass dinette set with match­ ing baker's rack. $ 6 0 0 for set O B O. G o o d condition 4 81 -0 7 2 2. C O U C H A N D Blue-Gray. $ 1 0 0 for set O B O . 2 3 8 1245 loveseat for sale Very good condition. Q U E E N IN N E R S P R IN G Mattress set New, firm, quilted, lOyr warranty. (Retail $45 0 ) Selling $ 1 8 5 442- 8830. DOUBLE F U T O N mattress with wood rock. G o o d condition. $75. 420- 8810. 1 98 7 CHRYSLER labaron converti­ ble N eeds work Asking $ 1 0 0 0 Col Melissa 441 -3 7 3 2. C A N N O N A U T O Zoom 101 4 Elec- tronic M ovie Camera & Elmo Sound ST-12 0 0 D Projector-Recorder. $ 4 5 0 for both- Excellent condition. 280- 6 3 1 7 . PA C K A R D BELL 1 0 2 4 S Color moni- Canon BJ-200 printer tor $ 150 238- $ 1 0 0 8668 . Both rarely used S E A S O N TICKETS, section 105 row 51 seat 3, only able to attend N e ­ braska game. Remaining tix, face value, $ 15 8.00. Iogsdon_mick@phdnswc.navy.mil. T W IN BED w/frame & box spring only one year old. Excellent condi­ tion. Call Castlen 472- 5 8 5 4 $ 100. C O M P A Q Presorio CO M PU TER. W ith 15 inch monitor & Canon B J C / 2 4 0 0 color printer, 1 year old $ 5 0 0 791 -5 7 1 9. Q U E E N SIZE Futon $ 2 5 0 O B O Call 371 -7 9 9 1. A M A N A REFRIGERATOR, ice mak­ er, white, 3yrs old. $295. Brad 4 7 3 -2 1 3 0 C A R G O C O U C H and coffee table Like new. $ 2 9 5 Metal twin double bunk bed with Winnie-the-Pooh com­ forter set $ 250. 2 6 6 -2 3 1 5 1-set, 3- BEAUTIFUL C O U C H E S. pieces, medium-blue &creom stripes 2nd set, 2-pieces, cream w/design in fabric. Each set $ 5 0 0 Call be fore 9pm. 4 7 2 -6 6 0 0 345-M isc. GIRLFRIENDS & W IVES Surprise your boyfriends & husbands, Budweiser Neon Lizards, Budweiser Patio Umbrellas, O ld Lone Star Clock, Schlitz Falstaff, Genuine Neon Draft Guitar, Spud Neon, Palm Tree Neon, O ld Miller Draft N eon Clock, Coors, Samuel Adam s Neon & lighted signs, O ld Pearl Clock & mirrors. Round Budweiser sign with Clydesdales, Miller Light Boot, Busch Neon, Lone Star Hat Rack Lots more to choose from. W ill buy memorabilia 8 3 3 - 5 9 9 8 . C A P P U C C IN O M A C H IN E $25, 6 X9 Sisal toaster-oven $25, $20,+misc. small appliances and furniture 473 -2 8 5 7. rug S O N G B O O K S and studies for oil instruments, voice. W h y pay post­ a g e ? Alpha M usic Center 61 1 W 29th. 477 -5 0 0 9. 3S0 * Renta! Services 360 - Fum. Apts. AFS Apartment Finders Service West Campus Eff 2-2 Access Gates $430 All Bills Paid $875 2-2 Cov. Park. 1-1 W/D, micro $825 $615 North CamDus Eff Walk to UT 1-1 Furnished 2-1 Free cable and gas 2 -2 Hyde Park UT Shuttle 1-1 Far West 1-1 Free Cable 2-1 Free Cable, gates 2-2 Low Bills, $400 $450 $795 $850 $520 $455 $595 $655 PRE-LEASING FOR THE PARKAVENUE Suite Style, I block from UT! From $475/month Fall/Spring • Efficiencies • ABP & Many Extras • Free Parking/Cable • Furnished/ Laundry Room 306 E. 30th* I block from Engineering/ Law Schools Call 494-9157 FREE FURNISH ED Efficiency Apart­ ment. Responsible female wanted for part-time help with housework and childcare. 478-2787. HYDE PARK efficiency $465-490. Furnished, cable paid, pool, all bills plus cable paid AptS 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 opartmentsource.net located G A R A G E EFFICIENCY in quiet neighborhood near law school and shuttle. Prefer non-smoker, no pets, student. $325ABP. Call 4 80 - 0 77 6 . N O R T H C A M P U S deal. 1-1 $ 5 5 0 * Furnished or unfurnished. Apart­ ment Source, 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apartment- source.net NEXT T O UT. Home Furnished Re­ frigerator, microwave. O w n en­ trance. Private Quiet $ 3 2 0 + util­ ities. Call 420-0431 O n e b lo c k fro m UT, fo rsisfe g d § ■ M M I «le a n a p a r t O M S t K 2109 R i o G r a n d e boors a «tel Park Avenue Place 531-0320 322-9556 NO RTH FU RNISH ED Campus!! FREE cable and gas, pool, laundry, awesome location, 1-1 $ 5 2 5 2-1 $ 7 5 0 A FS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 h t t p : / / w w w . a u s a p t . c o m 360 - Fum. Apts. LEASING FOR FALL G reat 1 -Bedroom apartment 1/2 block from law school. Furnished an d quiet, $ 5 2 0 T O W E R V IE W A P A R T M E N T S 320-0482 9 2 6 E. 2 6 T H # 2 0 8 SMALL, W O O D E D W est Campus Apt.! Furnished, Free cable and alarm, 1-1 $ 5 4 0 A FS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 FREE CABLE & Gas, W est Campus, large furn. 1-1, pool, $595. A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 SU M M E R -O N L Y H UG E 1-1! W est Campus, Sparkling pool, FREE cable and gas, laundry, $ 4 7 5 A F S 322- 9 5 5 6 PAID! ¡ALL FU RN ISH ED Stone's throw to UT, cable also paidl 2-2 $ 9 0 0 A F S 3 22-9556. BILLS FU R N ISH ED 1-1 North Campus, bal­ , ______ righ. cony, located right off the dragl $ 4 5 0 A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 H ID D E N W E ST Campus efficiency! Cute, quaint, furnished, ga s and w a­ ter paid. $ 4 5 0 AF S 322-9556. RED RIVER Shuttle, furnished, All Bills Paid! Pool, covered parking, Town­ homes available! $ 6 7 5 -$ 7 3 0 A F S 322-9556. HYDE PARK in the trees! Free cable, IF, laundry, pool, BBQ, furnished Eff. $ 4 6 5 A F S 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 N O R T H C A M P U S Furnished & Un- Eff. $33 5 -$ 3 95 , 1-Bd furnished. $41 5 -4 4 5. Byler Properties @ 4 0 4 East 31st. 4 7 7 -2 2 1 4 350 L/ > D a m A h h m ÉÉ ÉÍÉÉ m e n 350 - Rental Services 4. APARTMENT S O U RC E Tell us what you want, we’ll find it for you! ★ FREE SERVICE ★ Save Time ★ Save Money 5 0 4 W. 2 4 t h St. ( 5 1 2 ) 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apartm entsource. net 360 - Fum. Apts. 2 B E D R O O M A N D 1 bedroom apart­ ments available immediately. Pool, shuttle, shopping. Call for appoint­ ment. 452+5518, 4 5 2 -4 3 6 6 370 - Unf. Apts. A P A RT M EN T S UNLIMITED 462-FREE www. a pa rtmentsunlimited.com B R A N D N E W 1-1's from $ 530, 2- 2 's $ 930-950. High ceilings, awe­ AptS. some pool, great location. 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apartmentsource.net ARTIST PARADISE. 2-2 $775. 5-2 $ 1 6 2 5 . Apartment Source 473- 3 7 3 3 , apartmentsource.net POOLS, CO U RT Y A RDS, ¡¡ce ss gates. Large 2-1.5 $635. For more options, apartmentsource.net Apart­ ment Source 473-3733. $ 2 0 0 OFF First Months Rent. Most bills paid. O n shuttle. 1-1 $ 475. 2-2 $ 62 5 . Apt. Experts 4 16 -8 1 0 0. * N O RENTAL History O K I* W e work with credit problemsl Apt. Ex­ perts 416 -8 1 0 0. D O W N T O W N LAKE Views, faux granite countertops, Micro, Alarms, From $ 500. 2-1 $ 6 4 0 Apt Experts 416 -8 1 0 0. W A LK T O Zilker! community, most bills paid $450, Lort $ 5 5 0 Apt Experts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 Small courtyard Eff. M O P A C LUXURY, Greenbelt Views Most Bills Paidl From $470. 2BR $ 650. Apt. Experts 4 16-8100. BEAUTIFUL TRAVIS Heights, most bills paid, free coble, gym, from $ 42 5 . 2BR $ 5 8 5 Apt Experts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 370 - Unf, Apts. UT SHUTTLE! Gates, W / D conn, fit­ ness, micro, 1-1 $48 0 , 2 Bdr $ 7 1 5 A FS 322 -9 5 5 6. BEST DEAL W est Campus! Park, priv balcony, micros. $ 8 2 5 A F S 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 Cov. 2-2 EFFIC IEN CY W /FIREPIACE! W est Campus, pool, awesome! $ 4 8 5 A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 Q U IC K M O V E -IN S avail I Com e in nowl Apartment Finders 322 -9 5 5 6. ALL BILLS PAID I Cov. Park, pool, W est Campus! Eff $ 3 7 5 ,1 -1 $ 58 0 , 2-2 $ 8 7 5 A F S 322 -9 5 5 6. C O O L W E S T Cam pus Pad! Eff. with loft and fireplace, pool, $ 5 5 0 A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 BEST DEAL Shuttle! Gates, pools free cable, Eff. $435, 1-1 $ 4 7 0 2 -Í $58 5 , 2-2 $63 0 . A F S 3 22-9556. JERRICK APTS Walk to UT. Fantastic Rates! Eff's, 1-1's, & 2-1's Furnished/Unfurnished 104 E. 32nd (1 Block Speedway) 2 5 1 4 Pearl, 410 3 -5 Speedway 472-7044 $ 2 0 0 OFF One-bedroom $ 4 4 5 avg, 2-bedroom $ 5 8 2 avg. UT shut­ tle Most bills paid Property M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 W A T E R F R O N T T O W N H O M E $ 57 5 . Lofted master bedroom. 3- bedroom townhome. Polished con­ crete floors $ 9 2 5 5-bedroom town- home 2-kitchens $ 1 3 5 0 . Property M a x 4 62 -3 0 3 0. S P A C IO U S T O W N H O M E S , over lOOOsf Oversized patios, 1-1 $ 440, Large 2BR $ 575. Apt Experts 416- TRAVIS H EIGHTS $ 4 2 5 room $ 585. Property M a x 4 62 -3 0 3 0. Gym, 2 bed- free cable. RENT W A R I Free Coble. Most bills paid From $430. 2BR $ 56 5 . Apt Experts 4 16 -8 10 0 Shuttle route. QUIET C O U RT Y A RD community, UT shuttle, cable/most bills pd, gated. 1 I $ 435, 2 1 $565. Apt. Exp 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 ., ALL BILLS Paid! $ 47 5 . Apt. Ex 416-8100. Including Cable! W A R E H O U S E THEME. ' Polished concrete floors- stain glass- round futon loft- steel walls- track lightinq $47 5 , 2br $ 725, 3br $ 1 1 0 0, 4br $ 1 5 0 0 + Prop M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 Stu- ALL BILLS paid $ 4 0 0 to $ 9 0 0 dio's, 1,2 bedroom, some w/free cable- walk or shuttle campus. Prop­ erty M a x 4 62 -3 0 3 0. R IV E R W A LK -M U SIC DISTRICT Overhang water- washer and dryer- interior bar- garden tubs $ 5 2 0 2br $ 7 1 5 3br $ 1 0 2 0 . Prop. M a x 462- 303 0 . S A N T A FE Villas. $ 1 5 0 special-loft space-rm-mate 2br2bath $540- $ 780. Prop M a x 462 -3 0 3 0. 13 50 sf 2 b ¡ G IG A N T IC T O W N H O M E S 2ba 3br-3bath 1600sf $875. Washer/dryer, free cable. Prop M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 $745, GO LF C O U R S E townhomes. Sm. fenced yards - 2-2 1/2 1250sf $ 7 5 0 - 3-2 1/2 1400sf. $ 9 5 0 Prop M a x 462 -3 0 3 0. CARING OWNERS!!! Condos, 1 bedroom from $65 0 -$ 8 50 , 2-bedroom from $ 7 9 5 $ 1,300. 2-2bedroom apartment from $ 5 7 5 -$ 7 5 0 All W est Campus. Only immaculate units! KHP 476-2154. 2-STORY T O W N H O M E shuttle! 2- bd 1 5 bath, FREE gas, only $ 73 5 A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 W E ST C A M P U S Loft! Fireplace, pool, close-inl Avail. June $ 5 5 0 A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 QUIET C O M M U N IT Y ! O n bus-line, 9 ' ceilings, alarm, micro, pool hot- AFS 1-1 $ 505, 2-2 $ 7 5 0 tub 322 -9 5 5 6. ALL BILLS paid $475. 2 bedroom $ 80 0 . Free Cable, access gates. Property M ax. 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 SO U T H SHUTTLE Huge floorplans. 1-2-3-&-4 bedrooms. Access gates fitness/computer center, free cable, pools, sports court. First Coll Proper ities. 4 4 8 -4 8 0 0 / 1 -800-504-9067. - MARQUIS MANAGEMENT Student Housing marquis@mgmt.com 4 7 2 - 3 8 1 6 B R A N D -N E W 2 and 3 bedrooms in luxury apartment community. Apart­ ment Source. Call 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apart­ mentsource. net LUXURY C O N D O $ 5 9 5 Last one. Call Apartment Source 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apartmentsource.net LARGE 1-1 7 5 0 Sq. Feet - $48 5 September move-in, low deposit, prompt maintenance, very clean, N R shuttle, swimming pool. A nice, small , quiet community. Brookhollow Apts. 1 41 4 Arena Drive 445 -5 65 5 G REAT EFFICIENCIES. M 's , 2-1 s in North Austin starting at $ 3 9 0 Free water& cable. Large pool, ball- courts, electric gates 451 -4514. W A L K T O campus! Large, modern ga ra ge apartment with c/eck. 2 8 1 8 San Pedro. $650. Call 3 2 8 -9 3 0 7 5 8 9 -4 1 0 6 N O R T H C A M P U S deal Apartment apartmentsource.net Source, 1-1 $5501 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 S P A C IO U S W EST Campus 1-1, $ 5 9 5 Great for roommates. Call Apartment 473 -3 7 3 3. Source, apartmentsource.net W A L K O R ride ered parking. 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 . apartmentsource.net Cov- Apartment Source, 2-1 $ 7 9 5 V UT'S CLUB med "new " Island pool- basketball- sand volleyball- fitness center- alarms- gated/courtesy offi­ cer $411 $ 1 6 5 0 3 and 4br's also available. Prop. M a x 4 62-3030. e J -S g X iii* P.O. Box D Austin, Texas 78713 E-mail: W m ñ rYÚzi | Order by Mail, FAX or Phone FAX: 471-6741 Classified Phone #: 471-5244 20 w ords 5 d ay s *5 Additional W o rd s...$0.25 ea. 370 - Unf. Apt,. W A L K TO UT. Great pool, covered 1-1 parking, courtyard. $61 5 . Apartment 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3. Source, apartmentsource net C LO S E T O law school. 1-1 $57 5 . Great floorplan. Apartment Source, 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3. opartmentsource.net HYDE PARK, quiet tree-lined street. 2-1 $72 5 . Apartment Source, 4 73 - 3 7 3 3 apartmentsource.net HURRY! S P A C IO U S 1-1 $ 47 0 , 2-1 $585. Apartment Source, 4 73 - 3 7 3 3 apartmentsource net STUD EN TS efficiency C O Z Y $ 4 5 0 .0 0 and quiet property, private patio, on sight laundry and much more In the exclusive Hyde Park 39th/Speedway. 835 -6 2 5 0. STUD EN TS H U G E 1 bedroom town- home style ideal for roommates. Pa­ tio ond balcony, quiet community in Park the exclusive 835- 39th/Speedw ay 6 2 5 0 . Hyde $ 6 2 5 .0 0 , FREE R O O M , meals and negotiable salary in exchange for tutoring my children- especially in math. Call 4 5 2 -0 1 2 5 email photoquartz@iec.org or GUADALUPE/39TH 1/2 area Hyde Park very nice efficiency $450.00 and huge 1 bedroom $625.00 which is an ideal roommate plan. Large walk-in closets, private patio/balcony, on sight laundry quiet community 835-6250. STUDENTS 1 and 2 bedrooms spacious units, property is currently beina rehabbecfi take advantage oT our discounted rates and enjoy a newly refinished property (Sam's Place 2500 East 22nd Street) $425.00-$525.00, 835+5250. V IN T A G E W E ST Campus! Hard­ woods, tile, quaint, pets acceptedl 1-1 $ 6 5 0 A F S 322 -9 5 5 6. On-Line Apartment Search form- best and most complete service. All areas covered Apartment Finders www.ausopt.com W E S T C A M P U S Eff. $ 4 8 5 Apart- ment source. 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 . 3 7 0 - 3 ^ 3 * * A p t a » N ir- ★ Women's dormitory ★ 19 meals a week ★ Huge closets ★ Free cable ★ Housekeeping service ★ Courtesy officer ★ Quiet study areas ★ Peaceful surroundings All Bills Paid Private Rooms Available S7S0.00 per m oatb based on a 10 m onth payment plan P r el e a sin g now! Best Deal on UT Shuttle %% % # i E ff 1-1 2-1 2-1.5 2-2 3-2 $420+ $470+ $565+ $605+ $610+ $960+ # Features Energy efficient, ceramic tile entry & bath, fireplaces, walk-in closets, spacious floor plans, cats allowed, located just 5 minutes from Downtown Parklane Villas Shoreline Apts. Autumn Hills 444-7555 442-6668 444-6676 _ _ jncv Coble paid, pool, all bills paid plus cable paid. AptS 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apart­ mentsource net 2819 Rio Grande 370-U nf. Apt,. (512) 476-5657 370 - Unf. Apts. ________________________ 340 - furo. Apt».__ 360 - «urn. Apt,. 3 4 0 -Pure. ApN. 2 8 14 20 26 3 9 15 21 27 4 10 % 16 22 28 5 11 17 23 29 6 12 18 24 30 M E R C H A N D ISE ads only Individual items oflered N A M E -------- for sale may not exceed $1,000, and a price must appear in the body of the ad copy If items are not sold, five additional insertions will be run at no A D D R E S S charge Advertiser must call before 11 a m on the day of the fifth insertion No copy change (other than reduction in price) is allowed j ^ i a n reoucnon in price) is allowed C I T Y C I T Y . P H O N E . S T A T E _______ 7 1P ircu vivuio iwwivwu uwiuic 11a.m. luuay will be available on-line by 3 p.m. today. mm L i A s i N o t Park Avenue Place Eff. Apts • Suite Style 1 b lock from UTI walk to Engineering/Law S ch oo ls $ 4 7 5 /m o - Fall/Spring ★ ALL Bills Paid (except phone) ★ Quiet, Clean Building ★ Free parking/cable ★ Laundry Room ★ Controlled access ★ Walk-in Closets ★ Ceiling Fans ★ nicely Furnished ★ On-site m anager ★ Large Fridge/Microwave C a l l 5 3 1 -0 3 2 0 / RENTAL 3 7 0 -U n f.A | wti A W E S O M E W E S T Cam pus LOFTI Patio, micro, desk, access gates, $ 5 8 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 Q U A IN T HYDE Park eff. FREE gas $ 4 1 0 and water, laundry, trees! A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 N IC E ST APARTMENT-W est Campusl W a lk to UT, Pool, sundeck, gates, balconies, elevators, micros. Huge 1-1 $ 6 1 5 -$ 7 2 5 A F S32 2 -9 55 6 . CLARKSVILLE CUTE! Efficiency! Great neighborhood, trees, charm! $ 4 7 5 A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . WEST CAMPUS Efficiency $ 4 5 0 UP Efficiency ABP $ 49 5 Furnished 1BR $ 5 5 0 Large 1 BR $ 59 0 , $ 6 1 5 H YDE PARK & RED RIVER EFFIC IE N C Y $ 4 7 5 1 BR $ 5 5 0 & $ 5 7 5 FU RN 1 BR $ 5 5 0 3 BR $ 1 2 0 0 AVAILABLE C H A N G E S DAILY CALL TODAY! APARTMENTS & MORE 706 W. MLK 708-0355 W A L K T O campus. Remodeled stu­ dio $ 4 5 0 + electricity. 4 0 5 E. 31st @ Duval. 4 7 2 -2 4 5 0 or page 320- 3 070. 2 + B E D R O O M A IR Y apartment $ 7 5 0 with loft, balcony, b u s# l, quiet, wo- ter paid, all kitchen appliances Evenings 9 8 9 -8 2 9 5 / 6 6 3 -2 7 7 4 Over 100 0 Y O U N E E D space! square free cable, occess feet, gates, on hike & bike. 2-2 $ 6 5 5 A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 Fit A W E S O M E DEAL UT shuttle! ness, volleyball, gates, W / D conn! 1-1 $ 4 8 0 , 2-Bd $ 71 5 . AF S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . tanning, pool, W E H A VE Dorm spocesl All meals, furnished, ethernet, pool, ABPI Call for tourl A FS 3 22 -9 5 5 6. Y O U R O W N washer/dryer! Fastest shuttle, access gates, cov. parking 1-1 $ 5 6 5 . A F S 322 -9 5 5 6. FAR W E S T Experts! hottub, tennis, free moviesl 3 22 -9 5 5 6. Fitness, pool, AFS A TTN S ER IO U S studentsl Quiet prop, 9 ' ceilings, alarm, micro, pool, 1-1 $ 50 5 , 2-2 $ 7 5 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6. BEST DEAL UT shuttle! Free cable, access gates, volleyball, pools. 1-1 $ 4 7 0 , 2-1 $ 56 5 . A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 A W E S O M E HYDE Park Neighbor hoodl Gates, pool, hottub, sfudy- rooms, elevators. 2-1 $87 5 , 2-2 $ 94 5 . AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 A W E S O M E W estl slidel 9 55 6 . Fai T O W N H O M E Free gas, greenbelt, water- A F S 322- 2-1.5, $ 8 2 5 . UT SHUTTLE, hard-tile, access gates, free cable, hike & bike, cute 1-1 $ 49 5 . A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 N O R T H C A M P U S Furnished & Un­ Eff $ 3 3 5 -$ 3 9 5 , 1-Bd furnished $ 4 1 5 -4 4 5. Byler Properties @ 4 0 4 East 31st. 4 7 7 -2 2 1 4 2-1 H A R D W O O D floors, W / D W est Campus. 2 8 3 2 San Gabriel Apartment A. (3 3 0 )4 2 5 -1 4 2 6 . 1 9 0 0 S A N Gabriel. Huge luxury apt, 3-2, 2 car garage, zoned A.C. $25 0 0/ m o. 4 7 6 -7 0 5 9 , 4 7 8 -3 8 6 0 H YDE PARK split eff $475. apart- ment Source. 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 . N E A R M O P A C on 2 2 2 2 before Dry Creek. $ 875. 2-2-1 Carport. O n IM 2 2 2 2 / 3 6 0 6 . Evergreen Proper­ ties, 331 -1 1 2 2. 2404 WINSTED G arage apartment: 2-1, with hardw ood floors. Storage. $900. Large 1-1 w / private yard. H ardw ood floors. $700. W ater paid. TIP management. 495-9700. j+; Tewnhomtf ____ m w m S P A C IO U S 1.2.3 bedroom town­ homes. Located at 1 83 / M o p a c Paid gas, heating, water, and basic cable. Call 3 45 -1 7 6 8. W A L K TO UT w/loft $ 6 2 5 5 91 4 . Quiet 1-1 condo 3 2 8 -0 9 2 1, 478- W E ST C A M P U S 2 bed/2 bath Sabi­ nal C ondos W a lk campus $ 1 1 0 0 . Call Nick 474-0111 CCP. www.centralproperties.com. to G O O D W IN PARTNERS 2-2 condo with attached ga ra ge Near dow n­ town. $795/m o. Call Terri @ 4 1 5 - 91 16. H U G E 2 bed 2 bath condo W D firs vaulted ceilings walk to law sch $ 1 5 0 0 call Nick 474-0111 C C P www.centralproperties.com PRESERVATIO N S Q hrd wds 2 bed 2 bath 9 or 12 month lease wtk to campus $ 1 4 0 0 call Nick 474+0111 C C P www.centralproperties.com BY O W N E R O n e bdrm plus loft-4 lease onfy- blocks to Drag-12 mo $ 8 0 0 owner/agent, W / D included, pool, deck-new on mkt. 3 2 8 -8 3 3 3 x l 2 8 M a r i or Marsha. I T O 4 bedroom C ondos & Houses for lease W est & North campus. All shuttle routes. W e will find what you are looking for W REI 3 26 - 8 0 6 6 R E N T A L R E N T A L EMPLOYMENT E M P L O Y M E N T e m p l o y m e n t EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT T he D aily T exan Friday, August 20,1999 Page 9 LIVE-IN TUTOR for Algebra, Pre-Aloebra Science and English. Free room and meals. Call Steve at 452-012 5 (work) or 346-744 4 (home), or email smooreOieee.org. SHORT W ALK UT. Quiet, non-smok­ ing, lorge windows, hardwoods. Privóle bedroom, share bath. From fall, $325 (includes bills, some (reduction for fix it work meals), available). www.602elmwood.com 474-2618 CO-OP HOUSING m i l k s H u m n)H I . ill h p i |||M V ' ( i i l - \ 4 4 5 h i m . s ii m nú i 16x80* TRAILER '97 OAKWOOD 3-2, All appliances, sofa and chair included - Also steps- EXCELIENT CONDITION $21,000 OBO sensibly. Fax/call 830-990-8558. A N N O U N C EM EN T S ST. JA M ES' EPISCOPAL SCHOOL 3701 E. Martin Luther King Blvd. ph. 926-4214 Now enrolling for 1999-2000 2 1 /2 to 5 year olds Toddler, Pre-K, Kindergarten Diversity * Inclusion Love * Excellence Montessori based curriculum Certified teachers After School Enrichment Program Daily Chapel CC M S vendor An Episcopal School in East Austin Our mission is to encourage the development of the whole child in a caring community for children from diverse religious, ethnic, and economic backgrounds \ i i m i i s i ’ \ i i ) s i 11 Ll k > ,111(1 1111 ll l>k s N E W SLIM AND ATTENTION I TRIM, lose up to 30 pounds, 30 day programs. Start at $30. Call 1-888-3/5-6341. 2 4 - h NURSERY WORKER needed for Sundays 8:30-12 and possiole weekdays. $7.50/hour depending on experience. Please confact Rochelle Sweet, Tarrytown United Methodist 472-3111. CLERK WITH dependable car and good driving record to make deliveries and provide general office help. Some lifting. Mid-size law firm located near Barton Creek Mall. Fax resume and references to 327-6566. PART-TIME ASSISTANT volleyball, basketball coach Jr. High Contoci Donna M o be 272-8360. JR.ACCOUNTANT. IDEAL for stu- dents looking for experience in all $7.50/hr. areas of occountina Fax resume to 485-7555 Email: hr©geocel.com. MCVtfTY o m e n POSITIONS •Mind, lAxmad 4 Patrol •M&PorHn» Hgk 1 Vtokeid • tenth onlabit f # tMifenm Prowkd If Nd Vomng/Vocolion •«.(»/>« ■ No b p e w x » Naanary ■ A A .h w d h á Sai Warn • AAaramant Need | lanry HighriM at UT1 (M U Í and Lavaca) Only 3 units avaAafaia for laasa or ida: Penthouse 2-2 Penthouse Loft 3-2Vi Comer Unit 2-2 * Pool * Jacuzzi * Security by owner 478-4078 jatn fin CONDO FOR SALE Control/Downtown walk lo UT. 600 Sa.Ft. Condo 1 bed/lbatn first floor level, covered parking, pool and :uritv. Asking $55,G ,000. Call for appointment 472-1234 EXT. 21 ask for Leslie. W EST CAM PUS New carpet, balco­ 2/1.5 Nueces Oaks ny, acted. $!250/m o. Jeff 472- 4573. Contact ONE-FOUR woods. 1,700. Agent 477-1163. hard Close to campus $500- BEDRO O M S, 5/3 BEDROO M Hrd wds on UT shuttle Big rooms $2600. 4 7 6 0111. CCP. www. central proper­ ties.com 5/4 BEDROO M Hrd wds walk to campus off 38th. $3050 Great House 474-0111 CCP www.centrol properties.com 2 BED /1 BATH H O USE F ¡^ id yard, fresh paint, new carpet, walk to campus. Call 477-3128. $800/month AVAILABLE N O W I 1 to 5 bedrooms $525-$ 1600. For 24 hours infor­ mation-caH 477-UVE. 4408 BARROW-House 2-1 with hardwood floors. CF's, trees. Stor­ age $1300. Nice Efficiency. Resi­ dential Area, Near Duval. $425. TIP Management. 495-9700. 1026 ELUN GSO N -Cute 2-1 cottage it 45lh/Red - ■ at 45lh/Red River. $1,000. Large -1 cottage. IIP Private $625. M GM T. 495-9700. UT-HANCOCK 3-1 + study. Hard­ woods, fireplace, trees, yard, patio, W /D conn., no dogs 1309 Nor­ wood $1200. 343-2278. M S SHORT W ALK UT Quiet, non-smok­ ing, large windows, hardwoods. Private bedroom, share bath. From (includes bills, some $325 meals) it work available). 474-2618. www.602elmwood.com fall, (reduction for fix 4 BLOCKS to UT-Nicel Large pri­ vate room, bath, walk-in closet Quiet non-smoking, upstairs. W /D , big shared kitchen, CA /C H . Fall lyr $475 ABP 474-2408 www.abbey-house.com ROOM AVAILABLE in North Austin $360/monlh plus utilities and one month deposit. C all Tony 990- 1455 N i t " l*t i -1 i n s i n u l o r N u m m i T . I n i l . \ S m i i i " Inter-Cooperative Council 510 W. 23rd. St (512)476-1957 iccmail @ uts. cc. utexas. edu www. utexas. edu/studentsAcc/ E s t 1937 C O O P RO O M S $395 ABP 1910 Rio Grande, 3 blocks from campus 9660248, DP 899-6116 CASTILIAN LEASE at Reduced Price. through Available In­ Spring/00, M ale or Female- cludes M eals. Call (713)526-5054. Fall/99 for 440 GRADUATE STUDENT or professio- nal Tarrytown Large private quiet 1 bedroomw/both, hardwood floors, ER shuttle. Coll 476-1630. I'll give you $600 to NEED $600? assume my room contract at The On Campus. M any Castilian amenities. collect Call me (520)319-1517 Andrew. RO O M S FOR LEASE CENTRAL DEL W O O D AREA. $350 and up. Share: bath, living room, dining, kitchen, all appliances. In-door washer /dryer. Utility bills. Requires advance +montn rent, plus security deposit. Call collect 956585-7265 or leave message. SHORT W ALK UT Quiet non-smok- ing, lorge windows, hardwoods. Private bedroom, shore bath. From (includes bills, some $325 it work meals) 474-2618 available) www.602elmwood.com fall, (reduction for fix NEED A roommate? C all Student Roommates and find one for freel 322-9825. www, studen (room­ mates, com. ROOM M ATE TO share 2bd/2bath Near campus. $442+ electrical. Available August 16th. 303-908- 0719 mlh 131 30yahoo.com 3-2 PRIVATE bath. 3310 Werner Pets OK $400/mo W /D . 4 9 6 9836. Fraser. MATURE, NEAT AND QUIET? Fe- male prof. has furnished room for rent near campus. C all 477-7479. G A Y MALE needs roommate. Must share bedroom. $200ABP. Availa­ ble 8/15. 302-5074 NEED H O U SIN G ? C all M ary Ann to sublease a Dobie efficiency room. (214) 394-9097 m Postgraduate AVAILABLE N O W I NS/Fem ale with spocious, luxury 2bdr/2both, 7miles from campus. Must seel $380/mo l/2utiliHes. 8361999. WEST CAMPUS 9 Housing Available B ICollege Park Communities! SHARE FURNISHED DORM ESQUE 2-BD/l-BA. Cat, $287.50+bills. Red River area. 5min. from E. Cam­ pus. Contact O meholWmailcom. Single dorm rooms | I double dorm rooms ¡Ethernet, Pool, H ousekeeping! I Fitness Center I I I 478-9811 | 1 ■Single rooms, double rooms! I & apartments I ¡Pool, Sun Decks, Housekeeping! I 476-4648 ¡ V Double rooms & 3-rooms suites H ¡1 fa Sport court, Pools, Lifestyle H I 478-9891 I É m m W Km :' m m m m t NEED TO sublet 1/4 cut lower 2- bedroom apartment west end of campus to Christian girl. $325/mo Stocia/Heather (512) 4761976 FEMALE ROOM M ATE needed Fur- nished W est Campus Condo. 2bed- 1.5bath. lyear lease. If interested, call (281)493- 9414. $500/month MASTER BR/BATH available to fe- male, non-smoker, neat, responsible grad student in 3-2.5 house in Oak Hill. $400/mo. +1 /2 utilities. W /D , FP, CACH 899-3101 MATURE, FEMALE, Christian room­ mate wanted. Share duplex, own bedroom, share bath. North, $300, A.B.D. CaH 873-0943. MATURE STUDENT to rent 2bed- rooms and both in private home. $500/mo, ABP. No pets. NE Aus­ tin. C all Joann 9904961. Condos Houses Duplexes Property Type Rent Comments Hyde Park Terrace 1-1 $675 Great Floor Plans Elms Pecan Tree Orange Tree 904 W. 22nd 1-1 1-1 1-1 2-1 $725 Great for Roommates $725 Loft, W/D in umt $725 Luxury Unit $795 Cats OK, Hardwoods Spnnghollow 2-1.5 $995 Barton Hills, 9 month lease Orange Tree 2-2.5 $1,500 Courtyard, Poolside 4306 Caswell 3-2 $1,600 House w/Hardwoods ------------------ Best Selection. Best Service 476-1976 H y i m S m STUDENT HOUONC COOPERATIVE NOW LEASING For summer and fall Fall/Spring $360-1560/month • Summer$335-1430/month Single rooms available • ALL BILLS PAID (including food!) Democratic, member controlled environment (You make the rules!) Central Air/Heat • On-cam pus locations Check out our new house, 5 minute walk to campus A ll students invited to apply Contact )ay at Student Heritage Houses 471-7586 or enÁtl UTWCayahoo .com LIVE-IN TUTOR for Algebra, Pre-Algebra, Science and English. Free room and meals. Call Steve at 452-0125 (work) or 346-7444 (home), or e-mail smooreOieee.org. 6 1 0 - M l t t s t e m m i n IN T E R N S H IP ! ENTERTAINM ENT Marketing & Management company seeking aggressive, detail-oriented individuals for fall semester internship. Flexible hours. College credits Call Anna 479-7600 or email: annarobinson© brandingpartners.com. SERVICES * * * * * i f i r u l i ATTORNEY AT LAW , Former: Police Officer/State Prosecutor Kevin M adi­ son. 708-1650. Visit our web-site. www.kevinmadison.com. rao-tpftno Z I V L E Y The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS EDITING • R ESU M ES D ISSERTATIO N S APPLICATIO N S W ORD P R O C ESSIN G LA SER PRINTING FORMATTING 27th & Guadalupe 472-3210 7 ¡6 0 v M i a c . S e r v i c e * ia a n n m M a a ta ta ta a ta ta ia m a u i I CREDIT CARD DEBT (No fee) Stop harassing calls, reduce payments 50%, save interest i $, restore credit, non profit, bonded, & confidential. 1-888-828-DEBT A Family Budget Counseling, Inc. M B M a a a n iw a a a a a a u d c E M P L O Y M E N T LO O KIN G FOR MARY POPPINS and dose relatives to work as lead teachers & assistants with infants from 2-24 months/old. Must be 18+yrs old with high school diploma or GED. Some exp. and CDA preferred. Competitive pay, benefits. Low child-to-staff ratio, high parent involvement. In central Austin near shuttle 4 Capitol Metro stops. EO E. Call Helen 478-3113. $8-9.00. NEAR UT, Legal services firm, flex, hours, will train. Fresh, soph, early grad levels invited. PT/FT. Calf: paralegal courier 4762246; typist/clerical 4742216; bookkeeping trainee 4740853. O r apply onlinel www. law yersAidService. com/jobs PROOF OPERATOR I Guaranty Federal™ Bank, F.S.B. has parWime positions available, M-E, 5:30#:30p.m . with Bank Holidays and W eekends off i opportunity 1 There is an opoortunity to earn, in oddition to the hourly wc ’ wage, an extra $75/wk. Other bonus opportunities are also available. A nigh proficiency in 10 Key is required. Flexible evening hours ore preferred. Interest applicants M UST apply in person: TEMPLE-INLAND FINANCIAL SERVICES 1300 S . M opac Austin, Texas /8746 Equal Opportunity Employer Job Line: 512434-1717 ATTRACTIVE EXHIBITIONIST needed for internet project. Live rent free and get an allowance. DGM 320- 9 17 6 URGENTI 5 students from India, Jo ­ $50041000 pan, and China. plus/month Call Mrs. Spence 328- CALUSIO SCHO O L OF MUSIC seeking FT receptionist Also, seek­ ing music instructors of all types to teoch young, beginning students. 892-3958. lea ve message. PARALEGAL COURIER, $8-9 near UT MWF a.m., TT p.m., flex. Call 474-2246. Or apply onlinel Email law-a idOtexas. net for form, details. PART-TIME CASHIER for T J Seafood storting at $6.25/hr. Paid weekly Flexible hours Call 469-9038 OFFICE ASSISTANT for commercial Real Estate Firm Computer literacy, cor required. T/Th afternoons. $7/hr Jackie 4808100 COUNTER PERSONS NEEDED PorWime afternoons 3-7pm M E & alternate Saturdays. Storting $6.50-$8.00/hr. ------- nina FreFree Clean» W estbank D ry C leaning Dry 451-2200 35th/Jefferson STEPPING STONE SCHOOL Seeking School-Age Counselors Part-lime Hours. Great Working Environment Good $ Come Be A Part Of Our Team I 459-0258 PT INSTRUCTOR tooching basic ten­ nis to children ages 4-12. Classes are conducted inside a gym. Must be energetic ond enjoy children Good Pay. Call 442-3440 CHILDRENS HEALTH and fitness company seeking individuals who are energetic, fitness oriented, and have experience working with pre­ school children. $ 15/hr Mornings preferred. 33B4347. TEXACO FOOD MARTS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR FULL TIME/PART TIME CLERKS 28 AUSTIN/M ETRO LOCATIONS BENEFITS: —M edical Insurance —Retirement —Paid Vacation —Tuition Assistance APPLY IN PERSON: 4911 EAST 7TH STREET (Austin) 8am4pm M O N /FRI *EOE P/T OFFICE Assistant needed. FUN, FUN, FUN. Good organizational/ marketing skills. Pays well Fax re­ sume to Judy Arnold 7969787. PRESCHOOL ASSISTANT Teachers Looking for enthusiastic individuals to work M-E 2:30-5:30. Great work environment. 478-5424. W ANTED: STUDENT to babysit 2 children. Tuesday ond Thursday af­ ternoons References please Call Cheryl. 899-0145. LAW OFFICE near campus. 2-5pm. M i. $6.50/hr. 4763400 PART-TIME PO SITIO NS for students at N W Physician's office. W ill (512)2584411 train. C all Judith. or fax-resume (512)258-5456 CO AC H ES, P/T, needed for volley­ ball, field hockey, basketball, soc­ cer, and softball in grades 612 at St. Stejohen's Episcopal School. Call Cindy Gough at 327-1213 ext 233 PRIVATE SCHOOL Hiring PT after care help. Hours M-E 2:30-6pm Applicants must be energetic, positive, reliable, and must pass o criminal background check. P a y is g reat. All holidays off. C all 454-0848. Ask for W ill Plumb. PERSO N AL ASSISTAN T wanted P/T, approx 20 hours per week, 2-6 pm to run errands, pick up 2 year old from school. Child care experience and references required. Please call Brandie at 347-9994 to arrange for interview. LIFEGUARD NEEDED South Austin Pool Must be certified M ,W ,Th,F Hrs 5pm-9pm 8 00/hr. Call Nick 219-1927. CO URIER NEEDED Requirements: Good driving record, ability to drive vehicle with standard transmission, good communication skills, neat appearance, self- motivation, attention to detail, ond reliability. Computer skills a plus. Non-smoking office. Hours 12:00-6:00pm Monday-Friday Please send resum e b y E-m ail: resumes@countyline.com, M a il: Lauren Brent, 3 3 4 5 Bee C a ves Rd., # 1 5 0 , A ustin, TX 7 8 7 4 6 , o r FA X: 327-2622. Equal Opportunm, bnptorw IMMEDIATE O PEN IN G FOR PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST AT THE AUSTIN SYM PHO NY Excellent telephone and computer skills required. Must be oble to use multi-line telephone system 6 operate general office equipment Hrs: 9:00am-l :00pm Fax resume to Barbara at 4766242 or mail to 1101 Red River Austin, TX 78701 COUNTRY HOM E LEARNING CENTER now accepting applications for fall preschool teachers Full and Part-time available. Great working conditionsl N W Austin 331-1441 S W Austin 288-8220 M A R K E T R E S E A R C H Its hot outside, you need extra green, come work part-time in a casual scene. Phoning the public from an air-conditioned seat, Interesting co-workers, central office can't be beat. Evenings, weekends, some daytimes -no sales of any kind. If you read, write, and speak well you'll do just fine. W e've been here 15 years, we're not going away. Oh, and $7.50/hr is our storting pay 637-4936 (9:304:30 if possible, or leave msg) PRINTING paper STORE-CLERK and graphics store M-F. 12- 5:30pm. Apply at Bos worth Paper- chase. 8204 N.Lamar Suite A6. D O W N T O W N LA W firm seeks part time receptionist. Morning or afternoon hours available. Professional appearance, phone skills, and positive attitude required Computer/clerical skills a plus Please fax hours o f a v a ila b ility to 479-8013, attn.: Dawn. CHILDCARE AFTER school. M-F 4- 7pm Must have transportation & references Occasionally prepare dinner 3284704 PERSONABLE COFFEE lover, morrv ings/afternoons/evenings ond alter­ nate weekends Trianon-The Coffee 3201 Ploce Apply immediately Bee Caves Rd., 3284033 Also mourning position. North location 349-7758 EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER needed to care for hoppy 2yr/old 12:16 3. 9 least 3 days/wk References preferred $7/hr. 302-3616 W ANTED PART-TIME Student É7 rands, some driving, assisted duties, good pay Call 3454777 for inter­ view. T M - f t w t H m * y E f t - f t e r t * m i WORK ON CAMPUS THIS FALL! N ow a c c e p t i n g a p p l i c a t i o n s for C a m p u s Rap. at The Dai ly T ax an O n th e Jo b t r a i n i n g , p o s i t i o n a v a i l a b l e I m m e d i a t e ­ l y . D u t i e s I n c l u d e c o o r d i n a t i n g a d v e r t i s i n g f o r U n i v e r s i t y d e p a r t m e n t s a n d S t u d e n t o r g a n i z a ­ t i o n s , h a n d l i n g w a l k - l n a n d t e l e p h o n e c u s t o m e r s , c o m p l e t i n g f o r m s e n d f o l l o w i n g e s t a b l i s h e d p r o ­ c e d u r e s . M u s t b e d e t a i l o r i e n t e d a n d d e p e n d a b l e w i t h p l e a s a n t p h o n e p e r s o n a l i t y a n d e x c e l l e n t c u s t o m e r e e r v i c e s k i l l * . A v a i l a b l e S h i f t : 9 a m - 1 p m $ 5 . 4 2 / h r t h r o u g h A u g . $ 6 .0 0 S t a r t i n g S e p t 1, 1 999 A p p l y I n p e r s o n a t T h e D a l l y T e x a n T S P R o o m 3 . 2 1 0 . T e l e p h o n e I n q u i r i e s n o t a c c e p t e d . A p p l i c a n t s m u s t b e a U n i v e r s i t y s t u d e n t . 790-Pm rttin» Now Accepting Applications For THE DAILY TEXAN Fall Classified Clerk D u t i e s I n c l u d e t a k i n g v o l u n t a r y a d s b y p h o n e , f i l i n g , t y p i n g , c o o r d i n a t i n g p r e l e c t s , a s s i s t i n g s a l e e c l e r i c a l t a s k s , e x c e l l e n t p h o n e , c o - w o r k e r a n d c u a t e m e r s e r v i c e s k i l l s n e e d e d . s u p e r v i s o r y s t a f f w i t h a n d M o nd ay-F riday 12 - 3 p m Muat ba abla to bagin work Immodlataly. $ 5 . 4 2 / H r t h o u g h A u g , 1999 $ 6 . 0 0 / H r S a p t . 1, 1 9 99 APPLY IN PERSON THE DAI LY TEXAN T S P R oom 3.200 T e l e p h o n e m u s t b e a U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x e s s t u d e n t . I n q u i r i e s n e t a e e e p t e d . A p p l i c a n t s ASSISTANT TEACHERS. gh, Do you enjoy i crayons, and blocks? Children's Network has the pnrfocf opportunity for you. W e ore currently accepting applications for part-time afternoon teacher assistants. CaH 834-9526 TOY STORE dark. 2p-6p, M-E 10o-6p, Sat. Must be available summer, fall & X-maj For W est Bfvd 349-9298 "K EVIN 'S C O O K IES & DELI Friendly & dependable morning A afternoon help needed 1625 hrs/wk for busy downtown deli Great working atmosphere No nights or weekends. CaH 472-2388 or come b y 8 16 Congress A ve (Frost Bank Plaza, first floor) 8am4pm Monday-Friday ADMINISTRATIVE 4hrs./wk 480-0205. Rio Grande Counseling Center. ASSISTANT Call Diana $7/hr. D O W N T O W N ADVERTISING Agency needs individual with reliable transportation for morning office support. Duties include answering phones, making runs, and general clerical support. Students in communication are encouraged to apply Please fax resume to 482-8950 or E-mail at mailOstaats.com NEAR TO CAMPUS Childcentered Christian dayschool seeking port-time teacher's assistant to work with 4 year olds W ork with a trained supportive staff to develop a childcentered curriculum Experience preferred W ednesday/Friday (8:45-2:15) Please call Libby 266-8521. RECEPTIONIST/RUNNER POSITIO N for small downtown law firm. Must have reliable transportation. PT po­ sition. Fax resume to 478-2004. LO O KING FOR responsible, kind, babysitter for 3yr-ola. Occasional Near cam­ dog/cat housesitting pus. Cam ille 480- 0308. References PART-TIME AFTERSCHOOL mother s helper 3:30-5:30pm. M-E, days are flexible. Call Debbie Rosenberg 328-7728 home 339-6661 work. DOWNTOWN LAW FIRM seeks computer literate afternoon clerk, minimum 15 hrs/wk. Duties include copying, compiling, faxing, answering phones. Law office experience preferred Fax resume to 505-5956. A SSI6 PERSONAL/HOUSEHOLD TANT-LAWYER needs help! N W Austin. $8-10/hr. 15 hrs/wk flexi­ ble. 331-9621 STUDY PARTNER/COM PANION needed 2-3 mornings a week for Christian home schooled 10-year old Call boy. UT student preferrea 452-7269 W O RK WITH D O W N T O W N LAW FIRM Reliable, part-time runner/clerk needed by small downtown law firm. Must have own transportation Computer knowledge useful. Job includes erranas, phone, filing, faxing, copying, library upkeep, some computer research. Must have references and be competent, cheerful, punctual, neat. Previous general office work helpful. Hours: 1-5, $8 00 per hour Free parking 11 1 Congress, Suite 820, 78701. 477-4121. PRE-SCHOOL IN N W Austin has af­ ternoon teocher position. Excellent work environment Please call 451- 6134 KENNEL TECHNICIAN for veterina­ ry clinic near UT campus. Part-time and weekend hours. Apply 503 W est 18th. CLERICAL LIGHT duties M-E flexible hrs. $6.50/hr. Call Diane 474- 4242 from 8-5pm & 292-9290 after 6pm RUNNER POSITIO N M-f flexible hours $6.50+ mileage Call Diane 4744242 from 8-5pm & 292-9290 after 6pm. O N LIN E PRODUCTION Assistant Website editing, scanning and data processing. $8/Hr Fax 4867555 nr©geoceI.( NORTHW EST CATHOLIC Church needs several babysitters for chil­ dren ages 6mons-5yrs. 9:15am- 1 1 30am Third Friday of every month From Sept-May Experience preferred Mrs. Heath 338-001 8. PEDIATRICIAN & Nurse Practitioner need Front Desk Assistant. N W Aus­ tin $8/hr. Phone 250-1997, fax 250-1529 REJECT RE-ENTRY CLERK II Part time position, Monday-Friday nights, 610pm , for person to oper­ ate Unisvs DP 1000 sorter, re-enter items and balancing, wrap outgoing cash letters and making back-up tapes Ability to lift and carry up to 25 lbs, see clearly and be exposed to loud noise and high job pressure for meeting deodlines and do flexi­ ble when work arrives late Must have 10-key and high math skills and be PC experienced. Prefer per­ son with 1 vr experience in a simibr or related field Interested appli­ cants MUST apply in person at TEMPLE-INLAND FINANCIAL SERVICES 1300 S. M OPAC, AUSTIN TEXAS 78746 Equal Opportunity Employer/Lender Job Line: (512)4341717 PRO O f OPERATOR PO SITIO NS/ PAID TRAINING AVAILABLE Guaranty Federal™ Bank, F S B has part-time positions available, M-f, 5 30-8 :30pm with Bonk Holidays and Weekends off. There is on opportunity io earn, in oddition to the hourly wage, and extra $75/wk Other bonus opportunities are also available. 10 key skill required Paid training available, starting 1 uesday-Enday, 3 00pm - 5 00pm Flexible evening hours are preferred Interested applicants MUST apply in person TEMPLE-INLAND FIN AN C IA L SERVICES 1 30 0 S. M O P A C , A U S T IN T EX A S 7 8 7 4 6 Equal Opportunity Employer/Lender Job Line: (512) 434 1717 CHILDCARE W O RKERS W est Lake Hills Presbyterian Church is now hir­ ing workers for infant/toddler pro­ gram Weekends & some week nights. W ages are competitive Contact Ginger Bishop 327-8028 BATHERS NEEDED Porttime, morn­ ing shift. $6/hour Petco 3462355 Apply in person/All locations LOCAL CPA needs accounting stu­ dent for part-time help $7 50/hr Cor a must Afternoons 20/hr$ 328-9315 HELP W ANTED O l Shucks Tamales on 6th street needs part-time kitchen help Fun atmosphere 499-0766 THE KIDS exchange is hiring social work/ psychology students for direct casework. Spanish speakers Porttime, evenings and weekends. Cok 472-3588 BOX 3 PART-TIME FILE clerk for physician s okflce M E morning hours cak 477- 6341 and ask for shoron OFFICE ASSIST ANT/O RGANIZER needed. 66pm weekda ys for lech- meal consultant in food industry Science $7/hr 2767408 background G EN ERA L O FFIC E CLERK Part-Time Responsibilities indude organizing, filing and copying of medical records. Salary is $ 7 per hour. Soleus Healthcare Services Barton Creek 327-7100 AFTERSCHOO l STAFF for North Austin Charter School $7-8 to start Kate 453-8642. Start immediately. AFTER SCHO OL tutor needed for 13 yr. old girl 4-6pm M-F Call 4 7 6 5043 8:30-5:30 M-F $ 10/hr BEVERAGE CART DRIVER Mon.-Fri. (Must be flexible) Forest Creek Golf Club Contact Linda at 338-2874 EOE THERAPY ASSO CIATES Psychology, Speech, Special Education, Social W ork students Help a little boy reach his full potential G ain valuable experience Learn state-of-the-art behavioral therapy system $8 25/hr Training provided Must hove cor Time commitment 10 to 20 hrs/week Six-month commit­ ment Call Linda 263-9773 d o w n t o w n l a w f ir m seeks part-time recep tio nist/ o ffice clerk for M-Th m ornings. Fam iliarity w ith M icrosoft req uired. > 6.75 or up D O E. Send resume to G N H R, 812 Son A ntonio St., Ste. 2 0 1 , Austin 7 8 7 0 1 , or fa x to 476-5250 N ET W O R K TEC H N IC IA N HO URS: SAT & SU N 8-5 OR SUN -W ED 8-5 Austin's premier cable company has on opening for a Network Technician This position will be responsible for monitoring the Digital Video System and Rr system and maintaining a database of digital services on the network Duties include maintaining DS workstations, heodend components, optic transport and set tops, executing Plans and Procedures for implementation of new DVS system relecses; maintaining the system monitoring operation, and assisting engineering staff with training ana technical support related to above job duties. Requirements for this position include a high school diploma, completion of Tech 2 or equivalent and five years cable experience Knowledge of RE systems and spreadsheet programs W e provide a great environment for growth along with a competitive benefits packoge Qualified applicants please fax your resume or come by to complete an application. Time W arner Cable 1 201 2 North MoPoc Expressway Austin, TX 78758 512485-6186 fax Job Line: 512485-JOBS Website: timewarneraustin.com RECEPTIO NIST NEEDED for IntelliQuest's south Austin office- Monday-Friday, 4-8pm Responsibilities include accepting elude acce| employment applications at front tions at desk, answering phone, and light a , _ne, and ligh. clerical work Study at your desk in a casual environment! $8.50/hr P l e a s e c a l l A b b y a t 4 9 3 - 3 8 0 0 to a p p l y . S E E K IN G RESPO N SIBLE college stu- dent for light handy work Ftexible weekly hours, good pay 3 3 D 9328 R E S E A R C H S U B J E C T S needed to rate voice samples for overall speech quality Requires approx 1 hour - $25 00 on completion. Must have English as first language, good hearing ond cannot have participated in a study during the past 3 months Sessions are scheduled for Aug 19, 24, 25, 27 (Thurs., Tues. W e d and Thurs) (6, 6 30, 7, 7:30, 8, 8 30pm) For further information and to reserve a space call John between 9am-5pm D YN AST AT, IN C 2704 Rio G rande, Suite 4 4 7 6 4 7 9 7 R E S E A R C H S U B J E C T S needed to rate speech samples for intelligibility and quality Salary $7/hr W o rk 12hrs/wk M-W-F 1 00-5:00pm or 9hrs/wk T-Th 12 45-5:15pm. Schedule not flexible Permanent position Must have English os first language, good nearing and attend listener screening sessions. For further information call John between 9-5pm D Y N A S T A T , I N C . 2 7 0 4 R i o G r a n d e , S u i t e 4 4 7 6 - 4 7 9 7 . FRO NT D ESK clerk 3-1 1 shift Ap- pfy in person 565 6 I IH-35 Rode- w ay Inn PART-TIME C a SHIER evenings end weekends approx 20hrs/wk, refer­ ences required, experience prefer­ red Brian 478-6419 S A L E S A S S I S T A N T N E E D E D A b ility to g re e t clients, s h o w m o d e l h om e s, a n s w e r p h o n e s, h a n d o ut n e w h o m e p a ck e ts. Fill in for sale s co u n s e lo r. F le x ib le d a y s off F a x re su m e to ( 5 1 2 ) 3 3 8 - 4 1 6 3 E O E . PART-TIME BIRD surveyor 1-hour ot Some physical labor Must sunset have own 912- 8426 transportation BUSY O B / G Y N ofhee looking for person to clean 4 stock Limited late afternoon hours. Call Barbara K at 456 5721 A F T E R N O O N O FFICE help needea m N W Austin G o od phone eti­ quette & self-motivated Must be de­ Excellent pendable with references pay C all Kim 346-0471 L A W O FFIC E 3 blocks from campus has openings runners/office for clerks G reat work environment Openings for M W F 1-6 T/TH 8-1 and T/TH 12-6 Transportation re­ Please call Melissa 477- quired 7543 N U R S IN G PRE-MED, AND HEALTH SCIENCE MAJORS S9/HR IN-HOME HEALTH CARE Can be fall semester enrolled or sit-out Weekend ond afternoon weekdays shifts available. Must have valid Texas Driver's License. W ill train Call Anne for interview 373-1660. Y O U R F A V O R IT E W O M E N ' S R E T A IL / C O N S IG N M E N T S H O P N eeds responsible and friendly assistants to help with customers ond paperwork Full and Part-time positions available Closed Sundays and Mondays C a l l 451-6845. Second Time Around N o w A c c e p t i n g A p p l i c a t i o n s For T H E D A I L Y T E X A N EALL I n - H o u a a S a l e a Representativo D uties includ e se rvicin g an ex istin g a c c o u n t list of ad v e rtise rs a s well as p u rsu an ce of new b u sin e ss Ex c e lle n t phone, co-worker an d cu s to m e r s e rv ic e skills n e ed ed M o n d a y - F r i d a y 9 am - 12pm or 8 am - 11am M u a t ba a b l a to b a g ln w o rk I m m e d i a t e l y . B a t e + C o m m i s s i o n ! E g f i t i p n q u a l i f i e s for Lnt e r n a hip A P P L Y I N P E R S O N T H E D A I L Y T E X A N T S P R o o m 3 . 2 0 0 T e le p h o n e inquiries not a c ­ ce p te d A p p lica n ts m ust be a U n iv e rsity of T e x a s stud ent PART-TIME C O U RIER low office, af­ ternoon hours Call 477-6813 M EDICAL RECORDS CLERK PT, M-F 8-12 & 1-5. M e d i c a l c lin ic se e k in g in d iv id u a l to file, sort m a il, Sht c o m p u te r, w ill train , sal fo r students, $ 7 / h r . F a x re su m e to 4 5 4 - 0 7 0 4 . B i - l i n g p r e f . C o n t a c t Y M C A P/T Ofc. h e l p . M o r n , a n d A f t . a v a i l a b l e . M r . M c D o n a l d 476-1183. F R O N T D E S K A T T E N D A N T PT S a t u r d a y a n d S u n d a y 6am -2pm . 4 7 8 - 7 2 1 8 A p p ly to: Cam bridge Condominiums 1801 Lavaca N EED DAYCARE 6 5 aft./week, 3 6pm, 2 children, central location, must drive 2 references, $8/hr 4 7 6 4 7 4 0 PT V A N driver working with families $8/hr N eeded im- with children mediately M ichelle 453-6570. ST G E O R G E 'S Episcopal School (East of Hancock Center) seeks part- time teachers 24pm , 452-6063 H A N D S O N A C U D D L Y B O D Y Calling all CD, ECE, Sociology, Psychology, Nursing A ID , etc students Austin's only infant center gives you a fun, flexible practicum experience Part-time assistant teacher positions available. Flexible shifts, UT shuttle, hard-working, fun-loving colleagues, terrific babies, super families UT work study EO E. Call Helen or M ary 4 7 8 - 3 1 1 3 . Babysitters/Nannies Needed • Permanent PT/FT, 171 & I/O positions available AMP. $9-12 per hour • Babysitting, Temp Nannies - choose your own hours, days/evenwgs/weekends Childcare exp car & H.S. dipVGED req CaU MM>523 for more information or appt DIRECT C A RE STAFF N EED ED Austin Children's Shelter is actively recruiting childcare workers Varied shifts Differential paid for overnight positions Experience in RTC's and bilingual preferred Benefits for full-time Fax resume to Sherree Pochail or Reagan Shelley ot (5 12)322 9461 PA R T- TIM E C A R E N E E D E D for my child after school M-E 3-6pm Person needs to have a car and be able to drive the child places Right applicant needs to be the outdoors type who like to play with children. Must have experience and also must be honest ond dependable Pay $8/hr Please call Marsha if you are interested W o r k 3 2 0 6 9 1 0 or H o m e 3 4 3 - 7 1 1 1 . LIFEGUARDS NEEDED-PERFECT for W o rk afternoons/week­ students ends August lOth-foll, with year- round employment opportunities Contact Audrey Holmes ot W est­ wood Country Club O 453-7246X6 • 0 0 - O e n e r j ^ n i ^ i • O O - O m n m I extra NOW HIRING SECURITY OFFICERS Having a hard time making end* meet? Need income without sacrificing your GPA to get it? If ao, we have the perfect job for you!! At Zimco we offer • Full & Part Time ffositione • • Evening & Night Positions • * Study Whde You Work • • Car Not Required • • School Holidays O ff • • N o Experience Necessary • • Uniforms Provided • CALX 343-7210 NOW ZIM C O S E C U R IT Y C O N SULTAN TS • M W 10 U T S H U T T L E D R IV E R S N E E D E D Ideal (or college student, male or female Flexible hours and good pay Lots of fun! C a ll 2 8 2 - 5 7 7 0 or opply in person A T C / V a n c o n o f T e x a s L.T. 8 3 0 0 S. IH -35 -A ccess R o a d A u stin , 7 8 7 4 5 Y M C A O F A U S T I N N O W H I R IN G ! I ! S IT E C O O R D I N A T O R S A S S T C O O R D I N A T O R S C O U N S E L O R S W o rk with elementary age children after school in areas of art, sports, games tutoring and enrichment classes Sites located at schools in Austin ond surrounding areas Site and Asst Coordinators are responsible for the daily operations and management of an after school site Counselors must supervise 10-15 children in a variety of activities and teach enrichment classes Positions now available beginning M o n ., August 9th, 2 30 PM-6 30 pm M-F/M-W-F/T-TH shifts, $6 35-$9 90/hr based on experience Free Y M C A membership. Fo all positions, apply in person at 1 809 E Sixth St 9 om-5pm EO E F U L L - T IM E W O R K I N G in a m a il o rd e r h o m e -b re w sh o p in N o rth A ustin. O w n tra n s p o rta tio n e s s e n tia l H o m e - b rew i n g / b e e r k n o w le d g e help ful. S ta rt im m e d ia te ly . W i l l tra in if n e c e s s a r y $11 0 0 / h r 9 8 9 - 9 7 2 7 STUDENTS PA R T - T IM E/FU LL- T IM E $ l , 0 0 0 - $ 2 , 5 0 0 W e ' r e s w a m p e d a n d n e e d help . F le x ib le hou rs a n d tra in in g a v a ila b le 380-0570. PHONE ROOM S u p e r / i s o r . P a r t- tim e e v e n i n g s a n d w e e k e n d s G o o d p e o p l e s k ills . T e l e p h o n y m a n a g e m e n t e x p e r i e n c e h e lp f u l. Joe 447-2483. GREA T PAY. Casual office A M or Interview 5-7pm 0 8 7 0 5 . PM Shoal Creek Suite #202 or call 335- 3414 ATTENTION: C R E A T I V E I N D I V I D U A L S seeking a fun work environment Do you understand the need to be treated with dignity and respect? If so, come assist our staff with the Jdanning and implementing of ividualized Dementia care Pay training FT/PT available C o n t a c t K i m K e u t z e r @ 833-9253. $$$CHILDCARE WORKERS NEEDED at First U n ite d M e th o d is t C h u rc h for children 0-5 years. Starting salary $7/hr Sundays required and, various evenings and mornings available If interested please leave a message at 4 7 8 - 5 6 8 4 e x t. 2 3 NED EXTRA MONEY? FULLTIME OR PART TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT THE CONTESSAANDTHE MADISON FOOD SERVICE DEPT. • COOKS • SER VERS • CHECKERS • STOCKERS • D ISHW ASH ERS FLEXIBLE HOURS MORNING OR AFTERNOON SHIFTS FREE MEAL DURING SHIFT PROVIDED APPLY IN PERSON M-F BETWEEN 9AM & 5PM AT MADISON HOUSE 709 W 22ND ST LOCATED BETWEEN PEARL AND NUECES ST REFERENCE AND BACKGROUND CHECK REQUIRED C H I L I ' S H I R I N G N o w o c c e p tin g a p p lic a t io n s at new location 45lh and Lamar Also accepting applications at Lakeline M all IH-35 & 183 Bc-net & 183. Brodie Oaks, &Roundrock FLORAL DEUVERY FT/PT poj.hom N ea* ap p earance Good driving re­ cord Experienced with Austin streets Alff's Florist 472-9255 N O W HIRING T e o c h in g assistants for pre-school children at H y d e Park B ap tist C h ild D e v e lo p m e n t C e n te r Shifts M-F B 00-1 2 30 and/or 2 3 0 6 :0 0 p m E O E 4 6 5 - 8 3 8 3 . Ü M _ * > ---------- a gyjfl ESim fflN B B MHwnr QKL 512-447-2483 T E t f C O M M U N I C A T I O N S STRATEEIES G SOLUTIONS w Page 10 Friday, August 20,1999 T h e D a il y T e x a n EMPLOYMENT SIGNATURE LEASING, a grow ing leasing company it seeking one Full-time or two’part-time business students as runner/file clerk. This position requires delivering documents around Austin (transportation required), handling general office duties. Candi/ must be motivated and self-dii For consideration, fax resume to: 4 67 -8 1 8 6, Attn: V.P. Operations, or call 4 67-8161 PHONE RESEARCH A G E N T S TS2 A premier research firm, has just picked up a very large 3-month phone research project W e have plenty of hours available for phone researchers. Weeknights and weekends W eekday hours available mid-September Competitive pay, bonuses available and plenty of training. Project continues through early November. Call 4 4 7 -2 4 8 3 Todayl T EACH ERS N EED ED for A B A pro- gram To teach autistic child. Will train Call 388-8901 or 657 -0 7 6 3. W H O D O Y O U A T TENTIO N ! K N O W IN International IN D IA ? com pany expanding to India Look­ ing tor people of Indian descent to tram for a great business opportuni­ ty. (5 1 2)6 27 -3 4 55 O W N A computer?? Put it to workll PT/FT. w w w w ork- $25-$75/hr. from-home. 1- 8 00-243-6483. Net/opportunity. W E NEED PEOPLE to provide office services to downtown professionals and to work in our production center. Copying, faxing, filing, deliveries, etc. Flexible schedules. PT and FT. Fax resume 479-4159. Com e by for an application. 21 1 E. 7th. Suite #640. Drivers Needed Immediately Business is booming. Use own vehicle to deliver meals from Austin restaurants. Call Now 346-9990 DELIVERY DRIVERS wonted for UT campus FT/PT. N o car necessary. advancement Opportunity for S7/hr Call Joseph Robertson. 4 8 1 -0 5 9 4 DELIVERY A N D W arehouse help "ceded at G a g e Furniture. A pply in person at 5 3 1 9 N IH 35. FLORIST S E E K IN G sales and deliv­ ery help Afternoons and evenings 4 5 1 -6 7 2 8 C H IL D R E N 'S CEN TER O F AUSTIN . N e w center, beautiful N W Austin location, seeking innovative creative individuals for: FT/PT teaching positions, (infants through pre-K). M-F, Flexible Hours. Excellent wages. Call 795-8300. LOVE KIDS, enjoy singing and danc­ ing? Teaching position, start imme­ diately. Call A m anda 24hrs, 512- 784 -3 9 3 7. CARETAKERS N E E D E D for paro- H EA VY LIFTING RE- JIRED. Shifts available Sot&Sun. Sed man. 3 pm-10pm 8 9 9 -1 6 4 6 W A N T E D POSITIVE, energetic, self-starter to help manage a busy w edding & portrait studio. Outstanding marketing and sales abilities a must. Duties include camera and production work. Experience preferred Contact Misty or Deborah at 4 5 0 0 4 1 8 or fax resume to 4 5 0 0 4 8 2 . CHILD CARE W O R K E R S, cooks F/T, PA- Apply in person or online Syco- © ww w sycamorecdc com more C hila’s Roce 327 -0 3 6 9. N E E D PT estimator Must be able to read blueprints W ill train. $ 10/hr Call 3 27-1697. THE C O U R T Y A R D BY MARRIOTT (Arboretum Area) has a full-time night auditor position and front desk positions available. N o previous experience necessary. Applicant must be eoger to learn, friendly, and a team player Top w oges & great benefits To discuss further, apply at 9 4 0 9 Stoneloke Blvd. © 183 & 3 6 0 or call 5 0 2 -8 1 0 0 & osk for Kevin Lewis. POSTAL JO BS to $ 1 8 35/hr Inc. benefits, no experience For opp, & exam info, call 1-800-813-3585, ext.762 2 , 8am-9pm, 7-doys fds.inc. $ 1 5 0 0 W EEKLY potential mailing N o Experience Re- our circulars. Free information pocket 2uired. all 2 02 -4 5 2 -5 94 2 MUSIC/THEATER STUDENTS To score and arrange music for upcoming musical. $8/hr + theater credit. Call Mr. Moster at 485-7161. $9+/HR FOR an honorable, reliable & detail oriented student who would enjoy a long term job cleaning neo* S W Austin homes. C a r required. Training. Flexible, part-time hrs. W o rk now & /o r fall semester C all Kate at 28 0-67 43 Duties Stockman H A VERTY'S FURNITURE Flexible schedule. include stockroom and showroom mainte­ nance, merchandise shipping, & some heavy lifting Apply in person. 5 5 5 5 Airport Blvd GET PAID TO PLAY The Northwest Recreation Center is looking for enthusiastic, fun loving energetic people for our daily after school programs. A ge ranges from 5 to 15 years old flexible part time hours are available now. Call 4 5 8 4 1 0 7 to set up an interview time. N O W SE E K IN G students W ork on campus 10 hours/wk $7/hr. Coll Corey @ 800-797-5743. Ext.313. PRESC H O O L IN Westlake is hiring afternoon staff 3 2 7 -7 5 7 5 Amber 800 - General I BANKING OPPORTUNITIES At Compass Bank we are committed to the customer. And to continue our tradition of providing excellent customer service, we are seeking enthusiastic individuals to join our team. * Part-Time Tellers & Full-Time Tellers Com petitive P a y , P a id Vacations, Tuition A ssista n ce Teller Experience preferred; six months or more of heavy, recent cash handling will be considered. Must have excellent customer contact skills. Training provided. If you're interested in becoming a part of the Compass team, please fax your resume to Compass Bank Human Resources (512) 419-3472. Compass Bank Where Thcreb Compass, Thereb A Way. An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D/V 800 - Ganara! JSI u - l - n w p w anra© j i Account Reps $$ EXTRA CASH $$ EARN $9 TO $12 + /HR That's what our team members average every day @ DialAmerica In addition, they enjoy: • Part-Time AM /PM Hours • 18 to 25 hrs. per week • Weekly Paychecks • Clean, Relaxed Environment • Service Existing Accounts Our team is the best in the business. Call today to leam how you can become a part of this exciting opportunity. 339-6070 www.Dialamerica.com / Austin q i * * s í ptifWwlS pOtÜkVIS, CQÉilf 9Mp0fÍM9Q§ on o cofliputifiixl ca» ftgMtor. CompttitivB buttfe», great pWWwKH w uutunci. Apply in pawn, 9 6 Monday - Friday © Oath look* 9601 N.M45 $7.2$ to atom C O URIER SERVICE seeks part-time & full time drivers. Must have own car and insurance 328 -2 8 8 1. AVAILABLE N O W TELEMARKETING P O SIT IO N S Student friendly, afternoon & evening shifts, near UT campus in University Towers. N o selling involved, appointment setting only. $8-$ 15 per hour. Casual atmosphere. Experienced or will train. Call C J. at PBC 8 6 7 -6 7 6 7 INTERNSHIP! EN T ERT A IN M EN T Marketing & Management company seeking oggressive, detail-oriented individuals for fall semester internship Flexible hours. College credits. C all A n n a 4 7 9 -7 6 0 0 or email: annarobinson® brandingpartners.com. A V IS RENT A CA R has the following positions open: Rental Sales Agents (FT) Service Agents (FT & PT) Drivers (PT) PT Office Clerk. Avis offers excellent storting pay and benefits. Pre-employment drug screen and M R V check required Please apply direct at 9 3 2 0 rental C or Ln. or call 5 3 0 -3 4 1 9 with any questions. Avis is an Equal Opportunity Employer. S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E B A C K ! SLEEP LATE- G O H O M E EARLY $250-$350 WEEKLY, PARTTIM E N O SALES! N O SURVEYS! EVERY FRIDAY A N D SATU RD AY N IG H T OFF! C A L L (512) 458-8514 D ESK CLERK. Roadw ay Inn accept­ ing applications for full-time position, 3p.m.-11p.m., Wednesday-Sunday. Apply in person at 2 9 0 0 IH-35N. WEST AUSTIN YOUTH ASSO CIATIO N looking for hardworking, college- age people, with some sports back­ ground for positions as staff mem­ bers. Nights and weekends a must. Start ot $ 7 .5 0 per hour. For more info, call: 473-2528. FULL-TIME ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT PERSON needed for fast-growing contract placement firm. Skills include data entry, customer service, M S Word & Lotus Notes. If interested fax resume to (512)899-3535, Attn: Lana C O O L CO LLEG E G U Y S O R GIRLS who relate well to young kids for afternoon shift at our incred­ ible o reschool. Fun work, lots of other cool people, no nights or weekends. Call Kathy at Primrose School of Bee C av e 26 3 -0 3 8 8 . SORTER OPERATOR II Guaranty Federal™ bonk, F.S.B. has a full time postion, M-F nights, 12:00am to 8 :3 0 am, for person to process checks through a sorter and ensure correct handling of the checks. Individual must work inde­ pendently, be detailed oriented and occurate. Excellent iob for college student who is detailed oreientea, works well with W indo w s.95 and likes wo work with equipment. O f­ fer excellent benefit pockage includ­ ing flexible benefit plan, education assistance, 4 0 1 k and retirement. Interested applicant M U ST apply in person: TEMPLE-INLAND FINANCIAL SERVICES 1300 S. MOPAC, AUSTIN TEXAS 78746 Equal Opportunity Employer/Lender Job Line: (512) 4 3 4 -1 7 1 7 RO C KETS BURGERS, spuds and sal­ ads. Hiring drivers $ 9 -15/hr and Fiver Distribution $7/hr. Apply 2826-8 Rio Grande 473-2261 FREE BABY B O O M BO X + E A R N $12 0 0! fundraiser for student groups & or­ ganizations Eom up to $ 4 per MasterCard app. Call for info or visit our website Qualified callers receive a FREE Baby Boom Box 1-800-932-0528 ext. 119 or ext 125 www.ocmconcepts.com HELP W A N T E D 4days/week landscaping custom homes. experience needed $8/hr. Greenscape Landscape 4 22 -1 1 7 4. for Some Coll FEMALE MODELS needed periodically to market & promote new internet company at events including Firey Fooids, Bob M orley Festivals & UT games N e w Texas Flass Bikini, shorts, T-shirt and cap provided. $ 1 5 per hour, $ 5 0 minimum per event. Email letter of interest and photo to: sales@uniquelytexas.com. Live like a Texan.. Shop like a Texan... www.UniquelyTexas.com. H O W H IR IN G FT, PT sales & book- keeping. National Computer Clear­ ing House Experience preferred but not necessary. Bring resume to: 2 3 1 4 Rutland. CHILDREN'S FRIEND needed at a fun place to work. KID SPA CE, located @ 183 and Anderson Mill is seeking someone for the 2-7pm or 2-10pm and wknd shifts. Benefits/competitive w ages/unique center 918-0121. W A R E H O U S E HELP Flexible hours Clear driving record. Non-smoker. $ 9.50/hr. 3 85-6232. C H RISTIA N S N EED ED to help in the nursery at the Hyde Park Baptist Church Rate $ 6 50/hr. Call 465- 8 3 1 9 and leave message. G Y M N A S T IC S INSTRUCTOR-TEACH kids afternoons, weekdays. Fun and reliable more important than great gymnastics skills 6 9 9 - 3 3 9 1 , 3 2 7 - 084 8 . ENERGETIC, RESPONSIBLE, good- natured attendant for high function­ ing Re­ lly r.o ld boy w/autism. sume, references & transportation re­ Call quired 2 4 9 -0 7 7 2 leave message for Jim. Part-time $8-10/hr. PART-TIME HELP needed starting in fall semester. Tues./Thurs., General office duties. Must have knowledge $7/nr. of W ord. FarW est/MoPac area Fax resume to 3 45-8498. M S lovers. JOB O P E N IN G for book Part-time warehouse. All daytime hours, no weekends or night. Con­ tact Diane Graden 3 2 6 -9 0 7 0 or fox- 3 2 6 -9 1 12 W O R K W ITH young children; ac­ credited childcare center hiring part- time/full-time located in South Aus­ tin Call Brook 4 42-2301. seeks per BUSY W ESTLAKE Exec sonal assistant. Must have car. Tues., Thurs., Fri. 3:30-7, one eve­ ning/week to 10:30. Additional hours likely. 3 27-9863. Starting at $ 6.50/hr EN JO Y SELLING fine clothes? M ake good money and have fun working daytime hours at Second Looks 345- 5 2 2 2 DELIVERY/SERVICE P E R SO N need- ed for Full and part-time position at fitness equipment store. N o experi­ ence necessary. Non-Smoker. A p ­ ply within Fitness in Motion at Broker & 183. N E E D 1-5PM. EM PLO YM EE to an- swer phones, file, some retail sales. Will train. Need car. $ 6 75/hr. 4 5 4 -5 2 0 3 for appointment. $9/HR., FLEXIBLE hours., close to campus, good phone skills, good marketing experience. Steve W hit­ tington 4/4 -7 7 5 7. E Q U IP M E N T L E A SIN G Are you a new graduate or student looking for FT or PT work? Set your own schedule at our high-energy, well-organized company. If you re dedicated and a hard worker, our entry level Sales Prospector position can earn you up to $l3.00hr. We offer no cap earnings, flexible schedules, insurance and a fun place to work. If you’re ready to begin a career and learn the finance business, we’re waiting to hear from you. Hurry, positions are limited. Fax résumé to Stacy at: 3 7 2 - 9 1 5 6 or Call 458-1300 x 241 and leave a m essage on why you would like this position University Jewelers Now Open D o you want to be in on the start-up of a new retail group? Start part-time; Manager and supervisor opportunities may be in your future - if you have the right stuff. See Michael at 2304 Guadalupe, University jewelers at Bevo’s EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT AUSTIN INFINIT1 Is interested in a receptionist w ho is dependable, pro­ and people oriented. fessional, Please call Robert Taylor at (512) 4 5 4 -9 4 8 9 ANIMAL LOVERS Office Assistant Phones, light typing, some computer knowledge a plus casual fun work environ­ ment. Flexible hours. Good pay plus benefits. Call Amy 762-3800. Flexible hrs N E A R UT $8-9 0 0 Bookkeeping Trainee. 4 7 4 -0 8 5 3 Paralegal Courier: 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 ; Typ­ ist/Clerical: 4 7 4 -2 2 1 6 ; Smoke-free; WILL TRAIN, freshman welcomel A C C O U N T A N T PART-TIME, 4hours/doy, 5days/week, morning or afternoon. Should have 15hours of college accounting work or equivalent workplace experience. Should have computer skills and be very competent in Excel. Knowledge of QuickBooks or equivalent helpful. Fax resume to 4 19 -7 5 1 4. GR AD U A T E STUDEN T with C P A or Accounting experience wanted to maintain books for small business. Flexible hours. Minimum salary $ 15/hr. 385 -6 2 3 2. CLERK II (Giftshop Sales Clerk) The State Preservation Board is hiring friendly, courteous individuals to perform sales and customer service tasks part-time in the beautiful giftshops of the Texas State Capitol and Capitol Visitors Center. Duties include primary customer contact, completing sales transactions, stocking of inventory, and general store maintenance Afternoon positions available, no nights. Successful applicant must have experience in customer service and/or money handling and balancing, and be available to work some weekends and most holidays. This position requires frequent prolonged standing, walking, and the ability to lift merchandise of up to 50lbs. $7 4 3 per hour, $ 8 . 0 1 /hr beginning Sept 1, plus excellent benefits including insurance Submit state application to: SPB Human Resources, P.O. Box 13286, Austin, Tx. 78 7 1 1 . 5 1 2 / 4 6 3 -5 4 9 5 EO E B A R T O N C R EEK & H IG H L A N D MALL FT/PT associate &management train­ ing positions available Guitar & C a ­ dillacs is a fun 1 2 store chain of up­ scale Texas gifts Above average starting pay. Flexible hrs, benefit package, employee discount, paid vacation, holiday pay, bonuses, advancement opportunity & medical. For immediate consideration apply in person: Guitars & Cadillacs H igh­ land Mall/Barton Creek M all PLA N T N ERD S & PLANTNERD W A N N A B E E S - Small infamous G arden Center & Gift Shop in W est Lake Hills is looking for Part time and full time workers from A ug 1 thru Christmas - hopefullly - hopeh again in spring. To help help customers and water plants O R to water customers and help plants. Must have keen appreciation of Plastic Pink Flamingos W ill train. Contact Jenna A S A P 3 27 -4 5 6 4. "IT'S A G O O D THING" Stylish, creative, confident, witty and charming, nice, happy, manners, customer service oriented, witting and charming part 2. Small gift shop and garden center in W est Lake Hills looking for inside help. Must be people person Self motivated Smiles Yada, yada, yada Part-time and Full-time. A ug 1 thru Christmas-hopefully again in spring. Contact Martha S. 3 2 7 -4 5 6 4 A SAP. SWEAT, GRUNT, SPIT, SCRATCH, LIFT HEAVY OBJECTS. Small garden center in W est Lake Hills needs outside help A ug 1 thru Christmas -hopefully again in spring. Irreverent sense of humor a must Must have a keen appreciation of plastic pink flamingos. Contact Bruno327-4564 PART-TIME F U N Job in Lakeline M all starting Sept 3rd. Hourly plus com­ mission. Call 3 3 5 -6 4 5 4 tor appoint­ ment. PARTY PIG SUPERSTORE is now hiring full and part time for all positions. W e offer flexible hours around your class schedule, great pay and a fun place to work. W ork just weekends, evenings or around classes W e have 3 locations in Austin. Please call Jamie at 4 2 2 -5 1 8 5 for interviews. I T E C H N IC A L SUPPORT. Unix/NT. 2nd level. Solaris, NT, HP/UX, Digital, SG/lrix. Immediately hiring candidates in S Austin near Bee C aves Rd. with the following skills: troubleshooting, experience with 3rd party applications such as RDBM S, W e b Servers, Firewall products, etc. 3 shifts available M an p o w e r Technical 8 9 0 6 W a ll Street Suite 102. Austin, TX, 7 8 7 5 4 Phone: (5 1 2 )8 3 2 -5 8 0 0 Fax: (512) 8 3 2 -8 5 7 2 Mptechau©texos. net Oo p/! fid C o u l d NETWORK TECHNICIAN HOURS: SAT & SUN 8-5 OR SUN-WED 8-5 Austin's premier cable com pany has an opening for a Network Technician. Tnis position will be responsible for monitoring the Digital Video System and RE system and maintaining a database of digital'services on the network. Duties include maintaining D S workstations, headend components, optic transport and set tops; executing Plans and Procedures for implementation of new D V S system releases; maintaining the system monitoring operation; and assisting engineering staff with training and technical support related to above job duties. Requirements for this position include o high school diploma, completion of Tech 2 or equivalent ana five years cable experience. Knowledge of RF systems and spreadsheet programs. W e provide a great environment for growth along with a competitive benefits package. Qualified applicants, please fox your resume or come by to complete an application. Time W arner C ab le 1 2 0 1 2 North M oPac Expressway Austin, TX 7 8 7 5 8 5 1 2 -4 8 5 -6 1 8 6 fax Job line: 5 1 2 4 8 5 -J O B S Website: timewarneraustin.com 070* 2 POSITIONS available direct care weekend relief in M H M R group home. 2 weekends per month and wake staff needed. Hours lOpm-óam M-Th. Great job for students. Call 282-6090. STOCKBROKER TRAINEES College degree and/or sales experience. Diane @ 3 2 8 -7 0 7 7 . N A T IO N A L E V A LU A T IO N SY ST E M S is a leader in providing educational testing products. The high quality programs that we deliver to the education sector hove resulted in national prominence W e are steadily expanding to meet the grow ing demand for our services PROJECT A S S IS T A N T (Administrative Services) Responsibilities of this entry level position in our administrative services department include data entry, word processing, and personnel related activities. The ideal candidate will demonstrate an ability to work accurately and effectively under deadline pressure. Experience in working with the public and managing data in A C C E S S is desired N E S shares it success with every employee through its unique com­ pensation and benefits package If you are interested in joining our company, please send cover letter and resume to: Personnel N ational Evaluation Systems Inc. P.O. Box 1 4 040 6 Austin TX 7 8 7 1 4 -0 4 0 6 E.O.E. N A T IO N A L EV ALU A T IO N S Y ST EM S Project Assistant Registration Department Entry level customer service representative requiring excellent communication and record keeping skills. The ideal candidate will nave excellent organizational and analytical skills, and will demonstrate an ability to work accurately and effectively under deadline pressure Experience in working with the public is required, previous customer service experience preferred Bilingual Spanish/English a plus N E S snares its success with every employee through its unique compensation and benefits pockage. If you are interested in joining our company, please send cover letter and resume to: Personnel National Evaluation Systems, Inc. P.O. Box 1 4 0 4 0 6 Austin, TX 7 8 7 1 4 -0 4 0 6 EOE REG IST R A T IO N A S S IS T A N T Responsibilities of this entry level position in our data processing department include checking applications for accuracy, scanning computer forms, preparing bank deposits, and maintaining accounting journals. The ideal condidote will demonstrate the ability to work accurately and effectively under pressure Some data processing experience is necessary; basic accounting experience is o plus. employee through its unique compensation and benefits package. If you are interested in joining our company, please send cover letter and resume to: Registration Assistant Position National Evaluation Systems Inc P.O. Box 14 0 4 0 6 Austin, TX 7 8 7 1 4 -0 4 0 6 EOE • W - C M m - ______ ______ _ mmKm JOY, D A N C E R S and waitstaff. Be­ gin tomorrow, debt free next weekl Call/come by FT/PT. TABC cert. Joy of Austin IH 35 exit 2 5 0 N Bound 218-8012. KERBY LANE CAFE is now accepting applications for kitchen positions. Line cooks, prep & dishwashers All shifts available Some front of the house positions available G o od starting w ages N W 112602 Research Blvd) Soutn (2 7 00 South Lamar) Central (3 7 04 Kerby Lane) Apply in person at desired location M-F, EOE. LA M O R A D A M exican Restaurant. Fun environment, rockin' lunch and dinner shifts, and flexible hours. A p ­ ply for our team at 1 2 4 0 7 N Mo- pac Expwy (next to H.E.B.) or ¿all 8 3 6 6 6 1 1 . THE COUNTY UNE O N THE LAKE is looking for hardw orking energetic people with good attitudes for all positions. Slackers need not apply. Call 346-3664 for appointment. 5 2 0 4 FM 2222. PLUCKERS IS N O W HIRING: Delivety Drivers ($10-13/hr) C o o k s & Dishwashers ($7/hr) W aiters/Phone Personnel ($10/hr+). Apply at 2222 Rio Granae or Call David at 236-9112 BELLAGIO 6507 Jester/2222 346-8228 Apply M-Th, experience servers, bartender, buser, sous chef, dishwasher. Dinner only. U.R. COOKS Steakhouse Hiring waitstaff/hosts, flexible schedules, both North and South locations. Apply Burnet Road at 183 Monday-Friday 3-8 pm. LO W ER Y O U R food bills! Come work at Thistle Cafe at Davenport Village in Westlake. Full and Part- time positions available (Wait, coun­ ter, kitchen staff). Call 3 47 -1 0 0 0. O N CALL part-time catering staff positions available. Room set up, tear down, line watching, and interaction with client/customers. Call 327-1213 x225, Sodexho Marriott services at St. Stephen's School. EOE. DISHWASHER/UTILITY P E R S O N needed for morning and evening shifts, full or part time. Benefits available for full time positions including medical and dental. Call 327-1213 x 225, Sodexho Marriott Services at St. Stephen's School. EOE. 9 0 D A Y Hiring Bonusl Immediate Openings! Jason's deli has fun jobs & great pay for people who want to have fun while earning lots of $ $ $ The following positions are available Days/FT/PT • Ordertakers/Cashiers • Sandwichmakers • Delivery Drivers (must be 18, w/Drivers License & proof of ins ) • Line Help/Food Prep • Bus/Disnwashers Serious inquiries apply today @ Jason's Deli 3 3 0 0 Bee Cave Road by Blockbuster Video 5 1 2 -3 2 8 -0 2 0 0 C A FE JOSIE 1200-8 W est 6th • Line C ook Career opportunity for experienced professional person. • Dish/Prep G oo d skills, go o d hours, days, nights • A M server/PM host Short shifts, tipouts N O W HIRING ! RO C KETS BURGERS, Spuds and Sal- ads. Hiring Drivers J9-$15/hr & Fiyer Distributors $7/hr Apply 282 6 -8 Rio Grande 4 73 -2261 Z TEJAS GRILL 6th Street Is now Accepting applica­ tions for Day & Evenings Buser, & Food Runner Apply in person M-Thurs-4pm. 1 1 1 0 W . 6th St. B A N Z A I Part-time RESTAURANT help needed for lunch hour $ 7 to start. Apply in person 2 1 2 0 G u a d a ­ lupe St. N O W H IR IN G All Positions. Full and part time available - will schedule around school and other jobs. Top w ages, employee & family meal pro­ grams, employee contest and awards, vacation and insur­ ance package, working with friends and relatives O K . Apply in person at Barton Creek or Lakeline M a ll stores anytime - or call toll free 800-231-6881 (ext. 17 for Barton Creek location, ext. 0 9 for Lakeline) Chelsea Street Pub & Grill. A FTERSC H O O L HELP wanted M-F 3 6 p m to care for 7yr. old twin sons in Northwest Austin home. Experi­ ence preferred 3 4 6 -8 8 1 2 evenings Oi weekends N A N N Y P O SIT IO N : mature English speaking, non-smoking, female for live-in position assist- ing stay-home mom in Ced ar Park. Room & Board plus $ 5 0 0 /m o . Flexible hours, some evenings and weekends required. Call Beth at 33 14745. LADY IN wheelchair seeks part-time help w/routine personal care, er­ rands and household chores. Coll 4 76 -7 7 2 5. CHILD CARE/AFTER S C H O O L PICK- UP: Wed-Fri (2 :3 0 6 :0 0 ) Starting immediately. 12-yr-old girl, 9-yr-ola Near Arboretum. Dependa­ boy ble Reliable vehicle. Non-smoker. Salary negotiable W ork-646- 6 7 0 5 , homeE134-2566 CHILDCARE HELP- Zilker area 3 6 p.m Take care of 8 year-old boy. 7 9 1 -0 3 2 7 J o h n C a r helpful. NANNY POSITION , for mature female English as a first language student for 3 teenagers. Must live-in. Have go od driving record, cor, and references. W est Austin. Separate quarters. Salary, g a s allowance, and FREE time. 4 7 2 -7 8 2 0 A F TE R SC H O O L CA REG IVER for 9yr- old & 5yr old. Non-smoker, respon­ sible, included. Please contact Scott 20hrs/wk. Shutter at 263 -5 9 3 0. driving some N E E D C H ILD CA RE in my h om e "’M E lp.m.-6p.m. Must have own trans­ portation. Leave message at 849- 8108. • B A B Y SIT TER/N A N N Y , 20-25hrs/wk M-F, for 7mo. baby in N W Austin. $7-9/hr based on experience Must love children. Responsible. Non- smoker. References 9 18 -1 9 1 2. Baby CPR. W E E K E N D A TT E N D A N T needed hr disabled man Saturday & Sunday mornings 7am-10am, Saturday & Sunday evenings lO p m -llp m $ 78 per weekend 452- 3 332. Call Giles M O T H E R 'S HELPER needed for 3 young children in Westlake Part- time hours, flexible, experience pre­ ferred. Please fax experience & ref­ erences to 3 3 0 0 5 7 2 Attn: Am y S. I 'M L O O K IN G for someone to pro­ vide childcare on Saturday after­ noons/evenings Westlake area Call Laurel. 3 27 -6 6 3 8. CA REG IVER FOR 9/1 l y r children M-F, 2 45-6pm, $7/hr + mileage. Car, references required. Call 838- 5856. L O V IN G childcare ENERG ETIC needed. N W Austin. References and transportation required 502- 9 6 5 0 EXPERIENCED PE R S O N to provide afterschool care for energetic 7-yr- old girl. M-F 3-7pm, O w n car. Ref­ erences required Call 838-8659. CH ILD CARE IN -H O M E needed 7 :1 5am-3 30pm to care for 10-mon- old angel Room, Board, plus pay. Need immediately. References re­ quired. Suzanne 3 3 1 -1 4 8 8 L O O K IN G FOR responsible female to care for my 2 children and assist in schoolwork, in my home. M-F 3- Must have transportation. 6pm. Please call 3 2 9 -9 8 6 4 after 6:30pm A F T E R S C H O O l C H ILD CARE for 8 & 10 yr-old s M E 3:1 56 :15 pm . Rollingwood/Westlake Hills area Transportation and references re­ quired 3 2 7 -5 3 5 4 FREE RO O M /BO ARD in N W Austin home for responsible female nonsmoker in exchange for 10 hours per week childcare for 3 and 6 yr old girls. Hours flexible Opportunity for income for working extra hours Must have reliable car and character references C all Carol 302-1954. A F T E R SC H O O L SITTER needed M-F Dependable transportation 3 6 p m and references required 3 2 7 -7 0 0 4 after 6pm BABYSITTER N E E D E D after school for sweet 9-yr-old boy 3,4,or5 days/week. 3 :3 0 (or earlier)- 6:30. hove fun, home- Responsibilities worf, W est light housekeeping Austin. 1 Smins. from campus Stort­ ing $7/hr. Diane Burr W -823- 7 5 9 9 H -3 2 8 - 0 9 0 5 BABYSITTER N E E D ED for Saturday evenings with periodic overnights Must have own transportation and references. Call Joyce or M ark at 5 0 2 -0 3 6 5 PART-TIME N A N N Y for 3-yr-old girl & 5-yr-old boy 2 days/week 1- 5:30pm. References, car, great atti­ Su­ tude a must. O ff Parmer Lane zanne 836 -2 0 1 4. AFTER S C H O O L HELP Have fun while also caring for 2 great kids. Must be patient, energet­ ic and interested in being around kids. 2 children ages 9 & 13. Hrs: 2 :4 5 6 :4 5 p m Approx 15/hrs week. Must have own reliable transportation with seatbelts For more information call S haron Lutz © w -4 7 1-8064; or home before 10pm 502 -2 3 3 2. M O T H E R 'S HELPER 7am -1 lam M E Care for toddler in home-Barton Creek West. Salary based on e>rae- rience. References required Call Leslie 4 7 2 -1 2 3 4 Ext.21 N E E D SITTER for 2 elementary-age girls. Thursday nights. Westlake area. Reliable transportation neces­ sary. Non-smoker only 329 -9 1 0 3. W O R K IN G M O M need after-school care from 3pm-7-pm. M E W ill pro­ vide car and kids (two) 499 -6 2 2 5. RESPONSIBLE, RELIABLE, nurturing student with dependable transporta­ tion for afterschool core. Monday- Friday 2:30-5 30, need references, non-smoker. Call 990 -6 5 0 4. N A N N Y NEEDED. One child, nice home near campus. Free apartment, plus food & car allowance in exchange for childcare for 7-yr-old afterschool in home. Ken 4 7 4 4 1 5 6 . M O T H E R .OF 5 school-age girls needs afterschool help. M-T 3-7pm. Must have car. Tarrytown. Great, easy going family. $//hr+plus gas 453 -3 1 3 0, 9 7 0 -7 9 0 5 N E E D D A Y C A R E 4-5 aft./week, 3- 6pm, 2 children, central location, must drive 2 references, $8/hr 476 -4 7 4 0. L O O K IN G FOR experienced sitter to care for two youna children/ME afternoons. Must be responsible, have excellent driving record, and references 15hrs/wk $ 500/m o 2 36-2597. N E S shares its success with every 900 < D o m u f k - ? l l e r o P O S S E Y EAST cook +some bar. 2 9 0 0 Duval 477-2111 Sandwich & burger Start $ 7 .5 0 + AFTER S C H O O L babysitter needed in Westlake area for 6 and 8 year old 3:30-7:00 Must have car and Salary com­ good driving record. mensurate with experience. 728- 7 7 5 6 A F T E R N O O N CH ILD care needed for 10 year old girl Pick up after school, 2 :45 to 6:00, M o n d a y thru Friday, Terrytown area Please call Pat at 473 -2 6 6 1 (work); 4 5 9 -0 9 9 3 (home). N O W H IRIN G I Brown-Karhan Healthcare is looking for motivated individuals who would enjoy a unique employment experience in a comfortable environment while _ i of the are field. Currently hiring Mental Health W orkers to provide direct assistance for brain/spinal cord injured residents. Hiring relief, 7o-3p, 3p-1 I p & overnights. Health benefits, g a s re­ imbursement, PTO. Fax resume to: Brown-Karhan Attn: Jason Gilley (512) 85 8-46 27, or email to: jgilley-brown- karhan@worldnet att net FRATERNITIES • S O R O R IT IE S • CLU BS • ST U D EN T G R O U P S Earn $ 1 ,0 0 0-$ 2,00 0 this semester with the easy C IS three hour fundraising event. N o sales required. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so call todayl Contact Dan W o lm a n at C IS, (800) 922-5579, or visit campusfundraiser.com. P A R K IN G G A R A G E C A S H IE R S The State Preservation Board seeks reliable, customer-oriented individuals to assist in the operation of a new Capitol Visitors Parking G a ra ge Full or part-time positions available, M ondoyE riday schedule Accept payment from parking g a ­ rage customers and verify validations on a computer-based accounting system. Performs cash balancing functions and assists garage M a nager in preparing daily bank deposit. Salary: $ 7.43/hr. (8.01/hr beginning Sept. 1, 1999), plus state benefits. High school graduate or the equivalent and some experience handling cash. Previous experience on a computer- based cash receiving system highly desirable. These are security sensitive positions A thorough background check will be conducted before an offer of employment is made. The Preservation Board offers excellent working conditions and benefits which include paid health insurance, holidays, vacation, and retirement plan. Submit state application to: State Preservation Board Human Resources Dept., P.O. Box 1 3 2 8 6 (Sam Houston Building), Austin, TX 7 8 7 1 1. (512)463-5495. e o e B E G IN N IN G P O SIT IO N for hard- Hard w ood flooring company. workers only apply. Earn a s you leam. 2 5 7 -2 0 3 0 HOLIDAY INN N W PLAZA Busy N W Austin Hotel has following Positions available • A M / P M Bell Person/Van Driver • A M / P M Guest/ Service Reps •PM Line Cook •PM Restaurant Server P/T Soles/Catering Clerical Support Flexible Hours. W ill work with school schedule Fax resume to: 3 4 6 -6 1 9 0 or apply ot 8901 Business Park Drive (183/M opac) $8-9.00. NEAR UT, Legol services firm, Rex hours, will train. Fresh soph, early grad levels Invited PT/FT. C a ll paralegal courier 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 ; typist/clerical 4 74 -2 2 1 6; bookkeeping trainee 4 7 4 -0 8 5 3. O r apply online! www.LawyersAidService.com/jobs CUSTO M HO ME BUILDER seeks part-time help answering phones, filing & genereal office work. Basic computer skills a must. 10-15 hours a week, maybe more. $8/hr . Please fax resume to 502-0007 or email at tcch. i nc@world net. att. net. JO BS FOR the Fall. Call Todayl Customer Service To $ 10/hr Legal Secretaries - To $ 13/hr Accounting Clks - To $ 1 1 /hr Collectors - To $9/hr W ord Processor - To $ 10/hr Data Entry O ps. - To $9/hr Office Clerks - To $ 8.5 0/ hr Must be able to work at least one full day M-F 8a-5p, have stable work history & have good computer skills Free Computer Training I Call for 3 4 2 -8 6 6 2 for appt www .officespec. com Part-time, M-F. FILE CLERK 12- 5pm. Must know alphabet, answer phones, & have valia drivers license. $6/hr to start. W est Lake area Ask for M arsha 327 -8 9 3 2. Psycholo PART-TIME SECRETARY. gist office. Flexible Schedule. Sim­ ple computer billing program. Tele­ phone. FaxResume to 4 5 2 -3 3 9 3 . Office H AVERTY'S FURNITURE Clerk Customer service skills re­ quired. Able to handle multi-phone lines and basic office functions. Computer experience required. A p ­ ply in person. 5 5 5 5 Airport Blvd RECEPTIONIST IM M EDIATE opening in a challenging, fun, environment. Must be positive, energetic, dependable and able to learn new skills. Skills preferred include: Multi-line phone system, W o rd processing, Typing 5 0 wpm. Non-smoking office. Please send resume, salary history, and updated references to: Lauren Brent, The County Line Inc., 3 3 4 5 Bee C a ve Rd., Ste 150, Austin, TX 7 8 7 4 6 , Fax 5 1 2 -3 2 7 -2 62 2 , E-mail: rosumes©countyline.com "ADMINISTRATIVE CLERK needed for large downtown law firm. Position involves filing, photocopying, special projects and other duties as needed High school diploma and computer skills ore necessary. Flexible schedule. Pay is $ 8 per hour. To arrange on interview, send resume to P.O. Box 1 148 Austin, TX, 7 8 7 6 7 attention: A.L Mosel, or via e-mail to almOctw.com. CLERICAL HELP Wanted. Administrative assistant needed for local homebuilder. Salary negotiable, will work around student's schedule. Needed M-F mornings, afternoons flexible Computer know ledge a n d /o r clerical experience helpful. C all 328-6361 or fax resume 3 2 8 -9 3 9 0 G EN ERAL O FFIC E assistant, 10- 15hrs/wk. $9/hr. Bilingual prefer­ red. Flexible hours. 3 8 5 -6 2 3 2 Check out our Electronic Edition of the Daily Texan creatl. http://stumedia.tsp.utexas.edu/webtexan/today/ ,p'ei Issues 0,v s'“ or, f e j l a t e s t N e * s BacK la ,e s t Classified Ads CV‘ I HE D A ILY IE X A N Friday, August 20, 1999 Page 11 Julian Lennon steps clear of dad’s path University W ire Julian Lennon is carving out his own niche in the music business. He is the founder of Music From A n o th e r R o o m Reco rd s, he h a n ­ dles production and tours and he d o esn 't rely on his family nam e for fame and fortune. And along th e w a y h e ' s d i s c o v e r e d the importance of taking time to enjoy his friends and family. The son of the late John Lennon, Julian made his mark in the music world with 1984's Valotte and the hit " M u c h T o o L a t e for G o o d ­ b y es." U n fortu n ately, his record label and m a n a g e m e n t w rea k ed h a v o c on his c a re e r , and forced him into a seven-year "v aca tio n " from the music business. W h e n a m u s ic a l artist takes a leave of absence it can be the kiss of death. H o w e v e r, Lennon took the '90s to resurrect his personal life and learn how to enjoy living. "I spent seven years out of the b u s i n e s s ," s a id L e n n o n fro m a New York City tour stop. "I just got very frustrated with the music industry, and felt used and abused, with no respect as an artist. It actually took me five years to get out of contracts and m an ag e­ ment. I certainly didn't want any new work to be owned by t h e m __ I felt like I'd given them enough." The time off gave Lennon time BARG AIN MATINEES A l l SHOW S BEFORE 6PM MIDNIGHT 5 E V E R Y FR ID AY 6 S A T U R D A Y B R A C K E T E D [ ] T IM E S O N L Y CHRONICLE IQDC ^ ■ S h o w i n g o n ly H ig h la n d 1Q 8. G r e a t H ills HIGHLAND 10 ,7 & - J 3 5 P L M l d d k F is k v ille R D ____________ 454-9562 Deep Blue Sea P ’0 4C ’ 2 04 10 7 25 9 S I 71 ‘ 7 ; 7 - Iron Gian) -PG 10 20 12 20 2 20 4 20 7 0 0 9 00 Dolby «lake Placid R I ; 00 I ’5 3.20 5 3C 7 30 3 40 50 Sterec «Star Wars Episode l-PG-13 10:00 ! 0 0 4:00 7 00 : 0 0 0 5 *reJ Universal Soidier 2 -8 10-45 12 50 3 10 5 20 7 25 9 45 12flOTHX/SDD»,» MrdtKlownWoce-PG-13 1 0 10 1 2 40 2 00 5 25 7 45!OGO .. Mystery Men -fG-13 10:301 20 4.00 7:15 M S 12:30 HJ/DTS Lena Amurran Pie -8 10 15 12 30 2 40 4 50 7.40 100512 ! 5 SWec Ifconws Crown Affair -8 1050 ! 30 4 25 7 25 10 10THX/SDOS Dak* Mounting -PG-13 11:00 1 40 4:15 7 10 9 40 12:20 Stereo GREAT HILLS 8 ,7 is i US 183 & G reat Hills Trail MKkey Hue Eyes PG-l 3 I ! 55 2:20 4 55 7 20 9:50 THX DigHal 7 9 4 - 8 0 7 6 ! Inspector G adge t PG I 15 3 15 5 15 7 15 9 1 5 Dolby T a r ia n G 12 5 0 3 :1 0 5 2 0 D ígita1 Ttx Six* Sense PG-13 12:10 2 40 5 10 7.40 10 15 Ddby Ey es W id e Shut- R 12 2 0 3 4 0 7 0 0 1 0 10 Digital Bowtinger PG-13 1 00 3 30 5 50 8 10 10 30 Dolby Detroit Ro ck C ity - R 7 3 0 9 4 0 Digital fcodiing Mrs Tingle PG-13 1:05 3 20 5 35 7.50 10-05THX Dicta BARTON CREEK SQUARE 14 , 7 & Botan Geek Square Moil jMopoc & 360: 306 9 '9 0 M y ste ry M e n PG-13 1015 1 1C4 10735 iC 15Diatc Thomas Crown Affair -R 10 45 1 45 4 4 5 7 45 10 30 Diqital t ie r Witch Project -8 11 00 1 30 4 10 7:05 9 30 11 30 Dalo Big Daddy PG-13 1D20 12 30 3 00 5 3 0 8 00 1 0 30 Dana Inspector Gadget PG 10G012 102 304 50 7 10 9 20 '4 0 D-oito Haunting PC- 1311 1 0 ! 30 4 20 7 10 10 10 Dig > i Eyes Wide Shut 8 11 40 3 20 7 0 0 1D 2 0 D igta Drop Deod Gorgeous - PG 13 »loir Witch Protect -8 1000 ! 2 30 3 0 0 5 X 6 10’ 0 3C 2 a -a Iron Giant -PG 10 45 1 00 3 20 5 40 7 55 10 20 D o tal ' 101 404 105 50 9 2 0 ! ' 4 D aw Sixth Sense PG-13 11:30 2:10 5.00 8:00 I D X D g t a ' Sixth Sense PG I3 1 0 3 0 ! 10 4 00 7 00 9 50 1200 Digital lending Mrs. Tingle PG 3 11 GO 1 50 4 ^ )7 2 0 9 5 0 11 55 Dígito ... . No Midnight Showing on Sunaay Visit our website1^ www.aenerakinema.com to r e - e v a l u a t e his life and the m u sic in d u s tr y . While living in Italy, he spent his time antiquing, sailing and cooking. I had to look my life over from a pers onal and prof ess i onal p e r ­ spective," Lennon explained. "For 10 years my life had just been the m u s i c i n d u s t r y , and I had little time for myself. Leaving it really w a s a b l e s s i n g in d i s g u i s e , and a l l o w e d me the t i me to b r e a t h e and live again. " Whi l e enj o y i ng the s l ow- paced I talian lifestyle, Le n n o n realized t h a t t h e r e a r e m o r e i m p o r t a n t t h i n g s in l if e t h a n t h e m u s i c industry. "I m e a n m u s i c is i m p o r t a n t , " Lennon said, "but there are things in life that are equally important I decided that when I did my music agai n that the onl y way to do it would be by holding the reins, so I could use my t i me mo r e wi s el y. But I tell you, if it came down to friendship and family vs. m u s i c __ I'd stop the music." ~ B y W endy Kale, Colorado Daily l a n d m a r k * $ t e n e 21«t 1 Cuidilupt « (512) 472-Fll M F R E E P A R K IN G IN T H E D O B IE C t m r . r vote for your favorite foreign language pirns a t ________ www. La ndmarkTheatres. com W W H W T ‘DICITALLT It U Á S T t ñ íD tOUND * ^ " a n n i v e r s a r y ] . R E -R E L E A S E “A m usical masterpiece.” M ich a e l H e a to n , S . F . E X A M I N E R STOP SENSE MAKIN I , A Palm Pictures Release Daily; (3:00, 5:10) 7:30, 9:45 Saturday & Sunday Matinee: (1:0 “SCARY AS HELL.” -Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT Daily- (3:00, 520) 7:40,10:00,12:00am Saturday & Sunday Matinee: (12:40) ________ Daily (230,4:50) 7:10, 930; Sat ¿Tsun M a ü r i^ (íílQ ) D aily (5:00) 9 :1 5,12:00am HANDS on a HARD BODY | D aily (2:45) 7:00; Sat & Sun Matinee: (12:00) S H O W T IM E S V A L ID W, AUG. 20-THURSDAY, AUG. 26 B a rga in S h o w tim e s in I I °n Hylton’ a k a- Eel<-A-Mouse, «exes and struts Wednesday at the Flamingo. Photo by Robert Whrteman/DAILY TEXAN STAFF s h a d e s a n d l a u n c h e d i nto " B a d G i r l s , " a f unk n u m b e r so thick it ma d e J a m e s B r o w n ' s pants seem col d and hi s b a g s e e m old. T h e b a n d w a s h o t t e r t h a n e n g i n e b l o c k s f o r t h i s g e n r e - c r o s s i n g nu mbe r . Just as St e vi e W o n d e r ' s "B oo gi e on Re ggae W o m a n " was a t i g h t f u nk o d e to r e g g a e , t he Eekettes' " B a d Gi rl s " was an evil reggae ode to the funk. E ek - A- M o u s e may not truly be t h e " t a l l e s t e n t e r t a i n e r i n t h e wo r l d, " (though to look at hi m he must be close). But, pl ay i ng over 200 shows a year, he ma y well lay a l eg i ti mat e c l a i m to the title of t h e h a r d e s t w o r k i n g m a n in s h o w - b u s i n e s s . " And y ou know, if the E e k e t t e s e ve r d r o p a s ol ó joint, Eek - A- Mouse mi ght just be t h e n e w " G o d f a t h e r o f S o u l . " Y o u n e v e r k n o w . It c o u l d h a p ­ pen. Bidi -bi di-bi ng-bong. STUDENT NIGHTS L A N D M A R K ' S A T D O B IE THEATRE C O M E T O LANDMARK'S D O B IE T H E A T R E A U G U S T 2 0 — 24 FO R F R E E M I D N I G H T S C R E E N IN G S OF Trainspotting Maríachí NO ADMISSION WITHOUT YOUR STUDENT ID! L A N D M A R K S D O B I E T H E A T R E IS L O C A T E D A T ¿ 1 S T í. G U A D A L U P E I N T H E D O B I E M A L L S E A T I N G I S E X T R E M E L Y L I M I T E D . A R R I V E E A R L Y ! B O O K I N G S S U R I P C T T O r u A M / ' r With Eek-A-Mouse in the house, a creature was definitely stirring Robert Whiteman Daily Texan Staff W it n e s s i n g a p e r f o r m a n c e by r e g g a e v e t e r a n E e k - A - M o u s e is by no m e a n s a p a s s iv e a c tiv ity . At over 6-and-a-half feet tall, the self-proclaimed "tallest entertain­ er in the w o r l d " a llo w s n e ith e r interested o b se rv a tio n n o r quiet a d m i r a t i o n fro m his a u d i e n c e s . W e d n e s d a y n i g h t th e M o u s e , who plays over 200 shows a year, d e m a n d e d c o m p l e t e an d v o c a l in v o lv e m e n t from the less-th an- cap a city cro w d before he would even set one of his alligator-boot­ ed feet onto the Flamingo C an ti­ n a's stage. " If y o u w a n t the M o u se th en y o u m u s t call h im , ca ll h i m . .. " g u ita rist A d o n i c h a n te d as Eék- A -M ouse's Mouseketeers, (Adoni, 5 -strin g b assist F la p p e r, rid d e m m a n S e a n o n d r u m s a n d C a u ­ c a s ia n C la u d e on the k ey s) laid d o w n a w ick e d o n e -d r o p i n t r o ­ d uctory groove. The crow d, after a s l i g h t w a r m u p , r e s p o n d e d appropriately. E ek-A-M ouse! E e k -A -M ou se !" they s c re am ed to w a rd s the back of the club where they knew the M o u s e w a s w a i t i n g . " M o u s e y ! M o u se y ! M o u s e y !" th e y c o n t i n ­ ued. O n c e a s u i t a b l e f r e n z y h a d been in d u c e d Eek e m e r g e d fo l­ l o w e d c l o s e l y b y t h e g o l d e n - th ro a te d , eb ony E ekettes, (T ene- sha Boyd and Dharplu e Johnson) his back up vocalists. E ek-A -M ouse is one of the o rig ­ inators and greatest practitioners of sin g-jay," a style of Jam aican s i n g i n g t h a t c o m b i n e s DJ s ty l e t o a s t i n g w ith s in g in g , (th in k I- R o y m e e t s T o o t s , o r L u c i a n o m e e t s S i z z l a if th o s e g u y s a r e before your time). Eek's p articu ­ lar sty l e i n c o r p o r a t e s his d e e p , d e e p b a rito n e with nim b ly d e x ­ terous scat-style phrasing. Eek opened the show, d ressed as th e u l t i m a t e r e g g a e c o w b o y and singin g a wicked version of " W a Do D em ," his b reakthrough hit from 1981. Eek and the band later reprised this num ber as they b r o u g h t an e n t h u s i a s t i c f e m a le audience m em b e r up on stage to d a n c e w ith the M ou se. Eek and the Eekettes illustrated the song's m a n tr a of " S h e too sh o rt and a' he too tall, with su p e rb tim ing and comic brilliance as the oddly m a t c h e d c o u p l e s lin k e d a c r o s s the stage. live music EEK-A-MOUSE When: Wednesday, August 18 Played: Flamingo Cantina Opened: Bigga Rhythm The M o u se se e m e d to be in a m o o d to h a v e his sp irits lifted, and fully tw o-thirds of the songs p l a y e d w e r e a b o u t h is s e c o n d f a v o r i t e p a s s - t i m e , m a r i j u a n a consumption. "I do n ot s m o k e to get h ig h ," he toasted w ry ly in betw een the s o n g s " G a n j a S m u g g l e r " a n d "Sensee P a rty ." ...H ow bout smoking some of m y tim e / I and I is alw ays g r e a t / I o n ly s m o k e to m e d i t a t e , " he r e p e a t e d b e f o r e la u n c h in g in to h is t r a d e m a r k " B i d i - b i d i - b o n g - bing" vocal acrobatics. When Eek and the band left the s ta g e s o m e t im e a fter 2 a.m . the c r o w d r e s p o n d e d as they k new h e w o u l d w a n t . S e v e r a l b r a v e crow d m em bers grabbed a m icro­ p h o n e a n d th e a u d i e n c e through a rep eat of their "E e k -A - a n d M o u s e ! E e k - A - M o u s e ! " M o u s e y ! M o u s e y ! M o u s e y ! " le d chants. When the band returned, they d eliv ered a h a u n ti n g v ersio n of the o u tla w b a lla d " G u n Shot A C r y . " The M o u s e fo llo w e d this c l a s s i c w i t h s o m e c a ll a n d response scat th at g rew p ro g re s­ s i v e l y m o r e c o m p l e x u n til n ot e v e n the w o n d e r f u l l y t a l e n t e d Eekettes could follow the b o un c­ i n g b a s s o f h is v o i c e . E e k - A - M o u s e t h e n le f t th e s t a g e fo r good and as the cro w d began to le ave The M ou sek e te ers and the Eekettes g av e them one last s u r­ prise. The Eekettes donned sexy black JbTun More Games • More Variety * More Fun! New Games: Japan’s # ! Soccer Carné Virtua Stryker 2; Hydro Thunder Power Stone; L.A. Machine Gun; NBA Showtime; Southpark Pinball 2 2 0 0 G u a d a lu p e Always open till 4am § M O I | e § n* SOiLINaPl A GREAT AUSTIN COM BINATION RETURNS! Clove a n d Im port C iga re tte s Tobacco Hi S m o k in g A ccessories 4 7 9 - P I P E I m p o r t s C a s h P a i d D a i ly t o r C D s a n d V in y l - U s e d - H a r d t o F in d C D s 477-1812 You know the names -- come see the stores! 2418 G U A D A L U P E Nothing on T.V.? Channel Surf O n l i n e . austm.citysearch.com 12 T h e D a i l y T e x a n FHDAY, AUGUST 20,1989 ENTERTAINMENT Entertainment Editor Peter Debruge H ugh G ran t fondly grin s o v er n ew est film peterd@mail.utexas.edu in some Hollywood actresses." A fter assem bling the cast and crew, Grant's next obstacle was por­ traying the New York Mafioso in the proper light, and for that he looked no further than close friend Mike Newell, who directed Grant in Four W eddings. W ith N ew ell's advice, Grant wined and dined some of the New York locals in his research, along with Hurley. "They really loved Elizabeth," he says of his go rg eou s significant o th e r/c o -p ro d u c e r/E s té e Lauder spokesperson. "She use to sit on their laps and prepare m anicures. She even got a couple of quite senior mobsters down to the spa for the new Estée Lauder buff," laughs. he _ of danger and humor." With Mickey Blue Eyes in the can, Grant now hopes to do more than simple rewrites or polishes on scripts. "I w ould like to do one of my own," he says. "I have an idea, and the studio wants me to write it, and it even has a part for me. The prob­ lem is I have this in clin atio n to direct it and I think that's too many hats." With work just wrapped on Woody Allen's next film ("It should be funny. Broad comedy, going back to his early stu ff."), Grant looks to focus his immediate attention to the foreign dis­ tribution of M ickey Blue Eyes, pointing to his soon-to-be-famous mafia slang trans­ lation scene. "W h at I never foresaw w as a prob ­ lem with the international a u d ie n c e ," he says. " T r y i n g to work out the German tran sla tio n of 'fu gged- ah b ou d it,' that has r e a l l y b e e n hell!" W hatev­ their er m e t h o d s , they surely paid off for M ickey Blue Eyes. Sharp, funny and con­ sistently wacky, the Mafioso with rom antic fluff for a comedy that stays a step ahead of expectations. just enough film mixes intrigue Grant finds humor in even the m ost serious m obster environm ents and sus­ pects the laughs will play fair ly well r e g a r d ­ less of h i a c t o r s ' previous ! p e r f o r ­ mances. s I Barry Johnson Daily Texan Staff “I've never stripped and massaged my buttocks on camera before," says Hugh G rant about his latest role, adding, "I th ou ght I was kind of pushing the envelope!" America's favorite bumbling Eng­ lish gentleman is referring to Michael Felgate, his flashy on-screen persona in the new romantic comedy Mickey Blue Eyes. The film , w hich opens today, shows a surprisingly goofy side of Grant, best known for his subdued turns in such films as Four Weddings and a Funeral and Notting Hill. Mickey, which Grant co-produced with Eliza­ beth Hurley as part of their newly- launched Simian Films, has plenty of Grant's trademark English charm but offers a refreshing comedic naivete that results when M ichael Felgate finds himself married to the mob, so to speak, throu gh fian cee G ina (played by Jeanne Tripplehom). While Grant takes pride in his per­ formance in Mickey, he also has great expectations for the overall success of the film. Extreme M easures, Simian Films' first endeavor into film produc­ ing, d idn't fare so well at the box office, but Grant hopes to change the tide with Mickey's infallible combina­ tion of romance and intrigue. He per­ sonally oversaw much of the produc­ tion, even down to script rewrites, and hired most of the cast and crew along with Hurley. Most pivotal, of course, was the lead role, which initially was­ n't meant for an Englishman at all. "The lead character [was originally] a kind of neurotic, very anal lawyer living in New York," says Grant. "It made me laugh, so we had a read- through and got all sorts of people together. Janeane Garofalo played Gina, John Mahoney played Frank [G ina's M afioso father], and they were all excellent — but I was crap!" With that in mind, Grant decided ONE WEDDING AND COUNTLESS FUNERALS. The ever-charming Hugh Grant marries into the mob, literally, in Mickey Blue Eyes. 44_ _ [Caan] decided that I was an English wussy!. . . I think it’s disrespectful talking [like that] about the producer that plucked him from his pld people’s home.” — Hugh Grant on not getting any respect from co-star James Caan to add an English twist to Michael Felgate, providing all sorts of fish- out-of-water comic possibilities when Michael, a successful art auctioneer, is forced to buddy up with G ina's father Frank (played by James Caan). Grant didn't exactly set out on a mis­ sion befo re playin g M ichael, but nonetheless knew a bit about his part. "[Auctioneers] go so fast it's unbe­ lievable," he says. "There's no way I could do that so I made up my own auctioneering style, w hich I think will now be widely copied." The casting of C aan, how ever, turned out to be quite a feat for Grant. "H e's fabulous. He's a complete icon of mine and he hates me saying that, but I was very very excited that he [signed on] to the film," Grant says of the esteemed Godfather co-star. For thé role of Michael's romantic interest, Gina, Grant looked no far­ ther than the South. "I think the most important charac­ teristic for a girl in a romantic come­ dy is that she has to be natu rally charming, and it's a rarer characteris­ tic than one would think," Grant says about his casting criteria. "There are a lot of beautiful actresses but they are quite hard and spend too much time reading Hollywood Reporter, so they get the charm knocked out of them. My theory is that they should be Southern girls." Grant may have a point. His win­ ning streak of rom antic comedies wouldn't have been possible without Four Weddings' Andie Macdowell or N ottin g H ill's Julia Roberts, both Southern belles. "Southern girls have that charm," Grant adds. He must have seen just that in Tripplehom. "Jeanne has that sort of naughty, silly, real-life quality rather than those jaded eyes you find "Even w h e n ] [ m o b - I s t e r s ] I are dead s e r i o u s , like in The G o d fa th er, they're still funny with that incredi­ ble m ixture G E T T H E Re g a l TREATMENT [ M edium P o p c o r n ] M edium S o f t Dr in k W i t h e v e r y p a i d a d m i s s i o n Ml th ro u g h S e p te m b e r 1 6 ,19 9 9 l o c a t io n I A l l N e w ! 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