ENTERTAINMENT 8 ■ ■ STATE & LOCAL F ic ti Director film sch< video-dc *f ZLÍ - Í 066L X i OSVd "IB 1 M H Q T13QNVA 1SV3 LZ9Z iS B M H in o s o n i o N i H s n a n d o a o i w I wad 6 8 / t £ / 8 0 wad Older crowd The Travis County Commissioners Court voted unanimously to prohibit all minors from using Hippie Hollow Park. Conine the Destroyer Florida Marlin Jeff Conine hits the game-winning homer as the National League tops the American 3-2. T h e Da il y T e x a n Vol. 94, No. 176 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Wednesday, July 12, 1995 250 Man claims great-grandfather, outlaw Jesse James, died at 104 REYNOLDS CUSHMAN____________ Daily Texan Staff Jesse James rode the prairies of Texas in the 1870s, 1880s and 1890s, and, in fact, every decade until the 1950s, according to a claimed descendant of the Old West's most infamous outlaw. If you believe Jesse James IV, a 40-year-old carpenter from outside Leander, great-grand- pa Jesse James lived to a ripe age of 104 and died in Granbury, Texas. But the newest Jesse Jam es legend is rid­ dled with inconsistencies. The author of The Many Faces o f Jesse James, Phil Steele, said the new Jesse James story is a h oax. A lso the p re sid e n t o f the Ja m es- \ ounger Gang, a historical group, Steele said this new Jesse James ancestor surfaced several years ago and was completely discredited by historians. "H e's a character," Steele said. "It's good folklore, but that is all." M ost historians contend James died of a bullet in the head on April 3, 1882, at the age of 35. Living under the alias of Thomas Howard in St. Jo se p h , M o., the b an d it w as shot through a window by friend and fellow out­ law Bob Ford for offers of reward money. Jam es w as stand ing on a chair, unarmed, straightening a picture of a racehorse when Ford delivered the mortal wound. Je s s e Ja m e s ' on ly know n son, Je sse E. James, was 7 years old in 1882 and was in the house on the day of his father's death. He wrote a book in the late 1890s detailing his father's life and 1882 death. Je sse Ja m es IV pu sh ed a new legend T u esd ay at a new s conference: that Jesse James shot a man named Charlie Bigelow on April 3, 1882. James allegedly then took the body to his home, splashed chicken blood on his wife's dress and got friend Bob Ford to step up and say he shot Jesse James. Ford was believed to be the sole assassin of Jam es in 1882, but it w as n ev er know n w h eth er he collected any o f the vario u s rewards on James' head. The outlaw is said to have used James' death to shake authorities off his trail and make his escape to Texas. H isto rian s chu ckle ab ou t such claim s, which recur every so many years surrounding the lives of many gunmen of the 19th century, including Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Billy the Kid and John Wilkes Booth. What gives the specter of respectability to this new claim is that former Texas Attorney General Waggoner Carr is representing Jesse James IV in his quest to search for supposed buried treasure left by his ancestor, J. Frank Dalton, near Waco in 1917 or 1918. While pro­ ducing no m aterial evidence at the Austin news conference on Tuesday, both Carr and James promised proof would be forthcoming. A document circulated at the news conference detailing the 1951 autopsy of a man named J. Frank Dalton was all the proof offered. Physical marks on Dalton resembling ones Jesse Jam es was known to have when alive were pointed to in the 1951 report from the Hood County sheriff. Steele said that J. Frank Dalton, who tried to pose as James, was shown to be actually an 84-year-old man, not 104, and was born in Lansing, Kan. "Dalton tried to go see Jesse James' daugh­ ter and she w ouldn't have anything to do with him," Steele said. S te e le said m ore than 1,000 p e o p le observed Jesse James body over two days in St. Joseph, w here he died, and not one of them ever said the body was not that of Jesse James. S teele p o in ts to th e exh u m ation o f the Kearney, Mo., grave of Jesse James later this month to answer all questions about who was buried there in 1882. "D N A does not lie," Steele said. "It's the most perfect science ever developed, I under­ stand." If the DNA test results show that the DNA of known descendants of Jesse James matches that of the the man in the grave, this new claimant will "have to go find somebody else then" to claim famous ancestry from. "I honestly think it is hogwash," said Bill O'Neal, author of the Encyclopedia o f Western Gunfighters. "I just can't accept any of those stories. ... The burden of proof has to be on the claimants." WIRED Serbs overrun U.N. ‘safe area’ Associated Press S A R A JE V O , B o s n ia -H e rz e g o v in a — Shredding the W est's ragged lines of peace­ keeping, Bosnian Serb forces overran a U.N.- d e s ig n a te d “ s a fe a r e a " T u e s d a y . T h e y shrugged off a desperate NATO attempt to stop them w ith airstrik es and sent peace­ keepers and thousands of refugees fleeing. T h e c a p tu re o f th e e a s te rn to w n of Srebrenica represented a direct assault on a cornerstone of the United N ation's tottering p eace e ffo rts . P re se rv in g the sa fe areas, w h ich in c lu d e S a r a je v o , h a s b e e n U .N . peacekeepers' principal m ission since they were established in 1993 as enclaves where civilians were to be spared from attack. As Serb forces rolled in, Dutch peacekeep­ ers abandoned a defensive line on the city's southern limits and were trying to take up a b lo ck in g p o sitio n at P o to cari, ab o u t tw o m iles north of Srebren ica. Potocari is the main base for the area's 400 peacekeepers. "The Bosnian Serb army is now in control of S re b re n ic a ," said A lexan d er Ivanko, a U.N. spokesman in the Bosnian capital. "W h a t w e are see in g now is the m ost unfortunate scenario; massive, uncontrolled exodus of people of Srebrenica," said U.N. aid spokesman Kris Janowski. Thousands surrounded the Potocari camp. "T hey are not hostile," Janowski said. "They are just desperate people fleeing." Dutch and A m erican jets struck at least two Bosnian Serb tanks south of the town in an attempt to protect the Dutch U.N. troops and the 30,000 people in the town, Ivanko said. NATO said the airstrike was called at the request of United Nations forces. A spokesman for Dutch Defense M inister Jo r is V o o rh o e v e s a id he had a sk ed th e United N ations to call off a planned third N A TO airstrik e a fter Bosnian Serb fo rces threatened to k ill 30 Dutch p eacek eep ers they had seized in their six-day advance on the town. “ I think this is too little and too la te ," Bosnian Prime M inister Haris Silajdzic said o f th e a ir a tta c k s . “ They (th e U n ite d Nations) waited actually until the Serb ter­ ro rists started e n terin g the tow n. I d o n 't know what is the use of it now ." The efficacy of the U.N. mission has been in q u estion for som e tim e and T u esd a y 's events threw the question into higher relief. "This raises the question as to whether the U.N. force will be able to stay in Bosnia and perform their hum anitarian m ission ," U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry said in an interview on Cable News Network. "W h en they are attacked by military forces it obvi­ ou sly p re ju d ice s th e ir ab ility to p erfo rm their m ission." There was no reliable word on the num ber of casualties among the civilian population in Srebrenica and its environs since the Serb offensive was launched. René Carreno and Ted Jones from BJ Electric unrolled spools of wire on Tuesday morning. They were using the wire for differ- ent smoke detection devices for the new fire alarms in the 12 women’s co-ops throughout campus. STEPHANIE FRIEDMAN/Daily Texan Staff Advocates for homeless blast city ordinance SHOLNN FREEMAN Q U O ! KIM C D E C I I A M Daily Texan Staff __________ Inad equ ate social services, including shelters, w ill render a proposed ordinance to end transient living in public places ineffective in dealing with the problem , advocates for the hom eless said Tuesday. "I d on't think there is a place for them, and there are lots and lots of people who don't want to be homeless, but they're stuck," said Laura Hilgart, the developm ent director for the Center for Battered Women. "W ithout some services they're going to remain hom eless." At any time there are more than 5,500 hom eless peo­ ple in the local area, according to a report from Austin s o c ia l s e r v ic e a g e n c ie s s u b m itte d to th e U .S. D epartm ent of Housing and Urban Developm ent. On any given night, the study stated, local sh elters can accom m odate only 417 of the city's homeless. A hearing on the proposed encam pm ent ordinance, pursued by Mayor Bruce Todd, is set for 5:30 p.m. dur­ ing the City Council meeting Thursday. The council is expected to approve the ordinance, which would pro­ hibit anyone from "living" in places of public access, in a few weeks. Todd has said the bottom line is to return public places to the taxpayers who have com plained about feeling unsafe in parks, on sidewalks and by aggressive panhandling. M itch W ey n an d , d ir e c to r o f Y o u th O p tio n s , an agency that pro\ ides shelter and services to youth, said that the city has a com mitment to providing resources, but not enough. As police start to enforce the ordinance we 11 see more kids arrested. They’re going to be get­ ting hassled on the street because there's not a place to go to." He also said many of them avoid programs because of rules like curfews and mandatory contact with their parents. Hilgart helped write the hom elessness report, which on M onday helped a coalitio n , led by the Salvation Army, w in a $2.29 m illion federal housing grant for com prehensive services for 870 hom eless people over three years. Advocates said the city should com m it to meet the needs of the hom eless w hile the encam p m ent o rd i­ nance is being examined. W e need to hav e a so lu tio n ra th er than m erely penalizing them for being poor," said Hunter Morris, executive director of H elping O ur Brothers Out, Inc., which is partially funded by the city. M orris said a detoxification center would help. He also said he will support the ordinance, but "a lot of other things need to be done to keep people from urinating and doing in-your-face panhandling." Lucy Buck, a sso c ia te d ire c to r o f the D ow n tow n M anagem ent O rganization, said the DM O board has yet to take an official position on the proposed ordi­ nance, but she said "th e general feeling is the pu blic space belongs to the public and it is m ade un usable with private use." B u ck , w h o se o r g a n iz a tio n fu n d s d o w n to w n improvement projects, differentiated between hom eless and transients. To the hom eless "A ustin is a very car­ ing city with a lot of services," she said. "T ran sien ts a lso h a v e m a d e a life s ty le c h o ic e and c a n n o t b e helped." The p ro p o se d o rd in a n c e m ak es liv in g in p u b lic areas, including streets, parks, parking lots and alleys unlawful and punishable by a fine of up to $500. M orris said the proposed ordinance probably w ill not make the difficult lives of the hom eless even m ore so. "Being put in an air-conditioned jail and getting fed three meals a day doesn't make living on the street any harder," he said. "There are so many needs they have that the money used to keep them in jail could go to ." Cabbies help get petition signatures fo r low-cost housing ^ INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY MC 900 Jesus Foot Weather: Holding the tools of my trade in my hand: the weather station number and a joke that I’ve planned Highs in the 90s, Die same every day. SE winds won’t blow us away. Trapped In this base­ ment with hoodlum s and creeps, I write the weather while the dty steeps Index: Around Cam pus........11 Classifieds................... 9 Com ics.......................11 Editorials..................... 2 Entertainment.............. 8 S ports.......................... 12 State & Local............... 5 University.................... 4 World & Nation............ 3 PETER LIM D P T E D I I M Daily Texan Staff Roger G riego spends most of his time at the Auditorium Shores work com er waiting to be hired as a day laborer, but his routine was broken Tuesday when he registered to vote for the first time. Homeless for eight months, Griego said he was a professional featherweight boxer with a 20-2 record before he succumbed to alcoholism. Griego participated in the voter-registration drive organized by House the Homeless, Inc. "I believe in the ... cause," Gnego said. The mobilization was a reaction to Austin's proposed no­ camping ordinance. House the Homeless Inc. aims to collect 25,000 signatures by the Nov. 7 city elections from people regis­ tered to vote in Austin. The group is petitioning the city for a low-cost housing program that provides job training and health care, said Richard Troxell, the organization's president. This will be an alternative to the city's no-camping ordinance, which is an illegitimate response to a legitimate concern to get the homeless off the parks and streets, Troxell said. "Their plan is only going to give [the homeless] tickets of up to $500 for sleep­ ing in public and put them in jail with taxpayers' money, only to be returned to the streets without jobs or housing." Austin Mayor Bruce Todd has advocated the no-camping ordinance as a way to "return public parks and sidewalks to the taxpayers that pay for them." Much of the drive was focused on mobilizing Austin cab dri­ vers to collect the signatures. Nelda Wells-Spears, the Travis County tax assessor-collector, was on hand to deputize cab dri­ vers as voter registrars. Cab drivers are a good source of feedback on com plaints about the city because of the casual and often spontaneous con­ v e rsa tio n s they hav e w ith th e ir cu sto m e rs, said C a rlo s Velasquez, president of Roy's Taxi Company, which took part in the drive. We all need to get involved with the homeless. W e're all human beings, we all face tragedies and need to help each other out," Velasquez said. "H om eless people have com e in here looking for a job smelling like a brewery, and I tell them, 'Get rid of the alcohol and drugs and I'll give you a job.'" Velasquez said 11 of his cab drivers were deputized as voter registrars 1 uesday. He said he has been a registrar for 15 years. The main goal today was circulate blank petitions through the cabbies and not to gather signatures," Troxell said of the first-day efforts. Tuesday's drive was the first event organized to push an alternative program to the no-camping ordinance, and Troxell said he will continue the drive on a monthly basis. Richard Troxell, president of House The Homeless, discusses getting petitions signed with Billy Maserang, a Roy’s Taxi driver. ANDY ROGERS/Daily Texan Staff 2 T h e D a il y T exan WDNESDOT, JULY 12,1995 EDITORIALS T h e Da il y T e x a n Editorial Board M ark M urray A ssociate Editor Robert Rogers Editor Chris Parry A ssociate Editor Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publication's Board of Operating Trustees. VIEWPOINT South Mall It's difficult for UT students not to notice the deterioration of the South Mall as they walk across campus. The mall, home to some of the most impressive buildings on campus, is currently adorned with several corroded statues and a ravaged lawn. The condition of the statues surrounding the South Mall degrades the former national and state leaders they represent. Woodrow W ilson’s statue, for instance, now resembles more a deformed comic book character than the founder of the League of Nations and the 28th president. In addition, the statues of George Washington and Jeffer­ son Davis, with their chipped-off bronze, do these men little justice. The South Mall's lawn is also in poor condition. It's now covered with weeds and numerous barren patches. UT students should have a beautiful South Mall. With the amount of money they will be paying in the fall — especially with the upcom­ ing S2-per-hour tuition and the $10-per-hour general fee in creases__ UT students deserve at least an attractive campus to admire as they walk to their expensive classes. To improvt the South Mall s conditions, students should encourage the UT administration to touch up these statues and replace the lawn with new grass. The University's beauty must be restored. — M ark Murray Hypocrisy The Vatican is issuing some confusing messages. Pope John Paul II issued a proclamation on Monday advocating gender equali­ ty. As far as personal rights are concerned," he said, "there is an urgent need to achieve real equality in every area." Every area7 The same message curiously defends Catholicism 's ban on female priests. As leader of the world s largest religion, the pope influences a bil­ lion followers throughout the world. It is encouraging to see such a prominent figure supporting gender equality. But the pope's message is tainted with hypocrisy. He encourages his followers to respect wom en's rights, while condoning his church's policy that excludes women from leadership positions — including bishops, priesthoods and even the papacy. The pope has more direct control over bis church's policies than the lives of his followers. If he was serious about equality, he would eliminate discrimination within the Catholic Church. — Chris Parry No camping In proposing to ban camping on public land, the Austin City Coun­ cil has taken a welcome step to preserve public spaces. The pro­ posed ordinance would not affect private owners who wish to let peoplt camp on their land, nor would it reduce the large number of shelter beds available for the truly needy. What the proposal would do, however, is preserve the public nature of Austin s parks. This land belongs to the city. It is not the property of the interlopers who set up tents and turn the public's land into their private campground. It does not belong to those who would abuse the parks' sanctuary to commit crime or harass citizens for money. Austin's large number of beautiful parks distinguishes it from other cities. Our parks should be a refuge for parents and children. These havens must not be captured by abusive panhandlers who extort money from frightened pedestrians. Like many other cities, New York City once had a beautiful park that was safe for all residents. But the police and city failed to protect it, and now Central Park belongs to the criminals. Don't let the same thing happen in Austin. — Robert Rogers Legal services needed in democracy The United States is a great nation because its M arc Vockell TEXAN COLUMNIST laws protect all, regardless of race or income. Right? already ration i c -x n r r -n -if I m f p H ___ : i . ’m m r -w ^ m h p ^ July 19 will be Save Legal Services Day around the country. It is shocking that in the nation that prides itself as the leader in democracy, the prin­ ciple of justice for all is in jeopardy. Legal Services refers to 323 Legal Aid organiza­ tions around the United States that provide access to the courts for those who can't afford it. Legal Services' clients include low-income tenants fac­ ing homelessness due to unscrupulous landlords, battered women breaking the cycle of abuse and disabled adults acquiring public benefits needed for survival. Legal Services is a rare animal: an extremely efficient use of tax dollars. Only 3 percent of its funding goes to administration. It costs an aver­ age of 14 cents per person each month in taxes. And although its attorneys work for far less pay than their peers in firms, they're gifted, dedicated professionals. They settle 92 percent of the cases out of court, and they win 80 percent of the cases they try. While this efficiency makes Legal Services an exceptional creature, the current budget debate makes it an endangered species. Proposed cuts are as drastic as 35 percent. W hile there is an urgent need to eradicate the federal deficit, axing Legal Services would only harm the public trea­ sury. For example, when a battered woman can't escape her crisis through Legal Services, the gov­ ernment may foot the expensive bill of a murder trial and imprisonment of the husband. Not to mention the welfare payments to mothers who flee relationships without the ability to pursue child support. And if we don't have enough problems with the hom eless now, conservative Justice O'Connor points out, "M any people are pushed over the brink into homelessness every year for no other reason than their inability to afford basic legal services." Transcending the financial argument for Legal Services is the fact that our democracy is a fraud if m illions of citizens are denied access to the courts and therefore to protection of the law. The eminent Judge Learned Hand said, "If we are to keep our democracy, there must be one commandment. Thou shall not ration justice." U nfortunately, we justice. Although the Legal Aid Society of Central Texas served 8,043 clients in 1994, it had to turn away 7 4,326. Yet Congress is willing to deny access to the legal system to even more people because it does- n t have the courage to cut entitlements, subsidies and tax breaks o f powerful special interest groups. Conservatives and the religious right argue that Legal Services is dispensable because it pro­ vides divorces to battered women. Lourdes Flo­ res of the Legal Aid Society of Central Texas counters, The Christian-Right Coalition says we're breaking up the home, but in a home where there's, domestic violence, the hom e's already broken. We re just trying to prevent the children and spouses from further abuse." Fortunately, we still have freedom of speech, a tool that could save our concept of justice. On July 19, Save Legal Services Day will take place out­ side the Travis County Courthouse, 1000 Guadalupe St., at 11:30 a.m. Go to the rally if you believe the protection of all under the law is worth 14 cents a month or more. Vockell is a second-year law student. Unabomber has point about computers 1 can't condone the actions of the B ry M iller TEXAN COLUMNIST com puters has been "reducing sup­ port staff" and "dow nsizing." ■ r a n t m n r l n n o ~ C i_1 l-L r» ^ ^ . Unabomber. Something just ain't right about bombs and carnage. But 1 11 say this much: That fellow has raised a few mighty fine points. other things, Am ong the Unabomber is concerned that in the direction computers are taking us, each man will become an island. Everything we need, we'll get by merely tapping a few keys at home. W e'll all be isolated, and as a result, we'll be pretty darned lonely. I don't think computers are going to shut people completely off from one another like inmates in solitary. But we'll know a lot fewer people. One item that should be of great concern is the idea of a "virtual w orkplace." Instead of having a common workplace, everyone will do all their work at home and all their communicating by telephones or e-mail. I must note that I have occasionally caught myself referring to others by their e-mail addresses. That isn't a good thing when the address is "Butt-head" or "Easy." Especially when "E a sy " was my girlfriend. But I digress. any H ardly com m unications would be in person. That's bad. Many friendships have been started in a common workplace. Even a few romances too. (At times, I wish it w eren't so.) Eliminating a common workplace strips us of these bonds — and they aren't easily replaced. The diversity we experience in the common workplace is hard to repro­ duce elsewhere. True, people who work together typically have much in common, but everywhere else, it seem s, we group ourselves even more so on how much we are alike. The "virtual workplace" is evil incarnate. A nice thing about having a common workplace is that when it's 5 p.m., you can leave your work behind — on a desk, on an assembly line or in a dumpster. You don't have to haul the damned stuff home. But with a virtual workplace, it's sit­ ting there. It's a temptation. And when you do some of that work to get ahead, your boss will notice, and soon, everyone will be working dur­ ing those hours we used to hold sacred. With everyone working late into the night in their own homes — well, I don't want to think about it. It sounds almost like law school. 1 remember when some bozo was touting computers by saying they would make working a lot easier and would enable us to have more free time. As my boyhood com pan­ ion-in-evil Jeff Parks would say, "W hat a crock!" The last time I checked, the biggest advantage of transactions Computers are evil outside the workplace too. It seems kids today are more willing to play baseball on a com puter than on a diam ond. Meanwhile, banks are deciding that should be by all m achine and that anyone who wants a human teller should pay a hefty charge." Libraries — long a crossroads for young and old, rich and poor, black and white, Baptist and atheist — are being inform ation replaced by searches at the touch of a key. "inconvenience And instead of wanting to make telephone calls, "E asy" seemed con­ tent with e-mail messages since she didn t have to be home to receive them. Well, "easy" come and "easy" go. What a crock! Miller is a second-year law stu­ dent. FIRING LINE / / / A / ‘Texan’ story mistaken The story in The Texan about the acquisi­ tion of the Winedale Historical Center by the Center for American History ("Collec­ tion added to center," July 10) contains sev­ eral quotations from me that are in an erro­ neous context. Your reporter asked me what I thought about the Center for American History becom ing an autonom ous unit. The response you quoted referred to the Center for American History as a whole and not to Winedale. My course on the history of the University (HIS 350L) that will be given this fall will be taught at the Center for Am erican History and will use historical materials from that Center. Winedale will have no part in the course as such unless one of the students elects to do a term paper about its distinguished and impor­ tant history. Lewis L. Gould Professor o f history Don’t second-guess Fed I would like to comment about the July 10 Viewpoint Wasted money, "in which C h ris Parry correctly argues that the d efense spending spurs the econom y argum ent" is a weak theory at best. It's nice to see an opinion that is well-considered on a knee-jerk issue. However, in the very next article Mark M urray show s that the economic wisdom of The Texan is variable. The quarter-point cut in the Fed funds was what the economy needed — now. Six m onths ago, with the econom y building steam towards a huge boom, dis­ aster in the bond market and inflation (Do you rem em ber the '70s?), such a cut would justify inquiry into Alan Greenspan's sani­ ty. Greenspan, although nominated by a You -S g u g f/ P i/T THAT A * / Scvignw t h o WÍMM6A) A rU . C H / L P / ? F t S / / f ; * r>-> president I personally loathe, knows his job pretty well. I think that you would be well- advised to read up on currency trading (like Greenspan's efforts to stabilize the dollar, which plays strongly in the Fed funds decisions), bonds markets and the Federal Reserve System before criticizing him. Essentially, Murray, I would have con­ sidered a moment longer before second- guessing public figures, especially ones with decisions to be made as complicated and subtle as the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee. I would also like to apologize that this letter took the form of an attack on your writing — my original intent was more to make you think twice. I grow tired of read­ ing Firing Lines that look like hate mail directed toward the editorial staff, and you deserve credit for your rare, restrained responses. Carl Ford Chem ical engineering senior Smokey isn’t necessary business in Chechnya. In Friday s news story, "Cow boys own Smokey," Michael Perrin claims "It would be a real blow not only to the Cowboys' tradition, but also the University of Texas football tradition if the cannon were not fired." His fears are unfounded, at least after 1996 rolls around. There will be plen­ ty of smoke and bangs when Texans bring their concealed weapons to the festivities and show their true spirit. Smokey will look like a pop gun in comparison. Charles Soto U T alumnus Stay out of Chechnya The column by Rizwan Jaka, "W estern nations mustn't leave Chechnya to Russia's M ercies" (July 11), is a poor rationale for the United States to get involved in that quagmire. His own religio-eentrism blinds him to the fact that the United States has no First, I would throw back his charge that one of the reasons we don't help Chechnya is because they are Muslims. I would retort that the only reason he cares about them is solely because they are M uslim! Just because we helped out Kuwait doesn't mean that the United States is on a "H elp the poor M uslims" campaign! Does not Islam have one of the largest follow ings of all religions? If M uslims think Chechnya should be helped, they should either put up or shut up. Iran, 1 urkey, Bangladesh and even Saudi Arabia have enough soldiers to send there. Second, I am curious about what you mean by the Chechnyans fighting for "self- determination. Does "self-determ ination" mean that Chechnyans could operate as a center for the Russian Mafia? I suSgest that the columnist widen his scope and realize that there are genocides, freedom fighters and heroic stands against tyranny going on every day around the world. The United States should not be asked to become involved in areas where it has no interests, nor should it be chided in such a racist manner for taking care of itself and its citizens' welfare first. John Vandenberg Middle Eastern studies senior Flag-burning free speech It seems that Paul Lawton ("N ational sym bol deserves protection," Ju ly 10) would sooner burn the U.S. Constitution than the Stars and Stripes. Personally, I am morally opposed to any amendment that would strip away my rights. Just because a mode o f speech offends some people is no reason to clutter our Constitution. I think the majority of the people hate the Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers as much as I do. Should I give my senator a call? It is not the flag that is great — it is our rights. I he right to say something, no m at­ ter how controversial, is the most basic of these rights. T he flag-burning amendment diminishes the stature of Old Glory by removing the rights that it stands for. Damion Schubert Advertising senior Firing Lin e letters can be brought to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue or mailed to P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. They also to e-m ailed FEXAN@utxvms.cc.utexas.edu. can be Firing L in e letters must be fewer than 250 words. UT students should include their major and classification, and all writers must present identifi­ cation or include a phone number. The Texan reserves the right to edit letters. TUESDAY'S DOW JONES: 4,680.60 POWN 21.70 /VOLUME: 376,440,300 WORLD & NATION T h e D a ily T e x a n WEDNESDAY, JULY 12 ,18 9 5 3 Vietnam seeks to improve ties U Americans don’t understand why the Vietnamese H A N O I, V ietnam — So now th a t V iet­ nam ese and A m ericans are officially friends, w hat do they really know about each other?' Associated Press want to be friends. They don’t understand that we ju st want to forget about war.” — Tien, a Vietnamese language teacher ence of things V ietnam ese. The few th o u ­ san d w ho tric k le in on to u rs or b u sin e ss each year are often surprised to see private shops and tea-stalls jam m ing the sidew alks of a socialist country. Then, disarm ed by the general atmosphere of openness, they are equally surprised if offi­ cials search their bags at the airport and pull out letters or photos from Vietnamese — illus­ trating that laissez-faire economics and secret police can and do coexist. The biggest surprise for m ost A m ericans is how little overt hostility they encounter. I didn t expect that I would be embraced so w arm ly and so quickly. I didn't feel like an o u ts id e r as I m ig h t h av e e x p e c te d ," said Jason Schwarz, a junior at Hamilton College in Clinton, N.Y., w ho is w orking as a sum ­ mer intern at a U.S. consulting firm in Hanoi. Few V ietnam ese speak m ore than a few p h rase s of E nglish, b u t m ost h igh school grad u ates know President C linton's name, the nam es of m ajor A m erican cities and a sm attering of U.S. history. That s m ore than can be said in reverse. O n the other hand, said Chuck Searcy of the V ietnam V eterans of A m erica F ounda­ tion, m any Vietnamese naively assum e "that all A m ericans are rich and that everything about America is the best in the w orld." COFFEE BREAK " I'm p ro u d of Am erica, b u t I h ave to be m o d e st so m e tim e s w ith m y V ie tn a m e se friends, and say w e're not perfect. They don't even w ant to hear it. They w ant to say, 'Ameri­ ca No. 1/ " said Searcy, w ho adm inisters the foundation's humanitarian projects in Hanoi. "T he tw o people d o n 't u n d e rsta n d each o th er at all," said a V ietnam ese la n g u ag e teacher nam ed Tien w hose stu d en ts include b o th V ie tn a m e s e le a r n in g E n g lis h a n d A m ericans learning Vietnamese. "A m e rica n s d o n 't u n d e r s ta n d w h y th e V ietnam ese w ant to be friends. They d o n 't u n d e r s ta n d th a t w e ju s t w a n t to f o rg e t about w ar," he said. V ie tn a m e se , m e a n w h ile , r e n t p ir a te d v id e o s of H o lly w o o d a c tio n m o v ie s a n d "think all A m ericans are gangsters. They see Rcirnbo and think A m ericans like w ar." That d id n 't m ake Rambo any less p o p u lar on th e H a n o i v id e o c irc u it. C o m m u n is t Party restrictions on cultural im p o rts h ave been sharply relaxed in the past few years, revealing a huge appetite for U.S. p o p cul­ ture am ong the post-w ar generation. N ot much. V ietnam ese im ages of the U nited States are a jum ble of w ar m em ories and pop cul­ ture, B-52s and Metallica, the My Lai m as­ sacre and M ickey Mouse. Especially in the north, their conclusions are based on scarce personal contact w ith A mericans or things American. Take N g u y en X uan P huong, a v e te ra n w ho drives a taxi. H e's looking forw ard to being able to driv e A m erican cars because "A m erican products are very durable." How does he know ? "W e used to seize American supplies d u r­ ing the w ar and they w ere very good. Some­ tim es w e'd find a box of b ullets th a t had been buried u n d erg ro u n d a long tim e and w e could still use them ." E x cep t fo r v e te r a n s a n d a h a n d fu l of diplom ats, A m ericans have even less experi- Heart troubles Y eltsin Associated Press MOSCOW — P resid en t Boris Y eltsin's hospitalization for heart trouble has raised new doubts about his health and new ques­ tions about w heth er he will decide to run for re-election next sum m er. Yeltsin w as expected to rem ain several days for observation in the Central Clinical Hospital, w here he w as rushed early Tues­ d a y for w h a t th e K re m lin d e s c rib e d as "acute ischemic heart disease." s p o k e s m a n P r e s id e n tia l S e rg e i M edvedev said "n o th in g serious" had h ap ­ pened, how ever, and that Yeltsin rem ained active and in control. C hest pains he suf­ fered T u esd a y m o rn in g h a d gone aw ay, M edvedev said. Y eltsin's recurrent health problem s feed speculation about his political future. W ith presidential elections just 11 m onths away, it is increasingly unclear w hether the m an w ho has d om inated Russian politics in its chaotic post-Soviet period will seek a sec­ ond five-year term . M eanwhile, Prim e M inister Viktor C her­ nom yrdin, w ho w ould replace Yeltsin if the president w ere unable to serve, has risen in stature in recent weeks, em erging as a real le ad ersh ip alte rn a tiv e to the ailing p re si­ d e n t for th e first tim e since Y eltsin took pow er in 1991. But officials w e re q u ic k to stre ss th a t Yeltsin, 64, rem ains firm ly in charge. D e p u ty P r im e M in i s te r S e r g e i S hakh rai said he sp o k e to the p re sid e n t by p h o n e T u esd a y an d " n o th in g th re a t­ ens Boris Y eltsin 's h e a lth ." S hakhrai told th e In te rfa x n e w s a g e n c y , " T h e p r e s i­ d e n t is n o t tu r n i n g o v e r th e r e in s o f p o w er to a n y o n e ." The sym p tom s described by the K rem ­ lin in d ic a te h e p r o b a b ly h a s a fo rm of h e a rt d ise a se c a lle d u n s ta b le a n g in a , a com m on affliction in w hich n arrow ing of a rte rie s d im in ish e s th e b lood s u p p ly to the heart. It typically is treated w ith d rugs or w ith procedures that w iden narrow ed passages in arteries. In severe cases, bypass surgery is used to install new blood vessels. Y eltsin's doctors h ave consistently said he is fit for office, d esp ite back and heart ailm ents and fluctuating blood-pressure. M any critics, how ever, are skeptical of K rem lin h ea lth rep o rts, given the Soviet p re c e d e n t of h id in g the failing health of elderly leaders. O ur president d o esn 't govern Russia," said opposition law m aker Viktor Ilyukhin, a Com m unist. NEWS BRIEFS Smith to stand trial for deaths ■ UNION, S.C. — S usan Sm ith w as ruled com p eten t to stand trial T ues­ d a y fo r d r o w n in g h e r tw o y o u n g sons despite w arn in g s from a p sy ch i­ atrist th at she is suicidal and m ight try to sabotage h er ow n defense. Jury selection, w hich began M onday and could take u p to tw o weeks, pro ­ ceeded slow ly, w ith a w om an and a man surviving individual questioning of the first 13 panelists. The second d a y of the trial began w ith C ircuit Ju d g e W illiam H o w ard asking Smith a series of questions. D id sh e u n d e r s ta n d th e c h a rg e s against her? " M u rd e r," she said in a quiet but clear voice. A nd the possible punishm ent? "The death penalty," she replied. ' 'Is there any tim e that you have not been able to u n d e rs ta n d y o u r a tto r ­ neys and they to understan d you as a r e s u lt of y o u r m e n ta l c o n d itio n ? " H ow ard asked. "N o, your honor," she answ ered. D efense law y ers D avid Bruck and Judy Clarke said Sm ith had cooperat­ ed w ith them. But they told the judge they shared the concerns of the state's chief psychiatrist, Dr. D onald M organ, w h o testified M o n d a y th a t S m ith is sane but suicidal and capable of sabo­ taging her defense. The jud ge said the an ti-d ep ressa n t m e d ica tio n S m ith tak es seem s to be helping her. " I n th a t se n se , M s. S m ith is r e n ­ dered m ore rational and better able to u n d e r s ta n d th e se p ro c e e d in g s ," he said. "I find that Ms. Sm ith is com pe­ te n t to s ta n d tria l a n d can p ro c e e d w ith this m atter." S m ith , 23, c o u ld g e t th e d e a th pen a lty if convicted of the tw o m u r­ d er charges in the d ea th s last fall of s o n s M ic h a e l, 3, a n d A le x , 14 m onths. She claim ed a black carjacker took them but later confessed to letting her c a r ro ll in to a la k e w ith th e b o y s inside. Prosecutors plan to argue she u se d m u r d e r to g e t rid of h e r so n s w h e n th e y g o t in th e w ay of a love affair. Smith has a history of m ental p rob­ lems, first surfacing w hen she w as 13. She underw ent counseling for molesta­ tion by her stepfather, her father com ­ mitted suicide w hen she was 6 and she has attem pted to kill herself. H o w a rd su m m o n e d 105 p o te n tia l ju ro rs for q u e s tio n in g an d has kep t their nam es secret, identifying them in court by num ber only. Jurors screened in career criminal trial ■ SANTA ROSA, Calif. — The first of u p to 8,500 p o te n tia l ju ro rs w ere c a lle d T u e s d a y fo r th e tria l of th e m an accu sed of k illin g Polly K laas, th e 1 2 - y e a r- o ld w h o s e a b d u c tio n from a slu m b e r p a rty s p u r re d p as- sage of "three s trik e s" law s a ro u n d the country. P ro s e c u to rs sa id th e p a in s ta k in g a r r a n g e m e n ts , w h ic h in c lu d e fo u r m o n th s set aside for selecting ju ro rs from a pool e ig h t tim e s th e size of th at in the O.J. Sim pson trial, w ere to be ex pected in a d e a th p en a lty case th a t h as been p u b lic iz e d across the nation. K laas w as ta k e n a t k n ife p o in t on O ct. 1, 1993, fro m h e r h o m e in Petalum a, touching off a huge search that ended w ith Richard Allen D avis' a r r e s t tw o m o n th s la te r . H e g a v e police inform ation that led them to her body. The 41-year-old career crim inal told police he kidnapped Klaas for no p ar­ tic u la r rea so n an d stra n g le d h e r to cover his tracks. O f 95 p o te n tia l ju ro rs b ro u g h t in T uesday m orning, 49 w ere kept to fill o u t q u e s tio n n a ir e s . T h e re s t w e re released w h en they offered reaso n s w hy jury d u ty w o u ld be a h ardship. The trial is expected to last four to six months. It m ight not be necessary to call all 8,500 potential jurors. S uperior C ourt Judge Lawrence A ntolini plans to call a b o u t 150 p e o p le p e r d a y u n til he obtains a pool of 360 potential jurors. From that, 12 ju ro rs and nin e a lte r­ nates will be selected. By co n tra st, a b o u t 1,000 p o te n tia l ju ro rs w ere in itially su m m o n ed last year for the Sim pson trial. Antolini has said he doesn 't w ant to sequester the jury b u t w ants to avoid problem s plaguing the Sim pson case, such as the d an ger of running out of jurors. He has banned new s cam eras for all but five m inutes each m orning. "N othing like the O.J. Sim pson case is going to happen in m y courtroom ," A ntolini said M onday. D a v is ' lo n g c r im in a l r e c o rd includes arm ed k id n a p p in g and sex­ ual assau lt ch arges inv o lv in g at least four w om en. — Compiled from Associated Press reports ~ * * g W * - • ,* y V " Ismael Garcia filled a sack with coffee at a processing plant near San Salvador Monday. Six Latin American nations— Colombia, Brazil, Costa Rica, Honduras, El Salvador and N icaragua— agreed Monday to cut exports by 13 percent over the next year to bolster prices, which have fallen 25 percent in the last month. Together the countries produce half of the world’s coffee. ASSOC IATED PRESS Republicans outline sweeping cuts Clinton threatens veto if measure decreases funding f o r social programs Associated Press disadvantaged public school students. H ead Start funds w ould be reduced by $200 million and m oney for the C orporation for Public Broadcasting w ould be cut by $200 million. Goals 2000, a program to strengthen school standards, w ould be abolished. ed at the m iddle class. His different blueprint increasingly has draw n him into conflict with Republicans. W A SH IN G TO N — S parking an in stan t veto threat from President Clinton, Republi­ cans o u tlin e d sw e e p in g cuts T u e sd a y in H ead Start and dozens of social program s, including elimination of a $1 billion account that helps the poor pay their utility bills. 1 he president w o n 't allow C ongress to make our children, our schools, our workers and environm ent suffer in order to fund tax cuts for the w ealthy," White House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said in issuing the latest in a string of threats against GOP bills designed to balance the budget by 2002. Panetta spo k e to rep o rters at the W hite H ouse before H ouse budget cutters formally convened a drafting session on their latest bill, a m easure to cut $9.3 billion from pro­ gram s ru n by th e d e p a rtm e n ts of L abor, Health and H um an Services and Education. One of the largest cutbacks — $1.2 billion would fall on a program designed to help T he N a tio n a l In stitu te s of H e a lth , th e n a tio n 's p r e e m in e n t fac ility fo r d is e a s e research, received a rare reprieve from GOP budget cutters. It is in line for an increase of 5.7 percent, or $200 million more than Clinton proposed, and funding for breast and cervical cancer screening w ould go up by 25 percent. But N IH w as the exception rather than the rule as Republicans pressed their goal of bal­ an c in g th e b u d g e t in se v e n y e a rs w h ile financing a $240 billion tax cut. Precise details of the tax m easure remain to be w orked out, but are certain to include a variety of business b re a k s a n d c u ts for fa m ilie s w ith u p to $200,000 in income. Clinton favors a 10-year plan to balance the budget, with a far smaller tax cut to be target­ — — r > On M onday, for example, House Republi­ cans advanced legislation to cut billions of dollars in federal spending on environm ental protection, housing and space programs. The m easure, in addition to raising the cost of public housing to the people w ho live in it, w ould kill the president's cherished national voluntary service program — Americorps. That bill, too, showed on Clinton's veto list, as relayed by Panetta. I hese bills literally b lu d g e o n w o rk in g families in this country," he said. "Their cuts in education, job training, national service, housing an d environm ent are huge, deep, unacceptable cuts." Panetta spoke w ith reporters only a few hours after Clinton sat dow n w ith congres­ sional leaders at the White H ouse and said all sides should work on a com prom ise budget to stave off a "crisis in governm ent." u v i i o i o u i g w v c i i u i i c i u . . v v u Nobel Peace Prize laureate calls for Burma reconciliation Associated Press RANGOON, B urm a — P ro-dem ocracy leader A ung San Suu Kyi, her spirit u nbro­ ken after six years of detention, urged the generals ruling Burma T uesday to join her in national reconciliation talks. We have to choose b etw een d ia lo g u e an d u tte r d e v a s ta tio n ," th e N obel Peace Prize laureate said. S uu K y i's u n c o n d itio n a l re le a se from house arrest M onday has raised hopes that g o v ern m e n t refo rm w ill follow . She w as a r r e s te d in 1988 fo r le a d in g h u g e p r o ­ dem ocracy rallies that w ere crushed by the m ilitary w ith h u n d red s of deaths. Saying that detention "h a s not changed m y b a s ic o b je c tiv e s a t a l l," S u u K yi n o n e th e le ss sp o k e in c o n c ilia to ry to n e s clearly aim ed at encouraging talks w ith the governm ent. Looking slim m er b u t healthy, Suu Kyi, 50, met reporters and diplom ats at the lake­ side residence w here she had been u n d er house arrest. She w as flanked by top offi­ cials of the N ational League for Democracy, the party she helped found. She noted th at in his m essage M onday n o tify in g h e r of h e r re le a se , G en. T h a n Shw e w rote th at the gov ern m en t "w o u ld like me to help tow ard achieving peace and stability of the country." "O nce-bitter enem ies in South Africa are now w orking together for the betterm ent of the people. We can look forw ard to a sim i­ lar process," Suu Kyi said. " I h e r e is m ore in com m on betw een the authorities and w e of the dem ocratic forces in Burm a than existed betw een the black a n d w h ite p e o p le of S o u th A fric a," she added. Suu Kyi said she bore no hostility tow ard the governm ent for h er detention and has a lw a y s s o u g h t d ia lo g u e . "W e in te n d to help (the governm ent) in any w ay w e can to return pow er to the people," she said. Suu Kyi met w ith governm ent officials at least tw ice at h er h o u se last year, b u t no d etails h av e been disclosed. The g o v e rn ­ m ent has said it w ould not yield pow er to civilians until a new constitution is drafted, but has given no tim etable. S uu Kyi u rg e d th e re le a se of all p ro dem ocracy activists still in detention, and said: " I am happy to say that in spite of all they have undergone, the forces of dem oc­ racy remain strong and dedicated." At the end of the new s conference, about 300 onlookers crow ded ou tsid e Suu Kvi's house. But Rangoon w as quiet on a publu holiday m arking the start of Buddhist Lent. S u u Kyi c o m m a n d s w id e r e s p e c t in B urm a as the d a u g h te r of A ung San, the assassinated leader of Burm a's struggle for independence from Britain in the 1940s She w ould have com pleted six years of d eten ­ tion on July 19. By freeing her, authorities took a calcu­ lated risk, h a v in g p re v io u sly e x p re sse d fears she w ould incite m ass unrest. But her release is also likely to im prove relations with the m any foreign countries that h av e co n d e m n e d B u rm a 's h u m a n rig h ts record, and attract funds for nascent Westem- style economic reforms. Asian and W estern c o u n trie s h a v e e x p re s s e d h o p e th a t th e release signals the start of political reforms. Burm ese resistance groups said Tuesday their struggle continues. I he N a tio n a l C o u n cil of th e U n io n of B u rm a , a c o a litio n of s tu d e n ts , e th n ic m inorities and other groups, said the gov­ ernm ent had broken recent cease-fire pacts w ith ethnic m inority rebel groups and can­ not be trusted. D espite Suu Kyi's release, a council statem ent said, it is "h ig h ly neces­ sary for the people of Burma to go on w ith their m ass struggle." " T h e r e a re 40 m illio n p e o p le s till in prison. The p riso n is the w hole co u n try ," said 1 in M aung Win, vice chairm an of the Democratic Alliance of Burma. Since S uu Kyi s d e te n tio n , a u th o ritie s have suppressed dissent through m ass jail- ings and destroying party organizations. In th e |u n g le s, th e a rm y Has also se v e re ly w eakened the other major source of o pposi­ tio n - e th n ic m in o rity g u e r r illa g ro u p s f i g h t i n g f or g r e a te r a u t o n o m y sin c e Burmese independence in 1948. ASSOCIATED Burmese pro-dem ocracy leader San Suu Kyi met with reporters Rangoon house Tuesday. It was h news conference since her releas six years of house arrest Monday. 4 T h e D a i l y T e x a n WONESOAY, JUIY12,1896 UNIVERSITY Provisional students greet finals — warily C l i t a i m ELIZA SELIG D aily Te can S taff " — ----------------- T hough first su m m e r session classes en d W ednes­ day, a h o st of v eteran a n d p ro v isio n a l stu d e n ts alike still face th e long stretch u n til fall. T he U n iv e r s ity 's s u m m e r e n r o llm e n t, a t 16,399, looks sm all co m p ared to the m o re th a n 48,000 in the long sessions, b u t veteran, p ro v isio n al an d tran sien t s tu d e n ts still p o p u la te th e c a m p u s to ta k e su m m e r courses. E m ily M u s g ra v e , a b o ta n y se n io r, s a id s u m m e r school m oves "a lot faster." "It is easier to see th e light at th e e n d of the tu n ­ nel," M u sgrave said. The tw o su m m er sessions are six w eeks long, and som e classes ru n th ro u g h b oth sessions. W ithin this tim e, courses h av e to be condensed. It s i n te n s iv e a n d I 'm n o t le a r n i n g a n y t h in g because I h ave to fill m y brain w ith a lot of in fo rm a­ tion, said Beshka K andall, a pro v isio n al s tu d e n t this sum m er. A ltho ug h the tim e allo tted for a co u rse is shorter, te a c h e r s still w a n t th e ir s tu d e n ts to le a r n ju s t as m uch as in a reg u la r session. "I d o n 't w a n t to give stu d e n ts any less of a course," said Bruce Palka, a p ro fesso r of m athem atics. I th in k [ te a c h e rs ] fo c u s on w h a t a r e th e m o st im p o r ta n t a sp e c ts. T hey d e le te all th e th in g s th a t a r e n 't im p o rta n t," M usgrave said ab o u t co n d e n se d su m m er courses she has taken. H av in g the courses every d ay leads to a co n stan t d em an d for attention by stu d en ts in o rd er to keep up w ith their classes. "T he stu d e n t has to have the tim e an d en e rg y to learn in a condensed course," said S hearer Bower, an associate professor of history. John G ibler, a p h ilo so p h y senior, said, "If y o u 're d is c ip lin e d a n d y o u 'r e u p w ith [su m m e r sch o o l], then it's no problem ." A large p art of the stu d e n t p o p u la tio n that atten d s su m m er school consists of provisional students, w ho are try in g to becom e officially ad m itte d to the U n i­ v e rsity . The s tu d e n ts m u st tak e 12 h o u rs o v er the su m m er and m aintain a grade po in t average of 2.25 to re tu rn in the fall. W ith the first sum m er session ending, the stu d e n ts are at a m id p o in t in their trial courses. "I'v e been blow ing [sum m er school] off, and now I'v e com e to the realization that I c a n 't blow it off any longer," said G avin O 'H iggins a provisional student. K andall said, "I've been w orking h ard for the first session, b u t no t as h ard as I can. I really do w an t to to m e . UT is m y priority." S am L ev in e, a n o th e r p r o v is io n a l s tu d e n t, sa id , T here are a lot of people here w ho are try in g very NASHE to lobby on students’ tab ALEX KUNGELBERGER Daily Texan Staff Using m oney from both generat­ ed funds and student fe e accounts under the control of the Students' Association, SA P resident Sherry Boyles will travel to W ashington, D.C., in August to lobby members of C o n g ress o n b e h a lf of th e National Association erf Students in Higher Education. "I'm a classic example of a frus­ trated s tu d e n t le ad e r w ho feels helpless to w hat is happening in D C .," B oyles said. She said NASHE has plans for a paid office an d a staff m em b er w o rkin g in W ashington by January. D u rin g h e r v isit A ug. 13-17, Boyles will meet with all of the rep­ resentatives from Texas, as well as b o th Texas se n ato rs, to discu ss future cuts in financial aid. Along w ith the co-founder of NASHE, P aul A llvin of th e A rizona S tu­ d ents' Association, she w ill also discuss student assistance with the staffs of rele v an t com m ittees in both the Senate and the House. SA F in an c ial D ire c to r E lliot M cF add en sa id h e h a s alre a d y a p p ro v ed the expenses an d w ill sign the grant w hen it readies his desk. M cF ad d en a n d B oyles, w h o exercise joint control of the associa­ tion's sum m er budget, have ear­ marked $352 from the association's travel account for a round-trip air­ plane ticket as well as $1,800 from the association's checking account for a c h a rte r m e m b e rsh ip in NASHE. The organization receives its su p p o rt solely from the dues paid by its member universities. Dues for this y e a /s membership in NASHE are being taken from S A -g enerated fun d s, w h ich are kept in a perennial account adm in­ istrated separately from the student fee-supported account. Money for the generated account originates from fund-raisers and from the sale of codes for the asso­ ciation's copy machine to student organizations. The money for the ticket comes from the SA's regular account, generated by student fees. N A SH E is p la n n in g to ta rg e t financial aid cuts designated for fis­ cal year 19%. Boyles said the group started too late to affect the cuts planned for this year. This year's congressional budget calls for $10.5 billion in cuts in funding. M cFadden said NASHE w ants to be the group that represents stu­ dents to Congress and deals w ith issues such as financial aid an d grants. Rather than deal with issues that have a restricted impact on the college-age population, NASHE will focus on matters of more direct importance to students. "N A SH E h as com e a b o u t because people are upset and dis­ gusted with [the United States Stu­ d ents Association] because they deal w ith a lot of special interest group issues such as abortion, affir­ m a tiv e actio n a n d g u n control, w h ich d o n 't d irec tly affect s tu ­ dents," McFadden said. STEPHANIE FRIEDMAN/Daily Texan Staff Margaret Marrou, right, a provisional student, does her English assignment in the Undergraduate Library. h a r d , a n d th e y a r e n t m a k in g it. I fee l s o r r y fo r them ." For those provisional stu d e n ts w ho need help, the L earning Skills C enter offers s tu d y skills classes an d review sessions. "A m ajority of m y frien d s are tak in g a d v a n ta g e of the L earning Skills C enter," said O 'H ig g in s. E v e n t h o u g h m a n y s t u d e n t s a r e e n r o ll e d a n d locked in for su m m er school, th a t fact does not p re ­ clu d e occasional su m m e rtim e d ream in g . ' "M y te m p ta tio n is to le a v e th e c o u n t r y ," s a id G ibler, w ho has a tte n d e d su m m e r school every year since he has been e n ro lled at the U niversity. "E very su m m e r I pass u p am azin g o p p o rtu n itie s." Serial rapist strikes twice in Hyde Park U She’s spooked and yo u d o n 't k n o w w h en o r w h ere th e y 'll strik e next," said S enior Sgt. C h arles Johnson of the p o lice sex crim es u n it in a p re p a re d statem en t. KEVIN FITCHARD _________________ Daily Texan Staff T h e A u s tin P o lic e D e p a r t m e n t T u e s d a y a d d e d tw o m o re ra p e s to th e lis t of a tta c k s a ttrib u te d to a suspected serial rapist, brin g in g th e to ta l c o u n t to n in e . I n c lu d e d a r e tw o attacks in the H yde P ark area, just n o rth of the UT cam pus. The latest attack o ccurred S u n d ay w h en an u n id e n t i f i e d m a n b r o k e in to a H y d e P a rk house and sexually assau lted a w om an staying there. O ne of the cases new ly linked to the se r­ ial ra p ist took place on the 700 block of Keas- b e y S tre e t, j u s t o n e b lo c k f ro m th e h o u s e w h ere S u n d a y 's attack occurred — on the 4400 block of Eilers A venue. The su sp e c t's ea rliest attack d ates back to 1993. The w o m an w ho w as attack ed S u n d ay w as v is itin g fro m H o u sto n , sa id o n e of th e re s i­ d e n ts o f th e h o u s e w h e r e th e a s s a u lt to o k place. scared, just like the rest of us.” — Victim s friend a n d o f s l i g h t b u i l d . T h e d e p a r t m e n t a ls o b e lie v e s he m a y h a v e d a rk h air, a n d th a t he w atches his victim s before an attack to fam il­ iarize him self w ith th e ir habits. P o lice r e p o r te d th e y h a v e b e e n u n a b le to find a p a tte rn to the attacks. T hey kn o w th a t the ra p ist e n ters th ro u g h an o p en d o o r o r w in ­ d o w a n d h is v ic tim s h a v e b e e n w o m e n betw e en the ages of 20 an d 40. N eith er Johnson nor the officer in charge of th e i n v e s tig a tio n , S g t. Je ff H a m p to n , w a s av ailab le for fu rth e r co m m en t T uesday. The victim of S u n d a y 's a ssa u lt w en t back to H o u s to n , s a id th e r e s id e n t o f th e h o u s e in w hich she w as rap ed . S h e's shooken u p a n d scared, ju st like th e rest of us," he said. A n eig h b o r w ho chose to rem ain an o n y m o u s s a id h e k e e p s a g u n in h is h o u se . "I p r e tty m uch stay arm e d , he said. "P eo p le o u g h t to lock th eir do o rs ... T his is too nice a n e ig h b o r­ ho o d to h ave to deal w ith crim e." B esides the tw o rap es in the H y d e P ark area, r a p is t H e a d d e d t h a t s e v e r a l n e i g h b o r s o f th e w o m a n w h o w a s r a p e d h a v e b e c o m e m o re a l e r t to c r im e in t h e i r a r e a . P e o p le in th e xt n eig h b o rh o o d h av e ex c h an g e d p h o n e n u m b e rs N o v . 10, 1993: 3500 b lo c k o f G r e y s o n . a n d a r e p la n n in g to s t a r t a N e ig h b o r h o o d o th e r a tta c k s a t tr ib u te d to th e s e ria l include: . . . . "I w a s w o k e n u p a t 6:30 a t n ig h t by m y friend w ho w as staying w ith us," said the w it­ ness, w h o a s k e d n o t to be n a m e d . "S he w as scream ing." D rive. D rive A m an w as in th e liv in g ro o m , a n d w h e n tw o r e s id e n ts cam e in, h e ra n o u t th e f ro n t door, the w itn ess said. A c c o r d in g to a s ta te m e n t is s u e d b y th e d e p a rtm e n t, A u stin p o lice h a v e no su sp e c ts. The ra p ist is a w h ite m ale, 20 to 35 y ears old S treet ■ N ov. 14, 1993: 7300 block of W ood H ollow ■ Dec. 7, 1993, 2600 block of E nfield Road > Dec. 27, 1993: 2900 block of Barton Skyway ■ June 20, 1994: 3100 block of P ark er Lane ■ Jan. 10, 1995: 3200 block of K ing Street ■ F eb. 27, 1995: 600 b lo c k o f S o u th F irs t It is v ery d iffic u lt to fin d so m e o n e w h e n W atch p rogram . O n e w o m a n w h o h a s liv e d in a n e a r b y h o u se for 15 y ears sa id th a t before th e recen t a re a ra p e s sh e h a d n e v e r fe lt u n s a fe in th e n eig h b o rh o o d . N o w , I m m a k in g s u r e I k e e p m y d o o r locked," she said. But a n o th e r n e ig h b o r sa id the ra p e w as "a freak occurrence," an d he still feels safe in his house. UT seeks new dean for minority retention KEVIN FITCHARD___________ Daily Texan Staff The O ffice of th e D ean of S tu ­ d e n ts is n a rro w in g the list of c a n ­ d id a te s fo r an a s s is ta n t d e a n to o v e r s e e s t u d e n t r e t e n t i o n s e r ­ vices. W a n d a N e ls o n , th e p r e v io u s a s s is ta n t d e a n , le ft th e o ffic e in A pril to becom e d ire c to r of U n i­ v ersity O u trea ch . The office h e a d s stu d e n t re te n ­ tio n services, w hich in c lu d e p r o ­ g ram s b en e fitin g u n d e rre p re s e n t­ e d m in o r it ie s on c a m p u s , s a id D ean of S tu d e n ts S haron Justice. T h e o ffic e o v e r s e e s th e P R E ­ V IEW a n d SU C C E SS p r o g ra m s , w hich are d e sig n e d to keep black a n d H isp an ic s tu d e n ts at the U n i­ v ersity an d to see th a t they g r a d ­ u ate, N elson said. " T h is p r o g r a m m i n g w a s o ffe re d to th e se g ro u p s b e c a u s e th e ir r e te n tio n a n d g r a d u a tio n w as the lo w est at the U n iv ersity ," N elson said. Justice sa id th a t h er office d oes no t h av e a final list of ap p lica n ts, b u t sh e a d d e d in itia l in te rv ie w s w e r e c o n d u c te d o v e r th e t e l e ­ p h o n e M o n d a y , a n d face-to -face in te r v ie w s b e fo re a b o a r d c o m ­ p o se d of sta ff m e m b ers a n d s tu ­ d e n ts w ill be h eld nex t w eek. S tu d e n ts w ill be a p a r t of the i n t e r v i e w c o m m i t t e e ," J u s t ic e said. T hey w ill be allo w ed to ask q u e s t i o n s a n d th e n o f f e r th e i r o p in io n ab o u t the a p p lic a n ts, b u t Ju stic e w ill m a k e th e fin a l d e c i­ sion. W hen ask ed exactly h o w m uch in p u t th e s tu d e n ts w ill hav e, J u s­ tic e r e p l i e d , " I 'v e n e v e r h ir e d an y o n e in m y office w ho a m a jo r­ ity o f s t u d e n t s d i d n 't a p p r o v e of." Tw o in te rv ie w d a te s h a v e been a s s ig n e d , J u ly 17 a n d 20, b u t a th ird d a te is y e t to be set. E loy D e La G a rz a , d ir e c to r o f th e M in o rity In fo rm a tio n C e n te r a n d o n e o f th e s tu d e n ts on th e in te rv ie w co m m ittee, said he w as c o n c ern ed w ith h ow m uch a tte n ­ tio n th e n e w a s s is ta n t d e a n w ill p a y to r e c r u i t m e n t a s w e ll a s re te n tio n p ro g ra m s. T he re c ru itm e n t p ro g ra m s fall u n d e r th e O ffice of A d m issio n s, b u t J u s t i c e s a i d t h a t th e tw o offices w o rk closely to g e th er. De La G arza sa id he feels th a t b o th o ffic e s c o u ld be m o re e ffi­ c ie n t if th e tw o p r o g r a m s w e re m eshed. Th e Daily Texan Editor Managing Editor Permanent Staff Associate Managing Editors....................................................................................................T News Editor Associate News E ditors Robert Rogers , ^ Ke,vln Will‘am son ............................................................................................ News Assignments Editor Senior Ronnrtnro A s s o c M te ^ ito re ................................................................. Entertainment EditorZZZZZZZZZZ’......................................... MurraV Associate Entertainment Editor..................... Around Campus Editor Sports Editors : ” 1V Marcel Meyer Sebastian rac* Schultz Ger,k. 1EI,za?e ,h S oudw Molly Saint-James Scheibal. Reynolds Cushman. Sholnn Freem an ■ Chns ParrY a CoPP. Jonathan Blum ^ _ Caleb Canning U 2 Dozen Roses *19.95 '1 > Cash & Carry b Casa Verde Florist ,!> 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 Daily S p e c ia ls ■ > FTD *45* & Guadalupe • On ÜT Shuttle R t G eneral Sports Reporter Photo Editors Graphics Editor Listings E ditor ........................................................................................... G arza Jason Du9 9 or Livingston ........................................................................................................................... Alyssa Banta, Kim Brent ..................................................................................................................................................... Cravens ................................................................................................................................................Tracy Schultz „ Copy E ditor.............. M akeup Editor.TZÜZZZ Issue Staff ........................... ° ,,ersdort P h o to g ra p h e r^ ...........................................Bnan Rosas’ Ellza S* l*9' Ale* Klingelberger, Peter Urn, Kevin Frtchaid Editorial Columnists Z Z Z ........................................................ Stephanie Friedman. Andy Rogers, Carlos Cuellar Entertainment Writers ........................................................................ ................RrV Miller, Mark VockeH ......................................... ............................................................. Edward Kim, Rob Alexander Cartoonists - ..... Dionne deVille, Henry Demond W ire Editor............,..,".................... - ........................................................................Andrea Buckley ..... n,«nk» i Layout Coordinator ... G raphic Designer Classified D isplay Classified Telephone Sales Classified Clerks Office Assistant Advertising Vanessa Flores, Jennifer Case, Brad Corbett, Danny Grover. Sara Eckert .................... Dew ayne Tindell ............................. ... .....................................................Nathan Moore. Nancy Flanagan : ....... _ .............................Dana Colbert. Joe Powell V Fort)#s- An9 e,a Bartek. Crystal Yen Pham Diane Eaton ZZZ'.ZZ............................................... .................. “ * ' ......... Megan Zhang T u e s d a y , M * . . . . . _ . . News contributions wiH be accepted by telephone ( 4 7 1 Zhciu Z Z r Z S 8 W ^«cond class postage pa.d at Austin r x 78710 Z l Publications Building 2 122) or at the . „ (Texa3 Student For local and national display advertising, caH 471 1865 For classif^d Z Bu'ld" 2 A<* ' ° D display advertising, can 4 71 -8 90 0 . For classified word advertising can 4 7 1 ^ 2 4 4 aa‘' ° nal clas8,,*ed Entire contents copyright 1995 Texas Student Publications O ne S em ester (Fall or S p rin g )................................................... Two Sem esters (F a * and S p rin g ) Sum m er Session ....................................................................... O n e Y ear (Fa*, Spring and S u m m e r)........................................ .......... Y h * Deify Texan Mail Subscription Rates P 00 00 ..............................................................................20 00 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications P O Box D Austin to TS P Building C 3 .2 0 0 or c a * 4 71 -5 08 3 r x 7 * 7 n «oru Austin. TX 78713-8904, or To charge by VISA or MasterCard call 471-5083 ...............................................75 00 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P.O Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904 EDP UT D esignated D riv e r' ram A I RLL, SAFE cab ride home 471-5200 I h u r s . - S o t., 11 p m - T o n i STUDENT HEALTH CENTER Cam pus Alcohol and Drug Education Program For more information, call 471-6252 I O n ( k i j s j o n , l t i|> m a y t.ikt* A0-4S m i n u t r s t o a r r i v c*. 2 . I I s t m h - n l s . , n r i u p ! „ 1 q u e s t s o n | \ i ’i i w i i r x mu ( \iini NOW LEASING FOR FALL '95 OPEN POR TOURS DAILY DURING ORIENTATION O ffe r... Great Location On WC shuttle route Laundry facilities Game Room 2 pools & sundecks Study rooms All bills paid except phone Housekeeping Service Covered parking Computer room Exercise Room 24 hour desk attendant Weekend movies Special event parties » CO NT E SSA DOKN1S • 4 7 6 - 4 6 4 8 2 7 0 7 KIO GRANDE * C (rm SSA «CONTESSA » ( 0>TI SSA • COMTSSA • CONTESSA • ( ON 11 s s \ Page 6 Wednesday, July 1 2 , i y » b m * , i J a il y CUPPER CUPPER C o le e n M c C u lla , a g a rd e n e r for M artin B ro th e rs R e sta u ran t, trim s the y a u p o n sh ru b s in front of the building. STEPHANIE FRIEDMANDaily Texan Staff Federal judge relaxes turtle guidelines for coastal shrimpers Associated Press Associated Press H O U STO N — A fter y e a rs of co m p lain ts that turtle excluder devices cost shrim pers their catches, a federal judge has rem oved the stricter guidelines from the shrim ping picture. There's a catch, though: U.S. D istrict Judge Sam Kent has called for a tw o-w eek m onitoring period once the season begins Saturday night. If the num ber of turtle deaths rises substan­ tially in the first tw o w eeks of the season, the Ftxlpral Fishpript; ^prvifp will rrztrL- Federal Fisheries Service will crack d o w n and im plem ent emergency m easures it had planned for this season. rinum Shrim ping season reopens Saturday, 30 m in­ utes after sunset. Kent rejected shrim pers' requests to prevent th e en fo rcem en t of c u rre n t re g u la tio n s th is year. H e claim ed he had no g ro u n d s to grant shrim pers' requests to declare current govern­ m en t regulations requiring TEDs in ad eq u a te and prevent their enforcement. l „1_: A ttorneys and shrim pers agreed to begin the seaso n w ith o u t m o re s trin g e n t reg u latio n s, w hich w ould m ean the Fisheries Service w ould m ake m andatory the use of "h ard TEDs." .i . t .i T u r tle e x c lu d e r d e v ic e s a re c o m m o n ly referred to as TEDs. M ost shrim pers use hard TEDs, w hich have an escape hatch on top. But they prefer to turn the escap e h atch es d o w n w a rd becau se they believe they lose few er shrim p that w ay. Justice D ep artm en t atto rn ey C hrissy Perry . . . . . . told Kent the Fisheries Service thinks shrim pers can voluntarily u se TEDs correctly. If turtle d eath s skyrocket over the first tw o w eeks of the season, the g o v ern m en t said all sh rim p h arv esters m ig h t have to u se devices w ith escape hatches on top. Fisheries Service personnel h av e instructed shrim p ers on h o w to p ro perly use and m ain ­ tain their TEDs. G overnm ent w orkers testified that they think shrim pers will see to it that tu r­ tles survive their nets. Kent has o rd ered all p ar­ ties to m eet in his court Aug. 1 if the situation needs to be altered. C onservationists say they fear the population is endangered by the m ove. They say there are about 1,000 ad u lt fem ale ridleys left. I think there could be dead turtles aro un d in le ss th a n tw o w e e k s ," s a id C a ro le A lle n , fo u n d er of H o u sto n -b ased H elp E n d an g ered A n im a ls — R id le y T u rtle s, o r H E A R T . "If there's tw o w eeks of w h at hap p en ed last year, it's not acceptable." ATF to investigate fires in Houston warehouses C ity’s probe into suspicious blazes to be reviewed Associated Press H O U S T O N — T h e B u r e a u o f A l c o h o l , T o b a cco a n d F ire a rm s w ill la u n c h an i n d e p e n ­ d e n t p ro b e in to tw o s u s p ic io u s fire s a t a n e a s t H o u s to n w a r e h o u s e c o m p le x . A te a m fr o m th e a g e n c y 's H o u s t o n o ff ic e w ill in v e s tig a te th e tw o fire s w h ic h o c c u rr e d w i t h i n a tw o - w e e k p e r i o d , s a i d F r a n c e s k a P e ro t, a n A TF s p o k e s w o m a n . T he A T F ’s in v o lv e m e n t c a m e a t th e r e q u e s t o f th e H o u s to n F ire D e p a r tm e n t, P e ro t s a id . The c ity c o u n c i l m a n w h o r e p r e s e n t s th e P le a s a n tv ille d is tr ic t w h e r e th e fire s o c c u rr e d h a s c o m p l a i n e d t h a t t h e c it y " t o o k a v e r y c a s u a l a p p r o a c h " to th e b la z e s . C o u n c ilm a n M ic h a e l Y a rb r o u g h h a s c a lle d fo r an o u ts id e a g e n c y to d e te r m in e " w h e th e r th e c ity d r o p p e d th e b a ll o r w h e th e r th e F ire D e p a r tm e n t d r o p p e d th e b a ll." E ach fire d e s tr o y e d a w a r e h o u s e o w n e d b y H o u s to n D is tr ib u tio n In c. w h ic h is a s to r a g e p o in t fo r s e v e ra l c o m p a n ie s in th e a re a . A m a s s iv e fire w ip e d o u t a w a r e h o u s e c o n ­ ta i n in g p la s ti c a n d c a r d b o a r d p r o d u c t s . T h e b u i l d i n g t h a t b u r n e d w a s n e x t to t h e s i t e w h e r e a n o th e r w a r e h o u s e c o n ta in in g c h e m i­ c a ls b u r n e d to th e g r o u n d o n J u n e 24-25. I n v e s t i g a t o r s a r e s till tr y i n g to d e t e r m i n e [An outside agency will U determine] whether the city dropped the ball or whether the Fire Department dropped the ball.” — Houston City Councilman Michael Yarbrough th e c a u se s . " O n e fire o n to p o f a n o th e r is n o t g o in g to m a k e it e a s ie r , b u t w e w e r e n o t e x p e c t in g a s e c o n d f i r e ," s a i d A s s i s ta n t F ire C h ie f H .G . " L a l o " T o rre s . ^ O ffic ia ls fr o m th e T e x a s N a tu r a l R e s o u rc e C o n s e r v a t i o n C o m m i s s i o n t h e y 'v e w r a p p e d u p e n v ir o n m e n t a l te s ts o f th e f ir s t f ire s ite a n d a i r s a m p l e s f r o m P le a s a n t v i l l e a fte r b o th in c id e n ts . s a y T h e T N R C C r e s u lts w ill b e e x a m in e d b y s c i­ e n t i s t s to f in d o u t if a n y to x ic f u m e s w e r e r e l e a s e d a f t e r t h e f i r e s , s a i d J im I n d e s t , a m e m b e r o f th e c o m m is s io n 's r e s p o n s e te a m . Y o u c a n e a rn m o n e y w h ile c o n tr ib u tin g to the future o f m e d ic in e b y p a r t ic ip a tin g in a P h a r m a c o LSR re s e a rc h study. W e c o n d u c t m e d ic a lly s u p e r­ v is e d re s e a rc h stu d ie s to h e lp e v a lu a te n e w m e d ic a tio n s . W e n e e d both h e a lth y in d i­ v id u a ls a n d th o se w ith s p e c ific m e d ic a l c o n d itio n s to p a r t ic i­ p a te in o u r stu d ie s. S tu d ie s a r e a v a ila b le to accom m odate a lm o s t a n y s c h e d u le . Y o u h a v e to m eet c e rta in c rite ria to q u a lif y fo r a study, in c lu d in g o u r free m e d ic a l e x a m a n d s c re e n in g tests. C a ll us fo r a n s w e rs to y o u r q u e s tio n s a b o u t P h a r m a c o LSR. A n d lo o k fo r o u r c u rre n t stud y o p p o rtu n itie s liste d h e re e v e ry S u n d a y . Be a p a rt o f so m e th in g b ig a t P h a rm a c o LSR. o X X kp* _ DOZEN ROSES n r Y 7 1 ? X T D A C T ? C $9.95 _ Cash & Carry 3830 N. Lamar 453-7619 FIESTA FLOWERS London $369 Paris $360* Madrid $389* Frankfurt $408* Zurich $425* Tokyo $478* Costa Rica $179* Caracas $199* •fares are each wa/from A is t r based on roundtnp purchase. Restrictons apptyand taxes not ncluded. Call for other worldwide destinations. touncil Ttavej 2000 Guadalupe St. • Austin, TX 78705 512-472-4931 Eurailpasses issued onY e-spot' Board Meeting Friday July 14 2:00 p.m . TSP Conference Room C 3.302 V isitors Welcome M en 18-35 M en 18-45 M en & W om en 18-45 M en & W om en 18-50 M en 18-45 U p to $ 2 1 0 0 Healthy & Non-sm oking M en & W om en 18-45 U p to $ 1 0 7 5 H ealthy & N on-sm oking Fri. Jul. 14 through M o n . Jul. 17 Sat. Jul. 2 2 through Sat. Jul. 2 9 Thu. A u g . 3 through Sun. Au g. 6 M ust pass free ph ysical exam and screening tests. Brief outpatient visits July 18-22, 30, 31, A u q . 1-3 Fri. Jul. 21 through Sun. Jul. 23 M o n . Jul. 31 through W ed. A u g . 2 M ust pass free ph ysical exam and screening tests. Brief oupatient visits July 17-19, 24 -3 1 , A u g. 3-7 Up to $ 8 0 0 H ealthy & N on-sm oking Fri. Jul. 21 through Sun. Jul. 23 Fri. A u g. 4 through Sun. A u g. 6 M ust pass free p h ysical exam and screening tests. Brief outpatient visits July 2 9 -3 1, Aug. 1 -4 Up to $ 7 5 0 H ealthy & Non-sm oking Sat. Jul. 2 2 through M o n . Jul. 2 4 Sat. A u g. 5 through M o n . A u g. 7 M ust pass free ph ysical exam and screening tests. Brief outpatient visits July 2 5 -2 7 , Aug. 8-10 Up to $ 6 0 0 H ealthy & Non-sm oking U p to $ 1 0 0 0 H ealthy & Non-sm oking M e n & W om en 18-45 Up to $ 6 0 0 H ealthy & Non-sm oking Sat. Jul. 2 2 through Sun. Jul. 23 Sat. Jul. 2 9 through Sun. Jul. 3 0 Sat. Au g. 5 through Sun. A u g. 6 M ust pass physical exam and screening tests. Fri. Jul. 2 8 through Sun. Jul. 3 0 Fri. Aug. 18 through Sun. A u g. 2 0 Brief outpatient visits July 26-28, 3 1 , A u g . 1, 9-18, 2 1 , 2 2 M ust pass physical exam and screening tests. Fri. Jul. 2 8 through Sun. Jul. 3 0 Fri. A u g. 4 through Sun. A u g. 6 M ust pass physical exam and screening tests. Reseorch studies typically involve administration of investigational medication, blood drawn, and other procedures. T h e DAILY TEXAN Wednesday, July 1 2 , 1995 Pai S V G fS f a t MORE THAN 200 LOCATIONS! ®?®P FOR GREAT VALUES T M tll The Princeton Review 1201 W. 24th St. Speedreadfng Kaplan 811 W. 24th St. Austin Virtual Gaming 2118 Guadalupe Paintball Of Texas 19000 Trapper's Trail • Manor, TX Bowling Capitol Bowl 5700 Grover Chote’s Chevron 500 MLK Jr. Blvd. • 478-3226 Firestone Capital Plaza & Highland Mall Locations Northwest Hills Texaco 3635 North Hills Dr. Auto Parts Airport Auto Supply 4803 Airport Blvd. Auto Repair Downtown Automotive 1109 S. Lamar Blvd. Dyer Automotive 7513 N. IH-35 • 8225 N. Lamar Blvd. Hi-Tech Automotive 1801 S. Congress Ave. Body-Tek Good at All Locations Full Service Station University Texaco 3016 Guadalupe Oil Change & Lube Jiffy Lube All Austin Area Locations PDQ Master Lube 1727 Briarcllff Quick Lube 3401 N. Lamar Southwest Tire 4507 Airport Blvd. Entenmann’s Oroweat Foods 5312-A Airport Blvd. South Austin Bicycles 2210 S. First St. • 444-0805 12th & Lamar • 322-9131 University Cyclery 2901 N. Lamar Daybreak Boat Rentals 5971 E. Hi-Line Just For Fun 6410 Hudson Bend Rd. Another Comic & Card 608 W. 24th St. Asylum Books 2906 San Gabriel Textbooks & Supplies Texas Textbooks 2410-B E. Riverside Dr. • 2338 Guadalupe CD Warehouse 911 N. Lamar Blvd. Soundways C D’s & Tapes 13729 Research Blvd. #815 Austin Bio Med Lab, Inc 14415 Owen Tech Blvd. Fabulous Finds 3004 Guadalupe #3 Formalwear Gingiss Formal Wear 9722 Great Hills Tr. • Brodle Ln. & Hw Sportswear Active Athlete 3901 IH-35 - Next to Fiesta Longhorn Spirit 2350 Guadalupe Texas Apparel Wallace’s Bookstore 2244 Guadalupe 404 Colorado • 476-8297 Mardi Gras Daiquiris 306 E. Sixth St. • 472-4841 Toulouse/Headliners East 402-406 E. Sixth St. Nightclubs Dallas Nightclub 7113 Burnet Road Software Floppy Joe’s Inc 2904 Guadalupe Kinko’s All Austin Locations Mail Boxes, Etc 2002-A Guadalupe Ginny’s Printing & Copying 2401 Rio Grande P.S. Copies & Printing 2827 San Jacinto Resumes/Binding Longhorn Copies 2518 Guadalupe St. - 476-4498 Casa Verde Florists 4501 Guadalupe Originals 5408 Burnet Rd. Secret Garden Northcross Mall Toy Joy 2900 Guadalupe • 3203 Red River Fiesta Mart Rick’s Hair Salon 2414 Guadalupe Supercuts All Austin Locations The Beauty Store 3300 Bee Caves Rd. 4006 S. Lamar • 9722 Great Hills Tr. Manicure Get Nailed 8820 Burnet Road, Suite 400 2021 Guadalupe • Doble Mall • 505-0847 401 Sabine - 479-0817 Jalisco Bar 414 Barton Springs Rd. La Vista Restaurant In the Hyatt Regency Hotel Coffee Shop Another Cup 608 W. 24th St. 2120 Guadalupe Fast Food Arby’s All Austin Locations Taco Bell 2001 S. Lamar Blvd. • 6618 N. Lamar Blvd. Captain Quackenbush’s Cafe Russeil Korman Jewelry 3806 N. Lamar All Austin Area Locations The Hills Fitness Center 4615 Bee Caves Rd. Vitamin & Nutrition Shop 3267 Bee Caves Rd. Suite 127 Tanning Salons Austan 3407 Guadalupe Suite E Great Hills Tanning Salon 10740 Research Blvd. Tan It All At All Ten Locations Shown in Our Ad o Back Page of TexanCard Directory Weight Loss Diet Center 3933 Steck Ave. B-121 • 346-6787 3316 Bee Cave Rd. Suite #2 • 328-2861 Austin Futons 3401 Guadalupe Centex Furniture storehouse Highland Mall All-Pro Cleaners, Inc, 2410 E. Riverside Dr. Jack Brown Cleaners All Austin Area Locations Eagle Menswear 7801 N. Lamar • 4107 Capital of Tx. Hwy. So. Austin Vision Center 2415 Exposition Suite D • 477-2282 Knowles, Clark & Associates (TSO) 5501-B North IH 35 • Capital Plaza Shopping Center 411 West 24th St. • 300 West MLK Hamburgers Airport Haven 6800 Airport Blvd. Players I & II Ice Cream/Yogurt Baskin Robbins Fiesta • Delwood Shopping Center & 29th & Guaaalupe I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt 1914-B Guadalupe Tarrytown Yogurt Shop 2414 Exposition Suite C-100 Indian Cuisine 3023 Guadalupe Taj Palace 6700 Middle Fiskvllle Road Brodie Oaks Center • Lamar & Ben White Irish/Tex-Mex Señor O’ Brien’s 624 W. 34th St. Italian Spaghetti Western 1703 S. First St. Tony’s Vineyard 2348 Guadalupe • 474-8040 Oriental China On The Avenue 908 Congress Quality Vision Eyewear 2800 IH 35 S. Suite 125* 462-0001 Amazonia Aquariums 4631 Airport Blvd. Holland Photo 1221 S. Lamar Blvd. Film/Cameras Precision Camera 3810 N. Lamar Blvd. Photo Finishing Fox Photo 1-Hr. Labs All Austin Fox Photo Locations Eller’s Photography 1907 W. Koenig Lane Discount Framing & Art w e r t o t h e te i Domino’s Pizza AH Locations • 476-7181,447-6681 Gumby’s Pizza 2222 Rio Grande D102 • 472-3278 Pappy’s Pizza 2928 Guadalupe • 474-1234 Pizza Hut Good at All Austin Locations • Call 444-4444 Restaurant/Bars Hondo’s 407 E. Sixth St. Austin Seafood & Pasta 20% oft all food items Landry’s Seafood 600 East Riverside Dr. Sports Bar Top Games Sports Bar 2230 Guadalupe Mega Shoe Warehouse 8002 Research Blvd. Car Audio Audio Dimensions, Inc. 8120 Research Blvd. Capitol City Playhouse 214 W. Fourth St. Hill Country Flyer Steam Train Reservations/Information • 477-8468 Hazlewood Travel 2222 Rio Grande D-108 4107 Medical Parkway #203 • 454-3463 Tape Lenders Dobie Mall • 472-4206 ©SR/si 's?v ÜUlKOtó líijXLfJ d iito "Jiadsis; 8 T h e D a ily T e x a n W H M E S M Y , JULY 1 2 . 1 8 8 5 ENTERTAINMENT ‘Mountain’ gives towering insight ‘Pulp Fiction’ author ushers new age of film Quentin Tarantino showed what a degree from the most accessible film school - video - can do R O B A L E X A N D E R Daily Texan Staff O ne can just im agine a young Q uentin Tarantino, perched in his Southern California video store, qui­ etly absorbing the w ealth of movie lore that w ould later be cleverly reprocessed and regurgitated into som e of the freshest and most inno­ vative films of the Blockbuster era. W ith the advent of hom e video, anybody can becom e a film expert. No longer do films live and die by their theatrical releases. Unlike our parents w ho had to rely on local the­ ater selections for all their movie experiences, w e live in a rapidly expanding, visually oriented world. It is a tele-visual society w here MTV, Gilligan’s Island and Ed Sullivan can the sam e all be view ed d u rin g broadcast hour. The basis for m ost com m unication has m ade a drastic shift from textual to visual. Q uentin T arantino is a product of this age. His lantern-jaw ed head is chock-full of films from Jean-Luc G odard to H ow ard H aw ks to Jean- Pierre Melville. He is a self-made film expert and he know s it (he casually refers to him self as a film geek, not a film nerd). He has taken M arshall M cC luhan's prophecy of the future of visual literacy to heart and become the first VCR-spawned cinephile / filmm aker. D uring the H ollyw ood studio days of the '30s and '40s, films were churned out at an enorm ous rate by an assem bly-line m ethod of produc­ tion. There w as little individual artistic influence (not even John Ford edited the supply his ow n films), and p u sh e d the m assive dem and. to m eet But in the late '60s and early '70s, H ollyw ood experienced an infusion of creative talent that was profes­ sionally trained by rising film school program s. Film m akers like Francis Ford Coppola, G eorge Lucas, Martin Scorsese, Brian De Palm a and Steven Spielberg brought a new apprecia­ tion for the history of cinema to a previously uneducated Hollyw ood com m unity. Through film schools, these direc­ tors w ere influenced by foreign films and older classics that until that time had never been properly studied. Enter Q uentin Tarantino. He never attended a formal film school (he is a recent graduate of the Sundance Institute D irector's W ork­ shop and Lab) and spent nine years of his life supporting himself as a video store clerk until he finally sold the screenplay for True Romance. T arantino used this m oney to finance the critically acclaim ed Reservoir Dogs. He quickly moved from aspiring spectator to active p articip a n t and, the process, changed the definition of the inde­ pendent film. in No longer will independents be instantly eq u a te d as "art films." W ith Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction, T arantino has reassessed the norm s of genre and narrative convention, and given intelligence to an other­ wise stagnant style of filmmaking. H is m ethod of storytelling takes genre characters and places them in standard genre situations that have been done a h u n d red times before. Tarantino takes plot clichés like the boxer w ho throw s a fight or the busted bank heist and gives them his unique twist. He throw s real life situations in all their violent color and glory into the picture. N ow , these characters w hom w e th in k w e knew m ust abide by real-life rules. KVRX TOPLESS 17 ■ The 17 m ost played artists on UT student radio station KVRX (cable 91.7) for the week of July 3 - July 10 are: 1. Stretford (TX) 2. V / A — Hellbent: Insurgent Country 3. V /A — Pay it All Back Vol. 5 4. Billy Boy Arnold 5. Brutal Juice (TX) 6. Vic Chesnutt 7. Carla Bley/ Andy Sheppard 8. Carey Bell 9. Hair & Skin Trading Co. 10. Chris Knox 11. June of 44 12. Mad Professor 13. Towa Tei 14. Mobb Deep 15. Charlie Hunter Trio 16. Lunachicks 17. Million Sellers (TX) F I L M ■ Los Angeles — Sandra Bul­ lock's While You Were Sleeping finally dropped out of the top 10 list as Apollo 13 blasted its way to the number one posi­ tion. In two weeks the star vehicle for Tom Hanks has pulled in an impressive $65. 6 million. Don't despair though, Bullock is sure to be back on top when The Net opens on Aug. 4. ■ The top 10 movies in the United States for the weekend of July 7 - July 9 are: 1. Apollo 13 — $19.6 million 2. Species — $17.2 million 3. First Knight — $10.9 million 4. Pocahontas — $10.8 million 5. Batman Forei'er — $154.9 mil­ lion 6. Mighty Morphin Pcaoer Rangers — $25.5 million 7. Judge Dredd — $24.3 million 8. The Bridges of Madison County — $60.3 million 9. Congo — $73.1 million 10. Casper — $85.6 million — Compiled by M arcel M eyer with Associated Press reports SUMMER (FILM] CLASSICS W E D N E SDAY: ALL SEATS $3.00! W E U - r e L ^ _______ BLADE RUHNER,,»P£® [ DIRECTOR'S c u t ] ¡WIDESCREEN & STEREO j Wed. & Fri. @ 7:15 • Thu. @ 9:35 IPlus: Bugs Bunny in “Box Office Bunny") PLANET OE THE APES (CH ARLTON HESTON) Wed. & Fri. @ 9:35 • Thu. @ 7:20 SAT. & SUN. R.n H arrvh.uisen Tribute A SRECTACUU» DOUILE FEATURE HONORING THE MASTER STOP MOTION fiX ANIMATOR NEW HUNTS IN REMASTERED DOLBY STEREO! (AND MUSIC BY BERNARD HERRMANN!) THE VOYAGE Of SIHBAD , B Sat. @ 7:30 • Sun. @ 3:40 & 7:30 tPlus: Sylvester in “Greedy for Tweety") MYSTERIOUS ISLAND ( 1 9 6 1 ) Sat. & Sun. @ 5:30 & 9:20 Evenings / $5 • Matinees before 6 pm / $4 Students w. ID & Kids under 12 / $3.50 | § § \ i 7 1 3 C o n g r e s s A ve . • ¡ N E O : 4 7 2 541 1 T T .T T X TT X 'JI ■ S 20th ANNIVERSARY 11la m z z m z z z m z a í I Wednesday. July 12th <07.11 JODY DENBERG isSi 5 .0 1 blues L UVE AT ANTONES 5PM -7PM > • ^REGISTER TO WIN A lT 0 (,R A P )O > 1 1 FENDER STIAT ÉÉ m MUST BE PRESENT TO WINIlH ♦ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ + U W edm J u ly 12th Ri/S | C hicago B lue» JAMES ■MB COTTON MNET0P KKKMS CALVIN JONES ''I WILLI * NO EYE* SMITH KIM WILSOILZMNfOENE MYL0K | IMTMMNMN♦ ntffVKlES Arfr. Tlx • 416-STAR / ANTONES RECORDS Use CD. Taping hr Antonei ¡XLf 1+ Dan Akroyd’t “House of Bines” |¡££¿¡j I '. Rlck B ass’ In The Loyal Mountains proffers excellent fiTI n THE LOYAL M0UNT/UNS Author: Rick Bass Publisher: H oughton Mifflin Co. Price: $21.95 rary short stories. Som etim es, the present of the story is the past, an d the past of the story is the p rese n t — if th a t m akes any sense. This can be seen in Swamp Boy, in w hich the narrator recalls, rath er shamefully, how he and a group of ruffians torm ented a harm less, nature-loving boy. The best story in the collection is the title story, also a rem inis­ cence of the n arrato r's childhood in Texas, w hen he w as a teen-ager and w ould drive his girlfriend and uncle around the hill coun­ try. The n a rra to r's nostalgic jour­ ney through the past is m ade even m ore bittersw eet from the realizations he m akes from his older, w iser perspective, things he w asn 't even aw are of in his naiveté. Rick Bass' greatest gift to litera­ ture is his u nique and brutally honest voice, a far cry from the slick, agenda-driven stories that are frequently being published today. Bass' ch aracters speak straight from the heart, alw ays open and direct, w hether talking about the m ountains or friends or the small things in life that m ake them stop and smile. E D W A R D K IM ____________ Daily Texan Staff Every once in a while, a writer will p u t o u t a collection of short stories so fresh, so invigorating, so astounding in its voice and w is­ dom , y o u 'd sw ear there truly is a God u p there. I ll never forget the day I fin­ ished Tim O 'B rien's The Things They Carried, o r Thom Jones' The Pugilist at Rest or D enis Johnson's Jesus' Son. Books like those are priceless, and they are hard as hell to com e by. T hat's w hy Rick Bass' new col­ lection of stories, In the Loyal Mountains, h ad m e grinning like a slap-happy bastard. I w as doing flips. For years now, Rick Bass has quietly been producing som e of the best short fiction in the coun­ try. H is first collection, The Watch, is rem arkable in its voice, and his second, Platte River, is rem arkable in its magic. With In the Loyal Mountains, Bass has fused both these elem ents and p roduced a w ork of breathtaking perfection. In The History of Rodney, the n arrator describes his idle life in a small ghost tow n, w here he w o r ­ ries only about pigs that terrorize him. "The m other pig is the size of a sm all Volkswagen; h er babies are the color and shape of foot­ balls. They g ru n t an d sn o rt at night ben eath E lizabeth's and m y ho u se." M agical d escrip tio n s abound in The legend of Pig-Eye, about a bar-fighter w ho is striv­ ing to w in 100 fights. The Valley is the collection's m ost intense story; it starts out: "O ne d ay I left the South, fled m y job, an d ra n to the h ea rt of snow, the far N orthw est. I live in a cabin w ith no electricity, an d I'm n ever leaving." Life in the u n tam ed w ilderness is described here an d in Antlers, a riveting story ab o u t hunting, love a n d m a n 's place in the environ­ m ent. B ass' ch aracters care deeply ab o u t their w ay of life and will go o u t of their w ay to protect w hat they have, as one caretaker does in Days in Heaven. It's not surpris­ ing th a t Rick Bass him self is an environm ental activist. The poetical im agery in In the Loyal Mountains is just as im pres­ sive as the a u th o r's exceptional ability to cut back a n d forth in tim e, ad ding a d ep th and insight th at is rarely seen in contem po- I 1-35 ot M ID D L E FISKVILLE B P 454-9562 | S U M M E R M O V IE CA M P 10 A M TUES t W EDS • FAR FROM H O M E PG S P E C IE S O N TWO SCREENS 12:15 2:35 5:15 7:45 10 00 R DOLBY 1:15 3:40 5:55 8:15 10 30 R DOLBY F IR ST K NIQ H T O N TWO SCREENS 1:40 4:25 7:15 9:55 PG13 STEREO 2 00 5:00 7 40 10:25 PG13 SDDS APOLLO 13 O N TWO SCREENS SCR. ONE: 1:30 4 30 7 30 10 20 PG DTS SCR. TWO: 1:00 4:00 7 05 10 00 PG THX G L A S S SH E ILD 7 20 9 45 PG13 STEREO C A S P E R 12:30 2 45 5 15 G STEREO BATM AN F O R E V E R 12:00 2 50 5:25 8 00 10 30 DOLBY C R IM S O N TIDE 2:30 5:05 7:45 10:10 R DOLBY WHILE You W»f« SLEEPING 2:20 4 5 5 7 1 0 9 3 5 PG STEREO GREAT HILLS 8 .7 & US 1 S3 A GREAT HILLS TRAIL 794-8076 S U M M E R M O V IE C A M P 10 A M TUES I. W EDS - FAR FR O M H O M E PG | S P E C IE S O N TWO SCREENS 12:00 2:15 4:40 7:05 9 30 R DOLBY 12:20 2:40 5.10 7 40 10 05 R THX JUD G E D R ED D 1 00 3:00 5 15 7 35 10 00 R SDDS THX POCAHON TAS O N TW O SCREENS 12:30 2 45 5.00 7.15 9 30 G DOLBY 1:30 3:30 5 30 7:45 9:45 G S1ERE0 C A S P E R 2:20 4:40 7:25 9 40 PG STEREO T i n Brt4»u atttadbor Count) 1 45 4 30 7 20 10 00 PG13STEREO F O R G ET P A R IS 2:10 4:25 7 10 9:35 PG13 STEREO GIFT C E R T IF IC A T E S ON SA L E General Cinema BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6 p m "O n e of the strangest, most disturbing films in years!” -S.F. Civ onde The Secret of Roan Inish 2:30- 5:00 - 7: 15- 9:35 S h a llo w G r a v e n:45 pm D C E I E 21 st & G vada lvp* 4 7 2 -F IL M 2 :00- 4 :30- 7:00 - 9 :30- 12:00 e s f i w i s C a r e - O p e n M on .-Sat. until 1 :30 at n igh t 24th & San A ntonio The Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees is seeking applicants to fill two unexpired one-year terms on the board. Positions open are for College of Communication, Place 2 and Place 3 Applicants must: • Be registered this semester • H ave completed one semester in residence spring or fall • Be in g o o d academ ic standing • Be enrolled in the C olle ge of Com m unication • H ave completed 1 2 hours of Com m unication courses A pplications m ay be picked up from the TSP G e n e ral M a n a g e r 's O ffice R oom 3 -3 0 4 A an d must be completed by noon July 14. Quentin Tarantino (in Destiny Turns on the Radio) may deserve ail the awards he’s won for his directing efforts, but his acting needs help. Take for exam ple the now infa­ m ous scene in Pulp Fiction w hen V incent Vega's gun accidentally dis­ charges and blow s the rear-seat pas­ senger's head into little bits. The character was nobody the audience had any connection to. H is death h ad no meaning, but now Vincent and Jules are left w ith a really big m ess to deal with. T arantino has been ostensibly lam basted for his reliance on vio­ lence in his films, m ost notably by Sen. Bob Dole. U nfortunately, these critics fail to realize that T arantino's films do not glorify violence. As a film m aker, T arantino accepts violence as part and parcel of our society and uses it as a tool for his cinem atic gram ­ m ar/sty le . If you w ish to w itness glorification of violence, sim ply turn on the nightly news. The overdose scene in Pulp Fiction is another exam ple of how he uti­ lizes violence to m a n ip u la te the audience. It's very frightening, yet at the sam e time, it's also very funny. Yet, these diam etrically opposed em otions are com ing from the same scene. How ? We go to movies to see an d expe­ rience things that ou r day to day m u n d a n e w orld d o e s n 't perm it. M ovies are an escape, b u t som e­ tim es w e d o n 't really w ant to see the realities presented in them. T arantino's films are a double- e d g ed sw ord. O n one side, they engage the audience on an em otion­ al level and draw them into the illu­ sion. Yet, they are also a blatant crit­ icism of the movies them selves. He uses his im m ense bank of film DIRECTOR'S CUT ounim T/uwmo Principal works: Reservoir Dogs, True Romance (screenplay), Pulp Fic­ tion Awards: Academy A w ard for Best Screenplay (Pulp Fiction), Palm d 3 0 ^o ^B estP ictu re^(P u l^F iH io n ^^ know ledge against itself. He pokes fun at the movies. A good exam ple of this self-reflex- ivity occurs in Pulp Fiction, w hen Um a T hurm an casually traces the Pebbles Flintstone for square, and a magical dotted square appears. U p until this point, the audience have been engaged in a seam less narrative, and now m ust realize they are w atching a movie. sym bol What does the future hold for writer/director/actor Quentin Taranti­ no? He has expressed a desire to move beyond the crime genre. A musical, per­ haps? Might he try to follow in another of his "idols" footsteps, Howard Hawks, and attempt to make a successful picture in every genre? N o m a tte r w hat his next film m ight be, Tarantino has quite a rep­ u ta tio n uphold. A chieving trem endous success at such an early age is som ew hat of a bane in the m ovie industry. to It has spelled disaster for m any a young auteur (Orson Welles w as for­ ever cursed after his debut, Citizen Kane, at age 24). My only advice to Mr. Tarantino: stop acting. h t t p ://wv/w.utexas.c d u / d e p t s / o u t p u t / t s t v .html Muchllusic / A u s t i n M us i c N e t w o r k /Nows D o r m C a b l e C h a n n e l F i f t e e n C ha n n e l N i n e cumjoinus t h u r s d a y s @ 2 :15 t s t v P p t x v m s .c c .u t e x a s .edu T e x a S t u d e n T e l e v i s i o n B a s e m e n t West S i d e of Hoq g A u d i t o r i u m 5 1 2 , 4 7 1 . 7 8 9 8 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Wednesday, July 12, 1995 Page 9 TRANSPORTATION 1 0 —Misc. Autos ■M ERCHANDISE 1 9 0 —Appliances To Place a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 Classified W o rd Ad Rates Charged by th e w o rd Based on a 1 5 w o rd m in im u m , th e follow ing ra te s apply 1 day........................ 2 d a y s 3 days 4 d a ys...................... $ 6 15 $ 1 1 7Q $ 1 6 6 1 ) $ 3 0 4 0 5 d a y s F irst tw o w o rd s m ay he all capital $ 2 3 3 5 le tte rs $ 2 5 fo r each ad d itio n a l l a t t o r s w o r d M a ste rC a rd and Visa accep ted c a p i t a l in Classified Display Ad Rates Charged by the colum n inch One colum n inch m inim um A vn rie ty of type faces and size s and bordare a v a ila b le I all r a te s S e p t 1 M ay 3 0 1 to 31 colum n inches p e r m o n th $ 9 3 0 pot col in ch over 31 colum n inches per m o n th Call fot ra te s FAX ADS TO 4 7 1 -6 7 4 1 2 0 —Sports-Foreign Autos 3 0 —Trucks-Vans 4 0 —Vehicles to Trade 5 0 —Sen/ice-Repair 6 0 —Parts-Accessories 7 0 —Motorcycles 80-Bicycles 90-Vehicles-Leasing 10O-Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 —Services 12 0 -H o u se s 1 3 0 —Condos-Townhomes 1 4 0 —Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160-Duplexes-Apartments 17 0 -W a n te d 1 8 0 —Loans 8:00-5:00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11:OQ a.m. prior to publication 2 0 0 —Furniture-Household 2 1 0 —Stereo-TV 2 2 0 —Computers-Equipment 230-Photo-Cam era 2 4 0 —Boats 2 5 0 —Musical Instruments 2 6 0 —Hobbies 2 7 0 —Machinery-Equipment 2 8 0 —Sporting-Camping Equipment 2 9 0 —Furniture-Appliance Rental 300-Garage-Rumm age Sales 3 1 0 -T ra d e 3 2 0 -W a n te d to Buy or Rent 3 3 0 -P e ts 340-Longhorn W ant Ads 3 4 5 -M is c . 3 5 0 —Rental Services 360-Furnished Apts. 3 7 0 —Unfurnished Apts. 3 8 0 —Furnished Duplexes 3 9 0 —Unfurnished Duplexes 4 0 0 —Condos-T ownhomes 4 1 0 —Furnished Houses 420-U nfum ished Houses 4 2 5 —Rooms 4 3 0 —Room-Board 4 3 5 —Co-ops 440-R oom m ates 4 5 0 —Mobile Homes-Lots 460-B usiness Rentals 4 7 0 —Resorts 4 8 0 —Storage Space 4 9 0 -W a n te d to Rent-Lease 5 0 0 -M is c . 5 1 0-Entertainment-Tickets 520-Personals 5 3 0 —Travel-Transportation 5 4 0 —Lost S. Found 5 5 0 —Licensed Child Care 560 -P u b lic Notice 570-Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 5 8 0 -M u s ic a l Instruction 590-Tu toring 600-Instruction Wanted 6 1 0 —Misc. Instruction SERVICES 6 2 0 -L e g a l Services 6 3 0 -C o m p u te r Services 64Q-Exterminators 650-Moving-Hauling 6 6 0 -S to ra g e 6 7 0 —Painting 6 8 0 —Office 6 9 0 -R e n ta l Equipment 7 0 0 —Furniture Rental 7 1 0 —Appliance Repair 720 -S te reo -T V Repair 7 3 0 —Home Repair 740-B icycle Repair 7 5 0 —Typing 7 6 0 -M is c . Services EMPLOYMENT 7 7 0 —Employment Agencies 780-Em ploym ent Services 7 9 0 —Part Time 800-G en eral Help Wanted 8 1 0 —Office-Clerical 8 2 0 —Accounting-Bookkeeping 8 3 0 —Administrative- Management 8 4 0 —Sales 8 5 0 —Retail 86Q-Engineering-T echnical 8 7 0 —Medical 8 8 0 —Professional 8 9 0 —Clubs-Restaurants 900-D om estic Household 910-Positions Wanted 9 2 0 -W o rk Wanted BUSINESS 930-B usiness Opportunities 9 4 0 —Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED f o r o n ly ONE A D V E R T I S I N G T E R M S In in th e e v e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e advertisem ent, notice m ust be given by 11 th e f ir s t day, as th e p u b lish e rs are a m r e s p o n s ib le in c o r r e c t insertion. All claim s fo r adjustm ents should be m a d e n o t la te r th a n 3 0 days a f te r publication Pre-paid kills receive c re d it slip if requested a t tim e of cancellation, and if a m o u n t e x c e e d s $ 2 0 0 . S lip m u s t be presented fo r a re o rd e r within 9 0 days to be valid Credit slips are non-transferrable In c o n s id e r a t io n o f th e D a ily T e x a n ’s a c c e p ta n c e o f a d v e r t is in g c o p y f o r publication, the agency and the a dve rtiser w ill in dem nify and save harm le s s, Texas S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s a n d its o f f x e r s , em ployees, and a g e n ts a g a in s t all loss, lia b ility , d a m a g e , a n d e x p e n s e o f w h a ts o e v e r n a tu r e a r is in g o u t o f th e c o p y in g , p r in tin g , o r p u b lis h in g o f its a dve rtisem ent including w ith o u t lim itation reasonable attorney's fees resultin g fro m claim s of suits fo r libel, violation of rig h t of p riv a c y , p la g ia ris m and c o p y r ig h t and trad em a rk infringement. MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 3 6 0 - Fum. Apts. 360 - Fum. Apts. 36 0 - Fum. Apts. 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. Laundry facilities. Close to fridges a n d study desks. M a n y ex- TRANSPORTATION 10 - Misc. Autos LITTLE OLD Lady's '8 7 Buick w a g o n Low m ilea g e, m any extras, e xcel­ lent c o n d itio n . A sking $ 4 ,8 0 0 4 4 2 8 2 3 9 . 7-10-15B. 2 0 - Sports-Foreign Autos '7 9 SUPER beetle convert, excellent co n d it. 7 5 K miles $ 8 5 0 0 0 8 0 C a ll a fte r 6pm . (2 1 0 )6 0 8 -0 5 3 5 7- 10-10B. 80 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Cost!!! BUCK’S BIKES 928-2810 REAL ESTATE SALES 120 - Houses WESTOVER HILLS 4 / 4 , 2 liv in g , 2 d in in g , study, island kitchen, sauna, a lum in um shake roo f, sprinklers, la n d sca pe d , m any other extras. P rin cip als o nly $ 2 3 9 ,0 0 0 . 3 4 5 - 4 0 1 6 6 -2 8 -1 2P 130 - Condos- Townhomes Ely Properties # 1 i n S a l e s f o r U T •Quadrangle 2-2.5 96,900 •Orange Tree 1-1.5 79,900* •Robbins Place 2-2 74,900 2-2 64,900 •Sabinal •Georgian •Westplace •Elms •Tom Green 2-2 64,900 2-2 64,900 1-1 55,000* 1-1 51,000 •Overlook 1-1 49,900* Robbins Place 1-1 49,900 1-1 42,000 Pointe Nueces Place 1-1 39,500* Purchase rather than lease, it's cheaper! *FHA Approved 2.5% down 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 2 0 0 Furniture - Household FREE DELIVERY For UT Students! > TWIN 5FT w FSAMF $ 89 00 > FU.L SFT v. '-FAMF $ 90 95 • QiJFEN SFT ,... t s a.MF $ ' 39 95 $ 49 OS > 9 DCAWF? CHEST 1 STJDFNT CFSK $ 69'9 5 'SOTAS 1 5 pIFCE DINETTE $169 95 $<29 95 Centex Furniture W holesale 4V10VH6 >r; r'N Af.'At Oí S 4A/.AP Beds, Beds, Beils The factory outlet for Simmons, Seoly, Sprmgoir. We carry doseouts, discontinued covers, & factory 2nds From 5070% off retail store prices All new, complete with warranty Twin set, $ 6 9 . Full set, $ 8 9 Queen set, $ 1 1 9 King set, $ 1 4 9 1741 West Anderson Ln. 454-3422 RENTAL 3 6 0 - Fum. Apts. TH R EE OAKS & PECAN SQUARE APARTMENTS • 1 BDR/1 BA • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Community Atmosphere • On Shuttle • No Application Fee • Preleasing • On-site manager • Affordable deposit 451-5840 4 0 9 W . 3 8 t h S t . 2 / 2 A N D 2 /1 C o ndos in W e s t C a m pus Daniel C a in e BNR 4 4 8 - 5 8 0 8 7-7-1 1B Century Square Apts. ALL BILLS PAID • P o o l & P a t i o CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE YOUR SUPER LONGHORN WANT AD! • S h u t t l e a t D o o r • C o v e r e d P a r k i n g • H u g e C l o s e t s 3 4 0 1 R e d R i v e r 4 7 8 -9 7 7 5 PRIVATE R O O M sublet, Contessa Dorm ito ry, Barrone H a ll. Fall '9 5 - Spring '9 6 . U tilities+ m eals in clu d ­ ed. (5 0 1) 4 8 4 -8 0 1 0 , 7-6-1 OP W a l k T o C a m p u s Now Preleasing One Block From Campus HOUSTON 2801 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 DALLAS 2803 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 BRANDYWINE 2808 Whitis Ave. - 472-7049 W ILSH IRE 301 W. 29th-472-7049 G reat Locations! • Preleasing • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Central Air/Heat • 2 Blocks From UT • No Application Fee • 1BR/BA »On-site manager • Affordable deposits NEWLY DECORATED 2 B e d r o o m A p t s . ALL THE AMENITIES Competitive Prices NOW PRELEASING CONVENIENT TO HANCOCK CENTER, UT& SAN MARCUS SHUTTLE’S Pa r k Pl a z a - Pl a z a C o u r t A p a r t m e n t s “LUXURY AT REASONABLE PRICES" 915 E. 4 1 st 4 S 2 - 6 S 1 8 SAN GABRIEL SQUARE Apts. NOW LEASING! • l/T Shuttle •furnished • 5 blks from Campus • 2-1 Economy Style • Efficiencies • Deluxe 1-1 A L L B IL L S PA ID 2212 San Gabriel St 474-7732 302 W. 38th Street Fall leasing on efficiencies, IBR and 2BR furnished. A ll appliances, pool, and laundry room . O ne-half block to IF shuttle. G as, water, and ca ble paid . 453-4002 6-21-20B D • 1 B R & 2 B R • C e ilin g F a n s • O n S h u ttle • L a u n d ry R o o m • F u lly F u rn is h e d • P o o l • P e rm it P a rk in g • O n - s ite m a n a g e r / m a in te n a n c e • V e rtic a l m in i- b lin d s • A ffo rd a b le d e p o s its • B a rg a in S u m m e r R a te s R i o N u e c e s 600 W. 26th U M w i j CASA DE SALADO APARTMENTS 261 2 /2 6 1 0 Salado St. 1 Br, furnished. W a te r, gas, and cable TV paid. N o pets. Swimming pool, A / C , and celling fans. campus, near shuttle. G re a t summer rates! Limited ava ilab ility for Fall/S p rin g . 477-2534. 6-15-20B-D. LARGE 2 BEDROOM W a lk to campus. Pool and Laundry. Small, quiet com plex. Furnished or unfurnished. Summer $ 4 9 0 , Fall $ 6 9 0 . Cavalier Apartments 3 0 7 E. 31st St. 451-1917. 6-19-20B-D. W alk/Bike Campus 3 2 n d at IH -35 (N E corner) Avalon Apartments C onvenient to E ngineering, la w , LBJ School, and a ll East Campus. 1/1 $ 4 4 5 a nd up Efficiency-$395 and up W alk-m closets, ceiling fans, C A /C H . 459-9898 or 4 7 6-3629 6-28-20B-B A TTE N TIO N GRADUATES! Dress fo r success. V irtu a lly new men's Southwick b lu e /g ra y suit, 421; Ten 100% silk designer ties. All $ 165 Call B obby 2 5 1 -8 2 1 6 . 7-6-5B S O f A, CHAIR $200. Tiled kitchen table $ 1 0 0 C om puter desk $ 4 0 , 2 glass tops $ 3 5 , $5 7 0 7 -1 9 7 5 7 7-5B Q ueen-size quilt, $ 1 5 , Cutlery, $5 Phone (h a rdly used) $ 1 0 , electric razor, $ 1 0 4 41 -5 13 1 7-7-5B M A C IN T O S H SE w ith 2 0 M B hard- A Q U A R IU M C L E A N IN G supplies 1 4 8 6 -3 3 M H Z - 2 0 M B RAM d n ve a nd H ew lett P ackard desk including XL Diatom filter, fo r fresh or 3 4 0 H D , 2 Disk Drives, m onitor, w rite r. W o rd processing softw are salt setup, everything that you need $ 150 included $ 2 5 0 C a ll 4 7 4 8 6 2 8 O B O Dave, 499 -0 51 1 7 12-5P for details. 7-10-5B M O V IN G SALE! 2 5 " Toshiba TV, keyboard, mouse, a n d back-up tape Loaded w / software $ 8 0 0 3 4 6 -9 3 9 3 7 -12 5B M A C SE30 N e w h ard d rive , 5 $ 3 5 0 Panasonic VCR, $ 2 5 0 RAM, manual, o rig in a l box Clean, Q ueen futon, black, $ 4 0 0 O B O excellent co n d itio n , $ 4 0 0 4 6 7 - Everything 18 m o s/o ld -e xce lle n t 1 3 8 6 -3 3 M H Z - 3 9 M B RAM w / 106M B H a rd Drive, 3 5 " Disk drive, and software inclu din g W in d ­ POO L TABLE for sale, perfect c o n ­ TREK 9 7 0 Mtn bike $ 2 5 0 Unive­ d itio n $ 1 0 0 0 n e g o tia b le C a ll ga $ 3 0 0 , backp ack $ 4 5 , G uinea BED RO O M FURNITURE: Full-size bed with fram e, $ 7 0 Dresser and Doug 4 7 6 -9 0 9 5 d a y, 4 7 9 8 7 7 5 pigs, $ 3 /e a , w o m e n's 3-speed end tab le $ 9 5 G as g rill, $ 2 0 M E N 'S 10-SPEED bike, $ 4 0 9 8 4 8 . 7-12-5B condition 7 9 4 -2 8 0 5 7 -1 2 -5 N C ows, Lotus $ 6 0 0 346-9 39 3 , 7 12-5B BEIGE C O U C H $ 1 0 0 , black couch night. 7-1 1-5NC bike, $5. Excellent co n d itio n 371 8 3 2 -1 2 2 9 . 7-12-5B $ 1 0 0 , smoked glass circula r d ining table w /c h a irs $ 1 0 0 , reclining sw i­ vel c h a ir w ith ottoman $ 8 5 . 7 0 8 - 8 3 4 8 7 10-5P K IN G MATTRESS $ 3 5 , chest $ 4 5 , 735 1 7-12-5B g o lf clubs $ 3 0 , electric exercise M A T C H IN G C O U C H a nd chair, b,ke $ 3 5 , chairs $ 2 0 , B & W TV $ 1 2 5 G o o d c o n d itio n , 4 59 - $ 2 0 C a ll 4 7 4 -1 1 0 6 . 7 12-5B 6 7 1 5 . 7-12-5B M A IL O RS3É& R B L A N K Order by Mail, FAX or Phone FAX: P.O. Box D Austin, Texas 78713 471-6741 471-5244 Classified Phone: 2 0 w o rd s 5 d a y s S5 A d d i t i o n a l W o r d s . . . . $ 0 . 2 5 e a I 7 13 19 25 2 8 14 20 26 3 9 15 21 27 4 10 16 22 28 5 1 1 17 23 29 6 12 18 24 30 lim ite d to p riv a te p a rty (n o n -c o m O ffe r m a rc ia l) a d s o nly In d iv id u a l ite m s o ffe re d fo r s a le m a y not e x c e e d $1 OOO a n d price m u s t a p p e a r in th e b o d y of th e a d c o p y If ite m s a re not sold, fiv e a d d itio n a l in s e rtio n s will b e run at n o c h a rg e A d v e r tis e r m ust c a ll b e f o r e 11 a.rr». o n th e d a y of th e fifth in s e rtio n N o c o p y c h a n g e th a n re d u c tio n in p ric e ) is a llo w e d (o th e r A D D R E S S . C I T Y . .............. N A M E ..................................................................................... P H O N E . S T A T E Z I P . ............ AVAILABLE NO W HYDE PARK E F F ./l BDR. FR O M $ 3 8 0 FURNISHED A N D UNFURNISHED * D ishw asher/D isposal "P o o l/B B Q /P a tio /L a u n d ry /S to ra g e "R esident M a n a g e r/O n IF Shuttle 1 0 8 Place Apartments 108 W e .* 4 5 th St. WEST CAMPUS EFFICIENCIES Q u ie t a nd spacious G as, w ater, and ca ble paid. Laundry room, security lig h ting , on W C shuttle Discounts on ye ar leases. Furnished- $ 4 0 0 per month Unfurnished- $ 3 7 5 per month B arranca Square Apartments 9 1 0 W e st 26th Street 4 5 2 -1 4 1 9 , 3 8 5 2 2 3 7 , 4 5 3 -2 77 1 4 6 7 -2 4 7 7 7-5-20B D 7 -1 2-206-f North Campus 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. one bedroom apt N e w furniture N O W $445 FALL $495 LOS A R C O S APTS. 4 3 0 7 A venue A 4 5 4 -9 9 4 5 7-6 12B-D SUMMER/FALL LEASES Reduced summer rotes. Short-term summer leases a vailab le . 1-3 mos. N ice! Furnished eff., 1.2 and 3BRs A ll b ills. Poo! covered parking, laundry, shuttle. 2 blocks N o rth o f UT. Preleasing for fall. C h aparosa Apartments 4 7 4 -1 9 0 2 . __________________7-6-2 O BD . GREAT 1 BR. APTS. 1 / 2 Block from Law School. Furnished, quiet. Low Fall/Spring rates. TOWER VIEW APTS., 9 2 6 E. 26th St., #208 320-0 4 8 2 7-7-20B-D. AFFORDABLE & C O N V E N IE N TI Efficiencies- 1 block to campus, ABP, free cable, o ff street parking D e co ra to r/lu xu ry furnishings, ceiling fan, controlled access, quiet at­ mosphere, on-site laundry, large trasl $ 3 7 5 /m o . summer, $ 4 5 0 fa ll/s p rin g PARK AVENUE PLACE 3 2 0 -7 5 0 0 or 4 7 4 -6 4 6 6 7 -1 1-20B.B M A M A IS O N 3 blocks to campus, ABP. Beautiful "Southern style M a n sio n " w ith com­ munity d in in g , kitchen, TV room, stu­ dy room . Large rooms with lu xury furnishings. FREE CABLE, parking and co ntro lle d accessll O nly $ 4 5 0 for a ll o f 2 nd session Preleasing fo r fa ll starting a t $ 3 8 0 0 . 2 2 2 2 Pearl 3 2 0 - 7 5 0 0 /4 7 4 6 4 6 6 7 -1 1-20B.B LARGE 2-2. Furnished A ll bills p a id Free ca ble . N o rth Cam pus $ 8 0 0 , 2-2 Furnished, covered pa rkin g . Free gas. $ 7 3 5 , AFS, 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 .7 - 10-5P-B GREATEST DEAL ca m p us!! 1-1 fur- m shed-balcony-built-in desk-lim ited $ 3 9 0 , AFS, 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 7-10-5P-B IBR, A C , tu b /s h o w e r, study, new carpet, p riva te entrance, separate meters. A v a ila b ly now 4 7 2 - 1091. 7 - 1 1-5B P R O P E R T Y R E S ID E N T IA L . L E A S IN G Austin's Largest and Best Free Locating Service FREE APT LOCATING! ALL SHUTTLE ROUTES- STUDENT SPECIALS EFF’S. 370+ 1BDRMS 390+ 2BDRMS 515+ 3BDRMS 725+ 4BDRMS 800+ ALSO: Townhomes, condos, lofts, everything!!! Some with: Washer/1 dryers, fireplaces, wyigbtrooms, bet tabs, tennis and volleyball courts. Fast-Free-Friendly! Call Now! 4623030 H IL L S A H X X X X Preleasing X X For Fall X x fUflimCR RRTCI x M SAflD YOUCYBAU M TREE CABIE M M m tí PVIHUTTIE M T W O P O O H tJ m oniiTE m enu x 1911 Willow Creek Dr. x 3 444-0010 « m P rofessionally M anaged ►4 b y D avis 8c Associates H L E Campus Area L E A A Eff’S, M y b b> 2-1 's, 3-2’s F F Apt's, Condos, L L 1 1 Houses IM M 467-7121 E E RENTAL - 360 FURNISHED APARTMENTS . , ... Aspenwood Apartments 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 ú We still have discounted rates through t] [j the end of August on all leases. 1&2 Bedroom Apts. Furnished/Unfurnished • 5 minutes from UT Area • Shuttle at door • Major utilities paid «2 pools/ 2 laundry • Ceiling fans ^•Covered parking • On-site management [| :! 3 Avoid th e Stress. S ta r t e a rly . - Lock in k] current rates now! f] tm ZE Pm ZZZZZZ. B L A C K S T O N E 2910 Medical Arts St. - across from law school 2 bdrm - 2 bath only SUM M ER RATE: $550 A LL BILLS PAID plus Free Cable! 1 LEA SIN G FOR S U M M E R & FALL & Aj Furnished U nfurnished | 4 7 4 - 9 5 2 3 1 Cornerstone Place Apartments • Stackable W ashers • B u ilt-In M icrowaves • Ceiling Fans • Covered Parking • F ully Furnished • 1-1 from S425 Leasing office at 2222 Rio Grande 4 7 6 - 4 9 9 2 G a r d e n G a te A p a rtm e n ts Great Roommate Plan Small 1 BR Starting at $455 Furnished Unfurnished W est ( ampus Pool 5 Minute Walk to Campus Leasing office at 2222 Rio Grande 476-4992 W l I a g e S t u d e n t s W e l c o m e On UT Shuttle Free Cable 2-1 885 sq. ft. $535 2-1.5 1000+ sq. ft. $625 1201 Tinnin Ford 4400592 CASA GRANDf Now Leasing (ABP) $4 5 0 E ff’s $440 up X -l’s $9 5 0 3 -2 ’s • Furnished or Unfurnished • near UT • pool • laundry • parking • large rooms • On UT shuttle 1400 Rio Grande 474-2749 NICE PLACE TO CALL HOME ★ 1 - 1's 8c 2- l 's re a d y fo r >< X M H M X X ★ G a s C o o k in g , G as ★ G as, W a te r 8c C a b le S u m m e r H e a tin g Paid ★ On CR S h u ttle ★ $ 4 5 0 / $ 5 9 5 p lu s e le c . SANTA FE APARTMENTS 110 1 C la y to n Lane 4 5 8 - 1 5 5 2 PRE-LEASE DISCOUNT Amenities include: p ool, indoor basketball, w e ig ht room, tennis. O n UT Shuttle. $ 3 9 0 -7 7 5 - ALL close to UT- Effi ciencies, 1-1 's, 2 -1 's,- ve ry nice 4 6 9 -9 0 7 5 . 6 -3 0 -1 2 B-D ROBBINS PLACE 2 / 2 $ 1 1 0 0 a v a ila b le now ! W / D , fire p la c e , 1, 2, o r 3 bedroom floorplans m icrow ave , huge b a lco n y C a ll Jenni at PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-7-5B FR O M $ 4 5 5 . Advantage Properties 4 4 3 -3 0 0 0 6 .1 6 .2 0 B .D PRELEASE FOR SUMMER OR FALL! Lofts, Townhomes, Studios M any unusual floorplans. Advantage Properties 443-3000 6 .1 6 .2 0 B .D NEAR LA W school, on shuttle, la rg e 1-1. $ 3 9 5 + E . 4 7 4 -1 2 4 0 . 6-15-20B-D. W ALK UT - 2 B R /2 B A 8 3 2 sq. ft. $ 6 2 5 -$ 7 0 0 . A ll bills, ca ble paid , except A /C , heat, phone. Saving at least $ 5 0 /m o .N e w carpet, paint, appliances. Prompt service, swim m ing pool. On-site mgmt. V oya g er's Apartments. 311 E. 31 st St., N orth Campus. 4 7 8 -6 7 7 6 . 6 -19-20B. LARGE IBR, $ 3 9 5 Large 2BR, $ 4 9 5 . N e w ca rp et, p ain t, tile. 9 2 6 -7 3 7 7 . 6-22-20B NEAR UT.summer rate $ 3 2 5 . UT shuttle Large e fficien cy. N e w c a r­ pet, p a in t and tile 4 7 2 -6 9 7 9 . 6- 22-20B. G u aranteed August Prelease on this brand new efficiency with limited access gates and free cable. Super nice and on the shuttle. Properties Plus. 4 4 7 -7 3 6 8 or 1-800-548-0106. 6 -2 1 -20B-D SOUTH SHUTTLE 2Br Fall or Summer Prelease Price: O n ly $ 5 3 5 W ith C a b le p aid Access Gates Properties Plus 447-7368 or 1-800-548-0106 LARGE EFFICIENCIES SPECIAL RATES!! N e a r campus and on Red River shuttle. Remodeled, D W , N O p e ts /N O roomates Preleasing call Sandra 474-5043 M-F 371-0160 weekends 7-7-20B.D SUPER_RATESH FALL/SPRING UT AREA 2-2s and 2-1 s C A /C H , pool, laundry facili­ ties, cable connections, dish­ washer, disposal, plenty of parking, pleasant atmosphere. 474-5929. 7-7-20B VILLA VALLARTA e fficie n cy $ 4 0 9 . 2 5 0 5 Longview . Ask a b o u t our summer move-in special. 3 2 2 - 9 8 8 7 . 7-7-7B AVAILABLE NO W IN N IC E , Q UIET COMPLEX GREAT FOR GRADS FOUR BLOCKS W E S T C A M P U S G A S , W ATER PAID, FR O M $ 3 6 5 499-8013 AGENT: 473-1 892DP 7-7 -1 0B. D AVAILABLE N O W EFFICIENCY APAR TM ENTS JUST FOUR BLOCKS TO C A M P U S . G A S , W ATER PAID. F R O M $ 3 9 5 ASK A B O U T OUR SU M M ER RATES 4 9 9 -8 0 1 3 AGENT 4 7 3 - 1 8 9 2 D P 7-7-10B. D ENFIELD RO A D spacious $ 6 1 5 , a v a ila b le A ugust 2-1 1st Pool, m iniblinds, ce ilin g fans, quiet, ER shuttle. Shown b y appointm ent. 4 7 7 -1 3 0 3 . 7-7-1 O BD HYDE PARK Efficiencies n ow avail a b le w ith summer discounts Large walk-in closets, p a tio o r balcony, IF shuttle. 4 3 1 2 S pe e dw a y, 8 35 - 1 BR st. 2 BR st. @ 2-2 A B P $625 $ 1 0 0 O F F 1st M o n t h w it h T h is A d 6-21-20B-D. 6 2 5 0 . 7-7-5B. $ 1 00 OFF first months rent, L am ar/ K oenig a re a . C o z y 1-1's. A p ­ p liances, ce ilin g fans, m ini-blinds, p oo l, la un d ry room. W a te r & gas AVAILABLE N O W HYDE PARK E ff/1 BDRM from $ 3 8 0 Furnished& Unfurnished p a id . $ 3 9 5 . A p ril Realty 4 4 2 - D ishw asher/D isposal/B ookshelves Available Immediately For more info call „ 454-2537 „ 6 5 0 0 or 3 3 9 -6 4 7 1 . 6-23-20B W EST CA M P US a v a ila b le n ow 2 b r / l b e $ 5 9 5 . Stove, re frig e ra ­ tor, A / C For 2 4 hour in fo ., c a ll 477-LIVE. 7-3-20B D * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * CALL 477-LIVE 2 4-ho ur in fo., a v a il­ P o o l/B B Q /P a tio /L a u n d ry /S to ra g e Resident M a n a g e r, on IF shuttle 108 Place Apartments 1 0 8 W . 4 5th St. 4 5 2 -1 4 1 9 , 3 8 5 -2 2 3 7 , 4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 7-1 0-2 0 B .D GREATEST 2 b edroom on shuttle 2 / 1 .5 . Free c a b le , access gates, poo l $ 5 8 5 -$ 5 9 5 , AFS, 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 . 7-10-5P-B UT SHUTTLE L O O O O O O O W bills. Access gates, free ca b le , c e ilin g fans lb r - $ 4 2 0 2 br- $ 5 8 5 AFS, 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 7 -10-5P-B a b le A ugust 15th. 1-5 bedroom s $ 3 9 5 $ 1 5 0 0 . For fax, c a ll 4 5 2 - 5 9 7 9 (24hrs ). 6-28-20B D HILLSIDE APARTMENTS 1-2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished ÜTHE ASHFORD £ Í APARTMENTS * * Preleasing For Fall £ £ * Affordable West £ st Campus Living * Ü a Large Efficiencies ff K I - I s perfect fo r room m ates g J Large J Starting at $325 2-2's 2408 L e on £ 1 476-8915 * ■ « 1 X 1 K K K K K K J* * £ i AVAILABLE NOW! 3-1 /¡Townhome Best location/Poolside 1200+ square feet ( TVv Free Cable. UT Shuttle $795 440-0592 W est Campus E fficiencies $ 3 7 5 S u m m e r $ 3 9 9 Fall m I 3 2 ^ - 5 7 4 - 0 l+’lHLElSLHUÍLt-LHElHlLÍUÍlHlSlHEliaiaS ¡ L A CA JSITA J 2-1 $675 l - l $550 £ U ffi S w im m ing Pool ¡L- Gas, heat, & w a te r paid m lo w u tilitie s 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 E P I T ig tta c iiq p iu ic iw a ia ia u M a a a u n a c lg 1 i N o w L e a s in g The Arrangement Lg I - 1,2-2, lofts & townhomes SR Shuttle at Front Door 2 124 Burton Dr. 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 W A LK TO UT Large luxurious 3-2 tow nhom e w ith W / D a nd mi­ cro w a ve $ 1 2 5 0 4 6 9 -9 0 7 5 6- 3 0 -1 2B-D. C lean and Q uiet G REAAAT WEST Cam pus lo c a tio n l All Utilities Paid 4 7 8 -2 8 1 9 5 1 4 Dawson Road 1-1, $ 4 4 0 ; 2-1, $ 7 7 5 ; p o o l, co v­ ered p a rkin g a v a ila b le , fire p la ce s, lofts, AFS, 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 .7 - 10-5P-B Just off Barton Springs Road 6-29-20B.B IF SHUTTLE la rg e 1-1, furnished or unfurnished. Free gas C a ll now Tow er Real Estate 3 2 2 9 9 3 4 7- W A LK TO E n g in ee ring /La w school 10-5P-B Large, cle an 1 /1 's $ 4 5 0 - $ 4 7 5 E fficiencies $ 4 3 5 - $ 4 5 0 , gas, w a ­ ter, hot w a te r p a id . Reserved p a rk in g . Some furnished. Cats O K Small, q u ie t com m unities 5 0 0 & 5 0 2 E lm w ood. M atth e w s Properties. 4 5 4 -0 0 9 9 6-27- 20B.B HYDE PARK, sm all 1-1 's A ll a p ­ p liances, C A /C H , p atios. Q uiet, frie n dly com m unity RR shuttle 1 /2 block. Sm all pets neg otia b le . $ 4 3 5 $ 4 5 0 , 4 6 0 8 Bennett M atthew s Properties 4 5 4 -0 0 9 9 6-2 7-2 0 B B GRADUATE STUDENT subsidized rent, new e fficien cy, 5 blocks from cam pus, UT shuttle 4 7 6 -4 7 4 4 6- 3 0 -1 4B SUBLEASE 1 B R /1 B A 5 1 2 sq ft $ 4 5 5 /m o lease ends Dec, 31 O n N o rth Lamar bus route M ich e lle 4 5 3 -3 9 9 0 , 7-7-7B. W EST CA M P US I M ove -in spec-al! $ 1 0 0 o ff first m onth's rent C o v ­ ered p a rkin g . $ 3 9 9 4 AFS. 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 7-10-5P-B SHUTTLE SPECIAL, 2-2, $ 5 5 0 G i­ g a n tic pool, clu b room w a lk-in closets. AFS, 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 .7-10-5P-B 2-2 WEST C A M P U S C o ve re d p a rkin g , b alco n y, w a lk to school $ 6 7 5 , AFS, 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 7-10-5P-B HYDE PARK e fficie n cy N e w car pet, n ew p a in t n ew H V A C A v a il­ a b le 8 / 3 $ 4 0 5 3 2 0 0 0 1 0 7 12- 5B "L A W S CHO O L! Smaller, g o o d 1 / I w a lk /s h u ttle , $ 4 7 5 / m o Front Page 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 7 -1 1 -2 0 B D "A T T E N T IO N f^e a p a rtm e n t/c o n d o lo c a tin g se rvice l STUDENTSI Fast and frie n dly! Front Page 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 . 7 -1 1-20B.D "W E ST C A M P U S 1 S pacious o ld e r 2 / 2 , $ 7 5 0 / 7 2 5 Front Page 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 7 -1 1-20B D RENTAL • 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS Woodfake: ^ J ta tu its ''Jound ui { W oeJlafcs: • Four UT Shuttle Stops • Spacious One & Two Bedrooms • Ceiling Fans • Hike & Bike Trails • Sunrise Lake Views 1 Mrfiy not cStart snjoifintj Lije .it 1 Woodta&e today ? 443-6363 i s Page 10 Wednesday, July 12, 1995 T h e D a il y T e x a n RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 3 2 0 - P e r a o n a l s 7 9 0 - P a i t - t i m * 7 9 0 - P e r t - t f m e AROUND CAMPUS RENTAL 3 *0 - Uni. Apt*. *CARING OWNERS* Beautiful, spacious Efficiencies, $ 3 7 0 + O ne bedrooms from $ 46 5-625 Two bedrooms from $ 67 5-795 W est Campus- ITT orea KHP, 476-2154. Personalized attention 7-12-20B-D 390 - Uni. Duplexes 4 B D / 4 B A N E W construction, big deck, C A / C H , vaulted ceilings, $ 1 8 0 0 M ove in 8/15. W / D 4 7 8 -6 1 1 8 6-29-10B T A RRY TO W N , QUIET for quiet students. ER 1 block $400/mo.+electric smoker 1 6 0 7 Rockmoor. 8 7 9 7 7 12-36 efficiency shuttle, Non- 499- -C e n d o t- Tow nhom es Ely Properties UT Leasing 3-2 2 -2 2-2.5 2 -2 • N / C H o w # •St. T W rm s • Q w d r a ^ le 2-1 2-1 2-1 2 -2 2 -2 •CertoRRid •W/CHoese •Parapet •West Ploce •Croix •Tee Green •Oelsea •Seton 1-1 •Noeces Corners 2-j 1-1 •finis 1-1 •Overlook 2-1 W /C Duplex 2-1 •Gaiebo 2-1 •Tee Green 2-1 }1500 $ 1 2 0 0 $ 1 2 0 0 $ 1 2 0 0 $ 1 1 0 0 $850 $850 $850 $800 $800 $750 $750 $700 $675 $675 $650 $600 12 agents to serve you 476-1976 Tow n h r m et ‘ C A R IN G O W N E R S * Luxurious! O n e bedrooms from $ 6 2 5 -7 7 5 Two bedrooms from $ 7 7 5 -1 2 0 0 Som e hardw ood floors, all fully equipped KHP, 476-2154 t 7 12-20B-D 42 0 - Unf. H ouses 5/BR, 2/BA. C A C H , near UT shut­ tle August availability 867 -0 3 5 9 7-1CL5B HYDE PARK 5/BR, 2/BA w ood new HVAC, floors, electrical. Completely $ 2 1 0 0 3 2 0 0 0 1 0 7-12 5B hard­ new remodeled HYDE PARK 5/BR, 3/BA hard­ w ood floors, interior columns, com­ pletely remodeled 3 2 0 0 0 1 0 7-12-5B $ 2 2 0 0 425 - Room s SHO RT W A LK UT Private bed­ room; share kitchen, bath. Quiet, nonsmoking petfree From $24 5 plus share bills, meals (humble, co- op)- $55 0 + (in gorgeous, unique du­ plex) 474-2618 6-28-20B-B FOUR BLO C KS UT Private bed­ room, private bath. Share kitchen. C A / Quiet, nonsmoking, petfree C H 7- 10-20B-B $425, ABP 474 -2 4 0 8 435 - Co-ops Share a home with friends this summer! - * ¡3 - ■ $ - ICC’s large, older homes are conveni­ ent, affordable, & student-owned. Our backyards, sun- decks, & 24-hr kitchens are made for you. Call now. From $ 3 3 0 to $ 4 0 0 a month. Inter-Cooperative Council, Inc. 510 W. 23" St. 476-1957 8 8 Í C O F F E E $775-1200 Benchmark $1200-1300 Centennial $800 Chelsea $650-1150 Croix $900-1400 Delphi $850 Gateway $650 Hyde Park Oaks $550 Landmark Sq. $650-1300 Orangetree $575 Pointe $700 Sfonesthrow St. Thomas $950-1200 West. Univ. PI. $1000-1100 $850 Whitis Place SUMMER ONLY SPECIALS $425-650 Many Others Available! 2113 Rio Grande #206 474-1800 474-1800 Leasing For Fall 1 , 2 , & 3 Bedrooms “D e u t c g G d & m i y C t = PROPERTIES i . 478-6565 S a v a n n a h 3 2/2’s $ 8 7 5 4 2/2’s $ 9 0 0 2 I l l ’s $ 9 2 5 I 2/2’s $ 12 0 0 W /D. Covered Parking, F/P, Microwave. O n Shuttle G oing Fast! 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 EPI O N L Y O N E unit available 3br/ 3ba, large luxury condo. August move-m Starting at $ 2 , 100/mo Call Melanie 476-7059 7-10-10BB W EST C A M P U S St. Croix large 2/ 2 parking, gates, microwave, W / D included furnished, covered Prelease now 832-0548 7-7-5B D 2BR C O N D O UT W est Campus 15. required 7-10-6B (512) 2 9 5 -3 4 6 9 12 month lease Available 8/ References Q U A DRA NG LE 611 E 45TH STREET, #26 Really nice 2 bedroom-2.5 bath/ 1,296 sq ft/2 fireploces/2 decks/1 car garage, 1 reserved/ all appliances mcl washer-dryer/ security system/overlooks pool/on shuttfe/$ 1,250 rent-9 or 12 month lease/Coll Thomas or Lisad 472- 1783 __________________________ 7-7-20B M O V E IN TODAY 'Dow ntow n efficiency on hike and bike trail $ 3 5 0 'South Central 1/1 near St Ed­ w ard’s $38 5 'F a r W est Shuttle 2/2 $ 9 0 0 ABP 'W e s t Campus 2/2 Preservation Square $ 1 0 0 0 Summer $1 100 Fall Welcome Home Leasing 458-2525 7-10-58 D W E ST C A M P U S condo, 1-1,W /D , covered parking, built-in desk, mi­ crowave, $ 4 9 5 + AFS, 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 7-106P-B B E D R O O M S -C A M P U S THREE area 1 2 0 0 square feet W asher and Dryer vaulted ceilings, French doors, courtyard, microwave Pets ok $ 1 2 5 0 AFS, 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 7-10- 5-P-8 N O R T H C A M P U S 1-1 ond 2 2, walking distance Great for law ond engineerng students Tower ReolE state 322-9934 7-10-5P-B W EST C A M P U S and North Campus 1-1, $ 5 0 0 - $ 9 0 0 2-2, $ 6 7 5 - $ 1 5 0 0 Tower Real Estate. 3 2 2 -9 9 3 4 .7 - 10-5P-B $ 1 1 5 0 -$ 2 4 0 0 3 brs, GREAT W EST campus condo! 2-2, w asher/dryer-m icrow ave-covered parking-controlled access $950, AFS, 322 -9 5 5 6 7 10A5P-B SHORT W A LK UT. Private bed­ room, share bills, kitchen, baths, meals, chores. Friendly, quiet, non­ smoking, petfree $24 5 -3 3 5 +bills & meals 474-2618 6-28-20B-B 440-*- Room m ates PERFECT R O O M M A T E S . listing N o found. match 6-21-20B. fee 'til Guaranteed Fast service Free roommate computer 370 -4 9 3 8 Block W est UT. Share GORGEOUS Lorge restored 3/2 with 2 or 3 roommates. W hole second floor. Hardwoods. Screened porch. Yard Light, airy, CA/CH , W /D . Immaculate. Quiet M any amenities Available August 22nd. Rooms $ 360-$550 4 74 -2 0 1 4 6-22-20B-8. SHORT W A LK UT Private bed­ room, share kitchen, bath Quiet, nonsmoking, petfree From $24 5 plus share bills, meals (humble co­ op)- $ 5 5 0 + (in gorgeous, uniquedu- plex) 474 -2 6 1 8 6-28-20B-B RESPONSIBLE M/F, shore 3br du­ plex $ 2 9 0 + 1/ 3 bills Nonsmok­ er, wooded setting, near Zilker, all appliances 4 4 7 5 2 7 2 , 441 -6 0 0 5 7-3-10B needed to FEMALE R O O M A T E share 1-1 condo in Far West Available 8/1, $ 27 5 + 1/ 2 bills Charlotte 338-8129 7-6-5B BLOCK WEST/UT. Fall. Huge, gor- geous-hardwoods, screened porch. Quiet, nonsmoking women $360- $55 5 474 -2 0 1 4 7-5-20BB G R A D STUDENT share 2bd/2ba Luxury apartment, all ameni­ N W ties $ 40 0 Nonsmoker, no pets available 7 /1 5 719-5291 7-7-5B SE E K IN G RESPONSIBLE roommate to share 2bd apartment 10 minute drive from UT. $ 3 2 5 +deposit Vin­ cent 302 -1 5 3 9 7 -1 1-5B SHARE C H A R M IN G Westlake 4- plex with responsible female 2/ 1 5 Baldwin Grand,w/d, $ 3 2 5 + 1/2 utilities 328-1268. 7-10-5B LIBERAL MALE/FEM ALE needed to share cool 1 2 0 0 + square-foot 2-2 in Hyde Park Five minutes from UT $ 3 3 0 + 1 / 2 bills Available August 302-3139 7-10-5B Private bed­ FOUR BLO C KS UT. room, private bath. Share kitchen C A / Quiet, nonsmoking, petfree CH. $425, ABP 7- 10-20B-B 4 7 4 2 4 0 8 R O O M M A T E needed to M/F spacious W est share beautiful, Campus condo w/three females for 95 9 6 (210)521- 656 8 7-12-8P $ 32 5 Marcia RESPONSIBLE QUIET, spiritually oriented woman seeks same Share beautiful, large, garden home near Northcross C A /C H , W /D , fire­ place $ 35 0 + 1 / 2 bills Diane 467- 9128. 7-12-5B large bedroom HYDE PARK house. Male/Female UT shuttle, CA, $425+1 /2 ceiling fons, W / D bills Available 8/1, Mike 450- 9391. 7-11-46 S : FEMALE needed R O O M M A T E Prefer clean grad student. 1 block from campus $32 5 +1/2 2-1. bills 499-8643 7 -113P O FF-C A M PU S PERFECT 2/2.5 condo for norvsmoking female W / security, D, more Kristin only 385-4391 7-12-8B computer/printer, $275+part bills ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 2 0 - Personáis Live Gals! Great Talk! 1-900-476-1900, Ext. 8 47 7 3.99 per/min. Must be 18 yrs. Procall Co. (602) 954-7420. 7-11 58 M f t - O t m r a ! n i i p t V Q r i n i Q C H ILD C A R E P O S IT IO N S N ow Hiring Center Directors Teachers Disabilities/Resource Teacher Teacher A ides Center Clerks Home Visitors C ooks Offering exceptional opportunities for qualified individuals who enjoy working with young children Paid Vacation Paid Sick Leave Paid Holidays Paid Health/Dental Plans Retirement Plan Educational Opportunities Credit Union Send job experience and references to: Child Care, P.O. Box 431, Round Rock, TX 7 8 6 8 0 An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer IN T E R N A T IO N A L T E C H N IC A L INSTITUTE (ITI) an Austin-based company, serving higher education clients world-wide, is looking for flexible, self-motivated, part-time or full-time individuals to provide General Technical Support. Must have experience with computer applications. Accounting background, Programming experience or UN IX experience preferred Will be assisting with documentation and programming Please send resume and salary requirements to: ITI 4 0 0 6 Sp e e d w ay Ave Austin, Texas 7 8 7 5 1 or fax to: (5 1 2 )4 6 7 -9 0 6 2 . 7-10-5B C1ERICAL/SALES Assistant and gallery sitter needed at historical downtown Austin publishing company working with American Indian and historic Texas art in a pleasant environment This entry level job includes working with customers in person and on the tele­ phone. General typing and clerical skills needed Somewhat flexible hours with limited Saturday work included W e are looking for a self­ starter who is comfortable working independently Ability to travel for several days for out-of-state exhibits important. Call 472-7701 and ask for Bohdy and Ted 7-12-3B CIRCLE ME If you have a dynam ic person­ ality, e g o in check, winning smile, and professional a p ­ pearance. Smart enough to forge to leadership, various P/T, F/T positions available at nat'l marketing co. 459-4142 _________________________ 7-12-1B C R E W LEADER NEED ED to work on janitorial crew training adults with mental retardation. Full-time position, M-F, 8am-4pm Starting salary $5.70/hr. Experience working with adults with mental retardation preferred. Call 447-1619, ask for Roberta. EOE/M /F/H /V. GREAT OPPORTUNITY! Able to handle 4 phone lines, some data entry, customer service experience preferred, hours 3:30pm- 8:00pm, great pay! A N D Data Entry Clerk, spreadsheet experience, hours 8am to 1pm, M on -Fri. Please call for an interview 346-3155 ________________________ 7-7-20B-D PART-TIME CLERICAL W O R K available for fast-paced physician's office Must be highly motivated and dependable team player Af­ ternoons Please send resume to Laurie Serafine, Office Manager, Eye Clinic of Austin, 3 4 1 0 Far West Blvd. Suite 140, Austin, 7 87 3 1. 7-7-5B A round Cam pus is a d aily col­ u m n lis tin g U n iv e rsity -re la te d ac tiv itie s sp o n so red by academ ic d e p a rtm e n ts, stu d e n t services and s tu d e n t o rg a n iz a tio n s reg istered w ith th e C a m p u s A c tiv itie s O ffice. A n n o u n ce m en ts m u st be su b m itte d on the p ro p er form by n o o n tw o days before p u b lic atio n . F orm s are availab le at the D a ily Texan office at 25th S tre et and W h itis A venue. You m ay n ow su b m it A round C am pus e n trie s b y e-m a il at: a r o u n d c @ u tx v m s .c c .u te x a s .e d u . P lease in c lu d e the n am e of the s p o n so rin g o rg an izatio n , location, tim e an d date of event, date of a n n o u n c e m e n t, a contact p h o n e n u m b e r and o th e r rele v an t in fo r­ m a tio n . Q u e s tio n s re g a rd in g A round C am pus m ay also b e e- m ailed to th is address. O th erw ise , p le ase direct q u e stio n s to Tracy S ch u ltz at 471-4591. 7-11-9B The D a ily Texan rese rv e s the rig h t to ed it su b m issio n s. MEETINGS Texas Ju g g lin g Society will m eet 7 p.m .-9:30 p.m. W ednesday at the M usic B uilding 2.118. For m ore inform ation call Jim M axwell at 323- 9675. U niversity Flying C lub will m eet at 7 p.m. W ednesday at the G rad u ­ ate School of Business 2.124. No experience is necessary. For m ore inform ation call 478-AÉRO. B u d d h ist A ssociation w ill have a read in g of the Jataka Tales 7:30 p.m -9:30 p.m . F riday at Texas U nion 4.224. For m ore inform ation call C arlon at 416-0427. SPECIAL EVENTS ~ S tu d y A broad O ffice announces the 1996-97 Institute of International Fulbright G rants Com petition. Stu­ d ents currently enrolled at the U ni­ versity should contact Ivy M cQuid- dy in C arothers D orm itory 23 for application forms. There will be an inform ation session W ednesday at 3:30 p.m. The deadline for applica­ tions is Sept. 22, 1995. For m ore inform ation call 471-6490. S tudy A broad O ffice w ill have a general inform ation session from 1:30 p .m .-2:30 p.m . T h u rsd ay at Carothers D orm itory 23. For m ore inform ation call H eather M eacham at 471-6490. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES UT S tu d e n t V o lu n te e r C e n te r needs volunteers to help gather evi­ dence of alleged housing discrim i­ nation. For m ore inform ation call 471-6161. ■ V olunteers are needed to help the A u stin /T ra v is C ounty Youth Services w hich to assisting low income, at-risk youths and their families as they strive to reach their highest potential. For m ore inform ation call 471-6161. is com m itted ■ V olunteers are needed to assist a local diverse m agazine w ith a vari­ ety of publication related duties. Training is provided and the hours are flexible. For m ore inform ation call 471-6161. ■ V olunteers over the age of 55 are needed to be a friend to a family that has a child w ith chronic illnesses or disabilities. For m ore inform ation call 471-6161. ■ V olunteers are needed to assist Im m igration C ounseling & O u t­ reach Services in answ ering phones, setting client appointm ents, filing cases and other duties. For m ore inform ation call 471-6161. ■ V olunteers are needed to assist in a variety of operational needs for a historic house m useum w hich was once an official foreign legation d u r­ ing the early Republic of Texas days. For m ore inform ation call 471-6161. ■ V olunteers are needed to assist the Sierra C lub in general office duties as w ell as project related tasks. For m ore inform ation call 471- 6161. Services for S tu d en ts w ith D is­ abilities needs volunteers for a vari­ ety of tasks including stu d y assis­ tance, test assistance and reading and w ritten hom ew ork help. For m ore inform ation call Sandy at 471- 6259. EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 810 - Office-Clerical 890 - Clubs - SHORT W ALK UT Typists (will train on Mac), bookkeeping trainees, clerical, runners. Non-smoking. 474-2032. 7- 3-20B B GREAT OPPORTUNITY! Architects seek full-time energetic reception­ ist. W ord Perfect, multiple tasks. 3 0 1 8 N.Lamar, # 200. 3 2 3 6 6 6 6 . 7-10-5B 820 - Accounting- Bookkeeping SHORT W A LK UT. G ain experi­ ence with M a c bookkeeping sys­ tem. Also hiring typists, clerical, runners Nonsmoking 474-2032. 7- 3-20B.B Restaurants PO SSE EAST is now accepting ap­ plications for cooks $6/hr. start­ ing See Edward or Shannon 7-7-5B DAILY PAY! Waiters/Waitresses Bartenders/Banquet Set-Up 2 0 N EED ED IMMEDIATELY LABOR FINDERS Hospitality Division Apply 6 :0 0 a m 6 00pm 9 9 0 0 Gray Blvd 719-4384, Steve or Bob. 900 - Domestic- Household A $ 4 0 0 a day position working for Don Lapre of the TV show M aking Money. Coll Don ot 1-800-DON- LAPRE 6-20-20B 890 - Clubs- Restaurants AFTER-SCHO OL CH ILDCARE need­ ed- Boy, 10, Girl, 13. 10/hrs/ $5/hr ,2 50-4,50PM , M-F. wk., Must have own car for pick-up at Casis and O 'H e nry schools Non- smoker, refs/req'd. Start 8-14. 480-0218. 7-6-10B. RO XY NIGHTCLUB now hiring all doormen, bartenders, positions: waitperson. Apply in person. 302- 0 4 East 6th St. 477-7523. 7-10-5B T W O W O N D ERFU L boys, 3 and 5, need a nanny- flexible hours, allow for morning class time. Hyde Park. Call 323-5187. 7-7-I0B EMPLOYMENT 90 0 - Dom estic- H ousehold for 4yr Hours negotiated weekly. References and 474- PART-TIME BABYSITTER old Starting A S A P transportation 9756, leave message 7-7-5B required. BABYSITTER 4-9P M. M-Th $4 2 5 / hr, one child. One reference mini­ mum and interview 4 7 2 -0 8 5 6 7- 12-5B SITTER N E ED ED weekdays full time 7:30-5:30, July 17-8/1. Part time 2 30-5:30 8 / 1 4 through Decem­ ber. 3 3 5 6 0 3 8 . 7-12-5B 9 8 0 - Business Opportunities A $ 4 0 0 a day position working foi Don Lapre of the TV show M aking Money. Call Don at 1 -800-D O N LAPRE 6-20-20B TO PLACE YOUR SUPER LONGHORN WANTAD CALL 471-52441 7 12 58 BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT • 890 CLUBS - RESTAURANTS S T B Era U 6-29-20B 7-12-5B. 810 - O Ffica-Clw kal 840** Salas HOT, KINKY, erotic babes live. I- 90O535-LIVE (5483) $ 2 . 5 0 3 9 9 / min.6-2-308 J O IN THE Wildest Live Party Everl Check It Out 24/hrs/day! New, Exciting Dateline, Sexy Fantasies & Live Girls. Call Now ! As Low As $ 0 33/min 18+ 1 8 0 9 4 7 4 2 8 1 4 6-14-16P 560 - Public Notice SECRET H ID E A W A Y for romantics. Dabbs Hotel est. 1907 on Llano River Rock Enchanted (915)247-7905. 6-2O20B. near EDUCATIONAL 590 - Tutoring • w riting • essays • research papers • elementary grades through college ¡ $ 1 9 C A S H ! M d M n i M i f t ! l $ 1 4 0 / M O N T H ! ■Dy donating M et a wwfcl I I | With your first geMrovs | | donation of Mesaying plasma j | (with this coapoo). | j ! Wt r*9»k« yw bring wttb ywr I ‘Sedal Sacwfty Card ‘Proal el Rtsidooce I | ‘Pktori ID (UT ID, TDl...) | I AUSTIN PUSMA COMPANY INC I ¡ J 1 0 W. 29th St. • 477-3735J PUT IT IN W RITIN G 4 8 0 -0 6 3 6 TUTORING • TUTORING • REVIEWS O P E N 7 D A Y S til M idn igh t. Sun.-Thur. House oí IU T U T O R S lW 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 Sin ce 1980 SERVICES 630 - Computer Services JAYMOR COMPUTING Consulting/Training/Service If you just got a new computer and need a little help getting started... Call 4 4 3 -7 1 8 8 ask for Jason "You W o n 't Pay M o re With J A Y M O R " _________________________ 6-15-2 0B p a r t t Tm e $8 75+/hr. People needed !o prepare labels. Flexible hours and locations. N o experience required. Call 1-809-474-3366 Int'l LD Toll 6-19-12B.D N O W H IRING for summer posi­ In Dobie, tions, $5/hr. + bonuses from 11- call Chris 505-2349, I 3 PM 6-20-20P The nation's leader in test prepara­ tion, The Stanley H Koplon Educa­ tional Center, is seeking P/T in­ structors in general chemistry, or­ ganic chemistry, physics and biolo­ gy. M S. (or equiv ) and teaching experience preferred. Also seeking ESL teacher with M A and teaching experience Contact Cynthia Baker at 811 West 24th St, Austin, TX 78705. O r call 472 -8 0 8 5 ext. 5. 6 -2 2 -2 0 B E A RN EXTRA money while losing weight. N o willpower needed. A ll* natural. Doctor Theresa 419-0915. 6-29-20B recommended DENTAL A SSIST A N T Must have experience campus position. 20B. position. Close to Excellent pay for part-time 6-27- Call 4 5 2 -6 4 0 5 Come see how much fun a telemar­ keting job con be. W e are now taking applications for summer em­ ployment. Great work environ­ ment. N o selling. 1 block from campus 2 0 + hours/week. Evening shifts. $ 5 $ 10/hr. Call CJ at PBC Marketing, 4 7 7 -3 8 0 8 . 7-10-5B.D Staff PART-TIME A F TER SC H O O L Beginning Aug 14th, 2 6 :3 0 P M In­ terest and/or experience working with children. Various sites in Aus­ $5/hr Complete Application tin Branch at Child Development Y M C A, 110 0 Cesar Chavez. 7- 12-20B 800 - G eneral Help W anted $ 1 7 5 0 W EEKLY possible mailing N o experience re­ our circulars. quired For info call 301-306-1207 6-6-48P Begin now S U M M E R EM PLOY­ ALASKA Fish­ MENT- STUDENTS Neededl Earn up to $3000- ing Industry. Room and $ 6 0 0 0 + per month Boardl Transportation! M ale or Female N o experience necessary. Call ext. A 5 8 6 7 7 7-3-20P 5 4 5 -4 1 5 5 (206) CRUISE SHIPS H IR IN G - Earn up to $2000+/month. travel Seasonal & full-time positions. N o exp necessary. I- 206 6 34 -04 6 8 ext C 5 8 6 7 8 7-3-20P For info, call W orld N A T IO N A L PARKS HIRING- Sea­ sonal and full-time employment available at National Parks, For­ ests and Wildlife Preserves. Bene­ fits + bonusesl Call: 1-206-545- 4 80 4 ext. N 5 8 6 7 5 . 7-3-20P ATTENDANT NEED ED : M a le seeks live-in attendant. Room/board+sal- ary. (214) 252- 7702. 6-15-20P. Call collect LARGeTrEW A RD S INTERNATIONAL HEALTH A N D NUTRITION C O M P A N Y . EXPA N D IN G -EN G LISH A N D MULTILINGUAL PEOPLE NEEDED. French, Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Spanish, Portugese, Russian, etc. $ 4 0 0 $ 1 2 0 0 P A $ 2 5 0 0 - $ 4 5 0 0 F A Call; 707-7745 _______________________6.1 6 20B.D 750 - Typing Z I V L E Y The Compíete Professional Typing Service A P P L I C A T I O N S TE R M P A P E R S • D ISSE R T A T IO N S R E S U M E S • W O RD P R O C E S S IN G L A S E R PRINTIN G • FORM ATTIN G B L O C K B U S T E R Quiet, RESIDENCE M A N A G E R nonsmoking, personable Show rooms 2 hours/day. Reduced rent for showing rooms. Leave mes­ sage: 474-2618 7-3-20B B SHORT W A LK UT. train Mac), on trainees, clerical, runners. smoking 474-2032. 7-3-20B.B Typists (will bookkeeping N o n ­ US G O V 'T Jobs Hiring Now: 100's of entry Level Openings. Updated Call Toll-free 1-800-549- Daily. 2 3 0 0 ext 3 0 1 4 6-22-20B. U.S. GOVT. JO B S Hiring Now: 10 0 's of Entry Level Openings Up­ Call Toll Free dated Daily. Ext # 3 0 1 4 1(800) 5 4 9 -2 3 0 0 6-28-20P IRO NSM ITH BODY, IN C invites applications for the position of "professional" sports and fitness trainer Experience needed in teach- ing, designing and implementing generol health, fitness and sport- specific resistance programs. Early morning, evening and weekend work is required Qualifications: Must have or be working on Bachelor's degree in health related field, C.P R Certification. You must possess attention to detail, organizational and administrative skills, ability to communicate effec­ tively both in writing and orally. You must be energetic, hard work­ ing, disciplined and excited about working one-to-one and with groups of people who have a range of generol health, fitness ond sports- specific goals. Submit letters of application, 3 current letters of • recommendation, resume, income history to: Sarah Scott, President, (512)454-4766. A U ST IN Postal Positions ATTN Permonent fulltime for available For clerks/ sorters. Full Benefits exam date, application and salary info: 8am to 8pm. 7 0 8 -2 6 4 -1 6 0 0 Ext 5 1 5 8 7-7-5P CALL CENTER reps, casual at­ mosphere All shifts and Saturdays. Great for stud­ $6/hr S Austin ents. Call 707-3111 7-10-5B AIRLINES WILL TRAIN $9.00-$ 18.00/hr HIRING N O W ALL POSITIONS For information call N O W ! (800) 509-5505 ext. a8422 __________________________ 7-10-3B WRITERS W A N T E D for educational assessment material, grade levels 1-12. Send resume to Pearson Pub­ lishing, 5 9 1 7 M aurys Trail, Austin, 7 8 7 3 0 or fax to 343-0801. 7-7-10B INTERN, self-starter part-time, M A R K E T IN G responsible to able work w/minimal supervision, some general office and working knowledge of computers. Need reliable transportation and clean driving record. Call Kim 349-7500.6-29-10B knowledge, AISD CHILDCARE Childcare workers needed for schools. Monday- Friday, part-time, after­ noons. Start 8/10. Apply: AISD Classified Personnel, 1111 West 6th, D140. ____________________________7-5-8B PERSO N AL CARE assistant, morn­ ing or night hours $6 00/hr. M ark 3 26-5630. Leave message 7-10-5B O U T G O IN G , ENERGETIC people needed to work at Tolouse on 6th Street. Waitstaff, shot, and casino staff needed Please call Michelle ot 462-0894, leave messgge 7-6-5B PART-TIME P O SIT IO N S available W ork 4-8p m weekdays. $5/hr. + bonuses, paid training Call Craig at 4 53 -8782 between 3-4p m. 7-6-19P. HELPI IF you speak Spanish, Italian, Chinese, French, Korean, Russian, please call Mrs. Spence, 328- 1018 7-5-20B W E'LL PAY you to lose weight. Most successful products available Guaranteed Priscilla 930-3420. 7-6-20B All natural HAVE C O N T A C T S in Germany, Italy, Japan, Brazil, Venezuela, Tai­ wan, Spain, Hong Kong, or U.S.A.? 930-5696. 7-6-20B T A IW A N International marketing- team seeks assistance from Taiwan nationals Call 4 7 6 -4 3 6 4 (24 hrs.) OFFICE sional runner for blocks from campus F, $6/hr ager, 477-7543. 7-7-6B CLERK/receptiomst/ccca- 3 8am-lpm, M- Please call office man­ law office JOB-SHARE receptionist/office Be on important member of our team working 12-5 pm, M-F Growing company with a friendly environment $7/hr to start. Call 3 2 8 -7 7 9 9 between 8-9 am only. 7-1 W B PART TIME office help needed Must have W indow s experience Call Mike 451-2007. 7-11-5B IM M EDIA TE O P E N IN G S , sales as­ sociates, afternoons, evenings, ond weekends Please apply at Hilton Gift Shop. 4 5 1 -5 7 5 7 7 1 0 -5 B B 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 472-3210 ▼ Resanes ▼ Papers / Tbeses ▼ Laser Printing ▼ 79i Color Copies ▼ RosbJobs C o p i es 1906Gucxtolupe St 472-5353 760 - Misc. Services FOR college C A S H 9 0 0 ,0 0 0 grants available N o repayments, ever. Qualify Immediately 1-800- 243 -2 4 3 5 6-29-20B N EED M O N E Y for college? Finan- cial assistance available For more information send SASE to P.O. Box 1 03 1 2 College Statiop, TX 7 7 8 4 2- 0 3 1 2 6-28-20P EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part time $30 CASH/WEEK 2 Hours per Week Schedule Own Time • Extra Clean. State-ol- the-Art Facility • Sate. M e d ic a lly Supe r­ vised. Relaxing • Only 15 M inutes trom UT C ampus B I O M E D A MEW H igh Tech P la s m a Facility P l e a s e C a l l fo r A p p t 2 5 1 - 8 8 5 5 H O U R S 8 A M 7 P M IH 35 & Ptlugerville Exit We st side IH 35 b elnn tkE X XO N Bring this ad Exp 7 31 95 $240" to $550** Weekly! Fun, Fast-Paced Atmosphere Flexible Schedules: 9-1 • 1-5 • 5-9 Benefits Plus Bonuses 1-800-929*5753 EMPLOYMENT - 790 PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT - 800 GENERAL HELP WANTED r : ___ i - u __ a ________ m. h Circulation Assistant (Inserter) 19 hours per week maximum $6.16 per hour depending upon qualifications Work hours begin at 2 a.m. *ISi B o d y S h o p C a sh ie r Part-time position available M - F 12pm - 5:30pm willing to w ork around school schedule Qualifications: • friendly disposition • cash register and ad din g m achine experience • com puter skills • telephone skills No experience necessary. Call Ken at 832-1888 X311. Assist in Circulation Department of The í Daily Texan on nights when inserts are placed in paper. Requires High School^ graduation or GED; ability to Tift heavy ^ loads; valid Texas Driver's License and i an acceptable driving record. Applicant fi H selected must provide a current three year^ A Driver's License Record. A Call Angie after 11pm at 471 -5422 for appointment The University of Texas at Austin is an S Equai Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer M i n o r ! r a r o R i T i O R I U t T iU O K S • « « T i n m V O R I T I D I R I I R HEALTH CONSCIOUS MEN NEEDED FOR SEMEN DONORS!! •IF Y O U A R E B E T W E E N 13 A f J D 3 5 ¡ o I a I 'M i y ifv y Li ¡U v \ o u t u i Ik i M o r J F / If J A C C f J F I D F f J T I A L P P G ' - P - r j ^ A T U G - r ~ L L FfilRFfiX CRYOBfiNK 473-2268 JSrrady's