Fig UT’s searc as th * 2 Z £ - £ 0 6 6 ¿ ■ *,, ° 1 1 3 0 W '> XSV3 XI OSVd 13 , , o - 3 | w l c n n w w y d 6 8 / i £ / 8 0 w y j SPORTS 7 O ne w in away The Chicago Bulls crush the Seattle Sonics 108-86, leaving them a game away from sweeping the finals. Depp Man Johnny Depp plays an accountant from Cleveland in the dreamlike new movie, Dead Man. T h e Da il y T exa n Berdahl approves 14-hour proposition The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, June 10, 1996 Vol. 95, No. 153 2 Sections 25c AMY STRAHAN__________________ Daily Texan Staff fall. UT P resid en t Robert B erdahl approved last week a proposal to increase the number of hours required for full-time engineering students from 12 to 14 hours per semester. The 14-hour proposal, w hich drew criti­ cism from student groups and the Student G o v e rn m e n t la s t sp rin g , is d e sig n e d to increase the graduation rate of students in the college. A d m in is tra to rs w ith in th e C o lle g e of E ngineering said the additional hours per sem ester w ill h elp en su re th ere is space available in required courses to accom m o­ date the college's growing enrollment. The new requirement will take effect this Patricia Ohlendorf, vice provost, said that in his letter of approval, Berdahl requested that the college continue a "m ajor study of its curriculum " amid student concerns that m an y lab co u rses re q u ire an in o rd in a te amount of preparation. Officials within the college recommended students register for at least 14 hours last spring in anticipation of the m easure and said Friday they were pleased with its pas­ sage. "I'm delighted," said H erbert W oodson, dean of the College of Engineering. "This is a step in the right direction." W o o d so n said th o u g h he had n ot y et received the letter, but that efforts by engi­ neering departm ents to adjust the curricu­ lum of problem atic courses will continue. But he added the amount of coursework for labs is left mainly to the faculty's discre­ tion. "The problem is that the course content is a faculty prerogative," Woodson said, not­ ing that professors wrho wish to expand or keep their curriculum cannot be forced to do otherwise by the administration. "W ith a p u sh from the p re sid e n t, m aybe th e y 'll respond better." Exceptions to the 14-hour requirement for stud ents w ho m ust work will be allow ed under the same guidelines as the previous 12-hour requirement. "I'm sure they will also make exceptions in cases w here exceptions are w arranted,' said Jim V ick, vice president for stud en t affairs. Woodson said most engineering students will not be affected by the new requirement because they already take at least 14 hours per semester. The passage of the proposal marks one of W ood son 's last initiatives as dean o f the College of Engineering before his retirement at the end of August. A search com m ittee last m onth presented a list of four can d i­ d ates for th e po sitio n to th e p re sid e n t's office. The new dean will be selected by Berdahl from four candidates, two external to the University and two from within the college. Ben Streetman, a professor in the depart­ ment of electrical engineering, and Michael Wcilton, chairman of the department of civil en g in e erin g , are the tw o in tern al ca n d i­ dates. in R o b e rt W h ite, a p r o fe s s o r th e D epartm ent of Engineering and com p uta­ tion at Carnegie M ellon, is also being con­ sidered for the position. The other candidate requested his nam e and u niversity not be released, Ohlendorf said. W oodson said all four cand id ates w ere "e a sily q u alified to h an d le the jo b " and added th at he w ill co n su lt w ith the new dean before making future policy decisions for the college. HOMEGROWN HERO Sparrgrove family meets with health center officials AMY STRAHAN Daily Texan Staff W h ile fam ily m em bers of a U T stu d en t w ho died after she w as m isdiagnosed by the Student Health C enter said Friday they do not intend to sue the U niversity, they will w atch to ensure it does not happen again. Jennifer Sparrgrove, a graduate student in audi- ology, died M ay 4 after physicians at the center failed to d iagnose blood clots in her lungs after three visits. A fter a m e etin g w ith h ea lth ce n te r o ffic ia ls Friday, the Sp arrgro ve fam ily said the m eeting offered little comfort, but helped them understand how the mistake was made. "G iven all the information in record, the d iag­ noses w ere fairly co n sisten t," said Ted B alicki, Jen n ifer Sp arrgro ve's fiancé. "T h e health center did have adequate care in terms of seeing her and returning phone calls [so] w hen she w as ill she was able to go som ew here." W hile m em bers of the Sparrgrove fam ily said the visit was informative, they added that "n oth ­ ing was conclusive." Balicki said the family was given a statement of Sparrgrove's care at the center. "It w as a very opinionated conclusion saying that it w as appropriate, but that other things could have been looked at m ore d eeply,' Balicki said. "M ore em phasis could have been placed on her troubled breathing." Health center officials said the meeting attem pt­ ed to address any questions the family had con­ cerning Sparrgrove's care. "They wanted help in interpreting the medical re c o rd " a lre a d y p ro v id ed by th e ce n te r, said D av id D ru m , in te rim d ire c to r of th e S tu d e n t H ealth C en ter, adding that the fam ily received some interpretation of the case. Drum added "legal issues did not com e up in the meeting. They are coping with the tragedy of losing a daughter unexpectedly ." T h e S p a r rg ro v e s do n o t p lan to su e th e U niversity, bu t said they are anxious to see the results of die student-led investigation of the center. "If the Stu d en t H ealth C en ter takes ad equate The Sparrgroves do not plan to sue the University, but said they are anxious to see the results of the student-led investigation of the center. m easures to prevent this from happening again, th at w ould m ak e us feel b e tte r," B alick i said, adding that they expect the center to im plem ent the com m ittee's recommendations once the inves­ tigation is complete. "If they don't show full faith and credit in what the findings say, then we'll go from there." A fter co m p letin g an internal in vestigation of Sparrgrove's treatm ent, the health center is help­ ing organize the student-led committee to review its policy and procedures and compare them with similar institutions. The committee is chaired by Jeff Tsai and Brian Feld , Stu d en t G o v ern m en t p resid en t and vice president. Tw o other students have already been selected by Tsai to serve on the committee and one remains to be chosen, Drum said. Tsai will select another committee member from a list of co n su ltan ts provided by the A m erican College Health Association. The h ealth cen ter has requested that the UT System A cad em ic H ealth Scien ce C en ter select another expert to serve on the committee. David M cC lintock, Assistant to the Executive V ice P resid en t for A cad em ic A ffairs at the UT System, will also serve on the committee. The committee, which will begin meeting at the end of the week, will begin touring health centers at other universities this month, Drum added. The m em bers w ill be given a tw o-day tour of health centers at the University of A rizona, the U n iv ersity of C alifo rn ia and the U n iv ersity of California in Los Angeles. "These three institutions are part of a compara­ tive group with fully accredited health centers,' Drum said. The com m ittee will also tour health care facilities at the University of M aryland and Pennsylvania State University. Quick fix Capital Metro considers purchase of campus-area parking lots in response to neighborhood ordinance The North University Neighborhood Association’s plan would restrict on-street parking in the area bordered by 39th St. and 29th St. and Guada­ lupe and Duval St. to homeowners and renters at designated times. MIKE C ARR Daily Texan Staff _______ Capital Metro is considering acquiring campus-area parking lots to provide space for students who by fall will no longer be permitted to park on certain residen­ tial streets north of campus, a neighborhood associa­ tion official said. Officials with Capital Metro are looking at 15 sites th at w ill give quick access to cam pu s, said Will B ozem an , a m em ber of C ap ital M etro's C itizens Advisory Committee. The search for sites began in earnest after the Austin City Council passed a May 2 ordinance that will pre­ vent mostly UT commuters from parking anywhere inside the area bordered by Guadalupe Street, West 38th Street, Duval Street and West 29th Street. Only residents and their guests with parking stick­ ers will be able to park in the neighborhood. The ordinance has left Capital Metro scrambling to find alternative parking to handle an expected deluge of stu d e n ts w ho n o rm a lly p ark in the N o rth University area, Bozeman said. "T h e y 're trying to find a w in-w in situation for everyone," he added. The o rd in a n ce w as p assed after the N orth HAYDEN HEAD/DaHy Texan Staff Please see Parking, page 2 After addressing the general assembly at the Texas State Democratic Convention in Dallas, U.S. Senate candidate V icto r M orales signs auto gra ph s for fa n s and talks to reporters. ► Complete convention coverage, page 6 KEVIN L. DELAHUNTY Daily Texan Stafl Austin teachers to hold rally MICHAEL MULCAHY___________ Daily Texan Staff The Austin Federation o f Teachers, a lo n g w ith the A llie d E d u c a tio n W orkers, is sponsoring a Salary Rally M onday, w ith the hopes of bolstering public and board member support for a step-schedu le pay system that w ould en su re the com p etitiv en ess of A ustin schools in the future. U n d er th is sy stem , job ex p e rie n ce w ould be a g reater co n sid era tio n in salary increases, providing incentive for th e A u stin te a c h e rs to sta y in In d ep en d en t S ch o o l D istric t lo n g er, said Louis Malfaro, AFT president. The rally is scheduled to occur direct­ ly before the AISD board meeting. A FT m e m b ers sa id th ey are o p t i­ mistic that holding the Salary Rally and a d d ressin g the bo ard d u rin g citiz en co m m u n icatio n s w ill help them su c­ ceed. "W e want to m ake sure they follow through on the com m itm ent to im ple­ ment a step schedule/ Malfaro said. "Since 1989-90, Austin teachers have seen a steady decline in average salary co m p ared to the o th e r m a jo r u rban school districts," Malfaro said Salary in creases m ade in other d is­ tricts have o u t-p aced those of AISD, M alfaro said. "In 1989 we were fourth am ong [the eigh t largest d i s t r i c t s ] in salarv averages, now w e've dropped to the lowest," he added. At a tim e w hen oth er d istric ts are offering higher pay and Austin's cost of living is becoming one of the highest in Texas, "w e need to be m oving up the salary scale, and w e're not. Our cost of Please see Salary rally, page 2 INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Must-See TV Weather: On NBC tonight: Jennifer Anniston’s trademark F riends hairdo is named the official style of the 90s. The cast of ER endure another extraordinarily stressful night on the Job as they are bombarded by locust swarms while trying to complete 70 heart bypass operations simultane­ ously. And on Nightfy News with Tom Brokaw, yet another report on the Fleecing of America. Index: Around Campus................. 9 Classifieds......................... 10 Comics.................................9 Editorials............................. 4 Entertainment....................12 Sports................................... 7 State & Local.......................6 University............................ 5 World & Nation....................3 Clinton admits to wrongdoing in review of FBI security files Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — The W hite H ouse was wrong to obtain secret FBI files on 341 people, in c lu d in g p ro m in e n t R e p u b lic a n s and President C lin ton agreed Sunday that those people deserve an apology. " A m istak e w as m ade, it's in ex cu sab le, White House C hief of Staff Leon Panetta said of disclosures that a W'hite House aide perused the files in late 1993 for White House security records. " I think an apology is owed to those who w ere in v o lv ed ," he said on N BC's Meet the Press. "It appears to have been a completely honest bu reau cratic sn afu w hen we w ere tryin g to straighten out w ho should get security clear­ ances to come to the White House,' President Clinton said during a fund-raising trip to Las Vegas. Asked about Panetta s apology state­ ment, he said, " I completely support what he said." Panetta's and Clinton's remarks came a day after Sen. Bob Dole, the GOP presidential nom- inee-to~be, said an apology was in order. It appears, said Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin on ABC's This Week With David Brinkley, that " a relatively junior Army detailee made what looks like a very serious mistake. At the same time, Panetta stressed that the A rm v a id e w ho h a n d le d the file s of su ch Republicans as former Secretary of State lam es B a k e r and P re s id e n t B u s h 's C h ief o f S ta ff Kenneth Duberstein did so only to determine permanent passes to the W hite House and that no political use w as made of them. " T h e good n e w s is th e re w a s n o th in g im proper done with that inform ation," Panetta said, calling the incident a "bureaucratic mis­ take." Republicans, however, have charged that the administration appeared to have been k e e p in g an enemies list. "1 think it smells to high heav­ e n ," D ole said Saturday, com paring the inci­ d e n t to W a te rg a te and th e N ix o n VNhite House’s secret probes of political foes Panetta said there would be an FBI investi­ gation in to the m atter, but H o u se M ajority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, said that w asn't enough. " I don't think that ends it/ Armey said on ABC's This Week With David Brinkley, referring to the W hite House apology. "I think we ought to have hearings." Armey asked, "W h at business did they have noseying around in files on people who had long sin ce left the W'hite H ouse' when the adm inistration was having trouble getting its Please see Clinton, page 2 Page 2 Monday, June 10,1996 T he Daily T exan Federal officials tour wildfire site Associated Press H O U STO N , A lask a — Federal disaster officials toured the site of a week-old wildfire Sunday as cool, dam p weather helped contain the blaze that burned more than 37,000 acres and caused nearly $10 million in damage. Firefighters had contained 60 per­ cent of the blaze by Sunday night. It was expected to be fully contained by Monday night, but won't be safe­ ly out sa id Fire for w eek s, Commander Dave Liebersbach. The fire destroyed or dam aged more than 360 buildings at a cost of nearly $10 m illion and forced at le a st 1,800 p e o p le to ev acu ate. Crews searched residential areas for hot sp o ts S u n d a y and hoped to allow som e of the residents back into their homes by Monday. The cau se of the b laze, which burned through an area about 50 miles north of Anchorage, was not known. About 1,300 firefighters put in 12- hour shifts around the clock to root out hot spots. Ten helicopters, about 70 fire engines, 20 water tankers and more than 20 bulldozers also fought the fire. Jam es Lee Witt, director of the Federal Em ergency M anagem ent Agency, led a team of federal and state officials on an inspection tour of the fire-damaged areas Sunday. In addition, the Sm all Business Administration said it would set up a center to p r o c e ss govern m en t loans to help residents rebuild. The loans became available Friday when the area was declared a federal dis­ aster. W ildfires also burn ed Su n day through parts of Arizona and New Mexico. In Allentown, Ariz., a small com­ munity near the New Mexico bor­ der, a 3-day-old brush fire sparked by lightning was mostly contained after charring almost 2,400 acres of federal land on the Navajo Nation. The fire had been fully contained Saturday afternoon before erratic winds pushed the flames out of con­ trol, authorities said. Firefighters had contained about 95 percent of the fire on Sunday; it was expected to be under control by Monday. More than 100 firefighters battled the b laze and p lan e s d ro p p e d flam e-retard an t ch em icals, said H arold R u ssell of the Bureau of Indian Affairs' forestry division. F ive fa m ilie s w ere ev acu ated Friday when the fire began. They w ere allow ed to return hom e Saturday. In New Mexico, a wildfire grew from about 700 acres to 3,500 acres by late Sunday near the Bosque del A pach e N atio n a l R efuge. On Satu rd ay , the fire prom pted the evacuation of eight fam ilies from the small village of San Pedro. No injuries were reported and the fami­ lies return ed to their hom es on Sunday. About 100 firefighters fought the blaze as it burned in cottonwood, sa lt cedar an d oth er v e getatio n alon g the Rio G rande. It started Saturday north of a bird sanctuary and by Su n d ay aftern oo n had moved into the preserve. "It's just huge columns of billow­ ing sm oke," said Laurie Rosenthal at the refuge. Authorities determ ined the fire was caused by humans but did not elaborate, saying only that an inves­ tigation was continuing. South of the area, more than 30 small wildfires caused by lightning were burning in the Gila National Forest. A t least tw o of the fires w ere tucked inside inaccessible canyons. They burned a combined 100 acres. "W e've got to w ait for them to climb up to ridges, so people can get at them," said fire management officer Gary Benavidez. He said firefighters were m ap­ ping areas, anticipating where those fires could spread. Another fire had burned 100 acres Sunday and was moving toward a w ide canyon with rugged terrain. Benavidez said about 60 firefighters and a helicopter were trying to hold a containment line in front of the canyon. The forest was hit by more than 3,200 lightning strikes Friday and Saturday, accordin g to com puter readings. P H A R M A C O Men & W omen I O to up to $2000 Earn money while contribut- ing to the future of medicine by in a Pharmaco participating research study. Are you a healthy, non­ smoking, man or surgically the sterile woman between ages of 18 and 5¿? If so, you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $2000. The study would require staying in our overnight facility and out­ patient visits. Please call us for details and answers to your questions. Be a part of something big at armaco. 4 6 2 - 0 4 9 2 Visit o u r w eb.sjte: h ttp ://w w w .p h a rm a c o .c o m Visit our web site at http://www.utexas.edu/texany T he Daily Texan Permanent Staff Editor..........................................................................................................................................................T a ra L C°PP Managing Editor..................................................................................................................................... Robert Russell Associate Managing E ditor....................................................................................................................Ross Cravens News E d ito r......................................................................................................................................... Jennifer Schultz Associate News Editor..................................................................................................................... Christine Garrison Shanna Gauthier, Mike Carr, Andrea Buckley. Amy Strahan Senior Reporters Associate E d ito rs '""” ............................................................................................. David C. Barranco. Spencer Prou Photo Editor............................................................................................................................................ Robert Patton Associate Photo Editor....................................................................................................................... Kevin Delahunty Joe Sebastian Entertainment Editor. Associate Entertainment Editor.......................................................................................................... DanielI Maidman Sports E d ito r.........................................................................................................................................................Young General Sports Reporters..................................................................................... David Livingston, Mark Livingston Around Campus E ditor....................................... Cheryl Gooch Volunteers Lulinda Bartley, Colby Black, Agustinos Steven Chandra Widiaja, Victor Cintron, Jim Denman, Hayden Head, Julian Martinez, Michael Mulcahy, Eric McKinney, Geoff Mulvihill, Fernando Ortiz Jr., Melissa Taboada. Jeff Tandy, Darcy Tucker, Patrick Walsh, Mason West Local Display Graphic Designer................. Classified D isplay................ Classified Telephone Sales Classified Clerks----------------- A d v e rtis in g Amy Forbes, Knsta Coalson, Brad Corbett, Danny Grover, Kelly Capps, Sara Eckert. 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Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904 6/10/96 Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m. Thursday, 4 p.m. Tuesday ...Friday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday........... Monday, 4 p.m Friday............... Tuesday, 4 p.m C l» » » *» n W ord A d o H a m (U K Humooko Doy Prior to PitoOcolioni Parking: Capital Metro considers purchase of UT-area lots Continued from page 1 University Neighborhood Association complained to city officials that stu­ dents had turned their quiet neighbor­ hood streets into a congested parking lot, residents said. "In the fall, you can see them cir­ cling like vu ltu res looking for a s p o t ," sa id N orth U n iv ersity N eighborhood A ssociation presi­ dent Bob Morris. The ordinance has left UT officials grappling with the prospect of over­ flow parking on campus, said Austin .Gleeson, chairman of the Cam pus Master Planning Committee. "We already have a serious park­ ing problem on cam pus," Gleeson said. "This will put additional pres­ sure on us." Gleeson said the University has not taken an official position on parking north of cam pus, outside the University's jurisdiction. "The U niversity is n eutral," he said. "We felt that is the m ost we could do." M orris said G leeson sp o k e to North U n iversity N eighborh ood Association officials about what the U n iv ersity is d oin g to so lv e the parking problem, but said Gleeson referred only to a light-rail transit system that has been proposed as part of the master plan. Morris added that Gleeson said, "We don't really have a plan if that does not come through." M orris said the public does not support light rail, and even if it did, it w ould take five or six years to install such a system. "C ap ital M etro h as backed off light rail," he said. He said lack of p lan n in g w ill impact his neighborhood dram ati­ cally b ecau se the U n iv ersity is expanding toward it, and more stu­ dents will want to park there. "The way I understand the master plan, the problem is only going to get worse, and the University is not doing anything about it," he said. Gleeson said the University has not been actively involved in deter­ mining the probable effects of the parking restrictions north of cam­ pus. "That's the initiative of the neigh­ b orh o od ," he said , "N o b o d y has thought that through." Som e stu den ts said they have, however. C h arles Saw yer, a ch em istry senior, criticized the city for taking the punitive approach to dealing with the problem. "Instead of solving it, let's make the en d resu lt ille g a l," he sa id . "That's kind of crazy." He said students park on neigh­ borhood streets because they have no other choice. "The reason people come over here and park is not b ecause it's fun," he said. "They have to get to school." He said residents do not need the streets to park because they have plenty of parking on their long dri­ veways. But James Noton, of 107 W. 32nd St., said friends must park blocks aw ay to attend his w ife's church group get-togethers. "It makes it impossible for people calling to park here," he said. N oton said the high p ro p erty taxes he pays should entitle him to unfettered use of the street in front of his front yard. But Si-jian Lin, an electrical engi­ neering doctoral student, said resi­ dents should be more tolerant of students' cars. "W e do no harm to th em ," he said, adding that "this is my only alternative." Resident Lauren Templin of 109 W. 32nd St. said the congested park­ ing makes the neighborhood dan­ gerous. "It's an enormous problem," she said. "I can't see to back out." She said students tend to speed and add to the danger. But Saw yer sa id , "A s far a s I know, speeding is already illegal." Residents said they are pleased the city has passed the ordinance to put a brake on parking problem s, but impatient because the ordinance has not been enforced yet. "N U N A is p u sh in g to h ave it instituted by fall," Bozeman said. Meanwhile, the association wants to inaugurate a pilot program on streets yet to be determined to work out unforeseeable problems. Morris said the pilot program is likely to take place on West 32nd an d W est 33rd stre e ts betw een Hemphill Park and Speedway. Students park here to be close to the UT sh u ttle b u s sto p s on Speedw ay, which are five minutes from campus. Salary rally: Teachers hope to promote alternative pay system Continued from page 1 living is going up, rent is going up, we need some compensation," Malfaro said. The overall average salary for Texas teachers is $32,528, while the AISD average is $30,764. Although AISD offers one of the highest start­ ing salaries of $24,488, the pay does not increase for experienced teachers at the same rate as other districts. Since Austin's starting pay is generally com­ petitive with that of surrounding districts, it attracts new teachers, "but after a few years they leave for better salaries in other districts and w e're back to new, young teachers," M alfaro said. "It takes skills, a knowledge base and time to be a master teacher." Austin teachers who hold bachelor's degrees and have 10 years' teaching experience are paid $28,596, com pared with surrounding districts' average of $30,129. The average for the seven other large urban districts is $29,985 — a differ­ ence of $1,533 and $1,389, respectively. Austin teachers with master's degrees and 10 years' experience earn $29,436. In comparison, San Antonio educators of equal qualifications and teaching experience earn $35,248. "We have lost ground. We're no longer com­ petitive locally or with other urban areas," said Ted W hatley, an A ustin Independent School District trustee. "We do need a long-term program to raise teachers' salaries," he added. Kathy Rider, president of the AISD Board of Trustees said the board will vote later this sum­ mer on the budget, which currently includes a 3.75 percent salary increase for teachers and a 3.2 percent salary increase for classified employees. "There is a positive indication that some board m em bers are w illin g to w ork with this. I'm encouraged," Malfaro said. Geoff Rips, an AISD trustee, said "m y concern is making sure teachers' salaries are competitive with surrounding area districts." Austin needs to attract and keep quality educa­ tors with better salaries, Malfaro said. "But we're not cu ltiv atin g a crop of new p r o fe ssio n a ls because they're not staying with us,' he added. The rally will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the court­ yard of AISD headquarters at 1111 W. Sixth St. Clinton: President admits to mistake in FBI records review Continued from page 1 own people properly cleared? White House officials say the Army aide inad­ vertently obtained an outdated Bush administra­ tion list of people in working out a list for perma­ nent passes for the White House. Panetta said the files were held by the security office and have since been returned to the FBI. A sked why the incident is only now being revealed, he said, "I honestly think nobody knew those files were there.” The aid e has been id en tified as A nthony Marceca of the Army Criminal Investigation divi­ sion. "I appreciate the apology, of course, but the case is not closed,” said Tony Blankley, press sec­ retary to House Speaker Newt Gingrich and one of those whose FBI files were pulled. Blankley, noting press reports that the files were being reviewed for "derogatory informa­ tion,” said on C N N 's Inside Politics Weekend that "o b v io u sly the investigators and prosecutors have to go in and look at what the facts are. What we find is that every day there's a new explana­ tion, new information comes out.” The White House has already been under fire from congressional Republicans over requests that the FBI investigate for possib le crim inal activities seven employees of the White House travel office who were fired in 1993. Republicans charge that the White House damaged the repu­ tations of the seven so they could be replaced by friends of President Clinton and the first lady. The GOP inquiry into the travel office affair is being led by Rep. William Clinger, R-Pa., the chairman of the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee. FBI spokesman John Collingwood confirmed Sunday that FBI Director Louis Freeh had sent Clinger a letter saying he would seek to tighten procedures on White House requests for access to confidential information. Ann Lewis, deputy director of the Clinton cam­ paign, disputed on CNN Dole's comparison to Watergate, noting that Dole was chairman of the Republican National Committee at that time when the abuse of power "w as systematic and it was thor­ ough and it certainly didn't stop at the letter G." The Army aide only examined the files of those with names starting with the letters A through G before he left the position, and his successor did not continue the work. Passengers refuse to reboard chartered plane after smoke fills cabin during taxi 44 The stewardesses started running around S atu rd ay reported seein g sm oke come into the cabin through air-con­ ditioning vents, Fennell said. Associated Press ORLANDO, Fla. — Ninety-one B ritish p a sse n g e r s refu se d to reboard a charter DC-10 after smoke seeped into the cabin from air-con­ ditioning vents while the plane was on at O rlan d o ru nw ay International Airport. the "W e were taxiing out when we smelled this awful, burning rubber sm e ll," p assen g er Andrew Hunt said of the Saturday flight bound for Manchester, England. "T h e stew ardesses started run­ ning around like chickens without h ead s and the crew cam e down. There w as this two-second blast of black smoke and everyone was ter­ rified,” Hunt said. like chickens without heads and the crew came down. There was this two-second blast of black smoke and everyone was terrified.” — Passenger Andrew Hunt A irw ays jet later assured the 346 passengers the problem had been fixed, 91 elected to stay in the air­ port or at nearby hotels, airpo rt spokeswoman Carolyn Fennell said. The flight left Orlando five hours behind schedule and landed safely in Manchester on Sunday. who had refused to reboard were on flights home. Most were on a Virgin Atlantic Airways plane. Others took another E xcalibur jet. Excalibur, which is based in Manchester, paid for all of the flights. "I'm glad it was a good ending,” Fennell said. The pilot, H ugh Jones, said the smoke w as caused by oil that had seeped into air-conditioning ducts while the jet was being serviced. "I told (the passengers) that I val­ ued my own life, my crew's life and most of all, the passen gers' lives, and I w ou ld not fly in a plane I knew not to be sa fe ," Jones w as qu oted as sa y in g by the British Press Association. In an interview from Britain, Excalibur spok esm an M alcolm Ginsberg said, "W e've no responsi­ bility for any of these passengers who decided on their own not to take the flight. These people brought all their troubles upon themselves.” Though the pilot of the Excalibur By Sunday night, the passengers P a sse n g e rs ab o a rd the jet Your competitors for law school take Kaplan. Roses- $12.95 1 Dozen $19.95 2 Dozen ft < ■ Carnations- 4 for $1 !¡‘ Casa Verde Florist Cash & Carry • June is Rose Month 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 i, D a ily S p e c ia ls |^ ^ r r c y 45* a Gyadplupe • On UT Shi “ 302-LENS Valid thru 7 / 2 0 / 9 6 ¿ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ A ¡¡ SCHOOL SUPPLIES B " w ith thi* c o u p o n " 2 5 % OFF j Include*; N o te b o o k » . FjHer P o p e r, ■ B in d ers H ig h lig h ter» , Eraser*, Folder*, ■ Pon* A Pencü*, Index Card*, le g a l P a d » .* ■ i s i f C \ * V d t t a t h r u h ) V 3 1 ^ 9 9 6 . 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Ste. 560 338-9774 COMPLETE EXAM 29.00 CONTACT LENS EXAM 59.00 Add $20 for RGP or Tone 30-50% Off cn w C /3 Designer Frames (with purchase of Rx lenses) Berdel, Marchon, Cjp Guess, Polo and many others t t S i ' Q S P WOftUTWIOt WONBO* Of THE OUmPC dAMt* Medalist (d a ily o r extended) pair / $ 6 9 * 0 0 • Rx required • Exams available at our office • Add $ 10 1 st time rerss__________ _ 3 fix* oC/3 T h e D a ily T e x a n MONDAY, JUNE 10,1 T h e Da il y T e x a n Editorial Board D av id C. B arran co T ara L. C o p p A sso cia te E d ito r E d ito r S p en cer P rou A sso cia te E d ito r Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. VIEWPOINT ! Tlíey’re 1T a d k ! Is this the same Dem ocratic Party that took such a hard beating and was left for dead by party-sw itching deserters in 1994? If the excitement of this w eekend's Dallas convention was any indi­ cation, state D em ocratic leadership could move Texas to re-elect Clin­ ton and propel Victor Morales, a politically green but sincere high- school teacher from M esquite, to the U.S. Senate. Texas Democrats smell blood in November. Judging from the crowds' response, it was hard to figure out who was headlining the convention — featured speaker first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton or Morales. For the delegates, Mrs. Clinton's presence on Friday was a promise that the Democratic Party had not written off Texas. And the conven­ tion couldn't have been timed better: with the m inimum w age bill playing right into the president's hands, exem plifying his defense of the w orking class; recent econom ic figures boasting the creation of 9.7 million new jobs; and Clinton's new college tax credit idea, Texas Democrats congratulated them selves for a growing strength and unity against the Republican agenda. Texas' parched soil even got a little rain that morning. “The Democrats are back," boasted House M inority Leader Dick Gephardt. Delegates jum ped up and roared approval when M orales drove up to the stage in his tradem ark white truck. The Cinderella candidate, who according to cam paign staffers hasn't written dow n a speech yet, delivered a rousing address without notes from his tailgate. The convention marked another cam paign turning point for M orales, w ho received minimal support before defeating Jim Chap­ man and John Bryant in the Dem ocratic Party runoff. This weekend, the party couldn't have looked happier to support a new com er who has re-energized Texas Democrats. "Y porqué no?" the candidate asked. "And why not?" This thunderous approval may have pushed M orales to take bold­ er stands on a few issues he recently professed he didn't know enough about to discuss. “There are people who cheat," Morales said addressing welfare, "B u t if you want som e heavy-duty cheating, look at the savings and loans." When battling in the primaries, Morales defended his lack of know ledge about "th e issues" by stating he would read up on them. At the Convention, he told the press he was “not worried about read­ ing up as much anym ore," because he had heard the political rhetoric com ing out of W ashington, noticed they weren't saying anything either and realized “hey, I can do that." M orales is sincere, that is a huge part of his draw. He represents the dream for many supporters that yes, a regular citizen can beat the political m achine if he believes in him self and his cause. Hundreds of participants sported “Mr. M orales goes to W ashington' T-shirts. And true to the character of his upstart staff, just m inutes before the truck was to appear, no one could find the keys. O nce found, they made the last-second decision (his welcom ing them e song had already started) that Morales should drive in, instead of having staffers-pusb the car. For now, M orales' professed inexperience adds to his credibility. A vote for M orales is confirm ation to the voter that the regular guy can solve our nation's problems. Supporters excuse his lack of issue stands and hold faith that once elected he will find the answers. “1 am you," M orales boomed. "Y ou don't have to have money. ... You don't have to have the organization. You just have to have you and your sw eat and your desire." For now, that seem s to be enough. But to keep the m om entum of his battle against Gram m from fading, Morales will have to find some­ thing besides new ness . Because there are still five months to go, and the glow of newness can w ear off. EDITORIALS A question of methods Continued push to fund TexPIRG through the University raises legal issues Despite decisive defeat by student referendum this spring, the Texas Public Interest Research Group (Tex­ PIRG) has risen phoenix-style from the ashes to haunt our wary campus. Resurrected by the Student Services Fee Committee in mid-April, a mea­ sure to create a University chapter of TexPIRG will now be subject to the approval of President Robert Berdahl. The most recent proposal to the adm inistration offers a new funding structure, but old questions concern­ ing the m easure's legality continue to shroud lobbying the student group's legitimacy. According to the Appropriations Act of the 74th Legislature, “None of the monies appropriated by this Act, regardless o f their source or charac­ ter, shall be used for influencing the outcome of any election, or the pas­ sage or defeat of any legislative mea­ sure," (Article IX, Section 5, Para­ graph 1) If fees collected by the Uni­ versity becom e state m oney, it would violate the law for said funds J im D edm an TEXAN COLUMNIST to advance a political agenda. As students of the flagship institu­ tion of higher education in our state, we m ust remember how important it is for our University to respect the guidelines given to us by the Legis­ lature. The resources of the state should not be utilized to compile a list of political contributors and transfer funds collected by the state into the account of a lobbying group. If there exists any hint that TexPIRG m ight violate state law, then it should be abandoned until the state legislature and the Attorney General have offered their opinions on the matter. The original TexPIRG fee would have been mandatory for all stu­ dents; the new fee would be volun­ tary, according to an outline drafted by supporters. C ontribu ting stu­ dents would sign pledge cards, com­ mitting them to a $6.50 fee each semester. TexPIRG would then sub­ m it the cards to the University, which would adjust the students' fee bills and collect the money. Although the original proposal was on the ballot for students to endorse or reject, the new proposal only aw aits B erd ah l's signature. This change is ironic consider­ ing TexPIRG 's devotion to “dem ocratic participa­ tion." As an organization to environ­ dedicated mental preservation, con­ sum er protection, higher education funding, and the relief of hunger and hom elessness, TexPIRG w ould actively support and oppose legisla­ tion addressing political agendas. And even if adm inistrative costs are fully funded by TexPIRG, the use of UT accounting systems would make TexPIRG an arm of the University — a state institution forbidden to lobby for or against legislation. M indful of student body presi­ dents' roles, legislators included an exem ption in the Act for student governm ents of higher education institutions. Although this provision grants TexPIRG no legal ground, supporters have used it to argue for the proposal's legitimacy. The act states “that nothing in this section shall be construed as pro­ hibiting the payment of reasonable dues to an organization that is designed to represent student inter­ ests in the state legislature or federal that portion of congress mandatory student service fee col­ lections that is allocated to the stu­ dent government organization at an institution of higher ed u cation" (Article IX, Section 5, Paragraph 7). from The student government exem p­ tion does not apply to TexPIRG for three important reasons. First and forem ost, TexPIRG would be independent of Student Government. Therefore, TexPIRG is not entitled to the SG exemption. Second, the act declares that any student funds used to lobby the gov­ ernm ent must come from "that por­ tion of mandatory student service fee collections that is allocated to the student government organization." The optional TexPIRG fee, su b­ scribed to by pledge card, is obvi­ ously not the same as a mandatory student service fee allocated to the Student Government. MA V. L ' i j u >"<* $ww jsj a t i > i t > < M O W THE T R . U T W AND<{ " f 77 t h e T r u t h Jv.4 SHALL Third, the narrowly defined term “student interests" does not neces­ sarily authorize organizations to lobby for issues not directly related to higher education, such as envi­ ronmental defense or consumer pro­ tection. The Appropriations Act includes the exception so that Student Gov­ ernm ent officers, elected to repre­ sent the concerns of our student body, can voice their concerns to state and federal representatives. The Act offers this exem ption so that student body presidents like Jeff Tsai can confer with legislators on higher education issues. Under the current proposal, TexPIRG would be nothing more than an illegal, state- funded lobby group. Anticipating criticism, the propos­ al's authors were careful to focus on its research and service functions, rather than to em phasize its lobby- in8 Since Ralph Nader founded the first PIRG at the U niversity of Ore­ gon 26 years ago, dozens of PIRGs have been formed across the nation, forming a loose coalition that Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby dubbed a “w eb of liberal lobbies." W ith the advice and assistance of their umbrella group, U.S. PIRG, state PIRGs file law suits and lobby­ ing legislators w ith student fee money for years. W hile the New Jersey PIRG helped author bills and push envi­ ronmental laws through their legis­ lature, California's PIRG (CalPIRG) fought and won a m ultimillion-dol- lar lawsuit against Shell Oil. Although TexPIR G advocates have downplayed this legislative function in their manifesto, a hard look at the "accom plish­ m ents" of other state PIRGs illustrates that pas­ sage of this measure will likely open Pandora's Box. C onsidering the legal im plications of the pro­ posal, one m ight think that TexPIRG would dis­ continue its special affilia­ tion with the University, thereby m aking it equal to all student advocacy groups, from the College Republicans to the Long­ horn Young Democrats. While each and every other student group must struggle to gain member­ ship and funds, TexPIRG supporters w ould need only obtain signatures of passers-by on the West M all. They need not w orry about collecting the money, for the U ni­ versity will do that for them by assessing the fee bills of student contribu­ tors. Dedman is a junior in Tfc» fc*.' Vy T» history HB 1792 anniversary sad reminder of student apathy I am a loyal republican; I w holeheartedly believe in our republic. The system rocks. I love our republican form of governm ent as much as afternoon baseball double-headers on grass, TX -O U w eekend and country music. I also have a "Mr. Smith Goes to W ash­ ington" attitude tow ard politics. I don't think our governm ent participates in cover- ups and conspiracies. I believe telephone calls to legislators accom plish things, and I believe issues are m ore important than pack­ aging. I know it's naive, but then I still think Santa is a good idea. Sadly, events som etim es contradict my outlook. For exam ple, Sunday marked the one-year anniversary of House Bill 1792. HB 1792 allows the Texas Legislature to raise our tuition by one-third over the next four Colby B la ck TEXAN COLUMNIST years. And more likely than not, this is the first you've heard of it. It w hizzed through a House Subcom m it­ tee in three days. Its public hearing featured no testimony. The House passed it by a bipartisan voice vote, which means that no representative w anted his or her nam e attached to a vote against it. In the Senate, HB 1792 went through two public hearings characterized by heated, passionate testim o­ ny from absolutely no one, concluding in a record vote in the Senate: 31— 0. Our public officials then bickered over two words, “academ ic" and "undergradu­ ate," for eighteen days. At mne days of deliberation per word, we re lucky there Sunday marked the one-year anniversary of House Bill 1792. HB 1792 allows the Texas Legis­ lature to raise our tuiiion by one- third over the next four years. And more likely than not, this is the first you’ve heard ol it. w asn't any testimony to consider. On May 23, 1995; 85 days after it was first filed, House Bill 1792 was sent to the governor. It w as signed. It's the law. It's raising your tuition bill. There are four groups to blame for this. ■ First, blame the Legislature. While sav­ ing students $10 per credit hour would be nice, saving Texas taxpayers $320 million by 2001 was politically irresistible. Thus, the decision w asn't evil, just a matter of priori­ ties. And since the 18-24 age group never votes, evaluating HB 1792's political cost probably took less tim e than the perfunctory hearings. But taxpayers aren't likely to see a dime of “savings" anyway. The money will be siphoned off to repave the Capitol drive­ way in platinum or for other projects of sim ­ ilar merit. ■ Second, blam e the media. If this is the first you've read about this, we messed up. The Texan ran several pieces, including one column two weeks before the bill's filling. But HB 1792 did n't get the coverage it deserved. On behalf of the media, I apolo­ gize. ■ Third, blam e our Student Government. The SG claims to represent our interests. But according to the- bill's sponsors in both the House and Senate, the SG never made so much as a phone call on this issue. Come on, SG! Your cushy offices are located eight w hole blocks from the Legislature's cushy offices. That's just a short bike ride (with hel­ met of course). For future reference SG, it's the big pink building with the statue on top. ■ Finally, we should blam e ourselves When stealth bills like 1792 becom e law, we should be outraged. W e should gather our pitchforks and torches. But we w eren't pay­ ing attention; we were busy w hining about the M offett building. Hence, I guess we should chalk this up to the ever-escalating price of an education. W e'll do better next time. O ur system allows for improvement. Our system rocks. Black is a journalism/government junior. FIRING UNE S upport Clinton It is obvious that we gays and les­ bians have some right to be discon­ tented with President Clinton. Yet I desperately hope that we will go to the polls in the fall in record num ­ bers to vote for him. C linton's re-election is one of the m ost important things we can do if we are to stop the march of reli­ gious political extrem ists into total control and domination of our lives and civil rights. Yes, appointments to the Suprem e C ourt will be key — as will all court appointments all the way down to the district level. C linton has many positive achievem ents for the gay communi­ ty: 1) appointment of Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the Supreme Court. Appointm ent of the first openly gay federal judges, of six women to the Cabinet, of first openly gay Cabinet assistant secretary and of more than 100 openly gay adminis­ tration officials; 2) Clinton support­ ed the Employment Non-Discrim i­ nation Act and the repeal of the Dornan Amendment against HIV positive servicem en; 3) C linton elim inated sexual orientation as means of denying security clear­ ances and banned anti-gay discrim ­ ination in executive branch; 4) Clin­ ton publicly denounced state anti­ gay measures; and 5) Clinton creat­ ed an interagency task force to examine hate violence and gath­ ered a panel of experts to examine gay-teen suicide. I live and face the religious polit­ ical extrem ists daily in the nation's fundam entalist head qu arters of extrem ism , C olorado Springs. Speaking for myself, I will vote in the fall for Clinton and the straight Democratic ticket. I will personally work to get out every vote I can find to do the same. We need every advantage we can get. If Clinton is not ideal — consider the alterna­ tives. W e can't vote for Dole and throwing our votes away on third party candidates who cannot win is self-defeating. Frank Whitworth, Ground Zero Colorado Springs executive direc­ tor Lanes harm cyclists In the story "Bike Accident Vic­ tim Opposes Helmet Law " (Thurs­ day, June 6) issue of the The Daily Texan, bicycle accident victim Tyson Slocum states that “the thing that will protect bikers from cars are bike lanes." Paradoxically, the story relates another of Slocum 's statements to the effect that "bicyclists need the sam e access to the roads as vehi­ cles." In practice, these two state­ ments are antithetical. Bicycle lanes segregate cyclists from other legitimate road users P hysically, segregation this places cyclists in a position on the road that increases their risk of being involved in accidents. By encouraging cyclists to travel to the right of cars, bike lanes place cyclists at a greatly increased risk of being struck as cars make right turns across their paths. that By leading cyclists to believe they are not (incorrectly) allowed to operate outside of bike lanes, the lanes encourage them to make left turns from the right edge of the road (often without looking for and yielding to other traffic), rather than merging left into the traffic and making left turns in the same mannner as all other road users. The lanes also force cyclists to weave in and out of conventional traffic lanes in ways that are often difficult for motorists to see. to dodge C yclists have the parked cars and debris that so often obstruct “bike lanes" (“parking and debris collection areas" would be a more accurate label) in ways that are difficult and dangerous for motorists to anticipate. Psychologically, the segregation of cyclists serves to reinforce (and maybe to create) the incorrect belief shared by many motorists and cyclists alike that bicycles are not entitled to the same access to the roads and protection under the law that is afforded to other vehicles. Chris Johnson UT staff Firing Line letters can be brought to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitts A m m e or mailed to P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713 They álso can be e-rhafled to F ifA Lé»< letters must be féwer Chan 250 words. UT stu­ dents should include their major and classification, and ail writers must present iden­ tification or include a phone' number. The Texan reserves the right to edit letters. ■ ■ a Want to be% n editorial columnist for The Texan? We are holding tryouts for the next week. For infonaation, call 471-499L ' UNIVERSITY T h e Da ily T exa n MONDAY, JUNE 10,1896 5 Free taxi program seeks new funds MELISSA B. TABOADA Daily Texan Staff Members of the UT Designated Drivers Program continue their search for funding after the Stu­ dent Services Fee C om m ittee voted to cut off the p ro g ram 's financial support at the end of this year. In April alone, DDP members submitted 170 letters requesting financial support. "W e've targeted alumni, clubs that students frequent, alcohol dis­ tributors and grocery stores," said Debora Orrick, DDP staff adviser. The D esignated D rivers P ro ­ gram provides free cab rides to intoxicated students 11 p.m .- 3 a.m. Thursday through Saturday for 5,000 students annually, Orrick said. Further efforts of sponsorship have been made by newly elected Fund-Raising Director Biren Patel, who has also submitted proposals to beer and cola companies. Patel said he will submit a proposal to Pepsi Cola on W ednesday, but other companies, like Coca-Cola and Motorola, Inc., will not review any proposals until September. "It's frustrating when you keep getting the same response," said Patel, a finance sophomore. "They all say they like the idea, but then they usually say, 'o u r cu rren t funds are elsewhere.'" The fee committee decided last spring to d iscontinue funding DDP because the program alleged­ ly was not making efforts to raise its own funds. "W e focused on the belief that the Designated Drivers Program could develop funding outside the University as opposed to funding through the students services fee," said Jim Vick, vice president of student affairs and member of the ‘Defensive cycling’ class is alternative to $50 helmet fine ANDREA BUCKLEY Daily Texan Staff John Holzw eg, a biology sopho­ more, thinks bicycle helmets^ are an inconvenience. "T h e p ro b lem w ith the h elm et ordinance is if they make you wear a helmet, no one is going to want to carry a helmet around with them to cla ss," H olzw eg said, adding that helmets also impair hearing. The A ustin City C ouncil passed an o rd inance May 9, requiring all cyclists to w ear helm ets on public roads. There is a 90-day grace peri­ od b efo re A u stin p o lice w ill start enforcing the ordinance, yet once it does go into effect, riding without a h e lm e t w ill be a C la ss C M is d e ­ meanor with a $50 fine for first-time offenders and $100 for each subse­ quent offense. But given the option of paying a ticket or going to a tw o-hour class and getting a free helmet, Holzweg said he th in k s he w ould tak e the class. Such a class does exist at the Uni­ T h e B ic y c le T r a ffic V io la to r 's D iv e rsio n P ro g ram is a p ro g ra m funded by the Texas Departm ent of Transportation and run by the UT Police Department and the Student Health Center. In 1994, the department gave the U n iv ersity a grant o f $ 1 4 0 ,0 0 0 to la u n ch the C o lleg e T ra ffic Safety Program, an education and enforce­ m ent p ro g ram for su ch issu e s as b ic y c le s a fe ty , p e d e s tr ia n s and D W Is. T h e d iv e rsio n p ro g ra m is part of this program. A n n ick So u h a n i, the SH C sta ff mem ber w ho teaches the diversion program , said she likes to call the program "d efen siv e cy clin g ." She said it is modeled after a defensive driving class, but at two hours, it is a shorter course. A s tu d e n t w ho h a s re c e iv e d a ticket from either a UT police officer or an Austin officer can have that ticket waived by taking the bicycle s a fe ty c o u rse . At th e en d o f the course, the ticket will be waived and the student w ill receive a free hel­ met. Students can also get UT tickets w a iv e d by b u y in g a h e lm e t and pledging to wear it. Students do have other w ays of getting an inexpensive helmet. T h e U T C o lle g e o f P h a rm a cy began offering helm ets to students fo r $ 1 0 rig h t b e fo r e the c o u n c il passed the o rd in a n ce last m onth, Souhani said. S tu d e n ts w ere b u y in g tw o or th ree h elm ets at a tim e, So u h am i said. T h o u g h th e g ra ce p e rio d en d s A u g. 9, U T p o lic e w ill n o t s ta r t e n fo rc in g th e n because it falls right before summer fin als, said U T p o lice C a p t. S ila s Griggs. th e o r d in a n c e Griggs said, as a form er student, he feels it w ould be unfair to start enforcing the ordinance at this time. "W e tailor our enforcem ent policy w ith th e a ca d e m ic y e a r ," G rig g s said. UT. p o lic e w ill o ffic ia lly b eg in enforcing the ordinance on Sept. 15. D aw n W illia m s, the U T D e sig n a te d D river P ro g ram co ord in a to r, a n sw e rs the p h o n e and a rra n g e s rid es for s tu d e n ts w ithout tra n sp o rta tio n . S h e sa id the pro gra m u su a lly re ce iv e s 30 to 150 c a lls a night. S he versity. is tra in in g a n e m p lo y e e w h o will a n sw e r p h o n e c a lls this su m m er. LUCIN D A BAR TLEY/D aily Texan Staff Student Services Fee Committee. Vick said the discontinuation of funds to the DDP was the com m it­ tee's "w ay of encouraging the pro­ gram to do that." How ever, Orrick said DDP was activ e ly sea rch in g for sp o n so rs, but was unsuccessful in receiving donations. "M any corporations don't want to d o n a te m o n ey b e c a u s e D D P serves only UT stud ents," O rrick said. "But what they don't realize is that it does help the Austin com ­ munity. I know I feel safer know ­ ing there are a few drunks off the road." In ad d itio n to fin a n cia l p ro b ­ lems, the program is searching for a way to get taxi drivers to pick up in to x ic a te d s tu d e n ts on S ix th Street. B ecause police barricad es ran d om ly b lo ck v eh icle passag e through Sixth Street, cab d riv ers som etim es are unable to pick up students who call for rides. As a so lu tio n , th e p rogram m em bers w ant to propose a shuttle system to give the in to xicated stu d en ts rides from nearby Fifth Street to campus, Orrick said. H o w ev er, the s h u ttle sy stem w ill n ot o p e r a te u n le s s m u ch - n eed ed fu n d s are d o n a ted , she said. D D P m ay fold if the program does not obtain sponsors, leaving those who rely on it the responsi­ bility to find another way home. Gregory Gym renovations on schedule, but more costly than expected JULIAN MARTINEZ Dally Texan Staff Estimated costs for the renovation of Gregory Gym have climbed once again above the original projected cost of $20.7 million. After raising the estimate once to $23.6 m illion in N ovem ber, UT administrators said Friday the pro­ ject is now expected to cost $26.3 million. Arthur Dilly, executive secretary of the UT System Board of Regents, said the total project cost is now $26,372,000. Dilly said the cost overruns were expected because of "changes in plan and scope." The original esti­ mate of $20.7 million was calculated "before the plans [for renovation] were even drawn up," Dilly added. The construction contract with Temple-based Emerson Construc­ tion was approved at the Board of Regents' May 1995 meeting, Dilly said. Wayne Davis, project manager for Emerson Construction said the pro­ ject, which began in January, was on schedule. He said the expected time for completion was in August 1997. Tom D ison, director of the D ivi­ sio n of R e c re a tio n a l S p o rts, said "the bids cam e in a little over what w as o rig in a lly a llo ca ted , and we made up the difference at the Board of Regents m eeting." Paym ent for the total cost of the project was approved by the Board of R e g e n ts at th e ir N ov. 9, 1995 meeting, Dilly said. It includes $4.4 m illion from general fee balances, $1.3 m illio n from R e c r e a tio n a l Sports Reserves and the rem ainder fro m re v e n u e fin a n c in g sy ste m bond proceeds. T h e bond proceed s are "backed by the sp ecial stud ent fees w hich the students authorized and the leg­ islature approved," he added. "T h e old Gregory [Gym] and the annex are both under construction," Dison said, adding that the renova­ tio n s are sig n ifica n t b ecau se " it's g oin g to be tw ice as big and w ill probably have twice as many feet.' " It 'll be every b it as nice as the Rec C enter," he added. Gregory Gym occupies a space of approxim ately 250,000 square feet, D ison said, about h alf of the total 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 s q u a re fe e t u sed fo r U T recreational sports. G reg o ry "w ill have a lot o f the same activities but of a higher quali­ ty — b a sk e tb a ll co u rts, h a n d b a ll courts, racquetball courts w ill all be improved, Dison said. Of all the changes, "probably the bigg est thing is the air co n d itio n ­ in g ," D ison said. The 6 5 -y ea r-o ld gym n e v e r h ad air c o n d itio n in g before. O ne o f its m ost pro m in en t fea­ tures will be a "m uch bigger, better w eight training center" occupying 14,000 square feet, which will make the w e ig h t ro o m s p a c e o f a b o u t 8,800 square feet in the Rec C enter look pretty small in comparison. Other features will include a sus­ p ended jo g g in g track around the annex, a clim b in g w all, sk y lig h ts and a food service cou nter w ith a ju ice bar. The ID cen ter has been p erm an en tly relo cated in th e old social work building, Dison added. Davis said one of the characteris­ tics of the new building will be "a lot of openness." D a v is sa id th e e m p ty s p a c e betw een the old G regory and the annex will be filled. "It's about 28 feet that w ill be a g o -b e tw e e n " the tw o b u ild in g s , U It’ll be every bit as nice as the Rec Center.’’ — Tom Dison, director of Recreotkmol Sports Davis said. The space, which will be equipped with skylights and w in ­ dows, will be "real open and airy," he said. Dison said much of the planning cam e from su rv eys and statistics. "W e've run a student survey every two years, for 15 years,'' Dison said. "W e also use a lot of participation statistics," he added. For exam ple, "ro ck clim bing has becom e a new sp o rt in th e c ity of A u s tin , an d th rou gh our o u td oo r R ec C en ter, w e've seen a lot of interest, so w e're devoting some space" to the sport, Dison said. Jessica Rogozinski, a Recreational Sports C enter gym store clerk and form er U T stu d en t, said G reg o ry Gym em ployees "had the option to com e h ere or to go o v er to o th er Committee ponders academic advising by e-mail ERIC MCKINNEY Daily Texan Staff cations C om m ittee includes several other su b­ com m ittees that deal prim arily with com puting and technology issues. act to determine if UT computer policies need to be changed. "The CDA will impact the [UT] poli­ cy," O hlendorf said. UT officials discussed the possibility of advis­ ing students through e-mail and the impact that the Communications Decency Act could have on UT Internet policies at a meeting of the 18-mem­ ber Computer and Information Technology Use Policies Committee last week. The committee was advised on the direction UT policy should take by UT experts in the areas of student academic advising via e-mail, compli­ ance with the CDA, retention of old computer­ ized records and the presence of pirated software on University computer systems, said UT Vice Provost Patricia Ohlendorf. The committee does not set policy directly, said Vice President of Research Marye Ann Fox, but it is a subcommittee which reviews and reports on currently existing policy to the Digital Informa­ tion Science and Communications Committee. The Digital Information Science and Communi­ The Policies C om m ittee review ed current U I rules concerning softw are piracy and discussed difficulties with those rules, along with possible e n h a n c e m e n ts. C o m p u ta tio n C e n te r D ep u ty Director Clair Goldsmith reported to the com m it­ tee that compliance with UT piracy regulations is currently good and that all com plaints regarding piracy are investigated. Professor of Law Mark Lemley reported to the co m m ittee th e statu s of the C o m m u n ica tio n s Decency Act. If the CDA is upheld, it would pro­ hibit the distribution of "in d ecen t" m aterial on co m p u ter n etw o rk s su ch as th e In tern e t, bu t enforcement of the act is currently stalled while its c o n s titu tio n a lity is d eterm in ed in fed eral court. "M y hope is that it won't affect students at all because it will be ruled unconstitutional," Lemley said. The committee is keeping a close eye on the Stu d en t D ev elo p m en t S p e cia list Su e G am el updated the com m ittee on issues su rround ing student academic advising via electronic mail. "I su rveyed n ational ad visers' p o licies w ith regard to rights of privacy, Gamel said, adding that, "People really should look at the security of e-m ail as if it were a postcard." In face-to-face meetings with students, UT poli­ cy requires that a p icture ID be show n before ad v isers can d iscu ss any co n fid en tial stu d en t information. How to perform this type of verifi­ c a tio n via e -m a il is a c o n c e rn th a t m u st be addressed before any e-mail academ ic advising can take place, she said. The members of the committee will continue to w ork on the policy through the fall. It's u lti­ mately more complicated than we realized at the beginning," Ohlendorf said. EXAM + 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting at $119* Complete •prica includes exam, 2 pair clear daily- wear soft contacts, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1 st follow up. EXPRES JUNE 14,1996. WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT „ 477-2282 10-7 M/C VISA AMX DISC 9 .6 t ( Pharmaco is currently seeking men and women 1S> and older for a p ost surgical pain relief research- study. Sungery performed by a board certified ora] surgeon. • Free x-ray • Free consultation • Free rem oval o f up to three wisdom teeth For more information, please call: i*62-6?i*92 P H A R M A C O r G re g o ry G y m as It lo o k s now. R e n o v a tio n on the gym b ega n in J a n u ­ ary and Is e x p e cte d to be co m p le te in tim e fo r the 1997-98 a c a d e m ic VICTOR CINTRON/Daily Texan Staff year. areas like Bellm ont," another one of the gyms. "A lot of them quit," she added. D ison said use o f the o th er UT gym facilities had increased since the closing of Gregory. Rogozinski said the increase was noticeable. "It's been like double traffic since G regoiy closed dow n," Rogozinski said. "They had to double up in the shifts," she added. With the increase in people there has also been an in crease [in] the in ju r ie s " fro m a c c id e n ts su ch as ru n n in g in to w a lls and sw a ttin g o th e r p la y e rs w ith ra cq u e ts, sh e said . S u p p lies also run out m uch fa ste r w ith the ad d ed stra in , sh e added. Rogozinski said the reopening of G re g o ry G ym w o u ld be g re a tly appreciated. "F o r a good co u p le o f m o n th s after G regory closed down, people came up to us and asked, 'W hen is Gregory going to open again 1 she said. " P e o p le a re g o in g to lo v e it because they've been freaking out sin ce the clo sin g of G reg o ry , she added. Dison said the reopening would be accompanied by much fanfare. "W e'll do a grand opening c e r e ­ mony similar to what we did at the Rec Center when it opened in 1990," Dison said. A re you re a d y fo r the Com puter A d aptive GRE? The Princeton Review is the only national test prep company to offer a course specifically designed for the Computer Adaptve G RE. Small Classes • Personal Attention Thorough Review • Effective Test-Taking Strategies Two full-length computer adaptive GRE’s • Free Extra Tutoring Computerized GRE Classes start June 15. Call today! * The Prmcttom Revtew u not affiliated with Prune ton UmmtertUy or ETS. T U T T I M Ci PRINCETON REVIEW (800) 2-REVIEW WWW.P8VteW.C0IB I B T h e D a il y MONDAY, JUNE 10,1996_____________________5 S S f _ i l _ « ■ ^ ^ C A *0 * 1 m L Texas Democrats convene in Dallas SHANNA GAUTHIER Daily Texan Staff DALLAS — A com m on message am ong speakers at this w eekend's D em o cra tic co n v e n tio n in D a lla s was "to take back Texas and to clean up in the fall." "If you care about Texas, you will vote for C lin to n ," sa id first lad y Hillary Clinton, the keynote speaker at the convention. Mrs. Clinton said Texans should vote for the Democra­ tic P arty at all lev els b ecau se Bill Clinton is committed to putting peo­ ple first. The first lady said the president has already taken steps to im prove Texans' quality of life. "M ore than 3 million Texas work­ ers are protected by the Family and M edical Leave Act, w hich is not a bu rd en on bu siness but a relief to workers who know that they can be good parents," Hillary Clinton said. "U n d er the presid ent, Texas tax credits will allow anyone to attend community colleges free so that the 13th and 14th years o f school will become universal without increasing the federal deficit," she said. The president also wants econom­ ic security for Texas workers by rais­ ing the minimum wage and provid­ ing workers with more family health security, she added. "This state is good for the United States because it has given America good lead ers, like B arbara Jord an and [sen a to ria l ca n d id a te] V icto r M orales, who have perseverance," H illa ry C lin to n said . "T e x a s has showed strong fam ily values, head work and a lot of energy, along with a 'com m on sense' approach to liv­ ing." Texas Land Com m issioner Garry M auro said the C linton cam paign will not write off Texas. "H aving the first lady at the con­ ven tio n proves the im p o rtan ce of Texas to the president," Mauro said. H illary C linton was qualified to sp e a k a t the c o n v e n tio n , M a u ro ad d ed , b e c a u s e sh e k n o w s and understands Texas, and she started a voter registration campaign in Texas, causing a lot of people to vote who would not have otherwise. O th e r s p e a k e rs s tre ss e d the im portance of w inning the support of Texans and suggested that dele­ gates convince other members of the s ta te to v o te fo r th e D e m o c ra tic Party. "Dem ocrats are back — stronger, wiser, better to lead — and now our job is to earn the trust of all Texans," said D an M orales, T exas attorn ey general. The Democratic Party has already doubled the num ber o f sustaining members in Texas and they want to add to that number, Victor Morales said. The Texas party is more financial­ ly stable than they have been in a long time, so they can afford to pass out Clinton-Gore yard signs, bumper stickers and flags to show support for the party and possible bring new voters, Dan Morales added. U.S. House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-M o., said Texas is the battleground for w inning back the House. "Texans have five months to take gospel and m essage of the party to the people of this state," Gephardt said. "Failure is not an option." T e x a n s ca n n o t let R ep u b lica n s ta k e the s ta te L e g is la tu re , sin c e Texas has a R epu blican governor, and must win the U.S. House back, Gephardt said. "O ur goal is for this party to win back 10 seats," Gephardt said. "W e will win the House back in '96." "O n June 23, Democrats in cooper­ a tio n w ith the W h ite H o u se w ill reveal th eir ag en d a for p ro g ress, which focuses on the everyday prob­ lems of American people," Gephardt said. "G o a ls o f th e a g en d a are an increase in the standard of living and a ladder for p eop le on w elfare to c la s s ," to w a rd m id d le m o v e Gephardt said. "The agenda will not deal with balanced budget or line- item veto, subjects that do not con­ cern ordinary people." T exa s C o m p tro lle r Jo h n S h a rp sa id p ro g ra m s su ch as co m m o n sense w elfare reform will help the party win Texas. "The Lone Star card is a model for the rest of the country. W e do not have to slash and burn and cause pain to make w elfare w ork," Sharp said. "W e want to continue the Fam­ ily P ath fin d ers P ro gram in T exas w h ere c h u rc h e s, c iv ic c lu b s and o th e r su ch o r g a n iz a tio n s a d o p t m others and their children to help them becom e independent of w el­ fare." So far 750 organizations have par­ ticipated in the program in Texas, Sharp added. Rep. Eddie Berniece Johnson, D- Dallas, said the purpose of the Texas D em ocratic convention is to m ake sure all voters get to the poll and "m ake this a Bill Clinton state." Texas Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock said that he, like former President John F. Kennedy, wants to ask a new gener­ ation of Texans to make a new life for their state and country. PHOTOS BY KEVIN DELAHUNTY Daily Texan Staff Above: 7-year-old Eliza­ beth Slagle of Sherman, Texas, kicks off the general assembly by singing The Grand Old Flag. Right: Delegate Jerry Lee Fischer of San Antonio applauds during Hillary Clin­ ton’s address to the conven­ tion. Left: Hillary Clinton, Fri­ da y’s keynote speaker, encourages delegates to work hard for the Democrat­ ic Party. Travis County couple fights drought with rainwater collection system Associated Press rainwater. Unlike some of their Central Texas neighbors, Bill and Laurel M artin aren't feeljng the effects of the devas­ tating drought. Tw o su m m ers ago, the cou p le installed a system that provides 3,000 gallons of rainwater per month to the family of three. W ater collected in a cistern and pum ped into their house proved m ore reliable than the neighbors' 600- and 700-foot wells. ''W e 'v e lived th rou gh 75 days when it didn't rain at the end of the summer and we did OK," Bill Martin said. The M artins, w ho live in south­ west Travis County, are confidently settling in for another dry, hot Texas summer. W hen th e M artin s b u ilt a new energy-efficient home in an area with no m unicipal w ater supply, they included a system to collect and store Rainwater collection — common in the days b efo re city -su p p lied w ater — is seeing a resurgence in p op u larity am on g co n serv atio n - minded Central Texans. The systems can be as simple and inexpensive as a 55-gallon garden- watering system put together by a handy homeowner with hardware and plumbing shop parts or as elabo­ rate as a $10,000-plus system that provides a family with all its indoor and outdoor watering needs. Tony Gregg, Austin water conser­ vation m anager, said it's not eco­ nomical to install an expensive rain- water-collection system if the home­ owner already is connected to a city water system. "It won't pay for itself," he said. But rainwater collection could be increasingly im portant to C entral Texas if drought predictions prove true. Abnormally dry weather may con­ tinue for at least three years, accord­ ing to Mike Smith, meteorologist and president of WeatherData Inc., a pri­ vate weather service in Wichita, Kan. Peter Pfeiffer, an Austin architect and energy consultant, has designed several residential rainwater-collec- tion systems. In urban areas, collecting rainfall helps minimize flooding and runoff problems. Do-it-yourselfers, Pfeiffer said, can build a simple, small-capacity system for outdoor use. P feiffer said the components — guttering, pipe, a 55- gallon drum and filter — can be pur­ chased at hardware and plumbing supply stores. The w ater can be distributed to gardens with low-pressure drip sys­ tem s or so ak er n o ses. F or law n watering, elevated storage tanks or a pump-pressure tank system may be added to increase pressure. W h a t a r e y o u lo o kin g at? Yo u r f u t u r e , t h a t s w h a t . The Daily Texan is looking for reporters, photographers, entertainment writers, sports writers, editorial columnists, copy editors and page designers. No experience is necessary and we even pay — a little. All we ask is that you are a UT student (no, you don’t have to be a journalism major). Work for the Texan and you can look forward to valuable, résumé-f filing job experience. For more information, contact Rob Russell or Tara Copp at 171-4591. Our offices are located in the basement of the Texas Student Publications building at the comer of 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. We’re looking forward to seeing you. T h e Da il y T e x a n Th* student newspaper of the University of Texas at Austin Reptiles look to the Texan for news on im p o r t a n t campus events. $30,000 software donation to put Austin library on Web MASON WEST Daily Texan Staff MCI C om m u nications C orp ora­ tio n and th e A m e ric a n L ib ra ry Association formally presented the Austin Public Library with '$30,000 in softw are Friday that w ill allow access to the library's catalog from the Internet's World Wide Web. Charles Fick, MCI vice president for the southwest region, presented the award to Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D- Austin, and Brenda Branch, Austin Public Library director, in an award cerem on y at the new ly reop ened and re n a m ed Jo h n H en ry F a u lk Central Library. M CI and the A m erican L ibrary A ssociation join tly developed the software, LibraryLINK, which trans­ lates the Austin Public Library's cat­ alog for the W orld W id e W eb so that anyone with Internet access can b ro w se the sh elv es at the library with their computer. The MCI Foundation is in its sec­ ond year of a three-y ear program during which it will distribute more than $750,(XX) in computer software to public libraries in approximately 25 cities. Connecting a city library's catalog to the W orld W ide W eb increases the number of accesses or "hits" to the catalog, said Frank Bridge, sys­ tems programm ing m anager at the Austin Public Library. "A t the Cleveland site they had tenfold increase in the num ber of hits over five months," Bridge said. The LibraryLIN K grant also pro­ v id es a co n n e ctio n to O pen D ata R e se a rch A s s o c ia te s N e tw o rk , a national d atabase m anager. D ata­ base content will be on the Austin C ity C o n n e c tio n , the c ity 's W eb page at http: / / www.ci.austm .tx.us. T h e new s e r v ic e s w ill n o t be available until the end of the sum ­ mer because there are netw orking and s e c u r ity is s u e s to re s o lv e , Bridge said. M ost people do not realize that MCI built the Internet's High Speed Backbone, the main artery for Inter­ net communication, Fick said. "Com m unications technology has literally bro u gh t the world to our fin g ertip s and M C I L ib rary L IN K will help deliver this technology to A u stin area re sid en ts," Fick said. "O u r goal is to open doors so that everyone will have equal access to the vast amounts of resources avail­ able ov er the in fo rm a tio n su p er­ highway." " I fe e l lik e I g re w up in th is lib r a r y — m o re p r e c i s e l y th e b u ild in g n e x t d o o r ," D o g g e tt s a id , a llu d in g to th e o ld m a in li b r a r y b u il d i n g , w h ic h n o w houses the A u stin -T rav is C ounty H is to r y C e n te r . A f te r r e c e n t r e m o d e lin g , th e c e n tr a l lib r a r y reopened as the John H enry Faulk C entral Library. . "M CI is one of our leading corpo­ rate citizen s," D oggett said. "T h is grant is an exam ple of the sort of p u b lic -p r iv a te c o o p e r a tio n th a t makes Austin work. W e're fortunate to have the library reopen, especial­ ly in a w ay th a t my frien d , Jo h n Henry Faulk, would have enjoyed." The Internet proves to be a good w ay to com m unicate, particularly for students who are on the Net and co m p u te r lite ra te , D o g g e tt sa id , adding that he receives a lot o f e- mail, especially from UT students. Doggett serves on the House Sci­ ence Committee, which has jurisdic­ tion over the National Science Foun­ dation. He also helped organize the Inform ation T ech n o lo g y W orking G ro u p w h ich , h e sa id , is a b le to work around political in-fighting to g et m o re d o n e . T h e b i-p a r tis a n w o rk in g g ro u p s tu d ie s s e c u r ity issues that m u st be solved b efo re the Internet can be used fully as a conduit for electronic commerce and the flow of cash. The w orking group also studies how the law can keep up with the rapidly ev o lv in g com m u n ications technologies and seeks to minimize the regu lation o f the co m m u n ica­ tions revolution. "T h e less regulation in this area the better," Doggett said, "because the technology is changing so rapid­ l y " The d em o n stra tio n o f L ib ra ry ­ LINK featured D oggett's Web page at h t t p :/ / w w w .h o u s e .g o v /d o g ­ g e tt/w elcome.html as well as a map of Austin from a nationw ide data­ base o f m aps at w w w .p ro x im u s. com. Man charged in wife’s stabbing A m an w as charged w ith the fatal stabbing of his common-law w ife e a rly S a tu rd a y m o rn in g , a fte r w h a t a p p e a re d to b e a d o m e s tic d is tu r b a n c e , A u stin police officials said. Austin police were called to the Bel-Air Motel at 3400 S. Congress A v e. at 2:21 a.m . by W ay ne M ic h a e l B o u s q u e t, 4 0 , w ho cla im e d h is co m m o n -la w w ife had stabbed herself, said Suzanne Pardo, a police spokeswoman. Pardo said there were discrep­ a n c ie s in h is s to ry an d p o lic e investigators believe the stabbing was a result of a domestic distur- POUCE BRIEFS bance. The v ictim w as a 47-year-o ld w hite w om an w hose nam e w ill not be released until the medical e x a m in er's o ffice can notify the next of kin. B o u s q u e t w as ch a rg e d w ith intentional murder, a first-degree felony. Bousquet was being held at the C e n tr a l B o o k in g F a c ility on $100,000 bail. This was the 17th homicide this year, the third this week. 24-year-old’s m urder under in ve stiga tio n old H ispanic m ale that occurred Saturday night. F ra n cisco Ja v ie r M ira n d a , o f 5800 W ellington Drive, was found dead on the 6200 block o f Haney Drive about 9:20 p.m. This was the 18th hom icide in Austin this year. M inutes before police received the call that som eone w as down o n H a n e y D riv e , p o lic e w e re called to the 2600 block of W he- less Lane becau se som eone had reported shots had been fired. P o lic e fou n d n o th in g at th a t site, said p o lic e sp o k esw o m a n Suzanne Pardo. A ustin police are still in v esti­ gating the m u rd er of a 24-year- — Compiled by Andrea Buck­ ley, Daily Texan staff. BEST HViUUKE COPT SPORTS Astros sneak over .500 with 2-1 win over Phils Associated Press HOUSTON — It was teamwork at its best. Ricky Gutierrez got the hit and Derrick M ay made the throw. Gutierrez got the go-ahead hit in the seventh inning and May threw out the tying run at the plate for the final out as the Houston Astros ral­ lied to a 2-1 victory and three-game sweep of the Philadelphia Phillies on Sunday. "It's always a great feeling to get a hit like th at," Gutierrez said. "I'v e just been feeling real good at the plate lately, and just getting a chance to play has helped." The Astros (32-31) moved above .500 for the first time since May 9, when they were 18-17. They swept the Phillies in the Astrodome for the first time since June 3-5,1994. G utierrez's decisive hit was the ninth in his last 11 at-bats, and made it possible but May still had to made the defensive play of the day to seal the victory. With one out in the final inning, Mickey Morandini reached on an error by shortstop Gutierrez. Morandini stole second — his 19th in as many attempts — and Ricky Otero struck out. Pinch hitter Jim Eisenreich singled to right field, but Derrick M ay easily threw out M oran­ dini out at the plate to end the game. " It was straight in front of me and I just want­ ed to make a good throw and not put too much on it," M ay said. " I don't think I've thrown any­ one out like that to end the game but it sure is a good feeling." Starter M ike Hampton pitched six innings, allowing a run on seven hits while walking one and striking out one. Anthony Young (2-2) pitched the seventh for the victory, and Todd Jones worked the last two innings, barely sur­ viving for his 12th save. Hampton said he w asn't bothered by tendini- Please see Astros, page 9 Houston’s Derrick May avoids the tag of Benito Santiago as he scores the winning run for the Astros. ASSOCIATED PRESS T h e Da ily T ex a n MONDAY, JUNE 10,19 9 6 Cruise Control Jordan, Bulls coast past Sonics 108-86 Associated Press SEATTLE — Start sewing the championship banner, start casting the rings. The NBA Finals are over, folks, except for the formality of Game 4. Michael Jordan imposed his will on Seattle and the Chicago Bulls simply steamrolled the Super- Sonics on Sunday, putting on as mighty a perfor­ mance as they've given all postseason. They led by 22 before the first quarter was over, got 15 consecutive points from Jordan in the sec­ ond, withstood a Seattle run in the third and cruised through the fourth for a 108-86 victory and a 3-0 lead in the series. "In the first half we basically took the crowd out of the gam e," Jordan said. "W e pretty much w ant­ ed to control things, and that's what we did." No team has ever come back from a 3-0 deficit in any playoff round, and the Sonics don't look like much of a candidate to be the first — especially after what they saw in Game 3. The Bulls quieted Key Arena right from the start, kept their lead in double digits for the final 42 1 / 2 minutes and walked off the court looking as proud as the champions they seem certain to become. "W hen we get on the road," Jordan said, "w e become a little more focused." Game 4 is W ednesday night, and a victory by the Bulls would give them a sweep of the series and the best postseason record in playoff history: 15-1. The current record is 12-1 by the Philadelphia 76ers in 1983. It was the ninth victory in a row for Chicago, tying the 1982 Los Angeles Lakers for the second- Hersey Hawkins takes on the thankless task of trying to guard Michael Jordan during Game 3 of the NBA Finals. Please see Bulls, page 8 ASSOCIATED PRESS FA ll OF A LEGEND Kafelnikov reaches potential, wins French Associated Press PARIS — Yevgeny Kafelnikov is no longer just a can't-m iss prospect with a catchy nicknam e. H e's a Grand Slam champion. Fulfilling the great expectations that have burdened him for tw o years, Kafelnikov made his break­ through Sunday by beating Michael Stich in straight sets to win the French O pen and become the first Russian to capture a Grand Slam singles title. He came from behind in the last tw o sets to win 7-6 (7-4), 7-5, 7-6 (7-4) in 2 1 / 2 hours, ending the match with a blistering forehand passing shot that handcuffed the 15th-seeded Ger­ man at the net. " I t is just a dream ," the sixth-seed­ ed Kafelnikov said. " I never felt I could do it, winning a Grand Slam at age 22 ... I never felt I could make it." "T h e first Grand Slam title really m eans every th in g ," he said. "F o r Russia, it means very much. I know I have many supporters in Russia. I'm going to bring that wonderful trophy back to my country." Kafelnikov became the first man to win the singles and doubles titles at the French Open since Ken Rosewall in 1968. K afelnikov teamed with Daniel Vacek to win the doubles final Please see French Open, page 8 Bullpen comes through, Rangers upend Jays, 8-6 Associated Press ARLINGTON — The Texas bullpen is back on track. Hit hard recently, the Rangers relievers came through Sunday as Dennis Cook, Jeff Russell and Mike Henneman held Toronto to one hit in 3 1 /3 innings in a 8-6 win that gave Texas a three-game sweep. Rangers relievers had allowed 14 runs and 23 hits in a 12-inning span in five games, four of them losses. "Y o u 're going to give a few away. T h a t's b aseb all," said Cook, w ho allowed Charlie O 'Brien's solo home run in the eighth. "B u t it was nice to get the job done again." Russell got the final out in the eighth to preserve a one-run lead, and after Mark M cLem ore's RBI single in the bottom of the eighth gave the Rangers a two-run advantage, Hen­ nem an retired the final three Blue Jays for his 18th save. "O u r bullpen did a great job, espe­ cially C ookie," said Rangers starter Bobby Witt, who left in the sixth with a 6-5 lead. "They had opportunities, but he held 'em again." Cook has stranded 28 of his last 30 inherited runners after bailing out Witt in the sixth Witt allowed a two- run homer to Shaw n Green as the Blue Jays narrowed the deficit to 6-5, then issued consecutive w alks to O 'Brien and Alex Gonzalez. Piease see Rangers, page 9 , * Oscar De La Hoya walks away as referee Joe Cortez momentarily stops the fight in the first round to have the cut above Julio Cesar Chavez's eye attended to during their WBC Super Light­ weight Championship fight at Caesars Palace Fri­ day in Las Vegas. De La Hoya went on to win the fight in the fourth round by TKO. ASSOCIATED PRESS SCORES MLB ANBflC AN LEAGUE New York 3, Detroit 2 Milwaukee 11, Boston 8, (10 inn.) Seattle 3, Kansas City 2 Chicago 12, Baltimore 9 California 8, Cleveland 6, (13 inn.) Texas 8, Toronto 6 Minnesota 5, Oakland 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 3, Florida 0 Chicago 4, Montreal 2 Houston 2, Philadelphia 1 Atlanta 8, Colorado 3 San Francisco 9, St. Louis 0 Los Angeles 3, Cincinnati 2 Pittsburgh 6, San Diego 0 NBA Chicago 108, Seattle 86 (Chicago leads series 3-0) Els routs field at Buick Classic ■ H ARRISON , N.Y. — Ernie Els, w ith no one able to get clos­ er five shots Sunday, cruised to a wire-to-wire, eight- stroke victory in the Buick Clas­ sic. than Els shot an even-par 71 in the final round for a 72-hole total of 13-under 271. His victory margin was the largest on tour since D avis Love III won by eight strokes at the 1993 Las Vegas Invitational. It also tied the biggest winning margin at the Buick Classic, set by David Frost in 1992. The South African native won his third PGA Tour title and first since the 1995 GTE Byron Nel­ son Classic. He was alone in the léad each round, the first time that w as done on the PGA Tour since Tim Herron did it at the Honda Classic in March. Steve Elkington, Tom Lehman, Jeff M aggert and Craig Parry tied for second at 5-under 279. Fred Funk, Frost and Brad Faxon were at 280. The race was for second place all day. Els led Herron by six shots when play began Sunday, but immediately stretched the mar­ gin to eight by making birdies on Nos. 2 and 3 while Herron, his playing partner, made pars. Herron, who finished with a 75, did get the margin back to five as Els three-putted No. 5 for a par and No. 6 for a bogey and missed a short par putt on No. 8. But Els regained his touch by tw o-putting for birdie on the par-5 9th. He also birdied Nos. 11 and 13. Rockies’ Walker out for 8 weeks ■ DENVER — Colorado out­ fielder Larry W alker will be out tor at least eight w eeks after fracturing his left clavicle Sun­ day while crashing into the cen­ ter-held wall at Coors Field. W alker ran into the wall while chasing a triple by Jeff Blauser in the seventh inning of Atlanta's 8-3 w in over the Rockies. W alker was hitting .283 with 14 hom e runs and 43 RBIs at the time of the injury7. ‘ C h a rlie H u s tle ’ s u p p o r ts S c h o tt ■ H A RR ISBU RG , Fa. — Cincinnati Reds ow ner Marge Schott is not the villain some people think, says Pete Rose, who managed the team for her before being forced out of base­ ball. "T h e thing about M arge Schott is that she's actually two peo­ ple," said Rose, in Harrisburg over the weekend for a baseball card show. "M arge is the happi­ est person in the world when she goes to the ballpark. "Sh e'll sit there for 2 1 / 2 hours every night, sign autographs, talk to the writers and the TV guys. But when the lights go out and it's time for her to go, she goes home alone. She has no immedi­ ate family, no kids or friends," Rose told The Patriot-News. " I think she's a very7 lonely person and I kind of feel sorry for h er." W hile Rose said he doesn't agree with her comments and called them "b a d ," he added: " I think Marge Schott is harmless. What she has to do is she has to learn to keep her mouth shut. "B u t you are supposed to have freedom of speech in this coun­ try, aren't you? — Compiled from Associated Press reports Page 8 Monday, June 10,1996 T he Daily T exan French Open: Kafelnikov dumps Stich in 3 sets Continued from page 7 on Saturday. ^ “ The doubles yesterd ay really helped m e /' he said. “ I got used to playing a Grand Slam final on center court." Kafelnikov also broke the mold of recent French Open champions, who were pure clay-court specialists and baseliners. Although he's not a serve-and- volleyer, the Russian is the first all­ court attacking player to win the m en's title since France's Yannick Noah in 1983. Great things have been predicted for Kafelnikov ever since, as a 19- year-old, he extended eventual champion Pete Sam pras to five sets in the second round of the 1994 Aus­ tralian Open. At the time, Sampras predicted Kafelnikov could becom e No. 1 someday. Nicknamed “ Kalashnikov," after the Russian-m ade assault rifle, he broke into the top 10 but failed to go all the way at the Grand Slams, earn­ ing a reputation as the best player never to win a major. Kafelnikov said he was thinking of those expectations Sunday. "Everybody, especially after now, everybod y would exp ect m e to becom e the No. 1 player in the w o rld ," he said. “ But it d oesn't mean that after winning here I will become No. 1. Now for me it is a completely different life beginning because after winning the Grand Slam I will become a huge, huge tar­ get for the other players." Sunday's victory will push him from No. 7 to No. 5 in the next world rankings. Kafelnikov said there would be no big party to celebrate — “ I am not going to go any w ild" — and he would fly home to Sochi, a Black Sea ' coastal resort, to be with his family. Kafelnikov said he w asn't sure what kind of reception he would receive, noting that he has been crit­ icized in the past by the Russian media for his introverted personali­ ty- " I don't know — maybe I will be a hero tomorrow when I step into the airport," he said. “ Or m aybe I will be the sam e person." Kafelnikov is the most active play­ er on the m en's circuit, having played 167 matches last year, includ­ ing 105 in singles. Sunday's final was his 89th match of 1996. W ith his 6-3 frame, big serve, powerful groundstrokes and solid volleys, Kafelnikov has the game that could win on all surfaces. On a perfect spring day, with blue skies and temperatures reaching 82 degrees, he and Stich displayed an unusual variety of shots at Roland Garros. The m atch had it all: aces, drop shots, lobs, passing shots and groundstrokes of slice and topspin. There w ere no breaks in the first set, which went to a tiebreaker. Stich missed two drop shots in a row to go down 6-2. He saved two set points but netted a backhand on the third to lose the set. Stich w ent up two breaks at 5-2 in the second set but couldn't convert. Kafelnikov broke back twice, saved a set point at 5-4, and won five straight games to take the set. "T h e second set was critical," he said. " I f I would have lost that sec­ ond set, maybe things m ight turn all the w ay around." Stich was up a break in the third at 3-1, but Kafelnikov rallied again and broke back for 4-4. Kafelnikov had tw o match points on Stich's serve at 5-4 but played tentatively on both and cou ld n 't capitalize. “ I felt so bad ," he said. " I felt like m aybe I would never have a chance to win it. I felt really, really tired." But the Russian saved a break p oint at 6-5 and forced another tiebreaker. Stich saved a fourth m atch point at 6-4 with a backhand drop snot. But on the next point, Kafelnikov drilled a forehand pass that bounced off Stich's racket and off his body to end the match. Kafelnikov tossed his racket high into the stands and held his arms alo ft as his fiancee, M aria, and coach, Anatoli Lepeshin, cheered from the players' box. " I didn't serve well at a ll," Stich said. " I allowed him to dictate the m atch. tw o very bad tiebreaks. I had chances in all three sets, but I blew them all." I played to G etting final w as an the im probable achievement for Stich, who nearly skipped the tournament after recent ankle surgery. Speaking to the crowd in French, he said, "M aybe I lost a m atch but I found my love for the sport again." Bulls: Jordan scores 36 as Chicago takes 3-0 lead Continued from page 7 most consecutive wins in a single postseason. The record is 11, which the Bulls w on't be able to match, but it's about the only great thing that can't be said about them. Jordan led C hicago w ith 36 points, Luc Longley had 19 and Toni Kukoc 14. Chicago, which had struggled from the field in the first two games, finished at 50 percent from forced 21 field and turnovers from a thoroughly over­ matched Seattle team. the After a pair of m ediocre yet effec­ tive performances at hom e in the first two games, the Bulls seemed them selves determ ined to m ake click as the series moved West. They started the game precise and nearly perfect, taking a 7-0 lead on a lefty hook by Longley, a side jumper by Kukoc and a 3-pointer by Jordan before the game was two minutes gone. Just two minutes later, the lead was up to 13-2 on a jum per from the Jordan, and after lane by five straight points by Kukoc and a foul shot by Pippen, it was 19-4 with 6:07 left. And the Bulls didn't let up. Longley had consecutive shots inside, Jordan hit a jum per and a 3- pointer and then made a steal, feed­ ing Pippen for a fastbreak dunk that was followed by yet another, this one by Rodm an off an assist by Pip­ pen, for a 34-12 lead. It was 34-16 after one period, two points off record lead of 20 by the 1970 Los Angeles Lakers. The second quarter belonged to Jordan, who took over the show with a display uniquely his. He made four foul shots, hit a high- arching fadeaw ay from 14 feet, buried a wide open jum per from the side and swished a 3-pointer from straightaway for a 56-35 lead. His next shot was another long jumper with his foot on the 3-point line, again nothing but net, and then bounced around on one foot and did a sort of backpedal strut down- court. The 15-point burst ended w ith a pair of free throws, and Pip­ pen scored the last tw o points of the half on a pretty driving bank shot from six feet away. It made the score 62-38, and a sm attering of boos were heard as the Sonics sulked off the court. second half, Longley scored the first basket of the Seattle responded with a 16-2 run to draw to 66-54. and “ I thought we w ere going to give it away in the third ," Jordan said. Steve Kerr ended the run with a 3- pointer and Chicago opened the fourth quarter with a 6-0 run ending w ith a three-point play by Jordan. “ Yes! Y es!" Pippen said from the bench. The threat was over and so, pret­ ty much, w as the game. And the series. Avalanche one game away from Stanley Cup landslide Associated Press M IAM I — Who are the Colorado Avalanche anyway? They don't have a great tradition or a m arquee scorer. They do have a solid defense and a spectacular goalie. On M onday night, they could have a Stanley Cup. A win would complete a sweep of the Florida Panthers and end a sea­ son that began after a franchise move from Quebec with a jubilant skate around the rink with the cup held high. The Panthers, though, don't think a victory in Game 4 and a return to Denver for a fifth gam e Thursday night is that unlikely. " I don't think there's a guy on this squad that's going to roll over," Panthers captain Brian Skrudland said. "W e'v e come this far. W hat the heck. A couple of more plane rides is worth it." Colorado would like just one — a return home with the cup after 16 years without a title in Quebec. Not the A valanche long ago, even w eren't overly confident that would happen. "A lot of players probably ques­ tioned how good we a re ," C o l­ orad o's C laude Lem ieux said. "Then, once we won the first round, everyone thought, 'hey, we beat a good club.' " That six-gam e series against V an­ couver in which the Avalanche won the last two by a goal each boosted their confidence. They followed that with six-gam e wins over Chicago and Detroit. After Saturday night's 3-2 com e­ back victory in Game 3, they can fin­ ish off Florida in four but they're not celebrating yet. "W e're not thinking beyond get­ ting ourselves prepared for the first shift of the gam e," Avalanche coach Marc Crawford said. In the regular season, Colorado had the league's second best record but was overshadowed in the W est by the Red Wings, who set an NHL record with 62 victories. And the Avalanche didn't have household like M ario nam es Lemieux or W ayne Gretzky to draw attention, although unassuming Joe Sakic w as the league's third leading scorer. Quietly, they kept winning with the N H L's second highest scoring team, a disciplined defense and goalie Patrick Roy, w ho is three wins shy of Ken D ryden's record of 10 straight finals victories with M on­ treal. "W e were in a new market, a smaller city than Detroit and New Y ork," Lemieux said. "W e didn't have the coverage all year that we could have gotten. "W ith the run we had this year, if we can close it and win it all, w e're going to get that sort of recogni­ tion." The Panthers certainly know how good Colorado is. They haven't been able to focus on a couple of players, as they did in controlling P ittsbu rgh's M ario Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr in the Eastern Conference finals. Colorado has outscored Florida 8-0 in the sec­ ond period with eight different play­ ers scoring. “ We have a lot more depth than the teams that we just beat o u t," said Sakic, who needs one goal to tie the NHL playoff record of 19 in one sea­ son held by Philadelphia's Reggie Leach and Edm onton's Jari Kurri. "A team like Florida will be able to shut a couple of players down, but it's tough to shut the w hole team dow n.” In the second periods, Colorado scored three goals in a span of 3:49 of Game 1, three in 5:26 of Game 2, and two in 1:22 of Game 3. “ I don't see it as an entire [bad] period as much as a couple of break­ d o w n s," coach Doug M acLean said. Florida M acLean said the Panthers played about as well as they could play in Gam e 3, which was fairly even. Yet they still lost. Roy preserved the lead with a magnificent pad save on Scott M ellanby in the third period. Once the Avalanche gets the lead, they hang on tight. "W h en our team 's up, w e have that com mitm ent to defense," Sakic said. Florida had 29 shots in the first tw o periods but only five in the third in G am e 3. That followed vic­ tories of 3-1 and 8-1 in Denver in w hich the Panthers totaled 13 shots in the third periods. Only one team in finals history and two in any best-of-7 playoff series have survived after falling behind 3-0. And teams trailing 3-0 in the finals have just a 5-17 record in the fourth game. “ We never im agined being in this situation and it's not som ething w e're very happy or proud o f," Florida defenseman Gord Murphy said. “ W e did n't underestim ate them. They have a lot of depth and they haven't been giving us a lot of space or time out there." By M onday night, the Panthers may run out of time. " I t hasn't been done often that a team has come back from being down three gam es," Lemieux said, “ but we w ouldn't want to give them any life." Yevgeny Kafelnikov of Russia kisses the French Open tennis trophy after defeating Michael Stich of Ger­ many 7-6, 7-5, 7-6 in Paris. ASSOCIATED PRESS Cleamons trying to put Mavs on back burner Associated Press SEATTLE — Jim Cleam ons isn't quite ready to devote all his atten­ tion to h'is new club, the Dallas M avericks. There's still this business o f the NBA Finals, and Cleam ons contin­ ues to draw a paycheck as an assis­ tant coach for the Chicago Bulls. "W e said that we were going to talk hopefully once a day, if nothing else to leave a phone message, to bring me up to speed in case there's som ething I need to know or be aw are o f," Cleam ons said of his dealings with the Mavericks. “ B ut my m ajor priority is the Chicago Bulls, and I'm actually not focusing on the Dallas situation at all. I've been to Dallas only once for the press conference." That was 10 days ago, when the M avericks introduced Cleam ons as the new coach of a team that recent­ ly com pleted a change in ownership from D onald C arter to a group headed t>y Ross Perot Jr. Cleam ons' hiring was the new reg im e's first high-profile move, putting an 47-year-old basketball lifer in charge of a team that was a m ajor disappointm ent this season. C om ing o ff a 36-46 season in 1994-95, the M avericks were expect­ ed to contend for a playoff spot behind the talented trio of Jason Kidd, Jim Jackson and Jamal Mash- burn. Instead, M ashburn suffered a sea- son-ending injury, Roy Tarpley vio­ lated the term s of his substance abuse probation, Popeye Jones got hurt and the M avericks finished 26- 56 using an offense that relied heav­ ily on long-distance shooting. It was a forgettable season filled with turmoil and squabbling among the players, especially Jackson and Kidd. "A t this point, I can't comment on things I don't know, so I'm going to wait until I get there to evaluate the situ a tio n ," C leam ons said. " I'v e had conversations w ith the three of them [Jackson, M ashburn and Kidd]. The conversations w ere very positive and upbeat, and I'm look­ ing forward to getting down there and getting started." For now, though, C leam ons' main concern is working alongside fellow assistant coaches Tex W inter, i i I ) f e provide We need to [the three J s ] with some help and support and then see where we are.” — Jim Cleamons, new Dallas Mavericks' head coach Jimmy Rodgers and John Paxson to develop a strategy to beat the Seat­ tle SuperSonics in the NBA Finals. Chicago holds a 3-0 lead after an overw helm ing in Game 3. perform ance "I'm not a lame duck. I'm very aggressive and active in w hat w e're doing h ere," Cleamons said. The Bulls have been practicing nearly every day and holding shootarounds on games days since the playoffs began more than six weeks ago. The assistant coaches have been studying videotape and devising the kind of successful strategies that have led to a 13-1 postseason record. Cleam ons hasn't slacked off since landing the Dallas job, but he knows he's looking at some serious cram ­ ming once the Finals end. " I will get to Dallas as soon as I possibly can following the conclu­ sion of our season," he said. "T h e last possible date our series can go is the 19th, and the draft is the 26th, so that would give me a little less than a week to get familiar with names, personalities and attitudes of the athletes that will be available. " I did a little bit of work this week at the M oody Bible [pre-draft] camp. W e have the sixth pick, who hopefully w asn't over there, and we have the 34th pick and the 53rd pick, who were there. I just kind of perused and saw what the talent level was in case a name comes up. Hopefully, I'll remember something about the young m an." Dallas' most im m ediate needs, aside from better team chemistry, are a center to spell Lorenzo W illiams and a power forward to split more time with Jones. "Jason is a phenomenal talent, and one thing you need in this league is quality guards," Cleamons said. "It's just a matter of maturing, u nderstanding how to play the gam e and providing leadership amongst themselves and also for the team. throughout " I think the thing we need is qual­ ity lineup, one the through 12, and I think the people who played last year had more min­ utes than their bodies could tend to handle. W e need to provide them with some help and support, bring in some additional quality and then see where we are." Cleam ons already has four cham ­ pionship rings, three from the Bulls' titles in 1991, 1992 and 1993, and one from his playing days with the 1971-72 Los Angeles Lakers. W ould a fifth ring bring a little more respect if he showed it off on the first day of training camp? "T h e jewelry w on't be there on Day 1," he said. "W e don't get the rings until the opening day of the '96-97 season. But the fact remains that no one wants to go out a loser and this is my last hurrah here. "So certainly taking the hard work with me is the appropriate thing to do." 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An incorrect address m ay interfere w ith your registration or cause you to miss im p o rtan t university correspondence. You are responsible for any correspondence m ailed to you at th e address on the registrar's records. 0,,ia'111^ g'-= - D " . p R E G -1• S-1 R A-R m i u N i v i w i r v o F t i x a s a j a u s t i n • m arital status • sex • eth n icity • dates o f atte n d an ce • classification • m ajor field of study mm Crossword Edited by W ill Shortz T h e D a il y T e x a n Monday, June 10,1996 Page 9 3 3 4 7.. 8 ' 1' " _ ■ No. 0429 rr 13 13 22 Puzzle by Sidney L. Robbins 31 From 33 Let Us Now Praise Famous Men" writer 34 O thello's ensign 35 Like robins' eggs 36 Penury 38 Election time 39 Royal initials 43 Personally gave 44 Bridge seat 4 5 Was a cutup? 46 Etiquette arbiter Post 47 Thick 48 Is a bookhound 51 Jason’s ship 52 C onduct 53 Blackthorn fruit 54 C om poser Jerome 55 C oncerning 56 Romanov V I P 59 Derby, e g Answers to any three clues in this puzzle are available by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420-5656 (75c per minute). Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: (800) 762-1665 D o o n e s b u r y b y g a r r y t r u d e a u ACROSS 1 Tale with a point 6 Dutch portraitist Frans 10 Slightly wet 14 Wing it, speechwise 15 Rock’s C lapton or Carmen 16 Theater award 17 Diver's inspiration? 19 Facilitate 20 Extremities 21 The Zoo S tory’’ playw right 22 Escalator segment 23 — De-Lovely" 24 Restaurant patrons 26 Hijacker's destination, once 30 Mock 32 Hebrew A" 33 Bride’s route 34 Arab name part 371995 Whitney Houston movie 40 Zero 41 — bourguignon 42 Debate (with) 43 Bees' homes 4 4 Bounced back 45 Make calm 48 Squeal (on) 4 9 “You said it!" 50 Lads and dads, e.g. ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE i f4 17 20 53 Three-player card game 57 Gale 58 In suspense 6 0 Otherwise 61 "Yikes!" 62 Central artery 63 Like Easter eggs 64 Surveyor’s measures 65 Quartet mem ber DOWN 1 Lose brightness 2 Yemeni port 3 Blackm ailed 4 Revlon targets 5 Flow back 6 Dressy shoes 7 Yemeni, e.g. 8 Miller beer brand 9 Timetable 1 0 scratch" (old cleanser slogan) 11 Lessen 12 Super-skinflint 13 C hicks' sounds 18 23 Repress 25 Not precise 26 Actress Goldie 27 Jai 28 Bit of w edding tat-tat garb 29 Prone 30 Shakespeare s A ndronicus" MEAN BUSINESS! ■ ■ 2 0 WORDS 471-5244 THE DAILY TEXAN to pnvato party (non-oemmeroeA ads only ■ oAkwI tor mm may no* raosad t ' 000 and DILBERT I Aft PHIL,THE PRINCE OF INSUFFICIENT LIGHT! I DARN YOU T o HECK /// \ | / /T \ PHIL? YOU COERE ALCJAYS lAOtA'S GOLDEN BOY by Scott Adams r \ SOMEBODY BROUGHT POTATO SALAD. GIVE ^ E YOUR j u F This is th e s to ry o f young Edmund Hutchinson Before he figured out the name Hutch g o t him beat up a lo t less. NYAHHIH NERD! NERD, Eddy Hutchinson’s a NERD! ^ Ooo... Looks like you could use a friend. You know, -tor 20 bucks I know just where to fin d one! My name’s Rsrs! A ro u n d C a m p u s is a d a ily c o l­ u m n l i s t i n g U n i v e r s i t y - r e l a t e d a c tiv itie s s p o n s o re d b y ac a d e m ic d e p a rtm e n ts, s tu d e n t services an d s tu d e n t o r g a n iz a tio n s r e g is te r e d w ith the C am p u s A ctivities Office. A n n o u n c e m e n ts m u st b e s u b m it­ te d on th e p r o p e r fo rm b y n o o n tw o days before p u b lication. Form s are available at The D aily T e x a n o f f ic e a t 2 5 th S tr e e t a n d W hitis A venue. Y ou m ay n o w s u b m it A ro u n d C a m p u s e n t r i e s b y e - m a il a t: a r o u n d c @ u tx v m s .c c .u te x a s .e d u . P le a s e i n c l u d e th e n a m e of th e sp o n so rin g o rg a n iz a tio n , location, tim e a n d d a te o f e v e n t, d a te o f a n n o u n c e m e n t, a c o n ta c t p h o n e n u m b e r a n d o th e r re le v a n t in fo r­ r e g a r d i n g m a tio n . Q u e s t i o n s A ro u n d C a m p u s m ay a ls o b e e- m ailed to this address. O th erw ise, p le a se d ire c t q u e s tio n s to C heryl G ooch at 471-4591. T h e D a i l y T e x a n r e s e r v e s th e right to ed it su b m issions. AROUND CAMPUS Texas U nion Art Gallery. For m ore in fo rm a tio n call Jane C u m m in s a t 475-6603. U T Tae K w on D o m eets from 8- 10 p .m . M o n d a y s in A n n a H iss G y m n a s iu m 136 a n d 7-10 p .m . T hursdays AHG 133. Beginners are alw ays welcome. For m ore inform a­ tion call John Ledbetter at 475-7267 or 444-0321. Texas U n io n M anagem ent C om ­ m itte e m eets 5-6 p.m . every M on­ d a y in th e T exas U n io n B u ild in g Board of D irectors Room. All majors are welcome. For m ore inform ation call Stephen at 472-7025. U niversity Yoga C lub m eets at 5 p .m . M o n d a y s in th e L o n e S ta r Room in the Texas U nion Building. For m ore inform ation call Tyson at 495-3924. UT C ycling C lub m eets at 8 p.m. M ondays in Robert Lee M oore Hall 4.102. New' m e m b e rs a re a lw a y s welcom e. For m ore inform ation call Jeff at 480-8664. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES T h e UT V o l u n t e e r Ce nt er u rg en tly n eed s carnival v o lu nteers for M aplew ood E lem entarv’s 1>um- m e rfe st 6-9 p .m . F rid a y , Ju n e V V olunteers can help ru n anv variet of booths. Please call Diana Reyes at 471-6161. T he UT V o lu n te e r C en ter needs su m m e r renovation project v o lu n ­ teers to assist A nderson Lane Care C enter. Help w ith painting, w allpa­ p e rin g , deco ratin g a n d / o r v a rio u s la n d s c a p in g a n d y a r d w o rk jobs. Please call D iana Reyes at 471-6161. D e s i g n a t e d D r iv e r P ro g ra m needs volunteers to an sw er phones on w eekend nights. For m orí' infor­ m ation call D aw n W illiam s a t 475- 8252._____________________________ OTHER L e g a l S e r v ic e s f o r S tu d e n t s offers legal a d v ic e 5-7 p.m M on­ days in Texas Union Building 3.116. For m ore inform ation call A nnette Bernier at 471-77%. H a r r y R a n s o m H u m a n i t ie s R esearch C e n te r is sp o n so rin g an e x h ib itio n title d "W illiam M orris a n d h is C irc le ." It is o p e n to the p u b lic 9 a .m .-4:30 p .m . M o n d a y th ro u g h F rid ay and 9 a .m .-7 p .m . th e f o u r th flo o r T h u r s d a y s in g allery . For m ore m fo rm a tio n call 471-8944. HBP—by KRyan (Biggio) Umpires—Home Davidson; First Ponctno. Sec­ ond. Botun; Third, Pulli T—2 42 A—30,180 (54,350) MEETINGS T e x a s U n io n D i s t i n g u i s h e d S peakers C o m m ittee holds w eekly m eetings a t 6 p.m . M ondays in the Toronto's Joe Carter steals second base on a bad throw to Texas’ Mark McLemore in the fourth inning. Rangers Continued from page 7 the bases before Cook w alked Jacob Brum field to load retirin g D om ingo C edeno on a fly ball to end the threat. Juan G onzalez w e n t 3-for-3 and had the big hit for the Rangers w ith a three-run h om er to hig h ­ lig h t a in n in g . M cLem ore w e n t 4-for-5 and Rene G onzales w as 3-for-4 w hile giving reg u lar sh o rtsto p K evin Elster the day off. fiv e-ru n th ird W itt (6-4) survived 5 2 /3 shaky innings, and passed last year's com ­ bined five victories for Florida and Texas. He allow ed five hits, w alked five and struck out five. The Blue Jays com m itted a sea­ son-high four errors, one leading to an unearned run, as they w rapped up a 1-5 road trip. “ W e m ade som e m istakes and a few e rro rs/ Blue Jays m anager Cito G aston said. “ W hen you m ake an error, you feel like the low est per­ son in the w orld. O u r guys battled back but every tim e w e'd get close, they'd get another run." The R angers took a 5-1 lead in the third against Erik H anson (6-8). M cLem ore and Rusty G reer deliv­ ered RBI singles and G onzalez hit his n in th h o m e run, a 423-foot drive into the bleachers in left-cen­ ter. “ A fter the road trip w e had, it w as im portant to come back hom e and get back on track,” M cLem ore said. this N otes: T oronto is 1-5 against ... G reen season. Texas m atched a career-high w ith three RBls. ... Texas m an a g e r Johnny O ates gave catcher Ivan R odriguez the d ay off, b u t R odriguez had to enter th e gam e in the fourth after catcher Dave Valle w as ejected by hom e John H irschbeck for arg u in g a called third strike. The ejection was the first for a R angers player this sea­ son. ...R odriguez extended his hit­ ting streak to 10 gam es w ith a sixth- inning double. u m p ire p late MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL New York Baltimore Toronto Boston Detroit Chicago Cleveland Minnesota Milwaukee Kansas City Texas Seattle California Oakland w 34 32 26 24 15 W 39 39 30 28 28 W 38 32 26 28 Pet 586 AMERICAN LEAGUE East DMston GB — 2 9 1/2 11 21 L10 6-4 4-6_ 4-6 4-6 3-7 400 .242 426 I 24 26 .552 35 36 47 Control DMston GB — L10 9 1 6-4 7-3 5-5 ' 4-6 L10 6-4 5-5 4-6 4-6 — 0 10 1/2 12 — 5 1/2 9 1/2 10 Wost DMston GB Pet .650 .650 .500 475 452 Pet 623 533 467 459 Monday's Gamos Streak Won 1 Lost 3 Lost 4 Lost 2 Lost 1 Streak Won 3 Lost 1 Won 1 Won 2 Lost 1 Streak Won 3 Won 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Home 20-9 ¿1-14 14-16 15-16 8-18 Home 20-5 19-8 17-15 15-15 13-16 Home 25-9 18-15 19-11 14-17 Baltimore (Wells 3-5) at Detroit (Olivares 1-2), 6 05 p m Oakland (Johns 4-7) at Cleveland (Nagy 9-1), 6:05 p m New York (Key 2-6) at Toronto (Hentgen 6-4), 6:35 p m Boston (Sele 2-4) at Chicago (Tapani 6-3), 7:05 p m Seattle (Wagner 0-0) at Minnesota (Aldred 1-4), 7:05 p m California (Langston 3-2) at Kansas City (Haney 4-5), 7:05 p.m Milwaukee (Givens 0-0) at Texas (Gross 5-4). 7:35 p.m Atlanta Montreal Florida Philadelphia New York Houston St Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati San Diego Los Angeles San Francisco Colorado W 39 34 30 28 26 W 32 29 26 ^ 27 _ 22 w 30 33 31 29 ’ Pet M T10N A L LEAGUE East DMston GB — 5 1/2 9 1/2 11 13 L10 6-4 5-5 5-5 3-7 5-5 650 .557 .492 .467 433 Pet Control DMston GB — 2 3 1 2 508 .475 452 L10 6-4 7-3 0-2 6-4 3-7 443 400 4 6 3? I W o s t DMston GB — 3 1/2 4 5 1/2 L10 3-7 5-5 5-5 4-6 Pet .581 .524 .517 492 M o n d a y 's ■amos Streak Won i Lost 2 Lost 2 Lost 4 Wor 9 Streak Won3 Lost 2 Won 3 Won 2 Lost 2 Streak Lost 3 Won 2 Won 2 Lpst 1 Home 22-10 19-10 20-14 11-14 15-15 Home 17-15 13-14 12-19 19-16 12-17 Home 18-16 19-12 13-14 17-11 Chicago (Navarro 3-6) at Philadelphia (Mulholland 5-4), 6:35 p m Florida (Rapp 3-7) at Montreal (Cormier 3-3), 6:35 p.m. Atlanta (Avery 6-4) at New York (Jones 5-2), 6:40 p.m. Houston (Wall 2-0) at Colorado (Reynoso 3-5), 8:06 p.m St. Louis (Morgan 1-0) at Los Angeles (Park 3-2), 9:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Salkeld 2-1) at San Diego (Worrell 4-1), 9:05 p.m Pittsburgh (Loaiza 0-0) at San Francisco (Qardner 7-1), 9:05 p.m L 21 21 30 31 34 L 23 28 32 33 L 21 27 31 32 34 L 31 32 34 34 L 26 30 29 30 Away 14-15 11-12 12-19 9-20 7-29 Away 19 16 20-13 13-15 13-10 15-17 Away 13-14 14-13 9-21 14-16 Away 17-11 15-17 10-17 17 18 11-19 Away 15-16 16-10 16-15 8-18 10-16 Away 18-10 14*16 18-15 12-19 ASSOCIATED PRESS Astros Continued from page 7 tis in his left shoulder that forced him to sit out from M ay 13-27. “ The shoulder felt fin e /' H a m p ­ ton said. "T hey limited me to 90 pitches and I threw 94. The only thing I w as disappointed in w as I left a few too m any balls in the m id ­ dle of the plate. But I'll get better next tim e / M ay w alked and Sean Berry sac­ rificed the runners to second and third in the seventh. After Rick W ilkins w as intentionally w alked, G utierrez singled to left to score Bagwell and May. W illiam s w as replaced at that point by Ken Ryan, w ho struck out pinch hitter Derek Bell for the final out. Pete Incaviglia singled on a gro u n d er to deep shortstop to start the fourth inning off H am pton, and scored on T odd Zeile's double that got through the center-right field gap and rolled to the wall. M orandini knew early in his final charge that a good throw w ould get him at the plate. “ He m ade a good throw , you tip y o u r h a t to h im ," hav e to M orandini said. “ I tried to knock the ball loose, b u t there w a sn 't m uch I could do." RANGERS 8, BLUE JAYS 6 h bi 0 0 TORONTO ab Brmfld cf 3 Cedeno 2b CDIgdo dh Carter If Sprgue 3b Olerud 1b Green rf RPerez rf O’Brien c AGnzIz ss Totals Toronto Texas ab 5 TEXAS Hmlton cf McLmr 2b Greer If JGnzIz dh Tttleton 1b Palmer 3b Newson rf Valle c IRdrgz c RGnzIs ss Totals r h bi 0 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 3 0 0 0 1 1 3 37 8 147 100 005 202 010 01 x 101 - 6 --8 E—Cedeno (6), Sprague (7), Green (2). AGonza- lez (5), Valle (1). DP—Toronto 3. LOB—Toronto 6, Texas 7. 2B—Carter (18), IRodriguez (18). H R - Green (5), O'Brien (6), JGonzalez (9). SB—Brum­ field (2), Carter (4). SF—O’Brien. Toronto Hanson L,6-8 Crabtree Texas BWitt W.6-4 Cook Russell Henneman S,18 IP H R ER BB SO 6 2 12 7 2 1 6 2 8 0 0 4 52/3 5 5 5 5 5 2 1 1 1 1 2 0 0 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Hanson pitched to 2 batters in the 7th Umpires— Home, Hirschbeck; First, Culbreth, Sec­ ond, McKean; Third, Hendry T—3:08 A—-41,605 (49,178). t ASTROS 2. PIULES 1 HOUSTON PHILA ab r h bi 4 0 0 0 Otero cf 4 0 1 0 KJrdn 2b KRyan p 0 0 0 0 Esnrich ph 1 0 1 0 Jffenes 1b 3 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 Incvgla If 4 0 3 1 Zeile 3b 4 0 2 0 Sntiago c GMury rf 4 0 1 0 Bnjmm ss 2 0 0 0 Whiten ph 1 0 0 0 MkWIm p 2 0 0 0 Mmdni 2b 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 1 9 1 ab r h bi 3 0 0 0 Cnglosi If 4 0 0 0 Spiers 2b Bgwell 1b 3 1 1 0 3 1 0 0 May rf 2 0 0 0 Berry 3b 0 0 0 0 Biggio 2b 4 0 1 0 BLHntr cf 2 0 0 0 RWIkns c Gutierz ss 3 0 2 2 Hmptn p 1 0 1 0 Mouton ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 AYngp 1 0 0 0 DBell ph 0 0 0 0 ToJnes p 27 2 5 2 Totals Philadelphia Houston 000 100 000 — 1 20x —2 000 000 E—Gutierrez (4). DP—Philadelphia 1. Houston 2 LOB—Philadelphia 10, Houston 7. 2B—Zeile (14). GMurray (2). SB— MkWilltams (1), Morandini (19), Cangelosi 2 (9), BLHunter (14). Gutierrez (4). S— Berry Philadelphia MkWilliams L.1-5 KRyan Houston Hampton AYoung W.2-2 ToJones S,12 IP H R ER BB SO 6 2/3 5 1 1/3 0 2 2 2 6 0 0 2 3 6 7 1 0 2 2 1 1 2 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 2 Page 10 Monday, June 10,1996 T h e Daily T exan To P la c e a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 or on-line at: http://fetumedia.jou.utexas.edu/ CLASS/clasform.html Classified Word Ad Rates Charged by the word Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply. •,......$ 6 .1 5 1 day... 2 da ys........................ $1 1 7 0 3 da ys........................ $ 1 6 .6 5 4 da ys........................ $ 2 0 .4 0 5 days.........................$ 2 3 .2 5 First two words may be all capital letters $ .2 5 for each additional w o rd le tte rs. MasterCard and Visa accepted. ca p ital ...KniT.f, in Classified Display Ad Rates Charged by the column inch. One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces and size s and bo rde rs available. Fall rates Sept. 1-May 3 0 1 to 21 column inches per month. $ 9 .2 0 per col. inch over 21 column inches per month Call for rates FAX ADS TO 4 7 1 -6 7 4 1 8:00-5:00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication EDUCATIONAL 5 8 0 —Musical Instruction 590-Tutoring 600-Instruction Wanted 6 1 0-M isc. Instruction TRANSPORTATION 10 -M isc. Autos 20-Sports-Foreign Autos 30-Trucks-Vans 4 0 - Vehicles to Trade 50-Service-Repair 6 0 —Parts-Accessories 70-Motorcycles 80-Bicycles 90-Vehicles-Leasing 1 0 0—Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 —Services 12 0 -H o u se s 130-Condos-Townhomes 140-M obile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 16 0—Duplexes-Apartments 1 7 0 —Wanted 18 0 -L o a n s ■M ERCHA NDISE 190-A pp lian ce s 2 0 0 —Fumiture-Household 210-Stereo-TV 2 2 0 —Computers-Equipment 230-Photo-Camera 2 4 0 —Boats 25 0-M usical Instruments 2 6 0 —Hobbies 270-Machinery-Equipment 2 8 0 —Sporting-Camping Equipment 2 9 0 —Fumiture-Appliance Rental 3 0 0 —Garage-Rummage Sales 310-Trade 320-W anted to Buy or Rent 3 3 0 -P e ts 3 4 0 —Longhorn Want Ads 3 4 5-M isc. RENTAL 3 5 0 —Rental Services 360-Furnished Apts 370-Unfumished Apts. 3 8 0 —Furnished Duplexes 3 9 0 —Unfurnished Duplexes 4 0 0 —Condos-T ownhomes 4 1 0 —Furnished Houses 4 2 0 —Unfurnished Houses 4 2 5 Rooms 4 3 0 —Room-Board 435-Co-ops 4 4 0 —Roommates 4 5 0 —Mobile Homes-Lots 4 6 0 —Business Rentals 4 7 0 —Resorts 48 0-Stora ge Space 4 9 0 —Wanted to Rent-Lease 5 0 0 —Misc. ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 1 0 —Entertainment-Tickets 520-Person als 5 3 0 —T ravel-T ransportation 5 4 0 -L o st & Found 550-Licensed Child Care 5 6 0 —Public Notice 5 7 0 —Music-Musicians 620-Legal Services 630-Com puter Services 640-Exterminators 650-Moving-Hauling 660-Storage 6 7 0 —Painting ' 680-Office 690-Rentai Equipment 700-Fum iture Rental 710-Appliance Repair 720-Stereo-TV Repair 7 3 0-H o m e Repair 740-Bicycle Repair 750-Typing 7 6 0 -M isc. Services E M P LO Y M E N T 770-Employment Agencies 780-Employment Services 7 9 0 -P a rt Time 800-General Help Wanted 810-0fficeClericai 820-Accounting-Bookkeeping 8 3 0 —Administrative- Management 8 4 0 -S a le s 850-Retail 860-Engineering-T echnical 870-M edical 880-Professional 890-Clubs-Restaurants 900-Dom estic Household 9 1 0-Positions Wanted 9 2 0 -W o rk Wanted BUSINESS 93 0 -B u sin e ss Opportunities 9 4 0 —Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED ADVERTISING TERMS in In the e ve n t of e r r o r s m a d e advertisement, notice m ust be given by 11 a.m. the first day, a s the publishers are r e s p o n s ib le fo r only O N E in c o r r e c t insertion. All claims for adjustments should be m ade not later than 3 0 days after publication Pre-paid kills receive credit slip if requested at time of cancellation, and if a m o u n t e xce e d s $ 2 DO. Slip m u s t be presented for a reorder within 9 0 dBys to be valid. Credit slips are non-transferreble. In c o n s id e r a tio n of th e D aily T e x a n 's a c c e p ta n c e of a d v e r t is in g co p y for publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harm less, Texas S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s a n d its officers, employees, and agen ts a ga in st all loss, liability, d a m a g e , a n d e x p e n se of w h a tso e v e r n atu re a r is in g out of the copying, printing, or p u b lish in g of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, p la g ia rism and co p yright and trademark infringement. TRANSPORTATION ■ REAL ESTATE SALES RENTAL RENTAL R E N T A L 20 - Sports-Foi g 13 0 -C o n d o s - A utos Tow nhom es 350 - Rental Services 360 - Fum. Apts. 360 - Fum . Apts. 8 4 A C C O R D - M IN O R front end d a m a ge -needs work - go o d engine, interior perfect, new new clutch, tires - well maintained O B O 2 8 0 - 5 9 3 1 after 5 :0 0 6-4-7B $ 1 , 0 0 0 80 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Costil! B U C K ’S B IK E S > 9 2 8 -2 8 1 0 REAL ESTATE SALES 130 - Condos- Tow nhom es For Sale Guadalupe Sq. 1-1 36K Tom Green 1-1 51K 1-1 52.9K Overlook 1-1 54.9K Elms 2-2 64.9K Westplate Georgian 2-2 67.5K Landmark Sq. 2-2 70.5K 1-1 70.9K ♦Croix 2-2 71.9K ♦Poinle ♦Paddock 2-2 73K Wedgewood 2-2 73.5K Robbins Place 2-2 75.5K St. Thomas 2-1 79.9K ♦Park Place 2-2 84K Pecan Walk 4-2 92K ♦Enfield Challenge2-2 99.9K ♦Orange Tree 2-2 104K Habidad 3-2 1S0K 'Denotes FHA 2.5% Down FREE A P A R T M E N T L O C A T IN G Eff, 1, 2, and 4 bdrms available Call 4 5 2 -3 5 6 8 . 6-4-20B ________ mm^ m PROKRTV MAHAGEUEHT m " p r 704 w. 24th St. 360 - Fum. Apts. $56,500 $108,000 $33,000 $33,000 $85,000 $47,500 $81,500 $85,000 m SwS S U.T. E x p e r t s 1-1 ‘Overlook 2-2 ‘Orongefree Sbadowtree 1-1 3000 Geadaktpe 1-1 2-2 Lennox M w /bft Pearl Somerset 2-2 W. Univ. Place 2-2 (owner financed) Enfield Townkoine 2-2 $81,000 * FHA Financing 476-2673 MERCHANDISE 200 - Furniture - Household FREE DELIVERY For UT Students! S 89 95 • TW IN SET w.TRAME • FULL SET w/FRAME $ 99 95 • QUEEN SETw/FRAME $139 95 $ 49.95 • 4 DRAWER CHEST S 69 95 •STUDENT DESK $169 95 • SOFAS $ 1 ?9 95| I • 5-PIECE DINETTE Centex Furniture W h o le sa le 6618 N. LAMAR 2001 S. LAMAR 450-0988 445-5808 Beds, Beds, Beds The factory outlet for Simmons, Seoly, Springair. We carry closeouts, discontinued covers, & factory 2nds. from 50-70% off retail store prices. All new, complete with warranty Twin set, $ 69 . Full set, $ 8 9 Q ueen set, $ 1 1 9 . King set, $ 1 4 9 1741 West Anderson Ln. 454-3422 2 2 0 Computers- Equipment M A C P O W E R B O O K 5 3 0 0 5 0 0 M hard drive, 8 M ram, lOOmhz, w ar­ ranty remaining $ 1 6 0 0 9 1 8 -1 8 4 8 P a r k P l a z a and P l a z a C o u r t A p a r t m e n t s LEASING I & 2 BDM.APTS CONTROLLED ACCESS GATE C O N V E N I E N T T O H A N C O C K C E N T E R . U T & S A N M A R C U S S H U T T L E 9 1 5 E. 41 st 4 5 2 -6 5 1 8 3 0 2 W . 38th Summer/Fall Leasing on efficiencies, 1 bdrms & 2 bdrms. Convenient to Hancock Center, UT, and Hyde Park. Half a block to shuttle. All a p ­ pliances, pool, laundry room, gas, water, and cable paid 4 5 3 -4 0 0 2 4-24-20B-C RENT SPECIALS All new 1,2,3 or 4 BR's with access gates, free cable, sport activities director. O n shuttle. For summer or fall Properties Plus 447-7368 6-4-20B-D P E R S O N S T O answer phones in en- ch ang e for reduced rent on 1 bed­ room North Austin apt. 4 5 3 -1 3 2 7 6-4-5 B ONLY 1 LEFT! It's a 2-1 in West Campus available now. 12 month lease. $720. View Point Apts. 2518 Leon 476-8590 WALK/BIKE TO CAMPUS 32n d at 1-35 (NE corner) Avalon Apartments: 2-2 $ 6 4 5 up 1-1 $ 4 6 5 up Eff. $ 4 2 5 up Convenient engineering, law, LBJ school a nd all East Cam pus. W alk- in closets, ceiling fans, on-site laun­ dry, mgr. 459-9898 or 476-3629 4-26-20B-A N E E D A PLACE T O LIVE JUST FOR THE S U M M E R ? Sublet for a furnished 1/1 available in W est Cam pus from June 1-August 31. $400/m onth and $15 0. For more information, please call 4 7 9 -4 0 7 5 or e-mail me at: g i ngereb@m ail. utexas. ed u 4-30-208 RENTAL - 360 FURNISHED APARTMENTS LOCATION - LOCATION COME SEE BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APTS. Century Sq u are 3401 Red River 2 Bd., 1 Bd. & Efficiencies ALL B IL L S PAID 478-9775 Century Plaza 4210 Red River 2 Bd., 1 Bd. & Efficiencies A LL B ILL S PAID 452-4366 G ra n a d a III 940 E. 40th 2 Bd., 1 Bd. & Efficiencies ALL B ILLS PAID 453-8652 • CONVENIENCE • POOL • PATIOS'* LAUNDRY FACILITIES • 476-1976 6-10-5B 260 - Hobbies EN F IE L D T O W N H O M E 2BR- 2 .5 B A -2 Story, fireplace, balcony, pool, ¡acuzzi, covered parking; on UT • shuttle. C lose to lake, golf, shopping. $ 8 1 ,0 0 0 . Tammy Fariss, Broker/ Ow ner. 8 3 6 -4 4 3 7 . 6-7-20B TO PLACE YOUR SUPER LONGHORN WANT AD CALL 471-5244 O N E SKUTT electric kiln model # 1 0 2 7 with 3inch bricks, kiln sitters, complete furniture, $ 1 4 0 0. Call 4 5 2 -8 2 3 7 6-5-10B never used. 270 - Machinery- Equipment PR ESSU RE C L E A N E R S . Complete, ready to use, $ 9 9 . 1 -8 00 -33 3 - 9 2 7 4 . 6-3-10 B 345 - Misc. ___ SC U LPT U R ED L O N G H O R N by Jo ­ duction. D isp la y at B e v o 's Book­ store- on the d ra g O rd e r info: 1- 8 0 0 -4 9 9 -B E V O 6-3-20B 4539 G U A D A L U P E 452-4447 I Sp a ciou s One and Tw o Be d room s E l Covered P a r t in g A vailable i S p a r k lin g S w im m in g P o o ls Shuttle Route seph M elancon. C eram ic Repro­ ¡ 4 6 Furnished & Unfurnished Options 4 6 Laundry Centers B P rofe ssio na l M anagem ent & Maintenance THREE OAKS & PECAN SQUARE APARTMENTS 1 BDR/1 BA Fully Furnished Laundry Room Community Atmosphere On Shuttle No Application Fee Preleasing On-site manager • Affordable deposit 4 5 1 - 5 8 4 0 4 0 9 W . 3 8 t h St. Now Preleasing One Block From Campus 1 BR & 2 BR Ceiling Fans On Shuttle Laundry Room Fully Furnished Pool Permit Parking On-site manager/ maintenance Vertical mini-blinds Affordable deposits R i o N u e c e s 6 0 0 W . 2 6 th 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 R E N T A L Fvrrw Af*s. W a lk To C a m p u s HOUSTON 2801 Hem phill P a rk - 472-8398 DALLAS 2803 He'mphill P a rk - 472-8398 BRANDYWINE 2808 W hitls Ave. - 472-7049 W 1 L S H I R E 301 W. 29th - 472-7049 Great Lo ca tio n s! • Preleasing • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Central Air/Heat • 2 Blocks From UT • No Application Fee • 1 BR/BA »On-site manager »Affordabk- deposits W e st cam pus one bedroom Furnished,available immediately summer only $ 44 0 / m o . with $ 1 5 0 deposit gas, water cable paid, on W C shuttle route. Barranca Square Apts. 9 1 0 W . 26th St. Call 4 6 7 - 2 4 7 7 6-5-2 0 B M ESQ U IT E TREE APARTMENTS SUMMER SPECIALS! * 1-1 *s * Fully Furnished * Close to C am pus & W C Shuttle * Alarm System * C able * Jacuzzi * Frost-free Refrigerator * Self-cleaning O ven * Dishwasher * A / C , Ceiling Fan, Study Desk * Laundry Facilities * On-site M anagem ent JUPITER T E N O R saxophone, $ 8 5 0 . P E N T IU M 7 5 N e w systems from Denon stereo receiver, $ 2 2 5 . $ 7 9 5 4 8 6 D X 3 3 used system $ 4 5 0 Yam aha C D changer, $ 2 2 5 . All in C all M a rk 4 4 8 -2 5 3 6 . 6-6-5B-C excellent condition. C a ll G a brie l, 3 2 0 -8 0 3 8 6-5-5B LA R G E D O R M -S IZ E refrigerator, 3 years old $ 5 0 O B O 4 7 9 -8 2 2 4 I SM A LL D I N I N G table, $ 2 0 . Boo k­ shelf $ 2 5 . Twin bed. $ 2 5 . 2 8 2 - 4 6 2 3 6-4- 5B TV $ 1 2 5 , V C R $ 1 2 5 , Reel to Reel G R E A T B O O K S with custom b o o k­ case, ten volumes great ideas pro­ gram , $ 3 9 5 . Coffee table, 2 end tables like new, $ 195 2 5 8 -3 6 4 2 6- D I A M O N D B A C K O U T L O O K like new $ 100. Q u e en size water bed complete $ 75 . Pioneer 1 6 0 W 6 x 9 speakers $ 50 . 4 4 3 -1 4 3 9 6-6-5B M A C C L A S S IC 2 meg Ram 4 0 meg harddrive, printer, gam es /solitate/ tetris, M S w o rd , manuals, key­ board, mouse. Everything $ 3 0 0 . M A C P O W E R B O O K 1 7 0 with 8 0 M B harddrive 6 M B Ram, 1 4.4 fax modem. System 7 .0 includes carrying case $ 8 5 0 O B O 3 2 6 -3 4 7 4 6-10-5B. S T U D EN T SPEC IAL 4 8 6 DX-33 4 M B Ram 2 6 0 M B H D $ 3 9 9 : 4 8 6 D X 2 -8 0 4 M B Ram 6 3 0 M B H D $ 4 7 5 V G A Monitor $ 1 1 5 8 3 3 -8 8 6 9 . 6-7-5B-C C all Jessica 4 7 9 -0 6 0 8 6-10-5B F U G I BIKE for Sale. 5 4 cm, white tape recorder $ 2 5 0 , turntable $ 75 , 5-5B ____________________________ '8 8 H Y U N D A E Excel, 8 6 K miles, $ 5 0 2 5 8 -2 8 1 6 6 -1 0 -5 B G vacuum cleaner $ 2 5 3 3 9 -3 1 4 6 . 6- 6-5B FULL S U S P E N S IO N O ff R oad Pro­ flex 7 5 2 Rock S hox Fork, $ 7 5 0 . 2 5 8 -8 9 4 1 . 6-7-5& C G re y 4dr, auto, A / C , stereo, C O U C H FOR Sale, $60, and other mtsc $ 1 5 0 0 . C a ll 8 3 5 - 5 0 5 0 ask for items Please leave m essage 7 9 4 Alani. 6-10-5P 8 7 1 1 . 6-10-5B-D 3 Í ( • M A I L O R D E R B L A N K Order by M ail, F A X or Phone FA X : I P.O. B ox D i A u stin , T e x a s 7 8 7 1 3 4 71-6741 I C lassified P h o n e : 471 -5 2 4 4 2 0 w o r d s 5 d a y s S 5 A d d i t i o n a l W o r d s . ...$ 0 .2 5 e a 2 8 14 20 26 3 9 15 21 27 4 10 16 22 28 5 11 17 23 29 6 12 18 24 30 t o p r iv a t e p a r t y O t t e r ! m iit e d ( n o n - c o m ­ m e r c ia l ) a d s o n l y In d t v K lu a i it e m s o t te r e d to ' s a l e m a y n o t e x c e e d $1 OOO, a n d p r ic e m u s t a p p e a r in trie b o d y o f th e a d c o p y II i t e m s a r e n o t s o t d , fiv e a d d i t i o n a l i n s e r t io n s w ill b e ru n at n o c h a r g e A d v e r t is e r m u s t l a y of t h e fifth c a ll b e t o r e 11 a . m . o n t h e ( o t h e r U t a n in s e r t io n r e d u c t io n in p r ic e ) is a ll o w e d N o c o p y c h a n g e A D D R E S S . C IT Y . S T A T E Z I P N A M E ................................................................ P H O N E , 1 7 13 19 25 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I G r e a t D e als! v _ A ff o rd a b le D e p o sits! 4 7 8 -2 3 5 7 2410 Longview Dr. #301 4-30-20B C ASA DE SALADO APARTMENTS 10B-D O N E B E D R O O M vacancy. 3 4 0 5 Helms, $ 3 8 5 / m o 4 7 7 -8 8 6 2 6-7- SUMMER SPECIALS FROM $ 3 5 0 4 4 0 0 2 6 1 0 - 2 6 1 2 Salado Street Best Deal in W est Cam pus Preleasing for 1 9 9 6 - 1 9 9 7 * Family owned and m anaged property * Summer discount * O n ly 2 left * Fully furnished * Swimming Pool * Laundry Room ’ O w ner pays for basic cable, ga s and water/waste water (heat & stove) * Pest Control * Prefer one year leases Call Brian N o v y at 4 7 7 -2 5 3 4 Pre-leasing in H yde Park large E F FIC IE N C IE S from $ 3 9 5 FREE CABLE furnished a nd unfurnished DW /D SP /B ookshe lves Pool/BBQ/Patia Laundry/Storage/Res. mgr "IF" Shuttle 1 0 8 Place Apartments 1 08 W . 45th Street 4 5 2 -1 4 1 9 , 3 8 5 2 2 1 1 ,4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 6-3-206C HYDE PARK O N E B E D R O O M S U M M E R RATE $ 4 6 5 FALL RATE $ 5 2 5 New furniture Large W alk-in Closet 4 3 0 7 Avenue A 4 5 4 - 9 9 4 5 • M a n y Designer Amenities 5-2-206-C • Exercise equipment/Computers • Fans/Large Refrigerators PARK A V E N U E PLACE 30th and Speedw ay & M A M A I S O N D O R M 2 3rd a n d Pearl (Coed for summer) • N orth/W est Cam pus • All Bills Paid • Free C a b le & Parking • Fully Furnished • Close to all shuttles • Laundry room • Controlled Access Month to M o nth Availablel Ready to M o v e in N o w l C all 4 7 4 -2 2 2 4 , 1 8 8 8 -4 7 4 -2 2 2 4 6-7-20B-D N E E D A S U M M E R LEASE? Remodeled Efficiencies Just 4 blocks W est C a m pus W ater/ G a s / G a rb a g e Paid O n site laundry, near shuttle $ 3 8 5 Summer/ $ 4 2 5 1 year Fall Call Pedro 4 9 9 -8 0 1 3 W estSide Group A U BILLS PAID- fully or partially furnished Preleasing for summer or fall from $ 5 0 5 Properties Plus 6-3-206C 4 4 7 7 3 6 8 6 4 -2 0 B -D 6-7-60C Free Locating Service. Above Prices & Amenities reflect various properties. First Call Properties 4 484800 1 800 504 9067 R E N T A L R E N T A L R E N T A L SUMMER/FALL. EFF., 1-1, 2-1, 3-2 with ail bills paid N icely furnished! Pool! C h a p a ro sa Short or long term. Apartments 4 7 4 -1 9 0 2 6-5-20B-D G R E A T O A K - Spacious, quiet, 2-2, C A C H , fans, pool, sundeck, cable, laundry. Red River/30th. $ 7 0 0 / $ 8 0 0 4 7 2 - 2 0 9 7 4 7 7 -3 3 8 8 6-7-20B-D 370 - Unf. Apts. n c s /T 3Ü “ 2 0 Y e a r s S e r v i c e ” W est Famous Famished Washer/Dryer Eff l- l 1-l 2-2 2-2 Washer/Nryer $315 $415 $510 $770 $875 North ( ampos Free fable $1.30 Eff $475 IF l- l $55(1 Free fable l - l $7011 Free (¡as 2-1 $71(1 3lM/Speedwav 2-1 Shuttle F A U R .L 4 .P U R $415 Eff $455 1-1 $565 2-1 $66(1 2-2 Access (¡ales 2-2 Wasber/lryer $7S0 Free fable Free fable Free fable "And t a Wore" 2109 Rio (irande 322-9556 http://www.ausapt.com ^ i l l a g e S t u d e n t s ¿ \ P e lc i Available Immediately • On UT Shuttle • Free Cable • Gated Parking • Convenient Location • Laundry Facilities • Pool •2-1 885 sq. ft. $535 •2-1.5 1 0 8 0 sq.ft. $625 • 3-1.5 1275 s q .f t.$795 • 4-2 1600 sq.ft. $995 1201 Tinnin Ford 4 4 0 - 0 5 9 2 C A S A G R A N D f Now Leasing Eff’s (ABP) $450 up $650 2-1 3-2’s $975 • Furnished or Unfurnished • near UT • pool • laundry • parking • large rooms • On UT shuttle 1400 Rio Grande 4 7 4 - 2 7 4 9 ountlciHtC A iAftTM fNT HOMES 1 BR St. @ $440 2 BR st. O $550 2-2 ABP $650 $100 Off 1st Month Available Immediately for tror* info call 454-2537 UT SHUTTLE Preleasing/Rent Specials Free Cable/Access Cates $380 plus Eff. $410 plus 1BR 2BR $475 plus 3 BR $795 plus -U n f. Aptf. AVAILABLE NOW SUMMER and FALL ★ 1 -1 's 8c 2 - 1's ready for ★ Gas Cooking, Gas ★ Gas, Water fif Cable Summer Heating Paid ★ On CR Shuttle ★ $ 4 5 0 /$ 5 9 5 plus elec. SANTA FE APARTMENTS 1 IO I Clayton Lane 4 5 8 -1 5 5 2 4 I p=J to School Efficiencies 1 - 1 Large 2-2’s Various Locations Covered Parking Available North & West Campus Call Marquis Management 472-3816 or 454-0202 ^ PRE-LEASING Hancock Square 924 E. 40111 O n the R ed River Shuttle Efficiencies 1-1 's $ 3 9 5 $ 4 6 5 Cavalier 307 E.31“ W alk to C a m p us 2-1 's s u m m e r $ 5 0 0 2-1 's 9 m o . $ 7 5 0 2 -1 's 12 m o. $ 7 1 0 D E M IN G REAL ESTATE 3 2 7 - 4 1 1 2 f Leaseliné^ • UT Area •All Shuttles FREE Service \ 4 78 -710 0 * A ll B il l s P a id Close to Campus Effs, 1-l’s Starting @ $415 472-3816 L a C a s i t a • Only 2 blocks to I T • On-site m aintenance • Community Pool • Tastefully decorated • On Site Laundry • 1 and 2 bdrm floor plans • Summer & Fall/Spring availability • Covered Parking • Gas heat and w ater paid Best value in North Cam pus 12months 9 months! Summer J U T $5,00 l -$575 * $ 4 50 2 - 1 l $ 6 50 : $075 I $575 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 L E A S IN G ★ w e s t C A M P U S ★ T IM B E R W O O D A P T S . Efficiencies, Lofts. Fireplaces, Pool, Laundry, H u g e Trees, W a lk to Cam pus: 1000 W . 2 6 * S t $ 4 2 0 S u m m e r $ 4 3 5 -$ 5 0 5 S ch o o l 451-4822 Edward EFFICIENCY N E A R UT, $ 3 2 5 $345, on UT shuttle N e w carpet, paint and tiles 4 7 2 -6 9 7 9 . 4-24-208-D C L O S E T O campus. lbr-2bth's from $460-$550. Pool, ceiling fans. Very nice 4 5 1 -0 9 8 8 6-3-1OB-C N O W L E A S IN G effieciencies, 1 br's, 2br's. Quiet location For more details call 4 5 8 -2 0 9 6 . 6-5-20D \ - ' e i ú i ' f i t * f i l U l S f t l i i a u s i r S i f i f c & j y i K C um JJü f ! C A R IN G O W N E R S » Personalized attention only Efficiencies starting from $ 3 8 5 to $ 4 4 5 O n e bedroom s starting from $ 4 9 5 to $ 5 4 5 Two bedroom s starting from $ 6 9 5 to $ 8 0 0 KH P 4 7 6 -2 1 5 4 O3-20&C Pre-leasing in Hyde Park Large E F F IC IE N C IE S From $ 3 9 5 FREE CABLE Furnished a nd Unfurnished D W / D isp /B oo kshelves Pool/BBQ /Patio Laundry/Storage/Res M gr. "IF " Shuttle 108 Place Apartments 108 W . 45th Street 4 5 2 -1 4 1 9 , 3 8 5 -2 2 1 1 , 4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 6-3-200C RENTAL - 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS \ Jsatuxsx )T o u n d in ‘ 'WocdiaJzE: • Four lit shuttle Stops • Spacious One & Two Bedrooms • Ceiling Fans • Hike & Bikt irails • Sunrise Lake Views ( I I'kij not <¡£iait znjoythcj Ujt at L K \Vood£a&e. tod.au? 4 B -6 3 6 3 ,.,-f NitWPKEtEASWG ARM m m . A partm ents V * E F F IC IE N C IE S * D E L U X E M 5 B I K S F R O M C A M P U S * 2-1 E C O N O M Y S T Y L E • W C S H I T I I E S T O P * o s k s r r e m a n a g e m e n t ALL SILLS PAID 2212 San GabrW Street cae 78705 (512)474-7732 I " ” ” S u m m e r / F a ll - P R E - L E A S I N G — REDUCED RATES 3-9-12 Month Lease Now Available EH., 1-1, 2-2,3-3 Apartments and Condos North & West Campus M ARQ U IS MANAGEMENT CO. 472-3816 or 454-0202 ¥ 1VTATATI ^ T e x a n Classifieds are on the World Wide Web: I W J w w ! f http://stum edia iou.utexas.edu/CLASS/toc.html f * RE N T A L RENTAL RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT A P A R TM E N T H E A D Q U A R T E R S - N o w Leasing (or Sum m er a n d Fall I 2 ,3 , a n d 4 bedroom s. C a ll 4 4 2 - 9 3 3 3 . 4 - 2 4 - 2 0 6 0 W E ST C A M PU S SPECIAL RATES * Summer $ 3 9 9 APB * Fall 9 6 / Spring 9 7 $ 5 2 5 APB ly e a r lease. $ 1 0 0 0 . Front Page Large unfurnished efficiency at Properties 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 . 6 -3 -2 0 B C . N O R T H C A M P U S I I O n e left! 2-2 H eritag e Beautifull A v aila b le 8 / 2 0 . R O M A N C E FOR you by phone, 1- 9 0 0 -8 3 5 -7 4 0 0 ext 8 6 3 0 $ 2 .9 9 /m in . 1 8 + . Serv-U 6 1 9 -6 4 5 -8 4 3 4 6 -6 -10 P 540 - tost A Found LOST BLACK Lab puppy, red collar, Pearl a n d 2 4th St. Safe, clean, convenient to UT, fully equipt kitchenette, larg e closet, covered parking C a ll/c o m e to House of Tutors ENFIELD W A T E R S T O N II C ool 2-21 lost n e a r UT Rec. C enter. $ 5 0 0 Parquet hardwood floors. Available nowll R ew ard. Bob G ro ve 4 5 9 - 7 4 4 0 , 4 7 2 - O n ly $ 8 5 0 1 Front Page Properties 5 2 0 0 6-7-5B 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 6-3-20B -C . 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 6-1 0-8 B TWEILVE O A K S C O N D O W E S T C A M P U S Efficiencies 1-1, Q u ie t a re a $ 3 9 5 - $ 4 5 0 Kem p M a n a g e m e n t. C a ll N ic k 4 7 6 - 5-3-208 6 5 8 1 3 4 3 -2 4 0 2 . 6 -7-20B -D Large 2 -2 $ 1 1 0 0 yea r lease Summer only from $ 6 0 0 Controlled ocess g a te s /g a ra g e P o o l/ hot tub Responsive on site m anager C a ll for a n appointm ent 7 0 4 W e s t 21 st street 4 9 5 - 9 5 8 5 6 -5 -2 0 D W e s t Com pus Condos Lennox Condominium s 2 3 rd & S a n G ab rie l 2 / 2 a v a il, im m ed $ 1 1 5 0 neg. 1 /1 a va il. August $ 7 2 5 Eff. avail, summer only negotiable 6-7-108C All units covered-parking, fireplace, spa, pool. 6 -6-7B EDUCATIONAL 580 - M usical I * • * * í w C u c n PROFESSIONAL MUSIC INSTRUCTION in flute, pian o, voice, and w oodw inds All styles. Beginners welcom el Dr. Kathleen Bondurant, Ph D, Austin School o f M usic: 4 7 6 -7 6 6 6 . 8 0 5 -B W e s t 5th Street (behind Strait Music) 6-3-206 SERVICES 7 3 0 - Home Repair JOE RIVERA H om e Rem odeling plaster Tear-dow n , rebuild M a il­ boxes, w aterfalls. 25-yrs e x p e ri­ ence 4 4 7 -8 7 0 6 . 6-3-20B $5 EXTRA BONUS ON FIRST D O N A TIO N O N LY W C O U P O N E X P . 6/20/96 $ 2 0 EACH DONATION $165 PER MONTH Can Donate 2x/week Schedule Own Time • Extra Clean. State-of- the-Art Facility • Only 15 Minutes from UT Campus B I O IVIED A MEW High Tech P lasm a F acility Please Call for Appt. 2 5 1 -8 8 5 5 H OURS: 8 AM - 7 PM IH-35 & P flu g e rville Exit W est side IH-35 behind EX XO N C ontact Jonco 4 5 1 - 7 4 4 for info. Service. D ry-w all, p ain ting, W a te r /G a s /G a r b a g e Paid, BEAUTIFUL FUR NISHE D 2b rd . condo dow ntow n, pool. $ 9 5 0 June thru O c t or shorter. A m y 3 2 2 -0 0 3 1 6 -10-5B 7 5 0 -T y p in g * ENFIELD ** TOW N HOME 2 BR - 2 .5 BA, 2 Story Fireplace, Balcony, Pool, Jacuzzi Covered Parking, O n UT Shuttle, Close to Lake, G olf, Shopping $ 9 7 5 /m o . - 1 Y ear, $ 9 7 5 dep Tammy Fariss, Broker/Owner 836-4437, 459-9373 6-7 -20 B Z I V L E Y The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING 4 3 1 1 H o u s e s 2 7 0 7 H E M P H IL L PA R K 2 7 * & Guadalupe 4 72-3 210 PROPERTY M A N A G E R . S how room s, MASTERVALET CLEANERS needs take applicant calls, mail brochures. - counter-persons hrs 2 : 3 0 -6pm M - C le a n in g a n d y ard w o rk. N o n ­ F. A p p ly 3 1 0 1 S p e e d w a y 4 7 7 - smoking 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 . 5-7-20B -D 0 6 6 5 6 -1 0 -5 8 CO M PUTER GEEK trainee Tinker with M a c network, F ileM ak er D a ta b as e North Location Back-up, u pgrade, troubleshoot, Tuesday or W e d n e s d a y A M 's administer N e a r UT 4 7 4 - 2 0 3 2 . 5-7- & O ccasional W e e ke n d s 2 0B -D DEPENDABLE PRO FESSIO N AL a p ­ p e a rin g v id e o g ra p h e r to assist v id ­ e o-taping w edd ing s. E xperience w ith Panasonic A G 4 5 5 a plus. $ 7 . 0 0 / h r Fox resume to 3 7 1 - 7 2 7 1 or call 3 7 1 -7 1 7 9 . 6 -3 -10 B E VE N IN G W O R K , hard work, good pay $ 6 - 1 0 / h r ., no transp n e ed e d , call G e ra ld at D obie 5 0 5 -2 3 4 9 6-5 -20 -D FIELD REPS needed. $ 6 /h r . guar, plus bonuses. M-Th, 4-8pm , Transportation from campus avail. N o sales involved C a ll C raig 4 5 3 -8 7 8 2 6 6 - 2 0 B Prefer C hild Developm ent Back­ ground a n d /o r 2 years Experience M a n d a to ry C rim inal Background Check C a ll Suzanne 8 3 6 - 8 2 1 9 N o w Accepting Applications For THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD TAKERS UT DES IG N A TED Driver Program 15 Duties include taking voluntary ads h rs /w k , $ 5 . 0 0 / h r . , answ e rin g the by phone, filing, typing, c oordinat­ phones for the UT DDP over the ing projects, assisting sale and su­ summer, be ginning a s a p . C a ll pervisory staff with clerical tasks D a w n W illia m s to set up interview Excellent co-w orker a n d customer a t 4 7 5 -8 2 5 2 . 6-3-3B service skills needed ON-SITE M A N A G E R N EEDED for 21 unit apartment community located near Law School. Light m aintenance duties required. M ust have re lia b le trans­ portation and references. Applications a v a ila b le a t 7 1 1 W .3 2 n d St # 1 1 2 6-5-8&-D G O U R M E T S H O P seeks part-time help with possibility for more hours in the fall. Apply in person 2-7pm at Ully&Co , 1601 W aterston at W e s t Lynn. 6-5-5B P ERSO N T O enter data, m ake some phone calls and create a mailing list. Must know M ic r o s o ft/W in d o w s '9 5 . Trans student. Tech Automotive 4 5 2 - 3 7 3 8 6-7-6B $ 5 .0 0 Per Hour APPLY IN PERSON THE DAILY TEXAN TSP Room 3.2 0 0 O U T G O IN G STUDENTS NEEDED Currently hiring energetic persons for perm anent part-time positions w ith us, supplement your bank ac­ count. H ave fun and re ce d e the follow ing perks: Part Time secretarial position open in busy association office. Duties include typing , filing, and heavy telephone contact w ith members Know ledge T h e D a i l y T e x a n M o n d a y , J u n e 10, 1 9 9 6 P a g e 11 820 Airline Jobs - N o w hiring domestic & international staff1 Flight attendants, ticket W E E K E N D A F T E R N O O N S Ac- c o u n tin g /o u d it/b o o k k e e p in g . N e o r agents, reservationists, ground crew + cam pus. E xp erience/classes a plus CHILD CARE PART TIME more. F.xoetent travel benefits! C ol Airline $ 5 -7 /h r D O E . 4 7 4 2 0 2 4 4 2 4 2 0 8 D Em ploym ent Services 3 6 9 6 ext. L 5 8 6 7 1 . 6-3-16p 1 -2 0 6 -9 7 1 - SHO RT W A L K UT. G a in expe rienc e with M a c bookke e p in g system NATIO NA L PARKS Hiring - Positions are Also hiring typists, c lerical, runners now a v a ila b le at N a tio n a l Parks, Nonsm oking 4 7 4 - 2 0 3 2 6 -3-20B -D Forests & W ild life Preserves. Excellent benefits + bonusesl C all: 1 -2 0 6 -9 7 1 - 3 6 2 0 ext N 5 8 6 7 6 6 - 1 6 p W A N T E D 2 5 students ASAP! Lose 6-10-2B-C 8 -3 0 lbs fost. G e t p a id All natu­ 8 3 0 - Administrative- Managemenf O N-SITF M A N A G E R N FFD E D for 71* unit apartm ent community located near ral, dr. recom m ended , gua ran tee d Law School Light m aintenance duties 1 -8 0 0 -4 3 5 -7 5 9 1 . 6 -3 2 0 B required M ust h ave re lia b le Positions A vaila b le For Summer: m arket research com p an y seeks M-F: 1 0-1, 1 2 - 3 ,2 - 5 oriented individual a b le to function in educated, o rg a n ized , flexible, detail- OFFICE A S S T ./ recept. broadcasting Telephone inquiries not accepted A pplicants must be a University of Full-time position. Texas student or the spouse of a Trainer n e ed e d to w ork with adults Innovative M arketing Solutions BAKERS AND DRIVERS NEEDED $5.50-$6.50/hr. FT and benefits A p p ly in person at: 4 2 0 1 S. Congress, Ste. 10 8 . fast-paced environm ent must ha ve excellent verbal skills Must be proficient in W o rd Perfect 5 .1 for D O S a n d M icrosoft W in d o w s 3 .1 . Liberal Arts background o plus Im m ediate opening. Located a t Congress a n d Riverside. For interview call 7 0 7 - 7 8 9 9 6 4 4 B w ith m ental retardation in vocation­ al progra m . M ust h ave neat a p ­ p e arance a n d positive attitude. M-F 8am -4pm , $ 6 / h r with benefits Allies Staffing Inc. An Equal O pportunity Employer . C a ll 4 4 7 - 1 6 1 9 Ask for Roberta. B O O K S T O R E / N E W S S T A N D looking for 2 people for year-round part -time 2 5 -3 0 h r s /w k . Must h ave retail store experience. Apply in person only 9am - 5pm . BR N e w s 3 2 0 8 G u ad alupe. 6-7- sistant. Full a n d /o r p art time. Tuition scholarships for child developm ent co u rse s / m ajors H y d e Park B ap­ tist C D C . 4 6 5 -8 3 8 3 6 -1 0 -3 8 C The Little Gym of Austin seeks quo lifie d c andiates for full­ time on-w heels director. Q u a lific a ­ tions G ym nastics a n d / o r fitness ex­ perience, sales and office m a n a g e ­ ment e xperience. Energetic, en- fhuastic, c rea tive .A n y o n e interested should call M a rth a a t 3 3 1 - 1 2 3 4 Summer Positions. transportation a n d references A pplic ations a v a ila b le a t W 3 2 n d St # 1 1 2 6 -5 -8 B-D 7 1 1, 8 40 - Sates n Sales-oriented experienced Telemarketers a re needed for current credit card projects REQUIRED SKILLS • Reliability • Prior telemarketing expet lence • G o o d computer wills • Excellent verbal skills W E OFFER • Base + Incentive • Generous incentives • G re a t benefits package É insurance after 9 0 days evening & weekends available • Paid training • O ngoing supervision 454-4467 305 E. H u n tfa n d IM S COLLEGE GRADS Multi million $ environmental marketing company seeks 3 enthusiastic individuals for local expansion. 2 K /4 K POTENTIAL 4 1 9 - 7 3 3 3 . 6-7-5B 8 60 - Engineering- Technical S U M M E R JOB P rogram m er for state a g e n c y , must h a ve d a ta b a s e p rogram m ing e xp e rie n c e C a ll 4 7 9 -1 2 8 1 for a pplication. 6-4-5B 8 7 0 - M edical FEMALE NURSE'S a i d / housekeepers needed $ 7 . 0 0 / h r . fle xib le hours, students preferred, no prior experience necessary. 4 7 7 - 6 6 5 2 6 -6 -2 0 B 880 - Professional W I N D O W S P R O G R A M M E R /A R ­ C H IT E C T /D E S IG N E R . V isual C + + , M F C & STL, W in d o w s 3 .1 , 9 5 , N T , Strong background in G U I p rogram ­ • $ 7 .0 0 / h r . plus bonus an d in­ of W o rd for W in d o w s an d Excel 6 5-78 • flexible hours to meet your Fax resumes to Austin office . FILE CLERK, part-time for O B /G y n doctors. 2 0 - 2 5 h rs /w e e k , $ 5 . 2 5 / 10B hr., afternoons, M -F. C a ll Jonet H IR IN G C H ILD C o re teaching as­ Resumes Papers / Theses Laser Printing 79t Color Copies Rost) lobs Abel's Copies 1906 Guadalupe St 472-5353 D R IN K FO R S C IE N C E II Earn up to $55 for an evening at our bar. C o n d u c te d b y th e U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s at A u s tin D e p a r t m e n t o f P s y c h o lo g y You m u s t be a t least 21 y e a rs old to p a rtic ip a te Call the SAHARA LAR: 4 7 1 S 3 2 3 PART-TIME O FFIC E C lerk needed $ 5 . 0 0 / h r . flexible 2 0,/hrs. a week Duties include data-entry, filing, A C C U R A TE T Y P IN G onto m edical opening mail and copying. Must be able school applications. Laser printed to type 4 5 w pm . Apply a t the Texas w ord processing. Dissertations, term M e d ic a l Association, Personnel Dept. centives ment school schedule • fun, challenging work environ­ To find our m ore about this excel­ lent opportunity call Jason Flippo at 8 3 5 -5 0 9 2 6 4 + 3 8-C Income Opportunites for student schedules. O n call sub­ stitutes n e e a e d for p arking cashier positions. C a ll 4 5 4 -3 6 4 6 . 6-6-5B RESEARCH SUBJECTS NEEDED required. 4 7 6 0 9 4 0 . 6-1056 4 6 7 -2 7 4 7 . 6-1 0-5 B O FFICE C L E A N IN G 6 -1 2 ho u rs / w eek Bring ow n supplies Vacuum provided Renee or Brian 4 5 1 - 9 6 1 4 6 -1 0-5B RESEARCH ASSISTAN T NEEDED to help adm inister speech labora­ tory dedicated to evaluating voice papers 4 5 4 -2 3 5 5 anytime 6 -3 -2 0 b Ste. 5 1 3 , 4 0 1 W e s t 15th Street, M-F To rate speech samples for intelli­ com munication systems for speech betw een 9 am -4 p m . 6-3-6B-D g ib ility a nd quality, starting salary intelligibility a n d quality. Psycholo­ ATTENTIO N STUDENTS/PROFESSORS. I w ill p rovid e you w ith w o rd PART-TIME M A IN T A IN A N C E techni­ processing C a ll Sharo at 8 3 2 -5 0 2 6 . c ia n Pay com m ensurate w ith skills 6 -4 -5 B ________________________ M u s t have tools a nd transportation. Hours flexible 4 5 3 -2 3 6 3 . 4 -3 0 -2 0 B C $ 6 . 2 5 / h r . w o rk 12 h r s /w k M -W -F , gy, statistics, or engineering back­ 1-5 pm. o r 8 h rs /w k T-Th, 1-5 pm. ground preferred Starting salary Schedule not flexible. Perm anent $ 1 0 /h r . W o r k 2 2 .5 h rs /w k ., M-F, position, M ust have English as first 1 2 :4 5 • 5 pm . Schedule not flexi­ lang uage a n d good hearing, for fur­ ble. Must be ava ila b le in the fall. SHO RT W A LK UT .Typist (will train on inform ation call be tw ee n 9 -5 For further information call between 760 * Misc. Services A T T E N T IO N ALL studentsl G rants ond Scholarships a v a ila b le from sponsorsl Billions of $ $ $ m college money! C a ll 1 -8 0 0 -2 4 3 2 4 3 5 (1-800-AID-2-HELP) for inform ation. 6 -3 -2 0 b . M a c ) Paralegal runner trainee; Book­ k ee ping Trainees; C le ric a l N o n ­ smoking. 4 7 4 - 2 0 3 2 . 4 -2 6-2 0 B -D ther pm. 9 - 5 pm. Dynastat, Inc. 2704 Rio Grande, Suite #4 4 7 6 4 7 9 7 DYNASTAT, INC. 2 7 0 4 Rio G ronde, Suite # 4 6-10-5&C 6-10-56C THE A U S T IN N a tu re C e n te r is now hiring swim instructors for its nature d a y cam p. Applicants must have H »lp W anted LEflRN Bartending e xpe rienc e w orking w ith children P O O L CLEANER n e ede d. Must be a n d be certified in CPR, First A id neat, e xpe rienc e d w ith references. an d Life g u a rd in g , W a te r Safety In­ A pply a t Bluebonnet Pools. 8 1 0 8 structor or Com m unity W a te r Safe­ M esa Dr. Ste. B 1 0 4 6 -4 -1 0 B 4 7 6 4 7 9 7 $ 1 2 6 1 /m o . Apply a t Tx. School f / t skills a must. D e ta ils /A p p ly ; h t t p : / / Applicants must ha ve Lifeguard ming re quire d. W in d o w s d a ta b a s e certification and be a W a te r Safety (particularly O D B C ), m ultim edia Instructor. Excellent benefits of­ and T C P /IP program m ing p referred fered. Hourly rate based on Team p la y e r, g o o d com m unication Blind a n d Visually Im paired 1100 West 45th Street. 206-9129. w w w .d a e d a lu s .c o m /jo b s / Questions resources@doedalus com 6-6-5B 8 90 - Clubs- Restaurants $ 5 SURVEY Individuals a re invited PRIVATE CATERER looking for m oti­ to receive $ 5 for com pleting 1 5 - 2 0 vated student to w ork lunch shift minute d a tin g survey. Condu cted starting August 1 2th, 1 2 h rs /w k , at UT D ept, o f Psychology. C a ll $ 8 /h r 2 9 2 4 1 2 6 , 4 4 3 - 5 1 0 3 . 6 -3 -1 0B OTHER SCHOOLS $620 ty. This is a 2 6 h r ./w k . position. For more inform ation call Rachel a t 3 2 7 -8 1 8 1 ext. 16 or com e by the N a ture Center to fill out an a p p lic a ­ tion. 6 7 -6 B CRUISE SHIPS H IR IN G - Earn up to $ 2 0 0 0 + /m o n t h , w o rkin g on Cruise Ships or Land-Tour com panies W o rld travel (H a w a ii, M e x ic o , the and leave message 6-1 0-2 B 810 - Office-Clerical C a rib b e a n , etc.). S easonal & full­ SHORT W A LK UT. Typists (will train on N E E D RELIABLE child c a re for the time em ploym ent a v a ila b le N o M ac); Bookkeeping trainees; Clerical; Summer for a 10 y ea r old boy in experience necessary. For more in­ Runners. Non-smoking 4 7 4 2 0 3 2 4 W e s tlak e ond Torrytow n home. form ation c all 1 -2 0 6 -9 7 1 -3 5 5 0 ext. 2 6 - 2 0 8 4 ). Hours a re flexible 4 -5 h r s /d a y @ C 5 8 6 7 8 . 6 -3 - 16p $ 5 /h r . C all 3 2 8 -8 0 3 0 . 6 -1 0-5 B EFFICIENCY & 1-1 Available Nowl W est Campus W a te r/G a s Paid 2 8 0 9 Rio Grande Call Today! 450-1058 Also Efficiency Available July 1st NEED A SUMMER LEASE? Rem odeled efficiency Just 4 blocks W e s t Cam pusl on site laundry, near shuttle. $385 Summer/ $425, 1 year Fall C a ll Pedro 499-8013 West Side Group 6 -7 -6 BC 1 MU $550 oy $600 $600 $675 ip $700 $700 |Now Pre-Leasing ■ fo r AugustH I f lS M d S M 1, hardwood $550 La Cosita 1-1, 2-1 Pea© Wafc 1-1 1-1 Patata Orawp Trea off, 2-2 2 2 7 .1 PeoH 2-1 loft Gazebo 2-1 loh Peotboose 1-1,2-2 ligil rise $750 ip Im m Vista 1-1 Salon 1-1 1-1.5, 2-2 Quadrangle 1-1, 2-2 2-1 2-2 2-2 2-2 2-2 2-2 2-2 2-2 $800 $800 $800 op $850 op nOOOQWD $900 Tom Green $1000 Heritoge Wedoewooc $1000 ■ .n w v w v w $1000 1704 Enfield SllSOap Robbins Place SI 200 loacfaaarii $1300 (aataataai $1300 Croix Westridge 2-2 Pentboase $1400 $1700 3200 Doval $3800 911 W. 22nd 8-4 Haase 3-2 Largest pre-lease inventory 100's more to dwosefrom 476-1976 im u A S M p r wnm m m H $ u m m e r - F a ll ■ [j BuenaVista E (New Carpet) 2-2 $1050 1-1 $675 2-2 $1250 2-2 $1250 | Point _ C 0 St. Thomas E E D Croix E E G Orangetree E E [j Orangetree E E c Centennial 2-2 $1250 2-2 $1350 $800 1-1 i C4I1ÍV0H7 CAMPUS s o o c p 474-4800 & s a ia t a m a s a s a ia u » a t a ia q a q u HUGE 2 Story 8 B R - 2 B A lo c a te d 1 block from campus. Spectacular house avail. A u g . 10 $4800 Call Dan@ U niversity Realty 4 74-940 0 AVAILABLE A U G U S T 15th 1-4 b e d ­ rooms $ 4 2 5 - $ 1 ,5 0 0 For 2 4 - hour info coll 477-LIVE fox 4 5 2 - 5 9 7 9 . 6- 3 - 2 0 B C 4 0 0 Y ARDS north of U.T. Low School. 2 b r lb th g a ra g e c a /c h 8 / 2 0 / 9 6 - 8 / 2 0 / 9 7 $ 9 9 0 /m th . 4 7 8 - 9 1 7 0 . 6 -3-lO B -c Six - Seven bedroom luxury homes 2818 & 2822 Rio Grande By appointmentonly. Security systems, hardwoods, fireplaces, yards, decks, C A / CH, energy efficient, high ceilings, large rooms, W /D connections, carpet, etc. Walk to UT. 600-20B-C 42$ - Rooms S HO RT W A L K UT Furnished room w /b a t h , share kitchen Q u iet, non­ sm oking, petless All bills p a id . Sum m er $ 2 1 5 (double) $ 3 2 5 (sin­ gle) 4 7 4 - 2 4 0 8 . 6-3-20B -D EFFICIENCY A N D room for rent. G rea t location. Price nego tia b le O w n re frig era to r a n d bathroom . Kitchen access Furnished S eparate entrance UT Shuttle C lose to St. E dw ard's. 4 4 8 - 1 4 1 0 6-1 0-5 B -C 9 0 9 W E S T 2 2 n d Private, secure, quiet, A / C , high ceilings, hardw ood. Share kitchens, baths W a lk UT $ 2 6 0 - $ 2 9 5 4 7 8 - 3 1 2 8 Am y 6 -1 0 -2 0 B C 4 3 0 - Room -Board BLOCK U.T Private bedroom , share bills, bath, kitchen, suppers, cooking, chores H uge summer room screened porch. $ 2 9 5 . + $ 1 0 0 for bills, phone, food Q u ie t, friendly , nonsm oking, petless. 4 7 4 - 2 6 1 8 6 -6 3-2 0 B -D 4 3 3 -C o -o p * BLOCK U.T. Private bedroom , share bills, bath, kitchen, suppers, cooking, chores. H u g e summer room with screened porch. $ 2 9 5 + $ 1 0 0 for bills, phone, food Q uiet, friendly, non­ smoking, pet-less. 4 7 4 - 2 6 1 8 6-3-20B - D ROOMMATE SERVICE Looking o r have a place UT ID Discount Business Since 1 9 8 8 Served over 7 ,0 0 0 people Sam, 453-4396 4 8 2 -8 6 8 0 EDUCATIONAL - 610 MISC. INSTRUCTION OUR COST $395 COMPARE & DECIDE 833-0303 National Business School EMPLOYMENT - 790 PART-TIME Circulation Assistant (Inserter) 19 hours per week maximum $ 6 .1 0 per hour depending upon qualifications W ork hours begin at 2 a.m. 3*1 1*1 8*1 8* 8* Assist in Circulation Department of The Daily Texan on nights when inserts are placed in paper. Requires High School graduation or GED; abil­ ity to lift heavy loads. Call Angie after 11 pm at 471-5422 for appointm ent The University of Texas at Austin is an Equal O p p o rtu n ity /A ffirm a tiv e A ction Em ployer I i* i* I * I * 1 * I * I * 1 * • Circulation Aemietant 4 9 2 1 . 6-4-5B Thai CteUy Tunean I» e e e kin g á C b v u la tío n A e e i e t a n t t o p ic k u p nmwmpapmr» art t h e Jo c k , toad o w n v e h icle , a n d d e liv e r t h a n e w e p mpe r e t o b o x e e on o a m p u e a n d t o o t h e r A u e tiH an d U n fv e re Lty lo c a tio n » . P e B v e rie e m u s t beg in a t A--.00 A M and b e c o m ­ p le te d b y 7 A M , M o n d a y th r o u g h F rid a y - no w eekend » . R e q u ire s H igh S c h o o l g ra d u a tio n o r GtSXh ab ili­ t y a n d w iliing ne& e t o p ro vid e o w n v e h ic le (van o r c o v e re d p ick u p ), t o s h o w p r o o f o f in e u ra n e e , e n d t o p ro vid e a v a lid driver'© lic e n e e end. a c c e p ta b le d riv in g re c o rd . A p p lic a n t © e le c te d m u s t p ro v id e a c u r r e n t D e p a r t m e n t o f PuWfcC S a f e t y d river'© H cen ee re c o rd . N e w e p a p e r ie p re f e r re d bid# n o t d e liv e ry e x p e rie n c e B a k e ry to $ 6 . 1 0 p e r h o u r, f o r a m eabw idn hour© p e r w eek, plu© p e r m ile , j I S T f NEAR L A W School, O n Shuttle Large 1 i , Super Summer Rates < ¡' 2 6 1 8 6 -3-20B -D i ; . V a n d e r b ilt C o n d o s ,; • for bills, pho n e , food. Q u ie t, friendly, nonsm oking, petless 4 7 4 - 6 4 2 0 8 0 B E i Summer Only Deals! $475 2-2 Winchester $495 1-1 Leeex 2-1 loft $495 Gazeho $595 2-2 Georghm $595 2-1 St. Thomas $595 ta p WestrMge 2-2 $595 Wedgewood 2-2 Largest summer inventory mere to cheese from 476-1976 2X X X X X X X X X X X X X U .T .’s R O O M M A T E S O U R C E Instant Service - Student Discounts Mem ber Better Business Bureau "Texas Ex-owned since 1 9 8 9 ” 1711 Son Antonio {at 18*1 W INDSOR R O O M M A T E S 4 9 5 -9 9 8 8 m T 111 IIX T T T X T T .tJ I bedroom , BLOCK Private U.T share bills, bath, kitchen, suppers, cooking, chores. H uge summer room with screened porch. $ 2 9 5 . + $ 1 0 0 and Preleasing for Fall 4;f Luxury 2-2’s 472-3816 SH O R T W A L K UT Furnished room w /b a t h , share kitchen Q u iet, non­ sm oking, petless. A ll bills p a id . Sum m er, $ 2 1 5 (double) $ 3 2 5 (sin­ gle) 4 7 4 2 4 0 8 . 6 - 3 - 2 0 8 0 :i! C A R IN G O W N E R S FEMALE R O O M M A T E needed for fall, O ra n g e tre e apartments. 9 0 3 - Personalized attention only 6 7 5 - 6 6 5 6 6 -5 -20 P M ost luxurious condos Lots o f units starting summer Some pre-leasing for fall O n e bedroom s starting from $ 5 5 0 to $ 7 8 5 SHARE 2 -2 co n d o with loft, W / D . $ 3 1 7 plus 1 / 3 bills. Your choice o f rooms. E nfield Shuttle G r e a t neighborhood 4 7 8 - 5 7 3 4 6-6-5P Tw o bedroom s storting from R O O M M A T E N E E D E D for summer $ 7 9 5 to $ 1 2 7 5 o t fully furnished W e s t C am pus KHP 4 7 6 - 2 1 5 4 a partm ent $ 2 0 0 /m o Prefer non- smoker C oll 4 9 5 -6 5 3 1 6-7-2P 6-3-20B -C * * Stoneleigh Condos* * W est Campus Summer Housing! 2-2 's ( 8 5 0 sqft) storting at $ 8 9 9 FEMALE R O O M M A T E needed for W e s t C am pus 2 -2 C o n d o A SAP $ 3 5 0 + half bills 7 1 3 - 8 9 0 - 4 8 0 9 6-7-5P W C S U M M E R sublet a v a ila b le an d M ' s starting a t $ 6 9 9 - a v a il­ n o w -A u g 1 5 . 2 -2 $ 5 3 5 / m o . C a ll ab le June. 2 -2 a v a ila b le August. N Y TIMES w riter seeks a partm ent Steve 4 7 9 - 8 0 7 6 6 -1 0 -5 B H U G E 1 ond 2 's , W / D connec tions, separate dining, walk-ins, pa­ tio, shuttle, starting $ 4 5 0 C a ll 4 4 7 - 7 5 6 5 6 - 7 -2 0 6 D W e s W a lle rs Realty (in house, g a r a g e sublet, etc ) be ­ 3 4 5 - 2 0 6 0 ginning 7 / 1 to finish a book N o t Pat 4 5 2 - 3 3 1 4 , pager 8 6 7 2 4 8 9 too for from UT, quiet, trees 4-24-2050 $ 3 7 5 $ 5 2 5 H as tw o cats C a ll HYDE PARK Contem porary 3 b r 2btti G a r a g e Pool c a /c h priva te w / d $ 1 . 3 2 5 4 7 8 - 9 1 7 0 6 3 1 0 B C D a v id o t N Y T o ffice in D allas 2 1 4 - 4 4 3 - 9 3 3 4 6 -4-5P MEN & SURGICALLY STERILE: WOMEN AGES 18 to 55 Up To $2000 Compensation Are you a healthy, non-smoking man or surgically sterile or postmenopausal woman between the ages of 18 and 55? If so, you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $2000. The dates and times of the study are listed below; you must be available to remain in our facility for the entire penod to be eligible: Check-In: Saturday, June 15 Thursday, June 20 Saturday. July 6 Thursday, Juiy 11 Saturday, July 27 Thursday, August 1 Check-Out: Sunday, June 16 Saturday, June 22 Sunday, July 7 Saturday, July 13 Sunday, July 28 Saturday, August 3 In addition, brief out-patient visits will be required on the following dates: June 17-20, July 8-11. and July 29-August 1 To qualify, you must pass our free physical exam and screening tests. Meals, accommodations, entertainment, and recreational activities provided free of charge. For more information, piease call 462-0492 P H A R MA C O " L S R MEN & WOMEN AGES 18 to 45 Up To $500.00 Compensation Are you a healthy, non-smoking man or woman between the ages of 18 and 45? If so, you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $500.00. The dates and times of the study are listed below; you must be available to remain in our facility for the entire period to be eligible: Check-In Friday, June 21 Friday, June 28 Check-Out Sunday, June 23 Sunday, June 30 To qualify, you must pass our free physical examination and screening tests. Meals, accommodations, entertainment, and recreational activities will be provided free of charge. For more information, please call 462-0492 P H A R MA C O" L S R “ L A R G E 1 - 1 * * Big enough for 2 people. 3 blocks from UT On RR shuttle Above pool, new carpet/ paint. Perfect for law school. $ 6 5 0 /mo. Call Scott 8-5: 4 4 7 - 0 5 0 5 5 -1 0 : 4 7 9 - 7 9 3 7 HYDE~PARK 4510 Duval Large Efficiency SUMMER RATE $395 FALL RATE $445 Great Location by Bus stop 3 0 2-5 699 6-3-208-c large 1 /1 . West Campus New carpet, parking, dish­ washer, microwave, pool. 2402 Longview #202. $ 5 3 5 / mo. (512)353-5051 64-20B SMALL 8-UNIT complex, 2-1. C A/C H , stove, refrigerator. 1 block to #47 shuttle. $300/m o. for summer with year lease at $495/m o. 478-3472. 6-4-5B CLO SE T O cam pus Large effi- ciences from $ 3 7 5 - $ 4 3 5 . S everal locations to choose from V ery nice 4 5 1 - 0 9 8 8 6-3 -10 B -C W EST C A M P U S I 4 plex. Cute, smaller 1 -1 1 O n ly $ 4 5 0 . $ 5 0 off June, July, Augustl A v a ila b le n o w l Front Poge Properties. 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 . 6 -3 -2 0 8 -C W E S T C A M P U S I S pacious 2 -2 ! O n shuttiel I O nly $ 7 5 0 1 1 $ 5 0 off June, July, Augustl A v aila b le now l Front Page Properties 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 , 6-3-20B -C S P A C IO U S 1 -1 ,2 -1 , a v a ila b le now for summer and foil, $ 4 9 5 - 6 9 5 plus elect. 1 block from UT. tel 3 8 8 - 7 4 4 1 , pa g er 9 0 8 - 5 1 7 1 . 6-5-5B Spacious & Convenient Eff $ 3 9 0 1-1 $ 4 4 0 1-1 $ 4 9 0 2-1 $ 5 9 0 Sorry, no preleasing O n Bus Route # 1 Straight to C o o p W a lk to G rocery Norwood Apts 5606 N. Lamar Blvd. 451-1917 6-4-20BC M O V E IN SPECIAL- 2 BR Towrvhomes on shuttle $ 5 9 9 , Efficiencies only $ 3 9 5 . Limited access gates, only 15 min shuttle ride to cam pus. Properties Plus 4 4 7 - 7 3 6 8 6-4 -20 B -D L O W DEPOSITS, summer storage, units bein g assigned now for summer or fall H urryl Properties Plus 4 4 7 - 7 3 6 8 6-4 -20 B -D U NEXPECTED V A C A N C Y . Spruce House 9 0 9 W . 23rd St. 2-1, wood Boors, high ceilings. $ 7 2 5 / m o . CALL 4 8 0 - 0 9 7 6 (M -TH 6 p m -7 p m only) 6-4 - 2 0 6 0 709 West 26th Apt. C ute courtyard efficiency. Tile kitchen. Close a nd convenient. A v aila b le June a n d August at $ 4 4 5 / m o (Summer only leases from $ 3 0 0 ) Call Presidio Group 476-159 1 6 -4-20B -D I COVEhJTRY PLACE luxury 1 - 1 Tile, W / D Fireplace, M ic ro w a v e C row n M o ld in g A v aila b le June an d August from $ 5 6 0 (Summer only leases from $ 4 0 0 ) C a ll Presidio G ro u p 476-1591 6 4 2 0 8 0 LARGE EFFICIENCIES Special Rates Small, quiet com plex Rem odeled D / W , C A , N e w floors, pool, laundry $ 2 0 0 deposit N o pets or roommates A v aila b le N o w Preleasing C a ll S andra a n d leave nam e, number, an d best time to call 4 7 4 - 5 0 4 3 ext 1 0 3 6420BC HILLSIDE APARTMENTS 1-2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished C le an a n d Q u iet All Utilities Paid 5 1 4 D aw son Road Just off Barton Springs Road 47 8 -2 8 1 9 F all/Spring/ Summer Special Rates! W a lk UT 2 + 1 , 2 -2 , C A C H Pool, laundry facilities cable connections, dishwasher, disposal, plenty of parking 474-5929 6-6208-C GREAT LO CATIO N. Spacious Hyde Park 1-1 $ 4 4 5 Available now 4 1 5 W 39th St C A / C H C lose to cam pus and shuttle routes. 3 7 1 - 3 4 8 8 6-6-7B 9 0 6 W . 2 2 n d S t. 2 -1 , h a rd w o o d floors, 4 blocks from cam pus, $ 7 2 0 /m o . A v aila b le now . C a ll 9 1 6 - 0 2 5 4 6-6-5B 1-1 $ 4 1 0 4 7 4 1 2 4 0 6 4 2 0 6 - D 2 / 2 FOR rent or rent one room. ASAP C lose, D u v a l/4 5 t h . C h e a p l $ 6 0 0 / $ 3 0 0 C all Sharon 4 5 9 - 5 5 6 3 6-7-5B S U M M ER LEASE g re a t west cam pus 1- 1. A v a ila b le n o w $ 5 0 0 /m o n t h , w as h e r/d ry e r inc., C a ll G lenn d 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 , e 8 3 2 - 5 8 5 4 e p i 6-7-5B-D Q UIET O N E Bedroom 3 0 1 W e s t 39th. Large pool, courtyard, laundry room, central air. H a lf block from UT Shuttle Sum m er leases O .K . $ 3 5 0 - $ 3 9 5 /m o n th 4 5 2 - 3 8 5 2 6-6 -20 B -D E FFIC IEN C IES A N D one-bedroom s discounted during summer months w /o n e -y e a r lease N e a r M a g n o lia C a fe 2 0 2 0 S Congress, 4 4 4 4 2 2 6 6 -1 0 -1 0 B LARGE 2 / 2 W a te rfo rd fire p la c e, g a ro g e p arking M ove-in June 15 lease e nding A u g ‘9 7 $ 1 0 5 0 / m o 4 7 4 - 8 7 8 9 6 -1 0 -5 B E A R N $ 7 - 1 0 /H R . D eliv e ry drivers ne ede d. Flexible hours. Plucker's W in g Factory 2 2 2 2 Rio G ra n d e or 4 6 9 - 9 4 6 4 6 -6 -5 B________________ 9 0 0 - Domestic- Household FULL- TIM E N A N N Y for 7 y r. old boy Close in location. Pool, W S I helpful 4 7 3 - 8 8 6 2 , 4 3 3 - 2 7 2 3 . 6 -3 -2 0 6 -D Mother's Helper Free room and board. $ 1 0 0/w k. Must have own transportation. 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PART - TIME RECEPTIONIST Established lighting manufacturer has an im m ediate opening for a part-time reception assistant (1 2 :0 0 p m - 6 :0 0 p m / Mon-Fri) Duties include mail processing, light typing, h eavy phones, mailouts and general o ffic e /c leric al duties Must be computer literate, have a positive attitude and reliable trans­ portation. Com petitive pay. Fax resume to 8 3 2 - 1 4 6 9 or mail to: M etalO ptics, Attn: Receptionist, 2 0 1 1 W e s t Rundberg Lane, Austin, TX 7 8 7 5 8 EOE 4 7 2 - 8 8 0 0 x 4 1 9 6-7-6B BBEHEB 9 3 0 - Business Opportunities G et Rich A t Hom e Today!!! At 2 5 years old, 1 earn more than 6-10-540 your doctor and dentist com bined. A m a zin g FREE recorded message tells how . 2 4 H R /8 0 0 4 7 7 - 6 0 1 9 EMPLOYMENT - 840 SALES Southwestern Bell Services, a subsidiary of SBC Communications, Inc., has immediate openings for motivated, results-oriented individuals to fill the following positions in retail stores in Austin. SALES R EPR ESEN TA TIVE The ideal candidate has; • 1-3 years experience in a high-traffic retail environment or customer service experience • Telecommunication background a plus • Computer skills and/or knowledge of cellular data communications Southwestern Bell Services offers com petitive salaries, com m issions and a comprehensive benefits package. A ll interested and qualified candidates should subm it resumes and salary history to; Sales Rep P O. Box 2933 San Antonio, TX 78299-2933 ¡SBC' An Equal Opportunity Employer 12 T h e D a i l y T e x a n MONDAY, JUNE 10,1886 ENTERTAINMENT Living in ‘Sin’ Hyde Park Theatre modernizes old ideas about ethics PATRICK W ALSH__________________ Daily Texan Staff For m any of us who lived through the San Francisco earthquake of 1989 — "T h e Big O ne," as we Californians call it — the trem or's after- math w as a time for grief and for reflection on life's deeper meanings. The horrific pow er of nature (or God if you like) made all our rushing around seem utterly w ith o u t p u rp o se. L o ok in g at th e crum pled buildings and collapsed freeways reminded us th a t o u r se a rch fo r th e p e rfe c t ca p p u ccin o might not be so important after all. It is th is m o m e n t in tim e th a t W en d y M acLeod exam ines so p leasingly in Sin. The bittersw eet com edy is running through June 29 at the Hyde Park Theatre. M acLeod's tale revolves around the experi­ ence of Avery Bly (w ell-played by a fittingly stressed Katherine Catmull), a thirtysomething w om an in the process of separating from her a lco h o lic h u sban d . A very's p lace u nd er the g la ss ce ilin g is as a h elico p te r-b o rn e traffic reporter for a Bay Area radio station. The play opens with Avery com m enting how peaceful and calm the morning world appears from above, despite her know ledge that inside the quaint hom es below are unhappy people w ith screwed-up lives. In the scenes that follow, we are introduced to the people in Avery's life, each of whom also rep rese n ts one of the sev en d ead ly sins. By plotting Avery's course through a web of lust, greed, pride and so on, MacLeod creates what she calls a "Contem porary M orality Play." W hat makes Sin so satisfying is that the per­ sonified sins — Avery's drunken husband, for instance, as sloth — are not one-dim ensional. T h e s e a re p e o p le w e a ll k n o w , n o t ro u g h sketches. M acLeod is bent on telling us how a person ca n b eco m e flaw ed or ro tten . A v e ry 's boss (wrath) is a cut-throat yuppie bent on status in p a rt b e c a u s e h is w ife o p e n ly fla u n ts h e r ’ amorous affairs before him. The pilot who fer­ ries A very above the traffic (envy) is in turn jealous of the m aterial success that w rath has * achieved. T h e p la y e rs o f the S u b te rra n e a n T h e a tre Company ably evoke the spirit of San Francis­ can cu lture: the u nrelenting gen d er war, the frenetic pace of conversation, the universal feel­ in g of v ictim iz a tio n . A t tim es th e d ialo g u e m ade m e hom esick, at others it rem inded me why I was relieved to settle in Austin. M any o f the perform ances in Sin are first- rate. Depp plays ‘Dead’ DANIEL Y. MAIDMAN_______ Daily Texan Staff Jim Ja rm u sch 's latest film, Dead M an, is d o w n r ig h t te r r ify in g . A stark, black and white epic of dissa- p earan ce and d isso lu tio n , it is as nyperreal, grotesque and weightless as a dream. Jo h n n y D e p p p la y s W illia m B lake, an acco u n tan t from C lev e­ land who travels out w est at the end of the last century to work at D ick­ inson Steel W o rk s in the tow n of M achine, at the end of the railw ay line. The film sets its tone in the w ord­ less m o n tag e o f the tra in rid e. A w orried-looking Blake w atches the d e m o g ra p h ic s o f h is c o -r id e r s change from the middle class, to the poor, to the mad. By the end, he is riding with a crow d of men in tall fur hats who open fire out the w in­ dows on a herd of buffalo passing by. W hen B lake look s o u t the w in ­ dow , he se e s th e im m e n se , to o - bright landscape and the foreshad­ ow s o f h is o w n fa te: ab a n d o n ed teepees and covered w agons, can ­ vas h an g in g in ta tte rs from each alike, skeletal fram es bleaching in the sun. Blake arrives in Machine, a town of mud and skulls where everybody seems pleased to pull a gun on him, and rapidly finds him self out of an accounting job, accused of murder, dying of a bullet near his heart and h u n ted by a trio of h ired k illers. M ost notable am ong them is Cole W ilson (Lance Henriksen), a notori­ ous gunman with a sore jaw and a set of gleam ing metal teeth, madder than a dog and heavily interested in mutilation. Blake goes on the lam and meets up with Nobody (Gary Farmer), an o stracized N a tiv e A m erican w ho was schooled in England and mis­ takes Blake for the B lake, E nglish poet and painter. Odd happenings ensue. It is d if f ic u lt to d e s c r ib e th e unique atm osp h ere of horror that pervades Dead Man. Johnny Depp's portrayal of a man hovering on the edge of a com a, con stan tly losing blood and consciousness, is but the fpundation of a landscape rich with e v o ca tiv e sh ad o w s and o m in o u s guitar grindings from Neil Young. film DEAD MAN Starring: Johnny Depp, Gary Farmer, Lance Henriksen, Iggy Pop, Robert Mitchum, Jared Harris Director: Jim Jarmusch Rating: ★ ★ ★ '/: (out of five) E v ery c h a r a c te r see m s a m o n ­ strously anim ated skeleton clothed in a f r a g ile ro b e o f fle s h fo r an u ncertain interval before it is torn v io le n tly fro m h im . J a r m u s c h 's W est seethes not with life, but with m o v in g d e a th : h e a v y a u to m a tic m ach in es, le afless trees, m oan in g bear skins, religious corpses. W ithin this jarring , alien w orld, N o b o d y le ad s B la k e on th e o n ly jo u r n e y p o s s ib le : r e d e m p tiv e to w a rd a m e a n in g fu l d e a th . Nobody describes to Blake his des­ tined return to the place where the sea m eets the sky and great souls return whence they came. It is in this regard that my com ­ plaint against Dead Man arises: Jar­ musch seem s a little too facile with h is u se o f im a g e s to c o n v e y h is m eanin g. P articu larly tow ard the end, in a delirious overlay of guitar an d w o b b ly p e r s p e c tiv e s o f a Native Am erican settlem ent by the ocean, Jarm u sch lets his beau tifu l p h otograp h y rep lace the spiritu al exertion which his characters m ust make in order to reach their destina­ tions. Is it not a little too perfect for a lig h t ra in to tr o u b le th e w a te r a ro u n d B la k e 's ca n o e , w h en th e im port of the scene is that B lake's so u l is u n d e rg o in g the m e ta m o r­ phosis needed to bring redem ption to his dilapidated state? W e should le a rn th e s e th in g s fro m Jo h n n y D ep p , n o t th e c in e m a to g r a p h e r (Robby Muller). It s e e m s a p e tty c o m p la in t to make, but this repeated copping out cheapens Jarm usch's film, changing its icon oclasm to aesth eticism , its p h ilo s o p h y to m a w k is h n e s s. Ah w ell, one can't have everything. D ead M an is an u n s e ttlin g film w h ic h s tr ik e s c lo s e to th e h e a r t w h ile still m issin g it, as does the bullet that first bites into Blake. p leasin g , a m ixtu re o f the w rong elem ents often robs the music of its power. Intensely psychedelic songs like Take You Away are coupled with g ra tin g E n g lis h s h o e g a z e r -s ty le lyrics and the fact that Gibson is the only real musician in the band cer­ tainly doesn't help matters any. And le t's ju s t say th a t th e a m b itio u s ad d itio n of a flu te p lay er, w h ich works for Bardo Pond, should stay in Bardo Pond. Still, songs like Porno Q ueen's Love Dive are sure to be enjoyed and far be it from me to say tnat there's any­ thing wrong with rivers of feedback. In the end, Furry Things just seem to straddle the razor's edge between annoyance and talent, which, when I think about it, is not a bad place to be. W alker was a medical student years ago, and he used to write hilarious­ ly brilliant songs detailing disgust­ in g th in g s to do w ith the h um an an ato m y . O n S w ansong, h o w ev er, W alker proves that he isn 't half as learned regarding social issues and the lyrics in question are generically patterned over the music. There was so m uch musical talent in C a rca ss and it's d ep ressin g to h ear them cut co rn ers by playin g music that is far m ore standard and basic than their early work. It's an ev en b ig g e r slap in th e face th a t they keep their h eavy-d u ty trad e­ m ark g u ita r so u n d b u t in s is t on p layin g n o -b ra in er riffs. T h is is a v ery sad re lease for all in v o lv ed , and unfortunately it serves to per­ p e tu a te th e in d u s try m y th th a t d eath m etal is d ead (w hich it cer­ tainly is not!). SWANSONS Artist: Carcass Label: Earache Records Rating: ★ (out of five) soundtrack NRSSMNIH P0SSBLE Artist: V/A Label: Mother Records Rating: ★ (out of five) —]oe Sebastian C a rca ss w as o n ce a band m o st death metal fans called, "The Gods o f G r in d ." I g u e s s th a t w a s n 't enough for them, because their new album Swansong is a pathetic piece of sell-out garbage. The album is aptly titled, for as C arcass slow ly so ften e d up th eir style w ith every new album , they succeeded in alien atin g their core a u d ie n c e an d u ltim a te ly s e lf- destructing as a band. In fact, this album was recorded last year and the band has since broken up. Essentially, the band strip-m ines old r iffs from th e ir c la s s ic d ay s, slows them down, and puts them on top o f repetitive ro ck 'n 'ro ll d ru m ­ m ing. Earache R ecord s called this "d e a th ro ck " in the b a n d 's p ress r e le a s e , bu t it so u n d s m ore lik e AC /D C than anything else. Indul­ g en t g u ita r s o lo s re m in is c e n t of Steve Vai add to the cheesiness of th is e n d e a v o r, and th e ly rics are c o m p le te ly in s a n e . V o c a lis t J e ff — Jeff "the Undertaker" Tandy F irst o ff, no r e s p e c ta b le s e c re t agent w ould be caught dead w ith this kind o f theme music. Lalo Schifrin's original TV theme had guts, and this rem ake by U 2's Larry M ullen and Adam Clayton is ju s t an a m b ien t A xel F w an n abe. This sounds like the theme music to a movie where RuPaul's secret m is­ sion is to save the rave from a band of evil terrorist DJs. W hat's more, the remainder of the m u sic o n the d is c actu a lly h eard d urin g th e m ovie, nam ely D anny E lfm an 's orch estral score, is fairly boring. O f course, after scores like B e e t le ju ic e or e v e n B atm an h e is expected to deliver. The rem ainder of the album pur­ ports to be music "inspired by" the motion picture, but not actually con­ tained therein. These include: m M assive A ttack 's Spying G lass: Appeared on their Protection album, 1995. m P u lp 's I Spy: Take all the bad p a rts o f Lou R eed and m ix them with all the bad parts of The Cure0 an d y ou h a v e th is tr a c k , w h ich appeared on their Different Class CD, 1995. m Bjork Headphones: Another m usi­ th is o n e fro m B jo rk , c a l tu rd appeared on Post, 1995. ... and so on and so forth, through six more tracks of music inspired by the movie in the year before it cam e out. Som etim es inspiration moves, in strange and mysterious ways. — Eric M cKinney Marc Baiester, Malcom Callan, Katherine Catmull, Donald Sneed, and David Jones enact a moral­ ity play in the modem setting of San Francisco at the time of the massive earthquake of 1989. SIN (A CONTEMPORARY MORALITY PLAY) Starring: Katherine Catmull, Marc Baiester, Mal­ com Callan, Donald Sneed, David Jones Written by: Wendy MacLeod Director: Ken Webster Where: Hyde Park Theatre, 511 W. 43rd St. When: Thursday through Sunday through June 29 (extra performance Monday, June 24) Price: $10 ($9 students),Thursday pay what you can M a lc o lm C a lla n is p e r fe c tly sm arm y as greed, a real estate speculator specializing in snatching up the hom es o f AIDS victims, and Barry M iller is hilarious and heart-breaking as Avery's AIDS-stricken brother Gerard (pride). In the 1980s and '90s, fin g er-p oin tin g and "c o rre c tn e ss" h av e com e to ch aracterize the political landscape; both the Left and the Right h a v e b e c o m e m ire d in h o lie r -th a n -th o u rhetoric, which does little to heal or soothe. By allowing the morally-straight Avery to discov­ er the pitfalls of perfectionism ,Sin offers a pas­ sag e from the lo n e lin e ss o f the m oral h ig h ground. Squeeze Box, a song that had poten­ tial for in te rp re ta tio n by C arrier, and Rockin' in the Cradle o f the South, an unremarkable tune. Eliminating three songs on this disc would leave a strong eight, long enough for a full-length release. The talent Carrier displays on the good tracks deserves better than to be rushed to market padded by 25 percent boring blues that are far below the band's capabilities. — Eric M cKinney WHO STOLE THE HOT.SAUCE? Artist: Chubby Carrier & the Bayou Swamp Band Label: Mother Pig Records Rating: ★ (out of five) — — — — It is hard to recall another disc so e v e n ly sp lit b etw een artistry and m e d io crity . A lm o st one a fte r the o th e r , bad s o n g s a lte r n a te w ith good songs on this zydeco offering. U n fo rtu n ately , p oor prod uction cripples this disc and obscures the shine of half the songs, which hap­ pen to be excellent. The disc gets o ff to a disastrous start with the selection of the title track, Who Stole the Hot Sauce?, as th e o p en e r. T h is so n g , tam e and bluesy, has little going for it other than its som ewhat amusing title and lyrics. The song it precedes, on the other h and, Luziana Feelin', authored by C a rrie r, is an am azin g a cco rd io n attack that absolutely devastates the opening track. The odd p airin gs continu e w ith Hard to Believe, another bland blues song, follow ed by a raucous cover of Clifton Chenier's Zydeco Sont Pas Sale, which, although it proves the b an d 's cap abilities, only serv es to highlight the m ild n ess of the p re­ ceding track. Later on, Carrier manages to get a stre a k g oin g w ith W a stin g T im e, an o th er s e lf-w ritte n h u rrica n e of accordion w ith a backing beat that co m es from so m e w h e re h a lfw a y betw een Baton Rouge and Funky- town. Following is Ya Ya, one of the few good vocal tracks on this album, in w hich a unique distortion effect is applied to the accordion. This track, alth ough not the best, is the only one which has a distinct sound — it is neither a straight-up zydeco barn­ s to rm e r n o r is it a tep id b lu e s attempt. Th e streak o f hits, o f co u rse, is rounded out by a pair of misses: a disappointing cover of The W h o 's THE BIG SATURDAY ILUSIO N Artist: Furry Things Label: Trance Syndicate Rating: ★★a (out of five) Furry Things have always been a band plagued by at least one serious d ic h o to m y at a n y g iv e n tim e — they're either too willfully noisy and chaotic to fit the simple pop struc­ tures they attempt, or too head-nod- dingly num bing to necessitate the th e y in tr ic a te g u ita r attempt. la y e r in g This really comes through on The B ig S atu rd ay Illu sion , w h ich is at tim es really good and at others all too annoying. Introism, which opens the album, b u rn s rig h t in to th e e u s ta c h ia n tubes with Furry Things trademark guitar wankering, courtesy of front­ man Ken Gibson. T o be fa ir, G ib so n m ak es ju d i­ cious use of the mountain of effects p e d a ls he e m p lo y s — m o st g u i­ ta r is ts w ith th a t m u ch m o n ey in v e s te d in e le c tr o n ic s w o u ld proudly flaunt each fuzzbox. G ib­ son at least realizes he has a truly silly amount, and while not exactly sp arin g , he d o esn 't u sually o v e r­ whelm the listener. W ith this in trod u ction to Furry Things raison d'etre, the band then p lu n g e s in to ev e n m o re s o n ic debauchery. A few of the songs are actual rock songs — drum leads and choruses and all — while others like Law nm ow er Sounds are just G ibson sh riekin g o u t som e feedback. The album is a reasonably fair trade-off between the two extremes, and both ty p e s o f s o n g s a re p re s e n t w ith g oo d and bad re p re se n ta tio n s of each type. But this is where The Big Saturday Illusion lo ses points. W hile on the w hole, the album is actually quite Iil\ FR FARGO 4 30-9 35 1150 One * Upon a Tool W h e n W e i r r 1 55 I L I W e r e C o l o r e d \ |\| “ J inTar saaa ifiia jom m iovk 9:40 f y CiTVLOSTCHILDREN IMS 2:00 7:10 midn^jw T H E 2 15 4 45 7 20 9 30-1 LASTSUPP D E M t o i L e r f 5s o *•— \C '« 1:50 - 4 20 - 7:00 - L 2 30-5 0 0 7 3 0 9 idnstzintisA, General Cinema BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6 p m TUESDAY IS BARGAINQAY ALL SEITS-ALl SHOIIfS-ALL M Y ft NKHT TOO! $300 TUESDAY ONLY EXCEPT STARRED ( * ) FILMS H IG H L A N D 1 0 I 3 5 o f M I D D L E E I S K V 1 U I R O 4 5 4 - 9 5 6 2 T H IÉ R O C K O N THREE SCREENS It 11 30 2:15 5 10 7 50 10.30 Ihl/WOiUi 1 40 4 30 7 20 10 10 TMX/Mlttl I 00 3 45 7 00 V 45 DOtl! 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THE M AD CAQ E 12: ..35 7 15 10 05 9 SltREO P R IS O N E R S 7 25 10 05 R STEREO 12 102 35 5 05 7 35 10 00 R STEREO GIFT C E R T IF IC A T E S ON SA L E $2 La dies D o o rs 8:30 M u sic 9:00 SOUL RKVUI - BLUK M ONDAY SHOW w / M a lfo rd M illig a n , D t r t k O'BrSaa, Larry Falchar glas THa K allars C om ing Co Ju n e. H A 15 JUNIOR WELLS SO* OFF Any Purchase $2 or non 1914B Guadalupe Street M tritt 'A trm i R td A R t t _ •ZERO .HOUR don’t miss the high energy blend of lo-fi pop and distorted punk LIVE from the UK i!) ' j y r Y i i t / ' j y j d ' j y J u j j -j JJ ' jit S A L E E N D S 6/23/96 Compact Discs Records • Video 10-11 M on- Sat 12-11 Sun 600-A North Lamar Austin,TX 78703 512/474.2500 into6watarioorecords.com http://www.eden.com/-waterioo WHERE MUSIC STILL MATTERS