C atw o m an ad d s depth to Batman sequel. • p i J O B T h e Da ily T e x a n Vol. 91 No. 161 2 Sections Th© student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, June 22, 1992 25c Texas Republic; *' u"sh, stifle intraparty abortion debate Lesley Ramsey Daily Texan Staff DALLAS — The Texas R ep u b lican Convention in Dallas culminated this week­ end w ith 10,000 party m em bers chanting "four more years," in enthusiastic support of President George Bush. But the apparent groundswell of backing for the president included the previously muffled voices of a minority of Republican delegates opposed to the party's stand on abortion. Trying to forge a united front, Republican Party officials and the large pro-life majority at the convention stifled an attempted floor debate on the potentially divisive abortion issue, and adopted w ithout discussion a pro-life platform. The stage was set early in the convention when Texas R epublican Party C hairm an Fred M eyer told delegates on T hursday, "We m ust and will leave here united as a party." At a pro-life rally T hursday afternoon lasting nearly two hours, speakers encour­ aged support of a strong pro-life platform. * menace itually referred to Perot by Lesley Ramsey Daily Texan Staff DALLAS - If Republicans at the state convention w ere concerned ab out any th e o p p o n e n t November election, it was undeclared can­ didate Ross Perot. to G eorge Bush in But w hile m an y ack n o w led g e d th e potential threat posed by the independent, and the public frustration behind his pop- surer Kay Bailey Hutchison told conventioneers to "gear up because we're in the fight of our lives right now." "O ur very two-party system is at stake ... people are frustrated," Hutchison said. Rob Mosbacher, chairman of the presi­ dent's Victory '92 campaign, also spoke of the Am erican people's frustration, and Please see Convention, page 2 A d d re ssin g a crow d of 2,000 people, national pro-life activist Phyllis Schlafly said, "We are not just renominating George Bush, we are manifesting our control of the Republican Party." "W e cannot m ush up [the platform] to a p p e a se the sam e crow d th at ru n s the Democratic Party," she said. Bill Price, director of Texans United for Life, agreed that there could be no compro­ mises. "W e did not come here to slow dow n pro-abortion Republicans, but to stop them from busting the coalition," Price said. Anticipating a battle over the platform , Republicans for Responsible Decisions cir­ culated a petition among the 10,000 people at the convention. After one day they had gathered 1,000 signatures of pro-choice and pro-life delegates who wanted to take the issue out of the platform altogether. "There are some elected positions where it's really not relevant," said Jennifer Ellis, a delegate from H arris County. "A bortion should not be a political litmus test." But when the time came to vote on the platform, a motion was made and seconded to adopt it as written, without going over the sections individually. After a voice vote, the entire platform was adopted. The platform calls for a constitutional amendment prohibiting all abortions except to save the mother's life. Kathi M osbacher, finance d irector of Republicans for Responsible Decisions, said the party's denial of alternative points of view on abortion was going to drive abor­ tion rights supporters from the party. " It's a big m istake to exclude anyone from the R epublican P arty rig h t now ," Mosbacher said. "A lot of people feel alien­ ated from the party." Mosbacher, the daughter of Bush's cam­ paign chairm an Rob Mosbacher, said the platform's intolerance of differing views on many issues was "appalling," and added that she would seriously consider not vot­ ing for Bush in November. But she said she did not know who she would vote for. Bush greeted supporters Saturday. ANC delegation walks from talks Associated Press EVATON, South Africa - Nelson Mandela said Sunday the ANC had broken off talks with President F.W. de Klerk's government because it was "murdering our people." Although Mandela said the ANC would for now rem ain p art of m ultiparty black- white negotiations on a new constitution, the m ove underscored the leading black group's increasingly bitter relations with the government. "The negotiation process is completely in tatters," Mandela told 25,000 supporters at an emotional rally in Evaton, near the black tow nship of Boipatong w here 39 people were massacred on Wednesday night. The A frican N a tio n a l C o n g ress has charged th at governm ent security forces helped members of a rival black group stage the attack. Both de Klerk's government and the Zulu-dominated Inkatha Freedom Party denied involvement. At a news conference, Mandela said ANC leaders p lan n e d an em ergency m eeting Tuesday to decide whether to continue with the m ultiparty talks. The governm ent and the ANC are the c o u n try 's tw o m ost p o w e rfu l p o litic a l forces. As long as they feud, there is virtual­ ly no chance of breakthroughs in the negoti­ ations on ending white minority rule. Foreign Minister Pik Botha, the country's acting lea d e r w hile de K lerk is v isitin g Spain, said the government "remains com­ mitted to finding solutions through discus­ sion." Botha called for urgent talks between the ANC and the government on the Boipatong massacre. The m ultiparty talks deadlocked in May when the government and the ANC could not agree on how to write a new constitu­ tion. There have been periodic m eetings since, an d a n o th e r w as sc h ed u le d for Monday. In B oipatong, re s id e n ts w elcom ed Mandela with songs and cheers a day after they cursed de Klerk and chased him away. Follow ing de K lerk's h u rried d ep artu re, police fired on township residents, killing three and wounding more than a dozen. Police said 39 people died in W ednes­ d ay 's m assacre, in w hich attackers ram ­ paged through town, hacking and •shooting to death men, women and children. Ernest Sotsu, an ANC leader in Boipatong, put the death toll at 42. "I am convinced we are no longer dealing w ith civil hum an beings, b u t anim als," Mandela told about 4,000 people at a soccer field. Some ANC supporters, angry at the esca­ lating violence in black tow nships, have demanded an end to the talks and strongly back the mass protest campaign begun by the ANC last week. At the rally Sunday, the crowd chanted, "We want arms." But the ANC has little prospect of bring­ ing dow n the governm ent th ro u g h con­ frontation. Sunday's announcement showed the black m ovem ent is reluctant to w ith­ draw completely from negotiations, though that would be popular w ith the rank and file. "I can no longer explain to our people why we continue to talk to the regime which is murdering our people," Mandela said in an h ourlong speech in Evaton, south of Johannesburg. "We are now convinced that [de Klerk's] m ethod of bringing about a solution in this country is war." In Washington, Secretary of State James Baker, appearing on ABC-TV's This Week, expressed regrets that the negotiations had broken off, saying it was "incumbent upon all of us, myself included, the United States, other nations" to take steps to bring about resumption of the talks. "I think change is going to come, but if it doesn't come peacefully, it's going to come with tremendous bloodshed," Baker said. Almost 8,000 blacks have died in political violence since de Klerk came to power in 1989. The g o v e rn m e n t blam es a p o w er struggle betw een the ANC and Inkatha, while the ANC accuses police of instigating violence and aiding the more conservative Inkatha. M andela said the massacre W ednesday night in Boipatong would change the nation forever. "The gulf between the oppressed and the oppressor has overnight become unbridgeable," he said. At another point, he repeated a compari­ son between the white minority government and Nazi Germany, saying both killed peo­ ple only for racial and religious reasons. Juneteenth Paraders marched down Chicon Street toward Rosewood Park Friday morning during the 17th annuai Juneteenth Celebration. Juneteenth is the day in 1865 when Texas slaves were notified of the Emancipation Proclamation. Please see related story, p. 6. U.N. relief efforts stall Clashes at Sarajevo airport prevent planes’ landing Associated Press SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Machine-gun fire rattled around an embattled suburb near Sarajevo's air­ port Sunday, but the heavy fighting that has prevented U.N. relief flights subsided elsewhere in Bosnia's capi­ tal. The Bosnian governm ent, meanwhile, claimed that 40,000 people had been killed since fighting began after the majority Muslims and Croats voted to secede from Yugoslavia on Feb. 29. The official BH news agency said most of the deaths were attributed to massacres by Serb irregulars opposed to independence. The death count was impossible to confirm indepen­ dently and was almost six times higher than a figure of about 7,000 dead released only days ago. A lthough some massacre reports by each side appear genuine, both sides also engage in extensive propaganda cam­ paigns. W ith the. ebbing of heavy shelling at m idm orning, Sarajevo residents ventured onto sunny streets looking for food, which is in short supply after a 2 1/2-month siege by Serb forces. M arkets also offered flow ers, apparently for the frequent funerals in the battered city. On the front lines, troops were skeptical the calm would last, despite assurances from Serb leaders and Bosnia's government that they would stop fighting to allow relief flights at the airport. U.N. officials said Saturday they would not try to open the airport unless fighting stopped for 48 hours. "I don't think anything will come of it," said 20-year- old Sulejman Siljevic, a lone Muslim militiaman on the crest of a hill overlooking the airport and the Muslim- held suburb of Dobrinja. "W henever we sign these papers, we always get hit harder." M achine-gun fire could be heard around Dobrinja, and three tanks were seen rumbling between the suburb and the Yugoslav army's abandoned Lukavica military base, which is controlled by Serbs. The BH news agency reported that four warplanes, apparently belonging to the Yugoslav m ilitary, flew over the Sarajevo area. The news agency said 15 people had been killed and 187 wounded in the republic over the past 24 hours. I I k yfl 1 • £ WMwm U' The Students’ Association continues its drive to gain more student-friendly rep­ resentation on the Capital Metro board of trustees. 5 W e ’ re c h e a p w e a t h e r : 90s, 70s, 20 percent, SE 10 mph. HIM—iillMI ill i I ...............* * * * * «r-*• Index: Around C am p u s.........................8 Classifieds.................................9 Com ics.........................................8 Editorials..................................... 4 Entertainment............................. 7 Sports......................................... 12 State & Local.............................. 6 University.................................... 5 World & Nation........................... 3 Czechs and Slovaks agree to sever ties Associated Press PRAGUE, C zechoslovakia - President Vaclav Havel said Sunday th at Czechs and Slovaks sh o u ld decide in a referendum w h eth er their country stays together. A fter tw o w eeks of in te n siv e negotiations, Czech leader Vaclav Klaus and Slovak leader Vladimir Meciar agreed early Saturday that C zechoslovakia should break up. They asked the regional parliaments representing their two peoples to w ork out a final arrangem ent by Sept. 30. The deal left open a slim chance the 74-year-old federation w ould survive, and Havel said he would campaign to preserve it. "A referendum is the only consti­ tutional and moral way," he said in his regular weekly radio address. Havel has been a strong advocate of a referendum on the country's future since dem ands for greater so v e re ig n ty beg an g ro w in g in Slovakia following the fall of com­ munism to a peaceful revolution in 1989. There is still considerable support in both ethnic regions for keeping some form of common state, but the two parties Klaus and Meciar led to regional election victories in June 5- 6 elections are far apart on the kind of federation they would accept. Klaus is an advocate of a strong central government and continuing rap id m ark et-o rien ted econom ic reforms he has fathered as federal finance m inister. M eciar favors a loose confederation giving the two republics separate international sta­ tus. Continued from page 1 referred to Perot as a ''te m p e ra ­ mental tycoon." First Lady Barbara Bush m ade no direct reference to Perot, bu t said the tra il ah ead w o u ld be rough. "Y es, it's going to be a tough race. Yes, it's likely to turn out to be a nail-biter this fall," Bush said in her speech to the convention Friday. She stressed the im portance of Texas to the president's 1992 elec­ tion as he goes up against fellow Texan Perot. "We cannot do it w ithout you, and incidentally, this country can­ not do without George Bush," she said. U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, told R epublicans to p rep are for "som e difficult days ahead," but e n c o u ra g e d them to stay o p ti­ mistic. "Perot has peaked out, Clinton has pooped out, and George Bush has bottom ed out," Gramm said. "And we are about to seize the ini­ tiative in this campaign." He called the P erot cam paign "escapist." The p re s id e n t never d ire c tly referred to Perot, but alluded to his personality and lack of experience in government. "Being president is a demanding job and a president must be tem­ peramentally suited to that," Bush said. Referring to the many television talk show ap p earan ces by both Perot and Gov. Bill Clinton, Bush said, " sn a p p y answ ers and glib talk will not be enough to get the job done. "Let somebody else be the dar­ ling of the talking heads in this country." Ireland approves EC membership Associated Press DUBLIN, Ireland - In what was hailed as a crucial step in the march to a European union, Irish voters overw helm ingly approved a pact meant to create a common currency and coordinate policy on defense and foreign affairs, results showed Friday. The so-called M aastricht treaty, named for the Dutch town in which it was negotiated, had been rejected on June 2 by Danish voters, and a defeat in Ireland would likely have been a death knell for the accord. "E u ro p e w as at a cro ssro ad s," said P rim e M in ister A lb e rt Reynolds. "If Ireland had voted no ... it w ould have been the end to integration." A final unofficial count showed the treaty carrying with 69 percent of the votes. Some districts returned affirmative votes as high as 75 per­ cent. The treaty requires ratification by all 12 European Community coun­ tries this year. France's N ational Assembly on Friday followed the Senate in a p p ro v in g ch an g es to bring the country's constitution in line w ith the tre a ty , lay in g th e ground for a referendum, probably in September. "We hope the Irish yes will be the first of a series of yeses to the M a astric h t tre a ty and ... to the European union," said Joao de Deus Pinheiro, the foreign m inister of the P o rtu g a l, w h ich Community's rotating presidency. h o ld s In Ireland, the treaty referendum was dogged by the emotional issues of abortion and nationalism. Some n a tio n a lists cam paigned a g a in st th e p act as sacrificin g Ireland's independence and neutral­ ity. A n ti-ab o rtio n activists cam ­ p aig n ed a g a in st it because they believed it would reinforce an Irish Supreme Court ruling that abortion was legal in some circumstances. The p rim e m in ister on F rid ay repeated his assurances that the governm ent w ould produce p ro ­ posals this year to deal w ith the impact of a Supreme Court decision that held that abortion was permis­ sible in some circumstances despite an anti-abortion amendment to the constitution in 1983. Rebel com m anders from N angarhar province prayed for A fghanistan’s future Sunday at the Presidential Palace in Kabul. Afghan faction threatens jihad Associated Press ____________ _________________ KABUL, Afghanistan - Days before the care­ taker government is supposed to change hands, som e guerrilla leaders th re a te n e d Sunday to wage a "holy w ar" against those who oppose P resident Sibghatullah M ojaddidi's retaining power. Mojaddidi, who previously agreed to give up the post on June 28, has been arguing that he is the only leader who has the broad-based support to unite the country after a 14-year war against a series of Soviet-backed regimes. However, he has no real power base among the m ajor M uslim guerrilla gro ups and only last week formed an alliance with a coalition of eight small parties formed and supported by Iran. Afghanistan's num erous factions are riven by religious, ethnic and political differences, and there have been several outbreaks of fighting among the groups since the Com m unists were ousted. Many people in the capital fear the possi­ bility of new battles over Mojaddidi. On S u n d ay , d o zen s of tu rb a n e d relig io u s scholars and tribal leaders sat on the floor of the presid en tial palace as guerrilla com m anders paraded across a stage and called for Mojaddidi to remain in office for as long as five years. The event was broadcast by state-run television. "We have sacrificed a lot for this government. We don't w ant anyone to destroy it," said Sayeed Khalil Pacha, a commander in eastern Nangarhar province. "W e will wage jihad [holy war] against anyone w ho o p p o ses him . We have e n o u g h power and patience." Other rebel leaders have accused Mojaddidi of trying to sabotage the governing coalition and seize power for himself. Mojaddidi, a 70-year-old professor of Islamic philosophy, took office on April 28 under an agreement hurriedly put together'by major rebel factions to fill the void created by the ouster of President Najibullah's regime. The pact called for M ojaddidi to hand over pow er on June 28 to B u rh a n u d d in R abbani, leader of the powerful Jarniat-e-Islami faction, in the second phase of the transition to Islamic rule and elections. But within a week of taking office, Mojaddidi said that two months was not enough and that his term should be extended to two years, a sug­ gestion rejected by other guerrilla chiefs. On Sunday, M ojaddidi again accused other leaders of breaking the agreement. He also lashed out at Rabbani and Defense M inister Ahm ed Shah Masood, the rebel commander who orches­ trated the defeat of the Communists and has pro­ tected Kabul against attack by renegade guerrilla forces. M ojaddidi said an assem bly of tribal elders and religious scholars should decide whether he hands power to Rabbani or remains in office. "North and south, east and west, thousands of people have been coming every day to express their gratitude and telling me I should stay, Mojaddidi said. "Personally, I'm not interested. I'm very tired. But I cannot ignore the people's will and expectations." Prisoners serving more time [Yeltsin promises access to KGB files Associated Press WASHINGTON - More federal offenders are going to prison and staying there longer since a tough sentencing law went into effect five years ago, the Justice D epartm ent reported Sunday. The d e p a rtm e n t's B ureau of Justice Statistics said that in 1990, 74 percent of the defendants covered by the Sentencing Reform Act went to prison, compared to 52 percent of those sentenced in 1986, the last year before the new law took effect. Federal prisoners released from prison in 1990 had served an aver­ age of 19 months, which was 29 per­ cent longer than the average term Prisoners had served an average of 19 months, up 29 percent from 1986. s e rv e d by p ris o n e rs released in 1986. T he se n te n c in g act c o n ta in e d guidelines for judges to add prison time in proportion to the serious­ ness of the offense and in propor­ tion to the d e fe n d a n t's p rev io u s offenses. In addition, the act also eliminated early release on parole. "The advent of federal sentencing guidelines has accompanied a sub­ stantial increase in the probability of imprisonment for a large number of crim es," said Steven D illingham , bureau director. The United States now imprisons a larger percentage of its citizens than any other country in the world. The p e rc e n t of d ru g o ffenders who got prison time rose from 77 in 1986 to 89 in 1990, the bureau said. This reflects not only the sentencing guidelines but also mandatory mini­ m um sentences, w hich C ongress enacted during the 1980s for drug and violent crime. Nevertheless, the guidelines pro­ duced more prison sentences even for crimes without mandatory mini- mums. Those convicted of public- o rd e r reg u la to ry crim es w ent to prison nearly 50 percent of the time in 1990, compared to 34 percent in 1986. I EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ON Associated Press WASHINGTON - Pass the Alger Hiss file, please. And then the ones on the Rosenbergs, Lee Harvey Oswald, the m urder of Leon Trotsky and the Hitler- Stalin Pact. "There will be no more lies - ever," said Russian President Boris Yeltsin, hinting that disclosures about American prisoners in Russia and the downing of the Korean airliner were just the beginning. In that tantalizing moment, Yeltsin told the world it may soon gain access to some of the 20th century's darkest secrets - answers to some of its most enduring questions. Or at least access to the archives of the Kremlin and the KGB to learn what they might - and might not - contain. , FBI counterintelligence officials say they already are receiving unprecedented cooperation from Moscow and former communist capitals in Eastern Europe. The KGB has promised U.S. officials access to the Soviet files on Oswald, the man the Warren Commission said acted alo n e in a s sa s s in a tin g P re sid e n t John F. Kennedy. But scholars and the public are not yet learning much from Moscow's secret files. Would KGB files, for example, reveal any truth to the 1950s claim s of Sen. Jo sep h M cC arthy, the W isconsin R epublican and infam ous com m unist hunter, that the U.S. government was infiltrated by a Moscow-directed conspiracy? There already have been disclosures in Moscow of how the Communist Party smuggled cash to foreign communist parties. Is there more to learn? To this day, Alger Hiss denies he was a communist spy and claims his 1950 perjury conviction was a mis­ carriage of justice. IS YOUR CAREER LEGAL? If you a re n 't involved in or p u rsu in g a career in the legal profession, y o u 're m issing o n e of the m ost exciting areas of the professional world! 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June 22. 1992 Page 3 Protests mar Ethiopia vote Nation's first multiparty election embarks toward full democracy Associated Press A D D IS ABABA, E th io p ia — E th io p ian s voted S u n d ay in th eir country's first m ultiparty elections, b u t th e b a llo tin g w as m a rre d by opposition boycotts. By la te S u n d a y , in te r n a tio n a l observers had received no reports of violence or in tim id atio n in the vote for pow erful regional legisla­ tu res, a spokesm an for the g ro u p said. Voting appeared calm and order­ ly at several polling stations in the c a p ita l, A d d is A b a b a, a n d e ls e ­ w here around the country. Voters' thum bs were m arked w ith indelible purple ink after they cast blue-and- w h ite b allo ts m ark e d w ith w a te r jugs, torches, horses, flow ers an d other symbols. At a station in Deb re Zeit, about 47 m iles so u th of the ca p ital, 22- y e a r-o ld M o h am m ed N o o r c o m ­ plained that only one party and sev­ eral independents appeared on the ballot in the ethnic O rom o stro n g ­ hold. " I t is g ood, th e p o lic y to h a v e d em o cracy - th e o p p o s ite of th e dergue," he said, using the popular nam e for the governm ent of dictator M engistu Haile Mariam. T u rn o u t in u rb a n c e n te rs ap p eared m oderate to heavy. T he N ational Election Commission esti­ m ated that three-fifths of Ethiopia's 55 million people were over 18 and therefore eligible to vote. Sunday's balloting w as the first in a series of elections m eant to bring full democracy to Ethiopia by 1993. It came 14 m onths after the violent ouster of M engistu and the end of decades of guerrilla w arfare against his 17-year M arxist regim e and its im perial predecessor. The cam paign was virtually w ith­ out political issues in the conven­ tional sense, and voting was expect­ ed to run along ethnic lines. The elections are seen as a major test for E th io p ia 's new system of ethnic federalism, w hich has divid­ ed the country into 14 ethnic, large­ ly autonom ous regions. O n W ednesday, the country's sec­ o n d -la r g e s t p o litic a l p a r ty , th e O rom o Liberation Front, w ithdrew from the elections and m o ved its arm y from encam pm ents to w hich it w as to have been confined until the voting w as over. P re s id e n t M eles Z e n a w i sa id S a tu rd a y th a t O rom o tro o p s h ad clashed w ith government forces, but no fresh fighting h ad been reported by late Sunday. The Orom o front said it was boy­ cotting the election because M eles' g ro u p , th e E th io p ia n P e o p le s R ev o lu tio n a ry D em ocratic Front, h a d a r re s te d a n d in tim id a te d O rom o an d was m an ip u latin g the vote. O n S u n d a y , an O ro m o le a d e r called the elections "crude and ille­ g a l" a n d sa id th e re c o u ld b e renew ed hostilities. W estern diplom ats have said an O rom o w ithdraw al from the camps w ould be tantam ount to an act of w ar against the D em ocratic Front, w hich is th o u g h t to h av e 150,000 troops. W estern analysts generally credit Democratic Front leaders w ith try ­ ing to ru n fair elections b u t concede abuses have taken place. The O rom o leader, party deputy secretary general Leenco Lata, said O rom o troops th o u g h t to n u m ber between 15,000 and 20,000 left their encam pm ents " to pu rsu e political objectives through military m eans.' W estern diplom ats have said an Oromo w ithdraw al from the camps w ould be tantam ount to an act of w ar against the D em ocratic Front, w hich is th o u g h t to h a v e 150,000 troops. building w here a doctor perform s abortions. P o lice g u a rd e d th e e n tra n c e . P ro te ste rs m ade no attem pt to rush the entrance. • . • H u n d re d s of abo rtio n rig h ts p ro testers form ed a hum an line in front of a third clin­ ic, b u t no incidents w ere reported there. A bout 175 arrests w ere m ade during the first tw o days of protests, m ost for disorder­ ly conduct or trespassing. T h o se a r re s te d S a tu rd a y also w e re charged w ith disorderly conduct and three w ith resisting arrest. K atie C lem ons, 15, of Fargo, N .D ., said she and her younger sister and brother were arrested twice. */T "I d id n 't w ant to get arrested, but I w as w illing because the Bible says to p ro tec t life," she said. 4r. n o f arrac+*»H btlt T wa K atie's m other, Jody C lem ons, said she su p p o rte d h er c h ild re n 's effo rts because they w ere "standing for righteousness." Joseph Bruening, a m em ber of the Clinic Defense League of Minnesota, criticized the use of children in the protests. "H elping your kids craw l across a busy city street is child abuse," he said. In H artford, Conn., at least 12 anti-abor­ tion protesters were arrested at a clinic after w ho ch a in in g them selves to g eth er in an operating room. 143 arrested at all-ages abortion protest in Milwaukee Strikebreakers Police charge against protesters in Dhaka, Bangladesh. More than 150 people were injured in clashes with police during a nationwide general strike Sunday. The protesters demanded the death sentence for funda­ mentalist Muslim leader Golam Azam, who is in jail for treason. Riot murders stump authorities \ssociated Press LOS ANGELES — Reluctant witnesses and an o v e rlo a d of cases are h a m p e rin g rio t m u rd e r investigations and police predict m ost cases will never be solved, a new spaper reported Sunday. Police have m ad e a rre sts in only four of 33 hom icide cases, the Los Angeles limes said. Homicide Lt. Richard Molony, whose division is looking into 12 rio t-relatecf,m urders, said it w as difficult for police to begin investigations am id the pandem onium following the acquittals of fo u r w hite police officers in the b ea tin g of black m otorist Rodney King. "W e usually put up yellow tape ... and im me­ iiateiy KnocK on som e uuuia, uc diately knock on som e doors," he said. "W hen “If I saw the license plate of the getaway car and had a photograph­ ic memory and a cop came up to me, I wouldn’t tell him a thing.” — Leroy Miller, Los Angeles resident we get a hom icide d u rin g civil u n rest and the body is driven from the shooting location to the hospital, we d o n 't even know w here the victim was killed." In one case, detectives tow ed aw ay the car of H o w ard E pstein w hile his b u llet-rid d led b ody w as still inside. They took the u n u su al step to preserve evidence from the scene r - — But getting w itnesses to give inform ation on Epstein's April 30 m urder appears hopeless. "If I saw the license plate of the getaw ay car and had a photographic mem ory and a cop came up to me, I w ouldn't tell him a thing," said resi­ dent Leroy Miller, w ho was near the shooting. Los A ngeles police generally solve about 70 p e rc e n t of h o m ic id e cases, b u t in v e s tig a to rs expect the rate w ill be far less for riot deaths. O fficials a ttrib u te d 52 d e a th s in Los A ngeles C ounty to three days of riots in the South Central area beginning April 29. Gunfire killed 33 people, most of w hom didn't appear to know their assailants, the new spaper said. O ther victim s died in fires or traffic colli­ sions, or they were stabbed, beaten or strangled. Associated Press MILWAUKEE — Anti-abortion protesters ru s h e d a police line at a clinic S atu rd ay , w aving Bibles and singing hym ns as them foes at another clinic form ed hum an barri­ cades. Police m ade 143 arrests, including 31 pro­ testers aged 8 to 17, during the city s third day of dem onstrations at three clinics. The bulk of those arrested w ere anti-abortion protesters. A total of 2,500 people from both sides of the issue were at the three sites. The arrests began after about 15 young­ ste rs got on th eir k n ee s across from the S u m m it W o m e n 's H e a lth O rg a n iz a tio n , y elled " G o !" an d ra n to w a rd th e clinic, d ropping again to their knees in front of a line of police officers near entrances. Throughout the m orning, groups of peo­ ple ran across the.street and sat, knelt or lay in front of police. M any abortion opponents w aved Bibles, carried p ic tu re s of ab o rte d fetu ses, san g h y m n s a n d p ra y e d as th e y jo s tle d w ith abortions rights advocates for space on the sidewalk. "T hat building sells abortion. N ot adop­ tion. N ot ab stin en ce," said the Rev. Sam F aust of M uskego. "T hey call them selves choice. They only offer one choice." The protests, w hich are expected to last six w e e k s , a re o rg a n iz e d b y a n a tió n a l group, M issionaries to the Prebom . "M ilw aukee has spoken, the clinics m ust stay o p en !" h u n d re d s of a b o rtio n rig h ts backers, locked arm -in-arm , hollered o u t­ side the Summ it building. Clinic supporters have often greatly outnum bered anti-abor­ tion activists. The clinics have escorts to usher patients past dem onstrators. Angie Kvidera, coordi­ nator of a clinic coalition, said at least seven w om en w ere escorted into the Sum m it clin­ ic Saturday. A t a n o th e r c lin ic , a b o u t 600 a b o rtio n rights dem onstrators locked arms outside a Yeltsin seeks to end Moldovan strife Associated Press M O SC O W — P re s id e n t B oris Y eltsin returned trium phantly Sunday from a U.S.- Russian sum m it and stepped im m ediately into a domestic hornet's nest, w arning that Russia may intervene in M oldova's escalat­ ing civil war. As he spoke at V nukovo A irport, Slavic separatists and M oldovan troops battled for control of B endery, a secessionist stro n g ­ hold 750 miles southw est of Moscow. C om m onw ealth television said the casu­ alty toll from three days of fighting climbed to 200 d ead an d 300 w o u n d e d , m an y of th e m c iv ilia n s . T h e e v e n in g n e w s c a s t show ed bom bed-out buildings in Bendery, bodies scattered in the streets and arm ored vehicles charging through the city of 130,000 people. If Y e ltsin o rd e re d tro o p s to q u ell th e fighting, it w ould be the first official use of force by Russia on the territory of another m e m b e r of th e C o m m o n w e a lth of Independent States. As such, it could set a precedent for Russia to intervene w henever the lives of ethnic Russians are endangered. The separatists in Moldova - m ainly eth­ nic R u s s ia n s a n d U k ra in ia n s - h a v e declared an independent republic of 600,000 people along the Dniester River in the east­ ern part of the country of 4.3 million. Yeltsin stepped off his jet after a six-day trip to the U nited States an d C anada and told reporters in a jaunty voice that he had accom plished everything he had hoped for, including an arm s control treaty and major trade agreements. Then his m anner turned gruff and he said he w anted to send a w arning to M oldova's president, Mircea Snegur. "O f course we favor settling problem s at the negotiating table, by political means. But w h e n d o z e n s a n d d o z e n s of p e o p le are dead, w hen a w ar is going on, w e cannot rem ain indifferent," he said. Russia, Yeltsin added, "m ust respond to protect people and halt the bloodshed. We have the strength to do it - let Snegur know that." W ithin hours, Snegur responded w ith a telegram urging Yeltsin to get better infor­ m a tio n a b o u t M o ld o v a . H e a lso s e n t a counter-w arning: If Russia starts interven­ ing in other countries, it could soon be tom by internal conflict. Russian President Boris Yeltsin speaks to reporters after his return to Moscow. States get leeway with nuclear waste Joe Camel targeted at Chicago parade Associated Press Associated Press Shamir, Rabin trade accusations as Israelis prepare to cast ballots MAALE ADUMIM, Occupied West Bank — Prim e M inister Yitzhak Sham ir accused the Labor Party on S unday of "un-Jew ish b eh av io r," and Labor leader Yitzhak Rabin called some Jewish settlers in the occu­ pied lands "parasites." The sharp w ords could be an attem pt by the candi­ dates to pep tip a hitherto lackluster cam paign going into T uesday's parliam en tary elections, w hich polls h a v e b e e n p re d ic tin g w ill p ro d u c e in c o n c lu s iv e results. A d d re ssin g s u p p o rte r s in K far S h alem , a low - incom e stro n g h o ld of his Likud p arty in Tel Aviv', Shamir chastised Rabin and other Labor leaders w ho served in his Cabinet between 1988 and 1990. At a rally in Holon, a city south of Tel Aviv, Rabin denounced the Jewish settlem ents that Likud has built in parts of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, saying the m oney should be spent on creating jobs for Israelis. CHICAGO — The U.S. surgeon general, leaders of the Am erican M edical Association and school children paraded through dow ntow n Sunday to protest a ciga­ rette-sm oking cartoon camel they say is a m erchant of death. The tw o-m ile p arad e, w hich featured D um p trie H u m p" placards, m arked the beginning of the AM A's annual m eeting in Chicago. A m ong anti-sm oking p ro p o sals to be co nsidered during the five-day m eeting is a re c o m m e n d a tio n for curbs on y outh-oriented tobacco advertising, w hich Joe Camel represents to detractors. Japan remains most competitive nation GENEVA — Japan rem ains the w orld's m ost com ­ petitive country', w hile the United States has dropped from second place to fifth, according to a report p u b ­ lished M onday by tw o Swiss-based economic consult­ ing firms. The W orld C om petitiveness R eport said G erm any rose from third to second place d espite the costs of absorbing formerly com m unist eastern G erm any and doubts about its future performance. , WASHINGTON — The Supreme C o u rt on Friday blunted efforts to o v e rc o m e the " n o t- in - m y - b a c k yard " syndrom e w ith a ruling that Congress cannot force states to dis­ pose of low-level radioactive w aste generated within their borders. Voting 6-3 in a partial victory for N e w Y ork, ju s tic e s s a id th e Congress exceeded its pow er when it required states w ithout disposal sites to become the unw anted ow n­ ers in 1996 of low-level radioactive waste. M ost of the waste is from pri­ vate commercial sources. But the co u rt u p h e ld the la w 's other provisions creating incentives for states to get rid of the waste. U pheld w as a plan for regional com pacts in w hich states w ith dis­ posal sites are allowed to gradually increase the cost of access and ulti­ m ately to d en y access altogether. States that fail to join the compacts m ust come up w ith other solutions. Since the law was passed in 1985, Congress has approved nine region­ al com pacts encompassing 42 states. The remaining eight states, w ho say thev will build their ow n disposal facilities, are Texas, Michigan, New Y ork, V erm ont, N ew H a m p sh ire, M aine, M assach u setts and Rhode Island. In other action, the court: ■ L im ite d th e p o w e r o f local com m unities to require perm its for parades and rallies. The court, by a 5-4 vote, ruled that a perm it law in F o rsy th C o u n ty , G a., u n la w fu lly ham pers free-speech rights. ■ Ruled 6-3 in a victory for state tax collectors that the Wrigley chew­ in g g u m c o m p a n y m u s t p ay a Wisconsin state incom e tax. ■ Ruled that all law suits against the Red C ross over transfusions of b lo o d a lle g e d ly ta in te d w ith the AIDS virus m ust be filed in federal courts. The 5-4 decision prohibited a New H am pshire couple from suing the American National Red Cross in state court. ■ R uled 8-1 th at a fe d era l a p ­ peals court m istakenly overturned the 1988 racketeering convictions of reputed former mob boss Axithony "Fat Tony" Salerno and seven other men. In the radioactive w aste case, the court struck dow n a so-called "take title " p ro v isio n th a t w o u ld have m ade the states responsible for all d am ag es cau sed b y w aste w ith in their borders beginning Jan. 1,1996. Justice Sandra Day O 'C onnor said for the court that the provision vio­ lates states' rights. "W hile C ongress has substantial pow ers to govern the nation direct­ ly," she said, "the C onstitution has n ev e r been u n d e rsto o d to confer upon Congress the ability to require the states to g o v ern according to Congress' instructions." l i l i l> Ml \ T l A W Pnge 4 Monday. J,une 22. 1992 VIEWPOINT Geoff Henley Editor Anne Gainer Associate Editor John Sepehri Associate Editor Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Dally Texan are those of the editorial board. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. Opinions expressed in staff or guest columns are those of the writer. Letters submitted to Firing Une should be fewer than 250 words, and guest columns should be no more than 750 words. Bring submissions to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or mail them to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. Letters may be edited for grammar, length, libel and Texan style. The Daily Texan editorial board will meet with stu­ dents, faculty, administrators and members of the pub­ lic by appointment to discuss matters of public interest, political endorsements and Texan policies. To sched­ ule a meeting, call the Texan offices at 471-4591 Open-minded debate over PAC changes necessary A rt is often the preserve of powerful and eclectic personalities. One such person, Pebbles W adsw orth, director of the U n iv e rsity 's P erfo rm in g A rts C enter has recently endured a barrage of criticism for changes she is making to the UT performing arts program. Wadsworth is trying to reform a department that has remained static for more than a decade. Though Wadsworth has become the target of hyperbolic attacks, some of the complaints against her have validity. Wadsworth's purpose is a worthy one: She seeks to give the PAC distinct goals. Her pri­ mary objective is to turn the PAC into a teach­ ing center. Wadsworth states it this way: "With input from staff, faculty and students, we wanted to write a mission and set the goals in the broadest sense. The first thing people want­ ed was to turn the center into a teaching labo­ ratory." In order to accomplish the transformation of the PAC, Wadsworth is undertaking a variety of actions - some quite controversial. One of the more fiercely debated ideas has been the PAC's plan to let go a number of people who are in positions that are not teaching-related. Wadsworth, however, plans to create new posi­ tions to fill "contem p orary w o rld " needs. Additionally, the PAC director is trying to save money by employing university resources to address areas that have previously been han­ dled by outsiders. Since the University is, after all, an educa­ tional institution, Wadsworth's emphasis on teaching seem s ben eficial. M oreover, it is doubtful that an institution which has seen lit­ tle change over a long period cannot use new ideas from new sources. Also, in an era of financial constraints, the PAC should cut costs if it can. Despite the many positive aspects of the PAC restructuring, the critics have brought to light a disturbing facet of Wadsworth's plans. In her efforts to consolidate the department into a teaching center and cut costs, Wadsworth is ignoring an im portant aspect of the PAC's function. As her critics have pointed out, the PAC should serve as a center where students learn by observing p ro fessio n als pu ttin g together performances. Many students have rightfully stated that learning the arts is not akin to the typical student experience. Where business students can simply learn formulas in the classroom, artists learn by watching profes­ sionals at work. Beyond misunderstanding the needs of stu­ dents, in her zeal to restructure, the PAC direc­ tor has proposed seemingly innocuous ideas that lack soundness. One such proposal is to have students interested in entertainment law write PAC contracts. While the University cer­ tainly possesses many talented future attor­ neys, it would be quite risky to entrust impor­ tant contracts to people who have not complet­ ed their legal education. There are simply some functions best left to professionals dedicated to them. From the reaction Wadsworth's plans have elicited, one would think the apocalypse has come to the U niversity's arts community. W adsw orth's reputation, in tellig en ce and courage have all been attacked. Such vitriol does the arts community a disservice. Some of the new PAC director's plans deserve hearing, and the poorly conceived ideas Wadsworth has put forth should be addressed on their merits. Such an honest debate will do the UT arts com­ munity more good than the bom bastic and childish noise that has so far emanated from the PAC debate. ::: is Sexual assault not a race issue Friday, the last day of class for Ayesha Gray TEXAN COLUMNIST the spring semester, was an even tfu l day in my life. It started at the H u ntington A rt museum. I ditched art history class to look at the museum's Masters of Fine Art exhibit. One piece struck a chord in me. It was a M ike Montiero piece that looked like a huge comic strip. In the first frames, there was a graphic representation of a woman being raped. In the last frames, she fights back, leaving her aggressors in a crumpled mass clutching their crotches. The copy at the bottom went som ething like this: “ You have a right to wear whatever you want. You have a right to act how­ ever you want. No does mean no. No matter what the court system has said. There is no such thing as too much self-defense. Hit low and hard." Maybe this was in my sub­ conscious when my friends and I went to a party Friday night. When I got to the party I noticed about 30 to 40 people standing around talk in g, laughing and drinking beer - nothing too unusu­ al. My friends and I started talking to these guys. We were flirting a lit­ tle - again, nothing too unusual. I realized later that what was scary was the evening was so usual. The events of Friday night p robably happen every F rid ay night on college campuses all over the U nited States. One of my friends was talking with this guy. I didn't think anything about it until she disappeared. My other friend and I were worried because she is not the type to run off with guys she doesn't know. She also does not drink heavily, but she was pretty toasted that night. We went outside to look for her but found nothing. Then she walked in, but some­ thing was not right with her. Her face was pale and she seemed shak­ en up, so we asked her what had happened. This guy used some line to get her outside alone. She's not stupid, she knew what was going on, but hey, what's a little mug at a party, no big deal, right? What was a big deal was the fact that this guy pulled her off into some dark comer, they kissed, and then, he started touching her where she didn't want to be touched. She said no, but he wouldn't stop. She got scared and pushed him away. When I heard this, som ething snapped. I looked over at this guy, he was standing in his group of friends with a smug look on his face. I stayed very calm, grabbed a cup and filled it with water. I went over to him and shouted in his ear, "D on 't fuck with my friends and don't fuck with me!" - then threw the glass of water in his face. I walked out of the apartment looking for my friends who had gone inside looking for me. I was across the parking lot w hen I turned and saw the guy and his friends leading the pack that was coming after me. At this point, I got nervous. "W hat do you think you are doing?" the guy asked. "You wetted me too." The incident I started turned into a commotion. At least twelve peo­ ple were outside. Two guys were yelling in my face, pushing and threatening and two were trying to hold the first two back. My friends and I were trying to walk away. The situation looked explosive.. This is in part because of informa­ tion I intentionally left out: The guy I threw water at was black. The guys that were holding him and his friends back were white. Luckily, the situation didn't explode; my friends and I were able to get away. On the way home I expressed my rationale to both my friends, who stared at me in horror and disbelief. If I had to do it a dozen times over I would, every time. Things like this happen too often. Some girl gets a little drunk, and some wise-ass thinks he has hit the jackpot. This guy just got fresh, some guys don't stop at fresh. If more women would react the way I did, these things wouldn't happen so often. Some girl at the party made a com m ent to the effect of, " S h e probably wouldn't have done that if he had been w h ite ." She was wrong: it wasn't a black or white issue. I would have done what I did regardless. It was about being insensitive, and no race has cor­ nered the market in that respect. M aybe recent events in L. A. have increased race tensions, but whether or not I'm white and he's black wasn't an issue at the time. What was was that he tried to take advantage of a situation. It was a gender thing, not a black thing. Gray is a zoology junior. Female vice chancellor recommendation will benefit UT U ndeniably the best compliment a sooner than expected, helping the advance­ ment of women toward the presidency of the University as well as truck-loads of other positions within the system's elite. Ramiro Gonzalez TEXAN COLUMNIST Texan colum nist can get is to be read. At times, creating a little stir among his readers is a fringe benefit. But when his pronouncements are not only read, but followed through by those lead­ ing the herd, the writer is prone to receive an adrenaline shot. A shot laced with a hefty dose of hot air, straig ht into his already swollen egotism, is pure ecstacy. Oh, how sweet it is. It all happened on June 1 when my first column came to life. The column asserted that the next UT president must wear a skirt, at least once in a blue moon. That did not include transvestites, of course. The column's argument, one guesses, exerted some pressure on the often hesitant, but at times assertive, incoming UT Chancellor William Cunningham. A few days later, on June 11, Bill proposed to the UT Board of Regents the creation of a job in the system's elite vice-chancellor structure. And, best of all, Bill's intent is to name a woman for that position - rumors have it anyway. Some have even ventured that Shirley Bird Perry is the front runner to occupy the $100,000 to 150,000 a year position. It's about time. Particularly, when Bird Perry has put up with this abrasive male-chau- vinist bureaucracy for 30 years. in d icatio n Appointing a woman vice chancellor is the best th at W illiam Cunningham is ripe to mind one's shrewd recom m endations to lead this glorious in stitu tion . And B ill's proposal to the Board of Regents is an encouraging indica­ tion of his trail-blazing stance with respect to female empowerment. Thus Bill will be, Thanks to the sudden clout this column has gained - one is inclined to advise Bill on a pressing issue that has bogged down this campus for a long time: disparity in faculty salaries. Instead of submitting the 2 percent across-the-board pay raises for the 1992-93 budget to the UT Board of Regents last week, the administration should redis­ tribute the income of faculty from high- paying departments - like law, business and engineering - to faculty and staff who earn less than $25,000 a year. Actions, Bill, not lame explanations are needed to reduce the facu lty salary gap betw een these schools and the other eleven on campus. According to a UT report detailing salary disparities among faculty indicates that average salaries from the School of Law rose the m ost during a 10-year period while the average pay of professors of the School of Fine Arts fell more than $15,000 below the 1990-91 average. Sham e. Furthermore, the average professor of law earns $101,281 while a professor in liberal arts earns a dinky $59,622. But more ridicu­ lous is Cunningham's reasoning that these differences were because of competition as well as supply and demand. Close that gap, Bill. The last advice of the day concerns the 2 percent pay raise. It fosters resentment am ong those whose salaries are below poverty levels, especially when the current inflation rate is 3 percent. Pressing eco- momic conditions to the extreme may be as co stly if it tem pts the h orned-herd to charge and hook its leader from behind. For instance, a 2 percent pay raise for a professor of law with $101,281 amounts to - p ocket change a p altry $2,025 for coffee and doughnuts. The problem comes here. The same pay raise for an employee who earns $9,360 a year will amount to $187.20. That should be enough. In the long run that may be a liability - twisting the dormant mob's tail is risky; and no one wants an LA in Austin. So, Bill, for the sake of the glorious and bright plu tocracy, to w hich I long to belong, please remember your job is to lead this herd and to follow this column's rec­ ommendations. To keep the dormant mob in order, we must feed them, but not too much; one must concede, but not so little as your budget proposal indicates. Give these poor devils, those earning less than $25,000, a more substantial raise. That is called controlled hunger — alive, Bill, but sedated. Don't press our luck, give this starving herd some rope to hang on. Gonzalez is a graduate student in education. Facts on retirement fudged I am writing concerning the item about my retirement after 37 years as a profes­ sional librarian at the University. The item in the Friday, June 12, Texan ("U T librari­ an's career stacks up to 37 years") was con­ densed to the point of incoherence. My first five years were spent as a gener­ al cataloger before I began to specialize in Latin-American books. The first 20 years or so were spent before cataloging for the on­ line catalog, which did not exist until about that time. I do not now use the card catalog because it no longer exists as an active file. The last-paragraph quotation attributed to me was not a statement of mine. I said that I had found it difficult to begin using the on-line catalog after so many years of more traditional methods. Joseph Cunningham Austin resident Duban's exit injures faculty A recent letter from home brought with it a new s cfip p iri5 (A ustin A m erican- ture of my former professor, James Dub an, for the University of North Texas, where he will chair the Department of English. Jim's departure wounds the prestige and acade­ mic integrity of the UT humanities faculty and demands reckoning. Duban leaves under a pelting rain of abuse. Some of his accusers have spoken outright; some have muttered over cappu- cinos in usual cafes. He has been accused of violating professional process, trying to repress free discussion, conspiring against his colleagues, and even, in one unfounded instance, sexual harassment. I have yet to hear or read any report that suggests that Jim Duban is guilty of anything beyond persistently and unapologetically defend­ ing positions he believed were right. Jim's problems at the UT Department of English have stemmed, not from insensitiv­ ity to cultural diversity, but from insistence on trad ition al pedagogical standards, which some multiculturalists have mysteri­ ously identified with A nglo-A m erican patriarchy. Jim is no Amoldian reactionary with passé illusions about Western culture as the last repository of the true and the good. I ic IS a SOphiSuCaicu u iu u c im s t , W n u 'PON’T DOLIDO deep familiarity with the historical contexts in which texts are produced. He insists that students express them­ selves according to long-standing rules and conventions of English prose and rhetoric. I take it that he believes these rules and con­ ventions have deep roots in the universal logic and structure of experience, and that -ft) AS I SAY!' logic and grammar exist before any biases our culture projects on our prose or our thought. I recognize that a huge philosoph­ ical controversy underlies the insistence that we can express ourselves more clearly by following objective rules of rhetoric and ■y g i V i y u V v i i 3 u u j c v . u v c I| | ... r t .,^ ¡JT. j-iti»r.n * . . J-| ^ j u u g m c m la -- 1 g r a m m a r . that teachers of Duban's viewpoint pro­ duce more effective writers than those pro­ duced by ideologically minded innovators. I knew Jim for some time before I discov­ ered that he is a Jew. More time elapsed before he mentioned in passing that when he was growing up in Boston there were mornings when he would have to wipe eggs off his family car, eggs that had been thrown because the Dubans were Jews. Many of jim 's adversaries in the multicul­ tural debate will never have his personal experience of race hatred, and to accuse him, groundlessly, of com plicity with racism or cultural oppression is offensive. I am going to do Joe Kruppa, chairman of the Department of English, the service of assum ing that rem arks quoted by the Austin-American Statesman were out of con­ text. I assume that when Kruppa was con­ tacted by the Statesman he praised Duban's teaching, and made some appropriate remarks of regret that the situation had to come to this pass. The quotes in the clip­ ping I received were alm ost com ically boorish, the remarks of a bureaucrat con­ cerned less about human beings than about ripples in departmental schedules. x u u w f u i x y U r i Chicago resident UNIVERSITY_____________ p , „ 5 I Record request KTSB student radio DJ “Crazy” Ray Cole, a chemistry senior, makes a selection from the library for Sunday afternoon airplay. Cole said he thinks he is the only chemistry major who works as a DJ for KTSB. Cole was substituting for a co-worker’s Sunday shift. Patrick Sison/Daily Texan Staff Loan policy discourages part-time students Johanna Franke Daily Texan Staff Part-time students may find it dif­ ficu lt to re c e iv e S ta ffo rd L oan s b e ca u se o f a S tu d en t F in a n c ia l S e rv ices' policy that d iscou rages part-time students from borrowing. "T h e r e are a lot of p o licies on cam pus that discourage less than fu ll-tim e e n r o llm e n t," said D on Davis, associate director of Student Financial Services. "W e try to make some insurances that the student is making some progress [toward] get­ ting a degree when they're getting good dollars that they're borrowing. I hate to see them borrow $3,000 for three hours credit." A stu d e n t m u st be a tte n d in g school at least part-time to be eligi­ b le to re c e iv e a S ta ffo rd L o an , according to the U.S. Department of Education. But individual colleges are allowed to set their own guide­ lines as long as they com ply w ith the department's regulations. "M ost of the part-time students at UT don't know they can borrow ," said Alan Turley, graduate student in sociology and part-time student this summer. It took Turley two weeks of meet­ ing with Student Financial Services co u n s e lo rs and c a llin g th e U .S. D epartm ent of E d u cation to find out. T h e U .S . D e p a rtm e n t of Education considers all 12 weeks of the su m m er se ssio n as on e long term, like the fall or spring semes­ ter, Turley said. Full-time students during the sum m er take six hours over the entire term. Because he is taking th ree hou rs this su m m er, Turley said he is a part-tim e stu ­ dent. Davis said that according to the UT Student Financial Services poli­ cy, Turley is not a part-time student. "O u r policy has been that the stu­ dent be enrolled at least three hours each session and be enrolled for the w h ole sum m er. H e [Turley] w as “The University shouldn’t be standing in your way of borrowing money.” — Alan Turley, graduate student in sociology enrolled for three hours during one session," Davis said. Turley said, "W e've got an office policy going up against the law." O ffic ia ls the U .S. fro m D ep artm en t of E d u ca tio n called Davis after speaking with Turley. " I told them what our policy was and what our justification was. They said that if you want to require the student to be enrolled in both ses­ sions that that was fine, but maybe your part-time definition was a gray area that we needed to c la r ify ," Davis said. Turley said officials at Student Financial Sendees are using the eli­ gibility technicality to make it diffi­ cult for part-tim e students to get loans. He also said he w as told that it was a "h assle" for Student Financial Services to process all the part-time loans. Davis said, "W hen you are trying to determine what the costs are for a stu d en t b a se d on w hen th e y 're enrolled and their tuition and fees, it is alm o st im p o ssib le to try to m on itor and track w h o 's takin g three hours and w h o's taking six hours for one session or tw o ses­ sio n s, so th e p erso n h as to be enrolled both sessions." D e sp ite th is ru le , T u rle y w as g ran ted th e m on ey w h en he changed his three-hour class during the first session to cover the whole 12-week summer term. " T h e U n iv e rsity sh o u ld n 't be standing in your way of borrowing m o n e y ," T u rle y " T h e University should be making part- time students aware that they can get money and making borrowing a loan easier." said . EVERY WOMAN S CONCERN Confidential, Professional R eproductive C are • Adoption Services • F ree Pregnancy Testing • Problem P regnancy Counseling • Abortion Services _____ Sinco 1978 *11 REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES Board Certified Ob-Gynecologists Licensed Nursing Staff Experienced Counselors On HR Shuttle 458-8274 1009 E. 40th Becom e a member of our winning team! Now taking applications for full or part-time positions. No experience necessary. We'll train you and work with your school schedule. Apply in person:__________ Tuesdav-Saturdav. 9:00-5:00pm 6601 I-35 North, 459-9214 Have you read our classifieds section The Daily Texan Classifieds is the marketplace for products and services of all kinds, lo buy, sell, or trade, it’s the place to look...no matter who you are. THE DAILY TEXAN Classifieds Published daily for a diverse au dience. Call 471-5244 for information. SA, Nofziger to discuss Cap Met Kevin Williamson Daily Texan Staff Stu d en ts' A ssociation m em bers will meet with City Councilmember Max N ofziger M onday to discuss the. p o s s ib ility o f g a in in g a "U niversity-friendly” appointment to the Capital Metro board. SA A tto rn e y G e n e ra l M onem Salam said a U n iv ersity -frien d ly m em ber on the board would pro­ vide the student input needed for the SA to reduce the $3.3 million in fees paid by students to the transit authority. " T h e w ay it is n ow , the on ly information the City Council gets is from C apital M etro ," Salam said. " A U n iv e rsity -frie n d ly m em ber would give the board some actual u n d e rsta n d in g of the s itu a tio n faced by students. Right now, the input is pretty lopsided." The SA previously failed to get an appointment from Councilmember Bob Larson, who has said he sup­ p orts the S A 's p o sitio n , but had already made his appointment. A fter m isco m m u n ica tio n b etw e e n the SA and the C ity Council, SA members were wrong­ ly inform ed that M ayor Pro Tern C h a rle s U rd y held th e o th er appointment. They later learned the a p p o in tm en t is a ctu a lly held by Nofziger. S a la m said a p p o in tm e n ts are often prepared by staff and coun- cilm em bers are often u naw are of who has the appointment. N o fz ig e r's ap p o in tm en t is the SA 's last chance to get an SA-cho- sen candidate on the board, having failed to get one of their candidates appointed by either Larson or the County Commissioners Court, both of whom have expressed support for the SA. But Salam said he is hopeful that Nofziger will select one of the SA's four candidates. "N ofziger has traditionally been a very understanding person for the students at the U n iversity," Salam said. SA P re sid e n t H ow ard N irken said the City CouncT decision will "d rastically affect” the upcom ing ren eg o tia tio n of C ap ital M etro 's contract w ith the U niversity later this year. " I t 's going to be really u p se ttin g if w e d o n 't get th is ap p o in tm en t,” N irken said. "W e make up the majority of the rider- ship. If it wasn't for students, there w ould be a lot of em pty buses in Austin.” T h e SA has b een lo b b y in g to reduce the fee paid by students to Capital Metro by $1.5 million when the contract is renegotiated. Currently, students pay $32 per sem ester to C apital M etro for the shu ttle bus service as w ell as for regular bus routes. H owever, stu­ dents, who make up 53 percent of the company's ridership, pay for 83 percent of the cost of the service, w hile fares paid by ordinary c iti­ zens cover only 12 to 15 percent of the costs. The SA has previously threatened to drop the C apital M etro service and con tract w ith L aidlaw or an independent shuttle service. But the SA has no au th ority to forgo the service because the contract is with th e U n iv e rsity and n o t the SA . Salam said the SA is consid ering other options if the company refus­ es to reduce the fee. "O ne thing we've thought about doing is making the fee optional,” Salam said. "T h a t w ay, students who don't use the shuttle that much won't have to pay so much for it.” ‘Drag’ business survives despite closing of 4 stores ---------------------------------—-----------------------------------------------------------—--------------- Christy Fleming Daily Texan Staff Business on Guadalupe Street has im proved despite the loss of four stores run by prominent chains over the last six m onths, busin essm en said Friday. W h atab u rg er, K in k o 's , T o g o 's and S o m b re ro R osa le ft th e ir Guadalupe locations within the last six m onths. K inko's moved to the Lincoln Village, at 6406 N. 1-35, on June 6. April Demirs, K inko's manager, did not look at the move as pulling out. "W e needed to expand,” she said. "G u a d a lu p e w as too sm all for e x p a n sio n ," said Sam C hapm an, K in k o 's reg ion al m an ag er. " T h e Medical Arts Kinko's could keep up w ith the se rv ice s b eca u se it has more room. We want to be able to offer services for academics and for businesses." David Sands, owner of Longhorn Copies, said space is not a problem for his store. "W e don't need any m ore ex p a n sio n roo m b ecau se w e're com fortab le w ith w hat we have," he said. W h atabu rger, form erly at 2230 Guadalupe St., left the Drag in May. N ick D e e te rs, a sp o k esm a n for Whataburger, said the store's lease ran out. "W e're looking for space to move back in later,” he said. " T h e ch ain relies on d riv e-u p rather than walk-up service," said K en t R ed d in g , a m em b er of University Area Partners, a group of Guadalupe business and commu­ nity organizations, said. • J n . J J ! R ed d in g said W h a ta b u rg e r's leaving was not necessarily nega­ tiv e . " T e n a n ts le a v in g b rin g in stro n g er te n a n ts ," he said. " T h e Gap and Tow er R ecords are su c­ cessful chains. Wallace's has remod­ eled and so has Bevo's. In the past four or five years, I think the Drag has improved.” U n iv e rsity A rea P a rtn e rs h as worked for the past 1 1 / 2 years to clean up the Drag, Redding said. " C le a n in g up S ix th S tre e t is im p o rta n t, b u t w e 're im p o rta n t too,” Redding said. "W e'v e donated four bicycles to the police. W e're waiting to hear about a glass con­ tainer ordinance this summer and a sign ordinan ce. C hu rches, dorm s and fraternities help to clean poles o f flie rs . W e 're w o rk in g w ith A s s is ta n t V ice P re sid e n t for Business Affairs Jerry DeCamp on a kiosk program.” In March 1991, Edmund Wadeson designed a kiosk for the University area. It was knocked down by van­ dals later that same month. The new University kiosks will emerge over the summer. C h riss C oats, m an ager of G-M Steakhouse, said the kiosks proba­ bly would not eliminate fliers on the Drag. Even though it w ill be at least eight years before the Capital Metro lig h t ra il sy stem is ru n n in g , Redding said, Drag businesses are working to limit the size of the sys­ tem to save parking area along the Drag. "W e got them to go from two rails down to one," he said. Officials for Togo's and Sombrero Rosa could not be reached for com­ ment over the weekend. Come To A Free Kaplan Seminar And Get An Education On Getting An MBA. Getting into the right Business School takes a lot more than just getting a high score on the GMAT. It takes knowing what schools are right for you. And knowing the intricacies of the application process. That's why Stanley H. Kaplan created the MBA Seminar. There, you'll learn how to improve your chances of getting into the Business School of your choice. Review actual GMAT questions. And most importantly, you'll learn how to get the highest score on your GMAT by learning the Kaplan method. So reserve your seat today for our next Seminar. And discover how our advanced teaching methods and 50 years of experience can help you plan the next two years of your life. I STANLEY H. KAPLAN Take Kaplan Or TakeYour Chances June 22nd 1-8:30 p.m. R. S. V. P. 472-8085 Page 6 Monday. June 22. T992 STATE & LOCAL Group urges care with summer toxins Jamey Smith Daily Texan Staff C hem icals com m only co n sid ered safe are linked to m any health problem s w hen used abundantly during the sum m er heat, a consum er research group said F riday, w hile urging A ustinites to consider safer alternatives. A s h ly n n W e lls, of th e U .S. P u b lic Interest Research G ro u p 's Texas chapter, w a rn e d th a t m an y h o u se h o ld p ro d u c ts u sed heavily d u rin g the h o ttest m o n th s could be harm ful. " M a n y of u s are th in k in g of h e a lth y outdoor activities, but we m ay actually be exposing ourselves to toxic products that are harm ful to our health," Wells said. In the g ro u p 's report "S um m er Toxic, Som e A re N o t," PIRG identifies h o u se­ h o ld p ro d u c ts su ch as ch arco al lig h te r flu id , la w n f e rtiliz e r, b u g s p ra y s an d sw im m in g p o o l ch em icals as p o te n tia l toxic pollutants. For example, charcoal lighter fluid con­ tains carcinogenic chemicals such as naph­ thalene and benzene, the PIRG said, citing an EPA report. Wells recom m ended letting lighter fluid b u rn off the coal before placing food on c o o k in g o u ts id e . th e g rill w h e n "Em issions from the fluid could get into your food," she said. W arning that self-starting b ran d s con­ tain even m ore chem icals, W ells recom ­ m ended starters w hich spark the charcoal w ithout fluid. A m m o n ia-b ased law n fe rtiliz e rs an d pesticides containing Diazinon are poten­ tia lly ca n c e r-c a u sin g , ac co rd in g to the re searc h g ro u p . W ells su g g e ste d u sin g organic fertilizer to sp u r grow th and over­ seeding the grass to keep w eeds in check. M a n y in s e c t r e p e lle n ts c o n ta in th e chemical DEET, w hich has caused convul­ sions and unconsciousness, Wells said. "G re a t altern ativ e s are citronella and eucalyptus-based products," she said, and noted that there are sim ilar herbal alterna­ tives to tick and flea sprays and collars for pets. Wells said sw im m ing pool chemicals — such as chlorine and m uriatic acid — can cause lung and cardiopulm onary dam age and severe skin irritation. Statistics from A m erican poison control centers cited in the report list 5,000 poisonings from pool chemicals in the U.S. in 1990. O ne alternative, Wells said, is a fairly new system that uses ultraviolet light to kill b a c te ria an d alg ae. " T h e s e c a n be expensive, b u t they'll pay for them selves in the long ru n if you're using less chemi­ cals," she said. PIRG su p p o rts legislation that w o u ld p h a se out h a z a rd o u s chem icals in con­ sum er products and require m ore labeling of toxic ingredients. A line of their own Hopeful moviegoers lined up outside of Half-Price Books, 3110 Guadalupe St., Saturday morning in hopes of getting sneak preview Geena Davis and Madonna and directed by Penny Marsha . tickets to the movie A League their Own, starring Tom Hanks, Jeane Wong/Daily Texan Staff Juneteenth parade proposes unity, change Doug Anderson Daily Texan Staff T h o u san d s of A u stin ite s p a rtic ip a te d in the 17th annual Juneteenth celebration Friday w ith a parade dow n M artin L uther King jr. Boulevard that ended w ith a festival in Rosewood Park. On June 19, 1865, U nion Gen. G ordon G ranger a rriv e d in G a lv e s to n b e a rin g th e 2 -y e a r-o ld Em ancipation Proclam ation. T hat day, which has b ec o m e k n o w n as J u n e te e n th , is c e le b ra te d statew ide as the day slavery ended in Texas. Ben Bloom, UT special education senior, said, "This is a very im portant d ay for all Texans. It rem inds us w hat has been accom plished and also that w e have a long w ay to go. A lthough blacks are technically free, economically and politically, they are not free. The w hite-dom inated system has not allow ed them to be free. "I am disappointed that the w hite com m unity did not turn o u t for this," Bloom added. M ae M a rrio n , c h a ir w o m a n of th e B lack W om en's Political Caucus, said she questions the p ro g re s s of fre e d o m since th e E m a n c ip a tio n Proclamation. "I d o n 't feel like I'm free. Some of the things that h ap p e n ed w ith slavery still h ap p e n today. We d o n 't feel welcome. We are still behind and are the last people to get things. We are still liv­ ing across the railroad tracks," M arrion said. B oth B loom a n d M a rrio n s a id th e p a r a d e offered great potential to unite people for change. "E v ery o n e m u st be p o litically involved and “I am disappointed that the white community did not turn out for this.” —Ben Bloom, UT special education senior know the issues in order to save the com m unity," M arrion said. L ater in the d ay , ce leb ran ts gath ered at the Rosewood Pavilion for songs, prayers, speeches and poetry. M ayor Pro Tern Charles U rdy said, "All of us k n o w w h y w e are h ere to d a y . W e m u st tak e advantage of all th at Juneteenth stands for and vote so th a t East A u stin com es first this tim e. Juneteenth is all about East Austin. N elda W ells-Spears, T ravis C ounty tax asses- sor-collector, delivered the keynote address. "Blacks are survivors ... b u t today our survival is threatened by drugs, increasing violence and a suffocating sense of helplessness, W ells-Spears said. "W e, as blacks, m ust organize to chart a course for the future," she said. "W e m ust come togeth­ er in our hom es, churches, schools and the ballot box. We m ust continually ask ourselves w h at we can do to m ake the w orld a better place for the least of its m em bers." M any people attending the parade had mixed reactions to increased security for the event. A heightened police presence included a fence su r­ rounding Rosewood Park and m etal detectors at the entrance. L ast y e a r 's J u n e te e n th c e le b ra tio n s e n d e d a b r u p tly afte r an o u tb re a k of s h o o tin g s th a t injured four people. UT sociology senior K erensa Berry, a form er M iss Juneteenth, said it w as unfortunate one past incident of violence w ould m andate fences and security that perpetuate "th e negative im age that blacks aren 't controllable and need a paternalistic authority to celebrate." Demetria Batts, a parade observer, said, "A ny tim e a lot of black people get together, the police always w orry that there will be danger. This idea is so m ew h at d isc rim in a to ry since it says th at only black people com m it crimes." Justin M artin said, "T he m edia is w aiting for u s to m ess up. "A lthough the reputation of black violence is a nam e w e have sadly lived up to, w e need to stop th is a n g e r th a t stem s fro m o v e r 300 y e a rs of o p p re ssio n ," said M artin, an o rg a n iz er of the Texas State Conference on Black Males that was held Friday and Saturday. A lg e re n e C ra ig , w h o h a s liv e d o n th e Ju n etee n th p a ra d e ro u te for 50 years, said the ev e n ts la s t y e a r fa ile d to p re v e n t th is y e a r s parade from attracting one of the largest crow ds she has ever seen. "T his is a g re at d a y for all of us. This is an activity that inform s the young and old to appre­ ciate their heritage," Craig said. Drag racing accident leaves 3 hurt, 1 seriously Miguel M. Salinas Daily Texan Staff T h re e p e o p le w e re in ju re d Sunday afternoon after a drag race e n d e d w h e n o n e ca r, u n a b le to stop for a red light, struck another c a r e n te r in g th e in te rs e c tio n , police said. A red Toyota Célica and a red Iroc Z w e re tra v e lin g s o u th on Bastrop H ighw ay at speeds of up to 85 m ile s p e r h o u r w h e n th e Toyota w as unable to stop at the V a rg a s R o ad in te r s e c tio n a n d stru ck a car h ea d in g east, police officer Bill K ennedy said. Robert Garcia, 23, of 6200 Lotus L an e , th e d r iv e r o f th e b ro w n N is s a n S ta n za th a t w a s s tru c k , w a s in s e r io u s c o n d itio n la te S u n d a y e v e n in g w ith i n te r n a l injuries, a fractured pelvis and left leg a n d facial la c e ra tio n s , sa id L a rry B eS aw , s p o k e s m a n fo r Brackenridge Hospital. T h e d r iv e r of th e T o y o ta , M itc h e ll J o h n s o n , 20, o f 6702 S h a n n o n D riv e , a n d p a s s e n g e r M ichelle R o d rig u ez, 19, of 3201 H ills id e in R o u n d R ock, w e re treated for m inor injuries and dis­ charged, BeSaw said. Kennedy said, "They were both dearly lucky." Johnnie Miller, 25, the driver of the Iroc Z, w as uninjured. W itn e s s e s r e p o r te d th a t th e T oyota an d Iroc Z w ere racin g , K e n n e d y s a id , a n d a d d e d th a t sk id m a rk s u p to 160 feet long were found at the scene. "Based on the physical evidence we h av e on the g ro u n d w ith the skid m arks, and the statem ents of the w itnesses, we will be [charging the driver of the Toyota with] fail­ in g to s to p a t a re d l i g h t," Kennedy said. " A s far a s th e Iro c Z is co n ­ c e rn e d , I m a y ch arg e ra c in g on him ," he added Both offenses are Class C m isde­ m eanors punishable by a fine, he said. M iller sa id , " If y o u g o t a red car, everybody w ants to race you. It ain 't w orth it no m ore." Miller said he did not know the driver of the Toyota. Austin man drowns near Lake Travis cliffs H e a t a n d f a tig u e c a u s e d th e d r o w n in g £>f an A u s tin m a n in Lake Travis, officials said Sunday. T he b o d y of R o d n e y E u g e n e S te e n , 25, of 6513 G re e n s b o ro Drive, w as recovered Sunday after­ n o o n a f te r an h o u r a n d a h a lf search, w hich was hindered by the darkness and depth of Lake Travis, T ra v is C o u n ty S h e riff's D e p u ty C raig H utchinson said. Steen w as sw im m ing in the lake n e a r th e c liffs b e tw e e n Tom H u g h es Park and H ipp ie H ollow w hen he d ro w n ed w hile help in g some children out of the w ater, he said. " T h ere 's a p re tty good c u rren t up against the rocks and about 10 feet off of the edge of the rocks, it d ro p s to a 120 fo o t d e p t h ," H u tch in so n said. " T h e th eo ry at th is p o in t is th a t h e w as s w im ­ ming, got tired, and a com bination of the heat an d helping the other k id s o u t of th e w a te r, h e g o t fatigued and w ent under." Woman hurt in jet ski crash A H ouston w om an w as in criti­ cal condition late Sunday after los­ ing control of a jet ski and crashing in to a p ark ed b o a t at a L akew ay dock, officials said. Lucrecia Saldana, 30, w as airlift­ e d b y S ta rF lig h t h e lic o p te r to B rack en rid g e H o s p ita l from the Texas Flagship M arina after suffer­ in g ch e st in ju rie s , sa id h o sp ita l spokesm an Larry BeSaw. Compiled by Miguel M. Salinas and Doug Anderson, Daily Texan Staff Local woman missing since Thursday Miguel M. Salinas Daily Texan Staff All the facts in the case of an Austin w om an m issing s in c e T h u r s d a y p o in t to k id n a p p in g , p o lic e s a id Sunday. Tracy Parsons, 22, w as reported missing by her m oth­ er Friday after failing to show up for w o rk T hursday m orning, Sgt. Robert Pewitt said. Parsons' m other called police after a m anager at the S am 's C lub w h e re h er d a u g h te r w o rk s, at 10601 N. Lam ar Blvd., called her and said Parsons had not been to work, Pewitt said. "W e d o n 't have anything for sure right now that it s a kidnapping," Pewitt said. "W e're treating this is a miss­ ing adult case." # n "B ut the facts are pointing tow ard kidnapping, he added. Parson's red Jeep pickup w as found in the front park­ ing lot of the Sam 's C lub w ith her lunch an d w allet locked inside, Pew itt said. Parsons w as last seen by her room m ate before leav­ ing for w ork shortly before 4:30 a.m. Thursday. She w as probably taken from her vehicle or near the front door of the sto re b e tw e e n 4:30 a.m ., w h e n she p ro b a b ly arrived at work, and 4:45 a.m., w hen another em ployee arrived, Pew itt said. Parsons is 5 feet 2 inches tall and w eighs 120 pounds. She has light brow n hair and blue eyes, Pewitt said. EXAM CONTACTS arting at $99* Complete ice includes exam, 1 pair clear daily- ir soft contacts, care kit, dispensing ructions, 1 st follow up. PIRES JULY 31,1992. WTTH COUPON ONLY. NOT VAUD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. \ustin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT ,F 477-2282 SAT 3-6 M/C VISA AMX DISC 10-2 OUT OF SIGHT OUT OF MIND keep your business where you w ant it, on y o u r customers' minds retail advertising 4 7 1 - 1 8 6 5 472-FAST Buy Any Pizza, Receive A 12” Cheese Pizza for $2. OFFER MAY EXPIRE WITHOUT NOTICE , VALID WITH ALL OTHER OFFERS.___________ YOUR Term papers copied while you wait. Bound with your choice of covers. Priced low. Dobie Mall. 7 days a week. Monday through Thursday til midnight. 476-9171. Printing • Copying Register for Summer Session II classes by telephone me 22-27-ACCESS Registration for: • Current and former students (no holds) • New Students (applied by June 12) e sure the Admissions Office has your current address, register from any touch-tone phone, no bills rill be mailed, pay in person only at the District Offices June 22-30 from 9:00 am-4:00 pm to complete •eistration. For details see the ACC Summer 1992 Course Schedule-available at any ACC location or bookstore. Why Choose ACC? * I got all classes when / needed them registering by ACCESS telephone registration. You can't do that at some larger schools. A t ACC I get the classes I want. Kristy Keagan SMU transfer to ACC soon to transfer to UT Ar t s & e n t e r t a in m e n t Pfeiffer’s catty character saves Batman’s return Till I) xiia Tf.xw Monday. June 22. 1992 Page 7 Eric Rasmussen and Christy Fleming Daily Texan Staff Probably the most dis­ appointing thing about Tim Burton's 1989 ver­ sion of Batman was that it su g g ested so m uch and said so little about its m ain character. The bat ca r, the b at ca v e, various bat effects, and finally Jack N icholson's Jo k e r c o m p le te ly o v ersh a d o w ed p oo r Michael Keaton and the supposed duality of Batman's nature. Like its predecessor, Batman Returns is too loud and too long. All the explosions and crashes in the film nearly wreck the damn thing. The film also has too many charac­ ters, a bad thing, once again, when after all, we need to focus on Batman. One of these, however, Catwoman, is a good enough rea­ son to see the film. Once again, the villain outdoes the hero. While Keaton dons a new-and-improved laser-fitted batsuit and sulks around in the b ack g ro u n d as B ru ce W ay n e, M ich elle Pfeiffer prances around as Selina Kyle, over­ worked, servile secretary turned Catwoman and love interest to Batman. Danny DeVito waddles around as the overweight Penguin tu rn ed se w e r crim e b o ss. C h risto p h e r Walken enters as Max Shreck, the business- man-developer with sinister motives. The Penguin, who has hidden underneath the city zoo with the penguins since child­ hood, becomes a local hero after saving the m a y o r's in fa n t from a k id n a p p in g . He emerges from the sewer, looking for his par­ e n ts, w ho ab a n d o n ed h im in in fa n cy . Shreck, who wants to build an energy-suck­ ing power plant, schemes to get the Penguin elected mayor to okay the project. Each new plot twist gets lost in another, and som e d isap p ear co m p letely as new ones replace them. By the end, you want to hit rewind just to figure out where the tran­ sition started. A ll of th ese plots m igh t have created three different first-rate films, but there is not enough character development in this BATMAN RETURNS Director: Tim Burton Starring: Michael Keaton, Danny DeVito and Michelle Pfeiffer Playing at: Arbor 7, Riverside, Barton Creek, Highland and Northcross Rating: ★ ★V2 one movie to understand their true motives. On the plus side, Burton's dark direction and Danny Elfm an's beautifully produced dark m usic m eld seam lessly w ith those grim, gray buildings and statues reminis­ cent of Soviet proletariat monuments. DeVito, of course, seems like the most obvious ch oice in the w orld to play the Penguin. H e's diminutive. And he quacks. But, as longtime Taxi fans know, DeVito's number one asset is his body language. The m an d o e s n 't ju st em ote - he d an ces and w iggles. He suggests lew d ness and longing simply by waving his little fingers. The bulky Penguin costume, however, bare­ ly allows him to walk. P feiffer's ex cellen t S e lin a/C atw o m a n , however, becom es a complex character of Trumpeter Guerrero jazzes up adult contemporary pop music Eric Rasmussen Daily Texan Staff JAZZ * In the late 1980s, an interesting phe­ nomenon occurred in popular music. The baby boomer generation grew up - and kept buying m usic. A ll of a sudden, new classic rock radio sta­ tions sprang up, and VH1 hit pay dirt with "m ature" rock and pop. Some of the mellowing flower children, how­ ever, found them selves lured to the sophistication of jazz. Where rock 'n' roll often stressed amateur passion, jazz stressed virtuosi­ ty - but both forms soon required that their artists mix different musical styles (as well as catchy tunes) to make pop hits. Hence, in recent years, artists like saxophonist Kenny G have found a niche, and new adult contempo­ rary music has taken off. IT T T ^ Trum peter Tony G uerrero has found inspiration in m ixing pop elem ents in to his jazz bag. A su ccessfu l writer and producer at age 26, Guerrero prefers the term "adult contemporary instrumental" for his music, and to date, he has pitted his form idable flugelhorn against rock, Latin and conjunto beats on three albums. He cites influences ranging from Chuck Mangione (his idol) to Jimi Hendrix and Led Zeppelin. Yet Guerrero's lineup changes and dedication to spontaneity reflect his jazz sensibility. "I try to make each album with the musicians I'm tour­ ing with at the time," says Guerrero. "People move on. With new musicians, the music kind of goes through a metamorphosis." Guerrero began honing his craft in a high school jazz band in Southern California, teaching himself to play sev­ eral instruments including keyboards and guitar. When the director who began the jazz program left, Guerrero asked if he could take over as the band's director. The musician plunged into the professional world by scoring advertisements, independent films and television w hile also playing clu bs. By age 23, he had alread y released two albums. With professionalism, however, comes more pragmatic concerns of getting the music across to a mass audience. "Some musicians are picky and want to play the music note for note how it appears on the album ," he says. "People don't want to pay $20 to hear the album. This is the creative end - it's got to be creative every time." He points out that adult contem porary's new found Cosh & Cany 2 DOZEN ROSES $ 1 8 .9 5 Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 -OB91 FTD • 4501 Qu»d»iup4 • On UT Shuttle Rt. D a ily S p e c ia ls NOMADIC NOTIONS 1118 W e s t S ixth 4 7 8 - 6 2 0 0 Tony Guerrero blends pop and jazz for Inspiration. popularity has created new m onetary dem ands that threaten originality. "The market my music has been put into is so money- controlled," he says. "Nova [Guerrero's record company] has been good to me so far. With the first three records nobody was telling me what to do. To be honest, that's changing. They need money to stay afloat. I've actually had producers telling me that my next album should be a saxophone album. Which m ikes no sense at all because I'm a trumpet player. "T h e m ost freedom right now is in college under ground m usic and rap because I think those musicians don't care about the money. That's healthy. That's where you find the m ost cre a tiv ity . Jazz is ja z z , but even Wynton [Marsalis] is going back to the older stuff - the New Orleans sound. I love that stuff, but as far as being creative... " Guerrero plans to release his next album this summer, after a short tour. "I'm currently listening to Beethoven's symphonies," he says. "The radio in my house is set for classical. The radio in my car is set for classic rock." TONY GUERRERO Playing at: Top of the Marc Date: Monday * DOZEN ROSES $ 8 .9 5 Cash & Carry F ie s t a F lo w e r s 3830 N. Lamar 453-7619 Danny DeVito and Michelle Pfeiffer play cat and penguin games in Batman Returns. the sort we want in Batman. She isn't neces­ sarily evil, but she craves an alternate iden­ tity and transforms herself into Catwoman w ithout understanding why. Her plunge into the life of crime is her way of saying, "I won't be denied!" The Catw om an's inner conflict actually helps us understand Batman for the first time. Finally, character takes precedence over personality (Jack N icholson's strong point) when it com es time to take off the masks. M A R Q U E E SLEAZEMANIA Nope, Legend’s Johnny Sleazemania: The Midnight Edition is not for everybody. Prudes defi­ nitely need not apply. One thing this movie’s bound to get out of you is a reaction. One troubled soul, upon con­ cluding the film, simply spouted out, “What the hell was that?” and walked out of the theater in exas­ peration. But for those who appreciate this sort of thing - the tasteless, the tacky, the shamelessly prurient - this movie delivers in spades. Legend has more or less cleverly compiled a string of movie trailers and theater announcement clips covering several decades of the most exploitational, crude and naughty films made in America. As a sort of warm-up, the ani­ mated short The Devil's Ball opens the show with flyin g dem ons, ogres, grotesque creatures and animals at a celebration of the damned. The crude but effective anim ation adds to the chaotic, infernal scenes of monsters and living dishes, all inexorably being thrust into perdition by a crafty satanic figure. The bizarre images recall the work of Bosch, and the quirky movements and cartoonish violence make them more disturb­ ing. This is Looney Tunes in hell. Then it’s on to the real filth. The clips come fast and furious, with nary a sexual hang-up or per­ version left unturned. With titillating advertisements from such gems as The Sheik of Araby, The Flesh M erchant and Jailbait, Legend aims for the groin and flashes more nubile flesh than a stag party. In fact Sleazemania would make the perfect film for one of those drunken, chauvinist nights with the boys. But there’s something else at work here. Seemingly pointless and frothy, Legend’s compilation in fact turns out to be a fascinating (if o verblo w n ) of America’s sexual taboos, a catalog of the uncaged id. exploration Inadvertantly or not, Legend pro­ vides a crude sociological cross- section of America’s perversions over the years, from ’40s penny arcade films of buxom pool bun­ nies to the ’70s pornographic excess of Midnight Plowboy. What do all these tacky snippets of smut tell us about the culture that pro­ duced them? A lot, for those who can stand it. We learn that Americans are both terrified and spellbound by sex. We learn that, despite the social taboos erected against them, people crave and seek out such forbidden topics as transexu- alism (I Changed my Sex!), trans­ vestism (Glen or Glenda?) and bestiality (any film set in the Third World). if nothing Women will not appreciate the obligatory exploitation of their bod­ ies. But else, Sleazemania provides an interest­ ing way to see the growth rings of our sick and sorry sexual culture at its lowest form. Don’t bring your m other, but an open mind w ill help.(*-^) —Joe Alaniz THE FAVOR, THE WATCH, AND THE VERY BIG FISH It’s enough to make you scream. Bob Hoskins and N atasha Richardson are completely wasted in The Favor, The Watch, and The Very Big Fish. It’s an inept muddle of a film. At first, you'll find the earmarks of your standard, linear, British come­ dy - but then the plot takes a waf­ fling, oafish turn; and instead of tea and satire, you get lumpy-bumpy oatmeal. Louis Abinard (Bob Hoskins) photographs devotional scenes for a living, but he's generally miser­ able. He can’t seem to find the per­ fect Jesus to photograph. A chance encounter with an aspiring actress named Sybil (Natasha Richardson) during a sound taping for a porno film turns his life around. A brief scene of aural sex keeps the ball rolling until the plot comes to a sickening, grinding halt with a superfluous shopping spree. You see, she’s got this dying grandpa, and her boyfriend (Jeff Goldblum) is getting out of jail tomorrow so she needs a new dress. One day Louis' boss demands a photo of Jesus ASAP. Louis protests that he hasn’t found the perfect model for his work, when lo and behold, a bedraggled figure peers through the studio window. It’s Jesus, or Franz Schubert, or someone - but he does look the part of the Christian savior. The awful script and mawkish direction hamper Goldblum’s lively perfor­ mance. You can almost feel his teeth grate in a few scenes. a It’s letdown, seeing Richardson stoop to playing a stereotypical scheming woman. She usually plays a fin e line between fragility and power, com­ bining grace with taut strength. Perhaps she was fooled into par­ ticipating in this shallow waste of time and money. There’s a nice little twist at the end, and a few funny moments, but on the whole, The Favor, The Watch, and The Very Big Fish fal- ters.(-*”* ) — Courtney DeGinder * "SPLENDID... EXHILARATING...* TREAT.* A ll the I Yfermeersl in NewYxkl 2:15 - 4 30 - 7 .25 - 9 40 SLEAZEMANIA 1200 Sandra Bernhard--------- Without You I'm Nothing S ( I I I 11:45 2t« 4 QuMMt** 477 1324 imwmUL moucm PtOVOUfcWH* M O N S TE R IN A B O X v CH M 4:45-7:20 -9:30 BUY, SELL, R E N T , TRADE... WANT ADS...471 -5 244 SUMMER SOLSTICE SHOW DOORS 4:00 pG¿ c A MUSIC 8:00 SOUL HAT JOE ROCKHEAD LITTLE SISTER CURIOUS GEORGE JOEY LARGO THE WORD IS OUT! MORE LONGHORNS EAT AT CONANS THAN ANYWHERE ELSE. Why, because at Conans, you can en|oy the best whole wheat Deep pan pizza in AUSTIN, and the FASTEST LUNCH ON THE DRAG! , Try our slice and soda special o n ly $2.00, o r o u r ALL-U- CAN eat dinner buffet. Th 5:30-8:30 $4*69 onans p/zzA C hicago StyhS. D eep Pan 2606 Guadalupe 476-1981 .es H t e — O pen M o n .-S at. Until 1:30 at night 24th & San Antonio PRESIDIO THEATRES WE RE BIG ON BARGAINS 1 WOW! NEW PRICES AT THE VILLAGE! YES, FOLKS. That's right! Now students pay only $4.00 w/ID - Bargain matinees until 6:00 pm $3.00 - Children and seniors $3.00 - and only $5.00 for adult admission! wrtM v a l i d sT u o e K fj.D . 3 RIVERSIDE 8 IN RIVERSIDE MALL 448-0008 BATMAN RETURNS (p g i3> 1:30 4 15 7 00 9 45 BATMAN RETURNS (PG13) 11 45 2.30 5:15 7:50 10:30----------- HOUSESITTER (p g ) 12:453:00 5:30 8 :0 0 1 0 05 PATRIOT GAMES (R) 2:00 4:45 7:15 9:55_______ SISTER ACT (PG13) .2:15 3:00 5 30 8:05 10.05 LETHAL WEAPON II 2:00 4:45 7:15 9.55 CLASS ACT (PG13) 12:15 3:00 5:30 8:15 10:30 FAR AND AWAY (PG13) ,4:Q5 SL5fl_ ACES; IRON EAGLE III 2 00 7:15 (R) no pass/ k lb j SMART STEREO NO PASS/KLBJ SMART STEREO SMART STEREO NO PASS/KLBJ SMART STEREQ SMART STERL0 NO PASSES/KLBJ SMART STEREO. SMARtSTEREO SMART STEREO SMART STEREO VILLAGE CINEMA 2700 ANDERSON VOICES FROM THE FRONT (u r ) 12.20 2:40 5:10 7:40 9i50------------------------------ - PROOF (R) 451-8352 DELICATESSEN (R) 12:40 2:50 5:20 8 .0 0 1SL15_____ — DOLBY SIEBEQ RAISE THE RED LANTERN mm ^OUjmTEREi! ! Crossword E d i t e d b y E u g e n e T . M a le s k a No. 0 511 A C R O S S 1 “ N o th in ' Like 26 F o s s e 's 1 9 7 2 O s c a r film 30 Drat! 61 G e rm a n s u b of W W . I 59 S e c u rity folk i— re— rc 32 P ie m o d e 64 M o v ie c a n in e 33 E rra n d ru n n e r 65 G ra m p s , to Page 8 Monday, June 2 2 ,1 9 9 2 I HE D A IL Y I EX AN a r o u n d c a m p u s A ro u n d C am p u s is a d a ily col­ u m n l i s ti n g U n iv e r s ity - r e la te d activ ities sp o n so re d by academ ic d ep artm en ts, stu d e n t services and s tu d e n t o rg a n iz a tio n s re g is te re d w ith the C am pus A ctivities Office. A n n o u n c e m e n ts m u st be s u b m it­ ted on the p ro p e r form by 11 a.m. the d ay before p u b licatio n . Forms are a v a ila b le at th e D a i l y Texan o ffic e, lo c a te d at 25th S tre e t and W hitis A venue. 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 edit subm issions. MEETINGS T h e L o n g h o rn J u m p in g T eam w ill m e e t T u e s d a y at 9 p .m . in Burdine 130. For m ore inform ation, call M ark at 442-5642. T he Pagan S tu d en t A lliance will m e e t M o n d a y a t 7:30 p .m . in Education Building 416. T h e U n iv e r s ity T a e K w o n Do C lu b w ill m e e t M o n d a y a n d W ednesday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in L. Theo Bellmont Hall 502A. T h e U n iv e rs ity Yoga C lu b w ill m eet M o n d ay from 5:30 p.m . to 7 p.m. in the Texas U nion Eastwoods R oom . P a rtic ip a n ts s h o u ld w e a r comfortable clothes and not eat two hours prior to the m eeting. CLASSES The Program for R ape Education offers e d u c a tio n a l w o rk s h o p s for any U T s tu d e n ts . T he free w o rk ­ sh o p s e m p h a siz e c o m m u n ic a tio n skills to prev ent acquaintance rape and can be presented at the conve­ n ie n c e of in te r e s te d g ro u p s . For m ore details, call Jam ie S h u tter at 471-6252. OTHER T h e D ep artm en t of A stronom y will hold a public telescope view'ing Monday from 9 p.m . to 10 p.m . in Painter HaU O bservatory. T he D e p artm en t of P sychology is co nductin g a p rem en stru al syn­ drom e study. W omen ages 18 to 45 su ffe rin g from PMS can call 474- 5625 for m ore inform ation on this three-m onth study. S tu d e n t V o lu n te e r S e rv ic e s needs stu d en ts or com m unity resi­ dents at an Austin-based adult e d u ­ cation program to act as volun teer tutors for adults or youths seeking academ ic re m e d ia tio n or lite ra c y training. For m ore inform ation, call 471-3065. S tu d e n t V o lu n te e r S e rv ic e s needs male role m odels, preferably African-American, to establish rela­ tionships w ith youths in a residen­ tial hom e for violent offenders. The tw ice m onthly, w eekend visits are two to three hours long and closely superv ised. For m ore inform ation, call 471-3065. Q /P le ^ r ic ^ te á ' o J ? O s t o w u y M ' O t O ' ¿ f 6 N ile m e n a c e s 10 S e lv e s , to F re u d 14 O v id o r C a e s a r 15 S ta d iu m in Q u e e n s 16 W e t n erd ? 17 A b s a lo m , to J e s s e 19 F es tiv e 20 Fall b lo s s o m 21 B lu sh e d 23 S co ttish explorer 24 E n d: C o m b , form 25 H .S .T .’s successor 36 J a rg o n 39 E ar p art 41 S tre is a n d film : 1 9 8 3 4 3 P a g a n g o d 44 P h ilip p in e is la n d 46 M o o n g o d d e s s 47 L ife -fo rc e initials 4 8 S c ra m ! so D e c k e d out 5 3 " B lu e ? ” 1 9 2 9 s o n g 55 Y ield 58 Staff TT w 39 44 53 59 64 66 71 J u n io r's b a b y ? 68 S h a rp 69 N o t on tim e 70 Fit for d u c k s 71 M is s e s th e m a rk 72 O g le s 73 T ra c e DOWN 1 B u e n o s A ires is its c a p . 2 D ic k e n s c h a ra c te r 3 Y o u love, to O v id 4 T M w o rd or fo rm u la 6 K in d of tray 7 P lu n g e r’s lo ss 8 M a rtin iq u e v o lc a n o 9 S e a t for R oy 60 54 ■ I ANSWER TO PREV IO U S PUZZLE 5 M a k e b e lo v e d C t u m c l u b ALFRED'S PREAm OF B^comiNG fi Pr o fe ss io n a l Htf-rnRN SHORT mom uOHGhl Hie fo JN D o JT . t T o p p ^ v Ct ft £ e M o *- ** ~T T IX J M fT p 1 PUFWQ... NAfc,ALLKKáVVJ- . t 't 's fAOSTty M y FAULT, (t> w A m N tAtvyuf: VTV $ ¡ ñ & o í r t 6 1 t J a n h n s ' W o k e n ,VAfS) WKjOINt /C H lC K ^ ir A Op NoRTri \ \ foR THE t í o víaY • That’s col p.1 u Ü YA. \T IS A BIT COOLfcR OP YRFkF- YoO VCtJoW H E'S Fofc A s q u e e z e . C I'M Torn! F o r A np H ow \ ) >VAAfi- W t l l ,T H tS \S us bo'MH- U T S JbW-J fUic- W eutTo B t F F ? ? G E T V o u R S OVER MeRF ! VotA'T Be A wuss! Loue \S PETRI M E N T A L ,FoR ASPVRtNG MUS\- ClANS? oi^Vn* 28 R o le for g ra n d m a ? 4 9 S h e w a s M iss 56 P u t off M a rk e r 57 M o m ’s kin 29 F ar E a s t w e ig h t 51 A cto r R e d fo rd 60 M a k e s R o g e rs 31 T h e G re a te s t 10 A d v a n ta g e 34 W ild e b e e s t 11 P o p ’s p o p 35 V o lc a n o in 12 L u b ric a te d 13 G a rd e n to o l 18 C a u s in g g o o s e p im p le s 22 B a rk e rs 26 P h o n e 27 Lily p lan t 37 “ of y o u r Sicily lip !” 38 D e lig h te d 4 0 C o u s in of et al. 4 2 L a m b a s te 4 5 E v e ry ’s p a rtn e r 52 Title of re v e re n c e to H e b re w s 53 Alert 54 R a d ia tio n d e v ic e p re s e rv e s 62 N e a t as 63 Z es t 66 N o d ’S s ig n ific a n c e 67 C a u s tic Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 5656 (75c each minute). D oonesbury b y g a r r y t r u d e a u HU I ’M ROLAND HEDL5Y, ANPTM ON THE- ROAD! TODAY PUE'RE VISITING AN AMAZING COUNTRY! A COUNTRY THAT IN SOME- RESPECTS IS JUST LIKE OUR OWN! Need «i |)I(H (* !o live? Kead Ihe le v in ( '.lassilieds. carl greenblatt / llave «in apartmenl lo i('nI Y ( «ill Hie Texan C lassilieds. Need a job? Ke.ul the Texan Classifieds. Need lo sell a ( ar? You gel the hint?? I se I lie D.iTK le \.in ' ( lassilieds II s Y (H 1K newspaper! I or H ilrrrtN u y niloniiiitioii Gill: 471-5244 i n n L J BY MARC TRU1IUO rTS A SPECIAL RACE WHERE PEOPLE • ■ OWN 2 3 VCRS PER HOME, ■ APPROVE OF LIPOSUCTION, ■ CANT GET ENOUGH POPCORN. - ~ ^ YES, ITS... ... USA TODAY!* \ WHERE A WHOPPING 83% OF US RARELY beets! I jrfcAC 7/5% ~ y l r r ^ TIP OFF __ /> h u y c 2 f . o. S273Q0 ^ ------ ^ Salad bars 8 Wyoming ® 1 1 No v é TAIES FROM THS LAND OF P1ENTY SAY MISTER, I ’LL LET YOU s l a p m e fop a q u a r t e r O K A \ . HERE KtO. qov >.ii irütt- 1S i **'■. MF fed A (gte.uO. * 14 «Ti MBÉ.SAtf6,rWFjC«W«vJ' StAiíS ro w CAS. < WMitU wfti.ACMit'. fcQLH toMLQ OH T*e wACMti 4.«p(.<* XML Z vJ h K <&■ «.f i^FolVAep *e *wr ^ Iluten W HAVE MS CAR lWt0 ^ ms SK- *£R/4P ro ter Me 1 a «go secAMe (UrtHfX. a S h t S ? r -«PiEt? rb t*.r tHro My car , jwYic SRC ReAUieOtlVAS TRVlMirTO PilSP MS ch£Q<0oo* rr AU. ?etMB7Awwas Agic«RD, Sor HOgoW UAS LAUW4IKÍ» .. WHAT KTT >*i «efrS . T uieiAu-Yfoftteo r * e r o u a/ mH \Jf J 15 - UJ» U M X PiP.LJiYM -rue weu’of ms rttoJOsíúcíw^Mwir.O- Yo AV»iO 0eiW(, -rwweo.eycw rnovdrts T«e W0EOovjT t> E A cr\H ^ X o o u p I j u s t ' C A o s e TR O uqR T XOU OWED ttF . i By S h an n o n U lh e e le r ¿ 5 W a k / a * * * * * * * w pmwijTHE F U S C O B R O T H E R S by J.C. Duffy — c RCLIEVE THflT THE f a m il y t h a t d a t e s « i onbes T n r . g T H E W . h a l e - B o n d s — ¡BUL T O G E S t i E R - T t A l H f l T l I U l E B g L l E V E T T H f f T T t i e T*s ITM* ''•a V«-6 fR*T«OT»6M comic strip It . harrison) c J r 1 \ CHIl DR k L r/. 1 TH E D AILY TEXAN Monday, June 22, “i 992 Page 9 TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS TO PLACE A WORD OR LINE AD CALL: 8 :0 0 -5 :-0 0 /Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 CLASSIFICATIONS — DEADLINE: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 CLASSIFIED WORD AD* RATES Charged by the word. Based on a word 15 minimum — the following rates apply: $6.15 1 day................................................ 2 days............................................................. $11.70 3 days............................................................. $16.65 4 days......................................................... ,...$20.40 5 days............................................................. $23.25 First two words may be all capital letters. 25c for each additional word in capital letters. MasterCard and Visa accepted. -----------------------------C l a s s i f i e d DISPLAY AD* RATES_______ ‘ Charged by the column inch. One column inch mini­ mum. A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available. Fall rates Sept. 1 -May 30. 1 to 21 column inches per month. $9.20 per col. inch Over 21 column inches per month. Call for rates. TR A N SPO RTA TIO N 10 — Mtac Auto* 20 — 8port*-Foangn Auto* 3 0 — T ru ck» -V *n * 4 0 — V *M ct*« to T ra d * 50 — &*rvio*-R*p*ir 60 — Part*-Acce*»one* 7 0 — M o torcycto * 60 — B icycle * 90 — Vehtoto Laawog 100 — Vehicle* Wanted REAL ESTATE SA LES 110 — S*tvtc** 1 2 0 — Ho u m * 130 — Coodo*-Townhou**« 140 — Mob»* Hom**-Lot* 150 — Acreage-Lot* 1 6 0 — D u p t* » * * - Ap*rtm*nt* 1 70 — W * n t* d 1 6 0 — Loan* M E R C H A N D IS E 190 — Appliance* 200 — Fumttur*-Hou**boW 210 — S t*r*o T V 2 2 0 — Computer*- E qu ip m a nt 230 — Photo-C*m *r** 2 4 0 — Boat* 250 — Musical ln*trum«nts 260 — Hofcbtoe 2 70— MaeN«Ky- E0mpm*nrt 280 — Sportng-Campmg Equipment 290 — Fvmituw-Applianca R *ntai 300 — Garage-Rummage Sal** 310 — Trad* 320 — W arttd lo Buy M E R C H A N D IS E 330 — Pet* 340 — Longhorn Want Ad* 345 — Mac RENTAL 350 — Ramal Sarvtca* 360 — Fum Apt* 370 — Unfum. Apta 380 — Fum. Duptaxa* 390 — Uttfum Duplex** 400 — Condo*-Townhou#a* 410 — Fum. Ho u m * 420 — Unfum. Houm* 425 — Room* 4 3 0 — R o om -B oa rd 440 — Co-op* 450 — Mobil* Hom**-Lot* 4 6 0 — Business R entals 4 7 0 — Rm o t U 480 — Storage S p e c * 490 — Wanted to Rent-Lea*e A N N O U N CEM EN TS 510 — E ntartam m ant-Tictw ta 520— P entónala 530 — Trav*i- Tranaportatton 540 — Loet 5 Found 550 — Lceneed Chid Care 560 — Public Notice 570 — M uaic-M uaictane ED UC A TIO N A L 580 — Musical Instruction 590 — Tutoring 600 — Instruction Wanted 610— Miac Inatruction SERVICES 620 — Legal S e rv ic e * 630 — Computar Serwcet 640 — Exterminator* 650 — Movlng-Hauling 660— Storag* 670 — Painting 680 — Otfic* 690 — Rental Equipment 700 — Furniture Rental 710 — A ppliance R epair 720 — Star *o-TV Rapa* 730 — Horn* Repair 740 — Bicycle Reparr 750 — Typing 750 — Mi sc Sarvtcaa EM PLO YM EN T 770— Emptoymant Agencie* 780 — Emptoymant Sarvicae 790 — Pail Tima 800 — General Help Wanted $10— OWice-Clerical 820 — Account mg- Booidteaping 830 — AdminwtraBve- Management 840 — Sales 850 — Reta» 860 — Enginaertng- Technical 870 — Medical 680 — Profession*! 890 — Gtuba-Restaurant* 900 — Dom**#c-Hous*hotd 910 — Positions Wanted 920 — Work Wanted BU SINESS 930 — Business O pp o rtun itie s 940 — O pportunities Wanted M A S T E R C A R D V I S A A C C E P T E D i / X \ M a s te rC a rd j ■■■■■1 VISA ■■MlVi ADVERTISING TERMS In the event of errors made In advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a.m. the first day, as the publishers are respon­ sible for only O N E Incorrect insertion. All claims for adjust­ ments should be made not lat­ er than 3 0 days after publica­ tion. P re -p a id kills receive credit slip tf requested at time of cancellation, and if amount exceeds $2.00. Slip must be presented for a reorder within 90 days to be valid. Credit slips are non-transferable. In consideration of The Daily Texan's acceptance of advertising copy for publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harmless, Texas Student Publications and its officers, employees and agents against all loss, liability, damage, and expense of whatsoever nature arising out of the copying, printing, or publishing of its advertisement including without limitation reason­ able attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits tor libel, violation of right of privacy, plagiarism and copyright and trademark infringe ment. 10-M is c . Autos 3 5 0 - R e n ,ol Services 340 - F u m . Apt*. 3 4 0 - F u m . Apt». 3 6 0 - F u rn . Ap.». 3 70 — U n f. A p ts. 3 7 0 — U n f. A p ts. 400 — Condos Tow nhom es 4 2 0 — U n f. Houses '8 7 PON TIAC G ro nd Am, excellent condition, lo w mile», $ 4 5 0 0 2 51 -5 42 0 , must s*M. 6-12-108 ________________ 1987 OLDS Calais Supreme. A uto , AC, P/ S, P/B, o nly 71X, new tires, mint condi- hon 251-7661,1 3 0 6pm . 6 -2 2 -5 P ■n o w p r e l e a s in g Condos, townhomes, apts, duplexes, houses Prices from $400. Cafl Matt or Carol, 478-6565. _ C ‘ M Y PROPERTIES J L APARTMENTS, CONDOS, HOUSES In c re d ib ly M a n a g e d a n d P e rs o n a lly C a re d Fo r P entho u se A p ts : 1-Vs, 2-V s, 2 -2 's fro m $ 4 0 0 - $ 6 5 0 (c a b le p a id , la u n d ry , c o v e re d p a rk in g , se curity gates). C o n d o s : t - Vs, 2 -2 's fro m $ 5 5 0 - $ 1100. * C e n te n n ia l, O ra n g e tr e e , P re s e rv a ­ tio n S q u a re , T o rry to w n Houses: 3 /2 , 2 b lo cks S W ca m pus. H a rd w o o d flo o rs , fire p lo c e , $ 1 1 0 0 / KARL HENDLER PROPS. 476-2154 Q uality Unmatched ______________ 1 6 -1 9 -2 0 8 -A 360 — Furn. Apts. 80 — Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE SALE 1990-9 1 QT B IKES R E D U C ED 20% FREE U-Lock with Ad copy and New Bike Purchase Student Discounts BUCK'S BIKES 928-2810 REAL ESTATE SALES m o n th . 130 — Condos - Townhouses W ALK TO Campus fro m the security o f St. James Lorge 2 /2 , vaulted ceilings, all amenities 57K. Seller m otivated M itch 3 2 8 9 3 3 9 6 -3 -20 B -E _____________ BEAUTIFUL WEST Campus 2 2 under 50tC A ll amenities including W /D , m i­ crow ave etc. Seller m otivated. Mitch. 3 2 8 9 3 3 9 6 3-20B-E G EO R G IA N 2 -2 Four blocks to the T o w ­ er oil amenities included 59K. Seller m otivated M itch 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 . 6-10-15B-E W a l k T o MERCHANDISE C a m p u s l 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 451-5840 409 W. 38th St. One Block From Campus ---------------------------------— - V - J P A R K I N G S P A C E S AVAILABLE at The C a s t i l i a n $ 4 5 p e r s e s s io n , C o v e re d P arkin g . Act Fast. 2323 San Antonio 478-9811 M ............... ....—AaJ b l a c k s t o n é LOWER SUMMER RATES 2910 Medical Arts St. acroaa fro m la w uchooi A L L B IL L S P A ID Newly rem odeled 2 bdrm -2 bath Free Cable! Furnished or Unfurnished 4 7 4 - 9 5 2 3 THE ASHFORD Now Preleasing for Summer and Fall Large Efficiencies, 1-1's, 2-2's S tarting at $240 • F u m ts h e d /U n fu rn is h e d • West Campus Shuttle • On-Site Mgmt & Malnt • Pool • Laundry Room • Covered Parking A L L B IL L S PAID 476-8915 2408 L e o n LARGE TW O BEDROOM SUMMER SPECIAL $390 » S m all, q u ie t c o m p le x » * P o o l a n d la u n d ry ro o m * * F u rn ish e d * * W a lk to C o m p us » CAVALIER APTS. 307 E.31ST 451-1917 6 -2 20B-K $300-$350 FO U NTAIN TERRACE APTS. F u rn ish e d 1 b d r a n d e fficie n cie s. W a lk in closets, c e ilin g fans, p o o l, c a rp e te d , C A /C H , w a te r a n d g as p a id W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E T O UT MGR. APT. #134 610 w. 30th 477-8858 6-3-20B -E 302 W. 38th Summer/fall leasing on efficien­ cies. 1 bdrm. Convenient to Han­ cock Center, UT, Hyde Park, xh block to shuttle and city bus line. laundry All appliances, pool, room, gas, water, and cable paid. 453-4002 6 -8 -2 0 B 4&5 Blocks West UT Large, quiet, clean efficiencies. Kitchen, walk-in closet, laundry, gas/heat cooking, water and gas furnished 9 0 3 W 22V? $ 2 4 5 2104 Son G abriel $2 5 5 476-7916 6 -1 1 -2 0 B A QUIET/COOL Your oasis in chaos! W est campo» efficiencies on W C shuttle Go», w ater, e xp a n d e d cable p aid 910 Wes* 26th Street $ 2 4 0 - 2 6 0 p e r month, summer rate» A v a ila b le now . C all fo r an appointm ent, le ave yo ur nam e and num ber o r come by a t 6 p.m. 478-1350 6 12-20B fo r 3 - 2 1344 sq. ft. (that's gi­ fa ll. g a n tic ) BRAND NEW, AC­ CESS GATES, FREE CABLE. A s s ig n in g ch oice now . units South Shuttle, also 1 BRs, 2 BRs. only Properties One 4 4 7 - 7 3 6 8 6-1-20B -A SOUTH SHUTTLE oops....numerous, nice, large 2-2's. $ 3 9 2 student special (at least a $ 4 5 0 value). Q ui­ et O lto rf property. Properties One 447-7368 ADORABLE HYDE PARK APARTMENTS! Efficiencies, 1/1 and 2 /2 . Some with fireplaces, covered parking Cable paid. 105 West 38 1/2 Street. 459-1711,452-11* PEACE & QUIET IN HYDE PARK! Efficiencies $315 S um m er/$345 Fall Coble, gas, hot water and cook­ ing paid. 4 4 0 0 Avenue A 458-1985,452-J121 f 200 — Furniture- Household / FREE D E LIV E R Y ! * TW In S e t w /F r a m e % 9 9 .9 5 $ 1 0 9 .9 5 * F u ll S e t w / F m m e A D e s k , L a m p , C h a ir $ 7 9 .9 5 A 4 D rw . C h e a t $ 3 9 .9 5 A D r e s s e r w / M lr r o r $ 1 3 9 .9 5 * 5 -p to c e D in e tt e $ 1 3 9 9 5 A S o f a * C e n te x F u rn itu re W h o le s a le $ 1 5 9 .9 5 M i l N. L *m e r 2001 8. Lam ar 450-0968 445-5808 2 5 0 — M usical In stru m en ts SELMER S -8 0 ako sax. 8 years old p e r f* c t condition $ 2 0 0 0 o r best offer. 4 54 8 4 9 2 6-18 36 L O N G H O R N W A N T A O S T W Ó "PORTABLE Refngerators lo r sale $ 5 0 each o r best o ffe r C ali 4 4 4 -3 8 2 8 , l*a v e message. 6 -1 6-5 8 '7 8 BUICK LeSabre 2 d o o r, AC, g o o d condition, $ 8 5 0 D ay 471-9113, Evening 4 7 6 8 2 3 8 Ask fo r R ick.6 I6-5B room set, FOR SAL E B am boo $ 4 0 0 o r b *st o ffe r f o r m o re m form o- tion, coll 4 7 9 -8 1 8 8 . 6 -1 7 -5 B ___________ Irving TW O M O Ü Ñ Í/Ü Ñ b ik e s $175/$10Ci, Ep son com puter $ 2 5 0 , W indsurfer $100, couch $60, bookshelf $ 3 0 . 2 filing c a b i­ nets $ 2 0 /e a c h W o o d desk top $ 2 0 , porch rocking choir $ 3 0 451-2145. 6- 17-58 __________ Jina s« kul $1000, sacrificed o t $ 5 0 0 . W om en's rings size 6, men's - 9. 4 7 4 -2 6 6 4 o r 4 / 7 - B401 6 -1 7-5 -N C ________________ _ V983 Y A M A H A m o torcycle seco Red, engine siz* 7 5 0 cc $ 4 5 0 Helmet, 16 8K mile». Coll 8 3 4 -0 3 5 0 . 6 -18-5B COMPUTER/DESK chairs $ 2 0 -$ 3 0 Coll 4 5 8 ’ 2 0 4 5 6 - 1 8 - 5 B __________________ FREE CATSI Keep my 2 cats fo r one ye ar w hile I am g on e W ill p a y fo o d and vet bHs. 4 7 9 -6 7 6 0 . 6 -1 8 -5 P ______________ '8 2 H O N D A 750, g o o d shape, $ 9 0 0 Coll 4 4 4 8 6 8 0 6 - 1 8 - 5 8 ____________ S IM M O N S FULL size b ed $150, coffee table and end tobies $ 6 0 fo r set Call Brian at 4 4 5 -2 8 3 6 Ó -2 2 -5 N C _________ GREAT DEAL i Q ue e n size w a terbe d complete C o ol in summer, w arm in w in ­ ter $50. C oll A n d re w o r Sharon ot 4 6 9 - 9 4 6 4 6 -2 2 -5 N C HO USTO N 2801 H e m p h ill Park 472-8398 D A L L A S 2803 H e m p h ill Park - 472-8398 BRAN DYW IN E 2808 W fiiri» A ve 472-7049 WILSH1RE 301 W. 2 9 th - 472-7049 G r e a t L o c a tio n s ! • F u lly I •umished • Ijiu n d ry R oom • C e n tra l A ir/H e a t • 2 Block» From U T • N o A p p lic a tio n l ee • 1 B R /B A • O n -s ite manager | A ffo rd a b le deposit» Chaparosa Apartments 3110 Red River C L O S E T O U . T . — ♦ > - Small, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks from Law, on shuttle, attractively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3BR 4 7 4 - 1 9 0 2 WARWICK APTS. 2-2'S , 1-1 S & Eft. limited access gate pools, microwave Just blocks from csmpus Now baaing for tho Summar/Fsll 2907 W est Ave. 320-0915 1 BR & 2 BR Ceiling Fans On Shuttle Laundry Room Fully Furnished Pool Permit Parking On-site manager/ maintenance Vertical mini-blinds Affordable deposits Bargain Summer Rates R i o N u e c e s 6 0 0 W . 2 6 th 4 * 4 7 4 0 9 7 1 ^ . VACANCY AVAILABLE AT THE CASTILIAN! ACT FAST! , ( 5 1 2 ) 4 7 8 - 9 8 1 1 , 1 BLOCK UT, N o w pre leasina 1-1, small, auiet complex W e ll furnished a n d m ain­ tained. 2721 H em phill Park. 4 7 8 -1 8 7 0 6 -I-2 0 B -K S A I.A D O A P T S . Large 2-2’s & 1 -1 s N o w L e a s in g f o r S u m m e r / F a l l 2707 Salado 320-0915 EFFICIENCIES FROM $ 2 6 0 + E. AMENITIES INCLUDE: • Dtshwosher • Dtspoid • loundry * If Sbotrte • Microwove (opt) • Across from • Indmduol Storage Ciiy Pork « Pool e BBQPrts • Resident Monoger • Furnished & Unfurnished 108 PLACE APTS. 108 W. 45th 452-1419,385-2211, or 453-2771 CALL TOD AY 6-1 20B -A Hillside Apts. 1 & 2 Bedrooms Furnished o r Unfurnished Clean & Quiet All Utilities Paid 4 7 8 - 2 8 1 9 514 Dawson Rd. Jus* off Barton Springs Rd 6-I-/UD-C WALK TO CAMPUS AVALON APTS. 3 2 n d at IH-35 ★ Eff. — $310 ★ 1 br. — $ 3 4 5 W alk in closets, ceiling fans, on­ site manager, laundry. Conven­ ient to east campus. Great for law, engineering, business, and music students. 4 7 6 -3 6 2 9 ★ 6 -17-20B E Great one bedroom apartments. One half block from law school. Summer $260, fall $340. Furnished, Quiet. Towerview Apartments 926 East 26th St. #208 320-0482 6 -18-20B 370 — Unf. Apts. SOUTH SHUTTLE N e w Property S k y lin e vie w s, occess gate s, lo o o w bills. E ve ry in te rio r ite m n e w !!! Eff» cie n cie s to 2 -2 's $ 3 2 5 - 5 9 5 . o n ly Properties One 447-7368 6 -1 .2 0 B A NO RTH OF UT. Efficiencies $1 / 0 $195, 1 bdrms $ 2 3 0 $ 2 5 5 20B-K______________________ _ 4 7 7 -2 2 1 4 6 -3 SPACIOUS QUIET 2-2.sUT o ne block. C A /C H , pool, fans, walk-in closets, laundry. Red River/30th, dishwasher, $ 6 2 5 $ 7 0 0 4 7 7 - 3 3 8 8 6 18 20B A S u m m e r/$ 5 0 0 RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. MAKE A 1 STAMPEDE FOR S U C A S A APARTMENTS SUMMER LEASES AVAILABLE 3 9 -1 2 m o. leases S ta rtin g a t $ 2 7 5 • Pool • Laundry • Furnished Apartments • On-Site Mgn • IF Shuttle CALL TO DAY 451-2268 203 W 39TH SQUARE TR A N S PO R TA TIO N 20 — S p o rts-F o reign Autos UNBELIEVABLE!! $ 5 9 9 9 Including Air Condit­ ioning 1992 CHARADE SPORT COUPE SE • 3 Y r/36,000 ml Factory Warranty ^SRFV... • Door Blister Electronic Fuel Injection 43 M PG Hiway/ 38 MPG City Reclining Bucket Seats • Rack & Pinion Steering p js c ............................. $ 1 3 3 0 • 5 Speed Transmission ★ Ranked 2nd in Custom er Satisfaction - J.D. Pow er ★ Ranked First in Subcom pact C rash Test - NH TSA $499 down, amt financed $5500. 60 pymts O 10.50% APR, Total pymts $7092.62 pluaT. T AL APPLE DAIHATSU 4 7 8 - 6 0 9 6 * ÍKW ffiEJLEAS^ FAIX^rt* ll? * EFTICIBNCffiS . FURNISHED * 5 BUGS FROM CAMPUS * w s m r m j & s r o f * * DELUXE 1 BEDROOMS •M B Ü 0N O H f^KlM * o n s t t b m a n a g e m e n t A I X BELLS P A ID 2 2 1 2 San G a b r ie l S tre e t Austin. Texas 7 8 7 0 5 (3 1 2 )4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 HYDE PARK Elegant 3/2, just north of UT. Loft, fireplace, fans. Two decks. Porch. Two fenced yards. $1175. 272- 5783, 272-4076. 6-18 2 0 6 _ 477-LIVE 2 4 hrs O ld fashioned charm, 4 b edroom s $ 9 9 5 , 3 bedroom s $ 695, 2 bedroom s $ 5 5 0 6 -3 -2 0 8 A___________ O N FARM UT 2 0 minute», FM 969, 3 2, CACH W /D connections, garden, cou- ple $ 4 2 5 4 7 2 2 0 9 7 .6 22 5B-0 425 — Rooms SHORT W A LK UT, Quiet, non-smoking, pefless Private bedroom , shore kitchen For prívate bath $ 2 6 8 A BP, coll 47 / 4 1 9 / message 4 74 -2 0 5 1 D P * 0 6 - 4 5 2 3 To share bills, b ath $ 16 0-$2 4 0, coll 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 , 4 7 2 -1 7 9 7 6 -2 -20 B K PRIVATE R O O M S WeTt Campus Central a ir furni»hed, carpeted. Jeff 4 /3 -2 7 0 0 . 6-12 10P * 435 — C o -o p s D isco v er the C O -O P . D ifference! • Homecooked meals • All bills paid • 2-6 blocks U.T. S u m m er: Singles $300-340 Doubles $270-285 F o il/S p rin g : Singles $370-420 Doubles $320-330 Call soon! IC C CO-OPS 4 7 6 -1 9 5 7 5 1 0 W . 2 3 rd SHORT W A LK UT, Q uiet, non-smokmg, pefless. Privóte bedroom , share kitchen. For p riva te bath $ 2 6 8 ABP, call 47 7- 4 1 9 / message 4 7 4 -2 0 5 1 , D.P. ■406- 4 5 2 3 . To share bills, b ath $ 16 0-$2 4 0, coH 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 , 4 7 2 -1 7 9 7 6 -2 -20 B -K 440 — Room m ates ROOMMATE SERVICE W ill help you find a com pat­ roommate. Male o r ible female. Call Sam. 280-7118 6-1 -20 6 -A SHORT W ALK UT, Q uiet, non-smoking, pefless Private bedroom , share kitchen For p riva te bath $ 2 6 8 ABP, call 4 77 4 1 9 7 message 4 7 4 -2 0 5 1 , D.P 4 0 6 4 5 2 3 . To shore bills, bath $ 16 0-$2 4 0, coll 4 7 2 5 6 4 6 , 4 7 2 1797. 6 -2 -2 0 B -K NICE HOUSE next to northwest park. V egetarían preferred, $ 2 5 0 + utilities W / b tug y a rd , large private room. 4 5 3 - 5315 6-19-lOB EDU C ATIO N AL 580 — Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSONS R & B Rock. )Ozz. country 10 years teaching experience Andy puilmgton, 452-6181 6 -f-xQ ft-A . 590 — Tutoring TUTORING' frtf SERVICE I S Y E A R S O F P R O FESSIO N A L S E R V IC E H ELPIN G S T U D E N T S M A KE T H E G RA D E! Tutoring in ! WI M W J MATH & M0RK 1 504 W. 24th St. 4 7 7 - 7 0 0 3 6 -1 -20 8 -A 2 0 6 -K _ 2 -2 C O N D O , $ 6 7 5 /m o , 30th and Speedw ay Fireploce, W /D connection», built in m icrow ove, hot tub, and p oo l Coll Jill 01251-7615 6-10-106__________ ★ C O N D O S 3-2 August 1 availability $1300- 1350. Houses and huge 2-2.5 condos. Call for addresses. Rio Grande Properties 474-0606 6-12-10B-E UT STUDENTS CONDOS Condos, Houses, G arage Apts., lots and lots! For Fall, flexible move in dates, all shapes and sizes, 1-ls $ 3 5 0 -$ 6 0 0 . 2-2s $ 7 0 0 -$ 1 3 0 0 . $1200- ‘ ,35a 3-2s « « ★ LOFT Spiral Staircase City Views Indoor Hot Tub 1 and 2 bdrms ADVANTAGE 443-3000 ★ 6 -1 7 -2 0 8 -0 ENFIELD N ew ly remodeled, community, covered ing. 2-1, $650. s m a l l p a r k - Apartment Finders 458-1213 6-17-20B GOING CRAZY? NOT! N e c e s s a ry — w h e n 1 c a ll ca n d o it a ll y o u te ll us y o u r n e e d s — w e 'll fin d it) C o n d o s - A p a rtm e n ts — $ 2 8 5 - $ 1 5 0 0 Apartm ent Finders 458-1213 6-17-20B COZY COMMUNITY! C harm ing n e ig h b o rh o o d feeling in this m odern con­ do. Light & fresh — $350. Apartment Finders 458-1213 6*17 -2 08 ALL BILLS P a d 1 Efficiency $ 3 0 0 summer/ $ 3 2 5 foil 1-1 $ 4 0 0 su m m e r/$ 45 0 fotl 451 -8 53 2 ,4 5 2-11 21 6-1-20B-K- NEAR LAW School! 1 1 $ 3 0 0 iom m er/ $ 3 4 0 foil 4 7 4 -1 2 4 0 , 452-1121 6-1-206- K__________________________________ B U C K IN G H A M SQUARE Apartm ents! 711 W 3 2 n d Street 1 a nd 2 bed ro om apartm ents in quiet residential neig h bo r - h o o d 4 5 3 4991 6-1 2 0B -K ___________ HYDE PARK Efficiencies! 4 2 0 9 A venue B C oble ond hot w ater p a id $315 sum­ m e r/ $ 3 4 5 fall 4 50 -0 21 7 , 452-1121.6-1- 9 0B K___________________ HUGE 2 /2 Q u ie t location o n shuffle Gas, water cable p o id $ 5 2 5 s u m m e r/$615 foil 4 0 0 W 3 5 th Street 4 5 3 -1 8 0 4 4 52 1121 6 1 20B-K * * WEST CAMPUS! Super ip ocious 2 b ed ro om $ 5 / 5 /$ 6 0 0 Go» p oid ! Front Poge 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 6 1-20B-C____________ * T * ~ HYDE PARK N ice 1/1 Smoll com ­ plex. $315 Front Poge Properties 4 8 0 8518 6-1-20B -C ___________ _ GREAT SUMMER B AR G A IN Furnished- Unfurnished, pool, campus, quiet. Ideal fo r grods, law, music. 4 7 6 8 4 7 4 , 4 5 3 -2 3 6 3 . 6 -2 2 0 6 -K laundry, walk to SPACIOUS. QUIET 2-2! UT one b lo c k C A /C H , p oo l tons, w alk-in closet», dishw oiher, laun d ry Red R iver/ 30th - $ 6 2 5 - $ 7 0 0 4 / 7 - 3 3 8 8 .6 - 4 2 0 8 A_________________ S u m m e r/$ 5 0 0 . NO RTH O F UT. Efficiencies $170 $ 2 1 5 J 6 -4 - bed ro om $210 2 5 5 4 7 7 -2 2 1 4 NO RTH CENTRAL 1 block bus. 1 mile shuffle 1-1 $ 2 7 5 Smoll, quiet, conven­ ient com plex. 2 5 0 0991. 6 -I2 -2 0 B -K W ALK TO UT Furnished o r unfurnished Summer 1-1 storting ot $ 310 Profession­ a lly m anaged by Davis & Associates 3 100 Speedw ay 4 7 8 -6 0 0 5 . 6-15-20B- A __________________ ___________ _ WEST CAMPUS-Really cute 2-2, newly rem odeled, w a sher/dryer, e tc, august- ougust lease $ 6 5 0 477 971 2 6-1 6-2 0 8 * * SUPER DEAL1 N e w e r 2-2 $ 4 3 0 n ea r IF. N o w . Front Page. 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 6 - 16-20B-A _________________________ _ EFFIENCY A P A R TM E N TS -greot summer specia!--pre-leastng fo r fo il in Hyde Pork a re a 3 2 7 -8 9 8 5 6 -16-20B -A __________ SUMMER SPECIAL only $ 2 5 5 /m o 1 bdrm in Hyde Park Large pool, ceiling fan, courtyard, 1 bfock fro m UT shuttle 301 W 39th St 3 2 6 -9 2 1 5 , 4 7 4 -2 3 6 5 . 6-17 5B-A ___________________ * T W O STORY T o w n h o m e -l-lV j. * $ 3 4 5 . 7 3 0 sq balcony, nea r Introm ural Field. 701 N o rth Loop. ____________ 4 5 8 -8 0 6 9 6-17-7B ft B edroom 1-1 WEST CAMPUS O ld charm livma, ve ry private, A /C , huge closet, dose d patio, w in d o w woli, poH o r floor, $ 3 5 0 p e r month, g re a t managers, coll Ken at 4 7 6 -8 5 9 0 . 6-18-3P________ _ ENFIELD R O A D 2-1. Furnished or unfur­ nished, ceiling fons, mini- Winds, p oo l, larae courtyard, quiet. ER Shuttle Antilles Wv 2 2 0 4 Enfield Rd 4 7 7 -1 3 0 3 .6 -2 2 - SI1ÓB-E 3 9 0 _ Unf. Duplexes 2-1 SOUTHEAST Large privacy yord Large master BR Fireploce, new CACH, garage, near UT shuffle. $ 5 8 0 . 3 2 7 - 6-9-10B 4 2 4 6 . i----------- 400 — Condos- Townhouses CONTINUES Let us help you find a condo the right way NOW PRE-LEASING Croix St. 'tilomas Centennial Orange Tree Waterford Delphi Old Main Call 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 FURNISHED CONDO 2-2 most furniture, dishes, & linens. W asher & Dryer, mi­ crowave, new carpet, a p ­ proxim ately $1100 s.f. V2 block from Intramural. Sum­ mer rate $500. Call quick. 8 3 6 -5 0 7 0 . BEAUTIFULLY UNFURNISHED la rg e 1-1 at C entennial A ll amenities included A vailab le n ow for im m ediate m ove-m $ 6 7 5 /m o . 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 EPI 6-3-20B -E O R A N G E TREE-Large 2 /2 S ecure/up­ stairs A vailab le 8 /2 2 , 9 /12 S1200/S1100 month. 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 EPI 6- terms 3-20B-E ___________________ 3 2 0 0 D U V A L O ver 180 0 sq ft. Two cor o arag e A ll amenities $ 13 00 /m o Avon- a b le 8 /2 0 3 2 8 9 3 3 9 EPI 6-3-20B -E PENTHOUSE IN W e *t campus 1 30 0 sq ft. master both, lacuzzt. A ll im aginable omenitie». A vailab le 8 /2 0 . $ 1 3 0 0 /mo 3 28 9 3 3 9 . EPI 6 -3 -20 B -E __________ _ ST T H O M A S -T a stefu lly furnished 2/1’s Security, ali amenities A vailab le summer o r $ 8 2 5 /m o n tfv 3 2 8 - fa ll pre-leose 9 3 3 9 EPI. 6 -3 -2 0 B E CENTENNIAL 2-2. Unfurnished, security, covered parking. $ 1 0 5 0 /month A vail- □ble 8 / 2 Í 3 2 8 9 3 3 9 . EPI. 6 -3-20B -E ROBBINS PLACE Five large, unique 2- 2's to choose from. A ll amenities A vail from able summer o r $ 7 7 5 /m o n th 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 EPI 6 -3 -2 0 B - ______ fa ll pre-lease E CROIX 2 -2 . C om er unit, W /D . iecunty, co vered parking A v o lio b le n o w / Foil, $ 9 7 5 /m o Call Steve, 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 6-10- 15B-E _________ ENFILEID SHUTTLE Large 2-1 1 00 0 sq ft ca rp o rt, avaiiobta n o w /fa ll $ o 5 U / mo C a ll Hugo, 3 2 8 9 3 3 9 EPI. 6-10-15B E___________ _________________________ 2 -2 E NFIELD/EXPO SITIO N O ve r 1100 sqq parking $ 8 5 0 /m o C o H rlu g o 3 2 8 -9 3 3 9 EPI I ___________ 10-15BE ft- Covered Luxury WFSTPLACE 2-2 W /D , pool, covered n a rkm a a vailable n o w /F a ll $ 7 2 5 /m o . Coll H u go 3 2 6 -9 3 3 9 EPI 6-10-15B-E NEAR CAMPUS - 2 3 0 0 Leon, 2 /2 , W /D , microwave, cathedral ceiling, p arking, summer $ 4 0 0 4 7 8 -6 9 5 0 , p og er - 4 8 3 2 4 9 6 6-11-108_______________________ * PALLAD IA N PARK¡"Fresh mtenors, nice, bright, spacious 2-2's fro m $ 7 7 5 . Campus! Front Poge 4 80 -8 5 1 8 6-16- 2 0B -A ________________________ _ * ♦ Cam pus/w alk! N ice 1-1, w a she r/ dryer, m icrow ave, CP, furnished, a va il­ able $ 4 0 0 . Front Page 480-8 51 8 . 6-16- 20B A ____________________ ___________ ORANGETREE C O N D O - 2 /2 - 1 o r 2 room m ates $ 6 5 0 /m o n tfi. Coll a fte r (2 1 4 )2 4 8 3 5 6 7 6 -1 7 -2 0 8 j ______ 2 B ED R O O M 1 1 /2 bath, bus line, ca r­ p ort $ 4 0 0 / Immediate occupancy. month. Like new townhouse. 3 46 -1 5 9 3 _________________ 6 -2 2 -5 8 C E N T E N N IA L C O N D O M IN IU M S 2 2'». Furnished o r unfurnished, starting at $ 10 00 pe. month 4 5 2 -0 2 2 5 . Johnson & C o m pany Realtor». 6 -2 2 -2 0 B -K SUMMER SPECIAL $275 » Small efficiency » » Close lo campo» * » Clean, Quiet Complex » • Ail Bill» Paid • * Covered Forking * » 25< Laundry * Leon Apartments 2 3 0 2 Leon 4 6 2 -0 9 3 0 6-1-20B-K V2 0 F F ~ Sum m er. A rg u a b ly so uth shuffle's n i­ cest c o m m u n ity 1-2 Brs. M o s t a m e n i­ ties. W r a p a ro u n d decks, b est p o o l, o n ly Southside Properties 4 4 8 -4 4 3 8 1931 E. O ltorf, N e x t to D o m in o s 6 -1-208 A SOUTH SHUTTLE Efficiency 1 Luxury efficiency 2-2 Luxury 2 -2 3 -2 New, Huge 275 310 392 5 0 0 7 5 0 Southside Properties 448-4438 1931 E. Oltorf, N ext to Domino's 6-12-20B -A SOUTH SHUTTLE GRAND OPENING! Remodeled huge units on beau­ tiful wooded creek. 1-1 $335, 2- 2 $4 50. Gas paid! Only Properties One 447-7368 6 -12-206 COBBLESTONE APARTMENTS l-l's $ 3 5 0 , 2-Ts $ 4 4 5 . Gas w a­ ter, and cable paid. Heating in the winter is gas. O n shuttle. 1105 Clayton Lane 453-4037 Pre-leasing for Fall 6 16-20B ★ ULTIMATE ★ STUDENT PROPERTY Access Gates/24 hr..Guard Exercise room, Sauna, Tennis Full indoor B-Ball Court 1 * 2 * 3 Bedrooms Lakeside on Shuttle ADVANTAGE 4 4 3 -3 0 0 0 * ★ 6 -1 7 -2 0 B O Super, G ro o vy Deal! Fresh efficiency with w alk-in closet, overlooking tranquil courtyard. 31st & Duval area. Local, caring owner. $295. Apartm ent Finders. 458-1213 C O F F E E ■ s i m i u i m n a i CONDOS ★ APTS ★ HOUSES W est Cam pus North Cam pus 6-1 7-2 0 B All Shuttle Routes 420 — Unf. Houses G O IN G CRAZY? NOT! N e c e s s a ry — w h e n 1 c a ll can d o it a ll — y o u te ll us y o u r n e e d s — w e II fin d rtl C o n d o s - A p a rtm e n ts — $ 2 8 5 - $ 1 5 0 0 Apartm ent Finders 458-1213 6 -1 7 -2 0 6 Call or stop by for more info. 2 a m U o G r | n d e S t e ^ 0 ^ WsBmmm CLOSE T O Campus $ 4 9 5 ,1 -1 , W /D , 114 East 31st # 3 0 4 , Evergreen Properties 331-1122 6-1 20B_____________________ i * G eorg ia n! G re a t 2 b ed ro om $ 7 2 5 ! A ll amenities Front Poge Properties 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 6-1-20B-C HOUSES 3 -2 » A v a ila b le N o w 1 90 2 D a v id St a n d 4 5 1 5 A v e F. B oth 2 story, lo ts o f ro o m . P rice n e g o tia b le $ 1 1 0 0 -$ 1 3 0 0 . Rio Grande Properties 474-0606 _ 6-12-10B-E SERVICES 750 — T yping PAPERS RESUM ES RUSH JO BS Abel's Copies 1906 G UADALUPE 4 7 2 - 5 3 5 3 Page 10 Monday, June 22,1992 T H E D A I L Y I E X A N SERVICES EM P L O Y M EN T 7 5 0 — Typing 790 — Part time 800 EM PLO Y M EN T Clinton backs tax boost for wealthy Associated Press L IT T L E R O C K , Ark. - B ill Clinton on Sun d ay called for sub stantially higher taxes on the rich to finance a "putting people first" plan to create n ew jobs, exp and e d u ca tio n and achieve affo rd ab le health care for all. In a m anifesto for the fa ll cam ­ paign, C lin to n scaled back e a rlie r p lan s fo r m id d le-class tax re lie f. Instead of getting both a tax cut and a bigger tax break for having ch il­ dren, the m iddle class w ou ld have to choose one or the o th er. C a m p a ig n a id e s said the re s u lt w ou ld be a tax break roughly half the size of C linton's earlier propos­ als. "M y strategy puts people first by investing more than $50 billion each year over the next four years to put A m erica back to w ork - the m ost dram atic economic growth program since W o rld W a r II," the Arkansas governor said in the document. The plan calls for billions for program s such as low-incom e housing, trans­ p o rta tio n needs and re v ita liz in g inner cities. H is program also advocates a rad­ ically altered w elfare system. Clinton, w ho form ally claim s the Dem ocratic presidential nom ination next m o n th , laced h is p ro p o sa ls w ith sharp criticism of the Reagan and Bush adm inistrations. "T o d a y w e have no economic vision, no eco­ nom ic leadership and no economic strategy," he said. In all, he outlined ro u g h ly $300 b illio n in savings over four years, not counting cost controls on health care, to help reduce a d eficit now running at about $400 billion annu- in Extendacare needs one W SI to teach swimming its summer program. 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I I I I | I TEXAS UNION COMMONS ** 9:00 AM-5:00 PM f t* f t „ June 22-26 Monday-Friday 0 f t f t f t f t f t Z ^ f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * f t f t f t f t f t ft ft \ V I Tuesday First day coverage of Wimbledon Baseball Monday, June 22, 1992 Page 12 : l l ; :w page 11 Texas’ Kite survives to win U.S. Open Associated Press PEBBLE BEACH, C alif. - Tom K ite answered all the questions. The g ritty , g rin d in g little m an from Austin, Texas, beat some of the most diffi­ cult conditions m ajor-toum am ent golf has seen and won the U.S. Open championship w ith a rem arkable d isp lay of talen t and tenacity Sunday. O n a d ay w h en Ray F lo y d sh o t 81, defending champion Payne Stewart took 83, and Gil Morgan, the leader through the first three rounds, had an 81, Kite's cross-handed p u ttin g m agic and d e ft, d e lic ate to u ch around the greens produced a round of par 72 a n d a tw o -stro k e v icto ry o v er Jeff Slum an. W ith that trium ph, achieved in 35 m ph winds howling in from the Pacific, Kite put an end to two decades of the unanswerable question, asked over and over: "W hy haven't you won a major?" Kite, who has achieved almost everything else in golf and won more money than any­ one w ho ever played the game, found the answer at age 42 and on the heels on one of the most frustrating periods of his career. He failed to m ake the 1991 U.S. Ryder Cup team. He did not qualify for the 1992 Masters, a tournam ent he had a chance to win on three occasions. But Kite, like an old fighter who doesn't know when he's beaten, used those failures as a spur to greater effort, came back and won at Atlanta two m onths ago and then c a p p e d his c a re e r in c o n d itio n s Jack Nicklaus said "you just don't encounter in America." The winds, swirling through the pine and oak and cypress, gusting and whistling over the cliffs a n d crags alo n g the beaches, kicked up w hite caps on Carmel Bay and turned the picturesque splendor of Pebble Beach into a to rtu re cham ber for go lf's greatest players. "The hardest conditions I've ever played in," said Sluman, the former PGA champ who finished second and, w ith Kite, was one of the few able to handle the conditions. The ball that had bounced so wrong for him so m any tim es in the p ast bounced right this time. Like the 7-iron shot that backed off the bank and into the water on the 12th hole in the fin al ro u n d and cost him the 1984 Masters. "D o y o u th in k y o u w ill ever w in a major?" he was asked. Like in the final round of the 1985 British Open, when he was leading by two, missed the green on the 10th hole and saw the ball bound down a bank. Result: Double bogey and another loss. "Do you think you'll ever be able to win a major?" Like the tee shot off the sixth w hen he was leading the 1989 U.S. Open at Oak Hill, the tee shot that drifted into a creek few p e o p le knew e x isted . It set up a trip le bogey, another heartbreak and more ques­ tions. "Was this your last, best chance to win a major?" At that time, he could only say "maybe." Three years later, in bright sunshine on one of the m o st glorious venues in golf, with wife Christy watching, with the world w atching, Kite p u t the fru stra tio n s and might-have-beens behind. O n the 18th green at Pebble Beach, he w on the U.S. Open p u t an end to all the questions and, at last, filled in the one blank in an admirable record — a major champi­ onship. The 5-foot-7 Sluman was the only other m an in the field able to break par for 72 holes. A great 9-iron shot on the final hole gave him an 18-inch putt for the birdie that finished off a 71 and a 287 total, one under. It w as a n o th e r th re e stro k e s back to E n g lan d 's N ick Faldo and Nick Price of Zimbabwe, tied for fourth at 291. Kite's 17th — and most important — vic­ to ry w as w o rth $275,000 from the total purse of $1.5 million and pushed his sea­ son's earnings to $783,966. His career earn­ ings now stand at $7,439,440. The trium ph also fulfilled Nicklaus' pre­ diction that this Open would be won "by an experienced player, one w ho has played well in U.S. and British Opens before some­ one you have heard of." in the A nd, te rro rs of the final 18 holes, it took all the skill and guile Kite had gained in 21 seasons of PGA Tour activity. w in d y He started the final round a single stroke behind Morgan and caught him with a long birdie putt, perhaps 25-30 feet, on the first hole. Kite was not imm une to the difficulties and the dem ands. At one early p o in t it appeared he was destined only for another disappointment. On the fourth hole he got his second in a bunker, about 25 feet from the flag. But his sand shot caught a slope and ran some 40 feet beyond the cup. He three-putted for double bogey and was back to two under par and in a five-way tie for the lead. But Kite saved par from a bunker on the fifth, dropping a 12-15 foot putt, then ran in a 30-footer for birdie on the sixth. He missed the green in deep rough on the seventh — but chipped in from 45-50 feet. It was a birdie and he was back to four under and in control Kite av o id ed possible d isa ster w ith a bogey on the ninth after his tee shot found extremely deep rough and easily could have been lost. He found it, got away with nothing worse than a bogey and still had his head up. "There are bad bogeys and good bogeys. This was a great bogey," he said. He got th ro u g h the next tw o w ith o u t damage, then holed a 40-footer on the 12th, and came out of deep rough to 4 feet for birdie on the 14th. T hat p u t Kite five u n d e r par and four ahead of Sluman with four to play. He brought it home. B ogeys on the 16th a n d 17th had no meaning. And then he walked down the 18th fair­ way, playing three shots to the green and sc o rin g the p a r th a t w ra p p e d it and answered all the questions. Californians win Coors Light Open for second year straight Associated Press Tom Kite beat Jeff Sluman at Pebble Beach Sunday to win his first major tournament. Austinites fare well at Olympic tryouts Associated Press IN D IA N A PO LIS - Form er L o n g h o rn M att Scoggin scored seven 10s and Scott Donie overtook Pat Evans on Sunday to earn berths on the platform diving team at the U.S. Olympic trials. Scoggin and Donie will join Ellen Owen and Mary Ellen Clark on the p latfo rm team at th e B arcelona Olympics. Julie Ovenhouse, Karen LaFace, M ark L enzi and K ent Ferguson qualified for the Olympic springboard team. The average age of this y e a r's Olympians is 26.3 years, making it the oldest A m erican diving team since records first were kept in the 1920s. It's also the first team since 1948 no t to in clu d e a re tu rn in g Olympian. "They've all been to big meets," U.S. Olym pic coach Dick Kimball said. "It doesn't have the impact it did in the old days when we only had a big meet every four years." Scoggin d o m in a te d the m en 's platform , carrying a 64-point lead into S unday's finals. He received five perfect 10s and two 9.5s for an inw ard 3-4 som ersault with a 3.2 degree of difficulty on his next-to- last dive. Scoggin, at 28 the oldest m en's p la tfo rm d iv e r, m ad e his first O lym pic team in th ree attem pts. The Austin, Texas, resident finished 14th at the 1984 trials and fifth at the '88 trials. "E veryone know s I've had my fair sh a re of very d isa p p o in tin g moments," Scoggin said. "You put Please see Olympics, page 11 Rangers, Astros win low-scoring contests Associated Press ARLINGTON - Brian Downing's two-run single capped a three-run rally in the sixth inning against a wild Roger Clemens, and the Texas Rangers beat the Boston Red Sox 3-2 S u n d ay n ig h t for a th ree-g am e sweep. T odd B urns (2-0) o vercam e a shaky start and gave up two runs on seven hits in 7 1/3 innings. He walked three and struck out four. Jeff Russell got the last five outs for his 19th save. Clem ens (9-5) failed to join the R angers' Kevin Brown, S eattle's Dave Fleming and A tlanta's Tom Glavine for the most victories in the majors. Clemens took a two-hitter and a 2-0 lead into the sixth, w hen he issued consecutive walks to Dean Palmer and Kevin Reimer with no outs. Juan Gonzalez followed with an RBI single up the middle. The R angers lo ad ed the bases w hen catcher Tony Pena overran Rafael Palmeiro's bunt for an error, and one out later, Downing fisted a 1-2 fastball into center field, driving in the tying and go-ahead runs. Astros 2, Dodgers 0 HO USTON - E v e ry w h e re the Dodgers look there are awful num­ bers staring back. The Dodgers lost their 10th con­ secutive gam e Sunday, m atching the club record since moving to Los A ngeles in 1958, as Butch H enry and D oug Jones co m b in ed on a seven-hitter in Houston's 2-0 victo *y- The last-place Dodgers, who have lost 14 of their last 18 games, also dropped 10 straight in August 1961. The franchise record for consecutive losses is 16, set by the 1944 Brooklyn Dodgers. Henry (2-6) won for the first time since May 25. He left with two outs in the eighth after w alking Brett Butler. Jones finished for his 16th save, allowing one hit. Pete Incaviglia gave the Astros a 2-0 lead with his fifth homer of the season off Kevin Gross (3-7) in the sixth inning. Ken Caminiti was on base with a single. Gross and Henry m atched each other with five shutout innings to start the game. tics in the sudden death game and that gave us a few points, but their (Kirby-Rock's) serving m ade the difference," Dodd said. "In volley­ ball a to u g h serv e is the best d e fe n se b ecau se it cau ses y o u r opponents not to pass well keeping them from setting up the ball for a good kill." W omen's Professional Volleyball Association ~(WPVA) Director and Founding President Nina Matthies, 39, w ith tw o c h ild re n has been head women's coach at Pepperdine University since 1983 and has been playing on the beach circuit for 25 years. "Playing volleyball keeps me at an ev en k e e l," 1991 V olleyball World Champion Matthies said. "I give so much back in my coaching during the year, that this is what I do for me. This tournam ent is an outlet for me and some of the other women on the tour." are to u r Most of the younger women on the fo rm er L ady Longhorns. Annette Garza, Errica H ibben, A nissa H a u se r, M issy K urt, N ikki Busch, D agm ara Szycsczak and Connie Watson all tied for 25th place. All the Texas w om en m ade im pressive show ings at the tour­ ney, including Garza and Hibben in their second match against Kim Harsch-Bird and Erin Deiters. Garza and Hibben lost 15-13 but Hibben made four blocks and one ace and Garza braved the sand to bring up four digs. " T h is is our first tim e on the tournam ent and we haven't play­ ing as long as the other wom en," Garza said. "But we have all the basic skills we need and we're com­ patible with each other " Kurt and W atson took on Amy B altus and S am antha Shaver in their second match. Baltus-Shaver outscored Kurt-W atson 15-11 but Kurt made more than three defen sives saves. " It's a totally different gam e," L ady L o n g h o rn H ib b en said. "T h ere's so much m ore to learn, but the good thing is even if you m ake a m istake you're always in the game." A n n a P ellm an Daily Texan Staff Lakewood, Calif., native Angela Rock w o rk s as a fire fig h te r in Carlsbad, Calif., but she was start­ ing up fires on the sand p its at Z ilker Park this w eekend at the Pro Beach 1992 W o m en 's Volleyball Tournament. Rock and her p a rtn e r K arolyn K irby w on $9,000 apiece at the $40,000 Coors Light A ustin Open Sunday at Zilker Park after w in­ ning the double-final 15-9 and 7-4 a g a in s t riv a ls P a tty D o d d and Elaine Roque. This marks the sec­ ond time Kirby and Rock have won a tournam ent in Austin. They won the 1991 tournament. The 1992 $1,000,000 W om en's Pro Beach Volleyball tournam ent featured 32 of the top two-women teams in the country including for­ mer 1988 Olympian Rock and 1984 O lym pians Rita Crockett-Royster, Liz M asakayan, Jackie Silva and Linda Chisholm-Carillo. The final m atch at the to u rn a ­ m ent was the second time the two teams faced each other in the tour­ nament. Dodd-Roque had defeated Rock-Kirby earlier in the compete- tition 15-12 forcing Rock-Kirby to w o rk th e ir w ay to the fin als through the consolation bracket. K irby-R ock h a d to d e fe a t C am m y C iarelli and Jackie Silva before they entered the final match. The match was tied five times and th e lead ch an g ed h a n d s tw ice before Kirby-Rock broke the last tie to take a 9-8 lead. Kirby-Rock seemed assured of a win when they led 14-10, but Silva- Ciarelli came back to score three straight points bringing the score to 14-13. Rock scored the w in n in g point though when she popped the ball over Silva's block to win the match 15-13. "We couldn't afford to get out of th e gam e and lose o u r m en tal toughness," Kirby said. "We decid­ ed to stay together m entally and stay in a work attitude." Kirby-Rock took an early lead in the final match scoring two straight aces to bring the score to 2-0. They kept Dodd-Roque scoreless ) t Patrick Sison/ Daily Texan Staff California’s Angela Rock, right, and her teammate, Karolyn Kirby, won this weekend’s Coors Light Austin Open, collecting $9,000 each. at 7-0 until Roque roofed Rock's kill a tte m p t to p u t them on the board at 7-1. Both team s rallied hard w ith D odd-R oque denying Rock-K irby the gam e poin t and h o ld in g them at 14 for eig h t attempts until Kirby unleashed an ace to win the match 15-9. " O u r to u g h se rv in g w as th e key," Rock said. "It gave us points w e d id n 't have to expend extra energy on and it boosted our confi­ dence." In this double-elimination beach volleyball tournam ent a team has to lose twice before it is eliminated whcih meant a sudden death match had to be played. The first team to reach seven would win the title. O nce again, K irby-R ock used their strong serves as an offense to take them to a 3-0 lead. D odd-R oque a n sw e re d back with cross court kills, but Rock per­ sistently killed Dodd-Roque with her short dinks over the net. Kirby served the title w inning p o in t to end the gam e 7-4 and Kirby-Rock racked up seven aces for the match and a record 19 for the tourney. Kirby earned 10 total aces for the Austin Open and Rock finished with nine. "W e changed our defensive tac­