W endy’s construction raises questions at Union, p. 5 Da il y T e x a n V< The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, June 7, 1993 25c Hutcniisuii vows to fight for tax cuts New senator anxious for term to start after Saturday’s victory A ngela Shah Daily T exan Staff DALLAS — After her historic vic­ to ry a g a in s t in te rim Sen. Bob K ru e g e r, Kay B ailey H u tc h iso n "fired a message back to D.C." and then took aim at President Bill Clin­ ton. " I go fro m T exas to s p e a k on behalf of Texans, not to become part of the system in Washington, D.C.," H utchison said after her Saturday win. And she repeated her message of cutting spending Sunday, adding that she is "not prepared to vote for any tax increase." T he n e w ly e le c te d s e n a to r trounced Krueger by a 2-to-l m ar­ gin, becom ing Texas' first w om an senator after Saturday's special elec­ tion. She and Sen. Phil Gramm now form a R e p u b lic a n c o a litio n to W a sh in g to n for th e first tim e in Texas since 1875. "Republicans are working for the taxpayers and the w orking people of the state," Hutchison said. "The m andate that I received ... put me in a very strong position." She said she w ants to begin her term soon — possibly as early as next M onday. A sw earing-in date has not yet been chosen. "I'm going to talk to [Kansas Sen. Bob Dole] about w hether there are any key votes," she said, referring to Clinton's budget plan. Krueger said Saturday he would "do everything in my pow er to be sure we have a sm ooth transition for the people of Texas." Although this w as his third defeat in a U.S. S enate race in as m an y d ec ad es, “Republicans are work­ ing for the taxpayers and the working people of the state.” — Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. senator-elect K rueger d id no t rule out seeking public office in the future. Krueger spent Sunday in Corpus Christi m eeting w ith the Base Clo­ sure and Realignment Commission, is d id Gov. A nn R ichards, in an effort to prevent closure of prom i­ n en t Texas military sites — such as NJaval S ta tio n In g le s id e o r San Antonio's Kelly Air Force Base. Hutchison said she felt her place rig h t no w w as at m eetin g s to be held later this m onth in W ashing­ ton, D.C. "Kelly and Ingleside are my first priorities. They are very im portant .scientific p ro je c ts," she said . " I w o u ld su p p o rt them even if they ’w eren't in Texas." H utchison ad d e d that she does n o t believe party politics will influ­ ence the com m ission's decision or o th e r d e c is io n s th a t m ay affect ' Texas. "Phil Gramm, Ann Richards and I w ill w o rk to g e th e r ," sh e said . "The election is over." But w ith only 18 m onths left in f orm er Sen. Lloyd B entsen's term , H u tc h iso n a d m its sh e is a lre a d y looking to the 1994 general election. S a tu rd a y n ig h t, form er A tto rn ey Jim M attox all b u t G e n e ra l Please see Hutchison, page 2 Kay Bailey Hutchison thanked supporters Saturday night at the Anatole Hotel in Dallas after her landslide victory over Bob Krueger. Marsha Miller/Daily Texan Sta*4 Professors react to Hutchison win Jay Brida Daily Texan Staff Kay Bailey H u tc h iso n 's victory sent shock w a v es from Texas all th e w ay to the W hite House, as Democrats tried to pick up the pieces of their failed campaign Saturday night. But Texas Republicans should not blow the vic- to ry o u t of p ro p o r tio n , a c c o rd in g to B ruce Buchanan, a UT professor of government. "The result of the election was no surprise, but the m argin of the victory w as certainly larger than expected," Buchanan said. "Still, there is a Democrat in the White House, one in the Texas governor's office and they also control Congress, so the Republicans m ust be careful and cannot overestimate their victory." David Prindle. a UT associate professor of gov­ ernm ent, called the election a "referendum on “Don’t forget that Clinton lost Texas. This can’t be considered Clinton country.” — David Pnndle, UT associate professor of government Clinton and his policies. "Don't forget that Clinton lost Texas. This can't be considered Clinton country," Prindle said. Several faculty members described the race as a study in contrasting styles. "While certainly Hutchison has 'screen pres­ ence' and is very polished in front of the cameras, Krueger came across as stiff and boring. He ran a terrible cam paign," Prindle said. The presence of two Republicans representing Texas in the Senate could affect Texas' ties to the White House, according to Trindle. "It could m ake a d iffe re n c e /' said Prindle. "K rueger w ould have had an in at the W hite House, but Hutchison will not." Phil Gramm, who has represented Texa- in the Senate since 1985, will be Hutchison's senior sen­ ator. Glen Cope, UT associate professor of public affairs., called G ram m a " p o w e rfu l a lly " to Hutchison. "They are both similar in that they want to cut spending to reduce the deficit, and they both oppose the Clinton economic plan, but eventually thev will have to work with the president," Cope said. P lease see Reaction, page 2 Health care lawsuit stopped Judge rejects charge that UT plan violates state insurance code Steve Scheibal Daily Texan Staff A d istrict judge stru ck d ow n a law suit Friday which w ould have kept a health maintenance organiza­ tio n c u rre n tly s e rv in g 4,000 UT employees on the newly drafted UT System health care plan. The su it, filed by PCA H ealth Plans of Texas Inc., which charged the UT System w ith violating the Texas Insurance Code, w as struck dow n in a prelim inary hearing by state District Judge Scott McCown. The suit turned on one vaguely w orded sentence, added in a 1983 am endm ent to the insurance code, w hich says an HMO ap p ro v ed to INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Robert Byington is Shame­ less about his A ustin- 7 filmed debut movie. sto re C o n v e n ie n c e w eather: Only five high school students w ill be allowed in the store at one time Monday to experience Slurpees and candy bars in the low 90s. And if you’re in your low 70s, you’ll be carded for cigarettes and beer. ....... Index: 8 Around Campus ............. ......... 9 Classifieds....... 8 Comics 4 Editorials ...... .................7 Entertainment Sports 12 ............. State & Local............................6 ............................. 5 University ............ 3 World & Nation The suit turned on one vaguely worded sen­ tence, added in a 1983 am endm ent to the in s u r­ ance code. offer services to state employees is "qualified ... to provide similar s e r ­ vices ’ to System employees. but M cC ow n rejected P C A 's claim that the Texas Insurance Code required the UT System to offer sys­ tem em ployees the sam e o p tio n s offered to state employees. McCown also refused to order the System to place PCA Health Plans of Texas, Inc., which filed the suit, on the list of eligible HMOs under the plan. ' The [System] doesn't have to select every q u alified HMO," McCown said. "If that's what the law meant, it w ould have said it more clearly." Jeffery Hart, the attorney repre­ senting PCA said the amendment to the insurance code was meaning­ less if the sentence .‘ v s not mean PCA should be recognized in the System's health plan. "The amendment was meant to make a change in the [insurance] system," H art said. "It is meant to put UT employees on a parity w ith state employees." P lease se e Health care, page 2 Somali turmoil sparks U.N. troop evacuation Security Council demands quick justice Associated Press MOGADISHU, Somalia — Evac­ uations of relief workers began Sun­ day after at least 22 I nited Nations troops and as many as 23 Somalis were killed in the bloodiest day to r U N. p ea cek e ep ers in m ore than three decades. The U.N.'s special envoy blamed warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid ior S a tu rd a y ’s fighting, w hich cam e just a month after command of the international m ilitan coalition in Somalia passed from U S. to U.N control. I think this was a preconceived and planned event," said Admiral Jonathan Howe. The fighting crippled hum anitari­ an efforts and showed the tenuous secu rity situ a tio n in M o g ad ish u even afte r six m onths of fo reig n military presence. It erupted as U.N. troops inspect­ ed storage sites for weapons taken from Som alis in accordance with U.N. dem ands The U.N casualties were mostlv Pak stanis, w ho recent­ in re p la c e d U.S. M arin e s ly Mogadishu. A Pakistani army spokesm an m Islamabad said 22 Pakistani soldiers were dead, 10 were missing and 50 wounded. O fficials at M o g a d ish u 's m ain hospitals said 15 to 23 Somalis died and more than UK) were wounded. Witnesses said some of the m iss­ ing peacekeepers w ere c a p tu red , tortured and killed. There w as no wav to confirm the reports. T hree A m erican s o ld ie rs also rep o rted ly w ere w o u n d e d n o n e critically U.N military officials did th e ir n o t names. im m e d ia tely re le ase Aidid, v\ho c o n tro ls th e storage sites had been told of the planned inspections 24 hours in advance and d u l not object, the officials said. The U n ited N a tio n s a c c u se d Please see Somalia, page 2 Jackie Goodman won the Place 3 council seat. Brigid Shea beat Bob Larson in the Place 4 race. Steve Magy/Datly Texan Staff Kim Brent/Daity Texan Staff ( .oodman, Shea give Council greener look Chris S ch n eid m iller Daily Texan Staff C andidates and com m unity leaders agreed Sun­ day that the election of two new councilm em bers indicates a new pro-environm ent direction for the Austin City Council. A small percentage of Austinites went to the polls Saturday, electing two women w ith strong environ­ mental backgrounds. In the Place 3 election, com m u­ nity- and environm ental-activist Jackie Goodxnen defeated local businessm an Mark Tsehurr. Place 4 candidate Brjgid Shea defeated incum bent C oun dlm em ber Bob Larson. "It looks like voters are ready for a change. It also looks like it was ladies' night here in Texas," I arson said of the City Council election results and U.S. Sen­ ate candidate Kay Bailey H utchison's victory. The election of two pro-environm ent candidates proves the importance of the environm ent to Austin resident^, said ( leorge Avery, president of the Austin Sierra Club. "I'm optimistic that the new environmental coun­ cil will live up to the expectations of the environ­ mental comm unity," Avery said. Shea and Larson ran neck and neck as election returns came in early Saturday evening before Shea pulled ahead with 54 percent of votes. Shea rtxeived 41,542 votes to Larson's 34,887. In the Place 3 race, Goodman pulled ahead early, winning with 46,468 votes. 62 percent of the votes cast. Tsehurr received 27,902 votes. Only 7t>,429 A ustin ites voted for City C ouncil races this election, less than 25 percent of eligible voters in the city. Goodman said her first priority as a councilmem- ber will be to study the next city budget, which is due in September. Goodm an said she hopes to find funds for city hum an services program s including child care and crime prevention. G oodm an and Tsehurr both ran as pro environ- Please see City Council, page 2 Page 2 Monday, June 7, 1993 T h e D a il y T e x a n Man robs 2 restaurants, attempts 3rd in 3 hours Jeff Mead Daily Texan Staff A man driving a stolen car robbed two n o rth A u stin fast-fo od re s ta u ra n ts and attempted to rob a third within three hours Saturday night, according to police. The robber stole an undisclosed amount of m oney from the Subway restau ran t at 6929 Airport Blvd. and from the Pizza Hut at 5555 N. Lam ar Blvd., but panicked and fled after attem pting to rob a Jack In The Box at 8630 N. Lamar Blvd. All three robberies w ere com m itted by the same man, who remained at large Sun­ day, according to Austin police Sgt. Ralph DeLaFuente. "The car he was driving ... was reported stolen from San Antonio" Saturday, DeLa­ Fuente said. shotgun staring me in the face," Robinson said. "H e said to give him all the money in the register, so I turned around and ran." Joy Robinson, an employee of Jack In The Box, said the man pointed a gun at her after o rd erin g food at the re s ta u ra n t's d riv e- through window. "W hen I turned around to tell him how m uch his o rd er w ould co st, there w as a Employees of the other two restaurants declined to comment Sunday. Police reports indicate the man attempted to rob Jack In The Box at 7:45 p.m. Saturday. Two hours later, he held up Subway and Pizza Hut within a span of 20 minutes. P olice described the robber as a w hite .m ale between 30 and 35 years old, 5 feet 10 inches tall, 180 pounds, with glasses and shoulder-length light-brown hair. Police have no suspects in the chain of robberies, according to DeLaFuente. " H e didn't hit anyw here today, so he's profc-ably out of town by now ," DeLaFuente said. Hutchison Continued from page 1 announced his candidacy against her. "W hat's really going to be signif­ ican t is w h eth er the D em o cratic Party can unite behind a candidate, whether it be me or another candi­ d ate ," M attox said. "[H utchison 's victory] is going to be a significant blow to Texas." Before taking h er p lace in the U.S. Senate, H utchison said, she will also have transition meetings for her post at the Texas Treasury. Richards is expected to appoint a re p la c e m e n t w ith in d a y s , b ut H u tch iso n said sh e w ill n ot be advising the governor on possible candidates. Hutchison also said she is "n o t concerned" about a possible indict­ ment against her on charges of mis­ treatment of employees and doing p erso n al business on state tim e. However, Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock said he thought there would be a grand jury inquiry into her actions. "F o r all we know, we may have a n o th e r Bob P ack w o o d on o u r h a n d s ," he said referrin g to the Oregon senator who apologized for " in a p p r o p r ia te b e h a v io r " w ith female employees. Hutchison beat Krueger 67 per­ cent to 33 percent, winning many trad itio n ally D em ocratic stro n g ­ holds such as Travis County and South Texas. "I alw ays said I w asn't a good politician," Krueger said. Krueger lost his home base of Comal Coun­ ty by a 2-to-l margin. H u tc h iso n said " t h e re su lts showed I'm not a regional candi­ date. We won because I stayed pos­ itive." W ith rep o rts fr o m L esley Hensell/Daily Texan Staff City Council Continued from page 1 ment candidates, but Goodman said their battle did not hurt the city 's environm ental m ovem ent. G oo d ­ man said she and Shea, along with o th e r p ro -e n v iro n m e n t co u n - cilmembers, will assure protection of the environment in the city. D uring the cam p aig n , T s ch u rr called G o o d m an 's exp erien ce ".a record of com plete co m p ro m ise.'' T s c h u rr said he w as o p tim istic: about the city's future, but unsure how Goodman would perform as a councilmember. "W e'll have to wait and see how it takes shape. I hope that she works hard on exerting herself and is sue- cesful on being a strong advocate," Tschurr said. D uring the cam p aig n , T s ch u rr charged Goodman with taking con­ tributions from development inter­ ests, which she called "inaccurate." " I think w e took the high road and I'm glad and comfortable that we d id ." Goodman said. Tschurr'si Somalia Continued from page 1 Aid id of using the advance notice to p rep are am b u sh es on the p e a c e ­ keepers. "G en. Aidid's people were n o ti­ fied in ad van ce of the sites to bo inspected," said Howe. "They clear­ ly had e a rly w a rn in g of it a n d a p p a re n tly d ecid ed th ey w o u ld have a reaction." " W e a re to ta lly o u t r a g e d ," Madeleine Albright, the U.S. am bas­ sad or to the United N ations, told reporters at U N. headquarters. In an emergency session Sunday, the Security Council unanim ously demanded the arrests of those w ho killed the U N. peacekeepers in a resolution that also stressed th at campaign was "n ot the type of cam ­ paign that I w ould ever do and I don't like it." Larson said the Place 4 race was d ecid ed larg ely by "m is c o n c e p ­ tions" about his record on the envi­ ronment. Shea — former director of the Save Our Springs Coalition — represented the environm entalists who criticized Larson for backing development interests. But Larson said he was proud of the council's environmental record on issues including air quality con­ trol and recycling. Shea said that environmental and economic issues will be among her priorities. "I feel very pleased. I think what we're seeing tonight is a new vision for the city, one that rejects the idea that we must sacrifice jobs for the environment," Shea said. Shea said she will also fight for campaign finance reform, one of the main emphases of her campaign. U.N. com m anders take "all neces­ sary m e a s u re s" to p ro tect p eace­ keepers in future. The city w as m ostly quiet Sun­ d ay, with the usual b attered cars and carts maneuvering around the ren m an ts of b a rric a d e s m ad e of barbed w ire and boulders erected during Saturday's fighting. Aidid, who controls the southern half of the divided capital, blamed Saturday's bloodshed on U.N. sol­ d ie rs w ho he said " c a r r i e d o u t provocative attacks" across the city. A sen ior U .N . m ilitary official said Somali fighters have been stuff­ ing the weapons storage sites with arms and ammunition. 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GRE GMAT MCAT; KAPLAN RU LES E x p ert T e a c h e rs P e rm a n e n t C e n te rs T o ta l T rain in g Call now: 472-EXAM The Austin Center 811 West 24th Street Austin, TX 78705 Karl Schakelford and Jeff Kearns clean up at the Marriott Hotel in Austin after Krueger accepted defeat. Sean Gallup/Daily Texan Staff Reaction Continued from page 1 W h ile G ram m and H u tch iso n have both campaigned to curb fed­ e ral sp e n d in g , C o p e said he believed that Hutchison would not abandon Texas' Supercollider pro­ gram. "The Supercollider is^uch a small item in the en tire federal b udget and it would mean a great deal to T exas," Cope said. "I am sure she will support it." G ov . A n n R ich a rd s has co m e under fire in the media for the land­ slide against her hand-picked sena­ tor. But a c c o r d in g to P rin d le , R ich ard s' rep u tation will rem ain untarnished. "This has nothing to do with Ann Richards and everything to do with Bob Krueger," Prindle said. Health care: Judge rejects lawsuit against U T System Continued from page 1 PCA filed the lawsuit two weeks ago after being left off the UT list of eligible HMOs a v a ila b le . U n d er the UT p lan , A n th em Health Plans of Texas will be the only HMO co m p arab le to PCA o ffered , said Jam es Guckian, executive associate for health poli­ cy and planning for the UT System. Guckian, one of th e authors of the plan, said he was not sure if PCA will appeal the McCown decision. But the new health plan will be good for UT em ployees, he said. Guckian added that registration forms for the new plan would be sent to em ployees this month and the plan will go into effect Sept. 1. "Employees will be getting the same cov­ erage they would be getting under P C A ," Guckian said. But PCA President Donald Gessler said the quality of the new UT health plan was questionable. "W e should be able to get better contrac­ tual relations with medical agencies than Anthem and ou r costs should be lo w e r," Gessler said. "A nthem has less than 600 cus­ tomers right now ." A cco rd in g to G essler, PCA cu rre n tly serves 4,000 UT employees. G e s s le r a d d ed he h ad n o t d ecid ed whe ther to appeal the decision, but said he and H art will decide M onday w hether to contrinue the lawsuit. " W e lost round one," Gessler said. "N ow we have to decide whether it's economically w orth round tw o." T h e Da il y T exan Permanent Staff Rebecca Stewart ............................................................................................................................... ^ dl,or Managing Editor................................................................................................................................... Ted S. Warren Associate Managing Editors.............................. 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All of our notes are taken by graduate students with the permission of the professor. 407 W. 24th (behind the Gap) 472-7986 PARADIGM Course Materials, Lecture Notes, Study Guides, Copies, Typing FRIDAY'S DOW JONES: 3.545.14 UP 0.27/VOLUME: 224.239.200 WORLD & T hk D \m T e x a n Monday. June 7.1993 Page„ 3 300 killed in massacre by Liberian rebels Liberian Massacre Associated Press GU INEA Conakry R efugee cemp w h et* 300 people were *• I 5 (3* r c D D i «aughte'iKJ end ?56 ____ # Freet IVORY COAST 160 wn Atlantic Ocean A BID JA N , Ivory C oast — Liberian re b e ls s la u g h te re d 300 re fu g e e s — m ostly w om en and children — Su n ­ day at an abandoned rubber p lan ta­ tion outside M onrovia in an "o rg y of killing and m u tilation/' a U.N. official said. T h e m a s s a c re w a s th e w o rst in L ib eria's civil w ar since governm ent so ld iers k illed 600 m em bers of rival tribes in M onrovia in 1990. "T h e y cu t th roats, they cut heads, th rew out b ra in s, op en ed sto m ach s and pulled out intestines, broke legs, and shot, so many bullet w ounds that you cannot understand w hy," Augus­ tin e M a h ig a , re p re s e n ta tiv e o f th e U .N . H igh C o m m is s io n e r for R e f­ ugees, said in a telephone interv iew. He sp o k e a fte r v ie w in g w h at he called "scen es more horrible than any m o v ie I'v e ever s e e n ." He said the killings began just after midnight Sat­ urday and m ust have lasted for tw o hours. Most victims were women and children, he said. M ahiga said witnesses blamed guer­ rilla lead er C h arles T a y lo r's reb els, w h o started the w ar in 1989. S in ce then, Liberia has collapsed into chaos and more than half of the 2.3 million people are refugees. But Taylor denied responsibility for Guerrilla leader Charles Taylor denied responsibili­ ty for the massacre, saying it was another attempt to give his army “a bad name.” the massacre, telling the British Broad­ c a s tin g C o rp . th at it w as a n o th e r a tte m p t to g iv e h is arm y " a bad name. H e said he b e lie v e d th e k illin g s were carried out, as the pretext for an o ffe n siv e ag ain st h im , by L ib e ria n army t r o o p s and another rebel faction, w ith the co n sen t of a W est A frican intervention force sent to end the war. " I t is all a part of this deal where they are p lan n in g a m a ssiv e , a big push [against me] ... and they are try­ ing to find a pretext for this m urder and mayhem they want to carry' out," Taylor said. The massacre came two weeks after the W est A frican arm y said it in ter­ cepted a radio message from Taylor to one of his com m anders, in which he allegedly ordered a "reign of terro r" against refugees on the front lines. íav lo r denied he sent the message, but Mahiga and others who have lis­ tened to it said they recognized the guerrilla chief's distinctive baritone. Mahiga said he and others estim at­ ed som e 300 people w ere killed and 765 wounded Sunday at Kata a camp of refugees set up at the abandoned Firestone complex that is the w orld 's biggest rubber plantation. The site is 35 m iles n orth east of M onrovia, the Liberian capital He said survivors told him that Tav- lo r's guerrillas had com e looking for food just after m idnight Saturd ay, a day aifter the United Nations had dis­ tributed nee in the area. "They collected the rice, then went on an orgy of killing of mutilation ... they went from house to house killing entire fam ilies in the most horrifying m anner/' he said Activist tapped as new leader of Guatemala Associated Press GUATEM ALA CITY — One of G uatem ala's leading hum an rights advocates was sworn in as president Sunday, after G uatem ala's powerful militare perm it­ ted Congress to hold a special election to choose him . The election of Ramiro de Leon Carpió late Satur­ day restored democratic rule to the Central American country days after the ouster of Jorge Serrano, who declared emergency power and seized near-dictatorial power on May 25. Yet it was unclear whether the country s long-dom i­ nant military would stay on the sidelines. Although the army perm itted Congress to elect the president, the defense minister stopped short of saying that the army would back its choice. De Leon Carpió said his mission was "to save the nation " and promised to appeal for the release of tens of millions o f dollars in foreign aid suspended after Serrano seized power. Along with possible military distrust, his im m ediate problem s include declining living standards, a wide gap betw een rich and poor and a 33-year-old leftist insurrection, the last and longest in Central America. His promise to bring justice to the poor raised high expectations that may be difficult to fill. "W e face a challenge before the world, and before ourselves, to correct our errors and press on to a better d estin y ," said de Leon Carpió, 51, the governm ent- ap p o in ted attorney general for hum an rights. His office was suspended under the emergency rule. " G u a t e m a la 's in te rn a tio n a l s ta n d in g m u st be restored," he said in his inaugural speech. Still, his election w as w elcom ed by hund red s of jubilant supporters, who surged past a police line and burst into Congress to watch his swearing-in. The crowd sang the national anthem and cheered as the president donned a cerem onial sash. Firew orks crackled outside and cheering erupted in the street. The election of a human rights activist was unprece­ dented in a country^ with a poor human rights record, civil war and a military that hah long played a role in the country's political life. G en. Jose D om ingo G arcia Sam ayoa, the defense minister, promised to let the election proceed, but had stopped short of saying w hether the pow erful army would back Congress' choice. In W ashington, the White House view ed the elec­ tion with cautious optimism. "W e are tentatively encouraged by the restoration of d em ocracy and civilian ru le in G u a te m a la ," an anonymous White House spokesman said Sunday. T h e vote count w as 107 for de 1 eon C arp ió, six abstentions and two votes for others not nominated. One deputy in the 116-seat Congress was absent. His candidacy was strengthened after another lead­ ing candidate withdrew He will serve out Serrano's term, which ends January 19% Ten days ago, de Leon Carpió was a military target. 1 le was placed under house arres: May 25 by troops b ack ed bv arm ored carriers, but escaped over his rooftop and appeared at a clandestine news confer­ ence the next dav to denounce Serrano's move. De I eon Carpió had long been a fierce critic of the g o v ern m en t of Serran o , w ho was the first elected civilian president to succeed another in more than 150 years of Guatemalan history. As an attom ev general, de Leon Carpió oversaw the investigations into two of G uatem ala s m ost publi­ cized hum an rights cases: the lune l u% slaying of American innkeeper Michael Devine and the Septem­ b er stabbin g d eath of M im a M ack C h an g , a renowned Guatemalan anthropologist, Serbs besiege Muslim enclave UN. relief for Gorazde unlikely Associated Press SA RA JEVO , Bosnia-H erzegovina — Bosnian Serb gunners pounded b esieg ed G o razd e for yet an o th er d ay S u n d a y , and U .N . o ff ic ia ls a c k n o w le d g e d th e y w ere at th e Serbs' mercy in reaching the em bat­ tled M uslim enclave. T h e s ta te m e n t cam e d e s p ite a U .N . S e c u rity C o u n cil re so lu tio n adopted Friday that would com m it up to 10,000 ad d itio n al troo p s to guard G orazde and five other M us­ lim territories. Critics, including the M uslim-led Bosnian governm ent, have said the plan will only create M uslim ghet­ tos and do little to stop Serb aggres­ sion. "W ith the m andate w e have, we are not prepared, at this time, to use fo rce to g e t in to G o r a z d e ," said C m d r. B a rry F re w e r, th e U .N . spokesm an in Sarajevo. "U ntil we get any new conditions ... u sin g fo rce w ill h av e to co m e from higher command authorities," he said. Serbs have agreed in principle to allow peacekeepers into the territo­ ry, but have denied them access. M eanw hile, the Serb offensive on the en clave continued Su n day, its 11th day. It is apparently aim ed at w iping out the last Muslim strong­ holds in eastern Bosnia. S a ra je v o rad io said tw o p eop le were killed and seven wounded. M u stafa K u rto v ic, a ham rad io op erator w ho serves as G o razd e's voice to the outside world, appealed to Gen. Philippe Morillon, the U.N. c o m m a n d e r in B o sn ia , to sen d a convoy of aid and medicine. " W e are p lead in g w ith you on b e h a lf o f m o re th an 100 h e a v ily w o u n d ed in th e h o sp ita l, tens of thousands of refugees, and the citi­ zens of G orazd e," Kurtovic said. Any relief appeared unlikely. F rew er said G en. R atk o M lad ic w as still m aking h im self u n av ail­ able to w ork out d etails despite a p rom ise from Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic on Thursday that U.N. military observers could move into Gorazde. "W e 'v e seen this before. Whether it 's g a m esm a n sh ip or so m eth in g else, I don't k now ," Frew er said of the runaround. M eanwhile, the U.N. hum anitari­ an airlift resumed after a four-day hiatus prompted by attacks on U.N. p e a c e k e e p e r s and r e lie f p la n e s . Eighteen planes w ere landing in the capital, Sarajevo. A lso S u n d a y , F re n c h D e fe n s e M inister Francois Leotard conduct­ ed talks with M orillon and Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic. Leotard w as in Sarajevo for a one-day visit. The "safe areas" plan dominated discussions. Izetbegovic had said such zones would effectively lock the M uslims into U.N.-guarded reservations, and his d eputy, Ejup G anic, dism issed them S a tu rd a y as "c o n c e n tra tio n cam ps." " I understand very well the con­ cerns of the Bosnian govern m ent," Leotard told reporters after talking to Izetbegovic. "S e cu rity zones should be open and p erm it the free m ovem en t of citizens, which perm its normal life of the population, and ... areas can b e jo in e d to g e th e r by sa fe c o r r i­ d ors," he said. T h e r e s o lu tio n did n o t d e ta il w here the extra troops would come from for the "s a fe z o n e s," and no country has volunteered. Moving mountains S a le v a a A tisanoe, who g o e s by the sumo sumo wrestling tournament in San Jose, name of Konishiki, wrestled with an unidenti- C a lif., S a tu rd a y . K o n ish ik i w e ig h s 5 7 6 fied boy during opening ce re m o n ie s of a pounds. Associated Press AIDS conference opens with battle over AZT value Associated Press BERLIN — Leading researchers clashed Sunday over the best use of the anti-A IDS drug AZT, as activists, scientists and peo­ ple with AIDS prepared to open an inter­ national conference on the epidemic. Dr. M áx im e S elig m an n o f th e S a in t- L o u is H o sp ita l in P a ris stu d ie d 1,749 patients who used AZT, the primary drug to fight AIDS. He found no difference in the d ru g 's e ffectiv en ess am ong peop le w ho w ere given it early and those w ho w ere g iv e n it a fte r the v iru s had p ro ­ gressed. S e lig m a n n said b ec a u se the d ru g is only tem porarily effective against AIDS, "you may want to save it for later." Neither study found that AZT has any value in prolonging patients’ lives. The issue is whether it can slow progression of the disease. Seligm ann spoke Sunday at a sym po­ sium just before the opening of the Ninth International Conference on AIDS. The symposium was sponsored by Bur­ roughs W ellcom e Co., the maker of AZT, o n e o f the few dru gs av ailable to fight AIDS. Seligm ann's study, known as the C on­ corde trial, has prompted a sharp debate o v er w hether A m erican d octors should continue their widespread practice of pre­ scribing AZT before symptoms develop. AZT delays the onset of AIDS in people infected w ith the hum an im m u n o d efi­ ciency virus, or I UV. Dr. Paul Volberding o f the University o f C a lifo r n ia at San F r a n c is c o is th e author o f the leading study supporting the early use of AZT. That study, su p ­ ported by the U.S. governm ent, led the to F ood an d D ru g A d m in is tra tio n approve the dru g's use in H IV-infected people before the onset of AIDS sym p­ toms. The study also challenges findings that In an update of the study to be present­ ed later this week, Volberding will report that the sooner AZT is taken, the longer it will keep patients from becoming sick. N either V olberding's nor Seligm ann's stud ies find that AZT has any value in prolon g in g p atien ts' lives. T he issue is w h ether it can slow p ro g ressio n of the disease. The results of the Concorde trial were released earlier this year, bu t Su n d ay 's symposium provided an opportunity tor Seligmann and Volberding to publicly air their differences. O ver three years there is no signif icant bent'fit in terms of survival or progression to A ID S," Seligm ann said. ‘ W e believe these results do not encourage early use of AZT to treat AIDS, except perhaps in combination with other anti-viral drugs." 4 drown as ship of Chinese immigrants runs aground NEWS IN BRIEF Associated Press NEW YORK — Hundreds of ille­ gal C h in e s e im m ig ra n ts — so m e w e a rin g b u s in e s s su its , so m e in their underw ear — jumped intoethe chilly Atlantic before dawn Sunday when a sm uggling ship ran aground on a New York City beach. Four p eop le drow ned, tw o died later and about 30 others w ere taken to h o spitals, m ost for treatm ent of exposu re o r hypotherm ia, officials said. M o re th an 2 00 p e o p le fled the sh ip an d a b o u t 100 o th e rs w e re tak en a s h o re from th e fre ig h te r. O fficials w ere looking for about 25 people believed still at large. "It looked alm ost like the m ovie about the invasion of N orm and y," said police Detective Ming Li, who arriv ed sh o rtly a fter the 150-fo o t f r e ig h te r G o ld e n V e n tu re ran aground at 2 a.m. Som e swam and waded to shore clutching plastic bags of belongings. Others rode the surf in, using plastic jugs as m akeshift floats. Many had to be fished out of 53-degree ocean w aters o ff R ockaw ay Peninsula in the borough of Queens. M edical w orkers reported treat­ ing 328 people at the scene. M o st o f th e im m ig ra n ts w ere y o u n g m en an d a b o u t 20 w e re women. The freighter hit a sandbar about 200 yards off a seaside park, near a C o a st G u ard sta tio n . P olice w ere in v e s tig a tin g w h e th e r th e sh ip b e a c h e d it s e lf in te n tio n a lly to offload its human cargo. T h e re sc u e e ff o r t p itte d F ire Departm ent and Coast Guard teams in small boats against high surf and sw ift currents. A Coast Guard skiff cap sized , but all three crew m em ­ bers escaped injury. M ost aboard the freig h ter w ere from C h in a's Fujian province and had been at sea about 100 days, said W illia m S la tte ry , d ire c to r o f th e Im m ig ra tio n and N a tu ra liz a tio n Service in New York. A 27-year-old im migrant from the city o f Fuzhou in Fujian province said he and th e o th e rs p an ick ed when the ship ran aground. " W e c o m p le te ly d id n 't know w h a t w as h a p p e n in g ," said th e man, w'ho was too afraid to give His n a m e . " I fe lt lik e 1 d ied a little inside." He ju m p ed from the sh ip , and said it felt like "there w7as no one to save u s." But a rescuer helped him ashore. The man, w'ho cam e to the United Illegal Asian immigrants huddled on States seeking w ork, said the boat had been at sea for m ore than three m onths but ho didn't know' where it had been. "So m e days there w-as food, some days there w a sn 't/' he said, speak­ ing M andarin. "It was very hard to get w ater to drink." Immigration officials report a ris­ in g tid e o f C h in e s e im m ig ra n ts s n e a k in g in to the U n ite d S ta te s, a id e d by sm u g g le rs w h o ch a rg e Associated Press the beach in New York City Sunday. $20,000 to $35,000 per person More th an 1,800 ille g a l C h in e se a lie n s have been caught since January. Slattery said the Golden Venture w as th e 24th k now n sh ip lo a d of Chinese to reach I 9. waters in the past two years, but the first in New York, 1 le said a new federal task force was approved by tire White House l a s t w eek " t o s h u t th is tr a ffic d ow n." Associated Press Bolivia’s first peaceful election ends in runoff LA P A Z , B o liv ia — W e a lth y miner Gonzalo Sanchez de 1 ozada took a clear lead in Bolivia's presi­ dential elections Sunday, paving the wav tor his probable victory in a runoff in Congress, provisional results showed. The election w as w tdely consid­ ered the most peaceful and open in the country's history. Sanchez d e Lozada's party, the Revolutionarv N ationalist M ove­ ment, v\as ahead with at least 35 p ercen t o f the vote p ro v isio n a l results based on 70 percent of the \ ote count showed. S in c e no p a rty a p p e a re d to receive an absolute m ajority in the nationwide poll, the next president w ill be ele c te d on A u g. n from am ong the top three v o t e g e t t e r s b v t h e C o n g re s s t h a t w m s a l s o being elected on Sunday. Clinton attends ceremony to mark R F k assassination ARl INGTON, Va. — President C linton paid tribu te to Robert F. Kennedv as "a relentless searcher tor change" at a candlelight Mass Sunday beside Kennedy's grave 25 years after an assassin s bullet took hts life. "L et us embrace the memory of R obert K enned y bv living as he would have us live ' Clinton told thousands gathered on a hillside at Arlington National Cemetery'. "L et us believe again we can do better." K e n n e d y , at th e tim e a N ew York senator, was fatally shot on Ju n e 5, 1 % 8 on the night of his victory in the California D em ocrat­ ic presid ential prim ary He died the following day Spain re-elects Socialists M ADRID, Spain — Prim e M in­ ister F e lip e G o n z a le z 's ru lin g Socialists overcame Spain's dismal econom y and alleg atio n s ot co r­ ruption to win parliamentary’ elec­ tions Sunday , staving off a strong challenge from conservatives. The S o cialist victory indicated that the center-right Popular Partv st i l l has not com pletely exorcised the g h o s t of longtim e right-w ing dictator Francisco Franco and his 36-year repressive regime. It was the closest national elec­ tio n s in c e S p a in re tu rn e d to democracy in 1977 IE D \ m T e x a n ae 4 Monday, June 7’. 1993 EDITORIALS T h e Da il y T e x a n Craig Ackerman Associate Editor Editorial B o a rd Rebecca Stewart Editor Robert Rogers Associate Editor Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor and the writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. Opinions expressed in staff or guest columns are those of the writer. Letters submitted to Firing Line should be fewer than 250 words, and guest columns should be no more than 750 words. Bring submis­ sions 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. & XX NT ridlock Texas loses with GOP victory With the defeat of Sen. Bob Krueger, the damage control has begun. Instead of taking the collective blame for the senator's loss, the Democrats have chosen to point fingers. F irly Saturday evening, the White House distanced itself from Krueger andjblamed Gov. Ann Richards for making a poor appointment in Janu­ ary. í exas Democrats pointed the finger back and blamed President Clin­ ton's inability to get major bills passed through Congress as the main problem. And Richards, who placed Krueger in this position, wouldn't say a word while she stood on the podium behind the senator as he con­ ceded the race. is this the Democratic unity everyone was cheering about early in the race? You should have stood by your man, Ann. Politicians need to stop name calling and labeling Krueger the loser. The real losers of this race are the people of Texas. With two Republi- c n senators, at least half of the state's voters will be left out of the políti­ ca' process. The gridlock will continue now that the Senate minority has gained another seat. Both Kay Bailey Hutchison and Krueger said they would work together for a smooth transition, but that was just an election-night courtesy. As soon as Krueger packs his boxes and Hutchison moves in, it will be poli­ tics as usual. How can Hutchison say she will work to stop the roadblocks the Republicans keep throwing in Clinton's way? She had the king of grid- ! ck, Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kansas, campaigning for her. I Ter path to change Washington politics is littered with a bunch of sore- w inning Republicans. When Hutchison told her political supporters that Krueger had called to congratulate her Saturday evening, the crowd broke into laughter. When she added that Richards had called her too, everyone started to boo and hiss. Is this any way to start a smooth transition? Didn't her supporters learn proper family values from their parents? Don't they know that it's rude to bo*’ when they hear the governor's name? It sure doesn't seem like it. If any meaningful work is to be accomplished in the Senate now, both sides of the aisle are going to have to work together and make an honest effort toward compromise* Texas is in a dangerous position now that both senators are Republican, ur two Republicans join the forces to stymie Clinton's legislation, oses. — R ebecca Strcoart MZ 6E^6£N,m EK& A ng semester. The attorney general has ruled that the following items are directory information: • degrees, awards, and honors received • participation in officially recognized activities and sports • ethnicity • weight and height if a member of an athletic team • dates of attendance • the most recent previous educational institution attended • sex • marital status • classification • nam es and addresses of ferrxe' stucents w ho are credited with funds reman r>g in their general property deposit • student parking permit inform aron • names and attendance recoras o? • expected date of graduation students in individual courses For details about the Fam ily Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 see the General Information catalog, 1992-1993. DIRECTORY IN F O R M A T IO N SH O U L D BE KEPT CURRENT. Com m unications from the university are mailed to the 3 Jewess you give to the registrar's office. An incorrect address may interfere with your registration or cause k a to miss important university correspondence. You are responsible for any correspondence mailed to you a: the address on the registrar's records. (HUNT NO LONGER! S YOU’LL FIND IT ALL IN THE DAILY TEXAN 7 .7 .7 T X T 1 I CLASSIFIED S 471-5244 Yeast infection? Healthy women over age 16 are needed to evalute a vaginal medication for relief of symptoms associated with an active vagina! yeast infection. This research study requires three visits over a five-week period. Participants completing the study will earn $150. $150 For more information, please call: 478-4004 Phones answered 24 hours a day P H A R M A C O : : L S R (Formerly Pharmaco) (e y e c d r e ) " V IS IO N CENTERS V Optometry & Treatment of Eye Disease James A. Dugas, O.D. EXAMS • CONTACTS • GLASSES 1904 Guadalupe (Bank One Mall • Park free in Bank One Lot) 476-1000 O ffering the latest in contact lens technology..«At afforable prices. COMPLETE EXAM 24.00 CONTACT LENS EXAM Free pair of disposable lenses with exam 59.00 30 % Off c Designer Frames n: Berdel, Marchon, Armani, Polo and many others C1BA Focus soft lenses (daily or exten d ed ) 4 Pair for 49.99 • Rx required CI25GS * Exams available at our office h -— HI STATE & LOCAL T he D u n T r.w \ Page 6 Monday. June 7. 1993 Locals plead for air bases to stay open Associated Press C O R PU S C H R IST I — C losin g Kelly Air Force Base at San Antonio and Tinker AFB at Oklahoma Citv would be devastating to the local economies, their supporters argued before a base-closure comm ission Sunday. " C lo s in g K elly w ould h ave a scalding impact on our communi­ ty ," Texas Attorney General Dan Morales said in a plea focusing on the importance of the San Antonio bast' to Hispanics. O klah om a City M ayor Ron Norick said shutting down Tinker would make thp Oklahoma oil bust "look like a cake walk." "W e 'v e had a tough, tough 10 years in Oklahoma," Norick said. "I don't want to see our city and our state go through that again." Kelly and Tinker are among more than 40 bases being considered for clo su re by the Base C losu re and Realignm ent C om m ission, which Protestors demonstrate outside the main gates of Kelly Air Force base in an attempt to keep the base open. held a regional hearing in Corpus G a., and M cC lellan AFB at tary jargon and big-name politicos, Christi on Sunday. Sacramento, Calif. the Texas and Oklahom a lobbies touted the m ilitary importance of their bases and presented them ­ selves as the Air Force's most effi­ cient plane maintenance facilities. Though they d idn't make their presen tation s at C orpus C hristi, other air logistics centers on the list are Robins AFB at Warner Robins, The com m ission must make its reco m m en d atio n s to P resid en t Clinton by July 1. Armed with slides, charts, mili­ Associated Press Richards’ " a n ti-S O bill veto called victory Chris Schneidmiller Daily Texan Staff Austin environm entalists called Texas Gov. Ann Richards' veto of the “anti-SOS" bill a victo- rv over developers seeking to undermine the Save Our Springs Ordinance. Richards vetoed the bill Saturdav because it would have allowed most development in the Barton Creek watershed to escape the SOS water quality ordinance, according to a prepared state- “It would undermine the results of the 1992 local election in which voters overwhelmingly approved a new w ater q uality o rd in a n c e ," Richards said. The proposal would have allowed develop­ ment under pre-SOS ordinances if a company had filed preliminary surveys of a development area before SOS was passed. Companies that filed other documents after SOS was approved would have been exempt^as long as the initial documents were approved, according to Mary Arnold, director of the SOS Coalition. The SOS ordinance, which was approved by voters in August 1992, added regulations to city water quality ordinances to further protect the Barton Springs recharge zone from development. E n v iron m en tal and p o litica l lea d ers said Sunday the veto is a sign of approval for the ordi­ nance. " It was great. I think it gives us a real clear path now on SOS and when it ap p lies," said newly elected Councilmember Jackie Goodman. Richards' veto was a political move designed to satisfy environmentalists, who are a large part of her support in Austin, said George Avery, president of the Austin Sierra Club. "I think she's definitely a person who appreci­ ates the strong support she has received from Austin," Avery said. R ich ard s' veto cam e after the L eg isla tu re approved the bill, despite efforts to kill the pro­ posal from Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, who filibus­ tered against it for 18 hours, and others. According to Avery, the bill was designed to impose state legislation over city authority. He said the bill was "against the people of Austin" and the city would have been the only area affected. Richards has strong connections with local developers, especially Circle C Ranch developer Gary Bradley, with whom she has done business in the past. ' Richards had said in May that she planned to sign the bill. But Turk Pipkin, co-editor of the book Barton Springs Eternal and friend of Richards, said that Richard's statement was made before she looked closely at the bill. "S B 1029 w ou ld 've led to an overcrow ded development beyond what the land and the creek can sustain," Pipkin said. The b ill's fa ilu re w ill n ot a ffect m uch of F ree p o rt's developm en t n ear Barton C reek, which is already exempt, Freeport spokesman Bill Collier said. He added that the bill would have validated the SOS ordinance, giving it pro­ tection from legal challenges. "W e always felt that it helped SOS more than it hurt it," Collier said. According to Goodman, the b ill's veto will help Freeport, SOS and the city reach a compro­ mise in their battle over developm ent of the Barton Creek area. The three groups are working with mediators on a plan under which Freeport would agree to develop less land near the creek in exchange Tor sewage and water services. SOS proponents have said that Freeport must stop backing anti-SOS legislation, specifically SB 1029, if SOS was to agree to the proposal. or OFF • s7 off I any I BACKPACK ! QUEST 1 With Lifetime Guarantee * Vafid Only With Coupon ^ Not Valid W ith Other Discounts I Valid thru July 20, 1993 C o u p o n FREE T-SHIRT i < I with $40 or more ! purchase o ffe r expires July 20, 1993 Off The Drag TEXAS TEXTBOOKS Riverside Place Shopping Center 2410-B East Riverside 443-1257 Over 500 FREE Parking Spaces! Drag: Riverside: Regular Hours: Mon-Fri, Saturday Sunday Mon-Sat, Sunday 8 a.m.-8 p.m. 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 2 charged with abandoning child Jeff Mead Daily Texan Staff N eig h b o rs they h ave said w atched A ndrea Jam es beat her baby since she moved into her East Austin apartment three months ago. But w hen the ch ild su d d en ly stopped crying Saturday night, they decided to call the police. James, 21, and James Hobbs, 25, both of 41 Waller St., Apt. 309, were charged Sunday with abandoning a child, a second-degree felony. The two were being held at the T rav is C ou n ty C en tra l B ookin g Facility Sunday and were unavail­ able for comment. Police said they do not have an attorney. Neighbors said they saw Jam es drag the child up a staircase by the hair, throw him into the apartment, and leave him alone in their apart­ ment for more than six hours. Lena A lonzo, w ho liv e s tw o doors from James and Hobbs in the Lake Front Pioneer A partm ents, said she believes this is not the first tim e the tw o h av e abused th eir child. "T h is has been going on for a while," Alonzo said. "W e don't like to interfere ... but when it comes to a child, we felt like we needed to call the cops." M axcie M aldonado, who lives next door to the couple, said she heard a sound she believed was the baby being thrown against a wall just before the child stopped crying. "She threw him against the wall and he stopped crying. We thought the baby w as d e a d ," M aldonado said. A ccord in g to p o lice reco rd s, James and Hobbs left their son, who is tw o w eeks shy o f his second birthday, unattended in their apart­ ment for six hours and 45 minutes Saturday night. Linda G om ez, w ho lives w ith Alonzo, said James left the baby at the apartm ent m anager's door so the couple could be alone to drink. "S h e [Andrea Jam es] went and picked up the baby after a w hile and was screaming at him ," Gomez said. "She grabbed the baby by the hair, dragged him up the stairs and “She [Andrea James] grabbed the baby by the hair, dragged him up the stairs and threw him inside [the apartment].” — M axcie Maldonado, next-door neighbor threw him inside [the apartment]." Maldonado said once Hobbs and Jam es were inside the apartm ent, she could hear w hat she thought was James throwing the crying baby against the wall. "That's when he stopped crying," Maldonado said. Gomez said she called the police after the couple left the apartment. "W e didn't know if the baby was dead or not," Gomez said. "W hen the police came out, they said the baby had a bump on its head." The child was released into the custody of the Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services, according to police reports. Gomez said the couple knocked on n eig h b o rs' doors looking for th eir b aby after retu rn in g early Sunday morning to find the child missing. "I was on the couch and I heard [Jam es] y ellin g 'W h o sto le my b ab y ?'" Gomez said. Maldonado said James broke her ap artm en t w indow w hen she would not answer the door. "T h e y chased us u pstairs and broke my w in d o w ," M aldonado said. "They're crazy people." A lonzo also said H obbs had boasted of selling a 3-year-old baby to another couple for $300. "She sold one baby to buy a car," Alonzo said. "[H obbs] was going around bragging about it." Frank Luna, assistant manager of the Lake Front Pioneer Apartments, said James and Hobbs have caused problems at the complex before. "They disturb the neighbors and are loud and o b n o x io u s ," Luna said. If convicted of abandonment, the two face up to 20 years in prison and a fine of $10,000. DRAG One Stop Shop: In addition to stocking books for all classes at UT, we feature: • New & Used Textbooks • Backpacks • Josten's Class Rings • Engineering Supplies • Reference Books • UT Sportswear • Photo Copying • Cliff's Notes • Course Schedules • Send & Receive FAX world • and much, much, more! Free Coke r« w /t*xtbook purchase Expirti Jwty 20, 1993 On The Drag TEXAS TEXTBOOKS 2338 Guadalupe 478-9833 FREE Parking a» any ALL-RIGHT Parking Lot with purchase or buyback GUARANTEED BEST TEXTBOOK PRICES IN TOWN! We guarantee the lowest prices on every new or used textbook. If a textbook store in town beats our prices on any book, we will refund the difference. ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT M onday, June 7, 1993 Page ' Just don’t call i t ‘S lacker’-esq ue Austin Tex-M ex klepto love story defies Hollywood mainstream Budget and creative control set Shameless’ apart, says director Jamey Smith Daily Texan Staff FILM T h e title of this movie says it all. It seems like ev ery w h ere you look these days, people are sh am eless. P o litician s sh a m elessly p rom ise for v o tes. an y th in g Employees shamelessly kiss up to their bosses. M id d le-ag ed w om en shamelessly shop at H.E.B. in their curlers. It's an epidem ic; our society has lost all sense of shame. Shameless explores this phe­ nomenon and more. Described by director Robert Bvington as a 'Tex-Mex klepto love story," the filmre- volves around two Latino college room­ mates and an architecture teaching assis­ tant. The three make an unlikely love trian­ gle after the TA, Myers (Scott Rhodes, who also appeared in Slacker), is rebuffed by one of the women but shamelessly swallows his pride and begins dating the other. Even though the three begin spending a lot of time with each other, it's nothing kinky. They just steal things together. Ironically, the movie is overflowing with religious imagery. Im alia (N atalie Karp) surrounds herself with crucifixes and Christ figures. The icons seem to represent a cul­ ture she feels allegiance to, but was not raised in. This absence in her life is appar­ ently what drives her to steal, because her booty often includes Catholic artifacts. That's not to say she limits her thievery to a religious theme. In one of the movie's funniest scenes, Imalia rips off the cash box at a fraternity party after enduring a conde­ scending conversation with a couple of frat rats. In this scene and a few others, Spanish is spoken. It's not enough to befuddle non- Spanish speaking viewers, but just enough Shameless production crew films a sequence at an Austin-area Taco Bell. Robert Byington, second from the right, weaves a bilingual love story around Austin streets. to make a point. The Greeks' Anglo-centric attempts to relate to Imalia are hilarious but sadly sobering when you realize the por­ trayals are not as cartoonish as thev first appear. Anyone who has lived in W est Campus will recognize things in this film besides the geography. Shameless contains occasional voiceover n arratio n by M yers. In many film s, a voiceover seems to be an afterthought (Blade Runner) or a desperate attem pt to make sense of a convoluted plot (The Two Jakes). In Shameless, however, the narration goes well with the mood set by the crisp black- and-white images. It's unobtrusive and it works. Solid acting laced with some cool music by locals Cotton Mather, Daniel Johnston and the Reivers (may they rest in peace) m akes Sham eless look and sound much more expensive than the cost to produce. And in wl a coup. Bvington acquiree ately moodv music from which opens and closes the If more of the moviegoi occasionally take a chance films like this one msteai lining up at the m ultipl Hollywood formula flick, r American film productioi such a shambles. SHAMELESS S t a r r in g : S c o tt R h o d e s , Carmen Nogales Director: Robert Byingtc Playing at: Dobie 1 & 2. 2 Rating: ■*★★★ (out of fi aoatupe SL Carmen Maverick Daily Texan Staff 10,000 M aniacs acceptable past college 10,000 MANIACS Featuring: World Party Playing at: Palmer Auditorium. 210 E. Second St. Date: 8 p.m. Monday ü ü highly su ccess­ ful album , Our Time in Eden , is usually con sid­ ered a "college" band. But re ­ cently, a group of elem en tary school children were treated to some quality time with the group. Lead singer N atalie M erchant and Scholastic Newspapers helped organize a contest for young lyric writers. Copies of some of the songs from Eden w ere sent to teach ers arou nd the co u n try w ith id eas about w'riting lyrics. A sixth-grade girl in Oregon won the grand prize: She and 400 of her classmates had their own special concert featuring 10,000 Maniacs. "T h e y liked the show- ... they were, groovin' to i t ,' says drummer Jerome Augustvniak. "Their parents and teachers liked it more. I don't know what sixth-graders are into these days." P rob ably som e of the "o ld e r " folk at that show have follow'ed the group since their days as a cover P R E S ID IO T H E A T R E S W E RE B IG O N B A R G A IN S WELCOME BACK STUDENTS YES, FOLKS. That's right! Now students pay only $4 00 wTID - Bargain matinees until 6 00 pm $3 00 - Children and seniors $3 00 - and only $5 00 for adult admission! For Village Only! STUDENT DISCOUNTS DAILY y w l l f p u » f t w E i w u o RIVERSIDE 8 IN RIVERSIDE MALL 448-0008 GUILTY AS SIN no passes 12:15 2 30 5 00 7 30 tftO O __________ SMART STEREO MADE IN AMERICA (Pg i3> no passes/no klbj 1 2 00 2 15 4 45 7:15 9:40___________SMART STEREO DAVE (P613) 11 45 2 00 4 30 7 00 9 30 SUPER MARIO BROTHERS (pg> 11.45 2.QQ 4 J O 7.00 9 JO LIFE WITH MIKEY . th a t's stim u li enough 'he says. "I don't think we could ever really consciously try and do something different." 10,000 Maniacs perform on Monday band when they formed in 1981. Nowadays, the band is ven prolific in its production of orginal material, but it has recently gotten attention for its cover of the Morrissev song, Every Day is Like Sunday. Augustvniak, how ever, insists there is nothing romantic about how the version of that song came about. Ever\r time a band puts out a single, the record compam wants to pack­ age it as many ways a> the\ can as in CD 3s and CD Js. "It we re going to put out several singles, we have to come up with a bunch of B-Mdes so the B -sides might be live tracks. In this case, we record ed a bunch of co v ers in Buffalo, New V>rk." In addition to the M o rrissey song, the band DOZEN ROSES $9 .9 5 CasA A Carrs Fiesta Flowers 3 8 3 0 N. L a m a r 4 5 3 -7 6 1 9 NOMADIC JNOTIONS 3018 W. Anderson i n 454-0001 wlf General Cinema TUESDAY IS BARGAINQAY ALL SUTS ALL SHOWS-ALL DAY & NIGHT TOO! $ 3 0 0 TUESDAY ONLY EXCEPT "HOT SHOTS! PART DEUX" and MADE IN AMERICA BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6pm G E N E R A L C IN E M A HIGHLAND 10 & | 1-35 at M I D D L E F IS K V lL ti «D 4 5 4 9 5 6 2 ] LIRE w ith MIKEY ' 00 3 05 5 >0 1 15 9 25 “ G m EXCESSIVE FORCE 7 45 9 45 * sumo CLIFFHANGER ON TWO SCREENS R 11:15 2 40 S 05 7 40 10;10 THI J DO 4 *0 7 10 9 40 >011* HAPPILY EVER AFTER 11 45' 30 3 2C 5 10 G sumo MENACE D SOCIETY ON TWO SCREENS 12 30 5:00 5 15 7 50 10 05 R nu 7 IS * 40 7 15 « 30 R coin HOT SNOTS! Part (ta il K J 4 6 I 10 PGIJsu*»* LOST hi YONKERS 1O0AY 2 JO 9 55 PC TUESDAY 2 30 5 00 7:30 « 55 PG SUMO DAVE 12:00 2 25 4 50 7 20 9 50 RG13 DOir THE CRYING GAME 2 35 5 05 7 30 10 00 R SURE0 (MINERAL CINEMA GREAT HILLS 8 6 [ U S 183 & GR EAT HILLS TRAIL 7 94 8 0 7 6 I 7 10 7:35 * 35 10 05 MIR LIFE with MIKEY 12:45 3:00 5 15 7 30 9 40 PC in i SUPER MARIO BROS 12 45 2 55 5 10 7 25 9 <5 RG no MADE IN AMERICA ON TWO SCREENS PG13 1 30 2 15 « 10 4 50 HAPPILY EVER AFTER 1 00 3 00 5 00 G susto MENACE Q SOCIETY 2 15 4 40 7 15 9 30 R StHKO POSSE ' 25 9 50 R SUMO DRAGON 7:15 9 45 RG13sumo THE SANDLOT !2 45 2 50 4 55 PG SUMO ALADDIN 12:45 2:45 5:00 7:00 9 00 G ilHIO Roses 1 0 .5)5 I)ozon Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 * 0 6 9 1 Daily Specials F T P • 4 5 0 1 G u a d a lu p e • O n U T S h u ttle Rt ( o s i i A - ( t t i I V 1HE BEST PICTURE Of THE TEAR ( SIN VKMtftMZA ) 2 :15 -7 :3 0 Strictly Ballroom 7 :1 5 11 45 Army of Darkness 1200 I < I I I L illy T o m lin's The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe 4 a s 9 3, EXAM CONTACTS Starting at 599* Complete *prica inckxj»» exam , 1 p a ir clear doily w e a r soft contacts, core kit, dispensing instructions, 1 si follow up. EXPIRES July 13,1993. WITH COUPON ONLY N O T VAJJD W ITH A N Y OTHER OFFER Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, O ptom etrist 2 4 1 5 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west of UT 477-2282 (fy.Fé M / C V IS A A M X DISC ( jf1 ¡ Jamey Smith Da ly Texar Staff A t first glance, Robert Byin gton looks lik e typ ical beer- your sw illin g college stu ­ dent At 26. Byington, who holds an M.A in A m erican Stu d ies from the U niversity, easily passes for 20 in his cu t-o ffs and T- shirt. Behind the facade, however, a talent­ ed and driven filmmaker is hiding. For proof, go see Byington's first feature film Shameless, an impressive debut, especially considering it was made for onlv $30,000. "W e had to go six-dav weeks with a four-week shoot." Byington says of the movie, which was filmed this time last year in the campus area. "A lot of the big­ ger shoots have the luxury of knowing they'll be able to schedule reshoots. I'd like to work \\ ith a bigger budget just because I think planning reshoots is a nice thing to be able to do. Just knowing that vouTl be able to rethink some things." Other factors set Shameless apart from the mainstream. For instance, it lacks vio- lence and nudity. Bvington, who also w rote the film 's script, credits his four investors for allowing him to make the film his wny. "On a film that is going to sign on a dis­ trib u te' before you eo into production, which is very common these days, you can entice a distributor by guaranteeing cer­ tain elements in the script," he savs. "You can say. Look, we'll have six tits, eight guns and four dead people. It makes a dif­ ference ir pre-selling a film.'' Byington says he s been fortunate in dealing with people who do not mandate what enc- up on-screen. But he concedes “The comparisons [to Slacker] ar^ inevitable... maybe I’ll just need to get comfortable with that.” — Robert Byington that it's unrealistic to think he will be able to avoid that on future protects "That's just one element of the business But peo­ ple get to make films they want to make, basically. Robert [Rodriguez, director of El Mariachi] is going to get to make a film he wants to m ake, with com plete creative co n tro l. Sam e w ith [S lacker d irecto r Richard] Linklater." Becau se it has no d istrib u to r vet, Byington is toting the film to various film festivals around the country. "A lot will depend on how it does here," he savs of his chances of attracting a d istribu tor. "The Dobie has been a launching pad for a few films. We're hoping that if we can get a few people in in the next few' davs that w ell be able to stick around for a while." Shameless has already been pegged in print as another twentysomething S lacker- esque Generation X-malaise film, a label Byington disdains but understands. "The com parisons [to S lacker] are in evitable because of the geography and the budget and the perform ers, and maybe I'll just need to get comfortable with that. Slacker is a brilliant film and it's nice to be com­ pared to." Sc is the writer director pleased wnth his accomplishment? "Any director, by die time he talks about his film after he's made it, is totally unable to watch the film,' savs Byington. "I've seen Shameless about 350 times and now I literally get a physical sensation of nausea when I watch it. So a director who says, Hey, this is a great film, go see it,' is lying!" Conway Twitty dies after tour Associated Press SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Conwav Twitty, who started as a teen rock idol in the 1950s and crossed ox er to cou ntry to becom e a star, died Saturday at age 59. His wife. Dee Henrv, other rela­ tives and some of his band mem­ bers were with him at Cox Medical Center-South when he died of com­ p licatio n s from surgery' after a blood vessel ruptured in his stom­ ach. Twitty' collapsed on his tour bus during a rest stop in southw est Missouri. He was on the way home to H endersonville, Tenn., from a p erfo rm an ce Friday n igh t in Branson, Mo. "I've iust been sitting here cryin g," said Sandy Brokaw Twitty s press representative. "1 was in awe of the man." Twitty was bom Sept. 1, 1933, as Harold Lloyd Jenkins, named after the silent movie star. He changed his name in 1957 by borrowing from Conwav Ark., and Twitty, Texas. Conway Twitty. 59. died Saturday. Hey Gang! It’s Time for COMPACT DISCS o f AUSTIN'S 6 t h Anniversary Sale! JUNE 6 THRU 1 3TH SAVE BIG During This Storewide Sale! £ Off All New Discs ’7 " and up!! $ I 00 I Off all used discs and new discs *6” & Below 1 0 % Off All Accessories!! 1 0 % Off Ail Imports, & Multi-Disc Sets Above s19*t! SPECIAL! Receive s1°° extra credit when you trade in your used ■discs itiunng i PARTY!! Sunday June 13th 6-8 pm Join us for Soho Sodas, Cake, Door Prizes. And the Biggie - a Sanyo CD Boombox from Circuit City. t Register anytime but you must be present to win.) 6 4 0 6 N. 111-35, SI ITH 1301 V A l ST1N. TEXAS 78752 (5 1 2 )4 5 4 -1 2 1 2 In Lincoln Village, next to Bookstop o r AUSTIN Page 8 Monday, June 7,1993 T h k D a il y T e x a n AROUND CAMPUS Around Campus is a daily column listin g University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organi- zations registered with the Campus A ctivities O ffice. A nnouncem ents m ust be su b m itted on the proper form by 9 p.m. two days before pub­ lication. Forms aré a v a ilab le at the D a ily Texan office at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions. J 5HORT COURSES^ Baptist Student U nion w ill hold conversational English classes. Classes are free, and w ill be held M ondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 2:30- 3:30 p.m. and T u esd ays and Thursdays from 12:30-2 p.m. at the B ap tist Stu d e n t U n io n , 2204 San Antonio St. For mqre information, call 474-1429. Learning Skills Center will offer a four-w eek con versation al E nglish class. The class w ill meet M o n d ay through Thursday from 1-2:15 p.m. in Beauford H. Jester Center A209. The class is free, but lim ited to 1>T stu­ dents. Enrollment runs through June 7 in Beauford H. Jester Center A322. For more information, call 471-3614. Learning S k ills Center w ill offer reviews for Math 301 exams starting June 18. Sessions w ill run from 3-5 p.m. and w ill precede sched uled exams. Check with the Learning Skill Center for review dates and locations. The classes are free, but limited to UT students. Enrollm ent runs through June 7 in Beauford H. Jester Center A322. For more information, call 471- 3614. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES Texas Intensive English Program needs leaders for summer conversa­ tion clubs with international students who are learning English. Meetings w ill be held at the Texas Inten sive English Program, located at 1103 W . 24th St. Call Liz Murphy at 477-4511 after 12:30 p.m. to schedule an inter­ view. OTHER Department of Psychology is look­ ing for individuals with severe anxiety related to public speaking, meeting w ith people, parties, dating, etc. to p articipate in a study of non-drug treatments for severe social anxiety. For more information, call 471-3722. fcPt7\6 QlkJ[Z\It L O M , Í KWov* f 5hoüíW< » £17, 6/AP A5 *, f a ll Wma< MS io0 u f do Jo W p ' c h e c k o o < ouk. f t o w o / 'A i i 'i A j f w j F j ] CAtU Gifk, 9SSCJÍV FAOr* - ^ € > ^ {5 ; 0* A MMWÍN, Ae.fi lAOkK. m li A(J £*- W€l>/ jec A A W i t t w / / O Crossword Edited by Eugene T. Maleska AC RO SS 32 Winglike f 5 3 4 1 Marry in haste • La Scala solo 10 L A. eleven 1« Corncobs 15 Kind of wagon or saw 1 5 Q.E.F. word 17 I.e. words i t -— no good i»"Last Supper* picture 20 Disagreement 22 Lalapalooza 23 Alleviate 24 Congenital 25 Absquatulates 30 American Beauties 33 Rene actor , TV 35 Ceremonies 35 Douglas debater 41 Neptune's spear 43 Niggardly 44 Dull pain 46 Irish lake 47 Artist Rivera 45 Old MacDonald, e.g. 51 Appraise 54 Regretted 56 Actress Delany 57 Smuggled goods ANSW ER TO P R E VIO U S PU ZZLE - P 1 T r C R A M ► .. A S E R A E N w A c K 9 CA MP E T ■ E 1 U s E R 8 0 u N 0 B 1 T F E N D O w E 0 S R E e , e m Iy \L t G A N T A L F O VHT 1 B E T L 1 A Mm £ E N E E A L E U T m E • M s 1 N A C T 1 V E s O C 1 O N A N A L E N V O L T A i H E U c A S A L L u S T T A T T L I D A T R 1 A E R O O Si L 1 M N A R A D A R E L A T E R G u A C A M O L E E T C H ■ 1 N O N S E K o|1 S Y S T <4 20 is 43 56 63 66 69 63 A u ric u la r 64 Dismounted 65 Beeper 66 Renovate •7 Walking tempo 66 Strong-smelling weed 65 First place 70 A lw a y s 71 Chinks; cracks DOWN 1 "Iliad." e.g. 2 Resort near Venice a Accessible 4 Midge or aphid 5 Regard highly 6 Adjoins 7 Thrusting swords 8 Division word 5 Handsome young man 10 Take another look 11 Dallas's Reunion--- 12 Impressionists’ leader 13 Rubberneck 21 Of the nose 25 St. Philip--- 26 Tar 27 Cato’s 152 28 T o lle d 7 * ■ I IS 1 . , 34 I S l 40 mmJJ 47 ■ “ 48 51 52 53 ■ ■54 56 55 No. 0426 6 1 ’T í w T5 TJ 1¿2 , ; ■15 37 42 _ ■ i 31 50 mm w m m 60 61 | 1 I 67 ... I| 65 I “ 29 Ecclesiastic next below a bishop 31 Solemn promise 34 Obstacle 35 Bush had just 37 Nine: Comb, one form 38 Suffix with mob or gang 40 The elevator man 42 Advert 45 Top part of an entablature 46 Abscond so Accommodates 55 Absolute 56 King Harald's predecessor 59 Ancient Semitic 51 Idolize 52 Gorged 53 Slyly derogatory 60 Hindu god of deity fire 61 Raven's haven 62 Prohibitionists 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 o 0 I f i l carl greenblatt TWOUJORPS, OKAY? ft/CHARD G&ZB ANP KJM BASINGER! 60T YOUR ATTENTION* I MEAN, HAVE I 60T YOUR. \ ATTENTION* IPUNN0, TOO CLUELESS* OKAY, LETT'S 60 SIP. LUE GOTTA BE ANOTHER UJAY! CAREFUL NOU) \ REPFORP- STREEP! i T h e D a i l y T e x a n Com ics Read ‘em to your kids! Well, m ost o f ‘em, Well, som e o f ‘em Well, ... read ‘em to your, a h h h Read ‘em to you rself and enjoy m e G l u m C lub "The. oThep- P o t s p t c K e p o N B^NNiy. 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J' -WTT To Place a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 Classified W ord Ad Rates Charged &v v* won: Basec an a 1 5 word m irn rn u m , ttie foNowtng -ates aopN 1 aev-----------------------------JHS.15 $11.70 2 d a y 3 deys—_________ S16S5 4 oays.— - .......— - ___ &2Ü.4C 5 days $ 2 3 2 5 First two words may be al capita tetters S.25 for eac* additio-.a word ette's. capita MasterCat and Vise acceptec in ^ s Classified Display Ad Rates Charges tty the caumr inch -One solurnr inch rrnnmuT. A vsnety of type faces arc s res and boroers available -a -ates Sept 1-May 3C 1 to 21 column inches per month; S9.2D oe* cos met* ove* 21 ootomr nches per month. Cat for rates. TRANSPORTATION 1D-Mtsc M-os ?3-Socrt&^o-etcr ^utc 30-Trjaks-Van6 ¿D-Vehides to T-aoe 5G-Serviae-Reper SO-PertB-AcaesKnas 7D—Motcrcvoies 83—Scyctes 9 0 - venoes-Leasinc 1 0 0 —Vehice&- Wanted 1 10-S e rvc es 1 20-4-touses 130-Condos-Townhornes 140 -M o b «e Homes-uots 15 0 —Aoneagfriots 1 SO-Duplexes-Apart ments 170—Wanted 1 S3—-.oans 8 0(3-5:00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication T l j ; MSy»T 19C—Apokances 2 00 -F v rn tu re-H ousehold c13—Stereo--» 2 2 0 —Computers •£ qmpment 2 33—°n3tc-3a~-e~s 2 4 G -8o ats 2 5 0 —Musical Instrumente 2 6 0 —Hopotes c 73—Machtnetvcouoment 280-SporbngCamotng Eau©men; 29fZ~*-x~t.j'<~ iap«anoe Rexa 3 X —3 a *a ;f - j — age S a te 31 0-T rad e 3 2 0 — Wanted tc- 5 . , cr Reft 3 3 0 —Pete 3 4 0 —L o n g h c r * Afant 4 cs 3 4 5 -M s : RENTAL 3 5 0 -R e n ta Senncas 3 8 0 -F u m s h e c Apes 3 7 0 - U nfim shec Apts 380-RrTashac Duplexes 390—Unfurrsshed Duplexes 400-C ondos Tpwnhomes 4 1 0-Furrtsbed Houses 4 2 0 - Ü nftm sh ed - o js es 4 ? 5 “ ftoOHS 43O-Fbon>0oan¡ ¿25-Co-ops 440-RtxjrrwnBCBS ¿5 1—M acme Homes-i-ots 4 6 0 -6 u *m a s s Rentals 473i—Resorts 433—Storage Space 4 9 0 - anted x Rent-Laase 5 0 0 —M s c n JUU 5 1 3-Et*ert»rmertt-T«5cjBte 520-Personals 533—" '■mm-T ~a nsportaAx 540—Lost & cojnc 353—-cense: 3hiic 3a*e 560—Pubhc Motee 370—Music-Musicaans ■' • • TStryotior 590-Totoring 6 0 0 -te s rjc s tc r Wanted 6 1 3 —M s : nstnodior SERVICES 6 2 0 —Lsga Sesrvioes. 633—3: - putw Senaces 640-ciflcr^knator» SSO-Mowng-Heu mg 553—Sxrage 6 7 0 Parting 533—Offce 690—Rentai Equomex 7 3 0 - í j —«xre Ftenca ~ 10 Appiance Ftepar 720-Qtereo-T\i Rep»* 730—Hpme -eoar 743—5 c o e Aeoa1' 753—7yprig 7 6 0 —Msc Se-« T h e D a ily T e x a n Monday, June 7,1993 Page 9 MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED A O V E F T T IS IN G T E R M S T VQZHSi lSJ>-y0Pivris Hec War 01 323—Appc jntr 5-5 poktj S X —Business 0 t 94G—Oorortur oe St R E N T A L 3 6 0 - Fum. Aprs. RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 3 60 - Fum . A pts. 360 - Fum . A pts. 3 70 - U n fum . A p ts. 3 70 - U n fum . A pts. 370 - U n fu m . A pts. T H R E E O A K S & P E C A N S Q U A R E APARTMENTS 1 B O R 1 BA • • F u lly F u rn is h e d • Laundry Room • Community Atmosphere • On Shuttle • No Application Fee • Preleasing • On-site manager • Affordable deposit 451-5840 4 0 9 W . 3 8 t h S t . Walk To Campus SUMMER o. »• a u o lity co m p le x 2 Sm of s k s north o* UT i 2 Be- ao*s for short ©- long »«-- Poo ca«- ered pork • : shuttle r ceiv fur. n s- ea w8h a t b ils d o c i Cha pa rosa Apts. 474-1902 t-: 70M EFFICIENCIES Frorr $315 « D iip oso •D a h w a sh w •¡-■di«Ova storage • ’ 2alk Sr.iae po-< *Foa • P o n o 'BBG •Fes t v - Vtp- « O IF Shuttle *.o u n c r. •E-ooks''e*ves •Furnished,: jnfurn died 108 PLACE APTS. ’ OS W 45th 452 -1 4 1 9 365-22 1 ,4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 WALK TO CAMPUS 32ND at 1-35 AVALON A P T S . e**20M CASA DE SALADO APTS. ’ -BEDROOM FURNiSHED WATER GAS AND T V CABLE PAID N O PETS SWIM- M IN G POOL, AC A N D CEIUNGFANS LAÜN- DR ’ - ACUTES CLOSE TO CAMPUS NEAR SHUTTLE RESIDENT MGR. #1 1 2 2610 SALADO ST. UN (IS A2 AILABlE NOVV FOR INFO C A l. 4 7 7 -2 5 3 4 6-3 aes* sum-ner *p«tc a wound fur. luxur o^s E !;s pC'C ni$h ng ca'De* dc n* m any e r ” cs c u re c e n try i ng, s er vi ce p cce way, A7S-6614. Se- =' ee : : * « • , - c c ?a r k A v e n u e 3 0 t h at Sceec- ‘%ee c a b l e M c M a i s o n A 7 - i A 11 3 2 0 - 7 5 0 0 S 3 0 0 - S 3 2 5 -o' summer only. d-'5E^: 3 70 - Unf. Apts. T H F A L K R J S n \E O a WEST & NORTH CAMRS Summer or Fall M o v e - I n D iR D M M IKS 19] sn-'jis-- i-i2v$-?5© 2 BR $625 Effktenaes 2 05 8x* Grand-. $525-$3?5 MONTAGf : BR 2812 £k> Gnaée $5*5455^ MASKTWAIN 1106¥22nc $3?>$8(F 1 Bl 1 BR $3954415 2 B» $5^ Call 459-4227 * ★ ★ CAMINO REAL ★ + A P A R T M E N T S - p _ 2810 SALADO i t 1-1 S4''5 -5 2 5 . 2-2 $ 7 0 0-7 5 0 " * W * i t z, & •; n o r r <«8sat i t ^ 4 docks trr~ camD„t ^ *, ^ M -F 1 0 -4 Sa* 1 1 - 5 , ^ it ★ Su" 1 -5 ★ 472-3816 ★ Previewing ri-^es ¡CASTLE ARM APTS 5UMMEC PROM $375 320-0519 32ne & Speedway * * & 2 bedroom® Uaa>í- P a c tot W ater P a c room - HvOe Pjjn $34 SUPER rate; jm m e f ca^. SpF »■-. t .. : 3Cr D:U« n tw s s t o fid 01 1 8 0 3 N ueces o r c o il 4 5 1 - 4 3 8 6 , tesve tax n um ne 4-26-2084D VICTORIAN CONDO ithe conac >' *exas see*. Tne bes se-ta u* 'e s o o rs ife .i stuoe-* w ho w il a o p -e o a te this choice a re o f c *¡n c -esio-ec Y c to ria e c a r o ; 4 blades Farr campus '-es- pram 2 - *»o'v w in d o w s or.* h im drec »«;■ 3 4 CH in g a o o c se;u* ty aoc we e 1-- ro o m an© a- m a-Aupus- $ 5 5 0 v e a - - 5E A e: 3 3 - c e s e 'v e s c o v e re d p a r k ­ saun a <•>: iefa * M o> $475 summer e - non - ; - . 4 7 7 - 5 3 3 C - ■ & . C « i N G “ - v SQUARE Apart­ ment* 711 W 32n e sree' 1 aac 2 aea-oom apartments in ou>e* res 45 3-4PC :■ *7 - 208C £-■: e - . e¡ A T O F ABvE ments Some with *:-eo«>ct- tnc Dobe aa¡c 40C ¡A 2 5 '' s’ “* O n shuttle 45 3 -1804 * ? i :o 6-: HYDE PAR* £•*■;'e r tie s o-tc no- «vote- 0 0 c E 4 5 2 - 2 : 2 " 42 9 -2 0 6 -2 C o b le 4 2 0 9 Aver>u« - raoc : V - e Park a-ec a- 4 7 8 25 2 3 4-2-36 * € star $; OE Sh a r e h o u s e w *th o o o M .opac a r c p s :me- Lane te rre e c a t- lo v in g : ac stu $3 52 r-c aecasit ~ : f . - Ahe- ~brr 21 6 - "4 9 O- ] .Jg aornraom arc * tener *> o-'O'ces coser; UT sroao:! bus $252 92 8 -9 4 2 9 6-2-, IE 2 1 - ; . -e Smc yn A»k. 'SHE p te x w ith s tu d c moepne'e doo beoul-j 3 laundry room C A 2 - $'; 3 3 2 4 R e ; Rrver ¿ ~ '- E 2 ; í $40C-$4 30 W. 2i 478-481 ;■ 20M r r LGrae L n ¡ C ' encies r N e o r C a m p u s r.ec R ve* S h u trie S u i >e* F c :1 R a te s C e ili n g rz'i n e w f l o o r p e t s ' N o r o o m m a t e s 371-01 JL f \ o u 6* ?-3D4- C A R IN G O W N E R S ^Cr$Ofio 01- EAST 2 H v £ „ 2 Sh ia s rs to * 2 a *t Pre4¡ Charm ng e ft e v e ry fh ng n j ’ ed r u*- m sneo - jim a - e> r*e r iuTfie N #0p BOAmg k r A*#’ c c d e ? m * $ 2 9 5 $ 3 7 5 Low depow! b-omc- mraraenonc v e- • •c j - NR snjttie Swimming í x¡ ¡- mas smaS June* commur-N Brookhollow Aots " 4 1 4 A..^enc Dr 44 5-56 55 **r>o*0ime G*t»? to si *w c«0 0 r 8 D1 • 1 BP & 2 BF • Ceding Fans • On Shuttle • i - a j - m Root- • FuBy r-.j—us*->ec • Poo! • Permit Pa icing « On-site -nanager maintenance • Vf - cal — -o«r»ds • Affordable oeoosts • 9--e,e as - j Fat anc Spnrtg R io N u e c e s 6 0 0 W. 2 6 th M 7 4 - 0 9 7 l j 3 0 2 W est 38th : all easing o- 1-oa* C o '- v e m e n t t o H 0 -,c o c y C f - -e , UT and Hyde Perk half a c ocx to shuttle *.i op D 'O-ces ooo , laundry room gas ware* anc aaoe paic Call 453-4002. 62-20M LARGE E 5; C ENCY west con-, p.; r zt q«i« .ihuf-f Gen/water pc c Wolk-ir clcse* oundry F ro r $30C 499-S3 ■ 3 6 4 -0 8 R E N T A L 3 7 0 - U N F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T S D A IL Y T l X A N O A S S I F I E D S - 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 HOl'STON 2801 Bernphii fcrk 472*6396 DALLAS 280* Hemphit ftiri 472*8396 b r a n d \ a\ i n e 2808 Wlnta Aw 472-70*9 W1LSHIRE v u ’ 9d • 49 G r e a t L o c a t i o n s ! Ruin FwhmM ÍMunán Kíw*r. Central Kit "Hem 2 Blodí» Ftoíti IT Ho \nn$*canor: Fee J BK EA EFF. & 1 -2-3-4 BDRM APARTMENTS Starting at $315 ] Preleasing For 11 FL< • Spactc • Two p • Stuctef a m f I • Fum/Unf. • Shuttie Bus • 5 Min. To Downtown • Modem • Microwaves • w07s W r ans • Excellent Maint m m m n i .*4 >4 ■ P O IN T SOUTH- R e n t a l Office: l ■ Summer and Fall DOR PLANS )US oois Coioraoc Fhver jn N r ■ m a 536 Y U W - B R W G E H O L L O W 1 9 1 0 W illow cree k | j ! ^ p 5 * ° A 3 ^ 7 S Q U A R E A partm ents * NOW PRELLAStNG SI M FALL * FURNISHED * 5 BLKS FROM CAMPUS ’ IT SHI THE STOP * EFFICIENCIES * DE1 IM 1 BEDRiK 'M ' ’ 2-1 ECi»N0Mt ST11E ’ ON SITE MANAGEMENT A LL B ILLS PAID 2 2 1 2 San Gabriel Street A u s t i n , T e x a s 7 8 7 0 5 < 5 I 2 ) 4 ,r 4 - C T L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S FUTON-CCXFCH./iED. CUSHION and like new, only 10 frctre $ 21: ¿~¿ -t-¿í monthi sic Ast to-"me 6^i22»E AOVEN 1 20' PUj! ■ Ispr l v c c $42>E ne» s e ll to* $ 95 0 8 0 w ith free lock. 4 5 9 -4 0 8 6 64-56 ONE SF»*a poubie Dec one vea- a id » •* '•one $ 25 Co Steve a* 4 '2 367C 6-3-5E s e a-* c r : e • • e : WATER SfQ conneHy rocket sioiotr 66' medium * a* wraps 3 months o»e $: ' : 99&0659 &-7-5E ’ 7 9 FORD 1 ie *tc A C . -e o . It er> ame, $895; 19m stereo Toshiba fv s :-a f io Royfcofw $¿: ext $ i 6-7-5E S o n . TV $ ' C; F -ed 495 99 r * 3 6 0 - Fum . Apts. N O W LEASING summer and fall .cur.pry q u e ’ c o re t i Fe e, cec ,c * studenij for Grad Walt to campus RR shuttle 1-1, 2-1 starting $425*E Furnished, 4 7 c - £ ¿ ~ 4 4 53- Unfurnished 2363 422-20*-: GREAT 1 -BEDROOM APARTMENTS 1 / 2 b ock from law schoo •Furn shed • Q u ie t 1 VACANCY $360/m o. Lower Rates for Sum me* Towerview Apts. 926 E. 26th, #208 320-0482 4-2o-?0h-C 1 0 5 EAST 31st F urn s*-ec e** • c e - c y G o * stave /heal doic Cc 326 619 4 TB-2T7$ 20M W c x UT. laundry $ 3 0 5 *26 lor Shuttle 4 BeOCKS w . t i e -1 s*. c Oí r e**e!i o n o o tm o s p te -e Fumishec cowered paring lo un­ an 1700 Nueces C ol Quermn 322-9572 4-29-206 SPACIOUS Q UIET 2-2 C A Cr­ iara doc simOec* cab* lounan Red S;ve* 30th Summer/$600 F0 II/$ 75C 4 ’ 7 3386 472-2097 5 - ' 20bC Vr S'OC UT f \ ARR YT O W N EFFIC IE N C Y, h ardw ood Faei-i ceiling tor more closets A8 F $375 Avoilable Sep* Tom, 476-2329 after 5pm 6-1-208 v \ 3 „ ic cam EFFICIENCY UNITS Pei 'e ::** $2 70 -$ 3 1 0 A rt Tree apartments 1804 ¡.avoca 476-5152 2 dar- M-! p-2-586 CARING OWNERS Persona ot- •entior WC and surrounding o-ee Eff. 1-2-3 bedrooms he- Hendie Propedtes 476-2154. 6-1-208C S 'e C C S - WEST CAMpu S -fu f N1SHED-CARPETED--AIR cc-c ftoned-cetl ng (ons-retngerotor-ol bill* poio-$240 4 '2 -*9 ' t 6-3- 5P FIND YOUR SUMMER HOME IN THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS!i BL4CRST0NE ^ fF ^RE.EASiMG FOR > 15; SUMMER AND FALL ¿3“ 4 1 ¿ 8 29 iC Medica Arts S: f r o f across trorr law stfioo ftu ^OVVEF SUMMER R4TFS S 1 a l l b i l l s p u d f F Niews\ rernodeied SUMMER ONLY .EASES k. 2 bdrm-2 bath only ^ ^ FREE CABLE! cumished o* Unfumishec ^ \ 474-9523 h % V.I.P. Apts.- FALL LEASING | 1 BR S AVAIL. I .Poo!, shuttle a: door,5 las & water paid.«* contemporary fumish-y ■mgs large closets ^ 5 476-0363 ByAppt V ¿ 101E. 33rd at Speedway g LOCATION - LOCATION COME SEE BEAUTIFUL FURNISHEO APTS. 4210 Red River C entury P la z a 2 Bd.. 1 Bd & Efficiencies ALL BILLS Fall Only 452-4366 C entury S q u a r e 3401 Red River 2 Bd.. 1 Bd & Efficiencies ALL BILLS 478-9775 G ra n a d a 1 11 lit 940 E. 40th 1 B d . & E ffic ie n c ie s 4 5 3 -8 6 5 2 • CONVENIENCE • POOL • PATIOS ♦ LAUNDRY FACILITIES * It ’s T h e H o t A l t e r n a t i v e See (% €U* Ó 44% tí¿l*t¿í nn*,»r*«fn- «erais „ \ L L B I L L S P A ID FEATURES: Available in Select units: • Gelling tans • Spacious walk- • UT & City Busline • Clubhouse • Microwaves • Wei Pars • penceo patios • Built-in Pooksnetves m Closets • Mm-btinas • 3 swimming pools • Free 49-channe expanded : ar*>€ Excellent Roommate Plan Cameron Roac U T Sn^n»e 454-2537 1200 Broadmoo* Drive VILLAS of LA COSTA The IN Place To Live * Summer only teases welcome * Exterior upgrade now in progress * Access gates soon * Sparkling swimming pool * Lighted Tennis Courts 1.. * 1 st Stop on CR Shuttie 1 0 1 6 C a m i n o L a C o s t a 4 5 4 - 5 6 3 8 *»*» *»»*»* »»» «»»»» «natwMMMii *ai* »»»»«»•» wa* * T H E 4 S I1 F O R D ' k k 4 P \ R T M E \ T S k k k \o«f Preleasing k k tor k Summer ú I all k k k k k * 1-1 s perfect for room m ate* k k • Furnished.'’ü n fu m ts n e d • West Campus Shuttle • On-S«t€ M g m t & M a m t • Pool • Launa r\ Room • Covered Parxtrig ALL BILLS PAID Large Efficiencies Large 2-2 s * pe>D¡ • Launar, > F in-VS -If-3 Sue Mgr • * e Snu'Tie C a l c T o d a y 4 5 1 - 2 2 6 8 2 0 3 W. 3 9 t h S ta rtin g o f $ 2 6 0 2408 Leon 476-8915 K S S S K S t t t l K S I I S I S K S t S R S S S S f t S S S S M S t R t l l S S I Great Location 2222 Rio Grande • Great Roommate Plan • Large 1 BR starting at $285 Per Person • Small 1 - 1 s Starting a t l 465 • Furnished • Unfurnished • West Campus • One Bedrooms • Poo • 5 M nute Walk to Campus 476-4992 T R A N S P O R T A T IO N 20 - Sports-Foreign Autos 8 4 RENAULT, lo w m iie o o e , A T A C . A M /F M c a *s e « e ro c c Good lira* Run» oooe S 900, 0 6 0 Rick 873 7456 6-1-5E 86 HYUNDAI £*;e . 2c- Sc*. 4- ioeed. c r $1 7 5 0 Cc 263- 5036 6-2-5E 1 9 8 4 N IS S A N S entro $ 1 2 5 0 . Fichare 4 4 6 -4 8 0 0 56 F r j ‘ 6-7- 1 9 7 2 VW SUPER 8 U G I cvanae tun roo* stereo b o o s te r/e q u a liz e r, c o ta * * » tp ro o le d (71315206783. &7-3A * U V i» ; no"s om-ftr (4 sp e akers power rw - $ 4 9 9 5 . aio rrr SO - Bicycles M O U N T A I N B IK E C L E A R A N C E ‘92 Models M js - Go Mans ¡ñeauce: to Cost?? G~ Ml Shasta B'ooes’o'e B U C K ’ S B IK E S 928-2810 wfvte SuppH i«sts 100 - VehtcJes Wanted CASH FOR Y O UR CAR a- tru c k Running or 1 9 6 3 -1 9 9 3 L s* (or v ,a -cu s 4 6 7 -2 6 3 C 20F 6-2- R E A L E S T A T E S A LES 11 0 - Services EXPERIENCED C A M P U S ■»: es­ tate to 'e s s p e c ia lis t A ll cam pus c re a : G cve-n m en t repos D okes PMT 4 7 4 -2 6 7 3 . 6-2-208- E e " \ 1 2 0 - Houses CONVENIENT UT ENflEuD v C- r AC Great sto-te- home Okie* CA O hardwoods 2- 1-1 1 6 0 6 W ett»e*s*ieiC $ 15 0DC 4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 6 -4 -2 0 8 0 130 - Condos* Tow n hom es H p p C a m p u s C o n d o s Croix 25P $68 500 Croix 1BR $52.000 Seton 1BR $46.500 Call Mike 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 |B||¡B®ppR5NN¡yypgpp@iMpg| rrrrr ■nap* uZ 2 0 0 - Fumiture- H ousehold FREE DELIVERY > J For UT Students > Ful Set erfT rem» ■ T«r Set wTFreme •4 Prw. Cheet • Dreeew « M irror > Sotes • S-Ptece Dinette • Peek. Lamp. Che* i 9b<* *13**2 t*s**T n »i « 7*J C e n te x F u rn itu re W h o le s a le [ lIN L iin r [20C1 S Leme- 4S0-0»8fit 44S -S **’ L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S THIRTY GALLON h e x aquonum Complete se'-up S to n d light*, etc $9= 3 3 6 392 6 -3 5 8 system C O M F .E T E M A C -L C G re a t d e o ll f x cellen* c o n d itio n ! Ter meg rom, 8 0 meg Hord drive, Htgh-resoMior g ra y scale monitor keyboard mouse software orio' nol packaging 477- 2721 6 4 ^ 6 $ 1 0 0 0 3 60 - Fum. Apts. SUM M ER DISCOUNTS ON A l l LEASES C O N TR O LLED ACCESS ~ SECURITY GATE ' ' s’ PM T at 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 POINTE 2 2 $ 8 0 C va tco n f On FF srjfne or wqík *o schoo PMT at 476-2673 BENCHMARK 2 * A C n GA RA GE PKG M C D O. $650 S lW M E t 2>41Y P M T at 476-2673 LA R G E E F f lC IE N C V . w est cam* put, nice/quiet shuttle G a t / w a ­ ter pcid Walk-in closet/laundry. From $300 499-0013 6-4-68 * ADVANTAGE* PRE-LEASING ULTIMATE STUDENT PROPERTY . W EIG H T RO O M SHUTTLE. INDO OR B'BALL FREE CABtE A C C ESS GATE 1-2-3 BDRM5 $378* * 443-3000* • A D V A N T A G E * LOFT SPIRAL STAIRCASE ALARM, FREE CABLE WASHER/DRYER INCLUDED $ 3 5 5 * *443-3000* ‘ ADVANTAGE* $100 OFF JUNE, JULY, AUGUST SHUTTLE BUS EFF., 1-2 BEDROOMS $320+ * 4 4 3 - 3 0 0 0 * ‘ADVANTAGE EFF $305 1-1 $360 2-1 $435 3-2 $635 SHUTTLE FREE CABLE ACCESS GATES * 4 4 3 - 3 0 0 0 * ‘ADVANTAGE* 50% SUMMER DISCOUNT $ 348+ * 443-3000* large one and W ALK TO campus two bedrooms Ceiling fans/cov­ ered parking/coble From $375 409 8013 6-4-6B O N E B E D R O O M north cam pu*. on shuttle Walk-in close' ceilmc fon F r c - $ 3 5 0 499-8013 6-4-68 P e m o o e 'e a LA C A SITA Apts d e le d 2 I for o nly $5 25 paid M odel to v **. August 476-1976 Beautify remo­ G a s A vailable EPi 6-3-208- U N E X F E C T E D V A C A N C Y 2-1, w oo d floors. 912 W . 2 2nd 1/2 i r ? a ? 5 0 9 ~ c 6prn-7pm 6-3-108 2 3 0 3 R o G ro n d e S ~ r E C . : AN quiet G rad u ó te stoaent and young professiona cor^ ike tarn- ;> e* W e 'fee' neighbors y lo r g e 1-1 p o o l ¡o u n d 'v $30C 323-0670 mes&op# THE RED R VER A P A R T M EN T S lBd r ' I Be Gos wore- ano aas'C ccb>e poid Pool ana c-/na-> '¡>o«r pn &!*e Conven e-1 tc low School an: E ngmeerírig G ■ ect for grod stuaents $352 sum--e $425 to# The Taylor C om p an y 327-8171 Nev. corpet new point. Walk-in closets, celm g tans, ce n tra l o n , flexi­ pool Gas ano waier paid ble move-in dales W a lk le U. T FO U N TA IN TERRACE 6 )0 w 30th St 477-8858 390 - Unf. Duplexes G A P A G E - l’Kt 1-1 ■sa'Cwoocj gos sec uoec in Yves' Campus N e pe-s '••ana:-» 8 1 4 76 19 76 Eh 6-3-20B-B *#-~oc# ee 4 0 0 - C o n d o s - T o w r » h o m e s C A N D L E W 1 C K t T H l N T l A F A f Rates starting at $285 17 Floor Plans! 1601 Royal Crest Dr. 444-7797 . C • i T - V P R O P ! R T l E S i NOW PRELEASING! 706 W. MLK 478-6565 1900 S A N Gabnel- condos DBR's, huge Sta rtin g at $ I 2 0 0 / m o 9998 499-8317 4-23-206-6 2&3 fireplaces garages 4 * 6 • • U N IQ U E R lA N i G r e e t 2 . $ 7 5 0 , IP . W / D C P W a lk to U T front foe# 483-6516 4-36 206C “ LA W SC H O O L' Park 6#Iting 2 f ront 1 $ 6 5 0 . W / D C P £P Page 480-851 8 * 3 6 X B C " S U P E R C O N D O ! 1-1 $ 45 0 W a s h r i Dryer C p : ' 0 +' f ; o e 480-8518 4X-/36C ••LARGEST C IN * £ N N a . p o o ll 2-2 5 2 0 0 480-8518 * '» e ; ' ’ o- • Pa g e TWELVE O a k ; C o ñacs 7 ; c ••• Pre lease e a rly *cif re s! 2 1 si ra les 2 2 s iron $5 5 0 4 ; 5 9585 •« 4 .;*>«■ • 'S U N C H A S E C O N D O large 2-2 (all 2 0BC V t ’ y A vG ilo b e iv m rr* ' O' 5-3- front Page 480-8518 “ S M A il C O M M U N IT Y ! Housy areal Small 1-t $400 Avc «able 6/1 front Pag# 460-8518 5-5- 208 C •* E N F IE L D / C lA R K S v T Ü jÉ I T i Hardwood porquetl FP, loro# itv me small bedroom s' A vo ila b l# 8 25 1 year only $72 5 From Pag# 480-8518 5 5 2 0 8 C • •C LA SSY HERIT A G E I Treelmed Spacious 2 2 Porch W o «li Street et/drye Front Pog# 480-85 18 5-5-208C Campus $800 w o » h # '/ d r y « “ SU M M ER O N lY i Beovrtifu 2 2 m i­ c a m p u s , t - cro wove, porch' Only $ ‘ .'5 5-6- leen From Page 400-6 511 20&C O LD C A S T L E - r 10»h #211 from d o w n t o w n $36C 326-552 E F f .c e n c . .11 11 W * , r 8 & e *s G o s pC id a SE C O N D O O R e p o - tm e n * T b DF new corpet po '• o r : -„y 34th and Gsradoiupc 3 4 6 4 2 $43*5 me '• 5E ft #EN TH O U SI WITh * vt#w jettec tub 2 batearuei 1200 ¡u* ' ompui Avaitabi# b u-v ir W es 15 476-1976 EP 6 G 2 0 8 Í it 2061 K IN G S C L E A N IN G S G ,'IC t +26 296 H O M E M A D E G O O L +■ n # ret pt mprie, back guaranteed Send $4 00 money order --SASE to Recipe P O Box 5372 jamer- A llo w three towr Tx " E o 4 5 I 56 w-mr: tor qel've'- mmmüm 79 0 - Port h me A F T E R N O O N d e l i v e r y 1 30- 5 2 Opn M-f R e lia b le cor o '.o nea' oppeorancr required hou'ly poy - m ileog t A p p ly at 11 *4 0 joliyviin- Rd 4-26-206 LK U.T. B& o kkM pqt O F ’ Ttoinee ly p is t $4 40 (ow f e c o n o m ic a l reiigfc-e co r) iz ‘y. - trip» i/vrite opu.‘COtic 408 «Yves' I7l* 5 2064 r . • • '1 r8 a ' " '- ’ ¡ O n S T U D E N T S 4 9 p a rt -1 m# fOf Su m '’ * ' p tt . m4 $ i tit - Par.uses Men- qgem er t-o • et p t : ' on* o«aii- O t í C o l C'O g c e ' + ee» 2 4 p n rr..< o' Aj¿-k Hi 61-T0NC f all “ COOL DRIVERS* * ‘ WANTED* ?ie x ;tie hour» Fo' ic# d e ’’v e'y Heavy iftmg M utt #now Austin, • ove excellent O'w.r.g record, be custom er o rie n te d c • c com m it through summer Col 474 445 3 tve'wee' 9 5 A si fot Dor M ot y Alia# ot Suzi 6 560 M A IN T E N A N C E G R O U N O S $ 5 /hr • » , (,■# sch ed u le 327- 8 39 6 4 36 AUSTIN P U S HU CENTII i: i — * 1 7 °° CASH f i r s ! D o n o l i o n B e n e f i t s f o r y o u ; • Wft PfcytHü! o» l«f éiBiÜ0B INfV ftfiftH ii Sypmi's etr Now OtttH S a f u r d a v mwwmWm RFjPwH P i l w I W i l C e ll fo r lo fe . 477-3735 E A R N M O N E Y re a d in g books! $30 0 0 0 / yr income poten*.a! De- tails U ) 805-962 6 00 0 Ext y 94 3 *26 23»' LIVE ¡tv / TT E N D A NT r.eeoeo for '-andicapped student 40hrs $ 1 45 1 wee». + room, all bills poto 471- 2 6C 4 5236 A 3 S t M B E A RT S, ctoft» " . r i , arid lewetry item» frotT you' home 'x-.elie''' poy Col 446V-43C t 2 c 20Í N E E D E D ll 100 p e o p i* to se w eig h t N O W N o w ill p p w e ' needed N e w ' Vivian 512-329 54 I 2 326 016 4 2/ /'A t A D V E R T IS IN G S A L E S Represen to tive re e d e d tor S u d y b re o k s M a g a z in e Cal 477 3 14 boi+ * Comm ss or 6 7 56 T E M P O R A R IE S C H IL D C A R E $5/hou» lull- tim+ /port-t.m# f all ’/ IV 8 8 3 9 61 56 te a c h e r» / a id e s 6 '.A W •Yveicom it back students ’ Bonded ’v you' protection ..C'O*. -*s lor tr.a' right -oom- maie? D O M IN IO N 2/2 W A LK TO L A W SC H O O L V A C A N ’ $500 SU M M ER O N LY PMT of 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 O': 4k* squor# gar age A vail 6-3-20B towntioffie communit) 197: EP . s D f A N & L f porfcing otu# n o . I S e r , r.g s tu o e n ti ; o- / e a r s O i k » num ber 8 7 3 4 X 1 1 5 2 4 Hr paae- 8 6 7 9 2 7 7 a 20B-D SUM M .EF F “ C i/ >/ i- ’ E furnished 2-1 fiowse r 1 iorKsvilie with fe­ male p-ac ond co' N e a ’ 'Ou>et nc stnat iriQ/pomyma $250/ mo Don 469-9 i t 6-4-5B ~ "ñS ® T ro5mma?FF...... 1MX THE DAILY TEXAN CLASMFffiDS 4 7 1 524# H elp W a n te d STUDENTS BEWARE! 'Summer it coming fatt. ARE YOU PREPARED? Don’t settle for a dull, low-paying summer job Starting immediately through mid-May we ore going to be o ffe rin g full-time p o sitions which will last throughout the sum­ mer Ambitious people can earn great money, travel, cash scholar­ ships, and much more American Learning Systems 479-651 1 Ask for Miss Monroe W e ’re not only in Austin, we also h a v e o ffices in D a lla s , D enver, Houston, ond Oklahoma City. Call Now, Summer recruiting has begun 4-26-206 W A N T E D : G E N E R A L M a in ­ tenance person for rental houses E le c tric a l, p lum bing , c a rp e n try knowledge necessary. References required 451-4386 4-27-20B-D IDEAL JOB FOR COLLEGE STUDENT Nanny needed in my home for 14- montn o ld son F lex ib le hours W i l l w ork w ith summer school schedule Must enjoy outdoor a c­ tivities a n d be very responsible. N o rth w e st A ustin. C a ll 335- 0203. Leave message Transpor­ tation and references required. Summer JOBS for the ENVIRONMENT $2500-$3500/summer •Pass the Clean W ater Act •Learn Campaign skills •Make a difference Call Hank at 479-8481 6-1-206-8 G R E A T STUD ENT JOB- A C E Rent- A-Car is accepting applications for service agent and rental agent po­ sitions. Apply in person at 3822 Airport Blvd 6-3-5B D A LE'S A U T O Parts needs drivers and counter help. Full and part- tim e. P le a s e a p p ly 1 4 1 6 S. Lamar or 8950 Research Blvd. 6-3- 7B. LEGAL PUBLISHING FIRM seeks full-time traveling represen­ ta tive , no selling in vo lve d R e­ quires 2-year college $ 2 2 ,5 0 0 per y e a r to start (in clu d in g ex- penses)with four months paid vaca­ tion. Must hove reliable automo­ bile and proof of insurance. Excel­ lent p h ysica lent p h y s ic a l co n d itio n a must. Cal! 477-5485. 6-7-5P S W IM M IN G IN ST RU C TO RS need­ ed immediately. Must have current W S I C a ll for Inform ation 335- 6754 6-7-3B National Wildlife Federation Endangered Species Campus Organizer O n e yeor intern to o rganize col­ lege campus activities for the En­ da n g ered Species Act reouthori- zation. Public speaking, grassroots organizing and cultural diversity is­ sues experience a plus Co llege student or recent g ra d u a te p re ­ ferred $ 2 6 0 .0 O / w e e k w ith health benefits Wom en and peo­ ple of color strongly encouraged to apply. Send resume with three references a n d w ritin g sam ple to: N W F , 4 5 0 5 S o ice w o o d Springs R oad, Suite 300, Austin 7 87 59 by June 18, 1993 6-7-3 B M IC R O F IL M CLERK N o e x p eri­ en ce necessory, full-time or part- time summer positions. Call 837- 9847 after 10am for appointment 6-7-3 B 8 1 0 - Office-Clerical SH O R T W A L K U.T, Bo okkeeper T rainee, Typist, $4 4 0 Runner (ow n eco n o m ica l, re lia b le c a r), $4 50 ♦ trips W rite application, 408 W est 17th. 5-7-206-0 8 2 0 - Accountmg- Bookkeeping Bookkeeper SH O R T W A L K U.T T rain e e, Typist, $4 40 Runner ¡ow n eco n o m ica l, te lia b le c a r), $ 4.50 + trips. W rite application, 408 W est 17th 5-7-2060 8 3 0 - Administrative- Management OFFICE MANAGER O u tg o in g in d ivid u al with strong communication and organizational skills needed to manage busy edu­ c a tio n a l center. Requirem en ts: the a b ility to m o tiva te staff in quality customer service by setting the example Group presentation skills, W o r d F e rfe c t/ M ic ro s o ft skills # you enjoy helping others to maximize their potential, send resume and salary history to: The Daily Texan P.O. BoxBC-1 Austin, Tx 78713-8904 61-20BC. PANDEMONIUM FAMILY FUNPLEX N O W HIRING Full-time assistant manager Must be available for weekends 502 E, Highland Mall Blvd. 0-4-2066 8 5 0 - Retail DORIA'S JEW ELRY in the malls needs motivated sales f>erson M ust be a v a ila b le o r some 1-5:30 shifts. Excel­ lent working conditions, bonus program, Texible hours and jewelry discount. Must have 454-9444 from 10- c a r, 6pm 6-1-3BK: S A L E S T U E S D A Y / T H U R S D A Y a f­ ternoons, Saturday all day. Com­ mission plus salary. E x perience preferred Phone Sansora's shoes 477-6421 6-7-5B 8 7 0 - M e dical CUTE 4YR.-OLD boy with disabili­ ties needs w eek end co re W ill tram 837-7553 6-3-5B 8 8 0 - P rofe ssio n al P O S IT IO N AVAILABLE for civ.l en­ gineering graduate m proiec* man agerr.ent, stee d ivision of C o d y Builders Please coll 339-9834 lor on apqo ntroent 6-2-56 TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS CALL 471-5244! Foreman takes one in the hamburger basket from the Rocky foe Heavy hitters F o r e m a n , M o r r i s o n s e t t o d o b a t t l e 6356 A ss o c ia te d P r e s s L A S V E G A S — George Foreman reached out and offered some puncher-to-puncher advice after seeing a young Tom m y Morrison beaten senseless by Ray Mercer a few years back. He's hoping Morrison w ill have forgotten it by the time the two meet M o n d ay night in a genera­ tional clash of big-hitting h ea vy­ weights. “ I saw he had the old puncher's curse that I once had and I called his camp and told them why and how to prevent it / ' Forem an said. " I wish I'd never done that. But I was never thinking I'd fight the kid." The 44-year-old Forem an can't a fford to g iv e a w a y too m any secrets, considering he's already g ivin g a w ay 20 years in age in a fight scheduled for 12 rounds but not expected to last that long. M o rris o n 's you th , speed and explosive pu nching p ow er have given him a slight edge among bet­ tors. But Foreman is a huge puncher himself w ith the savvy gained by both 15 years in the ring and a decade spent outside of it. " I had 10 years in retirement to reassess my career and see what I could do better," he said. " I had the opportunity to re-enter boxing with the knowledge of a trainer. Tommy Morrison doesn't have that." W h a t M o rriso n does have, he says, is a new-found athletic maturi­ ty at the age of 24, something he lacked when Mercer stopped him in the fifth round of their October 1991 fight. But he also has a suspect chin, readily apparent just two fights ago when forced to come off the canvas twice before stopping journeyman Carl Williams. " I'v e redeemed myself to become a m ore com plete f ig h te r ," said M o rriso n , w hose 36-1 record includes 32 knockouts, mostly at the expense of no-name or over-the-hill fighters. " N o w I believe I belong here. W h e n I fought M e rce r I d id n 't believe that. I had doubts in m y m ind, doubts that overw helm ed me." M o rriso n also has Fo rem an 's advice, which he says has indeed helped to turn him into a fighter who is more relaxed, under control; a fighter not trying to end every fight with the next punch. Fight bettors apparently believe M orrison has learned enough to make him a 7-5 favorite in a fight in w h ich Forem an w as a 3-2 pick when betting opened. Foreman weighed in Sunday at 256 pounds, two pounds less than his last fight and his lightest since July 20,1989. Bulls preparing to smother Suns Associated Press C H IC A G O — Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls will have to take a different route this season to w in their third straight N B A cham pi­ onship. This time, they'll have to start on the road. "It's different," Bulls guard John Paxson said. "W e 've been comfort­ able w ith the first two games at home the last two years, but that doesn't prove anything. In order to win this series, we have to win on the road." The Bulls play Game 1 in Phoenix on Wednesday night. The Suns also will play host to Game 2 on Friday night. " I t had been predicted that it would come down to the Bulls and the Suns and we definitely welcome p la y in g the team w ith the best re c o rd ," B u lls A ll-Sta r Scottie Pippen said. The Suns had the top record in the N B A this season at 62-20. Chicago was 57-25. Pho enix w on the W estern Conference championship, beating Seattle 123-110 in Game 7 Saturday behind 44 points and 24 rebounds by league M V P Charles Barkley. H a d the Su p e rSo n ics w on that gam e, the N B A fin als w o u ld 'v e started at Chicago Stadium. "T h e only thing that matters is the homecourt advantage and that was won by them because they had the r e c o rd ," B u lls coach P h il Jackson said. "The finals are a spectacle every­ one w ants to participate in ," he said. "There are only two left stand­ ing and that's a very unique situa­ tion. They're the team that repre­ sents the West and the two left in the playoffs are going to go at it." The B u lls started the Eastern Conference finals on the road, los­ ing the first tw o gam es in N e w York. Chicago came back to win the last four games. Chicago started the last two N B A fin a ls at home, b eating the Los A n g eles Lakers in 1991 and Portland last season. "W e 're a good road team," said Pippen, who disregarded Barkley's remark that the Suns are destined to w in the cham pionship. " W e also feel we're destined to win, but I'm not going to make any predictions. "H o p e fu lly , we can play good defense and keep them around 100 points." Only twice in the 13 games they have played in these playoffs have the B u lls a llo w ed 100 or more points. T h ey w on both games, d efeating A tla n ta 117-102 and C le ve la n d 103-101. The K n ick s failed to score 100 points in six games. Phoenix and Chicago split two games during the regular season, each winning away from home. The B ulls won at Phoenix 128-111 in N ovem b er and the Suns won at Chicago 113-109 in January. " N o ," Jackson said when asked whether the Bulls can hold the Suns under 100 points. "T h e key to the series will be making Phoenix pay a little on its home court. "Stop the penetrations of Kevin Johnson, not let Barkley get all of those second shots in close and if our defense can overcom e their offense. They are a great offensive team," the coach added. This time, they'll have to start on the road. "It's different," Bulls guard John Paxson said. "W e 'v e been comfort­ able w ith the first tw o games at home the last two years, but that doesn't prove anything. In order to win this series, we have to win on the road." 8 9 0 - Clubs- R e s to u ra n is LES AMIS CAFE INTERVIEWING KITCHEN WORKERS 4-6 pm ■jr-H H I 1 9 0 0 - Dom estic* H o u se h o ld S T U D E N T O R co u p le w anted to help some evenings/weekend» with two precious girls unde* 3, in ex ch o n g e for new sem i-furnished Westlafce aoroge apartment (view of cty) 3 27 76 64 6-2 5B 24th and San Antonio 67 26 PART-TIME H E L P n e ed ed with housekeeping Must drive $5/hr (orejan applicants welcome C a ll 346 2525 6 2 I0 B 9 0 0 - Dom estic- H o u se h o ld BABYSITTER W A N T E D to co tilo- baby gi'l if Barton H.lis day.i and weekend» References required 443 7057 6 1 5B R ESPO NSIBLE STUDENT needed to b a b y sit 3 b o ys, « g e t 3 ,6 .1 1 Must dnve nor» smoke*, good ref erences M-F 7 30-5 30. Ju ly 5 vfl 44 i -6674 evenings 6-3-4P w s n c n e 880 - Professional Outstanding opportunity lor a new c o lle g e g ra d u ate who wonts a c o re e r in the in­ surance industry. The ideal candidate will possess above averoge oral and written com­ munication skills, and o strong work ethic, d o e sn ’t mind a flexible work schedule, ond wants o career opportunity in the insurance industry. This po­ sition is entry level but offers unlimited career and financial advancement Excellent star- jry, b ting salary, benefits, and train­ ing provided Contact toed Nationwide Insurance 3508 Far West Blvd Suite 130, Austin Equal Opportunity Employer 6 7 tit / T he DaJLY T exan Monday June 7, 1993 Page 11 Astros top Mets Baseball Continued from page 12 Rangers hold on to beat Yankees showers. Associated Press HOUSTON — No matter who the manager is. it seems the New York Mets always have a lot of trouble winning in the Astrodome Scott Sen a is third double of the cerre scored the go-ahead run m the seventh inning as the Houston Astros rallied for the third straight day to d efea t New Y ork , 5-4, Sonda»* ' It was the Astros' sixth straight victory over the Mets this season, three com in g in New Y ork. On Saturday, Houston scored six runs in the sixth inning tc overcome a 5-1 defiat. They kept battling all the w ay," manager Dallas G reer said of the Astros. "Our guys sometimes forget ids a nine-inning game and just play six. That s the storv The-» plaved rune, we played six." Chns lames singled tc lead off the A stro s seventh again st Pete Schourek (2-7) and Ken C am initi followed with a home run over the left-field wadi, his ninth, to tie the score 4-4 After Luis Gonzales sin­ gled and stole second, Serváis hit his club record-tying third double of the came e ve been together so long, we S e r v á is know we can come back said. Reliever AI Osuna (1-0) got the final two outs of die seventh inning for the victory Doug Jones got’the last th ree outs for his 12th save. It's tough to have confidence when you have a 2-7 record and a ba.ioor for an ERA,' Schourek said "I just have to put it aside every time I go out I can't dwell on the pas: " H ouston starter Doug Drabek pitched six in n in gs and allowed three runs and eight hits. ■ T exas 4, New York 3 In Arlington, the Texas Rangers staked Kenny Rogers to yet another first-:px mg lead and the ieft-hander finally made it stand up Sunday night in a v icto ry over the New York Yankees. The Rangers had scored at least three runs in th e first inning of Rogers' last three starts, but Rogers 4-4) was unable to hold the lead each tim e T h is : me, how ever, Texas scored four runs in the first off M el:d o Ferez ’'3 -5 and the Yankees were unable to catch up. Rogers, who had not won in his last five starts, left with two outs m the sixth and runners on first and second. Reliever Matt Whiteside got Spike Owen to ground out, ending the threat Whiteside pitched 2 1 hitless innings and Tom Henke worked the ninth few his 11th save ^ U Q r i lira . . Í Í D C LONGHORNS 6, COWBOYS 5 * « x a s Pratoercf .2 ; 0 0 Rvers 3C Htwrvncr- 2t < 2 2 Kscnok ( * 3 1 2 0 Hugo If Htcknar IDS 1 2 0 Frotan» cf Tay>vb 3 1 2 4 Chddrakdh Conway - ü D 0 0 TnpieC i t L a w 1? Bfeasmg p* 1 0 0 0 Wafiac* c 0 0 0 0 Osaste ss Tipton if Wftamsn c 4 0 5 0 Grader, pr. Hártente- ss 2 0 0 0 PrueS ss -'enefe> 3b 4 0 1 0 Benz p a b r h bi Oklahom a S ta te a b f h b i 5 0 1 1 Loses 2t> 3 5 0 ' 0 5 1 2 1 5 1 1 : 4 * 2 0 4 1 1 0 < * 3 i 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 Q C 0 0 0 0 39 512 3 D e a ' Hague 31 H O 5 Totals 3 0 1 C Heato if Totals Oklahoma St Texas 010 400 000—5 010 10x— 6 301 t ~ P s e to e 5 W M am son 4 W allace 3 . DP— O añoras 3 t 3 LO B—Oklahoma S t 3 . T exas 6 HR—Taytor 6, Prodanov 5 T e x a s «jesenntek O ktehom s State Benz Dear Hogue Safes IP K P E R S B S G 3 12 5 4 2 11 ¿ 1 7 5 5 3 5 1 1 1 2 2 1 0 : o C * 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 o Winner—•Oescf'.cx. woset— Dean, umpires— hempeon. G -a h a rr.. L'Heureux, January Attendance 20 447. OMAHA — Oklahoma Sate-A v o n * Slate -james a* the C o & eje Wend Senes neve meane atieran Loo am tots of offense. 0 0 0 Wner- me two c-j&x mee? Monda» r ateo mear* o** of them goes home. Top irawlwK. sec**5-*ees> eti A5U was oeaier 4-3 * v. Tewtgz by W&vta - a te in S a tu r d a y ’s ‘¿rsi round s xtr-ees6ed Gxianom a S t a t e wen; down to T e x a s 6-5 m Saturday nght ~hey tace of at 3^6 pm COT with it* aser fir- tsnad ”he wraer come* foac* Tuesday to meet the "Bxas-Wich.Ta S ta ts ¡osar daterpwnad later Monday Seventh-seeded Wichita Stm (55-*5; anc t?wo- seedad ’ exat 151-14/ u se are no» strange-* at the GWS G ene Sughanson's teat CWS fc *982 tied ns second-pace Sxxxers afensisfing i%rw> era'- 'exas 8-4 tothe semSnate in 196© Stephenson dti 8 agar., to® sms fmfing Goacr. C6f Gustafeors umghorts 5-3 me 19® championship. They are to*e Texas) end foudn (Wchte State. tn the itefion to wi-rang pentensags to® season. Doto wto mom toan 50 wns and ooto with averages o* mote than eight-jr* per ga~* Tr* Longhorns anc Shocsers ateo Does? tm at tat ~bxss Brooks K#essmo :-op pdfihefs «*] to* ocxed hs 18th *r agaew toree «eses, wt s “ 7 2 -pdtít eftx? if toe CW S opener Wichita Sate has i«6ef ace Darter- Dretfort toe sec:.oa man taxer m the majo- league Oral! week DreBod hi toe geme-wmnng name nr ar*s picked up the hrst-^Lme w-.~ for toe Shooter* ir If Jíto - istJVF: ÍCSi . "It's hard to pitch with only one pitch, and that's aE I had — a fast­ b a ll," said K ieschnick, who had been hanging his slider for OSU batters to tee off art " I threw no more than two or three breaking pitches the last five innings I tried to spot my fastball and get some ground outs " The Longhorn offense came via Jerry Taylor's 2-for-3, four-RBI per­ formance first The Horns took an early lead in th e in n in g a fter T ay lo r launched a three-run shot to left- center field, scoring Kieschnick and Braxton Hickman. I didn't think I hit the ball that w et said Taylor, whose hit barely made it over the w all "It just kept going." After a late reguiar-season slump, Taylor has been on fire at the plate For a w hile I w as in a little slump The past couple of weeks I've been happy and I'm starting to come around on my hrting." After OSU took a 5-4 lead in the fourth, Texas left fielder Stephen Larkin knocked in Hickman who reacted second base or a single and a Taylor walk W ifi the game knotted up at five apiece in the seventh inning, Texas' Steve Heinrkh scored from second on a throwing error bv W'aliace, who appeared to have H einrich picked off. Wallace s throw, howev­ er ended up in center field. He was obviously going to be out, Wallace said " I rushed mv throw a little b it " The rur gave the Lorghoms a 6-5 lead they would never recr.quish "There was a play on," Heinrich said. ' H ickm an] w as trving to drag bur,t. It was a baserunm ng m istake but it cam e out for the b e st" The H orns now face W ichita State in second-round piav Monday at 6 36 p.m Ryan Kios (3-3, 4.74 ERA is slated to star for Texas A fter 172 p itch e s, it may be aw h.e before C-ustafsor has rus ace back on the mound. ‘'I announced to f ie team since K iesch n ick d id n 't throw manv pitches, he d oe our starter Monday night," Gustafsor /eked "But I seri­ ously believe he L be ready again by’ Wednesday." Kieschnick, who went 2 for 3 and w alked once in d ou ble duty as Texas designated hitter, and had two bags of ice or. bus shoulder and elbow a her the game, didn’t seem to w orn about his condition after hurling 172 pitches most of which were fastballs 'T m in a little better shape than you think, he told Gustafson after the post-game press conference Brotherly love The Seattle Mariners and Baltimore Onotes tier*m a bloody 1O-mmute bench- and bullpen-clear- g brawl, A s s o c ia te s D-ess. S e v e ' players and Sea~rv over U kraine " I am verv sa tisfied w ith mv Emm Mutapcic, the Bosnian cap­ tain who now plays for the German club Alba B erlin , and two oth er leading players joined them shortly before the tournament Mutapcic, who played 220 games for the form er Yugoslav national team , said the Bosnian squad is intent on boosting the morale of the people b ad home. D elibasic said his m ulti-ethnic squad also wants to prove Muslims, Serbs and Croats can play together 'W h a t's m ore we m ust live together," he said Four of the p avers were soldiers in Sarajevo. They fought in the first months of the war until sports offi­ cials m anaged to persuade their com m anders that they should be withdrawn from the front line. "T h e y are soldiers " D elibasic stressed. "W e ail are soldiers for Bosnia-H erzegovina. In Sarajevo, we were fighting tor our lives, the lives of our families." Delibasic and his players had to get across the Sarajevo airport a killing held where Serbian snipers nightly take their toll. But it is the only route out of the city for ordi­ nary people. Tn the group J jo in e d , three women were killed before we made it to the other side," he said. "I rust cannot talk about it With the help of friends. Delibasic ar.d his players crossed to territory held by the Bosnian government. Then they made the dar gerous trek to Croatian lines and finally to Split — once an. easy fou r-h our drive from Sarajevo. Bosnians living abroad offered money and equipm ent in helpir g the team prepare. A fter the European fin als, Delibasic and his players plan to return to Sarajevo because the war is always with them. "W e did not escape " he said. ■ m We offer spe a tour packages U anywhere in the U.S along with TOUR-!FTK fares for International and Domestic Travel ' r o i m p a s s a g e i s o i m p r i o r i t y - SWOT IOOA LISTC' Ycmi*S fine to* me leve of ser Ot.TSTV'IMRQI DAa. {SIX/ «C7-NK? 7 (III *€7 TOUK 2,i if 7 9353 »t > Washington Boston Philadelphia V* York .. London........ 298 Lagos ..1450 298 Johannesburt i 395 298 lairobi... 5 395 298 bomb* Delhi. ¡ ! 2Í . 565 Karachi 1035 Texan Ad Day of Texan Publication: S p a ce Reservation and Copy Must Be In Before: RETAIL AND CLASSIFIED DISPLAY Monday Texan...............Wednesday, 4 p.m. Tuesday Texan................. Thursday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Texan Friday. 4 p.m. ThursdayTexan.................. 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Tap *n*o " v Assonatco Press w *« sennoe #tv c*epare T axvte X *c nTe-national stones ’o us* r "Ne T ex a n a x ' nesip* tn# is nnd and Nax> oag» .95 £ Wire Editor For -new» into»—.aton, call 4 ' -u-hs * n oome by the X ’io x et 25th Street a x tNNms Avenue. All ctooa'mne-'is. b s xwding try- outs .inti c noa» June 11. T h e Da il y T e x a n Page 12 ft * * ! Monday. June 7, 1993 Horns corral Cowboys in Game 1 TEXAS BASEBALL C hris Sm ith Daily Texan Staff Omaha, Neb. — T exas' B r o o k s K i e s c h n i c k show ed once again why he is college b ase­ m ost b a ll's v alu ab le player S atu rd ay n ig h t ag a in st O klahom a State in the Longhorn's opening round 6-5 win in the College World series. After a nightmarish start on the m ound, in clu d in g a fo u r-ru n Cowboy assault in the fourth that erased an early 3-1 Texas lead, Kieschnick retired 16 of the last 19 OSU batters to move the Longhorns into a second-round matchup with the W ichita State Shockers, who took care of Arizona State in extra innings 4-3 in S a tu rd a y 's early game. "He was horrible in the first four “It’s hard to pitch with only one pitch, and that’s all I had — a fast­ ball.” — Brooks Kieschnick, Texas pitcher in n in g s," L onghorn coach Cliff Gustafson said. "It was a real dis­ p lay of courage. He beat a fine offensive ball club." The Longhorn victory was seen by a record CWS crowd of 20,447, shattering the previous record of 19,772 set on May 30,1992, by Texas and Oklahoma. Kieshnick (16-3) threw a career- high 172 pitches in his complete- game performance, striking out 11 batters including OSU designated hitter Thad Chadrick to record the final out of the game. "H e m ade good pitches," said OSU catcher Joe Wallace, who was 3 for 3 before flying o u t in the eighth inning. "Later he had more command — my last at-bat he had better stuff than my first three at- bats. He pitched a good game." Kieschnick's problems began in the fourth inning when he gave up five base hits, one walk and threw a wild pitch with the bases loaded. A fter four C ow boy ru n s had the p late, K ieschnick crossed a p p eared to be headed for the Please see Baseball, page 11 LSU tops A&M behind hot bats Aggie bullpen roughed up by Tigers, A&M in losers’ bracket for Game 3 Chris Sm ith Daily Texan Staff OMAHA, Neb. — Louisiana State continued to be a postseason thorn in the Aggies' side Sunday night, as the Tigers erased a 7-2 deficit to rally past A&M for a 13-8 victory at R osenblatt S tadium in second- round play at the College World Series. LSU scored six runs in the bottom of the eighth, including a grand slam home run by second baseman Todd Walker off Aggie relief pitcher Chris Clemons (6-2) to put the game out of reach. "This is by far the best all-time victory I've ever been in," Walker said. "I have tremendous respect for Texas A&M and it's a blessing to beat those guys." W alker d rille d a 3-2 Clem ons pitch over the left-field wall to score Jason Williams, Armando Rios and Russ Johnson. "I knew he was throwing a fast­ ball," Walker said. "I just had to make contact." The loss was the fourth straight postseason defeat for the Aggies at the hands of the Tigers, who elimi­ nated A&M in 1989 regional play in College Station and beat them again in 1991 regional postseason play in Baton Rouge, La. Losing to LSU "d o esn 't bother me," said Texas A&M coach Mark Johnson. " T h e y 're ju st an o th er team." W alker's grand slam came with “I don’t think we gave up. We just got beat by a good LSU ball club. It’s one of those things where you have to get back up for Tuesday. ” — Mark Johnson, Texas A&M coach two outs in the eighth inning with LSU leading 9-8 after starting the inning down 8-7. "Down one run, I though we had a chance to get back in it," Johnson said. "They were struggling with their pitching. When Walker gets a grand slam, it takes the wind out of your sails." The Aggies committed five errors, allowing LSU to answer the A&M scoring b arrag e in the first six innings. "Anytime you have a team that plays 100 percent, you are going to have some errors," said A&M third baseman Lee Fedora. "That's all that happened to us. It was a battle. They did a good job of getting the balls in there. LSU just kept coming back." "I d o n 't th in k we gave u p ," Johnson said. 'We just got beat by a good LSU ball club. It's one of those things where you have to get back up for Tuesday. We'll show up." Texas A&M now plays Long Beach St. Tuesday at 3:06 p.m. in an elimination game. Associated Press A&M’s Rob Trimble slides safely into second under LSU’s Todd Walker. Walker later hit a grand slam. Texas finishes fourth in men’s golf final M att S chulz Daily Texan Staff TEXAS / n r \ T r 1 G O L F Sitting on a golf course in Nicholasville, Ky., and waiting for rain to pass certainly did not figure into Justin L e o n a rd '^ plans for the past week­ end. This was supposed to be break time. School had ended. He had played in the M asters, the Colonial, the Byron Nelson Classic and the NCAA Regional tournament and, according to Texas golf coach Jimmy Clayton, was plan­ ning on taking a well-deserved break. Instead, Leonard joined his teammates in Kentucky, where he helped lead his team to a fifth-place finish overall in the NCAA Men's Golf Championships. Despite a third-round 78, junior Jean-Paul Hebert helped shoulder some of the load usu­ ally carried by the weary Leonard. Hebert fin­ ished in a four-way tie for third with a four- day total of 287 (1 under par), nine shots behind national champion Todd Demsey from Arizona State. Harrison Frazar, a Longhorn sophomore, finished in a six-way tie for seventh, one shot behind Hebert. Leonard shot a 5-over-par 293, Taylor Tipton shot a 6-over-par 294 and Stuart Wallace recorded a 12-over-par 300 to wrap up Texas' scoring. Overall, the Longhorns finished 11 strokes behind first-place Florida in the team race. Georgia Tech and North Carolina finished second and third, one and two shots behind Florida. "I was really hoping w e'd play better," Clayton said. "You always like to win. We just d id n 't have enough low scores. There were lots of teams in contention who had players shooting 65s. We had to count a lot of high scores." The Longhorns seemed to play themselves out of contention in the third round. The team recorded its w orst single-day score of the meet (295) and only one player, Tipton with a 70, shot under par for the round. Friday's third round was suspended because of rain and completed on Saturday and according to Clayton, the Longhorns "just didn't play well on Saturday morning." The afternoon round yielded differen t results, however, with Texas rebounding after the troublesome third round. The Longhorns' final-round score (283) matched champion Florida's as the best round of the day. Hebert recorded his second-best single-day score of the meet with a 69. Clayton downplayed the importance to his team's play when having a tired Leonard on hand, though he admitted the junior was not at his peak performance. "H e was pretty tired m entally," Clayton said. "He did not have a good tournament. As a matter of fact, it was probably the worst he's had this year." For Hebert and Frazar, the outlook was quite the opposite. "I think that both of them had just been playing really well," Clayton said. "They real­ ly got motivated. Jean-Paul was real focused all week. They had a real good tournament." French finishes with new winner Associated Press PARIS — After five sets and four hours of grueling baseline tennis, Sergi Bruguera succeeded Sunday in doing what no one has been able to do in th ree years — beat Jim Courier at the French Open. Playing in his first Grand Slam final, the 22-year-old Spaniard pre­ vailed 6-4, 2-6, 6-2, 3*-6, 6-3 to halt C o u rier's French Open w inning streak at 20 matches and thwart his bid to join Bjorn Borg as the only man to win three straight titles. Bruguera, the first Spaniard to win the championship since Andres Gimeno in 1972, collapsed onto his back on the red clay after Courier hit a stretch backhand volley into the net on the second match point. "I was in heaven for a moment," Bruguera said. "It's unbelievable when your dream comes true." As Bruguera twitched in ecstasy with his arm s covering his face, Courier jogged over, pulled him up, and the two men hugged. Bruguera, usually a man of few words, was ebullient after accepting the M usketeers' Cup from former French tennis great Jean Borotra. "I'll tell you a secret," he told the crowd in French. "Ever since I was 6 years old, my birthday wish has Bruguera does a happy dance. been to win the French Open." Bruguera came into the match as a heavy underdog, having lost to Courier in straight sets in their four previous meetings. What's more, Courier hadn't lost a match here since 1990, when he was beaten in the quarterfinals by Andre Agassi. But B ruguera's cred en tials on clay are as good as anybody's. And on Sunday, he had Courier on the run from the beginning. > Horns stumble to subpar finish in outdoor track Greg Pederson Daily Texan * Staff The results at the NCAA Track and Field Outdoor C h a m p i o n ­ ships went as an ticip ated w ith the A rkansas men and Louisiana State women claiming national championships at the four-day meet which con­ cluded Saturday night at New Orleans' Tad Gormley Stadium. The Razorbacks became only the second school in NCAA histo­ ry to claim titles in cross country, and indoor and outdoor track in consecutive seasons as they outscored runners-up LSU and Ohio State. Arkansas also com­ pleted the sweep in 1984-85 and 1991-92. Texas C h ristia n 's w om en's squad posted its best-ever finish in an NCAA m eet, scoring 24 points for 12th place. The Texas w om en's team fin­ ished in a tie with Nebraska for 14th with 21 points. Texas finished in a tie for 36th along with Texas A&M with seven points. The Lady Longhorns received p o in ts from several athletes, in clu d in g the 400-m eter relay team of Crystal Braddock, Tamika Higgins-Francis, Shantell Grant and Stacey Clack. Texas clocked a 44.07 for fourth. Higgins-Francis also took fourth place in the 100-meter hurdles, in a time of 13.23. Braddock was sixth in the 100 meters and seventh in the 200. Texas' Telisa Young, the NCAA indoor cham pion in the trip le jum p, was sixth in the event Saturday with a top leap of 42 feet, 4 inches. "I gave it my best shot, but it didn't go as well as I'd hoped," Young said. "I really can't com­ plain though, after not trip le jumping for the past two years." Eileen Vanisi claimed sixth for the Lady Horns in the shot put, with an effort of 51-11 1/4, her third consecutive top 10 NCAA outdoor finish in the event. The Longhorn men's team suf­ fered its second consecutive dis­ appointing NCAA outdoor finish, with the only points coming from Steve Sisson's fifth-place showing in the 10,000 meters and Du'aine Ladejo's sixth-place finish in the 400 meters. "I'm disappointed I couldn't score more points for the team," said Ladejo, who earned his third All-American honor at Texas with his efforts. "U nfortunately, this isn't the time in the season when I'm peak- ing. "I'm at the lowest of lows for not w inning or scoring m ore points for Texas, but I feel good going into the summer season. I intend to make [Texas] proud of me in the future." Texas absorbed a major blow to its hopes when Todd Lockwood went down with an injury in the first event of the decathlon. He suffered a cramped hamstring in the 100 meter event and had to withdraw from competition. Longhorn d ecath letes Jason Patrick and Nabil Mark finished 12th and 14th, respectively, behind champion Chris Huffins of California, who had 8007 points. Texas received another setback when J.J, Miller no-heighted in three tries at 16-6 in the pole vault competition. s c o r e s Baseball ..........................5 Houston New York Mets..................... 4 Texas...................................... 4 New York Yankees................3 Chicago White Sox................4 Boston.................................... 3 Detroit..................................11 California...............................5 Minnesota..............................5 Cleveland...............................4 Oakland ......................... 10 Toronto..................................4 Baltimore...............................5 Seattle.....................................2 Kansas City............................8 Milwaukee.............................7 Philadelphia........................ 11 .................... 7 Colorado St. Louis.................................5 Cincinnati..............................1 Florida................................... 9 San Diego...............................2 San Francisco......................... 7 Pittsburgh..............................1 Chicago Cubs........................ 4 M ontreal................................1 Atlanta ..................................2 Los Angeles...........................0 BRIEFS* ■ PRO GOLF: DUBLIN, Ohio — Paul Azinger sank a 72nd-hole b u n k er shot to turn alm ost certain defeat into an improbable victory over a stu n n ed Payne Stew art in the M em orial Tournament on Sunday. Azinger went to his knees, then threw his head back and howled to the heavens after one of the most dramat­ ic triumphs in golf since Bob Tway beat Greg Norman on a sim ilar shot in the 1986 PGA Championship. “A miracle," Azinger said later. "The bunker shot of my life." "It's part of the business," Stewart shrugged, although he made no attempt to con­ ceal his disappointment. Stew art held a one-shot lead over Azinger when the two close friends, playing in the final twosom e on Jack Nicklaus' Muirfield Village Golf Club course, went to the tee on the 18th, a par-4 that doglegs to the right. Azinger, who had to come from three shots back, had a 3-U nder-par 69 and a 274 total, and m arked the sev­ enth consecutive season in which he has won at least one tournament. The victory, the ninth of his career, was w orth $252,000 from the purse of $1.4 million. ■ USA SOCCER: NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Brazil, a p p e a rin g to play at half speed for much of the game, com pletely outp lay ed the United States and beat the Americans 2-0 Sunday in the opener of the U.S. Cup '93 tournament. and Careca scored after just 4 the 1 /2 m inutes Brazilians then seemed con­ tent to go up and down the field at a scrim m age-like pace. The three-time World Cup champions kept the ball on their feet like glue but had trouble finishing, their downfall in the 1990 World C up. Luiz C arlos W inck fin ally got a second goal with three minutes left. Brazil, 4-0 a g a in st the U nited States, outshot the Americans 12-4, including 9- 1 in the first half. This tournam ent, which includes d efen d in g also W orld Cup cham pion G erm any and E ngland, is intended as a w arm up for next year's World Cup. With samba drums sound­ ing and most of the 44,579 in the Yale Bowl wearing yel­ low and green, it seem ed m ore of a hom e gam e for Brazil than it did for the U.S. The Americans, just 1-5-9 this year, were without three key starters still in Europe: m idfielder Tab Ramos, for­ w ard Eric W ynalda and d efe n d e r Thomas Dooley. The Brazilians were missing about half their top lineup. C o m p i l e d f r o m A s s o c i a t e d Press and staff reports