appointment Gov.-elect George Cameron County Judge Tony iry of state. Steelers KO Bills Rod Woodson returns an interception for a touch­ down and causes a fumble to lead the Pittsburgh Steelers past the Buffalo Bills in a 23-10 victory. Vol. 94, No. 53 i h e Da il y T exa n KVRX to launch broadcast on FM dial The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, November 15, 1994 2 Sections 25c PATRICIA BUSA___ Daily Texan Staff A fte r b ein g nam ed the top co lle g e ra d io sta tio n in the nation Satu rd ay , KV RX looks ahead to an even greater a c c o m p lis h m e n t T u e s d a y n ig h t — broad castin g on the FM dial. K V R X s t a t i o n m a n a g e r C a r o l T e ix eira said station em p lo y ees w ere th rilled ab o u t w in n in g the Statio n of th e Y e a r a w a r d fro m th e N a tio n a l A s s o c ia tio n o f C o lle g e B ro a d ca ste rs. T he com p etition is held am ong college radio statio n s nationw ide. B u t T e ix e i r a s a id th e s t a t i o n 's b ig g e st a cco m p lish m e n t w ill h ap p en at 7 p.m . Tuesday w hen KVRX begins b road castin g on FM airw aves. F o r fiv e y e a r s , K V R X , fo r m e r ly K T S B , h a d w a g e d a b a t t le a g a in s t K O .O P r a d io fo r A u s tin 's last n o n ­ c o m m e r c ia l FM fr e q u e n c y . In Ju n e 1 9 9 3 , th e tw o s t a t i o n s a s k e d th e Federal C o m m u n icatio n s C om m ission to a p p r o v e a tim e -s h a r e a g re e m e n t that w ould allow them to share the fre­ quency. B e f o r e K V R X b u ilt its n e w FM b r o a d c a s tin g to w er, th e s ta tio n w a s on ly a v a ila b le to rad ios w ith a cab le c o n n e c t io n . T h e 3 ,0 0 0 - w a t t to w e r , w hich w as com pleted on O ct. 24, w ill e n a b le K V R X to reach all o f A u stin , Teixeira said. “W e have been doing tests ov er the w e e k en d , and the sig n a ls h av e been stro n g ," T eix eira added. “W e think it will m ake a big d ifferen ce." KV RX w ill be b ro a d ca stin g on 91.7 FM at n ig h t, w h ile K O O P w ill h av e the d ay tim e slot, Teixeira said. KVRX w ill con tin u e cablecasting 24 hours, 7 d ays a w eek. She added that K O .O P is e x p e c te d to b e g in b r o a d c a s t in g in D ecem ber. K V R X p r o g r a m m a n a g e r Q e a n Teffer said the station w ill be ab le to reach m ore people and b ring a b road er range of musn to m ore listeners. W e are all real excited [abou t FM ] becau se we have been stuck to cab le," he said. "W e have recognition, but not listeners." T eix eira a ttrib u ted the1 s e le c tio n as b e s t s ta tio n in p a r t to th e s t a t i o n 's m usic departm ent. O ur m usic d ep artm ent has a rep u ­ tation o f being cm the lead in g e d g e ," she said. It s spectacular b ecau se w e are only a cable station ," T effer said. He said tw o m ain reasons K V R X is ranked above other college station s are its ta le n te d s tu d e n t v o lu n te e r s an d diversity in program m ing. "W e hav e a lot o f th in g s o th er s ta ­ tio n s d o n 't h a v e ," T e ffe r a d d e d . H e sa id K\ RX o ffe rs s p e c ia l p ro g ra m s , announces com m unity calen d ar events and plays a variety of m u sic. D is c jo c k e y M ik e M a r tin e z , J r ., know n as T u n koliciou s," said the sta­ tio n p la y s in d e p e n d e n t la b e ls an d ta k e s a d v a n ta g e o f th e la rg e A u stin m usic scene. lo t o f T e x a s a r t i s t s ," h e "We play good m usic, and w e play a s a id . [L iste n e rs1 really d o n 't g et d iv ersity on a reg u lar station ." reixeira said that tht station 's co m ­ m unity involvem ent also played a role in w inning the aw ard. 1 he sta tio n has added seven new program s this year, in c lu d in g p o etry re a d in g s , fin e a rts re v iew s and co m ed y im p ro v is a tio n . Please see S tation, page 2 . ANDREW ROMERO/Daily Texan Staff ► on M onday^luhe K % x eS u d io ' The ftT o n i s 'Z Z g to 9 1 .7 FM w h T re tt JTtV bíSaScast ñighMyPÍeS " a m ' * ° 1 P m ' 8'0t Far East nations back Clinton’s call to end N. Korea’s nuclear program Associa ted Press JA K A R TA , Indonesia In an orches trated show of unity, President C linton w o n p le d g e s M o n d a y fro m C h in a , Japan and Sou th Korea to k e e p the p r e s ­ sure cm N orth K orea to freeze its sus pected nuclear w eapons program . C linton, after o n e-o n -o n e ta lk s w ith p re s id e n ts and p rim e m in iste rs , said N orth K orea's neighbors offered “ their strong su p p ort" for the accord to freeze and ultim ately d ism an tle P y on g y an g 's nuclear program . C h in a , S o u th K o re a an d J a p a n already had endorsed the N orth K orean agreem ent, but C linton show cased the issu e b ecau se m any d etails o f how to im p le m e n t th e p a ct o v e r 10 y e a r s rem ain to be w orked out C lin to n said the* plan p ro v id in g N orth K orea w ith a lte rn a te fu els and new lig h t-w ater reactors for giving up its nuclear program — w ould “ requite a lot of efforts on several fro n ts." Perhaps the thorniest question is how to divide the estim ated $4 billion cost of th e d e a l. Ja p a n and S o u th K o re a are expected to fund m ost of the burden. < hina South Korea and Japan already had endorsed the North Korean agreem en t, but C linton show cased the issue because many details of how to im plem ent the pact over 10 years rem ain to be w orked out. After one-on-one talks and a cerem o­ nial dinner op ening the 18-nation Asia- P acific E co n o m ic C o o p eratio n (A P E C ) forum , Cl into i met again M onday night with Japan ese Prim e M inister Tom iichi M urayam a and South Korean President Kim Y oung-Sam at their request to fur­ ther d iscuss the nuclear accord. A d m inistration officials said the s e s ­ sion w as in ten d ed to help u n d ersco re the im portance of the agreem ent to the U n ite d S t a t e s to h e lp M u ra y a m a a n d K im sell th e d e a l at hom e. in o r d e r 1 he A sian and P acific lea d e rs were* expected to endorse Tuesday a blueprint tor a fr e e -tr a d e p a ct that w o u ld te ar dow n trad e b arrie rs acro ss the P acific Rim over the next quarter-century. C linton, cm his second trip abroad in recent weeks, w as closely questioned by his foreign cou nterp arts on last w e e k 's G O P election sw eep. Pledging coopera­ tio n w ith R e p u b lic a n s , C lin to n said , "M y stra te g y w ill be to have an open d oor and to have a lot of contact." Still jet-lagged after back-to-back trips to the M id d le East and Asia w ith non­ stop cam p aig n in g in b etw een, C lin ton jo k e d , I th in k I'm s till s o m e w h e re betw een Jordan and Jerusalem ." C linton held a new s conference in a lush g ard en at the U.S. a m b a ssa d o r's r e s id e n c e w h e re h is r e m a rk s m ix e d with the w histles o f song birds. H e b ru s h e d a s id e o b je c tio n s fro m allies ab ou t h altin g A m erican en force­ m en t o f th e B o s n ia n a rm s e m b a rg o . C linton portrayed his m ove as p refer­ ab le to an o u trig h t re v o ca tio n of the arm s ban, insisting, "W e are not violat­ ing the arm s em bargo." A sia is the w o rld 's fastest g ro w in g econom ic region, and U.S. trade across the Pacific is three tim es as large as that with European nations. U.S. officials predicted en d orsem en t 1 u e s d a y ot a s ta te m e n t c a l li n g fo r "o p e n and free tra d e " th rou gh o u t the region by the year 2020. Industrial com ­ panies would try to achieve the goal by 2010 w hile less-developed countries and newly developed nations would aim at the 2020 target. I he N orth K orean accord and trad e to o k p r e c e d e n c e o v e r U .S. c o n c e r n s about hum an rights problem s in China. 11uman rights issues have receded since C lin to n g ra n te d C h in a m o st-fa v o re d - n a tio n tra d e s ta tu s last M ay w ith o u t regard to its hum an rights conduct. D efending his approach, C linton said the U n ited S ta te s, p erh ap s m ore th an an y o th e r co u n try , " c o n s is te n tly and regularly raises hum an rights issu es." I le said he discussed the subject w ith C h in e s e P r e s id e n t Jia n g Z e m in and raised specific issues. " W e m a d e it a b s o lu te ly c l e a r , " C lin to n s a id , " t h a t in o r d e r fo r th e U n ited States relationship w ith C h ina to fully flow er, there had to be progress on all fronts." In the red Students often up the creek in paying back federal loans Editor s note: 1 his is the second o f a twi' part scries. A L E X D E M A R B A N Daily Texan Staff W ith fe d era l stu d e n t lo a n s re a c h in g re co rd n u m b e rs nationw ide, loan counselors say students — m any unaw are o f repaym ent options, are increasingly tiptoeing around the possibility o f default. I he fact that there are so many students in trouble finan­ cially is a sad com m entary on ou r lack of financial ed u ca­ s a id N a n c y B ilitn o , e d u c a t i o n c o o r d in a t o r at tio n , C onsum er C red it C ounseling Service, a financial counseling agency. "Th ese kids are young adults w ho are starting out in debt and they re looking at a continu ally im poverished lifestyle even after their first job." Lonnie W illiam s, d irector of the counseling service, s.ud student clientele at her agency has nearly tripled in the last three years. She and other counselors sav the accum ulation ot m ulti­ ple loans during college and frequent address changes often leav e stu d en ts w ith little k n o w le d g e ot th eir repayment terms, lo t exam ple, they often do not re a li/e until grad u ation that they m ay ow e as m uch as $40,000 and have paym ents nearing $1,000 a month, Bilitho said. She faulted both stu­ dents who did not keep track of their debts and a repaym ent P lease see D efault, page 2 INSIDE THE TEXAN Panel discussion focuses on media bias High co u rt to exam in e stu d en t publication case STACEY RODRIGUES ________________ Daily Texan S taff----------------------------------------------- ---------------- The U.S. Su p rem e C ourt agreed tw o-w eeks-ago to e x a m ­ ine sep aration of chu rch and state at public u n iv ersities by hearing a case about the U niversity of V irg in ia's denial of funds for a stud ent g ro u p 's C h ristian m agazine. A lthough the cou rt does not explain why p articu lar cases are chosen for review , the case will allow the cou rt to clari­ fy h o w fr e e s p e e c h c o e x is t s w ith th e C o n s t i t u t i o n 's E stablishm ent C lause, w hich prohibits state funding o f reli­ gious activities. D ep end ing on how bread the cou rt's o p in ­ ion is, it cou ld e ith e r affect the fre e -s p e e d i rights o f reli­ gious student grou p s or it could alter established ru les of chu rch-state sep aration. The genesis o f the case w as in 1991 w hen a C hristian stu ­ dent group. W id e A w ake P rod uctions, requested a share of the stu d en t a ctiv itie s fee fund for the g ro u p 's m ag azin e W ide A w ake, at th e U n iv e rs ity o f V irg in ia , a u n iv e rs ity founded by rh o m as Jefferson. The stud ent-run fee co m m it­ tee denied the request becau se of the religious nature of the publication. The now -d efunct m a g azin e's m ission w a s "to ch allen g e C h ristians to live, in w ord and deed, according to tht* faith they p rotlaim , and to encou rage students to consid er what a personal relationsh ip w ith Jesu s Christ m e a n s , " accord in g to a N ov. 9 article in The C hron icle of H igher Education. After losing ap p eals to university ad m in istrators the e d i­ tor of W ide Awake, Ronald R osenberg er filed a law suit in a , Please see Publication, page 2 TODAY E L IZ A B E T H S O U D E R _______ Daily fexa n Staff Prison Bound Hot Check W rite r W eath er: Hi You d o n ’t know me, but I’m a famous writer. I write checks. Mostly fiction. I thought my balance was in the $70s, but it turned out to be in the low $50s. It’s even less now after the penalties. Worse, I’ve got 10-15 le tte rs from C ounty Attorney Ken Oden telling me I have a 50 percent chance of being thrown in the pokey. Index: Around Campus..................12 Classifieds..........................13 Comics............................. 12 Editorials......................... 4 Entertainment ....................10 Sports....................................... i 6 State & Local........................7 U niversity. World & Nation 3 .............. q The e d it o r o f Texas M o n th ly defended his profession on cam pus M onday against two public figures w ho said they have been burned by the media. At the "M ed ia in Politics" panel d is c u s s io n s p o n s o r e d b y th e H on ors C e n te r, D is tr iit A tto rn ey Ronnie Earle, who prosecuted Sen Kay Bailey H u tch iso n e a rlie r this y ear, told ab ou t KM) stu d en ts that the m edia seek to raise the anxiety of the public by covering the most negative stories. Ih e higher the anxiety the easi­ er people are to m anipulate," Earle said. A d m . B o b b y R ay In m a n , w h o g ave up his nom ination for secre ­ ta ry o f d e f e n s e in th e C lin to n adm inistration, said several arm s of th e m edia w orked w ith an Israeli lobbying group to thwart his nom i­ nation b ecau se he w as th ought to be anti-Sem itic, In m a n sa id hi* d e c id e d n o t to accept the nom ination b ecau se the C lin to n ad m in istra tio n refu sed to deal with the distortion of his back ground, and he w as not prepared to live with the attention of the m edia. th in k " P e o p le th e m e d ia is biased, and it is, but not in the way people think it is," said Paul Burka, editor of Texas M onthly. He said the public w ants and expects politicians to lie, cheat and steal, so m edia are biased that way. M any tim es the publii d oes not w an t th e tru th , B u rk a s a i d . T h e m edia are biased in that they think there is som ething w rong with the system , he added. Plan II sophom ore C urtis Sparrer, w h o org anized the even t, said he thinks media are biased, and w ant­ ed the topic addressed. " A fte r all th e ru c k u s la st y e a r about the Bill C linton election being run by the media, I decided it was tim e to talk about it," Sparrer said. The event w as part of the Plan ll V o lta ire 's C o ffe e s" series, w hich gives students a chance to talk with professors in intim ate settings sev­ eral tim es during a sem ester. S p a rre r said he in v ited In m an b ecau se m an y p eo p le th o u gh t he declined the p resid en tial nom ina- I I Please see Bias, page 2 A d m . B o b b y R ay In m a n a d d re s s e s P la n II st dents on p ro blem s w ith the m odern m ed ia. ANDREW ROMERO/Daily T e x a n S Page 2 Tuesday, November 15,1994 T h e D a ily T exan T h e Da il y Te x a n Editor. Managing Editor ................... ................................. ..................... Permanent Staff ^ t l o r anag^ EdÍtWS.......................... TraVi8 **** LeStey n®11®®*' Associate News Editors................ News Assignments Editor................... Rhoads, Kevin ’.""- '1' »'.............— -Mfca Wallace f®' Senior Reporters........................... - ............... Stacey Rodrigues, Andrea Buckley. Mary* McManamee. A ssocia te Editors........................................................... Entertainment Editor............................................. A ssociate Entertainment E d ito r ................................................ Around Cam pus/Listings Editor....................................................... Sports Editor........................................... ....................... ■Laura Aastetten, Renae Merle Qeorge Klos, Meghan Griffiths Chris Riemenschneider _ ........................... .aoott B artel» Associate Sports Editor............................................................................................... 1C ” ? 0 0 G u99®f P t S J & S r 18 * * * * * * ....................... J° h nny LUdden' A n d m a L M enez! M ^ S L M ^ S l Special Prow cts Editor ' " " " I " " " " " " " " ..................... ‘" " " “ " Z Z Z ..............^ Graphics E d ito r.............................................. ................... ..................... ° M U P ' Sh u lm 8 " Cart0OniS,S............................................. Riv®,a C h n s ru m « f Vmeant Lin, C .J Jonas. W a n d y Rob Caswell. D avid Boswett. Monté Bm gham . Henry Dem ond issue Staff N e w ^ e p o r t e r s ................................ N ew s Heporters Andrew Rom ero, Bonnie W aldm an P a tn a a Busa, Elizabeth Souder. C hris Crews. Aiex D eM artw n p Makeup Editors Wire Editor C o p y Editors............................................................................. ..................... ...Z.ZZZZZ........................................ . H S ^ ra h R rv e n ., R ichard Luttre* Cravens. Trecy Schultz ^ ..........R u s s e i Editorial Colum nists Editorial Assistant Editorial C a rtoonist ............................ .ZZ.Z.ZZZZZZ ............................... S n e sh e Cidrtenc k °®c* ® f G «w ®°3 K e n Bridges. Robert R o ge rs -------- .Sa ra h H n k so n — I ^ w Z * . WrttefS. M fi R h0adS Joe S ®bas,« n Sfwfcy,' Mario Bermett! T h o m Í Z S Sports Assistant . .............................. Nathan S a n d e rs Steven Blum Advertising Local Display Nathan Moore. Kathleen Maver Brad Corbett, Danny Grover. KeBy G raha m .Sa ra Eckert. Joe Rowe» £ £ 1 Ja ckson Knsten Mansfield. M e g a n Z h an g ........ ........... ............................... 008,1 C e L o s Santos. Dew ayne Tnd®» Nathan M oore Sa n d ra Toon .... Carohne Langiey. S te pha n** R osenle id Layout Coordinator. Graphic D esign ers......... Classified D isp la y ........... Classified T eiephone Sales C lerks _ The Daily ¡exan ( U S P S 146-440). a student new spaper at The University of T e xa s at A ustrv k t i n fished by T e x a s Student Publications 2 5 0 0 Whrtw, Austin, T X 7 8 7 0 5 T h e Daity T e xa n « o u h i i i M 6nday oesday W ednesday Thursday and Fnday. except holidays, exam penod s and when school s not in se ssio n S e co n d cla ss postage paid at Austin. T X 78710. Pnscitta R c e . Kim oerK Stuber. V a n e ss a Flores ..............D _ _ ..... ........ „ le n rv w ~ * „ New s contributions wHl be accepted by telephone (471-4591). at the editorial otfice (T exas Publications Building 2.122) or at the new s laboratory (Com munication Budding A 4 101) For local and nabonai display advertising, call 471-1865 For classified dsptay and n e t * ™ * - m - . - A n display advertising, cat 4 7 i -8900. For classified word advertising, ca t 471-5244 Entire contents copynght 1994 T exas Student Publics bens T he Deify Te xan M ail S u b s c r ip tio n Ratee i One Semester c aM or S p n o g )...................... Two Sem esters (Fall and S p n n a ) ........................................................ Sum m er S e s s w n ..... O ne Year (Fa«. Spring and S u m m e r) ... ‘ " ............ ..... —--------55.00 To charge by V IS A or MasterCard, c a l 471-5083. bend orders and address ch ang es to T exa s Student Publications. P O B ox D Austm T X 7871 T - k t m r» ™ '* * * * or to T S P B u * i n g C 3.200 or call 471-5083 ' POSTM ASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday. 4 p.m. Thursday. 4 p.m. Tuesday Fnday. 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday........ Monday, 4 p.m. Friday.............. Tuesday, 4 p.m. WonJ A d * 11 » m ( U s : Business D*y P n w lo Publrcsson' Default: Many students are unable to pay back federal loans — --------------------- _____ Continued from p a g e l p ro c e s s th a t is o fte n d if f ic u lt to understand. been made. S tu d e n t " he said. E ven re la tiv e ly sm all d e b ts can pose serious problems. O ne s tu d e n t w ho graduated from the U niversity an d d id n o t w a n t h e r n a m e u sed , said she nearly defaulted on $2,700 in s tu d e n t loans b e c a u se h e r tw o lenders w ere sending the repaym ent term s to her m other's address. "They never sent the inform ation to me, she said, still unable to find a job and begin m aking loan paym ents I a year and a half after graduation. called b oth banks an d said, 'W h at can I do? I only make $5.75 an hour and I have to pay for m v ren t and my bills." She s a id th e m is ta k e w a s h e rs because she didn t read through the yards of fine prin t before accepting the loan. L oan o ffic e rs a t th e T exas G u a r a n te e d L o an C o r p o r a tio n sa id th e n u m b e r of d e fa u lts is d o w n in Texas, largely b e c a u se of in c re a se d e d u c a tio n a l efforts. M agazines and forum s focus­ ing on loan application an d re p ay ­ m e n t a re p ro v id e d to college a n d e' en high school students. Also, cus­ tom er assistance is now available 24 hours a day through the Internet. Texas G u a ra n te e d S tu d en t Loan Corporation officials also cite options th at allow reduced p ay m en ts over longer peno ds and the consolidation of m u ltip le loans for red u cin g the threat of default. th e D e fa u lts o c c u r if S tu d e n t T ex as G u a r a n te e d L o an Corporation has not received a pay­ m ent tor 180 da vs and no arra n g e ­ m e n t for deferm ent — for circum ­ stances such as unem ploym ent, half- time enrollm ent or disability — have In cases of default, studen ts m ay be sued for the loan's entire a m o u n t, have as m uch as 10 percent of their w ages garnished and be denied pro­ fessional and occupational licenses. Jam es S tarr, a p a rtn e r at C re d it S olutions of A u stin , said stu d e n ts o ften d e fau lt b ec au se lo a n a g re e ­ m e n ts m ay be s o ld a n d re s o ld am ong lending institutions w ithout the borrow er's knowledge. "The student loan collection is in a m ess,'' said Starr, adding that w hen a th e T exas lo a n h its d e f a u lt, G u a ra n te e d L oan Corporation leaves scant negotiating room. S tu d e n t "W e have com e into contact with several instances w here people have sincerely tried to pay their loans, but instead of assisting them the TGSLC has taken a hard-no sed a p p ro ach ," S tu d e n t But representatives of th é Texas L oan G u a r a n te e d Corporation and lending institutions say that ultim ately, an y difficulties le a d in g to d e la y e d p a y m e n ts o r defaults are the stu d en ts' responsi­ bility. L o n n ie W illia m s, lo a n s e rv ic e d irecto r at Sallie M ae, the n a tio n 's largest buyer of studen t loans, said " O b v io u s ly , w e h a v e s itu a tio n s w here you can't find the student. If we can't find them, it's really the stu­ dent's fault." W illiam s said th a t d e fa u lt m ay only m ark the beginning of a slew of problem s. Students m ay quit school and get a job to p a y off their debt, or they m ay have a dam aging relationship if th e ir p a r e n ts m u s t p a y th e lo a n back," W illiams said. Publication: Christian magazine case under court’s review Continued from page 1 federa! d istric t vvurt The g ro u p lost there and again in I1**! m the I ,S. C ourt of A ppeals tor the Fourth Circuit. * ^ The L niversjtv > policy of allow ing the mem- ^w ake P roductions open access to c a m p u s facilities a c c o rd s th e p la in tiffs a m p le opportunm - to express their religious views, and leaves the L ruversity com m unity as a w hole free t° nm d dnd consider them. ... O n the other hand, it w o u id be d if f ic u lt to v ie w a w a r d in g SAF m on ies to W ide A w ake as a n y th in g b u t sta te sponsorship — and therefore advancem ent — of p a n ^ l° US s a *d th ree_j u d g e a p p e a ls M ic h a e l M c D o n a ld , a n a tto r n e y w ith th e C enter for Individual Rights, w h o is representing Rosenberger, said UVa contradicted itself b y p e r­ m ittin g f u n d s fo r p u b lic a tio n s o f a n Isla m ic group and a Jewish group. p u fJ H g u m e n t is prem ised on one w ord: n eu­ trality. The p ublic university is n ot required to set u p these types of stu d e n t activity' program s But once the un iversity decides to do this, it has to fund these program s on a neutral basis. It cannot pick and choose w hich ones to fund," M cDonald said. L n iv e rsity of V irginia law y ers co u ld n o t be reached for com m ent M onday, b u t court papers indicate that the Jewish and Islamic publications w ere funded for "cultural reasons." M ark G o o d m a n , e x e c u tiv e d ir e c to r o f th e S tudent Press Law C en ter in W ashington D C said his organization is plannin g to file an am icus cu n ae on behalf of R osenberger. An am icus curi- U C m ea n s frie r»d of th e co u rt, is a b rie f filed by parties interested in a case b u t not direct­ ly involved in it. of control o ver s tu d e n t pu b licatio n s. T his case gives the o p p o rtu n ity to the S uprem e C o u rt to justify w hy those argu m ents d o n 't apply to col­ lege student publications," G oodm an said. M cDonald said "he is confident" R osenberger will win and all public universities w ith sim ilar b o o k s C t l 0 n S W U 1 h a V e t 0 S t r i k C t h e m f r 0 m t h e i r „ . Th® fact that b h e court] granted review indi­ cates there w as som ething flawed in the appeals court ... universities will have to allow the sam e tCZthef e fu n d s th *t other stu d en ts have " M cDonald added. V iü 1 Ví euPr! SÍJd en t f° r Student Affairs James Vick said he d id n o t know if there are sim ilar 'T h e fact is th e decisio n th e S u p rem e C o u rt rea c h e s can h a v e an in flu e n c e on any s tu d e n t publication. ... I w ould anticipate that w e w ould be looking at the b ro a d e r picture. The Suprem e C ourt has allow ed secondary schools a great deal ^ U niversity keeoin f 6nt orgam zation, there is no rule r° m gettm g stu d en t fee funds the norm al w ay ... just b e c a u s 7 i 7 y ‘h lv e T relT - gious affiliation," Vick added. "As far as I know, tne issue has n o t com e up." Bias: Honors Center panel debates ethics Continued from page 1 -------- ------- ------------------- ----------- on an investigational jtttn satgery. Approved Clinical Research! performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeon/! | If you need the removal of wisdom ■ « M A R C H C R O U P I la Austin call: I Outside Austin w b i t e x a m c l a s s i f i e d a d s ' F O R . Y O U R S C A L L . 4 . 7 . B H Ü b 3 I tion because the m edia had reached too deeply into his personal life. He said he also included Earle because m an y th o u g h t the H u tc h iso n trial h a d been g re atly influ en ce by th e media. Inm an said throug h w ork he has d o n e in p u b lic p o llin g he lea rn e d that if an issue appears on television RECOGNIZE AN OUTSTANDING TEACHER new s three tim es, then only 8 p e r­ cent of the public rem ains undecided on the issue. Print m edia do not m ake as great an im pact as television, he said. T h e b u lk of th e p o p u la tio n d o e s n 't re a d ," In m a n said . "T hey w atch, they listen. Politics is a game played on television." The m edia greatly influenced the o u tc o m e of th e g o v e r n o r 's race, B urka said. G eo rg e W. Bush used m edia skillfully to convey his m es­ sage, while Richards did not have a message, he said. The m edia m ade the decision that Bush w as not sleazy, Burka said, and did not give the Richards cam paign the h eadlines her su p p o rte rs w ere counting on to use in their com m er­ cials. Which god cam e dowm and told the m edia that Bush w asn 't sleazy?" Earle ask ed . The m edia are like a g ro u p of h ig h sch o o lers w h o d u b one person a nerd and another per­ son cool, he said . The c a n d id a te s w ere allowed to get by w ith inaccu­ racies and lies, Earle added. The m edia only played a signifi­ cant role in the g o v ern o r's race by airing commercials, Inm an said. Station Continued from page 1 The sta tio n also ex p lo res c a m p u s and com m unity issues through the S tu d e n ts A s s o c ia tio n L ive and. Unedited program . Teffer a d d e d th a t m an y college s t u d e n ts e n jo y lis te n in g to th e diverse m usic the station plays. DJs have specialty program s that attract a lot of listeners, he added. "W e've been p reten ding that w e are on FM for years now ." M artinez said that w ith KVRX on the FM dial, m ore A ustinites will be able to hear local artists. "We play a lot of local talent that other stations d o n 't play," he said. T ü ^ V r ^ 01 tenUred “"top-aduate teach- shin Z j s r a p . T Pr°fessor positions, this Fellow- snip is based SOLELY on two criteria: -or • First and foremost, a teacher’s ability to enrich the edu­ cational experience of undergraduate students, and • Second, a teacher’s significant contribution to The Uni­ versity, going above and beyond the call of duty. At a time when faculty research is often regarded more an teaching, the Fellowship emphasizes the skill ig y that we value most—teaching. DO YOU KNOW AN EXCEPTIONAL TEACHER? If you’ve had a truly outstanding teacher at The Univers­ ity, let us know. We must consider all outstanding candi­ dates and need your expertise to locate the best teachers. IT’S EASY TO NOMINATE A TEACHER Just take a few minutes to fill out this form and drop it off at the Student Activities Center (Tcxaa Union 4.300) or below no later than Fri., Dec. 9. 1Zi h_e_Zd_dress YES! I WANT TO NOMINATE AN OUTSTANDING TEACHER teachers Name ---------------------- Courses You’ve Taken From This Teacher__ Your Name_ __ Address_________ Phone(day) RETURN THIS FORM TO : THE FRIAR SOCIETY TEXAS UNION #117, P.O. BOX 7338. A U S T IN TX 78713 (evening) Departm ent_! ■i I 1 T o w n M eeting ON P l a n C a m p u s M a s t e r , W e lc h H a l l 2 .2 24 ¿t N o v e m b e r 17 F ro m 6:00 TO 8:00 T h is w i l l be a n OPEN FORUM ON HOW WE CAN MAKE THE CAMPUS SPACES WORK MORE ¡ T T EFFECTIVELY. P l e a s e c o m e . T h e U n i v e r s i t y O F T e x a s a t A u s t i C a m p u s M a s t e r P l a N T h e D a i l y T e x a n o TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15 ,18 9 4 ■ ULUIIILi C.UUf*¥ I D rOUII NEWS BRIEFS Supreme Court throws out ruling to protect teacher ■ W A SH IN G TO N - The Suprem e C ourt has revived a New York col­ lege s e ffo rt to o u st a p ro fe sso r accused of m aking an anti-S em itic speech as the chairm an of its black- studies department. The court set aside on Monday rul­ ings th at said City C ollege of New ro rk violated Leonard Jeffries' free- speech rig h ts by rem o v in g him as chairman. The justices ordered the 2nd U.S. Circuit C ourt of A ppeals to restudy let fries' case in light of their decision last May that gave public em ployers greater freedom to fire employees for the things they say. Jeffries' dispute with City College of New York dates back to a 1991 speech c gave at a black cultural festival in Albany, N.Y. In it, he accused Jews of financing the slave tra d e and said Jews and the Mafia conspired to belit­ tle blacks in the movies. Jeffries also m ad e u n fla tte rin g remarks about Jewish colleagues. Officials at the college, which is a mi mber of the state-run City Universi­ ty of New York, rem oved him from his post as departm ent chairman, but hr remained a tenured professor with no loss of pay or benefits. Police block Islamic militant march as Arafat cracks down B GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Yasser A rafat o rd e re d his se c u rity forces M onday to block Islam ic m ilita n ts from h o ld in g a rally fo r a su ic id e bomber and hunt down leaders of the most violent faction opposed to peace with Israel. Palestinian police set up roadblocks, se a rc h e d cars an d tu rn e d aw ay activists of the Islam ic Jihad m ove­ ment trying to reach the memorial for Hisham Hamad. Three Israeli soldiers were killed Friday when he bicycled into an Israeli army checkpost and set oft explosives strapped to his body. Monday was the first time Palestin­ ian p o lic e en fo rce d a new b an on street protests as part of a w idening crackdown on Muslim m ilitants that also included the arrests of about 180 activists since the weekend. N evertheless, more than 500 m ili­ tants m anaged to bypass police and rally outside H am ad's house, calling on A rat at to halt the crackdown and threatening to attacks Israeli targets. Arafat, we are not afraid of your arrests!” the demonstrators chanted. Gunman wounds 5, kills 1 at Wisconsin homes for disabled B WAUSAU, Vv is. — A junk dealer w h o th o u g h t peo p le w ere stealin g trom him shot six people at two group hom es where he volunteered as a dri­ ver, killing a 7-year-old girl, police said Monday. Four of the wounded, including the girl who died Monday, w ere related and a fifth person was á family friend. Carl Steppert Jr., 64, described by a neighbor as a "strange sort of fellow," was arrested hours after the Sunday night shootings, sleeping at his own home, police said. I just can't imagine som eone per­ form ing a crim inal act like this and being able to go to sleep, ’ D eputy Police Chief Paul Luoma said. Steppert was scheduled to appear in court Tuesday after charges are filed, court records show. Steppert told police he recently dis- covered thousands of dollars missing from his home and blamed caretakers of the group homes, Luoma said. NYPD applies brakes to most-wanted driver ■ NEW YORK - The traffic violation — an illegal U -turn — w as routine stuff. But w hen police p ulled over Leroy Linen, they soon discovered he was no ordinary motorist. It took nearly two hours to print out his list of traffic violations, which had resulted in 633 license suspensions in the last five years. He was the city's most-wanted driver. N ew Y o rk 's No. 1 sco fflaw w as charged with aggravated unlicensed op eratio n of a vehicle and d riv in g without a license. The 40-year-old was jailed without bail. He pleaded innocent Monday and a hear mg was set for Friday. A lter a serie s of fatal a c c id e n ts involving unlicensed driv ers, state lawmakers last year made it a felony to drive with 10 or more suspensions, p u n ish a b le by up to fo u r y e a rs in prison. Compiled from Associated Press reports Fed actions [ DEADLY FORCE worry many Possible interest rate hikes spark recession concerns Associated Press VV A SH IN G TO N — For m any th e q u e stio n has e c o n o m ists, becom e not w heth er the Federal R eserve w ill raise in tere st ra te s ag a in T u esd a y b u t w h e th e r the eco n o m y can w ith s ta n d m ore increases w ithou t risking a fresh recession. The central bank's interest-rate- setting arm, the Federal Open Mar­ ket C o m m ittee, m eets b eh in d closed doors Tuesday and the bet­ ting am ong economists is that the committee will raise interest rates for the sixth time this year. "The Fed is playing a forward- looking prevent defense and that su g g ests a n o th e r dose of higher interest rates will be forthcoming," said Allen Sinai, chief international econom ist at Lehman Brothers in New York. Sinai and other analysts are look­ ing for a half-point increase in the Fed's target for the federal funds rate, the interest that banks charge each other on overnight loans. They also expect a half-point boost in the d is c o u n t ra te , w h ich th e Fed charges on direct loans to banks. Those increases would trigger a c o rresp o n d in g jum p in b usiness and c o n su m e r b o rro w in g costs, with m ost econom ists forecasting that banks will announce an imme­ d ia te rise in th e ir 7.75 p e rc e n t benchmark prime lending rate. A h a lf-p o in t in cre ase w o u ld m atch th e F e d 's last ch an g e on Aug. 16, which pushed the funds rate to its current level of 4.75 per­ cent and lifted the discount rate to 4 percent. If the Fed does boost rates by a half-point on Tuesday, manv econ­ om ists believe at least one m ore h a lf-p o in t in c re a se w ill occur, either at the Fed's December meet­ ing or early next year. H ow ever, after that time, a n a­ lysts predict, there will be enough signs of a slowdown that financial m arket w o rries of in flation will recede, and the central bank will be sit back and see if it has succeeded in slowing economic grow th to an annual rate of around 2.5 percent. If this forecast holds true, these an a ly sts believe, 30-year bonds, which broke through the 8 percent level earlier this month, will peak at 8.25 percent. And 30-year, fixed - rate mortgages, currently at a three- year high of 9.11 percent, will peak at aro und 9.5 p ercent early next year, they say. On the other hand, some analysts said the central bank m ay gamble on raising rates by a full percentage p o in t Tuesday, b eliev in g such a m ove m ight actually cause long­ term rates, which are set by finan­ cial markets, to decrease slightly. "A half-point move is just going to leave people w ondering w hen the next m ove will co m e," said Bruce Steinberg, an econom ist at M errill Lynch in N ew York. " It would be better if the Fed did more rather than less." But one factor keeping the Fed from boosting rates a full po in t could be a rising chorus of com ­ p la in ts th at the c e n tra l b a n k 's aggressive credit tig h ten in g this y e a r has been an o v e rre a c tio n , g iv en th a t in flatio n ra te s h av e remained low. A coalition of labor, farm and civic organizations is plan n in g a protest outside Fed headq uarters Tuesday. Fed critics charge that the central bank is being held hostage to the demands of Wall Street bond tra d e rs rather than the n eed s of working Americans. Bond market traders are para­ noid and out of touch with w hat is going on in the real w o rld . The th rea t of inflation is negligible," complained Jerry Jasinowski, presi­ dent of the National Association of Manufacturers. Since Feb. 4 the Fed has boosted the funds rate by 1.75 percentage p o in ts. A n a ly sts sa id th a t p a st increases of between 2 percentage p o in ts and 3 p e rc e n ta g e p o in ts have been enough to slow the U.S. economy and anything above that level has pushed the country into a recession. San Francisco police Inspector Michael Gaynor displayed an Uzi 9mm pistol in a Monday news conference. The Uzi was among the cache of weapons taken from the scene of Sunday’s gun- fight that claimed the lives of a police officer and A S SOCIATED PRESS a suspect, Vic Boutwell. Boutwell, 37, started a 2 5-m inute shootout, hijacking three cars and spraying more than 100 rounds into restaurant windows and a gas line He was shot to death by police. Killer quake rocks P h ilip p in e island Lal l Stati0rlS £hom esdam aged in tremor Associated Press MALAYLAY, P h ilip p in es — A stro n g earthquake rocked the Philippine island of M indoro early Tuesday, killing at least 23 p eo p le — m an y as they sle p t — an d destroying nearly 200 homes. In Malay lay, a small fishing village on the island's northern coast, at least 23 people died, eight w ere m issing, and 32 hom es were destroyed, officials and police said. Injured people sitting and crying in the rubble of their hom es said m om ents after the quake struck a wall of w ater w ashed through th eir village on the m outh of a river. DZRH and DZMM radio reported that at least 31 people died on the island, m anv while sleeping in buildings that collapsed, including a Philippine Coast Guard struc­ ture. Both stations quoted Rodolfo Valencia, one of the island s two governors. L ou rdes M asing, the d isa ste r-se rv ic e director of the National Red Cross in M ani­ la, said 188 homes were heavily damaged. Mindoro Island is still recovering from a typhoon that struck last month, destroying much of the island's coconut and rice crops. P resid en t Fidel R am os, w ho is at the Asia-Pacific Economic C ooperation forum in Indonesia, ordered $208,000 to be sent to the island to help rebuild destroyed homes. F o o d and m edical su p p lie s w ere being flown in on four military helicopters. The quake, which occurred at 3:15 a.nj., had a preliminary m agnitude of 7 and was centered in a strait about seven miles north east ot Malaylay, said the Philippine Insti­ tute ot V ulcanology and Seismology. Lasting about four m inutes, the quake w a s felt th ro u g h o u t c e n tra l an d so u th P h ilip p in es, including M anila, 75 m iles , 1 m i p p 11it >, i n c l u d i n g i\iai north of the epicenter, said Ted Sandoval, , specialist at the institute. l lie u s - G eological S u rv ey in M enh P ark, C alif., an d the R oyal H ong Korn Observatory both put the quake's prelimi nary magnitude at 7.1. But Sandoval said no tidal waves wer< reported or expected from the quake, one o the strongest ever to occur on the Lubanc fault, one of the area's m ost active. A m agnitude 6 quake can cause severe damage if centered under a populated area w hile a m a g n itu d e 7 q u a k e in d ic a te s £ major quake capable of heavy damage. GOP plans new investigations Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — A rm ed w ith new ly w on a u th o rity to im pose the rules and issue subpoenas, congression­ al Republicans are preparing investiga­ tions of the Clinton administration that w ill ra n g e from W h itew a ter to the White House travel office. But key R epublicans from fiercely partisan Sen. Alfonse D'Amato to laid- back in tellectu al Rep. Jim Leach are prom ising to be fair once they, as the new majority, inherit the investigative power early next year. "W ater to rtu re is not in anybody's interest,” said Leach of Iowa, the likely H ouse Banking H ouse Banking C om m ittee chairm an w ho would preside over that panel's Whitewater investigation. He said there would be "no element of mean-spirited­ ness” in his hearings. ------ T his w ill no t be a w itch h u n t," p ro m ised D 'A m ato, R-N.Y., w ho is ready to assume command of the Sen­ ate Banking Committee and its White­ water probe. GOP lawmakers have often accused D em ocratic co m m ittee ch airm en of cooking the rules to frustrate probes of the adm inistration. It took m onths of GOP haranguing to get Democratic-run W hitew ater hearings u n d e r wav this year, and the House probe limited ques­ tio n in g so severely th at a su stain ed Republican interrogation was i m p o s s i ­ ble. The investigation of W hitew ater is only the most prominent probe planned for next year. There also could be in\ es- tigations of: ■The administration s tiring ot White House travel office personnel. A Repub­ lican re p o rt last m onth charged that adm inistration officials bent the truth in their accounts of the firings. ■ I he W hite H o u se's d ru g control stra te g y , w hich, according to m any Republicans, has been severely dow n­ graded since former President Bush left office. 100 Haitians dead in tropical storm Associated Press ~ “-------------- PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Heavy rains and flooding from I ropical Storm Gordon swept across Haiti on Monday, killing at least 100 people, triggering landslides and washing awav makeshift homes in the slums of the capital. Ferrified people fled their homes in the early morning dark­ ness^ as floodwaters poured in. Some spent the night huddled on their rooftops in the downpour. By flu* time the skies cleared, thousands wen left homeless I d.dn't save anything, only myself," said Lekeas Dorvilier 35, who jumped out the window of his two-room home min­ utes before it crumbled into a ravine. Bodies lay in the sun in some neighborhoods. Many of the victims lived in flimsy tin shacks on hillsides. Rescue workers said they expected the death toll to climb. At the height ot the storm, U.S. soldiers diverted traffic from unsafe bridges. As the weather improved, they cleared roads of muck and debris. ASSOCIATED p r e s s Haitians surround a sunken U.S. HUMVEE after the storm. 'W e need these roads as bad as they do," said Sgt. Tom A kins, 29, ot Lexington, Ky., whose HUMVEE was buried bv piles of mud and rubble. U.S. soldiers pulled a body from a flooded road late Sunday m the 1 art-au-Prmoe neighborhood of Martissant The body covered with flies, lay on the porch of a nearby home Monday. Scientists find race connection for hypertension Economics could be responsible for blood pressure, study says ~ Associated Press ~ --------- WASFilNGTON — It's a question that has frus­ trated doctors for decades: Why do black Ameri- cans suffer more high blood pressure, with worse consequences, than whites? Sociologists said poverty, geneticists suggested genes, but all the theories had major flaws Now doctors have a new theory: That a chief culprit is chronic, physically debilitating stress not just from poverty but from black Americans' entire socio-eco­ nomic status. "It'S very im portant research and it's long over­ due, said Dr. Elijah Saunders of the University of Maryland, co-fourider of the International Society on 1 lypertension in Blacks. High blood pressure, a major cause of heart dis­ ease, strokes and kidney failure, afflicts about 62 million Americ ans It is a huge health risk for every­ one, but black Am ericans get h ypertension one- third more often than white's, they get it earlier in lite and suffer more-severe health consequences Fhe tough part, said Dr. N orm an A nderson of Duke University, is proving "how is it th a t... (socio­ economic status) gets under the skin?" Anderson, whose research prom pted the Nation­ al Institutes of Health to invest in the theory, thinks this chronic stress incites the n ervous system to release strong am ounts of a vital brain horm one called norepinephrine. That horm one causes the kidneys to slow their elim ination of salt from the body and the more sodium in the bloodstream, the more risk for high blood pressure. ■ T h e D a i i a T r x . w TUESDAY, NOVEMBS 15,1994 T h e Da i l y T e x a n Editorial Board c a n _p (ViaK^ i*A/ec ^ tftis * on w i H _ View point ioriai f t <1 - X T ' (y \3 v n c is. N e w t / P I Hit'Vian hee ^ - iÉ£ ' Yí>M C A IM * t ao B o T E // /\Jo/ ^J o o p e M o t £ / 1^ s m e s s : " pr^UlcmiT. F i n c ^ w e “r S * ' n e e d -fa? u n b u r d e n fa U e ^"* jM ' g Kf>a^ r t»*d ffiitia rfrritf' P— C W d i r n t h a i ó r ^ i n c o m e - tr/»>c _ \ \ ^ > C k N 'a ik » g & th t> r^ a rn d aSOBL r e d u c e —bHc- ^ tz ~ e o -f v ^ tfa & W io r>9^ r d £ f i c i t - . . puto: c sk> h i r i n g starters L e x e rs m ay lude their m ajor and a p h o n e num ber T Í ' - - ^ d a /' coarse we7 f d e a l vv^fh Such So«>a( tss ■as-tine w & i-f^ re rz^forivi V cl f'bZtlejTxruA u llwt'Cs* I ^ - ^ Jncatjfri c a r& .. W\& \j the & 9¿ r ^ \ election, the word '’g ric H o c k * w ill fae a thmfi of ih t past We'd S f e e 3 ^ L it t h a l . . h & a f t F \ . c / » r ¿9 f * the popular music you might wonder. There are legal reasons We have a non-commercial this obligates us to provide program- frequencv; ming that commercial radio doesr.'t. The most popular m usk is already available on commercial radio we would be providing no sem ce to the com m um n it we durlicated their efforts Our FCC License application com­ mits the station ft? playing a diverse ntix of music with an emphasis on local artists- But we re not just doing this because we have to. We believe strongly that m Austin, the Live Music Capital of the World there are listeners who are readv for us. W e have an advantage over com­ mercial radio because we do not have to p^ay the music that will appeal to the largest number of peo­ ple in a parhcuiar demographic cat­ If commercial radio w e r e a restaurant it would be McDonald s It is convenient and accessible and it serves billions of people But that doesn t mean it is the best food in tcmn If 91.7 KYR\ were a restau- rant. it would be a famih-owned Thai restaurant a few blocks off the main road. Our offerings are spicv a n j unpredictable Tbe menu varies depending on the time of the vear and the mood of the chef. It mav be the best meal you have ever had or it may make you sick, but it is alwavs an adventure. Thus is the essence of K YR\ There are no rules We have blues folk 1 w f Dan.Y Texan Tuesdav. November 15, 1994 Page ^ unpredictable KVRX !-azz poetry world Latine metal show tunes spoken word, punk and country ail on the same station The experience and preferences of indi­ vidual DJs make for a v a rie d an d ever-changing mix of sounds It is crazy. It is a challenge fo u w-dl hear musk you rave never heard before Maybe you U like it mavbe vou won t. But it will always be or. adventure. And that s not all The news and sports will emphasize citv and cam­ pus events. We II present a series o# cultura^ shows such as radio drama poetry and fine arts reviews. In addition, we 11 feature communitv- focused interview and talk shows, lo u can fLnd a program, schedule m the CaH Letter an insert in today's Daily Texan. On e more thing — this is vour radio station! Campus groups can get their events mentioned in public service announcements. Political activist and cultural group’s can be guests on our interview' talk shows. Any student of any mayor can vol­ unteer for music sales promotions fundrais n g operations or produc­ tion — no experience required For more information. call 4~ 1-5106. The adventure that is 91.7 KYRX wiL arrive on your radio dial Your rarer.ts warned vou about this set ready for the ride of vour life ~ re *a stsüoti ma/mger at KVRX s a computer saetee senior r a i s e y o u r c o n s c i o u s n e s s A * ~P m Tuesdav, the LT . uesday, the I T stu­ * 7P m mer,: body and the Austin .community will ñnallv get to 7 K Y R \ „ a the py f ^ hear waves The road to FM has been an amazing toumey lasting eight vears continually fueled bv the effort and patience of more than 1000 students. Alter six vears of cable cestine and only three davs after bein¿ named Station of the hear by the National Association of Col W e B r o a d n a x c- - KV* x ,, .. ^ :n the homes cars and businesses of Austin. So, why should I tune in? vou might ask. We dor t sound much like the commercial radio vou mav be used to We. play all types ot music, such — „ Roses ^ Casé i lrry Two Dozen $ j 7,95 hno^cTlDd':'T!^L‘H F lo rist JEEP SERVIC J u s t J e e p s 6 0 3 W illia m s A u stin T X 4 S O - 5 3 3 7 ' atmt bwiqam U fee tcuiud in Ike fmgkm Want Ad»! T r ¡ j f o r e catt 471-5244 EXAM + 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting at 119* Complete *Pfi<* incudes exo-n 2 pa - ctea- da:y wear scri co~*acft, con» kt c sper •> nc ‘nslruchom 1 jl follow up a ^ s o e c 16 ' 994 WTH COUPON O f Y “O T VAuD VS ITH A N Y C ’TiEF O f FBL Austin Vision Center Dr. Mark F. Hutson, Optometrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D o n ly 2 i t • « west of l / f im-tk 4 7 7 -2 2 8 2 FR1 10-7 m /c v isa a m x DISC 9.6 • Brand-new materials • Personal attention • Dynamic instructors • Small classes • F ree extra help • AWA Workshop FIND OUT WHY OVER 97% OF OUR STUDENTS WOULD RECOMMEND US TO A FRIEND! Call us at PRINCETON I REVIEW We Score More! t •' m fv' rrmt> -ti», f. «.* -.ad Paris $244 London Madrid Frankfurt Tokyo Caracas Costa Rica each way are 'F # r « Restn< ttons apply. Taxes not included Call for other world-wide destinations from Austin ( all for your FREE | Student Travels magazine! C oun dllh w d 200 0 Guadalupe Austin. TX 7 8 7 0 5 512 - 472-4931 . E urailpasses issued on-the-spot! Z i v* < »» y/Y//////._ IP T H E O N E C A R D F O R C R E D IT , C A S H & C A L L I N G The AT&T Universal MasterCard Call 1 800 438-8627 to apply C AT&T 199-1 6 T h e D a ily T exan lU H M Y, NOVEMBER IB , 1884 UNIVERSITY Integration plan approved for Louisiana universities Associated Press — — NEW O RLEA N S — A federal judge Monday approved a plan to end a 20-vear desegregation battle by en co u ra g in g e n ro llm e n t bv blacks and w h ites at L ouisiana universities while preserving two historically black schools. The proposal was spurred bv a 19T4 lawsuit in which the U S ju s ­ tice accu se d Louisiana o f running a dual sys­ tem of higher education — one for blacks and one for whites. D e p a rtm e n t It w as the d e p a rtm e n t's first law suit to d esegregate a state s entire higher education system. U .S. D istric t Ju d g e C h a rle s Schw artz said a th ree-m e m b er com m ittee w ill be appointed to m on itor the se ttle m e n t w h ich succeeds a 1981 agreem ent that was abandoned after the state had spent S i00 million. The historically black Southern I t * as the departm ent’s first lawsuit to desegre­ gate a states entire higher education system . U n iv e rs ity sy ste m ^2 p e rce n t black in 1993 will remain intact. And G ram bling State U niversity w ill not be m erged w ith o th er schools Grambling was almost <*5 percent black m 1993. A t the tim e th e la w s u it w as filed So u th ern and G ram bling w ere p ercen t b lack and the others were 8C percent to 97 p er­ cent white. Money will be spent on build­ ings and programs to draw whites to G ram bling and Southern and to draw more b¿acks to Louisiana btate U niversity and the state s eight other most;v w hite universi­ ties. Gov. Edwin Edwards personal- ly presented the plan to the judge. The settlem ent has w id e su p ­ port, inclu d ing ag reem en t from officials of all the universities. The state chapter o f the N ation­ al A ssociation for the A d v an ce­ m ent o f C olored People objects but it is not a parts- to the suit. The 1981 settlem ent w as aban ­ d oned a fte r a ju d g e d e c id e d it w asn't working. In the cu rren t settlem e n t, the state has agreed to big ex p en d i­ tures again, including $65 million to finish b u ild in g s p ro m ised to historically black cam puses under the first settlement. O ther aspects of the new p ro ­ gram include removal of a quota system set up in 1981. This focu ses on q u a lity , the o th er focused on q u o ta s ," said Louisiana s executive secretary of education, Sally Clausen. D I V E R S I T Y B R I E F S APD continues search for hit-and-run suspect Austin Police Department officials released the description o f a driver M onday w ho fled after a Sunday* morning auto acoden: that injured Long- hom football nose guard Storue Clark Police spokesman Mike Burgess said die depart­ ment is asking for help from the public in locating the mar. who fled the accident 7 .'on ' purtishable by up to five years in jail and a $5 .iXV fine Burgess added. .Anyone with information about the acddent is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 472-TIPS. .All calls are kept anonymous, Burgess said. UGL open 24 hours a day The Undergraduate Library, which houses the ta rg e t computer lab on campus, is now available to L I students around the clock. The driver is described as a 17- to 18-vear-old - -ack man, about 5 tee: 4 inches ta l with light skin aoc a man build, Stu d en ts' A sso cia tio n P resid en t Jo h n B lack attributed the change to the fact that the Student Microcomputer Facility is open 24 hours a day. Burgess ssaa that police believe the man may fre­ ' This sim ultan eou s dual service to stu d en ts quent the area near the accident appeals to people/' Black said. Paboe spokeswoman Michele Walker said Sun- cay that witnesses told peace the suspect was last aeer h m m g away from the scene. K 2 : rem-¿mec in fair condition Monday rugfct a: B ra ck o m d g e H ospital a Brackenridge nursing supervisor sa;d 1 m l5 a m . Sunday at ... o*6 a" y f !e r ' occurred 7 C™con s:reets - East Austin Clark was d n n n g south when -us blue 1990 Honda Accord d riv er s side door by a ran 199] a r ' " h o fled was not die owner : ir ; :“r ^ “5 m o» ttit 'lazda Burgess said. su^Pect 15 a u g jh t he coid d be charged with failu re to sto p and ren d e r a;u a th ird -d egree He added that the availability of library facilities is important to students who work late and may not begin to study until one or two in the morning. Black called the hours an "invaluable service." Government junior Stephanie Perin said the new computer lab hours will be helpful because she has two papers due next week and expects to be spend­ ing a lot of extra hours at the UGL. In the past, Black said stu d en ts have staged protests and sit-ins to demonstrate the need for a 24-hour facility* to the U T administration. C o m p ile d b y A n d re a Ih J ^ id e y aW d~M ^7y M cM anam ee, Daily Texan S taff Receive academic credit Make friends Improve your communication skills Rain lob-related experience Become a Stuht Health Center i \ r o r N u t n t io ^ S lu c a n o m M a n a 8 e m e n t/A lc o h o l and O th e r D ru g s i n f o r m a t i o n , c a U t t S l ^ t h E d u S n 3 Health Center at 471-6252 come by SHC 459 ad v is o r o r t0 g et m ore Department of the Student lhe hours o f 8am-5pm M-F or sJm Jnd ,pm " r lonu'ln Sl K l < " " ' Introducing... a revolutionary new GMAT course: t a r g e t e d t r a i n i n g TH# most customized, flexible approach to QMAT study ever Kaplan gives you • live classes • home study materials • a training library • extra-help workshops • software and on-line help sessions Kaplan w,H create an Individualized studv plan that targets your needs C a l l : 4 7 2 - E X A M Seta higher scor e KAPLAN r i i f f p k W h * . ANDREW ROMERO/Daily Texan Staff UT to join in Texas Recycles Day CHRIS CREWS CHRIS CREWS Daily Texan Staff ------- T exas and UT o rg a n iz a tio n s w ill encourage recycling and waste control efforts in the w orkplace Tuesday as part of Texas Recycles Day. Gov. Ann Richards declared Tues­ day the first Texas R ecy cles Dav to focus attention on the econom ic and environmental benefits of recycling. The T exas U nion E n v iro n m e n ta l Committee, Department of Geography and Presidential Advisory Committee will host the Texas Recycles Extrava­ ganza at 11 a.m. on the West Mall. The Recycles Day Extravaganza is a festive educational medium to inform students about recycling and what can be done here at U T ," said Amy Wel- bom , Presidential Recycling Com m it­ tee member. Wei bom , former chair of the Texas Union Environm ental C om m ittee, is responsible for initiating the blue recy­ cling bins located on campus. W elborn said the University^ w ill launch a change in the current p ro ­ gram on Texas Recycles Day. A new com pany w ill accept m ore m aterial than the previous one, Welborn said. Althea Chen, a member of the Texas Union Environmental Committee, said the event will introduce students to all aspects of recycling. It is creating an awareness not just for re c y c lin g b u t red u cin g an d reusing," Chen said. Eight bu sinesses on the Drag w ill also offer discounted refills in Texas Union m ugs to discourage throwing away disposable cups. K evin T u e rff, m an ag er of C lean Texas 2000, said Texas has a recycling rate of 14 percent. "That means that 14 percent of the refuse in Texas has been recycled ...." Clean Texas 2000, part of the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Com ­ m ission, is a program to reduce the amount o f solid waste going to land- > fills by 50 percent by the year 2000. R ecycling is r e a lly 'ta k in g o ff in Texas," Tuerff said. "W e've had a 20 percent increase in the last two years in the number of cities involved in curb- side recycling — we're up to 120 com­ munities participating." He said Austin is the largest Texas city' performing curbside recycling. Alan Watts, waste reduction manag­ er tor Solid Waste Services for the city of Austin, said that Austin is leading by example. "This past year curbside collections are up by 36 percent," Watts said. "The city last year collected abou t 22,000 pounds of recyclables. A conservative estimate for the coming year would be 25,000 pounds." Watts added that Austin is a nation­ al leader in recycling. W ork p lace re cy clin g is the new wave in Austin and nationally. There is a tremendous amount of recyclable material at city offices," Watts said. REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES s i n c e 1 9 7 S SUPPORTING YOUR CHOICE P R F T N i w 7 P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G C O U N S E L IN G A D O P T IO N 4 8 0 4 GROVER Between Lamar and Burnet at 49th & Grover 458-8274 Board certified O B -G yra Licensed nursing staff -Confidential Services .Hexible annts Mon - R ,r TEXTBOOKS U niversity BookTraders, Inc. Buy and sell used textbooks through a student database 477-2146 Use your T e x a n Ca r d tc get an extra *5 weekly at Austin Bio Med Lab* T E ‘See your TexanCard Directory for Details T e x a n C a r d Just $2 at: • FIESTA MART • • TEXAS TEXTBOOKS • • WALLACE’S • Sturt Your Coctus Gordon Now! Order your copy of U T’s priceless treasure when you register this week for spring classes. 1995 Cactus Yearbook preserving UT memories fo r more than a century SIMPLY SELECT OPTIONAL FEE 26 ON I Hi; TEX REGISTRATION SYSTEM POt THREE 8-8-4 T h e D a il y T e x a n I T flBM l WVBMBMS, 1184 STATE & LOCAL delay ment appoints Judge Tony Garza secretary of state ‘ H a W • v r in c * In » . . . J _________ i « _ - ftate not Glen Maxey D-Austin sa d he '•as pleased with Bush s comments because they indicate that he will continue to be the ordv openlv cav open-minded Maxey . exz> legislator said he thought Bush irucht appoint a gay or lesbian person to a board or oommjss.ior without knowing it I look rorward to serving George as the secretarv or state said Garza who ran unsuccesszulh m the GO? > atvorrev gener­ al primaries Children s heart disease risk boosted by parents' smoking, study finds Poll: Texans want pollution-free SARAH J. RfVERA . c. e .g . sources such as win sc ia: electric: t\ aooondir.g to maue public Monday bv com and energy groups maintain that speed The poll also showed that Texans an? willing tepav for the change. ‘Seventy percent or all Texans are willing to pav up to 55 extra each month to shift from polluting pow er p .a r ts fired by coal and n uclear energv to n on -p ollu tin g methods saic ¿om. Smith director of Public Citizen s Texas ortice But Caroline Smith manager of ad v ertising and prom otions at Southern L nion L»as said using " '-r-'2 etectnaty in Austin would not be verx feasible promoting natural gas as a clean al temar, ve. RENAE MERLE Daily Texan Staff “ In his first major política’ appoi Gov.-elect George W. Bush named ^ Count) Judge Tony Garza as sec: state Monday, setting the stage to re future makeup of his administration I look forward to reiving on Tor ty of vision. Bush said' adding thai Garza have been good friends for six Assoaated Press " DALLAS — Parents' cigarette smoke dram atically lowered good cholesterol' in nonsmok- ing children and teen-agers with high cholesterol lev els, re­ searchers reported Monday. The researchers estimate that 2.9 million U.S. children have high cholesterol levels like the youngsters in the study. These children run a sharply higher risk of heart disease if their parents — or grandparents who live with them — are smokers, the study found. Getting these people to quit Sfnoking is apt to be beneficial for the children and grandchildren — not just the patient," said Dr. Ellis Neufeld, a blood specialist at Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School. He presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American Heart Association. Good cholesterol — called high-density lipoprotein — pro­ tects against heart disease; the higher it is, the lower the risk. Dr. Ingo Stubbe of Deaconess Hospital in Boston, who has stud­ ied smoking and cholesterol in adults, said Neufeld's study is ■ Two sm a. boys. Pyear-old Nathaniel Johnson -year-old Timothy Moreno, were killed and Monday nigh: after being hit bv a car while crossing a northeast Austin highway. Austin police Sgt Ray Sanders said witnesses to.u police the children were struck by a car while crossing to the north side of U S. 290 East near Cameron Road. An eastbound car in the right lane of the four-lane divided highway had na¿row h a\ oided the children before they were struck b\ another eastbound car in the left’ lane. Tehee spokeswoman Michele Walker said the Austin Fire Department arrived at 6:02 p m at the 6300 block of U S 290 East and began CPR on Kith boys neither of whom had a pulse. The children were pronounced dead at the scene. Bush pledges support for concealed pistols ■ Gov.-elect George W Bush - v»ov.-elect Ueorge W Bush v owed Monday to sign legislation allowing Texans to earn con­ cealed handguns. The gun measure was one of dozens unveiled *a"TTiakers on the first dav to file bills for the Ian. 10 start of the regular legislative session. ASSEMBLY M E E T I N G AC EN DA 26th & Guadalupe (512)478-7171 Fax 477-1774 10 Years Strong & Growing! SiVath A n n u a l Call to Order Executive Reports Appointments Unfinished Business AP 4 Defet Aik .-ut-c? g Same« V W Jéte Yanjci Shaham Meiuva SKinner -'r f h ^ 13 Student A'G Page ^ New Business É M B a R 1 5 S p o ^ n - l i k e ^ H B B B R l ’É AR 16 Relating to Amendment of Policy Memoranda 4.110 AP 6AIESEC AP 7 Beta Alpha Rho AP 8 Prometheus Literary Magazine -K e y - AR- Assembly Resdubon. AB- AssemWy Bill (Rule Change). AP- Appropnabons B * (Money Bd) Everything We Sell a h a r d w a r e Com hiter S> s v • s Hard Drives Cables. MwhertVvt js Otskettee RAP Joysticks .)•!• A.* • Tape Drives M o ,*-- Naw C om putan KeytKw N Ribbons Used C om putan Windows Software. Dv>S Soft* Gamaa. H m Softwan and Uaad Softwan Mac Softwan. utWhas Progrwmwxj I vh»* P age 8 Tuesday, November 15, 1994 T he D aily T e xa n Advertisement Intramurals • Outdoor Adventures • Sport Clubs • Open Rec • Non-Student Rec Sports Review Continuing A University Tradition» Education Through Recreation Get away for Thanksgiving and Christmas Breaks includes transportation, group camn- B H U H h includes transportation, group camp­ ing equipment, most meals, horses, a riding lesson, and experienced guides. m f i „ • This Week with Recreational Sports Tuesday Turkey Shoot Basketball Offi­ cials Meeting 5:00pm RSC 2.104 Intramural Soccer 5:15-9:00pm Whitaker Fields Intramural Volleyball 6:00-9:45pm RSC Wednesday Intramural Soccer 5:15-9:00pm Whitaker Fields Intermediate Bicycle Maintenance 6:30pm Gregory Gym steps Intramural Volleyball 6:45-9:45pm Gregory Gym Thursday National Soccer Sports Club Championship 8:00am Whitaker Fields Intramural Volleyball 6:0O-9:45pm Gregory Gym Intramural Badminton Singles 6:00pm Bellmont 528 Intramural Soccer 6:30-9:00pm Whitaker Fields Friday National Soccer Sports Club Chamionship Whitaker Fields Intramural Bench Press Meet 5:00pm Gregory’ Gym 17 I Longhorn Open 5:00pm RSC intramural Turkey Shoot Basketball Tournament TBA Gregory Gym Saturday National Soccer Sports Club Championship Whitaker Fields Intermediate Rockclimb 7:00am Gregory Gym steps Intermediate Bicycle Maintenance 10:00am Gregory Gym steps Longhorn Open TBA RSC Intramural Turkey Shoot Basketball Tournament TBA Gregory Gym Sunday Intramural Soccer Rainout Make-up Games Whitaker Fields Intramural Volleyball 4:30-9:45pm RSC Open Kayak Roll 4:30pm Gregory Gym pool Longhorn Open TBA RSC Intramural Turkey Shoot Basketball Tournament TBA Gregory Gym Monday Intramural Soccer Rainout Make-up Games Whitaker Fields Intramural Volleyball 6:00-9:45pm RSC Recreational Sports Center Open ‘til Midnight Sunday-Thursday Rec Sports Review The Rec Sports Review is a week­ ly production of the Division of Recreational Sports. It is designed to keep the University community abreast of all recreational activities, Phone numbers for the various pm- grams within the Division of Recre­ ational Sports are listed below. hitramurais Open Recreation Sport Clubs Outdoor Program Non-Student Facility Hotline Gym Stores 471-3116 471-6370 471-4003 471-1093 471-5234 471-4373 471-3134 Editor STAFF Catherine Rearick Enter Fall Basketball by Thursday Horsepacking the Texas orsepacking the Texas Frontier November 23-27 Spend Thanksgiving trekking along the border of Texas on horse­ back. The trip begins at the Lajitas Stables and winds through some of the most interesting and beautiful scenery in the Big Bend country. Highlights include riding through the limestone country of Fresno Canyon and setting up camp in this remote area. .After waking to the grandeur of Fresno Canyon, explore the area around Arroya Primero and ride up the canyon to the old Cavalry Bridge. On the third day, ride down an old trail used by Mexican cowboys work­ ing ranches in the area. In the after­ noon. head up a mountain pass called "Ventura de los Tris .Arc” (Rainbow Window). From this spectacular visa ride along the top of South Lajitas Mesa and into Rainbow Valley. The ($410 non-UT) trip fee of $365 Backpack Big Bend December 28-January 4 This trip winds through the Chisos Mountains which thrust out of the Chihuahuan desert to heights of over 7,000 feet. The mountains also har­ bor the southernmost stands of Pon­ derosa pine in the US. Come explore the mountains, the foothills, and the desert floor. The $275 ($320 non-IT) fee covers food while backpacking, transportation, experienced guides, and group camping equipment. Cross Country Ski January 4-11 Go cross country skiing. Nestled atop the Continental Divide, in some of the most beautiful country in Col­ orado is an isolated rustic inn com­ Upcoming Outdoor Adventures Date Activity Fee UT/non UT Rating* November 11/19 11/20 December 12/3 12/3 Intermediate Rockclimb Open Kayak Roll Rockclimb I Morning Horseback 30/37 7/10 30/37 21/24 Intermediate/Strenuous Intermediate/Easy Beginner/Moderate Beginner/Moderate Thanksgiving Break Trips 11/23-11/27 11 23-11/27 11/23-11/27 11/23-11/27 Christmas Break Trips 12/28-1/4 1/3-1/7 1/4-1/11 1/3-1/12 Backpack Guadalupe Mountains Canoe Boquillas Canyon Kayak Rio Grande Horsepack Texas Frontier 230/275 Beginner/Strenuous 230/275 235/280 365/410 Beginner/Strenuous Intermediate/Moderate Beginner/Strenuous Backpack Big Bend Horsepack Mexican Border Cross Country Ski Rockclimb the Southwest 275/320 390/435 405/450 405/450 Beginner/Strenuous Intermediate/Strenuous Begin ner/Strenuou s Beginner/Strenuous * Trip rating scale tells the skill level or experience needed by the participant and the level of physical exertion/fitness required for an activity plete with kerosene lamps and a wood burning sauna. Its panoramic views of the San Juan Mountains will The first annual Turkey Shoot Bas ketball tournament will begin Friday, November 18, for 32 men’s and 8 coed teams. The tournament will be played in Gregory Gym 131 on Fri­ day, Saturday, and Sunday. Enter in Gregory Gym 30 by 3:00pm Thurs­ day, brackets will be posted by 5:00pm. A $20.00 entry fee guaran­ tees each team two games. After the first round games, winners will advance to the championship bracket and losers will play in a consolation bracket. The second loss eliminates you from the tournament. The game will be regular intramural basketball (rules available in Gregory Gym 30), including all intramural' eligibility rules. There will be a Turkey Shoot Bas­ ketball Officials meeting tonight at 5:00pm in the Recreational Sports Center 2.104. Any and all experi­ enced officials interested in officiat­ ing this tournament need to come to the meeting. Officials and scorekeep- ers are needed for the tournament as well as for outside league games beginning in December and early Jan­ uary! Upcoming Intramural Events: B adm inton Singles - Enter by the November 16, in Gregory Gym 30. Tournament will play in Bellmont 528 on Thursday the November 17, begin­ ning at 6:00pin. No fee. Bench P ress - Fatter by Wednes­ day the November 16, in Gregory Gym 30, for this meet to be held on u n i u 1 1 ) Members o f the UT TaeKwon-Do Club at the Region IV Texas Invitational Tournament in Odessa. Racquetball Club hosts Longhorn Open — ---------------------------------------............................................................................................................................................ D.,^----------. T h e I/in crh n m H npn The Longhorn Open, the Racquet ball Club's big racquetball tourna­ ment is this weekend, November 18- 20, at the Recreational Sports Center. As a sanctioned event by the Ameri­ can Amateur Racquetball Association (AARA) and Texas Amateur Racquet­ ball Association, many of the top play­ ers from around the state will be com­ peting as well as many of the UT Rac­ quetball Team and Club members. Play begins Friday at 5:00pm and wili conclude with Finals on Sunday after­ noon. The Racquetball Team is host- ing this tournament to help raise money so that the Team may travel and participate in intercollegiate com­ petitions in the spring. On Saturday, between matches, all Longhorn Open participants as well as all guests and visitors will have the opportunity to see how fast they can hit a racquetball while being clocked by a radar gun. A bake sale will also be held on Satur­ day. If you have any questions regarding the Longhorn Open, please call tournament directors Amy Abramczyk at 495-3929 or Jack Long at 432-1439. TaeKwon-Do Twelve members of the UT TaeK­ won-Do Club competed in the annual Region IV Texas Invitational Tourna­ ment in Odessa, Texas, on October / - I 1 1 r 15. Club members competed in spar­ ring, patterns, and breaking competi­ tions along with competitors from Texas, New Mexico, and Oklahoma, with many UT club members either winning or placing in their division. The tournament was officiated by Mr. Fabian Nunez, a 5th degree Blackbelt from Odessa, with Mr. Walt Lang, a 6th degree Blackbelt from Utah, also in attendance. The UI 1 aeKwon-Do Club meets on Mondays and Thursdays in Anna Hiss Gym room 136. Monday classes meet 8:00-10:00pm. while Thursday classes meet 7:00-8:30pm for begin­ ners for advanced students. Classes are at 8:30-10:00pm and Roadrunners supervised by Mike Stinson, a 4th degree Blackbelt and internationally known instructor. New members are always welcome. For more informa­ tion. call Dina at 452-5822. Roadrunners The UI have changed their meeting day to Thurs­ days at 5.30pm. Participation is need­ ed now. Leaders are needed for the 1995-96 school year. I pcoming activ­ ities for spring will include participa­ tion in Intramural events as well as a race against the Texas A&M Road­ runners. Active members are also eli­ gible for fee reimbursements. For more information call Rob at 708-1691 or Jeff at 495-3996. NIRSA National Soccer Sport Club Championships The University of Texas Division of Recreational Sports is hosting the 1994 NIRSA National Soccer Sport Club Champé onships. This tournament will feature 15 teams (8 men s and 7 women s) of the top Soccer Sport Club teams from around the country, flay begins at 8:00am Thursday, November 17 and continues through Saturday, November 19. All games will be Played at Whitaker Fields, located at 51st a^d Guadalupe streets. Come on out, cheer on the UT teams, and see some great soccer. Fitness for the holidays j i /in '♦ tut L/.l! J _ Don’t let hectic holiday schedules and frantic finals get you all tied up in knots. Fitness classes offered by both I T Aerobics and the Non-Stu­ dent Program will keep your body remembering how great it feels to move freely and without excess ten­ sion. As you release stress through movement, your neck and shoulders will feel better, possibly reducing the chance for headaches; you’ll have more energy to stretch yourself through work, school, and parties; and you 11 feel better mentally about yourself and your body. All of which will also help reduce the temptation _ to overeat the all too present goodies that are everywhere at this time of the year. Beginning Thursday, Novem ber 17, all fitness programs in UT Aero­ bics and the Non-Student FVogram are pro rated to 1/2 price. Section and unlimited passes are available, as well as, 1/2 punch cards for 5 classes for $9. Classes meet from early morn­ ing to late evening, and at least one of them is sure to fit your schedule. To register, com e by Gregory Gym room 3 0 or call 4 7 1 -5 2 3 4 for more information. UT Aerobics Thanksgiving schedule Wednesday, November 23 (the day before Thanksgiving), all UT Aerobics classes will be canceled after the 12:30pm class. Any section holder may attend any morning class of their choice on that day. There will be no cla-^ses Thanksgiving Day through Sunday, Novt mber 27. Io register, com e by Gregory Gym room 3 0 or call 4 7 1 -5 2 3 4 for more information. refresh you. Bring along your song- book. a sketchbook, a camera, and be prepared for some of the best in back country skiing. No experience is nec­ essary. The $405 ($450 non-UT) fee covers transportation, guides, lodg­ ing, instruction and meals while at the lodge. Rockclimb the Southwest January 3 - 12 This extended trip is offered for Austinites who want an opportunity to climb three varied types of rock. This trip will travel to some of the best win­ ter climbing areas in the United States: Hueco Ianks, I exas; Socorro, New Mexico; and Red Rocks, Neva­ da. The skill level of participants may vary from novice to more experienced climbers. For safety purposes, top- rope anchors will be used at all times, but I T s exceptional climbing guides will teach everything from the basics to more advanced techniques. It’s an opportunity to Climb! Climb! Climb' The $405 ($450 non-UT) fee covers guide’s, transportation, and equips ment. Individuals who register and pay in full for any Christmas Break Trip before December 1, will receive a $25 discount If you are interested in any of the trips or activities sponsored by the Outdoor Adventures Program stop by Gregory Gym 31 to sign up or call 471-1093 for more information. Pay­ ing tor the trips is very convenient and may be made with cash, check, Visa, or Mastercard. All participants are required to be covered by medical insurance and proof (membership card) of medical insurance must be shown at the time of registration. If you don t have medical insurance a $2 per day charge will be added to the cost of the trip to fulfill medical cov­ erage responsibilities. Trips tend to fill up, so register soon. (Independent, Fraternity A & B. Housing, e lub, 6 foot and under A & B. & Law/Grad), women's (Housing. Sorority, and Independent), and coed leagues. Leagues will be offered Sun­ days trom 1:00pm until midnight and Monday-Thursdays 4:00pm until mid­ night. Friday leagues, if necessary, wrill be 4:00-8:00pm. All games are played in Gregory Gym 131 and 100. On Sundays, games are also played in the RSC. A $40.00 fee pays for five regular season games plus playoffs. Officials and sco rek ee p ers are needed. Training sessions will be held on T uesday, Ja n u a ry 17 (classroom ), W ednesday, January 18 (on court), an d Thursday, Jan uary 19 (p ractice gam es). We strongly encourage each team to sp o n so r an official to work for the Intram ural Program . He or she can also play. Pay begins at $ 4 .9 0 per gam e and goes up with experience. In tra m u ra l S u p e rv iso r Jo b O p en in g s - Applications are now being accepted for Intramural super­ visor positions for the Spring semes­ ter. Prior officiating experience in one or more sports is required. Work hours vary with office work, after­ noon and evening hours, as well as weekend assignments. Pay is $4.80 an hour for 10-12 hours per week.. Come by Gregory Gym 30 to apply or call 471-3116 for more information. Recreational Sports is an equal oppor­ tunity employer. Friday November 18, at 5:00pm in Gregory Gym 17. Men may enter one of five weight classes (148 lbs. and below, 148.5 - 170, 170.5 - 198. and 198.5 and above. Women may enter 110 lbs. and below, 110.5 -125, 125.5 - 145, and 145.5 and above. Contes­ tants will bench their body weight (1 /2 lor women). Maximum number of presses wins in each class. The weigh in for the contest will be at 4:30pm on November 17. by the Gre­ gory Gym locker rooms and Gregory Gynt 17. C oed R acq u e tb all - Enter by Wednesday, November 16, in Grego­ ry Gym 30. The tournament draw will be posted on Thursday. Opponents will play by specific dates. Class A and B available. No fee. B asketball - The instant schedule for spring basketball will open on Monday, November 28, in Gregory 1 earns can enter men’s Gym 28. Turkey Shoot B-Ball Officials Meeting Today 5:00-6:00pm RSC 2 .1 0 4 All experienced officials and storekeepers are needed for this tournament. The University of Texas at Austin THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY FACILITY HOURS NOVEMBER 23 - 27, 1994 Anna Hiss Gym Balcones Research Center Bellmont Hall Clark Field Gregory Gym and Annex Wednesday, November 23 Thursday, Nov. 24 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Wednesday, November 23 Thursday, Nov. 24 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Wednesday, November 23 Thursday, Nov. 24 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Wednesday, November 23 Thursday, November 24 Friday, Nov. 25 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Wednesday, November 23 Thursday, November 24 Friday, Nov. 25 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Gregory Pool Wednesday, November 23 Penick-Allison Tennis Coarts Recreational Sports Center Thursday, November 24 Friday, Nov. 25 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Wednesday, November 23 Thursday, Nov. 24 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Wednesday, November 23 Thursday, November 24 Friday, Nov. 25 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Texas Swimming Center Wednesday, November 23 Whitaker Fields Whitaker Tennis Coarts Thursday, Nov. 24 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Wednesday, November 23 Thursday, November 24 Friday, Nov. 25 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Wednesday, November 23 Thursday, November 24 Friday, Nov. 25 - Sunday, Nov. 27 Closes at 7:00pm CLOSED ll:00ain-2:00pm 4:00pm-7:00pm CLOSED ll:00am-7:00pm CLOSED 7:OOam-7:OOpm CLOSED 10:00am-6:00pm 6.-OOam-7:OOpm CLOSED 12noon-6:00pm 7.-00am-8:30am 12:1 Opm-1:00pm 5:10pm-6:30pm CLOSED l:30pm-4:30pm 8.-OOam-7.,OOpm CLOSED 6:OOam-7:OGpm CLOSED lOtfOam-ólOOpm 12:00pm-2:00pm 5.-00pm-7O0pm CLOSED l:OOptn-7:00pm CLOSED l:00pm-6:00pm 8:00am-7:00pm CLOSED lODGam-COOpm *Reguiar Fall semester horn will resume at 6:00am on Monday, November 28,1994 REGULAR ROAST BEEF PLUS RECEIVE A IFREE TEXAN CARD!' Offer exp. 11/30/94 One Coupon per person. USE IT HERE! L G ood at 1715 G uadalupe lé i location only. Tuesday, November 15, 1994 T h k D a i l y T e x a n Page 9 ■ / ' '■■/Mi i.’- T t r e $ t o n e ^ Y O U R _ CO M P LJETETIR E A N D S E R V I C E S T O R E i LUBE/OIL/FILTER i 114 POINT CHECK ! i $ 4 TIRÉ BRAKE CHECK J ! o 1 5 . " ! $1 9 . " Complete Vehicle Inspection and Rotation $ 9 .9 9 ______ Highland Mall 467-8017 Capital Plaza S/C 452-6464 Complete a Firestone Credit Application and Receive a $3 .00 D isco u n t .-Ai-L m a j o r b a n k c a r d s w e l c o m e Try the first enhancing-tinted disposable contact lenses available in soft shades of aqua, royal blue and evergreen. (eyecaré) Dr. James A. Dugas • 4 7 6 -1000 W e 've M oved: 17 1 0 Lavaca (next to Uptow n Enchilada Bar) North H ills H.E.B. Center, 4 8 15 W. Broker at U.S. 183 VISION CENTERS S V - -- k m ■ * • Michael F. Lessner D.D.S. Tender, Swollen Gums Q. What causes gum s to become tender and swollen? A. 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' | I I I Not v a lid w ith a n y o th e r p ro m o tio n a l o ffe r | L im it one p er c u sto m er. C o u p o n e x p ire s Nov. 29, 1994 C o u p o n re d e e m a b le o n ly at: Tarrytown Yogurt Shop ¡ 2414 Exposition Blvd. C-lOO I I (512)472-5190 Save*!.50 on your next Supercut™ (Reg. s8) Simply bring this coupon to these three SUPBKUTS®. As usual, no appointments are necessary. Come in today, this offer ends 12/23/94. f e r s i d e o o |S^ i i » - í -j SAVE WITH TEXAN SUPER SAVERS mm ♦ 10 T h e D a i l y T e x a n b v t b h a in m b v t 17 th century comes to life UT production livens Moliére’s dated play, ‘Learned Ladies’ LEAH WELBORN LEAH WELBORN Daily Texan Staff — ~ Times have changed since Moliere wrote this i He Learned Ladies in the iate l~th cctifu­ ry- In his day, theater was the public's main form of entertainment, and plavs lasted entire evenings. People brought their din­ ner, drank wine and chatted with their friends. The play itself was almost back­ ground music. Not so today. Entertainment abounds, and audiences' attention spans are steadily shrinking. Theatergoers have verv high dem ands, and Moliére s rhvm ed and metered dialogue, slapstick physical come­ dy, and powdered wigs seem rather quaint and charming but hopelesslv dated. Unlike Shakespeare's plays, The teamed Ladies is a period piece. Period. It would not stand up to a m odem setting, and its comedy is verv much dependent on the conventions of the day. The ladies of the title are of the Chrvsale family, bourgeois French wom en whose quest for knowledge is m otivated bv bore­ dom and pretension more than bv earnest desire. While giving lip service to their lofty — theater review TX lE /W m iA U B starring: Alfredo Huereca-Santos, Janet Haley, Bill W atso n Director: Lee Abraham Playing at: B. Iden Pavne Theatre Cost: $12, $9 (UT) Date: 8 p.m. Tuesday-Saturdav and nonsensical ideas, thev have been capti­ vated by the flamboyant con man Trissotin, a poet and plagiarist who has managed to bring the family of women under his spell The matriarch of the family plans te to marry off her youngest daughter, Henriette, to the money-grubbing Trissotin. Henriette, though, has other ideas. She is die only woman in the family who sees through the foppish con, and she has already pledged her love to young Clitandre. Henriette's father agrees that she should marry him and so is locked in battle with his domineering wife over his daughter's fate. The most breathtaking moment of the plav occurs when Trissotin makes his entrance, rising from beneath the stage on a platform, among rock guitars, screaming women and a smoke machine, em phasizine . os rock star image among the Chrvsale women. It is from this moment that the plav realh begins to take flight after a flounder­ ing and slow start. Alfredo Huereca-Santos is mesmerizing as Trissotin, draw ing attention aw ay from the unfortunately lackluster performance of the rest of the cast. The play is worth seeing if only for the fantastic set and costume design. The two- story set is replete with trap doors, m echan­ ically moving chairs, swings and platforms. It is painted with mathematical formulas and geometric structures, and is fascinating in and of itself. The costumes are caricatures of 17th cen­ tury French fashion: elegant dresses in car­ toon colors, metallic wigs in purple and blue, and garish m akeup add an innovative and welcome twist to the traditional and rather dry story. The Learned Ladies is entertaining, albeit entirely too long. It is a play that seasoned theatergoers will enjoy, but which novices may find unbearablv boring. Sympos Alfredo Huereca-Santos shines as Trissotin, a 17th century French swindler who cons socialites like Philaminte (Janet Haley) in The Learned Ladies. JEFF RHOADS_____________ ~ Daily Texan Staff " to define When Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes was growing up, his teach­ ers asked him and his fellow stu­ dents the boundary between the medieval and the m od­ em world. Fuentes' choice was Gutenberg's invention of movable rip e and the publication of Cer­ vantes Don Quixote. Fuentes was invited to speak on LT campus this past weekend on the fate of publishing in the next cen­ tury But trying to predict the future, he said, puts him in the same posi­ tion as a knight in a famous absur­ dist Spanish plav. i he krught in shining arm or unsheathes his sword and declares to his family, 'I'm off to fight in the Thirty ie a rs War!' " Fuentes said. To give a single answer, 1 fear, is like gomg off to the Thirtv Years WTar. " Yet that's what some of the fore­ most figures in publishing tried to do this past weekend at "The State and Fate of Publishing: The First Biennial f.a:T Symposium," spon­ sored by the Harry Ransom H u m a n - ifces Research Center. And their answers varied. Held in the honor of earlv '50s lit­ erary magazine Flair, the sympo­ sium tried to get a sense of the future of the written word, in a time when publishers aren 't sure who their audiences are, when journalists are widely mistrusted and w hen books and newspapers are losing ground to film and television. Some speakers were more opti­ mistic than others. Donald Lamm, president of W.W. Norton & Company, said fire art of fine novel is fated to move to "the fringes of the culture," w hile literary agent Bruce H unter noted that more books are published each vear in the United States and England, and more books stay in print, than ever before. Even Fuentes seem ed divided, noting that the media report more on the "child custody battles of Hol­ lywood celebrities" 'than the world population explosion. In the sym posium 's opening 46 I am in awe of the ability of politically active groups to shape the curriculum of pub­ lic schools.” — DsvklBsrtien, Temple Mverstty Press tBrector address, "Is the Written Word Real­ ly Dead?" London Times columnist Simon Jenkins gave an em phatic audiences will to his own question. no Despite predictions that new spa­ inevitably per decline, Jenkins said, readership in England has remained stable over the last 20 years, with London alone supporting 11 daily papers. "There's no industry’ that has such reader loyalty as the filthy, old tree- killing newspaper business." Jenkins said that in the United States — the "kingdom of futurity gurus the quality and quantity of newspapers have fallen, but that is caused by wreak anti-trust policies The num ber of [American] cities that have competing dailies has fall­ en from 90 to 33 in the last 10 years," Jenkins said. I believe it is the news­ paper monopolies that has caused this sense of decline in newspapers. American new spapers are dull, not exciting, not trying to go for part of the market, and it is a well-knowm fact that wrhen a monopoly product goes after an entire market, vou lose your individuality." Other speakers said the biggest dangers to the w’ritten word w’ere misinformation and censorship. In w’riting a book on the phenom ­ enon of "repressed memories," New Yorker reporter Lawrence W right said he was astonished to find even "cops telling cops" statistics on Satanic w'orship that couldn't possi­ bly be true. The explosion of new’ media has not been matched by a rise in the number of reporters, Wright said, and the result is a noise of "half- accurate facts and poor reporting of statistics." David Bartlett, director of the Temple University Press, spoke of a new’ wave of censorship efforts in public schools. "The list of challenged books is grow’ing, Bartlett said. "I am in awe of the ability of politically active groups to apply force to shape the curriculum of public schools." In his closing address, Fuentes said both w’riters and readers have to be encouraged if they wfill survive and flourish. His own children, he said, grew’ up on a steady diet of television, until he told them they w’ould spend an hour a day reading. "They reacted as though I had offered to torture them or to throw them into the slammer," Fuentes said. "But I persisted, and for sever­ al months we read David Copperfield, Oliver Twist and Great Expectations. I discovered I had succeeded w’hen I overheard them, quite unintention­ ally, playing scenes from Oliver Twist picking each other's pockets and even talking in cockney. I am confident they will have space for both television and reading." ■ BOSTON — It's been 25 P M gfrtee H illary Rodh am '; ' . t : ■ knows what 1 ’ I m a tes? ^ * A new PBsMMM V.V ^ j that, like so many o th er! .. ■iiHW'JMrml «««o», steát*! gling to balance careers w ith ! I family apd deal with other dilemmas of modem life. | I - "D espite 'their -edacatlon, I despite their privilege, despite \ ---------« H rnA rarf ftvaf ifunt are men who had ail the right cre­ dentials, they all faced very diffi­ cult choices that are mammfBn to all wom en," say* film) Rachel Dretzin, producer Frontline special Hillary's whidi airs at 8 p.m. Tu PK> (KLRU18, cable 9). , Dretzin spent month* down file women who gradual*! ed from the sm all, exclusive w omen's campus outside Boston witii the future first lady. 'It was really important to us not to choose just accomplished career women," Dretzin says "It's important for me to see diem as unique individuals who have done their best to navigate very difficult times." In 1969, H illary Rodham became the fust class president to speak at commencement Shá startled— and offended— some of the guests with a fiery, impromptu speech that ended with the words: "Demand die im possible. We w ill settle fo t nothing less." The women's movement was gathering steam. As the inter* view s w ith the class o f '69 *«veaL expectations often w é*|¡ .•*.« met at a price. "I think for m ost of th a n ! women, it was a real shock . | | the system," says Dretzin. "In the period erf time L, ing graduation, everything had been raised to believe been called into question." Í The Student and Professional Staff of Texas Student Publications CONGRATULATES KVRX-FM 9 1 . 7 t s p SAYS GREAT WORK TO THE STAFF OF KVRX WHO WERE JUST AWARDED: 1994 STATION OF THE YEAR BY . ■ r * ■ 9 * I’M SAVING I OVER $50 ON CONTACT LENSES WITH MY T e x a n C a r d *! AT THEIR ANNUAL MEETING IN PROVIDENCE RHODE ISLAND. The award was based on the cumulative efforts and accomplishments of all of KVRX’s departments including news production, public affairs, and management. Way to go folks! * ’. ! (Plus Tax) ULL YEAR o rO N L Available from: Fiesta Mart Texas Textbooks Wallaces Bookstore and from Phi Chi Theta Members Special Savings & Discounts from ^ Central Texas Business Firm ‘Also, congratulations on your imminent arrival to the Austin airwaves this Tuesday n ig h t T É X M W í L A SS.JJL L ba u í u o a i i u TUU Artist: J.J. Cale Label: Virgin • Rating: ★ ★ ★ (out of five) You may have heard of J.J. Cale from h is c o n n e c tio n s w ith E ric Clapton. M aybe not, but remember the Clapton tunes Cocaine and After M idnight? W ell, they're not quite Clapton's. You see, J.J. Cale wrote both o f those songs, as w ell as a slew of others. In fact, the guy has lo n g had h is ow n so lo c a re e r releasing 10 albums over a peridd spanning more than 20 years. Yet, even after all this time, Cale has gone relatively unnoticed as a country-blues player. M aybe it's because he prefers to avoid the limelight. Cale lives in a tr a ile r p a rk so m e w h e re on th e W est coast, reveling, it seem s, in the anonymity afforded him there. O r perhaps it s the way he sings, w h ich is a k in d o f h u sh ed and m onotonous croon, which has left him rather obscure. It's ce rta in ly no t, as m igh t be su g g ested , from any real lack of -talent. C lo ser to Y ou, C a le 's n e w e st album , w ill have you reth in king the nature of fame and success. But before that, you'll be gleefully sur­ p rised by C a le 's u n iq u e g ift for s h a r p s o n g w r itin g , d e s p ite h is peculiar vocalizing. And to his credit, C ale's clever s o n g c r a ft a v o id s th e fo rm u la ic approach th at's often the bane of m any a cou n try -b lu es tune these days. This is helped by the fact that every track on this disc has a differ­ ent sound. Aside from Cale's own im peccable guitar work, he draws heavily on accordions, horns, vio­ lins and even synthesizers. There's even a guest appearance on piano by ex-Little Feat keyboardist Billy Payne. But as elusive as this album may sound s ty listic a lly , you can still find a way to d iw y up the songs thematically. Cale s subject matters seem to dw ell in two spheres on this disc: the sensual and the philo­ sophical. v And, not su rp risin g ly , the fo r­ mer batch of tunes more often than not sounds a little trite. W ho, for instance, hasn't heard a song, like the title track on this disc, w here the sin g er longs to be a stockin g clinging to a woman's thigh? But with the more pensive ditties like Rose in the Garden and Brown Dirt, Cale's often overlooked origi­ nality shines through. On the latter tu n e , C a le s h a k e s th e w ro u g h t arrangements found on most of the disc for just a guitar, drums and his synths to spread some not-so-self- e v id e n t m u sin g s on th e g ra v e : 'B ro w n d irt, w et y o u 're sin k in ', dry you're d u st/I'v e been thinkin', w e re all co rn in ' to ya and w e w on't be the first." Brown Dirt, not a tune you'll hear at m an y s o r o r ity p a rtie s — it's m o re su ite d fo r a g a th e r in g of gravediggers. But there are other tu nes not as g ra v ely su b lim e as Brown Dirt. The whole disc is full of honest, no-frills songs intended for similar people. — Thomas Minor r r J.J. C a le m a in t a in s h is ow n unique style with C lose r to You. PRIMITIK BVBUA Artist: Butt Trumpet Label: EM I/C hrysalis Rating: ★ ★ ★ V fc (out of five) Okay, okay, okay. This is going to be gross, but you 'll like it any­ w ay . I p ro m ise . Y o u m ay h a te yourself for it, and w ant to cringe when you see yourself in the m ir­ ror afterwards, but listening to Butt Trum pet's debut, Prim itive Enema, will be fun. If you can deal with the shame. You w atch B eavis & B u tt-head, don't you7 Butt Trum pet has taken the créme de la crém e (crud de la crud?) of shock-rock and turned it into the most hilarious collection of tunes y ou 'll ever hear. W eird A1 Yankovic should take notes. P lay in g really bad p u nk rock, Butt Trum pet launches into songs like I'm Ugly and 1 Don't Know Why, Classic Asshole, and Ode to Dickhead w ith re lis h . T h e T h e m e s are so drop-dead stupid that they seem im p o s s ib le , b u t th e re th e y are . P rim itive Enema is a good case in point. W hen the band m em bers start shouting among themselves about w h o e x a c tly n ee d s a p r im itiv e enema (the details of which are left to the imagination), som e alarm in your collective consciousness goes off, screaming, "This is stupid! This is stupid!" Ignore it. L iste n to th e ban d m e m b ers (proud possessors of monikers like Bianca Butthole and Blare N. Bitch) battle for control in Shutup, rage in co h eren tly in I've Been So M ad Lately, or jam on the untitled track at the end, which has been dubbed Do M e in the Butt. Sure, people have tried to do this b e fo re . G ree n J e lly , G w ar, th e D w a rv e s and ev en th e M is fits could be said to have tried this, but they d on't really com e close. Too much kitsch, not enough kick. Butt Trum pet kicks right in the head , a p ain fu l b last rem in d in g you as you roll on the floor laugh­ ing that your sense of humor isn't quite as refined as you'd like it to be. This is the kind of toilet humor you thought long banished to your prepubescent days. Stop kidding yourself. —Joe Sebastian s o u n d b i t e le s s , ja m -s ty le so n g a b o u t th e s le a z y sid e o f life (b a rs, d ru g s, prostitutes, etc.). Another standout track is H igh H ead B lu es, a co m ­ pletely un-Southern song until the end, when it goes into a guitar jam re m in isce n t of F reeb ird (th o u g h m uch sh o rter and sim p ler). O ne so n g th a t is n o tic e a b le bu t n o t q u ite as good is P. 25 L on don w hich, in truly u n-B lack C row es style, features deliberately choppy vocals and distorted guitar. Amorica isn't going to make a fan out of anyone who d id n't already like the Black Crowes. But the band is load ed w ith ta len t and , m ore often than not, they use it to the fullest extent on their new songs. Although it may take fans a while to g et used to the ch a n g es, th is should end up being just the next on the list o f h it alb u m s by the Black Crowes. —Mario Bennett CLERKS SOUNDTRACK Artist: various Label: Miramax R ecords/Sony Rating: ★ ★ ★ (out of five) Every m ovie will have a sound­ track. Every movie. Oh, yes, please let every movie have a pop music soundtrack. This was apparently som e movie com p any ex ec's w et dream a few y e a rs ago. C om bin in g th e visu al m edia with a separate yet related audio component was a great way to boost the net gain on otherw ise failing pictures. This idea has really caught on. Soundtracks have flood­ ed the market, for better or worse. F o r b e tte r , in th e c a s e o f th e m ovie C lerks. W hile so u n d track s h a v e d ig re ss e d from th e a ctu a l scored music to overtly marketable music, some movies also have sunk to b e in g o n ly a v e h ic le fo r th e so u n d tra ck . S in gles, R eality B ites and even The Crow could be"put in this category. Clerks is a well-selected batch of tracks that covers many bases. The best music on the CD is not found at its extrem es but in the middle, with the oddball collection of one- off numbers by established bands. S n ip p ets o f d ialo g u e from the movie actually work on this sound­ track as introductions to the songs, instead of just getting in the wav as they do on so many others. A dis­ cussion of pom makes the intro to Stabbing W estw ard's Violent M ood Swings sound like, well, pom flick m u s ic , at le a s t u n til th e g u ita r screeches intrude. And a discussion of the eternal debate on w hich of the Star Wars trilogy was best leads into Chew bacca, a bizarre num ber from Supernova, which m akes the w h o le d isk w orth bu ying. Y ou 'll probably never hear Jabba the Hutt sampled again. K ill th e S ex P la y e r is a n ice e a r d r u m -fr ie n d ly in tro to G irls A g a in s t B o y s' m u sic. A lic e in Chains adds in a rhythmic Got Me W rong from its other odd-ball EP, Sap. A p p aren tly , A lice In C hains feels the need get its acoustic ten­ dencies worked out after gnashing their way through their full length album s. Got M e W rong is a much b e tte r e x a m p le o f th e ir a c o u stic BBWCttE AND JUKE Artist: The Coup Label: Wild Pitch Rating: ★ ★ V s (out of five) T h e C ou p is d e fin ite ly a rap group with a political message, one that is very A fro cen tric and very anti-establishm en t. This O akland trio's 1993 debut, Kill M y Landlord, drove home a hardline black pride sta n c e p o w ered by th e hard rhyming of rapper Boots and sup­ ported by the scratching of DJ Pam the Funkstress. As on their first album, The Coup sends out the sam e "lo o k out for your own, be suspicious of others" message to the black community on their new CD, G enocide and Juice. T h e title its e lf is a sh a rp a tta ck a g a in st the liq u o r sto re rap p ers who generally dom inate the genre th ese d ays, a p lay on the Snoop Doggy Dogg song Gin A nd Juice. Much of the album is a poke at the upper class as seen from below. Pimps, a decent but not overpower­ ing rap, is downgraded by the fact th at so u n d b ite s o f im a g in a ry socialites imitating rappers are scat­ tered th r o u g h o u t th e so n g and overlay an angry song with comic relief. The same message is carried th ro u g h tu n es lik e as H ip 2 Tha Skem e, H ard C on crete, and Takin' These. G enocide A nd Ju ic e is n 't a bad album, but it is a slow-moving one. The Coup is an angry group, and its biggest m istake on Genocide is mismatching this anger with a not- so -h a rd b a c k g ro u n d . S tu ff th is m ean w ould do b ette r w ith can ­ nons firing off in the background. — Heath Shelby j % The Black Crow es venture out of the South and into Amorica. AMORICA Artist: The Black Crowes Label: American Rating: ★ ★ ★ (out of five) ~ T h e B la ck C ro w e s h a v e n ev e r been out to change the world, and they're not about to start now. Their new alb u m , A m orica, o ffers m ore e n jo y a b ly sim p le , u n p re te n tio u s music, like that on their two previ­ ous albums. A m orica may com e as a surprise to Black C row es fans, how ever. It still has the distinctive vocals (Chris Robinson's voice can't be mistaken) and guitar-heavy music of their pre­ vious releases, but the entire album has a noticeable lack of the band's best-known trait — Southern style. T h e s o n g s h a v e m o v ed in the direction of pure rock 'n' roll rather than rem aining Southern rock, and are more mellow — slower without a c tu a lly b e c o m in g b a lla d s . Th e m usic is still very guitar-oriented, but rather than blend in g w ith the rest of the instruments like it usual­ ly does, the guitaring on A m orica’s songs stands out, becom ing alm ost as m u ch o f a fo c a l p o in t as th e vocals. This is especially evident on A C o n s p ir a c y (th e a lb u m 's first v id e o /s in g le ) and S he G ave G ood Sunflower, both of which are good but unexceptional, save for the gui­ tar playing. High points of the album are Non­ fiction, a slow , ram bling song that meanders through the thoughts of a person w ho's having a bad day, and D ow ntow n M oney W aster, a drum- ' \ 4 !kS ¡]ar^,toitake Butt Trumpet seriously. It’s a lso difficult to not enjov the band s latest CD, Primitive Enema, a piece of tasty trash. R e a l i t y d o e s i V t h a v e t o b i t e . These co m b o s ore priced so they d o n 't take a bite from y o u r budget. Introducing Miomi Subs Grill Sandwich choose from flamed burger/ turkey; ham, italian deli, tuna or chicken * salad all made fresh to order & served with small fries and a bottomless drink... $ 2 for o n ly S U P E R BURGER TUESDAY DINE-IN TUESDAY Serving The University of Texas ONLY T T I t L Coupon goo d l l / I 5 /9 4 Pt*o»# pretonl coupon • cxd.f’f>9 Avoilobl. o' Austin Miami Subi Gnll | Not voitd with any o é m oH»' limit o n . coupon pai I ^ potty vint I / 2 0 cent t»d.mption value 1915 G uadalupe St. 499-8097 Hours: Sun-Thurs, 9:30 am - 2:00 am Fri A Sat, 9:30 am - 3:00 am I W I N G IT ¡W EDNESDAY TWENTY CENT WINGS (MIN FIVE, MAX 40) CELERY AND BLEU CHEESE DRESSING 504 EXTRA DINE IN WEDNESDAY ONLY .20c Wings S H S S Ü L I I Coupon good ) ) / 1 6 /9 4 Ptcwj.pinM.nl coupon | whan ordering Available ot AuUm Mtomi Sub. Grill • Not valtd with any other oH*. I,mil o n . coupon p ., I party vi*it 1 / 2 0 c .n l redemption voiu. J ________ I I • I i u e s u d y , ro o v e m D e r lb , i y y 4 P a g e 11 éu J r . : ' í/>' ; V:' * , • ' vte :r. ■ . ■ I ^ Á T h e J o n S p e n c e r B lu e s E x p lo sio n c o n tin u e s to s h o o t life into the u sic world with its third album, Orange, a rock ’n ’ roller coa ste r ride. w ork than the can d y -G o th of No Excuses from Jar o f Flies. But you ca n 't w in all the tim e. Sou l A sy lu m 's new sin g le, C a n ’t Even Tell, is, unfortunately, a weak folk n u m b e r th a t o n ly in c re a s e s lo n g in g fo r a retu rn to th e d ays when Dave Pim er w asn't afraid to plug in. And both songs by Love Among Freaks (Clerks and Berserker) are utter failures. But so are the real clerks in the movie. —Joe Sebastian ORANGE Artist: Jon Spencer Blues Explosion Label: American Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ (out of five) Rock w asn 't m eant to be stru c­ tured. T hrow out those form u las and verse-chorus-verse structures. That guitar-bass-drums thing? Who needs it? Just take the phrase "rock and roll" and run with it. Jon Sp en cer bro k e the ru les by applying just that philosophy to his f ir s t b re a k th ro u g h b a n d /P u s s v Galore. Throughout the mid-1980s, Pussy G alore shocked the m usical world w ith not only its more than slightly off-color subject matter but also by throw ing m usical co n ven ­ tio n o u t th e w in d o w . W ith ju s t scraping g u itar and m inim al p er­ cussion, Pussy G alore rew rote the way the classic rock of the Rolling Stones vein should be written. But Pussy G alore occasionally faltered under punk ro ck 's fin g er-to -co n - vention attitude, w hose opposition to every thin g w o u ld n 't allow the band members to just lay back and rock out. Jon Spencer now has that chance with the Blues Explosion. Full of sw ag g erin g ja n g le , S p e n ce r and company jam through 13 tracks of fractured blues rhythm s, stabbing guitar, and smashing percussion on their third release, Orange. Spencer turns into a testosterone-dripping, confidence-oozing bluesman as he c h a n n e ls th e ro c k in g s p irits o f Elvis, Jerry Lee Lew is and Jam es B ro w n th ro u g h h is g u ita r an d train-of-thought lyrics. S p o n ta n e ity is im p o rta n t to Spencer s work. The opening track, B e llb o tto m s, is a b o u t " t h e m o st a m a z in g / th e m o st g a h -r o o v y " a r tic le o f c lo th in g to pop in to Spencer s head. Other tracks, punc­ tuated with random cries of "blues explosion! deal with equally odd subjects, if it can be said that they have subjects. A catchy phrase, no m a tter w h at it has to w ith a n y ­ thing, is more important than mak­ ing sense. But who needs sense anyway? This lack of fo reth o u g h t g iv es Orange the feeling of being a true jam , a qu ick peek in sid e a m u si­ cian s basem en t at p ractice tim e. W h ile p ro d u ctio n o f th is reco rd took a whole five days, as opposed to five h o u rs for the b a n d 's self­ titled debut, none of the spontane­ ity is lost. Orange is also chock-full — over­ flo w in g even — w ith th e b lu e s ' self-confidence. Every other track w ill re m in d y ou th a t th e B lu es E x p lo sio n is Ñ o. 1, No. 1 in Los Angeles, No. 1 in New York City, No. 1 in Jackson, Mo. It s also N o. 1 on y o u r ste re o , wherever it is. —Joe Sebastian i Cult - Foreign - Gay - Classics - Adult Open every night until 1:30 a.m. 24th & San Antonio P R E SID IO TH EATRES HEY STUDENTS! VES, FOLKS. Thai s right! Now students pay only $4 25 w/ID - Bargain matinees unlit 6 00 pm $3 50 - Children and seniors $3 50 - and only $5 25 tor adult adm ission' For Village Only STUDENT DISCOUNTS DAILY DIGITAL S M A R ^ R m WITH VALID STUDENT I.D. * R IV E R SID E 8 IN RIVERSIDE MALL 448-0008 STARGATE(PG13) 7:20 9350 INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE (R) 12:102:40 5:10 7 « 1 0 10 MARY SHELLY S FRANKENSTEIN (R) .12,00 2.30 5.00 7:30 10.00 MARY SHELLY'S FRANKENSTEIN (R) « 3 K ® , 11.30 3 00 5-3Q 9 QQ_______ s m a r t s t e r f o THE WAR (PG13) 1150 2.15 4.40 7 10 9 40 DOUBLE DRAGON (PG13) 1140 2 40 4 40 JASO N'S LYRIC (R) 7 20 9 40 PULP FICTION (R) 12 10300 7 10 1020 SMART STERFO SMART STFRFÍ1 s m a r t rip" SMART STERFO 4 5 1 - 8 3 5 2 1 DOLBY I VILLAG E CIN EM A 1 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N PULP FICTION (R) 11:004:007.00 1000 SHELF LIFE (NR) 12453 1 5 5 3 0 8 0 0 10 10 THE ADVENTURES Of PRISCILLA QUEEN OF THE DESERT (R) 12.30 2 45 9.50 THE ROAD TO WELLVILLE (R) S JB U JQ_____________ CIARO DIARIO (NR) 12 15 3 00 5 15 7 45 10 20 DOLBY 1 m o v ie re n ta YVith this ad! Expires 11 -22-94. One per family daily. Not valid with aiiy other oflei [4 6 3 1 A ir p o r t at 4 5 th 4 5 0 - 1 9 6 6 General C in em a B A R G A IN M A TIN EES EV ERY DAY All SHOW S STARTING BEFORE bm l i - j ROLUN6 ST4MC QCREAMiNGir F u n n y !” Y JJ o w u n g iy jr r ev e r en t!’ TUESDAY IS BARGAINDAY U l SUTS4U SHOWS-ALi M l ( NIGHT100! $300 TUESDAY ONLY EXCEPT STARRED ( ★ ) FILMS HIGHLAND 10 ,7 & I 1-35 a t M IO D lt r iS K V IllE 8D 4 5 ^ 9 5 6 ^ ^ • IN T E R V IE W w ith the V A M P IR E 3 00 5 45 8 30 M* 1 45 4 30 7:15 10:00 Wfttti ' i -Í, > ooir T H E SA N T A C L A U S E 2 45 5 05 7 25 9 40 PG thi T H E W A R . 3C Í 35 - 3UUFT5 OVER 3 R 0A H U V 2:35 4:55 7:15 9 35 R s r m o ROAD T O W E L L V IL L E LOVE A FFA IR 2 3C S I C L IT T L E G IA N T S 2 30 4 45 PG SlfHto T H E SHAWSHANKREDEMPTION 104 107 lOlO.lORsifwc RIVER W IL D 2 40 5 05 7 35 9 55 PG13 s t e r e o Q U IZ SNOW ' 05 10 00 PG13 s t e r e o 3. 4 15 7 00 9 45 R ooin -iC 10 00 PG13 oour ILLS 8 ,7 6. I I U S 183 A O B tA T H ILLS T K A U ’ «d M ’ s * FRANKENSTEIN Oh TWO SCREENS 2.40 5 25 1 15 www 1 00 4 00 7 10 10 10 R w ir ROA0 TO WELLVHLE " 4 45, sum o S T A R G A T E . S IL E N T FA LL „ 4- PULP FICTION ON TWO SCREENS v s s iu k )0 0 00 PG 3 hi 3 30 7 00 10 00 '« 1 0 2 00 5 00 Í 05 R o a r T H E S P E C IA L IS T 2:20 4:45 7 20 9 45 R S T « f 0 I O N LY Y O U 2 35 4 55 7 15 9 35 PG sn«c C H E C K T IM E S DAILY R u n w i l d . L i v e o n t h e mrnmm ÍCL ___ _ **»■* R e a d T H g \T D a i l y T e x a n . 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 A Hilarious Look al the Over the-Counfer Culture 2 :1 5 -4 :4 5 -7 :2 0 9:35- 11:45 SOUTHERN FRIED TUESDAY Your ch o ice o f our Chicken Fried Steak, Southern Fried Chicken or Southern Fried Vegqie Patty served with French Fries or Mashed Potatoes Texas Toast Vegetable 2 f o r l! 6 p.m. 10 p.m. e<*f cm *mfy! 11 A M. - 1 0 P.M. M-SAT 11:30-10 P.M. S U N 807 W. 6 TH 472-0693 fye Zb WAYS •bheLfSAve-bie € A P itH C A L L I-80O-4S8-8887. 0 Shaft, E dited by W ill Shortz N o . 1 0 0 4 A ro u n d C a m p u s is a d a ih col­ u m n l i s t i n g U n iv e r s ity - r e la te d a c tiv itie s sp o n so re d b \ academ ic d e p a r tm e n t stu d e n t services and s tu d e n t o rg a n iz a tio n s re g iste re d w ith the C am pus Activities Office. A n n o u n c em e n ts m ust be s u b m it­ te d on th e p ro p e r form b \ n o o n tw o days before publication Forms are available at the Dmih Texan o ff ic e at 2 5 th S tr e e t an d W hitis Avenue. The D a i l y Texan * e se r\ es th e right to edit subm issions. MEETINGS A lpha Phi O m ega and S tu d en ts U nited for Rape E lim ination SURE w alk, ^ p.m. T uesdays and T h u rs­ days Peter I . R aw n A cademic Cen­ ter lobbv students escort persons to their cars or o ther b u d d in g s. Cali 4"’5-6ri5c' A m e ric a n M a r k e tin g A sso c ia­ tio n , ~ p m T uescav U n iv e rsity Teaching c e r -er 4.112 Rick Gaven- Staptist S tudent . m o r ■* TYuii. CT OHT ?€*■ i dOAa ' SfUT* ?•' ^ \.g > “ p m ^T uescars, 22:4 San An nar Sel w e th e r Service O rg an izatio a, t pum ; uesc;- CObjege ot Business A d r u n á t a t í a n Building 4.326; old and new rnemrers welcom e C a m p u s C r u s a d e fo r C h ris t, 7 f n _T u e s d a v > M a r y E. G e a r in g r ia l i a iJSu C ircie K In te r n a tio n a l c a m p u s a r c com m u m n service o rg a n iz a ­ tio n p m. I uesd av s. G e o g rap h y B izüdu ig 424 Call Pam at 70/ -0938. C sarda- — UT International Folk D a n c e r s 8 - 30 p .m . T u e s d a y s , A n n a H iss G y m n a s iu m 136; fea­ tured dances unciude the swTing, jit­ terb u g w altz tw o-step, polka and am órteset e N o p artn e r needed; $5 ^ C o lleg ia tes fo r C h rist, 7-8 p.m . T u e sd a y s, St A u s tin 's C h u rc h at 21st a n d G u a d a lu p e s tre e ts , O u r Lady of G uaua/upe Room; different to p ic each w e ek . C all T am m y at 389-1177. F a cu lty /S taff C h ris tia n Fell ow - ship, noon Tuesdays, Burdine Hall 234; call John Cogdéll at 471-1851. The Good Society, 6:30-7:30 p.m. T u e sd a y s, T exas U n io n B u ild in g Chicano C ulture Room (4.206); call Brett at 478-8901. H ispanic Pre-Law A ssociation, 8 p.m . T uesday, Texás U nion B uild­ ing Chicano C ulture Room (4.206); Paul S. Ruiz will speak on adm inis­ tr a tiv e la w . N ew m e m b e rs w e l­ come. Call Maricela at 302-4758. In d ia S tu d e n ts A s s o c ia tio n , 8 p.m . T u esd ay , B eauford H. Jester C enter A uditoriujj't; brin g n o n p e r­ ishable food item s to donate for the i h a n k s g i v i n g / C h r i s t m a s fo o d d rive. Call K hushali Zaveri at 478- 0799. I n n e r v is io n s G o sp e l C h o ir, 7- 8 .30 p .m . T u e s d a y s , E d u c a tio n Annex Utopia Theater *2.106); call Diana at 419-0239. N atio nal Society of Black E ngi­ n e e rs, h p.m . T u esd a y , C hem ical and P etroleum E n gineering B uild­ in g 2 zf)6; A lu m n i E x te n sio n w ill speak about corporate politics. Call G erald Easter at 443-4327 or C hris Perry at 495-2002. Pagan S tu d e n ts A lliance, 7 p.m. T u e s d a y s , C o lle g e o f E d u c a tio n Building 2% ; call M ark at 442-3149. Phi A lpha D elta Pre-Law Frater­ n ity , I n te r n a tio n a l, 7 p .m . T u e s­ d a y s , T.U . T a y lo r H a ll 2.006; all m ajors w elcom e. Call Brad at 707- 2648. conscience calling U N O C A M P U S S tu d en t C om m ittee lor the Arts, -> r ... T u e s d a y s F in e A rts ibran 4 HH call C ynthia Q um n at T ex as I n io n A s ia n C u ltu r e C o m m itte e 6-7 p m T u e s d a y s Texas L n>or Building Asian C ulture Room 4.224 call 475-6630 T e x a s U n io n D is t i n g u i s h e d S peakers C om m ittee 6 p.m Tues­ days iexas u n io n Building Sinclair Suite (5.12s Texas L nion Fine Arts C om m it­ tee s p m I u esd av s Texas U nion Art G a lle n call M istv R > -ne^ .>r Tract Nert at 4 '5-oMl Texas L nion Finance C om m ittee, 6 r m T u e s d a y s T e x as L m o n B oard of D ire c to rs Room (4.118); cali enm fer Barron at 4~4-7597. T ex as U n io n I n t e r n a t i o n a l A w a re n e ss C o m m itte e , 5-6 p .m . VS ednesdays Texas Union Building C hicano C ulture Room (4.206); call Bmdu N air at 4"~-94~o. Texas L nion Recreational Events C om m ittee, 5 p.m. T u e s d a y , Texas L m o n B uilding A frican-A m erican C u ltu re Room 4 110); call M a n at 4~2-5265. Texas U nion M anagem ent C om ­ m itte e . 5-6 p .m . Tuesdays", T exas u n io n B unding Board of D irectors Room (4.118). U n iv e rsity F lyin g C lu b , 8 p.m . V% edi te > d a \, iex as U nion B uilding Asian C ulture Room (4.224); all are we¡come. Call A ndres at 343-7209. U n iversity In te rn a tio n a l S o c ia l­ ists, 7 3 p m . Tuesday, Texas Union Building African-A m erican C u ltu re Room 4.110); topic w ill be "Is the Free Press Free?" \\o m e n in C om m unication, Inc., 7 p m. Tuesday, Jesse H. Jones C om ­ m u n ica tio n C e n te r 3.124; S ab rin a Barton will speak on "W om en an d Film." f il m /l e c t u r e ^ DISCUSSION C e n te r for A sian S tu d ie s , 3 30 p m. T u e s d a y B atts H a ll T o b in Room 20V Stephen Field associate professor of C hinese at Trinity Uni- v ersity San Antonio, w ill speak on AJew Perspectives on the I Ching Call Asian Studies at 471-5811. C o g n itiv e S cience C lu b , b p m W ed n e sd a y U n iv e rs ity T each in g C e n te r 1.132; R o n a ld F in k e w ill on Chaotic Thinking in Cog­ nitiv e Science. Call L arry P aiso ns at 471-3358. D ep artm en t of G eog rap h y collo­ quium . 4-5 p.m. W ednesday, Geog- rapny Building 40S; T e m M cIntyre o f th e F u lb rig h t F o u n d a tio n w ill speak on C o n tem p o rary Brazil: A Country' in Crisis — Still ' Call 471- 5116. D ep artm ent of G eographical Sci­ e n c e , 4 p .m . T u e s d a y , G e o lo g y Building 100; Lynetté Hold ford w ill >peak on Q u a n tita tiv e se q u e n c e b io stratig rap h y of Late Q uaternary' fo ra m in ife ra of th e T ex as S h elf," a n d L a u ra Stevvart w ill s p e a k on Late H olocene paleosalinity h isto ­ ry from benthic foram inifera! biofa- cies, Baffin Bay, Texas." Call Laura at 471-5762. Probe C enter S tu d en ts, 7:30 p.m T u e s d a y , R o b e rt A. W e lc h H a ll 2.224; Cliffe Knechtle will speak on "H o w to W itness w ith C onv iction a nd Passion." Call 505-0105. “v o l u n t e e r OPPORTUNITIES S tu d e n t \ o lu n te e r C en ter needs stu d e n ts to help greet visito rs at a South A ustin sculpture garden. Vol­ u n te e rs w ill take a d m issio n s, ru n v id e o s , m a k e g ift sh o p sa le s a n d a n sw e r q u e stio n s a b o u t the m u se­ um . Call 471-6161. SPECIAL EVENTS 91.7 KVRX FM, 6:45 p.m Tues- d ay, Scholz G arten; com e h e a r us fin a lly on th e a irw a v e s at 7 p .m . Call Britt Daniel at 471-5106. D ep a rtm e n t of B o tan y /M aterial C u ltu r e a n d M u s e u m s W o rk in g G ro u p e x h ib itio n o p e n in g re c e p ­ tion, 4.30 p.m. Tuesday, N ettie Lee Benson Latin A m erican Collection, Rare Books Room. E xhibition w ill be on display thro ug h Dec. 7. Call the D e p a rtm e n t of Botany at 471- 5858. I n d ia S tu d e n t s A s s o c ia tio n D iw ali B an q u et, 7 p .m .-m id n ig h t F riday; pick u p tick ets a n d m ake table reservations at W est Mall table this w eek. Call K hushali Zaveri at 478-0799. P ro b e C e n te r S tu d e n ts , 11:30 a.m .-3 p.m . M o n d ay -F rid ay , W est M all; C liffe K nechtle w ill d isc u ss an d a n s w e r q u e s tio n s a b o u t th e C hristian faith. Call 505-0105. SHORT COURSES S tu d e n t H ealth C en ter M ethods of C ontraception Class for w om en, 5 30-7 p.m . Tuesday, Student H ealth Center 448; call 47Í-6252. S tu d e n t H e a lth C e n te r H e a lth F ducation D epartm ent offers n u tri­ tio n , sex u al h e a lth , a c q u a in ta n c e ra p e p r e v e n tio n , A ID S a n d s u b ­ stance abuse prevention w orkshops to residence halls, fra te rn itie s and o th e r s tu d e n t o rg a n iz a tio n s ; call 471-6252 to schedule a w orkshop. S tudent H ealth C enter is accept­ ing re g is tra tio n fo r C PR c la sse s. Medical level classes are available. Cost is S10 for UT stu dents and $12 for faculty and staff. Call 471-6252 or sto p by S tu d e n t H e a lth C e n te r 459. OTHER D ep artm en t of G o v ernm en t/C o l­ le g e o f L ib e r a l A rts r o u n d ta b le /b ro w n bag lunch, noon- 1p.m. T u e sd a y , B u rd in e H all P e n th o u se (602); call Elaine D avid at 471-5121. H e a lth S t u d e n t C e n te r a n n o u n c e s th a t th e in flu en za v ac­ cine is available to stud en ts, faculty and staff. The cost is $8 for students an d $12 for facu lty a n d staff. The vaccine is available 1-4 p.m . T ues­ days and T hursdays Oct. 18-Nov. 17 in S tu d e n t H ealth C e n te r 450. For most effective protection, m id-O cto­ b e r im m u n iz a tio n is s u g g e s te d . C urrent ID m ust be presented. Stu­ dents m ay be billed, but faculty and staff m u st p ay by check only at the tim e they g et their shot. C all 471- HELP. S tu d y A b ro a d O ffic e w ill hold in fo rm a tio n sessio n s in C a ro th e rs D orm itory 7 at the follow ing tim es th ro u g h N o v e m b e r: 4 p .m . M o n ­ d a y s , 11 a.m . T u e s d a y s , 10 a .m . W ednesdays, 3 p.m. T hursdays and 2 p.m . Fridays. Call 471-6490. S tu d y A b ro a d O ffic e w ill h old N a tio n a l S ecu rity E d u c a tio n P ro ­ g ra m in C a ro th e rs D o rm ito ry 7 at th e fol­ low ing times: in f o r m a tio n s e s s io n s ■ For u n d e rg ra d u a te s , 3:45 p.m . W ednesday. ■ For graduate students, 3:45 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. ■ Q u e stio n an d a n sw e r session , 3:45 p.m. Friday. The deadline is M onday. Call the Study Abroad Office at 471-6490. lynn forest ACROSS 1 Bea\ er projects S Service tem 10 Conceal 14 Of grana proportions 18 R u sh ed as the cheeks 16 North Sea feeder 17 Relax 20 Max mal 21 Covered with scales 22 He lenic H 23 Evocative of an earlier time, as fashion 24 ~ 'eaciess 27 Excursion 29 P a 2 Anka s ‘ a Lady" 33 Mil address 34 R-de the waves 35 Ra se 37 Rossini opera, with “T h e ” 40 Card gam e for 41 Tax deferral two plans 42 C om m and to Dobbm 43 Actress Olrn 44 W h ere some chichi sk: 45 Difficult 46 Part of Iber a 49 " O d e ------ Nightingale 51 Medicinal am ount 53 1975 Beatty-Hawn film ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE Iml 57 Small pooch 59 Toward shelter 60 Counting everything 61 Denoting certain textbook publishers 62 Fastens 63 Spruce 64 Society gatherings DOWN 1 Proofreader's mark 2 Summit 3 Catcher's glove 4 Tallied 5 Early 6 Misplace 7 Bat wood 8 Com e-on 9 Undemocratic law 10 Seaplane attachment 11 “T im e the essence" 12 Moist 13 Coastal flier 18 After taxes 19 Capek dram a 23 Bully 24 Noisy confusion 25 Quickly 26 Navigational system 28 Spamsh gold D o o n e s b u r y BY g a r r y t r u d e a u MU AT 7 2/i'f sjJST MOBILE TWO I'M W nnT ANAL- ternate, iO U ft ON THE RP.-ANP ANO.J. PORCH1 JUROR? < ^ 7 7W- DOWN dOOPSlB, SVENAN ALTERNATE CAN CHANGE THE COURSE OFH/STORY* excusa m b, are you the husband? \ OF COURSE, YOU HELLO? COULD ALSO START A MAJOR RJCTT. EITHER. WAY, OUR U VES WILL NEV- BR RE THE SAME' i COULD YOU MOis] ■“Si YOUR CAR? WE Lein; iSy/CD U U U fiT ? teeu to setu p in /n M I . on YOUR LAWN CLOSER T O THE HEART HI,Vou<£ KEVWS Hi, sa n d y . Row's Vbog MOTHER. A R E N T You? ¡'/v\ SANDY, PA^ENrS'_ lEK-eu P?. o o o h . . . o k a y , i t 's A l w a y s G o o d t o S £ £ T R E /W , ISN'T IT2 i f YesT an d i'm glad th at THEY M t t t jfE US IM " Puzzle by Stanley B Whitten 30 Hagar s better half, in the comics 31 Swiss m athematician 32 1994 movie thriller 34 Bullheaded 35 Salutarily 36 Hosp devices 38 Num ber two 45 Gertrude's son 47 Busy 54 S o cce r great 55 W orker-w elfare election-year org w a tc h d o g 48 Once more Abbr 50 Pull, at sea 56 M ed ica l suffix 51 Sandwich shop 57 ^ l0ve 52 Farm team com p artm en t ,{em 53 NaCl 58 S o m b re ro e q woods uar.Kd « 3 9 --------Lanka 44 Type of sausage 5656 (75c each minute). Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1 -900-420- 2 0 WORDS 5 DAYS -.JEAN BUSINESS! s5! 1-5244 BVEÑ i f IT’S 7HR,Ou/;NG B a l l o o n s o ff a ' p a r k i n g g a r a g e ? , WtfiLL... Yoo'KE R/6MT, tOvzsE, I Of TV by Chris Turner .B u r KEVlAS FATHERseeais \JT) ENJoy /r¡> U iN(t€ P Y4, Pu n k T Good one, 7 d a d f ) C H O W D E R H FX n X SPECIF VCKLLN TOLCs H\>A TO P\CYC VAE UP FOK OUR fcKTE NT TO O . o — x b e t R e s w i t h K n o t r e r , wovamn i — O Dave Rivera C O K E ON, t a k k l . ONE KOKE feKKEl NO. X ‘K\ SVOA OP PLKXVNcb "COKBKT." ^ 1 '■ Ml P IZ Z A GUY Hey Ti McBOB, X HCAR 50/AC0NC STOcC youR AUTOGRAPHED Picture o f j e s s e h e l ^ s . , -------- 7* y£AH; BUT (T d o e sn 't BOTHER^ US. NOT A BIT. BESIDES, WE h a v e a n e w p ic t u r e t h a t s frg V E N BETTER S Y pcr^ y THE FUSCO BROTHERS b y J.C. Duffy Í c h 0 ^ m c m u c c Í ' 0 W N LJCH W B N E U V g g OF THE M IN D " " r w e h f i m T CgOOD Foj? G ETTING FROM y o u s r — B K A IN . mJ ’ ^ T h e D a il y T e x a n Tuesday, November 1 5,1 99 4 Page 13 To Place a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 Classified W n rri Ad Rates Charged by the word. Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply 1 daV $ 6 1 5 ^ • ^ ........$ 1 1 . 7 0 3 day s .............................. $16.65 4 d a y s ........ $ 2 0 4 0 - — ......... $23.25 5 days First two words may be all capital letters $ 2 5 fo r each additional w o rd MasterCard and Visa accepted c a p ita l le tte rs in Classified Display Ad Rates Charged by the column inch One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available. Fall rates Sept 1 May 3 0 1 to 21 column inches per month $ 9 2 0 per col inch over 21 column inches per month Call for rates. FAX A D S TD 471-6741 8 :0 0 -5 :0 0 /Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11.00 a.m. prior to publication t r a n s p o r t a t io n 10—Misc. Autos 20 —Sports-Foreign Autos 3 0 —Trucks-Vans 4 0 - Vehicles to Trade 50—Service-Repair 60-Parts-Accessones 70 —Motorcycles 80-Bicycles 9 0 —Vehicles-Leasing 10O-Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES 110—Services 120-Houses 13 0 —Condos-Townhomes 140—Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160-Duplexes-Apartments 170-W anted 180—Loans MERCHANDISE 190—Appliances 2 00—Fumiture-Household 210—Stereo-TV 2 2 0 —Compute rs-Fquipment 230—Photo-Camera 240—Boats 250—Musical Instruments 2 6 0 —Hobbies 270—Machinery-Equipment 280-Sporting-Camping Equipment 290—Fumiture-Appliance Rental 300—Garage-Rummage Sales 310-Trade 320-W anted to Buy or Rent 330—Pets 340—Longhorn Want Ads 3 45—Misc. RENTAL 350—Rental Services 360-Fumished Apts. 370— Unfurnished Apts 380-Fumished Duplexes 390-Unfumished Duplexes 4 0 0 —Condos-Townhomes 4 10—Furnished Houses 420-Unfumished Houses 4 2 5 —Rooms 4 3 0 —Room-Board 435—Co-ops 4 4 0 —Roommates 4 5 0 —Mobile Homes-Lots 460-Business Rentals 470-R esorts 4 80—Storage Space 490-W anted to Rent-Lease 500—Misc. ' ANNOUNCEM ENTS 5 10-Entertainment-Tickets 520-Personals 5 3 0 -T ravel-T ransportation 540—Lost & Found 550-Licensed Child Care 560—Public Notice 5 70—Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580—Musical Instruction 590-Tutoring 600-Instruction Wanted 610-M isc. Instruction 620—Legal Services 6 3 0 —Computer Services 640-Exterminators 650—Moving-Hauling 6 60—Storage 670-Painting 680—Office 690—Rental Equipment 700-Fum iture Rental 710—Appliance Repair 720—Sterao-TV Repair 730—Home Repair 740—Bicycle Repair 750-Typing 760—Misc. Services EMPLOYM ENT 770-Employment Agencies 780—Employment Services 7 9 0 —Part Time 8 0 0 —General Help Wanted 8 1 0 —Office-Oencal 820—Accounting-Bookkeeping 830—Administrative- Management 8 4 0 - Seles 8 50—Retail 860-Engmeenng-Technical 870-M edical 8 80—Professional 8 90-Clubs-Resta urants 900—Domestic Household 9 1 0 —Positions Wanted 920—Work Wanted 930-Business Opportunities 940-Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED f o r o n ly O N E ADVERTISING TERMS In th e e v e n t of e r r o r s m ad e advertisement notice must be given by 11 a.m. the first day, as the publishers are r e s p o n s i b le i n c o r r e c t insertion All claims for adjustments should be made not la te r than 3 0 days a fte r publication Pre paid kills receive credit sJip if requested at time of cancellation, and if am ount exceeds $ 2 0 0 . Slip m ust be presented for a reorder within 9 0 days to be valid Credit slips are non-transferrable In c o n s id e ra tio n of th e Daily Texan's a c c e p ta n c e of a d v e rtis in g copy fo r publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harmless, Texas S tud en t Publications and its officers, employees, and agents against all loss, liability, d a m a g e , and e xp ense of w h atsoever n a tu re arising out of the copying, prin ting , o r publishing of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, plagiarism and copyright and trademark infringement merchandise MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 220 - Computers Equipment 345 - M isc. 3 6 0 - F u m . A p t . , 3 6 0 - T u r n . A p t s . 3 7 0 - U n f . A p t s . 4 4 0 - R o o m m a t e . RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS EDUCATIONAL | ~ » Ml] g g i | 1 « T T L U . l w i . i . y 80 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Cost!!! BUCK’S BIKES 928-2810 MERCHANDISE 2 0 0 - Furniture - Household Beils, Beds, Beds m n n E S E buying video gam es, SYSTEMS & CD-ROMS UNIVERSITY CARD SHOP 4 7 4 - 7 9 4 6 •» w - & * GUAOAIUM (BEHIND CHEVRON) 260 - Hobbies BREW BEERMI Fully In stru ctio n o l, 100 min v .d e o l Send $ 1 3 .9 9 + $ 3 S /H to B&R E n te rp rise s, P.O . 1 9 8 5 1 4 , N a s h v ille , TN Box 37 2 1 9 -8 5 1 4 10-24-20B 345 - Misc. Tw.n ^e. $0 Q Pull se( 5 0 0 Queen set, $ 1 1 9 . King set, $ 1 4 9 1741 West Anderson In. 454-3422 $$ for c o lle g e l S ch o la rsh ip s and j\lo pay back M oney back gra -H guarantee 1-800-645 3 5 2 5 11-3- 208 L L L NSPORTATION - 10 MISC. AUTOS UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEES GET A NEWER CAR LITTLE OR NO MONEY7 DOWN Y OI R GOOD JO B TIME IS YOUR CREDIT!! PREVIOUS LEASED CARS NOW FOR SALE GREAT FINANCING WITH EXTENDED LONGER TERMS 1/ 00 MONTH TERMS...LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS BRING YOUR PROOF OF INCOME. RESIDENCE AND INSURANCE...DRIVE AWAY TODAY!!! H O O K ’EM H O RN S LONE STAR LEASING & USED CARS (5 1 2 )3 2 3 -2 2 6 6 63X8 BURNET RD ’ Warehouse Clearance Sale* Student desk, Computer tables, filing cabinets, chairs, sofas, office furniture, dining tables, coffee tables, and pictures. Cox Office Products 10938 Research 345-761 1 M -F 8:30am-5:30pm 10-24-206-D ENERGIZE W ITH FORMULA O N E I with chromium picolinate Burn fa t/ build lean muscle C all Karen, 328- 1817. 1 1-10-20B RENTAL 3 6 0 - Fum . Apts. Immediate Availabilities NOW PRE-LEASING LUXURY APARTMENTS (Controlled Access) 1&2 Bedroom apts. Available for spring semester All of the amenities Fully Furnished Convenient to Hancock Center UT Shuttle 1995 Fall Leases available PARK PLAZA- PLAZA COURT l u x u r y a p a r t m e n t s SAN GABRIEL SQUARE Apts. NOW LEASING! •Fumtshed • 5 btks. from Campus • 2-1 Economy Style • Efftctencies/l-l *3 bdrm/26 ba *UT Shuttle ALL BILLS PAD) 2212 San Gabriel St 474-7732 SPRING LEASING Century Plaza 4 5 2 -4 3 6 6 Century Square 4 7 8 -9 7 7 5 Granada 4 5 3 -8 6 5 2 ’ ’ ’ M A M A IS O N * * * 1 IMMEDIATE VACANCIES IN WEST CAMPUSI Female dorm ABP, beautifully decorated rooms, controlled access, free parking and cable Decorator/community-style kitchen/dining hall/study Pre-leasing for Spring) C all for details and prices 7 0 8 -0 6 7 6 or 4 7 4 -6 4 6 6 ____________________ 11-4-2066 W ALK TO campus. 1-1 W ell m ain­ tained Small, quiet complex Avail­ able December 1 st or January 1 st. 2 7 1 1 H e m p h ill Park. 4 7 8 - 1 8 7 0 1 1-8-20B-D WALK/BIKE TO "CAMPUS 32nd at IH-35 AVALON APTS Walk-in closets, ceiling fans, CACH, on-site laundry, manager. Fully furnished, convenient to Engineering, Law, LBJ School and East Campus. 4 5 9 -9 8 9 8 11-10-2066 915 i. 41ST 452-6518 2 BR/2 BA-$595 and up W B P B WWi-*" SO SERVICE • REPAIR 1REHTAL ■ 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS 4 5 8 -6 1 8 5 8 3 7 -0 7 4 7 DYER TRANSMISSION & AUTOMOTIVE, INC. Domestic & Imports Transmission Overhaul C o n ve n ien ce Is H ere, A H om e A w a y F rom H om e Aspenwood Apartments Pre-leasing for January 7513 N O R T H I.H. 35 A U S T IN . TX 78 7 52 a n d /o r 8225 N L A M A R A U S T IN . TX 7 8753 S P E C IA L IZ E IN F U E L IN J E C T IO N S Y S T E M S Shuttle at deer ' X Pool* / 1 Laundry Ceiling Fan* Furnished O Unfurnished Covered Parking I Minutes From UT Area Starting at $495 Ma|or Utilities Paid 4 5 3 9 G u a d a l u p e 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 2 0 % O F F I a n v ASIAN & t r a n s m i s s i o n w e IN S T A L L IM P O R T S • » ■ N A V Y BLUE q u e e n size sle e p e r sofa $ 1 7 5 /o b o . M u st se lll 5 0 2 - 0 4 2 8 . U - l 1-58 Í8 6 D X /4 0 , 4 megs ram, 130HD, color monitor, dual disk drive and $40 software $ 6 0 0 /O B O 4 6 7 -7 7 6 2 $ 2 0 S V 1. jn g fF me M SCUBA SHERWOOD regulator, oc­ topus gauges. Very re cently serv­ iced, excellent condition. UT Scuba club member $ 1 8 0 firm. Eric 339- 0 9 5 6 . leave message 1 1-9-5NC SAN FRANCISCO round-trip ticket from Austin, $2 8 5 N o v .2 1 N a v 2 9 C all John at 9 9 0 -5 4 4 7 11-9-5B M A C IN T O S H CLASSIC 2 / 4 0 In excellent condition. Includes original m anuals + s o ftw a re $ 3 5 0 /o b o 4 5 2 7461 11-11-5B 'A G HEUER w a tc h , s ilv e r w ith g ra y face N ever been w orn. Has q u a rfi movement. Very fine watch $ 9 5 0 / t r a d e C a ll M a r k 8 6 7 - 6151 11-11-5B 8 6 H O N D A Rebel Runs G re a fl 26 0 0 0 miles $ 1 0 0 0 4 4 8 -4 5 7 4 I O LD S M O B ILE fo r sale H 0 0 0 Call 4 5 2 -0 0 4 8 11-14-5NC 1 9 7 3 V W Bug in good running corv d'tion, $69 5 4 6 7 241 2(d ay) 346- 9294(evening) Come see at 5 1 2 8 Burnet Road. I l l 1 5 N C FOR SALE Trip to H a w ai, for one over Christm as break D ecem ber (Dates are flexible) $ 7 0 0 19-29 For further info coll 4 4 8 -2 4 0 5 1 1- 11-5NC G RAD UATIN G! A N S W E R IN G ma- chine $ 3 0 Stereo cabinet $ 5 0 36 CRUISE TO Bahamas and Florida beachesl 9 days Hotel and accom­ m o d a tio n s in c lu d e d . T rip fo tw o $ 6 7 5 C a ll 4 5 3 -7 5 3 6 M ust selll 1M4-5B TEACHER'S DESK, solid blond oak, mica top, 3 drawers, with matching o a k c h a ir $ 9 5 / o b o cash 2 5 0 8 2 7 0 11-15-5B 197 1 IM P ALA Runs w e ll C ra g ers Tinted w indow s $ 8 0 0 or best o ffe r. 3 2 3 -0 4 9 7 A fte r 5pm and wekends 1 1-15-5B & 6 0 CD holders $ 1 5 tw o black couches $ 1 0 0 to $ 2 0 0 /o b o C all 3 8 5 -9 6 7 6 11 10-5B DRAFTING TABLE 3 6 * x 4 8 \ metal with ook drawers, VEMCO heavy duty mechanical arm Over $ 1 20 0 new INCREDIBLE HERBAL foodsl Fitness Ime w e ig h t m anagem ent, beauty and skm care a n d e n e rg y-vita lity. Starter pock, $ 4 3 75 4 5 8 2 3 1 7 Don't delay! 111 1 5B PORTABLE W O R D P rocesso r by Brother M o r itor a n d d e ta ch a b le keyboard, 6 4 ,0 0 0 character mem­ ory and 7 0 ,0 0 0 w o rd spell/g ra m ­ m ar check E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n $ 2 0 0 /o b o 251 620 1 11 15-5B $27 5 /o b o ca sh 2 5 0 8 2 7 0 11-15-5B FULL SIZE Futon mattress and frame $ 7 5 / 0 8 0 9 2 6 -6 9 4 7 leave mes sage 11-15-5B PC C O M P A T IB L E c o m p u te r fo r sale with tw o 5 .2 5 inch floppy disk drives, color monitor, & Epson print er $ 1 5 0 4 7 6 -4 9 6 9 11-10-5B TV $ 10 0, VCR $ 1 2 5 , vacuum $40 tu rn ta b le $ 7 5 o r w ill tra d e fo sport* card*. 3 3 9 -3 1 4 6 111 6-5B r i i i i s H A IL ORDER BLANK r i i i i O r d e r b y M a il, F A X o r P h o n e P O B u x l ) A u s t i n , T V x a s 7 8 7 1 3 4 7 1 - 6 7 4 1 F A X : C l a s s i f i e d P h o n e 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 2 0 w o r d s 5 d a y s ^ 5 A d d itio n a l W o rd a ....$ 0 .2 5 ea 0 15 31 ->7 4 10 16 22 28 5 11 17 23 29 6 12 18 24 30 N A M E .........................................................................P H O N E . C,TY.................................................................. STATE. -ZIP.. 26 L.... ■luted to private party (non -com in dividual item s ottered a d * only m ay not excee d $1 000 and price ipear in th e body ot the ad copy if • not said five add itional n*#«tior>v a rg e Advertiser m ust [Jay of fh® fifth than b# run 2. b e fo re 11 « m irb o n N o c o p o t h e r th4 . L i ADDRESS. UNEXPECTED V A C A N C Y . W a lk to in small, quiet UT, very large 1 /1 complex. 4 80 -80 79. 1 1-10-5B 1 BEDROOM, A /C , tub and show­ er, m odern kitchen , study room , new ca rp e t, re d e c o ra te d p riv a te e n tra n c e 3 4 0 8 Red R iver 4 7 2 - 1091. 1 1-14-58 UN EXPECTED V A C A N C Y ! W e st Cam pus ore a . Sm all E fficie ncy to sublet W illin g to sell furniture to new occupant. 322 -0 1 3 0 . 11-11-7B WEST CAMPUS available Dec. 15th. One bedroom with loft $ 67 5/m onth, W /D , p o o l/h o t tub. 480 -9 5 9 2 . Very la rge /nice. 11-11-5B LARGE 1-1 501 W . 2 6 th S treet. W e ll m a in ta in e d . A v a ila b le D e­ cember 22n d through August 15th. D ates fle x ib le $ 8 5 0 /m o n th fu r­ nished 4 76 -49 69. 11-1 1-5B. G AR D EN GATE a n d C o rne rstone P lace. P re le a s in g fo r S p rin g , 5 minutes to campus, furnished avail­ able, pool. Starting at $ 5 7 5 . 476- 4 9 9 2 .1 1-15-10B W EST C AM PUS A p t. G re a t lo c a ­ tio n , r e a s o n a b le re n t, fo r non- smoker 4 8 0 0 3 4 0 . 1 1-9-5P R O O M M A T E W A N T E D fo r 4 / 1 house O w n room fo r $ 2 7 5 + 1 / 4 bills/m o n th . N e ar UT shuttle 479 - 6 1 5 3 . 1 1-10-5P R O O M M A T E W A N T E D fo r Janu­ a ry move-in $ 2 5 0 + 1 / 2 b ills NR shuttle C a ll M o rg a n 7 0 7 -1 4 8 9 11-11-6B fe m a le SPECIAL DEAL! Y o u n g w a n te d to share spacious, sunny to w n h o u s e in F a rw e s t a re a . A S A P. N e ed to be frie n d ly and like cats. $ 4 1 0 / m o + 1 .5 utilities. 3 4 6 -8 5 7 5 . 1 1-15-5B FEMALE STUDENT seeks tw o stud­ ent room m ates fo r 3-2 in N o rth Austin. W a s h e r/d ry e r, dishwasher. $ 2 7 5 / e a c h p lu s 1 / 3 u tilitie s A v a ila b le J a n u a ry 1 C a ll A p r il 8 3 5 -8 3 5 1 . 11-15-5 B SHORT W A LK UT Private BR /B A share kitchen, quiet, friendly, non­ s m o k in g , p e tle s s . C A C H $ 3 9 5 ABP 4 7 4 -2 4 0 8 11-15-208 MALE OR female Spring semester, W est Campus. O w n bedroom and bath. 4 7 8 -5 7 2 2 . 11-15-5P ANNOUNCEMENTS 520 - Personals Sexy Eves 111 Contact Lenses can turn your Brown eyes Blue... or Green., or Hazel... or ??? only $79.99 a pair Contact Lens Savers (512) 335-3646 ^BUCKING HAM SQUARE APARTMENTS 711 West 32 nd Street 1 and 2 bedroom apartments in quiet, residential neighborhood. 453-4991 11 14-56-0 NEAR LAW School and downtown. Large 1 /1 , O n shuttle and busline Pool, laundry 4 7 4 -1 2 4 0 1 1-14-5B-D Small, clean and quiet complex: Efficiencies: 400 sq. ft. $325 1 Bedroom/1 bath 650 sq. ft. $395 2 bedroom townhouse 1000 sq. ft $525 926-6954 ________________________ 11-15-550 LARGE 1 -BR on w e ll m a in ta in e d property. Beautiful garden setting, to e a s y access IH -3 5 o f f 1 8 3 North. Free c a b le /w a te r , no pets. Starting at $ 4 5 0 , 8 3 5 -5 6 6 1 . 11- 15-20B-D 390 - Uttf. Duplexes HYDE PARK 3 b r-1 5ba, kitchen ap­ STUDENTSI IS O .J. GUILTY? W E N E ED Y O U R O P IN IO N ! 1 -9 0 0 - pliance s, vaulted c e ilin g , c a rp o rt. $ 1 00 0/m onth. 4 5 0 9 Ave B. 794- 4 5 4 -7 7 8 3 $ 1 .9 9 per ca ll, touch- to n e re q u ire d , 18 + . Y o ro p in io n 9 4 9 4 KVA Inc REALTORS 1 1 4 - 108 (2 1 6 ) 8 2 5 - 6 6 1 6 , d a ta to C N N , U.S.A Today. 10-31-15B 400 - Condos- Townhomes 5 3 0 - Travel* Transportation 2-BEDROOMS AVAILABLE in a lux­ u rio u s c o n d o on W e s t C a m p u s . 3 0 0 0 sq.ft. C a ll ASAP 4 7 7 -4 3 9 9 1 1-10-5P * ’ AVAILABLE 2 N D SEMESTER Unique 0-1 $41 0 Heritage 1-1 $62 5 W m dtree 2-2, $ 8 5 0 Silverodo 1-1 loft $ 49 5 ’ N ew listings d a ily* Front Page Properties 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 SPRING BREAK m v D w s n r & u w i 1101 Clayton Lane _________ _________ 11-9-2 OB MUST SUBLET b e a u tifu l Riverside townhome 2-bedrooms, 2 .5 baths w a s h e r /d r y e r $ 6 9 5 / m o 3 2 2 9 6 9 9 or 385 -2 4 6 8 . 11-14-5B is lew a. 5 3 0 - T r a v e l - Transportation Cancún and N assau from $ 3 2 9 1-800-235-TRIP Spring Fever! 5 40 - lo s t & Found GOLD A N D d iam o nd bracelet lost 1 1-8-94 Reward. 7 0 8 -0 8 1 0 11- 14-3NC. LOST RED s p ir a l n o te b o o k fo r M ilit a r y H is to ry . P lease c a ll Ed 451 -32 30. Reward 11-11-3 N C . 5 6 0 - Public Notice RESEARCH ON DATING COUPLES W e are asking for volunteer dating couples on a mate selection study. Conducted in the Psychology department at UT. Everything is anonymous and confidential! For a short questionnaire and our SASE, Matt Keller 476-2587. EDUCATI0NA1 5 8 0 - Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSO NS: Blues, rock, |a z z , a lte rn a tiv e , fo lk . 10 years teaching experience A n dy Bulling- ton, 45 2-6 1 8 1. 11-3-2066 5 9 0 - Tutoring w riting • essays • research papers • elementary grades through college PUT IT IN W RITING 4 5 9 - 9 0 1 5 TUTORING • TUTORING • REVIEWS O P E N 7 D A Y S t i l M i d n i g h t , S u n . - T h u r . T ir r < B » IV \ S in c e 1980 472-6666 5 9 0 -T u to rin g S P A N IS H -E S P A Ñ O L? NEED h e lp w ith y o u r lo w e r d iv is io n Spanish cla ss? C a li L e n o re -P riv a te T utor 708-8810. 11-9-20P SERVICES 6 2 0 - L o g I S e r v i c e s INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS: DV- 1 G reencard Program, by U.S. Im­ m ig r a tio n . G re e n c a rd s p r o v id e U.S . p e rm a n e n t re s id e n t status. Citizens o f almost all countries are allow ed For info & forms: Legal S e rv ic e s Tel. (8 1 8 ) 7 7 2 - 7 1 6 8 (818 )9 9 8 -4 4 2 5 . 11-3-5P SHARIF & ASSOCIATES Attorneys at Law W e take care of your legal problems at affordable fees If you need a lawyer for: IMMIGRATION PERSONAL INJURY (Car, Motorcycle, and other Accidents) BUSINESS (Incorporation etc) DIVORCE And all other legal matters. For further information & appointments (weekend/evenings). Please CALL M. N A W A Z W A H LA at 5 1 2 /4 9 9 -0 5 3 3 5 1 0 S. CONGRESS AVE. SUITE 110 AUSTIN, TEXAS 7 8 7 0 4 11-15-36 Z I V L E Y The Com plete Professional Typing Service TERM PA PE R S DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESU M ES WORD PRO CESSIN G LA SER PRINTING FORMATTING H U BLOCKBUSTER 27TH STREET , 2707 HEMPHILL PARK fr72'3210 JIHSI1 ▼ Resumes ▼ Papers / Theses ▼ Laser Printing ▼ 79i Color Copies ▼ Rash Jobs Ifrer* Copies 1906 G uadatupe St 472-5353 11-11-5B 7 5 0 - Typing E jn a z m a H E E i KEY WEST STEAMBOAT ■ e m c m m E i n a ^^■*** «•**<* «row » . . « -mem ir i» ll-8 0 0 -S tlN C H A S E i o t t n e u so iM n h a s TO PLACE AN AD IN THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS CALL 471-5244 EMPLOYMENT • 790 PART-TIME $ 6 00 - $ y y w 00c * I V h r / I1 II n Guaranteed! The B e s t Job f o r U T S tu den ts 3 shifts a day 7 days a w eek Call 416-89 EMPLOYMENT • 790 PART-TIME NORTH CAMPUS 1 /1 , 2 9 th /G u a - d a lu p e . $ 3 9 5 su b le t C a ll 7 0 8 - 8 0 4 6 . 1 1-14-3B UNEXPECTED V A C A N C Y I Design­ er 1 b e d ro o m e ffic ie n c y . S m a ll, q u ie t c o m p le x . UT shuttle. 4 1 0 5 S p eedw ay $ 4 3 9 4 5 2 -8 6 1 6 1 1- 15-5B Q uiet 1 bedroom 301 W est 39th St. Large pool, court yard, laundry room, central air, half-block form UT shuttle $47 5 /m o n th furnished $3 9 5 /m o n th unfurnished -December 3 2 6 -9 2 1 5 /4 5 2 -3 8 5 2 . 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 11-15-5B-D AMRTMCNT HOMES 1 BR st. @ $405 2 BR st. @ $495 Available Immediately For more info call 454-2537 $100 OFF 1ST MONTH'S RENT ★ L arge 2 - I ' s $ 5 5 0 ★ P ool. Laundry F acilities ★ Gas, Water, Cable Paid ★ Nice. Quiet Community SANTA FE a p a r t m e n t s 4 5 8 * 1 5 5 2 IMMEDIATE MOVE-IN The Arrangement Lg I - 1, 2-2, lofts & townhomes SR Shuttle at Front D o o r 2 124 Burton Dr. 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 NEAR LAW School and dow ntown Large l / I $395+E On shuttle and busline Pool, laundry. 4 7 4 l 2 4 0 J0-21-20B LARGE EFFICIENCIES Near campus on Red River shuttle New floors, ceiling fans, w /d , no pets/ no roommates. Available December 5th Pre-leasing for January 4th Call Sandra, 474-5043, M-F 3 7 1-0160 weekends 11-2-2066 W O O D W A R D /O L T O R F . H U G E , 1 5 0 4 S O F T 3 -B E D /2 -B A T H a p a rtm e n t. H a lf ABP SR Shuttle $ 7 5 0 /m o n th 4 4 0 1 3 3 2 20B-D 11-3 HYDE PARK Efficiences, l / l ' s and 2 /1 s from $ 4 0 5 $ 6 5 0 Turnberry Apartm ent*. C a ll 4 5 1 -2 2 6 8 11-2- 10B-B HILLSIDE APTS. 1-2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean and Quiet All Utilities Paid 478-2819 5 1 4 Dawson Rd Just off Barton Springs Rd 17 2066 VERY NICE, spacious one-bedroom opartment with fireplace and coded se cu rity. Room for 2 w ith an up sta irs . C lo s e to UT O ra n g e tre e A partments Pnce negotiable 4 7 4 2 6 0 9 . 11-9-7B I'M M O V IN G l Take over my lease a* V illa V illa rta , 2 5 th a n d Long­ v ie w C u te 1 1 , se c u ' fy g a te s p riva te p a rkin g great po o l, gre a t o n -iite m anagem ent You move in 1 /9 4 $ 2 0 0 deposit. $4 9 0 /m o n th CaH me 477-51661 11 11-5P IMMEDIATE MOVE-IN 3 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS AFTER DECEMBER 1ST Comfortable 2-2 I f shuttle, courtyard pool, hot tub, fireplace, ceilm g font, w asher/dryer All other major appliances $ 9 0 0 /m o - Iff) 31st Street Condos C oll 7 0 8 0 4 8 2 11-14-36 P E C A N W A L K c o n d o s . 2 / 2 , a ll appliances including m icrowave and stack w a sh e r/d rye r, fireplace, bal­ cony $ 7 9 5 A v a ila b le 1 2 / 2 0 / 9 4 3 5 0 6 S p e e d w a y # 2 0 1 , 4 8 2 - 873 5. 11-14-1 OB WEST CA M P US thre e b e d ro o m sl M ay or August move-ms. C all nowl A p a rtm e n t Finders S e rvice. 3 2 2 - 9 5 5 6 11-15-5B-B 4 2 0 - Unf. Houses 3 / 1 1 / 2 PERFECT fo r g ra d u a te student, 1 1 / 2 blocks from shuttle q uiet n e ig h b o rh o o d , la rg e fenced b a c k y a rd , g a ra g e a n d c a r p o r t 467 -7 2 9 2 . 1 1 15-4B 4 2 5 - Rooms FURNISHED R O O M /B A T H Spring 1 9 9 5 $ 2 5 0 /m o n t h ABP e x c e p t phone 1 st/last month deposit. Pre- fer RESERVED, nonsm oker fem ale 4 7 2 -0 8 5 6 11-15-5B 4 3 0 - Room-Board SUBLEASE 1 room in 2-1 setup Uni­ v e rs ity Tow ers 19 m e a ls /w e e k and full am enities C a ll M a x 867 - 6151 11-2 1 OB SUBLEASING FOR s p rin g -P riv a te room in U n iv e rs ity T ow ers Fully furmshed 19 meals 2-suite mates 86 7 -6 2 1 0 1 1-2-5B U N LIM ITE D M EALS, c a ll n o w to live in C astilian this Spring 2 4 th / S a n A n to n io V ie w o f UT 4 7 6 - 2831 11-11-208 D O R M R O O M fo r m a le to lease for Spring semester, $ 4 5 0 /m o n th m eals in c lu d e d C o ll 3 2 8 - 0 1 3 5 11-15-4B FREE R O O M a n d b o a rd in e x ­ chan ge for being m other's helper from 3 8pm M ust have ow n trans­ portaron 476 -1 3 4 3 11-15-58 4 4 0 - Roommates |T tX 7 X 7 J X 7 X 7 X 7 X i HU.T.’s r o o m m a t e?! H SOURCE ¡3 I» RHont Service Student Discounts ' ! I» 8**areot mail order' imitators t ! 1+ Texas Ix-owned since i W " ***" -ampwatirs San Antono • ' ! I * I*) W IN D S O R R O O M M A T E S CJ ¡2 M 495-9988 i T i x m i z m x z a l R O O M M ATE W A N T E D S p c o o u s 2 1 C A /C H , w a lk U-T, W e s t Campus $34 50+ electric Assigned porkm g 7 08 -89 22 11 10-106 FEMALE R O O M M A T E n e e d e d at semester break W est UT cam pus pr«vote room a n d b o th , w o sh e r dr yer $ 3 5 0 a month plus 1 / 3 utili­ ties N o depos t 4 7 9 6 5 7 0 1I -1A5P THE DAILY TEXAN IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR Classified Ad Takers and s Receptionist Duties include taking voluntary ads by phone, handling University accounts, filing, typing, coordinating projects, assisting sale and supervisory staff with clerical tasks. Excellent co-worker and customer serv ice skills needed. SHIFT AVAILABLE: MfRdiy Thri Friday, 8-11 APPLY IN PERSON THE DAILY TEX AN (TSP) room 3.210 Telephone inquiries not accepted. Applicants must be a University of Texas student or the spouse of a studentThe University of Texas at Austin is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. EMPLOYMENT 8 0 0 -G e n e ra l Help Wanted ALASKA JO B S I Earn great $$ in fisheries, parks, resorts, cruise com­ panies Get all the options Apply now for summer '951 (909)932- 1489 ext #A58 II-7-15B CRUISE SHIPS N O W HIRING Earn to 12000/month! World wide trav­ el No experience necessary Ap­ ply now for Summer '95. (909) 932-1489 ext #C58 11-7-15B LOSERS WANTED! Lose unwanted pounds and gam enough energy to survive finals. 512-912-5000 11- 7-20B EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 810 - Office-Clerical 880 - Professional HIRE-A-HORN needs dependable people for • vari° “ S fulWay (8-5) clerical assignments The following skills are helpful: typing (40+ wpm), MS Word, WP, Lotus, ect $6-$ 7 per hour Long-term and short-term positions. If you have a M W F or TTH schedule, or con work full-time, Please call 326-HORN ¡4676) __________ 11-9-206-0 PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST needed for downtown law firm Hours 1 2- 4, M-F. Answer phone, filing and word processing. $6/hr. 478- 1699. 11-11-5B EXPERIENCED TAE Kwon Do ond Aerobics instructors needed at Southwest YM CA. Good pay Call Manny 891-9622 11-15-3B 8 9 0 -C lu b s- Restaurants Bambino Cucina Italiana N o w hiring w aitstaff A pply in person. 2200 S. C ongress 444-1333 LIBRARY A SSIST A N T N EED ED No experience necessary 15 hours per week between the hours of 8 15am til Noon. Duties include pulling and copying journal articles. Able to lift 1015 lbs of E>ooks and journals To apply contact the Texas Medical Association, Personnel, 3701300 11-1436 SELF MOTIVATED individuals to sell roses in the hottest night clubs in Austin. 331-5161 11-2-20B 900 - Domestic- Household BABYSITTER N EED ED for after- school care. 2 children ages 7 and 10 M-F 3 30-6:30pm. Good driv­ er non-smoker, references Call 346-3780 or weekends and even- ings 328-0348 1 1-1 1-5B Page 14 Tuesday, November 15, 1994 T h e D a il y T e x a n ■ Ennr EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 7 3 0 - T y p in g « • " • ' i Typkg Servle Professional Laser Output • Competitive Rates • Q uality Service • Rush Service A vailable • Open when others are closed 472-1139 LORCO TYPING Services Qvolify work, competitive prices speedy turnaround All work guaranteed correct For more information call 451-6965 10-31-208. 760 - Misc. Services Fast, Easy Loans up to $ 0 0 Q 0 ! 4 CASH PAWN 2 2209 E. R iversid e If 4 4 1 1 4 4 4 FREE TUITION M O N EY! Millions ovoiioble Scholarships, grants, awards. Call 800-700-4150 10- 26-20B 790 - Part-time ON-CALL KEY OPERATOR Experience preferred, on-call, flexible hours, evenings, weekends Understand/communicate complex written/oral directions. Self motivation, attention to de­ tail Fost-poced physically active Call Mike, 478-7874. GINNY'S PRINTING & COPYING 800 - General Help W anted SEMEN DONORS NEEDED 11-10-58 F o iifa x C r y o b a n k $7-$ 15/HR 834-3030 SANTA'S HELPERS TO SELL TICKETS TO ANNUAL CHRISTMAS CHARITY EVENT PART-TIME EVENING TELEPHONE POSITIONS APPLY 8007 GESSNER DR. 1-4PM ________________ H - I& 2 0 B A N SW ER IN G SERVICE now hiring part-time operators Morning/Af­ ternoon/Evening shifts available. On UT shuttle Pleasant phone voice ond typing skills a must Some com­ puter knowledge helpful For more information coll 465-8126. 11 -14-5B s e e k in g sem en d o n o rs for its sperm bank pr< a n d is a ll b< g ra m The p ro g ra m c o n f id e n t ia l d o n o r s c o m p en sated , A s a p o te n tia l d o n o you w ill undergo, screen w i l l ing p ro ce d u res to insure g o o d health a n d fertility o fen tia ! You must be If e tw e e n 18 a n d 35 a r e y o u p le a se call in t e r e s t e d I473-2268 FAIRFAX CRYOBANK o division of the Genetic & I.V.F. Institute TAN C O . 1 year membership. $175. Must sell Call Miriam 443- 6964 11-15-5B PERSONAL CARE Assistant 2-3hrs. Morning or night $6/hr, Mark 495-5985. lea ve message if nb EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part time SUMMER IN THE MTNS Blue Star Camps in Hendersonville, NC needs Cobin Counselors and Activ­ ity Specialists. -Must be good-na­ tured, mature, flexible, have exp and enjoy working with children. Specialist must have teaching exp. Avail: 6/5 or 6/12 thru 8/13. To apply call our campus rep. Scott at 469-9253 or Lisa at (704)692 3591. 11-9-108 $ 1500/WEEK POSSIBLE ma.lmg our circulars! No experienced re quired! Begin Now! For info coll 202-298-8957. 11-9-24P Free room ond board plus 10 hours paid per week Female night supervisor fo live at small group home for young women with moderate mental retardation. Du­ ties include sleeping on premises 6 nights per week and assisting ladies Monday-Friday morning Nice private room in attractive home in Onion Creek Coll Pace Opportunity Centers 512-392-0888 EOE _____________ 11-9-5 B. DIRECT CARE staff to work in small group home for persons with mental retardation Various shifts available in South Austin Contact Pace Opportunities Centers (512)392-0888 EOE 11-9-5B CONFRONT AUTHORITY Become o union organizer Full and P-T I- 800-322-7348 11 9-5B SHORT W A LK UT. Typists (will rain on computers), Bookkeeping trainees, clerical, runners 474 2032. 11-8-20B-B EMPLOYMENT-STUD- ALASKA ENTS Needed! Fishing Industry, Earn up to $3000 $6000+ per month. Room and boord! Transpor­ tation! Male or Femóle No ex- per ence necessary. Coll (206) 545-4155 ext A58672. 11-14 16P * * * * * ‘ WEEKEND W O R K **"*** EARN $ FOR CHRISTMAS TAD Technical Services, Austin's leading employer of contract per­ sonnel has weekend shifts avail­ able, 6o m -7p.m. Saturday, Sun day and Monday from Nov 19 through year end These positions ore in a distribution environment of a Fortune 100 com­ pony ond require no particular skills- -just dependability and willingness to workl They are ideal for stud­ ents with Tuesday-Thursday classes However, students with limited Monday class schedules will be considered Starting pay $6 50/hr and a $100 bonus will be paid upon satisfac­ tory completion of the assignment with no unexcused absences For more information call TAD at to 452-9300 weekdays 8c m 5p tn and speak fo o recruiter to schedule on appointment to apply. ________ 11-I0-7B H IR E-A -H O RN IS looking for strong, depenable individuals for various labor assignments P i i« 3 •Hut Earn up fo $8-12/hr. Pizza Hut is now hiring PT-FT positions for delivery drivers Must have own car, insurance, and fair driving record. In store positions also available Apply at 717 E Ben White Blvd 320 W William Cannon Dr., 2021-B E Riverside Dr 10700 Anderson Mill Rd. 1901 W William Cannon, and in Pflugerville, 100 12th street # 102 N OW H IRING S E C U R IT Y OFFICERS Having a hard time making ends meet’ Need extra income without sacrificing your GPA to get it? If so, we have the perfect joh for u !! At Zimco we offer: ' Full & Part Time Positions • ■ Evening & Night Positions • • Study W hile You Work • • Car Not Required • • School Holidays O ff • • No Experience Necessary • • Uniforms Provided • C A L L 343-7210 N O W ZIMCO SECURITY CONSULTANTS Lkmsr * ¿0)910 HOME TYPISTS, PC users needed $35,000 potential Details Coll ( I ) 805-962-8000 Ext B-9413 10-19-23P MARKET RESEARCH INTERVIEWERS A N D EDITORS Established research company, NuStats International, has full-time day shifts, part-time afternoon, evening and weekend positions available. Great location ond competitive poy N O W ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS APPLY IN PERSON, 1 1AM-7PM MON.-FRI. 4544 SOUTH LAMAR AT THE CORNER OF HIGHWAY 71W AND WESTGATE BLVD BARTON RIDGE PLAZA, BUILDING 200 892-0002, ASK FOR GAIL (moving, driving, warehouse, 10-21 -206-B ect...) Jobs are usually full ASSEMBLE ARTS, crafts, toys, and lewelry .terns from your home. Exc poy Coll 448-6456 I0-24-20B WORK ABROAD! Cruise lines, ESL internships & more Up to $3K/monthi No experience necessary. World-w.de placements! Call SEI today! (919)932- 1489. extension W22 10-25-20B ALASKA JO B S I Students needed: fisher.es, porks & resorts Earn up to $3-$6K/monthl Now hiring for summer Call SEI! (919)932-1489, extension A22 10-25-20B PARALEGAL RUNNER. W ill from Your reliable, economical car Tues­ day, Thursday or other times flexi­ ble 474-2032 10-24-20B-B AA CRUISE SHIPS HIRING! EARN BIG $$$ & FREE TRAVEL! (Caribbean, Europe etc!) No Exper Nec. Stoff needed for busy Holfday/Spnng/Summer Seasons 919-929-4398 ext C8 10-28-206 AUTO PARTS. Van's is looking for drivers and experienced counter sales Full-time, part-time 472- 6236 834-0404 10-31-20B Earn up to $8-1 2/hr Pizza Hut is now hirmg PT-FT posi tions for delivery drivers Must hove own car, insurance, ond fair driving record In store positions also available Apply at 71 7 E Ben White Blvd , 320 W William Connon Dr 2021-BE Riverside Dr. , 10700 Anderson Mill Rd 1901 W William Connon, and m Pflugerville, 100 12tb street #102. days (8-5) during the week. $6-$7 per hour Call 326-HORN (4676) ________________________11 -9-206-D FLORIST SEEK IN G afternoon and Saturday delivery and sales help 451-6728 11-9-5B PART/FULL-TIME A SSIST A N TS needed Experience with children essential 345-6605 2-4pm 1 1-9-5B PART-TIME SALES assistant needed to work Tuesday and Thursday, 1 1 am-4pm $6/hr For Mapc 95/ party '94 Must be able to work during school vocations Must be proficient on I B M., answer multi- lin« PBX telephone system Call Sylvia Lagunas to set up an ap­ pointment at 327-9595 11-11-4B LIVE-IN ATTENDANT for female Paid room/board w/small stipend Back-up daytime attendant needed 'mmediotely Frank/M ary, 462- 0092. 11-11-8B M ICROFILM/FIIE CLERK part-time or full-time available Full-time of­ fered to students during school breaks. Two shifts Please call 837-9847 after 10am for appoint­ ment. I M 1-3B ~ ADVERTISING ASSISTANT FASTSIGNS is looking for a person to do mail-outs ond phone follow- ups, customer service ond other office responsibilities Telemarketing experience o plus Call Steve 9am-5pm at 795-0880 11-4-14B _____________________ U - 14-26 i answer 11-14-2B ! Christian child development center interviewing for assistont teacher for school age children. 3-6pm Monday-Friday $5/hour Call 346- 41.51 I M4-5B SHORT SHIFTS Good tips Selling coffee on compus in new kiosks. X- mas off Call Karen or Gretchen 451-0141/326-4968 11-I4 2B OFFICE CLERK for doctor's office Afternoons only M-F $5/hour Drug screen required Apply 8am-5pm DesRos.ers & Wernecke 1301 W 38th Street, Suite 403 or call Ja­ net 454-5599 11-14-56 FRONT COUNTER softwore sales Computer experience required Ap­ ply at Floppy Joe's 2904 Guada­ lupe. 1 1-14-58 UT PROFESSOR needs help with clerical work on research $6/hour 480-9554 before 8pm. 11 14-2B PSYCHOLOGY AND social work students t supervise visits for Kids Exchange Hourly rate Call 472- 3588 11-11-58 COME SEE H O W MUCH FUN A TELEMARKETING JOB CAN BE. W e are now taking applications to fill 4 positions! Great work environment. No selling. On campus - 20 hours/ week Evening shifts $5-$ 10/hour Coll CJ at PBC Marketing 477-3808 11-14-56-B EARN $420 a week! 1 0-1 2hrS a wee». No experience necessary Coll Mrs Spence 328-1018 11-14-20B M O R N IN G FILE clerk/some-. mes runner for low office 3 blocks from campus M-F, 8am-lpm Call 477- 7543. 1 1 -14-5B ATTENTION UT STUDENTS: Looking for some extra cash for the holidays? W e have port-time evening positions available M-Th 5:30-1 1 ond Sun 5-9 You will conduct surveys over the phone for market research (no selling involved), ideal for people with good phone skills, a professional attitude and familiarity w/ computer terminology. Training provided South-Central Austin location Starting immediately Do not wait, call today! MANPOWER TEMPORARY SERVICES 3281002 _________________________ 11-14460 TEACHER S AID needed in 3 year old classroom. Afternoons M-F, in UT orea. Please calí 2 30-5 30 Sandy 472-3467 1 l-l5-58 FLUENT IN S P A N IS H ? The Benchmark Co. has severol part-time eve-mg positions in rodio market research (NO StAES OR SOLICITING) Must be fluent in Eng­ lish and Spanish $5 50-$7.25/h? at Congress and Riverside on the busline Plenty of free parking Bi­ lingual helpful Call, Imdel! after 6pm Sun-Thurs. 707-7010 .... 1 1-7-58 800 - General Help W anted Dati\g Co uples Stid y Approved by The University of Texas at Austin Department of Psvchologx We are interested in couples who have just met, as well as couples that have been together for any length of time. Couples will receive $15 for their participation. If interested, please call F2¿-9, 60 and mention the ¡ dating couples study. .— M TRAVEL ABROAD and W ork Maxe up to $2 000-$4,000+/mo teaching basic conversational Eng­ lish in Japan, To,won, or S Korea No teoching bockground or Asian languages required For information (206) 632-1146 ext. cal1 I0-20-20P J58672 820 - Accounting* Bookkeeping SHORT W ALK UT Nonsmoking. Learn Bookkeeping. Also, hiring typists, clerical, runners. 474 2032. 11-8-20B-B 830 - Administrative* Management SO FT W A RE C O M PA N Y hos full­ time opening for recent grad Du­ ties include soles, marketing, and customer support Good communico- tion/organization skills Knowledge of Microsoft W indow s a must Medical plus other benefits. Ask for Lori 328-1204 10-31-15B 840 - Sates IMPRINTED SPORTSWEAR compo- ny (near downtown) needs telemar­ keter Mornings or ofternoons W holesale only $ 1 0/hr s very possible for enthus.astic, self moti­ vated person. Informal, hardworking atmosphere 442-8494 111 0-5B - WHAT? MAKE serious income part- time with no inventories em­ ployees, collections, or quotas by offering others o money saving service for free? Call 448-5483 for 24 hour recorded messaqe 1 1- 10-5P Licensed Real Estate Agent wanted Motivated and experienced leasing agent for UT area properties. C O FFEE PROPERTIES. 474-1800 850 - Retail 11-15-560 PART-TIME SALESPERSON needed Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday Hours flexible. Apply in pe-son Texas Ceiling Fans 1205 W 6th. 11-10-5B JUST ADD W ater, Arboretum, is looking for energetic part-time sales people Please stop by for application No phone calls please 1 1 14-38 PARTY W A R E H O U S E - - N O W accepting appliations for part-time/ full-time Holiday sales clerk Apply in person only, 5400 N Lamar I 1-15-10B ASSISTANT MANAGER GYMBOREE , a nationwide children s clothing chain hiring assistant manager Responsibilities hinng, framing staff merchand s ng, establishing/attorning sales calls assisting staff with sales Apply at GYMBOREE HIGHLAND MALL 11-15-58 860 Engineering- Technical M E C H / E E /ARCH M A JO R (S) Work with machines building sys­ tems, computers, networks 474 2032 11-3-20B-B MAKE MONEY FOR CHRISTMAS' Chemistry writer needed ro w-ite high school chemistry. Must be a good writer ond know current chemistry facts Experience in teaching chemistry a plus Part t,me position, November and December $8 to $ 1 2 per hour Send resume to Jon Lewis. 307 Comp Craft Rd., Suite 100 Austin, TX 78746 Fax (512) 328-9480 Questions? CaH Jon at 328-7007 11-14-36 870 - Medical EMPLOYMENT - 800 GENERAL HELP WANTED Resident Assistant Position University Towers se e k s applications for a Spring _995 Resident A ssistant position. M IN IM U M Q U IR E M E N T S 1) at least one year occupancy in a residence hall environment, 2) a minimum of a ¿ 5 G P A (transcript required) 3) three (3) letters of reference a n d 4) an interview with the Residential i e oordmator The deadline for initial screening of applications is Novem ber 18 Application packets are available at the Front D e sk Questions, contact Kara Hartzell. 801 W 24th Street Austin, T X 78705 or (512) 472-5846 Resident Assistant Position Untvers ,ty Tow ers s e e k s a p p lica tio n s for 1995 - yb H A position s MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS ) at least on e year o c c u p a n c y in a re sid e n ce a environm ent, 2) a m in im u m of a 2 5 G PA (transcript required) 3) three (3) letters of r e r e n c e , a n d 4) m a n d ato ry a tte n d a n c e at ? ! X oL^ ° m eet'n9 s - either T ue sd a y , , or W e d n e sd a y , 11/30/94 - both MflnTrr 7 °° P m <^uest,ons' contact Kara o r % 1 ? 5’I E . ^ 24th S,reet Aust,n* TX 78705 or (512) 472-5846. RODEWAY INN Port/Full-time desk clerk 3pm-11pm, Wednesday-Sun- day Apply m person 2900 1-35 North 11-14-56 HOLIDAY INN-AUSTIN airport now hiring mght auditors, executive od ministrative assistant 691 1 North IH-35 459-4251 11-I5-5B 810 - Office-Clerical DO YOU HAVE PERSONAUITY PLUS? SUPtRCUTS WANTS YOU! Enthusiostic people needed to greet customers, answer phones ond operate cash reg ster full ond part-time flexible hour positions ovoifoble a* several SUPERCUT locations Phone 3711033 MorvFn 9 5 SUPERCUTS 11-9 5 60 SHORT W ALK UT Typ,si, |w ,|j Ham on computer*); Bookka^pmg froiftee* cWfical, runners 474-2032 II- S 2 0 M AIRPORT C U ST O M ER clerical, and data entry dutie*. FuM- time, shift var es John 479-6666 Apply at I9 0 I E 51*1 St 11-14-5B te-vic* OFFICE ASSISTANT $6/hot,r plus Morning* or afternoons, u*ing Moc intoth computer*, general office du­ ties, near downtown, informal at- mosphere 442-8494 II-10-5B { $ 1 9 C A S H ! FOR MEVDONORS anti earn up to I ¡$1 4 0 / m o n t h ! Iby donating twice a week! 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Straight hourly poy Call today for an appointment Kelly Temporary Services 244-7735 Equal Opportunity Employer Never on applicant Fee 10-7-17M PARALEGAL RUNNER W ill tram Your reliable economical car Tues­ day, Thursday or other times flex, ble 474-2032 10-24-20B-B PROFEESIONAL W IN D O W clean mg Carry/climb fodders I -3 sto­ nes 2-3 days/week T,TH,Sot $5- 10/hr West campus office 482- 0688 10-25-20P W A N T ED CUSTO M ER serv.ee representatives Flexible hours Gain customer service experience w/lorge corporate accounts Bos-c computer literacy necessary. $6/ hr Call TeleNetwork @ 707- 3111 10-27-20B FlAG FOC BALL officials needed W ill train $9/hour Call 480- 3015 Austin Parks and Recreation Department 1 1-2-10B CHURCH NURSERY worker need" ed Sunday mornings and Wednes­ d a y evenmgs. 834-8302 1 1-U-5B WANTED THE Cadeou on the drag needs organized hard working indi­ viduals for positions as stockroom heiper and parking fot attendant Apply m person at 2316 Guoda- lupe 11 -4-10B HIVE IN ATTENDANT for female ?aid room/board with small sti­ pend Back-up daytime attendant needed immediately Frank/Mary 462-0092 11-9-10B .SH O R T W ALK UT Typists (w,|| • from on computers) Bookkeeping ‘trainees, clerical, runners 474 2032 11-8-20B-B GENERAL HELP needed in hair so ion for two port-time positions 3 days a week Hours 4 30-8 30 Saturdays flexible 346-2780 11- 10-5B DISC JO CKEY needed for private party work $20 plus/hr. 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Enfield area 478 8063 11-10-58 D R IV IN G R A N G E PartAme retail sales a n d general labor Golf knowledge preferred Severol positions open Apply m person Kram er Lane Driving Range 1825 Kromer Lane or cod 835-2514 u i cue O FFIC E ASSISTANT for telecom­ munications compony M-F opprox 20hr$/wk Filing, some deliveries answer phones assist with protects ond customer service Professional appearance required $5/hr 320- 4000 I 1 -9-106 PART TIME SECRETARY with local fond development firm Answering phones and l*ght office work Half days either morning or afternoon, flexible M-F $7/hr Send resume Suite 260 1717 W 6th St 78703 I M l 38 (ME T EA C H IN G assistant PART needed for accredited preschool $5 25 p » ' hour starting EOE Call 478-7775 11-11-38 BABYSITTER NEEDED 6-8am Must take son to school Must be reli­ able w th own tronporfot.on 832- 8364 11 ! I 58 N A N N Y FOR two boys, four ond two years, M-F. 7:30am-5 30pm $800/mo . own transportation, non- smoker 750-7989 1M5-5B LOVING PERSON for afterschool fun with 12 year old girl. Must have car ond good driving record 4-7 Additional time available. Day- time 328-4424 Evenings 263 9661 1 115-78 FREE R O O M and board in ex chonge for being mother’s helper from 3 8pm. Must have own trans­ portation 476-1343. 11-15-5B LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING and misc |obs Approx. 2 hrs/wk $8/hr 478-5294 11-15-2B BUSINESS 930 - Business Opportunities A M ER IC A N B U S IN E S S opening soon in Chile, El Solvador and Hon­ duras Phone 926-2037 for informo tion appointment. 1 )-l 1 -38 The \ Daily } t/j-v Pardee Continued from page 16 ing a sideline confrontation last sea­ son. Ryan left after the season to become coach of the Arizona C ard i­ nals. I predicted he d be selling insur­ ance in tw o years," Ryan said of G ilb rid e's firing. "It's a 'y e a r ahead of schedule." The O ilers struggled to a 1-4 start last year, but rebounded w ith 11 straight victories to w in the A F C Central. They lost to Kansas C ity in the first round of the playoffs. Team officials blam ed the new N F L salary cap for an offseason ros­ ter overhaul that cost the O ilers four Pro Bo w l players. D efensive linem en W illia m Fu ller and Sean Jones left after becom ing free agents, quarterback W arren M oon w en t to M innesota for fourth-round draft pick and M ontgom ery w ent to Detroit. a Greg "H o w do you cut $12 m illion off the budget and get better at the same tim e? " Pardee said. "In reality, that's w hat happened this y e a r." Pard ee and G ilb rid e w ere the architects of the team s run-and- shoot offense, w hich piled up huge num bers w hen M oon was quarter­ back. But instead of re-signing M oon, the team gave backup C od v Carlson a m ultim illion-dollar contract and the starting job. Carlson injured his shoulder in H o uston's opener against Ind ianap olis and has played sparingly since then. Clark Continued from page 16 The O ilers have used tw o other quarterbacks, third-year pro Bucky Richardson and journeym an B illy Joe T olliver, but the team has contin­ ued to lose. Pardee became Houston's coach in 1990, succeeding Jerry G lan ville. Entering this season, Pardee's 42-22 record was the best in franchise his­ tory. Before joining the O ilers, he coached three seasons at the U n iv e r­ sity of Houston. "Jack is a nice g u y," Ryan said. "B u t you can't let people run your business for y o u ." P ardee' s C oachhg Record By The Associated Press The coaching record oi Jack Pardee who was fired by the Houston Oilers on Monday. Team (PRO) 1974 Florida (W FLJ 1975 Chicago 1976 Chicago 1977 Chicago T87É Washington 1979 Washington 1980 Washington 1984 Houston (Ü SFLJ 1985 Houston (U SFLJ 1990 Houston 1991 Houston 1992 Houston 1993 Houston 1994 Houston NFL Totals Pro Totals W 14 4 7 9 8 10 6 13 10 9 11 10 12 1 67 124 L 6 10 7 5 8 6 10 5 8 7 5 6 4 9 77 96 Team (CO LLEG E) 1987 Houston 1988 Houston 1969 Houston Cortege Totals Ovsrall Totals W 4 9 9 22 146 L fi 3 2 11 107 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Í) 0 0 0 T 1 0 0 1 1 Pet. .700 286 .500 .643 500 625 .375 .722 .556 .563 ■688 .625 750’ • 100 .530 .564 Pet. 409 750 .818 .662 -576 hospital had to turn aw ay visitors : because C lark had been having too m any visitors and had not gotten m uch rest. 44 "Fro m w h at I hear, he's not too lo n ely,' said Baskin, w ho learned of C lark s accident Sunday afternoon. Stonie has a lot of friends. H e's real w e ll liked around cam pus and around town. I can understand w h v so m any people are trying to get to see h im ." C lark w ill miss the Thanksgiving game against Baylo r and could be out much longer depending on the seriousness of the injuries, ft is uncertain how long he w ill rem ain in the hospital. C lark ranked tied for ninth on the team w ith 37 tackles and 1 1/2 sacks, but his presence w ill be missed just as m uch aw ay from the field. "Stonie is a big part of our team. H e's a leader, a real likable guy, a good person," center Dan N eil said. You hate to see it happen, but in life, things happen. N o one knows w h y ." This is the second tragedy in seven weeks for C lark. D uring the week in preparation for the O kla­ hom a gam e, C la rk 's longtim e friend, D ietrick Holm es, was shot and killed. C lark p layed through that tragedy and w ould make the game- saving tackle w hich sealed Texas' 17-10 victo ry over the Sooners. It's unfortunate. Things happen in life. I'm a firm believer things happen for a reason," W atkins said. " I relayed that message to him. I just told him 'Y o u 'll be a stronger and better person because of this. Just Stonie is a big part o f our team. He’s a leader, a real likable guy, a good person. You hate to see it happen, but in life, things hap­ pen. No one know s w hy.” — Dan Neil, Texas center realize life is short.' " ■ M ackovic said he w ill most like­ ly not announce a starter at quarter­ back before the Baylo r game on Thanksgiving. Shea M orenz rem ains question­ able for the gam e w ith a bruised shoulder he incurred against Texas A & M on N o v. 5. Red shirt freshm an Jam es Brow n started Satu rd ay against Houston and earned Southw est Conference O ffensive Player of the VVeek honors for his perform ance. Brow n com ­ pleted 22 of 27 passes for 320 yards and four touchdowns. Senior linebacker K evin W atler, w ho has not played in the last three games, also is questionable for B ay­ lor w ith a quadricep injury. ■ U ith their next game not until Thanksgiving, the Longhorns w ill not p ractice Tuesd ay. They w ill practice W ednesday and Thursday before taking F rid a y off. On Saturday, the team w ill begin its usual five-day game week. Runnin’ Continued from page 16 adjusted real w ell. I told them, 'A s long as you catch it, I'll keep throw ­ ing it to y o u .'" M clve r is one of those players w ho has m ade the necessary adjust­ m ent, the opportunities Anderson provides. taking advantage of "VV ith Rod, you have to alw ays be alert," M clve r said. "P la yin g w ith him this sum m er as w ell as last year helped a lot. N o w I know pretty much w hat he's going to do when he d rives." The outstanding p lay of A n der­ son and Rencher has alm ost become expected, but the surprise of the early season has been provided by M clver. H e returned to school this fall w ith a m ore developed low-post game and w ith less excess baggage weighing in at 230 p o u n d s— about 25 pounds lighter than at this time last season. "R ich is focused," said Penders, w ho called the M ichigan transfer the most im proved frontcourt p lay­ er he has ever coached. "H is head is no longer in A nn A rb o r." One of the w ays M clver trimmed down this sum m er was by running, a sight that caught Anderson by sur- dow n pnse G uadalupe Street late one evening this summer. d riv in g w h ile "I put m y high beams on, and I was like, W h o is th a t?"' Anderson I thought he w as running to said. go get some Burger K in g ." M clver and the R un nin ' H orns w ill next p lay Brazil Minas-Tenis on Saturday in their final exhibition tune-up before the season opener N ov. 26 at N orth C arolina. Cam e tim e on Saturd ay is 7:35 p.m. at the E rw in Center. ■ I he R un nin ' Horns were not among the top 25 teams in the M on­ day s Associated Press Top 25 pre­ season basketball poll. Texas received 39 total points, good for the ^ 5th spot in the poll. Defending national cham pion Arkansas was aw arded the top spot. Four of Texas pponenfo this season are ranked ahead of the Horns. They are: N orth Carolina (No. 2), Florida (N o 10) Texas Tech (N o. 33) and (No. 34). Tem ple ■ Ju n io r forw ard Sheldon Quarles did not p ity M onday night beca he is planning to redshirt this son. use sea- Quarles, w ho m ade the decision to redshirt in order to add muscle to is 6-10, 210 pound-fram e, w ill return next season w ith tw o years of euDiiity rem aining. Broussard fully recovers from on-field collision Associated Press C IN C IN N A T I — C incinnati Ben- gals running back Steve Broussard rias fu lly recovered from an on-f.dd collision that left him tem porarily num b. N ow he has to decide w hether he w ants to p lay football again. Broussard was taken from the field on a stretcher w ith four min utes left m the Bengals-OUers game Sunday. H is legs went num b after neck" 3 bk>Ck and iammed in ^ r n ^ i rt‘turned to norm al w ith ­ in a couple hours of the injury and problem s M o n d a T w n° Broussard ntal aft abnmm)T " Í T ,ests found b u ? n , *r ? dUl SP,rUn* re!eased from a hos- * SOTe’ h e ' s a c h in h ^ : heU™ ! r a lly eVer>',h i"K I l e D a i l y T e x a n Tuesday, November 15,1994 Page 15 Uncaged Bengal Cincinnati QB Blake taking team, city by storm Associated Press C IN C IN N A T I- do for an encore? ■ W hat can Je ff Blake possibly to theX-ray room as fans gave a standing ova- fiom No fracture was found, so Blake rode back to^the rescue — call it H ollyw ood on the O hio Throw for 350 yards? The C incinnati Bengals quarterback has done it two weeks in a row now. Throw four touchdowns in a game? H e did that Sunday in a 34-31 victory over the Houston O ilers. Lead the downtrodden Bengals to a w in ? H e's done it tw ice. Get an entire d ty giddy? H e's done that, too. The N FL's most surprising quarterback is running out of heights to reach after just three starts. Perhaps the only one not overwhelm ed by the show is Blake, who prefers to think of it all as a beginning. "Pm not stopping now ," Blake said. "I'v e gotten this fa r." IPs a sign of the times that nobody doubts him . The 166th pick in the 1992 draft has taken apart the league's best defenses and gotten everyone around him — except incum bent starter D avid K Jin gler — caught up in the moment. There h asn 't been this m uch excitem ent around here since the days when Boom er threw and Ickey shuffled in the end zone. He s the m agic m an," running back D errick Fenner said. " I told him he's got the m aeic w orking." H is third N FL start was sim ply m agical. Blake played the second half Sunday on a man­ gled left ankle that made him lim p between plays and change his throw ing style. "In the second half, I had to throw off m v back foot," he said. The pain got so bad that he had to be helped off the field after throwing a 50-yard touch­ down pass to C arl Pickens. They BÍake him off N aturally, he led the Bengals cm two scoring dnves that won the game. Could it have ended any other way? "In other weeks, we w ould have found eight different ways to lose," said Doug Peifrey, who kicked a gam e-winning 40-yard field goal as time expired. This week we found a w av to w in ." 7 Peifrey ended the afternoon rolling on the field w ith teammates. A nearby banner pro­ claim ed Blake for president. Fans honked their horns in a loud chorus as they drove aw av from Riverfront Stadium . And what of Blake? He was perhaps the only one not impressed by the perform ance that inspired it all. This was one of the worst games I'v e had mentally, Blake said. "Mentally I made a lot of mistakes, but people don't see that. I m ade four or five mental mistakes and that's something you can't do. I got away with them because of my athletic ability." His luck was holding out Monday. The ankle injury turned out to be not as serious as the team initially thought. Doctors feared he might have broken the ankle or dam aged ligaments when a pass rush­ er fell on it in the first half. Trainer Paul Sparling said more X-rays Monday found no severe damage. The injur)’, now described as a deep bruise, shouldn't force him to miss practice. H e's expected to start again next Sunday against Indianapolis. There s a fair am ount of swelling, but noth- nothing in the joint, which is ing gross good," Sparling said. Steelers Continued from page 16 8 in 1987. They trail Miami (7-3) by two games in the AFC East and m ust play twice more in the next 10 days, against Green Bay and Detroit. Kelly, sacked six times for 54 yards in losses, was lifted for Frank Reich late in the fourth quarter after going 22-for-43 for 212 yards and tw o interceptions. H e has o n ly one touchdown pass against Pittsburgh the last two years after throwing 11 in his first four career starts against his hom etow n team. Pittsburgh, trailin g C le ve la n d (8- 2) by a gam e in the A F C C en tra l, could n t m o u n t an offense e ve n w ith form er A ll-Pro run ning back B a rry Foster back from a four-week injury layoff, but still rem ained per­ fect on M o n d a y night — 6-0 __ under coach B ill C o w h er. Foster had eight rushes for 32 yards. M a rk R oyals tw ice backed B u ffa ­ lo up to its 3-yard line w ith pooch punts in the first quarter, and Pitts­ bu rgh su b se q u e n tly scored both tim es — on A n d e rs o n 's 300th career field goal, a 39-yarder, and VNoodson's interception. A n d erso n added field goals of 39 and 30 ya rd s aroun d C hristie's 52- yarder, the th ird longest in the league this season, as Pittsburgh opened a 16-3 halftim e lead. The Bills, held to o n ly 80 first-half > ards, then d ro ve /4 yard s in seven plays for the Kelly-to-Reed touch­ dow n, the o n ly in eight quarters by Buffalo against Pittsburgh in M o n ­ d a y night gam es the last tw o sea­ sons. The Steelers w o n 23-0 last ye a r in one of the w’orst losses of the M a rv L e v y era. Jeff Blake has led the Bengals to a 2-1 ASSOCIATED PRESS record since taking over as starting QB. S T A N D I N G S National Football League AM ERICAN CO N FEREN CE East Miami Buffalo N Y Jets Indianapolis New England Cleveland Pittsburgh Cincinnati Houston San Diego Kansas Crty L A Raiders Denver Seattle Dallas Philadelphia Anzona N Y Giants Washington Minnesota Chicago Green Ba> CpjfclÉ Tampa Bay San Francisco Atlanta L A Rams New Orleans W 7 5 s 4 4 L T 3 0 5 0 S 0 6 0 6 0 PF PA Pet. 700 239 187 500 205 198 500 173 184 400 216 233 400 210 239 Central L 2 3 8 9 West L 2 4 5 " § 7 Pet. PF PA 800 219 118 700 176 156 200 175 251 100 147 218 PF Pet p a 800 243 164 600 195 192 500 203 222 400 220 243 300 195 196 n a t io n a l c o n f e r e n c e East 1 2 3 6 Pet. PF PA 800 262 141 700 216 174 400 126 198 300 171 220 200 220 279 Pet PF PA 700 224 164 600 172 182 600 205 143 500 198 217 200 124 229 Pet. PF PA 800 295 186 500 200 226 400 179 197 400 209 261 8 Central L _ 3_ 4 4 5 .8 _ West J. 2 5 6 " 6 Sunday. Nov. 20 Cleveland at Kansas City noon Detroit at Chicago noon Green Bay at Buffalo noon Indianapolis at Cincinnati, noon Miami at "Pittsburgh noon San Diego at New England noon Washington at Dallas noon Atlanta at Denver 3 pm New Orleans at Los Angeles Raiders 3pm New York Jets at Minnesota 3 p.m Philadelphia at Arizona 3 pm Tampa Bay at Seattle. 3 p m Los Angeles Rams at San Francisco 7pm Monday. Nov. 21 New York Giants at Houston 8 pm National Basketball Association EA STERN CO N FEREN CE Atlantic W 4 3 __ ______ 3 1. 1 2 2 3 5 5 4 L 2 2 3 2 2 3 5 _1_ 1 1 0 Central W 3 3 _1 2 ' 2 Pet. 800 600 600 .250 .167 167 000 " Pet 600 600 500 500 500 .400 167 G B 1 1 2', 3* 3’j 3 GB _ _ 1 2 ____ 2 1 W ESTERN* CO N FEREN CE Midwest W 6 4 3 3 3 0 Pet. 1 000 800 750 750 429 000 L 0 1 1 1 4 6 ‘ West w 5 3 3 3 3 ““ 2 0 L Pet. 0 1 000 0 1 000 j _ .750 1 750 2, 600 4 333 5 000 GB T V 2 2 3« 6 GB 1 T V _F_ 2 “ ~ 3 V 5 Washington New York Orlando Boston New Jersey Philadelphia Miami Detroit Indiana Chicago Cleveland Milwaukee Charlotte Atlanta Houston Denver Dallas San Antonio Utah Minnesota Golden State Portland Sacramento Seattle Phoenix L A Ljjfcars L A Clippers Monday s Game Utah 110. New York 97 Tuesday's Games Seattle at New Jersey 6 30 p m Washington at Orlando. 6 30 p m Dallas at Miami 6 30 p m Boston at Atlanta. 6 30 p m Charlotte at Cleveland. 6.30 p.m Philadelphia at Detroit 6 30 p m San Antonio at Denver. 7 p m Indiana at Milwaukee 7 30 p.m Sacramento at Houston 7 30 p m Phoenix at Portland 9 p.m L A Lakers at L A Clippers. 9 30 p m Minnesota at Golden State 9 30 p.m Wednesday's Games Seattle at Boston. 6 30 p m Miami at Philadelphia. 6:30 p.m Chicago at San Antonio. 7 30 p.m Minnesota at Phoenix, 8 pm New York at L A Lakers 9 30 p m. Manley arrested, charged with crack possession Associated Press H O U S T O N — Dexter M a n le y, the form er N F L star w h o w a s banned from the' league for v io la tin g its drug policy, has been charged w ith felony possession o f crack cocaine. Po lice said M a n le y, 36, w as arrest­ ed S u n d a y night and w as released M o n d a y after posting $5,000 bail. U n a b le to read until 1986, M a n le y had been an inspiration and also a frustration to the fans w h o follow ed his turbulent career. In 1981, the defensive end w as d rafted by the W a s h in g to n Red- skihs in the fifth round out of O k la ­ hom a State and w en t on to p la y in th rfe S u p e r Bo w ls. H e had 97 sacks in his N F L career, w h ic h ranks fourth in league histo­ ry-v LSAT • GMAT • GRE NEVER UNDERESTIMATE THE POWER OF PREPARATION! “My test scores are in and I scored in the 98th p ercen tile!’ You don , nave to pay premium price, fo, profesional preparation! Al PrepMa.ter we've been preparmg .'"den,, lo, gradúale exam, for ove, 12 year, Average LSAT: +10 points GMAT: +100 points GRE: +200 points Ou, live weekend cemmar, cost ONE-HALF what Kaplan and Princelon charge * We use actual free repeal policy. 50 beat ions nation»,de. Call or wr.te today fo, , I EOR A fRfcE BR O C H U R E, WHITE free brochure! fre e b ro ch u re Bm«J on March 1994 prxv companion que,,K„„ And were * . confident of our result, ,h>, we I,ave a guaranteed F7.5JÜT ™ T* — — — — — — R™ ? "a ,lr R' ' ,iew «1 _L _1 increase, I 1711 Rio Grande, Austin, TX 78701 * GMAT LSAT GRE I Pro p M a s t c r I - 8 0 0 - 1 2 5 - 5 7 2 8 Name__________ Street Pats’ Bledsoe unfazed by record day Associated Press ~ — ---- --------------- F O X B O R O , Mass. — The arm w a s hidden beneath a blue Patriots sw eatshirt. The arm. D re w Bledsoe said, w as feeling "p r e tty g o o d " M o n d ay. H e absent-m indedly rubbed his right bicep. H is v oice and his face sh ow ed little expression. H e w a s in a hurry. H e had to start prep aring for N e w E n g la n d 's next opponent, the San D iego Charg- Bledsoe w as taking it all in stride — all 70 pass­ es and all 45 com pletions. Both w ere N F L records, but the m ature 22-year-old rem ained on the even keel, sh ow ing the poise that is becom ing his trad em ark on and off the field. " I figured w e threw it a lot o f times but I d id n 't h ave a clue that w e th rew it that m a n y ," he said. It s fun to have those k in d of things happen as long as yo u w in ." In an im probable comeback, the Patriots did that S u n d ay. D o w n 20-0 and outgained 286 yard s to 41 w ith one m inu te left in the first half, they w ent to a no­ h u d d le offense the rest of the w a y , and Bledsoe led them back to a 26-20 o vertim e w in o ver the M innesota V ik in g s (7-3). In the gam e's last 36 m inutes, he completed 41 of 59 passes for 402 yards and three touchdowns. In the fourth quarter, the Patriots (4-6) never ran the ball as Bledsoe com pleted 18 of 27 passes for 1"/1 yards. H e threw on 34 straight offensive plays starting w ith the next to last p la y of the ASSOCIATED PRESS New England’s Drew Bledsoe completed 45 of 70 passes on Sunday, both NFL records. third quarter. A fte r the game, he talked by telephone M ik e Price, his coach w ith W ash in g to n State topic? w ith The I talked to him about the g am e com ing up this w e e k for them and their loss last w e e k e n d ," B le d ­ soe said, and our g am e." W h e n it ended, w h en fullback K e v in T urner slip ped out of the backfield, got behind linebacker C arlos Jen k in s and hauled in the w in n in g pass Cowboys Continued from page 16 49ers quarterback Steve Young. ^ ,f ^ c>ldd h a v e looked for that play, H a le y said. "T h e y used to run that p la y against me in practice all the tim e w hen I w as w ith the 49ers." Sm ith said the 49ers w ere effective w ith an eight-man front in the sec­ ond half. " W e didn't play our best," Sm ith said. It was like we didn't show up in the second half. W e lost. But it's Still a long, long road to Ja n u a ry ." This w a s n 't the S u p e r B o w l, thank G o d ,' said w id e re c e ive r M ich a e l Irvin . " W e h ave six gam es to go and w e 're still in first p la ce ." LIVE SERVICE CHAT UNE LOCAL GIRLS W a ilin g fo talk to you C A L L 2 4 H O U R S 3 0 5 - 4 3 0 - 3 8 3 5 Long distan ce rotes ap p ly N o other ch arges _________ M ust be 18 & over O P E N S U N D A Y «j üH * mi . 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Cancun and N assau from $329 1-800-235-TRIP Spring Fever! 469-0999 600 WIST 28TH SUITE 102 Sl mm urn i K IS OlfK CKh l xis ..... $ 19 8 ........$ 2 3 8 Ies . Diojjo.... C hicago......... i tria n d o ...... Miami......... Salt la k e t in N ew ark........... Haltimor i l-ondon......... Frankfurt P a ris ......... I ag< is - 1250 Nan .«In M 125 Johannesburg M 375 Bombay/Delhi. .....$ 1 0 7 5 \ 512-467 86K7 Fax 512 467 9353 «700 Middle FtakviUe Suite 305 44 I figured we threw it a lot of times but I didn’t have a clue that we threw it that many. Its fun to have those kind of things happen as long as you w in.” Drew Bledsoe, Patriots Quarterback o ver his right should er 4:10 into overtim e, B le d ­ soe w as calm. H e unsnapped his chinstrap and s lo w ly raised his arm s above his head. It s som ething that I'v e started to p ay atten­ tion to that I w ish, at certain m om ents in m y sporting career, that I w o u ld h a ve taken a little bit m ore tim e to savor the m o m e n t," he said. iA- Y 6 beat the H u skies last hom e gam e at v\ ashington State and after that gam e e ve ryth in g w as so exciting and e v e ry b o d y 's run ning on the field and I do n 't rem em ber it that m uch and I kind of told m yself that n o w w h en things happen like that I m going to take some tim e to look a roun d and try to rem em ber it a little b it." Bledsoe thrives in the hurry-up offense the Patriots sw itched to in an attem pt to get back in the game. d u o 6 accom P 1,shed an a w tu l lo t," Patriots coach B u i 1 arcells said. "1 here's a lot of pressure to exe­ cute alm ost e ve ry play. ... I think he re a lly stood up and did a good job." The Patriots d id n 't w in at all the p reviou s four gam es as Bledsoe struggled. H e th rew 11 inter­ ceptions and three to u ch d o w n s as N ew ' En g la n d dropp ed into the A F C East cellar. O n S u n d a y , w h en he called most of the plays after halftim e, he th rew no interceptions in 70 passes. s ie a m m w H m e c o n h m e v a h/b ea v er H r o íLFRFT INFORMA?ION AND RESfiKVWNQM* É—Dirimir mi i N 0 8 0 3 Y D O E S S K i B R E A K S . R 16 T h e D a ily T e x a n TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1884 SPORTS S C O R E S Assnniaterl P r t >cc Associated Press Fisher to take over head coaching duties «% HOUSTON — in less than a year, the H ouston O ilers have gone from a playoff team to the NFL's w orst record. O n M onday, the plunge cost Jack Pardee his job. He w as replaced by defensive coordinator Jeff Fisher, w ho inherits a 1-9 team heading for H ouston's first losing season since 1986. "I w ould never have thought we w ould have fallen so fast and so far," Fisher said. "It goes to show you how volatile the N ational Foot­ ball League is. It also show s you the head coach is obviously responsible for that. The w eight falls on his shoulders and now the w eight is on my shoulders." Pardee, 58, is the first NFL coach to be fired this season. He w as in the _______ i _ last year of a five-year contract. c The Oilers m ade the playoffs the past four seasons, but lost in the tirst round three times. It s part of the business," Pardee said. "W hen you start struggling, you try everything. We probably coached hard er this year, used more players." U nder Fisher, H ouston's defense has been a bright spot in an oth er­ w ise dism al season. The O ilers' defense ranks third in the AFC and eighth in the NFL. Jeff h ad d o n e a fan tastic job keeping o u r defense going," ow ner Bud A dam s said. "W e feel Jeff is a very capable young m an and has a great future in the N ational Football League. We felt we had the m an on board to be the head coach for the H ouston Oilers com e." for som e years to Fisher, 36, said he's looking for­ w ard to the challenge. "W e're starting over," he said. "W e are 0-0." A dam s said he and general m an ­ ager Flovd Reese decided to dism iss Pardee Sunday night after the O ilers lost to the Cincinnati Bengals, w ho also entered the gam e w ith only one win. 1 m sorry we d id n 't have better results in the first part of the year," Pardee said. W hen you lose your livelihood, it s pretty traum atic." Also d ism issed M onday w as assistant head coach Kevin Gilbride, w ho w as punched by form er defen­ sive coordinator Buddy Ryan dur- Please see Pardee, page 14 ASSOCIATED PRESS Jack Pardee, the NFL Coach of the Year last season, was fired as hoaH coach of the Oilers on Monday after the team ’s 1-9 start this year Horns run past Fort Hood 111-80 Mclver impressive in exhibition game U T M E N ' S B A S K E T B A L L i i i i n Teammates give support to Clark road Jack * 4f/5 ¡¿a»» ■* GENE M EN EZ Da ily Texan Staff ~ ------- - Stonie Clark m ay still be listed in fair condition, but Texas coach John Mackovic noticed som ething which may signal that things are returning back to norm al with the 343-pound nose guard. "H e w as com plaining that the food was not too his liking," said Mackovic, w ho tw u e visited C lark at Brackenridge H ospi­ tal Sunday. 'If th ere's one sign that a foot­ ball player is on the m end, it's that. H e is not satisfied w ith peas." visited ---- - Until he gets well enough to leave the hospital, Clark will have to be satisfied w ith the food and having friends and team m ates visit him regularly. Some play­ ers Clark, one of ^ Police release the m ost pop- description of hit-and- u la r p lay ers run suspect, page 6 on the team , in the hospital S unday night, im m ediately after hearing of his accident. ----------- O ther players planned to see him after practice M onday. He seem ed to be in pretty good sp ir­ its," linebacker N orm an W atkins, w ho saw Clark Sunday night said sen io r Everybody's pulling for him. I le w as in a little pain. He w as hooked u p to a lot of things." Clark suffered internal injuries in a hit- and-run accident early Sunday m orning. I he accident occurred w hen the car he w as driving w as hit on the d riv er's side by a 1991 M azda 626 which failed to stop at an intersection on the city's east side. Clark w as p in n ed in his car for 30 m in­ utes w hile em ergency crew s used the to rescue him. Jaw s of Life M ackovic said Clark may have suffered pancreas and liver dam age. X-rays taken on Clark proved to be negative. Based on the inform ation that I have received, I w ould say he's very luckv. H e's very fortunate," M ackovic said. Defensive end i hom as Baskin planned to V is it Clark M onday m orning b ut said som eone from the hospital told him the Please see Clark, page 14 break Pittsburgh 23, Buffalo 10 Ml NBA Utah 110, New York 97 COLLEGE BASKETBALL EXHIBITION Texas 111, Fort Hood 80 Baseball owners to drop salary cap proposal ■ NEW YORK — Baseball ow n­ ers will not ask for a salary' cap in their new collective bargain­ ing proposal, and instead will propose a tax on their revenues or payrolls. The shift, revealed M onday by Red Sox chief executive officer John H arrington, m arks m an­ agem ent's first change in strate­ gy since June 14, w hen negotia­ tors gave the union their salary cap proposal. f he new p roposal will be given to the union T hursday w hen baseball talks resum e in W ashington. Tt s not a salary cap in the Strictest term s," H arrington, now the lead negotiator for the owners, said from his hom e in M assachusetts. "A tax concept can look like a salary cap, any tax plan is m eant to p u t some controls on labor costs." "All payrolls w ould be taxed at a low percentage. All clubs w ould be affected above a cer­ tain level," H arrington said. The significance of the new proposal will d e p e n d on the level of the tax. A high percent- age presum ably w ould be reject­ ed by the union. A low er n u m ­ ber could to a d d itio n al negotiations. lead A shift from a salary cap has been the subject of m uch specu­ lation since three days of talks betw een players an d o w n ers ended Saturday. "I ve h eard ru m o rs to that effect," union law yer G ene O rza said. I w o u ld n 't get overly opti­ m istic about m ovem ent off the cap because there are tax pro­ gram s that are w orse than a salary cap and tax program s that are better." H a r d a w a y c h o s e n P l a y e r o f t h e W e e k ■ NEW YORK— Golden State guard Tim H ardaw ay, w ho led the Y\ arriors to a 5-0 record, was selected NBA player of the week M onday. H ardaw ay, w ho m issed the 1993-94 season w ith a knee injury, averaged 25 points, 8.6 assists and 4.2 rebounds in lead­ ing the W arriors to their best start since m oving to the West Coast 33 years ago. for O th er can d id ates the aw ard w ere Dallas' Jim Jackson and Jamal M ashburn, D etroit's G rant Hill, Golden State's Ricky Pierce and Latrell Sprew ell, H ouston's H akeem O lajuw on! O rla n d o s S h a q u ille O 'N eal, Sacram ento's M itch Richmond! San A ntonio s D avid Robinson, S eattle's S haw n K em p and W ashington's Rex C hapm an. U T ’s C la r k q u a lifie s f o r t o u r n a m e n t ■ UT junior C had Clark quali­ fied for the main draw of the G lendale C hallenger tennis tour­ n am ent w ith three big wins over the w eekend Clark entered the professional to u rn am en t, just o u tsid e of Phoenix, Ariz., as an am ateur and defeated a pair of high rank- ing professionals as well as one of the top am ateurs in the coun- try. — Compiled from staff and Associated Press reports C A L E N THURSDAY ■ WOMEN'S BASKETBALL: The Lady Longhorns play an exhibition game against the Russian Select National team at 7:30 p.m. at the Erwin Center. SATURDAY I MBITS BASKETBALL The R u n n in Horns play an exhibition game against Bra/il-Minas Tenis at 35 p.m. at the Erwin Center. Groups with sports calendar items should call 471-4591 or come by The Daily Texan at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue NATHAN S A N D ER S Daily Texan Staff - ~ ---------- A leaner fram e and greater aw areness of his m ercurial point guard helped Texas center Rich M clver score 18 points on 8-of- 10 shooting as the R unnin' H orns stam ­ peded past Fort Hood, 111-80, on M onday night at the Erwin Center. M clver, w ho also pulled d o w n 10 rebounds, provided the inside attack for Texas w hile guards Terrence Rencher (28 points) and Roderick A nderson (16 points, 10 assists) riddled the Tanker g uards alí evening. Aftc r Fort Hood took a 7-5 lead early, the H orns m oved to their three-guard lineup and used their patented pressing defense to sprint to a 37-11 run and a 43-18 lead w ith less than seven m inutes rem aining in the half. The Tankers never got closer than 18 points the rest of the game. "The main thing w e w anted to do was try to execute the full-court press, run the floor and be agressive defensively," Texas head coach Tom Penders said. "I thought we did a good job breaking the gam e open w ith our defense and not our offense." Running the show all evening w as the w izard-like Anderson. W'hile his quickness on defense gave Fort Hood fits, his seem ­ ing ability' to penetrate at will on offense and find the open m an provided his team ­ m ates w ith a n u m b er of lay-u p s and dunks, easy shots that w ere reflected in the team 's 58 percent shooting percentage. "Rod 's going to find you if yo u're open," Penders said. "I think I could get 14-16 points a gam e playing with Rod." All sides agree that a year of being to g eth er has h elp ed A n d e rso n 's tea m ­ m ates as passes that bounced off un p re­ pared hands last season are now being con­ verted into points. "Last year, I guess guys w eren 't used to me early on, said A nderson, w ho played a lot w ith team m ates this sum m er at Grego­ ry Gym to build familiarity. "They've just Associated Press ~ --------------- PIT ISBURGH — If Rod Woodson hadn't been voted to the NFL's all-time team, the league might be demanding a recount. V\oodson, single-handedly accounting for more scoring the last two weeks than Pitts­ burgh s offense, returned an interception for a touchdown and forced a fumble for anoth- ^ e Buffalo Bills ín !w d the Stee,ers 25-1U M onday night. Gary Anderson, again the only productive member of the Steelers' no-go offense, kicked three field goals to move into sixth place on the NFL's all-time list with 302 as Pittsburgh won for the second stra.ght week without an ottensive touchdown. Woodson stepped in front of intended receiver Bill Brooks for a 37-yard interception return touchdown — the third of his career - to put Pittsburgh up 10-0 in the final .minute of the first quarter. Later, with Buffalo down only a touch­ down after Jim Kelly's 19-yard scoring pass to Andre Reed, a blitzing Woodson dis­ lodged the ball from Kelly near the goal line and defensive end Gerald Williams fell on it for his first touchdown in nine NFL seasons Rookie defensive tackle Brentson Buckner added to the Bills' growing frustration, block­ ing a 32-yard field goal attempt by Steve the fourth quarter __ Christie hristie s first miss in 18 attem pts this sea­ later in son. r Anderson, w ho last week kicked a field goal in overtim e after W oodson forced a crit­ ical fumble in the Steelers' 12-9 victory over H ouston, is 7-for-7 the last tw o weeks, 17-for- 8 this season and 45-for-48 the last tw o sea­ sons. Please see Runnin', page 14 Texas junior forward Na.hion G||m ore slams home two points against Fort Hood. ANDREW ROMERO/Daily Texan Staff Woodson helps out struggling offense in Steelers’ 23-10 win Cowboys eager for rematch against 49ers in playoffs Associated Press ~ IRVING The Dallas Cow boys are look­ ing forw ard to another m eeting w ith the San Francisco 49ers in January. They d o n 't care w here it's played. "W e've got to play better next tim e that's tor sure," Dallas coach Barry Sw itzer said. We don t care if it's out there or in a cow pasture. We think we have the better team. W e have to prove it." The C ow boys w ere m ore defiant than dow n after their unpleasant w eekend excur­ sion to San Francisco. "1 guarantee you w e'll beat them in Janu­ a r y /' said safety James W ashington. "They w on tin* battle but w e'll w in the w ar like w e always do." The 49ers beat the Cow boys 21-14 Sunday, breaking a three-gam e losing streak to Dal­ las that included the last tw o NFC cham pi­ onship gam es. r I just w ish w e had given it our best shot," said Sw itzer, "W e d id n 't play like w e nor­ m ally do." It w as the first road loss for the C ow boys under Switzer. The 49ers controlled the D a l l a s running gam e by allow ing Emm itt Sm ith only 78 yards Troy A ikm an threw three intercep­ tions, tw o of them com ing w hen he tried to force the ball into tight coverage. "We II step up the next time we see them " safety Darren Woodson said. "That's when it m il be m oney time. The 49ers won and celebrated and I understand it being a big deal for them. We d id that w hen we beat U The thumb djkha’t bother me on the throws. It’s not a good feeling to lose a game like this. But we know the payoff comes in the play­ offs.” — T ry M ona, Camtm qaartari a them tw o years ago. Next tim e it will be dif­ ferent." G uard N ate N ew ton said the 49ers earned the nght for a little trash talk. They got us tins tim e But this is not o u r Super Ekrwl. This was just another gam e on our schedule," A ikm an refused to blam e a sore thumb on his passing problem s. "The thumb d id n 't bother me on the throw s, he said 'It's not a good feeling to lose a gam e like this. But we know the pay­ off comes in the playoffs." D efensive end Charles Haley said d ie 49ers hoodw inked the Cowboys. They ran every trick play thev had " in y S r n g 't y do/" * Hn* Haley w as victimized by bootleg run» by P****® Cowboy», page is a s s o c i a t e d p r e s s Pittsburgh running back Byron “Bam” Morris is tackled by Buffalo's Marvcus Patton In the first quarter. While the Steelers (7-3) again proved it's possible to win in the NFL without much offense — they've won three of their last four despite scoring only two offensive touch­ dow ns - the Bills (5-5) are in desperate straits well before the Super Bowl With Kelly under constant pressure from a Steel Curtain-like Pittsburgh pass rush that leads the NFL in sacks, the Bills are 500 in N ovem ber for the first tim e since finishing 7- Please see Steelers, page 15 neurosis slug the wannabes kathy meearty robert earl keen diamanda galas/j.p. jones devils food rake DoB^Mmoo^ specialty shows Inside jokes kvrx sportsbeat advertisements lots o f bad words no r.ejn. no zeppelin no pearl jam Vour Mama: The Sequel 7 creative ways to get thrown out of UT Official Bidness KVRX Call Letter Captain’s Log Fa111994KVRX Management S ta ff Travis Thompson ■ FM1994 Station Manager Carol Teixeira T g c l i n i c a l D i r p r t n r Mack Green Operations M a n a g e r- Debbie Cerda Programming Manager Dean T e ffo r Asst. Business Managpr Deanna Hand Non-Mus i n Prograirnninrr Llaa Endicott Manager Charlie C arpenter Music Directors Andrew Magilow PR Director Richard W hym ark Community Program Dirprt-nr Danielle Bolke Sports Director Hpderwritina Pirprfny C rystal Stephens Eimdraising Director M isty M orris so, w h o ’s re s p o n s ib le f o r th is c ra p , an y w a y? e d it o r C h ris G ra y a s s o c ia te e d ito r s D e an n a Hand K im N e v iu s g ra p h ic s g u ru Ryan Ju n eII illu s tra tio n s T y le r H a rw o o d w rite rs Carol Teixeira Andrew Magilow Dean T e f fe r Rodney Gibbs DJ Bryson Ricardo G uerrero M ario Cobb J e ffT a n d y LisaE n d icott thankyou L o riT a ffe t Richard W hymark 1 91.7 KVRX f e | < *** bV * * * * * at rinkan we're m orv jn9 5 w M f t l *^ th o s e o fl tor moybe that at night to É ■S££2iS i2?SK3KSSi?^"•*• f V * Mn,ve 05 possible t° the extremely delicate J^persensltiv© audience, We're not here to ° make everyone happy, kk». After I Here's where you can reach usi = . - care; ^ Hard Copy: 91.7 KVRX / . * Austin. TX 78706 ' Oral Fixations. Une; 471-6106 Fax the: 471*8177 Une; 495-KVRX by Carol Teixeira, KVRX Station Manager pairing. You may not like some Hello Austin! We are 91.7 KVRX, student radio SOn8S’ but you wiM ^ amazed by others' 11 c°uld be the musical a^vre"tur* >">u «'< *> «" 8 for. for the University of Texas, and we will be appearing on your FM dial TONIGHT, November 15 7:00 PM 91.7 FM With the effort and dedication of over 1000 students over eight long years, we have finally arrived. —v ««*««* r„ T — -----— »» V 11UTV We do all ofthis and we do it well. While still a cable station, we have been nominated for the Station of the Year by the National Association of College broadcasters for the past 2 years. Only five stations in the country are nominated each year. Here are a few reasons KVRX is ditferent from standard Austin radio: You may listen in and notice that 91.7 is awfully quiet during the day. What’s in it for me?” you might ask. We w ill be broadcasting from 7 pm - 9 am Monday-Friday and 10 pm - 9 pm Saturday-Sunday. Local Music: Austin is the “Live KOOP, a community radio station, is licensed to broadcast FM on 91.7 Music Capitol of the World.” Only during the other times. They are not in Austin can you find a hundred and prepared to broadcast now; they plan one bands playing on a Tuesday night all for $5 or less. There is to begin in December. If you have blues (Antone’s), jazz (Elephant Austin Cablevision or CableMax, you can get KVRX 24 hours a day room), country (Broken Spoke), folk by connecting your cable to your (C hicago H ouse), altern ativ e stereo through a splitter box. Check (Emo’s) and more. The local talents out page (page where Misty *s splitter that have made Austin famous — inf ° is) for more information. where do you find them on the 91.7 is excited to bring our version radio? 91.7, that’s where. of alternative to Austin. Listen in, check it out, see what you think. You can call 495-K V R X to make requests and 471 -5106 to reach the office. The office is great for information about volunteering and/ or underwriting with the station. The number also works for suggestions, complaints, compliments or ideas. Adventure: Do you ever find radio predictable? Do you ever get tired of hearing the same one song for the hundredth time? Do you ever imagine that the songs are starting to all sound alike? Try KVRX. We play all types of music including blues, country, rock, reggae, punk, metal and jazz. You will hear the blistering country of Junior Brown followed by the noise jazz of John Zorn, or another equally incongrous —----------- .--------------------------------- See you at 7:00... ** ve’ ^ T opless 18 fo r 10/31 -11/7 1. Glorium (TX) 2. Jon Spencer Blues Explosion 3. Kathy McCarty (TX) 4. Scarface (TX) 5. Skatalites (TX) 6. V/A: A Week or Two in . . . 7. Unsane 8. Melvins 9. Space Streakings 0. V/A: 23 Bands Who . . . 1. Notorious B.I.G. 2. Texas instruments (TX) 3. Don Walser (TX) 4. Dog Faced Hermans 5 Brutal Truth 6. Ween 7. Slayer 8. Uakti The Topless 18 is not a playlist. It's a list o f the top 18 album s from the new bin S ince w e are a tree-form station, w e let our DJs play whatever they want as long as you can't ear it anyw ere else. They like to play what you want, too C all 'em at 495-K V R X Austin bands - - drop o ff your dem os at the studios behind the MicroCenter, or mail em to us at P.O. Box D, Austin, TX, 78705. Carol T, by Andrew Magilow couldn t get o ff work. So how was it? Damian: It was CMJ. C: You hang around, you play for free. T: CM J is the following. We get to town, to New York at 6pm, we go to the club, we load in, at 10pm we play, continued on page 11 ------------------ - K V R X : Y o u ’re g o in g to be lik e Pavement! U h ...so m e th in g T: that...uh...EXACTLY! K V R X : So y ’all played a C M J showcase that I got to miss because I like S: These lengthy auditions, and Dave made the cut. band. Perhaps one o f the m ore intense bands you w ill h e a r th e s e d a y s , S lu g co m b in es tw o h e a v ily o v e rd riv e n basses with drum s that use standard as w ell as e x p e rim e n ta l p ie c e s . Webbed together with droning guitars and sporadic, distorted vocals, you experience the product o f Slug. Genius to some, incom prehensible, irritating n o ise to o th e r s . T h is in te rv ie w coincides with their tour supporting their first full length release on PCP records, entitled The Out Sound. Slug interview, 10/01/94 at E m o’s Interviewed by Andrew M agilow Damian. Bass 1 Dave: Bass 2 Tomas: D rum s Steve: Singer Colin: G uitar/ Distinguished Scientist KVRX. So y all are like a supergroup? C: Yah, totally, we are super. T: We had all o f these people lined up to fill in for M ichael B. Jour other bass player] who couldn’t. Dave: And they were so desperate I didn’t even have to audition. Dam ian said hey what are you doing between the start of our tour and the end o f our tour? T: We determ ined that D ave was the most uh, m entally stable o f the bass players we met. I have a fifteen point exam I issue to every bass player who auditions. And it goes over, “Did you ever have any problem s w ith y o u r m o th er as a c h ild ? ’ “ W h a t’s y o u r current work status?” “ C: Then how did Michael B slip through that? T: Well, yah...that’s true. T h at’s why w e’re asking those questions now. So w e d o n ’t m ak e th o s e m is ta k e s a n y m o re [Laughter]. C: Todd did as much as he could, I m issed the first four or five shows. KVRX: W hat were you doing? C: I live in D etroit so I m et up w ith th em in Chicago. to T: We a re g o in g b e c o m e a b i-c o a s ta l T E C H N O • A M B I E N • I N D U S T R I A L • 7 > • Going FM Party KVRX is FINALLY going FM! And to celebrate, w e're throw ing one heckuva little shindig scheduled to appear* W an nabes E uripides P a n ts M o ta rd s F riday, N ov. 18 The Green Room 306 E. 5th Street doors open at 9:30 pm $3 admission call 471-5106 for more info. AtCCAy T ■ V i JP .* Pfflh 4 i „ ^ 9 7 7 4 7 6 - 8 7 4 2 t - s h i r t s • u s e d l p KVRX Call Letter Fall 1994 All those darn... SPECIALTY 4 SHOWS!!! (Editor’s Note: since there are (]uite a bit of specialty shows on K V R X , we thou ght it w ould be exp ed ien t, you know, since we're going FM and all that, if you knew what you were listening to. Enjoy.) In Vitro DJ Bryson, along with alien guests, explores broader realms of energy through the expansion of dance. Each Saturday nite from 11-1 experience the latest in trance, deep house, funk, progressive, and gard beat techno. Understand your own reality. Texas Caviar Take a bite of Texas Caviar — a new tradition in Texas values, from the roots of Texas punk, rap, and blues to the snarl and groan of its most current artists. A lso, Texas C aviar is sometimes served with a side of live interviews with Texas personalities as well as pre-recorded telephone pranks on some of the biggest names in fundamental fanaticism. It’s a two hour ride that’ll make you laugh, make you cry and fill your heart clean up with Texas pride. Metalerema Our show is hard, loud, scary, and often offensive (and sometimes the music is too). We’re politically incorrect, so if you can’t handle it, then stick something else up your ass — METALENEMA is not for you. But if A ustin radio is m aking you constipated, bend over and spread them cheeks, and loosen your sphincter to take a full injection of METAL UP YOUR ASS!!! METALENEMA, Sundays, 1-3 a.m. High colonic music for A ustin’s congested colon!!! Happy shitting, The Pharmacist The Undertaker [a reminder to read the disclaimer on page 2 — ed.] Jazz ‘Round Midnight These days it seems more and more people are discovering jazz. For many, one of the greatest things about KVRX hitting the FM airwaves will be the increased exposure of Austin residents to this often underappreciated art form. Besides the jazz that will be played by KVRX DJs during our free­ form program time, jazz afficionados can look forward each Sunday night from 11 p.m.- 1 a.m. to Jazz ‘Round Midnight—the two jazziest hours of e v ery o n e’s week. Jazz ‘Round Midnight highlights new releases on the jazz scene; and none of this “smooth jazz” business a la Kenny G. Real jazz artists; jazz releases that are absolutely noi for the faint of heart. Maximum swing—that’s what Jazz ‘Round Midnight is all about. Travis Thompson, Your Host Fiesta Pan-Americana Show !Hola, am igo! You are hereby cordially invited to a party this Wed. from 7-9 a.m. at your place. Just remember to set your clock-radio to 91.7, turn it up a bit, and then hit the snooze instead of the off button. It’s that easy! Then just roll ober and let the sounds do their thing. Fiesta Pan- Americana kick starts your morning with hot, sexy dance tunes and evocative traditional music alike. It’s old. It’s new. It’s pop. It’s not. Latin other... A m erican, B razilian, guaranteed to get you dancin’ out of bed (unless there’s someone else there w ith you: then I c a n ’t be held responsible...). So, stop by and check it out! There’ll probably be some free stuff you can win. Who knows, you might even learn a little Español! Your amigo, Ricardo G. Wake Up In Texas We play only Texas artists focusing especially on Austin artists. Our playlist’s runs from Blues, Rockabilly, Folk, R&B, Reggae, Country, etc... We tend to stay away from anything hardcore, but everything is fair game as long as it’s from Texas! Carol and Jenn Saturdays 4:30-5:30 p.m. II you thought Showtunes were just a bunch of weirdos singing about cats, y o u ’re for one BIG FAT Join D ELICIO US SU RPRISE. Lorraine and Nancy as they trip the musical fantastic — it’s the corniest, happiest hour on radio. in Liquid A.M. goint S o m eth in g ’s to happen...S om ething w onderful.” Liquid A.M. is two full hours of the best of the best in ambient, post­ am bient and electronic listening music. It s all very clear to me now, the whole thing. It’s wonderful.” Music of India Experience a diverse range of Indian music hits ranging from classical, contemporary and the popular film songs of today and yesterday. This show adds a unique Asian dimension to enhance m ulti- in attem pt culturalism and diversity at UT as well as Austin. Pink Noise Gay and Lesbian music M onday nights at 11 P.M. James and Jen provide a com m unity calendar, entertainm ent news, and answ er probing questions like “Does the ‘One In Ten’ statistic include drunk frat boys? Austin has a very large and active gay and lesbian community. Although most clubs play a blend of house and hi-NRG , Pink N oise includes Folk, Country and Rock by gay/lesbian artists as well as gay- friendly artists. The atmosphere is not political activism , but more like keeping up with what’s really going on with pride as individuals. Showtoonz The Big Red Show The Big Red Show has no artificial ingredients, colors, or preservatives. It is all naturally artificial (and has a nice juicy taste). It is a “half-specialty show,” the hottest new trend on Wqll It is run by professional Streeet. business people, and is care fully engineered to satisfy society ’s taste. So what is the specialty in the show? Well, you might hear music that you posssibly cannot hear anywhere in Texas—like alternative music from Eastern, Central, Western, Southern, and Northern Europe. And what is half about the specialty? Well we don’t like to limit ourselves, so if something is really good, we play it regardless of place of origin, gender, color, disability, race. In other words, this lots of good stuff from hemisphere, too. For the goodies, tune in on SUNDAY?? 3r4:30 pm Lazio and Riz Voices of Relevance 1) is on every Thursday evening at 7 p.m. with LIVE interviews featuring people like you, speaking for themselves. 2) is also on every Saturday morning at 8 a.m. with an hour’s worth of verbal and musical mayhem. 3) always features relevant voices that you don’t hear anywhere else on the radio. 4) is produced by C ollective Relevance, a non-profit alternative media group. KVRX Call Letter Fall 1994 5 th is If you haven’t seen a recent c o Py o f T h o r a z i n e , th e n y o u ’re missing out on one o f the best music magazines around. With about a half dozen staff writers and a host o f other c o n t r i b u t o r s , n a ti o n a ll y - d i s t r i b u t e d ( c i r c u l a t i o n 1 0 ,0 0 0 ) magazine treats it’s readers every few months to a diverse collection o f band interviews and music articles. The band interviews, which comprise a strong majority o f the material, really stand out with their unique flair. No “So what are your musical influences” questions here. Fortunately for us here in Austin, this well-written and fun- to-look-at publication is headquartered locally within shotgun range o f the Fiesta on 1-35. I made the climb up Mt. O lym pus recently to chat with Damon (pictured) and Trey, two o f the “Big Wigs" in the operation. The magazine was started in H o u s to n b a c k in 1987 by G le n Ancheta in the form of, like so many other fledging music ‘zines, a black- a n d - w h it e p a m p h l e t p r in t e d by K in k o s . T h e c u r r e n t e d it o r and visionary extraordinair, Brent, took over the helm about two yeas ago. publishing the tirst formally numbered issue “#1" at about that time. Profits from each issue were re invested back into the magazine, leading to features like lull-color covers and a 7” flexi- disk in the most recent issue #5. After the publication o f issue #5 four months ago, the staff picked up and moved to Austin to take advantage o f the large pool of creative talent that anyone who lives in Austin already knows about. They site the dense concentration o f this talent as the reason why the Austin music scene is on par in energy and artistic quality with any o f the other larger and more well-known music What Thorazine wants to do is to help give Austin (and in general T e x a s ) m u s ic the r e c o g n i ti o n it deserves. Most people outside o f the state currently think o f people like “Stevie Ray Wonder” as the best the state to offer; but this is far, far from the truth. The editors hope that by covering national artists as well as m any local artists and by having a large national distribution, that they will be able to attract more national attention to Texas music. They d on’t, however, want to be an instrument in making Austin into another extension of L.A. If that means promoting the image o f the Texas o f “ Republicans, tumbleweed, and cowboy hats,” then so be it. Thorazine has big plans for expansion. They're getting together a basement studio and a record label to go with it. O f special interest to us at KVRX is their new half-hour radio show on Thursday nights from 10:30 - 11 pm. The show features lots o f local music, live band interviews, pre­ r e c o r d e d i n te r v ie w s c o n ta i n in g material not found in the magazine, and live performances from local and national musicians. The program will have an expanded time slot in the next couple of months. There’s also a show on the Austin Music Channel (cable 15) and a “complete line o f haircare products" in the works. The next issue, #6, should be out before the end o f N ovem ber, featuring full-color interviews with Don Walser, Daddy Longhead, and a g r o u p d i s c u s s i o n w ith M a n -o r- Astroman, Helios Creed, and James Brown (described as the “sweatiest man in show business” ). Issue #7, slated to come out in the early Spring before SXSW , will be an “ A ustin roundup." The current list o f local bands to be covered numbers around one hundred. In the next year they plan to reach a circulation of 50,000 issues published every two-months. If they can m a in ta in t h e i r t o - d a te h ig h editorial s ta n d a rd s and re le n tle ss ambition, Thorazine promises to be a strong voice for Austin (and Texas) music. A couple messages from that mouth: Daddy Longhead is the “hot pick" o f the month, and surf music is the wave o f the future. sounds like Kathy McCarty Dead Dog's Eyeball Bar/None Records Okay, so when I first heard Kathy was d o in g th is D aniel J o h n sto n tr ib u te album 1 was disappointed, not because don t love Johnston’s stuff but because I believe Glass Eye was the most fucking incredible ban d to ever twist my Diddlv little life. I thought, “Kathy, w hat are you doing? Get on with your own stuff. to u s fu li D on t s to p g iv in g throttle. Stupid, stupid me. Although she s nothing bu t reverent to Johnston’s songs, she’s rarely literal. A stounding stuff here, thanks largely to Kathy and B rian , fo rm e r G lass Eye m a te a n d p roducer of this album , bu t also due to o th er heavyweights, like Lyle Lovett’s form er cello player John Hagan. Eyeball, like Glass Eye’s recordings, is one of those rare things th a t 1 can listen to rep eated ly w ith o u t growing tire d or it feeling I can predict the next bit. Refreshing time after time. Sounds like ice tea bu t it’s just the am azing Kathy McCarty. Goddess of rock. Purveyor of super style. Singer of good song. — R odney Gibbs Robert Earl Keen Gringo H oneym oon Sugar Hill Records M ost o f y o u know th e T ex an s i n g e r / songw riter legends: you’ve got your Townes Van Zandt, Guy Clark, Butch Hancock, Lyle Lovett, etc. Bringing up the rear is Robert Earl í:OVe“ ’s form er room m ate at Texas A&M. Keen s got th e sam e sh a rp wit and catchy tunes as the others, yet he h asn ’t hit like some of them have. This isn’t to say h e ’s an unknown; rather, it’s just that he h asn ’t grabbed th at superstardom thing, for lack of a b etter term . Part of the problem could be the inconsistency of his recordings: some are stellar (W est Textures, A Bigger Piece o f Sky) w hile som e are ju st p re tty good (Gringo KV/RX Call Letter FalM994 6 e c o r d reviews by the lovable K V R X Honeymoon). If Bigger Piece o f S ky \\as the gun album — most of the a b o u t b lo w in g so n g s w ere someone away or consciously not blowing som eone away — then H o n eym o o n is th e se n tim e n tal a lb u m . N ot in a s a c c h a rin e , unlistenable kind of way, for some of th e songs (M erry C hristm as from the Family, Lonely Feeling) re ta in th e clev er cynicism and terse storytelling that m ade many of his earlier releases so salient Moreover, Keen could take a few lessons from his old buddy Lovett on how to construct an album ’s sequence so th at each song leads to the next and takes the listener w ith it (L o v ett’s Big Band an d P o n tia c th is a lb u m s w onderfully). By no m eans is this a poor album; it’s just not nearly as good as it could be. — R odnev Gibbs d o Brave Combo The H okey Pokey EP Dentone Records d e c id e d Brave Combo tried to sell Rounder on th is o n e , b u t a f te r m u c h hemming and hawing by the label BC it to th em selv es. As BC m akes v ery clear, this is not a collection of new releases; rath er, it’s a short EP of th e ir fa v o rite d a n c e so n g s. If re le a s e KVRX Call Letter Fall 1994 7 is th e j u s t g r e a t a n d concept is even better. It’s fucking with me, and I love it. Zeppelin man weds the most dangerous d o n ’t-fuck- w ith -m e w o m an a r o u n d to d a y . B lissful r a g e . — Rodney Gibbs Various artists From A to Z Starkland Records — ■ - — ------------------- -------- ------------ I y o u ’ve e v e r se e n BC a n d su b se q u e n tly d an c ed y o u r little ass off, y o u ’ll recognize most of these cuts. They’re all great ass-shakers, perfect for b a k in g , o r showering. - Rodney Gibbs h o m e w o r k Diamanda Galas & John Paul Jones The Sporting Life Mute Records it w ith r ig h t: You r e a d i t ’s Led D ia m a n d a Zeppelin’s own bottom man, J o h n P aul J o n e s . A fte r su c c e s s w ith m o d e r a t e alternative rock staples REM and the Buttholes, Jones — p e rh a p s aching for m ore intense partners — courted Galas. It’s an odd mix. From Jo n e s’ side, you get p re tty much what you expect: heavy but catchy bass lines (on an le ss), 8 - s tr in g b a s s , n o ro c k in g a n d d r u m s Hammond cheeze organ (as played by Galas). Galas, on the other hand, delivers a few more surprises: most of the cuts in c lu d e h e r s ta n d a r d s h r ie k s , a n d convulsions, but a few show Galas earnestly crooning like a ’50s so u l s in g e r. I t ’s a w elc o m e c o n t r a s t to h e r sta n d a rd fare an d one she u nd ou btedly can deliver — r a n g e f o u r - o c ta v e doesn t hurt. The execution g r u n t s th e t h a n A truly stellar collection of e x p e rim e n ta l co m p o sers ranging from the early ’60s p r e - s y n th e s iz e r d a y s to m odern samplers. The pre- s y n t h s t u f f o f T o d d Dockstader im presses me th e f a r m o r e contemporary stuff: all that w ork, so m u c h splicing, intricate timing, incredible syncopation an d all of it executed with a razor and immense patience. Not to slight th e la te r stuff, for everything here burns like concentrated chlorine in an infant’s swollen eyes. And it’s totally indie stuff run o ut of some g u y ’s living room in Colorado. Buy a copy for yourself, tape it a n d d riv e a r o u n d tow n blaring it until you go deaf, kids melt into sludge, old men shrivel and cops touch t h e i r t i d d l ie s w ith o u t shame. This music can do it to you, he said as he plucked the last hair from his ripe anus. — Rodney Gibbs Halo Benders God Don't Make No Junk K Record Okay, y o u ’ve got th e K staples — m ostly Calvin and Steve Fisk — plugging a w a y t h a t in a b a n d ad h eres to th a t ado rable Here Is how to get KVRX without dealing with Cable Companies. Th**e « « the part number* at Radio Shack. Thi* I* what you do with thorn. Thankt, Tr t m r , for knowing tho part off of tho top of your hoad. i f f jW w H W h k r t o M R ItTCaUsFII fcfadtto«UWl « « U w ftu m lM Ce**al Spatter • iM u iH • w-nee in Beat H appening sim plicity w h ile m ix in g tr a c e am ounts of something along the lines of Sebadoh. Now m a y b e I’m p ig e o n h o lin g Calvin, b u t th is rocks my s u d s y sock s off, la r g e ly because it epitom izes th a t raw, silly, p u n ch y K sound dealt to us by the likes of Some Velvet Sidewalk an d J iger Trap and Calvin’s other chums. It all makes me want to move to Olympia just for the foolish hope that songs like this would fill the air and welcome me to town as I eat fruit an d buy stran g e and beautiful candies. I find this whole album so much better than most new rock releases. T h e r e ’s h a rd ly a to u c h of distortion; the lyrics are fun a n d silly; th e p la y in g is com pletely average — i t ’s just got it all. Songs that fill my days and lull me to sleep at night. Bliss hits me in the eye. — Rodney A. Gibbs Godwithinthephoenix double 12" EP Hardkiss Records The Hardkiss b ro th ers just can ’t be anything less than ingenious, and this double 12" p ro v e s it o n ce again. With mixes from none other t h a n r a b b it- in - th e - m o o n , drama boy and others, this EP is already starting to look like a collector’s item. The track that brought more attention to the dancefloor, God Within — The Phoenix, starts with a high-energy build that dives into a dark trance realm only to jerk your body back into y o u r own re a lity of funk, whistles and even a monkey (?!?). All the tracks on this d o u b le 12" are w o rth y of attention. Just use your own e n e r g y to c h o o s e . — D J Bryson Jerry Gonzalez and the Fort Apache Band Crossroads Milestone Records It could only come from New York City. Continuing in their tr a d e m a r k L atin izatio n of jazz tunes, Crossroads proves once again that only a bunch of New Yorkers can totally kick b o th Afro-Cuban and s tr a ig h t-a h e a d jazz at the same time. “To have a gospel t u n e a n d a n h o m a g e to Elegua on the same album makes perfect sense,” quips d rum m er Steve Berrios in the l i n e r n o te s . — Ricardo Guerrero VRX Call Letter Fall 1994 8 at last Jacinto. Be there at 6:45 and sit back, drink beer, and listen to the radio as we go FM. Last but not least, KVRX is having another Going FM Benefit Fri. November 18 at the Green Room; 306 East 5th is: S in co la, St. D oors open at 9:30. Admission: $3. The tentative li ne-up the Wannabes, Euripudes Pants, and the Motards. For more information call the station at 471-5106. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! After eight years o f waiting, runaround and red tape, 91.7 K V R X w i l l go FM Tuesday night a t 7 p.m. ¿4s f o r w h a t happens next, w ell, that's a n y b o d y ’s guess...story by K im N evillS KVRX is finally going on the air, and more than just the station's workers have reason to be excited. The station, which existed as KTSB until last year, w ill begin FM transmissions Tuesday, Nov. 15 at 7 p.m. The 3,000-watt station will broadcast from 7 p.m . to 9 a.m . M onday through Friday and 10 p.m. to 9 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. “I t’s very exciting,” Carol T eix eira, K V RX statio n m an ag er said. ‘‘It is the cu lm in a tio n o f so m any people’s work.” KVRX is a non-commercial radio station that offers an alternative to the otherwise com m ercial, top-forty, A ustin, stations. radio Teixeira, comments, “I think that some people are bored with commercial radio, they think it’s predictable and bland”. KVRX, on the other hand, definately cannot be considered predictable nor bland. It’s venue offers a w ide range o f sp ecialty show s, anywhere from Showtoonz to Metalenema, sports, and and new s, com m unity programming such as Theater in the Sound, Coffee House, Art Radio, and if that’s not enough there’s our free form shows that mix a number of different genres, in which case anything goes. D ean T effer, K VRX program manager, chooses D J’s. He purposely chooses people with different musical tastes to create a wide variety o f diverse musical genres. (Check the program schedule for more information). He says a stu d e n t-ru n rad io station “keeps programming current”. He is right too. All the D J’s are students and most, if not all, are part o f the local m usic scene. And KVRX plays local music a good deal of the time. Carol confirm s that KVRX is the place where local musicians are heard on the radio, not just at certain times”. Britt Daniel, KVRX DJ and head of the station s “Going FM” committee, asserts that no other station in town puts an emphasis on the kind of music that ‘the kids’ in Austin listen to. Other stations do make efforts, but I find that it is rare that those efforts are towards the local music scene, music you hear at Emo’s and the Electric Lounge. That’s why I call it ‘the kids’ music”, and further postulates that the grand exposure of local bands had a lot to do with Seattle bursting out”. H ow ever, K V R X ’s in ten tio n is not to crea te a n o th er S eattle. K V R X , according to Teixeira, [will co n tin u e to] “provide the public with exciting venues with a lot of different music and artists.” KVRX is always playing new and local music. Plus, for the p ast tw o years has received awards for being one of the best five college radio stations in the nation. So keep your dial tuned to 91.7 F M __ KVRX. O th er Should Know In fo rm a tio n You KVRX is not on 24 hours. We only broadcast over the airw aves during the times listed above. So for KVRX 24 hours a day, get a cable splitter hooked up. Hook it up. If you hear dead air, that’s not KVRX. Get a cable splitter. If this seems like too much trouble and you have Austin Cable Vision, then turn the TV to channel 16. KVRX is on when the bulletin boards are. KVRX Press Conference is today! Tuesday, Nov. 15 at S holtz Garten, 1607 San KVRX Call Letter Fall 1994 by Mario Cobb Faith Flanagan leans forward over the table, dark hair and d ark c lo th e s and tired, post-day-job eyes, and stra in s her v o ice o v e r the s o u n d s y s te m . H e r new business partner, Mike Henry, is the manager of the Electric Lounge, and, consequently, bartender on some Thursday nig h ts, be fo re the rush o f people c o m e s to see M iss Universe or Milktrout or the Flying Saucers. F a ith 's d ay jo b is with a language tra n sla to r service; at night their business takes her here, beside M ike’s bar, in the t h r e e - q u a r te r s darkness. Alter working her way through school, Faith managed a club called House ol Borax in Boston for two years, then came here to work at S o u th By S o u t h w e s t , Austin’s annual 5,(XX)-person m usic industry conference. S he e n d e d up s ta y in g . Meanwhile, in college Mike did graphic design and layout in lo r a Oklahoma, then moved into booking and management. He took some time off in Austin and did “a bunch o f really strange little shitty jobs...all the Austin slacker-type jo b s.” Now their business, Popgun E n t e r t a i n m e n t , c o m b i n e s Faith and M ike’s managing, booking and promoting skills into a “one-stop-shopping for bands.” ta le n t a g e n c y Q; Popgun does m anaging, booking, promoting. W here d o you fit into the fam e d “Austin music scene” ? Faith: Mike and I do agree that this town is really ready for something huge. I don’t think, “the next Seattle,” but Austin could be “the next big scene.” I t ’s b e e n on the c u s p o f becoming that for a long time. I can see Popgun being like a SubPop kind of thing. Mike: Only, Subpop was built on a different kind o f show__ a lot m ore hair and flying around the stage. Q: Would you eventually like to a d d a r e c o r d label to Popgun? Mike: I wouldn't rule out any possibilities. SubPop has been a huge inspiration for me; it was started by two guys in an apartment; it's very much the same kind o f thing that w e’re doing. I think what you need most o f all— anywhere, but particularly in a tough market like Austin— is the talent. It’s all about listening to music. I can be the best p r o m o t e r w alking the earth, but if I d o n ’t have a good band to back me up, I’m wasting my time. You’ve got to build your business on absolutely stellar, rare, individual, talent. Q: Do you a g ree with the theory that Austin artists in particular, despite their talent tor live shows, lose something in the recording? Mike: For Austin bands there is a big e m p h a s is on live music, but inevitably, unless y o u h a v e a r e a lly g o o d producer— or someone w ho’s g u id in g the p roducer— that sound w o n ’t translate. The other thing a band needs is a lot o f staying power. It’s fun and glamorous and neat and sto ry by M ario C ob b pop music doesn’t new for the first six months, and then you hit a stretch of Oh, do I really w ant to do t h i s ? I m n o t m a k in g a n y m oney... and that's where you lose m ost people. C o m in g home from your day job and having to do more frigging w ork... Q: What do you see as lacking in the Austin “scene”? Faith: There seems to be a fe e lin g , on o c c a s io n , that Austin c a n ’t be a first-class m usic city because t h e r e ’s s o m e t h in g m is s in g . W h a t some people in the industry say— that Austin is some sort o f slacker place— is wrong. People I’ve met here work as hard. So, it’s here. This is a c ity ; f i r s t - c l a s s m u sic everyone should start living it. Mike: Yeah, there’s no doubt that A ustin has m ore than enough great bands, too many, actually, but there is a reason that S la c k e r was filmed in Austin. The dynamic o f this tow n is: E v e ry b o d y ’s very nice to each other, and I really like your band, and you really like mine, and we hang out and e v e ry th in g ’s cool. But when it c o m e s to actually struggling and promoting, and thinking, it really is: “Oh, I’ve got band practice in about four hours or so— I ’d better go on over.” People d o n ’t make that ju m p , see. T his tow n needs energy. W hat w e ’re doing (w ith Popgun) is an e x a m p le . So are S u n d a y nights at Hole in the Wall, w h ic h h a v e fre e s h o w s showcasing local alternative talent. That's the strength of an idea plus energy. People in this town are ready to jum p on— someone needs to push. Q: So what did inspire Popgun Entertainment? Mike: Pop music has a bad name. People hear the word “pop” and they think, “Top 40 radio shit.” Pop songwriting is sim p ly a n y th in g that is m e lo d ic , h o o k - y , c a tc h y , i n t e r e s t in g , a n d s h o r t — 3 m inutes or so. “ Pop music d o e s n ’t s u c k .” T h a t 's our lo g o , o f s o rts , ta g lin e , catchphrase. Because it's true. Our clients aren’t just bands that we like; all the bands we work with have that common sensibility. Q: W hat’s Popgun’s theory of booking bands? Mike: I see booking as an art form all its own. We think you can be creative in the way you put together a show. Working to create the “ v ib e ” o f an e vent is as im portant, and a lm o s t as e n jo y a b l e , as playing the show. It’s a puzzle or a game for me. But it’s a v o l a t il e b u s in e s s . Y o u ’re dealing with very creative people who are often not very responsible people. Booking is thinking on your feet; it’s having to deal with people effectively, yet nicely. Faith: Bottom line, booking is being an agent. It’s getting your bands into the clubs you want them to be in, the times you want them to be there, with the bands that you want Neurosis byJeffT aody Hailing from Oakland, California, Alternative Tentacles band e ~ »-■ E” m>* past, present, and future. mo son the night o f their first show and explain NEUROSIS ’ C ^ t n u J ¿ L Z e aCtS to live P™ 'the hyper-violent West C o a s t , p u n V h a r d c o r e scene.Fans witness them progress from a volatile V ***"****> contemplative, yet no less aggressive JT: The first thing I ’d like to ask is ; " comprised o f seven members, one o f them a visual effects how your trip down here went. I technician. Many people embraced this change, which was First heard you had some van problems, but apparently that’s been taken Jeatured on their album, Souls at Zero and now even more radicallv care of. Scott: Yeah, we had a gas leak in Arizona. It was another close near­ death experience for us, but it was fine. It s about a thirty-five hour drive from Oakland to Austin. JT: Thirty-five hours? Is that a straight drive? Steve: After thirty you lose count. We hauled ass, though. JT: (to Scott) Speaking o f near death experiences, how’s your arm? Scott: If s Fine...well, it’s fucked, but I can use it again. JT: You broke it on some railroad tracks? I skateboard for Scott: Yeah, transportation, and I was going across some tracks, and the wheel got stuck and I went flying. It was pretty cool. JT: Aside from bands like Buzzoven, are there any bands out there that you really like? I know y o u ’re influenced by Black Sabbath, but are there any current bands you’re into? Steve: Sleep. Scott: Yeah, they're good friends ofours. There’s a few others, though, like Crash Worship. Steve: They’re the most intense live act I’ve ever seen. Scott: There’s definitely a musical renaissance going on in the states right now. Lots of bands are going off on their own thing and expanding musical horizons. JT: Your show with EyeHateGod and Buzzoven got covered in Metal M aniacs magazine. I know you don’t consider yourselves a metal band, so how do you feel about that? Scott: It was all right. I’d rather read that than Maximum Rock ‘n’ Roll right now. We’re not here to judge. It d id n ’t seem like it was out to pigeonhole anyone into one specific train of thought. Steve: Plus we know we need to reach people in all genres, so press is what we want. Scott: And we listen to metal all the time. It s definitely a big influence on us. to old enough to be able to look back and get that kind of perspective on it. We just did what we did, and other people fell aside. Now, we’re a little bit more conscious of that reality. JT: You still operate at á loss with Neurosis, considering you still have support you rselves. job s Obviously, this band is more of a principle than a money maker. Scott: Definitely. If we wanted to make money, w e’d have done something else. It’s not that we don’t want to make a living off our band, I mean, we need to, but we know what we want and w e’re not into compromising at all. We put so much into this, and we’re really careful with it. We re not going to jump on the first big record deal that comes along. JT: Is it h a rd to k eep a b a n d to g e th e r w hen th e r e ’s so m any people involved? I noticed that you have a new keyboardist. Is there a p e rm a n e n t in n e r n u c leu s w ith everyone else being m ore o r less peripheral? Steve: That s not the way it works. That’s what was happening for the last couple of years. Scott: T h a t’s why S im o n ’s (the keyboardist) not in the band anymore. Steve: The reason I’d say it’s not hard is because there’s no one person trying to organize the whole thing. We have six people that could run their own bands if they wanted to, but that’s not what we’re after. JT: Have you ever had a problem with people freaking out and rioting at your shows? Scott: We ve had all kinds of weird shit happen, but no full-blown riots, mostly because we pummel people. We just pulverize them and make them stand there. But we’ve had stabbings, JT: Do you still have ties to the California hardcore scene? Scott: Totally. I mean, that’s our scene, and those are the people we hang out with. JT: Most of those bands were on small labels that burnt out and they disappeared with them, but you seem to have had resilience in the scene by adapting and reinventing. Scott: All I can say is that like anything you build, y o u ’ve got to have a foundation first, and we do. That’s why we re still standing because we formed the band on a thought...we had to visualize the whole thing first, and we built it slowly. That’s really the only way to make anything that’s going to last. It wasn’t really until a couple of years ago that we were even KVRX Call Letter Fall 1994 10 and shootings, and lots of fights. When we played Portland a couple of months ago, skinheads tried to storm the stage, and we get stuff like that all the time! Steve. We used to have a big problem with fights, but that’s mellowed out. Scott: Yeah, the Word As Law-Pain of Mind era (Neurosis’ first and second albums) was really bad with fights in California. It was one of the reasons we were really happy when we got our keyboardist, because it immediately weeded out all those assholes. Now they re coming back around, but at the like, tim e m ost of them were “Keyboards? No way! Fag!” (both laugh) But that was really good because we went six months where we couldn’t complete a set in the Bay Area. JT. That was really a big problem with all that hardcore-related violence. Scott: That’s always the way it’s been in California. I started going to shows in 1980 in San Diego, and it’s been violent, violent, violent! California’s a fucking violent state, and there were big punk gangs in L.A. in ’82-’84. KV/RX Call Letter Fall 1994 do? T: It varies... w nat ao you KVRX: Does someone start off with a part? T: Most of the songs are written in the first three minutes of practice. We show up for practice, turn on the amps, and go for it. But some songs...ideas are brought in, developed, tossed out, revamped. C: Structures are thrown around here and there. T. We take parts of one song, another V: 1 d go to Damian’s house and fuck his girlfriend. Damian: But my mom lives at my house! C: Ok, your mom...probably the same thing. S: I’d probably ju st sneak into my bedroom and see what my girlfriend looks like naked. C: You’d probably find us all in there... KVRX: What do y ’all think of Texas generally... T: I think Texas is cool. C: It is so humid I can’t handle it. 11 slug continued from page 3 by 10:30 w e ’re off, w e’re back loaded up in our van, we go to som ebody’s house, we crash, we go somewhere else, we d o n ’t get paid for doing anything. S: You pay tor parking, you worry about your stuff getting stolen, and it w on’t stop raining. T: You enevitably see about twenty people that you just brush past them, "Oh hi! H o w ’s it going!” You ca n ’t have a conversation with them. KVRX: So how did y ’all meet up with P.K. (W h o runs P C P re c o r d in g s , -Slug’s label) Did he come after y ’all, did you go after him? T: It was through Unsane. He was a friend o f their’s, so we met them, so they said check out PCP, and we did a split single on PCP. H e ’s thinking about putting out a split CD with us and Unsane that would include their first PCP single, the “My Right/Jungle Music” 7", which is an amazing 7", and our PCP single, and maybe w e ’d throw some extra tracks on it for fun or something. K V R X : So h a v e y ’all se en any differences since y ’all are affiliated wi t h P C P /M a ta d o r? Do you have people come out more? C: People come out who have actually bought the record. T: P eople have actually seen the record. We actually see the record in juke-boxes. T: It’s been great, P.K.... C: More chicks at the shows...and lots of young boys... S: Yah, that’s a plus too... KVRX: So, would you call yourselves pedophiles? S: Well, there’s good pedophiles and there’s bad pedophiles. KVRX: And you’re definitly the good ones, right? S: Just ask the kids... KVRX. So, (as Chris from Unsane shows up), is Chris in your band? C: He is in our band... Chris: I gotta get glasses...I just don’t fit in... S: That’s true, it’s a very strict criteria. KVRX: So when y ’all are Slug, how do you go about writing a song. Do song and make them into a third entirely different song. K V RX : W h o ’s idea w as it w ith the...what was it, Mr. Roger’s sample on the new album? C: I think Tomas dug up the Mr. Roger’s record. T: But I think it was a m utually brew ing idea. It was m ostly the w ork w ho s c ie n tis ts w ith...S im on..he has a laboratory where he does speech and linguistics. It was from that, and his theories and such that we came up with the idea to use this Mr. Rogers piece. KVRX: So if y ’all could be invisible for a day, what would you go do? T: That’s a good question...we aren’t that creative... we T: Colin has some breathing problems due to when he was in the war. It’s just, it’s tough. T: The people of Austin are great.. C: I haven’t felt that great in Austin both times but I always had a good time. KVRX: W here’s Magnatone in this picture these days, not in the picture? T: Magnatone is charging forward. It answ ers on the average about 25 letters a month from people looking for different stuff. We did this double 7 by a group That Dog, who later got a lot of press in Sassy magazine. Got signed to Geffen, etc. etc. So people came back to us looking for the 7" and of course by that time it was out of print. We have a CD coming out that is actually three years in the making. It s posthumous o f this experimental piano played Richard Grossman. He had a trio while he was alive, and it’s basically avant-garde jazz. That’s our next CD release. And then we have a 7" by a pop group called Go-Kart, w hich is going to be really nice.’ Lindsay Koon in town here did the screening, the cover. S: We work with a lot of other different labels in L.A. to put stuff out. Karate Brand, Tantalus. T. Karate Brand did a Beekeeper 7", th e y ’ve done a Big Damn C razy Weight 7”, Fellaheen. S: They just did a compilation that was a w hole bunch o f bands doing lovesongs. The Cherubss, johnboy, Steel Pole Bathtub, Jawbreaker, us and Pony... C: It’s a nice thing. S: It’s in it’s second pressing right now. T: Actually we might mention at this point the debut of a new label called Analog, which will be M agnatone distributed. There’s going to be a 7" by a group called Recess from L.A., Isn’t the theme behind Analog, analog recordings, lo-fi recordings? C: Yah, Mystic Moves Orchestra is going to have a single. T: Unbeknownst to Steve and the rest of the Magnatone crew, Summer of 1995 will see the debut of the Snare Beat label which will be more oriented to w ard s “d a n c e -m u s ic ” type of projects. There’s a jazz dub band in L.A. called A quaflesh that w e’re putting an EP together by... KVRX: This is a big business y ’all got going here... it s ju s t re a lly C: We have a nice catalog going on...it just continues forward... T: People should write us at P.O. Box 2576, El Segundo, CA, 90245, for a complete catalog. KVRX: So what are y ’alls feelings going into tonight’s show? Is it going to be a good show? Are you excited? Nervous? S: I just hope the Unsane don’t fuck up, g ettin g embarrassing. [Laughter] T. I had a blast last year...Austin was great. Probably one of the best shows. We ve really been looking forward to playing this show. C: I just hope we play to people’s expectations. KVRX: Do y ’all have anything else you want to say? T: I think I want to mention though that for people to support PCP because they have really helped us out in the last year. C: P.K. is a good guy, he is doing it for all of the right reasons and he’s working hard. As poppy as they Wflllllfl KimNevius talks to Austin's favorito melodic young punks The Wannabes are comprised Jen n in g s o f A ustin ites, C raw ford, Kevin C arney, H u nter Darby, and Thad Swiderski. We meet at the Show d ow n , on Guadalupe, except for Thad, the drummer. bar a KVRX: M od Flower Cake has been out for about 3 months but was recorded about a year ago, how do you feel about it? Jennings: It seems like it took forever; it’s nice to have it out. Hunter: It’s too outdated now. j: Luckily we are ahead o f the times so it sounds current. Kevin: Yeah our next one is going to sound way ahead, I mean, if we get it out. KVRX: W h a t’s y o u r favorite song and what does it mean to you? h: M ine’s uh Dead True. It got buried in the mix. What it meant was that we didn’t have any lyrics for it. I sat up all night trying to come up with lyrics. We had to be in the city at ten, and at nine- thirty we got all the lyrics. What I like about it is that it is not dismally, it sounds really upbeat. j: I thought it was about the Gulf War when I first heard it. h: I had been reading a book about that, G erm an Stuka bombers. Yeah I thought I was pretty clever. Dropping a bomb on someone is really stupid, the oldest cliche’ in the world. j: (chimes in) Because war is stupid (everybody laughs), j: I like / Want You to Know. I like the way Unsteady h: We can’t play it, w e’ve tried it so many times we can’t play it anymore, j: came out. k. Jennings was w alking around the studio, this is what I remember about that, with a pad of paper, writing these lyrics and looking like he didn’t know whether he liked them or not and then kind of looking away and going, “I’m a genius, a genius”, h: We are the worst band about that, the lyrics were the worst part because we were w riting them. The sound systems in town are so bad, no on e’s going to hear the words. But when you have to go into a recording studio the spot, your stuck on (pauses) We had choruses... j: Usually. h: ...it was mostly like ya da­ da da-da ya da-da da-da baby baby. k. Yeah when people complained that they couldn’t hear the lyrics, it was probably because there were’nt any. h: I used to have people come up to me and say, “I really liked that lyric in that song and th e y ’d say something back to me and it was like, well O.K. h: We were really bad about that. j: Now w e’re trying to be better about it. KVRX: W hat is b ein g played the most? k: Right now Itching Jenny has gotten the most air play, but you know, different places. Like right now there is this station in San Diego (hat is playing Dead True a lot. Which is cool. KVRX. W hat kind o f nicknames do you have for each other? j: Oh you don’t want to know that. KVRX: Yes I do. k: You’ll start a light, j: Our drummer is Thad and his nick name is “ D addy” because he acts like a dad all the time. h: Jennings is always refered to as “The Boy”, j: I was thinking about that. My nick nam e used to be “Kitten”, I kind of want to go back to that. I want to be called “Kitten” again. KVRX: And how did you get that name “Kitten”? h: The girls of the Reivers named him that after a bottle of Bacardi. k: To get back at you all for the names you gave them, h: Mine varies, it’s usually “Son of a Bitch”, “Bastard”, “Prima donna”, j: No, Hunter would be lik< “Uncle”, “Uncle Daddy”. KVRX: Does Kevin hav< one? h: “Pa-Pa”. KVRX: Have you guys evei been mistaken for anybody else? j: Hunter was mistaken, wel he wasn’t even mistaken, h< was introduced as Peter Bucl« up in D allas. T he True Believers were playing up ir Dallas and Hunter went along He was up there with them and Alejandro (Escovedo] said, just announced on stage, Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Peter Buck”, and got Hunter to come out on stage. All these people came up and wanted his autograph and stuff like that, it was cool, h: ...and they believed it. And that guy is built like a linebacker, we played at a party for... j: REM. h: REM and the Chickasaw Mudd Puppies over at the Continental Club. He’s like a big guy, and he’s old. kvrx: Your song Pete Buck is H ea vin g, what was his reaction? h: How the hell did you know th at? (ev ery o n e laughs) Where did you hear about that? KVRX: uhhh... h. That was from a long time ago. j: That’s the reason we got to play that (R .E .M .) party actually, because of that song. Yeah we played it and of course he didn’t listen or care, and somebody came up to him when we were talking to him and said, “ Hey you know these guys have this song KVRX Call Letter Fall 1994 13 KVRX S p o rts director Sports Beat! by Lisa Endicott, The Sports Doctor is inand can now be heard city-wide on 91.7 FM an d KVRX SPORTS NEEDS YOU as on -air a n c h o r s, producers, reporters, play- b y - p la y co lo r commentators. We are now on 91.7 on your FM dial offering up the latest in live sports talk, daily updates an d w eekly r o u n d ta b le discussions focusing on the world of U.T. Athletics and theseemingly dim inishing world of professional sports. A very innovative thing to notice about our sports department is that we h av e a s p o r t s fe m a le director and an entire staff made up of students. There s p o r t s fem a le are no reporters on the radio or television in Austin and it is about time that there were. Our programming stresses opportunities for all types in w ritin g , p r o d u c in g , reporting and anchoring. There are no limits to our sports civerage at KVRX. “Longhorns of the Week” at 9:30 p.m. on Wednesdays features the KVRX player of the week along with the nightly This s p o r t s u p d a te . se m e s t e r we have featured Priest Holmes, J a m e s Brown, S u san C h rism an , La T an y a W illiam s, Sh an tel Cornelius, Pat Fitzgerald, R encher, T eren c e R o d erick A n d erso n , Norman Watkins, Sarny Duarte, Cathy Hamilton, and form er Longhorns Nikki B usch , Katey Jameson, Shane Dronett, and Britt Hager. We are to have a lso know n recruiting analyst David G arvin , C oach Jo h n Mackovic, Coach Gene D a h lq u ist, an d Coach Mick Haley on from time to time. “ s u n d a y S p o rts Xtra” from 8 to 9 a.m. is a c o l l a b o r a t i v e p r o g r a m f e a t u r in g all sorts of members of our sp o r tin g in roundtabel discussions, s t a f f N o t What You Think We re around the comer from our old location. We're now at 2815 Fruth, % block east of Guadalupe & 29th. W^'ve got easier access, a better layout, even better service and lower rent. That's allowed us to drop our prices on bikes about 15% and parts and accessaries as much as 35%--All Day, Every Day. Store Hours. Mon S i t 10-6:00 Thurs. Sun 10-8:00 noon-500 Cat: 47-CYCll call-in se g m e n ts and live interviews. The show includes r e p o r t s ,a g am e c o lle g e fo o tv a ll w rap-up, an NFL game-day preview, f a n t a s y fo o tb a ll a w eekly a n d c o m m e n t a r y se g m e n t which p r o m is e s to not have an exchange betw een two ex ­ a th le t e s tu rn e d b r o a d c a s t e r s swapping stats but a hard edge slam- d u n k s é ssio n o f what’s really going on. the In addition to tale n t available at U.T. we been h av e fo r t u n a t e to include the likes of J e r r y Jo n e s, J e f f Kent of the Mets, A ikm an, T ro y Sm ith , Em m itt Jam es Washington, R u d y T o m j a n o v i c h , L e i g h Steinber, Stephen Jones, Nate Newton, Robert Heard, Doug English, Lance Armstrong, and several media experts from Dallas, Austin, Houston, and San Antonio on our weekly programs this fall. R em em b er w e’re student run so we don’t always have to reprot the status quo like other statio n s in town dowho rely constantly on nods fro m the U.T. A th letic Department. The same goes for o th e r big city m edia types whose careers hinge on being in good favor with the Rockets and the Cowboys. Our morning drive time u p d ates are on the half-hour from 7:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. and our evening updates are at 9 p.m. where you will get the latest before the local T.V. s p o r tin g crews. NO other local FM st a t io n p r o v id e s s p o r t s programming at any time following the morning show so the very sports concious m u st learn to tune into KVRX. The current sports gurus in town, who shall remain nameless, are not students and they do not go to sc h o o l with the U.T. more,, page 15 popgun continued from page 7 them to play with. I personally don’t think it’s fun; the managing is better for me. We book and promote a lot of different bands, but for the ones you manage, you listen a lot. You’re a real soun ding board for the b a n d ’s p ro b lem s, th e ir id eas, and any questions they may have. You’re like their best friend. Q: So is Popgun the “warm and cuddly” management company? Can you the av o id stereotypical band manager who yells a lot? being guys Mike. Well, managing is much more all-encompassing than agent work. The m anager is the last line o f defense, responsible for absolutely everything. Some flyers don’t get made, you get 'em made. East Coast band managers are just hard-asses, and I think that might work a lot better...on the East Coast. But here, ninety percent of the time diplomacy works. You have to be diplomatic, until it’s time not to be. Popgun E ntertainm ent presen tly b o a sts eig h t A u stin bands as m anagem ent clients: Black Irish, Milktrout, Prescott Curly wolf, Room By River, The Sidehackers, Splinter (form erly Bug), Spoon, and The Wannabes. car like a late model Dodge Dart, h: Can I have a 19th century, turn of the century Jim Dandy suit on? j: I think so, but yeah I think we should just do falling out the car all bloody and stuff. K VRX : A re you w o rk in g on anything new? j: Always. Always coming up with new stuff. KVRX: Hunter, you were the artist/ d esig n er fo r th e co v er o f M o d Blower Cake. How else would you design the next cover if you had to right now? h: A f eld of daisies. k: Ah yes, a field of daisies, I see that now. h: A field of daisies, with the wind blowing, and have the record called, “Swiderski”. k: And written in beautiful flowing script. h. So when Thad (the drum m er) shows up it will be “Pete Brilliance”, and he’ll go, “That’s pretty cool”... k: And then when it comes out it says...’’Swiderski”. The Wannabes will be pairing up with Sincola to tour the Midwest fo r the next couple weeks. They will return N o vem b er 2 6 th a t th e E le c tric Lounge. Catch them live. eftovers 5) always encourages you to get up, get into it, and get involved. We Try To Move Your M ind As Well As Your Behind.. Hey. It s me, Xian, the producer of Voices of Relevance on KVRX 91.7, your student radio station. The idea behind this show is to provide a place w here voices that do not fit the demographics of corporate radio can be heard, speaking for themselves. And if you have ever had a radical or progressive idea, that means you. So leave a m essage for me at the statio n or send me e-m ail at xtian@mail.utexas.edu. All ideas will receive a response. Promise — Xian Jennings o f Spoken Word Show Description No rock-n-roll pop here. Just an hour spoken w ord dose long s h e n a n ig a n s — from to sto rie s performance art to political tirades, som e p o w erfu l and som e ju s t pretentious— every Sunday night from 9-10 PM. Th e Ho Show What is The Ho Show, you might ask? a) Is it beauty tips for the working woman? b) Is it girls that can t play their own instruments? c) Is it full of hints on how to trap a man? None of the above! The Ho Show is ab o u t b ein g independent, strong and assertive, celebrating all types of w im m yn’s music, whether it is Zap Mama, the 5678s, Cub or S u p ersn azz, and proving time and time again that you don’t need a cock to rock. I am going to end on a little Ho Show trivia. If you have the answer to the q u estio n below , e-m ail me at: april@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu and the first one with the correct answer will win a lovely prize The question: What is the name of the band Jennifer Finch, Kat Bjelland, and Courtney Love were in before they w ent on to th eir respective very successful bands? Ring the alarm every Friday morning to 9 a.m ... scream ing from 7 dub...rhythm wize...drum and bass m usic...step through the universe of dub... Into the echo chamber and onto the off beat with The Dub Vendor the wannabes continued from page 12 called, Pete Buck is Heaving. And he said, “Heaving?...hmm”, and didn’t have much to say. k: But we think he does. K VRX: W h a t’s the h a p p ie st m oment o f your life so far, as a band? j- Stage diving at the Fluid show at St. Louis was fun. h: Yes, that was great, k: Playing with Spanking Rufus, j: That would be one only if we had killed them all. Oh I saw Winona Ryder in M inneapolis, that was a happy mom ent, because I kind of thought that it would be a great story I could tell everybody in Austin for the next year. h: But she had a big head. j: She had a big head compared to her body. h: Which reconfirms the theory that lots of big stars have big heads like Ted Koppel... KVRX: So, what do you want to be you r happiest m om ent w ith the band? k: We've just signed a contract for the distribution o f M od F low er Cake overseas, so I want to go to Europe, h: I hope we get so big that we can all get separate hotel rooms, j: I want the band to do so well that I can have a long and glorious solo career, the day I say, “Sorry guys I think I’ll do better without you”. But as far as stuff, seriously that would be a good thing [would be] to play with som ebody I idolized at that time. Devo. That would be it. To open for Devo in Madison Square Garden. KVRX: If you were to be on the cover of Rolling Stone what would it look like? j- Oh I know what would be good, I’ve got the perfect Rolling Stone cover. It’s like a big car wreck and we’re all just sitting around bloody and dying in a car, like a smashed up car on the cover of Rolling Stone and were like covered with blood and stuff. A VUICAH VIDEO 609 WEST 29171 STREET 47 8-5325 into over :53,D0D* Sp o rts Beat continued from page 13 and all ideas are welcome!! listen and tell us what you additnon to our live think. The request line for . SP?J?.S sPecialty sh™ s is 495-KVRX so don’t forget to call in. K Y R X eomiiumiix program schedule A ll limos : '() p in unless noted athletes like we do so that gives our reporters a chance to give the p u b lic added insight. C u r r e n t ly we h ave been b ro a d c a s tin g L a d y Longhorn Volleyball games using our own staff members on play-by-play and color commentary and we hope to find more talent so we can expand our game coverage to basketball and baseball. Any our esi!'f0fa^ a^l':! le,?d, our staff to cover all U.T. in tra m u ra ls , sp o rts, community sports, the Dallas Cowboys, Houston Oilers, San A n to n io S p u rs, D a lla s Mavericks, Houston Rockets and the Ft. W o rh F ire . Besides satisfying your love of sports, the station offers valuable esperience for those in te re s te d sp o rts broadcasting. Please call the if s ta tio n at 471-5106 in te re ste d and d e fin ite ly in M ond ay ; Root s. I healer in ihe Sou nd I 2 I a in I ik ’s d ; i \ : ( o| le e Í lo u se W e d n e s d .ix A n R a d i o I funsda\ \ o ie es o| R e le v a n c e I 11da\ : ( )n ( ampus Sai 111 d a > : V o ic e s o| Relex anee S 9 a in. S u n d a y M u s i c 11 o n i ih e I .asi 7 N a . m . Achtung! Read this, buy the records and patronize the advertisers. Or, in the words of OJ, “hey, I didn’t do it I swear!” This was produced totally by students, just like everything else at KVRX. So what you’re holding in your grubby little hands is living proof that there is more to this University than lousy parking and bad football. Chris Gray, editor — 91.7 KVRX Student Radio The University of Texas at Austin P.O. Box D Austin, Texas78713-7209 Non-Profit Org. U. S. Postage Paid PERMIT No. 77 Austin, Texas Mail To: C ertificate to the first 25 people in line at 8AM, Thurs., November 17 ONLY. f t » p e pram , must h « lust 14 years of i * . 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