ENTERTAINMENT Al Ste> Une of ti ^ ¿ £ - £ 06 6 ¿ Y-l OSVd 1 3 3AI80 ¿Z9Z m « W k h m o w iw u 3«Hinos M/n/m w a j 3 i v i s a o j t i v * ¿ A little yard work J.R. Phillips hits a home run in the 14th inning to give the Giants a 7-6 win over Houston and help San Francisco split the four-game series. UNIVERSITY Forte High school students in the 25th annual piano workshop hone their skills and hear from the pros. ---- ---------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- ---------------------------------- - T h e Da il y T exa n The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 94, No. 179 2 Sections Monday, July 17, 1995 25C BURNED OUT APD, city sign policy on minorities SHOLNN FREEMAN Daily Texan Staff Leaders from Austin's black communi­ ty, the mayor and the police chief commit­ ted Friday to a com m unity relatio n s agreement that seeks to reshape the way the A ustin P olice D ep artm ent treats minority citizens. The agreement, unveiled and signed during a news conference, is a response to anger expressed by members of the black community about the Police Department's handling of a Feb. 11 party at 1607 Cedar St. in East Austin. Community leaders and parents have said some partygoers there were injured by officers. "Cedar Street was the straw that broke the camel's back," said Herman Lessard Jr., president of the Austin Area Urban League, Inc. "W e wanted to have these issues addressed one by one." The agreement recommits the depart­ ment to community policing, to continue to diversify every level of the department and to expand multicultural training of officers. The centerpiece of the 10-page agree­ ment is a Chief's Forum, a panel of com­ m unity m em bers who will advise the police chief on various issues. Details of the activities of the group will be set out once it is formed. "The agreement we have forged togeth­ er represents a significant step forward for the Austin community to seek solutions to problem -solve when there are areas of co n c ern ," said A u stin P o lice C h ie f Elizabeth Watson. "This [agreement] is the essence of community policing with a common purpose." Mayor Bruce Todd said, "W e don't go to communities and tell them what to do, we listen to the com m unity and w hat solutions would they propose to develop a process to talk to the com m unity. ... Please see City, page 2 Iraq frees Americans Associated Press Rep. Bill Richardson instrumental in release U [Richardson] " I never lost hope. I never got d is­ co u rag ed ," Kathy D aliberti said from Jacksonville, Fla. " I am elated. At last it is over," said BA G H D A D , Iraq — Four m onths after they strayed across the border into Iraq, two A m ericans celebrated their release from a maximum-security prison Sunday with pizza and champagne, and prepared for the long road home. P re s id e n t S a d d a m H u sse in freed W illiam Barloon and David D aliberti after a personal plea by a U.S. congress­ man, who asked that they be released on humanitarian grounds. B a rlo o n and D a lib e rti w o re b lu e je a n s and ap p eared relax ed as they Were escorted by Iraqi security officials into the Polish Embassy, which handles American interests in Iraq. " I am happy to be reunited with my fam ily,” Barloon said later in anticipa­ tion of his return home. Daliberti said only that it was a "great day." Barloon called his wife in Singapore, where she was on a business trip. "H e seem ed in very good s p irits ," Linda Barloon told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. " It was so good to hear his voice." The men were expected to leave Iraq early Monday for the Jordanian capital Amman, a 10-hour trip by desert road. Air links to and from Iraq have been restricted by U.N. sanctions. S ad d am o rd e re d th e A m e rica n s released during a meeting Sunday with Rep. Bill Richardson, D-N.M. "I'm very happy that these two fine men will be going home to their fami- wasn’t authorized to negotiate.” Warren Christopher — l i e s ," R ic h a rd so n sa id as he sto o d b etw een the tw o m en at the M ily a- Mansour Hotel in Baghdad. Richardson said he made no deals to win the m en's release. "T h ere was no quid pro quo or concessions," he said. The sta te -ru n Ira q i N ew s A g en cy said Richardson conveyed an appeal fro m " P r e s id e n t C lin to n , th e U .S . C ongress and the A m erican p e o p le," b u t S e c re ta ry o f S ta te W a rre n C hristopher stressed that Richardson went as a member of Congress, not as a presidential envoy. "N o letter was delivered, no conces­ sions were made. He wasn't authorized to negotiate," Christopher said on NBC- TV's Meet the Press. Richardson told The Boston Globe that Saddam decided "on the spot" during their meeting to release the men. "H e responded to a humanitarian plea. I think Iraq deserves credit for that," Richardson said. The w ives o f th e freed m en, w h o went to Baghdad in May in an attempt to win their husbands' release but left em pty-handed, were overjoyed at the news. Linda Barloon. "H allelu jah ." P resid en t C lin to n sk ip p ed chu rch Sunday morning to call the wives and te ll th em th e ir h u sb a n d s h ad b ee n re le a s e d , a id e s said . He also ca lle d B a rlo o n 's b ro th e r, Ed, w ho liv e s in Rosemount, Minn. The release followed a U.N. Security Council decision last week to extend trade sanctions against Iraq for another 60 days. H ow ever, Sad dam m ay be h op ing th at, w ith the s a n c tio n s b itin g e v e r deeper and stirring unrest in Iraq, his gesture will be rewarded with leniency at the next review of the embargo. Saddam told R ichard son he hoped Clinton and other world leaders "would observe hum anitarian con sid eratio n s when dealing with all issues, w hether those pertaining to individuals or peo­ p le," the Iraqi News Agency said in a report monitored in Nicosia, Cyprus. The United States has remained firmly committed to maintaining the sanctions, imposed after Saddam's 1990 invasion of Kuwait, and threatened to use its veto power against any proposed relaxation. Barloon, 39, of New Hampton, Iowa, and Daliberti, 42, of Jacksonville, Fla., were employed by U.S. firms in Kuwait as aircraft m echanics. They said they Please see Freed, page 2 Austin firefighters quickly controlled a fire at the Conquistador Apartments, 2101 San Gabriel St. No one was hurt in the fire, which damaged two apartment units. ASHLEY GARMON/Daily Texan Staff Doctors, insurers battle over ‘drive-through’ care Associated Press TRENTON, N.J. — It's the '90s version of politicians kissing babies: They're lining up behind new borns and m oth ers in a b attle against insurance com panies over the trend critics call "drive-through delivery." M any insurers say th ere's no reason for most mothers to be hospitalized more than a day after a normal birth or two days after an uncomplicated Caesarean delivery. Many doctors and nurses argue that's too quick: Som e m edical problem s d on 't show up in the first day and b ran d -n ew m om s haven't yet learned to feed, care for and spot health problems in their newborns. When insurance com panies' efforts to cut medical costs run up against mothers' pleas for more care, the political choice is obvious. "It's outrageous for insurance com panies to push women out of hospitals after a day, after 12 hours in some cases," says Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J. " I was appalled that this was happening." Brad ley and Sen. N ancy K assebaum , R- Kan., are sponsoring a bill requiring insurers to pay for at least two days in a hospital after vaginal ch ild b irth , if the m other w ants to stay. Two such bills were introduced in the House, two states have passed sim ilar laws and at least six more are weighing them. Insurers are vigorously lobbying against the bills, which generally require they cover a 48- hour stay after uncomplicated vaginal deliver­ ies and four days after Caesarean sections. Most proposals also would require insurers to pay for follow -up care. For deliveries at home or at birthing centers, most bills require Please see Care, page 2 W reck claims 6 lives BRIAN ROSAS____________________ Daily Texan Staff Six people were killed and seven people were hospitalized when a van and a pickup collided Sunday at the intersection of Burleson Road and M cKinney Falls Parkway. "I've been working [as an emergency medical technician] for 17 years and this is by far the worst accident I've ever seen," said Jim Persons, EMS district commander. Michelle Walker, spokeswoman for the Austin Police Department, said the van, which had Louisiana license plates, was believed to be speeding north on McKinney Falls Parkway and ran a stop sign. The crash happened at 12:55 p.m. The van was carrying 11 people from the Family, a nondenominational Christian youth group. All 11 were unconscious or disoriented when rescue teams arrived at the accident site. Five of those killed were pas­ sengers in the van. Pronounced dead at the scene were Precious Oehler, 15, of New Orleans; Nina Wickenheiser, 17, of M ontreal, Canada; Victoria Korkahms of New Orleans, no age available; and a 16-year-old girl whose name has not been released, pending notification of her family. Rhonda L. Harris, of Cedar Creek, a pas­ senger in the truck, died Sunday afternoon at Brackenridge Hospital. Katrina Oehler, 14, a sister of Precious Oehler, also died at the hospital. "It doesn't appear any one [in the van] was wearing seat belts," Persons said. Both passengers in the eastbound truck appeared to be in their m id-30s to 40s, said Kurt Rothert, Austin police senior Please see Wreck, page 2 SUCCESS offers students a head start Editor 's note: This is the first in a three-part series on the SUCCESS program, one o f the University s most a^gressii^e efforts at minority retention. Part one focuses on peer advis­ ers in the program. Part two will appear Tuesday, focusing on the entrance process. M IC HA EL BRICK Daily Texan Staff When Sean Robinson graduates from the University in May with a master s degree in accounting, his walk across the stage will be hard-earned and against the odds — and he'll credit the first step to the SUCCESS program. The SUCCESS program, run by the Office of the Dean of Students, is designed to help black and Hispanic students adapt to a world where about 80 percent of the other stu­ dents they attend classes wifli and walk by on campus an* of a different racial background. Robinson was never made acutely conscious that being black made him different until he came to the University. I walk into a classroom and I'm consciously aware I'm the only black here. W e have alw ays had to ad ap t," Robinson said. "How would the average UT freshman who Is white feel if he went to Howard? It's just a shock." The strictly disciplined program is an alternative entrance Please see SUCCESS, page2 FRANK MILLER/Daily Texan Staff Sean Robinson and Monica Ramirez, who will graduate next year, are peer advisers in SUC­ CESS, the U n ive rs ity ’s most aggressive pro­ gram for recruiting and retaining minority stu­ dents. FRANK MILLER/Daily Texan Staff P olice exam ined the w re ck a g e o f a van th a t c o llid e d w ith a p ic k u p Sunday. INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Nice Weather, If You’re a Maggot: It’s hot, 90s. 100s, thereabouts, and humid. Shower steam on the convenience stores. It’s not raining, there is no breeze, and it’s going to be mis­ erable until Thanksgiving. One of those days when a putrefying corpse makes its own gravy. Index: Around Campus 10 Classifieds..........................9 Comics............................. 11 Editorials............................4 Entertainment.................... 8 Sports............................... 12 State & Local..................... 7 University...........................6 World & Nation.................. 3 Ready to rhumba Ballroom club offers chance to dance ERIN JO N E S _________________ Daily Texan Staff Every M o n d ay n ight the Texas Union Showroom is transformed into a ballroom, as students spin across the floor dancing the waltz, samba, fox trot and bolero. The Showroom is the site of weekly practices for the UT Ballroom Dance Club, an o rg a n iz a tio n started six years ago by only a few students. M em bership has sin ce sw elled to more than 100 students during the school year, with almost 70 members this summer. Although learning these sophisti­ cated dances may not sound appeal­ ing to some students, members of the club say ballroom dancing is an y­ thing but tedious. "B allroom d a n cin g is th is thin veneer of civilization over serious pri­ said M arg a ret mal Z im m erm an, grad u ate stud ent in u rg e s ," library and information science. "It's sex with clothes on." O ver the course of the sem ester, beginning members of the club will leam five basic dances and a variety of different series of steps for each d ance. But "the key p a rt," said instructor Richard Fowler, "is floor- craft, the ability to navigate, and part­ nership." For some students, even m aking their way across the dance floor can be particularly challenging. "It's like a moving obstacle course," Fowler said. "M ost men feel like, 'I barely have control of my life, and now you want me to guide someone else?' ... In the beginning class all I assume is that they can walk." A fter jo in in g the club, b u sin ess junior Ron Sasson has found his new knowledge useful during dates. "W hen the conversation turns to Please see Ballroom, page 2 ■■■■■■,...................................— Marieta Melendez Eva Gamia Page 2 Monday, July 1 7 ,1 9 9 5 T h e D a ily T e x a n T h e Da il y Texan Editor __ ____ __ ______ M a n a g in g Editor ............ Associate Managing Editors N e w s Editor Associate News Editors News Assignments Editor Senior Reporters___________ Associate Editors.............. . Entertainment E d ito r .............. A sso ciate Entertainment Editor Around C a m p u s Editor.......... Sp orts Edrtors G eneral S p o d s R e p o rt e r.. Pttoto Edrto's G ra p hics Editor U s i n g s Editor ........ C o p y Editor. Makeup Editors News Reporters Photographers Edüonai Columnists Entertainment Wrier Cartoonists .... Wire Editor — Permanent Staff .......... — ................ — . ................... ------- --------_— -------...---------- Robert R o g e rs ____.... Kevin Williamson T ara [_ G op p JbhBth y i p i j e ............................................... ............................Caleb Canning — .Metanie Genk. Elizabeth Souder MoSy SanWJames Bnck Steve Scheibal Reynolds Cushman Shoinn Freeman Mark Murray, Chns Parry M arcel M eyer Joe Sebastian Tracy Schultz ................................... Joe Garza Jason Dugger M aht Livingston Alyssa Banta Kim Brent R o s s C r a v e n s ............................Tracy Schultz ............... .... .............. ........... — •• ........................... Issu e Staff Erin Jones ........... ■— ■■■», — ........ i Bnan Rosas Enn Jones -rank M iie' Kim Brent Ashley Graman Kevm Delahunty Rizwan Jaka Michaei Lewis ... James Hibberd Henry Demood Dionne deVitte Andrea Buckley Local Dtspte) Layout Coordinator .......... Graphic D e sign er Classified Display C la ssified Telephone Sa le s C lassified C le rks Office Assistant Advertising V a n e s s a Fio res Jen nJe r C a s e B ra d Corbett D a n n y G rove r S a r a Eckert Megan Zhang Dewayne ~nde# Nathan Moore Nancy Flanagan Dana Cotoe ft Joe Powe* Amy Rorbes Angeia Bahek. Crystal Ye- Dham Diane Eaton The Daily T e x a r U S P S 146-4 4 . a student n e w sp ap e r a! T h e U n v e rsify of T e x a s at A u s ’r is p ub lishe d by T e x a s Student P u t x c a t o n s 2 5 0 0 Whitts Austin t > 78 70 5 Th e Dan y T e xan ts pubtisned^M onday T u e sd a y W ectnesda. r n y r s o a , anc -Tday except h o» d a ys exam p e - o d s and w hen schoo: is no- m s e s s o - S e c o n d c la ss p ostage paid at a l i s t - ~ X 7871C N ew s contributions wth be acceptec by *eiec>-o->e 4 1 1 .4 5 9 1 > at “ne ednona: d H c * ¡T e xa s Stud ent Pitoication s B _ d*ng 2 12 2 1 o ' a ' me n ew s a tx ra to ry C om m unication B ue om g A 4 - O 1.) For local and n a t o - a o sp ia t a d v e T ts n g c a l 4 * ’ i B S S For c a s s h e a d isplav a n c naton a ¡ c te ss h e d display advertising c a t 4 7 1 -8 9 0 0 Fo r c . a s s 'e o wc-'c advertist->c cal 4 7 1-5 2 4 4 Ent re contents cocvnght ’ 995 ~*xas Student P jb k ca t.o ns The Deify Texan Mar Subeeriptioo Rates O n e Se m este r í F a cr S p n n g Tw o Se m este rs (Fail and S p n n g l ______________ ________ _______________ Su m m e r S e ss io n O n e v ear (Fflfl S p n n g ano Su m m er) ________ _ ............. S3C0C 55 00 20 00 75 00 T o c -a rg e by V S A or M a ste -C a -c cat 4 ' t -5083 S e n d orders a nc a d d re ss c h a n g e s to * e x a s Stuoe-- ^ u b « c a io n s P O B e . D Ausftn 7 X 7 8 7 i 3-g q o 4 or to T SP Building C 3.200. or c a r 471 -5083 P O S T M A S T E R : Send aod-ess changes to ~he Da fy Texan P O BoxD Austin 'T ' 8~13-B904 Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Tuesday Wednesday W edresca. 4 p ~- Thursday 4 : - p-3a, 4 p m r'^rsaa'y Ftítíay Monday. 4 p m ~uesda> 4 p m > =*Trr tc PMorioit ONE HOUR E6 SLIDE PROCESSING 2 4 X = *4 .9 5 3 6 X = *6 .5 5 “-k t o s m o e m s - a c o - o n n . t i d s c o l i n t CUSTO M PH OTOG RAPHIC LABS W.MLKAT NUECES- 474-1 177 Freed Continued from page 1 strayed across the border by acci­ dent while visiting friends at a U.N. post. An official with the U.N. force patrolling the Iraq-Kuwait frontier said in A pril that the tw o w ere waved through by mistake when a guard mistook them for U.N. per­ sonnel Iraqi o fficia ls su g g ested that Barloon and Daliberti were spies. W ashington denied that. On March 25, the men were sen­ tenced to eight years in prison and committed to the maxim urn-securi­ ty Abu G h raib p riso n w e st of Baghdad. At first they lived in a cell block with 200 inmates and three holes in the floor as toilet facilities. Later, after they com plained o f health problems, they got their own quar­ ters. Ballroom Continued from page 1 Care Continued from page 1 m ean in g less ch atter you can ask a woman to dance," Sasson said. "It's aerob ic to o ," Zim m erm an said. "I lost 10 pounds when I started." exercise, Erin Flovd -B ann, a doctoral stu ­ dent in health education, agreed that b a llro o m d a n c in g is p h y s ic a lly dem anding, but said that she m ost enjoys the fact that "it combines a lot of aspects. It's an art and a sport at the same tim e." Flovd -B ann, w ho began d ancing w ith the UT Ballroom D ance Club almost two years ago, has now start­ ed com peting at the national level. She and dancing partner Roger Bell, a g rad u ate stu d e n t in lib ra ry and in fo r m a tio n p r a c tic e between 10 and 20 hours each week with a private coach, and are plan­ ning to travel to competitions across the country in 1996. s c ie n c e , home care for 48 hours. T h e r e 's little d ata on e x a c tly w h at th e p ro p o se d g u id e lin e s w o u ld c o s t in s u re rs . But Rep. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., notes that with about 4 million births a year and m a te rn ity b ed s a v e ra g in g 51,000 a day, insurers save 54 bil­ lion an n u ally for every day they slice off the average stay. That average fell from 3.9 days in 1970 to 2.4 davs in 1993 — figures that include births with com plications. Now most insurance guidelines call for discharge in 12 to 24 hours after uncomplicated vaginal births, and one Los A ngeles h o sp ital, K aiser Permanente, has let a handful of "the healthiest of moms and babies" leave after eight hours if they want, says spokeswoman Kathleen Barco. Insurers and hospital officials say that pleases m others who want to go home quickly, limits risk of hot-' pital-acqu ired in fections and le t¡¡ the family start bonding sooner, a "W e believe any legislation th ® mandates hospital length of stay is a bad idea, says B arbara G r a c e y J spokeswoman for the industry group! H ealth In su ran ce A sso cia tio n o l America. Appearing last week with doctors] and new and expectant mothers, Rep. ! Frank Pallone Jr., D-N.J., said he made his House bill a priority this year after his wife and infant son were rushed out of the hospital much more quickly than when their daughter was bom 17 months earlier. "W ith my daughter, I had classes on breast feeding, bathing and how to learn to read the sign s" of trou­ ble, Sarah Pallone said. "W ith my son, they handed me a videotape as I left the hospital." SUCCESS: Program gives minority students support system Continued from page 1 ramp to the University for minority students whose test scores would nor­ mally offer them provisional entrance. The difference is the approach. SUC­ CESS students — who number 100 this year — enter the University the sum­ mer after they graduate from high school unknown with something the student is fam iliar with and som etim es the point of reference is something vou haven't been exposed to. It's just com­ mon sense. If you don't feel comfort­ able, you're not going to do welL" During that first summer, students take freshman-level mathematics and English courses and an educational psychology class. an enorm o-college is far from com ­ pletely about intelligence. CESS students are taking the same kinds of classes." ------------------------------------------- The program's most important con­ tribution to students like Ramirez is a support system and knowledge of how to find resources. As Robinson points out, it is often important just to have someone you can ask how to sell back your textbooks. And for Ram irez, SU C CESS was about adapting. In El Paso [where Ramirez attend­ ed high school], I had white friends, racism was not an issue. At UT, it's the biggest issue " she said. .As important to making it through college as adapting to peers is finding common ground with professors. As Robinson points out, the viewpoints ingrained in most professors can make every class like a foreign language rhk<; for some students. T o be an effective teacher, you have to have a trame of reference," Robinson said . ‘ You hav e to com p are the While the students involved gain gyound on making contacts and learn­ ing how to study, they also must deal with the inevitable stigma of the per­ ception that they’ are unqualified and receiving an unfair advantage. As a procession of newr SUCCESS students walked across campus in their uniform green T-shirts last w’eek, a passerby asked w hat the uniform s meant. "It's the SUCCESS program ," one girl in the program replied. "It's for tal­ ented and gifted students." Robinson said he understands why the students joke about it. "A lot of people think it's affirmative action letting minorities slide in," he said. "People don't realize that SUC­ More important than the classes for Robinson w’as the confidence to over­ come the built-in stigma. ^ "I think going through the SU C­ CESS program, you're ego's kind of shot because you wonder why didn't you get in like everybody else," he said. Now’ that he is about to receive a master's degree, Robinson realizes he is qualified, but still sees what he had to overcome. "Right now, I'm going through col­ lege, I'd probably still get a 700 on the SAT, he said. "But I've realized, hey, I have the ability." SUCCESS is an opportunity , but it is by no means an easy ride. Students must live in dormitories, and undergo a rigorous class schedule of freshman courses. Most of their interaction that summer is with other SUCCESS stu­ dents. But they also gam a support svstem. Robinson and Monica Ramirez, who also plans to graduate in Slav, now work as peer tutors for students just entering the program. Ramirez credits SUCCESS with her entrance to the University, which is probably stretching i t The sociology senior's intelligence is instantly recog­ nizable but as she realizes, surviving at Wreck Continued from page 1 petrol officer. City Continued from page 1 What I found was there was a strong willing- ness to sit and talk." L essard , p resid en t of the A u stin Area Urban League Inc., and representatives from other community organizations in East Austin formed the Committee for Justice Advisory Council in response to the Cedar Street inci­ dent . The council, Watson and representatives from the Austin city manager's office negoti­ ated tire agreement. Efrain Martinez, regional conciliator with the community relations ser­ vice of the U S. Department of justice, mediat­ ed it The agreement has no bearing on anv forth­ coming litigation surrounding the incident. The Cedar Street incident began when Ira Bedford, the host of the party, called 911 to report that a gang member had entered with a gun and that he wanted the police to "ride through and check it out." Two officers who remained in the area aftei checking by the party claimed a fight broke out, responded, and radioed for help. Events escalated until an officer was hit over the head, causing him to need 72. stitches. Police o fficia ls have said th a t 67 u nits responded to an "officer down" call. UillDOm TEETH Httanrial iu cco th t provided in e z d a i^ e Sor yonr opinion on An inrestigatkmal patín medication following oral sn*Sery. Approved Clinical Research Study. S u r g e r y performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeon. If you need the removal of wisdom teeth call GROUP |mc Otósidc Austin call: l-800-3^)*l630 totostincalk 320*1630 Persons saic he knew the driver of the truck was wearing a seat be.: because he rad tirones of the tvpe usually caused by seat belts He acoec that me sea: bel: probably saved the driver's life. Persons added that the first crews cm the scene had trouble bms ano at first were not certain how many people — -TS were involved due to the position of the van. It w*as difficult because the van was on its side and people were on top of each other," said Persons. Eight EMS units, five units from the Austin Fire Department, two Jaws of Life and the STARFlight emergency helicopter were sent to the scene of the accident Seven doctors’ were called in to the emergency room w’hen the victims arrived at Brackenridee HospitaL * (?\) a r e y o u BOTHERED BY COLD SORES? 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Sanus is a subsidiary o f the New York Life Insurance Company, N Y, N Y TODAY'S DOW JONES: 4,708.82 DOWN 18.68/ VOLUME: 312,217,000 NEWS BfiEFS Heat wave deaths continue to rise ■ C H IC A G O — A nother 56 d eaths w ere add ed to the grisly toll five days of 9 0 -p lu s-d eg ree h ea t has tak en on the people of this city, the Cook C oun­ ty medical exam iner said Sunday. "It's a d isa ste r," m edical exam iner spokesman Mike Boehmer said. "O n a normal day we get 17 bodies, but it can go u p into the 30s on a very hot day." The 56 deaths, added to the 65 oth ­ ers logged in Illinois since W e d n e s­ d ay , p u s h e d th e n a tio n a l to ll from heat and storm s over the sam e period to at least 201, including 11 N ew York­ ers and an 80-year-old P ennsylvania man w ho had been out sealing his tar drivew ay in 94-degree heat. A m ong C hicago's dead w ere a 75- year-old w o m an and her 65-year-old h u s b a n d , fo u n d d e a d in th e ir 120- degree bedroom Friday w ith a ceiling fan w hirring overhead. "W e w ondered why they were in the bedroom and not in the basement where it's cool, but they couldn't w alk dow n there," neighbor Danyel Gooch said. In Philadelphia, autopsies perform ed Sunday revealed that heat contributed to th e d e a th of 15 p e o p le , sa id Jeff Moran, a spokesman for the city Health D epartm ent. The city's first tw o heat- related deaths were reported Saturday. In N ew York City, 11 people died of h e a t-re la te d ca u se s in th e 24 h o u rs e n d in g at 8 a.m . S u n d ay , said Ellen B o rak o v e , a s p o k e s w o m a n fo r th e medical exam iner. T em peratures that hit a grueling 102 d e g re e s S a tu rd a y , b re a k in g th e old re c o rd of 98 se t in 1983, a n d th a t m eant a record 4,607 calls to the Emer­ gency M edical S ervice, up from the old record of about 4,200, spokesm an D avid Bookstaver said. M ost of the h ea t's Chicago victim s w ere elderly, and scattered pow er o u t­ a g e s c a u s e d by h e a v y d e m a n d knocked out fans and air conditioning to com pound the problem . Sudanese officials attacked in Egypt ■ CA IRO , E gypt — In sim ultaneous attacks across Cairo on Sunday, gangs of men in street clothes attacked three S udanese d ip lo m ats as they left their hom es, b ea tin g them w ith clubs and kicking them. The attacks by g ro u p s of u p to 15 m en follow ed a sim ilar assault a day e a r lie r o n E g y p tia n d ip lo m a ts in Sudan, and Sudanese officials in Cairo accu sed E g y p tia n se cu rity forces of seeking revenge. "They pulled me on the ground and they beat m e," said a bloodied Beshir M oham m ed el-H assan, the em bassy's second-ranking official. "I think they are security.... I think they are Egyptian." S u d a n 's a m b a s s a d o r , A h m e d el- Tayeb el-Kordofani, w arned that m ore attacks could bring retribution against Egyptian diplom ats. "We will be forced to deal with the sit­ uation on the basis of reciprocity," said el- Kordofani, w ho w as not attacked. He said Egyptian agents had been tailing Sudanese diplomats since July 4. Relations between Egypt and Sudan, w hich h av e been rocky since a 1989 coup brought an Islamic fundam ental­ ist regim e to p o w e r in S u d an , h av e worsened dram atically since M ubarak accused Sudanese leaders of plotting to have him assassinated June 26. All three diplom ats w ere taken to el- S a la a m H o s p ita l. A b d e l-A z im el- Amin, a first secretary, received stitch­ es for a h e a d w o u n d , an d also w as beaten on his sh o u ld e r and legs, the a m b a s s a d o r s a id . K h a le d A li, an ad m in istra tiv e attache, suffered b ro ­ ken fingers and bruises on his shoul­ der and arm s. El-Hassan w as treated for cuts and bruises. P ictures of hostages released by K ashm iris ■ S R IN A G A R , In d ia — K ash m iri m ilitants released new photographs of th eir five W estern h o sta g e s S u n d ay and e s ta b lish e d d ire c t co n tac t w ith negotiators for the first time. The rebels are threatening to kill the hostages by d u sk M onday unless the Indian governm ent frees 21 members of their Al-Faran group, which seeks inde­ pendence for Jammu-Kashmir state. Sources within the state government, speaking on condition of anonym ity, said A l-Faran had estab lish ed direct c o n ta c t w ith th e g o v e rn m e n t a n d embassy officials from the United States, Britain, G erm any and N orw ay. There was no official confirmation. The m ilitants tried to contact nego­ tiators on F riday, b u t w ere foiled by faulty telephone lines. The rebels released a color picture of each h o s ta g e — an A m e ric a n , tw o Britons, a G erm an and a N orw egian — s h o w in g th e m s ittin g o n m e ta l chairs inside a room. — Compiled from Associated Press reports WORLD & NATION arms T h e D a il y T e x a n MONDAY, JULY 17r 1995 3 Pentagon may change view on nuclear arms test suspension Associated Press ~ W p p V c hpfnrp rh p v l i a h t f h p h . c p ¡r, f h o f ^ Weeks before they light the fuse in the far Pacific, the French have set off an explosion of global protest w ith their plan to resum e nuclear w eapons testing. But the nuclear futu re m ay d epend less on w hat happens on a Polynesian island in Septem ber than on the outcome of a secret m e etin g la st w eek at a C alifo rn ia reso rt, w here leading physicists gathered to try to h e lp a w a v e rin g U.S. g o v ern m e n t tak e a stand on a global test ban. These latest developm ents — a decision in F rance, in d ecisio n in A m erica — h ave suddenly cast a shadow of doubt over inter­ national negotiations to conclude a com pre­ hensive test ban treaty by late 1996. T he P o lish c h a irm a n of th o se ta lk s in G eneva sounds w orried. "It's possible," L udw ik Dembinski said of reaching the goal. "B ut it will be very diffi­ cult." F ifty y e a r s a f te r th e firs t a to m ic te s t explosion in N ew Mexico, on July 16, 1945, the nuclear pow ers have com m itted th em ­ selves to a 1996 target for banning the tests that over the years helped them build ever that over the years helped them build ever m o re com pact, d u ra b le an d finely tu n e d m o re co m p act, d u ra b le an d finely tu n e d w eapons. B ut a fte r 2 ,0 0 0 -p lu s e x p lo s io n s in th e N ev a d a d esert, th e cen tral A sian ste p p es an d th e Pacific, som e w a n t th e tre a ty to allow still m ore such "activities" — tests by another nam e. F o u r d e c la re d n u c le a r p o w e r s — th e U nited States, Russia, Britain and France — have observed a test m oratorium since 1992. L a st m o n th , h o w e v e r, th e F re n c h anno u n ced they w ould stage eight u n d e r­ g ro u n d ex p lo sio n s at th e ir M u ru ro a atoll site betw een Septem ber and next May. C ondem nation came quickly. Japan, N ew Z e a la n d a n d o th e r P acific g o v e rn m e n ts protested bitterly. Firebom bers destroyed a F ren ch c o n s u la te in A u stra lia . S e a b o rn e G re e n p e a c e a c tiv is ts in v a d e M ururoa. tr ie d to T he F re n ch say th e y n ee d th e te s ts to check the safety and reliability of their arse­ nal and to collect data, before a test ban, for later w eap o n s w o rk via co m p u ter sim u la­ tion. But arm s control advocates say Paris g g -------------------- U These latest devel­ opments — a decision in France, indecision in Ameri­ ca — have suddenly cast a shadow of a doubt over inter­ national negociations to con­ clude a comprehensive study test ban treaty by late 1996. m ostly w an ts to use the tests to com plete the design of a new w arhead. T h e U .S. g o v e r n m e n t re a ff ir m e d its adherence to the m oratorium . But as atten­ tion focused on France, things w ere h ap p e n ­ ing in W ashington, too. The U nited States had been expected to favor a test ban loophole to allow elem entary w eapons w ork via m iniature nuclear blasts underground, w ith explosive yields equiva- underground, w ith explosive yields equiva­ lent to no m ore than four pounds of TNT. In lent to no m ore than four pounds of TNT. In late June, however, it emerged that the Pen­ tagon w as seeking a m uch higher "th re sh ­ old" — reportedly 500 tons, equivalent to the pow er of 300 Oklahom a Citv bombs. In meetings last week, Clinton adm inistra­ tion officials were trying to settle the U S. policy dispute. None spoke publiclv about the pend­ ing decision, but the heat clearlv was on " T h e r e 's a lo t of p r e s s u r e w ith in th e adm inistration to go to a high threshold of several h u n d re d tons," said one inform ed official. The heat w as felt all the w ay to Geneva. "S everal h u n d re d tons, in m v p ersonal view, is certainly not acceptable," Dembins­ ki said in a telephone interview . India's delegate to the 38-nation talks was m ore direct in rejecting the idea of anv tests at all. A test ban treaty should m ean "com plete cessation of nuclear tests by all states in all e n v iro n m e n ts a n d for all tim e ," S atish C h a n d ra , s p e a k in g for th e T h ird W orld bloc, declared at one Geneva session. FLOOD AND TEARS GOP bills may slash environmental funds Associated Press W ASHINGTON — From end an ­ gered species p ro tection to easing s ta n d a rd s for d rin k in g w ater, the R epublican-led C ongress is u sing its p o w e r of th e p u r s e as n e v e r b e fo re to r e fa s h io n th e n a tio n 's environm ental protection policies. S p en d in g bills m o v in g through the H ouse have been stocked with riders th a t d irectly affect the w ay the federal governm ent will imple­ m ent law s to p ro tect the environ­ m ent and its natural resources. The effect, say critics, is essential­ ly to rew rite the n a tio n 's environ­ m ental agenda w ithout a full, pub­ lic debate on the law s them selves. O thers contend it's a legitim ate way to effect policy as quickly as possi­ ble. "It's a sneak attack," said Interior S e c r e ta r y B ru ce B a b b itt, w h o se d epartm ent has been the subject of n u m e ro u s d irec tiv e s th ro u g h the appropriations process from how it im p le m e n ts th e E n d a n g e re d Species Act to the size of its public relations office. " I t 's a tr e m e n d o u s ly c y n ic a l a p p ro a c h to p u b lic s e rv ic e ," he added. "T hey are basically sitting dow n in back room s w ith the lob­ byists and conspiring to find w ays to avoid having any debate." A sp e n d in g bill m oving tow ard H o u s e a p p r o v a l, fo r e x a m p le , w o u ld c u rta il th e E n v iro n m e n ta l P ro te c tio n A g e n c y 's b u d g e t by alm ost a third and cut its enforce­ m e n t p r o g ra m by $130 m illio n . A gency officials say vio latio n s by some polluters w ould no longer be pursued. The agency also w o u ld be p ro ­ hibited from pressing pending reg­ u la tio n s on to x ic r e le a s e s fro m cem ent kilns an d certain incinera­ to rs . T h e m e a s u r e w o u ld s c ra p rules on pollution from autom obiles a n d in d u s tr ia l p la n ts , a n d sc ale back a public inform ation program on toxic em issions from factories. Restrictions in a H ouse spending b ill w o u ld " e f f e c tiv e ly c re a te a m o r a to riu m on th e C lean W a te r Act," com plained EPA A dm inistra­ tor Carol Browner. O ne H ouse pro ­ vision w ould forbid the EPA from u sin g m o n e y to re q u ire p r e tr e a t­ m ent of sew age or to protect w e t­ lands. "W hat you see w hen you look at the w hole picture is an organized, concerted effort to underm ine p u b ­ lic health an d safety and the en v i­ ronm ent," com plained Browner. Congress' pow er of the purse has never before been used this broadly to affect en vironm ental protection program s, added Rep. G erry Stud- ds, D-Mass. "This is just w holesale legislating. It's absurd," he said. Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La., chair­ m an of the A p p ro p ria tio n s C o m ­ mittee, says he isn't happy about all the policy riders either, but explains that his party is reacting after h av ­ ing been out of pow er for decades in the House. "Y ou've got to u n d erstan d there a re a lo t of h u n g r y R e p u b lic a n s here w ho w ant to resolve im m edi­ ate issues," he said. B a b b itt s a id t h e r e 's no b e t te r exam ple of R epublicans u sin g the pow er of the p urse to affect policy than in the controversy over S outh­ ern C alifornia's M ojave Desert. L ast year, th e D em o c ratic C o n ­ gress, after years of trying, set aside a vast p art of the M ojave as a p ro ­ tected preserve u n d e r the N ational Park Service. N ow the H ouse, at the insisten ce of Rep. Je rry L ew is, R- C alif., a sta u n c h o p p o n e n t of th e desert protection bill, has m oved to block the lan d 's transfer to the park agency. It stripped aw ay all b u t $1 for the preserve's m anagem ent. V a r io u s m o n e y b ills m o v in g through Congress also w ould: — Ban n e w lis tin g s o f e n d a n ­ g ere d sp ecies an d c u rta il sh a rp ly the In terior D e p a rtm e n t's research a n d p r e lim in a ry w o rk r e la te d to species protection. — M ake it easier to b u ild ro a d ­ w ays in national parks and w ild er­ ness areas; open national forests to increased logging; and freeze m ost land purchases for parks. —Sharply cut m oney for research p r o g r a m s to p r o te c t th e P a c ific salm on and various ocean fisheries protection program s. — P ro h ib it o r c u r ta il s c ie n tific re se a rc h an d s u rv e y s of sp e c ie s. Federal officials w o u ld be b an n e d from going on private land to m ake ecological surveys. —Limit the ability of the govern­ m e n t to d e c la r e w e tla n d s , a n d require property ow ners to be com ­ p e n sate d for lost land v alu es as a result of w etlands protection. A ppropriators also have d ram a ti­ cally cu rtailed E nergy D ep artm en t c o n s e r v a tio n p r o g r a m s a n d c u t fu n d in g fo r fe d e ra l p r o g ra m s to d ea l w ith th e p ro s p e c ts of g lo b al w a rm in g . A n d th e G O P 's se v e n - year bud g et envisions o p en in g the A rctic N ational W ildlife R efuge in Alaska to drilling for oil. " E v e ry e c o n o m ic in te r e s t th a t m akes a living exploiting the public la n d s is lin e d u p b e c a u s e th e ir frie n d s are in p o w e r," said Brock E vans, le g isla tiv e d ir e c to r of th e N ational A udubon Society. "W e re seeing one environm ental sta tu te after a n o th er being g u tte d , repealed or strangled th ro u g h this process," added Karl Gawell of the W ilderness Societv. A fam ily pa ssed th ro u g h floo de d ho use s by a boat in B hu ap ur village in B angladesh Sunday. T h e flo o d ha s a lre a d y cla im e d 110 lives and affected m ore than 3 m illion people. ASSO C IA TED PRESS Serbian invasion may cause Zepa to collapse Associated Press SA R A JEV O , B o s n ia - H e r z e g o v in a — A s th e w orld dithered S unday over how to protect U.N. "safe areas" in Bosnia, a relentless Serb artillery a n d ta n k a s s a u lt p u s h e d th e is o la te d M u slim enclave of Z epa close to collapse. Aid agencies, struggling to cope w ith a m ass of h u m a n m isery after the fall of the g o v ern m e n t- held pocket of Srebrenica, p repared for the possi­ bility of th o u san d s m ore refugees. " T h e S e rb s h a v e th e c a p a b ility to o v e r r u n Z ep a ," said U.N. sp o k esm an A lexander Ivanko. S erb fo rc e s, b a c k e d by ta n k s a n d m o r ta r an d a rtille ry p o sitio n s, w ere ju st o ne m ile from the tow n. G o v e rn m e n t forces trie d d e s p e ra te ly to b ea t back the a s sa u lt. " F u r io u s a tta c k s on Z ep a are c o n tin u in g ," said B osnian P rim e M inister H aris Silajdzic. "M ajor battles are ongoing." The Bosnian governm ent, furious at internation­ al inaction, charged that U.N. com m anders rep eat­ e d ly sta lle d re q u e sts for N A TO a irstrik e s from U k ra in ia n p e a c e k e e p e r s in Z e p a . N A T O je ts b u zzed Z epa on S unday afternoon, b u t the U.N. officials said they d id not request airstrikes. S im ilar re q u e sts from D utch p e a ce k ee p ers in Srebrenica w ere ignored last w eek until Tuesday, w hen pinprick strikes on Serb tanks failed to stop the capture of the "safe area” h ours later. U .N . o f f ic ia ls , s p e a k in g on c o n d itio n of anonym ity, have said com m anders prom ised the Serbs in early July th at there w ould be no m ore a irstrik e s. T he p ro m ise re p o rte d ly cam e a d ay before the Serbs released the last of m ore than 370 peacekeepers held as h um an shields by the rebels in retaliation for N A TO airstrikes in late May. Bosnian Serb leader R adovan Karadzic, gloating over the U nited N ations' reluctance to use force, served notice that his forces intend to conquer all the land betw een Sarajevo and Serbia. "T he M uslim enclaves are not viable and m ust d isa p p e a r, or w e w ill do it by force," K aradzic said in an interview w ith the Spanish new spaper El Pais. The U.N. H igh C om m issioner for Refugees was stockpiling su p p lies in central Bosnian tow ns in p rep a ra tio n for an influx of refugees from Zepa, said spokesm an F ernando del M undo. O nce they seize Z ep a — w hich seem s only a m atter of tim e — the Serbs are expected to tu rn the full force of their gu n s on G orazde, the other U.N. "safe area" in eastern Bosnia. G orazde, w ith 60,000 inhabitants and 300 m ost­ ly British peacek eep ers, is b etter defended than Zepa, w hich has a p o p u latio n estim ated betw een 10,000 and 16,000. A fter Serb forces o verran Srebrenica last week, tro o p s to o k a w a y m en a n d b o y s and ex p e lle d m ore th a n 17,000 terrified w om en, children and elderly people into governm ent-held land. Inter­ national hum an rights and aid officials say an esti­ m ated 15,000 people m ay be missing. A id w o rk e rs, co n c ern ed over refugee re p o rts that men w ere slaughtered and w om en carried off to be raped, said they w ere having trouble getting access to the area to find out w hat hap p en ed to the missing. The m ass expulsions of M uslims in the past few days are am ong the biggest in the three-year war. But w o rld w id e c o n d e m n a tio n of the Serb c o n ­ q uests has not tran slate d into concrete action as g overnm ents are d ivided over w hat to do. GOP committee complains Clinton co-opting issues Associated Press PH ILA D ELPH IA — R epublican P arty leaders bent on w resting the W hite H ouse fro m D e m o c ra tic c o n tro l sa y P re s id e n t Clinton is m aking the challenge tougher by co-opting som e of their favorite issues. E ven w h ile m e etin g to sh o w case th e ir ow n W hite H ouse hopefuls and expressing confidence ab o u t the 1996 election, party stalw arts at the Republican N ational Com ­ m ittee sum m er m eeting grudgingly praised C linton's political skills. "H e's going to be a very tough opponent, a candidate w ho will do or say anything, said Robert Kjellander, an RNC com mittee­ m an from Illinois w ho attended the meeting w hich ended Saturday. "E ndorsing family v alu es, a tta c k in g H o lly w o o d , h e 's com e around to w here the Republican Party has known the American people w en' for years." C om m ittee m em ber Ray W ieczorek from N ew H a m p s h ire , like m o st h ere, called Clinton "a very form idable cam paigner "If he's reading the polls, he's like a man on a checkerboard. It's very h ard to keep track of him ," he said. O th e rs p riv a te ly e x p re ss n e rv o u sn e ss ab o u t how th e R ep u b lican fro n t-ru n n er, Senate M ajority L eader Bob Dole, w ould fare ag a in st C linton, and w h eth e r D ole s broad supp o rt is also deep. H ouse S peaker N ew t G ingrich told the partv leaders that if the race comes dow n to personality, no one on the Republican side can match Clinton. "I do not know in our lifetime ot any politi cal figure with a greater capacity to make you feel gixxi for 30 seconds," he said. So Republicans are depending on conser vative issues to carry the presidential race, as thev did in last fall's congressional elec tions. The G O P le ad e rs are seeth in g that Clinton is encroaching on their turf. For instance, Clinton recently stated that individual p rayer in school is not blocked U [Clinton is]going to be a very tough opponent, a candidate who will do or say anything.” — Robert Kjellander, Republican National Committee Member bv the constitutional separation of church and state. H e in fu ria te d m e m b ers of his ow n party w ith sp ending cuts and a b u d ­ get-balancing proposal. H e chided H olly­ w ood for b o m b a rd in g c h ild re n w ith too m uch sex and violence. A nd the R epubli­ cans expect m ore to come by election day. Dole on S aturday accused him of "co m ­ ing out alm ost on a dailv basis w ith som e Republican-light proposal.” T hat's w hy, said Kjellander, Republicans " d o th e m se lv es a d isserv ice by th in k in g th a t C lin to n is so in c o m p e te n t th a t h e 's going to be throw n out." Such com ments w ere pervasive here even as pnm arv contest squabbles began to inten­ sify am ong the GOP's ow n contenders. Conference attendees said they consider the GOP contest far from decided, w ith p ri­ m aries still seven m onths aw ay. S till, so m e e x p re s s e d u n e a s in e s s th a t Clinton and Dole run alm ost even in head- to-head poll pairings, even though surveys this far ahead of the election are considered to have little relevance to its outcom e. " W ith th e n e g a tiv e s C lin to n h a s, y o u w o u ld like to see D ole ru n n in g a h e a d of h im ," said RNC p resid en tial fu n d -raisin g ch a irm an Fred M alek H e p re d ic te d th a t picture w ould change once the party selects a nominee. 4 T h e D a i l y T e x a n MOMMY, JUUT17.1986 EDITORIALS T h e Da il y T e x a n Editorial Board Robert Rogers Editor Mark Murray A ssociate Editor Chris Parry Associate Editor O pinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or w riter of the article. They are not necessarily those of the U niversity adm inistration, the Board of Regents or the Texas S tudent Publications Board of O perating Trustees. VIEWPOINT Plus £a change Some things never change. The following statem ents w ere printed in The Texan’s early years, yet they just as easily could have been pulled from last w eek's paper. Enjoy. ■ Jan. 22, 1901: "You can hardly understand or appreciate the num erous trials of an editor until clothed w ith his responsibility," w rote Fritz G. Lanham. Lanham, The Texan's first editor, w ent on to becom e the editor of Alcalde and serve for decades in the U.S. House of Representatives. ■ Dec. 9, 1903: "The Texan has ever favored stud ent m anagem ent of student interests. It feels that the students can m anage their affairs better than the faculty or any private interest." ■ Dec. 16, 1903: Being Texan editor "is a hard job and one that receives scant reenum eration for the labor expended. The most that the editors have gotten out of it heretofore has been frequent and good cussings." ■ M arch 31, 1909: Concerning the m onetary rew ards of journalism, The Texan w rote "from a financial point of view, there is nothing encouraging to one w ho w ould go into the business." ■ A pril 17, 1909: The Texan quoted a visiting professor as saying about journalism "The w ork is hard, the hours are long, the vacations are short, and the routine is wearisome." ■ M ay 29,1909: "But the m ost pleasant thing of all [about being edi­ tor] is to have narrow -m inded soft-headed galcots to emphatically deny that you are printing a proper paper." ■ Oct. 26, 1910: "W hen you, possessed w ith an ugly scowl and a feeling of utter disgust, tell your friends that The Texan has m ade no reference to some m atter that should have been reported, does it not then strike you that a m ere trifle of exertion on your p art w ould have rem edied the whole situation?" ■ M ay 27, 1911: "the bitter experience of the editor and his band in endeavoring to edit a credible paper and at the sam e tim e keep up in some degree in class w ork." ■ Dec. 2, 1913: "In som e instances, things h appen that the Universi­ ty authorities are very anxious to keep from the public." — Robert Rogers Centralize Ironically, at a time w hen the country needs to centralize education, H ouse Republicans are assaulting the D epartm ent of Education! A ccording to S unday's New York Times, the H ouse plan w ould im plem ent deep spending cuts — as m uch as $4 billion — in the d ep a rtm en t's funding. The H ouse plan w ould also elim inate Goals 2000, a program that w ould establish national education goals. C onservatives argue that the national governm ent should play a sm aller role in education, turning pow er over to local governm ents. But decentralization w ould only aggravate the nation's education problem s. U nder such a system, pow er is concentrated at the state and local level, w ith district school boards exercising the greatest power. This leads to w ide varieties in educational quality am ong different school districts. Some school boards are concerned about education and staffed w ith com petent members. But other school boards are m ore concerned about local sports and Christian fundam entalism . The U nited States needs uniform education standards to ensure a m inim um quality level. In addition, m any school board officials don't have the expertise to set ap p ro priate policies. They m ay be familiar w ith their region, but often k now little about the skills needed to com pete in today's inter­ national economy. H ow can these officials ensure that their students are ta u g h t the ap p ro p riate m aterial? W ith centralized education, the federal governm ent could concen­ trate the country's experts and give them the pow er to set policies. C linton and the prev io u s Congress established Goals 2000 and increased the D epartm ent of E ducation's funding to give the national g o vernm ent greater control over educational reforms. W ith their m isguided d esire for decentralization, H ouse Republi­ cans are now attem pting to tu rn back the clock on educational reform. — Chris Parry Bravo for Texan’ story Thank you for your coverage about the D epartm ent o f S panish and its bogus adm inistration ("M ix-up causes Spanish students to miss final, spurs w alkout," July You all did an excellent job at covering the story and sorting o u t the facts, as the circum stances obviously w ere very compli- Prescott M. Caballero Government senior Don’t give Chechnya aid This letter is a response to the colum n W estern nations m u stn 't leave Chechnya to R ussia's mercies" by R izw an Jaka pub­ lished in the July 11 Daily Texan. In the article, Jaka w rites: "America, NATO an d the U nited N ations should have im posed sanctions against Russia and sent m ilitary aid to the freedom -fighting C hechnyans." Supplying C hechnyans with m ilitary aid w ould not be a sensible solu­ tion. On the contrary, it w ould result in an escalation of bloodshed. This w ar can be and should be stopped m ore efficiently through diplom atic chan­ nels. Jaka also gives a brief history of Russia's attem p ts to"subjugate the Caucasus M us­ lim s," am ong w hich he m entioned Stalin's 1944 cam paign against Chechnya. Well, Stalin actually w asn 't Russian. He w as b om in and w as a national of a C au­ casian R epu blic of G eorgia, w hich is C hechnya's neighbor. AH the nations within the Soviet Union suffered under Stalin's regime. That is why I maintain that Chechnya, as well as the rest of the republics, were oppressed dur­ ing that time not by Russia, but by a rule of SA gives UT students representation No taxation w ithout representation." This is an A m erican motto, based on dem ocra­ tic principles. In 1776, the A m erican revo­ lutionaries decided that they w ere fed up w ith the R izw an J a k a TEXAN COLUMNIST and pay them w ith fringe benefits. British bureaucracy. In 1995, the stu d en ts are fed up w ith the UT bureaucracy. The revolutionaries established a dem ocratic g o v ern m e n t w ith representatives. Previously, the stu d en ts had established the S tu­ dents' A ssociation. Some UT ad m inistrators believe that the stu ­ dents do not know w h at is best for them selves and for the U niversity. This is pretty ironic, since students pay p art of the adm inistration's salary. They w ork for us. For that m atter, stu d en ts are the essence of the U niversity. S tudents are here determ ining their future and should be allow ed to determ ine their environm ent. They should be em pow ered w ith equal representation in UT bureaucracy. The S tudents' A ssociation is one attem pt to represent the students. M em bers create resolu­ tions and allocate fu n d s to v arious stu d e n t events. The resolutions are symbolic in nature, but they hold som e credibility w ith the adm inis­ tration. These student governm ent resolutions the to convey stu d e n t concerns attem p t to bureaucracy. All organizations require im prove­ ment, but the students should be pleased w ith the Students Association. But im proving it m eans that the UT adm inistration needs to share their pow er w ith the S tudents' A ssociation and the Cabinet of College Councils. Critics of the S tudents' A ssociation should real­ ize that this is p art of dem ocracy and the concept of fair representation. Let the S tudents' Associa­ tion do its job. Less than $2 per sem ester of the stu d en t fees goes directly to the S tudents' Association. It m ay not be the best representation, b u t it costs less than a burger. Instead of criticizing it, one should take advantage of its influence upon the faculty and adm inistration. A dm ittedly, the SA representatives do som e resum e padding. U.S. representatives and sena­ tors have m any self-interests in their jobs as well. People need representation, and those w ho repre­ sent them need an incentive. This is the beauty of dem ocracy: Elect som eone to do the dirty work, This is h ow the system w orks, and the people m ust continue to watch. The alternative to w atch­ ing is to get involved and m ake the representa­ tives aw are of stu d en t opinion. In light of ou r never-ending increasing fees, students need the S tudents' A ssociation and their representatives to speak out on behalf of the stu ­ dents. The students say give us low er fees, or give us m ore financial aid. O ver the years, the S tudents' Association has contributed m any things to the University, such as Capital M etro busing, on-line teacher evalua­ tions, the new stu d en t services building, Texas L egislature lobbying, em ergency stations, the M inority Info rm atio n C enter, the V olunteer Agency, and, m ost im portant, an increase in the allocation of financial aid. S tudents should take tim e to get to know their representatives. Just m osey on over to the fourth floor of the Texas Union. UT adm inistrators set policies that students m ust listen to. By expressing stu d en t needs to UT adm inistrators, the Students' Association m akes this com m unication a tw o-w ay street. Jaka is a computer science senior. Regents ignore rules with Moffett building One of the U niversity's big M ichael Lewis TEXAN COLUMNIST topics is currently just a big hole in the ground. O n the southw est corner of Speedw ay and and the Peter T. Flawn Academic Center, are nam ed after living peo­ ple. But these b u ild in g s w eren 't nam ed so originally. and thp Ppfpr T p,3,Ar” L— 1 j honoree be deceased. 26th Street, construction has started on the Louise and James Robert M offett M olecular Biology Building. This building has generated a lot of controversy, starting w ith the p ar­ tial destruction of the beloved Anna Hiss G ym nasium and m ore recently the decision to nam e the building after Moffett, chairm an of the board of Freeport McMoRan. Few people, however, have asked how the UT Board of Regents could nam e the building after M offett. After all, h e's still alive. According to the Regents' Rules: Buildings of the [UT] System and its com ponent institutions shall not be nam ed in honor of any person until such person shall have been deceased at least five years." It appears that Moffett, w ho is still am ong the living, w ould be disqual- ified from being honored by a b u ild ­ ing. So how did the regents do it? According to Ed Sharpe, UT vice p resid e n t of adm in istratio n , the Board of Regents w aived the provi­ sion. In fact, it has done this on sev­ eral occasions. A little-know n fact about the rules is th a t they "m ay be ad d ed to, am ended, w aived, or suspended by a m ajority of all the m em bers of the Board at any regular m eeting." So ra th e r th a n telling M offett, "We can't nam e the building after you; it's against our rules," they decide to ignore the pesky little rule and do it anyw ay. Sharpe claim ed that m any of the buildings on cam pus w ere nam ed for living people. Sharpe is right in that m any buildings, such as RLM They w ere renamed for living peo­ ple, and th at's not the case w ith the Moffett building. to The Regents' Rules state that facil­ ities other than buildings m ay be nam ed recognize significant d onors or in d iv id u als w ho have m ade significant contributions to the University. The regents could have offered to nam e som ething in the m olecular biology building, such as a laboratory, a* classroom or a library, after Moffett and his wife. A nother option for regents w ould have been to renam e an existing building, such as the Geology Build­ ing, for Moffett. This w ould be a bit m ore appropriate, since M offett's degree is in geology and geological sciences. According to the Office of the President, the renam ing of a building does not require that the FIRING LINE Most buildings w ere nam ed for the departm ent they first housed and have been renam ed w ithin the last 30 years. The people honored have been either past UT adm inis­ trators or have m ade significant con­ tributions to the academ ic quality of the departm ent using the building. An exam ple of this w as the Anna Hiss G ym nasium . It w as originally nam ed the W om en's G ym nasium . In 1974, it w as renam ed in honor of A nna H iss, d irec to r of Physical Training for W omen. Yet instead of follow ing one of the options perm itted by the Regents' Rules, the Board just decided to w aive a rule and nam e the building after Jim Bob Moffett. W hat is the point of the rule, if it can just be w aived? It m akes one w onder w hat else they m ight w aive the rules on. Lewis is a graduate student in architectural engineering. cerned w ith protecting the bottom line. A useful econom ic adage says "look for the m oney." The m oney is not in free speech. The m oney is in the selling of those things that appeal to the baser passions: casual sex and violence (especially against women). Plato w as the first to realize that certain irresponsible forms of entertainm ent are harm ful to developing m inds. A ccording to Rosalie Chang, how ever, "a direct link betw een crim e and ... television ... has never been established." But the pow er of m edia to influence should be obvious to anyone w ho has ever been em otionally affected by a particular film, TV program or song. And even if, as C hang argues, "logic tells us that violent program m ing can, at the most, only aggravate a tendency that is already established," this is h ardly a justifi­ cation. The sam e argum ent could be used in supp o rt of narcotic trafficking: "People have an established tendency to useheroin, therefore, etc." The issue is not about free speech. N or is it about censorship. It's about m oney, of course. But m ainly it's about responsibility. Stephen R. Brown Philosophy senior Firing Line letters can be brought to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue or mailed to P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. They also can be e-mailed to TEXAN@utxvms.cc.utexas.edu. Firing Line letters must be fewer than 250 words. UT students should include their major and classification, and all writers must present identifi­ cation or include a phone number. The Texan reserves the right to edit letters. a m entally unstable person. Oleg Shckekin Physics senior Science receives review Tor N eilands ("Science needs scrutiny," th in k s science n eeds critical July 13) review. It needs it. It gets it. Science is an approach to investigation. It is also a social process. N eilands hints at "recent events that highlight fraud." These are proof that the system of scrutiny by fel­ low scientists works. It is an essential part of the w ay science works. There are "brow nie points" for finding flaws in other people's w ork (and even in one's own). Rapid recognition and retrac­ tion of errors enhances the reputation of the retractor. O bstinate rigidity low ers one's esteem. In short, contrary to the now popular image of the arrogant scientist, he is hum ble before the facts. David Barnett UT staff Put back issues on-line So you re sitting at home, rem em bering that there was something about that ride hom e on the shuttle bus that bothered you. Then you remember. The person in front o you on the shuttle bus w as reading an article that directly affects your life and could not only influence your college years but your future career as well. It's too late to get another Texan! W hat ° , r d much, much, morel REGULAR HOURS Drag: Mon-Fri Saturday Sunday Riverside: Mon-Sat Sunday 8 a.m.-8 p.m. 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 1 1 a.m.-5 p.m. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. 1 1 a.m.-5 p.m. ■ ■ * ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ F R iE J 00% c o tto n B Tw CAP of$7i advert This lirf p f Cop advertises /Our cfic _. h oice of Texis* Té*tbo®ks os your be (okstore. ® >ks Val Íd fc |É Í€ f< 9 5 N o t v a lid with other discounts. CUFF NOTES Y .#%virtvthft^Jbi V alid thru Jéfy% T, 1 9 9 5 N o t v a lid with other discounts ■ - / t in c a p s \ "Vith this coupon" \$3 otíYí>B<£y V alid t h r í Juf^ S 1, 1 9 9 5 N o t v o lid with other discounts OFF THE DRAG T E X A S TEXTBOOKS Riverside Place Shopping Center 2410-B East Riverside 443-1257 Plenty of FREE Parking é ON THE DRAG T E X A S TEXTBOOKS 2338 Guadalupe 478-9833 Park FRII in any West Campus ALLRIGHT Parking Lot (minimum purchase required) STATE & LOCAL T h e D a ily T e x a n / MOMMY, JU y 1 7 ,1 9 9 6 UNITED GOP brief attacks Waco intervention Associated Press W ASHINGTON — With potentially com­ b u stib le h e a rin g s ju s t ahead , th e H ou se Republican lead ersh ip d istributed its fact sheet to rank-and-file lawmakers concerning what it terms the "traged y in W aco." Designed to help Republicans field ques­ tions from reporters and thus shape public opinion about the hearings, the sheet notes that most of the dozens who perished at the Branch Davidian compound, many of them women and children, "w ere not suspected of any criminal w rongdoing." Q uestions about "excessiv e use of force, militarization of law enforcement, and due p ro c e s s o f la w m u st be a n a ly z e d ," th e material says. "T h e raid also raised serious q u e stio n s a b o u t re lig io u s lib erty in th is nation." That so b er ra tio n a le for eig h t d ay s of h e arin g s is s trik in g ly d ifferen t from the view of the D em ocrats in Congress and the W hite H ouse, w h ose m isery this sw e lter­ ing sum m er extend s from Waco to W hite­ water. Investigating the events at W aco "w ith ­ out investigating the extrem e activities of som e m ilitia s Seem s to su g g est th at law enforcem ent agencies are the real threat to the safety of Am erican citizen s," Treasury Secretary R ob ert Rubin w rote jo u rn a lis ts recently. The 1993 events in Texas m ust be viewed in the context of the April 19 b om b in g at Oklahoma City, with its connections to anti- government militia groups, he said. W h a te v e r m is ta k e s th e g o v e r n m e n t made, "th e real villain at W aco w as D avid K o resh ," lead er of the Branch D avid ians, s a id T r e a s u r y U n d e r s e c r e t a r y R o n a ld Noble. Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., w as even more pointed. The run-up to the W aco hear­ ings has, he said, "all the earmarks of a cir­ cus with the N ational Rifle A ssociation as ringm aster." The NRA has been critical of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the agency heavily involved in the siege against Koresh. Four ATF agents and six Branch D avidi­ ans w ere killed w hen the ATF in itiated a raid against the W aco com pound Feb. 28, 1993. Seven weeks later, an additional 81 David­ ians, in clu d ing Koresh, died in a fire that raced through the com pound after the FBI tried to force out the com pound's occupants with tear gas. The government maintains the fire was set by those inside. Arts funds untouched Associated Press DALLAS — T exas arts funding escaped the 1995 leg islative budget ax, a cause for rejoicing among m any of the state's arts and cu ltu re a d v o ca te s , w ho are now c a s tin g about for supplementary financial support. A ccording to the N ational A ssem bly of State Arts A gencies, Texas will spend 18.5 cen ts per p e rso n a y e a r on th e a rts. T h e national average is 99.14 cents. D espite the b otto m ranking, m any arts advocates say public funding in Texas is in better shape than before. Now, they are look­ ing to other financial sources to supplement state aid, such as special license plates. Peter Fox of Austin, president of the Texas A llia n c e fo r E d u c a tio n and th e A rts , a statewide association of arts groups, said the recently adjourned legislature was the "m ost pro-arts" session in more than a decade. Legislators "w ent into the session with the intent of no (new) taxes, and there was just no way to generate anything," Fox said. " I think probably as much as you could expect to happen did happen in this session." The Texas C om m ission for the Arts, the state agency that m akes financial grants to arts organizations, was reauthorized without significant funding cuts. A ls o , th e T e x a s C u ltu ra l E n d o w m e n t Fund, started in 1993 to generate income for the arts in the future, received an additional $2 million in state money for 1996-97. The endowment, which has a goal of $200 million, was initially funded with $2.2 mil­ lion. When the endowment reaches that goal, the income generated by that money would be used for arts projects. The com m ission this year granted about $3.7 million to various groups, but requests totaled about $18 million. In reau th orizin g the com m ission for 12 years, the legislature directed that it not fund "any project which includes obscene materi­ al." The directive was added at the request of Rep. Warren Chisum, R-Pampa and head of the Texas Conservative Coalition. C h isu m 's am end m ent w as rew ord ed to prohibit "obscen ity" as defined by the penal code: m aterial or a perform ance that " th e av erag e p e rso n , a p p ly in g co n te m p o ra ry community standards, would find that taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest in sex." It s m erely saying you've got to live by the law of the state of Texas as far as pornog­ raphy g o es," Fox said. "S o I d o n 't think it was that lim iting." Shukin Akbar,11, protested the U.N. arms embargo in Bosnia at a demonstration at the state Capitol sponsored by the Muslim Students Association and the Islamic Center for Greater Austin on Sunday. She was one of about 50 people who took part in the protest, designed to show solidarity with Muslims in Bosnia and draw attention to atrocities being committed there. FRANK MILLER/Daily Texan Staff Texas county jails offer beds for rent Associated Press FO R T W O R TH — O n e y ear ago, ja ils across the state were overflowing with pris­ o n e rs , m an y o f w h om had to sle e p on floors. Now county jails statew ide are offering cell space for rent in the hope of finding pay­ ing customers to fill rapidly emptying cells. At stake are m ultimillion-dollar contracts w ith states from Utah to V irginia, w hose jails are bulging with prisoners. I get letters daily from all over Texas," said Ben Griego, director of offender ser­ vices for the Colorado Department of Cor­ rections. "Texas, right now, is the only state in the nation that has beds to rent." Texas has completed a two-year, $1.5 bil­ lion jail building program that expanded s ta te p ris o n sp a ce fro m 7 5 ,0 0 0 b e d s to 146,000. In the past two months, Texas prison offi­ cials have moved 18,000 inm ates to state prisons from the county jails w here they had been backlogged, said Larry Todd, a T e x a s D e p a rtm e n t o f C r im in a l Ju s tic e spokesman. "They recognize the loss of revenue from the state, and county commissioners want to do something to make up for that loss, especially those who have built new jails," Todd said. The state paid counties $246.5 million to h ou se its inm ates in fiscal 1994 and has spent $390 million so far in fiscal 1995. That money stops Aug. 31, Todd said. "W e have no budget for paying the coun­ ties for fiscal year '9 6 ," he said. With the loss of the state prisoner back­ log, which generated almost $70 million in state reim bu rsem en t sin ce 1990, T arran t C ounty is looking to other states to make up that money, said Chief Deputy Zavala Swanson. The inmate population in Tarrant Coun­ ty's four jails now stands at 83 percent of capacity, and there are fears of jailer layoffs, said Tarrant County Sheriff David Williams. Tarrant and Dallas counties, which had up to 1,000 inmates sleeping on jail floors in 1994, are considering contracts to house the prisoner overflows of other states in their empty cells. "W e either must do that or we have to consider downsizing our own facilities and p e rso n n e l r e q u ir e m e n ts ," said T a rra n t County Judge Tom Vandergriff. T arran t C ounty, w hich now has 1,000 em pty beds, has received representatives from fo u r state s. T h o se re p re s e n ta tiv e s were referred by private companies acting as intermediaries. "It's alm ost like a b rokerag e of crim i­ nals, said Swanson, who helps operate the ja ils fo r th e T a rra n t C o u n ty S h e r iff's Department. ™ V;\UVÍJ0 jJ> . South Padre Island rieans Lake Tahoe Orlando MpNfei («ffwtf Cafe duMondt •{&•«« foe tvvo nrnmiifra n. H~L m W tnJLL ‘V m tfdm .1 t o Must k at t a t 18 fa n «ti i Critical Acclaim. At Friday's, we have a few showstoppers of our own, one-of-a-kind menu items that have gotten some great reviews. Whether it's brunch, lunch, dinner or late night, we've got something to please any crowd. r -1 1I 1 i 1 i 1 ii 1 ! l l I 1 1 \ I ¡1 i i 1 ll j FRIDAYS First State Bank • Student Loans • Student Accounts • • 11 Convenient Locations in Austin to Serve You • • ATM Access — 24 hrs. • 24 Hour — Telephone Service • • Personal Banking Service • B J Drop by registration forms at any of the following nearby locations: Red River Location N. Guadalupe Location S. 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JUUr 1 7 ,1 0 8 6 8 T h e D a ily T e v a n ENTERTAINMENT Seagal delivers payloads of dairy in ‘Territory’ -........................................................................................................................ . * jA M E S H ^ B E R D DttiV SXS' §73 Ok ph: leso r to keep vou up and iiaN . va l : Steven Seagal Bruce WiBb ] public make a -a ..- d ' ik'ts nere s one ^ it if a ruthless t lerronsis held ex Snipes and ¡id the The extent to which the terrorist takeover formula has beer rruiked has left this Hollywood cash cow with a severe case '* sore nipples And, in my homb.e estimation anv screenwtiter who begins his pitch wnth A ruthless and diabolical band of terrorists ought to be executed on sight Or at least forced to watch Under Siege 1 Here the ruthless and diabolical band is led by Eric Bogosian. happi­ ly camping away as Travi- Dane a former CIA techno-designer who hiiacks a tram. You see, Dane needs to be moving though Dark Territory (a mountain­ ous region where radio signals can­ not penetrate in order to tap unde­ into a CIA spy satellite tected equipped with a deadly ' particle beam." After setting up his mobile com­ mand center, the terrorists wait for to Middle-Eastern governments cough up the billion-dollar price tag for Dane to use the satellite to wipe out Washington. Of course, given the current congressional composi­ tion he probably could have raised the monev stateside. On the train is Seagal's Casey Rvback. the bone-snamni? former the bone-snaping former Ryback Navy SEAL who is traveling with his estranged niece When Dane and his thugs-fbr-hire take over Rvback is left to w age war against the terror- Right from the 'tart Under Siege 2 show’s the color of it s cheese. The film opens wnth a test of the satellite from a Wjryames-type com­ mand room With government brass and the head of the CIA watching, a technician uses the satellite to zoom in on a topless sunbather, lascivious­ ly exclaiming "Holy guacamole!" Yep, you're in Dark Territory all right. Things improve a bit once the automatic weapons and bone-snap­ ping commences, but whenever the pace slows down, you're left with lines like Ryback? He's the best there is! And you can almost smell the cheddar. As Ryback, Seagal is, well, Seagal. The problem with Seagal is he's a non-face-hit action-hero. You see, there are two kinds of adventurers: Those who get hit in the face and those who never do. Great battered face-hitters include Harrison Ford and Bruce Willis, w'hile the latter camp has Steven Sea­ gal and Roger Moore's James Bond. These smug, non-face hitters are action heroes by Glamour Shots. They never like to see themselves with dirty clothes, messed hair or bruised faces. The problem is it's difficult to work up any sort of suspense for FILM urna «EOF 2: rum mammy Starring: Steven Seagal. Eric Bogosian, Katherine Heigl Director: Geoff Murphy Playing at: Great Hills 8, Lincoln 6, Vo rthcross 6, Westgate 8 Rating: (out of five) their character's safety. After all, if getting hit in the face is a no-no, then death is pretty much out of the ques­ tion. Seagal not only never dirties him­ self, but in Under Siege 2 never even removes his black coat. Whether that's due to his rapidly inflating ego or rapidly inflating paunch, who can say. The supporting roles are a minori­ ty friendly lot and include a female bartender and a black porter. As the bartender, Sandra Taylor represents a holdover from the orig­ inal (and I use the term loosely) Under Siege in that she's a Playboy model strategically worked into the plot Though while the first film had an actual purpose for the model's character, here you can almost pic­ ture the director of Under Siege 2 say­ ing, "OK, Sandra, say your little line, look pretty and don't forget about our plans tonight." W ait, actually there is a purpose for Taylor's character, I almost for­ got. The scene goes like this: .1 d..i__ i Ryback pops into the restroom via a duct while Taylor is looking in the mirror putting on lipstick. What she is doing PUTTING ON LIPSTICK WHILE BEING HELD HOSTAGE BY MURDERING TERRORISTS is not explained, nor is she particularly surprised to see Ryback alive and well and popping out of a bathroom wall. Ryback has her open the bath­ room door and distract a guard with her cleavage, enabling Ryback to disable him. So Taylor does have a purpose; I stand corrected. As the villain, Bogosian is service­ able but can t compare with Tommy’ Lee Jones in the first film (or if you want to go back to the source, Alan Rickman in Die Hard). One annoyance about his charac­ ter: If Dane is so brilliant, why does­ n't he just kidnap the two train pas­ sengers he needs and drive around in Dark Territory? You would think attaining a large truck would be a hell of a lot simpler than hijacking a whole passenger train, right? But items like that are quibbles of a thinking person who, really, has no place watching a Steven Seagal film. Sufficient to say, if every cliche, improbability and plot-hole were to be listed here, this review would extend all the way to the Doones- bury cartoon. The time for terrorist takeover movies is past. Hollywood needs to take this formula cash cow gently into the bam and slaughter it. Auteurs like John Woo, Quentin THE FUSCO BROTHERS by J.C. Duffy T h ere’s a lot to SDoonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU say about the Land o f the Longhorn M ' From Bluebonnets to longhorns Texas has it all. From pick-ups on d irt roads to the fast-paced excitement o f the big city streets, Texans have seen it all. No other place so forcefully charges into the future as it so proudly preserves the heritage o f Its’ past. It ’s a ll p a rt o f a day in the life o f a Texan, and it ’s all found in The D aily Texan. ACROSS 1 Jobs to do • “ Excuse me 10 Sentry's command 14 Mr, North, informally 1 » ----- contendere 10 “Tosca"tune 17 Absolutely dependable 10 Monthly check 20 Gambling site 21 Partner of read Abbr. ’em 22 Latest news 24 Have on 20 London Magazine essayist 2« One of Santa s team 20 Half volley, in tennis 23 Speedy 34 Enfant terrible 38 PBS science program 30 Part of Q.E.D. 37 Beethoven dedicatee 30 Rat-—:— (knocking) 30 Achy 40 Rosalind Russell role 41 Religious work of art 42 Gym shoes 44 See 47-Down 40 Filly’s father 40 Droops 47 C ele b ratio n 50 Farming unit 51 Lawn square 54 Mideast’s Gulf o f------ 55 Almost weightless so Matador’s foe so Pulled a gun, as in a shootout to Bedside companion 01 Tortoiselike 02 Actress Thompson of “ Family" 0 3 ------- and true DOWN 1 One way to order at a restaurant 2 Very much 3 Neatmk’s counterpart Crossword Edited by Will Shortz No. 0 6 0 5 Seagal reprises his role as a bad boy ex-Navy SEAL In Dark Territory Tarantino and digital effects like Eighties dinosaurs like Steven Sea those in Jurassic Park have set new gal need to catch up, or get out of th parameters for the '90s action film. way. New York cybercafes upgrade from hairnets to Internet access Associated Press NEW YORK — The coffee house — a place to read poetry, eat muffins, gossip, philosophize ... and surf the Internet? Welcome to the cybercafe, the newest addition to the on-line lexicon. It offers more than cappuccino and cholesterol-free brownies. And the chips aren't just made of choco­ late. New York's first three cybercafes, which opened this spring in the East Village, charge customers $10 to $14 an hour to use a computer linked to the Inter­ net. While they eat or drink, patrons can send e-mail, scope a chat line or, at one cafe, plug in their own lap­ top. More than making money, the cafe owners say their goal is to educate a public still intimidated bv computers. You don't have to be a brain surgeon to use the Internet, says Dave Williams, co-owner of The Hero­ ic Sandwich Cybercafe. “It's very easy to understand. We're trying to provide a comfortable atmosphere to use it." The on-line cafes are among about 50 that have opened worldwide in the past several years — with at least 25 more in the works — according to a cybercafe guide obtained electronically at Manhattan's Internet Cafe. About 20 of those are in the United States, in cities ranging from Seattle and San Francisco to Nashville and Atlanta. Trendy? No, says Lu Ratunil, a customer at the "a t" cafe. I dare you to go outside and find someone who will pay $5 to use the Internet for a half-hour," Ratu­ nil, a Manhattan computer graphic artist, says as he nibbles on a BLT and scrolls through a database directory. "A one-time customer won't come back here unless he has a reason to be on die Net, and w hats a reason? To look at cool stuff? That's not enough." But Bert Presberg, a computer-illiterate psychia­ trist, was entranced with the Grateful Dead song lyrics his two friends were showing him at a nearby terminal. "They're trying to get me interested in the comput­ er, so they put up a subject I'm interested in," says Presberg, a Berkeley, Calif., resident who was so inspired he may now buy a computer. One of His friends, Manhattan free-lance writer Mark Shulman, says he likes the cafe's "social setting. Doing the Internet is very solitary at home. We re sharing our interests here." Co-owner Glenn McGinnis says that's just the kind of social atmosphere he was seeking when he opened the cafe April 24 with five investors. The at" is Manhattan's largest cybercafe and the only one that ofiers a full menu with everything from sandwiches to sushi and meat loaf. But it feels like a General Cinem a I BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY] | ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6pm| TUESDAY IS BMGAINDAY ALL SMTS4LL SN0WS4U DAY INKHT TOO! 4 3 0 0 TUESDAY ONLY EXgfT STARRED ( * ) FILMS H IG H L A N D l O . 11 1-35 a t M IP P U FISKVILLI 3D 4 3 A .o 5 ? 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The atmosphere is so mellow that employees some­ times need to be reminded to answer the phone. "W e encourage people to hang out," says McGin­ nis, 25, a recent Cornell University graduate. His Macintosh PowerMac 6100s and PCs cost $5 per half hour to use, while an e-mail address is $5 per month. The cafe also offers video conferencing and con­ certs or poetry readings that are "broadcast" onto the Internet through tiny cameras and microphones atop five computers. Education is the goal at the Internet Cafe, which offers Internet training classes — $20 for two hours, plus one hour of computer time. The cafe is one narrow room with a few tables, loose chairs and bookshelves lined with computer magazines, novels and that day's copy of The New York Times. A sign on the wall reads "Smoking Per­ mitted." "If you don't work in technology, you can't learn everything about computers from a book," says owner Arthur Perley, a Wall Street computer consul­ tant who lives next door to the cafe. His four PCs run from $6 to $10 an hour, depend­ ing on what you want to do. Customers can also con­ nect their own laptops and use a color scanner and laser printer. Perley, 38, says the favorite Internet databases are usually chat lines and e-mail. Kids often peruse The Lion King Home Page, while one woman doing genealogical research found Virginia census data from 1850. The Heroic Sandwich is the smallest local cyber­ cafe, with one Pentium PC ($7 per half hour). Owner Dave Williams, 26, says the "non-threaten­ ing " approach is deliberate — and designed to attract women. The S e cret ^ Persistently, the m ost of R o an Inish 2:30-5:00-7:15-9:35 S h a llo w G r a v o 11:45 pm DOEIEl Jloi UNUSUAL video store in the country. NO-CHARGE MEMBERSHIF’S VALIDATED FREE PARKING HANDY' VERY HANDY A N S W E R TO P R E V IO U S P U ZZLE p 1 C A S f 0 A M U S 1 N G P A R A S O L O M A N 0 A T s T O R K E E R 1 E ; B v lc O M P A S S A N 1 0 N 1 C M E R R 1 L Y E C L A T [s \E N 0 R S B H 1 G H IG R O O M B n E E c 0 R E L E S S 1 0 L E N T L Y R 1 s E S E W E R¡ s P L E N D O R S O R R E L A R A N A O M 1 L A T H\ T E T L 1 R A C U R T O R 1 N 0 C O A R R A N G E w 1 N D R 0 w ■ m E A N D E R s E E S A w s l P E N T A D S O B S E S S R S V p \ 4 Grade-schooler 5 Natural fish food e Wrath 7 Hula------- • Angled annex 0 Tone down 10 Steely 11 Zone 13 Fuzz 13 London’s ------ Gallery 10 Char 23 "Great Expectations" boy Puzzi* by Gregory E. Poui 24 Completely pale 25 Wipe out 26 Gown 27 Alphabetically advanced boy 20 Bowling score 20 Prunes 30 Arthur Hailey novel 31 Egg-shaped 32 Golden Horde member 34 Trumpet 37 May birthstones 41 Miss America, e g 43 First-aid box 44 Witch’s blemish 40 Unstressed vowel 47 With 44-Across, “Ain’t Misbehavin’" songwriter 40 Teen fave 40 Mr. Saarinen 50 Elderly 51 Rani’s garb 52 Seme feeder 53 Slave Scott so Savings for the elderly: Abbr. 57 California's Big Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 5656 (754 each minute). SODS m s C a t e - Tap O pen M on.-Sal u n til 1.30 at n ig h t 24th & San Antonio C O R N E R O F C A M P U S * 4 7 2 - 4 2 0 6 DOBIE MALL o “ FIRST LEVEL FACING GUADALUPE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF AN IM E IN THE AREA T h e D a i l y T e x a n Monday, July 17, 1995 Page 9 To Place a Classified Ad Call 471-5244 Classified W ord Ad R ht-.p r Charged by the word Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply. $6 15 1 day $11 70 2 days 3 days $16.65 4 days ............................ $20.40 5 d a ys............................ $23.25 First two words may be all capital letters $ 25 for each additional word le tters. MasterCard and Visa accepted. capital in Classified Display Ad Rar.BR Charged by the column inch One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available Fall rates Sept 1-May 30 1 to 21 column inches per month $9,20 per col. inch over 21 column inches per month Call for rates FAX ADS TO 471-6741 8:00-5:00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11:00 a.m. prior to publication TRANSPORTATION ■ M E R C H A N D IS E 10—Misc. Autos 20—Sports-Foreign Autos 30-Trucks-Vans 40—Vehicles to Trade 50—Service-Repair 60—Parts-Accessories 70—Motorcycles 80—Bicycles 90—Vehicles-Leasing 100—Vehicles-Wanted 190—Appliances 200— Fumiture-Household 210—Stereo-TV 220—Compute rs-Equipment 230—Photo-Camera 240—Boats 250—Musical Instruments 260—Hobbies 270—Machinery-Equipment 280—Sporting-Camping Equipment REAL ESTATE S A L E S 110-Services 120-Houses 130—Condos-Townhomes 140—Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160-Duplexes-Apartments 170-Wanted 180-Loans 290-Furniture-Appliance Rental 300-Garage-Rummage Sales 310—Trade 320—Wanted to Buy or Rent 330—Pets 340-Longhom Want Ads 345—Misc. REN TAL 350—Rental Services 360-Fumished Apts 370—Unfurnished Apts. 380—Furnished Duplexes 390-Unfurnished Duplexes 400—Condos-T ownhomes 410-Furnished Houses 420-Unfurnished Houses 425—Rooms 430—Room-Board 435-Co-ops 440—Roommates 450-Mobile Homes-Lots 460-Business Rentals 470—Resorts 480-Storage Space 490-Wanted to Rent-Lease 500—Misc. 5 10-Entertainment-Tickets 520—Personals 530-Travel-Transportation 540-Lost & Found 550-Licensed Child Care 560—Public Notice 570—Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580—Musical Instruction 590—Tutoring 600—Instruction Wanted 610—Misc. Instruction S E R V IC E S 620-Legal Services 630—Computer Services 640—Exterminators 650-Moving-Hauling 660-Storage 670—Painting 680—Office 690-Rental Equipment 700-Furniture Rental 710—Appliance Repair 720—Stereo-TV Repair 730-Home Repair 740—Bicycle Repair 750—Typing 760-Misc. Services EM PLO Y M EN T 770—Employment Agencies 780-Employment Services 790—Part Time 800—General Help Wanted 810—Office-Clerical 820—Accounting-Bookkeeping 830—Administrative- Management 840—Sales 850—Retail 860—Engineering-T echnical 870—Medical 880—Professional 890—Clubs-Restaurants 900—Domestic Household 910—Positions Wanted 920—Work Wanted 930-Business Opportunities 940—Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED AD VERTISING T ER M S In the event of e rro rs made advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a m the first day, as the publishers are responsible for only ONE in co rrect insertion. All claims for adjustments should be made not later than 30 days after publication Pre paid kills receive credit slip if requested at time of cancellation, and if amount exceeds $ 2 .0 0 Slip must be presented for a reorder within 90 days to be valid Credit slips are non transferrable. In consideration of the Daily Texan's accep tance of advertising copy for publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harmless. Texas Student Publications and its officers, employees, and agents against all loss, ability, damage, and expense of whatsoever nature arising out of the copying, printing, or publishing of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable ettorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, plagiarism and copyright and trademark infringement. RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 - Fum. Apts. 360 - Fum. Apts. 360 - Furn. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Uní. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. TRANSPORTATION 10 - Misc. Autos 83 SUBARU GL-10 4-door. Excel­ lent condition. G reat student car. REAL ESTATE SALES RENTAL 130 - Condos - 360 - Furn. Apts. Townhomes $1800, O B O . Robert, 480-8646. 7-14-5B. 2/2 A N D 2/1 Condos in W est Campus. Daniel Caine BNR 448- 20 - Sports-Foreign 5808 7-7-1 IB Autos MERCHANDISE W a lk To '79 SUPER beetle convert, excellent condit 75K miles. $85 00 O B O . C all after 6 pm. (210)608-0535 7- 10-10B. 200 - Furniture - Household C a m p u s 70 - Motorcycles £ 1986 H O N D A 250XL scooter 4,700 miles, $550 795-8262 7- 13-4B 80 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Cost!!! BUCK’S BIKES 928-2810 REAL ESTATE SALES 130 - Condos- Townhomes j l l ^ FREE DELIVERY For UT Students! • TWIN SET v/ '-SAME $ 89 0; • \ J.: SFT $ 53 05 '-ÍAMF • Q JF E N SE! * C=AVF $ ; 3r- 3X $ 45 05 • 4 DR AWE* -HF5t $ o5 05 ■ ST JDFMT DESK 5:3305 • SO cAS $'33 45 • 5 PiECE DifRETTF Centex Furniture W holesale m5 '8 N .a m a r :00 1 S .AMAR 4S0098H 445 5808 B eds, B eds, B eds The factory outlet for Simmons, Sealy, Springair We carry closeouts, discontinued covers, & factory 2nds. From 50-70% off retail store prices. All new, complete with warranty. Twin set, $69. Foil set, $89 Queen set, $ 1 19. King set, $ 149 1741 West Anderson Ln. 454-3422 345 ~ Misc. W A N T ED : TEXAS vs. Notre Dame tickets. Jami 288-0104. 7-17-5B RENTAL 360 - Fum. Apts. HOUSTON 2801 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 DALLAS 2803 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 BRANDYWINE 2808 W hitis Ave. - 472-7049 W ILSH IRE 301 W. 29th - 472-7049 Great Locations! • Preleasing • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Central Air/Heat • 2 Blocks From UT • No Application Fee • 1 BR/BA • On-site manager • Affordable deposits Ely Properties # I in Sales for UT •Quadrangle 2-2.5 96,900 •Orange Tree 1-1.5 79,900* •Robbins Puce 2-2 74,900 2-2 64,900 •Sabinal 2-2 64,900 •Georgian 2-2 64,900 •Westpuce 1-1 55,000* -Elms 1-1 51,000 •Tom Green •Overlook 1-1 49,900* Robbins Puce 1-1 49,900 1-1 42,000 •Points •Nueces Puce 1-1 39,500* Purchase rather than lease, it's cheaper! *FHA Approved 2 .5 % down 476-1976 THE QUARRY 2520 Quarry Road La rg e 2-2, o n e b lo ck o f E n ­ field , fire p la c e , v a u lte d c e il­ ings, U T shuttle, se cu rity sys­ tem, c o v e re d p a rk in g . $ 7 6 ,0 0 0 . 836-7660 7-17-5B NEWLY DECORATED 2 Bedroom Apts. ALLTHE AMENITIES Competitive Prices NOW PRELEASING CONVENIENT TO HANCOCK CENTER, UT& SAN MARCUS SHUTTLE’S P a r k P l a z a - P l a z a C o u r t A p a r t m en t s “LUXURY AT REASONABLE PRICES" 915 E. 41 st 4 5 2 - 6 5 1 8 Century Square Apts. A L L B I L L S P A ID • P o o l & P a t i o • S h u t t l e a t D o o r • C o v e r e d P a r k i n g • H u g e C l o s e t s 3 4 0 1 R e d R i v e r 4 7 8 -9 7 7 5 SAN GABRIEL SQUARE Apts. NOW LEASING! •Furnished • 5 biks (tom Campus • 2-1 Economy Style • Efficiencies • Deluxe I-I *UT Shuttle ALL BILLS PAID 2212 San Gabriel St. 474-7732 LARGE 2 BEDROOM W a lk to campus. Pool and Laundry. Small, quiet complex. Furnished or unfurnished Summer $490, Fall $690 Cavalier Apartments 307 E. 31st St. 451-1917. _________________________ 6-19-20B-D. Walk/Bike Campus 3 2 n d a t IH-35 ( N E co m e r) Avalon Apartments Convenient to Engineering, Law, LBJ School, and all East Campus. 1/1-$445 and up. Efficiency-$395 and up. Walk-in closets, ceiling fans, C A / C H . 459-9898 or 476-3629 __________________________ 6-28-20B-B 302 W. 38th Street Fall leasing on efficiencies, IBR and 2BR furnished All appliances, pool, and laundry room. One-half block to IF shuttle. Gas, water, and cable paid. 453-4002 6-21-20B.D. PRIVATE R O O M sublet, Contessa Dormitory, Barrone Hall. Fall '95- Spring '96. Utilities+meals includ­ ed. (501) 484-8010. 7-6-1 OP. TH REE O AKS & PEC A N SQ UARE APARTMENTS • 1 BDR/1 BA • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room . • Community Atmosphere • On Shuttle • No Application Fee • Preleasing • On-site manager • Affordable deposit Now Preleasing One Block From Campus • 1 BR & 2 BR • Ceiling Fans • On Shuttle • Laundry Room • Fully Furnished • Pool • Permit Parking • On-site manager/ maintenance • Vertical mini-blinds • Affordable deposits • Bargain Summer Rates Rio 451-5840 409 W. 38th St. N u e c e s 6 0 0 W . 2 6 th 1^ 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 ^ PRELEASING EFF/1 BDRM HYDE PARK AFFORDABLE & C O N V EN IEN T I Efficiencies- 1 block to campus, ABP, free cable, off street parking. Decorator/luxury furnishings, ceiling E F F . / l B D R . F R O M $ 4 1 5 fan, controlled access, quiet at­ FURN ISHED A N D U N FURN ISH ED mosphere, on-site laundry, large *Pool/BBQ/Patio/Laundry/Storage 'Resident M anager/O n IF Shuttle 1 0 8 P la c e A p artm e n ts 108 W est 45th St. trasl $375/m o summer, $450 fall/spring. PARK A V E N U E PLACE 320-7500 or 474-6466 452-1419, 385-2237, 453-2771 ______________________ 7-11-20B.B ___________________________ 7-5-208.D M A M A IS O N SUMMER/FALL LEASES Reduced summer rates. Short-term summer leases available 1-3 mos. N ice! Furnished eff., 1.2 and 3BRs. All bills. Pool covered parking, laundry, shuttle. 2 blocks North of UT. Preleasing for fall. 3 blocks to campus, ABP Beautiful "Southern-style Mansion" with com­ munity dining, kitchen, TV room, stu­ dy room. Large rooms with luxury furnishings. FREE CABLE, parking and controlled accessil Only $450 for all of 2nd session. Preleasing for fall starting at $3800. 2222 Pearl C h a p a r o s a A p artm e n ts 320-7500/4746466 474-1902. __________________________ 7-11-20B.B ___________________________7-6-20B.D. GREAT 1 BR. APTS. 1 /2 Block from Law School. Furnished, quiet. Low Fall/Spring rates. TOW ER V IE W APTS., 926 E. 26th St., #208 320-0482 7-7-20B-D. W E S T C A M P U S EFFICIEN CIES Quiet and spacious. Gas, water, and cable paid. Laundry room, security lighting, on W C shuttle Discounts on year leases. Furnished- $400 per month Unfurnished- $375 per month Barranca Square Apartments 910 W est 26th Street 467-2477. _________________________ 7-12-20B-B. 1BR/1 BA COMPLETELY furnished apartment, utilities paid, private parking, $450/mo 472-3350. LARGE 2*2. Furnished. All bills paid. Free cable. North Campus. $800, 2-2 Furnished, covered parking. Free gas. $735, AFS, 322-9556.7-17-5P-B G REATEST DEAL campusl! 1-1 fur- nished-balcony-built-in desk-limited. $390, AFS, 322-9556. 7-17-5P-B 370 - Unf. Apts. P R O P E R T Y R E S I D E N T I A L L E A S I N G Austin’s Largest and Best Free Locating Service F R E E APT LOCATING! •ALL SHUTTLE ROUTES- STUDENT SPECIALS EFF'S. 370+ 1BDRMS 390+ 2BDRMS 515+ 3BDRMS 725+ 4BDRMS 800+ ALSO: Townhomes. condos, lo fts, everything!!! fireplace*, w e fp tre m u , het tabs, tesni* and volleyball courts. Fast-Free-Friendly! Call Now! 462-3030 ‘ Dishwasher/Disposal fridges and study desks. M any ex- S m * with: Wtsber/dryen, N EA R UT.summer rate $325 UT shuttle Large efficiency. N e w car­ pet, paint and tile. 472-6979. 6- 22-208 Guaranteed August Prelease on this brand new efficiency with limited access gates and free cable. Super nice and on the shuttle Properties Plus. 447-7368 or 1-800-548-0106. AVAILABLE N O W EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS JUST FOUR BLOCKS TO CA M PU S. G A S, W ATER PAID. FROM $395 ASK A BO U T OUR SUM M ER RATES 499-8013 AGENT: 473-1892DP ___________________________ 7-7-10B.D ENFIELD RO A D spacious 2-1 $615, availab le August 1 st. Pool, miniblinds, ceiling fans, quiet, 6-21-20B-D. ER shuttle Shown by appointment 477-1303. 7-7-10B D SOUTH SHUTTLE PRELEASIN G EFF/1 BDRM 2Br Fall or Summer Prelease HYDE PARK Price: O n ly $535 W ith C ab le paid Access Gates Properties Plus 447-7368 or 1-800-548-0106 __________________________6-21-20B-D. $100 O FF first months rent, Lamar/ Koenig area. C o zy 1-1 's. A p ­ pliances, ceiling fans, mini-blinds, pool, laundry room. W a te r & gas April Realty 442- paid $395 650 0 or 339-6471. 6-23-20B. W E S T C A M P U S available now 2 b r/ l ba $595. Stove, refrigera­ tor, A / C . For 24 hour info., call 477-LIVE. 7-3-208. D CALL 477-LIVE 24-hour info., avail­ able August 15th. 1-5 bedrooms $395 $ 1500. For fax, call 452- 5979 (24hrs.). 6-28-20B D h ÍllsTde APARTMENTS 1-2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean and Quiet All Utilities Paid 478-2819 5 14 Dawson Road Just off Barton Springs Road _________________ 6-29-20B.B W A LK TO Engineering/Law school. Large, clean 1/1's $450- $475. Efficiencies $435- $450, gas, w a ­ ter, hot water paid. Reserved parking Some furnished. Cats O K. Small, quiet communities. 500 & 502 Elmwood. Matthews 454-0099. 6-27- Properties. 20B.B HYDE PARK, small 1-1's. All a p ­ pliances, C A / C H . patios. Q uiet, friendly community. RR shuttle 1 /2 block Small pets negotiable. $435- $450, 4 60 8 Bennett Matthews Properties 454-0099 6-27-20B.B G RAD U ATE STUD EN T subsidized rent, new efficiency, 5 blocks from campus, UT shuttle. 476-4744 6- 30-14B W A LK TO UT- Large, luxurious 3-2 townhome with W / D and mi­ Eff/1 BDRM from $415 Furnished& Unfurnished Dishwasher/Disposal/Bookshelves Pool/BBQ/Patio/Laundry/Storage Resident M anager, on IP shuttle 108 Place Apartments 1 0 8 W 45th St. 452-1419, 385-2237, 453-2771 ___________ 7-10-20B.D. HYDE PARK efficiency N e w car­ pet, new paint, new HVAC. Avail­ able 8/3 $405 320-0010 7-12-5B "L A W SC H O O L! Smaller, good 1/ 1 walk/shuttle, $475/m o Front Page 480-8518 7-1 1-20B.D. "A T T EN T IO N STUD EN T SI Free apartment/condo locating service! Fast and friendlyl Front Page 480- 8518. 7-11 208.D "W E S T C A M P U S ! Spacious older 2/2, $750/725 Front Page 480 8518. 7-11-20B.D. MO VE-IN SPEC IA L $385+, effi- ciency, lb r/2 b r. pool, quiet, C A / CH, immaculate, UT shuttle. Section 8 O K. 2 10 ) Elmont. 447-6939. 7- 13-208. MOVE-IN SPEC IAL $425 + , newly decorated lb r/2 b r, some hard­ wood, quiet building, AC, close to shopping and shuttle, Section 8 OK. 4719 Harmon 467-891 1. 7-13-208. *CARING O W N ERS* Beautiful, spacious Efficiencies, $370+ One bedrooms from $465-625 Two bedrooms from $675-795 W est Campus- UT area KHP, 476-2154. Personalized attention __________________________7-12-20B-D. EF FIC IEN C IE S $335. 290/Berk man, available now. Sunlight Vil­ lage, move-in special, 1st month's rent $200 928 8804 7-14-5B SPA C IO U S IB R Q uiet community, W / D connection shuttle, separate dining area, extra storage, starting $435 Call 447-7565 7-14-58 3 C AM PUS AREA C O N D O S 3 IB R / lB A s $650-700 1- Sunchase Condo 1- Treehouse Condo 1 - Greenwood Towers Andy, 3 4 5 -6 0 6 7 . _________________ ____________7-13-78. QUIET I BED RO OM 301 W . 39th St. Large pool, courtyard, laundry room, central air. Half block from UT shuttle $355- Summer. Available now 326-9215 or 452-3852. ________________ 7-13-38-D. W E S T A U STIN gara g e apartment Modern efficiency near UT shuttle Quiet neighborhood, vaulted ceil­ ing $550 ABP 4 7 2 4 2 4 9 after SU B LEA SE 1BR/1BA. 512 sq ft $45 5/mo. Lease ends Dec 3 1 O n North Lamar bus route Michelle 453-3990. 7-7-7B. LARGE EFFICIENCIES SPECIAL RATES!! N ear campus and on Red River shuttle Remodeled, D W , N O pets/N O roomates Preleasing call Sandra 474-5043 M-F 371 -0160 weekends ___________________________ 7-7-20B.D SUPER RATES!! FALL/SPRING UT AREA 2-2s and 2-1 s CA /CH, pool, laundry facili­ ties, cable connections, dish­ 6pm. 7-13-7B washer, disposal, plenty of parking, pleasant atmosphere 474-5929. ____________________________ 7-7-20B W ES T C A M P U S 1 bedroom garage apartment AC, full bath, kitchen, quiet area. $350/m o N o pets 478 8 9 0 5 .4 5 0 0 2 4 2 ^ 17 10B VILLA VALLARTA efficiency $409 2505 Longview Ask about our summer move-in special. 9887 7-7-7B SUBLFT 1 BDR $300 August only ABP Phone cable, paid. Quiet 322- required, close UT. Bill 482-0087 7-17-5B AVAILABLE N O W IN N ICE, QUIET COM PLEX GREATEST 2 bedroom on shuttle 2/ 1 5 Free cable, access gates, pool $585-$595, A FS, 322 9556 V illa g e S t u d e n t s W e lc o m e On UT Shuttle Free Cable 2-1 885 sq. ft. $535 2-1.5 1000+ sq. ft. $625 1201 Tinnin Ford 440-0592 C A S A G R A N D f Now Leasing Eff’s (ABP) $4 5 0 $440 up M ’s $9 5 0 3-2’s • Furnished or Unfurnished • near UT • pool • laundry • parking • large rooms • On UT shuttle 1400 Rio Grande 474-2749 I I ¡3 P I ?P FALL PRELEASING Eff. from $425 IPFfrom $510 Large 2 &R from $735 Various Locations North & West Campus Call Marquis Management 472-3816 or 454-0202 9 a q i % [ ¿ I [ j j [ ¿ I [ j f T j f Qj] a * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * STHE ASHFORDS APARTMENTS jj APARTMENTS ; * * a Preleasing For Fall £ * Affordable West * si Campus Living £ £ SI S| B I - I s perfect for roommates £ SI J * Large 2-2's Starting a t $325 Large Efficiencies * * L E Campus Area L E A A S S E F L L 1 1 N IM E E Effs, 1-1 s, 2-1 s, 3-2’s Apt’s, Condos, Houses 467-7121 Í l a c a s i t a I 2-1 $675 | 1 l- l $550 Swimming Pool [L £ Gas, heat, & water paid kj u; IH utilities I £ 4 7 6 - 1 © 7 6 k e p i ÍE IHUrlHLa^tHtaHLFM l-l C| ui q m una a u low $200 OFF N e w L e a s e s (th m ju iy3i) T h e A r r a n g e m e n t Lg I -1, 2-2, lofts & townhomes SR Shuttle at Front Door 2 124 Burton Dr. 444-7880 W A L K UT - 2BR/2BA 832 sq. ft $625 $700 All bills, cable paid, except A/C, heat, phone Saving at least $50/m o N ew carpet, paint, appliances Prompt service, swimming pool. On-site mgmt. Voyager's Apartments 2408 Leon s 2 476-8915 * f crowave 30-12B-D. $1250. 469-9075 6- Available 8/25/95 3 1 t E 31 st St., North Campus. GREAT FOR GRAD S 7-17-5PB 478-6776. FOUR BLOCKS 6-19-20B LARGE IB R , $395. Large 2BR $495 N e w carpet 926-7377 6-22-20B paint, tile W EST CA M PUS G A S, W ATER PAID, FR O M $365 499-8013 AGENT: 473-1 892DP 7-7-10B.D RENTAL • 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS UT SHUTTLE- L O O O O O O O W bills. Access gates, free cable, ceiling fans, 1 br $ 42 0 2 br $585 AFS 322-9556 717-5P B G R EA A A T W E S T Cam pus locationl 1-1 $440 2 1 $775, pool, cov- ered parking availab le, fireplaces, lofts, AFS, 322-9556 7-17-5P B if SHUTTLE large 1-1, furnished or unfurnished Free gas C all now Tower Real Estate, 322-9934 7- 17-5P-B W ES T C A M P U S i Move-in speciall $100 off fust month's rent Cov ered parking $ 3 9 9 * AFS 322 9556 7-17-5P-B SHUTTLE SPECIAL 2 2 , $"55C G, gantic pool, club room, walk+n closets AFS 322 9 5 5 6 7 17 5P-6 2-2 W E S T C A M P U S C o w e d parking, balcony, walk to school. $675. A F S 322 9 55 6 7 17-5P B VERY C LO SE to campus large 2 / Is $775 (nice) 106 D 4 6 9 9 07 5 7 17. \ IBR , AC, tub/shower, study, new carpet, private entrance, separate meters. 1091. 7-11-5B A vailab le now. 472- C A S A DE SALAD O APARTM EN TS 2 6 1 2 /2 6 1 0 Salado St. 1 BR, furnished W ater,gas, and cable paid N o pets. Swimming pool, A /C , and ceiling fans. Laundry facilities. Close to cam­ pus, near shuttle G reat summer ratesl Limited availability for Fall/Spring 477-2534 7 14-20B D l U m m C R R A T C f r , M f A f l D Y O K I Y B R U M Preleasing For Fall F R E E C A B I C P Y I H U T T I C T R I O P O O H O M I T E f f l G R I T H 1911 Willow Creek Dr. K a 444-0010 li Professionally Managed M b y Davis & Associates M t U v T T T V T r T V T T W f RENTAL • 360 FURNISHED APARTMENTS A s p e n w o o d A p a r t m e n t s 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 We still have discounted rates through the end of August on all leases. 1&2 Bedroom Apts. Furnished/Unfurnished • 5 minutes from UT Area • Shuttle at door • Major utilities paid • 2 pools/ 2 laundry • Ceiling fans i*Covered parking • On-site management Avoid th e Stress. Start early. - Lock in i _______ current rates now! n 9 ? w $ y» $ m ?! s r $ BLACKSTONE 2910 Medical Arts Si. - across from law school 2 bdrm - 2 bath only SUMMER RATE: $550 ALL BILLS PAID plus Free Cable! LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL Furnished Unfurnished 474-9523 f t J Cornerstone Place Apartments • Stackable Washers • Built-In Microwaves • Ceiling Fans • Covered Parking • Fully Furnished • 1-1 from $425 Leasing office at 2222 Rio Grande 4 7 6 -4 9 9 2 G a rd e n G a te A p a rtm e n ts Great Roommate Plan Small 1 BR Starting at $455 Furnished Unfurnished W est Campus Pool 5 Minute Walk to Campus Leasing office at 2222 Rio Grande 4 7 6 - 4 9 9 2 ^W oodfu/zs £ ¿dure i \J o u n J in 1 WooJ.Liíz¿: • Four UT Shuttle Stops • Spacious One & Two Bedrooms • Ceiling Fans • Hike & Bike Trails • Sunrise Lake Views not e S ta it enjoying Lif t a/ ( WoodCafta today? 443-6363 A Q U A R IU M C L E A N IN G supplies ncluding XL Diatom filter, for fresh or salt setup, everything that you K IN G M ATTRESS $35, chest $45, golf clubs $30, electric exercise bike $35, chairs $20, B & W TV need $150 O B O Dave 499-051 t $20. Call 474-1106 7-12-5B 7-12-5P M A C SE30 N e w hard drive, 5 RAM manual, original box. Clean, excellent condition, $400 467 9848 7 I 2 5 B M O V IN G SALE I 2 5 " Toshiba TV, $350 Panasonic VCR, $250. Q ueen futon, black, $400 O B O Everything 18 mos/oid-excellent condition 794 2805 7 12-5NC. PO O L TABLE for sale, perfect con­ dition $ 1000 negotiable Call Doug 4 7 6 9 0 9 5 day, 479-8775 ight. 7-1 1-5NC B E D R O O M FURNITURE: Dresser and end table $95 G a s grill, $20. 832-1229. 7-12-5B. ATTEN TIO N G RA D U A TESI Dress for success Virtually new men's Southwick blue/gray suit, 42L. Ten 100% silk designer ties, all $165, Call Bobby 251-8216 7-14-5B TAM A D RUM S, 6 piece-set. Roy al Pewter w / symbols. Heavy duty hardware Excellent condition $900 441-2597. 7-13-5B B O O KSH ELF FOR sale $25 Call 2 8 2 4 6 2 3 7-13-5B TRANSLATE 800 W P M Globallink professional Spanish/English soft­ N E W C O U C H , 1 year old mint ware All legal, medical, financial condition for sale, $200. Call dictionaries included Paid $700 Shannon 326-3644 7-14-5B sell $250. 448-5341 7-17-5B TREK 970 Mtn bike $250: Unive­ ga $300, backpack, $45, Guinea P'gs, $ 3/ea., women's 3-speed bike, $45. Excellent condition 371- 7351. 7 12-5B 1 486-33MHZ - 20 M B RAM, 340HD , 2 Disk Drives, monitor, keyboard, mouse, and back-up tape Loaded w / software SH O EI RF-200 motorcycle helmet $800 346-9393 7-12-5B Size L (7 3/8- 7 1/2), maroon. 1 386-33MHZ 3 9 M B RA M w / 106MB Hard Drive, 3.5" Disk Clear visor and sun visor Excellent condition, $75. 264-1 101 7-13-58 SO FA, CH AIR $200 Tiled kitchen table $ 100 Computer desk $40 2 glass tops $35, $5 7-14-5NC 707-1975 drive, and software including W in d ­ CO M PU TER/PRIN TER LIKE new. ows, Lotus $600 346-9393, 712-5B M A C LC III, w/software 140M B BEIG E C O U C H $100, black couch $ 100, smoked glass circular dining 1979 G R A N D PRIX runs great. M A T C H IN G C O U C H and chair, $750 0 6 0 323 9786 7 13 -5P $125. 6715. 7-12-58 G o od condition 4 5 9 - HD, 4 M B RAM, math coproces­ table w/chairs $ 100, reclining swi sor, $750 HP DeskwriterC color vel chair with ottoman $85 708 printer, $150 441-2597. 7 13-5B. 8348. 7-17-5NC. • 7 a * i T 1 O r d e r b y M a ll, F A X o r P h o n e FAX: P.O. Box D Austin, Texas 78713 471-6741 Classified Phone: 471-5244 20 words 5 days 85 Additional W ords....$0.25 ea 1 7 13 19 25 2 8 14 2 0 26 3 9 15 21 27 4 10 16 22 28 5 11 17 23 29 6 12 18 24 30 lim it e d In d iv id u a l to p r iv a t e p a r t y ( n o n - c o m - O t t e r m e r c i a l ) a d s o n ly i f e m s o t t e r e d f o i s a le m a y n o t e x c e e d $ 1 0 0 0 a n d p r ic e m u s t a p p e a r in t h e b o d y o f t h e a d c o p y If i t e m s a r e n o t s o ld , f iv e a d d it io n a l in s e r t io n s wMl b e r u n a t n o c h a r g e A d v e r t i s e r m u s t c a ll b e f o r e 11 a . m . o n t h e d a y o f t h e fifth in s e r t io n t h a n r e d u c t i o n in p r i c e ) is a l lo w e d N o c o p y c h a n g e ( o t h e r A D D R E S S . N A M E .......................................................................................... P H O N E . C IT Y ................................ S T A T E Z I P . ............ Page 10 Monday, July 17,1995 T h e D a il y T e x a n RENTAL RENTAL too RENTAL EM PLO Y M EN T 4 4 0 - Roommates 790 - Part-time NEAR UT- cheerful 2-1, for Sept. I, appliances, hardwoods, garage, garden, $695, 479-6153, no pets/smokers 7-14-20B-D WALK UT- Large 3BR on creek, ap­ 1, pliances, hardwoods, $1200, pets/ smokers 7-14-20B-D 479-6153, Sept no •W/C House UT Leasing •N /CH ofte •St. Hmms • O to á n g ie J-2 2-2 2-15 2-2 2-1 2-2 2-2 • W w tPloce 2-1 •Craix 2-1 I m Great 2-1 • C U s m •Soto» 1-1 2-1 •Nwces Coriers 2-1 1-1 •fins 1-1 •Overlook •W/C Duplex 2-1 2-1 •Gazebo 2-1 •Tm Greet $1500 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1100 $850 $850 $850 $800 $800 $750 $750 $700 $675 $675 $650 $600 12 agents to serve you West University Place •Huge 2/2 *Huge Bedrooms ‘ Huge Pool ‘ Huge Balcony ONLY ONE LEFT! CALL PMT 476-2673 ______________________ 7-14-20B.B D O M IN IO N Two bedroom /One bath N ear law school Pool, covered parking, washer/dryer $750 CALL PMT 476-2673 7-14-20B.B ROBBINS PLACE AVAILABLE N O W 20ft Cathedral Ceilings H U G E Kitchen $10 50 CALL PMT 476-2673 QUIET, RESPONSIBLE spiritually oriented woman seeks same. Share beautiful, large, garden home near fire­ Northcross CA/CH, W /D , place $350+1/2 bills Diane 467- 9128 7-12-5B MATURE M/F, N S to share house in East Austin. Room unfurnished, yard. $300/mo ABP 474-2385 7-14-5P BEAUTIFUL CO N D O , 5 min/walk, private BR/BA, covered parking, Non-smoking peaceful balcony. straight male $475/mo (817)483-6490. 7-14-5B. FEM ALE R O O M M A T E to share large 3-2 home with 2 others. On bus line. Access to W / D , microwave, computer, and large screen TV with home theater sound system. $300, ABP. Call Leslie, 837-6917 or 476-6955. ________________ 7-13-2B OFF-CAMPUS 2/2 5 PERFECT condo for non-smoking female W / D, security, more Share a room $275+1/4 bills. Kristin 385-4391 7-17-5B. computer/printer, 7-14-20B.B W ONDERFUL ROOM M ATE? lblk. from UT. Private br./ba. Pool, fans, guarded, etc $600/$400 N O W shared (possible sharemote) 469- 7489. 7-17-1 OP. O R A N G E TREE *Big, cute efficiency, vaulted ceil­ ings, poolside $650 ‘ One bedroom w/study, two-story, could be 2 bedroom $900 Two bedroom/2 both furnished, 4 parking spaces Ready for move-in $ 1400 to FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted share 2BR apartment. Private, x- large Bedroom w/vanity, walk-in closet, security gate. $300/mo 448-1651. 7-14-5B. ANNOUNCEMENTS . $ 4 0 C A S H /W E E K 2 Hours per Week Schedule Own Time • Extra Clean. jState of the Art Facility • Sate, Medically Super­ vised. Relaxing • Only 15 Minnies from UT Campus B IO IVIED A N EW H igh Tech P la s m a F a c ility Please Call for Appt. 2 5 1 - 8 8 5 5 HOURS 8AM 7 PM IH 35 & Pllngerville Exit Wesl side 111-35 behind EXXON Brtnq this ad - Exp 7 31 95 476-1976 CALL PMT 476-2673 Leasing F o r F a ll 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms S W i M t M C - 1 T V = P R O P E R T IE S ,^ 478-6565 S a va n n a h 3 2/2*s $875 4 2/2*» $900 I 2/2*1 $ 1200 2 2/2*s $925 W/D, Covered Parking, F/P, Microwave, On Shuttle Going Fast! 4 7 6 - I 9 7 6 E P I _______________________ 7-14-206 B 520 - Personáis W EST CAMPUS condo, 1-1,W /D , covered parking, built-in desk, mi­ crowave, $495+. AES, 322-9556 7-17-5P-B NORTH CAMPUS 1-1 ond 2-2, law walking distance. Great for and engineering students Tower Reol Estate 322-9934 7-17-5P-B W EST CAMPUS and North Campus 1-1, $500 - $900 2-2, $675 - $1500. 3 brs, $1150-$2400. Tower Real Estate, 322-9934 7- 17-5P-B GREAT W EST campus condo! 2-2, washer/dryer-microwave-covered parking-controlled access. $950 AFS, 322-9556. 7-17-45P-B 4 2 0 -U n f. Houses HYDE PARK 5/BR, 2/BA, hard­ wood floors, new HVAC, new electrical Completely remodeled, $2100. 3200010. 7-12-5B Live Gals! Great Talk! 1-900-476-1900, Ext. 8477 3.99 per/min. Must be 1 8 yrs. Procall Co. (602) 954-7420. 7-11-5B. JO IN THE WILDEST LIVE PARTY EVER! Check It Out 24/hrs/day! New, Exciting Dateline, Sexy Fan­ tasies & Live Girls. Call Now! As Low As $0 35/min 18+ 1-809- 474-2814. 7-I7-I6P 560 - Public Notice SECRET HIDEAWAY for romantics Dabbs Hotel est 1907 on Llano River Rock (915)247-7905. 620-20B Enchanted near EM PLO YM EN T 790 - Part-time WANTED: GRAPHIC designer Must have SyQuest and color scanner. Opportunity to build your portfolio. Call Todd at 454-7570. 7-17-5B temporary/PT ECLECTIC PRINT shop needs de­ pendable, help Flexible hodrs. Doys and nights available. Will tram. $5/hr Ask for Crystal 1002 West 12th St., M-F, 8a.m -5p.m. 7-13-5B WANTED: SAND W ICH board person able to handle busy lunch- time and prep food Hours: I Oam- 2pm, call M.J. at 479-0355 after 1:30pm. 7-13-5B GENERAL OFFICE work. Filing, correspondence, research. Flexible hours Experience preferred Refer enees. $6/hr. 326-1220. 7-14-6B Detail oriented, responsible individual needed for production in educational publishing company. Position involves operating high speed copier, punching and binding books, etc Must be able to stand on feet majority of the day and lift 50lbs C all or fax resume 343-0801. ___________________________ 7-14-5B W ANTED P/T appointment setter & research assistant for Federal Bank­ ing Regulations. Call immediately 477-7816. 7-14-58 ________ DAYCARE IN West Austin looking EM PLO Y M EN T SOO^Oenem l 44.-1».■■ «4 » - - * n w p w a r n e d INTELLIQUEST Telephone Researcher Intelliquest Inc , a n international market mg research firm specializing in the high-technology industry, is currently occepting applications W e hove day, evening and weekend shifts As on Intelliquest Telephone Researcher, you will gather strategic information for the top high technology companies in the U.S. Qualified Candidates W ill Possess Excellent telephone communication skills * Team player attitude who is motivated by a challenge Familiarity with computers and com ­ puter technology * A strong desire for personal develop­ ment and a willingness to learn * Typing skills of 25 words per minute Previous marketing research experi­ ence is preferred Pay range is $6 0 0 to 8 5 0 per hour ond paid training is provided If your skills match the above description, please ap ply in person between 8:00am ond 5 00pm Monday-fridoy of 1700 S Lamar. Suite 2 4 0 or call 447-6707 for more information Equal Opportunity Employer PAID EXPERIMENT Conducted by the University of Texas at Austin Department of Psychology You must be at least 21 years old to participate, lfin tc m tri. Call the S a h a r a i.ar- *4,.m iYI YgtYHU. for afternoon assistants. M-F, 3- $1750 WEEKLY 6pm Call 477-9549. 7-13-7B. HIRING for summer posi­ In Dobie, from 11- tions, $5/hr. + bonuses. call Chris 505-2349, 3PM 6-20-20P The nation's leader in test prepara­ tion, The Stanley H. Kaplan Educa­ tional Center, is seeking P/T in­ structors in general chemistry, or- ganic chemistry, physics and biolo­ gy M.S. (or equiv.) ond teaching experience preferred Also seeking ESI teocher with AAA and teaching experience. Contact Cynthia Baker at 811 West 24th St, Austin, TX 78705. Or coll 472-8085 ext. 5. ____________________________ 6-22-20B DENTAL position ASSISTANT Must have experience. Close to campus Excellent pay for part-time position. Call 452-6405. 6-27-20B RENTING MANAGER. nonsmoking, personable rooms 2 hours/day. sage 474-2618 7-3-20B.B Quiet, Show Leave mes­ SHORT WALK UT train on Mac), trainees, clerical, runners. smoking. 474-2032. 7-3-20B.B Typists (will bookkeeping Non­ PART-TIAAE POSITIONS available. Work 4-8p m weekdays $5/hr + bonuses, paid training Call Craig at 453-8782 between 3-4p.m 7-6-I9P HELP! IF you speak Spanish, Italian, Chinese, French, Korean, Russian, please call Mrs. Spence, 328- 1018. 7-5-20B W E LL PAY you to lose weight. Most successful products available Guaranteed. All natural. Priscilla 930-3420. 7-6-20B in Germany, HAVE CONTACTS Italy, Japan, Brazil, Venezuela, Tai­ wan, Spain, Hong Kong, or U.S.A ? 930-5696. 7-6-208 PART-TIME AFTERSCHOOL Staff Beginning Aug. 14th, 2-6:30PM In­ terest and/or experience working with children. Various sites in Aus­ tin. $5/hr Complete Application at Child Development Branch YMCA, U 00 Cesar Chavez 7-12-206 AUSTIN TELCO Federal Credit Union has openings for the following positions: Part-Time tellers- previous cash handling helpful, will train, Part-Time clerk to do filing end CRT input Some experience preferred Apply in person to 8929 Shoal Creek Blvd., 3rd floor Monday-Friday 9om-4pm EOE. 7-13-30B AISD CHILDCARE Childcare workers needed for schools. Monday- Friday, part-time, after­ noons. Start 8/10. Apply. A ISD Classified Personnel, 1111 W e st 6th, D140. ___________________ 7-17-5B BEVO'S ACC Bookstore now hiring for fall semester. Effective imme­ diately Apply at 1202 West Ave­ nue, Austin, Texas. 7-17-3B THEUNIVERSITY of Texas Child Care Center now accepting applications for part-time assistance Previous group child care experience preferred Call 471 - 7040 to inquire 7-17-5B RUNNER POSITION M-F, 100- 5.30. Start ASAP. Reliable car/in­ surance, $5/hr. + mileage Call 477-6111. 7-17-5B GREAT EXPERIENCE! P/T office man- ager for small office, flexible hours. Call Lisa now 452-2300 for more info 7-17-5B FILING & light data entry 10-15 hours/week. Computer experience needed. Call 469-0925 after 10a.m. 7-17-5B $6.00-7.50/HR. Part-time evening positions available in fun, friendly envi­ ronment doing radio market re­ search (no sales or soliciting). W e are located al Congress and Riverside (fluent in Spanish helpful, but not necessary). Call Sun.-Thurs. after 4p m 707-7010 Ask for Lindell 7 - 1 7 - 2 B 800 - General Help Wonted X T !| | R X 7 X 7 X 7 X 7 " ” rj TEACHER ¡2 ( j A pre-school program in N W j»| Austin needs an experienced j ! I * afternoon teocher to work with £| |2 4 & 5 year olds Please call H a 451-6134 Ü r r r r i T r i J l r i T i T EMPLOYMENT - 790 PART-TIME Circulation Assistant (Inserter) 19 hours per week maximum $6.16 per hour depending upon qualifications Work hours begin at 2 a.m. t mm Assist Assist in Circulation Department of The are J Daily Texan on nights when inserts ^placed possible mailing our circulars. No experience re For info call quired 301-306-1207. 6-6-48P Begin now SUMMER EMPLOY- ALASKA Fish­ MENT- STUDENTS Needed! Earn up to $3000- ing Industry. $6000+ per month Room and Boardl Transportation! Male or Female No experience necessary. Call A58677. 7-3-20P 545-4155 (206) ext CRUISE SHIPS HIRING - Earn up to $2000+/month travel. Seasonal & full-time positions. No For info, call 1- exp necessary. World 206634-0468 ext. C68678. 7-3-20P NATIONAL PARKS HIRING- Sea­ sonal and full-time employment available at National Parks, For­ ests and Wildlife Preserves Bene­ fits + bonusesl Call. 1-206-545- 4804 ext. N58675. 7-3-20P LA R G E R E W A R D S INTERNATIONAL HEALTH AND NUTRITION COMPANY. EXPANDING-ENGUSH AND MULTILINGUAL PEOPLE NEEDED French, Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Spanish, Portugese, Russian, etc $400-$ 1200 P/T $ 2 5 0 a$ 4 50 0 F/T Call: 707-7745 ___________________ 6.16.20B.D US G O V T Jobs Hiring Now: 100's of entry Level Openings. Updated Daily. Coll Toll-free 1-800-549- 2300 ext 3014. 6-22-20B. U S GOVT. JO BS Hiring Now: 100's of Entry Level Openings Up­ Call Toll Free dated Daily. Ext # 3 0 1 4 1(800) 549-2300 6-28-20P IRONSMITH BODY, INC invites applications for the position of "professional" sports ond fitness trainer Experience needed in teach­ ing, designing and implementing general health, fitness and sport- specific resistance programs Early morning, evening and weekend work is required. Qualifications: Must have or be working on Bachelor's degree in health related field, C.P R. Certification. You must possess attention to detail, organizational and administrative skills, ability to communicate effec­ tively both in writing and orally. You must be energetic, hard work­ ing, disciplined and excited about working one-to-one and with groups of people who have a range of general health, fitness and sports- specific goals. Submit letters of application, 3 current letters of recommendation, resume, income history to: Sarah Scott, President, (512)454-4766 _____________________ 6-29-20B. WRITERS WANTED for educational assessment material, grade levels 1-12 Send resume to Pearson Pub­ lishing, 5917 Moutys Trail, Austin, 78730 or fax to 343-0801. 7-7-1 OB RESIDENT M ANAGER 33 unit apartment complex Hyde Park. Experience required Apartment plus small salary 453. 8891. 7-14-68-0 No pets. - EDUCATIONAL 590 - Tutoring • writing • essays • research papers • elementary grades through college PUT IT IN W RITING 4 8 0 -0 6 3 6 TUTORING • T U T O R I N G • REVIEW S O P E N 7 D A Y S til Midnight. Sun.-Thur H o u s e o f |%e t u t o r s W N Since 1980 4 7 2 -6 6 6 6 SERVICES 7 5 0 -T yping Z I V L E Y The Complete Professional Typing Service a p p l i c a t i o n s TERM PAPE R S • DISSERTATIONS RESUM ES • WORD PRO CESSING LASER PRINTING • FORMATTING V ONLY ONE unit available 3br/ 3ba, large luxury condo. August move-in Starting of $2,100/mo. Call Melanie 476-7059 10B B 7-1 a 12 month lease Available 8/ (512) 295*3469. References 2BR CO NDO . UT West Campus 15. required 7-106B. b e d r o o m s -c a m p u s t h r e e area, 1200 square feet. Washer and Dryer, vaulted ceilings, French doors, courtyard, microwave Pets ok $1250 AFS, 322-9556. 7-17-5-P-B QUADRANGLE 61 1 E 45TH STREET, #26 Really nice 2 bedroom-2.5 both/ 1,296 sq. ft./2 fireploces/2 decks/1 car garage, I reserved/ all appliances incl. washer-dryer/ security system/overlooks pool/on shuttie/$ ] ,250. renl-9 or 12 month lease/Call Thomas or Liso© 472 1783. ___________________________ 7-7-20B HYDE PARK 5/BR, 3/BA, hard­ wood floors, interior columns, com­ pletely remodeled. $2200 320- 0010. 7-I2-5B 5BR/4BA, CLARKSVILLE Hard­ woods, 2-story, window-unit AC 1/2 block from ER shuttle $2100/ mo Agent 477-1 163. 7-17-10B 42g - ©oom i ONE BLOCK UT. 602 Elmwood Co-op. Quiet, friendly, non-smok- ing, pet-free $345-445, includes bills, five suppers, 474-2618 6- 28-20B.B FOUR BLOCKS UT. Private bed room, private both. Share kitchen. CA/ Quiet, nonsmoking, petfree CH. $425, ABP 474-2408 7- 10-20B Í room 909 W EST 22nd rental. Quiet, private, A/C, fans, share kitchen Walk UT $275-$305 Avoilable late August 478-31 28 7-14-206-0 - Co-op» ‘ C A R IN G O W N E R S * Luxurious! One bedrooms from $625-775 Two bedrooms from $775-1200 Some hardwood floors, all fully equipped. KHP, 476-2154. SETON AVENUE PLACE Huge 1-1 W est Campus _______________________ 7-12-206-D Pool, pa fio, reserved parking $750 CALL PMT 476-2673 ______________________7-14-206 B THE PADDOCK Huge efficiency with W / D Poolside, sport court Covered parking $450 CALL PMT 476-2673 7-14-20B.B Share a home with friends this summer! - 9 - -£■ - 6 - ICCs large, older homes are conveni­ ent, affordable, & student-owned. Our backyards, sun- decks, & 24-hr kitchens are made for you. Call now. From $330 to $400 a month. Inter-Cooperative Council, Inc. 510 W. 23- St. 476-1957 O N E BLOCK UT. 602 Elmwood Co-op Quiet friendly, nonsmoking, pet-lree Private bedroom, share kitchen, bath. $345-$445, includes bills, live suppers 474-2618 7- 14-206 B 2707 HEM PHILL PARK 472-3210 Resanes Repers / Tbeses U se r Printing I H Color Copies RbsS Jobs ^ w l ' i Coplea 1906 Goodolupe St 472-5353 ® ¥ ¥ } •f ^ an acceptable driving record. Applicant^ V selected must provide a current three year Driver's License Record. Call Angie after 11 pm at 471-5422 for appointment RIO G R A N D E C O N D O S •Split level ‘ Small, quiet complex 1 bedroom/ Ibath PERFECT listing. found match. 6-21-20B ROOMMATES 'til fee No Guaranteed Free roommate computer 370-4938 Fast service $600 CALL PMT 476-2673 7-14-206 B ST. JAMES Furnished Designer Condo Block West UT. Share GORGEOUS Large restored 3/2 with 2 or 3 roommates Whale second Hoot Hardwoods Screened porch Yard. Light, airy, CA/CH, 760 - Misc. Services CASH FOR ci allege. 900,000 grants available No repayments, ever Qualify Immediately 1-800- 243 2435. 6-29-20B NEED M ONEY for college? Financial assistance available For more infomation send SASE to P.O Box 10312 College Station, TX 77842- 0 3 12 6-28-20P W /D Immaculate Quiet. Many amenities Available August 22nd Rooms $360-$550 4742014 PROFESSIONAL EDITING SERVICES Summaries to tbeses Yale T A., Ph.D candidate, former N Y. editor Rates per project basis (512)847-5643 7-I45B EM PLO Y M EN T 6-22 2066 ONE BLOCK UT. 602 Elmwood Co-op Quiet, friendly, norvsmok 'ng, bed­ room,share kitchen, bath $345- 445 4742618 6-28-20B B includes bills, five pet-free suppers Private RESPONSIBLE M/F, share 3br du­ plex $290 +1/3 bills Nonsmok •f, wooded setting, near Zilker, all appliances 447-5272, 441 -6005 7-3-10B BLOCK W EST/UT Fall Huge gor geous-hardwoods, screened porch Quiet nonsmoking women $360 $555 4742014. 7-5-20B B SEEKING RESPONSIBLE roommate to share 2bd apartment 10 minute drive from UT $325 +deposit Virv cent 302-1539 7-11-5B Vaulted Ceilings Tile Floor Covered Parking $900 CALL PMT 476-2673 _________________ 7-14-206 B QUADRANGLE Huge 1300 sq. ft, townhouse Two fireplaces, ceramic tile, skylights, two patios, custom kitchen $ 11 50 CALL PMT 476-2673 7-14-206 8 SUNCHASE 2 bedroom /2 bath $950 1 bed roon/1 both $650 •Beautiful pool* ‘ G ate access* ‘ Covered parking* CALL PMT 476-2673 S S x A S H j 9.1 mmmsum • i M d M R i q p t i H Private bed­ FOUR BLOCKS UT. room, privóle both Share kitchen Quiet, nonsmoking, petfree CA/CH $425, ABP 4742408 7-10-2068 WM ywr first fm tnm iumHm W B im tI^ p i t — (wMfc ifcb CMfaa). 7-14-208 B needed to M /F ROOMMATE shore beoutiful, spacious W est Campus condo w/lhree femóles for 95-96 $325 M oroo (210)521 6568 7-12-6P « h r» **» ItetM^wNlywK ■ I "Uéá S— My (m4 ftwf «I I "FkfcnO IUTS, fBL...) I | j The University of Texas at Austin is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer MEN AGES 18 to 45 Up To $800.00 Compensation Are you a healthy, non-smoking man between the ages of 18 and 45? If so, you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $800.00. The dates and times of the study are listed below; you must be available to remain in our facility for the entire period to be eligible: Check-In: Friday, July 21 Saturday, August 5 Check-Out: Sunday, July 23 Monday, August 7 In addition, bnef out-patient visits will be required on the following dates: July 30-August 5 To qualify, you must pass our free physical examination and screening tests Meals, accommodations, entertainment, and recreational activities will be provided free of charge. For more information, please call 462-0492 PHARMACO::LSR EMPLOYMENT - 790 PART-TIME $ 2 4 0 “ t o $ 5 5 0 “ W e e k ly ! Fan, Fast-Paced Atmosphere Flexible Schedules: 9-1 • 1-5 • $.9 Benefits Plus Bonuses 1 - 8 0 0 - 9 2 9 - 5 7 5 3 MEN AGES 18 to 45 Up To $800.00 Compensation Are you a healthy, non-smoking man between the ages of 18 and 45? If so, you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $800.00. The dates and times of the study are listed below; you must be available to remain in our facility for the entire penod to be eligible: Check-In: Fnday, July 21 Friday, August 4 Check-Out: Sunday, July 23 Sunday, August 6 In addition, brief out-patient visits will be required on the following dates: To qualify, you must pass our free physical examination tests. Meals, accommodations, and screening entertainment, and recreational activities will be provided free of charge. For more information, please call 462-0492 PHARMACO"LSR 'Conrrn > m m , n rrrrT-m-r^-r- rrv-j xnf A R O U N D C A M P U S A r o u n d C a mp us is a d a ily col­ u m n l i s t i n g U n i v e r s it y - r e la t e d activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and stud en t organizations registered th e C a m p u s A c t i v i t i e s w i t h O ffice. A n n o u n ce m e n ts m ust be submitted on the proper form by noon two days before publication. Forms are available at the Daily T e x a n o f f ic e at 25th S treet and Whitis Avenue. You m ay n o w s u b m it A r o u n d C a m p u s e n t r ie s b y e - m a il at: a r o u n d c @ u tx v m s .c c .u te x a s.e d u . P le a se in c lu d e the n a m e o f the sponsoring organization, location, tim e and date o f e v e n t, date o f a n n o u n c e m e n t, a contact p h o n e num ber and other relevant infor­ m a t io n . Q u e s t i o n s r e g a r d in g A r o u n d C a m p u s m ay a lso b e e- mailed to this address. Otherwise, p le a se direct q u e stio n s to Tracy Schultz at 471-4591. The D a i l y T e x a n r e se r v e s the right to edit submissions. MEETINGS UT Taekwon-Do Club w ill meet from 7 p.m.-9 p.m. in L. Theo Bel­ mont H all 502A. The instructor is M ike Stinson. For more information call Diana Hun at 452-5822. UT Tukong Moosul Club meets at 6 p.m. M onday and W ednesday to p ractice m artial arts in A nna H iss Gym nasium 22. Visitors and new members of any skill level are alw ays welcome. U n i v e r s i t y Yoga C lu b m eets from 5 p.m.-6:30 p.m M onday in the Texas Union Sinclair Suite 3.128. Do not eat w ith in tw o hours before class. For m ore in fo rm atio n call Peter at 288-3456. O v e r e a te r s A n o n y m o u s w ill meet from noon-1 p.m. M onday in P a rlin 214. For more inform ation call 475-9257. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES UT Volunteer Center is looking for volunteers to work as job coach­ es fo r p eople in v o lv e d in an em plo ym ent and re h a b ilita tio n tech n o lo g y p rogram . Fo r m ore information call 471-6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to assist the United Cerebral Palsy Associa­ tion of C a p ita l A rea acco untin g department. Accounting and busi­ ness majors are preferred. For more information call 471-6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to help conduct safety scenarios to teach children bike safety, w ater safety, firs t a id , and assist c h ild re n in hands on safety situations. For more information call 471-6161. ■ Interns are needed to assist the A ustin Safe K ids C oalition in the developm ent and im plem entation of public awareness and education programs for childhood injury pre­ vention. For more inform ation call 471-6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to assist w ith the data entry of client infor­ mation into a specialized im migra­ tion software data base. For more information call 471-6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to spend some one-on-one time w ith a youth in Travis County Juvenile Detention Center. For more inform ation call 471-6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to track and send donor acknowledgements to hospice donors and assist w ith fund-raising events. For more infor­ mation call 471-6161. ■ Interns are needed to assist with accountin g and fin a n c ia l record keeping at the M ental Health Asso­ ciation. For more inform ation call 471-6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to staff telephones m ediating a range of consumer disputes and cases. Train­ ing and resources w ill be provided. For more information call 471-6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to assist the Texas M em o ria l M useum in greeting and inform ing the public. For more information call 471-6161. Services for Students w ith D is­ abilities needs volunteers for a vari­ ety of tasks including study assis­ tance, test assistance and reading and w ritten hom ew ork help. For more information call Sandy at 471- 6259. U T In te rn a tio n a l O ffic e seeks volunteers to assist w ith orientation for international students in Ju ly and August. For more inform ation c a ll K aren Pabon at 471-1211 or Lynda Gonzales at 459-4416. D iv is io n of H ousing and Food Service seeks student tutors to help w ith a literacy and G E D program for adults. Classes are 1 p.m.-3 p.m. on Fridays. For more inform ation call 471-5031. SPECIAL EVENTS Astronom y Departm ent w ill hold a public star party for U T students, facu lty and staff from 9:30 p.m.- 10:30 p.m. M onday at T.S. Painter H all Observatory. SHORT C O U R SES ~ Stud ent H ealth C enter is spon­ soring a Methods of Contraception class for men and women 2:30 p.m.- 4 p.m. M onday in SH C 448. For reg­ istration call 471-4158. 800 - General Help Wanted DOUBLETREE HOTEL - AUSTIN seeking a part-time Business Center Coordinator W ill work 7am-6pm every Friday and some weekends hours if needed. W ill be responsible for photocopying, faxing, word-processing, etc. for our guests. Great customer service skills required and 50 W P M typing and word-processing skills preferred Apply in person. 6505 IH35 N, HR Dept. 9am-4pm, Tues. or W ed. Call 454-4107 or 454-3737 for additional employment opportunities EO E. 7-17-3B EMPLOYMENT 800 - General « w p w a n te d C R EW LEADER NEEDED to work on janitorial crew training adults with mental retardation Full-time position, M-F, 8am-4pm. Starting salary $5.70/hr. Experience working with adults with mental retardation preferred Call 447-1619, ask for Roberta EOE/M/F/H/V. EMPLOYMENT 880 -Professional ___ Authors of Terminal Velocity and Microsoft Fury have several job openings for programmers to work on new and exciting 3D games for the PC, Macintosh, Sega Saturn, and Sony Playstation. C program­ ming skills are required, and the fol­ lowing experience is recommended: 80x86, 68K, C++, MFC, Wind­ ows. Company is located in suburb of Dallas, TX. Please send resume and/or 7-12-5B demo of your work to: NIGHT W ATCHM AN 326-9442 7-14-58 6 p m - 2 o m . Personnel Manager P.O. Box 293297 8 1 0 - O ffic q -C t e r k o l SHORT WALK UT. train on Mac), trainees, clerical, runners. smoking 474-2032. 7-3-20B B (will Typists bookkeeping Non­ GREAT OPPORTUNITY! Customer Service Reps. Inbound call experience, professional atmosphere, hours 3:OOpm-8:OOpm, pays $7.00 an hour,- please call for an interview 346-3155 _________________________ 7-7-20B-D IMMEDIATE O P EN IN G for runner/ office assistant at the Austin Sym­ phony administrative office Afler- noon hours only Must have reli­ able transportation. Call Barbara 476-6064 8 2 0 - Gain experi­ SHORT WALK UT ence with Mac bookkeeping sys­ tem Also hiring typists, clerical, runners Nonsmoking. 474-2032 7- 3-20B.B 8 4 © - S a f e s A $400 a day position working for Don Lapre of the TV show Making Money Call Don at 1 800-DON LAPRE 6-20-20B TO PLACE YOUR SUPER LONGHORN W ANTAD CALL 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 ! Lewisville, TX 75029-3297 Or fax at: (214)221-2059 7-U-20B K M r a u r o n u -iff DAILY PAY! Waiters/Waitresses Bartenders/Banquet Set-Up 20 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY LABOR FINDERS Hospitality Division Apply 6:00am-6:00pm 9900 Gray Blvd 719-4384, Steve or Bob 7-12-5B. 90© - ©mitesik n o iiiiV K N Q -1» AFTER-SCHOOL CHILDCARE needed- Boy, 10, Girl, 13 10/hrs/wk , $5/ hr.,2 50-4;50PM, M-F Must have own car for pick-up at Casis and O'Henry schools. Non-smoker, refs/ req'd. Start 8-14 4800218 7-6-10B TW O WONDERFUL boys, 3 and 5, need a nanny- flexible hours, allow for morning class time Hyde Park. Call 323-5187 7-7-10B BABYSITTER 4-9P M M-Th $4 25A ' , one child One reference minimum and interview 472-0856. 7-12-5B SITTER NEEDED weekdays full time 7 30-5 30, July 17-8/1 Part time 2 30-5 30 8/14 through Decern- ber 335-6038 712 5B for LIVE-IN CAREGIVER female grod student in wheelchair, Days, weekends free Neor /ilkei 328 1761 7-13 2B BUSINESS 9 3 © - Í u i í m m A $400 a day position working for Don Lapre of the TV show Making Money Call Don at I 800 DON LAPRE 6 Z a 2 0 B HEALTH CONSCIOUS MEN NEEDED FOR SEMEN DONORS!! IF 'O U - P E B E T . '. E E IJ : S - U U 3 S ! O I u|?F I I • 11 .'-'. A M U W O U LD [ IM M o r i r / I fj A r o r j F i u n j i i a i l L . p n Q ' n — ¡ ' M . r M - F f í l R F f i X C R Y O M N K 4 7 3 - 2 2 6 8 July 29-31. August 1-4 EMPLOYMENT • 800 GENERAL HELP WANTED MLB STANDINGS Boston Detroit Baltim ore New York Toronto Cleveland Kansas City Milwaukee C hicago M innesota California Texas Oakland Seattle W 40 37 35 33 30 W 50 35 36 29 24 W 43 42 37 35 L 32 37 3 / 38 42 L 21 3b 36 42 48 L 30 31 39 38 AMBUCAN LEAGUE East DMstoR G B P et 556 •5UU .486 465 4 5 f i’ L10 4 6 5-5 6-4 a a •417 10 6-4 Central DMstan L10 Pet GB 7-3 — .704 4-6 14 i .500 8-2 1 4 'j .500 2-8 21 •408 .333 2 6 1 West Division 6-4 Pet GB — .589 1 .575 7\ 487 .479 8 L10 7-3 7-3 2-8 3-7 SUMMIT'S GAMES S tre a k Lost 2 Lost 4 W on 2 W on 1 Streak W on 4 Lost 2 W on 4 Lost 4 Lost 1 Streak Won 4 W on 2 Lost 3 Lost 1 H om e 20-17 22-18 19-17 18-15 16-17 Home 29-10 15-17 16-20 18-18 11-26 Home 20-15 24-14 18-20 20-16 Away 20-15 15-19 16-20 15-23 14-25 Away 21-11 20-18 20-16 11-24 13-22 Away 23-15 18-17 19-19 15-22 California 6 , D etroit 4, 1st game California 13, Detroit 6 , 2nd game, 8 innings, rain Baltim ore 3, Kansas City 2 New York 5, M innesota 1 M ilwaukee 6 , C hicago 1 C leveland 5, Oakland 4, 12 innings Toronto 9, S eattle 3 Texas 5, Boston 2 MONDAY'S SCHEDULE Baltim ore (Brown 5-6) at Texas (Tew ksbury 7-3), 7:05 p.m. Toronto (Leiter 5-5) at M innesota (Harris 0-2), 7:05 p.m Oakland (Stew art 3-6) at Milwaukee (Sparks 5-4 ), 7:05 p.m. California (Anderson 2-2) at C leveland (Ogea 5-1), 7:05 p.m. Chicago (Alvarez 3-5) at New York (Pettitte 4 -6 ), 7:05 p.m. Kansas City (G ubicza 6-7) at Boston (Suppan 0-0), 7:05 p.m. Detroit (Bergm an 3-5) at Seattle (Krueger 0 -0 ), 10:05 p.m. Atlanta Philadelphia Montreal N ew York Florida Cincinnati Houston Chicago Pittsburgh St. Louis Colorado Los Angeles San Francisco San Diego W 46 40 36 28 26 W 46 40 38 32 32 W 40 36 35 34 L 2 / 33 38 45 44 L 26 32 36 38 43 L 33 37 38 39 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Pet GB — .630 6 •548 10*2 .486 18 .389 L10 8-2 2-8 4-6 5-5 .371 18 ’r 4-6 Central Division L10 Pet GB 7-3 — .639 6-4 6 .556 5-5 9 .514 7-3 13 .457 .427 15% West División 6-4 Pet GB — .548 4 .493 5 .479 .466 6 L10 6-4 3-7 3-7 3-7 SUNDAY'S GAMES Streak Lost 1 Lost 3 W on 3 W on 1 W on 1 Streak Lost 1 Lost 1 Won 1 W on 2 Lost 2 Streak Lost 1 Lost 1 W on 1 W on 1 Home 23-15 16-19 19-15 16-24 10-21 Home 21-16 18-19 14-21 16-20 19-21 Home 23-13 17-20 19-16 21-17 Away 23-12 24-14 17-23 12-21 16-23 Away 25-10 22-13 24-15 16-18 13-22 Away 17-20 19-17 16-22 13-22 Pittsburgh 3, St. Louis 0 Montreal 5, P hiladelphia 1 New York 2, C olorado 1 ,1 0 innings C hicago 7, Cincinnati 5 San Diego 3, A tlanta 1 Florida 5, Los A ngeles 2 San Francisco 7, Houston 6 , 14 innings MONDAY'8 SCHEDULE St. Louis (Jackson 2-9) at M ontreal (Urbina 2-0), 7:05 p.m. New York (Isringhausen 0-0) at C hicago (Castillo 6-5), 7:05 p.m. Philadelphia (M im bs 6-5) at Colorado (Grahe 4 -2 ), 7:05 p.m. Houston (H am pton 4-3) at Los A ngeles (Banks 0-2), 10:05 p.m. Cincinnati (N itkow ski 1-2) at San Diego (Sanders 5-5), 10:05 p.m. Florida (W eathers 2-3) at San Francisco (W ilson 3-3), 10:05 p.m. O nly gam es scheduled game, has 30 RBIs in his last 27 I games. GIANTS 7, ASTROS 8 (14) Astros Continued from page 12 The Giants had scored two in the bottom of the eighth to take a 6-5 lead after Houston scored four runs in the top of the eighth to take a 5-4 lead. John Patterson made up for a cost­ ly error with a two-run triple in the eighth for the Giants. His errant underhand toss from second base toward first in the top of the inning led to three unearned runs. Jeff Reed led off the Giants' eighth with an infield single and was sacri­ ficed to second. Todd Jones then hit Darren Lewis on the left hand with a pitch and Patterson followed with a triple over the head of center fielder Milt Thompson. Lewis was taken to a hospital for X-rays, which showed only a bruise. In the Houston eighth, Dave Mag­ adan had an RBI single with two outs to knock out Giants starter M ark Leiter, w ho struck out a career-high 12. With Rod Beck on the mound, Derrick May singled, a run scored on Patterson's flub, pinch-hitter Tony Eusebio walked and pinch-hitter John Caneglosi sin­ gled in two runs. It was the sixth blown save this year for Beck, who did not blow a save last year in 28 opportunities. Houston had scored eight runs in the eighth on Saturday to rally for a 15-9 win, and rebounded from a 6-2 deficit on Friday to beat the Giants 13-8. The first game of the series, on Thursday, was won by San Francis­ co in 12 innings. "This is Candlestick and anything goes here. I've seen mofe strange games here than any other ballpark except W rigley," said H ouston's Craig Biggio. "It was like today would never end. It's been a long four days." Leiter allowed three runs and six hits in 7 2 /3 innings. He struck out at least one batter in every inning but the fourth and eighth. Leiter, who struck out the side in the fifth and seventh innings, has not won since June 4. Astros starter Darryl Kile had a Women’s Continued from page 12 wedge from the rough to 6 feet at No. 11 for a two-stroke cushion. When Mallon, the 1991 winner, missed the green at No. 11 and bogeyed, the lead went to three strokes. Sorenstam finally stumbled at the 15th, driving into the rough, hitting into a greenside her approach HOUSTON Biggio 2b MTmsn cf Bgwell 1b DBell rf Mgdan 3b May If Miller ss Goff c Esebio c Kile p Powell p Shipley ph DVeres p Cnglosi ph Drabek pr ToJnes p Stnkwc ph Dghrty p Hrtgrvs p Brocail p Totals ab r h bi 6 1 1 0 7 0 0 0 4 1 2 2 7 1 2 0 7 1 2 1 6 1 1 0 6 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 52 6 11 s SAN FRAN DLewis cf Fneyte cf Pttrson 2b Bonds If GHill rf Clayton ss Phillips 1b Scrsone 3b Beck p Crreon ph Burba p Barton p RbTpsn ph Hook p JeReed c Impkm c MLeitr p Bnjmm 3b ab r h bi 4 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 5 1 3 3 3 0 1 1 5 0 0 0 7 0 1 0 6 1 1 1 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 2 1 2 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Totals 47 711 6 Houston San Francisco 000 ooo 001 041 000 022 020 000 00 — 6 01 No outs when winning run scored E— Magadan (8). Patterson (2), GHill (6) DP— Houston 3, San Francisco 2 LOB— Houston 11, San Francisco 14 2B— Magadan (12), Eusebio (14), Clayton (16), Scarsone (7) 3B— Patterson (3), HR— Bagwell (13), Phillips (5). SB— DBeli (18), Faneyte (1), Bonds 2 (15), GHill (16), Clayton (14) CS— Eusebio (1), Bonds (4) S— Hartgraves. Patterson Benjamin. Houston Kile Powell DVeres ToJones Dougherty Hartgraves Brocail L,2-1 San Francisco MLeiter Beck Burba Barton Hook W.5-0 Burba pitched to 1 b batter m the 14th. IP H R ER BB SO 5 2/3 1/3 1 2 2 1 1/3 2/3 4 6 0 0 1 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 1 1 4 0 0 2 0 0 1 7 6 0 0 2 0 1 3 1 2 1 2 0 0 7 2/3 1 1/3 2 1 2 3 2 12 3 2 0 0 1 3 0 1 0 1 1 0 the 12th, Brocail pitched to 1 1 1 0 0 0 6 3 1 0 1 HBP— by ToJones (DLewis). WP— Kile PB— Eusebio. Umpires— Home, Bonin First, Montague Second, McSher- ry; Third, Williams T— 4:54 A— 22,677 (63,000). for no-hitter innings but four allowed three hits in both the fifth and sixth innings. He walked seven and struck out six in 5 2-3 innings. Barry Bonds, Jeff Reed and Patter­ son each had an RBI single for the Giants, who are 7-2 in extra innings this season and lead the National League in one-run victories with a 16-7 mark. Bagwell is the first Astro to homer in three straight games since he did it last July 26th, 27th, and 29th. This was the fourth time Bagwell home- red in three straight games. bunker and missing a 6-foot putt for her first bogey in 23 holes. She then three-putted the 16th, reducing her lead to one. She also struggled at the par-5 17th, scrambling for a par on what is considered a birdie hole, but had a routine par at No. 18. MLB LEASERS AMBOCAN LEAGUE (Through Sunday night) EMartinez Sea O'Leary Bos Baerga Cle O'Neill NY Naehring Bos Thome Cle IRodriguez Tex RAIomar Tor Murray Cle DiSarcina Cal AVERAGES G 73 58 71 57 65 67 60 70 60 72 AB 252 215 298 202 222 227 228 269 232 264 R 58 31 46 35 36 47 33 41 37 48 H 91 73 101 68 74 74 74 87 75 85 Pet. 361 340 339 337 333 326 325 .323 323 .322 RUNS — Phillips, California, 65; Edmonds, Califor­ nia, 60; EMartinez, Seattle, 58; ByAnderson, Balti­ more, 55; JnValentin, Boston, 54; MVaughn, Boston, 54; Thomas, Chicago, 54; Belle, Cleveland, 54. RBI — MVaughn, Boston, 64; Edmonds, California. 61; MRamirez, Cleveland, 60; McGwire, Oakland, 59; TMartinez, Seattle. 58; Thomas, Chicago, 58; EMartinez, Seattle, 58 HITS — Baerga, Cleveland, 101; EMartinez, Seattle, 91; Nixon, Texas, 89; RAIomar, Toronto, 87; Belle. Cleveland, 86; Curtis, Detroit, 85; Knoblauch, Min­ nesota, 85; DiSarcina, California, 85. DOUBLES — Belle, Cleveland, 28; EMartinez, Seat­ tle. 27; DiSarcina, California, 22, Baerga, Cleveland, 19; Seitzer, Milwaukee, 19; CRipken, Baltimore, 19; JnValentin, Boston, 18; Joyner, Kansas City. 18. TRIPLES — Lofton, Cleveland, 7; RAIomar, Toronto, 7; BWilliams, New York, 5; ByAnderson, Baltimore. 5; White, Toronto, 5; O’Leary, Boston, 4; Knoblauch, Minnesota, 4; Leius, Minnesota, 4; DiSarcina, Califor­ nia, 4; LJohnson, Chicago, 4 HR — MVaughn, Boston, 24; McGwire, Oakland, 24, Thomas, Chicago, 23; MRamirez, Cleveland, 21 Fielder. Detroit, 20; Thome, Cleveland, 18; TMartinez, Seattle, 18; Gaetti, Kansas City, 18 STOLEN BASES — TGoodwin, Kansas City, 28, Coleman, Kansas City, 22; Knoblauch, Minnesota. 21; LJohnson. Chicago, 21; Nixon, Texas. 21; Lofton, Cleveland, 20; McLemore, Texas, 18; RHenderson. Oakland, 18 PITCHING (7 D ecisions) — DeMartinez, Cleveland, 6-0, 1 000, 2.47; RJohnson, Seattle, 10-1, 909, 2 66 Wakefield, Boston, 8-1, 889, 1.70. Langston, Califor­ nia, 8-1, .889, 4.30; Belinda, Boston, 7-1, 875, 3.27; Stottlemyre, Oakland, 8-2, 800, 3.72; Boskie. Califor­ nia, 6-2, 750 ,4 81. STRIKEOUTS — RJohnson, Seattle, 168, Appier, Kansas City. 122; Stottlemyre, Oakland, 115; Finley, California, 103; Cone, Toronto, 92; Hanson, Boston, 80; JMcDowell, New York, 80. SAVES — Mesa. Cleveland, 23; LeSmith, California. 22; Eckersley. Oakland, 19; Henneman, Detroit, 17; Montgomery. Kansas City, 15; DJones, Baltimore, 15; Aguilera, Boston, 14; Russell, Texas, 14 NATIONAL LEAGUE (Through Sunday night) TGwynn SD DBell Hou Dunston Chi Bichette Col Grace Chi Bonilla NY LWalker Col Cordero Mon Gilkey StL Bonds SF AVERAGES G 72 71 67 71 73 70 64 73 54 73 AB 285 298 246 291 283 276 249 292 222 264 R 45 47 29 45 48 40 50 38 33 57 H 103 102 84 98 93 89 79 91 69 82 Pet. .361 342 .341 337 329 322 .317 312 .311 311 RUNS — Biggio, Houston, 62; Bagwell, Houston, 59, Bonds, San Francisco, 57; Finley, San Diego. 56 McRae, Chicago, 55; Mondesi Los Angeles, 54, Gant, Cincinnati, 51; Galarraga. Colorado, 51 RBI — DBell, Houston, 60; RSanders, Cincinnati, 59, Galarraga, Colorado, 58; Sosa, Chicago, 57; Bonds, San Francisco, 56; Gant, Cincinnati, 55 TGwynn, San Diego, 55. HITS — TGwynn, San Diego, 103; DBell, Houston, 102; Bichette, Colorado, 98; Grace, Chicago, 93; Cordero, Montreal, 91; McRae. Chicago, 91; Bonilla, New York, 89 DOUBLES — Grace, Chicago, 33; Cordero, Montre­ al. 23; Lankford, St. Louis. 23; Bichette, Colorado, 22; McRae, Chicago, 21; TGwynn, San Diego. 20; Bag- well, Houston, 19; Bonilla, New York, 19 TRIPLES — McRae. Chicago, 6; Offerman, Los Angeles, 5, Larkin, Cincinnati. 5; Mondesi, Los Ange­ les, 4; BJordan, St Louis. 4; RSanders, Cincinnati, 4; Gonzalez, Chicago, 4; Bonds, San Francisco, 4; Bonilla, New York, 4; Dunston, Chicago, 4 HR — LWalker, Colorado, 20; Gant, Cincinnati, 20. Galarraga, Colorado, 19; Castilla, Colorado, 17; Bonds, San Francisco, 17: RSanders. Cincinnati, 16 Sosa, Chicago, 16. STOLEN BASES — Veras. Florida, 29; Larkin, Cincinnati, 25; RSanders. Cincinnati, 21; DLewis, San Francisco, 20; DeShields, Los Angeles. 19: Fin­ ley, San Diego, 19; DBell, Houston, 18 PITCHING (7 D ecisions) — Smiley, Cincinnati 9-1, 900. 3.27; GMaddux. Atlanta, 9-1, 900, 1.59; Nomo, Los Angeles, 7-1, .875, 1.90; Bullinger, Chicago, 6-1, 857, 3.18; CPerez, Montreal. 8-2, .800, 3.07; Dougherty, Houston, 6-2, .750, 4 70; Hammond Florida, 6-2, .750, 2.28 STRIKEOUTS — Nomo, Los Angeles 129: Schilling, Philadelphia, 109: Benes, San Diego, 104. Smoltz Atlanta, 102; GMaddux, Atlanta, 95. PJMartinez. Montreal, 91; Fassero, Montreal. 89 SAVES — Myers, Chicago, 22; Slocumb, Philadel­ phia, 21; Henke, St Louis, 19; Rojas, Montreal, 17; JBrantley, Cincinnati, 17; Beck, San Francisco, 15; Miceli, Pittsburgh, 13. Rob Dibble released by White Sox Associated Press ' ' MILWAUKEE — Fiery reliever Rob Dibble was placed on waivers Sunday by the Chicago White Sox, who want to give him his uncondi­ tional release. Dibble, who signed with Chicago as a free agent Feb. 27, was 0-1 with one save and a 6.28 ERA in 16 games this year. He'd given up just seven hits in 14 1/3 innings, but walked 27 batters. "We don't feel anybody's going to hit him, but he's got two walks an inning and in the major leagues you can't bring him into a game know­ ing that," Chicago manager Terry' Bevington said. The move came as the 6-4, 230- pound Dibble, known for a temper that led him to start fights and get suspended over his stormy seven- year career, was appealing a three- game suspension for throwing at Mil­ waukee's Pat Listach and igniting a brawl at County Stadium on June 29. "His career is not over," Listach said. "H e throws harder than any­ one I've seen this year. He's got a great arm. He can still play the game. Not too m any guys can throw as hard as he does." His last appearance for Chicago came Saturday night w hen he entered to face Listach in the eighth inning. He walked him on five pitches, then walked three more batters, two with the bases loaded, as Milwaukee went on to win 9-5. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Monday, July 17, 1 9 9 5 Page 11 Texas’ Jack Voigt dives under Boston’s Juan Bell as he completes the double play during the third inning.! ASSOCIATED PRESS Rangers: Rogers shuts down BoSox Continued from page 12 TEXAS Nixon cf McLmr If WCIark 1b JGnzIz dh IRdrgz c LOrtiz 3b Pglrulo 3b Voigt rf Greer rf Frye 2b Gil ss Totals Texas Boston Texas Rogers W.9-4 Burrows McDowell Russell S,14 Boston ZSmith L,3-6 MMaddux Belinda three hits in seven innings. The Red Sox got two runs off relievers Terry Burrows and Roger McDowell in the eighth, keeping them the only major league team without a shutout loss. "I knew I would toe the m ound tonight, I just didn't know how far I could go," said Rogers. Of his injury he said "1 trained my shoulder in the All-Star game. I just got a little too pum ped up and overthrew and that's what caused the strain." Rogers threw 109 pitches while striking out seven and walking four. "Kenny is a location pitcher and when he has his location he can be one of the best in the game," manag­ er Johnny Oates said. Jeff Russell worked a perfect ninth inning and got his 14th save. "It was nice to take three of the four games in Boston, but to be hon­ est they didn't have their complete team, Oates said. "Clemens w asn't his best against us, Vaughn was out of the lineup for two of the games and Greenwell didn't play at all." Gonzalez's home run, a three-run shot that landed in Boston's bullpen, came off Zane Smith (3-6) in the the Rangers third scored all five of their runs. It broke a tie with Ruben Sierra for the club's home run lead. inning when Will Clark drove in Texas' other two runs with a bases-loaded single. Juan Gonzalez became the Rangers’ home run leader with the 154th of his career and 14th of the season. Boston scored twice in the eighth on an RBI single by Mo Vaughn and a bases-loaded sacrifice fly by John Valentin. Troy O'Leary struck out with two runners on base to end the rally. "It felt like opening day to me," Vaughn said. "I wanted to get a hit and contribute. But I didn't know what to expect from the fans and when 30,000 people stood and cheered for me, it felt great." ■ NOTES: Jeff Suppan, the Red Sox second pick in the 1993 draft, was called up from Trenton of the AA Eastern League and will make his major league debut M onday night against Kansas City. Suppan was 6-2 with a 2.36 ERA at Trenton. ... Derek Lilliquist was released by the Sox to make room for S u ppan.... Mike Greenwell is making progress in his recovery from a bruise to his ribcage, according to team doctor Arthur Pappas, who said that the left fielder can run but is still not RANGERS 5, RED SOX 2 h bi 2 0 BOSTON Tinsley cf McGee rf MVghn 1b Cnseco dh Nhring 3b JnVlntn ss O’Lery If Mcfrlne c JuBell 2b Stairs ph r h bi 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 7 2 IP H R ER BB SO 7 1/3 2/3 1 6 2 1 3 2 2 0 3 1 0 0 2 0 0 5 0 0 0 2 0 0 5 0 0 4 0 0 0 7 0 1 1 3 3 1 0 1 0 — 2 E— JnValentin (10). DP— Texas 1, Boston 1. LOB-Texas 2, Boston 8 2B— Macfarlane (7) HR— JGonzalez (14). SF— JnValentin 005 000 000 000 000 020 WP— Rogers. MMaddux Umpires— Home, Craft; First. Denkmger Second. Shulock; Third, Tschida T— 2 43. A— 30,295 (33,871). able to swing the bat. ... Mickey Tet- tleton was scratched from the Texas starting lineup Sunday due to a left ribcage pull. ... The Rangers are 27-5 when outhitting the opposition and 29-4 when reaching double figures in h its.... Since June 1, Ranger reliev­ ers are 10-3 with 1C saves in 12 chances. UT AEROBICS Register now for second session! ONGOING REGISTRATION Gregory Gym, Room 30, Monday through Friday. 8:30-4:30 (until 6:00 Wednesday) 2 9 Fun c la s s e s offered J u ly 16 * A ugust 18! For more information, call 471-5234 m ta U A T IO N A X 12 T h e D a il y T e x a n MOMMY, JUIY17,1885 SPORTS_________ San Fran outlasts Houston in 14 Phillips HR does in Astros, 7-6 Associated Press ~ ~ ~ ---------------- ------------ -— ------------- SAN FRANCISCO There have boon few moments of satis­ faction for rookie J R. Phillips this season. His homer leading off the 14th inning Sunday provided one of them. 1 hope ho enjoys tonight, because these moments have been kind of rare Giants manager Dustv Baker said after Phillios gave San Francisco a 7-6 win over the Houston Astros in a game that lasted four hours. 54 minutes. Phillips, who came to bat hitting v m l b stan d in g s an d , leaders, page 11 II-* . — , (M" ro 'n *> ’ iwme. hit his fitth homer ot the season on a 2-2 pitch by Doug Brocail (2-1). 'It's a sad feeling when you know it's time to walk straight to the dugout because you know it s out, Brocail said. "It's a sad feeling when you're the last guv out there." Phillips was given the Giants starting job at first base this season, but struggled to get his average above .100 for the first two months He landed on the bench, with Mark Carreon tak­ ing over as the regular first baseman. E \er\ thing is a lift Phillips said of his homer, "especially with the way I've been hitting." Chris Hook (5-0) pitched two innings for the win. Houston's Jeff Bagwell homered leading off the ninth, his third homer in three games and his 13th of the year, to tie the game 6-6. Bagwell who had a run-sconng single earlier in the RED OF CONTESTANTS Please see Astros, page 11 ASSOCIATED PRESS Houston s Derek Bell slides past second base as S.F. s Royce Clayton leaps over him. Gonzalez blast helps Texas defeat Red Sox, puts him in record books A ssociated Press ~-----------------------~ BOSTON — The Texas Rangers have never been so far above .500 so far into the season. The Rangers improved to 42-31 Sunday night with a 5-2 victory over the Boston Red Sox in which Juan Gonzalez became the team's home run leader with the 154th of his career and 14th of the season. I feel real happy and excited to be the all time leader in home runs for this team," Gonzalez said. "I am about 90 percent healthy (he has missed 33 games this season with a herniated disk in his back) if I was 100 percent I think I could have 25 or 26 home runs by now." The victory was the sixth in seven games for Texas, giving them the best record after 73 games in club history. 1 exas moved 11 games over .500 for the first time this season U Kenny [Rogers] is a location pitcher and when he has his location he can be one of the best in the game.” — Johnny Oates, hangers manager and, by w inning three of four against the Red Sox, won its first series on the road since taking two of three at Detroit in mid-June. Kenny Rogers (9-4) got his first win since June 23, allowing only Please see Rangers, page 11 The pack ides by a field of sunflowers during the 14th stage of the Tour de France. Miguel Induraln is still the overall leader in the race, and Austin s Lance Armstrong is 34th, 58:56 behind. ASSOCIATED PRESS Sorenstam holds off pack, wins U.S. Women’s Open Swede captures 1st career win Associated Press -------------------------------------------------- COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - Sweden's ¡yiraka Sorenstam ran off three consecutive birdies and then survived a shaky finish Sun­ day, capturing the 50th US. Women's Open for her first career victory. w f ^ ! U tain' capitalizing on third-round leader Meg Mallon s tnple-bogey debacle at the fourth hole, shot a 2-under-par 68 for a one-stroke mar­ gin. Sorenstam had a 2-under 278 total on The Broadmoor Golf Club's East Course. Sorenstam's birdies at Nos. 9-11 put her two shots in front, a lead she extended to three, help­ ing her overcome bogeys on Nos. 15 and 16. 1 was five shots out starting the day," Soren- I went off today with the attitude 2 a® that I had nothing to lose " m ^ S i T T Y 24' * * LPGA'* rookie «he year 1994, had three second-place finishes over the last two seasons, but never a victory. Mallon had a chance to tie at No. 18, but £ 9 f e * a 20 fOOt bifítíe putt Her 74 s ave her a Mallon began the day at 5-under and with a two-stroke lead over Julie Larsen. After Larsen oogeyed her first two holes, the margin was Not for long. On the par-4 third hole, Mai km tot her approach into trees left of the green and ■had to scramble to make bogey, Item disaster struck at the par-3 fourth, a 139- yard hole with a pond fronting the green. Mal­ kin came up short hit on die bank and trickled b « k into ihe water. She mad* 4 trtpk^boigy 6. V' shockingly, gy f playera shared die J É Í fee round eight strokes had mounted a thunderous charge, tiwwfoing four of her first five holes to get to 1- under. a however' an*l knocked fit 12-foot birdie pirn ** No. $ *o rocfete aafcypos- ASSOCIATED PRESS Annlka Sorenstam closed with a 2-under 278 total in winning the U.S. W om en’s title. session of the lead. r In an instant, die gave it b a ck . Sorenstem, the youngest of the front runners, Par~5 ninth hole in two and two- putted for birdie, momentarily tying Mallon at ^Mataer. Mallon, meanwhile, nad bunkered her tee shot at the par-3 eighth. When she missed the par-saving putt, Sorenstam was alone at the top. Sorenstam then birdied the next hole as well, •inking an 8-foot putt But her lead remained a stroke when Mation birdied the ninth. , Sorenstam Blade it three i n a row, hitting a Wsss# sss Womsn’s, page 11 Uruguay, Colombia advance at America Cup tournament United States awaits Mexico in quarterfinals on Monday A ssociated Press ~ ~ MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay — Uruguay, looking to match Argentina's record of 14 America Cup titles, joined Colombia on Sunday in advancing to the semifinals of the South American championship. Uruguay used first-half goals by Marce­ lo Otero and Daniel Fonseca to defeat Bolivia 2-1. Colombia beat Paraguay 5-4 on penalty kicks after the teams were tied 1-1 follow- ing regulation and overtime. Colombia plays Uruguay in the semifi­ nals on W ednesday night. The United States, coming off a 3-0 vic­ tory over Argentina on Friday night, faces Mexico in the quarterfinals Monday night at Paysandu. The two nations were invit­ ed to the 12-nation tournament. In Monday night's other quarterfinal, World Cup cham pion Brazil plays Argentina in Rivera. Playing before its home fans, Uruguay took a 1-0 lead after just two minutes on a goal by Otero. Twenty-seven m inutes later, Uruguay made it 2-0 when Fonseca knocked in a floating free kick from veter­ an Enzo Francescoli. Bolivia scored with i 9 minutes left on Oscar Sanchez's header. Colombia won its spot in the semis on Playing before its home fans, Uruguay took a 1-0 lead after just two minutes on a goal by Otero. Twenty- seven minutes later, Uruguay made it 2-0 when Fonseca knocked in a float­ ing free kick from veteran Enzo Francescoli. the strength of goalkeeper Rene Higuita. Criticized for allowing a goal in Thurs­ day s loss to Brazil, Higuita made the big play during penalty kicks when he dived to his right and punched out Carlos Gamarra's shot. Until then, the teams had converted each of the nine penalty kicks Paraguay took a 1-0 lead in regulation on a 26th-minute goal by Juan Carlos Vil- Iamayor. Fredy Rincon of Colombia tied it in the 53rd minute off a pass from Carlos three Valderrama. Rincon defenders in the penalty box and rifled a shot past goalie Jorge Battaglia. then beat 1995 DALLAS COWBOYS ir a ih ig c a m p ■ Wednesday: The Daily Texan’s Dallas Cowboys summer training camp preview ■ Thursday: Cowboy players arrive at St. Edwards University ■ Friday: Two-a-day’s begin, 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. ■ Sunday: Blue and White Scrimmage at Nelson Field, 1 p.m. break SCORES BASEBALL AA83K AN LEAGUE California 6-13, Detroit 4-6 2nd game, 8 innings, rain Baltimore 3, Kansas City 2 New York 5, Minnesota 1 Milwaukee 6, Chicago 1 Cleveland 5, Oakland 4 (12) Toronto 9, Seattle 3 Texas 5, Boston 2 NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 3, St. Louis 0 Montreal 5, Philadelphia 1 New York 2, Colorado 1 (10) Chicago 7, Cincinnati 5 San Diego 3, Atlanta 1 Florida 5, Los Angeles 2 San Francisco 7, Houston 6 (14) BRIEFS Jarrett hangs on to win MGD 500 ■ LONG POND, Pa. — Dale Jarrett used every drop of fuel to get within a half mile of victory, then coasted around the final turn and hung on to beat Jeff Gordon on Sunday in the Miller Genuine Draft 500. they’ve "This one is for the team, after everything been through," Jarrett said after win­ ning for the first time this year and giving car owner Robert Yates his first victorv since May 15, 1994. "I have to pinch mvself," Yates said. "This one is real." The team has been beset by tragedy the last two seasons. Two years ago this week, driver Davev A'Jison was killed in a helicopter crash at Talladega, Ala Last August, Ernie Irvan nearly lost his life after crashing in practice at Brooklyn, Mich He has not driven since. Jarrett, who wants to form his own Winston Cup team next year if he can make arrange­ ments in the next month, needed a push to the winner's circle after his car stopped less than a mile beyond the line. He beat series leader Gordon by about five car lengths (.19 seconds) to win for the first time in 17 rides for Yates. The victory was only the third this year for a Ford Thunderbird, and the fourth for the 38-year-old driver. A&M pitching prospect bolts for Red Sox H HOUSTON — One of the top signees in Texas A&M's upcom- ing baseball class has decided to play for the Boston Red Sox. KRIV-TV in Houston reported Sunday that Andy Yount, a standout pitcher from Kingwood High School, will play profes­ sional baseball. Yount was the 15th player overall selected in the June amateur draft. The 6-2, 182-pounder said he expects to report immediately to Boston s Rookie League farm team in Fort Myers, Fla. In his senior year last season Yount went 10-0 with a 2.41 ERA. He struck out 124 batters in 76 innings. He said the choice to spurn the Aggies wasn't easy. It was a hard decision to give up A&M, but [Boston] came up with the money I was asking for, so I to ld .them I would go," said Yount,- w ho declined to discuss th e te rm s «of-the deal. " I always wanted to go to college and get my education, because that's what I've always been taught by my parents. "But then there's this oppor­ tunity to play professional base­ ball, a dream I've had since I was a little kid. So it was really tough, but finally I think I made the right decision." After taking a routine physi­ cal and signing his contract, Yount said he'll throw in the Fenway Park bullpen Monday night in Boston's game against Kansas City. to talk to Roger I 11 get [Clemens] you tomorrow, know," Yount said. "I'll have mv uniform on and have my name on thebpck. It'll be pretty cool." Brockermeyer inks deal with Panthers ■ SPARTANBURG, S.C. — Former Texas offensive tackle Blake Brockermeyer, Carolina's third first-round draft pick, reached an agreement with the team late Friday afternoon. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. — Compiled from staff and Associated Press reports