SPORTS 10 ENTERTAINMENT *Z¿£-£066i 3Aiaa -n3rn iter M elting pot Blonde Redhead brings a mix of Japanese, American and Italian musical tradition to the 1995 Lollapalooza tour. UNIVERSITY Park place Board of Regents expected to approve $11 million parking garage to be located next to Jester Center. T h e Da ily T exa n Significant fee increase surprises returning students The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, August 8, 1995 25C DENMAN SHELTON_________ Daily Texan Staff T E X w a rn ed s tu d e n ts th a t a c tio n s o f th e L e g is la tu re co u ld increase their tuition and fees, but this su m m er's h ik es seem quite a shock to returning UT students. "It seems like they're giving with o n e h an d and ta k in g w ith th e other," said Roger Gary, a disgrun­ tled geology senior. Gary w orks full tim e to support h im se lf and fin a n ce s m o st of h is education through loans. A le tt e r to s tu d e n ts fro m U T President Robert Berdahl explains the $20 increase in the general fee planned for the the next two acade­ mic years. The letter accom panies fall fee bills, and for some students will be the first they have heard of the increases. T h e T e x a s L e g is la tu r e ra is e d undergraduate resident tuition by $2 p e r c r e d it h o u r e a c h y e a r th ro u g h 2001, as w ell as v ary in g in cre ase s for som e g rad u ate p ro ­ grams. Tuition for nonresidents will in c r e a s e by m o re th a n $ 6 0 p e r . sem ester credit hour for both grad­ uate and undergraduate students. . . . . . . The revenues w ill p rim arily be used for staff and faculty pay raises, and to establish need-based scholar­ ships. The remainder will help fund classroom renovations and building improvements. Bernard R apoport, chairm an of the UT System Board of R egents, has called the increases "absolutely critical" in the absence of increased aid from the Legislature. C o n ra d o G o n z a le z , a L a tin American studies senior, recognizes . .. _ •_____________ u. , 4. the need for a tuition increase, but wishes they were smaller. "I ju st w en t and tu rn ed in my loan request to the bank, and b asi­ cally they're not giving that much m ore," Gonzalez said. "I see that a lot of people are losing their grants ... money seems to be shrinking as tuition goes up." "A n in c r e a s e of $ 1 0 p e r h o u r seems fairly drastic to me. If it con­ tin u es to in cre a se th e re cou ld be som e fin a n cia l d if f ic u lt ie s ," said Mat Thompson, a business junior. T h e in c r e a s e s a re e s p e c ia lly . . . . i . . 1 i n lirrV if r>f A 1 1 c t i n ' c K i - p a in fu l in light of A u stin 's high- priced rental market. "Within the past three years the cost of living in Austin has skyrocketed, so w e're not just getting hit by tuition [increases]," said Penny Prince, a kine­ siology graduate student. "T h e general fees that you have to pay are w o rse than th e cre d it h o u r c h a r g e s ," sa id M e re d ith F is h e r , a s e c o n d -y e a r sp e e c h pathology graduate student. S o m e s tu d e n ts th e University should do njore with the income it already has. th in k m n rh m nnpv. and it' "UT has so much money, and it's a "T I T shame they have to stick it to the stu­ dents," said Scott Lawrence, a journal­ ism junior. "I know the enrollm ent is pretty high, and I think they're trying to weed out a lot. I think that has something to do with it," he said. Not only students have ad verse reactions to the raise in tuition and fees, said biology sophom ore B eatrijs deWaard. "M y parents w ere surprised, and they w eren't happy about it," she said. DEVASTATION UT law school appeal begins STEVE SCHEIBAL_____________ Daily Texan Staff Officials on both sides of the UT law school reverse discrimination lawsuit pre­ dicted victory last week as they prepared for Tuesday's arguments before the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. But attorneys also said the suit w ill probably not be resolved for a couple of years, after it is considered by the U.S. Supreme Court. U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks ruled last August that the UT School of Law could continue using race as a factor in admissions, saying affirmative action poli­ cies "are still needed in our society." Terral Smith, an Austin attorney repre­ senting the four plaintiffs in the lawsuit, said he expects Sparks' decision to be overturned. He added that the decision was contradictory in that "the court said that even though my clients were discrim­ inated against, they had the burden of proof to prove they were discriminated against." But Harry Reasoner, who will be argu­ ing for the University Tuesday, said the law school's policies are in line with the "n a rro w ly ta ilo re d and rig o ro u sly applied" requirements the Supreme Court has required in the past for affirmative action programs. Reasoner is a partner w ith the H ou ston law firm V inson & Elkins. "To educate people in a lily-white law school would severely diminish the value of that education," Reasoner said. "The Supreme Court has never struck down a program of this nature." Affirmative action has become a volatile p o litical issu e w ith a recent strin g of Suprem e C ourt decisions d ism antling some federal programs and last month's decision by the University of California Board of Regents to discontinue using race as a factor in admissions. The issue also promises to be prominent in the 1996 presidential election. Smith said the four plaintiffs in the UT case, Cheryl Hopwood, Kenneth Elliott, Douglas Carvell and David Rogers, were d en ied ad m issio n to the law sch oo l despite the fact that all four had higher Texas Index scores than did m inority applicants who were accepted. The Texas Index is a weighted combina­ tion of an a p p lica n t's u n d erg rad u ate grade point average and standardized test scores and is used to determine who will be admitted to the school. U To educate people in a lily-white law school would severly diminish the value of that educa­ tion.” — Attorney for the University Harry Reasoner "There's been decisions in which diver­ sity has been a legitimate [consideration], but never hav e the m em b ers of the Supreme Court ruled that diversity allows you to discriminate," Smith said. "I think diversity is a dangerous thing to suggest you have if you base it on race." UT law professors also disagreed on w ho h as the u p p er hand going into Tuesday's arguments. Federal courts have been moving away from affirmative action programs in recent decisions, saying some of the programs "conflict with reality and common sense," said Lino Graglia, a conservativeSchool of Law faculty member. Graglia said the law school's adm is­ sions policies do d iscrim inate against whites by establishing minority quotas, and "as long as [the school is] trying to get a certain number of blacks and Mexican- Americans, that's what it's going to have to continue to do." But he added that the Court of Appeals' decision could depend on the politics of the judges deciding the case. "Law has so little to do with this and peo­ ple have so much," Graglia said. UT Provost Mark Yudof, former dean of the School of Law, said the court will take into consideration both the need for diversi­ ty and the law school's history of discrimi­ nation. "I think [Sparks' original decision] will be affirmed," Yudof said. He added that judges for both the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court could rule on the case without making any judg­ ments on affirmative action policies at U.S. universities. "Courts have looked for ways to duck the very tough issues," Yudof said. "It seems as if there's more public concerns on both sides of the issue, and this is a very important case. ... Just on the face of it, this looks like it would be a tough case to duck." Melba Almazar, who is expecting to give birth this week, narrowly escaped the flames that enjulfed and gutted her family's apartment Sunday afternoon. She and her husband were watching TV when they noticed the smoke. The couple came back Monday morning to pick through the ashes and search for any remaining possessions. They only found a half burnt mattress and an empty duffle bag. KEVIN L. DELAHUNTY/Daily Texan Staff AMA j oins battle against tobacco Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — After all but avoiding the b a ttle for years, the A m erican M edical Association is taking the lead in pushing for federal regulation of tobacco as an addictive drug. The rhetoric has risen — comparing the industry to “ the M edellin drug cartel' — as President Clinton nears a decision. Clinton, focusing on smoking among young people, w ill announce his stance as early as Wednesday in a speech in Charlotte, N.C., the heart of tobacco country. The AM A finally declared all-out war on tobacco when it published once-secret docu­ m ents in d icatin g indu stry schem es to hide tobacco's dangers. The new president of the doctors organization, Dr. Lonnie Bristow, fair­ ly bristles at the industry effort. “ It w as the m ost d espicable action by an in d u stry 1 had ev er h eard , so m eth in g you would expect from the Medellin drug cartel," he says. Su ch v e h em en ce is rare for the n a tio n 's la rg e s t d o c to rs g ro u p , w h o se C a lifo r n ia b ranch even today is accused of thw arting anti-smoking efforts. Bristow personally urged Clinton to allow the FDA to crack down on teen-age tobacco use, and the AMA recently put the force of its 296,000 members behind intensive lobbying of Congress. “ There's been an institutional shift in how they deal with this,' said Stanton G lantz, a p ro fesso r of m ed icin e at the U n iv ersity of California, San Francisco. "W h ile they have a terrible historical record ... they're becoming a 500-pound gorilla.' The AMA accepted millions of dollars from tobacco makers in the 1960s to study sm ok­ ing's health risks, a m ove the industry used for years to assert that the question of whether tobacco causes cancer was unresolved. In the past year, the AMA came under fire for supporting legal changes to exem pt tobac­ co from law suits — a position it recanted in June — and for giving higher campaign con­ tributions to lawm akers who oppose tobacco co n tro l th an to a n ti-s m o k in g m em b ers of Congress. And anti-smoking activists accuse its largest bran ch of help ing gut a cam paign credited w ith trip lin g C a lifo rn ia 's sm oking decline. The California Medical A ssociation supports diverting $102 m illion earm arked by law for to b a cco con trol and tra n sferrin g it to p ro ­ gram s that pay doctors to treat the uninsured. Croats claim ‘success’ as Serb tanks mass border INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Back to school sale weather: Sum mer’s 90 percent over, and I don’t have a thing to wear to class! A new fla n n e l costs 70 bucks on sale, leaving me 5-10 bucks for school supplies. Or maybe I’ll just go naked! Index: Around Campus...... ....... 4 Classifieds.............. ....... 7 Comics................... ....... 6 Editorials............... ....... 2 ....... 6 Entertainment........ Sports.................... ......10 ....... 5 State & Local......... University.............. ....... 4 World & Nation....... ....... 3 Associated Press ZAGREB, Croatia — Serb columns of tanks, trucks and buses rum­ bled toward Croatia on Monday, threatening to expand the fighting ju st as C roatia d eclared it w as over. Tens of thou sand s of Serb refugees fled the country, but some were reportedly attacked and others were trapped. C roatian D efense M inister G ojko Susak declared his three-day offensive a success, and said President Franjo I udjman would soon sign an order demobilizing 70 percent of his 100,000 soldiers. "T h e action has been com pleted ," said Susak, who claimed his troops had captured all land under attack and that all clashes had ended by 6 p.m. “There is no more fighting." He said the last 5,000 to 6,000 of the 50,000 rebel fighters were negotiating their surrender at Topusko, 35 miles south of Zagreb, where battles had raged for much of the day. But the danger of possible escalation was highlighted by Yugoslav tanks that rumbled through Belgrade toward the Croatian border, and by reports in Serb-held northern Bosnia of a huge colum n of Bosnian Serb fighters heading toward Croatia. It was unclear where either group was headed. Fighting continued along the route w here tens of thousands of Serb refugees tried to-m ake their way into Serb land in northern Bosnia — and beyond into Serb-led Yugoslavia. Aid agencies said the Serb exodus from Croatia could total as many as 200,000 people. A Bosnian Serb refugee official estimated 240,000 had passed into northern Bosnia by noon Monday. Colum ns of cars up to 30 miles long were reported stuck at the eastern Bosnian border with Serbia. Croat troops plunder Knin, erase Serbian traces Associated Press KNIN, Croatia — While homes burned on the outskirts, triumphant Croatian troops found new ways Monday to make the empty streets of Knin their own: They cruised, they smashed windows, the)' changed street signs to arase the last Serbian traces. As the Croat forces celebrated, Serb refugees huddled behind the barbed wire of a U.N. com­ pound and nervously told tales of death and cru­ elty, of unarmed civilians killed by the victors. Knin, the headquarters of the rebel Serbs and thus a powerful symbol for both Serbs and Croats, fell to the Croatian government army Saturday. On Monday, the first reporters allowed into the town found Croatian flags, hated symbols in Knin just three days ago. Their bright red-white-and-blue looked unnat­ urally cheery against the backdrop of buildings d estroyed or dam aged by days of intense C roatian shelling. A h u g e C roatian b an n er adorned a medieval fortress overlooking the city. 'm ,: ASSO C IA TED PRESS A Yugoslav soldier flashes a traditional three-finger salute as part of a tank convoy that left Belgrade Monday. In the Croatian town of Dvor, near the Bosnian border, shelling continued after Su sak 's an nouncem ent, said U N. spokesw om an Leah Melnick. She said the fighting trapped 30,lX)0 to 40,(XX) refugees trying to leave Croatia through the tow n. 2 T h e D aily T exan TUESDAY, AUGUST 8.1886 EDITORIALS T h e Da i l y T e x a n Editorial Board Mark Murray Associate Editor Robert Rogers Editor Chris Tam Associate Editor Opinions expressed in The D ai i Texet are those of the editor or writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the U n iv e rsity administration, the Board o f Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees VIEWPOINT Gag rule t ; Ihe House at R er “sentatsves protected tree speech and political lnvolvemer.t or Monda-. The He it. a bipartisan 263-le«l vote kdied a proposed amendmer.t that would deny redera! funds re aro unrorrsrh that cave student rees to ar. organization use seekir.c re atóuesv* r_ b b c pohcv The a r r r o r - i-nnns-bu. acnendm er.t sponsored by R er Gerald Solomon. R-N t ana Rep Ernest ¡stock R-Okla coukl have artected m ar U7 croups The deacrtpnor seeking tc influence public pobcv could apph tc a broad range or campus c'.ubs and U T studer.t orga­ nizan ons such ¿s the Mmortíx Inftonnabcr Center the M uslim Stu­ dent ^ s s o c a b o r and Hide-'. could easily have lost funding ~his anaendrtent -'ouid have rrocuoed bizarre results Because the ruk - c u e amen enh pofctical groups, religious or other advocacy groups x«'c>—id Of untouched Thus ar. organization advoca tire devil h_ emanar s rm sc-erm al candidacy ccu!d not Move uaspcca t . the proposed amendment overlooks that every student argaruraocn reoe.'.mu rees octam ec that money through the democrat»; rr.x s s s or a local level Republicans claim to support more .«ocu carc rci at gov e rnme nt why then do thev interfere with n oast cc a_. me proposed amendment would have decreased polit­ ical r v . v - i r e t r stad cnt política] groups were hamstrung, it mould ne raeder r:c odfege students to partiapate in the political Thai :u_ c re asácrtunate. In a democracy, all citizens rule, and th _s all ritmens "seed ao be mvolved in political affairs. If they are not, The rkxise c_c -ved to kill Solomon and Istook's amendment. In doing sc House members protected free speech, freedom of associa­ te or ar c oc lines! involvement. — Robert Rogers Research rights Academ ic freedom was tested at Harvard Medical School, and it lost. Harvard investigated whether one its professors, Dr. John E. Mack, deviated from the academic path with his research on people who claim aliens abduct them for sexual experiments. Harvard Medical School concluded that it would not censure Mack for his UFO research. But, according to The Associated Press, the school bluntly warned him that his UFO studies should not steer him away from professionalism. H arvard's warning is inappropriate. Besides his UFO research, Dr. John E. M ack has had a remarkable career, winning a Pulitzer Prize in 1977 for his biography of Lawrence of Arabia and founding the psy­ chiatry department at one of Harvard's teaching hospitals. One ques­ tionable research topic, by a professor as distinguished as Mack, shouldn't warrant an investigation or a warning by Harvard. Not only is such a warning inappropriate, but it is also frightening for intellectual freedom. If every professor or researcher followed only what university administrations or departments deemed professional, few break­ throughs would occur in the arts and sciences. It should be remem­ bered that it is the unusual and controversial research that often rev­ olutionizes the sciences and arts. For example, in a time when the consensus opinion of man's cre­ ation came from biblical accounts, it was a radical Charles Darwin who theorized on today's commonly accepted notion of evolution. Furthermore, it w as a radical Sigmund Freud who theorized on the human unconscious and developed psychoanalysis. Although M ack's UFO research may raise a few eyebrows and pro­ duce some snickers from his peers, it may one day be studied as much as the w orks by Darwin and Freud. Yet die chances are slim, especial­ ly if Harvard Medical School continues to coerce Mack to follow its idea of professionalism. — M ark Murray NEH, NEA deserve to keep funding A merica has always had an anti-artistic and various performing arts institutions. Thus by eliminating the NEA, you not only eliminate funding for questionable works of art, you also eliminate funding for the Austin Lyric Opera. R osalie Chang TEXAN COLUMNIST streak. As early as 1840, Alexis de Toc- queville observed that Americans tend to value the pragmatic above the beautiful and the useful above the artistic. This observation still holds true. How else could educated Americans allow the current push to eliminate or drastically cut funding for the National Endowment for the Arts and the Nation­ al Endowment for the Humanities? A few weeks ago, the Senate Appropriations Committee voted to cut next year's NEA budget by 40 percent. Earlier, the House approved mea­ sures that would "zero out" funding for the NEA by October 1997 and eliminate the agency in two years. If the current political blitzkrieg continues, funding for the arts could join prehistoric cave drawings in the annals of art history. These proposed budget cuts would eliminate funding for hundreds of cultural agencies. The University, for example, stands to lose at least $80,000. Funding for UT programs — including Latino USA, a radio program produced by KUT, and the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center — are in danger. W hat is behind these unenlightened attacks? Certainly not a desire to be fiscally responsible. The U.S. government currently spends about one- five hundredth of 1 percent of its national budget on art funding. With our present deficit of $180 billion, the $620 million of cultural funding, while a large amount, isn't going to break the bank. While funding remains a major issue, the con­ servative repudiation of government-funded cul­ tural programs is also influenced by a strong moralistic streak. The greatest blow against the NEA, for exam­ ple, is the public perception of the agency as a supporter of art that mocks religion, glorifies obscenity and thumbs its nose at middle-class values. Out of the tens of thousands of grants made by the NEA, however, only about a dozen have caused serious controversy. The N EA's oppo­ nents are committing the intellectual equivalent of judging all Christianity by David Koresh. Furthermore, the NEA spends only about 4 percent of its budget on grants for individual artists. Most of NEA's money goes to museums Represented by some as a hotbed of leftist views, the NEH, previously a highly regarded institution, also faces elimination. To eliminate suspected political correctness, Congress is w ill­ ing to kill the agency that supports the study and publication of the papers of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Mark Twain and other lum i­ naries of American history and literature. Never mind that the NEH has provided m one­ tary support to the authors of numerous Pulitzer Prize winners and National Book Award nom i­ nees such as Battle Cry o f Freedom: The Civil War Era by James McPherson. All that matters is the leftist bias perceived by some rabid Republicans. At a time when American students are cultur­ ally ignorant, the disappearance of the only gov­ ernmental agencies that directly promote music, art, history and other instrum ents of culture would be a disaster. Remem ber that budgets are for a moment, but art lasts forever. Chang is a Plan ll/chemical engineering senior. Bob Dole’s welfare bill would harm poor The raucous debate over wel­ K en B rid ges TEXAN COLUMNIST provisions for day care, mothers will be unable to continue their educa­ tion or find employment. For all the Republican talk of family values, they are not helping these parents. quick to- point out the wonderful career opportunities to be had flip­ ping burgers. But in the real world, a family cannot be supported on min­ imum wage salaries. fare reform has been quiet for most of the summer, as if in the eye of a hurricane. But now the welfare debate is back in full force as a welfare proposal from Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., is debated in the U.S. Senate. Dole's new welfare bill continues the reckless conservative drive to balance the budget on the backs of the poor. The bill would eliminate federal payments to poor families with children, replacing them with block grants. It would also allow states to cut off aid to legal aliens, single mothers under the age of 18 and fam ilies already on welfare. The proposal also dictates that the states force half of their welfare recipients to work by 2000. children born to More than 2 million jobs would have to be created within five years to meet the demands of this provi- sion. Yet no job training, work pro­ grams or economic stimulus of any type are provided by D ole's bill. Compounding this difficulty, the House of Representatives recently voted to eliminate $9 billion for edu­ cation, job training, assistance for the poor with heating bills and health programs. How can the poor get back on their feet if they are denied even the sim plest tools to im prove them ­ selves? Unlike what Dole seems to think, he cannot sim ply wave a magic wand and eradicate poverty, even if he were president. Sim ply cutting off unm arried teen-age mothers from welfare with­ out leaving them any means of sup­ port will solve nothing. With no All that welfare recipients have now are benefits from the govern­ ment. They have no jobs or job skills. If the government cuts them off, they will have no alternative. While able-bodied welfare recipi­ ents should be required to seek work, governm ent m andates of employment without guarantees of a job are foolhardy politics at best. They undermine the purpose of wel­ fare — to provide a second chance to achieve the American dream. Many areas of the country are still trying to recover from the wave of technological and corporate restruc­ turing their that underm ined economies. In these areas, meaning- fiil jobs are nearly impossible to find. M anv critics, how ever, are Education and job training must be the key to welfare reform. W el­ fare must provide recipients the opportunity to learn new skills to compete in an ever-more technical job market. W elfare recipients must learn business skills so they can begin their own enterprises — and create jobs for others in the process. W hile conservatives favor the scorched-earth approach to welfare reform, such Draconian measures will only worsen the living condi­ tions of the poor. Reform must include more than just deadlines and ideology. Instead, it must provide a key to escaping poverty. bum per-sticker Bridges is a history senior. University unfairly penalizes students from other countries When I saw my international tuition fee bill, I Sh iraz Sid d iqui TEXAN COLUMNIST nearly fainted. My stay at the University flashed in front of my eyes. I could see my party-going, pizza-eating, cable- watching, credit-card-punching, course-flunking miser­ able life as a student teetering over the edge of extinc­ tion. And then I found myself thinking about my room­ mate. He was one of those international students who had been unsuccessful in bridging the cultural gap. By day he would sweat over volumes; by night he struggled against a biased American-first policy. Every day of the week would scream a tragedy of its own. He would complain about everything from the lack of services for international students to the few research options available to them. But besides that, he did little else ... and the reader can't blame him — he was an international student. The international student body needs to realize that we are only here to pay for our courses. Why impose further on the taxpaying middle class? As Proposition 187 has shown, they are already fed up with assimilating foreigners. As an international student, there are many things that don't bother me. I don't care if I pay four times as m uch as the in-state student in tuition. I also don't mind the blunt denial of off-campus jobs — you surely would­ n't want to hire someone based on qualifications alone! There are other factors to consider, like nationality. It doesn't bother m e that the University — supposed­ ly an equal-opportunity employer — restricts the jobs available to international students. I don't complain about the lack of any financial aid or scholarships for international students. The government has no money for us, but I will sleep better knowing that m y armed-to-the-teeth Israelite brethren are getting their share of U S . government aid. N or do 1 fret over the double standards employed in admissions. The University is an institution for the peo­ ple ... urn, the people of North America ... urn, the Unit­ ed States ... um, Texas ... um, where were we? It doesn’t bother me that the University — supposedly an equal-opportunity employ­ er — restricts the jobs available to inter­ national students. I don't object to the government's deportation of international students who take less than the required 12-hour course load. Yes, deport the first cretin who dares to do that. I don't complain about the scarcity of co-ops and internships offered to international students. I can only sympathize with corporations who have tried to in the past and now face the dual threat of an IRS and the INS crackdown. However, I will tell you what really bothers me. I am upset that those money-grubbing, capitalistic credit card companies deny credit cards to international stu­ dents. I wonder why am I here? Am I that token nationality? No, 1 am that goodwill ambassador! Yes, um ... isn't goodwill ambassador a euphemism for an American cultural virus that is nurtured to carry its confused val­ ues — its utilitarian religion — and then released to Americanize the world? No, my purpose is nothing so paranoid. As an inter­ national student, I'll probably be instrumental bringing you out of the centuries of seclusion from the rest of the planet and to help you make your grades in geography. I am here so that your progeny don't wonder what I looked like. I am here to show you how I talk, walk, eat, dance and cry. I am here to give you exposure to my cul­ ture. Siddiqui is an electrical engineering junior. FIRING LINE Religion widely accepted in U.S. This is regarding Kathy O lson's column "Toler­ ance Extends to Every Group - Except Christians" on Aug. 7. Our culture treats oddball religions with a mockery it would never apply to the mainstream faiths. The beliefs and practices of a "cu lt" like the Moonies are not inherently weirder than those of the Roman Catholic Church. O f course, if a non-believer were to make that point, or to dismiss the virgin birth or kosher dietary rules as ridiculous, that would be taken as "anti-religious bias." Mainstream religion gets a free ride. Some of those who complain of American cul­ ture's alleged contempt for religious belief are the same people who, in other contexts, complain about the politics of victimization. Blacks, women, homosexuals are accused of claim­ ing victimhood as a way of getting special favors from society. But what could be more absurd than religious believers — who, according to all the polls, consti­ tute 90-plus percent of the population, embracing beliefs that no politician would dare challenge — claiming they're "victim s?" Does Kathy Olson really think it's harder to stand up in public in 1995 America and say "I believe in G od" than it is to stand up and say "I don't?" Charles F. Van Danen Jr. Illinois resident Being politically correct is OK Kathy Olson ("Tolerance extends to every group — except Christians," Aug. 7) refers to "the political­ ly correct set that dominates today's college campus­ es and media outlets." "Politically correct" is the pet phrase today, uttered with a sneer by conservatives. People who deplore bigot-driven comments are derided as being too sensitive, as being too (sneer) p.c. Turning a complaint around by personally attack­ ing the one making the complaint is an old tactic. If you tell someone they have just made a racist, sexist or hom ophobic remark, chances are the response will be that you should be ashamed for being "politically correct." Being p.c. becomes worse, then, than being racist, sexist or homophobic. no longer on the outs. I long for the day when being politically correct is Not a time when every imagined slight becomes a political cause or a time when language has been sanitized beyond common sense, but the day when those who deplore the use of words that demonize and degrade aren't intim idated by the anti-p.c. crowd and when people are truly concerned about preserv ing the dignity of those whose race, religion, creed, sexual orientation or other distinction differs from their own. Alan L. Light Iowa resident Scholarships merit-based now In regards to "M ent-based scholarships better" on Aug. 7, if the scholarship that Andreas Macke is referring to is the assistance that was created to off­ set the general-use fee increase to financially inde­ pendent students then, if memory serves me correct­ ly, doesn't it take a top-notch individual to be admit­ ted into the University in the first place in order to receive the scholarship? If this isn't the case, then which scholarship is she referring to? Troy Hawkes Geophysics senior Firing Line letters can be brought to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and W hitis Avenue or mailed to P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. They also can be e-mailed to TEX AN @utxvm s.cc. utexas.edu. Firing Line letters must be fewer than 250 words. U T students should include their major and classification, and all writers must present identification or include a phone number. The Texan reserves the right to edit letters. MONDAY S DOW JONES: 4,693.32 UP 9.861 VOLUME: 276,036,400 WORLD & NATION T h e D a il y T e x a n TUESDAY, AUGUST 8,1995 3 HELPED TO SAFETY GOP concedes to ethics probe Associated Press W ASHINGTON — In a possible d e a d lo c k -b rea k in g d ev e lo p m e n t, R epu blicans on the H o u se ethics c o m m itte e h a v e a g re e d to h a v e staff research the use of an outside counsel to exam ine Speaker N ew t G ingrich's conduct, congressional sources say. S om e R e p u b lic a n s , in c lu d in g G ingrich, have fiercely resisted an o u ts id e co u n sel. But D em o c rats h a v e in s is te d th a t an o u ts id e expert should determ in e w hether G ingrich turned a taxpayer-subsi­ d iz e d college co u rse in to a p ro f­ ita b le b o o k a n d w h e th e r th e course w as really a political fund­ raising tool. N o decision w ill be m ade until Septem ber, w hen com m ittee m em ­ b e rs re c o n v e n e a f te r a s u m m e r recess and determ ine w hether they can agree how b ro a d a co u n sel's probe should be. S o urces, w h o sp o k e on c o n d i­ tion of anonym ity, said the staffers also are to analyze the com plaints a g a in s t G in g ric h , to h e lp d e te r ­ m ine w h eth er any should be d is­ m issed. T hat w o u ld h elp resolve questions on the scope of an inde­ pend ent counsel's work. The staff w as told to w ork on a list of p eo p le w h o co u ld q u alify for the job of outside counsel, the sources said. T he a g re e m e n t by C o m m itte e C h a ir m a n N a n c y J o h n s o n , R- C onn., to ag re e to th e p o te n tia l breakthrough follows tw o signifi­ cant developm ents. F irs t, th e c o m m itte e of fiv e R epublicans and five D em ocrats h a s re a c h e d a c ritic a l ju n c tu re . A fter h ea rin g from w itn esses on G ingrich's book deal, no new testi­ m ony is scheduled and a m o n th ­ long H ouse recess has begun. T a k in g no a c tio n d u r in g th is p erio d w ould have placed Jo h n ­ son, already criticized for delay s by h er local m ed ia and n a tio n a l publicatio n s, u n d e r even g rea ter p re ssu re . A lso, she h as p u b lic ly e x p re sse d h e r d e s ire to re so lv e a b o u t G in g ric h , q u e s tio n s described "deadlock" as the m edi­ a's w ords, not hers, and said she b e lie v e d th e c o m m itte e w o u ld su p p o rt an outside investigator if the panel needed help. S e c o n d , r a n k in g c o m m itte e D em o c rat Jam es M cD erm o tt, of W a sh in g to n , c re a te d new p r e s ­ su res on Johnson late last m o n th w ith a public tirade on the seven- m o n th in fo rm a l in q u iry by th e p an e l, officially called the C o m ­ m itte e on S ta n d a rd s o f O ffic ial Conduct. H e said the p a n e l's sm all staff w as overw helm ed by the Gingrich p r o b e a n d th e c o m m itte e w a s u n p r e p a re d w h en it q u e s tio n e d th e sp e a k e r and o th e rs. H e also d em an d ed the appointm ent of an o u ts id e co u n se l w ith su b p o e n a pow er. Priests may face security checks U The church BOSTON — Background checks, once reserved for law m en or law ­ breakers, now are being done on a whole new class of people: priests. Associated Press After stories about sexual abuse and other transgressions among cler­ gym en, the E piscopal dioceses in N ew England are requiring priests to fill out background questionnaires. Two Roman Catholic dioceses in Ohio are using the police to investi­ gate clergy and lay leaders. Som e relig io u s le a d e rs say the checks are needed to restore confi­ dence in the church. And some iasur- ance com panies are requiring them before giving churches coverage for sexual misconduct. But some priests believe the policy violates their right to privacy, and 40 of the 600 members of the clergy in the Massachusetts Episcopal Diocese w ho received the form in May have refused to fill it out. The diocese plans to m eet in S ep te m b er w ith those priests. A m ong th e q u e s tio n s th e y are being asked: —"H ave you ever been charged or a d ju d ic a te d w ith sexual m isco n ­ duct?" —"Do you have a history of drug abuse?" — "H ave you ever been charged with misappropriating funds?" The responses are being forwarded to a M innesota records com pany, which then verifies them with the ref­ erences the ministers also are asked to provide. * "I'm in favor of accountability and background checks, but my concern is that we're running off w ith a sort of M cC arth y esq u e, 'le t's cover o u r­ selves' attitude," said the Rev. Ian Douglas, a professor at the Episcopal D ninitv School in Cambridge. The Massachusetts diocese — with 95,000 m em bers, the largest in the w ants to take responsi­ bility for the authority it places in its leader­ ship.” — Julia Slayton, spokeswoman lo r the Massachusetts diocese country — joined with the four other New Éngland dioceses in requiring the background questionnaire after its former bishop was involved in a sexual scandal. F o rm er B ishop D avid Jo hnson com m itted suicide in January, and sh o rtly a fte rw a rd th ree w o m en stepped forward to say Johnson had affairs with them. The church labeled the situation "sexual exploitation." "The church wants to take respon­ sibility for the authority it places in its leadership, and to be faithful to its congregants and the person it installs to lead th e m ," said Julia Slayton, spokeswoman for the Massachusetts diocese. Insurance also is a driving factor. The Church Insurance Co., the dioce­ se's primary insurer, announced two years ago that it would separate sexu­ al m isconduct liability from other coverage. To q u alify for th a t coverage, churches m ust have sexual miscon­ duct policies, prevention workshops for clergy and lay m em bers, plus background checks. In Ohio, the Roman Catholic dioce­ ses in Cincinnati and Y oungstow n require all em ployees and regular volunteers to sign affidavits certifying that they have never been involved in child abuse. Some are then subjected to police checks. NEWS BRIEFS NBC wins rights to 2000, 2002 Olympic games ■ NEW YORK — NBC w on American TV rig h ts to b o th th e 2000 S u m m er O ly m p ics in S ydney, A u stralia, and th e 2002 W in ter G am es at Salt Lake City, surp risin g its com petitors M on­ day w ith a record bid of $1.25 billion. NBC bid $705 m illion for the S yd­ ney G am es an d $545 m illion for the G am es at S alt L ake C ity , sa id D ick P ound, chairm an of the International te le v is io n O ly m p ic C o m m itte e 's panel. The netw ork also will su p p ly about $10 million in prom otional su p p o rt for each of the G am es, d riv in g th e total v alue of the package to $1.45 billion, P ound said. NBC m ade an en d -ru n a ro u n d the b id d in g p ro cess w ith its h u g e offer, k e e p in g th e th re e o th e r m a jo r n e t­ w o rk s o u t of the mix. Bids w ere not expected on the S ydney G am es until n e x t m o n th , a n d TV r ig h ts for Salt Lake C ity w o u ld n o t n o rm ally have com e up for tw o m ore years. " O u r bid cam e w ith a d e a d lin e ," NBC S p o rts P re sid e n t D ick E bersol said. "If they d id n 't accept it by this p a s t w e e k e n d , it w o u ld b e w i t h ­ draw n." B o th N BC o ffe rs a re r e c o r d s by large m argins, and the bid w as m ade w ith th e s tip u la tio n th a t it be k ep t secret from the other netw orks, Eber­ sol said. "A t a tim e w hen baseball, basketball a n d o th e r s p o r ts a r e d o w n , th e O ly m p ic s a re th e s tr o n g e s t s p o r ts property there is," said John Krimsky, actin g executiv e d ire c to r of the U.S. O lym pic C om m ittee. "W e are today in th e s tr o n g e s t m a rk e t w e h a v e e v e r seen. The rights fees are at an all-time h ig h fo r e n t e r ta i n m e n t p r o g r a m ­ m ing." Black activist given stay of execution ■ P H IL A D E L P H IA — T en d a y s before he w as to be p u t to d ea th for the m u rd e r of a police officer, black a c tiv is t a n d ra d io r e p o r te r M u m ia A b u -Jam al w on a re p rie v e M o n d ay w hile he p ursues an appeal that could take years. The su rp rise decision cam e on the ninth day of a hearing on A bu-Jam al's req u est for a new trial. H e h ad been scheduled to die by injection on Aug. 17. "T h e re 's reasonable d o u b t so there sh o u ld be a new tria l," Jackson said outside the courtroom . In his ruling, Sabo said th at even if he eventually rejects the request for a new trial, A bu-Jam al w ill need tim e for further appeals. Both sid e s h a v e sa id th e y ex p ect a p p e a l s to ta k e y e a r s , a n d T im R eeves, a sp o k e sm a n for G ov. Tom R id g e, s a id no n ew d e a th w a r ra n t w ill b e is s u e d u n til A b u -J a m a l ex h au sts his appeals. Earlier appeals w ere rejected. This is A b u -Jam al's first concerted effort to w in a new trial. Abu-Jamal, w ho has w ritten a book about prison life, contends he w as the victim of a racist crim inal-justice sys­ tem. H e is c h a r g e d in th e 1981 fa ta l shooting of 25-year-old Officer Daniel Faulkner, an attack that left Abu-Jamal w ounded. Bachelor pleads guilty to adopted son’s murder ■ E A ST O N , Pa. — A b ac h elo r w ho paid $30,000 to have a baby by a su r­ ro g a te m o th e r p le a d e d g u ilty M on­ d a y to b e a tin g a n d s h a k in g h is 5- w e e k -o ld so n to d e a th to s to p h im from crying. Jam es A lan A u stin , a 26-y ear-o ld bank analyst, could get up to 25 years in prison for third-degree m u rd er and endangering the w elfare of the infant, n am ed Jonath an. S entencing w as set for Sept. 28. The H an o v e r T o w n sh ip m an p aid th e In fe rtility C e n te r of A m erica in I n d ia n a p o lis to in s e m in a te P h y llis A nn H u d d le s to n of L afay ette, Ind., w ith h is sp e rm . Jo n a th a n w as b o rn Dec. 8. A u stin took th e boy hom e a day later. The baby w as hospitalized a m onth later w ith a fractured skull and inter­ n al h e a d in ju re s . A u s tin a c k n o w l­ ed g e d he beat the child and hit him w ith a plastic coat hanger to stop him from crying. The baby died Jan. 17 after H uddle­ ston agreed to let doctors sh u t off his respirator. An autopsy concluded the infant died of shaken baby syndrom e. " I th in k h e u n d e r s to o d th a t h e w as h u rtin g the child, but I think it w a s a m o m e n t w h e re h e lo st c o n ­ t r o l ," d e f e n s e a tto r n e y Jo h n W a l­ d ro n said. — Compiled from Associated Press reports. Riot policemen carried the body of an officer who was hit in the head by a brick that was dropped from the top of a construction site on Monday in Panama City, Panama. Rioting erupted for the second straight day because of labor law reforms being discussed by the Legislative Assembly. ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate proposes welfare reforms Associated Press ► Please see SENATORS, page 5 W ASH IN G TON — The governm ent has "foisted a n d d i r e c t e d " a fa ile d w e lf a r e s y s te m fo r six decades, Senate Republicans argued M onday as they b eg an th e ir biggest p u s h to p u t p ro g ra m s for the poor in the han d s of the states. The Senate rem ained in session this w eek — after the H ouse began its sum m er recess — in hopes of passin g a sw eeping bill that w o u ld transform the n a tio n 's w e lfa re p ro g ra m s an d u n d o d e c a d e s of social policy. The legislation, w ritten by Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., and backed by 32 other R epubli­ cans, w ould shift job training, child care, and cash w elfare program s to the states in three block grants. States could also choose to take over food stam ps. U nm arried teen-age m others w ould be required to live at h o m e an d atten d school as a c o n d itio n of receiving welfare, all families w ould have their ben­ efits cut off after five years, an d adults on the rolls w ould be required to work. T he le g isla tio n also ca n ce ls th e g o v e r n m e n t's lo n g s ta n d in g p ro m is e to p r o v id e a s u b s is te n c e incom e to low -incom e m o th e rs and ch ild ren an d curbs w elfare spending by $70 billion over the next seven years. D em ocrats and Republicans both took to the Sen­ ate floor M onday w ith their p ro p s — stacks of w el­ fare regulations and charts show ing the rising rates of out-of-w edlock births — as they argued for com ­ p e tin g p la n s to ch a n g e a w e lfa re sy stem th a t all sides agree is badly broken. "This is an issue w here the future of America is on the line ... our house is afire," said Sen. Phil Gram m , R-Texas, one of D ole's rivals for the GOP p residen­ tial nom ination. "A nd I w ould argue ... that w hat w e have done in the last 30 years has not only not pu t the fire out but p ro b ab ly h as m a d e it b u rn b rig h te r, and th a t the tim e has com e for a dram atic change in public poli­ cy," G ram m said. In a split w ith the S enate lead ersh ip , G ram m is p ushing for a "fam ily cap," a policy to bar the ad d i­ tional benefits that w om en on w elfare now receive w h en they h ave m o re children, as w ell as stricter restrictions on aid to im m igrants. The House, w hich passed its ow n version of w el­ fare reform in March, included the get-tough provi­ sions sought by G ram m and other conservatives. H ouse Speaker N ew t G ingrich, R-Ga., said M on­ day that he could not go along w ith D ole's bill, b u t expected it to be strengthened w hen the legislation is reconciled w ith the H ouse version by a joint confer­ ence committee. "I think that if w e can get a fairly good bill out of the Senate, w e can strengthen it in conference and p ass a p retty stro n g bill som etim e th is fall," G in ­ grich told NBC's Today show. S e n a te D e m o c ra ts are also p u s h in g th e ir ow n reform plan. Like the GOP legislation, it cuts off ben­ e fits a fte r five y e a rs, b u t saves le ss an d fu n n e ls m oney directly into child care and job training pro ­ gram s. D em ocrats said the GOP plan w ould p u n ish the m illio n s of ch ild re n w ho receive A id to F am ilies w ith D ependent C hildren. " T h e R e p u b lic an w elfa re plan is full of c h e ap ta lk ,” said Sen. John Breaux, D-La. Sen. E d w ard K ennedy, D-Mass., called it a "hom e-alone" policy for ch ild ren w hose p aren ts will be forced to w ork w ith o u t adequate child care. Whitewater investigators to testify Associated Press WASHINGTON — When federal savings and loan investigators rec­ om m ended a criminal investigation of Whitewater on the eve of the 1992 election, law enforcem ent officials questioned their motives, newlv dis­ closed documents show. The Whitewater work had come at the expense of other Arkansas cases w ith " m u c h g re a te r p ro sec u tiv e potential," the FBI lamented in a tele­ type message. A dded the U.S. attorney in I ittle Rock, Ark., an appointee of President Bush: "The insistence for urgency in this case appears to suggest an inten­ tional or unintentional attem pt to intervene in the political process." A year later with President Clinton in office, the S&L investigators had some tough questions of their ow n — after it w as suggested that high g o v e rn m e n t officials w a n te d to change some of their conclusions and might w ant to see the W hitew atef case "go away." Known as the "Kansas City trio," Resolution Trust Corp. investigators L. Jean L ew is, Lee A usen a n d Richard lorio will tell their story pub­ licly on Tuesday w hen they testify before the House Banking Commit­ tee about their work that prompted Whitewater investigation. Their testimony will be blunt. Top officials tried to suppress their inves­ tigation and then punished them when they refused to go along, they contend. "This committee should know that I believe there was a concerted effort to obstruct, hamper and manipulate th e resu lts of ou r in v estig atio n ," Lewis states in her prepared testimo- n y . : ... Adds lorio: "People w ho do their jobs and work against these political forces can face the hum iliatio n of reprisals motivated solely by a desire to shut them up." For Democrats seeking to defend Clinton, the three were over/ealous in v e stig a to rs w ho re o p e n e d an Arkansas S&L case that already had been prosecuted unsuccessfully once, then wrongly interpreted their boss­ e s' relu c tan c e to p ro ce ed as a coverup. Tamil rebel suspected of bombing Sri Lankan building Associated Press COLOM BO, Sri L anka — An explosion at a governm ent build ­ ing on M onday killed 22 people, m ost of w hom w ere w aitin g to see a regional official. Police said the bom b w as set off by a Tamil rebel. At least 50 people w ere rep o rt­ ed injured. A stream of cars and a m b u la n c e s e v a c u a te d v ic tim s from the area. The suspected bom ber, a m an in his mid-20s, w as killed, police said. H is alleged accom plice, N. Easw aran, w as arrested and was recovering from injuries at a hos­ pital. The explosion cam e four days a f te r P r e s id e n t C h a n d r ik a K u m a ra tu n g a p ro p o se d giv in g g re a te r au to n o m y to regions in th e n o r th a n d e a s t w h e r e th e T a m ils h a v e b e e n s e e k in g a hom eland for 12 years. But u n d er the plan, the rebels w ould have to contest elections if they w anted to govern the area, ASSOCIATED PRESS Police officers looked at the Sri Lankan government building which was bombed on Monday by a Tamil rebel suicide bomber. The bomb killed 22 and injured 52 others. m uch of w hich they already con­ trol. N o o ne im m ed iately claim ed re s p o n s ib ility . But th e E lla lan Force, an extrem ist Tamil gro u p believed to have links w ith Tamil Tiger rebels, threatened Friday to e x p lo d e b o m b s in C o lo m b o to p ro test alleged atrocities by the Sri Lankan m ilitary. "A ll indications art’ that it was an LTTE attac k ," said a d e p u ty p o lic e in s p e c to r , H .M .G .B K o tak a d en iy a, re fe rrin g to th e L ib e ra tio n T ig e rs fo r T am il Eelam, the m ain Tam il guerrilla force. Police b eliev e the b o m b w as m eant for the state-run radio and television netw ork, R upavahini, the inspector told The Associated Press. M ilitary police reported seeing the suspected bom ber pushing a h an d cart outside the Rupavahini b u ild in g . M o m e n ts la te r , th e b o m b w e n t off at th e a d ja c e n t o ffic e b u ild in g of th e c h ie f regional m inister for the C olom ­ bo area. Susil Prem ajayantha, the m in­ is te r, w a s in h is o ffic e a n d unhurt. E ighteen b o d ie s w ere p icked up from the reception area. Two m ore, including that of the su s­ pected bom ber, w ere found o u t­ side th e building. Tw o other p eo­ ple died in hospitals. O n M ondays, the chief m inis­ ter o p e n s his d o o r to the public w ith o u t a p p o in tm e n t. M o st of those killed w ere w aitin g to see him, police said. It w as the w orst terrorist inci­ d e n t in th e c a p ita l s in c e la s t October, w hen a s u i c i d e bom ber d e t o n a te d a n e x p l o s iv e a t a n election rally, killing the o p p o si­ tion candidate for president and m ore than 50 others. M em bers of the Tam il m inority say the m ajority S inhalese deny them education, jobs and govern­ m ent funding. M ore than 35,000 people h ave died in the fighting. O n M onday, rebels am b u sh ed a m ilitary patrol 135 m iles n o rth ­ e a s t of C o lo m b o , k illin g th r e e s o ld ie r s , l.A .R . D u n u w ille , m il ita r y s p o k e s m a n . R e b el c a s u a ltie s w ere not know n. s a id C a p t. a ™ T h e D a i l y T e x a n TOBM Y, AUGUST 8 ,1 9 8 5 UNIVERSITY 1997 garage on Regents agenda ELIZA SELIG_________________________ Daily Texan Staff Officials determining future expansion of on- campus parking at the University have decided to build up rather than to rem ain on ground level. On the agenda for the Board of Regents meet­ ing T hursday is a proposal for a seven-level parking garage on Lot 67 next to the Beauford H. Jester Center. Approval from the board on Thursday will be the green light to start construction. Construction will take about 16 months, and planners aim for a September 1997 opening. No provision yet has been made for alterna­ tive parking during the construction for Jester parking permit holders. Items on the regents' agenda are usually well- planned and are likely to be approved, said Bernard Rapoport, chairm an of the Board of Regents. The decision will be made on an eco­ nomic basis, he said. The proposal requests $11 million to build the garage, but the final cost depends on bids and final construction plans. The price for permit and transient parking will also depend on final construction and m ainte­ nance costs. The building will be funded partly by the Department of Housing and Food Ser­ vices and partly by state bonds. A parking building w ould cost 10 tim es as much as a surface lot, said David Kapalko, m an­ ager of UT parking and traffic. PARK IT HERE 21st St. Beauford H Jester Center CO LOT 67: Proposed site of parking garage BWd- ROSS C RA VENS/Daily Texan Staff But space must be considered along with cost, said Kapalko. "The only way we can increase space invento­ ry is with parking garages," he said The b u ild in g w ould have seven levels and about 1,600 spaces. The majority would be allot­ ted to students, prim arily to those who live in the residence halls. Spaces will also be available for faculty and staff and a number of transient parkers. C u rre n tly , Lot 67 h as 284 Jester re sid e n t spaces and 526 A-permit spaces. "There wH 11 be e n o u g h p eo p le to fill the garage," said Kapalko. But there will be some people who will not be able to afford a permit, Kapalko said. The C-perm it parking lot behind M em orial Stadium will be an alternative for those who cannot afford the garage spaces, he added. It has not been determined what kind of oper­ ating system will be used to govern building access. One possibility would be the use óf m ag­ netic slide cards that would allow' free access for perm it holders, as used in several existing UT garages. Drivers could use paper cards with magnetic strips on the back, which would state the time a vehicle entered the building. A d river w ould pay according to the tim e parked, Kapalko said. The building will be staffed and well-lit for secu­ rity reasons, said Shannon Janes, associate vice president of student affairs. The building is being designed by architect Alan Taniguchi, former dean of the School of Architec­ ture. Other parking garages may be built in the future. There have been potential locations identified for other garages," said Kapalko. Janes said each construction project will be taken one step at a time, and there are currently no plans for other garages. Discovery could revive super collider BRAD HAMILTON/Daily Texan Staff Kevin Schantz was appointed in mid-July as the new coordinator of the University Volunteer Center, where he worked as a student. Graduate takes helm of volunteer center Name switch to expand UT service BRIAN ROSAS Daily Texan Staff UT alumnus Kevin Schantz always has enjoyed helping people. While a student at the University, he frequently volunteered for programs aimed at helping Austin children. Schantz could be found at the Student Volunteer Center on any given day volunteering as a peer adviser. "I learned as much doing volunteer work out in the community as I did by sitting in the classroom," Schantz said. His love for volunteering did not end after his graduation in spring 1993. Even today, Kevin can be found at the Volunteer Center, but now he has a new position. In mid-July, Schantz was appointed coordinator of the University Volunteer Center. The position was vacated by Lloyd Jacobson, who is now partici­ pating in COOL, Campus Outreach O pportunity League, a national collegiate volunteerism program. Schantz said as the new coordinator at the Volunteer Center, he will try to increase people's awareness about the need for volunteers and increase participation from all of the individuals at the Universi­ ty- In an effort to increase p articip atio n , the V olunteer C enter is expanding its programs to include members of the faculty and staff. Schantz said in the past the center focused mostly on the students, but new program s currently being implem ented will target faculty and staff as well. Schantz said that the center's official name was recently changed from the Student Volunteer Center to the University Volunteer Cen­ ter in order to stress that everyone, — especially faculty and staff — not just students, is invited to participate in volunteer functions spon­ sored by the center. A lot of people are interested in solving social problems," said Schantz. "My interest is in getting people involved to solve these social problems." Schantz said the Volunteer Center serves two main purposes. The first goal is to serve as a referral service to anyone interested in vol­ unteering. The center has a database of about 300 agencies and several hun­ dred specific programs that are accepting the help of volunteers. The second aim is to serve as an action center. By sponsoring various projects and activities, the center strives to spark the interest of potential volunteers with many opportunities such as alternative spring breaks. Schantz said 1,350 students are registered with the Volunteer Cen­ ter, but he predicts as many as 6,000 students [will?] participate in the center's programs. Out of the vast array of program topics offered by the Volunteer Center, most prefer to dedicate their efforts to programs that benefit the children of Austin. Stew art Clancy, a sociology junior and frequent particip ant in home building projects with Habitat for Humanity, said, "The Volun­ teer Center has provided lots of inform ation which has been a big help to me this summer." JASON SPENCER Daily Texan Staff _______________ A University researcher is attem pting to har­ ness the technology which could lead to the cre­ ation of a mini-superconducting super collider. A super collider, or atom smasher, hurls atoms at one another at a great velocity. When atoms collide at a high enough rate of speed, the energy generated by the collision could, theoretically, be used as a power source. At present, this process can only be done in a cavernous cham ber m easuring m ore than 10 kilometers, said Toshiki Tajima, UT physics pro­ fessor. In June 1993, the U.S. House of Representa­ tives killed the super collider project, as much because of its $1 billion price tag as its size. Tajima, who was part of the project that would have put the super collider in Waxahachie, may have the remedy to Congress' financial worries. Ihrough the use of new ly developed laser technology, Tajima said he believes he may be able to develop a drastically downsized version of the old super collider. Recently, laser technology has progressed so far that now ... we are getting really excited," he said. The technology Tajima is talking about is a laser machine that can emit a short but extremely powerful beam. Tajima, along w ith UCLA physics professor John Dawson, has co-invented the technology known as laser wakefield acceleration. With this technology, Tajima said, he can shoot a laser beam into a gas-filled chamber, turning all the gas molecules that come in contact with the beam into a state of matter called plasma. "The laser acts like a motorboat going through a lake, creating a w ake. This w ake is w h at I would like to explore," Tajima said. Electrons separated from the gas molecules act like a surfer carried on a wave of plasma, he said. As the electron comes down the wave it hypo­ thetically gains enough speed to create energy. The word 'hypothetically' is used because at B RA D HAMILTON/Daily Texan Staff UT physics professor Toshiki Tajima, co-inventor of laser wakefield acceleration, explains how the new process of particle separation, which could revive the super collider project, works. this point the technology does not exist to bring Tajima and Dawson's idea to fruition. nal super collider, researchers say there are other present uses for the technology. The researchers have been unable to keep the beam concentrated over a long enough distance to test their theory. Tajima said that this new technology should not be viewed as a replacement for the original super collider, but rather as a technology for future gen­ erations to explore. "This technology is still in the embryo stage," he said, adding that he feels there is still a need to develop the original super collider. While it may be years before the laser wakefield acceleration technology is able to replace the origi­ "Hopefully in the next six months we'll have some interesting results," said Craig Siders, a grad­ uate research assistant. Siders said the group has created a commercial "automatic laser-steering mechanism" as a result of its work on the project that could be used in other experiments in laser technology. The University is one of about a dozen institu­ tions, including Le Meil in France and the Naval Research Lab in Washington, D.C., studying laser acceleration. AROUND CAMPUS The Daily Texan Edit o f ................................................ Managing Editor .................... Associate Managing E ditors..... News Editor..................................... Associate News E ditors........... News Assignments Editor Senior Reporters............................ Associate Editors ............................ Entertainment Editor.................. Associate Entertainment Editor Around Cam pus Editor................. Sports Editors................................. G eneral Spoils Reporter ............................. Photo Editors Graphics E d ito r.............................. Listings E ditor................................. Permanent Staff .................................................................................................................Robert Rogers ............................................................................................................ Kevin W illiam son .................................................................................... Tara L. Copp. Jonathan Blum ................................................................................................................Caleb Canning ................................................................................... Melanie Gerik, Robert Russell ........................................................................................................ Molly Saint-James Michael Brick. Steve Scheibal, Sholnn Freeman .......................................................................................... Mark Murray, Chris Parry ............................................................................................................ . Marcel Meyer ................................................................................................................. Joe Sebastian ................................................................................................................... racy Schultz ...........................................................................................Joe Garza. Jason Dugger — Mark Livingston .............................................................................................. Alyssa Banta. Kim Brent ................................................................................................................. Ross Cravens .................................................................................................................. .. racy Schultz News R eporters.......... W ire Editor.................... Photographers............ Editorial Columnists Entertainment Writer Copy Editor................... Issue Staff Jason Spencer, Eliza Selig. Denm an Shelton. Brian Rosas .........................................................................................................Alex Klingelberger Michelle Christenson, Brad Hamilton, Robert Patton. Kevin L. Delahunty - ............................ Ken Bridges, Rosalie Chang «* - .................................................. Joe Sebastian ......... ....................... .......... ........ .................................... Frank Tang \i uttd Campus is a daily column lib ing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organiza­ tions registered w ith the C am pus A ctivities Office. A nnouncem ents must be submitted on the proper form by noon two days before publication. Forms are available at the Daily Texan office at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. e-m ail en tries You may now submit Around Cam­ pus at: by aroundc@utxvms.ccutexas.edu. Please include the name of the sponsoring organization, location, time and date of event, date of announcement, a con­ tact phone number and other relevant inform ation. Q uestions regarding Around Campus may also be e-mailed to this address. O therw ise, please direct questions to Tracy Schultz at 471-4591. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions. MEETINGS Lutheran Student Fellowship will have sum m er evening worship at 9 p.m. W ednesdays at the University Lutheran Church at 21st and San Anto­ nio streets. For more information call the Rev. Norb Fimhaber at 472-5461. UT Staff Association will be show­ ing p a rt 2 of Homophobia in the Workplace. The video will be shown at the meeting of the committee for Les­ bian, Gay and Bisexual Concerns of tíre UT Staff Association from noon-1 p.m. Tuesday at Waggener Hall 316. UT Kendo Association will hold a special practice with Nagashima sensei Advertising ................. Local Display ..................................... Vanessa Flores, Jennifer Case. Brad Corbett, Danny Grover, Sara Eckert Deweyne Tindell Graphic D e signe r ..........................................................................................................Nathan Moore, Nancy Flanagan Classified D is p la y ........................................... ........................................................Dana Coibed, Joe Powell Classified Telephone Sales Classified C le rks .......................................................................... Amy Forbes, Angels Bartek, Crystal Yen Pham Office Assistant, Layout Coordinator ......................................................................................................... Dianne Eaton The Oally Texan (D S P S 146-440). a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is publistied by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whltia, Austin, TX 78705 The Daily Texan « published Monday Tuesday W ednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions wlH be accepted by telephone (471-4581), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.1 2 2) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 101 ) For local and national display advertising, call 4 71 -1 86 5 For classified display and national classified display advertising, cell 4 7 1 -8 9 0 0 For classified word advertising, call 471-5244 Entire contents copyright 1995 Texas Student Publications The Daily Texsn Mall Subscription Rates O n e S em ester (Fall or S p rin g )........................................................................................................................................ $ 3 0 go Two S em esters (Fan end S p rin g ).....................................................................................................................................5 5 go Summer Session ....................... 20.00 O n e Y ear (Fad, Spring end S u m m e f).............................................................................................................................75 00 To charge by VISA or MasterCard, caN 471 -5 08 3 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P O Box D. Austin, TX 78713-8904, or to TS P Building C 3 .20 0, or can 471-5083, POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan. P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904. Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m. Thursday, 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday...........Monday. 4 p.m. Friday.............. Tuesday, 4 p m. C «*aa**d Word Ada M a m (Lee* Buamaaa Dey P not to Pubfccefcjr.i c . A , i ^ i 7 I l W 'I © * : * .. f d \ > ^ * 0 . ™ I WJ A- f Q 1 < *2 ? ’áw m-A /( \ r i i( m \ W o A T E S O R O S . M M ?% 1S E C E -•.u ■, Antique and Traditional Folk Art from Latin A m e r i c a \ a t ” JEWELRY • FOLK A R T • T E X T IL E S 209 CONGRESS AVENUE • OPEN DAILY • 479-8341 * P (8th dan) and Nishiyama sensei (7th dan) 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Tuesday at L. Theo Bellmont Hall 502A. University International Socialist Organization will meet at 7:30 p.m. ’ Tuesday in the Texas Union African- American Room (4.110). The topic is "Stop the Death Penalty." VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES UT Student V olunteer C enter is looking for volunteers to assist resi­ dents on group outings by pushing wheelchairs and guiding walkers. Vol­ unteers will visit with residents during activities and assist with any needs twice a month. For more information call 471-6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to visit one- on-one and /o r make mobiles or posters Austin Sports Connection 1995 Score Football ProSne Football 1 Q Q R n 1995 Playoff Absolute 8312 Burnet Rd. M 19 458-6433 Brodie Oaks Center (by ToysRUs) 442-1242 pipes plu s US \ C O L IB R I q u a n t u m ZIPPO DISPOSABLES FUEL ADULT-FRIENDLY LIGHTERS 5 0 4 W. 2 4 th 1 ¡H I I I I 1 0 HI M S I H S U N for bed patients at a local residence home for the elderly. For more informa­ tion call 471-6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to help pro­ vide community education and infor­ mation in the areas of DWI, safety belts and bicycle safety. For more informa­ tion call 471-6161. ■ Interns are needed to assist a bereavement coordinator with exten­ sive duties at a registered hospice agency. Psychology, sociology, theolo­ gy or philosophy students are pre­ ferred. For more information call 471- 6161. ■ Volunteers are needed to staff tele phones mediating a range of consumer d isputes and cases. Training and resources will be provided. For more’ information call 471-6161. Division of Housing and Food Ser­ vice seeks student tutors to help with a literacy and GED program for adults. Classes are 1 p.m.-3 p.m. on Fridays. The program will begin June 16. For more information call 471-5031. UT AmeriCorps is looking for parole aides to work with juveniles. Morning hours are 8 a jn.-noon. Afternoon hours are 1 p m -5 p.m. Call Donze Lopez or Rose Zuniga at 472-8551. ■ Tutors are needed to work in a juvenile group home. Morning hours are available. Call Donze Lopez or Rose Zuniga at 472-8551. ■ Tutors and mentors are needed to work with high school, middle school and elementary school students in the afternoon and early evening in a unique community-based center in East Austin. Call Donze Lopez or Rose Zuniga at 472-8551. ■ Fine arts majors, especially those involved in dance and drama, are need­ ed to participate in cultural enrichment events. Call Donze Lopez or Rose Zuni­ ga at 472-8551. ■ Volunteers are needed to work with community-based health clinics. Call Donze Lopez or Rose Zuniea at 472-8551. PICK T H R E: 7-7-5 STATE & LOCAL T h e D a i l y T e x a n 5 TUESDAY, AUGUST 8,1995 STEPPING UP THE CARER LADDBt Treatment providers accused of abusing taxpayer dollars Associated Press Evidence against 22 state-financed chemi­ cal dependency providers accused of misus­ ing taxpayer dollars w ill be turned over to prosecutors for possible criminal charges, leg­ islators learned Monday. D e p a rtm e n t of P u b lic Safety D irecto r Jam es W ilson told th e H ouse and Senate investigating committees that more referrals m ay be imminent as an investigation contin­ ues into the Texas Com mission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse and its service providers. 'We're in the process of putting the cases together.... We're still doing investigations of other providers/' said Wilson, who oversees the Texas Rangers. A special task force com p rised of th e Rangers, state auditors and private accoun­ tants has exam ined the books of 72 of the commission's 400 providers. The findings were reported to the H ouse and Senate investigating committees, which are overseeing the TCADA probe. The audit found that more than $20 million earm arked for drug- and alcohol-treatment programs instead w as spent on "questionable costs" such as fake fingernails, snow tickets and gifts. As a result, funding to 35 program s was suspended last month. Officials with at least 22 of those programs will face possible prose­ cution, W ilson said. The nam es of the 22 providers were not released. "I've got a Bible of stuff here where abuses just go on and on," he said. "You can talk about one meal that w asn't justified all the way up to a lot of money that was spent or hidden that shouldn't have been spent." Several program s were cited in the audit for spending money for parties, bonuses and gifts. A m ong them w as Tropical Texas C en­ te r in E d in b u r g , w h o s e e x p e n d itu r e s included new acrylic fingernails, $135 on Las Vegas show tickets, $300 for a m ari­ ach i b a n d th a t p la y e d a t an e m p lo y e e meeting, $810 for m eat du rin g an em ploy­ ee m e e tin g a n d $184 to “ T o n y /T in a 's W edding" in Chicago. Steve Womack, interim executive director of the center, said, "W e welcome the scrutiny and an opportunity to discuss it. We don't feel at this point that w e've had an opportuni­ ty to do that." W omack acknow ledged the center m ay have some "questionable" expenditures, but he said the audit does not specify w hether they were paid for w ith TCADA money or other funding sources. Another problem, he said, is that TCADA has not provided explicit spending guide­ lines. "It7s not like you can go to a book and say, 'This is right and this is wrong.' A $50 shirt — is that just like a Mercedes?" he said. Wilson cited one provider whose adminis­ trator allegedly was paid $450,000 last year, more than three times the salary of most pro­ gram administrators. That provider, Riverside General Hospital of Houston, also is accused in the audit of paying more than $285,000 in public funds on the five-year lease of a Houston house valued at $96,990 by the H arris County Appraisal District. Riverside adm inistrator Earnest Gibson denied w rongdoing and called the audit's allegations "misinformation." "Those findings were not detailed or accu­ rate," said Gibson, w ho denied being paid $450,000 last year and said "no adm inistra­ tive salary was that." Gibson said he and other service providers have been treated unfairly by state officials. Texas senators agree on welfare Associated Press W A SH IN G T O N — T exas R epublican Sens. Phil Gramm and Kay Bailey Hutchison are in agreem ent that the nation's w elfare system is irretrievably broken. The two have differing visions, however, on how far Congress m u st go to fix w hat Hutchison terms the "self-perpetuating mon­ ster that sustains the m ost distressing ills of our society — illegitimacy, the disintegration of the family, w eakening of the w ork ethic and crippling dependency." H utchison has allied herself w ith Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, joining 31 other Republicans in endorsing the Kansan's w el­ fare overhaul legislation. Gramm, like Dole, a Republican presiden­ tial hopeful, contends that his rival's solution constitutes only "token" reform. Backed by other conservatives, G ram m is seeking to "dramatically strengthen" Dole's bill w ith a series of am en d m e n ts incorp o ratin g get- tough provisions passed by the H ouse in March. As the historic debate opened M onday in the Senate, both Texans took to the floor to outline their views of how to fix a system that dates to the 1930s. “ T his is an issu e w h ere the fu tu re of A m erica is on th e lin e ... lite ra lly , o u r h o u s e is a f ir e ,” s a id G ra m m . “ A n d I w ould argue ... that w hat w e have done in the last 30 years has not only not p u t the fire o u t b u t p ro b a b ly h as m ad e it b u rn brighter, and that the tim e has com e for a dram atic change in public policy." The two Texans are solidly behind the G O P effort to convert p ro g ra m s for the p o o r c u rre n tly o p e ra te d by th e fed e ra l g o v ern m e n t into lu m p su m s th a t sta te s can use to design and operate their ow n program s. W hile D ole's legislation places restric­ tions on recipients, such as cutting off bene­ fits after five years and req u irin g w ork, G ram m contends the m easure do esn 't go far enough. G ram m w a n ts to im p o se a se rie s of requirements: including more stringent work requirements, denial of welfare to legal immi­ grants, and reduced benefits for teen mothers and those having m ore children w hile on welfare. Governor remains after Baja elections PAN victory signals strengthening opposition to PRI control o f presidency Associated Press MEXICALI, Mexico — M exico's first o p p o si­ tion state governm ent on M onday retained con­ trol of Baja California, bruising the ruling party and setting the stage for a strong opposition run for the presidency in 2000. In Baja C alifornia's state election S unday, the c o n se rv a tiv e N a tio n a l A ction P arty , o r PA N , retained the g o v e rn o rsh ip for an o th er six-year term . W ith 74.5 percent of ballots counted M onday, P A N c a n d id a te H e c to r T eran T eran le d w ith 248,292 votes. F orm er Mexicali m ayor Francisco P e re z T ejada, o f M e x ic o 's ru lin g p a r ty , h a d 204,245 votes. Sm aller parties got the rest. P re sid e n t E rn e sto Z ed illo , w ho g re w u p in Mexicali, cong ratulated Teran and p ro p o sed "a new stage of respectful collaboration" betw een the federal and state governm ents. M any saw the election as a key test for dem oc­ racy in a country ru led by the Institutional Revo­ lu tio n a ry P arty, o r PRI, since 1929, w h e n th e p arty w as founded. The PRI has been a virtual arm of the g o vern­ m ent, often holding o nto pow er through p a tro n ­ age, fraud or corruption. "These elections are not only im portant for the state but for the rest of the country," read an ed i­ torial in the prom inent Mexicali daily La Crónica. “ W h at h a p p e n s h e re influ en ces all of M exico and the advance of dem ocracy in the nation." T he PAN v icto ry h e re in 1989 w as th e first g ubernatorial defeat ever accepted by the ruling p a rty . T h re e o th e r s ta te s h a v e sin c e e le c te d PA N g o v ern o rs, a n d p a rty le a d e rs c laim th e m om entum could p ro p el them to the presiden- Hector Teran y Teran and his wife, Alma, posed for photographers after announcing his victo­ ry in the Baja California state gubernatorial race Sunday. cy in five years. In an em barrassm ent for the ruling party, the P A N a ls o w o n th e m a y o r s h ip in M e x ic a li, know n as a PRI stronghold. The PA N retained the Tijuana m ayorship and appeared to be w in­ ning a m ajority in the state legislature. The PRI w as w in n in g in the o nly o th e r tw o m ayoral races — Tecate and Ensenada. A S S O C IA T E D PRESS Y our co m p e tito rs for b u s in e s s s c h o o l take K aplan. NUMBER OF STUDENTS PER YEAR* KAPLAN Prtn. R«v. “1993 e s tim a te S h o u ld n ’t y o u ? More students trust Kaplan to help them get a higher score because Kaplan is the undisputed leader in test prep. Find out why. Call today. i - i a a - i u t p - T E S T KAPLAN • rrn lt In to O ksp tan c o m Internet h orn s page http'J/www k u plnn co m America Online k eyw o rd Kaplan London $369 Paris $360* Madrid $389* Frankfurt $408* Zurich $425* Tokyo $478* Costa Rica $179* Caracas $199* • Fares arc eacfi way from Austnbased on roundtrp purchase testndaTsapptyandtaxesnotncludecJ Call for other worldwide destinations Council Trave 2000 Guddalupe St. • Austin, TX 78705 512- 472-4931 Eurailpasses ¿suca on-the-spot! 2 Dozen R oses * 1 9 .9 5 Cash & Cany C asa V erde Florist 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 D a i l y S p e c i a l s FTD • 45* & G u a da lu pe • On UT Shuttle Rt. O N E H O U R E 6 S L ID E P R O C E S S I N G 2 4 X = *4.95 3 6 X = *6.55 PHOTO STUDENTS - ADDITIONAL 10% DISCOUNT CUSTOM PHOTOGRAPHIC LABS W. M LK AT N U EC ES • 4 7 4 -1 177 EXAM Hh 2 PAIR OF CONTACTS Starting at $1 19* Com plete ’ price includes exam , 2 p a ir clear d a ily w e a r soft contucfs, care kit, dispensing instructions, 1 st fo llo w up EXPIRES SEPT. 1, 1995. WITH COUPON ONLY. NOT VALID WITH A N Y OTHER OFFER Austin Vision Center Dr. M a r k F. H utson, O ptom etrist 2415 Exposition, Suite D only 2 miles west o f UT mts 477-2282 FRI 9 6 10-7 M /C VISA AMX DISC Austin Fire Department cadet David Girourd Fuentes held on below M onday afternoon at carried a ladder up as fellow cadet Nathan the training tower on Pleasant Valley Road. R O B E R T PA TT O N /D aily Texan Staff Tejas wants Texas to pay for damages Associated Press The co m p an y pick ed to ru n a centralized auto em issions testing program in the D allas-Fort W orth an d H o u sto n areas su b m itte d a $187.5 m illio n b ill to th e s ta te M o n d a y se e k in g c o m p e n sa tio n for the project's cancellation. "I expect them to do the right thing and say ... 'I guess we ow e y o u th e m o n e y ,'" s a id A u s tin consultant Bill Miller, spokesm an fo r T ejas T e s tin g T e c h n o lo g y . "It's a lot of m oney and w e'd just like to be repaid for w hat w e did here based on a contract." to The claim for dam ages was sub­ m itte d th e T exas N a tu ra l Resource C onservation C om m is­ sio n . C o m m issio n s p o k e sm a n Patrick Shaughncssy confirmed the claim had been served but d id n 't have an im m ediate comment. If the claim is n o t paid, Miller said, Tejas could try to resolve the m a tte r o u tsid e of co u rt th ro u g h altern ativ e d isp u te resolution. If th a t fails, he said, the com p an y could activ ate a la w su it filed in M ay to try to force p a y m e n t of the m oney. "M o re th an likely, the state is going to dispute most, if not all, of their claims, and that will have to play out in a court, more than like­ ly," said Ron D usek, spokesm an for Attorney General Dan Morales, w ho is the state's lawyer. In a rela ted m ove, T ejas also asked a state district court to rule th a t it d o e sn 't h av e to rep a y an $8.8 m illion loan from the state for tw o years. The com pany said that w as the original agreem ent w hen the loan w as m ade. The m oney w as m eant to tid e o v e r Tejas w hile te stin g w as susp en d ed this year to allow for legislative consideration of a revised program . The A ug. 31, 1997, rep a y m en t date is in one m easure appro v ed b y th e 1995 L e g is la tu re , b u t a n o th er m easu re sets the ea rlier date, according to Tejas. M ille r s a id T ejas c a n 't b e e x p e c te d to r e p a y th e m o n e y w hen the p ro g ra m th a t it relied on for income has been scrapped. "This delay has cost us close to $190 million," Miller said. "There's n o th in g w e can be e x p e c te d to m ake any m oney from. You can't get blood from a stone." The centralized testing program sparked imm ediate criticism w hen it took effect in January in an effort to m eet federal clean air req u ire­ ments. Drivers in affected areas of the state said it w as inconvenient and costly. So the Legislature sus­ p en d e d the cen tralize d p ro g ra m while it considered changes. R E PR O D U C T IV E SE R V IC E S sin ce 1 9 7 8 S U P P O R T IN G Y O U R C H O I C E ABORTION EGNANCY TESTING COUNSELING ADOPTION 4804 GROVER Between Lamar and Burnet at 4 9th & Grover 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 Board certified OB Gyns Licensed nursing staff -Confidential Services -Flexible appts Mon - Sat U IIID O m T6CTH Financial incentive provided in exchange for your o p ii on an investigational pain medication following surgery. Approved Clinical Research Study. Sui performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeon. If you need the removal of wisdom teeth * B I O M E D I C A L I R E S E A R C H iG R O U P & c . Outside Austin call: 1-800-320-j In Austin call: 320*1630 6 The D aily T exan TUESDAY, A U G U ST 8 . 1 8 8 5 ENTERTAINMENT ‘Blonde Redhead’ has all the fun ‘Feminist’ printing writing on wallpaper JOE SEBASTIAN D aily Texan S taff It is entirely too easy to relate superficial aspects of a band's his­ tory or m akeup to the type of music the band might play. It happens all the time though, invalid in num erous resulting assum ptions about how a band might sound based on it's labels, producers, ethnicity or whatever. People think that som ething on records A m phetam ine R eptile must necessarily be loud and ugly, anything produced by Brad Wood must be sweet girly music, and anything from England m ust be snotty and pretentious. So tell me then, how does one classify a band that has two Japan­ ese members, two Italians, is from N ew York and h as its album s released by Sonic Youth's Steve Shelley on his Sm ells Like Records company? Any one of these classifications would be enough to peg a band into a distinct genre for all eternity. But instead of trying to classify a band like this (Blonde Redhead) w ithout even hearing it, you should just drop those preconcep­ tions and listen. "I just hope people get it," says singer/guitarist Kazu Makino of the Blonde R edhead's music. "W here we come from is a bit strange to most Americans. They m ay not be able to identify with it [the music], but I hope they like it anyw ay." There is a lot to like about Blonde Redhead. The band mixes low -key rhythm s with buzzing guitars and the odd inter­ play of tension between Makino and the band 's other vocalist, Am edeo Pace. This creates an interesting mixture of the several elements brought by the group's m embers without attem pting to use the band members' place of origins as any sort of theme. jazz ' W e're not a super-authentic culture-shock. It's not like we're com pletely alien, like the Bore­ doms from Ja p a n .... I'm not sure if 44 W h e re we come from is a bit strange to most Amer­ icans.” — H azu M akin o, sto g er/g u h ta r ttt $ t B lon d e R ed h ead LIVE MUSIC BU R K REDHEAD Featuring: The Muffs, Cub, The Queers, Pork Playing at: Electric Lounge, 302 Bowie St. Date: Tuesday, Aug. 8 Time: 7 30 p.m. there are any bands like that from Italy," says Makino. "W e don't press the origin thing. We just do what we do." "It's also hard to tell because we've only played big cities like New York and Boston," says Amedeo Pace. "I guess this way we'll find out how people respond to us." Blonde Redhead may not have had many people respond to them, but the ones who have are certain­ ly a large notch on their belt. Sonic Youth had Blonde Redhead open for them on their '93 European tour, and now Steve Shelley is helping the band put out its second LP on his label. But it's been a long road for Amedeo Pace and his twin brother Simone (drums). "W e went from Italy to Canada to Boston and then to New York says fam ily when my Amedeo. "W e stayed mainly for the music." left," "W hen we started playing in high school we started playing rock songs. But then we started getting into jazz and studying jazz for five years, both privately and in school. Then we moved to New York. We kept doing jazz and then D o o n esb u ry b y g a r r y t r u d e a u ALSO, CHANGBOFAW RBG5 CARPB, CREPIT CAFP NOTIFI­ CATIONS’ AND BANK AUTHORI­ ZATIONS TO TRANSFER \ ASSETS FROM TOUR FANTASY BACK to r e a l l if e . I PONT RE CALL M Y FANTASY HAVING ANY PAPERWORK. OF COURSE NOT-THATS UJHAT MAPS IT A FAN-, ACROSS 1 Panama, e.g. 6 Touch 10 Speck 14 Zipping along is Ballet attire 16 City southeast of Milan 17 Hook 20 Corset feature 21 Pledge 22 Computer adjunct 23 Kin’s partner 24 Parishioner s seat 25 Messiah” composer 29 Verve 31 Bygone gas station freebie 34 Actor Delon 35 Water container 36 Diva’s piece 37 Line 40 Song for the Everly Brothers 41 Harrow's rival 42 Hippy dances? 43 Gridiron gains: Abbr. 44 Fall in a faint, with “over” 45 Excessively sweet 46 Seal group 47 “Tarzan” actress Markey 49 Unresponding 52 Appearance 53 Wide-eyed 57 Sinker ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 60 Kind of sax 61 Extorted from 62 North from Virginia 63 Sequence position 64 Leaning 65 Airfield tower DOWN on the 1 Stand vehicles 2 G ive back 3 Zilch 4 Having pains 5 Hilo neckwear 6 Up 7 Fall for hook, line and sinker 8 1941 Pearl Harbor ship 9 Harbor boat 10 Tolerate 11 Health food item 12 Laudatory works 13 Swampy area 18 Hard labor 19 Oracle's utterance 23 Lottery game 24 Young salmon 26 “Jude the ObScure” author 26 Vocally 27 Scruffs 22 Japanese parliament Blonde Redhead will be playing at the Electric Lounge Tuesday and at Lollapalooza W ednesday. They’d better bring those beers, because they’ll probably be four bucks a pop at South Park M eadow s! started doing more rock again." "I wish there was another per­ spective to tell you th is," says Makino of how she m et the Pace brothers. "The twins were playing in an Italian restaurant, playing a jazz set and I w alked into the restaurant to meet a friend." Despite the rather casual meet­ ing, Blonde Redhead was soon a working unit. They w ent on tour with Sonic Youth only a year after getting together, and only a few weeks after adding their first bass player, Tada Harano (w ho eventu­ ally moved on to play drums in Ultra Bide and was replaced by Maki Takahashi). The band has turned out music that, w hile m arked by distinct influences, displays extraordinary skill in putting an interesting, and often-tim es better, twist on it than the original. "I guess we went through peri­ ods, phases were we liked different things," says Am edeo in his soft Italian accent. "I think our music changed by what we like. I think on the last record... I dunno, we liked Sonic Youth, we listened to them. ...Smog, a period w here we listened to a lot of the Rolling Stones... Fugazi, we love. But the music comes out always different from the things we listen to." "I think in the beginning we were really sensitive to everything UVE MUSIC L 0 U JP A L 0 0 Z A Featuring: Blonde Redhead Date: W ednesday Aug. 9, 1:40 p.m. Venue: Southpark Meadows (tickets available at any Austin Star Ticket Center, or call 210-224- SHOW ) listened we to," says M akino. "N ow , we don't listen to bands as excessively. How do you say it?... We try not to be as distracted. We stay in our own world a little bit." Blonde Redhead does occasion­ ally suffer from its relationship with bands that have helped it out. For example, The Austin Chroni­ cle's recent ambiguous description of the band as "Steve Shelley's Blonde Redhead" unfairly denotes the band as either Shelley's pet or having Shelley in it. This caused some distress within the band. "I can never trust those mistakes as a true mistake or just a way to get people to come to the show s," says an irate Makino. "G u ess we should have Bill dress up as Steve Shelley," jokes Am edeo. "W e have this person traveling with us named Bill. He doesn't look very much like Steve, though." MEAN BUSINESS! 20WORDS 5 ?5T 471-5244 DAYS THE DAILY TEXAN * MtuMkJ it pnvato party ( ^ A***»* w* H cat Np it am or' if»# ia, m* y Tary, lotwr Pian reduction »> INDY - ____ ’ ’ £ R o b e rt R e d fo rd in itia te d his ow n ind ep en d en t c h a n ­ nel, called the “S u nd an ce C h an n el” earlier this year. • The Independent Film Channel, dedicated to films made outside the Hollywood studio system, and American Program Services, which dis­ tributes programs to public TV stations, have struck a one-year deal. It provides for m onthly broadcast of such films as Francois Truffaut's The Last Metro and Federico Fellini's Amarcord on partici­ pating public TV stations nationw ide. Upcom ing fea­ tures include Peter W eir's The Last Wave (the week of Aug. 28) and The Last Metro (week of Sept. 25) Amarcord is set for the week of Nov. 27. Check local listings for station and time. P u z z l e b y D i a n e C B a l d w i n 30 Writer Uris 31 Scratch 32 Bride's destination 33 Erato's realm 35 90° from norte 36 Tightfitting 36 Clarinet part 36 Falling sound 44 Big Apple ex-mayor 46 Chinese: Prefix 46 Lace loop 48 They’re not hip 49 Vichy and Ems 50 Cash holder 51 Sgt. Snorkel s dog 52 1551, on monuments 53 Skillfully 54 Temerity 55 Gallimaufry 56 Dell 58 Fall back 59 Champagne- opening sound Get answers to any three clues by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 5656 (7 5 t each minute). SOUTHERN FRIED TUESDAY Your choice of our Chicken Fried Steak, Southern Fried Chicken or Southern Fried Veggie Patty served with French Fries or Mashed Potatoes, Vegetable & Texas Toast. 2 f o r l! 6 p .m . to 10 p .m . f4 / ¿1« 11 A .M .- 10 P.M. M-SAT 11:30-10 P.M. SUN 807 W. 6TH 472-0693 Crossword Edited by Will Shortz No. 0627 Associated Press NEW YORK — Midway through an interview about the publishing house she founded 25 years ago, Flo­ rence Howe of The Feminist Press is interrupted by a phone call, from the National Endowm ent for the Arts. I need to take that," she says, excusing herself. A few minutes later she returns, looking relieved. The NEA was only seeking help in finding someone for a panel discussion. "T h is is a nervous time for us," Howe explained. " I was sure they were calling to say they were going out of business." It s a nervous time for anyone who receives federal funding, and more so for a nonprofit publisher that supports feminism, multicultur- alism and other causes not favored by the drafters of the "C ontract With Am erica." Still, The Feminist Press has sur­ vived recessions, budget cuts during the Reagan administration, com peti­ tion from both small and big pub­ lishers and the closing of indepen­ dent bookstores in the face of the proliferation of superstores. Started when the feminist move­ ment itself was gathering momen­ tum, The Feminist Press is a pioneer in discovering, and rediscovering, books by and about women. Its cat­ alog includes w orks by Kate Chopin, Paule Marshall and Zora Neale Hurston, as well as literary anthologies from all over the world, children's books, books on health and medicine and on music and art. I hey have a great commitment to restoring w om en's voices to print," said Carol Seajay, editor and publisher of Feminist Bookstore News, a bimonthly magazine. What happens to women is that their writing has been considered unimportant, so some really brilliant w om an's w ork has gone out of print. The Feminist Press has made it their com m itm ent to bring these women back." 3 he publishing house is based on the Upper East Side and operates out of a second-floor office space donated by the City University of New York. The Feminist Press has an annual budget of about' $1 million, puts out about 10 books a year and has a staff of 10, including Howe I he Reagan years convinced Howe that she needed to rely more on marketing to bring in money, and most of the revenue, about 80 per­ cent, com es from retail sales and sales to schools. The rest comes from gifts and grants, including contribu­ tions from the AT&T Foundation, the NEA and the National Endow­ ment for the Humanities. The Feminist Press grew out of a project conceived by How e that never got off the ground: a series of writings by contem porary women authors on prom inent women in his­ tory. At the time, 1970, Howe was liv­ ing with her then-husband in Balti­ more and was an assistant professor of English at G oucher College. Howe approached three publishers with her idea, but received the same answer each time: great concept, but no chance to make money. She then attended a meeting of a local fem inist organization, Balti­ more W om en's Liberation, asked for support and was told by everybody there they were too busy to help. It was the beginning of August, and she went on vacation for a month. Upon returning, she found her mail box stuffed with letters — and contributions — made out to the Feminist Press. "B altim ore W om en's Liberation had decided they were going to print an announcement that this was happening, and they included my address. They also said we were going to print biographies and chil­ dren's books, w hich I never said. So I was more than enraged," Howe said. "T h ere were little checks — one dollar, two dollars, about a hundred Florence Howe is a pioneer in the rediscovering of fem inist books. 44 This is a ner­ vous time for us.” — Florence Howe, founder of The Feminist Press dollars in all. ... I just simmered and simmered until sometime in O ctober I m im eographed a long piece of paper saying the Feminist Press does­ n't exist, that this was a fantasy of Baltimore W om en's Liberation. " I sent copies to all the people who had sent letters, with or with­ out money, saying The Feminist Press doesn't exist, but it may exist if a cer­ tain number of people, 20, com e to a meeting and at least 12 agree to meet monthly. About 30 turned up ." While the press issues som e new works, How e's primary mission is bringing back out-of-print books. Am ong them are M arshall's first novel, Brown Girl, Brownstones; a Hurston anthology that Alice W alk­ er edited and for which Toni M orri­ son helped raise money; and the novel The Living Is Easy, by Harlem Renaissance writer Dorothy West. "O n e of the things The Feminist Press has done is publish leading and ground breaking women writ­ ers. The corporate presses aren't connected to the feminist com m uni­ ty and only learn about these writers after som eone else publishes them ," Seajay said. "In the case of Dorothy West, someone says, 'O h yeah, Dorothy West, Harlem Renaissance.' Double­ day is getting all the cred it for putting out her books this year, but the Feminist Press was there first." The press' all-time best seller is The Yellow Wallpaper, an autobio­ graphical short story about a wom ­ an's nervous breakdown. W ritten by feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman and published in 1892, the book has sold more than 200,000 copies. A friend of Howe's, author Tillie Olsen, helped persuade her to put out two other books. One was Agnes Sm edley's Daughter o f Earth, a novel about a working-class woman first issued in 1929. The second was Rebecca Harding Davis' Life in the Iron Mills and Other Stories, the title piece a grim novella published anonymously in 1862. " I met Tillie in the early 1970s and she handed me a dog-eared copy of Life in the Iron Mills, Xeroxed. W hat happened was she said to me, 'Read it, but don't read it at night.' And, of course, I read it at night. I could not go to sleep. First of all, it m akes you cry. Secondly, I kept thinking if this was lost forever, there must be more lost forever," Howe said. "A nother time, I got sick in Tillie's house, and she me gave me Daughter o f Earth. I said, 'Tillie, please call me a doctor, get me to a doctor, I have a 104. She said, 'H ave you read Daughter o f Earth?' Literally, that was her response. ... She said, 'I'll get you stuff if you read it.' " A turning point for Howe came in 1980. The Feminist Press published only American works during its first decade, but Mariam Chamberlain, a member of the publishing house's board of directors, persuaded her to look at books from other countries. TEXAN C L A S S IF IE D A D S W O R K FO R Y O U R S CALL 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 fhe Secret of Roan Inish (1 1:45) 2:30 5:00-7:15-9:35 t a m o o f t a (I I M S * M i l S-4^5-7 J M 4 S Shallow Grave 2:45-7:25-12:00 AM The Underneath 5:15-9:25 Funny Bones 11:45 Hong Kong Graffiti 12:10 htlp//wwwlfp*rweb.twi/(W »«/ k x h j m c M , s H * v e N (12HW S«t, Sm ) 2:00 7:40 (fS R Z B 4:30-9:40 D i ) i / i r 1__2_X_ñ__L_f A es /iw is L a te- open M o n . - S a t . u n t i l 1 : 3 0 a t n i g h t 24th & San Antonio General Cinema IBARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY All SHOWS STARTING BEFORE t>m HIG HLA ND 1 0 ,7 & I * -3 S o t M ID D U ^ ? S K v í t i n » ^ 3 4 ? 5 6 ^ l SU M M E R M OVIE CAM P \ o U T PEB8LI1 THE MNGUIN pg P O C A H O W T A SllJ O 2 00 4 00 6 00 G STIRIO SOM ETHING! TO TALK A BO U T 1:0£ 3:15 5:30 7 45 10 10 R SDK THX B A B E 12:30 3 00 5:20 7 30 10:00 PG THX O PER A TIO N DUM BO D R O P .12:50 3:00 5 20 7:35 10:00 PG THX TH E MET ON TWO SCREENS SCR. 1-12 45 3 15 5 35 1:00 10:15 PG13 ROUT SCR. 2 -1 3 :1 0 2 25 4 50 7:20 » 45 PG ROUT F R E E WW-LT 2 12:20 2:35 4 50 PG STEREO £ 2 £ £ L 2 2 £ l,:M. 5 05 7:15 9:40 * f i r s t k n i g h t m s p g u s t u n A PO U -O 1AJ-» 4:00 7:05 »:50 PG DTS f t j 4 g y . . o« M adhKKi C o u n ty 7 00 » 45 PG13 STUEO BATMAN F O R E V E R 1:30 4 :'5 7:00 9 30 PG13 STEREO GREAT HILLS 8 .7 MUS 183 A OB EAT HILLS TRAIL 7QA a n y ! H BUMMER MOVIE CAMP io am . m * t h e p e n g i j i s ^ B K U W P ■ FREE WW.LY3— ; 10 4 JO PG STÍRK) I 8 4 M J . 2 1.5 J l30 4 53 7 :2 0 » t Y g T h x I OPERATION DUMBO DROP O N 2 SCREENS P U j O T S ^ I O ^ 9 4 3 PG ROUI 1 7 10 9 :3 0 PG STlRto S S S a S f e ’iK S A iY " ’ I ■ FBI 3 ROUT I 2 0 0 5 1 5 ) S 0 P G 1 3 T H * | I:,i 4 50 7 30 10:C»RSt«J £»: 8M_i_00Lao 5 oo 715 o sutíc^BSIil 51 GIFT C E R T IF IC A T E S ON SALE I h e D a il y T e x a n Tuesday, August 8, 1 9 9 5 P a g e 7 Tq Place a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 Classified W ord Ad Rates Charged by the word Based on a 15 word minimum, the following rates apply. 1 day---------------------- $6.15 2 days 1,70 ......................$16.65 3 days 4 days $90.40 $23,25 5 days „— .... First two words may be all capital letters $.25 for each additional w ord le tte rs ca p ita l MasterCard and Visa accepted. ...... in Classified Display Ad Rates Charged by the column inch One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available. Fall rates Sept. 1-May 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 4 7 1 - 6 7 4 1 8 :0 0 -5 :0 0 /M o n d a y-F rid a y/T S P Building 3 .2 0 0 Deadline: 1 1 :0 0 a.m. p rio r to publication r , 7 r : U T T J . ) : ^ l . l « 10- -Misc. Autos 20—Sports-Foreign Autos 30—Trucks-Vans 40-Vehicles to Trade 50—Service-Repair 6 0 - Parts-Accessories 70-Motorcycles 80—Bicycles 90-Vehicles-Leasing 100-Vehicles-Wanted B z a H z a z s n a 110-Services 120-Houses 130—Condos-Townhomes 140—Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160—Duplexes-Apartments 170—Wanted 180-Loans MERCHANDISE 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 290-Furniture-Apphance Rental 300-Garage-Rummage Sales 310—Trade 320—Wanted to Buy or Rent 330—Pets 340-Longhorn Want Ads 345—Misc RENTAL 350—Rental Services 360-Furnished Apts. 370-Unfurnished Apts 380—Furnished Duplexes 390-Unfurnished Duplexes 400-Condos-Townhomes 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. ANNOUNCEMENTS 510-Entertainment-Tickets 520-Personals 5 3 0 -T ravel-T ransportation 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 SERVICES 620 Legal Services 630-Computer Services 640-Exterminators 650-Moving-Hauling 660—Storage 670-Painting 680—Office 690-Rental Equipment 700-Furniture Rental 7 1 0 -Appliance Repair 720-Stereo-TV Repair 730-Home Repair 740-Bicycle Repair 750-Typing 760-Misc. Services E M P L O Y M E N T ^ 70—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-Engineenng-T echnical 870-Medical 880-Professional 890—Clubs-Restaurants 900-Domestic Household 910-Positions Wanted 920—Work Wanted BUSINESS 930-Business Opportunities 940-Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED A D V E R T IS IN G T E R M S in th e e v e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e In advertisem ent, notice m ust be given by 11 th e f ir s t dsy, as th e p u b lis h e rs a re a m r e s p o n s ib le f o r o n ly ONE in c o r r e c t insertion. All claim s fo r adjustm ents should be m a d e n o t la te r th a n 3 0 days a f te r publication Pre-pa id kills receive c re d it slip if requested a t tim e of cancellation, and if a m o u n t e x c e e d s $ 2 0 0 S lip m u s t be presented fo r a re o rd e r within 9 0 days to be valid C redit slips are non tre n s fe rra b le In c o n s id e r a t io n o f th e D a ily T e x a n 's a c c e p ta n c e o f a d v e r t is in g c o p y f o r publication, the agency and th e adve rtiser w ill indem nify and save h a rm le ss , Texas S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s and it s o ffic e r s , em ployees, and a g e n ts a g a in s t all loss, • a b ility , d a m a g e , a n d e x p e n s e o f w h a ts o e v e r n a tu r e a r is in g o u t o f th e c o p y in g , p r in tin g , o r p u b lis h in g o f its adve rtisem ent including w ith o u t lim itation reasonable a ttorney's fees resultin g fro m claim s of suits fo r libel, violation of rig h t of p riv a c y , p la g ia ris m a n d c o p y r ig h t and trad em a rk in fringem ent 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. 36 0 - Furn. Apts I 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL PRELEASING EFF/1 BDRM 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 8-7-20B .D A L S O : T o w n h o tn « s . c o n d o s , THREE OAKS & PECAN SQUARE A P A R T M E N T S • 1 BDR/1 BA • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Community Atmosphere • On Shuttle • No Application Fee ■ Preleasing • On-site manager • Affordable deposit 451-5840 4 0 9 W . 3 8 t h S t. TRANSPORTATION 1 0 - Misc. Autos '70 TrwrvrA r n_ j j c '7 9 TO Y O T A C o ro lla 4-dr, 5-spd. A M /F M 4 6 9 -0 5 9 4 . 8-2-5B. cassette, A C . $ 5 0 0 , '8 4 H O N D A Prelude, g o o d c o n d i­ tio n , some cosm etic w o rk, $ 1 0 0 0 Pow er steering, sunroof. 4 6 7 -7 9 8 7 . 8-3 -5B M a rk , 80 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Cost!!! BUCK’S BIKES 92 8 -2810 RALEIGH TECHIUM mtn. bike $ 4 5 0 . Keith. 3 8 8 -9 6 5 2 . 8-8-5B M .'H w n . 'H m 2 0 0 - Furniture - Household FREE DELIVERY For UT Students! • TW IN SET w/FRAME $ 89.95 • F U tl SET w/FRAME $ 99.95 • QUEEN SET w/FRAME $ 139 95 $ 49.95 • 4 DRAWER CHEST $ 69.95 • STUDENT DESK $169.95 •SOFAS $129.95 • 5-PIECE DINETTE Centex Furniture Wholesale 661 8 N LAMAR 2001 S LAMAR 450-0988 445-5808 B eds, B eds, B eds The factory outlet lor Simmons, Sealy, Springaif We carry closeouts, discontinued cavers, & factory 2nds From 50-70% off retail store prices All new, complete with warranty Twin set, $ 6 9 . Full set, $ 8 9 Q ueen set, $ 1 1 9 . King set, $ 1 4 9 1741 West Anderson Ln. 454-3422 2 2 0 - Computers- Equipment Walk To Campus Now Preleasing One Block From Campus HOUSTON 2801 H e m p h ill P ark - 472-8398 DALLAS 2803 H e m p h ill Park - 472-8398 BRANDYWINE 2808 W h itis Ave. - 472-7049 WILSHIRE 301 W. 2 9 t h -472-7(119 G reat Locations! • Preleasing • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Central Air/Heat • 2 Blocks From UT • No Application Fee • 1BR/BA • On-site manager > Affordable deposits NEWLY DECORATED 2 B edroom Apts. A L L T H E A M E N IT IE S C om petitive Prices N O W PR ELEA SIN G 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 e n t s 'LUXURY AT REASONABLE PRICES 9 ! S E. 4 I s t ’ 4 5 2 - 6 5 I 8 1 BR & 2 BR Ceiling Fans On Shuttle Laundry Room Fully Furnished Pool Permit Parking On-site manager/ maintenance Vertical mini-blinds Affordable deposits R i o N u e c e s 6 0 0 W. 26 th 474-0971 302 W . 38th Street Fall leasing on efficiencies, 1 bedrooms and 2 bedrooms furnished. A ll appliances, pool, and laundry room. 1 /2 block to IF shuttle. Gas, w a­ ter, and cable paid. 453-4002 1 05 E .3 1 ST.- W a lk UT. Furnished e fficien cy. W a te r, g as stove and $ 3 9 5 /m o 3 2 8 -1 8 0 9 . heat p aid 8-7-20B. 1-1 & 2-2 furnished- c e ilin g fans- b alco n y- p o o l- la un d ry- w a lk to school !2 m o . lease. $ 4 5 0 + . AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . 8-8-5P-B FURNISHED EFFIC IEN C Y/ 1 bed C -N O TE COMPUTER co m p an y. room, id ea l for studen* G re a t lo­ $ 1 00 IBM la pto ps (convertibles), ca tion , vicin ity ?8th a n d N ueces also b a rg a in p e rife ra ls a v a ila b le . $ 4 9 5 /m o ., 9m o. lease. 4 4 7 - C a ll 2 5 8 -3 9 1 6 o r d .p .7 0 6 -3 0 5 6 3 1 1 7 8-7-5B . 8-7-5B. LARGE ? 2. Furnished. A il bills paid T W O BLOCKS UT N o rth . M a u n a Free co ble . N o rth Cam pus $ 8 0 0 K ai. 4 0 5 E. 3 1st $ 3 5 0 +E. 9 / 1 , 2-2 Furnished, covered p a rking . some sooner A pp t o nly 4 5 3 8 8 1 2 8-4-30B Free gas. $ 7 3 5 , AFS, 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 8 8-51 B 7-2 0-2 0 B .D Pre-leosing fo r fall starting at RANSPORTATION - SO SERVICE - REPAIR NTAL - 360 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 707-1396 #3 • 458-6185 #1 837-0747 #2 DYER TRANSMISSION & AUTOMOTIVE, INC. D o m e s tic & Im p o rts Transmission & Engine Overhaul 2425 W BEN W H ITE #3 A U STIN . TX 78704 822 5 N. LA M A R # 2 A U STIN , TX 78753 7513 N O R TH IH -35 #1 AU STIN , TX 78752 S P E C IA L IZ E IN FU E L IN JE C T IO N S Y S T E M S 2 0 % O F F ANY TRANSMISSION WE INSTALL A S IA N & IM P O R T S Aspenwood Apartments 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 j 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 •Covered parking • On-site management j A v o id th e Stress. S ta r t e a rly . - L ock in c u rre n t ra te s now ! LARGE 2 BEDROOM W o lk to campus. Pool and Laundry. Small, quiet com plex. Furnished o r unfurnished. Summer $ 4 9 0 , Fall $ 6 9 0 . Cavalier Apartments 307 E. 31st St. 451-1917. __________________ 7 -1 8-20B-D. HYDE PARK ONE BEDROOM $495 N ew furniture, ceiling fan. Large walk-in closet. N o pets. Los Arcos Apts. 4307 Avenue A 454-9945. 7-20-20B-D HYDE PARK FROM $ 4 1 5 FURNISHED A N D UNFURNISHED * D ishw asher/D isposal * P o o l/B B Q /P a tio /L a u n d ry /S to ro g e ‘ Resident M a n a g e r/O n IF Shuttle 108 Place Apartments 1 08 W est 4 5 th St. 4 5 2 -1 4 1 9 , 3 8 5 2 2 3 7 , 4 53 -2 7 7 1 _______________________ 8-1-20B.D AFFORDABLE & C O N V E N IEN T! Efficiencies- 1 block to campus, ABP, free ca ble , o ff street parking. D e co ra to r/lu xu ry furnishings, ceiling fans, controlled access, quiet at­ mosphere, on-site laundry, large fridges, a nd study desks. M a n y ex­ tras! $ 4 5 0 fa ll/s p rin g PARK AVENUE PLACE 4 7 4 -6 4 6 6 8-8-20B.B M A M A I S O N Luxury Dorm for W om en N o W a itin g List! 3 blocks to Cam pus Free cable, free o ff street parking, Security $ 3 8 0 0 all year 2 2 2 2 Pearl 4 7 4 -6 4 6 6 8-8-20B.B Call 471- 5244 to place your ad! W a lk/B ike Campus 3 2 n d at IH-35 (NE corner) Avalon Apartments Convenient to Engineering, Low, LBJ School, and a ll East Campus. 2 / 2 $ 5 9 5 a nd up 1 /1 $ 4 4 5 a nd up W a lk-in closets, ce ilin g fans, c a /h . 459-9898 or 476-3629 ___________ 7-26-20B-B PRELEASING EFF/1 BDRM HYDE PARK FROM $ 4 1 5 FURNISHED A N D UNFURNISHED D ishw asher/D isposal P o o l/B B Q /P a tio /L a u n d ry /S to ra g e Resident M a n a g e r/O n IF shuttle 1 08 Place Apertments 108 W est 4 5 th St. 4 5 2 -1 4 1 9 /3 8 5 - 2 2 3 7 /4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 MOVE IN SPECIAL $100 o f f 1 s t M O N T H W I T H T H I S A D WALK TO UT C A L L N O W ! R i v e r O a k s 4 7 2 - 3 9 1 4 3001 M e d k a llrlt’ M M M M M M H M |0 U cL icL icL ÍD JcL JclJ0 1 BRfrom $510 Large 2 5R from $735 $ t=ALt PPRELEASINGk Eff. from $425 % i 1 1 p Call Marquis p Management 3 !a 0 I North & West Campus 6 E E p i 472-3816 or 454-0202 Various Locations ID k b l a c k s t o n e 2910 Medical Arts St. - across from law school 2 bdrm - 2 bath only SUMMER RATE: $550 ALL BILLS PAID plus Free Cable! LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL Also Leasing Parking Spaces Furnished Unfurnished 4 7 4 - 9 5 2 3 fc S .A A -fc AA-fkS AA-ÍCS A*_k%i AA-KC *1 ¿ 8 ñ BURMESE P YTH O N , 2 B all p y­ thons, 4 0 g a l. critte rca ge . Stand a n d a ll accessories $ 4 5 0 O B O . 3 8 9 3901 8 7-5B M A T C H IN G Q UALITY PINE furn ture. D in in g set- $ 1 5 0 , C o ffe e / e nd tables- $ 1 5 0 , Dresser- $ 1 5 0 N ich tsta n d - $ 6 0 , W ritin g desk BLACK LACQUER dresser $ 1 0 0 . $ 8 0 A lso STRIPED S OFA $ 4 0 0 Earthtone queen sleeper sofa $ 1 2 5 . 4 7 2 -7 3 4 5 . 8-7-5B RCA 2 7 * TV, $ 3 2 5 . A m a no m i­ XL SOFA loveseat in excellen t con c ro w a v e , $ 1 2 5 . TV stand, $ 4 0 d itio n , cle an ,pa stel ye llo w . $ 1 2 5 Sony A / V surround receiver, $ 2 4 5 . 4 5 4 -2 1 0 3 after 10am. 8-3-5B. S ony 5-disc C D $ 1 2 5 . K en w o od cassette deck, $ 7 5 . Bose speak­ ers, $ 9 5 , Sony 3 00 -w a tt speakers, $ 1 5 0 4 9 5 -9 1 5 2 . 8 1-5NC Q UEEN WATERBED, $ 5 0 M atching couch a nd recliner. $ 7 0 . G o lf clubs ond bag, $ 35 . 4 7 9 -0 8 2 8 . 8-2-5N C. C O M P U A D D 3 8 6 D X 3 3 w ith M a th C o processor, S B G A (.2 8 -N I), HP Deskjet printer, F a x /m o d e m , all softw are. N e w d riv e , k e yb o a rd , Q ue e n mattress set $ 1 0 0 . Unas­ d ig ita l d is p la y case. $ 5 8 5 . 3 4 3 - 2 4 1 3 . 8-3 58 sembled teak desk stereo ca b in e t $ 5 0 . 4 7 2 -1 5 2 9 . 8-7-5B 3-PIECE BLACK lacquer b edroom e ach. C o m p ute r desk, $ 5 0 . O a k w / g o ld trim . Dresser, chest of o ffice desk, $ 6 5 . C a ll 2 8 2 4 6 2 3 sofa bed $ 7 5 . G lass circula r d ining tab le $ 5 0 . C a ll 4 7 4 2 9 9 5 8 8-5P d ra w e rs a nd n ig h tita n d . G o o d 8-4-5 B cond itio n $ 3 0 0 5NC 9 9 0 -0 8 5 5 8-2 DOUBLE FUTO N Sofa (b la ck w / m a h o g a n y finish) $ 7 5 . C o ffe e $ 4 5 . C a ll 3 0 2 -1 0 6 6 . Leave mes­ sage. 8-8-5B 1 T W IN bed 1 ye ar old, like new M U S IC SYSTEM, 2 B & W speak ers 6 0 0 series, $ 3 7 5 / e a . N A D re cie ver (7 0 5 ), $ 3 7 5 . S ony CD PINE B ED RO O M suite- trip le dress er w ith m irror, chest o f d ra w ers n gh tsta n d, king headb o ord, $ 2 5 0 2 4 4 -4 9 9 9 8 -8 5 B M U ST SELLI 2 5 * Toshiba TV BOOKSHELVES FOR sale, $ 2 5 / FULL SIZF bed 1 ye ar o ld $ 7 5 ; player, $ 1 0 0 7 9 4 2 8 0 5 . 8-8 5B IBM COMPUTER, c o lo r m onitor, tab le , $ 1 5 . W o rk s h o p /k itc h e n p rin ter, $ 2 0 0 D ig ita l p a g e r 4 7 3 shelves, $ 2 5 . 3 0 2 -4 1 8 0 . 8-3 5B 7 9 5 . 3 6 0 -5 5 6 7 . 8 2-5B 1 9 8 3 V W Rabbit, $ 1 0 0 0 . Red, runs grest 3 2 8 -4 8 7 6 . 8-4 5B. TOUR BIKE A ltie ri Record. Fxcei- le "t c o n d itio n , C a m p a a n o la hard $ 2 8 5 Panasonic VCR, $ 1 8 0 Q u+en fufon, b la ck $ 3 7 5 Every w a re , e xtra w heels. C o lle cto r's thing 18 mo» old-exce lle n t cond itém $ 9 0 0 / 0 8 0 C o ll 8 3 5 -2 1 8 5 . 8 8-5B tion condition. 7 9 4 -2 8 0 5 . 8-8-5B Cornerstone Place Apartments • Stackable Washers • Built-In Microwaves • Ceiling Fans • Covered Parking • Fully Furnished • 1-1 from $570 Leasing office at 2 2 2 2 Rio Grande 4 7 6 - 4 9 9 2 G a r d e n G a t e A p a r t m e n t s Great Roommate Plan Large 1 BR Starting at $620 Furnished Unfurnished W e s t C a m p u s Pool 5 Minute Walk to Campus Leasing o ffice at 2222 Rio G rande 4 7 6 - 4 9 9 2 Chaparosa Apartments 3110 Rad River C l o s e t o U . T . r) r l& i O R D E R B L A N K O r d e r b y M a l l , F A X o r P h o n e F A X : P .O . B o x D A u s t i n , T e x a s 7 8 7 1 3 4 7 1 -6 7 4 1 C l a s s if ie d P h o n e 4 7 1 5 2 4 4 I w o r d s S d a y s S Additional W ords....$0.25 aa 1 7 . 13 19 2 3 2 8 14 2 0 2 6 < 9 15 21 27 4 10 It . 22 28 5 1 1 I 7 23 2 9 6 12 18 2 4 3 0 lim ite d to p riv a te p a rty ( n o n -c o m O tte r m e rc ia i) a d s o n ly In d iv id u a l ite m s o tte re d for s a le m a y not e x c e e d $ 1 .0 0 0 a n d p rice m u s t a p p e a r in th e b o d y o t th e a d c o p y If ite m s a r e n o t so ld , fiv e a d d itio n a l In s e rtio n s win b e run a t n o c h a rg e A d v e rtis e ' m u s t c all b e f o r e 11 a m on th e d a y o f th e fifth th a n in s e rtio n N o c o p y c h a n g e (o th e r ^ re d u c tio n In p ric e ) is a llo w e d A D D R E S S . N A M E ..........................................................................P H O N E . C I T Y . ............................................................. S T A T E . . Z IP . Small, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks from Law, on shuttle, attractively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3S>K 474-1902 Starting from $490 ; R 0 p e R i y R E S I D E N T I A L L E A S I N G Austin’s Largest and Best F ree Locating Service FREE APT LOCATING! ALL SHUTTLE ROUTES- STIJDENT SPECIALS E F F ’S. 3 7 0 + 1BDRMS 3 9 0 + 2BDRMS 3BDRMS 4BDRMS 5 1 5 + 7 2 5 + 8 0 0 + lo ft», everything!!! Some with: Washer/dryers, fireplaces, weightrooms, hot tubs, tennis and volleyball courts. Fast-F ree-Friendly! Call Now! 4623030 P re le a s in g F o r F a ll FREI CABIE PV SHUTTLE TWO POOLS m 5 U m m E R RATES M m a d y o u c y b a u M M M M OASITE ÍAGAU h 1911 Willow Creek Dr. It 444-0010 H Professionally M anaged M by Da vis & Associates LEASING ONE & TWO BEDROOMS BEAUTIFUL HYDE PARK AREA A/C, HEAT, GAS & WATER PAID RED RIVER SHUTTLE, 2 POOLS 4 5 2 -0 0 6 0 _ ii= LE LE LE Ur |i¿ Lt lif Lif lü LH l¿£ LE LE L1- Ur LE I L A C A S I T A 2-1 $650 9 mo. I - 1 $5 2 5 9 m o . Swimming Pool Gas, heat, & w ater paid lo w utilities 4 7 6 - I 9 7 6 EPI I £ U= g L- £ £ _ _ M O V E -IN SPECIAL $ 3 8 5 + , effi ci# ncy, l b r / 2 b r . p o o l, quite), C A / C H , im m aculate, UT shuttle, Section 8 O K . 2 1 0 1 Elmont. 4 4 7 -6 9 3 9 7- 13-20B. H URRY! Newly remodeled apartments only minutes from campus, call HIDDEN V I N E S @ 453-0464 THE CRRRELLS S/taetauJ f - I S tix a iU iíe 'K C 7 V H ! * euper convenient location * recently refurbished * separate study areas * covered parking 472-3816 $100 OFF O n a 9+ m o . lease T h e A r ra n g e m e n t Lg I - 1,2-2, lofts & townhomes SR Shuttle at Front Door 2 I 24 Burton Dr. 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 ^ L e a s e l i n e \ • U T A rea • Ail Shuttles FREE Service J 467-7121 J& Two West C am pus 2/1 condos available for mid August move-in. $750 per month with $500 security deposit. Chelsea and St. Charles Condos. Agents welcome. Condo Joe 280-8333 C A SA G RANDE Now Leasing Eff’s (ABP) $450 M ’s from $450 • Furnished or Unfurnished • n ear U T • pool • laundry • parking • large rooms • On U T shuttle 1400 Rio Grande 474-2749 NICE PLACE TO CALL HOME ★ 1 -1 's fir 2- I 's re a d y fo r ★ G a s C o o k in g , Gas ★ G as, W a te r fir C a b le S u m m e r H e a tin g P aid ★ O n CR S h u ttle ★ $ 4 5 0 / $ 5 9 5 p lu s e le c . SANTA FE APARTMENTS I 10 I C layto n Lane 4 5 8 - 1 5 5 2 Furnished or Unfurnished HILLSIDE APARTMENTS 1-2 Bedroom s Cleon a nd Q u ie t A ll U tilities Paid 478-2819 5 1 4 D awson Road Just o ff Barton Springs Road 7 -2 1 -2 0 8 .B HYDE PARK 4510 DUVAL Bus stop, fan, no pets. EFF $420 1-1 $470 2-1 $ 6 5 0 708-9085 7 2 4-20 B D 2 4 2 3 T O W N ta k e C ircle . 1 B R / 1BA A ll bills p a id $ 4 5 0 /m o . C e ilin g fan, poo l, la u n d ry on site. C o nvenient to bus line, sh o p p in g . Barbara 8 9 2 -7 7 9 2 . 7 -24-20B O N UT shuttle, close to cam pus, la rg e e fficien cy, sp ecia l rate, $ 3 4 5 . N e w ca rp et, p a in t a n d tile 4 7 2 6 9 7 9 . 7-27-20B. M O V E -IN SPECIAL $ 4 2 5 + , n e w ly d eco ra te d 1 b r /2 b r, some h a rd ­ w o o d , q u ie t b u ild in g , A C , close to FREE RENT fo r TAs if yo u q u a lify shopping a nd shuttle, Section 8 O K . G re a t lo ca tio n nea r UT. C a ll 4 7 6 4 7 1 9 H a rm o n . 4 6 7 -8 9 1 1 . 7 - 1 3 - 20B. 4 7 4 4 7-27-20B. *CARING OWNERS* Beautiful, spacious Efficiencies, $ 3 7 0 + O n e bedroom s from $ 4 6 5 -6 2 5 Two bedroom s from $675-795 W e st Campus- UT area KHP, 476-2154, Personalized attention. $ 1 0 0 OFF first m o n th 's rent, la m a r / K oenig a re a . C o z y 1-1 s. A p p lia n ces, c e ilin g fan s, m in i­ blinds, p o o l, la un d ry room . W a te r and gas p aid . $ 3 9 5 . A p ril Realty 4 4 2 6 5 0 0 or 3 3 9 -6 4 7 1 . 7 2 6-20 B VERY CLOSE to ca m p us, E fficien­ cies a nd $ 3 9 0 , N ic e 7-26-11B D. 4 6 9 -9 0 7 5 . LARGE 1 and 2 bedro om s fro m $ 3 9 5 . Cee cable, new c arpet, p oin t _______________________ 7-12-20B-D. a nd tile. 9 2 6 -7 3 7 7 . 7-28-20B SU C A S A A partm ents, 1 0 9 C A LI 477-LIVE 2 4 -h o u r in fo ., a v a il­ W .3 9 th St., 6 5 0 s q .ft, IBR's. a b le A ugust 15th. 1-5 bedro om s Starting a t $ 4 5 0 /m o . F u rn ish e d / $ 3 9 5 -$ I 5 0 0 For fa x, c a ll 4 5 2 C a ll 4 5 1 -2 2 6 8 7- 5 9 7 9 (24hrs.). 7 -27-20B Unfurnished 19-20B. PRELEASING EFF/1 BDRM WEST CAM PUS 2 - M / 2 co nd o on sh uttle ,W a sh e r/D rye r, fire p la c e , HYDE PARK From $ 5 1 5 b alco n y, p o o l, $ 9 2 5 - 9 m o . lease. Furnished & U nfurnished 3 2 7 -1 1 5 0 , 3 2 7 -7 3 8 4 8 8-1 OB. D i sh w a s h e r/D i sposa I/B ookshelves RENTAL - 370 UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS ( l l o o d l u C c ^ f h a i t m e n t i 'J t a i u i e i \fo u n d in ( Woodla&e: • Four UT Shuttle Stops • Spurious One & Two Bedrooms • Ceiling Fans • Hike k Bike Trails • Sunrise I ake Views ’ not cStu'it enjoying Life at / i t f ( W o o d la L today? 4 4 3 6 3 6 3 Race On Over Preleasing For Fall I - Kxtra Large Efficiencies 1 *i Perfect For Koomniates Large 2-2\ 6 Blks From Campus 2 Blks From Shuttle Ml Bills Paid No Electric Deposit Prelease Now + C O A sh fo rd A p a rtm e n ts C all 4 7 6 -8 9 1 5 P o o l/B B Q /P o tio /la u n d ry /S to ra g e Resident M a n a g e r, on IF shuttle 1 08 Place A partm ents 108W. 4 5 th St. 4 5 2 -1 4 1 9 , 3 8 5 -2 2 3 7 , 4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 ____________________8 -7 -2 0 B.D SMALL, CLEAN, & QUIET COMPLEX 1 Bedroom 650 $q ft $380 Located ot 7033 Highwoy 290E The M ayfa ir Apts. 9 2 6 -6 9 5 4 8-1-20B .D C H A R M IN G 1-1'S a n d e fficie n cie s in the h ea rt o f H yd e Park M a rq u is M a n ag em en t 4 5 4 0 2 0 2 8 2 20B GREATEST 2 bed ro om on shuttle 2 / 5 F'ee c a b le access g a te , p oo l 9 5 5 6 8-1-5P-B $ 5 8 5 - $ 5 9 5 , AFS, 3 2 2 Q UIET, S PA CIO US 1 BR W / D conn ectio n s separate d in in g , w a lk m, storage shuttle $ 4 3 5 . C a ll 4 4 7 -7 5 6 5 . 8 3 -5 B-D AFFORDABLE. 1 B IO C K T O C A M ­ PUS W a lk to UT 2 -1 . Free c a b le , p a rkin g 4 7 4 6 4 6 6 8-4-10B B A il a p p h a n c e , $ 6 0 0 GREAT DEAL South shuttle! 1-1 $ 4 5 5 la rg e b alco n y- p oo l- ten n is AFS 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 8-8-5P-B G IG A N T IC U W . , t $ 5 3 5 , 12m o le ase Free gas covered p a + m g Built- in desk AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 8 ^ 5 P * RENTAL - 360 FURNISHED APARTMENTS A Píocí Ywi Cun Caff Hnm! Page 8 Tuesday, August 8. 1995 T h e D a il y T e x a n $7© - U«L Apts. SCX IT*. SMi $ 6 5 0 4 ’' c ' Ho* M*$ M* F-F-5c -f GRÍ *~f5 3 9 0 - Unf. D u p l e x e s 1008 WEST 25TH W e st o f ^ a —six $ l & r / I B o A v a i l a b l e 8 1 9 5 W c * e p a d - $ 4 5 0 C a n H e le n 454-6*i’' c c r 452-0071 M , spa ft- *>g system "*ec S* Ec WC--OS 20"0 0 “‘ ce^ng^cns Vv 0 1 *cot.c $595 - uttl * es No DOls N ic e ¿rote* ^Qwi *>ory access pc*e $450 ♦ut “■es ** 3 3 1 5 - 2 9 0 3 Ov> ~e- Aae~ 400 - Condos* T ow n h o m e s C O F F E E i i i n m i i a i f g Benchmark Centennial Chelsea Croix Delphi Hyde Park Oaks Landmark Sq. Orangetree Stonesthrow Si. Thomas West. Univ. PI S775-1200 $1200-1300 S800 $650-1150 $900-1400 $650 $550 $6 50-1300 $700 $950-1200 S I 000 1100 M any Others Available! 2813 Rio Grande *206 474-1800 474-1800 THE VANDERBILT R u a ila b le N o lu S t a r t in g @ $ 9 5 8 spacious floor plans ’ microwaves ’ washer/dryers * covered parking * swimming pool/hot tub 472-3816 ‘ CARING O W NERS* luxurious! One bedrooms from $625-775 Two bedrooms Some hardwood floors, all fully equipped. KHP, 476-2154 Call for an interview: 445-3599, b / w 9am-4pm M-F. 8-4-5B f u d d r u c k e r T IS N O W H IR IN G M A ID N EED ED weekly for W o m ­ en's Dormitory ond other proper­ ties August very busy. 320- 7500. 8-3-58 8 . AIRLINES WILL TRAIN $ 9 .0 0 $ 18.00/hr. H IR IN G N O W ALL P O S IT IO N S For information call N o w ! (800J-508-5565 ext. a8422. _______________________________ 8-7-5 B. Activist Campaign Jobs for the environment. $200-300/w k. *Defend environmental law s 'M a k e a difference W o rk in fun atmosphere C a ll Kelly at 479-8481 8-7-20B L A W O FFIC E runner, Mon-Fri. af­ ternoons, must have reliable trans­ portation, M VR, ond proof of in­ surance. H e avy lifting involved. Allison & Associates, 208 W , 14th, Austin. 8-8-5B BELIEVE IN YO U R JO B Community organizers to help people fight for jus­ tice, clean up slum housing, and other issues. Bilingual a plus, F/T $ 1000/mo. 444-1207 Call 1 1 am-3pm 8-8 28 MICROFILM FILE CLERK Now hiring part or full-time. Flexible hours for students as well as increased hours offered for summer and other school breaks. No experience necessary. Please call 837-9847 AFTER 10am for appt. _______________________________ 8-7-3B. Part-time and Full-time positions N o experience necessary. G o od starting pay. W ill work with schedule. Casual atmosphere Apply in person. Monday-Thursday 2-4PM 4024 South Lamar. 7-26-5B THE CASTILLIAN Food Service is now hiring for line servers and dish­ washers. Deadline Aug. 16th. Call Stacy 478-1732. 7-31-12B. STEAK & Ale, 2211 W . Anderson Lane, now hiring for the following am/pm positions: hostperson, bus- person, dishwashers, servers, and cooks. A pply 4pm. 8-4-20B in person d aily 2» P O S S E EAST is now accepting ap­ plications. $ 6.00/hr. N o phone calls. See Eddy or Shannon, 2900 Duval. 8-7-8B. 9 0 0 - Dom estic- H ou se h old Creative Tutoring & Children Carpooling For family in Westlake area with 2 middle-school age children. 2 or 2:30 to 6 or 6:30p m., M-F, $6/ hr. Pick-up & deliver teenagers from school & afterschool activities, help with homework & evening meal. Must like teenagers, have ability to tutor, have references, own car, & good driving record Phone & leave message with name & phone number at 327-8689 9a.m. - 5p.m., or 327-3229 after 7p.m. or weekends. Respond A S A P since hiring prior to school. _________________ 8-7-10B SITTTER N EED ED after school for 12 yr.old. Southwest Austin, must have reliable transportation. M-F, 4-7pm minimum $5 25/hr. Call Peggy 288-0315 8-7-5B A F T E R N O O N CH ILD CARE for 2 cute kids, ages 4-1/2 and 7, M-F, 3 6p m Must have car Far W e s t/ M o p a c area. C all Barry or Susan at 331 1144. 7-31-108 CHILD CARE. M-F, 2 45-ópm starting August 21 Must enjoy C O U R IER C O M P A N Y seeking children, be non-smoking, have reli­ drivers. Morning and afternoon pa- able car, good driving record and sitions available. G o o d driving record and own vehicle required. references. C all 345-9732. 10 B. 8-1- RENTAL SERVICES 4 4 0 - Room m ates 750 - Typing EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part-time RENTAL 400-Condos- Townhomes D O M IN IO N w o b e d r o o m O n e b a t h N e a r a w s c h o o l Axn1 covered pa \ íg O N E B LO C K UT. 602 Elmwood C o o p Qu'et, friendly, nonsmok­ ing Decree share k fchen barh P r iv a t e bedroom $345- $445 •'Cades b s 7t ’ 9 ^-27 2CS-S five suppers 474- w o s h e r d ^ e r R O O M M A T E $750 C A L L ^ M T 4? 6-2673 ' 4 roe s í O B ? N 5 p l a c e A'* A LABLE N O W 2DA Cathedral Ce -gs -l*GE Kitchen $ 1050 C a l l p m t -i'o-26 ^3 S E R V IC E Looking or have a place UT I D discount Business since 1988 Served over 7 000 people Sam 482-9383 ___________________ 8-1 roe W E S C A M P U S on shuttle *ema*e 2 -1-1 /2 non-$mo*e' ease $40.. 50 me \ ~e 32 ’ "3 8 4 8-3 106 sha’ e »c f Resumes T P ip e n / Tbeses ’ Laser Printing 79< Color Copies Rnsto lobs W>el's Copies 1906 Goodoiupe St 47 2 -53 53 IS your RESU M E working hard for you? O R ’S it hard'y work'ng for you? W RITTEN W ELL C all JoAnn 8 3 6 6 5 7 5 O ne Page Resume $25 00 ’ 0 origináis with ©rtvelopes O ne Poge resume $35 00 20 ongtnols with envelopes Custcvrirre cover lexers ore $5 00 extrc ! $ 1 9 C A S H ! FOR NEW DONORS $ and earn up to ! ! I $ 1 4 0 / M O N T H , ' Iby donating twice a week j ■ f . ' . U L W . ' . H M EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part-time 790 - Part-time W A N T E D S A N D W IC H board per son able to handle busy lunch time and p-ep food Part-time 10a.m.- 2p m. C all M J . at 4 7 9 0 3 5 5 8-2- 5B HELP! IP you speak Spanish, Italian, Chinese, French, Korean, Russian, please call M r Cuba 930-5696 8-1-20B b e a t t h e f a l l J O B R U SH SALES FLOOR M A N A G ­ ER Seeking g rad student for weekend sales floor m anage­ ment position in a retail book­ 800 - General Help W anted 880 - Professional IM MEDIATE O P E N IN G M O R N - ' HIRE-A-HORN rfie employment service for students IN G S A USTIN TEXAS Austin's N e w PARTY 94 7 is look­ ing for a morning host who can com­ W e need dependable people for municate with 25-34 women in a store. Public contact experi­ various full day (8-5) general labor music-intensive setting. N o shock ence required. Must be mature, dependable, if inter- sted at 5 0 7 W . 23rd street. Austin, TX. E O E and clerical assignments Long and jocks, no huge egos. W e need a short term If you have a M W F or communicator who understands the T-TH schedule or if you can work target Send your Tape & full-time, call 326-HORN (4676). Resume and references to: Dusty $6 .0 0 -$8 .0 0 /hr. Hayes, Program Director, KPTY Ra­ 8-8-58 8 1-20B-D. dio, 4301 Westbonk Dr., B-350, Q u ality infant/toddler center POLITICAL C O N S U LT IN G FIRM needs assistant teachers. Flexi­ needs office runners. 2 0 hours/wk. ble schedule. Prefer E C / C D $5.50/hr.+$.30/rmle Errands and M A N O S DE Cristo. Could you lend a hond? Help us tutor children, teach Eng/Span classes. 477-7454 Austin 78746. EO E N O PH O N E CALLS PLEASE. 8-4-108. 890 - Clubs- hours available to W esle y Davis @ 480-9315. Position available immediately; must be PT/FT $9 00/HR. C lip ads for us from your local papers. Flex, hours and locations. N o exp. req 1-809- 8-3-5B able to work during Fall semester 474-6905. Int'l LD Toll 8-7-48 8-10-5B SALES CLERKS N eeded Evenings and weekends. Apply in person (12-5PM) at Bressler's Ice Cream and Yogurt. 5 40 0 Brodie Lane. 892-2996 8-8-10B. C O LLEGE RU SH III Temporary position w/possibility for full-time work w/Austin Ameri­ can Statesman and XLEnt Marketing Deportment. Help needed for back to school newspaper campaign. Fun, entertainment, related. Perfect Restaurants C O U N T Y LINE O N THE HILL Currently seeking outgoing, energe­ tic individuals for cook, bartending, and cocktail positions. W a g e s + great tips. W ill train, experience not necessary Evening hours. Ask for Dee Dee 327-1742 R E S E A R C H S U B JE C T S for college students. ______________ 7-20-208 With your first generous students Previous experience donation of lifesaving plasma a plus. N e a r ER shuttle. E E O E . general office work; must have car. Please fax resume/cover letter with 8-36B (with this coupon). C all Helen or M a r y 478-31 13 7-' 4-206 5 o A Y j -RIENDIY FEM ALE ’ocmmotí» wc~»ec to 3 .2 house on O R A N G E ' R E E Sou*** > ae $300 me «fbiüs ? 9 c. -e e “ e-»c. v c. Jec ;e * $ 2 0 0 oeo s ', st se pets bur not ->gs (M o & d e $65 0 own a-v W / D alarm. 4 4 3 - N * faea-oo— <» s’. o *wo-s*cy\ ~353 8-2-5B EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part time Choose from SIX paper colors an< ■ We require you bring with you. envelopes 8 1-201 I 'Social Secarity Cord 'Prool ol Residence I | ‘ Picture 10 (UT ID, T D l...) j P R O M O T IO N A L HELP AUSTIN PLASMA COMPANY, INC. I | J H ¡ w * 29th St. • 4 7 7 - 3 7 3 5 j N E E D E D c .\ - i * r aeo-ooM $O0 0 Two oec-cc- 2 ocr- shod 4 port r>g spoces teo cv fo --'>*» - $1400 C A L L P M T A"7 p-2673 S-r-ARE 3 : 2 N E W S o v - w e s 1 tom e oe—ec* for - o \ -e stuae-- M c Sep-M oy O X Nonsmcve no oets nc oa-v an - a s $400.. ♦ 2 sties 833-8604 8-4-5B " 4-208 S F EM A lE R O O M M A T E *o share 3 :®a* 2 / 2 W es* Campus condo KFORD -\4CE Sc- G e t ? condo— - — E** ci*ncy Cr-C oecs-aot- jto—- : Of $4'T5- . sc 4o®-0®25 -•18-208 $325 - o 6566 6-3-46 M e rc ia (210) 5 2 ' G RAD . A W STUD EN T shc-e 3 '2 no.se o' vote -oem bo*- off C a r ­ ero- Ro cc $35 0- r s pets OX B E ? U N “ Ni W E S T C A M P U S 1 3 BED RO OM / 3 BATH 459-4778 8-7-5B 4 ejects (ctM m d ) s.oer view eve- 400so -*ew corpe* • tchen and s glass e^vata- P o ce Ava c o e 8 / 2 0 $500 me covered g c,e c park -.g. 474-6256 88-5P 2409 .ec-- Cal W es Wo-e-s R e o 'v -< 3 4 5 - 2 0 6 0 . house Q u e* nonsmoking grod stud­ ent preferred. N o pets. C all BiH 459-3552 87-1 I P 7-18-206 $40 CASH/WEEK $160 PER MONTH Schedule Own Time • Extra Clean. State-of- the-Art Facility • Safe. Medically Super­ vised. Relaxing • Only 15 Minutes from UT Campus BIO MED A MEW High Tech P la sm a Facility Please Call for Appt. 2 5 1 - 8 8 5 5 HOURS: 8AM - 7 PM IH-35 & Pflugerville.Exit Bring this ad ■ Exp. 8/15/95 R O O M M A T E TO s-a*e Hyde Park West side IH-35 behind EXXON Part-time, for appearances at vari­ ous local night clubs $ 10-15/hr. Must be 21 and able to wear re­ quired uniform (dresses, etc.). For an interview, call 371-0815 9am I pm only, leave message. ________________ 8-3-3B PART-TIME $ 9.00/HR. Answer tel­ ephones. Flexible hours and loca­ tions. N o experience required. 1- 809-474-6799. 4B Int'l LD Toll 8-7- D A N C E TEAC HER wanted for bal­ let, jazz, tap, and preschool. Af­ ternoons ot Dancers’ W orkshop. 459-5766. 8-3-4B PR STUDENT: W o rk 20-30hrs/wk. W riting, promotions, special ev­ 454-0333, ext. 247, Texan Eye Center. 8-2-20B POLITICAL C O N S U L T IN G FIRM needs office runners 2 0 hours/wk. $5.50/hr, +$.30/mile. Errands and general office work; must have ca r. Please fax resume/ cover let­ ter with hours ovailable to W esle y Davis @ 480-9315. Position avail­ able immediately; must be able to work during fall semester. 8 hundred million dollar a year national com pany seeking part-time sales consultants for their home- security division in Austin, ‘ leads provided 'Excellent comp, plan and 'P a id training C all C ra ig Boutwell at 451-6629. __________________ 7-21 20B EXTEND-A-CARE FOR KIDS IN TERN SH IPS Part-time job opportunities: W e offer fun-filled, stimulating ex­ periences working with school-aged students, flexible hours and com­ petitive wages for qualified per­ with children, giving guidance and being a role model. A great op­ portunity for students interested in gaining hands-on experience working with children. Hours: 2-6:30p.m., Monday-Friday. O ur programs be­ gins August 14 through M a y '96. Positions/Salary: Group Leader $6 /hr Center Supervisor: $6 .75/hr. (Center Supervisor pos. limited) APPLY N O W AT: Extend-A-Care for Kids 55 IH-35 North Austin, TX 78702 O r Call 472-9402 for more info. sons. Responsibilities: interacting ents, N O SALES. C all G in n y at N E E D E D . Earn $5 and free gift for participating in 30 consumer research study. Must be UT student with valid I.D. (business students not eligible). Come to the Graduate School of Business, Room 5.171 on the hour between I 1-4, Tues., W e d ., or Thurs. 8-8-28. 800 - General Help W anted INTELLIQUEST Telephone Researcher Intelliquesf Inc , cn international market­ ing research firm specializing in the high-technology industry, is currently accepting applications W e have day, evening and weekend shifts As an Intelliquesf Telephone Researcher, you will gather strategic information for the top high-technology com panies in the U .S. Q ualified Candidates W ill Possess Excellent telephone communication skills * Team player attitude w ho is motivated Familiarity with computers and com­ puter technology 7-27-108 by a challenge EA SY W O R K .C A S U A L dress. M a n ­ * A strong desire for personal develop­ agement opportunities in advertising department. $ 6 /hr+ bonuses. 4 :0 0 ment and a willingness to learn * Typing skills of 25 words per minute * Previous marketing research experi­ 7-240B 8:30, m-f. C all Craig , 453-8782 ence is preferred ROOM M ATE W AN TED ! Responsible Maie/Fem ate to share FULLY FURN ISHED 2-2 condo. 1 3 5 0 S Q FTI 10 mil*, from compus. 1 yr lease. W / D firep ace ceiling fors, non-smoking, petiess 3 blocks to C ty (jus $380/m c +1 / 2 utilities + deposit. 8 7 3 - 0 0 2 4 , leave messaqe. AU STIN TELCO Federa. Credit Union has openings for the following positions: Part-Time tellers- previous cash handling helpful, will train; cepting applications for floor staff. Part-Time clerk to do filing and CRT input. Some experience preferred. A pply Norm. 7 27-10B in person. 6 40 6 IH-35 LIN C O LN 6 Tnecter is now ac between 2:00-4:00. 8-7-20P-B C A S H IE R /R E C EP T IO N IS T / FILE- CLERK needed for part-time after­ noon employment. Must have own transportation. Call A P W electronics at 442-7824, M-F, 10-4. 8-4-58 Pay range is $ 6 .0 0 to 8 .5 0 per hour ond p a id training is provided If your skills match the ab o ve description, please ap ply in person between 8:00am and 5:00pm Monday-Friday at 1700 S. Lamar, Suite 2 4 0 or call 447-6707 for more information. Equal Opportunity Em ployer Apply in person to 8929 Shool Creek Blvd., 3rd floor. Monday-Friday 9am-4pm. EO E. ______________ 7-13-30B. 8-7-5P. M A N A G E M E N T availab le for flyer P O S IT IO N S distribution. C all Chris 3-4pm, M-Th. 505- 2349. 7-31-10B PART TIME $9.00/H R . Answer tel­ ephones. Flexible hours and loca­ tions. N o experience required. 1- 809-474-6799 8-4-4B. 2 - 2 ¿t o t e L * coverea pork -g, 24 nr. security, LUXURY C AM PU S C O N D O O w ner/Fe—c e grad student seeks mmediate root--ate for semester, or longer W asner/D ryer, hreproce, pool, (ocuzzi, microwave, private phone line, oeauhfui semng $375 ABP 708-9928. ____________________________ 7-27-208 CITY-VIEW, TA LLISM A N Condos 1501 Barton Springs Road. Sp a­ cious 3-3, fireplace, microwove, garage, pool over 1,500 sq.ft. A vc able N o w 327-2011. 2BR/1 BA W A L K IN G distqnee to campus N e w ly renovoted. W est _ampus $ 8 0 0 /mo. 24 1 3 Leon (409)265-1570 8-1 Apt #103 108. bills 5 N C . 2/2 W / D , covered parking, new M / F G R A D U A T E student to share 2-1 near compus AJI utilities paid except electricity $340/m c 302-0865 87-3P FEM ALE STU D EN T in wheelchair needs part-time assistance with per­ sonal care, light housekeeping, ond errands on weekends. N eed own SHO RT W A L K UT. Typists (will train on M ac ), bookkeeping trainees, clericol, runners. N on­ smoking. 474-2032. 81-20B.B $ 1500/m o PERFECT O FF-CAM PU S 2/2.5 condo for non-smoking femóle. W / D, computer/printer, security, more Share a room. $275 +1/4 Kristin 385-4391. 8 -8 - car 476-7725. 7 - 3 M 0 B RO C KETS F O O D service hiring C H ILD CARE S EEK S active and en­ ergetic teachers. Com e work with usl 327-7575 . 87-10B. fost-food delivery drivers. Earn $7- 10/hr. Cam pus 476-7633. Ander­ son Ln. 453-7633 between 2-6pm 8-2-58. MPLOYMENT - 790 PART-TIME from $775-1200 $875 335-5814 8-3-5B carpet ng, two patios W estridge house ¡n N W Hills. Condominiums, 914 W .2 6 th 2 living areas, full kitchen with 2 B R / 2 B A B e n c h m a rk C o n d o , Ava able Aug 16th $1050 ________________ 7-12-208 0 S m a ll 1 B R / 1 B A , 3 4 0 0 SET O N A V EN U E S p e e d w a y , available Aug 17th $425 Pool patio, reserved parkina PLACE Huge 1-1 W est Campus $750 CALL PMT 476-2673 2 B R / 1 B A , 2 8 1 5 R io G r a n d e available Aug 22nd $630 Call Ming 258-6572 _______________ 84-38 LARGE D O W N T O W N condo safe clean, quiet, 2 /1 , prof/grod com- 7-14-20B.B pe< hike and bike trails near Auct­ ion.,- ihores $800 323-0670 6 8-106 2 BLO CKS from campus 2-1, washer/dryer fireplace, covered parking, microwove $ 75 0 * Tow er Real Estate, 322-9934 8-8-5P-B H O U S E M A T E N EED ED ^ to share 3 B R/2 .5 BA luxury town- washer/dryer F W shuttle route Swimming pool, tennis courts. $ 4 0 0 /mo.-f 1/3 utility 418-0596. 8-85B 490 - W anted to Rent-Lease Visiting Prof, w fe, and two child- ten need furnished 2 c r more bed­ room apartment, condo, or home for Spring semester Nonsmokers, no pets and compulsively neat C an pro* de references Contact Galen Sevcik at (520) 621 25 3 6 W , (520) 797 3579H, (520) 621-3742FAX, or E -moil at sev cikg©ccit arizono.edu 7-21-20B ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 2 0 - P e rso n als NORTH C A M P U S 1-1 ond 2-2, JO IN THE W ILD EST UVE PARTY walking distance G re at for low EY ER i Creek I* Out 24/hrs/day! and engineering students Tower Real Estate 322 9934 8-8-5P-B N ew . Exciting Dote ne. Sexy Ear tasies & Live Girls. Coll N o w l $240" to $550" Weekly! Fun, Fast-Paced Atmosphere Flexible Schedules: 9-1 • 1-5 • 5-9 Benefits Plus Bonuses 1-800*929-5753 Ip B WEB OFFSET PRESS (TRAINEE) TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS (1 position available) Job requires high school graduation or GED, loud working enviroment, heavy lifting, working with strong cleaning solvents and various other duties 19 hours per week maximum THE PADDOCK Huge efficiency with W /D Poolside, sport court Covered parkinq $450 CALL PMT 476-2673 7-14-20BB RIO GRANDE CONDOS ’ Split level Small, quiet complex 1 bedroom/ lbath $600 CALL PMT 476-2673 ST. JA M E S Furnished Designer Condo Vaulted Ceilings Tile Floor Covered Parking S90C CALL PMT 476-2673 __________ ________________ 7-14-206 B q u a d r a n g l e Huge 300 sq ft townhouse Two fireplaces cerormc nle skyfigh’s two pc* os custom x -cher- $1150 CALL PM T 476-2673 W F j „A M PUS and North G o — pus 1 1 $500 $900 2-2, $675 $1500 3 brs, $ 1 1 5 0 4 2 4 0 0 Tower Real Estate 322-9934 8-8- 5P-B W EST C A M PU S condo, 1-1,W / D covered parking, built-in desk, m crowave $495* AFS 322 9556 8-8-5P-B L O C A T E D E A S T o f I H 3 5 38 1 /2 . H u ge 4 b e d ro o m / 2 bath home Large yard , g ia n t trees H a rd w o o d floors, Lots of w in d o w s. Central h e a t/ air C arp o rt. N o pets A v a ila b le Sept 1 3 9 0 3 C h e rry w o o d . $ 1 5 0 0 Private Properties 5 0 2 - 0 1 0 0 8-8-9B HYDE PARK 2/1 hardwood floors, arge fonced yard, dogs ok w/de o o f $800 458-8916 8 84B SAFE C lE A N quiet 2/1 house iorge yard W / D poQ| with, study pn» eges Grad/prof community $850 323-0670 8-810B 4 2 S - Room s O N E BLOCK UT 602' Elmwood i7-14-2063 - a o o -c ^e**ree Quiet friendly, nonsmok- j 4 4 5 ^ J 3 4 5 . SUNCHASE 2 o e d rx - " 2 both $95C oe&r-z' '' s c — $ 6 5 0 C vaes hve suppers 474-2618 7 27-2088 RO O M $2 5 Utilities included Co# 472-2816 8 4 "Beootihd p o o l* ’Gate access* ’ Cowed porkmg * C A U PM T 476-2673 48 *t -'-3+-" - o n s h o re m als housamo d o * $366/m c -deposit, split K 4 W / D W a lk lo UT W e s t University Ploce * H j g e Befroot-s 2 / 2 :,oc* '" . g e Botcon . O n l y -ONE l£FT C A i L P M T 476-2673 7 14-20» • G i f A T ' 3'# XT* r-g-cars* C— piu» coroc- 2 ~ *e-cc-*«- e-- $975 122 955 6 U V I - fox fem ale pre- ’e - e c 2 j- 4 : 2C 86-5E 4 3 5 -Co-op, __ o r * S iO C K UT 602 Elmwood - x * Gfe-e- ae* -ee •'onsmotung, *c*e oeoroom. ^ a r« *«c*er >3+ $345-$445 nctuoes & 4s • •« : -Coe's ' 4* 206 t 474-2618 7. As Low As $0.35/m in 18- I 809- 474-2814 717-16P $7.81 per hour 5 6 0 - Public Notice SECRET H ID E A W A Y for romantics Dabbs Hote est 1907 on Llano River near Enchanted Rock (9 1 5)2477 905 8 7 20B 5 9 0 - Tutoring Work hours are 10:00 pm to 1:30 am or 2 am to 5:30 am Sunday-Thursday. Apply in person at the TSP building (25th & Whitis): M A R V IN O 'N EA L 471-5422 or 471-7835 10 pm - 5:30 am Sunday thru Thursday. • reseorch papers nfi s**1 • elementary grades through college PUT IT IN W R IT IN G 4 8 0 - 0 6 3 6 TU TO R IN G • T U T O R I N G • R E V I E W S O PEN 7 D AYS tit Midnight. Sun.-Thur _ S in ce 1980 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 ^ ■ IH 2 E IflN I 750 - Typing The University of Texas at Austin is an Equal O pportunity/Affirm ative Action Em ployer S22222Z2ZZ2ZZ2ZZZ2ZZ - * w * *— MEN AGES 18 to 40 I Up To $600.00 Compensation | Are you a healthy, non-smoking man between the ages of f| 18 and 40? If so. you may qualify to participate in a jj pharmaceutical research study and receive up to |j $600.00. 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, August 18 Friday, August 26 Check-Out: Sunday, August 20 Sunday, August 28 To qualify you must pass our free physical examination and tests. M e als, accom m odations, entertainment, and recreational activities will be provided screen ing |j For more information, please call 4 6 2 - 0 4 9 2 2707 HEMPHILL PARK P H A R M A C O : : L S R )rrrrrrrrzrTTrry^rrrrTTrrrrrrrryr7-. "O mor* pets ok w »-®ave messaqe 8-7-58 Z I V L E Y Th# Complete T ypwig Serv** O O m F O i r s $250/mo cov Use of W /D T « * " r L , C A T , ° N S ■ m u « T A T IO N b r . f c o ^ * " O C f 8 b t N t , L A S E R P R I N T IN G • F C W M A T T IN 6 | free of charge. - '4-206 B 420 - Unf. H ouses EDUCATIONAL N O W H I R I N G S E C U R I T Y O F F I C E R S Having a hard rime making end meet ’ Need extra income without sacrificing your G P A to get it? If so. we have the perfect job for you!' At Zimco we offer: • Full & Part Tim e Positions • • Evening & N ight Positions • • Study W h ile You W ork • * C ar N ot Required • • School Holidays O ff • • N o Experience Necessary • • Uniform s Provided • C A L L 343-7210 N O W ZIM C O S E l I HITY CONSULTANTS License * K 01910 Now Hiring FALL RUSH $5 HR. Abel s Copies 1906 Guadalupe 472-5353 INTERN/CLERK National Democratic consulting firm seeks student for fall internship in­ volving light clerical and some re­ search. Familiarity with Austin for daily courier runs helpful. Daily hours of 12-4p.m. preferable but flexible. $5.00/hour plus parking. Apply in writing to Personnel P.O . Box 684243 Austin, TX 787 68 E.O .E ________________________________ 8-7-58 fL A G FOOTBALL officials needed! Austin Parks and Re­ W ill train. creation. Start $ 10/per game. 480-3015. 8-3-10B START TO D A YI Flyer distribution, jobs availab le. $5/hr.+bonuses. ($6-10 per hr.) C all Chris, 3-4PM, M Th. 505-2349. 8-3-20P. A F T ER S C H O O L C A R E for 2 child ren 2:45-5:45. $5.00/hr. Trans­ portation and references required. 459-9389 8-3-4B $6.00-$7.50/HR. ParMime evening positions available in fun, friendly environment doing radio market research (no sales or soliciting). W e are located at Congress and Riverside. (Fluent in Spanish helpful but not necessary ) Call Sun-Thurs after 4pm. 707-7010, Ask for Lindell. _______________________________ 8-7-2B. PART-TIME SA LES Sheshunoff Information Services Inc. Sheshunoff, the leading supplier for financial information, professional publicat.ons, and regulatory report­ ing software to the bank, S&L, and credit union industries, is currently hiring for part-time, inside business- to-business sales Excellent commu­ nication skills necessary. Previous sales experience helpful. W ee kd a y morning or afternoon shifts working appro» 15-30hrs/wk. Starting pay ot $8/hr. Please send resume and preferred work schedule to: Direc­ tor of Client Sales Sheshunoff Information Services Inc. P.O . Box 13203 Austin, TX 78711-9969 Fax (512) 476-1251 ★ Call 451-6544 for information. 8- 7-5B COLLEGE STUDENTS needed for low-key appointment setting Evening shift Base pay + commission Daily cash bonuses. Up to $400 weekly Call between 3 & 9 pm 467-8584 ask for Ron 8 1 0 - Office-Clerical SHO RT W A L K UT. Typists (will train on M ac), bookkeeping trainees, clerical, runners. N o n ­ smoking. 474-2032. 8-1-20B B Telem arketing $7 hr. + comm. 9-1 • 1-5 • 5-9 $ Call Dee $ 832-5331 EXCELLENT PART-TIME jobs. Af­ ternoon and evening hours in a gyne­ cologist's office. 250-1812. 8-7- 10B 8 2 0 - AccounHng- Bookkeeping SHO RT W A L K UT. G a in experi­ ence with M a c bookkeeping sys­ CH ILD CARE N EED ED , summer and after school for 2 great girls. Cen­ tral Austin Transportation and ref­ erences needed 453-4168 5B. 8-3- FEMALE CARETAKER/ HELPER N EED ED M onday and Thurday afternoons on W estlake area for 9 and 7 year olds W e 'll consider additional hours Must have own transporta­ tion, be a nonsmoker, and willing to help with laundry and ironing. Hours somewhat negotiable, but prefer l-6pm. $7/hr. Call Kim, 327-7477 _ _ _ _ _ ^ __________ 8-4-5B $17 50 W E E K L Y possible mailing our circulars. N o experience re­ quired. Begin now For info call 301-306-1207. 6-6-48P U.S. G O V T . JO B S Hiring N ow : 100's of Entry Level Openings Up­ dated Daily. C all Toll Free 1(800) 549-2300 Ext # 3014 7-19-20P W O R K O N Campus, Nowhiring for Fall semester, Food concessions, flexible hours, dependable workers needed Previous experience help­ tem Also hiring typists, clerical, CH ILD CARE N EED ED for children runners. Nonsmoking. 474-2032. 8-1-2 0 B.B of conference attendees visiting Austin Aug 17th-Sept 6th C all PART-TIME. BO O KKEEPER-COM - Lauren 444-4741. 8-3-5B PUTER literate 15hrs. per week. C O O K / H O U S E K EEPE R in ex­ Flexible hours. G o od location. change for room and board. N ice Quality company. C all 306-1209. &4-5B family and home. Flexible part time hours. Must have own car. PARTTIM E B O O K K E EPER /PER Call 346-7444 8 3-5B S O N A L .assistant needed for fast- PRIVATE R O O M / B O A R D +minimal paced remodeling company. M a c ­ rent in exchange for help with fami­ intosh computer/Quicken knowledge necessary. Flexible hours. 794- ly N ice home by campus. 329- 5881. 8-3-5B N o weekends. ful. 1367. 7-25-19B C all 477- 8604 8-7-20B 8 4 0 - Sale s GREA T JO B for students! M ake up 6p.m. at 327-2341 8-7-2B your own hours Unlimited income. For details, call 832-8776. 8-7-5B 8 7 0 - M e d ical sport-specific resistance programs C H IR O P R A C T IC / M ED IC A L office Early morning, evening, and wee­ assistant part-time afternoons, com­ N o phone calls please, A A / E O E ________________________________8-7-5 B PART-TIME EM PLO YM EN T available with in-house ad agency. Flexible hours, entry level wages. Duties include: mechanical paste up, running errands, color copier, heavy :: IRO N SM ITH BOD Y, IN C. invites applications for the position of "professional" sports and fitness trainer. Experience needed in teaching, designing, and implement­ ing general health, fitness, and clerical, answering phones, and minimal computer work (Mac) Submit resume to: P.O . Box 9989 Aust n, TX 78766 or fax 454- 1801 Attn Advertising Great job for students. ____________________8-7-58 C H ILD C A RE 3-6pm daily after school kend work is required Qualifica­ tions Must have or be working on Bachelor's degree in health related field, C P R. certification. You must possess attention to detail, or­ ganizational and administrative skills, ability to communicate effec­ tively, both orally and in writing. You must be energetic, hard work­ m W estlake home for two boys ing, disciplined and excited about ages 6,9 beginning 8/14 Must working one-to-one and with groups have reasonably safe car, good driving record, experience with children, references. $6.00/hr, including mileage. Larry or Amie. 327-8471 or Larry Smith, work- 322-9951 of people who have a range of general health, fitness, and sport- specific goals. Submit letters of application, 3 letters of recom­ mendation, resume, income history to: Sarah Scott, President _____________________________ 8-8-20B. (512) 454-4766 UT AREA childcare center hos part- ___________ 7-28-20B B time teacher atde positions avail­ RESEA R C H FIRM seeking P/T em able. Experience preferred. C all University Presbyterian Child De­ ployees M-F W ill train. C all 329- 8 1 4 ! 8 2-58 velopment Center 472-4984 82B 8 EMPLOYMENT - 800 GENERAL HELP WANTED HEALTH CONSCIOUS MEN NEEDED FOR SEMEN D O N O R S'! IF YOU APE BETWEEN 18 AND 35 A N D WOULD lIKr lO TARN TXfRA M O N E Y IN A C O N F I D E N T I A L , P R O G R A M , G IV E US A CALL. FfilRFfiX CRYOBfiNK 473-2262 openings for programmers to work CH ILD CARE N EED ED for infant. on new and exciting 3D games for Full-time help desired, but will con­ the PC, Macintosh, Sega Saturn, sider part-time C all Brenda at and Sony Playstation C program 447-7295 or 472-1213. 8-8-5B PR O F ES S IO N A L W O M A N seeking after-school (4p.m.-7p.m.) help for 2 girls, M-F. Please call after CHILD CARE N EED ED , two boys, 2 and 4 Home north of UT. Friday 59pm , Sat. 9-2pm $5.50/hr. References, nonsmoker, transporta­ for tion, interview, commitment academ ic year required. C all 3- 5pm, M-F. 3 2 0 0 9 3 0 . 8-4-58 W ESTLA K E P R O FESSO R housecleaner 4 hours every other week ($40) Must have car. C all 328-4748. (7-10PM) 8-4 3B A F T E R S C H O O l N A N N Y in Lake w ay area Supervise homework and help start family meal Approx­ imately 3-7pm, M-F. Transporta­ tion and references required. Call 892-9240 for additional tion. 8-75B informa­ A F T E R N O O N BABYSITTER needed for 9yr old girl M -W TH, 3-5pm C ar and references required Call 444-3808 8-8-4B S E E K IN G IND IVIDUAL for after school childcare North Central Austin. Children ages 9 & ] 1 Hours are 2:30-5:30, M-F begin­ ning August 14th. Transportation and references required. $6/hr 452 1168 8-8-4B Salary CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE YOUR SUPER LONGHORN WANT AD puter experience. 10-15 hrs/wk Call Betty at 480-8889 8-7-58 8 8 0 - P ro fe ssio n al Authors of Terminal Velocity and Microsoft Fury have several job ming skills are required, and the fol­ lowing experience is recommended 80x86, 68K, C++, M FC, W in d ­ ows Company is located in suburb of Dallas, TX. Please send resume and/o r demo of your work to: Personnel M a n a g e r P.O . Box 2 9 3 2 9 7 Lewisville, TX 7 50 29-3297 O r fax at: (21 4)221-2059 7-I4 20B ADVERTISING M arketing/Advertising student needed to prepare marketing packag es for local construc­ tion/contracting firm. Some computer skills wordperfect, exp needed Part-time 10-20 hrs./wk 4001 M a n c h a c a Rd or Fax resume 440-0705. _______________________________ 8-2 5B TO PLACE AN AD CALL 471-5244 T he D aily T exan Tuesday, August 8,1995 Page 9 Rangers: Angels stop Texas 9-2 Continued from page 10 Horns: Freshmen report to UT Continued from page 10 makes, that's probably the turning point of the gam e/' Lachemann said. Harkey (7-6) was glad for the defensive boost. "All that helps out and makes it possible for me to throw a complete game," Harkey said after going the distance for the fourth time in 100 career starts and helping the Angels gain a split of the four-game series. "It's really nice when you can go out there and challenge hitters to hit the ball, especially when you've got the kind of defense we have. Our defense is as solid as any defense could be, especially in the outfield." In the fourth, Ivan Rodriguez reached on a two-out infield single up the middle and contin­ ued to second on shortstop Rod Correia's errant throw. But Anderson, a rookie left fielder, went full-speed to run down Tettleton's drive in the alley. Phillips made it 6-0 in the bottom of the inning with a two-run shot, giving him 18 homers and leaving him one shy of his career- high total last year with Detroit. Two batters later, Salmon chased Taylor with his 24th homer and sixth against Texas this year. Harkey won his third straight start, allowing six hits, including Greer's eighth homer with a man on in the seventh inning. said. Harkey, who walked one, got through the sev­ enth inning for only the second time in his 16 starts this year, including 12 starts with Oakland. Edmonds, robbed of a home run by left field­ er Lou Frazier's leaping grab in the third inning, hit his 23rd homer in the seventh off reliever Mark Brandenburg. Scott Taylor (1-2) lasted only 3% innings in his third major league start, allowing seven runs and nine hits with four strikeouts and a walk. tom anterior crutiate ligament last spring. In year's past, Texas fans have criticized the H orns' running back by committee. The new crop of backs may mean that could continue, although now it would be because of a wealth of talent. "It's a nice problem to have," Rodgers The class' speed, however, is not just in the backfield. Many of the positions have added speed. "I'd like to think that at Texas we favor speed, but we also have size," defensive coordinator Gary Darnell said. "I think the mobility of this group may be up from other years." In the next few days before the veterans report on Thursday, the freshmen and two juco transfers will work on drills and learn the system. "The main thing is to give them confi­ dence in the system, and have them play with confidence," Darnell said. "When they come here, their confidence gets attacked. We want that confidence to grow back again." Many of the players could be thrown into the fire during this season. Since head coach John Mackovic's arrival four years ago, freshmen have consistently seen action. This class should continue that trend, and could have the most impact of any of the classes during the Mackovic era. Many of the new linebackers, which include Dusty Renfro, Brandon Nava, Matt Jones and Anthony Hicks, could step in-early in the season. The linebacker corps struggled a year ago and was plagued by an unbelievable num ber of injuries. Opposing running backs rum ­ bled for more than 200 yards three times in 1994. Renfro and Jones could both see an abundance of playing time. Other impact players include defensive lineman Clarence Martin, who could bid for a starting role, and Derrick Lewis, who could see some time at tight end. One player certain not to get m uch playing time is quarterback Marty Cher­ ry, who is stuck behind sophomore James Brown and redshirt freshman Richard Walton. But that doesn't seem to bother Cherry, for now. "I've been waiting a long time for this," Cherry said. "I've been wanting to be a part of this program for four or five years." Buy O ne D inner & 2 D rinks & G e t 2 n d D inner FREE lOoz MARGARITA SPECIAL $2.00 Sat. thru Thurs. ALL DAY, Fri. 1 lam-7pm _______ Mariachis on Thursday 1816 S. Lamar (Near W. 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Coop (2901 Medical Arts @ 26 th St.) 479-6911 expires 9/1 95 I ¿ 1 ■ 9 l i Have a “Super” Look Everyday • CD's • Buy • Sell • Trade • CD's 10 T h e D a i l y T e x a n TUESDAY, AUGUST 8,1995 SPORTS Freshmen football recruits usher in careers at Texas TEXAS FOOTBALL '95 highly heralded runners, all of w hom have an o p p o rtu n ity to m ake an im m ediate impact. Runners Shon Mitchell, Ricky Williams among newcomers to report M ARK LIVING STON Daily Texan Staff A fter a long wait, highly touted running back Shon Mitchell reported to the Texas ca m p u s M onday afternoon. His slow arrival, how ever, sh o u ld n 't be an indication of his running style. Mitchell, w ho w as one of 19 recruits to report to UT's Jester Center, finally became a Longhorn after spending the last two sea­ sons at Blinn and Coffeyville junior colleges. H e com m itted to the H orns tw o years ago, but he w as academ ically ineligible to play as a freshman. Mitchell has attained his eligi­ bility, and Tuesday will practice as a Long­ horn. The form er LBJ High School product could be the fastest of a recruiting class know n for its speed. “This is the fastest group w e've had in four years," said assistant coach and recruiting coordinator Randy Rodgers. "Speed is an area where we w anted to recruit, because it's hard for the strength coach to teach speed." The new com ers will hold their first prac­ tice at 11:45 a.m. T uesday at M em orial Sta­ dium and will return at 8 p.m. for another practice. Mitchell and three other running backs — Ricky W illiam s from San Diego, C hris Butcher from Longview, and Ricky Brown from Arlington — provide Texas w ith four With Mitchell, the H orns have a lighten­ ing fast runner. W ith W'illiams, Mackovic has his first p rototypical fullback w ith strength, speed and receiving abilities. Brown, a bruising back, and Butcher, who combines speed and strength from the tail­ back position, round out the corps of runners. This is a good year of opportunity for the four guys," Rodgers said. "It's a good year to be a running back because w e're thin at the position." The only veteran w ho is currently healthy is sophom ore Darrell Wilson. Last season's Sun Bowl hero, Priest Holmes, m ost likely will miss the entire season after suffering a Please see Horns, page 9 ■ Tuesday: Rookie practice, 11:45*12:45 at Memorial Stadium; 8- 9:45 p.m. at Memorial Stadium. ■ Thursday: Rookie practice, 9-11 a.m. at Memorial Stadium; Veterans report, 1-4 p.m. at Jester Center.____________ ■ Saturday: First full-team practice, 9:35-11~ a.m. at Whitaker Field; 4:35-6:25 p.m. at Whitaker Field. ■ Sunday: Practice, 4:35-6:35 p.m. at Whitaker Field. Smith claims M AR K LIVING STO N __________ Daily Texan Staff The m ost scrutinized ham strings in the country are ap parently feeling fine. D allas C ow boy ru n n in g back E m m itt Smith, w ho did not play in S a tu rd a y 's preseason loss to the O ak la n d R aiders because of a "twinge" in his ham strings, said he could have played in the gam e if head coach Barry Switzer had not held him out. “M y legs w ere sore, not tight," Sm ith said after a busy practice. "If I th o u g h t playing w ould p u t me in jeopardy, I w o u ld n 't play. I felt I could have played Saturday." Smith, w ho w as plagued by ham ­ string injuries during the 1994 regu­ lar season and playoffs, has refused to talk about his off-season condi­ tioning an d ham strings. Coaches, how ever, have praised his off-sea­ son conditioning, w hich w as driven by desire to avoid m ore ham string injuries in 1995. ■ D allas w ide receiver M ichael Irvin and Sm ith said they're best friends, som ething that has been tru e since the tw o players room ed together d u rin g S m ith's rookie sea­ son. “We are very sim ilar in every­ thing," Irvin said. “W e're both Flori­ da boys, w hich is an autom atic con­ nection. N ow , w e're b o th D allas Cow boys. The only difference is that he likes golf." MICHELLE CHRISTENSON Daily T e x a n Staff Cowboys running back Emmitt Smith (22) has repeat­ edly refused to answer comments concerning his ham­ strings — until Mon­ day. a DALLAS COWBOYS W TRANNG CAMP REPORT Sm ith agreed, saying the spend hours talking to each other. tw o "W e're alw ays getting on each other," Smith said. “Like if I get tackled, he'll come over and tell me that Barry Sanders w o u ld n 't have fallen on that." Irvin said that Sm ith can beat Irvin at golf, but that Smith alw ays loses in the players' other pastim es: pool and Sega Genesis. "I alw ays beat him at those things," Irvin said. “O f course, he'll say he alw ays beats me. "Since w e started w inning Super Bowls, w e h a v e n 't been able to spend as m uch tim e together. T hat's w hy training cam p is special. W e're alw ays aw ay d uring the off-season. W hen y ou're a Dallas Cowboy, the off-season is busier than the regular season." A ccording to Irvin, w ho is the team 's vocal and em otional leader, the closeness of the team is the strength of the team. “It's not just Em m itt that I'm close to," he said. “Daryl Johnston, I love that guy. I love Jay Novacek. I love Troy [Aikman], W e're all close, and th a t's w hat sepa rates us from the other teams. "W hen one of the guys leaves us because of free agency or som ething, he'll alw ays tell us that the Cow boys are closer. W e'll talk to them in the other locker room, and they all have the sam e thing to say — 'It's not the same, it's just not the sam e.' A nd I'll say, 'I told you so.'" Irvin said that m any of the form er Cow boys w ho leave because of free agency are still C ow boy s in his m ind. Kevin Gogan, w ho left for the O akland Raiders in 1993, said Irvin still talks to him about his days play­ ing for Dallas. "[Irvin] alw ays tells me, 'Y ou know , y o u 're a C ow boy,"' G ogan said. "H e says I will alw ays be a C ow boy." ■ Sw itzer said he is pleased w ith his d e p th at cornerback, w here Larry Brown and Kevin Sm ith are the starters, and Clay­ ton H olm es the backup. A lundis Brice, a fourth-round pick, has also im p ressiv e cam p. Even had an S w itzer, how ever, c o u ld n 't talk about the secondary w ithout m en­ tioning you know who. "Deion [Sanders] w ould m ake it look a lot better," said Switzer, refer­ ring to the highly touted free agent w hom the Cowboys are trying to lure. ■ The C ow boys M onday after­ noon practice w as cut an h o u r short by a rainstorm . The team w orked out for nearly 40 m inutes in the d ri­ ving rain. ... T raining cam p has attracted 58,128 fans to St. E dw ard's ... The C ow boys resum e tw o-a-days on Tuesday. — With Associated Press reports Record-setting day at World Championships Associated Press Jonathan. GOTEBORG, S w eden — Believe it, Jonathan E dw ards, the u n assum ing British triple jum per w ho finds it h ard to believe w hat he has accom plished, sm ash ed the w orld record tw ice at the W orld C ham pionships. In shattering the m ark for the first time, E dw ards becam e the first jum per to surpass 59 feet, his previous record, by soaring 59-7, on his first attem pt. On his second try, he surpassed the magical 60-foot barrier by a qu arter of an inch. After those efforts, the first tim e anyone has broken his ow n triple jum p record tw ice in the same m eet since Brazilian A dhem ar Ferreira da Silva did it d uring the 1952 O lym pic final at Triple ju m p e r Edwards breaks world m a rk twice Helsinki, the shaken E dw ards passed twice. H e then com pleted his rem arkable series by jum ping 57-4 . before again passing. It is difficult to take in," E dw ards, 29, had said after first setting the record of 59 feet at Salamanca, Spain, breaking Willie Banks' 10- year-old m ark of 58-11 . "In my m ind, there is still a distance betw een w hat I read about and w ho I am. "People are com paring m y perform ances to those of Bob Beamon and Butch Reynolds, and that feels very odd because these are legends in the sport, And this is just me. It's quite h u m ­ bling to do w hat I've done." O nly a year ago, E dw ards, the son of a churchm an, w as hardly close to being a leg­ end. In fact, he w as very depressed after being afflicted by the Epstein-Barr virus. The illness, w hich causes m ononucleosis, interfered w ith his training and continued to affect him until March. "The w hole spectre of post-viral syndrom e w as hanging over m e," E dw ards said. "I felt low physically and m entally. All I w anted to do w as re-establish m yself this season." He has re-established him self w ith am azing authority. On June 11, he broke Keith C onnor's 13- year-old British record of 57-7':-, leaping 57-8'/i O n June 25 in the European Cup at Lille, France, he surpassed the w orld record three times, including a rem arkable 60-5 /2, but each jum p w as w ind-aided and unable to be accept­ ed as w orld m arks. He did, however, have a legal 58-1 , another British record. W hile E dw ards w as celebrating, Olympic and defending w orld cham pion Mike Conley w as struggling. H e finished seventh with a w ind-aided 55-7%. E dw ards' tw o records overshadow ed the day s other finals, including G wen Torrence's victory in the w om en's 100 m eters in 10.85 sec­ onds and Dan O 'B rien's third straight world title in the decathlon w ith 8,695 points, the y ear's best score. Angel bats send Rangers reeling, drop Texas to 11 games behind U Its really nice w h en you can go out Associated Press there and challenge hitters to hit the ball.” ANAHEIM, Calif. — Even w hen the California Angels have one of their big offensive perform ances, they p refer to call atten tio n to som ething besides their big bats. J.T. Snow, Tony Phillips, Tim Salmon and Jim E dm onds all home- red as California beat Texas 9-2 M onday, but the Angels w ere m ore proud of their defense and Mike H arkey's com plete game. "T he hom e runs are great," m an­ ager Marcel Lachem ann said after w atching his team hit four hom ers for the fifth time this season. "B ut I think the im portant thing we did today w as play good defense." The Angels have hit 45 homers in their last 26 gam es and have outscored their opponents 305-186 over the last 42 games. Their power was too much for the second-place Rangers, w ho left Anaheim Stadi­ um the same way they came in last Friday — 11 gam es behind the Angels. It all starts w ith good pitching and defense," Snow said. "Y our hitting is going to have its ups and dow ns, like in this hom estand. We couldn't score yesterday [in a 5-2 loss]. But w hen the situation pre­ sents itself, w e're able to capital­ ize." Snow, fighting a 3-for-29 slum p, opened the scoring in the first w ith a three-run homer, his 15th of the season and first in 75 at-bats. Snow also added a third-inning single just before an RBI single by G arret A nderson that gave the Angels a 4- 0 lead off Scott Taylor (1-2 ). — m e Harkey, Angels pitcher A nd w hen Texas show ed signs of rallying, C alifornia's play in the field m ade the for Rangers to get anything going. it difficult With Texas trailing 3-0 in the sec­ ond after S now 's homer, Mickey Tettleton drew a one-out w alk but only m ade it to third on Rusty G reer's double to the fence in right- center. A potential sacrifice fly to center by Luis O rtiz turned into a double play m om ents later, when G reer tagged up and was thrown out at third by Edm onds before Tet­ tleton crossed the plate. "The play, that Jimmy Edmonds Please see Rangers, page 9 ASSOCIATED PRESS Rangers catcher Ivan Rodriguez, left, consoles starting pitcher Scott Taylor after Taylor gave up a three-run homer to J.T. Snow. break SCORES BASEBALL AMERICAN LEAGUE California 9, Texas 2 Boston 5, Toronto 4(10) New York 3, Baltimore 0 Minnesota 9, Oakland 6 Seattle 6. Chicago 4 NA TO N AL HAG UE Atlanta 5, Montreal 1 Los Angeles 3, San Fran. 1 (12) New York 5. Florida 2 NFL PRESEASON Minnesota 23, San Diego 19 McMahon close to signing deal with Browns ■ BEREA, Ohio — Jim McMa­ hon w as expected to sign w ith the Cleveland Browns on T ues­ day after agreeing term s M onday and p assing a team physical. to b onuses. The Plain Dealer rep o rted M onday that M cM ahon will get a one-year deal for the m ini­ m um salary of $178,000, plus playing-tim e The Brow ns would n o t disclose term s of the agreem ent M onday. "W e're excited to have Jim join us," coach Bill Belichick said. "A bove e v e ry th in g else about him, he's a w inner. H e's proven that for years. H e will make our team better." McMahon is 66-30 as a starter, a winning percentage of .691. That's the best of all active QBs McMahon, originally a first- round choice (fifth overall) of the Chicago Bears in 1982, spent last season for Arizona. He played in two games, completing 23 of 43 passes for 219 yards, one touch­ down and three interceptions. Raiders move to Oakland finalized ■ OAKLAND, C alif. — The deal returning the R aiders to Oakland became final M onday night when club o w n er Á 1 Davis, after some last-m inu te contract negotiations, signed a lease committing the team to a minim um 16-vear stay. Somewhere, som eplace, there's a fat lady singing,” Oak­ land Mayor Elihu H arris said during a news conference, which was delayed 4 hours while the sides review ed details of the agreement. revised and This is the longest labor I've ever been th ro u g h ," ad ded Gaile Steel, p resid en t of the A lam eda C ounty Board of let's get Supervisors. "N o w down to business and play ball. W e're happy they're here." The Raiders spent their first 22 seasons in Oakland, leaving in 1982 for Los Angeles after a dis­ pute over stadium renovations. The Raiders spent 13 seasons playing in the Los Angeles Coli­ seum but were unhappy with deteriorating conditions and lack of luxury suites. R o c kie s ’ B ichette g e ts NL aw ard ■ NEW YORK - Colorado's D ante Bichette, who set a club record with five homers in five consecutive games, was selected the N ational League's player of the w eek Monday. Bichette hit .433 (13-for-30) with seven hom ers and 14 RBls in seven games last week to extend his hitting streak to 18 games. He is tied w ith teammate Larry Walk­ er for the NL lead with 26 homers. — Compiled from staff and Associated Press reports CAMP SCHEDULE TUESDAY ■ Practice at 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. WEDNESDAY ■ Practice at 9 a.m. only. ■ N o practice. THURS0AY FNDAY ■ N o practice. Media photo day in Toronto. SATURDAY ■ Cowboys vs. Buffalo Bills, 7 p.m., Toronto.