rj 69WMH9t ?f ]Da il y T e x a n XI OSVd H ¿ ¿ 9 ¿ N i S r t n w m o s ' Mí ) ‘ 9N i h s i T s r M o a n i u i I N ( I N V A t n i 0 6 b ¿ t í u » H n í » n r n n v n Vol. 90, No. 188 2 Sections The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin 168T av a i lab le copysday, August 1, 1991 25c HIV-prevention lecture draws 30 colleges Clare Bundy Daily T exan Staff Representatives from 30 Texas colleges and universities met at the W y n d h a m H otel W e d n e sd a y for the first in a series of lectures o n AIDS at college cam puses. o f t h e Almost 200 a dm inistrators, doc­ tors, health officials, and stu d e n t in­ structors c o nvened for the first ses­ s i o n " S u m m e r H IV Prevention Institute for Universi­ ties." The m eeting began three days of lectures a n d g ro u p discussions designed to help colleges a n d u n i­ versities better e d ucate their staff a nd s tu d e n ts ab o u t HIV. Lectures will include discussions on adm inistrative o rganization as well as medical u p d a te s o n n e w re­ search. The Institute is sp o n so re d by the AIDS C onsortium of Texas, w hich is fun ded by the C e n te rs for Disease Control a n d stationed in San M ar­ cos at S o u th w e st Texas State U ni­ versity. "W e have a lot of HIV education on ou r c a m p u s ," said Sherry Bell, the health education m a n a g e r of the UT S tu d en t Health Center. "But w e're alw ays revising a nd p la n n in g ou r program . This gives us the o p ­ portunity to see w h a t o th e r colleges are d o in g ." She a d d e d that medical u p d a te s are helpful to a n y o n e involved in education in o rd e r to m aintain c re d ­ ibility. But in Texas — which has the fourth highest incidence of AIDS in the co un try — e d uc a ting college stu d e n ts about the disease is so m e ­ times just a co ntin uation of their secondary education. Carol Sear- ight, an Advisory Board m em b e r of the C on sortium a n d a Health E du ­ cation instructor at C an yo n High School in N ew Braunfels, said she believes preventive m easures need to be im ple m e nte d at the secondary level. . "M ost of us in the high schools d o n 't really see a problem yet," she Student Rose Mary Rochelle, left, and nurses Diane Foreman, center, and Martha Hardie, all of Lamar University, attended a conference on AIDS at the Wyndham Hotel Wednesday. Scott Lewis/Daily Texan Staff said. "B ut we w a n t to p re v e n t the problem instead of waiting for a cri­ sis. W e te n d to be a pretty crisis- oriented society." Searight cited the m ost recent statistic at UT — w h e re a stu dy see m e d to indicate that one in nine s tu d e n ts is infected with HIV — as an exam ple of such a crisis. " T h a t's scary," she said. C an y o n High School, m an y o th er high schools unlike the in state, incorporates HIV education into their health education. "U n fo r­ tunately, high school health is u s u ­ ally saved for the coaches," Searight said. " A n d a lot of them just d o n 't care a bout HIV." Recognizing the need for ed uca­ tion at the university level as well, the S tu d e n t Health C e n te r will a p ­ point 10 Sexual Health Peer Instruc­ tors this fall. Bell said that a lthough she thinks UT s tu d e n ts are "w ell-info rm ed," there is a greater n e e d for wide­ sp read peer counseling a n d educa­ tion. She said she m ay start an in­ formal w o rk sh o p w hich w ould be less peer cou nselo r training. tim e-consum ing th a n " O u r peer counselors go through 50 h o u rs of training," Bell said. "I'm interested to see if o th er schools do less intensive education. I'd w a n t to co nd e n se STD a n d AIDS ed ucation a n d contraceptive education, a nd let s tu d e n ts explore insights on their o w n sexual decision-making. Because these issues com e u p eve­ ry w here, th e y 'd be talking at p a r­ ties, d o rm rooms, on car trips." According to Tonya Lowery, a sexual health peer instructor at Rice University, s tu d e n ts at Rice are al­ ready relatively c on versant o n these issues. "T h ev seem c o n c e rn e d ," she said. " A n d if th ey're not educated, they w a n t to be e d u c a te d ." Bell, w h o is lecturing T h u rsd a y on peer education, said all different d e p a r t m e n t s of a d m i n i s t r a t i o n sh o u ld becom e involved. "A lot of the people here are in a dm inistration a n d counseling a n d d o n 't k n o w en o u g h ab ou t AIDS, a n d they can learn som e of it h e re ," she said. U.S., Soviet leaders sign historic treaty Associated Press M O SCO W — Presiden t Bush a n d Mikhail G o rb a ­ chev voiced u n p re c e d e n te d solidarity W e d n e sd a y as they concluded a su m m it that p rod u c e d a la nd m a rk arm s control treaty a n d a striking initiative to prod peace in the M iddle East. "D ifferent w in d s are b lo w ­ ing," G orbachev proclaimed. The leaders sh o w e d , in their actions as m uch as their rhetoric, that the s u p e r p o w e r s had e m b a rk e d on a new course of trying to e n g in e e r peace a r o u n d the world instead of testing each other. " W e take a significant step forw ard in dispelling a half c entury of m istru st," Bush said as he a n d G orb a­ chev signed the long-negotiated Strategic Arms Re­ duction Treaty in the Kremlin. Bush h e a d s to Kiev in the Ukraine T h u rs d a y for a firsthand look at life in one of the Soviet's chafing republics. The tw o-day su m m it d re w to a close with a dinn er at the Am erican a m b a ss a d o r's residence w h ere the tw o leaders pled ged frien dsh ip a n d efforts to work to gether for peace. In ad dition to the treaty signing, the cerem onial centerpiece of the sum m it, the final day p r o d u c e d the ambitious m ov e for peace in the Middle East. With Israeli participation still u p in the air, Bush said he a n d Gorbachev h ad decided to seize the initia­ tive them selves and w ould issue invitations for peace talks in October. "This historic o p p o rtu n ity m ust not be lost" to get Israel, the Arab states a n d Palestinians to sit at the sam e peace table, Bush said. He said he w as sen d in g Secretary of State James Baker to Jerusalem o n T h u rs ­ day "to obtain Israel's a n sw e r.' Israeli leaders have objected to the m a k e u p of a Palestinian delegation that w o u ld attend. Soviet Foreign Minister A lexander Bessm ertnykh said he w o u ld travel to Israel separately w ith p apers to re-establish full diplom atic relations — a step the Soviets h ave said m u st aw ait Israel's read in ess to talk peace with her Arab neighbors. W arm ing U.S.-Soviet relations a n d o th e r pressing issues such as the Middle East dra in e d som e of the dram a from the nuclear treaty signing c erem ony. Even so, the pact m a rk e d th e first time that the s u p e rp o w e rs had agreed to actually reduce the n u m ­ ber of tran scontinental nuclear w e a p o n s in their arse­ nals. If ratified by th e Senate a n d the S u p re m e Soviet, the 700-page treaty w ou ld red uce these stockpiles by 30 percent. "It is an event of global significance," Gorbachev said at the cerem o ny at Vladimir Hall in the Kremlin. City budget review begins Barnett submits Austin's first billion-dollar plan David Bezanson Daily Texan Staff City M an a g e r Camille Barnett presented a su m m a r y of the p ro­ posed .1991-92 city b u d g et — the the first billion-dollar b ud g e t m city's history — to the A ustin City Council W e d n e sd a y , launching a discussion a n d review’ process that will last until fhe council a p p ro v e s a bu dg et in Septem ber. The $1.05 billion p ro p o s e d b u d g ­ et, $51 million more than last year, prioritizes public health and safety, with increases slated for the Fire De­ partm ent a n d Em ergency Medical Services. F u n d in g for all existing police patrols a n d facilities will be maintained if the bu dg et is a d o p te d next m onth. Barnett allocated an additional $1 million to you th -related program s — an increase that had not been in­ cluded in the draft policy b u d g e t a n ­ nounced in June. Youth at Risk p ro ­ list g r a m s p r io r ity t o p p e d a d eterm in e d by the council and M ay­ or Bruce T odd last m on th . T he proposal incorporates a $281 million capital b u d g e t to provide for capital im p ro v e m e n t projects. Bar­ nett has slated $29 million for con ­ struction of the Austin C o nv e ntio n lulv 4, C enter, which will o pen 1992. "T he econ om y is s tre n g th e n in g ," C oun cilm em ber Max Nofziger told reporters after the meeting. I think w'e're on the brink of a n o th e r ro und of grow th, a n d w hat we need to do now is [anticipate] a n o th e r increase in population and d e m a n d on ser­ vices." U n d e r the pro po sed b udg et there w ould be no change in the current tax rate a n d no c h an ge in electric a n d w ater/w astew ater rates. T he G eneral Services D epartm ent for — which currently provides building services, fleet a n d radio m ain tenan ce a n d municipal energy conservation — w ould be elim inat­ those services w ould be ed and reassigned to other d e p a rtm e n ts U n d e r the budget, ab o u t 100 p o si­ tions w o u ld be elim inated from the general fund b u d g e t by reorganiz­ ing d e p a rtm e n ts. H ow ever, 202 po­ in e n ­ sitions w ou ld be a d d e d t e r p r i s e d e p a r t m e n t s , including 66 positions related to the new c o nv e ntio n center. f u n d The b u d g e t proposal calls for sev­ eral u se r fee increases, including a $1.60 per m o n th increase in the resi­ dential solid w'aste fee a n d a $2.02 per m o n th drainage fee increase. The d rain a g e fee w o uld pay for s to rm w a te r m a intenance, erosion control, retrofitting a n d o th e r m e a­ sures n e e d e d t6 com ply with the p r o p o s e d C o m p r e h e n s i v e W atersh ed O rd in a n c e , Barnett said. The proposal also includes an av­ for increase of 8 percent erage Brackenridge Hospital rates, a p ­ proved by the council last m o nth, that will pav for physicians' salaries, recruitm ent, capital e q u ip m e n t an d renovation of the h ospital's critical care unit. NAACP opposes Thomas, says judge unpredictable Associated Press W A SH IN G T O N — T he N AACP W e d n e sd a y u rged the Senate to re ject the S up re m e C ou rt n om ination of Clarence Thom as, the no m in e e 's "reaction ary" philoso­ ph y w as detrim ental to the interests of blacks. saying "W hile w e feel strongly the seat sh o u ld go to an African-American, w e looked beyo nd that factor and focused o u r attention o n w h e th e r Judge Clarence T h o m a s ... should sit on the S u pre m e C o u r t," said Dr. William F. Gibson, c h a irm a n of the board of directors of the National Association for the A d v a n c e m e n t of Colored People. in G ibson said that, "W hile we a p ­ preciate the fact that Ju d g e T hom as the school of hard came u p knocks a n d pulled himself up by his o w n bootstrap s ... o u r concern is for the millions of blacks w h o have no access to b o o tstra p s." T he NAACP, the n a tio n 's oldest a n d largest civil rights organization, is w idely seen as th e g r o u p best po­ INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY Correction In a page one story W ednesday, state Sen. Carl Parker, D-Port A r­ thur, was identified as chairm an of the Senate Finance Committee. John Montford, D-Lubbock, is head of the Finance Committee. Parker chairs the Senate Education C om ­ mittee. The Texan regrets the error. Inside: The Royal Ballet visits Austin for the first time to perform the celebrated Swan Lake 9 W eather: Again, mostly sunny and hot, but this time we may hit 103. Low in the low- to mid-70s, and winds from the southeast at 5-10 mph. . . . . . Index: 2 Around Campus Classifieds 13 15 Comics 4 Editorials . . Entertainment 9 Focus................................................... 12 S p o r ts ................ 8 7 State & L o c a l................. 6 University...................................... 3 World & N a tio n ............................... sitioned to fead a n y serious orga­ nized o pposition. H ou rs after the N A A C P a n ­ no un ced its opposition, the AFL- CIO said it Chicago that it, too, w ould fight the nom ination. "W e take no pleasure in yet a n ­ o th e r difficult disp u te over the fu­ ture direction of the high court," the u n io n 's executive council said at its s u m m e r meeting. "But as was true w ith the nom ination of Robert Bork, the p re s id e n t's a p p a re n t resolve to use the a p p o in tm e n t p o w e r to make the court the preserve of the far right w ing leaves us n o other choice." "W e have concluded that Judge T ho m as' confirmation w ould be in­ imical to the best interests of Afri­ c an-A m ericans," Gibson said. He said the N AA CP decided to o p p o se the nom ination after exten­ sive stu d y and soul-searching. Gibson said that T ho m as' o p p o si­ tion to affirmative action and his ten u re as head of the Equal Employ­ m e n t O p p o r t u n ity C o m m issio n convinced the g ro u p 's 64-member that Thomas board of directors poses a threat to civil rights if co n­ firmed to the high court. G ibson said Thom as' record as ch airm an of the EEOC d e m o n s tra t­ ed "h is reactionary philosophical a pp ro a c h to a n u m b e r of critical is­ sues, not the least of which is af­ firmative action. "W e are com pelled to o p p o se the confirm ation of Judge T h o m a s," Gibson said. "Judge T ho m as' incon­ sistent views on civil rights policy m ake him an unpredictable elem ent on a n increasingly radical conserv a­ tive c o u rt." Sen. John D a n fo rth , R-Mo., T h o m a s chief Senate spo nso r, said th e h e w a s d i s a p p o i n t e d by N A A C P 's opposition but s h ru g g e d off its impact. "I d o n 't think people are going to be led a ro u n d by g r o u p s ," Danforth said. "I think [Thomas] will be c on ­ firmed by a substantial majority. Of course, I w ould rather have u n a n i­ m o u s su p p o rt." T h e N A A C P ' s o p p o s itio n to T h o m a s is considered essential to a ny possibility that his n om ina tio n will be blocked in the Senate Students mull regent desirability, selection James C. Allen Daily Texan Staff While the stu d e n t regen t a m e n d ­ m en t awaits final legislative a p p ro v ­ al, a debate over its desirability and the p rop o se d selection process for stu d e n t regents has b e g u n in ear­ nest. soon debate C onference com m ittee m em bers will the education finance bills which contain the re­ gent a m e n d m e n t, H o u s e Bill 2 and Senate Bill 10, and iron ou t differ­ ences betw een to create a co m prom ise bill. them Even if the com p rom ise bill p a ss­ es, the a m e n d m e n t could be re­ moved du rin g conference com m it­ tee debate. "1 d o n 't think it s h o u ld be d o n e ,” said W.A. " l e x " Moncrief, a m e m ­ ber of the UT System Board of Re­ gents. "R egents really h a n d le some things require so m e experi e n c e ." that Moncrief said he believes con ­ s c h o o l s . cerns sh ou ld be expressed to the a d ­ m inistration at the s tu d e n t s indi­ " G e n e r a l l y v i d u a l speaking, it we had a stu d e n t re­ g e n t, h e 's not going to be a w are of problem s at o th e r schools, he said. "T h o se problem s sh o u ld be h a n ­ dled bv the chain of c o m m a n d ." G a rth Davis, U T Student-» A s s o ­ ciation president, said he t h i n k s that Sen. Carl Parker, D-Port Ar­ th ur, a noted o p p o n e n t of the stu ­ d e n t regent legislation, may have the provision rem ov ed from the e d ­ ucation bills. "If that h a p p e n s then w e II w ork with Rep. G reenb erg a n d Sen. Barrientos to bring it o n the floor again," he said. O n e concern of stu d e n ts is that the s tu d e n t regent w o u ld be a n o n ­ voting m em ber of the board and w ould not be allowed to sit in on the Board's Executive Council m e e t­ ings. Susan Hays, co-director of Texas S tu d e n t Lobby, said she believes Please see Regent, page 2 P a g e 2 Thursday. August 1 1991 T H E D a I I A T E W S Regent: ‘W ill be most helpful just by being there' Continued from page 1 the student regent will be most helpful fust b\ being there. The most important function of the student regent is getting into the room and being around the re­ gents as well as getting the background material prior to the meeting." A student regent in California present­ ed student concerns that the regents would ‘not have considered, she said. T h e California student regent I talked to a couple 5t a n ago told me she felt her biggest purpose was to 'penetrate the cli­ mate erf thinking/ " According to Hays, voting power might eventual!) be granted. "Y o u first get it [the student regent bill] through, prove that it can work and then get v oting pow­ er through," she said. Davis agreed: "It's a definite step in the right direction. It's a step toward change m the future." He said he believes the job has some degree of power, explaining that the stu­ dent regent would be more informed on student issues and would be able to ac- cess information more easily than an aver­ age student. He said that the student re­ gent would also be able to develop good contact with the regents, more so than students who testify before the board now. Hays said she is concerned that the stu­ dent regent would not be allowed to par­ ticipate in executive session " If there something thev know the student regent would get up in arm*' about thev will just go into executive session." However. Da\ is stressed that this is not the end of the struggle for a student re­ gent. "This is a step tow ard full empower­ ment," he said. "W e 'v e got to demonstrate that a stu­ dent regent is a viable part of the board," he added. If the measure passes the conference committee and becomes law, one student would then be chosen by the governor to represent every school in his or her uni­ versity system. Each school in the system would select a nominee and the governor would choose one student from the pool. Davis said a number of methods have been proposed for nominating a student at each school. He added that legislators may adopt a specific nomination process. "The way I'd do it is open it up and allow am kind of application process," Davis said "Then, I'd form a committee to interview all the applicants and narrow it down to a group of finalists and let the General Assembly vote on final choke.4" the Hays said the selection process would likely be left up to each campus. "W h e n we researched the issue, we found that the most effective student regents came from a selection process (instead of an election),' she said. "I think Carl Parker was very shrew d," she said, referring to Parker's comment Tuesday that w'orking students would not be "adequately represented by some BMW-driving, yuppie fraternity kid.,,.' That's w hy we need a v\ell thought- out selection process,” Hays said "The TSL will be taking a leading role to make sure the first generation of student re- W ith reports from Shat Tsur, D a ily Texan Staff 1 killed as scout bus tumbles down mountain Associated Press P A L M S P R IN G S , Calif. — A bus full of Girl Scouts apparently lost its brakes on a winding road and flipped repeatedly dow n a boulder-strewn m ountain Wednesday, killing seven people and in­ juring 53, authorities said. Seven of the injured wrere in critical condition and five others were listed in serious condition, hospital officials said. The chartered vellow school bus was re­ turning the girls from a ride on the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway up Mount San Ja­ cinto when it crashed, officials and wit­ nesses said. "It's the absolute worst, it's the abso­ lute saddest thing that could happen,' said an emotional Palm Springs Mayor Sonnv Bono, who helped carry several stretchers from the accident. The bus driver and six Girl Scouts were killed, police Sgt. Ron Starrs said The bus carried Girl Scout cadets ages 15 to 18 who were participating in an event called "California Dreamin ," said Sharon Hewitt, spokeswoman for the Po­ mona-based Spanish Trails Girl Scout Council, the event sponsor. Around Campus is a daily column list­ ing University-related activities spon­ sored by academic departments, student services and registered student organiza­ tions. To appear in Around Campus, or­ ganizations must be registered with the Office of Campus Activities. Announce­ ments must be submitted on the correct form, available in The Daily Texan of­ fice, 25th Street and W hitis Avenue, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, al­ though no significant changes w ill be made. LECTURES regional UT Macintosh Users' Group w ill have Rod Dial, for WordPerfect Corp. speak and give a dem­ onstration on the WordPerfect program Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Pharmacy Building 3 106. representative MEETINGS University S C U B A Club w ill meet in Robert Lee Thursdav at 7:30 p.m. Moore Hall 4.102. The Faculty and Staff of Christian Fel- lowship is holding a Bible study on John, chapter five at noon Thursday in Parlin Hall 8A. UT Ballet Folklórico w ill hold practice from 8 to 10 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Tow-er Room. Everyone is wel­ come. University Veterans Association w ill meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in University Teaching Center 3.112. All U.S. military veterans welcome. Christian Science Organization w ill meet Thursdav at 5:30 p.m. in the East­ woods Room or Governors' Room in the Texas Union Building. Check the bulletin board. Students Older than Average w ill meet for happy hour at the Texas Tavern from 5 to 7 p.m. Friday. Students 23 and older are invited. OTHER The Cabinet of College Councils is ac­ cepting applications for a chairperson for Students for Academic Integrity, a stand­ ing committee responsible for the mon- itering and preservation of academic hon­ esty at UT. Applications may be picked up at Texas Union 4.310 or call 471-3166. The Student Health Center is accepting applications from students who are inter­ ested in working as Travel Counseling Peer Instructors five to six hours per week during the 1991 fall semester and one hour a week during the 1992 spring se­ mester. Receive three hours course credit, pass fail, in ED P 369K for the fall semes­ ter. For information contact Wanda H ub­ bard, Student Health Center 347, 471-495? ext. 212. Substance Abuse Prevention Peer In ­ structors are being selected by the Cam ­ pus Alcohol and Drug Education Pro­ gram. Males and ethnic minorities are especially needed. instructors receive upper division course credit for training in the fall and for providing edu­ cational workshops to students in the spring. Two semester committment re­ quired. For information call 471-6252. Peer SHORT COURSES University Folk Dance Society w ill have a short course on the difference be­ tween Serbian and Israeli folk dance at 8 p.m. Friday in Texas Union 5.112. Wear slick shoes. D e tr o it a p a r t m e n t fir e k ills 5 Assoc atec P^ess Four aduüs and a toddler d ed when an apartment building went up in flames early Wednes- cay A woman who residents sa>d was angry at a boyfnend in the ouilding was arrested on I arson and murder charges. One m ar died when he leaped from the fourth floor. The fire in the Poinciana Apartments { eft dozens of 'e sid e r's mostly low-incorre and elderly with nowhere to go The fire was raging when authorities arrived, said a firefighter who refused to give his name. Both stairwells were burning. Som eone had poured gasoline in both stairwells, he said F re Chief Harold Watkins would confirm only that firefighters reported smelling gasoline. Watkins said a 45-year-oid Detroit woman confessed the crime to a fnend. who told police I T^e woman s name was no* announced Ponce arrestee the woman on arson and murder charges. Sgt. Christopher Buck said He and the W ayne County prosecutor s staff said no court appearance had been scheduled Apartment residents said the woman was angry at her boyfnend who lived in the four-story building a rc apparently escaped the fire. Authorities refused to confirm the possible motive. Smoke and fire alarms were not required in the building because of its age. about 50 years, Watkins said Watkins sa c a 60-year-oid man died w hen he jumped from the fourth floor to escape the smoke and flames. and the bodies of the four others were found inside. Authorities were yr sme *■*ow mar y oeooie lived n the building. A sso c a ’!- f/an ag ing Ed ito rs jo sep t" Abbott. M ich ae C a s e , Adam Her-.' 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Jo h n Cook Curt B e sse lm a r Ja m ie Bo w ie M att Sch ulz Je n r.i'e r G oldstein S co t D oyle Andy Thorr as Je n r fer K o cr Ann S ie g e Tom King. C h ris W are, Shan no n W heeler Advertising H U>- hampos M • hael Cnang. Cather - a 0 ■- • MererJitr Eggiestor- Oav«3Hernpn > Cn jck Hu v_- Matt Km. oog Lyon Ma ma Ma D Austin ' / To charged, . 3 A » MasterCard call 471 5083 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Deny Texan, P Q 0ny Q Austin TX 78713-8904. Texan Ad Deadlines Monday...... Wednesday, 4p m. Thursday............. Monday,4p.m. Tuesday..... ...Thursday, 4p.m. Friday.................. Tuesday,4p.m. n» m. Wednesday 9 Friday, 4p.m. otaaaifted word Ada (L**t «u en n i Oey P*-.* » •S.wn»eee¡ E A R N $5.00 View the N A S A Space Shuttle M ission Tape 8/9/91 (Fri.) 8/12/91 (Mon.) 8/13/91 (Tues.) 8/14/91 (Wed.) 8/5/91 (Mon.) 8/6/91 (Tues.) 8/7/91 (Wed.) 8/8/91 (Thu.) (1 session takes 40 min.) 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MON-SAT 1 0 - 10 SUN 12-6 3004 GUADALUPE SUITE #6 472-4154 p a r k in g a v a ila b le ■_____________ a£____________________ SIMMs 1MB SIMMs Plus................ $39 1MB SIMMs 80ns............... $49 $459 45MB Removable 45MB SyQuest Cartridge $79 Magic 105 External $599 Magic 9600 Fax/Modem ....$179 Black Rfabons.................. $3.50 Mac Products USA 2021 Guadalupe Suite 23 Second Level Dobie Mall Free Parking 469-5000 irtteo wrord advemsmg cat 471 5244 xmtents copyright ’ 99t T ern StuOem PytXtr The Da4y Texan Mad Subacnption Rates I n t e r n a t i o n a l S t u d i e s A b r o a d W ED N ESD A Y S DO.V JO N E S U P h bn V O L U V E 1 f-ñ f V * ng- WORLD & NATION t h h h i i v n w s Thursday August 1.1 9 9 1 ífá jÉ É k 6 killed in Lithuanian border >ost Associatec Press VILNIUS, U S S R. — Assailants killed six Lithuanians and w ounded tw o at a bor­ der post W ednesday, in the worst violence in the Baltic region in six m onths. The incident spotlighted M oscow 's ten­ sions with independence-m inded Lithuania just as Presidents Bush and Mikhail Gorba­ chev wrapped up their sum m it in the Sovi­ et capital. Lithuanian officials said they suspected Interior Ministry' "black beret" troops, those responsible for previous anti-m de- pendence violence in the Baltics. The Tass new s agency quoted the national Interior Ministry as denying any role bv the black berets. Lithuania's president called a special se s­ sion of Parliament for Friday to discuss the Kremlin's "terrorist and repressive struc­ tures," and offered a 500,000-ruble reward for information leading to identification of the killers. That is more than 100 tim es the salary’ erf the average Soviet. Lithuania and the other Baltic republics regard their border posts as important sym ­ bols of their claim to sovereignty Soviet of­ ficials call the posts illegal but deny order- ing the series of attacks against them this year President Yytautas Landsbergis declared an official dav of m ourning on Saturday, when the tunera! will he held. "Everv drop of blood which falls on the road to independence m akes that road sacred," he said in a TV and radio address in Vilnius on Wedne^-dav Lithuania’s intenor minister, Marionas M isiukonas, said all eight m en on duty were shot at the post near Medininkai on the Byelorussian border. A trui k driver found the bodies at about 5 a .m . Investigators believe the custom s post at­ tack occurred after 2 a m , w hen the last vehicle vva^ checked by the post The Soviet evening n ew s program \ remva show ed a pool ot bkx>d on the floor. The Lithuanian governm ent sent a letter W ednesd ay night to P resident B ush asking him to act as a mt diator in forming an inter­ national com m ission to investigate the slay­ ing- said parliamentary spokesw om an Rita Dapkus sympathy for the victims We are doing every t only to take action but < excesses -uch conflicts o lution of basic issu es, G new s conference with Bu it was the worst vkrft since January w hen Sen p eo p le and w o u n d e Lithuania and neighboru Soviet In terio r M inister B on4- Pugo said his m inistre w ould help find the attackers and Gorbachev, a p p a re n tly m oving to defuse the s tn ation, ex p ressed regret and The Baltic republics - and Estonia — have ail c ence from the Soviet Uni them in N41. House increases pay for Senate Raise levels both houses' salaries, but adjusts public disclosure rules Associated Press W ASHINGTON — The H ouse on W ednesday passed a $23,200 pay raise for the Senate in a bill that also would virtually elim inate public dis­ closure of gifts lawm akers take from lobbyists and others. The H ouse acted by' voice vote af­ ter partv leaders orchestrated a par­ liamentary’ blockade to any roll call on the sensitive pay issue. Final Senate action to send the bill to President Bush w as expected soon. The raise w ould bring Senate salaries to the sam e $125,100 the H ouse has been paid since jan. 1. Several H ouse m em bers attacked the Senate raise as ill-timed, given the econom ic recession and huge budget deficits, but they didn't criti­ cize the Senate directly. They did criticize it indirectly. "I think the H ouse dealt w ith the pay raise issu e courageously," said Rep. Vic Fazio, D-Calif., chairman of the H ouse legislative branch sub­ comm ittee. He did not say that the Senate did not. legislation passed H ouse pav rose to $125,100 in Jan­ uary under in 1989. The tim ing meant m em bers had to stand for re-election before they could keep the m oney. The Senate vote giving itself the 23 percent increase came in a night­ time session tw o w eeks ago, to take effect im m ediately with Bush's ex­ pected signature. "We took the honorable course," said H ouse Minority Leader Bob Mi­ chel, R-IIL By raising its pay in mid year, the Senate also allow s its m em bers a one-tim e honoraria windfall. While they'd make the higher sal­ ary' for the rest of the year, senators would still be allowed to keep a full year's limit of honoraria, $23,068, as long as they receive it by the time Bush signs the bill. The pay raise is part of a $2.3 bil­ lion spending bill for the legislative branch of governm ent. Before agreeing to the raise, the H ouse insisted on tightening Senate ethics rules, similar to standards adopted earlier by the H ouse. H ow ever, w hile bringing into ac­ cord the H ouse and Senate rules on taking gifts, the bill w ould require lawmakers to report gifts only in certain instances. O nly gifts worth more than $250 would be reported. But since those can only be accepted from family , which w ould not be reported, or if an exception is approved by H ouse or Senate authonties, such report­ ing would virtually be elim inated. M ultiple gifts from any one source w ould not count toward the limit until one exceeded $100. So, for exam ple, a lobbyist could pro­ vide all vear a regular $100 gift or less, such as baseball tickets, and it w'ould never be reported. Com m on Cause, a group that lob­ bies for tighter ethics rules in gov­ ernm ent, said it differently. H ouse m em bers were backtracking on prom ises m ade to raise standards w hen they passed their pay raise in 1989, it said. "Already, they're cutting back on the ethics rules," said A nn McBride, senior vice president of the group. "It is just really in our view break­ ing faith with the American peo­ ple." In taking the pay raise, the Senate agreed to limit its sources of outside incom e. For exam ple, senators w ould be barred im m ediately from su p p le­ m enting their public salanes with speaking fees from private groups. In addition, senators w ould no longer be allow ed to collect stipends for providing commentary' on radio talk sh ow s and similar activities. Rescue workers examine one of the passenger cars of the Amtrak train. The damage occurred when the train derailed and struck a parked fre p it Amtrak train derails, killing at least Associated Press CAM DEN, S.C. — An Amtrak train ea rn in g nearly 450 people derailed W ednesday and side- sw iped a parked freight car, killing seven and injuring more than 75, authorities said It w as the w orst Amtrak accident since 16 peo­ ple were killed in a 1987 wreck in Chase, M d., and the nation's third major tram derailm ent in tw o w eeks. The 18-car Silver Star w as en route to N ew York from Miami with 426 passengers w hen the accident occurred about 5 a.m . w’hile it w as driz­ zling. Hospitals reported treating 78 people and at least five w ere in critical condition, though Amtrak said there w ere 76 injuries. There w ere about 20 crew m em bers, none of w hom were hurt, officials said. "It w as devastating. It was awful, said pas­ senger Stephen Clark of Philadelphia. He stid he w as thrown onto the tracks during the six-car derailment. He said the person next to him died. "I'm breathing, praise the Lord," Clark said. Five men and tw o w om en were killed in the spokesm an for the crash, said H ugh Munn State Law Enforcement D ivision. H owever, Claire Austin, spokesw om an tor the Federal Railroad Administration in W ashington, insisted that 13 people had died. "There s no doubt about it," she said She said som e had died in hospitals but hospitals contacted by The Associated Press did not report any deaths. W. Graham Clavtor Jr., president and chair­ man of Amtrak, said later in W ashington there were seven dead and 7b injured. O f the 7b hurt, 38 were treated and released w hile 18 were hos­ pitalized, he said. The train w as going about 70 m ph about 9 mph under the speed limit said John Drake of CSX iransportation, which o w n s the tracks. Amtrak said the train was traveling at 77 m ph. Drake said the train wobbled for m unki o’, reason and slammed into the freight hopp- parked on a siding The train caí e U a ■ about 100 yards away, listing at a 40-degrt v gle. The freight car, loaded with coal -and w oodchips, cut deeply into the let* side id . rear passenger car knocking “ Ut several se and peeling back the car s alu m in u m skin r about 25 feet. "There is no indication the train was ; ir improperly," said Clifford Black operated spokesm an at Amtrak headquarters in W ashin ton. He said the crew had boarded at jacks wile. Fla., and had been on the job about n hours w hen the crash occurred Black said there were no m ore bodies n ti w reckage and that tracks appeared normal at t derailment scene in w oods near Camden a tov of 7,500 about 3(1 miles northeast of C olum bia central south Carolina. New drug may bar passage < >f AIDS from mother to bab Associated Press NEW YORK — An experim ental drug prevented AIDS virus infections in two chim panzees, suggesting it m ight be able to block transm ission of the virus from m oth­ ers to babies, a study says. Researchers started treatm ent before the chim ps w'ere exposed to the virus, an o p ­ portunity that may also exist in trying to protect babies, said study co-author Rebec­ ca Ward. Ward, a researcher at G enentech Inc. of San Francisco, presents the work in Thurs­ day's issue of the journal Nature with scien­ tists at her com pany and elsew here. Experts cautioned that the laboratory- grown AIDS virus strain used in the experi­ ment is particularly vulnerable to the drug, so that the therapy may not work as well against strains found in people. Previous studies have show n that vac­ cines also can protect chim ps against AIDS virus infection. The experim ental drug is called C D 4 ím- m unoadhesin. It is m ade from parts of two natural proteins: CD4, w hich the A ID S \ i- rus latches onto to infect cells, and im m u­ noglobulin, a protein of the disease-fight­ ing im m une system . The drug is designed to act as a decoy, so Experts cautioned that the lab­ oratory-grown AIDS virus strain used in the experiment is particularly vulnerable to the drug, so that the therapy may not work as well against strains found in people. that the AIDS virus will attach itself to the CD4 portion rather than infecting ce!K of the body. The tw o chim panzees w ere injected w ith the drug twice. '1 he first injection was eight hours before being injected with the AIDS virus, the second time one hour before. Treatment continued for nine w eeks, ih e chim ps remained free of infection through 47 w eeks ot observation, researchers r e ­ p o r te d Ward said she doubted the treatment w ould be practical a- a general preventive measure for people at risk ot infection, be­ cause injections w ould have to be given re­ peatedly for protection to continue. But a previous studv has show n that im- m unoadhesin crosses the placenta, raising the idea of preventing infection in the baby of an infected mother, Ward said. It is not clear w hen that infection taxi", place, but it may occur aro u n d the tii ot birth, providing an o p p o rtu n ity to get tin drug to the fetus tirst bv giving it to th e m other during pregnancv IA ird said. could The uncertainty about w hen mtection takes place treatn nt throughout the entire pregnancv wjy h might cost too m uch for use in areas ot pov­ erty, said Robin W eiss of the Institute tot Cancer Research in London. lead to W ard replied th at nobodv know s how m uch the treatm en t w o u ld cost an d that it m ight com pare favorably to the cost ot car­ ing for an H I\ -infected child Associated Press Dahmer's father tells police of suspect's childhood abuse MILWAUKEE — Jeffrey Dahm er's father told probation agents his son w'as abused by a neighbor boy at age 8, possibly leading to sexual problems, but the incident never was reported to police, authorities said W ednesday. In a jailhouse interv iew W ednesday with po­ lice, how ever, Dahmer denied he had been sex­ ually or physically abused as a child, a police official in O hio said. Lionel Dahmer told his son 's probation agent of the alleged abuse m a telephone call April 27, 1990, 22 years after he said it happened, accord­ ing to the agent's notes filed w ith the state pro­ bation division in M ilwaukee. Jeffrey Dahm er, 31, has confessed to killing 17 people over 13 years, including one in Ohio and three at his grandm other's house in subur­ ban M ilwaukee, police said. The probation notes don't specify the nature of the abuse, which w ould have occurred w hile the Dahm ers were living in Bath Tow nship, Ohio. But the notes quoted the father as saying the [Jeffrey incident "may be reason w hy Dahmer] has problems with sexuality issues." Marcos faces charges in Philippines MANILA, Philippines — The governm ent filed its first criminal charges against Imelda Marcos and her children Thursday, accusing them of failing to file tax returns after the late President Ferdinand Marcos w as ousted five years ago. Eleven counts wrere filed against Mrs. Marcos, two against daughter Imee M anotoc and eight each against Ferdinand Jr., and Irene Araneta. The charges were the first com plaints criminal ever filed in a Philippine court against the family of the late president. On W ednesday, the gov­ ernm ent reversed a 5 '/2-year ban and said Mrs. Marcos Marcos and her children were free to return from exile to face the charges, but that she could not bring the bodv of her husband back for burial. At a n ew s conference in N ew York, Mrs Mar­ cos was noncom mital on w hether she planned to return. "I'm glad at the thought of being able to go hom e, but saddened and pained about the ban on bringing back the rem ains of my late hus­ band," she said. Iraq cooperating with U.N. inspectors BAGHDAD, Iraq — The chief of a U .N . team investigating Iraq's nuclear capabilities said W ednesday his inspectors now' had full access to nuclear sites, a change from last month w hen the team was once warded off with gunshots. David Kay, the American leader of the 18- member team, told reporters in Bagdhad that Iraqi officials w ere forthcoming in dealing s w ith his people. He called the cooperation a signifi­ cant change from the last time I was here Last month, Iraqi troops fired shots in the air to prevent inspectors from checking trucks s u s­ pected of secretly carrying w eapons material. That prompted the United States to accuse Iraq of concealing w e a p o n s p ro g ram s a n d to th re a t­ en renewed bom bings of Iraq for failure to co m ­ ply with U .N . resolutions. The United N ations reported in N ew ’iork on Tuesday that a U .N . inspection team had found four times the am ount of chemical w eapons d e ­ clared by Iraq, adding to suspicions that Iraq was withholding information. Mandela criticizes response to scandal JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — In his first com m ent on President F.W. de Klerk's dem o­ tion of two senior security officials. N elson Mandela on W ednesday rejected the govern­ m ent's response to the "Inkathagate scandal as insufficient and unrepentant. The leader of the African National C o n g r e s s said that the decision M onday to change the portfolios of D efense Minister M agnus Malan and Law and Order M inister Adriaan Vlok w as "a good thing.” "But de Klerk should have done far more than that," Mandela told a new s conference. Mandela said the tw o officials were not respon­ sible for the secret funding of the Inkatha 1 ree dom M ovem e.it that has opposed the ANC. 'It is the policy of the National Partv ... It is the policy of de Klerk him self," he said. Violence, threats din peace talks in Yoati A sso cia te d Press B1 i GRADI 't ugoslav ía — 1 uro- pean C om m unity officials arrived W ednesday seeking a truce in the breakaway republic of Croatia, but peace prospects were dim m ed by an armv offensive and Croatian threat> of retaliation. Ihe eight man presidency, m ean­ while tried again to reach an accord on k roatia, w here the republic s sol­ diers are battling ethnic Serb militia­ m en and federal troops. The EC crafted a truce to end fighting in neighboring Slov enia on Julv 8, and it hopes to begin cease­ fire talks quickly in k roatia. Both re­ publics declared independence from \ ugoslav ia June 25. Mid-level EC officials in Belgrade on W ednesday w ere to be followed Friday bv three EC foreign m i n i s ­ ters, the Dutch Foreign Ministry an- nounced. In M oscow , President Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev issued a joint statem ent endorsing I k efforts to end strife in Yugosla­ via. About 50 people have died in clashes in Croatia since last wei an om inous turn to the v . the W ednesday forces used warplanes and m fire to drive Croat forces tic i town of Kostajnica, Croatian reported. federal A convov of about UX) trin k ried off retreating k roat fig h ti: the residents ot the town. utli kostajnica, about 70 miles tli east ot the capital Zagreb wu last Croatian stronghold m the so t tegic Banija region and tht ¡et should allow ethnic Serbs and armv troops freely betwe n Croatia and neighboring Seihia dm new s agenev 1 anjug said, to m ove Croatia s ethnic Serb minoritv o{ poses Croatia s secession and eks to join Serbia. The Serb led federal troops have engaged in the tigh im ostensibly as a buffer betw een Croats and ethnic forces but hav taken greater roles in recent bat es. Immediately after the retrt at from Kostajnica, Croatia's Suprem e State Council ordered an undeterm ncd number of n ew troops m obilized to fight against Serbian "terrorists md som e units of the federal armv 1 anjug reported. Page 4 Thursday, August 1,1991 T h e Da il y T e x a n EDITORIALS wportt optntons exp ressed m The D eiy Teten are those of the writer o1 the adiete They a-e not hecessenfy those of the Urmrenrty edrrmtstratior the Board ot R egents or m e Texas Student Publica­ tions Board ot Operating Trustees Opinions expressed m staff or g u est cokimos m e those of the wnter Fo r W o r d s Amendment would aid free speech L aw m akers are slow som etim es. But politicians do pick up on trends and sprint to front o f the pack with policies addressing the pressing issues of the day. The Texas Senate took a such a step Tuesday w hen it approved a law intended to stifle the ranks of the 'politically co rect" in the academ y. In a bill on education finance, the Senate approved an am endm ent sponsored by Sen . David Sibley, R-W aco, that would prohibit higher education officials from punishing faculty and students solelv on the basis of their speech if such expression is protected bv the C onstitution. He explained that the legislation's intent is to curtail intolerance of politi­ cally correct thinking, which he says is threatening "th e v en basic fabric of our univ ersities and colleges — vigorous, unim peded in q u in and d eb ate." Though the senator7s concern s have been aired often lately by faculty and students, his am endm ent and its m essage would be the first state law passed against this illness that has plagued the academ v in recent years. If passed by the H ouse in conference, this am endm ent would provide a statutory deterrent against university officials establishing ra­ cial harassm ent policies that pass negative sanctions against students and faculty w ho express thoughts deem ed offensive. Though the C on­ stitution already protects our rights to use fighting words, university officials in recent past have still penalized students and faculty for voic­ ing their opinions. The University meted out such punishm ents in the spring of 1990 when a couple of the fraternities got out of hand during Round-Up. The University suspended 60 M em bers of Delta Tau Delta for a year for spray-painting racist epithets on a banged-up car. Phi Gam m a Delta faced similar m easures for printing a caricature o f M ichael Jordan on a T- shirt. And one student w as alm ost suspended for reacting to the rallies that these acts drew by holding up a sign-which read: "K eep Sam b o ." The student, how ever, was saved by a letter w ritten by M aurice Shar- lott, an associate dean at the School of Uaw, asking the University on what legal basis it could justify suspending the student. Though few m ight condone such behavior, our Constitution has shielded such rights in the past. But the sword of adm inistrators around the nation have proven to be m ade of a tougher alloy. At the University of C onnecticut, the adm inistration kicked a dorm resident off cam pus and forbade her from eating in cam pus cafeterias for an offensive sign on her room door. O nly under the threat of a federal lawsuit did the school revise its Code of Student Conduct and allow the sophom ore to move back on cam pus. And at the University of W isconsin at M adison, offi­ cials were allowed by state law to ban "discrim inatory com m ents" in the form of "n am e calling, racial slurs, or jo k e s." If enacted, Sibley's statute would also give victims of adm inistrative harassm ent a cause o f action in state court, instead of having to deal with the intricacies and am biguities of co n stitu tio n al law. This would drive a few more planks into this First A m endm ent bulwark, making free speech a little less tenuous. H ow ever, the am endm ent does not, and should not, change how the way that individuals should feel toward offensive minority opinion. Controversial faculty m em bers can still be ostracized by their colleagues. Students can still be shunned by their peers. And factions will continue to remain intolerant and fail to respond the argum ents of opponents. But now , at least, these social sanctions would not receive the legal im prim atur of any adm inistration. No one would have to fear a call from the dean. — M atthew Contmlly — G eoff Henley r MOST FAVOREP NATION LEAST FAVOREP NATION The faithless unleash dogma as well W hen ever som eone says "d o g m a tic," John Cook TEXAN COLUMNIST im ages of Saturday S ight Lille's C hurch Uady com e to mind — a sim ­ intolerant prude. W hile dogm a­ ple-m inded, tism and religion are certainly related, som e of the most dogm atic people com e from outside the ranks of the faithful. Like Houston Astros fans. They insist on be­ lieving that the 'Stro s are going to win the pen­ nant even though they have traded away all their best players and consistently rem ained in last place this season. Hope springs eternal. M arxism is a dogm atic religion if ever there were one. Onlv blind faith could sustain confi­ dence in an ideology that has proved such a m iserable failure everyw here it has been im ple­ m ented. Russia was a food exporter before her 1917 revolution. Although the Soviet Union has twice the farm land of any other nation on earth, flood and drought have kept her from having a good harvest in 70 years. It seem s that Marxism is even bad for the w eather! Fundam entalist atheists like M adalyn M ur­ ray O 'H air do not simply lack faith in God. They passionately believe that God does not exist and they are on an evangelistic crusade to force their belief on individuals and public poli­ cy. Even agnosticism is a subtle form of dogm a­ tism. There are tw'o form s of agnosticism . Lim­ ited agnosticism holds that there is a limited am ount that hum ans can know about G od, a very sensible position. But unlim ited agnosti­ cism, the belief prom ulgated by Kant and Aver, holds that no know ledge about God is possible. But this is self-defeating since they claim to know one thing about God for certain — that nothing about Him is know able. Science is perhaps the m ost objective hum an activity , and yet even the physical sciences are not free of dogm a. Physicist Max Planck noted, "A new scientific truth is usually presented in a way to convince its op ponents. Rather, they die off, and a rising generation is familiarized with the truth from the sta rt." N otably, all the foun­ ders of quantum physics w ere young men at the time of their discoveries. Critics of religion are often far m ore dogm atic than the believers they attack. W hether their criticism s are valid or not, they resort to hypo­ critical argum ents. For exam ple, consider the usual response to argum ents for the existence of G od. Skeptics are quick to point out that such argum ents are not proofs and m ay go further to sav that the existence of God is not provable. And thev are right. At best, argum ents can suggest the exis­ tence of G od. O nlv m athem atical statem ents can be proven. But in this restricted use of the word "p ro o f," nothing in the real world can be proven. O utside of m athem atics, som ething is considered proven w hen sufficient evidence is gathered to make it credible. There are fair criticism s of manv of the stan­ dard argum ents for the existence of G od, but it is not fair to demand m athem atical certaintv of som ething that is not a m athem atical state­ m ent. At least theists offer such argum ents. A s­ tros fans, M arxists and agnostics seldom offer any evidence for their beliefs. Even objections to miracles suffer from chronic dogm atism . These objections have their origin in David H um e's Inquiry Concerning Human Understanding. In a nutshell, Hum e says that miracles cannot happen because thev are incredible. This does not address the issue. By d efini­ tion, m iracles are extraordinary. Saving that miracles cannot occur because m iracles cannot occur is circular reasoning. The proper attack on a supposed miracle is to exam ine the evi­ dence offered to support its occurrence. For exam ple, C hristians point to the resurrec­ tion of Jesus Christ as the cornerstone of their faith. It is illogical to say that C hrist did not rise from the dead because men do not rise from the dead. Of course, men d on't rise from the dead; it this were a regular occurrence, the resurrec­ tion could not be offered as evidence of any­ thing. The proper critical response would be to attem pt to refute the evidence C hristians offer or produce evidence to the contrary. M ost religions have a set of sacred w ritings. A rguing that sacred w ritings are non sen se is not going to change the mind of a true believer. This applies equally to the M arxist and to the M uslim. A rational believer has reasons why he holds to the texts that he does, and the skeptic has the right to dem and these reasons. W hile revelation is by definition beyond hum an ori­ gin, this does not mean that the source of the supposed revelation is beyond criticism . M oses, Jesus, M uham m ad, Joseph Sm ith and many others all claim ed to have received reve­ lation from God. W hat evid ence is there to su p­ port their claim s? W hen considered in context, are their teachings co n sisten t? Do they contain historical errors? How did their lives m atch up to w hat they taught? A sking such questions is an honest approach; dism issing all religious claim s a priori is not. In many wavs, the 20th century is not as e n ­ lightened as we may su ppose. Religious dogma has been replaced with anti-religious dogm a. We no longer believe that there are spooks in the w oods, but we believe political fantasies that are less credible and m ore d angerous. T a­ bloids carry stories at least as fantastic as the tales of the saints from an earlier day. W hile perfect objectivity is not possible, w e should strive to at least try to exam ine our presup posi­ tions once in a w hile. Cook is a graduate student in math. Blacks can control their fate W Robert Turner GUEST COLUMNIST hat ever happened to the prem ise of Martin Luther K ing's "I Have a D ream " speech? T he excerpt I am referring to is w here he says, "1 have a dream that one day my children will be judged not bv the color of their skin, but by the co n ­ tent of their ch aracter." I'll tell you what happened to it. It flew out the w indow in the fight for a di­ versified society. Q uestion: are m inorities in g en ­ eral looking for a free ride? A n­ sw er is, not all of them . I think blacks for the most part are, how ­ ever. Now before you jump down my neck nam ing me a racist, white bigot, let me say that I am not racist, nor a bigot. And w hat's m ore, I am not w hite, I am black. Also, I do not practice racial ap os­ tasy. Regardless of past discrim ina­ tion, I should not be adm itted to the University, given tenure as a professor, or a position or a job because of the color of my skin in the name of diversity. Give me that position or tenure because I it. A am qualified and deserve prom inent black leader recently stated, "I say to young black peo­ ple today, don't let your blackness be a problem for you. Let it be a problem for som eone e ls e ." This prom inent figure is G en. Colin Powell, know n to som e blacks as the current house nigger. Ih e use of this term toward Powell causes me to speculate on the various reasons why people would sav that. O ne possibility could be that they are resentful of the fact that the general has made som ething for him self and thev haven't. W hatever the reason, re­ sorting to nam e-calling only dis­ plays a lack of intelligence and an abundance of im m ature behavior. Returning to mv original qu es­ tion, I do believe som e people are looking for a free ride w'hile claim ­ ing to look for a diversified soci­ ety. The reasoning behind my th e­ ory is the fact that m inorities claim they didn't have the sam e ad van­ tag es th at o th e rs (w hites) did. 1 guess som e people don't realize that not all w-hite people are wealthy, not all m inori­ ties are poor, and a good educa­ tion isn't guaranteed with a large in checkbook. The environm ent which the education is received does not matter. W hat does m at­ ter is what one does with that ed ­ ucation. sch o o l in Instead of applying w hat they have, blacks look for other alterna­ tives to getting the positions they w ant. If an em ployer hires or pro­ m otes a w hite person over a black, they cry out that the em ployer is ( practicing racial discrim ination. W hat is even w orse is the fact that co n g re ssio n a l D em o cra ts are trying to pass a bill on civil rights that will make it difficult for em - ployers to prove that they are not practicing ciiscrim ination. Stop! In­ nocent until proven guilty? I guess that w as throw n out the w indow along with K ing's speech. the tw o Instead of putting forth som e ef­ fort for entran ce to colleges and universities, they argue that the S A T , AC I and other achievem ent tests are biased favoring w hites and that the universities need to low er the standards of entrance because blacks cannot score high tests or get good on grades in school, therefore having no chance of getting in on their own m erits. M aybe if people apply them ­ selves constructively instead of hunting for a diversified society they too can get the tenure, the prom otion, or the adm ittance they so desire. Instead of com plaining of no A fro-A m erican culture to base their lives on, they can build one in w-hich their children can be proud. I say to all black people, to­ day, the choice is yours. Turner is a mem ber of.Students A d­ vocating Valid Education . ~W ' W K .M ' S ' Painting Israel out of a corner COULD YOU HOVE YouQ g / E£€J A 6 A i\j/ PUEAS6 ? uH « l O r t i THf F IR IN G LIN E A cadem ics needs civility No one w ho has read about, or experi­ enced, the kind of conflict described by m em bers of the D epartm ent of English can feel good about it, or so 1 can hope. ("C ries of factionalism in English Dept, com e from -yore loi>ers," The Daily Texan, Tuesday). W hile few human environm ents are free of politics where one wins and loses with irregularity, one could expect that in an academ ic environm ent essential civility would prevail. W hile voting with a m ajori­ ty is more pleasant than being on the los­ ing side or isolated on a critical vote, o ne's professional and personal relationships should not suffer in the straightforward expression of principles or points of view. If there were more effort expended in persuasion than em phasis on pow er-bloc voting, genuine dialogue and discussion might be possible. "F a ctio n alism " is d e­ structive when it results in personal invec­ tive, ridicule, shunning and blackballing — that is, when academ ic debates cease to focus on principle or practice but hinge on ideological uniformity and pervade all re­ lationships. Intellectual gang warfare is not a pretty thing w henever or w herever it occurs. I guess the academ y still has a lot to learn about civilized d isco u rse and the re­ spectful treatm ent of m inority points of view — two w orthy goals of the ed u ca­ tional process. Donald G. Davis Professor o f Library and Information Science V ote 'Y e s !' for stu d en ts A "y e s " from le w s voters for a pro­ posed constitutional am endm ent on Aug. 10 will keep the door to higher education open for thousands of Texas students who depend on loans the W ithout passage of Proposition 2 — "T h e constitutional am endm ent providing for issuance of general obligation bonds to provide educational loans to stu ­ d en ts" — the Texas Higher Education C oordinating Board will soon run out of money to fund the state's H inson-H azle- wood College Stud ent Loan Program. The am endm ent will allow the state to meet an unprecedented dem and for Hin- son-H azlew ood loans. The H inson-H azlew ood program has functioned as a revolv ing fund in the past. No bond sales w ere needed because loan repaym ents covered the cost of making new loans. But cuts in federal student aid programs, creation o f a state C ollege Ac­ cess Loan Program to make loans to mid- dle-incom e students and the relatively low interest rate on the state's loans led to a demand that has outpaced available funds. Even students who w ere approved for loans through the board last year received only partial paym ent until more funds be­ cam e available through a January bond sale. That sale exhausted the coordinating board's authority for issuing general obli­ gation bonds and is the reason additional authority is needed under Proposition 2. No state general revenue has ever been used to retire student loan bonds. Instead, H inson-H azlew ood has produced $362 million in revenues through returns on in ­ vestm ent, interest on loans and federal subsidies. O f that am ount, $287 million has been used to retire previous student loan bonds, leaving the rem aining $73 m il­ lion available for loans to Texas stud ents. No doubt students will have to pay more in the future for a college education. And without adequate financial aid pro­ grams to help them pay those costs, few er will enroll. Form er U.S. Labor Secretary Ray M ar­ shall, now a professor at the LBJ School of Public Affairs, told the coordinating board last year that the United States must de­ velop workers with thinking skills to com ­ pete with highly trained w orkers in other countries. Noting that the average Japanese math student outperform s the top 5 percent of American math students, Marshall said that the U .S. education system should adopt standards tied to the best in the world, not m erely to the world average. At a time w hen political, bu siness and industry leaders are calling for a better ed ­ ucated work force, we would be sh o rt­ sighted if we allow ed another road block on the path to higher education. In the past Texans have clearly under­ stood the need for financial aid program s to help open the doors to college. C on sti­ the tutional am end m ents proposed by Texas Legislature the H inson- Hazlewood loans have been supported by state voters every time they have been placed on the ballot. to fund Today the need is still there. W e cannot afford to allow an anticipated low voter turnout to jeopardize this vital program . Our future d epend s on today's wise choices. Let's not let our college students dow n. Vote " y e s " for Proposition No. 2 on Aug. 10. Harry Reasoner Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board Economy recovers sluggishly Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — T he g o v ern - m e n t's m ain econom ic b aro m eter, released W ed n esd a y , c o n tin u e s to pom t tow ard recovery, b u t an aly sts said an acco m p an y in g rep o rt on slu m p in g factory o rd e rs illu strates the sluggish, c h o p p y n a tu re of the tu rn a ro u n d . The C om m erce D ep a rtm e n t said its Index of L eading Econom ic In d i­ cators rose 0.5 p ercen t in Ju n e, its fifth straig h t increase. At th e sam e tim e, h ow ever, it said o rd ers to U.S. factories fell 1.4 percen t, b reak in g a tw o -m o n th advance. T he string of g ains in th e lead ing indicators " p re tty m uch confirm s th at the recovery began in th e sec­ o n d q u a rte r," said S u n g w o n S o hn , an econom ist w ith th e N o rw est C orp. in M inneapolis. "T h e Still, only five of the 11 fo rw ard- indicators p o ste d gains. looking O ne w as virtually u n ch an g ed . less increases are th an w e'v e been accustom ed to in a re­ co v en ', b u t w e 'v e been sav ing it will be a w eak er recovery th a n av er­ ag e," said econom ist Robert D eder- ick of th e N o rth ern T ru st Co. in Chicago. The Bush a d m in istra tio n and m any priv ate analy sts believe the econom y will grow a b o u t 2.5 p e r­ cen t to 3 percen t for th e re st of the year, co m p ared to a 6 p ercen t av er­ age g ro w th rate in th e o th e r eight recoveries since W orld W ar II. But som e analy sts ex p ress co n ­ cern th e econom y could even dip back into recession after a period of gro w th . S u ng, "th e probability of a d o u b le-d ip reces­ sion is not exactly negligible. If a n y ­ thing, it is in crea sin g ." instance, said for Richard R ahn, an eco no m ist w ith the U.S. C h am b er of C om m erce, also c o n te n d e d the revival could be short-lived. Since th e en d of W orld W ar II, five of th e eight recessions have ex­ so-called perienced "d o u b le dip, th e econom y ex­ p a n d e d for o n e q u a rter before re­ su m in g its contraction. in w hich th e Still, D ederick said "su ch d e ­ creases [as th e d ro p in factory o r­ ders] are n ot un co m m o n the o p en in g stages of a reco v ery ." in A nd Bruce S teinberg, an eco no ­ m ist w ith M errill Lynch C apital th at M arkets indicators w h en e v e r p erfo rm ed sim ilarly com ing o u t of prev io u s recessions, " it's been p re t­ ty m uch clear sailing." in N ew York, said leading the S teinberg also n o ted th a t th e fac­ tory o rd e rs rep o rt show ed-T nvento- ries falling for six of the last seven m o n th s, w hich could sp u r p ro d u c ­ tion — an d th u s econom ic g ro w th — once d e m a n d picks u p an d b u si­ n esses begin restocking sh elv es. T he lead in g indicators are d e ­ signed to forecast econom ic activity six to nin e m o n th s a h ead . T h e big­ gest c o n trib u to r to the index g ro w th in lo n g er av erage workw ’eek. June w as a O th e r positive factors w ere an in ­ dex m easu rin g co n su m e r confi­ dence, a d ro p in initial w eekly u n ­ em p lo y m en t claim s, an increase in building perm its a n d lo n g er deliv ­ ery tim es, indicating a p ick u p in o r­ ders. Indicators m ak in g n eg ativ e c o n ­ tributions w ere a decline in factory o rd ers for c o n su m e r g o o d s, few er unfilled factory o rd e rs, a d ro p in the m oney su p p ly , a d ecrease in prices for raw m aterials in d icating lagging d e m a n d a n d a d ro p in o rd e rs for new p la n ts an d e q u ip m e n t. 1 he vario u s ch an g es left th e index at 143.6 p e rc en t of its 1982 b ase of 100. A lth o u g h the index has fallen 1.8 p ercen t from June 1990, it has last six risen 3.0 p ercen t m o n th s. th e in A TRUE GROUND FLOOR $ OPPORTUNITY $ Office M a c h i n e C l e a n i n g Can Be Your Key To Success! Begin a new career or supplement your existing income with the most exciting business opportunity of the decade! P C /\la c C le a n ’s exclusive 3-day training course will teach you how to clean and maintain PC’s, M ac’s, keyboards, monitors, copiers, fax/phone systems—even VCR’s. There’s a lot of money to be made and a huge nationwide market just waiting to be serviced by trained personnel. Our complete turnkey program is priced under $5000 and includes all tools, equipment, supplies, hotel, meals and more! NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY!! Classes now forming. Don’t delay... an exciting new future is wailing! 1/800/725-4595 512/343-4595 PC/MacClean" 9 4 3 0 R e se a r c h B lvd . ■ S u ite 4 0 0 • A u stin , T X 7 8 7 5 9 THE D AILY T e x a n Thursday, August 1,1991 Page 5 BCCI founder won’t be extradited to U.S. Associated Press KARACHI, Pakistan — T he ailing fo u n d e r of the Bank of C red it an d C om m erce In te rn a ­ tional will n ot be ex trad ited to the U nited States o r elsew h ere to face frau d a n d e m b e z ­ zlem ent ch arges, a g o v e rn m e n t official said W ednesday. Jam Sadiq Ali, chief m in ister of Sindh province, w as th e first se n io r Pakistani offi­ cial to m ake a state m e n t a b o u t th e issu e since BCCI's o p eratio n s in eig h t co u n tries w ere seized an d its fo un der, A gha H asan A bedi, w as indicted by a N ew York g ra n d jurv. H o w ev er, the Interior M inistry', w hich rules on extradition re q u e sts, declined to co m m ent o n th e p ossibility. P akistan h as an extradition treaty w ith the U nited States, b u t so far W ash in g to n has n ot re q u ested A b ed i's ex tradition, a m inistry official said. jam S ad iq's c o m m e n ts reflected the belief th e A rab-ow ned th at of many' P akistanis its bank w as b ro u g h t d o w n because of m eteoric success. BCCI o p e n e d in 1972 and rapidly e x p a n d e d to 69 c o u n trie s, m ostlv in th e d ev elo p in g w orld. Jam Sadiq accused the W est an d Israel of en g in ee rin g BCCI's closure. "M r. A bedi s o nly crim e w as th at he stood u p an d fo u ght th e disciples of th e evils in the dev elo p ed w o rld ," Jam Sadiq said. "BCCI w as a Third W'orld bank and it took to the challenge of b rea k in g a hegem o nistic control of the Jew ish lobby o n th e w o rld 's financial in stitu tio n s." A bedi, 69, resid es in th e financial h u b of Karachi, w hich is th e provincial capital of S indh, a n d Jam Sadiq, th e hig h est elected of­ ficial in the so u th e rn province of S indh, once received financial backing from BCCI. O n M o nday, a N ew York g ran d jury' in ­ dicted BCCI, four affiliates, A bedi an d his form er d e p u ty Sw aleh N aqvi on charges of fraud, falsifying records and stealing m ore than $30 m illion. The bank s w 'orldw ide o p ­ erations w ere seized on July 5. O n 1 u esday , th e g o v e rn m en t of Abu D ha­ bi, w hich o w n s 77 p ercen t of BCCI, d e p o sit­ ed $85 m illion in a L ondon account to protect d espositers a n d co n tin u e pavm g em ployees in Britain w hile a rescue o peration is a t­ tem p ted. A British H igh C o u rt judge p o st­ poned action on th e Bank of E ngland ^ plan to close d o w n BCCI, and set a n ew court hearing for Dec 2. Financial an alysts in L ondon said they' could not predict w 'hether BCCI could be saved until it w as clear how m uch the bank lost as a result of bad loans an d illegal o p e ra ­ tions, Estim ates range from $4 billion to $5 billion, m aking th e $85 million rescue a t­ tem p t pale by com parison. A racketeering law su it filed in M iam i al- that BCCI financed a h u g e coffee- 1 leged sm uggling schem e that ch eated I S C u s­ tom s tor four years. The fraud w as h e a d e d by M u n th e r Bilbeisi, a Florida b u sin essm an a n d b ro th e r of BCCI's regional m anager in Jo rd an , Fakhri Bilbeisi. according to th e law- suit filed bv Llovds of L ondon. I traffickers' m onev Saudi In A rgentina on W ed nesd ay, a federal co urt o p e n ed an investigation in to w h e th er foreign bank s o p eratin g there had la u n d e re d financier d ru g G aith P haraon, a key BCCI stockho lder had claim ed in April that banks other th a n BCCI w ere involved in d ru g m oney la u n d erin g m A rgentin a. Jam Sadiq said A bedi onlv so u g h t to help the Islamic w orld acquire scientific and tech­ nological in d e p en d e n ce. "T his, 1 su p p o se , w as too m uch for the Z ionists to sto m ach ,' he said. SAVE TODAY! H ATC H H ) R T H I S M i . V ' There’s A Great New Discover I nachertised Swings Way To Save At H-E-B! Pick Up Your Copy O f H-E-B 9s New “Save Today99 Booklet And Discover Extra Savings Every Week! . V GHOICX i i . N....—........... u s D A CHI' r Boneless Top Sirloin Steaks U .S.D .A . Choice Steakhouse Beef. Any Size Package Lim it-2, Please A dditional At S3.49 Lb. 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Tavlor • Limit Rights Reserved • VO-5 Shampoo Or Conditioner 15-Ounce Bottle, All Form ulas ▼ n C E P FREE COUPONT ~ 1 I Decker Quality I Meat Franks 12-Ounce Package | FREE DECKER QUALITY I MEAT FRANKS WITH COI PON | AND PURCHASE OF $10 OR MORE. , 2C3 LIMIT-1 C O U PO N PER CU STO M ER • K § | C O U PO N MAY NOT BE M E C H A N IC A L L Y RE PR O D U C E D * 3 I CO U PO N E X PIR E S AUGUST 6. 1991 ¡ f c r i i n n i n T K \v \ p a g e 6 Thursday. August 1. 1991 i I M I l / C D C I T V ^ ^ 1 i l l j f C b I T ^ ^ I - , „ _ . ... . . . _ « . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Faculty: ‘p.c. law" will be redundant Sheani Chanmugam Da*iy Texan Staff An am endm ent its sponsor said was aimed at protecting the First Am endm ent rights of students and faculty — w hich was adopted by the Texas Senate Tuesday — has been received bv faculty and adm inistra­ tors a*- largely sym bolic. like "Freedom of expression, a^ stated in the U .S. C onstitution, is already the lav% of the land and as such, the University can't places violate it," said M ark Yudof, dean of the UT School o f Law and ch air­ man of the com m ittee which devel­ oped plans for a racial harassm ent policy for the University. This am endm ent seem s to be de­ signed to show that the Legislature is firmly against w hat they see as intimidation by the 'politically cor­ rect' occurring in other universities around the co u n try ." State Sen David Sibley, R-VVaco, who authored the am end m ent to the Sen ate's education finance bill, has said that it is aim ed against the notion of "political co rrectn ess." Jeff Norw ood, a spokesm an for Sibley, said that Sibley wras dis­ turbed at the national trend to re­ strict speech on cam puses and felt that even though there w ere no clear-cut instances o f that happen­ ing at the U niversity, he saw manv wanting to go in that direction. However, according to a survey of college adm inistrators, conducted bv the American Council on Educa­ tion, the trend Sibley spoke of was not as widespread as had been "significant thought, with only 10 percent of senior adm inistrators surveyed re­ porting controversy over the political or cultural con­ te n t" of addresses by guest speak­ ers. Five percent reported faculty' com plaints about pressure to alter course content, 4 percent said class lectures had been at issue and 3 per­ cent said that inform ation in text­ books was at issue. The study found that more con ­ flicts over political correctness oc­ curred in larger institutions with 20 percent say ing there were contro­ versies over guest speakers, while 10 percent said class lecture^ were at issue. The survev polled officials of 359 colleges and universities, w hose an­ sw ers w ere adjusted to represent the 2,400 institutions that teach un­ dergraduates. John Siatin, a UT associate profes­ sor of English, said that the am end­ m ent w as unnecessary, not only be­ cause it simply reapproved the First A m endm ent to the U .S. C onstitu ­ tion, but also because liberals don't have the pow er that Sibley claims they have. "Sibley says that this is to send a m essage to the liberal thought po­ lice w ho would stam p out conserva­ tive ideas, action and speech on our college ca m p u se s," Siatin said. "B u t 1 don't have the pow er here. For in­ stance, the person in pow er at the liberal arts school, is acting Dean Robert King, w ho no one can call liberal. "If the liberals have any pow er on cam pus, I can 't see any evidence of it," he added. F ly in g d e b ris Jeff Holt Daily T ex an Staff Irene Giatan, an employee of the Division of Physical Plant, to sses a bag of trash from Robert A. W elch Hall. Her responsibilities include cleaning the Chem istry Library, laboratories, offices and classroom s in the building. County offers AIDS tests for students , ; ¿ Matthew Reeves Daily Texan Staff With the Student Health C enter's AIDS testing program booked solid, the Travis C ounty Health Depart­ ment on W ednesday began offering seven hours of A ID S testing each week strictlv for UT students. The health center has received an u r precedented num ber of requests tor AIDS tests since the release of a survey last m onth that tested blood sam ples from stud ents who had vis­ ited the center in the spring of 1990. "U T does w ant people to know that they are providing the test, but th ere's just a waiting p erio d ," said lead Margaret Kelbaugh, social the Travis County worker with Health D epartm ent. For three w eeks, students can seek testing on W ednesdays and Fridays from 1 to 4:30 p.m . at the Rebecca Baines Johnson Building on 15 W aller Street. Students are en ­ couraged to call 469-2070 in advance for an appointm ent. "T h ey [the Student Health C en­ ter] are booked through late Aug­ u st," said Dan Pickens, public infor­ m ation officer the health departm ent. He said adding hours for for students was a m atter of return­ ing a favor. "T h ey 'v e helped us in the past with m easles," he said. Student appointm ents, including pre-counseling, will last about an hour, Pickens said. Tw o weeks after their tests, students will be given their results, along with a 30-m inute post-counseling session. "W e ask for $10 [for the test], but we w ill waive the cost if the person is unable to p a y ," Kelbaugh said. Pickens said that the county has not discussed a possible extension of the services beyond three wreeks this sum m er. B e th e F I R S T T o E x p e r ie n c e L a k e S id e L iv in g Former fraternity president testifies before grand jury without immunity Unlike two fraternity m em bers w ho cam e before a grand jury last w'eek, a form er Tau Kappa Epsilon pres­ ident on W ednesday did not receive a grant of im m uni­ ty for his testim ony regarding alleged hazing activities. Form er Tau Kappa Epsilon President Troy Colim an, 22, gave the latest testim ony in a grand jury hearing, but the Travis C ountv attorn ey's office did not offer him im munity. The immunity statute protects w itnesses from crim i­ nal charges on the basis of their testim ony. Ken O den, Travis C ounty attorney, said allegations made July 24 by current TKE P resident Erik Sharp ee, 20, and rush chairm an Shawm Hill, 20, will continue to be investigated. "T h e other m em bers of the organization w ill likely be asked to provide w hatever inform ation they have and do that in an inform al se ttin g ," O den said. H ow ever, if investigators are unable to validate the allegations made, the grand tional w itnesses, he said. jury will probably subpoena addi­ W alter Prentice, C olim an's attorney, said he is 'n o t surprised by O d e n 's decision to w ithhold im m unity from his client. He added that no other hearings for the four fraternity m em bers subpoenaed have been sched ­ uled. Prentice said he expects the investigation "w ill co n ­ tinue for som e tim e in the fu tu re ." Publications coordinator Price dies at 56 David S. Price, the coordinator for University publi­ cations, died W ednesday at Seton M edical C enter after a short illness. Price, w ho w as 56, began work at the University as a publications production assistant in 1959. By 1969, he becam e head of the University Publications D epart­ m ent, which acts as an in-house design studio for the University. Compiled by Tini Tran, Daily Texan S taff w I \kl \ IKW L u x u ry A p a rtm e n t H om es O N U T S H U T T L E INDOOR BASKETBALL SANDED VOLLEYBALL COURTS TENNIS COURTS BARBECUE AREA PRIVATE STUDY POOL & PING PONG TABLES LAVISH HEALTH CLUB FREE EXTENDED CABLE ALL NEW APPLIANCES CONTROLLED ACCESS ENTRY FULLY EQUIPPED GOURMET KITCHENS ENORMOUS CLOSET SPACE LAUNDRY CENTER ON EVERY FLOOR Call and Gome By NOW I ¿ ik e v ie w A [ i a i t i u a i t H o m e s 2(401 Lakesfaore Blvd. Austin* Texas 78741 444-3917 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK I - 2 r 3 I J e d r o o u i s i M-F 10A.M.-7F. M. • Sat 1 1 A. ML-6p.m. • Sun 1P.M.-6P.M. tBaaaxxaxxxxxzzaxaxaxcaaeaxBaxxtxxazxzzzzxaxaxzzxazzzxzxxzzzBD THning Ideas ‘ This Tad When almost 5 0 , 0 0 0 new & retu rning students and 1 7 , 0 0 0 faculty/staff re tu rn to campus at The University of Texas this fall, they'll be looking for places to go out and eat. Feature yo u r res taur ant w ith an informative ad in I he Daily Texan's Fall R e s t a u r a n t Guide. I his issue will be widely used by students, faculty, and staff to find the best res tau rants in Austin. So, DON'T MISS IT! T h e D a ily T ex a n 's k i i l l I T < > w i € i i i > • * ) « i i L u d I d Publishes: Sep 11 Advertising Deadline: Aug. 16 Call T h e Daily T e x a n ' s RetaiJ Advertising Dept. 471-1865 STATE & LOCAL T H U D * ! ! : * T k x a n Thursday. August 1. 1991 Page 7 Study: Spending cuts will cost more than they save Associated Press A proposal to trim part of the state work force and pay bonuses to other employees might cost the state more than it would save, ac­ cording to an analysis by the comp­ troller's office. A spokesman for Gov. Ann Rich­ ards said the figures indicate that a "meat cleaver" approach to spend­ ing cuts isn't always effective. The House Republican Caucus, which has pushed the plan, says it would save more than $300 million in state funds over the next two years. "W e're convinced it will save about $340 million," said Scott Bohnenkamp, spokesman for the‘ GOP lawmakers' group. The proposal was adopted as an amendment to another budget bill by the Texas House last week. It currently is pending in the Senate. \ The plan would roll back the number of otate w'orkers in most agencies to the 1989 level. Remain­ ing employees would receive 10 percent salary bonuses. The plan would exempt from cuts employees in criminal justice, high­ er education and the Department of Mental Health and Mental Retarda­ tion. The GOP estimated that the plan would reduce the work force by about 9,500 jobs and save $681 mil­ lion over a two-year budget cycle. But with the bonus payments of about $341 million, the Republican Caucus estimates a net savings of $340 million. However, a comptroller's analysis concluded that the plan would re­ sult in a net loss of about $61 million over the budget biennium, Andy Welch, spokesman for the office, said Wednesday. Welch said there appear to be some "inconsistencies" in the pro­ posal, including a comptroller's esti­ mate that the plan would eliminate only 7,500 of the 226,000 state work­ ers. In addition, paying a 10 percent bonus to all remaining state em­ ployees would cost more than would be saved, Welch said. "Instead of a 10 percent [work force rollback], it's more like 3 per­ cent," Welch said. "Under this provision, everyone left would get a 10 percent across- the-board pay raise, and this partic­ ular provision would cost the state money. The bonuses would be more than the salaries it would save," Welch said. The governor's press secretary, Bill Crver, said Richards prefers the spending-cut plans offered by Comptroller John Sharp, who pro­ posed eliminating 1,043 state jobs by consolidating nearly 60 of the 250 state agencies. "This reduc­ [across-the-board tion] has been tried in the past, [for­ mer GOP Gov.] Bill Clements tried it. And those meat cleaver actions just never seem to work. Mostly be­ cause of court orders, lawsuits and things like that, you eventually dis­ cover there's no place to cu t," Cryer said. "Because of the exemptions and so forth that are written into it [the once GOP-backed you exempt all the agencies that are being exempted, then your base of cuts falls on just a few and that's really difficult," Cryer said. amendment], House panel OKs lottery; opponents predict defeat Associated Press A H o u se c o m m itte e W e d n e s d a y vo ted to set up a state lo tte ry , b u t a fight d e v e lo p e d o v er w h a t sto re s w ould b e a llo w ed to sell th e g a m ­ b lin g tick ets. lo tte ry M e a n w h ile, th e y b elie v e d o p p o n e n ts th e y still had said e n o u g h v o te s to kill th e m e a s u re b e ­ fore th e full H o u se, an d a ccu se d th e H o u se W ay s an d M e a n s C o m m itte e o f a d o p tin g th e leg islatio n w ith o u t proper, p u b lic h e a rin g s. th e S e ttin g u p a lo ttery w o u ld req u ire ch a n g in g co n s titu tio n . sta te T h at re q u ires tw 'o-thirds ap p ro v al in the H o u se and S e n a te an d ap p ro v al by T e x a s v o te rs. U n d e r th e c u rre n t p ro p o sa l, v o te rs w o u ld d ecid e th e issu e N ov . 5. " I ce rta in ly feel th e tire track s on m y back at the m o m en t as th e train ju s t cam e ru n n in g o v e r u s ," said S u e C o x, e x e cu tiv e d irecto r o f T e x ­ a n s Wrh o C are, after W ay s and M e a n s a p p ro v e d lotterv m e a su re s 8- 2 . it o n " W e a re still c o n fid e n t th at w e can sto p th e flo o r" o f the H o u se, s h e said . L o ttery bills w ere re jected in 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990 and e arlier this y ear. But S ta te R ep . R on W ilso n , lo t­ leg isla to rs are tery s p o n so r, said s e a rch in g fo r w a y s to in cre a se re v e ­ n u e, and "lo tte r y h as b asically tak ­ en on a life of its o w n . W e n e ed th e re v e n u e , an d it's g o in g to d riv e it­ s e lf ." B u d g et e x p e rts h av e said a lottery w ould raise a b o u t $450 m illion ov er th e n ext tw o y ears. H o u se S p e a k e r Gib Lew is said he su p p o rte d the lottery, but did not k n o w if th e H ou se would ad opt it. A sid e from trad itional an ti-g am ­ b lin g o p p o n e n ts , on e of the L eg isla­ tu re 's m o st p o w erfu l law m akers, R ep. H u g o B erlan ga, said he will o p p o se if corp oration s w h o se e m p lo y e e s have been co n ­ victed o f fe lo n ies are allow ed to sell lottery tick ets. th e g am e A ban ag ain st sto res w ith em p loy ­ e e s w h o hav e fe lo n y convictions cou ld p re v e n t th e n a tio n 's largest c o n v e n ie n ce sto re retailer, So u th ­ land C o rp ., from sellin g lotterv tick­ ets in T e x a s, W ilson said . Sou thland is th e p are n t co m p an y o f m o re than 1 ,0 0 0 7 -E lev en sto res in th e state. L A R E D O — U .S . an d M ex ican lea d ers g a th e re d W e d n e s d a y to d ed ica te th e n e w e st lin k b e tw e e n th eir tw o n a tio n s: a b rid g e th ey h ailed a s a sy m b o l o f in te rn a tio n a l co o p e ra tio n . O n th e U .S . sid e o f th e b o rd er, ab ou t 350 sp e cta to rs g a th e re d u n ­ d er a co n c re te and ste el ca n o p y th at w ill h o u se th e in s p e c tio n fa cil­ ities o f th e S o lid a rity B rid g e. T h e y ch e ered as th e le a d e rs s p o k e of g ro w in g frie n d sh ip an d c o o p e ra ­ th e U n ite d S ta te s tion b e tw e e n and M ex ico. T e x a s G o v . A n n R ich a rd s, U .S . R ep. A lb ert B u s ta m a n te , D -S a n A n to n io , and U .S . A m b a s s a d o r to Jo h n N e g ro p o n te w e re M ex ico a m o n g th e o fficia ls to in a u g u ra te E V E R Y D A Y L O W P R I C E S ON A m jn g ia s s e s b> BAUSCH & COMB « w c x i o v l u n o w M r s ' Metals *3995w /coupon Wayfarer *3995 w/coupon N ot vefcd v r th other d isco u n ts O FFER VALID WITH COUPON THRU 8-31-91 th e in te rn a tio n a l b rid g e. T h e S o lid a rity B rid g e is th e third sp an to b e built alo n g th e in te rn a ­ tion al b o rd e r n e a r L ared o . B ut it is th e first d irect lin k b etw ee n T exas and th e M ex ican state o f N u ev o L eo n an d its ca p ital, M o n te rre y . " T h e p u rp o se o f this b rid g e is to b rin g p e o p le to g e th e r in th e spirit o f c o o p e r a tio n ," said R ich ard s, w h o a d d re sse d th e cro w d a lter­ n ately in E n g lish an d S p a n is h . "It h as u n ite d ou r tw o sta te s as well as u n itin g tw o n a tio n s. " I t is a sy m b ol o f a n ew era, a n ew era o f co o p e ratio n and p ro s­ p erity for T e x a s and for M e x ic o ." S h o rtly th e re a fte r, R ich ard s and sev eral A m erican officials cro ssed th e new sp a n in to M exico to ag ain for d eliv er a m essag e of u n ity ab o u t 300 sp ectato rs. GLASSES BUY 1 GET 1 FREE BUY S IG N A TU R E FRAM E WITH LENSES AND RECEIVE A VALUE FRAME WITH LENSES FREE! • DOCTOR S PRESCRPTION REQUIRED • EXAMS AVAILABLE AT OUR O FFICE EXTRA BONUS ADD TINT, UV COAT & SCRATCH RESISTANT COAT TO EITHER PAIR FOR *29°° (Regular (4 5 0 0 ) OFFER VAUD WITH COUPON THRU 8-31-91 <3 V IS IO N CENTERS5) I S4 EXAMS • CONTACTS • GLASSES Ottering the latest in contact lens technology ...a t affordable prices. ■ 1 9 0 4 G U A D A L U P E r S S , 1 4 7 6 - 1 0 0 0 AAAON CAM PUS CHILD CARE*** UT FACULTY, STAFF, AND STUDENTS SEPTEMBER 1991 APPLICATIONS FOR LIMITED OPENINGS AT LOCAL RATES BEING ACCEPTED UNTILAUGUST 6, 1991 TO OBTAIN APPLICATION FORMS SEND NAME/ADDRESS TO: CHILD CARE CENTER ADVISORY COMMITTEE P.O. BOX 7609 AUSTIN, TEXAS 78713 - O R - PICK UP FORMS IN ROOM 301, MAIN BUILDING Spring s h o w e r Scott Lewis Daily Texan Staff Shawn Weekly, 16. watered flowers at Barton Springs Pool Wednesday. Weekly has been working at the pool about a month. The pool closed again Wednes­ day because of an above-normal fecal bacteria count. U.S., Mexican officials honor Solidarity Bridge Super collider passes conference committee $484 million appropriation expected to keep construction *on schedule Associated Press Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N — A H o u se -S e n a te co m m it­ tee h as ag reed to spend $ 484 m illion on th e su p er co llid er n ext year, and law m ak ers say it n en o u g h to k e ep con stru ction of the $ 8.23 billion atom s m a s h e r o n sch ed u le. T h e d ecisio n T u esd ay by a H o u se-S en a te c o n ­ fe re n ce co m m ittee is $50 m illion shy of w hat P resid en t B ush had so u g h t fo r the giant particle acce le ra to r bein g built in T e x a s. But it is a co m p ro m ise b e tw e e n th e $434 m il­ lion ap p roved by th e H o u se an d th e $309 m illion set asid e by th e S e n a te . B u sh had so u g h t $534 m illion in sp e n d in g for th e fiscal year th a t b eg in s O ct. 1. R ep . Jim C h a p m a n , D -S u lp h u r S p rin g s, said the $484 m illion is v ery stro n g for th e su p er co llid er" u n d e r th e cu rre n t tight fed eral b u d g ets. 1 he co m p ro m ise , in clu d ed in a w ater d e v e lo p ­ m ent and e n erg y a p p ro p ria tio n s bill, m u st now' be a p p ro v e d by th e H o u se an d S e n a te and th en sen t to the p re sid e n t for his sig n atu re . C h ap m an said th e $484 m illion w'ouid be e n o u g h to k eep co n stru ctio n on s ch e d u le , as w'ell as the d e v e lo p m e n t o f th e s u p e rco n d u ctin g m ag n ets, a kev co m p o n e n t. S e n . Phil G ram m , R -le \ a s , said th e m o n ey w ould allow a to be sch ed u led this fall. I he co llid er, a 5 4-m ile u n d e r­ g rou nd ring, is b ein g built sou th o f D allas in Ellis C o u n ty . form al g ro u n d b rea k in g "W e 'll be o ff an d ru n n in g in term s o f real c o n ­ s tru c tio n ," G ram m said. S en . Llovd B e n ts e n , D -T e x as, called T u e s d a y 's d ecisio n " a m ajo r b o o st for the SSC ' and said it should be e n o u g h " t o k eep this vital p ro g ram on s c h e d u le ." C h a p m a n , a m em b er of th e H o u se A p p ro p ria ­ t i o n s C o m m itte e p red icted that virtually all of the land for th e co llid er w ould be acquired ov er the n ext y ear and that ca m p u s b u ild in gs at the site w ould also be g o in g up. C ritics ot th e collid er h av e attack ed the E n erg y D ep a rtm e n t for failing to w in foreig n co n trib u ­ tions to the p ro je ct, w h ich w o u ld o ffset th e cost of collid er to taxp ayers. The on ly co n trib u tio n s to d ate are th e s i billion p led ged bv the state of f e x a s and a $ 3 0 m illion co m m itm e n t from India. Don’t Let TheGRE Psyche You Out If JC n n is the value 8 (A) (B) 10 (Q 12 CD) 28 (E) 40 f STANLEY H. KAPLAN lake Kaplan Or Take Your Chances We offer prep cou rses for the PSAT, SAL, AC :T , I .SAT, (¿M A T , CiRK and M C A T tests at over 150 locations worldwide. C lasses forming now! CALL 472-EXAM Summer Hours: Monday thru Wednesday, 10:00am - Midnight Thursday, 10:00am - 1:00am • Friday, 10:00am - 2:00am Saturday, Noon - 2:00am * Sunday, 4:00pm - Midnight Lower Level, Texas Union Ttif l u m i f \%\ Page 8 Thursday August 1 . 1991 SPORTS Del F*io. N orton to battle for starting job Sarah Homaday ■ Otter notes, page 16 cc rr p etin g w tf Nort »n from rr v an tage point, Del Rio is still m ate him self to the p re-seas -r and the heat. W an n sted t said ie co n sid ering he is learning a and has not been in ra m p long nv Jo hn son said the race w as iew ,ng the films from S u n d ay 's toe H o u sto n O ilers On 'ith d ay , he said both pract :ed well, but ted out N o rto n 's w ork m ore ie s oeen filling in th e gap and playing Tin better th a n I v< seen hirr in the last le of d a v s," Jo h n so n said "H e s going to to to h old n to that position a v s pre-sea- ity C hiefs It trolled situa- different of- p o n d s to >how u p , ke decisions itangibles of m issing curfew , but that m ay be the least of this rookie's problems Botes, w ho is on the C ow boys' in jured list, said W ed n esd ay he borrow ed both S m ith's car and his credit card Tuesday night. Boles said that his troubles with the Austin police arose because he did not return the car to Smith and return to training camp in time, causing Smith to re­ port the car stolen I I ft: IWU J11113 n o t give the Da Hi tv to ev aluate th be*vs did not a d - sh K>t offense, V age- basically t< pi a v e r 's techm q t th e ir m istakes. nages against the O ilers did s coaches a good o p p o rtu n i- - defen se Decause the C o w - for the O ilers' ru n and a n n ste d t said the sen m in ­ 'd th e coaches ab o ut each e an d ability to learn from ■ ■ ■ Rookie ru n n in g back Torn Boles took a w alk on th e w ild side T u esday n ig h t. H e m ay be in trouble wuth team m ate E m m itt S m ith, m av be in trouble w ith th e A ustin police, an d is definitely in trouble w ith th e C ow boys. Boles w as fined an u ndisclosed a m o u n t for J know- w’h a t I did w as w ro n g ,' Boles said, "It just tu rn e d into a big m e ss." ■ ■ ■ D irector erf Player P ersonnel Bob Ackles said no progress had been made on the three veteran h o ld o u ts — Daniel Stubbs, Dean Ham el and A lonzo H ighsm ith. Sources d o s e to H jghsm ith said th a t he will be back in cam p S unday. H ig h sm ith is said to be tired of n eg o tiatio n s and will take w h a t­ ever he is o ffered so that he can be in A u stin S unday night. Form er T exas C hristian co m erback Larrv Brown w as back in practice W e d n e sd a y after m issing six d a y s because his m o th e r w as ill. Wideout Harper seems to fit Cowboys’ specs Jo n B e ck e r Datty Texar Staff If one w ere to d esign th e u ltim ate re ceiv e r, th e re are certain q u alities he w ould have: great sp eed , h an d s, blinding acrobatic good jum p ing ability, an d ru g ­ ged to u g h n e ss D u rin g last A pril's draft, th e D al­ las C ow boys surely e n ­ tered these traits in to th eir collegiate ta le n t com puter, w hich spit o u t one n am e — A lvin H arp er. h eig h t, I he C ow b u v s selected H arp er w ith the 13th pick of the first ro u n d in the draft. O n ly tim e will p rov e his to u g h n e ss, but so far H arp er seem 5- to be tn e total p ackage th at coaches and fans dream about. H arp er used his great h an d s to catch 102 y ard s in his college c a reer at p a rse s for 1 T en n essee, n u m b e rs good e n o u g h to p u t him at fifth p ace o n th e V olunteers' all-tim e receiving j:st T hat's w e n m ore im p ressiv e w rie r o ne con sid ers T e n n essee 's trad itio n of great pass-catchers w hich h as e a rn e d it the nicknam e, "R eceiver U ." F orm er Vols w h o are now star NFL receivers in d u d e S tanley M organ. Tirr M cG ee Willie G ault, C lyde D uncan, a n d A n th o n y M iller M cGee is th e o n h o n e o f th o se w h o had m ore catches th a n H arp er at T en nessee. W hen you get th e re thev stress (T e n n e s­ see 's receiving histo ry ] so m u c h ." said H arper "Thev try to tell vou the trad itio n to get you !'• keep the trad itio n aliv e." Harp* r w as a big p a rt *f T er nc-ssee's excel­ lent track-and-field program , w hich also p ro ­ duced G ault and M iller He w as th e 1989 ju m p S outheast C on feren ce In d o o r high cham pion a n d ra n in th ree track ev e n ts, in­ cluding th e 4x100 m e te r relay team W ith that speed a n d leap ing ability, along w ith his 6-foot-3 fram e, the C ow boys d o n 't have to w o rn abo ut him not g ettin g to Trov Aik- m an 's nfled p a sse s. "I feel I'm d o in g p retty g o o d ," he said. " I'v e learned all the p b v s a n d I'v e got a feel tor w hat I'm d o in g The C o w b o y s 1990 sec o n d -ro u n d pick, speedy w id e o u t A lexander W right, m issed nearly all of tra in in g cam p last year in a co n ­ tract d is p u te a n d had a d isa p p o in tin g rookie season, special co n trib u tin g m ostly on team s. H a rp e r, on the o th er h a n d , ag ree d to a contract w ith Dallas on d raft d ay . T hey h o pe he will have a m ore im m ed iate im pact than W n g h t because of th e his p articip atio n in training ca m p and their o ffseason p ro ­ gram . "H e h ad a great m inicam p in D allas," C ow boys C o ach Jimmy Johnson said. "A l­ v in 's going to be a m ain factor in o u r offense. 1 think h e 's a big-tim e receiver. I th in k h e will not only be a big receiver for the C o w b o y s, Í think p eo p le in this league will n otice h im ." H arp er h o p e s he gets noticed e n o u g h to reach his goal this season — th e All-Rookie team . But h e ad m its h e has b een su rp rise d by the level of play in cam p, especial!) by th e defensive backs. "Since I'v e g o tte n here it's been a little bit to u g h er th an J th o u g h t," H a rp e r said. "T h e guvs trying to m ake th e team , w h e n thev see that bail th ro w n they are going a fte r it iust like th e y w ere a receiver." Jt seem s like e v e ry th in g is in place for H arper to be th e ideal receiver th e C o w b o y s think h e can be H e h as th e ability, th e T e n ­ nessee th o ro u g h prep aratio n of train ing cam p. Let th e gam es begin. tra d itio n , an d now the C o w b o y s roo*»oe r e c e d e * Aivir «-ta'pe* a p p e a r to oe th e kind of w id eo u t D alias w a n ts S 1 , 0 0 0 A T r e a s u r e is h id d en s o m e w h e r e in C e n t r a l T e x a s ! You c o u ld be th e lu cky T e x a n re a d e r to fin d rt! hnMI th» Ymmmm wwwty Wmy lor mor» etw>«rs mne MMftplfttft dot» T O D A Y 'S CLUE: If fen ce or wire bars your way, Y o u ’ll find no treasure— stay away: C i u e s D a ily *r th e T e x a n a n d at T r e a s u r e H u n t S p o n s o r s : AUSTIN ANTIQUES EXCHANGE #11/ * umn* *#rc AUSTTIh PLASM A CENTER 110 ft»-.* **» ÍWm B 00KR A CK NEWS CH0TE S CHEVRON am- «hm» * 4L* ft* COHAN'S PIZZA (nnaCtiiftft EAST CASH PAWN i Ha nets H R ES I UNE Hff1 HOUSE OF TUTOR S tn wm* **» mm LONG JOHN SILVER «0U/ ft LM»r btfC LONGHORN COPIES mi u»xisi«ft« LAKEVIEW APARTM ENTS ?*j Jmmmn to* J N N 'S PRO CUTS iLWr MR GATH'S PIZZA *21 * &w0> Uimo rt** 402 ft M.UK ftrtt 2411 faftt Nil«MÜ* &f 1441 ifcMtrut hw H it ktrpuf' •380 i Lam* p*. i tfi 1 »•* 0*t*t fartw* UhM** /Vi MibM*ur Mm /innhw? ?1 mt *7 i WO* w»fty»fc 11 sc im, r»r **( n r if . ím' K*a0a»r» .jmk ?1?' 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" I h a v e n 't talked to an y D x iv yet to figuix out w hat tim etab le to go by," said R yan, w h o took him self o u t of S u n d a y 's 10-6 ’ie x a s R angers victory over D etroit in th e sixth in­ ning becau >e of a re c u rrin g ache in his right sh o u ld er R yan w as cred ited w ith his 309th victory, striking out 10 for the fifth» tim e th is season a n d th e 212th tim e ' his career O n W ednesday, the R angers said Ryan w ould go on th e disabled list Thursday and w ould be replac ed on the roster by fellow rig h t-h an d ed fireballer Bobbv W'itt, w h o has been on th< DL since M ay 27 bee au>e a ro ta to r * uff injury in h is sh o uld er Ryan said his p ro b le m s began af­ ,*-< pitched his sev en n o-hitter ter M ay 1 a g am st Toronto. "It's a nagging type of thing that 1 • i-ir y i Wt)i Have to p u t up w ith all s< as*iri," R van said "I d o n 't think it will get b e tter u n til the offseason w hen 1 can give ¡t tim e to h eal." Ryan said he h as h ad periods w hen Oh- bark inju ry " h a s n 't both ered me but I g u ess fatigue sets in alter aw hile I here is no tim e for the stam ina to build up J can go three or torn starts «.md be fine and then it Starts to bother m e " Ryan -aid he w ouldn't want ex­ rest between tended periods of starts. "1 think 1 ta n get to the point when* I can take rny regular tu rn arid have the team juggle th e sta rt­ ing ro tatio n ." Ryan w as on the 15-day disabled list in M ay. When h e m isses his start 1 riday, it will be- the fourth ■ Major League game stones, box scores, page 16 time it has happened and on three occasions he has taken him self out of gam es. D oes h e ever th in k that o n e o f th e se days w hen he takes him self out m ight be his iasH "I d o n 't think a b o u t th in g s," he "b u t R yan ™ alwav'- a p o ssi­ bility. J look at w h a t h a p p e n e d in M ay a n d 1 cam e back a n d e f f e c t i v e h a d gam es. I d o n 't i‘* ;k a ' it a s a a- n - e r - c r i p p l i n g Just a n a g g in g in jury th at th in g co m es up d u rin g th e seaso n . "1 d o n 't have the lu x u ry o f giving it th e tim e it n e e d s." M a n a g e r D>bby V alen tin e bein g cautio us about th e situ atio n . is "T h is is the third tim e it has hap- p e n e d ," he said. "D J. is not a bad w o rd M issing a tu rn h as n o th in g to do w ith it He will pitch w hen h e 's re a d y , w h e n m o th er n a tu re tells h im he can pitch again. "R em e m b er, we re d ea lin g w ith a 44-year-old a rm ," V alentine said "It is im p o rta n t for him to be physi- t the oppo»ite o i the big busi ness m aneuver." It's perhaps the album-» friendship be­ fore money" attitude that separates thi» de­ but from the likes of the Traveling Wilburvs and Contraband While it rnav have been less riskv to -.imply rehash and mix the pop-rock s o u n d s of Styx and Night Ranger with an occasional riff or stage rap by the Motor City Madman, the self-titled debut album actually developed a distinctive sound unlike the previous music of any of its parts. "Everyone saw- this band as an outlet for letting their hair dow n and doing the kind of music w e alwavs wanted to do 1 think w e surprised som e people w ith the edge on this album," CarteUone says "The songs we came up with fit the band reallv well and determ ined them selves w ho should W hile even established acts are having trouble selling tickets to a rock au dience suffering from th e recession the D am n Y ankees Bad C om pany tour h as m anag ed to sta\ out on the -oad for an un h eard -o f length of tim e in to d a y 's m arket. M anv in ­ dustry insiders are view ing the success of this tour as historic tor both its packaging and low ticket pnces. "About seven or eignt m onths ago w e decided to b ring th e ticket p n c e s d o w n to aro u n d $12 d u e to the large am ount o f acts traveling a n d charging high ticket pnces, sa ■ s v artel one "I remember that 1 tned to see e v e n show 1 could as a kid, but today's crow ds are forced to make choices w hen it's going to cost them 30 bucks for a show . A lot of tours are suffering because o f it but since w e lowered the pnces our crowds have been huge. It s more than paid oft " While the publicity storm it created might w ind up being equallv a> notable as the spectacle itself N ugent s on-stage target practice with a lire-size Saddam H ussein re- plica ha-> tu rn ed the bow and arrow into one of the band/» highlighted in stru m e n ts. The whole war thing was am azing be­ cause we >tarted getting letters from troops w ho played their Dam n Yankees tapes out in the desert The song Damn ) ankees from the album becam e a runaway hit on mili­ tan radio, CarteUone s a w The most flatter.ng part was that a Dam n Yankees ran fired the first howitzer to officially "tart the war on jan 15. He had painted down the -side of the barrel the name of our band and now it s in the m ilitan m useum . ' W hile the troops used the music o f Damn Yankees a» a w eapon, the band s yearlong road trip is leaving behind so manv tour >tories the\ mav be discussing book deals before the tour ends in September. After the san Francisco earthquake of 1989 inter­ rupted their initial recording session, the band once again faced natural disaster w hen their tour bus burned dow n it s been weird, savs CarteUone, "but w e've been able to conclude that the earth­ quake v\ as ju»t the result of l e d playing too loud and the bu» fire was the last of Sad­ dam s SCUD attacks and was m retaliation for our stage show DAMN YANKEES Where AquaFest. Auditorium Shores When Fnday ANNIVERSARY “We actually are just the result of the age-old thing where two musicians bump into each other backstage and say Let s get together and wnte some­ time.’ ” — Michael Cartel lone of Damn Yankees take the sp o tlig h t on an y given tra c \ The songs have definitely m ad e the tru n c a tio n weli from the p re -p ro d u ctio n w ork w ith just guitars and am plifiers in the basem en t to the album and to the stage " During the rime the album went to plati­ n um and High Enough to p p e d th e video th e band w a t c h e d from the road, c h a r t s w h ere for over 13 m o n th s and 2500 sh o w s thee ve been co-headlinin g with Bad C o m ­ pany sacs CarteUone. "An extensive to u r like th is h a s only helped the band becom e closer and tigh ter as m usicians, I ts reached the point w here we can now al­ most thmk as one instead of wondering w h en Ted or Tommy wants to cross the stage or m ove the mike stand out of th e way." "Since w e have been t w o or three t i m e s to most cities we are constantly being told bv the tans and critics that the set is im­ proving and our m usicianship is actually grow ing bv leaps and bounds as well," he adds. Reri (Anne Chevalier), an untouchable maiden in Bora Bora, greets a fellow islander. Silent film retains punch Alvaro Rodriguez Daily Texan Staff film In an age of multimil­ lion dollar hom ages to carnage and excess, (see Hudson Han k and Terminator 2), it's m a ­ to rediscover a classic silent like Tabu w here, lo and behold, the director worked from an original script, the stars didn't dem and outrageous sala­ ries, and the special effects budget could afford a box of Velveeta. The film -going public has b een granted a m arvelous gift: A beautifully restored film as m oving, candid and thought-provoking as any talking classic. labu is the story of a tribe of South Sea islanders w hose tradition dictates the ritu­ al of appointing a virgin to the lofty yet lonely position of sacred maiden extraor­ dinaire. The girl chosen, Ren, has eyes for an agile native boy, Matahi, w ho recipro­ cates her love. When Matahi finds out that Reri has been decreed taboo, he kid­ naps her, who,king her away from the is­ land in a beautiful moonlit night-fhght to a civilized island where he hopes to get enough m oney to flee even farther By breaking the taboo, how ever, Matahi is cursed, and the ill-fated lovers live in fear of the w ith ered patriarch w h o chose Reri to be th e sacred virgin. O riginally released in 1931, Tabu w on the A cadem y A w ard for Best C in em ato g ­ raphy . C in em ato g rap h er H oyd Cro»by cap tu res the seascape from a m oving boat several action surprising ly well; an d scenes rival the f i ne s t a ch iev em en ts of K eaton a n d C haplin. Tabu w as co-w ritten a n d directed by th e G e rm a n d irecto r of F.W. M u rn au , Nosferatu. D ocum entare film m aker Robert Flaherty, w ho m ade \ mee» of the North, shares script credits. I he s t or v s sp e e c h ­ less pages have a tim eless quality th at al­ lows for in sta n t accessibility O ne c a n 't help but w on der about th e reaction Tabu insp ired d u rin g its prem ier run in 1931 This w as d a rin g filmmaking, cutting-edge s t u f f caused , in part, by the unlikely collaboration b etw een M urnau an d Flaherty. The versio n sh o w n then, h ow ever, cut som e of the n ativ e's nu d ity , w hich has been faithfully restored here. Unlike m any silent film s. Tabu ha-» lost little of its original p unch As a classic of silent cinem a, it d e m a n d s to be seen TABU Starring Anne Chevalier D irector F W Murnau Playing at Texas Union Theatre Rating * * * * Í $94 A MONTH! Students of the Big Hearted State Receive Payment Donate Life Saving Plasma AUSTIN PLASMA 510 W. 29th 477-3735 O rchid P lan ts In d oor Bonzai ^ a»ep •* T e x a s B l o o m s F o t Q a d N y , l « n r lo> , amé C aw y» D e b it M a ll 474-77*9 Associated Press Page 10 Thursday, August 1,1991 wi—HH . T h e D a i l y T e x a n A DOZEN ROSES $ 9 . 9 5 Caak é Carry Casa Verde Florist 4 5 1 -0 6 9 1 Daily Specials FTD * 4601 GuwMup* - On UT Shuro* Ri « ■ * A U S T I N 6 • n m o iiM o iiO fflM 1 MUI Ml.ef *o*Toeous P F N T F R A D U L T V ID E O Phone 385-5328 f COUPLES THEATER-Fri. & Sat. 7pm-6 am SINGLES THEATER-Qpen 7 days 24 hours "A VERY GREAT MOVIE " THE NEW YQftK TIMES L 'A T A L A N T E 2 00 4 30 7 2 5 3 35 | THE BEST OF t h e NEW VORK EROTIC FILM FESTIVAL S L A C K E R 609 WEST 29TH STREET 478 5325 day to discuss b u y in g the Spurs. 14Art is not a skill, though that's a part of it. ft's a passion. * Robert Altman Mill I P LSAT G M A T • GRE Fall Courses LSAT begins August 24, or August 31 (yesyou‘d get I^abor Day week­ end oil) GRE begins September 7 GMAT begins September 15 For more information, call 474-TEST rrttinn ALL DAY Ail SEATS-Alt SHOWS J D R O P D E A D F R E D (PG13) 11:45 2:004:457009:30 Anthony Hopkins S Jody Foster In THE SILEN C E OF THE LAM BS R o b e rt O e N iro S R o b in W illia m s in (N o m in a te d tor H o st S u p o rtm g A c to r) AWAKENINGS (PG13) ............ C 'tÍm ¿3 PUBLISHED ARE F C * TOQAV ONLY ] G a y ? If you haven’t discovered lesbian and gay literature and culture, you re missing the best pans LIBERTY LIB ER T Y WB O O K S y - A quality Lesbian and Gay bookstore fo r the heart o f Texas 1014 B North llamar Blvd {behind Sound Warehouse) Austin, Tx. 78737 495-9737 The only store like it in Texas L e s b i a n ? Augu.'I I -4 Bass( 'oncert ¡ I,til Tickets $20'S^O at all U T T M TicketCenters 471-1444 for information CENTER AT UT AD the Best Shows in All the BestTheatres. m ; This performance is underwritten in [ art by H -E-B FooJ Stores. THE PRINCETON REVIEW We Score More! U.T. PRE-LAW ASSOCIATION S p o n s o r s L S A T P R E P C O U R S E by S t a n l e y H. K a p l a n C l a s s e s S t a r t i n g N O W ! CALL: 471-5284 HAPPY HOUR M0NDAY-FRIDAY 2 -7 rVLRY FRIDAY NIGHT Salsa Dance Contest $200. CASH PRIZE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT Merengue Dance Contest $200. CASH PRIZE THE H O TTEST SALSA AND M EBENOUE IB TEXAS 217 Congress Ave. 479-50021 All You á B s - S Can Eat B U FFET H ours: All day Sun. & Mon. 11-2 Tues.-Sat. includes g reat p izza , salad, 415 W 24th St Under the Castilian 4 7 2 - D A V E 1 9 2 6 E R iv ersid e By MiniMax 4 4 8 - D A V E & 3000 Duval Near Posse East 476-DAVE With thw coupon Lim it 4 per co u p o n .•iV j. i . ' u ' ij i . ' i . ' i . ' i a 7771 'f {lelfliíf-TI/fT: " A STYLISH A N D BAW DY MURDER MYSTERY ABOUT SEX, M A N N E R S A N D TRUTH!’ r~u / -r-% «9 - \4J L - W mL * a-»'*.. « , - r - n / V : f 1 4 *rU Toniytit at 11:40 p.m. Union Theatre (R) Tonight at 9:30 p.m. Union Theatre (R) Austin premier» Tonight at 7:30 p,m . (NR) Union iheatre /;/* /; /• /• / • // /; ///;?*;/•/;///; /;.* ’ A/A/ A/A/A/A/ A/ A/ A/A;‘A •A*A( T h e I n t e r r o g a t i o n Polish with subtitles Tonight at 7:30 p.m. Hogg Auditorium (NR) mi • / * / $ i i Tonight at 9:45 p.m. Hogg Auditorium (R) Group seeks to purchase Spurs S A N A N T O N IO — Several busi­ ness people are o rg an izin g a group to buy in to the San A n to n io Spurs to head o ff outsiders w h o m ight purchase and m ove team, a published report said W ednesday. the "T h e re is a great concern that, if the Spurs w ere sold, they w o u ld leave to w n ," said W illia m Greehey, chief executive o fficer o f Valero I n- ergy C orp. "W e have talked to a n um ber of people in tow n to see if they are in te re ste d ." NBA The Express-News reported several people m et Tues­ A m o ng those re p o rte d ly a tte n d in g the m eeting were a Valero representative; M ayo r N elson W o lff; Robert M cD erm ott, chairm an o f U S A A , an insurance and f i­ nancial services firm ; and Robert C olem an, o w n e r o f Texace C o., a m anufacturer o f g o lf hats and visors. " I'm hesitant to say a n y th in g at the m om ent because it's a delicate s itu a tio n ," W o lff said. Spurs m a jo rity o w n e r Red M cCom bs has denied the N B A team is fo r sale. M cC om bs said he w o u ld listen to any offers from potential investors. " I f anybody has any interest |in purchasing in to the team], I'd be interested in ta lkin g to th e m ," M cCom bs said. "B u t, no, I h ave n't had any conversations w ith anybody on that and I'm not aware o f any g ro u p ." McCom bs said the team w o u ld rem ain in San A n to ­ nio. Sources told the Express-Neivs that Valero w o u ld not “There is a great concern that, if the Spurs were sold, they would leave town.” — Valero Energy CEO William Greehey be an investor b u t that Greehey w o u ld help organize the venture. The biggest h u rd le in any deal rep orte dly w o u ld be the value o f the team. M cCom bs re p o rte d ly w o u ld va l­ ue the team at about $100 m illio n , but others place the am o un t closer to $85 m illio n . Even at $85 m illio n , investors m ig h t have to p ro vid e $20 to $25 m illio n in e quity, w ith the rem aining $60 to $65 m illio n com ing from len din g in stitu tio n s. A more like ly scenario a pparently w o u ld be fo r local investors to purchase partial interest in the team and retain M cCom bs as investor and chairm an o f the board. "W e just had a small g ro up m eeting [Tuesday! and there is a p la n ," Greehey said. "W e 're loo king at sever­ al alternatives in v o lv in g a num ber o f p a rtie s." Greehey said no decisions are im m ine nt. "T h e final [in vesto r] gro up could be a large one be­ cause the am ount of m oney invo lved is so la rg e ," Greehey said. " I f Red does decide to sell, he can come to o u r gro up and say, 'H e re 's w ha t the deal is,' and w e'd go from th e re ." Potential investors appear to include Spectacor, a m anagem ent consultant group out of Philadelphia that ow ns the Spectrum and helped b rin g the H ouston O ilers tra in in g camp to San A n to n io and preseason games to the A lam odom e. ^IM M IGRATION ^ ij A j CITIZENSHIP • H-1 VISA WORK PERMITS • GREEN CARDS INVESTORS • INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL LABOR CERTIFICATIONS M.A. RAZZAQUE OFFIC E MANAGER G l o r i a L e e V e r a Attorney at Law 443-4788 1946 S. IH-35, S u ita 202, A u s tin , Texaa 78704 .( lic«n»»d by lh« Texas Supreme Court J Since 1976 d / Not certified by the Texae Board oI Legal Specialiration^y^ /b W a x E le p h a n t S ib lin g R iv als Friday H e y Z e u s W a llflo w e rs M ic h e lle S o lb e rg R ad io H a ird o Saturday Troll D olls B lu e C an o e P sych o D a is ie s Texas Union 24th & Guadalupe PRESIDIO THEATRES STUDENT DISCOUNTS DAILY $4.50 WITH VALID I.D. MATINEE ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 PM RIVERSIDE 8 RIVERSIDE & PLEASANT VALLEY RD 448-0008 V. I. WARSHAWSKI r 1:00 3:15 5 45 7:45 9.55 Nü PASSES ; KLBJ_____ TERMINATOR 2 r 1 45 4 30 7 15 10 05 12:40 NO PASSLS KLBJ BOYZN THE HOOD 12 30 3 00 5 30 8:00 10:20 ROBIN HOOD 1 00 4:00 7:00 9:45 ____________ NO PASSES-KLBJ ANOTHER Y O U r __________12:15 2 30 5:15 7:30 10:05__________ BILL & TED’S BOGUS JOURNEY pg ___________12 15 2 30 5:15 7 30 9 45 POINT BREAK 2 00 4 45 7:15 9:45 ____________ NO PASSES KLBJ_____________ NAKED GUN 2 1/2 pgu 12 30 3 30 5 30 7:30 9:30 ___________ NO PASSES - KLBJ______ DUTCH PG13 11:45 VILLAGE CINEMA 451-8352 7 0 0 ANDERSON R E Q U IE M F O R D O M IN IC r _________12:50 3 20 5:15 7:30 9 45__ THELMA AND LOUISE R ...... 12:35 3:00 5:30 8:00__________ L A W R E N C E O F A R A B IA p g _____________12 30 4 30 8 30 D R O W N IN G B Y N U M B E R S R J Z .45 52Q.1QJXL B R IG H T A N G E L r 3:10 7:45 e s H n a s O p o n M o n S a t Until 1 3 0 a t night 24th & San Antonio (hCactm: Trxijh The Dixie Chicks Friday The Austin Lounge Lizards Saturday Jim m y LaFave T exas U n io n 2 4 th & G u a d a lu p e FOR RAY BAN® SAVE 20-60% W E BEAT ANY RETAIL P R IC E 1 BIG DOG SUNGLASSES 2021 Guadalupe 1st floor Dob»** Mall 476-0171 Rem em ber Images? Alas, while we cannot re s u rre c t the hallowed entertainm ent rag, we can offer KTSB’s Call Letter, th e official radio and m usic magazine fo r the best radio station in town. Look fo r the back-to-school issue of the Call L e tte r in over 4 0 locations around Austin on August 28 . Or, receive on free of charge a t your own home fill by being on our revered mailing list. W rite us at PÜ Box D, 7 8 7 1 3 -7 2 0 9 , o r come by our studios in the Varsity Center.. K T S B T O P L E S S "ultra-hot" Hifz 7 / 3 1 - 8 / 6 1. PRIMUS Forbidden Places 2. MARY S DANISH Circa 3. V/A Love & Napalm Vol. 2 4. V/A Grunge Years Compilation 5. BLAKE BABIES Rosy Jack 6. ANTHRAX Attack o f the World Killer B‘$ Facelift 7. ALICE IN CHAINS 8. KING MISSILE The Way to Salvation 9. MEAT PUPPETS Forbidden Places 10. HEY ZEUS Swimming Lessons Hot add: Stretford - R o b e r t A Z im m e r II, S ta tio n E m p re s a r io KTSB OFFICES: 471-5106 / REQUEST LINE 471-KTSB A UT TRADITION Let Us Tempt Your Tastes. Lunch. Dinner. Bring Your Craving. W hatever Time of Day. Friday Home-Style Blues ANSON FUNDERBURGH andlHE ROCKETS with S A M M Y E R S ------------- Saturday---------------- Chicago Soul King OTIS CLAY and CHICAGO FIRE ------------- Sunday ------------- Zydeco Party with WILFRED CHEVIS Music-Food-Dance 6-10 p.m. ------------ Monday LOU ANN BARTON ------------ 8/9 8/15 8/15-8/17 6/19 Coming Up ------------ Johnny Nicholas Doyle Bremhell, Sr. David Hailey Looae Diamonds Boogie King* Leo B-Dey Party with Denny, Peul, George, Sereh, Kaz, Nick, Derek ALL YOU CAN EAT 4:30 pm-10 pm $4.95 Iced Tea • Tossed Salad • Fresh Fruit Salad Enchiladas Con Queso • Spanish Rice Beans Homemade Tamales C h ili Chips • Hot Sauce • Corn or Flour Tortillas Enchilada liar 1702 Lavaca 477-7689 Md 'cr< <)fd • Vis.» • Pul-<■ Ameritan hxpre** Ralph J . Branch D.D.S. WHAT CAUSES BAD BREATH? Q. W hat cau ses bad breath? A. N ot only d o e s plaque ca u se tooth d ecay and gum disease, it cau ses bad breath, too! Bad breath h as been blam ed on upset sto m ach , g arlic, onions, certain c h e e s e s , sm ok ing and m o re. W hile th ese th in g s m ay produce odors, th e o d o rs will d isap pear in tim e, unlike bad breath which is an oral condition. 'Hie prim ary cau se of bad breath is the bacterial plaque on te e th and th e d e co m p o sitio n of d iseased teeth and gum tissue. s p a c e and th e g u m in You can elim inate m o st of y o u r bad breath by bru shing and flossing after each m eal. (D on’t forget to b ru sh your tongue!) You m ight also try garglin g with m outh w ash. And periodic visits to the dentist are im portant, so he or sh e can rem ove additional plaque, treat decayed teeth and unhealthy g um s, and ch e ck for dental d isease. Rem em ber, bad breath can be prevented. W ith p roper oral hygiene and regular visits to your dentist, you can have a clean-feeling mouth and fresh-tasting breath everyday! I I 474-5314 2915 Guadalupe 2 9 0 7 Duval 4 7 2 - 5 6 3 3 Emergency # 4 7 4 - 1 6 7 3 I! Send all listings to Michael Casey, Listings Edi­ tor. The D aily Texan, P.O Box 0 , Austin, TX 78713, or call 471-4591 Deadline is one week before publication. Club owners are encour­ aged to send monthly listings to avoid incorrect listings Most music starts 10-11 p m unless otherwise noted HH — Happy Hour E vents in bold type are highly reco m m en d ed . LIVE M U S IC THE ACTING STUDIO 5811 Burnet Road, 452-5989 AFTER SEVEN 7601 N Lamar Blvd , 452-6407 A N T O N E S 2915 Guadalupe St.. 474-5314 Thu Fri Logan & Lix, Blue Devils Anson Funderburgh & the 1 Sam Myers Otis Clay w Chicago Fire Wilfred Chevis Lou Ann Barton Alan Haynes Miss Lavelle and the Antone Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed A R TH U R 'S PLACE 11940 Manchaca Road, 282-9804 AUSTIN AQUA FEST Thu Clay Baker, Debonaires, Mark Collie, Grains of Faith, Chris Thomas, M ar­ shall C rensh aw Kimberly M'Carver, • Lost Gonzo Band, Divinyls Fri Damn Yankees, Bad Company, Sherri Barr, Kevin Black, Eddy R a­ ven, Third Person, Dash Rip Rock. M ojo Nixon Javelin Boot, Presi­ dents Sat Rob Crosby. Holly Dunn, Will T Massey, Blood Oranges, T. Graham Brown, Hand of Glory, T en Hands John Prme, Tw o N ice Girls Lucinda Williams, Vince Gill AUSTIN OPERA HOUSE 200 Academy Drive, 443-8885 AUSTIN O UTHOUSE 3510 Guadalupe St., 451-2266 Yard Slugs Thu Texas Instruments Fri Bechtol 4 McBride s Metal Cow Sat Herman the German, Little Giants Sun Poor Yorick, Swing Potatoes, Lost Mon John Casner, Jubal Clark Best of open mike w Eric Blakely Bon Terra, Salem Tree Tue Wed BACK FORTY 407 Neches St., 478-0411 Music begins at 8 30 p.m. Margaret Wright Thu Burton Miton Fri Sat Buddy Wilson Mon Beth Williams Tue, Wed Margaret Wright BACK R OOM 2015 E Riverside Drive, 441-4677 Thu Fri Sat Sun Tue Wed Culture Shock, Outlaw Circus. Wik- kid Wayz, Weird Cousin Rockbusters Near Dark Dictators Reunion > Last Rite, Hurlant. Dancyr, Apo- cryphyx, Fury Sivias, Forgotten Sweet Revenge, Blind Date, Tribe, Porcelain Grind, Hush Scarlett, Little Miss Dangerous, Onyxx BLACK CA T LO UNGE 309 E. Sixth S t , no phone Thu Mon Tue Wed Soul Hat 2 Hoots and a Holler Soul Hat Chaparral BROKEN SPO KE 3201 S Lamar Blvd . 442-6189 Alvin Crow Fri Kimmie Rose Sat W ayne Hancock Tue People s Choice Wed p . CA C TU S C AFE Texas Union, 471-8228 Music usually begins at 9 p m Thu Fri Sat Mon Tue Dixie Chicks Austin Lounge Lizards Jimmy LaFave Open Stage Michael Fracasso, Betty Elders, D a­ vid Rodriguez Javelin Boot, Hey Zeus Wed C A N N IB AL CLUB 306 E Sixth St., 472-2002 Thu Fri Sat Sun Seamen, Moist Fist Tiny Lights, Shoulders Blood Oranges, Agony Column Barking Tribe, Glass Eye, State of Mind Flowerhead, Mother Tongue, Jeff Mi­ chaels & Freak Show Mon Tue Wed Picket Line Coyotes, Spirits & Trams, Virgin Machine Faucet, Helmet, Jaw Box CAP N TO M S B AR-B-Q 1180 N Lamar Blvd , 834-1858 Sat, Sun Bluegrass Jam Tue Old-Time Fiddler s Jam C A R L IN S 416 E Sixth St ,47 3 -0 9 0 5 Thu, Fri Sat Elliot Fikes River City Slim Rhythm Kings CA TFISH STATION 408 E Sixth St.. 477-8875 C H ANCES 900 Red River St 472-8273 C H ELS EA S TREET PUB Barton Creek Square 327 7794 Thu-Sat Wed 2 x III Guilty Party . r r ; ». i V i C H EZ FR ED /C R O S SR O A D S 9070 Research Blvd 451 6494 Robert Skiles Thu Robert Skiles Trio Fri Sandy Allen Trio Sat Tony Campise T rio Sun C H EZ FRED W ES TLA K E 1014 Walsh Tarlton Lane. 328-9187 Fri Sat Sun Sandy Allen Mady Kaye Trio Bill Forrest C H IC A G O HOUSE 607 Trinity St.. 473-2542 Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Bobby Roberts, Walt Wilkins, Barb Clark Therapy Sisters, Michael Fracasso, Steve Young, lam Matthews, David Garza. Bruce Robison, Bon Terra. Betty Elders W K Gentry, Greg Whitfield. Beth Freeman, Junior Brown, Lillian Standfield, Russ Somers, Michael Hardline, Susan Lmdfors Coyote Choir, Emily Kaitz. George Ensie, Barb Donovan, Jimmy LaFave, Michael Elwood w Beth Galtger, Kathy McCarty w Rich Brotherton, Heavy Weather Val Davis, Bob Redly w Craig Davis, Susan Colton, Mark Luke Daniels, M J Torrance, David Rodriguez, Troy Campbell, Andy Van Dyke C LOAK R OOM 1300 Colorado St., 472-9808 Thu, Fri Beth Williams Tue, Wed Buddy Wilson CLU B XS 110 E Riverside Drive, 441-5499 CO LO RA D O ST. CAFE 705 Colorado St., 479-6346 CO N TIN E N TA L CLUB 1315 S Congress Ave , 441-2444 Fri Sat Hand of Glory, Big Blue Men 2 Hoots & a Holler, Road Kings Rounders, Devil and the Dames Tex Thomas & Danglin Wranglers D Jalma Garmer's French Band Millionaire Playboys, Herman the German, 3 Balls of Fire. Death Valley Bonedaddys, Kulebra Dragons Sun Mon Tue Wed C YPR E S S CREEK CAFE On the square in Wimberly, 847-2515 DA M C AFE 911 N RR 620, 266-1979 Thu Fn Sat Wed open mike with David Kealy Midge Marsden David Kealy & Network Pepper Morris (HH) D E V E R E A U X S O YSTER BAR 120 E San Antonio S t , San Marcos (512) 396- 0022 Thu Fri Sat Wed Errol Blackwood D R U M Caliche Skinny White Boys DONN S DEPOT 1600 W Fifth St., 478-0336 Thu Fri Sat Tue Wed A C Gonzales & Big City Band Donn Adeiman & the Stationmasters Loy Blanton Donn Adeiman & the Stationmasters Loy Blanton THE ELE P H A N T BAR 315 Congress Ave . 473-2279 Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Beth Williams (HH), Phillip Marshall Quintet Beth Williams (HH), Tomas Ramirez Quintet Julie Burrell Robert Skiles Trio Bobby Doyle (HH), Michael Morde- cai s Monday Nite Jazz Jam Margaret Wright (HH), Tony Campise Quartet Margaret Wright (HH), Austin Jazz Orchestra w Tony Campise G R IZ W A L D ’S 1703 S. First St., 440-8778 Thu Fri, Sat Tue Wed D Jalma Gamier s French Band The Jazz Pharoahs The Frigidaires Tony Aroldi & Leah Rummel GR U ENE HALL 1281 Gruene Road, New Braunfels 625-0142 Thu Fri Sat Sun Tue Wed Christine Albert Clay Blaker Delta Rays, Jay Eric HooDoo Cats Mark Luke Daniels Joseph & Theresa H EA D LIN ER S EAST 406 E Sixth St .47 6 -3 4 8 8 Thu Fri, Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed High Noon Bill Forrest Bad Livers D Jalma Garmer's French Band Kent Finlay's Songwriter s Showcase Alvin Crow H E N R Y ’S BAR 6317 Burnet Road. 453-9594 Thu Fri Sat Mon Boomer Norman & Son Ted Roddy & Honky-Tonk Deluxe Jamie Smith Band Don Walser, Burt Revere, Howard Kalish & Don Keeling. Jason Roberts Jim Broder & Cactus County Band Tue HOLE IN THE W A LL 2528 Guadalupe St , 472-5599 Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Loose Diamonds LeRoi Brothers Kulebra Dragons Picket Line Coyotes Big Fish, Stick People Bad Ltvers Jimmy LaFave s Night Tribe, Kathi Nordone H U T S 807 W Sixth St., 472-0693 IN THE CITY ( Hi n \ i i , v l > ^ j y U Thursday. August 1,1991 Pag# 11.; Return of the Blue Lagoon: The best chance you’ll get to see a teen-age couple run around mostly naked for 98 minutes — unless you rent the onv JALISCO R ESTA UR A N T 414 Barton Springs Road, 476-4838 PA R A M O U N T THEATRE 7 13 Congress Ave , 472*5411 JA M B A LA YA 6801 Burnet Road. 453 8574 Fri Sat Wed James Polk Fernando Miramon Sandy Allen JA ZZ: A LO UISIA N A KITCHEN 212 E Sixth St , 479 0474 JA Z Z ON THE LAKE 2219 West Lake Drive. 327-2417 Thu Fri Sat Sun Wed Texas Unlimited Bubba Cox Mo|0 Jeff Anderson Denim JO E ’S G E N ER IC BAR & B EAC H CLU B 315 E Sixth St ,480-0171 Thu Fri Sat Storming Heaven. Bad Manners Crossing Oceans, Ronnie Taylor Cat Murphy & Blue Peppers Bad Manners Sunday Nite Blues Jam hosted by Buddy Tucker School Men, Buddy Tucker and Soul Hustlers Crossing Oceans, Cat Murphy & Blue Peppers Mon Sun Tue LAFF STOP 8120 Research Blvd , 467-2333 Thu-Sun Don Ware. Felicia Michaels. Roger Harrell LA ZO NA ROSA 612 W Fourth S t , 482-0662 Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Orangutango S usanna Sharpe & S am ba Police Bill Carter & Blame Tomas Ramirez Susanna Sharpe Sarah Campbell l-Tex LIBERTY LUNCH 405 W Second St., 477-0461 Thu Fri December Happy Family, Virgin Machine, Ba ing Tribe Eroll Blackwood Sat THE LUM BER YA R D 16511 Bratten Lane, 255-9622 Thu Fri Sat People's Choice Texas Fever Loy Blanton M AGGIE M A E ’S LIM E STR E ET STA TIO N 323-325 E. Sixth St., 478-8541 M A N U E L S 310 Congress Ave . 472-7555 Sat Sun Mitch Watkins Donna Menthol Trio w Spencer Starnes & James Polk M ER C A D O C ARIBE 506 Trinity St (Behind Maggie Mae s). 469 9003 Thu Fri Sat Mon Tue House in Orbit, Timbuk 3, Orangutango Timbuk 3 E.R Shorts Rock mte w Psycho Groove, Wax Elephant Chris Thomas Wed l-Tex M EXIC -A R TE 419 Congress Ave , 480-9373 M IKE AND C H A R LIE S W E S T S ID E BAR 1206 W 34th St , 451-5550 MIRAGE 222 E Sixth St., 474-7531 Fri Sat The Phaze The Limit . P EA R L'S O YSTER BAR Colonnade Shopping Center, 9003 Research Blvd.. 339-7444 RED RIVER SALOON 603 Red R iver St., 482-8773 SAXON PUB 1320 S. Lamar Blvd 448-2552 Thu Olin Murrell Music Emporium w Su­ san Lindtors, Dale Perry, Barbara Biechmann, Rusty Wier Shake Russell. Jack Saunders E.R Shorts E R Shorts, Blue Devils. Midge Marsden. Jett Anderson Band Bad Livers. Austin Lounge Lizards Uranium Savages Rusty Weir, Steve Fromholz, Demm Marcy Lynn's Variety Show, Gary P Nunn, Wayne Hancock Fri Sal Sun Mon Tue Wed SC H O LZ GARTEN 1607 San Jacinto Blvd 477-4171 Sat Tue Tomas Ramirez and Tejazz Uranium Savages SNEA K ER S 9515 N, Lamar Blvd 832-5922 S TE A M B O A T 403 E Sixth St., 478-2912 Thu Fri Sat Sun Extrem e Heat Lost Band. W ater the Dog Rotel & Hot Tomatoes Culture Shock, Shagnastys, Bat M astersons, Onyxx Lost Band. Mark Luke Daniels, I ted­ dy Steady & S hakin Apostles E.R. Shorts, Hand of Glory, Johnny Law Black Pearl F xtrem e Heat, Sou! Hat Mors Tue W ed STO U FFE R HOTEL 9721 Arboretum . 343 2626 TE X A S S H O W D O W N 2810 G uadalupe St 472 2010 TEXAS TA VER N Texas Union 471-9231 Fri W ed Hey Zeus, W allflow ers Michelle Sol berg & Radio Hairdo Toby Damm it, Joan of Arkansas, Spirits X T rams T H R E A D G IL L S 6416 N Lam ar Blvd 451 -5440 Live m usic on W ednesdays 311 CLUB 311 E. Sixth St ,47 7-1 630 Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue W ed True Blondes, W ill S exton & Bukka Allen. Nine Worlds, Will Sexton Band Flying Tigers. Drop the Gun, Road Kings. 2 Hoots and a Holler Jett Haese X Friends Stephanie Bradley Band Junior M edlow & Tor nado Alley Slash Cowboy, Silver Threads, Mil lionaire Playboys, LeRoi Brothers, Road Kings. High Noon Beat-O-Sonics. Nine Worlds, Apple Jane, Trainwreck Ghosts, Drop the Gun, The C low ns Ronnie Taylor Band, W alter Higgs & Shuttlepiggs Elliot Fikes Band. W C Clark Blues Revue Thierry LeCoz 8> French Ticklers, H erm an the German, Little Luck, Big Blue Men, Will Sexton Band, Junior Medlow & Tornado Alley TH U N D E R C LO U D B IER G A RTEN 208 E Riverside Drive. 447-7696 Thu Songwriter's Acoustic open mike w Jon D W hy, 9 W orlds Rock & roll open m ike w Rick Lane Rhythm & Blues open mike Fri Sat Mon OLD SAN FR A N C IS C O STEAK HOUSE 8709 N I 35. 835-9200 Thu Fri, Sat George Strawser, Giovanni Voltag Gail Hicks, Giovanni Voltaggio Sun Mon Tue Wed gio Lois Forsythe, Gail Hicks Lois Forsythe. George Strawser Lois Forsythe, Giovanni Voltaggio George Strawser. Lois Forsythe TO P OF THE MARC 618 W Sixth SI 472 9849 Thu Fri Sat Johnny C lyde C opeland The Brew I ingerprm ts TO ULO U SE 402 E Sixth St 478 0744 Changing Faces Short Notice Thu Changing Faces Fri the Phaze Short Sat Sun the Phaze Mon Tue the Trim Wed the Bizness Notice « VELV EE TA ROOM 117 E. Sixth St 469-9116 open mike night Thu Jim Shawn & Vanessa Kaufman Fri, Sat VO R TEX PER FO R M A N C E CAFE 1921 E Ben White Blvd., 448-2299 Thu-Fri Ancient Boys Sat Sun Dancing with Fire W A TE R LO O ICE HOUSE Sixth Street and Lamar Boulevard. 472-5400 W A TE R LO O ICE HOUSE (W E S T C A M P U S) 1106 W 38th St .45 1-3 712 W A TE R LO O R E CO RD S 600 N Lamar Blvd 474 2500 W Y L IE 'S 400 E Sixth St.. t/2 -3 7 1 2 Mon Tue Steel Power The Brew ANDY W A RH O L: SU PE R S TA R Starring Dennis Hopper Jimmy Carter among others Director: Chur k Workman Playing at Village Cinema Art AN O TH ER YOU Starring Gene Wilder, Richard Pryor Director Maurice Phillips Ptaymg at i at" -hills Riverside THE BEST O F TH E N E W YORK EROTIC FILM FESTIVAL Playing at Dobie BILL AND TED ’S B O G U S JOURNEY Starring Alev Winter (Bill), Keanu Reeves ( Ted) Dire< tor Peter Hewitt Playing at Arbor, Highland Riverside We .tgate 8 BODY PARTS Starring ,m evil arm Playing at Lincoln W estgate8 Norihcrow, Riverside Drive INTER R O G A TIO N Starring Krystyna Janda Agnteszk a Hr>lland Director; Richard Bugaisk Playing at Hogg Auditorium L'A T ALANTE Starring Michel Simon, Dría Parlo, Jean D astt Director Jean Vigo Playing at Dobte LA W R E N C E OF A R ABIA Starring Alec Guiness, Omar Shar i Director: David Lean Playing at: Village C inem a Art LIFE STINKS Starring Mel Brooks Lesley A nn W arn Director Mel Brooks Playmg at Highland, Westgate 8 M O B S TE R S Starring C hristian Slater f Murray Abrat am Director: Michael Karbelm koff Playing at Arbor, Highland t akehills THE N AKED GUN 2 ' . Starring: Leslie Nielsen, Priscilla Prt Director: David Zucker Playing at Arbor, Lincoln W estgati 8 101 D A LM A TIA N S Starring: lots of spotty canines Director: W alt Disney P la y in g a t: I akehills. Lincoln N orthctoss P O IN T BREAK Starring: Patrick Swayze Kneau Reevio- Gary Busey Director Kathryn Bigelow Playingat Arbor, Riverside Barton C re e k Highland PR O B LE M CHILD 2 Starring John Ritter Michael Qtivei Director Brian Levant P la yin g a t M ann W estgate J REG A RD IN G HENRY Starring: Harrison Ford, Annette Banning Director M ike Nichols Playing at Arbor, Lakehills L ir coin RETURN TO THE BLUE LAGO ON Starring Milla Jovovteh Brian Krause D irector W illiam A Graham Playingat Lincoln,Lakehills Riverside,ViiL Cinema Art ROBIN HOOD: PR IN CE OF THIEVES Starring Kevin Costner, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantomo Director Kevin Reynolds P la yin g a t Arbor. Highland B a rto n ( m ek BO Y Z N THE HOOD Starring Ice Cube. Larry f tshburne Director John Singleton Playing at Northcross, Riverside, Westgate 8 ROVER D A N G ER FIELD Starring: the voice of Rodney D irector no one w orth remembering Playing at: N orthcross, Highland, W estgate 8 CITY SLICKERS Starring Billy Crystal, Helen Slater Director Ron Underwood Playing at Arbor, Northcross Westgate 8 D A N C ES W ITH W O LV E S Starring Kevin Costner. Graham Greene Director Kevin C o s tn e r Playmg at Highland DOC H O LLY W O O D Starring Michael J Fox Playing at Arbor, Highland, Barton Creek Riverside THE DOORS Starring V.ti Kilmer, Meg Ryan Director Oliver Stone Playing at Hogg Auditorium THE D R A U G H TS M A N S C O NTRACT Starring Anthony Higgins, Janet Suzman Director Peter Greenaway Playing at Texas Union Theater DROP DEAD FRED Starring Phoebe Cates Playing at: Mann Westgate 3 THE SILEN C E OF THE LAMBS Starring Jodie Foster, Anthony Hopkins Director Jonathan Demme Playing at Mann Westgate 3 SLACKER Starring various Austinites Director Richard I inklaler Playing at Oobie TABU Director: F W Murneau Playing at Texas Union 1 he iter TE R M IN A TO R 2: JU D G M E N T DAY Starring: A rnold Schwarzenegger Lmda Hamilton Director Jam es Cam eron Playing at: Lincoln, N orthcross Rivers * W estgate 8 TH E LM A AND LOUISE Starring: Susan Sarandon Geena Davis Director Ridley Scott Playing at: Highland. Village C r ema a t W estgate 8 HEAVY M E TA L Stamng voices of John Candy Harold Ramis, etc Director Gerald Potferton Playing at I exas Union I heatre TRUTH OR DARE Starring M adonna Director Alex Keshishian Playmg at: Dobie HOT SHOTS Starring Charlie Sheen Lloyd Bridges Director: Jirn Abraham» Ptaymg at Barton Creek Lincoln Riverside V I. W A R S H A W SK I Starring Kathleen Turner . Charles Doming Director Jett Kanew Playingat Barton Creek Riverside. H ig b n n Northcross Applications Available for Fall Staff Positions Come sec what ACTV and UT are visiting TSTV for: the Video Toaster! Our editing suite has had a Video Toaster for the past five months, during which time our staff have become experts on its opera­ tion. See what the video commu­ nity is buzzing about and TSTVhas in iis possession. And since we have already bought it, it doesn’t cost anything to view. Summer Office Hours Monday-Friday Noon until 5 p.m. Saturday-Sunday 10 a.m. until Noon Studio: 471-7899 For anyone interested in an Ex­ ecutive Staff or intern position for the fall semester of 1991, come pick up an application form between August 8 and August 16. Everyone is welcome to apply for any of the five Executive Staff positions or for the intern positions. And if you just want to help out at TSTV, feel free to come down any time and volun­ teer your abilities. Volunteers arc always welcome! If you have any questions about working at TSTV, . - & 2 n y i e L i i l M Obtain the second issue of Signals TSTV’s newsletter. Out the week of August 5. Schedule for Evening of Friday, August 2 Cable Channel 33 10:(X) Vision 2CXK) 10:22 Why Walk When You Can Talk 10:45 Photographic Insights 11:00 Altem ity #3 11:30 Programming Buffet (A ll T im es A pproxim ate) Scheduled Events 8/2: TSTV Showcase 10 p.m. 8/5: Camera ( lass 6-10 p.m. Register for classes at the cashier's window in the T SP B uilding. v n u c UkJ m n City M agazine of UT, Texas •The Survival Guide •The Leisure Guide •Best/Worst Faculty Poll •The Career Guide l > M I N 1 > \ \ N I H I Page 12 Thursday. August 1. 1991 FOCUS 1 % • UT’s Darkest Chapter d d K i d r a h c R i INNER CAMPUS DRIVE PARKING RESTRICTED TO CLASS A P E R M IT S ( P i - 7 JO A H $ 0 0 RM F O N R E S T R I C T E D T O R . - s A P E R M I T S w O * - ( P • 0 0 0 PM 900 PM 25 years later, witnesses reflect on Tower massacre "Nothing like this had ever happened in Austin before — or since. To believe that the guy had the balls to get up there innocent place where people in would come to have lunch or a romantic encounter ... and he wreaked havoc. this — Adrienne de Vergie i l l Law In hu m Laura Leman Daily Texan Staff survivor of "It was a Monda)' ... a sweltering hot d ay," remembers de Vergie, an eyewitness and the crazed bloodbath that happened 23 years ago on the observation deck of "I was returning the L I Tower. from downtown, where I had just bought a pale blue dress at Yar- ing's." As she got off the bus at the stop on Guadalupe Street in front of the University Co-O p, de Vergie heard what she thought were firecrackers. Puzzled by the sight of a voung boy and his bike lying on the sloping grass of West Mall, she slowly head­ ed toward the glass doors of the Co- Op. She began to push her way through when a man snatched her arm and hurled her in the store panting, "D o n 't you know what's happening?" What de Vergie did not know was that a 25-year-old ex-Marine and ar­ chitectural engineering honor stu­ dent was stalking the observation deck on the 28th floor of the Tower. Peering through the scope of a .30- Charles Whitman * caliber semi-automatic carbine, with to enough food and ammunition the last days, on Aug. 1, 1966, sniper began methodically shooting everyone in his sight. Positioned about 300 feet above campus, C harles W hitman re­ mained unapproachable by authori­ ties. Several Austin citizens grabbed their shotguns, rifles and whatever they could get their hands on to take s h o ts at Whitman. Later tracing of the vigilantes' bullets show that shots came from as far as the Phi Delta Theta house on Nueces Street. The sniper wfas at such an advantage even a helicopter attempt was grounded. The m ad­ man's victims, strewn across lawns and shot down in the middle of streets, were just as impossible to reach. De Vergie, w ho was a UT em ­ ployee at the time, recalls, " O n e thing is vivid — people crouched down alone or in groups behind cars, trees, poles or whatever all up and down the Drag. And, the w hin­ ing and sirens — the ambulances couldn't pick anyone u p ." Some of the injured, such as Rob­ ert Heard, were accessible. Heard, now a free-lance writer, was a re­ porter for The Associated Press working out of the Capitol at the time. tipped A co-worker's wife called his of­ fice and them off on the breaking news. Heard and Ernie Stromberger, a reporter for the Dal­ la ^ Times-Herald, were the first two journalists to reach the scene. Un­ fortunately, Heard was hit as well. On foot one block north of the Tower, he pushed his w'ay closer, behind the lead of two state trooper cars. With only a 26-yard stretch re­ maining until he was out of the line of fire, a bullet shot through his u p­ per left shoulder, just Heard said. the pain," remember "1 A witness in the Biological Scienc­ es Building took the risk of pulling Heard behind the trunk of a Stude- baker, where an ambulance could reach and treat him. If the penetration had been 3 inches more to the right, Heard probably would have died. "P eo ple Please see Remember, page 15 (Top) Shots rang out for 96 minutes from the observation deck of the Tower. (Middle) People hid anywhere they could when they realized what was happening. (Bottom right) After Whitman was killed, people gathered around the Main Building to look at the aftermath of the massacre. (Bottom left) Memories of the terror remained for days after Aug. 1, i 966. Photos courtesy of the Barker Texas History Center S n ip e r 's terror reign ends with 15 dead Editor's note: T h is article ran Aug. 2, 1966, one day after the massacre, on the front page of T h e D a ily T ex ­ an G e o rg e K u em p le Issue News Editor The 25-year-old architectural en ­ gineering student perched on the observation det k of the University Tower, shot and killed 13 persons, and wounded 34 Monday after­ noon. Tw o others were found dead away from the University area. I he sniper, C harles Joseph Whit­ man, was shot to death at 1:22 p.m. by City Police Officer Ramiro Mar tine/ about one and a half hours af­ ter the first shots rang out on cam ­ pus. Whitman's wife, Kathleen, a Lan­ ier High School biology teacher, and his mother, Mrs. C J. Whitman, were their home. found dead later in The wife's body was found in the couple's home at 906 jewel St Po­ lice found the body of the mother in her Apartment at 1212 Guadalupe. Police said Whitman left three notes. O ne was found on his mother's door; two were left at Ins home On the observation deck police found three rifles, one with a scope; three pistols; a twelve gauge sawed- off shot gun; and a large Bowie knife. A G1 trunk filled with am m uni­ food and water was found tion, also. Allen R. Hamilton, chief of traffic and security at the University, said Whitman used a vertical dolly to carry the equipment and supplies. He took the lo w e r elevator to the 27th floor, and carried the items the remaining three flights of stairs to the newly reopened observation deck. A woman employee, Mrs. Edna Townsley, who was on duty at the entrance to the deck, w'as killed. I wo other persons were found dead fu mi mi— iii— immutmmnmnmMmim* mrnmm mum— «.ini— n ummmm Please see Whitman, page 15 TH E D a il y T e x a n Thursday August 1,1991 P a g ej3 T E X A N C LA S S IFIED S 8 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 p . m . / M o n d a y - F r i d a y / T S P B u i l d i n g 3 . 2 0 0 "LONGHORN WANT ADS" - Specifications - • 20 words 5 days, $5. • Merchandise for Sale. Priced a* $1000 or less. Price must appear in ad • If item doesn't sell ad­ vertiser must call before 11:00 a.m. on the day the ad is scheduled to end to qualify for the 5 addi­ tional insertions at no charge. • Must specify Longhorn Want Ad classification to qualify for $5 rate. • Changes allowed for Price Only. TO PLACE A W O R D OR LIN E A D CALL: 471-5244 CLASSIFIED W O RD AD*RATES * Charged by the word. 15 word mini mum. Set m 5 pt type only Rah» w e for conjecuthre days Each word 1 time Eoch word 3 times Eoch word 5 times Eoch word 10 times Eoch word 15 times Eoch word 2 0 times $ 38 SI 02 $1 4 5 . $2 5 0 S3 0 0 $3 4 0 per insertion SI 0 0 ch arg e to change copy First two words moy b e ofl capítol letters 25c for eoch oddftionol word in capitoi let­ ters M astercard and Visa occep ted CLASSIFIED LINE A D *R A T E S _____________ "Charged by the line O ne column inch minimum. Avoilable in 5 to 14 p* type 1 c o l * 1 inch 1 Time . . . $ 8 .2 0 WORD AND LINE AD Di ADUNE SCHEDULE Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Friday 1 ¡ « r Monday Ham Tuesday Horn Wednesday Ham Thursday 11am TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED D ISPLA Y A D, CALL: 4 7 1 - 8 9 0 0 ________ CLASSIFIED D IS PLA Y* A D RATES_________ * Charged by the column inch On# column inch minimum. A variety of type faces ond sizes and borders available Fafl Rates Sept 1-May 3 0 1 to 4 9 column inches Per Month $8 6 0 Per Column Inch O ver 5 0 col. in. per month, coi for rotes CLASSIFIED DISPLAY DEADLINE SCHEDULE Thursday, 4 p.m. M onday Fnday, 4 p m Tuesday Monday, 4 p m Wednesday Thursday Tuesday, 4 pm F n d a y ......................Wednesday, 4 p.m. . . . . . In the event of errors made 2 0 each Black and white 8" f v $ 4 0 3 3 5 -9 6 0 2 . 7 -2 9 - 5B._____________________________ __ WHITE FRENCH provincial student desk, laminate french provincial head board for full- sized bed $ 2 5 4 5 4 -0 6 3 8 7 -2 9 -5 8 like new $ 6 5 White top, FOR SALE Telephoto lens, Tokina RMC multi-coat, 8 0 -2 0 0 mm f/4 , $ 85 . O ff white couch, $ 3 5 . Call 4 76 -1 82 2 . 7 -3 0- 5B___________________________________ J g o m g S I I CALL US! Apartments Condos Houses APARTMENT FINDERS 4 5 8 -1 2 1 3 : A FREE SERVICE FREE LO CATING service1 West campus, Hyde Park, Enfield Coll the courteous ogents at Mory Talbot Co 4 8 0 -8 8 0 0 2813 Rio Grande 8-1-20B-C Yssa, broker, at PM T.. 476-2673, 474-9400 MARIMBA KOTSH four-octave full-size M ahogany key $ 4 7 5 , 2 8 0 -3 7 8 7 . 7 -2 9 - __________________ 5 N - C C 360 — Furr». Apts. T H R E E O A K S & P E C A N S Q U A R E APARTMENTS • Fall Rates -$315 • 1 Bdr/1 Ba • Furnished • Laundry • PRELEASE FOR FALL • No Application Fee 451-5840 409 W. 38th St. C haparosa Apartments 3110 Red R iv e r CLOSE TO U.T. ❖ S m a l l, quiet, q u ality complex 2 blocks from Law. on sh u ttle ; a t t r a c ­ tively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3BR 474-1902 f SANDPIPER 2810 Rio Grande (4 bike fiom UT) Furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath diihw M ti*i. m icotetv*. tont* covtitb ptrking, teim niinf pool R e m o d e le d A p ia All o th e rs $ 6 1 0 $ 5 6 0 W a te r a n d G a s P a id 472-5722 Jerrick Apts. WALK OR SHUTTLE UT • WALK TO CAMPUS AVALON APTS. 32nd at IH-35 • Efficiency - $ 2 7 5 • 1 BR - $ 3 2 5 & up • 2 BR/2 BA — $ 4 2 5 & up W a lk -in closets, ceiling fans, on-site m a n a g e r a n d la u n ­ d ry facilities. C o n ve n ie n t to east cam pus. G re a t fo r law , e n g in e e rin g a n d music stu­ dents. 476-3629 7-18-20B-K 5 BLOCKS WEST UT ge,quiet, immaculately clean efficien- Lon k'tchen, waik-in doset, laundry, aas cy jt and cooking, woter/qos, furnished heat and cooking, -voter/gas, FALL$200 RED OAK APARTMENTS 2 Í0 4 San G abnel 4 7 6 - 7 9 1 6 723 WEST CAMPUS~ EFFICIENCIES "Your Oasis in the Chaos of West Campus!" Quiet, friendly, ond spacious. Gas, w ater ond cable paid, laundry room, security lighting, on W C Shuttle, discounts on year leases $2 2 5/m o $ 3 0 0 /m o Summer Foli/Spnng B a rra n ca S quare Apts. 910 W. 26th Call 4 7 8 -1 3 5 0 for appt 7 -2 3 -2 4 B BLACKSTONE 2910 Medical Arts St. ALL BILLS PAID! Newly remodeled 2 b d rm .-2 bath Free cable! Furnished o r Unfurnished N o w pre-leasing fo r sum m er & fall Call 474-9523 7 -22-20B -C $300-350 F O U N T A IN TERRACE APTS. Furnished 1 Bdr and eff. Walk-in closets, ceiling fans, pool, car­ peted, water and gas paid. Walking distance UT. Mgr. Apt. #134 610 W. 30th 477-8858 7-16-20B-E LARGE TWO BEDROOM W a lk to cam pus, furnished, small, q u i­ et c om plex, po o l, laun dry room . $ 3 5 0 summer, $ 4 8 0 for fall. CAVALIER APTS. 307 E. 31st 451-1917 320-0687 7 8-20B -K 3 0 2 W . 3 8 th Fall leasing. Efficiency, 1 BR. Convenient to Hancock Center, Seton and UT. Half block to shuttle & city bus line. All appli­ ances, pool, & laundry room. Gas, water and cable paid. 4 5 3 - 4 0 0 2 7-1 6-.’ OB c CASA DE SALADO APTS. One bedroom furnished apartments Water, gas and full T V. cable paid, no pets. Swimming pool, AC and ceiling fan Laundry facilities. Close to cam­ pus, near shuttle. Resident manager #112, 2610 Salado St. Units available now) For info. 477-2534 7-25-20B L ive over a dive. N ot in One! T o u r LARGE CLEAN one bedroom/efficiency. no pets Ceiling fans, quiet individual ___ 35th St. 453 -5 41 7 7 -1 5-2 0 8 A * NEAR CAMPUS, 1-1 Walk m closet, RR shuttle gas/water poid. Sum—er/ Foil rate 4 4 4 -0 6 8 7 474 -5 15 4 7 -2 4 -2 0 8 -C VERY LARGE, cieon efficiency Sepe' ated bedroom/kitchen Q jie t neighborhood 37th St W alk-m closet residents dishwasher, laundry, no pets 12 month lease $ 2 7 5 * electnc 4 53 -5 41 7 7 -2 5 - 2 0 B ____________________________________ WALK UT! Spocious 2 -2 CA/CH, large windows, cable, security pool quiet en­ vironment super rates' 4 74 5 9 2 9 7 -2 5 - 10B-C_____________________ _ SPACIOUS 2 BR/1 BA S 450 $ 4 2 5 Clean, quiet, covered porking, fans, all gas paid Unfurnished available 4 3 0 6 Ave. A, 4 51 -5 8 2 5 7 -2 5 20B___________ N O R TH OF UTl Efficiencies $195 + E. one bdrm $ 21 0 -1 2 4 5 • E&G N o pets. 4 7 7-2214. 4 54 -4 44 1 7 -2 5 -2 0 6 -C QUIET COMPLEX G reat for graduate students. Efficiency, fully furnished, car­ peted, ond draped 2 0 2 E. 32nd 4 8 2 - 0 3 2 0 ,4 5 8 -1 1 1 5 8-1-12B fans, SPACIOUS. QUIET 2-2'sl UT 1 block, C M C H , w alk-m closets, pool, dishwasher, Red River/30th. $ 5 5 0 -6 0 0 4 7 7 3 3 8 8 7 9-20B-C 370 — Unt. Apts. Clean your room In 30 seconds or less. LARGE CLOSETS Compempory Apaitment Homes 1,2, & 3 Bedrooms FREE extended cable Fitness Center & Tennis Courts CALL NOW!! L a k e v ic w 2401 S. Lakeshore 444-3917 CAMPUS $349 Efficiencies Dorm rooms $249 Ail bills paid. 1/2 block, from campus. 2 0 t h & Whitis M U S T A N G A P T S . 478-2755 i ★ 24 FLATS APT. + * * Enheid and W est Lynn H uge * ★ Efficiencies S295 p oo aun- * ^ Hru rrtn m nn iitp UT shuttle * * dry room on site. ¿ B A S IC C A B L E 1 C ALL 4 8 2 - 0 3 9 8 * ★ ★ ★ SOUTH SHUTTLE BETTER HURRY! 1 BR's $300 + 2 BR's $400 - ALL PROPERTIES. UP T O THE M IN U T E AVAILABILITY. FREE SERVICE. PROPERTIES ONE 447-7368 2030 E. OLTORF BY H O M E V ID E O ' 3 0 -2 0 8 THE MARKS 3100 S p e e d w a y is p re -le a sin g fo r Summer & Fall! • I b e d ro o m 1 bath s a C e ilin g fans e M iv.row a ve s a D ish w a sh e r (som e units) • Furnished & u n vu rn ish e d a Tw o p o o ls a Walk »o cm pus • IF shuttle bus e Wide range of prices & amenities 478-6005 M 5 -2 0 B -K N O W PRELEASING 4 5 5 8 Ave A C.vte efficiencies, appliances $ 2 6 5 . 4 5 4 - 8 9 0 3 ; 15 2 06 * • N E W EVERYTHING! O utstanding g i­ ant 1-1, bright any $ 3 7 3 ! G o in g g o m a almost g o n e 1 FRONT PAGE 4 8 0 8518 7-15 20B C RENTAL 370 — U nf. Apts. FREE APARTMENT CONDOMINIUM LOCATING ★ ★ ★ UT SHUTTLE ★ lofts/Townhomes ★ Designer Intenors ★ European Cabinetry ★ W D U n itv 'C o n n e c h o n s ★ Fireplaces/Microwcrves Vaulted Ceilings ★ P ools'S aun das Jccuzzis ★ E xercise Facilities ★ C 'ty B us/UT S huttle ★ A la rm v A c c es s G ates ★ Cable Paid * Fans FTM: 443-1001 ONE MONTH FREE RENT Pre-leasing fo r S um m er/Fall e tow deposit e extra large apartments • prompt maintenance/very clean e NR shuffle bus e swimming pool a newly decorated e large 1 bedroom - 7 50 sa ft. e large 2-2 -1025 sq. ft. BROOKHOLLOW APARTMENTS 1414 Arena Drive 4 4 5 -5 6 5 5 8 1-20B-E Huge 1-ls and 2-2s Gas. Heat, w ater, and cable paid O n au e' street C eiling fans, verHcaí bimds a n d pool. Resident Management From S355-S430 Preleasing for Sum m er and Fail Three Elms Apartments 400 W. 35th St. 453-1804 453-4991 Penthouse Apts Two blocks southwest o f cam­ pus, Beautiful and qu et arec best new managn ent, 1 -Vs from $375. Incredibly arge 2-1 s startmg from $ 5 7 5 Fur­ nished or ur-furnished, cable water, gas ond frash paid- beautiful p o o l new laundry room, covered parking, be-' g remodeled. 1801 Rio Grande 480-0201 PRELEASIMG FO R FALL EFFICIENCIES A N D ONE BEDROOMS PROM S A M EN ITIE S INC-. J t E • Dishwasher • M icrow ave , íopttoFKsfi • Pool • Loundry • Across from Park• Resident Manager • Disposal • Individúe Storage • 2 •' T .., - V * Méft kS pLACE APTS. 108 w 4 5th. 4 5 ? 1419 3 8 5 -2 2 1 1 4 5 3 -2 C A i l T O D A Y 1 ART-DECO FLAT A cce n te d brick w alls, fre e ­ standing lo t sof fire p la ce , light, va u lte d ceilings, huge patios, 1 & 2 b e d ro o m s a v a ila b le starting at $ 3 5 0 ' A d v a n ta g e Properties 4 4 3 - 3 0 0 0 * Hyde Park - 4533 Ave A ♦ I b d rm s p r e -le a s in g f o r S e p t 1! 2 b d rm s a v a ila b le n o w O n shuttle, p o o l, la r g e flo o rp la n s , w a te r & cable paid ..also. ★ ...Efficiencies & 1 bdrms. ★ •dose to campus O ld e r q u ie T prop­ erty! 450-0702, 450-1058 7-15-?0B-C Security/Amenities II shuttle route • 5 floor piam • • Easy occess to U T. LARGE APTS. ★ — Bus * 1 goes d>rectiy *o the drag e V e ry large 1-ls, approx 6 25-750 sq. ft let $280-295) —b Efficiencies 434 sq. ft. (at $250) • Pool • Plenty o f park ng e C o n v e n ie n t to everything a O n M e tro route a Laundry facilities a Low y e a r round rates N o r w o o d Apts. 5 6 0 6 N. L a m a r 451-1917 e Private kb jry • ZOMPtETEl a Lakes-ce I Itng RENOVATE! Advantage Properties 4 4 3 -3 0 0 0 FREE VCR, TV, OR CD PLAYER W h e n you m ove in O UT Shuffle $150 o ff 1st m o n th ent 7 -2 4 -2 0 B -K Pooi w eight room tanr> g ■ i WALK TO UT! much m ore 442-9333 3101 To m G re e n St. (1 b lo c k o f f 31st a n d S p e e d w a y I - s m a ll q u ie t c o m p le x is p re -le a s m g fo r ta li! L a rg e e ffic ie n cies w ith u p d a te d in te rio rs, la u n d ry fa cilitie s, p a rk in g , $ 3 2 0 /9 mo. le ase, $31 0/yr. lease. Come by or call 452-4414 7 -2 6 -2 0 8 -L * * U T SHU remodeled, d ec!11 rp Q I 206 C us- WEST iwo bedroom c novated 1920- high ceilmqs, ek RENTAL 3 7 0 — U n f. A p ts . B a b y Y o u r s e l f A t • Numerous floorplans to choose. Eff., Lofts. Townhomes. 1-1’s, 2-2’s • Convenient Location on ITT Shuttle • Pool & Clubhouse • Open Saturdays N O W LEASING F O R FA LL 444 7880 2124 Burton Dr, Davis & Assoc. Mgt. Co. H O U S T O N 2801 Hemphill Park - 472-8396 BRANDYWINE 2804 Whití» Ave - 472-7049 DALLAS 2803 Hemphill Park - 472-8398 WILSHIRE 301 W 29th - 472-7049 Great Fall Rates • Fully Fumtabed • Laundrv Room • Central Air/Heat • 2 Block* From U T • N o Application Fee O ne B lo c k F ro m C a m p u s Now Preleasing Fall Rates Starting at $ 3 95 • 1 BR & 2 BR • Ceiling Fans • Central A/C • On Shuttle • Laundry Room • Fully Furnished • Pool • No Application Fee R i o N u e c e s 600 W. 26th 474-0971 T H E A S H F O R D Now Preleasing for Fall Large Efficiencies, 1-1's, 2-2’s Starting at $260 • Furrished/Unfurnished • West Campus Shuttle • On-site Mgmt. & Maint. • Pool • Laundry Room • Covered Parking ALL BILLS PAID 476-8915 2408 Leon Prelease N o w E ffic ie n c y -b ills p a id Fall $340 1 - 1 Fall $340 • near UT «pool •laundry «parking • large rooms • furnished /unfurnished • On UT shuttle 1400 R io Grande 327-3446 469-0940 RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. NOW PRE-LEASING FOR FALL Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. Quiet, friendly complex. Pool, free cable, on-site management. RR shuttle, walk to campus. 476-8474, 453-2363 7-31 20B-K Now Leasing For Fall! Furnished 1 and! Bdr apts. $315-5425 - Elec (water and gas paid) 104 E. 32nd, Mgr. f 101,478-5253 4103-5 Speedway, Mgr, #103,452-5218 2514 Pearl, Mgr. #203,477-7817 If no answer, coll 338-1662 7 -2 6 -2 0 8 -E MAKE A STAMPEDE FOR SU CASA A PA R TM ENTS FALL LEASES A VAILABLE S ta rtin g a t $ 3 5 0 • On-Site Mgr. • IF Shuttle • Pool • Laundry • Furnished Apartments C A LL T O D A Y 451 2 2 6 8 2 0 3 W 3 9 th Welcome • Bienvenue ^ G A B R | ^ We Think the o/you at: A sp e n w o o d A p a rtm e n ts • S h u ffle ai D o ot • Large a nd I urn ishe d • 2 Pools 2 Lau nd rv • CVsignet C olors • M a jo r I H iltiies Paid • O n SiU* M a n aq ei M aintenance 4539 Guadalupe 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 Bienvenidos • Welkon Herzlich Willkommen Selmat Datang S Q U A R E A p artm en ts ♦ NOW PRELEASING SUM/FALL * EFFICIENCIES * FURNISHED * 5 BLKS FROM CAMPUS • IT SHUTTLE STOP * DELUXE 1 BEDROOMS * 2-1 ECONOMY STYLE * ON SITE MANAGEMENT A L L B IL L S P A ID n i l Stun Gabriel Street Austin, Texas 78705 ( 5 1 1 ) 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 . & 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 B D I A P A R T M E N T S S ta rtin g a t $ 3 1 0 ■ ;V U FLOORPLANS Furn/Unf. Shuttle Bus 5 Min, to Downtown Modern Microwaves Lofts w/Fans • Spacious • 2 Sparkling Pools • Excellent Maintenance • Student Oriented • Friendly Community • ABP Option w c ‘ m N $ r> X T < 0 ft. Colorado River B rk ig a h o iio w P O IN T SOUTH O ttorf ■ T l ta* * a i 2 i - e __ 4 4 4 - 7 5 3 6 P O I N T S O U T H — B R ID G E H O L L O W R ental Office: 1910W illow creek BUENA VISTA O N E BLOCK T O U T AS- SUM AB lE FHA FIRST LIEN ASKING $ 7 1 5 0 0 0 0 CALL M ITCH 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 / PMT 7 - 1 8 - 2 0 8 - C ________________ WESTRiDGE-LARGE 2 .2 PENTHOUSE O N WEST CAMPUS. MUST SEE UNIT A S K IN G $ 8 5 ,0 0 0 0 0 CALL MITCH 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 /P M T 7-18-20B-C___________ MERCHANDISE 200 — Furniture- Household +C +( S T U D E N T S P E C IA LS A f • Full Set w/Frame C • Twin Set w/Frame • 4 Drw Chest •m ' Dresser w/Mirror « • Student Desk • Sofas • 5-piece Dinette $190 95 $99 95 $39 95 $139 95 $79.95 $159 95 $139 95 W 3 W )A . 3 C e n t e x F u r n i t u r e ^ W h o l e s a l e -fC e e tB N Lamar ?001 S Lamar 460 0988 446 6808 ♦ * * * * * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ * ♦ White wicker Henry link complete bedroom set Mint condition, includes double bed headboard, nightstand, desk, chest, triple dresser & mirror glass top $1200 complete set Also Laura Ashley custom drapes. Com­ forter, dust ruffle, 2 sets of sheet. Pil­ lows & Sham S300. 2 Boland chairs $50 eoch. 327-0701, please leave phone number 8-1-3B EQUIP YOUR place Sleeper sofo, loveseat, desk, table, mattress, bedding, dishes, utensils, microwave 8, more. 3 2 8 - 4 0 9 3 8-1 -5B ______________________ 220 — Computers- Equipment FOR SALE Apple lie with keyboard, modem, printer, mouse, lots oí manuals, and lots of software S 395, 2 8 2 -2 6 8 6 8-1 26 1986 YAM AH A XT350 Runs great/looks great S1.000 4 76 -4 61 8 . 7 -3 0 -5 B TANDY 1000 HX computer. 2 56 K with color monitor and dot matrix printer With software, 6 months old. $ 8 0 0 4 44 - 5 6 0 4 . 7-31-5B________________________ G O O D THRU 1992-Voucher for 3 night stay for two at all-inclusive resort at Puerto Ploto (Dom Rep.) (great surf) or Montego Boy Flight from Dallas includ­ ed S1200 v olu e-$950 O B O 4 7 6 -2 2 2 3 7-31-5P_______________________ 1 97? *H O N D A CB750F Very depend- able, fost! Must sell. $ 7 5 0 . Leave mes- soge. 4 7 7 -4 0 1 6 7 - 3 1 - 5 B __________ 1975 H O N D A CB400F. Immaculate low miles, $ 9 5 0 . Coll anytime ond leave message, 4 7 7 -4 0 1 6 . 7-31-5B J X Apartment 'stuff' - clothes, kitchen uten­ sils, etc bar stools, old sewing machine, lawn choir, armchair, women s clothes sz. 10- 14 (never or hardly used) 4 58 - 9 6 9 5 . 7-31-5B._______________________ '81 H O N D A N A 5 0 express scooter, 2 condition, speed automatic Excellent $175 3 4 5 -5 5 4 7 8-1-5B 345 — Misc. C A S H Buying Gold-Sitver Broken Chains, Class Rings Unwanted Jewelry S a r w ij S lu don tt S m c t 1976 L i b e r t y C o i n s 45»i 6 Guadkupa I— 462 3611 ■ — * ATTENTION STUDENTS! Are you looking for a fun pet for that dorm room or apartment? If so Call The Fish Tender fo r more details. 459-9119. Stu­ dent discount avoilable. ____________________________ 7 -2 6 -2 0 B ROLLERBLADES TRS lightning purple line, size 6 Purple knee, wrist guards $ 2 5 0 4 6 7 -0 6 5 9 7 -3 0 -5 8 L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S SHARP TAM A 7pc with zil|ion metal. Hot "classic" sound and extra equipment, only $ 9 8 9 4 5 9 5 7 4 8 8-1 5P__________ M A R I 1Ü40SF 2 -3 5" drives 1 meg RAM, color monitor, modem, mouse, soft-wore, 1 yeoi old, IBM compatible; $ 4 2 5 neg 7 94 2951 8-1-5B M O V IN G SALE Kmg size waveless waterbed w /6 drawers, 2 night stands and dresser $ 3 5 0 O B O 'Amod voniry ond bench $ 8 0 . Computer desk $ 3 5 TV stand $ 2 5 Dorm size refrigerator $ 7 5 Lazyboy reclmer $ 8 0 Call 4 44-8166. 8-1-5B APPLE IIC COMPUTER with letter quality printer, soft disk drive W ord processing, database, spreadsheet, pascal programs $ 5 0 0 0 8 0 4 6 7 -6 5 2 0 8 1 SB_______ TV, VCR, answering machine cordless phone, vacuum, stereo, tape deck, turn table, 10-speed bike, Atari 2 60 0, and 15 qomes S 3 0 -$ 2 2 5 3 39 3143 8 1 5B TRANSPORTATION 70 — Motorcycles * M H Ü Ü ü 8 ¿ k H O N D A . Come ride with us ■Smart Shopper’ 'R e a d The Daily Texan Classifieds! Call Today to Place Yours... 471-5244 \ A ) !! 7 . 71 i $ i i 6509 N. Lamar I 6 9 8 reg S1000 00 TTL #459-3311 Check out our Full Selection of Used Honda Page 14 Thursday, August 1,1991 T H E D A IL Y TEXAN RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL E D U C A T IO N A L E M P L O Y M E N T S P O R T S W I R E 370 — Unf. Apts. 400 — Condos- 400 — C o n d o s- Townhouses T o w n h o u se s 430 — R o o m -B o a rd 580 — M u sica l 7 9 0 — Part Time N E E D T E X T B O O K $ A college bookstore is now hiring 50 temporary sales associates for the fall semester. A 20 day assignment to start as early as Aug. 19. 1991. Different hours. Must be mature, service oriented and neat appearance. Minimum 6 months cash re g iste r e xp erience required. Close proximity to UT. Discount on books, su p p lie s and m ost merchandise. If interested apply at University Coop 2246 Guadalupe Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. WORK ON CAMPUS THIS FALL Now accepting applications for RETAIL ADVERTISING SALES CLERK for The Doily Texan Position op en for the fall semester, must be a v a ila b le for framing or, Aug 21. Duties include co ord inating a d v e r rising fo r university departm ents ond student organizations, handling w alk in an d te lep hone customers, an d fol- low ng established procedures. Must be detail oriented a n d d e p en d a b le with p leasant p hone personality and excellent customer service skills. S p e ll­ ing test required. Shift a v a ila b le for Fall 9 :0 0 a.m.-l p.m. Apply m person: Appl; mpl Student Em ploym ent Referral Services I S e Texas Unio n Room 2.222 Refer to Jo b # C-OO-1286 Telephone inquiries not a ccep ted A p ­ plicants must b e a University o f Texas student o r the spouse of a student. The University o f Texas is an Equal O pportunity/Affirm ative A ction Em ­ p loyer 7-26-20NC UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE — SCHOOL SUPPLIES One part time sales asso­ ciate needed to fill a 16 hour week position. Any 3 hours during the week plus weekends. Minimum 6 months cash register experience. M ust be mature, service oriented and neat appearance. Inventorize school sup­ plies, stock and display merchandise. Excellent customer service. Close proximity to U.T. Discount on most merchandise. If interested apply at: University C oop 2246 G uadalupe M o n .- F r i. 9 a.m .-1 p .m . Part time office clerk needed for small down­ town law firm. Must be able to work five after­ noons per week. Starting salary $4.50/hour. Con­ tact Greg Havican — 477-1070. 8 1-2B PART-TIME FILE CLERK N e e d an en th u siastic, motivated, self-starter to work in a fast-paced medi­ cal office. Hours will be Monday-Friday, 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Please send re­ sume to: Texas Orthopedics 3200 Red River #201B Austin, TX 78705 NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE 8-1 5B-E PART TIME OPPORTUNITIES $5.50 TO S6.00/HR. Texas G u a ra n te e d Student Loan C o r ­ poration has parttime positions a v a il­ a b le immediately. U p to 3 0 hour w ork w eeks that can b e scheduled aro und classes. C lerical and telephone re ­ search positions a v a ila b le Requires one year office expeience, excellent com m unication skills an d detail orient­ ed. Apply by August 9,1991 to: TEXAS G U A R A N T E E D STUD ENT L O A N C O R P O R A T IO N 1609 Centre Creek Drive P.O. Box 15996 Austin, Texas 78761 A A /EO Employer ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★♦★★★★★lit 8-1-2B-E ALWAYS HIRING GOOD VOICES LARGE 2 51 3?' 5 Tom O e e n . new pomt n « i , t* W-D »«•> oMociive $695 C o l ‘SOCC Ot *“i0fwton-»eor»oci 472-6201 7- 19-K* C A l l M U S PAID* EU ke n e e s $700 1-1 $400 2 S*C“. »> ‘'on- shuffle 451-8532 452-1121 r 22 206 K l a w SCHOOL-1/1 $300 • E Smoi *. »• . ampie» toe block» From eos’ o* low school Pool ou/xtoi 474-1240, 452- 112! 22 206 k C l o s e t o u t shu*»*- tqt - en<. 1-1, pf'VO’e pohc immed opohoixes 5 • WH - bills begtr 24 206-K WEST C A M P U S ' Oreo* loca*ron Elio e n oes - 1-14 S250 w " » e ra’e co" rotes srarting $295 444 0637 or 4. 4 ;154 7 24 206 C lOCATION' IOCATiON and 0* oS% cxjkJ near UT downtown and *he Cap- *ol! Older bctttdtng renovated wSh 'arge rooms and plenty o’ amtxarxe 4?6- °'3 Q 7-26-206-C_______________________ —’E IP ' I wttl gr«e pan-c: »ree rent or 2 bd far you* help w * apartmen’ ’ trode e p a '» e*c Senc fawn maintenance >«•*€•' ’O 5k. P O Bor 043 Austin faxes 78~’6 ? 7-26 65 B R O K EN LEASE spec-c 1 8~- A: bills patd ? bioc*", T Avoiioriie now $375 C o t 480 0976 7-29-5P________________ 'Bdr S 'U D E S T SpEC.At N o deposi’ 443- apor-men’s W a ’er potd $275 1577 7 29 -B__________________________ W ALK TO campus1 2 story 1-1 with new carpet ond ceilmg 451- .-’694 7 2 9 - 5 6 - C _____________________ Ion $375, W O W s e rv ic e 2-2, 1200 sq security. H O T ft TUB, S A U N A underground pork- in g , m a id for o n ly Just k id d in g ' C A L L U S J4 0 0 AN YW A Y * W e can !md you the condo of your choico RIO GRANDE PROPERTIES 474-0606 brise 1 & 2 Bedrooms. All H i g bilw s pcid One block to UT Keyed access to building Card access to garage Pool/Laundry/Sp. range S500-S900. 476-9710 1800 Lavaca 7 29 208 * L O F T ★ Spiral staircase, beautiful courtyards, microwave, bal­ conies, city views, on shuttle, 1 & 2 bedrooms available, unit starting $310. Advan­ tage Properties 443-3000. 3 7 31 20B-C O u lE T N tW L Y re modeled efficiencies 3 S’r " Guadalupe Po ol canary foe# **es cedmg lor- JT shuttle 459 497 ’ 7- 30-o b e _______________________________ GORGEOUS^ West campus 1-1'$ from $550, 2-2'$ from $800! PERSO NALLY CAREO • STUDENTS EliTE' U T spacious bright M S345 2 2 S450 FRONT ? a G E 480 3518 7-31-20B-C_______________________ • « WEST C A M PU S! Huge 2-2 with new point, micrcwcve covered pc-Lr-g only S550' f R O N T PA G E 480 8518 7 31- 206-C___________________________________ AVAILABLE A U G 4th, G arage Apt on »ery quie’ st-eet $425 mo - utilities Quiet non-smoker preferred 467-0344 7-31-5B_________________________________ h y CE PARK- cose ’o UT/shuftte. 4413 D Avenu* A 1-1 garage apartment, W oode- Boors appliances 1 year ease nc pets S335 - G & E 331-0400. 8-1- _ 206 PERFECT RO O M M A TE plans 2 Br/2 Ba opan-ents >4 4 5 ma Call Crosscreek Apar*mer>is 837 9427 8-1-106 W ES T C A M PU S larg e 2-2. zoned AC deal roommo’e Roorplan Small com- pier $595. Ir a v s Properties 328-5891. 3 1 2 0B ___________________ ____ f t t 'C ENCiES, 1 & 2 bedrooms, great lo­ cations. furnished and unfurnished Coll •ar more details 458-1115 8-1-12B tA R G E 2-1‘ 3115 Tom Green, new point full-size W/D, very oflrot’ive $695 Cali Isaor a* Harr-son Pearson 4 72 6201 8 1 5 B - C _______________________________ LARGE EFFICIEN CIES Near shopping " block from siutte W connections fireplaces, 327-7415. 7- center 10-70B C __________________________ 390 — Unf. D u p le xe s Qff FAR W E S ’ 4/3/2 fre p io ce , ‘an deck 6911 ThomcBffe yeor lease SHOO A72 2123 carpo rt W D - oico n y 6 1 2 0 6 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 400 — Condos- Townhouses ¿ in th« Right Dirvction C A M P U S C O N D O S fc — Condos — — Apartments — — Houses — no fees all price ranges 8 19 W . 2 4th Now Pre-teasing Condos, Apartments, and Houses C • i * t * Y _ PROPERTIES ÍL . 478-6565 2717 Rio Grande W est C a m p u s C o n d o s $800 D elp hi 2/2 W estplace 2/2 $750 $750 1/1 Centennial L ittle fie ld 2/2 $1,100 Make an Otler Call Mark Rio Grande Properties 474-0606 FOR BY O W N E R ! * Centennial * Orongetree • Croix * Preservation Square • plus Tarrytown props, and more! Karl Handler Props. 476-2154 7-10-20B C Prelease Now Pecan Pork condos, spacious 2-2's, gray corpert, decks, W D, microwave, FP covered parking, on shuffle S 700. 4200 Speedway Matthews Properties 454-0099 7-22-20B LUXURY 2-2'S ” Available now! A ll appliances, great condition. * Centennial * Chelsea * West 31' 2 St Johnson & Co. 452-0225 7-24-20B-C ELEGANT 2-2 CONDO Beautiful mirrored foyer and fire­ place Luxurious cprpet Sautrllo tile Security system. Washer/dr/er mi­ crowave Wolk to class $875- F a ll 5 0 5 B e lle v u e # 2 331-4080 7*17-20B-E ENFOLD B E A tT 'F U l 2-1 / appliances, W /D pool $725. April Reahy, 327-7745. 7- 15-206__________________________________ covered parking, Firepla poftin W EST 21 ST Beautiful 2-l’ i , 2-2's. fire­ places, ceilmg fons, appliances, W/D, microwave, covered parking pool from $750 April Realty 327-7745 7-15- 206_____________________________________ W E D G E W O O D 2/2 O N THE PO O L A IL A M EN ITIES IN C LU D IN G W/D, M ICRO. ETC N O W $450 00 FALL/ S P R IN G $900.00/M O MITCH 476- 2673 PMT 7-18-20B-C_________________ LAST O N E C R O U 1/1 FURN ISHED AVAILABLE. ALL A M EN ITIES IN C LU D ­ IN G W/D. M IC RO ETC I5 7 5 .0 0 /M O CALL MITCH 476-2673 PM.T 7-19-20B C________________________________________ PENTHOUSE- LARGE LU XURIO U S 2'2 IN W E5T C A M P U S IN MASTER 10' CEILIN GS ALL A M E N I­ TIES S1200 00/M O MiTCH 476-2673 PMT 7-19 208 C JA C U Z Z I RO BB IN S PLACE- LARGEST C O RN ER UNIT 1350 SQ/FT ALL AM EN ITIES IN C L U D E D $1195 00-M O CALL MiTCH 476-2673 PMT 7-19-20B-C ST TH O M AS 2/1 THIRD FLO O R C O R ­ N ER UNIT ALL A M EN ITIES IN C LU D IN G W /D MICRO, SECURITY $900 00 M O CA LI MITCH 476-2673PMT 7-19-206- C__________________ P R E S E R V A T IO N S Q U A R E - T W O U N IQ U E O N E B ED R O O M FLOOR- PLAN S AVAILABLE. ALL A M EN ITIES $650 00/M O CALL MITCH 476-2673 PMT 7-19-20B-C_______________________ O R A N G E TREE EFFICIENCY- SECURITY, CO VERED PA R K IN G ALL AMENITIES. W /D IN UNIT S550/MO. CALL MITCH 476 2673 PMT 7-19-20B-C____________ LEN O X 2/2 N E W FURNITURE. PAINT. S E C U R IT Y , TILE W A L L P A P E R . C O VER ED PA R K IN G ALL A M EN ITIES $1195 00 M O MITCH 476-2673 PMT _______________ 7-19-206-C C RO IX 2/2 FURN ISHED A N D U N F U R ­ N ISH ED ALL A M EN ITIES IN C LU D IN G W /D M ICRO , SECURITY ETC S1000, M G C A LI MITCH 476-2673 PMT 7-19- 206 C___________________________________ TREEHO USE-TW O U N IQ U E FLOOR- P L A N S TO C H O O S E FRO M . ALL A M EN ITIES W /D M ICRO ETC $1195- M O C A LI MiTCH 476 26 73 PMT 7-19 206 C__________ CRO IX C O N D O West campus 1-1, W/D, podnng space Available Aug 15 5500/yr. Call Bet, 345-8850 7-23-15B 2 BR 2 ? BA Orange Tree Condos Rio Granae and 25*h All appliances, W/D, fp. secu’ed garage 3 occupants maxi­ mum SIQOO mo M ondo” 4/6-3170 7-26-108 FOR RENT, for sale N e ar UT, 1 BR, all appliances and covered parking pur- cnaxe or lease payments under $350 7. monthly 343-0797 owner/ogent 29 se R EN T A L 370 — Unf. Apts. HEALTHY SAVINGS a t P L A N T A T IO N O AKS S 5 0 OFF 1st Months Rent VVi.'ri This Aci * 2 Pools • Sandpit Volleyball ► Hoi Tub» Clubhouse * Exercise Room • Microwave ► Ceilmg Fans* Controlled Access » New Appliances • UT Shuttle * Paid Cooking Heating & Water 2303 Pleasant Valley 442-1298 Managed by A s se t Investm ent Corp IFF l Bedroom $150 OFF 2 Bedroom first month on a one year lease FALL LEASE NOW FREE VCR or CD PLAYER Newly Remodeled 1 A 2 Bedroom Apts'. On UT Shuttle Microwaves Ceiling Fans New Appliances New Carpets Mini Blinds W et Bar 3 Pools/Volleyball 2 Clubhouses Exercise Room Resident Parties Watch for our Halloween Party » 4 5 4 - 2 5 3 7 ' i w r f l W 1200 B r o a d m o o r Managed by AmkK nverfnw* Carp 30TH & G U A D A LU PE l-l, a* appliances •Cu-id'y -oam assigned pork mg. sunv mer $275 foS $325 345 6518 7-24 __ 106 3B R 'O w n h o m E A l amendiei S 0O0 7-24- month Hyde ’’b'k 45' 4656 206-E 2210 pEa*u 1-1 on second *k>o' with balcony1 Covere d parking, $425 CaH Isoac ot Hamvon-Pea'son 472 6203 7- 26-1Q6-C________________________________ w a l k TO UT -2 3R 7 B A Ro b b ie F»ioce Condouve’v nice. $850lmo 441-0648 7 29-108 LA W S C H O O L Spacious 1-1, enormous cose’ W 'D $500 114 E 31 s’ Soro M a ­ dera, Broker 469 0894 328-1000. 7- 30- SB_________________________ __ PR O FESSO R S. FAMILY or Graduate sfu dents, lak e Trovis Condo, two Br upper and tower decks. 3BR 2 26. wood bum ,ng fireploce, hot ’ub poo' and boat dock. Comptetely furnished, available tobor Day (512 477 2145 7-31 offer 3P _________________________ O R A N G E TREE efficiency for only $500 Call R.V ot Rio Grande Properties. 474- ______________________ 0606 8 1-5B VERY NICE 1-1 2 story, fvmished in a contemporary w ay Huge CaA R.V. at 474-0606 8 1-5B ___ ______ ________ 2 BR. 2 BA LUXURY security Covered parking 2529 Rio Grande, unit 8 $1095-mo 4 roommates acceptable Robert, 335-5963 8-1-10B______________ C A M B RID G E TO W ER luxury condo, 26R/1 2BA, A, C, gloss doors to wrapp­ ing balcony basement parking UT one block, pool, exercise room, much more $750 all bJIs .nduded 477-7471 8-1- 5P____________________________________ (Neor Steck-Mopoc) S U M M E R W O O D 2-2-2 cathedral ceikng living room, frepksce, den *ormal dtmna pot'o pool tennis $1100 346-9336 8-1-2B s p e e d w a y C O N D O Appliances, me crowove fireplace, ceitirq ’ans, W /D shuttle 2-2 $700 Availoble Aug. 1 Shamrock 478-5588 8-1-56-E TREE H O U SE T O W N H O M E 2 moster bedrooms, cathedral ceilmg, fireploce fons, microwave wosher/dryer, garage lifestyle 328-2775 7-3-20B___________ FU RN ISH ED /U N FU RN ISH ED H ~ w * campus, oil amen.hes, starting from $399 2818 Nueces. 327-7415. 7-10- 206-C___________________________________ TREE-SHADED Creekside condo Hyde Park luxury, security system, marble fire­ place, must see1 $600-750 summer spe­ cials! 4409 Duval 327-7415, 7-10- 208-C_________________________________ IU X U R V C O N D O S ' West campus a# amenities 1-Vs from $550, 2-2's from $750. Pool, covered parking 2409 Leon, 327-7415 7-10-20B-C____________ fireplaces, fans micro­ EN FIELD AREA Nice 2 bdrm 2-story condos with waves, and more1 Paced from $750 Call M ary Talbot Co 480-8800. 7-10-208- C ____ SEVERAL 1 BD R M S * loft in west campus at $500' Several 1 bdrms. close to cam­ pus for $350 furn/unfurn Call M ary Tal- botCo 480 8800. 7-1Q-20B-C LARGE O RA N G ETR EE 2-story condo, park at your bock door! 2 2 "2 Call M ary Talbot Co. 480-8800 7-10-20B-C 420 — Unf. H o u se s HYDE PARK 610 Fairfield Ln. 3-1. Totally redone, very low util­ ities, quiet street, CA/CH, hard­ wood floors & tiles, 2-car ga­ rage, fenced yard. Available 9- 1,1 year lease. $795. 338-4373 7-31-3B (24 hours) Old fashioned 477-lfVE charm of 1-5 b e d ro o m homes; hordwood, gas, oppliances. $200- $1200 7-15-20B-A________________ W EST C A M PU S LU XURIOUS 1 Bdr Apt and 7-2 home Security system, energy efficient, stain glass, hardwoods, carpet, fireplace, vaulted ceilmgs, yard 1908 Son Gabriel f\ Bdr $750 2822 Rio Grande '7 Bdr. $2450 482-8680 7- 17-20B _____________________________ 912 W 23rd house 4 bdr -2 Be CA/ CH. hardwoods, ceiling fons. W alk to school $1100.00 Campus Condos 474 4800 7-22-20B-C______________________ 604 Baylor House- 3 bd- 1 7 bo, C/V CH, hardwoods, neor shuttle S850 Campus Condos 474-4800. 7-22 20B- C _______________________________________ 4 Br/2 Bo, corner of 15th and Lamar, $1100 N o pets $1000 security Non- negotiable W /D and gas Call Jo y 478- 0512.7-26-108_________________________ FREN CH PLACE: convenient UT, Hand- cock Delwood, downtown 2Br/l Ba. CA/CH, appliances, hardwood floors, fireplace $425 477-8613. 7 29-56 HYDE PARK area- close to UT/shutlle - 707 E 49th 2-1 -CA/CH, wood floors ceiling fans, mini-blinds, appliances, and one year lease; $550 • bills 331- 0400 8-1-201 N EED STUOENT to take over Castilian lease Mitch (7131467-5191. M ale ot female 7.23 206 435 — C o -o p s houses b ljk e L - 'l Homey older *2-6 kx UT •Greet A f l b ills r r « l » •/ Friends «Punt D o u b les $260-275 (summer) $299-309 (fall) Singles $295-329 (summer) $335-389 (fall) ICC CO-OPS 476-1957 510 W . 23rd SHO RT W A LK UT Quiet, non-smoking, petless Shared kitchen For private bath, $295 ABP (leaseI 495-9346 Shared bills bob $180 CaH 472-5646 7-24- 208-E 440 — R o om m ate s R O O M M A T E S E R V IC E Will help you find a compat­ Male or ible roommate, female. Call Sam. 280-7118 7-10-20B-C 2 M A L E R O O M M A T E S N E E D E D Luxury bi-level condo e Fully famished, including m’chen utemls • Desks • Ceiling fans e Firep loce e TV • Hoi tub • Sauna • ER shuttle front d oo r e Free cab le • Security • 10 mm. UT • Pool $ 2 0 0 / p e rs o n C o lle ct (512)664-6929 8-1-58 N EED R O O M M A TE for two bedroom duplex in West Campus $237 50 per month, ’ ? bills, 495-9177. 7-26-6P. N EA R UT. Shore 4 br house with grad students and professionals $200-250/ mo. Call Colhy or Bob 326-3009 even- mgs 7-26-5B___________________________ O RAN GETREE. M ale roommate wanted for fait/spring W est campus condo; 2 - 2, AC, W /D, pool. N o pets or smokers. 479- 0038 7 29-108_________________________ 2 FEM A LES STUDENTS Seeking 2 more female students to shore 2-2 Fun condo west campus Robbins Place W /D FP Cable. For Aug. 24tfi $300 ea Bills Paid Andrea 440-1043. 7-29-5B N O N - S M O K IN G quiet roommate. 3BR 28A, ca/ch, w/d. shuttle, nice home. Ol- torf & Parker, $160 or $180 per month Call Azam, 928-6439 or 892-0519. 7- 30-14B__________________________________ RO O M M A TE W A N T E D to share huge 2br/ba Centenmol Condos S450 • 2 utilities 713-499-2289 7-30-10B CHRISTIAN C O U PLE seeks same for female roommate(s). Must be cat-lov- er(s), honest, dependable1 Call Val: 459- 5748' 8-1-3P____________ H O U SEM A TE N EED ED . G M or liberal in­ dividual { G rad student preferred) Nonsmoker to share re-done home 5 blocks UT. N e ar shuttle. CA/CH W /D 472-4280.8-1-2B_______________________ SHO RT W A LK UT Quiet, non-smoking, petless. Shared kitchen. For private bam. S295 A B P (lease) 495-9346 Shared bills, bath; $180 CaH 472-5646. 7-17- 20B-E A N N O U N C E M E N T S 5 3 0 — Travel T ran sp o rta tio n VERY N ICE stone 2-1, central, near IF CA/CH, Satillo tiles, fireplace, $575. 476-0260 498-8071 8-1-2B CAN 'T GET any cioser to UT 4 BR/2BA $900/month, $400 deposit. Cali Pat, 474 1427.7 10-206-C LEADERS, FACULTY, Travellers, organize your groups trips & earn $ while travel! mg free1 48 countries, 104 tours today Thomas 759 8811 8-1-3P 540 — Lost & Found 425 — R o o m s SHORT W A LK UT Quiet, non-smokmg, petless. Shared kitchen For private both, S295 A B P (lease). 495-9346 Shared bills, bath. $180 Call 472-5646. 7-17- 206 E___________________________________ R O O M S FOR rent' Maid service and meals Only two blocks from campus Coll 472 7850 7-18 20B-C______________ G O O D CLEAN room All b Js paid. 2 blocks UT, $175, good rental histories only 480 0976 7-29-15P_______________ SUB-tET large double in Dobie Wilting to reduce monthly rent by $100 If inter­ ested call collect (214)931-0998 7-29- 5B LOST C A LIC O cat (orange, block, gold white) Lost 7-27-91 at Guadalupe and 34th. Tags from Riverside Veterinarian Clinic Cat's name- Chloe W earing red collar $50 reward 454-0185. 8-1-5B 560 — Public Notice N EED A date? G et real names and phone numbers of local singles 1-900- 535-7777 $2 50/mm 7 - 1 7 - 2 Q P ____ TALK LIVE Beautiful women waiting to talk to you' 1-900-386-5555. $2 50/ min 7-24-20P C A L L 47 1 -5 2 4 4 TO HACE A CLASSIFIED AD S A V E $ $ A T I K P L A C E ON THE LAKE $50 O FF 1 Bedroom $150 O FF 2 Bedroom June, July e On UT Shuttle Route > e Microwaves • 2 Ceiling Fans * e Po o l» Sundeck» Hot Tubs » Controled Access Entry • Boat Dock • Exercise Room 1500 E. R ive rsid e 444-1458 $ Managed by Asset Investment Corp 1 0 0 .00O F F MOVE-IN SPECIAL One & Two Bedroom Apts. 1st Month Only P L A N T A T IO N O A K S 2 3 0 8 P l e a s a n t V a l l e y 4 4 2 - 1 2 9 8 Managed by Asset Investment Corp Instruction GUITAR LE SS O N S , R&B, rack, country 10 years teaching experience Andy BuHtngton 452-6181 7 Ü.2Q B A _ tazz, P IA N O VO ICE saxophone donnei com position lessons A fan way to learn 443-2762 7-2* SB S E R V IC E S 750 — T y p in g Z IV L E Y The Completo Professional Typing Service •LO C K BU ST M H U E Y ’S 27TH ST »*rr 2707 Hemphill Park 472-3210 472-7677 SpeedH'ay T Y PIN G D O B I É M A L L L ase r Printing/Spell c h e c k A p p lic a tio n s/R e su m e s T e rm /R e se a rc h P a p e rs A p p lica tio n F o rm s A u d io T ra n sc n p tio n 5 6 5 3 Z IV L E Y TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS 27th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 LO N GH O RN C O PIES • Resumes • Theses • Term papers • Word Processing • Binding • Laser Printing 2 5 1 8 G uadalupe 476-4498 FAX # 476-2602 Z IV L E Y WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING 27th & G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 PA PER S RESU M ES RUSH JO B S Dot's Typing 2002-A G U A D A LU PE 472-5353 P R O F E S S IO N A L W O R D processing, campus p Mimwr COftftlfotfl * TM F SM ARTEST ta p ON E tftT U * p jF I SHORT TIME LATER.. ( I SUSFECT TH AT) YOU U FIND IT J \ QUITE USEFUL /^ ------------ ^ I E W , JIMMY... I 1 ■ drew you a map L - * ■ o f TUS ISLAND J ___ / s I 1 rt> HIGHLY AOVTSf you NOT TO SET THE 1 | OH, YES... YOU SET ÍT N e s e THINGS, TOO M MATCH M « T IF YOU CAN AVOID ITH K ~ 7 \ o d A ! \ lUATWAS 1 Y A ÚOOp ote J 14M Voa B€E>J a 600o GtfCL- H W t you yggy gooo g i« l ? A YCRYy c a t , My A (UyPBZTEN5io»J III The M agician AT UA5T U£ oer ^A^ori AUXfcte M t to CAVcU UP 0M MS (PER»OOtcAtS ! y \ it*s ai times owe fcus tuat SBtelTtV/f poETiNfMi I j Mom it... uoLbtT,.. o u r j ----------- k — m ijjfry Queen o f The Universe by Shannon W heeler THE FUSCO BROTHERS by J.C. Dutfy Tradition Continued from page 8 _ outweigh the result B\ initiating this pian the 106 Division-! football schools are carelessly careening down the road to a playoff, thereby destroying nearly a centurv of his­ tory of bow! extravaganzas People tend to forget (conven­ iently?) that the origina! purpose of the bowl system was not to d eter­ mine a solid national cham pion­ ship in college football. Bow ls were dei sed to give fans a chance to watch the best team s in the country' merely plav a bonus gam e. ' Let the best teams play the best te a m s/' was the idea, and that was what happened The gam es becam e an irreplaceable facet of the holiday season. Then the polls became a factor, and rankings became even atore im portant the bowl perform ­ the bowls became the ance. Soon final battle ground for superiority in the AP and UP! surveys and they w ent from being an extra gam e played for fun to the pres­ sure-packed media circus thev are fodav. the Now w e're getting what we asked for all along: a national cham pion. This age of total corpo­ rate sponsorship in athletics appar­ ently d ictates that we have a set-in- stone champion As Dodds said, this plan will fail to decide a cham ­ pionship. Once the plan is declared a flop those who wield the power in collegiate sport will dem and a college football play off. Those that genuinely this alliance would succeed will throw their hands up in dispair and go along with an NFL-type postseason. thought And the tradition and pageantry that have taken generations to in­ still will be w ashed into a big, green ocean of television bucks that all involved forsee. in the m eantim e, it appears that those pow ers that be will not be content until they choke every last bit of fun and tradition out of col­ lege football postseason. They can take their M o b il Cotton Bowl. I w ant the C otton Bow-1 back. Alternatives looked into by Holvfield Associated Press NEW YORK — The people w h o g u i d e h e a v y w e i g h t c h a m p i o n Evander Holv- field's career are to b e g in n in g co n ­ co n sid er tingency plans in case Mike Tyson is unable to fight in November. BOXING Holvfield is scheduled to defend the undisputed title Tyson Nov. 8 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, but a special grand jury is preparing to investigate accusations that Tyson raped an 18-year-old w om an in an Indianapolis hotel on July 19. "Holyfield definitely w-ants to fight in November and w e're plan­ ning on it being T yson," prom oter Dan Duva said W ednesday in a telephone interview. "If, however, it gets to where he's not available, we want to have an atlernate so Holyfield can fight in N ovem ber." jslew .. . Page 16 Thursday, August 1. 1991 THE DAILY TEXAN Carlson agrees to contract terms with Oilers Matt Schulz Daiiy T e * a " StaH Houston Oilers Coach lack Pardee finally got his wish Wednesday as veter­ an backup quarterback Led'. Carlson agreed to terms on a two-year deal with the team, ending a two-week holdout, "1 was really pleased said. "Without Pardee Codv in there we were losing valuable tim e.” Pardee seemed even m ore pleased w ith the fact that Carlson signed early in the week, allowing him to receive practice time before the squad flies to San Chego for this week­ en d's first official preseason game. "Now- the only concern is getting him time in San Diego," Pardee said. "I'd reallv like to do that. No matter what, w e just have to get him some time over the next few weeks, be­ cause one of mv mam concerns is not over­ working Warren (Moon) before the regular season starts." The general feeling among Carlson's team­ mates was one of relief to have him in camp. "I'm glad he's back," offensive lineman Bruce Matthews said. "Not only is Cody a ggeat physical talent, but more importantly he s also a really good guy. It's good that he finally signed." With Carlson reaching agreement, it ap­ pears likely that former Baylor teammate Tom Muecke will be the odd man out at the posi­ tion and is likely to be cut in the coming days. ■ ■ ■ The Oilers still have a large number of holdouts remaining, as Carlson arrives in camp. The list includes defensive end Sean Jones, defensive back Mike Dumas, running back Lorenzo White, punter Greg Montgom­ ery, linebacker Johnny Meads and comerbaek Cris Dishman ■ B ■ The full team has not practiced together much this week as Pardee has rested several of his athletes. By allowing certain players to miss an occasional practice or by holding only one practice on a certain day instead of two, Pardee hopes to give his tired team a rest be­ fore heading to San Diego Friday. Pardee had mentioned his team's "tired legs" as a possible reason for its sluggish per­ formance Sunday night against the Cowboys and hoped the abbreviated practice schedule w-ould remedy the problem before the trip. that ■ a a The defensive line suffered a blow on Tues­ day Veteran tackle Jeff Aim has a partially tom ligament in his left knee. Aim's knee won't require surgery, but he is expected to be out six to eight weeks, which will cause him to miss the beginning of the regular sea­ son. Also, rookie cornerback Steve Jackson from Purdue continues to miss practices with a nagging hfp injury, while veteran defensive end William Fuller is also still sidelined with an eye contusion. Fellow- defensive end Willis Pegúese suf­ fered a bruised knee against the Cowboys, but did return to practice on Wednesday af­ ternoon after tests on his knee showed no serious damage. The injuries to Aim and Pe­ gúese magnify the holdout of Jones all the more Ventura robs Rangers with dramatic grand slam ¡ Associated Press % §3§ 4 el3 | 4 CHICAGO — Robin Ventura ended the hot m onth of July with a grand two slam with outs in the ninth inning W ednes­ day night to lead C h ic a g o th e White Sox to a stunning 10-8 victory over the Texas Rangers. American It W-.3S his fourth hit and second homer of the game, giving him a to­ tal of 16 home runs, including 12 in July. "1 can't explain it," Ventura said. "I was just looking to get two runs in. But if vou hit it good enough, it's going to go." The victory was the seventh straight for the W hite Sox and their 25th in their last at-bat. "1 don't want to explain it, I just w ant to enjov it," M anager Jeff Tor- borg said. The Rangers broke a 5-all tie in the eighth when Dean Palmer hit his sixth hom e run and Rafael Pal­ meiro followed with a two-run shot, his 17th, for an 8-5 lead. Frank Thomas cut into it with his 20th home run the bottom of the eighth. in Then came the eventful ninth. Pinch hitter Craig Grebeck drew a walk off Kennv Rogers and Ron Karkovice singled. Joey Cora b u nt­ ed into a force play at third and re­ liever Rich Gossage got pinch hitter Carlton Fisk to pop out. Tim Raines drew a walk to load followed the bases and Ventura w-ith his second slam of the season. "1 had never faced G ossage," said Ventura. "The coaches told me that he would come at me. That he w ouldn't trv to trick m e." Gossage (4-2) d id n 't and saw his fastball sail into the bleachers. "I was conscious of w hat he has done this m onth, but I'm going after him," said Gossage. "He's hot and he's the last guy you w ant to face in that situation." Manager Bobby Valentine was asked about not bringing in his ace reliever Jeff Russell, who has 20 saves. "He said he was eight on a 10 scale," Valentine said. "So 1 thought I'd wait until he w-as a 10 on that scale. Hopefully, he will be ready tomorrow." Torborg kept repeating "1 can't believe it. I can't believe it. This club keeps picking one another up. To­ night they picked me up." TEXAS Pa -nei ' Franco 2b S err'a •' P mer. 1b Gonzaiz c l R e tm e r cP? Bee hete 3d Rdrgz c Huson ss ab r h bi 1 2 2 2 3 2 4 ' 4 2 4 0 4 • CHICAGO Thmas Paso-' Kmie 11 Huff ft G'oec» Krkvce c Cora 2D Guillen s' F s- Totals ab r h bi 5 2 1 0 h 2 4 5' 3 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 3 ' 1 0 5 i 2 i 4 0 1 0 ’ 000 38 10 14 8 400 030— 8 Totals 35 8 11 7 T e x a s .................................................. 001 Chicago ........... 103 010 014— 10 * a: Xrt‘ a hen A ’ ning run SC .'eO E (Rodriguez 1) K .fe 2; Ka'Xo.'Ce (1). Cora (6t DP Texas 2 Z^'caqc 2 LOB Texas 2 Chicago * 1 23 Reirner fifes ra . -e- ’ guez (■■•a (15) Pa - . : ro (i7 ). IBod' ’ 6 Tr.omas (20) SB Franco (22) CS Palmer (6) IP R ER 38 SO Texas K Brc Je'tcca: Rogers Gossage u 4-2 Chicago 3 JeCaher 4 1-3 MHerez Pa;: W 4-1 1 2-3 JeCaher pitr • e ; io * oatter in the 4th 5 2 1 1-3 1-3 HBP b , KBrown (Karkovice) WP KBrown 2 Umpires Home Fora First C v* Second Barnet! Third Kosc T 3 3 ' A 35 185 a Tigers 3, Angels 1 — In Detroit, Cecil Fielder hit two more home runs and took over the major league Associated Press HOUSTON — A s tro s T h e turned up the heat on the Car- d in a ls again W e d n e s d a y I night — or so it seemed. National Ken Camim- ti's two-run dou- ble highlighted a four-run first in- ning and Jeff Bagwell and Luis Gonzalez each hit their 10th hom ers of the season, leading the Astros to a 9-5 victory and sweep of St. Louis. "Whatever the temperature is, I hope they keep it there," H ouston Manager Art Howe said, laughing at suggestions the Astros had ad ­ justed the Astrodome's air condi­ tioning to help the balls carry. Houston, which has just 50 hom e runs this season, has hit six in its last four gam es, all victories in the Astrodome. "We're starting to think som e­ thing is going on with the air condi­ tioning too," said Bagwell, who got in as many his second homer nights. "It's nice to come to the bail park feeling you have a chance to hit it out." Darryl Kile (4-6) gave up one run and five hits in six innings and struck out four as he ended his four- game losing streak. Dean Wilkins pitched 2% innings for his first save. Astro home run derby continues in 3-game sweep of Cardinals Texas Julio Franco eluded the tag of Chicago’s Ozzie Guillen, but Robin Ventura jolted the red-hot Sox to victory. lead with 29, leading the Tigers over California. CALIFORNIA D ETR O IT Polor : 1 Joyner 1D Wnf eld ■’ DPrker an Gaett 3b Parrish c T ■ g ey c G gr ef cl Soto 2b Schfe ss Totals ab r h bi 4 0 0 0 4 0 10 4 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 -0 3 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 31 1 7 1 Phillips 2b Barnes 3c Frymn ss Fielder ' a T" etcm d h Deer rf Moseby - AHnson c Cuyler Cf S’ e'Cy cf T o ta ls ab r h bi 4 0 ’ 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 4 2 2 2 3 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 ■ 0 0 0 30 3 6 3 Califo rn ia............................................... 010 000 000— 1 D e t r o it .................................................. 020 000 01x— 3 E -Gaeüi2;8> DF -Detroit 3 LOB California 3. Detroit 6 2B Schc* ■< d .'8) B e- es (6) HR Pamsh ( 1 1 ) Fielder 2 (29 Deer (21) CS Barnes (3), Cuyier (6) IP H R ER BB SO . California Langston L 14-5 Detroit Terrell W.7-9 5 Umpires h xrte Reed Firs1 Br nkman Second Cousms Third Roe 3 6 6 3 8 9 3 0 7 1 1 T 2 -8 A 17 626 a Twins 12, Yankees 3 — In New York, Kent Hrbek hit a grand slam and Chili Davis and Shane Mack Gtdden J 3i_sh if K n b lch 2 d Puckett cf L arkir rf H rbe k 1b CDav s dh Haroer c OrfiZ C Mack rf p g r . 3b Gagne ss Nwman ss Minnesota Tapar w 8-7 Banks New York Sndrsr L 10-7 Plunk Leary WP Bar.--. also homered during an eight-run second inning that powered Minne­ sota past the Yankees. MINNESOTA NEW YORK ab r h bi 4 1 2 1 2 0 2 1 6 1 1 1 3 ‘ 0 ’ 1 1 0 0 5 2 3 5 5 1 2 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 2 3 3 5 2 4 0 4 1 2 0 • 0 0 0 w lams cf Sax 2D C Rdrgz 2b Mttngty 1b Mu ens t b Ha •( Hphrys f "tokes c Geren c Shridan rf Maas dh Espnza ss Ve arde pf PKe y 3o Totals ab r h bi 4 0 1 1 4 0 2 - • 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 10 0 0 3 0 1 0 10 0 0 4 0 2 0 4 • • o 3 - 1 0 o - o o 4 0 0 0 36 3 8 2 Totals 46 12 20 12 M in n e s o t a ....................................... 080 003 001— 12 New Y o rk .......................................... 001 000 002— 3 E Pagltaruk) (8) Williams (2) DP M e* vcrx 2 LOB Min­ nesota 8 New York 8 2B Sax (21). Sher dan (3) Espinoza (15) HP Hrbek (11) CDav® (23) Mack 2111) h h ER 38 SO IP 7 2 1 2 3 4 ‘ -3 3 Associated Press Umpires -Home Phi ips First, Hickox Second Hendry 7. rCj Hirschbeek T -2 4 4 A - 24 300 a Red Sox 11, Athletics 10 — In Boston, Jack Clark hit his third home run of the game, a two-out drive in the 14th inning that led the Red Sox over Oakland and stopped the Athletics' five-game winning streak. a Blue Jays 3, Indians 1 — In To­ ronto, Jimmy Key won for the first time in eight starts and the Blue Jays ended a four-game losing streak, beating Cleveland. a Royals 5, Brewers 4 — In Milwaukee, Brian McRae had three hits and drove in one run as Kansas City beat the Brewers. a Orioles 4, Mariners 2 — In Seattle, Chris Hoiles hit a two-run single in the 11th inning and Balti­ more beat the Mariners. "Darryl struggled with his control but he battled through everything," Howe said. "I took him out because he'd thrown so many pitches." Bob Tewksbury (7-7) allowed five runs and four hits in four innings. "It's an empty feeling," Tewks­ bury said. "We needed to get some momentum going and it didn't work out. 1 didn't think I pitched badly. 1 thought I had good stuff. There are just times when you make good pitches and the hits fall in any­ way." Houston, which won its fourth straight, took the lead in the first when Steve Finley tripled and scored on first baseman Gerald Per­ ry's fielding error. Jeff Bagwell sin­ gled, Caminiti hit his double off the glove of right fielder Felix Jose and Andujar Cedeno singled in a run for a 4-0 lead. Gonzalez hit his 10th homer in the third, giving the Astros home runs in four consecutive games for the first time this season. Tom Pagnozzi hit an RBI triple in the fourth and Bagwell hit his 10th home run in the fifth, putting Hous­ ton ahead 6-1. Ray Lankford hit an RBI groun- dout in the seventh, but the Astros took a 9-2 lead in the bottom of the inning on RBI singles by Biggio and Gonzalez and Bagwell's run-scoring groundout. Oquendo tripled in the eighth and scored on a throwing error by Cedeno at shortstop. The Cardinals got two more runs in the ninth on Milt Thompson's RBI single and Pagnozzi's run-scoring groundout. "We didn't pitch very well," Car­ dinals Manager Joe Torre said. "It just shows that no matter what park you pitch in, you'll get beat if you don't pitch well." that After the game, the Astros an­ right-hander Jim nounced Clancy had been traded to the At­ lanta Braves for minor league pitch­ er Matt Turner and a player to be named later. ST. LOUIS Lnkfrd Cl OSmith ss AgosiO 0 Perry 1 o Zeile 3b Joserf MThrnp If Pgnozzi c Ó qendo2o Twksbr p Hudfer ph Fraser o Alicea ph Terry p CWson 2b Totals HOUSTON Finley cf Bgwetl 1b l G ^ziz If Cmtmfi 3b Simms if Capet p Wi'Kins p Cedeno ss Cr de e 2b Kile p Young cf ab r h bi 4 0 11 5 0 10 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 4 1 2 0 4 0 2 - 5 0 1 2 4 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 37 5 10 4 Totals 33 9 9 9 St. Louis.............................................000 100 112— 5 Houston.......................................... 401 010 30x—9 E Perry (3) Biggio(6) Cedeno (1) DP Houston 1 LOB St Louis 13. Houston 2 2B Lankford (11) Zeile (22) Oquendo (6) Caminiti (15) 3B Pagnozzi (4) Oquendo (4 1 Fmiey (6) HR Bagwell (10) LGonzalez (10) SB OSmith (22) Perry (9) IP H R ER BB SO 4 2 1 i 5 1 3 0 5 3 1 1 3 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 4 1 1 6 4 2-3 2 2 1-3 4 1 1 1 i 3 2 4 1 0 3 3 0 St. Louis Tewksbury L 7-7 Fraser Terry Agosto Houston Kile W 4-6 Cape: Wilkins S 1 WP—Wilkins Williams Third Marsh T 2 49 A 15 589 Umpires Home WendefstedI Firs' Reiiford Second ■ Phillies 9, Padres 3 — In Phila­ delphia, Wes Chamberlain drove in a career-high six runs with a pair of three-run homers as the Phillies beat San Diego. SAN DIEGO PHILA Roberts 2b DrJckn cf TGwyn rf FMcGr 1b Sntiago c Teufel 3b Howed ph Ward If Shipley ss GHarrs p Rodngz p JClark ph Costello p MMdu* p Stphnsn ph Totals ab r h bi Dyksir cf 4 0 0 0 4 2 3 0 Oautton c 4 1 2 1 Hoiitns 3D 4 0 0 0 RMcDIp 3 0 1 2 Boever p Kruk 1b 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Murphy rf 4 0 1 0 4 0 2 0 Mrndni 2b Thon SS 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ruffin p 1 0 0 0 CHayes 3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 34 3 9 3 Chbln If Totals ab r h bi 5 0 0 0 5 - 1 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 1 0 4 2 2 2 4 2 4 6 3 0 3 - 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 C 1 0 0 0 33 9 11 9 000 San Diego 101 010— 3 Philadelphia 303 30x— 9 E Shipley (3) Hollins (6) DP Philadelphia 1 LOB San Diego 6 Phiiadelph.a 5 2B DrJackson(4) Santiago (14) Daulton(7j M urp hy2f16) Morandini (8) HR -Chamberlain 2 (4 ) CS Chamberlain (2) S GHarris Ruffin SF Santi­ ago Morandini IP H R ER BB SO / San Diego GHarris 1.2-3 Rodnguez Costero MMaddux Philadelphia Ruffin W 3 3 McDowell Boever GHairis pitched to 3 batters in the 6lh 5 1 1 1 7 1 1 T h e B r a v e s f l e w p a s t t h e B u c s . Associated Press CHICAGO CWtker 3b Grace 1b Sndbrg 2b Dawson r* GBe If DwSmt cf Dnston ss Wilkins c Castillo p Dacnzo ph SW Ison p Stcump p Walton ph Seaman p Totals CINCINNATI ab r h bi Larkin ss 4 1 2 0 4 0 2 0 Hatchr cf 4 0 2 ' Morns lb Sabo 3b 4 0 0 0 ONe f rf 4 0 - 0 Doran 2D 4 0 0 0 Braggs If 4 0 - 0 3 0 0 0 JReed c 0 0 0 0 Ri|0 p 1 0 0 0 Minutlli p Power D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 33 1 8 1 Totals ab r h bi 4 0 2 1 4 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 1 3 2 2 0 1 1 0 1 3 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 31 5 9 5 . . 0 00 000— 1 Chicago Cincinnati 001 OOx—5 E DwSmith 13). Wilkins (1). Moms (6) DR­ Cincinnati 3 LOB Chicago 6i Cincinnati 4 2B- Dunston (13) Larkin (13) Sabo (18) SB Braggs (5) CS Doran (2) SF— jReed . . . . . . 100 031 Chicago Castillo L 3-2 Wilson Stocumb Scan an Cincinnati R ijo W 7 -2 M in u t e .' Power S 2 WP Castillo Power son Third i.ayne IP 4 2 i 1 H 7 2 0 0 7 6 1-3 2 1 2 3 0 R ER BB SO 4 1 0 0 1 0 0 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 .1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 2 1 0 2 0 0 Umpires Home McSherry First, Davis Second David­ T 2 39 A 36 483 ■ Braves 8, Pirates 6 — In Atlan­ ta, Deion Sanders, making his fare­ well baseball appearance of the sea­ son, hit a three-run homer in a six- run fifth inning as the Braves beat Pittsburgh for a four-game sweep. PITTSBURGH ATLANTA Merced lb JBei’ ss Jarsho cl McCInd if Bonilla rt Bonds H LVIiere c Wehnet 3b Lmd 2b Reeu p P'acios p Wtkrsn ph Kipper p Redus pn ab r h bi 4 C - 0 5 0 1 0 110 0 1 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 4 1 - 3 4 2 2 1 4 0 ’ 0 4 1 1 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 Nixon rt Snders cf Stanton p Trdway 2b lem ke 2b Pndltn 3b LoSmth It Biauser ss Blhard ss Hunter 1b Oison c Smoltz p Gregg ph Frman p KtMchl rf Totals ab r h bi 4 2 2 0 4 1 1 3 1 0 1 0 4 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 4 1 1 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 1 3 1 1 0 0 0 10 0 0 1 0 0 0 10 0 0 34 8 11 7 Totals 35 6 9 6 Pittsburgh.............................................. 024 000 0 0 0 —6 A tla n ta .................................................. 011 060 OOx—8 E Merce-i (7) DP Pittsburgh 1 Atlanta 1 LOB Pitts­ burgh 5 Atlanta 7 2B Reed (1) Treadway (10) loSm ith (10) Olson 2 (12) HR Bonds (16) LaValliere (3), Sanders (4) B auser (8). SB Varsho (6). Pendleton (8) IP H RER BB SO 4 1-3 ’ 2-3 2 Pittsburgh Reed Palacios L.6-3 Kipoe' Atlanta Smoltz W 6-12 Freeman StantonS 2 Umpires Home Poncmo DeMuth Third Bonin ’ T 2 48 A 23 955 5 11-3 2 2 3 0 1 0 First Hirschbeek, Second, 6 2 6 0 1 0 0 0 0 7 1 1 The 1991 MC AT Be Prepared. Kaplan Is. Free Informational Seminar Date: August 6, 1991 Time: 7:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m. For more information or to RSVP: CALL 472-EXAM S389 LONDON S435 PARIS S445 MADRID MOSCOW S530 HONGKONG S539 COSTARICA $229 One Way from Austin ALSO TEACHER and BUDGET FARES! EURAIL PASSES USSR / Europe Tours Language Learning Centers 2000 GUADALUPE AUSTIN. TX 78705 CouncilTravei — 4 7 2 -4 9 3 1 ---- II $ 2 9 m O L . PACKAGE^HMk 477-5555 I I I N I | I I WISDOM TEETH If you need the removal of wisdom teeth S STANLEY H. KAPLAN ¿a fake Kaplan Or Take Your Chances « f t b i o m e d i c a l ■ r e s e a r c h ¡¡GROUP INC. . . . C a l l 4 5 1 - 0 4 1 1 Thud Cuzzi T 2 31 A 24 779 WP GHarris Costello Umpires Home Gregg First West Second Winters Financial incentive provided to cover consultation, x-ray, plus qualifying surgery in exchange for your opinion on pain medication following oral surgery. FDA approved Clinical Research Study. Surgery performed by Board Certified Oral Surgeons. ■ Reds 5, Cubs 1 — In Cincinnati, Jose Rijo allowed one run in seven innings and hit a two-run single as the Reds beat Chicago.