ENTERTAINMENT * 0 8 Í 0 0 V " y o i T i l * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * K¡" Gu lea a s< *?3¿£-£066¿ X I OSV d “ 3 3M «0 ni30NVX 1SV3 LZ92 a3ivyodyooNi ,1 0 w v s Q N w rw M Q ” » ; 1* 3^ xn° 5, Let the game begin After a week of hype, Texas and Notre Dame will finally play the biggest game in Royal-Memorial Stadium history. Royal affair Organizers sell out Austin Convention Center gala honoring former football coach Darrell Royal. r h e Dai ly T exan Vol. 96, No. 14 3 Sections___________________ The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin , Friday, September 20, 1996 25c IN REMEMBRANCE Police prepare for game chaos NATHAN ROTH__________ ____ Daily Texan Staff Saturday's Notre Dame game will be the most heavily policed game in the University's history, a UT police official said Thursday. To handle the 80,000 spectators, UT police Capt. Silas Griggs said there would be 150 officers policing the gam e. R egularly about 60 officers police the games. G riggs said UT stu d en ts would encounter strict enforcement to keep them from storm in g the field or bringing in alcohol. / * ’ "Last year we tried to cut down on students rushing the field," Griggs said. "This year w e're taking it far P i1H mnrp ctfiriniiclw o o the field with police officers at every gam e. At the M issou ri gam e, we arrested nine stu d en ts who cam e over the fence. It's not a m atter of property damage; it's about saving lives." o Gnggs said many people have been injured by falling goal posts. "S to rm in g the field cau ses too m any p ro b lem s," G rig g s said. "Players can be injured, the field can be ruined and it tends to lead to the tearing down of goal posts, which can be very dangerous." In an effort to ensure student safe­ ty, UT officials have adopted a zero- tolerance policy about alcohol in the D arrell K R o y al-T ex as M em orial Stadium. "A lco h o l is the cause of a great many problems at football gam es," Griggs said. "Many cases of violence and verbal abuse involve intoxicated fans." Inside the stadium, police officers will eject anyone in possession of alcohol, Griggs said. "At the first game, some friends of mine and I sat behind several drunk g u y s," said H eather M cB rid e, an anthropology freshman. "For us, it really took away from the gam e. Th ey were being really obnoxious and they even started a fight." The z e ro -to le ra n ce p olicy was enforced during the first two games of this season. At the New Mexico S tate U n iv ersity gam e, UT police ejected 33 spectators, cited 21 for pos­ session of alcohol, arrested one per­ son for criminal trespassing and con­ fiscated 48 alcoholic beverages. During last November's Texas Tech game, 19 people were ejected, 11 were Please see Football, page 2 Stephanie Echererri, an Air Force ROTC cadet and nursing meant to honor the flag and promote ROTC. The flag was at half­ freshman, folds the U.S. flag during Formal Retreat. The event is staff in remembrance of former Vice President Spiro Agnew C IN D Y B R O W N /D aily Texan Staff Committee head resigns over building naming CARLA B A S S ____________ ________ Daily Texan Staff Members of an advisory committee charged to review UT policy concerning the naming of buildings will meet with UT officials Friday to find a new leader. John Durbin, a professor of mathematics, resigned as ch airm an o f the D ev elop m en t P olicy A d v iso ry Committee this week because of dissatisfaction with the University's system of naming buildings. UT President Robert Berdahl said Thursday he has no replacement. He said he would meet with tne commit­ tee at 2 p.m. in the Berdahl's conference room to discuss the vacancy Friday. "W e'll be sorting that out," Berdahl said. Berdahl formed the committee last year after faculty and student protests about the naming of the new mole­ cular biology building after Jim Bob Moffett, CEO of Freeport-McMoRan. Durbin said last month tho rnmmittpp was not con­ sulted about the stadium's renaming. He also said he was not informed when Berdahl offered to name a planned psychology building after alumnus Charles Seay. Durbin declined Thursday to talk at length about his decision. "I'm not out to make headlines," Durbin said. "The main point is that I didn't personally want to be associ­ ated with something that didn't have a system of checks and balances." Durbin explained his complaints in a report he sub­ mitted to Berdahl in August. Durbin proposed that Berdahl be required to discuss new building-name proposals with an advisory com­ mittee. Durbin's proposed committee was composed of two faculty members, two administrators and a UT Fund­ raising board member. The com m ittee would be consulted in most cases before a building name is recommended to the UT System Board of Regents, which makes the final deci­ sion. Berdahl, who met with Durbin in August, said he thought the plan would create problems with donors. Although Durbin said Berdahl's concerns are legiti­ mate, but he said he thought the president did not pre­ sent viable alternatives to the current naming process. During the months Durbin chaired the 10-member committee, regents approved the renaming of Texas Memorial Stadium in honor of legendary former foot­ ball coach Darrell K Royal. cy, not provide input concerning specific cases. Although UT policy states buildings must be named in honor of individuals who are deceased, the regents can, and often do, override the rule. "I think the existing regents' rules regarding the nam­ ing of buildings should be changed to be consistent with practice and to give individual campuses more flexibility," said Reuben McDaniel, a professor of man­ agement science and information systems and a mem­ ber of the naming committee. McDaniel said the University would probably never be able to avoid controversies surrounding the naming of buildings. "When you don't build buildings and don't name Berdahl said the committee was formed to write poli­ them, there's no controversy," McDaniel said. Jury finds Hyde guilty in 2 hours MARK M C K E N ZIE _____ Daily Texan Staff A jury convicted Cesilee Hyde Thursday of intoxication manslaughter in the death of Austin policeman Drew Bolin. Although Hyde showed no emotion, her attor­ ney Ben Florey said later, "It's quite distressing to her. Her life will never be the same — even without the proceedings." Jury deliberations lasted about two hours. Her sentencing is scheduled Friday. Despite speculation that Hyde would take the stand Thursday, she declined to testify. Florey said the defense would ask for a change of venue upon appeal because of excessive media coverage of the case. Intoxication manslaughter was the harshest conviction available. Hyde could face a prison sentence of up to 20 years and up to $10,000 in fines. But Hyde could be out on probation after 120 days of her sentence. H yde's car struck Bolin at 1:50 a.m. June 2, 1995, as he was directing traffic around a three- car wreck. Police had cordoned off three of four lanes on Interstate 35 near the 51st Street bridge. Witnesses testified that Hyde's brakes never engaged during the accident. Bolin died of a massive skull fracture at the scene, but Hyde sustained relatively minor injuries. Police determined that Hyde's blood alcohol level was .16 at the time of the accident. A level of 0.10 or higher is considered evidence of intoxication in Texas. Throughout the two-week trial, argum ents centered on v isibility at the wreck site. The defense said the scene was poorly lit, and that Bolin was not wearing a reflective vest while directing traffic. Sandy Lynn Eversberg, a student at Austin Community College, who was at the scene after the first accident, testified earlier that the area was well lit. The defense suffered a blow Thursday when Sonny Wilkerson, a key witness, revealed under cross-examination that he served time in prison for larceny, theft of a vehicle and joy riding During his testimony Wednesday, Wilkerson blamed police officers for Hyde's accident. He also contradicted the accounts of most witnesses who said the overhead lights for the wreckers and the fire engine were flashing at the scene. In closing arguments, the defense insinuated that police tampered with evidence, including the blood-alcohol tests and the fibers from the reflective vest which were found on the wind­ shield of Hyde's car. Florey contended that Bolin was not wearing the vest because no shattered glass from Hyde's car was found on it. The vest was found laying Please see Hyde, page 2 INSIDE THE TEXAN TODAY ◦utzy Canddate Weather “ ...and so, my fellow Americans, I envision highs in the 90's, a low of 71 and a 30 percent chance of wh-WHOAH! AAAAAHHHhhh!!!!" --thud. Index: Around Campus................ 20 Classifieds.........................17 Comics.............................. 20 Editorials.............................4 Entertainment................... 13 Sports.................................9 State & Local..................... 8 University............................6 World & Nation................... 3 House overrides Clinton’s veto of partial-birth abortion bill Associated Press their health " WASHINGTON — Scoring a big win for anti-abor­ tion forces, the House voted Thursday to override President Clinton's veto of a bill that bans a form of late-term abortions. But the Senate seemed very' unlike­ ly to follow' suit. The apparent lack of sufficient support there makes it unlikely that the attempt to overturn the veto of the so- called partial-birth abortion bill will succeed. However, the House vote sent a message that the issue will not be ignored in the presidential campaign. Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole has cam­ paigned actively on the issue. He said Thursday that as more Americans become aware of the "horrible" prac­ tice, "the president has been left almost alone, defend­ ing the indefensible." When Clinton vetoed the bill in Apnl, surrounded by five women w ho had undergone the procedure, he criti­ cized the legislation by saying it "d o e s not allow' women to protect themselves from serious threats to The 285-137 vote was four more than the two-thirds needed for an o v errid e in the H ouse. Sev en ty Democrats joined 215 Republicans to support revival of the bill, which would ban a procedure — generally per­ formed in the third trimester — in which the fetus is partly delivered through the birth canal before being killed If enacted into law, the ban would mark the first time Congress has made illegal a specific abortion procedure since the Supreme Court ruled in 1973 that a woman has the right to an abortion. Supporters of the ban emphasized w'ith pictures and speeches the gruesomeness of the procedure — "How can anyone in this chamber or in the W hite House defend sticking a pair of scissors into a partially bom baby's head so as to puncture the child's skull?" asked Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J. "Our moment in history is marked by a mortal conflict Please see Abortion, page 2 After announcing his candidacy, Councilmember Ronney Reynolds hugs his kindergarten teacher Dr. Ines Jeffrey. Reynolds declares mayoral candidacy LEE SIMMONS____________ Daily Texán Staff With a pledge to work toward a shared vision of government, C ity C o u n cilm em b er R onney Reynolds announced his candi­ d acy for m ayor of A u stin Thursday. Mayor Bruce Todd announced last August he would not seek re- election. "The city is becoming a not-so- affordable city, and we need to address how the taxpayer can mAke it in this city ," Reynolds said. Reynolds said the electric utili­ ty, construction of the new air­ port and redevelopm ent of die the old one are issues he would address during the campaign. Reynolds was elected to the City Council in 1991 He graduat­ ed from the U niversity w ith a business degree in 1969. R ey n o ld s w ill cam p aig n ag a in st K irk W atson , a tria l law y er and en v iro n m en ta list who has w orked w ith the Chamber of Commerce. Don M artin , ow n er of D on M artin Public Affairs, said the campaign would be difficult for both candidates. Martin, who managed Todd's election campaigns, said business p eo p le w ould have to ch o se b etw een th e tw o. Both h av e strong ties to the Austin business Plea as mm Reynolds, page 2 Abortion: Bill demands doctors only perform surgery to save mother’s life Continued from page 1 between a culture (if death and a cul­ ture of life, and today, hére and now, •we m ust choose side§," saijd- House. Ju d ic ia ry C o m m itte e . /C h a irm a n "Henry-Hyde, R-I1J. . point in the presidential cam paign," sa id R alp h R eed of th e C h ristia n Coalition. m onetary cfamages. had no brain. • Buf anti-abortion law rnakers also' contended tjiaff-the issue w ent well b e y o n d sqxth ab o rtio n s, w h ich are relatively fare. ' " I t -9 a fron tal a tte m p t on Roe vs. Wade, plain frnd áim ple," said Rep. Carolyn M aloney, D-N.Y., w ho su p ­ ports abortion rights. The hi 11,.it* passed, w ould let doc­ tors perforna th¿ p ro ced u re only if they can show it w as the only w ay to save .the m o th e r s life. A doctor w ho perform ed th e p ro ced u re ille­ gally could face fines and tw o years in prison. The bill also w ould let the father or marterhal g ran d p aren ts file a civil law suit against the doctor for O ppon en ts of the m easure argued that it w ould take aw ay a life saving p ro c e d u re u se d w h en th e fetu s is found to have serious abnorm alities or the m o th e r faces se rio u s h e a lth problem s. I d i d n 't c h o o se fo r m y so n to die," Vik;ki Stella of N aperville, 111., told a hew s conference. "I w an te d this baby. I chose to take him off life s u p p o r t w h ic h w a s m y b o d y . C ongress has no 'right interfering in o u r liv es a n d o u r tra g e d ie s ." She h ad th e p ro c e d u re tw o y e a rs ago after it w as discovered th at her fetus Page 2 Friday, September 20,1996 The Daily T exan Football: City, campus police to monitor postgame crowds Continued from page 1 cited as minors in possession and one was charged w ith assault. brations from becom ing u n ru ly , p o lic in g c o n c e rn r e la te d to th e game. » C am p u s police w ill d irect traffic in s id e th e c a m p u s , w h ile A u s tin •police will h an d le off-cam pus traf­ fic, G riggs said. . A u stin p o lic e officials said th ey w o u ld try to k e e p p o stg a m e cele- MARKET \U BRIEF Thursday, Se.pfembér 19,1996 DOW(lndustrials) NY6E • "A nytim e there is a big UT foot­ b a ll g am e, e sp e c ia lly if UT w in s, th e re 's a chan ce th a t c e le b ra tio n s can get o u t of h a n d ," said A u stin police Lt. Greg Lasley. " H o p e f u lly th e m o o d w ill be good and there w o n 't be any p ro b ­ H y d e Continued from page 1 next to Bolin's body, Florey said lem s. I'v e seen if go both w ays. If there are any problem s, w e will be ready for them ." Lasley said the departm ent plans to station m ore officers than u su al on Sixth Street an d 'o th er popular enter­ tainment districts in cehtral Austin. .Saturday's, g-ame creates an o th er T he police hope to cut off c o u n ­ te rf e ite r s b e fo re th e y g e t to cu s- . tom ers. G riggs recom m ends that no one buy tickets from people they do • not know.1 R e y n o l d s Continued from page 1 community. "W e expect that the evidence should be h andled p ro p ­ erly," he said.Florey said there w as nothing H yde could have done to avoid the wreck. "It's not ag ain st the law to d rin k an d then drive, it m ay be negligent, b u t it's not against the law," Florey said. "Even if you believe she w as intoxicated, the colli­ sion w as unavoidable.'' In th e p r o s e c u tio n 's c lo sin g a rg u m e n ts , A ssista n t D istrict A ttorney R obert Sm ith sarcastically asked the jury if the state w o u ld really d o cto r evidence, a d d in g that the facts presented should not be called into ques­ tion. M a rtin s a id W a ts o n 's e n v ir o n m e n ta lis m m ig h t m ake him the stronger contender. "R eyno ld s is the m ore p o p u la r nam e, b u t I th in k Kirk w ou ld hav e the ed g e in the final w eeks of the cam paign," he said. W atson w as not in tow n T hursday. R eynolds stressed in his annou n cem en t he w o u ld cam paign on issues im p o rta n t to taxpayers u ntil the May 1997 election. R ey nolds said a go od re la tio n sh ip w ith th e sta te Legislature w ould be a priority. ."W e d o n 't need A ustin-bashing and w e d o n 't need p artisan sh ip ," R eynolds said. "The city needs so m e­ one to better represent it in the Legislature, and I w ant to bring A ustin to the table." S&P5Ó0 ' AMEX S&P MidCap Nasdaq NYSEDiary Advances: 1,114 New highs Declines: 1,26£ Unchanged: 851 Total issues: ’ 3,231 C onsolidated volum e: 476,085,900 1995 avg. comp, vol.: 422,909,640 72 New lows 27 BICYCLES SPECIALIZED • T R E K •CANNONDALE Visit us for the largest selection and best prices on all bicycles, accessories and cycling clothing! * Bring In This Ad And Gel 15% Off Any Helmet 2401 SAN GABRIEL 473-8700 •Offer Expires 9/21/96 • Sale Helmets Exeluded Looking For A Few Good People Whiting Turner Contracting Company date:.September 25, 1996 (Wednesday) time: 6-8 pm ’ • location: ENS 302 ‘Refreshments: pizza and cokes* P H A R M A C O i Interviews will be held Thursday, September 26 , from 9-5. ^ T ~ ..................... - - ■- ■ AUSTIN OB/GYN C O N F ID E N T IA L A B O R TIO N SE R V IC E S • First an d Second Trimester • Com plete Fam ily Planning Services . . • Emergency Contraception • Private Office Setting • Board Certified Gynecologist • Fem ale Physician on Staff • Student Discount (512) 250-1005 9805 Anderson Mill Rd. 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Edito/ .......:...........................................................................;......................... ............Tgra L Copp Managing Editor............. :...........................................................................................................................Renae Merle Associate Managing Editors...................................................... Holly Crawford, Jennifer Schultz, Amy Spitzenberger News Editor Associate News Editor u......................................................................... News Assignments Editor............................................................. Senior Reporters....... —........... .............................................................Leah Rauch, Lee Simmons, Bryan Mealer Associate Editors., Photo Editor......................... Associate Photo Editor. Enrnrtamrrient E d i t o r Assocpfp Entertainment Editor.................................................... 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The Datty Texan s published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Tburedey and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school b no! in session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710 ' News contributions w* be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications . Bukcttng 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Butfcfcng A4.101 ) . 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To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P O Box D, Austin, TX 78713- 8904, or to TSP Building C3 200, or call 471 5083 P O S T M A S T E R : Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P 0 Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904 9/20/96 Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m. Thursday. 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday, 4 p.m. Thursday Friday............... Tuesday, 4 p.m. 11 « m CHnXlid Wo»d Ad. ii m i B uansaa D«y Prior lo PuMcMon) Strokes may be genetic, study says Associated Press research in Chicago. C H IC A G O — A s tu d y o f ra ts suggests th at a susceptibility tow ard hav in g stro k e s could be genetic, a finding that could pave the w ay for m ore effective stroke prevention and treatm ent, according to a new study. T h e p r e s e n c e o f c e r ta in g e n e s could p u t a person at a h igher risk for h a v in g a stro k e , re g a rd le ss of w h e th e r th ey h av e risk factors for strokes such as high blood pressure or a b a d d ie t, th e s tu d y 's s e n io r's author said. “ T he re se a rc h s h o w s th a t h ig h blood pressure and other factors are not the w hole story," said Dr. Klaus L in d p a in tn e r o f B rig h a m a n d W om en's H ospital in Boston. "There are genes that directly affect the like­ lihood of having a stroke." The stu d y appears in the A ugust issue of the journal N ature Genetics and w as to be presented today at the American H eart A ssociation's a n n u ­ al conference on high blood pressure Strokes are the third leading cause of death in the United States behind h e a rt d ise a se a n d cancer. S tro k es o c c u r w h e n a b lo c k e d o r b ro k e n blood vessel or artery keeps blood a n d o x y g e n fro m g e ttin g to th e brain. T h e re is n o w a y to d e te r m in e w h e th e r o r n o t an in d iv id u a l w ill h a v e a s tro k e . C e rta in fa c to rs — such as h ig h b lo o d p re ssu re , d ia ­ b e te s, h ig h c h o le s te ro l a n d so m e h e a rt c o n d itio n s — a re k n o w n to increase the risk, so doctors concen­ trate on controlling them w ith m ed­ ication and lifestyle changes. For the stu d y , research ers in te r­ bred tw o strains of hypertensive rats w ith cardiovascular disease, one that w a s s tr o k e - p r o n e a n d o n e th a t w a sn 't. A fter e x am in in g th e ir off­ s p r i n g 's s tr u c tu r e s , researchers found three areas on the chrom osom es that seem ed to influ­ ence a predisposition tow ard having strokes. g e n e tic Rep. Pat Schroeder, D-Colo., said, "W e've h ad people so engaged with th e ir p ic t u r e s a n d c h a r g e s a n d sc rea m in g a n d p la y in g p o litic s in w o m en's uteruses that we have not really d e a lt w ith the safe m o th e r­ hood issue." T he S e n a te p a s s e d th e b ill last D e c e m b e r b y a 54-44 v o te , w e ll short of the tw o-thirds m argin n eed ­ ed to override, and Senate M ajority L e a d e r T r e n t L o tt, R -M iss., acknow ledged Thursday, "It will be h ard to o verride." But he said it w as an im p o rta n t issue, and the Senate w ould hold a vote, possibly next Thursday. R egardless of the outcom e, ab o r­ tio n foes p ro m is e d th a t it w o u ld rem ain p ro m in en t in the p re sid e n ­ tial c a m p a ig n .' 'T o d a y 's v o te is n o t o n ly a h is ­ toric tu rn in g point in o u r o n going effo rts to p ro te c t in n o ce n t h u m a n life, b u t it is a d r a m a tic tu r n in g The C hristian Coalition and other groups, p ro and con, have w aged an intense lobbying effort in the days leading to T h u rsd ay 's vote. L ast w eek , all e ig h t a c tiv e U.S. Rom an C atholic cardinals gathered on the C a p ito l ste p s to p ra y for a veto override. T h e N a tio n a l A b o r tio n a n d R eproductive Rights Action League, or NARAL, said the H ouse vote was “ n o t a b o u t w o m e n 's h e a lth a n d li\ res. It's ab out the m ost anti-choice Congress in history trying to hand a pro-choice p re sid en t a defeat prior to the election." C linton has vetoed 14 bills since the Republicans took over Congress in January 1995. C ongress has tried seven tim es to o v e rrid e a n d h a s b een su cce ssfu l once. 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One or more wisdom teeth can be extracted by a board certified oral surgeon in exchange for your opinion on an investigational pain medication. Call us todayl S C IR E X CALL TODAY 320-1630 OUTSIDE AUSTIN 1-800-320-1630 Le b\ age m-x and plan sekvted Acu ptance sub|cxt to medical underw riting A11-P1N-107 8 T h e D a i l y T e x a n HHD/nr, 8H>TEMBB< 20,1986 PEEK-A-BOO STATE & LOCAL PBK THRE: 6-7-4 voice tax woes s tax committee 44 They don’t want an extension in Burnet County, said his property taxes jum ped from $54 to $465 in one year. Scott gave testimony before the com­ mittee and said the experience was posi­ tive because the panel listened to his complaints. Scott said the tax assessor- collector in Burnet County would never hear his case. "They d o n 't w ant you to com plain. They don’t want you to ask questions," Scott said. "We got ourselves a real gov­ ernor now. I think som ething good is going to come out of it." Property taxes constitute the largest tax levies of state and local governments in Texas, Business leaders told the panel that such a high property tax discour­ ages capital investm ent, w hich m eans fewer jobs for Texans. "We've heard m any testimonies from capital-intensive businesses who are not locating in Texas because of the proper­ ty taxes," said Bob Stallman, president of the Texas Farm Bureau and a m em ­ ber of the committee. The current system weighs hard on most Texas taxpayers, who for the past 10 years have seen their property taxes skyrocket. you to complain. They don’t want you to ask questions.” — WM Scott, homeowner The com m ittee is seeking ideas for alternative means to fund Texas schools so that property taxes will not continue tp increase. The com m ittee and Gov. Bush d is­ cussed possible alternatives to raising property taxes. One of w hich w ould establish a tax on groceries and pharmaceuticals. A n o th e r w o u ld e s ta b lis h a g ro ss receipts tax on all revenue earned by businesses. Local b u sin ess people said raising tax es on re ta ile rs w o u ld o n ly b o o st prices in stores and force custom ers to shop elsewhere. They said m any would resort to the Internet or m ail-order cata­ logs. BRYAN MEALER Daily Texan Staff Area residents complained about the evils of the state property tax Thursday before a state panel charged with find­ ing an alternative. The Citizens Committee on Property Tax R elief's A u stin p u b lic h e a rin g m arked the last m eeting on its 14-city tour. The 16-member committee was creat­ ed by Gov. George W. Bush in April to g a th e r in p u t from T exas ta x p a y e rs about the current state of property taxa­ tion. More than 90 people, mostly citizens and rep resen tativ es of local business groups, signed up to speak about the tax. In testim ony, they offered g riev ­ ances, horror stories and advice about how the tax has tak en h o ld of th e ir incomes. After compiling information from the . state tour, the committee will prepare a report on Friday for the governor. Homeowner Will Scott said regardless of w hat the comm ittee recommends to . the gov ernor, som ething needs to be , done. Scott, who owned a trailer home with >3ERT PATTON/Daily Texan Staff Three-year-old Malachi Artdrada peeks out A.C.E: Signs and said' he would be up all at his father, Robert Andrada Jr., painting a night painting.because his baby sitter can- sign on the front pprch. Andrada owris celed, leaving him to watch the kids. Police accu LEAH RAUCH Daily Texan Staff Police began an investigation T hursday into com ­ plaints of police brutality and harassm ent at a South Austin apartment complex during a drug raid Sept. 12. In a letter to the Austin police chief, Rebeca Siegel, a Southwestern University professor, said she saw police officers and FBI agents knock a man to the ground and repeatedly kick him at the Meadowbrook Apartments at 1201 W. Live Oak St. "I was very scared," Siegel said. "I have never seen any­ thing like that. I didn't expect to see that in Austin, Texas, It w as uncalled for, and it seem ed m uch more like harassm ent than any type of investigation." at apartments Mike B u r g e s s , a police spokesman, said Siegel's com­ plaint was foiw arded to the Internal Affairs Division ■Wednesday. He said he could not comment on the accu­ sations until the investigation was complete. "It is too early to make any formal determinations, but any time someone makes an allegation it is fully investi­ gated," Burgess said. "We just ask that citizens keep an open m ind until the departm ent is able to determ ine what'took place,"he said. . i Burgess said M eadowbrook A partm ents, a unit of Austin Public Housing Authority, has been the source ,of num erous com plaints from residents about crime problem s.The letter also alleged that teen-agers were asked to remove their shirts and shoes and that photos were taken of minors who were not charged with crimes. "I was on my way to the store when a bunch of police started running after us and pulling their guns," said Chris Marshall, a student at Bowie High School who lives at Meadowbrook. "They started searching us, then they lined us up against a wall." * - In the letter Siegel also said she saw officers hit a woman on the head, who appeared to be drunk,, with a flashlight after she had been handcuffed.Siegel is a volunteer at the Family Learning Center near the apart­ ments, but she does not live in the apartments She said that at about 6 p.m. she was at the center when a child came and told her police were "beating her step-father." Siegel said she then went outside and saw the police harassing residents of the apartment. Beach cleaners out to bag trash LEAH RAUCH Daily Texan Staff __________ General Land Office officials hope 10,000 Texans will collect tons of garbage Saturday as part of the state's 21st Adopt-a-Beach Program. The program, started by Texas Land Commissioner Garry Mauro, is a volunteer effort to clean the state coast­ line. More than 169,000 volunteers have participated in the program each fall and spring since its inception in 1986. Roxanne Rouse, public outreach coordinator for the pro­ gram, said she expects between 9,000 and 10,000 volun­ teers to participate Saturday. "We ll be checking in volunteers from Beaumont to E x p e r i e n c e J a f a Spend a year in Japan as a participant in the Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) Program! This government-sponsored program, open to all majors, promotes international exchange and English-language education throughout Japan. Seniors and graduate students can speak to a representative on: Wednesday, September 25 at the Liberal Arts Study Abroad Fair or in George 1 Sanchez SZB, Rm 370 from 3:OOp.m.-5:OOp.m. For more information, call 1-800-1NFO-JET PUBLIC HEARING Proposed 1997 Budget O n Monday, September 23, Capital M etro will conduct a Public Hearing to take testimony on the Authority’s proposed fiscal year 1997 budget and designated reserves gency. The public is invited and encouraged to attend. In addition, the fiscal year 1996 budget and use of the fiscal year 1996 operating contingency will be reviewed for comparison. The proposed budget is available for review at Capital M etro’s Administrative Office during regular business hours. Additional information may be obtained by calling 474-1200. PUBLIC HEARING Monday, September 23,1996 6:00 p.m. Capital M etro Administrative Offices 2910 East 5th Street at Pleasant Valley C A P I T A L METRO 4 7 4 - 1 2 0 0 Per>ons with hearing impairments may call the TD D line at 385-5872. An interpreter hx persons with hearing impairments will be provided at the public hearing. Capital Metro Administrative Offices can be accessed on the Old Pecan Street ’Dillo, #K/Govalle and # 17/Johaston bus routes. • ( B row nsville," Rouse said. "Some repeat volunteers even plan a fall vacation around the day." Rouse said she hopes volunteers w o u ld collect ab o u t 200 to n s of trash from the 187 miles of beaches where they will be working. Volunteers collected mote than 197 tons during the April clean-up and almost 181 tons last September. They also will help scientists at the Center for Marine Conservation by analy zin g the pollu tio n of Texas' coasts and beaches. By recording the type and quan­ tity of garbage that is collected, vol­ unteers provide vital inform ation that can be used to pass protective legislation, Rouse said. "By cataloging what is found, we are able to analyze what is washing up on Texas shores," Rouse said. "We can tell if som ething is trash left by a beach-goer or something that is being dumped from off-shore." Rouse added that volunteers col­ lect m ore cigarette b u tts than any other type of trash. More than 36,600 cigarette butts were collected during the clean-up last fall, she said. The office has recruited v o lu n ­ teers from schools, ch u rch es and com m unitity groups. Rouse said v o lu n teers can still participate in the clean-up. Efforts begin at 9 a.m. at 17 locations along th e c o a st. In fo rm a tio n can be o b ta in e d by callin g th e G eneral Land Office. <>* * * * * * AAA* AAA* A A4» 3D ‘ INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS* Spring 1997 Applications are now H * being accepted for the ^ NORMANDY SCHOLAR 3D 3D >► 3D 3D 3D 3D PROGRAM and for the < TRACKING CULTURES PROGRAM « I Open to students from all UT academic disciplines < Students enroll in special ^ courses during the Spring < 1997 Semester, followed \ by a trip abroad 3D )D 3D 3D 3D 3D 3D 3D 3D 3D Application information 3D H t and materials are available 5 [ < * in the Office of the Dean, j „ >h * t College of Liberal Arts, \ West Mall Building 3.102 i (512) 475-7586 h ( * i Application deadlines: Normandy Scholar ■ t Program: h c September 30,1996 * * Tracking Cultures h * Program: 3d 3d 3d 3d 3d 3d 3d . ( 1 block South of Martin Luther King St. on Red River) including the conditions for use of the operating contin­ Dates PI ace Tues., S e p t e m b e r 2 4 , 9 : 0 0 A M - 4 : 0 0 P M W e d . , S e p t e m b e r 25 , 9 : 0 0 A M - 2 : 0 0 P M Ü Wk . • 1 . Hr ; ' i Frank Erwin..Center T r a n s p o r t a t i o n provided!!! Buses wi l l be r u n n i n g e v e T y 10 m i n u t e s f r o m T a y l o r H a l l a n d u n d e r the B r i d g e : | o e s . 8 : 3 0 A M - 4 : 3 0 P M W e d . 8 : 3 0 A M - 2 : 3 0 P M .• -;7. 1 . 7 . on 2(Sth. r • * i » • Dr ess- busi ness casual, firing your resume! For a d d i t i o n a l i n f o r m a t i o n , call the S t u d e n t Engineer ing C o u n c i l 4 7 1 - 3 0 0 3 . College of Engineering & Natural Sciences The University of Texas at Austin ! P Í I R T S ^ # 1 I I T h e D a ily T e x a n 9 FMMY, 8BnBMBBt 20.1986 Horns, Irish to get it on BRIAN DAVIS__________________ Daily Texan Staff N otre D am e and Texas. The tw o com bined have 12 national titles, eig h t H eism an T rop hy w in n ers, 1,447 w ins an d enough tradition to choke any other school w an tin g to be included in the sam e breath. The tw o team s have been to the top of the college football m ountain, and both have charted another course in 1996. The tw o national cham pionship con­ tenders will collide S aturday as No. 6 Texas (2-0) hosts No. 9 N otre Dam e (2-0) in the first big gam e of th e season for both team s that will set the tone for the rest of the it. Texas officials expect an estim a te d record crow d of m ore th a n 83,000 to fill up both sides of the stands, the north ern end zone, the new ly installed portable bleach­ ers in the southern end zone and every other nook and cranny that Royal-M em or­ ial has to offer. Kickoff is set for 11 a.m. Texas w ent to South Bend last season only to be hum bled 55-27. The Longhorns now ad m it they m ay have been aw ed by the au ra of the stadium , the tradition and the legacy of the Irish. But this season, the In sh are com ing to A ustin to find a team that has the sam e faces of 1995 b ut a new attitu de in 1996. "The biggest thin g th a t I'v e noticed about m y first year and this year is the confidence of this team ," Texas defensive tackle Chris Akins said. "M y freshm an Please see Horns, page 10 Clashing Styles Texas’ Ricky Williams and Notre Dame’s Marc Edwards have a position in common and not much else MARK LIVINGSTON____________ Daily Texan S taff T exas' Ricky W illiam s an d N o tre D am e's M arc E dw ards are both star full­ backs on nationally acclaim ed team s w ith histories of great fullbacks. O ther than that, the tw o d o n 't have a w hole lot in com m on. E dw ards has a bu zz haircut. W illiams w ears dreadlocks. E dw ards listens to heavy m etal. W illiam s likes Bob Marley. E dw ards loves the m ovie W yatt Earp w hile W illiam s prefers House Party. E dw ards idolizes form er N otre Dam e halfback Rocky Bleier. W illiam s' Texas idol is Earl Cam pbell. E dw ards hails from blue-collar, chilly N orw ood, Ohio. W illiam s grew u p on the beaches of balm y, laid-back San Diego. E dw ards is the prototypical fullback. He runs straig h t ahead, seldom breaking the long ones. His blocking skills are devastating, and he can occasionally catch the ball out of the backfield. W illiam s w ould rather play halfback He likes the big plays and often m akes one. He d o e sn 't like blocking, and he adm its to not being very good at it. But the tw o backs — w idely regarded as the top tw o fullbacks in the country — will have to spend their Saturday together w hen No. 6 Texas hosts No. 9 Please see Fullbacks, page 10 break MLB AM H C AN UEAGIE Boston 8, Detroit 3 Cleveland 9, Kansas City 1 Seattle 7, Texas 6 New York 9, Baltimore 3, 1st game Baltimore at New York, 2nd game Chicago 8, Minnesota 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE Los Angeles 7, San Diego 0 Pittsburgh 6, Cincinnati 4 New York 7, Philadelphia 2 Montreal 5, Atlanta 1 St. Louis 5, Chicago 4, 13 inn. San Francisco 11, Colorado 4 COLLEGE FOOTBALL TOP 26 No. 3 Florida St. 51, North Carolina State 17 MLS Los Angeles 2 Dallas 1 NHL PRESEASON Detroit 3, New Jersey 2 Tampa Bay 3, Florida 1 San Jose 6, N Y. Rangers 1 BRIEFS Women’s soccer team heads off on 3-week road trip ■ The Texas w om en's soccer team sets off this w eekend on a key three-w eek road trip, w ith the team facing four conference opponents. The o verall a ttitu d e of the H orns is one of excitem ent. They are looking to m ake their m ark in the Big 12, as well as the rest of the nation, show ing that they are a team to be reckoned with. 'Tm excited, the w hole team is really excited," junior forw ard Carol Finch said. "We’d like to w in every gam e, and it is espe­ cially im p o rtan t to w in all of the Big 12 gam es." This trip has the potential to m ake o r break the Longhorns' hopes of w in n in g the inaugural Big 12 title, b u t m ore im portant it can shape their playoff pic­ ture. In that respect, every gam e of the road trip is equally im por­ tant. "We need to think about every game," head coach D ang Pibul- vech said. "There are no auto­ m atic bids [to the NCAA to u r­ nam ent] yet for the Big 12, so the non-conference gam es are just as big as the conference games." The L onghorns are riding a 4- 0 sh u to u t of Kansas, w hich gave the team an em otional high after a d isappointing 1-0 loss to first- year Division-I team M issouri. The w in against Kansas p ro ­ vided the H orns w ith answ ers to the m any q u estio n s that h ad plagued them . M ost prom inent w as the lack of aggression at the b eg in n in g of each contest, a p ro b lem team h as since w orked on. the "Every team w ants to w in it from the very beginning of the gam e,"Finch said. "We can do it too, w e p ro v e d ag ain st Kansas." it Said Pibulvech: "If w e start quickly, we'll be on, b u t if w e struggle, it w ill be an uphill climb the w hole way." O ne of Texas' biggest assets is the incredible d e p th of its ro ta­ tion. The K ansas gam e saw four players w ho generally come off the bench p u sh e d into starting roles. The m o re exp erienced players have been able to guide their younger counterparts, and serve as role m odels. "The older kids have estab­ lished a com m itm ent to training that the y ounger ones have to keep up w ith," Pibulvech said. "Our younger players have seen adversity and have passed the tests. They resp o n d well to o u r dem ands." Texas' first o p p o n en t will be A uburn, w hich they face at 3 p.m . F riday. A fter th at, they travel to M aryland for a 12:30 p.m. d ate S unday against the Terrapins. A uburn snuck one in on us last year, so this year they will be a little m ore seasoned," Pibul­ vech said. "M aryland is com ing back w ith everything intact, and since they have higher caliber players, they are going to be a handful." — Com piled by Mike Wilson CALBWAR SATURDAY ROBERT PATTON/Daiiy Texan Staff Texas fullback Ricky Williams sprints for a touchdown against New Mexico State. Williams will be a key for Texas against Saturday, as will Notre Dame’s fullback Marc Edwards. Notre Dame taps into Texas pipeline DAVID LIVINGSTON_______ _______ Daily Texan S taff C edric W oodard can still rem em ber the day Lou H oltz traveled from South Bend, Ind., to the sm all Texas tow n of Sweeny. The fam ous Notre Dame coach strolled through the halls of Sweeny High School, intent on luring W oodard, a highly touted defensive lineman, up north to play college football. He talked of the Fighting Irish mystique, the leg­ ends that it created and the tradition. He explained to W oodard that once a player goes to Notre Dame, nothing else is quite like it. It's a sales pitch that many prepsters can't turn down. But W oodard never hesitated. "It really d id n 't m atter if I believed him ," said the 6-3, 270 po un d freshm an. "It just w asn 't for me." For m any high school players in Texas, however, it is. Fourteen Texans are on the Notre Dam e roster, five of them as defensive regulars. The Irish have m ade Texas a second hom e d u n n g recruiting, creating a pipeline that is hard for the Texas colleges to break. "Notre Dame is unparalleled as far as tradi­ tion," said David Garvin, editor and publisher of Heartland Recruiting and recruiting expert for CNN Sportsouth. "They could play over­ seas and still have no trouble [recruiting]." That tradition, along w ith w eekly ap p ear­ ances on national television an d regular New Y ear's D ay bow l gam es, has given N otre D ame a pipeline to every state in the country. A nd w ith Texas struggling through the eighties and early nineties, the Irish increased their hold on the state. N otre D am e's m ost prolific hero in the last ten years, H eism an w inner Tim Brown, w as from Dallas. So is Allen Rossum, the m an w ho will shadow UT receiver Mike A dam s all over Darrell K Royal-Texas M em orial Stadium Saturday. The distance from hom e and the cold w eather in Indiana have done little to deter Texan prepsters from grabbing the o p p o rtu nity to play for the Irish. "W ith all the tradition and the great histo­ ry they have, and they get a couple of Texas guys on the team, that just established the pipeline," Texas kicker Phil D aw son said. The H orns should know about pipelines. In 1993, Texas convinced a heralded high school com erback nam ed Bryant W estbrook to leave his hom e state of California and head for Austin. Since then, Texas has reeled in eight m ore recruits from the west coast state. Those players have become a major part of the team, ranging from W estbrook's intim idating pres­ ence on defense to Ricky Williams' highlight runs on offense. Most of the Longhorns still come from within the state, but California has given the team a w hole new talent pool, one that d id n 't exist a few years ago. "Texas has a big advantage because of Please see Texas, page 12 Notre Dame’s Allen Rossum carries the ball for a 99-yard kickoff return against Purdue. Rossum is one of several Irish players who grew up in Texas. A S SOCIATED PRESS Gators swamp Horns in 5 games MIKE FINGER _ _ Daily Texan Staff It w as ¿i battle betw een tw o of the pre­ miere program s in collegiate volleyball, basking under the spotlight of a national television audience and 4,632 rabid fans in the first-ever regular season contest at the Erw in Center. It w as a high-profile m atchup in an incredible atm osphere at the perfect time. The Longhorns couldn't have asked for m uch more. Except m aybe three points. The fifth-ranked Florida G ators over­ cam e tw o one-gam e deficits an d 33 attack errors to defeat No. 3 Texas 14-16, 15-8, 8-15, 15-10, 15-12, avenging last year's loss in the regional finals of the NCAA tournam ent. "This w as a show case of w om en's vol­ leyball," Florida coach M ary Wise said. The H orns had come back from three points dow n to knot u p the fifth gam e at 12-12, but a kill by Nikki Shade and an attack error bv Texas' Dem etria Sanee quickly forced m atch point. The contest en d ed on a crosscourt hit by Katie Austin that landed a foot w ide right. "It w as a typical Florida-Texas match, 44 We had control of this match. It was in our town, and we shouldn’t have let it slip away.” I l n l n ir nñKKrwl iRWwjf| Texas voteybah coach w here there w ere p eriods of just really great volleyball," Wise said. "W e just got to 15 before they did." team s th ro u g h o u t The tem po of the contest w as fast and furious, just as expected, b u t erro rs affected both the night. Sanee had a m atch-high 21 kills, b u t also erred on 11 attem pts, m ore than she usually com m its on three or four nights com bined. Texas w as held to a dism al .193 hitting percentage as a team. "D em etria has earn ed the load for us gam e after game, so it's okay for her to have a bad m atch," Texas coach Mick Haley said. "A nd really, she d id n 't even play that badlv " The H o rn s a p p e a re d the m om entum firm ly in hand after gam e to have three, in w hich they cam e at Florida from every direction. Sanee, Sarah But­ ler, Katie A ustin an d Jane W inkel all h ad at least three kills d u n n g the gam e. and Yet the Gators regrouped du n n g the interm ission dom inated Texas throughout the fourth s e t sprinting their w ay to a 10-1 advantage with the aid of great ball movem ent and ample miscues by the Horns. The home team gave the crowd bnef hope that they might go hom e in four games with six consecutive points, but a kill by Jenny W ood and a combina­ tion Julie Stanhope and Nikki Shade block sent it to the decisive fifth game "I'm pretty pro u d of m y team 's effort, Please see Volleyball, page 12 ■ FOOTBALL T he H orns ho st N otre Dam e at Royal-M emorial Stadium at 11 a.m. Shannon Mason of Florida attempts to kill the ball over the block of Texas Demetria Sanee and Sonya Barnes. ROBERT PATTON/Daily Texan Staff P a ge 10 Friday, Septem ber 2 0 ,1 9 9 6 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Notre Dame, Texas have longer history together than most think » DAVID LIVINGSTON_________ Daily Texan Staff • ' • It couldn't h a v e .Been a more sto­ rybook season fdr'the Longhorns. Under new có&ch Fred Akers, Texas was the top-ranked team in the .nation .with .an li~p record, and .-its beloved rupning’ báck, Earl Campbell, had. run through enough . defenders to 'w in the Heism an Tro­ phy. N ow all the Horns had to do was beat Notre. Dame in the Cotton 8 o w l and Texas’would be declared the 1977 national champiops. The Fighting Irish, however, had . other plans. ‘No one would win the national'championship against them. Those-'national championships and Heisman boys belong to. the Irish, not to the kids from Texas. • So when the two teams squared off at a chillv Cotton Bowl £>tadium on Jan. 1, 1978, the Irish pummeled the Horns,. 38-10, grabbing their seventh of eight ’ Associated Press national championships and quelling the Horns' hopes for another title. It was the second time in eight, years that NctreDam e blocked Texas' path to a consensus national title. In 1970, the Irish knocked Texas, who had spent much of the year ranked No. 1, from its perch atop the AP.pojj.' "They were physical and always have been," said Darrell Róyaí, *vyHq coached the Horns from 1957 to 1976. "W e had a lot of fumbles, we made a - lot of mistakes. You can't play a good ball game with that many mistakes. But with the exception of the fumbles, we didn't play that bad of a game." The year before, however, the Long­ horns had squeaked by Notre Dame, 21-17, propelling them to a No. 1 finish. Texas-Notre Dame has been a series of few games, yet several big ones. "They're Notre Dame," Royal said. "They're a big game for everyone. ... And I think they have a lot of respect for the University of Texas, too." The series dates back to 1913. And despite bpastirig one of the most prolific won-loss records in the his­ tory of college football, Texas has been unable to master the Irish. Notre Dame has com piled a 7-2 record against the Horns, easily making them the team with the best success against UT. O nly Vanderbilt can boast a simi­ lar record (8-3-1), but the Com ­ modores Haven't met th e.T rain s’ since 1928. Notre Dame has had an uncanny ability to defeat Texas even when U T was. the higher ranked team, a$ they, w ill be this Saturday. Four of Texas' losses to the Irish occiired with U T ranked higher. .. Texas has only two victories over the Irish, but both were crucial wins for the program. In 1913 and 1915, Texas lost to the Irish by a combined score of 66-14. But in 1934, Texas cap­ italized on an emotional pre-game speech from head coach and Notre Dame alumnus Jack Chevigny and edged the Irish for a 7-6 upset. That same day, Rice stunned Pur­ due, 14-0, and Southwest Confer­ ence football was finally noticed as a national power. "W e thought at the time, [Chevi- gny's pre-game speech] was the greatest speech we'd ever heard," Texas reserve end J. Neils Thomp­ son told Lou Maysel in Here Come the Texas Longhorns. "W e were a bunch of demons when we went out to play Notre Dame." It would be 35 years before Texas beat the Irish again. And although that w in clinched the national title it was for the Horns in 1969, arguably not even the most impor­ tant w in of the season. A few weeks beforé the Cotton Bowl, top-ranked Texas staged a comeback victory over No. 2 Arkansas for the nation's highest billing. Then against the Tri^h the Longhorns were forced to make another comeback, scoring a touchdown with 78 seconds left. "O f all the teams we played, they were the worst, as far as being dirty or unsportsm anlike," remembers Texas tight end Randy Peschel. It was the last time a Texas team would beat the Irish. Saturday, for the 10th time in school history, the Longhorns w ill meet Notre Dame. And once again, the game's hype has reached epic proportions. Fans and players from both teams see the game as a chance to prove to the rest of the nation that their team belongs with the elite in college foot­ ball. "It's a 12-game tournament for the national cham pionship," Notre Dame fullback Marc Edwards said. "Texas is in our way, and we're in theirs." Just like 1978. Notre Dame. vs. Texas * Notre Dame vs. Texas Marc Edwards Fullback Tyson King Inside linebacker Lyron Cobbins Linebacker Ricky Williams Fullback vs. > S IZ E : 6-0, 237 ■ C L A S S : Senior ■ H OM ETOW N; Norwood, Ohio ■ ST A T S: 121 yards on 31 car­ ries, two touchdown in 2 gam es ■ SIZ E: 6-0, 230 * C L A S S : Senior ■ HOM ETOW N: El Cam po ■ STA T S: 17 tackles,one caused fumble in 2 gam es ■ M A TC H U P: M árc E d w ard s’ straight-ahead running style is the heart and soul of. Notre D am e’s traditionally bread-arid-butter offense. W hile the Fighting Irish’s system has opened up a bit this season, Edw ards is still the most effective weapon Notre Dam e p o sse sse s. B e barr catch the ball out of the backfield and has the strength to slam it down the opponents’ gut. Last sea so n against Texas, he rushed for 44 yards and iwo touchdowns, and caught thr» ball for 72 yards and a touchdown. He is also an effective blocker. t It will be T yson Kin g’s job to stop Edw ards. King is the leader of T e x a s ’ linebacking corps and his experience will be useful. But King will need help from the defensive line and his fellow linebackers if Edw ards is to be contained. — David Livingston, Daily Texan Staff ■ S IZ E : 6-0, 246 ■ SIZ E: 6-0, 220 ■ C L A S S : Senior ■ HOM ETOW N: Kansas City, Kan. ■ STA T S: 10 tackles, 2 for loss­ es, 1 sack ■ C L A S S : Sophom ore ■ HOMETOW N: San Diego ■ STA T S: 26 carries, 244 yards, 4 touchdowns ■ MATCHUP: Lyron C obbins is one of many stars oh Notre D am e’s front seven. Cobbins, a senior captain, racked up 105 tackles for Notre Dam e last year to becom e a legitimate candidate for All-Am er­ ican honors in 1996. He is big, fast and fiery. Ricky W illiam s will have a tough time against him and his teammates, who could make up the hest front seven in the nation. But W illiam s may be up to the task. Though “Little Earl” has yet to face stitt competition, his 9.4 yards per carry is tops in the Big 12. Th>e last time W illiam s faced a highly tout­ ed front seven was against Texas A&M in 1995. He enderi up with 163 yards on 24 carries. W illiam s can stiff-arm, spin, sprint or simply bowl over opponents. It’s hard for anyone, even Cobbins and his extrem ely talented teamm ates at linebacker and defensive line, to tackle him. But if a defense has the ability to do it, this is the one. — Mark Livingston, Daily Texan Staff Fullbacks: It’s Bob M arley vs. heavy metal Continued from page 9 *. (. Notre Dame at Royal-Memorial Sta- dium- are "I'm not concerned about the other fullback," Edwards said. "I'm more concerned about w ho the best team is I'm more worried about the final score." Chances and W illiam s w ill have an impact on that score. In 1995, Texas held a 20-19 lead m idw ay through the third quarter. Edwards, however/helped erase any chance Texas had with three fourth-quarter touchdowns. The final score was 55-27. Edw ards "H e's a go-to guy," W illiam s said of Edwards.. "H e's really a guy that they can depend on to get the job done when they need it done."- •. Edwards twisted his knee against Purdue last week, raising doubts as* to whether he'll be able to play this weekend. Edw ards is a regular on the Irish offerise, with 20 starts in his- * career. ,* " If there's a'w ay he cañ play, I'm sure he'll play," said Texas head coach John Mackovic. "H e's onp of the real tough guys on their team." W illiam s, however, is a tough runner as well. He is the reigning Longhorn fan favorite with a -9.4 yards per carry and four touch­ downs in just two games. W illiam s is listed aS a fullback — as he was in high school-— but he is used for his NORTEL N O R TH ER N TELECOM |o you’re about to graduate ' •’ The moment you’ve been anticipating since orientation.But now what? Where do you goJ from hete9 Weir, here's the great part, you don’t have te go anywhere because Nortel is coming to your college campus1' If you re majoring in engineering, computer science, business or marketing - or you're interested i a co-op or internship - we re eager to meet you.. . • • Sounds great, right? But who's Nortel9 We re the people who désign, build, and integrate the world’s information, entertainment and communications networks We’re dynamic, innovative, challenging Nough said for now Want to know more9 Check us out at www nortel.com or let s talk. CU + - u□ G ■ 3 3 3 ■ ■ Q . rupning skills, not his blocking. "In* high school, I never ever blocked, and J was considered a full­ back," W illiam s said. " I think of myself more of a halfback, the w ay I run the ball. I like to spin. I can out­ run people maybe better than Edwards can. He's a guy that can do it all. He can block, he's a straight- up runner, more North-South W illiam s was heavily recruited by Notre Dame and Texas in high school. He chose the Horns over the Irish because he could start immedi­ ately at Texas. At Notre Dame, he would have to wait his turn. Texas can partially thank Edw ards for that. Texas opponents told W illiam s that if he came to Texas, he would just block and stuff it up the middle for short yardage, W illiam s hates that style. It's the same style that Edwards has excelled in. "W e want to run up the m iddle," DAN S LIQUOR 1600 LAVACA 5353 BURNET ROAD 478-5423 459-8689 SPECIALS GOOD FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIALS CASH OR CH ECK A L L SPIRITS 80 PR. U N LESS NOTED CONMEMORATIVO t e q u il a . ..Lit* 1 6 . 9 9 LEG ACY s c o t c h CAN ADIAN MIST Lit* 3 . 9 9 SOUTHERN COMFORT 76°.750mL 7 . 9 9 u t* 6 . 9 9 T R A V E L F L A S K S ...............is ox 1 . 9 9 J & B RARE SCOTCH 750 m L 1 3 . 9 9 ST. JAMES RUM iíabt*«qu€. 750 mL 1 3 . 9 9 , FIREWATER schnapps 100 ..750 mL 1 2 . 9 9 LAZZARONIAMARETT0 48°... 750 mL 8 . 9 9 1.75 Litre W.L. W E L LE R b o u r . 90°...„ . 1 9 . 9 9 JIM BEAM b o u r ...................... 16 99 KENTUCKY TAVERN b o u r .... 10.99 CHIVAS REGAL scotch 12 y r ........41.99 CUTTY S A R K s c o t c h........... 24.99 SC0RESBY or USHERS™.......... 16.99 GLENFIDDICH MALT SCOTCH 42.99 TO RADA TEQUILA--------------_11.99 19.99 FRIS o r S K Y Y v o d k a G ILBEYS g i n .......................... 12.99 M cCO R M ICK v o o k a ....... . __ 8.49 Edwards said. "That's Nojtre Dame fobtball. The heart of our offense is the I-form. W e 've got the new offense this year, but our game is still similar to last year." Notre Dame is used to great full­ backs from Jerome Bettis and Ray Zellers in the 1990s to Elm er Layden of "The Four Horsem en" in the 1920s. Texas has had its share as well. Earl Campbell, Roosevelt Leaks and Steve Worster all played the posi­ tion. Edw ards and W illiam s may someday be included on those lists. But for now, this Saturday is their biggest concern. "It's definitely the biggest game of the year," Edwards said. He and W illiam s could be center stage in that game. Their perfor­ mances, however, might be totally different. "W e have a lot different styles," Edwards said. "W e 're different kinds of run­ ners," said W illiam s. At least they agree on something. CHRIS'S LIQUOR 5201 CAMERON RD 451 7391 OPEN 10 9 PM O A K H IL L L IQ U O R 6031. 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September 24th and 25th Info Session: September 26th N ew Grad & Co-op Interviews: October 11th For more information, contact your Campus Placement Offioe 12pak 7.19 MILLER LITE nozc**b SHINER BO CK hoi «ore .,iipak 7.99 cs/24 9.99 LONE STAR mozcam* EOE KEY MATCHUPS QUARTERBACK: Irish’s Ron Powlus is saddled with a new pro-style scheme that Jam es Brown has been accus­ tomed to. Powlus has yet to live up to his expectations. Brown simply has too many weapons to choose from, and Powlus’ No. 1 target from '95, receiver Derrick Mayes, has gone to the NFL. Brown had two interceptions in South Bend last season, but he has yet to throw one this year. RUNNING BACKS: Texas' trio of Ricky Williams, Shon Mitchell and Priest Holmes are completely healthy, whereas ND’s Marc Edwards (knee) and Randy Kinder (quadricep) are slightly banged up. Kinder will make his season debut this Saturday, and he was ND’s leading rusher in '95 with 824 yards. Williams is the most talented back on the field. WIDE RECEIVERS: After racking up 141 yards against ND in ‘95, Mike Adams will once again be the spotlight receiver for UT on Saturday. That means that split end Cur­ tis Jackson can have a big day against single coverages. ND’s Malcolm Johnson had some big catches against Pur­ due, but outside of him, the Irish receiving corps is slim pick­ ings. UT tight end Pat Fitzgerald will catch passes because of the attention that Adams and Jackson will draw. ND’s Pete Chryplewicz will catch passes because Powlus doesn’t have many other options. O FFEN SIV E LINE: N D ’s line is big, big, big. Both tackles are 6-8 and both guards are 6-7. RT Mike Doughty anchors the Irish line with his 313 pounds. Texas’ line has a chance to prove itselves against one of the best and biggest front seven in the country. 49 D EFEN SIV E LINE: ND’s Renaldo Wynn is a converted linebacker who already has two sacks this season. UT’s Chris Akins believes this line is better than last year. It’s a good thing for Texas, because the UT line got driven up and down the Notre Dame Stadium turf in '95 for 511 total yards. 99 L IN E B A C K E R S : Veteran leader Tyson King silently makes plays, but basically, the corps is inexperienced in big games. ND has a wealth of talent that is very experienced. Bert Berry, Lyron Cobbins and Kinnon Tatum are all seniors, but sophomore Kory Miner may be the most talented. Texas wilt benefit from the return of Jonathan Hickerson and Matt Jones, who have missed time due to injuries. 49 S E C O N D A R Y : It’s hard to find a team on Texas’ schedule that has a better secondary. This is probably the biggest question mark area for the Irish this season, but Alan Rossum will try to go toe-to-toe with UT's Adams. The Irish have three new starters this season, while UT’s unit has been together for three years. S P E C IA L TEAM S: This is the first game that could be close enough to give UT's Phil Dawson a chance to make a difference. He earned big-play status with a last-second game winning field goal against Virginia in '95. ND’s Jim San­ son is only a freshman connecting on two of three attempts this year with a 33-yarder being the longest. If this game comes down to a FG, the sure money’s on Dawson. CO ACHING: Sure John Mackovic has been in some big games, but they pale in comparison to Lou Holtz’s experi­ ence. Mackovic has helped the Longhorns climb the moun­ tain, but Holtz has already seen the top. 49 D a w so n B ro w n M in o r P o w lu s By Mark Livingston and Brian Davis, Daily Texan Staff H orns Continued from page 9 year, we wanted to win but didn't really now how to win. But now, we go out there and play to win, and we don't play to lose." N otre Dame head coach Lou Holtz is one person who definitely knows how to win and who can't stand to lose. Holtz has revamped his offense this season to include a more pro-style attack — the same one with which Texas has found so much success. The Fighting Irish are led by quar­ terback Ron Powlus. The senior has led an offense that has averaged 216.5 yards per game on the ground and 230 yards per game via the air. Holtz is still concerned that Notre Dame does not possess the quick- strike potential that Texas does. " I think Texas is a very consistent football team," Holtz said. "But if I had to categorize them, I w'ould call them a big-play football team W e are not a big-play football team and we aren't going to get a lot of big plays against them, either run or pass." In typical Holtz-speak, that prob­ ably means that Notre Dame's run­ ning backs M arc Edw ards and A utry Denson w ill have a big day. Returning to the fold on Saturday w ill be the Irish's top rusher of 1995, Randy Kinder. Kinder missed the first two games of the season due to a pulled quadri­ ceps injury. Denson, who was his backup, has stepped in and not allowed the running game to slip. N otre Dam e's depth on offense makes stopping the run the most important key for Texas. "W e definitely have to stop their run," Texas cornerback Taje Allen said. "That's probably a big key They have that one big back, Den­ son, and they try to give him the ball every time they can." The Irish have two 6-8 bookends at the offensive tackle spots, and both weigh over 300 pounds. Texas defensive line, which is predomi­ nately inexperienced compared to Notre Dame, w ill get its first colos­ sal test Saturday. The challenge is one that Akins feels the three freshman — Cedric Woodard, W ill Goodloe and Casey Hampton — can handle. "If we come out of this game with our heads held high and if we're respectable stopping the run, this would be a big boost for us for the rest of the year," Akins said. If Texas' front seven can stop the • run, the experience of the Texas sec­ ondary can handle the pass. The Longhorns have four seniors in the defensive backfield in Bryant West­ brook, Tre Thomas, Chris Carter and Allen. The four have helped hold oppo­ nents to a paltry 160.5 passing yards per game, and they have also helped w ith run support as Texas has allowed only 136.5 rushing yards per game. "A ll in all, it's a senior team for them and at Notre Dame, when you have a senior team, they're general­ ly talking about national champi­ onship," Texas head coach John M ackovic said. "But we have a senior team, and clearly our intention over the last four years was to get our football program into a position where we were in a game like this with as much on the line as Notre Dame." W hat is on the line for Texas is a return shot to national prominence. Texas' last chance for a fourth title was in 1983, and it looks as though that Mackovic and the Longhorns may have earned another chance. But since Notre Dame is currently a 3 1/2-point favorite as the lower- ranked road team, Westbrook believes Saturday's game is a opportunity that Texas must take advantage of. "If we win this game, they should hopefully put us in the top three," Westbrook said. "Pollsters w ill real­ ize that this team is no fluke. W e're going to be here for a long time. After this w in on Saturday, they're going to realize that this team is no joke." Notre Dame wants another national title. Texas wants it also along with a little respect. "W e 're bringing our burnt orange and all our legends are going to be in the stands," Westbrook said of the crowd expected Saturday. "It's going to be a great ballgame." Two great teams. Two great tradi­ tions. Both are racing for a spot in the national championship picture. Even though the season is only in its third week, after Saturday, that picture should be a little bit clearer. Rangers fall victim to the broom, 7-6 Associated Press SEATTLE — The Seattle Mariners pulled it off, completing a hard-to- believe four-game sweep of Texas that put them right back in the AL West race. Seattle, nine games behind on Sept. 11, moved within two games of the reeling Rangers with a 7-6 vic­ tory Thursday. Ken Griffey Jr. and Dan Wilson drove in three runs each, and a second straight division title seems possible with 11 games remaining. “ I think everybody in here was thinking it was possible to catch these guys," Norm Charlton said after getting his second save in less than 24 hours. "The guys who won here saw what happened last year." Last season, the Mariners over­ came a 12 1/2-gam e deficit on Aug. 20 and beat California in a one-game playoff. This year's comeback has been even more stunning, with Seat­ tle gaining seven games in the standings in eight days. "W e're down to nail biting time and right now we're right there in it," said Tim Davis (2-2), who allowed one run in three innings. "I looking think our chances are good." ' The Mariners have won eight straight and were just one game behind Bal­ timore in the AL wild-card race pending the second game of the Orioles' dou­ bleheader at New York. "I'm not an oddsmaker, but the more you win the more these games count," Mariners manager Lou Piniella said. when they're going well," Oates said, "when their backs are against the wall and they're playing for their baseball lives — like Seattle was when we came in here. You will see what we're made of in the next nine days." Will Clark tried to be philosophical about the sweep. MAGIC N U M B E II Texas, in search of its first postseason appear­ ance, has lost eight of nine, includ­ ing five straight in the Kingdome. "This is as much adversity as we've faced all year," Rangers man­ ager Johnny Oates said. The Rangers' frustration showed in the fourth after Texas came back from a 3-0 deficit only to have Grif­ fey hit a two-run single that put Seattle ahead 5-3. Oates argued heatedly with first- base umpire Larry Young and then with plate umpire Mark Johnson. Will Clark argued with Young, and Dennis Cook had strong words of displeasure with Johnson after being taken out of the game and was ejected. "A team can look pretty good "I normally expect the unexpected," he said. "It's been my moho. Baseball's a strange game. Every day is a com­ pletely new challenge. We'll pick up the new challenge tomorrow. We came up a little short on today's clallenge." Seattle took a 2-0 lead in the sec­ ond when Dave Hollins walked with the bases loaded and Wilson hit a sacrifice fly, and Griffey singled home a run in the third. Texas tied the score in the fourth when Mark Whiten's throwing error in left allowed Ivan Rodriguez to come home on Mickey Tettleton's single and Dean Palmer followed with a two-run single. Griffey put the Mariners ahead to stay in the bottom half following singles by Hollins and Joey Cora and a walk to Alex Rodriguez. One inning later, Wilson hit a two-run homer for a 7-3 lead. Wilson's homer was a 406-foot shot over the center-field fence. Dar­ ryl Hamilton jumped high but just missed catching the ball. "I'm glad Junior wasn't out there," Piniella said, referring to his Gold Glove center fielder. Wilson's 29th career homer was his first to center. / "I thought he was going to catch it," Wilson said. "It turned on me at the last sec­ ond," Hamilton said. Mickey Tettleton hit a solo homer for Texas in the sixth, and the Rangers pulled within a run in the eighth when Clark hit an RBI double and scored on Tettleton's sacrifice fly. Rangers starter Roger Pavlik, 0-8 against the Mariners, was chased after allowing three runs and four hits in two-plus innings. Seattle starter Bob Wolcott also gave up three runs and four hits but lasted 3 2 /3 innings. Charlton got four outs for his 19th save. "It's September," he said. "Every­ body's tired. That's what we get paid to do. It's part of our business. We get paid to be tired." Morrison says he wants one more fight Associated Press TULSA, Okla. — HIV-infected heavyweight Tommy Morrison vowed Thursday to return to the ring for "o n e last fight," seven months after announcing he would never box again. Morrison has no date, no site and no opponent, but said he would fight to raise money to help children infected with the AIDS virus. "I know there's a lot people out there who probably are not going to like what I'm doing," Morrison said. "But they will have to listen to what I have to say." His announcement came in the same Tulsa hotel where in February he confirmed he had tested positive for the AIDS virus and would retire with a 45-3-1 record. At the time, the 27-year-old Okla­ homan said he likely contracted the virus through promiscuous sex but also raised the possibility of having been infected during a bloody bout. Morrison said he now "firm ly" believes HIV cannot be transmitted during a fight. "There has never been one docu­ mented case in boxing history that this has ever happened," he said. "Based upon this fact, I have decided to enter the ring for one last fight." Morrison's lawyer, Stuart Camp­ bell, said "a number of fighters" had expressed interest in fighting Morri­ son. He pointed to comments by a former opponent, Ross Puri tty, as an example. "I think HIV is not as easy to catch as everyone says it is," Puritty told the Tulsa World. "I don't plan to have sex with the guy. If the money is right, I'll fight anybody." Campbell said some of the fighters expressing interest were either ranked currently or had been ranked. He would not identify them. Campbell also advised Morrison not to answer questions from the media. At least one boxer expressed con­ cerns about fighting an HIV-infect­ ed opponent. "N o, I wouldn't fight him for medical reasons," said recently retired heavyweight champion Larry Holmes. "If he didn't have HIV, I'd come out of retirement and kick his behind in a second." M orrison's longtime promoter, Tony Holden, also has misgivings about a comeback. Holden did not attend the news conference and has not committed to promote any fight, which likely will take place by next spring. " I personally think it was prema­ ture," Holden said. " If I was sure that HIV could not be spread [in the ring] or even had a lot research pointing that direction," he would promote the fight. " I just need to talk to some doctors." Questions also remain about where Morrison would even be allowed to fight. The National Centers for Disease Control have received no reports of HIV transmission through sports. But Morrison's positive test prompt­ ed boxing officials nationwide to call for mandatory HIV testing. At that time only Arizona, Geor­ gia, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Puerto Rico required the testing. Since then, at least four other states, including New York and New Jersey, have begun mandating HIV testing. Morrison learned he had the virus after a test came back positive before February's scheduled fight against Arthur Weathers in Las Vegas. Okla­ homa boxing officials said he remains on medical suspension in Nevada. "W e would have to honor that," said Becki Andre of the state Profes­ sional Boxing Advisory Board. Morrison said his visits with chil­ dren who have the virus and the need to raise adequate funds to help them through his Knockout AIDS Foundation prompted his decision to fight again. " I have seen them rejected, shunned in their communities and schools," Morrison said, pausing to swallow haid. "Being rejected is probably more emi tional than actu­ ally having the virus itself." T h e D a il y T e x a n Friday, September 20,1996 Page 11 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL AMBUCAN LEAGUE East Division GB — 4 8 19 36 1/2 L10 8-2 7-3 6-4 3-7 0-10 Pet .572 .546 .520 .447 .333 Central Division GB — Pet .612 .526 490 490 464 Pet .549 ..536 .477 .437 L10 9-1 3-7 7-3 3-7 6-4 L10 2-8 8-2 5-5 2-8 13 18 1/2 18 1/2 22 1/2 2 11 17 West Division GB — Streak Lost 1 Won 1 Won 4 Lost 3 Lost 12 Streak Won 4 Won 1 Won 2 Lost 1 Lost 2 Streak Lost 4 Won 8 Lost 1 Won 1 Home 45-29 41-36 43-32 33-44 27-47 Home 46-28 41-35 37-41 37-42 35-42 Home 47-30 41-37 36-39 40-35 Away 42-36 42-33 36-41 35-40 24-55 Away 47-31 40-38 38-37 38-36 36-40 Away 37-39 40-33 37-41 26-50 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division GB — 5 17 1/2 22 1/2 28 1/2 Pet .592 .559 .477 .444 .405 L10 4-6 7-3 4-6 5-5 4-6 Central Division GB — 5 8 8 1/2 15 1/2 L10 6-4 2-8 4-6 2-8 8-2 Pet .542 .510 490 .487 441 West Division GB — 1 1/2 7 1/2 25 Pet .569 .558 .519 .405 L10 8-2 7-3 7-3 3-7 Friday's Games Streak Won 4 Won 3 Lost 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Streak Won 3 Lost 5 Lost 5 Lost 5 Won 8 Streak Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1 Won 1 Home 52-24 49-29 46-29 41-37 32-43 Home 46-32 44-31 42-35 40-34 33-41 Home 45-30 43-33 54-24 35-44 Away 38-37 36-38 27-51 27-48 30-48 Away 37-38 34-44 32-42 34-44 34-44 Away 42-36 43-35 26-50 27-47 New York Baltimore Boston Toronto Detroit « x-Cleveland Chicago Milwaukee Minnesota Kansas City • Texas Seattle Oakland California Atlanta Montreal Florida New York Philadelphia St. Louis Houston Chicago Cincinnati Pittsburgh Los Angeles San Diego Colorado San Francisco W 87 83 79 68 51 W 93 81 75 75 71 W 84 81 73 66 W 90 85 73 68 62 W 83 78 74 74 67 W 87 86 80 62 L 65 69 73 84 102 L 59 73 78 78 82 L 69 70 80 85 L 62 67 80 85 91 L 70 75 77 78 85 L 66 68 74 91 xclmcbed division title Friday's Games Kansas City (Bevil 0-0) at Cleveland (Nagy 16-4), 6:05 p.m. Boston (Wakefield 13-12) at New York (Gooden 11-6), 6:35 p.m. Toronto (Hentgen 17-10) at Baltimore (Krivda 2-4), 6:35 p.m. Detroit (Olivares 7-11) at Milwaukee (Karl 13-7), 7:05 p.m. Minnesota (Robertson 7-15) at Chicago (Tapani 12-9), 7:05 p.m. Texas (Oliver 13-6) at California (Boskie 12-10), 9:05 p.m. Oakland (Wengert 7-10) at Seattle (Torres 2-2), 9:05 p.m. Chicago (Foster 7-4) at Pittsburgh (Lieber 8-5), 6:05 p.m. Houston (Reynolds 16-9) at Florida (Brown 15-11), 6:05 p.m. New York (Wilson 4-12) at Philadelphia (Schilling 8-9), 6:35 p.m. Montreal (Paniagua 2-3) at Atlanta (Glavine 14-9), 6:40 p.m. St. Louis (Alan Benes 13-9) at Cincinnati (Burba 9-13), 6:35 p.m. Los Angeles (Candiotti 9-9) at San Diego (Hamilton 14-8), 9:05 p.m. Colorado (Thompson 8-10) at San Francisco (Gardner 10-7), 9:05 p.m. A m erican H om ecrafters Bevo's B ookstore B ook M arket Burger King C afé M atisse Win a Sea-Doo. Oil not included. It Si s a l Cr e e k Kefcsi Prise Winning Fried Catfish 8 Fried Oysters Bine Ught Specials 2 for 1 Special i M onjuc & Wed Nights after 5pm Í Pt. (atfiib flote « 8 Pe Oysltt fíate % Only $899 Pitcher cl Pearl Be# S3.50 WiWi? s College Footboll Saturday ESPN College Extra! Half Price Burgers & Chicken Sandwiches Pilcher of Pearl Beer • $3 50 NFL Sunday Ticket Featuring NEW ORLEANS SAINTS 9 0 9 N. Lamar 47 7 0 6 0 0 (oiling All Sports Buffs You could win up to *10,000 FREE every week on rte Internet! Just visit oar websht and test your skill playing Alpha Sports Games. Mo test. Do gamtiling. And itT fun! You'll find us at www.alphasports.com/alpha/ I Decided On a Graduate Career? Come Find Out About Possible Funding Sources! GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS/SCHOLARSHIPS F A I R FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1996 2:30 P.M. TO 4:30 P.M. TEXAS UNION BALLROOM, 3.202 INFORMATION ON: A m erican Council Of L ea rn ed Societies A m erican A ssociation Of University Women (AAUW) Local C hapter Charlotte New comhe Doctoral Dissertation E x S tu d en ts’ Association S ch o la rsh ip Program Fannie a n d Jo h n Hertz Foundation Fellowship Fulhright-Hays Dissertation Fellow ship Getty C enter fo r Education in the Arts H a rry Frank Guggenheim Dissertation Fellow ship L uce S ch o la rs Program M arshall S ch olarships Mellon Fellow ships in the H um anities National S cien ce Foundation G raduate Fellow ship National S cien ce Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship The Regional Foundation L ibrary - Hogg Foundation R hodes S cholarships O ffice o f Student Financial Aid Sam uel H. K ress Foundation S p e n c e r Dissertation Fellowship SSRC International Pre-Dissertation Fellow ship/Ford S em inars on Area Studies Study A broad R esources Texas Center for Writers Winston C hurchill Fellowship FJlgtbllity guidelines w ill be available to graduating seniors and graduate students. SPONSORED BY: THE OFFICE OF GRADUATE STUDIES, MAIN BUILDING 101,471 7213 ATTENTION STUDENTS! rs 3 S: V. ¿r- O £ £ & w. C*, cl $20 off with student ID on a n y * boot or shoe Want to make waves this semester? Then drop by any Dobie Mall mer­ chant by September 26 and register to win a Sea-Doo" personal water­ craft. If we draw your name on September 27, you’ll be the slickest thing on water. No purchase necessary. Need not be present to win. See mall for Red Wing Shoe Store 8440 Burnet Rd. The Spectrum Shopping Center 452-1575 Red Wing Shoe Store 3005 S. Lamar The Corners Shopping Center details. ■ DOBI “Austin's ONLY AuthorizedRedWing Dealers!" 443.3766 The Sm all Mall That Has It All ■ ( 5 1 2 ) 5 0 5 - 0 0 3 3 2 0 2 1 G U A D A L U P E Mon-Fri 9:30-6 Thurs. 9:30-8 Sat 9:30-5 Red Wing Shoes * i d ¥ í ! í W £ é L Sea-Doo* provided by Woods Honda •Kawasaki •Yamaha Fun Center WUfj ep Á d oj ÁVMpx*d$ m u jja q o id uow ttU d ív \(¡ x3m o¿ itfipjgf $WUQ vzzi¿ s iyjjv 5 On 3 bO I 3 £ Page 12 Friday, September 20,1996 T h e D a il y T e x a n Rematch of Super Bowls past The banged-up Buffalo Bills get more Jim Kelly will miss the Dallas garne had news as they learn quarterback with a pulled, hamstring Associated Press O R C H A R D PARK, N.Y. — B uffa­ Jim K elly lo Bills q u a r te rb a c k in p ra c tic e in ju re d a h a m s tr in g T h u rs d a y a n d w o n 't p la y a g a in st th e D allas C o w b o y s on S u n d a y . T he e x te n t of K dly.'s in ju ry w as n o t im m e d ia te ly know n,- ^aid Bills g e n e ra l m anager* John B utler. H e w a s ta k e n 'f r o m B uffalo's p ractice fie4d a n d w'as ex a m ip e d b \' th e te a m do cto r. Kelly,- 3-6, Was sc h e d u le d to u n d e rg o m o re tests T h u rs d a y n ig h t. " A s of th is ti/he, 7.inri h a s really b e e n ru le d o u t of th is w e e k 's g a m e ," B utler said. S eco n d -y e ar; q u a r te rb a c k T o d d C ollins w ill likely s ta rt' a g a in st the d e fe n d in g S u p e r Bow l c h a m p s. H e a n d A lex V an Pelt h a v e b ee n a lte r­ n a tin g w ee k s as B uffalo's second^;, s tr in g q u a r te rb a c k a n d . th is ;.‘ is . C o llin s' w eek. ■ • ’• T he in ju ry to K elly co m es a s .h e . h as g o tte n off to th e wcarst s ta rt in ; h is c a re e r. H e h a s th r o w n e ig h t in te r c e p tio n s a g a in s t to u c h ­ d o w n s a n d h as the p o o re st q u a rfe f- b ack ra tin g in the AFC. tw o In M o n d a y n ig h t's 24-6 loss to the P itts b u r g h S tee lers, K elly w a s p ic k ed off fo u r tim es in c lu d in g one th a t C a rn e ll L ake e r r a n t p a s s rv^turned for a to u c h d o w n . K elly h u r t h is h a m strin g d u r in g a no .n -c o n tac t p a s s in g d rill. W id e re c e iv e r Steve T asker, w h o h a s a sp ra in e d foot, w as g e ttin g tre a tm e n t in ju ry w h e n K elly w a s fo r h is b r o u g h t in from practice. " H e sa id He h e a rd it p o p , so it’s ' p re tty b a d I guess,'- T ask e r said. , o p e n e r: th e o n field a fte r s u s ta in in g a s p ra in e d fo o f in B u ffalo 's se aso n D e sp ite h is p o o r p e rfo rm a n c e s th is y e a r, th e Bills h a v e re g a rd e d K elly 's h e a lth as a k ey to re a c h in g th e S u p e r B ow l. C o llin s w a s a b y s m a l in h is o n ly s ta r t la st y e a r — a lo ss to H o u sto n . V an P elt w a s a d e q u a te , b u t n o t ste lla r, w h e n he filled in for K elly b rie fly d u r in g la st s e a s o n 's p la y o ff lo ss to P itts ­ b u rg h . M e an w h ile, th e Bills o ffe n siv e line also w ill go th ro u g h so m e sh u fflin g for th e D allas gam e. R ig h t ta ck le G len n P a rk e r w ill m iss th e g am e after h e to re h is rig h t calf M o n d a y ag a in st th e S teelers.. G u a rd R u b en B row n p ro m ise s to be B row n, th e Bills' to p d ra ft choice last year, h o p e d to p la y a g a in st th e S teelers, b u t sat o u t a fte r m issin g p ractice all last w eek. H e re su m e d w o r k o u ts W e d n e s d a y . C o rb in Lacina, w h o h a d p ro b le m s a t tim es in B ro w n 's place, re tu rn s to a b a c k ­ u p role, C o rey L o u ch iey w ill rep la ce P a rk ­ er in B uffalo's final g am e b efo re th e bye w eek. T he Bills are h o p in g co rn e rb a c k Jeff B u rris also w ill be av a ila b le after he r e tu rn e d to practice W e d n e sd a y . B u rris h a s b een o u t w ith a p u lle d q u a d ric e p s su sta in e d a g a in st N ew E n g lan d . E m m itt Sm ith says opposing defenses have given him no room to run A s s o c i^ e d Press rR V IN C — E m m itt S m ith is all su ite d o u t w'ith n o w h e re to run. " I lo o k u p a n d see e ig h t-m a n fro n ts all th e tim e ," sa id S m ith, the N F L 's to p ru s h e r in four o f th e past six se aso n s. " W e 're not fu n n in g th e ball like w e sh o u ld , f just h o p e w e g et it fig u re d o u t so o n .". S m ith h a s o n ly 253 y a rd s iA th e D allas C o w b o y s' first th re e gam es; a v e ra g in g o n ly 3.7 y a rd s p e r carry. T h at a v e ra g e ra n k s h im e ig h th in th e league. " N o th in g is a g iv en a n y m o re ," S m ith said . "T e a m s a re p ic k in g u p o n th in g s w e h av e been su ccessful d o in g in th e p a st." T he d e fe n d in g S u p er B ow l ch am - • p io n s h a v e stu m b le d to a 1-2 sta rt b ec au se th e lack of p a s sin g p ro fi­ ciency h a s p u t a stra in on th e ru n ­ n in g gam e. T eam s are lo a d in g u p to sto p S m ith, forcing th e 'C o w b o y s -to ' th e p a ssin g -gam e th a t lacks su s- ■ p e n d e d -w id e receiver M ichael Irviii a n d in ju re d tig h t e n d Jay. N ovacek. "T e a m s are lo a d in g u p o n u s," S m ith said. "W e h a v e -to find a w a y to m a k e th e m p ay ." C o m p lic a tin g th e C o w b o y s', ru n . p ro b le m s is the fact th a t S m ith is n 't ru n n in g o n all cylinders. " I 'm n o t 100 p e rc e n t," S m ith said. " 1 still h a v e so m e th in g s b o th e rin g m e ." S m ith w o u ld n 't g e t specific, b u t to b e in g h e still h a s n 't re c o v e re d fro m a tw iste d -knee su ffe re d in th e p re se a ­ son. this • • /'I 'm n o t u s e d b a n g e d u p th is ea rly in th e y e a r /' he said. • 'T he Buffalo Bills p re s e n t S m ith 's nex t challen g e. . - "'B uffalo d id n 't look g re a t a g a in st •P ittsb u rg h , b u t th e y 'll m a k e p la y s a g a in st u s ," S m ith said. " E v e ry b o d y p la y s th e ir best gam es a g a in st us. E ven th e so rriest team in th e NFL gets u p for th e C ow boys. T h a t's the h ig h s ta n d a r d w e haVe to p la y to. W e a lm o st h av e to p lay p e rfe c t'fo o t­ ball to w in g am es." O ffen siv e liA em an N a te N e w to n s a id -th e C o w b o y s h a v e n 't ru n like th e y sh o u ld b ec au se th e te a m isn 't in w h a t N e w to n calls " p o u n d in g sh a p e ." " E a c h p la y e r h as to check h im self o u t a n d get a sen se of u rg e n c y ," N e w to n said. "W e n eed to g et in to p o u n d in g sh a p e w h e re w e can just p o u n d th e ball a t o th e r te a m s a n d th e y c a n 't sto p it. T h a t's th e w a y w e u s u a lly r u n o u r o ffe n se a r o u n d h e re ." S m ith said h e k n o w s th e C o w b o y s e v e n tu a lly w ill sta rt ru n n in g th e ball better. "F o r w h a te v e r th e rea so n , w e 're n o t ru n n in g th e ball like w e u se d to ," S m ith said. "B u t w e 'v e still got th e g u n s to d o it. It's to o ea rly to p a n ic ." Buffalo’s Jim Kelly takes a break during training camp drills. Kelly injured a hamstring in practice and will not play against the Cowboys. ASSOCIATED PRESS Volleyball: Horns fall to old nemesis Florida Texas: Irish have wealth of Texas talent Continued from page 9 ev e n as irrita tin g as it is to lose," H ale y said . " N o b o d y g a v e u p at an y p o in t." v e n u e .a lso p ro v id e d an ex tra so u rce of en erg y . A n o th e r b a c k d ro p to th e n ig h t's actio n w a s th e fact th a t it re p re s e n t­ e d a n o th e r co n fro n ta tio n in w h a t h as b ec o m e o n e of th e i;o u n try 's b ig g e st riv alrie s. A T ex a s-F lo rid a m a tc h h a s e n d e d o ne te a m 's seaso n for the p a s t five years, a n d th e p la y ­ ers n e v e r h a v e an y p ro b le m s g ettin g re a d y to face each o ther. "I d o n 't th in k rev e n g e h a d a n y ­ th in g to d o w ith it, b u t it is a g rea t riv alry for b o th team s," sa id W ood, w h o led th e G ato rs w ith 19 kills a n d 19 digs. "T h e re 's g re a t volley b all e v e ry tim e w e play." B oth p la y e rs an d coaches sa id th e fact th a t th e m atch w as b ein g p la y ed in th e sp a cio u s E rw in C e n te r, ra th e r th a n th e 2,000 seat Rec C e n te r, d id h a v e so m e im p act oh th e w a y the e v e n t tra n sp ire d . T he h ig h e r ceiling a n d b ig g e r cro w d crecVed a bit of an in tim id a tio n factor, b u t-th e m o st the P e rh a p s ’ w h a t m a d e th e d efe at d ifficu lt to sw allo w w as th a t victory w a s so close th a t th e te a m could alm o st sm ell it, like a n o n co m in g sto rm p r a big g u y e x itin g th e Rec C e n te r w e ig h t room . A n d afte r th e final p o in t, the H o rn s w e re b la m in g no o n e b u t th em selves. "W e h a d control of th is m atch ," H aley sa jd . "It w as in o u r to w n , an d w e s h o u ld n 't h a v e let it slip aw a y ." Continued from page 9 A u stin ," G arv in sa id " It's a very g o o d location w ith its b ea u tifu l te r­ rain. E v e ry b o d y loves A u stin . T hat a p p e a ls to W est C o a st kids. T h a t's o n e rea so n T exas h as b e e n so su c­ cessful in C a lifo rn ia." F or fre sh m a n rec eiv e r B ran d o n H ealy, th e a lre a d y -e x istin g p rese n ce of C a lifo rn ia p la y ers h a d a m ajor im p a c t on h is decision to ch oose UT o v er N o tre D am e. "E verybixly bt'fore m e like [W est­ brook] and Clarence [M artin] w ere already here," H ealy said. "T hey w ere from w here Tm from and they w ere d o in g well, and they said they w ere treated well by the Texas program . W hen I cam e on m y recruiting tn p to A ustin, the exf>ectations I had, it just exceeded them . It m ade the decision a lot easier having them already be here. ... All of m y friends that w ere top recruits, they all like Texas, too." B ut N o tre D a m e 's p ip e lin e into T exas is eq u a l to th a t of U T 's in C al­ ifornia. A n d its h o ld w a s h elp ed ev e n m o re w h e n Bob D avie, fo rm er d e fe n s iv e c o o r d in a to r fo r T ex as AifeM jo in ed th e Irish c o a ch in g staff b efo re th e 1994 season. "D a v ie h as h elp ed N o tre D am e," G arv in said. "H e k n e w th e T exas ta len t a n d th e Texas coaches. T he key to re c ru itin g is to k n o w th e h ig h school coaches." But as Texas' p ro g ram rises in the polls, o th er factors will becom e even m o re of an advantage. The recreation­ al possibilities in A ustin easily o u t­ w eig h th o se in S o u th B end. A nd w hile it m ay not m atch N o tre D am e for h istory a n d nostalgia, Texas is still considered o ne of the m ost pro u d , historical p ro g ra m s in college ftxitball. " A fte r I v isited N o tre D am e, I k n e w I w a n te d to sta y in T exas after th a t," W o o d a rd said . "... T h ere w as n o th in g to do. I'm n o t try in g to live th a t se c lu d e d lifestyle th e y h a v e u p th e re . T h ey go to class a n d practice football a n d th a t's it. W 'hen I w en t u p th e re , it w a s n 't th e w a y I w a n te d it to be. [In A ustin ] th e y g o t m o st of the m ajo r attractio n s. I w a n te d to be close to It as I co u ld be. It's close to h o m e a n d I co u ld p la y big football, so I fig u re d , w h y n ot?" Favre wants out of drug abuse program Associated Press G R EEN BAY, W is. — B rett F avre say s h e w a n ts o u t of th e N F L 's d ru g a b u s e p r o g ra m n o t b e c a u s e he cra v es a beer, b u t b ec au se h e m isses his freedom . F av re is a p p e a lin g h is s ta tu s in th e le a g u e 's su b sta n c e a b u se p ro g ra m , w h ich h e e n te re d in M ay after he to ld th e NFL h e w*as a d d ic te d to th e p a in k ille r V icodin. H is a p p e a l is b ein g rev ie w ed by N FL co m m issio n er P aul T ag liab u e, w h o co u ld reach a d ecisio n as ea rly as w e e k 's en d , th e Green Bay Prcss- Gazette re p o rte d T h u rsd a y . G reen Bay coach M ike H o lm g re n first h e a rd ab o u t th e a p p e a l d u rin g a n a tio n a l call w ith re p o rte rs T h u rs d a y a fte rn o o n . H e se em e d ta k en aback a n d la ter w a s u n u su a lly testy at practice. c o n fe re n c e In th e lo c k e r ro o m a f te rw a rd , F avre said h e w a s th ro u g h ta lk in g a b o u t his a d d ic tio n a n d aftercare, so m e th in g th a t w o u ld p le a se th e o rg a n iz a tio n tre m e n d o u sly . "I a in 't Saying [expletive] n o w ," Favre said. "So, d o n 't ev e n ask ." P re ssed if th a t w as h is choice o r a d irec tiv e from H o lm g ren o r gen eral m a n a g e r Ron W olf, F av re said the d ecisio n w as his ow n. "Y eah. I'm tired of this. I'm tired of ta lk in g a b o u t it," he said. H o lm g re n also re fu s e d to talk a b o u t it afte r practice. " I 'm n o t ta lk in g a n y m o re to a n y ­ b o d y to d a y ," he said as h e left the field. Favre, last y e a r's M V P, sp e n t 46 d a y s last su m m e r at th e M e n n in g e r C linic in T opeka, K an., to trea t h is a d d ic tio n . H e n o w ta k es n o n -n a rc o t­ ic m e d icin e to deal w ith his aches a n d p ain s — an d th a t's n o t so m e ­ th in g h e 's try in g to ch an g e. Favre said because h e cam e for­ w ard w ith his addiction voluntarily, he s h o u ld n 't be subject to the league's stringent aftercare program . B ecau se F av re is " b e h a v io ra l- re fe rre d " to th e le a g u e 's su b sta n c e a b u se p ro g ra m , the N FL req u ires fre q u e n t ra n d o m d r u g te sts a n d th a t h e a b s ta in fro m alco h o l for tw o years. H e also m u s t m e e t w ith a le a g u e -a p p o in te d c o u n s e lo r local, tw ice a w ee k a n d alw a y s h a s to let th e le ag u e k n o w of h is w h e re a b o u ts. If F avre tests p o sitiv e for V icodin o r alcohol, he w ill be re g a rd e d as a firs t-tim e o ffe n d e r a n d c o u ld be fined, b u t n o t su sp e n d e d . Students, faculty and staff SAVE $ $ $ $ $ $ . [MacOS Hardware & Peripherals] Call fo r P rice lisf/Q u o te. DIMMS (168-Pin) SIMMS (72-Pin) 8Mb $46.- 16Mb $91.- 32Mb $182.- •SJMM»H)0»yRAM»CACHE»pqWERBC)0K5* 16Mb.$89.- 32Mb $179.- 64Mb $359.- APPLE POWERMAC 8500 Series ll32Mhzl 16Mfa/1.2Gig/CD/L2 IlSOMhi] 16Mb/1.2Gig/8XCD/L2 11 SOMhil 32Mb/2Gig/8XCD/L2 $2650.- $3345.- $43$|#/a. UMAX SuperMoc 900L (PPC604e) [150Mbzl32Mb/2Og/8XCD/L2/VKfeo$3- _ USOMhil 48Mb/2Gig/8XCD/L2/VKteo $3745. (200Mh2) 48Mb/2GiQ/8XCD/l2/VKl« $3949. ■ University PO's Accepted # m E n n i H v TFrH nn inr.iF s m m #1 MACSOURCE. 3007 North Lamar >y i ■ a Austin, Texas 78705 j \ m Tel: 512/451-2600 800/950-8411 T E K f l S Fax; 512/451-3323 Oaiplece p r ic e lis t on our website! Email; info@memory-tech.com, h ttp ://w w w .m em o ry-tech .co m If h e w e re reclassified as self­ referred, how ever, the league w o u ld offer its assistance, b u t the Packers w o u ld conduct his rehabilitation. H e could com e an d go at any tim e an d he could d rin k alcohol if he w an ted . Favre has indicated before that he'll p robably d rin k beer w h en his after­ care is finished an d th at he d id n 't expect the p ro g ra m to last tw o years. "1 d o n 't w a n t p e o p le to think, 'N o w h e 's p la y in g w ell sc^ h e w a n ts to go b a c k to p a r ty in g .' T h e re 's n o th in g w ro n g w ith th e p ro g ra m . It's ju st th a t I s h o u ld n 't be in it, b e c a u se I'm v o lu n ta ry . I'v e th o u g h t th a t fro m th e b e g in n in g ," F av re told th e n e w sp a p e r. " T h is is n 't a b o u t b ein g ab le to d rin k . I h a v e n 't to u c h e d a d ro p in five m o n th s, so th a t's n o t a pro b lem . T his is a b o u t m e re g a in in g m y free­ d o m ," F av re said. T h e N FL , c itin g c o n fid e n tia lity rules, d e c lin e d to d isc u ss F a v re 's sit­ u a tio n T h u rs d a y . " T h e o n ly th in g I can say is the facts of th e B rett F avre m a tte r are c o n fid e n tia l u n d e r th e te rm s of o u r s u b s ta n c e a b u s e p r o g r a m ," N FL sp o k e sm a n G re g A iello said . " I w ish w e co u ld say m o re ." O n th e teleconference, H o lm g ren said th e c o n fid e n tia lity of th e d ru g p ro g ra m p re v e n ts h im from k ee p in g u p w ith ev e ry tw ist a n d tu rn of F a v re 's case. " I 'm n o t p riv y to all th a t," H o lm ­ g ren said. "Sti, I d o n 't k n o w ... " th e b u t issu e, H o lm g re n h ad w a n te d the issue to die after a n ew s conference on July 17 in w h ic h h e an d h is q u a rte rb a c k a d d r e s s e d also d ec lin e d to a n sw e r several questions. " M y h o p e w a s th a t it w o u ld e lim ­ in a te so m e of th e stu ff th a t w o u ld be a s k e d th e f u tu r e ," H o lm g re n said . " A n d I s u p p o s e I w as a little n a iv e a b o u t that. H e h a s to u ltim a te ­ ly be th e final g u y w h o says, 'N o , I'm n o t g o in g to ta lk a b o u t th a t.' " in W h e n F av re a n n o u n c e d h is a d d ic ­ tion M ay 14, th e te a m 's n e w s release s ta te d h e " v o lu n ta r ily " e n te re d th e le a g u e 's su b sta n c e a b u se p ro g ra m . F av re n o w says h e w a s forced into re h a b b e c a u se th e a lte rn a tiv e w as a $970,588 fine — fo u r w ee k s' w o rth of h is $4,125 m illion salary. F avre a d d e d th a t h e d id n 't w a n t to g iv e th e im p re ssio n h e w a s m iser­ able. H e said h is fam ily life a n d fiKit- ball life w e re b o th g reat. A n d F a v re 's b e e n h is u su a l c u tu p in th e locker room th is season. " H e 's p ro b a b ly a little bit w o rse ," receiv er R obert Brcxiks said. "Y ou k n o w h o w B rett is, h e d tx 's all k in d s o f w e ird a n d c ra z y stuff. T h a t's w h a t m a k e s it fu n ." The Daily Texan Restaurant Guide hits the streets October 17. Chech it out! - X THE DARK STUFF T h e D a i l y T e x a n Friday, September 2 0,1 99 6 Page 13 em erged as one of this n atio n 's largest and fastest grow ing coffee chains. A lth ou gh Bow ker no long er ow ns stock in S ta r­ buck's, the two are viewed as parallel establishments. Through the Double Black Stout, their fates are once again intertwined. "T he real connection here is the love Seattlites have for their beer, and the love they have for their coffee," ex p la in e d N elson Jay, R ed h o o k 's head m ark etin g director. "D ou ble Black Stout is the only beer of its kind in the w orld." Redhook Double Black Stout was introduced in the N o rth w e s t tw o w in te rs ag o as a se a s o n a l brew . Demand was such that Redhook elected to introduce it as a year-round national product. Redhook then signed an agreement with Starbuck's w hich allowed them to use Starbuck's coffee extract and their name. O ne year later, it has m ade its way to Austin. Jay said that the delay was caused by the need for Star­ buck's to acquire the m achinery necessary to produce enough extract. A m ateur brew ers have produced coffee brew s for quite som e time. It is not uncom m on to find a coffee brew at one of the various beer festivals. Double Black Stout is sim ply a darker beer than these, said Daron W hite of Austin H om ebrew Supply. White predicts, however, that Double Black Stout may open up new possibilities in this town. "4 think that, w ith all the coffee shops and brew pubs in this town, a good num ber of people are going to be interested in it," he said. "I could see this town su p p o rtin g a place w here you have a bar that has some specialty beers and brewed their own beers, as well as coffee." The Texas Union, a nexus of coffee consum ption, has no plans to carry the beer in its Tavern Sports Bar and Grill, the primary vendor of alcoholic beverages on campus. Dave Cotton, how ever, a bartender at the Tavern, sees the possibility for Double Black Stout to succeed there, citing the am ount o f coffee consum ed in the Union. "It sounds like som ething people here would really enjoy, he said. "It would bring together the beer and coffee aspects of student life." N ot every one sees D ou ble Black Stou t in such a favorable light. Chip Tait, a m anager at Lovejoy's, a Sixth Street bar, views the beer as a gimmick. "The specialty beer m arket is becom ing bigger and bigger," said Tait. "Y o u 'v e got new specialty beers like P ete's W icked M aple and the new C elis hitting the shelves w ith som e su ccess. I ju st d o n 't believe Redhook's product is all that special. Coffee brew s are not a new thing, and Redhook is just trying to capital­ ize on the popularity of the Starbuck's name and the ALISON CODLIN/Daily Texan Staf4 Seattle connection." A u stin consu m ers can exp ect to see m ore of the Starbuck's name in the coming months. H .E.B.'s C en­ tral M arket has ordered 80-cases of the product. The store had received a large num ber of requests for the product after it was m entioned on The Tonight Show several months ago. SOUND BITES had a strin g of la ck lu ster albu m s since the late '80s, and a soberin g heart attack two years ago. Mr. Happy Go Lucky is Mellencamp's latest bid to return to his '80s levels of stardom. For this record, Mellencamp extends him self in a couple of new directions. Most notably he's brought dance producer Junior V asquez on board, who lends a hip-hop sensibility to Mellencamp's heartland rock. The album would promise to be an interesting experiment, but M ellen­ camp's songs aren't up to the task, a problem that has plagued his recent work. cam p -V asqu ez com bin ation is the lead single, Key West Intermezzo, prob­ ably the niftiest song h e's released this decade. With its warm, shuffling beat, the tune does a good job of con­ juring up the languid atmosphere of the Florida Keys. The lack of compelling tunes sug­ g ests th at M ellen cam p m ay h av e used up all his catchy choruses dur­ ing the '80s — and all the audio col­ lag es, e le c tro n ic b eats and b ra ss bands can't disguise that fact. A little ditty bout Jack and Diane is starting to sound pretty good right now. The best exam ple of the M ellen- — Michael Jolly " H o l d i n g C o u r t " BOO K S I G N I N G US!(. ftnikV /yJ _________________ THE OUTLAW THURSDAY CONCERT SERIES TICKETS AVAILABLE AT HANG 'EM HIGH NAU’S PHARMACY OR BY PHONE AT 49MS80 ✓ V A sober reporter delves into the heart of darkness that is Double Black Stout M IC H A E L C H A M Y Daily Texan Staff W hen A u stinites think of a typical n ight on the town, they often think of a place where they can grab a quality beer. Or perhaps they may think of a place which serves coffee of sim ilar quality. Now, thanks to an alliance betw een two like-m ind­ ed beverage producers from the Pacific N orthw est, they may be able to partake of both in one glass. The R edhook Ale Brew ery has in trod uced a new beer brewed with Starbuck's coffee to the Austin area. Redhook D ouble Black Stout reached the shelves of A u stin area b eer re ta ile rs ab o u t th ree w eek s ago. "Early returns are encouraging, and stouts as a rule don't pick up in sales until the w inter m onths," said K risten Jacobsen , a barten d er at the G inger M an, a small brew pub on Fourth Street. Jacobsen character­ izes the beer as "o n e o f the sw eeter stou ts, w ith a strong dark-roasted coffee flavor." Redhook Double Black Stout is available on draft as well as in 22-ounce bottles. The draft is available at a handful of sm aller pubs like the G inger M an. Area re tailers su ch as Fiesta have thu s far receiv ed 400 cases of the beer, acco rd in g to John W essels, Red- hook's district manager. Large chain stores have not received the product yet. "H .E .B ., A lb e rtso n 's and C ircle K h av e recen tly been authorized to carry our product," said Wessels. "O n ce th ey re ceiv e the p ro d u ct n ext w eek, w e're looking at a figure of som e 1,200 cases for the month of Septem ber, which, for a craft beer, is very good." Redhook produces the beer through a double fer­ m entation process. After the first fermentation, a sp e­ cial extract of esp resso roast coffee is added at the time the beer is bottled. The beer is then allow ed to ferm ent a second time in the bottle, which gives the beer its carbon atio n . This m ethod d iffers from the pre- carb o n a tio n m eth od s used by the larg er beer com panies. The connection betw een the Redhook Ale Brewery and Starbuck's coffee goes back to 1981 when Gordon Bowker, a co-founder of Starbuck's coffee, joined with Paul Shipm an to open in Seattle the first m icrobrew ­ ery in the Northwest. Bowker saw potential in a small brew ery serv in g a qu ality product, as sim ilar b o u ­ tique w ineries had becom e all the rage. Eventually Redhook Ale Brew ery (then called the In d ep en d en t A le b rew ery ) grew to b ecom e one of A m erica's largest and most fam ous m icrobrew eries. D uring the sam e period o f tim e, S ta rb u c k 's co ffee Continued from page 15 better. No amount of musical pundit- ry will sway many people, including myself, from being turned off by a recording's packaging. F ortun ately, p rod ucers o f T hird Wove Vol. Tuv have learned one les­ son from the first volume. Although the highest-selling ska compilation in history, volume one was left alone by die-hard fans of the genre. It's not because the disc didn't contain good music, it's because the songs were too good. With two cuts by The Toasters, and heavy represen­ tation from popular acts like Dance Hall Crashers and Mephiskapheles, v o lu m e o n e co n ta in e d too m any songs that ska-heads already had. This tim e around, the selections are from underexposed and refresh­ ingly talented bands. U tah 's Insa­ tia b le stea l the show w ith fu nk y W alkin ’ Shangbootie and GPC's, the story of a band m em ber's em ploy­ ment at 7-Eleven. Popular ska acts, for some reason, tend to come from NYC or California. Insatiable's hail­ ing from that cultural mecca, Utah, may be the reason for their relative obscurity. It should be rightfully less­ ened after their appearance here. The other two-song band, Under­ cover S.K.A., comes from the black su it and skin ny tie school o f ska. Although it is the tightest band pre­ sent on the compilation, it is the least original. Super N ice Guys is funny and has a driving Jamaican feel to it, but Rude Girl gets old fast. Boston's Thum per stands out on the compilation, playing Blind Justice. Self-described as "Judas Pnest meets The Sp ecials in a steel cag e death m atch," Blind Ju stice is p o litically charged and sounds great. The compilation also does a great job of show casing the lighthearted attitude of many ska bands. For those desinng escape from holier-than-thou preaching, take a dose of the Inspector Gadget theme song or Rodent R evolt. Third Wave Vol. Tuv is good, but it has nothing to offer over other exist­ ing ska c o m p ila tio n s o th e r th an w ider distribution. You should be able to find the disc just about any­ where, and it makes a good starting point for those becoming interested in the genre. It's also adequate for die-hard fans w ho w ant a taste of some hard-to-find bands. — Eric McKinney MR. HAPPY GO LUCKY Artist: John Mellencamp Label: Mercury Records Rating: ★ ★ (out of five) Back in the '80s, John Cougar Mel­ len cam p assau lted the U .S. radio w aves w ith his popu list M idw est rock, cu lm in a tin g w ith his finest work, The Lonesome Jubilee, in 1987. As just plain John Mellencamp, he's Page 14 Friday, S e p t e m b e r 2 0 ,1 99 6 T h e D a i l y T e x a n KATHAKAU • t • ^^k Kathakalt. a South Indian dance- Saturday, September 21 at 7:30 c)'ama will bring its splendor of p.m. Tickets are $3 for students, costumes, ornaments and sto- $10 for general public, and $20 ries to the Union Ballroom on for special reserved. IF You KNOW w h a t's g o o d f o r You SM I PRICE $12.99 cd $ 7.99 Cassette FEATURING “WAX ECSTATIC” AND “HAVE YOU SEEN MARY” ALFRED BRICE/Daily Texan Staff On the set of Sneak Peak, things calm down enough for the cameraman Steven Chea, a radio-television-film freshman to get settled. ‘Sneek Peek’ offers a suave, insightful look at recent films RU SS MCCRORY__________________ Daily Texan Staff versity students. "W e like to slam," admits Tony Salinas, pro­ ducer of the KVR-TV movie review show Sneek Peek. "It's a lot more interesting when we attack movies." Salinas, who is a full-tim e-film junior, has a hard job: he also adjusts camera set-ups, gives pep talks to the cast, edits the final product and, when necessary, orders pizza. Lights. Camera. Pizza? Cut. Sneek Peek, premiering in two days, is trying to film the first show o f the new season — or trying to begin film ing. A pizza delivery person just walked through the set. It's 11 p.m. and the show was scheduled to start at 1 0 . Salinas looks o v e r his shoulder and calls a break. The pizza. And he wants to make a change. "I just want to make it better — more consis­ tent production," he says. Back for its fourth sem ester in production, Sneek Peek is a chic and innovative show geared toward college students — this time with a new field of m ovies and a fresh young panel. It's informative like Siskel & Ebert, but hosted by uni­ This sem ester the hosts include radio-televi- sion-film students Joe Cotter, Zack Phillips, Matt Warren, Angie York, Jennifer Taylor, and broad­ cast journalism students Camille Anderson and Sara Johnson. Bumie Bums, a computer science major and the only returning veteran, is stepping down as the show's producer after working on its first three semesters. Week One and Sneek Peek is already o ff to a rough start. Matt Warren, one o f Sneek Peek's more abusive hosts, is looking fo r a bald spot — on camera. But when I k e First Wives Club finally comes up fo r review, h e’s quickly composed. "Igenuinely hated this m ovie,” he admits. "I hated it...even the extras were beautiful. " "W e want our hosts to be more entertaining," Salmas pauses. "And to know what they're talk­ ing about." Salinas knows. He has worked as Sneek Peek's assistant producer and director, in front of — and behind — the camera. To attract the clued-in, Sneek Peek is banking on offbeat movies like Jean-Claude Van Damme features or box-office bombs. They're tempting, he says, but quickly adds that he's open to all ideas and types of films. This week, his critics will take on Maximum Risk, join The First Wives Club and heckle Tommy Boy. Jennifer Taylor is one o f the nice ones. Five minutes until taping, and she's passing out bubble gum. Tay­ lor's doing M axim um Risk tonight and, um, she liked it... “Not fo r Van Damme; I d o n ’t like Van Damme," she stresses. "/ like action movies. " Currently, the show reviews two new cinema releases w ith one video pick each w eek, and "possibly even three new movies" if time allows. Each filming takes from two to three hours of recording time With an extra three to four hours thrown in for editing and dubbing. The result? 30 minutes long. Now, that's a sneek peek. And any resem b- lences to Siskel & Ebert are strictly intentional. And... action. Cut. The prop walls are falling. Sneek Peek premieres Friday at 9 p.m. and con­ tinues weekly on low power broadcast Channel 9 and on Channel 15 of the U niversity's R esi­ dence Hall Cable. ACTV will begin airing the show in tw o w eeks, sam e tim e. N ext w eek, Extrem e M easures and E d ’s N ext M ove will be reviewed. T E X A S U N I O N S E P 2 F I L M S FIST OF LEGEND v't.lll II JET LI “Sumptuous, sensuous, anti-fascist!” □ Directed by Bernardo Bertolucci n U U N IO N T H E A T R E F r i - S u n 8 pm Fri - Sat 6 ¿v midnight Sunday 4 & 10 pm M onday 6 pm, Tue 6 & 1 1 pm Wed 6 & 10 pm, T h u rs 11 pm U N I O N T H E A T R E F r i - S at 0 : 5 0 pm Sun 6 pm M on & W'ed 8 pm h t t p : / / w w w . u t e x a s . e d u / s t u d e n t / t x u n i o n On Sale This Saturday at 9am! i G eneral C in e m a BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY A ll SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6pm H IG H L A N D 1 0 ^ 6 | 1-35 ot M ID D L E F I S K V I L H WP 4 5 4 - 9 5 6 2 I D O U B L E F E A T U R E 1 2 : 5 0 4 : 2 5 8 : 0 0 R S U P E R C O P STEREO I T H E C R O W C ity oi A n * . ! * F I R S T K I D ~ oo 3 o s 5 Vs 7 2 0 » 30 p g stem o L O N E S T A R 1.10 4 15 7 10 10 0 0 R STEM0 F LY AW AY H O M E ^ SC 4 20 7 05 9 20 PG M B H M R IC H M A N 'S W IF E 12 55 3 0 0 5 10 7 45 10 00 R 0 O U Y • B O G U S 1 20 4 10 P G TNX S P I T F I R E Q R IL L 2 15 4 45 7 20 9 4 0 P G 13 DOLBY T R IG G E R E F F E C T U S 3 20 5 25 7 35 9 45 I DOLBY S H E ’S T H E O N E 7 05 9 35 R DIOITAl E M M A 1 40 4 30 7 0 0 9 30 P G TMX A T IM E T O K IL L 1 10 4 00 7 0 0 9 5 0 R S U M O G R E A T H IL L S 8 ,7 & U S 1 8 3 & G R E A T H IL L S T R A IL 7 9 4 - 8 0 7 6 L A S T M A N S T A N D IN G O N TW O S C R E E N S SC R E E N O N E; 1 35 4 00 7 0 0 9 25 R WSIYAL SC R E E N T W O 12 55 3 05 5 10 7 30 9 50 R DOLBY e F E E L IN G M IN N E S O T A 12 45 2 45 4 50 7 30 9 35 R STEREO M A X I M U M R I S K 1 30 4 30 7 10 9 55 R STEREO L O N E S T A R 1 15 4 15 7 15 10 0 0 R DOLBY B U L L E T P R O O F 7 35 9 4 0 R STEREO F IR S T K ID 12 50 2 55 5 0 5 7 25 P G STEREO ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU 12 45 2 55 5 00 10 00 PG13 STEREO T IN C U P 1 0 0 4 0 0 7 0 0 9 45 R TNX______________ FEATURING “SHAME” AND “WHAT DO I HAVE TO DO?” QH BOTH APPEARING AT LIBERTY LUNCH ON MONDAY SEPTEMBER 23RDÜ SALE ENDS 10/3/96 OPEN 9AM TO MIDNIGHT EVERYDAY! VIDEO S A L E S NO R EN T A LS! f J AUSTIN 24th & Guadalupe ONE HOUR FREE Validated Parking 3' 1 A L L R IG H T P A R K IN G L O T S (5 1 2 )4 7 8 -5 7 1 1 24tti & San A n t o r : D e Jd Z } I ) , tL (IM O M W IM W M H U I with special guest Josh Clayton-Felt O C T O B E R 29 • 8PM Bass Concert Hall at the UT Performing Arts Center Tickets available at all UTTM Ticket Centers or charge by phone at BASQU1AT An M USlaw -S*fw i t v , Vj 2:15-4 45-7:15-9:40-12:00 477-6060 DLWÍ niinncn 11:30 pm City 01 Lost (Mdreti II 45m 9 40 12:00 WHMI! SUNDANCE M IA FCSTIVAi FlUSMAKFRS ntOhhlSMCIAl ÍUtTIt'S VILLAGE CINEMA this ain't no 90210... (12:10 SaiLSun) 2:30-4:40-7 10-9:30 LONE STAR (R) 4-QQ 7.00 350 _ M A SA ISO N PREFEREE (NR) 2.45 5.15 7.45 10 10 TRAINSPOTTING (R) 3m.¿JQ 8.QQ 1ÜJ2Q___ MANNY & LO (R) 2 30 5 00 7 30 10 00 DOUBT DOLBY BIRKENSTOCK The original comfort shoe.' Whole Earth Provision Co. 2410 San Antonio 478-1577 4006 South Lamar 444-9974 _J P R E SID IO T H EA T R ES WE RE BIG ON BARGAINS HEYSTUDENTSI YES, FO LKS That's right! Now students pay only $4 25 w/ID - Bargain matinees until 6 00 pm $ 3 50 - Children and seniors S3 50 - and only J5 25 tor adult Pdrmssion1 For Village Only S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T S DA ILY WITH V A L ID S T U D E N T LD. Times Valid for Friday, September 20,1996 Only RIVERSIDE 8 4- IN R IV E R S ID E M ALL LAST MAN STANDING (R) 12.45 3 15 5 30 7 50 10 15 12 30 FIRST WIVES CLUB (PG) 12 15 2 45 5 0 0 7.30 9 50 12 10 LONE STAR (R) 1 00 4 30 7 15 1000 12 40 MAXIMUM RISK (R) 12 30 3 00 5:15 8 00 10 15 12 20 ISLAND OF DR MOREAU (PG-13) 12:15 2:30 4:45 7.15 9.30 1145 BULLETPROOF (R) 12.30 3,00 5,15 7M SL4Q 12.QQ. RICH M AN’S WIFE (PG-13) 12 30 2:30 4 45 7:00 9:15 11:45 A TIME TO KILL (R) l-QQ f IS 7 W 9-60 CROW 2 (R) 12 40 DO LBY SR DOLBY SR -BflLflYSB DOLBY S R P Q L6 Y S R BQLBYSP DOLBY S R -Q P IB Y S P DO LBY S R Gov’t Mule keeps on kickin’ across U.S. T h e D a i l y T e x a n Friday, S ep tem b er 2 0, 1996 P age 15 SHORT TAKES Daily even ts on and around campus. The hot side hot, and the cool side cool... Live Music ■ M asochists might want to make it over to see Paul Wester- berg Friday night at the Austin M usic H all, 208 N ueces St. Opening is Thermadore. ■ Saturday night the Banana Wind Tour '96 blows through town bringing Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band to the Southpark Meadows. ■ Legend Willie N elson will perform with the Spirit Band Sunday night at the Backyard, 13101 Texas Highway 71 West. Events ■ Sunday at Carlos and Char­ lie's The Great Texas Shoot Out spotlights volleyball phenoms, '96 O lym pic gold m edalists Karch Kiraly, Kent Steffes, Jose Loiola and Adam Johnson duk- ing it out over $100,000. After is a post gam e concert with Storyville and Common Sense at 7 p.m. For tickets: 263-4146. ■ The in*situ group will have a performance celebrating the ris­ ing of Sirius over the next week. The perform ance w ill tie in some of the various mythologi­ cal elements of different cultures surrounding one of the most visible astronomical events of the year. Music provided by Spetet Lumiere, and the visual element by aPlimbic systems. As usual, it should be a total sensory experience. The perfor­ mance is at the Bodhi Yoga Cen­ ter, 1710 Houston St., at 9:30 p.m. Saturday. Call 458-9526 for more information. Theater ■ This weekend will be your last to catch The Heather Wood­ bury Report or What Ever at the Planet Theatre, 2307 Manor Road. The one-woman debacle has writer-performer perform­ ing 100 characters. The 8 episode show e n d s Oct. 22. For rickets: 499-T1XS. ■ New in Austin this weekend is Homer un, a drama romanticiz­ ing baseball's role in the home and in life, playing at the Hyde Park Theatre, 511 W. 43rd St. For rickets: 499-TIXS. Movies ■ Bernardo Bertolucci's 1970 anti-facist picture, The C o n ­ form ist, detailing the trials of a homosexual who tries to bury his transgressive tendencies will start at the Texas Union Theatre Friday at 9:55 p.m. ■ Loosely based on Bruce Lee's Chinese Connection, Jet Li's Fist of Legend portrays a Chinese stylist who masters the nuances of Japanese fighting to defeat his enem ies on their own terms. Starts Friday at 6 p.m. and mid­ night at the Texas Union Theatre. ■ Also opening this weekend: — Buckm inister Fuller: Thinking Outloud — First Wives Club — L ist Man Standing — Manny & Lo — Stonewall — Compiled by Thomas Yoo, Daily Texan Staff HEATH SHELBY Daity Texan Staff T ouring m uch o f the year w ith the marathon concert-loving Allman Brothers Band w ould be enough to tucker out the average guitarist. But not Warren Haynes. Haynes is known to many as one of the Allman Brother's guitarists. For 62 shows this year he played alongside Greg Allman, Dickey Betts and the rest of the ABB as it toured the country. H aynes and ABB bassist Allen W oody decided to spend another 100 dates on the road this year touring with their other band, Gov't Mule. "We both enjoy it," Haynes said by phone from a tour stop in Tuscaloosa, Ala. "It's a lot of work, but w e're thankful that we enjoy our work." A quick listen to Gov't M ule's ep on y­ mous 1995 album reveals that Haynes' and Woody's power trio, rounded out by drum­ mer Matt Abts, isn't the mirror image of the Allman Brothers. There's less of the country tinge and more w allop — perhaps more surprising, considering that Haynes played for a long tim e in the '80s with redneck honky-tonker D avid Allan Coe, country music's most notorious outlaw. But putting a little of their country and southern rock backgrounds a little lower in the musical mix, the Mule packs a meaner kick. (W oody also once played in a band with ex-Lynyrd Skynyrd drummer Artimus Pyle, and Abts met Haynes when they both played in the country-ringed backup band of ABB guitarist Dickey Betts' late-'80s solo act.) Gov't Mule "is heavier in the sense that we're influenced by bands like Cream, Jimi Hendrix, M ountain and early ZZ Top ... Cream was the band that made me want to play guitar," Haynes said. "It's the nature of the beast with a power trio. The Allman Brothers Band is a seven- piece band, and there's alot of people play­ ing on stage at the same time. Gov't Mule is a hot-rodded version of that." A heavier sound defines the group. But BUMQUAL Artist: Pet Shop Boys Label: Atlantic Rating: ★★ (out of five) "¿Hay una discoteca por aquí?" This simple question opens the Pet Shop Boys' latest album, Bilingual, but the question "¿H ay una trashcan por aquí?" seems more applicable as the end of the album nears. PSB could always be relied on to put out albums full of catchy, dancey pop tunes, and rarely did they disap­ point. They showed glimpses of their creativity and prowess on their Disco albums with remixes of some of their singles, and I was hoping in a way that their new' release would embrace something of that nature. Instead, PSB have delivered a mediocre work revealing their new interest with inane lines spoken in Spanish and tropical-sounding beats. I guess that you could call Bilingual a concept album, with the tropical fascination, but the lyrics really do nothing to support this. It seems that Neil Tennant is trying to explore some serious subjects, but as pop musicians often do, he just ends up sounding silly and shallow. Take Metamorphosis, for example. He tells the story of a man who is dealing with new-found feelings of homosexuality, but really doesn't pro­ vide any answers or insights into the situation and closes the songs with an unfulfilling "Why?" Se a vida e (That's the way life is) sounds like the product of a Prozac overdose and pretty much sucks like the rest of the album. The message that Bilingual sends to me is that PSB have essentially run out of new avenues to explore, and after 10 years and almost as many albums, that is easy to believe. You TRAVEL AN D OUTDOOR OUTFITTERS SINCE 1970 C lim bing, C am ping, E xp ed ition Gear. R em arkable C lothin g & Footw ear. B eautiful & U n u su al Gifts. C onversion Luggage. Travel G uides Whole Earth G ov’t M u l e takes time off from the road to introduce the newest member of the band Haynes said Gov't Mule isn't a hard rock band. He points to the group's inspirations, particularly jazz and blues artists. Haynes lists M iles D avis, John C oletrane and numerous bluesmen as forces that inspire the group. Earth, is a Memphis Slim song that Haynes said the band "mule-ized" in their rendi­ tion. The original songs also show off the group's bottlenecked sound. "Everything is an influence," H aynes said. "We do alot of old blues songs in the course of a show — every couple of weeks we pull out a new cover. We all have differ­ ent neroes, but we all agree on the staples." The blues' influence comes out not only on stage, but also on the Gov't Mule album. The introductory track, G rin n in ' In Your is a short song written by '40s blues- Face, man Son House, while the next tune, Mother Gov't Mule also gives Haynes the free­ dom to play the guitar and sing, something he gets to do three or four times a night with the ABB, but with every song in Gov't Mule. "That's part of the inspiration of Gov't Mule," Haynes said. "I need an outlet to show the other sides of me that don't come out in the Allman Brothers Band." P laying night after n igh t a lo n g sid e Woody and Abts, presumably laying down practice time for the band's live album that w ill be released in O ctober, "is fun," Lucifer, Prince of Darkness. Haynes said. Saturday's date at La Zona Rosa w ill be part of the fun. Haynes said he hasn't played many times in Austin, but neverthless declared it his "favorite town in Texas." Among the times Haynes has found his way to town included two appearances on Austin City Limits - once with Coe's band in the early '80s and once last year with the A B B the day after an A llm an /M u le Hal­ loween show at Austin Music Hail. "I alw ays liked A u stin City Lim its," Haynes said. "I was very honored to play there with Coe, and I was honored to play there with the Allman Brothers Band." And there you have the story of 40 Acres and a Mule. SOUNDBITES can only do so much with the limited number of sounds and beats that PSB use, and the addition of the samba and merengue lines really do nothing for their sound. Also, many of the beats sound very familiar. A red letter day sounds remarkably similar to Shameless from the Boys' best work, Very. Famous for being trailblazers in expanding the lim itations of pop m usk, and helping to bring dance beats and synthesizers to the fore­ front, the trend that PSB spawned has overtaken them. With the re-emer­ gence of the guitar alongside the key­ board, today's audience requires more than the Pet Shop Boys can offer. The boundaries that they helped stretch have inevitably become their downfall, with several bands beating PSB in the dance-pop game. — Carlo Longino SKA: THE THIRD WAVE VOL. m o Artist: v/a Label: Shanachie Records Rating: ★★ (out of five) Beloved Recordings have released a follow-up to last years' successful Ska: The Third Wave compilation. This sequel is packed with music, as was volume one. Sixteen tracks from 14 different bands are present, covering many different interpretations of upbeat Jamaican dance music. From Less Than Jake's frantic crunching on Liquor Store to Regatta 69's more tra­ ditional stylings on Someone to Cling To, this compilation is an ideal intro­ duction to modem ska. The first volum e suffered from atrocious packaging, plastering some dorky "rude boy" wannabe onto the cover, and winning the Annual Walt Jabsco Award For Gratuitous Use Of Black and White Checks. Unfortu­ nately, volume two doesn't do any better with its poorly drawn skin­ head cartoon. Neither Shanachie nor Continuum (volume one's makers) will compete with major-label mar­ keting power. However, compilations that pre­ sent so well the range of sounds in contemporary American ska deserve Please see Sound Bites, p a g e l3 _______ GO H O R N S BEAT the IRISH THE BEST TAIL GATE PARTY IN TOWN Sat. Sept. 21 - Starts at 2:30 pm Food • Beer • Music featuring Chris Wall • Rusty Weir • Phil Pritchett NO TICKET-NO PROBLEM... WATCH THE GAME W ITH US! DOORS OPEN AT 10 AM FREE SHUTTLE 18 & Up Welcome I FRIDAY EVENING I 0 TVData 6:00 6:30 - 7:00 DORM CABLE CHANNELS WILL BE LISTED BEGINNING 9/30/96. 8:30 B A S I C C H A N N E L S 9:00 | 9:30 8:00 7:30 * UT residence hall cable onty 10:00 10:30 11:00 SEPTEMBER 20,1996 | 11:30 12:30 12:00 Hollywood Ent Tonight ( 7 ) 0 N ew s! Wh. Fortune Unsolved Mysteries I Sliders "Rules of the Game" Family Matters I KTBC KVUE @ 0 News News KXAN D O Home Imp. KEYE @ 0 N ew s! KLRU @ 0 C. Sandiego Business Rpl Newshour With Jim Lehrer Andy Griffith 1 Love Lucy KNVA S © Fresh Prince Universe Dating Gama Newlywed K13VC ® © Dinosaurs I ¡Muchmuíic Countdown TSTV G > © Classicmuch Spotlight ! Dave's World (Raymond Simpsons! News! Murphy 'Bzzz! :Boy-World jX-Filea "Welwired" (In Stereo) Simpsons! Seinfeld! :Clueless I Dateline (in Stereo) X Mr. 4 Mrs. Smith "Pilot’' I [Wash. Week Northern Exposure £ Baywstch “Aftershock" 1 ;Wail St. Week Citizens: Election Survval News 20/20! 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(In Stereo) Nurses RPM 2Night Mysteries Sports SF Vortex I Gold_____ Night Stalker “Zombie" Hunters in the Sky (R) “SaHtn** Im m "Daatfy Space Rangers "Pilot" (R, (Day tht Universa Changad (P ull of 2) Qivkj Sou. i **$ 9 6 7 , Dnra) B% Dm W te ü M ] ' m W M , YL'Jih (Simon 4 Simon ... . i “Ami Hendrtf’ HíTSlA fccumwury on JmT Hendrix.» róá'rjtsmi(Preview y w e n a a jJ iíT m B e fS íW Big Easy In Stereo) I News On Stereo) I Wiseguy 'The Loose CannonqIn the Heat of the Night I HB0 MAX SHOW inside the NFL (In Stereo) I IQ (MSyPMr.WondertuT (1993) 0 l*Titwi qt EhdwrtNenT‘PQ1 ¡"Canadian Bacon* Reel Sport» (R) (In Stereo) I jComedy Hour: Jon Stewart ¡Boxing W ireqo Rivera vs Pemeii Whitaker (In Stereo Live) PREMIUM CHANNELS (1996?D»th>IStem.9E (‘T T w S p s c i ^ T (1094,D n n u i ) S t a a o n t . 7 T H o t l i n e Latino (1996, Comedy) Alan Aidi-frS’ 11 É Pottwgxt Theupcy Bedtime Comedy HU pAca ViffafK Whan Nature CéW Q995) I “Body Strofcaa"*[1996 Ote» B ed iNRU » “NhaBchooT “ U n d e rIn QübVÍÍbS) fchartNortonl* 1 ¿ ¡“ Tough" “Mr.Deitiny"tt*(l^AllringirgNi4m inichinoatoohm gihl|M Éi.|'1ÉBeliricdtheUnfy»r»i“ ! * Austin’s Lowest Prices for TV’s • VCR’s • Stereos • Microwaves • Major Appliances Home & Car Audio 4534 WESTGATE BLVD ACROSS FROM THE WESTGATE MALL 892-2860 NOBODY, B U T NO BO DY BEATS REX LOW PR IC ES 8868 RESEARCH BLVD BETWEEN BURNET R0A0 AND 0HLEN 4 6 7 - 6 1 7 4 a SPECIAL DISCOUNTS WITH UT ID! HOOK ‘EM HORNS ENTERTAINMENT T h e D a ily T e x a n 16 FRKMY, SEPTEMBER 20,1896 tours ‘Loser’ SÜSAN SHEPARD Party- Texan Staff •* Austin is the smallest town in the world. Less than four h ours After a rtiy in g on Texas so il, le g e n d ary N ew Zealand, musician^ Chris Heazlewood met a former class­ mate from Dunedin-, 6,000 miles to the south. , ;/"Aftef am hour .or s q , I thought he was a dipshit and went eruising with spme other people. They were really good freaks, which reminded me of the best parts of New Zealand." •• H eazlew ood's- reco rd la b e l, the p ro m in en t N ew Zqalarrá indije Flyirtg N un, sent him stateside about a .month a’gó; ostensibly; to attend the C M J music confer­ ence, in New. Yofk. Tfeazlewood opted to-play .a series of sólo shows in N ew York City,' Chicago-and Austin after tour plans for his group, King Losér, wére postponed. " I decided, to come to A ustin because/I'd spoken to 'some people vi^•e-mail, namely K elly Petrash and Craig Koon; who's putting-out a record for us (King Loser)." King Los.er ii quite a bit louder than the average N Z pop group, incorpqrating trash rock, surf beats and fierce orgán lines into'a noisy mix. The group has released two albums, w ith two more on the way. of visual im pact because there are four people on stage doing their thing. I'm* generally a bit.quieter, but if 1 can Hook up w ith a d ru m m er, and I can ru n him through a few beats, th at m akes it a b it m ore upbeat. live music CStOS HEAZLEWOOD Featuring: The’Amuse- ment, Jar, Code 4 At: Electric Lounge, 603 Bowie Rd. Date: Friday Time: 9:30 p.m. . " I can't play some of the stuff on m y singles, because a lot of it I made it up on _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ the spot and just w ouldn't have a clue about how to play the freer, more improvised stuff. Unless, of course, I sat down and really tried." So far, H eazlew ood's stateside perform ances have included sets on a boat in New York with Barbara M an­ ning Cul de Sac and the Yips and a Matador office party-. In Chicago, he had a considerably more relaxing time, roam ing the town w ith Ajax Record's Tim Adam s and Joel Loeschke of the idiosyncratic label Kranky. Austin w ill hopefully provide more thnlls and a home to a more exciting population. ‘ Local labef Rise, run b y Sound Exchange beatmeister Craig Koon is releasing some archival Los.er material as A fyitch-On H eats T h eir videos have appeared on M T V Europe, and the group has toured N ew Zealand again and again. W ith a population of thrfee m illion among the two fnain islands, .if s not difficult to! play to what seems to be an im pressively large percentage of tHe populatión.. "W e get on the low er end of the charts — yóu don’t have to sell m any records to get on thethajcts in N ew Zealand, so it really doesn't mean jack shit, flu f it's nice tó ‘ show your mom and dad." . H eazlew ood's current shows have been m o stly -s ó I q affairs, like tonight's show at the. Electric Lounge which alters his material and' method of performance consider­ ably, • •. .* * v ! . - ' "The solo shows are a lot more downbeat — -.a King Loser show would be fast, loose, v e iy exciting w ith a lot "The people in Austin sqem to be a bit more relaxed • and loose. In N ew York, the people seem busy and yuptight'. Jh e y seem to feel obligated to-stay in control. M y reCoid label fam ily do m iddle class stuff like going out to a restaurant, for brunch, having dinner before a rodk show." ' Ó d d ly enough, members of H eazlew ood's m usical fam ily baVe established quite a path through Austin in recent days. A laisfer G alb raith played at the Voodoo Lounge last Week,, and Peter Jeffries w ill be returning next .Week. Y * ;'G alhraiJh is O ne of. the sweetest people you could ever hope to meet. If you ever go to one of his shows/you w ill • see ^someone completely open up lik e you've, never seen. •People don't want to see that, they want to .see complete-. ly impersonal rock music." • Heazlew ood also plans to interact fiercely w ith his' : ANDY ROGERS/Daify Texan Staff Chris Heazlewood, usually of the band King Loser, will be at the Electric Lounge tonight doing a solo performance. audience at tonight's show. "It's likely to be more entertaining than illum inating, but m y songs are good, and I'm a good guitar player, and I try n'ot to prey too heavily on the audience's attention span." WATERLOO RECOMMENDS GREAT NEW MUSIC AT GREAT PRICES & OUR 100% GUARANTEE fcOUNC htvseui O ft N V T T K ORNETTE COLEMAN SOUND MUSEUM Hidden Man (Verve) Sound Museum consists of Hidden Man and Three Women (see below), two separate CDs featuring different yersions of the same thirteen compositions, but to set them apart, each disc contains an auuitkxku unique iraca. The "sound museum” quartet features Ornette Coieman (alto sax, violin, trumpet), Gwi Mai! (piano)-, Chamet! Moffett, and Denar do Coleman. ' HANK WILLIAMS Low Down Blues (Mercury Nashville) Featuring 16 tracks recorded between 1947 and 1952, including 5 non-session demos, Low Down Blues Htuminates Williams’ mul­ tifaceted relation to the btues tradition Hank Williams did have the biues but he made it his own! SS.39CD only LOW The Curtain Hits The Cast (Vemon Yard) These minimalists strip their music down to the bare bones - yet somehow achieve the most lush, melodic, gorgeous, slow-moving musical cascades. “This is beautiful, beau- iiiui music - made me stop sweeping the fioor and si! down to listen.” - Dean W a rn h a m (1 una R a la v ln 9 W 1 ORNETTE COLEMAN SOUND MUSEUM Three Women (Verve) Sound Museum consists of Three Women and Hidden Man (see above), two CDs fea­ turing different versions ol the same thirteen compositions. The intense work !r, the studio for this project created music so compelling that it produced two separate interpretations of each song t O V N D M J U U Mmr O h n e t r k RED HOUSE PAINTERS Songs For A Blue Guitar (Supreme/Island) More sad-core tor.your blues! A great col­ lection ol lovely, lilting, slow songs, includes the delighttiil, ten minute long, cover of Paul McCartney's “Silly Love Sopgs "I. Best described as a wonderful bummer... don't forget-the Prozac! KEB MO’ Just Like You (O’Keh/Epic) Rooted in tradition with a modem yet incredibly heartwarming twist, Keb' Mo' is one of the freshest new contenders on the contemporary blues scene. This is what you've been hearing on KGSR. TRANCE MISSION Head Light (City Of Tribes) Just some of the instruments featured bn * this album; Didgeridoos, Dumbeks, Kanjira, Chistu, Spirit Chaser, tllimba, Hand Clapping, Piii, Ocarina, Klunting (clay pot). Like a soundtrack to a wortd safari; except ft's quite relaxing. Slap on the headphones,, and join the adventtrrel HONOR A Benefit For The Honor The Earth Campaign (Daemon Records) Honor is a 2 CD benefit release tor Indigenous Environmental groups put togeth­ er by Indigo Girl and Daemon Records owner Amy Ray. Featuring a great line-up of Native and non-Native artists; Ulali,bruce Cockburn John Truedell, Bonnie Raitt with David Grisman and more! $1)69 2C0set SCRAWL Travel On Rider (Elektra) Originally an all female trio, the group now consists of guitarist and vocalist Mary Mays, bassist and vocalist Sue Harshe and new boy drummer Dana Marshall. Scrawl has been blazing the trail for female-fronted alternative bands for ten yearsl Check out the real thing. FIONA APPLE Tidal (Work/Clean Siate) The music defies boundaries, the lyrics are pure evocative poetry., what you’d expect from someone whose sole influence is Maya Angelou. Although Fiona Apple It first and foremast a songsmith, her piano and haunt­ ing, dusky voice are the ultimate vehicles for her art. S9.99CD. THE HEATHENS Fire (SHence/TrjStar) Contemporary folk music from Scandinavia??? You bet! These Heathens are breaking ail the rules, Mending the traditional music of Scandinavia (using instruments like the lute, mandora, (he keyed fiddle, Swedish bagpipe) with the instruments of contemporary music (using samples) resulting in alien, realty rockin’, yet strange!/beautiful music. GARY MYRICK & HAVANA 3AM Texas Glitter & Tombstone Tales (Burnside) Guitarist Myrick originally hooked up with The Clash's Paul Simonon to form Havana 3am In 1992... his new version of Havana 3am Is a stripped down, rootsy trio whose surl-a-billy approach is powered by Myrick's raging tsunami guitar and vocals. RED AUNTS Saltbox (Epitaph) Once again the Red Aunts put alt other roek into perspectiva You cao see forever in both directions oh Sdltbox. A worthy tol- low-up to last year's #7 Chicken. This record will put the Red Aunts up there with Boss Hog, Jon Spencer, and New Bomb Turki. .- *• DJ JOHN KELLEY FunkyDesertBreaks (Moonshine) FunkyDesertBreaks showcases the talents of California desert-rave-maestro DJ John Kelley. He's mixing the freshest gfooves into a seamless nonstop party at your house! Put on the headphones, and take a little trip! GUS Gus (Almo Sounds) In contrast to his utterly concise moniker, the music of Gus Is fHled wtlh intricate melodies and imaginative instrumentation; sometimes loud and aggressively electric, sometimes intimately acoustic, always effusive and intriguing. It you missed Ms show at the Lounge - here's your chance to catch up! THE FINN BROTHERS Finn Brothers (Discovery) The Finns are Neii and Tim - the nucleus of both Crowded House and Spltt Enz. Together, they wrote all the songs, and with rare exception played Ml the Instruments * The result Is lovely, universally-appealing pure pqp music a defigbt for ydur ears. ■* ,v í " 4 '3 '- r * * * - vf 4- < I K o J E THE MELVINS Stag (Mammoth/Atiantic) Since their first primal doomsday chords issued forth in ‘84, the lethal combination ol skull-shattering guitar, superhuman drum­ ming and floorboard-rattling bass have left a decade's worth of shattered eardrums In their wake - now they’re branching into pre­ viously-unprobed areas, one song features a trombone and turntable scratching! WALLFLOWERS Bringing Down the Horse (Interscope) Wright, you've probably heard of the Wallflowers, but we wanted to make sure that everyone's had the opportunity to check out this solid, honest-to- goodness roots rock record Jakob Dylan and company provide some of Ihe best songwriting of the yuear, T-Bone Burnett provides his expertise as producer, and Counting Crow's Adam Durttz provides vocals on a track COME IN AND LISTEN TO THIS MONTH’S RECOMMENDATIONS CULLED FROM HUNDREDS OF NEW RELEASES. WE FULLY GUARANTEE YOU’LL BE SATISFIED OR EXCHANGE FOR EQUAL VALUE MERCHANDISE. PLUS, AS ALWAYS, YOU’RE WELCOME TO LISTEN TO ANYTHING IN STOCK» $ 1 1 9 9 EACH CD $799 EACH CS WHERE AVAILABLE W A T E R L O O E SALE ENDS 9/30/96 COMPACT DISCS RECORDS «VIDEO 10-11 Mon-Sat 12-11 Sun 600-A North Lamar Austin, TX 78703 512/474-2500 E-Mail: waterloo@eden.com WHERE MUSIC STILL MATTERS ? \ 1 o £ 8 pen Daily at 5pm flr Noon Sat and Sun T h e D a il y T e x a n Friday, September 20,1996 Page 17 To Place a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 o r on-line at: http://fetum edia.jou.utexas.edu/ C LA S S /clasform . html Classified W ord Ad Rates C h a rg e d by th e w o rd B a s e d on a 1 5 w o rd m in im u m , t h e fo llo w in g r a te s apply. 1 d a y ............................................. $ 6 . 4 5 2 days.......................... $ 1 2 .3 0 .....................$ 1 7 5 5 3 days $ 2 1 6 0 4 days 5 da ys $ 2 4 7 5 F irs t tw o w o rd s m a y b e all c a p ita l le t t e r s $ 2 5 f o r e a c h a d d itio n a l w o r d in c a p i t a l l e t t e r s . 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Autos 20—Sports-Foreign Autos 30-Truck.s-Vans 40—Vehicles to Trade 50—Service-Repair 60—Pa rts-Accessories 70—Motorcycles 80—Bicycles 90-Vehicles-Leasing 100—Vehicles-Wanted ■M E R C H A N D IS E 190-Appliances 200—Fumiture-Household 210-Stereo-TV 220-Compute rs-Equipment 230—Photo-Camera 240—Boats 250-Musical Instruments 260-Hobbies 270—Machmery-Equipment 280-Sporting-Campmg Equipment 110—Services 120-Houses 130-Condos-Townhomes 140—Mobile Homes-Lots T 50—Acreage-Lots 160—Duplexes-Apartments 170-Wanted 180—Loans 290—Furniture-Appiiance Rental 300—Garage-Rum mage Sales 310—Trade 320—Wanted to Buy or Rent 330—Pets 340-Longhorn Want Ads 345—Misc. RENTAL 350—Rental Services 360— Furnished Apts 370— Unfurnished Apts. j 380—Furnished Duplexes 390—Unfurnished Duplexes 400—Condos-T ownhomes 410-Fumished Houses 420—Unfurnished Houses 425—Rooms 430-Room-Board 435—Co-ops 440—Roommates 450-Mobile Homes-Lots 460—Business Rentals 470-Resorts 480—Storage Space 490-Wanted to Rent-Lease 500—Misc. 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Autos GREAT STUDENT cor Red 1 9 8 5 C o rtó la SR5 5-speed 137K. Runs well N e w tires First owner $ 2 5 0 0 3 4 2 0 2 7 4 . 9 17-5B 198 6 H O N D A Accord Runs good N eeds some w ork. $ 2 5 0 0 7 0 8 - 0 7 7 1 . Ask for David 9-17-5B-A 1984 TO YO TA Tercel A M /F M cas­ sette, Autom atic, A /C , Very reliable $ 1 2 5 0 0 8 0 . 3 3 9 1553 9-19-28 8 7 M A Z D A 3 2 3 - 5spa hatchback, new clutch, tim ing belt GREAT STU­ DENT CAR $ 2 0 0 0 / 0 8 0 4 4 1 - 6401 9-19-2B 2 0 - Sports-Foreign Autos B M W 3201 1978 Runs greatl N e w dutch ond front end. $ 9 5 0 must sell. C all 4 41 -08 21 2 0 0 - Fum iture- Household REMODELING SALE DAYS INN King-size beds, sofas, sleeper sofas, credenzas, desks, mirrors, lamps, pictures, chairs, etc. A ll priced to sell Call Days Inn University 4 7 8 -1 6 3 1 . 9-17-206-0 GRAND OPENING Southwestern sofas and print art; Rustic M exican furniture; W o o d pewter and tin cross collections; Unique gifts Visit M l CASA (Home furnishings with flare) 170 0-A South Congress. O pen M orv doy-Safurday 12-5 7 0 7 -9 7 9 7 918-4B 1 9 8 5 MERCEDES 190 D , 5spd 1 ow ner, show room c o n d itio n , new A / C 3 4 6 -8 4 3 2 9-12-8B 2 2 0 - Computers- Equipment PERSONAL COMPUTERS that'll 'Z a p ' you High Performance and Low pri­ ces. W e also custom-make PC's.. Hurry! I Visit: http://w w w .asa com pu ters com 9-11 206 M A C SE 4 / 1 7 0 H D w ith M odem ; Software- W ord, Q uicken, UT Con­ ned, HyperCard, Lotus 1-2-3, AOL, & morel $ 5 0 0 O B O 7 0 7 -9 6 9 5 9-17- 5B MEMORY AT WHOLESALE 4MB 30-Pin Simm $29 16MB 72 Pin Simm $84 Call NETRAM 800-505-1555 FOR SALE M a cintosh Performa 5 2 0 0 C D Lots o f softw are, add ed memory, W in d o w s9 5 $ 1 7 5 0 O B O M att 4 5 9 -1 5 5 4 9-20-1 OB 1 9 8 0 MERCEDES BENZ 450SEL, great, immaculate condition G a ra g ­ lo r ed time, all lo n g periods o f pow er, sunroof, high qualtiy Germ an aud o system, 6disc & cassette Must ser- 102Krm asking 8 5 0 0 # 7 0 8 - 1102 9-16-5B 1984 V W Rabbit convertible Runs good 5-speed. G ra y w ith goo d tan tec $ 2 5 0 0 O BO . 4 5 2 -3 3 9 5 9 17- 5B 1 9 8 8 H O N D A A c c o rd LX G re a t condition! Standard, m oving to M ich- gan $ 4 7 5 0 4 7 4 -5 3 1 6 . 9-17-5B CLASSIC BLACK Range Rover. Very d ea n, lo w m ileage, great investment. 45K new, asking 18.5K 512 -85 8- 5 4 3 2 . 9 -19 7B 30 - Trucks-Vans '9 0 B R O N C a X IT , 5 .0 , 30 2 , 4-W D, 5 5 k , Stereo, A larm system. Tinted w m dow s, Cruise control, Extended w arranty package included. Excel- >«.■; condition. Detailed recently f i ­ $ 1 1 ,0 0 0 nanced thro ugh UFCU O B O 3 3 8 0 3 6 6 , D P #505 -937 2. 9 11-106 1 0 0 - Vehicles Wanted WE BUY CARS A ll M a k e s a n d M o d e ls 750-AUTO FOR SALE '8 1 Suzuki G S550E Runs great. Needs a little minor detail. $ 6 0 0 C a ll 2 5 0 2 3 3 2 or pager 403- 155 2. 9-16-58 8-28-206 RIAL ESTATE SALES 160 - Duplexes- Aparhnents O N E BEDROO M, upstairs dup lex. O ne block from campus A vailable O ctober 1st $59 5 + b ills O ne year lease 4 5 9 109 5 9-18-5B TO PLACE A N AD IN THE SUPER LO N G H O R N W A N T ADS CALL 471 -52 44 TRANSPORTATION 8 0 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARAN CE Many Reduced to Cost!!! B U C K ’S B IK ES 9 2 8 - 2 8 1 0 10 DOT m atrix printers fo r sale Four Epson and six A pple $10 ea Hurry for best selection 4 6 9 -7 9 6 8 . 9-16-5N C . T W O N E W C a lo i mountain bikes, never ndden, alum inum fram es, $ 3 0 0 & $35 0. 2 0 9 -6 8 8 0 9-17-5B SOFA SLEEPER a n d cha.r, $ 1 2 5 E nd tables, $ 3 0 /p a ' Dinette w ith 4 chairs, $ 12 5 W o o d entertainment center, $ 15 0. 9 1 8 -3 7 0 2 . 9-17-5B PHOTOGRAPHY STUDENTS. G reat bargain darkroom equipment En­ larger timer etc $ !O O O B O 327 - 7 7 0 5 . 9-17-5N C O AK COFFEE table with 2 matching end tables $125 Coffee table, $40, 6-ft bookshelf $ 4 0 W ill deliver 836- 1828. 9-17 5B SECTIONAL SOFA includes recliners, chaise and double bed G ood condition $ 5 0 0 3 2 7 3 2 2 5 9 17-5B MERCHANDISE 2 0 0 - F u r n i t u r e - Household A u stin B icycle Salvage WAREHOUSE 1830 N. Mays Round Rock (Behind Buck's Bikes) Used Bikes and Parts Open to the Public B e d s , B e d s , B e d s The factory outlet for Simmons, Seoiy, Springair We cony closeouts, discontinued covers A factory 2nds From 50-70% off retail s*o'e pnc« All ■'e* complete with warranty Twin set, $ 6 9 Full set, $ 8 9 Queen set, $ 1 1 9 King set, $ 1 4 9 1741 West Anderson In. 454-3422 RANSPORTATION • SO SERVICi-RIPAIR Robert Eilers 80S Capitol Court Austin, Texas 78756 M ention or bring in this coupon and receive 2 0 % A ny Service (First tim e Customers) Close to UT Shuttle • M a jo r c re d it Cards A ccepted 4 5 2 - 3 7 3 8 3 6 0 - Furn. Apts. WALK TO UT from $ 3 5 9 Effic s, 1 -I s, 2-1 's Furn/Unf 104 E 32 nd (block Speedway) 2514 PecH 4103-5 Speedway (IF shuttle) 472-7044 or 342-1723 JERRICK APTS ^MAMAISON W om en's Residence 22 22 Pearl Semester Plans Available Enjoy life in an affordable, luxu­ rious mansion-style home in the Heart of W est Campus! * 3 blocks to UT * All Bills Paid ‘ Luxurious furnishings ‘ Free Cable/Parking *RA on duty ‘ Dining Hall ‘ Exercise equipment 'Housekeeping ‘ Controlled access ‘ Meal Rons at Towers Now Pre-leasing for Spring! Call 4 7 4 2 2 2 4 1 8 8 8 -4 7 4 2 2 2 4 Fax: 4 7 4 -7 8 8 7 9- 3-20B-D GREAT 1 BEDROOM APARTMENTS! 1 / 2 Block from Law School Furnished, Quiet, $ 4 5 0 /m o . Tower View Apartments 9 2 6 E . 2 6 t h St. # 2 0 8 3 2 0 - 0 4 8 2 . 9-20-20B-B 370 - Unf. Apts. SAmazing Back to School Specials $ PARK PLACE ON THE LAKE : 35 RIVERSIDE 1 s 2 s 3 s + Eft s Starting S425 •On. shuttle •Lake side views •Swimming pool •Laundry room C a ll 444-1458 L o n g h o r n W a n t A d s L o n g h o r n W a n t A d s LARGE BAR- 4 STOOLS Straight sec­ tion, curved section. G reat looking, BICYCLE, 18 SPEED, Cro-m0 frame, super c o n d itio n , w / helm e' $85 g re a t co nd ition Tan and w o od C all Len 8 9 1 -0 3 3 0 . 9-20-5N C $ 2 0 0 O B O Must sell. 3 3 5 -5 3 8 9 . 9- 17-5B FOR SALE Large, adjustable hydraul­ ic Italian drafting tables. G reat condi­ tion Must see to a p p re cia te $ 8 8 0 /e a O BO . O rig . price $ 2 8 0 0 . C all 4 7 6 -4 3 2 1 . 9-17-5N C SINGLE GUY stuck with mom s floral, but e legant couches 2 couches $ 1 5 0 or obo. Ryan 3 2 6 -9 5 3 3 . 9- 18-5B SEVERAL SETS o f twirvsize beds. Ex­ cellent condition. Box, mattress & frame $ 1 0 0 $ 120 per set. Free d e livery within Austin Call 343 -0 2 3 3 , 3 2 2 -0 3 4 4 Robert or Jane 9-18-5B COMPLETE, N E W dark room setup $ 2 0 0 Leave message 2 5 8 3 6 4 2 9- 18-5B GREAT BOOKS of W estern w o rld ALPINE CD Shuttle controller, AL­ PINE alarm , PHOENIX GOLD amp, aii w irin g , sounds perfect, o steal at $ 82 5. 7 1 9 -1 1 0 0 9 - 2 0 5B-A 4 8 6 DX2 overdrive, faster than penti- um, internet ready, m icrosoft office super fast modem, $ 9 4 5 . 719-1 100 9-20-5 B-A 8 1 /2 ' TRADITIONAL couch $ 5 0 0 . Pair matching chairs $ 2 0 0 /s e t. End tables, coffee table , m arble tops, $ 3 5 0 /s e t. 4 4 0 -0 9 0 0 after 5pm weekends Cash only. 9-20-5N C 3 4 5 - Misc. LOOK ALIKE Brand-name watches by Beverly Hills W atch Com pany. For color brochure 1-800-484-2873 ext code 2 2 7 4 8-28-20B APPLIANCES, BAR stools, choirs, dressers, AC 's, heaters, much more. 54 volumes, custom book case 10 I Buy Anything. O a k Hill. 892- volume great ideas $ 1 2 5 Leave 7 9 9 5 . 9-5-20B message 2 5 8 -3 6 4 2 . 9-18-5B QUEEN-SIZE WATERBED Full motion $ 8 0 mattress, fram e ond heater. 32 8 -4 6 0 7 . 9-18-5B GRE VERBAL software for w indow s $ 2 4 .9 5 . V S /M C /C O D h ttp ://n e t- m o d e .co m /cu rve 1 (888)LR N -A ide ¡576-2433) toll-free. 9-6-8p DO RM REFRIGERATOR W h irlp o o l, white, clean. $ 7 5 O B O 3 2 8 -8 2 6 2 . 9-18-5B CABLE DESCRAMBLER kit $14 95 View all premium and pay-per-view channels 1-800-752-1389. 9-1 a 10B 5 8 6 /1 3 3 , 8M E G RAM, 8 5 0 meg hard-drive, M in i tow er, W in d o w s, $ 5 3 9 . 8 3 2 -1 4 1 7 9-18-5B V C R $ 12 5. R s s l to R e s! ta p s re ­ c o rd e r $ 2 5 0 , s te re o re c e iv e r $ 1 0 0 . c a s s e tte d e c k $ 7 5 , t u r n ­ ta b le $7 5 . v a c u u m c le a n e r $25 . 339-3146 9-18-5NC W O O D COMPUTFP Stund/Desk for sofa, Excellent condition, $ not Jb tait tnjoyintj ii-ti tailaij? ' J U c R i 443-6363 S Q U A R E mWPRELEASfNC RRMSHEllT'NETRMSfffiD 5 B L K S FTtOM CAMPUS WC SHUTTLE STOP EFFICIENCIES DELLXEM 2-1 ECONOMY STY11 « j -S I E MANAGEMENT ALL BILLS PAID SM112 San Gabriel Sfratt Austin, Texas 78705 (512)474-7732 HYDE PARK Nice, quiet efficiency in great location. Private laundary room, large pa tio/balcony Small quiet complex 4 3 1 2 Speedway NICE EFFICIENCY apartment. Two blocks from UT. $ 3 7 5 +E. 451 - 4 5 2 1 . 9-18-5B Spacious & Convenient Eff $ 3 9 0 1-1 $4 40 1-1 $ 4 9 0 2-1 $ 5 90 Sorry, no preleasing On Bus Route # 1. Straight to Co-op. W a lk to Grocery. N orw ood Apts 56 0 6 N. Lamar Blvd. 4 5 1 -1 91 7 W ALK TO Class! 1-bedroom, Hyde 9-18-206-0 ings Available. 9-19-1 OB LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION! N ew ly remodeled Apartment homes near campus at terrific rates for immediate occupancy Call Sea Breeze at 47 8-5 3 5 3 . 9-19-2060 1 BEDROOM apartm ents in small quiet com m unity. Free cable, h o t/c o ld water. N o pets. 8 35 -56 61. 9-19-20B RENTAL 3 7 0 - U nf. Apts. $ 1 0 0 OFF last m o n th o f lease O n a 9+ m o n th lease T h e A rra n g e m e n t Lg I - 1,2-2, lofts & townhomes BR S h u ttle a t F ro n t D o o r 2 1 2 4 B u r t o n D r . 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 K T a T T T a T T S T T T T M : ALL BILLS PAID h ► Small Efficiencies )-« i C j p lu s r« 1&2 BR's J • G re at W est Com putjri • N e ig hb o rh o od £j < •I Extra Large Units 6 Blks from Campus 2 Blks from Shuttle Ho Electric Deposit H H - , ¡¿ A s h fo rd A frartm e n tsE ; ( ' H a n n i n g E f f i c i e n c i e s 2 A v a i l a b l e t ' t i i m n c y S w e e p I T S h u t t l e I m m e d ia te .M ove-in W a t e r . t«av A t a b l e P a i d M A R Q U I S MANAGEMENT CO 4 7 2 *3 8 1 6 3 60 - Furn. Apts. ¡ L J f f iL - i 12-SPEED FUJI R oyale ro a d bike 4 8 6 D X /3 3 COMPLETE system w.th Helmet, seat-pack, tools, 2 w ater bot­ tles. cable, lock G ood condition $1 2 5 441 1130. 9-16GB color V G A mouse, keyboard. $ 3 7 5 4 4 8 -2 5 3 6 9-19 5B-B m onitor, EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EM PLOYM ENT EM PLOYM ENT Page 18 Friday, September 20,1996 T h e D a il y T e x a n RENTAL RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS 4 2 5 - R o o m s 9 0 9 WEST 22n d. Private, secure, 560 - Public Notice FREE FINANCIAL AID! O ver $6 Bil­ quiet, spacious. A /C , high ceilings, lion in pub lic and private sector h a rd w o o d , y a rd . Share kitchens, grants & scholarships is now availa­ 9- ble All students are eligible regard­ less of grades, income, or parent's in­ come Let us help C all Student Fi­ nancial Services ext.F5 8675. 9-17-15P 1-800-263-6495 SHOAL CLIFF Ct. - 1 /b e d Q u ie t cam pus lo ca tio n . A v a ila b le now ! $ 6 0 0 Campus Condos 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 . 9-16-5B-A ** STONELEIGH C o n d o s ** W e s t C a m p u s S u m m e r H o using ! 2 - 2 ’s (8 5 0 sq ft) s ta r tin g at $ 8 9 9 a n d 1-1 s s ta r tin g s t $ 6 9 9 A v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly 2-2 a v a ila b le A u g u s t Wes W alters Realty 3 4 5 - 2 0 6 0 P a t 4 5 2 -3 3 2 4 , P a g e r 8 6 7 -2 4 8 9 9-16-20B-C 5B -C l-l $450 1-1 w/loft, $495 University Realty 474-9400 baths W a lk to UT $ 2 7 5 $ 3 6 5 1 1-20B-D AFFORDABLE PRICE Bath/K itchen acce'ss. Free cable, O n Shuttle Nice area near l-3 5 /O lto rf. ABP 4 4 8 1410. $ 2 5 0 /m o , W O M E N furnished STUDENTS- rooms private bath share kitchen in historic mansion 4 blocks UT 476- 5 8 4 5 9-20-3B-D 435 - Co-ops C O O P ROOMS a v a ila b le $ 37 5 A B P in cl H o u se P hone 1910 Rio G ra n d e , 3 B lo cks from C a m pu s 3 2 2 -9 3 4 7 , D P 6 2 5 -3 8 8 8 9 -1 6 - BLOCK UT. Private bedroom, share bills, bath, kitchen, suppers cooking, chores $ 2 9 5 ♦ $ 1 0 0 for bills, food. Q uiet, phone, friendly, non­ smoking, petless, 4 7 4 -2 6 1 8 9-16- 20B-D 4 4 0.- Roommates FEMALE ROOMM ATE needed to share large 1BR/1 BA off E. O ltorf and Parker land w / part time student with a full time |ob. $ 195 + 1 / 2 elec­ tricity Please call Judith at W o rk 4 5 2 -9 2 6 2 ext 2 8 5 M W FSat ROOMM ATE NEEDED 2-bed. 1.5 bath q u a d p le x. Shoal C r e e k / 183 $ 3 2 5 /m o + h a lf o f bills area 4 5 0 -1 7 1 8 9-18-5B LARGE 1-BEDROOM West Campus 2513 Seton. W/D, New carpet $650. Call Bill at PMT 47 6 -2 6 7 3 ext. 104 4 2 0 - U ni. Houses AVENUE G ! N ice , m odern 2-bed­ room ! $ 7 5 0 N o pets. Front Page Properties 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 8-28-20B-C AVAILABLE N O W 2 to 3 bedrooms, $ 6 7 5 -$ 12 0 0 For 24-hr info, call 477-UVE, fax 4 5 2 -5 9 7 9 9-3-20B-D SPECIALS GALORE ... C all Us First! Houses, Duplexes, Apartments, Con- 9-20-5 B-A BEAUTIFUL!!! 2-2 apartment to share in scenic Far W est with female On shuttle route. H urry!!! Available now C a li Sheila 3 4 6 -4 0 6 6 9-18-3B $ 3 2 0 + small bills! Bnan 4 7 2 -5 8 6 0 9-19-5P W A N T TO Practice Spanish? 1-1 $ 3 0 5 /m o .+ 1 /2 u tilitie s W est Cam Female, non-smoker, studious pus but Fun! 4 7 4 -4 3 6 9 , 9-19-4P dos-Rent, Buy or Sell. All Sizes, All 2-2 W /M A L E G ra d Students. $2 10 Prices (From $50 0 ). H abitat Hunters, +utilities 2-blocks UT, Pool, 2-balco­ habitat@ bga.com , h ttp ://w w w .a u s - nies, A /C . ASAP. Niklas 3 7 1 -1 3 8 0 tinre.com /habitat.htrn, 4 8 2 -8 6 5 1 . 9- 5-12B Leave message 9-19-3 P ED U C ATIO N AL 580 - Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSONS Teaching and playm g in Austin for 14 yrs Andy Buhngton 4 5 2 6181 9-10-20B 590 - Tutoring l- O N - l M AC IN TO S H tutoring. Hands-on. your M ac or m ne $20- $ 2 5 /h r C all Lorraine at 8 3 6 -6 1 4 0 9-19-5B SERVICES 7 5 0 - Typing FLYING FINGERS Typing Service- All w ord processing needs, some graph­ ics Reasonable Free delivery 458- 9 0 6 9 9 17-5B 7 6 0 - Misc. Services PENIS ENLARGEMENT professional vacuum pumps or surgi­ cal enlargements. G am 1-3 inches. Permanent and safe Enhance erection. For free brochures call Dr. Joel Kaplan 31 2-409-9995. For latest enlargem ent info; 1 -900-976-PUMP, $ 2 .9 5 /m in . COLLEGE GRANTS are available to anyone You just have to know where to look. Financial Resource ■ i ' J M ' i H » 7 9 0 - Part tim e EASY PHONE W ork. P/T. Surveys not sales. W eekends, some nights. (5 1 2 )4 7 2 -5 5 6 5 9-3- C all Dave 24B PARALEGAL RUNNER. F u ll/ Part- time w ill train Your reliable, eco­ nom ical car Also need typist book­ keeper N ear U.T , Nonsmoking $6- 2-1 WEST cam pus O w n room, Consultants. 2 5 1 -6 3 0 0 . 9-19-5B 790 - Part tim e FUN JOB: ADVERTISING/ JOURNALISM MAJORS N eed strong w riting skills, Pogemak- 790 - Part tim e COUNTER/SALES HELP needed Ap­ ply at Balfour counter in Bevo's at D o bie M a ll on Tues. & Thurs,, 11 30am-1 pm 9-19-5B er (PC) Develop ads, market via NORTHWEST AUSTIN Church seeks web Some clerical Fax resume 4 9 1 -6 6 1 8 caring nursery workers for Sunday morning services Caregiver must en­ Athletic Products Com pany joy working with small children Call Full time and Part time Melissa at 3 3 5 -5 9 6 1 . 9-19-5B-D 9 16-106 PART-TIME COUNTERPERSON NEEDED AFTER NO O N S A N D SOME SATURDAYS W ESTBANK DRYCLEANING 5B 3 2 9 -9 9 9 9 9-16- GREETING CARD Com pany needs a service m erchandise' Reliable frans portation needed G ood communica­ tion skills, dependable, punctuality very im portant 4 7 4 -8 7 9 5 9-16-5B LIFEGUARD NEEDED at C o urtyard Tennis & Swim C lub N e a r 3 6 0 bridge. C all N ancy 3 4 5 -4 7 0 0 after­ noons, 8 7 3 -9 0 4 8 weekends & morn­ ings. 9-16-5B ADVANCE TICKET SALES Immediate Openings $7/H R guaranteed + bonuses & benefits. Evenings. 3 7 1 -1 2 0 0 PART-TIME P A C K A G IN G assistant 20 + h rs /w k , flexible schedule, 8am- Inc. 5pm M-F. A p p ly at A m bion, 2 1 3 0 W o o d w a rd St, Suite 200 , Aus­ tin. EOE. 9-19-3B P/T LO N G term assignments ava ila ­ ble for clerical support. M-F 7:30am - 12:3 0 p m . Some office experience preffered Must be able to set up spreadsheets O ffic e Specialist (5 1 2 )4 5 1 -1 6 6 6 9-19-5B-A M a jo r hom e fu rn is h in g re ta ile r is LACKS lo o k in g fo r: Hours: M-Thurs. 4pm-8pm Sat, 9am-1 pm S e lf-m o tiv a te d , in d e p e n d e n t, in ­ d iv id u a ls are n e e d e d to w o rk in a fa s t-p a c e d e n v iro n m e n t. C o m ­ m u n ica tio n s k ills re q u ire d B ilin ­ 9-16-5B g u a l a plus G o o d b e n e fits p a c k ­ PAY OFF those student loans!!! Friendly and energetic voices needed for home improvement co G reat age A p p ly b e tw e e n 1 0 a m -5 p m , M -F Lacks S to re s, Inc work environment N o selling. Eve­ 2 0 2 0 W. A n d e rs o n Ln #B nings and Sat mornings $ 7 /h r +bo- A u s tin , T X 7 8 7 5 7 9-20-1 B-D nuses 8 3 3 -7 4 9 8 . 9-16-5B-A < 1 5 4 -2 7 5 0 / 1 - 8 0 0 - 5 8 0 - 6 7 6 7 SMALL C O M M E RC IAL real estate com pany seeking responsible junior or senior for deliveries light office work, M-F 9-12. Must have reliable transportation & insurance A p p e a r­ ance, punctuality, attitude important. Call 4 5 2 -2 5 5 3 . 9-16-5B-C TUTOR NEEDED for girls, ages 9-17, in a residential treatment center. Em­ phasis on M ath ¿«English. Special ED experience or degree perferred. 18h rs/w k. $ 7 .8 7 /h r A p ply Settle­ ment Home, 160 0 Payton G in Road, 8 3 6 -2 1 5 0 9-17-4B ____ X - CHILDCARE POSITION at dow ntow n church $ 5 /h r Leave name and Part Time Clerk N e w M exico 8 7 5 0 2 , 800 - Gonorat 8 0 0 "G en eral • i M i p w a n r a a $ 1 7 5 0 WEEKLY possible m ailing our circulars. 120 7. 9-1 2-20P For info, call 30 1 -3 0 6 - BUSINESS B O O M IN G ! C h ild care Employment Service Temporary and perm onent placem ent teachers, aides afternoons. M orn ings, full-day, $5 5 0 / h r . + N o fees. Jeri 3 2 8 -2 4 7 7 9-16-5B PLAN AHEAD SUMMER '9 7 ! Summer cam p counselors needed for coed residential cam p located in the beautiful Sangre de Cristo Mountains just 37 miles east of Santa Fe Teach one of the follow ing Art, Dance, Dram a, M usic, Sw im m ing, Soccer, Tennis, Flyfishing, N a ture, Ropes C hallenge Course, Archery, Fencing, Riflery, Kitchen, M ain te n a n ce and more! Salary plus room and board plus travel allow ance If interested contact Scott or Tamara at 1-800- 7 2 2 -2 8 4 3 or write to Brush Ranch Camps, P O Box 5 7 5 9 Santo Fe, 9 I 6 - 5 B SITTER NEEDED after school for 13- yr-old. S W Austin Must have reliable transportation M o n & W e d , 4-7pm $5 2 5 /h r C all Peggy 2 8 8 -0 3 1 5 9- 16-5B APPLICATION FOR ~ NIGHT AUDIT POSITION Responsible for guest check-ins, check-outs. C arrying out our 100% guest satisfaction pro­ gram. Responsible for night ac­ counting wrap-ups. Great pay, 1 1 pm-7am, great for students. Can pick up application today, ask for Terry. Start work experi­ ence today at the Hampton Inn Hampton Inn 76191-35 Austin, TX 78752 9-16-5B-D • A C C O U N TIN G c le rk w ith m in i­ m um 12 c o lle g e h o u rs in a c o u n t- in g . P a rt-tim e 20 h rs /w k M -F. te r to O u tre a c h H e a lth S e rv ic e s 111 4 L o s t C re e k B lv d S te 3 5 0 A u s tin TX 7 8 7 4 6 : Fax: (5 1 2 ) 3 2 8 -0 3 1 0 A ttn : P e rs o n n e l EO E 9 - 1 6 - 5 B N A T IO N A l PARKS HIRING - Pos. tions ore now available at N a tional Parks, Forests & W ild life Preserves Excellent benefits + bonuses! C all: 1- 20 6 -9 7 1 -3 6 2 0 ext N 5 8 6 7 7 . 9-17- L5P INTE RNA TIO N AL EMPLOYMENT - Earn up to $ 2 5 -$ 4 5 /h o u r teaching conve rsatio nal English basic Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea in N o teaching background or Asian lan­ guages required for info call (206) 971 -3 5 7 0 ext.J58 676 9-13-15P ALASKA EMPLOYMENT - Students N e eded1 Fishing Industry Earn up to $ 3 ,0 0 0 -$ 6 ,0 0 0 + per month Transportation! Room and Board! M ale or Female N o experience nec­ (2 0 6 ) 9 7 1 -3 5 1 0 essary. ext A 5 8 6 7 6 . 9-17 T 5P C a ll G AM ES UNIQUE Fun atmosphere, for g ro w in g com pany. O pe n in g s sales associate, $ 5 /h r . Assistant M anager, $ 2 2 5 /w k + Flexible hrs,* benefits 2 4 9 8 9 9 8 . 9-19-5B CRUIS SHIPS N O W HIRING - Earn up to $ 2 ,0 0 0 + / month w orking on Cruise Ships or Land-Tour companies. W o rld travel (H aw aii, M exico, the C aribbean, etc.). Seasonal and full­ time em ployment available N o ex­ perience necessary For more infor­ m ation ca ll 1 -2 0 6 -9 7 1 -3 5 5 0 ext, C 5 8 6 7 9 . 9-19-15P THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS Com oany If you are not just looking for a job but w ant a career, The Sherwin- W illiam s Paint Com pany is looking for you I W e have several part-time positions throughout the Austin Area with an opportunity for advancement. W E OFFER ‘ Competitive Salary *(6) Paid Holidays ‘ QUARTERLY BONUS ‘ Flexible Schedule (15 to 3 0 hrs/w k) * And M ore CURRENT O PENINGS INCLUDE Two PT Inside Soles Positions C all G re g /G le n @ 462 -19 91 or ap­ ply in person® 4 0 8 W W illia m Cannon O ne PT Sales Position Call J a y /M ik e @ 4 5 4 -5 8 2 9 or ap p ly in person @ 7 5 2 4 Burnet Rd Bring your dependable, w illin g to learn, hardw orking, customer service attitude to The Sherw in-W illiam s C om pany All applicants subject to background check HIRING CHILD care teaching assts part-time afternoons. Tuition scholar­ ships for child developm ent classes majors. Hyde Park Baptist 465- 8 3 8 3 EOE 9-19-5B A SALESMAN FOR t-shirt compjany to sell to student organizations Teed Shirts 4 1 6 -8 3 3 3 9-20-20-B Delivery drivers. Cashiers, w aitstaff goo d p>ay C all 4 6 9 -9 4 6 4 or 2 2 2 2 R io G rande 9-20-10B W ANTED "FLY GUYS" Hard work, great |oay! Adver­ through flyers, tise concerts posters, etc M ostly campus area! The righ t people can make $ 1 0 /h o u r +. Call M ike at 4 9 9 -0 9 8 0 for trial run O A K HILL YM C A looking for PT cleri­ cal help. Light typing, filin g , etc Hourly w age ♦ membership 891 - 9 6 2 2 9-20-6B D O YO U children? N eed PT/FT help e n jo y w o rk in g w ith im m edi­ ate oprenings Flexible hours C h il­ dren's W o rld 3 4 6 -6 1 6 0 . 9-20-1 B-D M a il o r fa x re su m e w ith c o v e r le t­ HIRING IMMEDIATELY $ 10-1-2/hr ... v.. ¿Xtóus. t l O - O M w C M c a l SHORT WALK UT. Typist (will train on Mac); bookkepping trainees; cleri­ cal; runners. Nonsmoking. 474- 2 0 3 2 9-16-20B4> IMMEDIATE PART-TIME (afternoons) data-entry operator for busy S W Aus­ tin office 3 2 9 -8 1 4 1 , Theresa 9-17- 5B ADMINISTRATIVE- ASSISTANT/RECEPTIONIST O ne man office in dow ntow n high- rise Part time. MS W O R D & EXCEL, bookkeeping, filing, etc Must look & be sharp. Fax resume to (51 2)469-91 88. $ 7 .5 0 per hour. 9 17 5B CLERK HIV/AID S and Substance Abuse Training Program Full time position - Primary responsi­ bilities include technically producing new training manuals and updating existing curficula; m anaging inform a­ tion relating to all trainings; provid­ ing technical coverage and photo­ copying. Must be able to take on new and varied responsibilities as well as complete repetitive tasks EM PLOYM ENT v __ ___ S S O - lt o t a H HOME-BASED P/T networking o pjxjr- tunity, perfect for students N o t multi level Prepaid, long distance phone cards. Earn $50 0-$ 1 0 0 0 / wk W h y w a it to graduate? Training provided Recorded message 24hrs 4 7 7 4 9-16-10B-D 4 3 3 - PART-TIME DELIVERY Driver Must be Hard worker with neat appearance Perfect driving record required A p­ p ro xim a te ly 2 4 h rs /w k . $ 5 .5 0 / h r A p ply in-person only. M-F, N W Hills Pharmocy & Florist 3 9 1 0 Far W est Blvd. 9-18-5B-D NEED M O N E Y , like clothes? Har old's O utlet Born seeks dependable P/T snles associate for lo rie s depart ment fle x ib le hours, discounts Must work at least 20hrs, including week ends 7 9 4 -9 0 3 6 9-19 2B-C 880 " Professional THE AVANTUS G roup Inc a group of financial consultants north of the Arboretum , is looking for motivated upperclassm en to intern for 8-12 hrs /w k Hours are flexible. C areer possibilities for those interested Reli­ ability and excellent phone skills o must. For in form ation contact M r Scott 9 1 8 -9 6 9 7 Fax 9 1 8 -9 6 4 7 8 27-20B Q ualifications: G raduation from high school or GED equivalent Two ATTENTION GRAD STUDENTS SCORERS NEEDED to evaluate wr>' years professional experience in the ten responses. 3 0 0 tem porary pos field of adm inistrative support is pre­ ferred. Should be detail oriented, have excellent writing, com munica­ tion and organizational skills, and M acintosh experience. Position re­ tions a va ila b le , app ro xim a te ly 3-4 weeks, beginning early Novem be' W e provide framing Two shifts are a v a ila b le . 4 00p m , M-F Day shift 8 15am shift Evening quires a flexible schedule, including 5 :00pm -1 0 :1 5pm, M-F Hours ore occasional w ork on weekends and evenings Salary range I 3,650- 1 4 ,5 0 0 + benefits Please fax or mail resume by 9-20-96 at 5 :00pm to 9-19-5 B-D W orkers Assistance Program Attention Eugene Alvarez 3 4 1 0 Far W est Blvd, # 2 5 0 Austin, Texas 7 87 31 F a x# (5 12)343 8 5 5 8 9 1 7 4 B rated 6091 PART-TIME O P P O R T U N IT Y C om puter softw are co m p a n y in N o rth C e ntral Austin needs HELPI Students welcom e! Requires light re­ ception experience and exceptional customer service skills! Long-term for the right person! Hours ore 8-5 Tues­ day and Thursday only. C all Evelyn or M a ria at 3 4 3 -7 7 7 7 for more infor­ mation I 9-20-3B CLAiMS ENTRY MEDICAL INVIOCING S te a d y w o r k / e x c e lle n t in c o m e , fle x ib le s c h e d u le S tu d e n ts w e l­ c o m e . S o m e D O S e x p e r ie n c e h e lp fu l, m o d e m 3 3 1 - 3 9 0 0 o r 8 0 0 - 3 5 9 - 9 2 2 1 9-20-2 B 9-20-5B 8 2 0 - Accounting' Bookkeeping not flex ble Bachelor s degree re language arts q u ired, prefer English education or related f ?ds . Durmg interview, dem onstration of w n 'm g ability required $7 0 0 per hour C a ll Measurement Incorpo^ Pay rate for a p p lic a tio n (5 1 2 )8 3 5 9-4-206C STOCKBROKER TRAINEES w anted First Financial Invest Recent grads ment Securities Diane 3 2 8 7 0 7 / 9 9-10B COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE appraisal firm special,zm g in litiga tion valuation seeks m otivotad in d i­ vidual for appraisal researcher Du ties include deed research, dota con­ firmation & e x fv b tt/re p a rt prepara tion. Must have good telephone com munication skills and reliable transportation Knowledge of W o rd Perfect for W m dow s, Reo Comp, 4 Lotus helpful. Full t me pre(erred w il consider part-time on job-share basis Fax resume 3 3 8 -0 4 7 3 9-9-306 MARKETING/SALES TEAM MEMBER Top candidates w ill be self motivated organized possess g ood w ritte n /v e rb a l com munication sk 'ls, and w ill d o the work o f tw o people You w ill handle current accounts, BALCONES COUNTRY C lub has a open new accounts develop market PT accounting position open. Flexi­ ble hou rs/good benefits A p ply in person fox resume 2 5 8 -0 8 0 0 9-17-5B 8 6 0 0 Balcones C lub Dr. or ing strategies, and travel fo trodes- hows and meetings with key buyers Pos''o n deal for g ainin g valuable experience in the w orkplace at a small office with a challenging and SHORT W ALK UT G am experience enthusiastic otmosphere Prer ous W AN TED 8 7 students Lose 8-29 lbs N e w metabolism breakthrough Doc­ with M ac bookkeeping system Also hiring typists, clerical runners N o n­ tor recommended Guaranteed $30, smoking 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 9-17-20B-D sales or ad agency exp. helpful Comm + com petitive salary Send re­ sume with cover letter explain ing why CAREGIVER For sweet, 71 -year-old lady with memory loss Sunday, 7am -10pm . Prepare meals, g o to church. * W estlake Hills home. Dependable, fre e g .h 1 -800-435-7591 9-20-10B 8 1 0 - O f f k e - C l e r i c a l T rain in g business. Flexible hours, PARALEGAL RUNNER Full/ Part- tim e will train. Your reliable eco­ w ork at home possible M ac Experi ence required 263 8 8 0 8 9-20-5B BOOKKEEPER NEEDED Personal you're best for the jo b to Human Resources 5 2 1 4 Burleson Rd #1 1 4 Aust n, TX 7 8 7 4 4 or fox to 9 1 2 -1 6 6 4 9 - 1 9 - 5 B FIELD REPS needed $ 6 /h r guar, plus bonuses M-Th, 4-8pm, transpor­ tation from campus avail N o sales involved. Call C raig 4 5 3 -8 7 8 2 9-19- 20B-C WILL PAY you to lose weight. Doctor recommended and guaranteed 916- 3301 9-20-20B HICKORY HO NEY Hams hiring stu- dents for delivery. Must have car. 10 30-2pm 1204-B W est 38th. 459 - 4 2 6 7 9-20-3B COURIER NEEDED. Flexible hours and g re a t pay N e e d your ow n transportation C a ll 8 3 3 -7 7 1 1 . 9- 20-5B-A ~MEALS O N WHEELS AND MORE needs a part-time driver, M-F. Must be dependable, flexible and have a good driving record. Heavy lifting and good math skills required Salary + benefits. A p ply at 2 2 2 2 Rosewood Ave. 9-20-3 B-D PAT LUCEY'S Tutonng Service is hir­ ing tutors in math, physics, chemistry, eng ineering, etc. Serious in quiries only A pply in person. 5 0 4 W 24th St 4 7 7 7 0 0 3 . 9-20-5B COLLEGE STUDENTS Creative W o rld Learning Center is looking for afternoon teachers to work with preschool children. Must be flexible and w illing to work hard. Four Convenient Locations 8 3 7 -8 8 4 0 ex t. 3 5 0 (voice mail) 9-20-3B 8 0 0 - G e n e ra l Help W anted W ORTH THE d r ve N icely furn shed 3 / 2 5, southwest, W D , pooltable, la rge deck, no pets, $ 3 0 0 / n 1 / 3 util­ ities 2 9 2 -6 1 0 7 9-20-2B FEMALE R O O M M ATE needed Re sponsible, neat, quiet. Share spa­ cious 2-1 duplex near UT $2 7 5 + 1 /2 bills. 4 8 0 -8 7 0 1 . (NS). 9-2Q-5B 470 - Resorts LO N G H O R N FOOTBALL fans spend the weekend on beautiful Lake Travis waterfront, 2 story, multi-family dock and spa, dog kennel. Call 512-250- 0 3 0 7 9-19-2N C A N N O U N C EM EN TS 510 - Entertainment- Tickets 6 .2 5 + . 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 8-30-20B-D number at 342 -8 0 3 6 . 9-17-5B M A C NETW OR KING , Filemaker Pro- gram mm g Trainee, Upgrading, Back­ ing Up, Troubleshooting. N ear UT, Nonsmoking $6+ depending on ex- . penence 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 8-30-20B-D Longhorn Em ployment Services We need dependable people for various tem porary assignm ents including: clerical, data entry, technical and light industrial. Must be available 8-6 short or long term. S tart w orking im m edi­ ately. Pay$6.50-$10+ depending PART-TIME SECRETARY N eeded year round $8 0 0 /h r 20 hrs a week, 1 15pm-5 15pm. Duties include gen era l correspondence know ledge of W ordPerfect, m aintain­ ing program attendees datobase and program materials for meetings Two years experience and type 45w pm A p p ly at Texas M edical Assoc ation, Personnel Dept., Ste 5 1 3 401 W est 15th St., M-F between 9am -4pm . Equal O pportunity Employer 9-17-4 B-D STUDENTS- AFTERSCHOOL Staff needed. W est Lake area M onday- on assignment. Call today for an Fnday, 2-6pm 327 -7 5 7 5 9-17-4B appointm ent 326-HORN, Job Line 462-3422. T E X A S AT C o lo ra d o F o o tb a ll Internet: www longhom jobs com T e x a s a t C o lo ra d o F o o tb a ll 9-20-1OB-B T e x a s at C o lo ra d o F o o tb a ll. Tick- e tm a n ( 3 0 3 ) 4 3 0 - 1 1 1 1 8 - 2 9 - 2 0 6 9 10-20B-C YMCA COME TO WORK TO PLAY A fte rs c h o o l s ta ff 2 :0 0 p m to NEED 2 tickets Texas vs. Virginia 6 30pm WEEKDAYS 1.2 3,4,5 C all 2 5 7 -9 5 8 5 Leave message 9 16-5B days week o pp o rtu n itie s a va ila ­ ble Supervising and interacting with children Various sites in A u stin. $5 0 0 /h o u r begin nin g p/T INFANT staff needed 3pm-7pm. Please call Carrie 3 0 2 -3 2 8 2 . 9-17- 4B LIKE GARDENING? Student needed for 6-8 hrs/w k. Lawncare, landscap­ ing, m iscellaneous chores. N e a r chores 4 7 8 -2 8 5 5 . 9-17-5B W O R K FROM Home $50 0 -$ 150 0 M o. P/T Health Field- N o telemarket­ ing. Judy at 4 6 2 -2 3 2 7 . 9-17-7B N W AUSTIN group home for women w / developmental disabilities looking NOTRE DAME tickets Y$4CA mem bership benefits. Ap­ for energetic individuals to provide ply in person at 1809 E Sixth Street 9-6-20B PART-TIME RETAIL sales help needed 9am-6pm 4 5 1 -7 6 3 3 , weekends only 9-9-108 training to residents. G reat work en­ PARALEGAL RUNNER F u ll/ Part- vironment. C oil 9 1 8 -2 0 9 4 . V-17-4B BUSY FAMILY needs help. T á time will tram. Your reliable, eco­ nomical car A lso need ty p is t, 12h rs/w k $ 7 /h r Flexible schedule b o o k k e e p e r Near U T N o n ­ Responsibilities include d riving, er- sm oking. $ 6 -6 .2 5 + 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 9 1 8 -3 6 . PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST fo r rands, and kidcare. Must truly en|oy children Nonsmoking. C ar provided 8 -3 0 - 2 0 B -D p riv a c y deck. $ 9 0 0 /$ 5 0 0 John b u y / s e l l 4 7 2 - 5 7 9 7 "2 NOTRE Dame tickets for sale 30- Aveda salon. C entral location. yard line, west, under canopy 454 C all 3 71 -1818 9-10 9B 7 4 3 2 . 9-17-5B This is o fun job C all M ichelle, 327- GUMBY S PIZZA, South Austin, hir­ dent across country during October ing drivers. Shifts available im medi­ '9 6 Camera (Beta ST), Audio, G rip ately Call 4 4 4 -4 8 6 2 , ask for G ary and W rite r Low jsay, hard work, Ostrowsky. 8-30-20B but great w a y to see the country and $ 1 7 5 e a obo. C all Jason or Josh HIRING STUDENTS since '8 4 Start 7 5 7 7 . 9-19-2B UT- NOTRE Dame tickets. 4 option seats. First row upper deck $ 1 2 0 0 261 -69 41 or 4 7 8 -6 6 2 3 9-19-2B-C 3 TICKETS together for N otre Dame 3 5 6 -5 5 5 5 9 -2 0 -IP N D TICKETS!!!!11 iiim m m m im n 3 guest & 1 student 4 9 4 -8 2 4 4 or 419-4,994 9 -2 0 -IB 530 - Personals COLLEGE CO-ED G enerous, athletic, m a l*,w ill grant all your wish­ es! (I'm ser ous) You make the rules' W rite Buddy, P O Box 9 5 3 6 Suite 166, Austin, Tx 7 8 7 6 6 9-3-20B 560 - Public Notice NOTICE NEEDED INTERNET Tech support rep- resentatives for W ndows & M acin­ tosh Internet know ledge required Flexible hours 91 M O B $ 6 /h r 707-3111 TV STATION on UT campus needs messenger up to 1 5hrs/w k, 1 30-4 30p m ,M-F. Must ‘ EARN BIG $ * W o rk your ow n have valid TDL & good driving re­ schedule. Looking for dancers, w a it­ cord Also help traffic dept, w /v c r ous clerical duties Submit resume resses Joy of Austin 2 1 8 8 01 2 9-3- 20B im m ediately Full time & Part-time with excellent p oy Call now 4 5 4 -8 3 0 5 9- 1 1-15B w /co ve r letter to Traffic Dept,PO Box 71 58 Austin 7 8 7 1 3 . N o phone calls Closing 9 / 2 3 . EOE TYPIST/CLERICAL, SHORT walk UT Flexible hours varied, nonsmoking. W ill tram on M ac. C all 4 7 4 -2 2 1 6 . 9- 5-20B 9-18-48 AISD CHILDCARE WORKERS • NEEDED for after-school child core high school or GED required, experience preferred Part time weekdays A p ply ASAP AISD DESK CLERK needed. Econo Lodge (5 1 2 )4 5 8 620 1 Hw y 2 9 0 East 4 7 5 9 9-18-5B MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Teach mde- pendent liv r g skills to mentally chal lenged individual. Psych/S ociology ma|or encouraged Hours 4-7pm M F C o ll John 8 9 2 -1 0 8 4 between 1111 W 6th St. D-140 6 30-8: iO pm , M-Th. 9-18-5B-B V • 2 7B ARTHUR MURRAY DANCE STUDIO Looking for men and women to be­ come dance instructors N o experi­ ence necessary. W ill train, FT/PT available A p ply in person 2 7 0 0 W Anderson Ste 504 M-F 2-4pm and 7 9pm N o calls please HAZLE W O O D VETERANS CASH REFUNDS $ 6 /H R Reoi esto'e assistant needed1 Cen­ 20-30 h rs /w k (afternoons) Present and former Hazlew ood Students may be e ligible for substan tiol refunds. C all now to determine your e ligibility trally located office 1 Business attire requ red Must be computer literate C all John Dav-d or Kim (014 58-6244 9-13-6B R.H Loya, P C Attorneys & Counselors 1-800 2 7 6 -4 3 0 9 N o t certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization PART-TIME RUNNER Tues/Thurs mornings. G ood driving record, reli­ able ow n tran sportation to work C oll 3 1 4 -0 4 9 9 . 9-13-6B P/T .MARKETING people for Aust n Pub shmg Services In UT area Call R C 3 3 5 -2 2 1 1 , 4 6 7 -2 8 1 2 9-18-5B TELEPHONE SUPPORT Excellent P/T jobs supporting hard­ ware and software for ma|or PC manufacturer Must have previous tel­ ephone support experience and good know ledge of hardw are and software Hours !0am -2pm M -F Round Rock location Drug screen 8-23- IB PART-TIME RESEARCH assistant re­ and background check required FAST FUNDRAISER Ra-se $ 5 0 0 m 5 days- Greeks G roups, Clubs Mot voted Individuals Fast, easy no I quiring mop, computer, phone skills. Fax re­ 5-9pm $ 6 .5 0 /h r to start. sume to 3 2 0 -8 2 5 5 9-13-6B Tad Techn col Services 4 5 2 -9 3 0 0 9-18-3B H O M EW O R K HELPER for H.S fresh n a n c ia l o b lig a tio n . (8 0 0 ) 862 - PART TIME RECEPTIONIST PUBLIC RELATIONS Intern $ 7 p e r H o u r 2 0 h o u r s w e e k ly C re a tive S e lf-s ta rte r Send Resume to: P.O. Box 50493 A ustin, TX 78763 9-10-20B 1982, ext 33 9-11-20P A N N O U N C EM EN TS 5 3 0 * Travel - Transportation C o l l e g e S k i W e e k eyston e ¿4 A rap ahoe Basin Ski Three Resorts for the Price of One! C o n d o s Lifts Rentals Lessons Nappy Hours Parties Aiffaie Bus Night S k irn j * 1 7 9 pi us ux " - - Ú .& S k i 4 6 9 - 0 9 9 9 6 0 0 NX 2 8 th S u ite <•> 104 w w w . a c J » n c o m / - u b c R A T g H jmARg » n v 1'800’ SUNCHASE tm mm Me at tmp/Amvm n n Nm com ^■¡1 NOBODY DOfS SIM BRIARS BETTER* Small law office seeks sophomore or • |umor $6 5 0 /h r Hours flexible, 15- 2 0 /w k Nonsmoker M ust be consci­ entious and neo' Pleasant phone voice. Some computer and minor know ledge o f Spanish a plus Fax re­ sumes with employment references to 476 -29 91 9-13-6P DANCE & Gymnastics Instructors for children s classes Reliable transpon tation needed Part-time hours 323 - 6 0 1 3 9-16-6B-D ED U C ATIO N AL 6 1 0 - Misc. Instruction B R U C E L E E ’S J E E T K U N E D O KALI AN D GRAPPLING CALL ABOUT CLASSES after 4-00 - 892-4557 mobile ph# 923-2849 man 7 30pm M-Th, 2pm Sunday. 1- LINCOLN THEATER 6 is now accept­ 2hrs. W e stlake 2 6 4 1 . 9-18-5B $ 2 0 /d a y 327 - ing applications for m anagement & floorstaff positions A p p ly in person RUNNER NEEDED Tuesdays & Thurs- $ 5 /h r 2 3 /m ile , Car days needed 6 0 9 4 9-19-5B-A Contem po Travel 346 - SERVICES 7 5 0 - Typing 6 4 0 6 IH-35 N. AFTERSCHOOL TEACHING position. Flexible hrs, w ill work w / schedule Stepping Stone C hild Development Center 4 5 9 -0 2 5 8 9-11-10B EM P LO Y M EN T 790 - P art tim e Z I V L E Y The Com plete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES W ORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING 2 7 0 7 H E M P H I L L P A R K 2 7 ,h & G u a d a lu p e 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 I i I S tu d e n t's #1 Choice fo r E x tra C ash | * $ 2 0 I ■ C A SH T O D A Y I ED U C ATIO N AL - 6 1 0 MISC. INSTRUCTION $ $ $ E h r n E x t r a M o n e y S S S B a r t e n d i n g Job Placement Assistance 2 W e e k C o u r s e 833-0303 National Business School 825 E. Rundberg Ln.. Ste B-3 ON FIRST DONATION ONLY W COUPON/EXP 9/30/96 $20 EACH DONATION $1 65 PER MONTH Can D o n a te 2 x/w e ek S ch e d u le O w n Time • Extr a C l e a n . S t a t e - o f - . the Art F a c il it y • O n l y 1 5 M i n u t e s from U T C a m p u s B I O I V I E D A NEW High Terh P lasm a F acility Please Call for Appt 251-8855 HOURS 8AM 7 PM IH 35 4 Pflugérvtlle Eut We st side IH-35 b e h i n d F X X O N icniuie, non-smoker w /r e l able trans­ portation $ 8 /h r. 4 7 7 -6 8 6 6 . nom ical car Also need typist, bookkeeper Near U T , N on­ 9 17-iB sm oking $6-6 25+ 4 74 -2246 8 -30 -2 0 B -D VIDEO CREW NEEDED! For O ff Beat DOCUMENTARY follow ing ^rite -in candidate for presi M A C -N E T W O R K IN G Filemaker Pro- gram m ing Trainee. Upgrading, Back­ ing Up, Troubleshooting N e ar UT, Nonsm oking, $6+ depending on ex­ perience. 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 . 8-30-20B-D work on the creative project o f your TYPIST, SHORT w alk UT. W .ll train life (7 1 3 )6 9 9 -3 6 2 2 FAX (7 1 3 )9 5 7 0 7 6 9 on M ac. Flexible hours varied, non­ smoking C all 4 7 4 2 2 1 6 9-5-20B-D 9-18-38 GREAT JOB! Are you looking for a great |ob with good pay & still have time to study or play? Home Steam Laundry & Cllean ers is faking applicants for counter at­ tendants. A fte rno on hrs a vo 'la b le . Starting pay $ 6 5 0 / h r A p p ly at 2301 M anor Rd, just east o f UT cam­ pus, dow n 26th St. SHORT W ALK UT Runners, clerical, bookeepm g trainees, flexible hours var ed nonsmoking $6-$6 25 + 4 7 4 2 0 3 2 9-6-20B-D P/T, F/T, short-term, long-term, femp>- pierm interviewing for multiple office positions, telemarketing, banking, in­ surance, call Success Staffing at 451 - 8 3 6 7 to set up interview or fax re­ 9-16 SB sume to 4 5 1 -8 4 1 9 9-10-10B RUNNERS NEEDED for local docu RECEPTIONIST PART-TIME M W F 9 ment delivery service FT or PT. A p ­ ply at 5 0 3 W . 17th Suite 100 9-20 2B 12h rs/w k for dieticiory/psychothero- pist office Please call Melissa 502 0 7 3 4 9-11-8B 9 -1 1-4B-0 EMPLOYMENT • 790 PART TIME Ap*- M C I MCI is now hiring Part-Time English & Bilingual Spanish T e le m a rk e tin g Sales Professionals. MCI employees earn great money! They also receive outstanding benefits...paid training, health/dental/vision insurance, educatioanl assistance, free long distance calling, and much more! Apply in person today at our N o rth Austin center located at. 9001 N IH-35 (take the Rundberg exit). ^ ^ D t ^ a l L o u t J ^ b h n e ^ o r w n o r e j j n f o m i a t i o n j ^ MEN & WOMEN AG ES 18 to 65 Up To $1250.00 Compensation Are you a healthy, non-smoking man or woman between the ages of 18 and 65? If so, you may qualify to participate in a pharmaceutical research study and receive up to $1250,00. The dates and times of the study are listed beiow; you must be available to remain in our facility for the entire period to be eligible: Check-In: Saturday, September 28 Monday. September 30 Check-Out: In addition, brief out-patient visits will be required on the following dates: September 29-October 4 ,1 0,11.16,17,24,25 November 7,21,22, December 19,20 & January 16,17 To quality, you must pass our free physical exam and screening tests. Meals, accommodations, entertainment, and recreational activities provided free of charge. For more information, please call 4 6 2 - 0 4 9 2 9-16-5B DAILY TEXAN 8 4 0 " Sales C AN YOU SELL? N o w a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r 1 0 P /T a n d F/T p o s itio n s . In­ b o u n d te le p h o n e sales. N o c o ld c a llin g . If y o u a r e b r ig h t a n d h a v e a g o o d v o c a b u la r y , p le a s e c a ll 3 2 3 - 8 4 9 4 9-13-106 AUSTINUTS Expanding, fast paced re ta il/w h o le ­ sale gourmet nuts and candy bus> ness seeks individuals with excellent telephone, com puter (M ac), and sales skills Full and ¡sart-time positions Fax resume to (5 1 2 )3 2 3 -6 8 8 9 or a pp ly in person at 2 9 0 0 W est Anderson Lane (next to Stem Mart) N o phone colls, please SA LES W O M EN WHERE can you find a P/T jo b thot pays at least $ 1 5 0 0 /m that requires y o i *o keep your clothed on? Dan 8 9 2 -8 7 2 7 8 5 0 - Retoil PROMOTIONS ASSISTANT For s p e c ia lty r e ta il d e p a rtm e n t. D u tie s in c lu d e m e rc h a n t re la tio n s , lig h t m a in te n a n c e , & p h y s ic a l la b o r . Flex P /T h o u rs . G o o d p a y A p p ly in p e rs o n or se n d re su m e to H ig h la n d M a ll M a n a g e m e n t O ff ic e EMPLOYMENT 8 0 0 - G eneral Help W onted A T H L E T E S I am a soccer player looking for aggressive high energy team players dnven by change tor a new com pany expanding in Austin Aw esom e advancem ent potential C all M ike at 453-3833 or fax at 451-8746 PROGRAMMERS M ultim edia developer has fofi-Tinie and part-time opportune es for exfjerienced professionals with a Computer Science degree or equivalent Lingo and director exper ence required Exce e n 'p o . Please fox resume to (5 1 2 )7 1 9 -4 4 3 9 9-16-58 CHILDRENS' SHELTER & ~ ASSESSMENT CENTER Needs C hildcare workers O vernight full-time and part time W eekend and Relief $6-6 5 0 /h r Send resume to P O Box 684 2 1 3 Austin, TX 7 8 7 6 8 4 2 1 3 or fox to Attn Kns 3 2 2 946 1 9 19 106 CLASSIFIEDS CALL 471-5244 EMPLOYMENT 8 0 0 • G eneral Help Wanted NOW HIRING SECURITY OFFICERS Having a hard lime making cikIs m eet’ Need extra income without sacrificing vour ( i I ’A t«> get i t 1 If so, we ha\e the perfei t job fo* VUUÜ At /ifTKO we offer • Full &. Part Time Positions • • Evening &. Night Positions ■ • Studs W h ile \ou W ork • • L a r N ot R e q u ired • • School Holidass l>ft • • No Experience Necessary • • Uniform s Pros ided • C ALL 341-7210 NOW Z IM C O SEC U RITY C O NSl l U M s 1 mrnsr # H 0WI0 AUSTIN AMERICAN STATESMAN ARE YOU SALES ORIENTED? WANT TO MAKE MONEY? IF SO, WE HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU! salary, plu- E n try - le ve l position offering com m ission and excellent co m p any benefits, in cen tives and Ixinuses are also a va ila b le . A verag e e a rn in g range of $22,000 - $30,000 p er y e a r S u p e rv is o r needed to m ark et su bscription to local neighborhoods. W ill be in ch arg e of hirin g , tra in in g , m o tiva tin g an d m an ag in g a sales team a base E v e n in g hours, co m p any vehicle provided. Proof o f lia b ility in su ran ce and D .P.S. d rivin g record required w h en a p p ly in g or c a ll 445-3949 A u stin A m erican-Statesm an 305 S. C o n g ress Ave. E.O .E. P r r F n ip lo y n K -n t D r u g Test R e q u ir e d EMPLOYMENT • 840 SALES T E L E P R O F E S S IO N A L S Westel. Inc., an expanding telecommunications company and now a pari of a joint venture to Mexico, is seeking Teleprofessionals for our Austin office F/T and P/T, English and bilingual phone sales positions are available to dynamic, money-motivated professionals Candidates must be highly dependable, self confident and have excellent communication skills Qualified applicants should call 480-5567, or apply in person at PHARMACO::LSR ^y^yyyyy~ rrrrT rrr r r r r T r r r r r y r r r vrY'>> >inr r rrry > r r r r r * r r m m o t e l 611 South Congress Avenue Suite 130 Austin Texas 78704 MAGNIFICENT 3-2 + form al living room & dining room N a tionol architectural aw ard. Steam room, 2-car garage w / automatic doors 3 blocks from UT Beautiful Landscaping Drastically Reduced! $ 149 5 /m o n th KHP 4 7 6 -2 1 5 4 9-16-206-D TARRYTOWN HOUSE G ra d student needs roommate to Share great home JUST WEST OF CAMPUS, 24th & W indsor T W O SHUTTLE ROUTES, W /D , Phone, Spacious porches, free cable, m aid service, trees, many amenities in great area, pre-lease now as for December, all bills paid. $ 3 0 0 (shored) $ 4 5 0 or $ 5 5 0 (single) 4 7 8 -0 9 2 6 Six bedroom luxury home 2 8 1 8 Rio G rande By appointm ent only Security system, hardw oods, fire­ place, yard, deck, C A /C H , energy efficient, high ceilings, la rge rooms, W / D connections, carpet, etc W a lk to UT 4 8 2 - 8 6 8 0 9-20-20B-D AVAILABLE N O W 3-2-1 C e iling fans, C A /C H , fenced yard, pets OK, 26 6 -2 1 5 5 9-20-5B-D 425 - Rooms 38TH ST Very large, private en­ tra n ce /b a th Refrigerator, micro­ wave, no kitchen, no pets $ 3 8 5 /$ 2 5 0 Bills paid Q uiet indi­ viduals. 4 5 3 -5 4 1 7 . 9-4 20B-D M A M A IS O N M onth-to-Month Leases Perfecf for university guests * & professors!! Enjoy a luxurious mansion-style home in the H eart of W est Campus Beautiful, furnishings C all to reserve your room! 2 2 2 2 Pearl, 3 blocks to D rag! Perfect for Football & UT events! Call 4 7 4 -2 2 2 4 1-888-474-2224 or Fax 4 7 4 -7 8 8 7 FOUR BLOCKS UT. Furnished, p ri­ vate bath Share kitchen Quiet, non­ smoking, petfree C A /C H Singles from $ 4 3 5 , ABP doubles from $ 2 7 5 , ABP 4 7 4 -2 4 0 8 9-10-20B-D R EN TA L 400 - Condos - Townhomes S to n e le ig h C o n d o s W e s t C a m p u s 1-1 s from $700 700 sq. ft./approx. 2-2's from $899 850 sq. ft./approx. 452-3314 pgr 867-2489 R EN TA L 435 ■ Co-ops c o - o p s : not your average student housing -UNIQUE COMMUNITY ALL B IL L S PAID 2-5 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS $405-515/M0NTH SINGLE 4 DOUBLE ROOMS FOOD INCLUDED UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS 1MER-COOPE8ATI\T COUNCIL 510 W. 23rd • AUSTIN - 78705 PH: 476-1937 • FAX: 47M789 . R EN TA L 440 - Roommates U.T.’s ROOMMATE SOURCE Instant Service Student Discounts Member Bone Business Bureau "Texas Ex-owned since 1989" f71 1 Sor Antor.to to* * W IN D S O R R O O M M A T E S 495-9988 t t i f i n w m t w i Dole to focus on anti-drug slogan on campaign trail T h e D a i l y T e x a n Friday, S eptem ber 2 0 ,1 9 9 6 Page 19 Associated Press D EN VER — Bob D ole trum peted Nancy Reagan's support for his new anti­ drug slogan Thursday and urged the media to help focus more public attention on drug abuse as "o n e of the important news stories of our tim es." Dole returned to his anti-drug message in Las Vegas and later in Denver one day after taking a startling tumble from a campaign stage in California. Asked what he though I public reaction to the fall would be, the 73-year-old Dole said: "They ought to think, 'Boy, that guy's agile. H e's young. He goes after 'em. He's tough.'" Speaking to the Associated Press M an­ aging Editors Association, Dole joked, "If they're waiting for a replay, it's not going to happen." The Republican presidential nominee lamented statistics showing soaring drug use among teen-agers and renewed his criticism of President Clinton for failed leadership in the war on drugs. "T he actions of the president and the government he leads must convey the message that drugs and violent crime are morally repugnant in a great society," Dole said. A day after criticizing the entertain­ ment industry for glorifying drug use in music and movies, Dole tailored his mes­ sage to an audience of editors, urging them to dedicate more newspaper space to the issue. He also cited statistics from the Center for Media and Public Affairs showing that TV network news programs includ­ ed 101 stories about drugs last year, down from 518 in 1989 at the height of the "d ru g w ar." The number bottomed out in 1992, at 45, and has increased marginally each year since. Dole said heavy media coverage when crack cocaine first appeared in the 1980s was critical in raising public alarm about the powerful drug, and wa1' necessary again given the rising drug use among 12- to 17-yea/-olds recently reported by the federal government. "It is my view that soaring teen drug abuse and the resurgence of a drug cul­ ture is one of the important news stories of our tim es," Dole told the editors. "W ithout information there is no con­ cern. Without concern there is no resolve. Without resolve there is no ch an g e.... The drug w'ar won't be won through igno­ rance. In some important ways, all of us are depending on you." On Wednesday, Dole announced that he would make "Just Don't Do It" his anti-drug slogan and promised to make it as well known as the "Ju st Say N o" cam ­ paign launched by Nancy Reagan during her husband's presidency. In advance of Dole's Denver appear­ ance, his campaign released a letter from Mrs. Reagan in which she wrote: "I am so glad you unveiled a new and powerful message in the tradition of 'Just Say No' to reach a new generation of young peo­ ple — Just Don't Do It.' It will be a tremendous rallying cry." Age is considered such a potent issue in the presidential race that Dole and his aides worked overtime to show he was all right after Wednesday's tumble. Playing down the incident with humor, Dole told supporters at a Las Vegas rally that the mishap occurred when he tried out "that new Democratic dance, the M acarena." "I'm not going to try that any m ore," he said to cheers from the crowd in a hotel ballroom. his staff O vernight, summoned reporters to a midnight hotel-room meet­ ing with a doctor who had examined Dole and found that a small amount of blood in Dole's eye came from a minor scratch to the white lining. Aides said Dole also had a slightly bruised left ankle. Dole's fall, during a campaign stop in Chico, Calif., made for gripping pho­ tographs and television footage given prominent coverage on Thursday. Dole, whose right shoulder and arm are withered from a World War II injury, was only down for a moment. The GOP candidate has stressed his good health throughout the campaign in an attempt to neutralize concern about his age, so aides were eager to get beyond the images of Dole on the ground and underscore that the spill was not his fault. ASSOCIATED PRESS Teen-agers cheer as Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole arrives at the MGM Grand Hotel in Los Vegas. Dole pledged to be tough on drugs and crime. IBM gives benefits to staffs gay partners Associated Press NEW YORK — IBM on Thursday became the nation's largest company to extend health benefits to the part­ ners of its homosexual employees. Gay activists welcomed the deci­ sion and said they hoped it would encourage other companies to do the same. Because it is so large and diverse, IBM is regarded as a bell­ wether of American business prac­ tices. Its new policy covers dental, vision and general health benefits, starting on Jan. 1. "T h is is a magnificent step for­ ward in terms of corporate America recognizing the value of gay and les­ bian em ployees," said Elizabeth the Human Birch, president of Rights Cam paign, the nation's largest gay political organization. the same benefits to same-sex cou­ ples that it does to married couples. That is up from 250 a year ago, according to Common Ground, a Natick, Mass., research firm. IBM did not extend benefits to unm arried heterosexual couples. The company, like others, reasoned that such couples can obtain benefits by getting married, an option not open to gays. H igh-tech com panies generally have led in the extension of benefits to same-sex couples 1 otus Develop­ ment Corp., which IBM acquired last year, took the step in 1990 and was among the first to do so. IBM employs about 225,000 peo­ ple worldwide and 110,000 in the United States. It joins nearly 470 other large cor­ porations, governments and univer­ sities in the United States to provide In recent months, several other household names, including Walt Disney Co. and American Express Co., have also extended health bene­ fits to partners of gay employees. "H aving a company like IBM on board is going to shake a lot more of them out of the trees,” said Liz W in­ field, of Com m on Ground. co-founder Political and religious conserva­ tives have criticized such companies. Leaders of Southern Baptist church­ es hake asked the denomination's 16 million members to boycott Disney, in part because of its recent benefits extension to same-sex couples. "W h at we really focused on in our discussion was our commitment to nondiscrim ination," said Jill Kanin- Lovers, vice president of hum an resources for IBM 's U.S. divisions. Insurers to pay for 48-hour stay for newborns Associated Press W ASHINGTON — Moving to relieve some fears of expectant mothers, key House and Senate lawmakers agreed Thursday to require health insurers to pay for at least 48-hour hospital stays for mothers and theii newborns. Congress was expected to send the measure next week to President Clinton, who has made it an election-year cause, saying some babies sent home early had died. Negotiators also agreed on a provision reduc­ ing insurance discrimination against mental ail­ ments. Both provisions, which w'ould take effect Jan. 1, 1998, w ere added to unrelated legislation provid­ ing $84 billion in fiscal 1997 for veterans, space, environmental and housing programs. Also included was a third provision, effective Oct. 1, 1997, that would extend benefits to Viet­ nam War veterans exposed to Agent Orange whose children suffer from the birth defect spina bifida. The agreements came as Republicans rushed to finish needed spending legislation by the end of the month and avoid any chant es of a battle with the Clinton administration that would cause a new federal shutdown. The provision on mothers and their newborns was written in response to the large and growing number of health plans that refuse to pay for more than 24 hours in the hospital except in extreme circumstances It would require health plans to pay for no less than a 48-hour stay after a normal vaginal deliv­ ery and no less than 96 hours following a Cae­ sarean section. Clinton recommended the provision in his State of the Union address this year and pressed for it during a radio add rcss the day before M other's Day. "Saving the life and health ot mothers and n e w ­ borns is more im portant than saving a few dol­ lars," the president said. Rep. Gerald Solomon, R-N.Y., the m easure's sponsor, said he drafted it after learning of a con­ stituent who suffered three strokes a day after she and her newborn were discharged from the hos­ pital within 24 hours. "N o w this woman, this young woman, 19 years of age, is not only unable to lead a normal life, she is unable to take care of that poor child," he said. A rou n d C am pu s is a daily colum n listin g U niversity-related activities sponsored by aca­ dem ic departm ents, student services and stu ­ dent organizations registered with the C am ­ pus and C om m u nity In v o lv em en t O ffic e . A nnouncem ents must be subm itted on the proper form by noon tw o days before p u b lica­ tion. Form s are available at the D a ily Texan o ffice at 25th Street and W hitis Avenue. No changes w ill be made to Around Cam pus entries after 5 p.m. one bu siness day prior to publication. You may subm it A rou nd C am pu s entries by e-m ail at: aroundc® u txvm s.cc.utexas.edu. Please include the nam e of the sponsoring organization, location, time and date of event, date of announcem ent, a contact phone num ber and o th er relevant in fo rm atio n . Q u estion s regard in g A rou n d C a m p u s may also be e- m ailed to this address. O therw ise, please direct q u estions to the A round C am pu s editor at 471- 4591. The D a ily T exan reserves the right to edit su bm issions.__________________________________ MEETINGS UT Tukong M oosul martial arts club meets 6 p.m. Monday and Friday in Anna H iss Gym 39, 6 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday in Anna Hiss Gym courtyard and 5 p.m. Wednesday in Anna Hiss Gym 39. Beginners welcome For more inform a­ tion call James Espy at 454-6176. M alaysian Singap orean C hristian F ello w ­ ship meets 7:30 p.m. every Friday in the Episco­ pal Student Center at 209 W. 27th St. All are wel­ come. For more information call 453-5798. UT Floor Hockey C lub meets 5-8:30 p.m Fri day in L Theo Bellmont Hall 502; all equipment is provided. For more information call Mike at 482-0798 or Bry at 302-3587. Sánchez Building 468. All UT student^, faculty and staff are welcome, regardless of heritage. For more information call Dorothy at 472-2666. European Students Association meet*' .it 9 p.m. Friday at the Dog & Duck Pub for happy hour. UT Sailin g Club sails on Lakt l ra\ is even Saturday. Car pool meets at 10 a m at the north­ west corner of 26th Street and Speedway. Begin­ ners are welcome; all sailing instruction and equipment is provided. Call the hot line record­ ing at 258-5770 for more information. Chin Woo M artial Arts Club meets at 10:30 Saturday in L. Theo Bellmont Hall Martial Arts Room (546). For more information call Patty Sun at 495-5050. FILM/LECTURE DISCUSSION_________ Institute for G eophysics hosts Sizing up Chicxulub: Constraints on the M / e ot the M crater and why it is im portant," presented by Virgil L. Sharpton, staff scientist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston. Lecture is at 4 p.m. at The Atrium, 8701 North MoPac Express­ way, conference room 382. ~ _______ OPPORTU NITIES VOLUNTEER U T International O ffice Pals Program seeks American students to prov ide friend'-hi p and cultural exchange as conversation partners for international students For more information call a Pals coordinator at 471-1211, or e-m ail pals® moza r t. io. u texas.ed u. D ivision of Housing and Food Serv ice needs student tutors to help with a literacy and GED program for adults. Clames are held from 1-2:30 p.m. and from 2:30-4 p.m For more information call Steven Phillips at 471-5031. M uslim Students' Association meets Sunday at 7 p.m. in Texas Union Building Board of Direc­ tors' Room (4.110). For more information call Mairaj U. Syed at 479-1087 The SH ARE program seeks \ olunteers to help introduce prospective freshmen to the L 1 Austin campus beginning Sept. 13. For more inform a­ tion call the SH ARE office at 475-~441. UT Kendo Association meets at 12:30 Sunday in L. Theo Bellmont Hall 502. Beginners are w el­ come. For more information call Yuji Ikeda at 282-5558. T he Anim e C lub meets from 7-11:45 p.m. Fri day in Engineering Teaching Center II 2.136 for a free screening of subtitled Japanese animation and in Engineering Teaching Center II 2.114 for a library, management and M anga/art meeting For more information call Mark at 480-9943. The Native American Student O rganization in George 1 meets trom 11:30 a m -1 3 0 p.m The Texas Intensive English Piogram needs leaders tor conversation clubs with international students who are studying English For more information call Linda T harp at 477 4511 from 7:45-11:45 a in T1EP is located at 1103 West 24th Street. _______ SPECIAL EVENTS _ The Department of Astronomy host- a star \ low­ ing at the Painter Hall Teles», ope (b >p of Painter 1 kill, 24th St and University Ave ) Fridays 9 10-10 >0 p.m. for I T students and staff and Saturdays 8 30 10 30 p.m. for the* general public.Viewings occur only when weather permits. No reservations are neces­ sary’, and diere is no charge. The Center for Mexican American Studies pre­ sents a reading by Dagoberto Gilb from his books The Magic o f Blood and The L ist Known Whereabouts o f Micky Acuna from noon-1 p.m. in the Texas Union Building Chicano Culture Room (4.206). A reception and book signing will follow. For more information call 471-2136. OTHER The Measurement and Evaluation Center dead­ line for receiving requests for course*iinstructor sur­ veys is Sept. 27. Survey requests should be made through each department office. Call 471-8175 tor more information. M uslim Students’ Association meets 2 p.m. in Texas Union Building Lonestar Room (3.208) for late Friday (Jumu'a) prayers. For more information call Mairaj U. Syed at 479-1087. "B eatT h e Hip Highways and Bebop Byways of M odem American Letters," i- on exhibit until Oct. 9 m the ground-floor di-pla\ cases of the Main Building. The exhibit was written by Carolyn Ellis- Gonzalez and James Retherford and coordinated by George Cogswell and Victoria Beatty. For more information call James Retherford at 495-4118 UT Performing Arts Center presents an organ recital by Da\ id Craighead, professor at the East­ man School of Music at 4 p.m. Sunday in Bates Recital Hall. Tickets are available at all UTTM Tick- etCenters and by phone at 477-6060. Call 471-1444 for more information. The international Awareness Committee and the D epartm ent of Asian Studies sponsor "kathakali, a South Indian Dance Drama at 7 30 p.m. Saturday in Texas Union Building Ballroom (3 202). Tickets am $3 with a UT ID and $10 for the general public through UTTM and at the dixir. For m en information call 475-6630. The Concerts and M usic Committee prese nts a concert by Guy F o rsy th from noon-1:30 p.m. Fridav on the Texas Union Building Patio. Few mom Infor­ mation call 475-6630 The Center for M iodle Eastern Studies pre­ sents "The Future of the M iddle East Peace Accords," a lecture bv Edward Djerejian, former U S. ambassador to Syria and Israel The lecture is at 9 a m Friday in Texas Union Building Sinclair Suite (3 128) For more information call M Pavne at 471-3881 Michael Lucid, son of astronaut Shannon Lucid, holds a photo of space shuttle launch. Lucid cannot wait to see his mother. Astronaut settles into Atlantis, on way home Associated Press SPACE CENTER, Houston — Saying " it's good to be back" or. a U.S. spaceship, astronaut Shan­ non Lucid hauled her baggage from the Russian Mir station and settled the shu ttle Atlantis, her ride home after a record-breaking six m onths in orbit. in aboard Back on Earth, church, busi­ ness and w om en's groups and universities already are clam or­ ing to hear from the woman wrho cheerfully space endurance records. shattered A total of 181 days into her flight, with just seven more to go, she w as alm ost giddy with excitement. "W e don't typically grade peo­ ple, but if we were going to, I'd give Shannon an A -plus," said Frank C ulbertson, director of N A SA's shuttle-M ir program. The 53-year-old astror.aui-sd- entist, who has spent more time in space than any other woman and any other American, refused to take the day off or even slow down. She helped her eight fellow space travelers m ove food, cloth­ ing and other supplies from one docked spacecraft to the other. "S h e 's probably the most strongly motivated to bring the bags that she has over to the shut­ tle, so I doubt she's going to wait on anybody else to get to them ," Culbertson said. But she's always been that way on orbit and she's always been that way on previous shut­ tle flights, w here she pitched right in to do her part, and more. It's hard to keep up with Shan­ non som etim es." EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 8 8 0 - Professional PSYCH S O C W O R K . PT STUDENTS progressive, norvaversive treatment center needs relief mental health workers Excellent p a id experience w orking with brom injured a n d /o r chronically mentally ill clients in resi den* a! setting Flexible hours includ­ ing evenings an d weekends Previ­ ous students hove used this position for internship requirements and grod school odmissions $ 6 2 5 / h r with opportunities to becom e full-time Fax resume w / a v a ila b le w ork hours to BKH Personnel (5 1 2 ) 8 5 8 5 1 0 4 8 9 0 - Clubs* Restaurants 9 0 0 - Domestic- Household THE YELLOW ROSE Is looking for Austin fin ­ est Entertainers, w a it­ A FTE R S C H O O L CARE n e ed e d T-F, 2 3 0 6 3 0 Must have reliable trans portotion & good driving record De­ pendability A e x p e tence w /c h ild re n a must C a ll Rhonda at 8 9 6 6 1 7 7 or resses A p p ly in 4 5 8 2 9 2 9 9 -1 9 -2 8 person. 6 5 2 8 N . Lamar. P/T CAREGIVER NEEDED to ass st work-at-home mom with 5- ma-old b a b y girl. Approxim ately 9 -2 0 -2 0 B 2 5 h rs /w k Prefer w ee k d ay after­ 9-2048 9 0 0 - Domestic- Household 8 9 0 - Clubs- Restaurants A FTE R S C H O O L SITTER n e e de d M - TH, 3 3 0 -5 3 0 p m Lost C ree k a reo E xp e rie n c e a must S tart noons, but con be flexible Must be relioble attentive, nonsm oker,A pro- v'de ow n transportation References required Suellen o r Todd 3 2 8-28 68. 9 -2 0 -3 8 WAITPERSON NEEDED For o ne o f the best Japanese Restaurants .n Texas Dmner only 4 p m -1 1 pm If you can think fast, move fost and w ould I ke to m oke excellent m oney, com e see us 7 9 5 - 8 5 9 3 , after 3 pm. Musashino G reystone at M o p a c m m ed ate ly 3 2 9 - 8 7 2 8 9 - l o 5 B I A M looking for a student to babysit IDEAL JOB FOR ~ COLLEGE STUDENT! 9-2 0-5 B my 9-mootb old w hile I teach in my home Thursday ofternoons 4 8 Ref­ erences helpful 4 7 6 - 2 1 7 4 M a rth a N o n n y needed for 2 small children M ust en|oy outdoor activities a n d be very respons bie N W Aus' i D P * 2 0 9 - 4 5 7 2 Transpoitation and Refer enees required REFERENCES WILL BE C H E C K ED ! HOUSEKEEPER N E E D E D M W F 3 4 h rs /d o y , A M preferred N e e d car to shop $ 7 / h r N E C a ll evenings, 9 3 3 - 0 9 0 7 , Patti. 9 10 76 T A R R Y T O W N N A N N Y P /T care for W A N T E D MATURE exper enced d e ­ 9 16-56 p endab le person for a full-time live-in o r liv e o u t c h ild c a re C a ll p a g e r { 5 1 2 )4 0 3 -1 6 3 5 1 pm -7pm 9 -2 0 - HELP W A N T E D W a itp e r s o n & boys 1 0 & 8 Afterscboo! Must 3B Door pe r son A pply C o in & Abel's h a ve transportation 4 8 2 - 9 2 8 0 9- 2 3 1 3 Rio G ra n d e after 4 p m 9 -1 3 - 1 6 -5 8 6B BUSINESS LUCY S RETIRED SURFERS FALL semester, possibly longer After­ noons, evenm gs, w eekends, hours O pportunities CHILDCARE 9 3 0 - Business v ary Responsible o rg a n ize d , non- S EN IO RS IF you w o n t to w ork for smoker Excellent references/drivm g someone else for the rest o f your lift record Must be a v a ilo b le for over that's your business If you don't, mghts or Iive4n. O fh c e that's my business. C a ll 3 2 8 - 2 2 7 4 e x p e ríe n c e /o w n c o r o plus. P .O . 9 -9 -1 0B Box 5 2 6 1 Austin, Tx 7 8 7 6 3 9 - 1 7 5 8 RESTAURANT A N D BAR N o w a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s for m id O c to b e r o p e n in g for woitstoff a n d hosts A w esom e work atm osphere A M /P M , PT/F7 shifts a v a ila b le A pply m person 219 E 6th Street 9 I6-5B-A THE C A S T IU A N food service is now hiring evening a n d w eekends dish room a n d lino servers C o ll Stacy 4 7 8 1 7 3 2 9 1 8 8 8 L O V IN G BABYSITTER for 2 mo old Experience preferred ThfS , $ 3 /h r Hours flexible N W Austin, Parmer / M c N e i 3 3 5 - 0 9 4 9 9 18 5B FULLTIME N E W B O R N care needed M - f, 9 -5 , call Liso A Phillip N a g le C A P IT O L CAFE o n 1 Ith S eeking w a rperson to work unch M F Coll 4 7 9 5 0 5 9 9 -1 8 5 B 4 7 6 -6 5 9 1 9 1 8 3 8 D O O R M E N NE E D E D Exp preferred lets Expe- ence, CPR a n d references Im m ediole openings CoM Joy 4 7 3 reqv red S W Austin 2 8 8 - 7 2 9 4 9 3 7 0 7 o r 4 9 1 7 8 6 8 9-2 0-5 B 1 8 5 8 RELIABLE HELP caring for infant tfip TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS CALL 471-5244 No. 0 8 0 9 UllEtC©NFUSlON b y T a u U M a P i *-o I saw w h a t you d\d for th e J a n ito r l a s t — /Took OUTi.Run- V ^ w a y p a r t it io n i ^ . ■ 7 / ' I f r \ Oh wow! She'e ta lk in g t o me. And ae long a s I’m e ta n < iln g I won’t walk in to a n y wallsly i i i o a k s VJOE f A E l . . . A STRANOEb I j f O R e v e ? ON THIS Fo|?E\6rN PocK. My PUAAJ ET t>t<.TlL0Y65 MV PEOPLE s u r e l y KAVE. PERVSV^EO. X s t a n d FDR t h e EoNS OP T lY v e t h a t 0« GREAT CoStA^C POWERS WHATEVER AM X TC> bt>; Questions? Comments? Visit tbe U.C. homepM^e a t http:/.rvvwvms.utexjiSLeduy'4fu/Plll.html Page 20 Friday, September 20,1996 T he D aily T exan Crossword E d ite d by W ill Sh o rtz A C R O S S 1 Object of a police hunt 8 Around-town expense 15 Strength 18 Historic NASA missions 17 Dishes derived from the Nahuatl Indians 18 Parts of the world ' 19 Palindromic preposition 20 Equivalent of -ness 21 Chopin work 22 Certain commuter plane, for short 24 With a willingness to ‘ proceed 28 Put on 29 William Kidd’s 31 Creme de la crime creme 33 “ Minus” point 34 Plus a point 35 How many diseases end 39 Protection, of sorts 42 Slapping site 43 Do some film 44 Dweller on the work Volga 45 Sir, abroad 47 Unit of Chinese phonetics 48 Medical meas. 51 “ Stately pleasure-dome" site 53 Perry batfle-site ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 54 Eagerly accept 56 Muff 58 Ingredient in a Bangalore torpedo 59 Ciudad Bolivar’s river 62 Film developer’s deadline, maybe 64 Hunter’s dish 65 Side dish made with Parmesan 66 Time to look one s best? 67 Voting no D O W N 1 Rockies resort 2 Begin to nag 3 Work that may go uncredited 4 Dr.’s grp. 5 Lots of money 6 Cabinet department 7 Student’s dream class 8 Rabbit, e.g. 9 Descendant of the Dryopithecus 10 They’re not quite up to par 11 Move erratically 12 One way to think 13 Musical form with a recurring theme 14 Altendorf is a suburb of it 23 Scoops 25 Imported wine 26 “The Sacred Wood" essayist pop group Doonesbury b y c a r r y t r u d e a u tomb THAT SPONSORSHIPS cw u> PRPTjy PRicsy FOR PRIVATB INPUSTRy. UJHAVS THB. U P - SIPF FOR US? 6000 (JUILL, PHIL-FSPPaAUy FORTHOSa OFVOU INTHa eXTRACVON INPUSmaS! /V S sMONBY INTHB BANK FOR J {A RAINY PAY! f ' SAV YOU'RB axXON, AND YOU HAVB A MASSIVBO/L SPILL UP ON THF TUNPRA-UMAT STANOS BBTWeBN YOU ANOA PR. X NI6IYTMARB? Yiii mfh THSBXXON f WILPFLOa/eR I yoWRS THF FRBSBRUF? J &RB£NFSr B/NFY)! BLOCK! / 0 p DILBERT® TINA THE technical WRITER TO INSERT A ' COLUrAN, CLICK THE COLUI^H INSERT rAENU. N / v^l) / 'O Puzzle by Dave Tuller 27 Star of an 1850's Barnum tour 30 Business V.I.P. 32 European capital 34 Supplement 36 Ore-lda Foods brand 37 "Hold your horses!” 38 Updated clunker 40 “99 Luftballons" 41 Western tribe 46 Charlatan's fear 47 Kind of greens 48 Spice tree 49 God Save the King" writer H e n ry — 50 Quill 52 R io ------ (African coastal region) 55 Entity 57 Answer: Abbr. 60 Bus. concerns 61 Minn, neighbor 63 Yoo— — Answers to any three clues in this puzzle are available by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420-5656 (75c per minute). Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: (800) 762-1665. Super Longhorn Want Ads 20 WORDS 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 T h e D a ily T e x a n •QUer lim itea to private party (non-com m ercial) ads only Individual items offered for sale may not exceed SI 000. and price m ust appear in the body of the ad copy. If item s are not sold five additional insertions w ill be run at no charge Advertiser m ust call before 11 a m on the day of the fifth insertion No copy change (other than reduction in price) is allowed. by Scott Adams Thor and the Werewolf by Bryant Rydell H fi'V , Geoav B u vo Y ! V o tA 'c t Wom£. My TAuk: ^ WCCC 5HOW, Tvih/Gc UP Am T/AAe w irw YouP PoifJ-ri,e-ss Mu5/eV Eb TO \‘}K Oh TO aji?.09E. \NON-*r :5eAP' HOO' \ S to p it . 'S t o p i t . ' y - — This is the too Stupid rhonKciis a c t / V : T/cKer. ATM, CLUB CARO, Soc/At $ecu«rry CARO, BtOCKBVSreB (A» PKOOF Of exi 5 T a ^ / C £ vonFA Bi X man* Akj X O - ^TMCet R?r® V x A M ... IGoopsye ... AHP CAOt> LUCA. '0LOC»lfAM (PLAYCO Bi L>A»m€Lt. Royal) -Pm>! Vou6,u$ ■'ARK/N(k STuR€N7 BUT LET'5 BE H0NE5T. USEPvBOY, I f VOU NEED TO BE TOLD THAT , y o u'PnL too s t u p id TO USE THIS PRODUCT. HAVE VOU REVIE6JE0 THE DRAFT VEIT IT A UP TO THE CHAPTER T IT L E D " D U H " FQghmm R i c h b o o v i v ^ v j ! ! •fey )S3 91 KMWE HAVINX syireM, j v n o i cmiB PYJSON r iM e f=ct FIS PaRF COA}\ACno\J, HAXSH YRISo^J ( / aJPO ^PUNA TFL v ^ H f P i PaJ ' T F/OCXJ A 8 0 U T JrYfAMOOi FAiTlATlOR) " r e c H f^ iG u F C .. ‘i-m t a \3 s o .. Wf'BL THf R C A l SC/37fcrs or HIS SX rfR ifD fN T S ? / \ \ I y / V I C '^ O N f IF U /f HURKY UC CAhJ CATCH him ; ^ ---------- ^ 'TOO LA T Ef . I V C ’ t ' T y o v R w a n I>? Fy/iiy \CoCRa^i. hfi-TiSKeMEere-d-t-hd par+-Y UN OR No H fiw a s oury-ft^itlY Mai t« tHe- iV/tsJo G/^rlaNatioN a s-to vvh/ ' JoHm coolJi rocM w a ll. R £ A L i y F T A S P O N O L f G€ T A SrokjO. £ f FoR CiO^'i SARF,, CtT A X T <=^ , ^ 5 . . y , , , UH wr Niit> T O a ,rr AKisiYfRS F R O M H IM N O T r i Y I N H O f f HALF- COCKgO, O.K.? g t/T < i O ^ L L T ' S % f l u A - i . ' 4 • • f Page 22 Friday, September 20,1996 T h e D a il y T e x a n T i i e D a i l y T e x a n Friday, September 2 0 ,1 9 9 6 Page 23 THE CLASS RING S P E C IA L . * w ith d ia m o n d from $575 For that symbol o f K accomplishment you'll treasure for the rest o f your life, The Sheftall Co. offers this 10K solid Gold Class Ring, available with a variety o f options at no extra cost. Your fu ll name w ill be engraved inside. Come to The Sheftall Co. and order your Class Ring now for earliest delivery. No extra charge for any year or date. ’plus sales tax ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDSACCEPTED t h e S h e f t a l l CO. J E W E L E R S 2 2 4 4 G u a d a lu p e At The Co-Op 39th at North Lamar Across From Central Market CAPI TAL METRO EAST 6TH ST. FOOTBALL SHUTTLE U.T. vs NOTRE DAME Saturday, September 21; Kick-Off 11:00 a.m. Catch the East Sixth Street football shuttle to all home University of Texas football games! Use free Saturday street curb parking and ride the shuttle from this East Sixth Street locatiog: • Northwest corner of San Jacinto at East Sixth Street Shuttles run two hours prior to kickoff and one hour after the game, every 15 minutes. Shuttle fare: $5 per family $2 age 13 & up $1 age 6-12; under 6 free Receive the ESSCA Card from Capital Metro operator, good for discounts at participating East Sixth Street businesses. Other football shuttle locations include: Barton Creek Mall overflow lot C, North Lamar Transfer Center at Hwy. 183 and N. Lamar GO HORNS! The Bushtit! 100% C o tto n P re-S h ru n k H em m ed Sleeved & B ottom 5.7 O unce an d Full C u t The Flycatcher! T h erm al S h o rts M ade o f 50% Cotton 50% Polyester. F e a tu re s C o n tra st F lannel Trim W ith B utton Fly and E lastic W aistb an d E m b ro id ered Logo on the L ow er Left R c Íí e iM 4 a r Three Easy Ways to Order: Call (800) 544-1093 fax (817) 346-6255 or e-mail us at: peckwear@dfw.net For more “Pun” Products Call f o r a complete catalog or check out our w eb site: www.peckerwear.com It*9 Simple, PLAY FREE* Lag© v e t a GOLF CLUBS Open to Public TW O G reat Courses, ONE Great Deal! Cham pionship Golf overlooking Lake Travis Call for the experience. 267-1685 ♦Pay Regular 18 H o le G reen Fee, w e’ll pay fo r your next visit. Must present ad for offer. Expires 9/30/96. • 3 Deluxe Rooms with Private Bath • Breakfast made to order Innkeepers Rose and Charlie Harwood Phone or Faz (512) 376-9443 Toll free number: 1-800-668-6293 205 N. Blanco Lockhart, Texas 78644 F L f l M I H Q Q C A N T I N A P R E / E N T J celebrating five great years o f live music at tWe Flamingo Cau-tma with special gues Grammy award win’ REGGAE STAGE ALTERNATIVE STAGE •K ILLER BEES • AMANOLA POETS • GINGBREADMEN • RAGGAMASSIVE • TRIBAL NATION • ONE DESTINY • POCKETFISHRMEN • EL FLACO • RUBBER BULLET • BILLV GOAT • KEITO & THE FIREDANCERS food • activities • arts • Sunday, September 29,199¡ Fiesta Gardens, To advanced tickets $5 gate $7 volunteers and vendors welcome for more information call 512*266*3487 ram or «Nr« * »K¡ MRUnds gr no cwrnmm tvccrimo ámncm ■ jvrvnna G O H O R N S . . . S T O M P T H E IR IS H ! t n c v on t h e A v e n a e fój A u t h e n t i c S z e c h u a n & H u n ^ in t h e S h a d o w o f t h e C a p it o l Elegant Atmosphere * Daily Lunch Specials Happy H our 5-8 W eekdays • Dinner Cum bos C o m e C e le b ra te A f t e r th e C a m e A t O u r H a p p y H o u r A n d T h e n Join Us F o r D in n e r r ~ " F R E É D T Ñ " N E R É N ~ f R E E ~ ~ 1 * Get one Free Entree when you buy one or more higher priced Dinner I | Entree after 5 PM . Blackboard Specials, China Combos & Take out not | | i included. Not valid with other offers. One coupon per group. ¡ _ ____________________Exp. 1 0 /4 /9 6 .___________ | M ajor Credit Cards Accepted 4 7 4 -0 1 3 7 9 0 8 C o n g r e s s M on-Fri 11 -3 & 5- 10; S a t 11:30- 10:30 N e w Y o r k P iz z a a l l N E V V \ P IT A L IA N R E S T A U R A N T AND rnuvt THRU r *. '■», 1945 E. OLTORF b BURLESON RI> 447-2306 lo r C arry O uts or Call-In O rd ers Banquets P arties at Home or O ffice Bring in this ad & your student I.D. & receive an extra YOUR PURCHASE GNC BRAND PRODUCTS: BUY ONE, GET ONE 50% OFF! N ot va lid w / a n y oth e r offer. G o o d at G N C N o r th c r o s s M all & V illa ge at W estlake lo c a tio n s only. Exp. 1 0 /4/96. c s s G I N M A t NU TR ITIO N C1NTIES Northcross Mall 2525 W. Anderson Ln. 453-7747 and our new location: The Village at Westlake W estlake Hills 701 Capitol of TX Hwy S. #B210 306-9979 A U.T. Tradition Since 1969 Come out after the Game. You’ll Enjoy the Short Drive. We Promise! T h e critics can ’t be w rong, so com e o ut after th e game, or anytim e, and join us for th e best BBQ in Texas. A nd rem em ber, Hays C o u n ty is dry so bring your cooler w ith alcoholic beverag­ es. We now accept reservations but they are n o t necessary. W e’ve got plenty of in d oor and o u t­ d o o r facilities available for parties TUESDAY - SUNDAY NOON - 10 p.m. L IV E E N T E R T A IN M E N T W ED N ESD A Y -SA T U R D A Y Located in D riftw ood, T h e Salt Lick is a sh ort drive from A ustin. lake MoPac S outh thro u g h Circle C to PM 1826 (C am p Ben M cCullough Rd.). T u rn L ett and go 7,5 miles. You’ll see us on the * right. i Hours: l l A M - l l P M Mon. - Saf. Closed on SundaysC C q & Holidays ^ The Salt Lick • Driftwood, Texas • (512) 858-4959 or 892-1433 Serving All Natural Texas Brisket R u b y’s BBQ has black beans, plays Charlie Parker records and serves up righteous backroad barbeque w ithout m issing a beat. Weekend Hours Often tit j a m Friday an d Saturday Midnight Sunday - Thursday Cafánng Dine In, Take Out & Delivery 512 ir 29th 29th & Guadalupe y . telephone 512-477-1651 RUBYSF BBQ J im B eam LIGHTWEIGHT POCKET FLASK Luntains a full .7.10 ml, of «Sil proof Jim Ikam llourbim 05» PLASTIC III it?., nilli jigger tap A V A IL A B L E AT ALL 9 ílM IM Ü d LIQUOR STORES AND AUSTIN WINE & SPIRITS. 5505 BALCONES DRIVE (same side of the street as Randall's) $1 Pints D p m e s tlc s ALL DAY S a tu rd a y Where 26th & 1 M anor Intersect S h g jf^ y o u r Ticket stub a n d r e c e iv e U0% off . a ll fá o d purch*óses a fte r t h é ^ í m é ..g T 5 r5 ? ll IvmM COUNTRY STORE ANP B A R -B O THE WORST PAR ? Q IN TEAAS 9* 11570 Research Blvd. Austin, TX 418-9898 Sun - Thut Fri - Sat 6:00 - 9:30 6:00 -10:30 Brisket, Turkey, Sausage, Chicken, Pork Ribs, Baby Back Ribs, Prime Rib, Pork Loin, Chopped Meats Potato Salad, Cream Corn, Beans, Cole Slaw, New Potatoes Breakfast Homemade Breakfast Tacos, Daylight Donuts and Cinnamon Rolls Delivered Fresh Daily Balloon Man & live ente; Eri Featured in top 100 Restaurants of Austin Guide Favorite restaurant of Olympic weightlifler Mark Henry as seen ESPN Olympic Special Page 24 Friday, September 20, 1996 T he D aily T exan More of family income dedicated to college 44 Access to higher education is getting public system s of higher education, while there is a greater concentra­ tion of higher-priced private schools in the Northeast, he said. Associated Press more and more out of reach for working WASHINGTON — Parents in the N ortheast m ust spend more house­ hold income to send their children to in-state public colleges and uni­ versities than parents elsewhere, a federal study says. "A s a percentage of household income, tuition has doubled over the last 15 years," Sen. Carol Mose- ley-Braun said T hursday in releas­ ing a study she requested from the G eneral A ccounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress. "Access to higher education is getting m ore and more out of reach for w orking and m iddle-class Am ericans," the Illinois Democrat said. Nationally, parents spent about 9 • percent of their m edian household incom e last year on in-state tuition and fees for their sons and d augh­ and middle-class Americans.” Sen. Carol Moseley-Braun, D-BUnois — ters atten d in g public schools, the GAO says. four-year That is up from 4.5 percent 15 years ago. Average tuition as a percentage of m edian household income var­ ied greatly from state to state, the report said. For example, H aw aii's average tuition last year was less than 4 p er­ cent of m edian household income in the state. H aw aii, how ever, recently approved an 85 percent increase for in-state, undergraduate tuition at the U niversity of H aw aii's Manoa campus. By com parison, V erm ont's aver­ age tuition for four-year public col­ leges and universities was more than 15 percent of m edian house­ hold income. Dave M erkowitz, a spokesm an for the American Council on Edu­ cation, w hich rep resen ts higher education institutions, said he was not surprised that N ortheastern states had lower rankings on the affordability scale. States in the M idwest and West have a tradition of low or no-cost Recent cutbacks in state funding higher tuitions pushed have nationw ide. But public support for colleges in the’ M idwest and West historically has been strong, resulting in lower tuitions, M erkowitz said. The report also repeated an earli­ er GAO finding: Between 1980 81 and 1994-95, the average annual tuition at four-year public colleges and universities for in-state stu ­ dents rose 234 percent — from $804 to $2,689. That com pares with an 82 p er­ cent increase in household income, the report says. And tuition rose faster than other consum er prices. The report says the average con­ sum er expenditure for a new car increased 160 percent; the national m edian sale price of a new single­ family hom e rose 101 percent; m ed­ ical costs went up 182 percent; and food prices rose 66 percent. GO H O R N S BEAT the IRISH TAIL GATE PARTY IN TOWN Sat. Sept. 21 - Starts at 2 :30 pm Food • B eer • M usic featuring Chris Wall • Rusty Weir • Phil Pritchett NO TICKET-NO PRO BLEM ... WATCH THE GAME WITH US! DOORS O PE N AT 1 0 AM FREE SHUTTLE to and from the cam e 18 & Up W elcome g ° vy\0 UT vs. NOTRE DAME GAMEDAY DOORS OPEN AT 10 AM $1.00 Lite Drafts & Margaritas $2.00 Bloody Marys / Screwdrivers $2.50 Well Drinks $3.99 Any Burger or Sandwich msuo3G3ga VOllEYBAR & GRILL 306 Barton Springs Road 480-0952 Baylor cuts funding for a journalism, survey Associated Press WACO— Baylor University has pulled the plug on a journalism survey financed by a $50,000 grant from a foundation with to several conservative links media groups. Baylor President Robert B. Sloan Jr said the survey, intended to test the job market for journal­ ism graduates, is being canceled and the grant returned to the Harold W. Siebens Foundation. Sloan said Wednesday that the decision to cancel the survey was made by the two professors in charge of the project— marketing professor Larry Chonko and polit­ ical science professor Mike Mans­ field. The Siebens foundation has ties to Accuracy in Media and the Western Journalism Center. Accu­ racy in Media is a conservative watchdog group. The latter pro­ gram markets a tape questioning the ruling of suicide in the death of White House deputy counsel Vincent Foster. In a letter released by Sloan, Chonko and Mansfield gave three reasons for ending the study: sponsor's wish to remain anonymous violated the tradition­ al policy for research projects. ■ Controversy surrounding the study led them to "anticipate that we will spend far m ore time defending our im partiality as scholars than ... discussing our research results." ■ Chonko and Mansfield said they did not wish to conduct the study without the active support of Baylor'*; journalism depart­ ment. Journalism Chairm an Mike Bishop questioned the propriety of accepting money from Siebens, accusing the foundation of trying to buy Baylor's reputation as an outstanding academic institution. "I'm pleased to hear of their decision," Bishop said. "... The funding source is very question­ able and, ultimately, veiy danger­ ous to Baylor." Last week, Bishop said he feared that Siebens was trying to get a foothold at Baylor. He had obtained a draft proposal for a Center for Ethics in Journalism. The center was apparently the idea of a university fund-raiser, who intended to seek funding for it from Siebens. Discussions of a possible Baylor-Siebens relation­ ship began at the 1994 football Southern game Methodist University and Bavlor. between Post office testing plan to postmark e-mail Associated Press WASHINGTON — The post office is testing a system to postmark e-mail and help protect the secrecy of elec­ tronic messages. Businesses, particularly the finan­ cial, legal and medical professions, are expected to be the prime customers for Electronic Commerce Services, said Paul Raines, who is managing the program for the Postal Service. Also being tested is an electronic postmark, a system by which the post office would place a date and time stamp on electronic messages for peo­ ple who need to verify data was sent and when. The growth of the Internet comput­ er network has led to an explosive increase in electronic messaging as more and more people and businesses have computers, but copies of con­ tracts and other business documents still have to be sent on paper for legal purposes. The new system could change that, permitting contracts, government applications, financial documents and other items to be sent electronically with the post office providing proof that they were sent and guaranteeing the accuracy of the copies. The agency could also provide an archive service, maintaining copies of documents for use if proof were need­ ed of what was sent and when. The current test is designed to determine what is a reasonable price for the service, get customer feedback and determine what features work best, said Raines. If all goes well, the system could become widely avail­ able sometime next year. The project has been promoted at business meetings over the past year by Postmaster General Marvin Runy­ on, who has stressed that the agency' needs to continually seek new ser­ vices to stay up with current business technology. But the post office also is aware- that it often runs into criticism in Congress and elsewhere when it considers ven­ tures that might conflict with private businesses. 1996 Cactus Yearbook & C a c tu s CD R om Pick up your copies of the 1996 Cactus Yearbook and Cactus CD Rom in the Texas Student Publications Building, Room 3.200, Monday through Friday, ' 9:00 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. e P h o t o I I ) n e c e s s a r y t o c l a i m y o u r y e a r * b o o k a n d CD Rom i e y o l o r d e r e d in ADVANCE. I f YOL DID NOT ORDER IN ADVANCE, YOL CAN STILE PLRCHASE THIS E X c ir iN O I’ACK ACE EOR ONI.Y $ 4 5 .4 9 .