JThe new est | rsize, «opear *Z¿£-£066¿ m m m I Tennis veteran Monica Seles is upset by Irina Spirlea during the U .S . Open ift New York. 1 'vh I ,,f P n ^ H p i 4 "^ m e SERVICE Fraternities and sororities promise a new emphasis on community seivi'ce. Mveralt&PapI . 4*511 -I'- ¡Él ip . - • 1 , ■ : Vol.97.ito.2 XL OSVd 1 3 3AIMI 1130NVA 1SV3 ¿292 ¿ t o X3VS 3 Sections ¿tOO OXdi h i Daily Te x a n New law makes admissions harder The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin .• S 1 •f September 3,1997 * 250 the student body does not become too large and unmanageable, he said. "We have a limited amount of spaces, and if most of these spaces are taken by those graduating in the top 10 percent, then there's going to be more competition," Walker said. Enrollment has risen gradually over several years and any increased enrollment for fall 1998 would not be caused by the new admissions policy, Vick said. The University decided to reduce the size of the student population to 48,000 after the student body reached almost 51,000 in 1990. "My concern is that we wouldn't be able to increase our enrollment very much from where it is right now — it wouldn't be educationally sound," Vick said. A committee of UT administrators has already planned to expand rem edial programs at the University next fall to accommodate those students admitted under the law. But Flack said the expansion of the remedial pro­ grams is necessary not because of increased enroll­ ment, but rather to prepare students admitted under the new law for college coursework. "I think the bill requires that the University look at all those students admitted under the bill," she said. "Those students may not have the same edu­ cational background." But Flack said there are still many uncertainties because no one knows yet just how many students will take advántage of the policy. Daily Texan Staff Under a new state law, getting into the University will become much more competitive for students not in the top 10 percent of their graduat­ ing classes, UT administrators said Tuesday. The "10 percent law," which will take effect in fall 1998, requires that Texas universities admit all applicants who graduat^ in the top 10 percent of Texas public high schools. In 1996, about 53 percent of applicants to the University graduated in the top 10 percent of their high school classes. Eventually, students admitted through the new law will begin to displace others who would have been accepted to the University under a wider range of admissions criteria, said Jim Vick, vice president for student affairs. But the number of students admitted under the law won't be so large that it will end up "swallow­ ing" the rest of the freshman class, said Teri Flack, public information director for the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. Bruce Walker, UT admissions director, said the University will not see increased enrollment as a result of the new policy. "I don't see any evidence that this bill is going to make the University grow — at least not in the next couple of years," Walker said. The University has an internal policy to keep enrollment at about 48,000 students to ensure that Wish list SG says computer budget is 30 percent too high Rush Rauflr njw i pwm Daily Texan Staff A recent Student Government study suggests that a proposed budget for new equipment in the College of Communication may be based on cost projections about 30 percent higher than necessary. Money budgeted for certain equipment costs in the college's departments is about $150,000 more than necessary to purchase the equipment, said Chuck Brady, SG financial director. "This budget was thrown together at the last minute," Brady said. "It's more of a wish list than anything else." But Stephen Monti, UT vice provost, said the itemized listings are subject to change. "This is not a budget. This is the best effort at a cost analysis with the recognition that costs may change," Monti said. "These are ongoing, continu­ ally evolving decisions. They are not set in stone. The College of Communication's new $16-per- credit-hour fee was created to finance the immedi­ ate needs of the budget proposal for new equip­ ment. A $2 million loan request, which is intended for the cost of new computers outlined in the pro­ posed budget, was approved by the UT System Board of Regents last month. The figures are based on estimates from vendors who often contract with the University, Brady said.' A more thorough analysis of the complete bud­ get — Brady's analysis accounts for new equip­ ment representing about 10 percent of the total budget — has not yet been made available, Brady said. It wasn't possible for the entire budget to be ana­ lyzed due to ambiguous items such as "software", "printers" and "furniture," he added. "I do believe that if the entire budget is analyzed, this analysis will be representative," he said. In his analysis of the budget, Brady chose several detailed items, including computers. He said he explored the possibility of purchasing clones rather than IBM or Apple Macintosh com­ puters, which could mean extensive savings to the college. "We're worried that this excess will free up other monies which might, be rolled into an administra­ tive fund used for bonuses or pay raises," he said. But it's impossible for the fee money to be placed in a "slush fund," said Anne Reed, assistant to the dean of the College of Communication. "If you want to buy a pencil with fee money, you have to get permission," she said. P le a s * s a t B rad y, page 2 ; ‘theater justice,’ says lawyer PARIS — A French judge declared seven paparazzi to be manslaughter suspects Tuesday in the death of Princess Diana, includ­ ing one aggressive photographer said to have felt die dying princess's pulse while snapping snots of the car wreck. A lawyer for one photographer dismissed the investigation as "the­ ater justice," a sop to public outrage over die fact Diana, her millionaire boyfriend and their driver were killed while being chased by paparazzi. But an attorney for boyfriend Dodi Fayed's father, Mohammed A1 Fayed, said there was "causality" between the photographers' pursuit and the fatal crash, and the elder Fayed was joining die case as a civil party to prove it. Fresh disclosures, however, pointed anew at a combination of deadly factors in Sunday's accident, including the apparently drunken condition of the driver, a Fayed employee. A police analysis found that chauffeur Henri Paul's blood alco­ hol level may have been almost four times the legal limit at the time of the crash — higher than originally believed. The photographers who went before the judge Tuesday, one by one, all had been in custody since being arrested at the crash scene Sunday morning. Judge Herve Stephan placed them under form al investigation for "in v o lu n tary h om icid e" — the French equivalent of manslaughter. It does not mean they will necessari­ ly be formally charged with any crimes. They also will be investigated for failing to aid people in danger, a crim e under the French "G oo d Samaritan" law requiring onlookers to assist victims of road accidents. All were freed, two on bond. Both p iM M “ D ia n a , pafei 2 Patrons flee as postal worker shoots 2 Cm m r M w ■ The School of Architecture will hold a meeting with stu­ dents to discuss how best to memorialize Brandon Shaw, a student killed in a carjacking. ■ The Texas Center for Writers hosts Katherine Hester reading from her new book-7 p.m. at Book People. Tomorrow, the Princess Diana] high will be in the [Diana, Princess of Wales] 80s. The low will [People's Princess] be in the 60s. Dammit, Brokaw, Jennings and Rather should let the dead rest in peace, but there's onty *50 percent chance the glut of coverage will continue. Around Cam pus.... .....................20 — P CtmMafi C o m i c s — ....................13 MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — A postal clerk left his counter to get a gun from his car Tuesday, then walked back in and shot and critically wounded his ex-wife and her friend as die two women waited in line. After the shooting, the clerk walked outside and fatally shot i t___ if \ rumseu > • The gunman was a longtime counter c ta k a tiie past offic* said aw M *»**fc> had gone to check on Antonio’ Tamayo, and said he I worked for die service for 21 years. | When he saw the two women I walk in about 1 pm ., Tamayo went I outside to his car and r e t u r a d a j few minutes later with a gun# sdKS police spokesman Hernandez. ’ "As soon aa they walked in/tbey saw 1dm leave through the bade," he said. "Then he came back in through the front doors and shot them. yi| | Each victim was shot one* and Tamayo tbm left j - * "Dogs were barking, people were screaming and running towards me," die said. Hernandez said Tamayo had divorced his ex-wife, Manuela Acosta, 62, four years ago. She and die other victim, Mima Mendoza, 55, shared an apartment in Ocean Beach, a few blocks from the post office. The women were hi critical condi­ tion after surgery at a local hospital The poet office is only a few p | l| fl from die oceanside mansion jjjP R ttedgnrr Gianni Versace was I afcofto death in July. Suspect Andrew Cunanan, who had been I Itekftd to killings in three other I states, was later found dead of a I atif-fcifiictedgtinshotwound & A p B a s e A c e r t f m d i ,14 . - J ___ "1 have known-him for a long time and he has been nice," said Jl% m vaC' n even seafled at him as • t e m h e d bdUndm a* íoenuneu the gunman as'64-year-old Jesus Sports State (l o c a l! Uwvernty.. J s i Page 2 Wednesday, September 3,1997 T h e D a ily TÉXAN Brady; Computer fee too high, SG iays Continued from' page 1 “ “ ’ The fee will not enable the col­ lege to have any excess money which may carry over to die next fiscal year, Monti said. "The College of Communication has $6 million worth of needs, and the fees will bring in juit over a million," Monti said. "I doubt there will be much, if any, left over for next year," he said But Monti said the figures in the proposed budget may be changed. The college may also attempt to find computers that are less expen­ sive than the college planned in its budget. | b | * | A t 36-Power t*9C 9600 30—Appiod600 12-P o m Rr w G3-250 30—Apte 1705 Monitor «8.700 «7,500 «744 89—Sony 20* GDM 20 Se II $2,200 15-Mag 17* Monitor «1,700 Total* for Above Equipment $606,812 SOUIIGt: Student GovemmsnfFinancial Director's OfRoa r 'U n W D t t e*«gg Mr $2,859 $4.229 $629 $1o299 eifuE «4.790 N N q M s a p s («80.189) p ia T t e JOEY RJENTES/DAILY TEXAN STAFF mother gambles RIDGELAND, S.C. — A 10-day- old infant left in a warm car for about seven hours died of dehydra­ tion while her soldier mother played video poker in a casino, offi­ cials said Tuesday. The infant's mother, Army Sgt. Gail Baker, was charged Sunday ih the death of her daughter, Joy, and is being held without bond. "Joy was my pride and jo y /' Baker wrote in a statement released by police. "I never meant to hurt ha* in no way. It was just pure neg­ ligence on my part." The infant was left in a car parked outside the State Line Casino from about 2 p.m. until 9:30 p.m. Friday, said Sheriffs Maj. Roy Hughes. The casino is about a mile outside Savannah, Ga. The car's windows were closed and temperatures rose into die mid- 90s on Friday, Hughes said. A pathologist from Candler General Hospital in Savannah said the new­ born died of dehydration, Hughes reported. Baker was charged with homi­ cide by child abuse, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison. In her statement, Baker said she never went to the car to check on her daughter, only looking out die casino door. "I thought she would be okay," she wrote. According to police reports, she left die casino about 9:3Ó*p.m. when her husband, Julius, a staff sergeant at Hunter, arrived and told her to §o home. Once home, she noticed le baby wasn't breathing. Efforts to revive the infant by Baker and paramedics failed. || I n IM e^tee m l a j H f NYSE Diary tU n a a * U B MNrMtfhr Declines: 737 238 «•W W W VwCnlllfHU uxai Consolidated volume 197,410,000 1996 avg. comp, vol.: 497.311.770 B Diana: Hillary Clinton will attend funeral as representative of the United States C o n tin u e d fr o m p a g e 1 ~ ~ — ~ ~ ~ ~ in v o lu n tary hom icide and Good Sam aritan violations can be p u n ­ ished by up to five years in prison and fines of almost $100,000. In central London on Tuesday, a grieving hum an tide engulfed St. James's Palace, where Diana's body lay in a chapel closed to the public, as the British m onarchy and gov­ ernm ent p repared for S aturday's grand funeral. The White House announced that first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton will attend on behalf of the United States. T h o u sa n d s of B ritons w a ite d hours to sign books of condolence at St. James's — ordinary people with P roducers of Quality Visual e dia PRESENTATION SUDES FROM DISK OR MODEM • Quafity Photographic Finishing • &6 S8de Proccjáng • Prints Own ncgaivea & slides • Large Formal inkjet Priming 3851 Airport Blvd. Austin, TX 78722 512^141-4444 Fa* 512-476-5345 www./imagel.cotn 1 -800-426-7959 special places in their hearts for the young princess. pulse when he was taking'pictures of the wreckage. The circumstances of her death — a high-speed chase by celebrity- hunting photographers on motorcy­ cles, an alcohol-loaded driver who m ay have been p u sh in g the armored Mercedes-Benz sedan over 100 mph as it roared through a Paris tu n n el — have o u trag ed people worldwide. An American businessman who said he happened on the scene just after the crash called the photogra­ phers "disgusting." "I mean (they were) all over the car," said Jack Firestone, of Hewlett Harbor, N.Y., "climbing all over the car as if they were m osquitoes ... clicking away like m ad. ... It was obvious these paparazzi knew they had struck gold." Some w itnesses said photogra­ phers even pushed aside rescuers and policem en, saying they were ruining their pictures. Police accused Romuald Rat, of the G am m a p h o to agency, of obstructing the work of the first offi­ cers on th e scene. R at's law yer, Philippe Benamou, said in defense that his client merely took Diana's "H e w a n te d to see if she w as dead or alive/' the lawyer said. "This is theater justice, aimed at satisfying the expectations of the public," said William Bourdon, a law y er for one of the p h o to g ra ­ phers. "There is no crime here, the file is em pty," he said. "I w ill dem and that the case be dismissed immedi­ ately." The driver, Paul, No. 2 security chief at the F ay ed -o w n ed Ritz H otel, w here D iana and Fayed dined before their fatal ride, was already reported by authorities to have been legally drunk at the time of the crash. A second police toxicology analy­ sis cam e up w ith a level of 1.87 grams of alcohol per liter of blood — even higher than the initial 1.75 figure given Monday, judicial offi­ cials said on customary anonymity. That gave the driver a blood-alcohol level nearly four tim es the legal limit in France. whiskey in rapid succession, or hav­ ing blood-alcohol of about 0.24 per­ cent. Most U.S. states consider a driver to be legally drunk when a blood alcohol content of 0.1 percent is reached, although some have recently lowered that to 0.08 per­ cent. Police sources say the wrecked car's speedometer was found stuck at 196 kilometers per hour — 121 mph — a strong indication of its speed at impact. Despite these damning reports, George Kiejman, a lawyer repre­ senting the elder Fayed, made it clear his aim is to establish five fault of the photographers in the case.1 "There is a causality between the pursuit (by paparazzi) and the acci­ dent," he said. Also joining the case as a civil party were the parents of the driver. They want access to documents to determine how their son was judged to be legally drunk at the time of the crash. A 1.75 level is the equivalent of d rin k in g a b o u t 11 ounces of Prosecutors had formally asked the judge, to jail two of die photogra- JJ Interested in Working in JA P A N ? JIMT Internships are available to students and researchers in Japanese companies and organizations. Internships are for students and research­ ers in a variety of fields, including Eng­ ineering, CS, Chemistry, Business, and Radio/Tele­ vision/Film. The JIMT Program will provide training, internship placement in Japan and fi­ nancial support. An informational meeting will be held Thursday, Sept. 4,1997,4-5 PM at the IC2 Institute, Seminar Room B, 2815 San Gabriel 29* St San Gabriel Lamar Blvd http ://w ww. utexas. edu/depts/ic2/jim t jim t@ icc.utexas.edu * 475-8923 Jm What is JIMT? JIMT is the Japan Industry and Management, of Technology Program of the IC2 Institute at The University of Texas at Austin. JIMT is a federally supported training program for engineers, scientists, and technology managers. Visit our homepage at http://stumedia.tsp.utexa8.edu/webtexan/today/ T h e Da il y T e x a n Editor........................................ ....... „....... ».. Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors....... News Editor............................... Associate News Editor .».......— Assignments Editor..................... Senior Reporters ------— Associate Edtors — ...... ~....... Photo EdNor-------------------- ----- Entertainment Editor.................. Associate Entertainment Editor... 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OWaWtefteyAte; Monday, 4 p m .Tuesday. 4 p.m. Independent and (Jlstance Learning Hm fUxflritity to study «1 yuurpu«-.at your plots. T r o te a * W É V r s la f c t e r it e t e ¿ fiM M *l« n i% y w < M N r a l rt any « m «te « é l up fc otoJ t e A l * c m * ! * • m m . ladiyindwti. Cura art offwed fcyamooteam, Haoi, ■riteVte. Boms* yon don't hove to atete dans, y * f i r i yoor nan oteyte t o t o f * y w d n m d i i M l l p r M i x t e . I Cm támu . Twnnlnli«wnnan>«—«. HateotwriOO UT teste cum. 04 6 ASSOCIATED PRESS. Reporters gather around a police van just before it enters the Paris hall off justice where seven photographers ere questioned in connection with the crash that killed Princess Diana. phers — Rat and Martinez — indi­ cating they felt evidence against them was most serious. But the judge did not follow their recom­ mendation. morning remained in intensive care Tuesday. Bodyguard Trevor Rees-Jones, the lone survivor in the wreck, suffered serious head and chest injuries. He is not expected to be able to speak with police for "a number of weeks," a hospital spokeswoman said. Rees-Jones is a Fayed employee. Diana was entitled to but routinely declined official British security. One man who could provide insight into what happened Sunday SUMMER/FALL INTERNSHIPS Fortune’s ‘Most Admired* Company “America’s Top Internships” • one of I997’s top ten internship programs “Jobs ’96” ■ Insurance sales compensation averaged $50,000 per year, increasing to $70,000 after 10 years. In fact, 20% of all insurance sales agents earned over $100,000 in 19% Full-Time Positions for ‘97 graduates Austin: (512) 327-3868 San Antonio: (210)490-3133 Houston: (281)583-4330__________ R O S E S 2 D O Z E N $ 1 9 . 9 5 CASH te CARRY I ■ DAILY SPECIALS, TOOI I C A SA VERDE FLORIST 4 5 1 -0 6 9 1 FTD I J 6W L ¡J 5TH Secondhand Scholarly iBooks D o b ie M a ll 21* & Guadalupe Mon-Sat 10*10 Book M anker f O NE H O UR SERVICE I IS B A C K W ITH O U R I I N IW PROCESSO R!! I ¡¡ONE HOUR E6 SLIDE PROCESSINgH I 24X s $5.50 36X ■ $7.25 1 I PHOTO STUDENTS- ■ ADDITIONAL 10% DISCOUNT I I CUST0H PHOTOGRAPHIC LARS I § W. MLR at NUECES i I 474-1177 i N oe l F. R o e b u c k , D .D .S. General Dentistry caring for children and adults • Whitening Procese • Preventative & Cosmetic Dentistry • Nitrous Oxide & Headphones • Insurance Processed NEW PATIENTS WELCOME — SINCE 1962---------- 454-5825 W. 38th ■ H a 3 H MEDICAL SCIENCE CENTER VISA • MASTER CARO • DISCOVER • AMERICAN EXPRESS 711 W . 36th B -10 September S P E C I A L Winter Bnijhli'i Itreth .vhil ■ nu 'Jeep W l n t t i i m i | PlOifiSS $50 o f f w / F R E E E v a l u a t i o n (till Today1 ! m) V hi) 9/ TIE CIHIEEE & IP©M IFÁLL « f o r o s *15.00 non-refundable fee INFORMATION MEETINGS: 4:00pm BEL 328 Sept. 3 4:30pm BEL 328 Sept. 4 Attendance is highly recommended. If you cannot be pres you must contact the campus office at (512) 232-2911 resent, MASCOT TRYÓT3T5 Sept. 15,17 Sept 19 5 - 7 pm 5 - 7 pm BEL 502 (Clinics) BEL 902 (Tryouts) Sept. 11,15 Sept 17 Sept 20 Sept. 16,18 Sept 19 Sent 20 CHEER TRYQUIS ^ % 5 - 7 pm 5 - 7 pm 10am BEL 902 (Chmcs) BEL 502 (O ink BEL 902 (Finals POM TRYOUTS _ . 4 - 7 pm 4 pm 8 am BEL 502A (Clinic) BEL 302 (R u t Cuts) BBL 302A (Finals) >—*«»>»*«» IIMHW III 4ep*te >V4—uee te Wow t i i M ThtUUmterten MO-ÜWt WORLD & NATION T h e D a ily T exa n ■ WBMESMY, 8EPTBHBI8,1867 Bosnia grave reveals 300 HRGAR, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Recovery workers descended into a cave Tuesday to carry out corpses — some with socks and shoes dangling off decaying limbs — from one of the largest mass graves yet discovered in Bosnia or neighboring Croatia. Up to 300 bodies, mostly Mus­ lim war victims, were believed buried in a labyrinthine cave near the northwestern Bosnian village of Hrgar. Bosnian officials began exhuming bodies Monday, and by Tuesday had removed 10 corpses. Some remains still had identifica­ tion cards. Ervin Lipovic, a 30-year-old alpine climber working for the excavating team, said trash was mixed in with the bodies, and the stench below ground was "horri­ ble." Several barrels of acid also were buried in the cave. Tens of thousands of people still are listed as missing from the 3 1 /2-year Bosnian war. Many are believed to have been slaughtered and dumped into pits. The U.N. war crimes tribunal has been using evidence gathered from exhumations to build cases against suspects accused of com­ mitting atrocities during the Bosn­ ian war and the six-month war in Croatia. On Monday in Zagreb, Croatia, a former police officer was arrest­ ed after telling a magazine he per­ sonally killed dozens of civilians during Croatia's 1991 war against rebel Serbs. In its Monday issue, the weekly Feral Tribune quoted Miro Bajramovic as saying he was "directly responsible for the death of 86 people," among them 72 he killed personally. He said victims were burned or shocked with electric current sent through nails driven under their fingernails, or through cables shoved up their anuses, óthers had salt and vinegar rubbed into deep wounds, he said. "We mainly didn't allow them to stop bleeding" Bajramovic said. He said when people were hooked up to high voltage through iron nails, "the person disappears. Ashes!" It was impossible to verify the comments. But the interview in Croatia's most respected indepen­ dent weekly appeared to substan­ tiate allegations that Bajramovic's unit was involved in some of the . . . ASSOCIATED PRESS Skulls and bones lie in Bezdana cave near the west Bosnian town of Bihac. Forensic teams will soon work to excavate the bodies. Approximately 300 bodies, mostly Bosnian Muslims, are believed to be buried in the grave, one of the largest mass graves yet discovered in Bosnia. m any a tro c itie s com m itted by both sides. C ro a tia n a u th o rities reacted swiftly, arresting Bajramovic later M onday n ear S isak , 25 m iles southeast of Zagreb, Croatian state television reported. The cave near Hrgar in north­ w estern Bosnia is a m oss-filled, 120-foot shaft that splits into sev­ eral tunnels. Excavators enter the shaft in a large metal basket that slides down a wire connected to an above-ground generator. Tents and wooden tables have been set up around the shaft, in a patch of forest cleared of trees, for examining the bodies. "W e won't have a real idea of what we are dealing with until all the m aterial is rem ov ed ," said Joseph Cruz, a human rights field worker who is among U.N. offi­ cials monitoring the excavation. "There is no real idea of how far the hole goes down there." The exhumation will take at least a month, said Adem Jakupovic, a local judge in the M uslim-Croat federation. An American forensic team was expected to help with the exhum ation beginning W ednes­ day, he said. Conflict erupts over Israeli street project Ai—clitud Prats HEBRON, West Bank — A U.S.- funded project to renovate a street for Palestinian traffic in Hebron became the focus of violent con­ frontation Tuesday, a week before Secretary of State Madeleine Albright arrives in the region. Jewish settlers threw stones at Palestinian workers renovating Shuhada Street, a main downtown thoroughfare that passes by two settler enclaves in this West Bank town. They fired pellet guns, smashing the window of a bull­ dozer. Renovating the road, which had been demanded by Palestinians, would "endanger our lives and allow for masses of troublemakers to come," settler leader Noam Arnon said. "We need to prevent this for peace and security in Hebron." Israeli police arrested the project manager, David Muirhead of Sher­ man, Conn., and two Palestinian employees for refusing to cooper­ ate with them. Muirhead accused police of failing to stop the attack. "I was arrested for holding up the police in arresting the driver," said Muirhead, who was released on bond with the other two and ordered to appear in court Wednesday. The Israeli army closed Shuhada Street to Arab traffic after a Jewish settler killed 29 Muslim worshipers, in a Hebron mosque in February 1994. The street w as p a rtially reopened after Israel w ithdrew troops from most of Hebron last January. The Palestinians demand­ ed the street be fully opened, and as part of the withdraw al agree­ ment, the United States pledged $1 million to fix up the street, which is in the Israeli-con trolled area of Hebron. Muirhead said he was trying to make substantial progress on the $1 million project, which is one-third complete, before Albright arrives in the region Sept. 10. The State Department said Tues­ day that American mediator Den­ n is R oss w ould h elp set up Albright's visit to the Middle East. A police officer inspects the papers of a Palestinian in line to enter Israel for work.. Lawmakers government shutdown W A SH IN G TO N — L aw m ak ers b egan returning from their summer recess on Tues­ day with leaders pledging not to let differ­ ences over spending bills force another gov­ ernment shutdown. But they also conceded several thorny issues need to be resolved this fall. President Clinton, meanwhile, might see the coming weeks as a fresh opportunity to use his line-item veto power. "I'm not interested in creating confronta­ tional issues — or avoiding them ," Senate M ajority Leader Trent Lott, R -M iss., told reporters, as he outlined the Senate's agenda for the coming weeks. The Senate returned from its month-long recess on Tuesday; the House is bade Wednesday. Both Lott and House Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, warned that a priority item of Clinton's — so-called fast-track authority for negotiating trade agreements — could be in jeopardy. Lott predicted "rough sledding" if Clinton insists on tying the authority to new conces­ sions to labor and environmentalists. And little enthusiasm was voiced on either side of the Capitol for another item on the administration's wish list — campaign finance reform. Lott said he wants to wait until the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, chaired by Sen. Fred Thom pson, R-Tenn., finishes its review of 1996 cam paign misdeeds "to see w hich (existing) law s w ere b ro k en ." That committee resumes work on Thursday. Among the difficult issues Lott listed for the coming months were a partisan battle over how the 2000 census is conducted, reform of the Food and Drug Administration, regulato­ ry reform and subsidies for Amtrak. Topping the list for both chambers is action on the 13 appropriations bills needed to keep the government functioning after the stárt of the new fiscal year, Oct. 1. None has been enacted. The measures are in various stages of completion. "W e've got a lot of catch-up to do on the appropriations bills" because so much energy went into getting the balanced-budget agree­ ment passed, Armey said. July's landmark agreement, which sets spend­ ing targets, makes a repeat of the government shutdowns of two years ago far less likely. Tougher regulations sought after bounty hunter shootings PHOENIX — The five bounty hunters who mistakenly kicked in Christopher Foote's door or over the weekend didn't need a warrant even a state license. But after the deaths of Foote and his girl­ friend in a hail of gunfire, some are demand­ ing that the shadowy world of bounty hunters be more closely regulated. "It created an image that this is the Wild West," said Maricopa County Attorney Rick Romley. "People should not be dying because of mistakes such as this." Even many of those who track down bail jumpers for a living say it was only a matter of time until innocent people got killed. "We knew that something like this was going to happen, because the^r s no standards or regulations across die country," said Bill J. Bryant, president of the National Association of Bail Enforcement Agents. Added Bob Burton, who runs the National Institute of Bail Enforcement, a training center in Tucson: "This is our Rodney King." Police said the bounty hunters, wearing black military-style clothing, ski masks and body armor, kicked in the front door of Foote's house early Sunday in search of a Cali- ; fomia bail jumper. They tied up several people inside the home — including three children — and a gun bat­ tle broke out when the bounty hunters tried to force their way into Foote's bedroom. Foote, 23, and his girlfriend, Spring Wright, 20, were killed. Two of the five men were wounded on their arms, which were not cov­ ered by the bulletproof armor. Authorities arrested three men on suspicion of second-degree murder. One of the three, 40- year-old Michael Martin Sanders, was charged Tuesday with two counts of second-degree murder and ordered held on $1 million bail. The other two under arrest are David Brackney, 45, and his son, Matthew Brackney, 20. The elder Brackney and Sanders were wounded in the shootout. Two other men were still being sought. Police spokesman Michael Torres declined Tuesday to release further details about the bail jumper the men said they were seeking. Investi­ gators have said the victims had no connection to the fugitive. RíImiimiii to Earth from the Mir space station, Russian cosmonaitts Vasily TsiWiyw and Alexan- der Lazutkin hug each other altor being pulled from their Soyuz spacecraft. Rosski. space offi­ cials Warned the cosmonauts for the worst space collision aver. Mir crew blamed for space collision MOSCOW — Russia may fine two of its own cosmonauts for history's worst space collision, rejecting the veteran crew members' claim that M ir's worn-out equipment was to blame, an overseer of the space station said Tuesday. A space com m ission concluded "beyond any doubt" that Vasily Tsib- liyev and Alexander Lazutkin caused the damaging June 25 crash, according to Valery Ryumin, the Russian coordi­ nator of the Mir-NASA program. The collision occurred during the practice docking of an unmanned robot space­ craft to the aging space station. "Personally, we felt pity for the boys, but the facts remain," Ryumin told the ITAR-Tass news agency. "M ost likely we will have to fine them." Russia has a history of rewarding and punishing its cosmonauts finan­ cially, with cosm onaut Gennady Strekalov saying he was stripped of some benefits lor refusingto ixñxe an extra spacewalk horn Mir in 199$. The space program has an elaborate bonus system that includes not only hazardous-duty pay, but specific pay ments for such tasks as spacewalks and manual dockings. For example, Russians earn an extra $1,000 for each spacewalk. American astronaut Michael Foale, who remains aboard Mir, was the third member of the crew at the time of this summer's accident. However, he — like other visiting astronauts — is not usually involved in operating or maintaining Mir. Lazutkin and Tsibliyev returned to Earth after the crash, which tore open the hull of one of Mir's modules and cost the space station about half of its power for weeks. The conclusions of the commission, which Ryumin said signed off on its report Tuesday, are unlikely to put all questions about the collision to rest. Skeptics could argue that Russia has a vested interest in finding that tech­ nical problems aboard Mir — a cash cow for their struggling space pro­ gram — did not cause the collision. "ft has been a longtim e tradition here in Russia to took for scapegoats," Tsibliyev, the Mir commander, said after returning to Earth Aug. 14 Tobacco companies raise cigarette prices ■ NEW YORK — Major tobacco com­ panies raised wholesale cigarette prices about 7 cents a pack Tuesday in what analysts saw as a down payment on the smoking suit settlements that would cost the industry billions of dollars. The increase was the second this year, following a rise of about 5 cents a pack in March. The latest increase amounts to a rise of about 7.5 percent in the wholesale price of cigarettes which should translate into a 4 percent increase at retail. Analysts said the latest increase should cover the first-year costs of ; legal settlements reached with the - states of Mississippi and Florida over I the states' claims to recover Medicaid * payments made to treat sick smokers. * They said the industry's quick move * to match the biggest cigarette maker, Philip Morris USA, in raising prices * may be intended to encourage Con- l gress to approve a broader national ' legal settlement reached in June. Higher tobacco prices could reduce demand for cigarettes by youngsters, backers of the agreement say. But crit­ ics have called the settlement too gen­ erous to the tobacco industry and say it is unfair to have current smokers shouldering the costs. Albright visits Czech concentration camp ■ PRAGUE, Czech Republic — Sec­ retary of State Madeleine Albright honored the memory of her grandpar­ ents with a private visit to the former Nazi concentration camp where they were held, a Czech news agency reported Tuesday. Albright stopped at Theresienstadt camp, north of Prague, on Sunday to learn more about the fate of relatives who died in the Holocaust, the CTK news agency said, citing unnamed officials. On Monday, Albright made a quick visit to two east Bohemian towns where her parents were bom. Albright learned about hen family's history and her Jewish heritage only in February when The Washington Post, in preparing a profile, established that more than a dozen of her relatives were killed in the Holocaust. U.S. demands exemption in world land mine treaty ■ OSLO, Norway — The United States demanded exemptions Tuesday to a proposed global ban on land mines — a demand that activists called a threat to the overall aim of the treaty talks. More than 400 delegates opened the conference Monday with a moment of silence in memory of the cause's most visible supporter, Princess Diana, who died Sunday in a Paris car crash. The U.S. delegation's proposals included exemptions for mines on the Korean peninsula and for certain types of mines* Delegates from more than 100 nations are attending the Oslo talks, which last through Sept. 19. Land mines kill or wound 26,000 people a year, about 80 percent of them civilians, often decades after a conflict has ended, delegates said. Opponents of the ban on land mines say mines can help prevent heavy troop losses in cases of enemy offen­ sives. Norwegian Foreign Minister Bjoem Tore Godal said backers hope sup­ porting countries will .-sign the treaty by the end of the year. Work would then begin to get all countries to accept a ban, including Russia, China, and India, which have not sent official delegations to the talks, he said. Efforts to ban land mines started last fall in Ottawa, but the United States joined the process just two weeks ago. Suspected armored car robber caught at border ■ BROWNSVILLE, Texas — After a five-month search for die man accused of staging one of the biggest heists in U.S. history, federal authorities say they have tneir suspect. Now they just have to prove it. At a brief federal court hearing Tuesday, die man authorities identify as wanted robber Philip Noel Johnson refused to concede that he is Philip Noel Johnson. The move prompted US. Magistrate Fidendo Garza to schedule an identifi­ cation hearing Thursday at which fed­ eral prosecutors must prove that the man in custody is indeed Johnson. Johnson, 33, is accused of stealing $22 mfflioh on March 29 from an armoced car company in Jacksonville, Fla. - Comptod from A—ooMásd f t n . I T h e D a i l y T e x a n NDW HNK IfflB M B I 8, 1M 7 T h e Da il y T e x a n Editorial Board Colby Angus Black Editor Jim Dedman Associate Editor A. Hunter Stanco Associate Editor Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publica­ tions Board of Operating Trustees. VIEWPOINT Firing Line rules On Monday, the Texan staff celebrated The Texan's 97th birthday as only a newspaper staff can. We labored — on Labor Day no less. Monday was also the Firing Line's birthday. Although letters to the editor appeared early in the history of The Texan, the term Firing Line was not coined until the '30s. Despite our best efforts, we cannot always be the voice of the student body on every issue. No matter what some tilings will always escape our scope. That's what the Firing Line is for. It gives each and every one of our readers the ability to inform us when we make a mistake, fail to cover an issue or simply illicit your concern. The Firing Line is the purest form of representation you have in the Texan. Right under our nameplate is the motto "The student newspaper of the University of Texas at Austin" — perhaps you've noticed it. The Firing Line keeps us honest. It makes us listen to our readers. It forces us to weigh your concerns. In many ways, it is our lifeline to you. Currently, the editorial board has over five semesters of experience doing what we do — a job which includes taking care of the Firing Line. Through our experiences, we have come up with several suggestions to make the Firing Line better: ■ E-mailed Firing Lines make us happy. While we will certainly accept a Firing Line scrawled on a bar napkin and placed in our hands, e-mailing us your comments will make the entire process much easier for everyone. ■ If you submit a Firing Line, we will call you to verify you sent it. Do not be surprised when you receive this phone call. We are not calling you to subvert your point of view by making it agree with ours. We are merely making sure we don't libel someone by publishing a letter he or she did not write. ■ Calling before you send a letter does nothing to help us verify the sender's identity. It merely supports the conspiracy theory which says you took the time to call us before writing a letter in your roommate's name just to get even with him. ■ Please limit your Firing Line to 250 words. We have a term for some­ one who regularly writes more than this. That term is columnist. Since we deal with limited space, brief comments allow us to run as many dif­ ferent letters as possible. ■ Do not send us your student ID number with your letter. This does not help us with the verification process. ■ We do not want to look up your classification and major. If we have to physically track you down to get this information, and can't, your let­ ter will not run. ■ Please include your phone number. ■ Do not e-mail us about stolen kidneys. For the last time, The Texan nearer reported the theft of anyone's kidneys. That story is what we call an urban legend. While it does indeed make a great story to tell at the next keg party, it didn't ever happen. ■ Do not send us a letter with a tiny line at the bottom that says, "This letter is not intended for publication." Doing such is akin to taunting us. People always ask what percentage of the letters we receive get pub­ lished. While no concrete numbers exist, we try to run everything and probably succeed 95 percent of the time. That being said, the Firing Line is what you make of it. Have fun, but realize everything you write will be read by thousands of people around the world. •' ‘ * • ' * • * ■ ‘ . Iranian president’s election sh new erainU.S.-Iran rela i • . . • ' T í -ív - • • In response to the recent inau­ guration of Iranian P resident Mohammed Khatami, thé United States must finally reevaluate its policy towards Iran. The election of a progressive moderate cleric who desires improved relations with the West should spur a new era of cooperation. Since 1095, the Clinton adminis­ tration has ostracized Iran, adopt­ ing a plan of "dual containment" to exclude both Iran and Iraq from any American relations. Because it df*s not alldW for any dialogue or any attempts at diplomacy, con­ tainment is one of the most extreme options America has in international sanctions. C ontinuing to deem Iran a threat is both excessive and coun­ terproductive. Not only has this policy failed to alter Iran's behav­ ior, it has also created tensions w ithin the intern atio n al arena. U.S. legislation, such as 199j6' s Iran-Libya Sanctions Act, punish-: es any m em ber of the global com­ m unity choosing to invest more than $40 m illion in Iranian or Libyan Oil or gas. Although the United States is a superpow er that influences international decision­ making, the idea that the Ameri- Parisa Fatehl TEXAN COLUMNIST can government should determine what is best for the entire world is arrogant. The administration cites Iran's support for1 terrorism, its opposi-. tion to the Arab-Israeli peace process and its quest for nuclear weapons as reasons for the policy. Although each of these concerns is legitimate, the current isolation policy does not rectify anything, . Israel and Iran, despite mutual hostility, have not halted all talks. Israel, when it pleases fh^ nation to do so, continues to deal with Iran. The United States should fol­ low Israel's example of systematic instead of using discernment extremist blanket policies which hinder, progress. Iri order to contain nuclear capa­ b i l i t y ip»iraf), the United States m ust rej&pdn relations^ ‘Without diplomacy, America is out of touch with Iranian developments. Despite the current policy's vale of silence, talking with the Iranian government does not send a signal of approval; it proves the United States is earnestly seeking solu­ tions. Cooperating with Iran will grant the United States some leverage — which is more than we have now. m ,_ The commercial potential which Iran possesses is yet another com­ pelling reason to reform sanctions. American oil companies and Iran once had very productive relation­ ships. In 1995, a conciliatory ges­ ture on. Iran's behalf awarded an oil contract to Conoco, but it was struck, down by the U.S. govern­ ment. Blocking a domestic compa­ ny's business ventures, the United States undermined its own inter­ ests and sent Iran the message we would not cooperate. Instead of teaching Iran a les­ son, and thus correcting miscon­ duct, the U.S. sanctions give the regime's dwindling — yet head­ strong — supporters more reason to attempt self-sufficiency. These factions of Iranian government must be shown international coop­ eration's advantages. They must understand such w illingness to branch out is a necessity in the global economy. Current policy has forced Iran to find other methods of survival. India, Reports show that Iran has culti­ vated stronger ties with Russia, China, Indonesia andt Brazil. Also, the production of "sophisticated goods and ser­ vices" has grown in the last 10 yeárs. Thus far, the United States') delay to improve relations with Iran has been attributed to lack of reciprocal desires. Khatami's inau­ guration, however, should quell any such hesitations. In his inau­ gural speech, Khatami spoke of his intentions to change foreign policy. America must take the next step. To group Iran with Iraq, as the current policy does, is ignorant at best. The attempt at "dual contain­ ment" was never intended to be a long-term solution. Now is the time to move forward and end years of wasted hostility. At a time when the United States encour­ ages trust and diplomacy among conflicting nations, the Clinton administration must heed its own advice and resume dialogue with Iran. Fatehi is a Plan II sophomore. it sh o u ld co ntinue GOiNCj u p... no, dow n, but THE L0N6-TÍRM TREND IS UP... ALTHOUGH WE'RE DUE FOR A T 10- 15% correction now... VES, HERE... NO, MORE LIKE 67» BUT THERE COULD BE MORE no, it's uP Again - Bur w a t ... oh, the HECK WITH IT. I D oonesbury ~ By g a r r y t r u d e a m P L u e iH A P u m o F & w m I 8 L O O F B R S ,U K E T H £ ttM N 6 l£ & QUACKERS, ANDSP0T7H& P09 5 ■ M W NO SPOT 7HO& ’ " P I 1™ ' S T )CK 70 C O L O R . ~- COMMf A/TAW Strong liberal tradition continues at the University.; students should get involved Ryan W. Gertz TEXAN CO LUM NIST N o matter what brand of lib­ eralism you subscribe. tQ, a group on campus will suit your needs. • presence at . • . . ;* . •k Liberals have alw ays been a the U niversity; they still dom inate cam pus. the UT A lth o u g h lib erals range from social­ "new " ists D em ocrats,- th ere are certain core val­ ues to which' m ost to liberals ascribe. H ere are some ways to d e te r­ m ine w hether you are.a liberal: ■ If you believe that the gov­ ernm ent is charged w ith p ro ­ m oting the general w elfare and not only the w elfare of the w ealthy, you are a liberal. ■ If you believe the govern­ m ent should protect in d iv id u ­ als' civil rights despite ideo­ logical disagreem ent, you are a liberal. ■ If you believe wom en and receive sh o u ld m in o rities equal pay for equal work, you are a liberal. If you believe people are im p o rta n t th an p rofit, ■ m ore you are a liberal. ■ takin g If you believe health care and w elfare bene­ fits from children and senior citizens is unacceptable, you are a liberal. ■ If you own a book or tape by Newt Gingrich, Rush Lim- baugh or Pat Buchanan, you are not a liberal. L iberalism in this country and on the UT cam pus stem s from a long tradition of pro- gressivism . Liberals have pio­ neered the greatest m ovem ents in U.S. history. .From w om en's rights to ch ild ren 's rights to civil rights, liberals have cap­ tained the charge. It's time for a new generation of liberals to begin their fight. Getting involved in this m ove­ ment may be the m ost im por­ tant decision of your college career. In an age where people are d isg ru n tle d by politics and politicians, political involve­ m ent is crucial. Many liberal organizations on cam pus need new m em bers. Involving your­ self w ith these groups is easy; m ost of them have tables set up on the West Mall where you contact their organi­ zation; all have regu­ lar meetings. For a small fee — and often for free — you m ay join these organizations and get placed on e-mall lists which w ill keep you inform ed. Follow these three steps if you would like to get involved w ith liberal cam pus organiza­ tions: ■ First, decide which group you w ould like to get involved with. There are political groups such as the College Democrats, the Longhorn Young Democrats and the University Democrats. There are also environmental groups such as Earth First! and the Sierra Club. Philosophical groups such as University International Socialists and University Civil Liberties Union can also be easily found. Other liberal groups include Feminist Action and the Long­ horn Chapter of the NAACP. m Second, you must have ;e- mail access. Today, the fastest and most efficient medium of communication is e-mail; every major political entity . employs e-mail for mass communication: ■ Third, and most -important, • you must participate in activi-^ ties with the organization you * join. Many students fail to be * active. You only benefit from#an orga- nization if you choose to invest your time in it. Liberals have been a; potent force in American politics for two hundred years. To continue this tradition, students interests ed in promoting the liberal value must get involved, drga- nize and communicate their m essage. College is a great place to start. Gertz is a government senior. h- )s7c ) a * ! 7' ( /S5t if 'ix '>s /A//1)5 O 11ocas Cl ir lotto c J licago Cleveland C l 1 Copenhaqen Dallas v . y Dusseldorf EuroCenter Frankfurt Geneva Gothernburg Hamburg Helsinki Hong Kong Houston Johannesburg Lisbon London Los Anaeles Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Milan Minneapolis Montreal Monte Munich New Delhi New Jersey New Osaka Oslo Yam Pi b e ■ ■ v Pi i :x7i / ¡. , - 7 I I y t ) I- ,c e ) w o i e S' ii! J S': 7,. Pa IO St 'O : tnwr: ¡; y ' y 7 ? > '« * i E / / : ' ■ ‘ ' •- / rekiieCt : c ’ v / v 7 S: or gab Svdnev k a ei I ' \ i / \ 'W 1 m r \ \ I The International Management Consulting Firm of McKinsey & Company, Inc. would like to wish you wall in your final year at the University of Texas. We will be on campus this semester to interview i December. May. and August graduates of al! disciplines with excellent academic credentials and strong leadership skills for the position of business Analyst. business Analysts a t McKmsey & Company have the unique opportunity to help leading companies in a variety of industries identify and resolve their most critical business problems. t you • ' +,i r t i 'J ! I/ner information about the business Analyst Program, please attend our presentation on ^ J I I Wednesday, September 10,1997 7:00 -9:00p.m. Alumni Center Equal Opportunity Employer M cKinsey & Company, lnc„ is an international stra te g ic management consulting firm w ith 74 offices in 39 countries around th e world. We serve m ostly Fortune and International 5 0 0 company executives on issues o f stra te g ic im portance. Our mission is twofold: to help clien ts make substantial and lasting im pacts on ■their perform ance, and to build a firm th a t is able to a ttra c t, develop, excite,‘and retain exceptional people. Search for funding Meeting to discuss college minority enrollment issues in Hopwood’s wake slated for November Usa Falkenbarg D aily Texan S taff A national post-Hopwood sum ­ mit at the U niversity planned for O cto b er h as b een p o stp o n ed to November pending the resolution of financial and scheduling issues. The sum m it's board of directors m et T u esd a y to p lan th e ev en t, w hich is hoped to open up more discussion about higher education after Hopwood. More than 200 letters to corpora­ tions and other prospective spon­ sors haven't brought any pledges for funding, said Jonathan Rude, student director for the summit. Bernard Rapoport, former chair­ m an of the U T System B oard of Regents, had indicated he m ight offer financial support, but has not y et d ecid e d how or w h eth er he will contribute to the event, Rude said. Plans for the summit were initi­ ated d u rin g the su m m er by the Student Government. M em bers of the sum m it board, which includes some students and UT ad m in istrators, are tryin g to attract a keynote speaker w orthy of national attention. "To get the summit the attention it d e s e rv e s ," said SG P re sid e n t WHERE ART WE? It always hurts me when you’re dealing with such a big, important cause, and so much money has to be spent.” —m tm im m um irnm tam i* um Marlen W hitely, "is not to ruffle the feathers or prove confronta­ tional to the University." The board has invited Kweisi Mfume, president of the National Association of the Advancement of C olored People, to o ffer the keynote address for the summit. Several national and in tern a­ tional newspapers and television statio n s have co n tacted Rude req u estin g in fo rm atio n on the summit, Rude said. Funding for the project may be expensive, according to prelimi­ nary fig u res d iscu ssed by the board Tuesday. Rough estim ates for the pro­ posed budget would cost more than $60,000 for several tentative expenditures: $800 for each pan­ elist's boarding and transporta­ tion ; $10,000 for p ro d u ctio n ; $18,000 for venue, which the Uni­ versity may sponsor, and $10,000 for security. If Mfume accepts the invitation, organizers can expect to pay more than $17,000 for the speech, Rude said. But Whitley said because of the sum m it's im portance, he hopes some of the speakers will come in for reduced rates. "T h is is an issue we honestly feel we shouldn't have to pay an honorárium for," Whitley said. The board was quoted $72,000 in costs to bring Colin Powell to speak. Presently, the highest name on the list of possible keynote speak­ ers is Mfume. " It alw ays h u rts me when you 're dealing with such a big, im p o rta n t c a u se , and so m u ch . m oney has to be sp e n t," s a id ! M ichael Sharlot, dean of the UT ¡ School of Law and a m em ber of \ the board. Organizers plan to have a town ' hall forum that would.include two high school counselors, tw o col­ lege adm issions cou n selors and two academ ic experts, said Ryan Gertz, SG press secretary. The focus of the summit is not how to reinstate affirmative action policies, but w hat to do w ithout them , W hitley said. He said the events planned will involve com ­ m unication of various ideas, not debates. "W e hope to come up with con­ crete, comprehensive plans we can take to the streets the following month," Whitley said. "A self-help mechanism for the University." Greek groups announce plans for community service activities Paul J. Weber Daily Texan Staff As Greek organizations returned to the West Mall Tuesday to entice freshmen to join their groups during Rush Week, sororities and fraternities also promised to put new and current members to work with community service. Sigma Phi Omega announced in its fall agenda a campaign to deter high school students from gang activity. Working with area schools, the social sorority hopes to encourage students to participate in positive projects such as jobs and after-school activities. "We want to work with students, and get them away from bad influ­ ences," said Hauy Huimhle, a Sigma Phi Omega member. "W e'll work with them, and try to steer them clear of gangs." Maria Sanchez, a counselor at Ellis High School in Round Rock, said she believes that the presence of college students, especially a sorority with a high minority representation, will make students more willing to listen to the detriments of gang activity. We want to work with students and get them away from bad influences,” — H m m m , * i . pw Phi On m u w "We have many sororities and fra­ ternities offering tutoring, but I haven't quite heard of anything such as this," Sanchez said. "I hope that many of our students will take •advantage of this opportunity." Along with Sigma Phi Omega, sev­ eral other sororities and fraternities presented their community service plans during the forum. Members of Beta Alpha Rho, a pre­ law fraternity, said tutoring and working with groups such as Habitat for Humanity are among their sched­ uled plans. "Last year we went out and rebuilt some houses, and we hope to do some similar projects this year," said Daniel Holmes, a member of Beta Alpha Rho. "We also plan to do some . activity in AIDS awareness, tutoring ¡ elementary kids and spending time j with retired people." Members of Beta Upsilon Chi, a J Christian-based fraternity, said Greek j members usually enjoy die chance to * help the community. "W e had a lot of fun last yea*, cleaning up and restoring homes, and it's definitely something we want to- try and do again," said Justin Hoop­ er, Beta Upsilon Chi member. "We'ré; always looking for new ways to help- out." Tuesday marked the fourth dav fraternities and clubs have assembled on the West Mall to encourage new“ students to join. John Rese, a member of Phi Alpha. Delta, a law fraternity, has attended rush since it started last week and said attendance has remained high r throughout the entire period. "The first day was really good, bu^ that's just because it was the first day," said Rese. "I'm still seeing a lot of enthusiasm though, and people are really taking an interest in why we're out here." If you want it in your HEAD you need it in your Cassie Velasquez, a freshman chemistry major, and David Rossiter, a freshman history major, take in the Spirited 'cur- Arts Museum after then Latin class. neys, self-taught artists of the 20th century, exhibit at th e fin e KASSi PATT0N /D aily Texan Staff ATTENTION ALL NEW LONGHORNS! Freshman Record Texas Student Publications Building, Room 3.200 Corner of 25th Street and Whitis Avenue Weekdays, 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Available to all students who placed an order during the summer. Photo Identification necessary to claim your book. You’ve got a lot on your mind. So before your bran gets to overload, get your hands on some help. With PalmPiloC it’s easy to store an entire college career’s worth of info—names, phpne numbers, appointments, assignments, e-mail*and more. And when you need to back up on your personal computer, just toych a button on toe dotting cradle aid aril your date is synchronized in conds. At just 4.7" and 6 oz, PalmPHot is more an a convenient electronic organizer. It’s toe ddy your overworked brain’s been waiting for. PalmfSit Tto G ew filei ••■■■Iter Provisional Edttkm m m m M » BacMit display • lMBmamofy • Address book • D atab oo fcB B • Msmopad ■ • Todo lists • Expanas • Gamas • M am at mady • E-mai • HotSync* • 512MB maamy • BacMtdtapmy • DaHbaok • Usas M s • Ispsnaa •Adftasabook • Mamo pad wpffiwBBMBsmH O j y « * 019S 7 3C«n Coporaton or t t M « a i m m m t.3 C t l » 30 » H»>. wa G n l* — e» W Sw eile or Mdemele e i W o m W » * ! * » - W W L W I C H Itt M M H H I T h e D a ily T e x a n § Hciean campaigns code lacks teeth Daily Texan Staff Though a law condemning unfair campaign practices went into effect this week, some political organizers questioned its significance Tuesday. While touted as a step toward cleaner elections, the Code of Fair Campaign Practices recently passed by die Texas Legislature has no force of law. The code, a pledge to cam­ paign fairly, is completely voluntary, and a candidate may sign at any time during candidacy. Morris Overstreet, a Democratic contender for Texas attorney general, has pledged in writing to adhere to the code and asked that his opponent, incumbent Dan Morales, do me same. "He has always run an honest cam­ paign — this is just a way to get it down in writing," said Jason Stan­ ford, a spokesman for Overstreet. The code, essentially a guideline for candidates to conduct their cam­ paign, requires that candidates limit attacks on opponents to the opponen­ t's record and stated positions. Not discussed in the code's guidelines are the state's ability to enforcethis con­ tract or the ramifications facing a can­ didate who breaks the pledge. Although Morales hasn't decided whether he will sign the code, Morales spokesman Ron Dusek said the attorney general's method of run­ ning campaigns will not be affected. "The attorney general always cam­ paigns honestly and openly and stands on his record," Dusek said. "Therefore, the issue of whether he signs the document is not relevant." Roderick Hart, a UT government professor, said die code is essentially unenforceable and will play a very minor role in spring campaigns. "I think by and large, campaigns in the Unitejl States are governed by economic issues," Hart said. "Until we have some kind of national agree­ ment on campaign finances, the con­ tracts about civility are very minor." Dusek said Overstreet's campaign has not taken a civil tone thus far and added that he doubts it will change with the signing of the code. "It is going to be a change of strate­ gy for Overstreet to sign this," Dusek said. "Throughout the campaign he has been distorting die record of die attorney general. On every issue, he has distorted and misrepresented the facts." But Stanford said Overstreet's cam­ paign has been fair from the begin- ning. "We are running on the facts, and we have documented everything we have said," he added. Regardless of political posturing surrounding die code, Hart said sig­ nificant election reforms are far from a reality. "Signing those documente is going to be accompanied by a bunch of photographers with flash cameras," Hart said. "In the end they are going to' do what is necessary by lawful boundaries to get elected." Apple Computer buys back license Associated Press The future of Power Computing Corp. and its multimillion-dollar tax deal with the city of Georgetown was unclear Tuesday after Apple Com­ puter Inc. announced it was buying back the licensing agreement allow­ ing the company to make Macintosh- based machines. Under foe $100 million deal, Apple will buy the licensing agreement. Power Computing will retain its name separate from Apple and is like­ ly to move into cloning machines that run Microsoft's Windows software. The company, the first to get a licensing agreement from Apple, will stop making its Macintosh-based machines at me end of the year. Power Computing last year agreed in a lucrative deal to move its head­ quarters slightly north from its cur­ rent Round Rock location to George­ town, both Austin suburbs. Georgetown spent $2 million on land to lure Power Computing and agreed to property tax breaks for 15 years, sales tax refunds for the compa­ ny and a scenic site. Equally convinced of the deal, Williamson County officials purchased land aiound foe pending Power Com­ puting site for an exposition center and convention center. They hoped the company would create a windfall of sales tax revenue for the project. This spring, foe company started construction on a $28.9 million, 340,000-square-foot sales and manu­ facturing complex. But the project was put on hold after Power Comput­ ing and Apple could not agree on extending foe licensing agreement. Under its deal with Georgetown, Power Computing faces a Dec. 31 deadline to have its Texas sales center moved from Round Rock. If the com­ pany fails to meet that deadline, Georgetown officials could call off foe company's tax incentives deal. The acquisition of Power Comput­ ing relieves the biggest source of Apple's nagging headache over cloning. The Cupertino, Calif., compa­ ny has been rethinking its licensing strategy — to the chagrin of clonemak- ers, industry observers and Mac users. Apple, based in Cupertino, Calif., gets certain critical Power Computing employees, its list of more than 200,000 customers and the clone license. WOMSUP SONG/Daity Texan Staff The sculpture Praying Mantis draws Paul Plata's appreciation at the National WHdflower Research Center. Praying Mantis is a part of the Big Bugs outdoor sculpture exhibit created by David H.G. Rogers. Body found under 1-35 Darak N. Marlin Daily Texan Staff Police discovered an unidentified body on the south shore of Town Lake under the Interstate 35 bridge around 11:45 a.m. Monday, Austin police public information officer Mike Burgess said. The decomposed body may have been in the lake since late May, Burgess said. It appears to be either a white or Hispanic male about 50 years old. The body was found clothed with a blue windbreaker and blue work pants. An autopsy Tuesday was incon­ clusive because of the condition of the body, said Travis County med­ ical and legal investigator Bob Davis. More tests are scheduled during the next two days. The body was reported by two transients who found it underneath the bridge. Anyone with information con­ cerning this case should call the Austin police tip line at 477-3538. New tactics planned to curb illegal alcohol use Margarita OHvero Daily Texan Staff Using tougher state laws against underage drinking, the Austin Police Department is taking new measures to curb the number of minors driving under the influence of alcohol and purchasing alcoholic drinks. Austin police will conduct stings sending minors into bars and liquor stores to find out which ones are breaking the law, said David police spokesman. Ferrero, a An increased number of police officers in downtown areas, specif­ ically on Sixth Street, should help deter minors from attempting to buy alcohol, Ferrero said. Students can expect that foe start of football season will bring more police on Sixth Street this week­ end, he added. The "zero tolerance law" against underage drinking, which went into effect Monday, prompted the police to begin the crackdown, Ferrero said. Under the new law, minors who are caught driving with any detectable trace of alcohol in their bloodstream could face a $250 to $2,000 fine and possible license sus­ pension. The law also penalizes the man­ ufacturers and distributors of counterfeit identification, and bar­ tenders and clerks who sell alcohol to minors. Consequently, students can expect closer inspection of IDs, Ferrero said. Sofia Mena, 18, a radio-television- film freshman, said she came to the University with the impression that without a fake ID, her college expe­ rience wouldn't be complete. Other students said Tuesday they are skeptical the law can be enforced effectively. The law affects minors with fake IDs from Texas and any other state in foe nation. But it does not address foe issue of foreign licenses, passports or other forms of identification. The Austin Police Department, citizen groups and bar owners will meet Sept. 17 to discuss measures against drunken driving. JP BankAm erica ta n d l a n aaá aattariatin hi m m Hm i ritapaaaaaaHfeManaHaaridkapHaatlaaa. vaMiU- ba « a « a M * ta «al ysar caraar a asfaifc at aWmi I» * 1» * p a M «a mama k«B mm, aanqteS «aap^WMl anas aari baalBaaaaNfkatB. tari, tspravMa aullllai —,B >■1 Mri appartaaMaa far aiaa*an af a v laaah «Via IssU * lar MaaM paspls la play «M mas aa an ti «arpa atoad taaaMaaa Haaaa lala aa la «aaaaalBi On B M U aNrfaa has ta aliar yaa. MBA/BA Presentation Thursday, September 4,1887 &00 p.m. University of Texas University Teaching Center, Room 3.102 g f e . • . : fe . M o s t of the furniture in the southern end of the Union is original pieces from the 1930s. m Gum wood w as used in the inte­ rior of the building. Such a large structure could no longer be built out of gum wood because the rain fo re st tree d o e s not grow tail enough today. Union Architect Paul Cret user soft earth to ne s and Span ish styles. The handicraft of this floor w as of such high quality in the 1930s that it can no longer be duplicated today. PHOTOS BY sc o n LA WHENCE/D a ¡ly Texan Staff Far left The light fixtures have been in the Governors Room Since the Union was built The floor, also original j ia s three different widths of boards and is the only one of its kind west of the Mississippi. Back then the room was the men's smoking lounge, where women were not allowed. The room's original counterpart was the women-only Sin­ clair Suite, where coeds could take afternoon naps and check their petticoats in a full-length mirror. Now portraits of Texas governors who studied at the University are dis­ played in the Governors' Room, and the current governor s picture hangs above the fireplace. L e t The ceing fans in the Texas Union Board cf Director room were made in 19» and used to rotate in Taylor Hal.WhenTay was renovated the fans were almost throff out^ sfcghty longer than ttsM - . . . f j Milwaukee Brewers Gerald Williams (29) slides safely into second base with a double as the Houston Astros Tun Bogar fields the threw hew the outfield during the fHlhtaaiaB - gives Rangers 13-12 win ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Yankees 0 Pittsburgh 6, Cleveland 4 Atlanta 5, Detroit 0 Montreal 6, Boston 5 Cincinnati 4, Kansas City 0 Chicago Cubs 9, Minnesota 3 N.Y. Mats 8, Toronto 5 Florida 3, Baltimore 2,10 Innings St. Louis 6, Chicago White Sox 1 Milwaukee 4, Houston 2 Texas 13, Loe Angeles 12. Anaheim 12, Colorado 7 • a n i l c iw f m r m c wr It IB s M n R K EIlW ■ An informational meeting will be held Wednesday, Sept. 3, at 5 p.m. in the Sports Office of The Daily Texan (25th Street and Whitis Avenue) for any student interested in becoming a sports writer for the fall 1997 semester. HVIML ■ EnSports@ubcvms.cc.utexas.edu Please send questions, comments or concerns to the Daily Texan Sports office address. Lehtinen signs 3-year contract with Dallas Stars ■ DALLAS — The Dallas Stars signed right wing Jere Lehtinen to a three-year con­ tract Tuesday. Lehtinen, 24, had 43 points on 16 goals and 27 assists last year, his second in the NHL. He finished third in voting for the Selke Trophy that goes to the league's best defensive player. He was 13th in the Lady Byng Trophy for the most gentleman­ ly player. team 's "He has been a solid player for the last two seasons and we look forward to his future con­ tributions to our hockey club," Dallas general manager Bob Gainey said. Lehtinen, top the rookie in 1995-%, was on Fin­ land's 1994 Olympic team and is likely to be on his country's . 1998 team. He also played for * Team Finland in die 19% World Cup of Hockey and he led the ' Finnish National Team to the gold medal at die 1995 World Championships. The Stars open training camp v Sept. 9 in Kalamazoo, Mich. Ohio State player accused of assault waiv as hearing ■ DAYTON, O hio — An assault case against Ohio State forward Jon Sanderson could go before a grand jury. Sanderson, accused of scuf­ fling with a University of Day­ ton campus policeman, waived his right to a preliminary hear­ ing Tuesday at a hearing before Dayton Municipal Court Judge JoKn Pickrel. The case was bound over to prosecutors, who could present it to a grand jury. However Sanderson's attorney, Jon Paul Rion, said die case might be resolved Thursday during a pretrial hearing. "We have in essence pre­ pared our case for trial," Rion said. innocent The 6-foot-7 Sanderson, an incoming freshman, has plead­ ed to charges of assaulting a peace officer, underage drinking and public intoxication. Sanderson, 18, kicked the University of Dayton officer on the knee and hip and in the abdomen during a scuffle Aug. 24, said John Delamer, die uni­ versity's director of security. Rion said Sanderson was at a campus party and ran when security officers arrived. He said Sanderson accidentally kicked someone after officers tripped and tackled him. — Comp&od from Associated Prass reports L ■ M H n M n P f t* Longhorns hoot tha Tecas Invitational at gpyaj^lanoiM SladiiM i. a M aw atete!* t gave thaw Sw win. I- off a victory as Seles falls NEW YORK — Michael Chang and Cedric Pioline shuffled as if they wore lead sneakers, die muscles in their legs pulsating with pain, their feet sore, shoulders slumped, mouths gulping for air. And they still had a set to go. Chang that most indefatigable of players, looked tm if he had absoiutefy nothing left Tbesday, % if he most certainly would follow Pete Sampras and Monica Seles out of the US. Open on this hottest and nmggiest of days. There was no reasonable way Chang could come back, trailing 5*2 in the fourth set and down two sets to one. Somehow, he did. Chang dim into his incredibte reservoir of desire, gritad upon fhoae thick legs to start teen game after game—seven in a row and 11 of the last 12— to produce a mas- terful6-3, (Ml 5*7,7-d 6-1 victory in3heure 41 minutes to move to the quartreinala. H A day after the toy reacted tepnprae, the and fettHfcnt champion, auc- I * '^ ;[t? fa*0 0 0 0 exhaustion, and right ■ ■ die women's No. 2 seed, lost to Irina Spirlea, the second seeded Chang I barely escaped a similar maty exit i Plaaae asa Opea, page 11 ARLINGTON — Rusty Greer's two-out RBI single capped a six-run ninth inning Tuesday nignt that rallied the Texas Rangers to a 13-12 win over the Los Ange­ les Dodgers. 4 f ¡ y.. > J ' ’>>» * ar Greer, batting for the second time in die inning, lined a 3- 2 pitch from Darren Dreifort through die right side to score Alex Diaz with the winning run. It was Greer's fourth game- winning hit in die Rangers' last at-bat this season. Juan Gonzalez went 4-for-5 with a homer and three RBIs, and Lee Stevens had a career-high four hits for the Rangers, who won despite committing a season- high five errors. PRESS Mike Piazza went 3-for-5 with a triple and Otis Nixon scored three runs for the Dodgers, who lead second-place San Fran­ cisco by 1 1/ 2 games In die NL West. The Giants were idle. Trailing 12-7, Greer singled to open the ninth off Scott Radinsky, and after Gonza­ lez single, Stevens hit an RBI single. After a walk, Todd Worrell (2-6) replaced Radin­ sky and walked Fernando Tatis to force in a run. Alex Diaz followed with a run-scoring single to make it 12-10. Ivan Rodriguez then hit a two-run, pinch-hit single to tie it. After Tom Goodwin's bunt attempt was caught by catcher Tom Prince for the first out, Dreifort relieved and Domingo Cede- no grounded into a fielder's choice, send­ ing Diaz to third. Greer followed with his game-winner. Wilson Heredia (1-0) pitched two innings for the win. Nixon and Greg Gagne each had three hits for the Dodgers. Hideo Nomo, staked to a 9-3 lead after five innings, allowed five runs and eight hits in 5 1-3 innings of a no-dedsion. Piazza, named NL Player of the Week Tuesday, is 26-for-66 (.394) in his last 18 games. The All-Star catcher 13-for-27 in five interleague games. The Dodgers grabbed a 2-0 lead in the first on Piazza's RBI single Mondesi's run- scoring double. But Texas came right back in the bottom of die inning on a two-run single by Gonzalez. Los Angeles scored four times in the third against Darren Oliver with three of the runs unearned after two Texas errors. Eric Young scored from third when Rangers second baseman Domingo Cede- no threw a potential double-play ball into left field. Mondesi drove in the inning's second run with a groundout. Todd Zeile's RBI double and Gagne's run-scoring single staked Nomo to a 6-2 lead. Piazza's third career triple and first since his rookie year scored Nixon in the fourth, extending the Dodgers' lead to 7-2. Oliver who had won his previous five decisions, lasted only four innings and gave up seven runs and nine hits. Stevens' RBI single in the fourth made it 7-3, but Prince hit a two-run homer, his third, off reliever Eric Moody in the fifth for a 9-3 Los Angeles advantage. Texas chased Nomo in the sixth and cut the deficit to 9-5 on Fernando Tatis' RBI single and Benji Gil's sacrifice fly. Darien Lewis had an RBI single in the seventh to put the Dodgers ahead 10-5, but Gonzalez's 33rd homer and Jim Leyritz's run-scoring single in the seventh pulled die Rangers within 10-7. Grand jury says Newton will not face indictment DALLAS — Dallas Cowboys offensive lineman Nate Newton was cleared Tuesday of allegations that he raped his former mis­ tress, a woman who defense attorneys said tried to extort money from the athlete before going to police. Newton spent more than an hour before the grand jury that declined to indict him on a sexual assault charge recommended by prosecutors. The normally talkative playo- and his wife, Dorothy, walked out of the courthouse together before the panel reached its decision. Neither had any com­ ment. "I'm very happy," Newton's lawyer, Howard Shapiro said. "It does not take a lot of evidence to get someone indicted — any­ thing can happen. "Mr. Newton wants to play football, get on with his life, help die Dallas Cowboys win another Super Bowl." The 31-year-old woman who accused Newton of raping her in her mobile home on June 15 was "pretty crushed" by the decision, according to her lawyer Bryan McDonald. "It took a lot of courage for her to come forward. To have the grand jury jerk the rug out from under her is kind of diaheart- ASSOCtATED PRESS Nate Nauitoa sad his write Dorothy leave tee uwakawa alter tealMytag ia fcoataf a greed jury. ening," he said. Her fears of not being believed kept her from reporting the alleged crime to Grand Prairie police before July 8, McDonald said. "It's not totally unexpected," he said. "We tried to prepare ourselves for exactly this situation because of the mystique of the Cowboys." Please aaa ílaa^la^L paga 1^1 P ag e 10 W ednesday, Septem ber 3 ,1 9 9 7 T h e D aily T e x a n Astros v Continued from page 9 Voigt to load the bases. Williams followed with a sac fly to center, scoring Bumitz, and with pinch-hitter Mark Loretta at the plate, Grillo scored on Wagner's wiki pitch. Villone (1-0) pitched three innings for foe win, arid Doug Jones worked the ninth for his 31st save in 32 chances. Kile held foe Brewers to one run and three hits and took a 2-1 lead into foe seventh. Cirillo doubled, went to third on a wild pitch and scored on Williams' sacrifice fly. "I feel aH right, but right now a lot of foe breaks are going foe other way," Kile said. "The other teams seem to come up with foe big hit or they make a quality pitch to win foe game." Houston took a 1-0 lead in foe sec­ ond on Tony Eusebio's RBI double off Jeff DAmico, making his first start since July 18 because of tendinitis in his right biceps. Jose Valentin hit his 15th homer in foe fourth for foe Brewers to tie it 1-all. The Astros took a 2-1 lead in foe fifth on Craig Biggio's run-scoring sin­ gle DAmico allowed three hits in five innings. Notes: The Brewers signed free agent pitcher Paul Wagner on Tues­ day. Wagner had a 3.94 ERA in 14 relief appearances with Pittsburgh this season before being designated for assignment on Aug. 19. ... Houston's Jeff Bagwpll needs four steals to become foe Astros' first 30-30 player. He has 37 home runs and 26 stolen bases.... Milwaukee's Jeff Huson is 7- for-53 (.132) since foe All-Star break. The University of Texas W om en's A th le tic s ROSS* TR W H O ! y/ All full-tim e U T students (fe m ale ) WHAT? w'" Pa rtic ip ate in tryouts to walk-on to the 1997-98 University ofTexas W o m e n ’sTrack & Field and Cross C o u n tr y teams W H EN ? ✓ Sunday. Sept. 7 at 9 a.m. (Cross C o u n tr y only) ✓ Wednesday, Sept 10 at 2 p m . (Trac k & Field only) ★ R A I N O R S H I N E * WHERE? ✓ Southwest c o r n e r of Royal-Texas M e m o r i a l Sta diu m T ra ck W H A T T O W E A R C o m f o r t a b l e running clothes and shoes IM P O R T A N T INFO.: ^ You m u st be cleared through the w o m e n ’s athletics d e p a r t m e n t B E F O R E you can try o u t. Pick up your walk-on checklist fro m Beverly Bavaro in B e llm o n t Hall R o o m 718 and turn in your c o m p le te d fo r m A S A P ! F or m o r e info., please call Assistant Coach John R e m b a o at 47 1 -9 1 3 8 or Beverly Bavaro at 47 I -6230. Newton / Continued from pege 9 Responded Shapiro: "I'm tired of hearing that. He's also foe one that said this wasn't about seeking money, it's about seeking Justice." Shapiro has said the woman false­ ly cried rape after an evening of con­ sensual sex in an attempt to extort money — anywhere from $80,000 to $650,000 — from his client. The woman and Newton have confirmed they had a relationship that Shapiro said lasted 15 months. First Assistant District Attorney Norm Kinne said the woman's cred­ ibility was harmed by her monetary negotiations with Newton before going to police. Kinne said he could not speak for grand jurors, but "they probably did not appreciate this monetary negotiations breaking down prior to the time that the criminal justice system is brought into play." Last week, the grand jury heard a recording, made by foe woman's answering machine June 17, in which Newton appears to apolo­ gize for his actions that night, said Kinne, adding that was probably the strongest evidence against Newton. "It's an apology, sort of, and an admission, sort of," he said. Four witnesses, including New­ ton and his wife, testified Tuesday before the panel, which also had for its review a packet of four letters Rutgers Continued from page 9 to keep his job. Last spring, Jones was awarded the starting spot because he was the only signal- caller in the Knights' camp. But after struggling early last week against the Hokies, he was pulled from the lineup in favor of junior college transfer Brendan Edmonds. Shea assured Jones earlier this week he would get another chance against Texas, and now the young quarterback said he believes both he and his teammates have nowhere to go but up. "This team is filled with charac­ ter, and we're not going to Texas to lie down," Jones said. "Sure, it's a challenge, but we just have to look at.it as an opportunity." Many Texas fans might find that statement then again, Goliath did his share of laughing, too. laughable. But 44 It’s an apology, of sorts, and an admission, sort of.” — mm Om A vf « É M áMHfcf from the woman's lawyers to Shapiro and Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, Shapiro said. One of the letters sent him demanded $650,000 or threatened publicity and criminal prosecution, he said. "We're going to take a serious look at her lawyer's actions now," Shapiro said. "It's not as though we went in making a bunch of demands unso­ licited," McDonald said. "They wanted to try to resolve this manner monetarily." The woman now plans to file a civil lawsuit over the events of that night, he said. "We hoped the criminal courts would take responsibility in this case," McDonald said. "Now that they haven't, we have no choice." West Coast’ offense very hard to define ■ Practically everyone has heard of foe "West Coast" offense. But just what exactly is it? There's no doubt that it has become the hottest thing going in the NFL ranks, but when asked to define what makes a good "West Coast" offense, Mackovic isn't really sure. "Every time I look at someone, they're doing it differently from someone else," he said. Primarily, foe system keys on spreading foe ball around to numerous places. The quarterback must be able to take quick drops, even faster reads and disperse foe ball to everyone on the field. Mackovic, who is considered an offensive guru himself, concedes that many have tried to emulate foe play design of Bill Walsh, the San Francis­ co 49ers head coach during foe team's dynasty years of the 1980s. In Saturday's game, Rutgers spread the ball around to nine dif­ ferent players — six receivers and three backs. Walter King walked away with the most receptions. He had three for 74 yards and one touchdown. "I don't know if anyone has been able to run it quite like Bill Walsh did," Mackovic said. "I know [Green Bay head coach] Mike ^ Rutgers vs. Texas tm * ^ 4 * 5 * * «* - 1 i Reggie Funderburk Flanker Tony Hohiws Comertoack ■ SIZE: 5-11,175 pounds ■ CLASS: Senior ■ HOMETOWN: Mitchellville, Md. ■ STATS: Caught 2 p a s s e s o r 13 yds. against Virginia Tech * ■ SIZE: 5-9 ,1 8 0 pounds CLASS: Junior ■ ■ HOMETOWN: Irving ■ STATS: Started Baylor gam e last season. Used pri- marily on special team s in ’96 W STATS: When these two match up on Saturday, it could be a battle to determine not who has the best skills, but who has the best doctor. Both are trying to rejoin the fray after devastating knee injuries. Holmes missed the second half of the 1996 season after tearing an anterior cru­ ciate ligament in his right knee against Texas Tech. Funderburk missed all of ’96 after blowing out his knee against Tulane in Game 9 of 1995. The Scarlet Knights’ “West Coast" offense is designed to spread the ball around to everyone in an attempt to find the defense’s weak link. In Fun­ derburk’s first two seasons, he picked up all-Bijg East honors as he averaged 11.9 yards per catch and scored nine touchdowns. Holmes and Co. are trying to prove that they can handle the pressure, and even though Rutgers is dismally thin at thfe quarterback position, they will still be UTs first challenge in a game situation. By Brian Davis, Daily Texan Staff Holmgren might be the closest." Longhorns stepping up their preparation ■ With the season opener only four days away, Texas head coach John Mackovic said that the team has stepped up its preparation for the Scarlet Knights by having the first- and second-team units square off against each other. The Longhorns began installing their game plan for Rutgers last week, but Tuesday, they took a more hands-on approach in get­ ting ready for a team that was dis­ posed of by Virginia Tech 59-19 in the two teams' respective season openers. "[Tuesday] begins a day of hard work for us, and we're going to be getting a lot of fundamental work in," Mackovic said. "We began working foe first team and second teams units against each other to get more of a Uve picture." The Longhorns began scrimmag­ ing No. Is versus No. Is last season, and Mackovic said that it gives them a little better consistency in what they will be seeing come Saturday. Texas plans to take Rutgers seriously ■ Even though the name Rutgers doesn't scare opponents Uke brand ‘ - names Notre Dame or Florida would, don't expect the Longhorns ^ to be taking foe Scarlet, Knights '* ' y lightly. r teams except ‘ * "There's not a whole lot of dif- ference between maybe personnel," UT outside linebacker Dusty Renfro said. "The name is the only difference. Every- body's going to have good ath­ letes, but i f s just who shows up on what day." ,: The Longhorns learned their les- ( . t ,; son last year about "showing up." They have dubious losses against Virginia and Oklahoma as proof. , -r "We've got to cut all the mental errors out of our play and show up „ each game like it was the national championship game," Renfro said. (J Injury update ■ Backup left tackle Cory Quye y- rolled his left ankle during individ- *' ual drills Tuesday. Mackovic said ! a that nothing showed up in X-rays, and Quye is expected to be able for t ' . « Saturday's game. ... Backup center Russell Gaskamp's back problems have not gotten any better. He is < I currently questionable for Satu- t ■ day's game. — By Brian Davis, Daily Texan ’ staff Snap, P itch & Play Flag Football R egistration NOW open! • enter by Thu., Sep. 11, at the RSC, to reserve your spot • "instant schedule" pick your day and league time • eligibility: UT students, faculty/staff members of RecSports : Football Official's Meeting • : — 7 = • * • • • I t f * • rmuvmcmor 1 ReCM ATKXiALM «ROUTS Switzer tells Cowboys to be smart, curb celebration 44 1 told them we already had one should have won die game/' Switzer said. "They dominated die game for 3 1/2 quarters." "Games against them have always been hard for us, particularly in their stadium." quarterback Troy Aikman. T he D aily Texan Wednesday, September 3,1997 Page 11 I IRVING — On the airplane home Horn Sunday's 37-7 blowout of the Pittsburgh Steelers, Dallas coach Biarry Switzer got on the public address system to warn his players about excess celebration. "I told them to be smart," Switzer said, "1 told diem we had already had one screwup [Switzer carrying a gun in an airport] and I didn't want anybody to join me. I told them diere was a lot of evening left and I want­ ed them to do the right tiling." Switzer also gave die team only 24 hjours to think about the win. ; "I told them they had a day to cel­ ebrate this one," Switzer said. i "Championship teams understand die jot? they have to do. We know what it takes to win and lose football games. They know if you have to take a sack lunch to a game or a bathing suit and suntan oil." Switzer said Tuesday that games against underdog teams like the Ari­ zona Cardinals next Sunday night are the toughest for coaches and players. He calls it a "sack lunch" game. "I mentioned Iowa State a couple years ago and got into trouble/' said the former.Oklahoma coach. "I'm not going to fall into that trap this year. But we know we will have to prepare well for Arizona. They will be at home and ready to play. screwup and 1 didn’t want anybody to join me.” — Barry PHttnr, fSmÉiw' é é é é céécéi "We saw die tape of the Steeler game yesterday and we had "some laughs and jokes. There's a lot of hee-hawing when you win. But diese games [at Arizona] worry you, they sure do." Dallas has defeated Arizona 13 consecutive times dating back to Oct. 14, 1990 when the Cardinals earned a 20-3 decision at Sun Devil Stadium. Cincinnati beat Arizona 24-21 last week on a touchdown with 38 sec­ onds to play after Larry Centers fumbled trying to run out the clock. "There is no question Arizona Switzer said the reason Dallas had dominated Arizona in the past was simple: talent. "The Cowboys have had a domi­ nating talent level, that's just being honest," Switzer said. "I don't see them with 13 Pro Bowl players. But we know they will be ready to play hard " Dallas played just well enough to beat Arizona twice last season, 17-3 at Texas Stadium in October and 10- 6 at Tempe in December. "We have a lot of respect for the way Arizona always plays us," said The Cowboys will have the ser­ vices of comerback Deion Sanders for a second consecutive game, although he has returned to his base­ ball team, the Cincinnati Reds. "Trainer Jim Maurer said Deion was sore after the Pittsburgh game, but we saw he was well enough to pinch hit last night," Switzer sjid. ♦ "We don't know when Deion will show." Sanders has said he will join the 10-point favorite Cowboys in Ari- 1 zona on Saturday. Irabu yanked from rotation NEW YORK — Hideki Irabu was removed from the Yankees' pitching rotation Tuesday, a day after owner George Steinbrenner blasted the pitch­ er following a loss to Philadelphia, r "With Irabu, we've been searching for the con­ sistency that will eventually be there because his stuff is there," New York manager Joe Torre said before Tuesday night's game against the Phillies. "He really hasn't caught up with die rest of our starters." Irabu gave up five runs and nine hits in three- p lu s innings in Monday's 5-1 loss. He is 4-3 with a team-high 7.68 ERA in eight starts, allowing 33 earned runs, 55 hits and 12 home runs in 38 2-3 innings. "I've got about seven dozen Hideki Irabu T- shirts I am giving to the Litde Sisters of the Blind," Steinbrenner was quoted as saying in Tuesday's editions of The New York Post. "I wasn't impressed afall." 1 Steinbrenner had a front-row seat for Monday7 s i series opener and left soon after Irabu was pulled. Torre said Irabu would pitch out of the bullpen to try and regain confidence. "Really he doesn't have enough command of what he's doing" Torre said. "Hopefully, if he gets out there and has a time or two out of the bullpen, he can maybe find something. Right now, I sense he's feeling for it and not where he'd like to be." Irabu again showed his temper following a poor performance, breaking a sprinkler head in the Yan­ kees' clubhouse at Veterans Stadium. He also punched a door leading to a Phillies news confer­ ence room, leaving a fist-sized dent, the Daily News reported. Yankees spokesman Rick Cerrone told reporters after the game that Irabu decided not to speak with them. "From what I've seen, I don't see [him starting again]," Steinbrenner told Newsday. "And I don't want to hear it was the mound again. I'm tired of those excuses. He's been disappointing no doubt about it He's got to learn to pitch" Lawyers say grand juror in Albert case is biased ARLINGTON, Va. — Marv Albert's lawyers asked Tuesday that the sexual assault case against the sportscaster be dismissed because a grand jury member once worked for the case prosecutor. Defense attorney Roy Black contended that Amy Levine, one of the six grand jurors who indicted Albert in May, was campaign manager for Arlington County Commonwealth Attorney Richard Trodden in 1994 and 1995. • "Such a close relationship by an advocate of the very prosecutor presenting the indictment clearly taints the makeup of the grand jury in this case, gives the appearance of bias and is in and of itself cause for this indictment to be dis­ missed," Black wrote in his request. The motion also asks that if the case goes to trial as scheduled on Sept. 22, that the jury not be allowed to consider consensual sodomy between Albert and his accuser as a crime. • Albert is charged with forcible sodomy in an alleged attack on a female acquaintance in an Arlington hotel room Feb. 12. Sodomy in any form is a crime in Virginia. Defense lawyers want the trial judge to allow the jury to consider only the forcible sodomy charge and deny jurors the option of convicting him of a lesser, consensual charge. One of Black's arguments is that prosecutors who claim Albert forced the woman to perform oral sex on him should not also be allowed to also argue that the sex was consensual, but a crime nonetheless. "Because consent is not a required element of forcible sodomy, the offense of consensual sodomy cannot be a lesser included offense," die motion argued. Further, if the state concedes that the sodomy is consensual, it must also admit that its witness lied by saying she was forced, Black wrote. "The commonwealth seeks to bring such a prosecution even though it would mean that the alleged victim of consensual sex is both a perjur­ er for testifying falsely about force, and a sexual criminal for engaging in consensual sex." Black alleged that the woman may have agreed to oral sex out of her own concern that she not become pregnant. He also took aim at Virginia's anti-sodomy or "crime against nature" law as vague and unconstitutional. "The commonwealth should be precluded from pursuing a prosecution based on the pri­ vate acts of consenting adults," the motion said." ASSOCIATED PRESS Workmen cover up the artificial turf with real grass at Civic Stadium in Portland, Ore., in preparation for a World Cup qualifying match between the United States and Costa Rica. Cup qualifying game to continue despite Princess Diana’s funeral Associated Press GLASGOW, Scotland — The British government dem anded Tuesday that Scottish soccer authorities explain their decision to hold a World Cup qualifying game on the afternoon of Princess Diana's funeral. The Labor Party said Scottish Secre­ tary Donald Dewar was contacting Scottish Football Association Secre­ tary Jim Farry to express "great con­ cern," especially given that the oppo­ nent, Belarus, is willing to postpone the game. Scotland said it w ould play the game as planned in Aberdeen. Most other sports in Britain have been being canceled that day. "This has not been an easy decision for the international committee to reach," Farry said earlier Tuesday. "But there are insurm ountable logisti­ cal difficulties in arranging a different date." He added: "We are extremely con­ scious of the mood of the nation and trust people will try to understand the position we are faced with and how dif­ ficult it has been for the international committee to arrive at this decision." The game is scheduled to begin just hours after the start of the 11 a.m. funeral at Westminster Abbey. Scotland leads Group Four and is in a good position to qualify for next year's World Cup in France. Belarus is out of contention. Fan slaps linebacker’s pregnant wife ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Buffa­ lo Bills linebacker Sam Rogers was involved in a fight with an irate fan who apparently slapped Rogers' pregnant wife after a game. «Leslie Rogers, 26, filed a com­ plaint against Kenneth Kuehne, 3^, of Rochester, based on an inci­ dent Sunday after Buffalo's 34-13 loss to the Minnesota Vikings at Rich Stadium. .Rogers, 27, said he was driving through the parking lot toward the sfadium after forgetting one of his b |g s when Kuehne began scream­ in g profanities. 'Leslie Rogers was sitting on the passenger side with the window down when Kuehne reached in and slapped her in the face, the linebacker said. ' '"I jumped out of the truck and jumped on him," Rogers told The Associated Press on Tuesday. !"I punched him a couple times before everybody jumped in. My réflexes and instincts told me you never let a man hit your wife or y#ur children. How's a man sup- pósed to react in that situation?" .Orchard Park police chief Robert Henning said witnesses verified Rogers' story. ’He said Rogers would not be charged for punching the man. Kuehne did not immediately return telephone calls to the AP seeking comment. «"Rogers went to his wife's defense, and rightfully so," Hen- njng said. Leslie Rogers was not seriously inured in the altercation. Sam Rogers sustained scrapes «O'* bruises on both hands and his elbow when he slipped in the park­ ing lot while wrestling with the man. J ie is not expected to miss any games. t h e Bills defense played poorly against the Vikings and received much o f the pm ne for the loss. Rogers did not know whedter the fa n was angry about Buffalo's per- fevmance or because the linebacker was attempting to get the vehicle through the crowd. "H e had no right to act like that," Rogers said. "I don't care if it was toward me or anyone." Rogers said the entire incident lasted about two minutes before security and other fans broke it up. Rogers, a four-year veteran, is 6- foot-3, 245 pounds. Police said Kuehne is about 6-0, 200. Kuehne was charged w ith harassm ent, and ordered to appear in Orchard Park town court on Sept. 16. a violation, Rogers had not planned any civil action against the man. "I don't want him to do any jail time or anything like that," he said. "I just w ant him to stay away from me. 1 just want him to stay away from the stadium /' he said. ■ FOOTBALL FANS- $ $ sto p LOSING //I §FREE Week of Selections.! $ f 5 yr. Rec: 64% i C a ll 8 3 7 -6 3 4 9 I T h e University of Texas W o m e n ’s Athletics SWIMMING TRYOUTS WHO? ✓ A l l f u l l - t i m e U T s t u d e n t s ( f e m a l e ) WHAT? t / P a r t i c i p a t e in t r y o u t s t o w a l k - o n to t h e f 9 9 7 - 9 8 U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s W-:>}iuiM*s S w im te am IF INTERESTED, C A i I 7 B 4-4 b y S E P T E M B E R S Utmost Web Magazine seeks Writers, Programmers and Artists To work on projects on the World Wide Web Undergraduates and Graduate Students Are encouraged to apply. no hi ml required research topics of concern make things happen O N n e , * n. / '• N u n Meeting in ISP building room C4.102 Friday September 5th 3:00 pm Sunday September 7th 1 2:00 pm Monday September 8th 7:30 pm ‘32.1*49/ c mail: rsaf533(u utxsvs.ee.utcxus.e ...is now available on the Get ALL the late-breaking news, • U.S. National News • World News • Regional News • Sports News • Local Weather • Arts & Entertainment • Health & Science • Technology W M Y flU A M http://stumedia.tsp.utexas.edu/WebTexan/today/ On-Line version of T h e D a ily T exan Page 12 Wednesday, September 3,1997 T he D aily T éxán Cox fined $10,000 for unsportsmanlike conduct CHICAGO — Bryan Cox's tirades and tantrums are nothing new, and his bank account has suffered accordingly. On Tues­ day he was fined $10,000 by Chicago Bears coach Dave Wannstedt for his latest out­ burst. Cox was assessed three straight unsports­ manlike conduct calls in a span of two plays during the fourth quarter of Monday night's 38-24 loss to the Green Bay Packers. The final penalty came as the irate line- backed, arguing with officials, threw his hel­ met after a Packers touchdown. He then stormed along the sideline for several moments, venting his anger at Wannstedt. "I can't remember being that out of control in a long time," Cox admitted Tuesday. "It was just a frustration, it was wrong again and 1 understand Dave's actions. "I'm in agreement with it. I have no prob­ lem with it. If that $10,000 helps us become better as a team, that's a well-spent $10,000." Cox was peeved by the Packers' substitu­ tions, saying they were leaving 13 men on the field until the last second, not giving the Bears a chance to match up. And he claimed the officials weren't regu­ lating the substitution patterns properly because Green Bay coach Mike Holgmrem is on the NFL Competition Committee. He also accused the Packers of late hits, running into the backs of Bears players, throughout the game. He said he com ­ plained to the officials, to no avail. Wannstedt said substitutions are the responsibility of the officials and something the players can't worry about. "Things like that are going to happen every game. You just got to go on, you can't let it linger in your mind and let it become an issue," he said. "You can't be affected by it on the field." After his tantrum, Cox wasn't ejected from the game, but he was taken out to cool off and rest a sore hamstring. "It was a bad situation," Cox said. "I think it could- have gotten a lot worse and it was going to get a lot worse in a hurry had I stayed in. Because then it was going to go: 'You're trying to hurt me, now I'm going to hurt you type of thing.' " Wannstedt, w ho tried to calm down Cox on the sideline, met with him Tuesday morn­ ing and levied the fine. "It was first game of the season and con­ duct like that, you can't just tolerate it," Wannstedt said. "It's going to hurt the team. It was a situa­ tion at the end of the game where it didn't, but it could have. Brian and I had a meeting and talked things through." There is no league fine for throwing a hel­ met, but there is a penalty for removing your helmet during the game. Cox sued the NFL this spring, saying the league has a vendetta against him after he w as fined $85,000 in last year's game between the Packers and Bears at Soldier Field. s In that game, Cox directed an obscene ges­ ture at an official after he was penalized for unsportsmanlike conchact for throwing his helmet. The NFL said Cox has been fined eight times in four seasons, totaling $123,000, including the $85,000. ASSOCIATED PRESS Cox argues a call with field judge Don Caray in the fourth quarter against Green Bay. Open: Chang escapes being upset, but favorites Seles and Sampras are eliminated C ontinued from p ag e 9 Chang's survival and Seles' sur­ render surpassed in drama, though perhaps not in historical signifi­ cance, the ascension of 17-year-old Venus Williams to the semifinals of her first U.S. Open with a 7-5, 7-5 victory over Sandrine Testud. The 6-foot-1 Williams grabbed a railing and hoisted herself up to kiss her mother after the match. Williams next meets Spirlea, who has made no secret of her dislike for the atten­ tion teens like Williams are getting before they win even one tourna­ ment. No one, though, has paid his dues and gotten so much out of his body as Chang. In 11 years at the U.S. Open, Chang, had never lost a set 6-0. Rarely had he ever been pushed around from the baseline as he was against Pioline. And almost never did Chang hit the kind of sloppy, loose shots he hit in the second set when he commit­ ted 17 unforced errors to the French­ man's three. But Chang, as everyone in tennis knows, is most dangerous when he is down. At that moment, when he summons his last stores of energy and attacks, he can break an oppo­ nent's spirit. That's exactly what he did in this match against Pioline, a finalist at Wimbledon this year and at the 1993 U.S. Open. "When you are out there, you try not to think about being tired," Chang said. "You try not to think about any­ thing that has to do with the physi­ cal aspect of the game. I felt like I had a little bit more today than Cedric. He was getting tired, and a few more errors were starting to creep into his game. He was starting to shorten up the points. I could see he was cramping up, shaking his leg." The unseeded Pioline served for the match at 5-3 in the fourth set, and Chang didn't give him a chance to put it away. At the end of a long rally on the first point, Chang tat­ tooed the sideline with a winning forehand. Chang worked his way to two break points before Pioline struggled back to deuce. Then, with another break point against him, the fatigued Frenchman sent a forehand long. "I was too tired," Pioline said after his second consecutive five setter. "That's why he's No. 2 in the world, and I'm not No. 2. I was cramping, and I think he saw I was tired and he tried to make me run." Sensing victory, Chang pounced as only he can. Wobbling on heavy legs only minutes before, he sudden­ ly bounced up and dow n and reduced Pioline to the stiff and sore victim. Pioline could hardly lift his feet, and he could do little more than aim for the corners and hope for win­ ners. It was not a strategy that would succeed against Chang, who chased down virtually everything and played, once again, like a human backboard. Though Sampras, who beat Chang in the final last year, is gone, Chang doesn't buy the idea that he seems destined to win his first U.S. Open. "People talk about favorites," Chang said. "Every match is tough. You can't come out here and expect B efo re you MAKEYOUR NEXT MOVE... CONSIDER T H E P R I N C I P A L F I N A N C I A L C R O U P As an international company with more than 117 years of experience and $56 billion in assets under management, The Principal Financial Group is one of the nation’s leaders in financial services. We recruit talented people and provide the training and technology they need to meet custom ers’ expectations. The Principal Financial Group is looking for employees who are ready to meet the challenges of today. W hether you are looking for a career or internship in investments, business, accounting or information systems, we may have the perfect match for you. We encourage you to stop at the Eyes on Texas Carer Fair on Thursday, September 18, to talk with our Corporate Placement Representatives about the various positions available. We look forward to visiting with you. Your edge on the future... The PrincipeI Edge*. the' V isit ou r internet site at w w w .p r in c ip a l.c o m y e m p lo y /h tm A ffirm a tiv e A c tio n /E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r Fintncial Group two years after a two-year absence following her stabbing, showed the resolve for which she is famous in the first set tiebreaker when she scrambled out of a 3-5 jam. She cracked groundstrokes from side to side, oblivious to pressure, and won four straight points — the last on a hopping second serve that Spirlea slugged long. Though known to only the most avid aficionados, the Romanian won the crowd's respect and cheers in the second set with the way she hung in grittily against Seles in long rallies, chased down balls that seemed out of reach, and attacked whenever she had the chance. "I can get used to it," Spirlea said of the crowd's applause for her in a rare stadium appearance. "I like it." For much of the match, Spirlea reminded Seles of an old foe. "Steffi is her idol, so I think she modeled [her style] after Steffi's game," said Seles, who lost to Graf in last year's final. Spirlea offered Seles a variety of backhand slices and topspin fore­ hands, much like Graf, and never relented. "She doesn't like to play against my slice," Spirlea said. "She has a little bit the same game with Steffi. When you play slice, you don't give her so much rhythm that she can come and hit every ball." Neither player yielded serve in the second set, and in the tiebreaker Spirlea again took an early lead, 4-1, before Seles evened the score with a superb backhand. Seles then managed to gain a match point at 6-5, but Spirlea ended that threat with a crisp backhand volley. At 8-8, Spirlea drilled a forehan | winner, then closed out the set when i Seles lofted a forehand long. » Slumping into her chair, sweaS covering her face, an exhausted loofi in her eyes, Seles presented a poij trait of a player who knew she had let the match slip away and didn't have much left to go on through a 4 third set. "I started having a stomach ache at the beginning of the second set," » Seles said. "It was bothering me. But she just played better, kept the ball going 4 long points, and I was struggling with that by the end of the second set. Then the third set, I think it waj j bothering me more and more." Spirlea came back to hold serv£ from love-40 in the second game of the final set, then broke for a 2-1 / lead. Seles never got back that break- At 5-3 with Seles serving, they engaged in an incredible rally from side to side, and Spirlea put it away with a backhand out of Seles' reach. Seles had nothing left when she went to serve at 30-40, and the match ended with her dumping a weak forehand into the net. "I felt I should have won the match," Seles said. "But then I have to give her credit that she played some great tennis, mixed it up. She didn't choke when she was up. She went for all her shots at every point." ASSOCIATED PRESS Second seed Michael Chang of Henderson, Nev., returns the ball to Cedric Pioline of France during their match. a cakewalk in any match. If you don't come out here and play your best tennis, you're gbing to fall short." Chang will play in the quarters against No. 10 Marcelo Rios, who beat No. 7 Sergi Bruguera 7-5, 6-2, 6- 4. Unseeded Magnus Larsson also reached the quarters, beating Wayne Ferreira 6-3, 7-6 (7-5), 6-3, and will next meet the winner of the Andre Agassi-Patrick Rafter match. Spirlea, who boldly said last week she wanted to "shut up the mouths of everybody" talking about the teens on the tour, reached the semifi­ nals by knocking off Seles, the two- time champion, 6-7 (5-7), 7-6 (10-8), 6-3. Only a few crucial points in each set separated Seles and the 11th- seeded Spirlea in their dramatic match, which featured tennis at its highest level and had fans gasping and roaring after seemingly impos­ sible shots. Seles, the U.S. Open champion in 1991 and 1992 and a finalist the past Bills’ Smith convicted of drunken driving Associated Press VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — Bruce Smith was convicted of drunken dri­ ving Tuesday after a police officer found him asleep in his Mercedes and the star defensive end failed a sobriety test. Smith received a 30-day suspend- P0SSE east * Bar & Grill B a r Rj ( T rill Cold Beer & Good Food (Open 7 am - 2 am) 21 Beers on Tap • * S I .SO Domestic Pint* (3-4 pm Mon - Fri) Happy H w n 4-7 PBI M i l Ml III ilil WnillIl (Domestic Pitchers $5.50, Imports $7.50) MfiDj sdixi In Tu— A T H ur 7-9 MB ■ Brewery Testing Promos B ll (Free Glasses, Tee Shirts. |§|| .HK| Mystery Items, etc.) Live Music wi Hooper * MU * BreaKfiii Bv kfastT Migas, & More (Mon-Fri 7-11 am I Sat & Sun 8 am - 3 pm) Lunch A Later Burgers, Sandwiches, Mexican & More (Daily 11 am -10 pm) San Jacinto at Duval 477 2111 ed jail sentence, was fined $250 and had his license suspended for one year. He appealed the traffic court con­ viction to Circuit Court, with trial set for Oct. 23. He remains eligible to play for the Buffalo Bills on Sunday against the New York Jets. NFL players convicted in alcohol- related violations are subject to fines — typically one-half of one game check with a maximum of $20,000. Because Smith was suspended for four games in 1988 after violating the NFL's substance abuse policy, he could face a stiffer fine. Technically, he could be suspended, but that is not likely because Smith did not have any problems for eight years. NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said the league is reviewing the matter, and commissioner Paul Tagliabue would decide Smith's punishment, if any. The Bills said the team would not comment until coach Marv Levy and general manager John Butler spoke with Sqnith, last season's NFL defen­ sive player of the year. A World of Opportunities The trial came two days after Smith signed a six-year contract worth $28.2 million, making him the highest-paid player in Bills history. The deal guarantees he will finish his career with the Bills, who select­ ed him first in the 1985 draft. Officer A.M. Fletcher testified that she had a difficult time waking Smith, who was slumped over the steering wheel of his car in a traffic lane with the engine running shortly after 6 a.m. on July 27. She said Smith smelled of alcohol, his speech was slurred and she had to tell him several times to get out of the car. "He just kept saying, 'I want to go home/" Fletcher said. After Smith got out of the car, Fletcher said, the player was unable to stand on one leg without losing his balance. Smith refused to take a breath test. Smith's lawyer, Larry Cardón, said his client has sleep apnea, a recurrent halting of breath that can wake sufferers repeatedly or, in rare instances, suffocate them. "It would be an explanation ... for the very hard time sne had getting him up," Cardón said. And he said Smith's inability to stand on one leg was a result of foot­ ball injuries, not drunkenness. He said Smith has had four knee opera­ tions. At Tuesday's proceeding, a chair was provided at the request of Car­ dón so Smith could sit, rather than stand, before Judge John Preston. Cardón said Smith was "a little banged up" from Sunday, when Smith had two sacks in the Bills' 34- 13 loss to Minnesota. Cardón said Smith had his seat belt fastened, "which is not some­ thing someone who is intoxicated would do," and cooperated during the arrest. He also said Smith did well reciting the alphabet — the only sobriety test he was given that did not test him physically, Cardón said. But Preston ruled the evidence wajs j sufficient to convict Smith. Smith also was convicted of refus­ ing to take a breath test and was given an additional 90-day license suspension on that conviction, which he also appealed. Mark Del Duca, assistant city attorney, said the punishment was typical for a first drunken driving offense. Smith, a Virginia Beach native who played at Virginia Tech, did not speak during the trial and left the courthouse without to reporters. talking Last year, Smith was named the NFL's top defensive player for the second time. ¡ it m k t im LAST CALL You have the opportunity to join Neiman Marcus, the leading national specialty retailer, at our Last Call facility. Various positions available. (Sales associates, Cashiers, Stock people, Loss prevention investigators) Enjoy flexible hours (great for accommodating class schedules), a fast-paced work environment, and an employee merchandise discount. Thursday, Sept. 4th - 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 6th - 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. 4115 Capital o fT X Hwy. South (Ben W hite and South Lamar) Brodie Oaks Shopping Center Contact Store Manger’s Office to R.S.V.P. • 5 12-447-0701 (phone) Send Resume to 5 12-447-2221 (fax) • EO E lithe in the ot information technology sSutions for the travel and transportation indus­ try. 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N U RSE COLLINS, NOW'S t h a t K w tr? L \ V- WM/tr'RE YOU 0OIVG IN H E R E ? ÉIN A15 A R E N 'T E v e n c lo s e - n e e d o u r O f A MIDTERM? m NO I'M fUAlLY S IC K Puzzle by Brendan Emmett Quigley 20 Lady Jane and 48 Raised platform 52 Ship’s trail Zane 31 Cartoonist Tex 32 Storm preceder 33 Envelope part 34 Switch settings 30 Ear part 37 Phys. activity 38 Catchy part of a song 42 Rub the wrong way? 43 Really impresses 44 “I swear!” 48 Obstreperous 47 Part of a bulb 48 Ships' spines so Long nap? si Dinesen who wrote “Out of Africa” S3 John Irving’s “A Prayer for Meany” ss Fictional planet 88 Slugger’s stat 87 Solder material 88 J.F.K. listing 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: 1 -888-7-ACROSS. 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YOU STILL HAVC 17 S TO BUY YOUR TCXTBOOKS WITH. SO. YOU roiGHT CVCN HAVC SOroC LCFT OVCR. TO TRCAT YOURSCLF! 1183. BUT AT A PLACC THC SIZC OF UT. THCRC'S BOUNO TO BC A BULK DISCOUNT. RI6HT? Edl Can we get partial credit on these questions? J No...all of the questions are multiple choice. Thatf where you write your name. But this first one is short answer?! So we can get partial credit right? GLOOM i 00#W£R IbNf TnflCr PIA»li1S,7Htt« SHif j CHOLESTEROL StoltHAP. ! M b I F I HAD • p m |B ,1 ^ ¿ ■ o l APE 14 Ifa u Y PASTEURiZEOSCERSl NAME A SHELF l»F£0F 3MDS- i THE CAR SEAT. REMEMBER, B n m M m m M ® I LONELiAlESS ARC A 8££ltS 1 WORST £H£M»é S,SOG.VÉ | I THCMTHS ATTENTiOH fl THEY DESERVE. « 9 t mv M r t 4LWAKI SAID*WEAR ClfAN iwoeRweAR BCcAufe you N fvrR L/VOW’WHiR THERE w ilt BE AH EMERSCNCy. * ------ — - L— MIÑE ARE DIATY You A/OW, Bur 5>o I0U REALty ifW NK If n a t t er s ? J A N G U E EPISODE 111 IT WAS THE S ix th OKYOY THC l a t e s t SiCoe Ano i W as o h HYWAt TO SCR MYBkOPiES. T k iY 'O w e n s t a ti o n c o o n The w c s tc u n r a m p a k ts a n d t on t h c e a s t: Tkui*A«t t h e y 'd s c u n a l l Thu. A c n o n .rto w A N ^ w a I STCCH AS FAR CLEAR OF THE Fi«MT\N4 M t FniA tRty CAN> Bur,THIS TTWC, t HRRPCP To RS^AfE I P tE WCH. m name i s g an i H a n » EVCRVoNC THlKkS YN A| VtCNO.THE YhwW-CM «4 THAT THEV c«oc»N 'r V HaCi NffcN*. Surreal Estate ¡ c í r ó v ^ f & c r t h e - vn’^vc- n v m t c r f o F f h e . . . j! FT cjkc- c ^ i f c r Hovr nine- i S | N «y=pB sA | >------ -c1 c lif iif iiv d e A i f I P n vw b or. | P T c a ^ c-oh^wH* oon r not X. ^ 4 ^ 0 1 9 9 7 A P Webb » c **w 3 o S i G r o v e f n m w 3 H t , : * 5 o u r Í 5BA 3 i 0 • • lO U r f o ^ t C F ií l Í N O A C f l P f I f e *P> 4 u T h e D aily T exan M M E D I f i S P T t i M H R 3 , 1 8 8 7 EfflERTAlMEOT people briefs Ono close on Lennon bio film ■ NEW YORK — All you n eed is love — and your ow n movie. Yoko Ono is about to close a deal w ith C o lu m b ia Pictures to m ake a m ovie a b o u t h e r ro m a n c e w ith John Lennon, the New York Post reported Tuesday, quoting u n id en ti­ s tu d io fied v sources. The p a p e r said Ono sees the film as a chan ce to tell h er v ersio n of their relationship and counter that of w riters such as Albert Goldm an, who declared the former Beatle was an "autistic, schizophrenic, bisexual manic depressive, as well as a child- abusing wife-beater whose m arriage was a sham ." Oho O n o — lo ° g b la m e d fo r th e b re a k u p of th e B eatles — w ill be portrayed as a peacemaker between L ennon an d Paul M cC artney w ho tried to save the Beatles. The Post quoted studio sources as saying the deal w ould bring O no at least $80 million. Byme tells fans to deal with new sound ■ LOS ANGELES — David Byrne's m usical sty le is n 't th e sam e as it ever was. But th at's your problem , not his. "There are people who feel that I betrayed them , that they p u t their faith in me and I failed them ," said th e 4 5 -y e a r-o ld fo rm e r T a lk in g Heads singer. "But I never said put y o u r fa ith in m e. I'll b e tra y you every time." Since the Talking Heads disband­ ed in 1988, B yrne h a s p ro d u c e d album s in various musical styles. In Please see People, page 15 Inconsistency, story holes plague ‘Hoodlum’ Mam Kush Daily Texan Staff There is no genre of movie that is 90 w idely p o p u lar as gangster movies. T he ab ility to mix dram a, vio­ le n c e a n d is s u e s o f h o n o r a n d c h a ra c te r a m b ig u ity a llo w s th e g en re to ap p eal to th e art-h o u se crow d as well as action-film fans. Hoodlum is no d iffe re n t fro m oth er m ob m ovies in this regard. However, w hat m akes it engaging are th e c h a ra c te r stu d ie s of the central figures, the change in their p e rs o n a litie s as th e m o v ie p r o ­ gresses. The movie focuses on Ellsworth "B u m p y " J o h n s o n 's (L a u re n c e F ish b u rn e's) rise to po w er as he fights D utch S chultz (Tim R oth) fo r c o n tro l of th e n u m b e rs in D e p re s s io n -e r a H a rle m . W h ile Johnson starts off trying to keep th e n u m b e rs m o n ey in, H a rle m and provide jobs for other blacks, his rise to p ow er inevitably cor­ ru p ts him and changes his am bi­ tio n s. As th e sto ry s h ifts aw ay from a chronology of the events of B u m p y 's life to s h o w in g h o w those events affected him, the film picks up steam. Hoodlum becomes th e ra re H o lly w o o d m ovie th a t finishes stronger than it starts. W hat se p a ra te s H oodlum from all other mob movies is its dealing w ith th e is s u e of race. F ro m B u m p y 's in te ra c tio n w ith o th e r HOODLUM Starring: Laurence Fishburne, Tim Roth . Director Bill Duke Playing at Lake Creek, Riverside, Northcross, Lincoln, Barton Creek, Round Rock, Movies 12, Great Hills 8 Rating: ★ ★ (out of five)______________ blacks in Harlem , as well as those in Schultz's gang, to his relations and dealings w ith A ndy G arcia's L ucky L u cia n o , th e film sh o w s m an y s id e s of a n o p e n ly ra c ist society. * The w a y th e m a in c h a ra c te rs deal w ith and handle their racism adds another twist. While Schultz lets h is h a tr e d o f a lm o s t e v e ry g ro u p of people affect this b u si­ ness, Luciano is far m ore interest­ e d in b u s in e s s th a n b eliefs. O f course, it is B um py's handling of the racial issu e th a t is th e m ost com plex an d in trig u in g . Seen as both a hero and villain in Harlem, Bumpy has to deal w ith hatred of his own people as well as from the established m ob. F ishburne is at h is b e s t in d e a lin g w ith th e s e issues and adds d epth to Bum py's character. However, the movie has its defi­ nite shortcomings. Too m any char­ acters are not fully developed, and poorly choreographed fight scenes take aw ay from the m ovie's credi­ b ility . T h e s tra n g e p a r t a b o u t m any of these problem s is that the m ovie seem s to recognize them , b u t avoids them later in the film. Of course, by then it's too late. It is th is in c o n s is te n c y th a t m akes Hoodlum frustrating. If the w hole movie was done as well as the last 75 m inutes, it could be just a notch below the b est gan g ster movies. But as it is, it's a film that h a s its m o m en ts an d a d d re s se s is s u e s a n d s to ry lin e s th a t th e genre has previously ignored. Yet, w ith th re e to p -n o tc h a c to rs to carry the film, it seems that m ore could have b een done to exploit their talents. While Hoodlum w on't draw com parisons to The Untouch­ ables, for the sake of the m em ory of Ellsw orth "Bum py" Johnson it w o n 't be fo rg o tte n th e w ay its m ain character has been. Violence-filled foreign films Associated Press L O N D O N — S u re, The Lost World is bloodier than Jurassic Park, and there appears to be no limit to the lengths jilted screen lovers will go to w reak revenge on one-tim e p artn e rs: T hink My Best Friend's Wedding and, especially, Addicted to Love. B ut th e re al a n d s u r p r is in g movie violence these days is origi­ nating well away from the Am eri­ can blockbuster in a crop of foreign film s due o u t over the next year th at are su re to m ake d iscerning moviegoers blanch. W hereas Britain once was home to sedate, genteel dram as — and can still deliver them in the Victo- ria n -e ra c o s tu m e p ic tu re M rs. Brown — it's also capable of Nil by Mouth and Welcome to Sarajevo, two upcom ing film s th at d o n 't flinch from grimness and gore. At the C annes Festival in May, French director M athieu Kassovitz was jeered after the press screen­ ing of his new film , Assassin(s), w h o se c a rn a g e q u o tie n t w o u ld m ake Sam P eckinpah or Q uentin Tarantino look sedate. C en terin g on th e re la tio n sh ip betw een a seasoned professional k ille r (M ichel S e rra u lt) a n d h is n e w fo u n d 2 5 -y e a r-o ld c o h o rt (p la y e d by K a sso v itz h im se lf), Assassin(s) is the k in d of film in which someone is said to be capa­ ble of killing his m other for cash — and then more or less does so. A u s tr ia 's M ich ae l H a n e k e arrived in competition w ith Funny Games, a film billed as "so disturb­ in g " th at th ere w ere no advance screenings. W hat audiences at lást saw w as the grisly dem ise of one family at the hands of torturers in a film th at, d e p e n d in g on o n e 's p o in t of view, either indicts vio­ lence or exploits it. set to hit N o t to b e o u td o n e , G e rm a n director Wim W enders w eighed in w ith his dryly titled The End of Vio­ lence — which m ay be the point at w hich serial film goers th in k the m edium 's obsession w ith violence has arrived. The issue, of course, is the use to w hich violence is put. A re these film s reveling in violence for its ow n sake o r re v e a lin g an ew its pow er to disturb? "There's violence in m ainstream c in em a , w h e re th e v io le n c e b ecom es a c o n su m e r p ro d u c t," Haneke said in an interview, "and then there's violence that becomes M SCe(§)RCUNE W E LC O M E U T S T U D E N T S ! We Buy Used CDs Every Hour, Minute & Second We Are Open! CDs Priced at $5.99 & $7.99 8 Listening Stations Largest Selection of Posters in Austin! Fill your room with our music & movie posters 479-7779 D ob ie M a ll 2nd Floor - Facing the Food Court O n G u a d a l u p e ÍIM A R 8ÑO MAJMtr'f MAppr n om if HOT Mon-Fri 4:00-7:00 p.m. $1.00 draft-beer/$ 1.00 off margaritas Free Munchies 4:30-6:00 p.m. SEPTEMBER SPECIALS 2 Enchiladas (cheese, beef or chicken), rice pleasure." H a n e k e c o n tin u e d : " I t 's so J im portant to give the spectator a * sense of w hat violence truly is. It7s ! the opposite of violence-as-specta- J cle, of violence-for-effect." Eyes have been averted, too, at ! early screenings of Nil by Mouth, \ the d ire c to ria l d e b u t of E nglish • actor Gary O ldm an. A sem i-auto- ! biographical look at the w iry per- J Please see Violence, page IS (lllSI 2:10-4:30-7:15-9:30 me ... guido chasingaiiiy V 2 :0 5 -4 :3 5 -7 :10-9:40 ataG Star Maps 2 : 1 5 - 4 : 4 5 Austin Powsrs midnight Lost Highway 11:30 pm 11:50 pm Swingsirs DQBIE*** J BOI, AR 1 DOUBlf f f A T U RI TO H A V I AND H A V I NOT w a d • 7 1 1 5 / t h u • 9 : 2 5 (1944) Humphny Bogart, Launn Bacall. Tough skipper-for-hlr* Bogart, raluclanffy gab ¡nvotvaájp lha F ranch Ratntonca, and lau rotudam W oot tvan tougher Bacall (in her stunning Mm debut). Based on Hemingway's novel, with dialogue by Faulkner. CASABLANCA w a d • 9 1 2 S / t h u 0 7 : 1 5 (1942) Humphny Bogart, Ingrid Bargman, Paul Huinmd, Clovdt Rains. As perfect as a movie can get, ond perhaps Hollywood's best film ever. Against the backdrop of W W II, Bogart plays a nightclub owner with a past - played by Ingrid Bergman, who's married to underground resistance leader Heinreid. Sponsors.' Austin AmericorvStalesmon, Origin, 107.1 i c q m i n M M M A KGSR. 101X, KNVA 5 4 and Starbucks 1 H H B H B AdullSi $5.25 1 B M H n H H J I V W P I I i / M l V I V r s / I • . ¡Klds/Motfnaee: $4 i’G D .L V G G '. I Tueedays: $3.251 7 I i CONGRESS • INÍO 47 2 ',470 Fri'Sunt THE H O 8U B 9 Ip n n kan varwon) * F r e e L i v e M U s i c : B r e e d l o v e . T a m e r e , J a c k r a b b i t K i n g , D e x t e r F r e e b i s h , C e n t z o n t l e , L u c k y S t r i k e s . C l a n d e s t i n e . D o t , C l a r k e N o v a M o v i e s . $ L 0 0 . A u s t i n P o w e r s @ 7 : 0 0 P M . C a m e r a <§> 9 : 0 0 P M . E r a s e r h e a d @ I U 5 P M F r e e E n t e r t a i n m e n t : S u m o W r e s t l i n g . S p a c e B a l l , Y o u d o n ' t K n o w J a c k . S i n g l e d O u t . T w i s t e r . L a s e r T a g K a r a o k e , D J J a m . F r o s t y - E a t i n g C o n t e s t . B l a c k j a c k . General Cinema IMG/UN MAnNtES EVERY DAY IffORK Aral AU SHOWS SIART «m v R o u l e t t e , C r a p s 1 0 : 0 0 P M . A m y ' s I c e C r e a m & t h e B i s t r o o p e n F o o d O u t l e t s T e x a d e l p h i a o p e n t i l l t i l l m i d n i g h t . $ 3 , 9 5 M e x i c a n b u f f e t o p e n f r o m S ~ \ W F o r M o r e OPEN ' TI LL 2 A M i n f o c a l l : 4 7 5 - 6 6 3 0 i O P m - 2 a m W e n d y s f v People ConHnuidfKMii Pto> 14 his latest work, "Feeling," Byrne collaborates with the British nip- hop group Morcheeba, Devo and the Black Cat Orchestra. Staler barred from contacting woman ;■ LOS ANGELES — Christian ‘Slater, charged w ith u sin g ’cocain e and b ea tin g h is girl- * frien d , w as barred T u esday ! from contacting her. The 27-year-old actor could * get 1 1 / 2 years in jail if convict- ! ed of charges stemming from a ; brawl last month at a West Los Angeles condominium. The Broken A r r o w star w as ; charged Friday w ith punching * his girlfriend, Michelle Jonas, in 1 the face and biting her friend in the abdomen w hen he tried to intervene. He is also accused of 1 attacking a police officer. An arrest report from the Aug. 11 incident said the actor told police he had beeii drinking ’for several days and had taken .cocaine and heroin. Slater is free on $50,000 bail »and was not at Tuesday's closed * hearing. Asked whether Slater is ;in drug rehab, h is attorn ey, M ichael N ap ier, said only: 'He's dealing with the problems that caused all of this." Criticism due to race, says Gumbei NEW YORK — Bryant Gumbei says the reason he's called arro­ gant is that he's black. "I can think of very few if any w e l l - k n o w n African Ameri­ can men in this business who were not accused of arro­ gance. Do I think it's a coin­ cidence? No," the former Today show host said in the Sept. 5-7 issue of USA Weekend maga­ zine. Gumbei Gumbel's Public Eye With Bryant Gumbei premieres this fall on CBS. The 49-year-old Gumbei com­ pared himself to the host of ABC's Nightline. "It is less than amusing that Ted Koppel runs his shop in a tight fasnion and is concerned about the graphics, concerned about who his producer is, gets tough with his director, and that shows his pro­ fessionalism , his attention to detail. But if I do that, suddenly I'm a meddler, or I'm arrogant, or I'm conceited, or I make enemies," he said. Auction of signed will blocked by S.C. court ■ COLUMBIA, S.G — South Caroli­ na's highest court Tuesday blocked an attempt to auction off baseball leg­ end Shoeless Joe Jackson's signed will for charity. The American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association had hoped to sell the document — bear­ ing the rare signature of the illiterate * ballplayer— for as much as $100,000. ’ But die Supreme Court ruled that * Jackson's will belongs to die county. J Hie two charities had argued that I \ die will should be theirs because Jack- I * son's wife, Katie, had named diem as * her beneficiaries. But die high court * said she never owned the document » "We are disappointed because 'now no one will receive any benefit | m from die will's existence," said Leo * Hill, the charities' lawyer. — Compiled from Associated I Press reports A u th o r James I. Robertson, Jr. Publisher: Macmillan Price: $40 ite and coundess diaries. Robertson has discarded all but the bare essen­ tials of die material, carefully evalu­ ated what he found and elegantly reconstructed the sharpest image ever produced of Jackson. Robert­ son defends Jackson as often as he condemns him, never turning away from an opportunity to present die most even-handed portrait of an ordinary soldier w hom warfare enabled to become a great comman­ der. The transformation in our percep­ tion of Jackson is the key to Robert­ son's endeavor. This "is not a biog­ raphy of a great general," he writes, "it is the life of an extraordinary man who became a great general." One who reads what Robertson has created can no longer view Jackson as simply the Stonewall, but as a man who suffered from a shattered heart, a man who relished a wom­ an's love and a man who learned to accept God's will through trust in His wisdom. R obertson vividly places us alongside Jackson as the Civil War erupts. We join Jackson at the Battie of Bull Run as the C onfederate forces falter and watch him "stand­ ing like a stone wall." We watch Jackson's endlessly fascinating Shenandoah Valley cam paign unfold, his ferocity at Second Bull Run, Antietam and Fredericksburg, and his execution of Lee's strategic masterpiece at Chancellorsville. Robertson's personification of Jackson through each of these battles is dazzling. The transformation from W EDNESDAY EVENING I 6:00 ! 6 : 3 0 P On May 11,1863, Gen. Robert E. Lee issued General Orders No. 61, officially announcing to the world the death of Lt. Gen. Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson. Lee was emotionally paralyzed from the loss, confessing to his son Custis Lee with desperation, "I do not know how to replace him." As subsequent campaigns painfully indicated, Lee indeed failed to fill the enormous void the tactical genius Jackson left behind, and the Civil War's final 23 bloody months unfolded as Ameri­ can history illustrates, arguably shaped more by Jackson's absence than by his presence. Jackson's death in the midst of the May 1863 Battle of Chancellorsville — accidentally shot by his own men and later fatally stricken with pneu­ monia — has always sparked more fascination with its effects on the Civil War than with the life Jackson lived before the conflict. Admirers from around die world and over the past 135 years have saluted him and his spectacular achievements, but as with all recollections of a fascinating individual, the true character can be blurted by emotions or ulterior motives, by political objectives or personal agendas. James I. Robert­ son Jr.'s mammoth masterpiece, Stonewall Jackson: The Man, the Sol­ dier, the Legend, is the bulwark against this flawed legacy — easily the finest portrait ever created of die mighty Confederate general. It's so easy to lose the true colors of Jackson in the brilliance of history7 s celebration of his achievements. Unfortunately for an aspiring stu­ dent of the general, Jackson failed to leave very much behind in the way of military papers. The general was uncommunicative and secretive in his campaigns, reporting only to his superiors with sparse frequency and informing his officers and men strict­ ly on a need-to-know basis. The majority of what historians know about him comes from witnesses to his life — primary participants and observers — whose accounts for the most part can be taken at little more than face value. These accounts set a flawed foundation for future histori­ ans to build upon. But Robertson has endeavored to set the record straight on every issue in Jackson's life, from his battlefield decisions and his character traits to legends bom from die life of a man many simply never understood. Robertson has drawn the line in the sands of history, fed up with unsub­ stantiated claims and empty anec­ dotes. He has used an astounding amount of material, from never- before published military dispatches to a recently discovered carte de vis- T he Daily T exan Wednesday, September 3,1997 Page 15 seum m M U T zip p e r s ¡¡f§9'Thursday. August 28 f e l i S l Stubbs ____ From the first devilish cracks of "Bad Businessman," the joint • was jumping. Squirrel Nut Zip­ pers — those kooky kids, those purveyors of music so mad and wanton, at once so deliciously nostalgic and novel you can't catch your breath — had taken over the stake. And the Thursday night sar­ dine-packed sauna of Stubb's couldn't get enough. The kids love this stuff — and well they should. Just a few years ago, the band trumpeted its national arrival from Chapel H ill, N.C., w ith The Inevitab le, an intoxicating and sed u ctive journey in to a forgotten tim e. And lik e that album, Hot combs musical his­ tory, both paying tribute and adding a few clever lines itself. Started by the now-married Jim M althus and K atherine W halen and q u irk ily nam ed after a brand of chewy peanut- flavored sw eets, the Squirrel Nut Zippers, from start to fin­ ish , flaunt an affinity for the irreverent and a reverence for the finite. The Squirrel N ut Z ippers don 't b elon g in this era, but they're here to stay. And all their hot, stirrin g so u n d s are e v e n better liv e . From Ken Mosher's ripping alto sax to Tom M a x w ell's p o s ­ se sse d v ocals, the band w as s w in g in g . Of cou rse radio favorites like the campy "Hell" or "Put A Lid On it" were doled sound bite out, with frn eruption of approval. And vocalist Whalen, w hen she cooed those uncanny Betty Boop choruses, was an audience favorite (if she wasn't singing, the shy Whalen quietly slipped backstage until the next song). But it w as not d ittie s nor gam s but the en tire ban d 's sheer giddy delight, their unas­ suming dedication to make you move that really walloped one. Everyone was moving, every­ one w as groovin g. Crammed co u p les even tried out som e creative sw ing dancing within their two-foot perimeter. Even a few reticent music critics, usu­ ally jaded by this sort of thing, could be found in the jungle of sw eat-soaked bodies, w aving and bouncing with the rest of 'em. — Sarah Hepola The many faces of Stonewall Jackson fem ado Ortiz, Jr. Daily Texan staff book page 14 form er's tough South London back­ ground, the film couldn't be further from the fanciful — and expensive — summer blockbusters (The Fifth Element, Air Force One) where Oldman earns his keep.’ The scarred heart of Nil by Mouth is the raging father Raymond (played by Ray W instone), w ho in one m em orably shocking scene beats wife Valerie (Kathy Burke, winner of the best actress prize at Cannes) until she is literally black and blue. "I just wanted to be really true to that world," said Oldman, distinguishing his treatment of violence from "movie vio­ lence that isn't about anything." As filmed, the abuse emphasizes Ray­ m ond's brute pow er w ithout further degrading Valerie. "I w anted you to see the physical strength of the man, hot the body of the wom an on the floor," Oldm an said, adding that after the incident what he loved was that "he's seen behind glass, that big stomach hanging over those boxer shorts." What isn't shown, of course, can be as frightening as what is — a blood-spat­ tered television in Funny Games, or the grimy, rain-soaked streets that carry their own unspoken threat in Nil by Mouth. "It's one of the powerful things film can do, to be effective by not showing," said Wenders, whose End of Violence is more a droll commentary on violence than an instance of it. (The movie chroni­ cles a director who is m aking a film called Violence.) But, said Wenders, "now the rule of thumb seems to be show it all; the more you show, the better you sell.” And if audiences can't take it? "The violence has to be part of it," said director Michael Winterbottom, whose film Welcome to Sarajevo makes piercingly immediate a conflict that to many was just another war on television. "You've got to make people feel it freshly." D efending the b ru ta lity in N il by Mouth, Oldman said: "The fact is, this goes on. Getting up and walking out is like seeing bodies in Sarajevo and then turning the channel." taciturn professor to fire-eyed war­ rior is presented as such a natural process in Jackson that he actually becomes an invincible man to be truly feared. Debating points over each battle are tantalizingly dangled for strategy students to fight over. What Robertson has created here is a monument of biographical litera­ ture. It's dearly written, always very readable and entertaining, and cer­ tainly the standard to which every subsequent biography of Stonewall Jackson will be compared. It perfectly embodies the marvel that Jackson was: as a man, as a soldier and as a legend. Jackson will never seem the same to the reader at the end of this enormous work. Perhaps Jackson will seem more of a good friend and teacher than just an empty name in a history book. A • UT Residence Hall Cable B • Over Air Channels ^^AustinCabla 7 : 0 0 7 : 3 0 8 : 0 0 8 : 3 0 ; ! B A S I C C l KTBC i’2; (D •X* KVUE KXAN KEYE •’5; KLRU KNVA (3 0 0 0 0 0 m News OS Real T V E Funny Things Kids Do IS Party of Five (In Stereo) I Simpsons E Seinfeld E News News Ent. Tonight Drew Carey Spin City E Ellen “The Puppy Episode” Primetime Live E Wh. Fortune Steve.oedekerk.com SI Dateline (In Stereo) IB Law & Order “Mad Dog” E Coast to Coast (In Stereo) 48 Hours (In Stereo) 31 News IS Home Imp. Nanny (R) 83 ¡Nanny (R) IS Creatures Business Newshour With Jim Lehrer Fresh Prince Cosby Show Sister, Sister Smart Guy Wayans | Harvey i n ..n tr h “T hin nr F W fff! 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(Live) E Prime Time Public Affairs (R) Wild Discovery: Cheetah Discover Magazine (R) What Really Happened I Night Stand |HowardS. |Howard S. |Meirose Place (In Stereo) Talk Soup . ^ Night Stand § Major League Baseball. Teams to Be Announced. (Uve) X ^ ^ ^ B 'i|hhIii enlei RPM2Night Motorcycle Racing: AMA Motocross. Unsolved I Music Videos (in Stereo) And the Nominees Are. HeyAmokH [Bewitched Bewitched [Bewitched Singled Out RugratsE Inside Space Mother Angeles Uve (Live) RaUgtous Reecue 911 (In Stereo) X Hawaii Ftve-OX 700 Club News Three Stooges News :.K Carson H CaH to theEart Paid Prog. Paid Prog. h file Night” ★ * (1990, Drama) JoBeth Williams. 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Weather Weather Weather Weather Weather Weather Wt wr Pacific Pacific El Alma No Tiene Color TuyYo Fuera Lente Loco P. Impacto Noticiero Al Ritmo dele Noche Kids entre otros. Juntos*) U.S. Open Tennis: Quarterfinai». From Ihe USTA National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, N Y. X ITrack ¡Pop Up Silk Stagings “Shock Jock’ Big Easy (R) (In Stereo) X |Magnum,Pl X RuPaui [Pop Up Act Like a Singer (R) |Mttdflt [Sox Appeal In the Heat of the light X [Siawn A Simon | .. uswm.i .« sp e w ■ II . . . . j m j . j I i Y-J *. 1ECEV. *' IS •! ’-I • Dorm Wmfirtgmrator hem $67." * T V if r M R l I D " * Cm Wkmmmitem U fi." • Fprtafcle CD Mayers from $49." Special Discount /Show UT I.D J — ^ H ook’am Horn» pal SMMSOPV. B U T N O B O D Y b e a t s B IX LOW P R IC K 4 6 7 - 6 1 7 4 K IM BM M R M H M W B 8 9 2 - 2 8 6 0 KMtsHNaniwnMnMu. Page 16 Wednesday, September 3,1997 T he Daily T exan moraine c f V v . ' 1 V ■/ '- . vv:7 NEW YORK — For m any rock 'n' rollers, 8:30 p.m. is early for a perfor- manee. 8:30 A.m. is downright unfath- omable. Yet there was Jon Bon Jovi one recent day, sunglasses obscuring any evidence of how strange the hour really was, smiling and singing for an audience on its way to work or sightseeing in Man- hattan. Morning television, of all things, is ! becoming an important venue for musi- cians — particularly artists whose real hitmaking days are behind them. '■ S B B B K a Sept. 26,. PPT «+ ' - A sporadic offering during the past few years, Friday morning concerts are now a regular part of Today's summer schedule. The weekly feature will con- tinue until Elton John's performance on Good MorningAmerica also has gotten into the act, bringing Jam es Brown, Billy Ray Cyrus and Gloria Gaynor to its morning concert series in Central H H H H H H H Park. Jon Bon Jovi plays to a Labor Day crowd at Myrde Beach, S.C. ASSOCIATED PRESS The concerts are a natural for the new, feel-good era at top-ranked Today. They're staged outside the show's win- dow-to-the-world studio in Rockefeller Plaza, and since the music plays on Today's last half-hour before the week- end, the smiles on passers-by seem just that little bit wider. “It's been a real success for us,'' said Jeffrey Zucker, Today’s executive pro- ducer. “It's just taken off. A lot of peo- pie have tried to im itate it now, like Good M orning A m erica and Fox A fter Breakfast. I don't think any of that hap- pened by accident." (Sniffs Good Morning America's Robert Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Cartoon­ ist Lynn Jo h n sto n , w hose com ic strip For B etter or For W orse has come under fire for featuring a gay character, has left Universal Press Syndicate in a contract dispute. Johnston and Kansas City-based Universal Press couldn't agree on contract length, money and licens­ ing, among other issues, company spokesman Lee Salem said. " S h e dropped u s ," Salem said. "W e wanted to come to an agree­ ment and she chose not to." Johnston angered some editors and conservative readers in 1993 w h en a fo u r-w e e k se q u e n ce revealed the homosexuality of one of her characters, Law rence, best frien d of the fictio n a l P atterso n fa m ily 's c o lle g e -s tu d e n t son, Michael. In July, Universal Press notified editors of an upcoming sequence in w h ich L a w re n c e 's p artn er, Ben, considers moving to Paris. By m id -A u g u st, at least three newspapers announced they were drop ping For B etter or For W orse and 30 others used reruns in place of that sequence. U n iv e rsa l P re ss d en ied th a t T u e sd a y 's a n n o u n c e m e n t w as affected by newspapers' reaction to the sequence. "Certainly this wasn't a creative problem , g iv en the freed om we gave her in the Lawrence series," he said. “We just could not come to term s on a c o n tra c t th at w ou ld please her." The strip appears in about 1,800 n ew sp a p ers and h as b een w ith Universal Press for 19 years. New York-based United Feature Syndi- cate w ill b eg in d is trib u tin g the strip later this month, Salem said. Jo h n sto n , w ho liv e s in N orth Bay, Ontario, declined to comment. She did release a statement saying h er Leaving U n iv ersal P ress w as "lik e a kid leaving hom e." " I have grown and matured with them over the past 20 years, and they supported me with each edito­ rial decision I m ade," she said. Universal said it would continue to publish books based on the strip. The company carries 18 titles fea­ tu rin g the Jo h n sto n strip , w ith more than 2 million books in print. S u ch an a rra n g e m e n t is n ot unusual in the syndication indus­ try, Salem said. For instance, Uni­ v e rsa l P ress sy n d ica tes G arfield w hile Ballantine Books publishes bound collections of the strip, he said. Johnston leaves Universal Press Geek Squad rescues computers Associated Press M IN N EA PO LIS — A m ovie star cou ldn 't send e-m ail, a pit crew c o u ld n 't se rv ice its race car and a band cou ld n 't access its s y n th e s iz e d so u n d s. W ho did they call? The Geek Squad. W h ile on lo c a tio n film in g a m ovie, D aryl H annah keeps in touch w ith friend s by sending e-m ail from her laptop com put­ er. During a visit to M inneapo­ lis to film G ru m p ier O ld M en, her com puter crashed. " S o w e w e n t to h e r h o te l room and fixed it," said Robert S te p h e n s , o w n e r an d c h ie f in sp e c to r of th e G eek S q u ad , adding, "W e 'r e d iscreet." In an ele v e n th -h o u r rescu e, the A ustralian band Frente was preparing for a performance at a local nightclub when it d is­ co v e re d the la p to p th at c o n ­ tro lle d so u n d its d ig ita l sequences w asn't working. The Geek Squad was called, and fixed the glitch just before the band was due on stage. The ,m u sicia n s w ere so g r a te f u l, th e y d o n n e d G eek S q u ad T- shirts in honor of the computer nerds who saved the show. And when they're not in the spotlight, the Geek Squad can o c c a s io n a lly be fou n d in the pits. The Skip Barber D odge ra c ­ ing team ca lle d on th e G eek Squad w hen the screen on the laptop that feeds information to th e ir G ran d P rix ra c in g ca r failed . The jit crew ch a n g es settings on tne ca r's on-board com p u ter via the laptop w ith every stop. "W e wired their laptop to an external screen and they w ere able to m ake the c o m p u te r a d ju s tm e n ts th e y n e e d e d ," Stephens said. And some Geek Squad clients are like the average Joe, slightly computer-phobic. "There are a few clients, who will remain nameless, who lose their temper three or four times a y ear," Stephens said. "O n e custom er brought us a computer he threw out of a car window at 50 miles per h ou r." "W e fixed it." 15% Off Tuesdays with Student I.D. T R M T S ’i M BY JOSH • Homemade Ice Cream • Gourm et Coffee drinks * Fabulous C akes Be P astries • Refreshing Fruit Drinks 24 1 0 E. Riverside Ste F-l next to Presidio Theater . 326-5240 CALL HOME AND PAY O V E R 210 C O U N T R I E S WORLD WIDE THE IN T E R N A T IO N A L SY M B O L FOR COMFORT Arizona 3l05& *dalupe Austin, TX 78705 512-476-5110 M With the Sprint FÓNCARD5? you f get the power to call nights and week­ ends for only a dime. T h e D a il y T exan Wednesday, September 3,1997 Page t? ) > K \ .... > ’ To Race a Classified Ad Call 8:00-5:00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11 £XD a.m. prior to publication o r on-line ok h ttp ://; ium e e.jom utexee.edu/ CLASS/ciasfprm .htm l Classified Word Ad Rates Charged by the word. 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AC needs additional freon. $1000 346-2415. 9-2-5B W OMEN'S BIKE for sale. Trek 700 hybrid. 21 speed. 17' frame. $200 OBO. 478-6715 9-3-58 NIKON FM-FULLY manual Comoro with Nikkor 50mm lens, UV filter $275. Coll 451-2687. 9-3-50 9 4 9 ~ 1 Ü 0 e . : STUDENTS BEST deals in townl Fur­ niture, tvs, desks, chairs, appliances I Buy Anything Ook Hill. 10% dis­ count witn this od. 892-7995. 8-7- 208 CABLE DESCRAMBLER Kit $14 95 View all premium and pay-per-view channels. 1-800-752-1389 106 8-29 SCULPTURED LONGHORN by Jo- seph Melancon Bevo 1, ceramic re­ productions with or without brand. Call * (800)499-BEVO(2386). 9-2- 206 R E N T A L APT HOTLINE 3 3 5 -F IN D (3 46 3 ) Century 21-Ripley 8-25-20B GREAT 1-BEDROOM APARTMENTS! 1 / 2 Block from Law school Furnished and quiet $450/m o TOWERVIEW APARTMENTS 3 2 0 0 4 8 2 9 26 E 26lh #208 M-206A LARGE shuttle, EFFICIENCY, 35th/Red River. Quiet individual $415. No pets. 12 month lease. 453-5417. 8-5-206 FURNISHED & all bill paid on shuttle route. Only $470. Properties Plus, 447-7368, 1-800-548-0106 8-26-10B-E SMALL 8-UNIT complex. 2-1 $495, CA/CH, stove, refrigerator, satilla tile, UT shuttlel Impact 472-5531.8- 27-5 BC 3415 GUADALUPE. Cute, furnished 200sqft. efficiency. $350. Availa­ ble 9 /6 . 371-3488. 8-29-20B-E FURNISHED GARAGE opt w/TV, re- frigerator. All bills poid. Free W /D , 2-mmole students preferred. $450. 604-8808. 8-29-10B SMALL EFFICIENCY two blocks from UT. $294, all bills paid. Quiet, stu­ dious environment. Orvsite manage: ment and laundry. Holloway Apart­ ments. 2502 Nueces. 474-0146. 8-29-2B-C RIO HOUSE. 1/1's 4 2-1's. Prices range from $450-$675. Close to campus. Rio Grande and 17lh. Coll now 472-1238. 8-5-1084) STOP BOUNCING FROM APARTMENT TO APARTMENT Find your new home at Ravenwood Properties. West Campus 1-1's $420-550 Hyde Park 2-2's $775 North Campus 2-1 's $750 Call Jennifer 451-2268 88-20B 8 FREE RENT! Live on the CR shuttle and save. Really nice 1-1, one month's free rent. Great floorplans and prices. $495-700. Call PMT 476-2673. 8-8-20B-A THE GOVERNOR'S Place Apart- ments. ER Shuttle. Great 1-1 close to everything. $475. Coll PMT 476-2673. 8 8-2 0 4 A DON'T GET LOST in this enormous 3BD 2BA with over 1300 sq.ft. En­ field apartment shuttle, Pease Pork, Pool. Available now! 0 /ily $ 1 1 9 5 . Call PMT 476-2673. 88-20B-A UNEXPECTED VACANCYI Immacu- late. Very quiet,, large efficiency. 37th st. Small complex, separate bdrA'tchen/ living. 12 month lease. $ 44 0 No Pets. 453-5417. 8-5-208 LONGHAVEN SUPER nice 1-1. Ap- prox. 6 00 sq.ft. 3 short blocks to campus. Also on shuttle. $575 for 9mo. $525/yr. Call PMT 476- 2673 Nowl 88-20B-A ^VALK TO UT FR: $39511 Designer Eff's, 1-1's 2-1's 104 E. 32nd (block Speedway) 25 T4 Pearl, 4103-5 Speedway 472-7044, 342-1723 Jerrick Apartments 8-6-20&C 302 WEST 38th $100 off 1 st mo. rent with 9/m o lease on efficiencies, 1, Bdrm. Ceiling fans, dishwashers, frost free refrigerator, laundry room, swimming pool. Located near UT, shopping, city,& UT buses. Gas, water, garb |e & cable paid. GREAT APARTMENTS! Efficiencies $425+, 1-1 $415+, Campus Area, Front Page Properties 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 . 8- 12-206C % TW O BLOCKS UT. 405 East 31st efficiency, now or 9 /1 . $385 plus electricity +$150. 1BR $450. Ap­ pointment 4 5 3 4 8 1 2 . 8-13-2068 WEST CAMPUS UNEXPECTED AVALABWTYIII Efficiencies on W C Shuttle FALL/SPRING 9 7 /9 8 $100 discount on year looses Gas, water, and coble PAID Borronea Square Apis. 9 10 W . 26th. 480-9421 /467-2477or •- m a il: d w i l l 3 0 i x .n e lc o m .c o m SI+20SC GRAD students/ seniors: sublet opart ortment at Melrose of Austin. apartment. Have new 1-1 In shuttle. Complex has the works $378.C $ 3 7 i C a l l Kelly at 508-761-4577. 8-21-10B in ¿ 4 a IMMEDIATE VACANCY- One bed- room dote to campus $400/m o. Call 7 0 8 8 2 7 4 8-21-204A 105 E. 31st/ Speedway. Walk UT. Furnished efficiency. Meet bills paid. $ 415/m o. 328-1809, 478-2775 8-21-106 UT/35TH RED River Shuttle. 1-1/ large efficiency. CACH, trees, quiet individual small cor complex No pets, rom $465 ABP 453 Lease to 8 /9 8 from 5417. 8-25-208 SANDPIPER- ONLY One left Giant 2 /2 , gas paid, pool, covered park­ ing, extra large bedrooms, micro- wove, Hurryl Only $750. Call PMT 476-2673 88-2064, quiet, Erivate, 909 W .22N D , ROOMRENTALS, share itchen/baths/utilities, wolk UT, short term leases available. $280- 335 4 8 2 8 6 8 0 8-11-2084) AC, FREE MONTHS RENT 1-bedroom Small quiet community with garden area. • Cable and water paid. No pets Call for more info 835-5661 8-21-206 HYDE PARK close to UT shuttle 1BR downstairs 4 0 7 8 W . 45th. No lyr lease. pets. Available 9-1-97. 8-21- $465 +GNE. 206 331-0400. HYDE PARK cbse to UT shuttle. 1BR eff. No 7 0 7 4 1 /2 E.49th. lyr lease. Available 9-1-97. O+bills. 331-0400. 8-21-206 WALK-UT. VERY clean, 2-2, CACH Large windows, built-in dressers, sheroes, new carpet. Large pool, se­ curity gates. $875. 474-5929. 8- 21-106 REDUCED PRICE WEST CAMPUS Dominion Condos. 2-1's now $700 walk to UT. Amenities included W /D , all appliances, covered park­ ing, pool. Available now. Coll Harrison Pearson 472-6201 or Kristen 8 9 6 ¿ 2 2 4 8-21206 WALK UT. Designer Fr: $3951 Eff's, 1-1's, 4 2-1's, 104 E. 32nd (near ¡peedway) 472-7044, 342-1723. & L21106C 4 2 2-1 AVAILABLE for immediate move- in. Cable 4 got paid, by Central Market. $660?mo 4 5 3 3 5 4 5 .. 8- 22 108 THERE'S NOT Much Available, But W e Know Where the Voconciet Habitat Hunters 482 8 6 51 Are. habilalObgo.com. 6-25-106 EFFICIENCY W.CAMPUS Available Sept. to School. W aff W ator/Got paid. 280 9 Rio Grande Call 450-1058. 8-26-106 1. ATTN. S1UL NED EXTRA NY LESS C O N C O R D I A P L A C E APARTMENTS! Huge 1 bdrm. only $475.00 a month! 8 2 S S . S S S E E F I R S T M S H T R ' S R E N T Laundry facilities on site! Pool, Dishw ashers, *3? Ceiling Fans! O n Univerisy Bus Route Don t M iss It! Best D eal in Town! 4 5 4 - 0 2 0 2 [Drastically R c fa c i! I Last Chance to I Live Near Campus! 8 MARQUIS i MANAGEMENT I 2810 Salado I Icall 472-38161 m i a a w i i ~ T ' B Starting at $540.00 I ChfanneySwwy Eff. - $445.00 1/1 - $545.00 basic cable paid HYDE PARK APARTMENTS 1 / r * - $455°° | 2 / r » - $635°°| front Water & gas paid I 458-2096 4410 Ave. F ^B uy, Sell, L ease^ Comprehensive | Computerized ■ Efficient Open Every Day I ■ On-staff I Attorney/CPA Huge Selection I http7Avww.austinre.com/ habitat.htm I 800-482-8 6 51, 482-8651 " habitat@bga.com habnaT hunrens u KeaLwKS J | 1/1 - $540.00 CastieArms 1 /1 -$ 5 6 0 .0 0 basic cable paid Eff. - $425.00 1/1 - $560.00 V All Bills Paid 9 o r 12 m o n th le a s e ^ jv a ila b le J HYDE PARK 21 Swimming pool, hot tub, covered parking $695/m o. Hurry two left. 8-29-5b L M l i Spacious & Convenient Eff $390 1-1 $490 1-1 $440 2-1 $590 Sorry, no preleasing On Bus Route # 1, Straight to Co-op. W alk to Grocery. Norwood Apts 5606 N. Lamar Blvd. 451-1917. 8-26-58-0 : & * • * ! S Q U A R E ; U I 0 E R I H W l a U f i R A A B M W T ! ■ I N B ■ H W H Í A g l f t f t t N e w ly R e n w d e i e d l iT W iv m o o M /! m • All Bills Paid I (PumAJnfum I i Ceiling Pans I H ■ am o a n s i D R O O M s I I I I I _____ v ' • AU Bills Paid • Pum/Unfum • Very Large ■ ■ m c m i c i i s fe& m '' • AM Bills Paid SwMl • S a p a n c e K itchen ; • i w o n m • * P w n / W d u n t SB 9| ■ Ü HS H 2 B locks fro m UT! S’.: ‘ I I X Sll Wy PH| L a C a s it a o r n e s 1 12-1 rooMttksncte I m 112 MMths 10 Hoaftej _I 1 $400 '88 HONDA Accord IX, ¿dr, 5-spd, M V Pray. $2750 Original Owner. 1504 Windsor. 477-4356 8-27-108 01 HONDA Civic, White, ¿dr, Standard' 5-spd, AC, Good Tape Deck Stareo. Great Condition. 15500 obo. 477-1260. 8-27-58 '91 HONDA CRX. Blue/Black int; Auto; 63K mi; very clean; runs great; $7K OBO; Call Drew 892 9309. 8-28-5B 1988 HONDA Civic ¿door. Very clean, excellent condition, runs per­ fect. 9 5 ,0 0 0 miles. $3200. 467- 7855. 8-28-5b M i r , 1985 TOYOTA Comrv star* standard-. A /C , power steering/ Drakes, . new ports. Very dependable. $2500 obo. 499-0111. 8-27-5B _____ I ’’ üttftÜPS MAC LC3 4 /4 0 computer. Excel­ lent condition. Loods of free soft­ ware & Doc's. $600 OBO. 707- 8480. 8-21-108 DELI LAPTOP P I0 0 with CD ROM 540meg. HD, 16meg memory. $1500. Less than 6 mo. old. 328- 5372 after 6:00p.m. 8-27-58 K5-133, 16MB ram, 2 gig hd, 16x cd, 336-modem, souncL W IN 95, monitor, $959 832-1417. 8-28- 108 LONGHORN W ANT ADS OFF-WHITE loveseot $300. 463-1463 X2310, 261- 8232 8-27-5B-D CUSTOM 1985 TOYOTA Comry 5sp<$ AC, A M /FM , excellent condition * 146k miles. Super student cqrr>2000 301-2406. 8-29-5b FOR SALE dark wood frame queen size Futon. Excellent condition. 1 0' to 1 2 ' pad w/multi colored cover. $275 0 6 0 990-017 BEAUTIFUL 1971 1 ? ! Roadster. I mlcol, classy Runs perfect, fun. r * $3,250 OBO Leave message. 9-24 p / f^ “ j7 2 4 1986 B M ^ n S s 5-spd. 2dr. Sun- feof, sterdb, new point. Excellent cwtfitJSnT 127K, $3,900. 453- 8734. 9-3-3B GT-6 LOOKS good, Runs good, Driven Daily. Great little British cor. $3200 OBO. 255-4737. 9-3-1 OB. 1972-CHEVY CUSTOM-DELUXE pick-up. Professionally restored. Or- Power-steering, auto­ onge-white. A M /FM cassette. matic, AC, $8,850 Ap­ praised; $10,000-12,000. 8-27- 5b (512)847-1036 MOTORCYCLE MOONUGHT new/used parts. in Specializing carbwork, make runs, general serv­ ice, & salvage. Towing available. Broken, wrecked, unwanted motor cycles bought. 440- 0808. 8-21-206 9-5/M-F. 1988 KAWASAKI EL250 Block- hond chrome. Near showroom con­ dition. Economical, easy to handle, $2000. Lin 926-1692. 9-3-3B CASH PAID/ free towing e ar/ trucks any condition for salvage. Free re­ moval junk vehicles. Kevin 458- 2122. 8-25-206 R E A L E S T A T E SALES GOV'T FORECLOSED homes from pennies on $1. Delinquent Tax, Re- a / w í * (1)800-218-9000 Ext.H-1443 current listings. 8-29-6P . V _ mm KSmmmm i KING SIZE waterbed Lighted book­ case, headboard w/mirror, drawers and cabinets, wave control and heater. Excellent condition. $200. 0 6 0 . 346-1352. 8-27-5b 486 100MHZ Has !6meg. RAM 1 2gig Hard-Drive, SVGA Monitor, fax modem, Windows95, MSOffice, Lotus, WordPerfect, Others $795. 252-9321 Sam. 8-27-5B-A MEDIUM DRAWSTRING Dooney and Bourke purse. $100 negotiable. Call 707-8047 8-27-5NC-A , ENTERTAINMENT CENTER $75. 251-4407. 8-27-bd SOFA - very good quality, very clean, loose pillow back, cream stripe, $350. 478-3344. 8-27-5b- d 8' LONG party couch. Lavender, pink, blue. Comfortable $150. 452-1663. 8-28-5 bd UT ORANGE color couch w / h ¡do­ bed $10 0 cash 266-3488. SNOWBOARD '97 k-2 Judu with great bindings, never used. Still in box. $500 pockage Will sell for $350. Jeff 302-3738 SEARS-FOLDING TREADMILL, digital read-out, 1 yr old. Good condition, $350 326-8798. 8-27-5B8 EXERCYCLE PEP. Monitor, mint con­ dition, $795. 440-1716. 8-27,56 FULL-SIZE BOXING bog 4 stand with base. $85. Combination um­ brella stroller: $75. Baby swir $15. Baby bicvde seat (RhoX> Gear): $25. All great condition. 329-5653, 329-7005. 8-21-5B GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies. Ger­ man import parents. Police & pro­ tection titles. 5 mo old. Socialized, energetic, responsive, smart. $500- for ¡¿ofr (830)899-7347 8-28-5B * ' ___________ __ BARGAIN $725 for 2-1 townhome. Huge master Must see to believe. Close to downtown. Swimming pool, hot tub. 3854)426. 8-28-6B GREAT C O N D O for sale! Convert loft into 3rd bedroom. Walk out door to UT shuttle. Call Leslie at JB Goodwin 502-7652. 9-2,58 JAMESTOWN C ON DO . Owner oc- cupied. 2 -1 1 /2 unit. Is deon as a whistle; move-in condition. Close to price transportation. $S3,900. Ross Anderson, realtor 327-3676. 9-2-5B Selling M E R C H A N D I S E W IN D O W A /C by Mr. Fix-It buys sells and services. New and used- worranties. MC/Visa. 4454)412. 8- 21-108 ¡¡£ W; B e d s , B e d s , B e d s L The factory oudsl lor Simmons, Seoly, llpringoir. Yds carry doseoub, discontinued I omen, & foetory 2nd». From 50-70% off retail •ore pnces. Al new, complete wüh warranty ! Twin eet, $69. Full set, $89 Queen set, $119. King set, $149 7530 B e n * Id . 4544422 DORM CARPET. Cheap. Do it self ond save money 280 -6 2 1< 8-21-206 \m UEf* AmUqn— I - W elcom e U T Students ■ We have uoonomical furniture | I for your «ridenoe I ■ • hades •hooka»» che» «dieB* Ílto • émm • mtnm • leMe» • eahrn E m S. Caafnaa * 442-1779 WM Hours M-S10-6, Sun 12-6 m i FUtLSiZE FUTON x x i 9 3 4 8 5 6 0 or 9 2 4 4 M 9 $ 1 5 0 price m g Bi able, KENMORE sAAAU. refrigerator 24*x58* $150. 2-drawer metal file cabinet $30. 2 0 ' TV $20. 329- SI 34. 8-28-5p HtGHBACK FABRIC office chair $100. Butcher block kitchen table $225. Dell 300N laptop $250. 327-9863 8-28-58 POWERBOOK 150, 16 Meg Ram, 1.08 GigHD, 14.4 modem (inter­ nal), grayscale display, extra battery and cnarger. Software includes: of­ fice, ClarisWorks, UT connect, and much more! $850 707-9695. 8-28- 5z4k KITCHEN TABLE plus 2 chairs $150.. 5 shelf wooden bookcase $80, Call Paul at 91 ¿ 8 7 0 3 . -28- 5b JEEP WHEELS for sale. Set of four. Goodyear Excellent condition. r. Mus Rene >323-2025. I'm nice. 8-28-5p BEAUTIFUL SILVER watch. Touch of gold. Christmas gift from parents. TOO- N eed money. 0 11 6 . 8-28-5p $50 OBO -B IG BRASS Bed. Oversized King. I 1 Could possibly sleep three comforto- Very Fun.l ■ H H i t f g r royalty Very Fut &50. OBO. 8-29-5c ^ ^ * ■ 7 0 8 4 ) 1 l W M M DOUBLE BED Wooden frame, like new. $250. 447-1437 leave message. 8-28-5b futon. i 16. FLY rod & reel; Rod; Thomas & Thomas 4 piece, 5 weight. Hard- ■ used. Moaet #1 never used $400 fy use< Coll Ryan 467-1446. Might OBO as well have me best. 8-29^5b* * * 5-SHELF BOOKCASE 4 desk (match­ separate) mahogany drop ing, but table $l7S-$22S h S dining tc leaf dining 0 6 0 . 8 37 8211 RALEIGH MOUNTAIN bike, Alumi- frame, XT, rock shox, $600. OBO 467-8303. 8-29-5b TW O ADULT bicycles, recently serv­ iced, men's 4 todies. Also various houseplants, large 4 small. 836- 2 68 5 8-29-5b COMPAX NOTEBOOK Computer, color active matrix display, 20mb RAM, removable hard drive, Wirv dows95, 33 6 Fax/Modem. $875. Call Tom: 349-7408. 8-29-5B SOFA 4 loveseot- brown ptoid pat­ tern, $170 for both. Phase call 458-4412 after 6:00pm or leave message. 9-2-5NGC LOVE SEAT, two chairs, matching coffee table. Light tweed upholstery, solid wood. Good condition. $175 8 3 7 8 2 2 9 9-2-56 SELMER MARK VI Tenor $ 3 8 0 0 , obo. 3 8 9 0 2 7 5 . 9-2 56 lax. 83 KAWASAKI 750- $400, set of 4 Mazda m ao* $100, Codec 326- 9 3 9 7 . 9 ^ S N C s r e + U n f e A p l c . f f i E f f l E S C H m Large 2/1 duplex - $650 Large 3/1 duplex - $895 Older units, high ceilings, lots of windows. Cats ok - no dogs. Drive by FIRST and call Matthews Properties 454-0099. AVAILABLE SEPT 1. Neat 2-1-1. Convenient to UT-Hancock Center Bus at your door. 346- 5747 8-21-3B $650. 2-2+ LOFT W /D reserved parking $ 700/m o 477-8288. 8-27-5B CONDO NORTH SUNCHASE CAMPUS 3115 HELMS ST. Luxury 2-2 w/Lots of amenities. Starting $750/m o. 346-DMIS. 8-27-7B HUGE 1-1 Free cable, security gates, pool, UT shuttle. Available now. Apartment Headquarters 442- 9333 8-27-20B-E WEST CAMPUS Larae 1-1 in historic house Oak floors, flagstone porch, lots of windows. ! 903 Nueces. $590 472-2123. 8-27-2088 WEST CAMPUS 1-1 Entire upstairs of Victorian house. C A/C H, win­ dows and open space. 2110 Son Gabriel. $740. 472-2123. 8-27-20B8 QUIET, SPACIOUS l - l W / D connections, walk-in seperate dining,outside storage, patio, shuttle, fireplace $450 CALL 447-7565. 8-27-5B-D BARTON HILLS! Pre-leasing for fall. Efficiencies, 1 or 2 bedrooms from $445. Properties Plus 447-7368, 1- 800-548-0106. 8-27-10B-E LARGE 1-5 bedrooms, on shuttle Huge computer center, free cable, Jotes, weight-room 4 more! From 495. Properties Plus, 447-7368, 1800-548-0106. 8-27-10B-E NEAR UT! -$325 Eft. 1 bed $395, 2 bed $495 Free Cable.472-6979 Walk to UT! Small, quiet complex near law school. All bills paid (except electric). Efficiency. Kemp Management 4 7 6 - 6 5 8 1 Nick dp 205-0994 415 GREAT HYDE Pork Location West 39thSt. 600sqft. 1-1 $475. Available 9 /6 . CACH, carpet, small, quiet complex near shuttle 4 bus route. 371-3488. 8-29-20B8 NICE Q l" cT 630sqft 1-1. 3703 Harmon. Gas/water paid. On site laundry. 4 5 ¿ 7 13 5 . -29-20B HYDE PARK efficiency and huge 1-1 clean, small, quiet community on IF shuttle, centra! heat/cod, 2weeks free rent. 4312 Speedway, 835 6250, Buddy 8-29-204C HYDE PARK, nice 1-1, $550, AC/HEAT. Paid $150 deposit, paid $150 of first month. Big pool, shuttle route 452-0060 or 4 7 4 4 0 4 0 8-2988 24TH 4 Nueces, nice l - l , W /D , dishwasher, covered parking, vault­ ed ceiling, private balcony, walk-in closet, $615/m o, 480-3111 9-2- 58 1940'S 2-1 on quiet street, oak floors, tile bath, ceiling fans, lots of winows. $780. 1401 Ashwood. 472-2123. 8-27-2088 HYDE PARK - 3 /1 house with wood floors ond a large yard. Shuttle stops at the front door. Large yard for pets. Move-in today! $895/m o. Ely Properties 476-19 /6/E P I. 8-27- 20bb 904 WEST 22nd - 2/1 only blocks from UT features wood floors and o unique old home charm. Recently renovated and ready for immediate move in $795 Ely Properties. 476- 1976/E PI. 8-27-20bb SHUTTLE OFF For W e*t/H art lone. $1050. 3-2-1, fireploce. 3900-A Knollwood. Evergreen Properties. 331-1122. 8-28-20B 3209 A Liberty- Very dean 2 /1 , hardwood floors. C /A , C /H walk to UT. Prefer 2 year lease min $800 mo. Call 1st 4 Roland0483-2223 message 8-29- 5B last. NICE 2-1, near UT shuttle, available now, fenced yard, CA-CH. cor port $550/400dep. Parker Lane. Please drive by ond call 459- 7188. 9-2-4b 16028 $ 0 0 — f o m f r n - TWELVE OAKS CONDOMINIUMS W est Campus Last 2 /2 from $900 Controlled Access Gates/Garage Pool/Spa Responsive On-Site Manager Call for an appointment 495-9585 8 1 2 0&Q GABLES- THREE story 2-2.5 with 2 car garage. Only blocks from UT, floorplon excellent roommate $1195. 476- 1976. EPI 8¿-20B8 Available 8 /2 5 . two bedrooms. $ 100 OFF 1 st month's rent! One and in West Campus. Campus Condos 474-4800. 8-7-20B-A Condos CROIX 2-2 $ 1200/mo- last 2-bed 2bath leflt New carpet. Coll Jared. Campus ftondos, 4 /4 -4 80 0 . 8-7- 20B-A SPLIT-LEVEL TOWNHOME. Wosh- er/Dryer, third bedroom. Avoilble August 15. Agent, 626- 5366 8-8-20B lofted SAN PEDRO Oaks- Condos at 28th. 4 Salado Large 2-2, new paint, new carpet, gos paid. Available now! $750 Call PMT 476-2673. 88-20B-A WINCHESTER- INCREDIBLE view 2- 2 end unit, new carpet, fireplace, pool, covered parking $950 Call PMT 476-2673. 88-20B-A gote access. Covered parking. One block to campus. W asher/dryer $675. Call PMT 476-2673 . 88- 20B-A k S O ■* C m t d o f ” - ••• ' . .. ÍCo H m P ro M rtU s ] t “Deals of iheWeek"i i I 2 /1 $ 4 7 5 1 | 6 A Z E I 0 ■ 2115 Rio Growl»-Wt, prkg, gates I ¡S A I1 N A L 2 /2 $ 8 7 5 1 ■ 712 Grohom PI. - Heart of W. Campus ■ w /n n i t » . ■ I W/D, Ff Micro, Covered Prkg SAN G A NIEL WEST 2/1 $700 I 1905 Son Gabriel - New pt, carpet J I 1 story, dean & bright 9 or 12 Mo. 1 loasos Availablo I , CALL FOIIMFO OH THESE, AHO MAHY OTHEHS. j 2813 Rio Grande #206 479-1300 2802 NUECES. Wedgewood con­ do. 2-1, $850. Covered parking, high ceilings, FP, full-size W /D 250-0991 . 8-26-10B i H a n t e o r i - P e a r s o n Discounted Availabilities Dominion - 2/1’s 2905 Swisher, cov. pkg. w/d. nice 1/1 $450 $700 3000 Guad., bal., res. pkg., dishw Pecan Tree - l / l $500 2107 Rio Grande, res. pkg.. w/d. loft call Kristin or Tom pgr #896-4224 4 7 2 - 6 2 0 1 SOUTHEAST ¿BEDROOM, 2 bath, security system, water paid, 6915 Ten Oak Circle $950/month $500 deposit, HP1, 4 1 8 8 4 7 4 . 8-27-7B-A SILVERADO CONDOMINIUMS. T- 1 condos washer/dryer stackable, microwove. 1840 Burton Drive. 443-3666. 8-27-1 Obe ELMS - Large 1/1 located at 28th and Nueces. This property included fireplace. W /D , microwave ond Move-in today! 476- 1976/EP!. 8-27-20bb $650/m o, WESTPLACE - West Campus 2 /2 immediate drastically reduced included move-in. Move-in today! 476- 1976/EPI 8-2/-20bb All amenities $795/m o for WESTRIDGE - West Campus 2 /2 with all amenities, covered parking and pool for roommates. Move-in today! $795/m o. Ely Prop­ erties. 476-1976/EPI 8-27-20bb Ideal BENCHMARK CONDOS-THEY do not come any better than this! Se­ cured parking , pool, hot tub, waler fall, elevator. Avail. Aug. $1100. Call PMT 476-2673 88-20B-A in Small STARWEST - Large 2 /1 West Campus Complex. Great roommate floorplan. Move-in today! $650/m o Ely Properties 476- 1976/EPI 8-27-20bb LOFTED 2-1 West campus. Covered parking. Gate access. Great location. Only one left call PMT $700 476-2673. 88-20B-A BRAND SPANKEN new. Approx. 7 00 sq. ft. One bedroom. All new, all nice. Should be ready late Au­ gust. Coll PMT 476-2673 . 88-206- A DECORATOR CONDO- Furnished at St. James Place, Gorgeous 2 /2 vaulted ceilings, ceramic tile, con­ trolled access, washer/dryer, fire­ place, shows like a model. $1000. Call PMT 476-2673. 88-20B-A COMPLETELY REMODELED- Three bedroom condo. Washer/dryer, mi­ Iblk to campus. New crowave, paint, new carpet, new wallpaper, $1300. Availa­ covered parking Call PMT 476-2673. ble August 1. Cc 88-206-A ROBBINS PLACE - Large 2 /2 loaded with amenities. This is the West Campus best Value. Move-in today! $795/m o. Ely Prc 1976/EPI 8-27-20bb Centrally located. West Campus *2 - 2« 3 blks to UT • Fireplace, W/D, controlled access, pool Kemp Management 476-6581 Nick dp 205-0994 j U n iv e rs ity j REALTY ! Pre L e a s i n g N o w ! < A v a i t o b f c Now! 1*1 Cottonwood $475 2307 Rio Gnndo Studio 1575 $675 Greenwood ABP 1-1 $725 2-1 SL Charles SwiGMoiCoidos 2-1.5 $775 B1W .31sl(hNN)2-2 $1200 TWELVE OAKS CONDOMINIUMS West Campus last 2 /2 from $900 Controlled Access Gates/Gorage Pool/Spa Responsive On-Site Manager Call for an appointment 495-V585 8-!2oac SPLIT-LEVEL TOWNHOUSE perfect for 3 adults Borton Hills area, 15min from compus. Parking for 3 cars, entrances separate $1195 441-5236 9-2-2B two 1-1 NORTH 38LOCKS to campus on shuttle route. Ira room. Irg closet Pool/jacuzzi $600/monlh ble Call Scott day 447-0505 night/weekend 389-3858. 9-3-58 EFFICIENCY GARAGE apartment in Suiet neighborhood. 1807 Pearl. 474- 375/m o. All bill paid. 5024 9-2-2b •SUPER CONDO! Berber corpetl 2 patiosl W /D conn. Covered park­ Page ing! Pool 2 /2 $850 Front Poo 4 8 0 8 5 1 8 . 8-12-20BC Park HYDE HUGE efficiency C A/CH , dishwasher, ceiling fans. Very nice! $425. 451-0988. 9-2- 20B-D WEST CAMPUS. Large 2-1's, some will) fireplace 4 vaulted ceiling. $875, $100 off first month's rent Very nicel 451-0988. 9-2-20B WALK TO campus. Huge 2-1's, all bills paid, $ 8 /5 . $100 off first months rent. Very nicel 451-0988. 9-2208 1717 W.35TH. Huge 2-2's. Very nice! $750. $100 off first month's rent. 451-0988. 9-2-206 2-1 'S WALK to campus Large pool $ 6 5 0 6 7 5 472-1238 or ¿ 5 4 4872 9-2-5B HATE YOUR new roommate? Bring along someone you really like 4 lease a 2-bedroom just peps from UT! 2-1 or 2*2 $675-725, 1-1 $ 4 6 0 5 0 0 . Call Jenniler:451-2268 9 8 -5 6 8 2-2, 1300 sq ft. Far West shuttle! Newly decorated/pointed! Perfect for graduate students! Available 9 /1 , 4 9 0 6 1 8 2 or 1 8 0 0 CUTE HOUSE Saledo/UT. huge efh- ciency IBr (?2 Br), from $675 ABP, hardwoods, ceiling fans, (win­ 12 month dow AC), No Pets 53 5417 8-5-206 WALK TO UT. Wood Floors, bright, dean, remodeled Many Prices, __ , Sizes. Habitat Hunters, 482 8651habitaKvfaga.com 6-25-106 MOST LUXURIOUS 4 best cared units around U.T. Some Colonial, Some Modern l- l s from $ 5 5 0 8 8 2 5 2-2's from $750-$ 1275 Preservation Square, Croix, Oakview, and Others PERSONALIZED ATTENTION ONLYI KHP 476-2154 (-21-20S TALISMAN C O N D a 2-2 with one car garage, gated, comes with all appliances. $ 1 100/mo. Available Nowl Eanes Properties, 263-7333. 8-l¿20B-A 2 bedroom 708 GRAHAM Place condo with W /D in heort of West Compus. 4 1 8 8 2 8 3 . Sherry McClain. 8-¿10B $700/m o. 1 BLOCK FROM UT 1 & 2 BR's, All bills paid Attractive, unique 1 4 2 bedroom condos. Enjoy luxury livina with views 4 privacy. Controllers access to building 4 parking garage Cov­ ered porking, loundry, w/unique pool 4 spa. Ideal location l / 2 block to bus shuttle, shopping, restaurants, 4 entertainment. Immediate occupancy available 1800 Lovoca 476-9710 « lio » 2 THE GABIES 2 /2 5, Unique 3 lew el condominium including an attach­ garage Reduced ed $995/m o Ely Properties 476-1976/EPI 8-27-206- 8 Movein today! cor NORTH CAMPUS Luxury 11, start- ing at $725 346DMIS 9-3-36 ittfayM o refl& m . | ■ E d f t i o n o H h e T o u n l E M P L O Y M E N T E M P 1 0 V M E N Í mmSm ■ n i i i f f l i r — n n F ^ f i HABIUTATION PROVIDERS Needed to work with people who deaf/blind and have cognitive impairments. Full-time and part-time positions available. Apply in person at 7801 N. Lamar, Suite 8148. Ask for Morey. S2S» COLLEGE PARK COMMUNITY (The GMH Company) The notion's leader in private nousi- ing & food service for college stu­ dents seeks PT cooks, dishwashers, & servers. Applicants need friendly ing cost-friendly attitudes & the txpe- . . sire to hove fun ot work. Food ex rience a plus. Excellent wages plus " meals. Uniforms & orrlhe job train- ing. Apply for positions between 10-2 at 2323 San Antonio St. in the food service dept. EOE ......... ‘ 1 1 Uni' 8-28-5Bc AUSTIN NORTH HILTON A N 0 TOWERS W e're growing and need additional talented people to round out our team! W e are seeking to fill the following positions: •N ight Auditor •W oitstoff, AM & PM * Host/Hostess •Banquet Housepersons •Room Attendants •Housepersons Flexible student oriented scheduling ■ availablel! W e offer competitive I pay and benefits, adiverse, fanand work environment. For chol ¡¡¡pate consideration, please M apply in person at ® Austin North Hilton 6000 M iddle Fiskville Rd M S (behind rslc d Mali). Application Hours: M 7am-7pm, T- Th 10am-2pm H 9-2-206-A H I M P L O Y M E N T EXCELLENTPAY for full or part-time outdoor work. Flexible hours. Also looking for tractor mower operator. Call Development Services. 454-4255 1 7 142066 INFANT/TODDLER TEACHERS need­ ed- 1 /2 price child care. W e will train the right person. 335-9616. 8-8-208 TEXACO FOOD MARTS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR FULL TIME/PART TIME CLERKS 25 AUSTIN/METRO LOCATIONS BENEFITS: —Medical Insurance —Retirement —Paid Vacation —Tuition Assistance APPLY IN PERSON: 5001 EAST 5TH STREET (Ausfin) FRI 8am-4pm MON/FR EOE 6-21-10B DAVID ALAN RUG COMPANY is looking for a motivated individual who can work between 2 0 & 30 hr/w k. Our store hours are Monday-Saturday 10om-6pm. Ideal position tor student. Heavy lifting required. Sales experience a plus. Downtown location. Please call for interview. 499-0456 8-21-108C ENTHUSIASTIC UT students needed. Starting at $ 5 .3 3 /h r. (5.75 after two weeks) w/frequen* raises. Flexi­ ble evening shifts. Coll 471-7351 or visit G IA1.206 on UT campus. 8- 25-148 T h e D a il y T exa n Wednesday, September 3,1997 Page 19 E M P L O Y M E N T E M P L O Y M E N T E M P L O Y M E N T E M P L O Y M E N T p | ATTENTION PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL SERVICES and HEALTH SCIENCE MAJORS Improve your chances of getting into grad school by working in a pro­ gressive, non-eiversive treatment cen­ ter. W e ore looking lor Mental Heohh Workers wonting to gain ex- perience helping survivors of brain injuries and individuals who have severe psychiatric disorders reach their goals for independence. Full i available Benefits ond part-time ™. ——- . — may include health/dental insur­ ance, mileage reimbursement, PTO's and regular pay incentives, raFax resume to: BKH-Personnel (512) 858-5104 and indiv " * 9-25B* HELP MOTHER Earth & Ausfin. Do something this fall that can make a difference Have fun & get paid $325/w k. Coll 3 2 6 5 6 5 5 8-25- 58 $1500 WEEKLY potential mailing re- our circulars. N o experience 3uired. Free information packet. Call 10-347-1475 9-2-20P INTERN/CLERK; NATIONAL Democratic consulting firm seeks student for fall internship involving light clerical and some re­ search. Familiarity with Austin for daily courier run helpful. Must be 21 to drive. Four hour shifts around lunch time M-F. $5 .oo/hour plus parking. Please call Personnel at 474-7514 9-2-5B CHILDCARE TEACHERS needed for daycare near Westgate & Ben now 892- White(290). 1884(day), 301-1848(evening). 9- 3-38 Call FULL-TIME positions. Casual, fast- paced office on Burnett Rd. Basic entry & customer service duties. No Good phone skills a must. weekends Call Kathy required. 454-8072. 9-3-3B-D - ■ — CUSTOMER SERVICE REPS NEEDED For the following languages: Polish, Arabic, Mandarin & Cantonese, Ko­ rean, Russian, Tagalog, Japanese, & to use Spanish. Great opportunity to > stud your language skills. Able to study while working. Day & evening^ shifts available w/some weekends. $7.75 /h r. Excellent positions for students. Call 343-7770 " ' 9-3-7B AUSTIN PARKS AND RECREATION DEPARTMENT needs people to work with teens. Duties include planning, evaluating, instructing, organizing, and monitor- ing porticipants in teen programs Must be 21 or older, 3 months previous experience and valid drivers license. $7 .6 0 /h r. Call 480-3043 for more info. 9-3-6B RESIDENT APT. Manager, UT area 1 bedroom apt +$300/m o salary. Car required. Call 3 4 6 1 9 9 0 . 9-3- 5BC WESTBANK DRYCLEANING needs counter help for afternoons.. Good pay. 329-999. 9-3-5bd CALL BUSINESSES from home part- time during the day. Generous com­ mission plus bonuses, advancement. Coll 477-4473. 9-3-5B CTG CUSTOMER service candidates needed with basic windows ond DOS experience for full-time positions for our clients in North Austin. $6.50-7/hr. Contact Sean at 502-0190. 8-15-108 Bee PART-TIME OFFICE work. Caves area marketing company seeking individual oble to work face to face with clients ond familiar with to tace wttn clients ona rammu Fax re- PC's. Entry-level position. Fi 10B sume to 512-328-3959. 8-21- GROWING MORGAGE company/ reo! estate investment office, os look- ing for assistants/interns. Coll Dana 2 06 0 0 0 5 . 8-22 106 NEAR UT $7-7.25 Flexible hrs. 24-hr. job lines: 474-2246 -Paralegal Courier: -Typist/Clerical: 474-2216 -Bookkeeping Trainee: 474-2032 Smoke-free, WILL TRAIN, freshmen welcome! 8-262080 NEAR UT $7-7.25 Flexible hrs. 24-hr. job lines; 474-2246 -Paralegal Courier: -Ty 474-2216 -Bookkeeping Trainee. 474-2032 'C lerical: Smoke-free, WILL TRAIN, freshmen welcome! 8-262060 PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST needed m phones and general office to answer work. MS-Word skills required. $ 6/h r. Fax brief resume to 345- 8498. 8-27-5BC OFFICE ASSISTANT Needed for port-time position. Com­ puter skills in MS Word and Excel a must. Nice work environment. Fox resume to 343-8134 or send to ERCOT I Mopac I Austin TX 78731 Near Far West Blvd. SJS5S CLERK TO do delivnri«s and in-house clerical work for centrally locat­ ed law firm. Morning & after­ noon shifts available. Need car insurance A dean driving record. Fax resume 3 2 7 -6 5 6 6 . 9-2-58* APPLY IN person. Front Desk Night- clerk. Shtft: 11pm-7om Rodewoy Inn, 5656 N .» i3 5 . Ask for Rose mory. 9-3-38 SKlfe .NEAR UT! enence Gain bookkeeping experi * --------------- r p j/ p T $7-7.25/hr.V Also hiring typists, clerical, runners. Nonsmoking. . s .... M in N W MONTESSORt SCHOOL Austin has o position for experi­ enced afternoon teacher. Excellent pay & working conditions. Also available morning aide position. Please cali 451-6134. 9-2-4B-F w e - c b t o 474-2032. 72320*0 GROWING MORGAGE compony/ real estate investment office, os look­ ing for assistants/interns. Call Dona 2 0 6 0 0 0 5 8-22 10B t * f l I r f t l INTERNET SALES- Commission Full/Part-time. Call 252-2491 or email: ccDshopanytown.com. Prefer Marketing, Advertising, and Busi­ ness majors. 8-620B tor students. SHOWROOM FURNITURE sales Full or part-time. Flexible scheduling ideal Evening ana weekend hours available. Contact Patrick at AAron Rents. 837-2944. 8-28-5b §50- M a il N O W HIRING- Heroes and Legacies cigar sales & collective memorabilia Good starting pay plus bene­ fits. P-T positions needed. Ap­ ply in person at 10000 Re­ search Blvd, Suite 123 or 3663 Bee Caves Rd. Suite 4-4. 8-27-5B BARTON CREEK A Highland Mall f-t/p-t associate and management training positions available. Guitar & Cadillacs is a fun 12 store chain of upscale Texas gifts above aver­ age starting pay. Flexible hours, benefit package, employee discount, paid vacation, holiday pay, bonus­ es, advancement opportunity and medical for immediate consideration apply in person Guitars A Codillocs Highland Mall/Barton Creek Mall. 8-29-10b CASHIER/SALES CLERK Part-time 20 hrs/wk, evenings and weekends. Retail experience preferred. Brian, ot 478-6419. 9-3-5B ■ f M R M V r f n g " Technical AUSTIN SOFTWARE COMPANY has an immediate opening for a programming intern or entry level programmer analyst. Duties include phone support, technical writing, & programming (Visual Basic). Send resume to: 4425 Mopac South Ste#204 Austin, Tx 78735 Fax# (512)892 1829. or e-mail: tomh@halfile.com 6-16 sb PART-TIME MACINTOSH Tech sup­ port / Sales person needed. PC software experience a plus. 453- 3830. 8-28-5b DRAFTSPERSON NEEDED By a structural engineering firm. CE or ARE major only. Part-time to full, flexible hours. Architectural freehand lettering is required. Familiarity with residen­ tial construction helps. Call 343-0766 or FAX resume to: 343-9103. 9-2-5M WEB BADASS Needed to research, test, ond imple­ ment video streaming system Most have good programming skills. W eb administration, video editing, and interface design experience a plus. Flexible hours, good pay, great office. M ail resume to 815 A Brazos, Box no. 390, Austin, TX 78701. Attn: E. Bryant 481 Or Fax: 708-8481 9-3-2NC § 8 0 CHILDREN'S SHELTER A ASSESS MENT CENTER IS N O W HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS: FT Direct Care Staff Overnight FT Staff Overnight Weekend Staff House Manager off Relief Staf Send resume to: Children's Shelter & Assessment P.O. Box 684213 Austin, TX 78768 4213 or fax: Attn.: Alice, 322-9461 8-8-208 YOUTH CARE COUNSELORS Positions available for Direct Core of emotionally disturbed children in a 24-hr core residential treatment cen­ ter with C i. oubled adolescent girls. Must have sincere interest in chil­ dren, ability to model appropriate life skills, and high energy level. Drivers license required Must be 21 years of age. Experience or de­ gree preferred. Medical and vaca­ tion benefits provided for F/T positions only. Full-time Awake Nights Position 5 nights 11 pm-9am $6.3 5 /h r Relief Worker $ 6/h r On Coll as needed Fax Resume to 8 3 6 2 1 5 9 Settlement Home 1600 Payton Gin Rd. 836-2 1 50 8-27-5B ' Austin, rosi COLLEGE PARK COMMUNITIES (The GMH Compony) The nation's leader in private hous­ ing & food service for college stu­ dents seek an assistant food service manager ot College Park- the Castil- ion in Austin. Position requires bachelor's degree in hospitality or business program. 1 or more years of supervisory experience or equiva­ lent combination of related educa­ ción and experience. Competitive salary, comprehensive medical, den- tal, A disability benefits. Send re­ ‘ sume A cover letter to: The Castilian 2323 Son Antonio Austin, TX 787Q5 478-1732, 478-9811 EOE lisaDili ~ 8-28-5 Be WATCH 3-YR-OLD and boby help with laundry. Approximately 4-6 hrs/wk. Flexible hours, References. $6/h r. 302-0385. 827-5b AFTER-SCHOOL BABYSITTER need­ ed Watch 3-boys Drive to_ sports practice. Westlake oreo 3 3C $ 7/h r. Contact Pam w.327-7415 h.327-0993. 8-28-68 ACCREDITED AUSTIN area childcare centers ore hiring assistant teachers, part-time & full­ time for oges 2 to schóol age. Applicants must be enthusiastic team players Four Austin locations: North 832- 91 37; N W 250-1669, central 3 4 6 6160, south 443-7765 EOE 8-29-6bd HOMEWORK HELPER for 8th grade level girl. Must be very responsible and nave strong math & science ability. M-Th 4-7ish. Must have car, start immediately. Contact Bobbie 328-7082 8-28-6B CHURCH NUSERY seeking babysit­ ter, Sunday mornings 9:45-12 30. Own transportation. Please call Lisa 794-0047 if interested. 8-28-5B UT FACULTY member seeks PT child 10- core(in home) 15hrs/wk, weekday mornings. Call 343-0535 8-28-5B for 2-yr-old. THE COOLEST P/T JOB IN N W AUSTIN Are you a cool, responsible individu­ al that loves fun kids? Well I need your help. I am a really cool 9 year old girl and I need to be picked up from school ot 3pm , Mon-Fri and helped with homework until my mom gets home around 6:30-7pm You must have previous child care expe 1 able rie n c e , e x c e lle n t references, re lia b le tra n s p o rta tio n a n d a c o o l a ttitu de Please c a ll soon b e fo re m y m om be­ co m e s u n -c o o ll! 728-1230 d a y tim e o r 491 -0408 eve n in g s. 8 29 58 LIVE-IN C O M P A N IO N Live & Work in N. Austin All Female Group Home Salary 15Kto 18K + FREE Room & Board Complete benefit package EMPOWERMENT OPTIONS, Serving Persons with Mental Retardation Call Terri at 338-4493, EOE 8 28-5B-E NANNY FOR 10 and 13yr chil­ dren. 3-6:30pm, non-smoker, with own car. 328-0348, evenings, 3 4 6 3 7 8 0 days 8-29-5b COME JOIN a winning team at the Oasis A great way to tan while you work, excellent benefits 4 01K, Insuronce, employee swimmina pool Beautiful view & best oi all. AWESOME MONEY If you ore a team player, energetic, . hari1 1 truely love people, born to serve, fill out an application. come in W e are hiring for the following posi- tions: Experienced woitstoff, food runner, hosts, & bussers Reply by application, Tues-Fn 2-4pm The Oasis 6550 Comonchie Trail Austin, TX 78732 2 6 6 2 4 4 2 8-29-5B FRESH PLANET CAFE 601 N. LAMAR, STE.#200 4 7 6 0 9 0 2 Exciting new self service restaurant opening mid-August. W e ore cur­ rently taking applications to fill the following positions: Cashier, Food Expediter & Runner, Busser, Cooks, Dishwasher Applications will be taken M-F 9anv 4pm. Please ask for Neil or Jockie 7-31 209 r PLUCKERS HIRING Delivery drivers, counter persons, & 2222 Rio Gronde or 469- cooks 8-13-20B 9464 immediately THE COUNTY LINE O N THE LAKE Is looking for hard-working, energetic people with good attitudes for all positions. Slackers need not apply. Call346-3664 for appoint­ ment. 5204 FM 2222 8-21-206 SUSHI BAR MUSASHINO is hiring a woitperson. High vol­ ume and excellent $$$. Some. Asian food-service experience neces­ sary. 4-1 lpm . Dinner only. Fun place to work.' Apply in person only. Please ase call first. 7 9 5 -8 5 9 3 THUNDERCLOUD SUBS Austin's#! Sub Shop s accepting applications for several locations, and Golf Course food concession illc Call 4 7 9 -8 8 0 5 for more info. 8-21-106 BUSINESS IS great. Looking for a few mote waitresses A dancers PT available 238-7700. 8-22-20B GOOD TIMES Fall cash available *o good people wifh good experience. If you have the energy, drive, & enthusiasm to join a winning team. Apply in person to Grady's American Grill. Research Blvd. and Great Hills Trail. 8-27-20be BW-3 N O W hiring experienced kitchen staff for football season. Ap- ply in person Mondays 2-4pm 218 E 6th Street. 8-27-b6 ' ‘ i 5tr« N O W ACCEPTING applicotions- cocktail servers. Apply in person on­ ly. 314 E. 6th St. 8-27-5B * * * * * * * * SUGARS CABARET DANCERS NEEDED 4 0 4 Highland Mall 451-1711 GOOD EATS looking for good peo­ ple. Accepting applications for serv­ ers, hosts/support staff. Please apply at 6801 Burnet Rd. 9-2-3B CHILD CARE NEEDED Someone to provide after school childcare for 2great kids ages 4A7 MF 3 4 hr s/day. References, relia­ ble cor, A some childcare experiece required. 306-8846 9-2-48 MOTHER'S HELPER / BABYSITTER/ DRIVER for 2 boys 12-15 hrs/wk, $7/hr. Need o cor. Coll 3 46 9 2 25 . Guys welcome who enjoy boys who like to ploy sports. 9-3-1 for fun 18 CAREGIVER NEEDED month old girl. Tuesdays/Thurs­ days. $ 6 /h r. Car and references needed. Call Julie 458-3979 9 3- 3B SITTER WANTED for T,Th 8am-2pm plus one evening per week. Must be female student between 18-25, have experience, references, and own transportation. Call Lyn 261-9145. 9-3-5B-F AFTER-SCHOOL CHILDCARE Must have reliable transportation, referen­ ces A experience with children. Call 8 9 6 $7/hr 3pm-6:30pm. - MCGIUJCODDYS PUB 8. Grill now hiring servers apply doily between 3-5pm Corner of Congress A 7th Street. 4 7 6 4 7 6 4 . 8-29-5b íiA u s s ié s ií Mow Accepting Applications for W aitstaff, Referees ft Cooks M Apply in person > J Monday-Friday V 1-5 Dm a DAY-TIME WAITSTAFF needed Ap- ply ot Coin and Abel s, 2313 Rio Gronde after 4pm. 4762301 9-2- 3B j BUSINESS 1 j 9 3 0 - t u f i M f i SNOW PEA Restaurant now hiring waitstaff, cashiers, delivery drivers $8plus. Call 454-3228 after 2 pm. 9-2-10B IINCREDIBLE BUSINESS OPPORTU­ NITY. N o risk, high returns, fifth fastest growing co m p a n y Call Mike 0 )4 7 6 1 5 3 7 . 8-21-10B WATERLOO ICEHOUSE/IRON Works Barbeque is now hiring for a II positions. Apply in person 24pm 13101 H W Y71 West. 9-3-5B $500-$ 1000 MONTHLY weekly. You decide Be your own boss. Great opportunity for large income. 3 7 4 4 7 6 0 9-2-580 314 Congress Ave. Servers, short-order cooks, and hosts. Good pay. Apply in person only b e ­ tween thenours of 2-5pm. 9-3-68 AFTERSCHOOL CHILDCARE 2-3 af­ ternoons a week. Must have own vehicle Coll Debbie 0 48 2 -0 61 4 or 7 9 5 0 9 7 6 . 8-21-15P N W AUSTIN couple needs child­ care for well behaved 13 v /o girl - ]>:45 MWF. - ond 7 y /o boy. 3:45-6:* _ Responsibilities include: pick-up at school (4 blocks) supervising homo- work ond driving to activities. Safe transportation required. $ 7 /hr. Food available for dinner. Large heated pool available most of year at house 258-3624 Please leave message if not ot home. 8-21-78 CHILDCARE A housekeeping 20-30 required. , hrs/wk. Reliable vehicle Coll Sarah at 329-0443. 8-21-58 LOVING RESPONSIBLE person to care for 8 A 4yr. old M f 4-6:30pm coll 329-8780 8-27-5B YOUR DISPLAY AD COULD HAVE BEEN HERE! CALL 4 7 1 - 1865 TO PLACE YOURS TODAY! ASSISTANT TEACHER (Assistant Childcare Specialist) The University of Texas ot Austin REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS FOR THIS VACANCY. High School graduation or GED. Some experience in group childcare PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS: Formal training In childcare; experiende working in a licensed care program; excellent personal demeanor; stable work history. ) program; ex. Security sensitive; conviction verification conducted on applicant selected. Hourly salary is ^ Judy, $5.50, depending upon 'tig ¡ups rw„„—. . . .¿hour: qualifications. W ork hour: range from-7:15-9pfn M-F. Qualified applicants should immediately calf the Child Care Center, o t47 1 - 7040 , between 9am and 4pm, M-F An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. 9-2-26-C Cl SUBSTITUTES NEEDEDI Employment Service Childcare enters & Privóte Schools. Temporary/Permanent placement teachers/aides. $6+ hourly/no fees Since 1985 Call 328-2477 9-2-48 LIFEGUARDS NEEDED ASAP. Con­ tact Carolann ot 490-9055. Court­ yard Tennis Club. 9-2-5B-E ELEMENTARY AGE children need re­ sponsible students with experience working with chidren for afternoon activities P/T. 327-7575. 9-2-48- D BODY CONTOURING CUNIC Looking for PART-TIME employee. Non-smoker. Heolth minded. Coll (512)322-9988. 9-2-4B I’slarj Pei o Are you a e l n , ■Person? At DAVE Transportation, the nation's largest private, specialized, transportation management company, service-oriented men and women are rewarded for their efforts. We have opportunities for full- and iart-time Drivers for the JT Shuttle System. You will enjoy flexible morning and/or afternoon schedules and a starting wage of up to $9-45/hr and paid training for your CDL. As a part of the DAVE team, you will be working with fellow students and servicing the Austin community. If you are responsible, friendly ana enjov working with others, brin your 5-year MVR, Monday-Friday, 7am - 7pm to: DAVE Transportation, 8300 South m 35, Austin. No phone calls, please. Equal Opportunity Employer D W E l transportation servioes, inc. extra NOW HIRING SECURITY OFFICERS Heving e herd time making ends meet? Need income without sacrificing your GPA to get it? If so, we have the perfect job for you!! At Zimco we offer. • Full fe. fc rt Time Itockiom • Evening & Night Position# • Study While You Work • • Car Not Required • • Sch od Holidays O ff • • No Experience Necessary • * Uniforms Provided • C A LL 3 4 3 -7 2 1 0 N O W nMCO SECURITY CONSULTANTS « i v t t i e COURIER NEEDED a t Manned Ptt- rerrihood of Austin. Twelve to fifteen hour» par waeM ftW F. Requires rate­ able transportation, goad driving re- cord,currant driver's licama and proof of ¡nturanco. $ 7 .0 0 par hour and mileage reimbursed, Call 472 086 8 to apply. 9-3-58. : GREAT JOBS Are you leaking for a great job "with good pay & *•» have time to study or piayr Home Steam laundry & Cleaners is tokina applications for counter allenaont/car hops. Morning or afternoon hours available. Apply at 2301 Manor Rd. Down 26th Street east of U.T. AF1ÍRNO ON SiTTER/STUDY-BUDY needed. $ 6/h t Experience prefer­ red* Transportation required. 453- 4095. 9-2-48 P-T -BABYSITTER for 3 young chil­ dren. Salary neg- Flexible hours. Mandarin speaking a plus. Kay 891-9278. for PART-TIME RUNNER needed North Austin Engineering Firm. M ult have own transportation for de­ liveries/errands $ 5 .5 0 /h r ♦ mile- a g¿ Phone:837-2446 Fax:837- I. Attn:Corrie. 9-2-58E 94 Se e k in g e n t h u s ia s t ic , experienced teachers for immediate a P/T Afterschool Club leaders & substitutes a •excellent benefits *on going training •professional supportive enviornment •2 0-3 0 hours/week Contact The Merit School 837-8840 8-29206 PART-TIME BUILDING CUSTODIAN Mbst have sufficient strength and stamina to perform a varitityof manual tasks In the care, cleaning and maintenance of buildings apa equipment. Must be able to read, -•tat, and speak English. Two years HoUrV K ^ to M Q a c u s to d io m ________ „ i Baptist „.u td D V IH nent Center M F, 8- 12:30 a n d /o r 2 .3 0 6 :0 0 EOE 465- 8383. 9-2-4B CATAPULT SYSTEMS hiring CS/MIS interns for our product sup port division, call 328-8181 for more info. 9-3-2B. is CHILDCARE PROSPER N W Austin evenings 6 30pm, | Sun- 9pm, Sunday 9om-12:30pm, $ SÜ1 day evenings. Additional hours B needed. TranH > H B B I É r i l f l cos required. I SPECIAL CARE giver needed lor 3yr- old boy M-F part-time AM or port- lime I s PM. 467-1640. 9-3-3B ^ M B B B L i n k i J INTERNSHIP, MARKETING/ADMIN- ISTRATIVE assistant. Desktop publish- eo- ing helpful. Bright geM ^eorrv Parttime, possible trov- ger to team. Part-t ,---------- el. 512-912-1661 or fax resume to 512-912-1664. 9-3-3B J~Lu fHni, WmpqitVtvMie, ■ LIVE-IN NANNY ■ FREE ROOM & BOARD in exchange for helping. Single mom with sons oges 14 & 10 needs helpl^ ^ m m g v rriva to room w /p ri- vate bath in Westlake h o m e .H w /pooi Prefer non-smoking female upperclassman or grad student. 327-8013 9-3-SS REAL ESTATE assistant needed, 20p|us hrs/wk $ 7 /h r. Call John Patton Jr. 458-6244. 9-3-5B RESPONSIBLE & FRIENDLY assistants needed at your favorite women's resole/consignment shop. A full and a port time position available Closed Sundays & Mondays. Can 451-6845. 451- SECOND TIME AROUND V-3-3# ‘ f§ § |§ | FUN MOTHER'S helper needed 15hrs/wk lata oftamoons & eve­ nings. Must have well maintained cor. $ 7 /hr. 327-9875. 9-3-5B790 digital sala­ _________ PERFECT PART-TIME job, signing-vp families door-todoor for d iq ita lH f dle televisión. Flexible hours aftor-5 6 weekends. Good Poyl Friendly outgoing personality. Transportation I -800-295-3168. required Leave message desciblng people- skllls/sales experience and interest in position. 9-3-3B Call ROUND ROCK Childcare has an Star a PT teacher's aid. 4 . 9-3-5B EARN MONEY reading books! |3 0 ,0 0 0 /y r income potential. De­ tails. 1-800-513-4343. Ext. Y-9413. 8-4-22P SECURITY OFFICERS $7-8/hr Full/Part-time, no experience necessary, report writing and public relations a must, evening and graveyard shins available. American Protective Services. Contact Debbie 448-4181 8-1-20B-A STUDENTS WANTEDM sates/marketing www.eduinfo.com. 9-3-3B job: P/T visit Longhorn Employment Services HIRING N O W for P/T data entry clerk 10-15 hrs/wk. at_Uniyersi^r Towers. Call Chris at 867-6767 3-5B P/T DATA entry ideal for student who has knowledge of Lotus and Ex­ cel. Centrally located. 10-12hr*/wk. Hours are flexible. Must have trans­ portation. Coll 48G 0 09 7 or fax re­ sume 4 8 0 0 1 1 5 . 9-3-68 I 2 .TEACHING Assistant positions available for preschool a g e d c h ik dren in central Austin. Effective im­ mediately. TWThF 8:30-2:30. May work any or oil of these days. Can Polly 899-0934. 9-3-58 W e need dependable people for various tem porary assignm ents including: clerical, data entry, technical and light industrial. M uat be available to work 8-5, short or long term . Pay ratas.of $6 50-$ 1 0 + depending on aaaignm ant. C all today for an appointm ent: 326-H O R N , Job Line: 4 6 2 -3 4 2 2 , www. longhornjobe, com t - f -20# M O M 'S BEST friend seek* qualify sif­ ters and nannies to work various full and part time positions oround schooischedules. 3 4 6 6 6 2 3 . 8 -6 2 0 6 8 CAMPAIGN JOBS fodthe ENVIRONMENT $ 4 6 7 0 /d a y •Fight for Clean Air •Protect National Forests * Great Team Atmosphere Work with the Sierra Club & U.S. PIRG to save ancient forests & wilderness areas. Make a difference «.get paid. Leadership & career opportunities. Tony, 479-8481 — INTERNET SALES- Commission. Full/Parttime. Coll 252-2491 or email: ccOshopanytown.com. Prefer Marketing, Advertising, and Busi­ ness majors. 8-6208 CONCERT TICKETS -$8 /H r base + bonuses Weekly Pay/Benefits/Advancemer -FuH/rort Time Fun W ork Outgoing People Excel T ío Weekends 442-7091 9-2-2B Assist in Circulation Department of The Daily Texan on nights when inserts are placed in paper. Requires High School graduation or QSD; ability to more heavy loads. f l t l l 4 n f U after Up i ct 471' MSS for appointment T t» U n lY » f8 itj o f T in s i t A u s tin U to Iq u s l O p p o rtu n ity /A ffln n s ttv s A ctio n Im p lo js r EASY PHONE work available. Re­ laxed atmosphere, casual dress. No selling involved. Start this week. Coll Rufus 447-2483. 8-25-98 O m n i # Austin Hotel DOWNTOWN 1 FULL AND PART TIME POSITIONS AND A GREAT WORK ENVIRONMENT IN A POUR DIAMOND HOTEL. Call the job line at 476-3700 j ext. 4902 Human Resources Dept. 700 San Jacinto Austin, TX 78701 Omni Hotel maintains and enforces a drug free policy LANDING STRIP gentlemen's club. Seeking experience dancers and will train non-experience dancers. Must be 18 years of age. Call Jeff 385- 2878 2pm to 10pm M-F. 8-29-11b FLORIST SEEKING soles and deliv­ ery help. AM ond PM shifts availa­ ble. 451-6728. 8-29-5B-F BOOKKEEPER/ RECEPTIONIST to assist new gift line. Must have limit­ ed bookkeeping skills,, excellent phone skills, and be very organized. 40hrs week at $8/hr. Please call 478-7657. 8-29-5B FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT $ 1 8K-$72K/yr + Benefits, Paid training. For info on FT or PT positions call; 1-800-585-9024 ext. 4 3 3 0 DO YOU like ploydough? Several jobs available working with chil­ dren. P/T-F/T and Temp/Perma­ nent. Some in UT area, please call 4 1 6 7 3 4 4 . 8-2620B GET PAID TO PLAY The Northwest Recreation center is looking for after school instructors to assist us with our year long activities for youth between the ages of 5-14 years old. Monday-Friday Afternoon hours vary. Call 458-4107 to set up an interview time. 8-28-68 QUICK TEST INC. Market research firm' is looking for interviewers for FT and PT positions. Applicants must have good commu­ nication skills. Pay is $6.00 PLUS commission. Contact Susan Sparrer or Michael Kim ot 327-8787. 8-27-5B ♦COLLEGE STUDENTS Easy work Quick pay Production & Assembly 1st, 2nd, & 3rd shift Flexible schedule to fit your school needs. Ask for Michael: 458-1227 8-27-206A I Q e t O n T h e F a s t T ta c k Earn your true potential by joining one ot America’s tastast growing telecommunications co. Be your own boss with flexible hours. Enthusiasm, not degree, required. Call now! 1 U IS 4 K N j j B g j j f l H EarrO $7-$15 Hour! FUN ... UPBEAT ATMOSPHERE! MORNINGS 8-2 EVENINGS 4-10 START IMMEDIATELY! ...CALL V 458-6524 J PART OR full time morning counter help needed at drydeaners. West Lake area. Ask for Kay, Jeannie, or Maxine. 327-7690. 9-2-10B GOLF COURSE maintenance. Look­ ing for motivated individuals willing to work eoriy mornings and some weekends. FT/PT po sitions available 892-1205. 9-2-48 KENNEL TECHNICIAN needed PT. Weekday and weekend hours. Ex- Kience preferred. Salary negotia- locatod in South Austin, 288- 0515. 9-2-5B PICK YOUR hours. Stay in shape, see Austin. W e pay $40-120/day. For covered outdoor work. Call Mark at 371-9274. 8-28-20b HELP NEEDED for high volume ani­ mal hospital. Experience preferred but will train. Please mail resume to: 7023 Bee Coves Rd, Austin TX 78746. 8-28-58 STEPPING STONE Child Develop-1 ment Center, school age & pre­ arttime school positions. Flexible part-time I hours available Vorious locations 5$ t® Í^ J u T area. Excellent wages. including £ 4 5 9 0 2 5 8 . 8 - 2 9 4 $ _ | ^ ^ m m 459-0258. POLYGRAM GROUP D istribution is looking for College Reps in Aus­ tin. This is o paid position dealing with college press, music retail, stu­ dent activities, marketing opportuni­ ties, ond more. All applicants must currently be enrolled and show proof of student status at o college of univesity. Interested students should mail one copy of resume to: PGD 825 8th Ave., 20th FL, New York, NY 10019 Attn. Rebecca Carrol N o phone colls pleosel 9-3-48 NOW H IR IN G J o i n a W i n n i n g T e a m ! M u ltip le P ro je cts $ 8 .5 0 B a se G r e a t I n c e n t i v e s & P r i z e s ■■ MS 1 454*4467 I Iq u sl Opportunity Cmployor page 18 Wednesday, September 3,1997 T he Daily T ^xan R [ N T A I * V \ V WANTS YOU... |To Lease Our| Condos! Buena Vista Gazebo i Gazebo Georgian Norwalk Sq. Paddock San Gabriel Í Treehouse Was Now 750 5# 500 1-1 1-1 2-1 1 / f 6 5 0 1-1 $ 0 ( f 6 5 0 2-1.5 ^ 0 875 495 eff. 2 -1 600 1-1 ^ 650 See Us For The Best Deals ★ All Units Available Now ★ $100 Off ¡First Month’s Rent With One Year Leases ★ 819 W. 24th 474-4800 410 -J a m . H w iio SERIOUS STUDENT large, clean 1- 1. Hardwoods. AC, UT, 1 block. 2901 Swisher. $600. 472-2097 8 21-20B-C FULLY FURNISHED townhome 3- 2 1 /2 w /garoge. Pool, tennis courts near IBM $ 99 5 /m o 453-7575, Donna Hoo properties. 420 * Uni* H o u f i NEW ENVIRONMENTALLY friendly, energy efficient 3-21/2-2, UT Han­ cock area, hardwoods, 10 ft ceil­ ings, whirlpool, fireplace, non-smok­ ers, no-pets, trees, quiet neighbor­ hood. Year lease. $1975. 453- 5417. 8-5-20B BIG HOUSES. 3-4 Bedrooms, Cen­ tral Areo. Call Today, Move-in Im­ mediately. Habitat Hunters, habi- tat0bga.com 482-8651 h t t p / / www.austinre.com/habitat.ht m 8-26-1 OP k PRELEASING HOUSES & DUPLEXES* H yd* Pork, Torrytown, Shoal CraoL, Wa$t Campus. Eyas of Taxas 477-1163 64206A AU. M IS paid IU W«»t Campus ihcM budroom duplex- taka lb# top floor 4 7 6 $1600. Call PMT 2 67 3 8-8-20BA WEST CAMPUS WONDER- Super n»cei One bedroom house. Hard­ wood floors. Huge bedroom. One block to campus. $750. Cafl PMT 4 76-2673. 8-8-206A LARGE 2-1 North Hyde Pork. UT IF shuttle. W o sh er/d rie r, C A /C H , no smokers/pets. 626-8142. 8-12-206 $85 0 HYDE PARK 3-2 $1250. Newly painted, CACH. All amenities. Call Ramsey 328-3939 8 2 1 -2 0 6 8 HYDE PARK close to UT shuttle. 707 E.49th. 2BR-1BA. W ood floors, CACH, no pets. Available 9-1-97. ly r lease. $840 +biHs. 331-0400. 8-21-206 COUNTRY LIVING (FM 969) UT 14 miles, manufactured home. 3-2, 1056sqft fans, garden. $450. 472-2097. 821-20B C AC, SPACIOUS Condition G O O D 3 / 2 / 2 CACH, fireplace, 2 living, Capitol Plaza. carpet, W /D . $ 1 2 0 0 ogent. 8-25- 106 477-1163. 4 / 2 / 2 N W Austin. Burnet & Mopoc $ 1095/m onth. Big fenced bock yard. 2-car garage. 3 phone lines. Cable all rooms. Matt 326-8010. Travis 491-8808. 8-27-5B WEST CAMPUS I One semester lease only. 3-2, $1250. 2829 Shoal C re w Crest. Front PAge, 480-8518. 8-27-7B-C HYDE PARK. W alk to UT, 3805 Duv- al 3-1 1 /2 and study, $1200: Par­ son's Enterprises, 836-1100. 8-27- 5P 3-1 SE of W illiam Cannon/IH-35, bocks to horseranch Fenced yard. Carport. $775. 255-2182. 9-3-3B 1 BEDROOM duplex available with 1 bam. Great location. / remodled. $55 0 /m o . N o O e. pets 374-9803 9-3-58 SOUTH, FURNISHED bedroom with kitchen extras. $375+ 1 /4 utilities, $200 deposit. 282-0329. 8-27-5B-D privileges plus ROOM FOR rent w /fa m ily in South Austin, on bus route. $375 first and last. 447-0913. 8 2 7 5 b FEMALE ONLY. New Rooms for Call Vanessa lease $ 3 5 0 4 2 5 . 708-8738 Immediate Occupancy. 8-29-5B TARRYTOWN HOUSEMATE need- ed. Male/Female. Cool 2+study/ 1. Fenced yard w/dogrun. W /D . UT Shuttle. Fireplace, deck, large porch, trees. N o smoking/cats in­ doors. $550/m o+ 1 /2 bills. Hunt­ er at 477-7948. 8-29-4B LOOKING FOR UT student/live-in. Free room and board exchanged for cleaning, cooking, and some child iving quarters on care. Separate livins 2000. 9-3-5B Lake Austin. 349-2C 4 3 0 - R oom -ioard location. Semi-privote Near HYDE PARK shuttle/bus. rooms. W ill include ABP, basic furnishings, all meals. Limited off street parking. $400-600. 837-2389. 8-283ba FREE R O O M & B O A R D in exchange for helping hand. Sinale mom with sons ages , & 10 needs help evenings and some weekend». Pri­ vóte room with privóte bath in West­ lake home with pool. Prefer non­ smoking female upperclassman or grad student. 327-8013 9 3-8B 4 3 5 -C o-op* SHORT WALK UTI Huge room with large screened porch. Ouiet, non­ smoking, $34 5 /m o (+$100 share suppers, bills) 4 7 4 2618 8-26-20B pet-free. DAILY -. TEXAN laASHncDS CALL Í$#ffWÉ«4 C O - O P S : M ' t \ i i i i ! . 1 \ • ' I . 11 k 1 1 ■ 11! ¡ 11 > 11 ^ n i $419-529/M ONTH| ALL BILLS PAID SINGLE It DOUBLE ROOMS I FOOD INCLUDED i “ V . - , | l l \ \ : i | 400+ ROOMMATE SITUATIONS- Windsor Roommates (Since 19891) Fost, computerized, effective! Son Antonio 495-9988. w ww.io.com /~windsor 8-1-20B 18th. & " r o o m m a t e I S 11 ■ ■ S O U R C E Instant Service - Student Discounts^ ¡Member: Better Business Bureau ■ ■■Texas Ex-owned since 1989' H HI H 1711 Son Antooro (of 18*) ¡WINDSOR ROOMMATES 1 495-9988 Ü I http://www.io com/-wind»OfHaBam ROOMMATE-HOME HEALTH ASST. Fall & Spnngl Semester. Light Duties 9:30pm-1 1:30pm. Sun-Thur. Offering Furn. private 8DRM & bathrm, meals, local phone plus $ 1 0 0 /wk salary. Prefer nursing or Health Science student. Lots of off-time to study. Safe neighborhood, near Bus Line. Call Kristy for appointment. 3 7 3 - 1 6 6 0 . e a t t o t A SHORT WALK UTI Huge room with large screened porch. Ouiet, non­ smoking, $345/m o. (+$100 share suppers, bills) 474- 2618 8-26-20B pet-free. LIVE-IN COMPANION live & work in N . Austin all female group home. See ad section 900. Empowerment Options EOE. 8-29-5B-E ROOMMATE NEEDED to sublease own bed, bath, washer dryer. Greenbelt location. $400/month. Call Jesse 708-0633. 8-29-5P TW O LAID-BACK females seeking 1- 2 roomates to shore W illiam Can­ non location. 3-2 mobile home $260/month +bills 44^ 084. 9-2- 48 TWO GAY males need 3rd room­ to share 2-i house, W /D , mate $365/m o, ABP. 302-5074. 9-2- 10B GRAD STUDENT seeks roommate. Spacious all apartment in Hyde Park orea $ 382.50 plus util. Grad stu­ dent preferred. Call Scott at 454- 5841 9-3-3B 480 - Storage S p o c 0 | S t . E l m o S t o r a g e | 405E.SLBmoF (N n r Congress ft LBanWMte) No App Fee/ No Deposit G reat Rates! DON’T DELAY! 4 4 5 - 5 5 0 2 A N N O U N C E M E N T S 520 - Personal* LIGHTEN UP! Lose those pounds and inches with Herbalife!!!! Call: Eddie & W yonda Garrett Independent Distributors 5 1 2 - 3 7 6 - 7 5 4 6 C&W DANCER? SWF looking for platón ¡c SWM partner for weekly practice. Please be 21+, semi-inter­ mediate (swing experience OK) Send SASE-P.O.B. 7311, 78713. 9-2-2B 5 3 0 - T r a v e l- T r a n s p o r t a t i o n ¡Ita ta r B r n k í E O B E G M E G O T T A prices are LOW EVERYWHERE YOU GO ata — m r r . One (Bedrooms Quadafupe Sq (Pecan Tree Stones Throw (Buena Vista Sunchase TeariStreet Treehouse $475 f.525 $575 $650 $675 $500 $795 1*800*SUNCHASE r ~ i ! Ski Breaks 1 — r i o Bedrooms Crovi Sandpiper S t James QabCes iParapet *Dominion Sunchase Orange Tree S t Thomas Sabinal jg| , f. 1 Tvmte $1000 $750 $850 $650 $575 $700 $900 $950 $850 $800 $850 Ely Properties 476-1976 $650 North Campus Best Value $650 Quiet in West Campus $795 Hard Woods, Unique Charm $795 Huge Floorplan, Garage 2/1 La Casita 2/1 Starwest 2/1 904 W 22 2/2 Pointe 2/2 Robbins Place $795 West Campus Luxury Ideal for roommates 2/2 Westplace $795 $795 Reduced, Best Value 2/2 Westridge 3/1 4508 Bennett $895 Hyde Park Duplex We make the D ealt! Afi Propertte* Available for Immediate Movem Come See why we «re the B iflpat and Beat 476-1976 A N N O U N ( A M E N T S F M l ’ i 0 Y M I N ■ n o u ú n n T R tM A K C T N G fO S m O N S O g AVAILABLE NOW mWrViB VTllWIOTPMvjr* Student friendly, afternoon & evening shifts, in University Towers, No selling involved. $5.50410 per hour, Experienced or wiN train. CaHCJ. afPBC 8 6 7 -6 7 6 7 SUPeR-OUPER "1“ V h graders Tues. eedl- | 6:30pm ebee to UT. III I i 1 B jS I S4I-MSS ■ DAYCARE CENTER Looking far (oyfut. snergetic, assidonts to work portdme wflh infonts and toddlers. FlexiUe irherhitss 2 Nocks frain S M w . Great kids & Famflias. EOE. Call Heien/Mory: r c o w r u T R O u n iT 1‘MHÉW end V pert Bme needed. PT mu* be abb to work 9-2 M4 and Soler Sun. Call or came by MF 103 4597247 UM B LOST CREEK Country Club needs paridme childcare teacher. Coil 892-1205 ext. 103. Ask for Jackie Walker 1-2838 478-3113 J *mM yeusatre PERSON • Futura Impbymant • laadanhlp Exportarse* •No Evaningi or Wookend* • A F raé FitnoM M te b o rth lp The YMCA of Amlin it hiring staff in five Khooi districts to work in our of- terschoo) end supendetoV/ i f r i ef S w f e working a t a grot» feeder w«h eto mentory school children in oreo» of art, iport*. gome», and tutoring Ac­ tivity leoders are oi*o neettod to leoch enrichment do»»e». Class top­ ics include: Sponish, science, inven­ tions, aerobics and much morel Hours are front 2:30pro3:30pm at silos throughout the Autin area. Choose the dam you wont to work . when you apply in parson ot 1809 ■ ¡■ x tn Street. -4.20AA EOE. E. Six# Now Accepting Applications For THE DAILY TEXAN FALL CLASSIFIED AD TAKERS Duties include taking voluntary ads by phone, filing , typing, co­ ordinating protects, assisting sales and suparvisory staff with clerical tasks. Excellent co-work- er end custom er service skills needed. Positions A vailable for Fell M -F: 9-12 (Must be available for these hours every day, M -F) Must be a ble to begin work on M o n d a y , 8 /2 5 2 INTERNET programmer» needed. I Mud have internet skids & aWe to m work 20hr»/wk. $ 10/hr. C a#301- I 4955 for detail». LCI Internet. 8-21- | 108 | PRE-SCHOOL IN wed Austin need» I morning & afternoon assistance. I Variety of ichedulet available. Call i Missy 0 476-1151 for more infor- B fl motion. 8-21-7B I i PT POSITION For programmer/assistant. Good communication skills necessary. The M KI^ H tio n is w /a computer consulting specializing in database appli­ cations A requires knowiedgo of mi- crosoft windows, micro soft access, & visual basic. Fax resume to 328- 1691 or call 328-1648. 8-21-1 IB $ 6 .< X ) - $ 7 .5 0 /H R PART-TIME evening positions available in fun, friendly environment doing radio market research (no sales or soliciting). Located at Congress and Riverside. (Fluent in Spanish helpful but not _ I I necessary). Call Sun.-Thurs, after 4pm. 7 0 7 - 7 0 1 0 , ask for Undell »2s-a 1 ” PRESCHOOL 1 HALF-DAY NAEYC accredited Chris- Han preschool in Westlake is I H searching for innovative child-cen- 1 tered teacher, teacher assistants, & H child care workers. Morning hour* 1 8:30-12:45 2-5 days/wk. Starting B salary $6-10/hr. For more info call I Dawn Hummer 301 -3138 or Pre- i school office 3 27 -1315 or 327-8028 8-2I-10B C o I U h j u *r> K • W t H » h W J BRECKENRIDCE SKI RESORT ■ Sm&VsaL Condi* Lifts Rentals Aftfee Bus I Night Skiing Non-Stop Parties | - d . & S k l I 1 489 -0 9 9 9 1 1600 W e s t 2 8 t h S u ita ? # 1021 r x T T T i r T n T i r r n T T f f n T i DRIVING FROM the Killeen area to UT? Coll Kelly to carpool: (254) 698-2034. 8-29-5B FREE ROTT/LAB mix. Under lyr. old. Super friendly. Free to good home. 467-8303. 8-29-3z 9 9 V " r M R R HOMOSEXUALS ANONYMOUS: Support group of men/women who desire freedom from homosexuality. Contact Pete 444-7583. 8-1-2080 RIFLE& PISTOL Club shoots at UTRifie Range Monday 4:30pm& Wednes­ day 4:30pm-9:00pm. Tuesday & Thursday from 6:30-9:00pm. Visi­ tor s& New shooters welcome. 8-29- 3P E D U C A T I O N A L MUSIC TEACHER. Teacher needed to teoch in home studio. Reliable transportation a must. 448-5939 9-2-4B GUITAR LESSONS: Folk, Jazz. Andy Burlington 452-6181. 20B-F Blues, Rock, Experienced teacher. 9-2- 9 W p | I l M O f H lg p R a is e Your GPA ' M a i • Pnp c L m r MUL L M t THR e " i n t M " r a i p N i M H i ■ H I House of % \\ 1 TU TO R SlW ekm— ioflilwwOgO— 160 ■ 2 4 0 0 P o r i > 1 d SERVICES LEGAL INSURANCE. One very low rate covers traffic tickets, lawsuits, audits, and more. Call 458-6022 for and independent associate. 8- 29-6b 750 - Typing ZIVLEY The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING 27* & Guadalupe 472-3210____ I Resumes • Applications Word Processing Priority Paper Work Term Papers Low, Low Rates!! 1 0 % O f f New Customers C a ll Joyce 4 4 1 h r ► ► ► ►I ► ► I ▼ R e iB M I ▼ P ip e rs / Tbcscs ▼ U s e r P r to tlH ▼ 1H Color Coplea ▼ d ash J o te C o p i e s 715-D W. 23rd ST. 472-5353___ 7 6 0 - M ík . S o rv k M HONEY BEAR doycore now hos openings evening, overnight, ond weekend core. 18 mos-9-yrs-old Coll 8 3 6 1 9 5 7 6 21-158 E M P L O Y M E N T 7 w O ^ P l i i i l i l » ' ■ FIRST STATE BANK OF AUSTIN Position available foi F/T & P/T PAYING AND RECEIVING TELLER W ill ossist customers with all transac­ tions and cross-sell services. Six (6) months teller experience,or 2.5 years cash handling Some locations close to campus. Please apply at 4 00 West 15tn, 2nd Floor, M -f, 9-4 or call Job line ot 8 6 7 3 5 2 1 . EOE M /F . 8-4-206A PART-TIME HELP- Runner needed for busy property management office. Must have reliobie transportation, proof of insurance ond good driving record. Flexible hours. Various other duties. ME, $ 6.0 0 A r . A pply at 1502-8 West 6th Street. Position Currently Available. 111.20k The Best Service, Price and Selection CASH TODAY S5 E X T R A B O N U S O h t m v D O N A T I O N O ' , 1 ' V, rn iO ’ QN F*P 9 O' $ 2 0 EACH DONATION $165 PER MONTH Can Donat e 2x/ week Sc h e d u l e Own Time • F x t r a C l e a n S t a i n ot t h e A r t F a c i l i t y • O n l y 1 5 M i n u t e s l i m n U T C a m p u s BIO IVIED A l\IEW H ig h T p c h P l a s m a F a c i l i t y . P l e a s e C a l l f or A p p t 251-8855 H O U R S 8 A M P M IH Oh $ P f l l i l l " ' . : f » i ! W p s ‘ s i d e OT 3b tlPlni' i! t X X O N - REAL ESTATE Office assistant need­ ed in W.Austin luxury home-office. Computer, bookkeeping, organiza­ tional & communication skills need­ ed. Hourly rate based on skills. Fax resume 338-1734 & coll 338-1717. 8-267B OFFICE CLERK PART-TIME POSITION IN A LAW FIRM, Experience with typina, filing, an­ swering phone, ond other clerical duties. Must have professional ap­ pearance and a car. Computer knowledge helpful. 4 0 4 3 6 1 0 *15-3» $ 5 .0 0 For Hour ■ A P P L Y IN P E R S O N T H E D A IL Y T E X A N T S P R o o m 3 . 2 0 0 Telephone inquiries not accept­ ed. Applicants must be a Univer­ sity of Texas student or the spouse of a student. CHILDCARE POSITION at down­ town church. Leave name and num­ ber with Stephanie 342-8036. 8- 21-10B FRIENDLY PEOPLE needed to pa*» out flyer*. $ 6 /h r base + commis- »ion. Choose your own hour*l 469- 9464 8-13-20B D O W N TO W N CHURCH childcare team need* compassionate, honeit, hardworking, responsible, experi­ enced people whio love children. Sundays essential. Completely Re­ warding! $ 6 .0 0 /h r storting. Con­ tact Carol at 478-5684. Voice M ail ext. 14. 8-27-5B MOTHER NEEDS helper/ driver for children 10 and 13. 2:45-5:45 M-F flexible. $6.5 0 /h r. Call 453-2235. 8-13-3B ENGINEERING INTERNS” VTEl, a designer and manufacturer of Video Conferencing equipment has several openings for Electricol Engineering,, Mechanical Engineering, Computer Science, Engineering Route to Business and MIS students. Tasks will vary widely. Flexible schedule 2 0 hours/week ot $9.60/hour. Fax resume* to 437-2568 or preferably email in text format to Marian _Justiss©vtel.com. Must be able to start work immediately. Located on Hwy 360 near Bee Coves Road. k-2i tos P/T TIRE service technicians needed. Experience necessary Fax resume to 454-5071. 8-15-108 LOOKING FOR THE PERFECT PART TIME JOB? YOUR SEARCH IS OVER! W orking with school-aged children in the afternoons con be so much fun ond very rewording. W e hove the perfect job for you I Be o Center Supervisor or a Group Leader. Great pay with weekends off! Must be 21 years old for a center and 18 years for a group . HS diploma or equiva a lent necessary, knowledge in child development, early childhood or elementary education are O plus! Salary: $8.0 0/hr and up for center supervisor and $ 6 .5 0 /h r for group leader Hours: 2 :1 5 3 :0 0 /6 :3 0 (Hays school district), M-F. Mony locations in Austin, Del Voile, Eanes and Hays school districts. Call today: (5 1 2 )4 7 2 -9 4 0 2 . A p p ly at: EXTEND-A-CARE FOR KIDS 55 IH 35 North Austin, Texas 78702 s 2 i-20» HONEY BEAR daycare now hiring flexible shifts. Transportation re­ quired. Must love children. Coll now 8 3 6 1 9 5 7 621 15B PART-TIME JOBS FOR THE ENVIRONMENT Help protect the envionment and expana recycling to apartments and businesses. Clean Water Action is hiring organizers. Student friendly hours. 3-5 days/wk. Mon-Fri. 4:30-10p*n. Earn $450-10 0 0 /m o n tk Call Jamie at 474-0605 EOE. *21-206 ” PRESCHÓÓL HALF-DAY NAEYC accredited Chris­ tian preschool in W estlake is searching for innovative child-cen­ tered teacher, teacher assistants, & child care workers. Morning hours 8:30-12:45 2-5 days/wk. Starting salary $ 6 1 0 A r. For mote Info call Dawn Hummer 3 0 1 3 1 3 8 or Pre­ school office 327-1315 or 327-8028 *21-106 LIFEGUARD POSITION Available at the Lee & Joe Jomail Texas Swimming Center- The TSC GUARD hos various positions availa­ ble storting at $5.50 or more de­ pending upon experience, certifica­ tion, & training. Stop by M E, 7:30om-5pm at the TSC front desk for an application pocket & info. 471-7703 *21-106 ATTENTION BUSINESS MAJORSI Capital Equipment Financing Com­ pany has PT assistant morketmg rep­ resentative positions available for Juniors/Seniors located in Austin, !5-25hrs/wk. Hourly wage ♦ bo­ nuses up to $ 18/h r. FT positions available to qualified candidates upon graduation. Call 458-1300, ask for Fred Fontana. *22-106 Check this out. You're cruising the town, deliv­ ering everybody's favorite food and making incredi­ ble money doing it. Part-time Delivery Drivers If you’ve got a drivers license, insurance and car, clean driving record, and a great attitude, tlyen this is for you. • Great pay (up to $10 per hour with tips) • Flexible work hours - perfect for students • On-the-dock third- party auto liability insurance • Free meals and uniforms • Excellent training and awesome management potential For a delivery store near you, call 444-4444 or check your Yellow Pages. 'H u t ® £ i?*» Piaaa Hw li*. Wt art an «ftt+ii opportunity m pioyti and sufiport a im r u ivoritpLm PT CLERICAL position flexible 5hr. e, knowledge days. 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