¿100 0)14 08¿ 90V HOJ TTV, ¿90 96/22/80 808 ******* »»♦♦»»> >»» The Harri cases a [ formerly *2¿£-£066¿ 3AIV 1130NVA 1SV3 ¿292 X¿ 08V4 13 I ~ . ,___.... Vol. 96, No. 186 2 Sections jw- st nai un h i t « t i l w i i r i W | i w ■ n m I The Rangers extend their not-so-stellar I record in one-run games as Robin ■■■ Ventura gives the White Sox a 2-1 win. 9 p H i l f n l^ t T h is is a W e a t h er . . . fo r m v M o t h er Big, bad Bonecrusher, I stand 94 foot tall r - line 75 perverts up like cans and watch me crush ’em all. I say whatever I want to, don’t pay no attention to grammar... I got a big ol’ long mid­ dle finger shaped just like a balt-peen hammer. Da il y T e x a n The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin July 25, 1997 250 Derelict Gebauer building waits for its rebirth Casa Verde Florist D <' !► ' I ► FTD • 45* A Guadalupe • On UT Shuttle Rt «! ’ Daily Specials 4 5 1 -0 6 9 1 A U S T IN R E P R O D U C T IV E S E R V IC E S C O N F I D E N T I A L . P R O I I S S I O N A l K L P R O D l t M V l C ARI I t (*( ' P i ( ' ( ¡ i i i t i H v. I * * s 1111<{ ‘ R o . n r i ( r i t i i n t l < >!> ( iv i i s * A b o r t i o n s ( o n f i r i c n t i . i l ( o n 1 is< ■ I n i q ’ - I h r n s c d \ m s m < ¡ S t . i l l I i< < n s < <1 !>i I \ l ) < p t o f l l o . i l t h A d o p t i o n \ l t c i n . i t i v c s * O n * ' R l o < k I o f 1 5 m n o t K r i I n i t ’ t < { «’ n i v, ( o n 11 < 11 i T ) 11 o n < 11 1 N ( 1 1 ( i V t ’ l REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES 4 8 0 4 Grover Ave. 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 "To F>. Z c U o o l or v\ob f o F>. Z c U o o l GIVI AT •over 50 hours of class instruction • practice on more than 30 tests • small classes • excellent teachers • convenient times >80 points average improvement • free extra help Summer classes begin Please call for more information. Longhorns Support Recycling S po n so r e d by T h e U T -A ustttn R ecycling A dvisory C o m m it t e e a n d T h e D aily T e x a n . G e t a n E d g e . 474-TEST www.review.com THE PRINCETON REVIEW B W0RU1& NATI0W T h e D a ily T e x a n 3 m ar, juur 26, iss7 Newt regains la stout p o s t ^ ^ ^ ^ Associated Press WASHINGTON — For the time being, at least, House Speaker Newt G ingrich em erges from the m ost recent round of Republican turmoil a stronger, more assertive leader, determined to use his authority to secure passage of tax cuts and bal- anced-budget legislation. In recent days, he snapped up the resignation of one member of the GOP leadership, perm itted three oth ers to retain their posts after being humbled in a closed-door ses­ sio n w ith the ran k and file and served notice on House Republicans that he is in charge. In the wake of ^ failed effort to topple him from power, Gingrich referred to himself in public as the "h e a d co a c h " w hose role w as to rem ind the m em bers of the team th e ir job is to p u ll to g eth er " i n whatever way is needed." In p riv ate, he w ent b efore the GOP m em bership and said, " I'm the speaker, I'm in charge, the line of authority is to m e," recalled Rep. Ray LaHood of Illinois. "If I didn't know better, I'd think this was a M achiavellian plot by Gingrich's loyalists to enhance his sta n d in g ," said Rep. Sh erw ood B o eh lert, a m oderate from N ew York. A fter a clo sed -d o o r cau cu s W ednesday night, Boehlert said, Gingrich holds the confidence of the rank and file, while Majority Leader Dick Armey of Texas, GOP W hip Tom DeLay of Texas and Rep. John Boehner o f O hio, the conference chairman, "h av e got to earn their way back into our confidence." All confessed to lawmakers they had not moved quickly enough to quell a rev o lt ag ain st G in grich , w hile DeLay said he had told the dissi­ dents he would vote with them to topple the speaker. Som e law m akers, speaking on condition of anonym ity, say that DeLay had denied the same allega­ tion in previous private conversa­ tions, and predicted all three lead­ ers are likely to face challenges if they seek new terms in the party hierarchy after the 1998 election. Privately, according to several lawmakers who have spoken with Gingrich, the speaker is disappoint­ ed with and mistrustful of Armey, DeLay and Boehner and is relying on other lawmakers for advice. The support that G ingrich has so lid ified w ith in the GOP ranks stands in contrast to the string of crises th at h ave co n fro n ted the Georgian since last winter. He confessed to violating House ethics rules last December and, with the support of the leadership team, lim ped to re-election as speaker. With Republicans holding the nar­ rowest of majorities and their cau­ cus prone to factions, a routine bill providing money for House com­ mittees was defeated earlier in the year w hen a sm all band of GOP conservatives protested. A veto showdown with the White House over disaster aid this spring turned into a public relations night­ mare that was compounded when Armey, DeLay, Boehrter and Rep. B ill Paxon, w hom G in g rich had ap p o in ted to a le ad ersh ip post, voted against the legislation that the speaker brought to the floor in sur­ render. Talk of reining in Gingrich was rampant. Dissident lawmakers and m em bers of the lead ersh ip alike talked of putting restrictions on him as they w ould on their teen -age children. Those tensions could easily resur­ face in short order. The tax bill now under negotia­ tion provides the next opportunity for dissent to flare anew, and an entire string of routine spending b ills w ill te st the R ep u b lica n s' newly professed unity. But for now, two weeks of tur­ m oil have changed the dynam ic among Republicans. Having accepted Paxon's resigna­ tion, Gingrich will chair the leader­ ship meetings himself. He's told the other leaders he will devote more energy to the daily affairs of the H ouse, a d ecision likely to curb Arm ey's influence, and lately has been spending more time mingling with members on the House floor. His immediate objective is reach­ ing a com prom ise with President Clinton on tax cuts and spending le g isla tio n reg u larly th at he describes in historic terms. And if he has maneuvered suc­ cessfully in the past several days to bring his rebellious leadership to heel, he's trying to bring along the dissidents for whom political com­ promise does not come easily. "W e are, in fact, w in n in g ," he told one audience this week. "T h e fact that Bill Clinton jumps up and now says, 'I'm for a tax cut, too,' doesn't mean conservatives should say, 'M y God, it must be terrible, he's going to sign it.' " ASSOCIATED PRESS President Clinton, with the help of an unidentified military aide, presents retired Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan with the Medal of Freedom Nov. 30,1993 at the White House Brennan dead at 91 Associated Press W A SH IN G TO N — R etired Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan, the liberal lion whose intellect and charisma made him one of the most influential jurists in America's history, died Thurs­ day. He was 91. The prim ary architect of the individual-rights revolution in the law through the 1960s, Brennan died at the Arlington, Va., nursing home where he had been recuper­ ating from a broken hip suffered in November. Ill health had forced him to retire from the nation's highest court on July 20,1990. D uring a 34-year tenure, he wrote more than 1,200 opinions. T h ey sh ap ed the .lan d m ark "one-person, one-vote" princi­ ple of p o litic a l r e a p p o rtio n ­ m en t, ex p a n d ed p r o te c tio n against libel law suits, defined ob scen ity and b road en ed the rights of any person — includ­ ing the poor, m entally h an d i­ capped or imprisoned — to bat­ tle the government in court. In the high court's history, only the la te W illiam O. D ou glas wrote more opinions. President C linton said Bren­ n an 's "d e v o tio n to the B ill of Rights inspired millions of Amer­ icans, and countless young law students, including myself." The president ordered all U.S. flags on federal installations and ship s low ered to h a lf-s ta ff in Brennan's memory until sunset the day of his interment. Chief Justice William H. Rehn- quist, upon learning of Brennan's death, said, "H e played a major role in shaping American consti­ tu tio n al law . He w as also a warmhearted colleague." Ju stic e Jo h n Paul Stev en s added, "T h e blend of wisdom, humor, love and learning that Justice Brennan shared with his colleagu es — indeed, w ith all those privileged to know him — was truly unique. He was a great man and a warm friend." M any co n serv a tiv es called Brennan an id eolog u e and an activist. Most liberals called him a hero. "The most outstanding justice of our century," said John Gib­ bons, a Seton Hall University law professor. R eferring to the 1960s court presided over by C hief Justice Earl W arren, Georgetown Uni­ versity professor Mark Tushnet said, "People call it the Warren court but in many ways, it was the Brennan cou rt. On all the key issues, he put together the co a litio n s and p ersu ad ed the others." Brennan remained a force even after his role evolved from the 1970s throu gh h is retirem en t from an increasingly conserva­ tive court to that of prolific dis­ senter and occasionally success­ ful coalition builder. Daniel Popeo of the conserva­ tive Washington Legal Founda­ tion once gave this assessm ent of the justice whose votes often infuriated him: "Unfortunately, I th in k the m an is ex tre m e ly in te llig e n t. H e 's b een a key player under three chief justices. He d ese rv e s p ro fe ssio n a l respect." Brennan was a consistent sup­ porter of abortion rights and of expanding the rights of individu­ als often forgotten by society *— prison inmates, welfare recipients, and the mentally handicapped. He w as an outspoken oppo­ nent of the death penalty under all circumstances. B ren n an also p layed m ajor roles in Supreme Court decisions that required busing to racially d eseg reg ate p u blic sch ools, bann ed o fficia lly sp o n sored prayers and Bible readings from p u blic sch ools and en h an ced free-speech and free-press rights. Sandra Mims Row, president of the American Society of News­ p aper E d ito rs, said B ren n an "m a te r ia lly stren g th en ed the freedom of speech and freedom of the press that every American enjoys on a daily basis." airman Icritics mu m * » ■ K o n g b u sin essm an who 'g u a ra n te e d th e lo an w ere the tra n sa ctio n s w ere ^ ^ ^ H n e e d e d to free money for the e le c tio n * ! ■ WASHINGTON ¡angrily rejected D em ocratic I accusations m t s u a e ^ M g r a l g i ^ c k e d "T here is no question this a u l t im ate debt. The III! | wanted its Nazis abound on Swiss bank lists Associated Press GENEVA — Hitler's photograph­ er. Adolf Eichmann's aide. Names corresponding to those of ranking Nazis appear prominently on a list o f W orld W ar II-era Sw iss bank accounts — angering Jewish groups that banks had hoped to mollify by opening their sealed records. The anger underscores the diffi­ culties Swiss banks face in dealing with Holocaust sensitivities more than a half-century after the end of the Nazi era. A spokeswom an for the Swiss Bankers Association, which pub­ lished the list of 1,872 nam es Wednesday, said the inclusion of any Nazis merely reflects the banks' attempt to be as open as possible in compliance with the Jewish groups' wishes. " I f som e of those nam es are names of Nazi people — and we are checking that — that shows ... that the banks announced every­ thing," said Silvia Matile. A Holocaust research center in Israel said six names on the list appear to m atch those of Nazis, with some spelling discrepancies. They included Hitler's photograph­ er, Heinrich Hoffmann, and Willy Bauer, an alias used by Eichmann's aide, Anton Burger. H ow ever, it w as not clear w h eth er the acco u n ts actually belonged to known Nazis or if they were the property of other people with die same names. The Wiesen- thal Center made the Nazi connec­ tions by comparing the Swiss list with its own records of Nazis, and has asked Swiss authorities for clar­ ification. Ironically, some of the most vocal critics of me Swiss banks' secrecy laws were among the angriest over the new disclosure. "Imagine the feelings of victims' famihe* as they read the list and see the nam es of victim s alon gsid e those of their murderers," said Gre- ville Janner, chairman of Britain's H olocaust Education Trust, who helped lead the cam p aign for releasing the names. Some heirs to Holocaust victims were also outraged over names that ASSOCIATED PRESS Alios Fisher, • Holocaust survivor, looks thorugh a stack of papers mat aha bellevee oormects her to money being held In Swiss bank accounts. were not on the list — relatives they w ere sure ow ned Swiss bank accounts w hen they died at the hands of the Nazis. Nevertheless, the list continued to provoke widespread interest. Thirty-six hours after its publica­ tion, more than 2,000 people had called five regional centers in New York; Sydney, Australia; Budapest, Hungary; Basel, Switzerland, and Tel Aviv, Israel, Matile said. In addition, the bankers associa­ tion site on the World Wide Web was clogged with visitors checking out names. Efraim Zuroff, d irector of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Israel, said the possible inclusion of top Nazis on die list only revealed "die coverup of the last 50 years." Rabbi Marvin Hier, the center's founder, sent a letter to the Swiss Bankers Association on Wednesday demanding "urgent help" in deter­ mining if six names o n die list were indeed Nazis. Hier said a Heinrich Ernst Hof­ m ann on the list could be Hitler photographer Heinrich Hoffmann and a Willi Bauer on die list could refer to the afyte used by Ekhmaitn's aide — Anton Burger. He also cited Elise Eder, which he said could refer to Elisabeth Eder, the wife of Ernst Kaltenbrun- ner, a top Nazi executed at Nurem­ berg; Hermann Eser, who might be Hermann Esser, vice president of the R eich stag; H. Schm itz who could be Hermann Schmitz, head of a chemical company linked to the concentration camps, and Karl Jaeger, a n otorious killer of Lithuanian Jews. Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal said the list also includes the name of a Slovak leader responsible for sending thousands of Jews to Nazi concentration camps. Vojtech Tuka, prime minister of pro-Nazi Slovakia during the war, was executed in 1946, Wiesenthal said in a statement, and urged that the money in Tuka's account be turned over to the Swiss fund for victims of the Nazis. " I f there are Nazis on the list, they shouldn't see a dim e," said A vraham Burg, head of Israel's Jewish Agency, who worked with the Swiss banks to produce the list. M atile said steps w ere being taken to make sure no ill-gotten Nazi gains would be handed over to heirs. H U ES GM strike closes 3 assembly plants ■ DETROIT — A strike at a General M otors Corp. tran sm ission factory forced the shutdown of three GM auto assembly plants Thursday, less than two days into the walkout. The Buick City plant in Flint, the Orion Township plant outside Detroit and an assembly plant in Lansing sus­ pended p rod u ction becau se of the United Auto Workers strike by 2,800 em p lo y ees at the GM P o w ertrain Group factory in W arren. A ll three assem bly plants use tran sm ission s built at Warren. G M 's two car assem bly plants in O shaw a, O ntario, are scheduled to shut down Friday. If that happens, as many as 17,800 workers in all will be idled, including the 2,800 on strike. The strike against the world's No. 1 automaker could bring G M 's North A m erican assem bly operations to a near stan d still w ithin two or three weeks. Only the Saturn plant in Spring Hill, Tenn., does not use parts from Warren. AOL dumps plan to impart phone lists ■ NEW Y O R K — Bow ing to angry protests from subscribers, A m erica Online on Thursday dumped a plan to give members' phone numbers to tele­ m arketers sellin g ev eryth in g from vacations to long-distance service. But in a move that could still irk its 8.5 m illio n m em bers, A O L said it might instead use its own employees to make telephone sales pitches. The plan to give phone numbers to telemarketers came to light Thursday morning, .with AOL saying its mem­ b ers w ou ld b e n e fit b eca u se they would be able to buy products at a discount. A m erica O n lin e had p lan n ed to com b in e the phone n u m b ers w ith other personal inform ation such as d em o g rap h ic p ro file s and b u y in g habits, based in part on what sorts of web sites each AOL member tends to visit. But d uring the day, w ord of the move unleashed a storm of criticism. Privacy advocates slammed it as an invasion of online privacy, particular­ ly since AOL previously told its mem­ bers it wouldn't give out phone num­ bers. Gulf War veterans told of exposure . ■ WASHINGTON — The Pentagon is I notifying nearly 100,000 Gulf War vet­ erans they may have been exposed to Iraqi poison gas b u t ap parently in am ounts too sm all to have caused health problems. While insisting that no U.S. troops encountered dangerous levels of chem­ ical agents, Pentagon officials on Thurs­ day said they would use new comput­ er-generated estimates of troop expo­ sure to study long-term health effects. It is not clear w hat con stitu tes a " d a n g e ro u s le v e l" o f ex p o su re, alth ou gh the P en tag o n 's new data show the vaporized Iraqi gas was in co n ce n tra tio n s w ell b elo w le v e ls known to kill or incapacitate humans. No troops reported health problems at the time, but in the aftermath of the Gulf War, some have suggested that exposure to Iraqi chemicals could be a cau se of the m ysteriou s ailm ents, known as Gulf War Illness, suffered by many veterans. Cloning technique yields protein gene ■ LONDON — The laboratory that produced the cloned sheep Dolly said Thursday that it had, for the first time, used a similar technique to produce a lam b carrying a human protein gene. Animals with human genes, includ­ ing pigs, have been produced before. But the use of the "nuclear transfer" m ethod rep resen ts a step tow ard achieving more efficient production of proteins that could be used to treat human disease and injury, said Chris Gardner, spokesman for PPL Thera­ peutics. Scientists at The Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland, announced in Feb ru ary that they had cloned an adult mammal for me first time, pro­ ducing Dolly. The scientists used cells fromthe udder of a dead sheep. The latest development, in which five lambs were produced, is appar­ ently the first time the cloning tech­ nique used to generate Dolly has been successfully replicated. It atoo is the first case in which animals have been cloned from cells taken from living adult animals. Compiled from Associated Press - reports 4 TheDailí Texan m m M ¡ 25,18B7 T h e Da il y T exa 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 Bad ‘ass’ Wednesday, Democrats assailed former Republican National Com­ mittee Chairman Haley Barbour, alleging that he accepted, foreign con­ tributions. The dilemma: Democrats assert this situation mirrors their funding scandal with China. It doesn't. First of all, the National Policy Forum — the RNC's alleged foreign contributor — was actually a think tank funded by the RNC. The RNC loaned over $2 million to the program. All money funneled back to the RNC was intended to repay the loan — not contribute to Republican campaigns. The RNC broke no laws in the venture. Second, the NPF is not incorporated with the RNC in any manner. It maintains its own fund-raising capabilities, its own office, its own board of directors and its own staff. Additionally, the RNC did not use funds from the NPF to finance election activities. The Democrats, on the other hand, did use foreign money to run political campaigns. Although the scope of foreign influence has yet to be determined, it is evident that at least a few Democrats, including John Huang violated federal law. The Democrats boast 21 party members invoking their Fifth Amend­ ment right to avoid self-incrimination — not to mention five supporters who have fled to Red China or elsewhere to avoid prosecution. Democrats must attempt to hide John Huang and his influence in the last presidential election. The fund-raiser raised more than a million in illegal contributions. President Clinton highly recommended him for his position at the Democratic National Committee despite protests from subordinates. The DNC enlisted Clinton and Vice President Gore to raise campaign funds. Both the president and vice president used White House phones to solicit contributions. This practice breaks the law — despite the absence of a “controlling legal authority," as Gore maintains. Gore and Clinton also made a hotel out of the Lincoln Bedroom and hosted numerous coffees at which donations were encouraged and expected. Gore was also involved in a money-laundering scam in California several participants have agreed to testify about the event in exchange for immunity. Democrats do not even attempt to feign innocence. The DNC specifi­ cally budgeted over $1.5 million to cover audit costs and another million to pay expected fines imposed by the Federal Election Commission. Democrats also returned millions in contributions to avoid further pros­ ecution. Blatantly disregarding the law, Democrats dispatched a former Clin­ ton aide, Mark Middleton, to Taiwan to raise money for the Clinton campaign. It's clear that Democrats are merely “spinning" their malfeasance so that Republicans might absorb the spotlight while they conceal their illicit activities. The RNC violated no laws with its relations with the NPF. Democrats auctioned government policy to the highest bidder. They must be tried and punished accordingly. ^ ip. ’90s drug culture differs from past; Welcome to the doctor-recommend­ ed, child-tested, socially approved drug culture of the '90s. Forget pot and hero­ in. Why go through tibe trouble procur­ ing illegal drugs when getting perfectly legal ones is almost as easy as getting a doctor's excuse for skipping class? These days, society almost pushes people to take Prozac and Ritalin to chemically alter their brains, molding them into calm, well-adjusted citizens. In the last few years, Prozac, Ritalin and tire like have grown in popularity, especially among parents of uncontrol­ lable children. Roughly 3 million chil­ dren have prescriptions to control hyperactivity. Almost 600,000 receive Prozac or other serotonin reuptake inhibitors, and thousands more get lithi­ um — the feel-good wonder drug. These psychoactive drugs regulate the level of behavior-influencing chemi­ cals in the brain. They work surprisingly well, turning children who cannot pay Drew Harris TEXAN COLUMNIST attention into productive students. But there is something ironic about telling kids to "Just Say No" when their parents are telling them they cannot attend school without their Ritalin. A child does not have to read Aldous Huxley's Brave New World to understand his parents are controlling him by drugs. Many children actually rebel and refuse to take the blue and yellow Ritalin pills. “The children feel the drug subduing their minds, and it's less fun," comments one school administrator. But over­ worked parents cannot put in the hours to manage a difficult child, and desper­ ate parents turn to a chemical solution to help their children fit in. With school and work, psychoactive drugs have become a spcially accepted tool. LSD was used as a tool in the 1960s to expand one's consciousness. Now, the goal of drug use has changed from getting rid of one's con­ sciousness of pain to simply making it through the day productively. While his tool might be a godsend to the esti­ mated 1715 million Americans suffering from debilitating reoccurring depres­ sion, Prozac and its ilk are a superficial fix for the existential anxieties of every person. Treating human discontent with a quick-fix drug may cut off the roots of artistic creativity. Imagine if Van Qogh or Kafka simply took Valium. It may someday become ordinary to take drugs like Prozac. Some say tech­ nology has made life too stressful for the slow-evolving brain to harldle. Every­ body gets depressed sometime in his or her life. Capitalizing on the universal affliction of depression, Prozac advertis­ es in national magazines claiming, “Depression hurts. Prozac can help." As more people begin clamoring for their doctors, line between the "depressed" arid “clinically depressed- wili become increasingly blurred. Doc* tors have written 51 million prescrip­ tions for Prozac-type drugs in h e last year alone. Why stop at Prozac? The drug culture of h e future will have pills to make you fully awake for your 8 o'clock class. Be sure to take Ritalin to combat any absent-mindedness in class, and down some appetite-suppressant pills so you are not hungry for missing breakfast. You can always take an appeti te-restorer at lunch and a laxative during your potty break afterwards. Relax after a "stressful" day of class with lithium, hen it will be time for some sleeping pills and off to bed. Perhaps someday; even your dreams will be controlled by psychoactive pills. Harris is a Plan II junior. WE LOST A FENDER. AND A r u n n i n g b o a r d w c o l l i s / o H W lT tl TRE CARGO StilP AMD W E A o liD e n tA llV d i s c o n n e c t e d TH E STARTER cRANIC . m o r e s e r k ^ s l y , o u r - 5L|ow 50% o F o u ,R FLOBBER WAS l e a k e d A^WAY < n t o s p a c e . & o O o Although the Democrats assert it's true, not every politician accepted foreign funds during the last election — those who did should be impeached, imprisoned and impugned. WMICM COULD JMPSD& our, c a p a c i t y to f l u Internet must become safe for the masses through self-policing Wednesday, h e White House announced an initiative to step up enforcement of existing Internet laws. This decision did not change laws alreadv prohibiting obscenity, cljild pornography and online stalking. The federal government, along with Internet corporations, such as Netscape Communications, is working to provide tools which allow parents and teachers to restrict access to prurient materials. Unfortunately, h e Clinton administration is not combating net rape and other forms of Internet harassment. Over 80 percent of UT students have Internet access, whether it be at home, in class or campus labs. Of hose, 72 per­ cent say hey access h e Net at least once a week which makes hem prime targets for Internet harassment. However, government officials shy away Eric Opiela TEXAN COLUMNIST from protecting adults from Internet harm. On one level, this policy is appropriate, since h e First Amendment protects freedom of expres­ sion. Adults have a right to access whatever information they desire, regardless of its nature. However, most agree that inappropri­ ate sexual material is unwanted on h e Net. Law enforcement agencies find it difficult to identify Internet sex crimes and heir perpetra­ tors. Sine» h e identities and genders of boh victims and assaulters are masked by technolo- , investigators cannot resolve Internet rassment cases. Some argue Internet sex i • i crimes aren't real crimes, because hey don't involve actual sexual contact. Unfortunately, cases of net-rape can harm individuals boh emotionally and physically. Perhaps h e first instance of Internet rape was in 1993. In a virtual world called LambdaMOO, one participant, Mr. Bungle, used a voodoo doll to force another participant, Legba, who was an avatar of undeterminable gender, to sexually service him in a variety of ways. Other participants in h e MOO were affected as well by h e text-based conversation, as some were forced into unwanted liaisons with other participants, and one member was even forced to “violate herself with a piece of kitchen cut­ lery." While some would chuckle at references to Voodoo and he possibility that simple text on a screen could cause individuals to engage in «11 rh artivitv his event was no laughing in such activity, this event was no laughing matter. The victims of Mr. Bungle's wrath were pro­ foundly affected by his actions. Aside from h e obvious physical harm caused by h e partici­ pant who used cutlery on herself, h e oher individuals involved were harmed emotional­ ly. Legba and others cried after Mr. Bungle was removed from h e MOO, and h e night's events became a part of heir collective memories. They felt as if h e rape were real. While Internet stalking is currently illegal, it is very difficult for victims and authorities to obtain convictions, partly because Internet users can easily conceal heir identities and also because stalkers often follow their victim's elec­ tronic identities for months and even years, gathering massive amounts of information about h e person. Then hey use hat knowl­ about h e person. Then hey use that knowl- edge to harm heir victims when hey strike. We must not focus solely on controlling h e Internet experience for our children; adults are also in danger. Boh h e government, through more effective enforcement of Internet laws, and individual Internet users, through vigilan- tism, must work to eliminate this problem. Research must quickly be integrated into law, boh in real and virtual worlds. The more time that passes, h e more Internet users will continue to be victimized. The solution lies not in turning the Internet into a 1984 dystopia filled with government censorship, but in rely­ ing on h e good intentions of h e masses to rid h e Internet of scum. Opiela is a government sophomore. Sponsored by UT Legal Services for Students FIRING LINE To SG or not to SG I am tired of all the bickering that goes on concerning our “beloved" Student Government. It is truly amazing that we are supposed to care about the scandals, election codes and attendance of the Student Gov­ ernment when hardly anyone even votes. No one cares! The only time I have seen a Student Government represen­ tative is when election time comes. Also, that is the wonderful time where I am handed more slips of paper then I ever want­ ed in my life. I can tell that these people just want another b.s. item for their résumés but if elected will not do anything. I think this has held true#recently. The new battle over violations of rights is completely ridicu­ lous. If you want to talk about rights, then why doesn't the stu­ dent body ever vote on any­ thing the Student Government approves? I especially would like to vote on appropriations of student money. What determines which group should get student funds anyway? In the city of Austin, at least we have the opportunity to vote on referenda, bonds, etc. Also, what a waste of time for the ACLU to fight in our judi­ cial system just so a few stu­ dents who can't follow the rules can vote. The judicial system is too tied up.as it is. They think they are standing up for rights, but in actuality are just trying to force their own agenda. • The Student Government is just an organization mimicking the real thing, therefore it is easy to see how little power it has and why constitutionality is not a question. Remember, it is the University who dishes out power and thereby is the last word. . Try to name something good that comes out of Student Gov­ ernment. I can't think of one off hand. If you know UT history, you realize that it didn't even exist 10 years ago. Even so, you could put Mickey Mouse on the ticket and I guarantee you it would win. In fact, something similar happened a few years ago and there had to be a second elec­ tion. I am not trying to belittle any individuals in the organization, but feel that the organization as a whole should be abolished thereby allowing more impor­ tant work to be done. Instead of ranting about rights, we could be addressing larger issues such as homeless­ ness, crime and drugs, which need serious action. Keith Rochelli Finance junior fírim Urn lettew and Aik Your Uwgm questions can be broiM&t to the Textm base­ ment offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue or mailed to ■ P , Austin, may also e- > . .. » . — UNIVERSITY T h e D a ily T e x a n ■ HOMY, JUUf 26,1807 High school seniors, along with their parents, check In to Jester Dormitory for the 1997 Honors Colloqui­ um. The three-day event will acquaint the participants with UT programs and faculty. UNIVERSITY BRIEFS Maintenance will close UT car lots ■ Several UT parking lots will be closed this w eekend due to sum ­ mer parking lot maintenance. The "A" lot 53 near th e Engi­ neering Teaching C enter and the A nim al R esources C e n te r — at 26th Street and San Jacinto Street — will be closed Friday through S u n d a y . B oth Lot 53 a n d th e entrance to the lot from Speedway will reopen on Monday. The w est side of Lot 108 next to the Frank Erwin C enter — avail­ able to all UT perm it holders — will be closed Friday through Sun­ day. The east side of Parking Lot 108 w ill be o p en a n d m ay be accessed from the In te rsta te 35 frontage road entrance. The driveway in front of Kinsolv- ing D orm itory along D ean Page Keeton Street, formerly known as West 26th Street, will also be closed Saturday and Sunday. The strip of "A" parking, "Child Care C enter" parking and "F36" parking betw een "C" Lot 80 and the School of Social Work building at M artin L uther King Jr. Boule­ v a rd and T rin ity S treet w ill be closed Saturday through Monday. "No parking" signs will be posted on M o n d ay , b u t p a r e n ts m ay drive up and drop their children off between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. The lot will close for striping at 9 a.m. and reopen at 10 a.m. DAVE’S injunction plea dismissed ■ A judge took less than 15 m in­ utes Thursday to dismiss a request from DAVE Transportation for an injunction against the union repre­ senting the contractor's drivers. DAVE T ra n sp o rtatio n , w hich em ploys d riv ers on the UT and AISD s h u ttle b u s ro u te s, h a d requested an injunction from the c o u rt to k eep th e d riv e rs from Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1549 from striking. DAVE filed for th e in ju n ctio n in re sp o n sé to a May 2 gathering held by shuttle bus drivers in Eastwoods Park. Officials of DAVE Transportation alleged that the gathering was a strike that violated a no-strike clause in its contract with tire union and said the gathering left 30 shuttle buses sitting idle and many students stranded. Representatives of the union said tíre gathering was an annual employee party allowing shuttle drivers to come together and unwind, not a strike. In his ruling Thursday, U.S. Dis­ trict Judge James Nowlin said he had review ed the plaintiffs' affi­ davit and there was no case. DAVE Transportation has also filed su it ag a in st the u n io n for dam ages as a result of the May 2 gathering, b u t a hearing for the suit has not yet been scheduled, said Kent McCulloch, attorney for DAVE Transportation. Robert Mowat, general manager for DAVE, said, "If we get another quote- unquote party, we will move to stop it before coming [to court] again." _ Compiled by Amanda M cDonald and Derek H. Martin, Daily Texan Staff Honors students tour UT LAURA SUNK)____________ Daily Texan Staff In an effort to lure the best and the brightest Téxas students, the University is hosting its annual Honors Colloquium, which began Thursday and lasts until Saturday afternoon. More than 700 honors students who are entering their senior year of high school in the fall are partici­ pating in the recruitment program, which draws students' attention to the University as they face a rising sea of college choices. The colloquium, a 16-year-old tra­ dition, is "designed to introduce out­ standing high school students across Texas to the academic and cultural resources on campus," said Paul Ped­ ersen, coordinator of the Honors Col­ loquium. "It's also a service to show them what college life is like.' In addition to campus tours, pre­ sentations from various depart­ ments and meetings with faculty, the itinerary includes special tours such as a flight simulation, a geolo­ gy field trip and a visit to the state capítol. Program coordinators use infor­ mation from an academic database, lists of winners from academic com­ petitions and nom inations from school faculty to select participants, Pedersen said. The colloquium "contributes to the' University's interest in talented and diverse students," Pedersen said, adding that about 40 percent of students who attend the program usually end up attend­ ing the University. "I'm a fan of the Honors Collo­ quium. It has been a successful device for attracting students," said Paul Woodruff, director of the Plan II Honors Program. "A lot of students went to the , Honors Colloquium before apply­ ing to Plan II." Plan II and other honors pro­ grams set up tables at the colloqui­ um to inform prospective students of their programs. Celeste Ojeda, a San Antonio student attending the colloquium, said she came to the University "to see a more challeng­ ing curriculum," adding that the UT honors system is on the "same level as bigger-name schools that are not as close to home." ** "I wanted to stay in Texas," said Charles Wright III, a colloquium participant from Amarillo who said he is also considering attending the University. "It's a nationally ranked school tha^s real cheap for the quality," he said. Some students identify themselves as Texans first, Americans second AMANDA MCDONALD______ Daily Texan Staff * UT students appear to be in step with the results of a recent poll showing that many state residents identify themselves as Texans first and Americans second. I In a telephone poll conducted by pollster Frank Luntz for a Washing­ ton, D.C., consulting firm on July 19- 20, nearly one-fourth of the 500 Texas residents surveyed — 24 percent — identified themselves first as Texans. About 73 percent identified them­ selves as Americans first and Texans second, and 3 percent said the two identities are equally important. * A majority of students, flaunting their Texas pride, said Thursday that they side with the Texas-first view­ point although a large number of UT professors chose the American identity. - "Texas is the home of the Long­ horns, so we all have a lot of loyalty tt> our state," said advertising sophomore Laura Timanus. Math senior Martin DeLeon said, "I've lived in a lot of different states and the people here are so much nicer, everything is cleaner and it's just a much better lifestyle." But some students disagreed with the Texan view. Steve Handelman, a graduate stu­ dent in architecture from California, said he considers himself an Ameri­ can first and criticized some aspects of the Texan lifestyle. "They may be louder about it than other states, but they don't necessarily have more devotion," Handelman said of Texans. "Com­ ing from California, I don't think people take care of their state here. They throw so many lit cigarettes down on the ground. I hate that." But Amanda Cochran, a photojour­ nalism senior from Kansas, said she has never seen pride anywhere else that is quite like it is in Texas. She noted the large amount of Texas- themed clothing that is sold in die state. 'Up in Kansas, you just don't see shirts with a big 'KANSAS' written across the front of it," she said. Marc Compere, a graduate stu­ dent in mechanical engineering, said that although he considers himself an American first — Texans definitely have more pride than natives of other states. "It goes back to the the big money- and-oil attitude, the flamboyant lifestyle and the whole get-rich-quick scheme," Compere said. A majority of UT professors also sided with the American viewpoint. "The United States is my country and Texas is the state I happen to live in," said George Forgie, professor of history, who said he believes Texas pride has grown for various reasons. 'Texas was at one time an indepen­ dent nation, and the only state that was ever this way," he said. "It is also much more culturally dis­ tinct than other states, so that too is a factor." Staples? Paperclips? No Problem. S t a p l e s in m e m o s . S t a p l e s in MAGAZINES. PAPERCLIPS HOLDING TOGETHER A SEMESTER'S WORTH o f p r o j e c t s . T h e y ' r e a l l o k a y . You d o n ’t h a v e t o r e m o v e STAPLES OR PAPER CLIPS TO r e c y c l e p a p e r . L e t t h e MAGNETS DO IT AT THE PROCESSING PLANT. ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS TOSS YOUR CLEAN PAPER INTO ANY RECYCLING BIN ON CAMPUS AND THE REST IS ANOTHER TREE SAVED. T h e U T -A u s t in R e c y c l in g P r o j e c t s u p p o r t s a c l e a n e r , MORE BEAUTIFUL TEXAS. F o r M o r e I n f o r m a t i o n C a l l P h y s i c a l P l a n t R e c y c l i n g : 471-8438, OR e m a il: R e c y c l e @ m a il .u t e x a s .e d u L o n g h o rn s S u p p o rt Recycling j W h a t g o e s in t h e r e c y c l in g b in s ? i A m y p a p e r t h a t t e a r s . T h i s m e a n s b r o w n ¡ PAPER» CO LO RED P A P E R , P O S D IT NOTES, j FO LD ER S, HANGING FIL E S, CA RD BO A RD , j MAGAZINES AND NEW SPA PERS. EVBN STAPLES, P A PER C LIPS AND SPIR A LS A RE OKAYÜ T H IS | D O ES NOT INCLUDE FO O D , FO OD W R A PPER S O R ANYTHING W ET. W h a t ? You c a n 't f in d a b l u e b i n . T h e w av t o g e t m o r e b w s in a b u d d in g b f o r ONE OF THE DERAKVMENTS TO REQUEST BINS FROM PHYSICAL PLANE. SO IF YOU DON*T SEE A BTO WHERE THERE'S A NEED FOR ONE, PLEASE GO TO A DEnUBTMBNT OFFICE AND Aflt WHERE H E rbcvcung bm s fo r that area are locaihd. I f IfflSRE A R n ñ r ENOUGH E BB , ASK FOR MORE. SnmiUD BcTiir. UT A ustin R b .y c u n d A ijv' is w s G jm m it t ee An d Ti ic O miy T e xan. I I I * I * I ' I II' I I , I II I.I II* I* I I* I. I. I. I. I, I I I' r I I I I* F UR JHI » , I 17 6 T h e D a i l y T e x a n STftTFftliDCAL City Council tackles parking, pay, health care P i m m 7-74 uanvez-frf-a* ZA CK MCLAIN_______________ Daily Texan Staff The Austin City Council passed an ordinance T hursday th at will re p la c e m e c h a n ic a l p a rk in g m eters w ith electronic ones and p ro v id e a sta n d a rd , 75-cent rate for those who pay to park. P e te r R ieck, d ire c to r of th e A u s tin D e p a rtm e n t of P u b lic W orks and T ra n sp o rtatio n , said the méchanical meters are not con­ siste n t in the h o u rly ra te s they c h a rg e . The n e w m e te rs w ill charge a flat rate of 75 cents an hour, regardless of where a person parks, Rieck said. "Each m eter w ill allow people to pay w ith nickels, dimes, quar­ ters and prepaid debit cards," he said. The new system will take about tw o y e a rs to im p le m e n t, Rieck said, b u t in the next two months, there should be 2,000 new meters in the city. He said his departm ent is look­ ing into a plan to make debit cards available for purchase at certain grocery store chains th ro u g h o u t the city. U n d e r th e n e w o rd in a n c e , "meter feeding" — the practice of returning to a m eter and extend­ ing th e tim e by in se rtin g m ore coins — will rem ain illegal. In a s e p a r a te issu e , c o u n c il m eeting reg u la r John M cM illan, president of the Progressive Pro­ h ib itio n ist R eligion, p ro p o sed a salary raise for M ayor Kirk W at­ son and the councilmembers. "I recom m end th a t the city of Austin pay each of its mayors ... a gross an n u al salary of $100,000 and ... pay each of its six coun­ cilmembers a gross annual salary of $75,000," McMillan said. He s a id th e c o u n c il s u ffe rs needlessly from "low purchasing p ow er" caused by the lack of a salary raise since Sept. 25, 1985. The m ayor currently earns about $35,000 a y e a r a n d each of the c ity 's six c o u n cilm em b ers earn about $30,000 a year. W atson jokingly said he would have liked to have given McMillan more time to speak on that topic. The council also postponed vot­ in g on a m e a s u re th a t w o u ld app ro v e A u stin 's bid to becom e the 'Ttinding entity" of a 12-coun­ ty region u n d er a new M edicaid distribution system enacted by the Texas Health and H um an Services Commission. T hursday's meeting, held at the N o rth w e s t R e c re a tio n C e n te r, 2913 N o rth la n d D rive, w as the second of three "community meet­ ings" the council is holding this year in different locations. Dave M atustik, public inform a­ tion officer for the city, said the council decided to hold periodic sessions throughout the communi­ ty to h ig h lig h t n e ig h b o rh o o d issues. "The goal is not to exclude peo­ in c lu d e p e o p le /' to p le b u t Matusek said. The next neighborhood meeting is scheduled for October. BEITB) PUT THAT SOMEWHERE MOM WONT S S IT! San Antonio buys Kelly AFB in $108 million deal 44 We Ve had for homeless programs. Associated Press Greene on Monday issued a two- week restraining order preventing parts of the Kelly property from being transferred to die city. SAN ANTONIO — After weeks of legal wrangling over the future use of Kelly Air Force Base, local elected offi- cials signed real estate documents Thursday in the city's purchase of the base. "It7s been kind of controversial, but we're very happy that we've gotten through those steps and that we're signing these documents," said Navar­ ra Williams, acting chairman of the Greater Kelly Development Corp. The San Antonio Air Logistics Cen­ ter, the major operation at Kelly and one of the city's largest employers, is slated to shut down by 2001. Through the development corpora­ tion it formed, the city has negotiated a 40-year, $108 million deal to buy the base property so it can lure private industry to Kelly. Real estate papers signed Thursday by Mayor Howard Peak, Bexar County Judge Cyndi Taylor Krier and Williams — and already signed by Air Force officials — define terms of the deal and the city's ability to sublease sections of the base. The city's lease documents will be followed by a transfer of deeds to the some bumps along the way. We’ll have some more bumps along the way. But we are going to be successful with the redevelopment of Kelly Air Force Base.” — Tutos WeMs, a Orector of the GKDC property once the Air Force finishes an environm ental cleanup and it is approved by state and federal regula­ tors, Williams said. On M onday, U.S. District Judge Harold Greene in Washington, D.C., lifted a temporary restraining order blocking the entire property transfer. The non-profit housing organization Senior Resources filed a lawsuit last month claiming it was improperly left out of the base redevelopment process, which requires some land be offered "We've had some bumps along the way. We'll have some more bumps along the way. But we are going to be successful with the redevelopment of Kelly Air Force Base," said Tullos Wells, a director of the GKDC. In the picturesque courtyard of the historic Spanish Governor's Palace, Williams presided over the document- signing ceremony and called the trans­ fer "the largest deal of its kind" in the closure of military bases. Leo Martinez, a retired Kelly work­ er, looked on with skepticism, though he said he hoped the city's privatiza­ tion plans would work out. After 32 years of working at the Air Logistics Center, Martinez retired in 1990 and was one of the thousands of San Antonio residents who demon­ strated in 1995 against the decision to dose Kelly. "It's really sad, but it happened. The best ALC in the Air Force they doped down because of politics," he said, adding that he attended Thursday's ceremony to witness history. Juventino Equia is getting his second tattoo of a pan­ ther on this chest by Dristian Barrientos. Barrientos works at Forbidden Fruit, and has been tattooing for four years. TANYA LUJAN/Daily Texan Staff Dallas Catholic Diocese to pay $120 million in molestation case Associated Press DALLAS — In the largest verdict of its kind, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Dallas was ordered to pay nearly $120 million Thursday for allowing a priest to molest altar boys and then conspir­ ing to cover it up. "It dwarfs anything else we've ever heard of," said Bill Ryan, spokesman for the U.S. Catholic Conference. The plaintiffs — 10 m en Rev. Rudolph Kos was accused of molesting and the family of another who commit­ ted suidde — had sought $146.5 mil­ lion in damages. Their attorneys con­ tended the diocese ignored evidence that the clergym an was sexually molesting boys. "I'm overwhelmed," said Nancy Lemberger, a plaintiff and the mother of the deceased victim. "We asked this jury to speak to the world and they have done that," said W indie Turley, an attorney for the plaintiffs. "This is a terribly important • * . decision for children." The state district court jury awarded about $101 million in compensatory damages. Then, after hearing more tes­ timony, it awarded $18 million in puni­ tive damages. Church officials said they will con­ sider an appeal. "The diocese of Dallas remains com­ mitted to abiding by the final outcome of this case. However, an appeal may be made in order that a higher court can review all tíre issues and make certain that a final verdict is just and appropri­ ate," Bishop Charles Grahmann said. After hearing 11 weeks of testimony, jurors began deliberating Tuesday on the 43-page charge, which consisted of 33 questions. In its 33-item questionnaire, the jury agreed that the diocese was negligent in its handling of Kos, lied about him, inflicted emotional distress on the práiíttiffs artd committed fraud. District Judge Anne Ashby read a statement from the jurors directed to the diocese. They asked church officials to change the way they investigate child abuse by priests. "Please admit your guilt and allow these young men to get on with their lives," they said in the statement, which received a standing ovation from the plaintiffs and their families. The diocese does not dispute the molestation claims but denies negli­ gence. Jurors split the damages between the church and Kos under a complex for­ mula that assigned varying percent­ ages of blame in each plaintiffs case. In one case, the blame was split 50-50 between the diocese and Kos; in other cases, the church was held to up to 85 percent responsible. However, Turley said, under Texas law, the church will be responsible for Kos' portion if he doesn't pay. Estimates of the costs of the priest sex-abuse scandals in the United States range as high as half a billion dollars. In 1994, the U.S. Catholic Conference reported dioceses had spent at least $60 million in settlements, not including legal and medical fees. Ryan said he could not provide updated figures. "This kind of astronomical award is a denomination's nightm are," said O liver Thomas, attorney for the National Council of Churches, the biggest ecumenical organization in the United States. "As people tend to do, they look for the deep pocket. Unfortunately, it's usually the church or the denomina­ tion. In most of these cases, the church or the denomination has no idea that this sort of misconduct is taking place." » The plaintiffs alleged the episodes occurred between 1977,and 1992 while Kos was a seminarian at Holy Trinity Seminary in Dallas and while he was assigned to All Saints Catholic Church in Dallas, St. Luke's Catholic Church in Irving and St. John's Catholic Church in Ennis. Turley told jurors Monday that the diocese was grossly negligent in foiling to stop Kos. "What we had was a negligent insti­ tution letting rage out of control a sick pedophile," Turley said. But diocesan attorney, Randal Math­ is, said Catholic officials are "good peo­ ple" who wrongly concluded that Kos was not engaged in sexual misconduct. Kos "got through" the system of safeguards against abusive priests, sur­ viving undetected for many years before getting caught, Mathis said. "The diocese dearly was wrong, but at the time, it was making what it drought were appropriate, fair and rea­ sonable judgments," Mathis said. Kos, who now lives in San Diego, did not show up to defend himself in the dvil trial; Ashby already has found him liable. He awaits a criminal trial for sexual contact with one child and inde­ cency with another, both of whom were plaintiffs in the dvil lawsuit Turley said he is attempting to bring additional criminal charges. In a copyright story in The Dallas Morning News in May, Kos denied some of the charges against him and refused to discuss others. He said he couldn't answer the ques­ tion of "which ones I had sex with." "I'm trying not to blame anybody else," he said. "I accept responsibility for anything I may have done. I'm sorry for that." 70-million-year-old dinosaur tracks exposed by recent Texas flooding Associated Press BOERNE — They were nature's secret for 70 million years, but now this town is abuzz with talk of dinosaur tracks uncovered on dty property after flooding in June. Fearing vandalism, dty staff members kept quiet about the discovery for three weeks and briefed the City Council this week after word spread. "We're frightened that someone is going to go out there and chisel them up," said dty planning director Chris Turk, who would dis­ cuss the tracks with the Sati Antonio Express- News only if the location wasn't divulged. Only a hint of the toes are visible in the prints, but the pattern of the indentations in the limestone makes it dear something very large ambled across the landscape long before it was dty property or rock. Geologists say the three-toed creatures that left the 20-inch-wide, 4-inch-deep prints could have been carnivores called acrocanthosaurus or vegetarians known as tenotosaurus. "You can't tell exactly what creature made them," said Mike Hawthorne, who published a 1990 study of dinosaur tracks in Texas while at Baylor University. "They were big dinosaurs, weighing tons, but they weren't tíre biggest," said Hawthorne, who was among several geologists who began studying the Boeme tracks July 11. Dinosaur tracks have been found west of San Antonio and around New Braunfels, but they h a v e n 't been found before around Boeme, he said. Boeme is about 30 miles northwest of San Antonio. Some city and county officials w ere informed about a week later but agreed not to reveal the discovery until they decided what to do about it. But in a memo to the City Council this week, Mayor Patrick Heath said the informa­ tion had leaked out of county offices. County Judge Bill Gooden said he told his staff not to release information until it was determined whether they really were dinosaur tracks. "It looked like a pothole to me," Gooden said. The flooding in Boeme also unearthed a trail of smaller tracks, each measuring about 10 inches in diameter, in the same area as the larger tracks. "These are interesting because of the mix­ ture of sizes of tracks," said Rena Bonem, a Baylor University geology professor. Also, she said, one set of tracks suggests a dinosaur saw som ething and suddenly changed directions. The tracks likely were left in a tidal flat, or marsh, between 70 million and 80 jnfllion years ago, she said. Ms. Bonem and her scientific team will return this weekend, and Boeme dty officials are eagerly awaiting their guidance. Turk said plaster copies of the tracks may be made to create a replica of the site at the Cibolo Nature Center. As for the actual tracks, he said, "If (the sci­ entists) say it may weather, we may cover it up with a real fine soil and put it back the way it was before." ASSOCIATED PRESS A 70-million-year-old dinosaur track uncov­ ered near Boeme, Texas after heavy flood­ ing in June. The tracks were discovered June 21 after floodwaters swept through the area. SUPERCUTS SUPERCUTS SUPERCUTS Void with other offers. ■ One coupon per | person. I Offer good at oH 17 oreo Supercuts Thru August 8,1997 I D.T. W e cut y o u r ha'fr t h e w a y YOU w a n t ! SUKRCUTS GATEWAY | TO THE ¿ E W O R L D ! Exclusive Airfares for Students and budget travellers curailpasses travel insurance work abroad programs student ft budget touis guidebooks ft travel gear International student ID cards Central Texas may get federal disaster relief ■ Texas Gov. George W. Bush has made á request to the federal gov­ ernm ent for disaster relief for 19 Central Texas counties ravaged by floods earlier this month The Federal Emergency Manage­ ment Agency will handle the request for public assistance funding, which would be used to aid in the repair erf public property damaged by flood waters, said Jo Schweikhard Moss, public information officer for the Texas Department of Public Safety's Division of Emergency Manage­ ment The public assistance funding helps local governments with the repair of public property and the funding of rescue helicopters and STATE BRIEFS boats. To receive the funding, Moss said, local and state governments must show that they don't have ade­ quate resources to repair infrastruc­ tures without federal assistance. The flood-dam aged areas are inspected by the Division of Emer­ gency Management to determine if damage is serious enough to merit federal funding, Moss said. Only areas that suffered flood damage between June 21 and July 15 will be eligible to receive funding, she added. Austinites asked to curb water usage again ■ Officials in charge of Austin's Water Conservation Program are urging dty residents to cut bade on their use hi water far landscape irri­ gation. Although Austin's lakes are filled, water production levels are rising, said Tony Gregg, manager of the program. Gregg said water production ami distribution facilities in the dty can only handle about 215 million gal­ lons per day. If the w ater levels increase, the dty will have to enforce certain restrictions ranging from mandating the already voluntary watering schedule to prohibiting any type of landscape irrigation. He said people should apply an inch of water to their lawns every five days, preferably early in die morning or late at night, and should check their irrigation systems for U*lr« The voluntary watering schedule, imposed about this time every year, is expected to continue until Sept 30. — Compied by Eugene Medoth, Daly Texan Staff SPORTS T h e D a ily T e x a n FNMV, JUU 25,1887 Big 12 coaches still abuzz over title game BRIAN DAVIS Daily Texan Staff IRVING — Even though Nebraska head coach Tom Osborne elected to be the Big 12's only party pooping no-show at Thursday's annual kick- off press conference, many coaches and players were Still abjuzz about Texas' win in the inaugural champi­ onship game. All conceded that the Big 12's first season was a big success but because of the conference's lack-lus- ter start, there is still room for improvement. Osborne elected to skip the two-day festivities for radio and print media simply because he couldn't wbrk around "an event out of town with his wife." At least that was die official BIG 12 FOOTBALL If there was any hangover, there were no ill feelings, no bad tasté and there is no revenge factor.” explanation from Nebraska sports information director Chris Anderson. Maybe Osborne was still stung about die Comhuskers' dramatic loss to Texas, 37-27, in last season's cham­ pionship game and that the aura sur­ rounding the two-time national cham­ pions is now a thing of die past. "When Superman's cape doesn't open all the way, it gives Batman a chance," Texas Tech head coach Spike Dykes said of the Longhorns' bold win. "If there was any hangover, there were no ill-feelings, no bad taste and there is no revenge factor," Nebraska defensive end Grant Wi§trom said. "We use it as a motivational tool that we lost. But we lost it because we played poorly." The press conference, held this year in the Harvey Hotel near Dal- las-Fort Worth International Airport, is normally used for media members to gather preseason predictions about each team. But on the first day, everyone wanted to talk about what happened last season. All of the approximately 200 media attendees wanted to know the specifics of UT's fourth-and-1 play against Nebraska. Longhorn quar­ terback James Brown said that he never "predicted an upset," and kicker Phil Dawson said that "[Texas] would have still won even if he didn't say that." "Most of them thought I was crazy. But I am," Texas head coach John Mackovic said. new Some of the issues addressed Thursday rule included changes, television contracts and possible future Big 12 bowl alliances that — because of existing contracts — would not take realistic shape until the turn of the century. Texas A&M head coach R.C. Slocum expressed extreme disappointment in the number of cutbacks the NCAA has ordered on coaching staffs in die past few years. The cutbacks focus on the declining availability of scholarships and practice time allowed. Slocum also said that he and the Aggie fans would like to see the annual Texas-A&M matchup possi­ bly moved back to Thanksgiving night instead of a 10 a.m. kickoff the day after Thanksgiving. The reason it won't be moved: money. fans would prefer the . "Our Thanksgiving matchup," Slocum said. "But when you look around and you see the things that we have, the facilities that we have, we can Please see B ig 12, page 8 Astros gain 6th straight win, 10-5 Associated Press HOUSTON — Every lineup Larry Dierker touches lately turns into runs. Center fielder Chuck Carr got three straight hits, including a go- ahead single in the seventh, as the Houston Astros beat the Montreal Expos 10-5 Thursday night for their sixth straight victory. "This is the kind of thing you hope for," said Dierker, the Astros' manager. "Every manager in the league likes to have his team doing whatever it takes. I'm glad to have it happening now because some of our opponents are losing." The Astros won for the 13th time in 16 games, including four in a row over the Expos, to take a 4-game lead over the Pittsburgh Pirates in the NL Central. Dierker sent Thomas Howard to center field on Wednesday night and he went 3-for-4, leading the Astros past the St. Louis Cardinals. "It's a season of streaks and slumps and all you do is try to make than your longer your streaks slumps," Dierker said. With the score tied 5-5, Tim Bogar led off the seventh with a single off reliever Anthony Telford (2-3). Bogar went to second on Bill Spiers' grounder and took third on Marc Valdes' wild pitch. Carr, who doubled in the fourth and hit his first homer of the season in the fifth, followed with a single, scor­ ing Bogar with the go-ahead run. The Astros got two more runs in the inning on Jeff Bagwell's sacrifice fly and a passed ball by Darrin Fletcher. "This is a good time to get going, instead of getting too hot early in the season," Carr said. "If I was hot early, they'd be trying to figure out how to pitch me. Now, I'm ready to go." Tom Martin (3-2) got the victory with 1 1 /3 innings of one-hit ball. The Expos rallied from a 5-2 deficit with three runs in the sev­ enth. A two-run double by pinch- hitter Jose Vidro off Shane Reynolds, and Mike Landing's single off reliev­ er Russ Springer tied it. Lansing extended his hitting streak to a career-high 12 games. Reynolds lost his shutout and no­ hitter when consecutive doubles by Darrin Fletcher, Mark Grudzielanek and Rondell White produced two runs in the fifth inning. Reynolds struck out nine and allowed five hits over 6 2-3 innings. "I was just trying to keep my team in the game against a very good pitcher," Reynolds said. "They gave me a cushion and that helps." Texas’ shortstop Dom ingo Cedeno relays the throw to first to complete the double play after forcing out C hicago’s Mark Cameron (24). Rangers drop 4th straight, 2-1 Ventura provides game-winning hit in return to White Sox from disabled list Associated Press CHICAGO — Public displays of emotion are not Robin Ventura's style. But here he was in his first game back waving to a standing ovation, pumping his fist after a game-winning hit and tossing his cap into the stands. "I definitely think this is one I'll remember," Ventura said Thursday night, celebrating his return in dra­ matic fashion with a Hollywood script-like ending. "Fitting," said teammate Frank Thomas. "You kind of got choked up a little. It was a big moment," said stoic Chicago White Sox manager Terry Bevington after Ventura's eighth-inning double beat the Texas Rangers 2-1. "It was outstanding for Robin." Ventura, who had missed the entire season after fracturing and dislocating his right ankle in a spring training slide back in March, was 0-for-3 when he came to bat against Ken Hill with .a runner on second and two outs. c *11 C 'm. The former All-Star third baseman rrit drove the first pitch to the wall in left center, scoring Dave Martinez and sending an enthusiastic crowd of 25,899 at Comiskey Park into a tizzy. "If not at the top, it's close enough," Ventura said, sizing up the game on his list of career highlights. "Just to be able to play again when you get something taken away you love to do and to be able to come back and do it before they expect you to do it is special," he said. "It was just enjoyable to be on the field and contribute. f i a l A a n r l m n l r i V i n t p ” Ventura, never known for his speed, lumbered into second base and then raised his fist to acknowl­ edge the cheers. "It was just fun to see the run score," he said. Ventura, who made his way back more quickly than most expected with a rigorous rehab program, received a loud standing ovation when he came to bat in the first Please see Rangers, page 8 Associated Press CHICAGO — Michael Jordan's smile must be stretching from the first tee all the way to the 18th green. The only coach he said he'd play for is coming back, albeit as a lame duck. Phil Jackson and the Chicago Bulls have been reunited for one final year. Now it's Jordan's turn for a new deal. One of his requirements has been met. Now it's time to talk money. Lots of money. Jordan, who led the Bulls to their fifth championship of the '90s this year, won't come cheap. After making $30.14 million last season, reports say he expects a raise to at least $36 million. The Chicago Tribune, citing sources dose to Jordan's agent David Falk, reported that Falk will seek a one-year, $40 million deal. Falk is on vacation and wik not return until next week. How tough will it be to re-sign Jordan? "I would say it wasn't that difficult last year and I'm hoping it won't be this year either," Bulls chairman Jerry Reiiigdotf said Thursday from his office at Comiskey Park, w h ere he planned to watch his other team, the White Sox. "I don't know what is in his head. We've had no conversations in months. I bandy talked to him at the celebration.... We can afford to pay him what we paid last year" \ But how much more? "I don't want to get into negotiations with Michael. We won't even be able to talk until the middle of August. David Falk is on a cruise. When he gets back, then Michael David and I will have to talk." When Jordan returns and with Scot- tie Pippen apparently off the trading block — another requirement for Jor­ dan coming back —- the Bulls would then need to bring back cross-dressing, troublemaker professional-wrestling and six-time rebounding champion Dennis Rodman to keep their nucleus intact. "It's important for us to have the core of the team back for one more year, absolutely," Reinsdorf said earlier. "Phil and [general manager] Jerry Krause and even Michael and Scottie have said they would like to see Dennis back," Reinsdorf said. "But our next priority is Michael." And if Rodman does return, it will be with die understanding that die con­ duct that caused him to be suspended for 14 games last season won't be toler­ ated, Reinsdorf said. One key player who won't be back is center Brian Williams, who received the league minimum after joining the team late last season. Williams played an important role in the playoff run but will command a much higjier salary than the Bulls can afford. Reinsdorf took over a major role in negotiating the one-year deal for Jack­ son that is worth $6 million. The deal was announced Wednesday. Reinsdorf, according to newspaper accounts, flew from his Phoenix home to Glacier Park International Airport near Kalispell, Mont., then motored to near Whitefish, Mont., where he and the vaca­ tioning Jackson met privately last Friday. "I had no specific message to deliv­ er," Reinsdorf said. "There was just the fact that Jerry Krause and [agent] Todd [Musburger] were more than $3 million apart on money and I could see their talks seemed to be going nowhere. I stepped in to step things up." Reinsdorf claimed Jordan's threat to retire if Jackson didn't return was not a major factor in re-signing the coach* What was, he said, was the team's inability to get what it thought would be a fair trade for Pippen. "Once we decided to keep Scottie, we're saying we're keeping the team intact and if we're keeping it intact, we would be foolish not to bring back the coach," Reinsdorf said Thursday. "If we had traded Scottie, Phil would not have wanted to come back." WW Jordan and Jackson pair up for a sixth titte? fas Kansas City 5, Minnesota 3 Boston 3, Oakland 0 Seattle 11, Cleveland 1 Anaheim at N.Y. Yankees, ppd., rain Toronto 5, Milwaukee 4 Chicago White Sox 2, Texas 1 HATH ML LEMUE Philadelphia 7, San Francisco 4 San Diego 8, Pittsburgh 6 Houston 10, Montreal 5 Colorado 7, Chicago Cubs 1 N.Y. Mets 3, Los Angeles 1 ink Duncan to 3-year contract a SAN ANTONIO— No. 1 draft pick Tim Duncan signed with the San Antonio Spurs on Thursday, setting the stage for him to play alongside center David Robinson this coming season. The Spurs would not disclose terms of the deal, but under league rules, his three-year con­ tract is worth slightly more than $10 million. He becomes a free agent after three years. San Antonio used the top pick in the NBA draft in June to select Duncan, a center from Wake Forest and the consensus player of the year. He was twice a first- team* All-American and aver­ aged 20.8 points, a national-best 14.7 rebounds and 3.3 blocks per game his senior year. The team envisions the 7-foot Duncan as part of a powerful front line featuring 7-1 Robinson, a seven-time All-Star whom the Spurs drafted in 1987, the last time the Spurs had the top pick. Spurs officials have said Robinson and Duncan both may play center and power forward. "I think it's going to be a hard matchup problem for teams that play us," said Sam Schuler, director of player personnel. "It's a nice combination to have and gives us that variability." San Antonio, which opens the regular season at Denver on Oct. 31, will be trying to recover from last season's franchise-worst 20- 62 performance. Robinson was out with back and foot problems and played only six games all year, and several other key play­ ers suffered an array of injuries. J Duncan and Spurs coach Gregg Popovich were not imme­ diately available for comment Thursday. They were headed to Utah, where Duncan will play in a summer league along with teammates Monty Williams and Cory Alexander, said team spokesman Tom James. Popovich, who also is the team 's general manager, has praised Duncan's wide range of basketball skills and his maturi­ ty and has said Duncan likely will play a major role with the Spurs from the start. Schuler echoed that sentiment Thursday. "Right now, we're thinking we're going to throw him right into the wolves and see how much he can take, put him into the fire and let him go at it as much as he can stand," Schuler said. rEurope gets Cup visit for 1st time H NEW YORK — The Stanley G up, which has been to bar­ -rooms and churches, the White and TV talk shows, is it's never going somewhere een before — to Russia. Next month, the Cup is being to Moscow by three of the Russian players who helped the Detroit Red Wings win it, Slava Fetisov, Vyacheslav Kozlov and Igor Larionov. The trophy will be paraded •through the streets of Moscow, then put it on display in Red Cup, which has never "been in Russia or the Soviet Union, also will be shown off at charity hockey game. — Compiled from Associated Press reports mufti rani ■ The UT Athletic Ticket office is offering student season ticket packages for the 1997 football season. Call 471-3333 for com­ plete information. ■ DTSport9®utx vms.cc.utexas.edu Please send questions, comments or concerns to the Daily Texan Sports office address. P age 8 Friday, July 2 5 ,1 9 9 7 T h e D a ily T exan Squad looking forward to trip ■ After a full week at St. Edward's, the Cowboys are looking forward to the change of pace brought about by this weekend's upcom­ ing scrimmage with San Diego at die Sun Bowl in El Paso. Adding to that excitement might be that the trek westward is only one of two preseason trips for Dal­ las this year and is a relatively short one. Last summer, the Cowboys played exhibition games and scrim­ mages in El Paso, Mexico and Orlando, Fla. Some say the extra traveling hindered team's preparation for the regular season, which they began by dropping three of their first four contests. the "I think we're looking forward to a little break and a chance to get some work in against someone other than ourselves," running back Emmitt Smith said. "I think the players are looking forward to that short trip. And it is a short trip — just down and back." A capacity crowd of 52,000 wit­ nessed Dallas' Sun Bowl scrimmage with the then-Houston Oilers a year ago, and a similar throng is expected again on Saturday. boys' w orkhorse said. "Hopefully ril wake u p Sunday m ornings feel­ ing good tne rest of the year." Veteran winning battle for center position ■ Seventh-year pro John Flannery seems to be winning the battle for the starting center position over formerTtorida State All-American Clay Shiver. Flannery, a 6-3, 304-pound for­ mer Houston Oiler, has been see­ ing most of the first-team action throughout the first week of camp, in a role left vacant when Daljas released veteran Ray Donaldson for salary cap reasons on June 2. Flannery nas a size advantage on Shiver (6-2, 294), but has spent most of his career playing guard. "I may have the age and [NFL] experience on him," Flannery said of Shiver, a third-year player. "But if you look at it conversely, he has the youth and quickness in his comer. I’m just going to play hard, and let tire coaches make h e final decision." som into a top-notch kicker. I The Cowboys' trend of saving' salary-cap space by ignoring h e kicker position has paid off in* years past w ith underpriced p lay -' ers like Lin Elliott, Ken Willis, and Boniol. A nd according to Switzer, * h e r e is no early indication that Cunningham or Kight can’t make h a t success continue. "B o h guys kick h e , ball well," he said. "That's gonna be a tough call. It’s gonna be how h e y kick h e ball in ball games that's gonna separate h em ." Dallas' quote-a-minute offensive lineman Nate Newton agreed with j his coach to an extent, saying h a t h e young duo can't be judged un til' h e y experience game situations. "You know kickers — h e y a in 't' nothing until h e y do something," N ew ton said. "That’s h e bottom line. Till h e y do something, h e y ' ain't no Chris Boniol." — By Mike Finger and Je ff' McDonald, Daily Texan staff LaFleur impressive in first week of camp ■ Coaches and players have been impressed with rookie tight end David LaFleur, a 6-7, 280-pound No. 1 draft pick from Louisiana State, who seems to have had little trouble picking up Dallas' offen­ sive system. At least one veteran Cowboy, however, had some advice for h e 23-year-old LaFleur. "I like David a lot, but he needs to get nastier," said All-Pro wideout Michael Irvin, who is entering his 10th season in h e league. "He needs to look at h e guy across that line like [h e opponent] just slapped his mother. He can be the nicest guy in h e world, but when he walks out of h at tunnel, it needs to be like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde." Battle to replace Boniol heating up ■ The battle to replace departed free agent Chris Boniol seems to be heating up, as youngsters Richie Cunningham and Danny Kight are fighting the next to become unknown Cowboy rookie to bios- Cowboys schedule Wednesday, July 23: Afternoon practice only Thursday. July 24: Practice______ Friday, July 25: Afternoon practice only ______________ Saturday, July 26: Scrimmage vs. San Diego Chargers El Paso, 8 p.m. _ Sunday, July 27: Ño practice Monday, July 28: Afternoon practice only__________________________ Tuesday, July 29: Practice with Oakland Raiders__________ July 30: Practice with Oakland Raiders_______________ July 31: Scrimmage with Oakland Raiders, Burger Center, Austin, 7:30 p.m.________________ Aug. 1: Afternoon practice o n ly ____ Aug. 2: Morning practice only ___ Aug. 3: Exhibition vs. Oakland Raiders, Texas Stadium, Irving, 7 p.m.____________________ Practice Schedule 8:35 a.m.: Specialists on field______ 9:10-10:45 a.m.: Practice 3:50 p.m.: Specialists on field_______ 4TÍ5-6 p.m.: Practice — All practice sessions are tentative and are subject to change. For up-to- the-minute practice schedules and last- minute changes, fans are encouraged to call the Dallas Cowboys Hotline at (972) 556-9308. Grade A report card ■ Through their first nine practices of the summer, the Cowboys have received straight A s from head coach Barry Switzer, who said Thursday that die team has put forth a "great effort" during the first week. "[The players] have got good pur­ pose and mindset about what we want from this camp," Switzer said, "and they're following through on it right now. I think that's great." Johnston recovering from bout with flu ■ Fullback Daryl Johnstpn returned to workouts Thursday, two days after leaving an afternoon workout early due to dehydration, a possible flu symptom. Johnston, who signed a new five-year, $7,575 million con­ tract over the off-season, has played in every regular season game since 1989, but said that streak might have come to an end had the 1997 regular season started on Tuesday. "It was tough enough trying to get through practice with a bit of the flu the other day," the Cow- Don Shula is carried off the field after notching his NFL-record 325th victory in 1993 at Veterans Stadium. Uncharted territory Don Shula adjusts to retirement by staying busier than ever "You enjoy seeing your kids and grandki^s more than you were able to in the past," Shula says. Associated Press U MIAMI — He wrestles w ith his grandchildren, loses to his wife at y[n, reads John Grisham novels and rails asleep w atching Nightline. After an extraordinary career, Don Shula is trying to enjoy an ordinary retirement. The adjustm ent h asn 't been easy. Shula stepped dow n reluctantly as coach of the Miami Dolphins in Jan­ uary 1996 after 33 NFL seasons. N ow 67, he w ill in terrupt his retirem ent routine on Saturday for his induction into the Professional Football H all of Fame. Then Shula will resume his life of leisure, a bit restless b u t otherw ise happy. "The m ost difficult thing," he ^ays, "has been going from knowing w here yo u'll be every m inute of every day to w here you wake up w ith no plan." "H e's w orking his way into it," says Shula's oldest daughter, Donna Cohen. "H e's getting better. With his workaholic personality, he needs to have a lot of things scheduled — family events, golf, tennis matches. He likes his calendar filled." As Shula anticipated, the change in lifestyle was especially tough last fall when, for the first time since childhood, he w asn 't on a football field. He attended several gam es an d spent num erous Sundays in front of his television, channel surf­ ing for the latest scores. Generally the scores w eren't good. Son David coached the Cincinnati Bengals and son Mike was an assis­ tant coach for the Tampa Bay Bucca­ neers. Both teams struggled, as did the Dolphins. "I knew I w ould miss Sunday afternoons the most, and that turned out to be true," Shula says. "I had hoped I'd be able to use up some of my anxiety watching Cincinnati and I knew I would miss Sunday afternoons the most, and that turned out to be true.” Don Simla, retired Mbmf coach — Tam pa Bay and the Dolphins. It turned out there was a lot of frustra­ tion there because they w ere all struggling at the sam e time." So, increasingly, Shula looks else­ w here for competition. He finds it m ostly playing golf. In Miami, the Shulas' home on Bis- cayne Bay is across the street from a golf course. Their sum m er home in N orth Carolina's Blue Ridge Moun­ tains overlooks a fairway. Shula plays as much as he can, works on his swing at the practice tee and wel­ comes tips from a neighbor and close friehd, golfer Raymond Floyd, a win­ ner of four majors. Shula's handicap is dow n to 18, and he sank a hole-in-one last year in Hawaii during a practice round for the Senior Skins. "That was the talk of the cocktail party that night," Shula says. "Nick- laus and Palmer were on adjacent holes, and I had the hole-in-one." Long oblivious to popular culture (he thought Don Johnson of Miami Vice was an actual policeman), Shula now enjoys going to the movies. He keeps active in charity work for breast cancer research and the United Way. He also basks in his role as a grandfa­ ther of six children, ages 2 to 13. "H e's almost on the goofy side says daughter them ," arou nd Donna. But the jutting jaw still looks the sam e as in newsreel footage of the D olphins' 17-0 season 25 years ago, and celebrity will always separate his retirem ent from most. After all, the m an coached back-to-back Super Bowl champions and set an NFL record w ith 347 victories. "I took him to one of my son's baseball games," Donna says. "Two kids came up for an autograph, and then there was a line around the w hole ballpark. H e just gets mobbed. It makes it hard for him to be a regular grandparent." Shula's nature has always been to look ahead rather than dwell on the past, a trait that served him well as a coach. H e'll adm it, however, he regards his final season — and par­ ticularly a 37-22 playoff loss at Buf­ falo — as his biggest regret. "The fact I didn't bow out a Super Bowl w inner — that w ould have been the ideal way to end a career," he says. "It didn 't happen. Instead, there was the frustration of playing poorly in the last game I coached." With 526 NFL gam es in his past, Shula now faces a m ore simple chal­ lenge: keeping busy. H e's healthy, w ealthy and wise enough to know life is still good. "I think he's through the worst of it," daughter Donna says. "I see him relaxing a lot more. Toward the end of his career, he'd enjoy the offsea­ son m ore and more, and he had to w ork harder to gear himself up for the season because he knew it was going to consume him. "Sometimes I think he's a little grateful to have some of that pres­ sure relieved and just have an ordi­ nary life for a change." DAN' S LIQUOR 1600 L A V A C A 5353 B U R N E T RO AD 478-5423 459-8689 SPECIALS. GOOD FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIALS CASH OR CHECK A LL SPIRITS 80 PR. UNLESS NOTED ANCIENT A G E bou r. JOHNSON BRANDY... T+L S CO TC H ...................... CASTILLO RUM.......... EARLY TIMES w ky .Liter 8 .9 !' .Liter 7 .4 9 ..Liter 7 .6 9 .Liter 6 .4 9 7so mL CUTTY SARK SCOTCH ....... 750 mL 1 3 .9 9 GRANTS SCOTCH--------------- 750 mL 1 0 .9 9 O’DARBY IRISH CREAM 34'.750 mL 6 .9 9 ANDRE CHAMPAGNE ex dry .750 mL 2 fo r5 .0 0 1.7S Litre EZRA BROOKS b ou r. 90°. .. ANCIENT AGE b o u r _______ 1 JIM BEAM b o u r------------------ 1 b .» y 10.99 NORTHERN LIGHT c a n a d CUTTY SARK s c o t c h — -_~.23.99l 12.99 HIGHLAND MISTscotch 26.99| J-fB RARE scotch CRAWFORDS OR VAT 69 scotch ... 1 4 . GORDONS OR GILBEYS vooka .9 .99 .-----9.99 CALENDE TEQUILA GORDONS or GILBEYS gin._. McCORMICK VODKA---------- f.W PEARL ttozcAM— ~— «re* "3.99 SHINER BOCK it cu mt inw 4.75 BUSCH or HIGHUFE «taz tor. m 2 .49 Big 12: Osborne only coach absent from event Continued from page 7 thank the television people for most of it. While I would prefer to play on Thanksgiving, I play when ABC [television] wants us to play it." One of the most interesting things that arose from Thursday's meetings was the distinct displeasure among Kansas players of former head coach Glen Mason's resignation. Mason had originally accepted the Georgia job just prior to the 1995 Aloha Bowl. But after the Jayhawks defeated UCLA 51-30 in Honolulu, Mason did an about face. Mason announced that he wanted to stay at KU for another season. Kansas suffered through a 4-7 campaign last year, and Mason quit to take the helm at Minnesota. "I wasn't surprised that coach Mason left, because we knew that he was looking for somewhere else to go," KU running back Eric Vann said. "[The Aloha Bowl] was like we were playing for ourselves, because we did­ n't know who our coach was going to be. After he made his announcement, I never saw him again. "The only time I've seen him since was on the news wearing a Golden Gopher smile." N ew Kansas coach Terry Allen, a Division I-AA coach from Northern Iowa, has implemented a player- friendly atmosphere that botn Vann and defensive back Tony Blevins love to be around. "Coach Allen is a player's coach," Blevins said, "and Mason is the type of coach that coaches out of fear." Based on a poll taken prior to the conference meetings, media mem­ bers have pegged Texas and Nebras­ ka to be in the Big 12's second cham­ pionship game to be held in San Antonio's Alamodome. But Dykes warned that picking the winners so early in the season may make for some unsavory crow later on down the line. "When you can pick the winners in August, that takes a lot of the fun out of September and October," Dykes said. "There were a lot of teams that could win on any given number of Saturdays, and that hap­ pened on more than one occasion." Rangers: Pitchers’ duel ends in heroic fashion Continued from page 7 inning and waved to the crowd before stepping into the box. "It was an emotional thing, pretty special," Ventura said. Martinez walked to start the bot­ tom of the eighth and moved up on Ozzie Guillen's sacrifice off Hill (5- 8). Ray Durham popped out before Ventura delivered. Ventura had 34 home runs and 105 RBIs last season. His replacement, Chris Snopek, hit .223 with five CHRIS'S LIQUOR S? 01 C A M E R O N R D 451 7391 O P E N 10 9 P M O A K HILL L I Q U O R h036 HWY 290 Wt.ST O p e n 1 0 a m - 9 p m ...6 tor 3 . 4 9 .6tor 6 . 4 9 1210(1 2 . 3 P h 692-0607 TECATE BEER CANS (Mexico; YOUNG S WINTER N.E ‘England! HEINEKEN (HoNandj ■ ■ 7 . 4 9 SP ATEN P R E M I U M L A G ER J.W. DUNDEE'S HONEY BROWN 4 . 6 9 I H U B ’S 010 WINTER N i (EngM) ip*u«ta 1 . 7 9 MCEWAN’S EXPORT (Scottand)6 tor 7 . 4 ! SIERRA NEVADA CELEBRATION ALE 6NX 8 . 9 9 u fiFG O N BEER P E T E S WI CKED B E E R LjfjT i ' V.I lT^iI *3 A A B 5 . 4 9 : h ” N A T U R A L L I G H T or u g h M I L W A U K E E ' S BEST K' : 4 3 . 9 9 iT1 Ky w M IMMAMAM CLUB MT CAM. WKY.17SL 1 « 4 . 9 9 1 2 5 . 9 9 • " ..1.75 L 1 1 . 9 9 GORDON’S GIN 80* . . 1 . 7 5 1 1 4 . 9 9 SMIRNOFF VODKA 80° .,17 5 i 1 6 . 9 9 IACARDI RUM 80° tm SCOTCH WKY 86* .750 m l 1 8 . 9 9 SAUZA TEQUILA SILVER It* ..1.75117.99 1 3 . 9 9 w m w n ~ r ^■ . * - ; ' homers and 35 RBIs. The win moved the White Sox within 3 games of Cleveland in the AL Central. Matt Karchner (3-0) got the victory despite giving up a game-tying solo homer to Dean Palmer in the eighth. Roberto Hernandez pitched the ninth for his 26th save. For six innings, it was a duel of one- hitters between veteran pitchers Hill and Doug Drabek, who entered the Austin Sports Connection Startrek Deep Space 9 $1.59/pack 97 Ultra II Baseball (Hobby) 97 Topps Football SI .59/pack 97-98 Fleer B a s k e tb a ll $1.59/pack 8 3 1 2 B u r n e t R d . = 1 1 9 2 9 1 9 M a n c h a c a N o r t h of S t e c k on B u m f t 1 bl k S of L a m a r 4 5 8 - 6 4 3 3 4 4 2 - 1 2 4 2 game with losing records and ERAs over 5.00. Hill hadn't won since Jul/4 and Drabek since June 17. Thomas for the game's first run. Hill held the White Sox hitless for 4fc innings before Harold Baines doubled off the left-field wall. The Sox didn't get another hit until Frank Thomas' one* out single in the seventh that was fot * ' lowed by a walk to Albert Belle. Baines lined a single to right to score . "Hill made some great pitches t$ some good hitters," said Texas man* ager Johnny Oates. "He pitched 'a *■' great game. But not good enough or better T"' Drabek gave up a leadoff single to Mark McLemore and then shfct down the Rangers, giving up just á third-inning walk to Damon Buford and then retiring 12 straight before Juan Gonzalez singled with one out in the seventh. than Drabek. He walked one and struck out a sea­ son-high six. Hill lasted 7% inning, giving up four hits and six walks. I PLEASANT’S AUCTION HOUSE S u r p lu s & R e p o s s e s s e d P r o p e r t y A U C T I O N Gp ■ I I S e l l i n g f o r L a k e T r a v i s I S D & o t h e r $aetííe4TTIÍTOrsB T h e s , J u l y 2 9 th , 6 p m ★ P r e v . 4 U « I Property will include: Nd¡Y electric coffee makers^CooWfc I sofas, Vinyl Living ■ gtf|81 t I Bres*er wAMiqJ: V I Screen TV, ' S ‘ ■ ovens, indoor grills, ‘ ■ lam p tables, lamps, bookcases,- bod Bedroom Suité, Oak King size * pRbeds, ‘95 Mitsubishi Big J * ' • ■ all purchases [ajrciTBlvcf B I Phone: 512-832-9006 « I ♦ B o n d e d ★ l i e 6641 ★ j f i : '"i* . Borders,etc. r á i i a M M H r T h e D a ily T e x a n 9 FM M l JUUT 26,1M7 SOUND BITE RMIUOM Artist: Various Label: Beggar’s Banquet Rating: **7 a (out of five) Yes, Gary Numan had other songs besides "C ars." Some of them were even hits in his native England. This two disc tribute com­ pilation is loaded with fellow Brits and Europeans, hence the inclusion of EMF and Jesus Jones. You might be shocked to read that they marginally improved after they fell from American conscious­ ness (they try here but annoying vocals ruin it). Numan's formula was standard chord progressions, in a catchy arrangement, played on analog synthesizers. But die real hook was his cold, androgyne voice intoning a gloomy future for human- machine relations. Often, these ele­ ments met in songs too similar and too long. This is the strength and weakness of Random; the bands using clever instrumentation invig­ orate his songwriting while those who play it straight magnify his shortcomings. St. Etienne wastes a perfectly good band name by making dis­ posable techno with diva vocals on "Stormtrooper in Drag." Matt Sharp (W eezer/Rentals) and Damon Albam (Blur) camp it up on a heartfelt cover of an obscure track, "We Have a Techni­ cal," bringing their collection of old synth and pop sensibilities to play. Stephin Merritt, the Phil Spector of our age, blesses this compilation with "I Die. You Die" featuring banjo. W ho'd have thought it would sound so great, completely removed from the stylistic overkill of too many synths? Posh and Earl Brutus (buzz bands of England) plod along with the originally boring "She's Got Claws" and "M .E." Earl Brutus commit an egregious error with a wanky guitar solo and theatrics, forcing a comparison to Queen. Underdog tear it up with the lo- tech hip hop of "Films," featuring Lewis Parker, Supa T and DJ MK taking liberties with Numan's lyri­ cal flow. A truly innovative track with stylistic surprises. How can a band signed by the great Mo' Max label, produced by the Dust Bros, and loved by Beck be so boring? Despite Sukia's rep, their Esquivel rhythms and rinky-dink electrónica smack of degeneration. Alex Patterson and Co. maintain the Orb's commitment to dub- heavy sonic wallpaf>er. Chill way out to an unrecognizable track. Extracting foe circus-like bit, Jim Tenor recasts "Down in foe Park" as a broken down calliope tune before to a shifting gears Kraftwerk-like arrangement. Too long, but foe dash of Muzak works. Ever heard Tori Amos doing "Smells Like Teen Spirit?" Four thoughts cycle as An Pierle tickles the ivories in an Amos turn on "Are 'Friends' Electric?": this is funny, it's a good arrangement; how pas­ sionate; and how cheezy. Moloko's whiteboy synth funk rendition of the same song also scores big. Chris Holmes made a small criti­ cal splash with his pop band Yum- Yum and works his magic here solo on "Remember I Was Vapor." Can a vocoder (Speak-and-Spell vocals) ever not sound unnaturally cool? Lush production improves much on foe original. Then, the collection divebombs. The last half of the second disc is plagued by bland pop, goth and hard rawk. República continue their assault on good taste with "Are 'Friends' Electric," done better on this album. Their note-for-note replica of the original features Numan guesting with "I've got in- yr-face chick attitude" singer Saf­ fron. Dave Clarke plays with fire and loses in his tepid mimicry of "Cars." Really now, shouldn't the producers have tried to get a better version of Numan's biggest hit? This could have been a tight, exdting record if they had cast out the detritus. Two CDs of synth-y tunes can drive you crazy. But, I have to recommend it for standout tracks by foe innovative soldiers in Numan's Tubeway Army. — John St. Denis T E X A S U N I O N F I L M S J U L Y 2 5 - 3 1 Saint Clara E S E E E 5 U cit> 01 L(lst Z W Í m m I T i x m U n i o n Fn 4 S *r 9 p m S u n 7 p m M o n , W b , 4 T h u r > A 4 S n a F i:i Ü S t 11 i S ir; <)> V.’fi. & Thih 11cm Q Come fly the not-so friendly skies Harrison Ford and Gary Oldman make1‘Air Force a soaring summer hit TROY PtCKETT DaMy Texan Staff Air Force One is first and foremost a good summer movie. That is both curse and praise, depending on four assessment of summer films. It is smarter than anything this side of Contact, but that doesn't say too much. Harrison Ford FILM Elays President James Marshall, a tough, onest commander in chief unafraid of political risk and aiming for what is right. His is a character almost impossible to believe — even them aliens in Men in Black are more plausible. The charismatic Ford, however, can make any character believable. And this one is no different. After delivering a speech stating that the U.S. will not negotiate with any terrorists and will strike at any unjust governments, the president climbs aboard Air Force One to head home with his wife Grace Marshall (Wendy Crewson) and teen-age daughter Alice (Liesel Matthews). But Ivan Kor­ shunov (Gary Oldman), a Russian ultra-nationalist who longs for the mother country's old communist ways, has other plans. After posing as a television journalist in order to board the plane, he takes over the aircraft with the help of a traitorous ally. The plane's crew attempts to protect the president by putting him into an escape pod and jettisoning him to safety. But he refuses to go, remaining on board to protect his family. While Marshall passes up his escape, Korshunov is shooting whoever gets in his way. Once he gains control of the plane and succeeds in a tense, touch-and-go landing, he calls Vice President Bennett (Glenn Close) to make his demands. As is customary, he promises to kill a hostage every so often until his wishes are met. The president eventually has to kill some bad guys, save the hostages and the day. And as the action builds towards climax, it gets very close to becoming simply unbelievable. Director Wolfgang Petersen pulls back, though, maintaining your tenu­ ous belief in an otherwise unbelievable course of events. Ford and Oldman deliver truly superb perfor­ mances. Oldman, who has made a career playing ^!7^ bñ sum m SeH a^ oñ^ r?pta^ 7iél^m M Señtw lSíou t precedent in the summer’s Air Force One. | film M FORCE ONE Starring: Harrison Ford, Gary Oldman, Glenn Close Director: Wolfgang Petersen Playing at: Arbor, Highland, Lakehills, Lakeline, Movies 12, Northcross, Riverside, Roundrock Rating: ★ ★ ★ (o u t of five) bad guys (JFK, True Romance, The Professional), has moved to die meanies' head of die dass. He keeps his volatile anger right at the surface, and the fire- cracker fuse always seems about to ignite. Ford, as a deaned-up Rambo, is both the mortar that keeps die film together and the brick with which it is built. There is not another actor in Hollywood who could kick some ass and still look presidential. The supporting cast, including Close, is passable — but the script gives them little to do. And Petersen's direction is merely competent. He builds a fair amount of suspense, but fails to create the nail- biting, white-knuckle fear that was just within his reach. His previous directorial outing, In the Line of Fire, suffered similar problems. But the movie is fun. Although it never manages to be more than an action flick, it is a first dass sum­ mer ticket. Enjoy the flight. HBO bests networks in Emmy nominations The Em m y Aw ards will be announced Sept. 14. CBS got 60 nominations, ABC 44 and Fox 19, for a network total of 212. HBO aryd 14 other cable channels got a record 138 nominations in all. In 1988, the first year cable was even rec­ ognized by the Em m ys, HBO received six nominations. Members of the Academy of Tele­ vision Arts & Sciences proved unsen­ timental, to nominate Roseanne for the final season of Roseanne. failing Also overlooked were series unveiled during the 1996-97 season, including the acclaimed The Practice. The academ y voters did salute Ellen DeGeneres of Ellen with a best comedic actress nomination in a year in which the ABC sitcom drew both praise and criticism for bringing DeGeneres' character out as a lesbian. ER hunk George Clooney, who's been splitting his time between TV and movies of late, was bypassed for the first tim e in the show 's three years. Co-stars Anthony Edwards, Julianna Margulies and Sherry String- field got lead acting nominations. Friends didn't receive a best-come- dy nomination, although an error during the awards announcement briefly had the show among the nom­ inees. A real supporting actress nomi­ nation did go to Lisa Kudrow as flaky Phoebe. " I was expecting to be disappoint­ ed," said X-Files creator Chris Carter. "The show became really popular this year, and I thought there might be a backlash. It's my paranoia, I guess." Associated Press LOS ANGELES — TV's Big Three networks aren't just suffering viewer erosion because of cable. They' re suf­ fering awards erosion, too. For the first time ever, a cable channel — HBO — got more Emmy nomina­ tions than any of die major networks. Home Box Office got a whopping 90 nominations in the 49th annual Emmy nomina­ tions announced Thursday, edging NBC's 89. Symbolically, that small gap is vast. After a half-century of dominating the fnedium, the networks are losing ground in both audience and prestige. • "It's a significant acknowledgment Within the industry of the sea of change that has been taking place am ong view ers within the last \iecade," said Larry Gerbrandt, an analyst with the media research firm Paul Kagen Assodates. "What view­ ers are increasingly finding is diere is programming as fresh, as original, as well-produced on cable" as on the major networks. * N BC's hard-charging medical "drama ER did lead with 22 nomina­ tions and remains TV's most-watched show. But HBO's The Larry Sanders Show beat the network sitcoms with 16 nominations, the most ever for a comedy in one year. "T h is is a landm ark m om ent," HBO executive Chris Albrecht said. F R A N K C A P R A C l N T I N N I A 1 YO U CA N 'T T A K I IT W ITH YO U frl 4 7 1 a 0 (1938) [B4W] Jean Arthur, Lionel Barrymore, James Stewart. Botad on lha hit Gaorga S. Kaufman • Mott Hart play, thit highly entertaining tola of on accantric houtahold won Oteare for Batf Pictura and Diractor. 1 W B B — W W W IT H A P M N ID O N I NIO HT f r I C 9 , 5 0 (1934) [BAW] Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert. Thit lagandary rood movia virtually I craatad tha "tcrawball comady" ganre, and wot tha first film to win oH fiva major Otcort. X-Flles received 12 nominations despite a season of critical backlash. Other program s making strong showings included The X-Files on Fox with 12 nom inations and ABC's NYPD Blue with 11. Frasier and Sein­ feld, both on NBC, got nine each. General Cinema BARGAIN MATINEES EVERY DAY I ALL SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 6fW| * INDICATES VW» RESTRICTIONS APPLY MIDNIGHT SH * WS EVERY F R I D A Y & S A T U R D A Y I t H A t h. I I I n I I T I M l S D N l ' t HIGHLAND 10 . 1 - 3 5 a t M I P P U nSKVILLi E D 4 5 4 - 9 5 * 2 M M V R N B H I K * o N K > u t s c m i n s I SC M EN l ! 12:40 3 :3 0 4 :3 0 9 :2 0 n 2 : 10J B N H A V f lM I SCREEN 2 : 1:10 4 :0 0 7 :0 0 9 :5 0 S M W M / f t jX I SCREEN 3 : 11:30 2 :1 0 5:1 0 3 :0 0 0 1 :0 0 1 M M T A l I SCREEN 4 : 1:40 4 :3 0 7 : 2 S 10:15 M M t H , I G E O R G E o f t h o J U N O L E * O N T W O SC R E IN S 9 0 1: 1:20 1:40 5:50 0:00 10:10 [12:151 S O U Y I SC I SCREEN 2 : 1:0 0 1 :0 5 5:10 7:20 9:10 [11:30] SltRIO I A S I M P L E W I S H 1:4 5 1 :4 5 5 :4 5 9Ó M U Y | H E R C U L E S 1 :0 0 3 :0 0 5 :0 0 7:1 0 0 SIMIO I 12 :5 0 3:1 0 5 :2 0 7 :4 0 10 :0 0 [12:201 9 0 1 3 1: 4 0 4 : 2 0 7 :0 0 9 : 4 0 ü | a | | f ^ H * 7 :5 0 10:30 9 0 1 1 5 - '. . . . ; GREAT HILLS 8 . U S 1 S 3 4 M E A T H IL L S T R A I L 7 * 4 - 4 0 7 6 n ^ B ^ 0 ^ ^ ^ J n 2:151 9 0 1 1 SUMO « C O N T A C T ON THREE SCREENS - 9 0 I SCREEN 1: 1:45 5 : 0 0 1 :1 5 H I: 1 0 Í TN X /B M fV A l | SCREEN 2 : 1:15 4 :3 0 7 :4 5 T N X / M O m i I SCREEN 3 : 12:45 4 :0 0 7:15 10 :3 0 M M 1A I / M U Y I E M M IN B L A C K O N 2 SCREENS R I SC M EN 1: 12:00 2 :3 0 5 :0 0 7 :3 0 1 0 :0 0 E O il I SCREEN 2 : 2 :0 0 4 .3 0 7 :0 0 9 :3 0 112:001 M M B É l i I O U T T O « E A 12:15 2 :3 0 4 :4 5 7:15 9 : 30 l _ f G I F T C E R T I F I C A T E S O N SA LE W I N N E R B e s t F e a t u r e M ila n G a y F ilm F e s t iv a l (12: 1 0 S a t i S » i ) D C U f S , B s s n s s s i i = 3 ^ s l i i i i i S i female R n m m iH 5 ANAf**T| \/2 m** 730pm h l lg * * I (11:45 SattSun) [2*>4:3fr7:tMfclB I Scream 11:45 pm W ill ÜMRMt 11:36 pm I I4534W ESTGATE BLVD. N M » H M I1 K I« lU lf M li Austin s Lowest Prices for TVs • VCR’s • Stereos • Microwaves • Major Appliances Home & Car Audio ; (12:00 Sat& Sun) D O B K S L 2:15-4:40-7:30-9:25 n Y rrftS S AIWA PORTABLE CD PLAYER W/ELECTRONIC ANTI-SHOCK AND HEADPHONES | • Etoctronic AaS Shock Syatwn • 1-Sit DmM DAC. 1XP-600 8868 RESEARCH ■ BLVD. I ungí NMEt M» un oma 4 6 7 -6 1 7 4 J Page 10 Friday. 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Credit slips are non-transferrable. In c o n s id e ra tio n of th e Daily Texan's a c c e p ta n c e o f a d v e rtis in g copy fo r publication, the agency end the advertiser will indemnify end save harmless, Texas S tu d e n t P ublicatio ns and its o ffic e rs employees, and agents against all loss lia b ility , dam age, end expense of w h a tso e ve r n a tu re a risin g o u t of th e copying, p rin tin g , o r p u blishing of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney's fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, plag iarism and co p yrig h t and_ trademark infringement RENTAL RENTAL TRANSPORTATION ■ REAL ESTATE SALES ■ MERCHANDISE RENTAL 130-Condos* 300-Oorogs* 350 SETON CONDOS $65,000- 3 left, w/washer/dryer, huge big/balcony, one block from cam­ pus. 474-01 11 CCP. 7-8-20B-A units, GIANT GARAGE Sale Vegetarian Network. Saturday 7/26, Wheats- ville Coop. 3101 Guadalupe 8am- 1 2noon. Coll with donations 252- 1919. 7-24-2B 10 «M bc. Autos 1989 TOYOTA Corolla. Good run­ ning condition. $27CX). Please call 912-1622 7-22-5B-B 20 - Spoft s f orsigw A/C. Autos '90 MIATA, white with hard top, ground effects, 5-speed, AM/FM tape, alarm, mag wheels 95,000 miles. $7500 346-9707. 7-22-5B 19 8 7 TO YO TA Supra 7 8 ,0 0 0 miles G rea t looking. Powered ev­ erything Please Sale for $ 4 0 0 0 call 9 1 2 -1 6 2 2 . 7-22-20B-B 1 0 0 -Vtefclu Wanted CASH PAID/ free towing car/ trucks any condition for salvage Free re­ moval junk vehicles. Kevin 458- 2122. 7-1-20B-C _ _ _ _ _ REAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 - Services Buy, Sell, Lease Comprehensive Computerized Efficient Open Every Day On-staff Attorney/CPA Huge Selection http://www.austmre.com/ habitat.htm 800-482-8651,482-8651 h a b ita t@ b g a .c o m h a b n a r h u n reK S n e a L w K S 120 -Housos LEASE PURCHASE option. Fixer-up­ per $60,000. 5600 Roosevelt St. Drive by first, then call for more in­ formation. Owner/agent Edward, 459-4488. 7-9-20B-B WHY PAY rent for 4 years Buy now, low down payment Fixer up­ per. 5600 Roosevelt 459-4488, Owner/Agent. 7-25-20B-B 130 - Condo»- CROIX CONDO lg /7 5 0 Sq. Ft. $70,900. Blocks from campus, hugé living-bedroom, covered parking. 474-0111. 6-27-20B-A For Sale Starwest 1-1 Gateway 1-1 Lenox M Westfíeld 2-1 Treehouse 2-1 2-2 Robbins PL West University 2-2 1-1 Centennial 2-2 Centennial 3-3 Talisman 3-2 Centennial 35.9K 39.9K 59.9K 64.9K 74.9K 75.5K 75.5K 79.9K 120K 127.9K 130K Largest University Inventory 476-1976 GREAT ONE-BEDROOM condo. Ground floor end unit with fireplace On UT Shuttle. Terrific shape! Call Janet at 328-8200 Coldwell Bank­ er, Richard Smith Rlts 7-23-5B MERCHANDISE 2 0 0 - F u r nS f u r u » Household [FREE DELIVERY| I For UT S tu d e n ttl I S 89.95 T W IN SET w FRA M E FULL SET w FRAM E S 99.95 Q U E E N SET w FRA M E $13 9 .9 5 S 49.95 4 D R A W E R CHEST S 6 9 95 $ 1 7 9 .9 5 S I 19.95 C e n t e x F u r n itu r e W h o l e s a l e | STUDENT DESK . S O F A S > $ PIECE D IN ETTE 4 5 0 0 9 8 8 6618 N . LAMAR 12001 S LAMAR_______ 445-5808 Beds, Beds, Beds The factory outlet far S im m or Sealy, Spnngair We carry closeouts, discontinued covers, 4 factory 2nds. From 50-70% off retail store pnces All new, complete with warranty. Twin set, $69. Full set, $89 Queen set, $119 King set, $149 7530 Bunwt ltd. 454-3422 S Q U A R E UNDER N E W MANAGEMENT! ¡All units Newly Remodeled! TWO BEDROOM/1 BATH . All Bills Paid • Fum/Unfurn • Ceiling Fans ONE BEDROOMS • All Bills Paid • Furn/Unfum • Very Large EFFICIENCIES • All Bills Paid • Separate Kitchen • Two Closets • Fum/Unfurn LIMITED AVAILABILITY W/C SHUTHi STOP WALK TO CAMPUS SPBQAL RATES MANAGEMENT OFFICE ONSITE 2212 San Gabriel Austin, Texas 7t705 7 4 - 7 1 _ Tell us what you I want, what you really, reauy want. Let us show you our “Spicy” inventory. ■ ■ http://w w .ausfinre.com / habitat.htm 800-482-8651,482-8651 ■ Buy, Sell, Lease I I h a b ita t@ b g a .c o m mm I h a k n a T b u n r e n s K e a lw K S 3 5 0 - F u m . A p t» * P ark A v e . Place Apts. $3 75 /m o S u m m e r $ 4 5 0 /m o - Fall 1 block from U T. ABP, free cable/parking, fully furnished, quiet, clean property. Call 474 2224 ---------------- - y .. Attention freshmen... **!! No Waiting List! Private Women's Dorm Enjoy life in an affordable, luxurious nunsion-style home. • s blocks to UT •ABP • Luxurious furnishings • Free cable/parking • Compnter/UT Internet access • Housekeeping • Controlled Access m Preleasing for Fall! Call 474-2224/ 1-888-474-2224 toll free 2222 Pearl m WEST CAMPUS Efficiencies on WC Shuttle FALL/SPRING 97/98 Furnished $450/mo Unfurnished $425/mo * 1 bedroom Available $ 1 (X) discount on year leases Gas, water, and cable PAID Barranca Square Apts. 910 W. 26th 4 6 7 - 2 4 7 7 o r e -m a il: d w ill 3@ix.netcom.com RENTAL 360»f|Wn.Apte. WALK TO CAMPUS Avalon Apartments: 32nd at I-35 •2 -2 $ 5 9 5 • 1-1 $ 4 4 5 • Eft. $385 W a lk to e n g in e e r in g , law . LBJ s c h o o l a n d all E a s t C a m p u s . W a lk -in c lo s e ts , c e ilin g fa n s , o n -s ite la u n d r y , m gr. 4 5 9 - 9 8 9 8 Open 7 d a y s and evenings 6-30-2ÜB A LARGE 1-1'S. Furnished west Cam­ pus. Free cable, gas paid, pool, $525 AFS, 322-9556. 6-30-20P-B WEST CAMPUS. Furnished 1-1 s $490-$515. Patio's, pool. Apart­ ment Finders, 322-9556. 6-30-20P-B 1-1 FURNISHED-PATIO. Great loca­ tions $410-$440. Apartment Find­ ers, 322-9556. 6-30-20P-B I ^ ^ E R F E C T ^ i 2Bd, IBd & Efficiency Apartm ents! G r a n a d a III 453-8652 Century Plaza 452-4366 Cetdmt) Squaw 478-9775 Park Plaza 452-6518 /& GREAT 1-BEDROOM APARTMENTS! 1 /2 Block from LAW school Furnished and quiet $ 4 5 0 /m o TOW ERVIEW APARTMENTS 320-0482 926 E 26th #208 7-3 208-A W A LK T O UT Fall Preleasing fro m $399! Efficiencies, 1-1's, 2-1's Furn/Unf 104 E. 32nd (block Speedway) 2514 Pearl, 4103-5 Speedway 472-7044, 342-1723 Jerrick Apartments 7-7-20-B-A 302 WEST 38th Great rates on furnished efficiencies, 1 bedrooms, 2 bedrooms. Ceiling fans, dishwashers, frost free refrigerator, laundry room, swimming pool. Located near UT, shopping, city, and UT buses Gas, water, garbage and cable paid. 4 5 3 “ -4002. 7-11 -2 0 K L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S SELLING TWO black Naughahide sofas with leg res*. Great condition $150. Glass dining four chairs. Entire queen bed 272-4487 7-2 1-5NC table, IOMEGA ZIP Drive $120. Light Jray wrap-around computer desk 80 OBO Nancy 338-0574 7- 24-5B GREAT DEAL Stereo Toshiba TV 20 inches. Stereo VCR Panasonic with head cleaner tape rewinder, surge protector. $250 each. 472-5860 7-24-5B DESKTOP COMPUTER lyr. old 16 megs, 75-P, 4X CD, 14 inch moni­ tor, Windows 95 and more. Excel­ lent condition $725 477-1255 7- 24-5B 16 MM BOLEX movie camera Tur- rent-style 2 lenses $700 OBO Joe 472-1026 7-24-5B IAMATI ALTO Sax $575 Besson Trombone L-7 LeBlanc Clarinet used, excellent con­ dition $675. 243-1632 7-24-5NC like new $325 MOVING BOXES- all sizes- new and used. Best rates. $1.00 - $8.00 Call Fred at 326-3643 Pager 908-2698. 7-24-5NC FOR SALE, blue sofa & love seat $300. Turn bed $75 WordPro- cessor $50 Great Condition. Must sell by 8/1. 495-9184. 7-25-5B T H IS SPACE COULD HAVE BEEN W ORKING FOR Y O U ! FO R DISPLAY ADS, CALL 471-1865. FO R W ORD ADS, CALL 471-5244 EFF. & 1 -2 -3 -4 BDRM A P A R TM E N T S S ta r tin g a t $ 4 3 0 Preleasing for Summer & Fall. GREAT APARTMENTSI Efficiencies $425+, l- l $415+, Campus Area, Front Page Properties 480-851 8 7 15-20B-C WEST CAMPUS. Large 2-2. Fur­ nished Pool, large living room. 12- month-lease, August. Price negotiable. 4 1 9 -0 5 7 5 7-17- 10B A va ila ble RENTAL RENTAL SeO-Rm tíjl® l - l M ESQUITE TREE APARTMENTS A FEW UNITS IEFT Last chance for the best deal in West Campus. Pre-leasing 1-bedrooms, close to campus and shuttle. Fully furnished, frost-free refrigerator, self-cleaning oven, dishwasher, ceiling fans, study desk, TV, Cable, Jacuzzi and alarm system. Laundry room. 2 4 1 0 L o n g v ie w D r. C a ll B ria n N o v y 4 7 8 - 2 3 5 7 . 7-15-20B-D CASA DE SALADO APARTMENTS A FEW UNITS LEFT 2610-2612 Salado Street Last Chance for the Best Deal in West Campus Preleasing for Fall 1997 ‘ Family owned and managed property * 1 / 2 block from W C Shuttle BUS * 1 & 2 Bedroom units * Fully furnished ‘ Swimming Pool •Laundry Room •Owner pays for basic cable, gas Call Brian N ovy 4 7 7 - 2 5 3 4 7 15-2060 T W O BLOCKS UT. 4 0 5 East 31st efficiency, now or 9 / 1 . $ 3 8 5 pius electricity + $ 1 5 0 Appointm ent 453 - 8 8 1 2 7-16-20B-B WEST CAMPUS Efficiencies on W C Shuttle. FALL/SPRING 9 7 / 9 8 Furnished $ 4 5 0 /m o Unfurnished $ 4 2 5 /m o * 1 bedroom A va ila ble $ 100 discount on year leases Gas, water, and cable PAID Barranca Square Apts. 9 1 0 W . 26th. 4 6 7 - 2 4 7 7 Now Preleasing One Block I From Campus » 1 BR & 2 BR • Ceiling Fans • On Shuttle • Laundry Room • Fully Furnished • Pool • Permit Parking • On-site manager/ maintenance • Vertical mini-blinds • Affordable deposits Rio N u e c e s 6 0 0 W . 2 6 t h 4 7 4 -0 9 7 1 M I L L E R P r o p e r t i e s P Scatter)» - 18 uttito O ^ j i g ef? $425 • 301 W BMijf ^Millbeck Square - 7 «nlts I sm ef» $475 fens* 2402 Rio G m m or e-mail: dwill3@ix.netcom.com " Westwoodi Place - 1 6 « a t o l 1+2 • $550-$850 • 1010 W. 23rd P l l r e e Villas - 1 2 units M ¡2-2 • $620 • 612 W North Loop Greenwood eff* $440« I I P 10 units 01 Tom Greenl C A L L 7 0 8 - 9 5 3 0 FURNISHED & ABP on shuttle route. O nly $ 4 7 0 . Properties Plus,. 447 - 7 3 6 8 , 1-800-548-010 6. 7-23-18B- 1 0 8 PLACE A P A R T M E N T S IN HYDE PARK EFFICIENCY: $420 1-BEDROOM: $520 FREE CABLE Furnished & Unfurnished D W -D isp-Pool Laundry-Res Mgr-Pets O n "IF” Shuttle 108 W . 45th St. 4 5 2 - 1 4 1 9 3 8 5 -2 2 1 1 , 4 53 -27 71 n m i ONE BEDROOMS •ironly 5 le ft^ I $400 + elec I I 1007 W 26th ¡Call 708-9530 FURNISHED LOFT style condo, great Includes floor plan, near UT shuttle ja- cable, W /D , m icrowave, pool, cuzzi $ 5 6 5 . Short or term. 9 2 6 -03 81 pgr 2 0 9 -7 3 3 4 . 7 - 2 1 - 5 M long THREE OAKS & PECAN SQUARE APARTMENTS 1 BDR/1 BA Fully Furnished Laundry Room » Community Atmosphere » On Shuttle ► No Application Fee • Preleasing » On-site manager • Affordable deposit 451-5840 409 W. 38th St 3 7 0 - t i n t * A p t » * HILLSIDE APARTMENTS 1 -2 bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean & Quiet All Utilities Paid. 5 1 4 Dawson Rd Just off Barton Springs Road 478-2819 6-30-20B-B ivf^hox 4m NICE COMPLEX Blocks from campus Free c ab le/ pool Huge 2 -2 's / 1-1 s 474-0111 6-27-20^0' BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT?/, Shuttle North/West Huge space Low prices - Great move-in specials * | ; 6-27-206-Ai* 474-0111 CCP 2-STORY 2-BED CONDOS ; Cheap price Washer/Dryer Balconies, Pool Covered parking Great for 2 or 3 people 474-0111 CCP . j 6-27-206 A DOS RIOS Apartments : / 9 mo. leases $52 5+ 1-1 's w/washer/dryers Covered park W alk to campus . 474-0111 CCP 6-27-206-A' HYDE PARK 4 5 2 0 DUVAL Great Location by bus stop. Unique 1-1's $465-$520 Remodeled 2-1 $650 302-5699 6-30-20&-C HYDE PARK Immediate move-in for spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. Pool, laundry, shuttle stop on-site. 452-4447 / 6-30-206C WEST CAMPUS on shuttle route. .1 & 2 bedrooms available for August Call 476-011 V. 6-30-20B-B **FREE TRAMPOLINE LESSONS!** Just kiddingl But stop bouncing from 1 apartment to apartment. Find your <* new home at Ravenwood Properties. West Campus 1-1's, $400-$550 Hyde Park 2-2's $750 North Campus 2-1's, $600-$750. r Call Victoria at Ravenwood Properties 451-2268. 6-30-20W s .. M A N Y FLOORPLANS^ TO CHOOSE FROM! - , Hyde Park area eff (all bills paid). 1-1, 2-1,2-2 & 3-2 available ~ now starting at $ 4 4 0 Pool, * laundry, newly remodeled less- than a block to UT shuttle. N ow pre-leasing . Call Lisa at,, 451 -6 6 89 . 6-30-20MT $ 1 0 0 OFF , 1 st M O N TH RENT!!:: Great west campus location with pool I Efficiencies, 1-1's & 2-2's \ 4 76 -8 9 15 6-3O-20B+Í' 2-2 WASHER/DRYER. Pool, patio, great roommate, floorplan, shuttle. Apartment Finders. 322-9556. 6-30- 20P-B NICEST APARTMENT West cam­ pus. Free gas, pool, 2-2, $785- $865. Apartment Finders. 322- % 9 5 5 6 .6-30-20P-B BEAUTIFUL SHUTTLE property, pooL hot-tub, tennis, w /d connections, 1- 1's, $475: 2-1's, $715; 2-2, $765. AFS, 322-9556. 6-3a20P-B NORTH CAMPUSI IF I Efficiency, $440-$450. Free cable. Free gas. AFS. 322-9556 6-30-20P-B SHUTTIEI FITNESS Center, poqj, french doors, patio, microwave, sau­ na 1-1, $490; 2-1, $695. A f V 4 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 .6-30-20P-B BEST DEAL, shuttle, 2-1.5. Free oo* ble, acceu gate, ceiling fans. $545>w $565 AFS, 322-9556 6-30-20P-B» , covered parking, HYDE PARK, 2-1. Free cable, ate», $75® ,, paid, Apartment Finders, 322-9556. 6-3®>, % 20P-B 2-2 NORTH Campus. Free cablf,-. gas paid, $675-$750. Apartment > Finders, 322-9556. 6-30-20P-8 FREE CABLE, greot north campus !•* 1, $485. Pod, gas cooking. AF$.' 322-9556, 640-20P-B 2 4 NORTH Compus, oas po i¿* pod, Great location. $685. Apote' ments Finders, 322-9556. 6-30-20®; B WE PRELEASE Far West! 1-1 $505, 2-1 s from $700. Fitnes» Cete, ter, pool, patio. AFS, 322-W 56. 6 m 30-20P* y «I FREE CABLE, access gates, ceilit§4 ions, Efficiencies $395711, $435, Í J 1, $565 AFS, 322-9556. 6 -3 ^ - * 1 20P-B WEST CAMPUS efficiencies. $ 4 ^ N $445. Walk to UT to * * * * t e f M ere 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 .7-1-2W B > ►Full-size washer/dryer TO PLACI YOUR AD ^ c r uTtwr°u,s Cent6r C0r*PuterCa ►Student Activity Center 9 IE ? 1 ( 4 7 0 0 E, R iv e r s id e D r iv e ) (5121356-5500 ORANGETREEII 2-2 wo$her/d Great unit. Summer < Fall, $1500. AFS, 322 20P only, 2-9556 'dryei $750 . 6-30- La Casita! N o r t h C a m p u s b e s t v a lu e l u s t j o t b e tte r ! 12 Months Já5Q_ Am $625 11 great value 1 extra large 1 All Bills Paid -1 roommate spacious Only I blocks lo UT Beautiful Community Pool ■ Clean On Site Laundry ■ 3, 9,12 Month Leases - Graduate Students paradise • New Carpet and Paint A m $625 $675 j£zs Deposit A M m i $300 $495 $400 $550 m o 3 m 1 and 2 bdrm floor plans Covered Parking Best value in North Campus 1/2 Month Free rent on 9 and 12 month leases 4 76-1976 u n i v e r s i t y g a r d e n s W e s t C a m p u s C h o ic e Very large 1/1 suitable for roommates. Pre-leasing Summer/Fall. Reduced rates. 2 blocks from campus. Automated access gates, coded walkway gates pool, private parking. Large patios with view of tower. On site management and maintenance. l i l t R k Grm d e ■befn«11a.m . | Edftion oftheTauml -Student Oriented Shuttle Bus Modern Microwaves Lofts W/Fans Remodeled Units 5 Min. To Downtown Spacious Excellent Maintenance 4 4 4 -7 5 3 6 POINT SOUTH Rental Office: 1910 Willowcreek Chaparosa Apartments 3110 Red River B o m to U.T. F i n d o u t i f y o u c a n b u y a h o m e ! ' V h T E O F F E R Credit Analysis ♦ Mortgage Analysis ♦ Market Availability For more info: 342—8 0 0 0 . M o n - S a t, IO a m - 7 p m ♦ S un, n o o n - 7 p m N O O B L I G A T I O N A L L F R E E ! P r e l e a s in g n o w ! Best Deal on UT Shuttle iff -1 $395+ $435+ Small, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks north of UT, on shuttle, attractively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3DR 474-1902 Starting from $400 ^ J ? $595+ J r ’-1 $520+ 1-1.5 $565+ !-2 1-2 ' $875+ £ Features: ^ Newly remodeled, energy efficient, ceramic tile entry & bath, fireplaces, walk-in closets, spacious floor plans, cats allowed, located just 5 minutes from Downtown Parklane Villas Shoreline Apts. Autumn Hills 1444-7558 445-6668 444- $76 RFNTAl R f N T A l RENTAL RENTAL R E NT AL T h e D a i l y T e x a n Friday, July 2 5 ,1 9 9 7 P age 11 R E NT AL S E R V I C E S E M P L O Y M E N T 1 3 0 0 + tquan feet. » i u l i i i n r i ’1 K t F i m t o n . 322- m*. Aportrm nt •W ASHIR/DRYlRi LARGE nice 1-1 shuttle $560. Front Page 480- 8518. 7-17-20-bc QUIET, SPACIOUS M W / D c o n n e c t io n s , w o lk -in « o p e r a te d i n in g . o u t s id e s to r a g e , p a t io , shuttle, fir e p la c e $450 CAU 447-7565. 7-1-2060 S E R I O U S S T U D E N T “A P A R T M E N T I N H I S T O R I C HYDE PARK VltlAGE Or» tits study rooms, cord access gates, covered parking, bicycle •SUPER DEAll Large 2/2, balcony, washer/dryerl $750. Front Page 4804518. 7-17-20b< HYDE PARK 4 5 2 0 DUVAL Great Location by bus stop. Unique 1-1's $495-$62o Remodeled 2-1 $675 3 0 2 - 5 6 9 9 7-17-206-C Erages, pool/hot tub. Huge floor ns designed lor roommates. Four minutes by bike from UT. Quiet community with upper-level and graduate students in mind. C a l U 5 1 - 2 3 4 3 4 3 0 5 Duval St. 2 bedrooms. Ask about our G P A rebate program. DUVAL VILLA APARTMENTS 7-2-2060 ***M O V E -IN N O W OR PRELEASE*** SUMMER SPECIALS . "Efficiencies on W . 38th St. $ 3 6 5 /m o n th a n d $ 4 5 0 /m o n th Buffington/ Keller Prop. 502-2062 Ext. 19 7-2-206A ‘2-1 AVAILABLE August N e ar UT shuttle Large master bedroom Efficiency, C A C H , fireplace, deck Fenced yard, garage, alarm system M a y ta g W / D , large attic Ideal ploce to study, pets O K . Graduate students preferred. $845 327-4246 7-16-20BA Q fftcien cieA ¡Starting at $40 I 1 -i\ I Sti rting at $465 . 2 G b ed ro o m iZ o ttm h o m es tnrting at $595 (Starting at $625 IBR Shuttle at Front Door All amenities 2124 Burton Dr. 0 S T 8 8 ^ ^ «0VE-IN SPECIAL J on our 2bd, 1 'A ba I T O W N H O M E expires July 31,1997 | ‘call for details charm efficiencies. H Y D E PA RK $ 3 9 5 . C A C H . W / D . Paid g a s a nd water. C le a n and convenient. Remodeled. N o pets/no smokers. 4 2 0 4 Speedw ay. Appointment on­ ly. 4 7 7 -3 9 4 9 . 7 -8-158 FREE RENT! Live on the C R shuttle a nd save. Really nice 1-1, one month's free rent. Great fioor-plans a nd prices. $ 4 9 5 -7 0 0 . C oll PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20B-A LIVE A LITTLE South and save. South O a k C o ndo. 2 b d 1 5 b a two stew townhome with garage. $ 5 7 5 . Call PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20B-A THE G O V E R N O R 'S Place Apart­ ments. ER Shuttle. Greot 1-1 close C all PMT to everything. 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-2 •-20B-A $ 4 7 5 . D O N 'T G ET LO ST in this enormous 3 B D 2 B A with over 1 3 0 0 sq.ft. En­ field apartment shuttle, Pease Park, Pool. A vailable now! O n ly $ 1 1 9 5 . C all PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9 -2 0B -A L O N G H A V E N SUPER nice 1-1. A p ­ prox. 6 0 0 sq.ft. 3 short blocks to campus. A lso on shuttle. $ 5 7 5 for 9 mo. C all PM T 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 N o w I 7-9-20B-A $ 5 2 5 / y r. THE G O V E R N O R 'S PLACE- Enor mous 3 bedroom on Enfield & Lo­ mar. Huge_ living room, huge bed­ rooms. A vailable now l C all PMT 476-2673. 7-9-20B-A SAN DP IP ER - O N L Y O n e left. G iant 2 / 2 , g a s poid, pool, covered park­ ing, extra large bedrooms, micro­ Call wave, Hurry! PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9 2 0 B -A O n ly $ 7 5 0 . Pork H Y D E H U G E efficiency. C A / C H , dishwasher, ceiling fons. V ery nicel $ 4 2 5 . 4 5 1 -0 9 8 8 . 7-14- 10B-D ■ Apartment Finders Service WestCupis Eff Access Cites -1 E n is M 2-1 E in isM 2-2 Wisfcer/lryer Net! C up PreeCible. IF Eff 1-1 IF Shrttle 2-1 2-2 HyáePiri Free Cikle, Has UT Skittle l-l Far West l-l FreeCaUe 2-1 Free fiWr, Cates 2-2 Law litis $415 m $771 $923 $441 $475 $739 $731 $315 $433 $343 $S§5 210$ R i o G r a id e 322-9556 k t t p / A m w - u a p t w 9 1 2 W 2 2 1 /2st SM A LL 1-1. $ 4 2 5 . C all 4 8 0 -0 9 7 6 M T h 6-7om only. A vailable late August. 7-21 - 10B-B "SUMMER SPECIAL" 1 / 2 M onth Free Rent • 1-br $ 3 9 9 , 2-br. $ 5 2 9 , 3-br. $ 7 2 9 Small, quiet, centrally-located off G u o d olu p e a nd Airport Laundry and Parking 409 Swanee 451-3432 7-18-) OB W E S T C A M P U S 2-1. G oted condo complex, pool, covered parking. $ 6 9 0 / m o . Summer discounts til A u­ gust. 3 2 7 -7 5 7 4 . 7 -18-12 B 108 PLACE APARTMENTS IN HYDE PARK E F F I C I E N C Y : $ 4 2 0 1- B E D R O O M : $ 5 2 0 FREE C ABLE Furnished & Unfurnished D W -D isp -P o o l Loundry-Res M gr-Pets O n “IF” Shuttle 1 0 8 W . 4 5 t h St. 452-1419 > 3 8 5 -2 2 1 1 , 4 5 3 -2 7 7 1 7182080 *COZY APARTMENTS* 1-1 $ 4 7 5 , 2-1 $ 6 6 0 N o Pets, pool, free cable & gas. By Central Market. 1 2 0 0 W e s t 4 0 t h Le Med Apartments 453-3545. 7-18-206C H Y D E PA RK large 2-1 's. N ic e p ro p . erty with pool, storoge unit, shuttle, basic cable $ 6 6 0 . D a y 3 2 2 -2 0 7 0 , evening 3 2 0 -9 9 9 0 . 7-21-5BC 2 2 0 7 L E O N Street. H uge 1-1. Lots pool, parking. of closets, swimmini A vailable Reduced Rate $ 4 7 5 N o w l 4 9 4 -2 1 2 0 . EPI. 7 -21-20B C R SHUTTLE. Large 2-2 9 8 5 sq ft. w/fireplace. $ 9 9 total move-in, for June, July, a nd August one month free prorated w / n o deposit or appli­ $ 7 7 0 . Property M a n ­ cation fee. agement of Texas. 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 7- 22-20 B -A AVAILABLE: N IC E efficiencies, 1 l 's , 2 -1 '*, electric gates, large pool, ball courts, on bus route, paid ca ­ ble/w ater. 4 5 1 -4 5 1 4 . 7-2 2-2 0 C A N Y O N HILLS Apartment homes is where you w ant to live this Ye a r- N egotiable lease terms, large rloor- plans, and great prices. C all 7 0 7 - 7-2 2- 6 3 0 0 for more information. 4 B W E S T C A M P U S Large 2-1 in Victori­ an House. H igh ceilings, stained d aw , C A C H , ceiling fans, fireplace. 5 n O San G abriel 472-2123. 7- 2 3 -2 0 8 8 BARTON H lliSI Preieosing fof fail Efficiencies, 1, or 2 bedrooms from $445. Properties Plus 447-7368, 1- 80064801 180106. 7 7-23-18 8 D LARGE 1,2,3,4, & 5 bedrooms, on shuttle route. H uge computer center, free cable, access gates, weight room & morel From $495. Proper­ ties Plus 447-7368, 1-800-548- 01 06. 7 -2 3 -1 88 0 N E A R LAKE Austin Blvd,/M opac. Extra nice efficiencies with all appli­ ances, walk-in closet, storage closet, C A C H , water, gas, trash, and basic coble paid. 443- 02 47. 7-24-5 B-A $395/month. Spacious & Convenient Eff $390 1-1 $490 1-1 $440 2-1 $590 Sorry, no p releasin g O n Bus Route # 1 , Straight to C o o p . W a lk to G rocery. Norwood Apts 5606 N. Lamar Blvd. 451-1917. 7-24-2060 HUGE 2-2 W / D Connections Great for 2-4 people Walk to campus. $900 CCP 474-0111 7-24-20B-A N E A R LAKE Austin Blvd./M opac. Extra nice efficiencies with all appli­ ances, walk-in closet, storoge closet, C A C H , water, gas, trash, and basic cable paid. 443- 0247. 7-24-5B-A $395/month. $90 1ST MONTH! K o e n ig & L a m a r On bus route to UT 1-bedroom: $475 2-bedroom: $575 Austin City Properties 4 1 9 - 0 0 9 9 ... » NICE COMPLEX Blocks from campus Free cable/ pool Huge 2-2's/ 1-1 's 4 7 4 - 0 1 1 1 6-27-2066 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT Shuttle I* North/West Huge space Low prices Great move-in specials 474-0111 CCP 6-27-206A 2-STORY 2-BED C O N D O S Cheap price Washer/Dryer Balconies, Pool Covered parking Great for 2 or 3 people 474-0111 CCP 728-20B-A DOS RIOS Apartments 9 mo. leases $525+ 1-1 's w/washer/dryers Covered park Walk to campus 474-0111 CCP 6-27-206-A LARG E S E L E C T IO N W e st C a m p us condos, w asher/ dryer, fireplace, covered parking, 2-2's, $ 9 2 5 and up. AFS. 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . 6-30-20P-B 2 2 0 4 R IO G rande- renovated his­ torical house. 6 big bedroom s, ja- cuzzi, tower views, brand new kitch­ en w /island. FP, new carpet. Pre­ leasing $ 2 8 0 0 . 7-2- 20B-B 4 6 9 -9 1 6 9 . W E S T R ID G E -P EN T H O U S E L IV IN G in this condominium. Large open 2 / 2 floorplan is great for roommates,all amenities style bath tub. $ 1 4 0 0 A vailable August 2 5. Ely Properties 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 EPI. 7- 3-20B-B including Jacuzzi R O B B IN S PLA C E-W EST C a m p u s's best kept secret. Large open well plannea floorplans, an abundance of natural light, a nd loaded with' amenities, this is the W e st C am pus best value. From $ 1 0 2 5 A vailable August 25. Ely Properties 4 76 - 1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-3-20B-B P E N T H O U S E - H IG H RISE luxury, in­ credible capitol views, parking go- rage, All bills paid 1-1 $ 7 5 0 A vail­ able August 2 5, 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-3- 20B-B GABLES-THREE ST O R Y 2-2.5 with 2 car ga ra ge. O n ly blocks from UT, roommate excellent floorplan. $ 1 1 9 5 .. A vailable August 25. 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-3-208-8 C E N T E N N IA L - W E S T C a m p us first new construction in over a decode. Experience new construction quality. Several 1,2 and 3 bedroom s to choose from. 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-3- 20B-B TWELVE O A K S C O N D O M IN IU M S W e s t C a m p u s 2 / 2 's from $ 9 0 0 Controlled Access G a te s/ G a ra ge Pool/Spa Responsive On-Site M a n a g e r Call for an appointment 4 9 5 - 9 5 8 5 7-3-2060 W IN C H E S T E R - IN C RED IBLE view 2- 2 end unit, new carpet, fireplace, pool, covered parking. $ 9 5 0 Call PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20B-A S A N P E D R O O a ks- C o n d o s at 28th Large 2-2, new paint, & S a la d o new carpet, g a s paid. Available now! $ 7 5 0 . C all PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20B-A O R A N G E TREE- pool side efficiency, vaulted ceiling, w asher/dryer, cov­ A vailable August ered parking. $ 6 5 0 Call PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9- 2 0B -A L A N D M A R K S Q U A R E -sweet 2/1 two story condo. H u ge balconv, washer/dryer, mircowave, hot tub, $ 8 5 0 call PMT. covered parking 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20b-A Best D e a ls W e st Cam pes: Large 3/1 duplex - $895 1100 A&BW. 25th _ 2/14-plex, nice porch - $595 1107-AW. 25th Small 1/1, porch $395 1105-A W. 25th Efficiencies $350 - 395 1108 W.2Sth. 2410 Leon #2 Room with kitchen (share bath) $325 - 1108 W. 25th Older properties, cats ok (no dogs) Drive by FIRST, then call Matthews Properties 454-0099 "For the student on a budget" H Y D E PARK, 1/1 $ 4 2 5 , 2/1 's $ 5 7 5 -5 9 5 . G a s, water, cable paid. Small, quiet property. 103 7 E . 44th. Matthews Properties 4 5 4 -0 0 9 9 . 7- 2 4-1 0 B W A L K T O UT (Engineering & Law efficiencies, School), spacious Very quiet C A / C H , G a s paid. property. 5 0 2 Elmwood. Matthews Properties 4 5 4 -0 0 9 9 . 7- 2 4 -1 0 B $ 4 4 0 . G R EA T L O C A T IO N I Efficiency & 2-1 available 8 /1 . Half block, near UT law, engineering. 5 0 6 Elm wood Place. 4 2 4 -8 4 0 8 7-24-5B-C S O U T H SHUTTLE 2 ,3 ,& 4 bedrooms. A ccess gates, free cable, starting at First Call 4 4 8 -4 8 0 0 , $ 32 5 /ro o m . 1 -8 00 -50 4 -9 06 7 . 7-24-206 FREE RENT, free Cable. South Shut­ tle 1 bedroom $ 4 4 0 + . First Call 4 4 8 -4 8 0 0 , 1 -8 00 -50 4 -9 06 7 . 724- 206 T O W N H O U S E 2-11/2 on shuttle. Security gates, pool, only $ 5 8 5 . Apartment Headquarters. 4 4 2 - 9 3 3 3 7-25-20B-A W A S H E R / D R Y E R IN unit- 1-1 $ 4 9 5 , 2-2 $ 7 2 0 . Pool, security gates, cov­ Apartment ered parking, hot-tub. Headquarters, 4 4 2 -9 3 3 3 . 7-25- 2 0B -A SU BLEA SE 1-1 for foil M arket price $ 5 3 0 / m o . O u r price $ 42 0 / m o . O n UT C R shuttle, gated community. leave m essage A vailable August, 4 5 2 -4 3 9 2 . 7-25-5B LARGE floors and carpeting neighborhood paid. C A C H . 5 8 4 9 7-8-17B H ardw ood H yde Pork W a ter 4 7 8 - $ 1 2 0 0 Fireplace. A V E N U E A H yd e Park efficiencies. Mini-blinds, ceiling fans, basic cable paid Very nice! $ 3 8 5 4 5 1 -0 9 8 8 . 7/14-10& D W A L K T O campus. H uge 2-1 's, all bills paid, $ 8 / 5 . V ery nicel 4 5 1 - 0 9 8 8 . 7-14-10B-D Augustl PRELEASE FOR August! Close to campus, large 3 -1 4 1 /2 townhouse, jmpus, large 3 W / D , dishwasher, fans, $1300. Very nice! 451-0988. 7-14- 10B-D ceiling W E ST C A M P U S ceiling fans 4 dishwasher, Very nicel 451-0988. 7-14-10B D Huge efficiency, W E ST C A M P U S 1-l's, ceiling fons, dishwasher, $475-550. Very nicel Some 2-story with fireplaces. 451- 0988. 7-14-10&D 1717 W . 35th. Hut nicel $750. 4 5 1 -0 9 Í 2-2's. Very 7-14-10B-D W E ST C A M P U S . Large 2-l's. Some with fireplace 4 vaulted ceilings. $875. Very nicel 451-0988. 7-14- 10B-D N EAR UT! -$325 Eff.” 1 bed $395, 2‘ bed $495 Free Cable.472-Ó979 716-20*0 W E ST C A M P U S efficiency- small, quiet 8-ptex. 4 0 0 sq.ft. Patio W alk- in-closet, gas/w ater paid $4 2 5 /m o Broker 4 7 8-25 79 7 -1 6 -2 0 6 * W A LK TO C A M P U S Efficiencies/ 1 bedrooms! West and North Campus. Available Immediately. From $425 Call Pedro 499-8013 WEST SIDE GROUP 7 23-2&C 1-1 H A R D W O O D floors, fons, A C, $395. Central Austin. 442-8425. Leave message. 7-23-3B W E S T C A M P U S 2 br. ga rag e apt. 3 blocks off campus Hardwood floors, quiet. N o pets. $700/m o. 478-8905, 450-0242. 7-23-10B AVAILABLE N O W . Roomy efficien­ cy. Water, gas, ga rb age paid. $325-340. 5 4 2 0 M iddle Fiskville 453-1327. 7 -2 3 -1 04 0 HYDE PARK efficiency. Available 8- Small auiet community. New ly 1. painted and carpeted. IF shuttle at Front door. 4 3 1 2 Speedway. Bud­ dy, 835-6250. 7-23-5B O LARGE 2-2, W est Campus. N eed someone to take over lease. Rent $750. 499-8987. 7-23-15B W E S T C A M P U S 2-1 In Victorian House W o o d floors, high ceilings, ceiling fans, $750. 9 0 8 W .22nd. 47 2 2123. 7-23-20B 9 0 4 W . 22nd . Unique turn of the century 2-1 with hardw ood floors. location. Great W e st $ 9 9 5 / m o . 4 7 6 - 1 97 6 . 7-15-20B-B C a m pus Ely Properties. SHUTTLE O FF Far W est/H art Lane. 3 9 0 0 -A $ 1 0 5 0 . 3-2-1, fireplace. Knollw ood Evergreen Properties. 3 3 1 -1 1 2 2 . 7 -2 2-2 0B 2 2 2 2 / B E F O R E Dry Creek O N N e a r M o p a c . $ 7 2 5 2-2. Carport, fireplace. Ever­ green Properties. 3 3 1 -1 1 2 2 . 7-22- 20B F M 2 2 2 2 / 3 5 6 2 . WEST AUSTIN N ic e 1-1 A C , carpet, appliances, carport, W / D connections, walk-in closet, miniblinds. Quiet. N o pets, no sm oking please. A vailable late A u­ gust. G reat for grod student or professional. Lease $ 5 5 0 / m o 454-2987 7-24-5B DUPLEX, E F FIC IE N C Y , 4 1-1 Large yard. 7 4 0 3 G u a d alu p e Street. Pri­ Brok- vacy fence. $ 5 2 5 . 4 58-2 er/O w ner. 7 -24-58 C O N D O N O R T H campus, 2-2, washer/dryer, patio, pool, $1050. Tower. AFS, 322-9556. Í+30-20P-8 W 1N DTREE C O N D O S I N ice 2-2. W a lk UTI $ 950, 9 month, or 12 month,$ 6 0 0 deposit. F ont Page 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 . 7-15-20B-C Aw esom e 2 / 2 R O B B IN S PLA C E vaulted ceilings, fireplace, W / D , mi­ crow ave & covered parking. Avail­ able N o w l $ 1 1 9 5 Ely Properties. 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 . 7-16-20B-B BELLVUE PLACE- Two story 1/1.5 townhome located 2 blocks from law school. All possible amenities $79 5 /m o. A vailable Ely Properties. 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 . 7-16-20B-B 8 / 2 5 uniaue 1 5 0 0 W O O D L A W N - Lore sibli 2 / 2 vaulted celling with all possible $ 1 05 0 /m o. Available amenities. 7- 8 / 2 5 Ely Properties 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 16-20B-B •FA RW EST ! G R E A T Large 1-1, BaL cony Shuttle $ 5 2 5 . Front Page 4 8G 8 5 1 8 . 7 -1 7 -2 0 -L x 2 6 0 5 ENFIELD. Absolutely beautiful 2/1 's & 2 / 2 's all amenities C o v ­ ered parking, pool, close to shuttle starting at $ 7 8 5 . Dan Joseph M a n ­ agement. 3 0 2 -1 1 2 2 . 7-18-20B-B 1-1 N O R T H W E S T Austin N e w car­ pet, new paint. W a te r paid W a lk to shuttle. Rent $ 5 7 5 , deposit $ 4 5 0 . HPi 4 1 8 -8 4 7 4 7-18-6B LENOX C O N D O S 23rd & San Gabriel. 2 b e d r o o m . P ric e n e g o t ia b le . M u s t le a s e fo r fall sem e ste r. Call Janeo at 4 5 1 -7 4 4 4 DP 6 0 6 -9 2 5 4 718-20B C O N D O M IN IU M : G U A D A L U P E & 34th Corner unit. W / D . $ 4 9 0 . 8 3 3 -0 2 4 4 . 7-21-5B 1-1. 7 0 8 G R A H A M Place. 2 bedroom condos in heart of W e st Cam pus $ 7 0 0 -8 5 0 / m o . 4 1 8 -8 2 8 3 . Cherri M cClain. 7-21-10 B M O S T L U X U R IO U S & best cored units around U.T. Som e Colonial, Som e M odern 1- l 's from $ 5 5 0 -$ 8 2 5 2 -2 's from $ 7 5 0 -$ 1 2 7 5 P E R S O N A L IZ E D A T T E N T IO N O N L Y I K H P 4 7 6 - 2 1 5 4 7-22-20B-D C A M P U S IC O N D O S B U E N A VISTA- super one bedroom, gate access. Covered parking. O n e block to campus. W a sher/dryer $ 6 7 5 . Call PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9- 2 0 b -A B E N C H M A R K C O N D O S -T H E Y do not come a ny better than this! Se­ cured parking , pool, hot tub, water fall, elevator. Avail. A ug. $ 1 1 0 0 . C all PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 7-9-20b-A LOFTED 2-1 W e st campus, parking. Gate access. G reat location. O n ly one left coll PMT $ 7 0 0 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20b-A Covered B R A N D S P A N K E N new. Approx. 7 0 0 sq. ft. O n e bedroom . All new, all nice. Should be ready late A u­ gust Call PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20B- 1 0 F O O T ceilings- W e d g e w o o d 1-1. C ondo. cute Reolly W asher/dryer, microwave, tiled counter tops, pool, hot tub, covered oarking. Available for August move- irT $ 5 7 5 . C all PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7- 9-20B -A ________________ O V E R L O O K - IN C RED IBLE one bed­ room with loft, great view, pool, hot tub, $ 7 5 0 . A vailable now. Call PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20B-A ceilings, vaulted fireplc D E C O R A T O R C O N D O - Furnished at St. James Place, G o rge o u s 2 / 2 vaulted ceilings, ceramic tile, con­ trolled occess, w asher/dryer, fire­ place, show s like a model. $ 1 0 0 0 Call PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20B-A Ib lk to campus. CO M PLETELY REM O D EL E D - Three bedroom condo. W asher/dryer, mi­ crowave, N e w paint, new carpet, new wallpaper, $ 13 0 0 ^ A v a ila ­ covered parking. ble August 1. Call PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 7-9-20B-A ______________ •SUPER C O N D O ! Berber carpetl 2 patios) W / D conn. Covered park- irTg! Pool. 2 / 2 $ 8 5 0 Front Page 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 7 -1 5 -2 0 B C l- l $575 Buena Vista 1-1 Georgian ointe l-l Stonesthrow 1-1 Centennial 2-2 2-2 Leratynn Orangetree 2-2 ¡1 $1101) Quadrangle 2-2 ¡1 Sabinal 2-2 4744800 O FF FAR W est/H art Lane. Shuttle $ 6 9 5 . 2-2 pool. 6 9 1 0 Hart Lane # 2 0 4 . Evergreen Properties. 331 - 1 1 2 2 7 -2 2 -2 0 B G U N IQ U E 1 B E D R O O M . Attic apart­ ment. $ 6 5 0 . C a m p us C o n d o s 474- 4 8 0 0 . 7-23-20B-A 3 B E D R O O M Townhome. New . $ 1 8 0 0 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 . 7-23-20B-A Brand Great C am pus location. Jared at C am pus C on d o s People shouldn’t be paid to have this much fun. But we are. G R E A T L O C A T IO N campus. $ 7 0 0 -8 0 0 dos. 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 . 7-2 3-20B-A Largest 1-1 on C a m pus Con- S Q U A R E C o n d o s G U A D A L U P E 1-1 3 3 1 6 Guadalupe, available now Robinson C o m p a n y Realtors 8 9 2 -6 6 2 2 7-23- furnished $ 5 2 5 . 5B-C Very clean unit Full size W / D , Available Aug. _____ Ir- $1175. 494-2120 B E N C H M A R K 2-2 Controlled access covered parking. 25 24-20B-B EPI. W E S T C A M P U S. Large 2-2, full size W / D , balcony, pool, cover parking $ 1 0 5 0 474- 9 4 0 0 7-24-5B-A University Realty VERY N IC E , 3-bedrooms- Hyde Park duplex, beautiful hardwood floqfs, appliances, $1200, 4 7 6 6 1 5 3 , no smokers/dogs. 7-22-19B Z ■ 45Q 7 AVE. F.- 8 bedroom, blue house. 1 block to shuttle. 3-bath, 2- loundry, 2-living. Ceiling fans. Pets O K . Available 8 /1 5 . $3200/mth. 331-9190. 7-22-20B STUDENTS. V2 G RADU ATE C A C H . Lawn service. Located © IF. ksrogersOix.neteom.com $900. (3 03 )7 61-5093. 7-23-206 --- 1 9 3 0 'S 4-2 neor Law School O a k Floors, tile bath, C A C H , $ 1 6 0 0 1301 E 29th 7-23- 20B-B 4 7 2 -2 1 2 3 . 1 H Y D E PARK 3-1 H ardw oods, fenced yard, w / d connections. A vailable August 1st. Large Pets O k. $ 1 1 0 0 3 4 3 2 2 7 8 ,9 2 3 -4 1 2 9 . 7-25-5B O n e semester W E S T C A M P U S ! 2 8 2 9 3 / 2 lease only. Shoal Creek Crest. Front Page 4 8 0 - 8 5 1 8 . 7 -2 5 -2 0 B O $ 1 2 5 0 , RESID E N T M A N A G E R 'S R O O M - N e a r UT, large room, private bath, summer, $ 2 0 0 A B P + show rooms. 4 7 4 -0 1 6 3 . 7-2-20B-D A N D E R S O N MILL Area. N e a r Bus route Very large room. Responsi­ ble, honest, mature individual. Pref­ erably female Type B personality Rent negotiable. Po g e :6 0 4 -0 4 9 4 . 7-21-206 A N D E R S O N MILL Area. N e a r Bus route. O n e small room. Responsi­ ble, honest, mature individual. Pref­ erably female. Type B personality. Rent negotiable. Page:6 0 4 -0 4 9 4 . 7 -2 1-206 C O O L C L E A N room 3 blocks west mall 2 3 0 3 Rio G rande $ 2 9 5 ABP. Call 4 8 0 -0 9 7 6 M-Th 6-7pm only. 7- 2 1 -1 0B-B 2 R O O M S for rent. $ 3 0 0 , $ 3 2 0 in eluding utilities. Family home. A bili­ ty to work for lower rent. 3 2 7 - 8 4 3 3 . 7-23-10 B JEF F E R SO N C O M M O N S PH A SE 2: Female to sublease bedroom, 4-2 apartment, beginning mid-August. Call Linda 3 8 6 -6 8 5 9 . 7-24-5B ER/SHUTTLE. R O O M and bath $ 2 5 0 monthly, A BP except tele­ N o phone. pets. Quiet. 4 7 2 -0 8 5 6 . References. $ 1 5 0 de­ posit 7-25-20P Fall/and/or Spring. Access to kitchen 4 3 5 - C o - o p * Summer Housing Available! 2-5 blocks from campus single & double rooms $340410 per month all bills paid «food included 24-hour kitchens monthly contracts available HUGE 2-2 W /D Connections Great for 2-4 people W alk to campus. $900 CCP 474-01 1 1 7-24-206-A $90 1ST MONTH! Koenig & Lamar On bus route to UT 1-bedroom: $475 2-bedroom: $575 Austin City Properties 4 1 9 - 0 0 9 9 ? s* i» * STONEY CO N D O S* 1-1 '$ starting at $ 6 7 5 W e st Cam pus 5 minute walk to UT G la ss enclosed elevator, access gates, swimming pool, appliances, microwave, dishwasher, frost free, refrigerator, and W / D in every unitl Call: 3 4 5 -2 0 6 0 , or digital pager: 8 6 7 -2 4 8 9 . y * B IG 2-2 con do near UT. C overed parking. W / D . Balcony. $ 1 0 0 0 , $ 9 0 0 for 12 months. C all 4 79 - 0 9 3 7 . 7 -25-10 B C O F F E E O N E BE D ftO O n Buena Vista Croix nueces Place Pecan Tree Seton Stonesthrow $725 $700+ $550+ $575 $775 $575 T W O B E D R O O M Croix $950+ Qazebo $700 Georgian $950 Oakvlew $1000 Sabinal $950 51st St $950 West. Univ. PI. $1000 Many Others A vailable! A P T S, BO U SES TOO! 2 8 1 3 « a G rande # 2 0 6 4 7 9 - 1 3 0 0 C A M P U S convenience. N O R T H N ice 2-bedroom with W / D and all appliances, pool, hot tub, $ 8 0 0 . Call Property M anagem ent of Texas, 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-25-20B-A M U S T SEE this W e st C a m p us beau­ ty! 2-2, pool, W / D , and all appli­ $ 9 5 0 Call Property M a n ­ ances. agement of Texas. 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7- 25-20B-A Q U A D R A N G L E - S A N T E Fe style 2 / 2 .5 townhome. Perfect roommate floorplan with 3 designated parking spaces. Perfect condition. Available 8 / 2 5 $ 1 2 5 0 / m o 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 EPI 7- 25-20B-A THE E L M S Spacious 1/1 in small goted community. Amenities include W / D , fireplace, ceiling fans and mi­ 8 / 2 5 crowave $ 725/m o. 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-25-20B- B Available PQINTE- LARGE 1/1 perfect for law / graduate students. Quite clean community with pool. Available 8 / 2 5 $60 0 /m o. 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI 7- 25-20B-B W IN C H E S T E R - W E S T C am pus 2 / 2 ideal for roommates. Great pool a nd covered parking. All possible amenities included. Available N o w $ 95 0 /m o . 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-25-20B- SILV ERA DO - A W E S O M E 1/1 load­ ed with amenities including: w ash­ er/ dryer, vaulted ceilings and mi­ crowave. O n Riverside shuttle. A vail­ able N o w $ 39 5 /m o . 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI 7-25-20B-B M E A D O W S G R EA T 2 / 2 in gated community. Amenities include: pool, tennis court, volley ball,, and w ash­ er/ dryer. Aw esom e value on River­ side 8 / 2 5 $ 5 9 9 / m o 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-25-20B- Available shuttle. 6 0 6 W E S T Lynn- Luxury 3 / 2 on shut­ tle in Clarksville Saltillo tile, pool, 3 patios a nd perfect for roommates. Available 8 / 2 5 $ 1 7 0 0 / m o . 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 EPI. 7-25-20B-B 4 1 0 - Fum. Houses GUEST COTTAGE O N PRIVATE ESTATE $ 1 4 00/m o . Perfect for single professional: Fully Serene furnished, 2Br, 2 B a home. country setting on almost six acres of land Privóte back yard w /deck All utilities included except long dis­ tance. including All appliances, W / D . Large master suite w/handi- cap accessible bath. Exterior park­ ing N o pets. Convenient to dow n­ town. For appoint­ ment, call A nna 3 4 6 -1 6 1 2 or 751- 5 0 8 8 , Realtor. 420 - Unf. Houses 2 2 0 4 R IO Grande- renovated his­ torical house. 6 big bedrooms, ja- cuzzi, tower views, brand new kitch­ en w/island. FP, new carpet. Pre- leasing $ 2 8 0 0 20B-B 4 6 9 -9 1 6 9 7-22-2B-6 7-2 H YDE PARK 3-2 $ 1500/m o. Great Clarksville location, all amenities 3-2 $ 1200/m o. 2 8 2 -1 0 0 0 . 7-8- 20B-B * PRELEASING HOUSES & DUPLEXES* Hyde Park, Tarrvtown, Shoal Creek, Wesf Campus. Eyes of Texas 47 7 -1 1 6 3 7-9-20&-A ALL BILLS paid! 11 W est C am pus three bedroom duplex- toke the top floor. 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20B-A Call PMT. $ 1 6 0 0 W E S T C A M P U S W O N D E R - Super nice! O n e bedroom house H ard­ w ood floors. H uge bedroom O n e block to campus. $ 7 5 0 . Call PMT 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 7-9-20B-A THREE B E D R O O M D R E A M N ea r law school, hardw ood floors, fenced yard, two car garage, all new appli anees. Available August. $ 1 4 5 0 Call PM T 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 . 7-9-20B-A P EA SE PARK! C ool Bungalow s 4- Front plex 1-1 $ 6 7 5 . Balcony Poge Properties 4 8 0 -5 8 1 8 7-10- 2 CS-C 4 5 0 6 C A S W E L L 3-3 $ 1 57 5 /m o Big yard. N e w appliances W / D , C A C H . Carpet staraae Available 8-1 Eric 4 8 0 -9 8 3 8 7-14- 3B Ample AVAILABLE N O W ! 2 to 3 bedrooms $ 6 7 5 $ 1 ,1 0 0 For 24-hour info, call 477-U VE, fax 4 5 2 -5 9 7 9 7-16-20B- D __________ * * N E W * * M U S T SEE/w olk to UT. 3 bedroom with W / D $ 1 2 0 0 . Call Tina 3 3 1 -1 0 0 9 . 7 -1 6 -2 0 B C Inter-Cooperative Council 5 1 0 W .23rdSt.* 476-1957 T T :440 - Roommates S M A R T L O N G H O R N S use W in d so r Fast, Roommates San Anto­ computerized, effective! 4 9 5 -9 9 8 8 . nio 6-2 7-2 0B w w w .io. com /~w indsor (Since 19891) 18th. & RESPO N SIBLE, C O N S ID E R A T E , drug-free female roommate wanted to snare 2-1 condo with same. Talis­ man condos/Barton Springs near shuttle. 4 7 9 -7 6 2 7 . 7-7-15B T W O M I D D L E - A G E D , N O N - S M O K I N G , P R O F E S S I O N A L F E M A L E S S E E K S I M IL A R T H IR D to share 4-2 country house on 6 w ooded acres. 2 0 minutes south­ west of campus, $ 3 5 0 plus share ex­ Ideal roommate likes sweet penses big d o g s but doesn't nave any 2 8 8 - 3 1 1 5 . 7-14-10B PEA SE PARK, 1 acre seclusion, C h a ­ let house roommate, non-smoking, no pets. $ 5 7 5 + bills. 4 7 7 -3 9 4 9 . 7-21-5B M A LE R O O M M A T E 1 2 'x 1 8 ‘ room in 3/1 house $300/m onth Share utilities. 3 4 5 -9 3 6 2 . 7-22-5B E A S Y - G O IN G M A L E incom ing grad student fall. Please coll Tim at 7 7 0 -6 6 4 -8 8 8 8 . 7-23-5B seeks housing for H A M IL T O N PO O L. Share furnished ranch h o u '"' Private loft, bedroom, and bath. Bring your horse 2 64 - 2 3 8 3 . 7-23-5B H Y D E PARK on UT shuttle floor 2-1 kitchen sm oking/drugs/pets $ 8 0 0 , share utilities sting@mail.utexas edu. Second Share living, dining, & N o Negotiable 4 5 9 -4 8 5 3 , 7-24-5B space T W O G A Y males need 3rd room­ mate to share 2-1 house W / D $ 36 5 /m o, ABP. Pgr 3 0 4 -1 5 9 2 7- 24-1 Op T W O M ID D LE-AG ED , N O N - S M O K IN G , P R O F E S S IO N A L F E M A LE S SE EK SIM ILA R THIRD To share 4-2 country house on 6 w ooded acres. 2 0 minutes southwest of campus, $ 3 5 0 plus share expenses. Ideal roommate likes sweet big dogs but doesn't have any. 288-3115 72558 R ESPO N SIBLE, LIBERAL, grad-student C A C H , two share Enfield Home. W / D , minutes from UT $ 5 0 0 A BP Eric at 4 7 4 -1 3 5 7 . 7-25-5B G W F G R A D S T U D E N T L O O K ­ I N G T O S H A R E 2-1 H O U S E O N R E D R IV E R . Available 8 / 7 with following.ameni- ties. W / D , storage, on UT shuttle, ow n phone line, private entrance $ 40 0 /m o . plus 1 /2 utilities and phone, $ 2 0 0 deposit. 4 7 2 - 6 7 7 2 7-25-8B A N N O U N C E M E N T S 560 - PuMk NoUce H O M O S E X U A L S A N O N Y M O U S Support group of men/women w ho desire freedom from homosexuality. Contact Pete 4 4 4 -7 5 8 3 . 7-3-20P E D U C A T IO N A L S to » A te tad Instruction G U IT A R L E S S O N S Folk, Jazz. A n d y Burlington 4 5 2 -6 1 8 1 . 2 0B -A Blues, Rock, Experienced teacher. 7-7- f k t f M V i n a i SU C C EED Get Help NOW T u t o r i n q A ll S u b j e c t s P r - o v is io n . il S t u d e n t s S t r u c l u r e d P r o q r . i n i R , - V i e w s K T e s t P r e p s I V L E Y jl Typing Se rvice T he Com plete Professional ■ •M $£ TERM PA PER S I Ü DISSERTATIONS §§ Ü APPLICATIONS 1 £$ RESUM ES I B WORD PROCESSING I m i FORMATTING V; 8 27* & Guadalupe I 1 472-3210 i LA SER PRINTING ■ W O R D P R O C E S S IN G . Quolity W ork, Reasonable Rates. PhD. D iv sertations 3 3 5 -0 4 3 1 . 7-22-5B ► ► ► ► ► ¥ ► ► I ► ▼ R c s m c s ▼ P a p e r s / T b e s e s ▼ U s e r M a t i n g ▼ 7 9 ( C o l o r C o p i e s ▼ l l o s i l o b s \ b e l ’u C o p l e e 7 1 5 - D W . 2 3 r d ST. ■5 4 4 < 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 A P P O IN T M E N T SE T T E R S/C A N ­ VASSERS. $6.5 0 /hr + generous bo- nusas & commission. 20hrs/wk. Easily «am $230 -3 80 /w k N o salt- ¡na. N o collecting M oke this calif Paul 453-5858. 7-22-5B M A D SC IE N C E A N IM A T E D TEA CHERS NE E D E D to conduct antertaming, educational, fun science activities with kids ot schools, events, porties. Flexible schedules. N e ed dependable car, extensive experience with elemento-, ry aged children. Training and ac­ tivities provided Interview* sched­ uled for 7 / 3 1 / 9 7 Pay $ 2 0 / 1 hr class C a ll 2 8 8 -1 1 6 8 2 8 8 -4 1 0 0 7-22-58 SUPER-DUPER D A Y C A R E C E N T E R Looking for joyful, energetic, assistants to work part-time with infants and toddlers. Flexible schedules, 2 blocks from shuttle. Great kids & Families. EOE. C all H e le n /M a ry : 4 7 8 - 3 1 1 3 . i77ku> Y O U M U S T be a neat freak! Y o u must love to dean. $ 8/ hr starting. Recommended flexible schedule a n a very, very reliable. C all 3 3 1 -1 8 7 2 A SA P . 7-23-58 since 1 9 8 4 START N O W . Established com pany in Austin $6- $ 14.50/hr. with complete training a nd bonuses. A lso career opp. and resume builder C all 4 5 4 -8 3 0 5 7* 2 3 -1 0 8 C R E N S H A W ATHLETIC club needs fall instructors for gymnastics, swim­ ming a nd ofterscnoo! care. 4 5 3 - 5 5 5 í 7-23-5B N IG H T LOT cashier. W eekends, 4th & Brazos. 5 6 8 9 . Starts Immediately 20B $6.25/h<\ 3 20 - 7-23- P A R K IN G $6/hr. M-F. 5 6 8 9 . 2 0B M O N IT O R S 10am-8pm Starts Immediately. needed 3 20 - 7-23- W A N T E D : PART-TIME nanny for 2 very special boys Afternoon -early evening. M ust De fun, dependable, and loving. M ust have reliable car. References please. 7- 24-1 OP 4 5 3 -2 0 6 7 PART-TIME R EC EP T IO N IST / clerk for non-smoking low office near cam ­ pus $5 5 0 / h r 4 7 6 - 3 4 0 0 6-9-5B P A R T -T IM E S U P P O R T For busy benefits administration firm. Duties include filing, copying, com­ puter entry and various other gener­ al office duties os needed. Requires computer literacy, organization, and self motivation. Beautiful office in S W Austin Hourly rate of $ 6 0 0 (negotiable) with flexible hours Pre­ fer minimum of 2 0 hours/week - C o n t a c t L a u ra K le in ( 5 1 2 ) 7 0 7 - 5 1 8 4 P le a se r a x re su m e to: ( 5 1 2 ) 7 0 7 - 5 3 0 3 ' 724-3B' UT A R E A apartment building needs* hard-working, dependable student for grounds-keeping, painting, ight maintenance, & errands W ill re­ Referen­ quire 2-3 afternoons/wk 7 ces j 24-36 4 7 6 -5 1 5 2 , 2-5 only, M-F R e s u m e s • S c a n n i n g W o r d P r o c e s s i n g P r i o r i t y P a p e r W o r k j T e r m P a p e r s L o w , L o w R a t e s ! ! 1 1 0 % O f f New C ustom ers C a l l J o y c e 760 - Misc. SwrvicM 17 ST U D EN T S needed w h o will be paid to lose weight, 1 0 0 % natural. Call Vivian 3 2 9 -5 4 1 3 . 7 -1 7-20B-B Ironing, w ashing, typing I D O it all! papers, housekeeping, childcare, etc.etc 9 3 3 -0 6 7 7 . Rea­ sonable rates. 7 -24-10B errands, E M P L O Y M E N T -P a r Ite A I S D PEOPLE w ho love children needed to care, work, and ploy in after-school child care at schools H igh school or G E D required. Part-time afternoons. Great for students, parents, seniors Apply: Austin IS D Community Education 1111 W e st 6th, D 1 5 0 7-1-20B-C D A N C E & G Y M N A S T IC S Instructors for children's classes. Must own a car. Part-time hours. 3 2 3 -6 0 1 3 . 7- 9 -1 3B-D C O L LE G E ST U D EN T S! N o w hiring, $ 6 -10/hr, 4-8pm weeknights in Do- bie Mall. Call G erald for interview 5 0 5 -2 3 4 9 . 7-15-20B-B Telesales Positions b lh Services is hiring higfalv- motivaied people for a major Long Distance prorider. Base is $7-50 • Day & Evening shifts available 1 Weekly incentives included • Call todav for appointment KELLY Services 4 7 4 - 1 5 4 5 Student's # 1 Choice for Extra C ash M O R N I N G R U N N E R needed for mid-sized law firm M ust be available to work 8 am -1 pm, M-F. Salary is $ 5 .5 0/ h r plus mileage of 31/mile. M ust have a clean driving record. Please mail resume to P O Box 2 1 5 6 , Austin, Tx 7 8 7 6 8 . * Attn: Diana, or fax resume to 4 6 7 - 9 3 1 8 7 2+3SC PART-TIME FLEXIBLE schedule hours, no Sundays. W a rehou se and main­ tenance. C all Lee 4 5 4 -2 5 4 4 7 25» 10B KID FRIENDLY education or child development majors wanted for the large, KidGenius educational toy store in Westlake Hills. (About 10 minutes by car.) W e have part-time positions available If interested please call 3 2 7 - 0 3 0 6 and ask for Jenny. H ook'em H o rn s1 7-25-1P F LE X IB L E H O U R S W e e kly lawn work Approximately 1 0 + hrs/week Other possible |obs include general repairs, painting, etc on an as-needed basis- $8/hr F a x re su m e a n d re fe re n c e s to 4 7 6 - 9 4 4 2 o r c a ll S u s a n at 4 7 6 - 5 6 7 6 7-25-1B PART-TIME P O S IT IO N P R O V ID IN G A F T E R S C H O O L C A R E FOR O U R T W O C H IL D R E N (10&7) 3pm-6pm M-F Beginning 8/1 1 in ( N W Austin M ust nave valid driv­ e r's license, go o d driving record a nd genuine interest in children. Salary $7/hr 2 5 8 - 3 0 6 2 . 7-25 56, A PPRO XIM AT ELY . Sat.-Mon. as needed, • E-' DA T A -EN TRY 15/w k. $8/hr. mail tit@thpa.org or fax 4 9 1 - 6 0 2 6 7-25-5B Typing skills required for R E C E PT IO N IST N E E D E D fast-' paced downtow n law office Fax & multi-phone line experience prefer­ red l-6pm , M-F 4 7 8 -7 4 6 2 . 7-25- 2 0 B SM A LL L IT IG A T IO N L A W FIRM N E E D S PART-TIME FILE CLERK, beginning August 13, 1 9 9 7 (Mon- filing, Fri, 8 -1 :30p). Duties include typing, filing pleadings w/court, general office duties, backup recep­ tionist, copying, & runner Contact Melissa/Tam m y to set up an inter­ view, 4 7 3 -2 2 5 7 7-25-68* * , C H IP S M A R T C O M P U T E R OUTLET ’ Two part-time positions, rotating ^ schedule, some weekends, cashier, answ ering phones, light accounting, , experience unnecessary, but appreciated W i l l T rain ! Part-time technical positions also available, experienced preferred. C all or visit, M-F 10-5, 4 5 9 - 7 2 4 7 7-25-5B , SOO - General Help Wanted reading books! E A R N M O N E Y $ 3 0 0 0 0 / y r income potential D e ­ tails 1 -8 0 0 -5 1 3 -4 3 4 3 Ext Y -9 4 1 3 7-2-2 2P $ 1 5 0 0 W E E K L Y potential mailing our circulars. For quired 0 4 7 5 . 7-1-19P N o experience re-s info call 3 01 -8 4 5 -, EXCELLENT PAY for full or port-time outdoor work. Flexible hours A lso looking for tractor mower operator C all Development Services 454-4255 „ . i 7-14 2 0 4 B * SECURITY OFFICERS * I $7-8/hr Full/Part-time, no experience necessary, a report writing and public relations a must, evening and graveyard shirts avoitobie * w A m erican Protective Services. m Contact Debbie 448-4181» 7 2 -2 0 4 A * FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT $18K-$72K/yr + Benefits, Paid training. For info on 5 FT or PT positions coll: * • 1-800-585-9024 ext. 4 33 0 CASH TODAY S5 EXTRA BONUS ON F I R S T D O N A T IO N ONLY W C O U P O N E X P 8 3 1/97 $20 EACH DONATION $165 PER MONTH Can Donate 2x/week Schedule Own Time • E x t r a C l e a n . S t a t e of- t he Ar t F a c i l i t y • O n l y 1 5 M i n u t e s t r o m U T C a m p u s BIO IVIED A !\IEW H igh Tech P l a s m a Facility Please Call for Appt. 251-8855 H O U R S 8 A M 7 P M IH 35 & Ptiuq e rvi ll e Exit - W e s t si d e I H - 3 5 b e h i n d E X X O N - A R E Y O U L O O K I N G F O R ... • G r e a t H o u r s • F le x ib le S c h e d u le • Future E m p lo y m e n t • L e a d e r s h ip E x p e r ie n c e • N o E v e n in g s o r W e e k e n d s • A F re e F itn e ss M e m b e r s h ip The Y M C A of Austin is hiring staff in five school districts to work in our af­ terschool program G a in leadership and supervisory experience while w orking a s a group leader with ele­ mentary school children in areas of art, sports, games, and tutoring. A c ­ tivity leaders are also needed to teach enrichment classes C la ss top­ ics include Spanish, science, inven­ tions, aerobics and much more! Hours ore from 2 30pm -6 30pm at sites throughout the Ausin area. C hoose the days you want to work when you opply in person ot 1 8 0 9 E. Sixth Street. 7-21-10B-A E O E. SEEKING ENTHUSIASTIC7 experienced teachers for immediate P/T Afterschool C lub Leaders & Substitutes • e x c e lle n t b e n e fits * o n g o i n g t ra in in g • p r o f e s s io n a l s u p p o r t iv e e n v ir o n m e n t * 2 0 - 3 0 h o u r s / w e e k Contact The Merit School 837-8840 2-21 10B PART-TIME HELP- Runner needed for busy property m onogement office Must hove reliable transportation, proof of insurance and go o d driving record. Flexible hours Various other duties. M-F, $ 6 .00/hr. A pply at 1 50 2 -8 W e st 6th Street Position A vailable 8 / 4 / 9 7 721 5*0 U N IV E R SIT Y C O O P Custom Publishing Department hus opening for temporary night shift person Previous copying, printing, or docutech experience helpful M ust be dependable Starts 8/1 through approx 9/1 W ill tram in daytime if possible. Please A pply in person at H um an Resources 5 0 7 W e st 2 3rd Street E E O . 7 22+» M A S T E R VALET Cleaners pick-up sta­ tion needs O counter attendant. Hours 2:30-6pm M T A ^ l y Speedway K>pm w-r 477-0665 3 10 1 NEAR UT $7-7.25 Flexible hrs. 24-hr. job lines: -Porolega! Courier: 474-2246 474-2216 -Typist/Clerical -Bookkeeping Trainee 474-2032 Smoke-Free, WILL TRAIN, freshmen welcome! 7212040 •“ T a s í r - (Two PoatÜoRi) H W o r k k o v r a b * 0 1 a ft 8 a . m + Assist In Circulation Department of The Daily Texan on nights when Inserts are placed in paper. Requires High School graduation or GED; ability to move heavy loads. C a ll A n g la a f t t r U p » a U n - M M for appointment f h f i D n t v m t t j o f T n u ü l u M n U « n Igual Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Looking for a part-time job for the fall semester? Your search is over! Extend-A-Care for Kids is now hiring supervisors and group leedor*. We have the perfect opportunity for you to work with school-aged children in the afternoons Requires no shift work nor weekend duties Just afternoons chock-full of activities and fun! To qualify you must be 21 years old for a CMtUf SUMTClSfll and tor a grotto kader. HS diploma or equivalent nevessary. knowledge m chito development, aarty childhood or elementary education are a plus' Salary: $8.50 per hour for group leader and $8.00 per hour for center supervisor Hours: 2DM:00/6:30 (Hays school district), M-F or flexible schedule. Taáing darte August 4. N you l a chutan. W e a the job ter you! J A L a See all our Lease and Sale L istin g s O nline ! u n D W - e l f f p r o p e r t i e s . c o m k n a g in t W i A - C a fl l a M VS ___ 55 North IN 35, Atirtki, T«x*« 787Í2 1 2 --------- 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 The A b so lu te Large st U niversity inventory f it H i S t i A \ \ \ H iOUSlYX 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 Page 12 Friday, July 25,1997 THE DAILY T e xan Crossword Edited by W ill Shortz DILBERT® No. 0613 by Scott Adaffis [AND the reason WOULD BE? H [ X’lA GOING “TO FIND PEOPLE WHO LAUGH NEWOOSLY EVERY TIME THEY TALK. THEN ILL SMACK THE* WITH MY FLYSUATTEA. ACROSS 1 Stereotypical swing voter 11 Luck, to some 15 Delusions 15 Dirk of yore 17 They don’t play the net in tennis 15 Lowers 1» Amour-propre 20 It may have a big head 21 Brandy letters 2 3 Curry or Rice 24 Composed 26 Piano pieces? 27 Doc bloc 28 Gather on the surface, chemically 30 Things for one to do 82 Mangel-wurzels 85 Long of “Boyz N the Hood" 88 Stirring 3 7 Relief, of a sort 88 Immigrant’s course, briefly 88 Driver’s warning 40 “GoodFellas” group 42 Lemieux milieu: Abbr. 43 Scrooge 44Tow head 45 How many manuscripts are submitted 4 7 Propel a shell 48 Fictional clue-sniffer so Nets of “Little House on the Prairie” 54 Sounds of Brahma, Vishnu and Siva 85 Peace, in Russia 58 Husband and wife, e.g. 57 Sect leader? 58 Sorority letter 80 Rock band named after the villain in “Barbarella” 83 Bank holding 84 Affranchise 85 Professor 'iggins, to Eliza 86 Press release? DOWN 1 Agrees 2 Model railroad track measure 3 TV newsman David ■ 4 “Get it?" ANSW ER TO P R E V IO U S P U ZZLE n E0E3 □ iA S S E S F A C A R A H A P 1 A R Y R E1 R A C T S H A N N U A L H a h v 0 a 0 0 a n a a s o 0 i 3 g 5 Christmas and Easter 6 Fox Mulder’s obsession 7 Philatelist’s purchase 8 Got fed up 9 Interviewer’s surprises 10 Affectionate, in slang 11 It was dropped in the 60's 12 “A Girl Like I” autobiographer 13 Hester Prynne portrayer, 1995 14 Slave’s response Puzzle by Bob Klahn 22 Mountain on the Gulf of Salonika 25 Doesn’t do takeout 28 Deity whose name means “black" 29 Bridge opening 31 Some are out of it in January 32 Buffalo 33 Where Rommel was routed 34 “Where Angels Fear to Tread” novelist 41 Leading man? 4 3 Sweet, in a way 46 Sudden seizure? 49 Top of a platter 51 Musical heirloom 52 Magniloquize 53 Number in NASA-speak 56 Twain’s celebrated jumping frog 59 Some 61 Hammer sound 62 News letters 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. yobs GTOfflfbrt by To 2./VT WITH THÍ consm iz#s$- you c a n ' t me Arne* a t e r r w it h o u t THF DEMANDERS M iH V i mi i i i i i i i ' i n i i 'I B mf 1 ' 1 1 W m X ) A feC A iT j A i m . m RYFP SATRUM «iboffl* 1 1 * » * * * ,'NE(i u cm w Hw * D oonesbury in e s m - YOUR IMPU- CATION, SEN­ ATOR- m .H P N .i UNPZFSmP Y0UU5EPT0 ÍOORKFOR th e ch ín ese SCMSRNMBNT. IS THAT CORRECT* by g a r r y tr u d e a u / # I'M A NATURAUZSP AMERICAN CITIZEN/ A N P I WORKER HARP w pr o y eia o r th y o fit/ UNLIKE yOU, I HAP TO - RASE A “ TEST/ \ Super Longhorn! I ^■WontAds ■ H i 2 0 1 ^^^^■WORDS 4 71-5244 The Daily Texan | •Offer limited to private party (non-commercial) « is only. Individual items offered for sale may not exceed $1,000, and price must appear in the body oil the ad copy. It items are not sold, five additional Insertions w ill be run at no charge. Advertiser must call before 11 a.m. on tí» day of the fifth insertion. H H .No Copy change (other than reduction in price) is allowed. Zk W H S I Keep U e K rftti w t k ¡«5- C A M P U S Around Campus is a daily column listing U niversity-related activities sponsored by academ ic departments, student services and student organiza­ tions registered zoith the Campus and Community Involvem ent O ffice. Announcements must be submitted on the proper form by noon tw o business days before publication. Forms are available a t the Daily Texan office a t 25th Street and \Nhitis Avenue. No changes w ill be m ade to Around Campus entries after 5 p.m. one business day prior to publication. Please direct all inquiries regarding Around Campus entries to the Around Campus editor at 471-4591. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions._____________ __ MEETINGS HFS-Shire of the Ivory Tower meets from 2-6 p.m. Saturday at Pease Park for medieval-style battle games. For more information call Terwin at 836-4777 or e-mail ter- win@cs.utexas. edu. Hillel Students' Jewish Organization hosts Shabbat services at 7 p.m. Friday at Hillel House, 2105 San Antonio St. for an Orthodox and combined Reform /Conservative Minyan. After services the rabbi hosts a Shabbat meal. For more information call Margo at 476-0125. _ SPECIAL EVENT The Department of Astronomy hosts free viewings through the Painter Hall telescope from 10-11 p.m. Friday for UT students, faculty and staff and from 9-11 p.m. Saturday for the general public. No reserva­ tions are necessary and viewings occur only when weather permits. For more information call 471-0445. The University Fashion Photo­ graphy Club hosts a party at 10 p.m. Friday at 600 W. 26th St. No. G167 (Rio Nueces Apartments). Anyone interested in fashion photography or fashion modeling is welcome. For more information call Clark at 479- 8024.__________ ____ ____________ FILM/LECTURE DISCUSSION The Buddhist Association hosts a lecture from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Asian Culture Room (4.224). Rev. Vimala, an American nun, will discuss the basis of Buddhist practices. For more information call Larry Lai at 323-5881. ________ OTHER________ The Study Abroad Office hosts a mandatory information session for those interested in study abroad at 3 p.m. Monday in the Study Abroad office in Carothers Dormitory. For more information call 471-6490. D a il y T e x a n C l a s s if ie d s EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS mm EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 8 0 0 - G e n e r I H e l p W ' i t M O M 'S BEST friend seeks quality sit- ters and nannies to w o rk various full time positions around and part school schedules. 3 4 6 -6 6 2 3 . 7-8- 20B-B CAMPAIGN JOBS FOR THE ENVIRONMENT $ 2 0 0 -3 5 0 /week "Fight for C leon A ir •Protect N a tio n a l Forests •G re a t Team Atmosphere W o rk with the U.S.PIRG & The Sierra C lub to stop the rollbacks of our most im portant environmental & public health protections M ake a difference & get paid Leadership & career opportunities Sandy, 4 7 9 - 8 4 8 1 HIRING HONEST, energetic, de­ pendable persons for em ployment at a H ighland M ali kiosk opening Au- qust 1 st C all toll-free to arrange in­ terview 1-888 5 2 5 -2 6 7 7 . 7-10-20B U S G O VERN M ENT jobs. H iring N o w i Entry level to advanced posi­ tions P a id trainin g +benefits. $11- 3 3 /h r C all Free 1-888-476-662 3 Ext.3 0 1 4 7-21-10B needed full-time, CUSTOMER SERVICE Representa­ tives part-time, mornings, nights, and weekends. Q u a lifie d applicants should be as­ sertive and confident Please apply in person Budget Rent-o-car, 3 3 3 0 M anor Rd 7-16-10B 8 0 0 - O m w r a l H e lp W a n te d EXPERIENCED NURSERY workers needed W est Lake M ethodist Church. References required . Pay $ 6 0 0 /h r . Pam 3 2 7 -1 3 3 T 7-21- _________ 5 B Í * ASSISTANT IN B O O K BINDERY * paper work, Examine and disbind books, fill out answer filing, knowledge of phones, Q u a rk/ Paaemaker a plus. Part-time (20-30 hours), AM. hours preferred. Fax resume to: 83 7 -9 7 9 4 7 -2 1 -5 8 -A ON-SITE APARTMENT ~ MANAGER NEEDED For small community located near law school, light mainte­ nance skills required No pets. Compensation is 1 Br/Ba apartment, utilities, bonus. Call 3 3 9 -6 1 5 5 7 -2 1 -2 0 B-A SMALL CO M PAN Y Seeks Part-time student to perform various tasks including shipping, errands, cleaning, and general office duties. M ust hove car. Hours are flexible and pay starts at $ 6 /h r. If interested please m ail or fax reply w ith contact inform ation to. ATTN: Personnel Dept., Austin D igital Inc., 3 9 1 3 M e d ica l Parkway # 2 0 2 , Austin, Texas, 7 8 / 5 6 . Fax (5 1 2 )4 5 2 -8 1 7 0 . ' 7 -2 1 -5 B C TRAVEL AGENCY NEEDS PART-TIME DELIVERY DRIVERS Must have go o d d riving record, reli­ able vehicle w ith insurance. A p p li­ cations ava ila b le at Tramex Travel, 4 5 0 5 Spicew ood Springs, Ste 2 0 0 , Austin, TX 7 8 7 5 9 or C all C in d y Lockwood at 343 -22 01 Fax 5 1 2 -3 4 3 -0 0 2 2 7-16-6& NEEDED FOR O N E OF AUSTIN'S FINEST INDEPENDENT A U T O M O ­ TIVE REPAIR SHOPS Part-time: A M receptionist Fulltime: To wash cars and general clean-up Punctuality and goo d d riving record a must! ¿ a ll Jennifer at 4 7 2 -5 5 5 5 . 7 - 1 7 -2 0 B -A FUU- COLLEGE PARK-CASTILIAN' TIME breakfast/lunch cook G ood woges and benefits G rea t w ork en­ vironment. Experience necessary EOE M /F , Please apply in person 2 3 2 3 San A ntonio Street, Austin, Tx, 7 8 7 0 5 7-17-5B INSTRUCTOR needed Y O G A in dow ntow n health club. Mike 322- 3 1 9 5 7 2 4 - 5 8 0 TRADE ASSOCIATIONS tw o for position of Accepting resumes to m aintain Technology Specialist hardw are ond software loca­ tions. Must have thorough know l­ edge of N o ve ll N e tw are , W ind ow s for W orkgro ups, and W in d o w s9 5 or W in d o w s NT, local area net­ works and able to set up IBM com­ patib le workstations. Must hove w o rking experience w ith database program s. Experience with M icro ­ soft Access and Delrina W inF ax Pro 'p referred A b ility to learn quickly, prioritize , and w o rk with minimal su­ pervision. Degree preferred but not required O n ly m ailed resumes w ill be accepted N O PHONE CALLS ACCEPTED M a il to the attention of: Technology Specialist Position 4 0 8 W . 14th St Austin, Tx 787 0 1 Please include current address and phone number Qualified appli­ cants will be contacted for interview. Equal Opportunity Employer ^ 1Qfr0 S O O -O e n e n ri H e lp W a n te d :l| Are you a I People I P erso n ? 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 part-time Drivers for the UT 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 enjoy working with others, bring your 5-vear MVR. Monday-Friday, 7am - 7pm to: DAVE Transportation. 8300 South IH 35, Austin. No phone calls, please. Equal Opportunity Employer. DAVE 8 0 0 - G e n e ra l H e lp W a n te d is for LINCOLN THEATRE looking professional energetic people for floor staff and management position. A p ply in person only 6 4 0 6 IH-35 N orth. 7-22-19B * COLLEGE STUDENTS* Easy work Quick pay Production & Assembly 1st, 2nd, & 3rd shift Flexible schedule to fit your school needs. Ask for Michael: 4 5 8 -1 2 2 7 7 -2 3 -2 0 B-A TRINITY CHILD Development Center has im m ediate openings for full and aart-time teacher aide positions. C all Laura, 3 2 8 -2 2 1 2 . 7-23-3B PROGRESSIVE, NON-AVERSIVE treatment center needs mental health workers to assist brain-injured resi­ dents reach their goals for independ­ ence Full and part-time available w ith great benefits and pay incen­ tives Fox resume to BKH Human re­ sources: 5 1 2 -8 5 8 -5 1 0 4 7 -2 3 -3 6 -8 W AN TED : O U T G O IN G interns for Detour Film Productions. M a il Re­ sume ond availab ility to P.O. Box 13 3 5 1 , Austin TX 7 8 7 1 1 or fa x to 3 2 2 -0 7 2 6 . N o calls please. PART-TIME RUNNER/CLERK^ (8am -l 2:3 0 p m , M-F) N eeded for dow ntow n la w firm. Messengerina, photocopy, fox, mail services, housekeeping, etc. Must have dependable vehicle w ith good driving record. Fax resume to Administrator, 476-7770 724-3&C Do You W ant To MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN SO M EO N E'S UFE? Leading group home provider for person's with developnientol disabilities has openings for direct core staff in the North Austin, Round Rock, ond Pflugerville areas. Our mission is to provide the mgh«st possible quality of care and life-skills training for the adults who reside in our group homes. This is on excellent opportunity for those who are interested in a career in the social services field. If you are 18 yrs. old, have HS diplom a/G ED, driver's license w / good record, ond an outstanding attitude, call Charles 0 2 1 8 -9 4 8 3 . n t 2 H AUTO M ECHANIC needed for South Austin repair shop. Tools re­ quired Call Tom at 4 4 1 -5 2 0 2 . 7- 25-5B $ 0 0 - G e n e r a l ______ J pet needed August 5-11. Must nave ref­ erences. $ 1 0 0 + . C a ll Andrea 416- 0311 7-25-5B NOW HIRING SECURITY OFFICERS Having a hard tim e making ends meet? income without sacrificing your G PA to get it? If so, we have the perfect job for you!! A t Zimco we offer: extra Need 8 1 0 - O ffic e - C le r ic a l PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST needed to answer phones and general office M S -W ord skills w ork. required $ 6 /h r. Fox brief resume to 345- 8 4 9 8 . 7 -2 2 -5 4 C ADMINISTRATIVE • BILLER/TYPIST Knowledge of A /R and A /P . Flexible Schedule. Should know Windows 3.1. Excellent income Full/Part-time 8 0 0-3 73-0 28 6. 7-25-5B C • Full & Part T im e Positions • • Evening &. N ight Positions • • Study W h ile You W ork • • C ar N o t Required • • School Holidays O ff • • N o Experience Necessary • • Uniform s Provided • CALL 343-7210 NOW ZIMCO SECURITY CONSULTANTS Lkciu* • B-0JS10 DO YOU LOVE CHILDREN? Sitting service is looking for part-time day, evening, and week-end on call sitters. Earn extra money on your schedule. $7-$9/hr. Experience and transportation required. 472-2605. 7-25-ik W ESTBANK DRYCLEANING needs counter help, for afternoons. Good pay, 3 2 9 -9 9 9 9 . 7 -2 Í+ 5 W ) PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST needed for busy property management firm. Phones, light typing/computers, filing. Flexible hours: 8:30-1:30pm. Apply at: 1502-B West 6th Street. 7.25-580 M A G A Z IN E /S M O K E SEEKS full or part-time em ployee w ith pleasant Retail experience re­ personality. quired. Accounting experienced helpful. Flexible schedule. A pply in BR News person only 9-5, M -f - 3 2 0 8 G uadalupe. 7-25-6B NEAR UT $7-7.25 Flexible hrs. 24-hr. job lines: -Paralegal Courier: * £ 4 -2 2 4 6 -T ypi st/Cler ic d : -Bookkeeping Trainee i y t o Q i o 4 7 4 -2 0 3 2 Smoke-free, WILL TRAIN, freshmen w e lc o m e ! 7-21-2060 RECEPTIONIST NEEDED. Experi­ enced only. G o o d com puter skills, M ac preferred. Type 60w pm . Busy phones. Fax resume 4 7 3 -8 4 1 7 . 7- 25-5B *20 NEAR UT! Gain bookkeeping experience $7-7.25 /hr. PT/FT. Also hiring typists, clerical, runners. Nonsmoking. 474-2032 . . . 8 Ú za im n M O - S o Im REAL ESTATE AGENT Licensed Agent for busy leasing/sales office near UT. Good Comission Many in-house properties. 4 7 9 - 1 3 0 0 7255SC E a rn « U n Ift C M M te M t o at «cheat, faaaHaffi opptert— H»a> 5 j j ? cutí, ChffiateWÑaa, mttmm ■ N t t h T w i i M M N O a a a * $20/HR FOR TOP GUN APPT. SETTERS Not fhe usual grind. Interesting program. Day and night shifts. Central location. Call Tony 320-9027. 7 -2 5 - 1» 8 S 0 - l t e t e V ' : 5 CLOTHING SALESPERSON needed FT/PT, daytime hours. Fun, friendly environment. Call 3 4 5 -5 2 2 2 7-22- 9B-D N O W HIRING HEROES A N D LEGACIES cigar sales and collective memora­ bilia. Good starting pay plus bene­ fits. Full-time and part-time needed. Apply in person at 10000 Research Blvd. Ste. 123 or 3663 Bee Caves Rd. Ste. 4H. WAITSTAFF, C O O K NEEDED for summer and foil Apply: Cain ond Abel's 2 3 1 3 Rio Grande, after 4:00pm . 7-22-5B 9 0 0 - D o m e s t i c ; AFTER SCHOOL childcare for 2 girls (8 & 10). Reliable transportation, help with homework, some driving, 7-16- 15-20hrs/wk. 2 6 3 -3 6 3 6 . 7 -2 3 -5 B 2 0 8 10% DISCOUNT on gasoline purchases ana make money with prepaid gas debit cards. Call 236-1162 today’ 7-166-56 LIVE-IN ATTENDANT FREE Room & Board. Live & W ork in North Austin All Female Group Home. EMPOWERMENT OPTIONS, Serving Persons with Mental Retardation. Call Terri at 338-4493, 721-3# EOE BABYSITTER NEEDED for boys ages 3 & 1. Northwest area 10-15 hrs/wk. $ 5 /h r. 3 4 3 -9 3 3 3 . 7-22-5B PRIVATE R O O M and bath on Enfield provided for coring, creative nanny After­ to our 2yr.-old daughter. 4 7 4 -4 0 0 4 noons, some evenings. for info. 7-22-4B HILL COUNTRY NANNIES W e need afterschool nannies starting mid August. Typicalhours 2-6pm. MF. Call for details. 345-0405. 7 -2 3 -5 6 - 0 ÍÉÉ • :■ O U T G O IN G PEOPLE-ORIENTED staff needed for front office of N W Austin physicin. Must be good with Computer skills needed. details. Pay based on experience. Fax re­ sume to 4 7 7 -3 8 7 4 . 7-22-10B LVN - W ith strong clinical experience to work with RN for a Private Provider of MR Services in challenging posi­ tion providing care to individuals in San Marcos and So-Austin area. Fulltime position + benefits. Fax resume to Nancy, 5 1 2 -3 9 2 -6 6 6 0 7-22-4B •00-feiMtatMft I INTERESTED IN teaching Enalish to corporate executives in M exico City? Call Native English- Austin (5 1 2 )3 2 9 -0 4 6 0 . 7-14-20B PROGRAMMERS WANTED C+, C + + , Visual for unique project. S o m e experience preferred. E-mail resume with salary history and requirements to rbellesOreallink.com or call 512-219-5215 Richard. 7 23-38 PART-TIME N A N N Y needed. 3 or 4 Some housework. afterrvoons/wk. Must have transportation. Experi­ ence preferred, references required 3 0 6 -1 5 4 6 after 7pm or weekends. 7-23-10B NEEDED AUGUST 1 1th: 2 childcare providers 3-6:30 M f . Reliable transportation. Non-smokinq_ Assist with schoolwork. 3 2 4 4 1 2 / , leave message. 7-23-5B NEEDED: BABYSITTER for 1 * •old bov 4 1 8 -0 5 2 6 . 7-24-5B-A Two mornings o week. RESPONSIBLE CARING PERSON Needed to help family with very intelligent 12-yr-old boy with severe cerebral patsey ond his two sisters, afternoons M f M u*t N w e good driving record. $ 8 /h r. Coll 4 5 8 -1 5 9 6 , evenings, 01k for Poufo or Don ^ THE YELLOW ROSE is looking for Austin's finest entertainers and waitresses. Apply 6528 N. Lamar. 7-10-204A r r ' EDGE CITY Cafe in the Arboretum has fulltime morning, parWime eve ning positions avaiw ble immediate­ ly 3 4 2 -2 2 3 9 7-15-9B PIUCKERS HIRING immediately Delivery drivers, counter persons, 4 cooks. 2 2 2 2 Rio Grande or 4 6 9 - 9 4 6 4 7-18-206 SuperLonghorn Want Ads - Call 471-5244