McGarity— Baílu Cexatt ■ving students at The University of Texas since 1 9 0 0 Going 'deep'— p. 7 Barak calls Palestinians inflexible; peace process hits snag •“ - T l l l l i n " ! said S u n d a y JE R U S A L E M — P rim e M in iste r E h u d B arak the Palestinians have not been flexible in peace negotiations, and Palestinian leader Yasser A rafat sum m oned his top negotiators to Cairo for urgent con­ sultations. A Palestinian official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a meeting to discuss implementation of the U.S.- brokered Wye accord Sunday between Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat and his Israeli counterpart, G ilead Sher, ended in "real crisis." According to the source, Erekat left late Sunday to consult on the brewing late Sunday to consult on the brewing officesaid. office said breakdown with Arafat in Cairo. A statement from Barak's office hint­ ed that the peace p rocess m igh t be e n co u n te rin g its first crisis since he took office. Barak "The office of the p rim e m in ister feels th a t w h ile Israel see k s real the p ro g ress, Palestinians respond without flexibili­ ty, probably because of internal consid­ erations, a statem ent from Barak's E a rlie r Su n d ay , B arak told his Cabinet that implementation of parts of the Wye accord might begin within a month, a cabinet statement said. But Israeli media said troop withdrawals would not begin until O ct.l. The cabinet statement did not speci­ fy whether troop withdrawals from the W est Bank would begin Oct. 1, but Barak spokesman David Zisso said the “p h y sical im p le m e n ta tio n " o f the a g reem en t w ou ld begin then. H e would not elaborate. More delays would likely anger the P a le stin ia n s, w h o hav e called for , l . im m ed ia te im p lem e n tatio n o f the agreement. The pact was frozen under B arak s h a rd -lin e p red ecesso r, Benjamin Netanyahu. In a sta te m e n t released by the P a lestin ia n n ew s agen cy W A FA , Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat reiter­ ated his stance against any delays in earning out Wye. Meanwhile, Israel is considering eas­ ing criteria for release of Palestinian security prisoners as part of Barak's efforts to revive the peace talks with the Palestinians, a Cabinet minister close to the prime minister said Sunday. The prisoners are one of 'he most ........................................ ____ V sensitive issues between Israel and the Palestinians. Under previous agree­ ments, Israel was to have released 750 prisoners, but when the first group was released it emerged that most of them were thieves or other common crimi­ nals, not so-called security prisoners — those jailed for anti-Israel acts. That set off angry Palestinian demonstrations. Netanyahu, then the prime minister, said he would not release prisoners "with blood on their hands." However, the Palestinians say only 250 of the more than 2,000 Palestinian security prisoners in Israeli jails have killed Israelis. O Others killed Palestinians accused of collaborating with Israel, w ounded Israelis, or were accomplices of those who killed Israelis. Haim Ramon, the minister in charge of Jerusalem affairs, told army radio the criteria for releasing prisoners is being re-exam ined in an attem pt to reach an acco m m o d atio n w ith the Palestinians. Israeli Justice Minister Yossi Beilin, an architect o f the O slo agreem ents with the Palestinians, has said the gov­ ernment is considering a new defini­ tion of which pnsoners have "blood on their hands." UT dedicates Tower Garden Suspected traitor maintains innocence A sso c iate d Press W A S H IN G T O N — T h e s c ie n ­ t i s t s u s p e c t e d o f p a s s in g v ita l U .S . n u c le a r w e a p o n s s e c r e ts to th e C h in e s e d e c la r e d h is i n n o ­ c e n c e S u n d a y in h is firs t p u b lic in te rv ie w and s u g g e s te d h e had b e e n s in g le d o u t b e c a u s e o f h is C h in e se h e ritag e. “ T h e t r u t h is I 'm i n n o c e n t ," W en H o L ee said in an in te rv iew w ith C B S ' 6 0 M i n u t e s t h a t w a s b r o a d c a s t S u n d a y . " S u d d e n l y , they to ld m e I'm a traito r. ... I ju st d o n 't u n d erstan d th is ." L e e w a s f i r e d in th e s p r i n g fro m h is se cu rity se n sitiv e jo b at th e E n e rg y D e p a r tm e n t's la b in L o s A la m o s , N .M ., a fte r h e had b een u n d er in v e stig a tio n for p o s­ sib le e sp io n a g e sin ce 1996. E v id e n ce e m e rg ed afte r h is fir­ in g t h a t L e e h a d s h if t e d t h o u ­ a t o m ic s a n d s w e a p o n s c o d e s to an u n s e c u re d co m p u te r. c l a s s i f i e d o f L ee has n o t been ch arg ed w ith any crim e. In th e i n t e r v i e w , L e e s a id it w as c o m m o n p r a c tic e fo r s c ie n ­ t i s t s to d o w n lo a d i n f o r m a t i o n fro m c l a s s i f i e d c o m p u te r s an d tra n sfe r it to u n cla ssifie d co m p u t­ ers. B u t he said he u sed th ree p a s s ­ w o rd s on h is u n secu red c o m p u t­ e r so " i t 's a lm o s t im p o s s ib le fo r a n y b o d y to b re a k in. Y ou k n ow , so m e tim e s I ev en had a hard tim e to b reak in m y s e lf." A sked w hy he w as sin g le d ou t fo r th e e s p io n a g e in v e s tig a tio n , L ee said h is b est e x p la n a tio n w as th a t a u th o r itie s n e e d e d a s c a p e ­ g o a t a n d a s a C h in e s e p e r s o n b o rn in T a iw a n " t h e y th in k I'm p e rfe ct fo r th e m ." L ee, an A m e rica n c itiz e n sin ce 1974, cam e u n d er scru tin y in 1996 a fte r it b e c a m e e v id e n t th a t th e C h in e se m ay h av e a cq u ired secret d esig n in fo rm a tio n a b o u t th e W - 88 n u c le a r w a rh ea d . L ee w o rk ed on th a t p ro je ct and had m ad e se v ­ eral trip s to C h in a. E n e r g y S e c r e t a r y B il l R ic h a rd so n , a lso in te rv ie w e d by 60 M inu tes, d en ied L ee w as b ein g m ad e a scap e g o a t. " T h is m an m a s s iv e ly v io la te d o u r s e c u r it y p r o c e d u r e s a t L o s A l a m o s ," h e s a id , r e f e r r i n g to im p ro p e r c o n ta c ts w ith C h in e s e o fficia ls and v io la tio n s o f secu rity ru les by his tra n sfe r o f secret d ata to u n cla ssifie d co m p u ters. The Ju stice D ep artm en t h as not d e c id e d w h e th e r to c h a r g e L e e w ith any crim e. B u t T h e L o s A n g e l e s T i m e s t h a t L e e 's r e p o r t e d S u n d a y SECRETS/Page 2 W E A T H E R If you d id n 't alread y know, the coolest radio sta­ tion ev er is the Bear in Waco. They played 98 cool songs in a row, like the jazz "Killing me Softly " and the alternative "R o cket Man." But do not be deceived by the 76 fake Bears that hang around Wichita Falls. W here's that? Well d on't you wish you had a locater map graphic I Classifieds I N D E X Comics......... Editorials.... Entertainment..... Sports'............... State & L ocal............. U niversity.......... World & Nation..... 8 10 4 .7 5 3 ..... 12 ....... 6 University remembers anniversary of deadly Tower shooting spree Sarah Gainer Daily Texan Staff Q u ie t re m e m b ra n c e m a rk e d Sunday's dedication ceremony for the Tow er Garden — com m em o­ rating those affected by the dark hours when bullets punctured the a ir, p ie r c in g th e h e a rt o f th e U n iv ersity and n ation 33 y ears ago. Past and p resen t m em b ers o f the UT com m unity attended the Tower Garden memorial cerem o­ ny, which took place north of the M ain B u ild in g n e a r th e tu rtle pond. The m e m o ria l h o n o rs th o se affected in w hat many consid er the nation's frrsfmass killing. O n th a t fa te fu l d ay, A ug. I, 1966, C h a rle s W h itm an , an ex- Marme and UT architectural engi­ neering student, made his way to the top o f the U n iv ersity 's trea­ sured landmark and began a more than 90-minute shooting rampage, k illin g 13 and w o u n d in g m ore than 30. “All w ho w ere on the cam pus on Aug. 1, 1966 — as I was — will forev er rem em b er the even ts of th a t d a y ," U T P re s id e n t L arry F au lk n er said in the cerem on y . I he T o w e r s h o o tin g s d e e p ly affected the lives of manv people in our com m unity, state and the nation." Faulkner, a chemistry graduate student in 1966, had just left cam ­ pus as the bloodbath began. He called the new ly-dedicated garden “a tranquil oasis" and "one of our most-treasured places." But he said the most important tribute the University can make to the v ictim s of the trag ed y is to carry on, renew ing the com m it- m e n t to th e co re v a lu e s o f th e University — learning, discovery and freedom. "For it is in embracing life that we truly honor those whose lives were changed by the events of that day," Faulkner said. Faulkner said there have been people concerned about any type of memorial because it may make the shootings too sym bolic of the University. B ut he said it is im p ortan t to co m e to an u n d e rs ta n d in g o f im portant sym bols in life and to come to terms with them. Som e present at the cerem ony re m e m b e re d all to o w ell th e events that unfolded that day, C lif D rum m ond, then-stu d ent b o d y p r e s id e n t, w as w a lk in g toward the Texas Union under a blistering sum m er sun. He heard s c re a m in g , an d p e o p le b e g a n shouting at him to take cover. A fter he slipped w h ile racing for cover, he went up to his office lo ca te d in th e U n io n . He th e n returned outsid e, determ ined to help the wounded "I decided that I was not going to just sit there in my office," he said . "1 w as g o in g to do so m e ­ thing." A fte r n o tic in g "p e o p le h ad abandoned their cars in the m id­ dle of the stre et," he saw a m an bleeding, slumped over, across the street, w ithin clear range ot the sniper in the Tower. He ran b arefo o t w ith another man — ob liviou s to the second- degree bums on his feet from the blistering street — zig-zagging as Whitman took deadly aim at him. He tried to help the man and TOW ER/Page^ . r - J i r r n UT President Larry Faulkner speaks as the garden just northwest of the Tower is dedicated to those who have suffered from the Tower shorting that occured 33 years ago on Sunday. Faulkner hopes that the garden will be a place for "reflection and i6n6W6a serenity. Kellar Hall/DAILY TEXAN STAFF Zapatistas, state to restart talks 'U li A sso ciate d Press y ears ago. SA N C R IST O B A L DE L A S C A SA S, M ex ico — M e x ic o 's 2000 p re sid e n tia l ch a n g e o v er sh ou ld not be an im p e d i­ m ent to re sta rtin g talk s w ith the le ft­ i s t Z a p a t i s t a r e b e l s , g o v e r n m e n t p eace n e g o tia to r E m ilio R abasa said Su n d ay afte r m eetin g a top rebel lia i­ son. T h o u g h p u b lic a t t e n t i o n w ill b e fo cu sed on n ext y e a r's local and fed ­ eral e le ctio n s, R abasa exp resse d o p ti­ m ism ov er ju m p -sta rtin g p eace n e g o ­ tiatio n s that b ro k e d ow n n early th ree R abasa m et p riv ately Su n d ay w ith A m a d o A v e n d a n o , an o p p o s it io n p o li t ic a l fig u r e w h o lo s t C h ia p a s ' 1994 g u b e rn a to ria l race to the in cu m ­ b e n t I n s t i t u t i o n a l R e v o l u t i o n a r y P arty . T he Z ap atista rebels, w ho took up a rm s in Ja n u a r y 1 9 9 4 , n o n e th e le s s d e c la re d A v e n d a n o th e h ead o f an "a lte r n a tiv e g o v e r n m e n t" and o fte n relay m essag es th rou gh him. T h e t w o - h o u r m e e tin g A v e n d a n o 's h o m e w a s th e b etw een the tw o men. in fi rs t " It w as a p le a s u re to s p e a k w ith A v en d an o w ho know s w ell th e c o n ­ f lic t an d th e r e g io n in w h ic h it is lo c a te d and th e r e fo r e m e r its b e in g h e a rd , R a b a s a sa id S u n d a y in an interview . R abasa said re s o lv in g th e co n flict is not ju s t a m atter o f sig n in g p eace acco rd s, b u t a d d ressin g the roots o f the p roblem — p o verty and p o litical iso lation . I he Z a p atista reb els have d em a n d ­ ed th e g o v e r n m e n t g i v e g r e a t e r a t t e n t i o n an d r e s p e c t to C h ia p a s ' Ind ians. AP photo Emilio Rabasa, right, the government coordinator for the peace agreements with the Zapatista Front meets with Amado Avendano Sunday. Parties at odds over GOP tax cut initiative Associated Press # W A SH IN G TO N — Republicans determ ined to pass $792 billion in tax cuts met stiff opposi­ tion Sunday from D em ocrats and W hite H ouse officials m aking the case ag ainst cu ts of any size. "W e are m uch further apart than the pub­ lic u n d e rs ta n d s ," said Sen. P hil G ram m ,*R - Texas. G O P and D em o cratic m o d erates still held o u t h o p e fo r an a u tu m n c o m p r o m is e th a t would give A m ericans a tax cut over the next d e c a d e an d p r e s e r v e n e e d e d g o v e r n m e n t sp en d in g p ro g ram s. But one m o d erate, Sen. Jo h n C h a fe e , R -R .I., said th e re w as a g oo d chance neither side would get w hat it wanted G O P lead ers in both cham b ers have given their deputies until the end of the week, when C o n g ress d ep arts for its A u gust vacatio n , to settle differences in House and Senate tax cut bills and gain final passage of a bill President C linton has pledged to veto. The bill actu ally w ill not go to the president until Septem ber, giving supporters a chance to take their case to their constituents and avoid a W hite House veto cerem ony when C ongress is not around. T h e b ills passed bv the H ou se and S en a te both total $7t}2 billion in cuts over 10 years, but differ in details. I he H ouse offers an across-the-board 10 p er­ cent tax cut while the Senate would low er the 15 percent tax bracket to 14 percent and, beg in ­ ning in 2006, gradually shift som e incom e cu r­ rently taxed at 28 percent into the low er brack­ et. The W hite House staff and m ost D em ocrats say the tax cuts would eat up alm ost all ot the estim ated $1 trillion in non-Social Secu n tv su r­ p lu s e s p ro je c te d fo r th e n e x t d e c a d e T h a t w ould take away m oney needed for reform ing M e d ica re , im p ro v in g e d u c a tio n and p a y in g dow n the debt. T h e \\ h ite H o u se s a id S u n d a y it w o u ld op pose an y tax cut o f m ore than $300 billion and preferred not to cut taxes at all It w ould be b etter to d o n othing and pay dow n $100 billion of our national debt than to sig n a la r g e and ir r e s p o n s ib le tax cut th at would signal to the world that the era of fiscal d iscip lin e in the United States is ov er," G ene Sperlin g, chairm an o f the N ation al Economic Council, said on N BC 's Meet the Press. S e n . D a n ie l P a tr ic k M o y n ih a n , D - N .l , agreed that reducing the debt bv not spending the Social Security surplus was already h e lp ­ ing the econom y. "I d like to suggest that we TAX CUTS/Page 2 Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky . holds a dollar bill during discussions on iie Republican tax cuts. AP phots Page 2 Monday, August 2,1999 T h e D a i l y T e x a n * -'i:- i . . / • » ,, Mall doc lets shoppers watch live eye surgeries Associated Press N o, FA IR FA X , V a. — S q u e a m is h s h o p p e rs bew are: T h ey 're slicing eyeballs at the Fair O aks Mall. t h e y 'r e n o t film in g a s c h lo c k h o r r o r m o v ie . I t 's ju s t b u s in e s s as u s u a l a t th e V isu a l F ree d o m C e n te r, b e lie v e d to be th e f ir s t e y e s u r g e r y c e n te r to open in a sh o pping mall. P a sse rsb y can w a tch the s u r g ­ eries — in te n d ed to correct n e a r­ sig htedness and farsightedness — live on a television screen. "Ew w w w ," squealed a teen-age girl w hen she saw a closeup of an éye being clam ped open. "Y uck," sa id a n o th e r m allg o er as the eye w as squ irted w ith an es­ th etic an d th e c o rn ea sliced a n d p e e le d b a ck , e x p o s in g th e a re a p e e le d b a c k , e x p o s in g th e b en eath , w hich w as th e n z a p p e d w ith a laser. a re a It's an o d d m ark e tin g strateg y , b u t for every g ro sse d -o u t p a sse r­ by th e re are d o z e n s of s h o p p e rs w ho can 't help b u t stop for a peek. T h a t's p recisely w h a t o p h th a l­ m o lo g ist R obert Jo h n sto n h a d in m ind w hen he m oved his office to th e m all in F e b ru a ry a n d b e g an te le v is in g o p e r a tio n s . th e B e sp e c ta c le d s h o p p e rs see h o w e a s y th e p r o c e d u r e is a n d lo se their fear, said m ark eting director Shannon Fredericks. Patients can choose to close the c u r ta in s on th e o p e r a tin g ro o m a n d tu rn off th e te le v is io n , b u t only a few do so. T ien C h a u . 23. of A n n a n H alp T ien C h a u , 23, o f A n n a n d a le , w orked up the courage to have his e y e s tr e a te d a fte r w a tc h in g h is girlfriend, Thuy N guyen, 23, have th e o p e r a t io n th e d a y b e f o r e . C h a u re a s o n e d th a t d o c to rs are less likely to b u tc h e r him w ith a crow d w atching. "M y th o u g h ts e x a ctly ," sa id a w om an w a itin g n e rv o u sly a lo n g ­ side C hau in the w aiting room. The surg ery takes abo ut 15 m in ­ u te s a n d c o sts a b o u t $4,500 fo r both eyes. The o p e ra tio n , w h ich resh a p es the cornea so th at im ages properly h it th e retin a, is called L aser in- S itu K e ra to m ile u s is , o r LASIK. The c en ter of a n e a rs ig h te d p e r ­ s o n 's c o rn e a is p u ls e d w ith th e laePr laser to reduce the curvature. In a f a r s i g h t e d p e r s o n , th e p erip h e ry of the cornea is pu lsed to rem o v e tissu e an d a d d c u rv a ­ ture. Laser eye su rg ery is p erform ed by o p h th a lm o lo g is ts a c ro s s th e c o u n tr y , a l th o u g h th e V is u a l Freedom C enter is believed to be the first center to be located in a s h o p p in g m all, sa id Jan B eiting, s p o k e sw o m a n fo r th e A m e ric an Society of C ataract and Refractive Surgery in Fairfax. - "T here's definitely a buzz about it am ong ou r m em bers," she said. Since th e c e n te r m o v ed to th e m a ll fro m J o h n s t o n 's o ffic e in L e e sb u rg in F e b ru a ry , b u s in e s s has jum ped ab o u t 40 percent, w ith a b o u t 15 p a tie n ts tr e a te d d a ily , Fredericks said. . The center has been so success­ ful th a t a second shop w ill o p en in a C o lu m b ia , M d ., m a ll in S ep tem b er. Tw o m o re are in the w o r k s th e C h ic a g o a n d W a s h in g to n -B a ltim o re a re a s by th e e n d of th e y e a r, F re d e ric k s said. fo r D avid Karcher, executive direc­ to r o f th e A m e ric a n S o c ie ty of C a ta ra c t a n d R efractive S u rg ery , cau tio n ed ag ain st triv ia lizin g the serio u sn ess of the p ro c e d u re and said this is as close as physician s have com e to "going retail." C raig C onroy, h ead of C o n ro y Research G roup and a form er m all th e V is u a l s a id d e v e lo p e r , . _ Freedom Center is part of the "doc in a box" phenom enon in w hich p h y s ic ia n s h a v e m o v e d o u t o f their traditional sterile en v iro n ­ m ents to attract customers. D en tists' offices h ave been in malls for years, and chiropractors hav e m ade the m ove too, he said. W h ile p e o p le m ay g e t sw e a ty palms w hen they walk into a hos­ pital, n o b o d y 's n ervo us a b o u t vis­ iting the mall. " M alls h a v e b e co m e th e to w n s q u a r e s in m a n y c o m m u n itie s , and it m akes sense for physicians to locate there," he said. A n d t h e r e 's o n e o t h e r p e r k : P a tie n ts g e t fre e v id e o s o f th e s u r g e r y fo r th e ir f r ie n d s w h o c o u ld n 't m ake it to the m all. Lewinsky unhurt after car accident Associated Press VENTURA, Calif. — M onica Lew insky suffered only scrapes a n d b r u is e s S u n d a y w h e n h e r sp o rt u tility vehicle o v e rtu rn e d on a fr e e w a y , th e C a lif o r n ia H ighw ay P atrol said. L e w in sk y , w h o w a s d riv in g alone, reached over to the p a s ­ s e n g e r se a t to ta k e s o m e th in g o u t of h e r p u rs e , re a liz e d she w a s close to a m o to r h o m e in the next lane, veered aw ay and then lost control of her vehicle, s a id Bob I n m a n , a C H P d i s ­ patcher. H er F ord E x p lo re r c ro ssed a d u s ty m e d ia n s t r i p on s ta te H ig h w a y 101 a b o u t five m iles n o rth of to w n a n d to p p le d on its side, he said. " S h e w a s a w a k e a n d a l e r t w h en p a ra m e d ic s a rriv e d ," he said. L e w in s k y , 26, w h o liv e s in Los A n geles, w as n o t cited for the accident an d n eith er alcohol nor d ru g s w ere involved in the 1 p.m . crash, Inm an said. L ew insky w as tra n sp o rte d to C o m m u n ity M em orial H o sp ital in V e n tu r a , w h e r e sh e w a s treate d and released, according to a n u rsin g sup erv iso r. H e r fa th e r a n d a n o th e r p e r ­ so n , w h o w as n o t id e n ti f ie d , cam e to the ho sp ital to pick her up, the su p e rv iso r said. It w as u n c le a r h o w f a s t th e form er W hite H ouse in te rn w as d riving, w here she w as going or w h a t she w as try in g to g et o u t of the p u rse, he ad d ed . W ill W o o d , a r e tir e d p o lic e officer from Santa Barbara, said he w itn essed the accident. "She m issed o u r car by abo u t 10 f e e t," W o o d s a id , a d d i n g th a t he h ad to sw erve to get out o f th e w a y . H e a n d o th e r m o to ris ts s to p p e d to h e lp , he said. "I saw there w as a girl in the fro n t seat, and she w as try in g to g e t o u t o f h e r s a f e ty b e lt. I d i d n 't k n o w w h o s h e w a s ," W ood said. "She said h er nam e w as M onica and w e w ere using h e r nam e to calm h e r dow n, like 'I t's okay, M onica."' H e a n d a n o th e r m an p u lle d h er o u t of the car, he said. "She h ad a lot of cuts on her left arm and som e of h er blood g o t o n to m y h a n d s ," W o o d s a id . " B u t sh e n e v e r p a s s e d o u t." T h e s o u t h b o u n d la n e w a s c lo s e d fo r a b o u t 30 m in u t e s w h ile th e v e h ic le w a s to w e d aw ay. Portland holds prom for homeless teens 44 These kids don’t make the choice to live on the Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — Her stringy green hair dyed gold, her em erald eyes fram ed by lavender liner, she steps o ut of the limo — a real-life Cinderella in a purple satin dress. People on the sid ew alk sto p to stare as the girl and her handsom e date move from the tw ilight into a shimmering, candlelit ballroom for a fo u r-c o u rse m eal a n d a n ig h t of music and dancing. "It feels so good to be looked at like h u m a n bein g s," said the 18- year-old known as Cuddles. "This is the one nigh t they look at us and don't think w e're just street kids." On any other night, she w ould be sitting on the gum -stained steps of the public square she calls hom e, chain-smoking cigarettes alongside other hom eless kids w ith m ohaw k haircuts, body piercings and tattoos. But for a few hours on prom night, Sunday, June 27, the cold rain, the drugs and loneliness are behind them. C u d d le s an d h e r b o y frie n d , Tigger, are among nearly 200 street kids prim ping for the prom, a gala not for graduates of the city's high schools but for the hom eless teens roaming its streets. "You'll see kids who all they do is walk around w anting to kill them ­ selves," says Cuddles, "and on that day they're totally different. They're just so high on life. I'm going as a princess." C u d d le s , real n am e Eorica Mohring, is a bit of a misnomer for a kid whose three years on the streets have been anything but w arm and fuzzy. streets ... They may choose to leave abusive homes, but they don’t choose to live under bridges.” — Neel Richmond, volunteer at Greenhouse She has been strung out on crystal meth, cocaine, pot and LSD. She has prostituted herself, been beaten up, sh o t and raped. She occasionally gets to visit the year-old d aughter she gave up for adoption. For 10 years, the Salvation Army has sponsored the prom for street kids at G reenhouse, a d o w n to w n drop-in center w here nearly 1,000 young people stop every year to get a sandwich, take a shower and duck o u t of the rain. W ith u p to 1,800 homeless teens in a town of 500,000, P ortland has m ore street kids per capita th an m ost cities. The v ast majority are white kids aged 12-21 w h o from Portland's suburbs. d o w n to w n flock "They don't get the kind of mark­ er events like a prom or graduation that other people take for granted," says Rowanne Haley, city coordina­ tor for the S alvation A rm y. "The prom is designed to show that peo­ ple care enough about them to pro­ vide good things for them." A dow ntow n banquet hall opens up its ballroom complete with vault­ ed ceilings, bronze chandeliers and a s tu n n in g v iew of s n o w c a p p e d Mount Hood. On prom day, professional mani­ curists show up to clean dirty cuti­ cles a n d p ain t broken nails. H air stylists trim shaggy bangs and curl wiry hair. T hen a fleet of lim o u sin es an d h o rse-draw n carriages w hisks the kids to the prom, where they stand in line for a stu d io p h o to g ra p h e r and dance to tunes spu n by a club DJ. The boys wear boutonnieres, the girls corsages. And it7s all donated, including the clothes on the kids' backs. Ju st d a y s b efo re th e p ro m , Cuddles steps from behind a clothes rack at a Salvation Army warehouse packed w ith dresses of lacy satin a n d g lim m e rin g v e lv e t. S h e 's sq u e e z e d into a tig ht, ro y al b lu e evening dress that puckers around her belly and doesn't quite stretch to her knees. Bra straps peek out and slide dow n her pale shoulders. H er boyfriend Tigger grabs his chin and silently shakes his head. " H o w a b o u t th is ? '' calls N oel Richmond, a Greenhouse volunteer w ho helped organize the first prom. S h e's h o ld in g u p a p in k , fla p p e r dress. Black sequins coat it like fish scales. , "It looks like a '50s hooker," com­ plains Cuddles. i The search co ntinues, C u d d le s slapping the hangars together and giv in g each d ress the once-over. Racks of pinstriped suits and tuxe­ d o s c ro w d the o th e r sid e of th e room. Cardboard boxes are stuffed w ith cum m erbunds, bow ties and socks — all d o n a tio n s sa v e d for prom-goers. C uddles has been dating Tigger, whose real name is Nathan Alleger, since November. "W h en I saw h im for th e first time, I just freaked," she says. "My heart just exploded out of m y chest." T igger is skinny, w ith d eep set eyes, clear skin an d spiky, blond hair. The 16-year-old has a w ispy m ustache and his street nam e tat­ tooed across his knuckles. H e d e sc rib e s a c h ild h o o d of neglect, beatings and sexual abuse. Everybody at Greenhouse has simi­ lar stories. "These kids don't make the choice to live on the streets," prom organiz­ er R ic h m o n d say s. "T h e y m ay choose to leave abusive homes, but th e y d o n 't ch o o se to liv e u n d e r bridges." Greenhouse makes sure to kick off each prom with a graduation cere­ m ony celebrating those w ho earned th e ir g ra d u a tio n e q u iv a le n c y degrees. Before the first fork is lifted, prom -goers w hoop and holler for the 30 g radu ates w ho stru t across the stage in blue cap and gowns. "Hie prom 's actually there to glori­ fy the fact that street kids have done something with their lives," Cuddles say s. "Y ou do so m e th in g good, you're going to have a party for it." Tower Continued from page 1 flagged dow n an ambulance. He later learned the man was already dead — shot in the throat. Drummond and others scrambled for the n e x t h o u r to a ssist o th e r wounded, and while anxious for his own safety, he knew he had a job to do. "I w as very focused du rin g that time," he said. "Yeah, I was afraid or concerned for my own safety ... but I knew th at those people had to be h e lp e d , an d I d e c id e d th a t I w as going to do that." VVhile he said he does not suffer from fla sh b a c k s or n ig h tm a re s, Drummond said he can never forget what transpired that day. "It d id p ro fo u n d ly affect me ... because it was the first public mas- sacre of people," he said. "It was as close to being unim aginable as you would think, and it was a great shock to put it mildly." He said he had alw ays loved the Tower — it represented som ething peaceful — a peacefulness which was somewhat diminished that day. "It d id n 't feel q u ite so peaceful anym ore," he said, referring to the times he revisited the Tower observa­ tion deck prior to its 1975 closing. Drum m ond said he is looking for­ w ard to returning to the observation deck this September. "I think that is probably the most important thing they can do because it means, am ong other things, that w e're taking back th e Tow er from Whitman," Drum m ond said. Visit our homepage at http://stumedia.tsp.utexas.edu/webtexan/today/ SJaxla ©exan Permanent Staff ........................................................... .............. ............ .. ............... ............................................................................ ................ Rob Addy Amy Strahan Jaclyn Roberson Ryan Bauer. Michael Tunks. Jennifer Valentino DmMbCociNN Sarah Gainer, Monty Markland Jew n* < hew Bnan Dupró. Michelle Mann, Cecily Sailer i i i r i t t f t i T ii n i w m - - i y * - Roberto Rivera. Matt Hempel. Alan Poizner Barry Johnson P MwOÉMpi Robby Nisenteld Matt Howell Thomas Reidy, Mike Woodson .......................................................................................................... Natalie Burgm ............................................................. ............ Issue Staff ............................. Emily Pyle, Kathryn Wolfe Paul Emig, Robert Whiteman Kellar Hall, Madeline Vincent, Alan K Davis Adrienne DeVgrkm. Stephanie Bruce Christy Banta Jamie Reid, Marium Mohiuddm Christi Clifford, Rhys Southan ... Khy Chapman ..................................................... ............................................ Editor . Managing Editor Associate Managing Editor Design Editors Associate News Editor Senior Reporters Around Campus Editor Associate Editors Photo Editor . Senior Photographers Entertainment Editor Associate Entertainment Editor Sports Editor Comics Editor Cartoonists .............................. Horoscopes Editor ................ News Reporters Entertainment Writers Photographers Copy Editors Makeup Editors Editorial Columnists Advertising Advertising Director Retail Advertising Manager Local Display Classified Manager In-House Sales Representatives Classified Clerks Web Advertising Campus Representatives ............................................................................................. Brad Corbett Ntccole Bledsoe. Chad Bnckey. Silver Cuellar, Luis Rolim, Nicole Baum, Dm Ironkwe Joan Whitaker Karen CarboneH. Farrah Kassam, Don Sohn, Joe Price, Craig Daniel, Jessie Kempf Amy Glasscock, Casey Quigg, Elizabeth Olivier, Melissa Hatley Danny Grover Vanessa Martinez. Lee Wmkelman ....................... Evelyn Gardner The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University ot Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis Ave Austm. TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published daily except Saturday. Sunday, federal holidays, and exam periods Periodical postage paid at Austin TX 78710. News contnbutions wiH be accepted by telephone (471-4591), or at the editorial office (Texas Student For local and national display advertising, can 471-1865 For classified display and national classified display advertising, can 471-8900 For classified word advertising, call 471-5244 Entire contents copyright 1999 Texas Student Publications Publications Buiidmg 2 122). One Semester (Fan or Spring) .......................... Two Semesters (Fall and Spring; ..... Summer Session............................... One Year (Fan. Sprmg and Summer) The Daily Texan Mail Subscription Rates ................................................................ $37 00 74 00 30.00 100 00 To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications P O Box D. Austin, TX 78713- 8904, or to TSP Building C3 200.or call 471-5083 POSTMASTER Send address changes to Tne Daily Texan P O Box D, Austin, TX 78713 8/2/99 Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m. Thursday, 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday.........Monday, 4 p.m. Friday.............Tuesday, 4 p.m. 11 a m C ia s s fo d Wotd Acts (La»t Buamew Day Pnor to Publication) He a d d ed th at he is pleased the U niversity is com m em orating the trag ed y w ith the garden, and th at such a m e m o ria l m ay h e lp som e bring closure to the tragedy. "The b otto m line is it is a good idea for the University in some fash­ ion ... to com m em orate those w ho lost so much that day," he said. Victor Q uintanilla, an accounting senior who gave a reading at the cer­ emony, said it is im portant to come to term s w ith w hat took place that day, especially with the reopening of the observation deck. "Before we can o pen the Tower once again, to stu d e n ts an d those within our UT community, the heal­ ing process m ust [begin], and that is exactly w hat we are doing here today — reflecting on past m em ories and valuing the lives of those that were touched and lost," he said. K enneth Foote, a UT geography professor, authored a 1997 book enti­ tle d Shadow ed G round: A m erica's Landscapes of Violence and Tragedy. He a g re e d th a t it is g o o d for th e University to dedicate the memorial. The b o o k ex a m in e s site s in America that have experienced vio­ lent or tragic events, including the 1966 massacre, and studies people's responses after the passage of time. He said it takes people a long time to come to terms with such tragedies, e sp e c ia lly w h en th e p e rs o n w ho caused the anguish w as part of the community, as was W hitman. H e a d d e d th a t th e tim in g now seems appropriate. "I th in k this is a good sign," he said. "It m eans th at the U niversity community is finally able to come to terms with this tragedy and to honor the victims." The Tower remained dark Sunday night in memory of the shootings. A com m ittee of UT an d A u stin representatives will collaborate d u r­ ing the next year to determ ine the best way to develop and design the garden memorial. W e bring to light m usic of d iffe re n t g en res. Including E x p e rim e n ta l, W orld, J a z z , Hip Hop TUnein. Secrets Continued from page 1 law yers su b m itted a legal brief to the d e p a rtm e n t th at stressed Lee h a d " u s e d c o n sid e rab le care" to p r o te c t th e s e c u r ity of n u c le a r codes he tra n sferred to an u n c las­ sified co m p u ter system . H is a tto rn e y s a rg u e d th a t Lee h a d g o o d re a so n to tra n s fe r th e f ile s , b e c a u s e it w a s e a s i e r to w o rk o u ts id e th e c la ssifie d s y s ­ tem an d the extra file p ro v id e d a b a c k u p in c a s e o f c o m p u t e r b reak d o w n s. Sen. O rrin H atch, c h a irm a n of th e S enate Ju d icia ry C o m m ittee, s a id S u n d a y th a t c h a rg in g Lee w ith m i s h a n d l i n g c la s s if ie d Tax cuts Continued from page t m ig h t be b e st off if w e ju s t q u it n o w , w e n t h o m e a n d le t n a tu r e take its course," he said. "There is no need for a tax cut." R e p u b lic a n s re s p o n d e d th a t it w as better to return the su rp lus to in th a n ta x p a y e r s W ashington w here it will be spent. k e e p it "We view this as an opportu nity to pare back the size of the govern­ m ent, to g iv e ta x p a y e rs som e of their ow n m oney back," Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said on NBC. G ram m said on ABC's This Week th ere is a fu n d am e n ta l difference b e tw e e n R ep u b lica n s w h o fa v o r tax cuts and Dem ocrats w ho w ant to " s ta rt a n ew s p e n d in g sp re e " w ith th e s u r p lu s — a g u lf n o t understood by the public. "Only here in W ashington could we not figure out w hat to do w ith $1 trillio n in s u rp lu s ," said Sen. John Breaux, D-La. Last w eek he le d an u n s u c c e s s f u l e f f o r t by Senate m o d era te s to p u sh a $500 billion com prom ise plan. Breaux, ap p ea rin g on ABC and Fox News Sunday, proposed that in Septem ber, the W hite H o u se and C o n g re s s n e g o tia te a d e a l th a t w o u ld in c lu d e b o th M e d ic a re reform and tax cuts. " L e t's d o M e d ic a re f ir s t," Sperling said, repeating the White H ouse position that extending the Book Market 2nd level Dobie Mall m a te r ia l m ig h t b e a p p r o p r i a t e b e c a u s e " it is v e ry d if f ic u lt to pro v e espion ag e." th e t h a t H a tc h , w h o is s e e k in g th e R epublican n o m in atio n for p re si­ d e n t , a ls o s a id o n F ox N e w s S u n d a y J u s tic e D e p a rtm e n t m ish an d led th e case. H a tc h , R -U tah , s a id A tto rn e y G e n e ra l J a n e t R eno re fu se d FBI req u ests for w a rra n ts ag ain st Lee e v e n t h o u g h th e s c ie n t i s t h a d w aiv ed his rights. " T h a t's w h a t r e a lly is m in d - boggling to those of us w ho real­ ly look at th is," the se n a to r said. 44 We are much fur­ ther apart than the public understands.” — U.S. Seuetor PhS Grenen, R-Texet liv e s of M e d ic a re a n d S o cial S ecu rity s h o u ld com e b efo re tax cut discussions. c h a irm a n , th e S e n a te B u d g e t F ro m C o m m itte e P e te Dom enici of New Mexico, cam e a p r o p o s a l fo r a " g r a n d c o m p r o ­ mise that w ould include "a very major" tax cut. A p p e a r in g on C N N 's L ate Edition, he said: "If they d o n 't w ant to s ta r t w ith th a t, th e n w e w ill have gridlock on their terms, it will be their fault." B ut g e ttin g a b ill Congress is far from certain. th r o u g h Chafee, w ho voted for the Senate package despite his concerns that it was too big, said on NBC th a t he had to ld S en ate M ajority L ead er Trent Lott, R-Miss., "D o n 't count on m e ," if th e fin al bill h a s th e H ouse's across-the-board cuts. C ritics of the H ouse bill says it gives a large share of the benefits to a sm all num ber of well-off tax­ payers. NM-Hiurs 10-8 • Fri-Jal 19-10 • Sun 12:}0-8 We buy books • 2 hr. validated parking 4 9 9 - 8 7 0 7 DAILY SPECIALS, TOO! I I C A S A V E R D E F L O R IS T | 481-0691 FTD /, 1806 W. Koaning Ln. Associated Press Associated Press WORLD & NATION T h e D a ily T e x a n 3 Explosion ignites tensions Wife of Atlanta shooter buried PRISTINA, Yugoslavia — Peace­ keepers scrambled to keep a lid on simmering ethnic tensions Sunday after a bomb damaged a Serbian Orthodox church under construction in Kosovo's capital. Russia on Sunday defended the action of its peacekeepers and accused the rebel group of flouting the peace process. province, regarding them as enemies because of Moscow7s traditional close ties with Serbia. In Moscow, the Foreign Ministry said in a statem ent that Russian troops briefly detained a group of KLA soldiers, including Ceku, and found that some of them did not have proper papers. It said they were allowed to continue after their identi­ ties were established. The blast early Sunday did little damage to the structure, but it fur­ ther undermined the already weak confidence of minority Serbs in the ability of the W estern alliance's KFOR peacekeeping force to protect them from violence they say is com­ mitted by ethnic Albanians. MONDAY, AUGUST 2,1898 __ ____ ___ Associated Press The bombing "was not a surprise because for the last few days we have been telling every day the KFOR offi­ cers that this is going to be the next target, Father Sava Janjic, a promi­ nent Serbian Orthodox priest in Kosovo, told Associated Press Televi­ sion News. "W e very much wonder why it couldn't be prevented." NATO issued a statement saying it "vigorously condemns this cowardly attack against a place of worship" and was carrying out an investiga­ tion. In the town of Zitinje, Serbs said they had no more faith in NATO's protection after the fourth man in 10 days was killed Saturday while pick­ ing plums in an orchard. The town's 150 Serbs left in a convoy Sunday escorted by U.S. peacekeepers. The peacekeepers "d o n 't have enough troops," said Hija Savic, 27, a farmer from Zitinje. "All we see is KFOR cooperating with Albanians." Maj. Kevin Farrell, operations offi­ cer of Task Force 177, which orga­ nized Sunday's convoys from the vil­ lage, said, "We're trying to protect both sides, but the hatred is so deep." The bombing added to tensions already running high after Russian peacekeepers briefly detained a top commander of the Kosovo Liberation Army, chief of staff Agjm Ceku. In response to the detention Satur­ day, ethnic Albanian rebel leader Hashim Thaci warned that if such actions aren 't stopped, "w e will defend our honor." Ethnic Albanians have opposed the presence of Russian troops in the The statem ent called Thaci's response "a crude provocation" and criticized w hat it termed "the impunity of the KLA, which is carry­ ing out illegal violence against local Serbs." In a separate report, Russia's ITAR-Tass news agency said all of the 3,600 Russian troops planned for Kosovo should be in the province by the end of the week. About three- quarters of NATO's planned 56,000 peacekeepers have been deployed. Also in Moscow, Milo Djukanovic, president of Yugoslavia's pro-West­ ern republic, Montenegro, repeated threats that Montenegro could break from Yugoslavia — splitting with the dominant Serb republic — if Bel­ grade did not agree to sweeping democratic reforms. Djukanovic was in Moscow to dis­ cuss reconstruction of Yugoslavia after NATO's bombing campaign, Russian news reports said. In Kosovo, a Serbian province, the minority ethnic Serbs have come under persistent attacks from some of hundreds of thousands of return­ ing ethnic Albanian refugees, many of whom lost their homes and family members under an earlier Serbian crackdown. More than 100,000 Serbs are believed to have fled the province since Serb-led Yugoslav forces pulled out after the 78-day NATO bombing cam paign forced Yugoslavia to accept a peace plan last month. The continued flight o f Serbs, despite NATO's pledges to protect all ethnic groups, could severely underm ine the W est's goal of a LIZ ELL A, Ga. — M ourners packed a rural church Sunday for the funeral of Leigh Ann Barton, the first of 12 victims in her husband's killing spree last week, as a pastor urged them not to "allow her murder to cloud our memory " Girl Scouts in uniform passed out tissues before the service. Mark O. Barton, 44, killed his wife with a hammer Tuesday night in her su burban apartm ent south of Atlanta. It was the first of a string of murders that would become Geor­ gia's worst mass killing this century. On W ednesday, Barton b lu d ­ geoned to death his two children from a previous marriage. The next day, he marched into two brokerage firms in the city's Buckhead com ­ mercial district and opened fire with two handguns, killing nine people and w ounding 13 others. W hen police cornered Barton hours later he committed suicide. I'm afraid there's a temptation to becom e focused on the h o rrib le events of last week," the Rev. Doug Davis told about 400 mourners at the Lizella Baptist Church. 11 miles wed of Macon, where Mrs. Barton grew up. "If we give into that temptation, we do a great disservice to Leigh Ann." Davis also read a letter from Mrs Barton's sister, Dana Reeves, that addressed the 27-vear-old bv her pet nickname, "Goldilocks." T only wish I could have spared you all of this ... I know you are in a safe place now,' the letter said. Also Sunday, services were held in Peachtree City for shooting victim Vadewattee Muradlidhara, 44. She will be buried in her native Trinidad A memorial service was also held Sunday for Allen Charles Tenen- baum, who was buried Frida\ Nine of the wounded were still hospitalized Sunday, three in critit a I condition. At the Antioch Baptist C hurch North in Atlanta, the Rev. Kenneth L. Alexander asked parishioners to "pray for our city. The devil is busy." M ayor Bill C am pbell told the Antioch congregation "our citv is in crisis." "It's almost unimaginable the hor­ ror, the tragedy we've endured |ust in the last two w eeks," Campbell said, referrin g to another m a s s killin g tw o w eeks ago in w hich seven were killed. "When people ask us what can we do about Atlanta's image, there's really only one answer and that is prayer." At St. Pius X Rom an Catholic Church in the A tlanta suburb of Conyers, several parishioners kneu Joe Dessert, a retired real estate bro­ ker who was dabbling in day trad ing. He w as one of those killed Thursday at the offices of All-Tech Investment Group. O ne said he had tried to get Dessert to quit day trading at All- Tech, where Barton also traded. "It just wasn t like him to gamble like that," said Tony Nicholson, who had lunch with 60-vear-old Dessert an hour before the shooting. "And he even thought about ... setting up another office to trade from, but then figured he had everything he needed at All-Tech." Barton's lawyer said Sundav the gunman approved some change- to his will Thursday morning a few hours before the shootings. He gave no indication he had already killed his wife and children, said Dou- glasville attorney Joe Fowler. AP photo Pvt. Robert Hall of the Royal Gloucester Berkshire and W iltshire regiment from Newbury, England, talks into his radio w hile standing guard in front of the Hram Sveti S p asa Serb Orthodox church in the center of Pristina Sunday morning after a large explosion ripped through the buildinq in the early morning. peaceful, multicultural Kosovo. NATO has stepped up its patrols and tried to get tougher with trouble­ makers after the shooting death of 14 Serbs as they harvested wheat in a village south of Pristina a week ago. Peacekeepers had detained 40 peo­ ple on Saturday alone in various inci­ dents, a NATO statement said. They included 21 Serbs held by U.S. mili­ tary police after two Apache heli­ copters on patrol spotted their illegal roadblock, nine miles outside the U.S. base-town of Gnjilane. First lady defends Clinton Associated Press LONDON — First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, in a magazine interview about her marriage, blames ner husband's infidelity on a desire to please women that can be traced back to his childhood, according to The Sunday Times. "He was so young, barely four, when he was scarred by abuse. There was a terrible conflict between his mother and grandmother," Mrs. Clinton told Talk magazine, according to the London-based newspaper, which said it obtained a copy of the interview. A psychologist once told me that for a boy being in the middle of a conflict between two women is the worst possible situation," Mrs. Clinton was quoted as saying. "There is always a desire to please each one." The magazine, edited by former New Yorker editor Tina Brown, debuts at newsstands Tues­ day. Clinton was impeached by the House of Rep­ resentatives for lying about his affair with for­ mer White House intern Monica Lewinsky; the Senate acquitted him after a trial in February. "He couldn't protect me, so he lied," Mrs. Clinton was quoted in the newspaper as saying. In Washington, White House spokesman Jake Siewert would not comment on Mrs. Clin­ ton's statements in the article. "The article paints a portrait of Mrs. Clinton that is quite positive and it speaks for itself," he said Sunday. The Sunday ‘Times said Mrs. Clinton empha­ sized in the Talk interview that her husband's affair with Lewinsky occurred after the deaths of his mother, her father and the 1993 suicide of their dose friend Vincent Foster. 'You know in Christian theology there are sins of weakness and sins of malice and this was a sin of weakness," Mrs. Clinton was quot­ ed as saying. Mrs. Clinton said she thought her husband's infidelity "w as resolved 10 years ago. ... I thought he had conquered it" according to the But she said that since the scandal, her hus- band "has been working on himself very hard. ... He has become more aware of his past and what was causing this behavior." She defended him as "a, very, very good man, but said, "Yes, he has weaknesses, yes he needs to be more responsible, more disci­ plined." Mrs. Clinton also refuted suggestions that she stuck with the president for her own bene­ fit, rather than out of love, The Sunday Times reported. "Everyone has some dysfunction in their families. They have to deal with it. You don't walk away if you love someone. You help the person," she is quoted as saving. Mrs. Clinton was asked by the Talk inter­ viewer: "And it is love, Isn't it?" According to the London-based newspaper, she replied, "Yes, it is. We have love." Mrs. Clinton acknowiedged the pain of the infidelities, but said it did not outweigh the close relationship the couple has built up throughout their marriage. "Is he ashamed? Yes. Is he sorry? Yes. But does this negate everything he has done as a husband, a father, a president?," Mrs. Clinton asked. "There has been enormous pain, enor­ mous anger, but I have been with him half my life and he is a very, very good man. We just have a deep connection that transcends whatev­ er happens." And despite the very public scandals, Mrs. Clinton said the couple remain close. "We talk. We talk in the solarium, in the bed­ room, in the kitchen — if s just constant conver­ sation," she was quoted as saying. "We like to lie in bed and watch old movies, you know, those little individual video machines you can hold on your lap." Mrs. Clinton also talked about her move toward a run for a U.S. Senate seat from New York. "Now for the first time I am making my own decisions. I can feel the difference. It is a great relief," she said, according to a news release from the magazine. AP photo An 80-meter crane raises a gold leaf-covered statue of a Madonna Saturday on the 17th-century St Mary of the Angels church over the site where St Francis of Assisi died in 1226, in Assisi, near Perugia, central Italy. The church reopened Satur­ day after earthquakes crumbled it and other priceless struc­ tures across central Italy in 1997. The statue is 21 feet high, and weighs about 9,900 lbs. Heat, death toll keep rising Associated Press A t t n r i a h i H P rA tc CHICAGO — Though temperatures began to drop Sunday across the Mid­ west, the death toll from last week's record-breaking heat rose even higher, with another 30 deaths here blamed on the heat and humidity. In much of the country, the worst had passed, with Sunday's tempera­ tures 10 to 20 degrees cooler across the Great Lakes and much of the upper Midwest. Chicago warmed to 81 by early afternoon, compared to a high of 104 on Friday. But 50 more bodies were brought to the Cook County morgue from Friday to Sunday, said city Health Commis­ sioner John Wilhelm, and officials expected the death toll to rise. A refrig­ erated trailer was brought in to store bodies until autopsies could be done. The new deaths added Sunday brought the Illinois total to 80 and the nationwide number to at least 182 since July 19. t v . / * * But for parts of the country that were sweltering a day or two ago, Sunday brought relief. The temperature was an almost crisp 59 degrees when Bill Hansche left for work early Sunday at the Maple Grove County Club in West Salem, Wis., a sharp change from afternoon tempera­ tures that peaked at 100 on Friday. "Today, ifs just perfect," Hansche said. "I wish you could box these up and bring one out every day you need one." In Louisville, Ky., the afternoon tem- Eerature was down to 78 — from a igh of 104 on Friday and 99 cm Satur­ day. While the cooler air pressed slowly toward die east and south, heat advi­ sories and warnings also remained in effect for areas scattered from Okla­ homa and Arkansas to Georgia and the Carolinas, the National Weather Ser­ vice said. Three heat-related deaths had been reported in North Carolina where the early afternoon temperature at Raleigh- Durham International Airport was a record-breaking 101, the third consecu­ tive day of temperatures over 100. "It's hotter here than south Louisiana, where we moved from," said Raymond Rodgers as he stood in the sun painting outdoor furniture with his 14-year-old daughter in Raleigh. The cold front is not expected to amve in Alabama until Monday. Sun­ day7 s heat index — a combination of temperature and humidity — was fore­ cast at 110. Sixty-eight of Illinois' deaths were in Chicago's Cook County, and while city Health Commissioner John Wilhelm expected the number to go higher, he said the latest heat wave is not a repeat erf 1995's deadly weather. The heat wave of 1995 contributed to more than 700 Chicago-area deaths While city officials said they have learned many lessons about helping elderly and other vulnerable residents AP photu A runner m akes his w ay through a drought-stricken field of gra ss on the cam pus of Lehigh University in Bethlehem. Pa.. Sunday. It rem ains hot in the Philadelphia region Sunday w hile the rest of the state begins to cool down Philadelphia is also expected to cool down by Monday. handle the heat, Mayor Richard M Daley said people have to take respon­ sibility for checking up on loved ones "Why don t family member- check on other family members and par­ ents?" Dale)' said "Why are thev call ing the city to do that? That is the m o s t frustrating thing in anv cn-i- ' NEWS BRIEFS Police now allowed to use plastic bullets L O N D O N — Police in England and Wales on Sunday were given the right in serious rioting to use p lastic bullets — co n trov ersial ammunition that has killed 17 peo­ ple in Northern Ireland during three decades of sectarian violence. Plastic bullets, known as baton rounds, have never been used in England and Wales. Police authorities also announced stricter rules for using the bullets in Northern Ireland. The same rules will apply in England and Wales. Police may use the bullets only in self defense and where other polic­ ing methods have failed and there is a serious risk of death or injury. Home Secretary Jack Straw, the Cabinet official responsible for police, said that although plastic bullets have never been used in England and Wales "there could be situations where their use is neces sary." Use of plastic bullets in Northern Ireland has dropped sharply since a peace agreement signed last year. A ccord in g to official figures, police fired 2,527 rounds in 1997, 1,237 in 1998 and 93 so far this year. The European Parliam en t has called for a ban on plastic bullets, saying they constitute excessive force and breach a United Nations code. Man rowing around world reaches Australia BRISBAN E, A ustralia — An American who is trying to row solo around the world said Monday he was relieved to have reached Aus­ tralia. Mick Bird of Malibu, C alif., arrived Sunday in Cairns, a resort town on the northeast coast of Aus­ tralia's Queensland state, after more than 12 months at sea. Bird began his trip from Fort Bragg, Calif., on Aug. 19, 1997, in his 26-foot rowboat "Reach." He completed the first leg of his planned 27,000-m ile journey by reaching Hilo, Hawaii, in October 1997. For the latest leg, he left the Mar­ shall Islands in April and said his normal routine was to row 10 hours a day. Bird said he was excited when he realized he had reached the Queens­ land coast. "I could feel the butter­ flies in my stomach, or maybe I was just hungry," he said. German re-arrested for premarital sex DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iranian police have re-arrested a German businessman who was con­ demned to death for having pre­ marital sex and later released on bail, a judicial spokesman said Sun­ day. Helmut Hofer, who was freed in April, was arrested Sunday and sent to Evin prison in Tehran, the official Islam ic Republic N ew s A gency quoted the official as saying. Hofer, 54, had been convicted of having sexual relations w ith an Iranian woman outside of marriage. He was re-arrested "because of connections with some foreign sus­ picious elements and fear of escap­ ing from Iran," judicial spokesman Saeed Nobari was quoted as saying by the agency monitored in Dubai. Under Iranian law, sex outside marriage is punishable by flogging, but if the man is not Muslim, he faces the death penalty. Chinese army warns meditation group B E I J I N G — China's arm y, the w orld's largest, marked its 72nd birthday Sunday with warnings to both Taiwan and an outlawed med­ itation group that it was ready to "smash any plot to split the nation." Defense M inister Chi H aotian repeated the government's accusa­ tions that Taiwanese President Lee Teng-hui last month had gone fur­ ther down the "dangerous road of splitting the motherland'' in sug­ gesting that China and Taiwan deal with each other as separate states. "The Chinese People's Liberation Army is combat-ready, prepared at any moment to defend the sover­ eignty and territorial integrity of the motherland, and resolutely smash any plot to split the nation," Chi said, as reported Sunday in the Communist Party newspaper Peo­ ple's Daily. — Compiled from Associated Press reports 4 T h e D aily T e x a n MONDAY, AUGUST 2,1989 EDITORIALS Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of Ae University administration, die Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. AISD S tr u g g les W ith D iv er sit y In an era when promoting and achieving diver­ sity has come to mean the difference between suc­ cess and failure in a wide range of endeavors, it would makes sense for struggling institutions to be in step with the times. Promoting diversity has put politicians in office, promoted top selling entertainments, sold everything from clothing to beer and excused billion-dollar bombing cam­ paigns. Failure has led to lawsuits, boycotts, eco­ nomic failures and the break up of nations. When the AISD board of directors voted in February to scrap the last vestiges of busing, to all involved it appeared as if they were giving up on promoting diversity in Austin schools. A week after the vote to end busing, though, the same board voted to amend the intradistrict transfer policies. More than just a minor set of policy changes, the vote ended institutionalized segregation by making AISD, in effect, an open district. One change added the "Diversity Choice" transfer option. This option allows students from selected elementary and middle schools to trans­ fer out of the districts' normal tracking pattern when the result is to enhance diversity. Their parents can now choose to send them to middle or high schools which do not reflect their tracked- schools' racial and ethnic patterns. They can do this regardless of their own race. A second change made by the board repriori­ tized the transfer selection process. The "Majority to Minority" clause rose to the top of the list in giving transfers to students. This clause states that "Students may transfer from a school where the student's ethnic group is over 50 percent of K hy C hapm an T e x a n C o lu m n ist the school's population to a school where the stu­ dent's ethnic group is under 50 percent of the population." Majority to Minority now takes pri­ ority over Tracking, Sibling, Curriculum and Adjustment as reasons to give transfers. The last change effected those students "grand fathered" into the campuses to which they had been bused for integration. The shift allows cer­ tain fifth-, eighth-, 11th- and 12th-graders to remain at their 98-99 schools. Additionally, the board voted to continue providing transportation for these students. If this sounds like news, don't feel alone. The opportunities presented by the transfer amend­ ments got lost under the mountains of newsprint covering the vote to end busing and redraw boundaries. Finding coverage of this issue proved challenging. According to Andy Welch of the AISD office of communications, the district sent 4,500 notices to families they felt would benefit from most the knowledge. There are almost 80,000 students in the district. Asked why the word was not made more public, the same office produced copies of three newspaper articles from the Oak Hill Gazette, West Austin News and a final from the April 4 Metro-State section of the Statesman — mbst of which was buried on page B5. It's hard to imagine anyone wanting to transfer from schools in Oak Hill or West Austin. (Perhaps they were being warned.) One drawback to AISD's new open campus policy is transportation. Students wishing to take advantage of it in most cases must provide their own. Sadly, the obvious choices, driving or being driyen, create greater demands on Austin's already stressed roads and economic challenges to already economically challenged. Yet one more good reason for light rail. Another drawback is that the opportunity to get a transfer for the fall of '99 has already passed. The deadline was July 1. Time remains, however, to apply to transfer for the spring 2000 semester. That deadline isn't until Nov. 15. Timely applica­ tions will be reviewed for space availability and class size caps. For the cynically inclined, a review of AISD's intradistrict transfer policy shows "space availability and class size caps" to be the board's ubiquitous escape clause. Space limitations aside, the responsibility for which schools students attend now rests upon the involvement and motivation of students and their families. It is a welcome freedom and responsi­ bility for diversity-minded individuals. The amendments are change for the better. It seems then AISD is keeping up with the times. They've taken meaningful steps toward increasing diver­ sity at the district. Speculation lingers as to why the district office and the megamedia did not make this move in the right direction better known. One answer could be the district's unwillingness to invite a barrage of requests, another could be media apathy. Perhaps good news these days is no news. Chapman is an education senior I F A M E R IC A N S 7t>oAV € * T E N D 7HEIR C R € D / T F A R TH E R TR a N O TH E R S ... I T IS B E C A U S E W E S TA M O {JP O M • r n e s h o u l d e r s O F 6 / A M T S - (Baily (Texan R o b A d d y Editor C e c i l y S a il e r Associate Editor M ic h e l l e M a n n Associate Editor B r ia n D u p r e Associate Editor N ew s B o n a n za So Austin is a “city on the move." Austin certainly has a personality all its own and is experiencing rapid growth and change, but are we really moving" enough to merit our own 24-hour news station? CNN sometimes has trouble filling their air time, and they're covering the globe. Local Austin stations even struggle at times to fill their 30 min­ utes, and it shows. But somehow, some way and someday soon, Austin news will be available 24-hours-a-day thanks to Channel 8 News. This new station, which is currently airing only back-to-back self-promo­ tional spots, boasts better technology, reporting and resources than other local stations. In order to broadcast even a mildly interesting piece of Austin news at 4 a.m., they'll need all of that, in addition to some highly-creative minds. But it may turn out that their nearly continuous weather coverage — at eight-minutes intervals (usually: hot and humid) — may be their only saving grace. A 24-hour news station might be a little more sensible in bigger cities like New York, Chicago, Los Angeles or Houston where there's plenty of crime and traffic accidents to fill up air time. It might even make sense for Austin to have more extensive news coverage during the Texas legislative sessions. But it seems nearly impossible to fill every minute of every day with sub­ stantial and interesting news about Austin. This idea is almost as bizarre as airing city council meetings from beginning to end. It could be just a matter of time before Channel 8 is airing features on the nutty transvestite downtown or the trials and tribulations of a disappearing toad population in Bastrop. And expect to learn more about the Austin-; Bergstrom International Airport than you ever dreamed — that is if you tune in long enough. But for those who find themselves watching Television at 3:30 in the morning (and not the Playboy Channel), there's likely to be something slightly more entertaining to watch — a bad '80s movie on TNT, a mesmer­ izing and energetic infomercial on placing tiny classified ads and getting rich or the mind-numbing pursuits of MTV. News you can use? Wouldn't count on it. C o m m u n ity It's football time again. Today, our much-heralded freshman football class reports to campus to begin three weeks of intense training which — hopefully — will transform them into true Longhorns. Along with the bonanza of training camp comes the customary media blitz and speculation dominating newspapers and television broadcasts for weeks. And as we kick off this season, the perennial complaints will inevitably arise about the University's overemphasis on sports at the expense of academics. That complaint is not without basis. We are, after all, an academic insti­ tution. ^ et all too often, our donors would rather shell out money for a new soccer stadium than new library. The top officials and coaches in the ath­ letics department make more money than anyone else on campus, and their jobs have the highest profiles and the most exposure. The University should fundamentally be a place of learning, and the role of athletics may seem to overwhelm that role on occasion. But the Univer­ sity is more than just a collection of classrooms and professors — we're also a community. Like it or not, football has an inexplicable way of bringing our campus together. If our team does well, we feel better about our school and enjoy a sense of camaraderie with our fellow students. When you go to school with 48,000 people, common experiences are few and far between. For the vast majority of students at the University, football is one of the few underlying threads which unite the campus. For that reason alone, our athletics program serves its purpose — to cre­ ate a sense of community at a place where people only stay for a few years and can easily get lost in the crowd. T he F iring L ine if we really want to unsightly support Aggie hypocrisy I hate to point out the obvious, but if there was never a time "w hen Aggies actually gave a damn what the elitists on the 40 Acres thought," why are they reading our editorial section? And why in hell do three of them in a day write Firing Lines to defend them selves? If you ask me, UT students have (alm ost) always been much better at the whole nonchalance thing. Kevin Miller RTF/Plan II senior Just the facts, please You have every right to report on the events that may or may not have occurred on campus at Texas I agree with you that The Battalion should A&M. have reported the story as well. The one thing I do not agree with is using a medium like The Daily Texan to achieve goals on a personal agenda. If it isn't your personal agenda, it is one of your con­ stituents. Using the new spaper to tear down another university while in the same breath bring yours to another level is unethical. A new spaper should be used to present the facts w ithout a hint of bias. reflects both a lack of respect to the student and the lack of knowl- edge that every per­ son needs an ID to enter Gregory Gym in the first place. Top that with no apologies w hatsoever and you have a really unprofessional service by people without any idea about community. --------------------------------- -- I wrote my com m ents to UTPD 's public relations officer. A one-sentence e-mail answ er would take him a minute and would not really im ply that UTPD would im prove in anyway. However, even a one- sentence e-m ail was too much of a task from the pub­ lic relations officer! Fortunately, I had only these interactions with the great people devoted to "R espect and safeguard dig­ nity and rights of all in d ivid u als," a phrase in U TPD 's M ission statem ent that I doubt officers understand. As im portant as specialized training against crim e may be, they also need training in basic hum an interaction. Such training could be named "The student as a person, looking beyond the potential crim inal." Felipe Gomez Graduate exchange student Chris Braaten A& M alum Americas cancer Hail to the chief Now that the UTPD will have a new chief he might accept suggestions. Its great officers get specialized training to deal with crim inal acts. However, they urgently need training in basic interpersonal skills. UTPD 's M ission includes "O ur daily objective is to work in partnership with the community and pro­ vide the highest quality of professional police ser­ vices.' But, what do "com m u nity" and "professional service" mean? Surely professional service does not mean harassing a student out of the showers at G re­ gory Gym so that he can show an ID. Such an action A m erica's cancer is spreading. A short walk from cam pus leads you past a Barnes & Noble, a Starbucks and the ever-crow ded Blockbuster subsidiary, Ein­ stein's Bagels. Is there no stopping this hom ogeniza­ tion of American cities? It sickens me to see local businesses close their doors w hile the newest fran­ chise, armed with its synthetic environm ent, suc­ ceeds a few blocks away. It is all too easy to sit blindly as our community is destroyed. The sign at the corner of 6th Street and Lamar urges passerby to be excited about the strip- center which is "com ing soon." As a nation of con­ sumers, it is easy for us to be excited about a new shopping center. It is im portant to decide, however, ——------------------------ strip-centers, playing host to national chains, in an area so teeming with local shops as Lamar. Bet­ ter yet, do we want strip-centers built in our town at all? The only way local business can succeed into the future is by our making the effort to support it. Only through unity can we stop the spread of this disease in our community. Bradley Collier Computer science senior Atlanta murders After yet another multiple-murder, this time in Atlanta, the same question returns — a question we ask every time, one that is never satisfactorily answered — how many people must die before we outlaw guns in America? Until we do, this will not stop. The manufacture of guns must stop and those in existence must be destroyed. And let's expose the NR A for their hypocrisy. They know the Second Amendment says explicitly that we have the right to bear arms BECAUSE OF THE NEED FOR A STANDING MILITIA, something we no longer need, now that we have professional armed services. The Second Amendment is utterly irrelevant to this debate. It's true that guns don't kill people. But people who kill would have a much harder time killing if they didn't have guns. Why is owning guns more important than preserving human life? Scott Miller St. Louis resident 'Blair Witch' ripoff Forget Rhys Southan's knuckleheaded notion that The Blair Witch Project "really happened" (as I'm sure a m assive flood of letters and e-m ails has already addressed); he almost makes as much an ass of him­ self when he writes "It's true that nothing like The Blair Witch Project has been made before". In reality, The Last Broadcast — a mockumentary made from "discovered footage" about cable-access hosts who journey into the woods to find the mythical "Jersey Devil," only to disappear and leave the film as the only evidence as to what happened—was made sev­ eral years before BWP, with such striking similarities it's a miracle we haven't seen a lawsuit yet. For more info, check out the film's Web site at http://www.teb- web. com/las tbroadcast. Vic Wang M IS senior Austin eviction As Austinites, we pride ourselves on enlightened and progressive social policies. The time to act on these sentiments is now, as dozens of low income families are about to be tossed out into the street. The Statesman reported that Royce Gourley, the new owner of the apartment complex on 1616 W. 6th Street, has extend his tenants 10 more days to his one month notice of eviction. Yet much was left unre­ ported as he barred reporters from the meeting. When asked to provide information about which ten­ ants are to be evicted, clarifying if these evictions are racially motivated, he claimed ignorance. In addi­ tion, as these tenants seek housing elsewhere, his office claims to have no tenant history for them. Without this reference, these families have little chance to find an apartment, especially now, as col­ lege students are snatching up everything in sight. The City if Austin has discussed housing problems in the abstract for years, but for these families the clock is ticking: they have until Aug. 10, and AISD starts on Aug. 11. Is it too much to ask for a few more months? Armando Rodriguez History senior A sk T h e M a yor Beginning next month, the Texan will be sponsoring a column called Ask The Mayor" where students can submit questions about dty issues to Austin Mayor Kirk Watson. Please send your questions to texan@www.utexas.edu along with your home and evening telephone numbers. and liability. F irin g L in e L etter s Please e-mail your firing line letters to texan@www.utexas.edu. Letters must be under 250 words and should include your major and classification. Please include daytime and evening phone num­ bers with your submissions. The Texan reserves the right to edit all letters for brevity, clarity, C o n ta c tin g Th e D a ily T ex a n S ta f f Editorial................. ......... 232-2212 Mailing Addrees: News ..................... Sports.................... Photo...................... Entertainment....... Copy D esk............ P.O. Box D Austin, TX 78713 (512) 471-2952 (/ax) Campus Mail Code G3100 ......... 232-2209 ........ .232-2217 UNIVERSITY T h e D a ily T e x a n MOMMY, AUGUST 2,1888 5 MALL RATS UT names new dean of library sciences Kathryn A. Wolfe Daily Texan Staff Beating out several highly quali­ fied competitors under considera­ tion last week, Roberta I. Shaffer w on the p osition of dean of the G raduate School of L ibrary and Information Science, effective Aug. Shaffer, selected by a search com­ mittee from a field of candidates nationwide, replaces Interim Dean Glynn Harmon, who has been head­ ing the school since Brooke Sheldon resigned last spring semester. "I think Roberta Shaffer ... is going to be really good," said UT President Larry Faulkner. "[She's] very ener­ getic, full of ideas and comes from a different perspective. Overall she had the best resonance with the faculty and people on campus." Provost Sheldon Ekland-O lson said d ealin g w ith the ch an gin g nature of inform ation technology will be one of Shaffer's most impor­ tant tasks. Faulkner agreed with this asses- ment and said integrating the GSLIS U I think Roberta Shaffer ... is going to be really good.” — UT President Larry Faulkner into the core mission of the Univer­ sity is challenging because informa­ tion science has expanded so rapid­ ly in recent years. "Library and information science is a field that is changing tremen­ dously rapidly because essentially technology, the way people are get­ ting their information ... has been altered su b stan tially ," Faulkner said. Shaffer said her immediate goal, w hich she hopes to ach ieve as quickly as possible, will be getting to know her departm ent and the University. "I think one of the most impor­ tant things that I will do ... is to kind of make [the school] have a pres­ ence at the University that wasn't really exerted before," she said. Shaffer is the former director of research information services for Covington & Burling, a Washing­ ton, D.C. law firm. She also served in adm inistrative and leadership positions at several libraries, includ­ ing the Library of Congress. "She's been a librarian and infor­ mation specialist for a large Wash­ ington law firm for the last several years," Faulkner said. "It's a very unusual d irectio n for a dean to come from, but I think it's going to give her some ideas." Shaffer said the turning point in her decision to pursue the deanship came when she met with several of the other deans currently at the Uni­ versity. "I was so impressed by the other deans that I really wanted the job at th at p o in t," Shaffer said. "T h is w ould certainly be a team that I would want to be included in." Shaffer holds a bachelor's degree in economics from Vassar College, a law degree from Tulane University and a master's degree in librarian- ship from Emory University. H REMEMBRANCE Kellar Hall/DAILY TEXA N STAFF Sandra Kwak of Austin recieves last-minute advice from her instructors on the South M all Sunday evening. Kwak has been part of a three-week debate camp that the University has put on for high school students from across the nation. The camp is ending with a final tournament that is running Sunday through Tuesday. Former Tech coach has record of harassment A sso cia te d P ress LUBBOCK — Greg Sholars, who coached m en's and w om en's track teams at Texas Tech until an assault charge by a female colleague forced his resignation in June, had already been form ally reprim anded by the u n iv e rsity b eca u se of co m p la in ts from three other women. Last summer, two Texas Tech stu­ d e n ts a c c u se d S h o la rs o f s e x u a l harassm ent, according to Tech doc­ u m e n ts o b ta in e d by th e L u b b o c k Avalanche-Journal. A nother w om an later reported that Sholars threatene her in a dance club. F o llo w in g an in v e s tig a tio n by Tech's Dean of Students office, Shoí- ars was placed on probation for one year on Aug. 28, 1998. Sholars resigned effective June 30, -m 1999, a fte r fo rm e r T ech a s s is ta n t tra c k co a ch T re c e H a y s le tt file d assault charges against him on May 5. Sholars was charged with m isde­ m e a n o r a ssa u lt, a rre ste d Ju n e 11 and re le ase d afte r p o stin g $ 1,0 00 bond. A th le tic d ire cto r G erald M y ers said the university responded prop­ erly to the earlier com plaints. "I think we acted responsibly and q u ic k ly w^hen th e se th in g s w e re b ro u g h t to ou r a tte n tio n ," M y ers said. "G reg did w hat he w as su p ­ p o sed to do in th e p r o b a tio n a r y period until the next incident h ap ­ pened." In written accounts subm itted in Ju ly and A ugust 1998, one wom an accused the coach of three separate occasions of inappropriate touching, inclu d ing kissing on the neck; the o th e r w o m an co m p la in e d o f tw o incidents of inappropriate touching and creating a hostile environm ent. In a Lubbock Police D epartm ent rep ort filed A ug. 6, G reta A d am s accused Sholars of threatening her in a lo cal d a n ce clu b e a r lie r that morning. Eventually, the school put Sholars on a one-year ad m inistrative leave w ith c o n d itio n s th a t c a lle d fo r im m ediate termination in the event of any further sexual harassment. Sholars was not fired im m ediate­ ly after H a y slett told d ep artm en t o fficials Sh olars bit and h it her in M arch 1999 b ecau se th at w as not c o n s id e r e d s e x u a l h a r a s s m e n t, M yers said. NOTICE UT Students, Faculty, and S ta ff Get A 20% Discount on all Classif ied Word Ads!* Example: 15 word minimum fo r 5 days. Only $21.30! And you can put it on our w ebsite f o r an additional $2.00! ✓ Ad must be pre-paid. ✓ Place Ad at The Daily Texan - Room 3.200 b e fo re 11am and get in next days publication. For more inform ation, call The Daily Texan Classified Department 471-5244 * E x c iu d e s Lon gho rn A d s The flags by the T o w e r flew at half-staff on Sunday, the 33rd anniversary of the T o w e r sh ootin g, to honor those who suffered from the tragedy. There w a s also a dedication of a memorial garden in the afternoon, and the Tower w a s dark on S u n da y night in rem em b ran ce of the event. Kellar Hall/DAILY TEXA N STAFF Dartmouth students ponder condom plan University wire HANOVER, N.H. — The D art­ m outh Stu dent A ssem bly m ay begin a p ro gram to increase the availability of condoms on campus and improve students' awareness about places to acquire condoms. Summer Student Assembly Presi­ dent Jorge Miranda said the Assem­ bly decided to broach a subject that had already been considered and rejected by Assem bly executives during the 1998 Spring term — the free distribution of condoms around the campus. During sp rin g, Mark Kutolowski, who was an Assembly member representing the Aquinas House Catholic student center at the time, said Aquinas House would disapprove of free distribution, due to the C atholic C h urch 's official that stance against contraception. Student Assembly member Prince Neelankavil, said the Assembly's orig­ inal idea this summer was similar to the one from last spring — to offer free condom s at inform ation desks, through Undergraduate Advisors or in boxes in every bathroom. Instead of free distribution, though, Neelankavil said Health Services rec­ ommended that the Assembly work through the Office of Residential Life to make sure there are vending machines in every bathroom. "I think it's just very important in the college setting to have condoms available, because I feel like sex is going to happen either way, so it might as well be safe," Neelankavil said. — from Dartmouth College week. For information call Ashley Yin at 472-9926. is available. For more information call Chris at 471-3623. Student G overnm ent meets 6 p.m. Mondays m Student Services Building Great Hall. Everyone is encouraged to attend. No previous participation is required. For informa­ tion call 471-3166. The UT Rifle and Pistol Club would like to invite any faculty, staff, or students interested in the shooting sports to come to die R.O.T.C. Range M onday-Thursday 6:30-9 p.m. Instruction and coaching from novice to world class competition is provid­ ed. All equipment to learn or compete The Allan Kardec University Study Group meets Mondays 8:10-9:45 p.m. in Student Services Building Room 4.212. They will discuss life and life after death, the existence of spirits and the spiritual world and justice, diversity and wisdom in daily life. The Yoga Club offers free yoga classes Mondays 5-6:30 p.m. in the Texas Union Eastw oods Room. Please do not eat 2-3 hours before class and wear loose clothing. For information call 236-8177 or e-mail leahb&mail utexas.edu. Man who opened A&M to women turns 100 Associated Press BRACKETTVILLE, Texas — Sterl C. Evans appeared embarrassed by the 100th birthday party thrown for him. "This is m uch ado about noth­ ing," said Evans, the man credited with changing the rules at Texas A&M University so women could attend. Evans, for whom A&M 's main library is named, was feted Satur­ day by about 100 people who gath­ ered at a com m unity building in Brackettville, 115 miles west of San Antonio. The party began as Evans entered the hall to the boom ing Texas A&M fight song. Wearing a maroon tie, the 1921 Aggie g rad u ate greeted friends who had traveled from all parts of the state, the San Antonio Express- News reported. When Evans was chairman of the A&M board of directors in the early 1960s, he pushed to have female students admitted. It was an uphill, controversial struggle that ended when Evans pulled a political fast one on fellow board members. History has it that Evans hastily called for a vote on the issue when he knew key op p o n en ts on the board couldn't make the meeting. W ith b arely a qu oru m p resen t, Evans succeeded in forcing the uni­ versity to break its long-standing, all-male tradition. "There was a lot of opposition about women 'invading' this tradi­ tional male dom ain," recalled his niece, Jane Mullins, who was at the party. "It was all about macho sta­ tus. Back then , 'A g g ie ' m ean t 'male.'" Haskell Monroe, former dean of faculties, recen tly asked E van s when he decided women should be admitted to the school. "I think ab ou t the day th at I arrived there as a student," Evans replied, Monroe recalled. During his tenure on the board, Evans also w as instru m en tal in making ROTC optional, rather than mandatory. After graduating from A&M in 1921, Evans embarked on a career in agricu ltu re that has spanned more than 75 years. Around Campus University Health Services pro­ vides FREE Travel Counseling for students traveling outside the United States. This includes information on required im m unizations, m alaria treatment and health concerns for specific countries. Due to time factors on some immunizations, please call four to six weeks before departure. Call 475-8252 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday- Friday. The UT Ballroom Dance Club holds classes every M onday and Thursday in the Texas Union Ball­ room 6-10 p.m. Students, faculty, staff and fire general public are welcome to attend. All classes are free for the first T h e D a i l y T e x a n MOMMY, AUGUST 2,1999 STATE & LOCAL 100 women dance on bridge Emily Pyle Daily Texan Staff The bats weren't the only ones causing a specta­ cle at the C on g ress A venue brid ge Saturd ay evening. About 100 Austin women, ranging in age from 9 to 90, joined a professional dance company and a live orchestra during a free-form dance perfor­ mance on the bridge. The women danced, sang, spoke and whispered with the orchestra. M argery Segal, founder and director of the M S/N erv e dance company, said she first con­ ceived of The Bridge project about a year and a half ago. "I was thinking about the idea of uncontrollable forces like weather and sex and women," Segal said. "I wanted the audience to take away a sense that life is very big and mysterious and funny and beautiful." Segal said professional dancers participated in the event, but many of the performers had never danced before. "For. a lot of them it's like an undiscovered dream, something they've never been able to do," she said. "I have to entice them into enjoying themselves, discovering the meaning behind the dance." Segal recruited dancers from the community, including many from senior citizen centers. "It can bring [the senior citizens] joy," Segal said. "W e're paying full attention to them because they're doing our work." She added that some senior dancers were not able to attend dress rehearsals because of the heat. Despite this and other limitations, Segal said the ch allen ge of w orking w ith n o n -p ro fessio n a l dancers was worthwhile. Segal added that the inclusion of community members in the company exposed the entire com­ munity to an experience they might otherwise have missed. 'T h e communities are under-served by the arts all over the country," she said. "This opens it up to more people. Their families and friends may come see a piece that would otherwise seem distant." Suzanne Beltz, an associate professor at the Uni­ versity of Mary Hardin-Baylor, learned about the project while consulting with .the Elder Haven TOO MANY NOTES Lisa Moore dances in The Bridge, a vocal, musical, and dance performance that brought together 100 Austin women, the MS/NERVE dance company and The Walter Thompson Orchestra on the Congress Street bridge Sat­ urday. Taking place at sunset the event was a celebration of women's voices. Alan K. Davis/DAILY TEXAN STAFF senior center. The dance performance recruited several seniors from the Elder Haven center. Beltz participated in the performance with her 10-year-old granddaughter, Alyssa. "I've never done anything like this in my life," Beltz said. "I'v e been much more scared than Alyssa. Sh e's been having fun from the very beginning." W alter Thom pson, of the W alter Thompson Orchestra, conducted vocal portions of the perfor­ mance. Thompson conducts using a method he calls "sound painting," which uses more than 650 sig­ nals to direct the performers. "It's composition that's put together right on the spot using a sort of sign language," he said. Segal said she and Thompson had been plan­ ning a collaboration for about two years. Both worked on previous projects involving more than one artistic discipline. "In this day and time, visual artists have been interdisciplinary for 20 years," Thompson said. "There is a need, because old forms are wearing thin, especially in music." As the sun set toward the end of the perfor­ mance, the Congress Avenue bridge bats made an appearance. Segal said she had hoped they would, adding that the bats fit into the overall theme of the per­ formance. "Part of the performance deals with themes of ascension and flight," she said. Funding for the project was made available by individual contributions as well as the Austin Arts Commission and the Texas Commission for the Arts. Convicts prepare for death Associated Press HUNTSVILLE — Up to six con­ victed killers could be put to death over the next 14 days in the busiest spurt of executions in Texas in more than two years. Texas already accounts for more than one-third of all the executions in the United States since capital punishment resumed in the late 1970s and is closing in on 200 lethal injections since convicted murderer Charlie Brooks ushered in the new death penalty era in the state in 1982. The Texas count now stands at 180, including 16 this year. Another six already are on the execution schedule for September and October and it is possible this year could challenge the record 37 prisoners put to death in 1997. The convicted killers set to die this month are all longtime death row inmates whose confinements range from more than 11 years to more than 18 years. They include: ■ Ricky Blackm on, set to die Wednesday for the robbery-slaying of a Shelby County man who was stabbed and slashed with a home­ made medieval-style sword in 1987. ■ Charles Boyd, to be executed Thursday for strangling and drown­ ing a Dallas woman at her apart­ ment in 1987. ■ Kenneth Dunn, 39, facing death Aug. 10 for the 1980 shooting death of a Houston-area bank teller. ■ James Earhart, 56, scheduled for injection Aug. 11 for the fatal shooting of a 9-year-old Bryan girl abducted from her home in 1987. Blackmon, 41, the first of the half- dozen this month to face the lethal needle, said his death, likely to occur Wednesday because all his appeals are exhausted, is the best thing that could happen. "Every young man on death now should give thanks to God when they get an execution date," he said in a recent interview with The Asso­ ciated Press. "If they wanted to pun­ ish me, that would be a life sentence. 1116/re giving me a way out. I'm thanking God for it." Blackmon acknowledges hacking to death Carl Rinkle, 26, at Rinkle's Shelby County home in far East Texas the night of March 28, 1987 and taking about $600 in cash and a small pistol. The murder weapon was a 3-foot- long serrated-edge steel sword the former sawmill worker made out of a saw-blade. He blamed a girlfriend, jealousy, drugs and a need for some quick cash for the attack that left Rinkle butchered. "I stepped out and swung the flat side of that sword like a baseball slugger, like Mark McGwire trying to knock a home run," Blackmon said. "He threw his left arm up to block the swing of the sword. It filet- ed his left arm down to the bone like you would filet a fish. ... I went to w ork on him like som e Conan movie you ain't never dreamed of. I went to work on this boy and didn't know what I was doing." The victim's skull and throat were slashed and he was stabbed 21 times in the back "so he would no longer be in pain," Blackmon said. Blackmon's girlfriend, who had been seen with the victim earlier in the evening, was arrested and led police to Blackmon. She wound up with a life prison term. The son of a preacher, Blackmon, who was wearing a black ninja out­ fit at the time of the killing, said he spumed his father's teachings until he arrived on death row and found religion. He's looking forward to his death. "I'm going to a much better place," he said. Bush career reaps benefits from family friends Associated Press FORT WORTH, Texas — Familiari­ ty has bred profits for G eorge W. Bush. The Republican presidential candi­ date has spent much of his career rely- ing on fam ily friends and making longtime buddies out of his business contacts. From all indications, he has done it profitably for himself and kept the friendships to boot. "It's hard to go anywhere without running into a friend of h is," said Karen Hughes, who has worked for Bush as a spokeswoman for five years. A one-time clothing salesman and ranchman, Bush has taken a career path through the oil patch, onto base­ b all's field of dream s and into the political briar patch as Texas governor. Much of his business success has come from brokering deals with folks he knew. Bush received a master's degree in business administration from Harvard Business School, a move he called "a vocational training exercise in capital­ ism." After graduation in 1975 he headed west through the far plains of Texas and decided to stop at the Midland oil fields. Crude prices were skyrocketing and he said he was attracted by the "entrepreneurial fever" following the Arab oil embargo. He started as a landman, checking deeds and mineral rights, and two years later founded an exploration firm putting together private partner­ ships for drilling ventures. He named it Arbusto, meaning bush in Spanish. The company did not begin active operations until 1979 — a year after Bush made an unsuccessful bid for a congressional seat. The first oil well he drilled was dry and Bush said he would never forget the feeling that the whole business would not be quite as easy as he had thought it would be. His company actually drilled few wells. Instead, Bush primarily bro­ kered deals or participated in those put together by others. Russell S. Reynolds Jr., now a direc­ tor atOppenheimer Fund, Inc., was an individual investor in Arbusto. A longtime-family friend, Reynolds got back only about 20 cents on the dollar for his investment in the business. Still, he does not blame Bush, say Texas Gov. George W. Bush signs a poster for Sean Strull, 10. Friday, Sept. 28, 1996, at a Texas Rangers game in Arlington, Texas. Bush paid $600,000 for 1.8 per­ cent of the American League club and served as managing general partner. He received about $15 million for his part of the club when it sold in 1998. ing he thought that the whole thing w as h a n dl e d well, e xc e p t "you paign dinner in Connecticut for Bush and is still undecided whether he will always like to make money instead have a formal role in this campaign. of losing it." Reynolds recently attended a cam- Federal prosectors say alleged bank robber is former gangster Associated Press Associated Press HOUSTON — Federal prosecutors said a man now facing trial for two bank robberies was once a high-rank­ ing member of Chicago's notorious G angster D isciples and the m an's lawyer said he believes the federal wit­ ness protection program may have brought his client to Texas in the first place. Authorities said Harry James Whit­ man, charged with two Houston-area bank robberies in 19%, is really Harry „ c____t ___ ,___. • .i Martin, a former lieutenant in the street gang known as the Gangster Disdples. Martin's attorney, Leonard Cox, said he believes Martin was given a new identity and relocated to Houston by the federal witness protection pro­ gram. "He is no longer in the witness pro­ tection program. He was terminated prior to" the bank robbery allegations, Cox told the Houston Chronicle. The U.S. Marshals Service, which operates the program will neither con­ firm nor deny that Martin was ever a . , protected witness. . . His bank robbery trial in federal court is scheduled to begin Tuesday. Federal prosecutors in Chicago said the charges do not surprise them. "From what I've read of his back­ ground, he was a career armed rob­ ber," said A ssistant U.S. Attorney William Hogan. "He's very intelligent, very articulate, very well-read. He's a smart guy, but probably not as smart as he thinks he is. And he's gotten into trouble because of that." According to the Federal Bureau of O Prisons, Martin was sentenced in 1981 to 31 years in a state prison for two Chicago-area armed robberies. Martin ended up in federal custody in Febru- ary 1991. "He began cooperating and began testifying against Gangster Disciples while he was in prison," Hogan said. Martin had already testified in sever­ al state murder investigations and later became a "primary source" in the fed­ eral investigation against the gang, Hogan said. M ade lin e Vincent/DAILY TEXA N STAFF Olivia Quinn Garza, 19 months, adm ires the efforts put into a piano-aquarium art piece w h ich w a s unveiled Friday afternoon at A ll A b ou t M u s ic in dow ntow n Austin. The aquarium w a s a collaborative project by area artist Larry Piltz and three y o u n g men from R e c o v e ry R an ch, a ch e m ic a l d e p e n d e n c y treatm ent center run by A ustin R e cove ry Center. The pro ce e d s for its sale will go to Safe Place, a center for battered wom en. M O Sat nm mmmm . I ■ KVR-TV BROADCAST 9 MUSIC MONDAY I W A N T TO W A T C H MUSK: * n i: For the best m UT news entertainment, snorts and comics, you only need one bookmark. . . Y o u fi h e l l e r w a t c h Videos lor Ron or Ruj Run Mil l kir.k y o u r M i j m u jT W irlf;u r> T u m u l i ! a? 10 fjfi P M ' . A h t t p : / / w w w . d a i l y t e x a n . u t e x a s . e d u Grab that m ouse & cruise by our site today!» Entertainment Editor Barry Johnson barry007@mail.utexas.edu Water ENTERTAIN MENT T h e D a i l y T e x a n 7 Jazz great McCoy Tyner plays Austin everywhere MOMMY, AUGUST 2,1899 Move over, Steven Spielberg. ‘Deep Blue Sea’ director Renny Harlin proves that ‘Jaws’ belongs to the ages with a fierce, cutting-edge shark-attack movie Paul Emig Daiiy Texan Staff The Blair Witch Project is still sold out, y o u 'v e alread y su ffered through the miserable Lake Placid and The H au n tin g , and we're still months away from whatever 1 Still, Still Know When You Screamed Last S u m m er sequel Kevin W illiam son has in store for us. But have no fear, horror fans! D eep Blue Sea is the movie you should have been seeing all along. The tightest, scariest hor­ ror film in years, Deep Blue Sea is the first film this summer to live up to its hype. Dr. Susan M cA lester (Saffron Burrows) is a scientist desperately searching for a cure for Alzheimer's Disease. Having lost her father to the degenerative disease, she has b ecom e a w om an o b sessed . She believes the key to a cure can be found within the brains of sharks, w h o p o sse ss a ch em ical w h ich enables them to regenerate brain mass. However, in order to produce sufficient amounts of this chemical, McAlester has to genetically engi­ neer her subjects, creating creatures with twice the brain mass as regu­ lar sharks. "As a side effect," she later admits while being chased by the m o n sters, "the sharks got smarter." Faced w ith losing her funding, McAlester brings her primary bene­ factor, billionaire Russell Franklin (Samuel L. Jacksón) to the massive aquatic research lab which she has co n stru cted . The d e a d lin e also forces the good doctor to accelerate her tests and perform the trials m onths ahead of schedule in the middle of a hurricane. The brilliant, powerful and evolutionarily superi­ or Makos seize their opportunity and b egin to hunt the n aive humans. cure for a The idea of mining the brains of su p er-sh a rk s to Alzheimer's is a bit of a stretch, but screenwriters Duncan Kennedy and Wayne Powers present it with the sam e c lin ic a l in te llig e n c e that Michael Crichton used to explain hqw dinpsaurs were cloned from fossilized m osquitoes. Suddenly, the idea doesn't seem far-fetched, but much like Crichton's Jurassic Park, the far-fetch ed e x p o sitio n soon takes a back seat to disaster, which is when the fun begins. With the com pound crum bling and sharks swimming down every hallw ay, the cast m ust reach the surface. The absence of stars from the cast allows the sharks to feast indiscriminately on the cast. Some characters are obviously less-suited for survival than others, but if you rely too heavily on your horror- m ovie instincts, you'll be in for a few surprises. The fact that no char­ acter is safe proves rather un set­ tling, and the intellectual and evo­ lutionary superiority of the sharks creates a remarkable tension. This sh ou ld com e as little surprise, as the film is direct­ ed by action-veteran Renny Harlin, w hose Die Hard 2 and Cliffhanger were more thrilling and im agina­ tive than most Roland Em m erich and M ichael m o v i e s c o m ­ b i n e d . But Har­ lin has kept a l o w Bay iM Voted Best Veggie Burgers $ 6 Chronicle Poll 2 for 1 . Veggie Burgers Mondays 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. f t ¿M f l f ! j u r a o your m ouse & visit the best Mte for UT new s I .mil entertainm ent. I _ j Bookmark it today!! | ™ HERE, FISHY, FISHY. Spielberg affi- cianados told us for years that it w as scarier notXo see the shark. In Deep Blue Sea, director Renny Harlin proves them very, very wrong. AN D THEN THERE W ERE NONE. Bur­ rows, Jackson, Jane and Rapaport breathlessly flee three M ako sharks loose in their sinking reasearch lab. film DEEP BLUE SEA Starring: Samuel L. Jackson, Saffron Bur­ rows, Thomas Jane, LL Cool J Director: Renny Harlin Playing at Gateway, Lake Creek, Lakehills, Metropolitan, Northcross, Riverside, Round Rock Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ (out of five) profile the past few years (probably becau se of flop s like C u t t h r o a t Island), which makes Deep Blue Sea an unusual suspect in a sum m er crow ded with big-budget horror stinkers. Harlin has borrowed a great deal from Steven Sp ielb erg's Jurassic Park and Jaws, and it is easy to criti­ cize him for doing so. But he does much more than steal. He recon­ structs the successful elem ents of Sp ielb erg's film s for a different time. The Hitchcockian notion that Jaws was scarier because you didn't see the shark may have been true in 1976, but in 1999, the opposite is true. Deep Blue Sea is ter­ rifying because we do see the sharks. We see a lot of them, and they look great! Not since the revolutionary cre- i 1 ations of Jurassic Park 1 have celluloid crea- so * tu res im p r e ssiv e. The sharks not o n ly look and m ove re a listic a lly , but they p o ss e s s an additional fierce­ ness, an o th er­ worldly aggres­ sio n . The sharks growl underw ater, sw im back­ lo o k ed & 7 u n More Games • More Variety • More fun! 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S H A M P O O plu s 9 0 » A no A C A K O i A A U C I Robert Whiteman Daily Texan Staff A small but privileged (in more than one sense of the word) crowd of no more than 200 people were witness to a rare event Friday at the coronation of Austin's new upscale performance hall the One World Theatre. The small crowd was treated to a virtuoso perfor­ mance by pianist McCoy Tyner, a livin g legend, who along w ith Avery Sharpe on bass and Aaron Scott on drums exhibited an exhil­ arating and breathtaking combina­ tion of precision, technique, pro­ fessionalism and pure improvised creativity. Tyner rose to fame as an inte­ gral part of John Coltrane's leg­ endary quartet of which he was a member d uring C o ltran e's arguably most important years, from 1960 until Tyner's departure in 1965. T y n e r's p layin g and recording then, and in all the years in between, has been consistently innovative and im portant. H is current trio recorded a Gram my nominated album Infinity in 1995 for C oltrane's orig inal record label. Impulse! The show began with the appro­ priately titled "M ellow Minor," a m oody groove punctuated bv short but impressive solos from Sharpe and Scott. The trio followed that with a complex and shifting version of the standard "W ill You Still Be Mine before Tvner awed the audience with a long and pow­ erful solo piece. Tyner's genius was most evident here as the dark song was made that much moreso by the audible emotion with which he played and by a sublime pedal technique in w hich he made his piano sound as lush and full as a string sec­ tion. F o llo w in g a brief intermis sion the T rio returned for an hour and a half of w h at was u n d o u b t­ e d ly the h o t t e s t live jazz the W est L a k e H i l l s have ever h e a r d . live m usic McCOY TYNER TRIO When: Friday, July 30 Playedat One World Theatre These cats were tighter than Hem­ ingw ay at Pam plona and freer than mammaries at Mardi Gras. It was here in this second set that d rum m er A aro n Scott emerged as the true highlight of the show. His impeccable timing and subtle brushwork drove and supported the band, as all the while he channeled the muses and laid down truly deep beats in a seemingly direct flow of inspira­ tion. Scott's im provisation and technique were mesmerizing as he could draw' an apparently infinite variety of sounds out of his 11 piece kit. "W h e re The second set featured "C h a n g e s " and is Love"off of Infinity, along with a version of the Duke E llin g to n classic "Don't Get Around Much A n ym o re " on w hich T y n e r's playing can only be described as lyrical. The Trio's performance w'as capped by a tw’o-song encore that featured bassist A aro n Sharpe ripping up a six string bass guitar on a Stevie W onder sounding number. The small but delighted crow d w hich w itnessed The M cC o v Tyner Trio's performance Friday- night can count itself verv lucky indeed. Within a wonder­ fully intimate venue Tyner proved that not only has he not lost a step in the 35 years since he left C o ltran e's quartet, he is still c h a lle n g in g himself and a u d ie n c e s by su r­ r o u n d i n g h i m s e l f | w ith tru ly gifted play­ ers and in ­ sisting on c o n s t a n t innovation. And he did it all with more than a touch of class. w a rd s and reco il lik e cobras to chomp their prey extra hard. Like the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park, these im aginative creations suggest that there's a side to these creatures that know-it-all biologists haven't dis­ covered yet. D eep Blu e Sea succeeds w h ere recent stinkers like Lake Placid and The H a u n tin g fail. U nlike the oth­ ers, it a c h ie v e s tru e scarin ess because it stays true to its bleak tone. There are no potty-mouthed old ladies feeding cows to croco­ diles or granddaughters standing up to evil paintings. Deep Blue Sea is morbid and dark. The bad one- liners and com ic re lief (o n ly L L Cool J's alcoholic chef / preacher attempts to cheer up the ravaged crew) are minimal, and most of the characters meet horrible, gruesome ends. The first truly scarv horror film in years, and a huge breath of fresh air for a dying genre and a stale summer movie season. M O N D A Y E V E N IN G A - UT Residence Hall Cable Over Air Channels | 9:00 | 9:3 0 | 10:00 | 10:30 | 11:00 | 11:30 I 12 C - Austin Cable A U G U S T 2, 1999 •Til B A S I C C H A N N E L S A B I C KTBC | 2 ( D lO ÍÑ ews Simpsons 1 70s Show [70s Show Ally McBeal (In Stereo.) « Simpsons £ j S e i n f e l l n ^ N e w ^ ^ ^ M*A*S*H £ Newsradio Mad Jenny Jones (In Stereo . ; KVUE 3 24 Q ; News « Ent. Tonight Golf Showdown at Sherwood (In Stereo Live £ Q News O News $ F o rt™ ---- Suddenly— Veronicas T k . . u sr P r a c i o r I t Frasier £ Th_anks« If i n n Low » Onh, "Si oio :ñ U W e lm . m S e .e c X n _________» Raymond _ . . . . ,48 Hours: Rush Spnngs [Becker £ News£ Nightlme 1 Politically Perry Mason Grace Under Tooighl Show ;ln Slerec- ü e N M d m . m s i ^ n r l , ™ , ? ^NewsS Late Show (In Stereo. £ Late Late Show m Stereo ^Edition .... ..................... C r e a t o r B u e in e s s _ Ne»shou, With Jim Lehre, antiques Road,now J r. ,P, I I . P . 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ESPN 2 HNN 18 LIFÍF SCI-FI TBN TLC TNN TNT TWC 22 27 24 26 USA VH1 WGN W T B S HBO MAX Nothing on T.V.? ■ hannel Surf Online austin.cHy8earch.com Page 8 Monday, August 2,1999 T h e D a il y T e x a n o To Place a Classified Ad Call 471-5244 e-mail: classadsOwvwv.utexas.edu or on-line at: http://fetumedia.tsp.utexas.edu/ cla s s / Classified W ord Ad Rates Charged by the w ord Based on a 15 w ord minim um , the following rates apply. 1 day.......................................$ 6 9 0 2 days.................................$ 1 3 2 0 3 days.................................$ 1 8 .9 0 4 d a y s ............................... $ 2 3 .2 5 5 days.................................$ 2 6 .6 5 First tw o words may be all capital le tte rs $ 2 5 fo r each additional w o rd le t t e r s M asterCard and Visa accepted c a p ita l in Classified Display Ad Rates Charged by the column inch One column inch minimum. A variety of type faces and sizes and borders available $ 1 0 .2 5 per column inch. Call for rates FAX ADS TO 471-6741 8:00-5:00/M onday-Friday/TSP Building 3 .2 0 0 Deadline: 1 1 :00 a.m. prior to publication Put your ad on the Web for $2.00 TRANSPORTATION 10-M isc. Autos 20-Sports-Foreign Autos 30-Trucks-Vans 40—Vehicles to Trade 50-Service-Repair 60-Parts-Accessories 70-Motorcycles 80-Bicycles 90-Vehicles-Leasing 100—Vehicles-Wanted REAL ESTATE SALES ■M E R C H A N D IS E 190—Appliances 200—Furniture-Household 210—Stereo-TV 215-Electronics 220—Computers-Equipment 230—Photo-Camera 240-Boats 250—Musical Instruments 260—Hobbies 270—Machinery-Equipment 280—Sporting-Camping Equipment 110-Services 120—Houses 130—Condos-Townhomes 140—Mobile Homes-Lots 150-Acreage-Lots 160—Duplexes-Apartments 170-Wanted 180—Loans 290-Fumiture-Appliance Rental 300-Garage-Rummage Sales 310-Trade 320-W anted to Buy or Rent 330—Pets 340— Longhorn Want Ads 345-M isc. RENTAL 350-Rental Services 360—Furnished Apts. 370—Unfurnished Apts. 380-Fumished Duplexes 390— Unfurnished Duplexes 400-Condos-T ownhomes 410—Furnished Houses 420-Unfumished Houses 425-Rooms 430-Room-Board 435-Co-ops 440—Roommates 450-Mobile Homes-Lots 460-Business Rentals 470-Resorts 480-Storage Space 490-W anted to Rent-Lease 500-Misc. ANNOUNCEMENTS 510—Entertainment-Tickets 520-Personals 5 3 0 -T ravel-T ransportation 540-Lost & Found 550-Licensed Child Care 560-Public Notice 570—Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580-Musical Instruction 590—Tutoring 600-Instruction Wanted 610-M isc. Instruction 620—Legal Services 630—Computer Services 640—Exterminators 650—Moving-Hauling 660—Storage 670—Painting 680—Office 690-Rental Equipment 700-Fumiture Rental 710—Appliance Repair 720—Stereo-TV Repair 730—Home Repair 740—Bicycle Repair 750—Typing 760—Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 770-Employmerrt Agencies 780—Employment Services 790—Part Time 800—General Help Wanted 810-Office-Clerical 820—Accounting-Bookkeeping 830-Administrative- Management 840-Sales 850-Retail 860—Engineering-Technical 870-Medical 880—Professional 890-Clubs-Restaurants 900-Domestic Household 910—Positions Wanted 920—Work Wanted BUSINESS 930-Business Opportunities 94(3—Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED ADVERTISING TERMS In in th e event of e rro rs m ade advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a.m. the first day, as the publishers are responsible fo r only ONE in c o rre c t insertion. All claims for adjustments should be made not later than 3 0 days after publication. Pre-paid kills receive credit slip if requested at time of cancellation, end if am ount exceeds $ 2 .0 0 . Slip m ust be presented for a reorder within 9 0 days to be valid. Credit slips are non-transferreble. In consideration of the Daily Texan's a cc e p ta n c e of advertising copy for publication, the agency end the advertiser will indemnify and save harmless, Texas Student Publications and its officers, employees, and agents against all loss, liability, dam age, and expense of whatsoever nature arising out of the copying, printing, or publishing of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney’s fees resulting from claims of suits for Hbel, violation of right of privacy, plagiarism and copyright and trademark infringement. TR AN S PO R TATIO N | M ERC H AND ISE REN TAL R EN TA L REN TAL R EN TAL REN TAL RENTAL R EN TAL 0 60 - Fum. Apts. 3 7 0 - Uni. Apt». 3 7 0 - U n f. A p t» . 10 - Misc. Aillos 1 9 9 2 4 W D 72k-m lles. 6 5 6 -3 7 6 2 JEEP Leather Cherokee lim ite d . 4-liter, high-ouput. 1 9 9 4 RED K ia Sephia 4 4 K . d en t car Drives sportyl 3 0 1 -4 7 7 4 . 5-speed 100K w a rra n ty. Perfect stu­ $ 4 ,0 0 0 . 100 - Vehicles Wanted W E BUY C ars & Trucks Top $ p o'd fo r trucks 2 5 1 -2 1 1 5 . SERIOUS BUSINESS C ashl N o lim- it fo r cars a n d trucks. 8 5 's & up run­ n ing o r not. 2 5 1 -7 8 2 6 . B B J I t i W I H U I 130 - Condos* Town homes 1 & 2 Bdrm condom inium s, FOR SALE Some homes also a v a ila b le M o st w / in w a lk in g distance to cam ­ Single & m ultiple stories. pus W REI 3 2 6 -8 0 6 6 or 6 3 3 -7 6 8 6 M ERC HANDISE 190 - Appliances RENT W ASHER/DRYER or $ 3 5 / m o 2 4 0 0 frid g e. Purchase o p tio n. 3 70 - 2 0 0 - Furniture* Household Beds, Beds, Beds Ike factory outlet tor Simmons Seofy Serta ond Sprinqan We tarry dose-outs discontinued rovers, S rartocy 2nds from 50-70% off retail store prices ill new complete wtlti worronty. Co# Em for more info. Twin set. $ 6 9 . Full set, $ 8 9 Q ue e n set $ 1 19. King set $ 1 4 9 Receive an a d d itio n a l 5“ c discount w i f t od. M-f 10am-7pm 7530 Burnet Rd. Sat. 10am-5pm 454-3422 2 2 0 - Computers* Equipment CALL US LAST New and Used Computers at Great Prices Expert C om puting Services. Call at 477-221 3 POW ER C O M P U T IN G Power Base 1 8 0 . 1 G /3 2 M -ID E +SCSI Buff. CPU o n ly $ 4 5 0 . K e yb o a rd & mouse $ 4 0 . 8 3 6 -6 0 2 3 . LONGHORN W A N T ADS M O V IN G . M U ST sell everything im­ m ediately. Hung 3 0 2 -4 9 6 2 . items. M isc. FURNITURE ATTRACTIVE new com- puter desk w / lig h t w o od a n d black ■ ron trim $ 4 5 , 5-shelf la d d e r in lig h t w o o d w /b la c k trim $ 5 0 . Both in g re a t co n d itio n 9 1 2 -9 8 4 4 . P resarla COMPUTER- C O M P A Q w /1 5 m c h C a non & m o n itor B J C /4 2 0 0 c o lo r p rinter, 1 ye a r o ld $ 6 0 0 . 9 1 2 -9 8 4 4 N ICE SOFA, like new , seats 4, looks g o o d a n yw h e re $ 2 0 0 . Twin bed $ 5 0 C o m p ute r desk $ 5 0 . C a ll S hannen 4 7 4 -7 6 0 1 . stereo, N a k a m ic h i FOR SALE 16 in ch T V w /b u ilt-in VCR, $ 1 0 0 $ 2 0 0 M o d e rn M a p le /M e ta l desk, $ 1 0 0 7 0 7 1 5 8 8 IA R G BOOKSHELF $ 1 2 0 , O B O B rand new c o n d itio n . 476-1 124 Q U E E N FU TO N like new $ 2 0 0 . queen mattress set $ 1 0 0 , bookshelf $ 1 5 , coffee ta b le $ 4 0 , nightstand $ 2 0 , table $ 15 C a ll 4 7 8 -8 8 4 9 SPIN MTB Rear C a rb on W h e e l, Front LX/Sun W h e e l, W / N e w Tiresl Both for $ 2 0 0 C o ll Don @ 4 4 5 - 4 8 0 9 . Leave message 1 9 6 5 FORD G a la x y A q u a m a rin e , fou r d o o r 2 4 0 straight six Basic tra nsp o rtatio n, classic ride $ 1 0 0 0 . O B O 3 2 7 -2 7 6 4 C O U C H FOR sale, six years old, long G ra y g o o d co n d itio n w o o l/p o ly $ 6 0 , 4 6 2 -1 6 0 9 7ft. LONGHORN W A N T ADS COVERED PARKING space for rent A t 21st a nd Rio G ra n d e $ 6 0 /m o . o r reduced rate w ith long-term con­ tract. C o nta ct M iche le 4 7 3 -8 3 3 7 1 9 9 7 G IA N T ATX875 M o u nta in B rand new, b a re ly used Bike $ 8 0 0 O B O . M ust Sell! 2 9 2 -7 5 8 8 Twin re clin in g sofa FOR SALE d o u b le $ 7 5 ; tied mattress, box springs. E nglander b ra nd . Excellent c o n d itio n Bookshelf $ 7 5 . 3 0 'x 7 1 .5 " $ 2 0 3 0 2 -0 9 1 0 . M A C PO W E R BO O K , 1 4 0 0 C S , 6 0 M B RAM, 2 G B m em ory, 1 1 7 M H z, US Robotics Cruise C a rd 2 8 .8 , Loaded w /s o ftw a re $ 9 5 0 . 3 01 - 0 1 2 1 . 1 9 7 9 D ATSUN 2 1 0 , 4-speed. AC, w e ll d e p e n d a b le $ 1 ,0 0 0 O B O 9 2 6 3 3 4 0 m a in tain e d, 345 - Misc. GIRLFRIENDS & WIVES Surprise yo ur b o yfrien ds & husbands. Budweiser N e o n Lizards, Budweiser Patio U m brellas, O ld Lone Star C lock, Schlitz Falstaff, G en u ine N e on D raft G uita r, Spud N e on , Palm Tree N e o n , O ld M ille r Draft N e o n C lock, C oors, Sam uel A da m s N e o n & lighted signs, O ld Pearl C lock & m irrors. Round B udw eiser sign w ith C lydesdales, M ille r Light Boot, Busch N e on , Lone Star H a t Rack Lots more to choose fro m . W ill b uy m e m o ra bilia 833-5998. R EN TAL 5 5 0 - Rental Services A F S Apartment Finders Service W est Cam pus Eff A ccess G ates $430 2-2 All Bills Paid $875 2-2 Cov. Park. 1-1 W/D, micro $825 $615 North CamDus Eff Walk to UT 1-1 Furnished 2-1 Free cable and gas 2 -2 Hyde Park UT Shuttle 1-1 Far West 1-1 Free Cable 2-1 Free Cable, gates 2-2 Low Bills, $400 $450 $795 $850 $520 $455 $595 $655 2 1 0 9 Rio Grande 322-9556 h ttp ://w w w . ausapt.com 3 6 0 ~ 360 • Fum. Apts. A W E S O M E DEAL. H yd e Park fur­ nished 1-1 $ 4 6 5 . C entral a ir/h e a t. A pa rtm e n t Source 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apart- mentsource.net W EST C A M P U S 1-1. $ 5 4 0 . TT $ 5 9 5 . Furnished C a b le included A pa rtm e n t Source 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apart- m entsource.net Beautiful Furnished 2 Bedroom/1 Bath Apt. Available NOW Across from new Hancock Mall Excitement Shuttle 2 doors away. 915 E. 41st & 4210 Red River Call 452-4366 or 452-6518 RED RIVER Shuttle, furnished, A ll Bills Paid! Pool, covered p a rkin g , Town- homes a v a ila b le l $ 6 7 5 -$ 7 3 0 . AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . FURNISHED 1-1 N o rth C am pus, b a l­ co ny, the d ra g I lo cate d $ 4 5 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . rig h t o ff HIDDEN WEST Cam pus efficien cy! C ute, qua in t, furnished, gas a nd w a ­ ter p a id $ 4 5 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 FURNISHED Stone's p a id ! 2-2 $ 9 0 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . PAID! th ro w a t UT, c a b le also BÍLLS Ta LL SUMM ER-O NLY HUGE 1-1! W est C am pus, S pa rkling p o o l, FREE ca ble a nd gas, la un d ry, $ 4 7 5 . AFS 3 22 - 9 5 5 6 NO RTH FURNISHED C am pus!! FREE ca ble a nd gas, p o o l, laundry, aw esom e lo catio n , 1-1 $ 5 2 5 2-1 $ 7 5 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . HYDE PARK in the treesl Free ca ble , IF, furnished, laun d ry, p oo l, BBQ, Eff. $ 4 6 5 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 Walk To Campus HOUSTON 2801 H e m p h ill P ark DALLAS 2803 H e m p h ill P ark BRANDYWINE 2808 W h itis A ve WILSHIRE 301 W. 2 9th 472-7049 Great Locations! • Preleasing • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • Central Air Heat • 2 Blocks From UT • No Application Fee • 1 BR BA » On-site manager • Affordable deposits THREE OAKS & PECAN SQUARE APARTMENTS • 1 BDR/1 BA • Fully Furnished • Laundry Room • t Community Atmosphere • On Shuttle » No Application Fee • Preleasing • On-site manager • Affordable deposit 451-5840 409 W. 38th LEASING FOR FALL Great 1 -Bedroom apartment 1 /2 block from law school. Furnished and quiet, $520 TOWERVIEW APARTMENTS 320-0482 926 E. 26TH #208 W alk to CAMPUS Avalon Apartments 32nd at 1-35 1-1 $465 C onvien t la w , e n g in e e rin g , LBJ, & a ll east cam pus. W a lk -in closets, ce ilin g fans, on-site la u n d ry mngr. 459-9898 Open 7 days a week FREE CABLE & G as, W e st Cam pus, large furn 1-1, p oo l, $ 5 9 5 . AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . PRE-LEASING FOR THE PARKAVENUE Suite Style, I block fro m UT! From $475/m onth Fall/Spring • Efficiencies • ABP & Many Extras • Free Parking/Cable • Furnished/ Laundry Room 306 E. 30th* I block from Engineering/ Law Schools Call 494-9157 370 - Unf. Apts. APARTMENTS UNLIMITED 462-FREE w w w .a p artm en tsun lim ited com Q UALITY LIVING on a quick shuttle- route. G a te d , pools, lots o f a m e ni­ ties AptS 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apartm entsource.net Reasonable prices RETRO W EST C am pus 1-1 $ 4 7 5 A p a rtm e n t Source 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apart- m entsource.net HYDE PARK e fficie n cy $ 4 6 5 -4 9 0 . Furnished, c a b le p a id , p oo l, a ll bills plus ca ble p a id AptS 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 a p a rtm entsource. net HYDE PARK 2-1 O n shuttle $ 6 7 5 A p a rtm e n t 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 Source apartm entsource.net APARTMENTS & M o re . Free lo cat­ in g service, 7 0 8 -0 3 5 5 . SMALL, W O O D E D W e st Cam pus Furnished, Free c a b le and A p t.I a larm , 1-1 $ 5 4 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 2-2 WEST Cam pus $ 8 4 0 ment Source 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 a p a rtmentsource net A part- Order by M a il, F A X or Phone P 0 . Box 0 Austin, Texas 7 8 7 1 3 F A X : 4 7 1 - 6 7 4 1 Classified Phone #: 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 E -m a il: classads@ w w w .u texas.e du 20 w o r d s 5 d a y s ^5 65 A d d i t i o n a l W o r d s . . . $ 0 . 2 5 e a . 1 7 13 19 25 2 8 14 20 26 3 9 15 21 2 7 4 10 16 22 28 Individu al ite m s offered M E R C H A N D I S E ad s o n ly fo r sale m a y n o t exceed $ 1 .0 0 0 , and a price m u sf ap p e a r in the b o d y o f the ad c o p y If item s are not s o ld , five ad d itio n al in sertion s will be run at no ADDRESS. ch arg e A d v e rtis e r m u st call b efore 1 1 a m on the d ay o f the fifth insertion N o c o p y c h a n g e (other th an re d uc tio n in p rice) is allow ed -------------- 5 11 17 23 29 6 12 18 24 30 PHONE_ WEST CAMPUS Efficiency $425 up Efficiency ABP $495 1 BR $495 up Furn. 1 BR $540 Large 1 BR $590, $615 Large 2 BR $840 HYDE PARK Efficiency $425 up 1 BR $475 up Furn 1 BR $475 & $585 2 BR $750 up RED RIVER SHUTTLE 1 BR's $525, $545, $550, $575 2 BR $720 up RIVERSIDE, FAR WEST & CR SHUTTLE ROUTES Call today for prices & availability APARTMENTS & MORE 706 W. MLK 708-0355 1 B ED RO O M $ 4 5 0 , 2 bed ro om C le a n, q uie t com m unity $ 6 2 5 4 5 1 -3 4 3 2 CLARKSVILLE CUTE, Efficiency! G re a t n e ig h b o rh o o d , trees, charm I $ 4 7 5 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 6 6 NICEST APARTM EN T-W est C am pus! W a lk to UT, Pool, sundeck, gates, balconies, elevators, m icros. H uge 1-1 $ 6 1 5 $ 7 2 5 A F S 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 Q U A IN T HYDE Park eff a nd w a ter, AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 la un d ry, FREE gas $ 4 1 0 trees! A W E S O M E WEST Cam pus LOFTi Patio, m icro, desk, access gates, $ 5 8 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 On-Line A p a rtm e n t Search form- best a nd most co m p lete service A ll areas covered A p a rtm e n t Finders w w w .a u s a p t.c o m V IN TAG E W EST C am pusl H a rd ­ w o od s, tile, qua in t, pets accep ted l 1-1 $ 6 5 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 Y O U NEED spacel feet, square gates, on hike & bike. AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . free O v e r 1 0 0 0 cable, access 2-2 $ 6 5 5 YOUR O W N w a s h e r/d ry e rl Fastest shuttle, access gates, co v a orking , 1-1 $ 5 6 5 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 tan n ing , Fit­ A W E S O M E DEAL UT shuttle! ness, v o lle yb a ll, gates, W / D conn! 1-1 $ 4 8 0 , 2-Bd $ 7 1 5 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . pool, FAR W EST Expertsl hottub, 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 tennis, Fitness, p oo l, AFS free m oviesl ATTN SERIOUS studentsl Q u ie t p ro p, 9 ' ceilings, a la rm , m icro, poo l, 1-1 $ 5 0 5 , 2-2 $ 7 5 0 AFS 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 . BEST DEAL UT shuttle! Free cable, access gates, vo lle yba ll, pools. 1-1 $ 4 7 0 . 2-1 $ 5 6 5 . AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 A W E S O M E HYDE Park N e ig h b o r- h oo d! G ates, p o o l, hottub, study- rooms, elevators. 2-1 $ 8 7 5 , 2-2 $ 9 4 5 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . YES W E have 3 bedroom s! W / D , gates, pool, v o lle yb a ll, internet ac­ cess AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . A W E S O M E W est! slidel 9 5 5 6 . T O W N H O M E Free gas, green be lt, water- AFS 3 2 2 - 2 -1 .5 , $ 8 2 5 UT SHUTTLE, h ard tile, access gates, free cable, hike & bike, cute 1-1 $ 4 9 5 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 CARING O W N E R S !!!" Condos, 1-bedroom from $ 6 5 0 -$ 8 5 0 , 2-bedroom from $ 7 9 5 $ 1 ,3 0 0 . 2-2 bed ro om a p a rtm e nt from $ 5 7 5 -$ 7 5 0 . All West Campus. Only immaculate unitsl KHP 476-2154. W AREHO USE THEME Polished concrete flo o rs- stain g la ss- round futon loft- steel w a lls - track lig h tin g $ 4 7 5 , 2 br $ 7 2 5 , 3 b r $1 1 00 , 4 b r $ 1 5 0 0 + Prop M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 V A C A N C Y , UNEXPECTED 2 / 1 , w o o d fio o rs 4 blocks UT. $ 6 7 5 /m , 9 1 2 W . 2 2 n d l/ 2 . C a ll 4 8 0 -0 9 7 6 , M 5 -6 , T-Th6-7 WAUGH PROPERTIES INC. N O W LEASING! 1 bedroom apartment at Casa Rio $510 Chateau Duval $560 Water, gas paid. Efficiency at Atrium $405 3-2.5 near Arboretum $1210 453-2363 or 478-9151 WEST CAM PUS Loft! Fireplace, p o o l, close-in! A v a il. June $ 5 5 0 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . QUIET C O M M U N IT Y ! O n bus-line, 9 ' ceilings, a larm , m icro, p oo l hot­ tub. AFS 1-1 $ 5 0 5 , 2-2 $ 7 5 0 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 UT SHUTTLE I G ates, W / D conn, fit­ ness, m icro, 1-1 $ 4 8 0 , 2 B dr $ 7 1 5 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . BEST DEAL W e st C a m p usl Park, p riv b a lco n y, m icros $ 8 2 5 . AFS 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 . C o v 2-2 EFFICIENCY W /FIREPLACE! W e st Cam pus, p o o l, aw esom e! $ 4 8 5 AFS ¡3 2 2-9 5 56 Q U IC K M O V E -IN S a v a il.! C om e in n o w l A p a rtm e n t Finders 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 ALL BILLS PAID I C o v Park, pool, W e st C a m p usl Eff $ 3 7 5 , 1-1 $ 5 8 0 , 2-2 $ 8 7 5 AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . C O O L WEST C am pus Pad! Eff. w ith loft a nd fire p la ce , poo l, $ 5 5 0 . AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . BEST DEAL Shuttle! G ates, pools, !ree ca ble , Eff. $ 4 3 5 , 1-1 $ 4 7 0 2-1 $ 5 8 5 , 2-2 $ 6 3 0 . AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 JERRICK APTS W a lk to UT. Fantastic ratesl Eff's, 1-1 % & 2-1 's Furnished/Unfurnished 1 04 E. 3 2 n d (1 Block S peedw ay) 2 5 1 4 Pearl, 4 1 0 3 -5 S pe e dw a y 472 -7 0 4 4 $ 2 0 0 OFF. O n e -b e dro o m $ 4 4 5 avg. 2-b ed ro om $ 5 8 2 avg. UT shut­ tle M o st bills p a id . Property M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 . W ATERFRO NT T O W N H O M E $ 5 7 5 . Lofted master b ed ro om . 3- bed ro om tow nhom e. Polished co n ­ crete floors $ 9 2 5 5-b ed ro om town- hom e 2-kitchens $ 1 3 5 0 . P roperly M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 TRAVIS HEIGHTS $ 4 2 5 . room $ 5 8 5 . Property M a x . 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 . G ym , 2 bed- free co ble . ALL BILLS p a id $ 4 7 5 . $ 8 0 0 . P roperly M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 2 b ed ro om Free C a b le , access gates ALORI PROPERTIES, 4 0 8 W . 37th, 1-1, 2-1. 4 54 -h om e EFFICIENCY APARTM ENT for rent $ 5 0 0 /m o . A ll bills p a id W ill be a v a ila b le 7 / 3 0 . 9 2 9 -3 3 5 1 . N.E. Austin. SOUTH SHUTTLE H uge floorplans. 1-2-3-&-4 bedroom s. Access gates fitn e ss/co m p u te r center, free ca ble , pools, sports court. First C a ll Proper­ tie s . 4 4 8 -4 8 0 0 /1 -8 0 0 -5 0 4 - 9 0 6 7 MARQUIS M A NAG EM EN T Student Housing marquis@mgmt.com 472-3816 HYDE PARK e fficie n cy $ 4 6 5 / 4 9 0 C a b le p a id , p o o l, a ll Dills p a id plus c a b le p a id AptS 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 a p a rt­ mentsource. net B R A N D -N E W 2 a nd 3 bedroom s in luxury apa rtm e nt com m unity. A p a rt­ ment Source. C a ll 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 a p a rt­ mentsource. net LUXURY C O N D O $ 5 9 5 Last one C a ll A pa rtm e n t Source 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apartm entsource.net HYDE PARK, WEST CAMPUS & CENTRAL LOCATIONS. Very nice efficiencies, 1-1 's & 2-2's from $405 to $825. Many amenities. HYDE PARK EFFICIENCIES Very nice, some bills paid, lots of amenities. $405. WEST CAMPUS Very nice, 1-1 's Ceiling fans, pool. $490-525. CENTRALLY LOCATED Large 1-1's & 2-2's. Huge walk-in closets, very nice. $575-825. 451-0988 3 9 0 - Unf. Duplexes 2 / 1 /CARPORT. W /D connections. C irc a 1 9 4 0 A ll b rick. H a rd w o o d floors Tile bath. U p da ted kitchen w / a ll a p p lia n ce s. W in d o w units, ce ilin g fans. Sorry, no pets, no smokers Lease $ 7 5 0 plus deposit. References re q uired Owner 327-1 224. 4 0 0 - Condos- Townhomes SPACIO US 1.2 3 b ed ro om town homes. Located a t 1 8 3 /M o p a c . Paid gas, heating, w a ter, a n d basic ca b le . C a ll 3 4 5 -1 7 6 8 . AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY! C o z y 1- just blocks 1 @ 3 0 0 0 G u a d a lu p e , N ice , cle an , 2nd from cam pus. flo o r unit, unfurnished, 4 0 0 s q .ft. In­ d iv id u a lly m an ag ed . $ 5 2 5 /m o . C a ll Emery, 3 8 5 -0 4 3 8 W A LK TO UT. Q u ie t 1-1 c o n d o w / lo f t $ 6 1 5 . 5 9 1 4 3 2 8 -0 9 2 1 , 4 7 8 W A LK TO U T /D o w n to w n . 1 /1 co nd o, poo l, vie w 3 2 8 -0 9 2 1 . A ll bills p a id . g a te d im pressive UT $ 7 5 0 /m o . 1 TO 4 b ed ro om C o nd o s & Houses fo r lease. W e st & N o rth cam pus A ll shuttle routes. W e w ill fin d w h a t you o re lo o kin g for. WREI 3 2 6 - 8 0 6 6 3 4 0 0 SPEEDWAY # 1 0 5 T T w /c o v e re d p a rkin g . Shuttle A v a il­ a b le 8 -1 4 $ 5 5 0 . Robin M c C a ll C o . 4 7 9 -8 8 5 5 . to D rag -1 2m o. BY O W N E R O n e bdrm plus loft-4 blocks lease only- $ 8 0 0 o w n e r/a g e n t, W / D included, p oo l, deck-new on mkt. 3 2 8 -8 3 3 3 x l 2 8 M a rk o r M arsha M O V E -IN TO D A Y I W e st cam pus nice co n d o , 1-1, 2 7 1 4 Nueces, $ 6 7 5 /m o . Cam pus C o nd o s 4 7 4 - 4 8 0 0 M O V E -IN TO D A YI 1-1 Preservation S quare, h ardw o o ds, bea utifu l unit $ 8 7 5 /m o ., 901 W e st 2 2 n d St. C am pus C o nd o s 4 7 4 -4 8 0 0 4 1 0 - Fum. Houses 2 B D /1 B A BI-LEVEL B un g alo w , h ard ­ floors, excellent n e ig h b o r­ w o o d h ood, 5m in tw o blocks from UT, from shuttle Faculty strongly p re fe r­ red 4 4 7 -6 9 3 7 . 4 2 0 - Unf. Houses AVAILABLE N O W I 1 to 5 bedroom s For 2 4 hours in fo r­ $ 5 2 5 -$ 1 6 0 0 . m ation- ca ll 477-LIVE. HOUSES & DUPLEXES 2 7 1 5 H em phill eff. h ard w o o d s $ 5 0 0 3 3 1 6 G ua d a lu p e 1 /1 C A C H $ 5 7 5 1701 Burton 2 / 1 . 5 g a ra g e $ 7 5 0 1 5 0 0 Cullen 3 / 2 h a rd w o o d s $ 1 4 0 0 4 6 1 1 D epew 4 / 2 h ard w o o a s $ 1 6 5 0 Eyes of Texas 477-1163 420 ~ Unf. H o u iti HOUSES & DUPLEXES 2 7 15 H em phill h a rd w o o d s $ 5 0 0 15 0 0 C ullen 3 / 2 h a rd w o o d s $ 1 4 0 0 . 4 6 1 1 D e pe w 4 / 2 h a rd w o o d s $ 1 6 5 0 . 3 0 0 7 W in d s o r 2 /2 + d e n $ 1 3 5 0 . 2 5 0 3 Bi id le Path 2 /1 H a rd w o o d $ 9 0 0 Eyes of Texas 477-1 163. 425 -R oom s 4 BLOCKS TO U T-N icel Large p ri­ vate room , bath, w a lk-in closet. Q uiet, nonsm oking, upstairs. W / D , b ig shared kitchen, C A /C H . Fall l y r $ 4 7 5 . Summer $ 3 3 5 Summer m ale dou ble $ 2 2 5 . ABP 4 7 4 -2 4 0 8 w w w .a b be y-h ou se .co m R O O M AVAILABLE in N o rth Austin $ 3 6 0 /m o n th plus utilities a nd one m onth dep osit. C a ll Tony 9 9 0 - 1 45 5. W E HAVE Dorm spaces! A ll meals, furnished, ethernet, p o o l, ABP! C all for tour I AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 SHORT W A LK UT. Q u ie t, non-smok­ ing, la rg e w in d o w s , h a rdw o o ds. Private b edroom , share both. From some $ 3 2 5 it w o rk meals) availab le ) w w w .6 0 2 e lm w o o d com (includes bills, fo r {a ll, (reduction 4 7 4 -2 6 1 8 fix C O -ED PRIVATE Rooms- N o Room­ mate! -W est C am pus- C A /C H , car­ peting -C eiling Fan- Fully furnished re frig e ra to r, m icrow ave- in clu din g from $ 2 8 0 .0 0 . 6 2 6 -1 8 1 4 from 2:30- LIVE IN TUTOR W o rk 7 3 0 p m E-mail: Photoquartz@ IEEE.org or c a ll Steve 4 5 2 -0 1 2 5 . M-F PRESERVATION SQUARE, 4 blocks from cam pus. Room fo r rent Hard­ w o o d front porch, 4 8 1 -0 2 6 6 fire p la ce , huge floors, N o rth w e st Hills. LARGE R O O M Rent-free fo r some in excha ng e housew ork a n d ca re o f m ild ly disa­ bled m an. 3 7 2 -9 9 1 1. 4 30 - Room-Board WEST CAMPUS Housing Available College Park C om m unitie s Single dorm rooms double dorm rooms Ethernet, Pool, Housekeeping Fitness Center 478-9811 Single rooms, double rooms & apartments Pool, Sun Decks, Housekeeping 476-4648 Double rooms & 3-rooms suites Sport court, Pools, Lifestyle 478-9891 435 - Co-ops C O O P R O O M S $ 3 9 5 ABP 1 9 1 0 Rio G ra nd e , 3 blocks fro m campus 9 6 5 -0 2 4 8 , DP 8 9 9 -6 1 1 6 SHORT W ALK UT Q u ie t, non-smok­ la rg e w in d o w s, hardw o o ds. in g, From Private bedroom , share bath (includes bills, $ 3 2 5 some meals), it w o rk fo r a va ilob le ) w w w .6 0 2 e lm w o o d com fix 4 7 4 -2 6 1 8 fall (reduction The Daily Texan (Super Coupons are playing your song! 1 B ED RO O M a p a rtm e nt at Tree- house A v a ila b le mid-August. Hyde Park. $ 4 5 0 /m o n th . C a ll D aron © Leaseline 4 7 8 -7 1 0 0 3 0 0 7 W IN D S O R N e a r 24th and 2-2 w / b ig bonus room M o p a c . C A C H , connections $ 1 4 0 0 /m o n th 2 6 1 -3 2 6 1 . W /D Every Tuesday Type 12 Month 9 Month 1-1 $595 $650 $725 $675 2-1 North Campus Only 2 Blocks to IT F r e e C o lo r T V APARTMENTS & M o re Free lo cat­ ing service, 7 0 8 -0 3 5 5 . GREAT L O C A T IO N 1-1 $ 5 2 5 , 2-1 4 7 3 - A p a rtm e n t Source $ 7 2 5 . 3 7 3 3 a partm entsource.net $ 2 0 0 OFF 1ST M O N T H RENT T- A pa rtm e n t l / l- ld e n / 2 b d t m s . Source 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 a partm entsource.net BRAND N E W M 's from $ 5 3 0 , 2- 2 's $ 9 3 0 -9 5 0 . H ig h ceilings, a w e ­ some p o o l, g re a t lo c a tio n AptS. 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 apartm entsource net ARTIST PARADISE $ 1 6 2 5 . 3 7 3 3 , apartm entsource.net 2-2 $ 7 7 5 . 5-2 A pa rtm e n t Source 4 7 3 - POOLS, COURTYARDS. access gates Large 2 -1 .5 $ 6 3 5 . For more o ptions, apartm entsource.net A p a rt­ ment Source 4 7 3 -3 7 3 3 . $ 2 0 0 OFF First M onths Rent. M ost 1-1 $ 4 7 5 . bills p a id O n shuttle. 2-2 $ 6 2 5 . A pt. Experts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 . * N O RENTAL H isto ry O K I* W e w o rk w ith c re d it p ro ble m sl A p t. Ex­ perts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 . D O W N T O W N LAKE Views, faux g ra nite countertops, M ic ro , A larm s, From $ 5 0 0 . 2-1 $ 6 4 0 A p t Experts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 . W A L K TO Z ilke rl Small co urtya rd com m unity, most bills p a id Eff. $ 4 5 0 , Loft $ 5 5 0 . A p t Experts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 M O P A C LUXURY, G re en b elt Views M o st Bills P aidl From $ 4 7 0 . 2BR $ 6 5 0 . A p t. Experts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 . BEAUTIFUL TRAVIS Heights, most bills p a id , from $ 4 2 5 . 2BR $ 5 8 5 . A p t. Experts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 free ca ble , gym , SPACIO US T O W N H O M E S , over lOOOsf O versize d patios, 1-1 $ 4 4 0 , Large 2BR $ 5 7 5 . A p t Experts 4 1 6 - RENT W A R I Free C a b le M o st bills p a id From $ 4 3 0 . 2BR $ 5 6 5 . A pt. Experts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 . Shuttle route. QÜIET COURTYARD com m unity, UT shuttle c a b le /m o s t bills p d, g a te d , 1-1 $ 4 3 5 , 2-1 $ 5 6 5 . A p t Exp 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 ALL BILLS Paid! $ 4 7 5 . A p t. Ex. 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 . Including C a b le l ALL BILLS p a id $ 4 0 0 to $ 9 0 0 Stu- d io 's , 1,2 bed ro om , some w /fre e cable- w a lk or shuttle cam pus Prop­ erty M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 . DISTRICT RIVERW ALK-M USIC O v e rh a n g w a te r- w asher a nd d ry e r- in terior b a r- g a rd e n tubs $ 5 2 0 2 b r $ 7 1 5 3 b r $ 1 0 2 0 . Prop. M a x 4 6 2 - 3 0 3 0 . S A N T A FE V illas space-rm -m ate 2br-2b a th . $ 7 8 0 . Prop. M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 . $ 1 5 0 sp e cia l-lo ft $ 5 4 0 - 1 3 5 0sf. 2 b 7 G IG A N T IC T O W N H O M E S 2 b a 3 b r-3b a th 16 0 0 s f $ 8 7 5 . W a s h e r/d ry e r, free c a b le Prop M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 . $ 7 4 5 , UT'S CLUB med "n e w ." Island p o o l- b a s k e tb a ll- sand v o lle y b a ll- fitness ce n te r- a la rm s- g a te d /c o u rte s y o ffi­ cer $ 41 1 $ 1 6 5 0 3 a nd 4 b r's also a v a ila b le Prop M a x 4 6 2 -3 0 3 0 . tow nhom es. Sm. GOLF COURSE fenced ya rd s - 2-2 1 /2 1 2 5 0sf. $ 7 5 0 - 3-2 1 /2 14 0 0 s f $ 9 5 0 Prop M a x 4 6 2 3 0 3 0 . 2-STORY T O W N H O M E shuttle I 2- b d 1.5 bath, FREE gas, o nly $ 7 3 5 . AFS 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 370 - Unf. A pt*, P r e l e a s in g now! Best Deal on UT Shuttle Eff 1-1 2-1 2-1.5 2-2 3-2 $420+ $470+ $565+ $605+ $610+ ^ $960+ 4 % % ^ Features: Energv efficient, ceramic tile entry & batn, fireplaces, walk-in closets, spacious floor plans, cats allowed, located just 5 minutes from Downtown la r g eT I 750 Sq. Feet - $485 Septem ber move-in, lo w deposit, pro m pt m aintenance, very clean, NR shuttle, sw im m in g pool. A nice, s m a ll, q u ie t com m unity. Brookholfow Apts. 1414 Arena Drive 445-5655 NEAR UT e fficien cy. N e w < la un d ry, p a rkin g , cle an , quiet p a id , no pets. $ 3 8 5 4 91-71 N e w carpet, w a ter 7 2 7 7 GREAT EFFICIENCIES 1-1 s, 2 -1 's in N o rth Austin starting at $ 3 9 0 . Free w a terA ca ble Large poo l, boll- courts, e lectric gates 4 5 1 -4 5 1 4 2-BLOCKS TO cam pus. room s $ 3 8 5 -3 9 5 ABP p a rkin g , semester Lavaca 4 7 6 -5 1 5 2 . leases Student Laundry, 1 8 0 4 Oop/ 2 f i d C o u l d l l o r o Condos Houses Duplexes Property Type Rent Comments Hyde Park Terrace $675 Great Floor Plans Elms La Casita 904 W 22nd Centennial 4306 Caswell 1-1 1-1 2-1 2-1 2-2 3-2 $725 Great for Roommates $795 9 month lease available $895 Cats OK, Hardwoods $1,600 Hurry Last One $1,600 House w/Hardwoods 500 W 38th 3-1.5 $1,300 Large House with patio Orange Tree 2-2.5 $1,800 Courtyard, Poolside I Best Selection. Best Service 4 7 6 - 1 9 7 6 Classified ordersrráeU before 11a.m lcKlay^h tj p :/ /s tu íy|e d ¡a j s p .u te x a s ,e d u /c |a ^ / ^ R e a ^ h W3 * a * ^ M ^ i ® ¡Daily. 444-7555 442-6668 444-6676 Parklane Villas Shoreline Apts. Autumn Hills o o i i 4 7 1 - 1 8 0 5 .STATE. - y — ----------- J — .ZIP. CITY — ~ — — will be available on-line by 3 p.m. today. RENTAL SERVICES E M P L O Y M E N T E M P L O Y M E N T EMPLOYMENT \ EMPLOYMENT T h e D a il y T e x a n 2 EMPLOYMENT 1 E M P L O Y M E N T ¡ ¡ l i s p AUSTIN INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT. | AISD needs grea t people to w w k l ¿ay with and care I care fo rk id ^ H H H Perfect for ‘ .' -'‘MtudentsL \ V r-school pro ids ' CHILD CARE ASSISTANT DIRECTOR N e ed ed for after-school child care in Austin schools. Must love children. High school or G ED required, experience preferred. Port time weekdays CHILD CARE WORKERS High s c h o d /G E D , experience and loving care required Part time afternoons. Apply ASAP: AISD Community Education, 3 9 0 8 Ave. B, # 11 3 . A C C BOOKSTORE Part-time tempo­ rary positions Contact campus stores: Northndge 8 3 4 -9 3 6 6 , River­ side 3 8 5 -5 7 2 7 , Cypress 3 3 5 -8 3 6 3 , Pinnacle RioGrande 4 7 4 -2 6 0 7 Eostview 9 2 7 -1 6 1 9 2 8 8 -2 3 0 3 , PROOF OPERATOR I Guaranty Federal™ Bank, F S B has part-time positions available, M-F, 5 :3 0 -8 :3 0 p .m . with Bank Holidays and W eekends off. There is an opportunity to earn, in addition to the hourly w age, an extra $ 7 5 /w k Other bonus opportunities are also available. A high proficiency in 10 Key is required Flexible evening hours Interest applicants are preferred. MU ST apply in person: TEMPLE-INLAND FINANCIAL SERVICES 1300 S. Mopac Austin, Texas 7 8 7 4 6 Equal Opportunity Employer Job Line: 5 1 2 -4 3 4 -1 7 1 7 Looking for N A N N Y W A N T E D nurturing person to care fo r tw o yr- old in home $ 8 /h r Flexible/1 yr. commitment Sept. 1. Call Linda 2 8 8 -8 2 7 5 ATTRACTIVE EXHIBITIONIST needed for internet project. Live rent free and get an allow ance D G M 3 2 0 - 9 1 7 1 RLE CLERKS Downtown law firm seeks part-time clerks to assist with receptionist and filing duties. Prefer students wi to commit to 9 -1 2 months; 2 0 -2 5 hours per week; prior office experience preferred Competitive hourly rate Please fax resume to 320-4598 n9 N A N N Y FOR 2 girls ages 5 ,7 Daughters of pediafricion 2 30- M -W -F, some Sat,a m 6 :3 0 p m . from Spicewood M a y pick up Springs elementary (off Anderson M ill Rd.) or w alk from busstop. Fax resume 3 3 6 -1 3 7 9 or call 3 3 6 - 1 4 1 9 . URGENT! 5 students from India, Ja­ pan, and China $ 5 0 0 -$ 1 0 0 0 plus/month. Call Mrs. Spence 3 2 8 - 1 0 1 8 EARN EXTRA CASH 10 Students or Part-time |ob seekers needed To do day or evening telephone work or m ake deliveries for marketing com pany in UT area High earnings potential. Flexible hours. Casuol attire Call Don at 2 3 6 -8 5 0 0 9 a m -1 pm or 5 30pm -9pm M-F EVERY other week 2 45-6pm need dependable, energetic person to pick up 1 0 4 14 year-olcf boys from school Supervise 4 drive to ac­ tivities 4 51 -81 3 1. EARN $ WHILE STUDYING Looking for dependable students to work various locations and various shifts Applicants must be 1 8 years of age, transportation, and a home phone. Starting pay up to $ 8 0 0 hr. Initial Security 31 4 Highland M all Blvd #21-0 Austin, TX 78752 4 5 1 -6 4 2 7 License #C-137, EOE CALUSIO S CHO O L OF M U SIC seeking PT receptionist Also, seek­ ing music instructors of all types to teoch young, beginning students. 8 9 2 -3 9 5 8 Leave message CHILDREN'S DAY O ut G reat work- for experienced mg environment PT, TUE-FRI 'eacher and assistants 8 4 5 -2 15. N e o r campus Job be­ gins August 17H, 2 6 6 -8 5 2 1 PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST for small downtown law firm Receptionist duties and Dictaphone transcription W ork Perfect 6 0 or higher or W o rd for W indow s experience necessary T/Th 8 :3 0 -5 3 0 Call 4 7 9 -7 7 7 7 or fax resume to 7 0 8 -1 7 7 0 . P ARADIG M IS now hiring store help for the fall semester. Please apply at 4 0 7 W . 24th or call a t 4 7 2 -7 9 8 6 . PRESCHOOL ASSISTANT Teachers Looking for enthusiastic individuals to work M-F 2 :3 0 -5 :3 0 . G rea t work environment. 4 7 8 -5 4 2 4 . W A N T E D 2 9 people to lose weight and earn money. 1 -8 8 8 -8 6 1 -5 3 6 3 . PARALEGAL COURIER, $8-9 near UT, M W F a.m., TT p.m., flex. Call 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 . O r apply online! Email l a w - a i d @ t e x a s . n e t for form, details. LAND SURVEYING Com pany needs part-time researcher and delivery person in the W estlake Hills area. G o o d pay Flexible hours Average 1 2-16 hours/wk. N eed valid TX driver's license. G ood driving record required. Contact Alexandria Perri' a. 328 -8 3 7 3 for details & interview. PART-TIME W AREHO USE help need- ed Flexible schedule. Call Steve Miller 4 5 4 -2 5 4 4 or send resume to: 6 7 1 7 Burnet, Austin 7 8 7 5 6 . LEG AL S E C R E T A R Y (part-time, Thursdays 4 Fridays - 15 hours per week): Vinson 4 Elkins L.L.P. seeks professional, organized secretary for performing a variety of secretarial duties with minimal supervision, exercising judgment over work priorities, and maintaining c confidentiality and positive contact with clients and professional and support staff.* Requires high school diploma or equivalent, minimum of 5 years executive or legal secretarial experience, 7 0 w pm typing with 2% or less error rate on the Firm's secretarial typing test and 7 6 % on the Firm's legal spelling test; ability to transcribe from Dictaphone tapes, good English gram m ar skills and telephone etiquette Proficiency in W ordPerfect 6 .1 preferred For co n sid e ra tion , pleose send resume a nd sa lary requirem ents to Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., A ttention: D irector o f A d m in istra tio n , 6 0 0 Congress Avenue, Suite 2 7 0 0 , Austin, Texas 7 8 7 0 1 -3 2 0 0 , o r fax (5 1 2) 2 3 6 -3 3 8 8 N o pho ne calls please. E O ff LIO NS GOLF COURSE part-time counter p osition open. A p p ly in p e r­ son at Lion G o lf C ourse 2 9 0 1 En­ fie ld Rood. PERSONABLE COFFEE shift, alternate w eekends, h rs ./w e e k , Place Bee Caves Rd., 3 2 8 -4 0 3 3 . m orning position. 3 4 9 -7 7 5 8 lover p m 15-20 C offee im m ed ia tely 3 2 0 1 A lso locatio n Trianon-The A p p ly N o rth PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST w ith cleri- ca l duties for non-sm oking la w office near M -f cam pus $ 6 5 0 / h r 4 7 6 -3 4 0 0 8-1 pm F /T 4 y r / o ld THE CHILDREN'S C enter o f Austin 7 9 5 -8 3 0 0 teacher, F /T to d d le r teacher, P /T 3 -6pm as­ sistant Excellent w a g e s /b e n e fits teachers. LIFEGUARDS needed n o w . lent w ages Austin. 7 9 5 -8 3 0 0 Excel­ C h ild re n 's C enter of A FTE R N O O N TEACHER needed for school-aae class M ust have expen ence w / this a g e g ro u p M -f, 3-6 C a ll 4 6 7 -9 7 4 0 KEVIN'S COOKIES & DELI Friendly & d e p e n d a b le m orning & afte rn oo n help needed 15-25 h rs /w k fo r busy d o w n to w n deli G re a t w o rk in g atm osphere N o nights or weekends Call 4 7 2 -2 3 8 8 o r c o m e b y 8 1 6 C o n g re s s A v e (Frost Bonk Plaza, first floor) 8 a m -4 p m M o n d a y -F r id a y TOY STORE C lerk 1 0o -6 p, Sat summer, Blvd 3 4 9 -9 2 9 8 . fall & X-mas 2 p d p , M-F M ust be a v a ila b le Far W e st R E S E A R C H S U B JE C TS N E E D E D to rate vo ice samples for overall speech q u a lity Requires a p p ro x 1 hour • $ 2 5 on co m p letio n M ust have English as first la n g u ag e , g o o d h ea rin g a nd ca n n o t hove p a rtic ip a te d in a study d u rin g the past 3 months Sessions a re scheduled fo r A ug 3, 4 , 5 (Tues W e d a n d Thurs ) (6, 6 :3 0 , 7 , 7 :3 0 , 8 a n d 8 3 0 p m ) For further in form atio n a na to reserve a space please c a ll John between 9 am -5pm DYNASTAT, IN C 2 7 0 4 Rio G ra n d e , Suite 4 4 7 6 -4 7 9 7 A SS ISTAN T/BO O KKEEP- OFFICE ER/SECRETARY (Afternoons p re fe rred ) c o u n tin g /c o m p u te r skills ient G re a t E xperience! 4 5 8 -3 6 3 6 Basic a c ­ C o nve n ­ Flex.ble hours 790 - Part rim s 790 - Part time WORK ON CAMPUS THIS FALL! N o w a c c e p t i n g a p p l i c a t i o n s f o r C a m p u s R e p . a t T h e D a i l y T e x a n O n t h e J o b t r a i n i n g , p o s i t i o n a v a i l a b l e A u g . 1 6 , 1 9 9 9 . D u t i e s I n c l u d e c o o r d i n a t i n g a d v e r t i s i n g f o r U n i v e r s i t y d e p a r t m e n t s a n d S t u d e n t o r g a n i z a ­ t i o n s , h a n d l i n g w a l k - l n a n d t e l e p h o n e c u s t o m e r s , c o m p l e t i n g f o r m e a n d f o l l o w i n g e s t a b l i s h e d p r o ­ c e d u r e s . M u s t b e d e t a i l o r i e n t e d e n d d e p e n d a b l e w i t h p l e a s a n t p h o n e p e r s o n a l i t y a n d e x c e l l e n t c u s t o m e r s e r v i c e s k i l l s . A va i l a b l e Shift: 1pm - 5pm $ 5 . 4 2 / h r t h r o u g h Aug. $ 6 . 0 0 S t a r t i n g Se pt 1, 1999 A p p l y i n p e r s o n a t T h e D a l l y T e x a n T S P R o o m 3 . 2 1 0 . T e l e p h o n e I n q u i r i e s n o t a c c e p t e d . A p p l i c a n t s m u s t b e a U n i v e r s i t y s t u d e n t . 7 9 0 - P o r t t i m a 7 9 0 - t o r t U n » Now Accepting Applications For THE DAILY TEXAN Fall Classified Clerk E M P L O Y M E N T m m tm f STATE SECURITIES BOARD Clerk II (Temporary) Posting 12-99 Part-time (preferred 20hrs/wk) Ends 1-13-00 Performs a variety of tasks including extensive filing (both numerically 4 alphabetically), data entry; check documents for accurocy; photocopy documents; transfer files A equipment; update archival records; stamp, receive, sort A route mail; answer inquiries, assist the public A other employees with forms, establish and maintain files and records; and process & approve licenses. Other duties as assigned Must be able to lift 5 0 lbs. High School diplom a or equivalent or current enrollment in secondary school $ 6 1 1/m onth. Applications available at 2 0 8 E. 10th St., 5th floor, Austin, TX Request by calling 512-305-8300. or download from website at http://w w w .ssb. state, tx. us Completed standard state applications should be sent to Human Resources State Securities Board P.O. Box 1 3 1 6 7 Austin, TX 7 8 7 11 Applications received will be considered for this posting only. Applicants to be interviews will be contacted by the agency EOE. MB EXTRA MONEY? FULL TIME OR PART TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT THE CONTESSAAND THE MADISON FOOD SERVICE DEPT. • COOKS •SE R V E R S •C HECKERS •STO CK ERS • DISHW ASHERS FLEXIBLE HOURS MORNING OR AFTERNOON SHIFTS FREE MEAL DURING SHIFT PROVIDED APPLY IN PERSON M-F BETWEEN 9AM & 5PM AT MADISON HOUSE 709 W 22ND ST LOCATED BETWEEN PEARL AND NUECES ST REFERENCE AND BACKGROUND CHECK REQUIRED LAW FIRM seeks part-time receptiorv ist/office clerk for M-Th mornings. $ 6 7 5 /h r . Send resume to G N H R , 8 1 2 San Antonio St Ste 2 0 1, Aus­ tin 7 8 7 0 1 , or fax to 4 7 6 -5 2 5 0 . tOO-Owwrai U - l - SAX u— - I n w p v v a n T O O STUDENT JOBS. D .G .M . Ltd. is rapidly expanding and seeking to fill positions in the following departments: W e b design, W riting, and Modeling. N o experience necessary 320-9175. SUPERSHUTTLE HIRING ALL POSITIONS Nations leading airport shuttle service is seeking knowledgeable, customer service minded ond highly motivated individuals for Driver, Dispatch and Guest Service positions Full benefit package Call 9 2 9 -3 5 5 6 for more information. GRADS/STUDENTS C om pany offers exciting new career for individuals With an A+ attitude and great people skills. $ 1 0 /h r ♦ potential Call 419-0990 SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS $9.25 per hour Training is provided with pay and benefits Apply: AUSTIN INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT, HUMAN RESOURCES - CLASSIFIED OFFICE, 1111 W . 6th Street, Austin TX, 78 703-5300. CARETAKERS NEEDED lyzed man QUIRED 4Sun 1 6 4 6 . for paro HEAVY LIFTING RE­ 2 shifts available Sat 8 9 9 - 8 am -3 p m /3p m -10 p m TEAM PLAYERS International Company seeks outgoing energetic individuals to help with company expansion. $2,500-J3,500/m o. 4 5 1 - 9 7 7 2 ext. 100 Drivers Needed Immediately S IG N IN G BO NUS available Business is boom ing Use own vehicle to deljver meals from Austin restaurants. C a l l N o w 3 4 6 - 9 9 9 0 PART-TIME HELP needed starting in fall semester. G eneral office duties Must have knowledge of M S W o rd $ 7 /h r . Fax resume to 3 4 5 -8 4 9 8 AVAILABLE N O W TELEMARKETING POSITIO NS Student fnendfy, afternoon A evening shifts near UT campus in University Towers N o selling involved, appointment setting only $8-$ 15 per hour Casual atmosphere Experienced or will tram Call C J . at PBC 8 6 7 -6 7 6 7 H A W T H O R N SUITES Northwest N o w hiring for Front Desk Clerk Flexible schedule, benefits available Please apply in person 8 8 8 8 Tall- w ood Dr flippy» G e n e ra l j.. . a .. IlCC/^iiABnc rr/BT Athletic Club. C a ll Trey 431 -0 4 8 8 Babysitters/Nannies Needed • Permanent PT/FT, 171 & 1/0 positions available ASAP, $9-12 per hour • Babysitting, Temp Nannies choose your own hours, days/evenings/weekends Childcare exp car & H S dip /TfFT) req Call 346-6523 for more information or appt DIRECT CARE STAFF NEEDED Austin Children's Shelter is actively recruiting childcare workers. Varied shifts Differential paid for overnight positions Experience in RTC's and bilingua! preferred Benefits for full-time Fax resume to Sherree Pachall or Reagan Shelley a t ( 5 1 2 ) 3 2 2 9 4 6 1 ^"PART-TIME CARE NEEDED for my child after school M-F 3-6pm Person needs to have a car and be able to drive the child ploces. Right applicant needs to be the outdoors type who like to play with children. Must hove experience and also must be honest and dependable Pay $ 8 /h r Please call Marsho if you are interested. * W ork 320-6910 or Home 343-7111. N O W H IR IN G S E C U R IT Y O F F IC E R S Having a hard tim e m aking ends m eet! income w ith o u t sacrificing your G PA to Need extra get it? I f so, we have the perfect job for you!! A t Zimco we offer: • Full & Part T im e Positions • • Evening & N ig h t Pbsitions • • Study W h ile You W ork • • C a r N o t Required • • School Holidays O f f • • N o Experience Necessary • • U n ifo rm s Provided • CALL 343-7210 NOW ZIMCO SECURITY CONSULTANTS Licrmt * B-01910 DELIVERY DRIVER w ith clean d rivm g Flexi­ reco rd. Part-time o r full-time ble hours N o late evenings o r Sun­ days. C a ll Becky a t 4 7 6 -2 4 0 1 N O W HIRING! B row n-Karhan H ealthcare is lo o kin g fo r m otivated individu a ls w h c w o u ld e n jo y a unique em ploym ent e xpe rie n ce in a com forta b le relaxed environm ent. W e a re currently h irin g for M e n ta l Health W o rk e r positions to p ro vide d ire ct assistance for b ra in a nd spinal co rd injured residents. G re a t o p p ortun ity to w o rk a lo n g sid e professional therapists in a residential setting w h ile g a m in g gre a t exposure to the fie ld of h e a lthca re . C urrently hirin g o n -c a ll/re lie f, 3-1 1pm A overnights Please fax resume fo: Brown-Karhan Healthcare at (512) 8 5 8 -4 6 2 7 , or e-mail to: jgilley-brown- karhan@ worldnet.att.net. to $ 1 8 3 5 / h r POSTAL JOBS ¡nc benefits, no experience For a p p . & e xam info, ca ll 1 -8 0 0 -8 1 3 -3 5 8 5 , ext 7 6 2 2 , 8am -9pm , 7-days fds.inc AIDES THE C h ild re n 's C enter o f Austin is an interm ediate core fa c ility fo r the m entally d isab le d that has o p e ra ted in Austin fo r over 2 0 years W e care fo r clients w h o a re 3 years o ld to 21 years o ld a nd n on-am bulatory E xperience a plus, but w e w ill tram the rig h t in d ividu a ls W e start at $ 7 0 0 per hour, have a g re at ben efit p acka ge and 4 0 1 K retirem ent plan. There is a bonus p ro g ra m also D A Y SHIFT W e have positions w orkn una Tuesdoy- Saturdays, Sundays-Thursdoy, Thurs- rsdo d a y-M o n d a y a nd Fnday-Tuesday The d a y shift is a split shift 6 0 0a m - 1 0 :0 0 a m a nd 2 3 0p m -6 3 0 p m e x­ ce pt on S aturday a n d S unday when yo u w o rk 6 :0 0 a m -3 0 0 p m E V E N IN G SHIFT Several positions a re a v a ila b le II! 2 0 0 p m to 9 :3 0 p m o r 2 3 0 to 1 1 :3 0 p m w o rkin g the same sched­ uled days as the D a y shift N IG H T SHIFT The N ig h t shift w orks 1 1 30pm - 8 :0 0 a m w ith the same scheduled days as the D ay shift A n yo n e interested in a position w ith us ca n com e to our Personnel office o r f a x a re s u m e fo 4 4 8 - 4 0 4 8 O f f i c e h o u rs M o n d a y - F r id a y 8 : 0 0 a m - 5 : 0 0 p m T H E C H IL D R E N 'S C E N T E R O F A U S T IN 4 8 0 0 S FIRST STREET EOE C H IL D R E N 'S C E N T E R O F A U S T IN . N e w center, beautiful N W Austin lo catio n , seeking in novative creative in d ivid u a ls for FT/PT tea ch ing positions (infants through pre-K) M-F, Flexible Hours Excellent wages. Call 7 9 5 -8 3 0 0 FURNITURE W AREHO USE a nd cus- tom er service positions a va ila b le PT/FT A p p ly in person at G a g e Furniture 5 3 19 N o rth IH-35 KITCHEN HELPER M-F 6 30-1 3C $ 7 / h r U T Cam pus area 4 7 4 -7 9 9 0 U T S H U TTLE D R IV E R S N E E D E D Ideal for co lle ge student, m ale o r female Flexible hours a nd g o o d pay Lots o f fun! C o ll 2 8 2 - 5 7 7 0 or a p p ly in person A T C / V a n c o n 0 f T e x a s L.T 8 3 0 0 S. IH -3 5 -A c c e s s R o a d A u s tin , 7 8 7 4 5 . INTERN NEEDED. N o t p a id y e t, w e ll p a id in 6 m o n th s . Y o u 'll b e a g o p h e r firs t, c lie n t lia is o n n e x t S o m e k n o w le d g e o f H T M L , P h o to s h o p , q u a r k . F a x re s u m e a n d c o v e r le tte r to 8 9 1 - 8 2 8 1 . 3 p m 1 1 p m. , DESK CLERK N eed ed Full and port- time I l p . m - 7 a m ond 7 a m -3p m Apply in person Days Inn University. 4 / 8 - 1631 PR A N D RTF interns needed immedt ately for auth or a nd natio na l event E-maii Fran a t fra nh a rris cam 443 - 0 7 1 6 A A A i . A e n e e e l ■ V v — w e i P w w i W t t n t o d • 6 0 - G e n e r a l U ^i Wren trail n u p w a i i i G u C O - O P H O U S I N G 2-5 blocks Tioin CREDIT CARD DEBT ( N o fee) Scop haras sin g calls, re d u ce p a y m e n ts 5 0 % , save in te re s t $ , resto re c re d it, n o n p r o f i t , b o n d e d , & c o n fid e n tia l. C .l 111 p u s s'4 4 5 -s 5 5 5 h i d . I all S p rint* s.V)ll-s445'm <>. Su in iiu i \ i i m i i s i ‘ \ n ) S iii'J is and iluiih lcs 2 4 -h o u i k itc lu ns No U Vs V m m ake the Rules \ euuie. \ e^an. X M e a t Irie m lK Pool M e m h e r ( o n tru l yol on v IT Now Pie-1 .easing lo r S u m m e r.l all. ck S p rin g Inter-Cooperative Council 510 W. 23rd. St. (512)476-1957 ic c m ail @uts. cc. utexas. edu WWW. utexas. edu/students/icd Est. 1937 4 4 0 - R o o m m a t e s NEED A roommate? Call Student Roommates and find one for free! 3 2 2 -9 8 2 5 www.studentroom- m ates com 4 BLOCKS to UT-Nicel vate room, bath, walk-in-closet et non-smoking, upstairs W / D , big shared kitchen, C A /C H ' ' " Fall ly r $ 4 7 5 ABP 4 7 4 -2 4 0 8 w w w abbey- house.com Large £ RESPONSIBLE FEMALE needed to share a very large 3-2 in N W A usfin. Rent $ 3 7 5 + 1 / 3 of bills. Please call Cyndi © 3 7 2 -9 3 9 4 SHORT W ALK UT Q u iet rton-smok- lorge windows, hardwoods. mg, Private bedroom, share bath From (includes bills, some $ 3 2 5 meals) it work fix available) w w w 602elm w ood.com fall, (reduction 4 7 4 -2 6 1 8 for 3 STUDENTS seeking a 4th room­ mate to share a 2-2 condo, less than campus. 5 min $ 3 0 0 /m o n th 4 7 8 - 4 2 7 3 to 1 fu t ilitie s w alk R O O M M A TES Fall/S pring Large 2- Full person loft, 4 5th /G u o d a lu p e 2nd kitchen, floor. livingroom. Free water, g a r­ W a s h er/d ry er. bage pickup 4 1 9 - 1 6 9 0 $ 2 5 0 /m o n th G A Y MALE needs 2 roommates for 3 - 1 1 / 2 house $ 45 0is h ABP A vailable 7 / 1 5 , 3 0 2 -5 0 7 4 4 5 0 - M o b i l * Homos-Lots 16x80' TRAILER '9 7 O A K W O O D 3-2, All appliances, sofa and chair included - Also sfeps- EXCELLENT CONDITION. $ 2 1 ,0 0 0 0 6 0 sensibly. Fax/call 830-990-8558. 4 9 0 - W a n t e d t o FURNISHED Room W A N T E D : o n d /o r for quiet, non­ smoking business student. Reasona­ ble rate Paul 8 0 0 -7 0 8 -3 9 4 8 (pog- roommate EDUCATIONAL 5 9 0 - T u t o r i n g from 2 :3 0 - LIVE-IN TUTOR- W o rk 7 :3 0 p m E-mail: Photoquartz®IEEE org or call Steve 4 5 2 -0 1 2 5 M -f 5 0 0 - I n s t r u c t i o n I A I m b s ^ ^ A B A /L O V A A S INSTRUCTORS need­ ed 6- for 4 5 y r/o ld PDD boy 1 0 h rs /w k Call Emmett or Carm en © 7 0 7 -1 6 1 3 . Possible training pro­ vided. SERVICES 630 - Legal Services ATTORNEY AT LAW , Former Police O fficer/S tate Prosecutor Kevin M a d i­ son 7 0 8 -1 6 5 0 . Visit our w ebsite, w w w kevinmadison.com 6 3 0 - INTERNET access, 2 UNLIMITED email occounts, 5 M G w eb site $ 9 .9 5 /m o n th 8 7 3 -1 7 9 0 . 7 5 0 - T y p i n g ZIVLEY The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS EDITING • RESUMES DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING 27th & Guadalupe 472-3210 FREE long distance, 30 MINUTES! G reat for students roommates and Co op housing 1 9< minute on yout phone or !0< minute on yout rolling ra id w number Call S I 2 -2 5 9 -4 3 4 5 and please leave name, numbet ond oddtess. 1 - 8 8 8 - 8 2 8 - D E B T A Family Budget Counseling, Inc. i5 ia » * m u iH a ia ia ia « M ia m a ta ia i4 c HORSE FACILITY S W : 50+acres, FullCore Lessons, Stalls/Pasture, a rena, residence own­ roundpen, ers/trainers 5 1 2 -8 5 8 -2 0 5 3 . EMPLOYMENT 7 9 0 - t a r t t i n * . PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST for busy salon. Mornings, afternoons, and Saturdays. Leslie © 3 7 1 -1 8 1 8 PART-TIME INTERNET SUPPORT TE C H N IC IA N O n e of Am erica's largest internet technical support companies is expanding and needs qualified technicians W e provide training, but knowledge of W indow s 9 5 / 9 8 a nd M a c O S a must, Internet Explorer, Netscape, Eudora, and modems strong plus. If you need training, you'll make $ 6 /h r while If not, you'll start at $8- you learn. 1 0 /h r diagnosing and solving customer's internet connectivity £oblems W orking hours are xible with day, weekend and night shifts available You'll be learning valuable skills in a casual environment and working someplace that looks nice on your resume. G o to this site online to apply: Now Accept i ng Appl ications For THE DAILY TEXAN F A L L I n-Hous e Sales R e p r e s e n t a t i v e D u tie s include serv icin g an e x is tin g a c c o u n t list of a d v e rtis ers as w ell as p u rs u a n c e of new b u siness E xc e lle n t p h o n e , c o -w o rh er an d c u s to m e r s e rv ic e skills n e ed e d . M o n d a y - F r i d a y 9 a m - 1 2 p m o r 8 a m - 1 1 a m M u a t be a b l e to b e g i n w o r k A u g . 1 6 , 1 9 9 9 . Ba s e + C o m m i s s i o n ! P o s i t i o n q u a l i f i e s f o r I n t e r n s h i p A P P L Y IN P E R S O N T H E D A I L Y T E X A N T S P R o o m 3 . 2 0 0 T e le p h o n e inquiries not a c ­ c e p te d . A p p lic a n ts m u s t be a U n iv e rs ity o f T e x a s s tu d e n t. PART-TIME PO S ITIO NS for students at N W Physician's office W ill train. Call Judith (5 1 2 )2 5 8 -4 4 1 1 or fax-resume (5 1 2 )2 5 8 -5 4 5 6 . TEXACO FOOD MARTS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR FULL TIME/PART TIME CLERKS 2 8 A U S T IN /M E T R O LO C A TIO N S BENEFITS: —M edical Insurance — Retirement — Paid Vacation —Tuition Assistance APPLY IN PERSON 4 9 1 1 EAST 7TH STREET (Austin) 8anv4pm M O N /F R I *E O E STEPPING STONE SCHOOL Seeking School-Age Counselors Part-time Hours. Great Working Environment Competitive $ Come Be A Part O f Our Team! 4 5 9 - 0 2 5 8 P /T N E TW O R K ADMINISTRATOR needed for small, centrally located, casual office, flexible hours W orking knowledge of NT Server, W indow s 9x, M S Office, M doem on em ail server, TCP/IP, VPN . Troubleshoot & repair basic hardw are problems Apply 1502 W .óth, fax resume 4 7 4 -5 0 4 9 . STUDENTS SUMMER CAREER PT/FT 1 K-2K+/mo. Local firm seeks college grad/students for management & various positions. 4 5 1 -7 2 7 0 ext. 200. L O O K IN G FOR M ARY POPPINS and close relatives to work as lead teachers & assistants with infants from 2 -2 4 m onths/old Must be 18+yrs old with high school diplom a or G ED Some exp and C D A preferred Competitive pay, benefits. Low child-to-staff ratio, high parent involvement. In central Austin near shuttle & Capitol Metro stops. E O F . Call Helen 4 7 8 -3 1 1 3 HCMITY OVVKIR POSITIONS •Armsd, Unarned & PaSoi • Ful 4 Fart-tim* » Lkry, high 4 Wnliind • Uiwrm Pruvdui » Pad Troinmg/VotaKor • Bandits amicd* • APaname* Potmhoi • l i 00 /HP i téamry • Auk b n to x* «ora $ 8 -9 .0 0 NEAR UT, Legal services firm, flex, hours, will train Fresh soph, early grad levels invited. PT/FT Apply online! Email law -aid©*exas.net for form, details O r call: paralegal courier 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 ; typist/clerico! 4 7 4 -2 2 1 6 , bookxeep mg trainee 4 7 4 -0 8 5 3 D u t i e s I n c l u d e t a k i n g v o l u n t a r y a d e b y p h o n e , t i l i n g , t y p i n g , c o o r d i n a t i n g p r o j e c t s , a s s i s t l n { a n d s a l e s t a s k s . E x c e l l e n t p h o n e , c o - w o r k e r a n d c u s t o m e r s e r v i c e s k i l l s n e e d e d . s u p e r v i s o r y a t a t f w i t h c l e r l c a P art-T im e T ellers $ 8 . 5 0 a n h o u r 4 3 5 -Ca" ip » ;i I I X H X Y Y X I I I X X X I I I l l A H I » T T T i T I I I I T T T y 4*5 STUDENT HOUSING COOPERATIVE NO W L E A SIN G For summer and fail Fall/Spring $360-5560/month • Summer$335-5430/month Single rooms available • ALL BILLS P A D (including food!) Democratic, member controlled environment (You make die rules!) Central Air/Heat • On-campus locations Check out our new house, 5 minute walk to campus All students invited to apply Contact Jay at Student Heritage Houses 4 7 1 -7 5 8 6 or email UTWCiyahoo.com im n xn m m m a iim m n n iin n f ^ ' M o n d a y -F rid a y 1 0 a m - 1 pm or 1 2 - 3 p m M u s t be a b l e t o b e g i n w o r k A u g . 1 6 , 1 9 9 9 $ 5 . 4 2 / H r t h o u g h A ug , 1 99 9 $ 6 . 0 0 / H r S e p t . 1, 1 99 9 APPLY IN PERSON T HE D A I L Y T E X A N T S P R o o m 3 . 2 0 0 Te l e p h o n e mus t be a U n i v e r s i t y of T e x a s s t u d e n t . I n qui r i es net a c c e p t e d . A p p l i c a n t e University Federal Credit Union offers competitive salaries plus an incentive, paid holidays, paid vacation and sick leave. We are looking for someone that knows 10-key by touch with excellent interpersonal and communication skills Prior teller and/or cash handling experience helpful. We train. HS/GED required For consideration, fax your resume to ATTN. Donette Peevey or come in to apply at: U niversity Federal C redit Union 3305 Stock, Suite 30 Austin, Texas 78758-8000 Fax: 512/421-7461 ________ l O l M/F/D/V G rea t working environment in fast growing, well established technology firm, exciting web protects V idecxonferencm g, shells, server H A S optimization, Apache Samba SendMoil, Compilations, Work-toSoiution required Java, HTML, and VPN a plus Visit us at w w w.bjy.com to e-matl your resume and a p p lic a tio n O r cal! Kim at 3 3 8 -1 0 0 0 . E.O.E. 63 People wonted te lose weight & SURF Tftf NET! 1 800-113-7546 let/I $ 9 + /H R FOR an h on orab le , re lia b le & d e ta il orie nte d student w h o w o u ld e n jo y a long term jo b cle an in g neat S W Austin homes Car required. Training Flexible, part-time hrs W ork now & /o r fall semester Call Kate at 280-6743 FURNITURE PRO DUCTIO N W o o d- fiberglass p ro d u ctio n , up­ w o rkin g , finishing holstery, a n d / o r w o o d Small co m p an y C a ll M ik e 339 - 7 4 8 5 C o m p etitive w a ges N o ex­ perien ce Required. LOVE KIDS, e n jo y singing a n d dan c­ ing? Teaching p osition, start imme­ d ia te ly C a ll A m a n d a 2 4 h rs 512 - 4 8 4 -3 9 3 7 RESPONSIBLE PERSON needed to w o rk part-tim e on horse farm in e xcha ng e for hou sin g and utilities M u st have e xpe rie n ce han dlin g horses N e e d to be a va ila b le at 7 am a nd 5 p m d a ily for fee d ing , a nd w ill include w e ekend work S o jfh w e st lo ca tio n 1 5 miles from d o w n to w n . N o d ru g s /d o g s /s m o k e rs Please c a ll 2 6 3 -7 7 4 4 O B /G Y N PRACTICE looking for a part-time employee Job duties include front office w ork & occasionally helping the doctor in exam rooms. All interested applicants, lease call 440-11 13 or P ta ax resume to 444-1 3 4 6 A PP O IN TM E N T SETTERS W e e k y part-time. 4 7 4 -9 0 9 1 Poid weekly $ 7 / h r + ROOSTER A N D R E W S SPORTING G O O D S needs FT/PT re tail sales em ployees. M o n -Sat w ith one w e e k d a y off B rodie Lane lo catio n -N ick W o o d h o u s e 8 9 2 -6 4 9 5 . G u a d a lu p e location-Jeff Rogers 4 5 4 -9 6 3 1 A nderson Lone location-Justm 4 5 8 -2 1 0 3 CUSTOMER SERVICE/ Sales Rep needed. Experience or interested in print p ro du ction pre fe rred M o tiva te d , o rg a n iz e d & peo ple o rie nte d a must. Call Lloyd at The Print Shoppe, 328-9206. RIDING STABLE needs b a rn help. Flexible schedule 1 5 -2 0 h rs ./w k M ust have transp o rtatio n 2 8 2 -0 3 7 9 re lia b le 6 3 people W A N T E D lose w e ig h t a nd surf the net! 8 8 8 -2 4 8 - 2 8 3 8 w w w e vita lity n e t/life lin e to YM C A OF AUSTIN N O W H IR IN G !!! SITE COOR D IN ATO R S ASST. C O O R D IN ATO R S COUNSELORS W o rk with elem entary a ge ch ild re n after school in oreas of art, sports, gam es, tutoring o nd enrichm ent closses. Sites located at schools in Austin a nd surrounding areas Site ond Asst C o o rd in a to rs are responsible for the OaJy o pe ra tion s a nd m anagem ent o f an a fte r school site Counselors must supervise 10-15 ch ild re n in a va rie ty of activities a n d teoch enrichm ent closses Positions n ow a v a ila b le b e g in ning M o n August 9 th 2 3 0 PM-6 3 0 pm M -f/M -W -F /T -T H shifts $ 6 3 5 -$ 9 9 0 / h r based on e xperience Free Y M C A m em bership Fo ail pos+ions, a p p ly in person a t 1 8 0 9 E Sixth St. 9 a m -5 pm EOE PT/FT WAREHOUSE CUSTOMER SERVICE S H O W R O O M industry Learn a ra p id ly e xp a n d in g from the inside out A t C e ra m ic Tile International. C ontact Jennifer 4 9 1 - 6 7 9 0 o r fa x resume to 491-6786 W ill tram HOUSEKEEPER A N D p orter needed staff Join a g re at 1 1 30am - 6 3 0 p m M -f C ontact M rs G ann 4 7 2 - / 7 4 8 ui C yn d Smith 4 78 - 6 4 5 2 L O O K IN G FOR FT/PT c h ild ca re p ro­ viders m small school C entral lo ca ­ tion 4 5 2 -8 5 0 1 FULL-TIME W O R K IN G in a moil o rde r home-brew shop in N orth Austin. O w n transportation essential H om e -b rew in g/be e r know ledge helprul Start im m ediately W ill train if necessary. $ 1 1 0 0 / h r 9 8 9 - 9 7 2 7 . STUDENTS PART-TIME/FULL-TIME $ l,0 0 a $ 2 ,5 0 0 W e re swamped and need help Flexible hours and training availa ble 3 8 0 -0 5 7 0 . P H O N E R O O M supervisor Part-time evenm gs and weekends G o o d Telephony m a n ag e ­ p eo ple skills ment experience h elpful Joe 4 4 7 - 2 4 8 3 CAMPUS BUILDING CUSTODIANS (Full a nd Part Tim e w / Ful¡ Benefits) Looking for a second incom e to supplem ent the h ig h cost o f liv in g or just w a ntin g to w o rk a t a g re a t place? W e ll lo ok no furlhe* The Un ve rs ty o f Texas at Austin has many im m ediate custo d ial p ositions a va ila b le C o m p etitive p a y easy bus occess a n d am p le p a rkin g Six months to o ne ye ar cu sto d ial experience is required P /T positions hours ore 5 30- 9 3 0 p m 4 F /T positions a re 5 30- 1 3 0 a m A p p lica n ts can subm it an A p p lic a tio n fo r Employm ent on the W e b at w w w utexas e d u / o d m in / o h r / e m p l/ Of ¡n person w o rkd a ys d u rin g bus ness hours c Em ploym ent Services, MLK a n d Red River Refer to ¡ob numbers 9 9 - 0 7 -0 9 -0 5 6 2 2 4 A (BA ll-fulhim e) o n d /o r 9 9 -0 7 1 9 0 1 -6 2 2 5 A (BAII-part tim e) A n Equal O p p o rtu n ty /A ffirm o tiv e A ction Em ployer F /T 4 y r /o ld THE CHILDREN S Center o f Austin 79 5 - 8 3 0 0 teacher, F/T tod d ler teo ch e' F /T 3 -6 pm es sistont Excellent w a g e s/b e n e fits teochers LIFEGUARDS le nt wi voges i 7 9 5 -f Austm 7 9 5 -8 3 0 0 n eeaed now ExceF C h ild re n s Center of AVIS RENT A CAR has the following positions open Rental Sales Agents (FT) Service Agents (FT A PT) Drivers (PT) PT Office Clerk Avis offers excellent starting pay and benefits Pre-employment drug screen and MRV check required Please apply direct at 9 3 2 0 rental C a r Ln or call 5 3 0 -3 4 1 9 with any questions Avis is on Equal Opportunity Employer GREAT PAY Casual office A M or PM Interview 5-7pm © 8 7 0 5 Shoal Crfcek Suite # 2 0 2 or ca ll 335 - 3 4 1 4 SPRAY PAINTER needed im m ed ia tely for w o rk with 1 3-year o ld a p a rtm e nt m aintenance co m p an y M ust have d ep e n d a b le vehicle, n ea t a p p e a ra n ce a nd be w illin g to learn a n d w o rk. Pay base d on a p p lic a n t's q u a lifica tio n s Resume to Box 6 8 4 4 8 9 , Austin 7 8 7 6 8 or c a ll 3 2 6 - 1 0 8 8 . N A T IO N A L ELITE G ym nastics is hir­ Pay in g gym nastics based C a ll (5 1 2 )2 8 8 -9 7 2 2 experience instructors on QUALITY IN N CENTRAL. N o w h ir in g im m e d ia t e ly f o r th e f o l lo w in g p o s itio n s : S P /P T n ig h t a u d it o r S P /P T f r o n t d e s k c le rk s F le x ib le h o u rs . P le a s e a p p ly in p e r s o n @ 9 0 9 E. K o e n ig Ln. FLEXIBLE HO URS! B udget C a r Rent­ al has FT a n d PT, d a y a n d evening A p p ly at shifts with fle xib le hours 3 3 3 0 M a n o r Road 5 1 2 -4 7 8 - 6 4 3 0 ~ ATTENTION: CREATIVE INDIVIDUALS seeking a fun w o rk environm ent. Do you understand the need to be treated w ith d ig n ity a nd respect? If so, com e assist our staff w ith the p la n n in g a n d im plem enting of in d iv id u a liz e d Dementia care Pay tra in in g FT/PT a v a ila b le Contact Kim Keutzer @ 8 3 3 -9 2 5 3 . $$$CHILDCARE WORKERS NEEDED at First U nited M ethodist Church for ch ild re n 0 -5 years Starting salary $ 7 / h r Sundays re q uired a n d , various even in gs and m ornings a v a ila b le If interested pleose ie ave a message at 4 7 8 -5 6 8 4 ext. 23. 8 1 0 - O f f i c e - C l e r i c a l SUMMER JOBS TH R O U G H O U T A US TIN CALL T O D A Y ! A dm in Assistants- to $ 1 1 / h r Legal Secietaries- to $ 13 / h r W o rd Processor to $ 9 / h r Receptionists- to $ 9 / h r Data Entry O pe rs • to $ 9 / h r Custom er Svc Reps- to $ 9 / h r O ffic e C le rk v to $8 5 0 / h r M ust be a v a ila b le M -f 8 am -5pm Same W e e k Pay 4 FREE com puter tra in in g ! C a ll 3 4 2 - 8 6 6 2 TO D A Yi www.officespec.com PART-TIME ADMINISTRATIVE/RE- SEARCH A ssistant needed fo r com­ m ercial real estate co m p a n y close to W e s t Cam pus Flexible hours M ust h ave car C a ll Doug H o d g e 322 - 9 0 0 0 $8-9, NEAR UT, le g a l services firm , fle x hrs . w ill train. Fresh, soph, e a rly g ra d levels invited PT/FT A p p ly online! Email law-oid@ texas net for form d etails O r c a ll p a ra le g a l couner 4 7 4 2 2 4 6 typist/cTenca' 4 7 4 -2 2 1 6 . b o o k keeping tra nee 4 7 4 -0 8 5 3 . FLOOR MESSENGERS Large natio na l m ulti-proctice la w firm w ith a b ranch office in d o w n to w n A ustin is curre ntly recruiting fo r tw o p erm anent part-time flo o r messengers Hours from 12 N o on - 6 3 0 pm A p p lica n ts must have high school diplom a a n d p rofessional a pp e a ra n ce Must show attention to detail, o rg a n iz a tio n a n d re lia b ility Must be h igh ly com m unicotive, team piayer, non-smoker Duties are adm inistrative in nature such as faxing , d e liv e rin g mail, m aking coffee re lie vin g receptionist and running m-house errands W e offer e xcellent co m pensation a n d benefits M a ,: or fax co ve r letter a nd resume to R Renteria, Baker 4 Botts, 1.1 P 9 8 Son Jac nto Blvd Suite 1 6 0 0 , A ustin, Tx 7 8 7 0 1 Fax # 322-2501 BUSY DO W N TO W Ñ T la w firm is seeking to fill o part-tim e w o rd processor position H ours are M o n d a y / W e d n e s d a y /F r a a y from 5 30pm to 12 3 0 a rr In d ivid u a l must be d e p e n d a b le , m ature a nd responsible Excellent interpersonal a n d com m u nicatio n skills required as well as e xce p tio n a l com puter skills (including p ro ficien cy in MS W o rd 9 7 a n 3 W o rd P erfe ct 8) C a n d id a te must type 7 0+ w p m , and possess a b ility to p rio ritiz e m ultiple tasks N on-sm oker M a ii resume *o IS M a n a g e r B aker 4 Botts L L P 9 8 San Jacinto Blvd Suite 1 6 0 0 Austin, TX 7 8 7 0 1 fax to (512) 322-2501 or e-m ail to csandusky@bakerbotts.com - no p ho ne calls please AUSTIN BRANCH OF LARGE H O U S TO N LA W FIRM seeks PT person to jo in the Info rm a tio n Systems team Duties in clude so ftw a re and h a rd w a re n sta lla 'io n (kn o w le dg e o f co m p u te ' h a rd w a re com ponents such os m o d e m s/n e tw o rk interference c a rd s /C D R O M technology) M in o r p rin ter m c n le n o n c e responsibilities K n o w ie o ge of D O S /W n 9 5 re q u ire d W o rd P erfe ct 8 /O f f ic e 9 7 suite a nd networks a plus C a nd id a te w ill help assist a p p ro xim a te ly I 2 0 users 2 0 h r /w k desirea Send resume to IS M anager, Baker &Botts fa x # 5 12-322 2 5 0 1 ; e m a il csa nd usxy© bakerbotts com o r m oil to 9 8 Son Jocmto BlvO Suite 1 6 0 0 , A ustin TX, 7 8 7 0 1 820 - Fle xib le hrs 4 7 4 -0 8 5 3 NEAR UT $ 8 9 0 0 B ookkeeping Tra in ee P a rale g al C o u rie r 4 7 4 -2 2 4 6 Typ- ’S t/O e 'ic a ' 4 7 4 -2 2 1 6 Smoke-free WILL TRAIN, freshm an w e lco m e ! 8 4 0 -Sa fe * FURNITURE SALES FT/PT A gg re s s ve person ab le soles person need ed a t G a g e fo r te m po ra ry o n d per morsent positions Soles e xpe rie n ce pre fe rre d A p p ly n person a t ony G a g e Furniture Store 8S0 - Retail BARTON CREEK & HIGHLAND MALL FT/PT associate 4 m anagem ent tra in ­ ing positions a v a ila b le G u ita r 4 Co- diTlacs is a fun 1 2 store chom o f up­ scale Texas g ifts Above a ve ra g e storting pay Fle xib le hrs b e n efit p a c k a g e e m p loye e discount, p a id vo catio n, h o lid a y pay. bonuses a dvancem ent o p p ortun ity 4 m e d ical For im m ediate co nsid e ra tion a p p ly m person G uita rs 4 C o d illo cs High­ la n d M a ll/B o n on Creek M o ll DRYCLf ANERS NEED counter help FT/PT S W Austin location Ask for Jenie or Kay 3 2 7 -7 6 9 0 SALES ASSOCIATE for g ,h store PT Flexible hours E xperience h e lp ful A p p ly at SonRio in H .g h lc n d M a ll £ £ £ m -RijMferaiintt» !L _ t _ —« m i i i N i i i i FT ACCESS 9 7 programmer need­ ed, 2-3yrs. experience preferred Must demonstrate expertise in VBA A database design S a la ry com m en jo b s © i.e surate with experience (range com, 4 7 2 -0 0 1 9 w w w netrange com fax 8 7 0 - M o d k a l D Y N A M I C M E D IC A L F A C IL IT Y Looking for a m«»d»ca! assistant/receptionist 20-30 h o u rs/ week, com puter skills preferred but not required Willing to train, good com m unication skills, enthusiasm and dependibility a MUST’ Please call Isabel ki 346-86452 PHARMACIST- INDEPENDENTLY o w n e d small t o w pFiarmacy in S o jth Texas seer ng p h a rm a cist for full-tim e position C o m p etitive w ages, o vertim e pay p o id vo catio ns, a nd g ro u p heoltl insurance N e o r one o f the best hunting a n d fishing areas in Texas Possible p a rtn e rsnip o p p ortun ity a v a ila b le Send resume to P.O Box 1033, Raymondville, TX 78580 or call (956) 425-6852 M0 - Professional STOCKBROKER TRAINEES College degree a n d /o r sales experience. Diane @ 3 2 8 - 7 0 7 7 . KINDERG ARTEN TEACHER needec for church day-school in N o rth eo si Austin, nea r C a p ita l Plazo Degree in e o rly-ch tldh o od or eiem educo tion re q uired M-F 8-2 C o ll 4 6 7 9 7 4 0 PRIMARY CLASS teacher n eeded fc small class a t church day-school Degree N e a r C a p tal Plaza M - 8 30-3 3 0 C a ll 4 6 7 9 7 4 0 ~~ GIRLS ADVOCACY ORGANIZATION Fast p a ce d non-profit seeks h ig h ly mot voted F/T Executive Assistam re p ortin g to *he Executive Director G enera: C le rical 1 yr office exp g re a t MS O ffice a n d Internet skills c~MUST F/T P rogram Assistant re p ortin g • the P rogram D *ector G ene-a cle rica l M S O ffice, Inte'-iet s* s a MUST Exp n e d u ca 1 un, HTM L preferred Fax resume 9 1 6 -4 7 7 6 h ttp ://w w w .s m a rfg rrls org N o phone colls 890 - Clubs- Restaurants BE PART o f the exc^e^e n? o f Longhorn Football, The U niversity o f Texas Club has the fo llo w in g posi* ons avo.iob-» for g o m e w e ekend activit-ps Earn $ 12 / h r as w o itsta ff or barte n de r Earn $ 9 / h r as late mg* * , a - w stew ard The fo llo w in g p e r positions are a v a ila b le Executive Sous Chef, A M reste jr c it supervisor A M 4 PM restaurant servers 4 bartenders Sc ar.es are com petitive. For fjrth e r in fo rm a ro n or to schedule o r interview , please ca ll Joe Thomas a t 477-5800 M-F 8-5 H ir in g Full and Part-Time Servers. Flexible hours. Apply in pervon, C ro s s ro a d s 1 8 3 a n d B u r n e t. C a ll 4 5 1 - 6 2 2 8 JO Y, DANCERS a nd wa,*stoff Be a m tom orro w , d e b t f-ee next w eekl C a ll/c o m e by rT /P T TABC cert Joy o f Austm IH 3 5 e x it i s0 N B ound 2 1 8 -8 0 1 2 is now a cce p tin g a pp lica tio n s for kitchen positions Line cooks, p ie p 4 dishw ashe-s A s* hs a „ a a bie Some fro nt o f the k>ouse p- is * ons a va ila b le G o o d star’ - q w oges N W ( 1 2 6 0 2 Resea’c ’ 6 vd) South (2 7 0 0 South Lamar) C entral (3 7 0 4 ’-e-by Lane) A p p ly in person a td e s ired locat.c- M-F. EOE " the c o u n t y l in e " O N THE LAKE is lo o kin g fo r hord-w orkm a e nergetic peo ple w ith g o o d attitudes fo r ai p c s 1- ons Slackers need not o p p iy C all 3 4 6 -3 6 6 4 for a p p o m t m e n * 5 2 0 4 f m 2222 " T l u c k e r s” IS N O W HIRING Delivery Drivers ($10-1 3 / f ) Cooks & Dishwashers ( $ 7 / hr) Waiters/Phone Personnel ($ 1 0 /h r+ ) A p p i , a ' 2222 Rio Grande or Call David at 236-91 1 2 9 0 0 - Domestic- Household N A N N Y POSITION fo r mature fem ale English as a first la ng u ag e stude t for 3 teenogers M ust live-.n Hove g o o d d '-v ng -ecora cor and references W e s ’ Austm S ep a -a ’e p u o rte rs Salary, g as a llo w a n ce a nd FREE tim e 4 7 2 -7 8 2 0 AETERSCHOOt B A B Y S IP F ^ T T j ^ 2 3 0 “: 3 0 M -f for 8yr-old g irl $ 7 / hr, neq o n o b le Transportation re q uirea v_ oil 2 0 6 -0 6 8 ! L O O K IN G FOR respon$ible female to ca re for m y 2 child re n a nd assist in school w o rk n my home M-F 3 6 p m tra n sp o rta ro n Pleose call 3 2 9 9 8 6 4 a he ? 6 30pm a nytim e on w eekends M ust hove CHILD CARE M F 2 4 5 p m "tp^r ^ o 't ■ng August 11th Must e oy chik d re n be non-smokmg have :e lia t ;e co r, g o o d dr v in g record o " d refer enees C ali 3 4 5 9 7 2 2 ng c h ild re n / experienced L O O K IN G FOR c o re for tw o y noons. M ust be responsible excellent a- v ng -ecora o nd enees 1 J h r$ /w k $ 5 0 0 / m 2 5 7 -1 2 2 5 nave ■e%r- W E EKEND ATTENDANT d isa b le d man S aturday m ornings 7 a m -1 Oom. J S unday evenings 10pm per w eekend 3 3 3 2 C o l! G 4 Sun ay 4 $ 7 8 4 5 2 N A N N Y NEEDED 3-< o g e children Jren, 3 -6 3 0, A exibi! W e st la k e on cam pus References req 5 4 6 0 d o s e to id 3 2 8 - CHILD CARE ,r a n d afterschoa UT 4 9 5 9 0 8 5 45-5 45 t0 < a *te occas o n e 1 RESPONSIBLE S TU D €N T noo n childcare eve­ ning s for 3 children 13, 10 7 Ref e rences and ow n transponen o r re quirect S a ;a ry 15 hours weekly negotiable 478 -44 55 ants N A N N Y FOR 2 References req.. R eliable kids quired Salary ence English spea kin g 4 5 3 -8 4 1 4 20hrs N o o d d it tra nsp o rtotio t based -ed COMICS Comics Editor Matt Howell, mkh@mail.utexas.edu Crossword Edited by Will Shortz 1 2 3 4 7.... 8 TT” 15’ T3.. l know I am going to regret this but oh well So what’s wrong Ted? No. 0621 inane drawings o f the NERDHERD By: Thomas P. Reidy I I I skafimkrastapunk@inail. uicxas.edu r Walked right into that one.. Weil, I finally decided to get a real major and well, I feel uneasy.- Everybody feels uneasy about trying to decide their future. It is kinda scary picking what you hope to be doing for the rest o f your life. I am sure whatever you choose you will do just fine in. 10 T h e D a i l y T e x a n MONDAY, AUGUST 2,1999 ACROSS 1 Fort Knox bar e Book after Joel io “ we forget” 14 Kitchen gadget 15 Way to go 16 Declare 17 Word after 18 grand or soap One of the Jackson 5 One of 100 in Scrabble 20 Mary Lincoln 19 Todd 21 Coward 24 Mary Poppins, eg . 26 Cartoon frame 27 to one’s madness 29 Portly 34 Not this or that 35 Valiant 36 Wedding words 37 Cohort 38 Moisten, as a roast 39 Microscopic organism 40 Haw’s companion 41 Corkwood 42 O ld 43 Tree-planting tale occasion 45 Most outspread 46 Four-footed friend 47 More levelheaded 48 Combat award 53 “Phooey!” 56 Butter substitute 57 Bona fide 58 Sidestep ANSW ER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE , Calif. 60 Snake eyes 61 L a 62 Kitchen gadget 63 Fishing locale 64 Hightailed it I” 65 “Land DOWN 1 Cathedral display 2 “Uh-uh” 3 Gardener's asset 4 “ the ramparts we watched ...” 5 Pie of the 20’s- 30’s Pirates e With precision 7 G.I.’s link with 8 Palindromic home fellow 9 Put on display 10 In the past week or so 11 Unholy 12 Bear’s order, on Wall Street 13 Deuce topper 22 Sign off 23 Group of birds 25 “Pardon me” 27 Coffee shop order Old anesthetic Brazen one Sundance Kid’s girlfriend Head gorilla, with distinctive coloring 32 N oses (out) * 22 23 27 28 14 17 20 34 37 40 4 ¿ 56 60 63 5 I25 6 15 18 I I 35 JI | 11 44 46 57 64 ■ 48 49 50 51 * 26 16 31 I ¿ 6 _ I 39 JI IP I 53 62 I 59 ¿ 5 33 B.L.T. base 47 Meal starter, 51 Dickens’s Uriah 46 Sunbathing often locale 49 Elbow-wrist connection 52 Relaxation 54 “Zip- Dah” -Doo- 55 Towel stitching so Really smell 59 By way of Puzzle by Gregory E. Paul 35 Festive 38 No longer speaking, after “on” 39 Man Friday 41 Belgian composer Jacques 42 Cold times ... or times for colds 44 Be against 45 “Saving Private Ryan subject Answers to any three clues in this puzzle are available by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420-CLUE (95c per minute). Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. m 55 b y N atalie B u r g in - b u n s b u r g in @ c o lle g ec l u b.c o m Lo n g h o r n H o r o s c o p e s A RIES (M ar. 21-Apr. 19): U nite w ith o th e r like-m inded indiv id uals before d o in g battle w ith a com m on e n e m y . U n d e r y o u r le a d e r s h ip , d isp a ra te elem ents becom e a u n i­ fied force. R em in d y o u r te a m to pay m ore attention to actions than to w ords. T A U R U S (A p r. 2 0 -M a y 20): Y our com pan io ns seem irritating - is it possible that they are reacting to so m eth in g about you? If y o u 're going to d o som ething extrem e, try to keep it in line w ith your p rin ci­ ples. Y our career plans m ay be at the top of y o u r m ind. G E M IN I (M a y 2 1 - J u n e 20): W hy stic k w ith on e flav o r w h e n th e r e a r e so m a n y to try ? Y o u r intellect im presses a special som e­ one in a pro fo u n d w ay. In fact, you m ig h t b e to o in tim id a tin g fo r a connection to h ap p e n over the next couple of days. C A N C E R ( J u n e 2 1 - J u ly 22): Y our b rain is the ultim ate am u se­ m ent park. A flash of insight m ay be ju st a bit bizarre for m ore con­ ventional listeners. Try to find bal­ ance in the chaos you face today. LEO (Ju ly 23-A ug. 22): A p a r t­ n e rsh ip co u ld d ev e lo p no m a tte r w hat y o u r efforts or desires are. If y o u c a n th in k a b o u t a p r o b le m f ro m a n a n g le n o o n e e ls e h a s tr i e d , y o u c o u ld b e th e o n e to d e v is e th e b e s t so lu tio n . A ccep t your accolades gracefully. V IR G O (A u g . 2 3 -S e p t. 22): A c h a n g e in r o u tin e g iv e s y o u th e chance to experim ent. This m ay be th e o p p o r t u n i t y y o u h a v e b e e n w a itin g for. W ith y o u r an aly tical m ind to keep the details in o rd er, y o u r te a m is s u re to a c c o m p lish w h atev er it attem pts. LIBRA (S ept. 23-Oct. 22): W ho are you to resist the call? G et o u t of w o rk as e a rly as p o ssib le so you can in d u lg e y o u r c re a tiv e sp irit. Life is a balance betw een resp o n si­ bilities and desires. If you p u t y o u r heart into it, you can have both. S C O R P IO (O c t. 2 3 -N o v . 21): Y ou p r o b a b ly c a n ’t p u t o ff th a t p a r t i c u l a r c h o r e m u c h lo n g e r . T h ink of h o w g o o d y o u w ill feel once you accom plish it. If the idea o f n e v e r h a v in g to d e a l w ith it a g a in i s n 't m o tiv a tio n e n o u g h , d re a m of a m a te ria l re w a rd y o u can allow yourself. S A G IT T A R IU S (N ov. 22-D ec. 21): All peo p le are filled w ith the glo w of th e ir h u m a n ity . N o b o d y has an y th in g to hide. You m ight be called up on to m ake a speech; you w ill im press them no m atter w h at y o u c h o o s e to sa y . A n a c q u a in ­ tance feels d ra w n to d ee p en y o u r relationship. C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): W atch e v e ry a sp e c t o f a tra n s a c ­ tion in progress. Y our natural cau­ tion serves you w ell u n d er the cu r­ ren t m oon. E xperience the b ea u ty of a system w h ile k eeping an eye o u t for functional or design flaws. If anyone is g oing to see them , you will. A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-F eb. 18): Y oii m ig h t b e e a s ily d is t r a c te d w hich could m ake you useless for a n y t h in g y o u r b o s s c o n s id e r s im portant. O n the other hand, you a re ea g er to le n d y o u r b ra in an d braw n to any project that prom ises to help the less fortunate. PISC ES (Feb. 19-M ar. 20): T his could be a fun tim e if you are able to get o u t of n agging responsibili­ ties. A nyone w ho talks to you rec­ ognizes you r w isdom . D ay d ream ­ ing m ay lead to a b reak th ro u g h or to a b rea k d o w n , d e p e n d in g u p o n how m uch co n tro l you can retain o ver y o u r te em in g brain. At least o n e p e r s o n w ill c o m m e n t u p o n you r perceptiveness. D aily T e x a n C l a ss if ie d s EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 0 0 0 - D o m e s t i c - U — L - I J r w w tv n o v a TW O WONDERFUL CHILDREN 9 and 7, need babysitter, M-F 2-7pm. Must also be available for some vocation days, sick days, etc Dependable car, great references, h a p p y d isposition are all a must. 4 5 3 - 9 7 1 1 . 2 FAMILIES need evening baby-sit­ ters Generous pay according to ex­ perience/education References and child CPU training a must Am y 3 4 7 -1 0 3 0 or Leigh 3 2 8 -6 0 0 7 N A N N Y , 8 M O S , SE/Cenfrol area, exp'd, non-smoker, car req'd, verifi­ ieove able ref's, English/Spanish, message @ 4 4 8 -1 3 1 6 O O O ^ O o tlM C ik - H o u i d b o i d A F T E R S C H O O l CARE, two boys, N W Austin, 2:30-5 30, M-F N o n ­ smoking, reliable car, references & driving record, experience 258- 6 7 5 7 G ood salary 9 2 0 - W o r k W a n t e d P R O F E SS IO N A L C L E A N IN G / O R ­ G A N IZ IN G service, light housekeep ing, $ 5 0 for 2 hours, $ 2 0 each ad­ ditional hour, 2 4 5 -4 3 2 5 BUSINESS 9 3 0 * B w k m m D IS C O U N T A N S W E R IN G SERVICE Unlimited $50/month Calls 8 33 -3 9 4 3 Flat rate O W N A Computer? Put it to work $25-$75/hour PT/FT www work- from-home net/profit. 1-888-248- 3 9 1 6 PEOPLE BRIffS ■ LEWISTOWN, M ont — Chelsea Clin­ ton w orked part of the sum m er as an intern at a Montana cattle ranch, weighing bulls and sorting breeding pairs, before being called home early following the dis­ appearance of John F. Kennedy Jr. The N-Bar Ranch in central Montana has an intern program for college students interested in agriculture. Chelsea had taker a course in environmental economics at Stanford University. ''She was a delight," said ranch owner Susan Allred. "She just pitched right in and worked with everyone else." The president's daughter started in June, and plans had been for her to stay six weeks. But she was called back early to Washington by her father on July 17— the day Kennedy7s plane disappeared. Chelsea spent her time at the ranch help­ ing move cattle, sorting pairs, weighing bulls, assisting with embryo transfers and collecting bkxmtrol insects. ■ NEW YORK — Lilith Fair founder Sarah M cLachlan know s w h a t w ent wrong at Woodstock. "W hen Woodstock was conceived, it was a beautiful thing," McLachlan says in Sunday's Neiv York Post. "But what hap­ pened is it turned into this big, horrible commercial madness. It became all about making money." Riots ckeed out the Woodstock concert festival this year, with fans burning and looting the stocks of vendors w ho sold water for as much as $4 a bottle. Things are different at Lilith Fair, the mostly female concert tour McLachlan founded three years ago. "Concerts w ith a conscience — I like that," McLachlan said. "W e've worked hard to create an environm ent for the artists and audience that is friendly, safe and socially conscious. We give room to all the nonprofit organizations that we sup­ port. This is the last year for Lilith Fair. McLachlan says she and its other female performers want more free time so they can begin starting families. ■ NEW YORK — Is Pierce Brosnan the new Steve McQueen? Brosnan reprises McQueen's role in the remake of The Thomas Crown Affair, fol­ lowing in the footsteps of one of his favorite actors. "For me, M cQ ueen could do no wrong," Brosnan says in Sunday's Daily News. "He was and is a unique cinematic actor." Still, he thin k s the role of T hom as Crown, a bored, wealthy man who gets his kicks from stealing, is a better fit for him, saying McQueen "was not comfortable in such a role." 'It was a stretch for him," Brosnan said. "I on foe other hand, have been acting in suits, it seems, all my life." Brosnan, best known wearing a tuxedo to perfection in his James Bond movies, costars w ith Rene Russo m the remake directed by John McTieman. He also has another Bond film in the can. The World is Not Enough opens in November. ■ NEW YORK — Newcomer Natasha Lyonne is a brash N ew Yorker — and 2 f r n t a l n ( í t í > B y : M i k e W i r i S M C S E S S r a s THE DISK IS cmm BY A FIERCE mm IM A CAVE HIDDEN BENEATH RIM. TO DEFEAT THE DRAOON, MX) VHLL NEED THE +12 X-ACTO KNIFE, WHICH THE MERCHANT AT'THE CO-OP WILL CIVE YOU IF YoU TRADE HIM TH E.. $ l Á You SHOULD ItprL t K ? SfcE THIS m m . u J T H E E N D ........... ■ ' - ( a Ay-' r n / iil® . X < £ X t 0 ACCESS 1 THIS FILE YOU IrlUST FIR5TCE1 F A T F I E S EC R ET PASSWORD j V f r o m t w .. si I \ OR 15 IT ? ? ? , a d ^ m J u t kdrv n*i-'fe»«.aiu adin i7 7 7 g > I i HEY, IT'S OUR NER Y CWV W o o p S T o d c I . FWT, I'LL M l ] on SOME B4D T e r P c f iM R ’A C C R E S W j Rock MUSIC. ...then), o u t OF goRCDOM, I’LL M AkC A B lC P IL E o u r OF TUltJCi THAT t e M i S O J T A CAPITAL 1ST, CoQ?OÍ>ATC S o ü e r/ C o m m JSriPiV / ^ ¡ ¡ L ¿ ^ W h e e l by C la y