SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS FOR MORE THAN 100 YEARS j T exan RIL 23, 2 0 0 2 25 CENTS STORY BY C OU R TN E Y M O R R I S • PHOTOS BY L U C I A N A CASTRO D AI LY T E X A N S TA F F Thi/OL. 1 02, NO. 1 3 7 Aroun theWoii Suspect denounces U.S. ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Zacarías Moussaoui, the only man indicted as a Sept. 11 conspira­ tor, politely raised his hand for attention, then declared in court Monday that he was praying for the destruction of the United States and wanted to fire the appointed lawyers he said could not be trusted. For nearly an hour in federal court Moussaoui alternated readings from the Quran with an attack on the U.S. criminal jus­ tice system. In calm, accented but under­ standable English, the French citizen accused prosecutors, his lawyers and the judge of working to end the case with his execution. ► See SUSPECT, Page 3 Arafat meets with U.S. envoy PRAM ALLAH, West Bank — While an Israeli army bulldozer crushed cars in the parking lot outside, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat met with a U.S. envoy in his besieged office Monday to discuss the standoff there and at Bethlehem’s Church of the Nativity. The armed standoffs have persisted for three weeks and neither appears close to a settlement. Until they are resolved, there is little hope for a cease-fire between the Israelis and Palestinians. In new violence in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, five Palestinians and one Israeli soldier were killed Monday. Trucks backed up in Kandahar KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Fed up with checkpoints and armed men demanding unofficial “fees,” shippers balked Monday at paying more charges, leaving a long line of elaborately painted trucks piled high with cloth, tires, television sets and car parts going nowhere. As Afghanistan’s fragile inter­ im regime struggles to extend its rule beyond the capital of Kabul, some warlords are reverting to old habits, setting up private checkpoints levying their own "tax” on the goods passing through their territory. LA. police chief resigns LOS ANGELES — Police Chief Bernard Parks resigned Monday, saying he will step down sometime next week and won’t sue the city over the decision not to give him a sec­ ond fiveyear term. Parks’ departure follows an ugly rift with Mayor James Hahn, who was sharply criti­ cized by members of the black community for refusing to support another term for the chief, who is black. Hahn relied heavily on African- American support in last year's mayoral election. Gates takes stand for first time WASHINGTON — For the first time in Microsoft’s four-year antitrust battle, Bill Gates took the witness stand Monday and personally chastised states for seeking penal­ ties he said would cripple the American soft­ ware giant. With a mix of computer slide shows and short, calm answers, Gates sought to rebut the arguments of nine states that have asked a court to further punish Microsoft for operat­ ing an illegal monopoly that hurt competitors and consumers. Compiled from Associated Press reports Photographer and jumper Lance Boyd gets ready to land in San Marcos after falling from 10,000 feet. Boyd has worked in San Marcos for five years, photographing and recording what he sees from the sky. Skydiving is ‘life-affirming’ for student organization jum ping out of a plane even once, but several T he average person would never dream of UT students have done just that m ore than 400 times. George Cham ales, president and founder of the Longhorn Skydivers, a club designed to promote the sport, has been a skydiver for about five years and has perform ed 485 jumps. "There are a lot of people who come out just to say that they've done it the first time and get hooked," Cham ales said. "There are people who come out and m ade their first tandem [jump] a cou­ ple years ago, and now they do it full tim e as a job." After deciding to create the organization last year, Chamales approached Phil and Deb Chappell, the owners of Skydive San Marcos, about sponsonng See SKY, Page 2 Second-time jumper Ashley Adamic from the University of Kansas suits up at the San Marcos Skydiving Company before her jump Saturday. the organization. Libertarian author, lecturer discusses benefits of globalization, free trade Tolerable Cruelty Elvis C ostello’s new album , When I Was Cruel, and Tweet lead o ff this w eek’s batch o f Sound Bites. See E n tertain m en t, Page 16 WORLD & NATION OPINION UNIVERSITY STATE & LOCAL FOCUS SPORTS NEWS ENTERTAINMENT CLASSIFIEDS COMICS CONDITIONS 4& 5 3 6 7 8 9 & 1 0 1 4 1 5 & 1 6 1 7 & 1 8 1 9 Low 70 BYLINE DRIVES ARE IN THE PLAYOFFS! Visit The Dally Texan on the Web www.dailytexanonline.com X By Raquel C. Garza Daily Texan Staff Libertarian author and lecturer Tom Palmer explained the positive aspects of globalization to a crowd of about 100 peo­ ple in Welch Hall Monday, stressing how it allows cultures to enrich each other. Palmer, a senior fellow with the Cato Institute and director of Cato University, a nonprofit public policy research founda­ tion, presented the audience v. list of baliza- books in favor of and against consid­ tion. Encouraging the audience ?i .ce in er fhe subject with reason and e' ization lieu of emotion, Palmer said glol 1 more is not inevitable, nor does it ere jobs. “Trade policy affects the distri jobs, but not the total number Palmer said. .tion of jobs," Palmer offered what he considered poor reasons for and against globaliza­ tion, as well as sound reasons for it. He said opponents of globalization often say it destroys jobs, encourages job move­ ment to poorer countries where labor and environmental standards are lower and destroys culture. Palm er disputed the cultural argument presented by anti-globalizationists. “There is a little bit of truth in this argu­ m ent," Palm er said. "Y outh culture is [extremely popular abroad]." He added that 81 percent of foreign U.S. investment went to Canada, Japan and Western Europe in the 1990s, while only 1 percent went to the poorest nations with the lowest standards. "The fact is that investors tend to invest capital where it will have the highest return," Palmer said. He also cited that in recent years, glob­ al cultures had seen more foreign influ­ ence in the forms of Harry Potter, Pokémon and Bollywood, the Indian film industry. "I think every culture is enriched by , contact with other cultures. There are no pure cultures on the planet. They do not exist," Palmer said. Palmer's viewpoints were new to some audience members, including Andrew Denman, a business freshman. "I'd thought about globalization from econom ic view points," Denman said. See PALMER, Page 2 Yen-YI U u / Daily Texan S ta ff Senior Fellow Tom Palmer of the Cato Institute uses a handmade skirt to justify the globaliza­ tion of trade Monday evening at Welch Hall. Ca ichin UP Texas’ Ryan Hubele is making his case as one of the best catchers in school history. See Sports, Page 9 Fire marshal investigates leak, fire By Chrlssy Ragan Daily Texan Staff T h e State Fire M arsh al's O ffice sent an investig ator M onday to the UT P rin ting and Press Building to inspect the site of a hazardous m aterials leak and fire th at occurred Su n d ay m orning. “W e're looking at it right now as the cause b ein g acci­ den tal, but no final d eterm in ation has been m ad e y e t," said M ark Hanna, spokesm an for the SFMO. T h e Austin Fire D ep artm en t dispatched a H a z M a t inves­ tigation unit Sunday around 11 a.m. to the b u ild in g located next to D isch-Falk Field, a fter a UT police officer reported a strange od or in the build in g, said AFD C a p ta in Don Sm ith. U p on entering the site, firefighters detected h igh levels of hydrogen sulfide, or sew ag e gas, and carbon m onoxid e. " I t was an extrem ely high am ount," Sm ith said , o f the characteristically rotten-egg sm ell of hydrogen su lfid e. "It w as a very strong odor." T h e team, which is trained to deal with ch em ica l spills, gas leaks and any other situation involving hazard ou s m aterials, discovered several open valves in the b u ild in g and shut off the gas. But a fter stopping the leak, the unit noticed som ething unusual, Sm ith said. "T h e y noticed a haze or m ist from the b o ile r room ," Sm ith said. "A nd u p on entry, they saw that the insulation w as b u rn ing." Firefighters extinguished the fire, but after observin g d am age to the boiler and surrounding chem ical drum s, they decided to evacu ate the building and th e im m ediate surrounding area. N o one w as injured in the accid en t. Securing the area w as difficult, Sm ith said, b eca u se of a cycling race that had finished in the nearby D isch -F a lk Field parking lot. See LEAK, Page 2 Leak location The Austin Fire Department responded to a hazardous materials leak at the UT Printing and Press Building Sunday morning, high levels of hydrogen sulfide and carbon monox­ ide were found at the building, located at 2 1 0 0 Comal St. Source: Austin Fire D ep a rtm ent Marijuana plants will not be investigated By Nicola Upman Daily Texan Staff The nut seldom falls far from the tree, and m arijuana seeds apparently may have not fallen far from a Jester dorm itory win­ dow. Without any new leads, UT officials will not investigate fur­ ther the discovery last week of 1Ü marijuana plants growing in a flower bed in the south interior courtyard of jester Center. The UT Police Department became aware of the plants after a landscaper found a sm all manjuana plant, "said Doug GaPrard, associate director of the Division of H ousing and Food Service. Garrard said he w as not shocked to hear of the discovery. “Obviously, if you find marijuana growing outside a resi­ dence hall, i f s going to attract a lot of attention," he said. “But if you've been in the business long enough, you d on't get sur­ prised." Garrard said grounds staff regularly tend to the gardens, cut­ ting flowers and pulling weeds, and it is unlikely that any other plants are growing on campus. The 10 plants have been removed and will be destroyed by UTPD, said Rhonda Weldon, spokeswoman for Campus Services. There will be no further investigation unless someone comes forward with new evidence. “The police think that the plants grew from seeds that had been discarded," she said. The plants were three inches tall, which means they had not been growing in the flower bed for long. “It is my understanding that this is the first time marijuana has been found growing on campus grounds," Weldon said. In 2000, UTPD handled 58 drug law violations on campus, with 14 of those resulting in arrests. Thirty-four of them occurred in residence halls. The Housing and Food division will not crack down on drugs in dorm rooms as a result of the incident. See PLANTS, Page 2 Longhorn Skydivers dispel safety-related myths SKY, from 1 "They saw it as a great way for us to bring new students out and to build up the level of jumpers that they have," Cham ales said. "It's worked out really, really well." In addition to the Longhorn Skydivers, stu­ dents taking skydiving informal classes through the Texas Student Union also use San Marcos drop zone, the area in which divers jump. Chamales, an electrical engineering junior, jum ped for the first time when he w as 16 years old at Skydive El Paso, after years of watching his father skydive. "The thing that I remember most about that jump w as being under the canopy [parachute] for the first time, because you're at 3,000 feet and you're just hanging there and it's incredibly quiet and peaceful," Cham ales said. "You can just look out and see miles and miles into the dis­ tance — it's awesome, there's nothing like it." Cham ales went to the National Collegiate Skydiving Cham pionships at Skydive Lake Wales in Lake Wales, Fla., as the sole representa­ tive of the Longhorn Skydivers and won second place in free flying, with Jason Waterbury, vice president of the Aggie Skydivers, and sixth place in sport accuracy. Brianne Butcher, a Longhorn skydiver, m ade her first skydive two years ago and said the expenence is indescribable. Butcher became a member of the Longhorn Skydivers after meeting Chamales while jum p­ ing at the San Marcos drop zone. Butcher said although she originally took up skydiving because she wanted to take up an exciting recreational sport, she has continued doing it because of the adrenaline rush. "Everybody does it the first time for the rush, but imagine flying that's what you're doing when you skydive," Butcher said. "Everybody •wants to get a chance to fly." "I w as just so excited, I wasn't really scared, I Skydiving is also a means of meeting new just wanted to get out," Butcher said. people. Butcher, a biology senior, has m ade about 470 to become a certified jum ps and plans Accelerated Free Fall iastructor. "Every time you just want to get better at what you do, it's just such an experience every time," Butcher said. "Each time I do something different that I didn't do another time." Chamales, who spent part of last sum m er jum ping with the Royal Dutch Military in Holland, said that no matter where a skydiver goes, there is alw ays a place for them to meet with other jum pers and practice their passion. Chamales said student knowledge about the safety of the sport is limited and often misinformed. "The m ost dangerous thing about skydiving is the drive to the airport," Chamales said. He added that there has not been a single death from tandem skydiving, a jump in which fledgling skydivers jump with an experienced partner, at Skydive San Marcos, after 12 years of operation and more than 13,000 tandem jumps. Dennis Perrotta, an adjunct associate profes­ sor in the School of N ursing said although the sport is relatively safe, it can be risky if it is not done properly. "There's nothing normal about jumping out of a plane at two-and-a-half-miles [above the ground] in the air," Perrotta said. "But there's something about it that is very fun." Perrotta began skydiving in 1989 after a neighbor show ed Perrotta his videotape of him skydiving 650 jumps and 13 years later Perrotta is a self-proclaimed skydiving addict. "The jump itself is life-affirming" Perrotta said. "If I can jump out of a plane from two-and-a-half- miles in the air... if I can do that, I can do anything." Skydivers perform various types of jumps when competing. Some of the events include formation skydiving in which several skydivers jump together to create specific formations in the air and free-fall skydiving an event in which jumpers can get creative and position them­ selves in multiple forms, Chamales said. "There's literally nothing you can't do with your body up there with enough practice," Chamales said. "The ability to do this and keep getting better and better and better is unmatched." First-time jumpers pay an initial fee of $150, and most skydive businesses charge a rental fee for the jumping equipment plus a fee, which at Skydive San Marcos is $17. For more information about the Longhorn Skydivers see their Web site at unwv.longhomsky- divers.org. BRASS WITH CLASS Palm er addresses child labor PALMER, from 1 "But the fact that there is no pure culture w as new to me." Palmer also addressed child labor, saying evidence suggests most children work primarily in domestic fields such as agnculture. "The reason why people send their children to work is because they are poor; they are not poor because children work," Palmer said. However, that argument did not appeal to some audience members. relationships," "Child labor is the by-product of said exploitive Debbie Russell, trade program director for Public Citizen, a con­ sum er advocacy organization. "To promote and support globalization, in my mind, is to be a selfish person and care nothing about the welfare of the w orld." Garrard: Student may have thrown seeds out PLANTS, from 1 for m a riju a n a " O u r p o lic ie s s m o k in g c h a n g e d ," h a v e n 't G a r r a r d said . S tu d e n ts w h o are fo u n d in p o sse ssio n o f m ariju an a are rep orted to the d ean o f s tu ­ d e n ts and h an d ed o v er to U T P D . "T h at m ay be on e reaso n w hy the se e d s lan d ed u p here — a S tu d en t m ay h ave th row n so m e s e e d s out of the w in d o w to get rid o f e v id e n c e ," he sa id . "I d o n 't k n o w ; th at's ju st sp e c u la tio n ." fo llo w s la te st d is c o v e r y the a p p re h e n sio n la st m on th o f T he three U T stu d e n ts liv in g in Je ste r E ast w h o w ere fo u n d in p o s s e s ­ sio n o f m ore th an tw o p o u n d s o f m a riju a n a . it," "I 'd sa y a g o o d p erc en tag e o f stu d e n ts d o a c tu ally sm o k e w eed , alth o u g h m an y w o u ld be a fra id to a d m it sa id D an iel, an E n g lish so p h o m o re w ho h a s liv e d in Je ste r for tw o y e ars an d ask e d to rem ain an o n y m o u s. "N o m atter w h at siz e the d o rm an d no m atter how m any ru les are m ad e, stu d e n ts will find a w ay to b rea k th em ." ® ■ Friday, April 26,2002 Texas Union Ballroom Hfm $5 Students; $8 General Call 477-6060 for tickets The Music and Entertainment Committee is proud to SC UNLEASH comedienne Kathy Griffin on the unsuspecting students of the University of Texas at Austin. 2915 Guadalupe _ accross from Buffalo Exchange m I Open 'til 3am nightly! ■ | 23*0759 | I 4631 Airport t 1 0 -midnightdaily 450-1966 I ::a From NBC's "Suddenly Susan”, MTVs "Kathy Griffin's So - Called Reality"» and the feature film "The Cable Guy" A few lucky fans will win the chance to hang with Kathy after the show. WARNING: This show contains Sc OWL strong language. Mature Audiences only, please. Trombone soloist Michael McLemore rehearses “Variations on Barnacle Bill, The Sailor,” with the UT Symphony Band in preparation for the band’s last concert of the semester. The concert will mark Longhorn band director Kevin Sedatole's final concert at the University. The performance will be held at the Bates Recital Hall Wednesday at 8 p.m. Yen-Yi U u / Daily Texan Staff TOMORROW'S FORECAST High 86 Low 71 Ben and Jeff, your Midtown albums are on the way. Enjoy. Long live emo! Hydrogen sulfide toxic, engineer says NEED CASH? No Problem! Steady income by donating plasma at Aventis Bio-Services. New Donors can earn up to $155/month or more. Please help us to help others who desperately need your plasma contribution. Call 477-3735. Bring this ad and get an extra $5 New Donors Only! Students Welcome $ 0 5 0 4m O F F Any Dinner Item 5 Blocks Away u p t o w n 4 7 7 - 7 6 8 9 1 7 0 0 Lavaca with UT ID not valid on weekly specials ¿ É Í t a o r a n t I c a n t i n a LEAK, from 1 "We had about 10,000 bicyclists and [there were] a lot of people w e were worried about," Sm ith said. "We had to m ove them all back." reference A ccording to eMedicine Journal, an online m edical source, low -level exposure of hydrogen sul­ fide — a colorless and flam m able poi­ son — is usually seen in industrial set­ tings, p rim arily in the petroleum industry. S y m p to m s o f low -level exposure include irritation to m ucous m em branes and the respiratory sy s­ tem. H igh-level exposure results in more neurological sym pto m s includ­ ing vertigo, confusion, nausea and vomiting, and exposure to a very high concentration of hydrogen sulfide can lead to seizures, heart arrest or death. Just a few breaths of air containing high levels o f hydrogen sulfide can cause death, as stated on the A gency for Toxic Su b stan ces and D isease Registry Web site. Yvonne Espinoza, an AFD associate engineer, said that hydrogen sulfide is a strong irritant. "One hundred parts per million would be the level of an immediate danger to life or health," Espinoza said. "And 100 ppm is relatively low, so [hydrogen sulfide] is a pretty toxic chemical." Garland Waldrop, UT fire marshal and assistant director with the Office of Environmental Health and Safety, said the cause of the fire and chemical leak is still under investigation. Hanna said the focus of the SFMO's investigation has been on the boiler room and what may have occurred. "It doesn't appear that anyone w as in there and tried to deliberately sab­ otage anything," Smith said. "We're looking at what may have malfunc­ tioned and why." The boiler room is currently closed off, Waldrop said. Visit our homepage at http://www.dailytexanonline.com The Daily Texan ' ............... Editor..................................................... Managing Editor.................................... 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Box D, Austin, TX 78713. 4/23/02 WITH SPE0A1 GUEST KEVIN SECCIA THE TEXAS UMON STUDENT EVENTS CENTER MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE http://sec.union.utexas.e y> y> y> y> > TSP BOARD MEETING Friday, April 26, 2002 3:00 P.M. TSP Conference Room C3.302 Visitors Welcome We encourage any community member who has any kind of tem­ porary or permanent disability to contact Texas Student Publications beforehand so that appropriate accommodations can be made. Anyone is welcome to attend. The Daily Texan April 23, 2002 High Court hears death penalty case By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Suprem e Court waded deeper into the death penalty debate Monday with a case that could overturn 800 death sen­ tences nationally and another case seeking extra appeals for the con­ demned. Death sentences in nine states could be affected by the court's rul­ ing in the case of Timothy Stuart Ring, convicted of killing of an armored car driver during a rob­ bery eight years ago. The court is expected to decide by sum m er whether a defendant's constitutional right to a jury trial means that only a jury can m ake the crucial determinations that result in sentence. Currently, a although juries are responsible for deciding guilt or innocence, judges decide the sentence in Arizona and eight other states. death The case, said Ring's law y er Andrew Hurwitz, raises "the basic constitutional principle that before you're handed over to the state, for the state to impose w hat­ ever punishm ent it can, that a jury of your peers is afforded to y ou ." ... Ring's is the fourth death penalty case the court has reviewed in the current term. None of the cases attacks the essential constitutionali­ ty of capital punishment, w hich is imposed in 38 states. th e court signaled its continued interest in the mechanics of the death penalty by agreeing to hear the appeal of Tennessee death row inm ate Abu-Ali A bdur'R ahm an, whose case has been championed by activists. The case, which the court will hear next fall, could have far-reach­ ing effects if the justices decide to loosen the rules for when co n ­ demned inmates can get new evi­ dence before a judge. blocked had Abdur'Rahm an's execution earlier this month and will now decide whether he can pursue appeals on new developments. Ju stices O ther courts had ruled that it was too late for Abdur'Rahman to bring up new allegations that the state didn't turn over evidence as it should have, had made m isleading statem ents and had im properly prepared witnesses. His case returns the court to a subject that has troubled som e of the justices: whether poor people facing a possible death sentence are getting good legal help. O ne of his government-provided trial lawyers admitted that he did little to prepare for the trial or the sentencing. It w as the attorney's first capital case. His lawyers also relied on infor­ mation from prosecutors that blood was found on A bd u r'R ah m an 's clothing. The spots w ere paint. Last year, Ju stic e Sandra Day O'Connor said it m ay be time to impose m inim um standards for lawyers who hand le death penalty cases. Justice Ruth B ad er Ginsburg said llth-hour requests S u p re m e Court reprieves, she had not seen one in which the inm ate had been well- represented at trial. in all for that th e The court partially addressed the question of ill-p rep ared death in a ruling last penalty lawyers month that upheld a death sentence for a Virginia m an w hose lawyer had represented the victim in an unrelated case. O'Connor w as th e d ecid ing vote as the court r u le d 5 -4 that the alleged conflict o f in te re st was not enough th at Walter s h o w Mickens was d e p riv e d of his right to an effective la w y e r. to The court h as not yet ruled in another case testin g when death row inmates can m ake new claims that their original law yer was inad­ equate. The is whether a judge alone can deter­ mine the aggravating factors, such as the heinous n atu re of a murder or whether it w as committed for monetary gain, necessary in some states for a death sentence. in R in g 's case issue After the jury in R in g 's trial was dismissed, the ju d g e heard testimo­ ny at a sentencing hearing from an accomplice who said Ring planned the robbery and murdered the guard. The judge then determined that the aggravating factors war­ ranted death. The Arizona Su p rem e Court rejected Ring's constitutional chal­ lenge last year. T h e state has 128 people on death row. Idaho and M o n t a n a have sys­ tems like Arizona, w h ere a single judge decides th e sen ten ce. Idaho has 21 people on d ea th row, and Montana has six. In four states, ju r ie s recommend life or death. A ju d g e makes the final call in th o s e states: Florida, w ith 386 p e o p le o n death row; Alabama with 188; In d ian a with 39 and Delaware w ith 19. In Colorado, w ith six people on death row, and N ebraska, with seven, a panel o f jud ges makes the sentencing decision. E a rn money now by p articip atin g in a m edically superv ised studv to help evaluate a new investigal i<>nal medication. You must m eet certain criteria to qualify, ing a free m edical exam and screening te sts, ent study lengths are a v a i l a b l e , 'ton II find current studies listed here e\ erv Sunday. Please call us today to find out more. T he future of medicine c ould our hse of the University admin­ istration, the Board of Regents or the Iexas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. V IE W P O IN T UTs Hired Guns The University's hiring of two high-dollar image con­ sultants is representative of a deep-running flaw in the administration's view of its role here on the 40 Acres. The University has lost its focus on student, staff and fac­ ulty issues and has damaged its reputation in the process. After a tumultuous few months of defending and justify­ ing the largest fee increase in UT history — with no warn­ ing given to the student body — the ÜT System feels that hiring two close friends of George W. Bush will solve its tat­ tered image in the Legislature. The hiring of former Waco state senator David Sibley and Bush education advisor Sandy Kress could have more to do with UT Regent Charles M iller's standardized testing crusade than anything to do with making life better for stu­ dents already at the University. Nevertheless, they were hired because there is much work to be done. Lately, the University is strategy-rich but results-poor. Dilapidated buildings and classrooms on the brink of being condemned were sold to the student body and the people of Texas as reasons for the monumental student infrastructure fee. Apparently, the state of the buildings on campus cam e as a surprise to UT officials since there was no warning given to students — except for a lame effort at notifying a select few students over the winter holiday. Such fiscal foresight is reminiscent o f Capitol Hill lawmak­ ers dabbling with the notion of paying for the 2000 U.S. Census with emergency appropriations - knowing full well a census has been taken every 10 years since our coun­ try was founded. After decades of neglect, these repairs should have been no surprise to anyone. M ake no mistake, Sibley and Kress are heavy-hitters. No one is accusing the University of being foolish in who it hires to curry favor with state and federal officials. Sibley was long considered one of the m ost influential members in the Texas Senate and Kress is very close to President Bush. In addition, the University would be foolish not to capitalize on a Texas-friendly administration at a time when higher education dollars are on the decline. But one must question if the University's federal and state goals are not sometimes contradictory. At the federal level, the University is lobbying for research dollars and access to Sandia National Laboratories - issues not gener­ ally pertaining to smaller classes and increasing access to the University. This creates a problem when the University goes to the Legislature and says it desperately needs money for students and less oversight from elected offi­ cials. Lawmakers see a university that wastes millions on a disputed art museum and talks about building hotels and golf courses. To further stain its image, the University con­ sistently interferes when other schools request more fund­ ing. For a university pegged with a reputation of not put­ ting a priority on students or respecting lawmakers, the fiasco over the infrastructure fee was the perfect example. With no alert, input or concern, the administration allowed students to read about the virtual doubling of the cost of their education in their hometown newspapers. Then the news came that the University was using an obscure clarification of a past law to justify the increase. When the authors of the legislation said that was not their legislative intent whatsoever, the University said that it was another portion of the regents rules that allowed for the increase. Perhaps Sibley and Kress could remind the University to at least contact lawmakers before using their legislation for its justification of a huge fee increase. Predictably, the UT Board of Regents rubber-stamped the increase (with the notable exception of one Tony Sanchez — ever the astute politician already) despite a pending attorney general's opinion on whether or not the entire scheme is legal or not. The silver lining is that a sim­ ilar stunt in the state of Washington wa6 repealed in the court and the university was forced to refund the fee increase — with interest. Episodes such as these have not helped the University at the Legislature come appropriations time. Lawmakers see the University putting priorities on legislation allowing DKR stadium to cut off city "view corridors" and making sure m oney-m aking ventures like Proposition 17 get passed. Obviously, Sibley and Kress have a full plate in the com­ ing months. The regents should not manipulate them to push M iller's preposterous "accountability" agenda on state and federal officials. Hopefully Sibley and Kress will be utilized to make real, palatable changes at System schools and the University for the students — who, if we remember correctly, are the main reason this place exists. GALLERY Opinion Sept 11 events deserve more scrutiny By U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney Daily Texan Guest Columnist Authorities tell us that the world changed on Sept. 11. As a result, university professors must watch what they say in class or be turned in to the "speech" police. Elected officials must censor themselves or be censured by the media. Citizens now report behavior of suspirious-looking peo­ ple to the police. Laws now exist that erode our civil liberties. Americans now accept these infringements as necessary to win America's New War. America, the world's only superpower, is stifled in its ability to defend human rights and democracy abroad because it has failed the fundamental test at home. Our combination of money and military might, and our willingness to use them, did not make us a superpower. We are the most powerful nation on the face of the planet because we have combined raw power with American ideals such as dignity, free­ dom, justice and peace. These ideas and ideals are admired around the world and are more important, in my view, to our position of global strength than our ability to shoot a missile down a chimney. We might be feared because of our military, but we are loved because of our ideals. Sadly, we have put American goodwill at risk around the world because of an imbal­ ance in our foreign policy that is palpable to even the most disinterested observer. In 1994, after an act of terrorism killed two sit­ ting presidents, the Clinton administration purposely failed to prevent the genocide of one million Rwandans in order to install favorable regimes in the region. In 1999 Madeleine Albright Ok'd a Sierra Leone peace plan that positioned Foday Sankoh as chairman of the Commission for the Management of Strategic Resources, a posi­ tion that placed him answerable only to the president despite the fact that his terrorist organization raped little girls and chopped off their hands as it financed its way to power with illegal diamond sales. Jonas Savimbi, recently killed on the bat­ tlefield, helped the U.S. protect the minori­ ty rule of racists in South Africa and his organization continues to rampage across southern Africa in Angola, Namibia, parts of Congo-Kinshasha, and Rwanda without restriction, financed by illegal diamond sales. The continued plunder of Africa's rich resources without penalty and sadly What did this Administration know, and when did it know it about the events of Sept. with the knowledge and support of power­ ful people in the United States serves as the foundation of the particular terrorism that victimizes Africans. And now, as Africans grapple with the fundamental right to control their own resources and despite U nited N ations reports making no such links, Bush admin­ istration experts seem prepared to link African diamonds with anti-U.S. terrorism, thus "necessitating" tightened U.S. control over Africa's resources. is And so, with no concern at all for the effects on others of U.S.-supported terror­ ism, the United States, with its bombs and military, embarks on a worldwide crusade against terrorism that Bush says likely will last as many as 20 years. The list of target countries long with Afghanistan, Somalia, Tanzania, Kenya, Sudan, the Philippines and Iraq offering the starters. But what of the fact that Henry Kissinger and the current new US Ambassador to Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, both once lobbied Washington, D.C ., on behalf of a U.S. oil company, Unocal, and a softer poli­ cy toward the Taliban? Whose war is this really? In November 2000, Republicans stole from America our most precious right of all: the right to free and fair elections. In an organized manner, Florida Governor Jeb Bush and his Secretary of State Katherine Harris created a list of convicted felons— 57,700 to be exact— to "scrub" from the state's voter rolls. The names were created from Florida records and from lists provid­ ed by 11 other states, the largest list coming from Texas. We now know that most of the people on that list were innocent of crimes. The list was a phony. And worse, the major­ ity of these rightful voters were people of color and likely Democratic voters. Of the thousands who ultimately lost their vote through this scrub of voters, 80 percent are African American. Had they voted, the course of history would have changed: Harris declared Bush the victor by only 537 votes. President Carter has said that the Carter Center would not certify the 2000 Presidential elections had they had been asked to do so. Consequently, an administration of ques­ tionable legitimacy has been given unprecedented power to fight America's new war against terrorism. Before Sept. 11, 2 million Americans found themselves behind bars: 80 percent of them people of color. Millions of Americans are sleeping on the streets of cities. All over America, American unarmed black men are targeted by rogue police officers, who shoot first and ask questions later. While 52 percent of all black men feel they have been victims of racial profiling, the Supreme Court declines to hear an important case on racial profiling. The Bush administration totally "disses" the World Conference Against Racism and the people around the world who care about eliminating racism. In February 2001, The United States Commission on National Security, including Newt Gingrich, recom­ mended that the National Homeland Security Agency be established with a hefty price tag. Most people chuckled at the sug­ gestion. After Sept. 11, we have Ok'd the target­ ing and profiling of certain groups of peo­ ple in America while not arresting in any way the racial profiling and discrimination that existed prior to Sept. 11. Mass arrests, detention without charge, military tri­ bunals and infringements on due process rights are now realities in America. Even more alarming are the calls in some circles to allow the use of torture and other brutal methods in pursuit of "justice." Sadly, U.S. administration of justice will be conducted by an administration incapable of it. Interestingly, prominent officials explain to us that Sept. 11 happened because we are free. And "they" hate us because we are free. Moreover, persons close to this adminis­ tration are poised to make huge profits off America's new war. Former President Bush sits on the board of the Carlyle Group. The Los Angeles Times reports that on a single day last month, Carlyle earned $237 million selling shares in United Defense Industries, the Army's fifth-largest contractor. The stock offering was well timed: Carlyle offi­ cials say they decided to take the company public only after the Sept. 11 attacks. The stock sale cashed in on increased congres­ sional support for hefty defense spending, including one of United Defense's corner­ stone weapon programs. Now is the time for our elected officials to be held accountable. Now is die time for the media to be held accountable. Why aren't the hard questions being asked. We know there were numerous warnings of the events to come on Sept. 11. Vladimir Putin, president of Russia, delivered one such warning. Those engaged in unusual stock trades immediately before Sept. 11 knew enough to make millions of dollars from United and American airlines, certain insurance and brokerage firms' stocks. What did this administration know, and when did it know it about the events of Sept. 11? Who else knew and why did they not warn the innocent people of New York who were needlessly murdered? Sept. 11 erased the line between "over there" and "over here." The American peo­ ple can longer afford to be detached from the world, as our actions abroad will have a direct impact on our lives at home. In Washington, D.C., decisions affecting home and abroad are made and too many of us leave the responsibility of protecting our freedoms to other people whose interests are not our own. From Durban to Kabul to Atlanta to Washington, what our govern­ ment does in our name is important. It is now also clear that our future, our security, and our rights depend on our vigilance. Cynthia McKinney is a U.S. represen­ tative for the fifth congressional congressional district of Georgia. is m * m sriN T m m do you stand? Daily Texan Contact Information THE ARAB KILLERS MUST BE KILLED BEFORE THEY GET TD KILL. THE CHANCE IT'S ALWAYS SAD WHEN INNOCENT WOMEN AND CHILDREN DIE, BUT HEY- THAT’S WAR! Wit 1 CAN'T HELP NOTICING THAT ISRAEL KIUS MORE PALESTINIANS THAN VICE VERSA. Editor: Marshall Maher (512) 232-2212 editor@dailytexanonline.com News Office: (512) 232-2206 news@dailytexanonline.com Features Office: (512) 471-8616 features@dailytexanonline.com Sports Office: (512) 232-2210 sports@dailytexanonline.com Entertainment Office: (512) 232-2208 entertainment@dailytexanonline.com Photo Office: (512) 471-8618 photo@dailytexanonline.com M ODERATE HONEST BROKER ÍUt, ' T SURE WE HAVE TO DEFEND OURSELVES. BUT IS BOMB­ ING REALLY SELF-DEFENSE? GARDEN-VARIETY ANTI-SEMITE my heart bleeds equally for v ic tim s REGARDLESS OF THEIR RELIGION. ' SURELY ISRAEL COULD FIND A BETTER WAV TD KEEP ITSELF SAFE? NAZI BIGOT kv m TH E L IV IN G INCARNATION OF ADOLF HITLER THE FIRING LINE Oops, you missed one the I was disappointed to open up Monday's issue of The Daily Texan and find no m ention of roughly 75,000 protesters who converged on Washington this past weekend. As many individuals from Austin and even our fine University made it out to these events, I think that it is a relevant, timely topic for coverage. Officials called it the largest pro- Palestinian rally in U.S. history; protest­ ers also railed against the IM F/W orld Bank, Plan Colombia, and the School of Americas (now the WHISC). All of these issues are championed by groups located here in Austin. I hope that the next time a national event of this magnitude occurs it at I wont have www.IndyMedia.org. to read about tions of the University. I thought that it was really cool when I heard "How many of y'all are rollin', who all is on that ecstasy" echoing all over the campus that is supposed to condone and punish the very thing. I don't care what you listen to or what you do to yourself on your own time, I just don't think that it should be promoted and sponsored by something like the Co-op, which is closely related to the University. I guess that whoever approved this in the Main Building should have checked out some of his lyrics, or went to www.ohhla.com. I'm sure they would be equally impressed by his talent in com­ posing lyrics that promoted drugs, mur­ der, sex and violence. Derrick Dees Management senior Brazos Price Biology/Psychology junior Deal in facts, not rumor Ludi-crass I would like to question whether Ludacris was an appropriate artist to bring to the University of Texas. I was at the concert and I had a great time, right up until the guy next to me lit up a joint. I guess my opinion could be biased by the fact that I did not know who Lucacris was until Friday, but I think that lyrics like his seriously undermine the inten­ David Peterson's article (Truth lies in the rubble at Jenin, Aprill9) should more aptly have been titled "N o truth, all lies in the rubble at Jenin." One of the hall­ marks of good journalism is to inde­ pendently verify info before printing a* "fact." Otherwise, readers are only being treated to rumors, accusations and even propaganda. Peterson states that "the initial estimate of those killed in the tiny refugee camp in Jenin ranges from 200 to 600," a number that has no independent verification and that comes entirely from Palestinian "witnesses," despite the hor­ rific Palestinian history of fabricating false claims. In contrast, Washington Post correspondent Molly Moore wrote: "Interviews with residents inside the camp and international aid workers who were allowed here for the first time today indicated that no evidence has yet sur­ faced allegations by Palestinian groups and aid organizations of large-scale massacres or executions by Israeli troops." support to In terms of the deaths of civilians, the catalyst for the whole Jenin operation was the daily slaughter of Israeli civilians at the hands of Palestinian terrorists. This was a defensive war that Israel did not choose. Contrast how Palestinians are specifically targeting civilians, whereas Israel is targeting those terrorists who kill civilians. Finally, why do these refugee camps exist in the first place? The camps are in Area A — territory totally controlled by Arafat and the Palestinian Authority. Arafat received hundreds of millions of dollars in international aid, yet these refugees have never been given adequate housing and facilities by Arafat. Why not? Israel has a right and a duty to defend herself from daily acts of terror against her citizens. The United States must sup­ port Israel's (and our) goal of eradicating terrorism and achieving safety for her cit­ izens before any peace negotiations can take place. Brian Berger UT alum Reich is wrong The current U.S. assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere Affairs is Otto Reich. Reich was head of the Office of Public Diplomacy during the Reagan administration, an agency later declared illegal after a 1987 investigation by the U.S. Comptroller General. The agency was exposed for its use of psychological warfare propaganda tech­ niques on the American public, the type used by intelligence agencies against for­ eign enemies. The OPD deliberately spread disinformation to sway public opinion in favor of the Nicaraguan Contras, whose death squads were later exposed this already) for massacres of innocent civil­ ians. They also engaged in narcotics traf­ ficking to fund their brutal operations. (though many knew During his appointment as U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela in the 1990's, Reich was instrumental in the eventual pardoning of Orlando Bosch, a convicted Firing Un— continued on Page 8 Sexual liberties helping Catholic church lose its way The D a ily Texan Tuesday, April 2 3 , 2 0 0 2 Page 5 By Albert Doskey Daily Texan Guest Columnist Once upon a time, catechisms reminded their readers that the tempters in this life are three: the flesh, the world and the devil. Unfortunately, few modern texts repeat this formula. Yet only by keeping it in mind will we under­ stand the current crisis in the church. What some priests have done to youngsters is evil. They have harmed them physically and emo­ tionally, but more grievously, spiri­ tually. To end the commentary here is to mistake the symptom for the ill­ ness. The illness, with all due respect to the real psychological problems of many of these predators, is a loss of the Faith by much of the clergy and embrace of the three tempters. Some have embraced the flesh. While the flesh has been a thorn always, a grievous promiscuity has afflicted much of the church. A cli­ THE FIRING LINE m ate has developed in w hich pas­ tors, including bishops and cardi­ nals, have refused to preach the church's sexual doctrine, and some have actively subverted it. W ithin the church, so many, including m em bers of the hierarchy, no longer consider contraception as intrinsically evil, m astu rb atio n as selfish, cohabitation before m arriage as an invitation to failure, divorce as a tragedy and hom osexuality as a suffering to be treated w ith love, th e ra p y It prayer, and p e rh a p s th a t p e d o p h ilia is no w o n d e r flo u r is h — a n d e p h e b o p h ilia eph eb o p h ilia, as an act, is sex betw een an adult and pubescent or p o stp u b e sce n t y ou th, m ainly a hom osexual crim e a m o n g st the priests, as opposed to pedophilia w hich is sex betw een an ad u lt and a prepubescent youth. Pedophilia and ep h eb o p h ilia both becom e just another lifestyle choice. O ne need Firing Unen continued from Pnge 4 Arafat walked The illness, with all due respect to the real psychological problems of many o f these predators, is a loss o f the Faith ... not condem n them because “they d o n 't h u rt anyone." Some have embraced the w orld. This applies to m any of our bishops. They have ignored their d u ties to discipline heretics, to ensure a p u re transm ission of the Faith, to preach Jesus C hrist crucified and H is one true church, to m aintain p ro p er w o r­ ship and adm inistration of the sacra­ m ents, the lifeblood of the sp iritu al life, becau se to receive the praise of the w orld. They they p re fe rred have failed in these duties because they have w a n te d the accolades of the children of the world for being progressive, up-to-date, with-it, nice and m odern. In doing so, they have given the im pression that anything (so long as is not genuinely Catholic) go es once m odernity accepts it. T he bishops have invited their clergy to act this way. it The only p ro b lem is that moderni­ ty was not q u ite ready to applaud pedophilia o r ephebophilia yet. them. E p h ebo philia N o te , though, that it soon m ig ht a p p la u d is g o in g mainstream with the increas­ in g acceptance of a certain radical h o m o sexual agenda, and Dr. Judith L e v in e 's new Harmful to M inors su g ­ g e s ts that pedophilia is n o t so bad a fte r all. Ironically, the bish ops have h a d to hide the very problem they h a v e invited because they d o not w a n t the criticism of their b reth ren in th e Zeitgeist. Finally, some have em braced the d e v il or his plan. Notable exorcists L ave stated that demonic possession h a s risen enormously in the past th irty years, y d many b ishops have re fu se d the service of diocesan exor­ cists, and many pastors n ev er m en­ tio n the Evil One. Some p a rts of the h ie rarc h y have become friendly w ith b o th witches and Freem asons, both of w h o m honor Satan by th e ir w o r­ s h ip or their doctrines. All of this is to in v ite pedophilia and e p h e b o p h il­ ia because Satan encourages such evil. The solution to the current crisis is not prim arily to add m ore rules or to invite m ore psychologists. It has nothing to do w ith the fiction of w om en priests, the abolition of holy celibacy, or the expansion of bloated diocesan bureaucracies. The solution — at least on the part of the clergy — is to recognize the three tem pters for w hat they are and to reject them by the pow er of the Triune G od and pos­ itively, to live Christ Jesus, both His mercy and justice. Some m ay w ish to continue to indulge their passions, to be praised for their modernity, or to ignore Satan; for them, though only the Supreme Pontiff has the prerogative to affect it, it is time to leave by choice or if not, by force. Holy Mary, pray for us. Doskey is a Plan II senior and chairman o f Veritas, a Catholic stu­ dent organization. in clu d in g terrorist responsible for bom bing a C uban airplane in w hich 73 civilians the entire C uban died, Olympic fencing team. This know n terrorist w as then granted U.S. citizen­ ship by Bush Sr. In addition to Reich, Elliot Abrams, w ho adm itted lying to Congress about C ontra b ru talities du rin g the Iran- C ontra been appointed as the N SC's senior director for Democracy, H u m an Rights and International O perations. proceedings, has It seems as though the foxes are guarding the h en house. It is actions such as these th at reveal the blatant hypocrisy of W ashington's stance on w orld terrorism . As long as the terror­ ists are on o u r side then we do n 't seem to have any problem w ith them. C an't w e find an y o n e b etter th an these right-w ing death squad apologists to handle delicate diplom atic matters? Brian Gentry Physics doctoral candidate Rosemary Simmons (More violence to come, A pril 19) w rites th at "Israel w ants peace, but only if it can have all the land that constituted ancient Israel too." How, then, does she explain Ehud Barak's offer of the vast majority of the West Bank (approxim ately 95 percent) at the C am p D avid m eeting in 2000 — an offer that Yasser Arafat w alked away from? I'm not surprised by the error; it's these sorts of sw eeping, uninform ed claim s that are routinely m ade by those w ho have jum ped on the anti- Israel bandw agon w ith little und er­ stan d in g of the conflict itself. Ms. Simmons, you have as m uch right to criticize Israel as I have to support it. But please, do your hom ew ork next time. Jamie Kopf Journalism master’s candidate Down with Prop 1 According to the editor of The Daily Texan in M onday's Viewpoint, the per­ fect electoral system w ould force indi- viduals to financially su p p o rt candi­ dates w hom they don't agree with, w hile sim ultaneously banning them from freely financially suppo rting can­ didates they do agree with. I have a message for the editor: D on't tell me who I can or can 't sup­ p o rt w ith my ow n hard-earned dol­ lars. If you or anyone else d o e sn 't like w ho I support, then d o n 't vote for them. It is as simple as that. W hat is inherent in the cam paign is an reform m ovem ent finance extrem e disdain for the intellect of ordinary citizens. "Well sure, I w ouldn't be persuaded by a flashy ad campaign, b u t w e m ust consider the delicate m ind of the aver­ age citizen." Give people som e credit, w e're not just mindless drones. A nd if w e did vote based on w hose cam paign w as flashier rather than on the issues, then w e w ould get the governm ent we deserve. That is democracy. The pow er rests w ith the vote. The editor wrote that dem ocracy is priceless. So are individual rights to free speech. Vote against Proposition 1. Scott Arthur Austin resident ©QQQXS? Qcwbq? 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Exp ire s 4 / 1 / 0 2 .___________ LARGE 3-TOPPING PIZZA 7 . 9 9 p ic k - u p 2- 2-2 SPECIAL 2 1 4 ” Large 2 topping Pizzas One 2-liter coke or diet coke 9 . 9 9 DELIVERED 1 4 . 9 9 p ic k - u p 1 6 . 9 9 d e l iv e r e d Call 459-2222 to place your order! .... | IP 1 1 i |i m ■ i fit I m Texan April 23, 2002 University SUGAR ON A STICK UT-Tyler ‘Patriot’ adviser may sue to retain position By Austin Klnghom Daily Texan Staff Journalism adviser Vanessa Curry said she will fight to keep her job at UT-Tyler and that litigation against her employer is not out of the question. UT-Tyler officials told Curry in early April that her contracts as lecturer and adviser of the Tyler's student newspaper, The Patriot, would not be renewed. The contracts expire May 31,2002. She has held the positions for the last three years, during which time the newspaper evolved from what Curry called a "tabloid piece" to an award-winning publication. Curry and Melissa Tresner, editor, said the termination came about because the adviser taught aggressive journalism that Tresner said "annoyed" the administration. "In years past the administration was used to students who went away and dropped the story, but now I teach students not to give up and be more persistent," Curry said. "I think the paper is growing faster than they are accustomed to." Under the Open Records Act, The Patriot filed for information such as faculty salaries, coaching and provost position candidate information, and police records, Tresner said. UT-Tyler officials did not return phone calls Monday, but previously told The Associated Press they are not legally obligat­ ed to give an explanation for the decision to not renew contracts. However, Curry' and Tresner said UT-Tyler Provost David O'Keeffe told the dean of the College of Communication that the newspa­ per contained too many errors and was too aggressive. Tresner called that reasoning a "lame excuse" and said The Patriot has been free from major errors. "We might have a comma out of place or a misspelled word, but that's just part of the learning process," Tresner said. "I see errors on the front page of The New York Times, and I don't think the publisher gets fired for it." The administration also chose to issue new policies in late March concerning student publications, calling for the establishment of a publication board composed of administra­ tors. The board would elect the editor and adviser, while overseeing operating policies. The guidelines drew criticism from organi­ zations such as the Student Press Law Center and the Southwest Education Council for Journalism and Mass Communication. The SECJMC issued a critical letter to UT-Tyler's administration and the SPLC has been advis­ ing The Patriot staff on a course of action. "W hat we pointed out was that there are serious practical and legal problems with the policy," said Mark Goodman, executive director for the SPLC. "One is the policy cre­ ates the authority for selecting the editor to a group of administrators, and the inevitable result of that is a rubber stamp for the admin­ istration's position." Tresner said the administration has recent­ ly backed down from the new guidelines, telling her the new regulations were a "work in progress." O'Keeffe apologized to the staff, saying the administration was under pres­ sure the UT-Tyler's new "University Handbook of Operation Procedures" and it failed to look over the revised section well enough, Tresner said. to publish University officials told Tresner they expect changes to the policy, including a stu­ dent and faculty presence on the publication board. O'Keeffe told the AP last Thursday that the rules were not intended to censor the paper, but that the amount of Open Records Acts the staff filed "raised some concern at the level of the administration." The Associated Press contributed to this report. Senate tightens immigration laws Some foreign students to encounter strict background checks By Nicola Llpman Daily Texan Staff legislation The U.S. Senate unanimous­ ly approved last week to tighten immigration policy for students from coun­ tries considered to be terrorist threats. The countries identified as sponsoring terrorism are Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan and Syria. The legislation obligates stu­ dents who are applying for a visa to undergo background checks, and will require univer­ sities and federal officials to more closely monitor students once in the United States. then the university within 30 days of class registra­ tion, is required to notify INS. The vote, which passed 97-0 in the Senate, was passed last year by the U.S. House of Representatives. In a separate move, President Bush is considering preventing certain foreign students from studying in sensitive fields, such as nuclear technology, chemical engineering, biotech­ nology'and advanced computer technology. There are 20 international stu­ dents from the identified coun­ tries studying at the University, said Deane Willis, manager in the International Office. If a student does not attend "It's always been the case that the University has to pro­ vide information required by INS," she said. "I think the bill is a relatively practical thing. The INS system needed to be updated and become more effi­ cient." Nayel Aawai, president of the Arab Students Association, is in favor of the extra security checks. "I support the bill because every country has the right to know who they're letting in," said Aawai. "The U.S. is giving foreign students the opportuni­ ty to get an education, and if people are going to take advan­ tage of this generosity to harm the country, then they shouldn't be allowed in." s Aawai said he does not believe the new measures will make prospective international students feel unwelcome in the United States. "If they don't have a shady past, then they will feel safe that they are going to be protected along with other U.S. citizens," he said. "Anyone can be the vic­ tim of a terrorist attack." Atabak Ghudd, treasurer of the Iranian Students Academic and Cultural Assodation, said he supports the bill. "Even as an Iranian bom in Iran, I can completely under­ stand why they're doing it," he said. Have you thought about the diversity in California? California offers teachers more choices in school locations, teaching environments and cultural experiences. Are you ready for a ch a lle n ge ? Like to mix it up? Then bring your teaching degree to California. Our six million students com e from households representing over 90 spoken languages, hundreds of cultures and myriad opinions. (Im agine a social studies c la ss in any one of our communities!) H you like a mix of people. environments, cultures and | hi cuisines, you'll In California, w e live and breathe diversity. If you em brace the new and challenging - if you can guide young lives from every background to achieve the greatn ess they are meant to achieve - if you have the potential to be a teacher of the first rank - w e have a place for you. Bring your teaching degree to California * Our diversity allow s you more ch o ice s in scho o l locations, teaching environments and opportunities. A n d w hen you 're not teaching, our rich diversity in cultures, climates and lifestyles will allow you to learn som e new th ings about yourself, too. W e need you in California. And w e 're backing that need with se rio u s dollars. Find out more. For more information, call toll-free 1-888-CalTeach (888-225-8322) or visit our w ebsite at www.calteach.com. CalTeach Left Coast. Ri ght Job.9 Seema Mehta, a corporate communication senior and vice president of Kappa Phi Gamma, makes cotton candy Monday during the Kickoff Rally for C.A.R.E. Week on the West Mall. C.A.R.E. Week is hosted by Kappa Phi Gamma to raise cancer awareness. Unity Peterson/Daily Texan Staff Laptop purchase required for future teachers, officials say By Vlckl Lame Daily Texan Staff The University formally announced Monday that UT students entering teacher preparation programs will now be required to purchase Apple laptops upon their entrance. The new requirement, which takes effect in fall 2002, is designed to help students develop the computer skills necessary for today's work­ place. "It is a requirement within the state of Texas that those preparing to be teachers are able to use technology in instruction," said Lawrence Abraham, associate dean for teacher education. The College of Education dedded that it would be best to use one type of computer, Abraham said, to fadlitate the faculty's ability to teach students. "It would be very difficult if all the students had different kinds of computers," he said. "It would be sort of like teaching a class where peo­ ple would be using different textbooks." The administration looked at a combination of factors such as price and product when select­ ing a computer manufacturer, Abraham said. "Apple had the best deal," he said. "And Apple has a strong presence in education. They are used in a number of schools. The Austin school district has a lot of Apple com puters and is where m ost of our stu­ dents do their practices." that Students may either purchase or borrow a new or old Apple laptop as long as it nas the required software and meets UT approval. Each laptop will be checked by UT officials. Apple will provide a discount to students entering the programs and any additional stu­ dents enrolled in the College of Education. Eligible students can purchase a laptop for only $1,000 as opposed to an estimated retail price of $2,500. Since it is a college requirement, the cost may also be covered by financial aid. Larry Chauvin, an applied learning and development junior and next year's Education Council president, said there has been mixed reaction among the students. "Many students feel it is very short notice for people starting their professional development sequence next fall," Chauvin said. "I know peo­ ple who jlist recently bought computers and now their computers aren't going to be compat­ ible." Sarah Welch, an applied learning and devel­ opment sophomore, said she also had many concerns early on, but now fully supports the idea. However, she believed students would lack the necessary experience to properly use an Apple, she said. To alleviate this concern, the University will provide computer training to students, as well as professors. Lana Sveda, Education Council president and special education senior, said she believes that once students are fully informed, they will sup­ port the idea. "It is going to put the College of Education at the forefront of teacher preparation," Sveda said. "And we are really going to start turning out teachers who are really technologically savvy." SOOS Schulenburg Festival Aug. 2, 3, 4, 2 0 0 2 Friday performers - Roger Creager & P at Green Saturday performers - Bleu Edmonson & Kevin Fowler Sunday performers - The Original Triumphs Fo r times St tickets, visit our website at w w w .schulenburgfestival.org STUDENT TRAVEL Change YOUR World! London............ $423 Paris............... $464 B ru sse ls $545 Rio de Janeiro...$723 San Jose C.R. ...$447 BUDGET NOIBS far as Mia as $18 U A NIBMT11I Fares are rounckrip. ictior may an t Re Tax not indiKf% TRAVEL Gregory Gym 512.471.74m 2116 Giadalepe St. 512472mm www. s t a t r a v e ! 1. com a G Ü . 7 7 7 . Q 1 1 2 AISD identifies test schools for project By Esther Wang Daily Texan Staff Austin Independent School District Superintendent Pat Forgione announced that six schools will serve as models for future reform within the district Monday. The Austin Blueprint to Leave No Child Behind, a plan introduced earlier this month to improve low-performing and underachieving schools, was the product of three months of work and dialogue between community leaders such as the Eastside Social Action Coalition and educa­ tors, Forgione said. "This is a new beginning," he said of the Blueprint. Three low-performing schools and three underperforming schools will be what Forgione called "laboratory schools," schools where the district will test what he called proven principles. All six — Dobie and Pearce Middle Schools and Oak Springs, Blackshear, Sims and Harris Elementaiy schools — are located in East Austin. That area is typically where the majority of Austin's low-performing schools have been situated. New principals from higher-performing schools have volunteered to switch over to the six Blueprint schools when the school year ends. They will have the job of evalu­ ating current and new faculty and increas­ ing the performance of their students, who are typically minorities from the poorer areas of Austin. The stark disparity in performance between AISD schools in East and West Austin must be addressed, Forgione said. "This district must show a sense of urgency, that we will not tolerate underper­ formance in our schools," Forgione said. "We know what works, and we must put that in place aggressively." Some of the 10 components to the Blueprint include guaranteed im proved student achievem ent; more tim e for reading and w ritin g every day; new teachers with at least tw o years of expe­ rience who are certified for the subjects they are teaching; frequ en t assessments of students; and partnerships with the parents and the com m unity. These measures are expected to cost $1 million a year, which will come from Title 1 grants. The superintendent's plan to close the achievement gap in Austin's public schools came after the AISD board of trustees reject­ ed proposals from tw o private firms — Edison Schools and the KIPP Academ y — in Febmary, saying they did not wish to "subcontract" the district's problems to out­ side companies. Forgione promised to bring in outside help from the Austin community, such as UT education professor Pedro Reyes, who in an unrelated study is looking at six underperforming schools in the district. Bruce Banner from Education Austin, an organization representing the district's teachers, said the district needs to ensure that teachers are given all the tools they need to succeed under the Bluepnnt, such os pay for overtime and teacher training. "We want to make sure that we have col­ laborative principals who come in with a team-building focus, not 'my way or the highway' focus," Banner said. "We want a model of support, not a model of compli­ ance." AISD teachers are concerned about lan­ guage in the Blueprint like "non-nego- tiable" and "compliance," and want instead to see support and more resources from the administration, Banner said. "We just want to make sure it's not a place where people are subjected to pro­ duce results at any cost," Banner said, pointing out that the No. 1 reason teachers leave is lack of support. "But we're cau­ tiously optimistic that the district is putting together a good plan here." 7 The Daily Texan April 23 , 2 0 0 2 _S&L Briefs Renovations for Laguna Gloria Art Museum to include sprinkler system, heating system Renovations recently started on the historic Laguna Gloria Art Museum, the first location of the Austin Museum of Art and primary site for the museum's art school. The main villa w'ill be the first structure renovated on the 12-acre property. Judith Sims, director of the art school, said the improve­ ments for the villa, which include installing a sprinkler system, will total $2.7 million. The museum has raised $1.6 million in the past year. "The funds have come from independent donors and foundations," Sims said. Sims added that they have received a grant from the Austin Convention and Visitors Bureau and a grant from Save America's Treasures. Other plans for the Clara Driscoll villa, named for the original owner, include installing a heating and cooling system. Sims said the renovation of the villa is part of long-term improvement plans for the property. "The art school w'ill be expanded as wrell as building a new intimate gallery," she said. Tower PR to commemorate organ donor week by passing out cards, answering questions To kick off National Organ and Tissue Donor Awareness Week, a UT student group will pass out donor cards and answer questions about organ donation Tuesday. "W e're trying to increase donor aw'areness and the actu­ al number of donors," said Rhett Skelton, a representative of Tower PR, thfe University's student-run public relations agency. According to the Texas Organ Sharing Alliance Web site, more than 74,000 patients were on the national waiting list for organ transplant in 2001, but there were fewer than 6,000 donors. As of April 12, there are more than 79,000 names on the waiting list. Cynthia Thompson, TOSA community relations assis­ tant, said it is usually a life or death situation for those waiting for a transplant. "A new name is added to the list every 16 minutes," Thompson said. "So the importance [of donating] is great." Skelton said, however, that indicating intent to be a donor on a driver license or carrying around an organ donor card is often not enough to be able to donate. Ultimately, the decision to donate organs rests with the family. "Your family has to know your wishes," Skelton said. "So it's really im portant that you tell others." The student group joined forces w'ith TOSA to organize the week's activities, which include an information booth in the West Mall Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and an open forum Tuesday evening with several guest speakers. Compiled by Sarah Shipley and Chrissy Ragan, Daily Texan staff Capital Metro reveals results from rail study By K irk W atson Daily Texan S taff The Austin lig h t r a i l p ro je c t showed renewed signs o f life Monday af the April Capital M etro bo ard meeting. City officials, in c o n j u n c t i o n with Capital Metro, p re sen ted study results on proposed tech n o lo g ie s, stations and routes for a light rail system . John Almond, d ire cto r for the Rapid Transit Project, said th e new project is different from th e u n s u c c e s s f u l 1 9 9 9 light rail initiative becau se it incorpo­ rates more voices in to the planning. "The major th in g th at we l e a r n e d is that we didn t g et clo se enough to the major sta k e h o ld e rs," he s a i d - "I he major stakeholders b ein g [downtown], the state Capitol an d the U n i v e r s i t y . Almond added th at the University will be more in v o lv ed this time around. “We're just n o w startin g to engage the University, in m o re detail, just in the beginnings o f all th is," he s a i d . "We need to spend a lo t of time together wherg we can sit to g eth er and discuss how' this can grow in m ore detail " John Rishling, asso ciate vice p r u ­ dent of cam pus p lan n in g , s a i d the University will ap p ro ach the issue of light rail when it is proposed by Capital Metro. v an tag es need to be w-eighed out." Rishling said a major consideration o f the U niversity is how' light rail could im p ro v e access the J. J. Pickle to R esearch Cam pus. S tev e R od gers, a m em ber of the W ooten Neighborhood Association, is am ong the many voices that Capital M etro will confront in developing the rail system . The neighborhood he rep­ resen ts opposes the effects the pro­ light rail routes will have on posed their hom es. R odgers said the new plan is no d if­ ferent from the one proposed in 1999. im m ediately; "O n e thing that happens when you get into these discussions is that we talk a b o u t m itigation that m eans fences for privacy,'noise reduc­ tion, e t cetera," he said. "We are going to w ant to talk about that. We will not se ttle with [the rail] like it's being so ld ." A lm ond said the num ber of voices to be considered m akes th at have progress difficult. "T h a t's another thing that' m akes transportation in Austin so frustrating is that all the m ajor pieces have to fit," he said. Keller Hall/Daily Texan Staff Alan Lubliner, a member of the Rapid Transit Project Team, presents objectives and plans for a light rail system to the Capital Metro Board of Directors during a work- session Monday. 'T his is very p relim inary," he said. "As w ith m an y of the proposals ot this so rt, a num­ ber of advantages an d disad­ TULIPS 7.95 A BUNCH CASH & CARRY DAILY SPECIALS, TOO! I I CASA VERDE FLORIST j ^ 1806 W . Koenig Ln. 4 5 1 - 0 6 9 1 FTD \ G O O D 'fY E A R 10% OFF A N Y Service or Tires w ith Univ. o f Texas I D. *7 9 0 7 East 41 st Austin - 4 5 9 -6 5 5 4 Em ail:a s c4 7 22@ a ttg lo b a l.ne t CLEP Preps - Earn Credit! 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For more information contact: Austin Diamond W ay Buddhist Center phone: 512.420.9388 web: wmMUstindiamondway.org Q Buddhism o f the D iam ond W a y Opening June 5th Currently Enrolling Student Family Early Care and Learning Center W o o ld r id g e H all 2 .1 0 3 B 4 7 1 - 0 0 3 4 In fa n ts th ru p re sch o o l a g e Lu n c h p ro v id e d Go to website for more information www.utexas.edu/services/childcare JUNE 3-28,2 BUSINESS BOOT CAMP For N o n -Business M ajors SUMMER BUSINESS INSTITUTE An Intensive Course In Business Essentials For Non-Business Majors The job m arket to d a y is ch a lle n g in g , dem anding new employees be well versed in business concepts and practices. 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CX02 2005D Men Against Sexual Assault work to combat sexual harassment on campus 8 The Daily T exan April 23. 2002 By Alicia Dietrich Daily Texan Staff W hen G raham D avis' m other rec­ om m en ded he read Reviving Ophelia, a collection of case studies of ad oles­ cen t girls in a book by psychologist M ary Pipher, he had no idea how m u ch reading it w ould change his life. H is m om suggested the book as a w ay to understand the fem ale g en ­ der, but Davis, a Plan II and Spanish senior, cam e aw ay w ith m uch more. "It struck m e how sexual assault w as a com m on them e in a lot of these y o u n g w o m en 's trau m atic ex p e ri­ en ces and traum atic lives and how m uch it affected th em ," D avis said. "It w asn't that I w asn 't aw are of it before, but I think reading the book personalized it m o re." D av is created the o rg an izatio n Men A gainst Sexual A ssault in the fall of 2000 as a w ay to com bat sexu­ al assault and to p ro m ote aw areness of the topic. "I founded M A SA because I saw the need for m ore m ale-focu sed edu­ catio n ," he said. D av is said m ost of the literature currently available focuses on what fem ales can do, such as taking self- defense classes, av o id in g dark alleys and d ressing in w ay s that d o n 't encourage sexual assault. "It really kind o f p u t a lot of responsibility on fem ales for things Marta Abrams, Moglovkan, a Plan II junior, read people’s accounts of victimization. left, an undeclared Blake Jones/D aily Texan Staff liberal arts sophomore, and Emily that they w eren 't really responsible for," D avis said. "N inety-nine p e r­ cent of the time, these violent crim es are com m itted b y men, and so it m akes sen se that more ed u catio n would be focused on men to trv to prevent sexual assault." M A SA offers ed u cation al p ro ­ gram s to m ale organizations like fra­ te rn itie s that not only p ro m ote aw areness o f the topic, but also strive to dispel som e of the m ost com m on gender stereo typ es that D avis said he believes can lead to violent crim es. "W e b elieve that society has creat­ ed a cu lture that promotes, or at least cond ones, sexual assault," he said. "If it w a sn 't som ething allow ed, then it w o u ld n 't happen. We think that there are a bunch of different factors that have socialized men into th in k ­ ing they can treat wom en as ob jects." Davis cited the m edia as an e x a m ­ p le th at p o rtray s w om en as sex objects and men as heroes who are strong and aggressive. "If we act out these stereotypes, w e are going to hav e vio len t sex u al crim es," he said. "If guys w ant to know one step they can take, it's to be careful what they say. D on't tell sexist jokes. Be aw are of things that are g end er-biased ." Chris Vaughn, a governm ent fresh­ m an, cu rrently serves as the vice presid ent of M A SA and will take over as president after D avis grad u ­ ates in May. Vaughn said he rem em ­ bers looking on the Internet d uring freshm an orientation for an org aniza­ tion to get involved in to m eet peo­ ple. "M A SA stood ou t because I d eb at­ ed in high school, and I had read lots of literature on the subject and w as it happens and interested w hat I could do to learn about it," V aughn said. in w hy 1 ie designed the educational pro­ gram that MASA currently uses, which has been presented to fraternities, resi­ dent assistants and male dormitories. As future president, Vaughn said he hopes to spread the word to even more male organizations next year. M ASA often w orks w ith o th er organizations on cam pus that pro­ m ote aw areness of sexual assault, and it has w orked with oth er groups to raise m oney for related causes. In addition, it served on the peer ed u ca­ tion com m ittee o f Voices A gain st Violence, 'a program funded by a governm ental grant to prevent v io­ lence against women. som e of th eir p ro ceed s In February, M ASA set up tables at The Vagina M onologues, w hich d o n at­ ed to S a fe l’iace, an Austin shelter offering cou nseling and services for victim s of sexual assault or abuse. M A SA also sponsored a fundraiser on April 7 th at raised m oney for SafeP lace. D avis and Vaughn p a rticip ated Frid ay in Take Back the N ight, a pro­ gram sponsored by Students A cting A g ain st Sexu al A ssault th at p ro ­ m otes aw areness of sexual violence through sp eakers and by offering survivors a chance to share their sto­ ries. "T h e w ord 'sexu al assault' tends to ward o ff a lot of p eop le," said M ay lin g G o n z a le s, co -d ire cto r o f Stu d e n ts A ctin g A g ain st Sexu al A ssault and a Plan II senior. "M y goal is just to get it to be a to p ic that people are going to pay atten tion to because the more d iscussion there is, the less likely that people are g oing to have the com m ents and b ehav io rs that lead to sexual assau lt." D avis agreed that aw areness is the first step in p rev en tio n , an d he w ants to m ake sure that m ales are visible in the fight against sexu al assault. "I think it's im portant that both m en and w om en see that fem in ism isn 't restricted to fem ales," he said. "Sex u al assault and violent crim es ju st a ffe ct ag ain st w o m en d o n 't w om en. T h ey affect everyone, eith er directly or indirectly." R esources Available Around the U n ive rsity and A ustin STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS •Men Against Sexual Assault Contact: Chris Vaughn Cvaughn 13@aol .com •Students Acting Against Sexual Assault Contact: Mayling Gonzales, codirector mayling@mail.utexas.edu CAMPUS RESOURCES •Counseling and Mental Health Center The Counseling and Mental Health Center offers crisis counseling, individ­ ual and group counseling, psychiatric sen/ices and educational information. They are open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m.- 5 p.m. 471-3515 •Women’s Resource Center WRC serves as a library and central ized referral base of resources to devel­ op outreach programs and provide services that promote the success of women and educate all students on the importance of gender issues. Contact: Katie Jahnke, director 2324236 •Voices Against Violence VAV has programs that serve the needs of the diverse UT population with information, education, training, advocacy, counseling and referral serv­ located at the UT ices. They are Counseling Center on the fifth floor of the Student Services Building. To get involved or request a peer education program, contact Jane Bost, 471-3515 •University Health Services UHS offers medical appointments, pregnancy testing, STD screening and treatment and emergency contracep­ tion. 4714955 •Student Judicial Services, Office at the Dean of Students Students can use this service to file a complaint, against another student. This may be done whether or not crim­ inal charges are filed. 475-2841 •Telephone Counseling Service This service offers crisis counseling 24 hours a day, seven days a week. 471-CALL •Domestic Violence Clinic, UT School of Law This clinic offers legal assistance for low-income victims of domestic vio­ lence. 232-1358 AUSTIN RESOURCES •SafePlace This 24-hour service offers hospital advocacy, crisis, individual and group counseling, disability support, educa­ tional resources and community edu­ cation. 267-SAFE www.austiresafeplace.org •SaheH Saheii offers a 24-hour help line and support group for Asian women in abu- . sive relationships. 7038745 www.main.org/sahell •Waterloo Counseling Center This center offers counseling for gay, lesbian or bisexual people. 444-9922 www.watertoocounseiing.org If you or someone you know is being physically or emotionally abused, please seek help from one of these sources. www.coop-bookstore.com A u * t tr\. T X /'& Y O & T’& l 1 Aw ard winners from the Sixth A nnual University o f Texas Men's Athletics Awards Presen, V PROVOST AWARD WINNERS The Provost Award is presented to UT male student-athletes who have achieved a 4.0 grade point average in either of the preceding two semesters (Spring 2001, Fall 2001): James (Culley) Barragan (Coif) Ross Binkley (Swimming) Tim Brown (Track & Jarod Carter (Swimming) Will Clark (Track & Field) Justin Dumais (Diving) Craig Edmondson (Tennis) Tomer Feingold (Swimming) Yair Harari (Basketball) Bradford Hedgecock (Football) Nathan Junius (Track & Field) Ryan Long (Football) Jason Muriby (Track & Field) Brett Robin (Football) Matt Timberiake (Swimming) Matt Ullrickson (Swimming) LAN HEWLETT AWARD WINNERS The Lan Hewlett Award is presented to UT male studeht-athletes who have the highest cumulative grade point average on their respective teams, The individual must be a letter winner and be of junior or senior year status: Matt Rosenberg, Senior (Baseball) Robbie Doane, Junior (Football) Field)James (Culley) Barragan, Senior (Golf) Justin Dumais, Senior (Swimming & Diving) }■ ij Joe Morris, Junior (Tennis) Barrett Havran, senior (Track & Field) :e ! l \ HI 3 ^ 'ill ' § 1 ’ wm At - | Applewhite to join Super Bowl champs Patriots’ roster T he Daily T exan Tuesday April 23, 2002 Anderson to join Steelers, Gordon to Cowboys; others still negotiating By Bob Jones Daily Texan Staff A lth o u g h M ajor A p p le w h ite 's nam e w a s netrer called d u rin g this w e e k e n d 's NFL D raft, the p la y in g career of the fo rm e r Texas q u a rte rb a c k m ay not be o v er afte r all. A c c o rd in g to th e N ew E n g lan d P a tr io ts ' W eb site, A p p le w h ite w ill join th e d efe n d in g S u p er Bowl ch am p io n s w h e n u n d ra fte d fre e-a g en t sig n in g s becom e official. T h o u g h he only s ta rte d on e gam e last se a so n , it tu rn e d o u t to be a career d a y for A p p lew h ite, as he led the L o n g h o rn s to a 49-44 com eback victory o v e r W ashington in the H o lid ay Bowl, th ro w in g for 473 yards a n d fo u r to u c h ­ d o w n s in the co n test. The Baton Rouge, La., n a tiv e com ­ p iled a 22-8 m ark as a s ta rte r d u rin g his te n u re at Texas in a d d itio n to se ttin g o r ty in g 48 school records. T h o u g h knee in ju rie s su ffered in the 2000 C o tto n Bowl and in a gam e a g a in st Texas Tech th e follow ing se a so n m ay have ad v e rse ly affected his d ra ft status, team s su ch as M innesota, A tla n ta a n d D allas w ere all re p o rte d ly in te re s t­ ed in a d d in g th e sig n a l-c a lle r to th e ir respective ro sters. A ccording to A p p le w h ite 's rep re se n ta tiv e, Steve W einer, the q u a rte rb a c k b e liev e d th e P atrio ts w o u ld offer him the best o p p o rtu n ity to m ak e an NFL roster, alth o u g h he d id n 't ex p ect a call from th e team . "M ajor's excited about going [to N ew England], and he thinks he'll have a good chance of com peting there," Weiner said. "The offer [from the Patriots] kind of caught him by surprise." W ith the d ra ft-d a y tra d e of D rew B ledsoe to Buffalo, N ew E ngland now c arrie s th re e o th e r q u a rte rb a c k s o n their roster, in clu d in g in c u m b e n t s ta rte r an d S u p e r Bowl MVP Tom Brady. Q u a rte rb a c k D am on H u a rd rem ain s on th e sq u a d after s ta rtin g five gam es in 1999 w ith the M iam i D o lp h in s, and the P atrio ts selected L o u isia n a S ta te 's R ohan D avey in the fo u rth ro u n d of this y e a r 's d ra ft. For the p ast tw o seaso n s, N ew E ng land h e a d coach Bill B elichik has entered tra in in g cam p w ith fo u r q u a rte rb a ck s on th e roster. In 2000, the P a trio ts k e p t fo u r p lay e rs at the p o sitio n for th e d u ra tio n of th e season, w ith D rew Bledsoe, John Friesz, Brady a n d M ichael Bishop. A d d itio n ally , the D allas C o w b o y s' Web site re p o rte d th at the te a m w ill sign fo rm er Texas d efen siv e tackle M aurice the G o rd o n as an u n d r a f te d L o n g h o rn s w ith fiv e -a n d -a -h a lf sacks last seaso n , a n d w as seco n d on th e team in tack les for a loss w ith 16. free a g e n t. G o rd o n led C e n te r M att A n derson, w h o sta rte d all 13 g am es last year, w as also sign ed as a free a g e n t by th e P ittsb u rg h S teelers, according to th eir Web site. S everal o th e r form er Texas p la y e rs are ex p e c te d to sign w ith p ro team s o ver the n e x t few d ays, in c lu d in g line­ b a c k e r D.D. Lew is, g u a rd A n tw a n K irk -H u g h es, lin eback er lineback er E verick R aw ls, safety A hm ad T yrone Jones, B rooks and lin eb ack er M arcus W ilkins. Coxswains keep rowers in check Andrew Loehman/ Daily Texan Staff Catching up with the best Seattle used in sid e play to even the playoff series with the Spurs with a 98-90 win Monday night in San Antonio. See Page 10 Former Texas quarterback Major Applewhite will be added to the ros­ ter of the New England Patriots when undrafted free-agent sign­ ings are official. Hubele makes his mark a t catcher for Longhorns By Brian Welch Daily Texan Staff W hen asked a b o u t his chances of becom ing o n e o f the best catchers in Texas history, Ryan H ubele adm itted h e had never really thought ab o u t it. But w hether h e k n o w s it or not, the A rizona n a tiv e is gradu­ ally moving into th e u p p e r eche­ lon of former L o n g h o rn greats by posting im pressive offensive num bers, year in a n d year out. th re e For nearly seasons, H ubele has played in the shad­ ow s of past catchers like Tommy H arm on and Jeff H earro n . cam paign But now, as the e n d of his jun­ io r ap p roaches, H u bele has m a d e a case for becom ing arguably o n e of great­ est catchers in school history. "The more th a t I th in k about it, I realize that it's a trem endous hon or to be m en tio n ed in the sam e sentence w ith those play­ ers," said H ubele, w h o has hit .317 w ith 14 hom e ru n s and 105 RBI for his career. "If y o u look at all of the great catchers, the one thing that th ey 'v e all done is w in. A nd there's o n e thing that I'd like to leave h e re w ith — a national cham pionship." The idea of w in n in g a national title is nothing n e w to Hubele, w ho as a kid w a tc h e d every College World Series gam e on television. So w hen Texas g o t its chance to go to O m aha in 2000, it w as an un believable for H ubele to say the least. e x p e rie n c e "Every kid g ro w s u p dream ­ ing of playing in th e College World Series," H u b e le said. "To be able to get there m y freshm an year, it gave me so m u c h to look forw ard to for th e rest of my career. It's so m e th in g I'll never forget." On a team w here veterans saw most of the action, it w as the fresh­ m an Hubele w ho played a key role in the Horns' 2000 postseason run. P lay in g in front of family and friends a t th e r e g i o n a l s in Tempe, Ariz., H u b e le helped Texas take over b a c k -to -b a c k A rizona S tate to advance to the super reg io n als. victories In th e e n d , Hubele was named the r e g io n a l's most valuable player, b u t th e aw ard w asn't the only th in g th e catcher took away. A fter th e tournam ent, it was a great feelin g to know that I helped m y team come back and win th e regional," Hubele said. "That re a lly helped my confi­ dence and show ed that I could play at th a t level." At th e e n d of that season, H ubele b e c a m e only the 11th player in school history to earn freshm an A ll-Am erican honors. Since th e n , Hubele has grown to b e co m e o n e of Texas' stars on the field. As a catcher, Hubele likens him self to a quarterback, since so m any d e c isio n s go through him. Still, H u b e le says his prim ary role is a s a leader, s o m e o n e w ho can m o tiv a te other players. A n d n o b o d y has seen this th a n Texas head coach m ore A ugie G a rrid o . "H e c o m e s to the ballpark every d a y to fulfill his commit­ m ent to b e in g the best he can," G a rrid o leads b y sa id . "He exam ple — t^ e better he does, the m o re p o sitiv e effect it has on the o th e rs." H u b e le , w ho is hitting .293 with a te a m -b e st 39 R&1 heading into T u e sd a y 's matchup against S o u th w est Texas State, attributes m uch o f h is college success to H a rm o n , w ho is currently a Texas a s s is ta n t coach. H e to ld m e pretty much w hat to expect," H ubele said. "H e gave m e sm all pointers on how to call a g a m e and ways to give your te a m a better chance to win — little th in g s that build up to make y o u a good c a t c h e r . Texas junior catcher Ryan Hubele has 39 RBIs heading into the Longhorns’ matchup with Southwest Texas State on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Disch-Falk Field. David Flnk/Daily Texan Staff Draft finally exciting to watch, partly because of Cowboys Darren W. Dummit Daily Texan Columnist With teams around the league frantically scouring their 3,000-man draft boards for two days and seven rounds, the NFL Draft usually serves as a reminder to the casual fan of how relatively little they know about football. But something different happened this year. Somewhere between the Texans taking Fresno State's David Carr with the first pick and UNLV's Ahm ad Miller with the 261st pick, football fans were treated to the first exciting draft in recent memory. 'And as usual, Jerry Jones played a major role. Not even ESPN's Chris Berman, Chris Mortensen or Jimmy Johnson knew what w as going on w hen the 15-minute clock ran out on the Dallas Cowboys' first-round selection. Live cameras in the Cowboys' "War Room" show ed a somewhat flustered Jerry Jones with a dazed look on his face and a phone glued to his ear. Wild anxiety brought about unwelcomed beads of sweat all over his newly renovated face. But Jones got the last laugh this time. The Cowboys were still able to get Oklahoma safety Roy Williams after trading dow n two spots with Kansas City, and later they stole Pittsburgh w ide receiver Antonio Bryant by trading up in the second round. The Cowboys were one of a handful of teams to come out big winners on Draft Day, but as is always the case, others ignorantly stumbled through the weekend with little to show for it. Atlanta Falcons: Losers Despite being one of the greatest NFL coaches of the past two decades, Dan Reeves may have lost his keen decision-making ability. After signing speedy free-agent running back Warrick D unn in the off-season to com­ pete w ith incumbent Jamal Anderson, the last thing Reeves and the Falcons needed was another running back to com plement Michael Vick. So with the 18th overall pick, the Falcons chose Michigan State running Associated Press Oklahoma safety Roy Williams meets with Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones on Saturday. Williams was the Cowboys’ first-round pick at the No. 8 spot- See DRAFT, Page 10 See ROWING, Page 10 Lee Ruckman/Daily Texan Staff Kendall Ewan, far left, Mary-Elizabeth O’Malley and Shasta Nolte are all coxswains for the Texas rowing team. Communication crucial job for three members of Texas rowing team By Casey Zertuche Daily Texan Staff Each Texas varsity eight boat is comprised of four port-side and four starboard-side rowers, while the varsity four boat is comprised of two rowers on each side. In the front of the boat, a Small but loud coxswain sits, helping to steer the boat. Sophomore Kendall Ewan, junior Shasta Nolte and junior Mary-Elizabeth O'Malley are the coxswains for the Longhorns. Their heights are 4-feet 10-inches, 5 feet and 5-feet 1-inch, respectively. In order to be a rower, each would need to be about a foot taller. "We want tall young women between 5-feet 9-inch- es and 6-feet 2-inches," Texas head coach Carie Graves said. "We have women who are shorter, but that would be a good height." These coxswains weigh 98 pounds, 115 pounds and 113 pounds, respectively. The ideal weight for a rower is anywhere between 150 and 195 pounds, Graves said, while the ideal weight for a coxswain is 40 pounds less than the ideal weight of a rower. "For a coxswain, the minimum weight is 110 pounds," Graves said. "The coxswain is basically a small person with a big voice." None of the coxswains mind being shorter than the rowers in their boat. However, Nolte had wanted to be a rower when she tried out for the team. "I was too short to row," said Nolte, the coxswain for the varsity four boat. "They m ade me sit in the front [of the boat] and scream." The coxswain is in charge of keeping the boat in sync. "If we sense something wrong, we have to com­ municate to the rowers," Nolte said. "We can't physi­ cally do anything. They are depending on me to make the call to change stuff. " Nolte describes a coxswain as being like a team captain in hockey. But coxswains are also similar to a coach. "We are correcting them on technique," Nolte said. "When you are in the water, coach isn't there, so you take over that." In the varsity four boat, Nolte m ust keep an eye on four rowers rather than eight. "It's more personal," Nolte said. "You can see all of Page 10 Tuesday, April 23, 2002 T he D a il y T e x a n 2002 NBA PLAYOFFS FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND SEMIFINALS FINALS Seattle evens series with Spurs (1) New Jersey Series tied. 1-1 (8) Indiana (4) Charlotte Charlotte leads. 1-0 (5) Orlando (3) Boston, Boston leads. 1-0 (61 Philadelphia (2) Detroit Detroit leads, 1-0 (7) Toronto (11 Sacramento Sacramento leads, 1-0 (8) Utah (4) Dallas Dallas leads, 1-0 (5) Minnesota (3) Los Angeles Los Angeles leads, 1-0 (6) Portland (2) San Antonio Series tied. 1-1 (7) Seattle 2002 NBA CHAMPIONS Eastern Conference Champions Western Conference Champions SuperSonics take advantage of Robinson’s absence in win By The Associated Press SAN A N TO N IO — The San A ntonio Spurs sure could have u sed D avid Robinson. The Seattle SuperSonics used strong inside play from Vin Baker and R ashard Lewis to beat San Antonio 98-90 M onday night and even their best-of-five series at one game apiece. Gary Payton led Seattle w ith 21 points, and Lewis had 19. Baker h ad 15 points a n d 10 rebounds before fouling out late in the fourth quarter, and D esm ond Mason scored 15. Payton also g rabbed 11 rebounds. Tim D uncan led all scorers w ith 32 p oin ts to go along w ith 12 reboun d s. Steve Smith had 16, while Tony Parker had 13 an d Bruce Bowen 11 for San Antonio. The Spurs w e n t the last 7:13 w ith o u t a field goal. * Robinson d id n 't play because of a lower-back injury sustained in a late-season gam e again st Detroit. He m issed the last three gam es of the regular season, but the 7-foot 1-inch center started G ame 1 against Seattle. He left in the first q u arter w hen his back tight­ ened up, b u t San A ntonio won easily anyway. It was a different story M onday night. Baker scored seven points in the third quarter, and Jerome Jam es m ad e a p a ir of key baskets late as Seattle turned a tw o -p o in t deficit into a tw o-point lead going into the final 12 m inutes. Bowen sta rte d the fourth w ith his third three-pointer of the gam e to p u t the Spurs up by one, but the Sonics then w ent on a 10-2 ru n to go ahead 83-76 w ith about eight m in u tes rem aining. San A n to nio got its chance w hen Jam es fouled out w ith 3:48 left an d Baker picked up his sixth a m inute later w ith the Sonics up, 91-85. Both team s sp e n t m ost of their tim e on the free-throw line, w ith the o nly basket coming on a breakaw ay dunk by M ason. The first half was defined by offensive streaks by both team s and a determ ined effort by the officials to keep a grip on the gam e w hen play g ot rough. Four technical fouls w ere called in the half, tw o on each side. With the Sonics ahead 16-15 m id w ay throu gh the first quarter, San A ntonio w ent on an 8-0 ru n m ade up of D uncan's d u n k an d six foul shots. After a pair of free throw s by Lewis, D uncan con- Associated Press Seattle's Vin Baker goes up for a rebound as San Antonio’s Tim Duncan defends him. The SuperSonics won Game 2 of their series with the Spurs 98-90 Monday night. nected on an 8-footer to start an 11-4 Spurs b u rst h igh ­ lighted by a p air of three-poin ters by Bow en in the final 1:13 of the period. Seattle erased the 14-point deficit by the m id d le of the second quarter. Payton started a 19-4 Sonics run w ith a driving finger roll and p u t his team u p 41-40 by w orking inside for a layup at 5:56. D uring that stretch, San A ntonio m anaged only one basket in eight attem p ts and shot 6-for-15 from the floor in the period. Terry Porter broke a 44-all tie w ith the first of his two three-pointers of the half, helping San A ntonio b u ild a 6 -p o in t m argin. B aker and P ayton c o n n ec te d on jum pers in the last m in u te to d o se the gap to 54-52 at the break. Carolina claims two huge picks; Seattle biggest loser DRAFT, from 9 back T.J. Duckett, a bruising back reminiscent of Jerome Bettis. When the Falcons finally decided to im prove their woeful defense, they selected Tennessee's Will Overstreet, a player too little for an NFL defensive lineman and too slow for an NFL line­ backer. Reeves better hope Vick can dominate the NFL like he domi­ nated the NCAA, or retirement may be his first wise decision in quite some time. Carolina: Winners Carolina may have stolen the two best players in the draft. Choosing second overall, the Panthers selected North Carolina defensive end Julius Peppers. While Peppers' talent is still a bit unpolished, m any are saying he could follow in the footsteps of another former Tar Heel defensive great — Lawrence Taylor. strength and agility with UCLA running back DeShaun Foster in the second round. Before being sidelined for NCAA violations, Foster was the most dom inating back in college football. If he can learn to hold on to the ball and stay off the injured list, Foster has the potential to become the best running back in the NFL within five vears. And just in case 53-year-old Chris Weinke doesn't w ork out at quarterback, the Panthers selected Stanford's Randy Fasani in the fifth round. New England: Losers The Patriots' actual draft w asn't that bad, as they stole Colorado tight end Daniel Graham with the 21st overall pick. N ew England's trade during the draft, however, could come back to bite the Super Bowl champs. Less than a year after m aking Drew Bledsoe the highest paid quarterback in NFL history, the Pats dealt their former franchise player to division rival Buffalo. Tom Brady m ay well have been the wiser long-term choice for New England, b u t trading Bledsoe to a division opponent sent the message that the Pats think Bledsoe is already w ashed up. Look for Bledsoe to take New England to the cleaners not once, but twice next season. The Chargers edged out the Raiders for the best draft in the pass-happy AFC West. With the fifth overall pick, the Chargers brought Texas' Qudntin Jam m er dow n to San Diego w here he can team up with one of the greatest middle linebackers in recent memory, Junior Seau. Joining Jammer and Seau will be Kansas State linebacker Ben Leber, w ho was taken in the third round. As if that w eren't enough, San Diego nabbed Nebraska guard Toniu Fonoti in the second round. Fonoti was listed as a first- rounder by many teams, but his lack of pass protection experi­ ence m ade him slip dow n to the second round, w here the Chargers were more than happy to catch him. Seattle: Losers Different conference, same old story. With a move to the NFC this season for the traditional doorm at of the AFC West, the Seahawks w anted to send a message in this y ea r's draft. Unfortunately, the only message received by the league w as that the Seahawks are going to remain a doormat. Of Seattle's 10 picks, all were bad. Seattle head coach Mike Holm gran traded dow n eight spots in the first round because he w as sure Colorado's G raham would still be available. As it turned out, G raham was gone tw o hours before the Seahawks were up, and they had to settle for Washington tight end Jerramy Stevens. Again settling for a player that could have lasted a lot longer, the Seahawks chose Oregon running back Maurice M orris in the second round. While Morris m ay turn out to be an effective back in the NFL, Seattle is already stocked at that position w ith Ricky Watters and Shaun Alexander. On the offensive side of the ball, the Panthers added speed, SSfl DÍG§£0!¡ WintlCfS Coxswains’ responsibilities include being eyes and ears of boat ROWING, from 9 the rowers, and there is a lot more togetherness. To me, it's more im portant to see all of them." Being a coxswain of a varsity eight boat isn't any different than being a voice in the varsity four boat. "We are the eyes and ears of the girls in the race," said O'Malley, the coxswain for the first var­ sity eight. "We can tell if we are winning or losing and by how much. We are aware of the external. The coxswain m ay be small, but she has a lot of responsibility. She m ust m ake sure the team is stretched, the boat is ready and that the team is in the water on time — if not, they will be penalized. O'Malley said the job can be stressful, but she likes to be in charge. "I like to be in control," O'Malley said. "I don't like to be told what to do." Though O'Malley is small, she doesn't think of herself as little. everyone else." "I don't notice," O'Malley said. "I feel as big as When O'Malley started rowing five years ago, she didn't know anything about being a coxswain. But once she took the position, she loved it. "It's fun and exciting," O'Malley said. "I think a lot of people think we are dead weight, but w e are helping our crew." would be important to the team. She said that her size has worked in her favor and the position has given her some perspective. "If I can deal with girls who are 6-foot, I think I can handle anything from there," said Ewan, the coxswain for the second varsity eight. The fact that Ewan is about a foot shorter than the rowers doesn't bother her, and neither does her weight. Since she weighs 98 pounds, she has to carry a seven-and-a-half-pound sandbag in the boat. "I definitely think of myself as small, but small in a good way," Ewan said. "When you are in the boat, you never notice it because you are at eye level with the girls." Unlike O'Malley, Ewan knew that her size Since the coxswain is the eyes and ears of a boat, Ewan has to have tunnel vision. "rrhey expected a lot out of me right from the beginning," she said. "As long as I gave my best every day and they gave me their best every day, we built respect." With respect between coxswain and rower, trust is gained. And then, it's important to keep the lines of communication open. "My job is to tell them what they are doing wrong," Ewan said. "If they don't correct it, I need to keep telling them. And if they do, I need to tell them that they fixed it." For the next two weeks, the Longhorns will prepare for the Big 12 Invitational, which will be held on Lake Austin May 4. kvrtv.com greeted with a smile. Call and place a classified ad today for as little as s8.85. It works! W hether you are buying, selling or trading, T h e D aily T e x a n Classifieds will help you get the job done, and w e’ll throw in the smile for free! Call 471-5244 Today! KVR-TV Scoreboard NBA New Jersey 95, Indiana 79 (Series tied, 1-1) Seattle 98, San Antonio 90 (Series tied, 1*1) NHL Ottowa 3, Philadelphia 0 (Ottowa leads series, 2-1) Los Angeles 3, Colorado 1 (Colorado ieads series, 2-1) San Jose 4, Phoenix 1 (San Jose leads series, 2-1) MLB Cleveland 4, Chi. White Sox 2 Florida 8, Atlanta 3 Kansas City 6, Detroit 0 Seattle 16, Anaheim 5 airWAVES | t o iff? fWfíBbm NHL Boston at Montreal 6 p.m., ESPN2 St Louis at Chicago...........7 p.m., ESPN Colorado at Los Angeles 9 p.m., ESPN2 NBA Orlando at Charlotte...............7 p.m., TBS Utah at Sacramento......... 9:30 p.m., TBS BBIEFS NJ downs Pacers, 95-79 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The N ew Jersey Nets shook off th e playoff jitters w ith two things e v e n m ore v aluable in the postseaso n than a half-court offense — Ja so n Kidd an d a great defense. K idd h a d 20 points, 10 re b o u n d s and nin e assists, and the N ets s h u t d o w n a n d Jerm ain e O 'N eal In d ian a's inside game in b e a tin g the Pacers 95-79 Monday n ig h t to even th eir best-of-five first-ro und series at a gam e apiece. The sp read -o u t series shifts to Ind ian a's Conseco Fieldhouse for Gam e 3 o n Friday and Gam e 4 a w eek from Tuesday. Blame it on television, at le a st th a t's w h a t NBA co m m issio n er D avid S tem d id before the gam e. If a fifth gam e is necessary, it w ould be p layed on May 2. Facing a n alm ost m ust-win s itu a ­ tion a fte r losing the h o m e -c o u rt lo s s a d v a n ta g e w ith an 89-83 Saturday, the Nets had a lo t o f heroes. K eith Van H orn, who h a d l o p o in ts in G am e 1, scored 1 7 . K enyon M artin added 19 d e s p ite playing w ith a sore right w rist, a n d b ack u p ce n te r Aaron W illia m s added 15, including six in a g a m e - breaking ru n early in the fo u rth quarter. It w as N ew Jersey's first p la y o ff w in since beating the K nicks fo overtim e on M ay 4, 1994. The N e ts have p lay ed only five p o stse a so n gam es since then. The big key was the Nets' defense, w hich fru strated O'Neal, lim itin g him to 12 points on 3-of-ll shooting . He h ad 30 points in Game 1. Compiled from wire reports DROP US A LINE Have feedback, opinions or suggestions for DT sports? By all means, tell us about it. We encourage letters from our readers. Here's how we can be reached: ■ E-mail: sports@dailytexanonline.com ■ Voice: 512-232-2210 ■ Fax: 512-471-2952 ■ Postal: PO Box D, Austin TX 78705 Md place fir (fee spriagflnalsl sapickupacepy on May tstl x ír i T he D a ily T e x a n Tuesday, April 23, 2002 Page 11 eview D iv isio n of R ecreational Sports • C elebrating a U nivers a« T radition for 85 gears T k e 8 5 t k A n n iv e r s a r y of R e c S p o r ts Facility Hours - May Break 2002 (May 14 - May 3) The Division of Recreational Sports, which was established in 1916, is celebrating its 85th anniversary this year. Be sure to visit the RecSports Web site at www.rs.utexas.edu for the new “History of RecSports” section. RecSports has a rich and colorful history, created by visionary leaders. Make a point to learn about RecSports this year! Celebrating a University Tradition • Education through Recreation New course • New lunch choice • Better check-in process K RecSports Poker Walk! Celebrating National Employee Health and Fitness Day Clark Field Basketball Courts Turf/Track Gregory Gym GRE Gym Store GRE Pool Sports Cafe RSC Weekdays llam-7pm llam-7pm 6am-8pm noon-6pm 7am-9am (M,W,F) noon-2pm 5pm-7pm Closed llam-7pm Saturday llam-7pm Sunday llam-7pm llam-7pm llam-7pm 8am-8pm noon-6pm l:30-4:30pm 10am-8pm noon-6pm l:30-4:30pm Closed llam-7pm Closed llam-7pm Whitaker Fields V Whitaker Tennis llam-7pm llam-7pm For a complete list of RecSports facilities, please dick on www.rs.utexas.edu, or call the RecSports Facility Hotline at 471-4373 (Hours vary during breaks and holidays). 3pm-7pm llam-7pm llam-7pm llam-7pm J Wednesday, May 8 Check-in ll:30am -12:30pm Drawings begin at 12:30pm Play your best hand Valuable prizes for top 3 hands • Door prizes for everyone • Drawings for team prizes Steps to doing the Poker Walk 1. Walk the 1-mile course (begins & ends at GRE) 2. Pick up a card at designated stations 3. Turn in your cards to see what you've won Ease your troubles with a professional massage from RecSports. Test anxiety Workout injury Muscular aches & pains Preparing fo r a sports event Recovering from a sports event Tension headache Neck and shoulder tension $8 - 10-minute C hair M assage $24 - 30-minute Table M assage Where to purchase: • G RE 2.204 • G RE Gym Store • Online at www.rs.utexas.edu • B y fa x or mail (dow nload fo rm online) For currently enrolled U T students a n d RecSports mem bers. Register by May 2 and receive a FREE bonus card! The Gregory Gym Pool will be open this summer! As information about the construction of the Aquatics Complex becomes available, additional information will be announced. Summer Pool Hours (June 5-August 16) Tentative Weekdays 7am-9am noon - 2pm 5pm~7pm Saturday/Sunday noon-4:30pm www.rs.utexas.edu Register FREE • Online at www.rs.utexas.edu/pokerwalk • At GRE 2.204, M-F 8am-5pm, W until 6pm • Fax form to 471-4994 or use campus mail c/o Fitness/Wellness Program, RecSports (D7500) • Show up at the starting line on GRE Plaza on May 8 www.rs.utexas.edu/pokerwalk SB C h í Cap with Texas Logo All Racguetball Gloves \v Texas" TankjTop | | f | | I ORE . RSC $10.99 $ 8.99 $ 7.59 ' ic ó n ? il 30. Él! save $1 save $1 ^ 4 7 1 -3 1 3 4 . ■ ■r-' Students - Hang on to a good thing! Renew Your locker for Summer! When: Now through May 14 Where: GUI Gym Store Call 471-3134 for hours Cost $20 (Cash, check. Visa, MasterCard) ■ Batter Up! Softball playoffs start Friday, April 26. Check the brackets outside GRE 2.200. Rosters are due in GRE 2.204 by 5pm on this day. IM Champs Congratulations, Intramural Champions 2001-2002! You’re the best of the best! RecSports looks forward to displaying your picture on the Wall of Fame. Come by GRE 2.204 if we missed capturing you on film! Summer Sports Summer Session I will be jamming with IM sports. Check out what’s on tap: Softball, basketball, volleyball, soccer, racquetball, tennis and golf. More details to come on this page and in the flyer racks at RecSports facilities. In tram u rals................ 471-3116 Sport C lu b s ................ 471-3116 Outdoor Adventures... 471-3116 Fitness/W ellness......... 471-3116 Open Recreation......... 471-6370 M em berships.............. 471-6370 Facility H o tlin e ............471-4373 Gym S to re s ................ 471-3134 Make the Call “ New Fitness/Wellness class schedules are now available! Fitness/Wellness classes will change during Exam Week (May 6-17) and May Break (May 18-June 4). Pick up a new schedule in the flyer racks at GRE or the RSC, or visit the RecSports Web site. , . CM O-f- www.rs.utexas.edu 471-3116 P ag e 1 2 Tuesday, April 2 3 , 2 0 0 2 T he Daily T exan T he D aily T exan Tuesday, April 2 3 , 2 0 0 2 Page 1 3 # WtMR . \ ¿¿p fa vi rn.m^ & l £ ¿ H - : I - : 1 mmmá$ «, wmsgm V : ■ V„-rf. / v■ “‘'FV’r ’‘ £v r-. / ' , 'f A'j *'r>. • ÍV-V m m • ■ •V • V -■ifi- fife O? '$$$$ * 1 * L, : i’ :: ■ .' ; '3 S B S I P$¿&: § - ■ '-. . •' ,:. I ■: -,v • ¿ . . 1 - '' - - . * ^ ' * • •/ •• . V O T ^ ' . - : 1 M S Í l » l Kpí’r-'r *J &”* S p v-4, SÉSi íf S f l l« 2Í f | nyKTBjiiJ 4,; V. ; 4 ^ . ■ V , u : ... - l r. f .- -‘- /' , ,W £f *,vfe 1 Jp í í Mother of slain girls testifies By The Associated Press DALLAS — A m other recounted for jurors Monday how she listened helplessly on the telephone as her ex-husband gunned down their two young daughters in his apartment. Mary Jean Pearle said she heard her daugh­ ter, 9-year-old Faith Battaglia, say "No, Daddy; please, no, don't do it," the night she and her sister, 6-year-old Liberty Battaglia, were fatally shot in the back M ay 2. John Battaglia, a 46-year-old accountant, pleaded innocent earlier in the day to two counts of capital murder. He faces the death penalty or life in prison if convicted. "I knew it w as so bad because she had never said no to her d ad d y in her whole life," testi­ fied Pearle, 39. The night of M ay 2, police said Battaglia called his former mother-in-law and asked her to have Pearle call him. Pearle testified that when she called Battaglia, he had Faith ask her, "Mommy, why do you want Daddy to have to go to jail?" After hearing her daughter plead with him, Pearle said she heard five gunshots and Battaglia yelling profanities. Pearle called police, who broke into Battaglia's apartment and found the girls' bod­ ies, along with handguns, shotguns and rifles. Battaglia was arrested hours later in the Deep Ellum entertainment district blocks from his home after getting a tattoo on his left arm of two flowers representing his daughters. A loaded pistol was recovered from his vehicle. At the time of the shootings, authorities were preparing to ask a judge to revoke Battaglia's two-year probation for allegedly violating terms barring him from contacting Pearle. The request was filed the day after the slay­ ings. During opening statements, prosecutors showed jurors crime scene photographs of each girl lying facedown in a pool of blood in Battaglia's loft. Battaglia, dressed in a black suit, sat emo­ tionless most of the day, but mouthed the words "I'm sorry" as Pearle took the stand. She avoided eye contact with Battaglia during her testimony. The trial began Monday afternoon follow­ ing a morning of legal wrangling that ended with Judge Janice L. Warder rejecting a defense motion to suppress photographs and other crime scene evidence attorneys said was ille­ gally collected without a search warrant. Some legal analysts said even the best defense for Battaglia, who has been convicted of assaulting two ex-wives, might not be strong enough to free him or save his life. "The hope of any tiling short of the death sentence is just not realistic," said Barry Sorrels, a 20-year criminal defense attorney not involved in the case. "This case is simply about someone who became so angry that they decided to use their children to get even with their spouse. And it's a story that's told too often in this country." Rylander says she kept campaign vow By The Associated Press •HOUSTON — state Comptroller Carole Keeton Rylander on Monday disputed a news­ paper report that she broke a campaign pledge by taking money from people and companies contesting taxes collected by her office, saying she always has limited the promise to cases per­ sonally before her. Rylander called a n ew s conference hours after the publication M o n d a y of the Houston Chronicle story that said R ylan der has taken at least $567,500 from p olitical action committees or executives of co m p an ies disputing tax cases or firms representing taxpayers. "I do not accept contributions from taxpayers with protested cases that come to me personal­ ly," Rylander said. "Contributions made under that circumstance are returned. In fact, I have returned checks to supporters upon learning my office is auditing them." During the 1998 campaign, the Republican vowed she would not take money from people with pending tax matters. "When you've got these huge tax matters, I would not," she said at the time. She said Monday that she always meant cases directly before her, or cases of which she was aware of the involved donors. She also noted that there are 2,200 tax cases or audits before her staff at any given time, making it unreasonable for her to refuse campaign money from everyone involved. She also reminded reporters that state law does not pre­ clude her from taking money from entities with cases before her and that she has chosen to do it voluntarily. Rylandei; according to the Chronicle review, has taken more than $223,000 in donations from five firms that represent hundreds of taxpayers in disputed tax cases. Ryan & Co. of Dallas, whose name partner G. Brint Ryan donated $75,000 to Rylander, obtained 176 tax refunds worth $58.1 million for its clients from Rylander's agency, according to the newspaper's story. Tax refund information on the four other firms is unavailable, the comptroller said. Additionally, the Chronicle reported that Rylander has taken at least $244,500 from politi­ cal action committees or executives of compa­ nies with disputed tax cases pending in her office. Marty Akins, the Democrat who will face Rylander in November, called for a heartfelt apology from Rylander. "Carole Keeton Rylander should be ashamed of herself for breaking her promise to not use her office for political gain," said Akins, who played football for the University in the 1970s. Contributions and the comptroller's actions on tax cases have no bearing on one another, Rylander said. "My bottom line is always whaf s in the best interest of Texans," she said. "If you're a sup­ porter of mine or a contributor of mine and think you're going to get some sort of advan­ tage, save your money." Rylander said she has collected $88.3 billion in taxes during the past three years and earned $3.5 billion from investments of state money. Read ab o u t all oí your lav o rite things in The Daily Texan Expect news, viewpoints and entertainm ent in our daily sections 4 j A r * J M * / v AROUND CAMPUS is a free-of-charge public service column devoted to j a n n o u n c e m e n t s for UT student organizations and departments. To include an [ 3 en,ry’ send y°ur information to aroundcampus@dailytexanonline.com by 4 p.m. your requested publication date. Be advised that The i ¡ 3 Daily Texan reserves the right to edit all materials submitted for publication.There ,hree days in advance V H T| / may be more listings on our Web site @ www.dailytexanonline.com. Association for Women in Communi­ cations last spring meeting, April 23, 7 p.m., Texas Union Showroom. Officer elections; last chance for AWC Banquet tickets, $10. UT Association for Computing Machinery Free Foreign Film Festival, April 24, 7 p.m., in Taylor 2.106. Spanish thiriller Abre Los Ojos and Chinatown, with Jack Nicholson. 471-9522 or sbak- erc@cs.utexas.edu Dr. Michael Thomas of Southern Methodist University lecture: "Relocating Domitian’s Horse of Glory: The Flavian Forum Romanum and the Equus Domitiani," April 24, 8 p.m., DFA 2.204. susan_gelb@mail.utexas.edu Pag© 14 Tuesday, April 23, 2002 T h e D a il y T e x a n MOTHER EARTH Jose Salazar, a dancer and member of the Coatlicue group, per­ forms In the Ceremonial Blessing of Corn Seeds and People. The event was spon­ sored by PODER, which held its 11th anniversary celebration in Martin Park. Adrienne Barnett/ Daily Texan Staff In honor of Earth Day, Helga Garza and Xochit Salazar, members of the Coatlicue group, kneel to worship the four corners of the Earth and pray for Mother Earth. Adrienne Barnett/Daily Texan Staff A discussion o f the love-war duality in as reflected in the Herald s Speech. Clever title inspired by an unexpected reference on Questia.com. Read and researched this online at Questia’s 70,000-title library. Not only that, but I spent half the time on this paper. G o t a paper due? Do it with Questia and you have instant access to helpful, time-saving tools and content not found anywhere else on the Internet. 24/7. • 9 out of 10 subscribers say Questia saved them time. with Questia. • 8 out of 10 say they got a better grade Isn’t it time to be smarter, faster, and done? Don't procrastinate. Act now and save some bucks. Go to Questla.com/utaustin q u e s t © a www.questia.com Me. Actual author of this paper. A quite impressive bibliography done automatically by Questia. Footnotes that I didn’t form at Questia did. Costello gets ‘Cruel’ on latest album Museum Review ‘22’ is one to watch SOUND BITES, from 16 lifeless, they only serve as a cure for insomnia. Hopefully, Tweet will be ready to re-introduce herself to the world her second time around. they are stories told only the way a songw riter like C ostello can tell them. Who knows if he just has a canon of new songs ready to go after such a long hiatus from solo song- making? Hopefully, he w on't keep us w aiting before getting Cruel again. - David A. Herron -Matt Den tier WHEN I W AS CRUEL ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ artist Elvis Costello label Island Records HANDCREAM FOR A ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ GENERATION artist Comershop label V2 Records Broken, bitter, vibrant and edgy, Elvis Costello jum ps off the bench and back into the game he helped create. For his first real solo record in close to 10 years, the father of New Wave folk has mastered a spectacu­ lar new album called When I Was Cruel. With no subtle bones in his body, Costello begins the album with "45," a num ber that reflects the age of its writer. But he doesn't sound 45, 47 or however old he should be in 2002. At the mic, at the guitar and alone in the writing room, Costello delivers tunes like a fresh face. When a newer songwriter like Ryan Adams comes bursting onto the scene, acco­ lades follow with an amazing sense of discovery. It's that same discovery — or in this case, re-discovery — that punctuates every song on When I Was Cruel. "Tear Off Your Own H ead" is the kind of jam that Costello and his old band, The Attractions, could spin in a heartbeat. When 1 Was Cruel spins and moves and rocks. But it also swoons, with delicate and crushed sleepers like the title track, accompa­ nied by a Latin-tinged vocal loop. "T art" breaks the Elvis Costello mold as a stellar song in which the the title melody takes the forefront. incid ental and seem s The album is defiant w ithout being naive, yet m ature w ithout being stodgy. It's adventurous, bold and — even better — smart. There are themes of family ("Daddy Can I Turn T h is?") and show -business evils ("Spooky G irlfrien d "), and into Every bu dd in g m u sic critic hopes to coin a phrase that defines a genre. So, w ithout further ado, C o rn ersh o p and I g ive you: "D iasp o ra R ock." On the band's fourth album , Tjin d er Singh and co m p an y have g o tten the show er, lathered up and applied Handcreatn fo r a G eneration to the dirty beats and m u lti-eth nic iden­ tity of their unique sonic recipe. C orn ersh o p not only negotiates the in tricacies of m usical genre- ben d ing with style, but they also prove it's possible to m ake a m usi­ cal statem ent that is reflective of the cu lturally and p o litically frac­ tured lives m any p eop le today in flu en ced by lead . As eq u ally Jam es Brown and Indian singer Asha Bhosle as they are by colonial­ ism and globalization, C ornershop m anages to blend d iverse musical sounds with D iaspora politics. is Listening to Handcreatn is a little like reading the ingredients in a tube of high-priced skin treatm ent by K ie h l's or A veda. T he first in g re d ien t the g ro ov e, e v i­ d enced on the op ener, "H eav y S o u p ," and "S lip the D rum m er O n e." W hile booty-sh akin g acts as fo u n d atio n of H andcreatn, the tracks like "M u sic Plus 1" and "T h e London R adar" add touches of electrónica and disco to the g rit­ ty R&B that pow ers the record. the urban C orn ersh o p d istills groove with the poppy southern rock of "L esso n s Learned From the R ocky I to R ocky III" and Criterion broadens their scope with two Russian classics: Ballad o f a Soldier’and The Cranes Are Flying' By Stephen Saito Daily Texan S ta ff For m ost stu d en ts, esp ecially because of finals, now isn't the tim e to becom e acquainted with the classic film s o f Russian cine­ ma. And for som e, it w ill never be the right tim e. But w ith the release of M ikhail K alatozov's The Cranes are Flying and G rigori C hukhrai's Ballad o f a Soldier (both post-W orld War II rum inations on the future and the d estruction of war), the C riterion C ollection has presented the o p p o rtu n ity to catch these film s in their best possible condi­ tion on DVD. W hile such h ard -to -find film s are the best feature of C riterion's D V D s, th ey h ave released The Cranes are Flying and Ballad o f a Soldier as essen tially bare-bones editions, though each film is still w orth a rental. Cranes (w hich won the 1958 Palm e d 'O r at Cannes), in a virtually flaw less digital trans­ fer, is a m oving account of a pair of lovers separated by the outbreak of war. Sim ilarly, Ballad o f a Soldier is equally stunning in its new dig­ ital presentation; but as a film, it is far more introspective than Cranes. Ballad follow s the journey of a sol­ dier com ing to grips w ith w hat's m eaningful in his life once the war is over. As the lone extra feature of the p air of D V D s, B allad's disc Read about all of your favorite things in The Dailj Texan Expect news, viewpoints and entertainment in our daily spring sections: • World & Nation • State & Local • Sports • Entertainm ent • Focus • Comics • Opinion • University in terv iew w ith includes an interesting but all-too- b rief au d io the film 's director and stars shortly after the film 's initial screening in the United States. Like the interview , these new R ussian releases from C riterion are certainly intriguing, but the experience is fleeting for two films great enough to deserve more. The in clu d ed featu rin g liner notes, excerpts from noted film scholars, do offer some perspective on the film s. Ballad o f a Soldier and The Cranes are Flying are great film s to be sure, but each DVD is worth m erely a look, as opposed to their $30 asking price. N O K I A R IN G T O N ES Voicestreom , AT&T & Cingulor W ireless Hundreds of SMS graphic messages REGAL CINEMAS D IG = D ig it a l S o u n d B a r g a i n S h o w s in ( ) Monday-Discount Shows All Day excluding ✓ Films ♦ N o P a s s e s * N o P a s s e s or S u p e r S a v e rs REGAL METROPOLITAN 14 I-35 S. AT ST A SSN EY LANE 416-5700x3811 ALL STADIUM SEATING! NOW HIRING ASST. MGRS NOW HIRING - APPLY AT THEATRE THE SCORPION KING (PG-13) d i g ✓ 12:15 12402:05 2 35 3:05 4:30 5:00 5:30) 7:00 7:30 8 00 9:30100010:30 MURDER BY NUMBERS (R)- ID REQUIRED d i g */ (12:301:00 4:15 4 45) 7:15 7 45 10:151045 (12:102:405:25) 8:1010:40 HIGH CRIM ES (PG-13) d ig BIG TROUBLE (PG-13) d ig (1:053:155:40) 8:15 10:20 VAN WILDER(R) - ID REQUIRED d ig 112:10 3.20 5 45) 8:1010:35 PANIC ROOM (R)-ID REQUIRED D id 12 00 12 50 2 15 4:20 4:50 5:20) 7 05 7:35 8.05 9 40 10:1010:40 BLADE II(R)- ID REQUIREDd i g (12 0512:45 2 45 3 20515) 7:207:509:5010:20 (12:252:45 5:15)7:40102! 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Photo courtesy of the Austin M useum of Art Eduardo Muñoz Ordoqui’s gelatin print, Sin título (Untitled), is only one work of the 22 artists currently on display at the Austin Museum of Art’s 2 2 to Watch exhibit. By Sarah Adams Daily Texan Staff At first glance, the building on the comer of Congress Avenue and Ninth Street looks like another Dobie-esque office building. 1 he first level, though, boasts in sleek lettering that it is home to the Austin Museum of Art. The museum consists of a few bright, (mostly) white rooms smelling faintly of latex paint; the stained floors, glaring lights and ever-present, electri­ cal, white-noise symphony remind me of a new building nearly finished with construction. The AMOA, however, showcases a decidedly political message about commercialism, materialism, femi­ nism and a thousand other "isms" under the guise of art. The latest exhibit, 22 to Watch: Nexv Art in Austin, runs through May 26 and merits an hour or so of your time. All 22 artists live within a 50-mile radius of Austin, and each has a cul­ tural message behind his/h^r artwork. The eclectic exhibit features paintings, film, multimedia, installations and one crushed car covered in pink foam (more on that last one later). None of the artists have previously shown work in solo exhibitions, according to the museum Web site. The lack of experience in a public show made me skeptical at first; I got the impression of a glorified high school art show minus the blue rib­ bons. Several paintings looked more like studies than the polished fare that usually makes it to established muse­ ums. The first impression, however, deceives the eye. As with the sleek exterior, one has to look beyond the surface of the artwork in 22 to Watch. The audience can cheat itself by mere­ ly glancing at the art without reading the artists' bios and explanations post­ ed on the walls. Each of the papers describes a deep social statement behind the inconspicuous art; or, at the very least, they describe how much work the artist went through to create a seemingly simple piece. Take the aforementioned pastel- pink wreck of a car, for example. Mark Schatz picked a wreck from a junk­ yard, covered it in polystyrene foam, smoothed the jagged edges and paint­ ed it in his Pastel Crash (20(12). The result is a disconcerting transforma­ tion from a 5,000-pound heap of twist­ ed metal and tires to a weightless and emotionless pink cloud. Schatz tries to show the audience its horror and fasci­ nation at car wrecks by concocting an installation worth rubber-necking. Eduardo Muñoz Ordoqui's untitled silver gelatin prints from the Low Tide Series (2002) give a more nostalgic view of the world. While the political message is toned down, pieces consist of photographs from Ordoqui's child­ hood in Cuba and his return to his home country years later superim­ posed onto one another. Each artist's style is ver)' different, and no piece is what it seems at first glance. The most obvious example of this is Paul Beck's installation of a pink bunny watching television, but I will refrain from giving away the surprise. Trust me, disturbing is too light a word for the piece, and the exhibit is worth going to just to see Beck's work alone. The artists are all talented, and the diversity of work leaves something for everyone. Suffice it to say, this is not your momma's art museum. For more information, look up www.amoa.org on the Internet. Admission is $ 4 for students. T H E A T Ft T h e Hob B u llock T ex as S tate H istory M useum 1X00 N . C o n g r e s s A v e . at M L K ( 5 1 2 ) 9 3 6 - I M A X G R f A T J Í F B N t r W E S T Presented by: Wells Fargo Mo n - T hu r s 10, 11 a m , 12, 1, 3 , 5 , 7 p m Fri day 10,11 a m , 12, 1 , 3 , 5 , 7 , 9 p m Saturday 1 0 a m , 1 2 , 1 , 3, 5, 7 , 9 p m Sunday 1 , 3 , 5, 7 p m £%ma$voRLD 3D Presented lo c a lly by: Applied Materials® Mo n — T h u r s 2 ,4 , 6, 8 p m Fri day 2 , 4 , 6 , 8 , 1 0 p m Saturday Sunday 11 a m , 2 , 4, 6 , 8 , 10 p m 2 , 4 , 6 , 8 p m The show on April 23 at 7pm is SOLD OUT. W i t h promotional rapport lrom 1 1 M l. W A RN 1.R ( AHI I • M IX 94.7 • MAJIC 95.5 • BEA I 104 Finally off his Burt Bacharach fix, Elvis new studio album, W hen I Was Cruel. Velvet Underground-meets-Bollywood of "Staging the P lag u in g o f the R aised P latfo rm ." But it's not until the psych edelic-raga dance jam s "S o u n d s Su p er Recordings" that "Spectral M o rn in g s" and Handcreatn disp lays its spirit. The album p ro p els itself for­ ward w ith irrepressible hooks and bass lines, but on top of the repet­ itive dance grooves, Singh sings m em orable on e-liners like: "W h o 's been to rock school, or the rock p o o l? /M ia m i Beach chicks with d ic k s" and p o litica l m an ifesto s to tak e this like "W e 're going m ovem ent onto the stre e ts/P e o p le pow er in the disco hour./T here's going to be people pow er." W hile sam pled lyrics in Punjabi and faux tran scontinental airline announce­ m ents help create the aura of an international album , it's actually the sch izo p h ren ic p lacem en t of Photo courtesy of Island Records Costello comes back this week with his tracks that hint at the displaced and unsettled m indset of the post­ colonial world. W hether it's sophis­ ticated disco, g hazals or power- pop, C ornershop seem s unboth­ ered by anything but the unifying nature of the beat. Like any personal hygiene prod­ uct, Handcreatn is som etim es con­ fusing and often in trigu in g, but never unsatisfying. Arm ed with just the right am ount o f danceable g roove and p o litica l p o stu rin g , C ornershop has created an album that transcends labels and stereo­ types with som ething more com ­ plex. You'can read the back of the bottle all you w ant, but it isn't until you pop open the cap and squeeze some Handcreatn into your palm that you can really sm ell good and feel the cool refreshing tingle of Cornershop. - Jonathan P. Noble La Zona Rosa gets back into the Black BLACK, from 16 allow s sim ple melodies to hang in the air, w aiting to gain entrance to open hearts. N ever has Black allow ed him self to be so unex­ posed and bare, but that is what the album is all about. A t the perform ance, songs from each epoch played to an ecstatic audience who, for the most part, co u ld n 't w ait to hear the next Pixies song. Fortunately, what they got was a little bit of everything. Black is not coasting on the cool statu s he earned w hile playing with the Pixies, but he's definitely utilizing some of the old material to help him find ears willing to give the more recent material a chance. „ Som e watched in silence as Black performed songs from Dog m the Sand, frustrated that they could not sing along to "W here Is My M ind." Most of us, however, trusted our experienced guide to take us som e­ w here we had never been. Get your l I news in T he Da il y T exan I f c M S é ¡ ■ | SHOW TIMES VALID FOR T U tS APRIL 73 ONLY ALAMO DOWNTOWN - 409 COLORADO ■ f TUtS $2 D0MESTICTS 56 BURGERS l V I FLESH A N D THE D EV IL / 0 0 & 9 3 0 FREE ■ I n l j j ■ T ALAMO NORTH 2700 W ANDERSON L IV E M U S IC BY G O L D E N A R M T R IO > J"4 J [ É J " ■ \ I J . I T h C R [M tM B tR THE ALAMO f 0 R YOUR NEXT PARTY » EVIL DEAD (RESTO RED PRINT) 1 0 1 5 * HUMAN NATURE 120 7 0 5 9 4 0 , P A N I C R 0 0 M “U S 7 4 5 1 0 Z U ^ f jú S f f r t t t t i 3 » DEATH TO SMOOCHY 4 4 0 7 5 0 T f * i # 4 M U R D E R BY N U M B E R S 4 0 0 7 0 0 950 We’re not like every other high-tech company, We’re hiring. No one told you the hardest part of being an engineer would be finding your first job. Of course, it s still possible to get the high-tech work you want by joining the U.S. Air Force. You can leverage your degree immediately and get hands-on experience with some of the most sophisticated technology on earth.To find out how to get your career off the ground, call 1-800-423-USAF or visit our Web site at airforce.com. V❖ U .S . A IR F O R C E 1 6 T he Daily Texan April 23, 2002 / c5r \ i t tr\ r*l U U I IV>I ★★★☆☆ P i + U I L U O W h a t’s g°o^ W h a t’s t>a d, W hat’s a v a ' / a b ' e in s to re s A Black Sunday Form er Pixies frontm an leads audience into the beyond with electrifying presence SOUTHERN HUMMINGBIRD art/st Tweet label Elektra For a fe m a le vocalist, d eb u t albu m s can b e pretty tricky. N ot only d oes sh e have to sound good', but she also has to establish her ow n voice and co m e up w ith a style to tal­ ly d iffe re n t than h er co n tem p o ­ raries. M ary j. B lige attained fam e w ith her h ip -ho p influenced What's the 411?, w hich featu red her am azing, raspy voice. E rykah Badu sparked an en tire m o v em en t, putting life back into soul m u sic w ith her afro- centric, in cen se-w avin g Baduizm . Jill Scott w ow ed the w orld with rich poetry and her ab ility to hit any note on W ho Is Jill Scott? Enter Tw eet and her first album , Southern H um m in gbird. C om peting for attention w ith other new acts lik e A sh an ti, A licia K eys, Ja g u a r W right, In d ia.A rie and m any others, Tw eet is ou t to m ake a nam e for h e r­ self. A n oth er m em b er of M issy and T im b alan d 's ever-exp an d in g cam p, n a tiv e is th is Rochester, N .Y ., alread y riding in th e fa s t lane by associatio n alone. T i m b a l a n d pro­ v id es the tran ce-in d u cin g lead sin­ g l e , "O o p s (Oh M y )," w h ic h is sup­ p o se d to be ab ou t s e lf- lo v e , but T w eet leaves the lis te n e r w ond ering a s to exactly which p a rt o f h e r body sh e is loving. U nlike "O o p s," th e w hole w o rld th e majority of Southern H um m ingbird is a d ark ride d o w n a cold and lo n ely s tr e e t called h u rt. Each song is m e llo w a n d laid- b ack , allow ing Tweet to re v e a l plen­ ty o f her personal life, a s if sh e had u n lo ck ed her diary and re a d it aloud fo r to hear. "S m o k in g Cigarettes" h a s h e r chain­ sm o k in g and w orrying a b o u t a past lo v e she can't get o u t o f h e r mind. O n "M o tel," which fe a tu r e s Tw eet's g u ita r skills, she sev ers tie s w ith her m a n , whom she h a s ju s t cau gh t ch e a tin g . Even w h e n h e r w ord s sw itch to joy, it's hard to tell exactly h o w she is feeling, s in c e h e r voice d o e s n 't journey up th e la d d e r of e m otion s, making th e tra c k s bleed in to each other. I he o n ly e x cite m e n t on the album com es fr o m a zealou s Bilal on "B e s t F rien d ." S u rp risin g ly , Tim baland 's b ea ts are rarely sum m oned on H um m ingbird — Tweet ta k e s on about h a lf o f the album 's p ro d u ctio n . This is proba­ bly w hat k e e p s H um m ingbird from being a g re a t albu m — Tw eet is skilled w ith the pen, but the beats she ch o o ses d o n 't m atch up to the high-textured offerings of Tim baland. When he is o n the boards, it's easy to overlook T w e e t's lack of soul and em otion, w h ich m akes tracks like "Call M e ," "M a k e Your M o v e" and "O ops s o u n d good. It takes a lot o f courage to debut with a d isc as revealing and p erson ­ al as T w e e t's Southern H um m ingbird, which e x p lo re s the darker sid es of life by to u ch in g on topics such as alcoholism , in fid elity and suicid e. Tweet g ets h igh p oints for her song- w riting s k ills , b u t w hat listen ers want is s o m e o n e w ho can m ake them feel ev ery w'ord. At tim es, her breathy v o ice is soothin g and puts you in a relax in g , laid -b ack m ood. The rest o f the tim e, the tracks are so See SOUND BITES, Page 15 ☆ r!> ☆ By Michael Winningham Daily Texan Staff F ran k B lack h a d n 't ev en finished his first song S u n d ay n ig h t w hen he b eg an to lure and b a it a m an ic crow'd by sin g in g , "I w as sw im m ing in the Caribbean." Im m ed iately, he into his had taken the a u d ien ce p o sse ssio n and on a jo u rn e y o f reck less p e rsp e ctiv e and p o ssible peril. B la ck 's b a ck in g band su p ­ ported him w ell, as they put on a p erfo rm an ce at La Z o n a Rosa that sh o w cased sev eral e p o ch s in the e v o lu tio n of his career. B la ck 's m u sical e v o lu tio n b reaks d o w n in to th ree d is tin g u is h a b le p e rio d s. T h e first e ra w as c o m ­ p rised o f the y ears he sp en t w ith the P ix ies, p io n e e rin g a sou nd that is s till p re s e n t in c o n te m p o ra ry rock 'n ' roll. Th e seco n d B lack era featu red the release o f his first three so lo alb u m s (w ith o u t the aid o f a full band and m o stly arran g ed by B la ck h im s e lf). T h e th ird e p o ch in clu d es his latest record , D og in the live w ith the a ssis­ Sand, created th e tan ce o f h is b a c k in g b a n d , C ath olics. Photo courtesy of www.war.com Frank Black, center, took center stage at Sunday’s La Zona Rosa show. A p ro lific s o n g w rite r an d an e x o tic ly ricist, B lack co n tin u es to m a in ta in a m ind and a m ood th at is d o m in ated by a ch an g in g p e rsp e c­ tive. In fact, the on ly co n siste n cy in his alb u m s is that the m o st recen t w ill sou nd d ifferen t from w h at you hav e p rev io u sly heard . H is new albu m is no e xcep tio n . A t the core o f D og in the Sand is a sw eet and in d u lg e n t p a tie n ce that See BLACK, Page 15 Photo courtesy of Elektra Tweet makes her own move on her first album, Southern Hummingbird. A ifcr ★ fV lip <*/> / a . The Texas ítevue Committee thanks (oeorge Miteh^ll and The University Co-op for their tremendous support of this year’s QIsTlMflTe TfUseNT QO0§T! UNIVERSITY CO-OP Interested in a Co-Chair, Committee Chair, or Webmaster position with Texas Revue? "Applications are now available" Pick up your opportunity at the SOC desk TODAY! T h e applications are due Friday, A p ril 26, 2002 for m ore information visit w w w .texasrevue.com A f t > AT If It H > vt, K A v)> V i V j p . f . . : j • A The Daily T exan Tuesday, April 2 3 , 2 0 0 2 Page 1 7 ADVERTISING TERMS In th e e w n t o f e r r o r s m a d e t a a d v e rtis e m e n t, n otice m u st b e g iv e n b y II a .m . th e firs t day o f p u b lic a tio n , a s th e p u b lis h e rs a r e re s p o n s ib le fu r t in c o rre c t in s e rtio n . In c o n s id e ra tio n o f The D aily T e x a n ’s a c c e p ta n c e of a d v e rtis in g copy fo r p u b lic a tio n , th e agencv a n d the only ill loss Habilitv a d v e rtis e r will in d em n ify a n d sa v e h a rm le s s. T exas S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s a n d its o fficers, e m p io v ee s a n d a g e n ts a g a in s t d a m a g e a n d e x p e n se o f w h a ts o e v e r n a t u r e a ris in g o u t o f th e c o p y in g , p r i n t i n g o r p u b lish in g .4 its a d v e rtis e m e n t in c lu d in g w ith ,.,it lim itation’ re a s o n a b le a tto rn e y s fees re s u ltin g fro m cla im s , 4 su its f o r lib el, v io la tio n o f rig h t o f p riv ac v . p la g ia r is m a n ti c o p y rig h t a n d t r a d e m a r k in frin g e m e n t. Ml a d copy m u s t b e a p p r o v e d by th e n e w s p a p e r w h ic h re s e rv e s (he rig h t to re q u e s t c h a n g e s , re je c t o r p ro p e rly classify I h e a d v e rtis e r, a n d n o t th e new s|> apcr. is re sp o n sib le fu r th e tr u t h f u l c o n te n t <4 th e ad . A d v e rtisin g is a ls o s u b je c t to c r e d it a p p r o v a l ,„ | DEADLINE: 11:00 a.m. PRIOR TO PUBLICATION W ord Rates Charged by the word. Based on a 15 w ord m inim um , the follow ing rates apply. ■ 1 day....................................... ...$10.80 2 days........................................ $18.80 3 days........................................ $26.05 4 days........................................ $31.60 5 days........................................ $35.85 First two w ords in all capital letters. 250 for each additional capitalized word. Display Rates Charged by the colum n inch. One colum n inch m inim um . A variety o f type faces, sizes, and borders available. $12.75 per column inch. Call for quotes 471-5244 M astercard & Visa Accepted. Fax 471-6741 MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL L O N G H O R N A U TO SPECIALS 198 9 Saab 900S 8 6 ,5 0 0 m i. 5spd manual. Must sell. $ 1 ,200 negotia­ ble G reat deall Contact Sunil at 5 12 -8 2 5 -7 3 2 3 1988 TOYOTA Corolla Sedan, Automatic, 4-door, A /C , blue 127K, le n d e r/h o o d runs well, wreck. Engine is fine $ 49 0, O B O 4 9 9 -8 6 8 4 91 H O N D A Civic G ood co n d i­ tion. 8 8 K miles, runs great Power locks $ 3 0 0 0 Call 826 -5 9 8 8 '9 3 PONTIAC Sunbird LE, 93K, Au to, A /C , ABS, excellent mainte­ Looks, runs great! $ 2 ,3 0 0 nance or O B O c a o y 10 0 @yahoo com 3 4 9 -9 9 6 9 Call 1991 H O N D A Civic SI, 5spd 98K black miles, 2-door, moonroof, M oving, must sell. $ 2 ,4 0 0 320- 8 2 9 2 . '9 2 NISSAN Sentra SE R ÜToC electric sunroof, new AC, 5 speed, red metallic. Excellent with records $ 2 7 5 0 4 1 6 -86 13 414-1021 1984 SAAB 9 0 0 S 5 speed sedan, M any new excellent condition parts $ 1 8 0 0 .0 0 7 36 -62 43 CARS FROM $50 0 pounds. For listings: 3 3 2 3 ext.4 62 0. Police im- 1-800-319- RENTAL 360 - Furn. Apts. W O O D E D A N D Q uaint W est Com pus! Furnished, FREE cable and alarm . 1-1 $57 5. Apartm ent Find ers 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 2-2, SERIOUS/QUIET/NON-SMOKERS- 1-block SPACIOUS la w P o ol/lau ndry/cable. School/LBJ Petless 1st $ 9 0 0 /$ 9 5 0 . Call 4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 or 4 7 7 -3 3 8 8 . G reat O ak/June FURNISHED APARTMENT. 2 room ­ mates to sublease. UT shuttle near­ by. Rent $ 3 7 0 /m o n th 7 6 2 -1 2 8 8 NEED TO SUBLEASE ASAP 2 rooms in a 4-room apartment. Fully UT shuttle, paid cable, furnished 385- free TV & VCR w/sublease 7 2 5 6 , Vince. 762 -12 88, Rico. 'ALL-BILLS-PAID IN HYDE PARK! Furnished efficiency near IF shuttle, #1 city bus 4 0 0 0 Avenue $545 A. C all 458-4511 For appointm ent C H A R M I N G APT. C O M P L E X 1 Blk. from UT ALL BILLS P A ID ! I n d . C a b le C o m p u te r iz e d E ntry S ystem BEST DEAL! Eff: Summer from $39 5, Fall from $ 50 0 1 B e d ro o m : Summer from $ 4 9 5 , Fall from $62 5 2 B e d ro o m : Summer from $ 5 5 0 + elec., Fall from $7 9 5 + elec KHP 476-2154 N O TRAFFIC PR O B LEM S! N O P A R K IN G H ASSLES! N O FULL SHUTTLE BUSSES! Avoid these problems by living on WEST CAMPUS C A S A DE S A L A D O APTS. 2 6 1 0 Salado St. 1 Bedroom U nits/ Fully Furnished 'D IS C O U N T E D S U M M E R LEASES* Call Brian Novy 3 2 7 -76 13 A V O ID PROBLEM S C A U S E D BY L IV IN G A W A Y F R O M C A M P U S : TRAFFIC J A M S , P A R K IN G HASSLES, FULL SHUTTLE BUSSES! MESQUITE TREE APTS. WEST CAMPUS- 2 4 1 0 LO NG VIEW Fully furnished 1 -bedrooms 'D IS C O U N T E D S U M M E R LEASES* C a ll B ria n N o v y 3 2 7 - 7 6 1 3 W ALK TO CAMPUS Avalon Apartments - 32nd at IH 35 Efficiency - $445 1 -Bedroom $54 5 2 / 2 - $745 W a lk to Engineering, Law, LBJ school and all East Campus. W alk-in closets, ceiling fans, on-site laundry, manager on-site. 45 9 -9 8 9 8 or 658 -6 0 0 7 O pen 7 days and evenings. SUBLET NEEDED M a y l5 -A u g 15 $ 7 0 0 . Furnished, all bills included, west campus, W /D , own b e d /b a th Call 708 -0 8 9 2 . TRANSPORTATION 20-$ports-for«i$n 1989 SAAB 9 0 0 Turbo- 4-door, sunroof, white, A C /P S /P W . 128K. $ 1 7 0 0 , 7 0 8 -9 2 7 9 interior, Runs well. leather REAL ESTATE SALES 13 0-C o w b i- Townhomes CONDOS FOR SALE Westplace 2-2 121K Winchester 2-2 134K Heritage 2-2 13SK Robbins Place 2-2 144K Georgian 2-2 138K Pointe 2-2 136k Phillip Filardi 626-2234 TOWER REAL ESTATE 32 2 -9 9 3 4 2109-B Rio Grande specializing in CONDOMS forstudents Campus Area and All Shuttle Routes p www.towerrealestate.com i [> fi ► HyQt * Westview 1-1 \ Hyde Park Oaks 1-1 1 Croix 1-1 | Bellevue 1-1.5 $99.9k ( ^ Westplace \ Pointe | Robbins Pic \ Treehouse 1 Tom Green 2-2 2-2 2-2 $121k $136k $143k 2-2.5 $155k | 3-2 $160k J Orange Tree 2-1 $165k | | Raiiyard ( Robbins Pic Sn TTWWP 2-2 2-2 $179k $179.9k | 'flT i a rá :U B Condos F o r Sale Ib d rm s 6 0 K - 1 1 OK 2 bdrm s 1 1 9 K - 1 8 9 K METROREALTY 4 7 9 - 1 3 0 0 l ^ w W j U t m e t r O j C o m j MERCHANDISE 1 G hz up N E W COMPUTERS 20 GB Horddrive M idtow $ 5 9 9 128 MB RAM, CD Rom case Drive, Floppy Sound, Speaker, Keyboard, Mouse, Fully Ready to Use Also Ray, 5 1 2 -6 6 3 -0 1 3 2 G ood used systems 320 - Wonted to Buy I buy automobiles and FAST CASH* trucks anytim e C all 8 0 4 -1 9 6 7 or 626 -4 9 3 4 L O N G H O R N W A N T A D S BOXES GREAT for moving $ 2 0 minimum. Cash only 7 2 6 3 . $1 451 - $59.9k $87k $89.9k j ATTENTION FEMALES. summer pad at Melrose. $ 4 8 2 /m o May-Aug I 6 2 7 5 Furnished O nly (903)376- 360 - Fum. Apts* MELROSE APT sublease needed May-Aug rent free Free phone, ca­ ble O ff Riverside on UT shuttle $52 0-5 40 Shannon 9 1 9 -3 1 5 5 to- komot@yahoo.com RIGHT AT UT campus adjacent to 1 bedroom apartment fully Dobie. equippea W /D Free parking in­ cluded $695. A va ila ble 6-1-02 Call 335 -88 09 QUIET DORM for serious students Private Bedrm/Bath, share kit & $ 2 ,3 0 0 /s e ­ L Rm. 1 Block to U T mester Summer O nly ABP. $ 1, 100/ABP. 1908 University Ave. 478-2185. JEFFERSON C O M M O N S APT sub- lease needed M ay-Aug UT Shuttle O w n bed/bath. $ 4 2 9 /m o , negotia­ ble Call Jason, 3 8 9 -1 8 2 7 j_fuxa@ma 1l.utexa5.edu $ 5 0 0 BONUS! Sterling University foi Furnished summer for 2002- 2 0 0 3 . Cal Karen 4 9 7 -4 2 2 3 4 / 2 $ 3 7 5 /m o n th $ 38 5/m onth 370 - Unf. Apts. WATCH FOR OUR " LAST HOUSING GUIDE O N M AY 8TH. IF YOU WANT IN THIS SPECIAL SECTION CALL 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 FOR DETAILS! Can’t Afford Campus Prices? S o u th p o in t V illage A p artm ents Just 10 minutes to cheaper rent! IMMEDIATE AVAILABILITY 448-0777 NE IG HBORHO OD WONDERFUL COMAAUNITY! Close-in community with pool. 1-1 $ 5 5 0 . Apartm ent Finders 322 -95 56 RED RIVER STEALI Gas paid, patio, and blocks 2-1 Apartment Finders 322- $ 8 5 0 9 5 5 6 . from shopping. BEST DEAL UT Shuttle' FREE cable, access gates, volleyball, pools. Effi­ ciency $495, 1-1 $ 52 5, 2-1 $ 6 4 0 Apartment Finders 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . SERIOUS students! ATTENTION Q uiet property, alarm, m icro, pool, w asher/dryer 1-1 $ 5 9 5 , 2-2 $860. Apartm ent Find­ ers 322-9556. connections. RENTAL 370 - Unf. Apts. G r e a t LOCATION n Eff- i !j 1-1 0 2-1 V ____ s S L f t a a a a a a a N ow leasing for fall , i - - V ;. . H H £ Call for more info. & annt. 4 7 8 - 9 1 5 1 W augh Properties, Inc. 451-0988 HYDE PARK Efficiencies $435-$495 1-1 $ 5 1 5 4 5 8 5 2-1 $775 WEST CAMPUS Efficiency $495 1-1 $515 S om e w ith c o v e r e d p a r k in g . NORTH CAMPUS 1-1 $ 6 5 0 ABP 2-1 $875 ABP 3-1.5 Townhouse $ 1475 CENTRAL 1-1 $595 2-2 $ 8 5 0 FAR-WEST SHUTTLE Trees, canyon 1,2 ,& 3 bedrooms $ 52 0 + views W a te r/g a s paid. Gas cooking Apartment Experts. 4 16 -81 00. RESORT STYLE LIVING Private shut tie, roommate-matching 2 's,3 's,4 's $47 8,+ W D , cable & basic phone paid Apartm ent Experts 41 6 -8 1 0 0 ENFIELD ROAD Shuttle Small court yard community. 1/1 $52 5, 2 -bed­ room $7 0 0 Call Apartment Ex­ perts, 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 QUAINT & Q uiet on UT-shuttle 1- bedroom $45 0, 2-bedroom $ 66 9 Most bills paid, including cable Apartment Experts 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 LUXURY-LIVING O N UT-shuttle-route. 2.5 months free! G a te d /c ity views, 2-bedroom W /D $848 $99-deposit. Apartment Ex­ p e rts ^ 16-8100. $ 55 8, 1/1 FUNKY OLD but cute 2 bedroom $68 5. 3 26 -94 42. OLD ENFIELD CHARM! Huge 2-1 with covered parking. $800. Apartment Finders 322 -9 5 5 6 . VISIT W W W AUSAPT.COM for the best apartments in W est Campus, North Campus, Hyde Park, & all shuttle routes. Apartm ent Finders STUDIOS W e st C am pu s $ 5 1 9 N orth C am pus $ 5 1 5 H yde Park $ 5 1 0 Apartment Finders 322-9556 SPANISH-STYLE CUTE Village. W asher/dryer walk to school, pool, gates. 2-2 $1015. Apartm ent Find­ ers 322-9556 SPACIOUS & C O NVEN IENT North IF shuttle and Campus Community! gas paid 1-1 $ 6 7 5 , 2-2 $10 00. Apartment Finders 322 -9 5 6 6 . LE MED Apartments 1 2 0 0 W est 40th street has immediate openings 2-1 $74 9, 1-1 $5 5 9 Central $99 N o app lica tion move-m special. fee Free gas, 453- 3 5 4 5 free cable UT SHUTTLE! Access Gates! Free ca­ ble! Pool, Computer Lab, 1-2-3 BD. $ 56 5+ . First Call 4 4 8 4 8 0 0 Imme­ diate/Prelease 9MONTH“ LEASES 1-1 $ 6 0 0 2-1 $ 9 0 0 2-2 $ 9 8 0 Apartment Finders 322-9556 A vigiuoim R e a l t y FREE APARTMENT LOCATING SERVICE W E S T C AM PUS Eff $495 All Bills Paid 1-1 $ 5 5 0 B e st Deal 1-1 $575 Walking Distance 1-1 $ 6 7 5 A ll Bills Paid 1-1 $ 6 9 5 N ice C o ndo 2-1 $ 7 7 0 B e st Deal 2-2 $ 9 5 0 Large F loorplan 2-2 $1025 Walking Distance 2-2 $1100 Remodeled Condo N O R T H CA M PU S Eff $425 Best Deal Eff $535 All Bills Paid 1-1 $ 5 3 5 In H yd e Park 1-1 $ 575 Large Floorplan 2-1 $795 Walking Distance 2-1 $ 8 5 0 S p a cio u s 2 -2 $ 9 8 0 Large F loorplan 2-2 $1100 Great Community U T S H U T T L E S 2-2 Starting $789 3-2 Starting $910 4-2 Starting $998 370 - Unf. Apt*. A F S Apartment Finders Service Eff All Bills Paid $495 Eft Hyde Park $510 Eff CA/CH $515 1-1 North Campus $550 1-1 Furnished $575 1-1 FREE Cable & Ethernet $640 1-1 With Study $675 2-1 Patio 2-1 Hyde Park 2-2 Close-In 2-2 Washer/Dryer Shuttle FREE Cable Eft $495 1-1 Furnished $495 2-1 Cable Paid $640 2-2 Access Gates $685 2-2 Washer/Dryer $860 $875 $950 $980 $1225 2109 R i o G r a n d e 322-9556 www.ausaptcom RENT REDUCTIONI North Campus, gas paid, pools, 9 month lease available 1-1 $635. Apartment Finders 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 AW ESOM E HYDE Park Neighbor hood! Gates, pool, elevators, GPA discounts 2-1 $ 10 25, 2-2 $1095. Apartment Finders 322 -95 56 O N E M O N T H FREE Fitness, pool, tennis $ 795 9 5 5 6 in Far West! 1-1 $620, 2-2 Apartment Finders 322- IMMEDIATE MOVE In's' M onth ble. Paid cable 452 -33 14 IF SHUTTLE $99 1st 1 /1 's availa­ Moving to the Dallas Area? FREE LOCATING SERVICE • Apartments • Hi-Rises • Lotts FREE RENT & BEST SPECIALS CityLifeRealtors@aol.com 972 788 0500 2 4 0 2 RIO Grande West-Campus ef­ ficiency with parking. Available now for $ 49 5 and $ 2 5 0 deposit. 3 2 7 -1 6 9 9 or 585 -5 8 1 0 . covered UT SHUTTLE, hard-tile access gates, free cable, hike & bike. Cute 1-1 $51 5, 2-2 $ 6 6 5 Apartment Finders 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 k UNEXPECTED VACANCY-W ALK Ü T 30's style 1-1, and large efficiency. H ardw ood floors, saltilo tile 25 1 4 Pearl. 9 2 4 -0 1 1 1 ,3 4 5 -4 5 5 5 DARLING EFFICIENCIES $ 4 9 5 /m o . 4 blocks to UT. Courtyard. C H /C A 909 W . 23rd Available M ay 480-0976 M-TH 6 p .m .-7 p .m . ~ freeP CABLE & ETHERNET W alk to school Patios, French, Doors, & Gas Paid 1-1 $ 6 4 0 Apartment Finders 322-9556 NORTH CAMPUS STUDIO with C A /C H , walk-in closet, disposal & pool! Apartment Finders 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 $ 5 1 5 . UNIQUE, HYDE PARK C om m urut/ 2-1 $950. Gas & W ater Paid Apartm ent Finders 322-9556. WEST CAMPUS TO W N H O M E i Luxury 2 story unit with w asher/dry­ er pool, gates. Apartment Finders 322 -9 5 5 6 . “ RELEASING SPECIALS FOR SUMMER A N D FALL Huge 11 (7 5 0 sq. ft.) $565 and 2-2 (1025 sq ft ) $700. N e w ly remodeled, low deposit, privately owned, very clean, NR shuttle and swimming pool. A nice, small quiet community Brookhollow Apartments 1414 Arena Dr 44 5 -56 55 CENTRAL EFFICIENCY Clean. Bus. Partly furnished. Serious stu­ dent or Young executive. $50 0, bills paid. 4 8 0 -8 5 2 5 327-8462 IMMEDIATE M OVE-IN! 13th month free w /y e a r lease 2 Studios- $525 + elec to Campus! 472- 2 4 5 0 apt 3 min 2 2 0 0 SAN G abriel. Spacious 2 / 2 $ 9 5 0 Front Page 480-85 1 8 370 - Unf. Apts. WALK TO UT, ACC 3-2, 2-2, 2-1 Immediate move-in. & efficiency Downtown, on-site 708- 9 6 6 4 . laundry. Z 7 SPACIOUS WEST CAMPUS sublease available mid-May throuqh August, $ 1350 negotiable, reserved parking 477 -0 7 4 4 SPARKLING/SPACIOUS, PERFECT for grad-students. 2 B D /2 B A /W /D 5m in |JT-shuttle Far W est Paid wo- ter P o ol/balcony/view . Availa- ble-immed¡ately. $10 0 0 I -877-4 5 8 -2 4 0 5 e xt,3 6 0 2 1 , (3 5 2 )3 7 5 -6 9 9 6 HYDE PARK AREA N ow Preleasing S p rin g /F a ll 2 0 0 2 1 Bedrooms C a ll Jennifer @ 467-1478 NEAR . UT ‘ $42 5 Large Efficiency W a lk to Campus-On Bus Route-Free N e w 1-1 Cable. C a rpe t/P a in t/T ile 472 -69 79 $525 PRE-LEASING MAY/AUG UST W est Campus, $ 4 5 0 /$ 6 5 0 Efficiencies and 1 bedrooms North Campus Efficiencies 1 and 2 bedroom $ 4 7 5 /$ 7 9 5 Call 499-8013 Westside Group WEST 6TH STREET APARTMENTS Pre-leasing for M ay/August, on Lake Austin shuttle, great pool Units recently renovated, rent for 1 bedroom $595 2 bedroom $795 C all W estside G roup at 499-8013 WATERFORD C O N D O M IN IU M S Prelease for June or August 20 0 2 w hile there is still a selection. Huge units still available from $1525. G reat location. Great floorplans. Access gates Friendly onsite management & maintenance Act now to avoid disappointment! 47 3 -83 18 w w w waterfordcondos.com MARCUS MANAGEMENT Immediate Move-lns Available and Pre-leasing for Fall 2002 Efficiencies, 1 and 2 Bedrooms starting as low as $450 Duplexes, Condos, and Houses starting as low as $750 C a ll us to d a y to find out a b o u t ou r GREAT M O V E -IN SPECIALS. For m ore in fo rm atio n, please call 474-4484 HYDE PARK HAVEN! Spacious floorplans, wooded sundeck and un Eff. $ 53 5, 1-1 believable prices $ 60 0, 2-1 $ 87 5. Apartment Find­ ers 3 2 2 -9 5 5 6 . 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. P R E - L E A S I N G WEST CAMPUS Treehouse 2 / 1 / 1G $1 100 Treehouse Eff. w / l G $ 7 0 0 NORTH CAMPUS 3 8 th/D uval 2-2 Condo $1 195 H ardw ood floors, 2 RSVD PKG Meister Realty 443-2526 SUMMER SPECIALS “ 1-1 Gates $485 1-1 Red River $485 1-1 Furnished $5 00 Apartment Finders 322-9556 TROPICAL PARADISE Pool, fitness, W asher/D ryer, Private balcony, condo quality 1-1 $465 2-2 $7 25 Apartment Central 480-9353 DO YOU HAVE A N APARTMENT FOR LEASE? Call Martha at The D aily Texan and receive 1 /2 off your first ad. 4 7 1 - 3 8 5 3 CUTEST APARTMENT in west cam ­ pus! Minutes to school, pool, gates, balconies, elevators and huge floor plans. Apartment Finders 322 9 5 5 6 2BR/2BA SUBLEASE N e ar campus on UT SUMMER apartment. busl 301 7 6 1 0 or 971 42 9 2 Lease expires mid August CA M E R O N GREEN APARTMENTS 5 7 0 0 Cameron Rd. 7 8 7 2 3 Immediate Availability for 1 or 2 bedroom apartments. N o w preleasing Convenient to campus, on UT Shuttle route with access gate for your convenience Close to shopping. C all 4 5 4 -7 0 0 7 or come by, w e are located next to C apital Plaza. Ask about our specials BEST BARGAIN in W est Cam pus1 W asher/D ryer, Patio, Covered Park ing, 1-1 $670. Apartment Finders 3 2 2 9 5 5 6 LO O K IN G FOR A N E W PLACE? Check out our online apartment search form at www.ousapt.com Apartm ent Finders LUXURY LIVING! W asher,'D ry^T covered parking, access gates and fastest shuttle 1-1 $ 5 8 0 ,2 -2 $ 9 0 0 Apartm ent Finders 322 9 55 6. La Casita 2 Blocks to I T 1/1 from $595 W est Campus S pecial 1 /2 Month Free in May Sublease for Summer Only May 15-Aug 25 Efficiency w/2 lofts 26tli& San Gabriel call Barliara 708-9530 LIVE OFF Campus! 1-1 $ 5 4 5 6 0 0 sq/ft. G o s /W a te r paid. 451 732 6 9 0 0 s q /ft 1 8 3 /M o p a c 2 2 $725 “ p r e l e a s in g - l a r g e 1-1 Townhome, over 800 sq.ft. Private patio & balcony. Quiet community. Perfect roommate plan. $625 401-9700. PR ELE A S I N G - EFFICIENCY in small, quiet community. On-site laundry, patio, central air and heat $475. 401-9700 2/1 from $875 5 8 5 - 5 8 1 0 9 7 0 - 0 7 5 4 $ 9 9 5 2-1 Hyde Park Completely remodeled. W /D hookup. Dish washer. 467 -66 32. Non-smoking NICE 2-1 CACH. walk to UT. a va iiT ble 6 / 0 1 . $ 7 0 0 /m o Call Ray day time 416-271 8, evening 2 5 7 -88 04 SUMMER SUBLEASE Share a 2 /2 5-mmute walk to cam apartment. pus 30th & Duval. Parking. $ 3 0 0 /m o n th . 482-8192 TÜMMER SUBLEASE Nice I BD oñ W /D , access UT shuttle gates. 736 - $ 5 0 0 4 9 0 8 650sq. route ft 2-blocks T STUDENT ROOMS. campus. Summer rates $ 40 0 $ 47 8 Laundry/parking, ALL BILLS PAID. on-site 1804 Lava ca /4 7 6 -5 1 5 2 management. ~ h y d T par k~ L a rg e EFFICIENCIES FROM $50 0 FURN also available FREE CABLE DW /Disp/Bookshelves Pool/BBQ /Patio Laundry/Storage/Res M gr O n "IF" Shuttle 108 PLACE APARTMENTS 108 W . 45th St. 45 2 -1 4 1 9 , 385-22 11 453 2771 APAR TM EN T CENTRAL K N O W S A ll the BEST d e a ls!! C heck out our latest Ads at APARTMENT-CENTRAL.COM LIVE O N 6TH ST! ~ UT Shuttle, Hike & Bike trail, Free cable, $595 VIEW POINT APTS. S tartin g at $475 Leasing Now ForJune [ P rim e W est C a m p u s lo c a tio n w ith be a u tifu l views. C o m p e te n t on-site m a n a g e ­ m e n t and large, ha n d so m e j e fficie n cie s m a ke [ livin g at View Point a ple a sa n t I lifestyle. A few cho ice a p a rtm e n ts are j available im m e - | diately. Lo cated at the I c o rn e r o f 26 th and Leon (5 b lo c k s W est o f | Gu td a lu p e ). Call 476-8590 2 5 18 Leon LARG E~272~ First h alf m onth's free! 1025 sq. ft. $ 7 0 0 /m o n th N ew ly remodeled, lo w deposit, prompt maintenance, very clean, NR shuttle and swimming pool A nice small quiet community Brookhollow Apts. 1414 Arena Dr. 445-5655 WEST CAMPUS 1/ 1, W /D , mi cro., dishwasher, covered parking 6 A vailable end M ay $ 7 0 0 28 1 4 Nueces 3 4 7 -8 3 9 7 294 404 8. "E A S T CAMPUS JE W E L " Less than 1 mile to Law school and Engineering 1-bedrooms starting at $5 5 0 2-bedrooms starting at $725 N ew carpet, ceiling fan, walk-in closets, all appliances. Great central location! O n shuttle $ 2 0 0 deposit M ackie or Theresa at 4 7 8 - 0 9 5 5 Sandstone Apartments IMMEDIATELY m Hyde MOVE-IN apartment 1-bedroom Park. $ 4 5 0 /m o plus electricity Security deposit $1 5 0 O n UT shuttle route 465-9491 7 7 5 -8 6 6 5 or see man­ ager in 4 1 0 5 Speedway #201 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Unf, Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. Marquis M anagem ent The student Housing Specialist W est Cam pus $625 $635 $715 $730 $765 $1050 LOCATION!!! Furnished HUGE W alk to School Prime Location HUGE/Pool/Covered parking Seton Square University Quarters The Carrels Camino Real University Gardens Camino Real HUGE Free Basic Cable Hyde Park N o rth Campus $595 $735 $950 Condos Chimney Sweep Chimney Sweep Park Place Eff. 1-1 1-1 1-1 1-1 2-2 Eff. 1-1 2-1 West Campus 2-1 y 2 Gated North Campus 2-2 2 - 2 HUGE Best Deal Shuttle $595 $795 University Crest University Crest 605 W. 28th 472-3816 ______ www.marquism9mt.com « / I f a r t t f o f i f t H e r h t f • New State of the Art Fitness Center • 0 » UT s h u ttle ro u te • Two swimming pools/hot tubs • Sand volleyball • Business center • Scenic views* • Tiled fireplaces* • Vaulted ceilings* _ LOCATION! LOCATION! • Complimentary video libran • Large pets welcome *ln select units BEST O F E V E R Y T H IN G . Minutes to campus, shuttle at door O ne & Two Lg ATTRACTIVE APTS, Huge Closets, Pool, M g r & M aintenance on site Adj. to Hancock Center PARK PLAZA 915 E. 41st 452 -65 18 Century PI 4 2 1 0 Red River 4 5 2 -43 66 SUMMER SPECIALS SUBLEASE $ 45 0, 0 5 / 2 0 to 0 8 / 1 3 , W /D , Furn, Private bed /bath, ether net, gated, near bus-route, LarryTay- 919 - lor28@ Hotm ail.com , M ike 3 1 7 8 2317 Pleasant Valley 512/440-0118 fax 512/440-0157 ‘ Studios $ 5 2 5 -$ 5 5 0 + to Cam pus!!! SAFE, QUIET, 3 min " elec * * *1 -1 $75 0 4 0 5 E. 31 /D u va i 4 7 2 -2 4 5 0 for appt NEWLY REMODELED! $ 5 0 move' in. 1 /1 's $550, 2 /1 s $ 6 7 5 Coll Apartment Experts. 4 1 6 -8 1 0 0 $1325 Nueces Oaks A p a rtm e n t C e ntral 480-9353 HUGE 1 1 Spacious 2nd-story of house W a lk to UT. W d firs, lots of light 6 /1 4 7 8 1854 G ated/pool/covered parking $ 1350 31 st St. Condos 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Unf, Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. SOFA A N D love seat for sale, great condition, bauhaus brand: $30 0 for both, O BO , C all 5 0 2 -98 43 MELROSE APARTMENT for summer sublease If interested w ill discuss rent. 742 -35 83. $ 5 2 5 /m o . FREE CLOTHES dryer. Tosses but no heat G ood for part/fix-up. Must p icku p , 4 4 3 -1 4 4 7 . L O N G H O R N A U T O SPECIALS D O Y O U H A V E A C A R F O R S A L E ? Sell it here in The Daily Texan 2 0 words, 5 days for $8 85, rf if doesn't sell within that 5 days call us back on the last dav and w e ll run it another 5 days FREE C a ll 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 1994 WHITE M azd a M X6 One owner, great condition, all mainte­ nance New-automatic transmission. Auto w indow s/locks Cold A /C . Cassette. $ 3 ,5 0 0 918 1792. records. 93 SATURN 2-door. records $ 2 9 9 5 . 4 4 1 -5 2 9 9 . Immaculate, all 1997 NISSAN XE Pick-up Great condition, cold AC , 61k miles. $ 5 5 0 0 O B O . 4 5 7 -0 2 7 9 '9 3 MERCURY C a pri Convertible, Teel, only 65K, N e w white top, 5spd. A /C , PW, Cruise, stereo. Fun & Sporty I $ 2 ,7 5 0 . 990 -4 7 5 7 , 789 -7 2 3 6 . NICELY FURNISHED W est Campus Apartm ent 1-1 $65 0, 3 closets, pa­ tio, pool Apartment Finders 322- 9 5 5 6 . LO O K IN G FOR A N E W PLACE? Check out our online apartment search form at ww w ausapt.com Apartm ent Finders. SUBLETTERS NEEDED! ethernet, gated. UT Shuttle. Bedroom. 297 -61 68 free free cable, W /D , gym, $ 4 6 0 /m o oer 2-1, SUMMER-SUBLEASE COLLEGE Park. Pool, tennis, basket ball, vol­ ley ball, fitness & game room, etc $ 3 9 9 /m o . 560 -33 27. SUMMER-SUBLEASE SAVE $ 2 5 0 2 / 1 , W /D . $ 4 6 0 /m o . UT Shuttle. W ireless modem Free cable June- August Brian 385-6931. vandouglas58@ hotmail.com STERLING UNIVERSITY. wanted. 4BR-2BA +bills. C all Vera, 8 0 4 -07 20 Female 1-year-lease starting fall. Lots of amenities. $ 4 0 5 I bedroom in 4-2 for Fall- LEASE Spring Free Ethernet, Exercise Room, Balcony with Pool View, Free Tanning, UT Shuttle and more $ 4 0 5 . Jackie 689 -52 40. Furnished $ 4 1 5/m o. Free H B O /C a b le SUMMER SUBLEASE 4 / 2 & ethernet! 736 -10 85 P r e l e a s in g a N O W O f t **s3£ y M b* SE Eff 1-1 2 - 1 2-1.5 2-2 3-2 $445+ $485+ $595+ $625+ $650+ $985+ O u Q ly y E Features: Energy efficient, ceram ic tile entry & bath, fireplaces, walk-in closets, spacious floor plans, cats allo w ed, located just 5 minutes from D ow ntow n Autumn Hills Parklane Villas Shoreline Apts. 444-6676 444-7555 442-6668 ¡ 3 o w s m i Student Heritage Houses, Inc. from 1936... to 2002 and beyond... SUMMER Housing! • Easy 3-month lease • $390 Doubles $500 Singles •All Meals, All Bills • free laundry, DSL men/women Next year live with peopie without living WITH people at University Gardens. The exclusive West # Campus complex of spacious one bedrooms is ready for pre-leasing C a ll fo r S pecials! Pre-leasing: Marquis Management» 4 7 6 -4 9 9 2 PRE-LEASE 2002-2003 • $495-600 •All Meals, All Bills • free laundry, DSL • singles/doubles • men/women • 0n/0ff-Campus houses 370 - Unf. Apts. 370 - Unf. Apts. E F F . & 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 B D R M A P A R T M E N T S Starting at $499 N o w Preleasing! • Gated Community • Student Oriented • On UT Shuttle Route • Sun Deck with Terrace • Water & Sand Volleyball • Lofts W/Fans • 5 Min. to Downtown • Excellent Maintenance • Microwaves • Basketball Colorado River SHHI has brought housing, democracy and lifelong friendships to Austin students. 2222 Pearl Street • Austin, TX 78705 • 512-476-2667 • 512-476-5578 (fax) • www.shhi.org 444-7536 POINT SOUTH Rental Office: 1910 Willowcreek P a g e 1 8 The Daily T exan Tuesday, April 2 3 , 2 0 0 2 3 7 0 - U n f. Apto. 3 9 0 - U n f. D u p le x e s RENTAL RENTAL 400 - Condos- Townh< mes 4 0 0 -Condos Townh m o RENTAL April Free 32nd/Tom Greer- AVAIlABlE N O W Efficiency w a te r paid, new carpet, fresh paint, appliances, laundry on site 311 9 Tom Green $525 Vista Properties 4 /2 -3 9 0 9 NEAR UT Pre-leasing fall Nice 3 bedroom , $ 1 4 5 0 Fireplace Appli anees N o smokers/pets O wner 4 7 9 -6 1 5 3 , 6 9 9 -6 8 8 8 , 6 5 8 4 2 5 7 ÍST JUNE 3 t 5, CENTRAL, $ 1 4 0 0 CAC H , fireplace, applian ces, Italian tile N o smokers/pets. O w n e r 4 7 9 6 1 5 3 , 6 9 9 -6 8 8 8 658- 4 2 5 7 APRIL FREE Efficiency, Appliances, pool, la u n d ry 305 West 35th. $515 Vista Properties. 472-3909. PRELEASE SPECIALS W EST C AM PU S/HYD E PARK/SPEEDWAY _________ • EFF'S M 'S 2 -1'S A N D 2-2'S 3 BR'S HUGE LUXURY DUPLEX $3 9 5 $ 62 5 $89 5 $ 12 95 $ 2 5 0 0 Westview Luxury living just 3 Blocks from UT 1/1 2/2 from $725 from $1,225 W/D, Lots of Windows, Covered Parking, Pool 9 month leases available Cobalt Partners 585-5810 NORTH CAMPUS. Hyde Park Oaks Big 2 / 2 , $ 1 2 0 0 FrontPage 4 8 0 -85 18 WEST CAMPUS Spacious, $ 1 2 0 0 Front Page 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 largest floorplan. W edgew ood 2 /2 , CALL HAUSTEIN PROPERTY C O M P A N Y 4 0 7 -3 7 0 0 SUMMER RENTAL 102 W . 3 2 n d O n shuttle 2 (possibly 3) BR 2BA 2 LIV Very nice. H a rd w o o d s/T ile /lo ts of w indow s, and storage 2 car garage $ 1 500-1 7 5 0 - d e p e n d in g on yo u r situation. 9 1 4 -0 6 7 0 2 /1 tile /h a rd w o o d avail. Jun 6 0 0 and 5 0 6 Elmwood PI 7 3 6 I BLOCK Law /E ngineering and 1/1 1 7 7 7 5 3 4 0 0 SPEEDWAY 2 story 2 bed room condo a vailab le June 1 New paint and carpet, W /D $ 1200 Sherry M cClain, realtor 4 1 8 828 3 just 2 blocks 9 0 9 WEST 21st Historic 1/1 and from Campus, 2 / 1 ha rd w o o d floors, Large windows CATS O K $ 7 9 5 $ 1 0 9 5 476 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES. 5 0 7 WEST 16th Q uiet and Uni que from UT $69 5. 1 /1 only blocks A v a ila b le June ELY 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 PROPERTIES COTTAGE-WEST CAMPUS efficien- floors, quaint cv with hardw ood quiet area remote in charm , $ 6 5 0 /m o 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 EPI 3 / 2 / 1 SOUTH Austin Ceiling fans Fireplace Big yard Pets ok W /D connections $ 9 5 0 3 0 1 -1 8 0 0 ,7 3 6 - 9 1 8 4 (cell). 4 0 0 - Condos- Townhomes UNIQUE EFFICIENCIES!!! Saltillo tile, fireplace, tropical pool $ 5 5 0 Preleasing FrontPage 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 C ountry C lu b T O W N H O M E S 2 story, 2 & 3 bedroom, 2 5 bath Faux finished walls. Fully furnished available Most bills paid Super specials for awesom e tenants starting at $ 8 9 5 N o w preleasing for Fall N e ar UT shuttles, Riverside ACC, & G olf Course. Contact Heather at 38 5-7284. ~ D O W N T O W N HI-RISE 2 / 2 1 blk. from UTI ALL BILLS PAID! Lifetime Deal! $ 7 9 5 until A ug. 2 0 0 2 , Fall lease $ 1 2 9 5 1,2 ,3 Bedrooms Leasing for Summer & Fall Best Landlord! KHP 4 7 6 -2 1 5 4 ~ C O N D O S FOR LEASE Centennial 3-2 $ 2 2 0 0 C roix 2-2 $ 1 6 0 0 Dominion 2-2 $ 1 3 0 0 H yde Park Oaks 2-2 $ 1300 O ld M a in 2-2 $ 1 6 5 0 , 2-1 $ 1 3 5 0 O ran ge Tree 2-2.5 $ 19 0 0 Pecan W a lk $ 2 1 0 0 Q uadrangle 2-2 $ 1 5 0 0 Salado PI. 1-1 $6 7 5 W inchester 2-2 $ 13 0 0 C a ll to set A p p ointm ent M e tro Realty 4 7 9 -1 3 0 0 w w w .utmetro.com 9 M O N T H LEASE- W est Campus Condo-luxury top of line, covered parking, pool, W /D , micro, all amenities, from $7 25 to $ 1 29 5. Call owner direct 3 2 7 -1 6 9 9 or 5 8 5 -5 8 1 0 large CAMPUS W EST 7 7 g a te d /co ve re d parking, W /D , fire­ place, patio, walk to campus A vail­ 789- ab le August 3 3 8 5 $ 1 4 0 0 /m o . 7 / 1 , 2 STORY at 24 1 3 Leon, # 104 $ 9 4 5 /m o n th . W / D on sight. Tina, Tarantino Properties, 3 0 2 -4 5 0 0 ext. 16. 35TH/SPEEDW AYI 1X1 nice Shut­ tle /W a lk $ 6 7 5 Front Paqe 4 8 0 • 8 5 1 8 CEN TE N N IA L SUMMER Sublease, one bedroom , study, huge immacu­ late place, W est Campus, end of Justin M ay-A ug 15, $ 1 0 0 0 nego 5 1 2 -6 8 0 -7 0 9 5 ~ D O Y O U HAVE A C O N D O OR T O W N H O U S E FOR LEASE? Call James at The Daily Texan and receive 1 /2 off your first ad. 47 1-38 52 WATERFORD C O N D O M IN IU M S Prelease for June or August 2 0 0 2 w h ile there is still a selection. Huge units still available from $ 1 5 2 5 G re a t location G reat floorplans Access gates Friendly onsite m anagem ent & maintenance Act now to avoid disappointment! 4 7 3 -8 3 1 8 w w w waterfordcondos.com T W O FEMALE roommates needed to share a townhome in south Austin, 3-2 5-2, W /D , pool, tennis court, UT shuttle, 9 / 0 1 / 0 2 - 8 /3 1 /0 3 , Law students/post graduate prefer red C a ll Lindsay at 326 -3 0 1 3 or 2 I 0-445-1 1 86, $ 55 0/m onth rent GREAT 1/1 condos available Au­ 3 4 0 0 Speedw ay or 300 0 gust Guadalupe. $ 5 5 0 /m o .’ Sherry M cClain, realtor 4 1 8 828 3 NORTH UT 3-2 5 Condo Shuttle, fireplace, W /D , vaulted ceikngs. $ 1 8 0 0 A va ila ble August 4 40 9 Speedway 443 4 1 0 6 Sam LIVE O N 4th Street Powntown! Cool 1 and 3 bedroom, hardwoods, G ranite counters. W et Bar and 47 6 -1 9 7 6 morel ELY PROPERTIES. $ 9 2 5 $ 1 ,695 LO OKIN G FOR perfect m West Campus? Seton I / 1 , upgrades and quality throughout 2 blocks to UT $ 89 5 Available August 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES WEST CAMPUS 2 /1 Loft- Soaring ceilings, lots of natural light $79 5 Available August 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES ST. JAMES-DESIGNER 1/1 and 2 / 2 in Small West Campus Community, Soaring ceilings, G reat Deck, Lots of Light, W /D $85 0 -$ 1395 A va ila­ ble August 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPER­ TIES. D O M IN IO N 2 /1 2 blocks to UT, Ideal Roommate Floorplan, W /D Conn A va ila ble August 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES $ 10 95 CENTENNIAL LARGE 2 / 2 with 2 covered parking. This unit has every possible amenity! available 8 / 2 / $ 1 6 9 5 /m o 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROP ERTIES. ENFIELD VALUE- 2 /1 , large bed rooms, very clean, Shuttle cit Front Door Available $ 7 9 5 /m o 476- 1976 ELY PROPERTIES. SKI LODGE Feel- Soaring ceilings, private patio, 2 large bedrooms, En­ field N e ighb orh ood $ I 195. A va ila ­ ble August 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPER­ TIES. ROBBINS PLACE- Unique 2 / 2 's just blocks from campus. All amenities, Huge Patios, Lots of w indow s, G reat courtyard $ 1 3 9 5 $ 1595 A vailable August. 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES H A N C O C K PLACE 1 /1 & 2 /1 with hardwood, tile bath, W /D , lots of charml A vailable August 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES $99 5 $ 1 ,3 9 5 LUXURY NORTH Campus Poolside 1/1 in Sunchase- gated communily, large open floorplan with W /D $89 5 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES ORANGE TREE- W est Campus's most desirable community, Spacious 1/1 s with W /D and covered park­ ing $895. A va ila ble August 4 7 6 1976 ELY PROPERTIES OAKVIEW- W ALK to Law School, poolside 1/1 w ith W / D $ 89 5. ELY Available August, 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 PROPERTIES HYDE PARK Oaks- Law Students dream property Q uiet community, floorplan with W /D $ 89 5. Open Available August 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES POOLSIDE 1/1 at the Croix- W est Campus's most exclusive complex. Loaded with amenities including W /D O nly 3 Blocks to UT $89 5. Available August 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES. WHITIS PLACE- 1 /1 Next to Dobie, W /D Covered Parking A vailable June. PROPERTIES 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 $795. ELY PECAN WALK 1 /1 - North Campus, Walk-in closets, N ice Patio $750. A vailable August 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES W E D G E W O O D QUIET and Private 1 /1 , overlooking pool, W /D $695. A vailable August 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES NORTH CAMPUS 1 / 1 - 5 blocks to UT, tropical pool, Huge living areas. Available August 4 7 6 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES. PRIVATE HYDE Park 1 /1 - Plenty of natural light Small community, Nice Patio $69 5 A va ila ble August 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES ENFIELD TREEHOUSE Very Spa cious and unique 2 bedroom loft and 2 bedroom 2 bath in the trees A va ila ble August $995 $12 9 5 47 6 -1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES. PECAN WALK N orth Campus lofted 2 /1 and 4 /2 ,- Soaring ceilings, Unique floorplan. C ool Patio $1300- $ 1995 476- 1976 ELY PROPERTIES A va ila ble August PARK HYDE Contemporary, 3 b r/2 b a , garage C A /C H , W /D , pool, on shuttle $ 1 6 5 0 /m o 346- 0 7 2 9 4 0 0 - Condos- 400 - Condos* Townhomes Townhomes The Place to BE For Summer & Fall Preleasing Condos/Apts cute/gated could be a 2bd Huge Bedrooms gate, full size w/d pool/hot tub Always a Hot Spot Gazebo Pearl Sandpiper WMgewood Svacfease Oraagetree 1-1 1 -loft 2-2 2-1 2-2 2-2 $59$ $300 $950 $1100 $1200 $1300 1061.38th 1037 L 43rd 4513 Speedway 3403 Cedar 3300 Ave. F Houses/Duplexes 2-1 3-1 3-3 4-2 4-2 yard maintained Hardwoods/Shuttle 2 story/creek view w/d, hardwoods huge, could be 5bd $925 $1600 $1900 $2295 $2300 April Free H yde Park Efficiency appliances, water/gas paid, laundry on site. 4415 Avenue B $495 Vista Properties 472 3909 LA CASITA N orth Campus 2 blocks to UT. Just renovated 1-1's from $595 2-1 's from $875 C all 970-0754 or 585-5810. LIVE 2 blocks from UTI Rio G rande & 24th I Bedrooms, covered park ing, qated orcess, W /D in every a p a r e e n , Cali now! 322-9887 C O M t CHECK us out! Very close to cam pus if f 1 & 2 Bedrooms. Beautiful pool, gated access dish w asher & microwave Call now l 3 2 2 9 8 8 / W A L K T Ó UT!! Preleasing N ow for Summer & Fall 1 / 1 ' s and Efficiencies Starting @ $425 C all 477-8858 n 5 w _ PRELEASING!! Summer & Fall 1 /1 's and Efficiencies W alk to UT Starting @ $325 C all 4 6 9 -0 9 2 5 SUBLEASE W aterford lER West Campus M id- , Aid Aug, HUGE 3 /2 , up to 5 472- i, kitchen, parking, i Lane B 0 / 2 BA. . Nice yard maintained mer lease ¡ now. ). 1-2501, EASE EFFICIENCY W est pus $425 Micro, 2505 Long- move-in after May 17, M ay s said 499 8695 noy@hotmail.com 'ER VIEWI West Campus luxu- ith access g ° tes P00^' balconies, fireplace. O nly Apartment Finders 322- i I N 3 / 3 2 / 2 M o d e rn /p o o l 5 3 8 8 / w i l l n e g o t ia t e ! Need own f u r n it u r e Erin or Heather b e d r o o m , ^un®. ~ ,u® 9 1 9 1421 TIRED OF ✓EST CAMPUS??? W a lk to Zilker Park & Downtown Huqe efficiencies Under $500 ia t Summer Specials.^ I Crystal @ 469-0 9 2 5 S U B-lfAS E EFFICIENCY available Sma I, attractive fro m Apr,I 25 n e ig h b o r - c o m p le x re s id e n tia l in laundry on sile h o o d , Pla ce Apartments on W .3 5lh one $ 5 15/m o. b lo c k off Guadalupe C a ll 4 5 3 2467 _____ ° ° l I : r & F A L L p r e l e a s i n g * H I J H B Y ! C A L L T O D A Y ! ! 1/1*8 Leon Hyde Park Pointe Nueces Corner Croix Buena Vista 2 bedrooms S600 $675 $^75 $800 $^50 $950 $1300 $1450 $1450 $1450 $1500 $1650 $1850 Leon Croix Lenox Parapet Somerset Wedgewoixl St. Thomas O range Tree U 1 / 1 je . 2 /2 $925, aid Available 454-7115 G R A N D OAK- June 2 /2 Cam pus one block 1000 sq cenng, free c a b le /h ,g h speed internet Seri­ o u s / quiet/sm okeless/pe*1 $ 1 3 0 0 4 7 7 3 3 8 8 / 4 / 2-2UV/ SUMM ER SUBIET/IONGER SP e edw ay near campu»- UT shuttle O p t i o n a l TV, c o u c h e s °vvn $ 6 7 9 /m o 474 2204 t e 4 y o u r s l o ^ h + T g r a d s tu d en t s^ - S hare 2 / 2 w /G ra d student Huge, mad- townhouse w / g ° r09e ern 9 ym . pool Sunlight, trees On Ear W e s , shuttle route $675/m o. Call 8 2 6 -0 9 6 0 RENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part tim e CAREGIVERS FOR sweet 7 7 yr old lady with memory loss Prepare meals, run errands W est Lake Hills home. Nonsmoker w ith good driving recorcT M on, Tues, or Fri 7-3. M on or W ed 3-9pm. Sat 8am-9pm $ 9 .5 0 /h r. 4 7 7-6866. DO YOU HAVE A PART-TIME POSITION AVAILABLE? Call Vanessa at The D aily Texan and receive 1 / 2 off your first ad 232-2680 Love Language & Travel? Hostelling lnterr,ational-Austin has a part time front desk opening. Town Lake waterfront location. Fun, rew arding iob International environment. Flexible hours, some nights, weekends Minimum approx 2 0 h r s /w e e k , $ 8 /h r . Resume, hiaustin@swbell.net. Fax 4 4 4 -2 3 0 9 w w w hiaustin.org WORK OUTDOORS part-time flexi- ble hours Require car and morning $10-$ 1 2 /h r to start. availability 2 9 4 -7 4 6 5 NEEDED BABYSITTER for alternating Saturday nights in Eanes neighborhood 10mm from UT. Fee negotiable 306-1478 Close EXPERIENCED PART TIME SITTER to core for 4&7-year-old in my Hyde Park home M ornings, late-May thru early-July References $ 7 /h o u r please. C all Alex at 453 -4 5 9 0 P/T POSITIONS available for students office Flexible hours! W ill Train! Judith 258-441 1 in N W Austin Physician's to help. TUTORS NEEDED for the Fall. Or- gam zed enough Small groups w /o u r organization G reat Interviewing now Call 979- pay 776-061 8 for appointment, manag- er@4 0andgo.com 3 6 0 T ra ¡n in g , an Austin, TX based e-learning company that provides training courses via the Internet to customers nationwide, seeks part-time customer service representatives to provide customer support via phone and web. Duties w ill include troubleshooting basic user problems, provide resolutions to customer requests, assist managers in special pro|ects, remain knowledgeable of 360training's products and provide quality assurance testing of new online course offerings. Basic computer and Internet skills, excellent telephone and interpersonal skills required. Full training provided. Hours Part Time, morning, afternoon and evening shirts available. Please email resumes to tor- rey@ 360training.com or via tax at (512) 47 7-5 7 2 5 - please indicate your interest in the CSR position or your cover page SW IM INSTRUCTOR. Summer morn­ ings, 8:45-1 1 45. Small classes, warm water, great pay! Experience preferred. Private swim school 4 0 minutes north of campus 259 -15 96 PT CLERICAL position available at a medical office Flexible hours. Please call 3 2 9 -9 2 9 6 or fax resume to 328 -2 4 5 5 . 800 - Genera! Help W anted $ 1 5 0 0 WEEKLY potential mailing our circulars For info call 203-977- 1720 GET PAID-TO-PLAY! Northwest-Rec­ reation-Center is looking for energet­ ic people for youth Summer-Camp- Programs PT/FT positions. $7.56- $ 8 . l l / h r . C all E ric/@ 458-4107 HIRING FOR Summer! Lake w ater­ craft business located on Lake LBJ. CSR help needed 8 30 -69 3-29 23 WELLS BRANCH M U D is looking for field professionals to join our aquatic team Assistant pool m anager, lifeguard, and swim instructors are welcome. C am p counselors also needed Salary DOE Summer or year-round FT/PT Call 251 -9 81 4 ext. 28. A dam s Translation Services N a tiv e S peakers W a n te d ! Adams is looking for French, Spanish, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, and Chinese Speakers. Please contact M arthaDavilla@ adamstrans.com for further information or log onto www.odam strans.com $$$ $ $ WEEKLY! Processing HUD- FHA M ortgage Refunds N o Experi­ ence Needed C a ll 1-800-449- 4 6 2 5 ext. 5 8 9 0 for information. SUMMER CAMP COUNSELORS NEEDED Chapparral Ice looking for energetic, enthusiastic & dependable students to work w / kids ages 5-1 3 in an 1 1-week day camp Skating exp. not necessary Great hrs/G reat pay. Also looking for shift leaders, cashiers, skate guards & food service Leslie, 2 5 2 -8 5 0 0 x 106 or app ly in person, 142 0 0 North IH-35. CAMP TAKAJO FOR BOYS, Naples, M aine. Noted for picturesque lakefront location, exceptional facilities. Mid-June thru mid-August. O ver 100 counselor positions in tennis, baseball, basketball, lacrosse, golf, flag football, roller hockey, swimming, sailing, water skiing, archery, ceramics, art, cam p newspaper, photography, w eight training, w o odw orking, theater, backpacking, rock climbing, ropes course, secretarial Salary, ro o m /b o a rd , travel included C all 1 -8 0 0 - 2 5 0 -8 2 5 2 or submit ap p lic atio n on-line a t w w vy.takajo.com EL MERCADO Uptown, 1 7th and Lavaca. 5 blocks south of campus, needs w ait staff and host staff. 477-7689 W ORK FROM home. $500-$ 1 5 0 0 PT, $ 2 0 0 0 -$ 4 0 0 0 FT. workfromho- mesimple com 8 0 0 -86 6-80 88 ] $50K-$ 100K First Y ear in Residential Real Estate sound good? Free Real Estate School sound good? Earn w h ile you learn sound good? O ne of Austin's fastest growing real estate companies (600% growth in 3 6 months) is looking for professional people interested in helping others and earning a great income at the same time! Call About Success Real Estate Academy 4 0 7 - 3 4 3 4 in­ SCOREPERFECT IS hiring LSAT structors $30 per hour Minimum 99th percentile score on real LSAT required 1 -800-259-62 11. FUN, S U N *M O N E Y Work, traw l, and play I 2 paid training;! ■ p a i d (provided 1-866-US1-CASH 800 - General 8 0 0 -G en eral Help W anted Help R anted — r s HOUSTON SUMMER JOBS! Miller Swim Academy is now hiring swim instructors, lifeguards, and pool managers. Excellent pay! Sixty locations throughout Houston. 713-777-7946 790 - Part tim e 790 - Part time 5 QUADRANGLE- HYDE Park's Euro­ pean style 2 / 2 .5 , every amenity, skylights, fireplace in bedrooms, G a­ rages $ t 395 $ 1 5 9 5 A va ila ble Au­ gust 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES FAR WEST 3 / 2 Downtown views, tropical poolside unit, G rea t Room- Q uiet Community mcte plan! $ 1 295 4 7 6 197 6 ELY PROPERTIES A va ila ble August UNIVERSITY AREA apartment, 4 / 2 and 3 / 2 6 4 1 4 , 3 0 2 -1 0 0 7 House and 293- PERFECT LOCATIO N, across Law school 2 /1 ton St Available 5 /0 1 Call 7 7 3 -5 2 4 0 from 7 1 6 Dean Kee­ Large deck. Must see PRELEASING STARTING May, Au 4, 5, 6 bedroom houses gust la rge yards, lOm in to UT $1,500- $2 ,1 0 0 9 2 8 -4 9 4 4 WALK TO UT Huge 1/1 condo available late-M ay W /D , micro- wove, walk-in closet, patio, fire­ place $ 6 7 5 /m o 7 7 3 -1 1 2 9 2 HOUSES den, $ 1 8 0 0 2 areas, big kitchen, $ 1 6 0 0 . 4 9 4 4 5 / 2 / 2 , big yard, gar­ living 928 4 / 2 / 1 The Templar Foundation now has its annual tax return available for inspections at its principle office at P.O. Box 1 5 5 8 4 San Antonio, Texas 78212 phone 51 2 -3 2 7 -7 4 5 6 by any citizen w ho reguests inspection within one hundred eighty (180) days after the date that this Notice is published The principal manager of the Foundation is D aniel W . O rtm an (A p ril 2 3 , 2 0 0 2 ) WEST CAMPUS 3 b e d ro o m /2 bath, Fall prelease $ 1 .7 5 0 F loorplan at h ttp :// utlive homestead com 7 91-0063 FRENCH PLACE 3 / 1 5 - Nice open yard, Pets N e g o H ardw ood floors, G reat Value $ 15 95 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPERTIES SERVICES 660 - Storage I AVAILABLE JUNE O ne spot in 2 / 2 condo North-Campus W /D Easy walk. 30th $ 6 2 5 /m o 458 -83 21 /S peedw ay 28TH A N D RIO GRANDE Very large 2 / 2 condo O n e room available for one or two females All Bills Paid including: phone, utilities, cable, Roadrunner $ 8 0 0 /r o o m Call Vanessa 7 9 7 -6 6 3 9 . 2 / 2 NEAR St. David's can. 345-2724 $7 5 0 summer 9 1 0 Dun- $9 9 0 fall 420 - Unf* Houses LARGE 5 / 4 UT Shuttle W est En field W /D , Central A ir/H e a t, Dis­ posal, etc $ 2 ,6 0 0 901 Newman 327-5833 O NE MILE to campus N ice 4 /2 , fans, w asher/dryer CACH , ceiling starting $ 1 6 0 0 /m o , lease June 1 st 3 0 0 9 Cherrywood Call between 6 8 p m , John 2 61 -80 23 ly r SEVERAL GORGEOUS 3 Bedroom Houses & Duplexes in Tarrytown & W est Campus. Leases beginning in Summer and Fall KHP 4 7 6 -21 54 2-BEDRO O M /2 BATH, 4501 Ave C, HydePark, CACH, front porch, nice kitchen, big den, June $1250. 4 8 0 -8 5 1 8 /G le n n /o w n e r/a g e n t. HOUSES FOR LEASE 2 10 5 W est 1 1th 5-2 $ 3 2 0 0 3201 G uadalupe 3-1 $ 1 7 5 0 502 N e lray 3-2 $ 1 8 5 0 450 4 El w o od 3 2 $ 1 9 0 0 5 4 0 7 Jeff Davis A 3-2 $ 15 0 0 5 4 0 7 Jeff Davis B 2-1 $ 1 2 0 0 4 15 W est 32n d 2-1 $ 1 2 0 0 7 04 W est 32n d 2-1 $ 1 2 5 0 8 07 East 45th 2-1 $ 1 2 0 0 9 3 7 East 52nd. 3-1 $ 1 7 0 0 Call fo r showing M e tro Realty 4 7 9 -1 3 0 0 w w w .u tm etro .co m NICE 3-2-2. G rea t neighborhood. CR shuttle. CACH Appliances 1201 Large rooms Ridgehaven Dr 8 /1 . 6 5 7 -7 1 7 1 /3 2 7 -3 6 9 0 $ 1 5 0 0 /m o Available D O W N T O W N LARGE, 5B R/2BA/2LR tion 1999, a vailab le about $ 2 0 0 0 /m o n th 217-9161 9 0 0 O live Awesome G eorge historic renova­ 6 /1 , agent, AVAILABLE N O W ! 24 hours inform ation call 477-LIVE 3-1 $ 7 0 0 for AVAILABLE AU G . 15 1-5 BD $500- $ 2 0 0 0 for 24 hour inform ation call 477-LIVE email or home austin rr com /fhe/477L IV E * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * HAUSTEIN PROPERTY C O M P A N Y 4 0 7 -3 7 0 0 PRELEASE SPECIALS WEST CAM PUS • 191 3 Robbins Place E ff's /1-1 s/H ardw o ods $ 3 9 5 and Up • 1 9 0 7 Robbins Place 1-1 's/2-1 s $6 2 5 -$ 9 7 5 • 2 2 2 0 Leon Apts 2-2's O n ly $8 9 5 HYDE P A R K /D U V A L / SPEEDWAY •4 5 1 8 Speedway- Luxury Duplex Fits 5 Roommates Easy W / D Included $ 2 5 0 0 • 4 6 0 7 B Duval 1-1 w /L a rg e Yard $ 6 9 5 • 5 1 1 2 M artin 3BR Duplex $ 1 2 9 5 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * BEST SELECTION! Prelease Properties Studios - 5 bedrooms ALL PROPERTIES LISTED O N OUR WEBSITE eyesoftexasproperties.com 477-1 163 5 / 2 2-story. 15/SH OAL CREEK! lease. house Cool $23 00. Enfield 3 / 2 hardwoods. A u g u s t/ly r Front P a g e /4 8 0 -8 5 1 8. J u n e /ly r $ 1 8 0 0 UNIQUE APTS, in great campus area locations. Terrific move-in spe­ cials, rent $3 9 5 and up A lori Prop­ 454 -4 6 6 3 . erties W W W .ALO R I NET N o w preleos- ing for summer and fall HYDE PARK 3 Bedrooms!- Hard­ floors. G reat yards Huge wood Kitchen and living areas $1,350- $ 2 ,195. 4 7 6 1 9 7 6 ELY PROPER TIES. LEASE M AY 1st Close in, North­ Large, beautiful, quiet, park­ east 2-story 4 / 2 5 Only like setting. $17 95 6 2 7 -3 9 4 0 HUGE 4B R /2B A house Remod­ eled real nice CR shuttle $1800. N o dogs 1508 Ridgemont Dr 6 2 6 5699, Alan 425 - Rooms $415 ABP in large older home, gar­ $ 1 0 0 deposit, three den, privacy blocks Deborah 478- 5027. from UT FANTASTIC NORTH campus apart­ ment 31 st/S peedw ay 5 /1 5 - 8 /1 5 Large bedroom. 10/m inute walk to campus. W /D /d is h w a s h e r Furnish ed Bills split w / 2 other easy-going girls $ 5 0 0 /m o . N egotiable Kristin 494 -04 86 SUMMER SUBLEASE. 3 bedroom apt Flexible $ 4 6 5 /m o n th Landings 470 -84 41 move-in Fully l-t>edroom in furnished dates College Park-The SUMMER SUBIEASE NE Austin In­ house Private room, share bath cludes cable tv/m odem A ll utilities $ 3 5 0 /m o N ic o /9 3 3 9 6 7 8 435 - Co-ops CO-OP RO O M S $39 5 ABP 1910 Rio G rande 3 Blocks from campus O w n e r/a g e n t 7 3 6 1 3 6 1 440 - Roommates 4 BLOCKS to UT-Nice! Large pn vate room, bath, walk-in closet, Q ui­ et. nonsmoking, upstairs, W /D , big $495 kitchen, C A /C H . shared ABP 47 4 -2 0 3 6 www.abbey-house.com SHORT W ALK UT- Quiet, nonsmok ing, large w indow s, hardwoods Private bedroom, share bath. From 474- $295 (+ $ 1 0 0 meals, bills). 2 6 1 8 w w w 602elm w ood.com in South Austin to Campus. ROOMMATE TO share beautiful 15 mins house spa, drive 2500+sqft. 7 5 0 4 04 1. $550+utilities. Pool, ARE YOU LO O KIN G TO SUBLEASE YOUR APARTMENT? Call Haya at The D aily Texan 475-8703 YOU NEED a roommate fast? Visit Austin # 1 w w w easyroommate.com. Free search free listing or 8 00 -87 7-25 57 in M /F NEEDED to share 5 / 3 , North start Aug. Campus, walk-to-UT, $ 4 8 0 /m o + 1 / 6 bills W /D , CACH 4 9 4 -8 3 8 6 /D a n ie lle SUMMER SUBLEASE in W est Cam­ pus! Furnished, Rent Negotiable, 6 minute walk to campus, 2 /1 Kelly 7 0 8 -03 08 ROOMMATE NEEDED Female Furnished townhouse on UT shuttle, pool, tennis courts, electric paid. $ 4 5 0 9 1 2 -8 9 8 6 28TH A N D Rio G ra n d e Very large 2 / 2 condo. O ne room available for one or two females. All Bills Paid including: phone, utilities, cable, Roadrunner $ 8 0 0 /r o o m C all Vanessa 7 9 7 -6 6 3 9 . female SPACIOUS 2 / 2 on W est campus needs to share large room from M ay 15-Augustl 5 $ 3 9 0 /m o + 1 / 3 bills 512-236- 03 2 4 roommate ANNOUNCEMENTS 550 - licensed Child Cave LOOKING ASAP for non-smoking fe­ male, driver, for 2 children (4 & 11) 3 tim es/week (3pm- 7:30pm ) Expe­ rience and references a must, $ 10/hour. 32 8 -0 8 6 2 560 - Public Notice $ 3 0 0 0 PAID. Donors SAT > 1 100 /A C T > 2 4 ages 20-29 N/sm okers. Inquire at: lnfo@eggdonorcenter com Egg FAST CASH! I buy automobiles and trucks anytime Call 8 0 4 -1 9 6 7 or 626 -49 34 Oop/1 T o u r lid C o u ld I I «uve B e e n H e r e 435 - Co-ops 435 - Co-ops Live in a place where you can make the difference! AUSTIN INTERNATIONAL Mini-Storage 2 4 hr. controlled access •Free Rent (Call for details) •Student Specials: Must show ID •Low Rate O nsite M anager 385-4777 7 3 2 0 E. Ben W h ite Blvd Personal/Busi­ ST.ELMOStorage ness Electr ic-qate/code-entry/light- ed/fe nced 7 -d a y/2 4 hr access! N o deposit Easy access to IH-35 5'x8's to 4 0 5 East St Elmo Road 445 -5 5 0 2 !0 'x 2 0 's 760 - Misc. Services GETTING MARRIED? Professional wedding photography and you keep the negatives. Karen Dickey Photog­ raphy 4 7 8 -5 8 0 6 EMPLOYMENT 790 - Part time L(.)(.)«! Part-time Job Austin Parks & Recreation Department People needed to work with kids for the summer Playground Program. Hours 2 0 -4 0 . Pay range: $ 6 .2 5 -$ 1 0.25 Austin Parks & Recreation Department O ffice, 2 0 0 S. Lamar Please ca ll 4 8 0 -3 0 4 3 for more inform ation, o r to find out interview dates & times. CHILD CARE Partime, North Austin Location 9am-4pm Saturdays. Private C ompany operated child care facility for employees and clients. Top pay in the field. A pply in person, nonsmoker, 14415 Owen Tech Blvd. (IH35 at W ells Branch Pky) 2 5 1 -8 8 5 5 NEAR UT, $9-10 PT, $10-14 FT, O ffice or courier, flex 474 -21 12 LawyersAidService.com /iobs TELEMARKETING POSITIONS a va ila b le now. W ork near UT Campus. 2 0 hrs/w eek. Sun-Thurs. Evenings. $ 8 -15/hour. N o selling involved A p p 't setting only Must have good communication skills. Friendly atmosphere Call Tom at PBC, 867-6767. Pizza Classics NOW HIRING Drivers & Couponers $ 1 0 - $ 1 5/hr. pd. daily. A lso Cooks . Call 3 2 0 - 8 0 8 0 after 4pm. . DESK ATTENDANT needed to w o rk the w eekend grave shift at a W est C am pus private dorm A.S .A.P.! $ 7 .5 0 / h r or w o rk /liv e . C all 4 7 6 -4 6 4 8 or more info. for several Have SEEKING SUMMER Youth Program Assistants in Austin. fun earn money. Lead out activities and games, super­ vise youth, swimming & field trips Call M arisela, 220- $8-$ 1 0 /h r locations TENNIS for kids INSTRUCTORS Part-time positions M -F /8am -l 2pm M a y 29-July 19 Salary based on experience Lonnie 4 8 0 -3 0 2 0 . PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS •AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY* Professional Library Services will be interviewing immediately. You must have at least one year remaining at the University ana be able to work during the summer to qualify The position is part time 1 5 2 0 /h rs /w k Job responsibilities include m aintaining looseleof periodicals in law libraries mainly in downtown Austin N o experience necessary as a training period is provided Professional dress is required Excellent salary and flexible hoursl Positions to be filled immediately For more information, call Charlene O 'Shea at .3 3 5 -0 4 6 2 . EARN UP to $ 10/hour weeknights for a n d /o r weekends appt s for South location Call Linzi 282-921 I Calling SUMMER DAY CAMP LEADERS needed at McBeth Recreation Cen­ ter. Rewarding opportunities availa­ ble working alongside campers with special needs. Come for a summer of fun and lasting memories. Call 5 1 2 /9 7 4 9011 for information $ 5 0 CASH P / W K P O S S I B L E SAFE • CLEAN MEDICALLY SUPERVISED i F IR S T - T IM E D O N O R S R E C E IV E A $ i o b o n u s W IT H T H IS A D V E R T IS E M E N T I appointment Austin Bio Med Lab • 251-8855 Call fo r ; 'fztz , 800 - General 8 0 0 -G en eral 8 0 0 -G e n e ra l Help Warned Help W anted Lifeguards, Supervisors, Swimming Instructors, Swim Coaches d ^ A u s t in P a r k s a n d R e c r e a tio n • 17+ start at (D.O.E.) $8.25 - $11.00 • Flexible Hours • City-Wide Locations • City Provides Training City of Austin-Aquatics, 476-4521 or Apply at 301 Dawson Rd. (behind City Coliseum) COLLEGE PARK - CONTESSA is looking for a full-time Leasing Agent for the summer. Tne position includes room (private room) and board plus $ 7 /h r. Contessa is a fun student environment and the position is a great w ay to bridge the gap for housing between the Spring and Fall semesters. Interested applicants need to come by CP Contessa @ 2 7 0 7 Rio Grande to pick up an application. You may call 476-4648 during normal business office hours for further information. summer on SPEND YOUR lake Travis!. Lakeway M arina now Hir­ Boat ing! Ski Cashiers, Drivers/Dockhands. Must be at least 18 Call 261 -75 11. SUMMER JOB: maintenance. 2 0h rs./w eek. 478 -7 8 7 8 Yard w ork plus literate Computer GYM NASTIC S/DANC E/C HEER IN- STRÜCTORS for after-school classes. N o w through Fall. Dependable. Re­ sponsible. Experienced A m azing Feats. 7 9 9 -2 107(cell), 280 -2 1 0 7 . G YM NASTICS/TUM BLING COACHES needed. Contact Jenni­ fer at 512 -30 3-35 67. Texas G ym ­ nastics Academy. GREAT SUMMER JOB EARNS UP TO $ 6 0 0 0 . Protect environment, drinking water. Need communica­ tion skills. Call 4 74 -19 03. CUSTOMER SERVICE Reps needed Inside and Outside. 4 3 0 9 PT/FT. G eneral Aviation Ave. 5 3 0 -7 0 0 0 FLORAL DELIVERY & Floral Design A p ril 22-26 & M ay 6-12. A lff's Flo­ rist 472- 6 0 0 Congress Ave 9 2 5 5 . ARE YOU LOOKING FOR HELP? Call Reagan at The Daily Texan and receive 1 /2 off your first ad. 232-2681 PR ES C H O O L TEACHERS: Southwest YM CA (Preschool) O akhill; PT Teachers for Toddler, Pre-K & Summer KinderKamp classes; $ 6 .0 0 - $ 8 . 8 0 /h r, depending on experience; FREE YMCA membership. Call Laurie Ellington @ 8 9 1 - 9 6 2 2 SUMMER CAMP Director needed" Prefer Education m ajor w /c h ild c a re experience. Pay is negotiable Call 4 5 3 -7 2 4 6 ext. 112. POSTAL JOBS $ 9 .1 9 - $ 1 4 .3 2 + Benefits, N o Exp. For A pp . & Exam Info Call 1-800-737-7072 Ext: 7 2 2 4 8 a m -9 p m /7 days M AINTENANCE- TW O POSITIONS Maintenance Tech: Should have knowledge & experience in building m aintenance/repair, salary $ 1259-$ 1461 /m on th plus good benefits. Groundskeeper: Experience in groundskeeping required; concrete w ork experience preferred, salary $ 1 3 2 2 /m o n th plus good benefits A pply at Texas f / t Blind, 1 100 W . 45th St.; 2 0 6 -9 1 2 9 ; www.tsbvi.edu EEO OFFICE CLERK performs a variety of clerical tasks including mail and shipment processing, filing, some data entry Skill in operating general office equipment required. Part Time 25-40 hours per week, $ 9 /h r. Please fax resume to 5 1 2-236-9009 or email hr@azuma.com EARN $ 1 0 0 -$ 3 0 0 /D A Y potential Com puter/office. W ill train and cer­ tify. 1-800-585-4810 ext 1001. $ 2 5 0 A Day potential/ Bartending. Training provided 1-800-293-3985 x5 0 2 NEAR UT, $9-10 PT, $10-14 FT, of- fice or courier, flexible. 474-21 12. LawyersAidService com /jobs SUMMER N A N N Y position availa- ble- Dallas. Children ages 7 -!3 y rs , experience and references required. Car available, but must have driver's license (214)7 2 5 -9 2 4 7 PART-TIME customer service positions available receiving orders by phone. N ot telemarketing. G reat opportunity with growing, Austin-based nutritional supplement com pany, must have strong "people" skills, and attention to detail. Scheduling between 8am and 9pm M-F, and occasional weekends. N o nutritional experience necessary. Excellent pay and benefits C all 3 0 6 - 9 9 1 1 . Ask for James. INSIDE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE. C andidate w ill deal directly with customers. Required input and cordiation of printing orders, copier operation and light bindery. Must have professional appearance, knowledge of printing & digital pre-press helpful A pply 83 11 Shoal Creek. Fax 4 5 4 -3 2 7 8 or em ail longhorns@qpaustin.com N O W TAKING application for sum­ mer staff. Gymnastics and swim in­ structors needed. Starting late M a y Call 453 -5 5 5 1 . 810-O fffce-C ferlcttl NEAR UT, $9-10 PT, $10 -1 4 FT, O ffice or courier, flex. 4 7 4 -2 1 1 2 LawyersAidService.com /jobs. PART-TIME SECRETARY NEEDED for office on Riverside Dr. M-F. Spanish fluency required. Send re­ sume w ith hrs. of a v ailab ility by fax 5 12 -44 3-64 45. SEEKING RELIABLE, hard-working individual lo do PT clerical work (2 0 hours) for small la w firm. Duties include answering phones, filing, running errands, and other various office duties. Please call N o ra at 4 7 7 -7 1 1 1 for info. Part- Fax We are accepting applications for summer and fall. Preleasing will begin on April 1st. Monthly room rates include food and bills! $394-516 Summer • $466-599 Fall We provide cooperative, democracy-based, community living for students. Amenities include: upper division/graduate houses, DSL, cable, community pool, all houses 2-6 blocks from campus. 476-2673 ICC • www.iccaustin.com • 476-1957 Housing for Students, Not Profit. WHEELCHAIR NINJA!! ABLE-HERO Joshua By’ Gosh T he D a ily T exan Tuesday, April 2 3 , 2 00 2 Page 1 9 38 “The Intimate 69 Place for a ” (1990 jazz spending spree 3 4 6 7 10 11 12 13 Crossword Edited by Will Shortz 1 14 1/ 20 23 38 44 49 S3 88 /1 64 8b ACROSS 1 Artist Chagall 5 Rams’ mates 9 Hairy-chested ones 14 Former Expos manager Felipe 15 Á la mode 16 Use a soapbox 17 Scorch 18 Frequent quarreler with Zeus 19 Chop finely 20 Oil container #1 23 On the briny 24 Melody 2 5 ___ -de-France 28 Oil container #2 33 Neighbor of Syr. 36 Downfall 37 Pitcher Ryan album) 40 Disgusted 43 Capone’s nemesis 44 English actors Bates and Rickman 46 Granola bits 48 Play thing 49 Oil container #3 53 “Naughty!” 54 Many a crossword clue 55 Follow 59 Oil container #4 64 Novel or essay 66 Desert bordered by steppe land 67 French cleric 68 “The Hodse of the Seven Gables” locale ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE z E T A 1 V A N N E X T C R 1 s 1 s 1 s 1 S 1 S 1 N 8 U N T A R G 0 T 0 N C E G E 0 D E S T 0 R A G E B 1 N B E E T E E S H 1 M 0 0 H S A C R 0 S S R A M T R 1 K E P 0 T S B A N A N A N A N A N A M E D A N D Y E 1 E 1 0 Y E S S A L 0 N S P A R K P 1 P E S H E L E T R 0 C 0 C 0 C O C o c 0 P Y 0 H 1 0 0 N L Y p 0 L 0 S E N A T E R A C E | 1 N T R o 8 R A D R 0 0 F S s A L 8 70 Apple throwaway 71 Nobel, for one 72 One way to orient a boat 73 Greek H’s DOWN 1 Tuscan city noted for its marble quarries 2 Alaskan native 3 Dappled horses 4 A time to remember? 5 Reverberate 6 “That was a close one!” 7 Leprechaun's land 8 Sacred beetle 9 Big hit 10 Enemies of the Iroquois 11 Lower jaws 12 Often-repeated abbr. 13 Maiden name preceder 21 Bert of ‘The Wizard of Oz” 22 The “S” in R.S.V.P. 26 Rent 27 Young's partner in accounting 2 9 ___ Wiedersehen 30 Tell tall tales 31 At th e rope 32 “ voyage!” one’s No. 0312 26 27 8 24 9 e 37 I 32 52 67 70 73 1 21 36 45 54 50 51 66 ¿9 7? 28 29 30 31 33 34 35 39 40 41 42 43 46 l ' 48 I 60 59 61 62 63 55 56 57 58 33 Vaulted 34 “Less Than Zero” novelist 35 Very attractive body? 39 Queen’s subject, possibly 41 Old Mideast inits. 42 “Harper Valley 45 Above all others 47 “Peter Pan” character 50 Capek play 51 Riddle 52 Unite threads 56 Wooden shoe 57 Planetary shadow 61 Brat's stocking stuffer 62 Highly adroit 63 Blue or White follower 58 Fencing needs 60 Secondhand 64 Supp. writings 65 Untreated Answers to any clues in this puzzle are available by touch-tone phone 1-900-285-5656 ($1.20 per minute). Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. HEY KIDSI bill and erik on the web, exclusively at http://group3C>. bigt83.com/ macb@madmanmail.com m i s e r y c o m i e 0 3 @ h o t m ft i I .c o m '5V K.YIC wHfiACRC and bit me in the ass. I tried to call you but it seems like So you wanna hang out or something this weekend'? Actually I think I have stuff on the weekends for like the next., year or so. Sorry. - ........ a r n j D O L c 0 Q © i ^ I s n e a k e r s 8AC itPAC ks •-m tT rs ra ^ S T K K E R s i C x i i w B e a m e s « U N « ! M « C f / m o r e 5 r l t T h e £ p # r T H ^ / j „ _ r - T P l e a s e RECMCL-E-! ‘tPi/N \Z-C> H p v p P ^ f o M o T M A ll. C A H L SWW&tosr S w c f i- A c , IS p o r n o yep. y ) A rm J £ mort- tnO iA jh H o m y , na~i' oeih-^ot U n / c i I i< X rrUtAS'j tooK « "b 6-hj-Pf -f-h€S* tjir li Jo. Vo\J Jo '^ 'W T / ( -J-Jq a'F * a H¡ but... O F F C A M P U S ™ By: Cyrus Mortazavi w w w .o tT -car.ap u s.2 0 m cg siree.co m s » w w . g c © c \ V i e \ . c . o * - * / 4 V \ K V \ < o * « i U ^ 6 t A \ o S a ta A S W s * k W W @ • * • »n i > £ A m ~í < ¡ ^ re.Q-|-ori«. • Cow-* C * V v t f v a 5 \ A v a T AIM . . . a y JASON ZiAJA s c o p e / / 'oahcf f D a ily T e x a n C l a s s if ie d s continued EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 870 - Medical | 890 ~ Clubs- 8 1 0 - Office-Clerical 850 - Retail LOCAL TECHNOLOGY Company Sales- Flexible needs clerk/data-editors Launch Your Sales C areer hours. Computer and 10-key skills with one of the fastest growing essential $9-12/hour Fax resume companies in weight loss LA 349-9835. Weight Loss is expanding our Austin market and has career opportunities for energetic Sales/Weight loss BALLET AUSTIN is currently seeking a receptionist/office manager for a fast paced front office. 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W e are looking for an individual who will enjoy w orking with people & desire a creative work environment with rapid advancement. PT/FT. Great $$$! 447-2519 ' COLLEGE GRADS N a tio n a l com pany targeting am bitious individuals who are seeking people-oriented careers. M ust be g re a t w /p e o p le & trainable. - 371-0542 PAID WEEKLY I Newly doctor devel oped, natural product to enhance in­ timacy Need mature, self motivated individuals to sell. Great opportuni­ ty www 2entisse com or Brian (512)923-5510. counselors If you are self-motivated and revenue driven, this is the perfect job for you! W e offer a highly rewarding compensation program, excellent benefits and opportunity for advancement Sales experience a plus. FT/PT positions available. 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C all to day to receive y o u r a p plication 880 - Professional BUSINESS PLAN needed for janitori­ al Company. 422-961 8 890-C lubt- Restaurants JOY, DANCERS and waitstaff Be­ gin tomorrow, debt free next week! FT/PT TABC cert. Call/come by Joy of Austin 1H35 exit 250 N Bound 218-8012 * * ‘ S U G A R 'S * **~ Now Hiring ENTERTAINERS Flexible Schedule Work Around School Great Money Exciting Atmosphere G UARANTEED 512-451-171 1 404 Highland M all Blvd THE IVORY CAT TAVERN IS N O W accepting applications for all positions, including Bartenders, Cocktail Servers, Hosts and Hostesses Experience preferred but not required Seeking motivated and energetic individuals to work in a highly structured and professional upscale establishment. Apply in person@600 E.6th Mon-Fri 12 3, or contact Jeff or Kenny at 478 5287 DOES YO U R C LU B OR RESTAURANT HAVE A PART-TIME PO SITIO N AVAILABLE? Call Adil at The Daily Texan and receive 1 /2 off your first ad 232-5729 890 - Clubs- 890 - Clubs- * Restaurants Restaurants AWESOME MONEY Join a w inning team and spend your sum m er at the lake! Flexible hours: 401 (k), Insurance, Meal discounts, Employee sw im m ing pool and The best view in Austin! If you are a team player, energetic, o u tgo in g , hard w orking, and you tru ly love people - Come in Tues-Friday, 2-5 to apply WE ARE HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS: * WAIT STAFF * FOOD RUNNERS * FOOD EXPEDITERS 4 HOSTS THE OASIS 6550 COMANCHE TRAIL AUSTIN, TX 78732 Resta urants JC'S BAR & GRILL now hiring bartenders, bar backs, busers, & w a it staff. G o o d m oney a n d fun place to w o rk. D ay & evening shifts a va ila b le A p p ly at 5 8 0 4 N o rth IH-35 o r call 4 07 -9 3 9 3 900 - Domestic- Household FULL-TIME NANNY needed June 1 I-year-old girl needs new best friend Experience w / 12-month to 24-month-old requued Own car CPR. 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Call 306 7243 or email wandams@austin.rr.com PART TIME NANNY needed for smi­ ley 3-mo-old, M-F 8-noon Flexib'e $ 10/hr required Close to FW 469-8362 References NANNY WANTED girls (6 & 4) Please call Rocky at 264 3701 Must have cor BUSINESS 930 - Business Opportunities MOVING, MUST SEll seamless ram gutter business $300 ,0 0 0 potential $29,OCX) negotiable, annual sales owner 512 873-0377. financing available $$$$$ WEEKLY! Processing HUD- FHA Mortgage Refunds No Experi­ Call 1-800-449 ence Needed 4625 ext. 5895 for information a ! T 7 100 WORKERS N eT d ed ble crafts, wood items Materials provided TO $480-fwk Free infor­ mation package, 24hrs 801 4 2 8 4732 O op /! T o u r f i d G o u l d H o v e B e e n l l o r e m 471 SHAQ COM MATADOR DUNK IT swatch THE ONLINE STORE IS OPEN 24/7 Receive FREE DELIVERY* until May 15th, 2002 with your purchase