STATE & LOCAL Sup The U.: tives p¡ to disrr rnrawjiiHMiii ~ uatemalan revolutions stin human rights attorney Jennifer Harbury ites Bridge o f Courage, a collection of inter- jws with Guatemalan revolutionaries. Manager of the Year San Francisco Giants first-year man­ ager Dusty Baker is chosen as the National League Manager of the Year. T h e Da il y T e x a n Hutchison’s 4 felony counts dismissed The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Wednesday, October 27, 1993 Vol. 93, No. 40 2 Sections 25c Jury member discovered ineligible to serve because of an outstanding warrant Jay Brida Daily Texan Staff One day after attorneys for U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison surprised the legal com­ m unity with a motion to m aintain ethics charges against the senator, a judge Tues­ day ruled to have her original indictment dropped. District Judge Mike Lynch rejected a pro­ posal that would have allowed Hutchison's trial to begin Nov. 29 as scheduled. Lynch ruled that Hutchison's four felony counts must be dismissed on the basis of a discov­ ery by Dick DeGuerin, attorney for Hutchi­ son, that a grand jury member was ineligi­ ble to serve because of an outstanding war­ rant for his arrest. The grand jury member, Melvin Wrenn, was charged with writing a hot check for $20.04 to a grocery store in 1988. Lynch wrote in his ruling that although he could sy m p ath ize with H u tch iso n 's attem pts to get an "in fo rm a tio n '' — an action that would bypass the grand jury's findings so the case would proceed directly to the original trial date — issued by Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle, the law prohibits the court from issuing such an order. "A trial court in Texas has no authority to The grand jury member, Melvin Wrenn, was charged with writing a hot check for $20.04 to a grocery store in 1988. file an information nor order the prosecut­ ing attorney to file one," Lynch wrote in his order. David Beckwith, spokesman for Hutchi­ son, said the judge's decision played right into Earle's desire to drag the case into next year's Senate race. The order "will further add to the delay Mr. Earle has consistently sought," Beck­ with said. But A ssistant D istrict A ttorney Darla Espinoza said Hutchison's allegations are off base. . "W e are not on any kind of a political doing. timetable," Espinoza said. DeGuerin filed two dozen motions to dis­ m iss the charges last w eek, in clu d in g motions accusing Earle of "prosecutorial vindictiveness" and of using "Gestapo-like" investigative techniques. Hutchison was indicted on one m isde­ meanor and four felony counts of official misconduct, tampering with a governmen­ tal record and tampering with physical evi­ dence during her term as state treasurer, stemming from allegations that she used her office to conduct personal and political pur­ poses. She has consistently denied any wrong­ Meanwhile, a new grand jury has been meeting for the past two days to reinvesti­ gate the Hutchison case. David Halpem, a spokesman for the Ear­ le's office, said the district attorney will con- Piease see Trial, page 2 R ing around th e rosy TSTV hopes to get UT’s TV station Josie Garcia Daily Texan Staff In an effort to keep the Federal Communications Commission from revoking the University's right to broadcast, Texas Student Television submitted a petition Tuesday for funding of a low-powered televi­ sion station owned by the Universi­ ty- The University has ow ned the channel for five years but has not used it. If no one begins broadcast­ ing on the station by the end of November, the FCC will revoke the license. It would take approximately nine years to reobtain the license if it is revoked. Because the petition includes the necessary 350 signatures, TSTV's request will appear on the Nov. 16 and 17 student referendum. "If UT gives TSTV the license, we will take complete responsibility of the station and UT would have the prestige of having a student televi­ sion station," said Edward Garaña, TSTV station manager. TSTV is cu rren tly on public “ If UT gives TSTV the license, we will take complete responsibility of the station and UT would have the prestige of having a student tele­ vision station,” — Edward Garaña, TSTV station manager access cable television, but the Uni­ versity's channel would air along­ side network television. The chan­ nel should reach m ost of A ustin within five miles of the University, Garaña said. Garaña said the D epartm ent of Radio-Television-Film and the Col­ lege of Communication do not want the channel because they do not have time or money to run it. G araña said he does not m ind having advisers but that the station must be entirely operated by stu ­ dents. "If UT says we can have the chan- Please see TSTV, page 2 Douglas Brown, botany senior, and other members of the Student Pagan Tuesday night. The holiday is actually on Oct. 31 and marks the final har- Alliance celebrated Samhain, the Celtic New Year, on the East Mall vest, a time to look back on the past year and look forward to the next. John Pendygraft/Daily Texan Staff Health plan falls $30 billion short Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Clinton's health reform proposal will fall $30 billion short of the budget savings predicted earlier, an administration official said Tues­ day as the White House readied the plan for delivery to Congress. The president and Hillary Rodham Clinton were due to bring the 1,600-page bill to Congress in person Wednesday in a ceremony in Statuary Hall, five weeks after Clinton's initial pitch. Clinton has argued that without a sharp slowdown in health inflation, the federal deficit would spiral back up later in this decade. But his economic advisers had vowed to sacrifice further deficit reduction before rais­ ing taxes any more for health reform. In the original draft, Clinton's health plan would have lowered the deficit by $91 billion between now and the year 2000. Dr. Philip Lee, the assistant secretary for health, told a medical educators' meeting the deficit reduction fig­ ure now is "around $60 billion." The new plan sets a deadline of Jan. 1, 1998, to achieve universal coverage for all Americans and legal residents. The earlier draft had aimed to bring all states into the new system by Jan. 1,1997. One reason for the lower deficit reduction figure was that the White House added a 15 percent cushion to its pool of subsidies to help small businesses and low- income workers buy insurance, officials said. Please see Health, page 2 Oil embargo fuels Haitian violence . ' j Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Gun-toting men barged past waiting motorists to seize dwindling gasoline supplies Tues­ day, as a global oil embargo aimed at restoring democracy squeezed Haiti harder. Parliament was again unable to muster a quorum to pass laws that could end the crisis. Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras, head of the military that toppled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 1991, wants the parliam ent to grant an amnesty to those involved in murders since the coup. But many legislators are in hiding at home or abroad, afraid that anti-Aristide thugs will kill them if they appear in public. Political violence blamed on the ruling military, as well as the military's intransigence, has hampered efforts to bring Aristide home under a U.N.-brokered accord signed in July. Under the agreement signed by Cedras and Aristide, the military chief was to have resigned before the return of Aris­ tide, the country's first freely elected leader. The accord called for Aristide to return on Saturday. But the United Nations imposed the oil and arms embargo Oct. 18, after Cedras showed growing unwillingness to step down and military-backed workers turned back a U.S. ship carrying U.N. workers who were to help implement the agree­ ment. Haitians line up for water amid the country’s embargo. A U.S. Embassy spokesman, Stanley Schrager, on Tuesday characterized the political efforts to retu rn A ristide as "stymied." Despite the political paralysis, the oil embargo has sunk its Associated Press Please see Haiti, page 2 Shuttle driver DAVE A UT student said he believes he w-as fired from his job as a UT shuttle driver because he is Hispanic and because he spoke out against management failures by the company that operates the shuttle service. Victor Sanchez, 27, a first-year graduate student in Latin American Studies, said the president of the UT sh u ttle d riv e rs' union told Sanchez Friday th a t Sanchez had been fired. Sanchez has not received written notification of his termination. Sanchez said he is» the victim of discrimination and plans to file a lawsuit against DAVE transportation services inc., the company that subcontracts with Capital Metro to service the UT shuttle routes, "It's discrimination on both grounds — ethnicity and my strong union point of view," said Sanchez, who rotated shifts on the Cameron Road, Red River «mu Pleasant Vaiiey routes for 4 i / 2 years untii Oct. 5. According to company documents obtained by Sanchez, DAVE supervisor Gary Barrios filed eight company reports claiming Sanchez violated safety and routing codes and refused bus rides to passen­ gers, in clu d in g a handicapped person. Sanchez denied all the company’s daims. DAVE manager Alex Roman refused to comment and Capital Metro officials were unable to be reached Tuesday. The University funds the UT shuttle service from student fees but is not involved in the employment policy of DAVE transportation or Capital M etro, according to Joe Ward, assistant to the UT vice presi­ dent for business affairs. Sanchez said that because most of the 160 shuttle drivers are students, managers at DAVE transporta- ! I . —■ — Please see Shuttle, page 2 ' - * INSIDE THE TEXAN I Am Bionic Weather: Few people know this, but in the mid ’60s, I was in a near fatal weed wacking acci­ dent. Fortunately, a team of cutting- edge s c ie n tis ts said, ‘ ‘We can rebuild her — Stronger. Faster.” Thanks to them, I can now whoop some serious ass, jog 15-20 mph, see through your clothes and — D. D. D. — overhear everything you whisper about me. And so can my dog. Index: Around Campus........................... 11 Classifieds.....................................14 Comics..........................................13 Editorials.........................................4 Entertainment............................... 12 Sports....,....................................... 16 State & Local.................................. 8 University........................................6 World & Nation............................... 3 Page 2 Wednesday, October 27,1993 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Trial Continued from page 1 tinue his second investigation into allegations against the senator. "W hat Judge Lynch did today was what we expected and we will proceed to present evidence to the grand jury/' Halpem said. Also Tuesday, DeGuerin filed a single motion to allow Hutchison equal access to the grand jury, which would let the senator make a presentation to the grand jury. "The district attorney apparently believes that he has a right to disap­ prove without giving a reason, for an improper or politically motivat­ ed reason, or simply out of a desire to prevent the grand jurors from hearing both sides of a difficult issue," DeGuerin said. "There must at least be some minimal guarantee of fairness." The prosecution reissued subpoe­ nas Tuesday for several people who were interviewed in the first investi­ gation, former treasury employees and political consultants who may have had contact w ith either H utchison or her top aide at the treasury, David Criss. Criss was not granted immunity for his testim ony in the original investigation. TSTV Continued from page 1 nel but that it has to be run by fac­ ulty and staff, then we do not want it," Garaña said. In addition to taking control of the channel, TSTV will ask for real­ location of 65 cents from each stu­ den t's student service fees — in add itio n to the 50 cents TSTV already receives — to fund the sta­ tion. TSTV was given until Tuesday to collect 350 stu d e n t signatures, enough to ad d the service fee change request to the referendum. Garaña said TSTV has collected about 600 signatures. The money would be used for a transmitter to be placed at the top of the Main Building tower and for playback equipment. "We already have $200,000 worth of equipment. It would be a waste for the University to let the license expire," Garaña said. Garaña said he is optim istic about TSTV being granted the chan­ nel. "I've received lots of good feed­ back from faculty, the communica­ tions department and students," he said. Students' Association President Eric Bradley said the bottom line is whether the station will be able to support itself. "I w ould like to see TSTV as a self-supportive, self-operating sta­ tion," Bradley said. "I see it as an asset to the students and faculty ... TSTV w ould act as a bridge between Austin and the Universi­ t y ” But David Bluestein, a member of the Texas S tudent P ublications Board of Directors, which oversees TSTV, said the chances of TSTV a c q u irin g the channel have decreased. "In the beginning, the committee seemed more positive. I now think it's less," Bluestein said. TSTV' must submit a presentation to UT P resid en t Robert Berdahl next m onth explaining how the channel would be funded and oper­ ated. T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor................................................................................................................ Rebecca Stewart M anaging Editor ....................................................................... Johnny Ludden Associate Managing Editors............................ Jason Goodrich, Kim Kiser, Carm en Maverick, Chris Smith News Editor............... Christopher M. Brick Associate News Editors................................................................. Valerie Godines. Chris Schneidmiller News Assignm ents Editor.............................................................................................Steve Scheibal Senior Reporters............................................... Elizabeth Allen, Jay Brida, Erin McDowell, Erica Shaffer Associate E ditors......................... ....Shalini Ramanathan, Robert Rogers ............................................ .................................................. Scott R. Bartels Entertainment Editor Joseph Garza Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor............................................................................................... Michael Rychllk General Sports Reporters........................................... A m y Hettenhausen, Gene Menez, G re g Pederson Around Cam pus/Listings Editor..................................................................................... Jason Unback Photo Editors.................................................................................................. Joey Un, Alicia Wagner Graphics Editor......................................................................................................... Korey Coleman Special Projects E d ito r................................................................. ................................D an e SchWer Associate Special Projects E d ito r.................................................... .............................. ..Justin Noble Contributor ......... ,.......... ........ .... ‘ R o b Caswell Cartoonists.................................................David Boswell. Korey Colem an, Carl Greenblatt, Vincent Un, D ave Rivera, Christopher Scroger, Devin Trudeil, C h ris Turner ................................................ Issue Staff News Reporters........................................... Ralna Anderson, Josie Garcia, Abraham Levy, R en a e Merle Photographers....................................................... Makeup Editor....,.^. ........... ............................................................. .................... G re g Bilbro Wire Editor ...... .................... ................................................................................... K en C a vn e ss Copy Editors................................................................. Leigh Fink, Stephanie Rosenblatt, Laura Smith Editorial Colum nists...................................................................... ..Gabriel Demombynes, Monnie Wills Entertainment Writers Sports Assistant.......................................................................... .George Klos, Carl Kozlowskl „.... John S. Green ,... Advertising Local Display................ Brad Corbett, Brad Floyd, Sonia Garcia, D anny Grover, Jane Trost, M ark Wlkoff, Kevin McHale, U sa Amesquita, At Herron, Lynn Lackey Graphic Designer.....................................................................................D ana Wallace, Am ee Shah Classified D isplay ................................................................................Nathan Moore, Jennifer Lanier Classified Telephone S a le s .............................................. Bob Roeh, Shawnte Williams, Vatina Metcalf C lerks......................................................................... Kim Krause, Klmberty Stuber, Jennifer Reyes, Valerie Boltman, Amanda Skoo, Caroline Langley Layout Coordinator...................................................................................................W endy Hopper The Dally Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, Is published by Texas Student Publications, 2h00 Whitis, Austm. TX 7B705 The Daly Texan la published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Fnday. except holidays, exam periods and when school Is not In session Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591). at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.101). Por local and nauonal display advertising, caK 471 1865. For classified display mid national classified display advertising, cad 471 -8900 For classified word advertising, cal 471 -5244 Entire contents copyright 1993 Texas Student Publications The Dally Texan Mall Subscription Ratas One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fall and Spring)................................................................ Summer Session One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer)................................................ ..................... ........... ............. ................... $30.00 55.00 75.00 To charge by VISA or MasterCard, cal 471-5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904, or to TSP Budding C3.200. or cad 471-5063. Chris Carson, Justin Noble Texan Ad Deadlines Monday Wednesday, 4 p.m. Tuesday......Thursday, 4 p.m. Friday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursday.......Monday, 4 p.m. Friday......... Tuesday, 4 p.m. Classified Word A d s...... 11 a.m. (Last Business Day Prior to Publication) PHARMACY WEEK O c to b e r 25 to O c to b e r 29 T u e s d a y O c t o b e r 26 12: 00noon to 1:00pm, PHR 3.1 Sp ea ke r C oh Rph. Topic: “Depression and M e n t a l Health” W e d n e s d a y O c t o b e r 27 10:00am to 2:00pm UJest M a ll Euents: • NHRD: Cancer • SNPhfl: Bl ood P e ss u r e Screenin • MflflPS: Rids • Ka pp a Psi: STD’s and related is sues A ll college H avvu Hour at Pesos 5:30vtn ' T h u r s d a y O c t o b e r 28 1 2:00noon to 1:00pm, PHR 3.106 * Sp e a k e r Dauid Triggle Ph.D. Dean, School of P h a r m a c y St ate Uniuersi ty of Ne w Vork at Buf fa lo Topic: “M e d i c a l Chemistrq: Re act in g to the f u t u r e ” F r i d a y , O c t ob e r 29 10:00am to 2:00pm UJest M a ll Euents • K a p p a Epsilon: Depression • PRC: Dia be tes • TSHP: Organ Donation [’H R IC H T F U L I’ HRIDAY**** • Costume Luncheon & Halloween Carnival • 11:30am to 1:30pm Between the pharm acy buildings • Come in costume and get a ...............hue and have fun with ug.^ ft Haiti: Efforts t o restore Aristide hampered Continued from page 1 teeth in to the W estern H em i­ sphere's most impoverished coun- try. Because ef insufficient fuel, deliv­ eries of drinkable water to the capi­ tal's huge Cite Soleil slum were cut by two-thirds on Tuesday. Aid offi­ cials also are concerned that food aid could be delayed by the fuel shortage. The neig h b o rin g Dom inican Republic, however, said trucks car­ rying food and other goods, but not fuel, had gone into Haiti the past few days. A previous embargo on Haiti, lifted Aug. 27, was widely violated by shipm ents from the Dominican Republic. On Tuesday, armed thugs at one station commandeered buckets of gasoline, then sold it nearby for $6 a gallon — ab o u t four tim es the pump price. The only people seen leaving the station with gasoline were carrying guns. Scattered shooting was reported in some sections of the capital. Gun­ shots killed a 25-year-old woman inside her home Tuesday, indepen­ dent Radio M etropole reported. A nother man was found shot to death on the streets of the Bel-Air neighborhood. Seven civilian arm y auxiliaries beat up, robbed and then dragged a street vendor into her home and raped her in the capital's Petionville suburb Monday, neighbors said. The United States, m eanw hile, maintained a security alert for its n ationals. Schrager, the U.S. Embassy spokesman, said there had been "un co n firm ed threats th at mid-level American diplom ats or people who work for international organizations" might become tar­ gets of violence. In other developments, two radio stations were shut down Monday in Gonaives, 90 miles north of the cap­ ital. A radio journalist and two tech­ nicians who were arrested in the closings remained jailed Tuesday. The head of the Gonaives military district, Capt. Casteras Fils, told The Associated Press by telephone that the sta tio n s w ere sh u t dow n because they were playing what he called a pro-Aristide message. Fils said that the radios said "the house is not theirs. We will take back our house this S a tu rd a y ," which he interpreted as a reference to the scheduled return of Aristide. Fils would not identify the three, saying, "That is your job." But several people in Gonaives said the stations did not give such a message and w ere guilty only of playing Haitian music. "They [the military] just w ant us to listen to th e ir m usic, w hich is m achine guns," a 25-year-old city resident, Jules, said by telephone. He gave only his first name for fear of retri- bution.ship. Health Continued from page 1 Mrs. Clinton went to Capitol Hill Tuesday with Trea­ sury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen to give Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the chairman of the Senate Finance Commit­ tee, a private briefing on the revised plan. Other administration officials said the revised plan will offer discounted coverage to some small businesses with as many as 75 workers. The cutoff had been 50 workers in the original plan. And a government takeover of employers' costs of providing health benefits for early retirees ages 55 to 64 will be phased in slowly between 1998 and 2001, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity. In another change, the W hite House has backed down from an ambitious goal to reserve half of all resi­ dencies for doctors training in primary care, not special­ ists, within five years. Instead, it would set a goal of having 55 percent of the residents in primary care by the year 2002. Seventy percent of the 625,000 U.S. doctors now are specialists. And the revised plan will cover dental treatment as well as preventive dental services for children, and emergency dental care for adults. Clinton said Tuesday he was not willing to water down his health reform plan in the face of criticism from the National Association of Manufacturers that he was promising Americans too much. "Most m anufacturers are going to save money on this. If they want to look a gift horse in the mouth, that can be their decision," the president said. Leon Panetta, the White House budget director, said Clinton had taken pains to avoid creating new "open- ended entitlements" in health care, "particularly when we're trying to discipline the rest of government spend­ ing." Panetta said Clinton has built in a mechanism to cap the entitlements. A 239-page draft summary of Clinton's original pro­ posal that leaked out almost seven weeks ago has been a lightning rod for complaints from businesses, hospi­ tals and others with worries about the so-called Health Security Plan. The plan proposes to pay for the reforms with ciga­ rette taxes, big savings in Medicare and Medicaid, a 1 Clinton said Tuesday he was not will­ ing to water down his health reform plan in the face of criticism from the National Association of Manufacturers that he was promising Americans too much. percent levy on large corporations and a requirement that all employers and employees buy insurance. Some lawmakers have voiced fears that Clinton was concentrating too much power in the hands of an inde­ p e n d e n t N ational H ealth Board and the regional alliances that would form a new insurance-buying mar­ ketplace. Under the final plan, the health board would be an executive agency, not an independent board like the Securities and Exchange Commission, the sources said. States, not the alliances, would certify each health plan. But Lee told the Association of American Medical Colleges that even the fee-for-service plans would receive flat amounts to provide care for all their cus­ tomers — regardless of whether they paid physicians a salary or a fee for each procedure or service. The Clinton plan would encourage Americans to join prepaid plans such as health maintenance organizations where their out-of-pocket costs would be lower. Such plans would charge patients $10 each time they went to the doctor with no deductibles. Advocates for the poor warned that $10 would be a hardship for a poor family on Medicaid, which now has no copayments. The revised Clinton bill would reduce the copay­ ments for welfare families and allow the health plans to waive them for others as well, the officials said. Clinton initially promised subsidies for small busi­ nesses with 50 or fewer workers and average wages of $24,000 or less. Now the discounts will go to firms with up to 75 employees, varying both by size and average wage. Shuttle Continued from page 1 tion often m istreat the d riv e rs, believing they are unable to defend themselves. " It's sim ply upsetting. [DAVE officials] play w ith your m in d ," Sanchez said. "Everyone thinks we got buses with air conditioners, but they don't know the irregularities we have to go through. W hat we portray outside is not really what goes on." M embers of the Am algam ated Transit Union, which serves DAVE transportation employees, are plan­ ning to file a grievance w ith the company concerning Sanchez's ter­ m ination, Sanchez said. U nion members are waiting for company officials to produce a written notice of termination, he added. Sanchez said he often reported the buses' mechanical problem s, which m anagers neglected to fix, leaving drivers and passengers in hazardous situations. "I'v e been the one voicing the problems with the buses," Sanchez said. "I've been driving for a long time and I w on't p u t people in a dangerous situation. They use the old buses to p u t in th e [new] routes." Sanchez said he believes th at because he rep o rted m echanical p roblem s fre q u e n tly , m anagers began to look for a reason to fire him. "Many times we did n 't have [air conditioning] and I had prob­ lem s w ith the b ra k e s," Sanchez said. "I always have been writing up buses. I was not content with riding an illegal bus. I will not jeop­ ardize the safety of passengers." B E V O ' S 'T'BOOKSTORES'T' Pioudly tm in g Ike U nw rniiy &i Texas .20.00 Greek Blowout Sole October 27-30 50% off 0 selected greek merchandise 1/2 price t’shirts with letters DOBIE M ALI O N THE DRAG 1 si Floor Dobie Mall 2 3 00 Guadalupe 476-0133 Look for the Legendary FREE PARKING in Dobie Garage STEER on the drag 476-7642 D O Z E N R O S E S $8.95 Cash A Carry Fiesta Flowers 3830 N. Lam ar 453-7619 LEARN BARTENDING *Ifu ‘Professional ‘Way’ • JOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE NATIONWIDE • DAY & EVENING CLASSES • A0 HOUR COURSE 323-2002 INTERNATIONAL BARTENDING INSTITUTE OF AUSTIN ____ \ T h k D a h .y T e x a n TUESDAY'S DOW JONES: 3,672.49 DOWN 1.12 /VOLUME: 284,508.600 Wednesday, October 27. 1993 Page 3 • C linton sends cost-cutting proposal to Congress Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Clinton pro­ posed a major overhaul of government buy­ ing Tuesday, requiring that the Pentagon and other agencies order items off the shelf when possible rather than custom-made, super-expensive versions. As part of a governm ent-stream lining program, Clinton also proposed a $10 bil­ lion package of new spending cuts and oth­ er cost-saving moves, ranging from offering federal workers bonuses for retiring early to letting the Internal Revenue Service hire pri­ vate bill collectors. “We can and will run a governm ent that works better and costs less," Clinton said at the White House. As for making the government buy com­ mercially available products, Clinton said, “Procurement waste is costing the taxpayers tens of billions of dollars and it has to stop." He said he hoped some of the savings could be channeled into anti-crime programs. “No more specially constructed cigarette ash trays," said Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., who is sponsoring the administration's pro- curement-overhaul legislation in the House. He w as referring to the nine pages of specifications issued by the General Services Adm inistration earlier this year for glass ashtrays to be used in government build­ ings — an example frequently cited by Vice P resid en t A1 Gore in his cam paign to streamline government. The governm ent buys $200 billion in “ Procurem ent waste is cost­ ing the taxpayers tens of bil­ lions of dollars and it has to stop.” — President Clinton goods and services each year, 75 percent by the Pentagon. C linton said his package fulfills the promise for more spending cuts he made last August to congressional conservatives to win their support for his deficit-reduction plan. It also aims to carry out a host of rec­ om m endations m ade by Gore's National Performance Review last month. The pack­ age ranges from ending federal subsidies for wool, mohair and honey to providing less money for certain small airports. And it would authorize the government for the first time to follow the example of private industry and offer "buyout" bonus­ es to federal employees as an incentive to early retirement. The goal is to bring about a reduction of about 252,000 federal employees. But some conservative Democrats have suggested they might press for even deeper cuts, per­ haps including a freeze on congressional salaries. And the acquisition-reform effort could prove contentious once it actually begins to move through C ongress. The process could result in giving work now performed by defense contractors to smaller companies. That is raising concerns of some labor interests. Abo. some lawmakers may oppose the program if it threatens to take business away from companies in their dis­ tricts. Still, the administration and its congres sional allies were predicting wide bipartisan support. “Although we may quibble about specific cuts in this package, there should be no question that this spending cuts package will let taxpayers keep more money in their pockets," said John Glenn, D-Ohio, a Senate sponsor. The adm inistration contended the pro­ posed changes in pro cu rem en t policies could save $22 billion over the next five years — on top of the $10 billion in new spending cuts Clinton proposed. B arney, w e h ard ly kn ew ye Ex-HUD aide convicted of Reagan-era swindle Associated Press WASHINGTON — Debo­ rah Gore Dean, a central fig­ ure in the Reagan-era HUD scandal, was convicted Tues­ day of 12 felony counts of defrauding the government, taking a payoff and lying to Congress. The former executive assis­ tant to H ousing and Urban Secretary D evelopm ent Samuel Pierce could be sen­ tenced to a maximum 57 years in prison and $3 m illion in fines. Dean's sentencing was set for Jan. 19 by U.S. D istrict Judge Thomas Hogan. Dean, 38, was the 10th per­ son in the HUD scandal to be convicted th ro u g h trial or guilty pleas. Pierce, who dis­ claim ed know ledge of the high-level m isdeeds in his d e p a rtm e n t, has not been charged. Dean was depicted at her six-week trial as being instru­ mental with others in tunnel­ ing m illions of do llars to housing projects that benefit­ ed p o litically connected Republicans. "D e fe n d a n t Dean took a program designed to aid low- income families, and instead used it to benefit herself, her family and her friends," said independent counsel Arlin M. Adams, whose office prose­ cuted the case. "By betraying the public tru s t in this m anner, Dean com m itted a crim e no less serious than the street crimes th a t p lag u e o u r n a tio n ," Adams said. Prosecutors told the jury of eight wom en and four m en that Dean stood at the center of “ a partnership in crim e" that enriched her family and friends, in clu d in g R ichard Nixon's former attorney gen­ eral, John Mitchell. She testified that she was the contact point for political­ ly well-connected developers. But, she said, her boss, Pierce, was the person w ho m ade all the d ecisions on w here to send "m o d -re h a b housing." Dean was executive assis­ tan t to Pierce from 1984 to 1987 w hen the agency w as parceling out federal money under its moderate rehabilita­ tion housing program. Mediators attacked as Somali fighting continues Associated Press MOGADISHU, Somalia — Battling Somalis fired on religious mediators Tuesday, a sign of a society so brutalized by war that young men ignore a centuries-old tradition demanding respect of one's elders. No one was hurt, and the clan elders, wav­ ing green branches of peace, eventually negoti­ ated a respite in the three-day battle over a water well in southern Mogadishu. But the deterioration of social order was undeniable. " I t's u n h e a rd o f," said businessm an Mohamed Jirdeh Hussein. “Any dispute, from car looting to camel poaching, is ended by the elders. These traditional controls are stronger than governments in Africa." The fighting over the well began Sunday near the Kilometer Four Traffic circle where M o g ad ish u 's m ain ro ad s converge, and resumed after the four-hour respite the reli­ gious leaders negotiated. Sporadic gunfire rang out elsewhere in the capital Tuesday. Clashes in M ogadishu on Monday had been the first major confronta­ tions there since warlord Mohamed Farrah A idid called off his show dow n w ith U.N. troops two weeks ago. The b a ttle s also appeared to scu ttle an unsteady 19-month-old truce between Aidid and his rival, Ali Mahdi Mohamed. At least 11 people died and more than 50 were wounded in the fighting. The fiercest gunbattles were around the Green Line dividing Mogadishu into the fiefs of Aidid and Ali Mahdi. Fighting also broke out around two heavily traveled points in Aidid territory, the U.N. compound and Kilo­ meter Four. On Tuesday, the Green Line was deserted. Only a few pedestrians ventured into streets where at least 10 people were killed Monday when Ali Mahdi's people tried to cross into Aidid's southern sector in what they called a demonstration for peace. Men armed with submachine guns and rock­ et-propelled grenades remained alert at build­ ings left roofless and windowless from previ­ ous battles. Gunfire around the U.N. compound Mon­ day night wounded a Somali worker near the U.S. Army's 46th Combat Support Hospital, U.N. spokesm an Capt. Tim McDavitt told reporters Tuesday. The 11th fatality Monday was a Somali dri­ ver for NBC News who was killed on the road from Kilometer Four to the airport. U.N. peacekeepers have kept out of this week's fracas so far. A U.N. strongpoint near Mogadishu port in Aidid territory came under small-arms fire Tuesday morning, McDavitt said. Peacekeepers from the United Arab Emi­ rates returned fire, and there were no reports of casualties, he said. , . * -v • ■ >■ ... Associated Press A sign at the entrance to a Halloween attraction in Colonial attraction features a stuffed Barney being hanged. The Heights, Va. warns of potential anti-Barney sentiment. 1 he attraction has angered a mother of two young children. Woman’s body found in home after 4 years 'Associated Press mg. •I WORCESTER, Mass. — One neighbor had *_Adele Gaboury's lawn mowed for her. Another * took care of a pile of mail. * ‘ A utility company was called to tend to her I broken pipes. All the w hile, the 73-year-old I recluse lay dead, probably for four years, in trash * [on the kitchen floor. ** Authorities found her body Monday with a * -phone nearby, as if she had been trying to make a •[call when she died. Z' “She didn't want anyone bothering her at all," ^ a i d an old friend, June Tsiokas. “She just wanted -To be left alone. I guess she got her wish, but it's w'awfully sad." Neighbors had inquired about Gaboury about four years ago, after they noticed she was miss- But one of her brothers, with whom she wasn't close, told police she had gone into a nursing home. "A brother had located a wom an with the same last name and assumed it was his sister. It wasn't," said police Capt. James Gallagher. With the search for Gaboury ended, neighbors began to tend to her two-story house that stood out in its decay in a middle-class neighborhood of the central Massachusetts city. The mailman kept delivering her mail through a slot in the door, until neighbor Michael Crow­ ley noticed a pileup. He opened the door and hundreds of pieces of mail fluttered into the yard. Crowley, notified police, who got the deliveries stopped. S ubsequent m ail w as stam p ed retu rn to sender. Dianne Crowley, neighbor to Adele Gaboury, didn’t notice the 73-year-old had died. Associated Press Canada’s woes not erased with Liberal Party’s entrance Associated Press , TORONTO — The Liberals van­ quished their rivals with a landslide ^election victory, but the strength of ''their w in w o n 't m ake C a n a d a 's [•struggle for renewal any easier. *\ The first stage of Liberal leader *Jean Chretien's plan — tossing the [rascals out — has been accom - -p lish ed . The C o nservatives are * gone, reduced to just two seats in ' the 295-seat House of Commons. Now Chretien takes on tougher -tasks: attacking 11.2 percent unem- 'ploym ent, getting a runaway bud­ get under control, dealing w ith a spiraling debt that is eating away revenues, finding an alternative to a hated national sales tax and coming to terms with Quebec. Chretien, 59, a Quebec law yer with more than 30 years experience in the federal government, has the mandate. Some Canadians wonder if he has the skill. “ I d o n 't expect lead ersh ip to come from the top of the govern­ m ent,'' said William C hristian, a political scientist at the University of Guelph. “Chretien has never had any ideas, that's not his particular skill. I don't think he has got much in the way of economic smarts in his own right, but he certainly has capa­ ble advisers." What Chretien can do is give free rein to some of the talented people on his team, then do what he does best: sell his program to the people. D eputy Liberal leader Sheila Copps said Tuesday the new gov­ ernment will take power within two weeks and move immediately on a prom ised $4.5 billion job-creation program, the first step toward eas­ ing C anada's 11.2 percent unem ­ ployment. “ We have to move very quickly because obviously Canadian confi­ dence is one thing that we really have to build u p o n /' she said on CBC television. “The public works program is ready to roll immediate­ ly-" Chretien's plan is to put up $1.5 billion to fix roads, sewers and other p ublic w orks projects. The provinces and municipalities would be expected to chip in another $2 billion each to create 120,000 jobs over two years. During the campaign, Conserva­ tives pointed out that the local and provincial governments are just as broke as Ottawa and would have to borrow to come up with their share. } Associated Pr9ss Georgian troops recapture port ■ TB ILIS I, Georgia — Soldiers loyal to Georgian leader Eduard S h evardnadze follow ed up a string of victories by attacking the rebels' militar}' stronghold of Senaki on Tuesday. The gov ern m en t troops, backed by tanks, converged on the western Georgian town from two directions in an attempt to break the back of the rebel army, said M inistry of Defense spokesman Eteri Baladze. The assault on Senaki came one day after government forces recaptured the vital Black Sea port of Poti from rebeb seeking to overthrow Shevardnadze and restore former President Zviad Gamsakhurdia to power. More governm ent troops and arms were being sent to Poti from the Georgian capital, Tbilisi. Shevardnadze has gained the edge in Georgia's civil war over the last five days after his troops united under a single command and received support from Rus­ sia, which prom ised to guard vital railroads. High court asked to delay gay policy ■ W A S H IN G TO N — The Clin­ ton adm in istratio n asked the Supreme Court Tuesday to delay a court order banning discrimi­ nation against gays in the mili­ tary. The o rd er, if granted, w ould enable the Defense D epartm ent to im plem ent its new policy on hom osexuals, which states that recruits will not be asked their sexual orienta­ tion but that openly declared gays will not be perm itted to serve. The Justice Departm ent filed its request to Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, requesting a par­ tial stay of a U.S. District judge's ofder while the administration appeals it. The aim is to limit the ju d g e's ruling to Navy Petty Officer Keith M einhold, a gay sailor discharged from the mili­ tary in 1992 after he disclosed he was gay. The departm ent con­ tended in its application that U.S. District Judge Terry Hatter Jr. "clearly erred with respect to issues of g reat im p o rta n c e '' when he ruled that the Pentagon could not deny enlistm ent or promotion because of someone's sexual orientation. T hk I) m i ^ T exan Page 4 Wednesday. October 27. 1993 T h e Da il y T e x a n Editorial Board Shalini Ramanathan Associate Editor Rebecca Stewart Editor Robert Rogers Associate Editor Viewpoint opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor and the writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. Opinions expressed in staff or guest columns are those of the writer. Letters submitted to Firing Line should be fewer than 250 words, and guest columns should be no more than 750 words. Bring submis­ sions to the Texan basement offices at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue, or mail to The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713 or send elec­ tronically to T bXAN@utxvms.cc.utexas.edu. Letters may be edited for grammar, length, libel and Texan style. VIEWPOINT Dragging On Will Hutchison case ever end? The saga of the tarnished senator continues without a hint of what lies ahead for her career. The only thing certain in Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison's life is a reindictment that may trickle over into her re- ! election campaign. The Democratic scavengers are already lining up to pick what's left of Hutchison s political carcass. Richard Fisher and Jim Mattox haven't even waited for the trial to start before announcing their candidacies. These Democratic challengers serve as fuel for the paranoid fire that seems to be burning in the Hutchison camp. The haphazard approach her attorneys are taking only adds confusion to her case. On one day, the plan of action is to try to dismiss the indictment by filing two dozen nitpicking motions. The next day, the lawyers want the original trial date. Hutchison's attorney Dick DeGuerin discovered a loophole last week that would force the senator's indictment to be dropped because a mem­ ber of the grand jury had been charged with writing a hot check for $20.04 in 1988. This plan backfired because this technicality would not onlv over­ turn Hutchison's indictment, but possibly 500 others, costing the county millions of taxpayers' dollars. In an effort to save face and precious campaign time, DeGuerin decided that Hutchison should go directly to her Nov. 29 trial instead of spending three more months to reindict her. District Judge Mike Lynch, however, has decided to side with the law. Hutchison will have to be reindicted. This delay will throw off the senator's political timetable. While all of her opponents will be out campaigning in January, Hutchison will be stuck in an Austin courtroom. Even though Hutchison's attorneys filed the motions that caused the delay, the senator's people are saying that Lynch's decision is, you guessed it, political. According to Hutchison's spokesman David Beck­ with, Lynch played into Earle's plan to drag the case into the Senate race. Hold on. When Earle first announced his investigation into Hutchison's case, the Republicans blamed the action on Earle's ambitions for running for the Senate seat. This was supposed to be a purely political motive for Earle to knock out the top Republican candidate to make it easier for him to run. Now the Hutchison folks claim Earle's motives are to drag the case on as long as possible to hinder the senator's reelection. What's up with these people? After the indictment, a Nov. 29 trial date was set so the case could be finished in time for Hutchison to file. It was her lawyer who decided to file 24 motions against the indictment. And it was her lawyer who uncovered the technicality that got the indictment overturned. Unlike the lawyers and advisers consulting Hutchison, most people are not so shallow that their lives are dictated solely by politics. Maybe Hutchison ought to find some better advisers who can look beyond the zoo full of donkeys and elephants. — Rebecca Stewart TV distorts views of verdicts Now that the v erd icts in the Reginald Denny case are two weeks in the past, it seems somewhat safe to comment on the Monnie Wills TEXAN COLUMNIST Distorted truths combined with outraged pas­ sion are powerful motivators. If you ever want to be seriously frightened, see a Nazi propagan­ da reel. truly powerful. proceedings. While there has been a lot of grumbling from some who say the defendants, Henry Watson and Damion Williams, got off easy, at least we can put the decision behind us. The hypocritical hype that was com ing from both camps was almost too much to bear. On one hand, people who cautioned against a hastily decided guilty verdict for the police offi­ cers in the Rodney King video leaped to conclu­ sions of Watson and W illiam son's guilt after viewing charged television footage. On the other hand, those who said the video of Reginald Denny's beating did not tell all the facts were the ones most outraged by the innocent verdict in the Rodney King trial. There is without a doubt enough blame to go around for most people to get their share. But if you really want to see justice served, go to your house and smash your television. We have been shown the potential power of what some call the instantaneous combination of audio-visual stimulation and information pro­ cessing. You may call it watching TV. The initial reaction of most people who saw the Rodney King or Reginald Denny beating was instant judgment. Anyone who makes knee- jerk judgments based solely on a 30-second clip is guilty of disregarding reason, for there are The more instantaneous and accurate a source appears to be, the more credibility or “truth” we give that information. complexities to consider beyond what an image can tell us. We should remember that, however persua­ sive, video images are second-hand information. Video cameras, because of their ability to repro­ duce an image exactly, seem to make excellent experts. But no m atter how real it seems, it should still be treated as eyewitness testimony that must be proved true. Remember, it is not the accused's job to prove innocence. Of the millions of people who saw the footage of Rodney and Reginald's beatings, only a rela­ tive handful were able to study all the facts and reach informed conclusions. The majority must rely on information from other sources. The more instantaneous and accurate a source appears to be, the more credibility or "truth" we give that inform ation. When this information can ignite the fire that is human passion, it is The police officers who beat Rodney King and the men who beat Reginald Denny were judged by millions of armchair jurors who sat wide- eyed in front of their televisions. Of course, some passions run deeper than oth­ ers. I have yet to see riots erupt within the com­ munities that dislike the verdicts in the Reginald Denny case. But we must be careful not to let our passions cloud reason. V ideo im ages can not tell the whole story. They cannot show intent or give us facts we must have to pass judgment. W e must understand that there are many interpretations for every situation, but we must abide by one set of rules to determine what the real truth is. Judgments can only be made after all evidence is in and due process is observed. This cannot be done in the comfort of your home or in the streets, but only in a court of law. The events that have surrounded Los Angeles for the past two years do not need to be repeat­ ed. The haughty judgments and quick-tempered reactions gathered from seconds of videotape are characteristic of barbaric behavior, not a civi­ lized society. Wills is a government senior. Ayn Rand peddles nonsensical capitalist bromides For years, I've heard mumblings about reportedly fancies himself a Rand fan. and technology. Gabriel Demombynes ÍEM/VCOLUMMST Ayn Rand, the author of The Fountain- head and Atlas Shrugged. In those two books, written in the '40s and '50s, Rand laid out what she called her "objectivist philosophy." Individuals, she says, should act "heroically," in their own self-interest, using their rational power to subdue the world. Her fiction defies categorization. Her writing is not good enough to be consid­ ered literature, and her ideas — really little more than a warmed-over version of Niet­ zsche's Superman — aren't solid to enough to be considered philosophy. Indeed, her works are neither read in English classes nor pondered in philosophy departments. Who, then, does read her stuff? In her later years she w rote several non-fiction works and som ehow w as adopted as a guru of some reactionary conservatives. Capitalism , she said, is the only proper playing field for self-interested heroes, so Both assertions belie thinking completely out of touch with environmentalism today. Since when is environmental­ ism anti-science? anything but the purest form of unadulter­ ated capitalism is immoral. Rand's ideas have made a new surge in recent years. (She died in 1982.) Michael Milken said in a New York Times interview that he received 24 copies of Atlas Shrugged w hile in p rison , and Alan G reen sp an , chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, Exactly why Rand has come back from the dead is not clear. Her popularity today appears to be linked to one of her last books, The New Left: The Anti-Industrial Rev­ olution published in 1971, in which she attacks the then-blossoming environmental movement as the religion of the weak. Her critique seems quaintly anachronis­ tic now: "There is a different group of young people, the avant-garde and cannon fodder of the ecological crusade, the prod­ ucts of 'Progressive' education: the pur­ poseless. These are the concrete-bound, mentally stunted youths ... who can grasp nothing but the im m ediate moment. To them, time is an enemy to kill — in order to escape a confrontation with inner empti­ ness and chronic anxiety ..." You know those environmentalists, she says — just a bunch of aimless kids who've been smok­ ing too much funny weed. A few weeks ago a self-proclaimed disci­ ple of Rand came to campus to speak on "C ap italism and the Environm ent: The V irtues of 'E xp loitation.' " The speaker didn't say much about how environmental concerns should be addressed in our soci­ ety. Instead he pestered the audience with a list of quotations from the most radical environm entalist thinkers, ostensibly to show that environmentalists are: 1. anti-sci­ ence, and 2. anti-human. Both assertions belie thinking completely out of touch with environmentalism today. Since when is environmentalism anti-sci­ en ce? Tell that to the th o u san d s of chemists, biologists, engineers and other techno-geeks at work on environm ental problems. And tell it to the National Acad­ emies of Science and Engineering, which have issued numerous calls for action on environmental threats and to Vice Presi­ dent A1 Gore, arguably the world's most pro m in en t e n v iro n m en ta list and also W ashington's chief supporter of science The claim that environm entalists are anti-human is even more absurd. The refer­ ence point for any environmental concern is the quality of human life. The reason we give a hoot about the Earth is that we don't want people to live in a world with a rav­ aged environment. Even the most extreme, m isanthropic ecothinkers alw ays begin with a concern for people's well-being. This new strain of Rand-inspired blather would seem dangerous if only it wasn't so silly. If I had more space I'd ridicule Rand further by quoting from the "heroic" rape scene in The Fountainhead. But you'll have to read it yourself. Maybe along the way you'll figure out how a mediocre writer with a dime-store philosophy got picked up as the intellectual ^or such a hollow attack on the environmental movement. Demombynes is a Plan ll/engineering senior. UT just a diploma mill A UT faculty member and former colleague of mine tells a distressing but surprising story. He was show­ ing his class pictures of a natural disaster that, though rare in the United States, frequently befalls Third World cou ntries. And the students laughed. My buddy was appalled. "These disasters cripple a million people a year," he said. "W h o would find that funny?" Now we know: UT students. The U n iv ersity is a Sun Belt diploma mill. Its motto is "C an 't we print these things any faster?" And it gets the students it deserves. W ith their m all-rat sensibilities, their quickness to defend anything that is third-rate, and their belief that a university is just a place with athletic scholarships and plenty of parking, these kiddies honor local traditions handsomely. Undoubtedly they will do their alma mater proud as they pursue careers at General Motors, the State Department and other big dumb organizations noted for their brash, confident inertia. So why not have a few laughs en rou te? UT stu d en ts view them ­ selves as heroic timeservers. They see education as a long, uneventful endurance contest. So tedious is this process, even a snapshot of dirt-poor foreigners in agony can brighten students' dull days. While teaching at the University, I was constantly troubled by my students' lack of greatness. Not one was passionate or hungry. Never did I fix on a face in the crowd and th in k , "T h is o n e's bound for glory." I once had som eone fix on my face and insist the 67 he got on a test was actually pretty good. I told him a 67 meant he was wrong one time in three. This is hardly better than one out of two, which would make this guy about as crafty a decision-maker as a flipped coin. But he didn't care. UT students clearly don't expect much of them selves, don't value themselves. No wonder they don't value others and chuckle at the lat- ter's misfortunes. J.A. Hutter Austin resident Computers help blind The concerns being raised in The Daily Texan about equal computer access for b lin d stu d en ts is an important issue being addressed in the first facility funded by the new student technology fee. I have been the m anager of M icrocom p u ter Technologies in the Com putation Center since 1985, and my organi­ zation is responsible for the initial designs and future management of the new FAC Student M icrocom ­ puter Facility. Providing for equal com puting access has been a part of this pro­ ject from the very beginning and was incorporated into the first pro­ posal submitted earlier this year to UT officials. Physical access for all students was an important issue in our plan­ ning, and the work required has already been approved and funded. Items such as electronic door open­ ers w ill be in p lace, along w ith modified door handles for opening office areas. We m ade sure that each table within the facility com plies with specifications listing w heelchair need s. In ad d itio n , a few c u s­ tomized tables were ordered for students who might wish or need even greater table heights. Providing a singular solution for com pu tin g access for blind stu ­ dents is no simpler than blindness itself. I happen to be blind, and the technical solution I adopted would not work for all blind individuals. Some blind people have no visual perception, but most do. Some blind persons can see large le tters on a com pu ter m on itor, while others with limited peripher­ al vision may require small charac­ ters con cen trated on a cen tral screen real estate. Alternative out­ put such as Braille or speech is fre­ quently very important. Trying to provide for all possible permuta­ tions is difficult, but we gave it our best effort. B esid es som e so ftw a re tools being available at the individual work stations, we also incorporated a sound-proofed office within the new facility where we are placing a h igh -p ow ered m icro co m p u ter attached to both a Braille printer and a scanner capable of translating prin ted m aterials to sy n th etic speech or to an electronic format for storage on personal diskettes. In conversations I have had with Step hen M onti, w ho ch airs the Information Technology Advisory Com m ittee, I have made it clear that I have no w ay of know ing exactly what the needs of all stu­ dents with disabilities are. Howev­ er, because individual needs will vary and student populations will change, flexibility is the intelligent course of action. We agreed to provide the core services described above, and, as we discover additional needs in this new facility, the University will make reasonable accommodations. G. Morgan Watkins, Manager, Microcomputer Technologies, Computation Center Lee didn't like slavery I would like to point a few things out in response to the "Melt away racism and replace with image of M LK " article by Texan colum nist Patrick Sullivan on Oct. 25. I was was w o n d erin g w hy Su lliv an didn't mention either of the other two statues of "v io le n t ra c is ts " am ong the statu es fla n k in g the South Mall, one of whom is George Washington. If you d id n 't alread y know , Washington was a slaveholder of the highest magnitude. In contrast, w hat few slav es Lee had he received through inheritance and freed them long before the C ivil War. Lee did not lead the Confed­ erate army to protect slavery, but to preserve self-government. In Jefferson Davis' words, "In any case, our slave property will eventually be lost," that is to say, whether the war was won or lost. Neither he nor the vast majority of the South were fighting over the question of slavery. And for that matter, Lincoln was purely in terested in sa v in g the Union, not abolishing slavery. He never even mentioned slavery until three years after the war started. Racism, as we know it now, was not a predominantly Southern phe­ nom en on but w as w id esp read throughout all of the States. The examples that spring to mind are the draft riots in New York City, w here ov er 200 b lack s w ere lynched because the white citizens there didn't want to fight and die to free the slaves. Lee and Davis were not defend­ ers of "ra c ist terro r" as Sullivan portrays them. Indeed, they were both m en w hose p u blic lives proved them worthy of statues, for they both fought with ceaseless courage to preserve liberty and self- government. To ju d ge h istorical fig u res as good or evil based solely on the moral beliefs of the present and not those of their time and culture is, in my o p in io n , w rong. But in the words of Lee, "slavery, as an insti­ tution, is a moral and political evil in any co u n try ." How he can be portrayed as he was in Sullivran's article is beyond me. Clay Hinton Architectural engineering senior I n O u r D e i j B a k e r y P a r t y F a v o r i t e s Available at S & I- Beverage of Texas m & Sfrom boli Pepperoni & Cheese, Ham & Cheese or Three Cheese. Pumpkin Pies In-Store Baked. 8 inch. ea. Coors Light, Coors, Coors Dry or Extra Gold Beer 24 pk., 12 oz. cans. Suitcase11.99 Seagram's Coolers All flavors. 4 pk.; 12 oz. n/r btls. ¡ r e n t o s A ppuTbíf. ■IUAP£NO am.;: DiP Mil <1.U \ n v x e m ir hip —-__ ssm ¥ I 5 lb. Bag Red Delicious Apples Doritos Tortilla Chips 9-10.5 oz. Ruffles Potato Chips 6 oz. Q ea. AppleTree Dips 8 oz. i r i r j ,* .. Fresh Carrot Sticks or Celery Sticks 8 oz. package. liFUJI VIOEOCASSETTE FUJI VIOeOCASSFTTF m T-120 ►«eUMn df»i: f.1 BERIOOX VMS . » > o T - 1 2 0 Fn*»wim Red B aron Fam ily Pizza 22-24.5 oz. -'rim ' s Z K T B ryan Corn D ogs Regular or Beer. 12 oz S ave 2 .3 9 DOUBLE MFG COUPONS Up to & including 50 <. See store for details. MasterCard These Specials Good through November 2, 1993 at your Austin Area AppleTree Markets • Limit Rights Reserved. T h e D aiia T e x a n UT environmental groups si ill div ided over BCCP Ralna A n d e rso n Daily Texan Staff With less than a week left before a bond electio n on the $48.9 m illion Balcones Canyonlands Conservation Plan, UT organi­ zations are as divided on the proposal as local environmental groups. The UT chapter o f U nited We Stand America brought Robert Brandes, a local landowner and a member of the BCCP exec­ utive committee, to campus Tuesday to explain the bond issue for the controversial endangered species preserve. UWSA member Therese McFadden said members need more detailed information on the BCCP to make educated choices. McFadden said the plan is so complicated and such a large public investment is need­ ed for the BCCP that people may find it dif­ ficult to vote for or against the plan with the limited information available to them. "The BCCP plan has some serious ques­ tions in it that are not adequately answered in [the plan's] present form," said Brandes, who has often been critical of the BCCP. "It has becom e a situation w here one hand gives, while the other takes away." Brandes said one of the major issues not com pletely resolved deals with the treat­ ment of endangered species in Travis Coun­ ty. Brandes said some possibly endangered species, including the Barton Creek sala­ mander, are being left out of the current version of the BCCP. Brandes said national politicians hope to use the plan as a model for other environ­ mental conservation plans around the coun- try. T h e plan in this form is not a good model; if it is held as a model it could do u n im ag in ab le d am age to co m m u n ities across the nation," Brandes said. On Nov. 2 Travis County voters will vote on a $48.9 million bond package for the BCCP. The bond aquisition package will be used to buy nearly 30,000 acres of environ­ mentally sensitive land in West Austin for the preserve. Some UT environmental orga­ nizations have decided not to take an offi­ cial position on the p la n because of the many different perspectives. Representa­ tives of UT environmental groups said they could give only their opinion on the plan. "I believe most of the opposition to the deal is due to all the political interference by private interest," said Bretton Cass, presi­ dent of student environmental group Texas Tide. Bretton said it is important that some type of com prom ise be reached because " th e alternative could be worse and these areas could be severely harmed by unmonitored development." Decisions, decisions A & M launches inquiry into busi ness dealings Associated Press The interim general counsel for the Texas A&M University System said Tuesday he will investigate whether changes are needed in the way the sys­ tem's Board of Regents conducts business! A&M System regents chairman Ross Margraves has acknowledged that the company operating the Texas A&M University bookstore has paid for lav­ ish trips to New York for him and school vice presi­ dent Robert Smith. "In the end, we may all learn a little bit about something that could have been done differently," said Jam es Bond, who serves as interim general cou n sel to th e se v en -u n iv ersity system that includes Texas A&M. But right now that remains something that I need to examine." M argraves' travel vouchers, obtained by The Associated Press under the Open Records Law, show his hotel expenses during a trip to New York in April 1990 were paid for by JP Morgan & Co., a financial services firm based in New York that serves Texas A&M. That was a higher education seminar that JP Morgan invited about 70 of our higher education clients to, and for that we pick up the hotel bill," said JP Morgan spokeswoman Ellen Barry. "W e don't pick up their airline tickets." When asked if JP Morgan had paid expenses for any other trips involving A&M officials, Barry said, "This is the only thing that I am going to confirm." Margraves defended having companies the A&M System does business with pick up the tabs for lodging and travel. They were not secret trips," Margraves said. "I have to assume they were legitimate. As a fairly astute person on ethics, I don't see anything wrong with that." Bond is heading an internal inquiry into allega­ tions leveled against Margraves in an anonymous letter sent to eight of the system 's regents last month. Bond said he would add the trips to his inquiry. The Texas Rangers also are looking into accusa­ tions made in the anonymous letter that Margraves has supported the privatization of several A&M ventures, like the bookstore, to personally benefit from the deals. Texas Department of Public Safety officials say Margraves has cooperated fully. Fellow regents say the investigation will vindicate Margraves. Margraves said Barnes & Noble Bookstores Inc. paid for at least four trips, including one this year, as part of A&M bookstore business. Barnes & Noble sent the company's corporate jet to pick up Mar­ graves and Smith in 1990 to finalize the signing of the bookstore contract, Margraves said. Under Texas law, anyone who spends more than $200 in a calendar quarter to influence a state agency purchasing decision becom es subject to lobby registration. Lobbyists are required to pro­ vide detailed reports any time more than $50 is spent on a member of the executive branch to influ­ ence agency action. A review of records at the Texas Ethics Commis­ sion, which monitors the conduct of state officials, shows Barnes & Noble is not registered as a lobby. Violation of the lobby law is punishable by a $2,000 fine and up to a year in jail. "It is a common practice in our industry and per­ mitted by the IRS to reimburse these administrators for legitim ate travel and out-of-pocket business exp enses," J. Alan Kahn, president of Barnes & Noble, said Tuesday in a statement. Timothy Chang, left, and Weylin Lee, both electrical engineering freshmen, scanned student comment tables in order to help them select math classes for next Chris Carson/Daily Texan S taff semester. Comments about math professors ranged from “is a god” to “Avoid like the plague!” The tables are set up outside the Peter T. Flawn Academic Center. ÍM ÉIí T0 0 D thought fall 1993 WEDNESDAYS 12 NOON-1:30 p.m. TEXAS UNION EASTWOODS ROOM WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27 MOTHERS & DAUGHTERS: THE PARADOXICAL BOND The bond between a mother and daughter is often a powerful one that can hep the daughter develop healthy relationships and a strong sense of self. Yet, paradoxically, out of that bond can come smothering, resentment, urtleaKhy dependency, and even rebellion. We will explore the nature of the bond between mothers and daughters to help you get past the pitfalls and e ea.e a hea-thy balance of caring and separation. Both men and women are welcome. | Counseling, Learning & Career Services«471-3515 Since 1980 472-6666 w If you are a healthy woman between 18-40 with moderate facial acne, you may be eligible to participate in a research study evaluating an oral contraceptive pill for the treatment of your acne. Participants will receive free: physical exams, diagnostic and laboratory testing, study medication, and up to $400 upon successful completion. This study;. requires approximately nine clinic visits over a six-month period. ;>• Women currently taking oral contraceptives or using contraceptive \ implants will not be eligible to participate in this study, .. For additional information, call: I W H E N R E A L O P T IO N S M A TT ER CONFIDENTIAL, PR O FESSIO N A L REPRO D UCTIV E CA RE Free Pregnancy Testing • Abortions • Confidential Counseling • Licensed by Tx. Dept, of Health • Adoption Alternatives • On RR Shuttle * Board Certified Ob-Gyns * Licensed Nursing Staff Morning After Treatm ent i i i i u j j i i i i i - i i i v t i i i i i t i l l ' -JÉÉI& ' * * ^ 3 ^ REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES 1009 E. 40th 458-8274 s i n c e 1V 7 H succeed Everybody can succeed at standardized tests. We repeat. Everybody can succeed at standardized tests. But nobody can get it all right, right away. UT STUDENTS Student Health Center staff Is recruiting students for spring of 1994 peer Instructor training In the areas of: • Alcohol & Drug Abus© Prevention and Stress M anagem ent • Nutrition Education Benefíti: • skills in public speaking, leadership a n d group facilitation • upper division a ca d e m ic credit for training a n d teaching • preparation for future employment or graduate school •a c h a n c e to b e co m e part of a valuable team and give something b a ck to UT R&qukomonts: • two semester commitment (minimum) • e a ch program has a requisite a ca d e m ic class Last year peer Instructors provided over 200 education programs to over 3000 UT students. To apply or to get a com plete description of the program and responsibilities, co m e b y the Student Health Center. Health Education Department. Room 459 or call 471-6252 betw een 8am a n d 5pm, M-F. M errill W . Russ D .D .S. k F R E E Initial E xam and Cavity X-rays (Nvw hilion ts ( )nly) ^004 Medical Arts Street 2 Blocks from I IT Insurance* Accepted MasterCard/VISA Yeast infection? Healthy women over age 18 are needed to evalute a currently marketed vaginal medication for relief of symptoms associated with an active vaginal yeast infection. This research study requires four visits over a one-month period. Particpants completing the study will earn $ 150. For more information, please call- 478-4004 Phones answered 24 hours a day P H A R M A C O : : L S R G R E » G M A T * M C A T * L S A T F O R M O R E I N F O , C A L L 1 - 8 0 0 - K A P - T E S T The University o f Texas Career Center presents a celebration ofdiversity , «£■1. ■■i-::.: W - §É| W e d n e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 3 1 0 : 0 0 A . M . - 3 : 0 0 P .M . T e x a s U n io n B a llr o o m 3 . 2 0 2 Schedule o f E vents Workshop: How to Get the M ost From A Career Fair Tuesday, November 2 5:30 - 6:30 P.M. FAC (UGL) 21 Panel Discussion: D iversity in the Workplace Tuesday, November 2 7:00 - 9:00 P.M. Texas Union Ballroom Fair: M ulticultural Career Fair Wednesday, November 3 10:00 A.M. - 3:00 P.M. Texas Union Ballroom f t Moderator-Deborah Duncan KVUE 24 Anchor/Reporter f t O pening rem arks - President Berdahl f t Reception - M ingle w ith em ployers f t W in great door prizes! (software, dinners, and more!) E m p l o y e r s S c h e d u l e d t o A t t e n d Army & Airforce Exchange Service Arthur Andersen Austin American-Statesman Austin Hotel Human Resources Association Austin Travis County MHMR Center CellularOne Chubb Group of Insurance Co. City of Austin Dept, of Public Works & Transportation Dell Computer Corporation Dowell Schlumberger Incorporated Eaton Eli Lilly & Co. EDS Espey, Huston, & Associates, Inc. Famous Footwear Furr's Cafeteria General Services Commission Glaxo Inc. GSD&M Guaranty Federal Bank HEB Grocery Company Hughes Aircraft Company JC Penney, Inc. J.P. Morgan & Company, Inc. K-Mart Lockheed Lotus Development Corporation Lower Colorado River Authority Metrocel Cellular Telephone Company 3M Mobil Corporation Motorola National Instruments Neiman Marcus Office of the Attorney General Price Waterhouse Radio Shack Rockwell Southern Union Gas Southwest Airlines State Farm Insurance Talbots Tandem Computers Texas Commerce Bank TDY Temporaries Texas Dept, of Health Texas Dept, of Human Services Texas Dept, of Transportation-Civil Rights Division Texas Employment Commission Texas School for the Blind & Visually Impaired Texas School for the Deaf Texas State Auditor's Office Texas Water Commission University Federal Credit Union University of Texas ^CAREER CENTER Jester A l l 5 • 4 7 1 -1 2 1 7 Page 8 Wednesday, October 27, 1993 Tin: D a i i a Texan / O j Z ~ ¡ ] n r ~ n f I—J LmmJ V-J LJ I Touch-up Collider death knell begins with House vote Renae Merle Daily Texan Staff With the approval of a bill by the U.S. House of Rep­ resentatives Tuesday that includes funds to dismantle the superconducting super collider and approval expected in the Senate Wednesday, chances are bleak that the project will survive. In a 372-81 vote, the House passed the $22 billion Energy and Water Appropriations Conference Report Bill, which includes $640 million to dismantle the SSC. The Senate is scheduled to vote on the bill Wednesday. The bill was approved by a joint compromise com­ mittee Oct. 21 after the House voted down the commit­ tee's proposal by a margin of nearly 2-1 on Oct. 19. The 54-mile atom smasher, constructed near Waxa- hachie, was designed to answer some of the mysteries of science, including particle physics and the origins of mankind. Of the estimated $11 billion project cost, $2 billion has been spent. Clinton could still veto the bill — leaving the SSC standing — but spokesmen for Sens. Kay Bailey Hutchi­ son, R-Texas, and Phil Gramm, R-Texas, said that Clin­ ton has not shown strong support for the project and that Clinton is not expected to sacrifice the bill for the super collider. Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, whose district includes part of the SSC structure, faxed a letter to Clinton Monday asking him to veto the bill. Clinton will likely receive the bill on Thursday. Barton told the House in a tele­ vised hearing that there has been a "brain drain" in American science because scientists are going to Europe, where more money is spent on science. "If the president decided to put his foot down it would send a very effective message," said Craig Mur­ phy, spokesman for Barton. "[Clinton] hasn't done what he should." Murphy said Barton's constituents will lose homes and jobs if Clinton does not veto the bill. Gov. Ann Richards, in Washington Tuesday to meet with legislators and federal officials on the North Amer­ ican Free Trade Agreement and other state issues, also dealt with leftover issues from the SSC. We want to see what scientific value can be sal­ vaged, and make sure the state is reimbursed for what it has invested into the collider," said Chuck McDonald, a spokesman for Richards. The state spent $400 million on development of the super collider. David Beckwith, spokesman for Hutchison, said he is disappointed that the Clinton administration was not active in trying to save the project. 'We are sure we could have saved it" if Clinton had supported the project, Beckwith said. Austin Gleeson, a UT professor of physics and mem­ ber of the Board of Overseers for the supercollider, said that the vote was a disappointment for the country', but that hope for the project was already lost after the vote in the House Oct. 19. It's too late to rescue this project," Gleeson said. "I would be very surprised if the president risks the whole appropriations bill for this one issue," said David Goldsen, special assistant m the House Science Commit­ tee. "Support for this project has collapsed across the board." German doctor to be defaced Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio — The like­ ness of a man alleged to have been a Nazi doctor is being removed from a mural of medical heroes at Ohio State University, but the Air Force said Tuesday it won't be renaming a library in Texas dedicated to him. The etching of Col. Hubertus Strughold, part of a mural at the university's medical college, was covered Monday after officials received a letter from The World Jewish Congress asking that it be removed. Strughold headed the German Air Force's Institute of Aviation Medicine during World War II. The Jewish group cited testimony from the Nuremberg war crimes tri­ bunal at which a Nazi doctor said Strughold was aware of experi­ ments on concentration camp inmates during World War II and could have stopped them at any time because he headed the institute that conducted them. The German Air Force was known to have used prisoners from the Dachau concentration camp for experiments that included immers­ ing inmates in ice water for long periods, placing them in air pres­ sure chambers and forcing them to drink sea water, the group said. University officials met Tuesday and decided Strughold's portrait should be removed, said Dr. Ronald St. Pierre, an associate dean of the medical college. "What we found is that the infor­ mation would strongly indicate that the likeness of Dr. Strughold is not one we would like to have d is­ played in this mural," St. Pierre said. Strughold's stepdaughter, Laura F. Olle of Leming, said allegations that her stepfather had a Nazi past dogged him until his death in 1986. "He's always denied it," she said. "I wish they would just let it rest. I wish they would let Dr. Strughold rest in peace." | MEaJM BUSINESS! Craig Gideon applied a coat of paint to a window Littlefield Building at 601 Congress Ave. Gideor frame Tuesday as part of renovation work on the works for A Tex Waterproofing Inc. Justin Noble/Daily Texan Staff WORDS DAYS I Mr ■■■, -E very page o f the yearbook is a prized possession. " ' --Jody Conradt 471-5244 THE DAILY TEXAN Offer lim ited to Pnvate party (non-com m ercial) ads only. sold, five additional insertions will be run at no charge Advertiser e * cef,d ($ 1 0 °0 and must call before 11 a.m. on the day of the fifth insertion No , ° e f! ? °J ^a te titled the t itibank ( lassie Visa® card. Established on the premise that a credit card should otter-24 hours a day-w arm , personal service, the Citibank Classic Visa card marked the end of the Ice Age. And it ushered in a new era. *' With the introduction of the first Photocard, the credit caid bearing ones own photo and signature on the front, it soon became f t sáfc* — For scale. evident that Man was entering the Post Paleolithic Period. First, Man was no longer looking like a Neanderthal, as one often does on more primitive cards such as the Student ID. He or she could now TA/i tablet, d a te d 1358 B C . was the fir s t known attempt to put one’s photo on a credit card-bu t not without drawbacks. Photography had not yet been invented It weighed over 50 pounds And. it did not fit easih into a wallet. choose his or her own photo. Second, by deterring other anthropoids trom using the card, Man was helping to prevent fraud. Surely this was a sign ot advanced intelligence. H The subsequent rise of services was nothing less than an American Revolution. So as you might expect, Citibank would be there for you, even if your card was stolen, or perhaps lost. The Lost Wallet™ Service could have a new card in your hands usually within 24 hours. (You can almost hear Paul Revere crying, “The card is coming! The card is coming!” ) T| When the Great Student Depression came along, Citibank introduced New Deals—special student discounts and savings. Hence, today’s student can enjoy a $20 Airfare Discount for domestic flights1 (ushering in the Jet Age); savings on mail order purchases, sports equipment, magazines and music; a low variable interest rate of 15.4%2; and, no annual fee. H Finally, comes the day you enter the Classical Age (i.e. when you chaige you of the best prices. Just see the same item advertised in print for less, within 60 days, and Citibank will refund the difference up to $150! You receive Buyers Security™, to cover those purchases against accidental damage, fire or theft, for 90 days from the date of purchase! And Citibank Lifetime Warranty™, to extend the expected service life of eligible products up to 12 years4. Together they give you complete coverage; and with everything else...the Age of Credit H a d S a p o te a n c a r r ie d a A C 1 citibank classic v,sa card La na becunty. ij It s credit history in the making. With the help of Citibank’s with its Lost Wallet Service, he > on Id not have been c o m - I Hied to hold on so obsessively to • , *aUet inside hi* jacket services and savings, you earn some of the credentials needed later on to purchase a car or even a house. *! So call to apply. Students don’t need a job or a cosigner. Call, also, if you'd like your photo added to your regular Citibank Classic Visa card. The number is 1-800-C 11 IBANK (1-800-248-4226), extension 19. H If after reading this chapter describing the prosperous condi­ tions set forth by a Citibank Classic Visa card, one feels that he or she has left forever the Dark Ages and has entered upon a new age, the Age of Enlightenment, then your time, as CITIBANCO C L A S S I C )^ fJ ÍA 'J ooia mss* exmAomoxsg v*u g f r o « ©6/9 J 0J/JJ/9J LINDA MAUI* me*. 0 k - f t VISA they say, has come. Destiny is calling. And so should you. Not just Visa. Citibank Visa. purc^asw is T 5 .4 ^ íis ^ ^ W * n d h n a v ^ r y ^ a r t e r l^ lt ó A ^ u a l P e r c e m a g e V a te ^ r t^ slía d v a n c c s^ s^ ^ 'f^ f’^fi ° n ‘“ T ^ finance charge for each cash advance transaction equal to 2% conditions and exclusions apply. Please refer to vour Sum m ary o f Additional P ro g ra m In fo r m a tio n R restrictions and hm .ta.tonsappk, Underwritten Annua. Percentage Rate for am oum o f e ^ h rastf t^ ^ n !2 tr a n !!a ! ^ ‘*ncecharSe is im posed, the minimum is-50 cents. There is an additional less .Iran $2.00 or greater than $10.00. ‘Certain 'V ^ - r w r t t t e n •» T he Zurich International UK Limited. ‘Certain ‘ l on- owcver* 11 * ' T ' .^ y » 315 not data. Details ofcoverage arc available in your Sum m ary o f Additional Program Information. Monarch • Notes'a're p u b X d by N w l h T r e s s t dot's,on ™Sim o n s T '' 7 ”* ? Com m unications C ompany. Used by permission o f the publisher. Citthank credh cards are issued by Citibank ISouth Dakota). N. A. . citibank ^ Around Campus is a daily col­ umn lis tin g U n iv e rsity -re la te d activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organ ization s registered with the Campus Activities Office. Announcem ents must be subm it­ ted on the proper form by 9 p.m. two days before publication. Forms are available at the D aily T ex an o ffic e at 25th S tre e t and Whitis Avenue. T he D a ily T ex an re serv es the right to edit submissions. M EETINGS /\ipna rn i um ega, coed service fraternity holds an executive meet­ ing at 7:30 p.m. every Wednesday in University Teaching Center 1.112. This is a meeting for members only. For m ore in fo rm a tio n call 471- HOPE. Amnesty International meets at 6 p.m. every Wednesday in Mary A. Gearing Hall 100. For more informa­ tion call Shama Ali at 495-3408. A sian H ealth P ro fessio n s will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Rus­ sell A. Steindam H all 310. Terry Boacher will speak. For more infor­ mation call Tommy Pham at 250- 0526. Black Health Professions O rga­ n iz a tio n w ill m eet at 7:30 p.m . Just A Handful of Reasons To Biiy Your College Ring! S t y l e , selection, Tfflljjp- H M fjaflir ill great reasons to chose a Balfour College Ring. And now easy paym ent plans ’ offer an affordable, convenient w ear y ou r college ring N O W ! Ask y o u r Balfou r Representative fo r details. lor ,iv lutle S14 j month Balfour. $100 off 18K, $60 off 14K, $40 off 10K Gold Rings The Balfour Representative will be at Bevo’s Bookstore this week on Wednesday, October 27 thru Saturday, October 30 from 10:00am - 4:00pm. 2304 ciiiflHainnp Bevo’s Bookstore 472_ A football helmet, a dozen vacuum tubes and a set of rabbit ears... S H A ZA M ! Another A wa rd -W in ni n g Costume From Goodwill X t's sim p le to have an aw a rd -w in n in g costu m e from G o o d w ill. You come to G oodw ill, g et a costu m e, and they'll take y o u r picture. BAM, you 're registered for their con test. Or, you can register with your ow n pictu re at an y Austin area G o od w ill, a n y tim e before N ov em ber 3, 1993. Th e next thing you know , y o u 're eligible to w in all kinds of stuff, 100 prizes in all. Movie tickets, t-shirts, a trip, C D 's... W ait a m in u te, a trip. Tell me more. T w o round trip tickets to a n yw h ere your little heart d esires (an yw h ere in the U.S. that is), V & l _ ^ v 4 ^ J c ou rtesy of A TS Travel. Im agine lying on the beach, sw ish in g d ow n the slopes, or flying your relatives in for the H olid ays, all for a H allo w een costu m e. T h e lucky H a lo w een ers will be notified in early N ov em b er 1993. You w ant I should m ake it easier. O K , G ood w ill h as the largest selection of n ew co stu m es in history and m ore co stu m e je w e lry , c lo th in g , sh o e s, and co stu m e a c c e s s o rie s than you can sh ake your Ja ck -O -L a n tern i at. That s easy enough. It s furi. You know you can p M H j win right? So get y o u rse lf d ow n to { G o od w ill, find that aw a rd -w in n in g -upm— costu m e, and pack y ou r bags. 8965 Research • 13096 Hvvy. 183 N. • 4444 N. Lamar Blvd. 2800 S. Lamar • 5734 Manchaca • 836 Airport Blvd. * 1200 Round Rock Ave For m ore in form atio n ca ll Je ff Kennedy at 471-5106. Latin American Women's Forum will meet at noon Wednesday in the Texas Union Building Sinclair Suite (3,128). Patricia Fajardo C avazos will speak on Voz Popular, under­ ground rad io in G u atem ala. For more information call Kate Marlay at 452-9736. League of United Latin Ameri­ can C itiz e n s announces that the m eeting sch edu led for 6 p.m. Wednesday is canceled. For more information call Amaury Nora at 385-6105. Le Cercle Fran^ais will meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday at Les Amis Side­ walk Cafe, 504 W. 24th St., to dis­ cuss its Halloween soirée. M ethodist University Group at Hyde Park meets every Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. at 4001 Speedway for food, fun and friendship. For more information call Kathy at 478-4713. M exican Am erican H ealth Pro­ fessions Organization will meet at 7 p.m . W ed n esd ay in the T exas U nion B u ild in g A sian C u ltu re Room (4.224). The director of admis­ sions at Baylor Medical School will speak. For m ore inform ation call Fabiola at 444-0505. M o viem ien to Estudiantil C hi- can a/o de A ztlán (M E C h A ) w ill meet from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Union Building Chi- cano C u ltu re Room (4 .206). For more information call Rául Alvarez at 448-3428. Orange Jackets meets at 5:30 p.m. every W ednesday in U n iv ersity Teaching C enter 4.104. For more information call Nancy at 478-6544. Pre-Optometric Association will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Beau- ford H. Je ste r C en ter 215A . For more information call Jean at 206- 0967. S p o o k s will m eet at 4 p.m . Wednesday on the steps of the Main Building. M em bers should w ear their casual uniform for the year­ book photo. For more information call 478-4577. S tu d en ts o f O b je c tiv is m w ill IF YOU HAVE Giant Papillary Conjunctivitis (GPC) AND YOU WEAR Contact Lenses You will receive free eye care + financial incentive If you qualify to participate in a new medication study CALL ^ ÍK ? * EYE RESEARCH ASSOCIATES ____________ Monday-Friday 458-6136 458-2274 8:30 am - 5:00 pm W O K 'W 0 0 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Wednesday, October 2 7 ,1 9 9 3 Page 11 meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Uni­ v ersity T e ach in g C en ter 4 .1 0 4 . Members will view the videotaped lecture "Environmentalism: Sacrific­ ing Mankind to N ature" by Peter Schwartz. For more information call Benjamin Whitcomb at 416-9852. Students Uniting Nations meets at 6:30 p.m. every W ednesday in R obert A. W elch H all 2.302. For more information call 416-8237. Tau Beta Pi will hold an officer meeting at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in E n g in eerin g T each in g C en ter II 2.106. Texas Society of Jugglers meets at 7:30 p.m. every Wednesday at the north entrance of Russell A. Stein- dam Hall. Jugglers of all skill levels are welcome. For more information call Matt at 323-2316. Texas Union Campus Entertain­ m ent C om m ittee meets at 5 p.m . ev ery W ed n esd ay in the T exas Union Building C hicano C u ltu re Room (4.206). For more information call Stephanie at 416-7494. T exas U n ion D is tin g u is h e d Speakers Committee will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Union Building C hicano C ultu re Room (4.206). For more information call Shannon Murphy at 475-6630. Texas Union Finance Committee meets at 5 p.m. every Wednesday in the Texas U nion B u ild in g Texas Governors' Room (3.116). For more information call Colby Harmon at 345-0178. P lease se e Around Campus, p. 13 Discover A Career In Management Consulting With Price Waterhouse Graduation Is approaching. Y o u e caught up in the excitement of embarking on a promising and chattenginp areer You want to succeed in the competitive environment of the nineties and beyond. Price Waterborne provides y ou the oppor­ tunity to excel in the decades ahead. Our Management Consulting Services (MCS) offers a dynamic atmosphere for gaining practical business experience and technical knowledge As a new MCS Information Technology con­ sultant, you will participate in an extensive training program, combining self-study with hands-on experience. W e help develop your skills so that you may continue our tradition of providing the highest quality information technology services to clients from Boston to Bangkok. If you are among the best and the brightest in an analytical major (MIS, Computer Science. Engineering Math, etc.), we invite you to come meet with us and learn why you should consider a career w ith Price Waterhouse. Look to a bright new future with MCS and discover what the nineties hold for you. j j I j W e will hold an informal infor­ mation session at Baylor Universih (Casual attire) O c to b e r 2 7 ,1 9 9 3 , 6:00PM • 8:00PM in the Ernest CockreB jr. 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Compare then Save a t the Co- • '-v .. > A •' 1 B a c h e l o r s P a c k a g e J fr Pk' •b í: 1 00 G r a d u a t io n A n n o u n c e m e n t s C a p, G o w n a n o T a s s e l .. - * 5 0 G r a d u a t io n A n n o u n c e m e n t s Cap, G o w n , a n d T a sse l VOU MVÍ Í «.«# »Y «MS G r a d u a t io n A n n o u n c e m e n t s C a p, G o w n a n d T a s s e l x Y o g SAYf $ 2 5 .0 0 BY PURCHASING THE PALS(J|cCE .vj- ♦ L ess t h a n 3 0 a n n o u n c e m e n t s : $ .7 5 e a c h C a p , G o w n , S t a n d a r d H o o d a n d T a s s e l R e n t a l $30.00 P u r c h a s e $35,00 • R e n t a l o r d e r m u s t m p l a c e d a t Nor» 24. IW 3. $ 2 5 , 0 0 m o a * D e p o s i t r e o u jr e d f o r r e n t a l . ♦ W i t h a n t m a s t e r s r e g a l ía r e n t a l o r P U R C H A SE, A N N O U N C EM EN TS MAY BE PURCHASED FOR f O J W EA. O R D E R M U ST BE PLACED W H E W Y O U ORDER REGALIA. D o c t o r a l R e g a l i a Rental $39.95 • R e n t a l o r d e r m u s t b e p l a c e d b y N ov 2 6 , 1 993. * D e p o s i t r e q u i r e d f o r r e n t a l T h a n k - Y o u N o t e s $ 4 . 9 9 Distinctive beige week with the University nf Tex»* ¡km» on front 10 « . pkg -. S o u v e n i r C o m e r Preserve your personatixed graduation announcement in an elegant souvenir announcement cover $ 1 , 9 5 A p p r e o a t w n $ 7 . 9 $ C b t h h c a t e f o r M o m a n d D a d P rices start at AWaHOCSGE (2) 5* 'XT' PHOTOS AND {$) WALLETS C o m e i n t o t h e C o - o p a n o make a n l | P i a p p o i n t m e n t w i t h o u r P o r t r a i t P h o t o g r a p h e r . W e w i l l f u r n i s h t h e r e g a l í a ANO SC H O O L TASSEL- P R O O F S W R JL f * AVAILABLE FO R YOUR REVIEW TH E N E X T DAY IN C o - o p C a m e r a s , o n t h e u p m w l e v e l o f t h e W e a r r o m L o n g h o r n A c h i e v e m e n t w r m Pk rusm S in t Umm t m r 4 wm<3 Tvrnmoum. V a rio u s s ty le s a n d p ric e p o MTS w m M U . - ♦ $ I 0 . 0 0 s i t t i n g f e e . ■ * A l l o r d e r s m u s t b e p r e p a id » £ * < lrfv ______ G r a d u a t io n iPEcm $ < ^ j f a/) M m t s jF G o l d m e t a l f r a m e f e a t u r i n c a u n e m - 1 OOK H A T T e w , r H BxjnHT ORANo O K M , 'toU 3'tA \ X OOVJ'T TVMWK TWKT X "LEE ~T=r E v e » , 2EV.E &OT NKJ6 KL-U T o t>o T \M S , L f c T 'S T9.H SovAe PUK.S- TVME 9.&VT NKltsS -T o E U O T o TYifcVA T to T ^ V E TVKKT X . COVAT T o VouP, poo^( T9T VNKj T o S .E L X " f o u l S°*AB.TWVMfc>... Page 14 Wednesday, October 2 7,1 99 3 T h e D a il y T e x a n To Place a Classified Ad Call 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 Classified Word Ad Rates Charged by the word. Based on a 1 5 w ord m inimum, th e following ra te s apply 1 day.— 2 d ays_________ 3 d ays S6 15 $ 11 7 0 ..................... _ ....$ 1 6 6 5 4 d ays ............... SB 0 4 0 5 days------------------------------$ 2 3 .2 5 f i r s t tw o w ords may be an capital le tte rs $ 2 5 fo r each additional w o r d m M aste rC a rd and Visa accepted c a p ita l le t t e r s C l a s s i f i e d D i s p l a y A d R a r . p s Charged by the column inch One colum n inch m inim um . A variety o f type faces and sizes and b o rd e rs availa ble Fall ‘ a ta s Sept 1 -May 3 0 1 to 21 colum n o c"e s per m o nth $ $ 2 0 pe** cot m cK o ver 2 1 column r e r e s oer m onth Ca" fo r -ates FAX ADS TO 4 7 1 -6 7 4 1 TRANSPORTATION 10—Mtsc Autos 20—Sports-Foreign Autos 30—Trucks-Vans AO—Vehicles to Trade 50—Service-flepar 60~Parts-Accessories 70—Motorcycles 30~8icyctes SO-Vehicles-Leastng. 10 0 —Vehictes-Warted 110—Services 12 C—Houses " 30-Condo§-T ownhomes 1 4 0 —M o b ile H om es-Lets 150-Acreage-Lots 150—Ouplexes-Apartments 1 7 0 —W anted 180-Loans 8:00-5:00/Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200 Deadline: 11.00 a.m. prior to publication MERCHANDISE 190-Appliances 200—Fumiture-Household 210—Stereo-TV 220-Computers-Equipment 230-Photo-Cernera 240—Beats 250—Musical Instruments 260—Hobbies 27Q-Machmery€quipment 2 6 0 —Sporting-Camping Equipment CivT-Ftrniture-Appliance Rental 300-Garage-Rummage Sales 3 1 0 —Trade 3 7 3 -Wanted to Buy or Rent 330-Pets 340-Longhom Want Ads 345—Misc. T 350-Rental Services 360—Furnished Apts. 3 ’ 0—Unfurnished Apts. 380-Fumished Duplexes 390— Unfurnished Duplexes 400-Condos-T ownhomes 410-Fumished Houses 420—Unfurnished Houses 425-Rooms 430—Room-Board 435—Co-ops 440—Roommates 450—Mobile Homes-Lots 460-Business Rentals 470-Resorts 480-Storage Space 490—Wanted to Rent-Lease 500—Misc. ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 10-Entertainment-Tickets 520-Personals 530-Travel-T ransportation 540—Lost & Found 550-Ucensed Child Care 550—Public Notice 5 70—Music-Musicians EDUCATIONAL 580—Musical Instruction 590-Tutormg 600-Instruction Wanted 610—Misc. Instruction 620—Legal Services 630—Computer Services 640—Exterminators 650—Moving-Hauling 660—Storage 670-Paintmg 680—Office 690—Rental Equipment 700—Furniture Rental 7 10-Appliance Repair • 720—E&ereo-TV Repair 730—Home Repair 740—Bicycle Repair 750—Typing 760—Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 770-Employment Agencies 780-Employment Services 790—Part Time 800-General Help Wanted 810-Office-Oerical 820-Accounting-Bookkeeping 830-Administrative- Management 840-Sales 850—Retail 860-Engineering-Technical 870—Medical 880—Professional 890—Clubs-Restaurants 900-Domestic Household 910—Positions Wanted 920—Work Wanted 930-Business Opportunities 940—Opportunities Wanted MASTERCARD & VISA ACCEPTED A DVERTISING T E R M S •n in th e e v e n t o f e r r o r s m a d e advertisement, notice m ust be given by 11 a.m th e firs t day, as the p ublishers are r e s p o n s ib le f o r o n ly ONE in c o r r e c t insertion All claims fo r adjustm ents should be m ade n o t la te r th a n 3 0 days a fte r publication Pre-paid kills receive credit slip if requested Bt tim e o f cancellation, and if a m o u n t e xcee d s $ 2 . 0 0 . S lip m u s t be presented fo r a re o rd e r within 9 0 days to be valid. C redit slips are non-transferrable In c o n s id e ra tio n o f th e D a ily T e x a n 's a c c e p ta n c e o f a d v e r tis in g c o p y fo r publication, the agency and the advertiser will indem nify and save harm less, Texas S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s and its o ffic e rs , em ployees, and a g e n ts a g a in s t all loss lia b ility , d a m a g e , a n d e x p e n s e o f w h a ts o e v e r n a tu re a ris in g o u t o f th e co p y in g , p rin tin g , o r p u b lis h in g o f its advertisem ent including w ithout lim itation reasonable attorney's fees resulting from claims o f suits fo r libel, violation of righ t of p riva cy, p la g ia ris m a n d c o p y rig h t and tradem ark infringement. TRANSPORTATION RENTAL 10 7 * ? - C:rAU^ ------ 3 6 0 - Fum. Apts. CASH PAID for Cors or Trucks, run­ ning or not 4 6 !-4 8 3 1 WEST CAMPUS 1-1 a > 0 '!ab e Coll 476-4992. 16: 566 'Q-4-20P RENTAl RENTAL 3 7 0 - Unf. Apts. 425 - Room» ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICES 5 3 0 - Travel - 7 5 0 - Typing Transportation EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 8 0 0 - General Help W anted 8 0 0 - General Help W anted J_BR/!BA AVAILABLE ©n W e s Campus, furnished on* Noe* from campus $450 mo * # &Ctr‘C ' N' Annie 499-0®28 10-14-106 i» - es- nC v - W A iX TO i-T - . 2 M 25 4 ce ’ - - -*a-es - ted access « e .. *> c c ess ana c - s te r - a - a g e - i , vm 5- U- \, - i $Npd Thom 0* 3 2vVC 5 ?c* EFFICIENCY 1C5 East 3 !s 7 ~ T s 7 ter- Gas stove- h *a ‘ pc d C© I© see 328-1809. $335 m0 m j . '08 SS SHUTtlE Lc *c * c o o - * - * - - ‘• ' f ” d see. ” fc sc- -C ve­ le- Fre- ease - a » u * : ’ y' g .- y - ve • 0-20-206 FURNISHED ~2BR.-T54 $5 7 5/m onth. Voyagers AparT- ments Free cob!*, water electrl©. ity. Musi pay for AC. Avoilcb e 1st of November. 311 East 31st. W ooing distance 445-5709 10-26- 51 TW O EFFICIENCY apartm ents. to cam pus. $ 2 7 0 - $ 3 ’ 0 W a lk ABP r «achtree A p a rtm e nts. 1804 Lavaca. 4 7 6 -5 1 5 2 , 2-5pm M-f. 10-27-3B LARGE 1BR newly decorated, a ll bills, LIT, shopping, shuttle $575 Call 4 5 2 -4 3 6 6 from 0.5 for a p ­ pointment. 10-265B 3 7 0 - U n f . A p t s . SAN GABRIEL SQUARE Apts. furnished *1/1 Shuffle 5 t * i from Campus *2-! Economy Style f l l / H • 3bdrm/2!4ba A L L BILLS PAID 2212 San Gabriel St. 474-7732 $600 APARTMENTS AVAILABLE Move in today; large 2-2 in histor­ ic Hyde Park village. Serious stud­ ent atmosphere, covered assigned parking, card access gates, spa & swimming pool, study room, bicycle garoge, #7 and IF shuttles. Ask about our GPA rebate program 451-2343 ____________ 9-30-20B QUIET RESIDENTS only- Small well m aintained near 5 2n d /IH 3 5 . CR shuttle 2 /1 only $420. 1 /1 ; $345. 343 -0 0 90 . 10- 4-20BB c o m ple x LARGE EFFICIECIES * Near Campus/Red River Shuttle New floors, ceiling fans DW, mini-blinas No pets/no roommates C A L L S A N D R A 371-0160 10-1-2060 EFFICIENCY $ 3 5 0 M C \ - W est Campus 2 5 0 5 Lancv • 322-9867 1622-5» HYDE p a r a area a ae © IficiM C y C e ilin g fan, m ini b lin d * o!, aa- pt ¡orces gas a ra w a a a a On site fo u n dry, new c c -'p e f. fro m $ 3 8 0 /mo 451-7694 )0>264d 1717 W .35TH St.. nea- shuttle, ^orge 2 / 2 A p p l’ onces, c e ilin g fans, mini blinds o r site foundry, coble paid. $600. 451-7694. i d 26-48 WEST CAMPUS 2 /1 , Huge wind­ ows, w o o d flo o rs , priva te deck overlooking g c 'd e r Available im­ m e d ia te ly $ 6 9 5 /m o n fh . 4 7 7 . 5608 10-25-5B i b r / Ta r g e , c l e a n i b a p r ¡. vate p a fio /g a rd e n , Red River, close to campus, poo!, lau n d ry covered parking $425 8 9 2 -7 0 4 7 ’ Leave message 10-275B LARGE EFFICIENCY tw o blocks o ff cam pus, central A /C , dispo- sal D /W , very clean, very quiet, '3 7 5 /m o n th . Immediate move-in. Call Luis 478-2523 10-265B 3 9 0 - Unf. Duplexes HYDE PARK, 1 -bedroom , h a rd ­ woods, quie t street, near shuttle and park. $ 355/m onfh, available early N ovem ber. 4 5 2 -3 5 7 5 . 10- 27-38 Large, Unique 2-2 Duj pTex in single fam ily Duplex in singL .... neighborhood. Close to UT ighborhood. Close to U Ideal for & downtown. roommates. Flexible lease terms if desired. AVAILABLE N O W I Students welcome $59 5 /m o 9 2 9 - 9 2 2 9 . 4 0 0 - Condos- Townhomes ’ •C O N D O S AVAILABLE! 2 B e J rooms West & North campusl All amenities $650 -$ 90 0 , call for lo­ cations! Front Page 480-8518 10 1 1-20B-C LACASITA APARTMENTS now leasing for spring semester. 2-1, to ta l re n o v a tio n , $ 6 0 0 . C huck 476-1976 EPI. 1D6-20B n l 2 ob * d ' ,0,wnh? m8S- 2 P°* Hos, 2 fireplaces, french doors mi­ cro w o ve , W /D . $ 7 9 5 + E 4 7 8 - 9753. 10-12-20B-B ’ ’ APARTMENTS AVAILABLE! 1 Bedrooms. Campus, Hyde Park Shuttle Routes $ 3 8 0 + . Front Page48G8518. 10-11-206C 2BR/2BA LUXURY condos near UT. Two car enclosed gorage $ 1 0 0 0 each. 476-9998. 10-14-10B 4 2 0 - Unf. Houses CALL 477-U V E , 2 4 hours 2-1 $ 5 2 5 . 9 0 8 W est 21st. For FAX listing coll 451-4386. 10-11-20B-D " T hU G E & Ñ ÍC E 7-8 bedroom, 3 both home in Hyde Park 2 living oreas 3 entrances 2 independent C A /C H units. 1 3 ceiling fans, lots o f parking and storage. Large trees. Convenient to UT 4 downtown. Iblk. to shut­ tle 1 /2 block to pork. A v a il­ ab le 1, Januory. $ 2 0 0 0 . 272- 5783. 10-14 20B 4 2 5 - Rooms PRIVATE, FURNISHED room with bath in Barrone Dorm a v o ila b le second semester. 19 meals, park­ ing included. 5 minute walk to cam­ pus. on shuttle $ 5 7 5 (reduced rate). 474-4873. 10-21-5P PRIVATE BEDROOM in 3-womon / 2-bathroom suite for Spring Semes­ ter M adison Dormitory, Fully fur­ nished, 19 Meals,. Reserved park­ ing space, 3 1 /2 Blocks from cam- P^*i nice' $ 5 5 0 / month, 469- 9180 10-27-5P HYDE PARK Available N o w l 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath O n Second Floor W a te r/C a b le Paid O n IF Shuttle SAUSALITO # 2 4 5 3 3 Avenue A 4 5 0 - 1 0 5 8 1018-206 SMALL, CLEAN, ond q u ie t com- E ffic ie n c ie s , 4 0 0 sq ft P_ex 1 B d r/1 Bo, 6 5 0 s q .ft, $ 5 0 0 . $-*u0. Available Nov. 1. No de­ posit with this ad. At 703 3 Hwy 2 9 0 E . between 9 2 6 -6 9 5 4 1041pm. 1M1-106 Hillside Apts. I & 2 Bedrooms Furnished or Unfurnished Clean & Quiet All Utilities Paid 478-2819 514 Dawson Rd Just off Barton Springs Rd. Call 476-4992. 10-21-5B-B 10-20-206-8 a v a |l° b le . , 9 0 V W Fox 4 - d o o r 4 -s p e e d , looks g oo d, runs g o o d One ow n­ e r $ 4 8 0 0 . 4 5 3 -1 3 5 0 . 10-26-96 20 - Sports-Foreign Autos 8*5 C E ljC A re d s p o rts c o u p . - s p d ,, 7 4 k, o rig in o ! owner $ 9 5 0 0 0 6 0 8 3 7 -8 2 1 2 . 10-26- 4B 70 - Motorcycles '/APAÑESE MOTORCYCLE repair and salvage Discounted new and -sed pa rts C a rb u re to r c le a n in g , tune-ups tires, etc T ow ,ng ava il- -oble. 4 40 0 8 08 . 10-8-20B 80 - Bicycles MOUNTAIN BIKE CLEARANCE Many Reduced to Cost!!! B U C K ’S B IK E S 9 2 8 - 2 8 1 0 to o + B I K E S $15 a n d a p SALES EVERY SATURDAY N o tltl - 54th St. & Airport (Next to Builder's Square) S outh.- 4 09 W. Ben White (Across from Wendy's) Austin Bicycle Salvage 244-7444 MERCHANDISE 2 2 0 - Computers- Equipment TANDY 286, 40MBHD, Bgo moni­ tor, iots of software, printer. 458- 3658. 10-26-4B 2 5 0 - Musical Instruments SONGWRITERS CONTEST. Call to r recorded m essage ( 2 1 0 )5 9 9 -6442 lo-ie-ioe LEARN TO build guitars at home f ^ ° i r'c° rT'e 1915)592-4026 or 1-800-373-0147. 625-56 3 4 5 - Misc. I AMERICAN FLOORS, -^F-Dorm Size Carpe L^fC , i Remnants Cheap! n A ” 5 3 0 B u r n e t R d . )ÉC * * « * * *■ PLAYBOY/PLAYGIRL ~~ Back Issues. Many celebrities Mint condition direct from stock. For $4 95, receive o sample issue plus our catalog featuring many other items His & Hers 1300 Perry A venue P.O. Box 0 8 5 6 2 5 Rocine W l 53¿08 «' , >27. i RENTAl 3 6 0 - Fum. Apts. UN EXPECTED AV A IU B fU TIE S , * On West Campus. Furnished & Unfurnished 1 -Bedrooms G a s, Water, & ca b le p a id , viOn WC shuttle. Great rates. - BARRANCA SQUARE APTS 910 W 26th St. 478-1350/467-2477. 1O1920B-B UT 1 BLOCK! Quiet, spacious 2-2 QACH, fans, ca ble . Red R ive r/ „® 0 0 ' + . S pecial $ 6 5 0 , $77-3388. 10-6-20B-0 F t F ííA i. M NDED non-smoker to r Hvde Park a re a ’ V . f ’ $ . '5 ♦ 4 u tilitie s C all Steve 454-4085 162738 430 - Room-Board " Dt? Room & B o a rd - -xv- w bath in lovely x v -e us- -v* Westlake Dr. w / * e-vi female upper-closs- .vxv # c xx-.-ate sfuaent Must ng Single mom -.e xv- * 3 chrldren ages 13,10,8.6 ** v cot's. c ‘-and driving, home- -i 4am-9pm daily and sentt sends. Very flexible. AVx' se ch.dren & animals. Pos- s i s automobile provided. 3 2 7 - 8 0 1 3 . 4 4 0 - Roommates U.T.’s ROOMMATE SOURCE find a great roommate for your busy lifestyle. "Texas Ex-owned since 1989” Conv#nt«nMy located at 1711 San Antonio. W IN D SO R R O O M M A T E S 495*9988 O N E R OOM M ATE to share a 3 /2 large house with two girls on creek with fenced ya rd. CR shut­ tle. 928-4800 10-22-4P S K I * Crested buttl i 1 • ( ■ 1 1 1 FROM ONLY $ 1 9 9 Pirn t a x SKI-IN/SK1-OUT LIFTS SKI RENTALS BUS PARTIES Q . & s k i 10-25-5B 4 6 9 - 0 9 9 9 5 40 - Lost & Found BICYCLE. SPECIALIZED. H a rd Rock. Approximately 22*. Blue. In West Campus. 4 7 4 -5 7 6 0 . Leave message to identify. 10-25-3NC 5 60 - Public Notice THE jA N E Austen Society of N .A . Tx Chapter to join and for informa- Hon call 288-0781. 10-275B LIBERAL ROOMMATE to share 2- 1 duplex near campus. $ 2 7 5 /m o plus bills. 477-6738 10-22-5P 5 8 0 - Musical Instruction ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 1 0 - Entertammenf- Tickets S M A S H IN G PUMPKINS tix des- pef ately desired. 4 4 2 -8 2 6 2 . 10- 5 2 0 - Personals AUSTIN DATELINE- Meet someone new! Free one week trial member- iJl'P . 2 4 h re /d a y . 3 4 6 -6 8 6 8 ex*. 93Ó call now I 10-27-206 5 3 0 - Travel- Transporfation C H R I S T M A S GUITAR, BASS. A ll styles. Be­ ginners 2 1 0 pros. Eleven q u a li­ fied instructors on staff. Get the edgel Austin Guitar Schooi, 442- 2880. 10-12-20B. S IN G IN G TEACHER and musical theater coach wonted. Experience part-time a t M arci Lynne Studio 445-4595. 10-22-1 OB GUITAR LESSONS: Blues, rock, jazz, alternative, fo lk. 10 years teaching experience. Andy Bullina- ton 452-6181. 10-21-20BC 5 90 - Tutoring • t u t o r in g • REVIEWS OPEN 7 DAYS til Midnight, Sun.-Thur. t y p i n g ‘til Midnight Sun.-thurs. O P E N 7 d a y s r t e l W N Since 1980 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 TERM PAPERS, reports, resumes /,ran $ C rip ,ion « t i Dons 282-4240. 10-25^B services X¿J?°£e P,c k -u p /d e liv e ry . WORD PROCESSING SERVICE ALDUS PAGEMAKER LASER PRINTER Many fonts and graphics to choose from RESUMES, SCHOOL PAPERS THESIS Best prices in Austin. Call 452-4022, leave message. 7 60 - Misc. Services 10-27-5B Fraternities, Sororities, C lubs, Groups, Teams NO BRAINER FUNDRAISER -Absolutely No Investment! *■ Earn hundreds of dollars per dayl $1,000 or more per weekl -Ask for Darren between 9:00 am & 5:00 pm CALLTODAY 1-800-669-7678 Staff Position Instruct classes, birthday parties, and work front desk. 30 -40 hours. Experience related to children preferred. Weekend hours required. Apply at Kidsports, 8 0 1 5 Shoal Creek (off Anderson Lane) 10-26-3B B R E A K S JANUARY 2-16,1994 • 5,6 m 7WGHTS STEAMBOAT^ * BRECKENRII VAIL/BEAVER CREER>v TEUIIRIDE 5 a fJEEJ«FORMATION I RESERVATIONS 1 * 8 0 0 • SUNCHASE OR CAU YOUR LOCAL CAMPUS REP: WENDY 477-3030 AIRLINE TICKETS FREE!? Couriers needed. Outrageous International tn p s; C ali PTG 310 -5 1 4-4 6 6 2. ’vrl | -/OB. L O N D O N 4 Paris or Europe 10 days land & air $ 1 9 9 5 , college to. 2720P 4 5 2 ' 6 3 , 7 / 8 3 5 -ó-179. CALL US AT 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 TO PLACE YOUR SUPER LONGHORN WANT-AD Since 1980 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 PROFESSIONAL ASSISTANCE: All subject writing assignments: or­ ganizational structure, editing. Spe­ cialization: government, history so- c io lo g y , p h ilo s o p h y . (5 1 2 )4 9 5 - 9333.10-12-208 . SERVICES 6 3 0 - Computer Services ~$$SCHOLARSHIPS$$~ Computerized search of private scholarships and other aid. ’ School, Occupational, etc Profiles ’ Fast Results! I ’ Storting at only $29 3 3 9 -7 1 4 7 104-206 7 50 - Typing Z I V L E Y The Complete Professional Typing Service TERM PAPERS DISSERTATIONS APPLICATIONS RESUMES WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING FORMATTING BLOCKBUSTER 27TH STREET 2707 HEMPHILL PARK 47M21Q 472-7677 EMPIOYMENT 7 90 - Part time GREAT COLLEGE JOB Political fund-raising office now taking part- time applications. Call 477-9821 Ask for Jeff. ___________ 105-206 Perfect Part-time Employment Customer Retention Clerks We have immediate openings for a company in North Austin for individuals to work for a non-profit health organization. Individuals will be calling past contributors to solicit support to the organization. This is noi cold calling ond you are not selling anything. N o commis­ sion, straight hourly pay. Work hours M-Th 5pm-9pm. Must have excellent phone skills. Call: Kelly Temporary Services 244-77 35. N ot an agency-Never a fee. EOE. 10-12-106-6 Resident Assistant Positions: Department of Resident Ufe of Uni­ versity Towers seeks applications for the position of resident assis­ tant. The recruitment period is the 1994-1995 academic year, R.A. positions begin in late May If you are interested in working with college students in a residential setting, hove o creative mind and o great disposition, are able to manage time effectively , and con satisfy the following requirements, we look forward to accepting your application. Requirements: 1 year or more if possible of occupancy in a resident hall, a minimum of 2.5 GPA, 3 letters of reference, interview with the Director of Resident Life. The deodline for initial screening of applications is Nov. 14. Graduating seniors ore not encouroged to apply unless you have omple time, ond are not participating ¡n on internship. , Application pockets are available from * ’ from Sheryl Schoenewald, the Director of Residents life. Any questions can be answered at mat time Please come by ond visit us at 801 W 24th St. between the hours of 9:00am & 5:00 pm M-F on p c ----- AFTERNOO N SC HO O L age teaching positions available. High q u a lity , several lo c a tio n s , co m ­ petitive pay scale. 459-0258 10- 27-5B SEASONAL PART-TIME hours avail­ able. Flexible hours. Apply in per­ son: Sears Personnel Department Hancock Center. EOE, M /F , disa­ bled. 1627-5B PART-TIME TIRE installers ond part- time c le ric a l p o sitio n s. Fle xib le hours. A pply in person: Sears Per­ sonnel Department Hancock Cen­ ter. EOE, M /F , disabled. 1627-56 PART-TIME C O M M IS S IO N sales and non-commission sales positions available Flexible hours. Apply in person: Sears Personnel D epart­ ment Hancock Center. EOE, M /F disabled. 1627-5B CHILDCARE WORKER Southwest Austin, 2 c h ild re n 6& 1 1, ofter- school M-F. 3 :0 0 -6 :0 0 . Reliable transportation, references, $ 5 /h r to start, raises. 4 7 3 -9 3 1 5 /8 9 2 - 0708, Joni. 1627-56. AFTERNOON TEACHING" position with toddler, pre­ school, or after school ages. NAEYC accredited. Profes­ sional environment. Experi­ ence required. Apply with- CREATIVE WORLD 2 0 2 3 Denton D rive 8 3 7 -8 8 4 0 or 4 7 2 -5 8 9 8 ______________ 1626-568 PART-TIME HELP w a n te d . W ill work around your schedule. W ill train. Family-owned and operated mid-size groce ry store. Friendly, responsible, honest people need ^26-56 2 8 8 ’ 4 2 3 4 Bi"X o r Bruce SONY 1991 car stereo. Used less J -Jhan ly r ., cassette, 18 program ' He!?// d lS',° l d i*P,0y. 4 channel j 2 2 W + 2 2 W am p N ew $ 3 0 0 j «now * 150 499-8200. 10-21-5B I PUEGOET 10 speed excellent con- ; d itio n , quick release fro n t and re a r, new tires recent tune-up 21 5B OB° 3 8 8 '4452 S,eve FOR SALE d a y bed $ 9 5 , bed fram e $10, electronic typew riter . : $75 459-6841 10-22-5B 1 MOPED H O N D A Elite 80. 1988 model, runs great, and in good con­ dition, $700 or OBO. 346-4034 '10-22-5B APPLE LASERWRITER tw o SC W orks great. $ 6 0 0 . 4 7 2 -8 2 1 5 J622-5B M A C IN T O S H SE 4 0 MB d riv e o n d 1 MB RAM w ith s o ftw a re 4 6 5 0 OBO. 472-8215. 1622 5NC BLACK LEATHER corvette b ra . Fits 1 98 1 model or similor bod y style $50 448-0505. i62i-5NC MUST SELL) Zoom 9000S effects processor, $ 3 0 0 . Dean M arkfey Pro-mag pick-up, $50 DOO stereo chorus pedal, $ 3 5 N e g o tia ble Evenings 451 -9771 10-21-5NC 1978 KAWASKI K750, runs good I 9 8 1 Kawaski, been sitting up Both $750. 10-25-5 B wLe ®k« old 486SX 2 5M hz I7 0 m b hard disk, super co lo r VGA m o n ito r-2 8 p , 4MB memory internal modem. $1600 8 weeks ago, w ill sell for $1400 in­ clude all software and warranties. 346-6460 Sarahjane. 10-25-5B CHEVY NOVA '7 7 . Automatic ~Z d o o r, d ependable, $ 7 0 0 OBO 478-7879 10-25-5B ENTERTAINMENT CENTER $100" 7 4 a WrL barst° o l / ‘a b le /ch 0 ir/lom p * 3 0 , beige carpet remnants $30 ty p e w rite r $ 3 5 , TV ta b le $ 2 5 ' ^ i2 7 5 345-3747’ d s p HIpBip 27,’h S,ereo 77 MTS' , 5 5 ° « S é ™ m r 0" G IA N T M O U N T A IN Bike rtew $325 445-7905 1625-56 Like F^ U SOFA/BED- $ 2 5 , Queen n w j Dlnin9 room ,obl®- * M 0 , W o o d e n m irro r c o n o p y four lever- $ 8 0 0 /O B O 44 ?. bed 7 7 9 7 , 1622 206 p lA M O N D B A C K M O U N T A IN bike Three months old w / acces­ sories Excellent condition low m ile a g e s till under w arra n ty * 1 7 0 . Evenings coll 4 5 3 -6 3 '3 1622 206 H a N G GLIDER $ 5 0 0 . O th e r e q u ip m e n t a v a ila b le 4 6 7 - 2 5 2 9 days and evenings. 1622-56 TURNTABLE- $20, Record albums: Coon,r>'. r°ck, easy- t $ 50-$ 1 .0 0 /ea. W ill trade for í í v ' m x JJüfíf P °i,ers albums, CDs 834-0713. 1625-5NC BEAUTIFUL WHITE wed d mg'gown" veil and petticoot for sale. Exceh l * ’l r c o n d itio n . Fits sizes 6-8 $ 5 0 0 / Coll 447-4458 10-25-5B STURDY PINE b p ^ M s e s - , x T $ 6 0 and 3 'x 5 . 5 | $ 1 1 5 . Desk w /choir $75. I p e e d bike, 26" g re a t shape $ 6 0 4 7 2 -7 0 1 2 ! Leave message 10-25-5B COMPUTER PRINTER C o m p e l 2'5 1 /4 dd, printer Epson 1003, dm Great word processing system. $32 5 . 388-4381 10-18 5B i-AR STEREO amps and speakers. N akam ichi Separates $ 2 0 0 . 80 Watt amplifier $135 Soundslream 2 4 0 W o tt am p $ 2 5 0 C a ll Joe 474-5937. 1627 5B NEED TO sale 2 one-way airline tickets for travel on December 14 to M ia m i,F lo rid o ($ 1 2 0 eoch). Coll 478-5559. 162756 KIN G MATTRESS/BOX springs goo d c o n d itio n $ 1 5 0 , V anity J a b le /c h o ir $ 3 5 ; D inette $ 2 5 ; Den chair $15; Corner sofa $25' Re rig e ro to r $ 5 0 ; art w ork/m is-i cellaneous $150. 282-5221 1625 5NC ONE AIRLINE ticket, $240. Travel to Tuscon, Arizona on dates. No-i vember 23 through November 29 I Kw U j5 9 , 3 8 4 ' l8 aV ® m essa9® j 5 PIECE liv in g room :c t $ 3 0 0 ^ technics steieo and CD p la y e r! co m ple te w ith speakers $ 3 0 0 i C oll for details 4 79 -8685 leav messoge. 10-27-5NC G P f AT CONDITIO N carpet one poochj 1x12, $50. Alpine tracker exer-i cise machine, $ 10 0 . 3 2 7 -1 0 2 9 ' 10-27-38 i7 5 ™ j f 25, tufn-tqbie $75, cassette deck $175, vacuum $40, answar- ¡nfl machine $35, cordless phon *J->, re ce ive r $ 1 2 5 s M n l . r $125. 339-3146. 1D27-5B MEXICAN FULL-SIZE headboard * 6 5 Antique w riting desk $175 rlease coll after 4pm 480-9805 3 10-27 5NC C A N N O N CAMERA cover for 35m m SIR, b lack le a th e r, like n ew , $ 3 0 3 4 5 -1 0 6 3 10-27-56 A M A N A M IC R O W A V Í~ $ T o c T French P ro vin cio l-style couch $150, king w aterbed with 4 j ets of sheets $150. 990-5126 10-22- GENERAL ELECTRIC w asher ond dryer, $400 for both or $20 0 for just one, obo Six years old. 251- 3642 10-27-5NC JsíD í M ' C jíJí í :! e£3-4¡y«.2í®®3j • COLOR COPIES fro m 90< • WORD PROCESSING: R e s u m e s , P a p e rs Theses A d is s e rta tio n s • BINDING: Veit,b in d , s p ir a l Fastback, 3 hole Punch - C O U R S E P A C K E T S — ^PEEDW AY cop y * p w m a Dobie Mall • Wordproceesing • T h e s e ^ / D Í 8 8 e r t a t io n 8 • Binding • Applications • Offset Printing • FREE copies 478-3334___ DATA PR OC ESSIN G~SerT7e» P rofessionol th e s e i, charts databases, etc. Laser print check. 312-0189 V28 206° re p o rts, * _________________ 1613-106 NEAR UT Typist w / 4 0 wpm, bookkeeping trainee w /to u ch 10- key, paralegol runner w /o w n reli­ able car. 474-2032. 10-14-20B-D PART-TIME TELEMARKETING s d ¡ ¡ for com puter p e rip h e ra ls. Some IBM PC experience is a must. Call 8 3 6 -0 7 0 9 a fte r 5 PM ask for Lance or Mike. FUN IN the sun-now hlfin ring 4 $ 5 /h r -bonuses. Coll C. C rai ween 2 ond 4pm at 453-878 2 0 -10B-8 4-9 M-F bet- 10- RETAIL SALES ASSO CIATES Fun, part-time holiday positions. Terrific discount on great cloths Good pay. Flexible hours. Apply in person at our Highland Park Village location in Dolías or call (214) 5 2 8 -6 8 7 6 ABER, CROMBIE, & FITCH 1892 162646 _______ [ a BOR EP NEEDED F le xib le n o u n . M ust be hard w o rke r & hove own c a r 2 64 - 2707. 1627-38 $ 6 / h r EMPLOYMENT - 780 EMPLOYMENT SERVICES $$$$$$ TEXAS JOIJ HUNT SUPPORT $$$$$$ W HERE? W H A T'S R IG H T? DA I X A S -H O U S T O N -A U S T IN ~ S A N -A N T O N IO II' HELP IS NEEDED , you should order Ihe* M C D J994 I exas Job Prospectus INCLUDED, you will receive a free consultation on your use of the Prospectus!! SENO CHECK OK MONEY ORDEK SOK *4* *5 TO; 4 OCIJM.E OKA DO ATE CONSULTING SERVICES O f TEXAS JOB PROSPECTUS I M i WINTER OAKS ORIVE HOUSTON. TEXAS 77«7t T ,,urUm your namr, a d d rrw , phon, number. <»i+rr telorsst, and major) t l , m MOIUt W <>* «WO. CAU. EMPLOYMENT 7 9 0 - Part-Time FLORAL DESIGNER wanted. Even­ ings and Saturdays. 451-6728 10. 2! -56. assistant GENERAL OFFICE va rie d projects, must have w ork­ ing kn o w le d g e o f com puters ie W o rd-P erfect, Lotus. 7 9 5 -9 5 9 5 10-26-28 SKILLS TRAINERS Group homes providing residential services to individual with mental retardation/physical handicaps. Part-time and on-call staff positions available to provide training and supervision Applications accepted between 9:00am-3:00pm M-F at Living Centers of Am erica 160 1 Rio G ra n d e # 3 4 3 .EOE. AFTERNOON COURIER and light maintenance. You need transporta­ tion, insurance, and good driving record. C all M a rily n 4 7 3 -2 3 7 0 10-22-1 OB TELEMARKETERS NEEDED. N o ex- perience necessary. Hours Sunday- Thursday evenings 6 -9p m . Sal­ ary/comm ission/bonuses. N o sell­ ing. Appointment setting only. Call Tim after 6pm 345-2333. 10-22 5B PART-TIME M O R N IN G help need- ed. Data entry 7 :0 0 a m -l 2:00pm 329-8141. 10-25-5B PART-TIME WAREHOUSE position fo r in d u s tria l d is trib u to r. A fte r­ noons M-F 835-2822, 10-25-3B CHURCH NURSERY worker need- ed in Oak Hill 9-12 Sundays. Call 2 8 0 -3 5 20 for inform ation and in­ terview. 10-25-56 FREE DINNER and lunch. UT stud­ ents/ w ait fe b le s/ clean-up. 5pm- 7pm. Five nights. No wage. UT sorority 477-5553. 10-265B4 LAW OFFICE, c le r ic a l p o s itio n from 1 :1 5 -5 :0 0 , M-F, $ 5 /h o u r N on-sm oker 2 9 0 5 Rio G ra n d e #216. 476-3400. 10-25-5B 10*22-08 To qualify: NO W HIRING SECURITY OFFICERS At APS we offer: $100 hiring bonus! flexible hours weekly pay uniforms provided full/part time be over 18 have transportation no exp. necessary Fitting your work schedule around class hours is no problem at APS. Apply in person, Mon.-Fri, 8AM- 5PM. Minorities and wom­ en encouraged to apply EOE. American Protective Services, inc. 11 Barton Springs, Suite 200 Austin, "fexas 476-3915 j ~WANTED: Sophomore BBA student, account­ ing major, to work 1 -2 afternoons a week from 1-5 to work for a re­ tired physician to do errands, household chores, typing, and gen­ eral office work. •Prefer original home in Austin. $11/hr. Call 454-3251. __________ 10-26-46 MORNING PRE-K Teaching with a twistl Family fitness center starting mom’s day proarom. (3-5 years) Prefer childcare and Montesori experience. Energetic, caring, and well organized person needed. Apply with resume at Kidsports, 8015 Shoal Creek (off Anderson Lane). __________________ 10-26-38 LE FUN. We are hiring daytim e cashiers. A pply at 2 2 0 0 G uada­ lupe. 10-2636 D O N O R S N E E D E D Fairfax C ry o b a n k is5 seeking semen donors for its sperm bank pro gram . The program is c o n fid e n tia l and a ll d o n o r.s b« compensated. As a potential dono you w ill undergo screen ing procedures to insure good health and fertility )otential. You must be >etween 18 and 35. If in te re ste d , You are f. please call: w i l l • AFTERN O O N GYM N ASTICS In­ structor needed to work with kin­ dergarten through 2nd grade Tues­ day & Thursday afternoons in af­ te rsch o o l c a re p ro g ra m . 3 27 - 0888. 1626-106-6 MAKE POLLUTERS PAY Sounds like fun? Join our team ond work to hold industry ond poliHcians account­ able to keep toxins out of our environment. $ 300+/w k, benefits, hours 1-1 Opm. Progressive workploce. Call Jaime 4 7 4 -2 4 3 8 . 165-206-6 HAUNTED HOUSE volunteer ac­ tors needed. 474-4678. 168-16B toys, ASSEMBLE ARTS, c ra fts , and jewelry items from your home Exce Tlenf pay. Call 4 4 8 -6 4 56 . 16 11 206-6 DAY IABORERS n eeded, cosh paid daily. Report to 6 06 East 7th St. 476-1444. 10-11-20B-8 OFFICE & telephone help needed. Day & evening shifts. Hourly +bo^ nuses Pleasant w o rkin g co n d i­ tions. 707-9928 1614-58 FULL-TIME AN D part-time positions open for community living instruc­ tors in north A ustin a rea grou p homes 448-1454. 10-22-6B HIRE-A-HORN Needs temporary data entry peo­ ple. Must Ivpe 5 0 wpm. Four dif­ ferent shifts available (1) 4pm- 7pm Mon-Fri (2) 7am-3pm MotvFri (3) 3pm-7pm M on-fri Saturdays are optional. $5.85 per hour, paid weekly, West Austin location Coll 326-HORN (4676) ~ 1 6 2 2 4BC ' VALET SUPERVISOR, DRIVERS & CASHIER. Full-time position available for valet supervisor with valet experience required. Port-time positions available fer valet driver & cashiers. Weekday & weekend openings Must hove good appearance Call 3 2 0 -5 6 8 9 between 1-5, M-F. 1621-56 SONG LEADER NEEDED Direct congregational music for 10:50am Sunday worship. Sing specials. Develop volun­ teer choir. Immediate opening EOE. Modest pay. First United Methodist Church, Luting (210) 8 7 5 -2 7 1 1 /2 1 5 2 . ____________ 10-23-10* ~PERFECT~ COLLEGE JOB F r ie n d ly te le p h o n e v o ic e s wanted. Flexible scheduling/weekend shifts available $6/h r. Come by 6200 Lo Calma, Ste200, Aus­ tin between 9am & 5pm or calí 458-5133. 1625-5B AA CRUISE & TRAVEL JOBS Earn $ 2 5 0 0 /month + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Howali, Asial) Cruise lines now hiring for busy holiday, spring and summer seasons. Guaranteed employment! Call (9 19)9 29-439 8 e x tl3 8 . 1622-206 APPOINTMENT SETTERS Rainsoft, a water-testing company, has part-time positions a v a ila b le tor people to set appointments for a free water test. •Great Pay I •Great Benefttsl •Must be bilingual. •$ 8/h ou r guaranteed during training Please call 8 3 7 -2 4 8 8 Ask for Ms. Ramsey 1626-4B B 1 0 - Office-Clerical RI AL ESTATE ASSISTANT , M inim um 8 hrs/week $6/hr. Must be Macintosh literate, know PageMaker, Filemaker Pro, Word Good telephone voice, own transportation, creative, flexible, work well independently 8 3 6 - 4 4 3 7 INTEILIQUEST INTELUQUEST, and International re­ search consulting firm Specializing in the computer industry, has imme- f° r day and evening RESEARCHERS. No sales are in­ volved. Ideal candidates will have a pleasant telephone voice, and outgoing personality, the ability to GP* 25 wpm, and have a basic fo- miliarity with computers, Customer service experience is helpful, but notrequired Pay rate starts at *6.0 0 per hour, with paid compo- ny training, potential bonuses, and flexible hours. Interested applicants should contact IntelliQuest at (512)447-6707. ______ 1614-126 WORD PROCESSING Trainee Run- ner. Part-time, near UT. Non-smok- $5 00. 474-2032. 10-14-20B-D 40+ w Pm * 4 5 °- OFFICE MANAGER. M-Th, 3:30- 8 00 Saturdoy 9-12. Must have exce lent math and PR skills 443- 1444. 1626-46-6 TO PLACE AN AD IN THE DAILY TEXAN WANT ADS CALL 471-5244 4 7 3 - 2 2 6 8 F A IR F A X C R Y O B A N K a division of the Genetic & I.V.F. Institute AUSTIN PLASMA CENTER First Donation Benefits for you: • n t l l Physical on 1st donation • W K Screening on every donation (HIV, Hepatitis, Syphilis, etc). > All supplies a r t used 0NC(. ’ Plasma may b t donglcd twice a week. Now Open Saturday Cali for Info. 4 7 7 - 3 7 3 5 29th ond Guodoluos G R E E K S & C L U B S RAISE UP TO $1,000 IN JUST ONE WEEK! For you fraternity, sor­ club, Plus ority & $1,000 for yourself! And a FREE T-SHIRT ust for calling 1-800- 932-0528, ext. 75. CRUISE SHIPS N O W H IR IN G - Earn up to $ 2 ,0 0 0 + /m o n th + world travel. Summer and Career employment available. N o experi­ ence necessary. For more informa­ tion c a ll 1 -2 0 6 -6 3 4 -0 4 6 8 ext C5867. 1618-15P A c tiv is t CAMPAIGN JOBS for the ENVIRONMENT $ 2 0 0 -3 0 0 /w k PROTECT THE ANCIENT FOREST Work with the Sierra Club, Nation's oldest & largest environmental group Call Hank 479-8481 ' 164-2066 C LE A N IN G TEAMS needed for residential home-cleanings Morn- mgs/eyenings available. Car need 3 7 1 371-3702. 1626-206 y P O y ’ M e r f y M o , d s ^ 'L O C A R E TEMpORAi T F i ^ ^ : ea Earn $ 5 /h r. substituting for davcares^ Full- and Part-time avail- obfe. 219-8839 I626-2B T h e D aily T ex a n Wednesday, October 27 ,1 9 93 Page 15 SCOREBOARD NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE A M E R IC A N C O N FER EN C E East Buffalo Mtom Indtonapoiis NY Jala New England Cleveland Pittsburgh Houston Cincinnati Kanaaa. City LA Raiders Seattle Denver San Diego NY danta DaHas Philadelphia Phoenix Washington Detroit Minnesota Chicago Green Bay Tampa Bay New Orleans San Francisco LA Rama Atlanta w 5 5 7 2 1 S 4 3 0 W 5 4 4 2 1 5 4 3 3 1 5 4 2 2 s 4 4 3 2 NATIONAL CONFERENCE 833 .667 .571 .500 333 0 0 0 o' 0 1 2 3 3 4 L 1 1 4 4 6 2 3 4 7 T 0 0 0 0 0 Central 0 0 0 0 Weat Pet 833 833 333 333 .143 .714 .571 429 .000 L 1 2 2 8 5 2 2 3 3 5 2 3 5 5 T o. 0 0 0 0 Contra! 0 0 0 0 0 Weat 0 0 0 0 Pet .833 .667 .687 .286 .167 .714 .667 .500 .500 .167 .714 .571 .286 286 PF 135 142 95 149 97 149 168 144 81 100 113 112 149 84 PF 145 132 128 135 99 134 85 109 147 68 163 170 114 147 PA 77 108 143 125 178 130 120 140 162 780 103 112 118 127 PA 71 92 133 133 161 113 94 78 118 159 137 141 152 191 lUifidJrv'a Atlanta 26, New Orleans 15 Buffalo 19, New York Jets 10 Houston 28, Cincinnati 12 Green Bay 37, Tampa Bay 14 Cleveland 28, Pittsburgh 23 Detroit 16, Los Angeles Rams 13 Seattle 10, New England 9 San Francisco 28, Phoenix 14 Miami 41, Indianapolis 27 Opan Data: Denver, Kansas City, LA Raiders, San Diego, Dallas, N Y Giants, Philadelphia, Washington Minnesota 19, Chicago 12 Monday** Game Sunday, O ct 31 Chicago at Green Bay, 12 p.m. Kansas City at Miami, 12 p.m. New England at Indianapolis, 12 p.m. Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 12 p.m. New York Jets at New York Giants, 12p.m. Dallas at Philadelphia, 3p.m. New Orleans at Phoenix, 3p.m. San Diego at Los Angeles Raiders, 3 p m Loe Angeles Rams at San Francisco, 3 p.m. Seattle at Denver, 3 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Open Date: Cincinnati, Cleveland, Houston, Pittsburgh Washington at Buffalo, 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 1 N F L incHvkkial Ladders AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE Quarterdeck* Com 63 91 122 141 119 100 71 53 137 63 Yda 871 1218 1611 1848 1357 1134 840 578 1486 581 AH 105 150 192 227 188 173 121 96 226 108 TD 6 8 9 10 6 10 s 2 9 3 Montana, K.C. Marino. Mia. EMason, NY-J Elway, Dan O'Donn*», PH. Kafly. But Hoatettor, Rai Frtosz, S.D. Moon, Hou. Koaar, Cto Foatar, PH Thomas, But. C. Warran, Sea Ruaae», N.E. Whita, Hou. Vardafl, Qa. Htggs, Mia. Pot!*, Ind. Alten, K.C. Bamstina, Dan Slaughtar, Hou. Blades Sea. A. Mrtier, S.D. Sharpe, Den. Johnaon, Ind. White, Hou. Pickens, Cin. Wiliam*, Sea. Martin, Sea. Jeffirea. Hou. R usher* Yds 568 566 458 426 423 379 311 308 305 276 AH 147 138 137 122 120 92 75 68 79 81 Receivers Yda 438 416 415 354 248 232 411 244 355 322 No 41 40 35 34 32 32 31 31 29 29 NO Gr. Montgmry. Hou. 25 Hanaen, Cie. 40 L. Johnaon, Cin. 39 Rouen, Den. 23 Stark, Ind. 29 Gossett, Ftai. 30 Saxon, N.E. 38 Royala, PH. 32 Barker, K.C. 26 Tuten, Sea. 43 Punters Yda 1214 1863 1779 1046 1308 1333 1628 1347 1080 1776 Avg 3 9 4.1 3.3 3.5 3.5 4.1 4.1 4.5 3.9 3.4 Avg 10.7 10.4 11.9 10.4 78 7.3 13.3 7.9 12.2 11.1 LG 77 72 60 60 59 61 58 61 55 57 Metcalf, Cie. Gordon, S.D. Brown, Rai. McDuffie, Mia. Mlibum, Den. Copeland, Buf. Woodson, Pit. T. Brown, N .E Carter, K.C. Hick*. NY-J Punt Returners Yda 313 191 185 125 129 159 178 150 136 61 NO 18 14 16 11 12 15 20 17 16 8 Avg 174 13.6 11.6 11.4 10.8 10.6 8.9 8.8 8.5 7.6 LG 30 25 17 21 14 54 31 34 22 13 LG 41 21 43 37 36 20 36 25 39 26 Avg 48 6 46.6 45.6 45.5 45.1 44.4 42.8 42.1 41.5 41.3 LG 91 54 32 71 36 47 39 19 30 19 Int 1 3 6 4 3 7 4 2 12 3 TD 7 1 3 2 2 1 1 0 3 3 TD 3 3 2 1 0 0 4 o 2 2 TD 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 o 0 Crittenden, N.E. Kick off Returner* NO Yda 247 10 Avg 24.7 LG 44 TD 0 r Verdin, Ind. Bel!. Cin. Robmson, Cin. Russell, Den. Metcalf. Cie Baldwin, Cto Law», S.D. A Wright. Rai T. Brown, N .E Foeter, PH. Alien, K.C. Reed, Buf. Coates, N.E. Culver, Ind. K. Jackson, Mia Jackson, Cto MttcheB, NY-J Pickans, Cin. 21 10 16 13 9 9 15 9 12 TD 8 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 465 199 306 236 164 163 266 152 186 Rush 7 3 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 Scoring Touchdowns Anderson, PH. Camay, S.D. Elam. Dan. Christie, But Kasay, Sea. Biasuca, Ind Jaeger, Rai. Lowery, K.C. Stynvch, Mia. Blnchrti, NY-J Pelfrey, Cin. Stover, Cto. PAT 16-18 6-6 17-17 15-15 11-11 8-9 11-12 10-10 16-16 18-16 6-7 18-18 Kicking FG 14-15 14-17 10-12 10-11 11-13 11-14 10-11 10-13 8-12 7-9 11-15 7-9 Aikman, Dal. Hebert, Att. Young, S.F. Simms, NY-G Cminghm, Phi. Beuerlin, Pho. Rypton, Was. Wilson, N.O. Harbaugh, Chi. Favre, G.B. Sanders, Dei Pagram, Att. Watters, S.F. Bettis, Rams Brown, N.O. Hmptn, NY-G Tillman, NY-G Word, Min. Anderson, Chi. E. Smith, Dal Irvin, Dai. Sharpe, G.B. Rice, S.F. Rison, Aft. Att 187 118 211 154 110 206 103 206 151 188 AH 167 119 108 105 109 124 60 92 96 73 No 46 43 42 37 Rushers Com 126 77 145 94 76 119 61 115 94 112 Yds 726 534 511 458 431 430 337 336 317 312 Yds 712 469 585 500 Receivers 23.1 19.9 19 1 18.3 182 18.1 17.9 16.9 15.5 Rec 1 2 5 4 1 4 4 4 4 LG 46 51 54 59 53 53 53 52 52 43 53 47 Yds 1650 875 1656 1188 850 1543 526 1383 942 1202 Avg 4.3 4.5 4.7 4.4 4.0 3.5 5.6 3.7 3.3 4.3 Avg 15.5 11.4 13.9 13.5 38 26 36 34 37 31 29 28 w Ret 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Pts 60 48 47 45 44 41 41 40 40 39 39 39 TD 5 8 10 9 5 9 4 8 4 9 LG 35 29 39 29 24 20 58 13 45 22 LG 61 50 41 42 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pts 46 30 30 24 24 24 24 24 24 Int 2 4 9 6 5 9 2 6 5 9 TD 3 1 3 3 2 2 3 1 1 3 TD 2 6 5 7 NATIO NAL FO OTBALL CO N FEREN CE Quarterbacks 3 3 3 2 1 6 TD 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 TD 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pts 42 36 36 36 30 24 24 24 24 Jones, S.F. H Moore, Dei Haynes, AH C. Carter, Min Eltord, Rams Proehl, Pho. 37 35 34 34 31 31 399 528 430 328 439 390 NO Roby, Was. 24 Newsome Min 36 Amoid, Dat. 32 Wagner, G.B. 25 34 Camarillo, Pho Jett. Dai 18 Wimsmeyer, S.F. 18 Alexander, AH. 33 Bamhardt, N O 33 Landeta. NY-G 24 Punters Yds 1152 1597 1419 1105 1496 788 782 1429 1416 1026 10.8 15.1 126 9.6 142 12.6 LG 60 62 68 56 61 59 61 75 58 57 29 72 98 40 46 51 Avg 460 44.4 44.3 442 44.1 438 43.4 433 42.9 42.8 Carter, S.F. Hughea, N.O. Meggett, NY-G Bailey, Pho. Gray, D el Obee.Chi. Gukford. Min. T. Smith, Att. Buckley, G.B Sikahema, Phi. Brooka, G.B. C. Harris, G.B. T. Smith, AH. Gray, Dat Mitchell, Was. Sikahema. Phi. K. WWiama. Dal McAfee, N.O. Ismail, Min Bailey, Pho. Rison, Att. Proehl, Pho. Rice, S.F. Sharpe, G.B. Williams, Phi. E. Bennett, G.B Early, N.O. Logan, S.F. Sanders, Was. Punt Returners Yds 234 241 120 207 154 132 143 74 82 60 NO 15 16 12 21 18 15 17 9 10 10 Avg 15.6 15.1 10.0 9.9 9 6 8.8 6.4 8 2 8 2 8.0 Kick off Returners NO Yds 8 273 12 348 22 616 14 373 12 276 11 252 8 181 11 237 14 301 339 18 Avg 34.1 29.0 28.0 26.6 23.0 22.9 22.6 2 1 5 21.5 21 2 Scoring Touchdowns Rush 0 0 1 0 0 4 0 4 0 TD 7 6 6 6 5 4 4 4 4 Rec 7 6 5 6 5 0 4 0 4 PAT Hanson, Det. 11-11 Andersen, N.O. 17-17 Johnson, AH. 15-15 Buffer, Chi. 10-10 Jacke, G.B. 16-16 Munay, Dal. 10-10 Cofer, S.F. 20-21 Tredwtl, NY-G 16-17 Reveiz, Min. 6-7 G. Davis, Pho. 16-16 Kicking FG 19-24 14-18 14-14 13-15 11-12 12-14 8-11 9-10 11-15 7-8 LG 44 49 54 55 51 50 46 46 51 54 LG 72 74 19 56 35 28 50 24 39 15 LG 95 65 97 95 68 35 37 41 44 43 Ret 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pts 88 59 57 49 49 46 44 43 39 37 Baylor: Needs a win against Texas Continued from page 16 Lady Longhorns could use. " W e 'r e takin g som e ch ances really," Haley said. " I think we're playing it a little too close." Texas rallied to beat Louisiana State Monday night in Baton Rouge, La., in four sets after losing the first set of the match. The Lady Long­ horns have been slow out of the blocks recently, losing the opening set in three out of their last five matches. This is the tim e of th e season where Texas should be starting to play its best volleyball. The Lady Longhorns have only eight games remaining on their schedule, half of those being conference matches. The last time Texas met the Lady Bears, the Lady Longhorns played perhaps their best match of the sea­ son. Texas slammed Baylor 15-1,15- 2 and 15-6. In contrast to the recent trend, the Lady Longhorns opened the match strong by hitting .500 and knocking down 19 kills. Texas kept the Bears to a negative .066 hitting. Haley said it would be difficult for Texas to return to its dominating form w h ile b ein g on th is fou r- match-seven-day trip. " I don't know if we can dominate like we did unless we can get our serving going," Haley said. B ay lo r has been on a slid e recently, losing three consecutive matches to Oklahoma, Houston and T exas A&M . A gain st the Lady A ggies Saturday night, the Lady Bears lost 15-5, 15-8 and 15-4 and dropped to 17-8 overall and 3-4 in SWC action. Baylor was second in the nation in b lo ck s b efore m eetin g T exas A&M, but recorded one block solo and two block assists. The Lady Bears also hit a negative .011 in the EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 8 2 0 - Accounting- Bookkoeping 890 - Clubs- Restaurants 9 0 0 - Domestic- Household THE B A G E IR Y / D E U n o w hiring for Bo r! a n d full-tim e. 8 1 2 7 M e » o riv e 8 2 0 2 , A u stin . 5 0 2 - 9 2 2 2 . 10-4-208 M O T H E R 'S H E L P E R d e s ir e d to care for 3-yr-old & 2 infant tw ins o n w e e k e n d s & p o s s i b ly s o m e w e e k n ig h t s . R e fe re n c e s n e c e s- sory. 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C o l 8 3 6 -7 2 6 3 . 102 7 48 88 0 - Professional FREE-LANCE AUTHOR To reseorch, write, locate visuals for 4th arode twice-monthly slate o r U.S. history newspaper N e ed background in elementary educa­ tion, history, English. M ust hove IB M compatible computer. Write to Windows, Box 667, Layton, Utah, or call 1-800-835-4993. 1026-108 H I R IN G E X P E R IE N C E D lin e se rv ­ ers, prep cooks, a nd dishw ash ers. A p p l y 2 -5 p m : S p o g h e t f i W a r e ­ house, 1 1 7 W est 4th. 10-20 -10 6 Texiana C a fe O P E N I N G S O O N : Best of Texos A Louisiana FILLING P O S IT IO N S : •Bright hard-w orking d in in g room waitstaff. • A ll p o s itio n s for kitchen. O n l y hord-working and w anting to learn Creole Cuisine needed. Apply: 1 3 1 0 R.R 620South M-F 9-5 10-22-206 EMPLOYMENT - 880 PROFESSIONAL Pinkney Continued from page 16 January. match. E arlier this season Baylor had won nine straight games (its longest w inning streak ev er) but things have turned around quickly. " I t does not seem like they are playing as w ell as they have ear­ lier," Haley said. Baylor outside hitter Jenny DeLue leads the Bears in kills with 223 and in digs w ith 272. All-SW C setter Cory Sivertson returned from an injury Oct. 9 and is hitting a team- high .300. A fter the m atch W ednesday night, the Lady Longhorns return to A u stin and then trav el b ack to A rlington Friday to m eet Texas- Arlington 7 p.m. in Texas Hall. "I think if we keep playing like we did today [against SMU], we have a good shot at going to the Cotton Bowl," he said. Mackovic knows that if it is to happen, Pinkney will have to find a way to maintain that focus he finally found against SMU. "H e still has a lot of learning to do," Mackovic said. "I think if you asked him, he'd say the same thing." He would. "I can truly say I haven't been very focused for our last games," Pinkney said. "I was worrying about where I was going to get the ball and what routes I was going to run. "I got a chance to think about it and talk to the coaches this past week. But mostly I just decided to relax and play the way Lovell Pinkney really plays." And if that is gaining 150 yards a game, even the most critical Texas fan won't have much to say against him. LET OUR PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHER CAPTURE YOUR CLASSIC SMILE for the 1994 CACTUS YEARBOOK STUDIO SCHEDULE: Seniors, Graduating Seniors & Graduate Students Last name A-L ... Oct. 18-22 Last name M-Z ...Oct. 25-29 Juniors & Sophomores Last nam e A-L ... Nov. 1-2 Last name M-Z ... Nov. 3-4 Freshmen Last name A-L ... Oct. 11-13 Last nam e M-Z ... Oct. 13-15 LOCATION: Texas Student Publications Building, Room 4.122, 25th Street & Whitis Avenue HOURS: 8:30 a.m. - Noon and 1:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. SITTING FEES: Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors, Seniors - $2.00 Graduate Students and G ra d u a tin g Seniors - $3.50 IF YOU HAVE NOT ALREADY DONE SO. You can still purchase the 1994 Cactus Yearbook. Simply select optional fee number 26 on the T E X Registration System when you register for spring classes, October 25 through November 12. The Cactus Yearbook - a lifetime of UT memories for only $35.00. C H ILD REN TUTOR A H O U SEH ELP- ER FO R W ESTLAKE FA M ILY O rganized, dependable person needed 4 hrs/doy M F 2-6pm to pick up two children from school, take to after school activities, help with homework, evening meal A light housekeeping. M ust hove safe, dependable cor, go o d driving record a n d references Call 3 2 7 - 8 6 8 9 8am-6pm ond identify yourself as responding to a d & leave name, phone number ond time for return colls. P A R T -T IM E B A B Y S IT T E R n e e d e d for 2-monlh old. Two evenings ond o n e time d u r in g d a y . C o i f 2 0 6 - 0 5 4 9 . 10-21-58 R E S P O N S IB L E BA BY SITTER needed (or 5 & 3 yr old . w k. for 5 & 3 yr.old. 2 0 - 2 5 h r s / w k . M u st be dec » p « n d o b lo / n *o t/ lo v in g C d l 474-91 r 118. 10-27-26 Nanny Needed Free room A board Private room w/batb in lovely home just off W eirtoke Drive w /pool. Prefer female upper-cloMman or grad, student M ust drive, non-smoking. Single mom w /3 children 1 3 ,1 0 ,4 6 needs helping hand driv­ ing, homework, cooxing 4pm-9pm doily & some weekends. Very flexible. M ust like children A ani­ mal». Possible automobile provied. 327-8013. 10-25.38 BABYSITTER N t E D E D in our home; a fte rn o o n s on ly. In q u ire at 4 7 7 - 9 2 8 2 or 4 5 2 -7 9 3 6 10-25-58 C A T E R I N G C O M P A N Y in hom e Prep work , dom estic duties a vail­ a b le 4 d a y s a w eek B r ig id 3 7 1 - 7 3 3 7 . 10-27-3B Mother's Assistant Afternoons W orking mother need» odditíond right arm. Pick up kids after school, babysit, house dean, grocery shop, start supper. M ust enjoy kids, hove a cor, ond g o o d driving record. References required. Call evenings ofter 5,i-« . » « -138 Philadelphia ...................... 126 Atlanta__________ .._82 Dallas.....______ _________ 77 Houston..................... „.101 Orlando................... ............100 Los Angeles Clippers 102 Indiana.................................100 Boston.................................. 126 Sacramento.*.......................125 Cleveland— ...................... 100 Portland................................ 85 Los Angeles Lakers 105 Washington..................«*,..104 Phoenix................................100 Detroit................................... 85 BRIEFS • W O M E N 'S B A SK E T - BALL: Michelle McCutchen, a junior center, announced Tuesday that she will forgo her final years of eligibility on the Lady Longhorn basketball team because she has lost the desire to play. Last seaon M cCutchen averaged 1.5 points a game. ■ PRO B A S E B A L L : In New York, Robby Thompson, who hit .312 with 19 homers and 65 RBIs for the San Fran­ cisco Giants, headed the list of seven players who filed for free agency Tuesday. Cincinnati Reds second baseman Bip R oberts and New York Mets third base­ man Howard Johnson also were among those filing, as were Chicago W hite Sox pitcher Tim Belcher, Oakland second Jerry basem an Browne, Seattle catcher Dave Valle and Colorado pitcher Bruce Hurst. ■ T E X A S F O O T B A L L : Raycom will televise Satur­ day's Texas-Texas Tech game at Memorial Stadium. Kickoff is at 12:07 p.m. Compiled from staff and Asso­ ciated Press wire reports CALENDAR Saturday ■ W O M E N 'S B A S K E T ­ B A L L : "Tip Off Madness" begins at 7 p.m. at the Frank Erwin Center. Player intro­ ductions begin at 8 p.m. G roups w ith sports calendar item s should call 471-4591 or com e to The D aily Texan at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. Owners award Charlotte NFL franchise Assoc ated Press ROSEMONT, 111. — The NFL expanded into new territory Tuesday night, adding a team in Charlotte, N.C., that will begin play in 1995 as the Carolina Panthers. NFL com m issioner Paul T agliabue announced the addition at the league's expan­ sion meeting. Action on the second team was deferred until Nov. 30 w ith St. Louis, Balti­ more, Memphis, Tenn., and Jacksonville, Ha. still in the running. Charlotte was a unanim ous recommenda­ tion by the 11-member expansion and finance committees and a unanimous choice of the 28 owners, although only 21 votes were needed. Tagliabue was interrupted by applause from Carolina backers in the jammed hotel ballroom where the announcement was made. In Charlotte, fireworks exploded and hun­ dreds of people gathered for a downtown cel­ ebration. Many North Carolina television sta­ tions carried the brief announcement liv e. The Panthers, the NFL's 29th club, will be run by Jerry Richardson, an ex-Baltimore Colts wide receiver and owner of the com­ pany that owns such restaurants as Hardee's and Denny's. "I hope giving birth isn't as difficult and doesn't take 6 1/2 years," Richardson said. The general manager will be Mike McCor­ mack, the former general manager of the Seat­ tle Seahawks and a former player and coach with the Cleveland Browns. And speculation has already begun that the coach might be Joe Gibbs, a Carolina native w ho resigned last year after leading the Washington Redskins to three Super Bowl titles in 12 years. The team will begin play at Clemson Sta­ dium in South Carolina and is situated in what the NFL considers a vacuum between the Redskins and Atlanta Falcons. The area has a population of about 10 million within a 100-mile radius. Its perm anent h om e w ill be a stad ium financed under a unique concept — perma­ nent seating licenses purchased by prospec­ tive ticket buyers at prices from $600 to $5,600. Even without a franchise guarantee, 50,000 licenses were sold. That, in turn, seemed to sell the NFL own­ ers. "When I get back to Charlotte, I'm going to say to those people who bought the [licenses], Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank said Richardson, who unveiled the you,' team's new jersey in the trendy colors of silver Please see Franchise, page 15 Overstuffed Pinkney drops labels, nabs glory Texas wide receiver struggles with expectations to earn praise Amy Hettenhausen Daily Texan Staff When Lovell Pinkney left practice early a month ago, people began to talk. Spoiled. Selfish. Undisciplined. But there wasn't a Longhorn fan who didn't come to his or her feet Saturday against SMU when he caught a 9-yard pass, then threw all of his 234 pounds against three tacklers to gain 5 more yards. If Pinkney recognized the hypocrisy, it didn't seem to dim his affection for the crowd — he saluted it after each of his two touchdowns at San Antonio's Alamodome. He says that, six games into the sea­ son , it just felt good to fin ally be focused. "The other games have been really hard for me, because I had a lot of dif­ ferent things going on," he said imme­ diately after Texas' 37-10 victory. Even the shirt he wore, which was danger­ ously close to being neon orange, made him appear more relaxed and self-dep­ recating. "But today I was very clear-minded — I didn't have anything else on my mind," he said. "I just focused on catch­ ing the football and running with it." It's not that Pinkney had been per­ form ing poorly. In the season's first four games (he was suspended against Rice), he had accumulated 268 yards on 18 receptions. It's that he had been per­ forming poorly for an athlete of his cal­ iber. "He can do some things a lot of guys can't do," head coach John Mackovic said. "His size, shape and speed set him apart from other players." Pinkney used all of those advantages to have a career-best gam e against SMU, with seven catches for 150 yards. H is p rev io u s h igh w as 140 yards against Syracuse last year, and it was his first time to score more than one touchdown in a single game. And then there was the play that sim­ ply can't be immortalized in any record He can do some things a lot of guys can’t do. His size, shape and speed set him apart from other play­ ers.” — John Mackovic, Texas head football coach book. He sh ou ld h ave been d ow n, had three SMU defenders hanging on his legs, and simply refused to stop barrel­ ing toward the end zone. "It's great for the team to score, but I a lso like to score m yself," he said. "When I catch the ball, I don't feel like going down with the first shot." He didn't quite make it to the goal line on that occasion, but it wouldn't be long for Pinkney. On Texas' first possession of the sec­ ond quarter, he ended up standing in m otion less trium ph before the SMU band, hands firmly on hips, cradling a spectacular 61-yard pass from Shea Morenz. Pinkney makes the most of his 6-foot- 5-inch presence on the field in more ways than one. "I'm always behind my team, and I love to support them," he said. Pinkney says there are other ways to help the Longhorns besides scoring 61- yard touchdowns. He whips a towel to the crowd when he's not in the game, begging for fren­ zied noise. He jumps up and down on a silver sideline bench and flaps his arms. "When the defense is on the field, they need the support of the fans and the team," he said. "I play cheerleader every once in a while." Pinkney beams with optimism any leg itim a te cheerleader w ou ld en vy when talking about his team's chances of m aking it back to D allas com e Please see Pinkney, page 15 Orlando Magic guard Scott Skiles attempted to shoot over the outstretched arms of Houston Rocket forward Robert Horry during the Rockets’ 101-100 victory in Orlando Tuesday evening. Associated Press No. 2 Lady Horns to battle Baylor Gene Menez Daily Texan Staff The Lady Longhorns have moved up to No. 2 in the country, have won their last five matches, lead the Southwest Conference with a 6-0 record and are 16-2 overall. Still, coach Mick H aley is not totally pleased. Texas has not been its dominating self since going on the road to play No. 4 Stanford in Stanford, Calif. The team lost that match against the defending national champion Car­ dinal and has w on the next five straight despite not being as sharp as it was in late September or Octo­ ber. P laying the slu m p in g Baylor Bears at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday night in Waco m ight be just what the Please see Baylor, page 15 Baker burns competition, wins Manager of the Year Associated Press NEW YORK — D u sty Baker, a rookie m anager w ho led the San Francisco Giants to their most victo­ ries since 1962 but just a second-place finish, was voted National League Manager of the Year on Tuesday. Baker received 15 first-place votes in balloting by the Baseball Writers A ssociation , four m ore than Jim Fregosi of the NL cham pion Philadelphia Phillies, who got 11 first-place votes and finished second. Dusty Baker Baker got nine second-place votes and three thirds for 105 points. Managers receive five points for first, three for sec­ ond and one for third. Fregosi got 11 seconds and four thirds for 92 points. Felipe Alou of the Montreal Expos and Bobby Cox of the N L West champion Atlanta Braves tied for third with 27 points each. Don Baylor, a rookie m anager w h o took the expansion Colorado Rockies to a sixth-place finish in the NL West, received one third-place vote and one point. Baker, 44, was hired by the Giants new owners last Dec. 16 to replace Roger Craig. Potential v. Six-Figure Income OLDE Discount is looking for energetic people to start a career in the brokerage business. Requirements include: College Degree General Market Knowledge, and Excellent Communication Skills OEDE offers: 6 to 1 2 Month Extensive Í raining Program Competitive Salary and Commission Structure Relocation Possibilities Call Rudy Rodriguez for more information' 1 800 992-2883 OLDE will also be recruiting on campus at U of T - Austin on November 4th - contact the career center to set up an interview. arfOLDE America's Full Service Discount Broker " Member NYSE & SI PC Texas Wraiigler MIDNIGHT MADNESS! , s TIP-OFF PARTY FEATURING BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP, INC. We are currently enrolling volunteers for the following studies: » M -fp i:;| -jc • 1 1 11,! • SoreThróát-A bé' 18+, pain symptoms for 5 days or less; must also have a cold. • Ankle Sprains/Strains - Age 16+, injury within is - Caused by contac lenses « a im -F o r future) ' • N > ^ . . . . ' > * OCT. 28, ‘93 9 pm -1 am SCHOLZ’S GARTEN All participants will reS incentive for co m p le tn ^lR e studies. For information call 320-1630