\aggi inema/ Aggie Cinema Movie Information Hodine: 847-8478 Back to the Future II Apr. 20/21 7:30/9:45 $2.00 Young Frankenstein Apr. 20/21 Midnight $2.00 Gone With the Wind (restored)... Apr. 21 3:00 $2.00 Children under 13 - $1.00 Tickets may be purchased at the MSC Box Office. TAMU ID required except for International features. The Battalion C&C Crawfish Farm Live, purged, farm raised crawfish Call and order now for Graduation Weekend! ™ G L f % "The Center for all vour Medical needs" Lilli OH "The Center for all your Medical needs" 200 W 26th • Corner ol 26th & Bryan Streets Bryan. Texas 77803 SPORTS NUTRITION FOR SERIOUS ATHLETES ONLY! Build: • Endurance with: • performance with • strength with • power with CYTOMAX METABOLOL II MUSCLE NITRO POWER PASTA EXPRESS MAGNIFICENT CHINESE BUFFETS Over 20 Selections of Salads & Entrees, Iced Tea, Desserts ALL YOU CAN EAT $ For Only w/coupon 6.99 Dine-ln Only Reg. $3.89 & $4.19 11:00 a.m.-8:30 p.rn. Daily One coupon per person per visit. Valid April 18 - April 25,1990 Not good with any other offer. 606 Tarrow 764-8960 Unh—relty HILTON The Conclusion to the Women's Issues Symposium with Ellie Smeal Former President of the National Organization for Women The State of Feminism and Women's Rights Today Thurs., April 19.1990 ?pm MSC 201 Reception following program Supersole SUPER SALE Sale Ends 4/20/90 The inside of this Pecos boot is cushion-soft with firm support and heel huggin’ fit. The outside is made for toughest wear... with full-grain leather and long-wearing SuperSole. 10-14 10-13 8-16 3810 S. Texas Bryan 846-3813 MADE IN US A. WORLD & NATION Wednesday, April 18,1990 Europeans criticize Bush at conference President defends stance WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Bush called for more research “to sort out the science” of global warming Tuesday, but ran into a storm of criticism at an international White House conference from Euro peans who argued for action. “Gaps in knowledge must not be used as an excuse for worldwide in action,” declared Klaus Topfer, the West German environmental min- ble gradual warming of the Earth. “Environmental policies that ig nore the economic factors — the hu man factors — are destined to fail,” he said, maintaining anew that some fit ister. Bush said he hoped the confer ence, attended by delegates from 19 nations, would prod international research and inject economic issues into the debate over the “green house” effect. The president called for resolving some of the scientific uncertainties and economic implications before making a commitment to specific pollution controls to deal with possi- Environmental policies that ignore the economic factors — the human factors — are destined to fail.” — President Bush scientists are in wide disagreement over the impact of manmade pollut ants on the temperature of the globe. Many of the European partici pants, especially the West Germans and the Dutch, said the conference agenda was narrowly arranged to prevent open discussions of policy aimed at dealing with global warm ing. Topfer suggested the German delegation would pursue such dis cussions, adding, “The gravity of the situation requires immediate, deter mined action.” Similar views were expressed by members of other delegations, in cluding Dutch and French officials. Discussions about further re search and economic considerations should “not distract us from taking action on carbon dioxide stabiliza tion now,” Hans Alders, the Dutch environmental minister, told the conference during a closed working session. Abernathy dies waiting for lung scan Court upholds decision to evict Jewish settlers in Arab quarter JERUSALEM (AP) — A Jerusalem District Court panel on Tuesday upheld an order to evict 150 Jewish settlers from the Arab Christian quarter of the Old City, fueling anti-Israeli protests. The settlers immediately appealed the decision. Several dozen Palestinian women and masked youths demonstrated inside the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, venerated as the site of Christ’s burial and regarded by many as Christianity’s holiest shrine. Visiting pilgrims and tourists stared as 40 to 50 pro testers waved Palestinian flags and chanted “PLO! PLO!” and “Israel no! Palestine yes!” inside the dark church. The judges ruled that a stay of the eviction notice d Frid granted Friday by a single District Court judge was im properly obtained. “We invalidate it,” the judges wrote. They took the unusual step of assessing court costs of $5,000 to the settlers’ lawyers, apparently for attempt ing to thwart the Israeli legal system. Judge Vardimus Zailer presided over the three- judge panel, which also included Judge Shalom Bren ner, who on Friday stayed the eviction order. The ruling said the settlers’ lawyers, in asking Bren ner for a stay, had failed to mention that another judge turned down a separate request for a stay hours earlier. It was the first time Arabs had staged a protest inside the church since the Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip began 28 months ago. A week ago, the ultra-Orthodox Jews moved into a 72-room complex near the church under heavy police guard, saying they wanted to establish a Jewish pres ence in the Christian quarter for the first time since 1936. The Greek Orthodox Church, which owns the prop erty, said a tenant in the four 100-year-old buildings il legally worked out a lease with the Jews. The church sued to have the Jewish settlers removed. A three-judge panel of the District Court conferred nearly four hours behind closed doors Tuesday before issuing a ruling that accused the settlers’ lawyers of “an improper use of procedures, to say the least.” Avraham Sochozolsky, a lawyer for the Greek Ortho dox Church, said he would immediately ask police to carry out the eviction order. “The judges have canceled the stay,” Sochozolsky said. “They (the settlers) must be evicted.” Police spokesman Uzi Sandori said police were study ing the court decision to decide how to proceed. Yacov Levine, a spokesman for the settlers group, said their lawyers sought a new District Court hearing late Tuesday, saying “our petition is to leave the people where they are with the argument that the place was rented legally.” He said his group would take the case to the Su preme Court, if necessary, to block the eviction order. The settlers’ move into the complex has raised ten sions in the old, walled city, which is divided into ethnic quarters that are home to about 50,000 Moslems, 7,000 Christians and 4,000 Jews. BEIRUT, I lian group h wstage prom me of the An mmanitarian arry a messaj Reliable dif jyria, confin reed Friday i The group ation of Pales hree would I companied b esse Turner ihoto ot him Stu Actio demo ATLANTA (AP) - The R« Ralph David Abernathy, whom ated the civil rights movemm with Dr. Martin Luther King] hut decades later enraged slain leader’s supporters by w. ing about his alleged infidelity died Tuesday. Abernathy, who had cradles the fallen King’s bloodied 1 after he was struck down by a let in 1968, was 64. Abernathy’s heart stoppi while he was being prepared fotj lung scan at Crawford Long Her pital, hospital spokeswoman fi sha BuHand said. “What they were trying to was detect if there was a bk clot in the lungs ... hut they never got to se»e,” Borland said Abernathy was taken toanop eiating room, but he was nounced dead thereat 12:1(] (11:10 a.m CDT) before doctors; A/Ti could begin emergency life sup (it 1V11 port surgery, she said. Burland quoted Dr. Kennedi St hriclt, a nuclear medicine spe cialist who was present for the scheduled lung scan, assayingthe test never began and could not have contributed to Abernathy death. Abernathy had been in the hospital since last month treatment of a sodium deficiency He had suf fered strokes in and 1986. Abernathy spent his last months under hitter criticisiri from his i ol leagues for passages in his 1989 autobiography, "And The Walls Came Tumbling Down. He wrote that King had sjx-ni time with two women and had a violent argument with one in the 24 hours before his 19$ assassination. But the Rev. Joseph Lowery, who succeeded Abernathy president of the Southern Chris tian Leadership Council, de- scribed Abernathy onTuesdayas "a faithful servant of the causeof liberty and justice.” “I extend my love and support to his f amily,” he said. King’s son. Fulton Count; Commissioner Martin Luther King HI, called Abernathy's death “a very tragic losstoourna- tion.” BySUZANN Of The Batta Scientists: Gene may be linked to alcoholism CHICAGO (AP) — Research ers say they have pinpointed for the first time a gene that may make people prone to alcoholism, adding weight to the argument that alcoholism is a disease and not a moral weakness. Government scientists called the finding “provocative and promising,” even if it requires more study, but a leading investi gator in the field declared it was impossible to say an “alcohol gene” had been identified. Writing in Wednesday’s Jour nal of the American Medical As sociation, the researchers said they found a particular gene on a chromosome previously linked with alcoholism to be far more common in alcoholics than in non-alcoholics they studied. If verified, the finding would represent the first specific identi fication of a genetic root for alco holism. Alcoholism afflicts an esti mated 18 million Americans and tends to run in families. Experts split over allocation of funds given to AIDS studies WASHINGTON (AP) — Experts are almost evenly divided about whether the federal government is taking too much money away from cancer, heart disease and other medical studies to support AIDS research, according to a survey by the Office of Technology As sessment. The OTA survey, released Tuesday, said most of the experts also believe AIDS research “has made many im- E ortant contributions to advances in the biomedical and ehavioral sciences” and that virtually every medical speciality has benefited, to some degree, from money spent on AIDS studies. Federal spending for treatment and prevention of acquired immune deficiency syndrome totals about $2.9 billion for the fiscal year that ends this October. Re search into the human immunodeficiency virus, which causes AIDS, is about $1.16 billion. “Critics of rising expenditures on HIV disease point out that HIV funding has exceeded funding for heart disease and rivals funding for cancer, despite the much greater number of deaths from these latter diseases,” the OTA report said. It said about 10 percent of the to tal National Institutes of Health 1990 budget goes to HIV funding. To determine how the federal AIDS spending is af fecting other biomedical fields, the OTA sent question naires to 400 scientists and received completed replies from 148. The findings showed many areas of biomedical sci ence have benefited from the AIDS research, but the experts showed opinion divided on how best to spend the federal funds. The study said 48 percent of those who responded “agreed or strongly agreed that too much researdi funding has been diverted” to AIDS research from other fields. Forty-four percent “disagreed or strongly disagreed with this statement.” There were 87 scientists with some professional acti\ ity related to AIDS in the survey, and 51.7 percent ot Critics of rising expenditures on HIV disease point out that HIV funding has exceeded funding for heart disease and rivals funding for cancer, despite the much greater number of deaths from these latter diseases.” Office of Technology Assessment those believed the level of AIDS spending was “aboffl right.” A third called it too low, and 10.3 percentsatvii as too high. In the OTA survey, more than half the expert 1 agreed that each of nine basic biological sciences en joyed at least some spin-off benefit from the AIDS re search. MATHEMATICS CONTEST Annual FRESHMAN and SOPHOMORE Mathematics Contest THURSDAY, APRIL 19,1990 • 7:30p.m.-9:30p.m. Freshman Contest - Room 216 Milner Hall Sophomore Contest - Room 304 Milner Hall No Calculators! All test material will be provided. First Place Winner - $ 100 Second Place Winner - $60 Third Place Winner - $40 Prerequisite for Freshman contest is knowledge of calculus through Math 151 or equivalent, for the Sophomore contest knowledge of calculus through Math 251 or equivalent. -m IMEQIM WANTED: Staff Members for the 1991 Aggieland (yearbook) Positions available for experienced photographers, writers, and layout designers. Applications may be picked up in room 230 Reed McDonald and are due by 4 p.m. on Friday, April 20 Motorists gave the pe the Texas i Group as Wednesday University Ave. Mike W spokesman is protestin; rests in Sai Mitsubishi I While soi rest played 14 protest rainforest” carried sig Kills Rainf Logging M Of Our Lif Rainforests The pur raise awan operations, “We war tsconcerne forests in p terconnecU economy, e “If people write Mils products.” Worshai dorsing a products, consumers selves. Mitsubis gtng comp which has rests in Sat Worsham He said original r; gone, prin ations. Accordi Rainfores 1 tional or A&M be Corp. alsc san Wooc pines and in Brazil, plywood. Worsh; Ei Lee By CHRI Of The B; P