The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 19, 1990, Image 7

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    April 19,19$ Thursday, April 19,1990
The Battalion
Page 7
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Sitting between the lines
Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack
An employee of R.E.C. Industries connects beams to the renovation of the Langford Architecture building Wednesday.
Welcome
(Continued from page 1)
the A&M campus in two limousines
with a police escort.
Nikolav Shishlin, of the Soviet
Union and also part of the dis
cussion, was scheduled to arrive in
College Station Wednesday night.
Adelman and ABC News anchor
Sam Donaldson, moderator of the
discussion, are scheduled to arrive in
College Station on Friday.
Shishlin is a Communist Party
central committee spokesman and
advisor to the Politburo.
Wieland is a member of the Ger
man Democratic Republic Foreign
Ministry and an ambassador for dis
armament.
Erdos is a member of the Hungar
ian Foreign Ministry and head of the
Department of International Multi
lateral Relations.
Trzeciakowski is a member of the
Council of Ministers and a Solidarity
economic advisor. Adelman is the
former director of Arms Control
and Disarmament Agency under
President Reagan.
“The Changing Faces of Commu
nism” will be at 8 p.m. Friday in
Rudder Auditorium.
Tickets cost $4,$6 and $8 for stu
dents and $6, $9 and $12 for non
students. Tickets are on sale at the
MSC Box Office and all Ticketron
outlets.
Women
(Continued from page 3)
man who regards women as daugh
ters. He tends to distrust women
with responsible projects.
Then there is the False Liberator
or Fake Mentor, male or female,
who is more interested in proving
Census
(Continued from page 1)
disappointed that this one is so
poor ”
Tom Murray, associate director of
student affairs at A&M, said the
Census Bureau did not publicize the
census adequately to dorm students.
“We asked for some posters and .
some pretty good publicity to accom
pany the forms,” Murray said. “And
all they provided were a couple of
notes saying, ‘Please return to your
residence director by such-and-such
date.’ So I don’t think the publicity
was as good as it could have been.”
Basmann, who is dealing only
with dorm students, cadets, athletes
and members of fraternities or soro
rities at A&M, said little can be done
to force students to complete and re
turn the forms.
In an effort to get more students’
to participate in the census. Census
their liberation than providing job
opportunities.
“They’ll use you as a shingle,” Ste-
panek said.
These categories aren’t all bad,
she said, but they may push a woman
into a position where advancement is
difficult or impossible.
“Overt discrimination is a thing of
We asked for some
posters and some pretty
good publicity to
accompany the forms ... I
don’t think the publicity
was as good as it could
have been.”
— Tom Murray,
associate director
of student affairs
Bureau workers on Wednesday be
gan phoning students who had not
returned their forms, Basmann said.
She' said Census Bureau workers
might have to go door to door, even
though it is a time-consuming proc
ess.
the past,” Stepanek said. Covert dis
crimination, however, still exists.
Identify the problem, she said, and
then try to negotiate it.
“Be professional, act confident
and do good work,” she said. “(But)
the most effective way to deal with
all this is to get to be the boss.”
“Well, we’d like to avoid that,”
Basmann said. “It’s a very inefficient
way, considering that we can't get
into most of those places without ad
vance notice and keys.”
Basmann said Census Bureau
workers, many of whom are em
ployed only temporarily, will work
through next week in an attempt to
contact students who have not com
pleted the census.
She said all students should com
plete a census form because statistics
derived from the census can influ
ence funds received by local govern
ment bodies.
“This makes more money for
Texas A&M because they use these
figures when they work on grants,”
she said. “And (it provides) more
money for the community for roads
and streets and things, and they use
them to develop housing projec
tions.”
Diplomats
(Continued from page 1)
called “very inefficient enterprises,”
dismiss workers and restructure
their operations.
The currency exchange is a major
problem hindering a quick reunifica
tion of the two Germanys. West Ger
many does not want to exchange its
Deutschemark one-to-one with the
East German Ostmark because the
Ostmark is much lower in value and
would send inflation rates soaring.
“There will be a lot of social prob
lems,” Wieland said. “The people of
the GDR are afraid of the price in
crease.”
Wieland said it could be late 1991
or early 1992 when the two Ger
manys are reunited. He said the first
steps will be to agree on a common
currency, then to negotiate with the
United States, Soviet Union, France
and England on foreign diplomacy
questions.
Although both leaders agree the
United States has a role to play in
both East Germany and Hungary’s
future, their opinions differed on
what that role should be.
Erdos said Hungary must receive
foreign economic assistance to ease
the transition to a more open market
and hopes the United States govern
ment encourages private companies
to invest in his couptry.
“On our own, it would be impossi
ble to address the difficult economic
situation we are in,” Erdos said. “We
need not only an interest, but an ac
tive participation in helping to over
come the legacy of the recent peri
od.”
The Soviet Union has said it
would like a reunited Germany to be
neutral, but Wieland said it would be
reasonable for a united Germany to
be part of NATO.
He did say, however, U.S. troop
reductions are in his country’s plans.
“The United States has the capac
ity to influence European progress
in the direction of overcoming more
and more East-West confrontation,”
he said.
Some countries, including the
United States, Israel and Poland,
have expressed fears about a power
ful reunited Germany, but Wieland
said the fears are unfounded.
“I don’t think other people have
to fear what’s going on in Germany,”
he said.
Recently, the newly-elected East
German Parliament apologized to
the Jewish people for the Nazi Holo
caust, and it has declared its commit
ment to honor Poland’s eastern bor
ders as they were prior to World
War II.
Erdos said the rapid changes in
the Eastern European countries
from a Bolshevik system to a demo
cratic society are virtually unprece
dented and have overwhelmed him
and many other people.
“I believe that we’re living in his
toric times,” he said. “I believe the
years 1989 and 1990 will go down in
history books in golden letters be
cause such developments of this
kind, of such a depth, of such a di
mension, happen very rarely in the
history of our countries.”
Thursday, April 19 & Saturday, April 21
Rudder Auditorium 7:30 PM / 9:45 PM
Saturday, April 21-Midnight
Rudder Auditorium
Admission is $2.00-All Shows
Tickets are available at the MSC Box Office.
Aggie Cinema Movie Information Hotline—847-8478
Gone With the Wind
Saturday, April 20
2:00 PM
Rudder Theatre
Admission $2.00
Children under 13 $1.00
\agci
NEMA/
Aggie Cinema Movie Information
HotUne: 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.
GREAT LUNCH at a
GREAT PRICE
All You Can Eat Salad, feuLi
Breadstyxz & Pizza only
326 Jersey 696-DAVE
211 University 268-DAVE BUFFET HOURS
919 Harvey Rd. 764-DAVE 11 AM - 10 PM SUN & MON
Carter Creek 846-DAVE 11 AM - 2 PM TUES-SAT
MUNCHIE IUNCHIE
Ask for your Munchie Lunchie Punch Card
</)•—( r*.
* r L O
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P
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?\
'5
Annual Red
Tag Sale
Friday 20th
Saturday 21st
Sunday 22nd
Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale
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a Doezens of titles for:
« IBM, AMIGA, APPLE,MACINTOSH,
« COMMIDORE, as well as selected
<8 NINTENDO cartridges,
re
n Located in Culpepper Plaza
o, next to Tempo Fashions
re M-Sat. 10-9 Sun. 1-9
^ 693-1706
4 c. |
Look for this tag for great ^
discounts on previously SL
used software! ^
Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale
PRE-LAW SOCIETY
MOCK LSAT
Sat., April 21
8-12
Blocker 165
$5. at door
PRE-LAW SOCIETY
Call Joel for info: 693-8213
A TTENTION AC CO UNTING
MAJORS
GAAP DAY 1990
APRIL 22 AND 23
BRIARCREST COUNTRY CLUB
SUNDAY, APRIL 2
7:30 pm Reception at Briarcrest (Free to ALL students)
MONDAY, APRIL 23
8:00 am 5Krun ($10 fee)*
9:00am Tennis tournament ($15 fee)*
Golf tournament ($25 fee)*
* All fees include lunch and T-Shirt or Golf shirt
SIGN UP FOR EVENTS IN
BLOCKERLOBBY
APRIL 19 and 20
Sponsered by Accounting Society, Beta Alpha Psi, and Accounting Department
Coors Light
24/12 oz. cans
$10.49
Cedar Ridge
Dry White
Zenfandel
750 ml.
$1.99
Cash or Check Preferred
AggieVision option 23
Texas A&M v s video yearbook