v MEMORIES i n MOTION Fee Option 23 AM/PM Clinics CLINICS Minor Emergencies General Medical Care • Weight Reduction Program 10% Student Discount with I.D. Card (Except tor Weight Program) 846-4756 693-0202 779-4756 2305 Texas Ave S. 401 S. Texas (next to U Rent M) College Station (29th & Texas) IPM.-EllMEE! r"« | «g»TRICTKP - [ 1^ I UNDfR 1*7 RfOUlRtS ACCORIPRUmG | PURMtT OH ADm ’ r,u*B0i*W t EEHlMNIIEimitt^EllNMffl'WUPlill" • mmn ■■ ^ mms miffli ItTSlH; ■ ilLiHlENBWLlNEClJ^* . , -r-.' ;'!r." ' STARTS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22nd AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU! MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1990 8:00 PM RUDDER AUDITORIUM SPONSORED BY^ inema/ Free Passes at MSC Box Office - Seating is limited to first 600 Limited Seating-First Come, First Served Zey said she has seen many changes at A&M, especially in the so cial sciences and humanities. The College of Liberal Arts has come into its own,” Zey said. Enrollment in these fields has in creased, she said, and the Universi ty’s national visibility also has in creased and become more positive. These facts make recruiting fac ulty easier, she added. “I’m very excited about the insti tution as a whole,” she said. Zey came to A&M from the Uni versity of Illinois, where she did post-doctoral work after receiving her doctorate in sociology from Louisiana State University. Organizational deviance, which is commonly referred to as “white-col lar crime” is Zey’s main interest right now. Specifically, she is examining how insider trading and securities fraud occur. When Zey returns to A&M, she plans to continue her research and teaching, in addition to starting a third book. She currently is working on two books. Loyal to u/s masts* , Scratch makbs sure Herbert never oversleeps. Scientists study Viking artifacts to unlock secrets of ancient life BIRKA, Sweden (AP) — The cen ter of the Viking world 1,000 years ago is under siege by archaeologists who are trying to pry secrets from beneath the pastures that now cover this farming island. Historians believe that Birka, a settlement on an island in Lake Ma- leren just west of Stockholm, was home to about 1,000 people. The site now is covered with grids, in which workers dig by hand through the seven feet of dirt covering the settlement. Two sections have been excavated since the dig began this spring, and although the findings have not been startling, they hint at a wealth of arti facts to come. The project is to last until 1994. Animal bones, remnants of meals, colorful beads, combs and house hold utensils that could shed light on Viking home life have turned up. Archaeologists also found Arab coins, evidence of how far the Vi kings roamed. Europe, and their spirit of adven ture drove them far afield, to Ice land and North America. The Vikings thrived from the late 8th century to the 11th century. Their raids struck terror throughout Birka has been recognized since the Middle Ages as the cradle of Christianity in Sweden. It was here that Ansgar, a missionary from Bre men and later bishop of Bremen- Hamburg, first preached around 830. But while some Viking towns flou rished, Birka was deserted at the end of the first millennium. Where trad ers once exchanged goods from all of the known world, sheep graze in meadows and on grassy mounds containing the graves of Viking trad ers. Historians say Vikings from the Birka region, a people known then as the Rus, sailed eastward across the Baltic Sea and lent their name to the land of Russia. They reached the Caspian Sea. Although Birka was the Vikings’ center, it has remained mostly unex amined while extensive digs were conducted at Viking settlements in York, England; Dublin, Ireland; He- deby, West Germany; Kaupang, Norway; and Staraya Ladoga,S» Union. The Viking era generally ii garded as having begun in 792,i year a raiding party attacked: Lindisfarne monastery on Briai North Sea Coast. But evidenced be uncovered indicating that thei began earlier, Bjorn Ambrosian Stockholm’s Museum of Natio: History, said. The only previous excavation Birka was conducted 100 years; by Hjalmar Stolpe, a zoologist came in search of insect fossili 1871 and stayed 24 years to dij many of the 2,500 Viking) graves. Stolpe touched very little ofi town of Birka, which stoodatthe cus of a heroic chapter in Scandt vian history. Ambrosiani andotl experts are eager to find out to was built and developed. The project is being financed one of Sweden’s richest men, ini trialist Gad Rausing. “If you go digging you sh< have proper resources, other* you do more damage than Ambrosiani said. Proposal threatens habitat Squirrel fights extinction MOUNT GRAHAM, Ariz. (AP) — The survival of a half-pound ro dent that has lived here for 10,000 years, the Mount Graham red squir rel, has been pitted against a propo sal for a $200 million astrophysical observatory. The squirrel, genetically distinct from 24 other subspecies of red squirrels, now numbers fewer than 150. Environmentalists contend con struction of the University of Arizo na’s Mount Graham International Observatory will mean extinction. Emerald Peak, at 10,500 feet, and its stands of majestic, mature Engel- mann spruce and corkbark fir, are the object of a battle as heated as the Arizona desert below. The mountain road twists through the lush Coronado National Forest in southeastern Arizona, and eventually pavement gives way to gravel and dirt. At 9,200 feet, a year- old, two-mile dirt route barely a ve hicle wide knifes amid aspens, Doug las and white fir and Southwestern white pine. Emerald and nearby High Peak, at 10,720 feet, are the crown jewels of what environmentalists, wildlife specialists and scientists call a unique “sky island,” an ecosystem that has been called “probably the most sensi tive barometer of global warming in North America.” On Emerald, encircling a clearing cut years ago to harvest trees downed by heavy winds, several hundred Engelmann spruce — cor doned inside 1 !4 acres and wearing painted numbers — await the ax to make way for the New Vatican Submillimeter telescopes and n» tenance facilities. A third instrument, theColunil lead er Telescope, destined to be thewoi most powerful, would occupy an ditional two acres. While the construction, inclui the road, would encompass onl) acres, opening the spruce-fir can and exposing its damp, cool, m covered floor would magnify “degraded edge effect” over rounding acreage, forest exp' say. Temperatures would increase* with more wind, land would dryt “These animals need moist, cik habitats,” U.S. Forest Service biol ist Kathleen Milne said. 7^ one c outfi Th to CO cer V tion 1 want- tivity crime Du dents house mate] Force grapl Th 500 i sure ingT rieso after Te on K tional apart ms ce lamp turne Say crimii aware Ad, Unite: R MO orderi Monrt tional civil W; Job much dent found out A dian ci Fou fines ] toast f has ru presui mainii Fig