there is one great specialty store. Page 4 The Battalion Wednesday, November 28, 199C bn ^o° PROFESSIONAL TESTING CENTERS GMAT review The Difference Between Admission To The MBA Program of Your Choice... And Not Being Admitted At All! □ Enclosed is $45. Enroll me at the TAMU student early en rollment discount tuition of $295 (Reg. tuition is $495) □ I would like more information about your course. Name: Address: City/St./Zip: Phone: ^ I plan to take the GMAT Exam on. -19_ 1-800-274-3926 A subsidiary of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Also offing Conviser-Duffy-Miller CPA Review, LSAT MCAT & SAT Mail to: bar/bri GMAT Review 1415 Fannin, Suite 250 Houston, TX 77002 SI 00 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 ADULT SORE THROAT STUDY Wanted individuals 18 years and older to participate in an investigational drug research study. $100 incentive for those chosen to participate. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 FREE ALLERGY TESTING Do you suffer from hayfever, itchy watery eyes, runny nose and congestion in December and January - Free Cedar Allergy Testing. $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $20C THERMOMETER USE STUDY Individuals with temperature of 99.5 F or higher to participate in a thermometer use study for approximately two hours. No medications or blood draw. $200 for those who complete the study. 5200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 5300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE STUDY Individuals with high blood pressure, either on or off blood pressure medication to participate in a high blood pressure research study. $300 incentive. BONUS: $100 RAPID ENROLLMENT BONUS for completing study. 5300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 S-. CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL® 776-0400 GETS YOU A SLICE OF GARCIA 1 S PIZZA! After you’ve hit the books, head for Garcia's. Order a pepperoni slice and pay only 990 Sunday thru Thursday 10p.m. til'midnight. 846-1616 ‘WZZVSPMl 303 W. UNIVERSITY AVE. The following incidents were reported to the Uni versity Police Department between Nov. 15 and 20. PUBLIC INTOXICATION: • A student was found passed out in his vehicle in Parking Area 19. ASSAULT: • A bicyclist was struck in the head with an object thrown from a passing vehicle. The vehicle sped away down East Main Drive. CRIMINAL MISCHIEF: • A student reported his vehicle was wrapped with toilet tissue while parked on the top floor of the Southside Parking Garage. • The rear taillights of a 1985 Honda Prelude were damaged by an individual kicking them while the car was in Parking Area 30. • A window in the southeast stairwell of Davis- Gary was broken by a projectile. • While parked in Parking Area 30, the antenna of a 1987 Olds Calais was bent. • A 15-foot elm tree was chopped down near the Golf Maintenance Shop. CRIMINAL TRESPASS: • A man found working on a computer in the Veterinary Medical Administration Building was given a criminal trespass warning. BURGLARY OF VEHICLE: • An ax handle was used to gain entry through a window of a vehicle in Parking Area 61. A parking permit and insurance card were stolen. The suspects were arrested and transported to the Brazos County Jail. • The rear window of a 1988 Mazda pickup truck was broken by an unknown intruder. A Craftsman 200-piece ratchet set and 18-piece screwdriver set were removed from the vehicle. HARASSMENT: • Five people reported receiving harassing phone calls. DRIVING WHILE INTOXICATED: • One person was charged with driving while in- toxicated VIOLATION OF UNIVERSITY REGULA TIONS: • A person soliciting magazine subscriptions was cited for violation of University regulations. MISDEMEANOR THEFT: • Four bikes were reported stolen. • A student reported his gold chain and nugget were stolen from the Moore Hall basketball courts. • An unattended purse was stolen from a study table in Sterling C. Evans Library. • A wallet was removed from an unattended purse in the library. The wallet contained a driver’s license, credit cards, student I.D., checkbook and $15. • A purse and its contents were stolen from the hallway outside a room in Blocker. The purse con tained a checkbook, credit cards and $11. • A wallet was stolen from a unsecured purse in the petroleum building. Act Now The Texas A&M Crime Pre vention Unit wants to stress thai the end of each semester usually brings an increase in crime. The fall semester is especially dangerous because of the ap ' preaching holiday season. The importance of securim property cannot be stressed enough. Of equal importance is to; report suspicious activity. By immediately reporting sus picious activity, you can help the Texas A&M University Police De partment stop crime before it happens. It sounds easy enough to re port a crime, but only half of all crimes are ever reported. It's; hard for police to do anything if they don’t know what happened Even an anonymous tip is better than no report at all. If you see something suspi cious, call the police as soon as possible to ensure they aci quickly. The longer you wait, the harder it is for them to catch a criminal. Put a stop to campus crime For more information, contaci j' UPD’s Crime Prevention Unit at I 845-2345 or the crime line at 815 : 6500. I Teen admits guilt in injury of bystanders AUSTIN (AP) — A 16-year-old high school student has pleaded guilty to wounding two bystanders in September during a quarrel among rival gang members in downtown Austin, officials said. Bonifacio Alba, who turned him self in to police about 10 days after the Sept. 19 shooting, pleaded guilty to charges of aggravated assault in the wounding of Tony Flores, 61, and a 16-year-old girl. Alba’s acknowledgement of guilt Monday was part of a plea bargain, Darwin McKee, his lawyer, said. Sen tencing is scheduled for Dec. 10. “This (the shootings) was a highly unusual thing for this young man to do,” McKee said. “It was an aberra tion in his lifestyle.” McKee said he and prosecutors would ask District Judge Jeanne Meurer to sentence Alba to three or four years in the state penitentiary. Boy receives national support for defying school dress code BASTROP (AP) — An 8-year-old boy’s battle with school authorities over his ponytail has brought him support from across the nation. Zachariah Toungate’s story has been told recently in dozens of news papers, on television networks and talk shows, in Time and People mag azines and on dozens of radio pro grams. Listeners in the 38 states that pick up radio station KOA in Denver re sponded so fervently that the talk snow host who interviewed the boy last week is organizing a Free Zach Campaign. ' The host is urging listeners to voice their outrage by sending locks of hair to Bastrop school officials. “I would hope the school board doesn’t just react to public outcry and change the rule, but that they understand why it should be changed,” said KOA’s George Weber, the host of “The Flip Side,” an open-line talk show. “I hope they see that the crime doesn’t fit the punishment,” Weber added. Weber told the Austin Amer- ican-Statesman that he plans to at tend the Dec. 18 school board meet ing to urge trustees to change the dress code on behalf of the residents of Colorado. But school officials say all the at tention won’t make them change the rule. Zachariah, a third-grader, was sent home from school in late Sep tember for having a 7-inch ponytail. His parents asked the administration to change the rule, then appealed to the school board. Ray Long, board vice president, said the rule will not be changed in the middle of the school year be cause it would set a bad precedent. Last year, about 10 times as many parents made an even bigger siinl about the district’s use of corporal punishment, and that rule was not changed, Long said. “This is not a major issue,” Lonj said “It’s hair he can grow back.lii no big deal.” Bastrop school Superintendem Paul Fleming said he nas received about 30 letters, mostly fromout4 staters who support the Toungater stand. On Oct. 5, Zachariah was ordered to do his reading, writing and aritli metic at Mina Elementary School it a 12-by-15-foot windowless room- an arrangement called “an altema live education setting” by schooloffi cials. He eats by himself, plays by him self and, for $35 a day, the schoo! calls in substitute teachers. He tiar no physical education, mus choir classes. Friends try to offer help to hostages HOUSTON (AP) — About 40rel atives, friends and employers Americans held in Iraq met will State Department officials Mondu as they wrestled with decidini whether to go to Baghdad to hel[ free the hostages. “All of them were concerned about the current decision to visT Iraq,” said Bill Schaub, OGE Dril ling’s coordinator for Kuwait, alto the meeting ended. Iraqi President Saddam Hussei; on Tuesday released three Amen can hostages whose wives came i| visit them. “It’s a very difficult decision b anyone to make,” said Schaiil whose company has six employee being held in Iraq and Kuwait. “Women want to do anything the can to help their husbands, but« risky and the husbands don’t alwa' want them to come,” he said “They’re also worried that they ma play into the hands of the Iraqis!) going.” Most of the families of hostage refused to talk to reporters as the left the meeting. Linda Ray, who said she ha) friends being held hostage, said tin family members “voiced ourconcen about our loved ones.” Magaly Garcia said she would nf be going to Iraq. “Every wife wall her husband back, but for me, oK family member there is enough.’ But Donnita Cole, of Odessa,^ the Houston Chronicle she plans visit Iraq next week and was heat ened by the release of the Americat Tuesday. “Fantastic!” she said. “I mean,! the best news since the invention< peanut butter as far as I’m cot cerned.” Daryl Watley of Tomball, son hostage Donald Watley, said the it 1 cussions, which began Monday, sometimes heated as some fan)) members disagreed with the Bn administration’s actions in the P die East crisis. He said relatives attending i! session often “disagreed withthel theadedness of the Bush adminisin tion’s policies” and the rapid es® tion towards war. In the fifth of seven sessions wit families nationwide, State Depa r ment officials avoided discussir Bush’s policies and discourage family members from visiting In- Watley said. “They just said that after f leave Amman, Jordan, theycan’K 1 sure your safety,” said Lynda P* ker, who still plans to visit her hif band, hostage Bobbie Parker.