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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 4, 1991)
Page 6 The Battalion Wednesday, September 4, 1991 ^ MSC Barber Salon Serving All Aggies! Corps Cuts Regular Cuts Layer Cuts $5.50 $6.00 $9.00 Six operators to serve you Theresa - Jackie - Romona - Kellie - Troy - Hector 846-0629 Open Mon-Fri 8-5 Room 028, in the basement of the Memorial Student Center WiRRD WOW-'X HAD HD WEA -THIS CEREAL WAS SO HEA&H1 AM> N01KmoH/\L. LOOK AT THIS, FAUL. MAXIMUM FI BEX, IS" ESSEHVAL VlTAHltfS AHP MIA/E-RAI-S, RICH IH WHEAT, OAT AND FINE BRAN... i IKOAV. NO SALT, FAT FREE., LOW ^OplDM... by Scott McCullar ©1991 7 'll THAT!? THE NOTKlTIONAL IH6KEVIEMTS OF THE BOX. THE- CEREAL 15 RAW 5UGAR. Baker from Page 1 Spade Phillips, P.l. by Matt Kowalski SEX. SACRILEGE. SCATOLOGY... AN EXHILARATING EXPERIENCE!” HiniAKH SI 'HWXWjTIMH MAGAZINE Thursday, Sept. 5 in Rudder Theater at 7 & 9:30. $2 w/I.D. Freshmen with paid 1 fee slip. X fluv tAS LOYAL FRftTXfiNITY EPorneFS flK£ LOOKED O? To AMD APE KeSPBcTED LEADERS oF F7?SH/OH,MOS(0, AMD THE LATEST KAKKET-OKiEHTEP EAdDMOosJ. OH* Doth OCR tMPiViDwAi.rTV shihe! * STUDENTS OF ALL MAJORS * SPEND SPRING 1992 IN ITALY EARN TAMU CREDIT IN: JOUR 401: Mass Media & Tech. Change (cr. 3) JOUR 406: International Communications (cr. 3) HIST 101: Western Civilization (cr. 3) LBAR 331: Renaissance Europe (cr. 3) ARTS 350: Art History (cr. 3) Study Abroad Office, 161 Bizzell Hall West, 845-0544 PROGRAM FACULTY: Prof. Susanna Hornig, 845-5372 Prof. Daniel Bornstein, 845-7164 Tubularman being msTAKerJ f<rf_ -me pnFiJ, To6uu*ier>iAN) is Rescueo 8V ms Tiwe-'TRAvEU/AJCi Suddtes,fevlc mp ted. by Boomer Cardinale the republics would gain pow er and the Kremlin would lose some authority. On Monday, Bush announced he would contin ue shipments of emergency medi cal supplies through the end of next year and would send experts to assess whether emergency food shipments may be needed. The prospects for U.S. aid are apt to be high on Baker's agenda. Bush also gave full diplomatic recognition to Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Deputy Assistant Sec retary of State Curtis W. Kamman arrived Tuesday in Estonia for consultations and will travel to Lithuania and Latvia later in the week. A State Department spokesman, Richard Boucher, said "we wholeheartedly endorse and support" the three new Baltic countries' application for member ship io the United Nations. "We look forward to early and favorable action by both the Secu rity Council and the General As sembly and hope that the three delegations will take their rightful place" in the United Nations when the General Assembly meets later in the month. The officials said Baker would likely go to the Middle East to try to make preparations for a peace conference designed to resolve the Arab-Israeli dispute. Israel, Jordan and Syria all have given their tentative ap proval to a U.S. formula for nego tiations. Palestinian Arabs have delayed a reply to the initiative amid uncertainty about who would represent them. Yugoslavia Continued from Page 1 rington, one of Britain's most widely respected statesmen, as its chief mediator. Dozens of 200 cease-fire ob servers were leaving Tuesday for Croatia. The European Community agreed to convene an international peace conference on Yugoslavia on Saturday. It named former NATO Secretary-General Lord Carrington its chief mediator. Carrington, one of Britain's most widely respected statesmen, negotiated the 1979 Lancaster Ac cords that led to an end of the white minority Rhodesian govern ment in what is now Zimbabwe. "It is now imperative ... that the momentum of our efforts for a cease-fire be maintained," Ger man Foreign Minister Hans-Diet- rich Genscher said in announcing the decision of the 12 EC foreign ministers meeting in the Nether lands. Dozens of the 200 cease-fire observers who are to monitor the latest EC peace plan were leaving Tuesday for Croatia. The head of Open a 12th Man Checking Account at First American Bank. First American Bank’s 12th Man Checking Account is an Aggie tradi tion, created especially for students like you. The account has no mini mum balance re quirement and no monthly ser vice charge. An initial $12 set-up fee and $100 opening deposit pro vide you with 200 Aggie checks and an MPACT® Auto matic Teller, card. Your first 12 checks per month are FREE! Get $5 off an Aggie t-shirt from Loupot’s Book Store. There is a $1 fee per MPACT trans action and a $1 fee for each check written after the first 12 free checks per month. A $12 an nual fee is charged beginning with the second year the ac count is open. The 12th Man Checking Account gives you a great handle on your money, at a cost you can live with. Keep your money in the only bank located just across the street from the cam pus: First American Bank. Open a 12th Man Checking Account and we’ll give you a certificate worth $5 towards the purchase of a Texas A&M t-shirt of your choice at Loupot’s Book Store (pronounced Loo - poes), another Texas Aggie tradition. The 12th Man Checking Account: only from First American Bank. Yugoslavia's collective federal presidency. Stipe Mesic, went on television late Tuesday to appeal for peace and call on all groups to cease hostilities. "The country is facing great trials and very grave risks," said Mesic, a Croat. He said the presidency was asking the federal army to imme diately appoint officers to oversee the cease-fire jointly with Croatian officials and representatives of Serb insurgents. In Zagreb, the Croatian gov- EMS ernment said it was instructing its Defense Ministry to implement a cease-fire, ban the movement of its troops without prior notification and demobilize reserve units. In the latest battle report, a Yu goslav army general said four sol diers had been killed since the cease-fire was accepted early Monday. Lt. Gen. Marko Negov- anovic, assistant defense minister, said several civilians also died. There were conflicting and un confirmed reports of other casual ties. Continued from page 2 for their lack of experience, and it works out pretty good." Wait says the campus emer gency medical team was orga nized 10 years ago because of the high response time of the county ambulance service to on-campus situations. "In 1980, the county was di viding its emergency service into an organization for each city," Wait says. "The students on the emergency care team at that time talked to the health center and through some donations were able to purchase an ambulance." Wait says by 1982, the EMS began providing on-campus ser vice 24 hours-a-day, seven days-a- week. The all-volunteer staff of 30 students operates two fully- equipped ambulances and are usually present at campus events where large crowds are expected. Brian Haschke, a senior biomedical science major, has been involved with A&M's EMS for more than two years, and was certified as an EMT-paramedic two months ago after completing the required training classes at Scott and White Hospital in Tem ple. "Right now I'm serving as the team's captain of apparatus," Haschke says. "That means that I'm in charge of all of the equip ment and handle the administra tive side of ordering supplies and equipment maintenance. "I like this because I really feel like I'm doing something impor tant, and I also like the interaction with the people we help." In addition to answering an average of four to five calls a day, the EMS is also on standby at the Firemen's Training School, rodeos, and campus events such as con certs and graduation. Wait says the fall semester is usually a busy time for them because of events like bonfire, football games and yell practices. "During football season we see a lot of alcohol-related injuries or alcohol overdose," Wait says. "A lot of times students will drink a lot at yell practice and then go to the game the next day while still partially dehydrated and get sick. "We haven't had any deaths from that (alcohol overdose) on campus, but there have been some that were pretty close. If someone hadn't found them and called us, then I don't think they would be here today." There is no charge for students who use the A&M emergency medical service, nor will faculty and staff be charged a fee, if they are under a workman's compensa tion plan. If the victim is suffering from an injury or illness that the A. P. See EMS/Page 8 FIRST UNIVERSITY CENTER 711 University Drive College Station, TX 409/846-8751 MAIN OFFICE 1111 Briarcrest Drive Bryan, TX 409/268-7575 BAFIK CONVENIENCE CENTER 1660 Briarcrest Drive Bryan, TX DOWNTOWN BRYAN 27th St. at Texas Avenue Bryan. TX SOUTH COLLEGE STATION Longmire Center 2202 Longmire Drive College Station, TX 409/764-1370 LEADERSHIP OPPORTUNITIES EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Applications available September 2 in room 211 of the Pavilion, and are due by Sept.11. Assistant Directors require no previous T-Camp experience. For further information contact the Student 'Y 1 office at 845-0690.