The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 06, 1992, Image 8

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    ATS GROUP
MATHEMATICS
ECON 202, 203
TUTORING
$6.95 per session.
SUN 3/8
MATH 151
7 - 9
ECON 202
9-11
MON 3/9
TUE 3/10
846-2879
MATH 142 MATH 151
5-7 5-7
MATH 151 MATH 142
7-9 7-9
MATH 152 ECON 202
MATH 161 9-11
9-11 MATH 251
ECON 203 MATH 253
11-1 11-1
Northgate, Behind 7/11, 2 Pesos
next to BURGER BOY
WED 3/11
THU 3/12
MSC Town Hall presents
Texas A&M’s own
/LYLE\
LOVETT
MONDAY, MARCH 30
Rudder Auditorium
Tickets go on sale Saturday, March 7
Rudder Box Office 9a.m. - 12 p.m. and
Foley's at Post Oak Mall or call 1- 800-275-1000
reserved seating
Jerry Brown *Bill Clinton *Tom Harkin *Paul Tsongas*
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• Candidate Info.
(Presidential
Candidate
Platforms)
• Register to Vote
• Campaign
Literature
• Other election
Info.
• Vote Tuesday
(March 10) and
attend the
Democratic
Party Precinct
Caucus:
7:15 p.m. at
your polling
place
MONDAY
(March 9)
Come
see
the
living
and
breathing
four
legged
symbol
of
the
Democratic
Party
Next
MONDAY
7:30 am
till
5:30 pm
AGGIE DEMOCRATS
Behind the Academic building (near the RCC) a poll will be
conducted to determine who Texas A&M students want as the
next (NEW) president of the United States.
Stop by the Aggie Democrat table at the MSC through Tuesday.
Next Meeting: March 25 at 7 pm in 504 Rudder-
Questions: Ivonne Vasquez 847-2286
or Patrick Gendon 847-6492
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♦Jerry Brown *Bill Clinton *Tom Harkin *Paul Tsongas*
(f GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER STUDY ^
Individuals are being recruited for a research study on
Generalized Anxiety Disorder. If you experience anxiety
or would like to find out more about this study, call VIP
Research. $200.00 will be paid to qualified volunteers
who enroll and complete this study.
CALL
VOLUNTEERS IN PHARMACEUTICAL
RESEARCH, INC.®
776-1417
/?
ULCERATIVE COLITIS
VIP Research is seeking individuals with ulcerative colitis. If
you've been diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and you're 12
years of age or older, you may qualify for a five month study of
a currently available medication. $200.00 will be paid to those
who complete this study.
CALL
VOLUNTEERS IN PHARMACEUTICAL
RESEARCH, INC.®
776-1417
ACNE STUDY
VIP Research is seeking individuals, 12 years and older,
with mild-to-moderate acne for a 12-week research study
of an anti-acne medication. $100.00 will be paid to those
who complete this study.
CALL
VOLUNTEERS IN PHARMACEUTICAL
RESEARCH, INC.®
776-1417 J
/f
GENITAL HERPES INFECTION
Individuals with genital herpes infection are being recruited for a
research study of an investigational antiviral medication. If you
would like to find out more about this study, call VIP Research.
A monetary incentive will be paid to qualified volunteers who
enroll and complete this study.
CALL
VOLUNTEERS IN PHARMACEUTICAL
RESEARCH, INC.®
776-1417
J
Page 8
The Battalion
Friday, March 6,1992
What's Up
FRIDAY
TAMU BAHA’I CLUB: Informal discussion on the
Baha'i Faith. 8 p.m. in 102 Zachry. Call 693-6789 for
more information.
MUSLIM STUDENTS ASSOCIATION (MSA): Friday
prayer. 12:50 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 226 MSC. Call
Agus Rohmat Widodo at 846-2888 for more
information.
HOSANNA! STUDENTS: Don Pope guest
professional saxophonist in concert. Noon to 1 p.m.
in the MSC Flagroom.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: General
meeting topic: “Sex and Relationships." 7 p.m. in
108 Harrington. Call Travis Keep at 847-4060 for
more information.
JOURNAL: Planning meeting for Saturday’s garage
sale. Items for sale will be priced. 6 p.m. at 201
Grove St. (Sara and Greg’s place). Call Greg or Sara
at 696-3637 for more information.
AGGIE ORIENTATION LEADER PROGRAM: Be an
O.L.! Orientation Leader applications are available at
106 YMCA, Student Activities, Off Campus Center
and the Department of Multicultural Services.
Applications are due by March 27. Call 845-5826 for
more information.
COLOMBIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: General
meeting. 7 p.m. in 200 Kleberg. Call Jaime Palau at
693-1423 for more information.
RIO GRANDE VALLEY A&M HOMETOWN CLUB:
Meet at about 10 p.m. at Grahams. Bring your
friends! Call 693-3724 for more information.
AMERICAN MARKETING ASSOCIATION (AMA):
Hoop it Up 3-on-3 Basketball Tournament. Cost is
$32 per team. Includes t-shirt. Sign up in Blocker
Lobby. 8 a.m. at the Grove. Call Adriana Patino at
693-5126 for more information.
SUNDAY
TEXAS A&M BICYCLE CLUB: The 20-mile East
Bypass Tour. 1 p.m. at the fountain between the
MSC and Rudder. Call Travis Keep at 847-4060 (or
more information.
TEXAS A&M SPORTS CAR CLUB: Autocross 3.
Registration from 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Come and run
the fast course with us! It will be a semi-road course.
Fast and Fun! 9 a.m. at the Riverside Annex. Call
Casey or Terry at 776-6045 for more information.
Vol. 9
KOREAN AGGIES ASSOCIATION: Meredith needs
help for the picnic on Saturday. Whoever wants to
help call Bo Chang at 847-3202 for more information.
HILLEL STUDENT ORGANIZATION: Shabbat
services. 8 p.m. at the Hillel Student Center.
UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRIES: Weekly Bible
study. 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the A&M Presbyterian
Church behind the Chicken. Call Brian Coats at 693-
6874 for more information.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS’ SUPPORT GROUP:
Meet every Friday from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. on the 3rd
floor group room of the YMCA Building. Facilitated by
Dr. Birch and Dr. Kuan. Everyone is welcome. Call
845-4427 or come to the Student Counseling Service
on the 3rd floor of the YMCA Building for more
information.
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION: Bible study. 12:30
p.m. to 1:30 p.m. at 203 College Main. Call 846-7722
for more information.
TAMU ROADRUNNERS: General meeting. 7 p.m.
in 292A Rudder. Call Ron Heath at 693-8071 for
more information.
BLACK GRADUATE STUDENT ASSOCIATION
(BGSA): General meeting. Old and prospective
members welcome. 7 p.m. in 502 Rudder. Call Kevin
Williams at 693-4625 for more information.
THE TOUCHSTONE: FREE PROGRESSIVE/LEFT
EUROPE CLUB: Europe Club party. 10 p.m. at the
Plantation Oaks Apts, party room. Call Antoine at
764-9799 or David at 696-1362 for more information.
SATURDAY
BAHA’I CLUB: Layli Bashir speaks on non-violence.
8 p.m. to 10 p.m. in 102 Zachry. 3:30 p.m. to 4:30
p.m. at Rumours. Call Leslie at 846-6634 for more
information.
TEXAS A&M BICYCLE CLUB: The 32-mile Tunis
Tour. 9 a.m. at the fountain between the MSC and
Rudder Tower. Call Travis Keep at 847-4060 for
more information.
KOREAN AGGIES ASSOCIATION: Picnic and
softball tournament. 4 p.m. at Hensel Park. Call Bo
Chang at 847-3202 for more information.
PRE-MED/PRE-DENTAL SOCIETY: Presents Dr.
Denton Cooley - pioneer of open-heart surgery.
Seating starts at 11 a.m. Limited seating, so please
come early. 11:30 a.m. in 201 Vet Medicine Building.
Call Brent Patterson at 696-2829 for more
information.
BILL THOMASON MEMORIAL COMMITTEE: Fifth
Annual Bill Thomason 5-K Memorial Run/Walk.
Benefits the American Cancer Society. Entry form $7
- pre-registration - $5 for all students. Starts and
finishes at Aerofit Club and Activity Center. 9:30 a.m.
at Aerofit. Call Chris at 846-8868 or Bill at 846-5391
for more information.
OPAS JR. PRESENTS THE MAKE BELIEVE
BRASS: Show for children and the family. Brass
quintet which has been playing at Disneyland for the
past seven years. 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. in Rudder
Theater. Call 845-1234 for more information.
LUTHERAN STUDENT FELLOWSHIP: Supper 6
p.m. at the Lutheran Student Center. Call Martin at
847-1835 for more information.
S.O.T.A. (STUDENTS OVER TRADITIONAL AGE):
Get together for pool. 4 p.m. at Yesterday's. Call
Tommy Armstrong at 764-1987 for more information.
ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION/BRAZOS VALLEY
FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: A presentation of the
stages of Alzheimers, followed by a time of small
group discussion. 3 p.m. in 160 TAMU Medical
Science Building - West Campus, across University
Drive from the vet school. Call Jane Donaldson at
776-2277 or Pat Stirling at 693-1680 for more
information.
Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The
Battalion, 013 Reed McDonald, no later than three
business days before the desired run date. We only
publish the name and phone number of the contact if
you ask us. What’s Up/'s a Battalion service that lists
non-profit events and activities. Submissions are wn
on a first-come, first-serve basis. There is no
guarantee an entry will run. If you have questions,
call the newsroom at 845-3313.
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Group monitors classes for bias
Continued from Page 1
ing as we go," he said. "We are
still working on a set definition."
The group selects which pro
fessors will be monitored based
on the personal experiences of stu
dents in the organization. Keetch
said many members of the chapter
have taken classes they feel were
taught with enough political bias
to interfere with learning.
"Political bias is a real threat to
education," Keetch said. "Educa
tion should be a search for truth,
not a search for political bias."
The results of the monitoring
process will be compiled, pub
lished and made available to stu
dents in time to be used during
Irop pc
i said l
Keetch said he feels any oppo
sition that might come up from
students or professors would be
unnecessary.
"1 think this (monitoring) is
one of the most unradical things I
could ever think of," Keetch said.
"All that we are doing is looking
for honesty in the curriculum."
Job prospects
in B-CS area
brighten
Continued from Page 1
manufacturing, wholesale/retai
trade and services. A decrease!
staff, however, is expected inedc
Party
woulc
drawa
Ne
meam
cuses!
Ref
winles
the w;
"Tl
deleg;
Ho
beyor
mistu
cation, according to the survey. inMi
Kerrey intends to support Clinton in race
Continued from Page 1
Kerrey said, “and I did not begin
to do that until very late in the
campaign."
Kerrey won a big victory Feb.
25 in South Dakota, but never
translated his assets into
widespread appeal outside his
own region. He consistently fin
ished at or near the bottom of the
pack.
Kerrey, whose campaign is
about $1 million in debt, said
money problems contributed to
his decision. "We ran out of gas,"
he said.
There are four Democrats still
in the field — Arkansas Gov. Bill
Clinton, former Massachusetts
Sen. Paul Tsongas, Iowa Sen. Tom
Harkin and former California
Gov. Jerry Brown.
On the campaign trail, Kerrey
insisted that Clinton was un
electable because of questions
about the Arkansas governor's use
of a draft deferment to avoid serv
ing in Vietnam. But Thursday Ker
rey called his attacks "political hy
perbole" and said he would cam
paign "feverishly" for Clinton if
he is the nominee.
"The only unelectable politi
cian running for president of the
United States is George Bush,"
Kerrey said.
For weeks in New Hampshire,
site of the critical first primary,
Tsongas was perceived as a re
gional candidate and Clinton was
beset by allegations about his per
sonal life. But Kerrey was unable
to attract voters searching for an
alternative.
The first-term senator was an
uneven campaigner who alter
nately impressed and bored audi
ences. He seemed to move weekly
from one theme to another —
trade, health, shaking up govern
ment, patriotism, electability. He
was blunt about his prospects and
his plans, to the point of saying he
would raise taxes to pay for
health-care reforms and infras
tructure investment.
Janice RaVr president
owner of the Bryan-College
tion franchise of Manpower
credits the geographical locatio
of Bryan-College Station, tl
George Bush Presidential Libra
and the stability of Texas A&M
reasons for the current econor
development.
"Here in the Bryan-Collej
Station area, employmen
prospects are somewhat belt;
than those of three months ago’
Ray said. "Twenty-seven perc;
intended to recruit new
but 17 percent reported planne
cutbacks."
On a national scope, the studj
reveals an increase of job opport
nities in the fields of construction]
manufacturing and services wil
prospects best in the Midwestar
Soutl
five 7
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irday
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Associate dean defends research on animals
Continued from Page 1
cultures, and tissue cultures are
just a few of the alternatives.
"We feel that animals do not
have the same physical systems as
humans and technology should
take the place of animals," Oester-
ling said.
Smith said although alterna
tives to animal testing have been
proposed, these suggestions can
not offer sufficient answers to
problems faced by the medical
community.
"Medical researchers use com
puter models or tissue cultures
whenever they provide the appro
priate results," he said.
"Unfortunately, the cases
where those can be used are very,
very limited."
The main assumption held by
animal rights advocates is that an
imals have the same rights as hu
mans.
Oesterling suggests that re
searchers and scientists need to
concentrate on preventing disease
through dietary regulation in hu
mans rather than finding cures for
these diseases by using animals.
"Animals are experiencing
pain in drawn-out experiments
and many animals are used over
and over in different experi
ments," Oesterling said. "Re
searchers can do anything in the
lab and get away with it if it's so-
called research."
Ninety percent of the animals
used at the A&M College of
Medicine - and in most research
laboratories - are rats and mice,
while the remaining ten percent
consists of various animals from
monkeys, dogs, cats, bats and sev
eral others.
"We use animals as models of
human conditions," Smith said.
"Which particular type of animal
used often depends on what par
ticular study we're doing."
Using animals to model hu
man conditions is essential to sci
entists because each particular an
imal may have organs that are
similar or comparable to the par
ticular human organ being stud
ied.
"The ultimate defense of using
animals is that there is no substi
tute," Smith said.
"Every medical advance has
been made by animal experimen
tation."
The A&M College of Medicine,
as well as the entire research com
munity, views animal testing as a
serious responsibility and makes
every effort to ensure in the hu
mane and ethical treatment of ani
mals.
The National Institutes of
Health (NIH) sets the standards
for regulating research facilities.
Failure by a medical research facil
ity to comply with regulations can
result in loss of state grants and
funds for that institution.
Animal rights advocates have
recently been put in the limelight
as a result of violent demonstra
tions against research facilities.
intif
of M
In spite of drastic actions tab
by animal rights groups, a recei
poll performed in Texas by tl
Public Policy Resources Laboralj
ry at Texas A&M University i
cated that 80 percent of the li
residents surveyed approve
mane use of animals in medical
search.
In addition, more than 83
cent feel that animal testing has
suited in many important medic
breakthroughs.
A publication by the Texas
ciety for Biomedical Resean
(TSBR) indicated that without ai
mal research, polio would
killing thousands of people eai
year, and diabetics would be m
controlled.
The publication goes on
state that transplant surged
would not be possible, many
the vaccines would not be avail
able, and many other significa
medical breakthroughs would’
non-existent without animal f 1
search.
Tex
illion
icials a
[the "Q
and the
The
A&M's
campai;
[en by ai
to reach
Cineplex Odeon Theatres
$2.95 BARGAIN MATINEES DAILY ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 P.M.
CINEMA THREE
POST OAK THREE £>
315 College Ave. 693-2796
Invisible Man
Mon-Fri 7:15 & 9:45 (PG-13)
Sat & Sun 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, & 9:45
Stop or my Mom will shoot
Mon-Fri 7:10 & 9:40 (PG-13)
Sat & Sun 2:10, 4:40, 7:10 & 9:40
Fried Green Tomatoes
Mon-Fri 9:30 (PG-13)
Sat & Sun 2:00. 4:30. 7:00 & 9:30
1500 Harvey Rd, 693-2796
Lawn mower Man
Mon-Fri 7:00 & 9:30 (R)
Sat & Sun 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, & 9:30
Once Upon a Crime
Mon-Fri 7:10 & 9:40 (PG)
Sat & Sun 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40
Father of the Bride
Mon-Fri 9:45 (PG)
Sat & Sun 4:45,9:45
%gdw < J r Cyer
Mon-Fri 7:15 (PG)
Sat & Sun 2:15,7:15
TEXAS A&M
BASEBALL & SOFTBALL
SEE YOU AT THE GAME
Baseball
Mar 6
Next Games
vs. Baylor
7:00
Baseball
Mar 7
vs.
Baylor (2)
2:00
Softball
Mar 6
vs.
Aggie Toum.
All Day
Softball
Mar 7
vs.
Aggie Toum.
All Day
Softball
Mar 8
vs.
Aggie Toum.
All Day
AGGIE BASEBALL ON KTAM...1240 AM
TEL
mer Pr
IBegin, t
|er who
but lec
Lebano
78.
Begi
Hospit;
rator in
lowing
Doctor
Thursd,
turnfoi
The
Michae
a.m. (7:
gin's tv
at his b
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news ir
dio 11/
would 1
cide fur
Begii
state.
A P<
were ki
to politi
as a ten
dergror.