R.E.M., Garth Brooks, Indigo Girls, Jesus Jones, David Garza, Poi Dog Pondering, George Strait, Digital Underground, Violent Femmes... MSC CLIIS»CQICEMS»COFfEEIOllSE MSC Town Hall accepting new Applications for all are available in Programs the M is now members, students the Student room 216 in Applications are due by 5:00pm Friday, September 12th = Registration for classes will begin on Monday September Tth at i 2 noon SllSIlii' V the MSC Graft 1 Center, located in the MSC Basement. Dance Classes Registration Begins Sept 7th - 12 noon MSC University PLUS - MSC Basement Jitterbug Mon. Oct 12 - Nov 9 Beg. Country & Western Dance Wed. Sept 16 - Oct 14 6-7:15pm $20/student $25/nonstudent 6-7pm $20/student $2 5/nonstudent Mon. Oct 12 7:15-8:15pm $20/student Nov 9 $25/nonstudent Wed. Sept 16 - Oct 14 7:30-8:45pm $20/student $25/nonstudent Wed. Oct 28 - Nov 18 7:45-9pm $20/student $2 5/nonstudent Adv. Country & Western Dance Wed. Oct 28 - Nov 18 6-7:30pm $20/student $25/nonstudent Ballroom Dance I Tues. Sept 22, 29, Oct 6, 20, 27 7:15-8:30pm $18/student $23/nonstudent J MSC Basement Level CallSS845*163t A S PRINCIPLES of SOUND RETIREMENT INVESTING TIAA-CREFs Five Easy Steps To Building Your Retirement 1 Look for ratings. Check out how an insurance company has been rated by the three leading ratings analysts: A.M. Best Company, Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Inves tors Service. TIAA has earned the highest ratings: A++(Superior) from A.M Best, AAA from Standard & Poor’s and Aaa from Moody’s. 4 Look for reputation and resources. TIAA-CREF has been serving the education and research communities for over 70 years. We can help you with all your retirement needs, and you get a full range of products along with a variety of services that are absolutely free. 2 Look for rates. TIAA offers a guaranteed minimum rate of 3%, plus dividends (which are declared annually). 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He was born into poverty and took with him little: a pacifier and a hairbrush, placed alongside him in a tiny casket, 10 inches wide and 24 inches long. They were the first gifts he received in his short life. "Andrew! Andrew! Andrew!" his mother, Natalia, cried hysteri cally as she bent over his grave, running her hand across the cas ket, the last connection to her son. In Spanish, she screamed: "Why, God, why? You gave me this child only a few days. Why did you take him?" Natalia and Andrew's father, Felipe, each placed a chrysanthe mum on the casket. And then Andrew was buried, in a cemetery surrounded by Hurricane Andrew's fury: piles of tree limbs, dirt, the debris of houses. Some of the trees in the cemetery itself were toppled. Both Andrews had lived short lives that touched all around them. Babv Andrew was 9 days old when ne died. He slipped away, not in a home surrounded by toys and pets, but in the coldness and loneliness of a Red Cross shelter, in a donated crib that suffocated him. He was the 39th death and, so far, the last death in Florida blamed on Hurricane Andrew. The hurricane had hastened his birth, and then betrayed him. Buried with him was a piece of the American dream of his par ents, who came to the United States 12 years ago from Cuba aboard the "Freedom Flotilla" boatlift. "I lost part of my life," said his father, a 48-year-ofd unemployed handyman. "It's a hard strike for us. We have lost all our happi ness and strength. I am emotion ally destroyed.^ He was the one who picked up the child from his crib, felt the coldness of his body and stared into a face that had turned blue. "I can't overcome that memo ry," he said. The funeral drew scant atten- dozen relatives a: tion, a friends. But to his father and mol and six brothers, babv Andii was an omen of good fortune.! enriched their lives at a when they had lost everyi they had to Hurricane Andrew Even in the finality oftk son's death, they did noth any money to pay for his fim or cemetery plot. The funti home donated both. Four days after the burnt: destroyed their apartment but ing and car in Florida City,i talia was rushed from these: Miami shelter to the hospital! the birth of their sevenths: Everyone in the shelter wasra ing for her. Felipe was pacing floor. He telephoned the hospital word about the birth, butsjjoi only Spanish and the nuts couldn't understand him.Jenna Reedy, a Red Cross volunteer, gan calling every hour from mi night on. At 5:07 a.m. on Aug. the Guanches' son was bom. His mother had picked out name Rodolfo for him, after brother. Yeltsin to settle island disputi THE ASSOCIATED PRESS mm MOSCOW — President Boris Yeltsin called off a trip to Japan Wednesday in the face of growing pres sure at home and abroad to resolve a dispute over islands claimed by Japan but occupied by the Soviet Union since 1945. Many Russians had expressed fear that Yeltsin would surrender two of the four Kuril Islands dur ing his three-day trip in exchange for major economic assistance from Japan. Japan has insisted that the dis pute over the Kurils — known in Tokyo as the Northern Territories — be settled before it would con- ^ vC.. A : Yeltsin tribute large-scale aid to Russia. The dispute has been the major stumbling block in their relations and prevented the Soviet Union and japan from signing a treaty formally ending World War II. Yeltsin's press office blamed "a number of cir cumstances" for the indefinite postponement of the visit, which had been scheduled to begin Sunday. It did not elaborate but said Russia's foreign minister would continue talks with Japan. "The president's decision does not affect good neighborly relations with both these states,’ statement said. the In Tokyo, Japanese officials expressed regie: Yeltsin's announcement. But Foreign MinisterMic Watanabe said: "We are taking this calmly." A government statement attributed Yeltsin'sili sion to "various internal reasons." Yeltsin spoke by telephone with JapanesePn Minister Kiichi Miyazawa for 35 minutes on Wedi day. He also called the president of SouthKoii which had been on his itinerary. The Interfax!)! agency said Yeltsin now planned to go to Seoul December, combining that visit with a scheduledl to China. The Kurils consist of 18 main islands inan curving from Russia's Kamchatka Peninsuli Japan, separating the Sea of Okhotsk from the Pat Ocean. Japan claims the southernmost four: ’ Kunashir, Shikotan and a cluster of small islands lectively called Habomai. They have a total are 1,929 square miles, about the size of Delaware. Russian naval officers say the Ekaterina Straits tween the islands provide the only yeai-TOYffA sage for their nuclear submarines. And local offic say the waters produce up to $1 billion worthed a year. Nationalists and conservatives fear that giving the islands would set an undesirable precedent China, the Baltic states and other nations with ten! rial claims against Russia. Russian hard-liners threatened to seek Yeltsin’s impeachment^ turned over the Kurils. U.N. begins discussions on attad THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegov- ina — The commander of U.N. troops in Sarajevo accused Bosn ian forces Wednesday of attack ing a U.N. convoy and said it was part of a plan to discredit the United Nations. In New York, the Security Council scheduled a closed-door meeting for Wednesday evening at France's request to discuss Tuesday's attack, which killed two French soldiers and wound ed five. In Paris, French Foreign Minis ter Roland Dumas called the as sault "a veritable act of war against members of a humanitari an operation." "The light was clear enough to see the U.N. insignia," U.N. Brig. Gen. Hussein Aly Abdulrazek said. "These irresponsible ele ments . . . have a deliberate plan to jeopardize our presence in Sarajevo." Sefer Halilovic, commander of the Bosnian forces, told The As sociated Press the government was studying the attack with U.N. officials. In Geneva, U.N. officials said an airlift to the besieged capital befo: undi wef was unlikely to resume next week. The airport has been heavy attack for the pastthn days, and it was closed last after an Italian aid plane crash! on approach. Investigators suspect missili downed the plane. In Zagreb, Croatia, Lord Ow and former Secretary ofStal Cyrus Vance, co-chairmen of international peace conferenced former Yugoslavia, arrived! talks with U.N., Red Cross Croatian officials. They werel visit Sarajevo and Belgrade lati this week. —MSC CEpInEid VARiAblE Presents — ^rn nr “THIS IS AMAZING FILMMAKING!” Joel Siegel. GOOD MORNING AMERICA. ABC TV THE ABYSS SepTEMbER 11, 1992 7: 50 p.M. AINcl 9:45 p.M. RuddER TIheater FresIhmein qEi In Free wirb PAid Fee Slip (present at RuddER Box OfficE) All OtIhers $2.00 V] The Rostoc is a m Augus- asylun Roman up to 7 Neo small c over-c drew tl reporte by two protec closing lice pi them 0 foe-bor ceptam assailai At th now sj many, dreds ; caust n this is lence a there \ 270 ini It that thi a hard- h Ky about t Sunday i ^gin w] Miain." Shakes % die t ne V d ton d J^Danje ^liam ] andMap k C e °t fo he J Sc b y ^ they Marych; fatten t ?>j e! 0u ud on i. ft the c !l $tened £ al ized i ea n had