WE BUY USED CD’S FOR $4.00 or trade 2 for 1 We sell used CD’S $8.99 or less 268-0154 (At Northgate) VMA Information Systems ^IMPACT One-Call Information Hotline 774*1222 Time and Temperature 1555 Real Estate 8001 Sports 3000 Financial 6001 Horoscopes 4000 Entertainment 9001 Medical/Dental 2000 Simplicity! 1. Dial Number 2. Enter 4-digit Code 3. Become Informed! iti Yes!% We have student airfares! Costa Rica $139* London $339* Paris $380* Frankfurt $419* Moscow $459* Tokyo $470* ♦Above fares are each way from Houston based on roundtrip purchase. Restrictions apply. Taxes not included. One way fares slightly hi'sher. fflRA/£PASS£S o/( the? &pot/ Council Ttavd 2000 Guadalupe Austin, TX 78705 512-472-4931 For over 40 years we have been bringing students and organizations together. Registration Deadline is August 31, 1993. For more information call 845-1515 or come by the Student Programs Office and see Nancy Adams. Study/nbro>HiPrograms 161 Piz/dt / /,/// West 845-0544 g' n 6 ...yourself in Italy for a semester, basking in the center of a culture suffused with masterful works of art and architecture from all periods of recorded time...then imagine getting ABM. credit for this Spring adventure... ARTS 350 Art History LBAR331 Renaissance Italy For more info: 251 Bizzell Hall West Wed. July 14 10:30-11:45 Histo^ofChristianiiy Italy in American Literature ENGL 394 History of the Modern Song rofessional Computing 505 Church Street College Station, TX 77802 (409)846-5332 (One Block Behind Kinko’s Copy) Featuring a complete line of Hewlett-Packard Scientific and Business calculators HP 48GX Expandable Calculator HP 48G Programmable Calculator * 128-KB RAM standard in HP 48GX * 32-KB RAM standard in HP 48G * Combined I/O ports for data transfer to and from a PC *GX features Expansion Ports for plug-in Applications Pacs and RAM cards HP 19BII Business Consultant * Algebraic of RPN Logic * Graphics for Cash Flow and Statistical Analysis * Menus and Softkeys HP 17BII Financial Calculator * Choose between Algebraic or RPN Logic * Menus and Softkeys for easy access to solutions * Over 250 functions for real estate and finance Business Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:00-5:30 Sat. 10:00-3:00 HEWLETT PACKARD Page 6 The Battalion Tuesday, July 13,1993 Bangkop Japan suffers strongest quake in 15 years Summer heat sends tourists into the cold THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The summer swelter along the East Coast has sent people seek ing the shelter of cooler air, bring ing more cold cash to tourist busi ness^ on the beaches and in the mountains. “The heat does wonders for us,” said Cathie Baines, general manager of the Hampton House, a hotel on the beach in Hampton, N.H., where rooms have been booked solid for the past week. The heat has been especially welcome on Cape Cod, which saw business dampened by cool, miserable weather last summer. Business on the Cape normally dips after the Fourth of July. Not this year, said Michael Frucci, head of the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce. Frucci said business activity has held steady, indicat ing tourists have been sticking around to enjoy temperatures that typically are 10 degrees cooler than inland. Among them is Patrice Doher ty, who drove to Cape Cod from her home in Woodstock, Vt. “The weather was too unbear able,” she said Monday while strolling along West Dennis Beach. ”1 changed my work schedule to come down to the beach." In Bar Harbor, Maine, tourists from Utah, Georgia and other parts of the nation were checked in this weekend at the Bar Harbor Inn, where the mugginess was moderated by an ocean breeze. In Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains, resorts that normally thrive on snow basked in the sun as crowds mobbed their water THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TOKYO — A major earthquake struck northern Japan Monday, leveling a small hotel, setting hun dreds of houses ablaze and trig gering tidal waves that swept dozens of homes into the sea. At least nine people were reported killed and about 40 were missing. The quake matched the strongest to hit Japan in 15 years, measuring 7.8 on the Richter scale, the Central Meteorological Agency said. It was centered 30 miles under the Sea of Japan and about 50 miles west of Hokkaido, the na tion's third most populous island with 5.65 million people. Okushiri, a small island just 30 miles south of the epicenter, was devastated by the quake. Kyodo News Service said the island's two-story wooden Yoyoso Hotel collapsed, killing at least five people and leaving about 20 missing. The public tele vision network NHK reported that six or seven people were res cued from the burning hotel. About 300 houses were ablaze on another part of the island of 4,600 people. A number of houses! also were washed away by tidal waves, they said. Television footage showed fires burning and residents gathering anxiously in small groups. Water, water everywhere... Great flood of '93 leaves Des Moines residents with dwindling water supply THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DES MOINES, Iowa — They can't take showers. They can't wash clothes. They can't flush the toilet. And that's one of the biggest problems fac ing Ed and Mary Conlow after floods knocked out the city's water-treatment plant: potty training for 3-year-old Steve. “We could go back to diapers, but his train ing would go backwards," said Ed Conlow. The taps went dry in Des Moines and most of its suburbs when the swollen Raccoon River surged over the 15-foot-high earthen levees and sandbag dikes protecting the Des Moines Water Works about 3:30 a.m. Sunday, contami nating the water filters and pumps. It was the first time the water plant had flooded, and Des Moines was the first major city to suffer such a municipal catastrophe in the already record-breaking floods of 1993. As many as 250,000 people in Des Moines, 10 sur rounding towns and two rural water districts are without water or will be as soon as free standing backup tanks run dry. L.D. McMullen, water works general man ager, said the water should be running again by the end of the week, but he guessed it would be a month before pipes can be disin fected and the water is safe to drink. Conlow, a legislative researcher for the Iowa House of Representatives, played with Steve and 6-year-old Kate outside his Des Moines home on Monday because Steve's day care center was closed. It just couldn't operate without toilets, Conlow said. “I feel like we're in a Third World country," Conlow said. "We're surviving. That's it." The Conlows haven't bathed since Saturday morning, although by Monday several friends had extended invitations for them to make shower visits. They are brushing their teeth with bottled water, and Conlow is fast learn ing the best way to flush a toilet manually. Pour the water directly into the bowl, and the force of the water causes the toilet to flush. Health officials urged people to put buckets under downspouts to catch rainwater, which has been in more than ample supply lately. One hitch: it stopped raining Sunday morn ing and no rain was expected before late Mon day night. "We don't really have a choice, so I don't even ask the question, 'What are we going to do?'" Conlow said. "We both have jobs, so we'll keep going." Tenure Continued from Page 1 In a letter addressed to Perry, Hursey said, "I feel that I have not been inactive at research, and it appears that the tenure decision was based solely on re search publications." "Teaching plays little role in the process despite University state ments that teaching is emphasized and highly valued," he said. Stock recently criticized the policy, calling it "Neanderthal and androcentric." She also said that the Universi ty gives lip service to the value of teaching, but does not carry this out in its actions. On March 8, a resolution in the Faculty Senate found that "some evidence does support the claim that non-research accomplish ments of the faculty have not re ceived adequate consideration with respect to tenure decisions in some academic units." The Faculty Senate recom mended that the Provost ask each academic unit within the Univer sity to re-double its efforts. How ever, the resolution did not pass because it was not explicit enough in identifying the difference be tween research and non-research requirements. According to A&M's Policy and Procedures Manual, tenure allows faculty members to contin ue in their academic positions un less dismissed for a good cause. The tenure process begins when a faculty member submits their file. The file is reviewed by several committees and offices, ending with the Texas A&M Board of Re gents. An applicant is evaluated on their research, teaching and service. The applicant is advised of the recommendations at each level of review. Cattle Continued from Page 1 activities around the country to improve the efficiency of such work, Adams said. Texas A&M is in the forefront of research into the genetic identifica tion of brucellosis, tuberculosis, and salmonellosis, the major bacte rial diseases of cattle, Adams said. A&M is also conducting re search into beef carcass traits in cluding fat content and marbling. Womack said the federal gov ernment wiP grant $75,000 to $100,000 a year lor the five years of the program. "A&M stands a really good chance in terms of receiving such grants," Womack said. In addition to cattle, the USDA program has also established na tional centers to coordinate map ping of genomes in pigs, chickens and sheep, according to a press release from Texas A&M Univer sity Relations. cut here — — —’ — —j i DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS ! I July 19 & 20 (6-10 p.m. & 6-10 p.m.) | I August 3 & 4 (6-10 p.m. & 6-10 p.m.) | ! STATE APPROVED DRIVING SAFETY COURSE ■ I Register at University Plus (MSC Basement) | | Call 845-1631 for more information on these or other classes | 1 D&M EDUCATION ENTERPRISES 1 I ,cut here Ethics Continued from Page 1 The sub-committee recommended the creation of new policies de signed to increase the knowledge of faculty, staff and students in re gard to human research procedures. After reviewing the final report of the TRB and other material, the Office for Protection from Research Risks (OPRR), a branch of the De partment of Health and Human Services, found the University appro priately addressed the allegations under investigation. However, the OPRR went on to state that the University's response indicated that certain violations did occur that "cannot be considered minor" and at the very least suggested weaknesses in A&M's institu tional procedures for protecting human research subjects. Genevieve Stubbs, first assistant general counsel for Texas A&M, said Chiou fully cooperated with the investigation. She said no other allegations have been made against Chiou, and that in reality, the mat ter was a minor mistake that has been corrected. Trupin said when an issue like this arises, the most common re sponse is silence. "There is a cover-up response, and the response of those who speak out on ethical matters," he said. "Most don't want to lose their jobs and keep their mouths shut. People do wrong in all sorts of disci plines, but when an institution is corrupt, it's more significant that if it were just the individual." Vaughn Waters, council for Chiou, declined to comment because of a pending lawsuit involving his client. What's Up Tuesday TAMU ASSOC, of Professional Support Staff (TAPSS): Is hav ing a Certified Professional Sec retary Orientation in Rudder Tower, room 707B at 12 noon. For further information call Jan Spears at 845-5311. Cooperative Education: Is hav ing a Student Panel discussion for students interested in learn ing more about cooperative ed ucation. It is to be held at 7pm in the Student Services Building room 110. Wednesday Job Search Strategies Seminar: The Career Center is offering a seminar for students interested in learning how to get started with their job search. It is to be held at 2pm in Rudder 308. For more information call Carrie Schendel at 845-5139. What's Up is a Battalion ser vice that lists non-profit events and activities. Items for What's Up should be sub mitted no later than three days before the desired run date. Application deadlines and no tices are not events and will not run in What's Up. If you have questions, call the news room at 845-3313. 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