Student Travel 1-800-777-0112 —S7i Theworld’s largest student &youtH travel organization ST A TRAVEL FINAL SKI CLEARANCE SALE 30% TO 60% OFF ALL SKI PARKAS, BIBS, POWER JACKETS AND PANTS. SKI CAPS, GOGGLES, GLOVEJ, EAR MUFFS. NECK WARMERS, TURTLENECKS. THER-MAX SOCK AND GLOVE LINERS, GATORS. tri-state SPORTING GOODS 3600 Old College Rd. m Bryan, TX 77801 E HURRY FOR BEST SELECTION (all sales final - no lay-aways) Sale ends 03-12-94 Open 9-6 Mon -Sat. 846-1947 Across from Chicken Oil Co. €i Floppy Joe’s Sof-f-WOLKe S f o r- ^ We have New & Used Software! Ef ef FREE one year membership . with this coupon expires: 03-31-94 Got a CD Rom Drive? We RENT IBM and MAC CD's!! 1705 Texas Ave., Culpepper Plaza ★ ELECT MOORE FOR JUSTICE 14TH COURT OF APPEALS PLACE 1 "It would be hard not to support Bob Moore. He is enthusiastic about life and the law and is deeply committed to doing what he sees as right, even if that may not be popular. The Eagle recommends a vote for Bob Moore for Place 1 on the Fourteenth Court of Appeals in the Democraticprimary. ” - The Bryan-College Station Eagle February 25, 1994 Please Vote Bob Moore for 14th Court of Appeals Place 1 I’d. Pol. Adv. Bob Moore for Justice Campaign, Linda Lee Moore, Treasurer, 7511 Broadway, Galveston, TX 77554. The Texas A&M University Student Publications Board is accepting applications for Editor 1995 AGGIELAND The editor of the 1995 Aggieland yearbook will serve from August 1994 through August 1995. Qualifications for the position are: Be a Texas A&M student with a minimum 2.0 overall and major OPR at the time of appointment and during the term of offiee. Have at least one year experience in a responsible position on the Aggieland or comparable college yearbook. Have demonstrated ability In writing through university coursework or equivalent experience. Have completed or be registered In JOUR 210 (Graphics) or equivalent. Application forms should be picked up and returned to the Student Publications Manager’s office, room 230 Reed McDonald Building. Deadline for submitting application: 5 p.m. Monday, March 21, 1994. Applicants will be interviewed during the Student Publications Board Meeting beginning at 5 p.m. Wednesday, March 23, 1994. For Help When the Flu Gets You! CarePlus MEDICAL CENTER Metlife Provider m f. No Appointment Necessary 10% Discount with A&JV1 Student I.D. 696-0683 Texas Ave. at S.W. Pkwy. College Station Open until 8 p.m. - 7 days a week Page 8 Mexican government makes promises to deter Zapatista revolt The Associated Press & IBARRA, Mexico — The government is tempting the people of this little village with offers of things they never had: roads and electrical power, good schools and clinics, democracy and justice. That package of promises, aimed at ending the New Year's Day revolt by the Zapatista National Liberation Front, may be a tough sell in Indian vil lages like this, where rebels began debating the of fer Sunday. "The worthless government offers only tricks," said a local Zapatista leader named Hector, who — like other Zapatistas here — gave only his nom-de- guerre for fear of government reprisals. The government made its offer Wednesday. Rebel negotiators are now explaining it to their supporters in tiny villages across Chiapas state to decide if they should sign a peace treaty or hold onto their guns. An answer could take weeks or months. Zapatista supporters in Ibarra, about 50 miles southeast of Ocosingo, and in nearby Santa Elena said they were skeptical of any government promis es after decades of Ix-ing ignored or pushed aside. "If the government delivers this in 90 days, then we would agree," said Ricardo, a Zapatista in near by Santa Elena. But he said that if the government does not come through, violence could start all over again. Two weeks of fighting that began Jan. 1 and left some 145 people dead has garnered more govern ment respect for the people here than generations of legal, peaceful requests for help. There are no roads to these two hamlets of a few hundred people. A bush plane or hours of driving on muddy jungle paths are the only ways to reach them. Few have the opportunity to get the legal mini mum of nine years of schooling. There is no elec tricity, no telephone and precious little water. The government first invited impoverished set tlers into this Lacandon forest area, then in 1972 gave them 60 days notice to leave after the area was declared a reserve for one small Indian group. That planted the seeds of anger from which the Za patista rebels eventually sprung. Dozens of Zapatistas gathered in the dirt court yard of a thatch-roofed safe house to discuss the proposals with two visiting reporters. Most spoke only Tzeltal Mayan. Others spoke a little Spanish and relied on reporters and a woman named Oralia to read the government commitments. Struggling through the wordy passages promis ing greater democracy, Oralia looked up with a be mused grin and said, "I don't understand anything." But then she added: "What the government wants is that we not fight with arms, that I under stand ... We have achieved nothing here by naming deputies . . . only with arms." To many here, the government promises have a fantastic ring. For everyone, there are vows of more roads, houses, electricity, new and improved schools and clinics and increased support for farmers. For the barefoot women who spend long days grinding corn, hauling water, cooking over wood fires and caring for children, there are promises of aid for tortilla-flour mills, community kitchens, wa ter projects, nurseries, buses. For second and third sons with no prospect of inheriting land — a category that includes the three Zapatista soldiers who escorted the reporters through the jungle — there is a promise to cut up some large estates. The government says it will outlaw discrimina tion against Indians and will create better local gov ernment in areas now part of Ocosingo. The Associulctl Pms A beef steer catches drippings of melting snow as it falls from a rain gutter on a (am near Greenvillage, Pennsylvania. Tenure Continued from Page 1 "All tenure is is a guarantee to a hearing if your job is in question," he said. "It's nothing but a guarantee of due process. Professors without tenure can be fired at will, whereas tenured professors cannot." He said the University would be great ly damaged if tenure was ever abolished and would be put on a censured listbf the American Association of University Professors. "No quality professor would take a job here as a result and you'd see a mass de parture of high-quality professors and de partment heads to schools with tenure,” Davenport said. "Frankly, A&M would be a laughing stock." The article reported Texas isn't the only state challenging tenure. Si •’■‘•ng ; arour and p ja vari It’s Spring Break — do you know what your travel plans are? Why not Go Greyhound®, see the U.S.A. and collect highly educational experiences for your next term paper with the Greyhound Spring Break Companion Pass? Just buy one ticket by 4/30/94, and get a second ticket free. Share one with a friend (or freeloader) - and leave the books behind. Just remember to be back in time for finals. Greyhound* Spring Break Companion Pass. Yes, my roommate would like the free companion ticket when I purchase one at the unrestricted walk-up fare. Origin Go Greyhound and leave the driving to us. Valid for trips of more than 400 miles each way. Companion must travel on the same itinerary. Riders must present coupon and student ID. No advance purchase necessary. Blackout dates apply. Coupon expires 4/30/94. Ticket Agent: Please see tariff for deketing instructions. CN 3/94 ©1994 Greyhound Lines, Inc. : ions, < and si Many ; think ; Govei bers a They class, a leatl delux' plann travel than I theUi ! write and c< I inbref Me ernn-if the wi f \ 1 I. yj