I Going Abroad? Order Your EURAIL PASSES Today Special Student Vacations Ages 18-35 Europe • Hawaii Australia • Club Med Cruises! Cruises! Cruises! EXECUTIVE TRAVEX 1X3 Walton at Texas Ave. S. At main entrance to TAMU 696>1748 Place Your Ad In The Battalion Call 845-2696 r Recent Discoveries and the Future of ARCHAEOLOGY IN SYRIA a public lecture by Dr. Sultan Muhesen A Professor and Director General of Antiquities and Museums Republic of Syria Friday, 1:00- 2:00 p.m. April 15, 1994 Evans Library Conference Room 204C This lecture is sponsored by: the Department of Anthropology; Institute for Nautical Archaeology; and funded in part by the Memorial Student Center L.T. Jordan Institute for International Awareness. Tubularmcm By Boomer Cardinale Bartholomew by lialvin Coming Soon... WAYLON JENNINGS XAE Chilifest '94 April 23, 1994 • Starlight Ballroom, Snook, Texas Tickets on sale now in the Student Gov't. Office, Room 127 of the Koldus Building Transfer Credits Biology--A.+ Brazosport College English-. CRHDURTION!! Summer vacation in Brazoria County- -coming home to relax, work, and take summer classes at Brazosport College? Yes! You’ll have more time to devote to your classes and BC offers many of the courses you may have difficulty getting into at A & M. The classes at BC are smaller for more individualized help and concentration on those more difficult classes. BC campus is close to home and the credits you earn here will transfer towards an earlier graduation. BC offers two summer sessions be ginning June 1 and July 12. To receive a summer schedule call (409) 266-3020 and register early. Summer school can make the dif ference in your expected date of gradu ation. Let Brazosport College make that difference for you. \UL!/ KAPPA fl L P H R TAETR 9th Annual 5-K/1.5 mile Walk Saturday, April 16th 9:00 a.m. Register at the MSC Mon.-Fri. 10-2, Blocker Wed.-Fri. 10-2, or at the Theta House. Cost is $ 10 (includes t-shirt) Proceeds go to Scotty’s House and CASA Call Christy at 693-8267 or the Theta House at 693-5289 for more info. 1995 Aggiexand Applications are available in room 012 Reed McDonald from 10-3. They are due Friday, April 15 at noon. So, “Honey”, be sure to pick up your application. Everyone is encouraged to apply. Eisenhower By Alex Uf=>T£M, Vo 4 MAfi^or, I'M TiRED bP - Your k.ifl? v<5lM^ AhTD CAHoiUS ON / YOU l-DW-life's IN'T GrOT NO RESPE-cr FOR ANVTH*N6,. ''SJP”well . I a/n't no • BAN\Bb you CAdI PlcX-ON. San Antonio gangs to ‘increase the peace,’ three—day summit ends with cease-fire pact The Associated Press SAN ANTONIO — Mediators of a cease-fire among four warring street gangs say it’s too early to know if members will honor the agreement when the^ return to their turf. ‘We’re not asking them to put down their colors,” said mediator Wayne Crooks, director for My Father’s House of Ministries in San Antonio. “The colors rep resent camaraderie and loyalty. We’re saying, ‘Put down your arms and let’s work toward a better com munity,”’ he said. A dozen teen-agers representing gangs comprising 100 to 150 members reached the pact Sunday after three days of peacemaking at Grace Lutheran Church. “Right now, they’re in a cease-fire. They’ve never ever been used to that,” Crooks said. “We’re trying to help them cope with what that means and how to deal with others who will try to test their fortitude.” More than 100 gang members packed the church to announce their agreement. “We’re fighting just to die for no reason,” said a ^oung man who identified himself as a gang leader. ‘We want to have a better life.” Another gang leader said the cease-fire won’t work unless community leaders come through with promises of help with jobs and education. “We’ve wanted this for a while,” he said. Althoxigh four other gangs involving 100 youths from other areas of the city failed to reach a truce, police Chief William O. Gibson called the conference a “significant first step.” But he said it’s too early know whether the cease fire will help reduce San Antonio’s record number of homicides during the past two years. “If they mean what they say, obviously the statis tics will change. I think we need to wait and see how this plays out, ’ the chief said. Stopping a deadly disease Broccoli may block formation of breast tumors, researchers say The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Broccoli con tains substances that can block or retard formation of breast tumors in rats by promoting anti-cancer en zymes, Johns Hopkins medical re searchers report. In a study to be published in the Proceedings of the National Acade my of Sciences on Tuesday, the Hop kins scientists said that doses of compounds that are found in broc coli and in some other vegetables provided cancer protection for a group of rats that had been exposed to powerful cancer-causing chemi cals. Dr. Paul Talalay, a Hopkins re searcher who is co-author of the study, said Monday that sul- foraphane and some related com pounds are apparently able to am plify the body’s own defenses against chemicals that can lead to cancer. “Most cancer-causing chemicals are themselves innocuous until they enter cells where they are converted to enzymes which are highly reac tive and are capable of initiating tu mor formation,” said Talalay. Sulforaphane and its chemical cousins, he said, cause the body to produce another type of enzyme that blocks the cancer-causing ac tion of the first enzyme. In the study, Talalay and his col leagues exposed 145 rats to a pow erful cancer-causing chemical called DMBA. Twenty-five of the rats were used as controls and received no drug treatment. The rest received various doses of sulforaphane and related compounds. The drugs were synthetic copies of the compounds found in vegetables. At the end of 50 days, 68 percent of the control rats had developed, mammary tumors, but only about 26 percent of those receiving high doses of sulforaphane developed cancer. Similar results were found for another substance, called com pound 2, that is related to sul foraphane. Other related com pounds also were effective, but to a lesser degree. Talalay said the studies showed the sulforaphane-type chemicals tended to either prevent or delay tu mor formation, and that when can cer did develop, the tumors were smaller and less numerous. . Talalay emphasized that the veg etable compound seems to work only as a cancer preventer and has no effect on tumors that have al ready started. As a result, he said, cancer patients should not expect benefit from broccoli binges. The experiment, which follows an earlier test-tube study by the Hopkins group that identified sul foraphane as a possible cancer pre venter, is the first by the laboratory to prove that the vegetable com pound can work in animals. Talalay said a clinical study with human volunteers is planned. Sulforaphane and related com pounds are found in what are called cruciferous vegetables. These in clude broccoli, cauliflower, brus- sels sprouts and cabbage. Earlier studies have shown that people who regularly eat these types of vegetables tend to develop less cancer than those who avoid this type of food. TEXAS A&M ATHLETIC EVENTS Home Games BASEBALL SOFTBALL OTHER EVENTS Apr. 12 UTSA 7 pm Apr. 12 SWT EX ST 5 pm Apr. 12 Tennis (M) Tech 1:30 pm Apr. 19 SFA (2) 5 pm May 1 La. Tech 2 pm Apr. 14 Tennis (W) Texas 5:30 pm Apr. 22 Baylor 7 pm Thanks for your support! Apr. 14 Tennis (M) TCU 1:30 pm Apr. 26 Sam Hous. 7 pm Apr. 17 Tennis (W) S. Car. 1:30 pm TICKETS: 845-2311 HOW ABOUT 1994 FOOTBALL SEASON TICKTES? Spamfish anyone: Pans gather at 19th Spamarama Tuesday, 'Flic Associated Press It was a Spam Ion AUSTIN dream. Blackened Spamfish and etoufee were just a coupleofil< dishes created with the famoi canned pork product at the l)i annual Spamarama over the wetj. end in downtown Austin. Spam was cooked, chillti crammed, sculpted, tossedn revered by roughly 2,000 peof “It’s a malleabl meat. Not only cai you eat it, you mold it. — David Arnsberfa founder of the mi MICHAEL BELINDA HEATHER TONI CAI who gathered to celebrate lunchmeat. “Spam is in the commonua consciousness of the Americu public,” said David Arnsbergei the founder of the event no* known as “The Potentate ofPo! ted Pork Parties.” “It’s a malleable meat. Nt only can you eat it, youcanmol it,” said Arnsberger, explain^ the appeal of Spamarama. Judges wandered through aroma of the potted porlt ani sampled such dishes as Spamalt maaingdong, a bite size Spairi sandwich covered by chocolait| and packed with whipped creait in the middle. “I can’t make ’em fast enoujl These people are chewing it up,' said Kevin Rollins of Austin. But not everyone was read) for seconds. "It was the worst thinglhai ever put in my mouth—at solutely horrible,” said Bob Fin ley of Dallas. “I may hurl an] minute.” “You pretty much have tohavi a chaser to kill the taste,” sail John Hutto of Austin, who pd died Spam chili. The event also included tkl Spam Olympics. There was tkl Spam throw, the two-persot Spam toss, Spam calling and tk Spamcram (speed-eating). L Rich Holmes and Kim Barr) came away slippery-handed aftei hauling in toss-and-catch honors with a 45-foot throw. “You have to become out with the Spam,” explained Holmes. “See the Spam. Feel the Spam Be the Spam,’ Barry chimed in. Int As a the Uni' seem tc monalii dren, p; left in due to t actually terracia are belt or deni parents the san state lav that pn still occ Acco . the delay tl discrim or ethr prospec The 1 becausi or His other r ter hor parentl be in i child t where would Christians Continued from Page 1 upon his return as Christ. “fie would be returning as a vic tor, not a victim, to restore the Kingdom of Israel,” Tyson said. A final answer was presented in the prophetic scriptures of the He brew Bible. “As early Christians began to di vert attention from Apocalyptic scriptures to the Hebrew Bible, they found a remarkable correspondence between what the books said and what Jesus did in his life,” Tyson said. H “Separation of early Christians from early Jews led to a parting of the ways between these two great reli gious traditions.” — Professor Joseph B. Tyson, Southern Methodist University Tyson said most apocalyptic Jews couldn’t accept the Christian claims. "Jews that didn’t accept the Christian message concluded delity to scriptures and fidelity to God required rejection of Christ ian claims,” Tyson said. "Separa tion of early Christians from earl) Jews led to a parting of the ways between these two great religious traditions.” John Lemmons, a sophomore bioengineering major, did not agree with the view presented. “I have never been presented with this idea, and off the top of my head I would have to disagree with him,” Lemmons said. On the other hand, Lisa Rush, a senior English and journalism ma jor, said the speech was encourag ing to her. “It makes me want to study religion more as a history and look into the social aspects of it, Rush said. I ’ll n mat grac authent brother thing ir the pov It di attende cared - the shii Me ( cr desa ed Siste plosion Friei playing (Thunc Ever buying should own. A going i wantec Afte Metalb tet aro\