THE NAIL STATION ..for the ultimate in acrylic & natural nails SPECIALS Full Set $25.00 • Fills $15.00 (409) 696-6016 315-B Dominik in Culpepper Plaza College Station, TX 77840 Page 6 all Tuesday • June 21,1994 Plant Continued from Page 1 CDs a-nmim WE BUY USED CD'S FOR $4.00 or trade 2 for 1 USED CD'S $8.99 or LESS 268-0154 (At Northgate) HERPES STUDY Individuals with genital herpes infections are being recruited for a 52-week research study of an investigational anti-viral medication. A current herpes outbreak is not! necessary. $300 will be paid tol qualified volunteers who enroll and] complete this study. For more information, call: account possible changes in regulation of the utility indus try, which Parker said could re sult in lower prices if A&M were to buy the power. The System is starting its own study to determine what to do next, but Parker said resum ing negotiations with Tenneco or another company is not like ly- “I don’t foresee us starting the project up again,” she said. “It depends on what the study recommends. ” The study will assess the fu ture energy needs of the cam pus, taking into account planned growth, energy conser vation factors, building usage and technological change. Parker said the construction of Phase I will not be a waste of time as the hot and chilled wa ter provided to west campus will reduce energy needs of the re mote buildings. “Phase I will be completed,” she said. “The decision not to go ahead with Phase II will not af fect it.” Lindsay said the transfer is critical for A&M’s short-term needs, and will remain part of the University’s infrastructure for years to come. Megan Mastal, spokeswoman for Tenneco, said the company hopes A&M will change its mind. “Tenneco was surprised and disappointed by the University’s announcement,” she said. “We hope to meet with University of ficials to address this issue.” Mastal said the University would have greatly benefited from the plant and the cancella tion is not fair to those who need the power. “It is not in the best interests of either Texas A&M or state taxpayers,” she said. The City of College Station was the third finalist for the bid to build the plant. Lynn Mcllhaney, mayor pro tern of College Station, said the city saw the cogeneration plant as a chance for A&M to work to gether, if the University had ac cepted its offer. “I still hope for A&M, that if they decide to purchase power in some fashion that the Univer sity and the city will work to gether,” she said. A&M currently buys an aver age of one-third of its power from outside sources. The other two-thirds are produced by the plant on campus. Heather By JL Out There A/o else: REALLY UNDERSTANDS ^HAT IT FEELS LIKE. YA' Mow? I mean, /MV/NG once Been hN American ICON, /VOW SHATTERED, Turned to a life ^ of CRIME-., -f that’s NH1 FlA glad You cAHE. KWoW flou IT FF&-S... ^ „ _ jr .> VIP Research, Inc. (409) 776-1417 Freeman Continued from Page 1 | (Zinenta 3 315 COLLEGE AVE. 693~2796 CARMIKE ^ RENAISSANCE MAN (PG) 7:00 9:30 * NO ESCAPE (R) 7:15 9:45 * MIGHTY DUCKS 2 (PG) . 7:20 9:20 Oak 3 #4, 1500 HARVEY RD. 693~2796 CARMIKE ^WOLF (R) 1:00 4:00 7:00 9:30 ^ FLINTSTONES (PG) ^ 1:15 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 JURASSIC PARK (PG-13) V 1:30 4:30 7:15 9:35 J r Yes! 1 We Have Student Airfares the question, 'Why was it necessary to consider privatizing Food Services, and why were the three top management personnel reassigned with no ex planation?’ “We still have not received an answer,” she said, “and we want an answer because if there is no real justification that can be shown. We would like to see these three people reinstated.” If she does not receive a valid reason for the of ficials being reassigned. Freeman said she will ask Mothers’ Clubs members to write letters to Dr. Ray Bowen, A&M president, asking him to rein state them. Freeman said she is pleased with Bowen’s deci sion to make changes around the University, and she thinks he will make an effort to work with the Mothers’ Clubs. Bowen’s statement of his plan to restructure the division of finance and administration in com ing months is a positive move for the University, she said. “Hopefully, there will be a power distribution in the division, rather than one person havihg all the power,” she said. Last week A&M President Ray Bowen reas signed Robert Smith, former vice president for fi nance and administration, to the new position of executive director of special operations. Freeman said she believed she did everything possible as president to help students and keep an eye on the administration. Looking back on her term, she said she feels a real sense of accomplishment. “We raised a sense of awareness in the students and increased the level of involvement,” she said. “I also dedicated my year to preserving A&M tra ditions. “Being president allowed me to meet students and make friends among the mothers. Most of the mothers were in agreement with what I did.” Freeman encourages students to get involved on campus . “My door is always open,” she said. “All they have to do is pick up the phone or drop me a note.” Freeman said one of the toughest things she had to do as president was to ask questions that could result in adverse publicity. “It was a hard decision,” she said. “Dealing with the publicity that resulted was the hardest thing I had to deal with.” Shirley Tingley, president of the Aggie Moth ers’ Clubs, said she will work with the committee to monitor anything that would affect students. Freeman joined the Mother’s Club in 1970 and has been an active member ever since. She plans to stay active in the Aggie Mother’s Clubs as vice president at-large of the club. She also will continue raising money for Sterling C. Evans Library. Korea Continued from Page 1 North Koreans, by avoiding further steps toward a crisis, but we have to know there’s been a change,” Clinton said. “So well be looking to verify that. And that’s really the question.” Clinton said he saw “some hopeful signs,” such as Carter's report that Kim had agreed to a summit meeting with South Korea. Carter said that Kim also proposed cutting military forces on both sides of the border, and that he agreed to permit a joint U.S.-Korean search for remains of Ameri cans lost in the Korean War. “But the critical question is, are they willing to freeze this nuclear program while we try to work these differences out?” Clinton said. North Korea denies its nu clear program is for military purposes, but the United States says it believes North Korea has accumulated enough pluto nium to build one or two nu clear bombs. Freezing the nu clear program while high-level talks were under way would preclude — at least for the du ration of the talks — the possi bility of North Korea adding to its plutonium stocks and build ing any nuclear weapons. It’s unclear how strictly a freeze could be verified. Sen. Sam Nunn, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, told reporters af ter a White House meeting Monday that Washington’s main focus should be on en suring that additional nuclear weapons are not built in North Korea. Nunn, a Georgia Democrat, cautioned against putting too much emphasis on solving the mystery of whether North Ko rea already has one or two bombs, at the expense of losing an opportunity to stop it from acquiring even more weapons. Church 'W& London Brussels Frankfurt Madrid Tokyo Costa Rica $339' $365' $399' $388' $455* $155* • Fares are each way from Houston based on a roundtrip purchase. Restrictions apply and taxes not included. Call for other worldwide destinations. Council Ttavd 2000 Guadalupe St. • Austin, IX 78705 Contiued from Page 2 copalians. While some Episcopal churches have more evangelical, fundamentalist views, St. Mary the Virgin always was closely aligned with Catholicism, he said. Episcopal diocese officials said they were sorry, but supportive of the parish’s deci- 512-472-4931 “It was an amicable kind of a separation. They talked about this for a long time,” Bishop Co-Adjutor Jack Iker said. The switch will make St. Mary the sixth “Anglican Use” Roman Catholic parish in the country. Under the Anglican Use provision, ap proved by the Vatican in 1980, Episcopal churches can become Catholic but continue to incorporate some of their traditions, such as the prayer book, and allow exceptions, such as married priests. Recently, traditional Episcopalians have been concerned that the church is following contemporary trends on moral issues with out any broad-based consultation, said Mark Lowery, assistant professor of theolo gy at the University of Dallas. “It’s precisely these changes which have prompted many Anglican priests, and in this case even a whole parish, to unify with Rome,” Lowery said. A series of pastors had led the 34-year- old Arlington parish before Hawkins arrived in 1980. “I felt when I came, that if I did nothing else, just staying here would help the parish,” Hawkins said. “If you stay in a place long enough, they may not agree with you, or they may, but they trust you.” That trust was a part of what led to the series of meetings in 1991, in which the con gregation sought to break free of the Episco pal Church. Karen Breaux and her 4-year-old son joined her husband, Mitchell, in the Catholic faith when they converted. “If the church had voted against it, the majority would have ruled,” she said. “It was a big change for me. Once I did, it felt good.” Hawkins’ wife and two adult children also converted. Giles Hawkins, 27, said he always felt more comfortable with Catholicism, but stayed with the parish out of loyalty to his father. “Always he has been a remarkable leader for me to follow personally. But I did not make my decision simply because he was my father. While that did play into it, I also have studied the theological issues involved in this,” Hawkins said. Space ^(BII CaC Cl/ f Peyote Continued from Page 2 Church of North America. The current U.S. House bill, sponsored by Rep. Bill Richardson, D-N.M., would apply the Texas exemption nationwide. Four American Indian civil rights groups, rep resenting more than 160 tribes, have made a top priority of federal legislation to afford the protec tion nationwide. “Texas is absolutely crucial for the passage of this bill,” said James Botsford, a Wisconsin-based attorney for the Native American Church. With the rise of the 1960s drug culture, many non-Indians turned to peyote as a natural high, drug enforcement officials said. “In the late 1960s, white folks who were fairly young and had money and some time on their hands started experimenting with peyote,” said DEA spokesman John Geider of Dallas. “They weren’t interested in the traditions or the religious significance of peyote to Native Americans,” he said. However, some non-Indians say their concerns are truly spiritual, not opportunistic, and that the proposed exemption unfairly and unconstitution ally excludes them. “I don’t think it’s right to have religious prefer ence based on ethnic origin,” said Bill Stites, a member of the Peyote Way Church of God, who is awaiting an appeal of a 1993 conviction on a pey ote possession charge. Continued from Page 2 Despite mounting pressure in Congress to identify up to $300 million in cuts, Goldin again maintained that he wouldn’t cut space station fund ing. He also expressed reluc tance to terminate either NASA’s Saturn probe or an or biting observatory that would complement the Hubble Space Telescope. Sen. Barbara Mikulski, the Maryland Democrat who chairs the appropriations subcommit tee that funds NASA programs, has indicated either the probe or the observatory may have to be killed. “We’ve got to find the money to solve the problem,” Goldin said, arguing that NASA has done its share for deficit reduc tion by cutting its budget 30 percent in the last two years. Asked if he would leave NASA if Congress terminates the space station, Goldin said he would have to consider that option. “I don’t believe the Con gress will kill the space sta tion,” he said. “But if the space station is cancelled. I’ll tell you one thing: I’m going to go home and cry about the future of America.” i/vxiat s Up Tuesday more information. Planning at 845-4427 for more information. Study Abroad Programs: Informational meeting for Fulbright research grants for graduating seniors and graduate students at 251 Bizzell Hall West at 10:00 A.M. Student Counseling Service: African American support group every Tuesday afternoon from 3:00 - 4:30 P.M. at Henderson Hall. Call Dr. Brian K. Williams at 845-4427 for more information. Study Abroad Programs: Informational meeting for TAMU study abroad program to Italy during spring ‘95. Meets at 251 Bizzell Hall West 2:00 P.M. Call Jenny at 845-0544 for more information. siness Consu Study Abroad Programs: Informational meeting for TAMU study abroad program to Italy during spring ‘95. Meets at 251 Bizzell Hall West 3:00 P.M. Call Jenny at 845-0544 for more information. Jesus Is Alive: Fellowship, prayer, bible study at All Faith’s Chapel 8:00 P.M. Call Tony at 845-0177 for more information. Wednesday HEWLETT PACKARD Authorized Dealer Professional Computing 505 Church Street College Station, TX (409) 846-5332 m HEWLETT PACKARD Autkoritti Dtaltr TAMU College Republicans: General meeting to work on fundraising and fall programs. A great way for new members to get involved! Meets at 8:30 P.M. MSC Flagroom. Call Chad Walter at 764-8190 for Student Counseling Service, Center for Career Planning: How to choose a major workshop. Meets from 1:30 - 3:30 P.M. at Henderson Hall. Call the Center for Career What’s Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit student and faculty events and activities. Items should be submitted no later than three days in advance of the desired run date. Application deadlines and notices are not events and will not be run in What’s Up. If you have any questions, please call the newsroom at 845-3313. 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