sday ( ^SllVAHliHODSK ymW^r'ni^uim.xiumiM. WE BUY USED CD'S FOR $4.00 or trade 2 for 1 USED CD'S $8.99 or LESS 268-0154 (At Northgate) D U k i n Dudes Tonight 823-4338 Page 2 • The Battalion STATE LOCAL Visible Man ex Tuesday • November 25 posed on Intern Digital image of executed killer's cadaver used as learning tool on computer network SOFTWARC €XCHRN©€ NEW & USED SOFTWARE TRY BEFORE YOU BUY! NOW OPEN! at Northgate behind LOUPOT'S CASH FOR USED SOFTWARE SOFTWARE SALES & RENTALS YOUR GAMING HEADQUARTERS 846-1763 10-7 Mon. - Sat. 12-7 Sun. 105 College Main , College Station . Tx 77840 Windshield Chip Repair i I I I $10 OFF CHIP REPAIR with this coupon Offer expires: Sat.., Dec. 03, 1994 Regular Prices: ■ 1st Chip $39. Each additional $7. I FREE with full coverage insurance. I Callus! 95% of all insurance coinpanies will waive your deductable and pay. me directly! Why? I can save approx. 10 windshields for less than replacing 1! Your insurance company wants to save your CHICAGO (AP) — Sixteen months ago, a killer was executed in Texas. Today, his body is a teaching tool for the world, made available on the Internet as the first three-dimensional, computerized cadaver. The “Visible Man” is a detailed atlas of the human body, assembled digitally from thou sands of X-ray, magnetic and photo images of cross-sections of the body. The National Library of Medicine is un veiling the “Visible Man’’ today at the an nual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America. “This is the first time such detailed infor mation about an entire human body has been compiled,” said Dr. Donald A.B. Lindberg, di rector of the library, which is the equivalent of the Library of Congress for medical matters. The digitalized cadaver will be available free to anyone who gets permission from the li brary. But the data is so extensive that down loading it takes up to two weeks of uninter rupted time on the Internet, and up to 15 giga bytes of storage space, enough to accommodate about 50 times the contents of The Encyclope dia Britannica. The information would fill more than 30 typical personal computers and is expected to | windshield before it cracks, thus eliminating expensive windshield replacement expenses. | Repair it, everyone wins! be sought mainly by medical schools; searchers, said Michael Ackerman, as specialist with the library. The “Visible Man” will be an i teaching tool for medical students,! future, it could be used to develop surge ulators much like the flight simulators! train pilots today, he said. “We hold this out as an example o[ ture of health care ... which more; will become visual rather than textual; man said in an interview. "It’s a ent way of looking at medicine.” Commercial ventures also hopetocap on the “Visible Man,” Ackerman said;< is “Fantastic Voyage: The Game,”basei Isaac Asimov book that was later mad movie, in which a group of scientists is turized and injected into the bloodstreai dying man. 846-CHIP 846-2447 Winter makes cracks run - every crack starts with a chip! Replant Continued from Page 1 tt FREE PREGNANCY TESTING • Confidential Counseling • Information & Referrals Available Good Samaritan Pregnancy Service, Inc. 505 University Dr., Suite 602 846-2909 Call for an appointment M" ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ •k-ttk-k ★ ★ ★ •k-k k kkkk kkkkkkkkk kkk k k kk k k IVOTES^yQLOTES 701 University Drive (409) 846-2255 Fax (409) 846-2985 Typing Services Word Processing • Resumes • Theses Dissertations • Research Papers • Fliers Laser Printing From any IBM or Compatible PC on HP Laser Jet Other Services Available Copies • Transparencies • Printing Study Guides • Lecture Notes • Scantrons THE DIFFERENCE IS SERVICE Brooke Leslie, student body president, knew Hantman and will speak at the ceremony. “Sometimes it’s fairly easy for us to forget people who have given so much to the University,” she said. "Scott had the founding idea for Re plant, and it is because of his work that it has gotten so strong and grown.” A bill supporting the dedica tion of Replant to Hantman will be presented to the Student Senate tonight. Leslie said Replant is the largest tree-planting effort in the country. “I think that says a lot about Aggies,” she said. Hantman started Replant to replace the many trees Ag gies cut down each year to build Bonfire. In the spring of 1991, Hant man, then a graduate student in safety engineering, along with Bonfire leaders, led a small group of Aggies that planted nearly 400 trees. It is estimated that 7,000 logs are used to build each Bon fire and over 35,000 will be planted at Replant 1995. Replant 1995 will be at Lake Somerville. Rosalez said over 2,000 students are expected to participate. “We are planting 17,000 trees this year and potting 20,000,” she said. Each year Replant pots trees to be planted the following year. “Last year we potted 20,000 and we will plant those this year,” Rosalez said. She said the Corps of Engi neers at Lake Somerville cares for the trees that are potted by Replant until they are planted by the committee. Almarez said Replant is for the community and students. “A lot of people aren’t aware of what A&M does for the envi ronment,” she said. “I think people go out there because they think they are contributing and giving something back.” Leslie said the fact that Ag gies do cut so many trees down for Bonfire has been an issue for several years. “I think that Replant, like Bonfire, reflects the spirit that all Aggies have for this universi ty,” she said. Russian Business Continued from Page 1 young students who just finished their bachelor’s and the older stu dents who are professionals work ing in companies.” The classes for the MBA pro gram will be in both Russian and English, Kolari said. “All students and faculty there now are in intensive English training courses,” he said. The money for the program originated from a two-year grant from the United States Informa tion Agency (USIA). After the two years pire, USIA ex- the will review whether it will support the pro gram fur ther. The program may also re ceive fund ing from private cor porations. Kolari program will eventually I* lar to MIT’s business Kolari said it will however, before the school U.S. standards. “It will take many years velopment until it reack standard of our business si Kolari said. Next summer, send four professors to8t tersburg to help the busi program’s development,Gs said. Each professor willsp one month in Russia. “The professors will wo curriculum development, teaching and guest lecturi: Caspar said. “They wi advice // St. Petersburg in Russia is the equivalent to MIT in the U.S. It is a very good institution. We hope its business program will eventually be similar to MIT's business school." textli! transli and ing ods.” Four lessors also be in thest mer oil — Or. Julian Caspar, director of A&M's Center for International fessor Cable Continued from Page 1 The Perfect Gifts for Your Aggie Graduation or Christmas. he said. “There are many other factors to be considered.” Dinkel said the University ca ble system could reach off-campus residences through the public ac cess cable channel 15. Dinkel will present the possi bilities of this cable system to the Residence Hall Association. The RHA will then decide if they want to have the system installed. “We will tell them what the technology can do and give them some options,” he said. “Then whatever they decide they want is what we will do.” If approved by RHA, the cable system could be installed as early as Sept. 1995, Dinkel said. Owen Ross, RHA president, said he will have a task force look into the options and tailor the ca ble system to the students’ needs. “If we decide to have this im plemented, there are a lot of changes that will have to be made,” Ross said. Dinkel said the cable would cost between $5 and $10 per resi dent each month. But the final decision rests with RHA, Ross said. “We have to decide if we really want this, if we really want to pay for it,” he said. said A&M became involved in the program through its participation in the University Consortium, which links universities in the United States with universities in Western and Eastern Europe and Russia. Through the program, profes sors received training for the last three years in social studies, in cluding business studies, in East ern Europe and Russia. A&M made contacts with professors in these countries who helped estab lish the Russian MBA program. The Russian MBA program just began this fall. Gaspar said he hopes the pro gram will be as successful as MBA programs in the United States. “St. Petersburg in Russia is the equivalent to MIT in the U.S.,” Gaspar said. “It is a very good in stitution. We hope its business remain Business Studies Russia the enl 1996 spring semester. Dr. Sam Gillespie, profess marketing, will be one of the! professors spending a montt Russia this summer. “The main difficulty is I, marketing here is difa from over there,” GillespiuA “They do not have ideasita advertising, putting togelta marketing plan or compeftf the marketplace.” Gillespie said that in to lecturing in Russia, he wills try to contact the American fe there and have them speat some of the classes. Gillespie said he expects learn a great deal from hisi perience. “I am really, really ward to this trip,” Gillespie si 1 “I have taught in Frances! Italy, and this will be a nice al tional experience.” 14K Gold Aggie Pendant $24 95 Citizen Watches with Official A&M Seal Gold-Tone $179 95 Two-Tone $159 95 Quartz Movement. 3 yr. Warranty. Water Resistant. *Call for Quantity Prices John D. Huntley 79 is also an official authorized dealer for Tag-Heuer and Breitling. ORDER FORM Ship To:_ Address:. 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It s that easy Westgate Plasma Center 4223 Wellborn Rd. 846-8855 The Battalion BELINDA BLANCARTE, Editor in chief MARK EVANS, Managing editor HEATHER WINCH, Night News editor MARK SMITH, Night News editor KIM McGUIRE, City editor JENNY MAGEE, Opi nion editor STEWART MILNE, Photo editor DAVE WINDER, Sports editor ROB CLARK, Agg/e/rTe editor Staff Members City desk— Jan Higginbotham, Katherine Arnold, Michele Brinkmann, Stephanie Dube,Ana® Fowle, Melissa Jacobs, Amy Lee, Lisa Messer, Tracy Smith and Kari Whitley News desk— Robin Greathouse, Sterling Hayman, Jody Holley, Shafi Islam, Tiffany Moore, Stanton, Zachary Toups and James Vineyard Photographers— Tim Moog, Amy Browning, Robyn Calloway,.Stacey Cameron, BlakeGrij$. 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