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(close to campus) 846-5933 Page 12 • The Battalion gA I I AI ION Tuesday • February 28, Course: Class teaches Japanese culture, language, lifestyle ip ExCET REVIEWS 512-474-5750 HOUSTON - April 1 & 2 Registration Deadline: Mar. 13 (iMte registration available thru Mar. 27) AUSTIN - April 22 & 23 Registration Deadline: April 3 (Late registration available thru Apr. 17) Continued from Page 1 things I noticed is that the Japanese appreciate people who try to communicate in their lan guage,” Mills said. “Japanese people get to know you first, then they do business.” Mills said that there has been an increasing emphasis on in ternational business in the United States. “You may work for an Ameri can company and still have an international component,” she said. “Being aware and under standing other cultures and lan guages can really help you get a leg up when dealing with any situations and issues you may come in contact with.” Scott Pillittere, a graduate student of the A&M College of Business, said he thinks there is a definite need for interna tional language classes, espe cially for those business stu dents and faculty members planning to work abroad. “The United States is no longer a local market,” Pillittere said. “This is making it neces sary for business people to un derstand and learn other cul tures (which) they could, at some time, come into contact with,” he said. LeFlore said this non—credit class has no prerequisites. It is open to faculty members, gradu ate and undergraduate stu dents, or anyone else interested in learning the Japanese lan guage and culture. She said classes in Spanish, French, Ital ian, German and Chinese are also available. She said business majors are not the only people who take the classes. LeFlore said quite a few people enrolled are planning to go on vacations overseas. Scattered violence mars Mardi Gras, but most revelers don’t seem to care Your Lifelong Romance begins at Harambee: Celebrating unity Continued from Page 1 other cultures. “These groups encompass different races not just African-Americans,” Harrison said. “I’m hoping we get sup port from the masses. These programs are not just for African-Americans at Texas A&M — they are for everyone.” Traylor said he wants the festival to remind students to observe black history daily, not just for one month. Traylor said he is expecting a good turnout because of the number of groups represented. The Harambee Fest starts at 7 p.m. at the Rudder Foun tain. If it rains, the program will be moved to 164 Plead and will begin at 8 p.m. □ Today marks the climax of the New Orleans festivities. So far six people have been wounded by gunfire during the citywide party. NEW ORLEANS (AP) — With more than 300,000 visi tors in town for Tuesday’s rau cous climax of Mardi Gras, city officials reassured revelers Monday that the citywide party is safe despite two shootings near parade routes. Six people have been wound ed in the gunfire so far — two early last week and four Sun day night during the highly popular Bacchus parade, in which television star John Lar- roquette was the grand mar shal. Witnesses said the shoot ing was near Larroquette’s float and he climbed down from his throne as other riders ducked for cover. “This incident was in no way related to Mardi Gras,” Mayor Marc Morial said Monday when asked about the latest shooting. “We expect Mardi Gras to be its usual rowdy but nonviolent self.” Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday, falls each year on the day be fore Ash Wednesday and the 40 days of Lenten sobriety in this heavily Roman Catholic city. It wraps up 11 days of bawdy Carnival parties and parades. Despite the scattered vio lence and a threat of rain, city officials say this year’s crowds appear bigger than ever. Tents, sleeping bags and lawn furniture lined the trol ley tracks on St. Charles Av enue, the main parade route on Tuesday. Crowds in the narrow streets of the French Quarter have been shoulder-to-shoulder since Friday. Both recent shooting inci dents erupted from what police said were private disputes. Police Superintendent Richard Pennington said 600 po lice were along the parade route and they quickl> restored order. Officers on the lookout for trouble confiscated 22 guns during the Bacchus parade, Pennington added. There was one arrest in the Sunday shooting, none in the shooting last Tuesday. “There’s some violence in general in any city,’’ Morial said. “I’ve long been a propo nent of reasonable gun control and I definitely think that would have helped here.” Morial’s assurances weren’t enough for one New Orleans res ident who said she will no longer go to night parades. She was standing among the Bacchus crowd with two small children when they heard the gunshots. “I started screaming. I didn't know what to do. Everyone was going in a different direction,’ the woman, who asked not to be identified, said. But Monday’s revelers were for the most part oblivious or ap athetic about Sunday’s violence. “No one around here was able to run by the time Bacchus got here,” joked Bob Morris, of Camden, N.J., who staked outa parade spot early Sunday and was still there Monday. “The only thing we saw wasa fight on Bourbon Street," said Robert Savage of Orangeburo, S.C., who was visiting the French Quarter with his wife, Sheila. “The cops stopped it in no time. They did a good job.” Ixocals joining the swarms of tourists swelled crowds to what Pennington estimated at 1.2 million people. Morial used a time-honored New' Orleans measuring stick for gauging the size of the crowds: “It appears as though the amount of garbage pro duced thus far is double that produced last year,” he said. | Enhance | the beauty of your wedding in one of the ■i most naturally l romantic settings anywhere. 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