^Q j(Friday • August 25, 1995 Page 7 • The Battalion 'ssioni Deceased student to be C e“ honored at Silver Taps ?ineer; Debashis Biswas, 25, will be hon- ^ ored at Silver Taps on Sept. 5. Biswas, a §exas A&M geography graduate stu- " K dent, passed away on Aug. 11. Services f 18 - were held at Southpark Cemetery in idents;Houston on Aug. 14. He is survived by to the his parents, Dayal and Bhawani d be at Biswas. c.ogr| era,” Jury selection to begin in id. b trial of Regents secretary singM. d worn Jury selection in the trial of Vickie thejiRunning, the Texas A&M Board of Re- ow gents secretary, on charges of tamper ing with government documents will begin Oct. 16. st Running is charged with altering user government documents in an attempt own a: totdisguise the purchase of alcohol as food, drink, ice and cups purchases. CoM The trial, originally scheduled to be- lnK gin Aug. 15, was given a continuance for two months. en ^'l The case will be heard by District 1 U P Court Judge J.D. Langley in the 85th at by District Court at the Brazos County r , stuilCourthouse in Bryan, e class. I, it eh" New eatery replaces snack nd 1 bar on West Campus treat r he nai ring fi dely rf ig to Is ;.PG-13 15 -13 REO Cavitt Corner Used Books & Collectibles • Paperbacks • Hardbacks • Furniture • Antiques • Collectibles dr Gifts 822-6633 2100 Cavitt Ave., Bryan Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. 1-5 p.m Sippial named as new VP of A&M Physical Plant Charles Sippial has been named as Texas A&M's assistant vice president for the Physical Plant. Sippial, Physical Plant director at San Diego State University, was ap pointed by Dr. Jerry Gaston, interim vice president for finance administra tion, and he will assume the position Monday, Aug. 28. Prior to his six years at SDSU, Sippi al worked for the U.S. Air Force in Eu rope and the United States. He holds a bachelor's degree in construction science from Tuskegee University and a master's degree in sys tems management from the University of Southern California. Engineering department receives new head dure today. The Tejeda twins have been criti cally ill since they were born 13 weeks premature at St. David's Hospi tal on May 1 5. Doctors do not expect Michelle to survive separation because a her pes virus inherited in the womb has destroyed part or all of her in testines, stomach, bladder, kidneys, liver and brain. Only her connection to Michelle is keeping Michelle alive. As of Sunday, the total charges for the conjoined infants was approximate ly $525,000. A small portion of those charges will be paid for by Medicaid, the re mainder will become part of the charity care St. David's provides to the Austin community, officials said. AIDS patient to receive baboon's bone marrow Dr. Rayford G. Anthony was named head of the Department of Chemical Engineering at Texas A&M by Dr. C. Roland Haden, Dean of the College of Engineering. Anthony, a senior fellow in the Texas Engineering Experiment Station, has taught at A&M since 1966. He is also head of the chemical engineering department's Kinetics, Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Laboratory. Anthony will assume his new posi tion Sept. 1. Conjoined twins face slim survival chances jL. The Critical Care Cafe, a new dining facility in the Interdisciplinary Building on West Campus, opened Aug. 14. I The cafe offers specialty sandwiches not served anywhere else on campus. The cafe replaced the Vet Med Snack Bar, and is open Monday through Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The new restaurant will be dedi- ycij' cated at a special ceremony Sept. 1, J recognizing those who funded the cafe's construction. xi l995 Texas - SAT scores gnjraM r remain low ,, (AP) — Texas students scored ,, higher this year on the Scholas- n ^ tic Assessment Test but re- 1]^ ^nfained behind the national av- n’lhe era £ e on both sections of the col- lege entrance exam, according to excedi new fi g^ res - ^ The College Board figures , , released Wednesday showed A ? that Texas’ average score on lgs [ ei . the verbal test was 419, a sev- 3e |j eV( en-point increase over 1994, sank 'Tile the math score remained 0 ff q unchanged at 474. )U jj- a; The state’s combined score of ie exar 893 was a seven-point increase ^hasl over last year’s combined score of 886, but it was still 17 points ft er Gbehind the nation’s average lepende: combined score of 910. 3 en A- The national average on the inaat: Ver bal test increased from 423 in 3 playt 1994 to 428 in 1995, while math ig aiio: 8 cores rose from 479 to 482. Texas Education Commis- rderec 8 kmer Mike Moses attributed cade the higher scores to the num- en C l 561 * of students enrolled in hon- s, the °rs curriculum, sxash “These results clearly show were that taking rigorous courses in nth oifliigh school is a prerequisite >r, thejfor success in college,” Moses estroyaPaid. “For those students who iels fejpvant to attend college after high school, taking challeng- offGalBg courses is not a luxury but 37. Aftp necessity. , ships ‘The figures showed that ihoai Texas students who completed accomPO or more course units in six crew?;honors classes recorded an aver- schooii age verbal score of 473 and an storm javerage math score of 533. . wag c»hose with fewer than 15 ad- n i835sVanced course units scored an Q g toll average 355 on the verbal sec- was pinion and 408 on math. 3 refit Both white and minority stu- guin dents recorded higher verbal comrjBcores this vear. with the biggest jump among black stu- on pi dents, whose scores increased and 5 nine points. i Aust Mexican-American students’ sand! scores rose six points, while Asian and white students' scores increased five points. Females showed bigger im- rovements on the test than ales. Females increased their average verbal score by seven i^i points and their average math (AP) — The medical staff seeking to surgically separate twin baby girls joined at the head said survival chances were slim for one if not both of the infants. Michelle and Michelle Tejeda were to become only the sixth set of twins to undergo separation surgery worldwide since 1991 when neuro surgeons Gordon White and Lee Berland initiate the daylong proce- (AP) —- A baboon from a San Anto nio research facility is being prepared for a controversial operation that would transplant the animal's bone marrow into an AIDS patient in hopes of fight ing the deadly disease. The San Antonio Express-News re ported today that officials of the South west Foundation for Biomedical Re search are scheduled to take the ba boon this week to the University of Pittsburgh. A school spokeswoman says the op eration could occur as soon as late September to try extending the life of 38-year-old Jeff Getty. The procedure would be the second of its kind. In 1992, the Pittsburgh group in fused baboon marrow into a 56-year- old man with advanced AIDS. The graft failed to grow, and the pa tient died a few weeks later. Foundation officials say the 62- pound Olive baboon to be used is about 7 years old and has been found through a battery of expensive tests to harbor fewer natural baboon viruses than most of the foundation's 3,065 baboons. Just stop by the Customer Service Booth to join our exciting new Bucks Back Club, exclusively for preferred customers. Members will receive a Free Bonus Card which entitles you to: a $5 Mall Gift Certificate; discounts and fabulous prizes every time you shop! 1 *See official rules. Post 0 Bealls, Dillard's, Foley's, JCPenney, Sears, Service Merchandise, The Food Court & 105 Specialty Stores. Open Monday - Saturday 10 to 9, Sunday 12 to 6. Your Gift Certificate Connection . . . Call Our Customer Service Booth 764-0777. Texas 6 Bypass at Highway 30, College Station. SBcore by two points from 1994 anMaW |q 1995' ! 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