CINEMARK THEATRES The Battalion EWS Tuesday Page 5 April 1, 1997 ivestigation of mass suicide continues Relatives have requested that the bodies be tested for HIV. SAN DIEGO (AP) — There’s no evidence Imore members of the Heaven’s Gate cult [planning to kill themselves, although cli reports are being investigated, author- Jsaid Monday. ich fears of copycat suicides by far-flung [cells are real. In 1994, 48 members of the r of the Solar Temple killed themselves in erland. Later that year, five more mem- s committed suicide in Canada, followed by the French Alps in 1995 and five in Cana- |n March 22, 1997. 'onetheless, sheriff’s Lt. Jerry Lipscomb said rrities have found “nothing, absolutely noth- |to suggest that anyone other than the 39 bers of the high-tech UFO cult planned to mit suicide. One member who left the group about a 1th ago, because he didn’t want to kill him self, received two farewell videotapes on March 25 from cult members describing their death plans. The next day, he and his employer drove to the hilltop mansion, found the bodies and called police. As for reports that members may have killed themselves because leader Marshall Applewhite had convinced them he was dying of cancer, med ical examiner Brian Blackbourne said Applewhite did not have cancer. In fact, none of the victims had a terminal illness, he said. The bodies were being tested for HIV, at the request of relatives, he said. Thirty-nine members of the nomadic group, which made its living lately developing Internet web sites, were found dead March 26 in a rented mansion in exclusive Rancho Santa Fe. They were dressed alike and covered in purple shrouds, their bags neady packed in anticipation of a trip to outer space. Authorities say the cult members died in groups, consuming a mixture of phenobarbital and alcohol and then placing plastic bags over their heads. Blackbourne also said that two Vicodin vials were found near the bodies of the last two cult members alive inside the mansion — and traces of the painkiller were found in their bodies in ad dition to the drugs that helped kill the other 37. Blackbourne said all autopsies were com plete and toxicological tests would be finished by Friday. Lipscomb said Monday that investigators still believe it was a mass suicide, and although they’re trying to determine where the cultists got so much phenobarbital, it’s unlikely the answer will lead to criminal charges. “We’re not going to charge anyone with any thing, and who would we charge?” Lipscomb said. The cult members believed they would be picked up by a spaceship trailing the Hale-Bopp comet after they shed their earthly “containers.” Monday, a forklift operator moved the body bags from a refrigerated trailer to unmarked vans for delivery to mortuaries. Relatives had been located for all but two of the victims. Officials released their names and other details in hope that relatives could be found. tens pay tribute to Selena two years after her death ■ORPUS CHRISTI (AP) — Te- ■ star Selena lives on in the ■lories of her fans, who have [en making pilgrimages to her Ive to mark Monday’s second an- i B-sary of the singer’s death. “1 or me, believe it or not, it’s a He of closure,” said Daniel Bs, manager of a car audio store iGalveston. “I never really got to /goodbye to her before.” |ares was once thrilled at watch- _Jelena Quintanilla Perez perform Houston nightclubs. On Sunday, he pled to Seaside Memorial Park in busChristi where Selena is bur ied. Ibout 5,000 people have done the ■e in the past five days to pay trib- tet( i Selena, who was gunned down ;a Corpus Christi motel on March 31, 1995. Yolanda Sal divar, the former president of Selena’s fan club, was convict ed of murdering her and is serving a life prison sentence. As many as 50 people at a time have visited the grave, said Stella Hernandez, a cemetery representative who has seen visitors with license plates from New York, Illinois, Arizona and Mexico. A 5-foot chain-link fence was erected around the burial site to keep people from disturbing a large arrangement of white roses, purple flowers and palm leaves that adorn “I never really got to say goodbye to her before.” Daniel Mares Selena fan the spot. Fans have decorated the fence with bunches of flowers, stuffed Easter bunnies and written homages to Selena. In death, Selena has achieved a celebrity status she only could have dreamed of in life: She is the subject of eight books, new musical releases and a full- length movie. And, since her murder, Selena has been the focus of numerous legal con frontations over rights to her music, name and image and the merchan dising of products bearing her name. “Ballpark, I’d say there have been 20 lawsuits filed, not counting the cease-and-desist letters that our at torneys send out to other parties who give up at that point,” said Bert Quintanilla, marketing director of Q Productions, the family business. He also is a cousin of Selena’s father. “It’s an ongoing battle. We have law firms in California, San Antonio and Corpus Christi, and we have in vestigators constantly trying to stop the pirating. Some people even bla tantly tried to copyright the name Selena,” Bert Quintanilla added. The latest and biggest lawsuit is a purely local affair, pitting the Quintanilla family and band members against television sta tion Kill in Corpus Christi, owned by McKinnon Broadcasting. Researchers find high injury levels as result of air bags WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly two-thirds ol drivers in crashes of air bag-equipped cars were injured by the deploying bag, ac cording to an analysis by University of Michigan researchers. 1 Most of the injuries were minor scrapes and bruises, but 3 percent of the drivers — or p —suffered broken bones in the forearm or hand, according to the university’s Trans portation Research Institute, where re archers studied 540 crashes. The fractures were caused by the de ploying air bag, the air bag cover, or the air flinging drivers’ arms and hands into tile instrument panel or windshield, Don- ildF. Huelke, a lead researcher, said in a telephone interview. Several of the breaks happened during a ft-hand turn when a driver’s right hand was eerthe steering wheel, where the air bag de ploys, Huelke said. Nearly two-thirds of the drivers had injuries to the arms, hands, face or upper body and most injuries were minor scrapes, bruises or cuts, Huelke said. Air bags have saved more than 1,700 lives, according to government estimates, but have been blamed for the deaths of 38 children and 24 adults. The researchers found that 38 percent of the drivers suffered forearm and hand in juries while one in three drivers sustained a facial injury, according to papers they pub lished this year. Huelke and other researchers at the in stitute in Ann Arbor, Mich., looked at 540 crashes involving the deployment of driver- side air bags in a variety of vehicles through mid-1996. Most of the crashes were in Michigan: about one-fifth were in other states, mostly the Great Lakes states. About 2 percent—or 11 drivers — sustained eye injuries from air bag deployment, primari ly scuffs on the eyeball or some blood in the eye, Huelke said. “In almost all the cases, the driver recovered from the injury and there were no long-term effects,” he said. However, a report published in March that reviewed five cases of air bag injuries treated at the University of California, Los Angeles, oph thalmology trauma center concluded air bags could be hazardous to the eyes. “The study highlights that air bags need some changes in design,” said Dr. Edward E. Manche, the paper's lead author and direc tor of cornea and refractive surgery at Stan ford University Medical Center. In one case, a woman became legally blind in one eye. In another case, a woman’s contact lenses broke and she needed surgery. (LECTION ntinued from Page 1 ason Jaynes, the election commissioner and lior computer science major, said the memo written before he or Baggett knew of the tion results. This was his interpretation, before he even wthe results of the election,” Jaynes said, esse Czelusta, a senior agricultural econom- inajor, was one of the authors of the referen- . He said Baggett’s interpretation is different nwhat the authors intended. The only reason to include this (the clause ut decreasing the number of candidates pro- tionally) is to reduce the number of four can- ites,” Czelusta said. “Otherwise, it’s pointless.” Hzelusta is planning to file a complaint with Student Government Judicial Board. (immel said he supported the referendum and was involved in getting it passed by the students. Kimmel received 7 percent of the vote, the smallest percentage of the run-off candidates. Bluntzer received 24 percent, Henke received 15 percent and Nichols received 13 percent of the vote. Kimmel said he is dropping out of the election because he came in last place among the four candidates, «nd by his interpretation of the ref erendum, it is unfair for him to run against the other candidates. “I think it would be hypocritical of me to turn around and take advantage of this mis nomer,” Kimmel said. “I think it (dropping out of the election) is the best thing for Texas A&M and it is more important than any single yell leadership [position].” Will Hurd, executive assistant to the student body president and a sophomore computer sci ence and international studies major, said it was Baggett’s right to interpret the referendum. “Whether you like the interpretation or not, it was up to him,” Hurd said. “There are always go ing to be two sides of a coin. Carl (Baggett) inter preted what he thought was best for the Univer sity. He is the representative of the student body and he will act according to its best intefests.” Christin Eiserloh, Kimmel’s campaign man ager and a sophomore business analysis major, said Kimmel’s campaign was based on yell lead ers being leaders both on and off the football field. His dropping out of the election is consis tent with his campaign platform, she said. “Robert (Kimmel) doesn’t feel it’s ethical to help get the referendum passed, and then slip through the cracks with this misinterpretation,” Eiserloh said. Baggett said people will have differences of opinion with his decision because this is the first year of yell leader run-off elections. “Any time a new situation arises, such as a run-off, there are going to be people who dis agree,” Baggett said. Zeta Tau Alpha’s “Don’t Be A Fool” Help Zeta fight breast cancer. Come by the MSC, Target, or Randall’s between 1 lam - 2pm today to pick up a FREE shower card! Don’t be a fool. Get shower cards for the ones you love. The MSC L.T. Jordan Institute for International Awareness presents Kathleen Ferrara “The Importance of Communication in Foreign Cultures.” Know what to say and what not to say in other countries. 7:00 p.m. April 1, 1997 Rudder 704 For more information, call 845-8770. Check out our web page at http://ltjordan.tamu.edu 4^ Persons with disabilities please call 845-8770 to inform us of your special needs. MOVIES 16 HOLLYWOOD USA BRYAN-COLLEQE STATION I Hwy 6 Bypass 0 Hwy 30 764-7592 TUESDAY TIMES ONLY $3.75 ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6PM AND AFTER 11PM $3.75 SENIORS & CHILDREN - $5.75 ADULTS JERRY MAGUIRE (R) ( 12:55 3:55 6:55 9:55 B. A. P. S. (PG-13) 1:30 3:40 6:05 8:15 10:25 ABSOLUTE POWER (R) 12:50 3:50 7:05 10:05 ★ DEVIL S OWN (R) 1:30 4:00 7:00 9:30 2:00 4:30 7:30 10:00 THE ENGLISH PATIENT (R) 12:45 4:30 8:15 ★ SELENA (PG) 1:00 4:00 7:00 10:00 12:30 3:30 6:30 9:30 RETURN OF THE JEDI (PG) 12:45 3:45 6:45 9:45 ★ LIAR LIAR (PG-13) 1:15 3:30 6:10 8:20 10:30 1:45 4:00 7:50 9:55 DONNIE BRASCO (R) 1:40 4:20 7:15 10:00 JUNGLE 2 JUNGLE (PG) 1:40 4:20 6:45 9:20 ★CATS DON’T DANCE (G) 1:30 3:50 6:15 8:20 10:25 SLING BLADE (R) 1:10 4:10 7:10 10:10 SIXTH MAN (PG-13) 2:00 4:35 7:35 10:15 SAME DAY ADVANCE TICKET SALES HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE ★ No Passes or Supersavers http -y/w w w. i pt .cpm/e i nema r k FAX us your Classified Ad 845-2678 Include Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express Number and Expiration Date for FAX orders The Battalion 015 Reed McDonald Bldg. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday Call 845-0569 for more info ik Ik CIGARETTES • IMPORTED CIGARS SNUFF • CHEWING TOBACCO MANUFACTURERS COUPONS ACCEPTED 1623 TEXAS AVE. CULPEPPER PLAZA (409) 695-1256 FREE CONCERT Wednesday - April 2, 1997 - 12:30 p.m. - Rudder Theatre OLIVER MESSIAN’S “QUARTET FOR THE END OF TIME” Composed and first performed before 5000 prisoners in Stalag 8-A on January 15, 1941 Presented in conjunction with the Unexpected Encounters with the Holocaust Conference by the College of Liberal Arts, Department of Modern & Classical Languages and the TAMU Music Program, and featuring artist faculty performers from Sam Houston State University. ATTENTION BUSINESS STUDENTS • Want to know about: • How to use Bonfire? • What classes to take? • What to major in? • What is a Certificate of International Business and Study Abroad? • When do I enter Upper level? • Academic Resources? • Grad School? Come to our Pre-registration Workshop! Please bring a copy of your degree audit from Heaton Hall April 3rd, 1997 7:00 to 9:00 PM Room 159, Wehner