Class of 1997 Ring Dance and Senior Week T-shirts on Sale Now in the MSC from 10-2 ...wants you to cover the Texas A&M University campus this summer and fall! K “Get to Know The Batt” Q&A sessions Come ask the summer and fall editors ANYTHING about The Batt! \Ne are looking for summer and fall staffs, and this is your chance to find out what each po sition entails. For your convenience, we are hosting two sessions: Tonight and Wednesday night at 8:30 p.m. in Reed McDonald 003. Hope to see you there. J GRADUATION $400 Bucks of Incentive 1 ' Hot Looks Great Performance Summer Home Nobel Prizes Drives Like a Shoebox Looks Like a Shoebox Working Two Jobs . OO' Excitement wr Rapture wr Bliss i«!r Boring wr Dullsville Miss RONTI/VC SUNRIRE DRIVING EXCITE/WENT EOR AROUND $03,500" Call 1 -800-SUNFIRE ©1997 GM Corp. All rights reserved. Always wear safety belts, even with air bags. *See your participating Pontiac dealer for details on the $400 College Graduate purchase incentive. GM reserves the right to change or withdraw this offer. **$1 3,514 MSRP including dealer prep and destination charge. Tax, license and other optional equipment extra. Prices higher in CA, MA and NY. Price as of 9/1 /96, subject to change. AFRAID OF OVER-STUDYING?? TAKE A BREAK! WATCH HARD ROCK LIVE PRESENTED BY PONTIAC SUNFIRE SUNDAY 8 P.M. AND 1 A.M., MONDAY 8 P.M., SATURDAY 5 P.M. ALL TIMES EST/PST. ONLY ON VH1. www.hardrocklive.msn.com Pages Tuesday • April 15,IS)I Panel Continued from Pagel ‘‘I thought there would be peat? last when Yasser Arafat shookht with [Yitzhak] Rabin on thelft House lawn,” Shapiro said. 1 Arafat has not stopped terrorist has shown intent to destroy Israd' Khali Sakakini, anotherpanei is from Jerusalem and a memta the Arab-American Anti-Discrii nation Committee. He discusii how important it is forthefigbj to stop and peace to be found. “This is an old cliche thai Arabs want to destroy Israel, said. “It is not true. Jerusalemisl core of the pea'ce process.Itisj much Palestine as it is Israel’ Larry Rushton, program cocs nator for the Jordan Institutes the panel arrangement wasoij nized to present different poii view to the audience. “It is a good opportunityforp pie to understand thecomplett| the issue,” he said. Rushton added that the disci sion shows the difficulties facing two groups in making peace. Aggieland Continued from Pagel Benson wants the yearbook! lustrate that even through dif ences and disagreements, A&M dents still can respect eachoi and love the fact that theyarepa the Aggie family. “We need to be able tositdi) and talk and celebrate our ences and be glad they are thi Benson said. “Otherwise, thisw be one really boring university.’ Some of Benson's tenia; changes include having justt| class have their pictures taken,f ing the cover a more traditional!! and adding a Greek section.!* mally, the Greek organizations listed in the organization the yearbook. “Fraternities and sororities becoming a big part ofA&M’sG pus,” Benson said. “TheyrepreZ a lot of diverse students. They lot of fun things that addtotki cial life at A&M.” Eric Pargac, 1997 Aggielana: tor and a senior journalism®!' said Benson likes to get things^} r Nl the right way and works wellc, bght layout and design. )f ret “I think she’s willing it id- chances and have a visuallyap^ ing book,” Pargac said. Pargac said it is importani't his successor to realize responsibility that comeswitiii job, especially as the yearli# nears completion. “I’d tell her to make sureshesi on top of things and doesn’t sit bp bf| and wait until the end,” Pargacs£ Benson said the hardest pafl the job is knowing 20 to 50 y® down the road people still looking at her work. “Our work is going to be in® hands of old Ags and otherpeoplf a long time—they’re more collects items,” she said. "So I thinkifsi® portant to do your job well andp' an accurate picture of what life" 1 like during that year at A&M. 1 Benson said her biggest cM lenge will be asking theyearW staff and students to put asideth beliefs about what the Aggiel® has been like over the years®* have faith that 1998’s willbeone 1 the best they have ever seen. “The challenges will bef staff to make it the best book, son said, “and for the student^ to have the faith in us tobuytl 11 book. I think they’ll be ret antly surprised when it Gomeso® In fact, I guarantee it.” Lawsuit Continued from Page He cited a U.S. Supreme Co® case in which an abortion clinics 11 * fered economic losses because 0 racketeering that caused person injuries to workers. “Your property injury cana^ out of someone else’s personal! 1 jury,” he said. He said state product liability! 0 ' bars only individual smokers’s"" against tobacco companies, theory that smokers knew the d® 1 gers of their actions. Texas taxpayers, Tribe said,^ no decision to absorb the smoking. Thus, they are entitle 1 ! sue, he said. Folsom said he would try decide soon whether to disnii the case because a trial date is for September. An afternoon hearing was sd determine whether Texas has fail 1 to turn over to the tobacco con? nies the medical documents on 1 dividual smokers’ cases that® companies have requested. Another defendant in thee? Liggett, which makes Chester? and L&M cigarettes, struck a ? last month that ends its liabtl? the Texas case and 21 other sim state lawsuits.