The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 24, 1997, Image 2

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    The Battalion
Tuesday - June 24,199
T
Hard pressed world leaders gather for Earth Summit
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Leaders of a world low on
water, high on carbon dioxide and growing less green by
the day opened a week-long summit today to answer a
basic question: Are we better off now than five years ago?
The official answers being debated at the U.N.
Earth Summit were not encouraging — a choice be
tween “worse” and "not much better.”
“Our task for the coming days must be to chart the
course for the years to come,” Vice President A1 Gore
said as he welcomed representatives from 170 nations
to New York to review progress on the environment
and Third World development since the 1992 Earth
Summit in Rio de Janeiro.
The conference chairman, Razali Ismail, said
bluntly that progress has been “paltry.”
“We face a major recession. Not economic, but a
recession of spirit,” the Malaysian diplomat said. “We con
tinue to consume resources, pollute, spread and entrench
poverty as though we are the last generation on Earth.”
Many delegates hoped the United States, the
world’s No. 1 polluter, would take the lead in setting
clean-up goals, particularly on the tough issue of glob
al warming. But it was Germany’s Helmut Kohl who
promised an action plan for “Earth Summit Plus 5.”
The German chancellor was joining with Brazil,
South Africa and Singapore to draft a joint plan for
adoption by the U.N. session “to achieve concrete
progress on key issues.” The centerpiece was under
stood to be a proposal for a new World Environment
Organization.
Kohl, Japan’s Ryutaro Hashimoto, Britain’s Tony Blair
and France’s Jacques Chirac, all fresh from the Denver
summit with President Clinton, topped today’s lineup of
U.N. speakers, leading off a week-long marathon of five-
minute addresses. Clinton speaks Thursday.
Those coming from Denver can act as “catalysts” in
breaking through negotiating logjams over the docu
ments to be approved
here, said summit chair
man Razali, the U.N. Gen
eral Assembly president.
“I hope the political
leaders will come to the
rescue,” he said.
In 1992 in Rio, govern
ments endorsed the goal
of “sustainable develop
ment” — developing the
global economy to bene
fit all while protecting the environment.
That summit was historic, but the steps it agreed on
were mostly voluntary — in reducing such "greet
house gases” as carbon dioxide, for example, to com
bat global warming, and in better preserving foresti
The record since then is spurring calls fortoughe
mandatory actions.
Carbon emissions have actually increased-i
the United States by more than 13 percent. Fres!
water is increasingly scarce. Forest is being lost
a rate of one Iowa — 55,000 square miles — pc
year. On the development side, the numberof'al
solute” poor — people living on less than $1 ad®
— has edged above 1.1 billion.
In closed-door, pre-summit talks, diplomatsdt
bated what conclusion to reach in the politic!;
statement that will end the summit: Is theemi
ronmental outlook “worse" than five years ago,®
“not much better"?
Shabazz dies of bum complications
Weather Outlook
NEWYORK (AP) — Betty Shabazz, who wimessed the
assassination of her husband, Malcolm X, and became a
civil rights figure herself, died Monday of burns suffered in
a fire allegedly set by her 12-year-old grandson. She was 61.
Shabazz suffered third-degree burns over 80 percent
of her body in the June 1 blaze at her Yonkers apart
ment. She had been in extremely critical condition
since the day of the fire, and underwent five operations
to replace burned tissue with artificial skin.
“My father lived strong, mother did honorably,” At-
tallah Shabazz, the oldest of the couple’s six daughters,
told reporters outside Jacobi Medical Center. “Now we
must adapt to living a life without parents.”
Along with Coretta Scott King and Myrlie Evers-
Williams — whose husbands were also assassinated
during the civil rights movement — Shabazz emerged
as a powerful symbol in her own right.
“Like her husband before her, Betty Shabazz has be
come a tragic American figure, and like him, she will be
remembered not for her death but for the principled
life she lived and the tower of strength she became,”
said Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C.
Said King: “The nation has lost a committed civil and hu
man rights activist whose life and contributions have made
a significant difference.... I will miss her greatly.”
The Rev. Jesse Jackson, who was a frequent visitor to
the family at the hospital, remembered Shabazz as a
“champion of solid dignity and quiet strength.”
“She leaves today the legacy of one who epitomized
hope and healing,” he said, “and the burden is upon us
to keep fighting the tragic recycling of violence.”
In 1965, pregnant with twins, she was in the audi
ence at Harlem’s Audubon Ballroom with her four chil
dren when gunmen pumped 16 shots into her husband
as he preached on stage.
“Sister Betty came through the people, herself a
nurse, and people recognizing her moved back; she fell
on her knees looking down on his bare, bullet-pocked
chest, sobbing, ‘They killed him!”’ Alex Haley wrote in
“The Autobiography of Malcolm X.”
Shabazz went on to become a university adminis
trator and spokeswoman for civil rights.
She made headlines in recent years by accusing Na
tion of Islam leader Louis FarralTian of orchestrating
the assassination. She later reconciled with him, and
defended her daughter Qubilah Shabazz against
charges that she plotted a revenge attack on Farrakhan.
It was Qubilah’s son who was arrested in the fire.
Malcolm Shabazz was said to be unhappy that he
had been sent to live with his grandmother and
wanted to return to his mother in Texas. He is being
held in juvenile custody.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
Thunderstorms
High: 94°
Low: 75°
Thunderstorms
High: 94°
Low: 74°
Partly Cloudy
High: 94°
Low: 74°
Sk@feh
By Quatro
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UP TO,PHI?
A NET SEARCH
OF 'SNOT* ON YAHOO.
PIP YOU KNOW THAT 'YAHOO*
WAS ORIGiNAU-Y COINEP &Y
JONATHAN SWIFT IN HIS
novel Gumvars trayei*?
/ YOU MEAN ms NOT
A CHOCOLATE PRINK?
HE USED THE WORD
TO DESCRIBE A
SAVAGE RACE WHO
THRIVED ON 8EJNG
CRUDE,TACTLESS AND
UTTERLY STUPID
HERE WE GO
'MELVIN'S MARVEtOVS
MEDLEY Of MUCtf.
CASE IN POINT.
MSC Great Issues presents...
The Ethics of
Cloning
Presenting Dr. Jim Wild
Head of the Genetics and Biochemistry Departments
Wednesday, June 25th
4 p.m.
MSC 206
# Persons with disabilities please call 845-1515 to inform us of your
special needs. We request notification three (3) working days prior
to the event to enable us to assist you to the best of our abilities.
PROFTTABLE NUMBER!
845-0569
THE BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS
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(Battalion
Stew Milne, Editor in Chief
Helen Clancy, Managing Editor
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April Towery, Lifestyles Editor
Kristina Buffin, Sports Editor
James Francis, Opinion Editor
Jody Holley, Night News Editor
Tim Moog, Photo Editor
Brad Graeber, Graphics Editor
Jacqueline Salinas, Radio Editor
David Friesenhahn, Web Editor
Staff Members
Cnv- Assistant Editors: Erica Roy & Matt Weber;
Reporters: Michelle Newman, Joey Schlueter &
Jenara Kocks; Copy Editor: Jennifer Jones
LiFEsmES- Rhonda Reinhart, Keith McPhail
& Jenny Vrnak
Sports- Matt Mitchell & Jeremy Furtick
Opinion- John Lemons, Stephen Llano, Robby Ray,
Mandy Cater, Leonard Callaway, Chris Brooks,
Dan Cone, Jack Harvey & General Franklin
Night News- Assistant Editor: Joshua Miller
Photo- Derek Demere, Robert McKay, Ronj
Angkriwan & Pat James
Graphics- Quatro Oakley, Chad Mallam&
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Schlueter, Michelle Snyder & Karina Trevino
Web- Craig Pauli
Office Staff- Stacy Labay, Christy Clowdus &
Mandy Cater
Wit
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The Bahalion (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall spring semesters
Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods) atfe
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The Battalion, 015 Reed McDonald Building, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-1111.
COMPUTER REPAIR & SUPPORT
College Station Facility
UCS continues to grow with more than 2000 clients nationwide. We sell and support powerful
systems including PC’s, CRT’s, printers, modems, controllers, mainframes, and many other
devices. Current open positions require formal electronics training and an interest in the computer
industry. The following positions require relocation to our multimillion dollar expansion site in
Bryan/College Station.
TECHNICAL SUPPORT: Will provide ongoing, daily support regarding the repair and
maintenance of customized computer systems to our technicians and client base. Duties also
involve testing and researching hardware issues relating to all UCS equipment. Associate’s
degree or military electronics training is required.
BENCH TECHNICIAN TRAINER: Will involve component level repair of all UCS peripheral
equipment at our College Station facility. No travel involved. All tools and scopes provided.
Associate’s degree or Military electronics training is required.
HARDWARE TECHNICIAN TRAINER: Will involve developing and conducting training programs
for incoming UCS hardware technicians. Should possess knowledge of electronics and an interest
in teaching. Degree preferred.
HARDWARE TECHNICAL DOCUMENTATION: Will involve writing, editing, support and
production of hardware publications. Bachelor’s degree is preferred. Any knowledge of Interleaf,
Photoshop or Windows software would be helpful.
All offer full salary plus a benefits package including medical, dental and vision insurance, direct
deposit, 401k and semi-annual performance evaluations. UCS promotes a healthy lifestyle by
sponsoring a variety of sports events and hiring only non-tobacco users. EOE.
To find out more about these opportunities, please call or submit resume to;
Universal Computer Systems, Inc.
Attn, ad# 486
6700 Hollister, Houston, TX 77040
1 -800-883-3031, fax (713) 718-1401 «
http://www.ucs-systems.com
taste °f,summer
\
This Week at the MSC
Tues. 24th, 8:30pni
Wed. 25th, Noon-1 pm
Wed. 25th, 4pm
Thu. 26th, 1pm
MSC Film Society: Clue
MSC Town Hall: Listening Early-free CDs!
MSC Great Issues: The Ethics of Cloning
MSC Visual Arts: Art in the "Real World"
-a "field trip" to Houston
MSC 201
Rudder Fountain
MSC 206
Meet at MSC Forsyth
Center Galleries
free admission to all events!
Your Student Union 845-1515
4
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A comprehensive, up-to-the-minute news report comt:
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