The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 02, 1997, Image 12

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    HOWDY ‘97
I
An Awesome Concert of
Praise and Worship!
Featuring
Ross King
Shane & Caleb
Sons & Daughters
Thursday, Sept. 11
8:00 p.m.
First Baptist
Church, Bryan
Texas Ave. & 27th
Tickets
$3 Advance
$5 At Door
Tickets Available at MSC Box Office,
MSC, FBC Bryan, BSM, Pothers
Hosted by Compass College Ministry
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W The Battalion
GRID
Tuesday • September 2,1997
juesday • St
Yeltsin says he’ll step aside in 2000n^ r
MOSCOW (AP) — Boris Yeltsin from within his own administra- schedule, pushing the government nomyrdin may pursue the job, i J
Piiecia’c firet immilcirhr &]tir»n tr» r*nmnl£»t£» f morlrGt r^fnrmc thnnah nr»\76»r forpH wpII in
— Russia’s first popularly elected
president — declared Monday that
he will step aside when his term ex
pires in 2000, clearing the way for a
pack of candidates already jockey
ing to succeed him.
Yeltsin’s recent health problems
and a two-term limit in the consti
tution already had appeared to rule
out a third term for the Russian
leader. But his sudden announce
ment at a Moscow school still
caught many by surprise.
“My term ends in 2000.1 will not
run anymore,” Yeltsin told children
and teachers on the first day of
classes at School No. 1253.
Looking upbeat and smiling,
the 66-year-old Yeltsin said
younger, more energetic people
would be needed to run the coun
try in the future.
“We have a very good team —
a good, friendly and intelligent
team,” he said, suggesting that his
preferred successor would come
tion.
Yeltsin, who underwent heart
surgery last year and suffered a bout
“My term
ends in
2000.1 will
not run
anymore.
BORIS YELTSIN
RUSSIAN PRESIDENT
of pneumonia early this year, re
turned to full-time duty several
months ago. He appears in good
health and no one questions his in
tention to serve out the final three
years of his current term.
Yeltsin has kept up an active
to complete free-market reforms,
while repeatedly locking horns
with the communists and nation
alists in Parliament.
The Russian economy, which
has been in a free fall for most of the
1990s, is stabilizing, although mil
lions of Russians are rpired in
poverty and only modest growth is
forecast in the coming years.
The 1993 Russian constitution
limits a president to two terms, but
some Yeltsin supporters reportedly
had been looking for ways to allow
him to seek a third, four-year term.
However, there had been no indica
tion that Yeltsin himself wanted to
find a way around the constitution
al limit.
There is already a large group
of potential presidential candi
dates for 2000, although none
could be considered a front-run
ner at present.
In Yeltsin’s administration,
Prime Minister Viktor Cher-
t
Newly
r 1
U
though he has never fared wellin'
opinion polls. First Deputy Prime
Minister Boris Nemtsov is the!
country’s most popular politician,
according to several recent polls,
though at 37 some think he is tot) -phe constructi(
young and inexperienced. I Evans Library
Communist leader Gennady^ and Study Cot
Zyuganov, defeated by Yeltsin iLyng good. The $
presidential runoff election iy ityw ill offer stu
1996, is likely to run again. BC iate ly needed res
most analysts view the Commuj! t . om p U ters and, y
nist Party as being in decline be| lV p ar id n g garage
cause the majority of its supportL some wasteful (
ers are elderly and it holds littli :es0 f mysterious
appeal for the young. f The adjacent hr
Alexander Lebed, a gruff-talk- : j,j n „ Lot 35 for
ing former general, finished | |nds out at ; CO(
strong third in the first roundoff even sav hc
the 1996 presidential balloting,.‘,| arge b an k-es<
But he was dismissed as Yeltsin’s
the Commons c
national security chief last att( , ted ,,
and 5“ sma ' stru 88 lad . t0 1 mai "'-ea dollar amour
tain his visibility. A political piny Ma be , missed
he formed has inspired only lm. w ' 1|s dl , mand
ited interest. Ln and red beao
It this structure? A
Authorities: Diana's driver was intoxicated
e“We want to pay
Mien I think of i
later place, const
fcch as more parkii
LONDON (AP) — Britain mourned its fallen
princess Monday in silent, patient, and grieving
lines, and heard the latest from France with new
dismay: Diana’s driver was loaded with alcohol
when he roar ed off for her final ride.
The black Mercedes-Benz sedan may have
been hurtling along at more than 100 mph when
it crashed in a Paris tunnel early Sunday, killing
Princess Diana, millionaire boyfriend Dodi Fayed,
and the driver, a French source reported.
The news hit hard in a nation already coping
with losing such ayouthful icon so abruptly—and
angered that celebrity photographers, who had
chased the speeding vehicle, may have been part
ly responsible.
But outside St. James’s Palace, where Diana’s
coffin lay within a closed chapel, the thoughts of
ordinary Britons seemed to turn again and again
to die life, not the death, of the “people’s princess.”
“Diana was the one in the royal family who was
most on our level,” said Halaena Hankin, one of
thousands waiting for hours to sign books of con
dolence inside St. James’s.
“She added the style and the flavor that the
monarchy needed,” said London businessman
Christopher Buckmaster. “Now the monarchy will
be poorer.”
Buckingham Palace announced Diana’s fu
neral will be conducted at 11 a.m. (6 a.m. EDT)
Saturday at Westminster Abbey — where kings
and queens are christened and crowned, wed
and buried.
It will be a state event, but not quite a full state
funeral, Prime Minister Tony Blair said.
Diana, Princess ofWales, lost the full title of
Her Royal Highness upon her divorce from
Prince Charles last year, but retained many of
her privileges.
The former Diana Spencer, mother of England’s
future king, Prince William, will then be buried pri
vately in her family’s ancestral chapel near A1 thorp,
the family home 60 miles north of London. There
lie 20 generations of Spencers.
The government, not wanting the funeral cer
emonies to involve merely “the great and the
good,” as Blair’s spokesperson put it, will include
as many ordinary Britons as possible.
“There should be people there who represent
ed the causes she touched and the people that she
touched,” he said. The palace said it plans to issue
iStudi
Brazos Valley
Symphony Orchestra
1997-1998 Concert Season
Marcelo Bussiki, Music Director
Attention All Texas A&.M University Students
The Brazos Valley Symphony Orchestra will
audition musicians ior the following instruments:
French Horn Clarinet
Trumpet Oboe
Trombone Flute
Bassoon Percussion
and All Strings
Auditions will bo held on:
Tuesday, September 2, 1997
7:00 to 10:00 pan.
Room 402, Academic Building
Audition Requirements: The appli
cant will be asked to perform two works
of bis or her choice, as well as sight read
an orchestral excerpt.
NOTE: Credit information: (Muse 286- Symphony
Orchestra) can be applied towards fulfilling the require
ments for Music Minor, or as 1 hour of general electives.
ismng existing stn
2,000 invitations. lehemoth blockadi
Much of the nation will stand still during the™ n 6 more stull;
televised funeral. London airports will suspend ma ' n proble
service and many stores will close. L difficulty in di
The investigation of the crash took an eveif enton an Y partic
more dramatic turn with the statement byb 1 does not have t
French prosecutors that an analysis of drivel™ 11 ^ 1 mams of ct
Henri Paul’s blood found “that the alcohol lev!
el was illegal.”
A French judicial source, speaking on con*;
dition of anonymity, said it was 1.75 grams per!
liter of blood — more than three times France'!
legal limit.
Under France’s strict law, exceeding 0.5^
grams — the level after about two glasses ofl I |
wine — is considered a misdemeanor, and 0.8^ J
grams is a greater offense. The 0.5-gram limit?
translates to a blood-alcohol content of about
0.065 percent. Most U.S. states consider a dri
ver legally drunk if the blood-alcohol content
reaches 0.1 percent.
A source close to the investigation said the Mer
cedes’ speedometer was found stuck at 196 kilo- rriexas
meters per hour — 121 mph — after the crash, a I A&M
good indication of the speed at impact. T has
| always
prided it-
sdon be
llnivi
T
4
PC REPAIR SPECIALIST
Our College Station office seeks an experienced PC
tech with knowledge of PC hardware and ability to
perform component level repair. We can offer full-time
or part-time hours to fit your schedule and offer up to
$15 per hour.
To apply, stop by our Recruiting office in the Metro
Centre in Bryan, Tuesday - Thursday after 12 p.m. or
call 1-800-883-3031. E.O.E.
UNIVERSAL COMPUTER SYSTEMS, INC.
http://www.ucs-systems.com
.Vi
opi
For information please contact:
Penny Zent, Orchestra Committee Chair
p-zent@tamu.edu (409) 845-5670
f 9
o
-C Hi
tf
Soc
<»
HI
cer
trge
campus.,
with a
"small
town at
mosphere.”
Students
con-
tan tly re
minded of that do
rarm fuzzy "spirit
jieland.” As A&M
jrow, though, this
ng replaced with
solationism. The
ion's focus has ch
Indent-centered
entered, and the
Suppliers of Soccer Equipment for the Brazos Valley.
Back To School Sale!
Store Hours
Mon., Tues., Thurs., & Fri. 4:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Saturday 10:00 am - 6:00 pm
Closed on Wednesday & Sunday
1405-B Harvey Road, College Station
Across from the Post Oak Mall Entrance - Next to E-Z Mart
Aggie Owned & Operated
MSC TOWN HALL
&
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.
Ml
I DOS T HESS HIMSXAS
Lil’ Keke
Saturday - Si
__ Ruqder
“j Texaj|M
I $15.00
S B, 1997
m .p
-sity I'
The Lady o ns
R mdri
A
$ 1 S.OOalntKL door
Tickets Available at MSC Box Office
^ (409)845-1234
% .Ac
Mr
Persons with disabilities please call (409)845-1515 to
inform us of your special needs. We request notification
three (3) working days prior to the event to enable us to JJL
assist you to the best of our abilities. Tr
recoming a prep:
mpersonal “real v
A&M students;
ugly being cut off
personal interacth
university experie
ningatorientatioi
identities become
security number A
dent ID card is pla
hands, students te
android-like unive
i.The scanning
icstrip becomes tl
dents get to a ham
Registration is j
most glaring exam
impersonality. In t
dents were require
counsel during reg
Discussing possib
Involved meetings
and sometimes ev
According to to
(students simply t)
Blimerical choice:
Touch-Tone phon
, this system may b
pficient, it basical
lients alone to rur
Frough schedule
an already frustra
i becomes even me
sstudents often <
Masses that are nc
to their degree pla
As for advising
Jents today do n
Ww their advis
find the student-
tatio basically er
i situation is i
Miange any time
\ny colleges hi
f at two advisers fi
population of tin
Ijjudents who do
fcng face limite
fofappointmer
Personnel prob
: are not limit
‘•g staff; students
ante issues in cla