Michael C. ‘85 Owner • "OLDEST TATTOO STUDIO IN TOWN" • MEMBER NATIONAL TATTOO ASSOCIATION • BODY PIERCING • STERILE EQUIPMENT • CUSTOM DESIGNS Sun. - Thurs. 3 PM-10 PM • Fri. - Sat. 3 PM-Midnight 846-7084 3803 South Texas Ave. • Bryan ETH ICON a company the Value or Working Together" ETHICON, INC. a Johnson & Johnson Company, will be conducting an on-campus interview on October 23 for the following positions: Supervisors Engineers The resume deadline is September 16. BUILD YOUR OWN COMPUTER!! IBM COMPATIBLE COMPUTERS VERY COMPETITIVE PRICES ZT WORLDWIDE GROUP EASY TO ORDER DELIVERY WITHIN 5 WORKING DAYS RUSH ORDERS AVAILABLE (48 HOURS) ALL COMPUTERS COME WITH ONE YEAR FARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY. MMX AND 17" MONITORS ARE AVAILABLE FOR ALL COMPUTERS CALL 1-888-FAX-7007 PENTIUM INTEL 133, 166, 200, & 200 PRO UP TO 64 MB RAM & 4.2 GIG HD AVAILABLE COLOR MONITORS FROM 14” & UP WINDOWS 95 SOFTWARE INSTALLED & READY TO USE UPON RECEIPT ALL PACKAGES INCLUDE: 33.6 FAX MODEM, 12X CD ROM, MULTIMEDIA SPEAKERS & MUCH MUCH MORE!!!!!!!!!!! VISA Hey, Education majors! We’re having a party for you September 16, 5:00-8:00p.m. 15'/? Discount on purchases during this event See our new teacher & ed. major’s workroom Free project demos Free goodies to take home Free food Call for info at 846-8660 www.jacques-toys.com y JaCQuE s Toys • Books • Educational Supplies On Texas Avenue • one stoplight north of University Drive at Rosemary The Ladies of Delta Delta Delta would like to congratulate the New Member Class of 1997 Emily Armour Taryn Livingston Jessica Beard Kimberly Loftis Tara Beeler Jennifer Marshall Lindsay Bellow ^ Ashley McAlpine Stephanie Best Melissa McGavran Jody Bohnsack Sarah Minter Brittney Booth' Sarah Myers Pamela Boyd Katie O'Leary Erin Brennan Kristen Pittman Brooke Browning Kristen Quigley Trissa Campbell Amy Roach Alexa Capps Kelli Roberts Christy Carleton y Shannon Rodrigues Whitney Carlisle Jl 'T Julie Sadler Amanda Carter Jennifer Salazer Ashley Darden Ashley Scott Natalie Drees sen Sheridan Scott Laae Duke Lindsey Smith Sarah Dunlap Noelle Smith Lisa Elinn Whitney Smith Natalie Floyd Kathryn Stallings Kristen Gatewood Casey Stefan Lauren Harrison M Jennifer Stinson Kelli Hartgrave Leigh Stinson Sarah Hicks Katherine Thoroughman Catherine Johnson Kelli Towns Anne Jones Katherine Turnier Katie Kavanagh Micah Wing Robyn Knocke Cathleen Wright Lauren Kunze Katie Zey "T’ The Battalion Nation Tuesday • September 16, Eat your veggies Study shows sprouts contain cancer fightei WASHINGTON (AP) — Good news for people who hate broccoli: A study shows there is up to 50 times more anti-cancer chemical in broc coli sprouts than in the mature veg etable — and the sprouts don’t taste like broccoli. Three-day-old broccoli sprouts, which are tender shoots topped with two baby leaves, are loaded with a concentrated form of sul- foraphane, a powerful cancer fight er, say researchers at Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Paul Talalay, head of a team at Hopkins that discovered sul- foraphane five years ago, said he was surprised that die sprouts contained such a high level of the anti-cancer compound. “If these are developed commer cially, this could be a really easy way for people to get the benefits of chemoprotection against cancer,” said Talalay. A report on the research was be ing published Tuesday in the Pro ceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Earlier studies showed that sul- foraphane, found in broccoli, cauli flower and some other vegetables, prompts the body to make an en zyme that prevents tumors from forming. A1994 study indicated that cancer development was reduced by 60 percent to 80 percent in laborato ry animals fed sulforaphane extract ed from broccoli. Talalay said that diet studies have shown that eating 2 pounds of broc coli a week can provide enough sul foraphane to lower colon cancer risk by half. Talalay said his lab has found that the sulforaphane content in broccoli from a grocery store can vary by a fac tor of eight or 10 and there is no way to identify a vegetable loaded with the compound from one that is not. “They look the same,” he said. "It is impossible to tell a highly protec tive broccoli from a poorly protective broccoli.” Broccoli sprouts may solve this problem, said Talalay, because the baby plants have a uniformly high level of sulforaphane. “Because of the high content (of sulforaphane), it is possible to con sume far lower quantities of the sprouts and get the same protec tion,” he said. Broccoli sprouts resemble the alfalfa sprouts now common in gro cery stores, but they have more fla vor, said Talalay. And the broccoli sprouts do not have the sharp tang of mature broccoli that many people, such as former President Bush, find unpleasant. “They have a far more interesting taste than ordinary sprouts,” saidl; lalay. “You can use them in sail! wiches or salads.” Talalay said the broccoli sprot take just three days to grow Etc seeds, in contrast to the 55 to 70dji it takes to grow a mature broct! plant. Broccoli sprouts are not ni grown commercially, butTalalaya that if other researchers confirmt findings of his lab, it could encouui c growers to start producing thebi: broccoli as a new vegetable health-conscious shoppers. “This is an important findii said Michael Bennett, a professoi; the University of Texas, Southwt Medical Center and an expert onii 0 and cancer. He said that diets ridi broccoli and other vegetables ha;- proven benefit to health butthaft important thing is getting people y ( eat them.” Survey: Americans puzzled by Constitution WASHINGTON (AP) — Pop quiz: How many U.S. senators are there? One in two Americans do not know the an swer is 100, according to a survey on the U.S. Constitution released Monday. And two in five don’t know there are three branches of govern ment, let alone what they are. Mayor Edward G. Rendell of Philadelphia, where the Constitution was signed 210 years ago this Wednesday, said the results were dis appointing. “That shows an appalling lack of knowledge for a document that determines what we do,” said Rendell, chairman of the National Consti tution Center, created by Congress in 1988 to in crease awareness of the document. “Every day, issues important and central to us as people and government are affected by the Constitution.” Fewer than one in five surveyed were able to correctly answer at least eight of 10 basic ques tions, such as how long senators serve (six years), who nominates Supreme Court justices (the president) and what the first 10 amend ments to the Constitution were called (the Bill of Rights). Rendell, whose group sponsored the survey, “That shows an appalling lack of knowledge for a document that determines what we do.” EDWARD G. RENDELL CHAIRMAN NATIONAL CONSTITUTION CENTER did find a ray of hope in findings that 91 per cent consider the Constitution important and 77 percent believe it has an impact on their dai ly lives — even if many of them cannot say pre cisely how. “The good news,” Rendell said, “is they have a great reverence for the Constitution." Rendell said the lack of knowledge sta partly from an education system that tends treat the Constitution in the context ofhisto: rather than as a living document thatshap current events. The survey also found that: —16 percent incorrectly believe theQ stitution declares Christianity the officialll religion. —35 percent wrongly believe the docura declares English the premier language. —24 percent cannot name any oftheFi Amendment rights, and only 6 percentc name all four: freedom of speech, press sembly and religion. The telephone survey of 1,000 U.S. citize: conducted by the New York communicafe firm of Shepardson, Stern & Kaminsky,h margin of error of plus or minus 3 perceni points. Respondents were asked a series open-ended and true-false questions. Helms battles over federal arts funding WASHINGTON (AP) —The annual battle over federal arts funding moved to the Senate Monday with conserva tive Sen. Jesse Helms urging elimination of the National En dowment for the Arts. The House has already stripped funding for the NEA from a fiscal 1998 spending bill and Senate acceptance of the Helms measure would set up a confrontation with the White House, which strongly supports the agency respon sible for federal subsidies for the arts. Helms, R-N.Q, contends that the NEA funds programs that many Americans find objectionable or blasphemous. “It is self-evident that many of the beneficiaries of NEA grants are contemptuous of traditional moral standards,” he said in a floor speech. He said the NEA caters to “phony, self-appointed artists who insist on using the American taxpayers’ money to fi nance anything they want to drag up from the sewer and declare to be art.” The NEA, founded by President Johnson in 1965, pro vides grants for nonprofit and community art groups. NEA spokeswoman Cherie Simon said legislative re strictions and internal reforms have solved past complaints of problematic funding, and that the NEA didn’t even fund some of the programs that Helms condemned. Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., spoke of NEA backing for theater groups that bring Shakespeare to tiny towns in his home state. It would be a shame to focus on a few mistakes when there are so many good worthwhile projects that the NEA has made a reality.” . .„ A vo 1 te ]1 on the Helms amendment, attached to a $13.7 billion bill to fund Interior Department and Indian pro grams m fiscal 1998, is expected as early as Tuesday. The bill currently includes $100 million for the NEA. Smithsonian chief refuses to change sweatshop exhibit Tuesda Nc Hoc The Texas an win a na would know. That is tl Hockey Club gas in search al Champior The USA nship Tom ends Saturd; This is the the A&M He egas. Lasty the inaugurc The Aggie Davis in the 1 Santa Barba second-rank This yean they get. Ryan Phil team, believ ring the title “If we pla; good game,” Three oth lub Hockey ty, Sam Hou WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the Smithsonian Institution said Monday the museum has no intention of changing a planned exhibit on sweatshops that some clothes makers have called biased. The California Fashion Association, which represents major clothing firms, last week accused the Smithsonian of taking a “political position” by focusing on sweat shop conditions rather than on the apparel industry’s contributions to American busi ness. The show is scheduled to open April 15 at the National Museum of American History in Washington. It will include a reconstruction of an El Monte, Calif., factory where 70 undocu mented Thai immigrants were discovered in 1995 working under slave-like condi tions, sewing clothes for brand-name makers. Asked Monday if he would consider re shaping or canceling the exhibit, the Smith sonian’s secretary, I. Michael Heyman, said, “Not at all.” Use Metchek, the fashion group’s execu tive director, contends the show is negative, unbalanced and unduly influenced by labor unions — a claim refuted by the museum. She pledged last week to block it. c o “We want to turn this exhibit planiw another Enola Cay,” Metchek said, refe ring to a 1995 controversy over an exhi it of the plane that dropped the atom bomb on Japan. Heyman said Monday the sweatshc show’s planners had tried to getcoopf ation from the clothing industry. Iftk effort remains unsuccessful, officialsir try to get input from individual manufc turers, he said. The show’s co-curator, Peter Liebholdi vited clothing groups to provide videos! “good industry practices” to balance (i. sweatshop information, Liebhold saidli of) Oft week. But several industry groups said sir. —* unday just th A&M! nificant vie After lo son, inclui Aggies fin? noon. Alth the start, i tone and 1 videos would not provide enough of aeon terweight to the El Monte exhibit. The exhibit is called “Between a Rocki a Hard Place: A Dialogue on Americ Sweatshops, 1820-Present.” It receivedmo5 ey from, among others, the Labor Depar- ment and an apparel labor union. “Some of the exhilritions in the area at the Smithsonian are on contem] rary issues,” Heyman said. “And normd] what one seeks in those is to use thecoi temporary issue to focus attention andthi Wome takes The fiftee team finishe Preview in V competing f ranked in th< terCard Colli to give the historical context of that conteit] porary issue.” Administrative Assistant full or Our Bryan/College Station o(her oart-time for word processing, oftice coordination ana o n part time, tor ^ experience helpful. Full time posWon^fferssalaryand full benefits including medical, = ca„ our, main headquarters: Universal Computer Systems, Inc. 1-800-883-3031 http://www.ucs-svstems.com Universal Computer Systems, Inc. Check out our website at www.ucs-systems.com to find out more about Universal Computer Systems, Inc. UCS is looking for candidates to fill otiM open positions at our multi-million dollai| expansion site in College Station. We still have 40+ part-time positions available. If you would like to gain valuable computfij experience with a job that is flexible enoujj to accommodate your school schedule an pays $6.00/hr., don't wait any longer! Despite s j sickness, th, l in individual Senior is; (three rounds record she s, Political Fern Call our Recruiting Department at: 1-800-883-3031 NOW!!! EOE. UCS hires non-tobacco users only. I Michael Murphey '93 Owner Extra Inning Sports Cards From picnics to date parties to formats Plan your next event at the Kyle House Call for an appointment (409) 775-8375 Visit our web site www.lcyIehouse.com Baseball - Basketball - Football Autographs - Memorabilia Texas A&M Collectibles 724 E. Villa Maria Across from Manor East Mall V, (409) 823-3236 Welcome Back Ags! ‘ views expn of MS