chasers." Moi h Bonfire sin? e it. I am sure i the officers rew spend r Aggie Boni iris whooi: YEAR • ISSUE 37 • 10 PAGES COLLEGE STATION • TX TUESDAY • OCTOBER 21 • 1997 chelleVotii ! students . . .. iystem chancellor ,»ckinrt§cted council chair ightadvenirj Di. Barry B. Thompson, chancellor d. My first -'the Texas A&M University System, nd I slept,'as elected to a two-year term as iderablaniiair of the Council of Public Universi- in awe as Presidents and Chancellors at the ' sun strealcoup’s meeting Oct. 15 in Austin, sky. fBhe purpose of the council, in ex- avebeenocfence since 1953, is to provide a ions ranginmim for discussing the needs, mile tripstoficerns and problems of the pub- treks. IVeli universities of Texas and to en- italdivkkourage inter-institutional coopera- is whereto in meeting the higher education to survive, seds of the citizens of Texas. rdofelksp:_. ■ ■ ■ uifemsinbiochemistry prof T walls ml! lamed AAAS fellow elaxedink: j ames Wild, head of the igs. I’veevt 3Xas a&M Department of Bio- toeingdor^ljyijstry and Biophysics and a battlingin rofessor of genetics and toxicolo- i Hoods, ylyvas elected a fellow of the o natureis; merican Association for the Ad- ’ aboutsittancement of Science (AAAS). deallowing Wild’s research includes studies to comeou f biochemical regulation, gene ex 's, asVossp ression and control and enzyme- rerspectivt ased bioremediation. He works iv smallthf fth scientists in the former Soviet can be. rjfpn on problems with the use of elfagaininzyme-producing bacteria to clean s" isnotat p environmental pollution. It is about:. Wild will be formally recognized it and asktong the 1998 AAAS annual meet- ecessarytc ig in Philadelphia, c to natureiM ,nmsandsjeague encourages behave h imendment voting ) nature’ ^ AUSTIN (AP) — Early voting for pportthec ie Nov. 4 constitutional amend- ng of dose lent election is underway in all iremaybri-54 Texas counties. !, but howr* Under a new law passed by the to enjoy alt 997 Legislature, the voting peri- destructior d begins 17 days before Election Adamftit|y. That law gave county clerks option of starting voting as jy as last Saturday, with all ting by Monday, hile encouraging Texans to do duty, the League of Women rs suggested the time has e to overhaul the 121-year-old ment and put an end to the involved amendment ballots. it reform leads to Isurance cuts OUSTON (AP) — Texans will about $610 million in insurance s in 1998, with holders of auto- ile insurance getting the biggest reak, Texas Insurance Commission- ifllton Bomer and Gov. George W. iifh announced Monday. s a result of tort reform by the s Legislature, Bomer was able to |rder cuts of an estimated $436 mil- por 1996 and $441 million for 7. Altogether, the cuts for the three s bring the insurance impact of reform to $1.5 billion in savings, he rollbacks stem from 1995 jglation mandating insurance corn- lies pass on to their customers [savings the companies received euse of civil justice reforms. 7, 6:30-7:301 )! ’m Not an Addict: Students battle everyday addictions to caffeine, nicotine See Page 3 sports Boudreau: The Texas A&M ►Qfccer Team gets back on jhe winning track. See Page 7 ate dancefs 28, 8:15-9:31 per couple 1 j ?8, in rook sek session nberthy G