OPEN TO ALL MAJORS Greece/Turkey Study Abroad Summer Term 1 1998 S The Battalion TATE Wednesday • November 19, it Follow Ulysses, St. Peter and Alexander the Great on an odyssey through Greece, the Aegean Sea, and the sites of Turkey. Visit famous sites of preclassical, Hellenic, early Christian and Islamic civilizations. We leave from Houston May 20, 1998. Earn 6 credit hours! Courses will be offered in The Arts and Civilization and Design Communication. For more information contact: Dr. Charles White, 425 ELAC, 845-7859. or visit our web site at: http.Y/www.archone.tamu.edu/neweb/resources/greece.html SO, YOU THINK YOU HAVE ALL THE ANSWERS. BUT DO YOU KNOW THE RIGHT QUESTIONS? ANSWER: A POPULAR GAME SHOW QUESTION: WHAT IS ? MSC Political Forum’s take on a game show favorite— And you get a chance to compete! MSC Flagroom, 12:00 p.m. Friday, November 21 Interested in competing against a fellow Aggie and a faculty member for prestige and prizes? Answer the following questions and return them to the Political Forum cube in the Student Programs Office on the second floor of the MSC by 12:00 p.m. on November 20. 1. Who was Jimmy Carter’s vice president? 2. What was the theme of Ross Perot’s 1992 presidential campaign? 3. How many representatives are in the Texas House? 4. Who is the Secretary General of the United Nations? 5. In what year was Martin Luther King Jr. assassinated? ^Tr Political Fortun H .* It A 1 1 INTRODUCING TEXAS A&M™ 14K JEWELRY TAM001 14K $128 TAM002 14K $64 TAM002ERD 14K $124 TAM003 $124 lililll TAM005 $119 TAM006 $124 IBISllS TAM007 $159 Now Available TAM004 Helmet $159 TAM013 Football $124 TAM008 Large ATM $33 TAM010 Small ATM $54 TAM009 Gig ‘em Thumb $121 TAM011 Aggies™ Mom $83 TAM012 “The 12th Man” $88 All items available in 10k. Call for pricing. logoArt™ The Broadest and Most Elegant Line of Aggies™ Jewelry is Available at: John D. Huntley, Inc. Very Personal Investments 313-B South College Ave. College Station, TX 77840 (409) 846-8916 2 DEREK DEMERE/lHt Bum Evan Zimmerman, a senior ocean engineering amjor, works on an experiment in the hydro lab Tuesday. The project is a simulation of the westGalv ston coastline. Their 1/115 scale coastline is hit with simulated waves from the wave machine, and take measurements to record the effects of the waves over time. They then determine whether the man-made reef they have built is effective. Bush disappointed that Saddam is still in power COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — Former Pres ident George Bush acknowledges he’s disap pointed the United States is dealing with another crisis involving Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein six years after the Persian Gulf War. “Some people ask me, ‘Why didn’t you go in and get him?”’ Bush said at a news conference Monday at the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum in College Station. “The job was to end the aggression, and we did it,” he told the Bryan-College Station Eagle. “But am I happy he’s there? No. He’s testing us. He’s testing the United Nations,” Bush said of Saddam, who provoked a standoff with the United States by expelling American members of the U.N. arms inspection team. Pursuing Saddam after Iraq had been forced out of Kuwait could have shattered the interna tional coalition he assembled after Iraq’s 1990 invasion, Bush said. The international coalition in 1991 included some Arab states. But the United States has had a more difficult time gaining Arab support for military force in the current crisis involving U.N. weapons inspections. “I’d like to see them more on board,” Bush said. “I don’t know the intricacies of thediplon cy anymore so I don’t honestly know what has transpired between the state department, the White House, our Arab friends. But it is impor tant that they be with us in this.” Bush said he will support President Clinton whatever he does to resolve the crisis. “I would hope that he would be able toattrad other nations to back us, to be with us In whaffiipson w| er actions were necessary,” he said. “When you’re dealing with the possibility of producing weapons of mass destruction/it in- volves the whole world, and we better be strong and firm in making him comply with international law,” he said. Ih'I enl et,f 2 is coni Mil ( jl I that nT day foi l file bird fter.Butl main i if Continuing this weekend... The biggest show of the year The Qood Woman of Setzuan , November 19--22 Rudder Forum, 8pm Tickets available at the MSC Box Office, 845'1234 $6 for students and $7 for general public For more information see our web page: www.tamu.edu/theater/ or call the Theater Arts Program office, 845-2621 ***** X ** ★ ^ ★ WILEY LECTURE PS E R I E S Memorial Student Center ***** \ * *** presents: THE EUROPEAN UNION: THE DYNAMICS OF A COLLECTIVE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC BLOC November 19, 1997 7:00 p.m. MSC 206 FREE ADMISSION Featured Speakers: Alexandr Vondra - Ambassador of the Czech Republic Nigel Evans - Professor at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy Jeffery Gedmin - Executive Director of the New Atlantic Initiative Persons with disabilities please call 845-1515 to inform us of your special needs. We request notification three (31 . working days prior to the event to enable us to assist you to the best of our abilities. JS^ Their name may sound Ivy League, but their facts are strictly bush league. You’d think a test prep company could get its facts straight. Too bad that’s not always the case with The Princeton Review. The Princeton Review’s MCAT score improvement claims are so flimsy, the company hasn't made its supporting "study'' public. And, of course, The Princeton Review has no affiliation whatsoever with Princeton University, or any other university. Ttie tact is, Kaplan works so well that more students have chosen our courses than all other national test prep companies combined. 1-8Q0-KAP-TEST www.kaplan.com Kaplan. The facts speak for themselves. IV/ntet Mountain View College offers Winter Term! Earn up to four credit hours during the winter break. ' Winter Toti is denned fot highly motivated students who am devete time to on infertsfra, fast-pored minkemestef. • Students BrnyeimdiBn. Winter fern. Poyment for dosses b required at the fene of registration Spring feo schedule applies. • Classes begin on Monday, December 15, 1997 end end Friday, January 9, 1998. Gasses do not meet Dwember 24 through Januoiy 4, and resume on Monday, January 5, 1998. Registration: Now - December 5 Spedoi Registration: December 12 and 15 For information, please coll the Enrollment Management Office ot 214/860-8600. Mountain View College tfea toe fotRue * Dcfa, R 75211 www.ravdad.da DAY CUSSES ACCT 2301 PftlNCACCfl ENGL 1302 tOMPOSITIQHII ENGL 2327 AMERICANS ENGL 2332 WORLD UT GOVT 2302 AMEAGOVT HIST 1302 HIST US OMAT 0091 ELEMALGEBRA MATH 1342 INTRO STM PHIL 1301 INTRO PHIlOSPd EYEHIHG CUSSES ENGL 2311 TECH WRfllHG ENGL 2328 AMERICAN UT HIST 1301 HIST US HUMA 1301 HUMAfUTIB MGMT 2374 HUMAN RESOIM SPCH 1311 INTRO SPE (01 SELF-PACED AllBIO/VIM0 E0URSE5 PHYS 1311 flESCASTROHOr GEOG 1301 PHYSICAL GEOOr GEOl 1404 HISTGEOlOGf* PHED 1304 HiiHfomoor SPCH 1145 WORKSHOP ’If you hove any questions, pleos« tfie Sriente/PEH offke of 214-MW •_