The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 04, 1997, Image 10

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    Nation
Thursday • December 4,
Regents
Continued from Page 1
Dr. David Wiltschko, a Texas A&M
professor of geology, said the bache
lor of arts geology program offers stu
dents greater flexibility with electives.
He said the program provides stu
dents with a good foundation in phys
ical science and geology and a minor
in another field. This way students can
explore other fields.
“A bachelor of arts program opens
up different options for students,” he
said. “This type of degree can be a
stepping stone to careers in law, med
icine and business. It can be a power
ful combination.”
Wiltschko said that all of the sci
ence departments on campus offer
bachelor of arts programs.
Dr. Michael Friedland, dean of
the college of medicine and vice
president of health affairs, said the
master’s program of public health
will train students to serve the
needs of communities.
“This program is consistent with
A&M’s land-grant mission to get out
and serve the community,” he said.
New study reveals American less
likely to relocate, move to cities
WASHINGTON (AP) — Ameri
cans aren’t as restless as they used
to be, and when they do move
more are now heading to the coun-
tryside than to the cities.
The share of Americans relocat
ing dropped to 16.3 percent in the
year ending March 1996, the Cen
sus Bureau reported Wednesday.
Mobility, dropping steadily, is
now well below the 1980s when
more than one in five Americans
moved every year. “I keep thinking
pretty soon they’re going to bottom
out, but they don’t,” Kristin A.
Hansen of the Census Bureau said.
Young people tend to move
more than older folks but the de
cline is affecting all age groups, and
so is not just a result of an aging
population, Hansen said.
The report “Geographical Mo
bility, March 1995 to March 1996”
also disclosed the nation’s metro
politan areas are losing popula
tion, with a quarter-million more
people moving out than moving in.
Declines in the central cities have
been common as Americans head
ed for suburbs in recent decades,
but now the metro areas are losing
to the countryside.
“It’s hard to come up with a
why” for the metro losses,
Hansen said. Jobs are moving to
the suburbs in some areas, and
people are willing to commute
farther, she said. Other people
may simply be choosing to live in
smaller communities.
Reasons for moving may differ
from person to person and com
munity to community, she said.
What makes the falloff especial
ly surprising is that the report is the
first to use the new 1993 definition
Gore: Hollywood|
blame for smol
for metropolitan areas, which of
ten include additional counties
that should result in increased
population, she said.
Metro areas were growing in the
late 1980s but experienced a loss
between 1992 and 1993. In most
other recent years figures have
about balanced out, Hansen said.
For 1995-96, the net loss to met
ropolitan areas totaled about
275,000 people, the Census Bureau
said, as cities lost 2.4 million and
suburbs gained 2.1 million. The net
loss accounted for people who
moved to nonmetro areas.
The highest moving rates were
for people in their 20s as about a
third of those aged 20 to 29 relo
cated during the year. The rate
for those 30 to 34 was 14.1 per
cent. It was just 6.6 percent for
those 55 to 64.
WASHINGTON (AP) — With
Vice President A1 Gore contending
that Hollywood is partly to blame
for teen-age
smoking, some
movie-makers
and TV produc
ers agreed
Wednesday to
****** Ww clean up their
^Jlr acts.
' '■ Representa-
^ f|g tives of the
ImB - Screen Actors
Gore Guild, Directors
Guild and
Writer’s Guild — along with
Christy Turlington speaking for
supermodels — pledged to use
their own kind of peer pressure to
keep their colleagues from depict
ing cigarettes as cool.
>
It would be a voiuntar'
with no new govemmei
lions or censorship,Gorefe
I le cited a study thatriP i
percent of all moviesrelA
year showed tobacco uE
finding coincides widiip^
rise in teen smoking. I
“Tlic cause and effectitl 5
is very, very clear," Gore sac]
tably, he added, in™
moviegoers “don't seethe]
lung cancer dnnvninginthi
builds up in their lungs.’
Richard Masur, pret:
the actors’ guild, blame:
generation ofyoungeti
ers and TV executive;
have not had the bene:®***
kind of educational pro
many of us who areoldflH
he said. 5nc I
—He
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CRAM
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December 19, 1997.
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like, and that’s why right now through Dec. 19th at
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WHAT INSPIRED THE MOUNTAIN MEK
George Washington:
“Whereas it is the duty of all nations
to acknowledge the providence of
almighty God, to obey His will, to be
grateful for His benefits, and humbly
to implore His protection and favor.”
Abraham Lincoln:
“Intelligence, Patriotism, Christianity,
and a firm reliance on Him who has
never yet forsaken this favored land
are still competent to adjust in the
best way all our present difficulty.
...As was said three thousand years
ago, so still it must be said, ‘the
judgments of the Lord are true and
righteous altogether’”
n
>M
Thomas Jefferson:
“God who gave us life gave us:(
Can the liberties of a nation be s?j
when we have removed a cord
that these liberties are the gifloisj
Indeed 1 tremble for my country
reflect that God is just, that His j
cannot sleep forever."
Teddy Roosevelt:
“There are those who believefi
new modernity demands a
morality. What they fail to cons®
the harsh reality that there is no
thing as a new morality. There sj
one morality. All else is immcs
There is only true Christian ethics:
against which stands the wlici
paganism. If we are to fulfill our;
destiny as people, then we musts
to the old morality, the sole moraltj
FACULTY FRIENDS
We are inspired by Jesus Christ who said: “For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever befejn
Him shall not perish but have eternal life.” We are a group of professors, instructors, lecturers, and administrators united: see
common experience that Jesus Christ provides intellectually and spiritually satisfying answers to life’s most important quests*
are available to students, faculty, and staff who might like to discuss such questions with us. If you would like to be a part''
FACULTY FRIENDS ad, please contact Murphy Smith 5-3108, Steve Crouse 5-3997, or Lee Lowery 5-4395.
Natalie L. Allen
Accounting
Bill Cready
Accounting
Austin Daily
Accounting
Patsy Deere
Accounting
Kelli Shomaker
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L. Murphy Smith
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Elizabeth TeBeaux
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Sally Dee Wade
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Casper Wiggins
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Walter Haisler
Aerospace Engineering
John Whitcomb
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Oral Capps, Jr.
Agricultural Economics
H. L. Goodwin
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Don R. Herring
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Alvin Larke Jr.
Agricultural Education
L. Wayne Greene
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Dan Hale
Animal Science
Paul Harms
Animal Science
Douglas Householder
Animal Science
Jimmy T. Keeton
Animal Science
Theodore S. Maffitt
Architecture
David Kent
Athletic Department
George W. Bates
Biochemistry
James R. Wild
Biochemistry & Genetics
Joel McGee
Center for Academic Enhancement
Liz Miller
Center Teaching Excellence
Nancy Simpson
Center Teaching Excellence
Richard Davison
Chemical Engineering
Jack Lunsford
Chemistry
Charles Hix, Jr.
Civil Engineering
Dallas N. Little
Civil Engineering
Lee Lowery, Jr.
Civil Engineering
James S. Noel
Civil Engineering
Paul Roschke
Civil Engineering
Hayes E. Ross Jr.
Civil Engineering
Donald Saylak
Civil Engineering
Ralph Wurbs
Civil Engineering
Dan Colunga
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Walter Daugherity
Computer Science
Mac Lively
Computer Science
Dick Volz
Computer Science
James W. Craig Jr.
Construction Science
Beth Miles
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Richard K. Anderson
Economics
James M. Griffin
Economics
Tim Gronberg
Economics
Steven Wiggins
Economics
Maynard Bratlien
Educational Administration
David A. Erlandson
Educational Administration
Jack Campbell
Educational Curriculum (Retired)
Robert K. James
Educational Curriculum
Delmar Janke
Educational Curriculum
Patricia Larke
Educational Curriculum
Will Worley
Electrical Engineering -Emeritus
James Blake
Electrical Engineering
Andrew K. Chan
Electrical Engineering
Robert Nevels
Electrical Engineering
John H. Painter
Electrical Engineering
A. D. Patton
Electrical Engineering
B. Don Russell
Electrical Engineering
Karan Watson
Electrical Engineering
Roy Hartman
Engineering Technology
Hank Wigley
Engineering Technology
Craig Kallendorf
English & Mod. Languages
Terry Larsen
Environmental Design
Russell K. Biles
Family & Community Medicine
George Mcllhaney
Family & Community Medicine
Lamar McNew
Family & Community Medicine
David Segrest
Family & Community Medicine
James Kolari
Finance
Lawrence Wolken
Finance
Walter F. Juliff
FSIS Project Management
Terry Spencer
Geophysics
Danny Ballard
Health and Kinesiology
Kirstin Brekken
Health and Kinesiology
Camille Bunting
Health and Kinesiology
Brian Colwell
Health and Kinesiology
Stephen Crouse
Health and Kinesiology
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Health and Kinesiology
Carl Gabbard
Health and Kinesiology
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Health and Kinesiology
Nikki L. Jackson
Health and Kinesiology
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Health and Kinesiology
Leonard Ponder
Health and Kinesiology
Rose Schmitz
Health and Kinesiology
Wayne Wylie
Health and Kinesiology
Barry Nelson
Health Science Center
Bryan Deuermeyer
Industrial Engineering
Richard Feldman
Industrial Engineering
Don Phillips
Industrial Engineering
Donald A. Sweeney
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Terry Blanchard
Large Animal Med/Surgery
Robert Field
Large Vet. Animal Clinic
O. E. (Ed) Elmore
Management
Frederick Larson
Management
George Rice, Jr.
Management
Ben Welch
Management
Richard T. Hise
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Stephen McDaniel
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Robert Gustafson
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Yvette Hester
Mathematics
Jeff Morgan
Mathematics
Richard M. Alexander
Mechanical Engineering
Walter L. Bradley
Mechanical Engineering
L. Roy Cornwell
Mechanical Engineering
Robert DeOtte
Mechanical Engineering
Louis Everett
Mechanical Engineering
Ramon Goforth
Mechanical Engineering
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Mechanical Engineering
Warren Heffington
Mechanical Engineering
Harry Hogan
Mechanical Engineering
C. L. Hough
Mechanical Engineering
Ken D. Kihm
Mechanical Engineering
Gerald Morrison
Mechanical Engineering
Dennis O'Neal
Mechanical Engineering
Ozden Ochoa
Mechanical Engineering
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Mechanical Engineering
Dan Turner
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David Thompson
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Michael Davis
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Roger Fay
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Stephen L. Hand
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Joyce Davis
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Judith M. Collins
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Marian Scully
Physics
Patricia Griffin
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Mort Kothmann
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Gary W. Maler
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Louis Hodges
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Carson E. Watt
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Maurice Dennis
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Speech Comm & Theatre Arts
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Statistics
Ron Green
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Loren Skow
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Veterinary Pathology
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Veterinary Pathology
James G. Anderson
Veterinary Physiology
Larry D. Claborn
Veterinary Physiology
Jim Jensen
Veterinary Physiology
J.D. McCrady
Veterinary Physiology
' I
NOTE: This ad presents the personal convictions of the individuals listed herein; the ad does not represent or support any view or position of Texas A&M Unive(|
any academic department. The ad does represent and acknowledge the diversity of academic contributions to Texas A&M University by men and women of various
ethnic group, and cultural background who share the Christian faith.