The Battalion |g y Springer under attack CHICAGO (AP) — All of a sudden, it is Jerry Springer who’s taking the hits, not the guests on his fists-flying talk show. Rolling Stone magazine and a TV entertainment show are reporting that the fights are about as real as a pro wrestling match, a charge the show denies. And the NBC station that brought Springer to the big leagues has scraped the show off the bottom of its corporate shoes amid rising criticism that it has de generated into a pornographic slugfest. Springer has a history of profiting from sleaze. And as media watchers doubted that his top-rated day time talk show will suffer from the mmmmmmmmmmmmm allegations, Chicagoans braced for a double dose of “The Jerry Springer Show” on a new station. “Nobody ever lost any money un derestimating people’s taste,” said Christopher Sterling, a George Wash ington University media scholar. The show “is like wrestling,” Sterling said. “The whole thing is a put-up job.” On Thursday, Chicago’s WFLD-TV owned by the Fox Broadcasting Co., quickly snatched up the syndicated show in a multiyear deal that will air it not once, but twice daily. A day earlier WMAQ-TV said it was ending its con tract with Springer, whose profile the NBC station tried to raise a year earlier in a brief but disastrous ‘Nobody ever lost any money underestimat ing peoples taste.” Christopher Sterling Media scholar stint as a news commentator. The WMAQ announcement came just hours be fore the syndicated show “Extra” was scheduled to air a report saying that many of Springer’s fights are staged and guests are coached. On Friday, Rolling Stone hits the newsstands with similar allegations. Show spokesperson Jim Benson denied the alle gations and said the show has “strict production guidelines and policies.” Suzanne Muir, a Canadian restaurant owner who helped staged a high-profile hoax on the Springer show three years ago, said reports of staged shows are mmmmmmmmmmmmm hardly shocking and she doubted that viewers care. “You can tell who his audience is by who he’s playing to,” she said. “These people have just come from a fresh cockfight or a tractor pull.” The Springer show, which fea tured such topics as “I Strip With My Family,” had been broadcast in Chicago daily from WMAQ’s down- town studios. It will continue to be produced there under the new deal with WFLD-TV. Larry Wert, WMAQ’s new president and general manager, said only that he determined the show did not fit with his station’s goals of making “the strongest connection with the community.” What's Up Friday, April 24 Alpha Phi Omega: Meet to go visit Crestview Retirement Home at 6:30 p.m. at Crestview. Student Y: We will meet at 3:45 p.m. at Koldus to go to Boys & Girls Club. Episcopal Student Center: There will be a celebration of holy eu- charist followed by free dinner at 6:15 p.m. on Sunday at 902 George Bush. Call Father Mark at 696-0774 for more details. Environmental Issues Committee: Earth Week will be celebrated all day at Rudder Fountain with booths, free T-shirts, bands, and more. Call Sarah at 847-8446 for details. Alpha Phi Omega: There will be a blood drive at Rudder Fountain and Sbisa from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, April 25 Pre-Vet Society: There will be a Dog and Car Wash at the Long John Sliv er’s on Texas Avenue to benefit the Brazos Animal Shelter and Grey hound Track. Call Jennifer Sharpes at 847-8415 for more details. Monday, April 27 Officers’ Christian Fellowship: Bible study on how to live a Christian life in the military/Corps of Cadets will be held at 7:45 p.m. in the Military Science Building room 108. Call Tim at 847-1730 for details. Alpha Phi Omega: Meet to go to Girl’s Club at 3:30 p.m. in 133 Koldus. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship: On-campus Bible studies will be held. Contact David at 847-4264 for location and further details. Fellowship of Christian Cowboys: FCC will hold a Bible study, prayer and fellowship meeting at Pearce Pavilion on George Bush Doctor from : 8 to 9 p.m. Call Jay or Andy at 825- ! 2716 for details. Catholic Students Association: There will be a praise and worship ; session from 7:30 to 8:30 at St. Mary’s Catholic Church and a gen eral meeting at 9 p.m. in the St. Mary’s Student Center-Main Room every Monday for the rest of the se mester. What’s Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit student and faculty events and activities. Items should be submitted no later than three days In advance of the de sired run date. Application deadlines and notices are not events and will not be run in What’s Up. If you have any questions, please call the news room at 845-3313. ^Battalion Tiffany Inbody, Editor in Chief Helen Clancy, Copy Chief Brad Graeber, Visual Arts Editor Robert Smith, City Editor Jeremy Furtick, Sports Editor Jeff Webb, Sports Editor James Francis, Aggielife Editor Mandy Cater, Opinion Editor Ryan Rogers, Photo Editor Chris Huffines, Radio Producer Sarah Goidston, Radio Producer Dusty Moer, Web Editor Aaron Meier, Night News Editor News: Hie Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the Division of Student Publications, a unit of the Department of Journalism. News offices are in 013 Reed McDonald Building. Newsroom phone: 845-3313; Fax: 845-2647; E- mail: batt@unix.tamu.edu; Website: http://battalion.tamu.edu Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorsement by The Battalion. For campus, local, and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-2678. Subscriptions: A part of the Student Services Fee entities each Texas A&M student to pick up a single copy of The Battalion. Mail subscrip tions are $60 per school year, $30 for the fall or spring semester and $17.50 for the summer. To charge by Visa, MasterCard, Discover, or American Express, call 845-2611. The Baitauwi (ISSN #1055-4726) is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam peri ods) at Texas A&M University. Second class postage paid at College Station, IK 77840. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Battalion, 015 Reed McDonald Building, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-1111. HELP US SAVE Free Jason’s Deli delivery after 4 PM with Student I.D. The Politically Correct Alternative. Pizza is one of the most stalked and preyed upon meals in the United States, and is at the top of the endangered foods list. Please help save the pizza by making a conscious and politically correct decision at your next meal: Call Jason’s Deli. Not only will you be working to save pizza from extinction, you’ll feel better because you’re eating higher on the food chain. Jason's deli 1404 Texas Ave. S. • 764-2929 • 764-2712 FAX email: www.iasonsdeli.com Jr $6 minimum order Friday •April; Insurance system nei fixing, commissioner m AUSTIN (AP) — In the last traffic jam you suffered through, as many as one of four motorists around you was illegally driving without insur ance. Texas Insurance Commis sioner Elton Bomer believes the number can be slashed. Bomer on Thursday recom mended that state lawmakers adopt a program to randomly sur vey Texas drivers for proof of insur ance. Those that could not prove they had coverage would face fines and suspended licenses plates. The program, operating in Illi nois since 1994, has reduced the number of uninsured drivers there significantly, Bomer said. “I think it is a good system. Any time you can bring something down from 17 percent to 4.4 per cent that’s pretty strong,” he said of the Illinois program, run by the Illi nois Secretary of State. In addition to adopting such a program, Bomer said Texas law makers should consider a com plete overall of auto insurance laws. He said moving away from the current system, in which dri vers who cause damage pay for it, to a “no-fault” system would save consumers money. In no-fault systems, operated by more than a dozen states, insurance companies pay their customers for damages and injuries no matter who caused them. Drivers without insurance in those systems have limited options for recovering for their damages. “I believe Texans would em brace a no-fault system if it re duced rates,” Bomer said. “1 be lieve a good no-fault system would bring down rates and I believe it Painting fanatic should be in the law, Lawmakers could s no-fault system oraiE surance survey before! regular session nextyeai makers, however, void that a no-fault systems rectly reduce the nunfe sirred motorists. Bomer agreed. Bu:: fault would reduce in: and that could getm purchase coverage. “Affordability is added. Insurance indusin said they would like! both ideas. “Our thing is to get! of uninsured drivers d Jerry Johns, presidem western insuranceInfon: vice, an industry group. ■I arfoi itisic tore W1 ona! tidi Lindsay Maxwell, a junior anthropology major, paints the face of Melanie Krause, a senior geneticsn the MSC on Thursday.. Apply for The Battalion Today Application due: Friday, April 24, by 8 p.m. r j#**" f V. J 013 Reed McDonald Building • Telephone (409) 845-3313 • FAX (409) 845-2647 Name: •Staff Application • □ Summer 1998 n Fall 1998 Please check box to indicate semester(s) for which you are applying. Number of hours you will take: Phone Number(s): Expected graduation (semester): Major: If you have another job, what is it? Classification: How many hours per week? E-mail Will you plan to keep it if hired? Please check the position(s) for which you are interested in applying. If you are interested ini one position, number them in order of preference with 1 being your top choice. 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(give special attention to the stfj you’re applying for) Please attach a resume and samples of your work (stories you have written for publication classes, pages you have designed, photos, drawings, or other creative samples) All hiring decisions will be made based only on qualifications