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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 15, 1999)
Buy them something this time. a variety of parents t-shirts from $13.97 available at SPnAtw Stiu JEHm jt •mAf Student Counseling etp£in Volunteers Needed! AtLMAJ0RS WELCOME! # INTERVIEWING NOW * to begin service in the Summer or Fall Semester. Summer Training wilt take place May 24-29, 1999. For more information call Susan Vavra at 845-4427 ext. 133 or visit our web site at wwuv.scs.tamu.edu/voiunteer/ STUDENT COUNSELING SERVICE Post Oak Mall • 764-4444 A department in the Division of Student Affairs a new church for a new generation Community |i Church I at the Hilton - Sundays, 10 a.m with worship leader Ross King and special guest speaker this Sunday, Mike Nugent (‘92) from Albuquerque, NM call 260.1163 for more info or check out www.comchurch.com HURRY! TIME IS RUNNING OUT I SAVE AN H 1 5 *%£ SILVER,'gOLdJ GOOD THROUGH SAT. ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ j EXTRA 15 DIAMONDS &|| DISCOUNTED ^ prices GEMSTONES ALL AUDIO SYSTEMS, BOOM BOXES, VIDEOS ELLIPTICAL TRAINERS NOW $39 ALL AUTOMOTIVE ALL m au m i INFANT %n° FF ATHLETIC Hi 50-70°" APPAREL 9 V |F00TWARER#1 ALL DISCOUNTS TAKEN OFF LOWEST TICKETED PRICE ALL ATHLETIC FOOTWARE .ELECTION IS LIMITED & VARIES BY STORE ALL FURNITURE FIXTURES FOR & n f "Montgomer^^^ THESE LOCATIONS ONLY 1618 ROSE LAND BLVD. • TYLER HWY 6 & VILLA MARIA RD. • BRYAN 3201 TIXOMA PKWY. • SHERMAN teaui -sue Mtni naureoMBn «ime chauss, m. «*raeME, mrcw express j, discover, au. sas sew no checks ;UE 70.-THE ORCLiMStSKi-CES. WP CA;-4.MO LONGER ACCEPT COUPONS OR 'N-STORE REBATES. AVAILABIIjTV. LIMITED TO STORE STOCK ON CERTAIN ITEM: Page 14 • Thursday, April 15, 1999 News Hubble spots ancient galaxy (AP) —Astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope have peered 13 billion years back into time, almost to the dawn of cre ation, to find the oldest, most distant object ever detected: a galaxy fizzing with new stars. The galaxy lies near the edge of the uni verse, 13 billion light-years from Earth, where its presence was detected by its faint ultravi olet light, which is invisible to conventional telescopes. Paradoxically, the oldest known galaxy — dubbed “Sharon” after the sister of one of its discoverers — appears young to us. That is because the deeper astronomers look into space, the further back in time they are looking. It takes so long for light traveling through space to reach Earth that as tronomers scanning the edges of the universe are seeing objects as they were billions of years ago. By some estimates, we are seeing the galaxy as it existed 1 billion years after the Big Bang, the colossal explosion believed to have created the universe. The discovery by researchers at the State University of New York at Stony Brook was reported in Thursday’s issue of the journal Nature. It marks the third time in the past year that astronomers have found what were thought to be the most distant objects yet. Other astronomers said the finding can help them determine when galaxies formed and developed and learn more about the ori gins of the chemical elements that make life possible. “Finding the most distant galaxies is akin to finding the oldest fossils on Earth,” said Patrick McCarthy of the Carnegie Institution Observatories in Pasadena, Calif. “They give you a handle on the timing and processes by which the first recognizablegalaxies coalesced from the primordial sea of light elements.’ Galaxies appear to come in two basic de signs — disc-shaped spiral galaxies like the Milky Way and more massive, elliptical galax ies. But the SUNY researchers said their tar get is much too far away even for the Hubble to see clearly, so they cannot say what type it might be. In fact, the new galaxy is so faint that some astronomers said they might have to wait un til better instruments are developed to learn something from it. King of the founta Td’vr - SALUE TURNED Benjamin Rodgers, a senior industrial distn major, plays in Rudder fountain Wednesday Eeki I .‘S'fc'l 11 jpek' ml ;Kri ; ‘pco mu phtum . ajor, sa m in 1 1 $ f UbL “T as all n ember ■ e M >m antly 'ns," si m to i me n :se thei so |as , m.T Poldei as eha id nan line Iml TEXAS A&M Tlu '° \S°fo n ai 5: UNIVERSITY WAIGI by SEIKO II; Someday all watches will be made this wav A Seiko quartz timepiece officially taP University. Featuring a richly detail^ dimensional re-creation of the Universit STAR the 14kt gold-finished dial. Electronii. movement quaranteed accurate to with For mi seconds per month. Full three year Seiko r } iltural FRIDAY & SATURDAYONII oner , s All Gold 2-Tone Leather Strap $285.00 $265.00 $200.00 'mi' A,, dn s DOUGLAS JEWELRY 1667-3 TEXAS AVE. COLLEGE STATION, TX 77840 Class of “75 IVIail Orders VC^elcome 1 -409-6S>3-067"7 ■pes * A ri> "biubs \ Od bus; Ordering your 2000 Aggieland ^ « yearbook is as easy as 1-2 -3!! b.V.ML •.m. * Lt Q bm T 972, v, lencen Don't forget to order your 2000 Aggieland yearbook when you register for classed Use fee option 016 during phone registration. For any questions regarding the 2000 Aggieland, call 845-265