I They're conning! Are you These music favorites aren't the only shows on our 1999-2000 roster. The Barber of Seville New York City Opera National Company SB , f MSC CD CO Season Media Partners: MT1AIV Nmwm/SporlB/Tmik 1130 AM ^ ^ To find out more, visit our website at opas.tamu.edu or call 845-1234. our luxury accommodation nd mealplan starts as low is $650 per installment (Based on 10 installment plan for two-bedroom double-occupancy accommodation. Advanced payment for the academic year begins at $5,999.) 'Rest easy. Mom ... We'll do it all.' PEACE OF MIND Private Bedrooms Available Courtesy Patrol Limited Access Entry Professional On-Site Res. Life Staff DO APPLY TODAY WHILE NOT MISS THERE’S STiLL SPACE! OUT! COMMUNITY T H E CALLAWAY 40-Seat DVD Mini- Theatre with THX Surround Sound Indoor Recreation Center Pool & Sundeck Fitness Center HOUSE 301 George Bush Drive West College Station, TX 77840 CALLAWAV SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS 409.260.7700 www.callawayhouse.com ifjlU AMERICAN CAMPUS COMMUNITIES Luxury student community co-developed by Callaway Development Co., San Antonio, and American Campus Communities, Austin, Texas © 1999. The Battalion’s now offering access to The WIRE A 24-hour, multimedia news service for the Internet from The Associated Press The WIRE provides continuously updated news coverage from one of . the world’s oldest, largest news services via The Battalion's web page. ■ A comprehensive, up-to-the-minute news report combining the latest AP stories with photos, graphics, sound and video. • Headlines and bulletins delivered as soon as news breaks. http://bat-web.tamu.edu Page 6 • Wednesday, June 30, 1999 N ATION Fed expected to raise rate! WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve will nudge interest rates up today for the first time in more than two years, according to the widely held view in financial markets. Then the real guessing game be gins: How many more rate hikes will the central bank order to slow the red-hot U.S. economy to a more sustainable pace? While analysts disagree on how high the central bank will need to boost borrowing costs for millions of American con sumers and businesses to slow eco nomic activity, they are virtually certain the Fed will start the process today. “Short of jumping up and down and yelling, [Federal Reserve Chair GREENSPAN Alan] Greenspan has pretty much announced this move as much as he can,” David Wyss, chief finan cial economist at Standard & Poor’s DRI, said. Wyss and other economists said Greenspan left no doubt with his June 17 testimony in Congress. He said, “When we can be pre-emp tive, we should be.” Financial markets rallied for a second straight session yesterday, with the Dow Jones industrial av erage rising by 160 points to close at 10,815, after a 103-point gain Monday. Analysts said traders saw buying opportunities in advance of the Fed’s expected rate hike. The Fed under Greenspan has preferred to be forward-looking, moving to raise interest rates before higher inflation has a chance to be come embedded in the economy. But the question is whether these rate hikes will be a replay of 1994 or of 1997. In February 1994, the I Greenspan launched a pre-ei5| strike against inflation, andt the central bank was finishedaj] later it had driven rates upbyj percentage points in sevensepi steps. The economy slowed,if flation stayed under control. The Fed started raising: again in March 1997. Thatii stopped after a quarter-pod crease it believed was suffici show its inflation-fighting resaj The 1997 tightening ca® before the global currency: struck in Asia. Before that! was over, the Fed had toi course last fall and cut rates:' times to keep the U.S. ecoi from tumbling into a downtt: Critics from both consen,' business groups and liberalii(j unions believe the Fed willbe/ ning the risk of upsetting at global recovery if it beginsi U.S. rates. Hormel takes oath under high scrutiny WASHINGTON (AP) — It is usu ally a private, low-keyed affair when an ambassador is sworn in. The pat tern was broken yesterday as James Hormel became ambassador to Lux embourg before a raucous gathering of supporters assembled in the State Department’s main reception room. “What an incredible privilege it is to be standing before you today,” Hormel, who is homosexual, told the gathering of several hundred. Many from San Francisco who stood with him during his tortuous 20-month journey from nomination to swearing in. Television cameras lined the rear of the majestic eighth-floor room of the State Department. Normal pro cedure on such occasions is to bar the press altogether. The reason for the hoopla, of course, is that Hormel is the first openly gay ambassador. Uncertain ty had shrouded Hormel’s appoint ment almost from the day he was nominated because of opposition from a relatively small group of sen ators. President Clinton broke the im passe three weeks ago when he made Hormel a “recess appoint ment” — a method to circumvent the normal Senate confirmation process. The Traditional Values Coalition, a church lobby that opposed the nomination, said in a statement that the swearing in of Hormel marks “the beginning of the Gore cam paign’s efforts to woo the homosex ual vote. ” Expiration coi for counsel la: WASHINGTON (AP)—The pendent counsel law, bom of and steeped in controversy at o ' of nearly $150 million so law today at age 21. The relevant provisions o‘ Ethics in Government Act off: once were hailed as a bipartis? sponse by Congress to theStii Night Massacre, in which two* neys general resigned rathe: carry out President Nixon's 19'! mand that Watergate special r cutor Archibald Cox be fired. But support for the law erode ter investigations spanningthf ministrations of four presides Carter, Reagan, Bush and Clink focused on allegations of cm use, Mafia ties and marital infe The law’s demise marks a to pre-1978 policies. Attorney eral Janet Reno says her Jusfe j partment stands ready to take the job of appointing specialp outers to investigate miscorr high-ranking government officii The lollege 930s 1 ations mildin estaur. omple The noved 02 Col parse hurch uimbe: Beni ,83, sai allow < APPLY TODAY Staff Application Fall ’99 Name: Number of hours you will take in the summer: 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 in more than one position, number them in order of preference with 1 being your top choice. City Desk Campus and Community News Reporter Opinion Desk Columnist Visual Arts Desk Graphic Artist Cartoonist Aggielife Desk Lifestyles and Entertainment Feature Writer Page Designer Web Desk Web Designer Photo Desk Photographer Night News Desk Front and inside page design Page Designer Jar 24 J] Radio Anchor Reporter Sports Desk Sports Writer Page Designer Copy Desk Copy Editor Please type your responses on a separate piece of paper 1) Why do you want to work at The Battalion, and what do you hope to accomplish? 2) What experience do you have that relates to the position you are applying for? (include classes, seminars) 3) What do you believe is the role of The Battalion on campus? 4) What changes do you feel would improve the quality of The Battalion? (give special attention to the section you’re applying for) Please attach a resume and samples of your work (stories you have written for publication or classes, pages you have designed, photos, drawings or other creative samples). Tam applications in to Room 013 of Reed McDonald by 5p.m. Applications due Wed., June 30, The( ill kicl America 3n the g "ushPrf ervancf TheC ^vas stai unction nimity] ? rs thmi televisio and Djv Lons C for the I they a number DO at ttiert niances Rosy anilmi;